Harvard Law School
Beyond the Exclusive Study Groups: What Ted Cruz (and his Cowboy Boots) Did at HLS
Drunk actor. Video gamer. Staunch conservative. And star student. All of these titles would accurately describe Senator Ted Cruz when he was a student at Harvard Law School, according to a recent story by The Boston Globe.
Harvard Professors Express Skepticism About Twitter Stock’s Staying Power
Twitter's IPO generated significant enthusiasm among investors, but despite this hype, several Harvard professors suggested that the company's stock might not be a worthy investment.
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Members of the present Harvard Legal Aid Bureau answer questions in a town hall meeting at the 100th HLAB aniversary. The Harvard Legal Aid Bureau has been providing legal services to low-income individuals free of charge for the past century.
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Members of the present Harvard Legal Aid Bureau answer questions in a town hall meeting at the 100th HLAB aniversary. The Harvard Legal Aid Bureau has been providing legal services to low-income individuals free of charge for the past century.
HLS Conference Celebrates 100 Years of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau
The Harvard Legal Aid Bureau commemorated 100 years of service and debated possible avenues for the organization’s future at conference at Harvard Law School this weekend.
Peter Singer Advocates for Animal Rights
Moral philosopher and Princeton professor Peter Singer described what he called a “momentous revolution in thinking” regarding animal welfare during a talk in the Ames Courtroom at the Harvard Law School on Friday.
Queen of Jordan Opens Pan-Arab Conference
Royalty graced the streets of Cambridge on Thursday when Queen Rania Al-Abdullah of Jordan and Prince Moulay Hicham of Morocco gave speeches to crowds in Harvard Law School’s Wasserstein Hall during the opening night of the seventh annual Harvard Arab Weekend Conference.
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Gubernatorial candidate Don Berwick, former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, speaks about the future of American healthcare on Monday afternoon at Harvard Law School’s Caspersen-Wasserstein Center.
50 Percent of URL Citations in Supreme Court Cases are 'Rotted,' Harvard Researchers Say
Whether you're a Con Law student prepping for your next paper or a 1L cramming for Civil Procedure, be careful while you research—your materials might very well be rotting away.
PSA: A New Way Out of Law School Debt
Don't worry Harvard Law Class of 2014, there's still hope that you can take that non-profit or government job after all. Even with those law school loans piling up, you may not have to sell your soul to the giant law firms—just your Hot Wheels collection. Just like this student, who is apparently trying to sell 240 die cast cars from his childhood on eBay in order to pay off the debts from his legal education, you, too, can find a way to make it work.
Noah Feldman Master Class
Harvard Law School professor Noah Feldman '92 lectures on the 1927 Supreme Court case Buck v. Bell. The master class was sponsored by the Mahindra Humanities Center.
Harvard Law Review Gender Breakdown over Time
In addition to expanding the size of the board to 46 editors, the Law Review instituted a new gender component to its affirmative action policy. The newest board has more female editors than any volume since volume 122 in 2007.