After Harvard came Yale Law, where he graduated first in his class.
You left Yale Law within six months of your degree.
Some of the most cited articles published by the Yale Law & Policy Review include:
Sloan has published in the Yale Law & Policy Review and numerous other publications.
In a 1987 article for The Yale Law and Policy Review, he referred to affirmative action as "social engineering."
St. Timothy's for high school, then Vassar and Yale Law.
It was at this point, when he was the Dean of Yale Law while still in his 20s, that Hutchins became a national figure.
He was in the top third of his class at Yale Law.
Yale Law does not have a traditional grading system, a consequence of student unrest in the late 1960s.
Yale Law admitted only men until 1918, when it began admitting women.