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The Mountains
I visited Franklin Pierce and Vermont Law school on my very first road trip,
in 1989. I'm reluctant to say anything at all about the facilities, since
they almost certainly have renovated in some ways since then; however, I'm
sure the towns have changed in surprisingly few ways -- they probably have
changed very little since 1800.
Of course, both of these schools are a national draw because of their specialties, not because of their environment. Vermont's environmental program and Franklin Pierce's intellectual property program are both consistently ranked among the very top in the US News rankings. Vermont Law SchoolSouth Royalton, Vermont is really too small to call a town [as you can see here]; Wikipedia lists it as having 622 families. My recollections of Main Street include the bed and breakfast where I stayed, a combined gasoline-car repair-restaurant on the corner, a post office, a general store, and the church. There may have been more establishments on Main Street, but not double the number that I've listed. The scenery was everything that a quaint New England village is reported to be. The weeping willow tree reflected in the calm mirror of the White River belonged on a high-class jigsaw puzzle or postcard. The most troublesome thing for a student might be that Vermont Law school is in no way affiliated with the University of Vermont, and is not physically near it. A free-standing law school may lack the secondary sources (books on history, psychology, or sociology) that can be important to a research paper. The people were small-town friendly, and I wasn't there long enough to discover whether they were stereotypically New England standoffish. Franklin Pierce Law SchoolConcord, New Hampshire is a little larger and less green than South Royalton.
The staff at Franklin Pierce is uncommonly nice; in fact, they were decidedly
the brightest thing I saw in the town. ConnecticutConnecticut is in many ways the midpoint between New York and Boston. This is true geographically, of course, but it is also true in terms of demographics. Connecticut was founded by settlers who considered the Puritan attitudes of Boston and Salem far too restrictive, yet it never developed the amoral chaos that characterized New York 300 years ago and still does today. Almost exactly halfway between New York City and Boston, graduates of UConn and Quinnipiac participate in both job markets. The countryside is more fertile and meadow-like than either rocky New England or urban New York. I wish I could tell you something about Yale, but I've really never seen it. Well, maybe once, in 1975, but I wasn't paying attention to facilities back then. I could go to their web page or to Wiki and paste a picture of a building I've never seen, but that's not my style; I can only vouch for what I've seen myself. The University of Connecticut
Quinnipiac
We arrived at Quinnipiac too late to talk to anyone on the admissions staff,
but the many employees we ran into were helpful and friendly. The law school
is beautiful, with many of the little touches that led me to believe that
the institution was designed for people instead of for offices.
BostonBoston continues to make far less of an impression on me than it does on others, perhaps because the interesting, cool, and funky places are not collected into one area. Only those "in the know" can really appreciate the city, and I'm decidedly not one of those people. This may be seen as the "sour grapes" of a Philadelphian, but the sense that Bostonians rate themselves a bit higher than others rate them is common, as can be seen in the famous "Boston Toast" by Harvard alumnus John Collins Bossidy:
Harvard Law School
Harvard Law School is undeniably impressive, even majestic! Austin Hall is the building where The Paper Chase was filmed. Harvard is not officially in Boston; but Cambridge can hardly be called a separate town, primarily because Boston itself is so small that without its surrounding communities it would be fairly unimpressive. While the metro population is about four and a half million, Boston proper holds fewer than 750,000. Also, the MTA [the only public transit system to merit a song about it] passes seamlessly from Boston to Cambridge with not even a transfer to disturb your ride.
Harvard Yard is a quadrangle of buildings making up one of the earliest parts
of the college.
Harvard Square is the collection of trendy, funky, intellectual businesses that accumulate near many colleges. Perhaps I've become jaded in my travels, but I don't find this particular collection to be trendier or funkier than the ones near Penn, Berkeley, or UCLA. In fact, I find the off-campus shops near M.I.T. to be the coolest set of campus stores that I've seen. Fortunately, M.I.T. is only one or two stops up the red line (a subway) from Harvard, so you get two cool neighborhoods for the price of one. BC/BUThat's really unfair of me: so many people, myself included, have trouble remembering which campus is which that I really should not put them in the same paragraph. But I've come up with a clever mnemonic device that I'm hoping will solve the problem: Boston Univer-sity is in the city. I hope that helps. There are a number of other differences besides the suburban/city distinction.
In a greater sense, BC and BU typify the distinction between urban and suburban
schools.
BU is energized by the traffic (both automobile and pedestrian) on Commonwealth Avenue. Sidewalk vendors epitomize lunch "to go." The students walk with the more directed pace common to city life. BC's isolation not only from the city but also from the rest of campus creates an almost-mythical sense of isolated academia. The law school's emphasis on community service may tend to offset the isolation, but the very act of having to leave campus in order to find someone to serve emphasizes the metaphor of a safe suburban society.
Newton MA's City Hall captures the feel of the BC environment better than a picture of the law school itself.
Northeastern, New England, and SuffolkThe "other three" Boston law schools are generally not considered to be in the same league with Harvard, BC, or BU. Their primary focus has been on working-class people in the Boston area, offering more flexible educational options. Northeastern University is one of only two in the country to operate on co-op system; students spend a significant amount of time (as much as three semesters) in internships, guaranteeing a very high placement rate after graduation. New England Law School is a freestanding law school within blocks of Boston Common. It was originally called Portia Law School in honor of the woman lawyer in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, and was the only law school exclusively for women. Like many other downtown law schools, it has a large part-time evening program, accommodating people who work in the area. Like Vermont and Franklin Pierce, it is a free-standing law school, lacking the secondary sources associated with the University. Suffolk Law School, while also in the heart of Boston, is part of a larger University. It also has strong ties with the state government buildings only a block or two away. The two law schools I visited in 2005, Northeastern and New England, struck me as adequate but not superior; if you want to be in Boston, they're fine, but no one would say, "Have you seen...?" Both of them are doing an excellent job of serving the primarily local market too often ignored by the bigger-name law schools in the city. My client wandered over to Suffolk while I rested my tired feet in Boston Commons. She says their new facility is great, but I'm hesitant to write about something I didn't see.
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