Law School Evolution
In his opening remarks at the afternoon gathering with his classmates, David Goldberger talked in detail about the evolution of law school teaching as he experienced it in the the decades he spent teaching First Amendment law, Constitutional Law, [...]
Bernardine Dohrn
Bernardine Dohrn Editor's Note: Bernardine Dohrn's remarks were made on April 29, 2022, at the first of two dinners associated with the University of Chicago Law School's Class of 1967's 55th Reunion. Following a few bad puns on [...]
John Ashcroft
John Ashcroft Editor's Note: Among John Ashcroft's observations during his question and answer session was, "If you don't want to see blood, don't get into politics." With a long career in Missouri and national political life, solid conservative [...]
Bernardine Dohrn & John Ashcroft Look Back
Bernardine Dohrn Bernardine Speaks John Ashcroft John Speaks Class of 1967, 55th Reunion University of Chicago Law School Editor's Note: In April 2022, two dozen members of the Class of 1967 [...]
The Low Density University and Lessons from Britannica for the Digital Age
The Low Density University and Lessons from Britannica for the Digital Age Editor's Note: Following publication of my exchange in Inside Higher Ed with Joshua Kim, Dartmouth College's Director of Online Programs, on the challenges facing higher education today, [...]
MGB (1903-18): Deal, Tacks and Sisters
Editor's Note: With financial help from Richard Gwinn, Jr. and his sister, Mary Cornelia Gwinn, a house at 58 Sydney Avenue in Deal, New Jersey was purchased and run by their mother as a rooming house. This becomes my mother's summer home.
MGB (1901-02): The Early Years before Deal
Editor's Note: In this clip, Tony Bowe asks about my mother's childhood. When her mother, Agnes Roche Gwinn dies giving birth to her in 1901, I explain how my mother came to be largely raised by her father Richard Gwinn, Jr.'s mother, Elizabeth Agnes Burns Gwinn.
Richard Lawrence Gwinn, Jr. (1867-1932) (En Francais)
Mon grand-père, Richard Lawrence Gwinn, Jr., est né à Baltimore, Maryland en 1867. Il a fréquenté le Calvert College là-bas et a poursuivi une carrière dans la banque et la fonction publique. Il mourut à Baltimore en 1932 après avoir été victime d'un accident vasculaire cérébral.