Word: laws
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...made to organize a graduates' engineering society, and committees were appointed to draw up a constitution and to nominate officers. The graduates will meet in the Trophy Room at 6 o'clock to organize definitely, adopt a constitution, and elect officers. This graduates' society will be parallel to the Law and Medical School Alumni Associations...
...Harvard to whom he can write for information. He applies for a room perhaps in Perkins or Walter Hastings, both of which are attractively described in the booklet on college rooms. When he arrives at Cambridge and is settled in his room, he finds that his neighbors are Law School men, graduate students, and a few upperclassmen, and that he is half a mile away from the centre of undergraduate life on Mt. Auburn street, about which he has never heard. To get into the geographical location in which he belongs, takes him a year. This alone is a serious...
...messenger of the New York electoral college which conveyed to Washington the vote for Abraham Lincoln as president. In the Civil War he became brevet-brigadier-general of volunteers and was first military governor of Charleston, S. C. After the war, Gen. Woodford resumed the practice of law, and in 1867 was elected lieutenant-governor of New York He was president of the electoral college that voted for U. S. Grant as president. In 1873 he was a member of Congress from New York, and was a member of the commission that framed the charter of greater New York...
...Hampshire will speak in the Living Room of the Union next Tuesday; on March 31, Hon. W. L. Garrison will speak; Hon. W. J. Gaynor of the Supreme Court of New York will speak on April 7; and on April 14, Professor J. H. Beale '82, of the Law Faculty will address the club...
...Law School's collection of portraits of famous lawyers and judges has recently been increased by about one hundred pictures, which have been purchased at an auction in Philadelphia of the late Chief Justice Mitchell's collection. Most of them are portraits of English jurists of the last four centuries, including those of Wolsey and other Lord Chancellors. This new addition brings the total number of pictures in the collection up to about five hundred and makes it probably the best of its kind in the world. Most of it is in the old Law School Building, but part...