Law Faculty Policy with Respect to Non-take-home-exams

The faculty on April 18, 2013, adopted the following policy with respect to non-take-home exams:

 First, that cell phones (and tablets) must be turned off and put away.

 Second, that headphones may not be used.

 However, it is within the discretion of individual faculty members to deviate from this policy.

Don’t Forget to Report Your Pro Bono and Community Service Hours from the Spring Semester!

All Certification of Supervisor Forms for pro bono and community service hours completed during your Spring semester must be submitted to Professor Joann Sahl or Alisa Benedict O’Brien no later than Monday, June 3rd. If you have any questions, please contact Professor Sahl at jsahl1@uakron.edu or Ms. Benedict O’Brien at ab139@uakron.edu. Thank you.

Best wishes on their retirement to Dean Aynes and Professors Carro, Koosed and Richert

The School of Law honored four faculty members, who will retire from Akron Law at the end of spring semester, this past Thursday, April 25.  The four have contributed immensely to the character of the law school, and their contributions were memorialized in personal tributes shared with the attendees of colleagues, alumni, community members and students.  As interim dean Elizabeth Reilly summed it up:  “Each has left an indelible mark on this law school.  They may be leaving our halls, but they will never leave our hearts.”

Professor Richard L. Aynes has been with the School of Law for 37 years. He earned Bachelor and Juris Doctor degrees from Miami University and Cleveland-Marshall College of Law before joining The University of Akron School of Law in 1976 as coordinator of the Appellate Review Office and a Lecturer. He was Associate Dean from 1984 – 1993 and has held the rank of Professor since 1986. He served as UA’s interim athletics director in 1993-94 and returned to Akron Law where he held the John F. Seiberling Chair of Constitutional Law for the balance of 1994. Professor Aynes was appointed Dean of Akron Law in 1995, a position he held through 2007. Beginning in spring 2008 he returned to the faculty as holder of the John F. Seiberling Chair of Law and Director of the Constitutional Law Center. For Aynes’ full bio, visithttp://www.uakron.edu/law/faculty/profile.dot?identity=687625 .

Professor J. Dean Carro joined the law school 35 years ago after he graduated from the School of Law in 1978. He is currently the Dean’s Club Professor of Law, Professor of Clinical Education, Director of the Appellate Review Office and Director of the Legal Clinic. He received his B.A., cum laude, from State University of New York at New Paltz. Professor Carro teaches Clinical Seminar: Criminal Law, Appellate Advocacy, Trial Advocacy, and Criminal Procedure. His areas of research include prisoner civil rights actions, post-conviction (state and federal), criminal and appellate (state and federal). He is admitted to practice in Ohio and before the U.S. Supreme Court; the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio; and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit. For Carro’s complete bio, visit http://www.uakron.edu/law/faculty/profile.dot?identity=687943 .

Professor Margery M. Koosed has been with the School of Law for 39 years. She is the Aileen McMurray Trusler Professor Emeritus at the School of Law. Her writing focuses on death penalty litigation issues. She teaches Criminal Law, Constitutional Criminal Procedure, and seminars in criminal process, capital punishment litigation and mistaken convictions. Professor Koosed received her B.S., cum laude, from Miami University and J.D. from Case Western Reserve University. A member of the Akron Law faculty since 1974, she served initially as a Lecturer in Law and Coordinator of the Appellate Review/Legal Clinical Program, and later as a Visiting Professor at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law. For Koosed’s complete bio, visit http://www.uakron.edu/law/faculty/profile.dot?identity=692083 .

Professor Paul Richert, who is also the law librarian, joined the law school 36 years ago in 1977. He received his A.B. and M.S. at the University of Illinois and J.D. at Tulane University. He focuses his research on legal research topics and currently teaches international human rights. His professional memberships include the American Association of Law Libraries, the American Bar Association and the Akron Bar Association. Professor Richert created and maintains the Law Scout Web site, which is a database that links to legal pathfinders at about 100 law schools. For Richert’s complete bio, visit http://www.uakron.edu/law/faculty/profile.dot?identity=700375 .

Photos of the Retirement Celebration may be viewed at http://www.uakron.edu/law/photos/slideshow.dot?albumId=5872375084455077041& .

Attention all July 2013 Bar Examinees: Join us to practice for the MPT & Essays for free!

Attention all July 2013 Bar Examinees:

Join us to practice for the MPT & Essays for free!

 

As an additional opportunity to prepare for your MPT and essays, we will be offering a practice MPT and practice essays here on campus on June 21, 2013 from 1:00pm-4:00pm. 

 

The workshop will begin with a simulated MPT.  A sample question will be assigned, and you will be given an opportunity to complete it.  A practice essay exam, consisting of three essays, will be held immediately following the MPT simulation.  We will grade your answers to both the MPT and essays so that you may see both your strengths and areas for improvement.

 

If you are unable to attend the workshop because you are working, please contact Ms. Palmer-Schmitz for assistance. 

 

Remember:  The essays and MPTs together equate two-thirds of your total bar exam score.  Don’t miss out on these crucial points!

 

Please RSVP to Donna K. Palmer, Esq. (Director, Academic Success Programs) at dpalmer1@uakron.edu.

Clip art used with permission of iclipart.com

Planning to Graduate this Fall? All Fall 2013 Degree Candidates must submit an application by July 1st

Monday, July 1, is the graduation application deadline for law students planning to graduate at the end of the 2013 fall semester. Late applicants will need to obtain the dean’s permission.

Students must apply for graduation through ‘My Akron’ (formerly ‘Zipline’). Step-by-step instructions for submitting a graduation application in ‘My Akron’ are available by clicking the Graduation Services link in the “Quick Links for Students” section of ‘My Akron’.

Please note that, per University policy, all obligations to The University of Akron must be reconciled prior to degree candidacy (i.e., commencement program notation, ceremony attendance and degree conferral).