Word: solicitor
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...HOUSE FOR MR. BISWAS, by V. S. Naipaul (53 I pp.; McGraw-Hill; $5.95). "I can't tell you how sad it make me to leave this house," the solicitor's clerk told Mr. Biswas. "Really for my mother sake, man. That is the onliest reason why I have to move. The old queen can't man age the steps." And so Mr. Biswas, ex-sign painter, ex-bus conductor, ex-journalist, achieved his heart's desire and moved into a dwelling of his very own. It looked "like a huge and squat sentry...
Archibald Cox, solicitor general of the United States, will deliver what may well be a major Administration address at the annual combined luncheon of the Harvard foundation for advanced study and research and the Harvard Law School alumni association, at noon in Harkness Quadrangle of the graduate center...
...University now has so many friends in the government that it will probably have to pick them off according to seniority. Archibald Cox '34, Solicitor General, is therefore an excellent candidate; his boss, Robert F. Kennedy '48, and David E. Bell of the Budget Bureau are not. Still, one can't forget John Kenneth Galbraith and Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. '38, who both protested Harvard's giving too many degrees to Republicans, and who may both be ready for the honor themselves. Whizzer became Mr. Justice White too late...
Paul A. Freund, Carl M. Loeb University Professor, will be toastmaster for Wayne G. Barnett '50 of the United States Solicitor-General's Office; John F. Dooling, Jr., U.S. District Judge for Eastern New York; Erwin N. Griswold, dean of the Law School; Edmund M. Morgan, Royall Professor of Law, Emeritus; Elliot L. Richardson '41, Boston attorney; and Frederick B. Wiener, Washington lawyer...
...City Solicitor has determined that the City cannot seize any land already devoted to public use, but Hayes asserted yesterday that "once the MTA decides to sell the Yards it will obviously no longer need the land for public purposes...