Monthly Archives: May 2012

Do not ask for whom the bellwether tolls . . .

Washington University (St. Louis) has become the first “highly ranked traditional law school” to offer a fully online LL.M. degree program that will qualify students to sit for the bar exam in a dozen U.S. states.  The Wash U program is aimed … Continue reading

Going back to the Langdell law school model

Over at Concurring Opinions, Frank Bowman, who I’m happy to say teaches at my alma mater, has a good post about legal education, well worth reading.  Jeff Lipshaw at Legal Whiteboard has some thoughts of his own on the subject. … Continue reading

Defending Elizabeth Warren, undermining diversity

I’ve always admired Elizabeth Warren, if for no other reason than she graduated from a middling state law school and yet managed to make her way to the faculty of the world’s most storied law school.  (Last time I checked, … Continue reading

“If you want to help lawyers serve the poor, don’t charge $45,000 a year for law school.”

That’s the comment from “James” in response to an ABA Journal Weekly story about New York’s new “pro bono” requirement for would-be attorneys.  I couldn’t agree more.  There are lots of people who could use lawyers if those lawyers could … Continue reading

ABA considers making LSAT voluntary

The American Bar Association is apparently the only accrediting body in the U.S. that requires prospective students to take a standardized exam for admission.  That may change, as the Standards Review Committee of the Section on Legal Education and Admission … Continue reading

Lawyers and mandatory “pro bono”

A colleage whom I like and respect takes a very different view of New York’s new mandatory pro bono requirement for bar appicants than I did yesterday.  In the course of our email exchange, he made this point: I have … Continue reading

Fixing the NBA draft

A little off-subject here, but over at Prawfsblawg David Schleicher (Geo. Mason) is raising the question of what can be done to fix a glaring problem with the current National Basketball League draft: teams tanking games to increase their chances … Continue reading

New York adds “pro bono” requirement for bar admission

New York Court of Appeals Chief Judge Jonathan Lippmann used a Law Day lunch yesterday to announce that the Empire State would now require 50 hours of pro bono legal practice from applicants before they are admitted to the New York … Continue reading

Judges want more money, less criticism from ignorant citizens

That’s the upshot of a new report from DRI The Voice of the Defense Bar, released yesterday as part of the May 1 “Law Day” testifivites.  The recession is really hurting American courts, so taxpayers (who presumably aren’t hurting as much as … Continue reading

Shrinking the law school class

The University of California’s Hastings College of Law is cutting back on its 1L class this year.  The school (whose in-state tuition is now apparently a staggering $46,575 a year) will This may be motivated by concern for students, or … Continue reading