Word: laws
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...lived with him a year at Notre Dame. I still regard him as having the best mind, memory and fund of general knowledge of anyone I've ever known. He turned down a chance to take the exams for a Rhodes Scholarship in order to go to Harvard Law School. He was a much better scholar than...
...Exposition there has been . . . [a] noticeable absence of the type of crimes one might reasonably expect. This record can be attributed only to police vigilance and efficiency, plus the fact that San Francisco has no district where abound people who can be described as "tough" and who would protect law-violators in their operations...
...letter was written, of course, by Franklin Roosevelt's son-in-law, John Boettiger, publisher of Hearst's Seattle Post-Intelligencer. It got under Elliott's hide. From Pinehurst, N. C. he retorted to Brother-in-law Boettiger in his best literary style...
Yesterday afternoon at a meeting in Kendall House, the Legal Aid Bureau, which is manned by Law School honor students, elected officers for 1939-40. The following were chosen; Edward Le C. Vogt. President; Hubert Nexon, Vice-President; William Hulburt, Treasurer; Edward Gignoux, Secretary; and Irving Panzer, Senior director on the Board...
...committee is headed by Ralph Barton Perry, Edgar Pierce Professor of Philosophy; the rest of the committee is composed of E. Merrick Dodd Jr. '10, professor of Law; Arthur M. Schlesinger, professor of History; Harlow Shapely, Paine Professor of Practical Astronomy; Kenneth Murdock, professor of English; Edmund M. Morgan '02, Royall Professor of Law; and William S. Ferguson, McLean Professor of Ancient and Modern History...