Just a little over a year later, a handful of law students at Yale, Harvard, and the University of Chicago, sharing an enthusiasm for what one called “free-market concepts,” founded the Federalist Society. It turned out to be the monumentally important first step in the plan Horowitz’s memo had laid out. The Chicago chapter enlisted a professor at their law school who was also on the payroll of the conservative Washington think tank AEI to be their faculty adviser—Antonin Scalia. The idea behind the society, in addition to hanging with young fellow travelers and organizing campus lectures and
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