First Sentence:
To achieve superior scores on essay exams, a law student must (1) learn and understand "blackletter" principles and rules of law for each subject; (2) analyze how those principles of law arise within a test fact pattern; and (3) write clearly and succinctly a short discussion of each principle and how it relates to the facts.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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strongest constitutional argument, immediate personal injury, rational relationship test, contemplated conduct, legitimate governmental objective, remedial reading program, presidential privilege, licensing commission, strict scrutiny standard, equal protection rights, important governmental interest, excessive entanglement, strict scrutiny test, offensive touching, strongest basis, compelling state interest, legal aliens, legitimate state interest, less restrictive means
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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Supreme Court, Fourteenth Amendment, First Amendment, United States, Commerce Clause, Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause, Establishment Clause, Tenth Amendment, Siegel's Constitutional Law, Attorney General, Supremacy Clause, Fifth Amendment, Free Exercise Clause, New York, State Blue, Nazi Party, State Orange, African Americans, Eleventh Amendment, Water Department, Police Commissioner, Aggravated Robbery, Armed Robbery, Creative Crafts
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