Word: legalize
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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November 26: Edward M. Bassett. "Limiting the Height of Buildings Through Zoning." Mr. Bassett is a member of the New York Bar. Was a member of the commission which framed the original New York zoning ordinance. Has been a legal adviser on zoning questions of communities all over the United States...
With speeches by President Conant, Dean Pound, and the President of Law Review and the Legal Aid Society, the Law School Committee of the Phillips Brooks House will hold its annual fall reception for the first year men at the Law School on Tuesday, October 2 at 3 o'clock in the Court Room of Langdell Hall...
Havoc reigned at Langdell Hall yesterday afternoon when the crafty students who had heard of the great migration to the banks of the Potomac began to quiz the powers that be as to those who were to deliver the real legal information. After much hunting about a few wringers were finally brought in who could give the courses in the required fashion, but left the poor struggling law students coming to drink the chalices of learning at the "world's greatest" rather against this new system of government which feels it necessary to take away the men who were hired...
...apparently the legal geniuses that burn in Langdell prefer to offer their ideas to the government, perhaps in an effort to bring some order out of the chaos that rules our life. Sad Indeed is it to see our youth of today go without the teachings of the great, but, oh, perhaps it is more valuable for the masters to attempt to teach their findings to those who feel that brains, as such, can run a government...
...taken place over the summer in the number of concern's catering to the student body in everything from laundry and pressing to firewood and furniture, and the consequent bitter and cutthroat competition, the fine line between the ethical and the unethical in soliciting, the line between the legal and the possible, has been almost completely obscured. And not because such a line has ceased to exist, but because it has been so frequently and persistently trampled upon and crossed that it is no longer easy to see, and indeed it may be at times more convenient...