Page 8-Saturday, July 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily To teach to think or to practice? The High Citadel: The Influence of Harvard Law School 216 pp., Houghton Mifflin Company, by Joel Seligman By Stephen Selbst L AW SCHOOL has not always been a prerequisite to admission to the bar. Less than a century ago home study, ap- prenticeship in a law office, or law school were all routes that led to the practice of law. For those who chose to attend law school, the academic routine much resembled other types of classroom instruction. By night law students struggled to memorize the major rules of American law, and during the day professors lectured on and amplified what was contained in the texts. During his tenure as dean of Harvard Law School, Christopher Columbus Langdell brought revolutionary change to the manner law is taught in the United States and created a model of instruction that has persisted nearly intact for nearly a century. It was Langdell who introduced the "case system" of study. In the case system, students are asked to read a small number of cases each day and be prepared to an- swer professorial questions designed to stimulate legal reasoning. Langdell's method works particularly well with students fresh to the study of law, for it helps them abandon imprecise thinking, and in the time-honored phrase of law professors, "gets them thinking like lawyers." More important, ,Harvard students trained in the Langdell method found them- selves in increasing demand by private law firms, which created a further spur for other law schools to ape the Harvard system and for potential lawyers to attend law school. In The High Citadel, Harvard Law School graduate Joel Seligman delivers a per- suasive argument that the success of the case system has inhibited Harvard law professors, whom he characterizes as an unflaggingly stuffy lot, from making any but the most cosmetic changes in legal education in the past 100 years despite an increasing number of studies which have called for reform. A corrollary to Seligman's thesis is that what happens at Harvard continues to be copied at all other American law schools. Thus, he writes, influencing curriculum reform at Harvard will inevitably cause changes elsewhere. SELIGMAN ALSO charges that the pre- sent system is inadequate because it focuses unduly on theoretical preparation, graduating students who may have isolated See BOOKSPage 12... i 1 'You are about to e dimension of sight ( By Gary Geresy T HE NEWS HAS just gone off the air, ar Dad in is the mood for a first run movie. H pushes a button on his personal control centi and in a matter of seconds Star Wars III appea on his seven-foot screen. He doesn't have 1 worry about being disturbed because every othe member of the family is lost in his or her ow video dreamland. In the den, mother is watching a tape of th episode of Soap that she missed last night. Afte that, she will edit the tape of the family's trip ou west. Down the hall, Jimmy gives his compute command to start a game of baseball. In secon- ds a voice projected from a speaker in his vide screen asks what kind of pitch he would like t throw. Studying the batter, Jimmy calls for G forkball, and the batter misses it by a mile Steee-rike one!" the computer umpire announ ces. It sounds like a scene from Fahrenheit 451, bu in a few short years it will be a reality in nearl every home in America, as it already is in th test market city of Columbus, Ohio. 'But what really sets Qube apart from other video systems is that the viewer can react to programming through use of the control unit's five response buttons.' Whether we like it or not, television has become the great American family pastime. Millions of Americans plan their average week- day evenings around the television schedule, and therein lies the problem with the system-viewers are at the mercy of the three major networks (and PBS too, if they are lucky) for their primary means of entertainment: There is no limit to the kinds of entertainment that can be presented on television, and a public that is sick of being a prisoner of Fred Silverman and Co. is crying out for innovative programming. W E ARE IN the beginning stages of the video revelation today. Although several companies pioneered video projectors in the early, 50s, they were too advanced for popular acceptance. Today, one in every five homes ,