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The Connecticut Law Review is the oldest, largest, and most active student-run publication at the School of Law. [13] The Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal is a student-run biannual law review published by the school. It was established in 2001 and is abstracted and indexed in HeinOnline. [14] Every fall, the journal hosts a symposium on ...
The University of Connecticut's College of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources (CAHNR) is the oldest of UConn's fourteen colleges, and teaches a wide range of subjects. It is the oldest agricultural school in Connecticut, originally established with two purposes, conducting agriculture research and teaching practical skills to modernize ...
E.O. Smith has maintained an Agricultural Science education program since its time as a part of UConn, and junior and senior high school students may take classes for credit on UConn's campus. During the 1970s, UConn Health was established in Farmington as a home for the new School of Medicine and School of Dental Medicine.
Overlapping themes in psychology and law offer endless insights and opportunities for study, but real-life application in the courtroom has been limited since the popular psychology boom of the ...
Law School City/Town Founded Litchfield Law School: Litchfield: 1773 (closed 1833) Quinnipiac University School of Law: North Haven: 1995 University of Connecticut School of Law: Hartford: 1921 Yale Law School: New Haven: 1843
Josephine Dolan – UConn's first professor of nursing (1944–1976) Richard Eberhart – poet; James C. Faris – anthropologist (Professor of Anthropology and Near Eastern Studies) Estelle Feinstein – historian at UConn Stamford (Professor of History, 1957–1989) Harry L. Garrigus – animal scientist (Professor of Animal Husbandry, 1900 ...
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But Patrick had just left a facility that pushed other solutions. He had gotten a crash course on the tenets of 12-step, the kind of sped-up program that some treatment advocates dismissively refer to as a “30-day wonder.” Staff at the center expected addicts to reach a sort of divine moment but gave them few days and few tools to get there.