- Title Pages
- Title Pages
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Commencement Day, 1845
- 2 Founding Father
- 3 A Few Lonely Frenchmen in a Strange Land
- 4 Return of the Blackrobes
- 5 Uneasy Neighbors
- 6 New York City’s Other Jesuit College
- 7 Et in Arcadia Ego
- 8 The End of the Little Liberal Arts College
- 9 From College to University
- 10 The Fordham University School of Law
- 11 The Graduate School of Social Service
- 12 The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
- 13 Fordham Downtown, Uptown, All Around the Town
- 14 World War II and After
- 15 The Halcyon Years
- 16 Slouching Toward the Sixties
- 17 Fordham’s Decade of Three Presidents
- 18 Quasi-Revolution on Campus
- 19 War and Peace
- 20 The New “Normalcy”
- 21 Approaching the Sesquicentennial
- Presidents of St. John’s College and Fordham University
- Acknowledgments
- Bibliography
- Index
- Plates
The Fordham University School of Law
The Fordham University School of Law
- Chapter:
- (p.201) 10 The Fordham University School of Law
- Source:
- Fordham, A History of the Jesuit University of New York
- Author(s):
Thomas J. Shelley
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press
The Law School leads a nomadic existence before finding a permanent home in the Lincoln Center campus in 1961. Dean Ignatius Wilkinson plays a key role in the shaping of the Fordham School of Law. Both Deans William Hughes Mulligan and Joseph McLaughlin add to the luster of Fordham Law School. The Law School is involved in a protracted dispute with the university over funding and its relationship with the university. Dean John Feerick succeeds in making Fordham Law School one of the top U.S. law schools.
Keywords: Paul Fuller, Robert Moses, Malcolm Wilson
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- Title Pages
- Title Pages
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Commencement Day, 1845
- 2 Founding Father
- 3 A Few Lonely Frenchmen in a Strange Land
- 4 Return of the Blackrobes
- 5 Uneasy Neighbors
- 6 New York City’s Other Jesuit College
- 7 Et in Arcadia Ego
- 8 The End of the Little Liberal Arts College
- 9 From College to University
- 10 The Fordham University School of Law
- 11 The Graduate School of Social Service
- 12 The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
- 13 Fordham Downtown, Uptown, All Around the Town
- 14 World War II and After
- 15 The Halcyon Years
- 16 Slouching Toward the Sixties
- 17 Fordham’s Decade of Three Presidents
- 18 Quasi-Revolution on Campus
- 19 War and Peace
- 20 The New “Normalcy”
- 21 Approaching the Sesquicentennial
- Presidents of St. John’s College and Fordham University
- Acknowledgments
- Bibliography
- Index
- Plates