The Docket
October 30 - November 5
Docket Information
The Docket is the Law School's official means of
communicating important administrative announcements
and many Law School events to the student body. The
Docket is published weekly [bi-weekly June-August]
only in electronic form and the complete contents
are contained in this site. Students are responsible
for all information in each issue. In addition,
please check both your e-mail accounts and pendaflex
mail folders daily for important faculty and
administrative communications disseminated after the
week's Docket has been published.
Unless you request otherwise, announcements will
appear in one issue only.
Notices for the
calendar (not the Docket) should be
directed to
lawcalendarsubmissions@umich.edu. Docket Web-based Submission Form
The Docket accepts announcements on a Web based
submission form. The article submission form is
available at
http://cgi2.www.law.umich.edu/_Docketposting/DocketSubmissionForm.asp.
Our deadline remains 1 p.m. Wednesday for
publication the following Monday (Docket
Schedule)
Deadlines
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Exams & Registration
Winter 2007 Early Registration And Drop/Add Calendar
Early Registration Period uses the Law School’s own Priority Registration System (PRS) to
temporarily reserve law classes:
Round One for selecting seminars, practice/simulation courses, and clinics:
Begins Monday, October 30 at 8:00
a.m. Ends Friday, November 3 at 5:00 p.m.
Round One results e-mailed to students on Friday, November 10.
Round Two for selecting upper-class courses. Students can select open seminars, practice/simulation courses, and clinics and/or add their name to the bottom of a waitlist for closed seminars, practice/simulation courses, and clinics:
Begins Monday, November 13 at 8:00
a.m. Ends Friday, November 17 at 5:00 p.m.
Round Two results e-mailed to students on Friday, December 1.
Students must have financial holds removed by: Monday, November 20
If you have a financial hold (a negative service indicator) on your student record when the PRS data is loaded into M-Pathways, your temporarily reserved law classes will not load, your class schedule will bounce out, and you will not be “officially” enrolled at the Law School or University!
After your financial obligation is paid and the hold removed, you will have to create a class schedule via Wolverine Access with whatever open courses are available at the time. Contacting the professor to obtain a seat in a closed law class is not an option!
Drop/Add Period uses the University’s Wolverine Access System:
Winter 2007 Drop/Add begins Friday, December 22 at 8:00
a.m. (Students can add their name to the bottom of waitlists for seminars, practice/simulation courses, and clinics until
January 3, 2007. Starting January 4, students will have to e-mail Amy Bishop (albishop@umich.edu) to have their name added to the bottom of a waitlist.)
Waitlist Drop/Add begins Wednesday, January 10, at 8:00
a.m. (Permission codes will be entered each morning for seminars, practice/simulation courses, and clinics that meet that afternoon. Prof Pick permission codes will be entered as received.)
ALL
Drop/Add activity ends Thursday, January 18 at 5:00
p.m.
As always, we will be available for questions during business hours in 300 HH, or you can e-mail the Office of the Registrar staff (lawrecords@umich.edu).
Limited Grade Option (Elective
Pass/Fail) Law students make their
limited grade option (pass/fail) elections for law
courses ONLINE at the Law School Registrar's Office
Web site. Do NOT use Wolverine Access to elect
pass/fail! Wolverine Access does NOT correctly
reflect pass/fail elections for law students. Please
go to:
Law School Registrar's Office Web site
http://www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/registration
Click on "Pass/Fail" then "Pass/Fail Login"
You will be presented with a login page where you
will use your uniqname and password [log in]
Click on "Pass/Fail" On the left side you will
see the Pass/Fail column where you will click on the
Graded or limited grade option (Pass/Fail) link to
change the election for that class. The link will
say "past deadline" if it is after the listed
pass/fail deadline.
***You can change your limited grade option
(pass/fail) election online anytime until the
established deadline passes.***
A student may exercise the limited grade option
for up to fifteen (15) credits of course work in
upper-class courses and seminars. You may not
exercise the limited grade option more than two
times during your final semester.
If you have questions about pass/fail
limitations for DEGREE HONORS (you may not have more
than 20 credits of combined ELECTIVE and MANDATORY
pass/fail credits to qualify for degree honors),
please see the online Academic Regulations located
on the Law School Registrar's Office Web site.
http://www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/registration
or the Law School Registrar, Jack Atkinson (300 HH).
Attention First-Year Students: You are
required to take ALL of your courses, including your
first-year elective course, on a graded basis.
Therefore, you may NOT elect the limited grade
option (pass/fail) in your first-year elective
course. If you do, you will receive no higher than a
"C" in the course.
Summer Starters in their THIRD term may elect
pass/fail in upper-class courses.
Transfer Students: You may elect a first-year
course on a limited grade option (pass/fail) basis.
You MUST file a Limited Grade Option Form in the Law
School Registrar's Office, 300 HH, BEFORE the final
exam becomes generally available.
LL.M Students: You are required to take ALL
of your courses on a graded basis. Therefore, you
may NOT elect the limited grade option.
Accelerated/Postponed Pass/Fail Election
Deadlines:
For courses with an EXAM, the pass/fail deadline is
normally just before the start of an in-class exam
or the first day when a take-home exam becomes
generally available. Courses with deadlines EARLIER
or LATER than this (and seminars with early
deadlines are on the list of "Fall 2006 Accelerated
or Postponed Limited Grade Option (Pass/Fail)
Deadlines," which is posted at the front desk in the
Law School Registrar's Office, 300 HH, and on the
first-floor bulletin board across from the elevator.
Research Course: Unless an accelerated
pass/fail deadline has been established, a student
can elect to take a research course on a limited
grade option (pass/fail) basis up to the time you
turn-in the paper on the appointed due date. A
student who elects the limited grade option
(pass/fail) basis AFTER December 21, 2006 at 5:00
p.m., MUST file a Limited Grade Option (Pass/Fail)
Form in the Law School Registrar's Office, 300 HH,
because the online system will not be available.
Seminar/Course (No Exam / Paper
Option): Unless an accelerated pass/fail deadline
has been established, you can elect to take a
seminar/course in which you are writing a paper
instead of taking an exam on a limited grade option
(pass/fail) basis up to the time you turn-in your
paper on the appointed due date. A student who
elects the limited grade option (pass/fail) basis
AFTER December 21, 2006 at 5:00 p.m., MUST file a
Limited Grade Option (Pass/Fail) Form in the Law
School Registrar's Office, 300 HH, because the
online system will not be available.
Early Ending Seminars/Courses (No
Exam): If the seminar/course (no exam) ENDS EARLY
and no deadline/time has been established, you can
choose pass/fail online until the last day of class
@ 5:00 PM. After that date/time, you will have to
file a Limited Grade Option (Pass/Fail) Form in the
Law School Registrar's Office, 300 HH, PRIOR to
turning-in your paper or project on the appointed
due date.
Non-Law Course: A student MUST have
course approval (course approval requests are placed
ONLINE using the External Enrollment link on the Law
School Registrar's Office Web site). Those who
receive a grade of at least a "B-" and want the "S"
vs. the letter grade to show on the transcript MUST
file a Limited Grade Option (Pass/Fail) Form in the
Law School Registrar's Office, 300 HH, by the
beginning of the exam period of the department,
school or college offering the course. The online
limited grade option (pass/fail) is NOT available
for non-law courses.
Questions about electing pass/fail can
be directed to Debby Hartranft, 300 HH,
dmhart@umich.edu.
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Workshops/Symposiums/Speakers
Honorable John H. Logie
'68 Talk On Takings
Time: Monday, October 30, 5:00 - 6:30 p.m. Location: 150 HH Event Contact: Jackie Julien,
jmjulien@umich.edu, 734.763.6170
The Honorable John H. Logie
'68 is the longest serving mayor in the history of Grand Rapids (1991 2003) and the Dean of West Michigan's condemnation lawyers. He will discuss takings from the unique perspective of a litigator who has been in the trenches for several decades. Please do not miss this special opportunity to hear
Mr. Logie's insights into condemnation and inverse condemnation cases.
Fall 2006 International Law Workshop
Hot Topics In International Law
The International Law Workshop introduces today’s most debated issues in international and comparative law. The Workshop is intended for non-specialists; you are encouraged to attend any or all of the sessions. Speakers will talk for 25 minutes, followed by discussion and questions. The Workshop is coordinated by Professors Daniel Halberstam, Rob Howse, Michael Barr, Steve Ratner, and Assistant Dean Virginia Gordan. The Workshop meets on Mondays from 4:00 to 5:15 p.m. in
116 HH, unless otherwise noted. The following are the next two Workshops for the fall 2006 term. Please refer to the following web site to see the complete fall term schedule.
http://www.law.umich.edu/CentersAndPrograms/cicl/workshop-series.htm
October 30 Robin Walker-Lee Vice President for Public Policy and General Counsel for Latin America, Africa & the Middle East, General Motors Corporation, Detroit, Michigan ”Five Things Foreign Lawyers Really Want to Know about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (and You Should Too)”
"Native America, Discovered And Conquered: Thomas Jefferson, Lewis & Clark, And Manifest Destiny."
Time: Monday, November 6, 12:15 - 1:15 p.m. Location: 218 HH Event Contact: Erin Dougherty, edough@umich.edu, 734.476.4326
On Monday, November 6, 2006 the Native American Law Students Association will host Professor Robert J. Miller of Lewis & Clark Law School. Professor Miller will discuss his new book at a talk for law students at 12:15 p.m. 218 HH. Lunch will be provided.
Also, for those who are unable to make the lunch-time talk, Miller will hold another talk that evening in room 120 HH. This talk is free and open to the public.
In his new book, Miller analyzes the Doctrine of Discovery and shows how Thomas Jefferson and the Lewis & Clark expedition used that international legal doctrine to create Manifest Destiny the idea that the United States would sweep across the North American continent.
This book grew out of Miller’s three year involvement with the Lewis & Clark anniversary as the representative of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe and an advisor to the National Council of the Lewis & Clark Bicentennial.
Further information can be found at:
http://law.lclark.edu/faculty/rmiller/
Citizens At Risk: Conference On Refugees And Diasporas
Monday, November 6, at 5 pm, with the
première of Koryo Saram The Unreliable People, (a film by Y. David Chung and Matt Dibble; Executive Producer, Meredith Jung-En Woo; 57 minutes). This documentary film, which follows the story of 180,000 Koreans and their descendants, whom Stalin deported in 1937 from the Russian Far East to Kazakhstan, is opening simultaneously at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor and at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. After the screening, the David Chung and Meredith Woo will talk about the film.
The conference will continue on Tuesday, November 7, with three panels at Palmer Commons, Floor 3, Forum Hall. In the first panel (9:00 - 11:30 a.m.), The Unreliable People: The Korean Diaspora in the Former Soviet Union, Steven Lee of Stanford University will talk about Viktor Tsoi, the phenomenally popular Kazakh-Korean rock star; German Kim of the Kazakh National University and Institute for the Humanities Andrew Mellon Fellow, will discuss Diasporic communities in Kazakhstan; writer Alexandr Kan will offer a literary perspective; U-M historian Ronald G. Suny will provide an historical overview of how the Soviets dealt with non-Russians; and Balázs Szalontai of the Central European University in Budapest will give a comparative analysis of the deported Koreans. In the second panel (1:00 - 3:30 p.m.), Diaspora and Its Discontents: The Place of Race and Gender in Debates on Immigration in Europe, Helle Rytkønen, visiting scholar (from Denmark) at Stanford University, will talk about the Mohammed cartoons published earlier this year in a Danish newspaper. Miriam Ticktin (U-M Women’s Studies and Anthropology) will talk about sex, slavery and suffering in the context of claims to a post-colonial French citizenship; Damani Partridge (U-M Anthropology and Center for Afroamerican and African Studies) will reflect on “racializing” Islam in the context of Turkish women in German schools; and Nacira Guénif-Souilamas (University of Paris 13), will talk about ways in which sexism and racism have been used as tools of containment and control. In the final panel of the day (4:00 - 5:30 p.m.), Trafficking in Persons, Richard Danziger (International Organization for Migration, Geneva) will talk about the “dark side” of immigration, and Neferti Tadiar (UC-Santa Cruz) will comment on the global course of Filipino nationalism. A related installation of works and sound by Sudanese artist Elshafei Dafalla Mohamed will be
on display at the Institute for the Humanities from
November 6-10, 2006. The closing reception for the
conference will be held on November 7, 6:30 - 7:30
p.m., at the Institute for the Humanities. This free,
public conference is sponsored by the University of
Michigan Institute for the Humanities, the Korean
Studies Program, and the Center for International
and Comparative Studies. Koryo Saram received
generous support from a variety of sponsors. Please
go to the following web site to view a complete list
of sponsors, and a full schedule:
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/humin/events/conferences/routes/
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Events/Activities/Meetings
Come Chat With Christine Gregory And David Baum
Event Contact: Marilyn Genoa, marilyng@umich.edu, 734.764.0516
David Baum and Christine Gregory of the Office of Student Affairs, have set up times to meet with all first-year students in their Legal Practice Program groups. Please come and ask questions about classes, the Student Affairs Offices, or any other aspect of the Law School in an informal setting. Food and beverages will be provided. These meetings will take place at Dominick's (located on Monroe Street across from the underground library).
The remaining section meeting is:
Section G: October 30 12:15 p.m. (lunch)
OCS/OPS 1L Orientation
Time: Wednesday, November 1, 12:20 - 1:15 p.m. Location: 100 HH Event Contact: Tia Bradley, tiab@umich.edu, 734.647.3256
Join the Office of Career Services and the Office of Public Service for an introduction to their staff and overview of their services. Open to all 1L students.
Public Service 101
Time: Thursday, November 2, 12:20 - 1:15 p.m. Location: 218 HH Event Contact: Tia Bradley, tiab@umich.edu, 734.647.3256
1Ls interested in working in public interest or government should attend this program. Resources, funding, and networking will be discussed. Pizza and soft drinks will be served.
Clerking For A U.S. Magistate Judge: Joanne Werdel, '05
Time: Friday, November 3, 12:15 - 1:15 p.m. Location: 236 HH Event Contact: Robin A. Kaplan, rakaplan@umich.edu, 734.764.0546
Joanne Werdel, '05, will speak about her recent clerkship with the Hon. Alan Kay, Magistrate, US District Court for the District of Columbia.
What do magistrate judges do? What is the value of clerking for a federal magistrate judge? What credentials do you need to apply? Come here Joanne Werdel, a recent UMLS grad give the low down on her time at the court, her clerkship and the application and interview process. Judge Kay's chambers has been responsible for handing discrete issues surrounding Guantanamo detainees, as well as a variety of civil cases and some preliminary criminal matters. There will be time for a Q&A. All students welcome.
Semester Study Abroad Opportunity
Tel Aviv University Law School
Information Meeting Time: Friday, November 3, 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Location: 118 HH Event Contact: Stephanie Wiederhold, wls@umich.edu, 734.764.0535
Interested in learning more about semester study abroad at Tel Aviv University Law School? Come to a meeting with Professor Yoram Margalioth, Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law. Professor Margalioth is the academic and overall coordinator for Michigan students at Tel Aviv.
Fall 2006
Practice Your Language Skills!
Time: See dates listed below, 12:15 - 1:30 p.m. Location: Lawyers Club Recreation Room (under the Lawyers Club Lounge) Event Contact:
Stephanie Wiederhold,
wls@umich.edu,
734.764.0535 Language lunches are a great way for J.D. and LL.M. students who share an interest or background in countries where the particular languages are spoken to meet each other and improve their language skills. The lunches have played a wonderful role in bringing together students interested in different parts of the world and enabling them to build friendships and share resources. MONDAY: JAPANESE, FRENCH, & RUSSIAN:
October 30 November 6, 13, 27 December 4 TUESDAY: GERMAN, ITALIAN, & ARABIC:
October 31 November 7, 14, 28 December 5 WEDNESDAY: SPANISH, CHINESE, & HINDI/URDU:
November 1, 8, 15, 29 December 6 No language lunches: Week of November 20.
If you would like to participate but pizza is not your food of choice, residents of the Lawyers Club may request a brown bag lunch 24 hours in advance. Also, you do not need to live in the Lawyers Club to participate. Nonresidents may have the pizza or bring in their own brown bag lunch.
If you have any questions or are interested in starting a group in another
language, please contact Stephanie Wiederhold. Enjoy!!!
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Competitions/Scholarships/Externships/Fellowships
Jewish Educational Loan Service Students may apply for interest-free loans through the Sarah and Harold Gottlieb Jewish Educational Loan Service (JELS). Applicants for these interest
-free loans must be Jewish residents of the Metropolitan Detroit area and full-time students, pursuing undergraduate, graduate or professional education at an accredited college or university in Michigan. Financial need and satisfactory academic progress must be shown. Application information is available in the Financial Aid Office, 310 HH. The application deadline is
November 17, 2006.
Dykema Scholarship Dykema will select a minority first-year law student at the University of Michigan to receive a $7,500 scholarship to be used for law school tuition and fees in the second year. This scholarship is automatically renewable for the student’s third year if the student maintains a 3.0 GPA and presents proof of continued enrollment. Applications are available in the Financial Aid Office, 310 HH. Applications must be submitted to the Financial Aid Office , 310 HH, by the
December 1, 2006 deadline.
International Court Of Justice's University Traineeship Program An opportunity is available to graduates of the University of Michigan Law School to apply for the International Court of Justice's University Traineeship Program beginning September of each year for a period of nine months. The other participating schools are Columbia, Yale, Georgetown, Virginia, New York University, McGill, Strasbourg, and Geneva. One nominee from each school typically is selected. The Law School is grateful to Judge Bruno Simma of the International Court of Justice and a member of our Affiliated Overseas Faculty for his invaluable assistance in making this opportunity available to our students.
Students are chosen through a competitive process in which a select group of academic institutions are eligible to nominate students to the International Court of Justice. The Court makes the final selection of clerks from the nominees of all the schools.
The primary duties of the trainees will be to assist Members of the Court in their tasks, including carrying out research, preparing case files, and drafting various types of documents. For more information about the International Court of Justice, please see its website:
www.icj-cij.org.
For information on eligibility, the application process, funding, and miscellaneous details, please see the following web site:
http://www.law.umich.edu/CentersAndPrograms/cicl/programs/ICJUnivTraineeshipProgram.htm
The application deadline is Friday,
December 15, 2006.
Please direct questions to Virginia Gordan, Assistant Dean for International Affairs,
vgordan@umich.edu; 734.764.5269.
The University of Michigan Center for the Education of Women Scholarships CEW Scholarships are given at the graduate, professional and undergraduate levels to women whose education has been interrupted. The interruption in education must be for at least a) 48 consecutive months or b) a total of 50 months, not counting interruptions of less than 8 months. The interruption may have taken place at any point in the pursuit of higher education. If you feel your situation meets the intent, if not the exact criteria, and warrants an exception, please submit an explanation of your circumstances in writing for an evaluation by the eligibility committee prior to submitting an application. Approximately 38 scholarships are awarded annually ranging from about $1,000 to $8,000, with some larger awards given. Strength of motivation, promise of impact in a chosen field, academic record, potential and creative and scholarly contributions are among the criteria for choosing the scholars. Applications are available online at
www.cew.umich.edu. The application
deadline is
January 8, 2007.
The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago Academic Scholarship Program
Approximately $500,000 is available for Jewish students who are identified as having promise for significant contributions in their chosen careers, and are in need of financial assistance for full-time academic programs primarily in the helping professions. Legal domicility in the greater Chicago metropolitan area, or in some cases, Cook County or Northwest Indiana is required. Refugees or asylees are encouraged to apply, as citizenship is not a prerequisite. To apply, go to
www.jvschicago.org and click on Scholarship Services. The application deadline is
February 15, 2007.
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Externships
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Fellowships
Fulbright Scholar Program for U.S. Faculty and Professionals
The Fulbright Scholar Program is offering various lecturing and research awards in some 150 countries for the 2007-2008 academic year. Opportunities are available for college and university faculty and administrators, professionals from business and government, artists, journalists, scientists, lawyers, independent scholars and many others. While foreign language skills are needed in some countries, most Fulbright Scholar lecturing assignments are in English. Some 80 percent of the awards include a lecturing component. Register and apply online at
www.cies.org. The deadlines vary but range from
May 1, 2006 - February 1, 2007.
Luce Scholars Program The Luce Scholars Program represents a major effort by the Henry Luce Foundation to provide an awareness of Asia among potential leaders in American society. It is unique among American-Asian exchanges in that it is intended for young leaders who have had no prior experience of Asia and who might not otherwise have an opportunity in the normal course of their careers to come to know Asia or their Asian counterparts. Internships are arranged for each scholar on the basis of his or her specific interest, background, qualifications, and experience. These work assignments run for approximately ten months from mid-September until July and are intended primarily as learning opportunities for the Scholars. Luce Scholars receive a significant monthly stipend. Applicants must be U.S. citizens who have earned at least a bachelor’s degree before taking part in the program. Candidates must be in good health and no more than 29 years of age on September first of the year they would enter the program. Applications cannot be considered from those who already have had significant exposure to Asian culture or who have a specific career interest in Asian affairs. Further information and application instructions
are available in the Financial Aid Office, 310 HH. The application deadline is
November 1, 2006.
Bates Overseas Fellowships
Application Deadline: November 1, 2006 Are you interested in pursuing an internship or other project overseas after you have completed two years of law school or shortly after graduation? Do you need funding to make your dream a reality? The Law School has an endowment for assisting recent law school graduates, or law students who have had two or more years of law study, to travel abroad for work or study experience.
The deadline for submitting proposals for projects to take place between January 2007 and January 2008 is Wednesday,
November 1, 2006. In the past, students have used the fellowships for internships with international agencies, human rights organizations, and law offices in foreign countries; or comparative legal study and teaching assistantships at universities throughout the world; or pursuit of a research project for which field research overseas is an important component. (Students may not seek Bates Overseas Fellowships for externships or study abroad programs for academic credit toward the student's JD.)
More detailed information about the application process for a Bates Overseas Fellowship may be found at the Center for International and Comparative Law, 300D LR, or can be found at the following web site:
http://www.law.umich.edu/CentersAndPrograms/cicl/programs/BatesTravelFellowships.htm. Questions may be addressed to Stephanie Wiederhold,
wls@umich.edu, 764.0535.
AARP Foundation Litigation Herbert Semmel Elder Law Fellowship
This Fellowship includes a salary for a summer 2007 clerkship in Washington, DC and scholarship, totaling approximately $20,000. Following the summer clerkship, the Fellow will be expected to prepare a manuscript. Applicants should be in their second year of law school at the time of application. They must possess strong analytical, research, and verbal skills, an ability to write clearly and effectively, and a commitment to public service. A familiarity with the issues affecting older Americans is highly desirable, as is a demonstrable commitment to the field of elder law. Further details and application instructions are available in the Financial Aid Office, 310 HH. The application deadline is
November 15, 2006.
Jean Monnet Graduate Fellowships For Research On Issues Of European Integration
Call For Proposals
Deadline: December 1, 2006 With a grant from the European Commission, the European Union Center and the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies are offering students summer grants of $5,000 to work on issues of European integration. Student grantees would conduct research and write a paper resulting from this research on a relevant topic.
It is expected that during spring and/or summer of 2007, the grantees will devote twelve weeks of full time work on this project with a faculty advisor. Recipients may be invited to participate in selected outreach activities organized by the European Union Center with local high schools, colleges and universities. N.B. This is not a travel grant.
Students in professional schools and graduate programs are eligible to apply. Applicants should submit 2-3 page proposals that describe the project to be carried out, including its topic, aims, method, and anticipated scholarly contribution. They should indicate the dates they would be devoting themselves full time to this project. A letter of recommendation from a University of Michigan faculty member (preferably the student's advisor), most recent transcript, and a CV should accompany the proposal.
Application materials are to be submitted by
December 1, 2006, to Michael D. Kennedy, Director, CREES/CES-EUC, International Institute, SSWB 4663, 1080 S. University, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106. For further information please contact Natasa Gruden-Alajbegovic,
nalajbeg@umich.edu, or 734.647.2743.
Public Interest Fellowships
For the latest fellowships available in Public Interest visit the Office of Public Service Web site at:
www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/PublicService.
Student Writing Competitions
To see all student writing competitions please visit:
www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/studentservices/competit.html
Additional information about these competitions and awards may be found in a binder located in the Registrar's Office, Room 300 HH.
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Awards
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Announcements/Reminders
Digital Cameras Available For Student Groups Event Contact: Trudy Feldkamp, tfeldkam@umich.edu, 734.936.0776
Digital cameras are now available for student organizations to check out from the Audio-Visual Programs Office (AV) so that you can photograph and document your organizational activities. You may use these cameras here at the Law School or for school related trips that take place off campus. We hope that you will take full advantage of this service so that more of your event highlights and experiences can be shared with the law school community.
We have two very nice Nikon Coolpix 7900 7-megapixel cameras available. At least two working days of advance notice is required for all audio visual requests. Upon camera check-in, the AV department will post your pictures at the following address: L:\Groups\Web\Devroot\CurrentStudents\informationtechnology\AV\Photos. If you're interested, simply submit an audio visual work request at the following link:
http://www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/informationtechnology/AV/index.htm
Should you have any questions, please contact the Office of Academic Services, 313 HH, 734-615-0019.
For Information On Career Opportunities In Social Work And
University Of Michigan Graduate Social Work Degree Programs, Come To Social Work Day
Time: Friday, November 10, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Location: School of Social Work Event Contact: Michael Leier,
mleier@umich.edu, 734.764.3309
Professors & Administrators will speak on career opportunities in social work and Master of Social Work and Ph.D. in Social Work and Social Science degree programs. Registration is required by
November 6, 2006 via their website:
www.ssw.umich.edu. Then click on prospective students and look for the link to Social Work Day.
Parking On Football Weekends On home-game football Saturdays, the following parking lots are reserved for football parking pass holders only. All vehicles must be removed by 6:00 p.m. the preceding Friday evening as the lot is chained and locked closed. Please note the popular student parking lot located by the Coliseum on Hill and Division is included in the areas to vacate.
Lots that will be controlled:
SC2 between Keech & Hoover SC13 Greene Street SC4 Kipke Drive SC14 Hoover @ Greene SC5 Kipke Drive SC32 Greene Street SC6 east of Kipke Drive SC35 Keech & Hoover SC7 west of Kipke Drive SC36 Main Street @ Keech SC9 Hill & Division SC37 Hoover Street SC11 Hoover Street SC38 corner of Hill & SC12 Greene Street Division Street
Alternative parking can be found on North Campus, where there is no parking enforcement during the weekend. Bus service is provided from Lots NC46 and NC53, with stops on central campus within one block of every major residence hall and library.
Listed below is the
last home football game:
November 4
We appreciate your cooperation to observe this parking restriction and remove your vehicle accordingly. Failure to comply with this restriction will result in the issuance of parking
citations, revocation of student parking privileges and possible towing.
For further information and assistance with alternative parking, please contact the Parking and Transportation Services office at
734.764.8291.
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Employment
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Office Hours
Assistant Dean for Student
Affairs - David Baum
To make an appointment with Dean Baum, please contact Marilyn Genoa
either in person in 301 HH, by calling 734.764.0516, or via e-mail at
marilyng@umich.edu.
Director of Student Affairs -
Christine Gregory
Tuesday: 9:00 - 11:00 a.m. Friday: 10:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
To make an appointment with Christine Gregory, please contact Mark Gebhart or Trudy Feldkamp by e-mail
mgebhart@umich.edu
or
tfeldkam@umich.edu, or phone at 734.615.0019.
Office of the Registrar:
For answers to questions about graduation requirements, registration, examination procedures, and the like, e-mail lawrecords@umich.edu. Alternatively, students can make an appointment to see Jack Atkinson, Registrar (734.763.6499), Debby Hartranft, Student Services Examination and Grade Coordinator (734.647.7589), Amy Bishop, Student Services Curriculum Coordinator (734
.763.6499), David Baum, Assistant
Dean for Student Affairs (734
.764.0516), or
Christine Gregory, Director of Student Affairs (734.615.0019).
Financial Aid Office:
Office hours are 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. and 1:00 - 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Our phone number is 734.764.5289 and the office e-mail is lawfinaid@umich.edu.
Assistant Dean for International Programs Virginia
Gordon:
To schedule an appointment with Assistant Dean Virginia
Gordon, please contact Barbara Glispin in 300D LR, phone 734.764.5269,
glispin@umich.edu. If you have questions about international legal studies, planning your curriculum, or opportunities for students with international or overseas interest, drop by the Center for International and Comparative Law and Assistant Dean Virginia Gordan would be happy to talk with you.
Office Of Public Service:
To make an appointment with a counselor,
please see Tia Bradley at 200 HH #3, call
734.647.3256, or e-mail
tiab@umich.edu.
Office of Career Services:
To make a scheduled appointment with Susan Guindi, Carolyn Spencer
or Robin Kaplan, please stop by 210 HH, or call 734.764.0546.
Library Hours:
8:00 a.m. to Midnight, seven days a week
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