To the Editors of the Crimson:
I hope the numbers in the story (April 2) on the potential loss by the Legal Services Institute of the Law School of its funding from the Legal Services Corporation are wrong. The story ("Budget Cuts May Hamper Legal Service") asserts that the Institute gets $500,000 a year, 24 law students and 8 GSAS students are presently involved, and that it handles cases for people who cannot afford legal fees. It thus appears the Institute is costing us roughly 15,600 per student involved. What can possibly explain these figures, unless it is an error? I assume the students are not paid: the faculty is not paid, except perhaps in modest part, from the grant. An office? A secretary? Car-fare? Legal briefs? Summer pay for students? The real story was not that the Legal Services Institute was being cut: it was, unless the figures were wrong, that something that should cost very little--providing legal services by student volunteers for the poor--was costing a fortune. It is this sort of head-scratching result resulting from simple division that leads some of us to believe that many things in government can be cut without any apparent losses to the poor. Nathan Glazer Professor of Education and Social Structure
Read more in News
Counseling Groups Form Committee, Prepare NewsletterRecommended Articles
-
Ogletree Is Named Director Of HLS Clinical ProgramsProfessor of Law Charles J. Ogletree has been named to serve as faculty director of clinical programs, Law School Dean
-
Aid InstituteExpected reductions of more than a million dollars in federal funds for legal aid services could close the Legal Services
-
Furcolo Calls For State Aid To EducationGovernor Foster Furcolo, in a speech yesterday to the combined houses, called for the "expansion of our scholarship program" and
-
`L.A. Law': An HLS Corporate Fantasy"We don't have time to go around taking moral stands," the voice of Douglas Brackman, the balding managing partner of
-
Legal ServicesTo the Editors of The Crimson I was disgusted by the New Right's latest tactic: a full-page Crimson advertisement by
-
Legal-Ease?"Paoverty creates an abrasive interface with society: poor people are always bumping into sharp legal things." Stephen Wesler, Yale Law