Word: laws
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Law School tug-of-war team, Easton, '83, Bachelder, '83, Curtis, '83, and Fiske, '81, are now constantly practising on the cleats with the class teams...
...various parts of the university and bring their united weight to bear on the problems of a single part. Each speaker is invited to deal with some point in which his special vocation touches the thought or the life of students of Theology. Thus, the corporation, the overseers, the Law School, and the Medical School and the various departments of the college, each says its word to the Divinity School. This step of the Divinity School is an example worth imitating. It is good for the teachers, because it leads them to discuss the larger relations of their special subjects...
...alumnus of the Law School, in a letter to the Advertiser, thus upbraids the alumni of that department for lack of interest in the school. He says: "You have said not a word too much in praise of the wise and sagacious gift of Dr. Calvin Ellis to the Medical School. When will the legal alumni give to the law department of the university the benefit of a personal interest, support and generosity comparable in any way to that which the medical men have shown to their professional school...
...measure was forced through the faculty meeting without giving the members of that body a sufficient chance for discussion or any chance to learn what the students, graduates and others interested in Harvard had to say upon the subject. This savors too much of political wire-pulling and gag law methods, and hardly reflects credit on those having the matter directly in charge before and at the meeting. Therefore, for these reasons, in the first place, that the present action was too hasty and that the students were not consulted, we think that the matter was ill advised...
Easton, '83, of the Law School, is giving points to the freshman tug-of-war team every afternoon...