(Page 6 of 14)
/p>I read your recent article on Ave Maria. I have to say that this is the sort of article that gives journalism a bad name. The article makes it clear that you have no idea what you are talking about.
I don't suspect that you are interested in learning the truth about what has happened here. If you are interested, ask the school to send you all the communications it has received from the ABA about the matters in question. The ABA keeps such matters confidential but the school is free to disclose those communications to you. I suspect that they will refuse to do so and you then ought to wonder why. If you saw those documents, you couldn't possibly have written the article you wrote.
I have a word of advice for you. I wouldn't bother to defend the actions of the people you praised in the article. Their actions have been scandalous and I don't think it is in your interest to defend them. I can only think that you don't really know what has happened here. If you did know, you wouldn't have written what you did. I don't think I'd defend their actions without knowing what has happened.
I don't have the time to detail in an email the history here. I would be happy to talk with you if you care to know that truth of what has happened here. Please feel free to contact me.
p>Please say a prayer for Mr. Monaghan and Mr. Dobranski, and also for all the people they have harmed. br> -- Richard S. Myers br> Professor of Law br> Ave Maria School of Law br> Ann Arbor, Michigan /p> p> BREADBASKET NO MORE br> Re: Jens F. Laurson & George F. Pieler's
ADVERTISEMENT
SPONSORED LINKS
The speech our President should make.
A noted economist fires back.
How political can you get?
You might have missed it, but it was boomed in January.
Farcical feminism is a decades-old phenomenon, as George Will's essay from 1970 reminds us.