Word: laws
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...some extraordinary chance any one of the invisible legislators of Harvard athletic rules, whom all men concede to be the most gifted handicappers in the world, were present at this aquatie duel, he would have seen in all its broadcast evil and unfairness the severity of his own law. As it is, he may read about it in the papers to dismiss it with a tush...
This is my point--the vast and varied absurdities of the two-season rule, as now maintained. When this law was first made, it was tagged with the statement that it was reasonable because it would affect so few. As a matter of fact it affected a great many. Probation itself became blunted and worm-eaten by this idiotic rule. Does a man who has made a successful record in the fall in both sports and studies find himself better off than his neighbor who has competed to the detriment of his courses? Not a whit. Doesn't it seem...
...appointment of Professor Joseph Henry Beale, Jr., '82, as Carter Professor of General Jurisprudence was approved. The recipient has held the important positions of Bussey Professor of Law at Harvard, and of Dean of the Law School in the University of Chicago...
...trials were conducted in the form of a debate on the question, "Resolved, That a National Divorce Law is desirable." Each man spoke for twelve minutes, and gave a five-minute rebuttal. The affirmative side was upheld by B. S. Ulrich, G. D. Howie, and W. F. Ryan, while D. Haar, J. W. Finkel, and M. W. Cox spoke for the negative. The judges were A. H. Elder 1L., W. M. Shohl 3L., and M. C. Leckner...
...meeting of the Taft Club held in the Trophy Room of the Union last night an advisory board consisting of one man from each class in the College, and one man from the Law School was elected as follows: R. H. Oveson 3L., M. L. Newhall '08, S. D. Bush '09, E. C. Bacon '10, and E. Harding...