1   2  

  1. Charles Hamilton Houston

    Charles Hamilton Houston (September 3, 1895-April 22, 1950) was a black lawyer, Dean of Howard University Law School and NAACP Litigation Director who helped play a role in dismantling the Jim Crow laws and helped train future Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall. He was educated at Amherst College, where he was valedictorian, and at Harvard Law School, where he graduated cum laude and was a member of the "Harvard Law Review".

  2. Nadine Strossen

    Nadine Strossen , president of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and professor of law at New York Law School, will speak about cyber censorship on Thursday, Feb. 28, at 7 p.m. in the Chapel. She was named one of "The 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America" by National Law Review two times and among the top "100 Executives Leading the Digital Revolution" by Upside Magazine, in addition to many other distinctions.

  3. Reva Siegel

    Reva Siegel is the Nicholas deB. Katzenbach Professor of Law at Yale Law School. She is a specialist in constitutional law and antidiscrimination law, and frequently draws on legal history to explore contemporary issues of inequality and the role of social movements in shaping constitutional law.

  4. Abram Chayes

    Abram Chayes (July 18, 1922-April 16, 2000), American scholar of international law closely associated with the administration of John F. Kennedy. Abram Chayes's full name was Abram Joseph Chayes, but he did not use his middle name. He was born in Chicago. Both his parents were lawyers. He graduated "summa cum laude" from Harvard College in 1943 and served in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1945 as a field artillery officer in France, Holland, Germany, and Japan, …

  5. Mary Joe Frug

    Mary Joe Frug (1941-1991) was a professor at New England School of Law from 1981 to 1991. She is often thought of as the mother of postmodern feminist theory, and was a renowned postmodernist and feminist scholar. Much of her work was collected in the posthumously-published book Postmodern Legal Feminism. On April 4, 1991 she was murdered on the streets of Cambridge, Massachusetts not far from the home that she shared with her husband, Harvard Law professor Gerald Frug, …

  6. Pierre N. Leval

    Pierre Nelson Leval is a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. At the time of his appointment by President Bill Clinton in 1993, he was a United States District Court Judge in the Southern District of New York. Judge Leval received his B.A. degree from Harvard College in 1959 and his J.D. degree magna cum laude in 1963 from Harvard Law School, where he served as Note Editor of the "Harvard Law Review".

  7. Ron Klain

    Ron Klain , thank you for being with us. RON KLAIN , FMR. GORE CHIEF OF STAFF: Thanks for having me, Judy.

  8. David Riesman

    David Riesman (born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, September 22, 1909; died in Binghamton, New York, May 10, 2002), was a United States sociologist, attorney, and educator. After graduating from Harvard Law School, where he was a member of the "Harvard Law Review", Riesman clerked for Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis from 1935-1936. Riesman's 1950 book, "The Lonely Crowd", deals with modern sociology.

  9. Jeannie Suk

    Dr. Jeannie Suk is an assistant professor of law at Harvard Law School. She is the first Asian American woman to hold a tenure-track post there. Her work focuses on the nexus of criminal law and family law. Prior to joining the Harvard faculty, she trained as an assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office. Despite the three year requirement, Ms.

  10. Preeta D. Bansal

    Preeta D. Bansal is a leading United States lawyer whose career has spanned government service and private practice. A partner at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, she is a member and past chair of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) and former Solicitor General of the State of New York during Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's first Term. Bansal was raised in Lincoln, Nebraska as a child.

  11. Thomas Merrill

    Thomas Merrill is the Charles Keller Beekman Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. He received a BA from Grinnell College in 1971 and a BA with first-class honors in politics, philosophy and economics in 1973 from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar. He received his JD from the University of Chicago Law School in 1977 and went on to clerk for Judge David L. Bazelon of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and then Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun.

  12. Jane Ginsburg

    Jane C. Ginsburg (born 1955) is the Morton L. Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic Property Law at the Columbia Law School. She also directs the law school's Kernochan Center For Law, Media and the Arts. An expert on copyright, Ginsburg has written various treatises and law review articles. She holds degrees from the University of Chicago, Harvard Law School, and the University of Paris. At Harvard, she served as an editor of the Harvard Law Review.

  13. Carol Platt Liebau

    Carol Platt Liebau is an attorney, political analyst and commentator based near Los Angeles, California. She has served as a guest host for the nationally-syndicated "Hugh Hewitt Show," for KABC radio in Los Angeles, and for KFTK 97.1 FM Talk in St. Louis. Carol has also provided analysis and commentary on television for PBS, CNN, the Fox News Channel, MSNBC and on "The Dennis Miller Show."

  14. Jamie Raskin

    Jamie Raskin is a professor of constitutional law at American University and Director of its Program on Law and Government. He founded the Marshall-Brennan Constitutional Literacy Project, which sends law students into public high schools and junior high schools to teach about the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. He is the bestselling author of We the Students and Overruling Democracy: The Supreme Court versus the American People.

  15. Robinson O. Everett

    Robinson O. Everett was born in Durham, North Carolina, March 18, 1928 to a family of lawyers: his grandfather and both of his parents being noted North Carolina attorneys. His father, Reuben Oscar Everett, was one of the first five law students at Duke and practiced law for 66 years until his death, in his law office, at age 92. His mother was one of the first women to graduate from the University of North Carolina School of Law, where she ranked at the head of her class, …

  16. Allan Gotlieb

    Allan Ezra Gotlieb, CC, LL.D, LL.B, MA (born February 28, 1928) is a Canadian public servant and author. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Gotlieb received his BA from the University of California at Berkeley, his MA from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, and his LL.B degree from Harvard University, where he was editor of the Harvard Law Review. In 1957 he joined the Department of External Affairs. From 1967 to 1968 he was assistant undersecretary and legal adviser.

  17. William C. Powers

    William Charles Powers Jr. is the 28th president of The University of Texas at Austin, a position he has held since February 1, 2006. Powers was selected in November 2005 as the sole finalist for the position of president of the University of Texas at Austin. In December 2005, Powers was officially named the next president of the University and succeeded Larry Faulkner when he left office in February 2006.

  18. Charles Evans Hughes Jr.

    Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. (November 30 ,1889 - January 1, 1951) was the United States Solicitor General in 1929-1930. As a young man, Hughes was an honor graduate of Brown University and the Harvard Law School, serving as the editor of the prestigious "Harvard Law Review" during his third and final year there.

  19. Stephen J. Friedman

    Stephen J. Friedman, former commissioner of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission , is the current dean of Pace University School of Law. Prior to that, Friedman served as senior partner and co-chairman of Debevoise & Plimpton.

  20. Roger Park

    Roger C. Park is a law professor at UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, California, who specializes in evidence. He received his B.A. from Harvard University and his J.D. from Harvard Law School, where he was Case Editor of the Harvard Law Review. He has also served as a law clerk for Judge Bailey Aldrich of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. He is author of the textbook, Evidence: Cases and Materials (Thomson West Foundation Press 2005), …

  21. John J. Cound

    John Cound, a retired professor of law, is a recognized expert in civil procedure. As a full-time law professor, he specialized in admiralty, civil procedure, complex litigation, conflict of laws, evidence, federal courts, and professional responsibility. He taught at the University of Minnesota Law School for over 35 years. Professor Cound received his B.A. degree from George Washington University.

  22. Malcolm Donald

    Malcolm Donald was an American lawyer and a founder of the Pioneer Fund. He graduated Harvard College (where he played football) and Harvard Law School. He was an editor of "Harvard Law Review". He worked at Boston law firms Gaston Snow and Herrick, Smith, & Donald. He served in the War Department during World War I. Following the war, Donald was named Vice President of the Harvard alumni club. He later became a trustee of the Roxbury Latin School.

  23. Michael Leiter

    Michael Leiter will begin to serve as Principal Deputy Director of the United States National Counterterrorism Center starting at the end of February 2007. He currently serves as Deputy Chief of Staff for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI).

  24. Jennifer Martínez

    Jennifer Martínez is a human rights lawyer and a professor of law at Stanford Law School. She represented José Padilla in the Supreme Court in "Rumsfeld v. Padilla". Martínez is a graduate of Yale University and Harvard Law School. While in law school, she was published twice in Harvard Law Review and finished at the top of her class.

  25. John G. Koeltl

    John George Koeltl (born 1945 in New York City) is a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan.

  26. M. Bernard Aidinoff

    M. Bernard Aidinoff is Senior Counsel to the firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, from which he retired as a partner on December 31, 1996. Prior to joining Sullivan & Cromwell, he served as Law Clerk to Judge Learned Hand of the United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit. He is a director at AIG, a member of the Advisory Board of BNA Tax Management, …

  27. Nat Lewin

    Nathan Lewin is an American lawyer. He received his B.A. summa cum laude from Yeshiva College in 1957, and earned his J.D. magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1960, where he was treasurer of the Harvard Law Review.He is admitted to practice in the District of Columbia, New York, the Supreme Court of the United States, all federal appellate circuits, …

  28. Hans F. Loeser

    Hans F. Loeser is an American lawyer whose activism during the Vietnam War earned him the enmity of Richard Nixon. Born in Germany, Loeser served in the United States Army, 1942-1947. He then went to Harvard Law School, where he was an Editor and Officer of the Harvard Law Review from 1948-1950. He graduated "magna cum laude" in 1950 and began a long career at Foley Hoag in Boston. He was active in several professional groups.

  29. Abraham Lincoln

    Reviews Lincoln's early years as a farmer and his significant impact on U.S. agriculture, including the establishment of the USDA and the beginnings of the National Agricultural Library. Also includes various full text documents and agricultural Acts from the 1860s.

  30. Viet D. Dinh

    Viet D. Dinh is founder and principal of Bancroft Associates. He is Professor of Law and Co-Director of Asian Law & Policy Studies at the Georgetown University Law Center. He also serves as a Director and Chair of the Corporate Governance Committee of the News Corporation. Dinh previously served as U.S. Assistant Attorney General for Legal Policy at the U.S. Department of Justice from 2001 to 2003.

  31. Felix Frankfurter

    Felix Frankfurter was an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.

  32. Tom Perrelli
  33. Douglas A. Berman

    Douglas A. Berman , William B. Saxbe Designated Professor of Law, Moritz College of Law, The Ohio State University

  34. Guhan Subramanian
  35. John Nockleby
  36. Jennifer Bechet
  37. Aileen McGrath

    Aileen is the President of the Harvard Law Review. HELLO!!! And this isn't mentioned in the announcement, but we've learned that she'll be clerking next year for Chief Judge Michael Boudin , of the First Circuit -- feeder judge extraordinaire. So, Aileen, have you picked which Supreme Court justice you'd like to clerk for? She has. We've learned that Aileen McGrath (Harvard 2007 / Boudin) has accepted an offer to clerk for Justice Stephen G. Breyer in October Term 2008.

  38. John McCain

    Hey, whats up people.. Im John McCain but aint a senator of arizona haha.. I just uhh graduated from Osd which is oregon school for the deaf... Wanna get know me, add me and talk to me foo..

  39. Joseph

    hey my name is joseph.

  40. Jack Levin

    Jack S. Levin graduated summa cum laude from Northwestern University's Undergraduate School of Business in 1958, and in 1961 graduated summa cum laude from Harvard Law School, where he was recent case editor of the Harvard Law Review and ranked first in a class of 500.

1   2