Difference between revisions of "Columbia Law School"
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− | ==Further Reading== | + | == Further Reading == |
− | [http://library.law.columbia.edu/EarlyHistoryColumbiaLaw/index.html Early History of Columbia College Law School] | + | *[http://library.law.columbia.edu/EarlyHistoryColumbiaLaw/index.html Early History of Columbia College Law School] |
+ | *[http://www.law.columbia.edu/law_school/communications/reports/Fall2002/brief A Brief History of Women at CLS] | ||
[[Category:Schools]] | [[Category:Schools]] |
Revision as of 01:03, 28 October 2007
Columbia Law School | |
Established | 1858 |
President | {{{President}}} |
Dean | David Schizer |
Degrees | JD, LLM, JSD |
Enrollment | 1,300 |
Website | www.law.columbia.edu |
Columbia Law School, the most corporate of elite law schools in the US, occupies Jerome Greene Hall, one of the ugliest buildings in Columbia's ensemble. Students slave away in its library at odd hours.
Pictorial history of the law school
A lounge in Kent Hall for law students in the 1950's
The law library ca. 1900, when the collection was housed in Low Library
The law school library on Columbia's Midtown campus
The law school building on the Midtown campus ca. 1860
An 1891 montage of the Midtown campus law school, prepared for a celebration of the career of Theodore Dwight
Further Reading
Columbia University Schools |
Architecture, Planning and Preservation • Arts • Arts and Sciences (Graduate School) • Business • Columbia College • Dentistry • Continuing Education • Engineering • General Studies • International and Public Affairs • Journalism • Law • Medicine • Nursing • Public Health • Social Work |
Affiliated Institutions |
Barnard • Jewish Theological Seminary • Teachers College • Union Theological Seminary |
Defunct Schools |
Pharmacy • Library Service |