Word: law
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Were it not for the widespread student discontent which I discussed above, the very small group of leaders of the student rebellion would find scant following, and if they should break the law, without such followers, they could be readily death with. It is the mass following they can arouse because of the widespread discontent which alone makes them dangerous. I therefore think we should concentrate in our thinking and planning not on these very few, but on what needs to be done so that they won't find ready followers...
...Scherle amendment must still pass the Senate and be signed by the President before it becomes law. Few of the measure's opponents, however, expect that the bill will fall to pass these final hurdles...
...PRESIDENT and Fellows of Harvard College retain a prestigious Boston law firm, but to many students the position of "attorney to the University" is held by John G.S. Flym. Flym was the star of last month's University Hall trial. He defended most of the 174 arrested for criminal trespass, and is handling practically all who are appealing the charge. He was lawyer for John Sisson '67 in a precedent-setting case last month which established the right of a man to C. O. draft status without the benefit of religious training or belief. He is defending King Collins against...
These political-legal type cases constitute right now about half of Flym's practice. He recently left a large law firm to start his own--Flym and Zakhind--so that he could spend more of his time on this type of case. The firm's specialty is litigation. Flym is interested in draft cases; his partner handles many pertaining to narcotics laws. Fully 40 per cent of their clients are poor people from Boston's ghettos. "People in the ghetto always seem to be in trouble with the law," Flym says, "and they often have trouble finding someone to defend...
...findings of fact" give each student the exact details of his hearing as well as the charges against him. Evidence used, according to a letter received by Nathan L. Goldshlag '71, includes documents of general information (in this case presented by Archibald Cox, Samuel Williston Professor of Law), photographs, written statements, and oral testimony. A sound tape was also made of each hearing...