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Word: jurists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...inauguration of John Marshall as Chief Justice of the United States will be held in Sanders Theatre this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Acting-president Walcott will preside, and Professor J. B. Thayer of the Law School will deliver an address on John Marshall as a man and a jurist. A portrait of Justice Marshall will be displayed on the stage during the exercises...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOR JOHN MARSHALL. | 2/4/1901 | See Source »

...States Supreme court, will be held in Sanders Theatre at 4 o'clock on February 4. Acting-president Walcott will preside, and Professor J. B. Thayer, of the Law School, will deliver an address on John Marshall's character and work, his position as a man and as a jurist. Admission to sanders Theatre will be by ticket...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In Honor of John Marshall. | 1/29/1901 | See Source »

...gains. Professor Loisette's wonderful discovery enables his pupils to learn any book in one reading. Endorsed by Prof. Richard A. Proctor, the astronomer; Hon. W. W. Astor, late U. S. Minister to Italy; Hon. John Gibson, President Judge 19th Judicial District, Penn.; Hon. Judah P. Benjamin, the famous jurist, and hundreds of others who have all been his pupils. The system is taught by correspondence. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, and 1500 on return visit to Philadelphia. Address Prof. Loisette, 237 Fifth Avenue, New York, for prospectus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Speical Notices. | 4/25/1888 | See Source »

Simon Sterns will lecture before the Yale Kent Club, April 25, on "The Application of Old and the Development of New Legal Principles on the Law of Corporations, Trusts and Strikes." Mr. Sterns is a celebrated New York jurist and has been prominent among counsel in suits against the Gould corporations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/21/1888 | See Source »

...admission, no entrance examination, the majority of whose students are not college graduates, which requires for a degree a course of only two years' instruction, and whose graduates expect, and many are forced, to go immediately into the practice of the law, is not to attempt to make jurists or philosophers out of the students, but to give them a liberal, well-rounded course in the law as a whole; giving a full, extended course of instruction in the several most essential subjects, each topic to be treated as a whole and inductively as far as time will allow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HARVARD COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL. | 12/4/1874 | See Source »

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