Word: law
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...municipal finance throughout this country and Canada. He belonged to one of the oldest families of New England, and was born in Concord, December 11, 1877, a son of Charles Hosmer and Florence (Keyes) Walcott. He was graduated at Harvard College cum laude in 1897 and attended the Harvard Law School for two years and New York University Law School for one year. He was admitted to the New York...
...holders of degrees in Arts and Sciences, students who have completed two years of College work, one of them devoted to chemistry, physics, and biology, provided also that the student ranks in the upper third of his class, has contributed also to the quality of the incoming class. The Law School, with its high standards of work, has also grown as regards quantity and quality of its members. Registration in other graduate departments, not yet fully determined because registration is slower in these than in the other departments of the University, likewise manifests favorable conditions. With the splendid equipment...
Princeton barely nosed out a 10 to 0 victory over Bucknell on Saturday, failing to display any brilliant open offensive work or consistent defensive play. Princeton attempted the forward pass twelve times before succeeding once. Law punted steadily for great distances, once making 70 yards on a kick. Bucknell sprung a surprise by playing a savage line attack instead of the radical open game which had been anticipated. Glick was the mainstay of Princeton's attack. He several times slipped through the line outside of tackle for good gains...
...fall of 1912 there appeared in this column a long comparison of the work done in the Law chool by Harvard men and students from other colleges. The comparison was occasioned by the fact that in that year not one of the men elected to the Harvard Law Review Association was a graduate of Harvard College. After a careful and thorough discussion the CRIMSON concluded that "the recent Review elections indicate a real deterioration in the quality of work done by Harvard graduates in the Law School. Such a deterioration presents a problem which all Harvard men are called upon...
Among the twelve men elected a few days ago to the Law Review appeared the names of five graduates of Harvard. Of these five two held the highest standings in the Second-Year Law Class. Such results are exceedingly gratifying to all who have been concerned about the standing of Harvard graduates in the Law School...