It's interesting to me that I've not seen any linking up of the Harvard Law School curriculum reform agenda with the broader Harvard general education curricular reform package, which was announced several days ahead of the law school's initiative. (To be fair, Jim's post below touches on the relationship between a general liberal education and a legal education.) I blogged about the latter issue in connection with a blogosphere debate in which the folks at Empirical Legal Studies and Larry Solum, among others, chimed in.
I'm not prepared to consign the third year of law student to adjuncts and professors of the practice (unless I'm one of them, in which case, ignore everything I've said). I still think this is what Larry Solum was getting at in his discussion of cross-disciplinary skills and tools. A legal academy without deep specialization diminishes its claim to scholarly bona fides; one without that gap-filling threatens to become, as Jim and others have said, an odd way station on the way to the bar exam and to practice. Is it Chicago that asks faculty to teach a subject wholly outside the professor's field on a regular basis? I take Jim's proposal to teach tax in that spirit of gap-filling.