Word: legalities
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...whom 155 were voters. Of the total number who registered themselves as Republicans, 203 became members of the Harvard Republican Club. A thorough tabulation of the cards showed the following results: of age, 200; under age, 130; not voting on account of expense and lack of legal residence, 43; refusing to do campaign work, 168; willing to "stump," 29; willing to work at the polls and canvass votes, 148. These statistics will be forwarded to the National Republican College League, where they will be used as a basis of distributing campaign work. All Republicans who neglected to register yesterday, should...
...Henry Newton Sheldon, jurist, in youth a lieutenant in the Fifty-Fifth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, for twenty-eight years a legal practitioner in Boston, for fourteen years past a learned and independent Massachusetts judge, now on the Supreme bench...
...clock Mr. Henry W. Taft, of the New York Bar, will deliver an address in the Living Room, on "The Decreased Influence in the Community of Members of the Legal Profession; its Causes and the Remedy." Front row seats will be reserved for second year law men and the address will be open to all members of the Union. After the speech the second year law class will hold a smoker in the Dining Room, at which Dean Ames '68, of the Law School, will speak...
Before an audience of about a hundred Law School men, Mr. Merrill E. Gates, head counsel of the New York Legal Aid Society, delivered an interesting address in Langdell Hall last night on the work of the society, which provides legal aid to the poor gratuitously, or at a charge of a few cents...
...main office, there are five branches: the Sailors' branch in the Battery, the East Side branch, the West Side branch, and branches in Brooklyn and Harlem. The Sailors' branch deals with the impositions practiced upon seamen, and has done much in the last twenty years to raise the legal standard of the sailor. The East and West Side divisions both practice among foreigners and the lowest classes, and do much good in settling the petty cases of the neighborhood. With these objects in view, and partly to discourage the litigious spirit among the lower classes, the purpose of the society...