Word: laws
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...November number of the Harvard Law Review contains the following important articles: "What Law Governs the Validity of Contracts?" 1. "The Origin and History of the Doctrine," by Professor Joseph H. Beale '82, of the Law School. "The Force and Effect of the Orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission," by H. T. Newcomb. "Concealment of Assets in Bankruptcy Cases," by Lee M. Friedman '93. "Conflict of Laws and the Enforcement of the Statutory Liability of Stockholders in a Foreign Corporation," by Edwin H. Abbot...
...first two elections to the Law Review, the following men were chosen: J. J. Kaplan 3L., J. M. R. Lyeth 3L., J. C. Prizer 3L., C. R. Branch 2L., E. E. Cheatham 2L., C. B. Garver 2L., M. Griswold 2L., J. K. Kauffman 2L., R. K. Landis 2L., J. W. C. McCarter 2L., S. Macneil 2L., and B. L. Young...
...foregoing departments of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences gives an increase of 31 over last year. The Divinity School shows an increase of 9, the number of regular and special students being exactly the same as last year, but the number of graduate students having doubled. The Law School has a gain of 71, the entering class of 307 being the largest on record. The Medical School reports a decrease of 8. The Dental School, which has just moved into its new building, shows a gratifying increase of 22, the entering class having been more than doubled...
Professor Jeremiah Smith '56, Story Professor of Law, whose resignation has been accepted by the Corporation to take effect September 1, 1910, has been created Professor Emeritus...
...most important of the immediate needs of the committee are as follows: 30 men, preferably men from the upper classes, or the Law and Graduate Schools, to teach the rudiments of English to classes of foreigners of several different nationalities in East Cambridge, East Boston, and Boston, requiring an hour or two one evening a week; ten men to take boys' clubs one evening a week; 25 men to speak in different organizations on the opportunities at the Prospect Union, requiring part of as many evenings as convenient within the next two or three weeks; 50 men to form entertainment...