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Loved reading your piece on your first year of law school. As a graduate of ASU's law school I found it very nostalgic. My advice - make sure to take AZ con law from Paul Bender.

Looking forward to next years piece.
Paul

Save your recollections in a file you can remember and access Greg. We had a place to post our favorite memories of law school in the rotunda the weeks leading up to graduation. A fond memory of my class was when Prof. Schroeder backed into the trash can during a property lecture. Much more memorable than Black Acre and White Acre and easements!

Nice post - nice reflections.

Like really she is a model of the brightest students... whatever.... :)

Nice post. It’s funny cuz it’s true.

I'm not surprised you picked Hurwitz as the best teacher. I think it's because you're getting the benefit of his real world experience. The professors who have been holed up in academia for 30 years just don't have the same perspective. My advice FWIW is to try and take as many classes as you can from the adjuncts at ASU. They are typically lawyers (at the top of their game) who've seen the inside of a courtroom within the past five years.

Great analysis of law school! Too funny!

I can totally relate to the "no longer 27" realization. I'm 42 and because I don't have kids I often feel much younger than women my own age. The fact that I could be the mother of a high school kid astounds me at times.

Nice post Greg. Congratulations on making it through your first year. As a 2L, you will start to really learn the law, and as a 3L, you will wonder why you are still paying tuition. The best class I ever took at ASU was election law, taught by Justice Bales. He was the Solitor General at the time, and I found his insight fascinating.

P.S. Lots of 44 oz. Dr. Peppers kept me going when I was there, so I guess the strict contructionist line is really true.

Great post and congratulations. I don't know what your class schedule will look like next year, but I can only imagine if you take any policy-related or legislature-related courses you will continue to be singled out for ribbing.

Greg:

I really enjoyed this post. It brought back memories. I also plan to show this post to my wife who is thinking about law school and wonders what it will be like to be in her 40s and in law school.

I agree with you abou the caliber of ASU students. I have taught there twice and was impressed both times.

Greg,

Congratulations on jumping through the first of three hurdles in order to jump through the ring of fire - the Bar. 2 Quick points: 1) You'll get all the liberal bias you want when/if you take Con Law from Bender and 2) Are you starting to think like a lawyer, yet?

Bill

Greg,
I would suggest George Schatzki for employment law (or anything else he teaches). The LDS guys when I went to law school (Mr. Petersen included) did drink a lot of soda b/c Red Bull had not saturated the market at that point. I am a bit surprised by Hickie's post, I thought all he did was study in the library. Nostaglic indeed.

This will sound like a cliche but you will be friends with the people you went to law school with for the rest of your life (providing you practice where you went to school).

Congrats on getting through that first year. I'll think you'll greatly enjoy the 2nd year because unlike the vast majority, you won't be freaking out about finding a job the following summer.

Schatzki is fantastic. Although for a guy who does not care that much about doctrine, he certainly likes to test it.

I loved this post.

You will soon learn two things about contracts: (1) It is interesting but most of the theory has been replaced by the U.C.C. and (2) You can teach it to yourself. I did. I had to do so because Anita Hill was my contracts professor, long before she became a feminist icon.

One of my best law school memories was winning an election for managing editor of the law review. I won in part because I had an Air Force commitment after law school and announced that if you elect me, I won’t be competing against you in job interviews. Everyone laughed, thought a second and then voted for me.


Congrats Greg on surviving your first year! Who wins the "Spring Butt" award for volunteering to answer the most questions (incorrectly)? In my law school, justice was served: Mr. Spring Butt actually flunked out, so we were spared a second year of frantic hand-waving, accompanied by "Ooh, Ooh, Professa, Professa!"

Greg

Hats off on being finished! I always thought the non-traditional students had the best perspective on law school.

2nd year is a lot more fun.

Congrats on being done with the first year! OMG, without bar review I would never have made it through first year. I went to UA, and, as much as I loved law school and the U, I thought the environment was WAY far to the right. It's a myth that law schools are "liberal". The federalists made up a huge amount of students.

I also had the pleasure of taking Scott Bales' election law course (I guess he taught it at both schools). It was an excellent class that was actually fun to read for. I think law students should take as many courses as they possibly can from Supreme Court justices. It's such an honor to be able to learn from someone like that. As much as I politically - and personally - despised former CJ Wm. Rehnquist, his course on the history of SCOTUS was fascinating and I was glad I took it.

Good luck in your remaining two years!

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