Word: law
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...follows: William John Crozier 5G, of Agar's Island Bermuda, in Zoology; Raphael Demos 4C of Constantinople, Turkey, in Philosophy Willard Edward Farnham 2G, of Cedazedge, Colo., in Modern Languages; Herbert Feis 1G, of New York, N. Y. in Economics; John Raeburn Green 3L, of St. Louis, Mo., in Law; Albert Richard Carl Haas 2G, of Scranton, Pa., in Botany Norris Folger Hall 4G, of Cambridge, Chemistry; Harold Calvin Marston Morse 3G, of Waterville, Me., in mathematics Hyder Edward Rollins 2G, of Asperment, Tex., in Modern Languages; Harold St. John 3G, of Philadelphia, Pa., in Botany Ray Ethan Torrey...
...following are branches in which expert knowledge will be of service: Aviation, Business Administration (quartermaster), Chemistry, Dentistry, Divinity (chaplains), Engineering, En- tomology (camp pests, etc.), Law (Judge Advocate General's Department), Medicine and Surgery, Metallurgy, Meteorology, etc., Navigation, Sanitation, Seismology, Telegraphy and Wireless, Topography (under U. S. Geological Survey, War Department Division), Transportation, Veterinary Science. In addition it may be suggested that business men of good experience in handling problems of supply, transportation, labor, etc., are well suited to enter the Quartermaster's Corps...
Professor George G. Wilson, the Harvard authority on international law, asserts that we are not in a state of war with Germany, no matter what outrages she has committed upon us, because "the United States and Germany are both parties to (III.) Hague Convention, 1907, Article I, of which is as follows: "The Contracting powers recognize that hostilities between themselves must not commence without previous and explicit warning, in the form either of a reasoned declaration of war or of an ultimatum with conditional declaration...
...accessions for the year and the present extent of each department are shown in the following table: Volumes Present extent in LIBRARIES Added Volumes Pamph. College Library: Main collection, 29,568 706,459 457,800 38 special libraries, 5,507 83,563 -- -- -- Total, 35,075 790,022 457,800 Law School, 5,619 166,476 22,250 Theological, 1,302 108,082 53,955 Comp. Zoo., 1,123 53,459 50,393 Peabody, 622 6,950 6,803 Astron. Obs., 231 14,817 34,621 Gray Herbar., 294 16,243 11,027 Medical School...
...therefore, is such that sustaining it will not open any unobstructed way for attack by the legislature upon any fundamental condition of the existence of the social order. The decision does not in the least tend to establish that wage fixing acts are "due processes of law." The dissenting judges in performing the process of balancing the interests must have regarded the predominant effect of the Act as one which substituted the legislative flat for the freedom of the railroad managers to contract with employees as to wages...