Fri, 2 February 2007 Chapter 1, part 1 of Debbie Hagan's page turner introduces us to the Merrimack Valley: to the Tyngsboro Fire Department as they battle a suspicious barn fire, to an ambitious local determined to make it big, whatever the cost, and finally to Diane Sullivan, a $60 dollar a week bank teller by day, indefatigable student by night, with one last shot at fulfilling her dreams.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[15] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Juggling multiple jobs, family and impossible hours is a small price to pay for Diane Sullivan and her fellow students at Commonwealth School of Law. They have one dream... to create a better future for themselves and their families by becoming an attorney. No price seems to large for these determined, if unconventional law students, and they have placed their trust, their money, and their future in the hands of Commonwealth School of Law's President, Michael Boland. But is anything at Commonwealth, including, Michael Boland, what it first appears?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[12] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Draft card burnings, anti-war protests, feminist marches, racial riots, and political assassinations punctuated the year 1968. The son of Russian immigrants, Lawrence Velvel matures from a precocious Chicago teenager, to a law professor at the racially divided University of Kansas and finds himself thrust into the midst of one of the most turbulent times in our nations history.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[9] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Amidst the national uproar of the Vietnam War, the sentencing of The Chicago Seven, and the horror of Kent State, Velvel finds himself labeled as an "enemy of the state" in conservative, 1960's Kansas.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[11] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Packing up home, family and a sixteen year career in Washington DC, Velvel heads north to Lowell, Massachusetts to begin his new life as Dean of Commonwealth School of Law. But would the new dean succeed in fixing the ailing CSL, or did the schools' president, Michael Boland, have other plans?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[8] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[23] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Exhausted, broke, and disillusioned, Commonwealth students don't know were to turn next. Velvel, on the other hand, is staking everything he owns on a new law school. Is there room for both in The Merrimack Valley?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[10] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 After months of endless, determined work The Massachusetts School of Law finally opens its doors. But soon after, former senator, Paul Tsongas, determined to bring a law school to Lowell, joins the board at their rival, Commonwealth. Can the outsiders at MSL overcome the increasingly powerful and politically connected board at CSL, or would all their work be for naught?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[10] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Amidst intense pressure on MSL to merge with Commonwealth, former Senator Paul Tsongas, Chairman of Commonwealth's Board of Trustees, is named Chairman of the Massachusetts Board of Regents. Tsongas' new position places him in charge of determining which school would be approved in the Merrimack Region, MSL or Commonwealth. If MSL refuses the merger, does it have a chance?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[8] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 As Commonwealth struggles to survive, and Tsongas tries to wield his influence to bring a Law School to Lowell, Velvel and MSL find themselves drawn into a bigger and tougher battle than they had ever imagined.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[4] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Whoosh! At 12:38 am on October 22, 1989, the MSL library explodes into flames. The evidence points soundly to arson, but who hates MSL so much that they are willing to risk their safety and future in an attempt to burn down the building? And could their hatred succeed in keeping MSL from graduating their first law school class?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Despite a longstanding history of classism and snobbery in the legal profession, Velvel becomes more determined than ever to create a school that would belie commonly accepted stereotypes about and who and what makes up a lawyer. Meanwhile MSL's first graduating class ventures out into the world, building practices, beginning families, and finally living their dream of becoming a lawyer.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 By the spring of 1991 MSL's enrollment had surged and the school had put down a million dollars on a beautiful new red brick building. It was time, thought Velvel and Coyne, to seek accreditation from the ABA. But the more they learn about the ABA's long history of keeping "the undesirables" out of legal education the more it is clear that in no way did MSL fit the rigid ABA mold.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[4] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 Could MSL satisfy the ABA standards without sacrificing everything MSl stands for, or in order to survive must they turn MSL into another eilitist law school? Although the ABA claimed to applaud innovative and diverse law schools, a visit by the ABA's James White soon makes it clear to Velvel that any deviation from the ABA's standards, especially the deviations that defined MSL's mission, would not be tolerated. Velvel and his board see no choice but to take their grievance directly to the ABA's accreditation renewal hearing at The U. S. Department of Education.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[14] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 In 1992 the faculty at MSL spent six months researching and writing a 500 page self study that they considered a valuable discourse on legal education. Entitled "The Deeply Unsatisfactory Nature of Legal Education Today". But would their hard work turn the tide in the favor, or would it serve to further alienate MSL from the powers that be of the ABA?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[2] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 The ABA report finally arrives and what Velvel reads makes him physically ill. Never content to suffer the slings and arrows however, Velvel and the MSL faculty swiftly switch back into offensive gear. Meanwhile the mystery of the law school fire appears to be solved, and Michael Boland appears on the scene once more, this time in a far different role.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[3] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[2] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 In a dimly lit modern court room, MSL's anti-trust case against the ABA finally begins. The Judge, J. William Ditter Jr. claims to never have thought about the issues involved in MSL's conspiracy suit, however it soon becomes clear that Ditter is far from open to MSL's suit. Is Judge Ditter, as Velvel claims, determined to do in MSL?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 When a lawyer from The US Department of Justice informs MSL that not only had the DOJ procured evidence that proved the ABA's antitrust conspiracy, but that the judge presiding over MSL's antitrust case had not fully disclosed his involvement with the ABA accreditation process, Velvel and his colleagues do everything they legally can to try and save their case.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 MSL takes its case all the way to the White House, and believes it finally has an ally in the form of the Anti-Trust Division of The United States Department of Justice. With the DOJ firmly on their side, MSL must finally prevail...but would they?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 MSL continues to fight the ABA in the courts as well as with the US Department of Justice, but time and again finds that political agendas and incompetence thwarting their efforts. Finally MSL turns to Senator Ted Kennedy just as Congress is preparing to renew The Higher Education Act.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[2] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 At his invitation, MSL brings their case to Senator Kennedy's office one more time, but come to realize that their initial faith in justice amounted to no more than pure naivet�©. Beaten, but not defeated, MSL realizes that if it is to survive, it must embark on a series of new strategies aimed at increasing both the schools excellence and its appeal to law students nation wide.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Fri, 2 February 2007 By the spring of 2000 the tide appeared to fiinally have turned. Fourteen years after it had first opened its doors, MSL boasted 1500 graduates who had gone on to careers in law, politics, real estate, education, law enforcement... the list goes on and on. Despite the fact that the ABA had grown more powerful than ever, MSL had won the war.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[4] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Chapter 1, part 1 of Debbie Hagan's page turner introduces us to the Merrimack Valley: to the Tyngsboro Fire Department as they battle a suspicious barn fire, to an ambitious local determined to make it big, whatever the cost, and finally to Diane Sullivan, a $60 dollar a week bank teller by day, indefatigable student by night, with one last shot at fulfilling her dreams.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_1_Part_1_Merrimack_Valley_Northern_Massachusetts.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 5:27 PM Comments[8] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Juggling multiple jobs, family and impossible hours is a small price to pay for Diane Sullivan and her fellow students at Commonwealth School of Law. They have one dream... to create a better future for themselves and their families by becoming an attorney. No price seems to large for these determined, if unconventional law students, and they have placed their trust, their money, and their future in the hands of Commonwealth School of Law's President, Michael Boland. But is anything at Commonwealth, including, Michael Boland, what it first appears?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_1_Part_2_Merrimack_Valley_Northern_Massachusetts.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 5:23 PM Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Draft card burnings, anti-war protests, feminist marches, racial riots, and political assassinations punctuated the year 1968. The son of Russian immigrants, Lawrence Velvel matures from a precocious Chicago teenager, to a law professor at the racially divided University of Kansas and finds himself thrust into the midst of one of the most turbulent times in our nations history.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Amidst the national uproar of the Vietnam War, the sentencing of The Chicago Seven, and the horror of Kent State, Velvel finds himself labeled as an "enemy of the state" in conservative, 1960's Kansas.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[1] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Packing up home, family and a sixteen year career in Washington DC, Velvel heads north to Lowell, Massachusetts to begin his new life as Dean of Commonwealth School of Law. But would the new dean succeed in fixing the ailing CSL, or did the schools' president, Michael Boland, have other plans?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 As President Michael Boland's past begins to come to light and his paranoia increases, Velvel finds his career, even his future, at stake. Could he, and the determined CSL students, attempt the impossible?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Exhausted, broke, and disillusioned, Commonwealth students don't know were to turn next. Velvel, on the other hand, is staking everything he owns on a new law school. Is there room for both in The Merrimack Valley?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_4_Part_1__Birth_of_a_Law_School.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 5:04 PM Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 After months of endless, determined work The Massachusetts School of Law finally opens its doors. But soon after, former senator, Paul Tsongas, determined to bring a law school to Lowell, joins the board at their rival, Commonwealth. Can the outsiders at MSL overcome the increasingly powerful and politically connected board at CSL, or would all their work be for naught?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_4_Part_2_Birth_of_a_Law_School.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 5:01 PM Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Amidst intense pressure on MSL to merge with Commonwealth, former Senator Paul Tsongas, Chairman of Commonwealth's Board of Trustees, is named Chairman of the Massachusetts Board of Regents. Tsongas' new position places him in charge of determining which school would be approved in the Merrimack Region, MSL or Commonwealth. If MSL refuses the merger, does it have a chance?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 As Commonwealth struggles to survive, and Tsongas tries to wield his influence to bring a Law School to Lowell, Velvel and MSL find themselves drawn into a bigger and tougher battle than they had ever imagined.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Whoosh! At 12:38 am on October 22, 1989, the MSL library explodes into flames. The evidence points soundly to arson, but who hates MSL so much that they are willing to risk their safety and future in an attempt to burn down the building? And could their hatred succeed in keeping MSL from graduating their first law school class?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Despite a longstanding history of classism and snobbery in the legal profession, Velvel becomes more determined than ever to create a school that would belie commonly accepted stereotypes about and who and what makes up a lawyer. Meanwhile MSL's first graduating class ventures out into the world, building practices, beginning families, and finally living their dream of becoming a lawyer.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_6_Part_1_American_Bar_Association.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:49 PM Comments[6] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 By the spring of 1991 MSL's enrollment had surged and the school had put down a million dollars on a beautiful new red brick building. It was time, thought Velvel and Coyne, to seek accreditation from the ABA. But the more they learn about the ABA's long history of keeping "the undesirables" out of legal education the more it is clear that in no way did MSL fit the rigid ABA mold.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_6_Part_2_American_Bar_Association.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:46 PM Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Could MSL satisfy the ABA standards without sacrificing everything MSL stands for, or in order to survive must they turn MSL into another eilitist law school? Although the ABA claimed to applaud innovative and diverse law schools, a visit by the ABA's James White soon makes it clear to Velvel that any deviation from the ABA's standards, especially the deviations that defined MSL's mission, would not be tolerated. Velvel and his board see no choice but to take their grievance directly to the ABA's accreditation renewal hearing at The U. S. Department of Education.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_6_Part_3_American_Bar_Association.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:42 PM Comments[5] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 In 1992 the faculty at MSL spent six months researching and writing a 500 page self study that they considered a valuable discourse on legal education. Entitled "The Deeply Unsatisfactory Nature of Legal Education Today". But would their hard work turn the tide in the favor, or would it serve to further alienate MSL from the powers that be of the ABA?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[2] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 The ABA report finally arrives and what Velvel reads makes him physically ill. Never content to suffer the slings and arrows however, Velvel and the MSL faculty swiftly switch back into offensive gear. Meanwhile the mystery of the law school fire appears to be solved, and Michael Boland appears on the scene once more, this time in a far different role.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 From the Board of Governors, to The Department of Justice, to The Department of Education, and finally to the ABA House of Delegates, MSL pursues their accreditation case against the ABA. Has the case been stacked against them from the start, or has the tide begun to turn?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 In a dimly lit modern court room, MSL's anti-trust case against the ABA finally begins. The Judge, J. William Ditter Jr. claims to never have thought about the issues involved in MSL's conspiracy suit, however it soon becomes clear that Ditter is far from open to MSL's suit. Is Judge Ditter, as Velvel claims, determined to do in MSL?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[4] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 When a lawyer from The US Department of Justice informs MSL that not only had the DOJ procured evidence that proved the ABA's antitrust conspiracy, but that the judge presiding over MSL's antitrust case had not fully disclosed his involvement with the ABA accreditation process, Velvel and his colleagues do everything they legally can to try and save their case.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[4] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 MSL takes its case all the way to the White House, and believes it finally has an ally in the form of the Anti-Trust Division of The United States Department of Justice. With the DOJ firmly on their side, MSL must finally prevail...but would they?
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Comments[2] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 MSL continues to fight the ABA in the courts as well as with the US Department of Justice, but time and again finds that political agendas and incompetence thwarting their efforts. Finally MSL turns to Senator Ted Kennedy just as Congress is preparing to renew The Higher Education Act.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_9_Part_1_The_Tide_Starts_To_Turn.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:53 PM Comments[3] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 At his invitation, MSL brings their case to Senator Kennedy's office one more time, but come to realize that their initial faith in justice amounted to no more than pure naivet���©. Beaten, but not defeated, MSL realizes that if it is to survive, it must embark on a series of new strategies aimed at increasing both the schools excellence and its appeal to law students nation wide.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_9_Part_2_The_Tide_Starts_To_Turn.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:43 PM Comments[4] |
Thu, 1 February 2007 By the spring of 2000 the tide appeared to fiinally have turned. Fourteen years after it had first opened its doors, MSL boasted 1500 graduates who had gone on to careers in law, politics, real estate, education, law enforcement... the list goes on and on. Despite the fact that the ABA had grown more powerful than ever, MSL had won the war.
For more information on The Massachusetts School of Law please visit www.msl.edu Direct download: Chapter_9_Part_3_The_Tide_Starts_To_Turn.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:27 PM Comments[5] |

Chapter 1, part 1 of Debbie Hagan's page turner introduces us to the Merrimack Valley: to the Tyngsboro Fire Department as they battle a suspicious barn fire, to an ambitious local determined to make it big, whatever the cost, and finally to Diane Sullivan, a $60 dollar a week bank teller by day, indefatigable student by night, with one last shot at fulfilling her dreams.
Juggling multiple jobs, family and impossible hours is a small price to pay for Diane Sullivan and her fellow students at Commonwealth School of Law. They have one dream... to create a better future for themselves and their families by becoming an attorney. No price seems to large for these determined, if unconventional law students, and they have placed their trust, their money, and their future in the hands of Commonwealth School of Law's President, Michael Boland. But is anything at Commonwealth, including, Michael Boland, what it first appears?
Draft card burnings, anti-war protests, feminist marches, racial riots, and political assassinations punctuated the year 1968. The son of Russian immigrants, Lawrence Velvel matures from a precocious Chicago teenager, to a law professor at the racially divided University of Kansas and finds himself thrust into the midst of one of the most turbulent times in our nations history.
Amidst the national uproar of the Vietnam War, the sentencing of The Chicago Seven, and the horror of Kent State, Velvel finds himself labeled as an "enemy of the state" in conservative, 1960's Kansas.
Packing up home, family and a sixteen year career in Washington DC, Velvel heads north to Lowell, Massachusetts to begin his new life as Dean of Commonwealth School of Law. But would the new dean succeed in fixing the ailing CSL, or did the schools' president, Michael Boland, have other plans?
Exhausted, broke, and disillusioned, Commonwealth students don't know were to turn next. Velvel, on the other hand, is staking everything he owns on a new law school. Is there room for both in The Merrimack Valley?
After months of endless, determined work The Massachusetts School of Law finally opens its doors. But soon after, former senator, Paul Tsongas, determined to bring a law school to Lowell, joins the board at their rival, Commonwealth. Can the outsiders at MSL overcome the increasingly powerful and politically connected board at CSL, or would all their work be for naught?
Amidst intense pressure on MSL to merge with Commonwealth, former Senator Paul Tsongas, Chairman of Commonwealth's Board of Trustees, is named Chairman of the Massachusetts Board of Regents. Tsongas' new position places him in charge of determining which school would be approved in the Merrimack Region, MSL or Commonwealth. If MSL refuses the merger, does it have a chance?
As Commonwealth struggles to survive, and Tsongas tries to wield his influence to bring a Law School to Lowell, Velvel and MSL find themselves drawn into a bigger and tougher battle than they had ever imagined.
Whoosh! At 12:38 am on October 22, 1989, the MSL library explodes into flames. The evidence points soundly to arson, but who hates MSL so much that they are willing to risk their safety and future in an attempt to burn down the building? And could their hatred succeed in keeping MSL from graduating their first law school class?
Despite a longstanding history of classism and snobbery in the legal profession, Velvel becomes more determined than ever to create a school that would belie commonly accepted stereotypes about and who and what makes up a lawyer. Meanwhile MSL's first graduating class ventures out into the world, building practices, beginning families, and finally living their dream of becoming a lawyer.
By the spring of 1991 MSL's enrollment had surged and the school had put down a million dollars on a beautiful new red brick building. It was time, thought Velvel and Coyne, to seek accreditation from the ABA. But the more they learn about the ABA's long history of keeping "the undesirables" out of legal education the more it is clear that in no way did MSL fit the rigid ABA mold.
Could MSL satisfy the ABA standards without sacrificing everything MSl stands for, or in order to survive must they turn MSL into another eilitist law school? Although the ABA claimed to applaud innovative and diverse law schools, a visit by the ABA's James White soon makes it clear to Velvel that any deviation from the ABA's standards, especially the deviations that defined MSL's mission, would not be tolerated. Velvel and his board see no choice but to take their grievance directly to the ABA's accreditation renewal hearing at The U. S. Department of Education.
In 1992 the faculty at MSL spent six months researching and writing a 500 page self study that they considered a valuable discourse on legal education. Entitled "The Deeply Unsatisfactory Nature of Legal Education Today". But would their hard work turn the tide in the favor, or would it serve to further alienate MSL from the powers that be of the ABA?
The ABA report finally arrives and what Velvel reads makes him physically ill. Never content to suffer the slings and arrows however, Velvel and the MSL faculty swiftly switch back into offensive gear. Meanwhile the mystery of the law school fire appears to be solved, and Michael Boland appears on the scene once more, this time in a far different role.
In a dimly lit modern court room, MSL's anti-trust case against the ABA finally begins. The Judge, J. William Ditter Jr. claims to never have thought about the issues involved in MSL's conspiracy suit, however it soon becomes clear that Ditter is far from open to MSL's suit. Is Judge Ditter, as Velvel claims, determined to do in MSL?
When a lawyer from The US Department of Justice informs MSL that not only had the DOJ procured evidence that proved the ABA's antitrust conspiracy, but that the judge presiding over MSL's antitrust case had not fully disclosed his involvement with the ABA accreditation process, Velvel and his colleagues do everything they legally can to try and save their case.
MSL takes its case all the way to the White House, and believes it finally has an ally in the form of the Anti-Trust Division of The United States Department of Justice. With the DOJ firmly on their side, MSL must finally prevail...but would they?
MSL continues to fight the ABA in the courts as well as with the US Department of Justice, but time and again finds that political agendas and incompetence thwarting their efforts. Finally MSL turns to Senator Ted Kennedy just as Congress is preparing to renew The Higher Education Act.
At his invitation, MSL brings their case to Senator Kennedy's office one more time, but come to realize that their initial faith in justice amounted to no more than pure naivet�©. Beaten, but not defeated, MSL realizes that if it is to survive, it must embark on a series of new strategies aimed at increasing both the schools excellence and its appeal to law students nation wide.
By the spring of 2000 the tide appeared to fiinally have turned. Fourteen years after it had first opened its doors, MSL boasted 1500 graduates who had gone on to careers in law, politics, real estate, education, law enforcement... the list goes on and on. Despite the fact that the ABA had grown more powerful than ever, MSL had won the war.
Chapter 1, part 1 of Debbie Hagan's page turner introduces us to the Merrimack Valley: to the Tyngsboro Fire Department as they battle a suspicious barn fire, to an ambitious local determined to make it big, whatever the cost, and finally to Diane Sullivan, a $60 dollar a week bank teller by day, indefatigable student by night, with one last shot at fulfilling her dreams.

