How could he ask a woman to be a law clerk - what if she had to work late?
From 1982, the number was increased to two law clerks for each justice.
The cause of death was cancer, his law clerks said.
I'm still a law clerk, just at a different office where they let me work nights.
His style, he said, is to do all the writing himself rather than leave it to a law clerk.
Still, in some countries the position of law clerk does not exist.
He also worked as a law clerk for local attorneys.
The job was a combination of law clerk and secretary.
Sometimes, they ask lawyers or law clerks to help with research.
The judge said the prosecutor's wife had once been his law clerk.
His entry into public policy was accomplished one night over dinner with some other former judicial clerks at Peroni's Waterfront on Route 29.
Sentelle's judicial clerks are known as Sentelle-tubbies.
The School of Law at St. John's University has announced a program to help law students prepare for work as federal judicial clerks.
This requirement is usually met by students working as judicial clerks, interns in prosecutor and defense offices, state and federal governmental agencies, and private practices.
Nikolay was born in Tobolsk, Siberia to the family of a typographical engineer who later worked as a judicial clerk.
She completed her vocational training as a judicial clerk at the Amtsgericht Rheda-Wiedenbrück.
He practiced law at two of California's leading firms and served as a judicial clerk to the California Supreme Court.
She began her legal career in the Supreme Court as a judicial clerk.
For the 2010-11 session each judicial clerk at the Supreme Court was paid Rs 25,000 a month, which may be increased further in the next year.
Then I remembered that the computer research sites all give free passwords to law students and judicial clerks.