Hone your legal skills through student organizations that feature scholarship and competition at the highest levels.
Hone your legal skills through student organizations that feature scholarship and competition at the highest levels.
There are two ways to become a staff editor. First, the 10 first-year students who are ranked at the top of the class, based upon their cumulative GPA at the end of the spring semester of their first year, will receive an invitation to become members of the Law Review. Second, all first-year students in the top 50 percent of the class, based on their cumulative GPA at the end of the second semester, will be invited to participate in an anonymous Write-On Competition. The individuals with the top entries will be invited to join Law Review, also contingent upon the successful completion of a Casenote of publishable quality.
The subscription price is $25 per volume (three issues annually); single issues $8.50 per copy. Subscriptions are renewed automatically upon expiration unless the subscriber sends timely notice of termination. To subscribe, please email Jennifer Grismore at j-grismore@onu.edu, or call our office at 419.772.2248. Checks should be made payable to account number 110-4020-85302-110, ONU Law Review, and mailed to: Ohio Northern University Law Review, The Claude W. Pettit College of Law, 525 South Main Street, Ada, OH 45810.
The ONU Law Review is currently accepting submissions. Submissions can be made via Scholastica. You may also send a printed manuscript, along with a cover letter and your CV, to: Ohio Northern University Law Review, The Claude W. Pettit College of Law, 525 South Main Street, Ada, OH 45810. You may also send submissions directly to the Law Review Administrator by email, j-grismore@onu.edu.
“I participated in the Ethics Symposium at ONU, and had the good fortune to work with the Law Review editors. The entire experience was a pleasure. I was impressed that the Review focuses on issues of real concern to the profession and does so in a congenial environment.”Michael Tigar, Professor Emeritus of the Practice of Law, Duke Law School