Saturday, September 24, 2011

Geof Stone Addresses First-Year Class

by Geoffrey Stone

University of Chicago Law School
Remarks for the Entering Students Dinner

September 23, 2011

When Dean Schill first invited me to speak this evening, I turned instinctively to memories of my own Entering Students Dinner . . . 43 years ago.

I vividly recall that evening, in this very room. Phil Neal was the Dean, I sat over there (point), at my table were, among others, my still very good friends Barry Alberts, Bart Lee, and Judy Mears (one of the very few women in my class), and the speaker was Grant Gilmore, one of the most distinguished legal scholars of his generation.

But to my surprise, when I thought back to Professor Gilmore speech, I found no memories. I drew a total blank. I had no recollection whatever of what he said, or why.

After reflecting on this for several days, I came to the reluctant and depressing conclusion that such is the likely, if not inevitable, fate of most talks on these sorts of occasions. Students are too distracted, too anxious, too eager to get started, and too curious about one another to hear anything we say on an occasion such as this.

With that rather dreary insight in mind, I decided to scale down my aspirations. If I cannot leave you this evening marked indelibly with some profound wisdom concerning the role of law in American society, then perhaps I can at least offer you something more modest to help you in the days immediately ahead.

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