Word: prospective
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Among the other articles in prospect are the following: "Vicarious Admissions" by Professor E. M. Morgan '02, an important contribution to the law of Evidence; an article by a well known New York corporation lawyer on the liabilities of a trustee under a corporate trust indenture; a discussion of multiple incorporation and the conflict of laws. "The Higher Law Background of American Constitutional Law", by E. S. Corwin; a valuable critique of some phases of present federal equity practice, as well as articles by Dean Roscoe Pound, Professors Zecharian Chafee and F. B. Sayre and other noted professors...
...detectives and policemen to reach into every hamlet, and to every ward, and to every purlieu of a large city, and use the leverage of an intermittently lax and strict enforcement of the law against would-be dealers in liquor and their patrons, he will wield a sinister power, prospect of which should make anxious the friends of free constitutional government...
...prospect of having a new gymnasium in the near future, immediately gives rise to the problem of the disposal of the old Hemenway...
...been announced that managers of the polo team are to be chosen in future from candidates of the Junior class, since it has been found that seniors are generally too busy, with divisional examinations in prospect, to afford as much time to managerial duties as is desirable. It is pointed out also that under the new system the manager in office will be in a position always to receive valuable aid and advice from an experienced predecessor who will be on hand to help him. These appear to be the chief reasons advanced to explain this innovation in managerial policy...
...Great Northern Railroad and son of its founder, the late, great James J. Hill, jumped for joy and led cheers on the Smith platform in St. Paul. . . . Senator Shipstead, the duck-hunting dentist, the Farmer Laborite, was friendly-and then reported "hurt," "alienated." . . . Milwaukee went wild over the prospect of hearing its beer signs creak again. . . . Nominee Smith went on home...