Judge Guido Calabresi, Sam Alito’s Torts professor at Yale, had the following comment about Alito’s performance as a first-year law student:
“I remember his exam, and I remember that it was lucid, well-written and that he had an imagination which, like many first-year students, he was careful about exercising,” Calabresi said. “He was careful to walk before he would run.”
Over at The Right Coast, Yale Law grad Tom Smith is, well, a bit skeptical. An excerpt:
  I mean, seriously. A first year torts exam from thirty years ago? I can barely remember my own life thirty years ago. I took torts from Guido and actually attended many of the classes, and I remember it only vaguely. I have not the faintest recollection of what I wrote on my exam. Guido is much smarter, richer, and more accomplished than I, but I simply do not believe it. And I say that as a Catholic, a Republican, a middle aged novice surfer, and someone whose spouse still tells him he is good looking, i.e., a person prepared to believe a lot of improbable things. By way of disclosure, I should say I certainly hope my teachers at Yale do not remember me, since I was, in retrospect, pretty insufferable, but then, in my own defense, so were many of my teachers.
There’s more over at The Right Coast.
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