tomhobbes wrote:I doubt it. Ducks do not attend law school.XxSpyKEx wrote:Are you really a duck?

tomhobbes wrote:I doubt it. Ducks do not attend law school.XxSpyKEx wrote:Are you really a duck?
Specifics about your house and 401K questions: http://www.law.harvard.edu/current/sfs/ ... ssets.htmlnicdmx wrote:I have been wondering about this quite a bit. I will have considerable income from this year that I will have to report. Will MY income be taken in to consideration by HLS or will it mainly be my assets (how much I have in the bank?) I am underwater slightly on my house and am considering putting a bunch of money towards that so as to get a lower interest rate/payment before moving out for school. Also, what kind of consideration do they give to 401k savings?mallard wrote:
Jayzon, financial aid has been good to me. I hear it would have been even better at other top schools. But my need-based aid more or less matched my average merit aid from Columbia and NYU (let's say between 1/3 and 1/2 tuition). I was unemployed for awhile last year and spent most of my savings, which turned out to have been a good idea. If you are going to a top school, especially HYS, don't save up "to pay for law school." If you have nothing, they pay for you.
I lived on-campus. It's more convenient and more expensive. I'm sort of bad at taking care of myself; if you don't have that difficulty it probably won't make as much sense for you. I ate in the Hark a fair amount. It was also good to have people living around me; I had missed that in my year off (as you can see from my post count).sayan wrote:An exceptional thread, Mallard; thanks for sharing your wisdom.
The topic of housing has been touched on lightly, but I would like to know your recommendation for off-campus living considering cost, distance and quality. Do you live off-campus? What reasons did you have for deciding where to live?
On another front, given the open endedness of the exams (at least from what I'm inferring), do you think it's essential to study in groups throughout the semester for the sake of covering more avenues of thought? You touched on group study briefly, but never said if it helped you perform better or not (in particular your pairing with another student to do outlines). Should I be looking into making friends with 2Ls or 3Ls to get their advice/outlines (I read of a TLSer that did this)? If so, how do you think it's best to approach them?
For any given week day, how much free time do you have from 8am to 11pm for relaxation, recreation etc.? Change much on the weekends? I suppose free time would change depending on the period of the semester, but let's assume an even workload throughout. Does your mind eventually begin to melt from constantly absorbing new information?
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It's alright. Some meals are better than others. There are other places near campus to eat. Lots of people eat there, especially lunch.tomhobbes wrote:How is the food at Harkness Commons? Is there a decent amount of variety? Quality? Do lots of students eat there?
It's often very crowded when everyone gets out of class for lunch. It's much less crowded for dinner, as all the off-campus students are gone. Dinner also generally has less of a selection than lunch. The best thing to get for lunch is far and away the flatbread, which is toasted with your choice of four toppings. I generally ordered sausage, sun dried tomatoes, onions and goat cheese.mallard wrote:It's alright. Some meals are better than others. There are other places near campus to eat. Lots of people eat there, especially lunch.tomhobbes wrote:How is the food at Harkness Commons? Is there a decent amount of variety? Quality? Do lots of students eat there?
I'm curious about this as well.ISquareJudd wrote:Is the goat cheese at Harvard different from the goat cheese at other law schools?
I thought that the Porcellian club got the milk straight from Satan's teat.jayzon wrote:Yes, at Harvard they get the milk directly from your grandmother.ISquareJudd wrote:Is the goat cheese at Harvard different from the goat cheese at other law schools?
I've met very few 2Ls/3Ls who are looking at firm jobs not through OCI. Usually here you say you're an OCS person or an OPIA person; it's an unfortunate divide and they're trying to bridge it, but like I said, that's pretty much how people get firm jobs. I did know one guy who was still interviewing in October, so I guess he lucked out at OCI this year. But I don't think that's because the firms weren't interviewing... Anyway, yes, secondary journal work seems well-respected, and yes, I think it's pretty well understood that getting onto LR on Harvard is quite a feat. I don't know this for sure, though, not having interviewed for jobs or anything.soullesswonder wrote:Mallard:
I feel like you touched on this a little earlier with your comments about journals, but do you feel that employers have a good understanding about how small the Law Review contingent is (esp. compared with schools-that-shall-not-be-named) and still respect secondary journal work? Also, have you met many students who are looking at a significant number of firms that don't regularly OCI at Harvard?
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He was pretty good at spotting fatty policy forks...sluggo wrote:So, how much did your "partner" carry you this semester?
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Hey zabagabe; trust you to make Yale look good. The endowment question is a great and a cutting one. "Benefits" like the ice skating rink, free coffee, etc. have been significantly scaled back. More importantly, public interest programs have taken a hit (something I'm personally unhappy about). In essence, LIPP has remained untouched, SPIF is being reduced to eight weeks, and the PSI (free third year with a five[?]-year commitment to public interest work) is being discontinued. As for Harvard's pressure, it's not simply notoriety, but poor decision-making and huge losses combined with Wasserstein's recent death that make the law school's current situation somewhat unique. So in all honesty it seems like more than mere fodder to me.zabagabe wrote:Hey Mal,
Thanks for your thoughts....really interesting stuff. I'm curious to know if the general endowment issues at Harvard have hit the law school in any measurable way? I'm sure other top law schools are facing similar pressure (I'm more intimately familiar with one out west that definitely is), but Harvard seems to get most of the attention for it, probably given its notoriety/lay prestige. Curious to know if this actually has any real effect on the vibe/experience, or mostly just makes for good Above The Law gossip fodder?
Also curious to know if there's much interaction with other professional school students (biz, med)? I know Stanford tends to have a fair amount of cross-school interaction, but wasn't sure if that's the same at Harvard. And congrats on finishing!
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I'm not sure where the notoriety stems from, but I mean, the university as a whole lost ten billion dollars, so I tend to think it's merited. (But I'm a bit of a grump, as this thread demonstrates.) I'm not really sure about the effect of Wasserstein's death but I've heard murmurs to the effect that some money thought to be going to the law school might be going elsewhere; I don't really know anything substantial, though.zabagabe wrote:I'm not out to make Yale look good...I think every school is facing significant cutbacks to their budgets. I've just been surprised that somehow every other top law school (apart from maybe Berkeley) has been better able to shield these from the public, whereas there seems to be a lot of coverage about Harvard, so I wasn't sure if this was just b/c it was Harvard, or if there was something more there.
How has Wasserstein's death affected things? I haven't heard anything about that.
As someone who has been following this for a bit, Harvard's losses were similar to peer schools on a % basis. Since Harvard has the biggest endowment, they obviously had the biggest dollar losses. The growth of the endowment and the large bonuses paid to some of the fund managers were very controversial in the early '00s so there are some people who are happy to see them taken down a notch. Given this and the large dollar amounts involved, it is not suprising that the losses are also receiving more coverage than those in the endowments of less known schools. The bigger they are the harder they fall (and the more people like to watch).mallard wrote: I'm not sure where the notoriety stems from, but I mean, the university as a whole lost ten billion dollars, so I tend to think it's merited.
Thanks for sharing this - I'd heard of it before but never read it straight through. It's interesting that you feel much of this is still relevant even as law schools have gotten "softer", with grade reforms, etc. I'm surprised that even a post-Kaganized HLS still feels this way, but I suppose this is the result of the entrenched nature of legal education as an institution generally, regardless of the school. I wonder if this is the experience students universally have at all law schools? I would imagine some where CLS took off more within the school (such as Berkeley) might be a little different, but maybe not in any significant way... It would be really interesting to poll 1Ls across schools and see if there's any significant difference, or if this really is a universal experience.mallard wrote:Though I don't necessarily agree with his politics or many of his conclusions, a lot of stuff in Duncan Kennedy's essay "Legal Education and the Reproduction of Hierarchy" is accurate, and it does a pretty good job of drawing out a lot of the common reactions and thoughts law students will have. Not all of it completely correlates with my experience (for example, my professors tended to feel that the result in the "hot" cases should have been decided a bit less technically). But go especially to page 602, where he's discussing The Modeling of Hierarchical Relationships, and the following section on The Student Response to Hierarchy (I feel like I've personally experienced all of the responses he outlines, so it seems well done to me).ntzsch wrote:elaborate on the persistent foibles?
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