(Archived document, may contain errors) 2/24/87 38 MAKING SENSE OF THE GROVE CITY DECISION (Updating Issue Bulletin No. 112, "Civil Rights Can Be A Deceptive Label," January 18, 1985.)
(Archived document, may contain errors) WHY THE FIRST AMENDMENT IS NOT INCOMPATIBLE WITH NATIONAL SECURITY INTERESTS: MAINTAINING A CONSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE by The Honorable Martin L. C. Feldman INTRODUCTION
By
Tyler M. Alabanza-Behard, a low-income student at Harvard Law School, will spend his summer in the private sector at a big law firm and litigation boutique.
“Looking at the debt burden I have, the things I want to achieve for my family, and my kids in the future, the private sector feels like the only option to achieve all of those things because the public sector jobs don’t pay very well,” Alabanza-Behard said.
Before entering law school, Alabanza-Behard worked as a high-school teacher through the Teach for America program. While still passionate about the public sector, Alabanza-Behard said he will likely pursue private law for the next decade or so out of financial necessity.
To some students at Harvard Law School, the Harvard Law Record is a paper coaster on a classroom desk. But to William âBillâ H. Barlow II, the publication represents âwhat the Harvard Law Review should be.â
âIt is actually read, it is actually discussed, and it actually changes conversation,â Barlow said, reflecting on his time at the Law School.
Harvard Law School is famed for its premier student-run journals, manifold in both scope and speciality. From the esteemed Harvard Law Review to the Harvard Human Rights Journal, these publications offer law students the opportunity to sharpen their editorial skills while strengthening their candidacy for prestigious post-grad careers.