My Philly Neighborhood: Chinatown (Podiatric Residence Hall)

Chinatown lacks the cafes you’d find in Fairmount or West Philly which makes it hard to find somewhere to study. Other than that, most of the things I don’t like come from the residence hall itself, and not the Chinatown neighborhood. The residence hall is expensive and small. Rent is around $4,000 per semester, which works out to ~$900/month.

Fifth Free Online Advocacy Conference – January 19, 2022 – Temple Law

Temple University Beasley School of Law Presents the Fifth Free Online Advocacy Conference. January 19, 2022 6:00 PM – 8:00PM Online. About the Event. Temple University Beasley School of Law will host its fifth free online advocacy training conference on Wednesday, January 19 from 6:00-8:00 PM (East Coast time) and will cover two topics.

The Free Library and access to justice

Stephen and Sandra Sheller Center for Social Justice 1719 North Broad Street, Room 411 Philadelphia, PA 19122 (215) 204-8800 shellercenter@temple.edu

LL.M. in Beijing, China – Tuition and Cost | 学费 – Temple Law

Payment of Tuition | 学费支付方式. Tuition must be made in three installments during the program. The first two installments of RMB 60,000 yuan are paid before the beginning of the Fall I and Spring terms. The third installment, the USD equivalent of 60,000 yuan, is paid before the beginning of the summer term.

Campfires, Car Accidents, and the Cosmos: Persuasive Appeals to Jurors …

Wonder should be defined broadly for the sake of good, transportive storytelling. In campfires, car accidents, and the cosmos we find three guideposts pointing the trial lawyer toward the wonder of that which is mesmerizing, morbid, and magnificent. The trial lawyer should aim for these three broadly-conceived levels of wonder.

[PDF] DUCATION – law.temple.edu

The Origins of Birthright Citizenship, BOSTON REVIEW, Nov. 9, 2018 (reviewing Martha S. Jones, Birthright Citizens: A History of Race and Rights in Antebellum America (Cambridge 2018)) Specter of a White Minority, LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS, Sept. 3, 2018 Book Review, 104 JOURNAL OF AMERICAN HISTORY 179 (2017) (reviewing Nicholas Guyatt, Bind Us Apart: How