First Black Elected to Head Harvard's Law Review
By FOX BUTTERFIELD, Special to The New York Times
Published: February 6, 199
Correction Appended
BOSTON, Feb. 5—
The Harvard Law Review, generally considered the
most prestigious in the country, elected the first black president in
its 104-year history today. The job is considered the highest student
position at Harvard Law School.
The new president of the Review is Barack Obama, a
28-year-old graduate of Columbia University who spent four years heading
a community development program for poor blacks on Chicago's South Side
before enrolling in law school. His late father, Barack Obama, was a
finance minister in Kenya and his mother, Ann Dunham, is an American
anthropologist now doing fieldwork in Indonesia. Mr. Obama was born in
Hawaii.
''The fact that I've been elected shows a lot of
progress,'' Mr. Obama said today in an interview. ''It's encouraging.
''But it's important that stories like mine aren't
used to say that everything is O.K. for blacks. You have to remember
that for every one of me, there are hundreds or thousands of black
students with at least equal talent who don't get a chance,'' he said,
alluding to poverty or growing up in a drug environment.
What a Law Review Does
Law reviews, which are edited by students, play a
double role at law schools, providing a chance for students to improve
their legal research and writing, and at the same time offering judges
and scholars a forum for new legal arguments. The Harvard Law Review is
generally considered the most widely cited of the student law reviews.
On his goals in his new post, Mr. Obama said: ''I
personally am interested in pushing a strong minority perspective. I'm
fairly opinionated about this. But as president of the law review, I
have a limited role as only first among equals.''
Therefore, Mr. Obama said, he would concentrate on
making the review a ''forum for debate,'' bringing in new writers and
pushing for livelier, more accessible writing.
A President's Future
The president of the law review usually goes on to
serve as a clerk for a judge on the Federal Court of Appeals for a year,
and then as a clerk for an associate justice of the Supreme Court. Mr.
Obama said he planned to spend two or three years in private law
practice and then return to Chicago to re-enter community work, either
in politics or in local organizing.
Professors and students at the law school reacted
cautiously to Mr. Obama's selection. ''For better or for worse, people
will view it as historically significant,'' said Prof. Randall Kennedy,
who teaches contracts and race relations law. ''But I hope it won't
overwhelm this individual student's achievement.''
Change in Selection System
Mr. Obama was elected after a meeting of the
review's 80 editors that convened Sunday and lasted until early this
morning, a participant said.
Until the 1970's the editors were picked on the
basis of grades, and the president of the Law Review was the student
with the highest academic rank. Among these were Elliot L. Richardson,
the former Attorney General, and Irwin Griswold, a dean of the Harvard
Law School and Solicitor General under Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and
Richard M. Nixon.
That system came under attack in the 1970's and was
replaced by a program in which about half the editors are chosen for
their grades and the other half are chosen by fellow students after a
special writing competition. The new system, disputed when it began, was
meant to help insure that minority students became editors of The Law
Review.
Harvard, like a number of other top law schools, no
longer ranks its law students for any purpose including a guide to
recruiters.
Blacks at Harvard: New High
Black enrollment at Harvard Law School, after a dip
in the mid-1980's, has reached a record high this year, said Joyce
Curll, the director of admissions. Of the 1,620 students in the
three-year school, 12.5 percent this year are blacks, she said, and 14
percent of the first-year class are black. Nationwide enrollment by
blacks in undergraduate colleges has dropped in recent years.
Mr. Obama succeeds Peter Yu, a first-generation
Chinese-American, as president of The Law Review. After graduation, Mr.
Yu plans to serve as a clerk for Chief Judge Patricia Wald on the of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
Mr. Yu said Mr. Obama's election ''was a choice on
the merits, but others may read something into it.''
The first female editor of The Harvard Law Review
was Susan Estrich, in 1977, who recently resigned as a professor at
Harvard Law School to take a similar post at the University of Southern
California. Ms. Estrich was campaign manager for Gov. Michael S. Dukakis
of Massachusetts in his campaign for the Presidency in 1988.
photo: Barack Obama was elected yesterday as
president of the Harvard Law Review. He is the first black to hold the
position. (The New York Times/Jim Bourg)
Correction: February 7, 1990, Wednesday, Late Edition - Final
Because of an editing error, an article yesterday about the election
of Barack Obama as president of the Harvard Law Review misidentified
the United States court on which Patricia M. Wald is Chief Judge. It is
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, not for the
Federal Circuit.
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