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Vol. 49, No. 4, October 23, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Oct 1998

Vol. 49, No. 4, October 23, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Halloween Party Set for October 30 •Moot Court Season Begins •Figure Out Just How Big a Loser You Really Are •And You Thought Your Life Was Miserable •At Least Find Somewhere More Sophisticated than Rick's •I'll Be Siskel, You Be Ebert •Celebrate the Holidays- RG Style •Alcohol Eases the Pain


Vol. 49, No. 3, October 2, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Oct 1998

Vol. 49, No. 3, October 2, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Baum Comes of Age •1Ls Elect Their Leaders •Baum Backs Down •1Ls Allowed to Attend Sonobe Lecture •We Find the Weirdest Things in Our Pendaflexes •What Some People Do for the Good of the Country •Some RG Staff Members Have the Way too Much Time on Their Hands •We are So Glad Larry Was Paroled


Vol. 49, No. 2, September 18, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Sep 1998

Vol. 49, No. 2, September 18, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•A Fresh Start for Career Services •LSSS Passes New Funding Policy •Law School Hires Five New Faculty Members •Are Student/Faculty Relationships Good? •But Did He Ever Get to Meet the Beatles? •Give Me a Home, Where the Buffalo Roam, and the Geeks and the Antelope Play? •Welcome Back Larry •But Doesn't Sierre Leone Need Legal Services?


Vol. 49, No. 1, September 3, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Sep 1998

Vol. 49, No. 1, September 3, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Cook Lecture Slated for Sept. 8 •New School Year Brings New Visiting and Adjunct Faculty •Administrative Landscape Altered •Rhymes of Reason •Welcome Back! Well, back, anyway… •Interviewing? Can't Go Wrong With Our Sound Advice… •Who? •Excuses •Pleas


A Tribute To Theodore J. St. Antoine, Jeffrey S. Lehman Aug 1998

A Tribute To Theodore J. St. Antoine, Jeffrey S. Lehman

Michigan Law Review

The University of Michigan Law School was ninety-five years old when Ted St. Antoine first entered Hutchins Hall in 1951. In half as many years, he profoundly influenced the institution, its traditions, and its character. Ted came west to Michigan after studying philosophy and theology at Fordham College in New York City. He came with the proven abilities of a summa cum laude. He came ready to engage what he considered a more practical challenge: he wanted to become a lawyer.


Professor Theodore J. St. Antoine: A Legendary Figure, Harry T. Edwards Aug 1998

Professor Theodore J. St. Antoine: A Legendary Figure, Harry T. Edwards

Michigan Law Review

Ted St. Antoine's career as a law professor started more than three decades ago, in 1965, just after I had graduated from the University of Michigan Law School. I never had the good fortune to experience Ted in the classroom and I have always regretted that, for he has been a legendary teacher at the University of Michigan Law School. Indeed, even among those of us who graduated before his arrival at Michigan, Ted quickly gained a reputation as one of the finest classroom teachers ever to deliver a lecture in Hutchins Hall. He has graced his classes with brilliance, …


Ted St. Antoine: An Appreciation, Benjamin Aaron Aug 1998

Ted St. Antoine: An Appreciation, Benjamin Aaron

Michigan Law Review

In seeking to encompass the many facets of Ted St. Antoine's complex life and career, one thinks of other persons to whom he can be compared. John Maynard Keynes comes immediately to mind. Although Ted may never attain the worldwide renown and influence of the great British economist, the two men share several significant traits. Like Keynes, St. Antoine is an internationally prominent and respected scholar in his own field. Like him, also, Ted is a bon vivant and a lover of the arts. He can generally be relied upon for information about the best places to eat, especially in …


Vol. 48, No. 10, April 23, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Apr 1998

Vol. 48, No. 10, April 23, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•$500 For Brian Simpson? Are You Serious? •Student Debate Explores Affirmative Action •What's Next for Career Services? •Larry, Clarence and the Homoerotic Photographer •Save Rick Hills •The Dean Wants to Have a Few Words With You •I'm Really Hungover and I can't think of Anything Witty to Say About Larry's World So... •RIP Legal Lad •But Can He Do the Lambada?


Vol. 48, No. 9, April 1, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Apr 1998

Vol. 48, No. 9, April 1, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Changes Coming to Records Office •U.S. News Ranking Corrected: Career Services Now #1 •David Baum Purchases Dominick's: "Free Sangria for All" •SFF Granted Liquor License for Auction •Lawsuit Filed Against School Seeking to Ban Graduation Because it Discriminates Against Idiots •Michigan Militia Co-Sponsoring JLR Symposium to Move Away From Anonymous Jury System •JJ White Makes Move to Have Faculty Salaries Drawn From a Hat •Dean Lehman Announces New Schedule- All Students Required to Take 8AM Comm Trans •Law Quad, Ashley's Contract to Provide Food Service •Top Ten Reasons the RG Needs Its Own Computers


Vol. 48, No. 8, March 18, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Mar 1998

Vol. 48, No. 8, March 18, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Do We Need Reform in Career Services? •Nine Down, Only 16 to Go •Larry Visits Clarence's Magazine Collection •Gotta Love Those Curves •Letters to the Editor •Larry and the Dirty Old Man in the Trench Coat •Time Flies… •If You Think the JLR Symposium is Impressive, You Haven't Seen Anything Yet


Vol. 48, No. 7, February 25, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Feb 1998

Vol. 48, No. 7, February 25, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•Jessup Team to Compete in Internationals First APALSA Symposium Client Counseling Team Takes Third at Regional Competition Everything You've Ever Wanted to Know About Professor Logue but Were Afraid to Ask Bruce Man Can't Jump •Movie Reviews for Movies we Didn't See •Larry's Weekly Contribution to his FBI File •It Pays to Stay in School


Vol. 48, No. 6, February 11, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School Feb 1998

Vol. 48, No. 6, February 11, 1998, University Of Michigan Law School

Res Gestae

•No, We Ain't Got No Computers •Six Faculty Offers Extended •A Dated Look at the Winter Graduation Ceremonies •Is William Cook Spinning in his Grave? •Bruce Manning v. Responsibility •Spice Girls v. Dignity •Larry v. Ronald McDonald •Rick v. Discretion •Campus Response to Affirmative Action Lawsuit


The Role Of Clinical Programs In Legal Education, Suellyn Scarnecchia Jan 1998

The Role Of Clinical Programs In Legal Education, Suellyn Scarnecchia

Articles

In clinic, students get a glance at the lawyer they will be someday. They gain confidence that, indeed, they will be a "good" lawyer. They understand the context in which their classroom learning will be applied. In short, they are able to integrate their law school experience.


In Appreciation Of Ted St. Antoine, Terrance Sandalow Jan 1998

In Appreciation Of Ted St. Antoine, Terrance Sandalow

Articles

As I began to think of what I might say this evening, it occurred to me that I was fortunate the occasion had not been billed as a roast. It would not be easy - and, indeed, might be sacrilegious - to direct attention to the foibles of a man whom thousands call "the Saint." That title, by which he has been known by generations of students, is, of course, a measure of their affection and their esteem for him. For more than three decades, Ted has been one of our most popular teachers. Although I have learned a great …


Breaking Into The Academy: The 1998-2000 Michigan Journal Of Race & Law Guide For Aspiring Law Professors, Gabriel J. Chin, Denise C. Morgan Jan 1998

Breaking Into The Academy: The 1998-2000 Michigan Journal Of Race & Law Guide For Aspiring Law Professors, Gabriel J. Chin, Denise C. Morgan

Michigan Journal of Race and Law

I was not very far into my law school experience when I realized that my professors had the best job in town-it took me quite a bit longer to discover that I, too, could get in on the deal. Do not misunderstand me-being a law professor is not easy. In fact, when done correctly, the job requires a tremendous amount of intellectual energy, emotional commitment, long hours, and hard work. However, if you enjoy writing, research, public speaking, and developing mentoring relationships, being a law professor could be the career for you. This Article, and the listings of helpful organizations …


Listen, Matthew L.M. Fletcher Jan 1998

Listen, Matthew L.M. Fletcher

Michigan Journal of Race and Law

In a traditional law school setting, experiences of students of color, especially Native Americans, are often buried by the discourse of the dominant culture. This piece, a non-traditional work using elements of prose, lyric, monologue, and poetry, weaves strands of legal discourse, commentary, and autobiography into a critical narrative of the experience of legal education from an outsider law student's perspective. The author, a member of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, recounts these vignettes in a voice infused with the history and traditions of Native American oral storytelling.