Word: lawyer
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Paul's Catholic Club will hold its first smoke-talk in the Assembly Room of the Union this evening at 8.30 o'clock. Mr. M. J. Dwyer, a well-known lawyer and lecturer, will deliver an address on "With the Poets in Smokeland," and afterward will sing a number of songs and ballads. The talk is open to all members of the University; men who are not members of the Union may enter by the Ladies' Entrance...
...Paul's Catholic Club will hold the first of a series of smoke-talks in the Assembly Room of the Union tomorrow evening at 8.30 o'clock. Mr. M. J. Dwyer, a well-known lawyer and lecturer, will deliver an address on "With the Poets in Smokeland," and afterward will sing a number of songs and ballads. The talk is open to all members of the University; men who are not members of the Union may enter by the Ladies' Entrance...
...hearing on the proposed parkway, from Quincy square to the river, was held at the City Hall last night. James R. Murphy, the lawyer for those opposed to the parkway, argued that the hearing could not be called final, because, according to statute, the final hearing could only be the called after the plans had been advertised for thirty-days. He introduced witnesses to show that the traffic on De Wolfe street was not large enough to call for widening the street. Objections were made to the proposed changes on the ground that a wider street would so encroach...
James B. Dill, a New York corporation lawyer, will give an address on "National Corporation Laws for Industrial Organizations" before the Economic Seminary, at 4.30 this afternoon. Mr. Dill, besides being director of forty-two corporations, has been connected with the organization of more than seven hundred others, which gives him the distinction of having formed more corporations than any other lawyer in this country. The lecture is open to all members of the University, and will be in Harvard 1 instead of University 23 in order to accommodate outside students who may wish to hear...
...sketch of Chief Justice Marshall's life, and the events preceding his appointment to the supreme bench. His appointment came at a critical time, when amidst the strife and change of political parties contending over points of a constitution but half interpreted there arose the need of a great lawyer to explain clearly and aright the true principles of the American scheme of government. Cases involving the subtlest points of the Constitution came before Marshall during his long term as Chief Justice, and to the wisdom of his decisions is due in great measure that prevalence of sound constitutional doctrine...