Word: law
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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After January 12, Saturday is to be a porkless day throughout the Bay State, so says the Massachusets Committee of Safety. This law has, however, a loophole, for the Committee has decided to exempt from this ruling the minute bit of pork which accompanies the Boston bean to the dinner table of every true Bostonian. It was, indeed, a good thing that this rider was attached, for the bean is sacred in our midst, and what the salt is to the egg or the yeast to the bread, the pork is to the bean. Whether the tinge of pork...
...rate the long and short of the matter is that baked beans must be preserved even if the pork law has to be changed for their benefit. For just as Milwaukee is noted for its beer, and Detroit for its Ford, so, too, Boston is known on account of the bean. Any blow at its prestige is a slap at Boston. Indeed, Daniel was cast into the lions' den for not bowing before Darius' idol; if the commissioners had erred they might have suffered similarly and as a penalty for snubbing the sacred bean they would doubtless have been cast...
Lieutenant Greene was detailed by the Navy Department to the Ensign School to give the technical instruction of the course. With the assistance of several instructors he has given courses in gunnery, naval regulations, military and international law, naval history, seamanship and ordnance...
...Law Review has announced the election of six new men to its board because of the small number of editors in the Law School on account of the war. The immediate occasion for the addition to the list of editors was the fact that two members of the staff already elected earlier in the year have left the Law School to go into services. They are George Franklin Ludington 2L, of Baltimore, Md., and Sigurd Neland 2L, of Minneapolis, Minn...
Harvard University has not received a more splendid tribute for its spirit and its labor in the great war than the message from the law students of the University of Buenos Aires published in this morning's CRIMSON. It was not so long ago that we Americans felt it would be difficult for South America and the United States ever to come into close harmony. National and temperamental differences seemed so strong that a unity of purpose on the Western Hemisphere was looked upon as a distant dream. Such differences, however, melt away when a question of duty...