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In this episode, UVA Law Professor G. Edward White takes listeners back to 1972 when he first arrived in Charlottesville to teach law. White situates his personal experiences as a former clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and as an early scholar in legal history within the broader transformation of American legal education in the mid-twentieth century. As a member of the faculty for over fifty years, White provides an eyewitness account of the Law School's development from a predominantly southern law school to a national one.
By Arthur J. Morris Law LibraryIn this episode, UVA Law Professor G. Edward White takes listeners back to 1972 when he first arrived in Charlottesville to teach law. White situates his personal experiences as a former clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and as an early scholar in legal history within the broader transformation of American legal education in the mid-twentieth century. As a member of the faculty for over fifty years, White provides an eyewitness account of the Law School's development from a predominantly southern law school to a national one.