In 1972, the law school faculty voted to abolish its practice of
computing class rank. The faculty did so under the conviction that a
too-heavy reliance had been placed on a system that seemed to imply
substantial differences among students' academic accomplishments, yet
was based on very insignificant actual differences among cumulative
grade-point averages. In short, the ranking system was believed to have
obscured, rather than to have reflected accurately, the relative merits
of graduates in many cases.