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Teaching Law, Testing Ideas, Obama Stood Slightly Apart | Teaching Law, Testing Ideas, Obama Stood Slightly Apart |
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| Written by Foresight | |
| Tuesday, 05 August 2008 | |
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CHICAGO — The young law professor stood apart in too many ways to
count. At a school where economic analysis was all the rage, he taught
rights, race and gender. Other faculty members dreamed of tenured
positions; he turned them down. While most colleagues published by the
pound, he never completed a single work of legal scholarship. At a formal institution, Barack Obama was a loose presence, joking with students about their romantic prospects, using first names, referring to case law one moment and “The Godfather” the next. He was also an enigmatic one, often leaving fellow faculty members guessing about his precise views. Mr. Obama, now the junior senator from Illinois and the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, spent 12 years at the University of Chicago
Law School. Most aspiring politicians do not dwell in the halls of
academia, and few promising young legal thinkers toil in state
legislatures. Mr. Obama planted a foot in each, splitting his weeks
between an elite law school and the far less rarefied atmosphere of the
Illinois Senate. Comments
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Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
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