Full marks for this go to the Federation, for they invited
law school folk from across the country.
Not exact matches
Headed by MBA student Jon Staff and
Law School student Peter Davis, Getaway House provides an attractive, affordable, off grid tiny house for «
folks looking to escape the digital grind and test - drive tiny house living.»
It includes attorneys, paralegals,
law students, and a few local
law school career services
folk.
I've met several people visiting from state supreme courts (Nevada and Micronesia, for starters), a
law librarian, several publishers (from Luxembourg and the HeinOnline digital archive, among others), and the
folks from CALI, which many of us know from
law school.
But the
folks at Indiana Tech
Law School think you are all wrong.
Are the people recruited those who could not get into Canadian
law schools, or those who don't want to wait to have a first degree, or perfectly competent
folks for whom the Canadian
schools just did not have room?
Yet, when it comes to advancing one's earning capacity, most of the
folks intelligent and driven enough to attend
law school are much better off investing in their education than in business equipment.
The site is a service of St. Thomas University
School of
Law, Miami, the same
folks who bring you DiplomacyMonitor.com, which I wrote about in September 2003.
In
law school, I heard rumors of
folks who applied to every federal judge in the country.
Prof. Antonino Longo Graduated with honours at the University of Catania, Prof. Antonino Longo con - tinued his studies abroad, specializing in Administra - tive Penal
Law at the Cath - olic University of Tilburg (NL), in International Com - mercial
Law at King's Col - lege, London (UK) and Suf -
folk University
Law School of Boston (MA — USA), in European Private
Law at Humboldt Universitaet in Berlin and in Energy
Law at LUISS Guido Carli, Rome.
One key to success is something they don't teach in
law school — how to effectively communicate with business
folks.
Determined to develop an extensive knowledge of the
law and use it to help as many
folks as he can, Pat went so far in
law school as to obtain a student - attorney practice license from the Supreme Court, allowing him to represent low - income clients without compensation through the
school's Pro Bono clinic.
For
folks in or around Toronto, a couple of Osgoode Hall
Law School events are coming up that might be of interest.
In the interests of full disclosure, let me note that I have been a trustee of the
Law School Admission Council — the
folks who «own» the LSAT — for eight years now.
We have put together some exciting content and we think it will help young
folks that are going to
law school, and it will help their decision - making process as to what
law school to attend.
We've got a Fellows Program so that people that are coming right out of
law school or going to have year - long fellowships where they can work on certain projects or other projects within the center, we also have mid-career fellows they're going to be a part of this where
folks that want to take a six - month leave of absence from their current job or whatever they are doing to do the same to work on innovative products and projects within the industry, so very new, but we are off and running very quickly.
Rather than work through large
law firms, bar associations (particularly the ABA),
law schools and large legal publishers, all which where innovation has gone to die — or at best moved far too slow, these
folks are moving with sound ideas — and moving now.
(It's the case that
folks east of the Manitoba border don't take crops as seriously as they ought, either: is there a
law school in Ontario that has any course on agricultural issues in any respect?)
The Legal Information Institute's Tom Bruce created the Teknoids list in 1992 for «
folks involved and / or interested in support and development of IT for
law schools,
law firms, the judiciary and more.»
Congratulations to the
folks at University of Calgary
Law School for putting this together — I wish you success!
Even
school districts with relatively progressive sex - ed programs are constrained by state
laws that, for example, forbid teachers from presenting LGBTQ
folks in a positive light.