The most common is black. However, like the hoods, the color of the caps and gowns are particular to the school the student is graduating from.
It all depends on the schools colours. It could be black, red, blue, green, and anything inbetween.
Yes
a dork!
Harvard Law School does not publish an official employment rate for its graduates. However, data from sources like the American Bar Association and the National Association for Law Placement indicate that the employment rate for Harvard Law graduates is typically very high, often over 90% within the first year after graduation.
Richard Lidwell has written: 'Survey of 1996 law graduates in careers other than law'
Cooley is an accredited law school. Its graduates are qualified to take the Michigan Bar exam.
Your question does not make any sense son?
An llb is what law school graduates used to get until the law schools and their graduates got tired of being in the back of the academic line at graduations and other formal occasions. It stands for "bachelor of laws." It has been replaced by JD, so we lawyers get to be with the other doctors at the head of the line.
It is difficult to determine an exact percentage, as it varies depending on factors like career choice, salary, and saving habits. However, research suggests that a higher percentage of college graduates become millionaires compared to those without a college degree.
The law does not regulate clothing. It might be contrary to the rules of some school for a person to wear particular clothing under certain conditions on that school's grounds. Still, there is no law against possessing that clothing.
Most graduates will take a month or two of study for the bar exam. Then you take the exam and await the results.
66% of all Harvard graduates become millionaires. 63% of the millionaires were studying Harvard Law. 22% studied Business. 10.9 % of them studied mathematics. 4 % studied linguistics. Information from US Census 2006