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10 Sep 2010, 3:09 am by Bob Kraft
Fugh-Berman said DesignWrite was also assigned to write 20 review articles about the drug at $20,000 each. [read post]
9 Sep 2010, 2:32 pm by Elie Mystal
[Us News]* This Sunday Elizabeth Wurtzel will explain how to write about the bad things that have happened in your life. [read post]
8 Sep 2010, 10:56 am by froomkin@law.tm
The boring parts are compiling information that may be useful for people and writing memos about them, or doing various administrative stuff to foster interdisciplinary cooperation. [read post]
8 Sep 2010, 8:10 am by jessie
  Be sure to take clinics or seminars along with your big lecture classes to ensure you have professors who can speak to your writing and work ethic. [read post]
7 Sep 2010, 9:12 am
Carolyn Grose, William Mitchell College of Law, has published Storytelling Across the Curriculum: From Margin to Center, from Clinic to the Classroom in volume 7 of the Journal of the Association of Legal Writing Directors (2010).Narrative theory and storytelling can be used throughout the law school curriculum, cutting across types of courses and types of lawyering. [read post]
7 Sep 2010, 12:05 am by John Steele
This article by Patrick Breyer (via ALM) looks at whether law school clinics enjoy attorney client privilege. [read post]
3 Sep 2010, 11:07 am by Vivian Persand
The chiropractors at the emergency clinic suggested that Ritchie contact Paula Insurance (“Paula”), Ritchie’s workers’ compensation carrier. [read post]
3 Sep 2010, 7:57 am by Jordan Furlong
Some excerpts, courtesy of the ABA Journal: These “impractical professors whose chief mission is to produce theoretical legal scholarship” feel indifferent towards—and sometimes outright disdain for—practicing lawyers and faculty members with a practical bent, he writes…. [read post]
1 Sep 2010, 2:00 pm by Tim Zinnecker
  Most of the College of Law’s clinics are hybrid programs based in the government or legal-services office, although we have a small, live-client Veterans Appellate Clinic. [read post]
1 Sep 2010, 9:17 am by Evidence ProfBlogger
For instance, at Detroit Mercy, students are required to take: Contracts, Property, Torts, Civil Procedure, Applied Legal Theory and Analysis (ALTA), Core Concepts, Criminal Law, Constitutional Law, Evidence, Professional Responsibility, Taxation, two Law Firm Program courses, a Clinic, an International Law elective, and an upper-level writing requirement. [read post]
1 Sep 2010, 6:25 am by cornellvermontlaw
1) Paying more attention in Legal Research and Writing this fall is a good start 2) Take every clinical program offered for which you have time 3) Be open to opportunities to learn about the practice of the law 4) Develop relationships with adjunct professors who have their own practices 5) Strive, during the next three years, for more effective utilization of your legal education [read post]
31 Aug 2010, 9:54 am by Elie Mystal
When you have the opportunity, you should be taking every clinical program your school has to offer. [read post]
31 Aug 2010, 7:05 am by Anastasia de Waal
Proust’s madeleines may evoke a merry-go-round of warm childish memories, but a trip to Disneyland Paris is the stuff of nightmares, writes Annaliese Briggs. [read post]
29 Aug 2010, 8:12 am by Jason Mazzone
Instructors would not be expected to write books or articles. [read post]
27 Aug 2010, 9:51 pm by Paul Horwitz
 Some left-leaning legal academics, including many who write on theoretical questions, have significant practice experience and bring it to bear in their teaching and scholarship. [read post]
26 Aug 2010, 10:32 am by Jonathan H. Adler
There are some full-time non-clinical law professors capable of competently representing clients in real cases, but they are the exception, not the rule, particularly among professors hired in recent years at highly-ranked law schools. [read post]
26 Aug 2010, 4:05 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
The NCI sponsored clinical trials and filed an investigational new drug (IND) application. [read post]