Word: law
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...threatened invaston of a Yardling's traditional right to walk the streets of Cambridge at all hours of the night came to naught yesterday when reports in the Boston press that the new curfew law would apply to all children 16 or under were dented by city officials...
...originally interpreted, the curfew law would have put a clamper on noctural excursions for nearly 40 16-year-old Yardlings...
...ghost-writing and were awarded all of six cents. The blow was only important in so far as it established the legal position of the school in relation to the University. Yesterday, however, the University connected with a sharp right when a bureau offering a review in criminal law called off the tutoring upon pressure of being asked to do so. From this it might seem as if the University had a relatively easy problem, necessitating only the asking of Manter Hall, Wolff's, Parker-Cramer, and the College Tutoring Bureau to stop their cramming...
After college--what? The answer to this question is discussed many times during the college year in meetings large and small. Here various fields of work are contemplated, the advantages and disadvantages of going into the profession of the law, medicine, and business are taken up. And now comes another such meeting to consider the profession of the ministry...
More startling was a recent radio capture. Four desperadoes in jail in Omaha slugged their guards and got away. Soon law & order and law's new kibitzer, radio, were hot in pursuit. First word of the escaped convicts came by telephone to radio station WOW, reporting them heading toward Gretna, 23 miles southwest of Omaha. Soon police, newsmen and radio newscasters with mobile transmitters were on the trail, among them WOW's dapper News Editor Foster...