ONLY a few years ago, some commentators seriously predicted the end of law schools as we now know them. Yet the traditional law school is still with us and in some ways seems stronger than ever. Meanwhile student demands for poverty law and other relevant courses have come and gone, and the clinical movement has flooded and is now ebbing. Hysterical outcries against the socratic method and praise for law schools as places where affluent middle-class children might relate seem strangely dated now, although the leading articles supporting these positions are at most four years old. It would be wrong, however, to lapse into· a complacent assumption that the reform movement is dead. The demands of the late 60\u27s_ and the early 70\u27s we...