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#72 - Spring 2005
Highlights:
- One-On-One with William H. Rehnquist '52. An exclusive interview with the chief justice about his years at Stanford Law School, and his classmate and fellow justice Sandra Day O'Connor '52.
- The Rehnquist Court. A roundtable discussion on William H. Rehnquist's '52 tenure as chief justice of the United States, featuring Dean Larry Kramer, and professors Kathleen M. Sullivan, Robert Weisberg '79, Alan B. Morrison, and Eugene Volokh.
- Taking Clinical Education to the Next Level. Larry Marshall, one of the nation's top clinical law professors, recently joined the law school faculty—charged with turning the clinical program into one of the best and most innovative in the country.
- Law School Clinics. Profiles of each of the law school's seven clinics: youth and education law, immigrants' rights, environmental law, Supreme Court litigation, cyberlaw, criminal prosecution, and community law.
- Private Lives. Professor Lawrence M. Friedman documents the emergence of individual rights as a major component of family law in an article based on his new book, Private Lives: Families, Individuals, and the Law.
- CEO Pay and Skill. Professor Robert M. Daines writes about his research on the relationship between CEO skill and pay, demonstrating that some CEOs are indeed overpaid.
- Google's Dirty Little Secret. Professor Lawrence Lessig reveals the dirty little secret about Google's plan to digitize 20 million books.
- Lawyering to Silicon Valley's Elite. John Roos '80 named CEO of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, a leading tech law firm.
- Biotech Experts Gather at Stanford. Law school hosts confab on biotech patents.
- Public Interest Fellowships. Students and alumni garner a baker's dozen fellowships.
- Asian Pacific Americans Gather. Minority alumni association launches at law school.
- From The Dean. Dean Larry Kramer discusses the importance of clinical education and his plans to boost the law school's clinical program.
- The Global Rule of Law. Jurists from international courts gather at Stanford to exchange ideas.
- Classmates
- In Memoriam
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