The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law Digital Commons @ Georgia Law Other Law School Publications Archives 7-1-1974 The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law Repository Citation University of Georgia School of Law, "The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition" (1974). Other Law School Publications. 89. https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/lectures_pre_arch_archives_other/89 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Other Law School Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. Please share how you have benefited from this access For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition Summer 1974 Vol. 10 No.2 Published by the University of Georgia Law School Association This placement directory introduces the 1975 graduating We welcome your inquiries about our placement pro- class of the University of Georgia School of Law. We are proud gram, encourage you to post your employment needs with us, of all these graduates who are prepared to assume responsible and invite you to visit the University of Georgia campus and positions in the legal community. make use of our interview facilities at the Law School. The present senior class entered the Georgia Law School in the fall of 1972 with an average undergraduate grade point average of 3.14 and an average Law School Admission Test score of 614. The 207 third-year students were selected for law school admission from among 1,687 applicants. As you can see, the 1974 graduate was well qualified when he or she entered the J.D. degree program, and the completion of three years of comprehensive studies has Neill H. Alford, Jf. confirmed our confidence in each graduate's ability to succeed Dean in some field of the law. This comprehensive program of study includes a carefully planned and executed curriculum, instruc- tion under legal educators who are nationally-known for competence in their specialties and opportunities to partici- pate in clinical programs of prosecution and legal aid, legal Gwen L. Yawn writing for publication and trial preparation. Director of Placement The placement office serves as a clearinghouse where employment inquiries directed to the Law School may be distributed to student applicants. This office makes a careful effort to establish contact between prospective employers and students whose interests are compatible with the type of work and job location each opportunity affords. Employers may utilize placement services either by conducting interview sessions at the Law School or through recruitment by mail leading to interviews at the employer's office. The Law School is open for interview appointments Monday through Friday between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and Placement 5:00 p.m. and, if necessary, on Saturday between 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon. The calendar on page 4 outlines the academic Procedures / schedule for 1974-75. Unless otherwise requested, interviews ../ are scheduled in twenty-minute periods. and ~ .. Each student who desires to use placement services submits a brief resume which is deposited in office files. As an employer lists a job opening with the Law School, information Policies. on the position is posted with access to all students. The notice usually states the title of the position, whether it is a permanent job or summer clerkship, the location of the job, description of the duties, salary range and applicant specifications appropriate to the work. Interested candidates will sign listings in the Placement In compliance with University of Georgia policy, all Office which authorize their resumes to be sent to the placement services provided by the University are to be prospective employer. These resumes are assembled, photo- administered in a manner which provides equal opportunities copied and sent to the employer for review before an for the employment of individuals who are entitled to use such on-campus interview session, or for selection by an employer services. Therefore, placement office files and listings are not who plans to invite applicants to the firm or agency office. available to any organization which discriminates against any For those who visit the campus for an interview session, person because of race, creed, sex, religion, or national origin. conference rooms are provided in the law building. Appoint- The placement Office will not attempt to screen ment times are designated for each student and this schedule is applicants for a specific job request. The obligation of this available to the interviewer upon arrival. Parking permits and office is to provide a procedure whereby interested applicants maps of the campus are sent in each advance packet. For those may identify themselves to an employer. Students are en- who need overnight accommodations, a list of Athens motels couraged, through their resumes, to provide as much informa- is also available. tion about themselves as possible. It is the information If an employer is unable to come to Athens for personal provided by the student which should serve as guidelines for interviews, he may still request resumes to be sent from the judgment by the employer pursuant to an interview. Law School or seek direct application from the student. As a courtesy to the job applicant and as a means of Please direct inquiries to: Director of Placement, School maintaining current and accurate job listings, employers are of Law; University of Georgia; Athens, Georgia 30602; asked to notify the placement office when a position which it telephone: area code 404-542-2511. advertised has been filled. Employer Request for Place men t Services University of Georgia School of Law Address _ Name of personnel director/recruitment chairman _ Telephone _ (area code) (number) Job description _ Applicant specifications _ First Year _ Second year _ Third year _ Datepostlionbecomesavailable. ----------- For on-campus interviewers: a. Preferred interview dates First choice _ Second choice _ Third choice _ b. Beginning time, _ c. Interview length Thirty minutes _ Fifteen minutes ------- Twenty minutes _ d. Names of interviewers, _ For inquiry by mail: a. Resumes to be sent from Placement Office _ (Allow at least two weeks for processing request, posting of notice, sign-ups by students, resume duplication and return correspondence.) b. Direct response by individual student. _ Closing date for consideration, _ Other special instructions, _ 3 Academic Calendar Fall, 1974 September 18 Classes begin September 30 - November 25 Available for interview dates November 26 Classes end December 2 - December 6 Examinations Winter, 1975 January 6 Classes begin January 13 - March 13 Available for interview dates March 14 Classes end March 15 - March 20 Examinations Spring, 1975 March 26 Classes begin March 31 - June 2 Available for interview dates June 3 Classes end June 4 - June 9 Examinations June 13 Graduation History: Established in 1859 as the Joseph H. Lumpkin School of Law, the School is the second oldest unit of the University of Georgia's thirteen schools and colleges. Enrollment: 655 (1973-1974) Physical Plant: Hirsch Hall, located on the University's north campus, was constructed for the School of Law in 1932. A 2.75 million dollar addition to this building was completed in 1967. The new law complex provides seven times the space formerly available to the School. Classrooms and seminar halls, faculty offices, library, courtroom, student lounges, conference rooms and administrative offices are the facilities for a professional school which administers its own admissions, registration and placement services. Law Library: The Law Library shelves more than 210,000 volumes of legal research material. In terms of volume count, it is the 17th largest among the nation's 163 law libraries. Bar Examination Data: One hundred per cent of the 1972-73 Georgia graduates who took the Georgia Bar Examination were successful in qualifying to practice law in the state. During the 1972-73 academic year, 189 seniors completed requirements for the J.D. degree. Of that number, 180 graduates took the Georgia Bar Examination in either February or July 1973. The passing percentage for both examinations was 100. 4 Administrative Faculty NEILL H. ALFORD, Dean ALBERT M. PEARSON, Ill, Assistant Professor SAMUEL M. DAVIS, Assistant Dean B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1969 SEWELL M. BRUMBY, Law Librarian J.D., Vanderbilt University, 1972 FRANK G. POLSTER, JR., Registrar WALTER RAY PHILLIPS, Professor GWENDOLYN L. Y AWN, Assistant to Dean, Director of A.B., University of North Carolina, 1954 Placement LL.B., Emory University, 1957 JAMES W. CURTIS, Director, Institute of Continuing Legal LL.M., Emory University, 1962 Education MACK PLAYER, Associate Professor ROBERT C. KATES, Director, Office of Special Studies A.B., Drury College, 1963 ROBERT D. PECKHAM, Director, Legal Aid and Defender J.D., University of Missouri, 1965 Society LL.M., George Washington University, 1972 B. THOMAS COOK, JR., Director, Prosecutorial Clinic JOHN REES, JR., Professor B.A., Hobart College, 1954 LL.B., University of Virginia, 1957 Instructional Faculty DEAN RUSK, Samuel H. Sibley Professor of International Law NEILL H. ALFORD, JR., Joseph H. Lumpkin Professor of A.B., Davidson College, 1931 Law B.S., St. John's Oxford, 1933 B.A., The Citadel, 1940 M.A., St. John's Oxford, 1934 LL.B., University of Virginia, 1947 *CHARLES SAUNDERS, JR., Professor J.S.D., Yale University, 1966 B.S., University of Wisconsin, 1952 VAUGHN C. BALL, Thomas R. R. Cobb Professor of Law LL.B., University of Virginia, 1958 A.B., Washington University, 1947 PERRY SENTELL, JR., Professor LL.B., Washington University, 1937 A.B., University of Georgia, 1956 RALPH BEAIRD, University Professor LL.B., University of Georgia, 1958 B.S., University of Alabama, 1949 LL.M., Harvard, 1961 LL.B., University of Alabama, 1951 IRA B. SHEPARD, Assistant Professor LL.M., George Washington University, 1953 A.B., Harvard, 1958 EMILY C.
Recommended publications
  • (Abstracted by Courtesy of Joe P. Burns Funeral Home, Perry, FL and Mayo, FL) Edna Labar, 94, of Perry, Died Sunday, June 2, 2013 at Her Residence
    LABAR, Edna LaBar (Abstracted by courtesy of Joe P. Burns Funeral Home, Perry, FL and Mayo, FL) Edna LaBar, 94, of Perry, died Sunday, June 2, 2013 at her residence. Edna was born January 10, 1919 in Andover, NJ, to the late Joseph and Eva (Trauger) Riddle. Edna was preceded in death by her husband of 50+ years Robert LaBar and one son Robert LaBar Jr. Edna was of the Presbyterian Faith and in her spare time she enjoyed reading and gardening. She is survived by 3 daughters: Roberta LaBar Sanders of Perry; Beverley Willard of Michigan; and Sharon Harty of Perry; 1 sister: Ilamay Vendola of New Jersey; 11 grandchildren; several great and great-great grandchildren. All arrangements are under the care of Joe P. Burns Funeral Home. LABARBERA, Gerald S. LaBarbera (Abstracted from the February 11, 2015 Waycross, GA Journal Herald Newspaper) Gerald Stephen LaBarbera, age 65, passed away Saturday (Feb. 7, 2015) in Jacksonville, FL. He was an avid golfer and well known in the Jacksonville golf community. He loved boating and spent a large amount of time in his favorite vacation spot, Key West, FL. He is survived by 1 daughter, Kristen, and 2 sons, Kurt and Kip; his wife, Tonya, and her 2 daughters, Tamara and Jacqueline; 1 brother, Marty, and his family, wife, Lela, and children, Adam, Jason, Reece, and Lindsay. The funeral will be Saturday at St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church, 6801 Merrill Road, Jacksonville, FL. Entombment will be at Oaklawn Cemetery, Jacksonville. Arrangements are under the direction of Hardage-Giddens Funeral Home, 1701 Beach Blvd., Jacksonville Beach, FL.
    [Show full text]
  • HIGHER EDUCATION Enlightening Problems: the Failure to Share Academic Expectations and Civic Responsibilities Hurts Students, Schools, and Society
    Fall 2009 2009 HIGHER EDUCATION Enlightening Problems: The failure to share academic expectations and civic responsibilities hurts students, schools, and society. Business Fluctuations: The recession cuts into college sports and alters campus enrollment. Collision Courses: An earthquake shakes up a university. Helicopter parents shake things up too. Apex Award Winner Chapter Update: for Publication Excellence Distinguished Member Shirley C. Sorensen, 85, retires as executive secretary of the for Magazine & Journal University of Maryland chapter after more Writing for the than two decades of service. Spring 2009 Edition About Us Phi Kappa Phi Forum mission statement Phi Kappa Phi Forum, a multidisciplinary quarterly that enlightens, challenges and entertains its diverse readers, The fi rst organizational meeting of what came serves as a general-interest Archival photo. Archival publication as well as a platform for to be known as The Honor Society The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. of Phi Kappa Phi took place in Coburn Hall (shown at left) at the University of Maine in Phi Kappa K Phi Forum F Orono, Maine, in 1897. The Phi Kappa Phi name (Issn 1538-5914) is published quarterly by was adopted on June 12, 1900. Although the The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, national headquarters have been located in 7576 Goodwood Blvd., Baton Rouge, La. 70806. Printed at R.R. Donnelley, 1160 N. Main, Baton Rouge, La., since 1978, the vast majority Pontiac, Ill. 61764. of the Society’s historical documents are still kept at the founding institution. ©The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, 2009. All rights reserved. Nonmember subscriptions $30 per year, domestic; $45 outside the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SHIELD SPRING 2020 Archive
    THEOF PHI SHIELD KAPPA PSI SPRING 2020 VOLUME 141 • ISSUE 1 I AM PHI PSI Calling all Phi Psi graphic designers! Submissions for the GAC T-shirt contest are now being accepted. Open to: All Phi Psis (alumni too!) Deadline for submission: Thursday, April 24 Voting: Begins Friday, May 1 Visit phikappapsi.com/tshirt for official rules and regulations YOUR S MGAC I I L N 2020 O N E A P DESIGN HERE! IN THIS ISSUE 4 Letter from our President 8 Facing Uncertainty Together: Phi Kappa Psi responds to COVID-19 10 Grand Arch Council heads to Minneapolis 14 Order of the S.C. Centenary Observance 15 I am Phi Psi 10 Ice Patrol: My Hunt for Icebergs One Man’s Move to Belong OVERCOME Disabilities Developing Opportunities 30 Remembering the ‘Other’ Widow Letterman 33 Member Milestones 18 20 34 Chapter Eternal 26 SPRING 2020 THE SHIELD OF PHI KAPPA PSI 3 A LETTER FROM OUR PRESIDENT IHonorable AM brothers PHI from all walks PSI! of life necessary in quest for noble perfection We live in the age of identity. DNA companies run endless our members do not. At the GAC, we will celebrate the 100th commercials trying to sell us the genetic keys to reveal our Anniversary of the founding of the Order of the S.C. identities. People seem to be more and more focused on their identities and how they are labelled, and The Order of the S.C., due solely to its secrecy, has received how they want to be labelled by others. unwarranted criticism from some circles.
    [Show full text]
  • Carter Family Papers: a Guide to Its Records at the Jimmy Carter Library
    441 Freedom Parkway NE Atlanta, GA 30307 http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov Carter Family Papers: A Guide to Its Records at the Jimmy Carter Library Collection Summary Creator: Carter, Jimmy, 1924- Title: Carter Family Papers Dates: 1940-1976 Quantity: 87 linear feet (70 linear feet, 3 linear inches open for research), 161 containers Identification: Accession Number: 80-1 National Archives Identifier: 592907 Scope and Content: The records in this collection document Jimmy Carter’s early political career in the Georgia State Senate, his term as Governor from1970-1974; and his membership on the West Georgia Planning Commission. In addition, the collection contains material from the 1970 gubernatorial campaign, gubernatorial trips to South America and Europe, the 1976 presidential campaign, Rosalynn Carter’s gubernatorial papers, and Carter’s pre- presidential speech files. The files consist of correspondence, form letters, memoranda, studies, recommendations, position papers, notes, speeches, drafts, press releases, news clippings, itineraries, newsletters, pamphlets, polling data, photographs, schedules, vote statistics, advertisement flyers, appointment books, and publications. Creator Information: Carter, Jimmy and Rosalynn The Carter Family Papers were transferred to the library by President and Mrs. Carter. These documents and memorabilia were collected over a twenty-five year period. Biographical information on key office personnel is located at the end of the finding aid. Restrictions: Restrictions on Access: These papers contain documents restricted in accordance with applicable executive order(s), which governs National Security policies, applicable statutes/agency restrictions, and material which has been closed in accordance with the donor’s deed of gift. Terms Governing Use and Reproduction: Copyright interest in these papers has been donated to the United States Government.
    [Show full text]
  • The Perils of Guardian Ad Litem Appointments Move on up in the World
    April 2020 Volume 25, Number 5 From the President: GEORGIA BAR In the Face of Difficulty, Hope Can Be Found Annual Bar Media & Judiciary Conference JOURNAL Exceeds Expectations Spring Into Action: October is Just Around the Corner Mindfulness Meditation to Combat Stress and Promote Civility in the Law THE LEGAL The Perils of Guardian ad Litem Appointments Move on up in the world. Join a State Bar Section. The State Bar of Georgia’s 52 sections provide newsletters, programs and the chance to exchange ideas with other practitioners. Section dues are very affordable, from $10-35. Join one (or more) today by visiting www.gabar.org > Our Programs > Sections. Questions? Contact Sections Director Mary Jo Sullivan at [email protected]. ADMINISTERED BY: DON’T ROLL THE DICE ... WHEN IT COMES TO A DISABILITY You can’t count on avoiding a disability, but you can help preserve your family’s way of life with Long-Term Disability Insurance. It is no secret that your ability to work is a key element to your financial well-being. In the unforeseen event that you become disabled, you’d want to have solid disability income protection. That’s why as a member of the State Bar of Georgia, you have access to a group plan with specially negotiated rates that can help meet your needs. UP TO $10,000 OWN SPECIAL OF MONTHLY OCCUPATION GROUP RATES DISABILITY COVERAGE FOR MEMBERS COVERAGE1 Get an instant online quote for Long-Term Disability Insurance at www.memberbenefits.com/gabar or call 1-800-282-8626 Products sold and serviced by the State Bar of Georgia’s recommended broker, Member Benefits.
    [Show full text]
  • The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory University of Georgia School of Law
    Digital Commons @ Georgia Law Other Law School Publications Archives 7-1-1988 The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory University of Georgia School of Law Repository Citation University of Georgia School of Law, "The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory" (1988). Other Law School Publications. 98. https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/lectures_pre_arch_archives_other/98 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Other Law School Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. Please share how you have benefited from this access For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Georgia School of Law Classes of 1989 & 1990 The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory Summer 1988 Letter from the Dean 2 Law School Description and Academic Calendar 3 Placement Policies and Services 4 Faculty 7 Clinical Education Programs 9 Student Publications and Student Organizations 10 Employment Preference Index for the Class of 1989 13 Employment Preference Index for the Class of 1990 14 Directory of Third Year Students (Class of 1989) 15 Directory of Third Year Students Not Pictured 51 Directory of Second Year Students (Class of 1990) 56 Directory of Second Year Students Not Pictured 91 Employer Data Sheet (Job Posting Request Form) 95 Student Portrait Photography: Chuck Moore, Athens, Georgia Cover art © Warren L. Kirbo I I I The high quality of our students is one of the points of pride of The University of Georgia School of Law. The men and women who enter this school as first year students come to us with impressive academic credentials and a demonstrated capacity to excel.
    [Show full text]
  • Terry L. Coleman Museum and Archives Finding
    Terry L. Coleman Papers Terry Coleman Museum and Archives Middle Georgia State University Roberts Memorial Library 1100 Second Street, S.E., Cochran, Georgia Phone: 478-934-3179 Arranged and described by Judy Ellis, MLIS TABLE OF CONTENTS Descriptive Summary Administrative Information Access/Restrictions Copyright Scope and Content Note Organization and Arrangement Series Description Finding Aids (Box and Folder Numbers) Biographical Note ____________________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY Title of Collection: Terry L. Coleman Papers Accession Number: TC-2007-01 Manuscript Number: 01 Dates: 1973-2006 Physical description: 67.5 linear feet of manuscript material; 103 linear feet of non- manuscript material. Creator/Provenance: In 2006, Terry Coleman donated legislative office files and memorabilia collected from his thirty-four years in the state legislature to Roberts Memorial Library at Middle Georgia College in Cochran, GA. After Coleman’s retirement from the State 1 Legislature in 2006, the collection was first stored at the state capitol in Atlanta, GA, then moved to storage at Roberts Library until The Terry L. Coleman Museum and Archives opened on December 7th, 2007. Repository: Terry Coleman Museum and Archives, Roberts Memorial Library, Middle Georgia State University, Cochran, Georgia Abstract: The Terry Coleman Papers is a collection of manuscripts, photographs, audio-visual material and memorabilia spanning the thirty-four years Representative Coleman represented Dodge, Bleckley, Laurens and parts of Ben Hill, Pulaski and Wilcox Counties in the Georgia House of Representatives. Coleman served in the House from 1973 to 2006. The collection also contains a small amount of personal correspondence and business papers. ___________________________________________________________________________ ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Access: Few Restrictions. Roberts Memorial Library/Terry Coleman Archives will follow the guidelines set forth in the Georgia Open Records Act.
    [Show full text]
  • Trojan Arena Without Physical American Flag
    What’s Inside: Student decides to Troy football attempts continue education in to shock Ole Miss on the foreign country after road Saturday. studying abroad. Sports, pg. 7 Features, pg. 3 Troy University’s Official Student Newspaper ROPOLITAN Vol. 87, Issue 14 www.TropNews.com November 14, 2013 WhiteCaleb Lolley takes the crown Special to the Tropolitan Brandi White, a sophomore elemen- tary education major from Dothan, was crowned queen at the 43rd annual Miss Troy University Pageant. The pageant was held in Claudia Crosby Theater on Saturday, Nov. 2. White bested 12 fellow Trojan women in private interviews, onstage questions, talent, swimwear and evening gown categories to clench the coveted title of Miss Troy University. White’s platform centered on “Changing Lives through the Arts.” She is a leadership scholar as well as a dance minor and has had lead- ing roles with the Southeast Alabama Dance Company. In addition, White is the founder and teacher of “CLARA,” a dance camp for underprivileged children in Dothan. Carlie Spencer, a freshman mathemat- ics and broadcast journalism major from Montgomery and a contestant in this year’s Miss Troy pageant, said, “I think Miss Troy University offers young wom- en on campus not just scholarship op- portunities, but also valuable interview and public speaking skills. It’s also a chance to represent this great university and show the rest of the state the quality students and individuals of Troy Univer- sity.” The position of Miss Troy University is similar to holding a public office in many aspects. Miss Troy is the represen- tative of her constituents, she is to put the interests of others before her own, and she is always being critiqued.
    [Show full text]
  • The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law
    Digital Commons @ Georgia Law Other Law School Publications Archives 7-1-1980 The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law Repository Citation University of Georgia School of Law, "The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition" (1980). Other Law School Publications. 92. https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/lectures_pre_arch_archives_other/92 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Other Law School Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. Please share how you have benefited from this access For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition Summer, 1980 Vol. 16, NO.2 Letter From the Dean 2 Placement Policies and Procedures 3 Faculty 4 Campus and the Law School 6 Academic Calendar and Description 7 Clinical Education Programs 8 Student Organizations 9 Employment Preference Index 10 Directory of Graduates 12 With great pleasure and pride we introduce in this directory the 1981 graduating class of the University of Georgia School of Law. This senior class, 200 students selected from 1,304 applicants, entered the Georgia Law School in the fall of 1978 with a mean undergraduate grade point average of 3.46 and an average Law School Admission Test score of646. The selectivity of our admissions standards and the entering qualifications of our students combine to assure competence in these students, who then participate in a rigorous course of study. This course of study, a comprehensive program in legal education, includes a carefully planned curriculum, taught by legal educators whose national and international reputations rest on their instruction, scholarship and service.
    [Show full text]
  • The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law
    Digital Commons @ Georgia Law Other Law School Publications Archives 7-1-1976 The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition University of Georgia School of Law Repository Citation University of Georgia School of Law, "The Georgia Advocate Placement Edition" (1976). Other Law School Publications. 86. https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/lectures_pre_arch_archives_other/86 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Other Law School Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. Please share how you have benefited from this access For more information, please contact [email protected]. Placement Procedures and Policies The Placement Office serves as an clearinghouse where employment inquiries directed to the Law School may be distributed to student applicants. This office makes a careful effort to establish contact between employers and students whose interests are com- patible with the type of work and job location each oppor- tunity affords. Employers may utilize placement services either by con- ducting interview sessions at the Law School or through re- cruitment by mail leading to interviews at the employer's office. The Law School is open for interview appointments Monday through Friday between the hours of 9: 00 a.m. and 5 :00 p.m. The calendar on page 5 outlines the aca- demic schedule for 1976-77. Unless otherwise requested, interviews are scheduled in twenty-minute periods. When an employer lists a job opening with the Law School, information on the position is posted with access to all students. The notice usually states the title of the position, whether it is a permanent job or a summer clerk- ship, the location of the job, description of the duties, salary range and applicant specifications appropriate to the work.
    [Show full text]
  • Phi Kappa Phi Records, 1897-[Ongoing]
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Finding Aids Special Collections 2015 Phi Kappa Phi Records, 1897-[ongoing] Special Collections, Raymond H. Fogler Library, University of Maine Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/findingaids Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Special Collections, Raymond H. Fogler Library, University of Maine, "Phi Kappa Phi Records, 1897-[ongoing]" (2015). Finding Aids. Number 86. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/findingaids/86 This Finding Aid is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Collections at DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Finding Aids by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact Special Collections, Fogler Library, 207-581-1686 or [email protected]. Phi Kappa Phi Records This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on February 04, 2020. Finding aid written in English. Describing Archives: A Content Standard Raymond H. Fogler Library Special Collections 5729 Raymond H. Fogler Library University of Maine Orono, ME 04469-5729 URL: http://www.library.umaine.edu/speccoll Phi Kappa Phi Records Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 4 Historical Note ............................................................................................................................................... 4 Scope and
    [Show full text]
  • Recovery Momentous Deaths: the Passing of Sitting U.S
    Summer 2010 Recovery Momentous Deaths: The passing of sitting U.S. presidents impacted government policy while wartime casualties transformed early American military medicine. Creative Solutions: Visual arts serve post-Katrina New Orleans and American movies confront drugs and alcohol. Recession Proofs: Unemployment rates remain troubling and marketing practices continue to be reassessed. Society Developments: Chapter delegates, register now for the 2010 Phi Kappa Phi Convention, Traditions & Transitions: Responding to a World of Change, Aug. 5-7, in Kansas City, Mo. About Us Phi Kappa Phi Forum mission statement Phi Kappa Phi Forum, a multidisciplinary quarterly that enlightens, challenges Phi Kappa Phi Forum and Its and entertains its diverse readers, serves as a general-interest publication as well as a platform for The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. Relationship with the Society Phi Kappa Phi Forum (Issn 1538-5914) is published quarterly by The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, hi Kappa Phi Forum is the multidisciplinary 7576 Goodwood Blvd., Baton Rouge, La. 70806. quarterly magazine of The Honor Society of Printed at R.R. Donnelley, Phi Kappa Phi. Each issue of the award- 1160 N. Main, Pontiac, Ill. 61764. P winning journal reaches more than 100,000 active ©The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, members as well as government officials, scholars, 2010. All rights reserved. Nonmember educators, university administrators, public and KappaPhi archives Phi subscriptions $30 per year, domestic; private libraries, leaders of charitable and learned $45 outside the U.S. Single copies $10 each; $3.25 each for active, dues- organizations, corporate executives and many paying members.
    [Show full text]