Word: indigentes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
The conservatives won. The boycott resolutions were smothered in committee. The House of Delegates adopted an omnibus resolution proclaiming the A.M.A.'s devotion to the freedom and high quality of medical care, to the profession's code of ethics, and to the Kerr-Mills Act, which provides federal...
Such questions used to be a staple of law-school graduation oratory. And as such, they were all too often brushed aside. But U.S. lawyers can no longer ignore them, for the constitutional right to counsel is no longer limited to accused Americans who have the necessary cash. In its...
> Chicago's Barry Kroll, 30, is a 1960 Michigan Law graduate who got his first legal experience in the Army, arguing 300 military appeals cases. Out of the Army in 1962, Kroll joined a Chicago law firm and found himself picked off a bar list to handle one of...
"We constitute an indigent class," says Cal's Bernardo. "We live below the labor department's poverty line." Thus there are duds as well as diamonds among TAs. One Harvard fellow candidly rates 20% of the TAs in his department as "obtuse and useless pedants." And undergraduate uneasiness...
Last summer the council put 40 students to work aiding indigent clients in Northern cities, from Philadelphia to San Francisco. Another 60 clerked for volunteer Northern lawyers in the South, notably in Mississippi. Columbia Law Senior Robert Watkins (Harvard '59) is a Boston Negro who had never dreamed of...