Word: partnerships
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...June number of the Harvard Law Review, which has appeared recently, contains the following articles: "The Separate Estates of Non-Bankrupt Partners in the Bankruptcy of a Partnership under the Bankrupt Act of 1898," by Professor J. D. Brannan '69; "Rome and Law," by A. H. F. Lefroy; "A Phase of Accounting in Trade-Mark Cases," by G. Cunningham '87 and J. Warren...
During his absence his courses on Partnership are being given by Professor J. D. Brannan 69, and those on Trusts by Professor J. H. Beale...
...enterprise, run for private profit, like an ordinary boarding house, leaving it would require no justification. But the Dining Association, which conducts the Hall, and to which every man who boards there belongs, is a co-operative association. It was founded and has been conducted as a large student partnership to supply board at cost. It has been built up and steadily improved by the efforts of public-spirited, volunteer-student officers, like the late William H. Baldwin '85 and others. It seems very unlikely that the men who are now leaving the Association when it needs, for a time...
...India and entered the East India trade. Becoming interested in the insurance business he was later made president of the American Insurance Company of Boston. In 1873 he accepted the local agency of the Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company and after a few years entered into partnership under the firm name of Guild and Eastman, with which firm, in addition to many other local insurance interests, his name has since been associated...
...plot in the main is as follows: Lovewit, after the death of his wife, retires to the country, leaving his house in the care of Jeremy, his servant. Jeremy forms a partnership with Subtle, a sham alchemist, and setting up furnaces and apparatus in Lovewit's house, they prepare to conjure money from the credulous. Disguised as Captain Face, Jeremy lures in customers, and then as the grimy servant of the Alchemist, assists in gulling the victims. The play represents a day's business, one customer following another. Dapper wants a "familiar" to make him win at cards. Drugger comes...