University of Minnesota Law School

University of Minnesota Law School

Infobox_University
name =University of Minnesota Law School
native_name =
latin_name =


motto ="Rigorous. Relevant. Ready."
established =1888
type =Public law school
endowment =$99.6 million [http://www.law.umn.edu/prospective/profile.html]
staff =
faculty =61 full-time (female: 38%; minorities: 18%); 9 clinical faculty; 29 University affiliated faculty; 110 adjunct; 30 faculty who hold endowed chairs/professorships; 34 permanent endowed chairs/professorships
president =
provost =
principal =
rector =
chancellor =
vice_chancellor =
dean =David Wippman
head_label =
head =
students =860 students (816 J.D.; 19 international visiting - 5 countries represented; 2 domestic visiting; 23 LL.M. - 13 countries represented)
undergrad =
postgrad =
doctoral =
profess =
city =Minneapolis
state =MN,
country =USA
campus =Urban
free_label =
free =
colors =Purple and silver
colours =
mascot =
nickname =Fighting Mondales
affiliations =
footnotes =
website = [http://www.law.umn.edu/ www.law.umn.edu]
address =Walter F. Mondale Hall
229 19th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55455
telephone =612-625-1000
coor =
logo =
The University of Minnesota Law School, located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, is a professional school of the University of Minnesota. The school offers a Juris Doctor (J.D.), Masters of Law (LL.M.) for Foreign Lawyers, and joint degrees with J.D./M.B.A., J.D./M.P.A, J.D./M.A., J.D./M.S., J.D./Ph.D., J.D./M.D., J.D./M.P.P., J.D./M.B.S., J.D./M.P., J.D./M.B.T., J.D./M.U.R.P., and J.D./M.P.H.

The school is currently ranked 22nd in the "U.S. News & World Report" "Best Law Schools" rankings. Tuition and fees for a resident are $25,400. Non-residents pay $34,900.

According to a study by "The National Law Journal", 18.1% of the law school's 2006 graduates joined the United States' 250 largest law firms; the number is relatively low compared to peer institutions, though the Law School claims it is related to the small number of very large law firms in its region.Leigh Jones, [http://www.law.columbia.edu/null/NLJ_Ranking?exclusive=filemgr.download&file_id=133&showthumb=0 The Go-To Schools] , "The National Law Journal", January 15, 2007.]

Founded in 1888, the Law School is consistently ranked among the top 25 law schools in the nation (according to 'U.S. News & World Report') and has a reputation for turning out outstanding lawyers and public servants. With approximately 860 students, the Law School maintains a 13:1 student-to-faculty ratio. Admission into the Law School is highly competitive. All first-year classes are graded on a curve. Most upper-level classes are graded on a curve as well; only those classes with the smallest of enrollments are relieved of the curve. The five-year average bar exam passage rate is 99.18%.

The Law School's 10th Dean is Professor David Wippman, former Vice Provost for International Relations and Professor of Law, Cornell University.

The Law Library is the 8th largest of its kind in the United States, with over 1,000,000 volumes, and is open to the students 24 hours a day throughout the year. The chief librarian at the school is Joan S. Howland, who joined the Law School in 1992. Of particular note is The Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center, which houses one of the top three collections of rare legal texts in the nation. For its millionth volume, the Law School acquired the papers of Clarence Darrow.

In 1999-2001, the Law School initiated and completed an expansion of its facilities on the west bank of the University campus. This larger building was renamed Walter F. Mondale Hall in honor of one its most distinguished alumni, former Vice President Walter Mondale (Law Class of 1956).

There are 19 legal education clinics, offering students the opportunity to handle real legal cases under supervision of teaching attorneys. The school also has a formal moot court system, in which a majority of students participate. Second year J.D students are required to participate in either a moot court or legal journal.

tudy abroad programs

The Law School offers a number of study abroad opportunities and, in 2006 opened a summer study program for J.D. students in Beijing. For two years, this program was held in conjunction with the China University of Political Science and Law. However, that relationship did not work out, and this year because of the high cost of everything in Beijing, the summer program was suspended. The Law School hopes to re-open the summer program for J.D. students in 2009 with a new partner.

The school also features semester exchange programs with ESADE Faculty of Law in Barcelona, Spain; University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden; Université Jean Moulin (Lyon III) in Lyon, France, Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany; University College Dublin in Dublin, Ireland, Tilburg University Faculty of Law in Tilburg, Netherlands; and Bucerius Law School in Hamburg, Germany. In Fall 2006, the Law School announced a new exchange partnership with the Universidad de Montevideo in Montevideo, Uruguay.

Publications

The school produces a number of scholarly journals. Those that are edited by students include "Minnesota Law Review" (the 14th most cited legal journal [http://lawlib.wlu.edu/LJ/index.aspx] ), "Law and Inequality" (formerly the "Journal of Law and Inequality"), and "Minnesota Journal of International Law" (formerly the "Minnesota Journal of Global Trade"). Faculty edited journals include "Constitutional Commentary", "Crime and Justice", "Minnesota Journal of Business and Entrepreneurship", and "Minnesota Journal of Law Science and Technology". 175 students participate on a journal each year. Students at the Law School also regularly publish the humorous newsletter and harbinger of Thursday night activities, "The Bar Review Weekly".

tudent life

Musical

An annual highlight for the Law School is when the student body puts on its own full-length musical: written, performed, directed and produced by the all-student Theatre of the Relatively Talentless (T.O.R.T.). Begun in 2002, the event draws over a thousand audience members each year and features cameos by distinguished alumni and other distinguished members of the Minnesota legal community. For the 2006 show, "West Bank Story" (a spoof on "West Side Story"), tickets sold out within three days. Previous shows include: "The Wizard of Fritz" (2003, a spoof on "the Wizard of Oz"); "Law Wars" (2004, a spoof on "Star Wars"); "Walter Wonka and the Lawyer Factory" (2005, a spoof on "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory"); "Frankenlaw" (2007); and "Robin Hood, Esq." (2008). Participants are known as the TORTfeasors.

Hockey

The [http://www.tc.umn.edu/~mondales Fighting Mondales] hit the ice during the season in intramural play, club play and rivalry games. In the fall, the Fighting Mondales square off in an adult league against several opponents, including the law school hockey teams of the Hamline School of Law's Res Ipsa, University of St. Thomas School of Law and rival William Mitchell Fighting Eelpout. In the spring, the Mondales participate in the University of Minnesota intramural season, playing their games at Mariucci Arena on the U of M campus. The season concludes with the annual law school hockey tournament, where all four Twin Cities law school teams compete for the coveted Golden Gavel.

Notable alumni

The Law School currently has 11,776 living alumni in 50 states and 68 countries [http://www.law.umn.edu/prospective/profile.html] , including 275 serving as federal and state court judges nationwide [http://www.law.umn.edu/prospective/welcome.html] . Perhaps the most famous alumnus of the Law School is former Vice President of the United States and Ambassador to Japan Walter Mondale ('56). The Law School's building was renamed Walter F. Mondale Hall in his honor in 2002. His legacy and continued participation in the life of the school recently earned him a most interesting honor from the school's student-run Law Council: the naming of the mascot of the Law School as the "Fighting Mondales."

Other prominent alumni of the school include:
*G. Barry Anderson, Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Paul H. Anderson, Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Russell A. Anderson, Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Wendell Anderson, former Governor of Minnesota and United States Senator
*Dean Barkley, former United States Senator
*James J. Blanchard, former Governor of Michigan and U.S. Ambassador to Canada
*Kathleen A. Blatz, former Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Willard Boyd, former President, University of Iowa
*Myron Bright, former Judge, United States Court of Appeals (Eighth Circuit)
*David Brink, former President, American Bar Association
*Quentin Burdick, former United States Senator
*William Canby, Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
*Ray P. Chase, former United States Congressman
*Satveer Chaudhary, Minnesota State Senator
*Theodore Christianson, former Governor of Minnesota and United States Congressman
*Michael Ciresi, trial lawyer
*Alden W. Clausen, former President, World Bank
*Charles M. Dale, former Governor of New Hampshire
*Jay Conison, Dean, Valparaiso University School of Law
*Norris Darrell, former President, American Law Institute
*Everett Dirksen, former United States Senator (did not graduate)
*David Durenberger, former United States Senator
*Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to the United States Congress
*Donald M. Fraser, former United States Congressman
*Orville Freeman, former Governor of Minnesota
*Mike Hatch, former Minnesota Attorney General
*Douglas M. Head, former Minnesota Attorney General
*Gerald Heaney, former Judge, United States Court of Appeals (Eighth Circuit)
*Einar Hoidale, former United States Congressman
*Hubert "Skip" Humphrey, former Minnesota Attorney General
*John Hutson, Dean of Franklin Pierce Law Center and former Judge Advocates General of the Navy
*Ron Kind, United States Congressman (D-WI)
*Harold LeVander, former Governor of Minnesota
*John Lind, former Governor of Minnesota
*Miles Lord, former Minnesota Attorney General and U.S. District Court Judge
*William Paul Luther, former United States Congressman
*George MacKinnon, former Judge, United States Court of Appeals (DC Circuit)
*Richard Maxwell, former Dean of Law, UCLA
*William Mitchell, former Attorney General of the United States
*Walter Mondale, former Vice President of the United States and United States Ambassador to Japan.
*Mee Moua, Minnesota State Senator
*Wayne Morse, former United States Senator
*Diana E. Murphy, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
*Constance Berry Newman, former United States Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs
*Alan Page, Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Tim Pawlenty, Governor of Minnesota
*Maynard Pirsig, former Dean of Law, University of Minnesota
*J. A. O. Preus, former Governor of Minnesota
*William Prosser, former Dean of Law, University of California, Berkeley, author of "Prosser on Torts"
*Greg Raymer, 2004 World Series of Poker Champion
*Harry A. Sieben, former Speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives
*Gerald Edward Sikorski, former United States Congressman
*John E. Simonett, former Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Warren Spannaus, former Minnesota Attorney General
*Harold Stassen, former Governor of Minnesota, former President, University of Pennsylvania
*Melvin Steen, founding partner, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
*Robert Stein, former Executive Director of American Bar Association, former Dean of Law, University of Minnesota
*Royal A. Stone, former Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
*Charles Vogel, former Judge, United States Court of Appeals (Eighth Circuit)
*Benson Whitney, current United States Ambassador to Norway
*Michael A. Wolff, former Chief Justice of Missouri
*Lawrence R. Yetka, former Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court

References

External links

* [http://www.law.umn.edu University of Minnesota Law School mainpage]
* [http://www.tc.umn.edu/~tort University of Minnesota Law School Theatre of the Relatively Talentless]
* [http://www.tc.umn.edu/~mondales University of Minnesota Law School Fighting Mondales Hockey Team]
* [http://www.politicslaw.org Institute for Law and Politics at the University of Minnesota Law School]


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