Special to The News Leader WILLIAMSBURG -- A statement by a widely known New England law educator is being cited by the College of William and Mary as part of an effort to reassert its historical precedence in American legal education over a one-time Connecticut law school. Dean Erwin N. Griswold of the Harvard Law School, in a book published in 1965, wrote that there can be no doubt that the law program at William and Mary started in 1779 can fairly be called the first law school in America . . . Late in June, the National Park Service dedicated the site of the Litchfield Law School, in Litchfield, Conn., as the place where American formal legal education began. In a citation presented as part of its National Survey of Historic Sites a...