elena kagan ended that, i believe. and over much of that time harvard maintained a committee to fret over its lack of diversity. while it wasn't hiring any republicans. john mcginn necessary of northwestern put it this way. even as the torrey party or rather, i'm sorry, the anglican church in this great britain has been described as the torrey party at the pulpit, so the legal prof sore yacht in most good law schools can be described as the democratic party at the lectern. now, that has been changing. i mentioned that it's been changing at harvard, and, indeed, most schools that have any self-respect these days will have a libertarian or a conservative outspoken law professor. they may hesitate to have more than one for fear that they'll breed. [laughter] but they do tend to have one these todays, and so things are changing. this is not new, this ideological slant goes back a good, long way, and if you wanted to, you could trace it back to rosco pound about a century ago who said that law should be conceived as applied