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                    <text>SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE

02 A MESSAGE FROM DEAN PERLMAN 03 SUFFOLK LAW BY THE
NUMBERS
04
NATIONAL
HONORS
FOR
CIVIC-MINDED
STUDENT
04 FAIR HOUSING PROGRAM GETS $1M GRANT 04 THE PEW
CHARITABLE TRUSTS TURNS TO SUFFOLK 05 ALUMNA DESIGNS
DIVERSIONARY PROGRAMS APP 05 NEW DEGREE PROGRAM FOR LIFE
SCIENCES LAW 05 PROFESSOR EARNS ABA LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
06 NEW LAW FACULTY ON ISSUES THAT MATTER 08 LEGAL 500 RECOGNIZES
RECENT GRADUATE 08 RECOGNITION FROM THE NATIONAL BLACK PRE-LAW
CONFERENCE 08 SUFFOLK LAW HELPS LAUNCH NATIONAL POLICING
09
MICHAEL
J.
NICHOLSON:
MAYOR
A SAGE CONSORTIUM
	
BY DAY, LAW STUDENT BY 			
NIGHT 10
FROM
SUFFOLK LAW
DEA
STUDENT
WINS PATENT
A W A R D
11 NEW GROUP
ASSISTS FIRST
-GEN STUDENTS
12 CLOSING
COVID-19
35
JUSTICE GAP
PHD’S
	12 NY TIMES
ENROLLED AT
HIGHLIGHTS
SUFFOLK L
EVICTION RELIEF
13 A QUICK
13
CLINICS FORGE
TURN T O W A R D
AHEAD IN FACE OF PANDEMIC
THE VIRTUAL CLASSROOM
13 EMERGENCY FUND HELPS 			
STUDENTS IMPACTED BY COVID
14 SERGE GEORGES JR. NOMINATED TO SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
17 BRETT FREEDMAN ADVISES THE SSCI 18 REGINA HOLLOWAY’S CAREER
IN POLICE OVERSIGHT TAKES A NEW TURN 19 THREE ALUMNI MAKE $1M
PLEDGES IN SINGLE YEAR 20 ALL RISE: CELEBRATING SUFFOLK LAW’S FEMALE
LEADERS 21 ALUMNI CONTRIBUTIONS WITH PERSONAL MEANING 21 ERNST
GUERRIER PAYS IT FORWARD 22 DIVERSITY, EQUITY &amp; INCLUSION AT SUFFOLK
LAW 25 TRANSACTIONAL LAW MEETS SOCIAL JUSTICE 26 DEAN
PERLMAN HELPS LEAD ACCESS-TO-JUSTICE-EFFORT 27 SUFFOLK LAW
LAUNCHES INNOVATIVE HYBRID ONLINE JD PROGRAM 28 EMPATHY AND
REHABILITATION, ALUMNI FORGE NEW PATHS FOR THE COURTS 32 SUFFOLK
LAW RESPONDS TO THE HOUSING CRISIS 38 WALK IN MY SHOES: A DAY IN
THE LIFE OF A BLACK WOMAN ATTORNEY 41 HONORING THE MEMORY
OF A RISING STAR IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE 42 DEAN’S CABINET GROWS BY
FIVE 44 STUDENT AWARD NAMED FOR FORMER DEAN ROBERT SMITH
WINTER 2021 49 REMEMBERING KENNEDY FAMILY ADVISOR GERARD DOHERTY

�SUFFOLK

LAW

CONTENTS

Dean
Andrew Perlman

Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Editor-in-Chief
Michael Fisch
Associate Editor
Katy Ibsen
Design
Jenni Leiste
Contributing Writers
Kara Baskin
Beth Brosnan
Alyssa Giacobbe
Jon Gorey
Mark Potts
Contributing Photographers
Michael J. Clarke
Adam Johnson
Copy Editor
Janet Parkinson

32
Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine is
published once a year by Suffolk
University Law School. The magazine
is printed by Lane Press in Burlington,
VT. We welcome readers’ comments.
Contact us at 617-573-5751,
mfisch@suffolk.edu, or at Editor, Suffolk
Law Alumni Magazine, 73 Tremont
St., Ste. 1308, Boston, MA 021084977. c 2021 by Suffolk University. All
publication rights reserved.

SUFFOLK LAW
RESPONDS TO THE
HOUSING CRISIS
Tackling Discrimination
and Affordable Housing
Head On

EMPATHY AND
REHABILITATION
Suffolk Law Community
Helps Forge New Paths
for the Courts

28

�02
A MESSAGE FROM DEAN
ANDREW PERLMAN

04
LAW BRIEFS

12

38
WALK IN MY SHOES:

A Day in the Life of a Black Woman Attorney

PANDEMIC PIVOT
12	 Closing the COVID-19
Justice Gap
12	 NY Times Highlights
Eviction Relief Tool
13	 A Quick Turn Toward
the Virtual Classroom
13 	 Clinics Forge Ahead in
Face of Pandemic
13 	 Emergency Fund Helps
Students Impacted by
COVID-19

14
IMPACTFUL ALUMNI
14	 Serge Georges, Jr.
Nominated to Supreme
Judicial Court
17	 Brett Freedman Advises
Senate Intelligence
Committee
18	 Regina Holloway’s
Career in Police
Oversight Takes
	 a New Turn

19
GIVING BACK
19 	 Three Alumni Make
$1M Pledges in
	 Single Year
20 	 All Rise: Celebrating
Suffolk Law’s Female
Leaders

1

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

20 	 Posthumous Honors for
Professor Victoria Dodd
20	 CATIC Foundation
Supports Acceleratorto-Practice Program
21 	 Alumni Contributions
With Personal Meaning
21	 Ernst Guerrier Pays It
Forward

22
LAW COMMUNITY
22	 Diversity, Equity, and
Inclusion at Suffolk Law
25	 Transactional Law
Meets Social Justice
26	 Dean Perlman Helps
Lead Access-to-Justice
Effort
27	 Suffolk Law Launches
Innovative Hybrid
Online JD Program
41	 Honoring the Memory
of a Rising Star in
Criminal Justice

42
DEAN’S CABINET

44
RETIREMENTS

45
CLASS NOTES

49
IN MEMORIAM:
GERARD DOHERTY

�MESSAGE

A MESSAGE FROM

DEAN ANDREW
PERLMAN
Dear Suffolk Law Alumni:
The past year is one we will not soon
forget. We have faced a deadly global
pandemic, political polarization, a severe
economic downturn, and a reckoning on
issues of racial and social justice.
Suffolk Law alumni are at the forefront
of tackling these kinds of challenges, and this
issue of the Alumni Magazine covers just some
of their accomplishments. For example,
our graduates are addressing flaws in the
criminal justice system; they are working
within the government, at the federal,
state, and local level, to solve a wide range
of pressing problems; and they are raising
essential concerns about the obstacles that
lawyers of color face in our profession.
Suffolk Law faculty and students are
also playing their part. For instance, just
this year, they have uncovered pervasive
discrimination in the Boston housing market,
led an international effort to automate court
forms for the public while courthouses are
closed, and established a new transactional
clinic that offers legal assistance to small
businesses during difficult economic times.
In these and so many other ways,
the Suffolk Law community is making a
difference in a changing, challenging world.
At the same time, we are carrying out our
core mission of providing an outstanding
legal education to talented students who
want to achieve professional success. Here
are some recent notable developments:
Continuing classes in a pandemic.
In March, we temporarily moved our entire
program online to respond to the public
health crisis. Our faculty and staff then
worked hard over the summer to prepare
for a fall semester that has included a mix
of in-person and online classes that are
interactive, engaging, and delivering on our
educational promise.

An exceptional group of first-year
students. The fall 2020 entering class was
9% larger than we were expecting, and our
409 first-year students have median LSAT
scores (154) and undergraduate GPAs (3.44)
that were the strongest of any Suffolk Law
class in the past 10 years.
Increasing bar pass rates. For the
class of 2020, Suffolk Law’s first-time
bar pass rate in Massachusetts increased
substantially to 80.7%. This is our highest
first-time bar pass rate in six years.
Record-setting
donations.
The
Law School received three $1 million
commitments in one year. These were the
three largest commitments ever made by
living Suffolk Law alumni, and two were
made after the start of the pandemic. We
also now have 45 Dean’s Cabinet members,
each of whom has committed at least
$50,000 to advance the Law School’s work.
These contributions are enhancing our
programs and ensuring that Suffolk Law
remains affordable to everyone regardless
of financial circumstances.
Top rankings in experiential
education. Suffolk Law is the only school
in the country that has had four top-25
ranked legal skills specialties in U.S. News &amp;
World Report for five years in a row (2017–21
editions).
Diversity, equity, and inclusion. The
national focus on issues of racial and social
justice is reflected in our own community.
For several years, the Law School has been

2

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

making strides to ensure that our community
is diverse and inclusive. This year, we began
taking additional steps in a wide range of
areas, such as admissions, the curriculum,
and hiring, to advance that important work.
Transforming legal education.
Suffolk Law has launched a pioneering new
Hybrid JD Program (HJD). The program,
which had been in the works long before
the pandemic, is the first in the country
to offer full- and part-time students a
traditional in-person first-year classroom
experience, followed by the option of taking
all remaining classes online.
In this issue of the magazine, you will
find more details about these developments
as well as stories about the many ways
that all of you—Suffolk Law alumni—are
making a difference.
Thank you for everything that you do,
both through your professional impact
and your contributions to Suffolk Law.
Together, we are advancing the Law
School’s longstanding mission of providing
an exceptional, practice-oriented legal
education that enables our graduates to
make a difference in the world. That mission
has never been more important.
Warmest regards,

Andrew Perlman

�SUFFOLK LAW BY THE NUMBERS

ONE
TEN

373

45

ONE

IN

The incoming class has the
best academic credentials
of any in the last 10 years.

OF

Governor Baker has nominated Suffolk
Law alum and adjunct faculty member
Judge Serge Georges, Jr. JD’96 to the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. If
confirmed, Judge Georges would become
the third Suffolk Law graduate to join the
Commonwealth’s seven-member high
court in the last four years, joining Elspeth
Cypher JD’86 and Frank Gaziano JD’89.

The number of Dean’s Cabinet members.
Each has committed $50,000 or more to
Suffolk Law.

FIRST
THIRTY

new $1 million
commitments in
the last year.

THE ONLY LAW SCHOOL WITH FOUR TOP-25 LEGAL
SKILLS PROGRAMS FOR FIVE YEARS IN A ROW, U.S.
NEWS &amp; WORLD REPORT (2017–21 EDITIONS).

IN

10 months after graduation, the Class of
2019 had the best employment outcomes
of any graduating Suffolk Law class in at
least 30 years.

LEGAL
WRITING

5

#

3

CLINICS

14

#

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

TRIAL
ADVOCACY

20

#

DISPUTE
RESOLUTION

#

22

�LAW
BRIEFS
GRANTS

$1 MILLION GOVERNMENT GRANT
PROPELS FAIR HOUSING EFFORT
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
has awarded Suffolk’s Housing Discrimination Testing Program
(HDTP) a three-year grant totaling more than $1 million to
continue its nationally recognized work. In addition to training
the next generation of civil rights attorneys, the HDTP has
uncovered widespread discrimination against tenants in the
Boston area on the basis of race, the use of housing vouchers,
and other protected categories. Since 2012, the program has
received $4.2 million in grant funding to support its work.

NATIONAL HONORS FOR

S

am Faisal JD’20 was
named a finalist for the
National Jurist 2020 Law
Student of the Year. The honor
is given to just 10 students across
the country.
“Sam has this great quality
of being gentle, at ease, and
warm yet tenacious,” Professor
Ragini Shah, director of
the Immigration Clinic, told
National Jurist. “Whether he’s
helping clients in the immigrant
community, teaching high
school kids through our
Marshall Brennan Program, or
advocating for fellow students,
he brings that warmth and
determination to bear—and
good things happen.”
During his 1L summer,
Faisal volunteered in Boston
Municipal Court, working
with indigent clients and
attempting to get their cases

THE PEW CHARITABLE
TRUSTS TURNS TO SUFFOLK
In response to the pandemic, Suffolk’s Legal Innovation &amp;
Technology Lab created mobile-friendly guided interviews that
walk litigants through court forms without the need for physical
contact; think Turbo Tax, but for legal issues like a restraining
order. With support from The Pew Charitable Trusts, the Lab
is building tools that last beyond the pandemic, to bring data
from those court forms directly into a court’s case management
system. That means court employees will not need to fill in case
data by hand, speeding up court response times and simplifying
processes for pro se litigants. Most importantly, it offers the
potential to revolutionize data collection and analysis in trial
courts throughout the country.

dismissed. He went nine for 12
on the dismissals, National Jurist
reported.
Faisal served as a mentor
in the Law School’s Marshall
Brennan Program, commuting
a few times a week to instruct
a public high school class in
constitutional law. One of his
students went on to win the
preeminent high school moot
court—with federal judges
deciding the final round.
In the last five years, Suffolk
Law has made the Student of
the Year shortlist four times.
Last year, National Jurist honored
Justin Rhuda JD’19, noting that
he helped stop the eviction of a
former U.S. Army prisoner of
war and his family, who were
facing homelessness. Rhuda was
a U.S. Marine Corps captain
from 2010 to 2015, stationed for
two years in the Persian Gulf.

IN THE MEDIA
“DEADLY FORCE BEHIND THE WHEEL”
WASHINGTON POST, AUGUST 24, 2020
Professor Emerita Karen Blum addresses a
controversial police driving maneuver used to end car
chases. Blum and Suffolk Law students filed a brief
in a Supreme Court case brought by a man who was
paralyzed in 2001 during an attempted “precision
immobilization technique” by a Georgia police officer.

4

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Photographs from left: Michael J. Clarke (2), Adobe, Michael J. Clarke

CIVIC-MINDED STUDENT

�LAW BRIEFS

BUILD IT AND

THEY WILL COME
ALUMNA DESIGNS DIVERSIONARY PROGRAMS APP

D

efense attorneys, especially when
they’re handling low-level offenses
like small-quantity drug possession
and petty theft, often ask judges to divert
their clients into social programs—such
as substance abuse treatment or group
therapy—to avoid a criminal record.
They do that in part because the effects
of a criminal record can be so far-reaching:
ineligibility for college scholarships
or financial aid, lost opportunities for
employment, and denials for private and
public housing.
While working in Suffolk’s Juvenile
Defender Clinic, Nicole Siino JD’18 saw
how difficult it was to find her clients
a place in treatment or job programs
before they were arraigned, and her
student colleagues and public defenders
experienced the same problem.
“I sat in court and listened to judges,
attorneys, and probation officers talk about
dozens of programs designed to help juveniles
succeed and discovered that there was no

master list of community-based resources.
No place to go to do a comprehensive search
where you could learn about programs and
determine if they had openings,” she says.
The idea that young people would lose
an opportunity for professional help and a
shot at redemption largely because lawyers
and social workers didn’t have a basic web
resource seemed wrong.
So she conquered her fear of coding,
turning to Suffolk Legal Innovation
&amp; Technology (LIT) Lab teachers for
instruction. And then she built the tool
she envisioned, the Juvenile Resource
Finder. Today, Massachusetts attorneys
(and anyone else, for that matter) can
check her app on their phones from a
courtroom—and help their clients avoid
the potentially devastating effects of a
criminal record.
Siino is a consultant focusing on legal innovation
and technology at Fireman &amp; Company. Find her
app at bit.ly/NicoleApp2020.

NEW DEGREE
PROGRAM FOR LIFE
SCIENCES LAW
In collaboration with Suffolk’s
Sawyer Business School and the
College of Arts &amp; Sciences, the Law
School has launched a new Master of
Science in Law: Life Sciences degree.
The interdisciplinary program is
designed to help students secure jobs
and advance careers in the life sciences,
one of the nation’s fastest-growing fields
for job growth. A 2019 Massachusetts
Biotechnology Education Foundation
report indicates that the state does not
have enough suitably trained workers for
available life sciences positions and that
filling openings often takes more than
three months as employers compete to
hire promising candidates.
QUESTIONS?
Contact Jennifer Karnakis at
jkarnakis@suffolk.edu.

PROFESSOR EARNS ABA
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

A

t an event headlined by Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Illinois Attorney
General Kwame Raoul, Suffolk Law Professor Janice C. Griffith received a
Lifetime Achievement award from the American Bar Association Section of
State and Local Government Law for her years of service and impressive professional
accomplishments. She began her career as an associate with the Wall Street firm Hawkins,
Delafield &amp; Wood, then served as general counsel for New York City’s Housing and
Development Administration. Griffith also served as Suffolk University’s Vice President
for Academic Affairs and dean of Georgia State University College of Law.

5

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�LAW BRIEFS

IN THE MEDIA

NEW SUFFOLK LAW FACULTY
ON ISSUES THAT MATTER
“TELL US ABOUT A LEGAL ISSUE THAT IS ANIMATING YOU.”
NEW PROFESSORS WEIGH IN

JENNIFER
CIARIMBOLI
LIVING TOGETHER?
YOU MAY NEED SOME
LEGAL ADVICE
A recent study by the Pew
Research Center has found for the
first time that the percentage of
people cohabiting is higher than the
percentage of married couples.
In March, Boston News 25 turned
to family law expert Professor
Maritza Karmely to ask if she had
any legal advice for people living
together.
She had several recommendations:
Put your names on all assets. Hire
an attorney for four important
documents—your house deed, your
will, a power of attorney for financial
decisions, and a health care proxy.
Marriage provides tax benefits as
well as safeguards if couples decide
to split up, she added. For example,
unmarried fathers have fewer rights
than married fathers when it comes
to custody, at least until a judge gets
involved.

STEPHEN
CODY

Assistant Professor of Academic Support
BA, Boston University
JD, University of Notre Dame Law School

Assistant Professor
BA, Temple University
MPhil, Cambridge University
JD, PhD, University of California, Berkeley

Ciarimboli served as in-house counsel at
Re:Sources and at Sapient Corporation,
where she advised on a variety of global
legal issues, including contracts and
compliance. Prior to working in-house, she
was an associate at Goodwin Procter LLP.
Remote bar complexities
“Due to the pandemic, 2020 graduates
dealt with months of changes to the dates
and format of the bar examination. Most
students took a remotely administered
test in October rather than a live exam in
the summer. I’m thinking a lot about how
those changes impacted our students,
whether they disproportionately affected
particular groups, and how I can support
our future graduates who are dealing
with continuing uncertainty around the
administration of the exam.”

6

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Before coming to Suffolk Law, Cody
was a research director at Berkeley Law’s
Human Rights Center and prosecuted
criminal cases for the U.S. Attorney’s
Office (Eastern District, California).
His interviews with hundreds of child
soldiers and other survivors have helped
determine how best to prepare, support,
and protect witnesses who testify against
perpetrators of mass violence.
Supporting witnesses of war crimes
“Witnesses are the lifeblood of
international criminal trials. Most victims
and witnesses have survived killings,
torture, or the destruction of their homes.
For many, testifying in a war crimes trial
requires an act of great courage, especially
when perpetrators still walk the streets
of their villages and towns. Criminal
prosecutors must be part of national and
international efforts to support and protect
victims and witnesses and help to restore
communities affected by violence.”

�LAW BRIEFS

MAURICE
DYSON

ALI ROD
KHADEM

CARLOS M.
TEUSCHER
Assistant Clinical Professor
Director, Transactional Clinic
BS, University of Southern California
JD, Georgetown University Law Center

Assistant Professor
BA, MA, JD, University of California, Berkeley
MA, PhD, Harvard University

Dyson practiced law with Simpson
Thacher &amp; Bartlett LLP, where he
specialized in mergers and acquisitions,
securities, and leveraged buyouts valued
at over $166 billion. He participated in
landmark pro bono school-finance litigation,
winning a $14 billion judgment that was
upheld on appeal. He also led federal civil
rights enforcement as the Special Projects
team attorney for the U.S. Department of
Education’s Office for Civil Rights.

Photographs from left: Adobe, Michael J. Clarke (5)

Professor
BA, Columbia University
JD, Columbia Law School

Khadem has worked as an associate in
King &amp; Spalding’s Middle East and Islamic
finance group; as an associate in Linklaters’
China mergers and acquisitions group;
as a senior director for global strategic
relationships at Westport Innovations; and as
a senior vice president for Asia and Middle
East strategy at Macquarie Capital. He
speaks several languages, including Arabic,
Mandarin Chinese, Farsi, and French.

Teuscher was a lecturer and clinical
instructor at Harvard Law School, where
he directed the community enterprise
project of the transactional law clinics.
Before joining Harvard Law, he worked
on domestic and international finance,
mergers and acquisitions, and other
commercial transactions at Linklaters LLP
and Dechert LLP.

Collaboration in a “post-truth” era
“In our so-called post-truth era, we are
experiencing increasing polarization around
fundamental existential questions, whether
they be related to the pandemic, climate
change, religion, race, gender, or nuclear
threat. If information is part of the commons,
then how does pollution of the information
ecology (whether through misinformation,
misunderstanding, or cognitive overload)
undermine the possibilities for agreement and
collaboration? And what new modalities are
needed, at the levels of the individual and the
collective, for resolving the ensuing conflicts?”

“A horrible year”
“COVID-19, the murders of Breonna
Taylor and George Floyd, murder hornets,
and now raging fires along the West Coast.
2020 has been a horrible year. Regardless,
people have come together in different
ways to support each other. Mutual
aid networks have sprung up across the
country, including in the Greater Boston
area, to support immigrants and other
oppressed groups with money, labor, and
education programs, among others. Tax,
business, employment, immigration—the
legal issues are vast!”

Saying no to the “hired gun”
“We often seek a ‘hired gun,’ but we
should advocate for the ‘hired dove’ attorney
to engage in creative problem solving as a
deliberate peacemaker, using restraint,
reconciliation, and healing rather than acting
as instruments to perpetuate malice and
bitterness. As such, the hired dove lawyering
model, first put forth by Professor Mary C.
Szto, gives us a more effective manner for
empathic cooperation in the practice of law,
uniting parties riven asunder by conflict to
reach lasting compromises built on mutual
respect and need.”

7

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�LAW BRIEFS

LEGAL 500

R

RECOGNITION FROM THE
NATIONAL BLACK
PRE-LAW
CONFERENCE

RECOGNIZES RECENT
GRADUATE

ecognition by The Legal
500 typically takes years
of building a career and
clientele. An organic chemist
turned Suffolk Law student has
accomplished the feat while
still in law school.
Paul R. Fleming JD’20, who
serves as a patent agent with
Dechert LLP, was recognized
this year by The Legal 500 U.S.
for his patent prosecution work.
“The partner I worked with
said that it’s a big deal,” says
Fleming, who received his PhD
from MIT and did his postdoc
at the National Institutes of
Health before working as a
scientist for AstraZeneca. “I
think my background in the
pharmaceutical industry really
helped me. I am able to help
clients because I understand

Suffolk Law was recognized at
the 15th-anniversary celebration
of the Annual National Black PreLaw Conference &amp; Law Fair with that
organization’s “Outstanding Law School
Diversity Outreach Award.”
The school’s admissions outreach and focus
on diversity pipeline programs contributed to the honor. One
example of the pipeline in action is recent graduate Sam Faisal
JD’20. As a public high school student in Boston, Faisal wasn’t
thinking of becoming an attorney until he began receiving lessons
in constitutional law from two Suffolk Law students. His mentors
were serving as Marshall Brennan fellows, teaching subjects like free
speech in the high school context, search and seizure law, and civil
rights in police encounters.

drug discovery so well; it’s
deeply ingrained in my
system.”
His work as a staff scientist
at Choate, Hall &amp; Stewart with
Andrea Reid JD’06, a former
chemist herself, helped inspire
his own transition to law. The
two continue to work together
today at Dechert.
“It definitely took me some
time to get comfortable making
the switch from research to
being a patent agent. That’s a
big switch,” he says. “So, for me,
it was really gratifying to see that
the clients appreciated the work
I did and found that I was a
valuable part of their team.”
Through Suffolk Law’s new
Accelerated JD Program,
Fleming completed his JD a
year and a half early.

IN THE MEDIA
NIGHTLINE AND ESQUIRE COVER
SUFFOLK LAW HOUSING STUDY
On July 1, the Boston Globe reported that undercover
investigations by Suffolk Law’s Housing Discrimination
Testing Program (HDTP) “found that Black people posing
as prospective tenants were shown fewer apartments than
whites and offered fewer incentives to rent, and that real
estate agents often cut off contact when the renters gave
Black-sounding names like Lakisha, Tyrone, or Kareem.”
The HDTP study was also covered in Esquire, The
Chronicle of Higher Education, on NPR, and cited on ABC
News Nightline.

SUFFOLK HELPS
LAUNCH NATIONAL
POLICING CONSORTIUM
Dean Andrew Perlman helped lead the creation of the ABA-Legal
Education Police Practices Consortium, which launched in October.
The Consortium is creating opportunities for more than 50 law
schools across the country to work with the ABA and local, state, and
national stakeholders to improve police practices, from use of force
policies to training and oversight.

8

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�LAW BRIEFS

MICHAEL J. NICHOLSON:

MAYOR BY DAY,
LAW STUDENT
BY NIGHT

Photographs from left: Adobe, Michael J. Clarke

A

s Suffolk Law students
navigate law school,
there’s a lot to think
about. For some, there are work
responsibilities, babies to feed,
parents to care for. Michael J.
Nicholson, Class of 2021, is
only 26 years old and running a
small city. He was elected mayor
of Gardner, Massachusetts, this
summer.
Since his election, he’s been
working through all manner of
thorny problems, including a
truncated $70 million city budgetplanning process and making
an educated decision about how
the state would likely fund cities
despite its own pandemic-related
budget challenges.
Nicholson and Gardner’s
school superintendent worked
through four separate plans
required by the state to get the

city’s students back to school
safely this fall. Gardner, a city
of about 20,000, lies 57 miles
west of Boston. By charter, the
Gardner mayor serves as chair
of the school committee.
As part of the city’s hybrid
schooling
model,
Nicholson
proposed the city start off with two
weeks of remote learning for all
students. “That two weeks up front
allowed us to see how other districts
were faring, what mistakes or blips
were happening, so we could avoid
those. It made the learning curve a
little less steep,” he says.
It’s no surprise that he’s been
thinking back to lessons from his
favorite Suffolk Law professors,
including Judge Serge Georges,
Jr. JD’96 and Professor Anthony
Polito. “I’m responsible for
managing the procurement
process for the city,” Nicholson

9

THREE
SUFFOLK
LAW
STUDENTS
WON
LOCAL
ELECTION
RACES IN
2020

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

says. “Professor Polito helped me
see the whole system, how we got to
the process that we use to set a city’s
excise and property tax numbers.”
Nicholson’s Government Lawyer
class included some equally politically
minded students who ran for office
in Massachussetts—for example,
33-year-old Meghan K. Kilcoyne,
Class of 2021, who was elected state
representative for the 12th Worcester
District. Another classmate, 31-yearold Michael J. Owens, Class of
2021, served for four years as a
town councilor in Braintree. And
another Suffolk Law student, John J.
Cronin, Class of 2022, was elected
state senator for the Worcester and
Middlesex District.
Before becoming mayor, Nicholson
served as town administrator of
Rutland, Massachusetts, and as top
aide for then-mayor of Gardner,
Mark Hawke.

�LAW BRIEFS

SUFFOLK LAW

STUDENT WINS
PATENT AWARD

W

hile working as an investigator in oral biology at Boston
University, Eva Helmerhorst, Class of 2021, discovered that
a naturally occurring oral bacteria, Rothia mucilaginosa, can
break down gluten proteins. Her discovery and forthcoming inventions
will create a natural therapy for individuals with celiac disease or other
forms of gluten intolerance.
Going through the patent process spurred Helmerhorst’s interest in
law, she says: “I was in contact a lot with the Office of Technology
Development during the time, and this is how I actually became
interested in patent law.”
Helmerhorst, who holds a doctorate in oral biochemistry, was
recognized in 2019 as one of 13 honorees at the Boston Patent Law
Association’s 9th Annual Invented Here! Awards, and was one of four
honorees invited to share more about their work.
“I remember one of the questions I was asked was: ‘How do you
get to a discovery?’ My answer was ‘Just let your brain wander and
see where it goes and make connections’ ... because, when I found the
enzyme ... it was kind of an accidental discovery. It often goes like that,”
says the Suffolk Law 4L evening student.
Helmerhorst’s journey from science to IP law is not uncommon at
Suffolk Law. In a typical year, more than a dozen entering students hold
a PhD, many in STEM fields. They often pursue patent law, one of the
reasons that 30% of Boston-area patent lawyers are Suffolk Law alumni.

THE
DOCTOR
IS IN

35 PhDs ENROLLED AT SUFFOLK LAW

The incoming Law School class boasts 14
PhDs, 46 students with graduate degrees, and
even a nuclear engineer. While impressive,
this is not unusual. In recent years, Suffolk
Law has attracted an increasing number
of students with advanced degrees, with 35
PhDs currently enrolled.
“Many of these students have graduate
degrees in STEM fields, and they know
that the Law School has a terrific local
and national reputation in IP law,” says
Professor Rebecca Curtin, co-director of the
Intellectual Property Concentration. “Many

10

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

of these students already have jobs in law
firms working on patent matters, so they
need to go to law school at night. We pair an
outstanding IP program with a highly ranked
evening program. It’s a perfect match.”
Many attend Suffolk Law for the IP
Concentration, which is one of the largest
and most developed of its kind in the
country, offering a patent law specialization
and a full range of IP courses—patents,
copyright, trademarks, trade secrets, and
licensing—to introduce students to the
diversity of the field.

�LAW BRIEFS

NEW GROUP
ASSISTS FIRST-GEN
STUDENTS

Michael Murray (right), in his previous position as the AHL executive
vice president of hockey operations, presents the AHL Playoff
MVP award (Jack A. Butterfield Trophy) to Andrew Poturalski of the
Charlotte Checkers following their AHL Calder Cup championship
during the 2018-19 season.

ACHIEVING HIS

NHL DREAM
ALUMNUS JOINS THE MINNESOTA WILD

Photographs from left: Courtesy of Carly Gillis Photography , AHL File Photo

M

ichael Murray JD’08 has been named assistant to the general
manager of the National Hockey League’s Minnesota
Wild. In his new role, Murray will assist in the day-to-day
responsibilities of the Wild’s hockey operations department, including
contract negotiations, scouting, and player development. He will also
support hockey operations for the American Hockey League’s (AHL)
Iowa Wild.
Hockey is part of Murray’s DNA—he first wore skates and handled
a hockey stick when he was 3 years old. He played at Dartmouth
and for two seasons professionally, and his father, Bob Murray, was
part of Boston University’s 1971 and 1972 NCAA championship
teams. Murray was previously the executive vice president of hockey
operations for the AHL.
“You can never have too many smart people around you, especially
during these unprecedented times,” said Wild General Manager Bill
Guerin. “Between Michael’s education and experience in the hockey
world ... he will help make our organization better.”
Murray says he wouldn’t have achieved his dream of working in the
NHL without his Suffolk Law degree, noting that he regularly applies
the lessons he learned in courses like sports, labor, and employment
law. “I think one of the best things about Suffolk is the diversity of the
faculty and the ability to learn from their personal and professional
experiences,” he said. “Their firsthand knowledge and expertise is
invaluable.”

11

Lauren Bertino, Class of 2022, a first-generation law student,
said imposter syndrome set in on her first day of classes last fall.
“I realized I had no idea what was going on,” she says. And she
wasn’t alone. “There are plenty of students around me, especially
at Suffolk … who don’t have an uncle or a family friend to tell
them what to expect [when attending law school].”
This experience led Bertino, along with her 2L classmates
Melanie Stallone, Cassandra Munoz, and James Lockett, to create
the First Generation Law Student Association and its podcast
“Firsthand from FirstGen” to support other first-generation law
students in understanding the nuances of law school.
The podcast delivers insights from other students, faculty, and
alumni. “Firsthand from FirstGen” is working on more episodes
now and seeking out alumni for interviews.
“Suffolk is well-known for its strong alumni network,” Bertino
says. “That is why I came to Suffolk in the first place and why
it is such an especially good place for first-gen students. When
I was looking to see whether I wanted to even go to law school,
I spoke to Suffolk alumni who were so willing to just say, ‘Yeah,
here’s the deal.’”
Episodes 1 and 2 of “Firsthand from FirstGen” can be
found on Spotify, tinyurl.com/suffolkfirstgen. Alumni
interested in participating can email the organization at
sulsfirstgen@gmail.com.

IN THE MEDIA
“‘WET’ INK SIGNATURES REQUIREMENTS
MAY FADE AFTER CORONAVIRUS”
BLOOMBERG LAW, APRIL 10, 2020
With the logistical challenges of meeting in person
during a pandemic, many states are moving away from
requiring “wet signatures.” Professor Gabe Teninbaum
JD’05 explains why this idea is long overdue. He argues
that wet signatures remain a common practice, like a lot
of legal practice processes, simply because of inertia.

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�PANDEMIC
PIVOT

A TEAM GATHERS ACROSS FIVE CONTINENTS.
WATCH NBC 10 COVERAGE AT bit.ly/LITLabNBC

Clinical fellow
Quinten Steenhuis
interviewed by NBC
10 about the court
forms project

CLOS ING THE COVID-19

JUSTICE GAP
By Michael Fisch

I

magine a woman living with an abusive partner,
isolated for months during the pandemic shutdown.
Eventually, she goes to the local courthouse to get
help, but the doors are locked when she arrives—
because of the pandemic, Massachusetts courts are
closed to the public except for emergencies. She waits
outside for hours, until a clerk finally comes with a stack
of complex papers for her to complete on her own.
“Unfortunately, this actually happened,” says
Quinten Steenhuis, a legal technologist and clinical
fellow in Suffolk’s Legal Innovation &amp; Technology
(LIT) Lab. “It’s a problem that was foreseen by Ralph
Gants, the late chief justice of the Supreme Judicial
Court [SJC], at the start of the COVID-19 crisis. He
put out a call for ideas to increase public access to the
courts, and the LIT Lab answered that call.”
Within weeks, the SJC’s Access to Justice
Commission COVID-19 Task Force’s Access to
Courts Committee, co-chaired by LIT Lab director
David Colarusso, had started tackling the question of

how people facing legal emergencies
could access the court from home.
The answer: court forms that
could be filled out and submitted to
the courts entirely via mobile phones.
Simply placing existing court forms
online wouldn’t get the job done.
The forms would need to walk users
through complex legal questions, in the
same way that TurboTax simplifies tax
documents, and provide a way to be
submitted without the usual printing
and signing requirements.
By the end of April, the LIT Lab had
recruited a group of 100 volunteers across
five continents: coders, user experience
experts, designers, lawyers, linguists
offering translation services, and the LIT
Lab’s own committed student team.
Working at rapid speed, the team
launched MassAccess in June with
an initial array of forms. The project
is a remarkable feat, both for its swift
turnaround and its $0 price tag for the
courts. Without the volunteer army,
Colarusso estimates the project could
have cost over $1 million.
The mobile forms address legal
issues from restraining orders to
unlawful eviction and even “breach
of quiet enjoyment”—say, when a
landlord won’t repair a sewage leak in
your kitchen. The creation of court
forms in other legal areas, such as
consumer debt, education, health, and

guardianship, is ongoing.
“In the U.S., even before the
pandemic, a majority of people faced
their civil legal emergencies without
a lawyer,” said Suffolk Law Dean
Andrew Perlman—a problem called
the justice gap.
Additionally, many courts have forms
that must be printed out, filled in by
hand, and delivered to a courthouse or
scanned and submitted to the court, said
Steenhuis. “But many people don’t have
a printer or scanner at home, and they
don’t have access to a library right now—
or a retail store’s computer station,” he
noted. These are some of the hurdles that
the mobile tools overcome.
And because the framework for the
mobile app, Docassemble, is open to
anyone, technologists in other states will
have a leg up in creating similar forms
for their courts.
“This project is extremely helpful,”
said Jorge Colon, a court service center
manager with the Massachusetts Trial
Courts. “When people call to receive
assistance at the Court Service Center, we
can refer them to the different tools that
this project has created, and they are able
to do the same things that they could do
at the courthouse through this project.”
View the MassAccess project
forms at courtformsonline.org.

NY TIMES HIGHLIGHTS EVICTION RELIEF TOOL
Millions of Americans have been
facing the very real possibility of
eviction—in the middle of winter, with a
pandemic spiking.
This fall, the Suffolk LIT Lab released a free online tool that has
helped thousands of tenants across the nation determine whether
they qualify for eviction relief, based on the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention’s (CDC) eviction moratorium order.
If a renter qualifies, the tool produces a customized letter that

can be sent to their landlords, as CDC rules stipulate. In September,
The New York Times featured the tool in its primer on the topic, “The
New Eviction Moratorium: What You Need to Know.”
At press time, the CDC eviction reprieve covers qualified renters
through December 31.
Check out the tool at courtformsonline.org.

12

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�PA N D E M I C P I V O T

CLINICS FORGE AHEAD IN

FACE OF PANDEMIC

A QUICK TURN TOWARD

While the COVID-19 pandemic has upended the traditional faceto-face interactions of Suffolk Law’s 11 clinical programs, students have
found creative ways to help their clients.

THE VIRTUAL
CLASSROOM

	 The Legal Innovation &amp; Technology Lab created cell phone-guided
interviews that walk pro se litigants through complex court forms.
The team’s effort drew media attention, including a television
segment on NBC Boston.

Photographs from left: Michael Fisch , Michael J. Clarke, Adobe

W

hile COVID-19 has created widespread
hardship, it is also driving rapid innovation—
including at Suffolk Law School, says Professor
Gabe Teninbaum JD’05.
As the recently appointed assistant dean of innovation,
strategic initiatives, and distance education, Teninbaum knew
that the fundamentals of a Suffolk legal education would
remain the same whether faculty and students were miles apart
on a Zoom call or six feet away in a Sargent Hall classroom.
But because the two experiences can feel very different,
he’s made it a priority to get faculty the resources they need
to make their remote classes more intimate and interactive,
as well as rich in content.
Law librarians now serve as “tech guides” or, more formally,
library distance education liaisons, assisting faculty with
the finer details of remote teaching. Faculty tech facilitators
(FTFs), hired students, are the virtual world’s new teaching
assistants, serving as an extra set of eyes to help professors.
Faculty, in turn, are gaining a sense of the new medium’s
unique rhythm and how to incorporate digital tools—from
instant polling of students to building in commentary from
experts around the world.
“So far,” says Teninbaum, “it’s gone terrifically, because
we have a staff and faculty working together to put students’
needs first.”

	 Students in the newly created Transactional Clinic are working on
legal documents that set out the governance and financial structure
of Puntada, an immigrant women’s worker cooperative that
produces face masks and other personal protective equipment.
	 In April, the Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples Clinic learned
that the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights had
referred their case against the government of Guatemala, addressing
persistent government raids of indigenous community radio stations,
to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. The Clinic’s student
attorneys drafted and submitted a lengthy merits brief to the Court
in October. Expert witnesses will include UN Special Rapporteurs
and Suffolk Law Professor Lorie Graham.
	 As the Massachusetts District Attorney’s Offices faced court closures,
the Prosecutors Clinic has jumped in to assist. Working in 17 courts with
five Massachusetts District Attorney’s Offices, students have created
COVID-specific templated motions, flowcharts, and analyses to help
criminal cases proceed without undue delay as litigation resumes.
	 The Accelerator Practice represented a mother with a housing voucher
who faced discrimination for over a year as she sought in vain to rent an
apartment for herself and her two disabled children. The Accelerator
Practice and the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office negotiated
settlements for the family with several of the offending housing providers.

EMERGENCY FUND HELPS STUDENTS IMPACTED BY COVID-19
One law student, the mother
of a toddler, was laid off from fulltime work. Another was unable to
find summer legal employment or
find work as a nanny to make extra
income. A third lost his regular gig
as an Uber driver. These are just a

few of the reasons why students have
applied for grants through the Suffolk
Law CARES Emergency Fund.
The Fund—made possible
through the generosity of alumni,
faculty, and staff members—aims
to help support law students facing

13

financial challenges brought on by
the pandemic. As of September 24,
$33,200 in grants had been awarded
to students in need.
To support Suffolk Law Cares
visit app.mobilecause.com/vf/
SUCARES

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�IMPACTFUL
ALUMNI

SERGE
GEORGES, JR.
NOMINATED
TO SUPREME
JUDICIAL
COURT
SUPREME JUDICIAL
COURT NOMINEE HAS A
REPUTATION FOR LEGAL
BRILLIANCE—AND FOR
TREATING EVERYONE WITH
DIGNITY AND RESPECT
By Beth Brosnan

�I M PA C T F U L A L U M N I

Photograph by Michael J. Clarke

O

ver the course of his 25-year legal
career, Judge Serge Georges, Jr.
JD’96 has earned a reputation as a
remarkably gifted communicator.
Whether he’s talking with professional
colleagues, defendants in his Dorchester
courtroom, or his students at Suffolk Law,
Judge Georges is the kind of person who
can connect with his listeners and cut to the
heart of the matter, says Suffolk Law Dean
Andrew Perlman.
Yet for a few brief moments this fall,
Georges, 50, found himself speechless.
On November 17, Governor Charlie
Baker announced Georges’ nomination to
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
At a State House press conference, the
governor praised Georges not only for his
legal brilliance, but also for the humanity
he has brought to his work as both a Boston
Municipal Court judge and a teacher at
Suffolk Law.
“Many lawyers say he’s their favorite
judge,” Baker said. “Not because he gives
them the answer they want, but because
he knows the law, does his homework,
and treats everyone in his courtroom with
dignity and respect.”
Stepping to the microphone, Georges
paused to collect himself. After thanking
the governor, he said, “I can’t adequately
express what this means to me—I just
don’t have the words.” As a young HaitianAmerican boy growing up in Dorchester, he
added, “I would never have dreamed this
was possible.”
Yet Georges has spent his life believing
in the possible—including in the classroom,
where he has mentored law students, and
in the courtroom, where he has earned a
reputation for making litigants feel listened
to, fairly treated, and able to move forward
with their lives. As the governor put it, “It
seems clear that no matter when Judge
Georges becomes your friend and colleague,

that relationship will last.”
“None of us get to where we are alone,”
Georges said a few days later. “I try to give
people the opportunity to be successful.”
Proud, Joyful Tears
If confirmed in early December, he
will join two other Suffolk Law graduates
on the seven-member court: Justices Frank
Gaziano JD’89 and Elspeth Cypher JD’86.
Even more significantly, he will become only
the fourth Black person ever to serve on the
328-year-old SJC.
Georges’ longtime friend, Suffolk Trustee
Ernst Guerrier BS’91, JD’94, a HaitianAmerican who grew up in Mattapan, wept
when he heard the news.
“Serge’s appointment was a great day for
Suffolk, and for our diverse community,” he
says. “It signifies everything that we preach.
You can grow up in Dorchester or Mattapan
or Roxbury or Jamaica Plain, and if you are
given the opportunity and work hard, you
can reach the highest level.”
Cherina D. Wright JD/MBA’17—the
law school’s assistant dean for diversity,
equity, and inclusion, who first met Georges
when she was president of Suffolk’s Black
Law Students Association—was also moved
to “proud, joyful tears.”
While plenty of systemic racial barriers
remain, she says, “I hope this helps Suffolk
Law students, especially our students of
color, realize the sky is the limit. Serge is
proof of that.”
University President Marisa Kelly calls
Georges “a role model for our students,
someone who embodies our very highest
ideals. And in a period when our country
is wrestling with criminal justice reform, he
brings a deep understanding of how different
communities navigate our legal system.”
Dean Perlman points out that Georges’
tenure on the Boston Municipal Court
will provide “an often under-represented

perspective” for the Supreme Judicial
Court, whose members are rarely drawn
from the district and municipal courts. “His
professional experiences, particularly those
involving the civil and criminal legal issues
that individuals regularly encounter, will be
especially valuable to the court,” he said.

“WHAT SERGE HAS
DONE FOR THE PAST
SEVEN YEARS IS LIKE
PRACTICING LAW
IN THE ER. HE HAS
PRESIDED OVER THE
BUSIEST COURT IN
THE COMMONWEALTH,
AND HE’S DONE SO
WITH INTELLIGENCE,
COMPASSION, AND
COMMITMENT.”
–Ernst Guerrier BS’91, JD’94

Guerrier puts it this way: “What Serge
has done for the past seven years is like
practicing law in the ER. He has presided
over the busiest court in the Commonwealth,
and he’s done so with intelligence,
compassion, and commitment.”
Continued on page 16

15

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�I M PA C T F U L A L U M N I

The early years in Dorchester
Georges was first appointed to the Boston
Municipal Court in 2013 by Governor
Deval Patrick, following more than 15 years
as a trial attorney concentrating in civil
litigation, criminal defense, and professional
licensure and liability.
“I can’t tell you how much it has meant
to me to be a judge in the neighborhood
where I grew up,” he says.
From age 4 until his early 20s, Dorchester
was home. He lived with his parents and
two older sisters in a rented two-bedroom
apartment on Hancock Street in Kane
Square, surrounded by Irish-American,
Cape Verdean, and Puerto Rican families.
He and his friends loved to ride their BMX
bikes through the neighborhood, flying past
the courthouse where Georges would one
day preside.
Education was everything to Georges’
parents, who had left Haiti to avoid political
persecution. His father, Serge Sr., who taught
in the Boston public schools by day, held
down a second job at Honeywell by night,
while his mother, Maryse, worked as a data
entry clerk for the Boston Stock Exchange
and at the Safety Insurance Company, all so
they could afford to send their children to
Catholic schools.
Georges graduated from both Boston
College High School and Boston College,
where he majored in English. (He can still
recite poetry he studied there from memory.)
Having put their three children through
college, Serge Sr. and Maryse Georges
bought their first home, in Randolph, where
they live today. The judge lives nearby, with
his wife, Michelle, and their two daughters.
Yet Dorchester remains home, the place
that taught him “there are a lot of really
good people who get bad breaks,” he says.
It’s a perspective he brings with him to
the courtroom, where he is known for giving
people a chance while also holding them
accountable. “When you are practicing at
the district and municipal court level,” he
says, “you see there are plenty of people

who have just made mistakes and need
some guidance to get back on their feet, stop
committing crimes, and become productive
members of society.”
From 2014 to 2018, he presided over the
Dorchester Drug Court, working with a team
of clinicians, attorneys, police, and parole
officers to provide substance-use offenders
with consistent structure, expectations, and
support. He calls the experience the most
rewarding of his professional life.
“I’ve seen the kind of miracles that come
with sobriety,” he says, “when people who
have lost everything are able to reconnect
with family, find employment and housing.”
After Georges’ SJC nomination was
announced, his email inbox and phone
were flooded with congratulatory messages,
including some from former Drug Court
clients. “It’s ironic they are calling to thank
me,” he says. “I feel I should be thanking
them. This work has given me so much.”
Lighting an intellectual fire
Prior to accepting his nomination
to the SJC, Georges accepted another
honor: Suffolk’s invitation to serve as
Commencement speaker for Suffolk Law’s
Class of 2021, where he will receive an
honorary degree.
An adjunct faculty member since 1999,
Georges has now taught a full generation of
Suffolk Law students. At the start of every
school year, when he leads incoming 1L
students in their oath of professionalism,
he shares how the notorious 1989 Charles
Stuart case galvanized him to study law.
When Stuart shot and killed his pregnant
wife, Suffolk Law alumna Carol DiMaiti
Stuart JD’85, and blamed her death on an
unidentified Black assailant, city officials
spent two months indiscriminately rounding
up Black men and interrogating them.
Boston newspapers called for the restoration
of the death penalty.
Georges still has a copy of that newspaper.
“It’s old and yellow and I’m going to be buried
with it, because it informed the rest of my life,”

16

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

he says. Stuart was eventually revealed to be
the murderer and committed suicide, yet there
was no immediate reckoning, no admission of
how an entire community had been presumed
guilty and deprived of its legal rights.
After graduating from BC in 1992,
Georges enrolled at Suffolk Law. There was,
he says, a warmth to everyone he met, and
the sense that faculty and staff alike cared
deeply about students and wanted them
to succeed. “People would take the time
to check in with you, when things were
going well and when they weren’t,” he says.
“Suffolk was a place you could always come
home to.”
Suffolk also lit a fire under him. “My
professors were the best in the business
and they started my love of the law,” he
says. Friday nights would find him in the
basement of the Archer building, debating
the latest slip opinions with his classmate
and close friend, Hank Brennan JD’96,
now a noted criminal defense attorney. “I’m
a nerd,” he cheerfully admits. “I love the
intellectual stimulation of reading the law
and thinking about how to apply it.”
Today, Georges lights those same fires
under his own students in his courses on
Trial Advocacy, Evidence, and Professional
Responsibility. “He is an exceptional
teacher,” says Dean Perlman. Assistant
Dean Wright adds he’s the kind of professor
“who empowers his students, and gives them
a real sense of ownership of the material.”
If confirmed, Georges will bring all this
with him to the Supreme Judicial Court—
not only “his clear command of the law
and his sharp analytical mind,” says Dean
Perlman, “but also his desire to make a
positive impact on the lives of others.”
The prospect of joining the nation’s
oldest supreme court, operating under
its oldest constitution, renders this most
eloquent of men speechless once more. “I
want to be part of a team that is working
to get it right,” Georges says after a pause.
“For a kid from Kane Square, this means
everything.”

�I M PA C T F U L A L U M N I

“ONE OF MY PASSIONS IS TRYING TO BRIDGE THE
PUBLIC AND PRIVATE DIVIDE THAT EXISTS BETWEEN,
SAY, SILICON VALLEY AND WASHINGTON.”
–Brett Freedman JD’07

BRETT
FREEDMAN
ADVISES SENATE

INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE
By Jon Gorey

Photograph: Courtesy of Aviva Krauthammer

O

n a late December day in 1988, Brett Freedman JD’07
and his family were readying for an overnight flight to
Israel, where they were planning to celebrate 13-yearold Brett’s bar mitzvah. As they packed their bags, anticipation
turned to anxiety when they heard that a passenger jet, Pan-Am
Flight 103, had exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland—killing all
259 people aboard and 11 on the ground in one of the most
deadly airline bombings in history.
“We were watching it on television when the van came to pick
us up to go to the airport,” Freedman recalled. As a suburban
Boston middle-schooler, Freedman says he didn’t grasp the full
dynamics of what was happening at the time, beyond the burning
wreckage on the TV But he could sense and understand his
.
parents’ fear, concern—and resolve. “My mom was upset, and
my dad said, ‘There’s nothing more important than to actually
do this now.’”
Freedman didn’t decide in that moment to pursue a career
in national security, but the experience was influential.
After earning his juris doctor at Suffolk in 2007, Freedman
went on to provide legal counsel at both the National Security
Agency and the National Counter-Terrorism Center in
Washington, DC. Now, he serves as minority counsel for the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI), which oversees
the entire U.S. intelligence community.
Working for Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, the
committee’s Democratic vice chairman, one of Freedman’s top
priorities in most years is to help get the bipartisan Intelligence
Authorization Act (IAA) through Congress—the critical
legislation that authorizes funding and oversight for the nation’s

powerful intelligence apparatus.
Security threats have evolved
since the Lockerbie bombing, of
course, with cybersecurity and
election interference among the
committee’s current concerns.
“There’s certainly a public
knowledge of the efforts by the
Russian Federation and other
countries to interfere [with the
election] in one way, shape, or
form,” Freedman said in October,
citing as examples the spread of
false narratives and innocuoussounding disinformation that
proliferate on social media.
Freedman isn’t on the front
lines of election cybersecurity
and doesn’t consider himself an
especially technical person. “But in
order to be able to put forth policy,
you need to understand the innards
of what’s happening,” he said, so
he’s had to familiarize himself with
technologies like the 5G wireless
standard, artificial intelligence,
and quantum computing—with
some help from the Congressional
Research Service. He also relies on
relationships he’s built with trusted
academics, think tanks, and private
industry leaders.
Recognizing the importance
of these relationships, Freedman
pushed for the most recent IAA
to include a public-private talent
exchange, which would allow
intelligence officials to spend a year
or more immersed at a company in
the private sector and vice versa.
“One of my passions is trying
to bridge the public and private
divide that exists between, say,
Silicon Valley and Washington,” he
said. Through the pilot exchange

17

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

program, a computer scientist
at the NSA could, for example,
spend a year or two working at
Google—honing their skills and
gaining a better understanding
of its culture—while maintaining
their government tenure and
benefits. Meanwhile, an engineer
from the tech industry could take
time to learn how the government
operates—and how to get things
done within its bureaucracy—
without leaving their job.
Freedman hopes that this
cross-pollination of talent could
help the two camps, which are
often at odds, get past what they
read about each other in the news.
These exchange workers can
“meet the people, see what the
mission is, and get a sense of the
challenges facing them,” he said.
Freedman also hopes the
program could open up the
intelligence community to a
more diverse talent pool. If the
intelligence community as an
analytical body does not reflect the
composition of the country and the
globe, decision makers are going to
miss critical nuances, he warned.
Imperfect as U.S. national
security is, Freedman cherishes
his role in keeping people safe,
and feels fortunate to be part
of something much bigger than
either himself or politics.
“I’ve been proud to be a
part of one of, if not the only,
remaining
truly
bipartisan
congressional committees, where
we put our noses down, look at
the issues, and continue to work
together to try to find solutions,”
he said.

�I M PA C T F U L A L U M N I

REGINA HOLLOWAY’S
CAREER IN POLICE
OVERSIGHT TAKES A NEW TURN
By Alyssa Giacobbe

R

egina D. Holloway JD’15 began
law school the year someone
close to her went to prison.
She was raising four children, working
a hodgepodge of jobs to make ends
meet, and living in public housing in
Cambridge. Naturally, her life informed
her approach to law.
“Everything I did in law school
had some relationship to my personal
experience,” she says.
At Suffolk, she found support from
faculty and staff, often turning to Professors
Kathleen Engel and Karen M. Blum
JD’74. Blum ignited her interest in criminal
justice reform, specifically civilian oversight.
After working as a clinical fellow in Suffolk’s
Housing Discrimination Testing Program
and as a bar advocate in the Boston District
Courts, Holloway relocated to Chicago.
At the Civilian Office of Police
Accountability there, she worked as
an investigator overseeing “critical
incidents,” including officer-involved
shootings and deaths in custody. The job
was fascinating, yet frustrating.
“There was not a lot of stability,
and these departments ... really need
political will. I just didn’t see it there,”
says Holloway. “It wasn’t the substantial
change I was looking for.”
Next, she worked with a Chicago
neighborhood policing pilot program
founded by New York University law
professor Barry Friedman. The initiative
was designed to help inform policing
priorities with a deeper understanding
of a community’s concerns. While
police might focus on loitering teens,
for example, the community was more
concerned about hidden sex trafficking

of 13- and 14-year-old girls, she says.
“Even when a problem couldn’t be
fixed immediately, which was often the
case, people still felt like they had a better
quality of life,” says Holloway. “Everyone
felt more like they were a part of the
process of police and community.”
She then received an unexpected offer.
Friedman, who serves on the board of
public safety technologies company Axon
(perhaps best known as the makers of
the Taser), approached her this summer
about joining the company.
“I thought it was crazy. I was just like,
what in my life makes you think that I
would work for Axon?,” recalls Holloway,
a Senior Atlantic Fellow for Racial Equity.
But following the murder of George
Floyd and other Black civilians by police,
Axon had expanded its company mission to
include a focus on racial equity, diversity, and
inclusion. Its “Sprint for Justice” initiative
resulted in eight new products to support
transparency and officer development.
Holloway ultimately decided to take
the job as vice president of community
impact. “I think they have started to
realize—and I’m hoping to help them
make good on this realization—that the
community is our customer,” she says.
“And that these products need to be
solving for them, and for their lives.”
She points to one new feature, Axon’s
priority-ranked video audit, as an example.
“Civilian Oversight might get 30
hours of body-worn camera footage.
Trying to piece through that stops the
investigation process, stops people from
finding out whether their complaint went
through,” she says. Using the new tool,
investigators can instead seek out keywords

AA (REGINA HOLLOWAY)

18

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

among hours of footage in as little as 30
minutes, helping them to quickly see what
happened in a specific interaction.
Holloway now helps develop
initiatives that connect Axon with the
communities it hopes to serve, educating
civilians on Axon products while learning
about their specific safety concerns. She’ll
also work with police departments seeking
training in nonlethal weapons and other
de-escalation tools and practices.
Next year, she will assemble a
community coalition that includes
members from the mental health,
philanthropy, and educational fields to
examine Axon’s products with a racial
equity toolkit. The goal is that community
groups will help the company develop
products that are less likely to result in
injury or escalation to use of force, and
Axon product teams will begin to view their
products through a more equitable lens.
“My hope is that it will be training
on both sides,” Holloway says. Axon
employees are going to need to do their
part, she points out. “I can’t be the constant
reminder of the need for equity.”

�THREE ALUMNI
MAKE $1M PLEDGES
IN SINGLE YEAR
ALUMNI INVEST IN
SUFFOLK LAW’S FUTURE

Photographs: Courtesy of Regina Holloway, William G. Hardiman, Tailayah Leche Macklin, Hector Pagan

W

ithin a single year, three different alumni
have committed million-dollar gifts to help
advance Suffolk Law’s mission of delivering
an outstanding, affordable legal education. Two of the
commitments were made after the pandemic began.
“We are deeply grateful for these remarkable
commitments,” said Suffolk University Law School Dean
Andrew Perlman. “They are a testament to the impact of a
Suffolk Law education and the desire of our alumni to give
back and help the next generation of graduates achieve
similar success.”
Most recently, an anonymous donor, who was a firstgeneration college and law school graduate, wanted to
contribute life-changing support to first-generation Suffolk
Law students in an effort to bridge financial gaps that unfairly
burden deserving students. This particular scholarship is
focused on eliminating barriers and widening the pipeline for
first-generation students to enter the legal profession, helping
them thrive as successful and confident lawyers.
Another alum, Warren G. Levenbaum JD’72, has long
supported the Law School as a member of the Dean’s
Cabinet. Levenbaum, founding partner of the West
Coast personal injury law firm Levenbaum Trachtenberg,
recently said, “The true test of lifetime achievement is the
ability to give back, and I am forever grateful to Suffolk Law
School, which has given me this opportunity.”
Last fall, the Law School announced the first of the three
gifts, when Dean’s Cabinet member Barry C. Cosgrove
JD’85 honored the spirit of his wife’s grandmother, Graciela
Rojas-Trabal. She grew up in the Dominican Republic,
and her hard work and ethics were an inspiration to her
family. Today, the Graciela Rojas-Trabal Term Scholarship
Fund supports law students from Cosgrove’s hometown of
Brockton, Massachusetts, as well as law students who have
a significant interest in and knowledge of the Dominican
Republic’s history and culture.

GIVING
BACK

SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS SHARE THE IMPACT OF
THE GRACIELA ROJAS-TRABAL TERM SCHOLARSHIP
WILLIAM G.
HARDIMAN,
CLASS OF 2022
Brockton, Massachusetts
I have wanted to be a lawyer
since I was a freshman in high
school, when I was a member of
my high school’s mock trial team.
During my time as an undergrad,
I interned at the Plymouth County
District Attorney’s Office, which
was an amazing chance to see the
criminal process in action.
Suffolk’s JD/LLM in Taxation
Program really stuck out to me. Being
able to get my JD and LLM in three
years was a no-brainer. After law
school, I plan on practicing tax law.
The scholarship has been
immensely helpful in offsetting the
burden of paying tuition. Barry
Cosgrove and I both attended
Cardinal Spellman High School in
my hometown.
TAILAYAH LECHE
MACKLIN,
CLASS OF 2024
Brockton, Massachusetts
My family has always instilled in
me the value of an education and the
power that comes with knowledge.
I grew up in a community that did
not believe in the criminal justice
system because they felt as though it
failed them. For me, this was hard to

SUMMA DONORS

grasp. I knew I wanted to be a part
of the change. … I wanted to be a
voice for my community to bridge
the gap between the communities
and the justice system.
I plan to focus my legal education
on civil rights and human rights law.
The support of this scholarship will
allow me to build a legal career
where I can become the voice of
those individuals who need to be
heard in our society.
HECTOR PAGAN,
CLASS OF 2024
Caguas, Puerto Rico
I moved to
Boston to continue pursuing my
education. I had a big dream, law
school being my end goal. However,
I had one obstacle to overcome:
mastering the English language.
I was not ready for law school
back then, so I decided to pursue
graduate studies in psychology and
behavior analysis and improve my
writing and communication skills
so I could be prepared to pursue
studies in the law. After completing
my two master’s degrees, I felt ready
to pursue my biggest dream and
decided to apply to law school.
When I visited Suffolk Law,
I felt that I was home. I felt that I
belonged there.
The scholarship has allowed me
to focus more on my studies.

In fiscal year 2020, Suffolk Law saw the largest number of Summa Society donors in 12 years. The Summa Society is composed of those
who contribute $1,000 or more annually.

19

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�GIVING BACK

ALL RISE: CELEBRATING
SUFFOLK LAW’S FEMALE LEADERS

T

he third annual celebration of Suffolk
Law’s female leaders—known as “All
Rise”—took place on November 18.
The event raised over $95,000 to benefit the
Catherine T. Judge Scholarship Fund and
the Suffolk Law Student Emergency Fund.
One part of the program featured a
panel presentation, “Rise Up, Speak Up
and Lift Every Voice,” which highlighted
individual and collective actions to advance
racial and gender equity and justice.
Moderated by Suffolk Law Professor Lolita
Darden JD’91, the panel included Tamela
Bailey JD’04, member of the Law School
Alumni Board of Directors and commercial
legal senior counsel, National Grid; Hon.
Stacey J. Fortes JD’90, First Justice of
Lowell District Court; and Nina
Mitchell Wells JD’76, former
New Jersey Secretary of State
and former director of the
Metropolitan
Washington
Airports Authority (MWAA).
Given the event’s theme,
“Rise Up, Speak Up and Lift
Every Voice,” the alumnae
panelists shared their thoughts
on the importance and
power of sisterhood,
building community,
“All Rise”
moderator
Suffolk Law
Professor Lolita
Darden JD’91

and personal empowerment, as well as
on the collective responsibility of every
legal professional to join the effort of
transforming legal institutions into places of
equity and inclusion for all.
The event also celebrated two
remarkable women. This year, the
Catherine T. Judge Teaching and Service
Award was posthumously presented to
Professor Emerita Victoria Dodd, who
died earlier this year. The Marian Archer
“Trailblazer” Award was presented to Judge
Marianne B. Bowler JD’76, HLLD’94.
Judge Bowler has served as a magistrate
judge, U.S. District Court, District of
Massachusetts, since 1990 and as chief
magistrate judge (2002 to 2005). She was
the first female president of the Suffolk
Law School Alumni Association Board
of Directors. In addition to her lengthy
judicial service, Bowler recently concluded
two terms as a member of the International
Judicial Relations Committee of the Judicial
Conference of the United States, traveling
to Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Kuwait, Nepal,
and the United Arab Emirates to teach
judges mediation techniques and to lecture
on intellectual property issues, money
laundering, and high-profile criminal cases
including terrorism.

The next All Rise event will be held March 8, 2021.

POSTHUMOUS HONORS
FOR PROFESSOR
VICTORIA DODD
Few are courageous. And even fewer are
courageous often, regularly saying what needs
to be said, even when it’s risky to do so. When
colleagues remember the life of Professor
Victoria J. Dodd, they invariably recall
moments when Dodd showed such courage.
“As one of very few tenured women, she
always put herself out there on important issues
so that we younger women never felt alone,”
wrote Professor Rosanna Cavallaro on hearing
of Professor Dodd’s passing. “That plus her
humor and fierce intelligence made her a largerthan-life figure whom I will miss.”
Dodd taught law for nearly 40 years at
Suffolk, teaching criminal law, constitutional
law, civil procedure, and federal courts and
advancing the interests and status of women
in the profession. As one of the pioneer
female law professors, she faced gender bias
head on, often with humor. She was honored
posthumously with the Catherine T. Judge
Teaching and Service Award at the All Rise
alumni event on November 18.
Among her other accomplishments,
Dodd served as a three-time chair of the
Education Law Section of the Association
of American Law Schools. And her book,
Practical Education Law for the Twenty-First
Century, has been widely used in the field,
both inside and outside the classroom.

CATIC FOUNDATION SUPPORTS ACCELERATOR-TO-PRACTICE PROGRAM
This past spring, the CATIC Foundation committed a generous
$55,000 to support Suffolk Law’s Accelerator-to-Practice Program.
The program prepares graduates to join or establish small law
practices that serve average-income clients.
“We appreciate the CATIC Foundation’s support, which
enables Suffolk Law to fulfill its historic and nationally recognized
commitment to preparing practice-ready lawyers,” said Suffolk
University Law School Dean Andrew Perlman.
The award-winning program consists of an innovative professional

development and skills curriculum. Students learn about law office
management, receive training in efficiency-enhancing law practice
technology, and intern at financially successful small firms and learn how
they operate. They also participate in a full-year capstone experience in
the Accelerator Practice, which combines training in fee-shifting cases
with an opportunity to manage the law firm
embedded within the Law School. CATIC’s
funding will support the ongoing work of the
Accelerator-to-Practice Program.

20

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�GIVING BACK

ALUMNI CONTRIBUTIONS
WITH PERSONAL MEANING

Ernst Guerrier with his family—son Myles, wife Marie,
and daughter Christa—at the 2019 Suffolk Law Clinical
Programs Reception.

By Kara Baskin

Photographs from left: Michael J. Clarke (2), John Gillooly

S

uffolk Law is fortunate to boast
legions of alumni devoted to
giving back. That giving is
especially resonant when generosity
dovetails with professional passions.
Consider Dean’s Cabinet member
Deborah Marson JD’78, executive
vice president, general counsel, and
secretary of Iron Mountain, a Bostonbased global leader for storage and
information management services.
Her $100,000 of funding supports a
clinical fellow for Suffolk Law’s Legal
Innovation and Technology (LIT) Lab.
“I’m very involved in the new
products that we offer, which
are dependent on technological
advancements. Supporting the LIT
Lab just seemed like a great synergy to
me between what I know and what I
work with—cutting-edge, novel, and
linked to the law,” she says.
Iron Mountain and the LIT Lab
both operate at the intersection of
technology and data science. Marson,
who was the longtime deputy general
counsel for The Gillette Company
before Iron Mountain, is delighted to
help support these civic efforts through
a legal lens.
“Suffolk gave me the gift of being a
lawyer, and I’ve reached a few milestones
in my career that I never expected when
I was a graduate back in 1978,” she says.
“I believe in giving back and trying to
make the road for students today a little
bit easier where I can.”
Her generosity currently supports
clinical fellow and adjunct professor
Quinten Steenhuis, who previously
practiced housing and eviction defense
law for Greater Boston Legal Services.
At the LIT Lab, his projects focus on
the intersection of access to justice
and technology, with an emphasis on
housing and evictions. During the

pandemic, his work is more important
than ever. (See p. 12 for more details.)
Or consider University Trustee
and Dean’s Cabinet member Mark
E. Sullivan JD’79, retired chief legal
officer at Bose Corporation—a
company whose audio innovations,
from noise-canceling headphones
to high-tech speakers, are often
mimicked. To protect the company’s
inventions, Sullivan’s practice focused
on intellectual property, and he
is devoted to supporting the next
generation of Suffolk graduates
interested in the nexis of IP and
business.
He recently committed $250,000,
much of which is intended to advance
the Law School’s work in IP law. “Each
decade brings its own wrinkle in terms
of the knowledge and experience you
need to succeed as a lawyer,” he says.
“For many new graduates, they’ll
need to operate comfortably in the
innovation economy, and I wanted to
help out in that subject area as it was
critical to my career.”
“These two remarkable Suffolk
Law graduates have achieved so
much in their careers,” said Dean
Andrew Perlman. “It is gratifying to
see them give back, and it is especially
meaningful to see them support the
kind of work that has been critical to
their own success.”
Alumni appreciate the chance
to share their professional passions
through funding, but equally significant
is an overarching appreciation for
Suffolk as an institution.
“Suffolk Law is a place of
intellectual curiosity, learning,” says
Marson. “It’s a place that makes a
difference in the lives and careers of its
graduates. What more could anybody
ask for?”

21

ERNST GUERRIER
PAYS IT FORWARD
By Kara Baskin

Suffolk Trustee and Dean’s Cabinet member Ernst
Guerrier BS’91, JD’94 immigrated to Boston from
Haiti at age 7, the son of a cab driver and a hospital
worker. He learned the value of paying it forward at
a pivotal time in his life. The self-described inner-city
kid, who grew up in Mattapan, received a helping
hand to attend Suffolk as an undergrad and later as
a law student.
The opportunity came by way of Richard J.
Trifiro JD’57, HLLD’87, the late Boston lawyer and
philanthropist who was committed to city youth.
The Trifiro family has given nearly $1.6 million to
Suffolk and has made a profound impact on the lives
and careers of countless Suffolk students who needed
financial assistance.
“I asked him: ‘How do I pay you back? Do I have
to work for you for 10 years?’ And [Trifino] said, ‘You
pay it forward,’” recalls Guerrier.
Today, he runs his own law firm, Guerrier &amp;
Associates. “My clients don’t have the opportunity to
hire a major Boston law firm; they just don’t have that
access,” he says.
Guerrier conceptualized and has championed the
Suffolk University Black Alumni Network (SUBAN).
Recently, he and his wife, Marie, pledged $100,000,
half of which will establish the SUBAN Scholarship
Fund—designed for students with an interest in AfricanAmerican studies and social justice. His efforts also led
to the creation of the Suffolk University Celebration
of Black Excellence event, which, this year, showcased
social equity champions.
Guerrier believes in developing a tradition of
hands-on involvement among alumni, and is leading by
example. “Giving back means everything to me. Without
Suffolk, I would not be here today,” Guerrier says. “My
teachers became my friends. My administrators became
my mentors. I’m hoping to preserve that opportunity for
students who will follow me.”
To join Ernst Guerrier in contributing to the
SUBAN Scholarship Fund, text “suban” to 71-777 or
visit: app.mobilecause.com/vf/SUBAN.

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�LAW
COMMUNITY

DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION

AT SUFFOLK LAW
A

gainst the backdrop of one of
the largest national civil rights
movements in generations, a
seemingly endless list of Black victims of
police brutality, the exposure of pandemicrelated health disparities, and a resurgence
of the white supremacist movement, Suffolk
Law is reckoning with systemic racism.
In a letter to Suffolk Law students on
June 19, Dean Andrew Perlman wrote the
following:
“Today is Juneteenth, a day when we
commemorate the end of slavery in the
United States. We can use this moment
to reflect on how far we still have to go to
remedy slavery’s horrific and enduring
legacy and to address the profound and deep
problem of racial injustice in our country. As
a law school, we have a special obligation to

pursue justice, to right wrongs when we see
them, and to make an impact, not only in the
broader community but in our own as well.
“Too often the burden of seeking
change falls on those who have been most
disadvantaged by the status quo. This must
change. We all have an obligation, especially
as future legal professionals, to address
injustices where we see them. This is our
shared obligation. I look forward to working
with all of you in the weeks and months
ahead to bring about real, meaningful
change, both in our broader communities
and within our own.”
A new steering committee
Giving top leaders at the school a key
role in recommending practical steps for the
institution in these areas has been a priority

for Dean Perlman. This past spring, he
launched a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
(DEI) Steering Committee chaired by three
academic deans and comprising the faculty
chairs of key standing committees.
These academic leaders will work with
the existing DEI Faculty Committee and
other standing faculty committees to develop
proposals for improvement in the areas of
curricular change, cultural competency of
faculty and students, admissions, recruitment
and retention efforts, scholarships, hiring,
and more. While many of the outcomes
will take more than one academic year
to implement, the steering committee
has already begun its work, and concrete
proposals will be put forward to the faculty
for approval and implementation as early as
spring 2021.
Continued on page 24

22

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Photographs by Michael J. Clarke

By Michael Fisch

�ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER
D I V E R S I T Y, E Q U I T Y, A N D I N C L U S I O N ( D E I ) AT S U F F O L K L AW

RAISING AWARENESS

Expanding our existing antiracism, implicit
bias, and LGBTQ+ inclusion orientation
trainings for new law students and the
entire Suffolk community.

11 CLINICS TO
MAKE AN IMPACT

Expanding access to justice through
our 11 nationally ranked in-house clinics
and a new Transactional Clinic to
support nonprofits and businesses that
are committed to creating economic
equity.

DIVERSITY FROM THE TOP

ASSISTANT DEAN
OF DIVERSITY, EQUITY,
AND INCLUSION

More than 1/3 of Suffolk Law’s 11 deans
are people of color and more than 60%
are women. Suffolk Law elected its
second Black female Student Bar
Association president in 2020.

Appointing a newly created Assistant
Dean of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion to
spearhead DEI initiatives throughout
the Law School.

SUPPORT FOR FIRSTGENERATION STUDENTS

CLASSES FROM DIVERSE
PERSPECTIVES

Supporting first-generation students
and students from underrepresented
backgrounds through our FirstGeneration Law Students
organization and networking
opportunities with first-generation
alumni.

Expanding our curriculum with new
courses that examine diversity and
inclusion in the legal profession and the
law’s relation to systemic injustice and
inequality; enhancing our existing areas of
focus in Diversity and Social Justice
and Civil Rights &amp; Human Rights Law.

ALUMNI ENGAGEMENT

INSPIRING THE NEXT
GENERATION

Inspiring diverse and underrepresented
high schoolers in law student-coached
trial competitions in the MarshallBrennan Constitutional Law
Program.

AFFINITY STUDENT GROUPS

Celebrating a more inclusive
community with over a dozen affinity
groups that support students from diverse
and underrepresented backgrounds
through multiple programs: Diversity
Week, diversity receptions, anti-racism
panels, and an alumni speaker series.

The Suffolk University Black Alumni
Network (SUBAN) serves current and
future Black alumni through mentoring,
philanthropy, volunteerism, and
events. The SUBAN Scholarship
Fund supports Suffolk students with a
demonstrated interest in serving
under-represented communities.

DIVERSITY IN HIRING

Making the Law School faculty and
staff more diverse by changing our
hiring practices—minimizing the
potential influence of implicit biases and
maximizing our efforts to attract and
recruit diverse candidates.

PEER MENTORS

Growing our Diversity Peer Mentoring
Program by including more students
and new initiatives. Also offering
more safe social spaces, professional
development workshops, and academic
enrichment through the Student Bar
Association’s Diversity &amp; Inclusion
Committee.
23
Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

HBCU &amp; FIRST-GEN
SCHOLARSHIPS

Providing scholarships for students
from historically Black colleges &amp;
universities (HBCUs), as well as for firstgeneration students from Boston-area
colleges.

�LAW COMMUNITY

Assistant Dean of
Diversity, Equity,
and Inclusion
Cherina D. Wright
JD/MBA’17 has been
named the first assistant
dean of DEI, building
on her previous work
as director of student
engagement
and
inclusion. In this new
role, Wright will provide
strategic direction for the
Law School’s DEI efforts
and will work closely
with various institutional
stakeholders, including
students, faculty, staff,
and alumni. Starting this past summer, Wright has been leading
all of the deans in monthly town hall meetings with students and
faculty to address issues that are on the minds of student leaders
of color, with upcoming topics including Suffolk’s admissions and
scholarship processes.
A recent town hall featured the co-chairs of the faculty curriculum
committee. The co-chairs and deans addressed questions about the
Suffolk Law curriculum, including how courses are chosen, what is
taught in each course, and how faculty are encouraged to intentionally
address issues of systemic racism, such as redlining and for-profit prisons.
“When a student asks a faculty leader in a public forum,
‘Should a property law class address redlining?’ there’s a great
sense of immediacy and urgency to that question,” says Wright.
“It’s been a great experience for all sides—for the students to have
direct access to faculty leaders, to hear their opinions, and for the
faculty to hear directly from students. We’re having these hard
conversations as a community rather than in our siloes, and that’s
an important first step.”

A time for action
This summer’s protests compelled both the DEI Faculty
Committee and the Student Bar Association to create documents
laying out recommendations for change. The Steering Committee
will use these two key documents to help drive its work in coming
months.
“I want to make public, as I have several times,” Dean Perlman says,
“that studying proposals won’t be enough. The times demand action,
and that is my expectation. I’m committed to finding ways to implement
as many of the community recommendations as possible. Our school
can do better, and we will be a force for change.”

Building on previous work
Wright says that the national racial justice protest movement has
been important in gaining traction for much broader conversations
about race: “More people today are listening and open to talking
about difficult DEI issues, but people should know that the Law
School’s DEI Faculty Committee has been working hard for many
years. They’ve been helping colleagues improve classroom culture,
offering suggestions to better integrate DEI matters into law classes,
and training faculty on microaggressions and implicit bias.”
Wright adds that the Progress to Success: Diversity Peer
Mentorship Program has grown exponentially over the last few
years to provide a full calendar of programming, ranging from social
spaces for students to find community to professional development
workshops and academic enrichment.

Rising to a historic moment
When asked about the DEI work ahead for the Law School,
Professor Maurice R. Dyson, co-chair of the Faculty DEI
Committee, turned to the words of American artist William Merritt
Chace: “Diversity ... is not casual liberal tolerance of anything not
yourself. It is not polite accommodation. Instead, diversity is, in
action, the sometimes painful awareness that other people, other
races, other voices, other habits of mind have as much integrity of
being, as much claim on the world as you do.”
“As long as we can see ourselves in each other’s hopes and ambitions,”
Dyson says, “and respect each other’s equal right to occupy a life with
the same dignity that we want for ourselves, then change is possible.
I believe we can rise to meet this historic moment with the solemn,
sustained commitment it deserves and requires.”

A leading role in
the Student Bar
Association
Elected this year as
president of Suffolk Law’s
Student Bar Association
(SBA), Dayana Donisca
(at left), Class of 2021,
is the second Black
woman to serve in the
role. She has led a critical
conversation around DEI.
In honor of Juneteenth,
she spearheaded an SBA
virtual town hall, where
professors Renée M.
Landers and Karen M.
Blum JD’74 and adjunct
professor Judge Michael C. Bolden JD’78 presented on legal and social
issues connected with systemic racism. On October 22, Donisca was
honored as a racial equity champion by the Suffolk University Black
Alumni Network, which highlighted her advocacy work at Suffolk,
North Carolina’s Queens University of Charlotte, and the AmeriCorps
program in Baltimore.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�LAW COMMUNITY

TRANSACTIONAL LAW MEETS

SOCIAL JUSTICE

By Michael Fisch

Photographs by Michael J. Clarke

W

hen you think of the term
“transactional law,” perhaps your
mind turns to corporate law—
someone in a suit drafting contracts, maybe
working on a corporate merger.
What you might not think of is a workerowned cooperative of immigrant women in
East Boston producing face masks and other
personal protective equipment (PPE).
“People don’t necessarily connect
transactional law with social justice,”
says Clinical Professor Carlos Teuscher,
who launched and directs Suffolk’s new
Transactional Clinic. “But transactional
law can be a transformative tool for our
community-based clients. We can help create
new economic structures that prioritize
community and equity.”
Toward that end, his students work on
legal formation, debt and equity financing,
general contract drafting and negotiation,
and commercial leases, among other work.
After working at two Big Law firms,
Linklaters and Dechert, Teuscher brings
experience in international finance deals and
mergers and acquisitions to a whole new set
of clients—one of those being Puntada, the
East Boston mask-making cooperative.
Teuscher previously directed Harvard
Law School’s Community Enterprise Project.
We caught up with him to find out more
about Suffolk’s new clinic.

Tell us about the work with Puntada.
Puntada’s worker-owners came together
during the COVID-19 pandemic to support
themselves and their communities. They
decided to form a worker-owned cooperative,
meaning that the workers, and not third-party
owners, fully own and control the business. The
workers produce and sell—or donate, in many
cases—face masks and other PPE to support
low-income immigrant communities in the
Greater Boston area. Their masks have made
their way to families in East Boston, Chelsea,
Chinatown, Lynn, and Dorchester, as well as to
other cities across the U.S.
Working with the cooperative incubator
Center for Cooperative Development and
Solidarity in East Boston, students in the Clinic
recently conducted a bilingual workshop with the
worker-owners to better understand their legal
needs. In addition to learning presentation and
other client-based skills, the Clinic students are
developing Puntada’s internal legal documents,
including a tailored limited liability corporation
operating agreement that will set out Puntada’s
governance and financial structure.
The Clinic is also working with
Community Land Trusts (CLTs). What’s
the basic idea there?
A CLT is often a nonprofit corporation that
is controlled by members of the community.
In many CLTs, the CLT owns land with the

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

intent to hold the land in perpetuity for
affordable housing, among other uses.
In the case of affordable housing,
the CLT will often build a home on
its land and sell the building only—
not the land—to someone of low or
moderate income. The land is leased to
the building owner, often for 99 years.
This “ground lease” approach is
designed to ensure that the nonprofit
can hold onto the land—it won’t be
sold to developers. But homeowners
still gain equity through appreciation
of the part they do own—the building.
There’s another big benefit here.
As the land value goes up, the buyers
in a low-income community aren’t
saddled with that high land cost, just
the building cost, so homes are more
affordable.
There’s less displacement of lowincome people, a lot less foreclosure,
and
affordable
housing
for
generations. Also, because they have
the ability to vote for the CLT’s board
of directors, long-term residents have
more of a say on how the land in their
community is used.
Tell us about the students’ work
on CLTs.
One of our CLT clients this
semester is the Boston Neighborhood
Community Land Trust. BNCLT
provides affordable housing to many
families in Boston’s communities of
color that have been disproportionately
impacted by COVID-19.
One of our student projects for
BNCLT this semester is to develop a
form of ground lease so that the CLT
can move forward with donations of
land from two separate homeowners
in Dorchester. The lease contains
affordability and other restrictions
so that the land is controlled by the
community, while still allowing the
homeowner to build equity.

�LAW COMMUNITY

DEAN
PERLMAN

HELPS LEAD
ACCESS-TOJUSTICE-EFFORT

L

awyers from around the country came to the American Bar
Association (ABA) House of Delegates meeting in Austin,
Texas, in February 2020 with a controversial question at hand:
Should states be encouraged to consider innovations in the regulation
of legal services—alterations specifically designed to expand legal
services to more Americans?
“The train is leaving the station. The ABA needs to be on that
train,” Suffolk Law Dean Andrew Perlman told Bloomberg Law in
an interview before the landmark vote on ABA Resolution 115.
The metaphorical train is the increasing number of states that
are adopting innovations designed to address the access-to-justice
gap—the large numbers, 80% to 90% in many states, of low- and
middle-income Americans who face critical civil legal issues like
eviction without a lawyer.
Resolution 115, which passed overwhelmingly, encourages states
to try new ways to address the crisis. As one of the resolution’s
primary drafters, Perlman, inaugural chair of the ABA Center for
Innovation and the former vice chair of the ABA Commission on the
Future of Legal Services, played a key role in the effort.
He recently answered some questions about his national advocacy
effort.
What drove the need for the resolution?
We’re falling further and further behind in terms of addressing
the public’s civil legal needs. The problem is that traditional solutions
over the last several decades, including increased pro bono efforts by
lawyers, additional funding for legal aid, and civil Gideon [providing
a lawyer as of right to indigent clients in civil matters], have been
insufficient.
We need new ideas, and a number of states are trying them. The
resolution says: Look at those states, assess what they’re doing, and
consider trying some new approaches of your own.

Did the resolution recommend any specific innovations?
The resolution doesn’t specify what types of solutions states should
try, though states are experimenting with a lot of new approaches. For
example, some are implementing ways for litigants to resolve their
disputes entirely online; others are developing automated tools and
forms of assistance for pro se litigants; and still others are adopting
streamlined litigation processes.
Some states are also experimenting with new ways to regulate
the delivery of legal services, including changes to the unauthorized
practice of law, the creation of new categories of legal services
providers [the legal equivalent to registered nurse practitioners], and
the loosening of restrictions on lawyers’ abilities to partner and share
fees with other kinds of professionals. For example, Arizona and
Utah recently adopted major reforms in these areas, and other states
are considering doing the same.
The resolution does not take a position on these specific
innovations. Its intent is to encourage states to experiment with new
approaches. Once we assess the data and see what works and doesn’t
work, we’ll be in a better position to know which ideas are worth
trying more broadly and whether it makes sense to recommend any
changes to the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct and other
model policies. In other words, the resolution encourages states to
be the so-called “laboratories of democracy” when it comes to the
access-to-justice crisis.
Is the passage of the resolution important?
Yes, because it puts the ABA on record as encouraging states to
consider innovations, including regulatory innovations, in the delivery
of legal services at a time when many states have started to consider
and implement such changes. With the weight of the ABA behind the
idea, more states are likely to follow suit. And, most importantly, my
hope is that we will see fresh ideas about how we can best serve the
public’s unmet legal needs.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Photographs from left: Michael J. Clarke, Getty Images

By Michael Fisch

�xxxxxxxxx • • •

LAW COMMUNITY

SUFFOLK LAW LAUNCHES

INNOVATIVE HYBRID
ONLINE JD PROGRAM
By Michael Fisch

T

he Law School has launched a pioneering new
Hybrid Online JD Program (HJD), the first in
the country to offer full- and part-time students
a traditional in-person first-year classroom experience
followed by the option of taking all remaining classes
online.
We spoke to Professor Gabe Teninbaum JD’05, who will
oversee day-to-day operations of the program in his role as
the Law School’s assistant dean for innovation, strategic
initiatives, and distance education. Teninbaum brings a
deep background to the position. In 2017, the ABA Journal
called him “perhaps the most tech-savvy law professor in
the country,” and since 2015 he has led the Law School’s
Legal Innovation &amp; Technology Concentration.

to attend law school at a flexible time. We’re now leveraging
technology to offer students the opportunity to attend most
of law school at a flexible location. We’re basically updating
Archer’s original vision for the 21st century.
Once students go remote, will they be able to do
moot courts, the Law Review, and other activities?
Absolutely. HJD students are full members of the
community. They’ll have access to all of it: extracurricular
activities and support services, including student groups,
law journals, bar prep classes, academic support, alumni
networking programs, and career services. Also, they’re
welcome to be physically on campus any time they want,
just like any other student. They’ll have the additional
option to take their classes, access services, and engage in
extracurriculars remotely.

Suffolk is taking a new approach with this program:
first year on campus, followed by as much remote
learning as a student wants in the following years.
Why structure the program this way?
By enrolling in the same first-year courses as everyone else,
HJD students will develop close connections with classmates
and faculty. They’ll get to experience those hallmarks of 1L
year, from getting cold-called in Contracts class to participating
in oral arguments in Legal Practice Skills. But then, as upperlevel students, they’ll have flexibility to live and work where they
want during the remainder of law school.
Many students have good reasons for needing to live
outside of the Boston area, whether being closer to family
or a job, or living in a less expensive region. These are
legitimate reasons that might otherwise prevent a person
from attending law school. We’re going to make it easier
for these people to succeed by requiring them to be on
campus for only one year.
In 1906, [Suffolk Law founder] Gleason Archer started
teaching small law classes in his home for working-class
people and immigrants who worked during the day and
attended law school at night. Archer found a way to help
people overcome obstacles by offering them the opportunity

Was the hybrid approach brought on by the
pandemic?
No. Many years before the pandemic, we started to see
a trend toward online work and collaboration in the legal
field. There’s no doubt that COVID-19 is accelerating
that trend, but we were ahead of this curve and have been
planning this program for some time.
These days, if you aren’t comfortable in a remote
environment, you’ll be at a disadvantage in the workplace.
Our HJD students will be at ease engaging in significant
work remotely and using the technologies needed to
do it. This will give them an advantage in a changing
marketplace.
How big is the program expected to be? And what
kind of student are you looking for?
We’ll have small cohorts of no more than 25 new HJD
students per year, and those students will have certain
qualities they share. They’ll be the innovators, the firstadopters. In this unprecedented time, that’s a good person
to be.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

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I

n his early years as a prosecutor in Suffolk County, Michael V Glennon
.
JD’10 says he struggled with how to help juvenile offenders.
“We were developing their criminal records but not doing the work
needed to support them and keep them out of the system in the long term,”
says Glennon, chief of the Juvenile Unit at the Suffolk County District
Attorney’s Office. “Or we’d lean on a program we were familiar with rather
than calibrating to that particular youth’s needs. So the outcomes we were
getting for moderate- and high-risk youth were all wrong.”
Glennon joined forces with another Suffolk Law alum, University
Trustee Daniel F. Conley JD’83, who as Suffolk County’s district attorney
from 2002 until 2018 created reforms like the 2017 Juvenile Alternative
Resolution (JAR) Program. Glennon developed JAR and now oversees it as
part of the Juvenile Unit.
Their goal was to increase public safety, while at the same time reducing
youth involvement with the courts—and the lifelong barriers that ensue with
a criminal record. That meant creating plans for services and interventions
outside of the court system and appropriate to the specific offender.
Glennon is naturally bullish on the effort, calling it “one of the most
important things I’ll do in my career,” and now he has hard data behind him.
Early statistics from the Juvenile Justice and Policy Data Board in
Massachusetts, as well as a large body of national research, show that youths
who have taken part in diversion programs are less likely to reoffend than
those who are formally processed through the juvenile courts.
And according to the state’s Juvenile Justice Reform Coalition, each
dollar spent on diversion produces benefits of $10.60 to $25.60 for the
community.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�Just one aspect of reform
Juvenile diversion is one of a number of
criminal justice reform measures that have
emerged locally and nationally in recent
years, many of them spearheaded by Suffolk
Law alumni.
Reform is, of course, an elastic and
amorphous term. But in the arena of court
reforms, Suffolk Law experts say, it includes
model initiatives like the expansion of both
juvenile and adult diversion programs;
specialty courts that focus on drug addiction,
homelessness, veterans’ issues, and mental
health; major changes in bail laws; wider
access to remote judicial hearings; greater
use of prosecutorial discretion; and reducing
jail populations, especially in the age of
COVID-19.
A vital aspect of the reform movement
is its tight focus on data and independent
validation, so that skeptics can see if new
approaches are objectively effective. One
way to get the data is to offer more juveniles
diversion programs. Nicole Siino JD’18, a
graduate of Suffolk’s Legal Innovation &amp;
Technology Concentration, has developed a
tool that helps achieve that goal (see page 5).
While early results have been positive,
more data is needed to learn whether the
reforms championed by Suffolk-connected
experts will pay long-term dividends in
rehabilitation and public safety.
A Suffolk grad’s pivotal role
One Massachusetts legislator and Suffolk
Law graduate instrumental in passing the
state’s landmark criminal justice reform
legislation of 2018 is Rep. Claire D. Cronin
JD’85 of the 11th Plymouth District,
House chair of the Joint Committee on the
Judiciary, and the first woman to serve in that
role. She was a primary author of the bill and
oversaw the bipartisan conference committee
negotiations that got it to the governor’s desk.
The law affects people of all ages who
become ensnared in the legal system. Provisions
include upping the age when youths can enter
the court system from 7 to 12; removing
restrictions on diversion programs to keep

teenage first-offenders out of prison; allowing
some criminal records for 18 - to 21-year-olds
to be expunged; ending mandatory minimum
sentences for low-level drug crimes; and setting
up a medical-release program for terminally ill
and elderly inmates.
According to the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, 65% of inmates in American jails
have not been convicted of the offense they
are charged with. They are awaiting court
action but cannot afford what are often
onerous or punitive fees and bail amounts.
Those situations, research shows, lead to a
higher rate of future offenses.
A centerpiece of the Massachusetts
legislation is its bail reform measures, which
require that judges, in setting bail, take into
account a person’s financial resources and
allow fees and fines to be waived for financial
hardship. Judges must also justify in writing
instances in which bail is set so high that it
prevents someone’s release.
Cronin says she was especially gratified
that her efforts had strong bipartisan
support. “We’ve seen justice reform become
a bipartisan issue around the country,” she
says. “That’s because research and data show
these reforms reduce recidivism, increase
public safety, and save money.”
Improving prosecutorial
discretion
Christina E. Miller, who runs the Law
School’s Prosecutor Program and served as
the Chief of District Courts and Community
Prosecutions at the Suffolk County District
Attorney’s Office, has long focused on the
complex matter of prosecutorial discretion.
She spent years managing the hiring and
training of assistant district attorneys at a
time when efforts to have prosecutors treat
lower-level legal and criminal matters more
holistically took hold as a reform priority.
“Every day an ADA makes from 30 to 100
discretionary decisions,” she says. “There are
charging and sentencing recommendations,
financial penalties, bail amounts, and so on.”
For decades, some prosecutors focused on
using those decisions to drive guilty pleas.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

But a new generation of progressive DAs
in Massachusetts are rejecting that mindset
and embracing reforms.
“What I’ve seen that is really encouraging
is that options are growing,” Miller says.
“Things like pre- and post-trial arraignments,
diversions and alternative sentencing options,
and the assigning of cases to specialty courts
that are ‘pre-adjudication,’ so an individual
is held responsible and is granted support
without the need for a guilty finding.”
Miller is working on increasing such
options as co-chair of the Massachusetts
Trial Court’s Boston Community Justice
Task Force, a group charged with increasing
diversion, especially in the areas of mental
health and substance abuse.
A new pre-sentencing approach
for substance abusers
Rachelle Steinberg JD’00, MSCJ’03,
assistant deputy superintendent with the
Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, says that
the justice system is starting to see substance
abuse as a problem that doesn’t lend itself to
simply leaving a person in jail. Public safety
outcomes for the community are better
and less expensive when people get needed
medical, mental health, and substanceabuse treatment and learn some life and
vocational skills, she says.
Steinberg oversees the Opioid and
Addiction Services Inside South Bay
program, or OASIS, which launched in
2018. The program focuses on intensive
substance-abuse treatment and dischargeplanning services for male pretrial offenders.
The men remanded to the unit, about 30 at
any given time, aren’t free to leave, but haven’t
been sentenced either, giving them a chance to
turn their lives around through comprehensive
substance-abuse counseling, mentorship and
support from peers in the program, and other
Sheriff’s Department offerings.
Most of the participants create
individualized reentry plans with OASIS
staff that are coordinated with local service
agencies and include detailed program and
treatment steps.

�When judges decide that such a plan
seems reasonable and in keeping with the
nature of the crime, offenders may be released
on probation or to a residential treatment
program, or both, with strict guidelines.
Correctional facilities like Suffolk
County’s are “managing a difficult challenge,
as we have become de facto mental health
and substance-abuse treatment facilities,” she
says. “Our goal is to have someone walk out
of our facilities, and the OASIS program,
more equipped than when they came in. To
do that, we offer evidence-based treatment
and services that are gender-specific and
trauma-informed.”
Charu Verma JD’11, a staff attorney at
the Committee for Public Counsel Services
(the public defender’s office) and co-chair of
the Massachusetts Bar Association Criminal
Justice Section Council, concurs with
Steinberg’s root-causes approach.
“I think today there’s more attention
being paid to the science of substance abuse
and mental health disorders, and how those
intersect with criminal behavior,” she says.
“The science leads you to spending more
money up front before people are caught up in
the justice system—more money for treatment
beds, transitional housing, social workers,
diversion programs, specialty courts.”
As enhanced data is collected about
the savings accrued by treating the
causes of criminal behavior as well as the
positive public safety outcomes of keeping
communities whole, she says, the state’s
budgeting priorities will start to change—and
that’s when criminal justice reform efforts
will really begin to take hold. “Now,” she
says, “when hearts and minds are in the right
places, we lack the resources.”
Incarceration numbers
Former DA Conley says Massachusetts
prosecutors are more likely to embrace
changes that would be politically anathema
in more prison-oriented states. Prisoner
numbers at the Suffolk County House of
Corrections, for example, fell from around
1,000 when he took office to 500 in 2018.

“I think we have always been more
advanced on justice reform,” he says, noting
a wealth of data showing that “over the years
our rates of incarceration have declined—
and, remarkably, crime was going down as
jail populations were going down.”
Anthony Benedetti JD’93, chief counsel
for the Committee for Public Counsel
Services, agrees that the state has made
progress, especially with juvenile justice,
probation practices, and bail reform.
However, he cautions that “the state’s
incarceration rates are still astronomical
compared to Europe.”
“All of us who work in the system,
including defenders, prosecutors, and
judges, need to take responsibility for
creating a fairer and more effective legal
system,” he says.
A judge takes the long view
Judge Serge Georges, Jr. JD’96, nominee
(at press time) for the Supreme Judicial Court
and long-time teacher at Suffolk Law, grew
up in Dorchester and ran the Municipal
Drug Court there from 2014 to 2018. In the
end, reliable financing for the specialty court
system and its affiliated diversion programs is
key to success, he says.
Georges has been praised by the
Massachusetts Bar Association and
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly, among others,
for showing extraordinary compassion to
low-level offenders—urging them to embrace
diversionary programs and assisting them
in staying off the courtroom to prison-cell
conveyor belt.
“An appropriately staffed drug court is
worth doing,” he says. “Otherwise it can
be a waste of time. You need a clinician,
a probation officer, the commitment of the
DA’s office, a defense attorney, and longterm treatment beds all in place to make
it work.”
Georges points to the drug courts,
a major catch-basin for people who are
headed for a life of crime. “It’s a shame
courts may be the only way a person can get
help,” he said.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

In the end, criminal justice reform is as
much about empathy and rehabilitation as it
is about data and funding.
Benedetti asks, “If we cannot end the
cradle-to-prison pipeline in Massachusetts,
what hope does the rest of the country have?”
One answer to that question may lie
within the pockets of the Massachusetts
justice system that are finding practical ways
to maintain public safety while giving some
offenders a shot at redemption.

“We’ve seen justice
reform become a
bipartisan issue
around the country.
That’s because
research and data
show these reforms
reduce recidivism,
increase public
safety, and save
money.”
- Rep. Claire D. Cronin JD’85

�SUFFOLK
LAW
RESPONDS
TO THE
HOUSING
CRISIS
Tackling discrimination and
affordable housing head on
By Michael Fisch with reporting from Mark Potts
Photography by Michael J. Clarke

�STUDY FINDS DISCRIMINATION
PERVADES GREATER BOSTON’S
RENTAL MARKET
When Aisha inquired about an apartment in Boston
recently, the listing agent said he wasn’t sure when he
planned to show the unit, asked Aisha for her credit
score, and told her to text her number so he could call the
next day. The listing agent didn’t follow up, so Aisha tried
him again. The agent rushed her off the phone, saying,
“You gotta stop calling me.” She never heard from the
agent again.
But when another young woman, Meredith, called
about the same apartment, the agent immediately
offered her a tour, confirmed it by text, and didn’t ask
for her credit score.
Why the difference?
Aisha and Meredith are race-associated names
chosen quite purposefully by Suffolk Law’s Housing
Discrimination Testing Program (HDTP) as part of a study
in which undercover testers interacted with rental agents
or landlords of 50 randomly selected rental properties in
Greater Boston from August 2018 to July 2019.
This summer, the HDTP’s findings were compiled
in a study co-authored by the Analysis Group and
funded by The Boston Foundation.
Highlights from the findings
Overall, Black testers faced discrimination in 71%
of the tests, including issues like not being able to make
an appointment, not being offered the discounts or free
parking offered to white testers, and not being offered
an application. Agents showed Black testers about half
the number of apartments shown to white testers and
were far less likely to return Black testers’ calls—just
62% of the time versus 92% for white testers.
And for people using a Section 8 voucher, which
helps low-income families, the elderly, and people with
disabilities afford rental housing in the private market,
the chances of even touring an apartment were few and
far between.
Nearly 90% of testers who indicated they were
using a voucher faced discrimination, regardless
of their race. In a number of cases, the brokers told
the testers outright that the owner was not accepting
voucher participants.
Both state and federal law prohibit housing
discrimination based on race and source of income,
among other reasons, so the findings suggest both
pervasive discrimination and unlawful conduct. The

33

HDTP’s rigorously designed testing program began in
2012 and has resulted in multiple enforcement actions
by state agencies.
City signs agreement with Suffolk
The most recent findings were so compelling that
they prompted immediate calls for change.
A few days after the study was released on July 1,
2020, industry publication Banker &amp; Tradesman called on
the state’s Attorney General’s Office to convene a task
force to address the housing discrimination problem.
“No serious person can tell themselves that these
results were the product of shoddy study design,” the
publication wrote. “To make sure no other factor could
influence the broker’s actions, the listings in each test
were randomly chosen, testers did not know each other,
participated in only one test each, and, in each test, had
the same income, credit score, sex, disability, family size,
and gender identity.”
Boston City Councilor Matt O’Malley, who
referenced the study on NBC 10, was just one of several
councilors who took to local media this summer to
decry widespread housing discrimination in the city and
to announce a formal council hearing on the HDTP’s
findings.
At that hearing on October 13, Suffolk Law
Professor William Berman, director of the HDTP, laid
out the study’s conclusions. William Onuoha, director of
Boston’s Office of Fair Housing &amp; Equity (OFHE), then
announced that the OFHE had signed an agreement
with Suffolk Law to fund a new discrimination testing
coordinator position, housed at Suffolk. The new hire
will be part of the HDTP and will run a comprehensive
undercover testing program across Boston.
A commitment to enforcement
Spurred by Suffolk’s data, Onuoha announced
that the OFHE will file agency-initiated enforcement
actions against agents and landlords found to be
discriminating. “This is particularly important, because
the responsibility of fighting housing discrimination
shouldn’t only fall on victims,” says Jamie Langowski,
assistant director of the HDTP.
“Imagine you’re rushing to find a place to live for
your family, addressing your work responsibilities, and
then you add on a layer of trying to convince a lawyer to
take on a housing discrimination case,” says Langowski.
“It’s hard for anyone in that set of circumstances to
make a legal case a priority.” And people often don’t

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�know they are being discriminated against,
she adds.
Discipline of rental agents who
discriminate is rare, and the state legislature
should make it easier to suspend offending
brokers, Langowski argues. Toward that
end, the HDTP is regularly convening
fair housing stakeholders from nonprofits,
the government, and academia to push
for changes in enforcement, punishment,
broker training, and the legal processes for
acquiring fair housing.
With a strong commitment for legal
enforcement from the City, more instances
of housing discrimination will be challenged
and stopped, she says.
How does housing discrimination
testing work?
Seventy-one Suffolk Law students served
among 200 testers posing as interested
renters. Pairs of testers, equal except for the
characteristic they were testing for, started
the process by calling the advertisers of 50
randomly selected rentals in nine Greater
Boston cities and 11 Boston neighborhoods.
White testers were assigned names such
as Brad and Anne, and Black testers were
assigned names like Latonya and Jermaine.
The testers recorded their experiences in
meticulously structured reports.
For example, in one test, “Lakisha,” a
Black tester and a Suffolk Law student, met
with an agent to view an apartment. He did
not offer her a rental application and did not
mention any additional, unadvertised units.
However, when “Allison,” a white tester
and also a Suffolk Law student, met with
the same agent, he offered her a rental
application before she even entered the
apartment, and told her after the viewing
that he wanted to show her an additional
unit. He went on to explain “they don’t
advertise that apartment because then they
would have to respond to everyone who
inquires” and they were looking for “people
with quiet lifestyles who work, not CEOs
necessarily, but people with good jobs.”
He invited Allison to join “a select group”
that would tour the unadvertised unit the
following day.

A “hollow” promise
“The promise of the Section 8 program
is a hollow one if a voucher holder is turned
away from renting a property nine out of
10 times just because they are trying to use
a voucher—and this in a state where this
kind of discrimination is explicitly illegal.
A person can’t hope to use a voucher for
upward mobility under these conditions,”
Professor Berman says.
“Housing is the most basic of
necessities,” he adds. “Where you live
impacts your health, your access to
education, and economic opportunities.
The fact that such a high level of race
discrimination exists in our community is a
disgrace and acts as a barrier to opportunity
that must be removed.”

ADDRESSING THE
AFFORDABILITY CRISIS
A separate but related problem for those
who seek affordable housing is that there
simply isn’t an adequate supply, says Suffolk
Law Professor John Infranca, a housing and
land-use expert.
In Massachusetts, and across the country,
neighborhood activists in lower-income and
working-class communities and residents of
wealthy towns are both fighting against the
development of new and dense multi-unit
housing, says Infranca.
When it comes to these large apartment
complexes, residents of wealthy towns
often point to concerns about traffic and
contend that schools and town services will
be overburdened. While in some cases these
concerns may have merit, they also reflect
a longstanding tradition of NIMBYism
(not-in-my-backyard), Infranca says, and
sometimes personal prejudice. Some
people, he says, won’t admit that prejudice
against Black renters and voucher holders
is a key reason why they stand against
multi-story developments with affordable
housing. But, as the recent HDTP study
makes clear, racial prejudice remains alive
and well.
Meanwhile, anti-gentrification activists
in blue-collar towns argue that new housing

34

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

complexes will increase housing prices, alter
neighborhood demographics, and displace
current residents.
Infranca set out to better understand
the fiery opposition in the Bay State, and
across the country, to proposed changes
in zoning laws, the substance of new laws
that have passed in certain states, and a
potential route forward. He is focusing his
scholarship on related issues.
In November 2019, he organized a
two-day national roundtable where leading
academics, policy makers, and advocates
from across the country discussed recent
housing and zoning reform efforts. Speakers
directly involved with reforms in California,
Oregon, and elsewhere discussed lessons
learned and potential roads forward in
Massachusetts and beyond.
Last spring, he learned he was among just
16 professors to receive one of the country’s
top legal academic honors for junior
faculty, an invitation to present his research
at the Stanford/Harvard/Yale Junior
Faculty Forum. His paper, “Differentiating
Exclusionary Tendencies,” is forthcoming in
the Florida Law Review.
Build it or not, they will come
The version of gentrification that
has solidified in popular culture, usually
including images of hipsters sipping lattés,
suggests certain truths, Infranca says, but his
research points to a different conclusion than
that of many anti-gentrification activists. He
contends that gentrification is largely caused
by demand—not new supply.
People who can’t afford to live in
Boston’s South End or Jamaica Plain, for
example, will move into less expensive
neighborhoods in Roxbury and Hyde Park
whether developers build new housing or
not, he argues. If no new housing stock
is available, that means more competition
for existing units, housing prices rise
even more rapidly, and there’s even more
displacement.
Infranca points to a study by Lance
Freeman, a Columbia University affordable
housing and urban planning expert,
which shows that people in gentrifying

�Suffolk Law leaders
in housing reform,
from left, Jamie
Langowski, assistant
director of the Housing
Discrimination Testing
Program (HDTP),
and William Berman,
Suffolk Law professor
and director of the
HDTP. Suffolk Law
Professor John
Infranca, a housing
and land-use expert.

�36

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�neighborhoods don’t move out of their apartments more often than
people do in persistently poor neighborhoods.
Regardless of their neighborhood, low-income individuals tend
to move a lot, Infranca says. “What’s different is who moves in when
people move out, and in gentrifying neighborhoods it tends to be more
affluent, oftentimes white residents moving in. So, if all that is true,
new housing supply by itself is not going to lead to higher levels of
displacement.”
Instead, he argues, new housing supply should help keep
housing prices from skyrocketing.
If we fail to increase the pace of new development, we risk
moving in the direction of the San Francisco area, he warns, noting
the images many have seen on television. In Palo Alto, California,
in the heart of Silicon Valley, news crews document battered RVs
and scruffy cars lining the main road next to Stanford University,
makeshift living places for workers who can’t afford the area’s
hyper-expensive housing.
Greater Boston, facing its own affordable housing crisis, has
significant parallels with the San Francisco area, he says. Both have
limited new development—even as their technology, health, and
other hot job markets continue to attract affluent workers willing
and able to pay top dollar for rent or home ownership.
“That combination has resulted in massive housing price
increases and evictions. The status quo of too much demand and
too little new housing supply is not going to work, and we’ve seen it
play out. It’s clear we need to figure out some creative approaches.”
Looking to the future
In many cases, Infranca says, longstanding zoning laws effectively
limit the construction of new housing. Suburban towns, for instance,
with zoning that mandates single-family homes on sizable lots, make
it difficult, if not impossible, for new, denser housing to be built
that might increase affordability. That in turns limits opportunities
for new residents to move into those communities—and often
exacerbates existing discrimination against people of color.
In Oregon, a recent state law requires cities with more than
10,000 people to allow duplexes in areas zoned for single-family
homes, a concept called upzoning. In California, there’s a movement
to upzone across the state, Infranca says.
Such state upzoning measures—some of which prohibit
exclusively single-family zoning and others that would permit
denser, multi-family housing near transit hubs—are worth
considering, he argues, but controversial. Efforts along these lines
have found limited traction in Massachusetts.
Should low-income communities have greater say regarding
development?
In his paper, Infranca examines whether low-income
neighborhoods should have a greater degree of control over new
development than very affluent communities do.

37

There are a few critical reasons to consider doing that, he argues,
including the historical injustices faced by these neighborhoods:
redlining, discrimination, and disinvestment. Additionally, lowincome communities generally have a high proportion of renters.
The time commitment and costs of finding a new affordable rental
is harder to bear for a lower-income person than for someone who
is higher income, he says.
Infranca also points to Suffolk’s recent rental housing
discrimination study, which uncovers additional obstacles faced by
voucher-holders and Black renters.
He concludes that treating certain neighborhoods differently
than others makes sense as a way to target a narrow subset of
gentrification concerns, including the claims of long-term residents
to a stake in their neighborhoods. Infranca also suggests coming
up with new ways to grant long-term residents of low-income
communities a financial interest in development.
One option, his paper argues, would grant property owners and
long-term tenants development rights they could sell to a nearby
property. This would permit the purchaser to build a higher-density
development, while giving residents a financial stake and some
degree of control over new development in their community.
An industry perspective
Dean’s Cabinet member Jeffrey R. Drago JD’04, a partner
at Drago &amp; Toscano, a Boston zoning/permitting law firm that
represents developers seeking to build large and small residential
and commercial buildings, agrees with Infranca that higher-density
development is part of the solution.
“In many cases we go out to start community processes in a
neighborhood and folks will say it’s too dense or too high or not
enough parking. However, if you want to address affordability, you
need to allow for larger-scale development,” he says. “Then the
municipalities can ask the developers for more affordable units in
return. With a greater supply, the demand will also go down.”
HYM Investments LLC, founded by Boston developer Tom
O’Brien JD’93, is overseeing the redevelopment of East Boston’s
Suffolk Downs. The project increased the required 13% affordable
housing to 20%—the highest feasible amount, according to O’Brien.
“We have two options: we can build a development that includes
up to 20% of affordable housing or we cannot build the project
at all—it’s a pretty stark choice, unfortunately,” he says. “We need
a national initiative to go and build more housing and make that
housing affordable to more people.”
New affordable units are important, but equally important
is equity, says HDTP director William Berman. He has been
surprised by the vehemence of opposition to affordable housing in
Massachusetts, and the veiled and not so veiled suggestions of race
and class that go along with that: “That vehemence comes with
a significant cost to the community, in that economically we can’t
promote growth if we don’t have access to affordable housing.”

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�Walk in
My Shoes:

A Day in the Life of a Black Woman Attorney
Danielle Johnson’s essay is reprinted with the permission of the Boston Bar Journal, where it appeared on May 28, 2020. She is a staff
attorney at Greater Boston Legal Services, where her practice focuses on elder housing and disability benefits.

I

f you approach the steps of the Edward Brooke
Courthouse (named after the first African American
elected to the U.S. Senate post Reconstruction) around
8:45 a.m. on a Thursday morning—colloquially known as
“Eviction Thursday” in Boston—there is a seemingly endless
line of people, mostly in street clothes, waiting anxiously to
get through the security screening. I approach, dressed in a
suit and dress shoes with my hair neatly dreadlocked. I walk
quickly past the lines of waiting litigants with my bar card
and driver’s license in hand. I am a young African American
woman and I am an attorney. In court, I am both an anomaly
and a chameleon, depending on whom I encounter.
The Court: The Tale of Two Lines
The familiar discomfort starts outside the courthouse.
To get through the door of the courthouse to the Eastern
Housing Court sessions on the fifth floor, I must walk past
the long lines of fellow people of color waiting to submit
themselves to the security screening—which often includes an
electronic pat-down—before being allowed in the building. It
is my weekly routine to swallow the discomfort of the two
lines; one short line for predominantly white attorneys and
another longer line for the litigants, including my clients,
predominantly people of color. I present my bar card and

driver’s license, and after close inspection—notably which
are not scrutinized for my white colleagues, who flash their
cards and proceed before me—I am allowed to pass the first
test and enter the foyer of the marbled courthouse.
Inside, the courthouse is buzzing, and the clamor of
chatter and movements echo throughout the hallways. I
make my way up to the fifth floor for the call of the lists.
Exiting the elevator, the scene that awaits can overwhelm an
unsuspecting person, but it is business as usual for Eviction
Thursday. The two “Attorney of the Day” tables are set up
to provide quick legal advice, one for pro se landlords and the
other for pro se tenants. The area is so crammed with people
that one cannot see the Attorneys of the Day. This is not
surprising given that in 2019 alone, 39,600 households faced
eviction in Massachusetts. Of these, 92% of the tenants were
unrepresented; in contrast, more than 70% of landlords
were represented.
At the Attorney of the Day table for tenants, I flip
through the dockets and see the usual massive number of
new eviction cases—about 150 in total—and 55 motion
hearings on the two lists. The day will be long. I brace
myself for the ongoing series of tests that I will face, each of
which will demand that I prove who I am, making Eviction
Thursday an even more exhausting day.
Continued on page 40
38

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Photograph by Michael J. Clarke

By Danielle Johnson JD’16

�39

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�The Client: “You’re My Lawyer?”
Finding my client among the sea of black and brown faces who
are anxiously searching for answers from anyone who might be
willing to listen is doable if I have previously met the tenant. Today
is not that day. Working in legal aid, where there is a mismatch
between high demand and limited resources, I often walk through
the hall shouting out names of clients I will meet for the first time
in court. When my first call does not yield a response, I call again.
Success! I formally introduce myself to the client and field the
expected question: “You’re the attorney I spoke with?” Surprise
mixed with suspicion registers on my client’s face. For my clients, it
is my youth that is concerning. I am used to this look of doubt as an
attorney who practices exclusively with elders; this is my second test
of the day. It is the unspoken challenge to my legitimacy raised by my
appearance. I deflect their anxiety with humor using stereotypical
images of attorneys common to their generation: “I must look
adolescent, not the Matlock or Perry Mason you were expecting?”
To get past the awkwardness, I direct my client’s attention to the goal
for the day and what to expect in the courtroom. But sometimes this
is not sufficient assurance. I confidently explain to my client that this
is “not my first rodeo,” and hope that I have gained their trust. I
leave them to their thoughts and move on to find opposing counsel.
The Bench and the Bar
Housing courts tend to have their usual players, so locating a
specific attorney is not often difficult. Again, today is not that day.
Like a chameleon, I pass unnoticed through the tenants crowding
the halls while waiting anxiously for the courtrooms to open, and
quickly scan each white individual in a suit. In the courtroom,
shades of brown dominate, speckled here and there by clusters of
ivory. I am not the only person of color, or the only woman, or the
only person of modest economic means. Even so, there is a clear
dichotomy: The majority of the tenants are minorities while the
majority of attorneys are white and male. Then there is me.
As the list is called, the attorneys jockey for seats in the jury box.
In that segregated space, protected against the huddled masses
packed into the courtroom, the color scheme flips; today, I am
the only grain of pepper in a sea of salt. I sigh, recalling the day
the court officer singled me out: “Hey, you can’t sit there. You a
lawyer?” Moving past colleagues to an empty seat, I speculate that
they are wondering: “Does she know this section is for attorneys?”

This is the daily reality of what it means to be an attorney of color
in Massachusetts, navigating unwritten tests to prove that I exist, I
am qualified, and that I belong.
Once the call of the lists begins, the doors to the standingroom-only courtrooms are shut. Any defendant not present in
the correct courtroom for the call will be defaulted. Most tenants
who answer are visibly anxious. Once referred to court mediation
on the third floor, some will go over agreements with a housing
specialist, but most will be diverted to sign, without the benefit of
a hearing or trial, the pre-drafted form agreement for judgment
offered by the landlord’s attorney. This is accomplished quickly
in the hallway, often with no understanding on the part of the
tenants of the document they have signed, including the waiver
of their right to request a stay, seek reconsideration, or pursue
an appeal. Instead, they blindly focus on the quickest option that
allows them to remain in their home and escape the stress of
being in court.
My client, who was previously pro se, had signed such an
agreement for judgment with the landlord. The slightest breach
of any of its conditions, including all incorporated lease terms, is
deemed material and could trigger an execution for possession—
and the agreement waived all stays of execution. But today,
there will be no execution for possession. Today, I have prevailed
in negotiating an amendment to the “sword of Damocles”
agreement, and substituted a sustainable repayment plan with
sufficient time to access third-party rental assistance through the
Residential Assistance for Families in Transition (RAFT) program
for the onerous agreement for judgment. I also connected the
elderly client to the court’s Tenancy Preservation Program (TPP).
I am the most pleased with my success in changing the basis for
the eviction from “fault” to “no-fault,” thereby protecting my
client from mandatory termination of their Section 8 housing
choice voucher.
I have passed today’s last test. I achieved a successful outcome.
I demonstrated my competence to my client and proved my
negotiation skills to an opposing counsel with whom I had not
worked in the past.
Legal Aid and the Massachusetts Bar
Back at my office at Greater Boston Legal Services, my
shoulders relax. Here, I am not burdened by expectations to

40

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Photograph: Courtesy of the Sarita and Claire Wright Lucas Foundation

“In court, I am both an
anomaly and a chameleon,
depending on whom I
encounter.”

�conform to the culture and hierarchy of
a Boston law firm. I am not oppressed
by inadvertent stereotyping nor
subject to daily microaggressions that
would stunt any lawyer’s professional
growth.
Notwithstanding,
my
dominant experience navigating my
chosen profession is one of alienation,
exclusion, and discomfort—the price
that I pay under the “invisible labor
clause” for being a Black woman legal
aid attorney in Massachusetts, serving
the poorest people in Boston who are
predominantly people of color, like me.
In my career, I have experienced
racism, gender discrimination, and
elitism. My experience is not unique.
Throughout the Commonwealth,
attorneys of color are called upon
to prove their qualifications daily, to
colleagues, clients, court personnel, and
even clerks and judges.
The 2019 demographic survey
conducted by the Supreme Judicial
Court, in collaboration with the
Massachusetts Board of Bar Overseers,
revealed that out of 22,743 participating
attorneys, 20,043 (86%) identified as
white, and only 494 (2%) identified as
Black or African American, 519 (2%)
as Hispanic or Latinix, and 574 (2%) as
Asian. These numbers make clear what
my experience has proven—there is a
gross lack of minority representation in
the Massachusetts bar.
This is not a “woe is me” story. It
is a call to action for cultural diversity
in law firms and legal organizations
and, more importantly, for reflection
on and recognition of each of our
implicit biases. My day is over, but these
challenges will repeat tomorrow and
next week and every month thereafter
with a new list of scared, mostly poor,
minority tenants, assembled in lines to
enter a courthouse named for the first
African American attorney general
of Massachusetts, all in effort to get
“justice.” We should do better. We can
do better.

Honoring the memory of
a rising star in Criminal Justice

The Sarita and Claire Wright Lucas Foundation strives for diversity in the law
By Kara Baskin and Janet Parkinson

Elected prosecutors in the United
States are overwhelmingly white and
male, according to the 2019 Reflective
Democracy Campaign. Only 3% are men
of color; and while 24% are female, just
2% are women of color.
As a Black assistant district attorney
Sarita Wright Lucas JD’08 didn’t let those
demographics constrain her. At Suffolk
Law, Lucas interned at a corporate law
firm but found her calling as a prosecutor
after an internship in Boston Municipal
Court. She became deputy attorney
general with the Delaware Department of
Justice in Wilmington, Delaware, which is
ranked one of the most violent U.S. cities
on a per-capita basis. A rising star, Lucas
took more felony cases to trial in 2013 than
any other prosecutor. She was named head
of the Wilmington Trial Unit in 2014,
becoming one of the youngest attorneys
to head a criminal unit, trying homicides,
assaults, and other violent crimes.
Tragically, she died that same year of
pregnancy-related complications.

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

In her memory, Lucas’ mother, Wanda
Geer, established the Sarita and Claire
Wright Lucas Foundation (SCWLF) in
2015 to support other Black women who
want to pursue careers as prosecutors—a
step toward making those demographics
more representative of the U.S. population.
“There are very few women
prosecutors—and very few women of color
who are prosecutors. Our goal is diversity
in the law to create a more equitable
criminal justice system,” Geer says.
To that end, the SCWLF grants
$5,000 scholarships to Black female law
students to cover the cost of preparing
for and taking the bar exam in four states.
“If you go into private practice, usually
the firm will cover many of these costs, if
not all of the cost—but people who want
to go into public service are on their own
financially,” Geer says.
A second $5,000 employment
incentive is available if recipients become
prosecutors. In its first five years, the
SCWLF has granted scholarships to 11
Black women.
Although the foundation has focused
on the Mid-Atlantic region, it will launch
a paid summer internship program in
2021 with the Suffolk and Middlesex
County District Attorneys’ Offices, with
preference given to Suffolk Law students.
“Sarita wanted to make a difference
in the justice system, as a woman of
color, for victims. She was really just so
passionate about it. We wanted to honor
that,” Geer says.

�DEAN’S CABINET
COMMITTED ALUMNI INVEST IN
THE FUTURE OF SUFFOLK LAW

DEAN’S CABINET
GROWS TO 45
MEMBERS
The Dean’s Cabinet now has 45 members, each of whom has
committed at least $50,000 to support the Law School’s programs
and students. Members meet with the dean twice per year to
receive updates about Suffolk Law, offer strategic advice about the
Law School’s direction, and engage with their accomplished fellow
members.
Two new members share what inspired them to join.

JACQUELINE L.
PERCZEK JD’94
“Someone once wrote that the price of leadership in
academia is to forge the path forward and await the judgment
of the future. Dean Perlman is not waiting for the future. The
future is now! An innovator and trailblazer, Dean Perlman’s
global vision has taken our law school to the next level of
excellence. Suffolk Law enjoys enviable national rankings
in various categories, we have a spectacular faculty, and our
school is defining the path forward. I made a gift to the school
because I want to advance the mission of our leadership and
honor the mission of our founders—to pass on a gift when we
can, and to help widen the path to education.”

CARL P. GROSS JD’71
“I had Sargent for Torts, Lemelman for Property and Taxation,
and Judge for Contracts. They inspired me, and I credit a lot of
my success to them and Suffolk Law as a whole. Dean Perlman
visited [my family]—I was impressed with him and his vision. His
assurances to me that the Suffolk mission would not be altered
convinced me to up my game financially.”

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Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�DEAN’S CABINET

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL

DEAN’S CABINET MEMBERS
Patricia M. Annino
JD’81
Partner
Rimon Law
Boston, MA

Kevin M. Fitzgerald
JD’82
Partner
Nixon Peabody, LLP
Manchester, NH

Henry G. Kara BSBA’66,
JD’69
President
Kara Law Offices
Boston, MA

Robert T. Noonan JD’85
Regional Managing Partner
(ret.)
KMPG, LLP
Boston, MA

Joy L. Backer JD’15
Associate
Fish &amp; Richardson PC
Boston, MA

Christine Newman
Garvey JD’72, Trustee
Global Head of Corporate
Real Estate and Services
(ret.)
Deutsche Bank AG
Santa Barbara, CA

George N. Keches
JD’75
Senior Partner
Keches Law Group, PC
Taunton, MA

Eric J. Parker JD’86
Partner
Parker Scheer, LLP
Lecturer
Suffolk University Law
School
Boston, MA

Todd L. Boudreau JD’98
Partner
Morrison &amp; Foerster, LLP
Boston, MA
Alexander A. Bove, Jr.
JD’67
Partner
Bove &amp; Langa P.C.
Boston, MA
Brian T. Brandt JD’96
Managing Director
SCS Financial LLC
Boston, MA
Claudine A. Cloutier
JD’95
Partner
Keches Law Group, PC
Taunton, MA

Photographs courtesy of Jacqueline L. Perczek, Carl P. Gross

Barry C. Cosgrove
JD’85
Chairman &amp; CEO
Blackmore Partners, LLC
Laguna Beach, CA
Gerry D’Ambrosio JD’93
Partner
D’Ambrosio Brown, LLP
Boston, MA
Gerard S. DiFiore JD’84
Partner
Reed Smith, LLP
New York, NY
Jeffrey R. Drago JD’04
Founding Partner
Drago + Toscano, LLP
Boston, MA

Kenneth T. Gear
BSBA’89, JD’95
Chief Executive Officer
Leading Builders of
America, Inc.
Washington, DC

James A. Lack JD’96
President and Founder
HPL Enterprises
Sunny Isles Beach, FL
Warren G. Levenbaum
JD’72
Managing Partner
Levenbaum Trachtenberg,
PLC
Phoenix, AZ

Marc S. Geller JD’71
Managing Director
Sternhill Partners, Ltd.
Houston, TX

Konstantinos Ligris
JD’01, Trustee
Founder &amp; Board Member
Ligris + Associates, PC
Co-Founder
Escrow Mint, LLC
Newton, MA

Joseph W. Glannon
Professor of Law
Suffolk University Law
School
Boston, MA
Carl P. Gross JD’71
Director &amp; President
GB Ltd. Operating Co., Inc.
Freehold, NJ
Ernst Guerrier BS’91,
JD’94, Trustee
Principal
Guerrier &amp; Associates, PC
Boston, MA
James F. Haley, Jr.
JD’75
Partner
Haley Guiliano, LLP
New York, NY
Bradley M. Henry JD’91
Partner
Meedhan, Boyle, Black &amp;
Bogdanow, PC
Boston, MA

Deborah Marson JD’78
Executive Vice President,
General Counsel &amp;
Secretary
Iron Mountain, Inc.
Boston, MA
Michael J. McCormack
JD’72
Partner
McCormack Suny, LLC
Boston, MA
Timothy M. McCrystal
JD’89
Partner
Ropes &amp; Gray, LLP
Boston, MA
Brian E. McManus
JD’71
President
McManus Capital
Management
Fort Worth, TX

43

Jacqueline L. Perczek
JD’94
Partner
Black, Srebnick, Kornspan
&amp; Stumpf, PA
Miami, FL
Jamie A. Sasson JD’04
Managing Partner
The Ticktin Law Group, PA
Deerfield Beach, FL
Lewis A. Sassoon JD’69
Partner
Sassoon &amp; Cymrot LLP
Boston, MA
Janis B. Schiff JD’83
Partner
Holland &amp; Knight, LLP
Washington, DC
Alan B. Sharaf JD’87
Partner
Sharaf &amp; Maloney, PC
Brookline, MA
Marie-Louise Skafte
JD’96
Founder
Skafte Global Law, PA
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Wayne E. Smith
BSBA’77, JD’82
Adjunct Professor
Suffolk University Law
School
Firm Director (ret.)
Deloitte Tax LLP
Boston, MA

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

Mark E. Sullivan JD’97,
Trustee
Partner (ret.)
Nelson Mullins Riley &amp;
Scarborough LLP
Boston, MA
Regina C. Sullivan
JD’88
Managing Partner
Gaman Real Estate Group
LLC
Wellesley, MA
Thomas M. Sullivan
JD’94
Founding Partner
Lando &amp; Anastasi, LLP
Instructor
Suffolk University Sawyer
Business School
Boston, MA
James S. Trainor JD’00
Partner
Fenwick &amp; West LLP
New York, NY
Kenneth J. Vacovec
JD’75
Senior Partner
Vacovec, Mayotte &amp;
Singer, LLP
Newton, MA
Richard J. Walsh BA’58,
JD’60
Attorney (ret.)
Federal Trade Commission
Naples, FL
Stephen N. Wilchins
JD’82
Founding Partner
Wilchins, Cosentino,
Novins LLP
Wellesley, MA
Linda J. Wondrack
JD’95
EVP, Head of Compliance
for Advice Solutions
Fidelity Investments
Boston, MA

�RETIREMENTS
SUFFOLK LAW FACULTY
RETIREMENTS

STUDENT AWARD
NAMED FOR FORMER
DEAN ROBERT SMITH
Robert H. Smith served as the Law School’s dean for eight years
(1999–2007) and retired in May 2020 after serving an additional
13 years on the faculty. To honor his retirement and celebrate his
contributions to the Law School, and to the Clinical Programs in
particular, nearly $50,000 has been raised to establish the Robert H.
Smith Outstanding Clinic Student Award.
The award was created with an anonymous gift of $25,000 and
has grown with additional support from several Dean’s Cabinet
members who wanted to honor their relationship with Smith and
acknowledge his contributions to the Law School.
Smith was a clinical professor before coming to Suffolk Law, and
emphasized clinical education throughout his career. As dean, Smith
helped reimagine the Law School’s clinics and was instrumental in
developing them into cutting-edge experiential programs.
“I am happy to support Dean Smith,” said Trustee and Dean’s
Cabinet member Ernst Guerrier BS’91, JD’94, who contributed to the
creation of the award. “We [Suffolk Law] owe him a debt of gratitude.”

Professor Dwight Golann may be retiring,
but the positive impact he has had on the field
of alternative dispute resolution will endure. He
has been a pathfinder in teaching his subject
remotely—in a field that is so often dependent on
in-person instruction. His scholarship has been
informed by his own deep experience as both a
mediator and a former chief of the Trial Division
of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office.
Dwight has been a wonderful colleague, generous
with his learning and assistance. Suffolk’s national
ranking in dispute resolution draws heavily on his
contribution.

“Bob Smith was the dean when I was hired 20 years ago, and I
learned so much from his leadership during his eight years as dean.
Among other accomplishments, he transformed our experiential
programs, especially our clinical and legal writing programs, and
helped to make them the national leaders that they are today,” said
Dean Andrew Perlman.
The first award will be given in the spring of 2021 to a student who
has engaged in outstanding work in a clinic and the corresponding
seminar. Consideration will be given to a student’s commitment to
public service, either in the form of public interest work or through
pro bono contributions, as well as to the student’s commitment to
mentoring future law students.
To make a contribution to the Robert H. Smith Outstanding Clinic
Student Award, visit suffolk.edu/law/alumni/give.

Over his 40-plus years of teaching and
service, Professor Stephen Hicks
is largely credited as the inspiring force
for global legal studies at Suffolk. He
developed LLM degrees in Boston and
abroad, an international internship
program, as well as several exchange
programs. Steve is a superb scholar,
a wonderful mentor to many, and an
influential teacher who has taught
thousands around the world.
—Assistant Dean Bridgett C. Sandusky

I recruited Professor Andy BeckermanRodau to join the Intellectual Property
Concentration as our patent specialist.
It was Andy’s idea that the High Tech
Concentration be retitled the Intellectual
Property Concentration. Andy has been
the driving force in making Suffolk Law
School the training grounds for more patent
attorneys in Greater Boston than all of the
other law schools in the area—combined.
Asking him to join the faculty and be the codirector of the IP Concentration was the best
decision I made as an administrator.
—Professor Michael Rustad

—Professor Lisle Baker

44

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�CLASS NOTES
PROFESSIONAL AND
PERSONAL MILESTONES
FROM SUFFOLK ALUMNI

1955

ARSEN TASHJIAN turned
100 on December 1. He
worked various jobs during the
day and attended law school
in the evening and spent his
entire legal career working at
Hanscom Air Force Base as a
patent attorney for the federal
government, a job that he
found on the bulletin board
at the Law School. During
World War II, he worked at
the Watertown Arsenal, testing
metals for heavy artillery.
He grew up in Everett and
currently resides in Chestnut
Hill. Married for 43 years, he
has three children and two
grandchildren.

Photographs from left: Michael J. Clarke, Class Notes submitted

1974

THE HON. DAVID
G. SACKS has retired
after nearly 34 years as a
probate and family court
judge in Springfield, MA.
He is former chair of the
Massachusetts Trial Court’s
Standing Committee on
Dispute Resolution and
remains a member and vice
chair. As a judge, he worked
with Suffolk interns from
the FYSI Program from the
program’s initial year. After
retirement, he was elected as
a Joe Biden delegate from the
First Congressional District.
David and his wife, Deborah
Leopold, senior manager
for developmental disability
services at BHN, Inc.,
continue to reside in Holyoke.

1984

1975

BRIAN M. HURLEY of Rackemann,
Sawyer &amp; Brewster, was named to The Best
Lawyers in America 2021.
1978

DIANE C. TILLOTSON was named as
one of the 2019 “Lawyers of the Year” by
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. She was selected
for her work on McLean Hospital v. Town
of Lincoln, in which the Supreme Judicial
Court ruled in favor of her client, McLean
Hospital, clarifying the education use
exemption under the Dover Amendment.
1979

KEVIN F. BERRY joined Vaughan Baio
&amp; Partners in Philadelphia as a partner. He
is a commercial litigator who has tried more
than 200 civil jury trials to verdict.
WILLIAM B. FLYNN is building a new
international financial services platform that
brings investors to privately owned midmarket investment opportunities in Europe
and North America.
1983

Boston Law
Collaborative
LLC has
added veteran
employment
lawyer and
mediator JODY
L. NEWMAN
to its practice.
She has more
than 35 years’
experience resolving workplace disputes and
investigating bias and sexual misconduct
cases in workplaces and college campuses.

45

MADELINE S. BAIO
recently founded Vaughan Baio
&amp; Partners in Philadelphia.
She litigates product liability,
premises liability, motor vehicle,
and employment-related matters, representing clients
in the product manufacturing, retailing, transportation,
pharmacy, grocery, and restaurant industries.
1986

ELLEN M. HARRINGTON, of Rackemann, Sawyer &amp;
Brewster, was named to The Best Lawyers in America 2021.
1988

DENISE I. MURPHY was elected to serve as president
of the Massachusetts Bar Association and as co-chair
of the Supreme Judicial Court’s Standing Committee
on Lawyer Well-Being. She is co-chair of Rubin and
Rudman’s Labor and Employment Practice group.
Hermes Netburn shareholder ANTHONY J.
SBARRA, JR. was elected a national director for the
Defense Research Institute.
1989

JOHN C. LA LIBERTE at Sherin and Lodgen was
named to The Best Lawyers in America 2021.
1990

PATRICIA L.
DAVIDSON, a partner
in the Probate, Trust,
and Fiduciary Litigation
group and the Business
and General Litigation
group at Mirick O’Connell,
has been selected to the
2020 Massachusetts Super
Lawyers. She was also
selected to the 2019 Massachusetts Super Lawyers.
Her practice focuses on helping families resolve issues
involving wills, trusts, and real estate, as well as disputes
involving family and closely held businesses.

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�CLASS
NOTES
ISABELLA KIM has joined
Helsell Fetterman, a Seattlebased law firm serving businesses,
organizations, and individuals.
She will be leading its immigration
practice area and will be working
in the firm’s business transactions
practice group.
Leber IP Law, the boutique IP
firm founded by CELIA H.
LEBER, has been in business
for nine years and continues to
grow despite the pandemic.
MAURICE E. MUIR has been elected as justice of the New
York State Supreme Court, 11th Judicial District, for a 14-year
term. He previously served on the Civil Court of the City of
New York, where he presided over civil cases relating to no-fault
insurance, breach of contract, and personal injury claims.
JANE LEARY
LEVESQUE recently
celebrated 28 years as
a full-time teacher of
paralegal, business,
criminal justice, and fire
science at North Shore
Community College.
1991

MARIA R. DURANT
BA’8 8 has been named
the managing director of
Hogan Lovell’s Boston
office.
1992

JOHN D. COLUCCI
of McLane Middleton
has been named to the
2020 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers.

1995

1994

SOL J. COHEN has joined Kerstein, Coren &amp; Lichtenstein
as a partner. With more than two decades of practice, Cohen
has tried over 40 cases to jury verdict and closed over 3,000 real
estate transactions. He notes, “I’ve had my own firm for more
than 20 years and am looking forward to practicing law in a
collegial environment with a team of experienced attorneys.”

PAUL W. CAREY, a partner in
the Creditors’ Rights, Bankruptcy,
and Reorganization group at
Mirick O’Connell, has been
selected to the 2020 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers. He was also
named to the 2019 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers. He concentrates
his practice on creditors’ rights,
bankruptcy, and business
reorganization matters.

McCarter &amp; English, LLP has elected MIA A. FRABOTTA to
its equity ranks.
ROBERT B. GIBBONS,
a partner in the Litigation
group at Mirick O’Connell,
has been selected to the
2020 Massachusetts Super
Lawyers. He was also named
to the 2019 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers. He
concentrates his practice in
commercial litigation, where
he handles a broad range of
business matters involving
commercial contracts,
banking, construction,
commercial landlord-tenant
disputes, complex collections,
and fiduciary fraud.

CHRISTINE
E. DEVINE,
a partner and
the chair of
the Creditors‘
Rights,
Bankruptcy,
and
Reorganization
group at Mirick
O’Connell,
has been selected to the 2020
Massachusetts Super Lawyers.

46

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�CLASS
NOTES
Morgan, Brown &amp; Joy attorney
GREGORY A. MANOUSOS
was named to the Best Lawyers
in America for Litigation—Labor
and Employment.
JENNIFER L. PARENT at
McLane Middleton was named
to the 2020 New England Super
Lawyers for Business Litigation.
1996

JASON S. DELMONICO has
joined global law firm Greenberg
Traurig LLP as a shareholder
in the corporate practice in the
firm’s Boston office. He has
over 20 years of experience
representing major financial
institutions and other commercial
lenders.
TERRI L. PASTORI,
managing partner of Pastori |
Krans, is delighted to announce
Pastori | Krans’ inclusion in
Business NH Magazine’s 2020 list
of top women-led businesses for
the second year in a row, one of
only three New Hampshire law
firms recognized.

Shareholder DAMON M.
SELIGSON has joined Sheehan
Phinney’s Business Litigation
group, where his practice focuses
on commercial litigation and real
estate matters. He also focuses
on assisting clients in medical
malpractice and personal injury
matters.

KEVIN J. WILLIS has been
promoted to counsel at Ropes &amp;
Gray. He is a probate and trust
counsel in the firm’s private client
group. He has advised clients
for nearly 25 years, creating
sophisticated estate plans, settling
estates and trusts, and advising
fiduciaries concerning their
responsibilities. He also advises
beneficiaries of their rights in the
trust and estate settlement process,
and works with both fiduciaries
and beneficiaries in connection
with fiduciary litigation matters.

2004

HEATHER M. GAMACHE
has been named presidentelect of the Women’s Bar
Association for 2020–2021.
As a director in Rackemann,
Sawyer &amp; Brewster’s
Litigation group, Gamache
has a broad focus on real
estate and commercial
litigation matters.

MATTHEW RAY JD/MBA
joins Murtha Cullina LLP’s
Business and Finance
Department.

2005

MICHELE BEAUCHINE
COLLINS was elected to a
three-year term on the board
of directors for the Society of
Financial Service Professionals.
She is an advanced sales
director with MassMutual
Financial Group in Boston,
president of FSP’s Boston
chapter, and an active member
of the Boston Bar Association,
where she participates in the
M. Ellen Carpenter Financial
Literacy Program. She resides
with her husband, Patrick, and
daughter in Nahant, MA.

2000

DAVID C. HARDY manages
the Hardy Law Firm PA in
Tampa, FL. Last fall, his article
“Simon a Slave v. State of
Florida” was the cover feature
of the Florida Bar Journal. He and
his wife, Carolyn, are the proud
parents of an 8-year-old girl and
a 6-year-old boy.
2003

JILL M. RYNKOWSKI
DOYLE has launched Bennett
Doyle LLP in Washington, DC,
specializing in estate and trust
administration, family law, and
litigation.

DAVID L. FINE, a partner
and chair of the Construction
Law group at Mirick
O’Connell, has been selected to
the 2020 Massachusetts Super
Lawyers. He was also named
to the 2019 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers. Fine represents
and counsels clients in the
construction industry, including
commercial, institutional,
and residential owners and
developers, general contractors,
construction managers,
specialty subcontractors,
suppliers, and manufacturers.

ELIZABETH LEVINE,
a director at Goulston &amp;
Storrs, has been named an
“Employment Law Trailblazer”
by The National Law Journal
for her visionary work
helping companies across the
country assess and reform
their corporate culture. This
is Levine’s second trailblazer
award, after being named a
“New England Trailblazer” by
The American Lawyer in 2019.

47

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

JUDITH L. STONEHULSLANDER has been
elected partner at Lathrop
Gage, where she focuses her
practice on patent preparation,
prosecution, and client
counseling in all areas of
biotechnology. She holds a
PhD in molecular genetics
and microbiology and, prior
to obtaining her law degree,
worked as a technical specialist
and patent agent.

�CLASS
NOTES
JENNIFER L. JUNKIN has joined Am Law 100 firm
Polsinelli’s Seattle office as an associate in the firm’s
national Intellectual Property Department.

2006

MICHELLE-KIM (LEE) COHEN
has been promoted to deputy general
counsel at Dassault Systèmes, where
she is responsible for employment law
and compliance matters.

JACLYN S. O’LEARY has been elected an individual
clients partner in the Boston office of Day Pitney LLP.
Her practice focuses in the areas of estate planning
and estate and trust administration.

2007

JACK S. GEARAN of global law
firm Greenberg Traurig LLP has
been elected to the board of trustees
of City on a Hill Charter Public
Schools. The nonprofit is dedicated
to graduating responsible, democratic
citizens who are prepared for college
and to advancing community, culture,
and commerce.

HEIDI A. SEELY served as speaker at the Boston Bar
Association’s webinar, “Trusts &amp; Estates End of Year
Review 2020.” An associate in Rackemann, Sawyer &amp;
Brewster’s trusts and estates practice, Seely represents
families and individuals in estate planning, estate
administration, tax planning, trust administration, and
other trusts and estate needs. She is co-chair of the BBA’s
Public Policy Committee and Practice Fundamentals
Committee of the Trusts &amp; Estates Section.
STEPHANIE S. MCGRAW has
been named partner at Shook, Hardy
&amp; Bacon. She focuses her practice on
complex product liability, commercial,
and business litigation.
2010

2008

MATTHEW R. FISHER, a partner
at Mirick O’Connell and chair of
the firm’s Health Law group and
a member of the firm’s Business
group, has been selected to the 2020
Massachusetts Super Lawyers. He was
also named to the 2019 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers. Fisher helps guide
clients through the regulatory maze
that challenges all participants in the
healthcare industry.
2009

DAVID I. BRODY of Sherin and
Lodgen was named to The Best Lawyers
in America 2021.

RYAN P AVERY of Mirageas &amp;
.
Avery LLC was selected as a “Rising
Star” by the 2019 Massachusetts
Super Lawyers.
ALLISON AHERN FILLO has
joined the Boston law firm of Davis
Malm, advising businesses and
individuals seeking U.S. immigration
and naturalization benefits. She
counsels clients on immigration
issues regarding employment and
compliance, as well as immigration
concerns arising in corporate
transactions and obtaining all
categories of non-immigrant visas
and lawful permanent residence in
the U.S.

2011

ANDREW A. KINGMAN was named to Massachusetts
Lawyers Weekly’s “Up and Coming Lawyers.” He is a
senior managing attorney in DLA Piper’s intellectual
property and technology practice. The publication
highlighted Kingman’s work as general counsel to the
State Privacy and Security Coalition, whose members
include 30 of the largest technology, media, telecom,
retail, and online security companies in the world, and
identified him as “a key player in the debate over state
privacy legislation.”
ANDREW M. MACDONALD was elevated to
partner at Fox Rothschild LLP. He advises businesses
on a diverse array of labor and employment law
issues, including union organizing campaigns and
National Labor Relations Board proceedings,
collective bargaining, and labor arbitration, as well
as employment discrimination and wage-and-hour
litigation. He is based in the firm’s Philadelphia office.

ELIZABETH RAHN GALLUCCI
has been named a partner at Ropes
&amp; Gray.

48

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

BRADFORD N.
VEZINA has been
elected as a director of
McLane Middleton.
He focuses on estate
plans for individuals
and families across the
economic spectrum.

�CLASS
NOTES

2012

CHRISTOPHER J. ABBOTT was promoted to counsel at Weil,
Gotshal &amp; Manges LLP, where he is a member of Weil’s global antitrust
and competition practice in the Washington, DC office. He represents
clients in civil and criminal antitrust investigations and litigation, and in
obtaining antitrust approval for mergers and acquisitions.
JAMIE G. LEBERER has created a new partnership, Leberer &amp;
Palladino PLLC, that will practice matrimonial and family law in the
Buffalo, NY region.
JACLYN L. MCNEELY has joined Boston labor and employment
law firm Morgan, Brown &amp; Joy as an associate. McNeely counsels
and represents employers in all aspects of labor and employment
law, including workplace discrimination, leave laws, wage and hour
disputes, collective bargaining and grievance arbitration, unfair labor
practices, and related litigation.
2014

BRIAN M. CASACELI, an associate in the Labor &amp; Employment group
at Mirick O’Connell, was named one of the Worcester Business Journal’s “40
Under Forty” for 2020.
MATTHEW R. O’CONNOR joined Pierce Atwood LLP as an
associate. His work involves commercial litigation, ERISA matters, and
assisting an active receivership practice. He lives in Providence, RI, with
his wife, Johanna, and their 1-year-old son, Theo.
On February 23, 2020, DARIUS
PAKROOH married Aris
deOliveira on the 7th-floor
balcony of Suffolk Law School.
“Choosing [to be married
at] Suffolk Law School was a
reminder of how far we’ve come
together. During my law school
library study marathons, Aris
would routinely come visit to cheer
me on and bring healthy food,”
Darius reminisces. The newlyweds
now spend their days operating
Pakrooh Law in Boston.
2017

MELISSA M. MARQUEZ BA’14 joins Knox Ricksen LLP, a civil
litigation firm specializing in complex health care fraud cases, as an
associate.

49

IN MEMORIAM

REMEMBERING KENNEDY FAMILY
ADVISOR GERARD DOHERTY
The passing of alumnus and former Trustee Gerard “Gerry”
Doherty marks the end of an era in Massachusetts politics.
Doherty, who graduated from Suffolk Law in 1960 while
serving in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, was
deeply embedded in the civic life of the Commonwealth and
worked on the historic presidential campaigns of all three
Kennedy brothers. His 2017 memoir, They Were My Friends–Jack,
Bob and Ted: My Life In and Out of Politics, details those relationships.
“Gerry Doherty was someone larger than life who actually
made those around him better,” said Robert J. Allison, a Suffolk
University history professor.
Doherty brought political savvy and legislative knowledge to
his roles, but Allison said what made him truly indispensable was
his character, integrity, and ability to bring people together.
“You can find people who can crunch numbers and can look
at polling data, but understanding how to connect with people
is the most important thing. It’s a character trait that he had
and could use to great effect, and that’s one of the reasons the
Kennedys and others relied on him,” said Allison.
Doherty served on the Suffolk University Board of Trustees
from 1996 to 2014. He received the Law School Alumni
Association’s Edward Bray Legacy Award in 2018 and the
Alumni Service Award in 2005.
“Gerry was not only a civic leader—he was a philanthropic
leader as well. For decades, he made a profound impact on the
lives and careers of countless Suffolk Law students,” said Dean
Andrew Perlman.
Doherty was responsible for nearly one-half million dollars
in scholarship support, including one of the school’s public
service scholarships. Many of the students benefiting from
his philanthropy are from working-class towns, including
Charlestown, where he was a lifelong resident.
“We admire his lifetime of tenacity and his insistence that
individuals must make a difference in their communities,”
Perlman said. “When America’s leaders needed counsel, he
stepped up to help. And when Suffolk Law School and its students
needed him, he answered the call.”
Doherty is survived by his wife, Judge Regina Quinlan
Doherty, who received her Suffolk Law degree in 1973 and an
honorary Doctor of Laws in 2005.

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine | Winter 2021

�NON-PROFIT
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UNIVERSITY
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BOSTON, MA 02108–4977

GIVE TO SUFFOLK LAW ONLINE
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JOIN
THE
FROST
SOCIETY
Consider a bequest—a gift through your will or
trust. You can direct your gift to meet Suffolk’s
greatest needs or to support a specific
program that is meaningful to you.

Establishing a bequest enrolls you in Suffolk’s Frost Society.
Please contact Corian Branyan BSBA’11, Associate Director of
Planned Giving, at 617-573-8456 or cmbranyan@suffolk.edu.

SAVE T HE

DATE!
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                    <text>SUFFOLK

LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE

THE

$1M GIFT

Suffolk Law changed Barry C.
Cosgrove’s life; now he’s giving back

“ON SHIFTING SAND”
Four legal experts weigh in on the
immigration crisis

WINTER 2020

GREEN
DIVIDE

EMBRACING THE CHALLENGES OF
A BUDDING CANNABIS INDUSTRY

�TABLE OF
CONTENTS

LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE

$1M
GIFT

Suffolk Law changed
Barry C. Cosgrove’s life;
now he’s giving back

“ON
SHIFTING
SAND”
Four legal experts
weigh in on the
immigration crisis

THE

GREEN
DIVIDE

EMBRACING THE CHALLENGES OF
A BUDDING CANNABIS INDUSTRY

WINTER 2020

ON THE COVER:
Laury Lucien
JD’15

12

$1M DONATION TO SUFFOLK
HONORS AN INFLUENTIAL
GRANDMOTHER

30

“I AM STANDING
ON SHIFTING SAND”

Reflecting on the challenges of
immigration law

34

THE CANNABIS CONUNDRUM

Graduates inspired by the emerging
industry push on despite challenges

DEPARTMENTS

SUFFOLK

FEATURES

Ingrid and Barry C. Cosgrove
JD’85 generously donated
$1 million to Suffolk Law.
Read their story on page 12.

02

A MESSAGE FROM
DEAN ANDREW
PERLMAN
Impressive
employment
outcomes; 21stcentury skills; news
from the national
rankings; and more

04

LAW BRIEFS
News and notes
from the headlines
and hallways

11

SUFFOLK LAW LOOKS
TO THE FUTURE
A breakdown
of recent
achievements in
innovation

14

Next Generation

SPOT ON:
EASING ACCESS
TO LEGAL INFO
Improving the civil
legal system

15

Next Generation

WHEN CULTURAL
SURVIVAL IS AT STAKE
Clinic student
takes case to UN in
Geneva

16

Impactful Alumni

JOSH KOSKOFF
TAKES ON THE AR-15
It’s an uphill battle,
he says, but worth
the fight

�SUFFOLK

LAW

	DEAN	
ANDREW PERLMAN

B. Stephanie
Siegmann JD’97.
Read her story on
page 20.

	

22

28

HOOP DREAMS
COME TRUE FOR
DAVID DUQUETTE
Team counsel for
NBA’s Charlotte
Hornets shares how he
got there

SUFFOLK LAW FACULTY
WEIGH IN ON WORKPLACE
BULLYING LEGISLATION,
POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY,
AND A TOOL FOR MINDFUL
LAWYERING

YOU WANT TO GIVE,
BUT YOU’RE NOT
SURE HOW OR WHEN
Prof. Philip C. Kaplan
on a little known tool:
the CRUT

19

Impactful Alumni

THE CONNECTOR:
CARMEN ARCE-BOWEN
One graduate’s
quest to build a more
inclusive Boston

20

Impactful Alumni

B. STEPHANIE SIEGMANN
IS TENACIOUS AGAINST
TERRORISM
The first female chief of
the National Security Unit
of the Massachusetts
U.S. Attorney’s Office
opens up

21

Thought Leaders

WHY MASSACHUSETTS
SHOULD PASS THE
FACIAL RECOGNITION
MORATORIUM ACT

GREG GATLIN

	EDITOR-IN-CHIEF	
MICHAEL

18

Impactful Alumni

EXECUTIVE EDITOR 	

Thought Leaders

24

Thought Leaders

TOUGH GIG: DOES
TRADEMARK LAW
NEED A MAKEOVER?
Associate Dean Leah
Chan Grinvald on
rethinking
trademark law for the
“gig economy”

25

Giving Back

MARIE-LOUISE SKAFTE
TRAVELS TO NEW
SUCCESSES
Alumna credits former
dean with academic
opportunity

26

Giving Back

SUFFOLK LEADER
HELPING LAW STUDENTS
NAVIGATE THE
INNOVATION ECONOMY
Trustee Mark Sullivan
gifts $250,000 for IP
effort

28

Giving Back

A RECORD-BREAKING
REUNION
Class of 1969 pays it
forward at 50-year mark

Giving Back

29

Giving Back

KEVIN FITZGERALD
ON BEING AN
“UNFASHIONABLE
SUCCESS”

29

Giving Back

DEAN’S GROUP LAUNCHES
FOR RECENT GRADS
Larry Nussbaum gives
back by joining the
Dean’s Associates

37

CLASS NOTES
Professional and
personal milestones
from Suffolk alumni

42

DEAN’S CABINET
Committed alumni
invest in the future of
Suffolk Law

44

ALUMNI EVENTS
Capturing memorable
moments from school
gatherings

	

ASSOCIATE EDITOR	

FISCH

KATY IBSEN

	DESIGN	
JENNI LEISTE
	CONTRIBUTING WRITERS	

SHANNON DOOLING

		
JON GOREY

		
		
		

SETH JONES
BILL MARCUS
STEPHANIE SCHOROW

MICHAEL CARPENTER
KATHY CHAPMAN
		
MICHAEL J. CLARKE
		
ADAM DETOUR
		
BEN GEBO
		
JOHN GILLOOLY
		
KENT SMITH
		
BRYCE VICKMARK
		
MARK WILSON
	CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS	

		

	

COPY EDITOR	

JANET PARKINSON

Suffolk Law Alumni Magazine is published
once a year by Suffolk University Law
School. The magazine is printed by Lane
Press in Burlington, VT. We welcome readers’
comments. Contact us at 617-573-5751,
mfisch@suffolk.edu, or at Editor, Suffolk Law
Alumni Magazine, 73 Tremont St., Ste. 1308,
Boston, MA 02108-4977. c 2020 by Suffolk
University. All publication rights reserved.

01

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�A MESSAGE FROM

Photograph: Michael J. Clarke

DEAN
ANDREW
PERLMAN

F
02

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

or more than a century, Suffolk
Law has prepared its graduates
for professional success. This
issue of the Suffolk Law Alumni
Magazine tells just a few of their
stories and highlights some of the ways that
the Law School continues to prepare students
for success today.
What you will discover from these stories
and from conversations with current students
is that Suffolk Law remains committed to
its rich tradition of practice-oriented legal
education. That focus is making a difference,
and I’m delighted to update you on some
notable accomplishments:
Increased applications. The quality of a
Suffolk Law education and the achievements
of our alumni are major attractions for
aspiring lawyers. Applications have increased
in four of the last five years, and the two most
recent entering classes had the strongest
academic credentials in eight years.
A national leader in skills training.
When students arrive, they find skills
training that is unmatched in the nation.
Suffolk Law has long been known as a place
that trains outstanding lawyers, and the rest

of the country is taking notice. We are the
only law school in the nation that, for four
years in a row, has had four top-20 ranked
skills programs in U.S. News &amp; World Report
(clinics, dispute resolution, legal writing, and
trial advocacy).
Positioning for the 21st century.
We also are a leader in teaching the new
knowledge and skills that lawyers need in
the 21st century. Suffolk Law is ranked No.
1 for legal tech, and our work in this area is
receiving international recognition. (p. 11)
Near-record employment outcomes.
Our students are leveraging their legal
education to find impressive professional
opportunities. Last year’s graduates had the
second-strongest employment outcomes in
the last 30 years. (p. 5)
Bar passage on the rise. The Law
School’s first-time bar pass rate on the July
2019 Massachusetts bar exam improved
to 70.5%, up from 64.5% last year. The 6
percentage point increase is the largest jump
we have seen in 14 years, reflecting numerous
recent bar-related initiatives. Moreover, our
ABA ultimate bar pass rate within two years
of graduation is 84%.

Alumni giving back. Alumni appreciate
how much their Suffolk Law education has
contributed to their success, and they are giving
back. This fall, we received a landmark $1
million commitment from alumnus Barry C.
Cosgrove JD’85 and his wife, Ingrid Cosgrove,
to establish the Graciela Rojas-Trabal Term
Scholarship. (p. 12) We have seen a dramatic
increase in the size of our Dean’s Cabinet,
which now has 40 members, each of whom has
committed at least $50,000 in philanthropic
support. (p. 42) We saw a 29% increase in
money raised over the prior year and a 20%
increase in the number of Summa donors, who
give $1,000 or more. And the Class of 1969
added nearly $500,000 to their already recordbreaking class scholarship fund in honor of
their 50th reunion. (p. 28)
I hope you share my pride in the progress
we are making at Suffolk Law. Together we
are advancing our longstanding mission of
offering students an impactful legal education
that has a transformative impact on their lives
and careers.

�THE NUMBERS ARE CLEAR

1 13
ONLY

#

ONE

Suffolk Law was
ranked number
one in the nation
for legal tech.
(National Jurist)

Suffolk Law is the only
school with four top20 ranked legal skills
specialties—clinics, legal
writing, trial advocacy, and
dispute resolution—for four
consecutive years. (U.S.
News &amp; World Report)

OF

Suffolk Law is one of only three
schools ranked in the top 20
in all four legal skills specialty
areas in the 2020 edition of
U.S. News &amp; World Report.

ONLY 10
BEST
GRAD
SCHOOLS

LAW

LAW

ONLY 10 HAVE MORE TOP-20
SPECIALTY PROGRAMS THAN
SUFFOLK LAW. ( U.S. NEWS &amp;
WORLD REPORT )

LAW

LAW
2020

LEGAL
WRITING

TRIAL
ADVOCACY

DISPUTE
RESOLUTION

2020

2020

2020

3

#

15

#

16

#

CLINICAL
TRAINING

19

#

�LAW
BRIEFS

NEWS
AND NOTES
FROM THE
HEADLINES
AND
HALLWAYS

ALUMNA
CONFIRMED FOR
SEAT ON U.S.
DISTRICT COURT

QUICK FACT

04

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

30% OF RECENT
BAY STATE JUDICIAL
NOMINEES WERE
SUFFOLK ALUMNI
Gov. Baker’s “crown jewel”

Thirty percent of the judges nominated in 2017 and 2018 by Massachusetts
Governor Charlie Baker are Suffolk Law alumni. He nominated 89 judges
during those two years; 28 graduated from the Law School. In remarks made
at Suffolk University, Baker said, “As somebody who appreciates and believes
in the difference that public service can make, I find Suffolk University to be
one of the true crown jewels in the Commonwealth’s constellation of higher
education institutions.”

From left: Shutterstock, Courtesy of Isabel Stern

Federal courthouse in
Providence, Rhode Island

Mary S. McElroy JD’92, Rhode Island’s top
public defender, was confirmed to the Rhode Island
U.S. District Court by the United States Senate on
September 11, 2019.
McElroy has the unusual distinction of having
been nominated by both President Donald
Trump and President Barack Obama for the
position. Both nominations had stalled, however,
languishing in what the Boston Globe called “the
morass of Beltway gridlock.”
Before her confirmation, McElroy served as
public defender for the State of Rhode Island from
2012 to 2019. She previously spent six years as
federal defender for the districts of Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, and Rhode Island and served
as an assistant public defender with the Rhode
Island Public Defender’s Office for 12 years. Before
stepping into that role, she worked for Tate &amp; Elias
LLC as an associate, after a clerkship for Justice
Donald Shea on the Rhode Island Supreme Court.
McElroy joins Chief Judge William E. Smith,
Judge John J. McConnell, Jr., and Magistrate Judges
Lincoln Almond and Patricia Sullivan in the U.S.
District Court for the District of Rhode Island.

�Last year’s graduates had the secondbest employment outcomes in 30
years. Why? From individualized
career coaching sessions to large-scale
recruitment programs in both the
public and private sectors, Suffolk
Law’s innovative professional and
career development program prepares
students and graduates to enter a rapidly
evolving legal job market.

TOP AREAS
OF EMPLOYMENT

33

% 15%
%
12%
in firms of 101+

5

IN FIRMS OF 2-100

21%
in business

LAW BRIEFS

SUFFOLK
GRADS FIND
SUCCESS IN
JOB MARKET

IN
CLERKSHIPS

in government
&amp; public interest

COMING FULL CIRCLE
LAW STUDENTS HELP HIGH SCHOOLER WIN NATIONAL MOOT COURT COMPETITION

Sam DeLong JD/LLM’19,
Isabel Stern, and 3L Sam Faisal

You might think that most high school
students’ eyes would glaze over when asked
to read and discuss the pages of a 1969
Supreme Court case, but that’s not how it
turned out, says Suffolk Law 3L Sam Faisal.
As he helped 20 teens untie the knotty issues
in Tinker v. Des Moines, a case that decided
whether a group of public high school
students could be suspended for wearing
anti-Vietnam War armbands, his students
were energized and impassioned.
Faisal’s presence in a high school
classroom teaching constitutional law and
his work as a moot court mentor bring him
full circle. In 2011, when he was a junior in
high school, Suffolk Law students serving
in the Marshall-Brennan Constitutional
Literacy Project taught con law in his own
classroom at public magnet school Another
Course to College in Hyde Park.
Last academic year, Faisal and Sam
DeLong JD/LLM’19 traveled twice a week
to Cambridge Rindge &amp; Latin, a public high
school in Cambridge, to serve as teachers,
coaches, and mentors in the same program.
They and other Suffolk Law students fanned

out to Boston-area public high schools to
teach the concepts of search and seizure and
free expression.
As a mentee and competitor in the
Marshall-Brennan Moot Court Competition
in 2011, Faisal realized that the law was
important, so much more important than
he had imagined, with rulings that seemed
to touch on every aspect of human conflict.
“In high school, my thinking was that
I wanted to be a police officer. My parents
wanted me to be a doctor or an engineer,”
he said. “But the Marshall-Brennan
training made me ask myself: ‘What could
I accomplish as a lawyer? What could I
accomplish using the structure of the law?’”
Through the spring of 2019, DeLong
and Faisal prepared Rindge &amp; Latin
students, including Isabel Stern, for the
program’s high-profile capstone, a moot
court competition for teen litigators
across the country. During the National
Competition in Washington, D.C., Stern
had the opportunity to appear and argue
before federal judges in the final round. She
was honored as the best oral advocate.

05

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�LAW BRIEFS

GET
KONNECTED!
HONORS
BOSTON’S BEST,
INCLUDING
SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI
On April 30, Get Konnected!, in
partnership with Mintz, celebrated Greater
Boston’s 50 Most Influential Attorneys of
Color. The Get Konnected! website describes
the award winners as “some of the best legal
minds in Greater Boston … making their
mark in the legal profession, while serving as
role models for the next generation.”
The following Suffolk Law alumni were
honored:

Sheriece Perry

DEAN TOUTS LEGAL
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM ON
CAPITOL HILL

Damian Wilmot

Stephen Hall

GOVERNMENT
Sheriece Perry JD’08, Acting CoDirector, Department of Support Services,
Massachusetts Trial Courts Office of Court
Management

Macey Russell

Damian Wilmot JD’00, Senior Vice
President, Chief Risk and Compliance Officer,
Vertex Pharmaceuticals
Jasmine Jean-Louis

LAW FIRM
Stephen Hall JD’10, Senior Counsel,
Holland &amp; Knight

PIONEER
Macey Russell JD’83, Trustee; Partner,
Choate; former Chair of the Judicial
Nominating Commission; Advisory Board
Member, Institute for Inclusion in the Legal
Profession

Keerthi Sugumaran

RISING STARS

06

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

Jasmine Jean-Louis JD’15, Attorney,
Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office
Keerthi Sugumaran JD’11, Associate,
Jackson Lewis PC; President, South Asian Bar
Association of Greater Boston
Elke Trilla-Bamani JD’12, Associate,
Morgan Lewis
Cherina Wright JD/MBA’17, Director of
Student Engagement and Inclusion, Suffolk
Law

Elke Trilla-Bamani

Cherina Wright

Dean Andrew Perlman spoke to Congressional
staffers on the role law schools can play in curbing a
growing crisis in access to legal services among low- and
middle-income families. The May 21 briefing included
remarks by Congressman Joe Kennedy III, recipient of
an honorary JD from Suffolk in 2019.
“Law schools need to teach future lawyers how to
develop innovative and more cost-effective approaches
to delivering legal services,” said Dean Perlman.
Suffolk Law’s top-ranked program in legal technology
has been leading the nation in this area with cuttingedge courses, a legal design lab, and online training, he
told staffers. He also referenced the school’s Acceleratorto-Practice program, which trains students in legal
technology and sound business practices, making it
possible to serve moderate-income clients in ways that
are financially sustainable.
The panel was spearheaded by the American
Academy of Arts &amp; Sciences and the U.S. House of
Representatives’ Access to Civil Legal Services Caucus.

From left: Courtesy of Get Konnected (8), Shutterstock, Michael J. Clarke (2)

IN-HOUSE COUNSEL

�LAW BRIEFS

LEARNING THE
ART OF SUPERVISION

INNOCENCE
CLINIC
OFFERS NEW
OPPORTUNITY
Suffolk Law’s Innocence Clinic, now in its third
year of operation, teams up with the New England
Innocence Project (NEIP) and the Committee
for Public Counsel Services (CPCS) to review
claims of innocence on behalf of incarcerated
individuals. The cases are an outstanding vehicle
for students to delve deeply into legal, evidentiary,
and ethical issues associated with criminal cases.
This past year, for example, students uncovered
evidence that suggests a man serving time for
armed robbery had been framed by his ex-wife—
and it was evidence the jury never saw. As a
result of the students’ work, their client may have
grounds for a new trial.

Students involved in the
Innocence Clinic discuss
cases with Clinical Adjunct
Professor Shira Diner.

Shai Myers CAS’20 and
Julianne Jeha BA’16, JD’19

Law school clinics teach law students the invaluable skills associated with client
representation, but few provide students with the opportunity to learn the skills of
delegation and supervision. Now, some of Suffolk Law’s clinics do just that.
Appearing in Chelsea District Court, Julianne Jeha BA’16, JD’19 successfully sought
a restraining order on behalf of a client in Suffolk’s Family Advocacy Clinic (FAC). The
complex domestic abuse and custody matter was the first case Jeha had presented before
a judge—but she wasn’t alone. Thanks to a pioneering partnership with Suffolk’s College
of Arts &amp; Sciences, students in FAC have the opportunity to team up with undergraduate
students who serve as paralegals.
In this restraining order case, Jeha had the help of Suffolk undergrad Shai Myers
(Class of 2020)—and Myers’ help was invaluable. For example, Myers created a detailed
timeline of the client’s many Department of Children &amp; Families records, police reports,
and court orders. Beyond that, Myers was another set of eyes and ears who provided
valuable input.
Suffolk Law’s clinics have been ranked among the nation’s best for more than a
decade, and a primary reason for their success is their focus on innovative pedagogy. The
partnership with Suffolk’s College of Arts &amp; Sciences now offers Suffolk Law students
the opportunity to delegate tasks and supervise the undergrads in a professional setting.
The undergraduates organize documents for hearings, take notes at client preparation
meetings, attend court hearings, file pleadings, conduct non-legal research, and act as
sounding boards for law students during practice presentations.
Associate Dean for Experiential Learning Kim McLaurin says the cooperative
effort helps student attorneys find the right balance between supervision and
micromanagement. Delegation is a skill that has to be learned, she says. “When I was an
attorney who hired people, those who struggled were the ones who couldn’t work well
with the paralegals and other support staff.”
Clients appreciate having a full, supportive team working on their cases, she adds. “It’s
a win for everyone.”

07

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�LAW BRIEFS

Suffolk Law School

ACCELERATED JD
PROGRAM ENABLES
DEGREES IN LESS TIME

08

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

Suffolk Law got its start in 1906
as an evening law school that offered
students the flexibility they needed to
get a legal education while continuing
to work. Student needs continue to
evolve, and the Law School’s new
Accelerated JD program seeks to
address one of those needs: finishing
law school faster.
Accelerated JD students graduate
more quickly than traditional JD
students—two years instead of three
for the full-time program or two and
a half to three years instead of four for
the part-time evening program. The
Accelerated JD caters to those who
have already spent some years in a
professional setting before returning to
study law, such as students who have a
PhD and are working as patent agents.
The requirements are the same as
for the traditional JD program—same
number of credits, same tuition, same
required courses. Students finish faster
by taking classes the summer before

the 1L year and by taking classes in
subsequent summers.
Admission into the Accelerated
JD program is competitive, and
students must have even stronger
academic credentials than the typical
first-year law student. The Law
School launched the program in
2018, and the first class of students
will earn their degrees in 2020.
Suffolk Law was the first law
school in Massachusetts to launch an
accelerated JD program, and one of
only 21 nationwide at the time.
“Suffolk Law was founded on
the idea that aspiring lawyers should
have some flexibility in how they
obtain a legal education,” Associate
Dean of Admission Matthew Gavin
said. “In 1906, that meant offering
classes at night so law students could
work during the day. In 2020, that
means letting law students earn their
degree faster, so they can rejoin the
workforce sooner.”

Dr. Sonia Guterman JD’00 was cited by the Nobel
Committee for Chemistry when it announced two winners of
the 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Her co-invented patent in
the area of protein engineering helped lay the groundwork for
later innovations by George P. Smith and Gregory P. Winter,
who won for their work in “the phage display of peptides and
antibodies.” Guterman was cited in a Nobel Committee paper
laying out the history of advances in the laureates’ field of
research.
Guterman, originally a biochemist, and her then-associate
Robert C. Ladner created and licensed a library of mutated
proteins, which enabled researchers to create more effective
medicines. Work in this area of chemistry began in the
1940s, said Dr. Guterman, who in 1971 received her PhD in
microbiology from MIT after studying under Nobel laureate
Salvadore E. Luria, an Italian-born bacteriologist.
After earning her PhD, Guterman served as vice president
for research at biopharmaceutical firm Protein Engineering
Corp., which later became the Dyax Corporation. She
returned to school in 1996, receiving her JD in 2000 while
working full-time. She was named partner and chair of the
Patent Group at Lawson &amp; Weitzen LLP, and she now serves
as principal at intellectual property law firm Armis.
“I love Suffolk Law, and Suffolk Law made me into a
lawyer,” she said. “The satisfaction of being a lawyer is different
from being in science, and also wonderful—thrilling, actually.
“Suffolk Law was collegial from the first day. We were all
in it together. I remember that September in 1996, professors
showed us the library—how to do legal research. We were
given the tools and taught how to use them. When I studied
science for my PhD, it was like being thrown into a pond
without knowing how to swim.”

From left: Michael J. Clarke, Adobe Stock, student submitted

NOBEL COMMITTEE
LAUDS ALUMNA’S
PATENT WORK

�LAW BRIEFS

Suffolk Law students in
Connemara, County Galway

SPAIN, IRELAND
PROGRAMS GIVE
STUDENTS A
GLOBAL VIEW
REAL MADRID
Approximately 25 law students will head to Suffolk
University’s Madrid campus during spring break to learn
about Spanish law and its relationship to the European
Union, among other topics. The campus, founded in 1995,
sits just four miles from Madrid’s city center.
The Madrid visit is part of a new course that starts in
Boston with classes on the Spanish and EU legal systems.
Field trips will include visits with European Union officials
at the EU’s Madrid offices.

GALWAY DAYS
In May, students in the Suffolk Law summer course at the National
University of Ireland (NUI) Galway wrestled with some complex legal
questions. An example: whether the EU’s bylaws will allow it to maintain its
pollution emissions requirements post-Brexit and despite some EU countries’
reliance on coal.
Professor Sara Dillon, director of international programs at the Law
School, and Suffolk Law alumnus Lawrence “Larry” Donnelly JD’99, an
Irish American attorney and director of NUI Galway’s clinical program, have
been instrumental in organizing the summer program and helping Suffolk’s
students land valuable internships at major Irish nonprofits and government
organizations. The course included a visit to the Dublin headquarters of
Twitter to meet with the company’s chief legal officer for Europe, the Middle
East, and Asia, who discussed legal issues facing the company arising from
bots and hacking.
“The work of lawyers is increasingly focusing on transnational issues—digital
privacy rights and climate change are good examples,” says Dillon. “We’re
asking our Galway and Madrid program students to delve into matters that
cross borders, cultures, legal systems. It’s complex, sophisticated, and important
work—and for many students, it can also be life changing.”

09

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�Former NFL star Nick Buoniconti JD’68, HLLD’93
died July 30, 2019, leaving behind a notable legacy.
Among other contributions, he had an impact on research
into paralysis and chronic traumatic encephalopathy
(CTE) that is impossible to measure.
After attending the University of Notre Dame,
Buoniconti was selected by the Boston Patriots in the
13th round of the AFL draft in 1962. He was inducted
into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001 after a
remarkable football career that included winning two
Super Bowls with the Miami Dolphins and covering the
sport as a commentator for 23 years.
While Buoniconti was still playing for the Boston
Patriots, he managed to make time to attend Suffolk
Law. He earned his JD in 1968, was a member of the bar
in Florida and Massachusetts, and received an honorary
doctor of laws in 1993.
After Buoniconti’s son, Marc, suffered a paralyzing
injury while playing football at The Citadel, the two
resolved to increase paralysis research, creating the Miami
Project to Cure Paralysis and the Buoniconti Fund to Cure
Paralysis, which have raised over $450 million. In 2017,
Buoniconti announced an especially personal pledge:
donating his brain and spinal cord to CTE research,
citing the damage his own body had endured as a result of
repeated head collisions in football.
Truly a champion in so many ways, Buoniconti said of
his donation: “I don’t do this for myself … I do it for the
thousands of others who will follow me.”

10

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

Suffolk President
John Fenton;
Nick Buoniconti
JD’68, HLLD’93;
and his wife,
Teresa Marie
Salamano,
at the 1968
commencement

STUDENTS ARGUE BEFORE
U.S. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE
In a national securities law competition judged by U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Samuel Alito and other federal court judges, Suffolk Law students won the
award for best brief and finished second overall among 30 schools. The Kaufman
Competition was held in March at Fordham University.
“It was quite the radical transformation to get me to a place where I could take
hardball questions from circuit court judges and Justice Alito,” says 3L Dylan
Woods. In his first oral argument practice with Professor Joseph Franco, a former
attorney in the office of the General Counsel of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Woods made some classic mistakes: “I came up with a fully typed,
several page speech, which I read robotically line by line, swaying, gripping the
podium. Professor Franco, week after week, got me to look him in the eye and make
my argument.”
The National Trial Team was also victorious last spring, winning the regional
championships of the National Trial Competition in Portland, Maine. Jake Hasson
JD’19 walked away with the Best Advocate award.
The Suffolk Law team won the Duberstein Bankruptcy National Moot Court
regional championship as well. Armand Santaniello JD’19 received the outstanding
oralist award.

YOU MIGHT CALL IT A DYNASTY
The Law School’s trial teams have won the regionals of the National Trial
Competition or the American Association for Justice’s Student Trial Advocacy
Competition 29 times in the last 34 years.
Our Trial Advocacy Program placed 15th in the country in U.S. News &amp; World
Report’s 2020 rankings guide, its fourth year in a row in the top 20.

From left: Suffolk Law archives, Michael Carpenter

LAW BRIEFS

REMEMBERING
NICK BUONICONTI:
SUFFOLK GRAD
AND NFL LEGEND

�SUFFOLK LAW

LOOKS TO
THE FUTURE
A BREAKDOWN OF RECENT
ACHIEVEMENTS IN INNOVATION

LEGAL
TECHNOLOGY

LEGAL INNOVATION LEADER
National Jurist/preLaw named Suffolk the best
school in the U.S. for legal tech.

GOING
MOBILE
The ABA’s Center
for Innovation
NextGen Fellow
and LIT Fellow
Nicole Siino JD’18
created a mobile
tool for judges
and lawyers to
help juveniles
avoid jail time.

Brian Kuhn JD’07
is partner, co-founder,
and global leader of
Watson Legal, IBM’s
artificial intelligence
legal platform.

–preLaw Magazine

The Legal Innovation &amp; Technology (LIT) Lab is
Suffolk’s consultancy and R&amp;D shop, working
with attorneys, courts, and legal aid agencies to
offer legal tech and data science solutions.

NEXT-GENERATION JOBS
Legal Innovation and Technology Concentration
graduates have landed jobs that did not exist 10
years ago: legal innovation advisor, legal solutions
architect, legal project manager, and NextGen Fellow.

INNOVACTION
AWARD
WINNER

ALUMNI
SPOTLIGHT

“SUFFOLK IS ONE OF THE MOST INNOVATIVE
FORCES IN LEGAL EDUCATION”

SUFFOLK
LAW R&amp;D

We’re preparing students for 21st-century
legal employment through a range of cuttingedge curricular initiatives. The nerve center
is our Institute on Legal Innovation and
Technology (LIT).

BLOOMBERG
COVERAGE:
“RETRAINING
LEGAL
INDUSTRY”
In 2018, Suffolk Law
launched its online
Legal Innovation
&amp; Technology
Certificate program
taught by legal
industry leaders.
The program has
drawn students
from five different
continents.
Bloomberg covered
the launch.

The LIT Lab
was named
a 2019
InnovAction
Award Winner
by the College
of Law Practice
Management
in recognition
of the Lab’s
cutting-edge
public service,
data science,
and artificial
intelligence
projects.

GLOBAL
GAMECHANGER
The LIT Lab’s crowdsourcing tool Learned
Hands, co-developed with Stanford’s Legal
Design Lab, was one of 30 World Justice
Challenge finalists—a shortlist of the world’s
most innovative access-to-justice projects.

PEW GRANT
FOR AI
PROJECT
The LIT Lab recently received a
grant—its second—from the Pew
Charitable Trusts. The funding will
help create an algorithm that can
spot legal issues in the language
a layperson uses when searching
online for legal information.

11

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ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�The Cosgroves look over the tree they
planted in honor of Graciela Rojas-Trabal,
near the lakeside home in Wareham where
she was a summer guest.

$1M Donation
to Suffolk honors an influential grandmother

This column,
by Thomas
Farragher,
appeared in the
Boston Globe
on September 5,
2019.

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Winter 2020

Her treasure was not kept in a bank
account. It could not be measured in
stocks and bonds.
It was simpler than that. Closer.
Within arm’s reach.
Her big family. Her grandchildren.
A home that became a haven to
anyone who needed a meal, a spare
bed, or a sympathetic smile during
the rough patches of life.
What did Graciela Rojas-Trabal’s
family learn from her?
“To be respectful. To be loyal,’’ her
granddaughter Ingrid Cosgrove told
me the other day on the porch of her
family’s home here. “She was a loving
woman. She was not rich. She worked
in poverty. She was a poor woman,
but if she had one hundred dollars
and she knew you needed forty, she
would give it to you.

“If she knew you were struggling
with something, she would be there
for you. And she would help you.’’
Graciela died in 2017 at the age
of 86, but now her family has found
a way to keep her legacy alive. It’s a
remarkable gift that will carry her
name and will honor the woman
who prayed the holy rosary each
afternoon at 3 o’clock, a woman
whose welcoming message was
always this: Come in. Have a seat.
Let’s share a meal.
Suffolk University Law School in
September announced a $1 million
gift that Ingrid Cosgrove’s husband,
health care venture capitalist Barry
C. Cosgrove JD’85, said will help
students like him, the son of a single
mom who has become one of the Law
School’s most generous supporters.

“Hopefully, there will be a lot of
kids like me from Brockton who
have promise, but don’t have the
confidence and don’t have the means
to go to a place like Suffolk where
there is rigor, but they also care,’’
Cosgrove said. “That’s a nice formula.’’
It’s a formula born out of a
relationship
that
blossomed,
remarkably enough, during the Red
Sox historic 2004 championship
season, when the New York Yankees
won the first three games of a sevengame series before fortunes turned,
history was made, and a curse was
broken.
Barry and Ingrid watched one
of the games of that titanic series in
Miami, where from across a hotel
lobby they first caught each other’s
attention.

Photograph by David L. Ryan

She grew up in poverty, the mother of seven, grandmother of 14, and the matriarch of
a close-knit neighborhood in her native Dominican Republic, where she taught others
what genuine riches really look like.

�“I thought she was beautiful,’’ Cosgrove, 62, told me the other day. “She didn’t speak
English. I didn’t speak Spanish. She had four kids. Who would believe that we would
meet? It was meant to be.’’
By the time they met, Ingrid, 50, was a widow with four children. They fell in love
and got married in 2009. By then, Barry had met the woman at the center of his new
love’s universe: Graciela.
“She helped me raise my kids,’’ Ingrid said of her grandmother. “They call her
grandma. For them, she’s their grandma. You can’t say anything bad about my grandma
with them. They just love her.’’
Her children recall Suffolk University’s newest scholarship namesake as the sweet
soul who taught them about faith, about kindness, about what loving your neighbor
really looks like. As they grew, their grandmother became their confidant, their friend,
and their true north. When she took out the rosary beads each afternoon at 3:00, they
witnessed how unwavering faith is practiced.
For Barry Cosgrove, whose own father abandoned his family when Cosgrove was
just a little boy, she personified what family life should be.
Cosgrove is the founder of a dialysis company and has spent much of his time trying
to figure out how to improve the lives of others.
“She had a remarkable and genuine ability to make people know she cared about
them,’’ he said. “She raised her own kids and other people’s kids as well. She was a giver,
not a taker. This gift will continue her giving.’’
When she died in late January 2017, there were nine days of services in Santo
Domingo. More than 200 mourners lined up at the family home. Some slept in chairs
or on couches. Buses transported her friends and family to the cemetery after her
funeral Mass.
They recalled the woman whose morning greeting never changed.
“Bendición,’’ she would say. “Blessings.’’
“We have tried to keep her house the way she had it,’’ Ingrid Cosgrove said.
“Everybody who goes on vacation in the Dominican, they go there to stay. She always
told everyone, ‘This is the maternal house. This is the house for everyone.’’’
Money from the $1 million scholarship fund will soon be disbursed. Suffolk is
looking for applications. It would be wonderful if the applicants are required to learn a
little something about the woman whose name adorns that scholarship.
Barry Cosgrove, who once swept the floors at Cardinal Spellman High School in
Brockton, would like that.
And so would Dean Andrew Perlman of the Suffolk Law School.
“What I love about this gift is that it’s so true to Suffolk’s identity,’’ Perlman told me
the other day. “Suffolk got started as a school in 1906 and was intended to provide an
opportunity for students to get an education when they otherwise wouldn’t have one,
either because of their race, religion, or national origin. Discrimination was rampant
back then. Suffolk was a place that opened doors for people who otherwise didn’t have
a chance.’’
Now those doors are being held open by a Dominican woman who quietly, in
dozens of small ways, made a huge impression.
“The way Barry is honoring his wife’s grandmother represents the kind of person
who we have tried to give opportunity to,’’ the Law School dean said. “She was a
giving person, and the idea that something is being created in her name that will give
opportunity to young people for education is true to our founding vision.’’
Her family knows what Graciela Rojas-Trabal would have to say about all of this.
“Bendición.’’

“Hopefully, there
will be a lot of
kids like me from
Brockton who have
promise, but don’t
have the confidence
and don’t have the
means to go to a
place like Suffolk
where there is
rigor, but they also
care,’’ Cosgrove
said. “That’s a nice
formula.’’
From The Boston Globe. © 2019 Boston Globe Media
Partners. All rights reserved. Used under license.

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SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�NEXT
GENERATION
By
Bill Marcus
Photography by
Kathy Chapman

Jessica Promes
JD’19; LIT Lab
Director David
Colarusso;
Chantal
Choi JD’19;
Nicole Siino
JD’18; and
Dean Andrew
Perlman

SPOT ON:

EASING ACCESS
TO LEGAL INFO

G

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SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

etting useful legal information from court and other
government websites is a challenge, especially for people
who are not lawyers. The sites try to match users with the
right resources, but individuals often don’t know exactly what to
search for. Complicating matters further, laypeople and legal experts
use different language, making it hard to match a user’s question with a
court official’s or lawyer’s expertise.
As the director of the Legal Innovation and Technology (LIT)
Lab at Suffolk Law, David Colarusso is working to change this,
thanks to funding from the Pew Charitable Trusts. Along with
his LIT Lab students, Colarusso is developing a machine-based
algorithm that understands legal queries couched in lay terms,
improving access to justice.
Known as Spot, the software will be made publicly available via an
application programming interface, or API. It builds on work from
2018, when the Pew Charitable Trusts funded the development of an
online game, Learned Hands, created by the LIT Lab and its partners
at Stanford Law School’s Legal Design Lab. Lawyers, students, and
other gamers playing Learned Hands identify and label legal questions
posed by laypeople. Each time they play, they’re training a machine to
spot and sort legal issues.
With this new grant to develop the Spot tool, someone could type a
plain-English search query such as: “My apartment is so moldy I can’t
stay there anymore. Is there anything I can do?” The search results
would reveal that the query is highly likely to be related to a housing
issue or, more specifically, to the legal term “constructive eviction.”
“You know you have a housing problem. But very few people think
about their housing problems in terms of something like constructive
eviction,” explains Colarusso. “The idea is to have the tool be able to
spot those issues based upon people’s own language.”

Improving
the civil
legal
system

Colarusso and his students envision Spot being used by courts,
legal offices, and nonprofits to direct people to the most appropriate
resources—and in some cases even to software, similar to TurboTax,
that would walk users through filling out and submitting legal
documents. This fall, the LIT Lab was recognized for its gamechanging approach with a top honor, the InnovAction Award, from
the College of Law Practice Management.
The Lab’s API will be available at no charge to those working on
access-to-justice issues, says Colarusso.
Erika Rickard, senior official of Civil Legal System Modernization
at Pew Charitable Trusts, says the civil legal system is increasingly
navigated by people who don’t have legal help. Pew has set a goal to
modernize the courts’ relationship with users and make the legal
system more effective and accessible to all, especially low- to moderateincome populations.
“For those people, identifying and understanding their legal issues
are the first steps in tackling the problem,” she says. “By incorporating
Spot, legal information portals can better help these populations
successfully navigate the nation’s civil courts.”

GAINING GLOBAL ATTENTION
The LIT Lab’s Learned Hands crowdsourcing tool,
co-created with the Legal Design Lab at Stanford, was
shortlisted among 30 of the most innovative access-tojustice projects in the world by the World Justice Project
(WJP). The LIT Lab earned an invitation to The Hague for
the WJP’s World Justice Forum.

�NEXT
GENERATION

WHEN

CULTURAL
SURVIVAL

Clinic
student
takes case
to UN in
Geneva

By
Michael Fisch
Photograph
courtesy of
Nicole Friederichs

IS AT STAKE

Student
Attorney Cara
Libman JD’19
(second from
left) with HRIPC
Director Nicole
Friederichs
(far right) and
clients at the
United Nations
Office in
Geneva.

B

razil and its environmental news
are far away, but Cara Libman
JD’19 is playing a role closer to
the center of the fray. In April, she crossed
time zones and language barriers as a
student attorney in the Human Rights
and Indigenous Peoples Clinic (HRIPC).
Her mission: help an indigenous
community facing hardships caused by
environmental change.
Libman and Nicole Friederichs JD’03,
the director of the HRIPC, traveled to
Geneva, Switzerland, this past spring
to advocate before a United Nations
treaty body. While there, they joined
leaders of indigenous communities from
central Brazil who were laying out their
case for halting and rethinking massive
agribusiness infrastructure projects.

“The approach to
development is
unbalanced, and there’s
a culture at stake.”
“Indigenous communities living in the
savannah in Mato Grosso [a state about
800 miles from Brasilia, the capital] are
up against a booming agricultural export
business,” Libman explains. Most of that
business is related to soybean exports,
and the consequent roads, railroads,
and trucking routes being built in and
around areas that indigenous people
have historically claimed. One road that’s
in development will abut the spiritual
center of one indigenous group—the
home of its origin story.
As one indigenous leader argued in a
letter to the UN:

“The savannah is the source of our strength. Agribusiness doesn’t just destroy the forest that
surrounds our territories. It pollutes the rivers where we perform our rituals, that we bathe in, and
the water we drink. It contaminates the air. Because of this, agribusiness is destroying our dreams,
the source of our spirituality, and our future. Agribusiness contaminates the animals we eat and the
game that is essential for our rituals. Without game, we cannot perform our wedding ceremonies.
Agribusiness unbalances the world, the savannah, and threatens the very existence of our people.”
In 2019, before the Geneva trip, the HRIPC, working with indigenous community leaders,
submitted a communication to the UN treaty body outlining serious violations of indigenous
people’s rights to lands, natural resources, religion, and culture. The document also expressed
concerns about the Brazilian government’s commitment to consulting with indigenous groups about
the infrastructure projects—as evidenced by the weakening of FUNAI, the Brazilian government
authority responsible for protecting the rights of indigenous peoples.
“When the Brazilian government presents its infrastructure plans, building roads and railroad
lines, there’s never been an opportunity to reach a consensus,” Friederichs says. “When I talk about
the survival of the indigenous peoples of Mato Grosso, it’s cultural, physical, and spiritual. The land
is being destroyed where people gather and hunt; the environment is polluted; and the spiritual and
cultural life becomes impossible to sustain.”
This May, a month after the Clinic’s advocacy in Geneva, the UN treaty body issued a letter to
the Brazilian government calling on it to suspend the infrastructure projects in Matto Grosso until it
has properly consulted with the affected indigenous communities and obtained their free, prior, and
informed consent.
The Bolsonaro administration may not heed the letter’s findings, but it’s important to put the
government on notice that they’re being watched, Friederichs says.
“I understand that there are benefits for agribusiness exporters,” Libman adds, “but the indigenous
people aren’t negotiating on a level playing field.” Forests are clear-cut at a time of massive fires in the
Amazon; agricultural runoff is contaminating waterways; and plant and animal life is being destroyed,
she says. “The approach to development is unbalanced, and there’s a culture at stake.” Through her
Suffolk Law clinic experience, Libman is lending her voice to help balance the scales.
[Editor’s note: Nicole Friederichs JD’03, Director of the Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples Clinic, asked that the indigenous
group, indigenous leader, and United Nations body not be named to protect the clinic’s clients from possible retaliation.]

15

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�IMPACTFUL
ALUMNI
By
Jon Gorey
Photography by
Associated Press

JOSH KOSKOFF
TAKES ON THE

AR-15
It’s an uphill battle, he says, but worth the fight

O

16

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

ne advertisement for the AR-15 Bushmaster rifle
used to kill 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy
Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., read:
“Consider your man card re-issued.” Another said: “Forces of
opposition, bow down.”
In a case that’s earning much media attention and, predictably,
generating both political polarization and emotional intensity,
attorney Josh Koskoff JD’94 is leading a lawsuit against
Remington, the manufacturer of the Bushmaster.
Filed on behalf of some of the Newtown victims’ families, the
suit argues that Remington irresponsibly marketed its weapon
to at-risk young men. The case received an important green light
in November when the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal
from Remington arguing that a 2005 federal law shielded it
from liability. The case will now be sent back to the trial court in
Connecticut and proceed with the discovery process.
Koskoff wanted to help after talking to a family friend of slain
school teacher Vicki Soto, though he knew next to nothing
about gun cases at the time. “The Sandy Hook case really found
me, I didn’t find it,” he says. The case would later prove to be a
tipping point in his legal career, which had previously centered
mostly on medical malpractice.
“In the Sandy Hook case you have families whose lives have
been turned upside down,” he says. “They’re facing huge legal
challenges, but if they can get out of bed in the morning after
losing a child, then we have an obligation to help. I find it to be
a core motivating belief that I have about how the law should
be used.”

Koskoff is also representing Sandy Hook families in a
defamation suit against Alex Jones, the far-right conspiracy
theorist who for years insisted the all-too-real horror in
Newtown was a “giant hoax.” Those continual false claims took
root, leading to sustained harassment, stalking, and even death
threats against the already grieving parents.
In another case, Koskoff is suing eight different gunmakers
on behalf of a victim of the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting that
left 58 concertgoers dead and more than 500 injured. That
shooter had an arsenal of guns stockpiled, but relied entirely
on a dozen AR-15s from eight manufacturers to carry out the
attack, according to Koskoff. “And they were all equipped with
a bump stock,” he adds, a simple modification that can make a
semi-automatic rifle fire continuously like a machine gun.
Koskoff’s suit alleges that “with a reckless lack of regard
for public safety, defendant manufacturers courted buyers by
advertising their AR-15s as military weapons and signaling
the weapon’s ability to be simply modified.” In response, the
manufacturers are likely to argue that the gun is for hunting,
self-protection, and target practice and that under current law
manufacturers can’t be held liable for a gun’s illegal misuse.

A LAW SHIELDING GUN MANUFACTURERS
The manufacturers have a strong defense. That’s partly
because in 2005, Congress passed the Protection of Lawful
Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), a law intended to shield
gun manufacturers from blame when their weapons are used in
a crime. Among other arguments, proponents of the PLCAA

�“In the Sandy
Hook case you
have families
whose lives have
been turned
upside down,”
he says. “They’re
facing huge legal
challenges, but if
they can get out of
bed in the morning
after losing a child,
then we have an
obligation to help.
I find it to be a
core motivating
belief that I have
about how the law
should be used.”

argued that it was necessary to protect the
gun industry from the high costs incurred in
defending unfounded lawsuits.
Koskoff was stunned to learn about
the PLCAA, and one thing he hopes to
accomplish by filing these suits, he says, is
to “shatter the perception” among lawyers,
judges, and the firearms industry itself that
gunmakers can’t be held accountable for
reckless behavior.
The law has some exceptions. According to
the New York Times, “[t]he [PLCAA] law does
allow for [lawsuits] for sale and marketing
practices that violate state or federal laws and
instances of so-called negligent entrustment,
in which a gun is carelessly given or sold to a
person posing a high risk of using it.”
Koskoff seeks to broaden the courts’
understanding of those exceptions, which
he believes will have a positive effect. “[The
law] gives the industry the sense that there’s
no conduct too reckless or too unethical
or amoral, that they can just do anything
regardless of public safety because they can’t
get sued,” he says. “Whether that’s true or not,
the perception is dangerous.”

THE LAW AS EQUALIZER
Long before Josh Koskoff enrolled at
Suffolk Law, he was drawn to a vision of the law
shaped by his father and grandfather—trial
lawyers in Connecticut who once represented
the Black Panthers in New Haven and helped
integrate the Bridgeport Police Department
during the Civil Rights era.
“They saw the role of the law, in its most
idealistic and important way, as the institution
that protects individuals from corporate or
government abuses, and really as the great
equalizer,” Koskoff says. “They seemed to be
always on the side of the underdog. It seemed
to me an incredibly noble profession.”
Suffolk Law was a great fit for him, he adds.
He appreciated that there was a whole cohort

of students who found a way to work during
the day and succeed at law school at night,
as well as the school’s practical approach.
“Suffolk really encouraged you to go out and
participate as early as you could in going to
court and getting your sea legs under you as a
lawyer—feeling what it was like.”

THE FAMILY FIRM
When Koskoff joined the firm founded
by his grandfather, Theodore Koskoff, who
received an honorary JD from Suffolk in
1980, it took him some time to find his
footing as he worked alongside his father,
Michael Koskoff.
“I did feel early on a sense of total
inadequacy, like I was going to torpedo the
good family name,” Koskoff reflects. “It took
a long time, but over many years we became
more like colleagues at work who enjoyed
challenging each other and coming up with
different ideas for cases. But we didn’t work on
a lot of cases together.”
That changed after Koskoff’s father was
diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. The
prominent attorney passed away in April at
the age of 77, but before he did, he asked his
son to work with him on one last lawsuit.
“When he got sick, he wanted to make sure
the case was in good shape, and it was my
incredible honor to work with him on it,”
Koskoff says.
He hasn’t forgotten his father’s idealism
and belief in the promise of the law to
protect everyone.
“There’s definitely a perception that the law
is unfair, that it favors the rich and powerful,
that it’s weighted against minorities—and
that perception is not invalid,” he says. “But
any case I could handle that could change
that perception, that could give people more
confidence that the law exists for everybody
and not just a few people at the top, I’ll take
that chance.”

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�IMPACTFUL
ALUMNI
By
Seth Jones
Photography by
Kent Smith

HOOP DREAMS
COME TRUE FOR

DAVID
DUQUETTE
Team counsel for NBA’s Charlotte Hornets shares how he got there

I

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t was a 1-in-1,000 shot, but David Duquette JD/
MBA’10 was willing to take it—again and again—
until he succeeded.
“My first three years in Boston, I probably wrote a
couple hundred letters and sent them out to various
NBA teams, just trying to make contact and get my
foot in the door,” Duquette says. “I wasn’t sure if I’d get
a break or not.”
Today, Duquette works as the director of basketball
strategy/team counsel for the NBA’s Charlotte
Hornets in North Carolina.
He has served in multiple roles for the Hornets
as his job has evolved and grown. Using his legal
background, his primary duties are player contracts
and acting as a liaison with the league office. But
Duquette also scouts both pro and college players and
does background research on players. Establishing the
Greensboro Swarm, the Hornets’ minor league team,
was another responsibility.
It’s a long way from Duquette’s unpaid internship
with the Minnesota Timberwolves. Over the years, he
had made a connection with longtime
NBA executive Rob Babcock (recently
deceased) of the Timberwolves. In
2009, Babcock called out of the blue
and asked Duquette, who was in his
first year at Suffolk Law, “How soon can
you be here?”
Duquette’s response was the right
one: “How soon do you need me?” The
answer: in three days.
“I said, ‘Sure, I’ll be there,’”
Duquette recalls. “This was the break
I was looking for. I picked up my
life and moved to Minnesota for the
summer.”

Duquette worked hard that summer and was offered a paid internship—
minimum wage—as the team’s basketball operations intern. He took classes
at the University of Minnesota as a visiting student and traveled back to
Suffolk to take three- and four-day intensive courses. After passing the bar,
Duquette was hired full-time by the Timberwolves as a basketball operations
assistant. In 2011, he accepted the same position with the Charlotte Hornets.
“For somebody who didn’t have any connection to this world, it’s a dream
come true,” he says. “The NBA is very much an apprenticeship kind of league.
Whether you played or came into the league some other way, most people
start at the bottom ... and once your foot is in the door, it’s up to you how high
you’re going to go.”
Duquette’s target was always the NBA. He interned with a sports agent
and also worked for the LPGA Tour, but professional basketball was his
No. 1 goal.
“For someone like myself who grew up idolizing Michael [Jordan] as a kid,
it’s pretty surreal for the last eight years to work for him,” Duquette says of
Michael Jordan, a six-time NBA champion, who also is principal owner of
the Hornets. “You hear that voice, it’s very iconic. He’s been awesome as an
owner; he’s admirable from a number of different perspectives.”
Looking back at his time at Suffolk, Duquette says his goal may have
seemed unlikely, but no one ever discouraged him from going for it. Suffolk
“positioned me perfectly. They gave me
the resources and the latitude to pursue
the passion,” he says. “Everyone was
always positive about me pursuing this,
always supportive.”
Now that he is living the basketball
life, Duquette, a married father of one,
says he wouldn’t change a thing about
his hoop dreams career.
“Most people go to law school and
they find the field that they enjoy ...
corporate law, tax law, you’re a litigator,”
Duquette says. “For me, the subject
matter is NBA players. Everything
about the NBA is enjoyable to me.”

“The NBA is very much
an apprenticeship kind
of league. Whether you
played or came into
the league some other
way, most people start
at the bottom.”

�IMPACTFUL
ALUMNI
By
Katy Ibsen

THE CONNECTOR:

CARMEN
ARCE-BOWEN
One graduate’s quest to build a more inclusive Boston

M

entoring is cyclical. And in
Boston, it’s possible that no one
knows that more than Carmen
Arce-Bowen LLM’06.
Arce-Bowen serves as the chief operating
officer of The Partnership Inc., a nonprofit
organization dedicated to the development
of increased diversity in Boston businesses
and corporate America—which is a
simple way to describe the impact she
has made on Boston’s multicultural and
underrepresented communities.
“Boston is a majority-minority city, and
we know that diversity spikes innovation,
and we know that we’re better off when
we are together,” she says, highlighting the
importance of a more diverse workforce,
especially in leadership positions. With the
U.S. Census Bureau estimating that people
of color in the United States will outnumber
Caucasians by 2042, corporate leadership
that reflects the actual population is vital to
business success, she argues.
In her role as COO, Arce-Bowen manages
finances, events, program content, and
recruitment for The Partnership’s leadership
development programs. The organization was
founded in 1987 to focus on the advancement
of African Americans in corporate Boston, an
issue that has long been a challenge for the city
and its business community. Over time, The
Partnership has evolved to focus on helping a
broad range of organizations build racially and
ethnically diverse leadership pipelines while
helping multicultural professionals rise and
thrive in the workforce.

Arce-Bowen is emerging as an important
voice among a new generation of leaders
in Boston who are focused on increasing
opportunities for professionals of color.
Arce-Bowen mentors a diverse group of
people, helping them tap into networks and
find opportunities to work with corporations,
nonprofits, political organizations, and, most
importantly, the communities they represent.
“That is something that in many ways
comes naturally to me—that’s what other
people have done for me,” she says.
Elizabeth Tran, director of constituent
affairs at the Massachusetts State Senate, met
Arce-Bowen through a career mentoring
program. Tran says Arce-Bowen helped her
consider opportunities ranging from applying
to the Peace Corps to exploring graduate
programs and attending Asian American
political advocacy events.
“The incredible characteristic of Carmen
as a mentor is that she listens to my goals
and then digs into her expansive network to
connect me with helpful people and resources
that can provide guidance and information,”
Tran says. “I am incredibly fortunate to have
her as my career mentor.”
In the arc of her own career, Arce-Bowen
notes the influence of Carol Fulp, former
president of The Partnership. “Carol has been
the most impactful mentor I have had in my
career. She is a person who deeply cares about
developing the next generation of leaders in
our community,” she says.
Fulp, who received an honorary doctorate
from Suffolk’s Sawyer Business School in

2017, is now CEO of her own diversity consultancy.
Fulp explains that Arce-Bowen reflects the next
generation of leaders in Boston. “She is diverse,
energetic, innovative, and global in her thinking.
She’s incredibly committed, and brings a broad
perspective,” says Fulp of Arce-Bowen.
When Arce-Bowen moved to the U.S. from
Mexico in 2005, she struggled at first to understand
the challenges and racial disparities facing American
communities of color. “We talk about class more
than about race,” she says of her native land. “When
I came here, I didn’t have all these thoughts about
race—or preconceptions … When [my peers]
faced a challenge, at the beginning I asked them,
‘Why is that happening?’” And she wondered,
would she start to have similar experiences?
She saw race issues through a slightly different
lens, and that view has ultimately become an
advantage.
“I almost feel like I’m able to see race relations
from the outside and then from inside,” she says.
That ability to be both outsider and insider,
sometimes simultaneously, may stem from the
communities she has embraced over the years.
There’s her family in Mazatlán, Mexico; her academic
community in Guadalajara, Mexico, where she
earned her LLB at Universidad Panamericana
and met her now-husband, James Bowen JD’06;
her Suffolk Law community; and the professional
communities she developed as director of personnel
and administration for Massachusetts Governor
Deval Patrick.
Arce-Bowen has long felt a pull toward
community building, which led her toward
nonprofit service and work with a number of social
justice and grassroots organizations. Suffolk Law’s
deep roots in local communities were an important
draw for her, she says.
Arce-Bowen says it’s never too early to start setting
goals and building a network.
She’s determined that her 9-year-old daughter,
Pilar, will understand that the sky isn’t even a limit.
As a family, they are exploring Pilar’s current dream
job: space researcher.
“I just want her to know that anything that she
wants is possible as long as she really wants it. And
she can always find a way to make those hopes and
those dreams come true,” Arce-Bowen says.
And you’re never too young to start making your
way. When Pilar gripes about only being 9, her
mother responds, “Kid, I want you to start learning
how to tap into your own network!”

Photography by
Mark Wilson

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�IMPACTFUL
ALUMNI
By
Stephanie
Schorow
Photography by
Mark Wilson

B. STEPHANIE SIEGMANN
IS TENACIOUS

AGAINST
TERRORISM
The first female chief of the National Security Unit of the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office opens up

P

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oliticians talk about fighting terrorism, but B.
Stephanie Siegmann JD’97 has looked dangerous
extremists square in the eyes and figured out how to
get them behind bars.
One of the nation’s top anti-terrorism prosecutors, she
serves as the chief of the National Security Unit of the
Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office, the first woman to serve
in the prestigious position.
“Democracy is under attack by these individuals,” says
Siegmann, with an edge to her voice. “I don’t know how long
that will continue. But this does shake you and make you want
to do something positive to help prevent future attacks.”
In an interview, Siegmann overflows with enthusiasm;
words pour out of her in gusts. When asked about this
intensity, she says, “I think it all comes from my background. I
had to fight so hard to get here, and it was always a struggle. So
I look at each day as a new opportunity. What can I do today?”
Siegmann’s desire to be a lawyer dates to her youth growing
up in New Jersey. When she was only 10 months old, her
father, an enlisted service member in the Air Force, was killed
by a drunk driver. Her mother told her details of her father’s
death when she was 12 years old and that he had hoped to
become a lawyer. Stephanie resolved to become a lawyer to
honor his memory. Her path would not be easy.
Her mother and stepfather were not well off, and no one
in her family had attended college. Three months before she
entered Boston University as a freshman, her stepfather lost
his job. By Siegmann’s sophomore year, she was deep in debt
and was asked to leave the university.
She began working full time as a paralegal and was admitted
into the University of Massachusetts Boston in 1991. In her
senior year, she came home to find her roommate gone and
learned that she had stolen all the money Siegmann had given
her for rent. Just three months before graduation, she owed
$3,000 and faced eviction. Siegmann marshaled her energy,

asked the university for help getting a loan, and graduated on time in May 1994,
heading straight to law school.
“Suffolk opened up a whole new world for me,” she says. She was selected for the
Suffolk University Law Review and graduated magna cum laude. She then served as
a lieutenant in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps in the U.S. Navy for three years,
prosecuting cases ranging from murder to rape to child abuse.
After joining the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District of Massachusetts as an
assistant U.S. attorney in 2003, she quickly became known for her tenacity. She
didn’t waste time jockeying for prominent cases—instead she took on cases in
areas like export control. It wasn’t “sexy,” but she told herself, “I have to work harder
than anybody else to prove myself.”
Her attitude paid off. Siegmann went on to prosecute numerous high-profile
domestic and international terrorism cases, including the Boston Marathon
bombing obstruction case and
cases of conspiracy to provide
material support to ISIS and
“Don’t waste your time
al Qaeda. She also successfully
fighting over high-profile
prosecuted a case involving
a Chinese citizen who ran a
cases; you can make your
network supplying material to
mark in taking on something
Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
In June 2018, she was named
that maybe no one else has
chief of the National Security
done but where you can
Unit, the unit in which she has
worked since 2004.
prove yourself.”
Former Acting U.S. Attorney
William “Bill” Weinreb served
as the lead prosecutor on United
States v. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and supervised Siegmann’s work. He calls her one of
the country’s most experienced national security prosecutors and a leading expert
in cases involving the illegal export of controlled technology.
“She has also been a leader in helping DOJ, other government agencies, and
private industry work together to maximize the effectiveness of government
enforcement efforts,” he says. “She is a star in the courtroom, in the classroom, and
in the conference room—she does it all.”

�THOUGHT
LEADERS
WHY MASSACHUSETTS
SHOULD PASS THE

Commentary by
Gabe Teninbaum,
Professor and
Director of the
Legal Innovation
&amp; Technology
Institute

FACIAL
RECOGNITION
MORATORIUM
ACT

M

assachusetts recently marked the 150th anniversary of one of the most damaging
errors in scientific history. In 1868, a French scientist, Étienne Léopold Trouvelot,
imported a new breed of caterpillar to the state. He knew that American silk-spinning
caterpillars were susceptible to disease, so he hoped to hybridize them with new imports. In
actuality, he imported gypsy moths. The moths promptly escaped, spread, and became an
environmental scourge. Now, they defoliate 1 million acres of American forest a year, costing
$868 million.
As a professor focused on teaching law students how to deploy new technologies, I have seen
the digital equivalent of gypsy moths unleashed at a scale unimaginable in the 19th century. The
proliferation of face and biometric recognition technologies are particularly concerning. These
tools secretly record us when we’re in public, and then store our information in databases to make
us instantly recognizable by our voice, retinas, face, or gait. Police in Massachusetts are currently
using biometric recognition technology—scanning photos in the Registry of Motor Vehicles’
database to search for suspects in criminal investigations, for instance—without any legislative
approval or judicial oversight.
Biometric recognition tools are not only in use here. They have
also been used in China, where the government deploys them to
efficiently round up religious minorities and police petty crimes
like jaywalking. If you think that sort of abuse is unimaginable in
America, consider the recent revelation that federal authorities
distributed a secret list of activists, lawyers, and reporters to stop
for added scrutiny at the border because of their criticism of the
current administration’s policies.
In addition to raising privacy concerns, these tools can also be
inaccurate. In one recent test, Amazon’s facial recognition tool falsely
identified 28 members of Congress. It also disproportionately
misidentified people of color, tagging them as people who had been
arrested for a crime. The tools not only steal our anonymity—they
may tell police we are someone we are not.
Even tech companies that stand to profit are sounding the
alarm. Google recently announced it would not release a general face surveillance product
“before working through the important technology and policy questions.” Microsoft’s president
published a blog post calling for the government to step in and regulate the technology.
We should heed these warnings, before the situation spirals out of control. Thankfully,
lawmakers in Massachusetts have introduced a bill, known as the Face Surveillance Moratorium
Act, that recognizes the dangers unregulated biometric surveillance poses to our basic rights and
freedoms. The bill says that, before we use these tools, we need to debate how, when, and why
they’re to be used, and decide who will have oversight to prevent abuse. Notably, the act doesn’t
permanently ban the technology. Instead, it follows the path recommended by the tech giants

Photograph Shutterstock

“We
should
heed these
warnings,
before the
situation
spirals out
of control.”

who created them: Consider their use carefully,
and legislate accordingly.
The proper balance between authority and
privacy is personal for me, not only because I
care about democracy, but also because of my
own background in law enforcement.
As a young man, I served as an operations
support technician in the U.S. Secret Service,
spanning the period before and after 9/11.
Protecting our highest officials and supporting
criminal investigations was among the highest
honors in my life. But more than a decade after
returning my badge and gun, I received an
alarming letter from the federal government. It
said the government had been hacked by foreign
agents, and I was one of millions of federal
employees whose security forms had been
stolen. A foreign, hostile government had gotten
our complete files, including dozens of pages
detailing employees’ backgrounds, beliefs, family
and friendships, and financial information.
My file was supposedly kept in a “secure”
computer database. Reality proved otherwise.
In the end, the Chinese government got my
secrets and Uncle Sam gave me five years of
free credit monitoring for my trouble. I wish
our government had paused to analyze the
safeguards that were supposed to have kept my
confidential data safe.
From gypsy moths to privacy-invading
technologies, the butterfly effect can morph a
tiny ripple into a hugely destructive force. In the
case of face recognition software, we still have
time to pause, and we should do so by passing
the Face Surveillance Moratorium Act.
This essay was originally published on Cognoscenti, wbur.
org’s ideas and opinion page. It was reposted with permission.
You can read the original piece at www.wbur.org/cognoscenti.

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�THOUGHT
LEADERS
Story by
Michael Fisch
Photography by
Michael J. Clarke

Professor David Yamada

LEADING AT THE INTERSECTION OF

WELL-BEING AND THE LAW
Suffolk Law faculty share insights on workplace bullying legislation,
positive psychology, and a tool for mindful lawyering

P

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eriodic scientific surveys conducted
by the Workplace Bullying Institute
estimate that one-third of America’s
workers have been a target of workplace
bullying at some point during their careers—
but unlike most countries in Europe and
South America, the U.S. lacks laws to address
the phenomenon.
In Massachusetts, 109 of the state’s 200
legislators have co-sponsored the Healthy
Workplace Bill, written by Professor David
Yamada, director of the Institute. The
legislation gives severely bullied workers a
cause of action and creates legal incentives
for employers to prevent and respond to
workplace bullying.
Yamada’s legislation is just one of many
reasons he received the Bruce Winick Award

for outstanding contributions to the field of
therapeutic jurisprudence this past summer at
the International Congress on Law and Mental
Health in Rome. Therapeutic jurisprudence
analyzes whether laws and legal systems
promote or detract from the advancement of
psychological well-being and human dignity.
The field uses research and insights to
produce practical legal and policy outcomes,
Yamada says: ”Look at bureaucratic forms,
for example. Do they lead to resolution
of a problem or promote conflict? One
therapeutic jurisprudence study looks at
ways to improve a state’s marital dissolution
form and revises it to promote a peaceful and
less stressful resolution.”
The workplace bullying bill’s language is
modeled on the law of sexual harassment

under Title VII and doesn’t make it overly easy
to sue. “I set the bar higher for recovery—you
need to show intent to harm,” Yamada says.
“We need to open this door carefully.”
One of Yamada’s former students,
Massachusetts
State
Representative
Danielle Gregoire JD’06, says that the law
professor’s policy efforts have had a ripple
effect across the country: “It was at his
urging that I co-sponsored his legislation
to ban workplace bullying, and I’m happy
to continue our work together to see this
bill become law so we can better protect
Bay State employees.”
The legislation is a good example of
the practical nature of the therapeutic
jurisprudence movement, Yamada says:
“There’s not a lot of pretension in the field.”

�THOUGHT
LEADERS

MORE ON WELL-BEING
AND THE LAW

THINK LIKE A LAWYER—
BUT NOT AT YOUR OWN EXPENSE

MINDFUL, FOCUSED—AND A LAW STUDENT
Mindful Lawyering: The Key to Creative Problem
Solving

Professors Kathleen Elliott Vinson JD’95,
Samantha Alexis Moppett JD’95, and Shailini
Jandial George
Professors Vinson, Moppett, and George wrote
their book, Mindful Lawyering: The Key to Creative
Problem Solving, as a practical tool to help law students
and attorneys develop focus and creative approaches to
solving problems—in a climate dominated by mobile
phones, constant interruptions, and stressful deadlines.
Lessons from the book are applied as part of the Law
School’s Wellness Wednesdays program, which Vinson
pioneered. The program teaches students strategies to
cope with stress, enhance focus, develop healthy habits,
and increase community.

Professor Lisle Baker
“Integrating Positive Psychology Into Legal
Education”
48 Southwestern Law Review 295 (2019)
“Positive psychology” may sound like a phrase from a
sunny self-help book, but it’s actually the scientific study
of well-being. And it can be used to help law students
have a healthier educational experience and outlook.
Since 2017, Professor Lisle Baker has led a national
conference at the Law School, “Integrating Positive
Psychology Into Legal Education.” Baker earned a
master’s degree in the discipline from the University of
Pennsylvania in 2016.
So how might the field’s work help law students?
Baker’s Southwestern Law Review article explores ideas
offered by positive psychology conference participants,
including an insight shared by psychologist Dr. Larry
Richard, an expert on lawyer behavior.
Richard argued that attorneys’ skepticism, which
can be so helpful in court, may not be as helpful at
home or, even worse, counterproductive if turned
inward excessively. Richard reported that skepticism is
a characteristic of 90% of the attorneys he has surveyed
over the years, far higher than the norm for other
occupational groups.
Based on that insight, professors and support staff
might remind law students that they are being trained
to be professional skeptics and to use that particular tool
consciously, when it’s specifically needed.
Making use of insights from applied positive
psychology is important at Suffolk, which has signed on
to the American Bar Association’s Well-Being Pledge, a
national effort to reduce the levels of stress and substance
abuse in the legal profession. The pledge has been
endorsed by many leading law firms as well as the Office
of the Massachusetts Attorney General.

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�THOUGHT
LEADERS
By
Michael Fisch
Photography by
Ben Gebo

Associate Dean Leah
Chan Grinvald

TOUGH GIG:
DOES TRADEMARK LAW NEED A MAKEOVER?
Associate Dean Leah Chan Grinvald on rethinking
trademark law for the “gig economy”
In a new world where millions work for “gig economy” platforms like Uber and food-delivery service
DoorDash, the courts are trying to sort out who’s an employee and who’s a contractor. However, another
critical digital commerce question is getting less attention: Does the structure of these platforms require
a new set of trademark laws?
Associate Dean and Intellectual Property Professor Leah Chan Grinvald addresses this question in
“Platform Law and the Brand Enterprise” (Berkeley Technology Law Journal, Vol. 32, 2018, with Professor
Sonia Katyal). We spoke with Grinvald this fall.
WHAT PROBLEM DOES YOUR ARTICLE ADDRESS?

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In our paper, Sonia and I refer to platforms like Airbnb, Etsy, and Uber as “macrobrands.” These sites
host a bunch of smaller businesses that we call “microbrands”—the people driving for Uber or renting
out their homes on Airbnb, for example.
Many companies are sending the macrobrands takedown notices, alleging trademark violations
on the part of individual gig workers—the microbrands. For example, Airbnb might receive a notice
from Marriott to take down a listing by someone with the last name of Marriott who is hosting their
room or house on the platform. Those allegations are frequently unsupported by the facts; but
because there’s no efficient or economical legal process available to assess and challenge allegations, the
hosts—the macrobrands—honor the takedown requests.
Macrobrands won’t be able to survive if they’re regularly forced to take down the pages of the
small businesses that are the heart of their enterprises. And gig economy workers find their lives
turned upside down.
CAN YOU GIVE US AN EXAMPLE OF HOW THIS PLAYS OUT IN THE REAL WORLD?

One example involves an artist who was selling Frida Kahlo dolls on Etsy. The Frida Kahlo
Corporation sent a takedown notice. Etsy complied, even though the case is extremely complex and
it’s not clear at all that the Kahlo estate actually has the rights to the trademark. And if they do have
rights, it’s still not clear that the Kahlo trademark has been infringed by this artist. Etsy’s position is that
current trademark law forces them to take down their users’ sites or face legal challenges, possibly even
monetary damages.

ARE THE MACROBRANDS TRYING
TO CHANGE TRADEMARK LAW?

Yes. Etsy teamed up with Foursquare,
Kickstarter, Meetup, and Shapeways
to ask the government for a change
in trademark law that would provide
a new set of legal protections for
macrobrands—similar to the existing
rules in copyright law.
One of the macrobrands looked at all
of the takedown requests it had received
in a year and argued that a large majority
of those requests were marginal. The
macrobrand nevertheless felt compelled
to comply because it didn’t have the
resources to fight so many requests.
The current system, essentially
automatic takedown on request,
regardless of validity, isn’t fair—and it’s
not economically sustainable. It places
macrobrands in a situation where they’re
working against their own business
model and often ignoring the important
goals of trademark laws. One of those
goals is to balance a trademark owner’s
rights with the individual right to satirize
and make political statements, a careful
balance that is ignored when platforms
don’t fight back.
Our paper lays out a set of
recommendations for changes in the
law that we think would help level the
playing field for microbrands, protect
free speech, and still protect trademark
holders.

�GIVING
BACK
Law school and three jobs

Global Citizen

PAYS IT
FORWARD
Marie-Louise Skafte
credits former dean with
academic opportunity

Dean’s Cabinet member Marie-Louise
Skafte JD’96 has travelled the world
during her notable legal career, but she
almost didn’t make it through law school.
At a moment when she feared she would
be unable to continue to pay for her legal
studies because of the unavailability of
financial aid for international students
at the time, then-dean Paul Sugarman
HLLD’89 helped Skafte secure a trustee’s
loan. His kindness made all the difference
in keeping Skafte’s dreams of her legal
career alive, she says. And like so many
Suffolk Law alumni, she took advantage
of the opportunity.

Global citizen and lawyer

If you sketch out the course of Skafte’s
life and career, you’re covering a lot of
territory. Places she has lived include
Vancouver (twice); Taulov, Denmark,
where she spoke both Danish and
English; Toronto; Koko Kai, Hawaii;
Waterloo, Ontario; Ithaca, N.Y.; Boston;
San Francisco; and Fort Lauderdale,
punctuated by regular travels to London
and various cities across Europe, Asia, the
Middle East, South America, and Africa.

Over the years, Skafte has worked as general
counsel and corporate secretary for DHL
Canada (now Deutsche Post DHL – Canada)
as well as general counsel and head of human
resources and corporate compliance for Cronos
Limited, a leading global marine container
leasing company. At Cronos, she led operations
for 19 countries and was appointed head of
office in the U.S. She now runs her own global
consulting firm and enjoys traveling so much
that she is in the final stages of obtaining a
commercial pilot’s license.
Skafte’s work in international logistics—
vastly simplified, getting products from one
country to some other far-flung spot—brought
her to meetings with indigenous peoples on
their sacred lands. One pro bono trip led a group
of South Africans to show their gratitude by
breaking into local gospel songs. But the most
unusual gathering, she says, was at the famed
Blue Lagoon, a geothermal spa in southwestern
Iceland, during the dark winter months.
“We met with our clients in the afternoon,
but it was already pitch black, except for a super
bright moon. I can still see it: There was steam
coming up from the water. We were in this
caravan type situation, walking together in the
darkness, in our swimsuits.”

Her time at Suffolk Law was far more
modest. To stay afloat, Skafte worked three
jobs, including stints as an intern at Massport,
where she later took a full-time position as the
airport business office’s first attorney. Her office
building was right on the tarmac, she says. “I
remember taking down some photo frames
and there were huge black outlines on the wall
around the frames—and then realizing that it
was jet exhaust.”
Air quality aside, she adds, the Massport
jobs were great building blocks for her;
they taught her about the intersection of
government, logistics, and business. Since
she continued working a part-time side job
as a flight attendant (she started after her
first year in law school), her office’s location
at the airport was helpful. It was easy to
trade her work clothes for her flight uniform.
Other jobs in law school included modeling,
working in an Italian restaurant handling
take-out orders, and serving as a legal intern
to the general counsel at a restaurant chain.
Given her strenuous schedule, getting
through law school was itself a logistical
challenge, but Skafte says she appreciated the
pragmatic nature of her Suffolk Law education.
“It prepared me well,” she says. “The Legal
Practice Skills class taught us how to write briefs
and memos in a way that was so relatable. When
I got to Massport and the deputy GC gave me
my first assignment and said, ‘Can you brief me
on that?,’ I was ready.”

By
Michael Fisch
Photograph
courtesy of
Marie-Louise
Skafte

Paying it forward

Now Skafte wants to pay it forward. She has
created a $100,000 scholarship for Suffolk Law
students—with first preference for students
who have international backgrounds and are
struggling, as she did, to keep up with tuition.
One reason for the scholarship is her
appreciation for Suffolk Law students. She recalls
how welcoming her classmates were: “They knew
that I was coming from Canada and didn’t know
much about Boston, and I was just blown away by
the embracing nature of the students.”
Skafte also wants to show the kind of
generosity that Suffolk Law showed to her
when she needed it the most. She recently
reconnected with former dean Paul Sugarman
and told him that the loan he arranged and the
encouragement he gave “changed the course of
my career and my life.”

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�GIVING
BACK
By
Michael Fisch
Photography by
Michael J. Clarke

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Mark Sullivan JD’79

�GIVING
BACK

INNOVATION
ECONOMY
Suffolk Leader Helps Students Navigate the

Trustee Mark Sullivan’s $250,000 gift supports
education at the nexus of business and IP

When audio giant Bose Corporation introduces
a new product, says the company’s retired chief legal
officer, Mark Sullivan JD’79, engineers from some
competing companies have been known to take
the product apart and study it, piece by piece, to
understand the innovations housed within.
It’s not hyperbole on Sullivan’s part. Bose is known
for disruptive innovations, including noise-canceling
headphones, audio speakers designed for a specific
car’s cabin acoustics, and small, easy-to-hang cube
speakers that produce big-speaker sound. Sullivan
was tasked with protecting all that ingenuity.
In the late 1990s, he and his team wrested $8.2
million in patent infringement and legal damages
from JBL, a division of Harman Kardon. Over the
decades, Sullivan regularly faced the challenge of
knock-offs of patented Bose technologies.
In 2016, after 35 years at Bose, Sullivan retired
from that prestigious job and its directive “to protect
the lifeblood of the company, Bose technological
advancements, and to bring Bose’s innovative
products to customers throughout the world.”
His career at the company began with
accounting and tax law and then grew to include
a wide range of legal issues, including negotiating
manufacturing and sales deals with government
officials around the globe and a stream of patent
and counterfeiting issues.
While Sullivan is quick to deflect attention from
himself—and not in the “humble brag” manner
common these days—some quick research shows
his years at Bose were marked by growth, both for
those around him and for the company as a whole.
During his tenure, the company’s sales revenue
shot up from $50 million to approximately $4
billion. The legal department grew from a one-man

operation, Sullivan, to 28 lawyers, including six
based in Europe and Asia.

“They don’t have
to be engineers”

The evolution of his career helped him better
understand a critical nexus: IP law, business
investment, and innovation. Sullivan, who serves
as Vice Chair of Suffolk’s Board of Trustees, has
donated $250,000 to the Law School with an eye
toward creating a growing cohort of graduates who
are “comfortable and conversant in IP—and able to
speak intelligently with engineers, entrepreneurs,
and investors.”
“They don’t have to be engineers themselves,”
he adds, “but they do need some broad knowledge
about how innovations and trademarks are
protected.” That know-how will give students a
leg up in the job market. He says: “The need for
IP knowledge is spreading to so many areas of the
law, and it’s where a lot of the financial investment
is made.”

How to hinder
counterfeiting?

One example of the importance of protecting
IP, he says, was figuring out how to get Bose’s
products into the massive Asian market without a
huge loss from counterfeiting or crippling customs
duties. Over the years, it had become abundantly
clear that protecting innovations would be nearimpossible to manage in China.
The solution? Producing products at a new Bose
plant in Malaysia, a country known for its strong legal
system based on English common law and its low
tariff arrangement with the Chinese government.

A lesson from
Shark Tank

The value of IP knowledge, while
oversimplified, is underscored
on national television, Sullivan
says, on shows like Shark Tank, in
which famous investors bombard
entrepreneurs with questions about
patents and trademark protection.
The entrepreneurs quickly come
to understand that they generally
can’t get funding if their ideas can’t
be protected.
Suffolk is known for its sizable
footprint in patent law, and
Sullivan notes that the school’s
graduates make up 30% of the
top IP firm patent partners in
Greater Boston—and its IP
concentration and downtown
location make it ideal for law
students to land internships with
corporations and startups.
Sullivan, who grew up in
Roslindale, Mass., and attended
Boston public schools, says of
Suffolk: “It’s a school with a
working-class heart, great teachers,
and a unique, we’ll-get-throughthis-together camaraderie among
the students. I wouldn’t be where I
am today without my Suffolk legal
education.
“The school gave me the
opportunity to combine business
and legal skill, which was critical
to my career trajectory. I had great
faculty teaching me corporations,
agency, a host of tax law courses.
“But it’s been a long time since
I graduated,” Sullivan adds. “Each
decade brings its own wrinkle
in terms of the combination of
knowledge and experience you
need to succeed as a lawyer. For
many new graduates, they’ll need
to operate comfortably in the
innovation economy. Suffolk Law
can help them get ahead in an
economy that cycles new products
in months versus years.”

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�GIVING
BACK

YOU WANT
TO GIVE,
but You’re Not Sure
How or When

Prof. Philip C. Kaplan on a little-known
tool: the CRUT

RECORDBREAKING
REUNION

Class of 1969 makes extraordinary
effort at 50-year mark

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The Suffolk Law Class of 1969 commemorated its 50th reunion with an outpouring of
generosity, raising a record-breaking $449,300 to fund scholarships for the next generation
of Suffolk Law alumni. On May 31, 2019, more than 75 members of the Class of ’69
gathered at Boston’s Omni Parker House for an evening of celebration and philanthropy.
Eight members of the Class of 1969—Hon. Carmine M. Bravo (ret.), Henry Kara,
Paul Kaufman, Rich Rubino, Lew Sassoon, Ted Schwartz, Jim Sokolove, and Mario
Zangari—led the exceptional fundraising efforts. Wanting to honor the world-class
legal education that enabled their professional careers, the Class of 1969 donors
committed to providing future law students with the same opportunity at Suffolk.
“The impact of this event has been extraordinary. It has renewed relationships and given
us a greater sense of love and commitment to the school, and an unprecedented sense of
pride in our past,” said Schwartz.
The Class of 1969 has a history of paying it forward. In honor of their 35th reunion,
members of the class raised $320,000 to establish their scholarship fund, a record no other
class has broken.
Law School Dean Andrew Perlman hosted a reception to honor the class members,
who were inducted into the Half-Century Club. To conclude the evening, two recent
recipients of the Class of 1969 Scholarship, Adam S. Rizk JD’13 and Tara Q. Higgins
JD’18, spoke of the impact of the support they had received.
“That freedom led me to broaden my horizons, hone my skills, and obtain two
clerkship opportunities with two incredible judges, one of whom is a fellow Suffolk
alum,” said Higgins.

Professor Philip C.
Kaplan JD’88

From left: John Gillooly, Michael J. Clarke, Gleb Budilovsky

Left to right: Anthony DeLuca JD’69; Alan Kraut JD’69;
J. David Damico JD’69; Jerry Scarano JD’69; Dean Andrew Perlman; Theodore
Schwartz JD’69; Paul Kaufman JD’69; and Hon. Carmine M. Bravo (ret.) JD’69

Suffolk Law Professor Philip C. Kaplan JD’88 had a
dilemma. He wanted his estate to provide for his loved
ones, but he also wondered how he could give back to
the law school he had graduated from and taught at
for decades. Could he help Suffolk Law students with
financial needs pay for school?
“My desire to provide for Suffolk Law seemed to
conflict with my desire to provide for my beneficiaries,”
he said. The solution: an estate-planning tool called a
CRUT—a charitable remainder unitrust.
The trust will provide income to his beneficiaries
for life and then pay the remaining principal to the
charities he’s chosen, including the Law School, he
explains. A significant portion of Kaplan’s estate will
one day fund a Suffolk Law scholarship in his name.
“Most people have never heard of a CRUT and
don’t know that the Law School will provide an
attorney at no charge to execute the agreement,” he
said. “I want people to know that they can provide for
their families and still give back to the Law School.
That conflict about how to do both can be resolved.
“I appreciate the opportunities the Law School has
given me,” he continued. “I appreciate the students
and want to help more students be able to afford law
school. I just needed a way to do both.”

�GIVING
BACK
Kevin Fitzgerald
JD’82

Dean’s Group Launches for

RECENT
GRADS

Larry Nussbaum gives back by
joining the Dean’s Associates

Kevin Fitzgerald on Being

“AN UNFASHIONABLE
SUCCESS”

How do you take a Boston-based regional law firm with roughly 100 attorneys and turn it
into an Am Law 100 member with 650 lawyers, 16 offices spanning New York to Shanghai,
and more than half a billion dollars in gross revenue? The right person to ask is Dean’s Cabinet
member Kevin M. Fitzgerald JD’82, a key leader of Nixon Peabody for nearly 30 years.

Outside the circle

The Nixon Peabody growth story, Fitzgerald says, involves bringing together smart and
hard-working attorneys, most of them outside the small circle of the most prestigious firms in
the country. “In Britain, they call those firms the ‘Magic Circle,’” he says. “If you’re outside the
circle but still successful, you’re called an ‘unfashionable success,’ and that’s what we became.”

A nose for business

So how does one become an unfashionable success? The firm requires a relentless focus
on “occasionally unsexy but essential work: understanding the business climate and its
relationship to the legal economy; networking effectively; the nuts-and-bolts elements of
running a practice,” Fitzgerald notes. And two ever-present questions—“What’s our plan
for generating revenue? Where’s the business going to come from?” Those critical questions
have become part of the firm’s culture “and helped define an archetypal hire—a person with
both a fine legal mind and a nose for where business might come from.”

Hanging out with the justice

Fitzgerald, a partner at the firm and long-time chair of Nixon Peabody’s Policy Committee,
looks back fondly on his years at Suffolk Law, describing a camaraderie among students and
an overarching feeling that good things would happen, that “like so many of the good and
successful alumni, you could be successful too.”
That esprit de corps has long been a hallmark of the school. One of Fitzgerald’s many
examples: “I was in a class with Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Justice Joseph Nolan,
and he would hang out after class and talk with us. I was excited to be found sufficiently
interesting for the justice—someone who was so wise and had accomplished so much in his
field—to stick around and have conversations and care about my responses.”
As to why he joined the Dean’s Cabinet, Fitzgerald says, “I wanted to go back to the people
and the places that helped me succeed and thank them. The successes I’ve had are directly a
function of the experience I had at the Law School.” He adds, “Suffolk Law is similar to Nixon
Peabody in a way, I suppose. Perhaps not in the Magic Circle of the most elite institutions, yet
no less an unfashionable success.”

The Law School recently launched a new
group, the Dean’s Associates, for alumni who
have graduated within the last 10 years and make
a financial commitment to the school of at least
$25,000, which can be satisfied over five years.
Group members support Law School initiatives
and serve as ambassadors of the school.
Founding member Larry Nussbaum JD’11,
a personal injury attorney and principal of
Nussbaum Law Group, says, “I committed to
joining the group because the Law School allowed
me to make a name for myself. I knew that once
I was able to have some success, I wanted to give
back to the school that allowed that to happen.”
Nussbaum recalls that his most memorable
courses at Suffolk covered real-world skills, such as
Professor Richard Pizzano BA’63, JD’66 offering
insights into how to handle clients and how to talk
to judges. And he learned personal lessons from
faculty such as Professor Karen Blum JD’74, who
taught his civil procedure course. “She taught me it
was okay to be myself and do it my own way, and I
still lean on her for advice,” he says.
Nussbaum says joining the Dean’s Associates
will allow members to build relationships with
successful lawyers in a variety of fields and to
nurture those relationships. The group will meet
with members of the Dean’s Cabinet annually.
For more information about this leadership
opportunity, please contact Kathy Tricca
BSBA’82, Director of the Summa Leadership
Giving Program, at ktricca@suffolk.edu.

Larry Nussbaum
JD’11

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�“I Am Standing on

Shifting Sand”
Reflecting on the challenges of immigration law
By Shannon Dooling | Photography by Bryce Vickmark

It may be impossible to overstate the complexities of the immigration crisis playing out along the U.S. southern border.
There are the legalities associated with the apprehension of hundreds of thousands of migrants during a surge this year
that overwhelmed border facilities, along with changes in the asylum application process. The immigration system itself is
facing unprecedented pressures, and all of this is playing out in a politically polarized environment.

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We reached out to three alumnae in the field and the head of Suffolk Law’s immigration clinic to better understand these
challenges and how they view the future.

�“It Changes You”
Maybe it was the 18-hour work days or the sight of mothers and
children clinging to one another in fear. It could have been the scent of
petrol wafting through the surrounding fracking fields or the scathing term
“baby jail” used by some to describe the facility. Whatever the reason,
the week Alexandra Peredo Carroll JD’06 volunteered at an immigrant
detention center in Dilley, Texas, in 2015 was an eye-opener, even for the
experienced immigration attorney.
That year, federal judge Dolly M. Gee found that the two detention
centers in Texas that the Obama administration opened failed to meet
minimum legal requirements for facilities housing children.
“Being witness to those conditions and the way people are treated in
our own country changes your perspective in life—it changes you,” Peredo
Carroll says.
She went to Texas with a group of immigration attorneys from the
New England Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association
(AILA). Their days at the South Texas Family Residential Center, which
opened in 2014 to house women and children from Central America,
were spent at the detention facility working with clients. In the evenings,
attorneys prepped for bond hearings and “credible fear” interviews. During
the latter, individuals attempt to demonstrate that they have a credible fear
of returning to their home country.
“I think we all came out of that trip as different people. It was during
that week that I realized I wanted to work at a nonprofit doing this kind of
work,” Peredo Carroll says.
Three months later, she interviewed for a pro bono coordinating
attorney position with the Boston office of Kids in Need of Defense
(KIND), whose mission is to “represent unaccompanied immigrant and
refugee children in their deportation proceedings.” Her work for KIND
took her back to the border in 2018, to the Port Isabel Detention Center
in Harlingen, Texas, after the Trump administration’s decision to separate
migrant children from families who were detained as they attempted
to enter the U.S. illegally. The Trump administration contended that
separation would deter families from making the hazardous journey to the
United States.
“I thought that I would be prepared,” she says. “But what I witnessed,
working with mothers and fathers who had their children forcibly
separated from them, was truly the worst thing I have ever seen in my life.
Nothing in the world could have prepared me for that.”
As managing attorney for KIND’s Boston office, Peredo Carroll now
helps to train and mentor pro bono attorneys representing children in
removal proceedings. When asked if she’s hopeful about the future of
immigration law, she answers without hesitation: “Always hope. I do think
there’s always hope that the justice system will prevail.”
Alexandra Peredo
Carroll JD’06

�Lawyers,
the Most
Powerful
Tool

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Rachel Self JD’04

Rachel Self JD’04, a legal analyst for Fox News and CNN,
has a private practice in Boston specializing in what she calls
“crimmigration,” the intersection of criminal law and immigration
law. She splits her time between criminal trial work, deportation
defense, adjustment of status cases, and other immigration matters.
Over the last 15 years, Self says she’s developed valuable relationships
with government officials and prides herself on maintaining them
during a tumultuous period for U.S. immigration policy.
Self’s approach to representing clients has changed from the past,
when she could recommend some clients fill out an application on
their own. Now, she says, that suggestion is almost laughable: “For
one thing, forms that used to be one or two pages are now in excess
of 20 pages, and in some cases there are 10 to 12 different forms that
need to be submitted.”
In February 2018, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(CIS), the Department of Homeland Security agency that
oversees adjustment of immigration status, changed its mission
statement, eliminating the phrase describing the U.S. as a “nation
of immigrants.” A new statement on the agency’s website says the
office focuses on administering “the nation’s lawful immigration
system.” This change was not lost on immigration advocates and
attorneys like Self.
L. Francis Cissna, then-director of CIS, described the revision
as a “simple, straightforward statement” that “clearly defines the
agency’s role in our country’s lawful immigration system and the
commitment we have to the American people.”
“Over the last two years, I’ve noticed a significant shift within
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, away from the spirit of
an agency that exists to provide a service,” Self says.
So Self throws everything she can at a case. That could mean
proactively sending additional application materials before they
have been requested, knowing that the process for something
like a green card or a visa application has become unpredictably
complicated.
“People are paying $2,000 in filing fees just to file applications
in many cases, and because the agency is so busy and has so many
new directives, there are needless errors being made, which are
completely avoidable, and devastating to the client,” she explains,
citing issues like paperwork that has already been submitted being
overlooked and materials being filed under incorrect names. Each
error or oversight can derail a process that already takes months or
years.
Self believes many of the career government employees tasked
with executing rapid-fire policy changes and new procedures are
just as confused and frustrated as the attorneys and clients who are
forced to adjust.
“I am standing on shifting sand, which means my feet are moving
and my advice could change next week,” she says.
Individuals who support more restrictive immigration policies
often argue that the immigration system is too easily exploited by
people who do not have legitimate claims to enter or remain in
the U.S. But that doesn’t mean one should ignore due process and
constitutional violations that result from policy changes, Self argues.
“The way we fight back,” she says, “is through the courts.”

�Janeth Moreno LLM’09

“it makes
everything

worth it”
Janeth Moreno LLM’09 is empowering immigrant communities with the tools they need
to know their rights. The founder of Moreno Law in downtown Boston, she’s been in private
practice for three years. The bulk of her cases are asylum claims, a facet of immigration law
that has seen some of the most fundamental changes under the current administration.
In June 2018, then-Attorney General of the United States Jeff Sessions summarily reversed
the finding that women fleeing domestic violence from certain countries could qualify as
a special social class when applying for asylum in the U.S. Moreno says the announcement
immediately eliminated what many immigration attorneys considered a crucial adjudication
strategy.
In issuing the decision, Sessions wrote that asylum claims had expanded too broadly to
include victims of “private violence,” like domestic violence or gangs, so he narrowed the
type of asylum requests allowed.
“We’ve seen more restrictions, more restrictive venues. We don’t have the law on our side
right now,” Moreno says.
Perhaps no system has undergone more upheaval in the last three years than the asylum
application process. The Trump administration—citing a system of loopholes that it
contends are readily abused—has made it more difficult for people to apply for asylum,
instituting in January 2019 what it calls the Migrant Protection Protocols, also known as the
“remain in Mexico” policy. This new process requires people to wait at the southern border
for their chance to begin the asylum application process. A recent series of agreements struck
with the governments of Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador is part of a plan to prevent
Central American migrants from applying for asylum in the U.S. if they have not first done
so in another country.
These additional challenges mean Moreno needs to be sure her clients are even better
prepared. To that end, Moreno not only works with local consulates of Colombia, Mexico,
Guatemala, and El Salvador but also connects directly with immigrant communities in New
England, bringing “Know Your Rights” sessions into neighborhood churches. One lesson
shared at the sessions is that immigrants facing ICE agents have the right to remain silent and
to speak to a lawyer.
She says it is empowering to share information in an informal group setting, where
people feel safe: “I’ve seen the impact in the communities, it’s making a difference. It makes
everything worth it.”

Ragini Shah, Clinical
Professor of Law

The Path

Forward

Clinical Professor of Law Ragini Shah sees the potential for
students to play a critical role in the immigration system. Shah came
to Suffolk Law 11 years ago to found its Immigration Clinic, which
represents detained immigrants facing removal from the U.S. While
there’s always been a healthy student interest in the clinic, Shah is
seeing an increased interest from incoming students who say they
know immigration law is their path.
“Immigration policy has always been sort of harsh, particularly
for the population we serve at the clinic, but this administration has
brought it into the public discourse in a way that we’ve never seen,”
she says. And aspiring lawyers are paying attention. For better or
worse, the rhetoric out of Washington, D.C., is sparking dialogue.
Shah’s goal in the Immigration Clinic is to select cases for students
that help illuminate a larger issue—such as the factors that drive
migration from Central America and the human consequences of
something like the “remain in Mexico” policy.
She says keeping one’s bearings in a dramatically shifting landscape
can be challenging, so she wants to make sure her students can feel
grounded while they’re learning.
“I spend a lot more time reading decisions that are coming down,
not just for my own knowledge,” she says. “But I’m trying to give my
students a sense that, even though policy is rapidly changing, there are
legal anchors, so let’s find those anchors together.”
It’s easy to get discouraged working within a complicated system
when every day seems to bring changes. Yet Shah finds hope in the
community of lawyers sharing advice and banding together to file
class action lawsuits against the Department of Homeland Security
and other government agencies.
The biggest takeaway for Shah’s students often is the connection
with their clients. For Shah, it’s her connection to her students: “Being
a part of this moment and being a part of their journey to becoming
better lawyers, I feel privileged.”

�Laury Lucien JD’15 is chief
legal strategist at Greenlight
Business Solutions.

THE

CANNABIS

CONUNDRUM
Graduates inspired by the
emerging industry push
on despite challenges
By Jon Gorey | Photography by Adam DeTour

I

t’s rare to see entrenched opposition to an
illegal substance collapse in real time. But
such is the case with marijuana, where the
foundations of criminalization are cracking
and giving way to legalization, one state at a time.
Rarer still is the opportunity to build an entirely
new industry and legal landscape from the rubble.
Several Suffolk Law alumni have embraced this
unusual opportunity to become trailblazers in
the nascent and legally complex recreational
cannabis industry in Massachusetts.
The changes came so quickly that none of them
could have anticipated their work in the field just
a few years ago.

�A standout student at Suffolk Law, Laury Lucien
JD’15 spent her first two and a half years after law
school at the prestigious firm Holland &amp; Knight,
where she focused on mergers and acquisitions as
well as corporate healthcare law. She worked closely
with regulators and municipal agencies, ideal training
for her next and unexpected career venture—into the
highly regulated cannabis industry.
Today, Lucien, who grew up in Haiti, is chief legal
strategist at Greenlight Business Solutions, one of six
organizations recently chosen by the Massachusetts
Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) to help train
cannabis entrepreneurs and professionals. She’s also a
founder of Major Bloom, a business that will cultivate,
manufacture, and sell cannabis.
Lucien sits on the Board of Advisors of the
Massachusetts Recreational Consumer Council,
which works to ensure a safe marijuana industry. And
she teaches Cannabis Law at Suffolk. She cites her
own law school education in preparing her to navigate
the challenges of the budding industry. “Cannabis
is multidisciplinary—you need to know banking
law, securities law, you need to know real estate and
municipal law, corporate law. You need all those
pieces,” she says.
You also need access to capital. That doesn’t
come easy in an industry selling a substance that
remains federally prohibited. The federal ban means
entrepreneurs don’t have access to traditional
commercial bank lending.
Lacking those resources, it can be nearly impossible
to start a cannabis company—something Lucien
learned firsthand. She had previously pursued a
medical-use cannabis license in Massachusetts, but
found the costs of entry out of reach. “You had to
prove that you had half a million dollars just to apply
for a license, so it basically kicked us out,” she says.
“We were having tremendous difficulty raising funds
as people who weren’t born into privilege.”
After striking out in medical marijuana, Lucien
didn’t give up. She joined forces with a core group of
partners, and in 2017, she founded Major Bloom. The
company focuses on the adult-use market and is 98%
owned by people of color.
LEVELING THE PLAYING FIELD
When Massachusetts legalized recreational cannabis
in 2016, the law included an economic empowerment
mandate and a first-in-the-nation social equity
component. The provisions are aimed at encouraging
“full participation” in the regulated cannabis industry by
minority-led businesses and people from communities

that have been disproportionately harmed by drug laws.
Social attitudes toward cannabis may be shifting,
but that hasn’t erased the damage done by decades
of discriminatory enforcement of marijuana laws,
says Suffolk Law Professor Emeritus Eric Blumenson.
“Research shows that white and black populations
use marijuana at about the same rate, but arrests,
convictions, and jail sentences have been many times
higher for black communities,” he says. The peak
of the decades-long war on drugs that packed U.S.
prisons saw 800,000 marijuana arrests annually. And
while many of those arrested for cannabis initially
dodged jail time, many others “ultimately went to jail
for inconsequential probation violations based on the
original conviction,” Blumenson says.
From his perch atop the state’s Cannabis Control
Commission, Shawn Collins sees a major policy
challenge in figuring out how to create an equitable
industry. Collins is executive director of the CCC, which
regulates the industry in the state. He’s also a double
Ram, who earned his BS in Government from Suffolk
University in 2008 and his JD from Suffolk Law in
2013. He went on to work on healthcare policy in state
government and became legislative and policy director
for State Treasurer Deb Goldberg, whose office oversees
alcohol policy. With the 2016 legalization ballot question
pending, it fell to Collins to figure out the most effective
and efficient ways to regulate cannabis.
“That’s really how I got introduced to cannabis
policy,” he said. The independent CCC was created,
and Collins was a natural for the executive director
post. When he started two years ago, there were no
desks, no phone numbers, no employees, not even an
address, mirroring the state of Massachusetts’ fledgling
cannabis industry. Today the Commission has grown
from just Collins to 60 employees, though they are still
in temporary office space. He’s spent much of his time
building the nuts and bolts of the agency, which has a
bureaucratic role as a licensing and regulatory agency.
But Collins adds that the cannabis statute, shaped
by the ballot question, also includes a mission—that
the industry, as it develops, should be inclusive and
represent the communities where facilities are located.
“It acknowledges, frankly, that while cannabis has
been illegal, both federally and locally, there are folks
that have been disproportionately harmed by the
enforcement of those laws,” Collins says.
Part of the Commission’s focus is on fostering
economic empowerment, including making it easier
for small operators and entrepreneurs to launch their
businesses. But Collins says the federal prohibition is
inhibiting those startups: “If you want to open up a bar

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SUFFOLK LAW
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�Left to right:
Andrea Cabral
JD’86, CEO
of Ascend
Mass LLC and
MassGrow LLC;
and Shawn
Collins BS’08,
JD’13, executive
director of
Massachusetts’
Cannabis Control
Commission

or a restaurant or an ice cream shop, HVAC or plumbing,
or any small business—you name it—you can get a bank
loan, and you can present your business plan. You cannot
do that in the cannabis context.”
Andrea Cabral JD’86 says writing social equity into the
regulations was the right thing to do, but adds that the
execution still needs improvement. Cabral, former Suffolk
County sheriff and Massachusetts secretary of public
safety, now serves as chief executive of Ascend Mass LLC,
a subsidiary of the multi-state cannabis retail operator
Ascend Wellness. “You can write it down, and you can
make it the law, but the real issue in leveling the playing
field is access to capital,” Cabral says.
Despite a decades-long career in law enforcement,
Cabral says she never understood the villainizing of
cannabis. She sees alcohol as far more destructive. “A lot
has to do with their respective histories, but it just always
struck me as unfair,” she says.
In legalized cannabis, Cabral saw a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to enter an industry at the ground level.
“You can go through your entire life, through generations,
and never have a brand-new industry to consider being a
part of,” she said. “There aren’t that many industries, new
or otherwise, that present that kind of opportunity for
women or a person of color that this one presents.”
Still, like Lucien, Cabral adds that it is nearly impossible
to start a cannabis company without the help of private
equity, an issue that she says needs to be resolved.
IT HELPS TO KNOW THE LAW
While she says it’s imperfect, Lucien credits the social
equity mandate with opening at least some avenues

for minority entrepreneurs to get into the industry—
including herself. But she has also relied heavily on the
experience she has gained along the way, including her
Suffolk Law education. Without knowledge of the law,
problems can quickly arise, she explains. For example,
without access to traditional banking, cannabis operators
often turn to friends and family for funding, not realizing
that those investments may be considered offerings
prohibited by securities law. Real estate law proves useful
when negotiating a lease or sale agreement or navigating
the special permit process. Corporate law is essential
when forming a company among partners, and tax law is
crucial. “The amount you have to pay in taxes is insane,
and you need to know tax law. You have to have a great
accounting team,” she says.
In the end, Collins says successfully creating an equitable
industry will require assistance from private industry,
specifically, access to banks. In the meantime, the CCC is
working toward building a strong infrastructure as well as
sustainable equity programs so that if and when banks can
come to the table, they will be more willing to lend.
All say they are hopeful that federal prohibition will be
lifted in favor of a clear, consistent system of regulation
that is accompanied by public health and safety measures.
And while Cabral expects federal prohibition to fall, full
legalization may happen in fits and starts, leaving a legal
hodgepodge in the interim. To groundbreaking pot
pioneers like Lucien and Cabral, that means hard work
ahead, but also an exciting challenge. “It presents a lot
of great opportunities to think outside the box and be
creative,” Cabral says, “because the path has not been trod
already on a lot of this stuff.”

�CLASS

NOTES
PROFESSIONAL
AND PERSONAL
MILESTONES FROM
SUFFOLK ALUMNI

Andrew S. Mullin JD’91

IN-HOUSE
LEADERS
ANDREW S. MULLIN JD’91 and DAMIAN W.
WILMOT JD’00 have been recognized as 2019 InHouse Leader honorees by Massachusetts Lawyers
Weekly and New England In-House for outstanding
professional accomplishments in the legal field.
The class of 25 general counsels and staff attorneys
are nominated by colleagues, clients, and legal
professionals and selected by Massachusetts
Lawyers Weekly’s editorial department.
Mullin serves as vice president and chief
counsel for BAE Systems Electronic Systems,
where he is responsible for managing the sector’s
legal department, consisting of in-house attorneys
and staff, and the export and ethics functions.
At Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc., Wilmot serves
as the senior vice president and chief risk and
compliance officer. He is responsible for leading
the company’s global compliance, global litigation
and enterprise risk management, and quality
assurance organizations.

Damian W. Wilmot JD’00

1970
ROBERT H. ROWE, retired
attorney and former New
Hampshire special justice,
received special recognition
from the New Hampshire Bar
Association for his 18 years of
service to the state as a member
of the New Hampshire
House of Representatives.
He currently serves as an
elected Hillsborough County
commissioner. Rowe is the
author of two histories and one
historical novel and resides in
Amherst, NH.

1975
BRIAN M. HURLEY, of the
real estate litigation practice
for Rackemann, Sawyer &amp;
Brewster, was named to The
Best Lawyers in America 2020.

1977
KENNETH A. GRAHAM, retired assistant attorney general
for the State of Connecticut, has been reappointed by
the Chief Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court to
a seventh term of office as Superior Court trial referee.
He was also reappointed to a three-year term of office as
Superior Court arbitrator/fact finder. He took his oaths
of office on June 12, 2019, the 42nd anniversary of his
graduation from Suffolk University Law School.
SARAH HALL LUICK was honored for over 35
years of service as a board member for the national
nonprofit the Animal Legal Defense Fund. The Fund
is celebrating its 40th year working to protect the lives
and advance the interests of animals in the legal system.

1981
DAVID E. CHERNY was selected for inclusion in The Best
Lawyers in America 2020 in the field of family law. He
is a partner in the Boston firm Atwood &amp; Cherny PC,
where he concentrates his practice in the area of complex
matrimonial and family law litigation at the trial and
appellate court levels.

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�CLASS

NOTES

1982
ROBERT P. AVOLIO has joined
Eckert Seamans’ Litigation division in
Princeton, NJ.

1983
MICHAEL MAZZONE has been named
cochair of the litigation practice group
at Haynes and Boone LLP.

1985
THOMAS M. BOND was named vice
president of the Massachusetts Bar
Association for its 2019-20 year.

1986
ELLEN M. HARRINGTON, of
Rackemann, Sawyer &amp; Brewster,
was named to The Best Lawyers in
America 2020. She serves on the firm’s
Executive Committee and chairs
Rackemann’s Trusts and Estates
Department.

1991
LISA CUKIER was named a 2019 “Top
Woman of Law” by Massachusetts Lawyers
Weekly. She is a partner and executive
member at Boston-based Burns &amp; Levinson.
GARY MERKEN, an attorney with the Large
Business &amp; International Division of the
IRS Office of Chief Counsel in Philadelphia,
was acknowledged for his contributions to
the 11th edition of Black’s Law Dictionary,
published in June 2019.
ROBERT RIVERS JR. was selected as 2019
Boston Family Law’s “Lawyer of the Year” by
Best Lawyers. He is a partner at Lee &amp; Rivers
LLP in Boston.

1992
MEL PASSARELLI has joined Aspera
Technologies as its new president and
CEO. He has over 30 years of experience in
corporate strategy and growth.

1988
DENISE I. MURPHY was named
president-elect of the Massachusetts
Bar Association for its 2019-20 year.

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SHELDON CRAIG TOPLITT has been
appointed chair of the Massachusetts
Bar Association in the Real Estate
Section Council for the 2019-2020
year.

THOMAS TUTTLE was appointed bar and
policy compliance specialist in the Office of
General Counsel of Ropes &amp; Gray LLP.

1994
ANN MARIE MACCARONE was appointed to
the Cranston (RI) City Planning Commission
for a four-year term by Cranston Mayor Allan
Fung JD’95.

1995
ERIN M.
BOUCHER was
named partner
at Morrison
Mahoney LLP.
	
JENNIFER
PARENT has
become a fellow
of the American
College of Trial
Lawyers. She
is a director
at McLane
Middleton and
chair of the firm’s Litigation Department.

1997

1989
JOHN C. LA LIBERTE, partner at Sherin
and Lodgen LLP, was named to The Best
Lawyers in America 2020. He is chair of
the firm’s bankruptcy and creditor rights
group, as well as cochair of the business
litigation, construction law, and real
estate litigation practice groups.

1993

LYNNE F. RILEY was named a 2019 “Top
Woman of Law” by Massachusetts Lawyers
Weekly. She is a partner in Casner &amp; Edwards’
bankruptcy and restructuring group. Riley
has argued numerous appeals before the First
Circuit Court of Appeals and the Bankruptcy
Appellate Panel for the First Circuit and
has authored amicus briefs for the United
States Supreme Court, the First Circuit,
and the Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals on
significant bankruptcy issues.

MEREDITH
COOK was
appointed
chancellor of
the Roman
Catholic
Diocese of
Manchester,
NH. She
has been
a member of the New Hampshire Bar
Association for more than 20 years. In 2001,
she received the Saint Thomas More Award,
presented by the Catholic Lawyers Guild of
New Hampshire to a lawyer or judge who
is a practicing Catholic and who embodies
the spirit of Saint Thomas More in his or her
courage, dedication, integrity, civility, and
compassion toward others.

�CLASS

NOTES

JESSICA GRAF has joined
Sullivan and Worcester LLP’s
real estate group as counsel
in Boston. Previously with
Seyfarth Shaw LLP, Graf
counsels clients on all aspects
of environmental law.
UYEN MONG TRAN
was appointed assistant
attorney general in the
Massachusetts Attorney
General’s Office and
chair of the Contributory
Retirement Appeal Board
on July 22, 2019.
ADAM P. WHITNEY was
selected to Super Lawyers for
2019. He is the founder and
owner of the Law Office
of Adam P. Whitney in
Boston.

2000
MICHAEL J. FENCER
BS’97 has been named
to The Best Lawyers
in America 2020. He
focuses on bankruptcy,
creditor and debtor rights,
insolvency, construction,
and reorganization law with
Casner &amp; Edwards LLP.

2001
KEVIN MALTBY was
sworn in as associate
justice of the Northampton
(MA) District Court on
September 12, 2018.

2003
ELIZABETH K. LEVINE, an
employment lawyer and litigator with
Boston firm Goulston &amp; Storrs, has
been promoted to shareholder.
The Insurance Library Association of
Boston has named PAUL TETRAULT as
the organization’s new executive director.

2004
SETH BONNEAU has joined DLA
Piper’s finance practice as a partner in
the Boston office.
HEATHER
GAMACHE
has joined
Rackemann,
Sawyer &amp;
Brewster as
a director
in the firm’s
litigation
practice.
Previously,
she served
as a partner at the Boston-based law firm
Prince Lobel Tye.

2005
MIA B. FRIEDMAN has joined Fish
&amp; Richardson as pro bono manager.
Friedman will lead and manage the
firm’s pro bono practice for Fish’s 11
U.S. offices.
MARIAH L. HEPPE has joined Estate
Preservation Law Offices (EPLO),
Worcester,
MA, as an
attorney.
Her practice
at EPLO
concentrates
on estate
planning and
elder law.

RACHEL MOYNIHAN has been promoted to
member (partner) at Eckert Seamans. She
focuses her practice on commercial litigation,
employment law, and product liability and
handles employment, trade secret, real estate, and
trust litigation.

2006
KEVIN POWERS of the Law Offices of Kevin J.
Powers, together with Andrew M. Fischer JD’80
and Andrew J. Brodie III JD’04, both of the Law
Offices of Jeffrey S. Glassman LLC in Boston,
briefed and argued Meyer v. Veolia Energy North
America on behalf of plaintiff Richard Meyer. On
May 8, 2019, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial
Court decided in favor of Meyer. The case, which
clarified the law regarding the right of a plaintiff
to bring a claim for injuries resulting from road
defects, is a watershed moment in Massachusetts
tort law.
MICHAEL RUEDA has been named a partner at
global firm Withers LLP. Based in New York, he is
head of US sports and entertainment for the firm.
Goulston &amp; Storrs director TIMOTHY W.
SULLIVAN MBA’06 was named a 2019 “40 Under
40” honoree by the Boston Business Journal. Sullivan
is the only lawyer on the 2019 list who specializes in
real estate law.

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�CLASS

NOTES

2007
KELLY B. CASTRIOTTA was promoted to
regional head of product development for
financial lines, North America, for Allianz
Global Corporate and Specialty.

KENNETH A. SHERMAN joined
Robinson+Cole (R+C) in Boston. He
is an experienced construction attorney
with significant construction litigation and
transactional experience.

ANGEL KOZELI MOZINA has written a
chapter, “Legal Aspects of Commercial
Condominiums,” for the 2019 supplement
to the Massachusetts Continuing Legal
Education’s (MCLE) Massachusetts
Condominium Law practice manual. She is a
director in the real estate practice of Boston
firm Rackemann, Sawyer &amp; Brewster.

2009
MARK HEINZELMAN has joined Rubin and
Rudman LLP as a partner in the litigation
group.

LORI K. VAULDING BS’06 has been named
a partner at Morrison Mahoney LLP.

2010
MARGARET HAGEN published How Can
So Many Be Wrong?: Making the Due Process
Case for an Eyewitness Expert. The book,
written with Sou Hee Yang, discusses the
importance of the defense having access to
expert testimony on eyewitness reliability in
cases where that testimony is critical.

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HEIDI A. SEELY, attorney at Rackemann,
Sawyer &amp; Brewster, served as moderator
at the Boston Bar Association’s program
“Advising Trustees and Serving as a Trustee
in Massachusetts” on April 26, 2019. She
has been appointed cochair of the Public
Policy Committee of the Boston Bar
Association’s trusts and estates section.

2011
KATHLEEN A. FEDERICO was elected
partner at Morrison Mahoney in Boston.
She is a graduate of the MBA 2018-2019
Leadership Academy and received the
2019 Massachusetts Defense Lawyers
Association’s Rising Star Award.

�CLASS

NOTES

JENNIFER GARNER joined Chamberlain Hrdlicka as a real estate
associate based in Atlanta.
KIMBERLY MASON has joined Pastori | Krans PLLC, a Concord, NHbased litigation firm, as an associate.

2014
RAY GRANT and MEGAN WEBER JD’15 were married in Bristol, RI, on
June 8, 2019.
CHRISTOPHER C. STORM was elected
partner at Morrison Mahoney in Boston.
He represents insurance companies,
national retailers, attorneys, and real estate
and design professionals in the areas of
professional liability, insurance coverage,
tort and liability defense, and commercial
and business litigation. He is also a
Proctor of Admiralty with experience in
maritime liens, Jones Act, and Longshore
and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act
(LHWCA) cases.

2012
BRIDGET R. LOPEZ was elected partner
at Morrison Mahoney in Boston.
ERIC LOSEY was promoted to member
(partner) at Eckert Seamans. Losey
concentrates his practice on the defense
of personal injury, property damages, and
environmental cases, including the defense
of asbestos, mass tort, and product liability
litigation matters in Massachusetts and
Rhode Island.

MATTHEW R. O’CONNOR has
joined Pierce Atwood LLP as an
associate in the firm’s litigation
and business practice groups.

JACLYN MCNEELY, associate at Sherin
and Lodgen LLP in the Employment Law
Department, has been chosen as cochair
of the Women’s Bar Association of
Massachusetts’ New Lawyers Committee.
MICHAEL TRIPICCO and wife Jessica
welcomed daughter Miriam Patricia on
July 11, 2019.

2013
DILER ERDENGIZ is serving with the
United Nations Mission in Kosovo as a
political affairs officer.

2016
KIMBERLY SMITH has joined the
Connecticut law firm of Brody
Wilkinson PC as an associate.

2018
CLINTON OAS has joined Williams Mullen as an associate in the firm’s
litigation and tax sections.
AMANDA C. SCAFIDI BS’10 has joined Eckert Seamans as an associate
in the firm’s Boston office and Litigation division.

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�DEAN’S

CABINET
COMMITTED ALUMNI
INVEST IN THE FUTURE
OF SUFFOLK LAW

DEAN’S CABINET
NOW HAS 40
MEMBERS
DEMONSTRATING
COMMITMENT,
OFFERING A
VOICE

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The Dean’s Cabinet now has 40 members, each
of whom has committed at least $50,000 to support
initiatives of the Law School. Since this magazine
featured the Dean’s Cabinet last spring, 10 new
members have joined the team of generous benefactors
dedicated to advancing the Law School’s mission—
through both philanthropy and strategic consultation.
Two recent members share what inspired them to join.

JEFFREY R.
DRAGO JD’04
“Under Dean Perlman’s leadership, Suffolk University Law
School has remained true to its founding mission of providing a
first-class legal education to striving students from the inner city
looking for an opportunity in the law. I know the benefits of this
access firsthand, which is why I’m proud to support Suffolk Law as
a member of the Dean’s Cabinet today.”

LINDA J.
WONDRACK
JD’95
“I am very motivated by
how Dean Perlman is leading
the Law School, specifically
his focus on enabling and
arming students with the skills
necessary to succeed in the
future.”

�DEAN’S

CABINET

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL

DEAN’S CABINET MEMBERS
Patricia M. Annino JD’81
Partner
Rimon Law, PC
Boston, MA
Joy L. Backer JD’15
Associate
WilmerHale, LLP
Boston, MA
Alexander A. Bove, Jr.
JD’67
Partner
Bove &amp; Langa, PC
Boston, MA
Brian T. Brandt JD’96
Managing Director
SCS Financial, LLC
Boston, MA
Claudine A. Cloutier JD’95
Partner
Keches Law Group, PC
Taunton, MA
Barry C. Cosgrove JD’85
Chairman &amp; CEO
Blackmore Partners, LLC
Laguna Beach, CA
Gerry D’Ambrosio JD’93
Partner
D’Ambrosio Brown, LLP
Boston, MA
Gerard S. DiFiore JD’84
Partner
Reed Smith, LLP
New York, NY
Jeffrey R. Drago JD’04
Partner
Drago + Toscano, LLP
Boston, MA
Kevin M. Fitzgerald JD’82
Partner
Nixon Peabody, LLP
Manchester, NH
Christine Newman Garvey
JD’72, Trustee
Global Head of Corporate Real
Estate and Services (ret.)
Deutsche Bank AG
Santa Barbara, CA

Kenneth T. Gear BSBA’89,
JD’95
Chief Executive Officer
Leading Builders of America,
Inc.
Washington, DC

Deborah Marson JD’78
Executive Vice President,
General Counsel, and
Secretary
Iron Mountain, Inc.
Boston, MA

Marc S. Geller JD’71
Vice President
Cedar Crossing
Management, LLC
Houston, TX

Michael J. McCormack
JD’72
Partner
McCormack Suny, LLC
Boston, MA

Joseph W. Glannon
Professor of Law
Suffolk University Law School
Boston, MA

Timothy M. McCrystal
JD’89
Partner
Ropes &amp; Gray, LLP
Boston, MA

Ernst Guerrier BS’91,
JD’94, Trustee
Principal
Guerrier &amp; Associates, PC
Boston, MA
James F. Haley, Jr. JD’75
Partner
Haley Guiliano, LLP
New York, NY
Henry G. Kara BSBA’66,
JD’69
President
Kara Law Offices
Boston, MA

Brian E. McManus JD’71
President
McManus Capital Management
Fort Worth, TX
Robert T. Noonan JD’85
Regional Managing Partner
– Tax
KPMG, LLP
	
Boston, MA
Eric J. Parker JD’86
Partner
Parker Scheer, LLP
Boston, MA

George N. Keches JD’75
Senior Partner
Keches Law Group, LLC
Taunton, MA

Jamie A. Sasson JD’04
Managing Partner
The Ticktin Law Group, PA
Deerfield Beach, FL

James A. Lack JD’96
Attorney
Law Office of James A. Lack
Boston, MA

Lewis A. Sassoon JD’69
Partner
Sassoon &amp; Cymrot LLP
Boston, MA

Warren G. Levenbaum
JD’72
Managing Partner
Levenbaum Trachtenberg, PLC
Phoenix, AZ

Janis B. Schiff JD’83
Partner
Holland &amp; Knight, LLP
Washington, DC

Konstantinos Ligris JD’01,
Trustee
Founder &amp; Board Member
Ligris + Associates, PC
Co-Founder
Stavvy &amp; Escrow Mint, LLC
Newton, MA

Alan B. Sharaf JD’87
Partner
Sharaf &amp; Maloney, PC
Brookline, MA

Marie-Louise Skafte JD’96
Principal
Skafte Global Law, PA
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Wayne E. Smith BSBA’77,
JD’82
Adjunct Professor
Suffolk University Law School
Firm Director (ret.)
Deloitte Tax, LLP
Boston, MA
Regina C. Sullivan JD’88
Managing Partner
Gaman Real Estate Group, LLC
Wellesley, MA
Thomas M. Sullivan JD’94,
Trustee
Founding Partner
Lando &amp; Anastasi, LLP
Cambridge, MA
Instructor
Suffolk University
Sawyer Business School
Boston, MA
James S. Trainor, Jr. JD’00
Partner
Fenwick &amp; West LLP
New York, NY
Kenneth J. Vacovec JD’75
Senior Partner
Vacovec, Mayotte &amp; Singer, LLP
Newton, MA
Richard J. Walsh BA’58,
JD’60
Attorney (ret.)
Federal Trade Commission
Naples, FL
Stephen N. Wilchins JD’82
Founding Partner
Wilchins, Cosentino, Friend, LLP
Wellesley, MA
Linda J. Wondrack JD’95
EVP, Head of Compliance
Fidelity Investments
Boston, MA

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�ALUMNI

EVENTS
CAPTURING
MEMORABLE MOMENTS
FROM SCHOOL
GATHERINGS

1
2

CLINICAL AND EXPERIENTIAL
PROGRAMS 5TH ANNUAL
ALUMNI RECEPTION AND
AWARD PRESENTATION
THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 2019
Sargent Hall, Boston
This year’s celebration of our nationally ranked
Clinical &amp; Experiential Programs honored Trustee
Ernst Guerrier BS’91, JD’94 with the Outstanding
Clinical Alumni Award. Photographs by John Gillooly

44

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Winter 2020

1.

2.

Melissa Marquez BA’14, JD’17; Rose
Kiggundu JD’18; Najma Hussain BA’15,
JD’18; and Amanda Scafidi BS’10, JD’18

Sarah Boonin, Director, Clinical Programs and Director, Health Law Clinic; Dean
Andrew Perlman; Ernst Guerrier BS’91, JD’94, Trustee and Dean’s Cabinet; and
Kim McLaurin, Associate Dean and Clinical Professor of Law

�ALUMNI

EVENTS

LAW SCHOOL
CLASS OF 1969 50TH
REUNION DINNER
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2019

1

2

Omni Parker House, Boston
On Friday, May 31, the Suffolk University
Law School Class of 1969 celebrated its
50th reunion with a special dinner at the
Omni Parker House Hotel in Boston. See
story on page 28. Photographs by John
Gillooly

1.
Dean Andrew Perlman; Richard Krezel
JD’69; and Cindy Krezel

2.
Bonnie Damico; J. David Damico JD’69;
Jennifer Scarano; Hon. Carmine M. Bravo
JD’69 (ret.); Jerry Scarano, Jr. JD’69;
Winnie Rubino; and Richard Rubino JD’69

3

4

3.
James Sokolove JD’69, Paul Kaufman
JD’69; Betty Rappaport; and Hon.
Carmine M. Bravo JD’69 (ret.)

4.
Joan Farcus JD’69 and David Gianetti

5.
Richard Rubino JD’69; Ted Schwartz
JD’69; and James Sokolove JD’69

6.

5

6
7.
Anthony DeLuca JD’69; Alan Kraut JD’69; J.
David Damico JD’69; Jerry Scarano, Jr. JD’69;
Dean Andrew Perlman; Theodore Schwartz
JD’69; Paul Kaufman JD’69; and Hon. Carmine
M. Bravo JD’69 (ret.)

7

Henry Kara BSBA’66, JD’69, Dean’s
Cabinet; Lew Sassoon JD’69, Dean’s
Cabinet; and Amy Sassoon

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�ALUMNI

EVENTS

HALF-CENTURY
CLUB LUNCHEON
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2019
Marriott Long Wharf Hotel

On May 31, alumni from the class of 1969 returned to
Suffolk to celebrate their 50th reunion.

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At this annual luncheon, Suffolk inducts the 50th
reunion class into the Half-Century Club and invites
alumni from past 50th reunion classes to attend.
Save the date for the 2020 Half-Century Club
Luncheon on Friday, May 29, 2020, when we will
celebrate the Class of 1970. For more information,
contact Corian Branyan in the Office of Advancement
at 617-573-8456. Photographs by John Gillooly

Top row, left to right: Robert Billage MA’69; James O’Donnell
BA’66, JD’69; Teresa Gillis BA’69; Bob Rook JD’69; John Webster
JD’69; Jeffrey Mark Pearlman BA’69; Richard Duchesneau
BSBA’69; Jerry Scarano, Jr. JD’69; Richard Krezel JD’69; Andrew
Bram JD’69; and Henry Kara BSBA’66, JD’69, Dean’s Cabinet
Middle row, left to right: Lew Sassoon JD’69, Dean’s Cabinet;
Anthony DeLuca JD’69; Hon. Carmine M. Bravo JD’69 (ret.);
Robert Nocera JD’69; J. David Damico JD’69; Roger Phillips
JD’69; Gregory Britz JD’69; Edward McTighe JD’69; John
Bourgeois, Sr. JD’69; Mario Zangari JD’69; Theodore Schwartz
JD’69; and Paul Kaufman JD’69
Bottom row, left to right: Thomas Woodbury BA’69, MAE’72; John
Wansea BSJ’69; Michael Houghton BSJ’69; Ruth Monahan BA’69;
Marsha Feffer BA’68; Jack Dennis BSBA’69; David Flynn BSBA’69;
Thomas Miley BSBA’69, MAE’71; Linwood Nelson BSBA’69; Mary
Cahalane BS’69, MED’74; and Joseph Ruggio MBA’69

�ALUMNI

EVENTS

COMMENCEMENT
EVE DINNER
SATURDAY, MAY 18, 2019

1

The Seaport Hotel, Boston
Alumni and guests gathered on May 18, 2019, at the Seaport
Hotel on the evening before commencement to celebrate
the accomplishments of our 2019 graduates, our esteemed
honorary degree recipients, and the generosity of our alumni
and friends in the Summa Society. Photographs by John Gillooly

2

1.
Alexander Bove, Jr. JD’67, Dean’s Cabinet and Catherine Bove

2.
Eddie Jenkins, Jr. JD’78 and Tamela Bailey JD’04, Alumni
Association Board Member

3.

3

4
SUFFOLK CONNECT
ALUMNI-STUDENT
NETWORKING RECEPTION

Konstantinos (Kosta) Ligris JD’01, Trustee and Dean’s Cabinet;
Robert Lamb, Jr., Chair, Board of Trustees; and Nik Ligris JD’11

5

6

4.

6.
Gary Prado JD’16; Shelby
Devanney; and Sarah Marshall

TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2019

James McKenzie JD’75;
Cade Nauman; Erica Mattison
MPA’08, JD’13; and Desi Powell

Ropes &amp; Gray LLP Boston
,

5.

Over 270 alumni and students attended the
annual alumni and student networking reception
held at Ropes &amp; Gray LLP. A special thank you
to alumnus Timothy McCrystal JD’89, Dean’s
Cabinet, for hosting the reception.
Photographs by Michael J. Clarke

Paige Stopperich; Jessen Foster;
Sammy Nabulsi JD’14, Alumni
Association Board Member; and
Brianna Whitney JD’13

Timothy McCrystal JD’89,
Dean’s Cabinet; Dean Andrew
Perlman; Gunjan Sali; and
Hillary Peterson JD’09, Assistant
Director of Professional and
Career Development

7

7.

47

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�ALUMNI

EVENTS

1

4

5

2

6

SUFFOLK LAW REUNION
DINNER AND ALUMNI
AWARDS CEREMONY
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 2019
Sargent Hall

48

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

The annual Suffolk Law Reunion Dinner and
Alumni Awards Ceremony was held in Sargent
Hall on Saturday, June 1, 2019. This special
dinner honored alumni celebrating a reunion year
and also recognized four alumni for outstanding
achievements, service, and philanthropy:
Massachusetts House Speaker Robert A.
DeLeo JD’76, HLLD’09, Outstanding Alumni
Achievement Award; Jennifer L. Parent JD’95,
Outstanding Alumni Service Award; Kwabena
Kyei-Aboagye, Jr. JD’09, Outstanding Graduate
of the Last Decade; and Gerard F. Doherty JD’60,
Edward Bray JD’58 Legacy Award. Photographs
by John Gillooly

7

3

1.

4.

Rep. Josh Cutler JD’00;
Lynn Sullivan; Hon. Amy
Nechtem JD’85, Trustee;
Thomas Sullivan JD’94,
Dean’s Cabinet and Alumni
Association Board Member;
and Robert Rio JD’94

Carla Perugini-Erickson
JD’94 and Teri Scibelli JD’94

2.

6.

Patricia Tarabelsi JD’08;
Victoria Burdman JD’06;
Tamela Bailey JD’04, Alumni
Association Board Member;
and Tiziana Polizio JD’97

Johanna Homan; Jonathan
Schwartz JD’11, Alumni
Association Board Member;
Brian Neely; and Anna
Lucey JD’06

3.

7.

President Marisa J. Kelly;
Gerard Doherty JD’60;
Massachusetts House
Speaker Robert A. DeLeo
JD’76, HLLD’09; Jennifer
L. Parent JD’95; Kwabena
Kyei-Aboagye, Jr. JD’09;
and Dean Andrew Perlman

Massachusetts House
Speaker Robert A. DeLeo
JD’76, HLLD’09; Mary
Doherty; and Tim Wilkerson
JD’03, Alumni Association
Board Member

5.
Hon. Regina Quinlan
Doherty JD’73, HLLD’05 and
Gerard Doherty JD’60

�ALUMNI

EVENTS

1
U.S. SUPREME COURT BAR
ADMISSION PROGRAM
MARCH 3-4, 2019

2

Welcome Reception, Washington, DC

Forty Suffolk University Law School alumni
traveled to Washington, D.C. to be sworn in to
the Bar of the United States Supreme Court. 
The two-day program began on March 3 with
a welcome reception at the Hyatt Regency
Washington. On Monday, March 4, the alumni,
along with Dean Perlman, appeared before the
justices of the U.S. Supreme Court during the
court’s Monday morning session. Professor
Emerita Karen Blum JD’74 presented the
motion to admit the Suffolk Law alumni to
the Supreme Court Bar. The group received
a surprise visit from both Chief Justice John
Roberts and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
during the reception. Photographs by Michael
Carpenter

1.
Suffolk University Law School’s newly admitted
members of the U.S. Supreme Court Bar and
D.C. area alumni.

SUFFOLK LAW
SCHOOL
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
NETWORK
DINNER
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 2019
Bedford Village Inn, Bedford, NH

The Suffolk Law New Hampshire Alumni
Chapter gathered at the Bedford Village
Inn for its annual meeting and dinner.
Photographs by Annamarie M. Mueller

3
2.
Suffolk University
Law School
New Hampshire
Alumni Network

3.
Jennifer Parent
JD’95, president
of the NH Alumni
Network

49

SUFFOLK LAW
ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Winter 2020

�NON-PROFIT
US POSTAGE
PAID
SUFFOLK
UNIVERSITY
120 TREMONT STREET
BOSTON, MA 02108–4977

GIVE TO SUFFOLK LAW ONLINE
tinyurl.com/SuffolkLawDonation

JOIN
THE
FROST
SOCIETY
Consider a bequest—a gift through your will or
trust. You can direct your gift to meet Suffolk’s
greatest needs or to support a specific
program that is meaningful to you.

Establishing a bequest enrolls you in Suffolk’s Frost Society.
Please contact Randy F. Stabile, Esq., Office of Advancement,
617-573-8029, rstabile@suffolk.edu.

SAVE T HE

DATE!
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL

REUNION DINNER
AND AWARDS CEREMONY

APRIL

04
5:30 P.M.

If your degree year ends
in a “0” or “5” and you are
interested in becoming
a class representative,
contact Alison E. McManus
at amcmanus@suffolk.edu

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SUFFOL K L AW
Suffolk University Law School Alumni Magazine

e-Leaks: Byte
Data with a Dangerous

•

Spring 2005

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Page IFC

CALENDAR 2005–06
UPCOMING EVENTS
ADVANCED LEGAL STUDIES

ALUMNI EVENTS

All courses are held at Sargent Hall unless
otherwise noted. The following schedule is
tentative. Contact ALS Director Carole
Wagan for more information at
617.573.8627, als@suffolk.edu or
visit www.law.suffolk.edu/als.

For more information, contact
the Office of Alumni Relations
at 617.305.1999 or visit
www.law.suffolk.edu.

JUNE

Alumni Afternoon at the
Pawtucket Red Sox
Pawtucket Red Sox vs. Red Wings
Sunday, August 21
11am buffet, 1pm game
9th Annual PawSox Fan Fest
following the game
McCoy Stadium, Pawtucket, RI

Confronting Crawford: Understanding
Its Meaning and Impact
Thursday, September 22
Current Legal Issues in Higher Education
Friday, September 30
OCTOBER

North Shore Alumni
Essex River Cocktail Cruise
Wednesday, June 22
6pm
Essex, MA
JULY
Boston Chapter 1st Thursday Happy Hour
Thursday, July 7
6:30-8:30pm
Hub Pub, Boston
Boston Chapter Schooner Sailing
Saturday, July 23
6-8pm
Salem, MA
Alumni Night at Fenway Park
Boston Red Sox vs. Minnesota Twins
Friday, July 29
7pm
AUGUST
Alumni Night at the Lowell Spinners
Saturday, August 6
3:30pm Buffet at the Gator Pit
5pm Game
Alumni Afternoon at Tanglewood
Sunday, August 14
2:30pm concert
4:30pm reception
Lenox, MA

Have you moved?
Please send your change of address to:
Office of Alumni Relations
Suffolk University Law School
120 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617.305.1999
fax: 617.573.8151
email: lawalumni@suffolk.edu

Alumni Night at Fenway Park
Boston Red Sox vs. Detroit Tigers
Friday, August 26
7pm
SEPTEMBER
Principles &amp; Pitfalls of Contract Drafting
Thursdays: September 15 and 29
Critical Federal &amp; State Developments in
Medicaid &amp; Trusts: 8th Annual Northeast
Elder Law Symposium
Friday, September 16
Southbridge, MA
Alumni Association
Board of Directors Meeting
Saturday, September 17
8:30am
Sargent Hall, Boston

Dean’s Advisory Committee Meeting
Friday and Saturday,
September 30 and October 1
Sargent Hall, Boston
New York Chapter
Alumni Tour and Luncheon
Museum of Modern Art
Saturday, October 22
11:20am
New York City, NY
Labor and Employment Issues
in Immigration Law
Thursday, October 27
33rd Annual National Labor Relations
Board/Department of Labor Conference
Thursday, October 27
NOVEMBER
Annual Alumni Awards Dinner
Wednesday, November 2
6pm
Seaport Hotel, Boston
Applying Assisted Reproductive
Technology to Family Law
Thursdays: November 3 and 17

Alumni Volunteer Leadership Day
Saturday, September 17
10am-3pm
Sargent Hall, Boston

When Does Life End?: Exploring the Legal,
Medical &amp; Ethical Issues Concerning
End-of-Life Decisionmaking
Friday, November 4

Suffolk University 7th Annual 5K
Road Race and Family Walk
Sunday, September 18
9am registration
Charles River, Boston

Ethical Issues in the Use of Technology
Thursday, November 10
4-6pm
Edwards &amp; Angell LLP, New York City, NY

We want to hear from you.
Please send letters to the editor
and class notes to:
Suffolk Law Magazine
Creative Services/UMS
41 Temple Street
Boston, MA 02114
617.573.8098
fax: 617.305.1987
email: lawmag@suffolk.edu

Resolving Uncertainty in Biotechnology
Patent Law: Patentability, Experimental
Use and Safe Harbor
Friday, November 18
DECEMBER
Writing Workshop
Friday, December 2
Bus Trip to New York City
Saturday, December 3
Details TBA

�9897.txt

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Page 01

SUFFOLK LAW
Suffolk University Law School Alumni Magazine

•

Spring 2005

S U F F O L K L AW
David J. Sargent
President, Suffolk University
Robert H. Smith
Dean
John C. Deliso
Associate Dean
Bernard V. Keenan
Associate Dean
Marc G. Perlin
Associate Dean
Gail Ellis
Dean of Admissions
Beverly Coles-Roby
Dean of Students
Diane Frankel Schoenfeld
Director of Alumni Relations
Deborah Beaudette
Director of Communications
Lori Friedman
Major Gift Officer
Executive Editor
Midge Wilcke
Editor for Public Affairs
Rosemarie Sansone

FEATURES
10

PUTTING A LOCK ON E-LEAKS
By Sara Romer
Electronic technology has revolutionized many aspects of the
practice of law. But the little-known perils of cyberspace may put
you and your clients at risk. Some tech-savvy Suffolk Law faculty
and alumni provide tips about how to better protect your data—
and your practice.

18

SUFFOLK LAW CLINICS
By Jennifer Becker
Thousands of students have participated in the Law School’s clinical
programs during the past four decades, many maintaining that it
was the best experience of their law school careers. Three recent
student advocates tell us why.

Managing Editor
Sara Romer
Copy Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Contributing Writers
Jennifer Becker
Karen Crowell
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Nancy Kelleher
Mariellen Norris
Maria Palomino
Steven Withrow
Art Direction
Donald Suthard
Design
Ginny Warren

DEPARTMENTS

Production Manager
Sarah Medina

2

FROM THE DEAN

Cover Photography
Nick Koudis, Photodisc

3

LAW SCHOOL BRIEFS

7

FACULTY SPOTLIGHT

8

FACULTY NEWS

16

RECOGNITION

17

STUDENT PROFILE

20

ALUMNI NEWS AND PROFILES

26

CLASS NOTES

IBC

PROFILE IN GIVING

Photography
John Gillooly
Phil Humnicky
Joe Kenemore
Tracy Powell
Don Taylor

S U F F O L K L AW magazine is
published twice a year by Suffolk
University Law School. It is produced by Creative Services and
distributed free of charge to alumni,
students, friends, parents, faculty
and staff. The views expressed in
this magazine do not necessarily
reﬂect the opinions of the editors
or the official policies of the Law
School or the University.

�9897.txt

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Page 02

FROM THE DEAN

Nowhere is the Law School’s tradition
of public service and practical approach
to legal education more apparent than
within our nine clinical programs. In
the past four decades, thousands of
students have participated in our clinics,
most believing the experience to have
been a highlight of their legal education
and invaluable to their professional
careers. In our story, three recent
graduates explain how their experiences
have helped to shape the lawyers
they’ve become.

As we approach Suffolk University

Law School’s centennial anniversary in
2006, we need not look far to appreciate
the tremendous growth and change
we’ve experienced, not only as a
University, but also within the everyday
practice of law.

S U F F O L K L AW

A photograph from the University’s
archive, reprinted on our back cover,
shows Massachusetts Governor Calvin
Coolidge presiding over the laying of
the cornerstone of Suffolk Law School
on Derne Street in 1920. Today Sargent
Hall faces the newest addition to the
Suffolk campus. The University is now
the master tenant at 73 Tremont Street—
the gracious 13-story neoclassical building
at the corner of Beacon Street that was
built in 1895.

2

Within most law ﬁrms and businesses
today, even the most ardent resisters of
the computer age have succumbed to
the lure of email and other trappings
of our technological revolution. In our
cover story, “e-Leaks: Data with a
Dangerous Byte,” Editor Sara Romer
explores how the practice of law has
been transformed as the paper trails of
the past have become unending mazes
of megabytes. With the click of a
mouse, attorneys transmit information
with ease—but are they disclosing more
than they intend? As some tech-savvy
Suffolk Law professors and alumni
reveal, the threats posed by electronic
communications and metadata can
seriously compromise attorney-client
conﬁdentiality, a client’s case, and a ﬁrm’s
practice—our experts offer practical
advice to help protect them all.

We also highlight Janis Schiff, JD ’83,
a real estate partner in the Washington,
DC, office of Holland &amp; Knight LLP, who
launched the Rising Stars mentoring and
leadership program to promote women
into leadership positions within the legal
community; and David Chesnoff, JD ’79,
a criminal defense attorney with
Goodman &amp; Chesnoff in Los Angeles,
whose high-proﬁle courtroom success
stories include clients Shaquille O’Neal,
Andre Agassi, US District Court Judge
Harry Claiborne, and Britney Spears.

In this issue, we mark the milestone
reached by one of our most esteemed
administrators, recognize the spirited
contributions of one of our faculty
members, and note the accomplishments
and generosity of several distinguished
lawyers among our alumni. At the same
time, we announce three exciting new
Suffolk appointments.

I am delighted to introduce three new
members of the Suffolk community.
Patricia Maguire Meservey joined the
University as provost and academic vice
president in November. David James,
an attorney from San Diego, California,
with signiﬁcant legal recruiting and hiring
experience, became the Law School’s
director of career development in April.
Lori Friedman, JD ’87, rejoined the
Suffolk Law community in November
as our major gift officer.

It is with enormous pride that we
recognize Lorraine Cove and celebrate
her 25 years of extraordinary service as
Law School registrar. A member of the
Suffolk community for the past 35 years,
Lorraine’s dedicated contributions to
the Law School are legendary among
students, alumni, and members of the
faculty and administration alike.
Associate Professor Renée Landers
brings to Suffolk Law not only her
expertise in health care, administrative,
and constitutional law, but a passionate
sense of leadership that permeates each
of her endeavors, within and outside of
the classroom. She currently serves on a
study panel of the National Academy
of Social Insurance, exploring how
Medicare can reduce racial and ethnic
disparities in health care.
Judge Paul J. Fitzpatrick, BA ’56, JD
’57, found his niche in trial work and
has enjoyed a distinguished career in
public service. His generosity and
foresight, and desire to provide ﬁnancial
assistance to future Suffolk Law students,
led him to establish The Honorable Paul
J. Fitzpatrick Scholarship Fund,
endowed through a charitable gift annuity.
Judge Fitzpatrick’s gift is part of the
University’s Centennial Scholarship
Program, designed to recognize 100
donors making gifts of $50,000 or more
in honor of our centennial anniversary.

Finally, I encourage you to attend our
alumni reunion weekend, June 3-5, for
graduates from class years ending in “0”
or “5”. A series of not-to-be-missed events
are planned, including performances by
the Boston Pops, dinner at the John
Joseph Moakley Federal Courthouse,
and historic tours of Boston. We hope
that you will enjoy visiting with us and
reacquainting yourself with your fellow
alumni. For more information, please
see www.law.suffolk.edu/offices/
alumni/reunion.

Best wishes,

Robert H. Smith
Dean and Professor of Law

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L AW S C H O O L B R I E F S

New Provost Focuses on
Academic Initiatives
Patricia Maguire Meservey joined the

“Dr. Meservey joins the University during

University as provost and academic vice

a period of tremendous growth, with new

president on November 1, 2004.

programs constantly in development and

Academic initiatives are the priority of
the Provost’s Office, and Meservey will
work closely with the deans to expand
and reﬁne the University’s comprehensive
academic programs.

multiple campuses here and abroad,”
said President David J. Sargent. “She
brings a strong track record of success in
establishing new positions of responsibility
in the academic arena, and we look
forward to her involvement as we prepare

“Suffolk University is a premier urban

for Suffolk’s second century.”

institution with a focus on excellence
and a commitment to diversity, access,
community service, and leadership in
a global society. I am very pleased to
be part of this community,” she said.
Meservey holds a PhD in higher education
administration from Boston College; a
certificate from the Institute for
Educational Management, Graduate
School of Education at Harvard
University; an MS in parent-child health
nursing from Boston University; a BS in
nursing from Boston University; and a
diploma in nursing from Faulkner
Hospital in Jamaica Plain. She is a fellow
of the American Academy of Nursing.

Meservey has had a distinguished career
in higher education, most recently as
vice provost for faculty and budget at
Northeastern University. While at
Northeastern, Meservey also served as
special assistant to the president; interim
vice provost for enrollment management;
director of the Center for Community
Health Education, Research and Service;
and director of the Graduate Medical and
Nursing Education Partnership Program.
She also held administrative and faculty
positions at Boston University’s School
of Nursing and, as a registered nurse,
has served on the staffs of several
Boston hospitals.

Career Development Director Named
David James, an

became the hiring attorney in 1991,

Lawyer magazine and a member of the

attorney from San

recruiting law students, making

American Society of Writers on Legal

Diego, California,

presentations at law school campuses

Subjects, he has authored more than 50

has been named

throughout the country concerning legal

articles, primarily on career-related topics.

the Law School’s

career options, and mentoring new

director of career

attorneys in the office.

development.

James received his undergraduate
degree cum laude from the University of

An active member of the National

California, Los Angeles, and was a graduate

James served with the City Attorney’s

Association for Law Placement (NALP),

student in psychology and counseling at

Office of San Diego for more than 20

James has served on its board of directors.

the University of Minnesota. He earned

years, most recently as senior deputy city

He currently serves as a member of NALP’s

his JD degree from the University of the

attorney. In 1985 he joined the hiring

Research Advisory Council and as the

Pacific, McGeorge School of Law, in

committee for the City Attorney’s Office

group’s liaison to the ABA Government

Sacramento, California.

and has since interviewed more than

and Public Sector Lawyers Division. A

2,500 lawyers and law students. He

contributing editor of the ABA’s Student

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Donahue Lecture Series
Showcases National Scholars
The annual Donahue lecture series began
in October with the Honorable Rosemary
Barkett of the US Court of Appeals for the
11th Circuit speaking on “Tyranny of
Labels.” Barkett was the first woman
justice on the Florida Supreme Court and
is the recipient of numerous prestigious

Hon. Rosemary Barkett

Jack M. Balkin

Charles R. Lawrence III

honors, including the Latin Business and
Professional Women Lifetime Achievement
Award and The Margaret Brent Women
Lawyers of Achievement Award presented
by the ABA Commission on Women in
the Profession.
In March, Jack M. Balkin delivered
“Disturbing the Universe: How Social
Movements Change the Constitution.”
Balkin, a prominent legal theorist and
constitutional scholar, is Yale Law School’s
Knight Professor of Constitutional Law and
the First Amendment as well as the director

Balkin’s work spans many disciplines,

The Donahue lecture series is named in

from philosophy to politics, and from

honor of the Honorable Frank J. Donahue,

theories of cultural evolution to legal and

JD ’21, the longest serving associate

musical interpretation.

justice of the Massachusetts Superior

The ﬁnal lecture, “Race, Democracy and
Education,” was presented by Georgetown
University Law Center Professor Charles R.
Lawrence III in April. Lawrence is among
the leading voices in critical race theory

Court. As chairman of the Law School
Committee of the Board of Trustees, Judge
Donahue served an active role in the
expansion of the faculty, library, and
other Law School facilities.

and has written numerous articles on race

Each lecture serves as a basis for a

relations, anti-discrimination law, and

lead article to be published in the

equal protection.

Suffolk University Law Review, a

of the Information Society Project.

sponsor of the series.

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The Future of Sentencing: Policy and Practice

4

National Moot Court Competition Held at Sargent Hall

Held on September 23, 2004, the program was co-sponsored by the
Center for Advanced Legal Studies, Macaronis Institute for Trial and Appellate
Advocacy, Moakley Archive and Institute, Suffolk Chapter of the American
Constitutional Society, and Flaschner Judicial Institute. Pictured are several of
the distinguished jurists, educators, and policy experts who participated on
the panel. Top Row: (L to R) Hon. Peter W. Agnes, Jr., Mass. Superior Court;
Hon. Charles M. Grabau, Mass. Superior Court; Hon. Robert Mulligan,
Chief Justice for Administration and Management. Bottom Row: (L to R) Marc
Mauer, assistant director, Sentencing Project, Washington, DC; Prof. Stephen
Saltzburg, chair, ABA Justice Kennedy Commission and Howrey Professor of
Trial Advocacy, Litigation and Professional Responsibility, George Washington
University Law School; Honorable Nancy Gertner, US District Court for the
District of Massachusetts; Hon. John J. Irwin, director, Macaronis Institute.

The Region 1 Round of the National Moot Court Competition was held at
Suffolk University Law School on November 19 and 20, 2004. Suffolk’s
team reached the semi-ﬁnals, competing against the team from Boston
College Law School. Pictured are members of the Suffolk Law team and
several of the judges from the ﬁnal argument: (L to R) Kristin Ferris, JD ‘05;
Lauren Koblitz, JD ‘05; Hon. Edward Harrington, US District Court; Dean
Robert H. Smith; Hon. Thomas Horgan, Boston Municipal Court; Suzanne
Breselor, JD ‘05; and coaches Julie Baker, Suffolk Legal Practice Skills
instructor; and Stuart Hurowitz, Esq. The Hon. Mark Kantrowitz of the
Massachusetts Appeals Court presided but was unavailable for the photo.

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L AW S C H O O L B R I E F S

Centennial Scholarship Program Builds on Strong Start
Established to recognize Suffolk’s Centennial in 2006, the Centennial Scholarship
Program has grown to include more than $2.9 million in endowment support through the
generosity of 31 donors. The program is well on its way toward reaching its goal of
recognizing 100 Centennial Scholarship benefactors.
Centennial scholarships serve as tangible evidence of Suffolk’s commitment to recruit
and retain an exceptionally talented student body. The following donors made new or
additional scholarship commitments of $50,000 or more as of March, embracing the
mission of the Centennial Scholarship Program.
For more information about how you can help transform the student experience
at Suffolk University Law School, contact Lori Friedman in the Development Office
at 617.305.3233.
Centennial Scholarship Donors
The William F. Connell
Charitable Trust

NEWIRE (New England Women
in Real Estate)

Robert F. Muse, JD ’50*

Margaret E. Ford Trust*

Daniel N. Ford, BA ’77

Brian G. Doherty, JD ’77*

David J. Sargent, JD ’54,
LLD ’78 (Hon.)*

Alice Moore Trust*
Robert W. Casby, JD ’82*

Gerard F. Doherty, JD ’60, and
Marilyn Doherty*

James G. Sokolove, JD ’69*

John C. Scully, DCS ’86 (Hon.),
and Barbara A. Scully

Professor and Mrs. Clifford E.
Elias, LLD ’99 (Hon.)*
Hortense K. Seybolt

Donald J. Scott, JD ’41*

Richard M. Rosenberg,
BSJ ’52, DCS ’91 (Hon.), and
Barbara Rosenberg

The Estate of Arnold W. Olsson,
JD ’43, and Edith Olsson*

Michael S. Smith, BSBA ’61
and Larry E. Smith, BSBA ’65

Thomas J. Ryan, JD ’74, and
Margaret Ryan*

John J. O’Connor, BSBA ’73

The Honorable Salvatore J.
Basile, JD ‘39, LLM ‘42, and
Jennie B. Basile*

John N. Wilson, Jr.*

James W. O’Brien Foundation*

Campus Stores of
Massachusetts, Inc.

Kathryn and Thomas Battillo*

Suffolk University Law School
Class of 1969*
Richard A. Voke, BA ’70, JD ’74

Michael J. McCormack, JD ’72*

Foley Hoag LLP*

The Honorable Paul J. Fitzpatrick,
BA ’56, JD ’57*

Donors are listed in order of
contribution
* Scholarship beneﬁts Suffolk Law School

Pamela Scangas, BA ’72, and
Patricia Scangas

Paralegal Studies Program Celebrates 20 Years
Certiﬁcate Program, later renamed the
Paralegal Studies Program. In 1992,
bachelor’s and associate’s degrees were

Suffolk Law is Regional Champion
for Fourth Straight Year
Two Suffolk teams placed in the New England
regional ﬁnals of the National Trial Competition
held at the Law School on February 10-13.
Christopher DeCoste, JD '05, and Susannah
Reilly, JD '05, defeated Maine, Vermont, and
Western New England. Jason Drori, JD '05, and
Cynthia Erickson, JD '05, defeated Boston
College in the finals, and represented the
region in the National Phase of the competition in
San Antonio, Texas. This is the fourth consecutive
year that Suffolk will be going to the nationals as
regional champion. Erickson also won the “Best
Advocate” award. (L to R) Professor Tim Wilton
(coach); Cynthia Erickson, JD ‘05; Bobby
Hazelton, JD ‘02 (coach); Chris Perillo;
and Jason Drori, JD ‘05.

added, and, in 1993, ABA approval was
first obtained. As of May 2004, 357
students had completed the program.
As part of the celebration, Boston attorney
Rob Toomey taught the ALS program “Law
Firm Survival Skills: How an Understanding
(L to R) Ellen Burke, Daniel Keefe and Paralegal
Studies Program Director and Associate Professor
Lynne Dahlborg during the ﬁrst presentation of the
alumni service award, posthumously, to Mary
Keefe, BS ‘03.

In October, Suffolk University’s Paralegal
Studies Program celebrated its 20th
anniversary with an Advanced Legal
Studies (ALS) program and reception.

of Personality Types Contributes to
Success.” A panel discussion featured
area paralegals and program alumni.
Paralegal Studies Program Director and
Associate Professor Lynne Dahlborg
presented the ﬁrst alumni service award,
posthumously, to Mary Keefe, BS ’03, for

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her exemplary service to the program. The

The University’s training of paralegals

award was accepted by her husband,

began in 1985 with the Lawyer’s Assistant

Daniel Keefe, and her mother, Ellen Burke.

5

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L AW S C H O O L B R I E F S

Distinguished Visiting Professor Focuses on International Law
John E. Noyes, a professor of law at California Western School of Law in San Diego,
California since 1982, joined Suffolk University Law School as the distinguished
visiting law professor for the spring semester. An expert in international law, Noyes
has written extensively about the law of the sea and other international topics. His
current interests include international dispute settlement and the relationship between
religion and international law.
Noyes also has taught as a visiting professor at Victoria University of Wellington in
New Zealand, Roger Williams University School of Law, Wake Forest University School
of Law, and the University of Connecticut School of Law. He is an active participant in
the work of several international organizations, and is currently the US member of the
International Law Association’s Committee on the Outer Limits of the Continental
Shelf and a vice president of the American Branch of the International Law
Association. While at Suffolk University Law School, Noyes taught International
Law and International Law of the Sea.
John E. Noyes

Suffolk Law
Alumna Named
Major Gift Officer
Lori Friedman, JD
’87, rejoined the Law
School community
in November as
McLaughlin Fellow Marina Moriarty, JD ‘06 and
Drinan Fellow Lisa Oliver, JD ‘06.

Fenton Award recipients (L to R) Sarah Temple
Blodgett, JD ‘05; Jessica L. Tripp, JD ‘05; and
Catherine M. Hobbs, JD ‘05.

Drinan, McLaughlin, and Fenton Awards Named
The Thomas J. Drinan Memorial and Paul R. McLaughlin Memorial fellowships are
awarded each year to second-year day or third-year evening students for summer
internships in criminal law. Eligible summer placements include federal and state
prosecutors’ offices, public defender agencies, and the Massachusetts Attorney
General’s Office.

the new major gift
officer. Friedman is filling the post
previously held by Shelagh Foley O’Brien,
who was promoted to the position of
campaign director.
Friedman has been involved in fundraising
for the past 10 years. She previously
worked at the School of the Museum of
Fine Arts and, most recently, at Facing
History and Ourselves, where she raised

Marina Moriarty, JD ‘06, was awarded the McLaughlin Fellowship, and Lisa Oliver, JD

more than $7 million as the organization’s

’06, received the Drinan Fellowship. Moriarty will intern at the Suffolk County District

associate director for corporate and

Attorney’s Office, Dorchester Division, and Oliver will work in the Criminal Division of

foundation relations. She played a key

the US Attorney’s Office in Boston.

leadership role in her work with donors

S U F F O L K L AW

For more information about these fellowships and the Suffolk Law graduates for whom
they are named, see www.law.suffolk.edu/offices/career/fellowships/fellowships.cfm.

and with members of several prominent
Boston law ﬁrms in securing donor support.

The John E. Fenton, Jr., Public Service Awards are given annually to three Suffolk Law
School students who exemplify Judge Fenton’s commitment to public service and are
pursuing post-graduate employment with qualifying government and public interest
employers. Sarah Temple Blodgett, JD ’05, Catherine M. Hobbs, JD ’05, and Jessica L.
Tripp, JD ’05, were recently named this year’s Fenton award recipients. The Fenton

6

throughout the Northeast and Florida

awards are Suffolk Law School’s highest paid public service grants.

A Suffolk Law honors graduate, Friedman
was president of the Student Bar
Association. She clerked for the justices of
the Massachusetts Superior Court and was
a litigator in private practice for six years.

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FACULTY SPOTLIGHT

Landers’ Time
She says she’s often found herself at the right place
at the right time. But those who have worked with
her know that it’s much more than that: Renée
Landers is a spirited leader whose conﬁdence
and enthusiasm deﬁne each of her pursuits.
associate professor, Suffolk University Law School.
Attorney, Ropes &amp; Gray. Assistant attorney general with the US
Department of Justice. Deputy general counsel with the US
Department of Health and Human Services during the Clinton
administration. First woman of color and first law professor
to become president of the Boston Bar Association. With
each new challenge, Renée Landers leads confidently and
passionately—with spirit.
Reﬂecting on her various roles, Landers says she feels fortunate
to have had extraordinary opportunities to serve the public as
well as her clients in private practice. She says she often found
herself at the right place at the right time. “In life, timing is
everything,” she says with a warm smile.
Today, Landers delights in the energy of the classroom, teaching,
guiding, and encouraging her students. An expert in health care,
administrative, and constitutional law, Landers says she’s
extremely happy to be teaching at Suffolk. “We have strong
students who bring highly relevant and diverse backgrounds
and experience to their studies, and a distinguished faculty
that has high expectations for the quality of the academic
experience,” said Landers, who was born in Springfield,
Illinois, and graduated from Harvard College in 1977 and
Boston College Law School in 1985. “It feels great to be part
of an incredibly lively intellectual community.”
In 2002 Landers co-authored “Research in the Information
Age,” an article that addresses regulations that attempt to
balance privacy interests with the advancement of research in
the health care ﬁeld. She also serves on a study panel of the
National Academy of Social Insurance, exploring how Medicare
can reduce racial and ethnic disparities in health care—relating
directly to issues covered in her Health Law and Constitutional
Law courses.

Landers is past president of Harvard University’s Board of
Overseers and currently serves on the board of directors of
WGBH. She has been actively involved in the Big Sister
Association of Greater Boston for more than a decade, having
served as president for three years. She’s now serving on the
organization’s board of directors, together with her husband,
Thomas L. Barrette, Jr., executive vice president and general
counsel for a wireless technology company.
Landers and Barrette live in Watertown with their 9-year-old
son, Nelson. During Little League games, Dad can be seen
coaching on the field and Mom cheering from the stands.
At home, mother and son enjoy reading Harry Potter books
together because “we’re too scared to read them alone,”
she laughs.
Dean Robert H. Smith, who was a colleague when Landers
was an associate professor at Boston College Law School from
1988 to 1993, is delighted to be working with her again.
“Renée is a multi-talented individual,” says Smith. “What
impresses me the most is Renée’s range of skills, the range of
roles in which she excels, and the range of people she has
worked with over the years who rave about her professionally
and personally. We’re very lucky to have her here.” •
by Tony Ferullo

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FACULTY NEWS

Andrew Beckerman-Rodau
presented “Law School Teaching” at
the Conference on Legal Education
sponsored by Gonzaga University
School of Law in Spokane,
Washington, in July. In October a
second presentation was made as part
of the ABA Legal Education Section
Program at Rutgers University Law
School, in New Jersey, titled
“Pedagogy to Practice: Maximizing
Legal Education with Technology.”
Carter Bishop co-authored with
Daniel Kleinberger and Thomas Geu,
“Charging Orders and the New
Uniform Limited Partnership Act:
Dispelling Rumors of Disaster” which
was published in 18 Probate and
Property 30 (2004). A second article,
“Diversity Jurisdiction,” also coauthored with Daniel Kleinberger,
was published in 14 Business Law
Today 31 (2004).

Sara Dillon’s article, “The New
American Hegemony?, Looking for
the Progressive Empire: Where is the
European Union’s Foreign Policy?”
examines the persistent problem of
the European Union in constructing a
uniﬁed political and legal role in the
context of foreign policy. It was
published in 19 Connecticut Journal
of International Law 275 (2004).
Valerie C. Epps was a panelist on
“The Use of Force and the Geneva
Conventions,” at New England School
of Law, and chaired a panel on
“The Implementation of the Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations
after Avena” at the Annual
Conference of the International Law
Association (American Branch) in
New York in October. Her article,
“Resolution of Claims to SelfDetermination: The Expansion
and Creation of Dispute Settlement

Karen Blum received the Suffolk University
Law School Charles P. Kindregan, Jr. Award for
Extraordinary Contributions to Advanced Legal Studies
in September 2004.

S U F F O L K L AW

Eric Blumenson’s book, Reporter’s
Notes to the pre-trial Rules of the
Massachusetts Rules of Criminal
Procedure (2004), was published
by West Publishing Group. He also
presented “Revised Rules of Criminal
Procedure,” to Massachusetts
Continuing Legal Education in July
and later to the Suffolk Lawyers for
Justice in September.

8

Victoria Dodd has been appointed
to the executive committee of the
Association of American Law Schools
(AALS) Section on Education Law.

Mechanisms,” was published in 10
ILSA Journal of International &amp;
Comparative Law 377 (2004).
Steven Ferrey authored several
articles, among them: “Sustainable
Energy, Environmental Policy, and
States’ Rights: Discerning the Energy
Future through the Eye of the
Dormant Commerce Clause” in 12
New York University Environmental
Law Journal 507 (2004) and “Inverting
Choice of Law in the Wired Universe:
Thermodynamics, Mass, and Energy,”
which was published in 45 William
and Mary Law Review (2004).

Keith Fisher presented “The Higher
Calling: Regulation of Lawyers PostEnron,” at the Sloan Interdisciplinary
Workshop Series at Georgetown
University Law Center in May 2004.
The focus of the discussion was the
paper’s application of the public
choice theory to the efficacy of
regulating the legal profession by
state courts and state bar associations
and the author’s proposal for partially
federalizing that regulation. He also
was awarded the 2005 National
Writing Competition Peterson Prize
for his article, “Towards a Basal Tenth
Amendment: A Riposte to National
Bank Preemption of State Consumer
Protection Laws.”
Dwight Golann has been named
co-chair of the Boston Bar
Association’s (BBA) Alternative
Dispute Resolution Committee and
led a seminar on “Insulting First
Offers: Whether to Make Them, How
to Respond” at the BBA. He traveled
to Beijing, China, to lead a seminar
on commercial mediation techniques
sponsored by the Chinese Council for
the Promotion of International Trade
and the CPR Institute for Dispute
Resolution. It inaugurated the USChinese Mediation Center, an
organization created to promote
mediation disputes between American
and Chinese businesses. In addition,
Golann was a guest lecturer on
“Cognitive and Emotional Barriers
to Settlement” in October at Boston
University Law School. His article,
“How to Borrow a Mediator’s
Powers,” was published in 30
Litigation 41 (spring 2004).
Lorie Graham authored “Resolving
Indigenous Claims to SelfDetermination,” published in
10 ILSA Journal of International
&amp; Comparative Law 383 (2004).

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FACULTY NEWS

Lisa Healy, an instructor in the Legal
Practice Skills Program co-authored
with Gerald B. Healy, “Honesty is the
ONLY Policy: Physician Expert
Witnesses in the 21st Century,”
published in the November issue
of Journal of the American College
of Surgeons.
Charles P. Kindregan, Jr., authored
“Same-sex Marriage: The Cultural
Wars and the Lessons of Legal
History,” published in 38 Family
Law Quarterly 427 (2004).
Renée M. Landers was appointed the
2004-2005 chair of the membership
Committee of the American Bar
Association Section on Administrative
Law and Regulatory Practice. In May
2004, she was appointed a member
of the Massachusetts Commission on
Judicial Conduct by Chief Justice for
Administration and Management
Robert Mulligan. In addition she
served on a panel, “Careers in the
Public and Nonproﬁt Sectors,” at the
17th Annual Women’s Leadership
Conference, Harvard University in
September, and was a guest speaker
at a class on compliance issues for
health care organizations at the Health
Care Administration Program held at
Simmons College in October.

Herbert N. Ramy, director of the
Academic Support Program, was
elected to the board of directors at the
Humanizing Legal Education Program.
The organization is an initiative
shared by legal educators seeking to
maximize the overall health, wellbeing, and career satisfaction of law
students and lawyers.
Michael L. Rustad has been
appointed to the advisory board of
the Center for Justice and Democracy.
The board is dedicated to raising
public awareness of the value of our
civil justice system and the campaign
behind the tort reform movement.
He was also named to the board of
advisers, Intellectual Property Program
at the University of Florida. He
continues to co-author many articles
with Professor Thomas H. Koenig at
Northeastern University, including
“Punitive Damages in Medical
Malpractice: A New Audit” in a leading
publication for nurses about legal
issues, 4 LNC Resources: Where
Litigation &amp; Health Care Come
Together 1 and “Cybertorts and
Legal Lag: An Empirical Analysis”
in 13 Southern California (CA)
Interdisciplinary Law Journal 77
(2004). His article “Punitive Damages
in Cyberspace: Where in the World
is the Consumer,” was published in
7 Chapman Law Review 39 (2004).

Miguel Schor presented a paper
in May 2004 titled “The Political
Foundations of the Rule of Law,” Law
and Society Meeting in Chicago, Illinois.
Robert H. Smith has been appointed
chair of the Curriculum Committee of
the ABA Section on Legal Education
and Admission to the Bar. In January,
the committee published the results
of a survey of law school curriculum
developments since 1992.
David C. Yamada has been named
to the advisory committee of the ﬁrst
annual “Voices of Inclusion” Health
Care Disparities Summit, co-sponsored
by the National Conference for
Community and Justice and the
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
Foundation, John F. Kennedy Library
and Museum, Boston. In October
2004, he was the plenary speaker for
“Workplace Bullying and Healthcare
Workers,” at the Annual Convention
of the Massachusetts Nurses
Association in Boston and also
presented, “The Metropolitan Law
School and the Urban Condition”
at the annual conference of the
Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan
Universities, sponsored by Pace
University in New York.

Andrew Perlman made a presentation on the ABA Model Rules on bar admissions
and their unconstitutional limitations on the interstate practice of law at the
Massachusetts Bar Association’s Sustaining Member Reception in Boston in
October. His essay, “Ethics Issues Associated with Electronic Metadata,” explored
the various legal ethics issues that arise as a result of the presence of unseen data
embedded in electronic ﬁles, such as word-processing documents. The essay was
presented at the Center for Advanced Legal Studies conference Ethical Risks from
the Use of Technology. (For more on this topic, see story on pages 10-15.)

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e-Leaks:

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Data with a
Dangerous Byte
by Sara Romer

March 2004: The SCO Group files suit against
DaimlerChrysler for violating the terms of a software
licensing agreement. Through “hidden” text
revealed within the court documents, it soon
becomes widely known that, just days before,
SCO had planned to sue Bank of America.

March 2005: Applicants to six of the nation’s
top business schools manage an unauthorized
e-peek at the schools’ preliminary admissions
decisions—courtesy of instructions in a
BusinessWeek online forum.

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February 2005: The names of 6,000 HIV/AIDS
patients are inadvertently sent in a mass email
to Florida health department workers.

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Whether accidental or intentional, each of these
examples makes clear that the technological
revolution that has transformed our paper trails to
mazes of megabytes has some less-than-desirable
The Good Ol’ Days

consequences. For attorneys, who must represent
their clients and conduct their practices consistent
with ethical rules and standards, some technological
twists are throwing a monkeywrench into the
everyday practice of law.

Until the late 1980s, most lawyers employed legal
secretaries who were well trained at taking and
transcribing dictation and using the correction keys
on IBM Selectric typewriters. Documents were stored
under lock and key in steel ﬁle cabinets, and photocopies
looked and felt like copies. And unless a document
was hand delivered by messenger or sent via facsimile,
nothing was faster than the US Postal Service. To say
that times have changed is an understatement.
“Even partners of mine who predicted that their
computers would be nothing more than oversized
paperweights are now hooked on email,” says Suffolk
Law adjunct faculty member Jerry Cohen, a partner
with Perkins Smith &amp; Cohen, and chair of the ﬁrm’s
Science &amp; Technology Group. “It’s an amazing
thing—it starts with hunting and pecking, and ends
with ten ﬁngers on the keyboard and an abundance
of electronic correspondence.”

S U F F O L K L AW

Suffolk Law Professor Andrew Beckerman-Rodau,
who co-directs the Intellectual Property Law
Concentration with Professor Michael Rustad, says
that even though people tend to know that email is
not terribly secure, its ease and efficiency often make
it the communication tool of choice. “People tend to
be very casual in email, but my rule of thumb is this:
If you wouldn’t be comfortable seeing the contents of
your email message on the front page of The Boston
Globe, you probably shouldn’t be sending it.”

12

Rustad, who co-authored the E-Business Legal
Handbook 2003 (Aspen Law &amp; Business) with
adjunct faculty member Cyrus Daftary, points to
some highly publicized examples of the damaging
role of email in the litigation context. “Email smoking
guns were used to prosecute those individuals and
institutions involved in the collapse of Enron and
provided key evidence in the Arthur Andersen
obstruction-of-justice case as well.”

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“People tend to be
very casual in email,
but my rule of

Cautionary Practices

A Brave New World
The proliferation of email in the typical attorney’s day
requires lawyers to be ready to respond to both clients
and opposing counsel more rapidly and efficiently
than ever before. And there’s lots of room for error.
“I remember people sending faxes to the wrong
locations and being unable to recover them,” says
Tom Turano, JD ’88, a partner with the Intellectual
Property Practice Group of Kirkpatrick &amp; Lockhart
Nicholson Graham LLP (K&amp;LNG), who has taught
Patent Prosecution at Suffolk Law. “But now, people
can even more easily enter an incorrect email address
when sending a message or respond by hitting ‘reply
all’ when they didn’t intend to do so.”
“Once you send an email, you’ve created a digital ﬁle
that can’t easily be destroyed,” says Beckerman-Rodau.
“The message you send gets backed up on the server
in your office, and also on the server within the office
to which it is sent. Realistically, you could never ﬁnd
all of the copies—once it’s out there, you just can’t
get it back.”
“Sometimes you can use the recall tool in Microsoft
Outlook to recall an email message that hasn’t yet
been opened…but usually the recall request occurs
after the message has been read and the damage has
been done,” says Turano.

“At K&amp;LNG, our email system is set up so that even
someone who’s very technologically challenged would
have to work hard to cause trouble,” Turano says. “The
system is designed by our information technology (IT)
department to return any email addressed outside of
the ﬁrm to the sending attorney, with the automatic
comment, ‘one of the addresses you have entered is
outside of this ﬁrm—are you sure you want to send?’
thereby giving the sender a second chance to review
the email message and conﬁrm its transmission.”
Cohen says that within his ﬁrm there are welldocumented policies concerning email and that all
staff members are trained by their IT department and
cautioned as to the potential dangers. “Opinion
letters issued by the firm require approval by two
partners, and certain email transmissions have similar
requirements,” he says.
Mark Greco, director of information technology at
Perkins Smith &amp; Cohen, says he’s seen tremendous
growth in the information technology sector and the
entire Internet and electronic security industry within
the last ﬁve years. Attributing this to the increase in
malicious attacks and hackers, as well as a greater
awareness of terrorist threats after 9/11, Greco says that
more and more security technology is now trickling
down to the corporate level. At Perkins Smith &amp;
Cohen, that means using Open Text’s First Class, an
email program with a strong encryption device that is
proprietary and allows clients to have secure extranet
access to the information they need. “The ﬁrm also
operates on a Macintosh platform rather than a
Windows platform because we believe it to be more
secure,” he says.
Among law ﬁrms, there are a wide range of practices
regarding email and email security, often dependent
upon the size of the ﬁrm and the nature of its practice.
But nearly all lawyers include a disclaimer within their
email transmissions indicating that if the email was
sent to the wrong party or is in obvious error, that the
receiving party should notify the sender and destroy
the information.

thumb is this: If you
wouldn’t be comfortable seeing the
contents of your
email message on
the front page of

The Boston Globe,
you probably
shouldn’t be
sending it. ”
Professor Andrew BeckermanRodau, co-director of Suffolk
Law School’s Intellectual
Property Law Concentration

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S U F F O L K L AW

What many lawyers do not realize is that the electronic
document contains something called metadata that
could reveal your client’s initial instructions…and
make otherwise confidential information available
to opponents.”

“What many lawyers
do not realize is
that the electronic
document contains
something called
metadata that could
reveal your client’s
initial instructions…
and make otherwise
conﬁdential
information available
to opponents. ”
Associate Professor Andrew
Perlman, in “Ethics Issues
Associated with Electronic
Metadata”

“Not all Word

Both the American Bar Association and Massachusetts
Bar Association have issued formal ethics opinions
indicating that a lawyer may transmit client information
through unencrypted email over the Internet without
violating the Model Rules of Professional Conduct
because the transmission affords a reasonable expectation
of privacy. But jurisdictions are currently split as to the
legal rights and duties of those who receive erroneously
sent email messages. And according to Suffolk Law
Associate Professor Andrew Perlman, the ABA’s new
model rule on the issue provides little guidance, stating
that the recipient of an inadvertently disclosed document only has to notify the sender about the mistake.
This approach contrasts with an earlier ABA opinion
that requires the recipient not only to notify the
sender of the mistake, but also to follow the sender’s
instructions about handling the document. The
position adopted by Massachusetts suggests that
lawyers have an ethical obligation to take advantage
of inadvertently disclosed documents and provides an
opportunity for the court to determine the appropriate
use of the material received consistent with the ethical
rules, once the use is challenged.

2003 metadata is
accessed quite this
easily...but no
matter how your
unintentional
information might
be seen on the
screen of a lawyer,
a competitor, or your
brother-in-law, you
probably don’t want
it there.”
Laurie Rowell, in her
InformIT.com article,
“Avoiding Snares and
Gotchas in Word 2003”

MetaMischief
Even if the document forwarded via email is in ﬁnal
form and directed to the appropriate party, certain
metadata—data about data that is stored within the
document—could prove damaging for attorneys and
their clients. Consider this example described by
Perlman, in his article, “Ethics Issues Associated with
Electronic Metadata”:
“Imagine negotiating a contract with opposing
counsel through the exchange of an electronic
document that you created using WordPerfect.
During the negotiations, your client instructs you
to make an important concession in one of the
contract’s provisions. You make the change in the
electronic version of the document, but before
emailing the proposed change to opposing counsel,
your client decides not to offer the concession. You
edit the document back to the original state and
send it to the other party’s attorney.

Metadata stored in Word or WordPerfect document
ﬁles can include information about who wrote the
document, when it was revised, by whom and how,
the name of the computer, network server or hard disk
where the document was saved, ﬁle and case numbers,
and the amount of time spent editing the document.
“In the SCO [v. DaimlerChrysler] case, some of the
‘hidden’ information was disastrously easy to ﬁnd,”
writes Laurie Rowell in “Avoiding Snares and Gotchas
in Word 2003,” an article published in January by
InformIT.com. Rowell is a technical writer who has
worked with a multitude of software and technology
giants, including Microsoft and IBM. “Someone reading
the Word document online just selected either Original
Showing Markup or Final Showing Markup from the
toolbar, and information that had been deleted showed
up right in the text for anyone’s perusal. Not all Word
2003 metadata is accessed quite this easily…but no
matter how your unintentional information might be
seen on the screen of a lawyer, a competitor, or your
brother-in-law, you probably don’t want it there.”
Whether fact or ﬁction, some say that lawyers ﬁrst
became aware of the metadata morass several years ago
when a client came across hidden text that revealed
billing discrepancies. Within the legal community,
awareness of metadata is growing, but is still often
limited to those practicing within larger ﬁrms and
corporate law departments. A Suffolk Law Advanced
Legal Studies program titled “Ethical Jeopardy” focused
on this and related topics last June. Co-sponsored with
the Law School’s Intellectual Property Concentration
and the Boston Patent Law Association, the program
left many attendees with their jaws dropped. “People
were shocked to learn about the vast amounts of
information that could come back to haunt them,”
says Beckerman-Rodau, who served on the
program faculty.
“Lawyers at my ﬁrm were previously unaware of the
threats posed by metadata,” says John Cloherty III,
JD ’93, who attended the seminar. “And it’s my
experience that most small ﬁrms are not aware of the
problem.” Cloherty practices insurance defense and
municipal law with the 14-member ﬁrm of Pierce,
Davis &amp; Perritano, LLP, in Boston. “We’re now
cautioning our clients and looking at our documents
a bit differently as a result,” he says.

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S U F F O L K L AW

“My guess is that in
most large firms,
the IT department

Firm Remedies
There are a variety of ways for law ﬁrms to eliminate
metadata, either by altering certain computer settings
or through software programs speciﬁcally designed to
delete metadata. According to Perlman, Microsoft has
provided an add-in for Office 2003/XP that enables
users to remove metadata from Word, Excel, and
PowerPoint documents. Rowell writes that the
program is an effective scrubber, but cautions that
the add-in does not work with all versions of Word,
or with digitally signed ﬁles or those with informationrights management protection—in those instances,
third-party applications such as Workshare Protect
or iScrub may be used.
At the large ﬁrm where Turano previously practiced,
attorneys were trained to use the Metadata Assistant
scrubber to eliminate metadata in their documents
before transmitting them. At K&amp;LNG, the IT
department has conﬁgured its system to hold electronic
documents until the sending attorney responds to a
prompt asking whether or not the document should
be scrubbed. “Our IT department is outstanding—
recognized by CIO Magazine (Chief Information
Officer Magazine) as a CIO100 Award winner for the
last three years. My guess is that in most large ﬁrms,
the IT department trains ﬁrm staff to run the scrubbing
applications themselves and that in smaller ﬁrms these
applications are unlikely to exist at all.”
Some ﬁrms, including Perkins Smith &amp; Cohen, train
users to cut and paste documents into new documents,
rather than having the original documents scrubbed.
More often than not, they also convert document ﬁles
to Adobe Acrobat’s Portable Document Format (PDF)
files as a way of avoiding metadata misuse and
unauthorized tampering. “Though not foolproof, the
PDF makes everyone more comfortable,” says Greco,
“and many of the larger ﬁrms and smaller tech-savvy
ﬁrms have done the same.” Perlman cautions that
though the PDF conversion process eliminates the
metadata contained in the original Word or WordPerfect
document ﬁles, the newly created PDF ﬁle contains
metadata of its own, independent of the original
document. “As the US Department of Justice recently

learned when conﬁdential information it had ‘removed’
within a report issued as a PDF was later revealed,
revisions made to the PDF itself result in another
layer of metadata that attorneys need to address,” says
Perlman. Adds Rustad, “New software is available that
makes it possible to detect altered documents that
may then become the foundation for a spoliation-ofevidence lawsuit on the civil side and possible jail
time on the criminal side.” Law ﬁrms and business
entities need to conduct legal audits to avoid liability
and protect their rights.

Click with Caution
Recent technological advances have transformed
much of how lawyers practice. Though just a few of
the technology-related concerns are highlighted here,
the list is endless. How should electronic information
be securely stored on a long-term basis? How can
confidential electronic information be effectively
destroyed once a matter is closed? How many data
backups are really needed? Must a sledgehammer be
used to delete data from an old hard drive about to be
retired? Are the risks of accessing the Internet through
a Wi-Fi (wireless ﬁdelity network) connection too
great to justify its use? How will the increasing use of
electronic discovery affect the practice of law?

trains firm staff to
run the [metadata]
scrubbing applications themselves
and that in smaller
firms these applications are unlikely to
exist at all.”
Tom Turano, JD ’88
Kirkpatrick &amp; Lockhart
Nicholson Graham LLP

With each new innovative change, the fundamental
challenge for attorneys remains the same: to act
competently and with reasonable care to safeguard
conﬁdential client information. As Suffolk Law faculty
and alumni agree, an awareness of current technology
and its capabilities and an understanding of the
potential risks and consequences involved will enable
attorneys to proceed—informed and cautiously—to
the next mouse click. •

S U F F O L K L AW

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RECOGNITION

A Suffolk Law Cornerstone
Celebrates 25 years as registrar
lorraine d. cove has never been comfortable having the
spotlight shine on her.
Despite her preference to shy away from attention, Cove was
applauded recently as she celebrated her 25th anniversary as
registrar of Suffolk University Law School. The assistant to the
dean has been one of the most respected and influential
members of the Law School community for the past 35 years—
a milestone achieved by only a few.
“I’ve always considered Suffolk Law my ‘home away from
home,’” says Cove, who is known for her dedicated service,
normally arriving to her office early and leaving late. “In fact,
my husband (Robert Cove, JD ’72) would say I spend more
time at work than I do at home.”
Since she ﬁrst arrived at Suffolk in 1969, when the registrar’s
office was tucked away on the fourth ﬂoor of the Donahue
Building and responsible for handling all students, as well as
applicants, Cove has seen it all. She proudly walks through
Sargent Hall each day and is continually in awe of the total
transformation Suffolk Law has made over the years.
“I can’t believe all that we’ve accomplished to get where we
are today,” says Cove. “With the Centennial approaching [in
2006], these are very exciting times to be at Suffolk Law, and
I’m delighted to be part of it all.”

S U F F O L K L AW

Although times have certainly changed during Cove’s
distinguished tenure, her motivation to do what she does—
guiding and inspiring students to reach their academic
goals—has always remained the same. “If you can help to
make someone’s life less complex and see them achieve what
they set out to do, that’s what it’s all about,” she explains.
“Students with obstacles to overcome give me the biggest thrill
and satisfaction. This is probably most evident when I see
them at graduation.”

16

Cove’s popularity with Suffolk Law students is legendary.
In fact, she received The Malcolm M. Donahue Award for
Excellence in Administration a total of 14 times. This distinguished
award, honoring the administrator of the year, is voted on by
the entire student body.
“She has won the award so many times, I suggested that it be
named the Lorraine Cove Award,” laughs Suffolk Law Dean
Robert H. Smith. “Lorraine is amazingly dedicated to our

school and our students. She is a hardworking and caring
individual who is extremely knowledgeable and enjoyable to
work with.”
According to Smith, Cove has something of a celebrity status,
particularly among alumni. “When I’m conversing with alumni
who have graduated during the last 25 to 30 years, they always
ask how Lorraine is doing,” says Smith. “They all seem to have
a Lorraine Cove story to tell, usually about how she has helped
them along the way.”
When she’s not working, Cove and her husband, who live in
Arlington, enjoy spending time with their three children and
two grandchildren. She also likes to read, collect antiques,
and travel.
Asked how long she plans to continue as registrar at Suffolk
Law, Cove smiles brightly. “I have no aspirations of going
anywhere else,” she says. “This is the best place for me and
it’s where I want to be. I love my job more now than when
I first started. •
by Tony Ferullo

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STUDENT PROFILE

Man on a Mission
Gerard Eric Hill,

JD ’05

He’s made a career of helping communities,
and when it comes to a commitment to service,
Eric is someone who stands apart.
many law students clerk at top ﬁrms or for distinguished
judges, and some research comparative law at foreign
universities. But Eric Hill’s practical training occurred in an
unexpected venue—the front lines of Iraq.
A member of the US National Guard, he was activated in
February 2003 as the ground war in Iraq was still being waged
and while he was halfway through law school. Hill put aside
his textbooks and put on his uniform to lead his 93-person
ordnance unit on equipment-recovery missions.

“It was a learning experience to be in a different part of the
world and to get a chance to see how different people live,”
he says. “It makes you appreciate what we have here.” During
his 13 months of active duty, Hill adjusted to eating cold
meals, drinking hot water, and living in a land where the
lowest summer temperature was 105 degrees.
He also learned about military law through his work with the
judge advocate general in southern Iraq. He helped administer
a claims system for Iraqis seeking compensation from the Army
and dealt with discipline problems. “Military law is pretty swift
and the conviction rate in military trials is high,” he says. He
turned his newfound insights into a directed study paper, for
which he earned two Law School credits.
Hill chose Suffolk because he could continue working while
taking evening classes. “It turned out to be a perfect ﬁt,” he
says. He also is grateful that the Law School was very supportive
and understanding of his service in the Middle East. “That
helped me get through the transition from student to soldier
and back again,” he says.
“When it comes to commitment to service, Eric is someone
who stands apart,” says Dean of Students Beverly Coles-Roby.
“So, we were not surprised to learn of his willingness to serve
in Iraq and to be part of that country’s historic struggle with
religious beliefs, ethnicity, and oppression.”
Hill has made a career of helping communities. “For three
years I was Mayor Menino’s neighborhood coordinator for
Mattapan and Dorchester,” he says. “I was expected to be on
top of any hot-button issues and to be able to give the mayor
advice. And I was gratiﬁed that I could actually solve some of
the issues myself.” He went on to head employee development
programs for the Boston Police Department.
Far from the battleﬁelds around Baghdad, Hill now defends
the home front as a member of the Police Department’s
Community Mobilization Unit. “We are attempting to combat
terrorism by using existing crime-watch groups and
incorporating them into that ﬁght,” he says.
Now Hill has a new goal in his sights: to practice business law
after receiving his degree in May. Accustomed to accomplishing
his objectives, he’s looking forward to his next mission. •
by Jennifer Becker

S U F F O L K L AW

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S U F F O L K L AW

Suffolk Law Clinics
Student Advocates Develop Skills
While Serving the Public
by Jennifer Becker

A lawyer’s life doesn’t quite mirror the movies. “Everyone imagines
lawyers giving fabulous closing arguments like Atticus Finch, but

For the Defense

that rarely happens,” Associate Professor and Director of Clinical

Julie Buszuwski,

Programs Jeffrey Pokorak says. Before they can deliver flashy
statements, young attorneys must master the skills of “figuring
out what the issues are and seriously preparing for any matter,” he
says. And the Law School’s clinics offer crucial on-the-job training.
Up to half of each graduating class takes advantage
of one of Suffolk’s nine clinical opportunities, in
which students represent, under their mentors’
supervision, clients facing such issues as domestic
violence, disability-related discrimination, and
criminal charges. They learn everything from drafting
correspondence to ﬁling motions and interacting
with opposing counsel. And by advocating for
indigent clients, they fulﬁll Suffolk Law’s mission
to “serve the bar, the bench, and the people who
live here,” Pokorak says.
Clinics are primarily geared for upper-level students,
who are “ready to understand the bridge between
theory and practice,” he says. “Our goal is to create
ethical, reﬂective, careful, and well-prepared lawyers.”

S U F F O L K L AW

“It’s a very intellectual process,” says Associate
Clinical Professor Ilene Seidman. In her Family
Advocacy Clinic, she challenges students “to think
very seriously about what kind of lawyer they
want to be. It requires a tremendous commitment
from them.”

18

Pokorak agrees. “The quality of the effort put forth
by our students is amazing,” he says. “And for both
the students and their future employers, the rewards
have been tremendous.” Now that Suffolk’s clinical
professors also teach courses within the traditional
curriculum, Pokorak is confident that even more
students will benefit from the program’s hands-on
principles. As the following three recent graduates
demonstrate, participating in the clinical program
prepares students for leading roles on the legal stage.

JD ’03

A student will often point
to her yearlong clinical
experience as the most
challenging time of her
law school career. Julie
Buszuwski took on two
clinics—and relished both.
“Initially I applied for the
Juvenile Justice Clinic
because second-year
students could participate,”
she says. “What I did not anticipate was how
much I would enjoy criminal defense, particularly
representing indigent people. So when I was in
my third year, I absolutely had to apply for the
Suffolk Defenders.”
“Julie was tenacious in court and a tireless advocate
for her clients,” recalls Ken King, practitioner in
residence at Suffolk’s Juvenile Justice Center. “She
was also quick with a smile and a kind word for a
scared kid who was in court for the ﬁrst time.”
Client advocacy came naturally to her. “Despite
what the charges were, my clients were good people
who made some bad choices in life,” she says. “It
was easy to relate to them on a human level, even if
our lives were completely different.” Buszuwski says
the two clinics also placed the law in context. “I
loved working within the criminal justice system,”
she says. “I really got to see the big picture and
appreciate what the practice of law would be like.”
Buszuwski continues to be a zealous advocate—
now as a trial attorney with the Salem office of
the Massachusetts Committee for Public
Counsel Services.

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S U F F O L K L AW
Thousands of students
have participated in
Suffolk Law School’s
clinical programs

From House-keeping
to the Senate
Nick Martinelli,

during the past four

JD ’04

Everyone knows Greater
Boston’s housing prices are
soaring. Nick Martinelli
represented the tenants
struggling to keep up with
them. He enrolled in the
Housing and Consumer
Protection Clinic hoping
for “an instructive, impactful forum” in which he
could help underprivileged clients—he won on
both counts.
“A standout moment for me was when my client,
a woman who had been staying in the East Boston
Holiday Inn with her daughter for over a year, was
ﬁnally approved for an apartment at one of the
local housing authorities,” he recalls. “After months
of back and forth, they got their own home.
Everyone in the clinic wanted to be ‘useful,’ and
this was a day I felt like I was serving a purpose.”
He now serves as an attorney for the Massachusetts
Senate Committee on Ways and Means. “It’s been
a great way to learn how Massachusetts operates
and how public policy is made,” Martinelli says.
His career echoes his clinic. “In some ways, the
spirit of the effort is the same. I’ve been fortunate
to deal with many people who are genuinely
concerned about poverty-related issues.”
Martinelli’s mentor, Assistant Clinical Professor
William Berman, knows Martinelli will put his
legal talent and “natural ability to work with people”
to good use. Berman says he enjoys instilling in his
clinic participants their “power as law students to
make a difference in the lives of the individuals
they serve and even to influence broader public
policy. Nick’s position in the Senate gives him the
opportunity to do just that.”

decades. Today’s
students may select

Compassionate
Counsel
Michelle Harper
Lawson, JD ’04
Having counseled women
and children fleeing
domestic violence before
she came to Suffolk,
Lawson was a natural ﬁt
for the Family Advocacy
Clinic. “I thought that in
my new role as a student
attorney, I could utilize
some of the skills I’d already developed,” she says.
Defending the dignity of her victimized clients in
the clinic helped her become a compassionate
counselor at law.
“In the clinic, I learned very quickly that what’s
first and foremost about being an attorney is
serving the client,” Lawson says. “I got so much
out of building relationships with my clients and
really getting to know the people behind the legal
issues. Knowing that they were depending on me, I
was even more motivated to give my best effort to
each task.”

from one or more of
the following clinical
opportunities:
Battered Women’s
Advocacy Program
Civil and Judicial
Internship Program
Disability Advocacy Clinic
Family Advocacy Clinic
Housing and Consumer
Protection Clinic
Juvenile Justice Center
Evening Landlord
Tenant Clinic
Suffolk Defenders
Suffolk Prosecutors
See www.law.suffolk.edu/
academic/clinical/ for more
information.

“She was a superior student,” Associate Clinical
Professor Ilene Seidman says. “Michelle had a
tremendous desire to learn everything she could
learn.” But great lawyers must have more than
book smarts. “She could use her intellect in an
especially powerful way because she’s so empathic.”
The lessons she learned from the clinic continue to
guide Lawson now that she is an associate in the labor
and employment department of Ropes &amp; Gray.
Along with the complexities of the court system,
“I also learned to manage a caseload and prioritize
client needs, skills that are now critical to my
practice,” she says.
“Participating in the clinic was, hands down, the
most positive and beneﬁcial experience of my law
school career,” Lawson says.

S U F F O L K L AW

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ALUMNI NEWS

New Opportunities
for

Alumni

Alumni Luncheon Series

A New Look for the Online
Community’s Web Site

The annual luncheon series featured distinguished alumni addressing
topics of concern to both practitioners and policymakers.

On October 13, 2004, Kathleen O’Donnell,
JD ’80, president of the Massachusetts Bar
Association (MBA), introduced some of the
MBA’s newest initiatives. Pictured with Kathleen
O’Donnell is Stacey Ober, JD ’97.

On November 15, 2004, Hon. Robert
Mulligan, JD ’68, chief justice for administration
and management of the Massachusetts Trial
Court, spoke about the technology and facilities
challenges facing Massachusetts’ courts. With
Justice Mulligan are classmates John Mulvee,
JD ’68 and Michael Matz, JD ’68.

The new site is more user friendly and
easier to navigate. If you haven’t yet
registered, now is the time to do so.
Members of the online community enjoy
the beneﬁt of easy communication with
friends and classmates. Did you ever
wonder what happened to that friend
from Con Law? Search the alumni
directory and ﬁnd out.
Post news about a wedding, births, or
your new law ﬁrm. Did you know that the
Online Yellow Pages enable you to ﬁnd
products and services advertised by

Andrea Cabral, JD ’86, Suffolk County Sheriff,
shown here with Dean Robert H. Smith, spoke
about women in law enforcement and public
service on March 28.

fellow alumni and members from other
alumni communities? You can post your
own listing to promote your law ﬁrm or
services at no charge.

On January 24, Barbara Anthony, JD ’77, director
of the Federal Trade Commission’s Northeast
Region, outlined the FTC’s enforcement policies in
the consumer and antitrust arenas. With Barbara
Anthony is Dean Robert H. Smith.

Update your address information and send
us your email address. More and more of
our alumni event invitations are distributed
exclusively by email and we don’t want you
to be left out.

S U F F O L K L AW

Check out the new site at http://alumni

20

connections.com/olc/pub/SFL/
Oliver Mitchell, JD ’79, chairman of Ford Motor
Company’s Dealer Policy Board, spoke about the
importance of eliminating bias and promoting
diversity within the legal profession on April 8.
With Oliver Mitchell is Daniel Hogan, JD ’94,
president, Suffolk Law School Alumni Association.

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ALUMNI NEWS

Alumni Chapter Events

The Greater New York Chapter enjoyed
a concert and reception at Carnegie Hall
on April 1.

Greater New York Chapter

(L to R) Andrea Eisenberg, JD ’79; Kate Rooney,
MPA ’04; and Janine Geraigery, JD ’03.

Members of the Greater New York Chapter at a wine tasting on November 16, 2004.

(L to R) Richard Bass; Skitch Henderson, founder
and conductor, NY Pops Orchestra; Diane Frankel
Schoenfeld, director of alumni relations; and Paula
Prifti Weafer, director of alumni relations, Sawyer
School of Management.

Greater Boston Chapter
Recent Graduate Financial Workshops

On January 27 David Murray, JD ’02, led the
home-buying and mortgage workshop.

Sports Law Panel

On March 7 Arthur Goldberg, JD ’74, spoke
about starting one’s own law practice.

Chocolate Buffet on April 5

On May 2, a program co-sponsored with the
Massachusetts Bar Association featured three
attorneys serving as in-house counsel for Boston
sports teams. (L to R) Jack Mula, New England
Patriots; Michael Wall, Boston Bruins; and
Lucinda Treat, Boston Red Sox.

Recent Grad Holiday Party
December 2, 2004
S U F F O L K L AW

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(L to R) Ryan Dietz, JD ’01; Professor Charles
Kindregan, Jr.; Dean Robert H. Smith; and Tanya
Oldenhoff, JD ’00.

Marie Richards Breen, JD ’88; and Kimberly
Brooks, JD ’95.

(L to R) Lucy Rivera, JD ’01; Dana Casali, JD ’99, copresident, Boston Alumni Chapter; Chris Micchia, JD
’94, clerk, Boston Alumni Chapter; and Lena Wong.

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New Opportunities
for

ALUMNI NEWS

Alumni

Metropolitan Washington, DC, Chapter
Red Sox vs. Baltimore Orioles
October 2, 2004

Book Signing by Best-Selling Author
and Alumnus, January 18

(L to R) Daniel Hogan, JD ’94, president, Suffolk
Law School Alumni Association; Robert Serino,
JD ’69, treasurer, Washington, DC, Alumni
Chapter; Stephani Hildebrandt, JD ’00, president, Washington, DC, Alumni Chapter; and
Gregory Noone, JD ’90, Alumni Association
Board of Directors.

James Bamford, BA ’71, JD ’75, met with area
alumni and discussed his recent book, A Pretext
for War: 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America’s
Intelligence Agencies. With James Bamford is
Ann Hagan, JD ’76.

The Sports Club/LA
The Boston location of The Sports
Club/LA is conveniently located just
steps from Suffolk Law School and
offers over 100,000 square feet of
fitness and spa facilities. Suffolk
University alumni (including faculty,
staff, and students) may take advantage
of a variety of preferred membership
rates including:
• Health Membership
• Squash Membership

New Hampshire Chapter

• Access East Coast Membership:

Members of the New Hampshire Chapter
convened at the annual dinner held on February 17 at the Bedford Village Inn.

New York, Miami, Washington, DC,
and Boston locations
• Bicoastal Membership: Los Angeles,

Orange County, Beverly Hills, San
Francisco, New York, Miami,
Washington, DC, and Boston
For questions about membership or to
arrange an appointment for a tour of the
Club, please call 617.375.8200 or visit
www.thesportsclubla.com. Don’t forget
to mention that you are a graduate of
Suffolk University.

(L to R) Paul Gagnon, JD ’77; Martha Jacques,
JD ’01; and Susan Atlas, JD ’92.

Jennifer Parent, JD ’95, president, New Hampshire
Alumni Chapter; and Hon. John Maher, JD ’68.

Los Angeles Chapter

S U F F O L K L AW

Members of the Los Angeles Chapter met at a reception on March 1 at the Four
Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills.

22

(L to R) Debra Carr, JD ’81, President, LA Alumni
Chapter; Nancy Garabedian; Robert Dini; and
Brendan Monaghan, JD ’93, vice president, LA
Alumni Chapter.

(L to R) Tara Schlener; Susan Schlener, JD ’82;
Javier Kinney, JD ’04; Dean Robert H. Smith; and
Robert Wolf, JD ’68.

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ALUMNI NEWS

New Opportunities
for

Alumni

South Florida Chapter Events
On March 13, Marilyn and Sidney Rosenthal, JD ’56,
hosted a brunch in West Palm Beach.

New Alumni Beneﬁt
Suffolk University’s Alumni Association
is now an associate member of the
Association of College and University
Lois Morse, JD ’72; and Norman Morse, JD ’72.

Clubs (ACUC). ACUC is a non-profit
organization of campus-based clubs
located throughout North America,
Europe, Asia, and Australia. Over 100
clubs worldwide participate in the ACUC
reciprocity program, facilitating academic
interaction by opening their doors to club
members visiting from other campuses. As

Edward Masterman, JD ’50, LLD ‘90 (Hon.); and
Norman White, BSBA ’51, friends who ﬁrst met
in junior high school, enjoyed reminiscing.

a Suffolk University graduate, the ACUC
is now your link to an international
community of member-only clubs on or
Joseph White, JD ’00; and Kendra White.

near the campuses of some of the world’s
leading colleges and universities. One of

On March 15, Ann Frank, JD ’72, and Peter Frank, JD ’71, hosted a reception in Naples.

the greatest benefits of reciprocity
between ACUC clubs is the opportunity to
use other clubs for business meetings and
to book hotel or overnight guest rooms at
a number of the university clubs. In
addition to the convenience of staying on
campus, club guest quarters often are on
a par with elegant boutique hotels, at a
fraction of the cost. The ACUC network
offers reciprocal privileges at exclusive

Ann Frank, JD ’72; and Peter Frank, JD ’71.

(L to R) Irene Cameron; Hon. Lawrence Cameron,
JD ’51, DJur ’67 (Hon.), University trustee; and
Kathryn Battillo, vice president for advancement.

clubs throughout Canada, the United
States, Europe, Australia, and Asia. For
a complete list of reciprocal clubs go to
the ACUC web site at www.acuclubs.org.
If you would like to participate in the
ACUC network, please contact the Law
School Office of Alumni Relations for
details and a membership card.
617.305.1999, fax 617.573.8151 or
diane.schoenfeld@suffolk.edu.

S U F F O L K L AW

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Kyle Lantz and Lorraine Lantz, JD ’99.

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ALUMNI PROFILE

A Guiding Star
Janis Schiff,

JD ’83

Partner, Holland &amp; Knight LLP

before launching the rising stars mentoring and
leadership program in early 2003, Janis Schiff realized that
whenever a woman was needed to take part in a committee,
she was the one selected. She recognized a need for greater
leadership and professional development opportunities for
women attorneys, as well as higher compensation—and
decided to take action.
A partner in the Washington, DC, office of Holland &amp; Knight
LLP, Schiff designed and developed the Rising Stars program,
which will begin its third year as part of the ﬁrm’s Women’s
Initiative, “to promote women into leadership positions within
the ﬁrm, elevate their proﬁle within the legal profession and
the community, and increase their success in business development.” Five female attorneys enter an intensive, yearlong
professional development program that provides hands-on
leadership, marketing and management training, professional
mentoring, and experiential learning.

S U F F O L K L AW

Deputy section leader of Holland &amp; Knight’s national real
estate section and a member of the ﬁrm’s board of directors,
Schiff represents developers, owners, and landlords in the
acquisition, development, and leasing of retail, office, and
mixed-use real estate projects throughout the country. She
is active in the International Council of Shopping Centers,
Women in Retail Real Estate, and Commercial Real Estate
Women (CREW). Her clients and projects have included
Gallery Place, 4500 Wisconsin Avenue, Madison Marquette,
Kodiak Properties, Federal Realty Investment Trust, Roadside
Development, and Toll Brothers. In 2004, CREW’s Washington,
DC, chapter presented Schiff with its outstanding achievement
award. “Janis is one of Washington’s most inﬂuential and
dynamic leaders who has made a lasting impact in the legal
industry and business community,” says CREW President
Dawn Marcus.

24

She serves on the board of the Georgetown University Law
School Advanced Commercial Leasing Institute and is an
adjunct professor at The Johns Hopkins University Berman
Real Estate Institute. Real Estate Forum magazine recently
named her one of the top women in commercial real estate.

Professor Barry Brown ﬁrst met Schiff when she was a student
in his ﬁrst-year property class. Her interest in property law
continued throughout law school. Professor Brown recalls,
“With her work in my advanced seminar in land ﬁnance and
development, it became clear that Janis possessed the energy,
creativity, and analytical skills that pointed to her future success
as a great real estate lawyer.” Since law school, Professor
Brown has continued to work with Janis, and their respective
families have become close friends. Commenting on the scope
and complexity of her practice at Holland &amp; Knight, Brown
believes that few other lawyers have the drive, technical skills,
and organizational ability that Janis does. These qualities are
combined with a charismatic personality that “makes her
unmatched for helping her clients succeed in achieving
their goals.”
Schiff, who remembers Suffolk University Law School as “a
tremendous place to learn and prepare for the practice of
law,” grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, and moved to
Washington, DC, after a semester-long program there through
Brandeis University, her undergraduate alma mater. She has
been married for 25 years to her husband, Phil, an attorney
and director of operations at the American Association of
Blood Banks. They live in Bethesda, Maryland, and have a
teenage son, Justin.
Amid all this success, she still considers founding the Rising
Stars program “one of the most rewarding things I’ve done in
my career.” •
by Steven Withrow

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ALUMNI PROFILE

The Defense Never Rests
David Chesnoff,

JD ’79

Partner, Goodman &amp; Chesnoff

you may be familiar with some of high-profile
Las Vegas attorney David Chesnoff’s recent clients: Shaquille
O’Neal, Andre Agassi, Jamie Foxx, Britney Spears. You may
also have seen him on CNBC, ABC Nightly News, Larry King
Live, A&amp;E’s American Justice, or the Charlie Rose Show.
Chesnoff, who once dreamed of courtroom success as a member
of the moot court team at Suffolk University Law School, now
practices with the mayor of Las Vegas, Oscar B. Goodman, in
the firm of Goodman &amp; Chesnoff—one of the top criminal
defense ﬁrms in the United States.
His criminal defense, civil litigation, and federal appeals work
has included defending US District Court Judge Harry Claiborne
in a US Senate impeachment trial; Morris Shenker, attorney for
teamster president Jimmy Hoffa and owner of the Dunes Hotel
and Casino, in a federal bankruptcy fraud prosecution; Diane
Salome in the largest money-laundering case in federal court
history in Pennsylvania; and Marion “Suge” Knight, president
of Death Row Records, in a five-year federal income tax,
money-laundering, and racketeering investigation, in which
the government ultimately determined that no charges should
be brought against Chesnoff’s client.
Above and beyond what he calls “an intense practice,”
Chesnoff, who has tried criminal cases in 30 US states, also
teaches trial techniques at the National College for Criminal
Defense and is a member of the board of directors of the
National Association of Criminal Defense Attorneys.
He credits much of his success to his Suffolk education.
“What I gained at Suffolk was outstanding preparation, and I
was very impressed with the people I studied with,” he says.
“David was a student at a time in the Law School’s history
when it was just beginning to become nationally known,”
Professor Herbert Lemelman says. “His hard work and
determined personality brought him to the forefront of the
criminal defense bar in places far distant from Boston.”
Suffolk Trustee Michael G. George agrees: “The extraordinary
success that this brilliant attorney has earned in his distinguished
legal career reﬂects as well on the University as it does on
David. Though he has excelled in a challenging, competitive
environment, David remains gracious and humble.”

Of the media attention surrounding some of his cases, Chesnoff,
who represented Martha Stewart in her appeal, says, “In this
day and age, the media is a big part of criminal law, especially
in high-proﬁle cases. It can help your client if you use it right.
You certainly have to show the side of your client that you
want the jury and judge to know, and the media can help
you do that.”
A graduate of Alfred University, Chesnoff was born in Paterson,
New Jersey, grew up in Israel and New York, and moved to
Las Vegas—his home for 25 years—after a brief stop in Houston,
Texas, for his ﬁrst job out of Suffolk Law. He has been married
to his wife, Diana, an outstanding equestrian, for 20 years, and
they have a teenage son, Max, who is a nationally ranked junior
tennis player. •
by Steven Withrow

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CLASS NOTES

Brian Grearson was appointed a district
court judge in Vermont.

NEWSMAKER
Jayne B. Tyrrell, JD ’72, was honored in September
by the Massachusetts Bar Foundation (MBF) as a
“Great Friend of Justice,” for her dedication to providing
legal services to the poor and improving access to
justice. Tyrrell’s effective leadership as executive
director of the Massachusetts Interest on Lawyer Trust
Accounts (IOLTA) Program, has led to the adoption by
Massachusetts’ banks of favorable administrative policies
toward IOLTA. Several years ago, Massachusetts had
the highest IOLTA revenue of any other state, including
those with greater numbers of attorneys.
“Jayne has worked tirelessly over the last 11 years to
maximize the income for grants that are awarded by the foundation…she’s been a
leader in this arena on a number of fronts—forging stronger relationships with the
banking community, serving as a key member of the national litigation team that
fought, and won, to hold IOLTA programs as constitutional, and her myriad of other
access-to-justice activities,” says Anthony Stankiewicz, JD ‘87, president of the MBF.
“She makes an impact every day.”

1955
Paul Lausier has retired after serving 45
years as town counsel in Marblehead.

Andrew L. Mandell was named ﬁrst
justice of the Fitchburg District Court.

1967

Stephen Morrison was named presiding
justice of Dover District Court in New
Hampshire.

Gary L. Fialky, a partner in the law ﬁrm
of Bacon &amp; Wilson, P.C., in Springﬁeld,
received an award from the Massachusetts
Bar Association for exemplary community
service work in Western Massachusetts.

1968
Russell Gaudreau, Jr., a partner at Ropes
&amp; Gray LLP, was included in the 2005-2006
edition of The Best Lawyers in America.

S U F F O L K L AW

1969

26

Theodore A. Schwartz,
a partner in the ﬁrm of M.
Mark Mendel, Ltd., received
the Pennsylvania Trial
Lawyers Association’s
Community Service Award
for his extraordinary and
long-standing efforts on behalf of the
developmentally disabled.

1973
Class Correspondent
Richard Weiss
w: Weiss &amp; Nestro
15 Court Square, Suite 210
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.742.2900

1974

Jane V. Hawkes, a partner in the business
formation practice area at Bowditch &amp;
Dewey, has been named to the list of
Massachusetts Super Lawyers.
Robert E. Longden, a partner in the
environmental law and real estate practice
area of Bowditch &amp; Dewey, was named to
the list of Massachusetts Super Lawyers.
Robert C. Rufo was appointed associate
justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court.

1976
Class Correspondent
Virginia Bonesteel
w: Van Wert &amp; Zimmer, PC
One Militia Drive
Lexington, MA 02420
phone: 781.863.2951
email: vabvwz@world.std.com

Charley Barr was named executive vice
president and general counsel of XL
Capital Ltd., a Bermuda-based NYSE-listed
insurance, reinsurance, and financial
products company.
Robert Cornetta, BA ’72, was appointed
ﬁrst justice of the Salem District Court.
Donald Fries has joined the Glynn Law
Offices in Falmouth and focuses his practice
on real estate, tax-deferred property
transactions, and business matters.

Paul K. Leary was named president-elect
of the National Board of Trial Advocacy for
the 2004-2005 term.

John McMorrow, an
attorney at Pierce Atwood
LLP, was named to the
board of directors of the
Maine Employee Beneﬁts
Council.

Alan S. Pierce was named president of
the Massachusetts Academy of Trial
Attorneys.
Paul Reiber has been appointed chief
justice of the Vermont Supreme Court.

1975

John R. Rathgeber was named chief
operating officer of the Connecticut
Business and Industry Association and
appointed to its board of directors.

Class Correspondents
Richard Cuffe
w: Bradley, Moore, Primason, Cuffe &amp; Weber
85 Exchange Street
Lynn, MA 01901
phone: 781.595.2050
fax: 781.599.5160
email: rcuffe@bradleymoorelaw.com
Paul Kelly
w: Segal, Roitman &amp; Coleman
11 Beacon Street, Suite 500
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.742.0208
fax: 617.742.2187

David G. Spackman, a
shareholder in the Boston
office of Greenberg Traurig
LLP, was included in the
2005-2006 edition of The
Best Lawyers in America.

1977
Class Correspondent
Robert Turner
h: 78 Oxford Street
Winchester, MA 01890
phone: 781.729.0557
email: FDXH31B@prodigy.com

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CLASS NOTES

Howard Greenspan has been appointed
legal counsel for the Groton Dunstable
Regional School District.
Linda L. Mariani, senior partner of
Mariani &amp; Reck, LLC in New London, CT,
was appointed a director at Dime Bank.
She was also included in the 2005-2006
edition of The Best Lawyers in America.
Robert K. Sheridan, president and CEO
of The Savings Bank Life Insurance
Company of Massachusetts, was elected
vice chairperson of the board of directors
of The New England Council in Boston.
Russell E. Towers, vice president of
business and estate planning at Brokers
Service Marketing Group in Providence, RI,
was appointed president-elect of the
Rhode Island Society of Finance Service
Professionals.
Frederic S. Ury, a senior partner in the
law ﬁrm of Ury &amp; Moskow LC of Fairﬁeld,
CT, is president of the Connecticut Bar
Association for 2004-2005.

phone: 603.448.4722
fax: 603.448.7005
email: NSTierney1@aol.com
Larry Wheatley
h: 608 Old Post Road
Cotuit, MA 02635
phone: 508.428.8636
email: LarryWheatley@comcast.com

w: phone: 508.428.7515
fax: 508.437.7747

Christine L. Butler,
a partner at Butler and
Monks in Cambridge,
received the 2005 M.
Patricia Cronin Award for
Public Policy, given by
Jane Doe Inc. Butler was
recognized for her work on behalf of victims
of domestic violence and as co-director of
the Battered Women’s Advocacy Program
at Suffolk Law School.
James G. Dowling, Jr., was elected a
fellow of the Connecticut Bar Foundation
James W. Cooper Fellows Program.
Richard J. Kos, an attorney with Egan,
Flanagan, and Cohen in Chicopee, was
elected to the board of trustees at
Elms College.

1978
Class Correspondents
Daniel Russo
h: 78 Hawks Nest Circle
Middletown, CT 06457-1514
phone: 860.347.5651

Ronald K. Machtley, president of Bryant
University, has been inducted into the
Providence Gridiron Club Hall of Fame.

Nancy Tierney
w: Tierney Law Office
One Court Street, Suite 360
Lebanon, NH 03766

Steven L. Wollman received the Great
Friend of Justice Award from the

Massachusetts Bar Foundation, where
he has served as a trustee for the last
six years.

1979
Class Correspondent
Marcia McGair Ippolito
h: 42 Knowles Drive
Warwick, RI 02888
phone: 401.463.7468

Mark B. Decof was named a 2004
“Lawyer of the Year” by Rhode Island
Lawyers Weekly.
Francis J. Russell, a partner in the
Worcester law ﬁrm of Mountain, Dearborn
&amp; Whiting, was appointed to the Board of
Bar Overseers for a four-year term.
Hedwig Veith Whitney has joined the
executive team of Aspen Technology, Inc.,
in Cambridge. As senior vice president for
human resources, Whitney is responsible
for designing and implementing worldwide
organizational management practices to
help AspenTech deliver on its strategic and
ﬁnancial objectives.

1980
Class Correspondent
Edwin Wallace
h: 11 Herrick Street
Winchester, MA 01890
phone: 617.729.4941

HOUSE NEWS

House Speaker
Salvatore F.
DiMasi, JD ‘71,
DPA ‘05 (Hon.)

House Majority
Leader John H.
Rogers, JD ‘92

House Ways
and Means
Chairman Robert
DeLeo, JD ’76

Suffolk Law School graduates have long
enjoyed positions of prominence within the
state’s political hub. That strong tradition of
leadership continued when Salvatore F.
DiMasi, JD ’71, DPA ‘05 (Hon.) who
has represented the 3rd Suffolk District in
Boston since 1979, was elected to serve as
Speaker of the House in September 2004.
At his inauguration DiMasi outlined his
vision for the future, telling colleagues,

“I believe that government can be as good
as the people who serve in it, and that
government exists in order to be a catalyst
for the improvement of the quality of
the lives of all of our citizens. We must
assist and nurture the entrepreneurial
spirit that has long been the hallmark
of Massachusetts.”
DiMasi immediately began a historic
reorganization of the House so that it
might better respond to different economic
sectors, embrace opportunities for growth,
and improve the business climate in
Massachusetts. He chose several fellow
Suffolk Law School alumni to partner
with him in key leadership positions.
John H. Rogers, JD ‘92, who has
represented Norwood and Walpole since
1992, and previously chaired the House

Committees on Ways and Means, Taxation,
and the Judiciary was tapped as House
Majority Leader in January.
“The three of us working in unison with
the rest of the House know that the twin
principles of prudence and humanity must
continue to guide us as we work to take
Massachusetts to new heights and better
ﬁscal times,“ says Rogers.
Robert DeLeo, JD ’76, who has
represented Winthrop and a portion of
Revere since 1991, was appointed
chairman of the House Committee on
Ways and Means in February.
According to DeLeo, “The experience of
crafting a $23.6 billion budget for the
Commonwealth has been one of the most
interesting, fulﬁlling, and difficult in my
professional life.”

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CLASS NOTES

Jonathan L. Healy was appointed a
museum trustee for Historic Deerﬁeld.

NEWSMAKER

Bruce R. Henry was appointed a justice
of the Massachusetts Superior Court.

Michael Bolden, JD ’78, former commissioner of
the Massachusetts Department of Youth Services, has
been appointed an associate justice of the Roxbury
division of the Boston Municipal Court by Governor
Mitt Romney. Before joining DYS in 2002, Bolden
served for three years as acting secretary and undersecretary for the state executive office of public safety
before being specially assigned by then-Governor
Jane Swift to coordinate the state response to the
September 11th attacks.

1981
Class Correspondent
Sheila Tracey
h: 7 Sonrel Street
Woburn, MA 01801-5250
phone: 781.933.0838
email: jmcelhiney94@comcast.net

David E. Cherny, a partner in Atwood
&amp; Cherny, P.C., in Boston, was named a
Massachusetts Super Lawyer in the ﬁeld
of family law.
Corinne Diana has married Heather
Baker. They live in Woburn.
Nancy J. Marks was promoted to the
position of division counsel/associate chief
counsel, tax exempt and government entitites, within the Internal Revenue Service.

1982
Class Correspondent
Edward L. Wallack
w: Sapers &amp; Wallack
101 Rogers Street
Cambridge, MA 02142
Phone: 617.225.2600
fax: 617.494.5485
e-mail: wallack @sapers-wallack.com

Thomas Doyle, an attorney at Pierce Atwood LLP,
in Portland, ME, was
included in the 2005-2006
edition of The Best Lawyers
in America.

1983
Class Correspondent

S U F F O L K L AW

Philip Mulvey III
h: 152 Adams Street
Milton, MA 02186
phone: 617.698.4594
email: adamsmulvey@msn.com

28

Daniel F. Conley, the district attorney
of Suffolk County in Massachusetts, was
elected president of the Massachusetts
District Attorneys Association.
Margo Cooper has a photo exhibition on
display at the National Heritage Museum in
Lexington through June.
Thomas J. Curley Jr., associate justice of
the Massachusetts Superior Court, was
honored by the St. Thomas More Society
of Springﬁeld.

“I see this appointment as the ultimate reward in a
very satisfying career in public service,” Bolden says.
“I often compared a judge in the district court to a community referee, someone who
makes sure everyone plays by the rules and resolves disputes when the parties
disagree. I am conﬁdent that the lessons learned throughout my 27-year career will
serve me well as a judge.”

Ellen McLaughlin was named senior vice
president, general counsel at the Federal
Home Loan Bank of Boston.
Joyce McNeill has retired after 35 years
as a guidance counselor at Ipswich High
School.
Jonathan D. Tamkin, a partner in the
Newton law ﬁrm of Tamkin &amp; Hochberg,
LLP, was appointed a member of the Board
of Appeals of Needham.

1984
Class Correspondent
Mario Iglesias
w: Adams, Gallinar &amp; Iglesias
Colonial Bank Centre, Suite 9
1200 Brickell Avenue
Miami, FL 33131
phone: 305.416.6830
email: miglesias@agimlaw.com

Edward P. Flaherty argued a case before
the United Nations Administrative Tribunal
(UNAT) in New York on behalf of 150
locally recruited UNHCR staff in Pristina,
Kosovo, who had their salary entitlements
wrongfully reduced by UN management. A
partner in a Swiss commercial law ﬁrm, he
is living with his wife, Margaret, and two
children, Eamonn and Abaigh, in Geneva,
Switzerland. He is always happy to hear
from former classmates at flaherty@
sfalegal.com.
Charles J. Keilty, a partner with Stern,
Keilty &amp; Wall, LLC of Salem, was elected to
the board of directors of the Essex County
Bar Association.

Susan D. Ricci, an associate justice of the
probate court in Worcester, received the
Distinguished Jurist Award from the St.
Thomas More Society of Worcester.
Rachel S. Rubin was appointed to the
new post of special counsel for ethics
compliance for the executive branch of the
State of Connecticut.
Sarah Verville, a member
of the environmental
practice group at Pierce
Atwood LLP, has been
named to a three-year
term on the board of the
National Hydropower
Association in Washington, DC.

1985
Class Correspondent
Michael Callahan
h: 247 Humphrey Street
Marblehead, MA 01945

w: NSTAR Service Co.
Prudential Tower
800 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02199
phone: 617.424.2102
fax: 617.424.2733
email: michael_callahan@NSTARonline.com

James B. Bartlett has joined Bergen &amp;
Parkinson, LLC, as managing attorney of its
York, Maine, office.
Louis M. Ciavarra, a partner in the
business litigation practice area at
Bowditch &amp; Dewey, was named to the
list of Massachusetts Super Lawyers.

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CLASS NOTES

Robert D. Cox, Jr., a partner in the environmental law and real estate practice area
of Bowditch &amp; Dewey, was named to the
list of Massachusetts Super Lawyers.
Jason M. Honeyman, chair
of the mechanical practice
group at Wolf, Greenﬁeld
&amp; Sacks, P.C., has been
elected managing partner
and president of the ﬁrm.
Honeyman also was
featured as a Massachusetts Super Lawyer.
Eva Marie Mancuso, a managing partner
for the law offices of Hamel, Waxler, Allen
and Collins, was inducted into the
Cranston, RI, Hall of Fame.
David C. Nunheimer has opened a law
office in Hyannis.
Patrick T. O’Regan, Jr. has married
Cecily Anne Snyder. They live in East
Falmouth.
David H. Reiter was named director of legal
affairs for URAC in Washington, DC. He is the
author and managing editor of The Utilization
Management Guide, third edition.
Theodore R. Tyma was appointed a
superior court judge in Connecticut.

Boston, MA 02111
phone: 617.951.1118
email: drp@rackemann.com
Doug Sears
w: P.O. Box 669
Tewksbury, MA 01876-0669
email: dwsear@mediaone.net
Joe Wadland
w: Wadland &amp; Ackerman
28 Elm Street
Andover, MA 01810
phone: 978.474.8880
email: jwadland@wadacklaw.com

1987
Class Correspondents
Mark Darling
w: Cogavin &amp; Waystack
2 Center Plaza
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.742.3340
email: m5kids@cybercom.net
Michael F. Walsh
w: Law Offices of Michael F. Walsh, P.C.
1200 East Street
Westwood, MA 02090
phone: 781.251.0100
fax: 781.251.2266
e-mail: mfwalsh@hotmail.com

Michele Garvin, an attorney with Ropes
&amp; Gray LLP, was included in the 2005-2006
edition of The Best Lawyers in America.

1986
Class Correspondents
Mark Barnett
h: 158 Norman Road
Brockton, MA 02302
phone: 508.584.7164
Donald Pinto
w: Rackemann, Sawyer &amp; Brewster
One Financial Center

Sylvia L. Pusateri, president of the
Fitchburg law ﬁrm of Pusateri &amp; Pusateri,
received the Distinguished Attorney Award
from the St. Thomas More Society of
Worcester.

Gordon M. Smith was appointed to the
new position of Rhode Island Adult Drug
Court magistrate.

1988
Class Correspondent
Karen Lynch Bernard
h: 42 Drum Rock Avenue
Warwick, RI 02886
phone: 401.739.6585

Nanette A. Avril has joined the law office
of Michael M. Ransmeier in Littleton.
Martin W. Healy, BS ’85,
general counsel and acting
executive director of the
Massachusetts Bar
Association (MBA), received
the President’s Award
during the MBA’s Annual
Dinner program in March. The President’s
Award is given to individuals who have
made a signiﬁcant contribution to the work
of the MBA, its values, and initiatives.
Shari Levitan, chair of the New England
Private Wealth Services practice for
Holland &amp; Knight, LLP, has been named
a Massachusetts Super Lawyer.
Kathryn A. O’Leary, a trial lawyer with
Gould &amp; Ettenberg, P.C. in Worcester, was
appointed to a ﬁve-year term on the
Clients’ Security Board.
Gregory P. Vasil was appointed senior
vice president and legislative counsel for
the Greater Boston Real Estate Board.

1989
Class Correspondents
Meaghan Barrett
h: 21 Loew Circle
Milton, MA 02186
phone: 617.361.4288

NEWSMAKER
Kathleen M. O’Donnell, JD ’80, is president of the
Massachusetts Bar Association (MBA) for 2004-2005.
Since 1982, she has practiced with Marcotte Law Firm
in Lowell, a general-practice ﬁrm with an emphasis on
personal injury law. A major item on her agenda as
MBA president, in addition to working with the legislative
and judicial branches of state government, is the
launch and maintenance of a Web-based judicial
evaluation system in which MBA members can log on
to the association’s site and evaluate judges “based
on fair criteria after they’ve appeared before a judge.“
Of her “humbling” new role, O’Donnell says, “The
magnitude of what lawyers do each and every day throughout the commonwealth is
overwhelming. It is a privilege to serve as the spokesperson for all of the dedicated
and committed lawyers in our state.”

Chad Kindregan III
w: Looney &amp; Grossman LLP
101 Arch Street
Boston, MA 02110
phone: 617.951.2800
e-mail: ckindregan@lgllp.com
Laila Maalouf
w: 20 Whitney Road
Quincy, MA 02169
phone: 617.689.0000
fax: 617.984.1885
Timothy McCrystal
w: Ropes &amp; Gray
One International Place
Boston, MA 02110
phone: 617.951.7000
email: tmccryst@ropesgray.com

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Eric Crane is a unit manager with
Premier Insurance Company in Danvers.
He has served on the Danvers School
Committee since 2000.
Mary McLaughlin, area
vice president, Northern
New England, for Adelphia
Communications in South
Burlington, VT, was named
to the board of trustees at
Champlain College in
Burlington, VT.

1990
Class Correspondent
Joel R. Davidson
w: Law Office of Joel R. Davidson
PO Box 14
Wollaston, MA 02170
phone: 617.773.9092
fax: 617.770.0930
email: JDavid3537@aol.com

Carolyn Carpentier was named director
of human resources for Charlton
Memorial Hospital.
Theodore M. Hess-Mahan, an attorney
with the Boston ﬁrm of Shapiro Haber &amp;
Urmy LLP, was named co-chairman of the
Class Actions Committee of the Litigation
Section of the Boston Bar Association.

1991
Class Correspondent
Gary Merken
h: 791 Robinhood Road
Rosemont, PA 19010
phone: 610.581.4119
email: gary.merken@verizon.net

Lisa M. Cukier, has been named a partner
with Burno &amp; Levinson LLP. Cukier is a
member of the probate litigation group,
divorce and family law group, and family
advisory services team. She also is president
of the Massachusetts Family and Probate
Inn of Court for 2004-2005.

S U F F O L K L AW

Joseph D. McDonald, Jr., was elected
sheriff of Plymouth County in Massachusetts.

30

Christine Griggs
Narcisse, an attorney with
the Worcester law ﬁrm of
McGuire and McGuire,
received the Distinguished
Ecumenical Award from
the St. Thomas More
Society of Worcester.

David P. Panagore, MPA ’93, has been
named deputy director of the city of
Springﬁeld Finance Control Board.

1992
Class Correspondent
Jeff Padwa
h: 25 Margrave Avenue
Providence, RI 02906-5167
phone: 401.273.8330

Steven A. Torres, city solicitor in
Taunton, has been elected to the executive
committee of the City Solicitors and Town
Counsel Association for 2004-2005.

Peri Aptaker, a principal and director of
tax services at Kahn Litwin Renza &amp; Co.,
Ltd., was named president of the Jewish
Family Services board of directors in
Providence, RI.

1994
Class Correspondent

John W. Lyle, Jr., was named superintendent of schools for Block Island, RI.

Judy Crowley
w: Daly, Crowley &amp; Mofford, LLP
275 Turnpike Street, Suite 101
Canton, MA 02021
phone: 781.401.9988
fax: 781.401.9966
email: jcc@dc-m.com

Linda Turteltaub has been appointed
corporate counsel for Skanska USA
Building in Parsippany, NJ.

Susan M. Basham has joined Price,
Postel &amp; Parma LLP in the land use,
environmental, and natural resources group.

1993

Peter F. Carr II, a partner in the law ﬁrm
of Eckert Seamans Cherin &amp; Mellott in
Boston, has married Dr. Lisi Warren. They
are living in Boston.

John Keenan was elected to the
Massachusetts House of Representatives,
7th Essex district.

Class Correspondent
Eileen McAnneny
w: Associated Industries of Massachusetts
222 Berkeley Street, PO Box 763
Boston, MA 02117
phone: 617.262.1180

Sheryl Bourbeau has become associated
with Gallagher &amp; Cavanaugh LLP in Lowell.
Joan M. McMenemy was appointed
second assistant to the Berkshire County
district attorney in Massachusetts.

Ernst Guerrier, BS ’91, principal of Guerrier
and Associates, P.C., in Dorchester, was
named to the list of Massachusetts Super
Lawyers.
Joshua D. Koskoff, a partner at Koskoff,
Koskoff &amp; Bieder, has been named one of
Connecticut’s “New Leaders of the Law” in
the Development of the Law category by
the Connecticut Law Tribune.

NEWSMAKER
Diane Murphy Quinlan, JD ’90, is the ﬁrst lay
chancellor of the Diocese of Manchester, New
Hampshire, and the highest-ranking lay person in the
diocesan administration. Bishop John B. McCormack
appointed Quinlan chancellor in December 2004.
She began working with the diocese in 2002 during
the most turbulent time in its history, as hundreds of
new complaints of sexual abuse of minors came
forth in the wake of the growing scandal in the
Archdiocese of Boston. She helped the diocese
“formulate a response to victims that was more pastoral
than confrontational. I was able to talk on a peer
level with the lawyers representing the Diocese and help them understand that ﬁrst
we needed to help anyone who was harmed.”
Quinlan, who previously practiced labor and employment law at the Manchester ﬁrm
of Devine Millimet, also has implemented an educational program to promote
children’s awareness of the dangers of abuse. “As a mother of two elementary
school children, I wanted to help the Church create something that will resonate
with both children and parents.”

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NEWSMAKER
Saher J. Macarius, JD ’94, a Framingham attorney
and Egyptian national, successfully argued Succar v.
Ashcroft before the US Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit. The case concerned the 1996 Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act,
which curtailed many immigrants’ rights and forms of
relief. Through regulation, the attorney general later
added another category of immigrants, including
those arriving in the United States without a visa.
Those who were allowed in for humanitarian reasons
would be barred from adjusting their status to permanent
residency (obtaining a green card), and many were subsequently deported in
violation of Congressional intent.
“At ﬁrst impression, Succar v. Ashcroft is a groundbreaking case solely for ﬁnding
this regulation to be invalid,” Macarius says. “However, this landmark case also
delves further into how the attorney general and any other executive agency, enacts
a regulation. This decision [entered on January 5], one of the most extensive for an
immigration issue, has a direct impact on all executive agencies, as it draws a road
map that dictates the proper procedure to enact a regulation.”

Dana Randles has joined Houlihan/
Lawrence, an independent residential real
estate ﬁrm, in its Pound Ridge and South
Salem, NY, offices as a sales associate.

1995
Class Correspondent
Gary Murad
h: 75 Cambridge Parkway, Apt. E110
Cambridge, MA 02142
phone: 617.621.0119

Seth Ellis has married Stefanie Davidson.
They live in Boca Raton, FL.
Daniel Graves was elected president of
the Franklin County Bar Association for
2004-2005.
Matthew Maiona has married Sara
Ward, JD ’02. They live in Boston.
Robert J. Tosti has joined
the Boston office of
Edwards &amp; Angell as a
partner. The intellecutal
property attorney was
formerly with Testa,
Hurwitz &amp; Thibeault.

1996
Class Correspondents
Jennifer Hoopis D’Ambra
w: Hoopis &amp; Hoopis
33 College Hill Road, Bldg. 5B
Warwick, RI 02886

phone: 401.823.6266
fax: 401.823.6265
email: hoopis@aol.com
Michael Lartigue
h: 32B Whites Avenue, #8806
Watertown, MA 02472
phone: 617.926.6824
email: mjl96@hotmail.com
Ray Lyons
h: 125 Hayden Road
Groton, MA 01450
phone: 978.692.7000
email: attylyons@aol.com
Michael Palladino
w: UMass Donahue Institute
10 Tremont Street, 4th ﬂoor
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.367.8901
fax: 617.367.1434
email: palladino@donahue.umassp.edu

Adam L. Benjamin was named senior
vice president and equity research analyst
for semiconductor devices at Jefferies &amp;
Company, Inc.
Melanie Brockway, an attorney with the
law ﬁrm of LaTanzi, Spaulding &amp; Landreth,
P.C., in Orleans, has married Brendan
O’Keefe. They are living in Orleans.
Rebecca Collet was named associate
athletic director for marketing communications at Boston University. Collet, who
was previously director of corporate affairs
for John Hancock Financial Services, was

most recently a principal of Collet
Communications LLC, the private public
relations and communications strategies
ﬁrm she founded in November 2004.
Christopher Cassara, an attorney in the
corporate practice group of Partridge,
Snow &amp; Hahn, LLP, in New Bedford, was
named to the board of directors of the
Buttonwood Park Zoological Society.
Elaine Martel, senior legal counsel for
Stratus Technologies of Maynard, received
the George B. Morgan ’20 Award from the
MIT Alumni Association for sustained
excellence in her service to its Educational
Council.
Michael T. Matraia has
formed a law practice in
Worcester that will help
audit committees of public
companies carry out their
responsibilities and comply
with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Jeannine Reardon, BS ’93, and husband
David M. Reardon, BS ’93, JD ’99,
announce the birth of their daughter, Ashley
Rose Reardon. She was born on September
30, 2004, and weighed 5 lbs., 9 oz.
Michael Williams was listed in the 10th
annual “Lawyers of the Year” by
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly.

1997
Class Correspondents
Dylan Carson
w: Dylan M. Carson
Kaye Scholer, LLP
The McPherson Building
901 Fifteenth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005-2327
phone: 202.682.3664
fax: 202.414.0338
email: dcarson@kayescholer.com
Stephanie Lyons
h: 41 Hawthorn Street, Suite 34
Cambridge, MA 02138
phone: 617.234.1914
e-mail: stephlyons@comcast.com

w: Cornell &amp; Gollub
75 Federal Street
Boston, MA 02110
phone: 617.482.8100
fax: 617.482.3917
email: slyons@cornellgollub.com

Heath E. Antonio, an assistant district
attorney in Bristol County, has married Raquel
Carvalho. They are living in New Bedford.

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NEWSMAKER
Christine P. O’Connor, JD ’94, city solicitor for
Lowell since 2003, is credited with being one of the
key leaders in the city’s continuing renaissance. With
a keen understanding of energy deregulation, she’s
worked to signiﬁcantly cut the city’s costs of electric
power, and has helped to bring Lowell’s bond rating
to AA-3, enabling the city to move forward with its
revitalization plans.
As Lowell’s top lawyer, O’Connor handles an
enormous range of issues involving administrative
law, litigation, general business practices, labor disputes,
tax collections, public bidding, municipal bonds,
and the public schools. Upon being named by Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly as
one of the Up and Coming Lawyers of 2004, O’Connor said that her biggest
challenge “is always the deal I am working on right now.”

Roger J. Kineavy, Jr., a ﬁreﬁghter for the
city of Quincy, has married Cynthia Ann
Dowd. They live in Weymouth.

Matthew J. McDonough has joined the
law offices of Sherwood Guernsey, P.C., as
an associate.

Class Correspondents
Paul Cronin
h: 2 Reed Lane
Bedford, MA 01730
phone: 781.542.2290

Mark R. Quigley has joined the
Marblehead real estate brokerage ﬁrm
Landmark Properties.

Peter Fiore
h: 58 Mott Street
Arlington, MA 02474
phone: 781.646.6009

1999

Jamie Murphy
h: 17 Ruggiano Circle
Weymouth, MA 02188
phone: 617.725.8095

S U F F O L K L AW

Nathanael E. Wright
h: 79 Hampstead Road
Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
email: Legis70@yahoo.com

32

Daniel P. Barry, vice president and assistant
general counsel of Baring Asset Management
Inc. in Boston, was named co-chairman of
the Investment Companies and Advisers
Committee of the Business Law Section
of the Boston Bar Association.
Paul English, a member of the law ﬁrm
Gawryl and MacAllister in Nashua, NH, has
married Chanyn Norton. They are living in
Nashua, NH.

Tamara La Pointe, general counsel and
assistant business manager at Choate
Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, CT, has
married Robert Laurie, JD ’00, an attorney
at Edwards and Angell in Hartford, CT.
They are living in East Haddam, CT.

1998

Jenny L. Redden
w: Bellotti &amp; Barretto, PC
25 Thorndike Street
Cambridge, MA 02141
phone: 617.225.2100
email: jlredden@earthlink.net

of Conservation and Recreation, has
married Lisa Ann Pettinato. They are
living in Brookline.

David H. Rosenberg, MBA ’97,
announces the opening of his law office,
David H. Rosenberg, P.L., a Florida limited
liability company in Sarasota, FL. specializing
in real estate and civil litigation. He can be
reached at david@srqlaw.net.

Arlington, MA 02474
phone: 781.646.1692
email: hlitsas@hotmail.com

Trevi Berretta has joined the law ﬁrm of
Gilmore, Rees, Carlson &amp; Cataldo, P.C.
Catherine Eastwood was named an
associate in the Boston law ﬁrm of
Partridge Snow &amp; Hahn, LLP, and is a
member of the firm’s creditors’ rights
practice group.
Kenneth M. Collette, assistant general
counsel for the Massachusetts Department

Class Correspondents
J.R. Craven
h: 95 Grayﬁeld Avenue
W. Roxbury, MA 02132
phone: 617.323.3138
Marc Diller
w: Diller &amp; Diller
84 State Street, 6th Floor
Boston, MA 02109
phone: 617.523.7771
fax: 617.227.1767
email: dillerlaw@aol.com
Thamir A.R. Kaddouri, Jr.
w: Law Office of Thamir A.R. Kaddouri, Jr., PA
2107 West Cass Street, Suite C
Tampa, FL 33606
phone: 813.600.5752
fax: 813.600.5785
Helen Litsas
h: 10 Wright Street

Thamir A.R. Kaddouri, Jr., and his wife
Melissa announce the birth of their daughter
Savannah Grace Kaddouri. She was born on
October 30 and weighed 6 lbs., 4.5 oz.
David M. Reardon (see Reardon, ’96)

2000
Class Correspondents
Susan M. Bourque
phone: 617.725.0400 x8385
email: smb@parkerscheer.com
Kristin Cole
h: 122 Bowdoin Street
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.722.0854
email: colekristin@hotmail.com
Kathleen Delaplain
h: 21 Michigan Avenue, #2
Somerville, MA 02145
phone: 617.628.5840
email: kdelaplain@hotmail.com

w: MA Dept. of Environmental Protection
Office of General Counsel
One Winter Street, 3rd Fl.
Boston, MA 02108
phone: 617.654.6650
fax: 617.338.5511
email: kathleen.delaplain@state.ma.us

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Jennifer Genzale
h: 115 Garﬁeld Avenue
Chelsea, MA 02150
phone: 617.884.2913
email: jenng007@hotmail.com

Patrick Faherty was promoted to the
rank of sergeant in the city of Quincy
Police Department.
Stacey Friends, a trademark, copyright
and entertainment attorney with Ruberto,
Israel &amp; Weiner, PC, was named a member
-at-large of the Intellectual Property Law
Section of the Boston Bar Association.
Sonia K. Guterman has joined the
Boston ﬁrm of Lawson &amp; Weitzen as a
partner.
Kristen Andrikopoulos is teaching in
the science department at Reading
Memorial High School.
Robert Laurie (see LaPointe, ’98)
Geoffrey Waller has formed Reidy Waller,
LLP, a law ﬁrm specializing in civil, criminal,
and appellate litigation located in Boston.
Waller was previously a superior court
prosecutor for the Norfolk County District
Attorney’s office.

2001
Class Correspondents
Wendy I. Provoda
w: US Postal Service,
Northeast Area Law Office
8 Griffin Road North
Windsor, CT 06006-0170
phone: 860.285.1609
email: wprovoda@usps.gov

h: 40 Middleﬁeld Drive
West Hartford, CT 06107
phone: 860.523.4772

Meredith Linnell has married Corey
Murphy. They live in Tampa, FL.

Kathleen E. Lang has joined the law
offices of Boyd &amp; Boyd PC in Centerville.

Matthew Oleyer, MBA ’01, who is associated
with the Boston law ﬁrm of Keegan,
Werlin &amp; Pabian, has married Ashley
Sexton. They live in Boston.

Derek Massey, vice president of title
operations and an attorney with Market
Street Settlement Group, has married
Eugenia Rutherford, JD ’03, an attorney
with Market Street Settlement Group,
Manchester, NH. They live in Bedford, NH.

Laura M. Roffo has married Matthew
Thompson, JD ’02. They are living in
South Weymouth.

2002
Annette L. Baker discussed guardianship
issues as a guest on The O’Reilly Factor, a
Fox News program.
William Burns, MBA ’04, was promoted
to the position of director within O’Neill
and Associates’ technology practice.
Megan Byrnes has been named an
associate attorney at Querrey &amp; Harrow,
a 100-attorney law ﬁrm with offices in
greater metropolitan Chicago; Merrillville,
IN; New York City, and London, England.
Justin Fabella, an attorney with Morrison
Mahoney LLP in New York City, has married
Alison Gormley, JD ’02, an attorney with
Taub and Marder, P.C., in New York City.
Alison Gormley (see Fabella)
Justin Hayes, an attorney with the New
Hampshire Public Defenders Office, has
married Jody Dan. They live in North
Andover.
Stephen Rossetti Jr., an associate at
O’Reilly, Grosso &amp; Gross, P.C., has married
Jill Moloney. They live in Brighton.
Matthew Thompson (see Roffo, ’01)
Sara Ward (see Maiona, ’95)
Marc M. Wefers has
become a principal in the
patent group of Fish &amp;
Richardson P.C.

Lucinda V. Rivera
h: 463 Commonwealth Ave. #2
Boston, MA 02115
phone: 617.266.6001
email: Lucinda_Rivera@hotmail.com
Laura Unﬂat
h: 519 Lewis Wharf
Boston, MA 02110
phone: 617.523.0631
email: lunﬂat@tiac.net
Donald Wyse
h: 32 Maple Avenue
Nahant, MA 01908
phone: 781.581.0683
email: wysedd@yahoo.com

Eric Holt has married Marlena Taylor.
They live in Lawrence.

Anita Weisberg, an assistant district attorney in Essex County, has married
Dr. Robert A. Russo.

2003
Class Correspondent
Sean R. Higgins
w: Pollack &amp; Flanders, LLP
50 Congress Street, Suite 430
Boston, MA 02109
phone: 617.259.3000
fax: 617.259.3050
email: shiggins@pollackandﬂanders.com

Michael McCain, has joined the law ﬁrm
of Neaton &amp; Puklich, PLLP as an associate
attorney in Minneapolis, MN.
Melissa Gnoza, an attorney with the
Newton law ﬁrm of Tamkin &amp; Hochberg,
LLP, has married William Ogden.They live
in Middleton.
Erica Spokis has joined the Worcester
law ﬁrm of Lian, Zarrow, Eynon &amp; Shea
as an associate.
Jason Stone has married Aimee Terban.
They live in Chestnut Hill.
Paul Tetrault has joined the Boston law
ﬁrm of Melick, Porter &amp; Shea, LLP.

2004
Class Correspondents
Seth N. Stratton
h: 14 Curtis Street, #3
Salem, MA 01970
978-594-5426
str09035@suffolk.edu

MaryDilys Anderson was named an
associate at Wolf, Greenﬁeld &amp; Sacks, P.C.
Heather M. Gamache has joined Weber
Gallagher Simpson Stapleton Fires &amp;
Newby as an associate in the ﬁrm’s
Philadelphia office.
Roque El-Hayek was named an associate
at Wolf, Greenﬁeld &amp; Sacks, P.C.
Amie C. Joseph was named community
development associate for the city of
Gardner.
John K. Kelley has joined the corporate
group of Burn &amp; Levinson LLP as an
associate in the ﬁrm’s Boston office.
Joshua Miller has married Emily Shapiro.
They live in Brookline.
Carole G. Rapoport is working at the
ﬁrm of Denner O’Malley with Rob
Sinsheimer, JD ’79, an adjunct member
of the Suffolk faculty.
David Torrisi was elected to a fourth
term as Massachusetts state representative
from the 14th Essex district.

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IN MEMORIAM
William F. Scanlon, JD ’29
Bennie Gold, JD ’34

Louis A. Cyr, JD ’50
William F. Meara, JD ’51
Francis G. Sheehan, JD ’52
Eugene E. Sololosky, JD ’54
Walter E. Steele, Sr., JD ’54
William F. DiPesa, JD ’55
Robert Cauchon, JD ’57
Robert Driscoll, JD ’65
John J. Twomey, JD ’65
John P. McGloin, JD ’66
Garth Kenyon Chandler, JD ’67
Edward Murphy, Jr., JD ’68
William P. Spanos, JD ’68
John J. Cassidy, JD ’69
Robert F. Wright, JD ’69
James R. McMahon, Jr., BS ’69, JD ’70
Henry J. Kerr, JD ’70

photo by Globe Staff Tom Landers

Arthur Montuori, BA ’46, JD ’49

Robert V. Cauchon, JD ’57
Robert V. Cauchon of Cotuit and Marshﬁeld died on September
28. The former chief justice of the Massachusetts Land Court was 78.
Born in Warwick, Rhode Island, Cauchon graduated from Yale
University with a degree in economics. He served in the US Navy
and traveled to China after World War II; he also served in the
Korean War. He earned the rank of lieutenant commander,
according to The Boston Globe.
Cauchon was politically active and became executive director of the Democratic State
Committee. In 1962, he helped Endicott Peabody win election as governor. Peabody
named Cauchon as his statewide campaign director.
In 1965, Cauchon joined Boston’s Sullivan &amp; Worcester, where he practiced for 21
years, specializing in real estate litigation and public utility regulation. He was active in
Marshﬁeld town affairs, serving on the Board of Registrars and the Charter Commission.
In 1986, Governor Michael Dukakis appointed Cauchon to the Land Court, where he
served until his retirement in 1996. At the time, the Boston Globe wrote that Judge
Cauchon’s knowledge “has transformed [the] Land Court from the backwater of the
Massachusetts trial court system to the court of choice for high-proﬁle land use cases.”
Following the death of his wife in 2000, Cauchon relocated to Cotuit, remaining active
as a mediator with REBA Dispute Resolution, a legal consultant, and an expert witness
at trials. He also served as co-counsel on certain land use cases, The Real Estate Bar
Association News reported.
He leaves a daughter, Barbara A. of Attleboro; two sons, Richard R. of Kingston and
Thomas W. of Waltham; four grandchildren; and a brother, Paul of St. Petersburg,
Florida. He was the brother of the late Herve Cauchon.

Winifred Kiernan, JD ’72
Robert A. White, Sr., JD ’72

Walter E. Steele, Sr., JD ’54

Robert P. Keough, JD ’73

Walter E. Steele, Sr., of South Dartmouth and Boston died on January 21.
The prosecutor, criminal defense attorney, and judge was 78.

John E. Nanorta, Jr., JD ’73
James A. Paisley, JD ’73
James J. Caruso, Jr., JD ’75
Robert L. Elliott, JD ’75
Robert A. N. Foote, Jr., JD ’75
Robert E. Manchester, JD ’75
Daniel Gilmore, JD ’79
Joseph D. O’Connell, JD ’79

S U F F O L K L AW

Paul V. Dullea, JD ’80

34

Florence K. Murray, LLD ’81 (Hon.)
Suzanne L. King, JD ’88
John Dones, JD ’91
Tamara A. Greelish, JD ’91
A. David Mazzone, LLD ’95 (Hon.)
David S. Connolly, JD ’02

Born in Roxbury, Steele served in the Navy as a Seabee. Upon his graduation from the
Law School, he joined Suffolk District Attorney Garrett H. Byrne as a legal aide. Steele
was named an assistant district attorney in 1957, the position he held until 1969,
when he was appointed special prosecutor for Dukes County on Martha’s Vineyard. He
was in the position for just a month before serving as special prosecutor in the case
concerning the accident on Chappaquiddick Island that led to Mary Jo Kopechne’s death.
He practiced as a criminal defense attorney until he was appointed associate justice of
Dukes County District Court in 1975. In 1980, he was named to the Superior Court.
He leaves his wife, Janet Stella Kotroﬁ of South Dartmouth; a daughter, Roberta J. of
Fort Lauderdale, Florida; two sons, Terrance of West Roxbury and Walter E., Jr., of South
Boston; and six grandchildren. He was the father of the late Frederick S. Steele.

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Page 35

IN MEMORIAM

Suzanne L. King, JD ’88

David S. Connolly, JD ‘02

Suzanne L. King of Boston died on
November 16, 2004. The commercial
leasing attorney was 44.

David S. Connolly of Boston died in a
helicopter crash while on military duty in
Afghanistan on April 7. The Army Reserve
captain and Suffolk County assistant
district attorney was 37.

King began her career as a paralegal
at Boston’s Rubin &amp; Rudman. Upon
graduating from the Law School’s evening
division, she continued with the ﬁrm as
an associate. In 1995, she joined the
commercial leasing practice of Goulston &amp; Storrs, becoming a
director in 1998. According to colleagues at Goulston &amp; Storrs,
where King practiced until her death, King represented all of the
major office landlords in Boston, drafting leases at the Prudential
Center, the Hancock Tower, and Rowes Wharf, among others. She
was known for making her clients and the opposing side laugh
during even the most difficult negotiations. In a number of
instances, those who started out across the table from her later
hired her. King was reputed to know every commercial real estate
broker east of the Mississippi, but she maintained that this was
a slight exaggeration.
King was an active member of New England Women in Real
Estate (NEWIRE), chairing the Community Involvement
Committee and serving on the Steering Committee. She was
especially proud of NEWIRE’s recent establishment of a
Centennial Scholarship Fund at Suffolk’s Sawyer School of
Management, stating, “Our mission creates equality and parity
and empowers women. The scholarship directly beneﬁts someone
who may not have the ﬁnancial resources and who comes from
a non-typical background.”
She was active with both Massachusetts Continuing Legal
Education and the Commercial Brokers Association, serving on
numerous program faculty panels, and was a judge for the
Commercial Brokers Association “Deal of the Year,” for a number
of years. King also was a volunteer for AwardsMassachusetts
Association for the Blind.

Connolly, who served in the Army Reserve’s
1173rd Transportation Battalion, was
aboard the CH-47 Chinook helicopter when
it crashed in bad weather approximately 80 miles southwest of
Kabul, The Boston Globe reported. None of the 18 people in the
aircraft survived.
Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, JD ’83, who
hired Connolly, told the Globe upon learning of the crash, “Word
that he may have been on that helicopter has devastated our
office. He was very respected. He struck me as a young man who
wanted to make a difference, who could see the greater good.”
Connolly was a member of the Army Reserve Officers’ Training
Corp at Boston College, graduating in 1994. He entered active
duty and served with the Army Rangers. Soon after accepting an
offer to join the district attorney’s office, Connolly was sent to
Iraq. He began work as an assistant district attorney in June
2004. He was expected to return from active duty in June.
Connolly leaves his wife Debra (Toran) of Boston; his brothers
Joseph P. and his wife Jeanne of Duluth, Georgia, Gerald P.
and his wife Susan of Needham, Paul R. of Duxbury, Gregory
A. and his fiancee Jessica Mickelson of Boston; his sisters
Marguerite F. and her husband Walter Divine of Newton, and
Nancy E. Sperry and her husband James of Gloucester; and
16 nieces and nephews. His parents, Gerald F. and Marguerite
(McHugh) Connolly both died in 2003.

King leaves her husband, Steven Bang of Boston; her mother,
Joyce King of Quincy; her sister, Judi King and Judi’s husband,
Guy Sanderson of Quincy.

S U F F O L K L AW

9897.txt

35

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Page 36

IN MEMORIAM

A. David Mazzone, LLD ‘95 (Hon.)

Florence K. Murray, LLD ‘81 (Hon.)

Judge A. David Mazzone of Wakeﬁeld, who
served 26 years on the bench of the US
District Court, District of Massachusetts,
died on October 25, 2004. He was 76.

Florence Murray of Newport, Rhode Island, the ﬁrst woman
appointed to the Superior and Supreme Courts of Rhode Island
died on March 27. She was 87.

Mazzone was born in Everett,
Massachusetts, and received a BA from
Harvard College in 1950 and a JD from
DePaul University College of Law in 1957.
His wide-ranging career included positions in the Army and CIA,
insurance adjusting, and as assistant US attorney under US
Attorney Arthur Garrity, who later became his colleague on the
bench and was a lifelong friend and mentor. Judge Mazzone also
practiced law privately in Boston for several years and was
appointed to the Superior Court of Massachusetts by Governor
Michael Dukakis before joining the federal bench. While a federal judge, Mazzone was appointed by President George H.W.
Bush to serve on the US Sentencing Commission.
Some of the most important environmental federal cases in history
were heard in Mazzone’s courtroom, including a lawsuit to prevent
oil and gas drilling on Georges Bank, the massive, 20-year
cleanup of Boston Harbor, and a suit to reduce overﬁshing in
New England. Mazzone also adjudicated the Kodak-Polaroid
patent dispute, a seminal intellectual property case.
Oliver C. Mitchell, Jr., JD ’79, chairman of Ford Motor Company’s
Dealer Policy Board, served as Mazzone’s law clerk from 1979 to
1980. Always impressed with Mazzone’s genuine and consistent
kindness, Mitchell recalled, “Judge Mazzone treasured the
opportunity to meet and spend time with all kinds of people. His
former law clerks found it amazing that he could recall the names
of people he met once and spoke with only brieﬂy. He always
remembered little things about these people, and he always
addressed them by name. Mazzone had a peculiar sense for
fairness and equity; something about his humble roots—his
heritage—always prompted him to ﬁnd a solution that treated
everyone fairly.”

S U F F O L K L AW

Judge Mazzone is survived by his wife of 53 years, Eleanor
Stewart Mazzone; sons Andrew, JD ’03, of Cambridge, John of
Boston, and Robert of Darien, Connecticut; daughters Margaret
of Nashville, Tennessee, Jan of Williston, Vermont, Martha of
Boston, and Carolyn of Wakeﬁeld; his sisters Maria Alimena of
Rye, New York, and Flora Joyce of Boston; and nine grandchildren.

36

Murray, who enjoyed a 40-year judicial career of ﬁrsts, served as
the state’s ﬁrst woman Superior Court judge for 22 years, according
to reports by Rhode Island News Channel 10 and the Associated
Press. In 1978, she became the ﬁrst woman presiding judge of
that court; one year later, she was appointed the ﬁrst woman on
the Supreme Court. She retired from the Supreme Court in 1996.
“Judge Murray brought down the barriers and beckoned the rest
of us to follow her,” recalled Maureen McKenna Goldberg, JD
’78, LLD ’99 (Hon.), who assumed Murray’s position on the
Supreme Court in 1997 and is now the only woman on the high
court bench.

The Providence Journal reported that Murray graduated from
Syracuse University and was the only woman in the graduating
class of 1942 at Boston University Law School. Following
graduation, she joined the Women’s Army Corps. Murray served
for six years in the state Senate, and was the only woman in the
chamber at the time. In 1990, the Newport County Courthouse
was named for Murray.
Murray’s husband, Paul F., with whom she practiced law at one
time, died in 1995. She is survived by her son, Paul M. of
Algonquin, Illinois.

Edward F. McLaughlin
Edward F. McLaughlin, Jr., of Osterville
and Jamaica Plain, died on January 21.
The former lieutenant governor was 84.
McLaughlin is the father of former
Assistant Attorney General Paul R.
McLaughlin, JD ’81, who was killed by a
gang member in 1995, and for whom the
Paul R. McLaughlin Scholarship at Suffolk
Law School is named.
McLaughlin served in the Navy during World War II in the same
PT boat squadron in the Solomon Islands as President John F.
Kennedy. After Kennedy’s election, Kennedy sponsored
McLaughlin’s appointment as an assistant US attorney in
Boston, The Boston Globe reported.
McLaughlin served on the Boston City Council from 1953 to
1961. He was lieutenant governor under John A. Volpe, from
1961 to 1963. Later, he was general counsel of the MTA (now
the MBTA), and worked in private practice until his retirement
several years ago.
He leaves his wife Elizabeth; three sons, Edward F., of Needham,
Robert D. of San Francisco, California, Richard J. of Medﬁeld; a
daughter, Elizabeth Ann LePera of New York; six grandchildren
and a sister, Mary Palm of California. He was the father of the
late Patricia Ann McLaughlin and Paul R. McLaughlin, JD ’81.

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Page IBC

PROFILE IN GIVING

Giving Back with Purpose
Gift Annuity Invests in the Future of Suffolk Students
when paul j. fitzpatrick BA ’56, JD ’57 decided
to establish The Honorable Paul J. Fitzpatrick Scholarship
Fund, his goal was clear. “I wanted to help needy students
with their tuition costs, ease the ﬁnancial pressure on them so
they would be able to focus on their academics and would not
be compelled to be working all the time,” he says. Judge
Fitzpatrick, no stranger to hard work, put himself through
school with a series of part-time jobs.
After graduating from Suffolk Law, Judge Fitzpatrick worked
as an associate in the Boston ﬁrm of Lee &amp; Graham. It was
there that he discovered his love for trial work. “I worked my
way into being a trial man through the usual route—probate,
personal injury, cases of that nature,” he says. “Trial work
became my niche.”
In 1963, Judge Fitzpatrick heeded the call to public service
and became a trial attorney for the US General Service
Administration. In this capacity he represented all civilian US
government agencies, principally as users in the field of
transportation. This work necessitated frequent travel, and his
wife, Mary Collins Fitzpatrick, often joined him as he argued
cases throughout the country.
Judge Fitzpatrick enjoyed the challenge of arguing these cases.
They were crucial to the public interest, involving, as they
often did, matters of international law, maritime concern, antitrust issues, and even monetary decisions critical enough to
the economy that they were sometimes directly advanced to
the US Court of Appeals or even to the Supreme Court.
In 1972 Judge Fitzpatrick was appointed to the bench as a US
administrative law judge, an appointment based on a nationwide competitive exam. For him, this position was the logical
extension of a career devoted entirely to the interests of the
US government. In this capacity, he was required to consider
collectively all arguments presented by numerous parties with
variant interests. During his 24 years on the bench he served
with the Interstate Commerce Commission, the Federal
Maritime Commission, and, ﬁnally, with the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission.
Judge Fitzpatrick retired in 1996, having spent more than 30
years employed by the federal government. He spent the next
four years caring for his wife, whom he lost to ovarian cancer
in 2000. He presently resides near Charleston, South Carolina,
where he enjoys the beneﬁt of the many cultural and historic
activities, as well as the nearby beaches.

In deciding to make a gift to Suffolk University Law School
for student ﬁnancial aid, Judge Fitzpatrick, whose affection for
Suffolk is evident, opted to endow his scholarship through a
charitable gift annuity. He hopes his scholarship fund will
beneﬁt future generations of Suffolk Law students. Since he
grew up in New York City, graduated from Brooklyn High
School, and attended The City College of New York, his
preference is that the fund benefit deserving students from
the New York metropolitan area.
“Gift annuities provide a win-win situation for the donors and
the Law School,” says Dean Robert H. Smith. “We are deeply
grateful to Judge Fitzpatrick for his thoughtful scholarship
support. His annuity will reach beyond his lifetime with an
endowed scholarship that will beneﬁt deserving students. This
gift is a testament to his belief in our mission and vision.” The
Honorable Paul J. Fitzpatrick Scholarship Fund is part of the
University’s Centennial Scholarship initiative that will recognize
100 donors who create a newly endowed scholarship, or
enhance an existing one, with a gift of $50,000 or more in
honor of Suffolk’s upcoming centennial anniversary.
For information on charitable gift annuities and other gift
vehicles, please contact Charlotte W. Sobe, director of planned
giving, at 617.573.8441 or by e-mail at csobe@suffolk.edu. •
by Maria Palomino

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Page BC

CELEBRATING 100 YEARS 1906-2006
Suffolk's centennial anniversary is just
one year away. As we count down to this
momentous occasion, continue to look to
this space for snapshots of the University's
ﬁrst 100 years. Suffolk has long been building
and expanding its presence on Beacon Hill.
The most recent addition to Suffolk's campus
is the University's acquisition of space as
the master tenant of 73 Tremont Street, a
gracious 13-story building at the corner of
Beacon Street, built in 1895.
Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge presides over the laying of the
cornerstone for what was once the home of Suffolk Law School and what is
now the Archer Building, 20 Derne Street, in 1920.

Non-Proﬁt Org.
US Postage
PAID
Boston, MA
Permit No. 55195

c/o Office of Advancement
8 Ashburton Place
Boston, MA 02108
www.law.suffolk.edu

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THOMAS J. BOYNTON, President
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1906-1937

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THOMAS J. BOYNTON is widely known to the public
from his long and honorable career at the bar and his
distinguished pu b lie service as M ayor o f E verett,
Attorney Genera\ of the Commonwealth and United
States Attorney for the district of Massachusetts. In
his active and kindly career thousands upon thousands
have learned to know and bless him for his wise and
disinterested counsel and aid.
But Suffolk Law School has special reason to be
grateful to him and to offer him today her meed of
honor. For more than a quarter of a century this institution has been a large beneficiary of the unselfish
devotion characteristic of Thomas J. Boynton.

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Twenty-eight years ago, when Suffolk Law School
was less than two years of age, he was the chief speaker
at the closing exercises for the year. He has participated prominently and invaluably in every Commencement in her history since then. He has been President
of the Board of Trustees since the school was incorporated. Every law degree ever issued by Suffolk Law
School bears his signature.

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He is the revered and beloved friend of every Suffolk
man. He has poured the wealth of an exceptionally
benign personality into their service from the humblest
days of the school to the present hour. His mellow
tones and eloquent tongue have lent dignity and charm
to our public exercises. His illuminating humor and
sage advice have cheered and inspired our departing
graduates. His unaffected humanity has revealed to
all the worthiest and truest Americanism.
Suffolk Law School is profoundly grateful to President Boynton. She is indeed fortunate that he is able
and willing to carry on in her service, that her students
will continue to enjoy his wise and benevolent guidance in the perplexing years that are upon us.

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Suffolk Law School in paying honor to Gleason L. Archer, its Dean
and Founder, honors itself. Educational annals contain few instances
of such devotion to an institution and to an ideal as will be found in the
thirty years of service that Dean Archer has rendered to the school
which he created alone and unaided in September, 1906. He did not
realize when he opened an humble evening law school in Roxbury that
it would one day become the outstanding educational institution which
it has already become. He did realize, however, that ambitious and
worthy young men were being denied opportunity for legal training
solely from economic necessity which obliged them to work for a living.
"Archer's Evening Law School," as he called it in 1906, was to minister
to such men. Then when the magnitude of the public need was apparent the present name of Suffolk Law School was adopted.
For eight years at great personal sacrifice, he bore unaided the
financial burden of maintaining the struggling school, taking the risk
again and again of borrowing money on his personal credit when his
assets were character alone. The last three years of that period found
him devoting time and energy to the limit of unusual capacity to the
task of winning legislative approval for Suffolk Law School. When the
charter fight was won and the School developed to the point where
its financial success was assured Dean Archer conveyed by deed of gift
to the Trustees named in the charter all his proprietary right to the
School which he had created with such toil and travail through the
years, thus to make it a permanent institut:on of strictly public character in which no individual could have any personal ownership. Since
that date Dean Archer, though but a salaried official, has repeatedly
ventured all his worldly goods and even his life insurance to tide the
school over financial crises. He did this when the school purchased
45 Mt. Vernon Street; again when it built its annex there in 1915 and
yet again in much greater measure when an ambitious building program
was undertaken in 1920 on the site of the present school home. Every
promissory note or obligation undertaken by Suffolk Law School in
this building enterprise was a joint and several obligation signed by
Suffolk Law School and Gleason L. Archer as an individual. At one
Jime more than half a million dollars of such obligations were outstandg; yet today Dean Archer's financial prudence and skill have enabled
e School to redeem all but a fraction of its obligations.
Page seven

�His administration of the School has been marked from the b
ginning by considerable initiative, originality, and practical good sens
He has demonstrated rare talent in the choice of teachers and counselo
from the legal profession and in selecting able administrative officers.
He has achieved teamwork to a high degree in faculty and admin
tration, and has encouraged the utmost personal development of
associates by entrusting to each full responsibility for his task and
giving each complete freedom to perform in his own way the dutie
assigned. The faculty and officers of administration are unhampere
by academic red tape or constraint upon originality and initiative i
the pursuit of the main objects of the institution. Each is confident i
the security of his tenure so long as his performance measures up tot
needs of the institution. Six members of the Faculty have been teachi
continuously for over fifteen years, one of them for twenty-one year
and another for twenty-eight years. The Dean himself has been teac
ing from the beginning.
Dean Archer early enlisted as trustees the aid and counsel of some
the greatest lawyers of the Commonwealth, distinguished both for leg
attainments and experience in high office, among them the late Gener
Charles W. Bartlett, the Hon. James H. Vahey, and Hon. Wilmot
Evans, and their active survivors, former Attorneys-General Thom
J. Boynton, James M. Swift, and former Congressman Joseph
O'Connell. One of the latest recruits to this distinguished group
Joseph E. Warner, who became a Trustee while serving as Attorne
General of the Commonwealth and while continuing as an active me
ber of the Faculty on which he has served for many years.
From its lowly beginning it has grown to be one of the leading la
schools of the country in service, efficiency, and numbers. Its growt
has repeatedly required moving to larger quarters, and its library a
other facilities have correspondingly improved.
The present school home on Derne Street opposite the rear wing
the State House is an impressive four-story building occupying t
south end of the entire city block between Temple Street and Ridgewa
Lane and extending back one hundred and fifty feet, affording spacio
lecture halls, auditorium, and library accommodations. The buildin
already has an aggregate seating capacity for eighteen hundred studen
and it is so constructed that additional floors may be added if int
future the institution expands, as we hope, into "Suffolk University."

Suffolk Law School and all its graduates affectionately acknowledg
a debt of gratitude to the resolute man who in youth conceived a visio
of helpfulness to his fellow men and for three decades has striven
mightily and successfully to translate that vision into an everlasti
monument of service to humanity.

1906-07
THOMAS J. BOYNTON, President
CHARLES 'vV. BARTLETT, Vice-President
GLEASON L. ARCHER, Treasurer
\VIL.MOT R. EVANS, JR., Clerk
JosEPH F. O'CONNELL
JAMES H. VAHEY
SUMNER ROBINSON

1936-37
. Arlington, Mass.
OMAS J. BOYNTON, President
Massachusetts, former Attorneyformer U. S. Attorney for
General of Massachusetts
Boston, Mass.
ES M. SWIFT, Vice-President
Massachusetts, Commissioner to
former Attorney-General of
arrange the General Laws
ASON L. ARCHER, Treasurer
Boston, Mass.
Dean and Founder, Suffolk Law School; President, Suffolk
College of Liberal Arts and Suffolk College of Journalism
M J. ARCHER, Secretary
Director, Department of Research and Review

Middleboro, Mass.

Boston, Mass.
former Congressman from Massachusetts, National Committee on Uniform State Laws, American Bar Association
PH E. \;VARNER .
former Attorney-General of Massachusetts

Taunton, Mass.

RGE A. FROST*
.
.
.
.
. West Newton, Mass.
President, George Frost Company, Boston, Mass.
* Deceased, 1936.
Page nine

Page eight

�1936-37
GLEASON L. ARCHER, LL.B., LL.D., Professor of Law.
History of Law.
Dean and Founder of Suffolk Law School.
HIRAM J. ARCHER, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law.
Director, Department of Research and Review since 1915.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1907.
HERBERT S. AVERY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Bankruptcy.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1923.
Law office at 153 Milk Street, Boston.
MARK CROCKETT, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Sales.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
THOMAS F. DUFFY, LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Bills &amp; Notes. Partnership. Wills &amp; Probate.
Landlord &amp; Tenant.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1917.
Law office in Waltham.
ENRY P. FIELDING, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Criminal Law. Agency.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1921.
Former Assistant District Attorney of Suffolk County.
Assistant Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 6 Beacon Street, Boston.
OMAS J. FINNEGAN, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Torts. History of the Law. Sales. Equity &amp; Trusts.
Bankruptcy. Partnership. Domestic Relations.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
Law office at 40 Court Street, Boston.
Page eleven
The first composite picture of the Suffolk Law School Faculty was taken twenty years ago. Of
twelve members in the original body three are still on the teaching staff of Suffolk Law School
appear in this group-PROFESSOR YORK, HIRAM J. ARCHER and DEAN ARCHER.

�WARREN A. FOGARTY, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law. Evidence.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
Law office at 6 Beacon Street, Boston.
ARTHUR V. GETCHELL, LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Real Property. Equity &amp; Trusts.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 74 India Street, Boston.
LEO J. HALLORAN, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Equity &amp; Trusts. Wills &amp; Probate.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 40 Court Street, Boston.
WILLIAM H. HENCHEY, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Torts. History of the Law.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1921.
Former Mayor of Woburn.
Former head of Legal Department of U. S. Internal Revenue.
Law office at 85 Devonshire Street, Boston.
LEO W. HIGGINS, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Carriers.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1930.
Law office in Quincy.
JOHN L. HURLEY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Contracts.
Appointed to Faculty in March, 1919.
Former Assistant Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 19 Milk Street, Boston.
WILLARD P. LOMBARD, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Corporations. Domestic Relations.
Appointed to Faculty in April, 1931.
Member of firm of Stover, Sweetser &amp; Lombard, 18 Tremont Street,
Boston.
JoHN A. McCARTY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Deeds, Mortgages &amp; Easements.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1934.
Law office at 10 State Street, Boston.
Page twelve

K A. MENTON, LLB., Professor of Law.
.
:Massachusetts Plead"m~ &amp; p ract1ce.
.Appointed to Facult?' m August, 1933.
Law office in Cambndge.

TRI C

A · PARKS, LLB., Professor of Law.
.
Workmen's Compensat10n Law.
.Appointed to Faculty in 1915.
Chairman, Industrial Accident Board, State House, Boston.

BP H

XANDER R. SMITH, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Deeds, Mortgages &amp; Easements.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 10 State Street, Boston.
ODORE E. STEVENSON, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Real Property.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1935.
Law office at 73 Tremont Street, Boston.
GER A. STINCHFIELD, B.S., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Criminal Law. Agency.
Appointed to Faculty in December, 1935.
Deputy Clerk, U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
PH E. WARNER, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law.
Appointed to Faculty in December, 1922.
Former Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 11 Beacon Street, Boston.

NETH B. WILLIAMS, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Conflict of Laws &amp; Carriers. Contracts. Evidence.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1930.
Law office at 89 State Street, Boston.

Insurance.

WYMAN, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Massachusetts Pleading &amp; Practice.
Appointed to Faculty in 1920.
Law office at 44 School Street, Boston.
CHESLEY YORK, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Corporations. Bills &amp; Notes. Landlord &amp; Tenant.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1908.
Assistant U. S. Attorney for Massachusetts.
Law office at 11 Beacon Street, Boston.
Page thirteen

�1909
To be the President of the Suffolk Law Alumni Association on the
Thirtieth Year Jubilee of the School is not alone a unique privilege and
honor; it is an honor and a privilege magnified and exalted by the
character and achievements of the Dean and Founder of the School.

53 Lee Street, Cambridge, Mass.

ROLAND EDWARD BROWN
GEORGE Lours BusH

1 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.

CARL COLLAR
GEORGE ARTHUR DOUGLAS
*JAMES FRANCIS O'BRIEN

1910

The lustre of Dean Archer's career the Alumni Association reflects
and appreciatively and affectionately attests.

LEWIS AUSTIN ADAMS

Thirty years Dean Archer has held invitingly
opportunity to young men.
Thirty years of inspiration to ambitious youth!

EMANUEL COHEN
OLE MARTIN DAHL
ROBERT TIMOTHY HEALEY
BERNARD JOSEPH KILLION
CHARLES FRANCIS MURPHY

Thirty years of idealistic devotion to the hope for educational oppor-

HARRY NAYOR
EDWIN LEROY WEISCOPF

709 Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich.

JAMES BERGEN
ERNEST PALMER BRADSTREET

1397 Beacon
73 Tremont
6 Beacon
11 Beacon

Street,
Street,
Street,
Street,

Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
5 Knapp Street, Boston, Mass.

tunity for all in the field of law l
Thirty years that have proved the possibilities of indomitable will,
sterling character and unflinching courage in the heart of a man devoted to the building of a great institution of learning.
In the spirit of the Founder, the Alumni Association invites its
members, Suffolk undergraduates and the public to this observance of
our Thirtieth Anniversary.
The Alumni Association commends the Trustees and Faculty of th
School for their untiring devotion from the beginning to the present
day.
To Dean Archer above all others the Alumni Association extend
felicitations. To you, our Dean, our hearts go out. Fortunate indee
are we and the institution that is our Alma Mater, that you have bee
the guiding intellect and steadying hand through all the troublo
years.
May you continue your great work until fruition of your
tional ideal is as fully realized as human nature and human
permit.

B. J. PARTICELLl

1912
JosEPH ABBOTT
(LARENCE WILFRED BOSWORTH
ATRICK STEPHEN BRODERICK
OHN THO,iIAS Coy
A.c'1:ES JOSEPH CRONIN
ICHAEL FRANCIS CURRAN
ILLIAM GREGORY DOLAN
HUR GEORGE EASTMAN
PETER HERON
CHAEL JOHN HORAN
N EDWARD HOWARD
CIE DODGE JORDAN
HOLAS STANISLAUS LAWLESS
RAHAM LELYVELD
AM EDWIN TUTTLE
FRANCIS WELCH

11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
110 Pleasant Street, Framingham, Mass.

25 vVilson Avenue, Malden, Mass.
111 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
158 Riverside Avenue, Medford, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Central Post Office, Boston, Mass.
320 Union Street, Rockland, Mass.
(Now in U. S. Army)
80 Barnstable Street, Swampscott, Mass.

1913
141 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.

SELL CLUCAS
JOSEPH FLYNN
FRANCIS HALEY
AS FRANCIS HOLLAND
DEUS ALEXANDER KITCHENER
JOSEPH MCSWEENEY
N ALDEN MORRILL

Boston Globe, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
* Deceased.

Page fifteen
Page fourteen

�Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

MICHAEL RUANE
FRANK LESLIE VICCARO

1 State Street, Boston, Mass.

MYER LINDA
WILLIAM MARSHALL, JR.
*BERNARD MATTHEWS
CHARLES S. McEvILLA
*JOSEPH FRANCIS McGRATH

(LL.B. DEGREES FROM THIS DATE)

1914
LOUIS ABRAHAMS
JOHN E. BAILEY
HENRY BENJAMIN PICKMAN BETTS
EVERETT RYDER CAMPBELL
"WILLIAM JOHN COLLINS
WILLIAM GREGORY DOLAN
GEORGE ARTHUR DOUGLAS
FREDERICK DUGDALE
} AMES PETER HERON
PERCIE DODGE JORDAN
JAMES JOSEPH MACKERMAN
JOSEPH ARMAND MARCHARD
WILLIAM JOSEPH McNALLY
Lours EUGENE p ASCO
MYRON PROCTOR PEFFERS
*PHILIP ROSENBLUM
MICHAEL RUANE
HIRAM LOVELL SKINNER
GEORGE MADISON WASHING TON
JOHN FRANCIS WELCH
GEORGE WARREN AYER
ANDREW JAMES HALE BICKFORD
EDGAR RAYMOND BREED
HARRY ERNEST BURROUGHS
FRANK LEO CAREY
ISAAC STEVENS COLLINS
JAMES HERBERT CURRIN
CHARLES ANTHONY DECOURCEY
CHARLES AUGUSTINE DONAHUE
JAMES CHARLES FITZPATRICK
RICHARD ROCHE FLYNN
- - ----}OSEPH EDWARD GRANAHAN

230 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
7 Central Square, Lynn, Mass,
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.

73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
84 State Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.

1915

73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
218 South Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
14 Tyler Avenue, West Medford, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
362 Essex Street, Lawrence, M
52A Broadway, Somerville, Ma
22 Pearl Street, Boston, M
323 Hildreth Building, Lowell, Ma
Room 123, State House, Boston, Ma
101 Billings Road, North Quincy, Ma

*JOHN FRANCIS HALEY
JOSEPH BASSETT HAMMOND
THOMAS VREELAND JONES
JAMES THOMAS KIRKBY
*WILLIAM McCARTHY
JOSEPH ANDREW MURPHY
vVILLIAM FRANCIS O'DONNELL, JR.
WILLIAM OWENS
LEOPOLD FRANCIS QUINN
HARRY GARRETT SELIGMAN

25 East Street, Melrose, M
294 vVashington Street, Boston, M

1916

KARL GRANVILLE BAKER
OLE MARTIN DAHL
EDWARD NATHANIEL DAHLBERG
JOHN HAROLD DREW
THOMAS FRANCIS DUFFY

Page sixteen

* Deceased.

10 Newbury Street, Boston,
43 Tremont Street, Boston,
177 State Street, Boston,
14 Central Avenue, Lynn,
81 Washington Street, Salem,

MAURICE ELI GOLDBERG
ISADORE JAMES GORNSTEIN
JACOB ISRAEL HANFLIG
GEORGE Fox HoGAN
PATRICK FRANCIS JOYCE

40 Court Street, Boston,
30 State Street, Boston,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
12 Market Square, Amesbury,

JOHN LAWRENCE MURPHY
CHARLES SEBASTIAN O'CONNOR
11YRON PROCTOR PEFFERS

88 Tremont Street, Boston, M
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
106 Main Street, Brockton,
53 State Street, Boston, M
680 Main Street, Waltham, M

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

238 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass.
30 Boylston Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
27 School Street Boston Mass
11 Pemberton Square: Boston: Mass:
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.

IsAAC MosTOW
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY
ISADORE EDWARD PARETSKY
WILLIAM BURTON STILES
WILLIAM BANCROFT WALKER

1917
89 State Street, Boston Mass
31 St. James Avenue, Boston: Mass:
14 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
14 Cent:al Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street Boston Mass
DAVID COHEN
222 Walnut Avenue' Revere' Mass.
MICHAEL ABRAM COPLAN
294 Washington Street' Boston' Mass.
WILLIAM EDWARD CUNNINGHAM
127 Walnut Street Wakefield, M ·
SEYMOUR CHANDLER DICKIE
1007 Hyde Park Avenue, 'Hyde Park', Mass.
.
ass.
JOHN JAMES DREA
134 F airmount Street Lowell Ma
JOSEPH EDWARD DWYER
'
ss.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN EVARTS 500-501 Peoples Savings Bank Bldg ·• H' ol yo k e, M ass.
84 State Street, Boston Mass
BERNARD EYGES
3 Annapolis Street, Roxbury' Mass.
NEWMAN CARDINAL FIELDING
32 Hopkins _Street, Hartford: Conn:
SEPH G. HASSELBACK
City Hall, Chelsea, Mass.
EORGE FRANCIS HEDERSON

GEORGE MELVILLE BLANDFORD
FREDERICK BREEN
MAURICE EDWARD CASSIDY
JosEPH BERNARD CLANCY
MELBOURNE EDGAR COFFIN

RLOS SANFORD HOLCOMB
ILLIAM JAMES LEONARD
OLD LIPKIN
ILLIAM FRANCIS McGOWAN
THEW LEE McGRATH
IS KEEGAN MCNALLY
JOHN MULLEN, JR.
ARD LEONARD PAINE
AM HENRY p ARKER
ALOYSIUS p ARKS
T RIDDLE POLLOCK
IS COGGSWELL PORTER
IAN DAVID RAINEY
RGE BRINKERHOFF RANSOM
LIAM ALDEN ROBART
PH FRANCIS ROGERS
TIN DOUGLAS ROSENFIELD
EMERY SEAVER
AS CHARLES SHORT
RICK FREEMAN SMITH
L JOSEPH SULLIVAN
y TERMINIELLO
MORTON TOOLE
LESLIE VICCARO
WATERMAN

1 State Street, Boston Mass
1140 Columbus Avenue Roxbury' M ·
'
ass.
294 W as h mgton S treet, Boston,' Mass.
·
11 Beacon Street Boston Mass
Clerk, Municipal Court, Cha~lestown' Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston: Mass:
10 Tremont Street Boston Mass
Room 272, State House: Boston: Mass:
Navy Yard, Boston Mass
39 McLean Street, Boston' Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston'. Mass:
7 Arlington Street Newton
740 M am S treet, Waltham '
·
'
186 Ruthven Street Boston'
242 Cabot Street,' Beverly:

Ma
ss.
Mass
Mass.
Mass:

51 Cornhill Boston Mass
67 G Street, South Boston' Mass·
270 Broadway, Revere'. Mass:
12 Market Square, Amesbury Mass
1020 River Street, Hyde Park: Mass:

* Deceased.
Page seventeen

�1919

1918
SAMUEL BLACKMAN
HARRY GREENLEAF BLAZO
JOHN BAPTIST BOUDREAU
*ERNEST WILLIAM BRANCH
*STEPHEN CLIFFORD BRESNAHAN
GEORGE SABIN BRIGGS
JOHN JOSEPH CALLAHAN
ARTHUR GERALD CHISHOLM
MARTIN PATRICK CUMMINGS
JAMES HENRY DOOLEY
JOHN CHARLES DRISCOLL
HARRY STANLEY FAIRFIELD
FRANCIS JOSEPH FALVEY
PATRICK JOSEPH FERGUS
JOHN JOSEPH FINNERTY
JOHN GREGORY FITZGERALD
CHARLES GILFIX
FRED GILLESPIE
WILLIAM GOLDBERG
THURE HANSON
JOHN FRANCIS HARDY
*JOHN JOSEPH HEFFERNAN
ELWOOD ASA HOWE
JOHN LAWRENCE HURLEY
ARTHUR NATHAN lLLMAN
FRANCIS JOSEPH KALINAUSKAS
JEREMIAH FRANCIS KILEY
PETER VINCENT MAGGIO
MANUEL MEL VIN MARGET
JOHN JOSEPH MARKEY
STEPHEN AMBROSE MCALEER
FRANK DONALD McCARTHY
PETER JOSEPH McCARTHY
DANIEL JOSEPH MCGILLICUDDY
JAMES PERCIVAL McNAMARA
BENJAMIN FRANCIS MCQUADE
*"WILLIAM JOSEPH MONAHAN
JAMES IRVING MOREHEAD
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY
JAMES PATRICK AUGUSTUS NOLAN
CHARLES EBEN NORDSTROM
CLEMENT AUGUSTINE NORTON
PHILIP PATRICK A. O'CONNELL
JOHN NEVILLE O'DONOHUE
"EDWARD PAUL O'HALLORAN
THOMAS EDWARD PATTEN
*FAMAGUST SIPPING PAULSON
DANIEL THOMAS SHEA
EDWARD THOMAS SIMONEAU
JOHN JOSEPH TOBIN, JR.
DANIEL Lours TUMULTY
JOSEPH JAMES TWITCHELL
WALTER HART WATSON
FREDERICK PAUL WELSCH
JACOB WISSER
LEO WYMAN

49 Winthrop Street, Roxbury, Mass
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass'
449 Broadway, Everett, Mass:

26 Avon Street, Cliftondale, Mass
29 Union Street, Peabody, Mass·
93 Elliott Avenue, West Newton, Mass·
3 Auburn Place, Charlestown, Mass·
33 Broad Street, Boston, M
112 Antrim Street, Cambridge, M
6 Atherton Street, Braintree, M
361 Third Street, South Boston, Mass
Room 707, Statler Building, Worcester, Mass'
Holmes Avenue, Dorchester, Mass·
20 Bedford Street, Lexington, Mass:
1180 Raymond Boulevard, Newark, N. J.
18 Dorrance Street, Charlestown, Mass
69 Chambers Street, Boston, Ma '
125 Eastern Avenue, Worcester, Ma
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
131 State Street, Boston, Ma
22 Beacon Street, Boston, Ma
25 Pemberton Square, Boston, Ma
414 West Broadway, South Boston, M
9 Concord Street, Natick, M
427A Broadway, Everett, M
Station WDAY, Fargo, No. D
51 Monument Avenue, Charlestown, Ma
% United Drug Company, Boston, Ma
60 State Street, Boston, M
North Postal Annex, Boston, M
9 Pleasant Street, Malden, M
16A Ashburton Place, Boston, M
6 Taunton Street, Somerville, M

11 Pemberton Square, Boston,
433 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain,
14 Symphony Road, Boston,
Commonwealth Pier, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
15 State Street, Boston,
235 State House, Boston,

59 Ellery Street, Cambridge, M
186 Main Street, Marlborough, M
1094 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, M
22 Main Street, Peabody, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
16A Ashburton Place, Boston, M
24 Milk Street, Boston, M
27 School Street, Boston, M
44 School Street, Boston, M
• Deceased.

Page eighteen

M
M
M
M
M

21 Nevada Street, Winthrop, Mass.
,'\JI.RON ALLEN
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH HENRY AMSBURY
15 Grove Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE APPLEBJ\.UM
1114 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Mass.
CIJf\.RLES JJ\.SON AUSTIN
10 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIJN HENRY BJ\.CKUS
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIJN JOSEPH BARRY
Clerk's Office, Superior Court, East Cambridge, Mass.
fREDERICK CLIFFORD BEAN
47 Irving Street, Boston, Mass.
SJ1.MUEL ARTHUR BERENSON
28 Thane Street, Dorchester, Mass.
IRVING EDWJI.RD BERMAN
48 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
T!Jf\.NJ\.S TREMEL BODI
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
ETER CELESTINE BORRE
69 North Common Street, Lynn, Mass.
JI.WRENCE JOSEPH BRODERICK
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
DWJI.RD NoRMJI.N BRODY
Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.
CYRIL FITZGERJ\.LD BUTLER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
EORGE FRJ\.NCIS CAHILL
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
FJI.EL CERVINO
4 Leicester Street, Brighton, Mass.
osEPH GEORGE COHEN
Navy Yard, Boston, Mass.
ours BERNJ\.RD CONNELLY
243 State House, Boston, Mass.
JI.VID W J\.RREN CREELMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
IJOMAS AQUINIS CRONIN
639 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Mass.
JI.LTER PATRICK CUNNIFFE
ILLIJ\.M JOSEPH DELAHANTY
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NNETH CLYDE DUNLOP
134 Waverly Street, Everett, Mass.
PH G. ERICKSON
428 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
AR EVENSON
92 Boylston Street, Malden,~Mass.
MJ\.S BERNARD EYGES
8 Broad Street, Nashua:N. H.
NISLJI.US FIJAL
~ 3 Blossom Street, Woburn, Mass.
N EDWARD FITZGERALD
195 Sheridan Avenue, Medford, Mass.
ERT DANIEL FOUNTAIN
168 Dartmouth Street, Boston, Mass.
RENCE EDWARD FULLER
N FRANCIS GILBERT
NLEY LOWNEY GRABOWSKI
ERT AUSTIN HALL
49 Bellevue Street, Lowell, Mass.
!STOPHER JOSEPH HALLIGAN, JR.
Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HALLORAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
crs GARDNER HATTIE
516 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
IAM VASSALL HAYDEN
Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
ERT JACKSON
9 Clifton Street, Somerville, Mass.
s RussELL KrNG
34 Marshfield Street, Roxbury, Mass.
B KLINE
29 Revere Street, Boston, Mass.
OLD MYER LICHTENSTEIN
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
H LINHARES
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
GERALD LONG
Old Colony Trust Company, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE MACCUBBIN
Clerk's Office, Superior Court, Boston, Mass.
FREDERICK MANNING
18 Tremont Street Boston Mass
FRANCIS MEAGHER 712-718 Barristers Hall, Pemberton Squar~, Boston', Mass:
IAM PATRICK MORRISEY
53 Central Street Lowell Mass
ARD :NTHONY MURPHY
7th Floor, Federal Building,' Boston'. Mass:
D RANCIS ANTHONY MURRAY
11 Pemberton Square Boston Mass
rs J °;1LN O'CONNELL
618 Boston Street, W~st Lynn' Mass.
'
, .
H , 0 EARY
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
LIUS PATRICK O'SHEA
746 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
W JOSEPH PETERS
33 High Street, Lynn, Mass.
R WHITING PORTER
y JOSEPH PRITCHARD
5 Estralla Street, Jamaica Plain. Mass.
BENJAMIN RANDALL
18 Hubbard Avenue, North Cambridge; Mass.
*Deceased.

Page nineteen

�ABRAHAM CHAIM ROME
MICHAEL EDWARD ROSENZWEIG
JOSEPH Russo
GEORGE AUGUSTUS SCHEELE
MICHAEL JORN SHERRY
SAMUEL SIDLOFSKY
PETER JORN SILSBEE
GEORGE DIXON SINCLAIR
EMANUEL MAX VICTORSON
JOHN RICHARD WALLACE
WILLIAM VALENTINE WALLBURG
JOHN BENJAMIN WENZLER

446-447 Old South Building, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
54 Norman Street, Boston, Mass
117 Court House, Boston, Mass·
42 Oak Street, Peabody, Mass:
160 Washington Street, North, Boston, Mass
96;/, Blackstone Street, Boston, Mass:
225A Highland Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
39 Mermaid Avenue, Winthrop, Mass
33 Oneida Street, Lynn, Mass:
160 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
514 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.

1920
MAURICE NOEL ABRAHAMSON
THOMAS JOSEPH BARRY
MAURICE BERNARD
MAURICE FRANK BODNER
THOMAS JOSEPH BOLAN
JOSEPH FRANCIS BONNER
CHARLES NATHANIEL BRONSKI
WALTER FRANCIS BRYSON
JOHN FRANCIS BURKE
WALTER BENJAMIN BUSHWAY
DANIEL CARAMANICO
GEORGE Lours FRANCIS CHAPMAN
EDWIN ADAMS CHENEY
JOSEPH HARRY CINAMON
SAMUEL COHEN
MAURICE EDWARD CONDON
EDWARD }AMES CONLON
THOMAS LA WREN CE CONNOR
FRANK SALVATORE DIMENTO
DENNIS ALOYSIUS DOOLEY
*RICHARD PATRICK DUNN
HARRY EDWARDS
NELSON EDWARDS
JOHN HUBERT FARLEY
JOHN HUGH FURFEY
}AMES PATRICK GALLAGHER
JOHN THOMAS GIBBONS
ALBERT BENJAMIN GOLDMAN
ARTHUR CORNELIUS GRANVILLE
WILLIAM GRIFE
LEO JOYCE HALLORAN
MARTIN HAMILTON
EDWIN MATTHEW HARKINS
CHARLES EDWARD HARRINGTON
CHARLES THOMAS HUGHES
FRANK }AMES HURLEY
NATHAN NOAH HURVITZ
GEORGE KATZ
EDWARD }AMES KEIRAN
FRANCIS JOSEPH KELLEY
WILLIAM }AMES KELLEY
WALTER MELVIN KENDALL

73 Tremont Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
89 Florida Street, Dorchester,
24 School Street, Boston,
92 Western Avenue, Lynn,
632 Broadway, Everett,
140 Stanwood Street, Roxbury.
5 Cornwallis Place, Waltham,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass
Mass:
Mass,
Mass,
Mass.
Mass.

170 South Street, Jamaica Plain,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
98 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury,
185 Devonshire Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,

Mass,
M
M
Ma
Ma

20 East Cottage Street, Dorchester, Ma

7 Water Street, Boston, M
24 Castleton Street, Jamaica Plain, M
100 Chauncy Street, Boston, M
161 Devonshire Street, Boston, M
51 Cornhill, Boston, M
164 Harvard Street, Newton, M
277 Washington Street, Newton, M
107 Green Street, Boston, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
103 H Street, South Boston, M
123 Holland Street, Roxbury, Ma
40 Court Street, Boston, Ma
18 Milton Road, Brookline, Ma
5 High Street, Medford, Ma
791 Purchase Street, New Bedford, Ma
20 Madison Street, Somerville, M
12 Drayton Avenue, Dorchester, M
16 Elm Street, Chelsea, M
12 Crowell Street, Dorchester, M
51 Cornhill, Boston, M
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
Court House, Malden, M
106 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, M

* Deceased.

Page twenty

Jo:S:N BALTZAR KNUDSON
f;pMUND FRANCIS LANDERS
].VlARTIN JOHN LEE
C:S:ARLES ISADORE LEWIN
f{ERBERT FRANCIS LYNCH
fRANC!S PATRICK MADDEN
GEORGE BERTRAM MAHAN
C:a:ARLES EDWARD MALLAHAN
WALTER VALE McCARTHY
JAMES FRANCIS McGOWAN
].VlICHAEL McGOWAN
CORNELIUS ALOYSIUS McINTIRE
JosEP:S: AGOSTINO MERENDA
GEORGE ANDREW MOONEY
EDWARD FRANCIS MYERS
:MARTIN JOHN NEARY
OHN FRANCIS NOLAN
HN THOMAS NOONAN
PH EDWIN NOWELL
RNEST O'CALLAGHAN
:a:oMAS POWER O'CONNOR
ANIEL FRANCIS O'KEEFE
ROMAS PENTA
!RAM PORTER
NATHAN RIDER POWELL, }R.
ERNARD DAVID ROSENBERG
RL LINWOOD SARGENT
SEPH LEONARD SHAWMUT
N DONALD SMITH
BERT MOYER STALEY
IS GOTTLIEB STONE
PH SWARTZ
p ATRICK TIERNEY
NK ISADOR TOBIN
EL MATHEW WEENE
EL WEINER
P ANDREW WELSH
BLANEY XIMINESS
ARD ARTHUR YOUNG

719 South Flower Street, Los Angeles, Calif.
20 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
99 Chauncy Street, Boston, Mass.
26 Waverly Street, Roxbury, Mass.
48 Eighth Street, Cambridge, Mass.
Room 37, State House, Boston, Mass.
254 Bussey Street, Dedham, Mass.
54 Forest Street, Roxbury, Mass.
33 Chelmsford Street, Dorchester. Mass.
70 State Street, Boston; Mass.
856 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
520 LaGrange Street, West Roxbury, Mass.
16 Sargent Avenue. Somerville, Mass.
14 Clement Street, Malden, Mass.
1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
9 Ingraham Road, Wellesley, Mass.
51 Bullard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
718 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
238 Purchase Street, Boston, Mass.
294 ·washington Street, Boston, Mass.
817 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
vVebster Road, Kendall Green, Boston, Mass.
115 Crawford Street, Roxbury, Mass.
1246 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
1369 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
162 Babcock Street, Brookline, Mass.
262 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
170 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
28 Pearl Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
62 Bessom Street, Lynn, Mass.
1 Sagamore Street, Dorchester, Mass.

1921
D EDWIN BEALE
S ISAAC BECKER
T DODGE BILLINGS
D WII,LIAM BOHM
RD EUGENE BRADLEY
HENRY BRENNAN
EDWARD BROWN
S }EFFERSON BROWN
S JOSEPH CANAVAN
RANCIS CARROLL
JOSEPH COLBERT
JOSEPH COOKE
rt:rs BERNARD COTTER
N RoscoE COUNCE
0SEPH DEVLIN

Ludlow, Vt.
50 Main Street, Clinton, Me.
26 Akron Street, Roxbury,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
21 Egremont Road, Brookline,
82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
Savings Bank Building, Quincy,
177 State Street, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
137 Newbury Street, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
370 Seventh Avenue, New York,
44 Champney Street, Brighton,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
N. Y.
Mass.

* Deceased.
Page twenty-one

�110 Williams Avenue, Hyde Park, ~as~.
FRANK JOSEPH DONAHUE
206 Essex Street, Boston,
ass.
FREDERICK WILLIAM DONAHUE
109 Union Park Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES CHRISTOPHER DONOVAN
148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
HowARD MATTHEW DowD
405 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
JAMES HENRY DRONEY
80 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
HoMER AusTIN DURGIN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN J osEPH ENRIGHT
440 Beach Street, Revere, Mass.
CHARLES WILLIAM FERMOYLE
88 Suffolk Street, Malden, Mass.
Lours MORTON FLASHENBERG
559 Broadway, Everett, Mass.
WALTER RuFUS FLINT
531 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
JAJ,IES LEO FoLEY
323 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
PHILIP JAMES GALLAGHER
132 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
Lours BERNARD GLIXMAN
.
d
t
Berkeley Street, Boston, Mass.
ANDREW JOSEPH GOREY
Police Hea quar ers, 154
*ROBERT EDWARD GRANDFIELD
WILLIAM HENRY HENCHEY
CHARLES VINCENT HOGAN
JAMES FRANCIS HOLLORAN, JR.
ROBERT HENRY JAMESON
DAVID LASKER
FRANCIS RAYMOND LAWLER
THOMAS SHAW LAWRENCE
ARTHUR GEORGE LEDWITH
Lours VINCENT LENNON
FRANK JOSEPH LINEHAN, JR.
JORN FRANCIS MADDEN
JOHN EDWARD MAHONEY
HENRY JOSEPH McCARTHY
LEONARD WILLIAM McCLAY
ALBERT AMBROSE McDONALD
JORN FRANCIS McLAREN
THOMAS JOSEPH MENTON
FRANCIS PATRICK MURPHY
NATHAN NADELMAN
JOSEPH MARTIN N OVER
*WILLIAM HOLLIS ORMOND
SAMUEL BIERSTEIN PEARLMUTTER
EDWARD LAWRENCE PRAGUE
FRANK PRESTERA
*GEORGE HENRY PRIESING
PAUL RECORD
JOSEPH JORN SARJEANT
CHARLES HENRY SAVAGE
VINCENT ROGERS SAYWARD
SAMUEL JAMES SCOTT
THOMAS BERNARD SHAPIRO
SAMUEL SIDMAN
GEORGE HENRY SPILLANE
PETER MALONE SULLIVAN
RICHARD CHARLES TIGHE
GEORGE ROLAND VANASSE
*JAMES EDWARD WALSH
CHARLES OLIVER WILLIAMS
PERCY FULLER WILLIAMS

82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
7 Central Square, Lynn,
22 Church Street, Woburn,
250 Main Street, Marlborough,
19 Milk Street, Boston,
122 Beacon Hill Avenue, Lynn,

272 Tremont Street, Malden, Mass.
36 Wenonah Street, Roxbury, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
44 Wallis Street, Beverly, Mass.
106 Berkley Street, Lawrence, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Bo~ton, Mass.
127 West Street, Qumcy, Mass.
41 Rosedale Street, Dorchester, Mass.
450 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
117 Court House, Boston, Mass.
8 Dunkeld Street, Roxbury, Mass.
53 Shirley Avenue, Revere, M
53 State Street, Boston, Ma
85 Church Street, Whitingsville, M
40 Broad Street, Boston, Ma
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
144 Dudley Street, Rox~ury, Ma
216 Farragut Street, Qumcy, Ma
333 Washington Street, Boston, M
54 Walnut Street, Chelsea, M
145 Munroe Street, Lynn, M
89 State Street, Boston, M
58 Edison Park, Quincy, M

333 Washington Street, Boston, Ma
40 Court Street, Bosto:1,
West Dennis, M

*Deceased.

Page twenty-two

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

1922
DWIGHT LEONARD ALLISON
199 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES }AMES BAILEY
372 Meridian Street, East Boston, Mass.
FREDERICK ALANSON BARTLETT
6 South Washington St., North Attleboro, Mass.
FRANK BECKMAN
42 Lawrence Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
ARTHUR IRVING BURGESS
1364 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
FRANCIS EUGENE BURKE
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE EUGENE CARTER
51 East Street, Dedham, Mass.
*ANDREW JACKSON CASEY
PETER JOSEPH CHI CARELLO
32 Eliot Street, West Medford, Mass.
WILLIAM DAVID COLLINS
45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE RANDOLF CONNOR
98 Balboa Street, Mattapan, Mass.
ROBERT w. STEWART Cox
142 Berkeley Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS DALTON
45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES HENRY DIGNAN
89 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
DANIEL JOSEPH DOHERTY
377 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH DONOVAN
599 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
JEREMIAH FRANCIS DRISCOLL
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
,,WILLIAM EDWARD DUNNE
Van Dusen Harrington Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
ARTHUR VINTON GETCHELL
74 India Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS GILMORE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
MosIER BARNET GOLDBERG
678 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
LEON GOLOSOV
39 Robson Street, Jamaica Plain. Mass.
WILLIAM VINCENT GORMLEY
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
FERGUS WILLIAM GRIFFIN
30 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
HARRY GROSBAYNE
JAMES JOSEPH HARRINGTON
70 Pine Street, New York, N. Y,
UEL HARRIS
52 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
RY THOMAS HARTMERE
10 High Street, Boston, Mass.
HIRO HAYASH!
26 Arlington Street, Cambridge, Mass.
UEL JACOBSON
101 Suffolk Street, Malden, Mass.
MAS FRANCIS KERRIGAN
N WILLIAM KING
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
N VINCENT MAHONEY
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
N JOSEPH MALONEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
RICE CHARLES MCNULTY
91 Henley Street, Charlestown, Mass.
OTHY JOSEPH MOLLOY
100 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
ND LESTER MORRISON
99 Main Street, New Canaan, Conn.
RT CHARLES MANGAN MULCAHY
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM NEWMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
IAM LAWRENCE NOLAN
27 Lakehill Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
H NUTILE
17 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
K THOMAS O'CONNELL
210 Lincoln Street, Boston, Mass.
K WHITE O'REILLY
Hillside Avenue, Dedham, Mass.
RUSSELL p AAKONEN
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
W HARRIS PATON
79 Boardman Avenue, Melrose Highlands, Mass.
EL LEO PEITCHEL
6 Beacon Street, Boston. Mass.
LD ALBURN PERRY
77 Quincy Street, Medford Hillside, Mass.
!CK HENRY REINSTEIN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
ATRICK RYAN
12 Litchfield Street, Brighton, Mass.
ENRY SPENCE
46 Florence Street, Roslindale, Mass.
ONY SPILLANE
27 Roseway Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
LEO STACEY
10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
REY STORKE
150 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.
ILLER STUART, JR.
9 Cedar Street, West Somerville, Mass.
lfATCH STURTEVANT
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass.
•Deceased.

Page twenty-three

�/

45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
DARIEN STEPHEN TERRILE

23 Bloomingdale Street, Chelsea, Mass.
50 Sea Street, North Weymouth, Mass.

GUY HOLCOMBE TRESILIAN
JACOB WEISS
RussELL HOWARD WRITING

1923

ELLIOT ANDREW BARTLETT
JOHN MARTIN BOYLE, JR.
JOSEPH WILLIAM BUCKLEY
THOMAS FRANCIS BURKE
JAMES JOSEPH CAFFREY
MORRIS CAPLAN
JORN MICHAEL CARNEY
JAMES AUGUSTINE CARRIG
JEREMIAH AUGUSTIN COAKLEY
DOUGLAS MONTAGUE COLLINS
JOSEPH FERGUSON CONNELLAN
JOHN PHILLIP CONNOLLY
ROY EDWARD CONNOR
JAMES KENNETH CONROY
ARTHUR DANIEL COOPER
WALTER FRANCIS COSTELLO
JAMES JOSEPH Cox
FRANK lsADORE DANIELS
JOSEPH DENTE
ROGER EDWARD DEVENEY
JOHN JEROME DONAHUE
CHARLES JOSEPH DONOVAN
JORN ANDREW DOOLEY
EDWARD LEO DOYLE
TIMOTHY JEROME DRISCOLL
JAMES HENRY DUFFIN
THOMAS ANTHONY FINN
THOMAS FRANCIS FITZPATRICK
JOHN JOSEPH FOSTER
JAMES JOSEPH Fox
/'EDWARD JOSEPH GARITY
DANIEL JOSEPH GILLEN
ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER GILLIS
MAX GOLDSTEIN
SAMUEL GOLDSTEIN
EDWARD ALOYSIUS GORMAN
ROY WILSON GUILD
LAWRENCE ENOCH HANSON

45 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.
1053 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass.
Chamber of Commerce Building, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
53 Intervale Street, Roxbury, Mass.
2352 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
54 Ellery Street, Cambridge, Mass.
17 Guild Road, Dorchester, Mass.
38 Batavia Street, Boston, Mass.
Bank Comm. Office, State House, Boston, Mass.
598 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Shephard Street, Cambridge, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
27 Temple Street, Quincy. Mass.
154 Palmer Street, Arlington, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
143 Main Street, Maynard, Mass.
456 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
16 City Square, Charlestown, Mass.
711 Main Street, Waltham, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
Court House, Boston, Mass.
144 Concord Avenue, Belmont, Mass.
19 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
143 Third Street, Chelsea, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
56 Amherst Street, Cambridge, Mass.
362 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
49 Boylston Street, Malden, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.

LEO ALAN HARRISON
EUGENE ALBERT HUDSON
JAMES MICHAEL JosEPH HURLEY
BRONISLAS AMBROSE JEZIERSKI
JOSEPH PETER JIENUSHEVSKY
JAMES SAMUEL KENNEALLY
MYER WILLIAM KETTLEMAN
HERBERT LEWIS KUHN
WILLIAM HENRY LALLY
CLARENCE ADOLPH LINDSKOG
FREDERICK WOLCOTT LOVEJOY

15 Ashburton Place, Boston, Ma
344 Geneva Avenue, Dorchester, M
35 Centennial Avenue, Revere, M
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
681 Main Street, Waltham, M
109 Marvin Road, Melrose Highlands, M
Nashua, N
678 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, M

JOHN WILLIAM LYONS
*LEO MoosEAK MAKSOODIAN

* Deceased.

Page twenty-four

6 Beacon Street, Boston Mass
FRANK WILLIAM MANNING
622 Columbia Road, Dorchester' Mass.
GEORGE HENRY MAYNARD
25 Congress Street, Lynn' Mass.
JEREMIAH GEORGE McCARTHY
19 Hunter Street, Dorchester: Mass:
JAMES MAXWELL MCELROY
419 South Station, Boston Mass
THEODORE CHARLES MCELROY
124 Stevens Street, Lowell'. Mass:
EDWARD JAMES McKINLEY
700 Cregg Building, Lawrence Mass
AUGUSTINE PATRICK MCMORROW
75 Federal Street, Boston: Mass:
EDWARD JOHN MEAGHER
51 Cornhill, Boston Mass
THOMAS JOSEPH LEO MEEHAN
607 City Hall Annex Boston' Mass.
EDMOND JAMES MILES
144 Dudley Street, Roxbury° Mass.
FRANKLAND WILLIAM LAMBERT MILES
100 Nashua Street, Boston' Mass.
DANIEL MARTIN MOORE
Federal National Bank Building , Bo st on,'M ass..
W
.
EARL MALCOLM MORRISON
294 ashmgton Street Boston Mass
.VINCENT MOTTOLA
20 Pemberton Square' Boston' Mas .
JAMES ASHTON MULHALL
141 Milk Street'. Boston: Mas::
PATRICK JOSEPH MULLANE
DANIEL FRANCIS MURPHY
309 Fairburn Building ' Lowell ' Ma ss.
GEORGE EDWARD MURPHY
.
Post Office, Boston Mass
JORN JOSEPH N EVULIS
13 Richards Avenue ' North Attleb oro,' M ass..
THOMAS ROBERT NORTON
19 Congress Street, Boston Mass
HENRY JOSEPH O'BRIEN
147 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
FRANCIS JAMES PERRY
199 Washington Street Boston' M .
Lours EDWARD RESTIERI
101 T remont Street,' Boston ' Mass
ass.
DAVID E. RICHMOND
410 Stevens Street, Lowell: Mass:
JAMES PATRICK HENRY ROANE
46 Burtt Street, Lowell. Mass.
PAUL JOSEPH ROANE
73 Tremont Street, Boston: Mass.
SEBASTIAN RUGGERI
17 Court Street, Boston Mass
EDLAND DONALD SAVAGE
44 School Street, Boston'. Mass.
CHARLES THOMPSON SEXTON
308 6 B
Boylston Street ' Boston , Ma ss..
JOHN FRANCIS SMITH
eacon Street, Boston Mass
GEORGE P. STONE
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass·
ARTHUR VINCENT SULLIVAN
20 Pemberton Square, Boston'. Mass:
.BERNARD TITLEBAUM
*JosEPH GEORGE TOLAND
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
JOSEPH MICHAEL VERACKA
Court House, Cambridge Mass
MICHAEL EDWARD VIOLA
31 St. James Avenue, Boston' Mass.
SIDNEY STANLEY VON LOESECKE
11 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS WALLACE
242 State House, Boston' Mass.
;WARD EVERETT vVETHERELL
75 Fe?eral Street, Boston'. Mass:
WALTER WHITE
280 Mam Street, Fitchburg Mass
SSE EVERETT WILSON
199 Washington Street , Boston', M ass..
ROMAS ZINITI

1924
UEL BACHERMAN
TON BATES BAILEY
MAS HOWARD BARRY
ROLL HILTON BEERS
RLES BERENSON
ARLES HENRY BOLSTER
HONY AUGUSTINE BONZAGNI
ARD MICHAEL BRADLEY
MAS HENRY BRESNAHAN JR
NCIS JOSEPH BUCKLEY '
•
LIAM CHARLES BURKE
ETT HENRY BYRNE
FRANCIS CALDWELL
PATRICK CAREY

4 Washington Avenue, Chelsea
100 Franklin Street Boston'
'
'
24 S h
c ool Street, Boston
89 Broad Street, Boston'
43 Tremont Street, Boston'
140 Federal Street, Boston'.
100 Nashua Street, Boston
20 Kilby Street, Boston'.
53 State Street, Boston
48 Chestnut Street, Charlestown:

Ma
M ss.
ass.
Mass
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass:
Mass
Mass:

District Attorney's Office , Court H ouse, Boston Mass
10 Mt. Auburn Street, vyatertown'. Mass:
.
Ames Bmlding, Bath, Me.
* Deceased.
Page twenty-five

�778 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH AUGUSTINE CAULFIELD
98 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
ALBERT WILLIAM CHAPMAN
14 Morrison Road, Braintree, Mass.
ARTHUR GROVER CLEVELAND CHAPMAN
73 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
ALDEN MILTON CLEVELAND
*JOSEPH MICHAEL COFFEY
834 Moody Street, Lowell, Mass.
FRANCIS PAUL CoGGER
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH CONCANNON, JR.
131 Warwick Street, Boston, Mass.
ERNEST DECATUR COOKE
RAYMOND JOHN COTTER
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD AUGUSTINE CRONIN
671 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
DANIEL JEROME CROWLEY
151 Highland Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
JOHN JAMES CROWLEY
Room 136, State House, Boston, Mass.
DANIEL JOSEPH CURREN
134 Ashland Street, Roslindale, Mass.
JAMES FRANCIS DALEY
176 Andover Street, Lowell, Mass.
THOMAS ALOYSIUS DELMORE
28 Calvin Street, Somerville, Mass.
JAMES CHARLES DONAHUE
10 North La Salle Street, Chicago, Ill.
HARRY JAMES DOOLEY
City Hall, Cambridge, Mass.
ALBERT THOMAS DOYLE
180 Boston Street, Boston, Mass.
MATTHEW HENRY DOYLE
1430 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass,
GEORGE STARKEY DREW
234 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HENRY DUGGAN
268 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, Mass,
JAMES JOSEPH DUNPHY
100 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN HANCOCK EATON, JR.
*WILLIAM HENRY EGAN
294 ·washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES SAMUEL ELLIS
7 Arborway Court, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
GEORGE BARTLETT FARRELL
198 Walnut Street, Lawrence, Mass.
JOHN EDWARD FENTON
Room 825, 18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD ISADORE FINKS
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JACOB FINKS
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH KIERAN FINN
875 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass.
MARK LEO FLAHERTY
43 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Mass,
MICHAEL JOHN FLAHERTY
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LOUIS ISAAC FLEISCHMAN
418 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Ma
ALFRED JAMES LAWRENCE FORD
LaFayette Street, Salisbury, Ma
GEORGE Ross FRENCH
317 E Street, South Boston, Ma
JOSEPH BARTHOLOMEW GAIL!US
419 South Station, Boston, M
FRANK FosTER D. GIACOMO
130 Bowers Street, Lowell, M
WILLIAM LEONARD GILLIGAN
83 Summer Street, Chelsea, M
ISADOR GILLMAN
1 State Street, Boston, M
SAMUEL GOLDMAN
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M
WILLIAM FANTON AMBROSE GRAHA1!
General Electric Company, Lynn, Ma
RONALD HALEY
113 Munroe Street, Lynn, M
AXEL HERMAN HANSON
18 Chase Street, Dorchester, M
HERBERT JAMES HICKEY
136 Federal Street, Boston, M
HARRY SIDNEY HORNE
729 Old South Building, Boston, M
MORRIS HOROWITZ
245 State Street, Boston, M
WILLIAM CLINTON HYLAND
60 Congress Street, Boston,
OTIS ELLIOTT JOHNSON
53 State Street, Boston,
THOMAS HENRY KANE, JR.
40 Court Street, Boston,
TIMOTHY FRANCIS KELLEHER
16 Howes Street, Dorchester,
JAMES FRANCIS KELLY
8 Church Street, Woburn, M
EDWARD JAMES KIRK, JR.
649 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge,
EDWARD ALBERT KOLLEN
43 Tremont Street, Boston, M
ALAN KRAVITZ
EDWARD AUGUSTUS LACEY
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
JEREMIAH JOSEPH LANE
Kingfield,
ELMER GEORGE LAWLER
Hopkinton,
WILLIAM HAROLD LEAHY

* Deceased.

Page twenty-six

JosEPH LEWIS
100 Concord Street, Framingham Mass
WALTER JOSEPH MACDONALD
232 Main Street, Brockton' Mass·
JOHN WHITMAN MACLEOD
196 Washington Street, Chelsea' Mass.
CLARENCE EDWARD MARSH
237 F'
,rst S treet, Melrose ' Mass ·
1419 C
JosEPH GEORGE MAZUR
ommonwealth Avenue, Brighton' Mass·
JOHN FRANCIS MCAULIFFE
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
THOMAS PATRICK McAWEENEY
378 St
'
·
264 Washington Street ~~~~hStCrehet, !Boston, Mass.
JoHN JAMES McCARTHY
19l
. '
,
ar estown Mass
JosEPH WARREN McCARTHY
Merrimack Street, Haverhill: Mass:
JOHN JOSEPH McDONOUGH
57 Fessenden Street, Portland Me
JosEPH PETER McFARLAND
1448 Standard Building, Cleveland 'ohi;
LEWIS }AMES MCHARDY
45 Forest Avenue Portland Me
MICHAEL DANIEL McLAUGHLIN
48 Stanley Street, D;rchester Mass.
JAMES FRANCIS MOLLOY
154 H' h 17 Bay St reet, W atertown,' Mass,·
S
JoHN }AMES MORIARTY
,g
treet, Shawsheen Village Mass
JOHN LEO MORRIS
401 Barrister's Hall Boston' Mass.
PHILIP IRVING MURRAY
120 Boylston Street: Boston' Mass.
DANIEL WILLIAM O'BRIEN
. 15 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass·
CHRISTOPHER }AMES O'BYRNE
231 Main Street, Brockton' Mass·
GEORGE FRANCIS O'KEEFE
38 Arborway Street, Jamaica Plain' Mass.
FRANK JOSEPH PENNEY
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RODERICK JOEL PETERS
6 ~eacon Street, Boston: Mass.
Lours PHILIP RABINOVITZ
294 Washmgton Street Boston M
.
117 C
'
, ass.
LEO AUGUSTUS REED
ourt House, Boston Mass
EDMUND FRANCIS RICHARDS
15 Proctor Street, Peabody: Mass.
CHARLES PHILIP RILEY
65 Chestnut Street Lowell Ma ·
19 T
'
,
ss.
RUSSELL SULLIVAN RILEY
remont Street, Boston ' Ma ss.
.
JosEPH FRANCIS ROARKE
C ,ty Hall, Lowell Mass
JAMES JOSEPH RYAN
330 Summer Street, Boston' Mass.
ROMAS LEO RYAN
18 2J6 'i:alnut Street, Newtonville: Mass:
AN!EL SALTZMAN
art Anderson Street, Boston, Mass.
WEN MARTIN SANDIFORD
Room 577, South Station, Boston, Mass
RRIS SCHNEIDER
12 Pearl Street, Boston Mass.
JAMIN LEWIS SCHWALB
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RY SHATZ
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RT KANNAH SHIMELOVICH
100 Milk Street, Boston: Mass.
TER GODDARD SHUTTLEWORTH
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass:
ARDINO SILVA
IS STONE
6 _Beacon Street, Boston, Mass
rs JOSEPH TAGUE
U;on Square, Somerville, Mass:
S FRANCIS TEEHAN
3 arren Avenue, Boston Mass
DAN JENNINGS THORUP
100 Franklin Street , Boston', M ass..
B
T GERARD TIERNEY
11
10 Mount Aub eacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NY T. TUTTLE
Federal Building Devuornh~treeSt, Watertown, Mass.
FRANCIS TWOHIG
'
ns ire treet, Boston, Mass
ND YOUNG URQUHART
120 Boylston Street, Boston Mass.
JOSEPH WALSH
324 Common Street, Belmont' Mass.
AM FRANCIS WALSH
109 Center Street Roxbury' M
·
18 T
'
'
ass.
ALFRED WARREN
remont Street, Boston Mass
NORMAN WINKLER
11 Pemberton Square, Boston: Mass'.

i~

1925
:jOSEPH AGNEW
GEORGE ALLBEE
B FRANCIS BARRY

3425 Washington Street, Jamaica Plain M
20 Pemberton Square , Boston' Mass.
A
, ass.
40

B~:TE~~wrcz, Room 5, Five Cents Savings Bank B~~~1!s StNreet, Boston, Mass.
1 mg,
ew Bedford. Mass
53 State Street, Boston,' Mass.

Page twenty-seven

�JAMES T. BERGEN
MARTIN BERKAL
HOWARD GURNEY BERRY
RUSSELL VINCENT BLAINE
HARLAND ALBERT BLOOD
HARRY BLOOMBERG
WILLIAM AUGUSTINE BRADY
MELVIN FARNSWORTH BREED
MEYER BROMFIELD
JOSEPH WILLIAM BUCKLEY
MARK JOSEPH BUTLER
LEO JOHN CARELLA
WILLIAM HENRY CAREY
SYDNEY GEORGE CARPENTER, JR.
FREDERICK JOSEPH CASEY
JosEPH DAVID CASEY
MICHAEL JOHN CASEY
BYRON SANDERSON CASWELL
ARTHUR LEO CAVANAGH
MAURICE HENRY CAVANAGH
FRANCIS GREGORY CLAFFIE
NICHOLAS CONSTANTINE CocKINOS
WILLIAM PATRICK CODY
BENJAMIN COHEN
DEXTER SAMUEL COHEN
AMEDEO 0MBERT0 COLLARI
FRANCIS XAVIER COLLINS
Vno CoMPERCHlO
JosEPH PATRICK CONATY
JOHN JOSEPH CONNORS
EDMUND HANLON CORRIGAN
FRANK BERNARD COUGHLIN
JOHN JOSEPH CRIMMINS
JOSEPH STANISLAS CROWLEY
EUGENE LAWRENCE CUNEO
NEIL THOMAS CURRAN
JOHN WALL CUSSEN
PATRICK JosEPH DALEY
FREDERICK HENRY DAVIS
JOHN JOSEPH DELANY
ANATOLE JEAN DEMERS
ROBERT LA WREN CE DEVINE
FRANCIS JOSEPH DILLON
WILLIAM PHILIP DOHERTY
EDWARD JAMES DONAHUE
CHARLES STEPHEN DONOVAN
WILLIAM HENRY DONOVAN
MICHAEL JOSEPH DRAY
SIDNEY LANGDON DROWN
HENRY MICHAEL DJJGGAN
JAMES LESLIE DUNN
FREDERICK FARLEY
JOHN THOMAS FARRELL
MYLES JOSEPH FERRICK
HAROLD JAMES FIELD
LEO MAXWELL FINEN
ABRAHAM ALAN FINKELSTEIN

703 Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich.
70 Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
16 Woodlawn Avenue, Mattapan, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Nashua, N. H.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, _Mass.
Fairfax Apartments, Phil_adelph1a, Pa.
188 Pleasant Street, Arlmgton, Mass.
28 Lynde Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
461 Main Street, Walt'.1am, Mass,
1400 Hancock Street, Qumcy, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Bost~n, Mass.
32 Main Street, Franklm, Mass.
Sec. and Exchange Com., Washington, D. C.
7 Central Square, Lynn, Mass.
Amesbury Street, Lawrence, Mass.
46
271 Waverley Avenue, Waterto:'fn, Mass.
7 Davis Square, Somerv_1lle, Mass.
7 Davis Square, Somerv11le, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
250 Stuart Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
2A Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass,
l 79 South Street, Boston, M
103 Saratoga Street, East Boston, M
915 Post Office Building, Boston, M
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, M
101 Pine Street. Woburn, M
153 Pleasant Street, Norwood. Ma
793 Main Street, Malden, M
681 Washington Street, Norwood, Ma
40 Broad Street, Boston, M
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M
18 TremontStreet, Boston, M
40 Central Street, Boston, M
27 State Street, Boston, M
12 Warwick Road, Brookline, M
212 West Street, South Weym?uth, M
42 Antwerp Street, East Milton,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
109 Brookline Avenue, Boston,
16 Colonial Avenue, Dorchester,
177 State Street, Bos~on,
28 Calvin Street, Somerville,
1219 River Street, Hyde Park,
State House, Boston,
34 Pleasant Street, Newburyport,
153 Brighton Avenue, Allston,
44A Joy Street, Bo~ton,
57 North Main Street, Fall Rive~,
85 Yale Street, Medfor '
11 Pemberton Square, Bos~tt'
191 Merrimack Street, Haver I '
7 Central Square, Lynn,
10 Post Office Square, Boston,

SAMUEL FINN
RAYMOND ANTHONY FITZGERALD
£pMUND THOMAS FLANAGAN
Jof!N EDWARD FOLEY
osEPH FRANCIS FORD
HENRY DAVID GAFFNEY
AZIZ JOHN GANEM
JoHN HAMLET GILBODY
lvfANUEL LEAL GOMEZ
FRANCIS JOSEPH GREELEY
ROBERT ALVAN GREENE
JAMES EDWARD GRIMES
JosEPH ANDREW GUAY
WESLEY CLEMENT HALEY
FREDERICK PAUL HANFORD
WILLIAM GERARD HARBER, JR.
ORRIS HARRIS
ATTHEW THOMAS HAYES
f!N HENRY HIGGINS, JR.
EO WELLS HIGGINS
CHILLE JOHN HILB RUNNER
LIAM JOSEPH HINES
RICK WILLIAM HOAG
H IGNATIUS HOLLAND
EPH GARDNER HOLMES
N HENRY HOOLEY
HAEL FRANCIS HOURIHAN
ES JOSEPH HUGHES
IS JOSEPH HUR.NEY
RD HURWITZ
IAM COLLINS HUTCH
NICHOLAS JANE
RD FRANCIS JOHNSON
KALUS
OBERT KASPER
RUFUS KEACH
FRANCIS KEENAN
D JAMES KELCH
S JOSEPH KELLEY
FRANCIS KILDUFF
AR.REN KILLAM, JR.
IGNATIUS KING
KING
OSEPH LANE
OHN LAUNIE
AUGUSTINE LEARY
NCIS LEARY
SEPH LEHAN
ES LEONARD
AX LEWIS
USTIN LINCOLN
cus
NCIS LONG, JR.
SEPH MAGUIRE
MAGUIRE
NOS
IS MARTIN

44 School Street, Boston, Mass.
41 Eastern Street, Allston, Mass.
9 Bailey Street, Lawrence, Mass.
5 Buck Street, Newburyport, Mass.
72 Park Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
46 Amesbury Street, Lawrence, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
488 Pleasant Street, New Bedford, Mass.
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
49 Mt. Everett Street, Dorchester, Mass.
8 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
245 State Street, Boston, Mass,
1458 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
54 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
305 Winthrop Street, Winthrop, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
143 West Squantum Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Post Office, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
35 India Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Auburn Terrace, Waltham, Mass.
163 West Springfield Street, Boston, Mass,
22 Williams Street, Ayer, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
49 Milwood Street. Dorchester, Mass.
Room 314, 53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
705 Statler Building, Boston, Mass.
Havana, Cuba
1 State Street, Boston,
40 Broad Street, Boston,
8 Railroad Avenue, Beverly,
15 Otis Street, Lowell,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
709 Post Office Building, Boston,
110 Milk Street, Boston,
439 Main Street, Melrose,
105 East Cross Street, Norwood,
161 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston,
323 Seaver Street, Roxbury,
92 Abbott Street, Lawrence,
Room)503, Post Office Building, Boston,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

10 Arnold Circle, Cambridge,
7 Willow Street, Lynn,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
Egypt,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
13 Hall Street, Jamaica Plain,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
53 State Street, Boston,
661 Stevens Street, Lowell,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

JOSEPH FINKS

Page twenty-nine
Page twenty-eight

�JAMES PATRICK McARDLE
J OSEPH CORBETT Mc CART
CHARLES JosEPH M cCARTHY
JOHN M cCORMACK
FREDERICK ALBERT McELROY
EDWARD J AMES McGRATH
CHARLES J AMES McKENNA
JOHN DANIEL M EDEIROS
HERBERT M ELLING
J AMES LEO MINITER
JOHN FRANCIS MITCHELL, JR.
JOHN JOSEPH MONAGLE
GEORGE HENRY MORAN
WALTER HERMAN MURPHY
. .JOHN ANDREW IGN ATIUS NAGLE
JosEPH FRANCIS O'BRIE N
GEORGE ANTHONY O'CONNOR
H ARRY JOHN O'REILLY
FRANK Lours 0RFANE LL0
WILLIAM VINCENT O 'SULLIVAN
MAXWELL ROB ERT P ARK
CHARLES ADAMS PERRY
RODERICK SILVEIRA PERRY
MARTIN WILLIAM POWERS
THOMAS JOSEPH POWERS
J AMES WILSON PRENTICE
RALPH WALL ACE PROUT
ISRAEL R ESNICK
EDWARD MARTIN R EARDON
J OSEPH D ENNI S RE ARDON
HOWARD VINCENT REDGATE
SYLVESTER ALFRED REHHIAL TER
MAX R E ISER
JAMES JOSEPH RILEY
JORN THOMAS RILEY
FOREST H ARVEY RO BI NSON
HERBERT L EWI S ROBINSON
JOHN JOSE PH ROCHEFORT
JAMES P ATRICK ROSE
. SIDNEY RosENBERG
JULIUS RosENGARD
JOHN SANTORO
FREDERICK ADAMS S CHWER
ARTHUR JosEPH SCULLY
HENRY SELVITELLA
GUY ALCIBIAD ES SENESAC
WILLIAM FRANCIS SHANAHAN
WILLIAM H E RBERT SHANNON
MAX SHAPS
FRANCIS LEO SHEEH AN
ALFRED CALLISTUS SHEEHY
WILLIAM FRANCI S SHEEHEY
NATHANIEL SIMMONS
NELSON DRUE Sr:MONS
CHARLES SKLADZIEN
JOHN LEONARD SMITH
Lours HENRY STEINBERG
JAMES FRANCIS STYNES

Page thirty

12 Robin son Street, Lynn, Mass .
14 W ashington Street, Eastport , Me.
27 School Street, Boston, Mass.
88 T esher Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
145 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Lombard Street, Baltimore, M d.
2925 South Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.
44 School Street , Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street , Boston, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, M ass.
73 Rock Avenue, East L ynn, M ass.
542 East Fourth Street, South Boston, M ass .
53 State Street, Boston, M ass
22 Fort Hill Avenue, Lowell, Mass.
40 Cornell Street , Arlington, Mas; ,
838 Lexington Road, Elizabeth, N . J.
917 Fifteenth Street, N.W., W ashington , D. C.
33 Elm Street, Chelsea, Mass.
Camden, Me.
799 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
44 School Street , Boston, Mass.
Commonwealth Pier, Boston, Mass
14 Summer Street, Saugus, Mass·.
Quincy, Mass,
·

WILLIAM LEO S ULLI VAN
JOSEPH ANTHONY SVAGDYS
ALLEN NEWMAN SWAIN
JOHN PARIS SYLVIA
LELAND p ARKER SYl\IMES
J AMES EDWARD TETLOW, JR.
CHARLES LEO THEBEAU
JO RN FRANCIS THORNTON
JOR N J OSEPH T IERNEY
.
MICHAEL TOBIN
WALTER HOWARD TOOKER ..
JAMES ARTHUR TOOLE
.
CHESTER BRAINARD TRAVERSE
ROG ER FELIX T URNER
STEPHEN C HARLES VISHINSKAS
HERB ERT GARDNER· WALDER
fREDERICK RI CHARD WALSH
JoH N RICHARD WALSH
PETER JOSEPH WALSH
HENRY WILLIAM WALTER
ALFRED CLI F TON WALTON
SAMUEL JAMES WEI NER
JosEPH CHARLES WELCH
JosEPH ALOYSIUS WHELAN
JOHN THOMAS V,THITE
DAVID WILLIAM WHITMORE J
' R.
SAMUEL GEORGE ZACK

309 Fourt13 S~~:~~ SJreeth,B
Boston, Mass.
, out
oston Mass
.
58 School Street Dedham' M
31 M"lk S ,
' ass.
1
E
treet, Boston Mass
608 Wheeling Bank xt~a~ Place, Springfield'. Mass '.
an 7;u~t Bld_g., Wheeling, Va.
4 A r ornhill, Boston, M ass.
6 Boston /iac~oad, Brookline, M ass.
, South Boston, Mass.
351 S
ummer Street L
M
137 H arvard A
, ynn, ass.
20 Wa uchusett St::::eF Clarem?nt, Calif.
B
, orest Hills, Mass.
761 roadway, Everett, Mass.
18 T
63 ~n:io~ Street, Boston, Mass
45 Cherr~~ treet, Brockton, Mass:
18 T . treet, Cambridge, Mass.
40r1mont Street , Boston, Mass.
road Street, Boston, Mass
7 S h
44 Central Squ are, L ynn, Mass.·
c ool Street Boston M
40 Co t S
'
' ass.
185 Devon ~r t reet , Boston, Mass.
jtreet_, Bost~n, Mass.
87 School
11 H
' amaica Pla m Mass
A
a rvest Street, Boston'. Mass.
203 M a m Street, Milford M .
7 Central S
' ass.
31 E h
quare, Lynn, Mass.
•
xc a nge Street , L y nn, Mass.

s:~:~:

Mid-Year, 1926
42 Upland Road, Quincy, Mass.
42 Upland R oad , Quincy, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston , Mass.
37 Adams Street, Malden, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
Gillette Safety R azor Co., Boston, Mass.
3 Stratford Street, W est Roxbury, Mass.
85 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Granite Road, Saugus, Mass.
490 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass.
85 Perham Street, W est Roxbury, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street , Boston, Mass,
481 West William Street, San Jose, CaJil,
185 D evonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
3 Meridian Street, East Boston, Ma
136 Central Avenue, New Bedford , Ma
Probate Court, Salem, Ma
53 State Street, Boston, M
88 Tremont Street, Boston, Ma
36 Bates Aven ue, Winthrop, M
742 Broad Street, E ast Weymouth, M
3 Benson Street, Brighton, M
Denmark Inn , Denmark,
Mashpee, M
Slater Building, Worcester, M
207 Essex Street, Boston, M
20 Pemberton Square, Boston,
16 Union Square, Somerville,

ARTHUR J AMES BROWN
JOHN PATRICK CONNOLLY
MICHAEL J OSEPH CRONIN
WARREN ANDREW FOGARTY
JAMES FRANCIS McGEE
T. ANTHO NY M ILLER
JAMES JOSEPH MURRAY
MOSES H . NAHIGIAN
OMAS FRANCI S NEALON
RANCIS JOSEPH O'LAUGHLIN
OSEPH LESTE R SHEA

Room 320, 40 Broad Street Boston
'
,
373 State H
ouse, Boston,
14 Ut" S
6 Bica treet, Lexington,
eacon Street Bo t
,
s on,
6 2 Maverick Street , E ast D edham,

M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.

30970 Washingto n St reet, Salem,
Kittred
80 H
gSe Street, Roslinda le,
avre treet, East Boston
59 Berkeley Street Bost '
31 St. J a mes A venue,' Boston,
on,

Mass.
Mass.
M
Mass.
ass.
Mass.

1926
IP A BRAMOVITZ
NRY JAM ES ALLEN
ALTER ADOLPH ANDERSON
THUR ABRAHAM BAKER

TH~ HARRISON BAKER
HITAKER BAKER
MON BAKER

ARD D ARCY BARRETT
ERT AR THUR BARRETT
1AM H LEN BARTLETT
UR AL
ENRY BASTIEN
J OSEPH BEATTY
RT JOSEPH BENKOSKI
Es BMAX WELL BENNE TT
D
IRvERTRAND BENNISON
ING BENTON

20 Pem4~erto_ Square, Boston, Mass
n

95 Waltham

s~:~~, ~

eet,NBoston, Mass:
est ewton, Mass.

622 Morton Street, Dorchester
39 Somerset Street, Boston,
43 Tremont Street Boston'
52 E l S
,
'
40 Kenwood m treet, Quincy,
6 South Washington St . tStNreet, Dorchester,
ree , orth Attleboro
185 Main Street ' M ar lb orough ,
,

M
Mass.
Mass.
ass.
Mass .
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.

34 Warwick Road ~uth;utton,
125 Homestead St estR ewton,
reet, oxbury,
8204 ~as~n Street, Boston,
ar Avenue, Natick,

N. H .
Mass.
Mass
Mass:
Mass.

Page thirty-one

�WILLIAM JOSEPH BIRMINGHAM
NORMAN STEPHEN BLANCHARD
LOUIS BoBRICK
JOHN HENRY BoGRETTE
JOHN CHRISTY LEE BoWMAN
JOHN JOSEPH BRADLEY
JOHN J OSEPH BRADY
HERBERT ANDREW BRIMNER
WALTER JOSEPH BROWN
EDWARD JOSEPH BUSHNELL
PAUL J OSEPH CAHILL
MALCOLM K1RK CAMPBELL
CHARLES TIMOTHY CAVANAGH
FRANCIS XAVIER CAVANAGH
THOMAS BRONISLAUS CrnsINSKI
ALBERT JULIUS COHEN
JOSEPH p. COLLINS
ANDREW FRANCIS CONNELL
ANTHONY JAMES CONSOLMAGNO
GEORGE EDWARD CONSTANTINO
CHARLES TIMOTHY CRONAN
JOSEPH BOYLE CUNNINGHAM
JOHN JOSEPH CURRAN
PETER FRANCIS CURRAN
JAMES EDWARD CussEN, JR.
JOSEPH FRANCIS CussEN
FRANCIS EDWIN DEADY
JAMES FRANCIS DELANEY
JORN JOSEPH DELANEY
JORN FRANCIS DEVER
GEORGE THOMAS DOLAN
MoRRIS DoLNICK
HARVEY LEROY DONALD
EDWARD DONOVAN
CORNELIUS J OSEPH DRISCOLL
HERBERT FRANCIS ELKINS
JOHN STRANTON FEENEY
FRANCIS PATRICK FENTON
PATRICK JosEPH FINLAY
THOM AS JOSEPH FINNEGAN
WILLIAM HENRY FINNEGAN
JOSEPH JORN FLANAGAN
JAMES JosEPR FLYNN
JORN J OSEPR FOLEY
__ALF.RED DANA FOSTER
FREDERICK ALBERT GAGE
JOHN JOSEPH GALLAGHER
PATRICK EMMET GAVIN
ALBERT CLEMENT GENNACO
DAVID JOSEPH GIBBONS
*ARTHUR EUGENE GILMAN
HYMAN GOLDMAN
EDWARD WARREN GOODALE
OLIVER FRANCIS GREEN
SAMUEL HARRY GuRVITZ
GEORGE FRANCIS HAGGERTY
JAMES MELROSE HAMILTON

18 Church Street, Peabody, Mass.
87 Wallace Street, West Somer:'ille, Mass.
678 Massachusetts Avenue , Cambridge, Mass.
910 Statler Building, Boston, Mass.
Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
153 Arlington Street, Framingham, Mass.
Bailey Street, Lawrence, M ass.
214
37 West Street, Medford, Mass.
17 Pleasant Street, Malden, Mass.
1108 Pleasant Street, Worcester, M ass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
Davis Square, West Somerv!lle, Mass.
7 Davis Square, West Somerv1lle, Mass.
7
4 5. Charter Street, Salem, Mass.
30 State Street, Boston, Mass.
lOO Summer Street, Boston, Mass,
101 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
l 87 Fulton Street, Medford, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Congress Street, Boston , Mass.
l8 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Mt. Auburn Street, W~terto"'.n, Mass.
274 Chestnut Avenue, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
10 East Fortieth Street, New York, N. Y.
63 2 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
4 3 State House, Boston, Mass.
Welton Road, West Roxb~ry , Mass.
7
Warwick Road, Brookline, Mass.
12
Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
11
Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
143
32 Leston Street, Mattapan, Mass.
70 Galen Street, Watertown, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston , Mass.
Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
294
l41 Milk Street, Boston,. Mass.
3l6 Court House, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
77 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Ma
9 Pleasant Street, Malden, Ma
88 Francis Street, Roxbury, Ma
72 Cleveland Street, Melrose, M
26 Falmouth Street, Lawr: nce. Ma
44 Dana Street, Cambridge, ~
Travellers Insurance Co., Salem, M
14 Campbell Avenue, Revere, M
75 Federal Street, Boston, M
93 Main Street, Brock~on, M
365 Washington Street, Somerv1lle,
294 Washington Street, Boston , M
27 State Street, Boston,
111 Highland Avenue, Winthrop,
580 Blue Hill Avenue, DorcLheste{i,
68 A Street . o,~e '
merv1lle,
78 Bay State Avenue, So

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

J oIIN KELLEY
•WILLIAM JAMES KENEFICK
ALFRED EDWIN KEOUGH, JR.
ANSELMO KRIGGER
JoIIN THOMAS LANE
JAM ES FRANCIS LAWTON
Lours BENJAMIN LEVENSON
FRANK GEORGE LICHTENSTEIN

225 Boulevard Street, Melrose,
South Armory, Boston,
6 Scollay Square, Boston,
260 Tremont Street, Boston,
10 State Street, Boston,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
185 Devonshire Street, Boston,
1 Dexter Row, Charlestown,
164 Broadway, Cambridge,
165 Friend Street, Boston,
1391 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston,
15 Van Winkle Street, Dorchester,
3 Woodlawn Street, Boston,
Post Office Box 174, Woburn,
29 Webster Street, Lynn,
212 Cross Street, Lowell,
8 Pierpont Street, Peabody,
80 Peterborough Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
141 Milk Street, Boston,
10 State Street. Boston,
2 Boylston Street, Brookline,
230 Cypress Street, Brookline,
165 Broadway, New York.
820 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge;

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
N. Y.
Mass.

MosEs LUBETS
JosEPH BENEDICT LYONS
P. AusTIN MACCORMACK
JOSEPH FRANC IS MACDONALD
CHARLES HE NRY MACKIE
HARRY EDWARD MACLEOD
TI!UR JOSEPH MAHONEY
GGO MAIOCCHI
OBN DANIEL Mil.LONE
NIEL EDWARD MARTIN
ATHAN FRANC IS MASTERSON
ES CRAWFORD MAXWELL
RED AUGUSTINE McDAVITT
EL!US EDWARD McLAUGHLIN
RD JOSEPH McLAUGHLIN
EL FRANCIS McNEIL
EL J AMES · MEANEY
ARD MOLONEY
OND WALLACE MOORE
HERBERT MORSE
GE HENRY MULHOLLAND
ONY MULLIGAN
ARTHUR MURPHY
DENNIS M URPHY
EDGEWORTH MURPHY
IMOTHY MURPHY
0SEPH MURPHY
GERARD NAGLE
FRANCIS X AVIER NAGLE
N NATHAN
JONAS NEWCOMB
EXTER NORTON
lLLIAM NORTON

123 Millet Street, Dorchester,
66 Main Street, Lowell,
16 Garrison Avenue, \Vest Somerville,
11 Koscinsko Street, Peabody,
97 Central Street, Lowell,
56 Eutaw Street, Lynn,
20 Pemberton Square, Boston,
17 Becket Street, Ashmont,
98 Howard Avenue, Dorchester,
112 Hall Place, Quincy,
44 School Street, Boston,
5 High Street, Medford,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

* Deceased .
* Deceased.

Page thirty-two

10 Jerome Street, Dorchester,
11 Harol&lt;l Street, Somerville,
Post Office Box 513, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
162 Lowell Street, Peabody,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
4 Naples Road, Salem,
12 Milton Street, Attleboro,
48 North Street, Quincy,
67 Cleveland Street, Arlington,
12 Harvard Terrace, Allston,
42 Homes Avenue, Dorchester,
171 Riverside Avenue, Medford,
112 H Street, South Boston,
390 Main Street, Worcester,
215 Court House, Boston,
45 Milk Street, Boston,

J ollN JOSEPH HARRINGTON
JosEPH EDWARD HARRI N GTON
WIL BUR GARLAND HAYWARD
REMA JORN HENDERSON
J ollN HENRY HIGGINS
J osEPH ALLAN HINES
WILLI AM MICHAEL HOAR
F. WILLIAM HOCHBERG
RAYMO ND JACKSON HOITT
WILLIAM FRANCIS HORGAN
WILLI AM CHARLES HoRNEMAN
ALFRED LEO HUTCHINSON
J ollN JOSEPH IRWIN
RUSSELL HENRY JACKSON
DAVID JOSEPH KATZ
EoWARD VI NCENT KEATING

Page thirty-three

�TIMOTHY FRANCIS O'BRIEN
I GNATIUS J EROME O'CONNOR
THOMAS J OHN O'CONNOR
MAX l sAAC 0MANSKY
CHARLES LEO O'REILLY
ALVIN Lours OsTROWS
ROYAL BARTLETT PATRIQUIN
CHARLES Lours PERRIELLO
GUY THOMAS PISCOPO
ABRAHAM WILLIAM PLOTKIN
STEPHEN BRADYS PRODAN
WILLIAM FRANCIS PUMPHRET
GEORGE THOMAS PYNE
J AMES FRANCIS QUINN
J AMES FRANCIS QUIRK
FRANCI S XAVIER ALBERT READDY
R EUBEN RESNICK
HENRY LUPTON RESTALL
MATTHEW LAWRENCE RING
J OHN J OSEPH RIORDAN
Lours J OHN ROAZEN
EDWARD CHARLES ROSENBERG
J ACOB HAROLD RosENGARD
CHARLES EDWARD RoWE
FRANCIS WILFRED RUEL
EARL EDWARD RYAN
ORVIS HOUGHTON SAXBY
FRED CARMEN ScANGA
J AMES FRANCIS SCANLAN
PHILIP SELETSKY
J OSEPH HERBERT SHARRILLO
MICHAEL J OSEPH SHEEHY
FREDERICK A U GUSTUS SHERWOOD
REVASHANKER MAGANLAL SHUKLE
BARNEY SHUMRAK
HARRY BENJAMIN S IMONS
J AMES HENRY SMITH
CHARLES VINCENT STATUTI
BRUCE ATWOOD STEVENS
EDWARD J OHN SULLIVAN
JOSEPH BENEDICT SULLIVAN
J AMES EDWARD SULLIVAN
SAMUEL HENRY SULLIVAN
ROY FERNANDES TEIXEIRA
MAX WILLIAM TITLEBAUM
·WILLIAM FRANCIS TRAVERS
ABRAHAM SAMUEL V r GODA
Lours VILLANI
NORMAN AUGUSTUS WAL KER
WILLIAM PINKERTON WALKER
FOREST H ENRY WARD
LEO J OSEPH W ASKELEWICZ
GEORGE J EREMIAH WATTERS
SAUL WEINBERGER
MARTIN JosEPH WELCH
JAMES JOSEPH WINSTON
JOHN EDWARD WINSTON
FRANK WILLIAM ZINITI

Page thirty-four

46 D artmouth Street , Everett, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
43 State House, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Bragdon Street, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
Hall Street, Mansfield, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
466 Main Street, Athol, M ass.
10 Sheafe Street, Cha rlestown, M ass.
20 Cliff Aven ue, Winthrop, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, M ass.
60 Thorndike Street, Cambridge, M ass.
18 Hayward Street, Mi!ford, M ass.
14 Belvoir Road, Milton, M ass.
Chambers Street, Boston, Mass.
133
51 North Aven ue, Melrose Hi ghlands, M ass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Mt. Vernon Street, Charlestown, Mass.
44
Columbia Road, Dorchester, Mass.
531
40 Court Street, Boston , Mass.
Harvard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
180
Main Street , Marlborough, Mass.
50 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
Dudley Street, H averhill, Mass.
10
Main Street, Stoneham, Mass.
375
57 Hull Street, Boston, Mass.
Belton Street, Dorchester , Mass.
19
Wolcott Street, Dorchester, Mass.
34
Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
20
Eighth Street, South Boston , Masi,
211
615 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Mass.
520 Beacon Street , Boston, Mass.
10 Yeoman Street, Revere, Mass.
268 Washington Avenue, Che.lsea, Mass.
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
420 Huntin gton Avenue, Hyde Park, :ass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, ass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Samoset Street, Dorchester, Ma:,
1326 Columbia Road, South Bost on, :a .
1 Beacon Street, Boston, ass,
20 P emberton Square, Boston, Mass
173 Arlington Street, West Medford,:::
185 D evonsh ire Street, Boston.' M
Milo,
30 Court Street, Boston, M
'st et Boston, M
Beacon Chambers, M yrt1e re ' B t O n M
100 Boylston Street, os '
t Newton, M
1271 Washington Street, W es
kl' e M
72 H arvard St reet, Broo ind, M
25 Raymond Street, Medfor ' M
Room 43 State House, Boston,
24 Federal Street, Boston,
.
S
t Boston,
199 W ashington tree •

Mid-Year, 1927
ARTHUR WELLESLEY ATKINSON
EDWARD PETER BACIGALUPO
MA URICE MYER COHEN
WILLIAM MICHAEL DALY
R AYMOND LEO FOYE
THOMAS HOWARD G ILROY
RALPH L EROY GREENE
SrMO N GRINSPOON
FREDERICK J OHN HARRIS
D A.YID CHARLES HENRY
WILLIAM JOSEPH MACHALE
H A.RRY J ACKSON WARD

6 Mark Lee Road, Needham Heights,
29 Cha rter Street, Boston,
161 Devonshire Street, Boston,
313 Union Street, Lynn,
81 Beacon Street, Lowell,
28 Carney Street, Medford,
19 Greeno ugh Avenue, Cambridge,
73 Tremont Street, Boston ,
73 Tremont Street , Boston,
259 Washington Street, Boston,
84 State Street, Boston,
138 Brighton Avenue, Allston,

Mass .
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

1927
WILLIAM LYONS AHERN
.EDWARD ANKELES
WILLIAM ARONOFF
EDMU ND J OSEPH AVALLONE
] A.MES EDWARD BAGLEY, JR.
] A.MES G REGORY BARRY
LEO VI NCENT BENNETT
JsRAEL BERMAN
KE ELAH BouvE
JOH N J osEPH BOYLE
]A.M ES PATRICK BUCKLEY
NORMAN BUNSHAFT
EUGENE FRANCIS CANNEY
FRANCIS LAWRENCE CARAHER
JiU!ES DENNIS CARNEY
FRA.NCIS JOSEPH CARROLL
JOSEPH J AMES CARTY
LEO J OSEPH CASEY
EDWA.RD THOMAS CAULEY
FRANK J OSEPH CAVANAGH
JOSEPH RICHARD CLEARY
JOH N JOSEPH COAKLEY
THOMAS ALF RED COLLINS
HUGH JOSEPH CONWAY
ARK V. CROCKETT
IDNEY S OLOMON CROSS
AROLD DEVER CUNNI NGHAM
AVID D AVIDSON
AMES JOSEPH DEVLIN
OMAS P. DILLON
lLLIAM ESAU DINGWALL
NRY FRANCIS DUGGAN
NRY CHARLES DusTEN
HOLAS J OSEPH DYNAN
UEL EISENSTADT
R FEDOSINK
S JOSEPH FELONEY
DAVID F E NTON
LEO FENTON
H FINE
N PARKHURST FISKE
ARD JOHN FITZGERALD

145 Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
23 School Street, Danvers, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
SO State Street, Boston, Mass.
32 Bacon Street, Waltham, Mass.
72 Edwin Street, Atlantic, Mass.
10 Dennison Street, Roxbury, Mass.
7 Water Street, Boston, Mass .
240 Albany Street, Cambridge, Mass.
7 Willow Street, Lynn, Mass.
191 Merrimack Street, Haverhill, Mass.
3 Lamartine Street, J amaica Plain , Mass.
15 Orchard Street, Revere, Mass.
588 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass.
18 Chapel Street, Canton, Mass.
30 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Beckett Street, Dorchester, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
Federal B uilding, Boston, Mass.
718 Huntington Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
19 Linden Street, Norwood, Mass.
57 Farragut Road, South Boston, Mass.
42 Railroad Aven ue, Beverly, Mass.
207 Manthorne Road, Boston, Mass.
82 Pleasant Street, Ma lden , Mass.
59 Ashford Street, Allston, Mass.
21 Oneida Street, Boston, Mass.
53 Bernard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
794 Tremont Street , Boston, Mass.
9 E lm Street, Peabody, Mass.
65 Wareham Street, Medford, Mass.
118 Norfol k Street, Cambridge, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston , Mass.
772 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
59 Granville Road , Cambridge, Mass.
32 Ossipee Road, West Somerville, Mass.
18 Archdale Road, Roslindale, Mass.
304 Main Street, Fitchburg: Mass.
115 Central Street, Auburnda le, Mass.
49 Pacific Street, Fitchburg, Mass.

P age thirty-five

�EDSON LINWOOD FoRD
Thomas A. Edison School, Boston, Mass.
JoHN THOMAS FoRD
84 Avon Street, Somerville, Mass.
EDWARD JosEPH Fox
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
----iosEPH LEO GAGEN
30 Romsey Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH GEOGHAN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
HARRY GEORGE GILBERT
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM ROBERT GILMAN
36 Burnside Street, Medford, Mass.
MATHEW ALLEN GoLBURGH
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, M ass.
JosEPH DAVID GOLDBERG
ABRAHAM GOLDENBERG
70 State Street, Boston, M ass.
EDWARD MAURICE GOLDMAN
36 Whiting Street, Lynn, M ass.
RICHARD IRVING GOTTLIEB
10 State Street, Boston, M ass.
ALBERT CLARENCE GRAUPNER
17 Mineral Street, Reading, M ass
FREDERICK JoHN HANSBERRY
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass:
ARTHUR WARREN HANSON
11 Barnes Road, Newton, Mass.
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass
LOUIS SAMUEL HARRIS
FRANCIS AUGUSTINE HART
34 Buswell Street, Lawrence, Mass:
FREDERICK GERARD HART
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass
JAMES JosEPH HAYES
448 Ashmont Street, Dorchester, Mass:
EDWARD PHILIP HUGHES
14 Bartlett Street, Somerville, Mass.
JAMES LEE HUGHES
89 Essex Street, Lynn, Mass
JoHN BERNARD HYNES
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass:
HARRY ILLMAN
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
ELLIOTT WILLARD JACKSON
Gilchrist Company, Boston, Mass.
ARTHUR LESLIE JOHNSON
16 Dartmouth Street, Everett, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LOUIS KARP
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MORRIS KAUFMAN
}AMES HENRY KIERAN
21 Briggs Street, Salem, Mass.
MARTIN STEPHEN KILGALLON
63 Chestnut Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
JACOB KLEIN
29 Cummings Road, Brighton, Mass.
ARTHUR FRANCIS LAURIAN
209 Wauchusetts Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
ROY WILLIAM LAWSON
9 Ed~on Street, Brockton , Mass.
JoHN JosEPH LEAHY
1 Perth Road, Arlington, Mass.
JOHN HENRY LEE
177 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH LETORNEY
33 Oak Street, Boston, Mass.
IsADORE MEYER LIBMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
GERALD THOMAS LISTON
151 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass.
EVERETT HAROLD LYNCH
104 Pearl Street, Middleboro, Mass.
JOHN ALEXANDER MAclNTYRE
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
CLIFTON EUGENE MACK
626 Federal Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.
JosEPH M. MAGALDI (Western Union Building) 230 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS BARTHOLOMEW MAHONEY
321 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass,
FREDERICK ALOYSIUS MALONE
25 Benefit Street, Waltham, Mass,
LAWRENCE PATRICK MANNING
82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
CASIMIR MARCOU
14 Powder House Terrace, Somerville, Mass.
MAX MARKS
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MAX LAWRENCE MATT
121 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JEREMIAH JosEPH McCARTHY
62 Williams Street, M edford, Mass.
JoHN THOMAS McCLUSKEY
33 Woodbine Street, Roxbury, Ma
JosEPH MARTIN McDONOUGH
6 Beacon Street, Boston, M
JAMES LOMBARD McLEAN
CLIFFORD OTIS MILLER
DAVID SAMUEL MILLER
EVERETT HALE MILLER
JAMES JOSEPH MORRIS
NICHOLAS MoscATO
DANIEL JosEPH MURPHY
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY

Page thirty-six

145 South Street, Boston, M
1 Beacon Street, Boston, M
1 Cedar Street, Roslindale, M
60 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
19 Princeton Street, Medford,
154 School Street, Watertown, M
11 Pemberton Square, Boston,

~

6 Beacon Street, Boston Mass
I{ENELM MICHAEL MURPHY
24 S~. 6eters Street, Jamaica Plain'. Mass:
WILLIAM PAUL MURRAY
evelan? Street, Cambridge, Mass.
GU STAVE ADOLPH NICKERSON
McKinley School, Revere Mass
WILLIAM HENRY O'CONNELI.
18 Beckett Street, Peabody'. Mass:
FRANK ROBERT O'KEEFE '
F . G . Magrane Co., Lynn Mass
ARTHUR FRANCIS OSBORNE
1167 Broadway, Somerville' Mass.
JosEPH DAVID PATE
6 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass.
LEONARD PORETSKY
153 Jefferson Avenue Everett' M .
JOHN ERNEST QUIGLEY
104 Ad
S
'
, ass.
p ams treet, Dorchester Mass
THOMAS ALFRED QUINN
66 rospect Avenue, Norwood: Mass:
J oHN JOSEPH RILEY
137 Orange Street Chelsea M
ARTHUR FRANK ROBINSON
.
1 State Street Boston ' Mass.
J{ERBERT DANIEL ROBINSON
ass.
R oom 1802, Post Office B m"Id'mg,' Boston ' Mass
PATRICK GEORGE ROCHE
19 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
HARRY RosE
82 Pleasant Street Malden' M
.
MAX RHODES ROSENBLATT
20 Me h A
•
, ass.
re
venue, West Roxbury, Mass.
(HARLES CHRISTIAN ROTHFUCHS ]R.
8 Alfred Road Arlington M
FRANK HENRY ROWLAND, JR. '
73 T
'
'
ass.
remont Street Boston M
GEORGE SYLVESTER RYAN
24 S h
'
'
ass.
c ool Street Boston M
NATHAN SALLOP
25 S
'
'
ass.
. achem Street, Lynn, Mass
THEODORE ANTHONY SCRIVEN
294 Washington Street Boston M
.
JACOB SHACTMAN
221 S
,
'
ass.
tate Street, Boston Mass
PHILIP N. SIMPSON
24 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS SMITH
9 Lynn Street, Chelsea' Mass.
BENJAMIN SNYDER
53 State Street Boston' M
·
SAMUEL SPIRO
I · S
•
, ass.
55 r / R
72
osec air treet, Dorcheste M
DANIEL VINCENT SULLIVAN
r,
ass.
42 p d v·
on
iew Road, Arlington Mass
JAMES EDWARD SULLIVAN
469 B
d
'
·
HARRY HARVEY TOLTZ
United States Quarantine s/ot~ wa arcus Hook Pa
.
a wn, My, Chelsea, Mass.
THOMAS LEO TULL y
117 Winthrop Street • Taunton , M' ass..
FRANCIS JAMES TUMMON
B
6 eacon Street Boston M
PAUL CLEMENT WALLACE
55 p
h
S
•
, ass.
urc ase treet, Danvers Mass
(HARLES JAMES WALSH
195 Ashmont Street Dorchester:'- M
,
JOHN JACOB WALSH
6 Beacon St~eet Boston·,. Mass.
WILLIAM JAMES WALSH
40 C
'
'
ass.
WESTON COLBY WALTER
25 C ourt Street , Boston ' M ass.
entral Square Lynn M
OBERT LOUIS WEINER
1010 c
•
, ass.
entral Street ' Lowell . M ass.
DMOND EUGENE WELCH
c·
tty Hall, Peabody Mass
ILLIAM AUGUSTINE WELCH
85 D evonshire Street Boston' M
.
RLES JOSEPH WHELAN
89 S
'
, ass.
tate Street, Boston, Mass.
NNETH BRECK WILLIAMS·

Mid-Year, 1928
V!D LOUIS BLOOMFIELD
lJL WILLIAM CAREY
ARD JOHN CARR
CE A. DANFORTH
NARD JOHN DAVIDSON
URICE DAVIS
!AM EDWARD FITZGERALD
H DELLA GROTTE
PETER HAMILTON
M ISRAEL REINSTEIN
GE BRADFORD HOGAN
FRANCIS HOLT
S FRANCIS HURNEY
JOSEPH LAVIGNE

43 Tremont Street Boston
21 Park Vale Avenue' Allston'
18 Tremont Street' Boston'
69 Beacon Street' Boston'
8 Cha l s
•
,
r es treet, Dorchester
25 Pemberton Square Boston'
22 Sever Hill Road Medford'
121 Tempi St
s'
,
1677 C
e reet, omerville
ommonwealth Avenue, Brighton'
6B
S
. '
eacon treet, Boston
Overbrook Drive Wellesley'
·
'
32 p·1 gnm Road, Marblehead ,
1
52 St. Mark Road, Dorchester'
305 Muglean Building, Lowell'.

M
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
ass.

ivI

Mass.
Mass.
ass.
Mass
M
.
ass.
Mass
M
.
M ass ·
M:::·
Mass:

Page thirty-seven

�JOSEPH LEVY
EDWARD LONG
HENRY CORNELIUS LYNCH
CHARLES B ERNARD MAHONEY
,
y
THOMAS WILLIAM ODA
N FERDINAND 0DERMAN
J OH
WILLIAM FRANCIS REGAN
MAX RICHMOND
JOHN TEAGAN

294 Washington Street, Boston, :ass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
ass.
d R 0 ad West Medford, Mass.
147 Playstea
h. e' Street Boston, Mass.
68 Devons ir
'
M
599 Central Street, Lowell,
ass.
th
288 Commonwea1 Avenue ' Boston, Mass.
d M
14 Main Street, Peabo y,
ass.
43 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, Mass.
48 Bigelow Street, Cambridge, Mass.

1928
et Dorchester, Mass.
d M
31 B urgoyn e Stre '
JAMES MORTIMER AHERN
7 Valley Place, Medfor , ass.
WILLIAM MARTIN ANDERSON
1 Broadway, Taunton, Mass,
ARISTIDES ANDRADE
71 Bellingham Street, Chelsea, Mass.
BENJAMIN DAVID AVAN
214 y, Essex Street, Salem, Mass.
Lours ELIOT BAKER
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
C
brid e M
DouGLAS WHITE BARLOW
JosEPH BARRETT
g ' M
2 20 Norfolk Street, am
*WILLIAM
RY BEIGIN
88 Broad Street, Boston,
WILLIAM ~E~ZBACHER BIRNBACH
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
MAURICEJO~EPH BLANCHETTE
22 Sterling Street, Medford,:
GEORGE C
!INE BLASI
40 Water Street, Boston,
OLINDO ARi'.
BOWKER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
ARNOLD JosEPH
AN
H'll Avenue Dorchester, M
ARTHUR BRENN
921 Blue 1
'
l' d
J
ORN
MORRIS BRODERICK
72 Hewlett Street, Ros m a 1e,
CHARLES
B RBA-NK
S
t North Attleboro,
THEO~ORE A~~!~u:uR~EN.
47 North Washingto~O ;:~e~al Street, Boston, M
FREDERIC~ ;ARD BURKE
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M

;::;i,~::

M:cHAEL BURKE
E WIN VINCENT CAHILL
D
L
CANTY
JOSEPH EO
p
R FRANCIS CARBONE
ETE
WILLIAM CASHEN
GEORGE. EDWARD CocHRANE
CHARLES
PH COLE
J
osE
CoLLINS
~~:r.I!~s;:WARD CoMER
JOSEPH CONLON
ANDREW MICHAEL CONNORS
EDWARD STEPHEN CONNORS
J EREMIAH
LAWRENCE CoRMAC K
FRANCIS PA-TRICK COYNE
J osEPH M. ICHAEL CRONIN
J osEPH
JEREMIAH JAMES DACEY
JOHN JosEPH DALY
J HN MARTIN DALY
S~MON JOSEPH DARIVOFF
JoHN WILLIAM DAVIS
JosEPH HENRY DEROMA
JOHN HENRY DEVLIN
J 0 H~ WATKINS DINEEN
T
MAS DOBBYN
EDWARpD HpOSHERIDAN DOHERTY
JOHN HILI
HENRY THOMAS DOLAN
T MAS JosEPH DONAHUE
E~~ARD DAVID DONOVAN

707 Adams Street, ~~~~h;r:~:::
41 Dunster Road, Jam
S l
M
21 Jackson Street, a em,
A
e Roslindale,
386 Hyde Park venu ,
B
73 Tremont Street, oston,
72 Empire Street, Lynn,
Robey Street, Boston,
2
14 Butter Street, Lawrence,
29 Dillingham StreHet, Dor~h:sst~:·
154 State ouse,
•
90 Ames Building, Boston,
40 Court Street, Bo~ton,
.
369 Columbia street , Cambridge,
50 Federal Street, Boston,
79 Centre Street, Rohxbury,
A
Dore ester,
4 Davidso~ ven~e, t Boston,
294 Wa~hmgkto;t :ttiaverhill,
54 Merrimac
re ' M Iden
129 .Medford S~::~• W:ipole:
97 Umon Str?et, treet Boston;
82 Devonshire S Wollaston
145 East Elm Avenue,
Quine)"
44 Faxon Avenu:, Bosto
18 Tremont Stree '
1
10 Phdps Street, Sdafe
Me
35 Sheridan Avenues mervi
21A Russell Street, West o
* Deceased.

Page thirty-eight

ALBERT J osEPH Dowm'is
25 Linden Street, Waltham, Mass.
EDWARD PATRICK DOYLE
272 State House, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH FRANCIS DRAY
28 Clifford Street, Readville, Mass.
ARTHUR }AMES DUGGAN
138 Newport Street, Arlington, Mass.
ARTHUR ] OSEPH DWYER
10 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
JsADORE MORRIS EPSTEIN
26 Evelyn Street, Mattapan, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH FAY
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIIN FRANCIS FEENEY
155 M Street, South Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE DUBOIS FERGUSON
32 Verchild Street, Quincy, Mass.
*ANTONIO ] OHN FERRAND!
JEREMIAH FINN
11 John Street, Chelsea, Mass.
GEORGE THEODORE FINNEGAN
960 Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
DAVID EDWARD FITZGERALD
34 Olcott Street, Watertown, Mass.
JAMES EDWARD FITZGERALD
8 Corning Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH FRANCIS FITZGERALD
26 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIIN STEPHEN FLANAGAN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
AMES THOMAS FLYNN
303 Watertown Street, Newton, Mass.
RANK BOARDMAN FREDERICK
50 State Street, Boston, Mass.
RRIS FULMAN
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
ARLES LEO GAFFNEY
Room 6, Little Building, Boston, Mass.
RANCIS ] OSEPH GALLAGHER
140 Pleasant Street, Arlington, Mass.
o JOSEPH GANONG
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
ERNARD FRANCIS GATELY
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS GATELY
133 Redlands Road, West Roxbury, Mass.
UR EDMOND GAY
65 Worth Street, New York, N. Y.
JOSEPH GENNACO
27 East Nilsson Street, Brockton, Mass.
D GERSTEIN
27 School Street, Boston, Mass.
HOLMAN GILBERT
1 State Street, Boston, Mass.
ERICK ] OSEPH GILLIS
23 Summer Street, Lowell, Mass.
RLES FRANCIS GLENDON
1435 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton, Mass.
ERT JOSEPH GOGUEN
43 Gotham Street, Somerville, Mass.
B GOLDMAN
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
.
PATRICK GORMAN
170 River Street, Dedham, Mass.
H FRANCIS GRADY
10 North Washington Street, North Attleboro, Mass.
RD JOSEPH GRAMER
28 Thornton Street, Roxbury, Mass.
S }OHN GREEHAN
140 Line Street, Somerville, Mass.
AUGUSTUS GREENE
689 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
ANDREW GRENIER
8 Thetford Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
IN LEWIS GROSSMAN
724 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
HADGI
110 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
] OSEPH HAGERTY
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
K HAIGIS
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
GARRETT HARRINGTON
64 Porter Road, Cambridge, Mass.
AN HARRIS
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
HIRAM HAWLEY
42 Barrett Street, Revere, Mass.
260 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Reservoir Street, Cambridge, Mass.
PAUL HEGARTY
14 Spring Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
ALTER HussEY, 7 Willow Street, Central National Bank Bldg., Lynn, Mass.
RARD HYLAND
52 Ames Building, Boston, Mass.
JAQUES
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
173 Porter Street, Stoughton, Mass.
39 Chambers Street, Boston, Mass.
ORUCH KARP
3 Bridge Street, Haverhill, Mass.
SEPH KEATING
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
L
104 Congress Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
. KELLEY
24 Topliff Street, Dorchester, Mass.

* Deceased.
Page thirty-nine

�19 Myrtle Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN GEORGE KELLEY
*JosEPH PATRICK KELLY
MICHAEL .J osEPH KELLY
GEORGE CHRISTOPHER KENDALL
JORN JOSEPH KENNEDY
GEORGE RICHARD KENNEY
DAVID ANTHONY KEOHAN
HARRIS KING
WILLIAM WALTER KIRLIN
MAX KLATZKIN
JOSEPH Lours KLINE
MICHAEL MARION KOLODZIEJ
EGIDIO LEO RALPH LAVELLE
JOHN LANDY LAWLER
CHARLES EDWIN LEAHY
ALBERT WARDWELL LEE
Lours LEEDER .
LEO JORN LEMIRE
ROBERT J. LEUPOLD
ABRAHAM LEVEY
BENJAMIN EDWARD LEVIN
ABRAHAM SHELL LEZBERG
J ULIUS LIBERMAN
EDWARD GEORGE MADDEN
JAMES FRANCIS MAHER
ROBERT JOSEPH MAHER
CHARLES WILLIAM MAHONEY
lsAAC MARGOLIS
PHILIP MASSARELLA
EDWARD PHILIP McCABE
WILLIAM FRANCIS McCLELLAN
HAROLD LEO McCORMACK
*CHARLES FRANCIS JosEPH McCUE
DANIEL JosEPH McEACHERN
YSIUS McELANEY, JR.
ALO
J AMES
JOHN JOSEPH McGEE
JoHN JosEPH McG1NN
MAN McGRATH
CHARLES HER
H
LAWRENCE PATRICK Mc UGH
WILLIAM JOSEPH McSWEENEY
GURDON IRA MEAD
WILLIAM JosEPH MEANEY
MANUEL D' ALMEIDA MEDEIROS
PATRICK ARTHUR MENTON
HARRY LINCOLN MILLER
RALPH STANLEY MILLER
EDWARD JAMES MORAN
RICHARD CHARLES MuLRO~.
HENRY Ar;oYSIUS MURPHY .
JOHN STEPHEN MURPHY
WALTER JOSEPH MURPHY ..
CLARENCE ATWOOD NADO
EVERETT WARREN NELSON
HERMAN NEWBURG
THOMAS WALTER NORTON
THOMAS JOSEPH O'DALY, JR.

249 Waverly Street, Belmont, Mass.
3 Dilworth Street, Boston, Mass.
A
e Boston, Mass.
107 Massachusetts venu .' Plain Mass
23 Clive Street, J ama1ca
. '
.
venue Somerville, Mass.
18 Norwoo d A
'
B
M
20 Pemberton Square, oston, ass.
131 State Street, Boston, M ass.
21 Second Street, Framingham, Mass.
. ton Street Boston, M ass.
294 W ash mg
' 1· gt
M
78 Orvis Road, Arm on, ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
t Street Dorchester, Mass.
'
B t
M
44 Lyn dh urs
448 Beacon Street, os on, ass.
uare Concord, Mass.
•
M
M onumen t Sq
17 Verrill Street, Mattapan, ass.
107 Gainsborough Street_, Bost~n, Mass.
155 South Street, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
47 Portland Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
361 Walnut Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
129 Adams Street, Malden, Mass.
Castle Street, Cliftondale, Mass.
12
City Hall, Boston, Mass.
42 English Street, Salem, Mass.
162 Park Street, Beverly, Mass.
167 Mt. Vernon Street, Dover, N. H.
200 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
Main Street, Waltham, Mass.
77
196 Main Street, Broc~ton , Mass.
d Street Cambridge, Mass.
398 Port Ian
'
B
M
43 Hancock Street, oston, ass.
8 Park Street, Peabody, Mass.
89 Cross Street, Randolph, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
49 Federal Street, Bos_on, Mass,
t
Sears Building, Boston, MMass.
.
R d Somerv1lle, ass.
121 Liberty oa •
B
Me.
7 Hammond Street, _
angorM
A
e Cambridge, ass.
1430 Massachusetts venuS' t Boston Mass.
73 Tremont tree ' .
I ' M
et Roshnda e,
16 Ce d ar St re '
h'll Ma
92 Webster ·Street, Ha~rl I ' Ma
30 Squantum Street, East I ton, M
503 Haverhill Street, Lawrnc~, M
70 Mudge Street, y_n ' M
t Somerville,
303 Beacon Stree ' . I d M
B . tree High an s, ,,
Standish Avenue, _
ra1Sn
t Brockton, in
106 Mam tree •
M
53 Arlington Street, Lynn,
West Roxbury,
20 Maple Street,
Dorchester,
Revere,
11 Stockton Street , ffi
Revere Post 0 ce,

JAMES DANIEL O'HEARN
TIMOTHY JOSEPH O'KEEFE
WILLIAM CYRIL O'MEARA
RICHARD p ARMENTER
J osEPH PETER PHELAN
EDWARD ISADORE PERKINS
VINCENT EDMUND PICHULO
VITALI PoDOLSKY POTTER
WILLIAM ALLEN POTTER
WILLIAM MICHAEL PRENDIBLE
HENRY EDWARD QUARLES
(HARLES RAYFORD QUINN
WILLIAM GARLICK REED
WILLIAM PATRICK REILLEY
JAMES AMBROSE REILLY
URBAI N ROBERT
NATHAN ROSENFELD
JosEPH ROTHSTEIN
JOSEPH RusscoL
DAVID JOSEPH RYAN
JoHN JAMES RYAN
THOMAS JOSEPH RYAN, JR.
TIMOTHY GLEASON RYAN, JR.
WILLIAM JOSEPH RYAN
JosEPH S AKLAD
SAMUEL DANIEL SAMPSON
VINCENT LAWRENCE SCANLON
EDWARD JOSEPH SEGAL
(HARLES WILLIAM SEIBERT
JOSEPH SERAFINI
HARRY SESNOVICH
PAUL SHAPIRO
EDWARD FREDERICK SHERLOCK
(LARENCE CLIFTON SHOREY
ARRY SILVER
AYID SILVERSTEIN
NER ROY SISSON
ILLIAM PATRICK SLATTERY
ERARD JOSEPH SMITH
ILTON IRVING SMITH
NJAMIN SNOW
ORRIS SOKOLOVE
BERT ABRAHAM SPIZER
UEL HAROLD STANDEL
FELIX STEFANSKI
UNO AUGUSTUS SULLIVAN
BERT PATRICK SULLIVAN
CK JOSEPH SULLIVAN
MAS JOSEPH SULLIVAN
OTHY LAWRENCE SULLIVAN
TIN EDWARD SWEENEY
TAYLOR
RT KENNETH TAYLOR
G ANDREW TEBO
FRANCIS THOMAS
E LAWTON THOMPSON
PETER THORNTON
T FRANCIS TILLSON

45 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
217 Franklin Street, Quincy, Mass.
Heard Building, Phoenix, Ariz.
9 Marshall Street, Medford Hillside, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
568 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass.
1565 Washington Street, West Newton, Mass.
Court House, Boston, Mass.
6 Scollay Square, Boston, Mass.
32 Pine Street, Woburn, Mass.
150 Causeway Street, Boston, Mass.
708 Cregg Building, Lawrence, Mass.
53 Howard Street, Brockton, Mass.
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
189 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
728 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
82 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass.
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Whitney Avenue, Beverly, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Arlington Street, Malden, Mass.
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Reddy Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
220 Common Street, West Quincy, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
19 Edgewood Street, Roxbury, Mass.
23 Claflin Road, Brookline, Mass.
34 Chester Road, Belmont, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Wendell Avenue, Brockton, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
440 Park Drive, Boston, Mass.
201 Belgrade Avenue, Roslindale, Mass.
108 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Mass.
71 Campbell Avenue, Revere, Mass.
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Reed Street, Arlington Heights, Mass.
236 C Street, South Boston, Mass.
7 Hardy Street, Salem, Mass.
31 Ivy Street, Boston, Mass.
1 State Street, Boston , Mass.
52 Patten Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
28 Larch Street, Brighton, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
27 State Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
18 Shailer Street, Brookline, Mass.
41 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Mass.
219 Grant Avenue, Medford, Mass.
482 East Eighth Street, South Boston, Mass.
36 Orchard Street, West Newton, Mass.

JOHN FRANCIS O'DAY

* Deceased.
Page forty

Page forty-one

�67 Rindge Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
103 Clayton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
184 Lowell Street, Somerville, Mass.
108 St. Botolph Street, Boston, Mass.
26 Park Street, Attleboro, Mass.
78 Humboldt Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
62 Central Street, Hudson, Mass.
209 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
155 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
197 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
Security Trust, Lynn, Mass.
52 Ames Building, Boston, Mass.
15 Norwood Avenue, Newton Centre, Mass.
248 West Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
2 Sears Street, New Bedford, Mass.
1412 St. Peters Avenue, New York City, N. Y.
36 Normandy Street, Roxbury, Mass.

JOHN MICHAEL TOBIN
GEORGE PAXTON TOWLE
THOMAS REED TUTTLE
ALBERT ANDREW UTO
JEREMIAH ANTHONY WADE
SOLOMON 'vV AKSTEIN
FRANCIS MARTIN WALSH
JAMES GREGORY WALSH
ROBERT EMMET WALSH
JAMES EDWARD WARD
MosES WASSERMAN
MICHAEL JOSEPH WATMAN
WILLIAM BERNARD WELCH
DONALD MITCHELL WHITE
THOMAS HENRY WHITE
EVERETT CHESTER WILLIAMS
WILLIAM GEORGE WOLPERT
HAROLD PHILIP

Y OFFE

Mid-Year, 1929
THOMAS N. ASHTON
GIACOMO AucELLA
WILLIAM N. BIBEAULT
ROBERT WITHINGTON BLOSSOM
FRANCIS XAVIER BRUTON
SYDNEY BucKMAN
HERBERT E. CARLSON
FRANCIS FREDERICK CARMICHAEL
JAMES GABRIEL CURRAN
LAWRENCE EDWARD DuANE
_BENJAMIN WILLIAM FREEDMAN
HENRY JAMES GAFFNEY
FORREST LITCHFIELD GouLD
MANUEL MARTIN GouLDEY
BERNARD JAMES GRAHAM
M. EDWARD HAYES
NELSON FrsCHER HERMANCE
GEORGE THOMAS HOLMES
MAURICE LANGBORT
FRANK GusTAVE LAUREANA
BARNEY LEZBERG
JOHN FRANCIS MAHONEY
STEPHEN JOSEPH MATTALIANO
Lours THOMAS McCABE
JOHN JOSEPH McCARTHY
FRANK M. McCLosKEY
DANIEL HENRY McGuNIGLE
FRANCIS JOHN MINTON
WILLIAM FRANCIS NEARY
CORNELIUS WILLIAM O'CONNELL
FRANCIS VINCENT O'CONNOR
JOHN EDWARD O'KANE
ARTHUR DANIEL O'LEARY
MICHAEL JOSEPH RANO
ARTHUR WALLACE REILLY
ERIC RICHARD
GEORGE DEWEY SCULLY

Page forty-two

Room 601, 20 Somerset Street, Boston, Mass,
26 Reservoir Avenue, Revere, Mass119 Washington Street, Quincy, Mass74 State Street, Boston, Mass747 Washington Street, Quincy, Mass18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
104 Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
106 Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
1 State Street, Boston, Mass.
57 Fayston Street, Roxbury, Mass.
117 School Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Square, Cambridge, Mass.
737 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
101 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Lincoln Court, Saugus, Mass.
105 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, Mass.
111 Atlantic Avenue, Revere, Mass.
32 Leston Street, Mattapan, Mass.
14 Kirkland Street, Boston, Mass.
102 New Woodcliff Street, Roxbury, Mass.
42 Appleton Street, Everett, Mass.
313 Washington Street, Newton, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
264 Washington Street North, Charlestown, Mass.
57 Faxon Street, East Boston, Mass.
7 Lyman Street, Beverly, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Wollaston Terrace, Dorchester, Mass,
110-116 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn•
187 Lowell Street, Arlington Heights, M
4 Mary Street, Binghamton, N.
110 Milk Street, Boston, Ma
10 Charles Street, Marlborough, M
42 Thaxter Street, Hingham, M

DANIEL ARTHUR TOOMBS
FRANK BROWN WHITING
GRAFTON ALEXANDER WOOD
PAUL ZERRAHN
*WILLIAM H. JACKSON

254 Copeland Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Trust Company, Cambridge, Mass.
Los Angeles, Calif.

1929
1374 Massachusetts Ave nue, Cam!mdge, Mass.
.
109 Hi hfi Id
g e Road, Arlmgton, Mass.
18 G~ B~acon Street, Boston, Mass
ARTHUR ELLSWORTH B ALFOUR
4~ Hall~:e~nS~~::, ~eedham, Mass:
OHN ALLEN BENJAMINSEN
J
4 Wellmgton Hill St
' Mattapan, Mass.
WYMAN BERENSON
7H
reet, attapan Mass
FREDERICK JOSEPH B ERNACCHI
C
253 tden Street, Dorchester'. Mass:
HARLES y OUNG BERRY
rant Street, Weymouth, Mass.
JOHN WEBB BEVERSTOCK
4 Water Street, Boston Mass
J OSEPHAT CYPRIEN BLAIN
'
·
17 D oone A
1028 Dorchester A venue,DMattapan, Mass.
CHARLES SILINGER BLA KENEY
129 C venue, orchester, Mass.
J OHN PHILIP BOGAN, JR.
27 Park lurt House, Boston, Mass.
EVERETT NOEL BOUCHER
27 T 'd
venue, Cambridge, Mass.
GEORGE JOSEPH BOYER
n ent Avenue Winthr
743-744 Little B 'Id.'
op, Mass.
RICHARD KNOTT BOYLE
194 North Beacon St mt iWng, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT MICHAEL BOYLE
ree , atertown M
ANIBA DA SILVA BRANCO
161 Devonshire Street , Boston', Mass.
ass.
A
(HARLES DANIEL BURKE
. I rmdy Base, Boston, Mass
(HARLES AUGUSTUS CALLANAN
2 air
294 W Fh' an St ree t ' B oston, Mass ·
ANTONIO JESUS CARDOZO
as mgton Street, Boston Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS NICHOLAS CARROLL
38 State Str t R
'
·
Boston Police Head
tee , evere, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS CASEY
quar ers, Boston Mass
WILLIAM JOSEPH CASEY
'
·
44 Lawndal S
47 Bellevue Ro ~ treet, Be~mont, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS CASSIDY
95 B
d a ' East Bramtree, Mass.
PERCY CATTON
arnar Avenue, Watertown Mass
STEPHEN FRANCIS CAULFIELD
162 c
40 Market Street • Lynn', M ass.·
:RTHUR ANTHONY CENTRACCHIO
20 M 'd'
ourt Street, Boston Mass
ASQUALE ARMAND CERVIZZI
en ian Street, East Bos
'
.
54 Hollingsworth St ree t , M attapan Mass.
ton, Mass
JOHN J. CHENEY
HECTOR FELIX CICCHETTI
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mas~·
JAMES MADISON CLARY
140 Federal Street, Boston' M .
, ass.
7 Fla St
MARK JAMES CLEARY
140 Wood1!!d ;;et, Cambridge, Mass.
JOHN THOMAS COAN
115 H' hl d
reet, Lawrence, Mass.
JOHN A. COLBERT
ig Can Road, Somerville Mass
ALBERT COLE
·
38 7 entral S quare, L ynn,' Mass.
M . S
EDWARD MAURICE CONLEY
am treet, Amesbury Mass
Orro CORKUM
20 F 53 Joy Street, Boston'. Mass:
iDWARD HENRY COSTELLO JR
enwood Road, Boston Mass
IMOTHY CHARLES CREAN '
•
.
20 Eastburn Street Bri ht '
g on, Mass.
421 Hildreth B 'Id''
FREDERICK ROBERT CROWLEY
191 M .
m mg, Lowell, Mass
~HILIP MICHAEL DEBIASIO
3r~mack Street, Haverhill Mass.
DWIN LEO DELANEY
ssex Street, Cliftondale: Mass:
WALTER GERARD DIMMOCK
18 Tremont Street, Boston M
ass.
4 Homestead Pl ace, Ch ar Iestown , Mass
ROMAS FRANCIS DONOGHUE
ORNELIUS PATRICK DONOVAN
55 Franklin Street L
' M ·
, ynn, ass.
44 Glenburnie Road W
0SEPH DANIEL DONOVAN
estN ew y ork N y
124 West Seventy-second St' reet, Roxbury, Mass.
ARRY HOM Dow
GINALD VALENTINE DOWNS
173 Hancock Street Quincy' M. .
65 B
'
' ass.
OMAS HENRY DUNN
road Street, Salem Mass
130 B
ANK ALBERT FARRELL
rookfield Road ' Winth rop,' M ass.·
HOWE COOLIDGE AMEE
HAROLD EUGENE AND
EARL AUERBACH
ERSON

* Deceased.
Page forty-three

�CHARLES EDWARD FARREY
WARREN FRANCIS FENLON
ARTHUR BERNARD FERRIN
WARREN GEORGE FERRIN
PAUL MARTIN FINAN
LOUIS FINE
ROBERT FINN
EVERETT IRVING FLANDERS
PHILIP FLEISCHER
ROGER MICHAEL FOLEY
-WILLIAM FREDERICK GALLAGHER
BERNARD ELI GERSON
OMAR JOSEPH GIGUERE
HENRY LOUIS GILMAN
JOHN JOSEPH GINNETTI
BENJAMIN L. GOLDENBERG
CHARLES 'WILLIAM GOLOBOY
DANIEL ANTHONY GRANT
ALBERT GREENWALD
MAYNARD ROLLINS GREGORY
HARRY GROB
J
BENJAMIN JOHN GUARINO, R.
EDMUND HENRY GUNTHER
FRED WESLEY C. HANDY
EDWARD JOSEPH HANRAHAN
FRANCIS DAMIAN HARRINGTON
EDWARD JAMES HAYES
SAMUEL HECHT
HAROLD G. HERSCOVITZ
RAYMOND ANTHONY HOLUB
LEO HURWITZ
MAX HURWITZ
SAMUEL HAROLD KALISH
FRANCIS ANTHONY KELLEHER
ROBERT JOSEPH KELLIHER
JOHN JAMES KENNEDY
JOHN MICHAEL KENNEDY
WILLIAM MICHAEL KERWIN
DAVID KoRISKY
ABRAHAM BENTLEY KURTIS
RALPH WOODBURY LAKIN
}AMES GREGORY LANE
GEORGE VINCENT LARKIN III
}AMES HENRY LEEDHAM,
JOSEPH LESBERG
ABRAHAM LEVINE
JULIUS JOSEPH LEVITAN
BARNETT LEWIS
JEREMIAH A. LINEHAN
LESTER ENOS LOHNES
HOWARD PAUL LUCIER
HUGH ROBERT MARAGHY
HAROLD MARKEL
EDWARD JOSEPH MATTHEWS
ALBERT EDWARD MAYKEL
}AMES MCCAFFREY
JosEPH H. McCAFFREY
ARTHUR JOSEPH McCARTHY

110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
E t Boston Mass.
1141 Saratoga StredetS,t aest Boston: Mass.
88 Broa
re ,
141 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
25 Pemberton Square, Boston ' Mass.
M
40 Harold Street, Roxbury, Mass.
24 School Street, Boston, ass.
24 State House, Boston, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, MMass.
ass.
18 Whitredge S tree t ' Dorchester' Mass.
b 'd
C eron Avenue, Cam n ge,
32A am Holden Street, Lowell, Mass.
26
19 Broadway c·ire 1 Lynn ' Mass .
e,
35 Grape Street, Malden, Mass.
.
186 Mam Stree t , Marlborough, Mass.
M
1 B eacon Street • Boston, M ass.
.
185 Devons h tre Street , Boston, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, ass.
10 Florence Avenue, Allston, Mass.
Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
294S
d' h Street Dorchester, Mass.
3 tan 1s
' amin ham, Mass.
53 Laurence Street, FrC bgr1'dge Mass
.
p b t East am
'
·
Registry of . ro a ep, k Newtonville, Mass.
15 Washington ar •
M
110 Milk Street, Boston, ass.
43 Tremon t St reet ' Boston, Mass.
.
1 M
76 5 South Street, Roslmda e, ass.
1 k Street Dorchester, Mass.
44 Have o~t Aven~e Brookline, Mass.
'
M
38 Summi
43 Kilby Street, Boston, ass.
A enue Boston, Mass.
126 Massachu~etts st\et Roxbury, Mass.
M
254 Qumcy r '
101 Milk Street, Bos~on, ass.
12 Munroe Street ' Somerville, Mass.
d N H
54 South State Street, Concor ' M. .
56 Batterymarc h St ree t • Boston, Mass.
.
92 Washington St ree t , Lynn ' Mass.
80 Boylston Street, Boston, ivtss.
73 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, Mass.
140 Main Street, Qu~ncy, Mass.
62 Pleasant Stree t , Q umcy · Mass.
1 State Street, Boston, ass,
30 Purchase Street, Milford, :a
103 Park Street, Attleboro, a
1 Beacon Street, Boston, :a
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
80 Boylston Street, Boston,
43 Homestead Street, Roxbury, M
17 Oakville Street, Lynn, M
Vine Street, Weymouth, M
4 South Broadway, Lawrence,
R m 65 City Hall, Boston,
oo.
, A
Roxbury,
22 Westminster venue, . Plain M
8 Oakdale Street, Jamaica ter' M
332 Main Street, Worces , M
31 St. James A ven Ue ' Boston,
.
42 Crescent Stree t , Cambndge,
n
23 Oak Street, Charlestow ,

COLEMAN AUGUSTUS McDONOUGH
FRANCIS JOSEPH McFARLAND
]AMES FRANCIS McGILL
GEORGE EDWARD McGUNIGLE
RAYMOND OTis McKENZIE
ALBERT ]OSEPH McLAUGHLIN
JOSEPH FRANCIS McLEAN
ARTHUR PHILIP MCLELLAN
WILLIAM SARSFIELD McNARY, JR.
ARTHUR LEWIS MEYERHOFF
NATHANIEL HYMAN MICHAEL
JOEL LEWIS MILLER
MICHAEL MILLER
MORRIS MILLER
JAMES FRANCIS MONAHAN
ANGELO MORELLO
EDMUND GILLESPIE MORIARTY
JOSEPH THOMAS MULCAHY
FRANK LEO MULLETT
LEROY CLIFFORD MURCH
EDWIN MICHAEL MURPHY
-HENRY MICHAEL MURPHY
REGINALD ] OSEPH MURPHY
JOHN AUGUSTUS MURRAY
CLARENCE LORING MYETTE
FRANCIS PATRICK NAZZARO
MICHAEL NEEDLE
Lours NEYMAN
THOMAS NICHOLSON
MICHAEL JOSEPH NOLAN
CHARLES WELLINGTON NORTON
JOHN BAPTISTA NUNES
RAYMOND DANIEL O'BRIEN
PHILIP DANIEL O'CONNELL
MICHAEL FRANCIS O'CONNOR
LAZARUS 0Gus
ARTHUR AMBROSE O'SHEA
ABRAHAM p ANITCH
PHILIP p ARKER
SHERMAN HENRY PEPPARD
ALEXANDER EDWARD PERRIELLO,
JOSEPH WILLIAM POLLARD
MAURICE PRAGER
SAMUEL RAPHEL
THOMAS EUGENE REGAN
AXWELL HERBERT ROBINSON
HENRY ROGOVIN
ERBERT W. ROSEN
AUL EDWARD ROWE
RNEsr ENRICO RUBINO
BERT MILTON RUDMAN
lIGUST SAARELA
0 SAMUEL SACKS

RY SAFFIE
IUs JOSEPH SAKOWICH
RON l. SANDERSON
NK RAPHAEL SANTOSUOSSO
WARD JOHN SAUNDERS

]R.

148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
44 Melville Avenue, Boston, Mass.
Summer Street, Ashland, Mass.
Room 704, 70 Cornell Street, Boston, Mass.
46 Lowell Street, Malden, Mass.
56 Cheltoy Street, Cambridge, Mass.
6 Summer Park, Dorchester, Mass.
44 Harding Avenue, Belmont, Mass.
84 College Road, Chestnut Hill, Mass.
6 Wave Way Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
98 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
619 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
519 Lawyers' Building, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Pennsylvania Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
City Hall, Waltham, Mass.
12 Pearl Street, Medford, Mass.
81 Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
86 Albion Street, Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
50 State Street, Boston, Mass.
112 Poplar Street, Boston, Mass.
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
606 Westford Street, Lowell, Mass.
Room 920, Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
206 Essex Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
459 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
600 Wyman's Exchange, Lowell, Mass.
74 Highland Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
416 Washington Street, Somerville, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
123 Aspinwall Avenue, Brookline, Mass.
179 Lincoln Street, Boston, Mass.
47 Portland Street, Boston, Mass.
7 Gray Circle, Arlington Heights, Mass.
540 Gallivan Boulevard, Dorchester, Mass.
9 Taylor Building, Taunton, Mass.
111 Westminster, Providence, R. I.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
410 Fairburn Building, Lowell, Mass.
12 Pearl Street, Boston, Mass.
160 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
130 Chestnut Street, Cambridge, Mass.
Hanover Street Post Office, Boston, Mass.
38 Clark Street, Medford, Mass.
9 Arthur Street, Maynard, Mass.
121 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
30 Courtland Road, Mattapan, Mass.
41 Jefferson Street, Cambridge, Mass.
143 Franklin Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
71 Granite Street, South Braintree, Mass.
23 Summer Street, Lowell, Mass.

Page forty-four
Page forty-five

�15 Linnaean Street, Cambridge, Mass.

WILLIAM FRANCIS SCANLAN
NATHAN JACOB SCHNEIDERMAN
SAMUEL SELETSKY
MORRIS BENJAMIN SHAPIRO
JOSEPH LEONARD SHAW
Lours SHOWSTACK
RALPH SIEGEL
SIDNEY BERTRAM SIMMONS
THOMAS SINCLAIR
FRANK SPEAR
VINCENT N. STATUTI
lsADORE HENRY STERN
JOSEPH MICHAEL SULLIVAN
WILLIAM LEAVITT SULLIVAN
WILLIAM CHARLES SUTHERLAND
JOSEPH LEO SWEENEY
BERT TAYLOR
Lours THERAN
JAMES FRANCIS TOBIN
TERRY LEO TOBIN
GEORGE HENRY TOOLE
EUGENE OscAR TURCOTTE
JOHN KENNETH TURNER
JAMES JOSEPH TWOHIG
JOSHUA JAMES VERNAGLIA
MYER VERNICK
WILLIAM ELMER VoYE
CHARLES HAWTHORNE WALTERS
CARLOS FREDERICO WEIMAN
EDWARD WEINER
NATHANIEL PHILIP WHARTON
Lours G. WHITCOMB
HARRY ELWOOD WILBUR
FRED LEO WILLIAMS
FRANK PETER WILTRAKIS
EDWARD R. WINE
SIDNEY CHARLES WINSTON
WILLIAM JOHN WooDS
MAURICE WOOLF

89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
135 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass.
129 Concord Street, Framingham, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
159 Coolidge Street, Brookline, Mass.
536 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
49 Waverly Street, Everett, Mass.
49 Ashley Street, East Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
650 Albany Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Box 102, Dedham, Mass.
1205 Brook Road, East Milton, Mass.
80 Bay Street, New Bedford, Mass.
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
316 Court House, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
156 State Street, Boston, Mass.
523 Fletcher Street, Lowell, Mass.
674 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
76 West Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Conant Hall 26, Cambridge, Mass.
118 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Woolson Block, Springfield, Vt.
5 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
185 Main Street, Marlborough, Mass.
267 Fuller Street, Dorchester, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Cornhill, Boston, Mass.
383 Broadway, Somerville, Mass.
107 Trenton Street, East Boston, Mass.

Mid-Year, 1930
WILLIAM ANDREW AHLGREN
JOSEPH ADDISON ALDRED
CYRIL GEORGE BENNETT
VINCENT JACOB CELIA
CLIFFORD ZENAS CHRISTOPHER
AARON COHEN
MAXWELL COHEN
RAYMOND MICHAEL CONWAY
HENRY HERMAN DEITCHMAN
JAMES CORNELIUS DOYLE
MARTIN RICHARD DURKIN
MAX FELDMAN
FRANK JEFFERSON GIFFORD
WILLIAM GOLDENBERG
NELSON STONE KAPLAN
RALPH JAMES KARCH

Page forty-six

15 Summit Road, West Roxbury, Mass.
12 Middlesex Avenue, Reading, Mass.
223 West Springfield Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
83 Stults Road, Belmont, Mass.
19 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
56 Grant Street, Milford, Mass.
72 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
65 Suffolk Avenue, Revere, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
50 Essex Street, Chelsea, Mass.
21 Spruce Street, Dedham, Mass.
6 Lorne Street, Dorchester, Mass.
70 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Littleton Street, Chelmsford, Mass.

]OHN ALBRO KENNEDY
FRANCIS XAVIER LANG
WALTER HENRY McLAUGHLIN
HENRY ]AMES MULLIGAN
]OHN THOMAS O'NEILL
WILLIAM H. RAFFERTY
HAROLD ARTHUR ROGERS
BERNARD SINGER
NATHAN ]OSEPH SOKOLETSKY
MARTIN JOHN TASHJIAN
ARTHUR HOWARD VICKERSON
]AMES JOSEPH WALSH
CLAUDE SEYMOUR HARTWELL

] OSEPH ABO RN
LEON ABORN
MARK SHERMAN ABORN
SAMUEL M. ABRAMS
THOMAS F. ALLEN
DEWEY GEORGE ARCHAMBAULT
HAROLD NORMAN ARCHER
] OHN FRANCIS ASPELL
KARL WATSON BAKER
DANIEL ]AMES BEGLEY
WARREN EDGAR BENSON
GEORGE BERNSTEIN
MORRIS BERZON
CHARLES ] AMES BLACK
Lours J. BoRRE
EDWARD GERALD BOYLE
EDWARD THOMAS BRADY
GEORGE I. BREEN

* GEORGE ELDRIDGE BROPHY
ROBERT MANSFIELD BROWNE
THOMAS ] OSEPH BURKE
] OHN ] OSEPH BUSH
HENRY CULLINAN BUTLER
WILLIAM HENRY BUTLER J
HAROLD AUGUSTINE CAH~LI~·
] AMES ELMER CALLAHAN
]OHN ]. CALLINAN
]AMES ]OSEPH CANNON
RALPH CARCHIO
ERNEST WILLIAM CARLSON
THOMAS HAROLD CARR
JOSEPH CARVER
JOHN ] OSEPH CHAPMAN
PHILIP ALOYSIUS CHAPMAN
EL y HERMAN CHA YET
JOHN ELMER CHISHOLM
Juuus BERNARD CLAYMAN
SAMUEL H. COHEN
FRANCIS XAVIER CONNELLY
:ETER WILLIAM CONNORS
ALPH HENRY COOPER
EDWARD ]AMES COUSINS

44 Amo~y ~treet, Cambridge, Mass
11 p69 H1lls1de Street ' Bos t on, M ass .
b
em erton Square Boston M
41 p
'
, ass.·
earl Street Boston M
37 B
d
'
' ass.
25 Parklan~oa way, T~unton, Mass.
25 B
M
Street, Brighton Mass
ryn awr R oa d , W ellesley ' Mass ·
19 F owIer St
D
'
·
281 Black t
S reet, orchester, Mass
10 Ca;ir1?-e treet, Fall River, Mass:
891 Hyde p kl Street, Somerville, Mass.
ar
venue, Hyde Park Mass
75 Federal Street Boston' M .
'
' ass.
45 M"lk S
treet, Boston, Mass.
I

1930
18 Tremont Street Boston M
18 T
'
, ass.
1
remont Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Tremont Street Boston M
18 T
'
, ass.
remont Street Boston M
1F d
'
' ass.
e era! Street Boston M
197 p
k
'
, ass.
awtuc et Street , Lowell , M ass.
.
Great Pond, Me
6 Woodv1lle Street, Boston M .
72 Palfrey Road Belmont' Mass.
17 Rush s
'
, ass.
644 Hyde Park A treet, Som~rville, Mass.
38 p k V I venue, Roslmdale, Mass.
ar
a e Avenue, Allston Mass
51 Chelsea Street Everett' M .
h
' ass.
116 Murdock Street
6R
' ng ton, Mass
olyVRoad, Jamaica Plain Mass.
l . alle y R oa d ' Woburn,' Mass ·
20 M ernam Street , somerv1lle M ·
·
ass.
397 Commonwealth A venue, Boston , Mass
6 Queen Street, Dorchester' M .
5 c1· street, Atlantic ' Mas
ass.
Ive
4 Woodstock Avenue ' Allst on,'M ass
s.
60 State Street Boston M
·
4 Merrymount Av
w' I
' ass.
81 Kilb enue, o laston, Mass.
care of Second Nation;! ~reelt, BBoston, Mass.
an ,, oston Mass
52 Broad Street, Salem' Mass.
80 Freeport Street Boston' M .
331 F anem·1 S treet, Brighton , M ass.
'
144 M · S
, ass.
am treet Milford M
11 W
S
'
, ass.
15 Dalrymple
MMass.
4 Es
ds
, ass.
mon
treet, Dorchester Mass
40 Court Street Boston' M ·
40 C
'
' ass.
20 p b ourt Street ' Boston , M ass.
em erton Square Boston M
5 H' h
,
' ass
. ig Street, Medford, Mass.
78 Manon Street, Somerville M .
11 B
S
, ass.
eacon treet, Boston Mass
Brayton Road, Brighton' Mass.
ortland Street, Lawrence' M .
, ass.
294 W h"
as mgton Street Boston M
145 Bartlett Road ' Winthro P,' Mass.
ass.

B.

s:::et,t~{:~a%:;~~~·

:i

* Deceased.

Page forty-seven

�Westland Avenue, Boston, M ass.
24 5 State Street, Boston, Mass.
High Street, Medford, Mass.
5
143 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Radcliffe Street, Dorchester, M ass.
89
Arthur Street, Winchester, M ass.
29
67 Milk Street, Boston, M ass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M ass.
Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
231
l41 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass.
Century Street, Medford , Mass.
47
Washington Street, Newton, Mass.
277
131 West Street, Hyde Park, Mass.
40 Vvater Street, Boston , Mass.
City Hall, Boston , Mass.
Parker Hill Avenue, Boston, Mass.
74

THEODORE FULLER CoWAN
RICHARD FRANCIS CRONIN
JOSEPH THOMAS CUMMISKEY
CHARLES JOSEPH CURRAN
CHARLES ARTHUR CUSICK
PHILIP PORTER DEVER
FRANK STEPHENSON DEWEY
DONALD SAMUEL DIBUONO
CORNELIUS FRANCIS DINEEN
JOHN ZAVIER DOHERTY
FRANK VINCENT DOLAN
THOMAS BERNARD DONNELLy
THOMAS FRANCIS DONNELLy
JOSEPH LAWRENCE DONOVAN
TIMOTHY JosEPH DONOVAN
MAURICE PATRICK DoWNEY
JoHN PAUL DOYLE
*BERNARD EDMUND DUFFY
WALTER A . DULLEA
EDWARD FRANCIS DUNCAN
NEWMAN OSBORNE DURELL
PHILIP J oSEPH DURKIN
PETER DWYER
WILFRED DWYER
ISADORE ROBERT EcTMAN
ABRAHAM EINSTEIN
ALBERT DANIEL FANNING
VITO FAZIO
CARL FEINBERG
HARRY GEORGE FELDMAN
HENRY MELVIN FERRICK
FRANK FIALKOW
JOHN FRANCIS FINN
JOSEPH FLEMING
GORDON JOHN FLINK
PAUL HENRY SNOW (FOLEY)
THOMAS RUSSELL FOLEY
Louis ARTHUR FORTI
FREDERICK FRANK
CHARLES WILLIAM GAFFNEY
JOHN HENRY GALLAGHER
WILLIAM FRANCIS GALVIN, JR.
ABRAHAM MORDECAI GAMERMAN
ROYAL RAYMOND GILES
BERNARD GINSBURG
DAVID GINSBURG
JAMES ARTHUR GLYNN
ELY GOLDSTEIN
JACOB JAY GOTTLIEB
JOSEPH JACOB GOTTLIEB
DANIEL FENTON GRAY
GEORGE M. GROH
BERNARD LEONARD GROSSMAN
LAWRENCE ROGER GROVE
JOHN WILLIAM GuiNEE
Louis GuRMAN
GERSHOM DAVIS HALL
EDWARD CHARLES HALLY

Page f orly-eight

37

80 Sudan Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Parker Terrace, Dorchester , Mass.
Lambert Avenue, East Lynn, Mass.
26
Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
125
26 Cortes Street, Boston, Mass.
Summer Street, A_ndover, Mass.
53
237 Shirley Street, Wmthrop, Mass,
Orkney Road, Brooklme, Mass.
18

6

7 Melvin Street, Wakefield, Mass.
Kerwin Street, Dorchester, Mass.
15
Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
18
Moody Street, Waltham, Mass.
210
Pearl Street, Stoughton, Mass.
31
Rockland Street, Cant?n, Mass.
257
10 Wisconsin Avenue, Somer~1lle, Masa.
43 Highland Avenue, Cambridge, Masa.
48 Governor Winthrop Road, Somerville, ~asa.
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
30 Wareham Street, M edford, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
14 Kingman Road, Somerville, M
l6 Pine Street, Stoneham, M
54 Mountain Street, Malden,:
24 School Street, Boston,
Montvale Avenue, Woburn, M
24 School Street, Boston, :
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
6 Broadway Square, Boston,
113 Boylston Street, Malden,
A nue Boston,
.
•
S ·t 3 185 Huntmgton ve
m e '
18 Tremont Street, _Bost~~·
6 Post Office Building, Spnngfie '
H' h
Mattapan,
R oom 32 ,
926 Cummins ig way,
ton
185 Devonshire Street.' Bops\ . '
J ma1ca a1n,
78 Rockview Street, a A r gton,
33 Alton Street, rB1n t on,
as
· h
20 Pemberton Square,
Harw1c,
hester,
17 5 Adams Street, D ore
• Deceased.

517 Granite Street, Manchester, N. H.
GERARD ADRIEN HAMEL
519 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
CHESTER DAHL HANSEN
117 Bowdoin Street, Dorchester, Mass.
fREDERICK ALOYSIUS HARKINS
16 Sewall Street, Lynn, Mass.
WILLIAM DALY HARRINGTON
110 School Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
JOHN ANTHONY HART
Room 855, 10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
RAYMOND EVERETT HENRY
109 Summer Street, Stoneham, Mass.
RICHARD HORNE HERSAM
Canton Street, Westwood, Mass.
JOHN DAVID HODGDON
6 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hill, Mass.
JoHN PATRICK HooBAN
192 Woodward Street, Waban, Mass.
JOHN RAYMOND HORGAN
Dorchester High School, Girls, Boston, Mass.
EoWARD EVERETT HUNKINS
7 Belmont Street, Charlestown, Mass.
MAURICE MEADE HURLEY
70 State Street, Boston , Mass.
MAXWELL SOLOMON H URVITZ
l}f Front Street, Salem, Mass.
PHILIP HURWITZ
98 High Street, Charlestown, Mass.
GEORGE EDWARD IRVING
857 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
REUBEN JAFFE
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES AUGUSTUS KANE
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JULIUS KAPLAN
53 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
ROBERT KAPLAN
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
LoUIS I. KARLIN
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
PHILIP KASTEL
264 Meridian Street, East Boston, Mass.
JsRAEL IRVING KATZ
75 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
LOUIS FRANK KATZ
75 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
REUBEN KATZ
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MORRIS ROBERT KAUFMAN
69 Deering Road, Mattapan, Mass.
NATHAN AARON KA y
43 Hawkins Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM JOSEPH KEANE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS R. KEENAN
55 Circuit Street, Roxbury, Mass.
JosEPH P. KELLEY
44 Central Street, Somerville, Mass.
GEORGE JOSEPH KING
7 Willow Street, Lynn, Mass.
LEO ALAN KING
109 Clark Street, Clinton, Mass.
RICHARD S. KIRBY
33 Ashfield Street, Roslindale, Mass.
WALTER THOMAS KIRLEY
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
OUIS KOBRIN
State Prison, Charlestown, Mass.
OBERT GORDON Koen
107 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
DIAN SEYMOUR KRAMER
90 Shawmut Street, Chelsea, Mass.
ILLIAM J. KRA WCZUN
80 Waltham Street, West Newton, Mass.
!ES JOSEPH LALLY
96 Raymond Avenue, West Somerville, Mass.
:UCIAN HUBERT LARUE
20 Mill Street, Abington, Mass.
BERT LATHAM
68 Marlborough Street, Chelsea, Mass.
OB LEADER
1051 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass.
THUR JOSEPH LEARSON
199 Park Drive, Boston, Mass.
OMAS MILLETTE LEARY
AND OMER LEBLANC
825 Main Street, Westbrook, Me.
30 Gordon Street, West Somerville, Mass.
RLES JOSEPH LEHAN, JR.
RGE HENRY LEMAY
Room 205, Old Post Building, New York, N. Y.
HAEL SALVINO LESPASIO
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
IAN EARL LEVINE
30 Angell Street, Dorchester, Mass.
NEY LEVISON
540 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass.
EL LEWITON
41 Harvard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
EDWARD LYNCH
11 West Cottage Street, Roxbury, Mass.
JOSEPH MACDONALD
111 Robeson Street, New Bedford, Mass.
GILES MAHLER
42 Horace Road, Belmont, Mass.
TON PHILIP HARRY MAJOR
4 Columbus Square, Boston, Mass.
ES FRANCIS MANNING
30 Chester Street, Danvers, Mass.
y J0SEPH MA THEWS
6 Bowdoin Square, Boston, Mass.
I!. FRANK T . McCABE, U.S. Army
3 Lewis Street, Newton, Mass.
M JoHN McCLUSKEY
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.

Page forty-nine

�AMES JOSEPH McCusKER
J
WARD McDERMOTT
WALTER ED
JoHN JOSEPH McGEE
RODERICK McKINNON
PAUL REVERE McLEAN
CHARLES MILLER
CHARLES HIRAM MooRE
WALTER J. MoossA
LESTER BERTRAM MORLEY
JOHN PATRICK MULDOON
EDGAR CHARLES MUNDY
WILLIAM TIMOTHY MURPHY
GEORGE ALFRED MURRAY
HAROLD ALOYSIUS MURRAY
RALPH ROBERT MusTO
JoHN JosEPH NEARY
FRANK EMIL NELSON
STANLEY SIMON NEWBERG
ARTHUR WILLIAM NOLAN
DAVID BARRY NOONAN
LEONARD NoVICK
RuBIN NovINSKY
FRANCIS CHARLES O'BRIEN
REGINALD WILLIAM O'BRIEN
WALTER THOMAS O'DONNELL
LEO JosEPH O'KEEFE
FREDERICK JOSEPH O'NEILL
FRANK p AL UMBO
BRUNO JOSEPH PARTICELLI
SAMUEL PEARL
CHARLES EDWARD PELTIER
ISRAEL PERRY
NORMAN ALLEN PLUMMER
WILLIAM JosEPH POLEN
ALAN THEODORE PoLGREEN
PETER JOSEPH PoWILATIS
JOSEPH EUGENE REILLY
NICHOLAS EDWARD REPPUCCI
BERNARD S . RESH
ARTHUR EDWARD_ RICHARDSON
BERNARD E. ROBINOVITZ
SAMUEL ROBINSON .
RICHARD HENRY ROCKETT
GEORGE E. ROGERS
JULIUS RoMMELL
CHARLES MoRRIS RosENFELT
JOSEPH RUBIN
ARTHUR FRANCIS RusH
HUBERT !THEL RYAN
ARTHUR SANDBERG
JOSHUA lsAAC SEIDMAN
JORN L. SERRA
SAMUEL SHAPIRO
EDWARD D. SHARKEY
WALTER WILLIAM SHARP
MARCUS LEON SHERIN _
SAMUEL WILLIAM SHERMAN
ABRAHAM BERNARD SHORE
Page fifty

121 Elm Avenue, Malden, Mass.
48 Garden Street, Brighton, M ass.
45 Aberdeen Street, Newton, M ass.
1024 North Shore Road, Re:'ere, M ass.
h d Street North Cambndge, Mass.
73 Ore ar 18 Trediont Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
332
Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
10
295 Minot Street, Dorches~er, Mass,
W hin ton Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
as
g Custom House, Boston, Mass.
3801
302 West Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
181 Pearl Street, Newton, Mass.
"d'
264 M en 1an Street , East Boston, Mass ·
Bellevue Street, Newton , Mass.
247
35 Fellsview Avenue, Medford, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
109 Child Street, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
_
Sun Building, Lowell, Mass.
805 806
t Ave nue New Bedford, Mass.
85 1 Acush neNewbury 'Street, Boston, M ass.
137
174 North Street, Boston, Mass.
30 Waverley Place, Mel:ose, Mas,.
19 Lurton Street, Qumcy , Mass,
Winter Street, Arlington, Mass.
78
Franklin Street, Belmont, Mass.
30
. t n Street Waltham, Mass.
204 L exmg o
'
1 Dustin Street, Peab_ody, Mass.
eet Cambndge, Mass.
105 Montgomery Str '
M
24 School Street, Boston, ass.
Hillis Avenue, Greenwood, Mass.
7
South Boston, Mass.
302 West B roa dway ,
M
Elm Square, Andover, ass.
s uth Boston, Mass.
501 Southampton S treet, o
B t
Mass.
18 Tremont Street, ~s .on,

t;!~~\i:~:~~~~~::·, :::

1_ 3 St. A;f
0

76 Sheridan Street, Lynn, M
420 Main Street, Woburn, ~
28 Moffatt Road, Salem,
21 Sewall Street, Marblehead,~
91 Walker Street, Cambridge, M
. R d Dorchester,
584 Colum b 1a oa t • Dorchester, M
36 Hansborough S tree ,
Chelsea M
10 3 Bloomingdale Street , Boston,, M
St re et '
150 Causeway
H arvar d , M
t Boston, M
. S
185 Devonshire tree '
·ne M
West Somerv1 ,
31 Gorham Street,
R xburY M
25 Huckins Street, o b y'
S
t Rox ur '
2132 Washington tSree , t Boston,
27 State tree '
d Dorchester,
47 Semont RoaS' t Boston,
27 State tree ,
r
Dorcheste ,
159 Devon Street, Dorchester,
64 Nightingale Street,

]VloRRIS SHULTZ
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
]VlosES SHYAVITZ
3 Washington Street, Haverhill, Mass.
SAMUEL SIEGEL
7 Marshall Terrace, Brookline, Mass.
SAMUEL SLAVINSKY
12 Hansborough Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JosEPH JOHN SoNIGAN, JR.
32 Washington Street, Peabody, Mass.
SIDNEY SPIEGEL
126 Essex Street, Malden, Mass.
EDWARD P. J. SPILLANE
48 Huntington Street, Brockton, Mass
J oHN JOSEPH STELLA
197 Salem Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES EDWARD STILL
12 Electric Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
RoGER ADAMS STINCHFIELD, 1602 Post Office Bldg., United States Court, Boston, Mass.
MAURICE SuALICH
296 Dudley Street, Boston, Mass.
EUGENE HENRY SULLIVAN
66 South Main Street, Providence, R. I.
JAMES HINES SULLIVAN
52A Maple Street, Danvers, Mass.
JoHN FRANCIS SULLIVAN
245 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JoHN HENRY SULLIVAN, JR.
263 Court Street, Dedham, Mass.
WILLIAM EDWARD SUPPLE
59 Elm Street, Charlestown, Mass.
JEROME SuVALLE
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
SYDNEY SWARTZ
185 Campbell Avenue, Revere, Mass.
WELLMAN YouNG TAYLOR
37 Churchill Street, Milton, Mass.
GEORGE EDWARD THOMAS
143 Co urt Road, Winthrop, Mass.
LOUIS TOBIN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH LAWRENCE TULLY
State House, Boston, Mass.
MicHAEL PHILIP VISCONTI
144 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
THOMAS EDWARD vVALKER
7 Goddard Road, Brockton, Mass .
WILLIAM FREDERICK WALLS
16 Poplar Street, Chelsea, Mass.
JosEPH F·RANCIS WALSH
56 Montvale Street, Roslindale, Mass.
THOMAS ALOYSIUS WALSH
101 M ilk Street, Boston, Mass.
JoHN J osEPH WARD
5 Lynnville Terrace, Dorchester, Mass.
JoHN LAWRENCE WARD
1 Walker Street, Peabody, Mass.
RALPH WEINBERG
128 Fuller Street, Brookline, Mass.
GEORGE FREDERICK WEIR
23 Hazelhurst Avenue, West Newton, Mass.
JACOB WHITKIN
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
WILFRED WILD
198 Garden Street, Lawrence, Mass.
MAYNARD OSBORNE WITHERELL
Rehobeth, Mass.
MYER JoHN WOLF
90 Lawton Street, Brookline, Mass.
ORN ALBERT WRIGHT
15 Hutchinson Street, Winthrop Highlands, Mass.
YDNEY ZUKER
45 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.

Mid-Year, 1931
ES EDWARD ANGOFF
ES J OSEPH BOYLE
OMAS ARTHUR BOYLE
MUND JAMES BURKE
CARTOOF
ORGE EDWARD COLEMAN
BERT MORRISON DOLAN
N ALoYsius DONOGHUE
RY EIGNER
ERT WOODBURY EMMONS
UEL SOLOMON EVANS
S ALONZO FARMER
ARD HUDSON FISHER
B GARBER
RD E. GOODALE
ERICK BERNARD HAYES
JOSEPH HOGAN
L WILLIAM HURWITZ
S EDWARD KELLEY

6 Beacon Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
356 Center Street, Dorchester,
826 Nantasket Avenue, Allerton,
Kendall Square Building, Cambridge,
42 Oxford Road, Newton Centre,
334 Bay State Road, Boston,
64 Halifax Street, Boston,
325 Summit Avenue, Brighton,
Ames Building, Boston,
76 Vendale Street, Brookline,
3 Waban Street, Newton,
Boston Terminal, Boston,
23 Central Avenue, Lynn,
1 Beacon Street, Boston,
61 Old Harbor Street, South Boston,
379 Beacon Street, Lowell,
10 Bismark Street, Mattapan,
814 Washington Street, Stoughton,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

Page fifty -one

�JOSEPH JAMES KELLy
JOHN FRANCIS KENNEY
FRANCIS JOSEPH KILLCOYNE
FRANK HENRY LANE
GEORGE LEARY
FREDERICK NELSON Lrss
MURDOCH KE NNETH MACLEOD
ROBERT BURNS MANNING
vVILLIAM MANOWITZ
RICHARD FLOYD MARTIN
JOHN JOSEPH McCARTHY
WILLIAM E. MELLEN
FRANK PEVERIL METCALF
STEPHEN A RTHUR MORRISSEY
,
PATRICK JOSEPH ODONNELL
LEONARD OLIVIER
NATHAN PARNES
JACOB MORRIS ROSENBLOOM
JAMES RICHARD ROURKE
PAUL HENRI THEREAULT
JOSEPH STEPHEN VAHEY

6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Tremont Street, Boston, :ass.
19 Whitney Avenue, Bever!~, Mass.
51 Marston Street, Medfor ' Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, M:::·
11 Hobomack Road, Qumcy, M
.
616 Trapelo Road, Bel11;ont, M:::·
320 Squantum Street, Qumcy, M
.
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
Street West Roxbury,
ass.
96 LaGrange S
' Street Boston, Mass.
245 tate
'
M
24 Boehm Street, Lawr1;nce, Mass.
. d e Street Cambndge,
ass.
390 Cambn g St eet Worcester, Mass.
80 Webster r
,
M
et Dorchester,
ass.
30 B arry Stre '
d M
70 I · ton S treet , Ne w Bedfor , ass.
rvmg
d I R ad Mattapan, Mass.
55 Goo a e O •
M
29 0 cean Street , Beverly, M ass.
105 Chester Avenue, Chelsea,
ass.
.
304 Mernmac k Street • Lowell, Mass.
M
ass.
18 T remon t Str eet • Boston,

1931
1 Beacon Street • Boston, Mass.
M
BERNARD NATHAN ABRAMS
d Street Framingham, ass.
300 Howar
t s' treet Boston, Mass.
CHARLES ABNER ADAMS
18 Tremon
'
M
THEODORE FERNANDEZ ALCAREZ
t Street Attleboro,
ass.
Pleasan
'
Boston Mass
SIMPSON BENJAMIN ALPERT
, M ·
294 Washington Street,
JOSEPH Lours AvAN
'Id'
II
3 18 Bronson Em mg, Attleboro, M ass.
ROYAL PACKER BAKER
.
24 Mernmac k Street ' Lowe ' M ass,
.
ARCHIE BARLOFSKY
Street Qumcy, ass.
206 East Squantumt Street' Boston, Mass.
RICHARD JAMES BARRY
260 Tremon
'
M
JOHN EDWARD BARTON
'Id'
New Bedford, ass.
21 Merchants BWankh:Smtonmgtreet Brighton, Mass.
MILTON ELWOOD BORDEN
15 6 as mg
'
M
HAROLD THOMAS BOWKER
10 Tremont Street ' Boston, M ass.
WILLIAM FRANCIS BROPHY
.
St reet ' Dorchester, M ass.
116 A mandme
vVILLIAM EDWIN BUCKLEY
904r 18 Tremon t Street ' Boston, M ass.
PAUL THOMAS BURKE
Room
,
B "!ding Boston, ass.
824 Park Squ~re Stm t Rockland, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH CALLAHAN
Umon ree '
CHARLES LAW RENCE CALLANAN
"Id"
Mass
803-804 Cregg Bm mg, Lawrence, Mass.
JOSEPH CHARLES CAMPIONE
St eet Taunton,
·
24 North PleasantSt rt Wollaston, Mass.
ALBERT MONROE CARR
163 Clay ree '
M
WILLIAM HAY CLARK
Worthen Street, Chelmsford, M:::·.
RALPH PORTER COATES
333 Washington Street, Bostrn, d Me.
ALBERT ABRAHAM COHEN
89 Market Street, Port an M' '.
ISAAC EDWARD COHEN
ass.
·
M · Street L eomms ter '
30
am
W , S merville, Mass
RICHARD COMERFORD
1023 Broadway,
est o Boston Mass,
ERNEST BENJAMIN COVENEY
' M
3 1 St. James Avenue,
THOMAS JOHN COYLE
18 Tremont Street, Bosto~, M
MICHAEL JOSEPH COYNE
137 Princeton Street, Medfor '
CHARLES vVILLIAM DICK
R oom 708 , 125 Milk Street, Bostond,, M
Medfor
JOHN JOSEPH DOHERTY
h'll M
35 Sheridan Avenue,
J AM~S FRANCIS XAVIER DONAHUE
.
191 Mernmac k St re et ' Haver t 11 ' M
JOHN JOSEPH DONDERO
8 Merrimack Street, Low~ ' M
EDWARD TURNER DONOHOE
116 School Street, Jamaic~Pl:~~·
JOHN JOSEPH DUNN
24 School Street, os
' M
MAX FELD
h A
ue Allston,
1212 Commonwealt
ven , Malden, M
DANIEL JOSEPH FERN
4 1 Clayton Street,
GEORGE FINGOLD
Page fifty-two

]AMES EDWARD FITZGERALD
247 Willow Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
WILLIAM PATRICK FITZGERALD
47 Pleasant Street, East Walpole, Mass.
EDMUND BARTHOLOMEW FLAHERTY
13 Monmouth Street, East Boston, Mass.
SIDNEY GOYENS FLETCHER
37 Norfolk Road, Randolph, Mass.
FRANK BENJAMIN FOSTER
61 Main Street, Bangor, Me.
BENJAMIN GARGILL
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
ELMER EDWIN GEORGE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
LEROY RALPH GERSKOVITZ
86 South Street, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT GILMAN
45 Greenock Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JACOB GINSBERG
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MAURICE SAUL GLASER
1 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
MAX CHARLES GOLDBERG
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NICHOLAS ]OSEPH GRACE
United Trust Company, 1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass .
JOSEPH EDWARD HALEY
Washington Street, Holliston, Mass.
LAURENCE FRANCIS HALEY
1578 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
MAURICE LIVINGSTON HALEY
1578 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS HANLON
11 Eleanor Road, Arlington, Mass.
JOSEPH BERNARD HARRINGTON
ARTHUR HAVEY
57 Osgood Street, Salem, Mass.
Summer Street, Kingston, Mass.
GEORGE IRVING HILDRETH
15 Oxford Street, Somerville, Mass.
*DAVID FRANK HOLLAND
CHARLES HENRY ]AYES
10 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN HENRY JOHNSON
182 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
VICTOR BRYNOLF JOHNSON
332 Commercial Street, East Braintree, Mass.
MARTIN FRANCIS JUDGE
23 Trull Street, Dorchester, Mass.
SAMUEL KATZ
71 Bellingham Street, Chelsea, Mass.
HENRY EDWARD KEENAN
691 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD GERARD KELLEY
15 Varnum Street, Arlington, Mass.
LEONARD FRANCIS KELLEY
34 Canal Street, Maynard, Mass.
GEORGE RUSSELL KEOUGH
817 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
ARTHUR XAVIER KOERBER
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HODES KOPLOWITZ
228 Warren Street, Allston, Mass.
VICTOR EMANUEL LANDSTROM
43 Barden Hill Road, Middleborough, Mass.
NICHOLAS S. LAWLESS
Lours HARRY LETVAK
73 Rockaway Street, Lynn, Mass.
HERMAN LEVENTHAL
101 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES ANDREW LINEHAN
Rindge Technical School, Cambridge, Mass.
SIDNEY HAROLD LITNER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN FRANCIS LOMBARD
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN ] OSEPH LYNCH
7 Appleton Street, Everett, Mass.
ALEXANDER JOHN MACDONALD
39 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM CHARLES MAIERS, 3RD
Room 357, State House, Boston, Mass.
EDMUND VINCENT MALONEY
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH K. MATTHEWS
862 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
FRANK ]OSEPH McCARTHY, JR.,
41 Dorr Street, Roxbury, Mass.
RICHARD ]AMES McCAULEY
45 Newman Street, South Boston, Mass.
HUBERT LEo McLAUGHLIN
367 High Street, Lowell, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH MCMANAMY
Brighton Post Office, Boston, Mass.
JoHN JOSEPH MULDOWNEY
306 Sutton Street, North Andover, Mass.
ROLD DANIEL MULLEN
19 Nicholas Avenue, vVatertown, Mass.
ILLIAM DOJl,IINIC MURPHY
62 Prentiss Street, Watertown, Mass.
lNFRED EDWIN NIXON
28 Dorset Street, Dorchester, Mass.
NK J 0SEPH NOR.MILE
TON KINSMAN NOWELL
D ALBERT 0BERHAUSER
WARD ANTHONY O'DONNELL
NNETH LORRAINE PAGE
LLIAM PERRY

* Decea.sed.

71 Lowell Street, Methuen,
137 Newbury Street, Boston,
76 Chestnut Street, Boston,
39 Bushee Street, Attleboro,
366 Centre Street, Dorchester,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

Page fifty-three

�HENRY JOSEPH PHILIPS
MAURICE EDWARD PITCHEL
FRANCIS vVILLIAM PIWCUM
ANTHONY JOSEPH PROVENZANO
SOLOMON REISNER
LEON PAUL RESERVITZ
STOUGHTON JAMES R1cm1I0ND
FRANK CYRIL ROHDE
DIMITRY GEORGE RoMANOW
Lours RuBINSKY
FRANK MARTIN SAMUELS
PATRICK JOSEPH SAVAGE
Lours SEVELL
IRVING SHAPIRO
MICHAEL SAMUEL SHAPIRO
EDWARD HENRY SKUSE, JR.,
JORN l. SMITH
DANIEL JOSEPH SULLIVAN
JOSEPH BRENDON SULLIVAN
GEORGE FRANKLIN SWASEY
KARL TRIS
WILLIAM JOSEPH TUMMON
HAROLD DONALD ULRICH
ANGELO RALPH VACCARO
JAMES JORN OLIVER VALERI
WILLIAM ANGELO VrscOUNTE
FREDERICK DONOVAN WALSH
JAMES LEONARD WILLIAMS
LEONARD FRANKLIN WILLIAMS
HENRY LESTER ZIEGEL

8 Morrill Place, Lynn, Mass.
28 Deckard Street, Roxbury, Mass.
71 Forest Hills Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
91 Union Street, Everett 1 Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
90 Maple Street, Malden, Mass.
1100 Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
16 Union Street, Holliston, Mass.
1 Grosvenor Place, Boston, Mass.
98 Bristol Road, Medford, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Medford, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
35 Charlotte Street, Dorchester, Mass.
12 Clarendon Avenue, West Somerville, Mass.
67 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Middlesex Road, Newton, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass,
59 Richfield Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Rear 117 Winthrop Street, Taunton, Mass.
69 Canal Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
24 Pleasant Street, Lynn, Mass.
535 Main Street, Woburn, Ma
24 Bartholomew Street, Peabody, Ma
73 Williams Street, Concord, M
160 Lisbon Street, Lewiston,
68 Devonshire Street, Boston, M

1\iid-Y"ear, 1932
SAMUEL R. ARNO
WILLIAM B. BAKER
AUGUST L. BURDA
JOSEPH COULTER
ABE M. EsKovrTz
FRANCIS J. Fox
JOHN F. GREIG
Lours S. HANFLIG
GEORGE F. KEEGAN
CHARLES J. KERWIN
ANGUS M. MACNEIL
*HAROLD L. NYHAN
IRVING M. ScHKOLNIK
JAMES B. SULLIVAN
JAMES J. VAHEY

73 Tremont Street, Boston, Ma
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
18 Boylston Street, Jamaica Plain,
92 Tremont Street, Boston,
6 Parkman Street, Boston,
151 North Main Street, Mansfield,
l8 Terne Road, Adams Shore, Quincy,
68 Devonshire Street, Boston,
32 Ravine Road, Melrose,
14 Wolcott Road, Brookline,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
929 A Blue Hill Avenue, Dorchester,
lO Nevada Street, Dorchester,
104 Riverside Street, Watertown,

1932
WYMAN OSCEOLA ARBUCKLE
LEON ARONSON
SIDNEY ARONSON
!TALO Lours BALDINI
ALLEN CROSBY BEAN
ALLINE CHESLE BEARS
RAYMOND MITCHELL BEFORD
PETER LEONIDAS BELL
JOHN BELTON
DANTE ARTHUR BERTOLAMI

Page fifty-four

10 Spruce Street, Braintree,
199 Washington Street, Boston,
278 Humboldt Avenue, Roxbury,
6 Smith Block, Framingh~m,
14 Upland Park, Somerville,
114 Walworth Street, Roslindal
110 West Main Street, Marlboro~g
47 Cedar Street, Somerv
Main Street, Tewksb~
55 Atherton Street, Somerv1l

STANISLAUS ]ORN BISCOE
FRANK HERBERT BISSETT ]R
ARTHUR SNOW BLANCHAR~ ]~
ALBERT Rm,u BOUSQUET '
·
VINTON DUANE BOWEN
HARRY BRAll!S
DONALD PARDOW BRENNAN
NORMAN BRIGHTON
RICHARD ALDEN BROWN
] ORN FRANCIS BUCKLEY JR.
SAUL ]ACOB CAGAN
,
SARO ALFRED CAMPISI
JAMES ]ORN CAMPOBASSO
LAWRENCE PETER CAPODILUPO
WILLIAM EDWARD CAREY
VICTOR PHILIP CHANDLER
ANTHONY ] OSEPH CHIPES
JOHN ROBERT CHRISTIAN
IRVING SAMUEL CHYET
JOHN EDWARD CLARKE
ARTHUR ] OSEPH COHEN
HARRY ROBERT COHEN
DWIGHT PETTEE COLBURN
LAURENCE ]AMES COLLINS
JAMES HENRY CONNINGTON
FRANK WILLIAM COPPINGER
JOSEPH XAVIER CORBETT
FRANK JOSEPH CRONIN
HERBERT ] OSEPH CRONIN
CHARLES RAPHAEL CROWLEY
HERBERT ERNEST CUMMINGS
OHN TOBEY DAGGETT
AUL ROBERT DAILEY
OHN ]OSEPH DANEHY, ]R.
Yl\!OND ] OSEPH DEVETTERE
RL FREDERICK DIEMER
UGH FRANCIS DOHERTY
HN JOSEPH DOHERTY
HN PATRICK DOHERTY
RGE LEON DONAHER
ES ANDREW DOYLE
ES EDWIN DOYLE
ES HENRY DUGGAN
T WILLIAM DULLEA
H vVILLIAM FENNESSEY
N ELMER FISHER
FRANCIS FITZSIMMONS
PATRICK FLAVIN
IEL FRANCIS FLYNN

s Fox
IAM MARTIN FRASER
]OHN GALLIGAN
ARTHUR GAL VIN
]AMES GALVIN
RT HAYDEN GARDNER
FRANCIS GATELY
JosEPH GEORGE
ES ]OHN GILBERT

17 Upham Street, Malden Mass
18 Eire~ Road, Watertown: Mass:
328 Blue Hill Parkway, Milton, Mass.
46 Lafayette Place, Salem, Mass.
43 Tremont Street Boston Mass
23 Lamoille Avenue, Bradford'. Mass:
218 Court House, Boston, Mass.
Non S~ch Park, Wellesley, Mass.
73 River Street, Hudson, Mass.
45 Moore Street, Somerville Mass
222 Cabot Street, Beverly' Mass.
32 Rich Street, Waltham'. Mass:
44 Decatur Street, Arlington, Mass.
32 Munroe Street, Somerville Mass
12 Jefferson Street Lynn' Mas~·
154 Lynnfield Street, P~abody'. Mass.
455 East Seventh Street, South Boston Mass.
116 Walnut Street, Somerville' Mass.
387 Norfolk Street, Dorchester' Mass·
18 Tremont Street Boston' Mass.
294 Washington Street'. Boston: Mass:
25 Wayne Street, Roxbury, Mass.
2 Pleasant Street Sharon Mas
78 Melrose Street, Arlington: Mas:·
p
B
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass:
. O . ldg., U.S. Vet. Bureau Boston Mas
40 Court Street,' Boston ' Mass
s.
431 Broadway, Everett' Mass.
25 Granville Road, Cambridge' Mass.
96 Sheridan Avenue , Medford' Ma ss.·
,
40 Broad Street, Boston Mass
117 Hammond Road, Belmont: Mass:
28 Seaverns Avenue Boston Mass
150 Almont Street, D;rchester'. Mass:
16 Grove Street, Milton Mass
176 Federal Street, Boston'. Mass:
14~ Winn Street, Woburn, Mass.
98 Harnson Street, Leominster, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston Mass
580 Second Street, South Boston' Mass.
194 Evespart Street, Dorchester' Mass.
86 Main Street, Saugus' M·tss.
10 Pleasant Hill Avenue, Dorcheste/ M;ss.
73 Tremont Street, Boston'. Mass:
l98 Arborway, Jamaica Plain Mass
74 Chapman Street, Wollaston' Mass.
134 Lexington Street, Auburndale: Mass:
1601 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
60 Braebourne Road, East Milton Mass
294 yYashington Street, Boston: Mass:
7 Lmnaean Street, Cambridge Mass
110 Milk Street, Boston' Mass·
29 Holman Road, Waban: Mass:
707 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
283 South Avenue, Whitman, Mass.
101 Brow~ Avenue, Roslindale, Mass.
1694 Mam Street, Springfield Mass
108 Greenwood Street, Dorchester: Mass:

* Deceased.
Page fifty-five

�FRANK GoLDMAN

JoHN EoWARD GooDmcow
BERNARD GEORGE GoRSUN
GERALD FRANCIS GRAVEL
R ALPH ANTHONY V. GRAZIANO

CBARLES Jos"B GRIB&gt;&lt;N
______-, JoHN JosE&gt;H Gms«N, JR.
MITCHELL GEORGE HADGE

59 Nightingale Street, Dorchester, Mass.

33 Belvoi&lt; Road, Milton, Mass,
70 State Street, Boston, Mass.
109 Queensbury Street, Boston; Mass.
20 Willard Avenue, Medford, Mass

78 CoDg&lt;'SS St,eet, Portsmouth, N . H
B•Y St,te Building, Law&lt;ence, M ass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.

JM&lt;ES EDWARD HARRmoroN

62 Porte&lt; Road, Carob&lt;idge, M,ss.

GEORGE ALBERT HENDERSON

39 Charles Street, Boston, Mass

Wn.aUR GUSTAVE HoWNGSWORTH

8 Be,ron St&lt;eet, B~ton, Mass:
71 St. Rose Street, J amaica Plain, Mass.
39 R evere Street, Boston, Mass.
54 Playstead Road, Newton , Mass
Jo•• AuousTUS H uTCH&lt;NS
14 Kingman Road , Weymou&lt;h, M,ss:
SAMUEL MICHAEL lANZITO
211 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
SILAS J ACOBSON
22 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me.
Jo sEPI:l WILLIAM J ENNINGS
6 Naples Road, Salem , Mass.
SIDNEY L EO KARAN
76 Westmoreland Avenue, Arlington , Mass.
ABRAHAM MoRRIS K AMENASI:l
31 Blossom Street, Lynn, Mass.
HAROLD K ARP
135 Yeoman Avenue, Medford, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS K ENNEY
10 High Street, Boston, Mass
wn.uAM K &lt;ARS&lt;S, JR,
3 Washington Street, H,ve&lt;hill, M,.:
CHESTER WILBUR KNEELAND
43 Anderson Street, Boston, Mass.
H AROLD FREDERICK LAMPRON
103 Moreland Street, Roxbury, Mass.
MARCELLUS DUNTON L EMAIRE
43 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass.
R UBIN LIP SKY
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
]ORN To&lt;oTHV LooNEY
185 Devooshi&lt;e St&lt;Ocl, B~ton, Mass.
WILLIAM PAUL LYONS
11 8 Maverick Street, Chelsea, Mass.
HoRATIO SEYMOUR LYNESS
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
KENNETH FREDERICK MAclVER
109 Scituate Street, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD DENNIS MAHONEY
139 Kendrick Avenue, Quincy, Mass.
NORMAN FRANCIS MAXWELL
650 Metropolitan Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
BARNETT MAZOW
449 Walnut Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
PHILIP JosEPH McCALL
207 Boxford Street, L awrence, Mass.
JoHN ] AMES McCARTHY, Room 24, 264 Washington St,eet Nmth, Chadestown, M••·
VICTOR PAUL McDAVITT
108 Aberdeen Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.

D ANIEL THOMAS HORGAN
H AYWARD SANDERSON HoUGI:lTON
H UBERT JORN HUGHES

Massachusetts Institut e of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
HAROLD FRANCIS McDoNNELL
WILLIAM VINCENT McDONOUGH
381 Salem Street, Medford, Mass.
EDWARD McGoNAGLE
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE KENNETH McKENZIE
809 Park Square Building , Boston, Mass,
H AROLD R ussELL McLEAN
52 Bancroft Avenue, Reading, Mass,

JosseB J\LaERT McQmLLAN
JACOB Loms MEYERS
PAUL Loms M&lt;NAGUA
HARRY MucHE~
ANTHONY FREDE'&lt;tCR MoBU.&lt;A
]A=s GERARD MoRRtS
HuGB GRRGORY MuRPHY
Jos•'" LAWRENCE Mu"BY
STrnrnN Auomrrus MuRPHY
Iav&lt;NG NEWBURG
w,w,,. FRAN"' O'BtUEN, ]a.
RoBERT LEONARD O'CALLAGRAN
THoMAS JoSEt'H O'MALLEY
HERBERT STANWOOD O'NEILL

Tn&lt;OTHY GERARD QssonN

Page ftf ty-six

63 Goodeoough St&lt;e&lt;t , Bdghton, M"'
6 G\enwaY St&lt;eet, Do&lt;ehes&lt;e&lt;, 185 D evonshi&lt;' St,eet, Boston, 1326 Blue Hill Avenue, MattaP'°• 108 Fells Avenue, Medfo«I, M,.
215 Chades St&lt;eet, B~ton, M,_
194 T,apelo Road, Belmont, 34 Montebello Road, Jamaie&gt; Plain, M
1 Pope Se,eet, Hud~n, M
21 Dminda Ci,de, Lynn , M
43 D&lt;ew Road, Belmont, M
8 G"nd View A~nue, Medio&lt;d,
\05 West Glenwood A~nue, Hyde PM&gt;
216 Almont Street, Mattapan,

Front St,eet, Weymouth,

MILTON COBURN p AIGE
E
ARL ALBERT PALLOT
HARRY PAVAN
EDWARD L AWRENCE p
E DWARD FRANCIS Q OWER
*LOUIS RAY
UINN
ALBERT ULYSSES R OSA
J ORN D ENNIS RING
CHARLES NEIL Ross
ROGER ANDREW SALA
EDWARD SANDLER
J OHN WILLIAM SAVAGE
GEORGE SAYERS
FRANCIS SCANNELL
J ACOB J OSEPH SCH NEIDER
J ORN J OSEPH SEAMAN
R EGINALD DURWARD S EAVEY
L EONARD S REINFELD
H ENRY NATHAN SILK
LESTER ALEXANDERS
ALAN SKLAR
IMPSON

30 Hopkin s Road A I'
72 Peterborough Str~et r ~ngton ,
284 W t S
' oston,
1137 Massachusetts Aa er treet, Quincy,
venue Ca b 'd
R ear 49 W
'
m n ge,
est Street ' N ewto n,

NATHANIEL ELI SL AVIN
ARTHUR MARTIN SMITH
EUGENE FERDINAND S MITH
ANTONE FELISBORTO S
ELTON EUGENE STE NVES
OUZA, JR.
DWARD ROBERT T HORNTON, J R
E
J\LVIN A T
• OLTZ
'
EDWARD L ESLIE TR
JACOB TRUST
AVERS
JAMES HENRY T URNER
WILLIAM CAL VIN T YREE
LESLIE BLYTHE VAU GHAN
J AMES ABBOTT VAUGHN
LEONARD GEORGE V ELISHKA
S
.;MUEL ABRAHAM VERNON
ALTEJR J OSEPH WALDRON
J OHN OSEPH WALSH
LAURENCE J OSEPH W
WILLIAM FRANC IS W ALSH
FRA
F
ALSH
NK ERDINAND W
ISRAEL SHEPARD W ALTERS
HA
ERMAN
ROLD WIDETSKY
SmrH BURTON w ILLIAMS
RALP \i
S H "1,J ALDO WILSON
/ ~IUEL WINETSKY
HEODORE W ILLIAM ZIEGLER
THEO
DORE C
ARL ZIRSCH, JR.

Mass.
Mass
Mass.
·
Mass.
M ass.

20 Meridian St
12 Pond Vie:e;t, !ast ~oston, Mass.
1395 Hancocko . Arlmgton, Mass
Sat
reet Q ·
M
·
.
103 Mam Street ' N orth' Aumcy, M ass.
da ms
eacon St t B
, ass.
1 B
1372 H ancock s /ee ' o~ton, Mass.
84 State St::e~, Qumcy, Mass.
11 Manchester Road eB, Bos~on, Mass.
' rooklme Mass
232 B
•
roadway Ch 1 '
22 H d S
'
e sea, Mass
Y e treet R
·
Court House F' e.vere, Mass.
6 Beacon S ' armmgton , Me.
114 State S~~:e~, Boston, Mass.
106 Grafton S
e , Boston, Mass
127_North Wash'
treet, Arlington Mass.
mgton Street B
'
·
Homestead St
' oston, Mass.
57
17
reet, Roxbur M
State Stre t B
Y,
ass.
7
23 Stickney R de
oston, Mass.
492 Division St oa , edford, Mass
reet Fall R'
M
·
35 Essex Street L
iver, ass.
839 Elm Street
aw
hren ce, Mass.
167 W I
' a nc ester N H
a nut Street Ch I ' · ·
J ohnswood R d ' . e sea, Mass.
89
1 St o~ ' Roshndale, Mass
2679 Washin gtoatS t treet, Boston, Mass.
e
n reetRb
·
0
97 Overland Road' W ~ ury, Mass.
100 Franklin Str~et ; tham, Mass.
100 M'lk
' oston, Mass
Lucier &amp; Dowd 41 S h i Street, Boston Mas .
'350 Cc ool Street, Nashua ' N H .
s
ross St
' · ·
120 Paul Gore Sreet, Malden, Mass.
199 Washington S~reett, BBoston, Mass.
N'ICh o Is Avenue ree ' oston ' M ass.
W
21 T k
'
atertown Mass
uc er Street M'l
'
·
97 T en Hills Road S '
I ~on, Mass.
11 B
' omerv1lle Mass
1 ~tcotn SStreet, Boston: Mass.
518 B ay State Build' treet ' B ost on, Mass.·
a e
m g, Lawrence M
.
ass.
111 M a m St reet ' GI oucester,' Mass
53 St
32 T'
ate Street, Boston M
.
imson Street E t L
'
ass.
107 Water St;ee:\o?tnonn,, MMass.
'
ass.

M

M

M id-Year, 1933
ILLIAM M. BAGLEY
ORRIS F INN
RAHAMA G
AREN
, ANS
CE KARELITZ
OMAS J · K ELLY
AX S
· PORTNOY
UEL W · STANTON
WARD D · STEELE

670 Bennington Street, East Boston
1 Beacon Street B
'
40 H a rlem Street D , hoston,
2F
, ore ester
ord Street H
. ,
10 Fairway Street ' averh1ll ,
278 Bates Street N' MBattapan,
' ew edford
'
62 John son Street L
79 Milk Street 13 y nn ,
' oston,
* Deceased.

Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.

Page fifty-seven

�1933
MILTON IsADORE ABELSON

H
Street Mattapan, Mass.
41 osn_ier
' W rcester, Mass.
87 Plantation Street, o

GEORGE ABOUMRAD oMB
.
. h School Roxbury, Mass.
FRANK WIPPICH BAJ~nior Master, Roxbury Mem~~1a~~~~ry Stree~, Medford, Mass.
B
h.
Street Boston, M ass.
WALLACE JOHNSON AL\
2374 Was mgton treet 'Newton, Mass.
JoHN LESTER BALLANTYNE
20 St. Jame~~dford Hillside, M ass.
PIERRE BELLIVEAU BoUDREAU
58 Catting St~:tt,Street, Dorchester, M ass.
AMEDEE RAYMONDE
24 Assa B
64 West Groton, Mass.
MICHAEL OWLER
ox '
h t
M
B WMAR
Mellen Street, Dore es er, ass.
J AMES
RALPH BURTON
39
East Boston, Mass.
EDWARD WILLIA~~!i:::: JR.
1189 Benni~g;~~k~~r;~~~et, Arlington, Mass.
THOMAS Lo¥::~GH BURNS
60 Federal Street , Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE
B RR
Street Dorchester, Mass.
WILFRED FRANCIS u
69 O ~ean
Marlborough , Mass.
RTRAND CADIGAN y
5 Mechanic Street,West M e df or d , M ass.
C
T
J OH N BE
FAY EDWARD JosErASE~RE
31 Baxte\2 e;:t~~~ Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM FRANCIS CIERI
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH ANTHONY C HEN
Tilden Road, Scituate, Mass.
O
EDWARD ISRAEL
A
ue Roxbur y, Mass.
FRANK MERLON CoLE ELLY
106 Mt. Pleasant ~e;tre~t Portland, Me.
THOMAS BENNETT CoNN
Suite 502, 97 Exchrg ue D~rchester , Mass.
MORRIS Cox
1744 Dorchester t~e~v~nue Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM CHARLES CRAY
412A Massachuse s St eet' Boston, Mass.
L
CROPP
6 Beacon r '
70 Washington Street, Shalem, ~ass.
NEILL E;;:DERICK CULLINAN
FRANCIS
D
h
Street Dore ester, ass.
DANIEL IGNATIUS ALY
43 Wrent. a~
t Marlborough, Mass.
JosEPH D'ARRIGO D
Y
186 Mfffm Rtr:~ 'Jamaica Plain, Mass.
O
'
GEORGE EDWARD EWE
50 I ey
C bridge Mass
TIMOTHY CHARLES DoHERTY
169 SWpringfSt~e;~~ee~mAllston', Mass:
G
ON DUFFY
35 est or
'
M
JoHN ORD
F LON
448 Broadway, Chelsea, ass.
WALTER JAMES AL
Broadway , Chelsea, Mass.
448
WILLIAM FELDMAN
O Milk Street, Boston, Mass.

°

AJLEX::D~:i~:G;~ANAGAN
osE
HARRY FLASHENBERG
R
CLARENCE BAXTFER F~tE
WILLIAM PAUL ULL
---=---GEORGE VALPEY GAGE
EDWARD NuTE GELLER
JAMES VINCENT GGIBLIN D
MARK RussELL IFFOR
FRANCIS JosEPH GILL
DWARD FRANCIS GILLIS
E
N
SAMUEL GoLDSTEI
JosEPH GRAGLIA
Y
RA~:~o'i:~~~~~T~~REENE
t~RALD FRANCIS GRIFFIN
ABRAHAM GROSSMAN
____,. FREDERICK JosEPH HADGE
JAMES LAw HALEY
SUMNER LYONS HALEY
J osEPH HANLON
REDMOND
HARRINGTON
JAMES FRANCIS
OSEPH BERNARD HARTE
}oHN PATRICK HENNESSY
JOHN DICKSON HEWITT
Page fifty-eight

73 ¥remont Street, Bsostn, ~:::·
a em,
·
221 Essex Street, Salem, Mass.
Avenue
1~J'1;~~;~ Street, Beverly, Mass.
Dorchester, Mass.
57 Milton Avenue, arlborough, Mass.
56 Emmett Str.ee~M d Belmont Mass,
22 ~e~tm~;tr~:t 'Arlington', Mass.
139 e or
Str~et Boston, Mass,
74 BlackstoneR d Medford, Mass,
230 Lawrence Soa , t Boston Mass.
53 State tree ,
' M ss.
ffice Building, Boston, a
1510 Post O School Street, Boston, Mass.

;~:~~~:

1/iremont ~tr~et,
~all,
801 Pemberto~. Bu~t:e~' Boston, M
24 East Brook
C;mbridge, M
74 Kirkland treeNewburyport, M
29 Marlboro Stree~ t Somerv1lle, M
18 Day Street, ;~reet Boston, M
6 Beacon
' B ston
89 State Street , 0
'
h I Street Boston,
24 Sc 00
D~rchester,
1744 Dorchester Avenue,

~t /

Room 215, Court House, Boston, Mass.
ALBERT HENRY HINES
Bedford Inn, Bedford, Mass.
RoY Lours HODGSON
129A Wilson Road, Nahant, Mass.
ALBION LuscoMB HoGAN
26 Kenelworth Street, Malden, Mass.
RALPH GRAF HOWLAND
119 Exchange Street, Portland, Me.
HYMAN JACOBSON
800 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JACK HEATHER JOHNSON
36 Franklin Street, Malden, Mass.
MAXWELL KAHN
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES HENRY KANE
545 Beach Street, Revere, Mass.
ABRAHAM L. KAPLAN
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
RONALD HYSON KEDDY
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM FREDERICK KEITH
20 Somerset Street, Boston, Mass.
RAYMOND JOSEPH KENNEY
265 Lamartine Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
WILLIAM HENRY KEYES
44 School Street, Boston, Mass.
HENRY GERARD KIGGEN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES JOHN KILEY
28 Fairmont Street, Lawrence, Mass.
VICTOR JOHN KRUKONIS
30 Wright Avenue, Medford, Mass.
ALBERT VINCENT LABELLA
110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE MAURICE LA FLAMME
19 Ronan Street, Dorchester, Mass.
SAMUEL MILLER LAKIN
51 Deering Street, Reading, Mass.
ELDRED WILSON LARKIN
Post Office, Amesbury, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS LARNARD
45 Pleasant Street, Newburyport, Mass.
CORNELIUS FRANCIS LEARY
Doane Street, Cohasset, Mass.
BENJAMIN LECLAIR
28 Madison Street, West Medford, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH LEE
Elliot Street, Beverly, Mass.
PHILIP WESTLEY LEFAVOUR
252 Beacon Street, Somerville, Mass.
GEORGE ANGELO LENZI
205 Old South Building, Boston, Mass.
JULIUS LEVOWICH
6 South Huntington Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
ELLIOTT LEWIS
390 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
GEORGE LIAN
272 State House, Boston, Mass.
LINWOOD IRVING LOCKE
19 Irving Street, Melrose, Mass.
FREDERICK CARROLL LOVE
5 Regina Road, Dorchester, Mass.
WILLIAM ALBERT MACLELLAN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT MUIRHEAD MAC RICHIE
36 School Street, Leominster, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS MANNING
17 5 Main Street, Rockport, Mass.
HENRY LURVEY MARSHALL
49 Upland Road, Attleboro, Mass.
JOHN JAMES MCCARTE
5 Venner Road, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD AUGUSTINE McDONALD
17 Pleasant Street, Woburn, Mass.
HAROLD JAMES McHUGH
5 Wallace Court, Charlestown, Mass.
PETER ALEXANDER MCMULLAN
707 South Street, Roslindale, Mass.
JOHN KEEN MCNUTT
17 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
DAVID HAYES MERRIAM, JR.
273 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
ARTHUR ABRAHAM MILGROOM
261 Church Street, Marlborough, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH MORAN
153 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS MORIARTY, JR.
Second National Bank of Nashua, N. H.
JOSEPH FABIAN MORIARTY
195 Dana Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS MORLEY
436 Norfolk Street, Mattapan, Mass.
DUDLEY JOSEPH MULRENIN, JR.
834 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass.
0SEPH WILLIAM MURPHY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
THUR LAWRENCE MURRAY
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
USSELL JOSEPH O'BRIEN
14 Derne Street, Boston, Mass .
lllOTHY JOSEPH O'LEARY
451 Warren Avenue, Brockton, Mass.
WIN WALTER OLSSON
18 Kirkland Street, Boston, Mass.
ARIO ORSINI
15 Scottfield Road, Allston, Mass.
WARD CARTON PATCH
22 Claremont Park, Boston, Mass.
SEPH RODRIGUES PEREIRA
43 South Main Street, Waterbury, Vt.
EST CLIFFORD PERKINS
Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass.
AR JAMES PHILLIPS
GENE FROST PROCTOR
13 Irving Street, Melrose, Mass.
Page fifty-nine

�315 High Street, B~rlin, N. H. .
109 Antrim Street, Cambndge, ~ass.
34 Randlett Park, West Newbton, Mass.

JAMES PATRICK QUINN
ROBERT JOHN REARDON
GEORGE LAURIAT REYNOLDS
TERENCE FRANCIS RILEY
BENJAMIN DOUGLAS ROMAN
SAUL RICHARD ROSEN
JOHN FRANCIS SANTINO
DANIEL SEXTON
THOMAS WILLIAM SHEEHAN
Lours SHUMAN
NATHAN SILVER
ABRAHAM SPIGEL
CHARLES STEINBERG
HAROLD WESLEY STEVENS
MosES SoLO}II0N STROCK
PHILIP STROME
GUY TASCHETTA
JOHN JOSEPH TOBIN
THOMAS FRANCIS TOBIN
NAZZARENO ANTONIO TOSCANO
"
CLINTON H ERBE RT TUTTLE
JEREMIAH JOSEPH TWOMEY
FRANCIS EDWARD WALSH
FRANCIS AUGUSTINE .WELCH
ALBERT LEWIS WELLMAN, JR.
HARRY WHEELER
ARNOLD RICHARDSON .WHITE
GERARD STICHFIELD WILLIAMS
LAWSON .WRIGHT

R d W t Rox ury,
ass.
123 ManthorBne oa 'streeest Dedham; Mass. .
48 arrows
,
.
lue Hill Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
1027 ~ H om~ A v enue , Dorchester, Mass.
B
M
135 Harvard Street, Ever~tt, ass.
78 Walnut Street, Natick, Mass.
.
Mass.
100 Fran kl m Street ' Lawrence, ]v
148 State Street, Boston, lass.
263 Norman d Y Street ' Dorchester, Mass,
·d
lvI
tt Avenue Cambn ge,
ass.
415 Massttf ;:o~lawn St;eet, Everett, Mass.
78 Franklin Street, Brockton, Mass.
193 Bolton Street, Marlborough, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
67 Bloomfield Street, Dorchester, Mass.
enue 'Watertown, Mass.
3 L ang d on Av
'
11 1\1
8 Duren Avenue, Lowe , ass.
Court House, Lawrence, Mass.
156 Sixth Street, Cambridge, Mass.
260 Tremont Street, Bos~on, Mass.
. .
Mass.
16 F airv1e w Avenue ' Readmg, lv
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Iass.
43 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass,
1 Broad Street, Bethel, Me.
77 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.

Mid-Year, 1934
LEROY ALLEN ANDERSON
ERNEST KRUSE EDIE, JR.
H ORACE NICIIOLAS FORMICHELLI
EDWIN STANLEY KUNDSIN
THOMAS EDWARD LEEN
ASPER SHERWOOD MooRADIAN
:lvrLLIAM EDWARD MoTHERWAY
RUSSELL BROWN PERKINS
SAMUEL SAVAGE
WALTER THOMAS WALL
ROBERT .WILLIAM WALSH

40 Court Street, Boston, Mass'.
425 Hancock Street, North Quincy, MM
89 State Street, Boston,
71 Pratt Road, Squantum, M
124 Milton Street, Dorchester, M
25 Central Square, Lynn, M
84 Baldwin Street, Charlestown, :
22 Beacon Street, Boston,
615 101 Milk Street, Boston,
Room 75'y, School Street, Milford, M
41 Longfellow Street, Dorchester,

1934
FRANK A~IERENA
WILLIAM L. ANDERSON, JR.
GEORGE BELLI, JR.
LAMBERT HENRY BIGELOW
ROBERT ERNEST BOWERS
HERMA.N BRENNER
FRAN~LIN CHAPIN BRONSON
ALFRED LIAN BuNAI
NICHOLAS CANNISTRARO
JOHN JAMES CARTY
DAVID COHEN
JAMES F RANC IS CRONIN

Page sixty

5 Laurel Street, Evere~t, :
69 Arborway, Jamaica Plam,
141 Milk Street, Boston, M
223 Main Street, Marlborough,
62 'Weir Street, Taunt·~t'
131 Orchard Street, Somerv1 e,
176 Federal Street, Bo~~o:,
94 Oxford Street, Cambn g '
t Watertown,
452 Pleasant S tree '
Boston,
154 Berkeley Street,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
82 Alexander Street, F r amingharn,

HENRY CUTLER
216 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE vVILLIAM DANA
Room 4, Dana Block, Franklin, Mass.
JOSEPH J. DELANEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
AoUNEY WAFA DEJANY
11 Bulfinch Street, Boston, Mass.
CARL FRANCIS DELUCIA
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN EARL DrcK
74 Sacramento Street, Cambridge, Mass.
BERNARD MICHAEL DOHERTY
11 Hobart Street, Brighton, Mass.
BERNARD GERARD FERGUSON, Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., Park Building, Boston, Mass.
LEO FRANCIS GARVEY
14 Lebanon Street, Winchester, Mass.
MAURICE GELL
41 Wellington Hill Street, Mattapan, Mass.
BENNIE GOLD
342 Crescent Street, Brockton, Mass.
ALBERT EVERETT GOODHUE
18 Dysart Street, Quincy, Mass.
DANIEL FRANCIS HARRIS, JR.
23 Riverside Avenue, Gloucester, Mass.
GEORGE FRANCIS HOWARTH
55 Franklin Street, Watertown, Mass.
CHARLES EDWARD HUGHES
110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN BERNARD JENNEY
102 Overland Road, \,Valtham, Mass.
MAURICE PATRICK JENNEY
6 Hawthorne Lane, Concord, Mass.
LEO H. JONES
2 Saunders Street, Salem, Mass.
RICHARD EDWIN KNOWLES
3 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass.
LEO KORNFELD
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM JOSEPH LAFAY
101 Marlboro Street, Chelsea, Mass.
JULIAN CAPEN LORING
Accord Post Office, Hingham, Mass.
LAuRrs WILLIAM MACPHAIL
1179 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
TIMOTHY JOSEPH MAHONEY
48 Harvard Street, Charlestown, Mass.
THOMAS LEo McCom,IACK
306 Hyde Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
*PETER GERALD IVIcGAFFIGAN
HENRY LEONARD MORLEY
115 North Beacon Street, \,Vatertown, Mass.
BRENDON CHARLES !VI URPHY
324 Adams Street, Newton, Mass.
FRANK DAMRELL NEILL
38 Bradlee Road, Medford, Mass.
WILBUR FRANCIS NIXON
353 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
RoY CHARLES PAPALIA
22 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Mass.
EUGENE p ASTER
24 Antrim Street, Cambridge, Mass.
FRANCJ:S THOMAS REARDON
109 Brookline Avenue, Boston, Mass.
WALTER R. SARGEANT
17 Wellington Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLARD IRESON SAVAGE
183 Essex Street, Boston, Mass.
ISIDOR SERLIN
190 Magnolia Street, Dorchester, Mass.
ERNARD THOMAS SEXTON
90 Washington Street, Charlestown, Mass.
SADORE SrL VERMAN
311 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
RK EDWARD SMITH, JR.
Fort Clayton, Panama
X STERN
88 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass.
ARRY T ABACHNICK
49 Jones Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
!LIP THOMPSON
319 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
UPERT C. THOMPSON, JR.
58 Prospect Park, Newtonville, Mass.
AX TUTTLE
61 Chelsea Street, Boston, Mass.
UGENE DAVID WEINBERG
80 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
LAN GOODWIN vVHITEHEAD
85 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
HN DENNISSON vVILCOX
135 Main Street, Nashua, N. H.
YRON vVRIGHT
160 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.

Mid-Year, 1935
NCIS J 0SEPH BAXTER
zro BONACCORSO
RY LACK
!AM PATRICK RYAN
ARD \,VEBSTER SMITH
RGE LAWRENCE \,VHITE

81 Sherman Street, Lowell, Mass.

7 Chelsea Place, East Boston, Mass.
3 Malden Street, Everett,
502 Belmont Street, \,Vatertown,
37 Main Street, Rockport,
93 Union Street, Newton,

Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.

* Deceased,
Page sixty-one

�1935
WILLIAM ALTMAN
JOSEPH HENDERSON BENGER
WILLIAM MILLER BENJAMIN
EDMUND JAMES BLAKE
WALTER FRANCIS BRADY
JOHN LEO BRENNAN
NELSON GREGORY BURKE
CHARLES FRANCIS CANAVAN
AMERICO RALPH CATALDO
CARL ALFRED CHRISTOFFERSON
CLARENCE DUDLEY CLATUR
ARTHUR BENEDICT CORBETT
EDWARD GEORGE CUNNALLY
AVERY PAINE CURRIER
FREDERICK THEODORE DELESKEY
THOMAS LAWLOR DOUGHERTY
EUGENE FENTON
DANA WALKER FISHER, JR.
JAMES ALOYSIUS FLAHERTY
EDMUND PATRICK FLEMING, JR.
RALPH AUGUSTINE GALLAGHER
JAMES BERNARD GIBBONS, JR.
DAVID IRVING GOLDBERG
ERNEST JOSEPH GOODALE
LEO ALFRED GOSSELIN
RALPH EMERSON GOTT
JOSEPH PATRICK GRAHAM
JAWDAT MAHMUD HABIB
GEORGE HAFFTY
MICHAEL JOSEPH HARNEY
JOHN PAUL HOGAN
NORMAN BENJAMIN HOYT
JAMES TOBIN HYNES
SAMUEL ISAACSON
WINTHROP LENTH JEWELL
JOSEPH EMHOFF JONES
JOSEPH FRANCIS JORDAN, JR.
Lours Eu KATZ
JOHN JOSEPH KELLY
HARRY FRANCIS KENNEY
MosES SAMUEL KLEIN
HASKELL ARTHUR LAMPKE
FREDERICK TOMPSON LARRABEE
THOMAS HENRY LAVIN
NATHAN LERNER
RAYMOND MARCH
HAROLD ARTHUR McAsKILL
ARTHUR MARTIN McCARTHY
JOSEPH STEPHEN MEANEY
JOHN JACOB MINKIN
WILLIAM EUSTIS RUSSELL MURRAY
RICHARD HENRY NOLAN
GEORGE HERBERT NooNAN
CHARLES HERBERT NUTTING, JR.
GENERINO ALFRED PoLCARI
JAMES ROBERT RAFFERTY
GEORGE HERBERT ROBERTS

Page sixty-two

141 Homestead Street, Roxbury, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
72 Walnut Street, Arlington, Mass.
460 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
1002 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
312 Broad Street, Providence, R. I.
1383 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
33 Tuckerman Street, Revere, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
100 Seyon Street, Waltham, Mass.
53 Chelmsford Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Winthrop Square, Boston, Mass.
1400 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
305 Cherry Street, West Newton, Mass.
6 Columbia Park, Milton, Mass.
57 Abbott Street, Lawrence, Mass.
48 Rockview Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
28 John Street, Valley Falls, R. I.
52 Central Street, Somerville, Mass.
94 Dean Avenue, Franklin, Mass.
215 Court House, Boston, Mass.
495 Eastern Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
40 Ashland Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Bellingham, Mass.
137 Washington Street, Malden, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Jerusalem, Palestine
311 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
41 Pearl Street, Dorchester, Mass.
695A Boulevard Street, Revere, Mass.
1871 Central Street, West Roxbury, Mass.
489 West Main Street, Northborough, Mass.
Suite 7, 40 Clearway Street, Boston, Mass.
110 Crescent Avenue, Melrose, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.'
14 East Cottage Street, Boston, Mass.
373 Washington Street, Boston, Mass,
127 Middle Street, Braintree, Mass,
366 Lebanon Street, Melrose, M
454 Washington Street, Haverhill, M
47 West Street, Boston, M
Bucksport,
32 Priest Street, Leominster, M
95 Canal Street, Boston, M
256 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, M
1383 Hancock Street, Quincy, M
197 Clarendon Street, Boston, M
276 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, M
6 Beacon Street, Boston, M
Beach Road, Salisbury, M
1950 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston,
866 Fifth Street, South Boston,
Ridge Road, Sharon,
1 Beacon Street, Boston,
250 Norwell Street, Dorchester,
Seventh and Mateo Streets, Los Angeles,

DOMENICO ] OSEPH R
EDWARD Roy SAcHs usso

383 Reservoir A
258 Marion Streetve~ue, :evere, Mass.
17 B
h' ast oston, Mass
eac Road L
M
.
• ynn, ass.
37 7 Cohannet St
129 Concord Stree reet, 7:aunton, Mass.
231 Main s;;t;ai;mgham, Mass.
920 Western A e ' rockton, Mass.
118 Kendall Street ;enu?, Lynn, Mass.
4 Nazing C~u ~ammgham, Mass.
606 Bay State Build. r ' Roxbury, Mass.
6 B
mg, Lawrence Mass
eacon Street, Boston' M
J
, ass..
76 Coolidge Stree:rralem, Palestine
262 Washington Str;et a;rence, Mass.
342 Harrison Ave
'Boston, Mass.
nue, oston M
6 B eacon Street B
ass.
.
, oston ' Mas
M am Street Grat '
s.
30 State Street' B
on, Mass.
, oston, Mass.

NELSON FRED SCHLEGEL
JOSEPH EDWARD S
C
HEEHAN
G ARL ALBERT SHERIDAN
EORGE Eu SHUL:rv!AN
CHESTER \VARREN S MITH
OSEPH SPINAZOLA
BERNARD GEORG S
JAMES JOSEPH S E
TEINBERG
ULLIVAN J
S AUL DAVID SwARTZ
'
R.

J

HIKMAT TAJ!
WILLIAM EMMETT T
] OHN HAROLD VARN~~RNEY
FRANK V OLINI
ZARAH \VEJNSTEIN
EDGAR ] OSEPH W
Lours WINER
ELLS

Mid-Year, 1936
WINFIELD SCOTT C AVANAUGH
T ROMAS FRANCIS G IBSON
F RANCIS ] OSEPH L F
A OUNTAIN
A LLAN K ENNETH M AC I VER
C HARLES SUMNER M L
C AUGHLIN
T ROMAS FRANCIS O'D ONNELL
HARVEY EDWARD SNOW
IRVIN WELENS

89 Broad Street Bosto
49 Federal Street' B
n, Mass.
119 A119 Main Street, 'Bi~J~~~;tass.
375
ppleton Street A I'
' Me.
Mt. Auburn Stree ' r m!!"ton, Mass.
15 Harbor View
CSambndge, Mass.
, quantum M
Main Street Natick' ass.
16 Griffin Street
h
, Mass.
' et uen, Mass.

Stre:t

M

1936
THOMAS EDWARD A NASTASI
A BRAHAM ALFRED A
NKELES
E DWARD ]AMES AUSTIN
ALEXANDER ALBERT A
VOLA
PAUL ]AMES BARRY
.;LENN WASHINGTON BARTRAM
ROMAS TURLEY BECKER
WALTER CHARLES BELL
]AMES RUSSELL BOHAN
YRON ROBERT BORAKS
HOMAS HENRY BUCKLEY
DMUND RICHARD BURKE
HARLES ALOYSIUS C
OHN A
AMPBELL
NGUS CAMPBELL
DMUND Eu
ENRY R
PLIO CAPODILUPO
OYAL CARLEY
ASQUALINO F p
DIE F
.
HILIP CARUSO
RANKLIN CLEVENGER
LIAM Jo SEPH CONNOLLY
TER L
HN p ours DESTEFANO
ATRICK DOLAN
ILLIAM CHARLES E
RGE FINE
LLIS
RDON FLAHERTY
Ncrs Jo
JAJI.
SEPH FORTUNATO
1IN AL VIN FRIEDMAN

378 Centre Street , D ore h ester M
1 D ustin Street p b
, ass.
15 Harnden Ro
ea ody, Mass.
267 Havre Street Ea ,tMBalden, Mass.
41 M ascot Street D hoston , M ass.
' as
, ore ester M
33 Cherry Street L
' ass.
16 Mt. Vernon Street D'dhynn, Mass.
50 J
' e am Mass
996 W
·
oy Street, Boston' M ·
ashmgton Street , GI oucester ' M ass.
14 H ayes Road R I'
' ass.
198 Centre Avenu~ ;~.mdale, Mass.
491 Pleasant Street 'w mgton, Mass.
637 D di
' orcester, Mass
. u ey Street, Bost 0 M ·
7 Hillside Park S
. n, ass.
55 H II S ' omerv11le, Mass
1163 Dorcheste~ A/reet, BBoston, Mass:
.
enue, oston M
7 En d1cott Street
, ass.
36 Salisbury Road ,_Joston, Mass.
24 Upham Aven
' ewton, Mass.
4 Friedane Terra~=· gorctester, Mass.
218 Common Str~et o; fster, Mass.
99 Quincy Street , R a 6ole, Mass.
27 Summer Stre~t ~x ury, Mass.
142 Madison Avenue' e:vere, Mass.
82 Stanley Avenue M'Qdufmcy, Mass.
.
, e ord M
'
ass.
38 P me Street T
' aunton, Mass.

d

Page sixty-three

�PERRY STANLEY FURBUSH
ERNEST RUSSELL GA VIN
JOH N AMOS GIFFORD
FRANK GLAZER
MORRIS HYMAN GOLDMAN
LORING Dow GooDALE
FRANCIS BERNARD GREELISH
FREDERICK GEORGE HARMS
ROGER J AMES HUSTON
ARTHUR AUGUSTUS JE NKINS
EDWARD J OHNSON
GABRIEL KANTROVITZ
HYMAN KAPLAN
THOMAS JOSEPH KELLEY
ELI YALE KROVITSKY
ROBERT JOSEPH LARKIN
JO SEPH LOUIS LEONARDI
EDWARD HAROLD LIBERTINE
WALTER TRISTRAM LUNDEGREN
DONALD FRANCIS LYNCH
JAMES WILLIAM MACKEY
WALTER J OHN MALLOY
EDWARD THOMAS MARTIN
JOHN JO SEPH McDONOUGH
tFRANK E. McINTIRE
HENRY FRANCIS MCKENNA, JR .
LAWRENCE J OSEPH MOORE
BART EDWARD MULCAHY
SIDNEY DAVID NADLER
EDWARD THOMAS NEDDER
THOMAS MATTHEW NEWTH
MICHAEL FRANCIS O'CONNOR
ROLAND HENRY PARKER
FRANCIS GEORGE PATRICK
HENRY PERLMUTER
ALBERT GEORGE PETERS
ABRAHAM IRVING PORTNOY
EDWARD FRANCIS QUIGLEY
WALTER KAUKO RAUTIO
ARMANDO RICUPERO
JOR N JOSEPH RISOLDI
LAWRENCE DOMINIC RYAN
OSEPH L. SALA
ROBERT SCHNEIDERMAN
ANTONIO SERRA
ANDREW PATRICK SHEEHAN
BURTON MALCOLM STEVENS
EDGAR WHITING STILES
CHARLES EUSTIS STOCKBRIDGE
GEORGE THOM, JR.
MILLARD HARRIS TIBBETTS
WILLIAM J OSEPH TIBERT
CARROLL NATHAN vVHEELER
ROBERT EDWIN WISEMAN
VICENTE MARQUIS FoRTICH ZERDA

tJ

20 Main Street, Somerville, Mass.
37 Harvard Street, Arlington, Mass.
533 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Paxton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
745 Morton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
208 Fuller Street, Brookline, Mass.
94 Sydney Street, Dorchester, Mass.
271 Roxbury Street, Roxbury, Mass.
9 Hosmer Street, Marlborough, Mass.
82 Main Street, Reading, Mass.
26 Berkshire Street, Swampscott, Mass.
39 Baird Street, Dorchester, Mass.
9 Greendale Road, Dorchester, Mass.
43 Emerald Street, Medford, Mass.
622 Morton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
46 Sedgewick Street, J amaica Plain, Mass.
36 Buswell Street, Lawrence, Mass.
214 Quincy Avenue, Braintree, Mass.
213 Washington Street, Marblehead, Mass.
71 Toxteth Street, Brookline, Mass.
128 West Spruce Street, Milford, Mass.
418 Ashmont Street, Boston, M ass.
50 Lexington Street, West Newton, Mass.
628 South Street, Roslind ale, Mass.
36 Armory Street, Wakefield, Mass.
34 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Mass.
105 Radcliffe Street, Dorchester, Mass.
42 Avalon Road, West Roxbury, M ass.
66 Floyd Street, Dorchester, Mass.
35 Readville Street, Readville, Mass.
55 Thomas Road, Swampscott, Mass.
11 Fenwood Road, Roxbury, Ma'ss.
10 Fairmount Street, Winchester, Mass.
19 Dartmouth Street, Taunton, Mass.
23 Evelyn Street, Mattapan, Mass.
343 Oak Street, Lawrence, Mass.
642 Walk Hill Street, Mattapan, Mass.
20 Central Street, Ashland, Mass.
24 Victor Street, Fitchburg, Mass.
106 Bremen Street, East Boston , Mass.
11 Everett Street, Beverly, Mass.
377 Main Street, Biddeford, Me.
1 Pebble Street, North Adams, Mass.
48 Wolcott Street, Dorchester, Mass.
25 Huckins Street, Roxbury, Mass.
Room 343, 7 City Square, Charlestown, Mass.
137 Summer Street, Fitchburg, Mass.
14 Lovell Street, North Weymouth, Mass.
Oakland Avenue, Hanover, Mass.
21 Woodland Court, Lawrence, Mass.
48 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
50 Granite Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
5 Park Street, ·Boston, Mass.
30 Chatham Street, Cambridge, Mass.
34 Rutland Square, Boston , Mass.

t February
Page sixty-four

1937 Graduate.

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                    <text>SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�G~L.AYcher

' B ~ Vece,wrbe,,y 19, 1920

En.dAuLfebrUCI¥)! 13, 1931

�2

December 19, 1920
I am beginning this Journal in the midst of the most strenuous campaign
that I have ever waged for Suffolk Law School. Our great building project is
drawing rapidly to a climax - a climax that will affect my future in a manner
beyond present calculation. If I fail to secure adequate financial support (ant the
chances are ten to one that I will fail) it will be many years of hardship and
struggle with overwhelming debts. If I succeed the victory will be correspondingly
great.
Tomorrow I expect to test fate once more. Although I have failed more
than a score of times already when hopes were as bright as the one of tomorrow,
yet tomorrow is a new day and ones success will efface the score of defeats - so
here is to the coming day.
At the beginning of the first Journal I described my household. No such
elaborate description is now essential. But changes have been wrought in three
years. These changes I will briefly set forth.

Page 2

J

I am now forty years of age. My hair is iron gray and is perceptibly thinner
than it was a year ago. I am not so heavy as I was three years ago but the
difference is only four pounds. I now weigh 176 pounds.
Other than this there is little change unless we consider those intangible
qualities of soul that God alone can measure. I am not sure, bur I think I have
grown in humility of spirit, for three years of battling with life - especially the past
eight months of that battle - have taught me to know my own limitations and
imperfections as never before. Only by consistent prayer and effort have I
maintained my ground on the battle line - and I am weary indeed but can never
be weary enough to quit the fight.
Elizabeth, my darling wife, is still fresh and blooming and youthful. She
weighs 155 pounds in spite of three years of endeavor to "reduce." She is still as
devoted to her church as three years ago (Temple Street Methodist). She
teaches class in Sunday school and has a class of foreign girls that meet at
Allan 5 ft 1 1/2 - 96
Marion 4 ft 8 - 67
Jr
3 ft 8 - 43 1/2

The Community House on Wednesday evenings.
As a wife and mother she has grown dearer every year. In three
strenuous days when I am so burdened with care and anxiety it is her love and
faith that helps to steady me in my onward way. God bless her.

�5

My financial problems have not lessened. On the contrary, they have
increased in complexity. A month ago bankers and others were postponing
decisions on our load until after Thanksgiving. Lately it has been until after the
Christmas holidays. This week the excuse will doubtless be "until after the first of
the year." Thus it goes and I am fighting with my back to the wall, still refusing to
believe that the way will not be miraculously open, or that in some manner "the
worst will turn best for the brave."
The plasterers have given me a great deal of trouble for they have no
money of financial credit and cannot meet their payroll. I advanced $1000 to
them to pay their men Friday. Many firms who have supplied us with materials or
have preformed services under sub-contracts are clamoring for money but no
ominous threats have yet been made. I have apportioned the small advances
from the bank in what seemed to me the wisest manner. I have given several
notes and am negotiating for the sale of used lumber to some of them on
account.
Today's Boston Advertiser (Sunday Edition) had a feature story about
members of the Legislation who are studying law in Suffolk Law School. They
also had photographs of three legislators and a view of the Dern Street elevation
of the new building.
Friday, Dec 28, 1920
Mr. Rush's broker friend with N.Y. connections and who was so sure that
he could handle the proposition has fallen down, so we have no more to hope for
in that direction.
Mr. Mason, the broker who talked so hopefully of his firm buying a first
mortgage bond issue, has not yet made a definite move. My chief remaining
hope lies here and it will be a serious blow if he fails me.
Today I got after WR Evans Jr. to help reach one of the banks (Provident
Institution for Savings) that has already turned us down. He will try to make an
appointment tomorrow or next day.
Mr. Spillane reports that Colonel Logan is working on the loan for us and
will have a report in a few days.
Work is going forward well in the building. I have let all contracts except
the floors in the apartments and the erection of the theatre marquise.
Thursday, Dec 30, 1920
Louis Spillane reports that Col. Logan has failed thus far but will try again. Mr.
Rush has apparently gotten to the end of his possibilities. The only hopeful
development of the last two days is the fact that Mr. Nason has written to JM
Swift to say that he will take up our matter the first of next week.
Nothing has transpired in the sale of 45 MS. Vernon Street.
Troubles are certainly thick just now but I am trying to keep a level head
through them all. Our creditors are of course clamoring for money, but I am
denying some and paying small amounts here and there where the need is
greatest. My financial resources are so slender that the slightest error in
apportioning the fund would shipwreck the building programme. When I receive

�6

an advance from the bank I study my situation carefully and decide how much is
to go this firm and to that. My belief is that it is far better for a firm to be refused
money than to pay at the risk of stopping work on the building. Those firms that
are supplying us with materials must be kept in good humor or they might refuse
credit when it is necessary.
I have sold the used lumbar to Joseph Lemay for $250 to apply on his
bonus of $500, which I promised some time ago. Today I sold the putlogs for
$150, although the manufacturer, if he had taken then back as agreed would
have paid only $116 for them.
I have close two important contracts within a week, one for the finish of the
building and the other for the floors of the apartments. In each case I told the
dealers our exact situation and they have had no hesitancy about it. Several
small contracts have also been entered into.
The painting, marquise and one or two small matters still remain to be
taken care of.
January 1, 1921
I am not turning over a new leaf this New Year's Day, for the old leaf of
problems and perplexities is still unfinished. The old year has ended - a year
glorious with achievement and upward striving even though the goal has not yet
been gained. The varied experiences of the last twelve months have
undoubtedly fortified me against perilous days that may be in my pathway. But
they have brought about, I feel, a change in my inner life - a new seriousness
and a new appraisement of my own very limited powers. I am quite despondent
at times when I realize how far I fall short of my ideals of life - how superficial is
my thought life in all respects save that relating to my school and building
problems.
My success, such as it is, has been due to the indulgence of a very
Merciful Father who has overlooked my unworthiness and granted my prayers
even though in justice they should probably have been denied. Possibly this is
God's plan - to utilize the imperfect instrument where no perfect one is available in the furtherance of a cause, to forget the unworthiness of the standard bearer.
God only knows how I have prayed and laid awake nights and have
worked long hours to put through this building venture. How cheerfully I could
put aside life's burdens if there were not imperative duties to my loved ones and
to Suffolk Law School to keep me to my tasks. The applause of men has no
special appeal to me, even though it were possible to win such applause in large
measure. Praise is empty and not the stuff upon which spiritual growth can find
sustenance.
I took Elizabeth, Mother S. and Marion over to the new building today.
The watchman was so sound asleep in the noisy boiler room that I could not
rouse him, so was obliged to enter a window. Before leaving the building I went
down to the boiler room and found the watchman sleeping like a log. After
inspecting things and blowing out his lantern, I wrote "Happy New Year" on a
card and stuck it into the lantern. He will doubtless be mystified then he sees it.

�D

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In the afternoon I went to the farm. The house was in splendid condition no signs of rats or mice. The wind had thrown down the pergola on the
bungalow grounds and gotten the doors of the two outbuildings off the hinges.
Jan 3, 1921
Troubles unending! The plasterers are out on a strike all over the city. It was
rumored some time ago that the trade unions were going on a general strike
January 1st, but I never thought that they would be foolish enough to do it. The
lathers are still working likewise all others on our force.
The brokers, HL Nason and Co visited the building today. They were not
at all enthusiastic. When we parted, they called for figures of the school's ability
to handle so large a proposition. I prepared a table showing the total and net
earnings of the school through a period of years - its net earning this year and
probable income next year. This result I took to their office in person and talked
with Mr. Hurlbert of the firm - making a distinct gain in his direction I think.
Last Wednesday I started a plan for some publicity. We have in the
school and Indian of Pequot tribe, Nelson Simonds, by name. He has been out
of work for some time. In order to help him, I suggested that he prepare a lecture
on "Colonial days from th~ ~tandpoint of the Indian." In order that this be more of
an attraction to the public, I' suggested that he go home to his tribe and get
selected as "chief." Today Simonds returned a full-fledged Chief. I am setting
him at work to collect data for his lectures and shall try to get him lots of publicity
for them.
Speaking of elections, I was myself unanimously elected a trustee of the
1st Methodist Church at a meeting of the quarterly conference tonight - that in
spite of my prior refusal to serve. Well, I shall accept in order to shake up some

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of the dry bones in that organization, although I do not relish taking on any more
responsibility just now.

,,

January 4, 1920
A busy day. Plasterers still absent from the building. A second interview with Hr.
Huilburt has helped matters along. Heard a rumor today that the State was
considering taking our new building for an extension. This was conveyed to me
by a newspaper reporter who called me by telephone to ascertain the facts. I
told him there was no truth in the matter as far as I knew.
January 5th 1920
This forenoon I selected the electric fixtures for our new building and held
various conferences on school matters. The strike is still on, so far as the
plasterers are concerned. This evening we started a special course on "Mass.
Income Tax Laws," given by Irving L. Shaw the head of the State Income Tax
Department. About forty are in attendance. I am much pleased at the outlook of
the course.
This evening at 8 PM I attended a meeting of the Trustees of the church
(to which I was elected Monday) and was made temporary chairman. We held a
very interesting meeting.

J

January 6, 1921
I scarcely dare credit the news, but Mr. Nason told me tonight that the thing
looked good to his firm and that he would talk with Mr. Swift and me tomorrow. If
the long agony is soon to be over it will come none too soon for I fear that I am
very near a nervous breakdown.
The matter of sale of 45 Mt. Vernon Street still holds fire although Mr.
Sheet's office feels that a sale to the Gil Company is pretty certain in a short time.
The plasterers are still on strike.
January 7, 1921
There seems to be no end to the delays that lie in wait for our mortgage
proposition. Mr. Nason's office telephoned today that because of illness Mr.
Nason would be unable to take up the matter today.
I heard today that the plasterers were offering to return to the old rates,
but that the contractors association were trying to reduce the overtime
proposition of double time to time and one half.
Baby Gleason is fast drawing away from babyhood. He is already
developing marked indi\(iduality. v,sterday he told his grandmother the Pied
Piper of Hamlin story with these variations. The piper, he said, played "Jesus
loves me - this I know for the Bible tells me so" and that the rats followed him into
the "Childs River'' (Charles River). He also declared that not all of the children
followed the piper on his fatal excursion of a later date, but that one cut his foot
on a stone and got all bloody and went home to its mother. She kissed it and
said "Poor Fing".

�9

He uses a great deal of license in dealing with the old fables he has heard
and changes are usually surprisingly good. Not long ago, he asked me to tell
him a story and teased so hard that I finally left what I was doing and sat down
beside him on the sofa, proposing that I would tell him a story if he would tell me
one. He agreed and when his turn came he gave me a new version of Red
Riding Hood. In his story the wolf knocked at the door but grandma refused to
admit him unless he would promise to be good. This he promised and the wolf,
grandma and the little girl had a nice "pickanic" which is certainly an
improvement over the bloody yarn of old.

D

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Saturday, January 8, 1921
Another week of weary anxiety has closed and no definite word has been
spoken, either on the building loan or the sale of 45 Mt. Vernon Street. My
thoughts, both waking and sleeping, are battling with these problems until life
revolves around them. Daily I am called upon by creditors whom I cannot pay. I
explain the situation and they are invariably kind. But every passing week makes
my position more desperate. How long my physical strength can bear up under
the strain of worriment, hard work and loss of sleep, I do not know, but life is
about as dark for me as it has ever been. Every week for two months I have
though was the black hour before dawn - but dawn has not come - One hope
succeeds another, each as will o' the wisp like as the first, disappearing as it ever
seems within my grasp. I am left in the darkness, the only glimmer of bright light
being my determination to carry the burden as far as it is humanly possible to
carry it.
And really as I survey the whole matter I have accomplished three hundred fold
of what I had believed possible one month ago. If anyone had told me that I
could stall off the evil day and keep the pay roll running until the 8th of January
without a solution of the financial crisis in the meantime I would not have believed
him. As it is I shall be able I think to get the school part of the building ready for
occupancy before the deluge engulfs me. I am pessimistic as to a settlement of
the matter on a satisfactory basis. If the brokers do offer us anything it will
probably be on such highway-robber terms that it will be a very joyless
deliverance. But it would be in keeping with endless disappointments of the past
few months if they ended with some excuse as to the hard times and their
inability to raise so much money.
Men say to me frequently 'What a monument you have erectedl" and I say
"Yes and by the way things are going I sometimes feel I shall need the
monument by the time it is completed."
Jan 10, 1921
Well, there is nothing yet from the brokers except that some doubt has
been cast upon their ability to handle the proposition. Mr. Nason telephoned Mr.
Swift Saturday night that he might have to have another brokerage firm come in
on it. This probably means the preparation of an alibi, for no other brokerage firm
is likely to be found. I have very little hope for a successful termination in their
direction - or for that fact, in any other. Three months of anxious endeavor have

�10

brought nothing tangible - nothing to show for the time and energy except a long
trial of blasted hopes. The same is true of the sale of 45 Mt. Vernon Street. The
plasterers are still out and the rumor is that all the trades will walk out "in
sympathy" on Thursday.
But I shall win this fight yet. I am used to blank prospects and endless
disappointments with victory in the end.
Tuesday, Jan 11, 1921
A disheartening day. The long drawn-out uncertainty about the oil company
purchasing the building at 45 Mt. Vernon Street has now been settled - and they
have fallen downl Mr. Swift and I held a long conference with the brokers today.
As I feared they will be unable to take on the bond issue. There are some
complications due to the fact that the bonds would be taxable in Massachusetts.
Mr. Nason is considering several alternative propositions, including the secant
mortgage bonds, a note or stock issue on Theatre.
No news from the plasterers yet.

)

Wednesday, Jan 12, 1921
Nearer the verge of despair today than I have been for a long time. For nearly a
week I have been laboring under a heavy cold. Last Sunday I was sick a bit but
since then it has fluctuated. This afternoon I quit work for a couple of hours but a
tangle in the work at the building made it necessary to get into the harness again.
I have decided to take charge of the plastering (having given the sub
contractor notice last Friday that I should do so after today unless the strike were
settled) and expect to have men on the job by tomorrow.
To night I had an adventure in the Boston Transcript with reads as follows:
It is a desperate expedient in which I
have very little faith.
Exams tonight and a very tedious evening
one man tarrying until after 10 P.M.
having come in late. I was on duty until
the close.

FIRST MORTGAGE
WANTED
By a well-known Boston Institution,
a $250,000 first mortgage loan on
a $500,000 property adjacent to the
heart of the business district. A
$400,000 fireproof building is just
being completed. Willing to pay
any reasonable rate of interest.
Address M. W.K. Transcript, Boston

9.
Thursday, Jan 13, 1921
One of the most strenuous days of the year for me. I was at the building
at 8 A.M. but the plasterers did not appear. Later in the forenoon the foreman
plasterer and the plasterers' delegate Mr. Hobbs called. We had a lively session,
finally ending in an agreement to pay the union $301, on Nicholson and Cathcart
account for an alleged "waiting time bill." Later the delegate returned with Mr.
Nicholson and we had a second lively session. Mr. Nicholson was inclined to

�11

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make trouble but I advised him if he blocked my efforts to continue the work his
firm would be liable in damages. A real estate man called to look over the
building for the Chandler School of Secretarial Science. There was a steady
stream of conferences until noon, ending with a call from the Principal of the
Chandler School. After dinner there were tangles at the building. Registration of
new students, a second call from Nicholson, numerous other conferences at the
office and building filled up a large part of the afternoon. Then the strike
committee of labor delegates waited on me and we had an exciting meeting.
They wanted to know the real situation of Nicholson and Cathcart's contract. I
convinced then I was really clear of obligations - that the firm had received all the
payments they were entitled to. They finally declared that our work could resume
next week. Whereupon I told them that my agreement to pay $1.25 per hour was
based upon an express provision that we should have the third floor completed
by tomorrow night so the plaster could dry over Sunday and unless the men
could go to work tomorrow morning I should call the whole thing off. I made them
quite a speech on the subject and when it was over they voted to agree to my
demands. There was one fat German delegate with whom I evidently made a
great hit for he shook hands with me three times before leaving.
After that I held several conferences at the building - hired a man to wash
windows at 15 cents each - hired a painter to begin work in the morning. Then I
visited the market for wife, called at the Transcript office and to my surprise and
delight found that I already had two answers to my advertisement. I hurried back
to the office for it was almost five o'clock. By great good luck I reached both of
them by telephone and made appointments with them for tomorrow morning. I
forgot to say the Mr. Swift and I have an appointment with Mr. Nason for 1 P .M.
tomorrow.
Exams again tonight.
January 14, 1921
Another exceedingly busy day. Met by appointment at 8:30 one of the men who
answered the advertisement. He is an architect by the name of Dow who claims
to have financial connections in New York City. He offered to take our cause to
them , but would need some money for expenses for the trip. Of course I did not
take kindly to such a proposal.
The plasterers started work today; likewise the painter. I am much
pleased at the progress made.
This being pay day I was put to it to get out my pay roll, so was unable to
meet the second man who answered my ad, so postponed the interview until
tomorrow.
Mr. Swift and I held a long conversation with H. L. Nason &amp; Company. We
have decided to form a voluntary association or holding company for the new
building in order to meet one of the difficulties by securing tax exemption for a
bond issue. This will mean that we must pay taxes on the building - a heavy
expense, but there seems no other way.

�12

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Mr. Nason says that he wishes two other houses to come in with him on it
and if they are agreeable he will take the entire issue ($300,000) and turn over to
us $270,000 in cash.
The trustees of the 1st Church held a meeting at the Wesleyan House,
which I attended, riding back with Tev. Dr. Johnson at 5 P.M.
Exams in the evening.
Saturday, January 15, 1921
It seems that I won a greater victory on Thursday than I realized. The fat
German that I mentioned as having shaken hands with me three times after my
talk to the strike committee is no a German at all but a Scotchman, and
International Vice President of the Trades Council.
I have learned also that this is the first instance when the same crew were
allowed to return to a job and work for the owner when they could not work for
the sub contractor because of a strike. The precedent this established has today
caused a fight in the labor councils. A similar case arose in Fall River and the
assembly voted to deny the same right. It is now being reconsidered and my
informant Mr. Dobbs (the plasterers delegate with whom I seem to have made a
great hit says that a proposal was made to reverse the strike committee's action
in our case - but nothing can be done to injure us. It was therefore a piece of
marvelous good fortune that forces the committee to decide to allow the men to
return Friday. For had the thing come up at the meeting today it would have
failed.
Mr. Swift said to me today, "I hope you are keeping a diary, so that you
can write this all up some day."
Hard as the situation has been for me in the past, I now face the most
difficult situation of all. There is to be a general strike of all trades, beginning
next Thursday. The Employers Association has not only refused the increase
demanded by the men but issued a new wage scale calling for a 10% reduction
to begin Thursday.
The President of the Building Trades Council is John Carroll the very man
who pulled the "Sympathetic Strike" on us last summer (I was today informed by
Mr. Dobbs that Carroll has now come to regard me very highly, in spite of our
clash last summer). Carroll loves a scrap and there will be one of the greatest
labor wars in the history of Boston.
I have a new theory on this point that vitally concerns us. Our subcontractors figured our contracts on the present wage scale - they now
promulgate a lower rate and precipitate a strike - thus be their voluntary acts they
have made it impossible to complete our work. I believe this renders them or the
Employees association liable to us for damages. I propounded this to Mr. Swift
today and he agrees with me that there is something in it.
Of course I shall make the biggest fight possible to continue our work to a
finish of the building. Shall take over all sub-contracts that in any way hinder our
progress, on the theory that when breach occurs it is our duty to mitigate
damages by completing the work in the best way possible.

_)

�13

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I have made the most fortunate beginning with the Unions. Delegate
Dobbs came in for an hour talk with me this evening and I sent word through him
that I was planning to take over all contacts and pay the present wage scale.
While I believe it is for the best interests of the public that wages come
down, yet I see no reason why Suffolk Law School should be made a victim in
the fight if there is any honorable way out that will leave the real issue to be
fought between the Unions and the employers association. But it will require tact
and firmness to accomplish it.
This afternoon I had an hour of heated debate with Nicholson and
Cathcart. They are trying to force me to pay them fifteen hundred dollars to quit
the job, but I refused and reasoned with them, met threats with defiance and
finally sent them away in a friendly mood.
Mr. Cathcart said in going out, 'Well , old man, we couldn't put it over on
you, could we?"
Monday, January 17, 1921
I had a very ill turn this morning - intestinal disturbance. Knowing that I
was about to faint I left the bathroom and made a staggering progress to my
study bed everything going dark around. I reached the bed and my dear wife
came hurrying after me and was greatly alarmed at my apparent demise.
However she was a widow for only a minute. I came out of it, but it was ten
o'clock before I was able to go down to the building.
Since then I have gained in strength and tonight feel almost normal again.
The day has brought no change in affairs except that I have come to an
understanding with some of the sub-contractors as to procedure in case of a
strike. The plasterers have done excellent work today. I have some hope that
the strike will not occur, for I believe the employers association will pay the
present wage scale if they can have a year's contract with the unions.
Today also I began operations in behalf of Big Chief and publicity. I called
the Boston Herald (Sunday Editor) and the result was that the feature writer Miss
Ellam will come for an interview with Mr. Simmons and Miss Vaughn has already
been here. She and a photographer called this afternoon, and I suppose her
story will be tomorrows Traveler. Miss Ellam will write for the Sunday Herald.
The last exam of the first semester occurred tonight.
Gleason Jr. walked on the Common with his mother this afternoon. In the
course of is walk he espied the moon and became greatly excited. "My gracious,
Mama," he cried,"the moon is broked." She smilingly agreed the half moon did
look as though it were broken. She asked him what he supposed could have
happened. "It couldn't have been a star that runned into it. Stars don't move. Oh
I know - it was an aeroplane."
He finally concluded that the aeroplane man would take back the broken
piece and mend the moon. When the little chap next sees the full moon he will
be sure that the man has mended it.
Wednesday, Jan 19, 1921

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Yet another disasterl HL Nason Co. notified Mr. Swift today that they could not
handle the loan. We are now about as near a solution to our problem as we
seemed to be three months ago - except then there were many hopeful
prospects and we had not learned from hard experience the world of
disappointments that lurked behind the rosy mist of hope.
A real estate broker called at 1:30 and waited for a client who wished to
purchase 45 Mt. Vernon Street. His client came not but telephoned that he had
changed his mind.
At 2:30 (Mr. Swift as already indicated having heard that Nason (his last hope)
has given up the fight.) I went Leo Spillane to interview Alvan T. Tuller the new
Lieutenant Governor to see if we could interest him in our loan. He had a grand
alibi - was to leave for Fall River in half an hour or so. My progress was of
course slight, but he did express some interest. I am to write to him and also to
see him again.
When I returned to the new building I found Mr. Boyuton there, also one of
the contractors as well as a committee of strikers - all wishing to see me. Having
disposed of all I accompanied Mr. Boyuton to the Tremont Trust Co. in the hope
of seeing Simon Sing.
By good fortune we saw him and has a very interesting interview. He
suggests raising the needed money by small notes from various banks and
individuals. When dedication time comes he thinks we will be able to raise he
thinks we will be able to raise quite a fund in donation or loans.
This evening I wrote to John J. Martin of the Exchange Trust Co. about
suggesting a broker to place a seventy thousand dollar loan suggesting that we
would pay a $5000 commission. That is a diplomatic move for my hope is that
JJM may not let this $5000 wander from the Exchange Trust Co.
By the way, I have discovered tonight that our bond issue of last winter
permits the placing of prior "mortgage or mortgages " thus making possible a
second mortgage, which should simplify our problem of raising money.
Chief Simons is attracting quite a bit of attention. A photographer for the
Boston Record was here today to photograph him. He was also photographed
for the Boston Herald by Bacharach, one of the leading photographers today. I
shall get him into the Movie News soon.
Monday, Jan 20, 1921
The day has come and gone without definite developments in our great
problem. A broker by the name of Milton C. Burton claims to have a client who
will perhaps take our second mortgage but wants to rent our theatre. I told him
that we did not favor renting our theatre but would give careful consideration to
any reasonable offer.
The strike began today. The steamfitters, plumbers and electricians are
off the premises but the plasterers, metal lathers, carpenters and laborers are
with us. The work of laying floors in the apartments began today - a very good
Chief Simons was featured in the pictorial section of the Boston Record
today - a very good likeness.

�15

School prospects are very bright. An unusually large number of men have
registered for the mid-year entering class. I am hopin'g that during the second
week of the new semester we can use our new halls.
Friday, Jan 21, 1921
The worst day in all the awful days since my woes began! There was an
hour or two in the afternoon when I abandoned all hope of finishing the building
even in part. All efforts to raise a loan of any sort have failed. My exchequer is
exhausted. The plumbers, heating men and electricians are of course out, but
the unions won't let us finish either of these contracts except by employing a new
contractor. I told the committee that we would quit building until after the strike
was settled. They were somewhat disturbed over that and we discussed ways of
meeting the difficulty. But when they left, it was with the understanding that at a
future conference the matter would be taken up again.
For an hour or so after they left I was very much discouraged.
Then a reporter from a credit agency called to look at our financial
condition. I was very frank with him, telling him our predicament, with abundant
assets, but no way of realizing on them. The effect upon him was curious as well
as pleasing. He became very friendly and sympathetic. I took him to the new
building. He was much impressed and left, promising to send a secondmortgage broker of his acquaintance to see me soon.
Late in the afternoon Mr. Halloran telephoned that he was planning to go
to New York the first of next week and wished for a picture of the building. I
called a photographer and made an appointment for tomorrow morning.
The prospect of success is very remote, but so long as I can keep the tide
of affairs from engulfing me I shall keep on in the disparate hope that somehow
That Heavenly Father who has never before deserted me will still rescue me
before all is lost.
But troubles are indeed heavy upon me. The Bank Commissioners agent,
Mr. Cushman, is clamoring for the payment of our indebtedness to the
Cosmopolitan Trust. I cannot pay until #45 is sold and Mr. Street reports that he
has no definite hope.
The stairs contractor is calling insistently for money, also the heating
contractor, the clock man, Swift-McMutt and others.
Saturday, Jan 22, 1921
My first duty this morning was to go to the building (8 AM) with the
photographer but he had the wrong camera, so promised to return later.
In the morning mail came a letter from Pres. Martin of the Exchange Trust
Company - a cordial and friendly letter sending by inviting me to call. Later I
talked with Mr. Martin by telephone. He is leaving for Montreal tomorrow but told
me to call him Wednesday and he would go with me to the building and see what
could be done.
A bad headache developed during the morning - I had been out on
errands (one of them with son Allan to the bank this being his thirteenth birthday
and his usual money present from his "pa" had to be deposited).

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'-.__ .. ·

_)

Mr. Swift called to tell me the distressing news that a lawyer representing
the stairs contractor was in his office to see whether he should file a lien against
the building. The building account is now exhausted so I agreed to pay $500
from the school account (having already decided to do that and actually having a
telephone call in for the contractor at the moment); this smoothing the difficulty.
I called Mr. Cushman at the Cosmopolitan and told him that the only thing
I could think of to meet our obligation to him was to convey #45 Mt. Vernon
Street to him if he would take it in full extinguishment of our debt ($36,000) for we
have an equity above the first mortgage of more than $40,000. He side stepped
the proposition and very graciously offered to let the matter rest.
My hopes of selling #45 that had dropped well down to the vanishing point
took a sudden rise, shortly after my talk with Mr. Cushman. Mr. Barnett, the
head of a Jewish organization (fraternal) who had been here ten days ago, called
with a committee and went over the building plans. I think we have reason to
hope. Mr. Barnett promises to see me next week.
Sunday, Jan 23, 1921
Another week has dawned and January is almost gone. I have ceased to
welcome the new weeks as each in its turn the possible week of victory - for
victory is now a will-o-the-wisp, receding even farther from my grasp. Months of
prayer and struggle have availed nothing except to prolong the heartbreaking
struggle -yet that in itself is next best to victory, for every week has brought
nearer the day when I can use the new building.
If I were to forecast the future from the angle of today, with its mountain
wall of difficulty, the labor war that grows daily more bitter and is tying up three of
our important sub-contracts; with the hundreds of failure to secure mortgage
money and the faint glimmer of hope still remaining, I should say that we will
succeed in making possible the use of our new building for the school itself,
although in an unfinished state. I should also set the date of the first lectures at
about the middle of February.
I do not see how it is possible to carry the theatre to the point where we
can use it, owing to a lack of funds. We may not be able to start earning money
with the theatre until next fall - mo re's the pity.
Of the troubles that confront us as the result of the present horrible state
of affairs, the worst is perhaps bad faith on the part of the Exchange Trust
Company - and the foreclosure upon our building and the bidding in of the
property at so low a figure as to merely cover the loan. Our creditors may resort
to bankruptcy proceedings or to the filing of liens against the building.
All things considered, we are in a hellish predicament and unless deliverance
comes I shall feel that at last my faith in God's leading has been disproved.
Surely He would not lead me into such a heartbreaking enterprise. If I am in truth
deserted of God in this my year of trial then I shall know that He has found me
unworthy of the great prize that my too ambitious hands have sought. But his
judgments are righteous and all-wise. I am not so blind that I cannot see my own
unworthiness for the great places of life. I am neither a profound scholar, nor of
anything beyond ordinary intelligence. Absence of temptation is perhaps

�17

responsible for such mild virtues as I possess. Knowing myself as I do, I am sure
that if I were in God's place as a judge of men, I should feel that I have done
quite enough for Gleason L. Archer, and that it was time for him to be brought to
realize that there were distinct limitations upon what he had a right to aspire to.
I realize now what a frightful mistake I made in undertaking this thing.
Many of my friends were against it. My own arrogant faith, my Kaiser Bill
delusion that God was with me, is like to prove my undoing. However, that
delusion will not leave me even yet. I still come back to it in the silent hours of
the night when weary of thought and prayer and anguish of spirit and it comforts
me still.
But when I go down for the count and the great referee counts ten - then
and there only shall I be sure. Until that hour (and it may come shortly) I shall
pray and fight and plead with fate, and go down like a man. Then after it is over
and the battle is lost I shall gather up what is left of the wreck and began to build
anew. However I can be ruined financially or the physical property of the school
can be swept away, yet Suffolk Law School will still live on independent of these
things. A crash will injure it, but it will stand as firmly as twelve months ago. It
can be held together - that much I am sure God will grant me. I can yet live to
see my dear ones independent financially and the school which I have created a
strong institution that may live after me. These things assured, I should most
willingly quit the scenes of turmoil and soul weariness for the quiet of oblivion.
But it does seem cruelly hard that the day schools can roll up the millions
in endowment, that they can receive the most generous of support, while this
school that ministers to the friendless and makes men of power of the
downtrodden must go down in defeat - unable to secure endowment or even
loans upon assets of great worth. But God's will be done - He knows the reason
- I can only guess. Justice moves slowly. Progress is measure in centuries and
not in the life of any one man.
Monday, Jan 24, 1921
Another hope has followed the long procession of those dead hopes of
other weeks. Mr. Barnett the head of the Jewish labor organization called today
and told me that his organization would like to buy our building at #45 but could
not do it on a cash basis. This is of course the only basis upon which I can work.
I was awake several times last night battling mentally with many problems.
It is a source of wonder even to me that my health bears up under the stress of
this dreadful nightmare in which I live. I was obliged to sign a note for the roofing
contractor today.
I am living from day to day - meeting my problems to the best of my ability
but deep in my heart the conviction is growing that fate has marked me for
slaughter- that there is no escape. I am not afraid. I have even gone over
mentally what statement I shall make to the newspapers when the crash comes.
There is one grain of comfort in the situation - I have steadily refused to permit
my dear wife to loan any of her money to the school during the campaign. She
has several thousand dollars in the savings banks that may be an anchor if my
assets are swept away.

�18

Another broker has started work on our case, but I regard work in Boston
as profitless and of no account whatsoever. Mr. Halloran is in New York working
on the matter, but I cherish no delusions as to the outcome.
I started the bar review in Torts tonight with a full attendance of seniors.
Tuesday,Jan.25, 1921
Before the events of the day cast again the black shadow over my spirit I
will record one cheerful morning thought. The new building presents to the eye a
truly majestic picture - so different from what would have been presented had I
quit the fight when it was a mere roofless thing of walls and gaping masonry. For
this I thank God. It so lessens the bitterness of a possible defeat. If every
pedestrian that passed our way could point to the half completed structure as an
evidence of Suffolk Law School's failure it would injure the school most cruelly.
But now, no man can stand before it without increased respect for the school
whose names is chiseled across its great white forehead.
But now if I fail I
must, the great building strike is an excuse that all people can understand.
While I was writing the above, Joe called from the
building to say that he was sending a workman to me
to be paid off - No.41, whom he had just "fired" for
being absent from work for two days. When he arrived
I found that it was a young fellow who had been twice
injured on the job and whom I had befriended before.
He had then confided to me that he was engaged and
hoped to be married soon. So when he told me, very
sadly that his absence Saturday and Monday was due
to the fact that he had been sick, while absence on the
previous Saturday was due to his marriage on that day,
I decided that it was a case of mercy rather than
harshness. I took him down to the building and
appealed to Joe. The latter had somewhat of a grudge
against the man. He had been saucy to "Fed" the labor
foreman and had talked when he should have worked.
We called the culprit before us and he made a rather
lame defense. Joe was hard hearted and declined to
take him back unless I insisted. So I was obliged to
insist. therebv makina our ooor cuss haoov. I told him

Joe Lemay

he must make good for I would not take his part again. Joe told me afterward
that it was lucky for the job that I wasn't there to hear all the hard luck stories that
he heard, or we would have a building full of laborers. I am not sure but Joe is
right.
My forenoon was a very difficult one for I had a long session at labor
headquarters with the strike committee. They refused to life the band from our
plumbing, heating and lighting contracts.
At noon however the tide turned and my gloom was somewhat relieved.
Mr. O'Hara, the broker added to our quest a few days ago (introduced by Mr.

�19
~

'":. · ·

~

2.J

Marrin the reporter of the credit agency) had put in a call for me. Upon my calling
him he telephoned that he had a proposition for me. He came to the office
promptly and informed me that a certain bank official had offered to loan us
$200,000 on a 1st mortgage. While we were talking, Mr. Smith (one of Rush's
friends telephoned that he had found a man who would loan us $200,000 and
made an appointment to meet me at 2:30 PM at 50 State Street.
Before Mr. O'Hara left, a real estate broker looked in and started to show a
client over the building. This client, I found, was from the office of "Crain and
Ferguson" the well-known architect. I piloted them over the building. The results
were apparently hopeful.
We laid off twelve plasterers today, so I had a payroll to get out. Several
students registered. Conferences were many, but I managed to keep my
appointment at Smith's office at 2:30. The "client" was Reginald Boardman the
well know real estate operator who has a real client who offered to loan us
$200,000 on our building at 6 1/2% for five years. The upshot of our interview
was the idea of trying for a second mortgage for the balance. It was suggested
that the Exchange Trust might be persuaded to tale a second and have the first
paid off.
Mr. Marion had intimated yesterday that he had a friend who would give
us a second mortgage if the first was satisfactory: I called him and he has
promised to have the man get in touch with me.
The situation has now returned to the hopeful stage, but like previous
hope-bubbles I suppose they too will vanish into the air.
The chairs are being installed in the new building - the senior room being
the first to be thus honored.
Jan 26, 1921
A strenuous day with our labor problems. The Committee of Labor
Leaders have refused to permit any tile work in the new building unless the
contracts for plumbing, heating and electric work are previously cancelled and
relet to new contractors who stand well with the unions. So arbitrary and
unreasonable an attitude got my goat, so to speak and I came very near severing
all diplomatic relations with the crowd.
This action made it impossible to finish the bathrooms in accordance with
our plans. I was therefore obliged to work out another plan. We will finish the
floors with red master builder's finish and make the wainscoting of hard plaster to
imitate tile.
Mr. Martin met me by appointment today and went through the building.
He was full of praise for the structure and will take up the matter of financing with
friends of his. I hope that some good may come of it. Incidentally, I persuaded
him to advance an additional $10.000 on account.
The installation of chairs is going forward rapidly and the hall now
complete looks very impressive.
Held many conferences, by telephone and otherwise, with contractors in
regard to the sub-contracts on which we are troubled.
Thursday, Jan 27, 1921

�20

D

This day was much like yesterday so far as labor difficulties are concerned. Held
several conferences with plumbers who wish to take over the Browning job. Mr.
Browning was also in. The Employers Association have retained Henry F.
Hurlburt, one of the ablest lawyers in Boston, to handle their side of the present
situation. We may have to fight the Association. In the morning mail I received
from Arthur Huddell, Vice Pres. of the Labor Union, a list of the Employers
Association and the correspondence leading to the strike - valuable information
indeed.
Mr. Halloran has not yet left for New York. Mr. Mann has not succeeding
in reaching his second mortgage party. Mr. Rush is still working. Today at 4
P.M. I met him, Mr. Smith and Reginald Boardman at 50 State Street. The three
of them urged me to apply for the $200,000 1st mortgage that Mr. Boardman was
on trail of, but I am holding off until I can get a line on a second mortgage.
Mr. Rush and I went to the Exchange Trust to see Mr. Martin. He
concurred with my judgment in holding off on the 1st mortgage, even though it did
look attractive. We discussed his idea of a bond issue.
Then I went to see Mr. Swift. While there, the thought occurred to me of
trying to match Nason and Martin on the bond issue. Mr. Swift thought it a good
idea and telephoned Mr. Nason. The latter expressed belief that he could take
$150,000. After Mr. Swift and I had discussed the law as to the liability of the
Employer's Association, I hurried back to the Exchange Trust and told Mr. Martin
that if he could dispose of half the issue of bonds, I thought I could arrange for
the placing of the balance. He appears much interested.
Mr. Ferguson of "Cram and Ferguson" called to look over #45 Mt. Vernon
today.
Senator Carey and several others registered today. In fact we have an
unusual number of new men coming in this year. The new building will not be
ready any too soon.
Jan 28, 1921
Tonight we used the new building for the first time - a mere sentimental
performance, since the building is of course still very incomplete. The court room
was "slicked up" so that I could take the seniors in there for our bar review
lecture. I am astonished at the size of the hall, for it is a real effort to talk to men
in the rear seats.
Today has been a busy one - pay day being the forenoon programme. I
have secured a "contractor" who will take over the plumbing and heating work.
Saturday, Jan 29, 1921
The hand of the Employer's Association has now appeared. Late this
afternoon I received a demand from Barber Company's lawyer for $16,500 on
their contract. They know we are in a precarious financial situation and that will
be seized upon as the point of attack.
Monday, Jan 31, 1921

�21

D

Yesterday I studied law somewhat, finding many Mass. Cases that will aid us in
defending against hostile actions on the part of the Association. I forgot to
mention that on Thursday that I arranged with a Mr. Feely, a plumbing and
heating man, to go on with the work in both the Browning and Barber contracts,
having notified each that because of their breach we should endeavor to
complete the work ourselves.
It was in response to this notice that we received the Barber demand.
That was the first move of the Employer's Association lawyer.
The second move was made this morning and I must confess that it
placed me in somewhat of a quandary for a time. When I reached the building
this morning, one of the first men I saw was Mr. Browning. He was dressed in
overalls, but I did not grasp the significance of the fact at first.
After greeting him, I said, "Of course I am glad to see you, but won't the
union object to your being on the job?" "Oh, no, I guess not," he replied. But Mr.
Feely was there and also some of Mr. Browning's former employees. Before I
left it appeared the Browning was there with a kit of tools and was puttering
around in the toilet off the reception hall of our apartments. Mr. Feely objected
and said there was danger of trouble with our union men on the job.
I went up and talked with Browning finally accusing him of being there
under advice of counsel. He admitted it. I told him that since he had broken his
contract by participating in a strike it would be impossible for him to work on the
job while striking workmen where there. I urged upon him the fact that his
presence would tie up the whole job, for all our union men would quit. He made
motions to leave, so I went to the basement and found Mr. Barber and his lawyer
going over the plant. We had quite a conversation - an argument on the case
between me and his lawyer Rogers.
Later, I was called to the building "to put Browning out," as Mr. Feely
expressed it, for he had not quit as I thought but was working. This time I was
more emphatic and warned him in no uncertain terms that he must leave. This
he did, finally. But in the afternoon he met me outside of the building and we had
some very plain words.
Mr. Rush came to the building at about 4 P .M. with two men in who he has
financial hopes. I hurried from conference with Mr. Swift to meet them, but
frankly I expect their attempts to raise the money like the others.
Mr. Martin telephoned about noontime to tell me that he had a man that
might take half the bond issue if Nason would take the other half. I telephoned to
Mr. Nason and made an appointment for tomorrow at 10:30.
The second semester opened tonight. So many new men have registered
that it was extremely difficult to find seats for the Freshmen in the 6 P.M. division.
All things considered, this day, with its three hours of teaching in the
evening, has been a most strenuous one.
Tuesday, February 1, 1921
It is hard to keep track of events in the Journal, owing to the lack of time for
writing. The battle with the Employer's Association is on. I have taken measures
that safeguard against our pay roll money being attached. Rogers, attorney for

�22
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-

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}

Barber, has started something, so Mr. Swift's office reports. Mr. Swift is ill with
neuritis and his secretary, at his request, telephoned to Rogers asking for a delay
until he could confer with him. But Rogers replied that the request came too late.
I have received two letters from Mr. Hulburt - one for Barber &amp; Co. and the other
from Browning.
Browning himself came to the building and demanded the right to
complete his contract. My attitude was the same as yesterday. He requested a
written refusal but, of course, I did not "fall" for such a ruse.
Although Mr. Feely and his men were on the job today, they are
handicapped by lack of fixtures etc. Other work is going on well. The floors are
apparently completely laid on the 3d floor. The wainscoting in the concourse is
going on well. The theatre is being plastered. Chairs have been installed in four
halls.
I met Mr. Martin and Mr. Nason at the appointed time. If we do business
on the $300,000 bond issue it will be at a murderous rate, so I am praying for
deliverance in some other direction. Our condition is so desperate now that we
must accept any offer that will pull us through the present dilemma.
Physically, I am all in. Have had a sick headache all day and find great
difficulty in "carrying on."
Wednesday, Feb 2, 1921
Events have moved so rapidly today that I am obliged to insert in this place a
dictated summary of more important events up to noontime.
This morning when work started on the
building, I was notified by telephone by the
Superintendent of construction, Joseph Lemay,
that Mr. O'Sullivian of the Lewis Company and a
non-union man were on the job claiming to be
there to finish the work. Mr. Lemay stated that
all other work on the job would immediately cease
unless the non-union man was removed from
the building. I instructed him to keep the work
going on if possible until I could reach the building.
I arrived at the building about 9 AM. and
talked with Mr. O'Sullivan who state to me that
he was there to finish the work. I told him that we
would be very glad to have him complete the
work if he could do so without causing our men
to quit, but in that alternative he must leave.
I instructed the electricians what had reported to
work on our job from the union to call their
delegate and have the matter settled officially.
In response to this call Mr. Queeny, the delegate
if electrical workers arrived at the building at
10:40 AM. I called Mr. O'Sullivan into conference having Mr. Lamay, our
superintendent, and John Brick, head mason, as witnesses. Mr. Queeney stated

�23

that all union men were under instructions to quit any job on which non-union
men were employed, and that if Mr. O'Sullivan and his helper persisted in staying
it would tie up the job. Under those circumstances I informed Mr. O'Sullivan that
I considered the action of the Lewis Company as a breach in faith and as a
second breach of their contract, the first of which was already treated. He asked
me if I was ordering him to leave the building. I replied: "Under the
circumstances, yes. You will have to go and take your man with you."

8

I returned to my office at 11 A.M. I received a telephone message from
Mr. O'Sullivan telling me that he had received instructions to stay on the job
notwithstanding my request and he proposed to stay. I told him that if he
attempted any such thing I should treat him as a trespasser, call a police officer
and have him ejected.
About 11 :30 A.M. I returned to the building and found Mr. O'Sullivan there.
He requested permission to wait until a member of his firm could arrive. This
permission was granted and the party expected arrived. He assumed, however,
the same attitude, declaring that his men were on the job to work and would
continue in spite of us.
I sent Mr. Lemay out for an officer and it was some time before he
returned. In the meantime Mr. Boynton came in. He and I went over the
situation. Then I went upstairs to the third floor where the Lewis belligerents
were and found they were about to go out to lunch. I told them that they had
better take their things with them. They met the officers on the stairs and insisted
upon seeing what we could do with them. We reinstated our case to the officers.
At first I told them that we would not permit them to reenter the building. They
objected on the grounds that they had property there and that they had the right
to protect it. I then stated that we had no objection to their protecting the
property. Our objection was wholly to doing any new work on the building such
as would cause our union men to leave the job. The agreed that they would do
no new work. They would simply appraise work already done, seeing if their
pipes were clear and that sort of thing. They thereupon went out to lunch.
Shortly after one o'clock I was notified that the men for Lewis Co. had
broken their pledge and were doing new work. I hurried down and found the
Union electricians sitting down on the concourse. Calling to them to follow, I
went up stairs. The Lewis men were working as reported. Upon my angry
denunciation they replied that they could not teat out the state of the conduits
without finishing wires. I told them that if that was the case, the union men on the
job would fish the wires for them and they could watch. This they refused. They
also refused to leave unless ejected by force. I knew that with a building full of
angry men, to give the order to eject these fellows would be touching the match
to a powder magazine - that the men would be roughly handled, so I refrained
from giving the order. Later, I succeeded in pacifying the union delegate by
assuring him that I was preparing a formal written notice forbidding access to our
building which would be given to the Lewis Co. before night.
At 4:30 P.M., I told the non union men that they were forbidden to even to
attempt to enter our building again and that if they did attempt, they would be

SUFFOLK UN{VERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�24

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thrown into the street bodily if necessary. They protested that they would have to
return for their tools and that they were under orders to return to work. I replied
that I was giving them new orders that were more important than any they had
received from their employers and that furthermore, they must take their tools
with them. So they packed up their things and departed.
I gave instructions to Joe as to the defenses of our citadel for tomorrow
morning.
Thursday, Feb 3, 1921
What a day this has beenl
As I was about to sit down to breakfast our head painter came to #45 to
report that the job was held up by a strike over non union men who were there
again. Jumping up from the table, I finished my toilet at double quick pace and
hurried tot he scene, mad clear through. But all was quiet. Fred, the labor
foreman, was guarding the door and no one could enter without a pass from me
unless they could produce a union card. Mr. Hayden's alarm had been caused
by the fact that Mr. Moriarty had, under orders, refused to allow any one to enter
the building until Joe arrived, and the various workmen gathered in a throng
around the doorway. Of course, I was relieved but my digestion had been more
or less thrown our of gear.
A busy morning was followed by an afternoon that hummed with
sensations. I was called from dinner by a telephone call from the Boston Post
and informed that a reporter was coming to see me. Now, under the
circumstances, I did not relish seeing a reporter. When I had finished dinner, the
reporter was waiting for me, Ted Hedlund, the aviator. He told me that he had
learned of our calling police officers to our building yesterday and he wanted the
"dope." I replied that we did not wish any publicity just now.
While we were talking, my telephone rang. A deputy sheriff told me that
he had two writs to serve on me and wished to come right up. Mr. Hedlund was,
of course, all the more interested. We discussed matters at some length until the
officer arrived.
I greeted him pleasantly and after being served, found that Barber had
sued for $50,000 and Lewis for $5,000.
But an even more important event now occurred. I was being interrupted
every few minutes by telephone calls, and before Mr. Hadland left I received a
call from Smith, the broker, saying that he had a new 1st mortgage proposal to
offer $225,000 for five years at 6 1/2%, but that I must accept within an hour if I
wished to get it.
I got rid of the reporter by promising to have some sort of story for him
before night. Then I got busy by telephone, talking with Mr. Rush, Mr. Nason,
Mr. O'Hara and some others. Having decided to accept, I went to Smith's office
and explained the occurrences of yesterday and today. We adjourned to Mr.
Boardman's office and both men agreed that the suits would not interfere with the
loan, for we could get the whole thing through quickly and their man would not be
scared in any event. But a difficulty arose when they proposed to have a title
handled by Rockerman &amp; Brewster. I refused point blank to consent to that office

�25
acting unless we had a definite agreement for a satisfactory charge. Mr.
Boardman feels confident that he can arrange it.
While this loan is not a large as I had hoped, it may prove our salvation in
this hour of peril. It almost looks to me like and answer to prayer and a most
particular fulfillment of the following prophecy. This morning I awoke at 3 AM.
and did not sleep another wink until morning. Finally, I tired of darkness and got
up and came into the house. Being in such distress and anxiety of mind, I
opened my Bible at random and my eye fell upon the wonderful language about
midway of the 71 st Psalm. "Cast me not off in the time of old age; forsake me not
when my strength faileth. For my enemies speak against me; and they that lay
wait for my soul take counsel together."
* I will go on in the strength of the Lord God." and all the rest of the old warrior's
courageous meditation.
It finally put me on my feet, reviving my faith and hope and giving me strength to
go on. And now comes this wonderful bit of encouragement. I pray God that it
may have a golden fulfillment!
I met Mr. Boynton and Mr. Sing at the Tremont Trust, seeing them as I
passed, so we took counsel together. The uncertainty of whether attachments
had been made troubled us, so Mr. Boynton and I went to Registry and found
that two real estate attachments ($50,000 and $5,000) were on record. I told Mr.
Boynton of the reporter who desired a story and also that before I left the office I
had dictated a story. He advised against advertising our troubles and pointed out
that the attachments have been on record since Tuesday and no one, not even
we knew of it. This convinced me, so when I returned to the office I had to labor
with Mr. Hedlund (who was waiting for me) not to run the story. He finally agreed
to keep it out of the Post until I had time to sign the loan.

~

Friday, Feb 4, 1921
An exceeding busy morning, being pay day with a largely augmented
force of workers. Mr. Street called. Mr. Smith came with a document for my
signature. Rockerman &amp; Brewster have agreed to do the title for $500, but made
an awful row over it. Mr. Boardman persuaded them, however. While it is a stiff
price considering the little to be done, yet all things considered, I cannot hold off,
so I have signed.
By dint of hustle I managed to get the pay roll out by twelve o'clock. I am
now working on the problem of securing bonds to release attachments, for they
will have to be removed next week for the loan will be ready in ten days, so says
Smith.
I have asked Smith to look up a second mortgage for us. Mr. Rush also
will make a fresh start.
Work is running in all departments. The plumbers are making good
headway. The steam fitters are new men, however, and nearly all loafers I fear. I
called them down and also kept my eye on them afterwards, for they continued to
have hilarious good times. My wrath was specifically kindled against one of my
students, Archie Gillis, whom I had sent to the job thinking that he would work for
the school with real spirit. But it seemed that he worked as hard at story telling

�26

r..,.
'&lt;..

and joking as at steam fitting. This evening I called him into the office and gave
him a plain talk. He appeared quite cut up and declared that he had worked
hard.
I an not sure whether my experiences of the past months have made me
more blunt of speech that before, but it is now no effort at all to tell a man in plain
language things that he needs to hear. It used to be a trial for me to have to
administer reproof to students or to criticize members of the faculty. Tonight I
was called upon to do both of these things and it troubled me not at all.
Saturday, Feb 5, 1921
Gillis quit the job this morning. I wonder if he will leave the school. He
has always been quite a nuisance with his long spiels to Hiram and Mr. Dolan.
But with me he has had no better luck than have other talkative gentlemen, for I
have admonished him on numerous occasions to learn to imitate that wise (?)
bird the owl.
Last night I was very wakeful, (in fact I have slept very little since Monday)
and decided that perhaps I could remove the Barber attachment by compromise.
By the way, I forgot to mention a conversation with Mr. B. yesterday in which he
declared that this suit was against his wishes and that he was forced to do what
he had done, but he added, "They couldn't make me put non-union men into your
building."
So I tried to arrange a conference with Barber's lawyer. Our plans
miscarried for the day, but we will meet Monday at 11 AM.
Mr. Boynton and Mr. O'Connell met we at the new building this P.M. and
we discussed our present plight. O'Connell is full of confidence that our enemies
have delivered themselves into our hands.
A new attachment of $5,000 was filed today at the Registry and I will
doubtless be served Monday.
I have telephoned all of our creditors who might make trouble telling them
that I expect to settle with them in about two weeks. This was, of course, to head
off liens by reassuring them,
I had a pleasant talk with John J. Martin at the Exchange Trust Co. He
applauds my judgment in accepting the $225,000 loan, and promised
cooperation in every way.
Monday, Feb 7, 1921
It is now after 10 P.M. My lectures and school duties are over and with a
lighter heart than I have known for many a day do I write this entry. My interview
with Mr. Barber was very successful and I am sure that the $50,000 attachment
will be removed. But I hear tonight from reliable sources that the building strike
has been settled, so perhaps Barber can return to complete his contract. As for
the other two who have brought suit, the question is very different.
My greatest cause for rejoicing is that the mystery of the mortgage of our
building loan has lifted and lo! It the Suffolk Saving Bank. They turned me down
cold two months ago. They refused M. Rush and now they calmly take the loan
through Reginald Boardman.

�27

0

Mr. Vahey has started to help me on the second mortgage. We will hold a
trustees meeting at the new building tomorrow to vote on the mortgage
proposition.
The extension course in Income Tax Law was held in the Senior hall of the
new building tonight.
Tuesday, Feb 8, 1921
What a blessed relief to have the sun shining through the dark clouds that
have overhung my firmament since last October! I could almost shout for joy at
my good fortune. God did not refuse to grant me the great reward after all. I
speak if it as already assured, because it truly seems that with the great victory
won the outcome is certain.
Mr. Rand of the Rockeman office sent me the votes which he desired to
have voted upon by the corporation which met today. We have taken the
necessary action. A bonding house is working on our bonds to dissolve
attachment in the Lewis and Browning cases.
By the way, I met Mr. Browning at the building today and purchased the
Rudd heater which he was about to carry off.
Mr. Martin has offered me a second mortgage proposition that sounds
pretty good.
The following is an exact copy of the typed story of Joseph, as typed by
Gleason Jr. when he was six years old. You will see that his idea of spelling was
most original but he has absorbed the idea of the story.
josaf and faro
Once ther was a man namd jakab.he had twelv sons.the yongst was jozaf and
bengmn.jozaf was biggr than bengmn.his ten brathrs were gelas of himcazz thar
frthr liked him the best.the nekst day jozafs brathrsaid to him wat have you dremd
to-day.I dremd I had a flak of sheep and you had a flak of sheep and your sheep
baud down befor my sheep.this made his brathrs gelas.the nexst day jozafs
brathrs said wat have you dremd to-day.I dremd the moon and strs baud down
befor me.evn frthr didn't like this droem.one.day jozads frths now you go our to
help your brathrs feed thar flak of sheep.jozaf waked a long time.at last he saw a
manand said have you seen my brathrs.he said I hrd them say lets go to
dothn.so jozaf went to dothn.here is the mastr dremer lets kill him.one of the
brathrs said lets not kill him.throw him in the pit.findly they saw some ishmelits
with camls ladn with spiscarinthem to egap.aftr that they solldpoor jozaf.then they
took a kid of a goatand killd it.they put the bl adon jozafs coatof many cal rs. they
made bleev a willd beest dvowrd him.one of jozafs brathrs came to drop poor
jozafout.he lookd in the pit but jozaf was not thair.he pikd up the blady coat of
meny colrs and took it to jakub a pane came in his hart an d he said its my sons
coat.a willd beest has dvowrd him.jozaf was solld to egapand was a slav.

J

Now there was a king namd faro.he had an ofsr potffr.but potfr had a bad
wit.one time she told jozaf to be bad.he said the lord cant trus me if Im bad.she

�28

was mad then and told potffrthat jozaf mokd her and fondernikto her.this made
potffr ongryand he detrmend to out poor jozaf in prizan.findly the chef bakr and
the chef batlr were put in jale.they had a drem and they wontd to nothe mening of
it.the began to say his drem I had three baskits on my head .in the top baskit I
had some kakes and the birds came and ate them. then jozaf said in three days
faro will tak you out of prizan and chp off your head.and jozaf told the batlr when
farro takes yo out of prizan you tell him to tak me out .a year a too after farro had
a drem and he wontd to no the mening ofit .his wiz men kdnt tall him. the batlr
told farro that jozaf kood tell menings of drems.farro told him I sa too stoks of
cornbesid a brook.thar came some nies fat cows and ate it.jza said the to storks
are to days it will be famin so you bettr get all the food thar is.farro said you will
tak kar of it and jozaf did.he made jozaf rollr of egpt.in kanen it was famn to and
his brathrs hrd thar was food in egpt.when they went that jozaf wontd to no if they
were still bad he said Ill tak simean to prizan.the brathrs went bak to kanan and
told jakup .he said you took jozaf and your going to tak bengmen no you cant
.but they did then jozaf noo they ewre good and blest them.

J

Wednesday, Feb 9, 1921
A busy day chiefly devoted to negotiations and interviews. The Barber
case has given me quite a bit of trouble since he claims $1600 more than we
think he is entitled to. We have finally compromised the matter by splitting the
difference. We will meet in the morning and conclude final arrangements. Of the
surety bonds go through we will pass papers tomorrow.
I am trying to purchase the Lewis' Co. appliances that are now in the
building and not affixed.
Thursday, Feb 10, 1921
At last, Thank God!
The First Mortgage of $250,000 from the Suffolk Savings Bank was placed
this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. For four months I have labored unceasingly
toward this grail, I have worked and prayed and walked through the Valley of
Despair. I have even doubted that God was leading me, but now I knowl Not for
five years will I need worry about the first mortgage - and such a load has rolled
off my shoulders this day.
The end of the quest came with all the excitement of a movie drama.
Not until 2 P.M. did I get the bonds to release attachment. We were to
pass papers at 3 P. M. About 2: 10 Mr. Rand telephoned that he must have
written assent of Geo. A Frost, James M. Swift and Thos. J. Boynton (Trustees
of the Board of last winter), on the mortgage.
With no real hope that we could reach three men in different parts of the
city in so short a time, I sent Mr. Cleveland off on the quest while I worked on the
last details of things. The time for passing papers came and no word from
Clevelandl Col. Rogers, Barbers counsel, had done to the Registry. We
telephoned for delay and he returned to his office subject to call.
Then Cleveland telephoned that he had gotten the signatures of Mr. Frost
and Mr. Swift and was on his way back. Mr. Boynton's whereabouts was
uncertain. Mr. Tibbetts if the Exchange Trust had the figures on what was due

�29

his bank from us but he was gone and could not be located for a long time. Mr.
Rand telephoned the Suffolk Savings Bank to send down the money but the man
to draw it had not returned from lunch.
I hustled about on Mr. Boyntons trail. Then Mr. Tibbets returned but did
not have all the insurance policies and had to order them sent by taxi from the
Branch Bank. His figures and mine did not agree at first.
I telephoned to Miss Cararher, my secretary and found that Mr. Boynton
had telephoned that he was on his way to the Registry, having gotten one of my
messages. I hurried up there from the Ames Building. He had not been to the
Registry, so I went to the office but did not find him.
When I returned to Mr. Rand's office, Mr. Cleveland was there and he had
put over the star performance of getting all three of the signatures, having met
Mr. Boynton on the street.
The insurance policies arrived. The money came and we sent out the call
to gather at the Registry. So at 4:30 we passed papers and all is well.
Now for the second Mortgage.
Saturday, Feb 12, 1921
Two very busy days have passed since my last entry in this book. Friday
was filled with the usual duties - pay day until noon and, in the afternoon, school
duties and working on the treasury accounts. Mr. Rush reported in the evening
that he had made some progress on the second mortgage proposition and
expected a man to report to him Monday.
Today has been somewhat quieter. A session with the Rating Board on
the Zurich Insurance Co. 's overcharge on our account took some time this
morning. This afternoon I have paid many bills, taken various people (including
the folks) over the new building.
I think we can move to Derne Street by the last of next month.
Monday, Feb 14, 1921
My hopes were raised today that we had located our second mortgage. Mr.
Smith, the broker, called me into conference with another broker who claimed
that he had a man who would make an investment if it looked good. We
discussed the matter and the broker asserted that he was confident that his client
would act by 1 o'clock, and act favorably. But 1 o'clock came and no response.
It was nearly 4 P.M. before the verdict came and it was unfavorable.
Mr. Rush reports that he has hopes of landing a proposition tomorrow. He
surely has my prayers for success in the matter.
Thursday, Feb 17, 1921
Our second mortgage matter still holds fire although there are several
prospects that look hopeful. Yesterday, I scored a victory over H.F. Hulbuit
Esq., the attorney for the Employer's Association by forcing the Lewis Company
to sell me the panel boards and other materials that were on the job (which we
could not use, according to Hulbuit, unless we settled the whole case.) I paid
$600 and reserved the rights in the main proposition.

SUFFOLK UN \VERS\T'{
BOSTON

ARCH\VES

�30
~
'&lt; J

A serious blow to me just at this critical time is the closing of the Tremont
Trust Company in which I have $1000 or more and the school double the
amount. Still it is not near so bad as it would have been had it happened two
weeks ago.
Work on the building is going well.
Thursday, Feb.24, 1921
For and entire week I have been too busy to write in this book. We moved
from #45 Mt. Vernon Street to the new Building on Saturday, February 19th , and
a strenuous day it was. When I saw that we would not get both families moved, I
ordered another truck and put on three of our men. We ran everything into the
concourse in order to save time, but even at that we were unable to move the
safe or the bookcases. Then on Sunday came a mighty snowstorm that blocked
the streets and tied up traffic. So that it is only now getting anything like normal
School is in session here in the new building. The boys are delighted with
the spacious corridors and the new and unaccustomed convenience of
everything.
The plumbing is practically finished. Plastering is about ten days from a
finish. Electrical work is pretty well closed. The steam-fitting job is progressing
well.
Friday, March 4, 1921
A great day in Washington D. C., with Harding and Coolidge being
inaugurated.
With us it is payroll day and I have just about enough in the Treasury to
meet the call today. The second mortgage matter is still unsolved and I am full of
concern at the outlook. Mr. Rush declares that he is sure of a $50,000 loan but a
ruinous interest rates. He is trying for a larger loan and says it looks good. They
are to meet and go over the matter at noon today. I have my doubts, however,
for Mr. Rush is a natural optimist and a splendid hustler. People like to say nice
things to him, but in the final test to sidestep the issue.

_)

Saturday, March 12, 1921
At last, the great fight is won. I have gotten the second mortgage.
$70,000 is the figure, larger by far than I had dared hope. Frank Halloran called
me severat days ago to say that he had a man who had money for investment
but that it would be up to me to convince him of the soundness of the investment.
I had been through such a series of mirages of late, however, that this
announcement brought little hope. Mr. Rush had been working on several
promising clues all of which had disappointing endings or led to a smaller figure
than we needed. I had, in fact, made up my mind to accept a $50,000 mortgage
at a high rate of interest and had so instructed Mr. Rush. He was to put several
of his matters to the test the very afternoon that Mr. Halloran called me to meet
him.
This occurred Wednesday P .M. He had an appointment for me at 3:30
P.M. We went to 25 Huntington Ave. to the office of the First People's Trust and
called upon H. Harry Neal, the President. He p r o ~ ~ a very keen

�31

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'-.:..c,,../

businessman of pleasing personality. For a time I was doubtful. He raised many
queries and objections. He called for figures, for plans of financing the mortgage
indebtedness. But I met every objection and answered all his queries so that
toward the end of the interview I knew from his face that he was thawing out. He
finally informed me that I had made of wonderful success of the school and that
he was disposed to take on the loan. His rate was 12%, however, (which I
already knew from Mr. Halloran) so I raised a protest over that.
When we left at 5 P.M., I promised to let him know at 9 AM. Thursday. Of
course I was secretly rejoicing, but since Mr. Rush had a possibility at a lower
rate of interest [note - I am writing aboard train to Hanover] I was Yankee enough
to leave the matter open until I could be sure that no better proposition was
available.
But Mr. Rush had no definite offer, so on Thursday morning I called Mr.
Neal and told him I had decided to do business with him. He promised to
telephone in an hour whether his associates would agree. I had already called
the Corporation together for Thursday at 4:40 P.M. to act upon the mortgage.
Mr. Neal called at 10:30 saying that if I could produce paid vouchers
showing an expenditure of $250,000 we could have the loan. To say that I was
disturbed was to put it mildly, for in the moving I had not taken especial care of
receipted bills. I told that it was a "tall order" but if he would send a man to the
office I would do my best.
At 2 P.M. the Vice President of the company arrived. He was a very
different type from Mr. Neal. Try as I did I could not thaw him our. Before
settling down to our task I took him over the building. But he had one thought
only - receipted vouchers "for a quarter of a million dollars." He had no other
interest in life. In this embarrassing predicament I got out my check books for his
inspection, having already made a hasty tabulation showing $249,000 of
expenditures or at least that amount of money deposited which had been
checked out. He had scarcely started on his task when a telephone message of
urgent nature called him to the office. He did not return, but at about 3:30 P.M.
the auditor arrived with orders to find that quarter of a million.
Two things were now in my favor. I had been able to marshal my figures
somewhat and not the auditor, despite his formidable office was much less of a
man with one idea. He was of a very agreeable personality. My tabulation was
worthy of consideration. But he was under orders to take of memorandum as to
my larger checks. We checked up the payroll.
The trustees came before he had gone far. We held our meeting and
passed the formal votes. The auditor finally left with a promise to return Friday
morning.
I worked quite a bit Thursday evening and located a bale of vouchers that
I knew would rejoice the heart of my inquisitors.
The auditor came next morning and found me busy with the payroll, but I
took him over the building which excited his admiration. We figured for an hour
or so and he departed.
In the afternoon I got word from Mr. Neal that I had won my case and
could have the money early next week.

�32

So this is a happy weekend for me. For the first time in over a year I can
see sunlight ahead. It has been such a nightmarel No moment of day or night
has been entirely free from burden. At times I have even despaired of victory. I
have doubted God's leading, fearing that my own unworthiness was thwarting the
high purpose for which I labored.
(6:15 P.M.) I am now in the Hanover station with a happy and successful
afternoon at the farm behind me. I have been pruning apple trees in the
bungalow lot. I also dug some parsnips in the garden and was much astonished
to find there was no frost in the ground. The winter has been unusually mild.
One week ago today Elizabeth and I came down here for the weekend,
leaving Moss Caraher, my secretary, to keep the children company. My plan for
pruning apple trees at that time was frustrated by an accident. I awoke in the
night sneezing .. About the second sneeze after I awoke I "dropped a stitch" in
my back and suffered agony for hours. Every breath made it seem that a knife
was being thrust into me. I have but recently recovered from the ailment.
A new departure at school is giving me great satisfaction. Although I
worked out the idea nearly a year ago the time was not ripe to put it into
operation until last week. Coupon books for admission to classes are now being
sold to students. The boys are taking the plan very well. More money came in
this week that we have ever received in a single week.
Tuesday, March 15, 1921
My day of rejoicing over our second mortgage was of short duration. The clouds
have settled once more for a difficulty has arisen that may defeat the whole
programme. The lawyer at First People's Trust decided that unless we got
releases from all holders of our second mortgage it would not be safe to take the
investment. This would involve weeks and perhaps months of delay. This
difficulty arose yesterday morning. I finally suggested that we give a bond to
indemnify the mortgage. This will be satisfactory if we can get it. A. A. Dority is
working on it, but it is doubtful whether he can get it without collateral of an
indorser.
Wednesday, March 16, 1921
I have not been in a more peculiar mood than tonight. My nerves seem at the
breaking point. There surely have been times when there was more cause for
despair than now, yet never have I felt more broken up that after this anxious
day. My head is throbbing and half-giddy and my heart is like lead. Just when
victory was assured fate snatches it from my grasp and presents to me a bitter
cup of defeat. But I am doubly sore because those who might help me without
cost to themselves or risk to their purses will not help me. I am left to
Gethsemane and there is apparently no deliverance. It looks as though I should
lose the seventy thousand mortgage just when its possession would solve all my
difficulties.
The bonding company has refused to give a bond. Mr. Neal says that
there are others who desire the money and he cannot hold it for us long.

I
:

I

I

I

I I
I

�33

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\....~.

Thursday, Mar 17, 1921
3 P.M. There still is a fighting chance and I am certainly fighting. Mr.
Rush is hard at it and has just telephoned me that he thinks Dority has a feasible
scheme. Mr. Hitchcock, to whom I have just telephoned, says that if Dority will
give the bond he will be satisfied. Dority has been there and he understands that
the matter rests between me and Dority. Meanwhile I await his coming with great
interest.
Later Mr. Dority's proposition
did not make a great hit with me. It was nothing less than a proposal that if the
surety company issued the bond the mortgage money should be paid to a trust
company in escrow and turned over in such amounts as we could produce
second mortgage bonds or bonds with wavers indorsed upon them by the
owners. Mr. Swift met us and the plan appealed to him more than to me,
perhaps because he did not understand the difficulties that would confront us in
securing the endorsement and loan of bonds with which to prove our case.
However, this seemed to be our only hope. I yielded a reluctant consent
and Mr. D. departed.
He had no sooner left than another idea popped into my head that
because of the failure of the Metropolitan Trust Company we had a splendid
excuse for calling in the entire bond issue and putting out a new issue that should
clear up all uncertainty. Thus we would deliver ourselves from two serious
difficulties as well as obtain such proof as would satisfy the First People's Trust.
Mr. Swift was instantly enthusiastic over the plan and before he left we
had elaborated it to include a debenture bond issue, giving our bond holders the
choice of either kind of bond but holding our inducements for the debentures.
Sunday, March 20, 1921
I am at Clinton Osgood's in Manchester N.H. Elizabeth and I and Gleason
Jr. came up yesterday morning, having planned the trip several weeks ago.
My bond issue plan has made great progress. Thursday night found me
somewhat wakeful and the result of my cogitations was to issue 9% debentures
and endeavor to absorb the whole issue of February 1920 as well as an issue of
$20,000 extra ( if the students will buy them) if I find that I need to finance the last
expenses that way
On Friday afternoon I got the Trustees together and they passed two
votes, one authorizing me to call in the old issue and replace it by new bonds
either debentures or refunding bonds similar to the old. The second vote was to
authorize the $100,000 issue of debentures if I deemed it wise to issue so many.
On Friday evening I visited the classes and told them of the new plan.
The boys voted unanimously to bring in their bonds. I had already mailed out
announcements to holders outside our present student body.
We should expect to finish all except odd jobs on the building by Saturday
of this week.

)

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�34

~
\__ __ / i

\

_)

�35

~
'--"'~ l

Tuesday, March 22
At last the deed is donel
I returned to Boston in the 8 A.M. train from Manchester on Monday
morning and spent a busy day arranging the last details of things and incidentally
issuing debenture bonds to replace the old issue. Before the evening was over I
called in $10,000 of second mortgage bonds and replaced them with debentures.
We met at the registry at noon today and passed papers. Everything went
off smoothly. Then I turned over to Mr. Dority $17,500 of cancelled bonds,
receiving an equivalent amount of cash.
I have already started to pay the bills, especially of those who will help us
be allowing cash discount to reduce our interest charges. Some of them allow as
much as 5% discount.
Wednesday, Mar 23, 1921
I gave Mr. Dority $3,000 in cancelled bonds and also had him witness my
endorsement of "priority claim" on $7,000 of bonds held as collateral by Barber
Co. This means that $27,500 of the issue has already been accounted for. I
now have (evening) $3,000 more of cancelled bonds.
It is an unspeakable relief to have money to pay up these overdue bills.
God has been very kind to me.
Tuesday, March 24, 1921
I turned over $8,000 of bonds yesterday and have released thus far about
$35,000 of the funds in escrow. With the sum thus obtained I have paid the bulk
of the long-standing accounts. The high rate that we are obliged to pay for the
money has given me a successful argument for cash discounts ranging from 2%
to 5% on these old bills. My motto is the ancient on with a variation - "a dollar
saved is a dollar for the endowment fund." With what my successful scrap with
the insurance company yielded I have already saved over $2000 in the payment
of bills.
I went to Norwell Saturday and brought up my car, having it at the service
station for minor repairs.
Saturday, April 16, 1921
Busy days have intervened. Our dedication of the new building is now a pleasant
memory. The theatre is open and the work on our building is done. Is not this a
grand culmination of my year of struggle?
There is too much to tell for even a slight recital of events.
We received quite a bit of publicity. The Globe had a wonderful write-up
of school on the editorial page. All of the papers reported the dedication
exercises at considerable length. I received many flattering comments, and
congratulations, but the surprise that affected me most was a gift of gold by
students and workmen on the building. More than $230 was in the purse. More
than half of it was from the workmen.
Uncle Leonard was our guest for a few days at dedication time, but no
others of my Maine relatives could come. On Saturday last (dedication was

)

�36

Friday April 8) we held a private opening of the theatre. But the students did not
patronize the theatre party in any numbers so we did not pay expenses.
The public opening of the theatre opened last Monday - an auspicious
opening. But the next day our attendance fell off about 60%. Wednesday was
the same, while on Thursday a further slump occurred, but yesterday trade
began to come in greater volume.
John J. Enright, our theatre manager, is a very capable fellow. He has
had a great deal of experience in assisting to put theatres on a paying basis. He
is full of enthusiasm over the "Suffolk Theatre." We will not pay our bills this
week - in fact we will lose six hundred dollars or so, but that is to be expected
from the opening of a new theatre that has not been advertised.
It was certainly cheering to me to see the crowd pouring into our lobby last
evening.
Sunday, April 17, 1921
Yesterday did not turn out as well in the theatre as we expected, the total
being only $85 for the day. We have a loss for the week of about $700. While I
expect greater returns next week, I do not dare hope that the theatre will begin to
pay dividends for some time. Mr. Enright and I are working diligently on plans for
advertising and developing the place.
Two or three ideas of mine have been put into operation. One is to open
the theatre Saturday morning for children with an admission charge of 11 cents.
Eighty children attended yesterday.
Another plan we are to put into operation this week is to announce the
formation of a "best films club" the members of which are to receive a ten-cent
reduction in prices.
My troubles with the Cosmopolitan Trust Co. are still continuing. They
have refused to assent to the written waver without an order of the court, so
$20,000 of funds are tied up indefinitely. I have been utterly unable to make
progress in the selling of 45 Mt. Vernon Street.
Tuesday,April19, 1921
I went to the farm today with Elizabeth and Gleason Jr. We took along with us
Mrs. Theo. Dyer, of Church Hill, who has been visiting us for the weekend. The
weather was cold and raw. I did some work on the apple trees and devoted the
balance of the time until 3 P.M. to the flower garden, planting tulips.
An agreeable surprise awaited me on my return to the building. The
matinee at the theater had brought in nearly $50, about double any previous day.
This being a holiday I had hoped it would bring customers, but had not expected
so strong a run.
Thursday, April 21, 1921
I contracted a cold Tuesday and am now quite miserable with it. Things are not
going as well as I could wish. The agent of Cosmopolitan has now definitely
refused to permit annotation on the bonds. This means that until I can sell 45 Mt.
Vernon St. some $20,000 of needed funds are tied up. The theatre continues to

J

�37

0

lose money. We are planning to cut down expenses as much as possible and
thus minimize the loss.
The outlook for the summer troubles me not a little, for there are heavy
obligations to meet. But after all I should be a sorry figure to doubt now after all
the wonderful leading that I have had the past two years. The good Father of All
has blessed me too often to doubt that he will point the way to victory over
circumstances that still obstruct the pathway. It will all come out right.
Sunday, Sept. 25, 1921
I am whiling away the forenoon in Franklin Park, sitting in the auto which is
parked in the margin of Walnut Avenue. Mr. John J. Moriarty, the engineer of our
building (and a sophomore in the school) and his family together with Allan and
Gleason Jr. are seeing the sights and the animals. Unfortunately Elizabeth was
taken with a spell of indigestion this morning and could not accompany us; else
we would have gone direct to Norwell. I am hoping by noon she will be well
enough to go, so I will return for her after lunch. Dear little daughter volunteered
to stay with her mother so that the Moriarty should not be disappointed in their
long expected outing. Without my dear wife at my side as we skim along the
country roads motoring is not at all enjoyable. I have been reading the latter
entries in this journal and realize more keenly than ever how wonderfully God
has blessed me in the past five months. How many things there are to tell wonderful happenings and veritable answers to prayers that I had no right to
expect would be answered. Certainly I could never have planned in advance,
nor even dared hope for the success and triumph of today.
Who could have dreamed that this day would see Suffolk Law School with
an attendance that promises to exceed one thousand students this year; with a
tenant for out lecture rooms during the day and very prospects or a gross income
this year of approximately one hundred thousand dollars. Yet such is the factl
And in spite of my unworthiness and very humble talents, God has permitted it to
me.
A sort of thanksgiving is in my heart continually. My constant prayer is
that God may help me to be more worthy of the trust that he has laid upon me to
administer
The spring ended in gloom incident to the lamentable failure of our
theatre. It lost money week by week so that in two months we dropped over
seven thousand dollars. All theatres lose money at the start and covering a
considerable period. But each week we hoped by new expedients to gain ground
and eventually to retrieve our losses. We reduced our rates, we cut down on
expenses, we changed to a three-day run instead of a play running the full week.
But nothing could turn the tide. Money was being lost that was needed for the
paying of our bills, so early in June I clamped down the lid and closed the
theatre. I have carried Mr. Enright on the payroll all summer, for having given up
his position as Treasures of Boston Theatre to be our manager. I felt it duty
bound to carry him through until the new theatrical season.

)

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�38

The pipe organ which was supposed to have been ready when the theatre
opened in April and not to be paid for until ready has been in progress of
construction all summer. That was another "white elephant" on my hands, but I
could not honorably back out of the agreement. The organ is now practically
complete. They are actually tuning it, so we are sure of the instrument when the
theatre opens again on October 3r0.
Yes, we are planning to open again. But this time I have no illusions. The
experience of last spring has shown me the dangerous possibilities involved. My
fingers have been too badly scorched for me to look forward with any pleasure to
the experiment. I am not a quitter. I shall give the project another try and if it
fails to make good will close it until we have sufficient capital to finance a long
campaign of educating the public to the merits of the Suffolk Theatre.
I have set a limit of two thousand dollars as the utmost that I am willing to
lose in the venture this fall. With this as a spur, Mr. Enright (with what assistance
I can give him in the executive end of the work) will stage his best campaign to
put the thing across. Here's wishing the venture the best of success. I have
abundant faith in the great money earning possibilities of the theatre, but under
present circumstances cannot afford to spend money at the rate we lost it last
spring.
Now that I have disposed of the dark shadows and tales of regret we will
move into the sunlight of a glorious summer of success.
To begin with, the school year ended with our most noteworthy
graduation. The exercises were held in the morning (A story of senior revolt
thereby depends, but the class did not hold out long against the verdict of the
trustees). There was a theatre party in the afternoon and a wonderfully
successful roof garden party in the evening. Bar examinations came in due
course and our boys made an excellent record. Our sad mishap of the previous
summer (when but twelve men passed) was forgotten and even the faint hearted
in our flock became once more loyal champions of our school.
This event I knew presaged a great boon for the school now in its now
home. How great that boon has been I shall presently relate. But another event
of great importance was slowly unfolding and should with propriety be related
here.
Dr. Bennett, the executive secretary of the school of Religious
Education of Boston University called upon me in the spring with reference to our
Mt. Vernon Street property. As a matter of courtesy and to show him why we left
the old building over the new building I piloted him over the new building. He
was so captivated with the new building that he could not think of the old building
at all. To secure accommodations here was his urgent request. Finding that his
school operated only during the day, I saw at once that the building might be
made to accommodate both schools.
At our annual meeting in May, I secured from the trustees the necessary
vote authorizing me to proceed with the matter of a lease to Boston University.
The matter held fire all summer and not until the last day of August did the
trustees of Boston University agree to my terms. Their lease began September
1, and is for a period of five years. By the terms they are to pay Suffolk Law

�39

School $10,000 rent this year and $11,500 hereafter. This is a very tidy income
from our lecture halls when the school is not using them.
Matters of finance have also been in the foreground all summer.
Our creditors have grown impatient at time. I have met the situations with utmost
candor. In some cases I have persuaded them to take bonds in lieu of payment
in cash. In all I have secured extensions of credit.
The matter of our senior annual interest that fell due in August was my
gravest problem - over eight thousand dollars due and an empty treasury! By an
exhibition of audacity that smacks of "Frenzied Finance" I put the thing across.
Finding that the money held up by Cosmopolitan could not be salvaged; I went to
President Martin of the Exchange Trust Co. and asked him for a temporary loan.
With absolutely no collateral to offer and no endorsers on the school note
except myself, I surely had no reasonable expectation of securing the loan. But it
succeeded, with some difficulty to be sure, but success nevertheless and $8,500
in cold cash. I paid the interest when itfell due.
Now comes the greatest event of all - the wonderful boom of the school.
While advance registration had indicated a mammoth freshman class, yet until
last Monday when school opened I could not be sure of the magnitude of our
victory. We shall have over one thousand students - some six hundred freshmen
who are entering under the $100 tuition plan.
Every indication points to a gross revenue this year with the rent and all of
$100,000. What a wonderful help in our hour of need! My most optimistic
estimates last spring were far below our present reality. Seventy-five thousand
dollars gross was my heaviest quotation, but fifty percent above last year. But,
lo, our income has doubled.
Friday, October 7, 1921
Elizabeth and I spent a delightful day and a half in Norwell to celebrate our
fifteenth wedding anniversary. Miss Caraher stayed with the children in Boston,
so we were very carefree in our grand old farmhouse. I gathered my apples
while there.
The theater opened last Monday- poorly as I expected. We will lose
about $800 this week. The organ has surprised us by disturbing lectures in two
rear halls.
On Wednesday I decided to "can" the theatre except on Wednesday and
Saturdays when it would not interfere with school. This plan would reduce
expenses and still keep the theatre alive.
Today two thing developed: one distressing and the other quite the
reverse. The first was a tax bill from the city assessing the theatre at $75,000.
To lose money in trying to run the thing and have it taxed in addition is very
exasperating. When I returned to the office from a trip of protest at City Hall, I
found awaiting me a Colonel somebody from New York who was in Boston with
reference to a great film gotten out by the American Legion based upon E. E.
Hales masterpiece, "The Man Without a Country." He had been to see me
earlier in the day to obtain permission to play to the State officials in the Legion.
This permission I had granted. They ran off the film on one of our machines at

�40

about noon. Then they had departed (as I later learned to try to hire Tremont
Temple) Now they were waiting to see if I would let them use our theatre for the
play. When I found out what their publicity plans were - aeroplane advertising
and all sorts of real publicity, I saw a great opportunity to put Suffolk Theatre in
the map.
In short, we closed upon an agreement to put the play on beginning
October 24th - Suffolk to have 40% of the net receipts, the balance going to the
Legion for the benefit of disabled soldiers.
As I view it, now, after some hours of reflection, I believe that one of the
great possible strokes of good fortune has come my way. We could not have
spent money enough to advertise our theatre, but now comes an organization
that will advertise it far and wide. Before the play leaves Boston, Suffolk Theatre
will be one of the best-known playhouses in the city. It will do for the theatre
what only my legislative scrap with Governor Foss did for the school. My
gratitude to God for his wonderful leading in this matter is boundless. His
wonderful kindness is so far greater than I deserve that I marvel at each new
manifestation. May He help me to be more worthyl
Sunday, October 30, 1921
My note of rejoicing on the opposite page was somewhat untimely. The
play did not come to Boston at all. The theatre is still closed and there is no
prospect of opening it.
Elizabeth and I and Gleason Jr.
have just returned from a very enjoyable
trip to Wilton, Maine. We left last Tuesday
morning and returned to Boston this
afternoon. I drove over the road in our new
sedan (Sterns Knight) which I purchased
not long ago. The car had been used
some, so I bought it for $2500 (trading in
my Willys Knight) instead of $4300 that it
cost last year. It had been driven 6100
miles before I got it. We are delighted with its comfortable qualities and beauty of
outline.
Sunday,November20, 1921
Three busy weeks have elapsed since my last entry. School duties and
negotiations in respect to leasing the theatre have been the topics most
engrossing. Various groups of men have visited me, some of them repeatedly,
and endeavored to make terms for the theatre. One man in particular, Rex
Farnsworth, expects to close the bargain with me tomorrow. He has been in
daily hope of doing so for two weeks but has thus far been unable to raise the
first quarter's rent ($3000) which must be paid at the signing of the papers,
otherwise I don't sign.
I have been working on new plans for #45 Mt. Vernon Street. Mr. Hayden,
the painter who worked for me here, is working to put the place in shape for
tenants.

�I:
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School is progressing well. While there are many problems, especially in
the matters of discipline, yet there are no more than might be expected in so
large a school.
In odd moments I am writing the history of our building campaign that
resulted in the present building.
December 22, 1921
The theatre lease was not closed as speedily as Mr. Farnsworth had
hoped. It was not in fact until the 13th of December that we signed papers. The
delay occasioned by my rigid insistence upon the $3,000 initial payment. Every
argument and strategy was resorted to by one group or another of would be
movie magnates, but I grew more disgusted with the whole business and
consequently more independent. Farnsworth finally got Victor Hufman and John
H. Lyons as financial backers. They formed a corporation to operate the theatre.
It opened last Monday. My judgment was certainly justified in demanding three
month's rent in advance. They are losing money at a desperate rate, the
audiences being much smaller than our audiences last spring.
While I sympathize with them, yet my conscience is clear. I told them that
they would lose money fast at first, that it would be several months before they
could hope to build up a patronage that would pay expenses. In fact I told them
frankly that unless they were prepared to lose from fifteen to twenty thousand in
establishing the new theatre, they ought not to lease it. Doubtless they did not
believe that my prophecy would be fulfilled. So emphatically as is now the case.
#45 Mt. Vernon Street is still occupying my attention. Mr. Hayden has
pretty well finished painting over there. Arthur W. Maclean of the Portia Law
School is now talking of buying it. He is not willing to make any of the sacrifices
that I did when I bought it, but it may be that the think can be managed
nevertheless.
Today there is a new prospect of sale of the place, but I have little faith in
any possibility except the Portia Law School already mentioned.
I have made some changes in the office - or rather addition to the staff.
Miss Caraher has been overworked (although valiant little soul that she is, she
would never admit it) so I have hired a young man named Kean to help her. He
is taking hold of his work in a very satisfactory manner.
The first semester is now drawing to a close - a very successful session.
Our tuition receipts this semester very nearly equal the entire year's tuition of last
year and greatly exceeds that of any previous year's entire tuition. I surely have
reason for gratitude to God for his wonderful kindness.
When I reflect that one year ago today I was in the midst of the most
heartbreaking struggle, with months of crushing responsibility and anguish before
me, I feel like crying out with joy that things are as they are. Some financial
problems remain. Careful management is still a necessity, but thank God my
burdens are light as compared to last year at this time.
In spite of my unworthiness, God has seen fit to hear and answer my
prayers and to answer them even more bountifully than I could have hoped. The
shadow if despair that hung over me so long has left its imprint on my soul, but

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even that is fading away. Since the leasing of the theatre and the removal of that
care (at least for a time) I feel less and less like an old man.
My darling and I are finding more time to enjoy each other's society. We
read together quite a bit nowadays. Our beautiful home is a continual delight.
The children are developing wonderfully. All things considered this is a good
world to live in and a good time to be alive. I pray God to make me more worthy
of my blessings.
January 16, 1922
The first semester is over and two weeks of vacation now ensue. The Mt.
Vernon Street proposition still holds fire, but I have hopes that it will be closed up
soon. The first half of the school year has been a wonderful success from every
viewpoint. Many problems were raised by the sudden influx of students. The
necessity of more lecture space was first in order. The freshman hall (hall I) was
overcrowded even during the first week. I therefore opened hall 8 as a
supplemental freshman hall for Div I and Div II N to Z. The change made
necessary the addition of new men to our staff, bringing the total to six as follows:
Douglas Hurley, Asst. District Atty. Fielding, wm. H. Henchey, and Geo. H.
Spillane.
The result has been most gratifying, so far as teaching is concerned. Out
of the emergency, however, developed, or rather brought out in aggravated form,
a most vexatious problem - that of discipline in class. Since large classes were
the order of things in Suffolk Law School, it has been impossible for teachers to
identify noisy students. In the freshman class last year, I even had great difficulty
at times. Prof. Hurley was quite in despair over the noise and confusion that
developed.
This year, with so many inexperienced teachers in the freshman
department, the challenge was immediate. The school would be ruined unless
means could be devised to hold the rowdy or noisy students to strict
accountability. I met the situation by installing a student from the Theological
school in each classroom of Freshman, Sophomore and Junior classes with strict
orders to watch the class continuously, to take names of offenders and to report
to me at the close of school each night.
This system of written reports, together with a card catalog of offenders
which I soon compiled has solved our difficulty very completely ..
The tuition receipts for the first semester are almost exactly equal to the
SUFFOL
receipts of the entire year last preceding.
K y N!VERSITY
BOSTON

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An occasion a few days ago may have considerable bearing upon the
summer vacation of this year. For some time I have desired a larger boat for my
fishing excursions. Elizabeth and I decided that the time had come when the
plan might be feasible. On Jan 9th I visited the Baker Yacht Basin in Quincy
where several boats were for sale. One took my fancy - a 39-ft. cruiser, with a
large cabin and a 30 horsepower engine. It cost over $10,000 to build and had
been actually used but two seasons (having been in storage five or six years).
The price set upon it was $i500, but I was unwilling to pay so much. I finally
purchased it for $1000. So summer has a new interest for me.
Sunday, Feb 5, 1922
Words cannot express the relief and satisfaction that is mine in these days
of anniversary of the greatest trial of my faith and perseverance, for lol I have
seen in these four months since October 1st the most glorious fulfillment of my
prayers for material help. God has showered upon me blessings and triumphs
wholly beyond my deserts. Financial resources of the school in unhoped
profusion have enabled me to pay off long -suffering creditors. I have sold bonds
to enable the school to refund short-term indebtedness ($10,000 going to R. L.
Day Co., one of the largest brokerage houses in Boston, and smaller amounts in
other directions). Best of all, I have sold #45 Mt. Vernon Street, the transfer
being made on February 1st_ That removes the foreclosure menace of the
Cosmopolitan Trust Co. and pays off Mr. Bayley's first mortgage that has been a
burden for me to keep so long.
Problems remaining are minor and insignificant. Now that the good Lord
has led me through the darkness of blank night into the fullness of a new day, I
cannot doubt His future leading. Oh that I may remain worthy of all my blessings,
or rather become worthy, for I know that I am not. My only consolation is that I

�44

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have tried with all my soul to be worthy and that God has apparently taken the
will for the deed in those things in which I have fallen short. He is truly a merciful
and loving Father to whom all possible service is due.
Turning to school affaire: The second semester began January 30th with
many additional students. Owing to the illness of Mr. Halloran, the recorder, I
secured Mr. Dolan for Monday and Tuesday nights. On Friday, Miss, Caraher,
the ever faithful and efficient, was at the recorder's desk. She handled every
situation admirably and will doubtless continue to be on hand three evenings per
week. I really need a secretary in evening as well as the day.
Miss Cathrine and I have has some difficulty over a
year on the salary
question - and for the most extraordinary reason. In
November 1920 I had raised her salary by degrees to $18 per
week, but a secretary of her ability and efficiency would
command a higher salary. When I announced a raise to $19,
she refused to accept it. Not only that, but when on repeated
occasions I put the extra dollar in her pay envelope, she
invariably returned it by slipping it into my roll top desk when I
was out of the office. Of course, I realized the motive - she
knew that the school was very hard pressed in our building
campaign, and she desired to add her bit of self-sacrifice to
the cause. It was not until November 1921 that she would
accept a raise.
But when the question came up of her taking on evening duties she
declines to accept additional pay. I flatly refused to allow her to work at all in the
evening unless she would accept what I thought was a fair return for her
services. She was very set in her determination not to yield and for a day or so
held out against it. On Thursday, however, we compromised on a basis slightly
below my original offer. So she is happy again and will be in the office in the
evening whenever I need her. All of which is a relief to me. I think I have
previously recorded that her help in the office during the terrible strain of the
building campaign was one of the big factors in its victorious conclusion.
Mr. Kean is still assistant secretary and is doing well except that he is a
wretched speller and makes quite frequent mistakes in that line.
Tuesday,Feb.28, 1922
I have a mild case of the "flu" - up ad dressed after an uncomfortable night
but wit weak knees and general discomfort. Allan had it the first part of last
week. His mother developed the trouble Thursday or Friday. She is up and
around but not quite well yet. Marian was taken ill last evening and is abed
today. I am sitting in the sunlit living room beside a warm radiator whiling away
the time by writing in this book.
I noticed the last entry of Feb. 5th concerned the "poor speller." I was
obliged to warn him a number of times that I fear he lacked interest in his work.
His spelling was dreadful. One week ago yesterday I notified him that I should
be obliged to let him go at the end of two weeks. The next morning I was notified

�45

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that he was sick with a cold (cold feet probably) and would not be in. He has not
been in the office since.
Mr. Cleveland is brushing up on shorthand and will help Miss. Caraher
whenever necessary.
The new catalog is in the hands of the printer. Schoolwork is progressing
splendidly. Problems are continuously arising, but since I am devoting my
energies to administrative work, doing no teaching and even leaving the
mechanical part of the treasury work (pasting tuition vouchers on the individual
tuition cards) to Miss. Caraher, the burden is lighter than usual.
A situation has arisen in the law school field to which I am giving earnest
attention. A conference of Bar associated was held in Washington last week to
confirm a little scheme that certain powerful day law schools have been
concocting for some time. I did not believe that they would be able to put it over,
but they have.
It is nothing less than a resolve that no man should be admitted to the bar
who has not had at least two years of college work. This is ostensibly to bar out
dishonest and corrupt lawyers.
I have been studying the situation in Massachusetts, however, in which we
are having a house cleaning in the profession of law. Two district attorneys have
been ousted for corruption in office and a dozen more have been excused for
crookedness. It happens that eleven of the thirteen are graduates of day law
schools and several of them are college graduates. Both the ousted district
attorneys are graduates of college. So in an address to the Alumni Association
of Suffolk last Saturday night I attacked the new plan, demonstrating how legal
demoralization was due to the fact that too many lawyers are admitted without
having any actual experience with life that would develop character. I pointed out
that day law schools were graduating perspective crooks while practically none
were coming from the evening schools. The investigations in Massachusetts
being the basis for the charge.
I advocated two reforms: ( 1) Teaching of ethics in all law schools. (2) That
no man be admitted to the bar unless he has earned his own living for four years
without going "crooked."
Yesterday I drafted a circular letter to all the deans of evening law schools
in the Union, inviting them to join in organizing an "Evening Law Association of
America" to fight this new move of the day schools. It will go out today with
extracts from my Saturday night speech. My hope is for a hearty response.
Wednesday, March w, 1922
My distemper continues - a most disagreeable visitation. Yesterday my
pains were in three localities: my head, my chest, and my legs. Today there is
not a part of my body that is not full of gnawing pain. Of this I am thankful: I am
up and dressed and able to give direction to any problem that arises in the office
downstairs. With Catherine and Alden on the job in the office and book store, I
know that all is well for ordinary things. Other matters I can arrange via the
Dictaphone or go down in a few moments at a time.

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY

BOSTON

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Allan is in school. Marion and Gleason are abed. Daughter is better
today. Junior was taken at noon yesterday so his is still quite miserable.
Manchester N.H. Saturday, March 18, 1922
The "flu" mentioned in my last entry is now but an unpleasant memory.
The family is well. Elizabeth and I are visiting, for the weekend at Clinton
Osgoods.
So many things have transpired since I last wrote that it would be a task
indeed to recount them. I shall mention them but briefly.
The responses to my circular letter were sufficiently gratifying to lead me
to appoint a preliminary conference in Washington D.C. for March 15 and 16.
The notice in many cases was very short. What I desired, however, was to get
together a few law school executives from different sections and with them to
draft a Declaration of Principles and constitution to be recommended to the
schools as a basis of organization. My replies have already convinced me that
our organization should include both day and evening schools. Having never
been to Washington, my arrival here on Wednesday morning in the midst of a
very heavy downpour of rain, was decidedly a new sensation. I hove
immediately for the Willard and prepared for business.
My first conference was by appointment with Dean Charles F. Carusi of
the National University Law School at his office. I found him a very able man, but
one who stood in great awe of the American Bar Association. He had worked out
an ingenious plan for organizing an association of law students to be used as a
"stalling horse" so that the schools need not come into the open as targets of the
Association. He pictured the dire consequences of their possible
characterization of our movement as an attempt of the "propriety schools" to
protect their pocket books.
I pointed out to him that the whole student movement could be
checkmated by the Association declaring that the college rule should not apply to
men now studying law. Also, I averred, that since we were not in fact "proprietary
schools" we should not fear to face the falsehood. Dean Carusi was at first
resolved not to meet in conference with the other delegates at all. I finally
prevailed upon him to accept my invitation to take lunch with us at the "Willard"
and state to them informally his reasons for not joining the conference.
Having spent an hour in this conference, I hurried by taxi to the 'Willard" to
meet Dean Carlis of Benton College of Law of St. Lewis, Missouri, and ViceDean Easterday of the Brooklyn Law School who were awaiting me at the hotel.
I was much pleased with the appearance of both gentlemen. We
adjourned to my room and plunged at once into a general discussion of the
problems before us.
When I found that they were both quite timid about opposing the bar
association, I was afraid that all my efforts would be fruitless. The seriousness of
the situation, however, was so manifest that they agreed with me that some
definite action must be taken.
My statistics, gathered from government reports, were so astonishing,
however, (only 1.4% of our school children having the advantage of a college

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training, which meant that the association planfwould bar out over 98% ()four
young people from aspiring to the profession o law) they began to pluck up a
little more courage.
Dean Carusi met us at lunch and his fears, expressed eloquently and well,
threw my companions into the doldrums once more. They were my gue:sts for
lunch, after which we repaired to my room and for four ours Dean Carusi and I
conducted a joint debate in which my enthusiasm and boldness gradually swung
the issue my way. Before Dean Carusi left us he admitted that I had convinced
him that his plan of law student association was not sound. We were to
formulate plans for a convention, and he would meet us again next day.
Until suppertime we debated the question of a declaration of principles to
be sent out to the law schools for approval. They could not at first see the
necessity of that, but I finally convinced them that it was the only way to escape
successful attack as attempting to lower the standards of legal education and
also the only was to avoid the embarrassment of having one year and t\vo year
law schools joint the association as charter members, thus exposing us to fatal
criticism.
We took supper together and at seven thirty took a recess until I could
draft a declaration of principles. The task was much more difficult than I had
anticipated. Our minds had met on the general proposals but to state the matter
in forceful and decisive language was quite another thing. I made start after start
and destroyed draft after draft until at 9:30 P .M. I had what was to me a
satisfactory paper.
I called the others to my room and found that neither had written anything,
having debated continuously. But my draft upon which I had labored so
strenuously was no sooner read than they both pitched into it as being too bold a
platform. We must not, they declared, attack the bar association plan.
Then our debate began all over again. I told them that they reminded me
of the anxious mother who told her boy that he could go swimming but he must
not go near the water - we were to fight the bar association plan but our
declaration must be so worded that even the astute Elihu Root would be
deceived into thinking that we were forming a suicide pact to relieve the bar
association the necessity of killing us. Finally, I took my declaration, article by
article, agreeing to change it into more suitable form, providing that I did not do
all the compromising.
Never was a more earnest debate conducted than was ours until midnight.
At the end of that time my resolutions were a hopeless ruin and we were
completely fagged. My companions had smoked incessantly and I was giddy
headed from tobacco smoke. We then conceived the very wise notion of going
out for a walk.
The storm had cleared. The street lights were brilliant and the air was
biting cold, with a wind that struck through me in a way that made me re~Jret that I
had not brought my fur coat to Washington instead of a light overcoat.
We walked around the mighty shrine of every schoolboy's hope - the world
famous White House - white and wonderful in the midnight illumination. The

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great block known as the Army and Navy building was also circumnavigated
before we returned to the hotel for the night.
I awoke at daylight and the dawn of a new thought that solved our long
vexation of the night before. To find an adequate reason for a new organization
without openl'y attacking the bar association plan had been the cause for our long
and unsatisfactory debate. It now flashed into my mind that there were two
important facts we had overlooked. First - that the Assn. of Am. Law Schools
had sharply drawn the line between themselves and the unorganized schools
when they had declared for college training as indispensable to admission.
Second - that the Carnegie Foundation report, undertaken at the express request
of the American Bar Association had come out with a strong endorsement of the
evening law schools which the Bar Association was now trying to abolish. I
accordingly drew up the following statement or Declaration of Principles.

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"·-/
PROPOSED DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES OF THE NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF DAY AND EVENING SCHOOLS
The latest development in legal education has separated the law schools of the Nation iinto two
distinct groups.
First: Law Schools that will receive for training college men and women only
Second: Law schools that are open alike to college and non-college man and women.
The first group of schools is organized into an association of law schools for mutual improvement
and assistance. The second group is not yet so organized and cannot join the association of the first group,
since it would necessitate the abandoning of training of the great mass of American youths who must daily
toil to support themselves or others dependent upon them.
Government statistics prove that ninety-eight and six tenth percent of American youths belong to
the latter class, and that but one and four tenths percent of our public school children ever graduate from
college.

It has been most ably pointed out by the Carnegie Foundation, after an eight year survey of legal
education undertaken fil the express request of the American Bar Association, that the part time or evening
school is a vital necessity. "Inherently," says this report, "the night school movement in legal education is
sound. It produces a necessary corrective to the monopolistic tendencies that are likely to appear in every
professional class - tendencies that in some professions may be ignored - but in a profession connected with
politics constitute a genuine element of danger. A decidedly intolerant attitude toward any sort of night law
school training is sometimes displayed by those who receive their education in other ways."
"Training for Public Profession of Law" page 399.
We, therefore, the only law schools now open to the 98.6% of our American youths, so hereby
organize ourselves as the National Association of Day and Evening Law Schools, for the following
purposes:
(1) To raise the standard oflegal education in our own ranks, with a minimum training period of three
years, to be extended to four years for ~ time schools as soon as local circumstances permit.
(2) To assist one another by interchange of ideas of teaching and methods of law school
administration.
(3) To determine from time to time and to maintain the highest entrance requirements that
can reasonably be expected of applicants whose circumstances have prevented from
attending college, which, until evening colleges are available, we now declare to be a
high school education of its equivalent.

�50
Having accomplished this, I shaved and made ready for the day much
more hopefully that I had deemed possible after the difficulties of the previous
day.
When I went to the dining room of the hotel and was ushered by the
obsequious waiter to our usual table, I saw at an adjoining table in stately dignity
and alone Vice President Calvin Coolidge whom I had not seen since he laid the
cornerstone ti0 our new building.

Strangely enough he recognized me as a man from home. I crossed to
his table and we shook hands. He invited me to be seated and take breakfast at
his table. We had a very pleasant chat in regard to improvements in the legal
profession, politics in Massachusetts, Mr. Coolidge's experiences in presiding
over the senate etc. The final result of our meeting was that I received a Vice
Presidential pass to the Vice President's gallery, not only for myself but also for
Dean Corlis and Vice Dean Easterday.

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Mr. Easterday was the first to join me in my room and he was OVE!rflowing
with astonishment that I had breakfast with the Vice President (the waiter had
told him). He was greatly elated at our pass for the senate debate. But when I
had read my Declaration of Principles, he declared that the great objective of our
Washington Conference had been attained.
Dean Corlis had overslept and it was ten o'clock before he arrived at my
room. I found that he had indulged in literary labors also, so I declined to read
mine until he had read his own. He did so, and much to my amazement I found
that his platform was fully as belligerent as mine of the previous evening. The
joke lay in the fact that he had been the cautious one of the night before, having
warned my earnestly many times that we must not attack the bar association
plan. When he read his paper, I turned the tables on him by telling him that there
was only one fault with his paper, for we must remember that it was very unwise
to attack the bar association. Dean Easterday, knowing my solution of the vexed
problem, roared with laughter at my little joke in Dean Corlis. The good dean
defended himself saying that he saw no alternative.
So I read my document and he joyfully acclaimed it as Easterday had
done. In fact, my companions felt that the work for which we had come 1:o
Washington was now complete (I had drawn up a proposed constitution). They
felt we were entitled to a little recreation and were both eager to accompany me
to the senate debate. A luncheon engagement made the day before by Dean
Carusi stood in our way, so we called him by telephone and told of what we had
accomplished and of our desire to go to the Senate.
He advised us to go and see him in the afternoon as soon as we returned
from the Capitol. He also informed me that he thought we should have some
publicity for our plan and that he was preparing a letter to go out to law schools.
We went to the Capitol at noon and lunched in the Senate lunchroom.
While there I met Senator Walsh and introduced him to my companions.
The Capitol building itself was very impressive but when we passed into
the Vice President's gallery, I was conscious of somewhat of a shock. The
chamber was much smaller than I had expected. Possibly my imagination from
childhood had painted the Senate chamber in lines of grandeur that no real
legislative hall possesses. Certainly it was not as impressive to me as our own
House of Representatives Hall in Boston. The desks were better and thei richly
upholstered chairs a decided improvement.
The first impression of the Senate in action was perhaps unfortunate, for
here again it did not measure up to my conception of the most powerful
legislative assembly in the world. Our Senators from Massachusetts had always
appeared immaculately dressed and somehow to look the part of a senator. My
fancy had painted the Senate as a whole living up to that standard of outward
appearance.
But what I did see in the United States Senate on the 15th day of March,
1922? A small number of men (the chamber was almost empty) of very ordinary,
almost homespun appearance. Some of them needed haircuts. They stmlled
around, some of them very awkward in their movements, shambling of gait, like a
group of ordinary folks from the county districts. But after all, what more healthy

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evidence could be desired of our Nation's democracy that this unostentatious
body of men?'
Senatc,r Reed was speaking to a chamber well nigh empty, declaiming
loudly against the evils to him apparent in the Four-Power Treaty. That he had
scant support: in his views was evident. Very few senators were in their seats.
Some of them were reading, others whispering together and all present seemed
to be either too gouty to leave or else ready to flit bask into the Senate
antechambers.
The only diversion that occurred was when some hoary haired patriarch
doubted a qw::&gt;rum. The clerk called off the names and received a few responses
until he had reached the end of the list. Then the senators came from the ante
rooms until fifty-six had recorded themselves. The clerk announced that a
quorum was present, but it was noticeable that the senators had played hide and
seek; for when Senator Reed resumed speaking there were fewer men present
than before the calling of the roll. Even blind Senator Gore was led out by a
page.
During the roll call we saw many notable men including Senator Lodge,
Senator Lofollette and others who have played a leading part in the League of
Nations and treaty battles.
After leiaving the Senate, we walked through wonderful corridors, halls and
staircases until we reached the hall of the House of Representatives. The house
chamber was unimpressive. The seats, without desks, looked more like an oldfashioned assembly hall than like a modern parliament chamber. This hall, too,
was empty except for a few members. A young man was standing in the open
space before the clerks' desk and delivered an impassioned oration on 3%
something or other. We did not tarry to find out whether it was beer or taxes,
although I ventured an opinion to my companions that if it had been beer the
young orator would have had a larger audience.
Somewhat latter we met Dean Carusi at the National University Law
School. We emtered with high hopes that my draft of a declaration and principles
might be sent out by the four of us as a committee. But Dean Carusi had no
sooner begun to read his letter to be sent out that I saw with dismay that he had
abandoned the advanced ground that we had occupied that night before. It was
a mass of generalities without a practical suggestion except to invite the schools
to come together for another conference. He did not favor an association at all,
but thought the whole thing could be accomplished by a mere conference.
The others said almost nothing, so I was obliged to take up the debate
and endeavor again to convince him of the grace necessity of an immediate and
permanent or!ganization. He was in fact afraid to be identified with the movement
unless he could be sure of its success. The document he had prepared, he
wanted me to send out.
We debated the matter for an hour. When I saw that Dean Corlis's
courage had C)Ozed out I lost all hope that we could agree on the matter.
I told them that we had accomplished all that I had a right to hope namely that we had, or at least a majority, had at one time been in accord as to
what should be sent out to the schools. Now it was apparent it could not be sent

�53

out over our names. I therefore would "carry on" whether they did or not The
report should be sent out in my name as chairman and I boldly prophesied that it
would win. Dean Carusi was indulgent in his attitude toward my "youthful
enthusiasm" and I retorted what when he saw victory coming our way he~ would
scramble aboard the bandwagon and wave a big flag. This was perhaps a trifle
galling to a man so much older than I, but he took it well.
After leaving Dean Carusi, we returned to the hotel and talked until time
for me to take the Federal Express for Boston. Dean Carusi recovered his spirits
somewhat and Dean Easterday expressed himself as being with me without
reservations. I reached Boston early Friday morning March 1ih and immediately
started to draft a letter to accompany my report. Before night the report was in
the mails to about seventy-five schools.
On the following day Elizabeth and I took the train for New Hampshire to
make our present visit.
Thursday, Mar 23, 1922
Our visit was cut short by a telephone call from Mother S., Sunday
evening, telling us that Marian was very ill. We hurried home and found the little
girl with a high fever. Br. Prior had left medicine and would call the next day. I at
once feared pneumonia and that was the doctor's verdict the next day. Marian
grew worse toward night Monday and I acted as nurse after school was over.
She was delirious a good part of the time and so restless that I scarcely closed
my eyes al night. She was very ill Tuesday but at night slept quite a bit.
Yesterday her fever abated and today she is almost normal. We feel very much
relieved and very grateful to God foe his mercy to us in this anxious time.
The first returns are coming in from the law schools. Four schooh; already
agreed to come into the "National Association of Day and Evening Law
Schools." I have every hope of success in putting the big project over and of
defeating the very un-American project by the Bar Association.

Sunday April 1, 1923
More than a year has elapsed since I last wrote in this book - a year of
solid achievement but with no exciting or spectacular features. The nearest
approach to excitement was at the organization of the "National Association of
Evening Law Schools" in Cincinnati, Ohio (April 24,25 1922) Our convention was
very small. The Dean of the YMCA Law School of Cincinnati was the leader of
the movement to capture the organization for the YMCA schools. His hostility
and discourtesy to me finally led to an open breech between us and lined up all
delegates but YMCA representatives with me. We organized the association
with Dean Lee of John Marshall Chicago as President, Dean Douglas of Atlanta
Law School vice President and myself as Secretary and Treasurer. The
organization has failed to grow in size because the evening law school men
apparently fear to come out in the open. However, the purpose of the
organization has been accomplished for we have published two bulletins (both
I

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�54

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.J

from my pen) that have been very effective in exposing the evils of the two year
college plan.
The campaign or the day law schools to eliminate their evening law school
rivals, launched through the Bar Association with Chief Justice Taft and Elihu
Root as spok:esmen more than a year ago has resulted in practically nothing.
Even the Bar Association in Massachusetts has turned them down, and no bill
has been filed in our legislation. In a few other states where they have won in
the state bar associations it has been by a small vote. So far as I have been able
to learn they have been defeated in every legislation where the matter has been
decided.
So far a law school attendance is concerned, some of the day law schools
have lost numbers, some have had an increase because their college rule does
not take effec:t until next year and men have hurried in before the rule takes
effect. The evening schools have gained in numbers - Suffolk Law School being
now the largest law school in the nation.
The school theatre was one of my great problems last year, but like many
other things that have happened in the history of Suffolk Law School when plans
have been thwarted it has been the hand of Providence itself. Because of a
failure to pay rent I cancelled the lease of out theatre tenants. Had they made
good the school would have been tremendously handicapped for when our
mammoth Fn~shman class descended upon us in September the theatre was our
only salvation. We have used it all the year with splendid results. Our first
division that would require three of our regular halls finds ample accommodations
on the first floor of the theatre.
My evE~r faithful and efficient secretary, Miss Caraher, is still with me,
although for six weeks last summer I tried the experiment of an all-male
organization. It seemed that the work was too hard for her, for she is a young
lady of slight build, weighing about one hundred pounds, and evening work in
addition to he!f day duties, which she takes very seriously, looked like too great a
burden.
The experiment, however, was disastrous to my office. Costly errors were
made. My work got behind and I was quite desperate with the additional cares.
Catherine came in on several Saturday afternoons as well as on one or two
evenings and helped straighten out the tangles in our Federal Board account.
So I finally wrote to her employers (with whom I had placed her) and
asked for her release to come back. She had already admitted that she was not
happy in her new situation and would be glad to come back. It cam about,
therefore, that she returned under a plan by which she should have half a day off
for every evening which she worked.
This plan has worked out very happily for the school. The young lady
understands the details of the office so thoroughly that she can carry on my
duties whenever I am absent. No three men that I have ever employed can do
as much (or at least ever demonstrated that they could) as Miss. Catherine. She
is indeed a prize.
My office staff as a whole is a remarkably fine one. One of my greatest
claims to success has been my ability to choose my helpers. Mr. Snyder

SUFFOU&lt; U~.' tVERStT'f
BOSTu,·J

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0

continues to handle the problem of incoming tuition in a most satisfactory
manner. On rush days Catherine and I take care of the overflow. Alden
McCleveland continues to manage the bookstore and handle some of the
secretarial work. He also corrects papers as well as pursue his studies in the
school. He is so absolutely trustworthy that , as in the case if Mr. Snyder, I have
no cares or worries over the work assigned to him.
John J. Moriarty continues as engineer of the building and has never failed
in his duties. He has a very capable assistant in Thomas J. McGreel, now a
freshman in the school. Chief Simmons is filing clerk and to the best of his
abilities carries out his duties.
Hiram has brought the Problem and Quiz department to a high state of
efficiency. Our faculty has received some important additions this year. In all
ways the school is a greater institution than before.
The wonderful growth of the school, over 1500 students this year, has
rendered necessary the extension of our plant. On February 15th I purchased the
building adjoining us at 51 Temple Street and we will erect an addition next fall.
Not only have I bought the property mentioned but have also acquired for the
school the strip of land between it and the First M. E. Church, which giveis us a
grand building site.
This current year has been one of solid achievement for me persc,nally in
the field of legal authorship. During the first semester I wrote a textbook on
"Criminal Law'', and am now well along in a text on "Real Property" which I hope
to finish before commencement
CLASS DAY F.X£RC1SF.S
time.
r.11ntli1Jat,..R, t1&lt;11 othn "t11,ll'nt~, btth11{
August 4, 1923
Our commencement
exercises this year were
noteworthy. The clip pasted
here tells the story

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SENATOR BORAH'S ADDRESS

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COMMENCEMENT

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�56

August 6, 1923

Hon. Calvin Coolidge,
Hotel Willard,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. President:
I wonder if you remember the rather prophetic words that you spoke to me in the morning of March
16, 1922? I have often though of them and am especially
impressed by their remarkable fulfillment.

J

On that morning I had the honor and
the breakfast
pleasure of the time with you
dealing
I have
Of the White House. You said to me as nearly as I can recall your words, "To become President is very largely an
accident of Fate."
We did not expect the very sad accident
ofFate that has made you the Chief Magistrate of this Nation, but I feel sure that to that Providence which has
placed you there it was no accident at all. You have simp- ly
been in training to meet the emergency that has arisen.
We need not only a man of presidential stature, but one
who understands the great problems that confront this national government. Two years in cabinet, and as presiding
officer of the Senate enables you to bring to the great
office of President of the United States that ability and
understanding that the Nation needs in this hour of crisis.
We who have watched your political career
and who understand something of your ability believe that
you are the Man of the Hour, and that for six years the Nation's welfare is assured.
Very cordially yours,
GLA/C.

DEAN.

Lost in copy at
Suffolk Archives

�57

t';"\
'-.., __ I

WASHINGTON

D

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�58
We gave Senator Borah a complementary luncheon at the Hotel Bellevue
with trustees and faculty present. He made a very cordial speech in praise of the
school and ple~dged his good offices in any case where his services might be
helpful.
The gre~at and overshadowing event of the day is the death of President
Harding and the accession of Calvin Coolidge to the high office of President.
The new President took oath at his father's Vermont farm house at an early hour
this morning and is now speeding to Washington to assume his heavy
responsibilities.
It recalls to my mind most vividly a portion of my conversation with the
Vice President (as noted on page 126) at the "Willard" on the morning of March
16, 1922. I had voiced the hope and belief that he would be the next occupant of
the White HoU1se. Mr. Coolidge replied, "To become President is largely an
accident of fate." The accident of fate has occurred and has elevated a great
and good man to the highest office of the nation.

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

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�59

New York City. July 29, 1930
Nearly seven years have passed since I last wrote in this book - seven
years of great importance in my life. It is not a case of wearying of the sielf
imposed task that has caused me thus to neglect my Journal, but simply that I
have been so engrossed with other things that there has been little or no time for
anything but the task at hand.
I am now seated in my room at the Hotel Victoria with leisure for several
hours. Every Tuesday for the next few weeks I shall find myself similarly situated
for I am broadcasting a series of talks on "Laws That Safeguard Society1," giving
them over the National Broadcasting Company's great chain of radio stations.
My purpose, therefore, is to utilize this unaccustomed leisure time by
summarizing the events of the past several years.
Before making that survey, however, it is highly proper that I set down
some facts concerning my family and the present status of things in general at
the school.
Elizabeth, my wife whose name so frequently appears in these pages, is if
anything younger and more charming than she was seven years ago. The
lightening of family cares due to the growing up of the children has left her more
leisure time for self-culture than she formerly enjoyed. She has struggled
somewhat unsuccessfully with a tendency to plumpness, but inasmuch as that
tendency is a family trait on her father's side, the contest has been unequal. In
spite of every effort of self-denial at the table, she has increased to about one
hundred and eighty pounds.
In other ways, however, she has scored remarkable successes. She took
r-an,unn

about five years ago and has pursued it with great zeal under
&lt;''!

)

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�60

Professor F. Morse Wemple of the N.E. Conservatory of Music. He is a very
remarkable teacher and my dear wife has profited to the full from his teaching.
She sings quib3 a bit in public, especially in churches and at social gatherings.
She is also a capable teacher of voice but does not burden herself with anything
but voluntary teaching.
But it is in a literary way that she has undergone the greatest development
during the past seven years. Something less than two years ago she began to
dabble in poetry. While I welcomed the new interest as an important factor in her
soul development, it did not impress me at first as likely to result in anything but
amateurish productions. Her first poems were somewhat too prosy in
construction to suit my ideas of poetry. She was quite addicted to blank verse.
But after some~ spasmodic efforts, she produced some very good verse. The late
professor Sharp gave her some valuable criticisms that helped her see things
more clearly. While at first I was obliged to be very cautious about any criticisms
of her work, lest I discourage her, yet she now asks me to criticize each of her
poems.

\

"A ROSE TO THE LIVING"
-----·········--·----

...

~

Also. with Jiis lo11e of nature,
Gifted. was he in expTession,
For that golden pert he wielded,
Vivid pictu-res e'tr _t&gt;Tesented,
erelling as no ,nan 11as told us
Of the wonders of Creation.
To ou-r lac\ of mtderstartding
Brot he powe-rs of perception
Such as none but he coukl teach us,
Shm·ing all his numtill treasures.

.. ,)
;

......_ __.,•"

DAtLAS LORE SHARP
he moved ctlllOng us,

J Living fuHy, freely
Of the b1~aut)' of l1is vision
OYOUSLY

giving

From his heart of unde-rstanding.
We who listened to his teaching
Marvelled at his words of wisdom,
As he opened up before u.t
Wonde1·s of t11e Book of :N:ature,
Wonders which we rze' er imagiued
Ir1 our unperet:ivirzg blindness.

AH his thots i,ere tinged with b~uty;
'.Never cm·eles.~. r:ver tendCT
To the wca~e:.t of creation.
Little crc:attt"res of t11e woodlancl
Fdt the ,aura of his friendship;
Knew that he woi1ld neva hurt them,
Knew that he was Nature's love,-.
And 'twas his delight to picture
All the marvels of comt.rnction
fo the fems and flowers and 1r.osses.

More than all f1is lips could utter
Did we prize his charm ancl f ervoT,
Unde·rstand-ing, perfect friendship!
Oft 11e gave his fu.ll atte11tion
'fo the best he .~atu in others.
Lavishly, with pains 1.msparing,
Urging on to high endeapor
Those in wliom appeared some prolllisc,
Gently, but with honest fosig11t
Showing them their strength and wca\ne.~s.

With his brown eyes beaming humor,
Wal~ing ever in the sunlight,
Taught lie, by his wholesome sweetness
How we s11ould endure life's trials.
With a spfrit brave and cheeTy,
Emphasizing all the sunlight,
Minimizing all the shadows.
And he 11ad no hidden vica;
Nothing in his Jife which needed
C11arity of me,t's forgetting.

6

�61

)

The rapidity of her development along this line is truly extraordinary. She
has written some beautiful poems, overflowing wisdom and a calm philosophy of
life that appeal to the ordinary reader. Quite a number have been published in
periodicals. The Boston University Alumni Magazine has published several of
them of late. Thus my wife and the mother of my children has developed with the
years and is a source of pride to us all, whether as a singer or poet or home
builder in the truest sense of the word.
Allan is now a six foot man, twenty two years of age, well developed in all
respects. He has heavy brows and a strong intellectual face. He has already
had four years of college training, two at Boston University and two at Harvard
but is planning to continue at Harvard for his Ph.D. degree. Owing to the~ fact
that he has changed colleges, he was unable to receive his AB. degree at
Harvard this year but will receive it next year. Allan is now in Cuba chasing the
elusive snail. Yes, he has taken up another queer fad. During his first two years
in college he collected Japanese prints, but since going to Harvard and falling in
with the members of a club intent upon shells of one kind or another, he has
become a snail enthusiast. In fact, he talks of making it his life's work. l'f he
carries out with this intent it would seem to me a great pity, for he has a very
remarkable legal mind (as I have learned from testing him on law). But for the
present I am indulging him in his whim.
One particular thing about Allan is that he is not at all attracted to grown
up young ladies. But he can enthuse no end over little girls from seven to
fourteen. Many the child of that age has attracted his fancy in recent years. I tell
him that unless he expects to be an old man before he marries, he must pick
older damsels for his "lights-o-love."
Daughter Marian is now a very charming young lady of nineteen
She has finished one year in Colby College
·,
·
·
·
at Waterville, Maine. She is taller than her
mother but slender and willowy in build. She
is heavier than her mother was at nineteen
since she weighs about one hundred and
twenty-two. Marion's eyes are brown and
her face is of a very unusual type. She has
a splendid singing voice and, three weeks
ago, she made her debut in a church duet
with her mother. She repeated her exploit
last Sunday and, of course, I was very much
puffed up with pride to have my wife and
daughter so splendidly perform.
There are many things about my only
daughter that cause me to rejoice. Her
honesty and her uprightness of character
have been manifested on many occasions.
She is also very particular about the
opposite sex and we have never had any
trouble about "puppy loves," for she has

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
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�62

never accepteid serious attention from anyone. She is a very game young lady
as they learned at college last winter when another girl accidentally struck her in
the mouth with a hockey stick. The blow loosened five teeth and quite ruined her
appearance - blood spurting and lips swelling in an alarming manner, But Marian
did not faint nor weep as some other girls who saw the accident proceeded to do.
Quite recently she has mastered the art of driving an automobile and I
have given her a new Chevrolet sedan in which she now drives around Norwell
and the surrorunding towns. Her mother, who is a very cautious lady, declared at
first that she would not be a passenger in Marian's car the first season, but I
notice that daughter has already overcome her mother's fear of the
consequences of such a venture.
Gleason Jr. is now climbing the ladder to man's estate at an astonishingly
pace. Although but fourteen years of age, he is taller than the average man (5 ft
6 1/2 inches) and a wonderful physical specimen. His arm muscles are almost
duplicates of my own, despite the fact that he is still in early adolescence. All the
girls and women rave over his good looks. His blue eyes and rather sandy hair
give him a blonde appearance but I suspect that within a few years his hair will
be almost black. He will soon need to use a razor for the outcrop of masculine

:~~~r=~~~"!:~~~~r

~t,i ,TRfVELER,' THlJRSDAi;J:iE~E: · \Ei·11., J.9ai

Gleason has

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~~~is'f~~~e~~ year

f~r being the fi~st in
his room. Durmg
the Past Yealr he
had th e g rea t
cor~petition of
h~vmg _a gallaxy of
pnze wmner:s from
other rooms
assigned to the
same room, with the
consequence that
although thei won
five "A's" and one
"B" he came, out in
second rank: and
was awarded the
modern prize.

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�63

There is another thing about young Gleason that be especially noted in
this Journal. He has a great passion for the oratory and possesses a remarkable
gift in that direction. The fire and fervor that he can put into spoken language
quite amazes me at times. Needless to say, son is in great demand at social
affairs and there have been such this past summer in which he and his mother
were "the whole show."
As far as my wife's parents who for so many years have formed an
important part of our houshold living in a suite next to us in the school buiilding
and in our Norwell bungalow in the summer, they are hale and hearty. This
summer they have been away constantly since June. For several weeks they
visited the Osgoods in Manchestter NH, and since that time have been in
Chatauqua NY as in as guests of "Aunty Flo," taking in lectures galore on a great
variety of subjects. They will return to Norwell in a few days.
Affairs at school deserve attention. Hiram is still Director of the Review
department

J

\

�63

There is another thing about young Gleason that should be especially
noted in this Journal. He has a great passion for the oratory and possesses a
remarkable gift in that direction. The fire and fervor that he can put into spoken
language quite amazes me at times. Needless to say, son is in great demand at
social affairs and there have been such this past summer in which he and his
mother were 111the whole show."
As far as my wife's parents who for so many years have formed an
important part of our household living in a suite next to us in the school building
and in our Norwell bungalow in the summer, they are hale and hearty. This
summer they have been away constantly since June. For several weeks they
visited the Osgoods in Manchestter NH, and since that time have been in
Chatauqua NY as in as guests of "Aunty Flo," taking in lectures galore on a great
variety of subjects. They will return to Norwell in a few days.
Affairs at school deserve attention. Hiram is still Director of the Review
department and has a permanent staff of resident workers: Kenneth B. Williams,
Harry Bloomberg, and Abbot G. Allbee. The department is a very strong feature
of the school.
My office staff is headed, as usual, by Miss Catharine C. Caraher, the very
remarkable SE~cretary whose name has frequently been recorded in these pages.
When she came to work for me eleven years ago last January, she was the only
member of what has now become the most important part of the school. While
the school was small she was stenographer, bookkeeper, recorder and
secretary. Years have brought about great changes but Miss. Caraher has
grown up with the institution and is now fully capable of running the executive
department even when I am unable to give her personal instructions. There
years ago, when I was stricken with appendicitis and was in the hospital for a
month (as willl be noted hereafter) she carried the entire burden at a very critical
period of the school year. Nowadays I can leave her in full charge and rest
assured that no mistakes will be made and no important duties will be neglected.
I am Dean and Treasurer of the school. Catharine is assistant Treasurer
and Director e&gt;f the office staff. She handles the payroll and attends to the
drawing of checks for paying of bills. Her assistants are Leonard Williams as
Recorder, Margaret Gillespie (Catharine's married sister) assistant Recorder and
"engineer" of the mimeograph machine. Louise Duggan and Dorothy McNamara
are stenographers and very efficient ones at that.
Rossiter Snyder comes up from Guilford Conn. during the weeks of
quarterly payments and assists in the tuition ingathering. Harold Archer is
manager of the bookstore and has been for three years.
Other members of the office staff are the monitors who are legion. They
come from thE~ Theological School of Boston University and "monit" in the day
and evening classes about eight or ten regulars but on examination nights the
number may rise to sixteen or so. The other employees under Miss Caraher's
dominion are Ted Baker, the Janitor or engineer and his assistant. During the
past year it has been Gerald Williams but Gerald has been promoted to the
Library and will be succeeded by a young man named Keddy.
_j

�64

~

Now that the present status of things at the school and in my domestic
household have been sufficiently outlined, let us take up the story of the years
that have elapsed since the last formal entry in this book.
Events of 1923-24
While the chief events of this year (1923-24) have already been recorded
at length in my book "The Impossible Task," yet, for the purpose of this record, I
will summarize them as briefly as possible. On page 139 of this Journal it was
recorded that on February 25, 1923 I purchased an additional tract of land on
Temple Street for a possible addition to our building. A tenant was occupying the
premises and the lease would not expire until September. This was, of course,
as early as I could hope to start the work of building the annex, although it was
obvious from the advance registration that we should need additional lecture
accommodations as soon as possible.
Happily, I was able to make arrangements with the tenant to vacate in
August. It was not a mere sentiment but sound business judgment that lied me to
engage Joe Lemay who had been the Superintendent of construction of the main
building to take charge of the new enterprise. I also hired John Buck as head
mason so that we had a strong and loyal
organization to move onto "the job" as soon
as wrecking operation would permit. In fact,
as soon as the "El" of the building was down
we started a trench for foundation work in
the rear of the premises. Before the
wreckers were through the rear wall, the
foundation was completed and the masons
were called to start the brickwork.
The Law School opened September
1?1h with an increase of two hundred men
over the previous year. Our grand total of
1923-24 rose to the high figure of 1737.
One fortunate circumstance about this
additional prosperity was that we had a large
sum of money immediately available for
building needs. To be sure, we would need
a great part of it to meet the semi annual
interest and the cancellation of Bonds, but
the need would not arise until January or
February. I figured that the annex would
then be so nearly finished that I could get a
first mortgage and replace the tuition money
before it was needed, thus avoiding the
great expense of borrowing money on a
construction loan. The beauty of it is that
the plan worked exactly as I had hoped.

�65

\

(Written in New York City Aug. 5, 1930)
The progress made by our workmen on the annex was truly remarkable.
Joe Lemay fully lived up to the reputation acquired during the construction of the
main building.. His ingenuity and resourcefulness were a continual delight to me.
I had wisely decided to keep all the brick in the original building and had paid a
wrecking concern to raze the old building and cart off all the material except the
bricks. When they found that we had double the quantity of bricks which they
had estimated, it galled them considerably and they left the job without carrying
off the granite! of the high entrance, not the underpinning of the house. This was
a matter of vexation to me, for I feared that it would cost a great deal to dispose
of such heavy stones. Fortunately, a manufacturer of stone monuments came
along and offered to buy the granite. He was able to remove these stones at his
own expense and I succeeded in extracting $75 from him fir the privilege. The
result was that our brick cost us very little. Joe hired some colored men to clean
them and invented a brick-cleaning machine operated by an electric motor that
accomplished wonders.
The co,lored men kept the masons supplied with brick and the latter
worked very industriously on the rear wall of the annex. They needed to, for Joe
had no soone!r built the concrete foundations along the boundary next to the
church than he started pouring columns and built the floors. It transpired that he
could build floors faster than the masons could build supporting walls, so we

•

; ,r i

were treated to the strange spectacle of floors tied into the wall of the main
building and at the back end of the annex but all the rest supported on
scaffolding.
Meanwhile, John Brick's forces were working furiously in more senses
than one for the forms for these concrete floors were never so tight but drippings
of concrete fe!II upon the heads and down the backs and neck of the masons who
were working below. There was thus furnished a powerful incentive to build walls
as rapidly as possible.

��66

(

"'\.

_j

The work began, as I said, in September. By the early part of December
the floors and walls of the annex were complete. Early in February we took
possession &lt;&gt;f lecture halls for the larger classes but the Annex was not
dedicated until March 10, 1924. I had purposely delayed the ceremony in order
that U.S. Senator Walsh might deliver the address on the tenth anniversary of the
signing of the charter of the school.
The financing of the project was vastly different from the harrowing
experience of the financing of the main building. I had the satisfaction and
triumph of having several banks that had refused us aid three years before offer
and even urge upon me a loan for the new structure. As a matter of fact, we
were then paying 12% interest on a second mortgage on the main building. So I
conceived the idea of placing a $60,000 first mortgage on the annex and
devoting at least half of that amount to paying off the second mortgage. That this
was good business policy will be seen by the fact that I borrowed at 6% and
cancelled a 12% obligation. The Exchange Trust Company made the loan.
Early in the fall I had seen that the Boston University lease was no longer
advantageous. Their classes met in small units in our large halls. We were now
about to build much larger halls and would perforce be obligated to let the S.R.E.
students to use them. But our rental had been fixed on the basis of the original
building. In tlhe lease, however, was a provision that after three years the lease
could be cancelled upon due notice. The three years would expire in September
1924.
After due deliberation, I notified the authorities of the school that we would
be obliged to terminate the lease. I, thus, gave them nine months notice instead
of three. This led to very disagreeable consequences because we were dealing
with people who were capable of disagreeable conduct.
By some particular process of thought it had been deemed wise from the
beginning of their lease for the officials of the School of Religious Education to
"four flush" to their students and to give the impression that they were owners of
the building instead of tenants thereof. Their catalogues and printed matter gave
that distinct impression. When they had moved in, I had with my own hands
taken down a sign that they had placed over our main entrance. This sign read
"Boston UnivE~rsity" as though the building had been taken over by the University
instead of hiring offices in the left wing. At that time I had told them that the only
sign I would permit would be a sign on the corner of the building near Ridgeway
Lane. Well, the officials were in the dilemma of acquainting their students with
the true facts or else have those facts come out through the logic of events. To
my astonishment they refused to confess the truth. The S.R.E. students became
very indignant at the presence of workmen about the premises. They still
believed that Suffolk Law School was a disagreeable tenant and they set about
making life as miserable for me as the knew how. I had formerly enjoyed very
pleasant relations with the young people but I now found myself the object of
black looks. The even went to the extent of hissing me in the corridors,
particularly when we were cutting through the wall of the main building into the
annex.

�67

'··

.

I demanded that Dean Athearn make frank explanation to his students.
This he refused to do. I therefore issued a statement myself to the studemts of
S.R.E., explaining the necessity of building operations and also that I had given
due notice of cancellation of the lease. Since the professors were unaware of
this and some of them had denounced me in their classes, the announcement
made a great furor, but the officials of the school confiscated them before many
of the students has seen them.
But I was not to be baffled by any such childish conduct. I thereupon
issued the same statement to the students of Suffolk Law School. The S.R.E.
people did not dare confiscate these bulletins which were left around where their
own students would get them. I also placed some on our bulletin board under
lock and key. Dean Athearn and his staff were furious but their students learned
the truth in spite of them.
They did not bid me a fond farewell when the moved out during the
summer of 1924 and surely no landlord was ever happier to be rid of tenants that
were we.
But one of the reasons why I was particularly anxious to resume complete
possession of our building was that I thought the time had come to institute a day
department. The Trustees agreed with me and I made a trip to New York City to
investigate the law schools in that vicinity where both day and evening classes
were in operation.
The new department was announced in the catalogue of 1924-25, which
was issued about April 1924. We offered several day sessions: 10 AM., 2 P.M.,
and 4 P.M. but stated that we would be governed by the student preferences in
the matter. All day school registrations during the summer of 1924 were
therefore studied by me with great interest. Each such registrant was requested
to state his references as to divisions. I soon discovered that the populair periods
were to be 10 AM. and 4 P.M., so we made definite announcement with these
divisions as a basis for our day classes.

Events of 1924-25
The day department opened according to schedule, having, of course, but
one class to begin with - freshmen. 140 students was the initial day enrollment
out of a class of 958 freshmen. The year was comparatively uneventful, all
departments running smoothly and efficiently. In this year I insisted upon
lightening the burdens of my hard working secretary by employing a
stenographer, Miss. Anna Crampa and also employing a Recorder, H. Re&gt;ssiter
Snyder. This made it possible for Miss Caraher to devote more time to executive
work, thus lightening my own burdens.
The total attendance during the year rose to the record figure of 2018
students and tuition receipts rose to $150,000. Out of this amount I succeeded in
paying more than $90,000 on our building debt.
But the annex was not my only out of the ordinary activity, for during the
school year of 1925-25 I accomplished the very difficult and exacting task of

J

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY

BOSTON

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�68

writing a textbook on Wills and Probate. This book was published during the
summer of 1~J25 and was ready for use at the opening of school in September.

Events of 1925-26

Advance registrations during the summer of 1925 indicated a substantial
increase of students, coming to us in large part through our new day department.
I spent as much time as possible on the farm in Norwell, going fishing
occasionally. For several years Professor Sharp and his boys had accompanied
me on these fishing trips but for two years the two younger boys has been
attending school on a ranch in the west. As a sort of celebration of their return
we staged a fishing trip in early August 1925 which led to important results.
Professor ancl Mrs. Sharp with three of the four boys were with us in a sea trip
with Captain Edson. We went out from Ecituate for codfish and made a very
good catch, but Professor and Mrs. Sharp became very seasick. We returned to
the farm and completed the day's outing with a corn roast and fish dinner at my
boiling spring in the woods.
"The Reverie" August 9, 1930
The place was so enchantingly beautiful that I decided to build a log cabin
as a permanent shelter for picnics. The decision was no doubt helped in the
process of incubation by the enthusiasm of my dear and greatly respected friend
when I mentioned it to him. His enthusiasm over the enchanted woodland is
which the spring is the bright and particular jewel was good to see for Dallas Lore
Sharp was as joyous in his expressions of gladness as an exuberant boy.

�69

But there was also the cosmic urge of the woods of my childhood and the
emerging memories of long ago when a log cabin in the forest was my favorite
shelter and my delight. Not only could I recall golden days and hours when as a

J

small child I toddled about my father's lumber camp, but those five years of my
youth in the lumber camps had sketched unforgettable memories in my brain.
Hardships there were and privations of a primitive life but soul-satisfying days
when the glory of autumn and of winter made the deep woods a paradisE~ indeed.
So now I would recreate from those memories a cabin of pine logs, grown
on my own land, that should speak to me ever of the past and yet fulfilling for the
present as even greater measure of blessing than the 'old days' had possessed.
Those days had been yoked to hardship and grim necessity - these would be
idyllic recreation from the busy labors of a life filled to the brim with opportunities
of service to humanity and of work well worth the doing.
So on that very day after my guests had departed I returned to the spring
with Gleason Jr. as an interested spectator. I felled the trees and shaped the
logs for the sills of the cabin. The story of that struggle to build the cabin before
the bark of the pine trees stuck fast in obedience to Nature's laws has been
written by me in the log book of the cabin. It is too long to be inserted in this
narrative but suffice is to say that with limited time at my command and in the
heat of an unusually sultry August, I nevertheless succeeded in accompliishing
my purpose.
On the seventh day of September in 1925 we reassembled our oriiginal
fishing party, with my wife in addition thereto, and dedicated the cabin with due
ceremony - and a steak dinner. Professor Sharp christened the cabin with its
poetic name, "The Reverie."

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
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c:

-.--...._

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It was my delight to add to that cabin every convenience that a cabin could
have, including a silvery voiced radio which has served me ever since that
autumn of 19:25, bringing the news of the world and the music of the spheres in
to the peace of my woodland Eden.
Several happy reunions with our friends, the Sharps, were staged in the
cabin during that year. But I found ''The Reverie" growing upon me as a new and
peculiarly rich experience for body and mind. In the deep silence of the woods
sleep took on new meaning. I could also write with an ease and power of
expression not before experienced.
So I stole away to the woods whenever I could rejoicing in preparing my
own meals and enjoying them as never before. But there were many things to do
and my fertile mind was forever getting me unto one task after another.
In October I conceived the idea of excavating the brook that flows from the
spring. On October 31sst the log book of the cabin bears record that I began a
very ambitious irrigation project. I wrote in the log book, "This day I began to dig
the Suez Canal. The brook from my spring was always a slow moving trickle,
choked by a c:entury's accumulation of fallen leaves and tree limbs. Now I have
always longed for a brook of width as well as length. That longing give birth to an
idea and this day I began to put that idea into tangible form. I will excavate me a
brook and dammed will it be - in several places. Thus I will create a wide brook,

�71

a deep brook, a brook for trout, filled with sparkling cold water from my spring.
Not only will I have a brook, but I will have a trout pond I"
Thus the originated the trout pond that has been such a joy to us 'for five
summers. I hired Bill and Bob Smith to assist me in the arduous task of
excavation. To my amazement I found that the entire swamp was underlain by a
white sandy beach dating back to prehistoric times. So hard packed was the
sand that it was difficult indeed to cut it with a spade. Under about two feet of
peat the sand was to be found wherever we dug, so that in the process of digging
the pond we threw up a high embankment on all sides and covered the
embankment with white sand.
Thus I created the an ideal pond for trout and the following May the first
consignment of eight-inch trout arrived from the Gilbert Trout Hatchery o·f
Plymouth Massachusetts. Every spring since then I have stocked the pond
anew, and every summer and fall I have been able to treat my guests to trout
dinners which they themselves helped catch.
Under the urgings of Professor and Mrs. Sharp I began during the! late fall
of 1925 to reduce to writing some of my early life and varied experiences in the
primitive hamlet of my birth. This writing was more in the nature of relaxation at
odd moments than a real task. The delight of my family and friends at the vivid
pictures of a strange and primitive community encouraged me to prepare~ and
read them these installments of manuscript. I must have written more than five
hundred pages of it during the year but have never attempted to put it into print,
my idea being that such written record will keep an be of more interest to people
years hence than now.
But there was another circumstance that encouraged delving into the past.
I had become convinced that Joshua Williams, my great-great grandfather, was a
Mayflower descendant. I went to the secretary of the Society of Mayflower
Descendants to discuss the matter and he treated me as though I were a burglar
trying to break into a sacred temple of which he was divinely appointed guardian.
This treatment made me so indignant that I resolved to show the gentleman and
his associated that I could qualify for admission and thus pave the way for all the
descendants of Joshua Williams to join if they wanted to do so. Thus I let myself
in for a great deal of research in Boston, Plymouth, Taunton, and even Elsworth,
Maine. But I won the fight to become a life member of the sacred socie~,.
During this investigation, I had sent out a questionnaire to all known
members of the older generation of Great Pond (Maine) descendants and had
thus accumulated a great deal of family data. By comparing data from various
sources, it was possible to trace the various branches of Joshua's descendants.
So I resolved to put into book form the results of my gleanings. While this had
seemed to be a simple task when it was begun, it proved to be one of the most
exacting jobs I ever tackled; for it was necessary to write for more and more
information concerning this family and that, leaving portions unfinished for
months. However, I evolved a system of folders for different family lines and thus
avoided confusion so far as possible. But the family has so extensively
intermarried that it was exceedingly difficult to carry the story of the different

�72

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',

branches in c,rderly sequence. It was, in fact, not until December 1926 that the
little book came from the press.
It must not be supposed that I was neglecting my school duties. The new
day department tendered it necessary for me to be in the office more than usual
for the building was now full of students day as well as night. However,
Catharine held the students at bay as much as possible and attended to all
except really important problems. This, of course, disrupted our old plan of
giving the young lady the next forenoon off after an evening on duty, for we had
morning classes. She stood up well physically, however, and we increased her
salary to a substantial figure.
In the American Magazine for February 1926 appeared a special story
about me which attracted a great deal of attention and indirectly led to important
results. I had long been in 'Who's Who in America" and other such publications,
but this magazine article, giving the romantic story of my rise from a cook in the
lumber camps to my present prominence in the law school world, focused
interest in the school and its founder.
Shortly after the appearance of the magazine I received a letter from Dean
Hamilton Douglas of Atlanta Law School which had been using my text books for
a year, saying that his students were very eager to have me come to Atlanta. He
stated that they had cut the story from the American Magazine and had placed it
on their bulletin board. The invitation was accompanied by an offer to pay my
expenses, which would be around $100.
Elizabeth and the family urged me to go for they feared I was working too
hard. My school associates felt that it would be a good thing for the school, thus
to advertise it, so I accepted the invitation
·
setting the date of my visit for the last of
March. Of course, I don not wish to take
so wonderful a trip without taking my wife
along. Elizabeth has a great dread of
travelling, however, and could not be
persuaded to go. She urged me to take
Gleason Jr. along. He was very eager to
go, so I included him in my plans. It
seemed to mE! that when I was so near
Florida, which was then in the midst of a
great boom ais a winter resort, I ought to
take some portion of Florida into my
itinerary. Young son was very exuberant
over this idea but insisted that we should
swing far enough south to see "waving
palm trees."
In consulting Raymond &amp;
Whitcomb, the travel experts, they
suggested Sarasota, Fla. as a quiet and
beautiful spot for a few days. The

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
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itinerary was drawn up and tickets procured for each sector of the journe!y. Then
I fell victim to a species of influenza quite epidemic at the time. For three weeks
and up to the very time of my scheduled trip I was very much of an invalid,
running a fever every day and losing weight as a consequence.
A few days before sailing time I was able to be out of bed and around our
apartments, but very rarely down stair in the office. My doctor said that the trip
would do my good. We felt sure that on the Savannah boat would be ample
medical attention until I reached the summer warmth of the south.
So on a Saturday afternoon, March 13th or 14th, Gleason and I took a taxi
to the steamboat for our grand adventure. If I remember correctly, the steamer
was the "City of Columbus." Although it was near sailing time I was surprised to
see the great boat deserted. There were no people on the dock on this cold and
cheerless afternoon and when we moved into the harbor there was scarcely half
a dozen passengers in sight on the deck.
Being still feverish, I made inquiries about a doctor in case I should have a
relapse. To my dismay, I found that because of the light travel at this time of
year, there was no physician aboard. Neither was there a barber. Fortunately I
had brought shaving equipment along.
When we had our first supper on the shipboard, I found that we could all
sit at the captain's table. Such a motley handful of passengers. There was one
tottering wreck of a man, so thin and antiquated that a gust of wind would have
wafted him overboard. His wife was much younger and, oh so fat! She went to
the other extreme and carried around all the beef of the family.
Then there was another couple in which the wife was a little frail old lady,
one of the plainest mortals that ever drew breath. She was squired by a devoted
husband-who looked many years her junior, a fine upstanding man, well muscled
and in every way a contrast to his unfortunate wife.
There were several other passengers, but the ones referred to are the
only ones that I now recall with any degree of clarity. Gleason, now nearly ten
years old, was the only child aboard. Son had some definite ideas of his own
and before starting had procured a blank book in which to keep a journal of his
trip. This record began he began to write on his first day out. One of the first of
his tasks was to write a description of each of the passengers, a circumstance
that later led to a hair-raising predicament.
That fact that so young a child was engaged in literary endeavors was
soon known to the other passengers, for he did a good deal of it in the main
saloon. Quite naturally the old ladies of the party were soon quite friendly with
the small boy. On the last day of the sea trip they had become so friendly that
son was persuaded to read his Journal to them. Now he had written so much
that he had quite forgotten the frank description of the passengers. He did not
discover the damaging entries until he was in the midst of them. The ladies were
so delighted with his recital and so curious to know what he had written about
them that they would not let him pause, so he was obliged to read the unflattering
and truthful comments, while his audience rocked with laughter. In fact, they
liked him all the better for it.

�74

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It happened that one of the ladies had a copy of the American Magazine
and was quit43 thrilled to discover that I was a fellow passenger and that young
Gleason was the child pictured with me in the illustration that accompanied the
story.
Gleason distinguished himself in many ways on that trip but particularly at
the table. The food was excellent, a fact apparent even to me in my ill and jaded
condition of body. I went to the table each mealtime but ate very little. We were
encountering very heavy weather and the ship wallowed a good deal. As I sat at
the table I could see through the long windows of the dining saloon the
remarkable antics of the horizon line. At one moment it would drop below my
range of visic,n. The next moment it would come swinging up, rising into the
window-view nearly to the top of the window, only to do down as suddenly.
Meanwhile, we were somewhat concerned lest our dishes on the table would get
away from us.
I did some writing in our stateroom but the chills that accompanied my
fever, as well as the heavy cough that afflicted me, led me to spend a good deal
of time in the bunk with an electric heating pad on my chest. In fact, if it had not
been for the pad, I should have suffered a great deal more than I did. The
weather continued very cold and inclement until, on the last morning when we
steamed up the yellow Savannah River. It was then quite warm.
We arrived at Savannah about noontime, having been delayed on our trip
by an accident to the crankshaft. The night when we rolled and tossed for hours
on the open sea while a new pin was being inserted in the shaft is a very vivid
recollection, not only for the discomfort at the time, but because I feared that the
delay would throw my entire schedule out of gear. Fortunately, however, we
reached Savannah in time to connect with the train for Jacksonville, Fla.
The train ride down the melancholy coastline of Georgia was quite
fascinating but also dispiriting. To see endless miles of swamp land, dark and
more or less forbidding in places, and yet in which human beings and domestic
animals strove to exist was surely depressing. I shall never forget the cows,
scrawny and even emaciated, nearly knee-deep in mud and water moving feebly
along in search of grass on some hummock or reaching for moss among the
trees. Once of twice I saw a dead cow lying on its side on some patch of dry
ground, its legs grotesquely extended and its body bloated as no food had ever
bloated it. Se&gt;mehow, I felt as glad for the dead cow as I felt sad for the living
ones.
We reached Jacksonville with two or three hours to spare before the train
for the west coast would leave. So with Gleason and my movie camera we made
a circuit of thE~ town. We took a bus ride around the park system and found the
trip one found of glorious scenery, fortunately, we had taken our overcoats along.
While it was very warm when we started, yet before we returned from the trip I
was glad to be buttoned tightly into my fur coat.
My clinical thermometer told me, when we were in the sleeping car that
night, that I was still running a temperature. This was, of course, discouraging.
When morning came, I felt better. We were moving through very interesting
landscape. Palmetto palms were everywhere. Farms and fields and cottages

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whizzed past our windows, all looking joyful in the spring sunshine. The contrast
between the Georgie coastal swamps and this magnificent Eden of interior
Florida was quite inspiring to the one who had come from snows and winter of
Massachusetts.
(Hotel Victoria N.Y. City, Aug 12,)
We reached Sarasota at mid-forenoon and took a taxi to the hotel! selected
by the tourist agency. The hotel was now and hastily constructed as I ce&gt;uld wellimagine for the entire town had sprung up overnight. The closet in my room was
roughly plastered and there was nothing about the place that was first class
except the price.
A friend of Wilmont R. Evans, in fact the husband of Mrs. Evan's niece - a
young named Crist, was in the real estate business in Sarasota. He hadl invited
us the lunch with him, so when Gleason and I had freshened up a bit, we sallied
forth into the blinding sunshine to meet our appointment. His office was not far
from the hotel.
Now my eyes have always been very sensitive to bright sunlight but the
glare of that semi-tropical sunshine was positively painful to me. I walked up the
street with my eyes almost closed, surveying the dazzling world through narrow
slits. And it was a glorious scene - a beautiful town with palm trees and tropical
foliage everywhere.
Mr. Crist was expecting us and probed to be a very engaging young man,
as was his business partner. They had arranged for a luncheon at an inn on the
edge of Sarasota beach. The drive thither by automobile was a joyous affair for
my small son whose capacity for enjoyment is quite beyond description. Two
great ambitions had possessed him for some hours. The first was to gather
some Spanish moss and the second was to climb a palm tree, both of which
ambitions he was to realize before the sun had set that day. But he was obliged
to postpone both experiences until after the luncheon engagement.
The meal was very appetizing and the company was congenial. After
lunch we strolled on the beach in the warm sunshine. It was hard to realize that
the calendar spoke truth in labeling this day the eighteenth day of March. To see
women and girls disporting on the beach and in the warm waters of the Gulf of
Mexico in scanty bathing suits was to complete the sense of unreality that
engulfed us. I could not help thinking of the wintry scenes of New England from
which I had so recently come.
I took some moving pictures to commemorate the occasion and thus
brought back visual evidence of the summer land of Florida. Our hosts were
eager to show us the country and set out through a section then about to,
undergo development. There were rumors afloat that an Indian mound had been
discovered by road-builders and we headed for the spot.
To anyone as interested as I in such things, the Indian mound was worth
coming many miles to see. It seems that the steam shovel had dipped into the
edge of an innocent-appearing mound of sand, from which soil of the region is
famous, and had dropped the human skulls and human bones into the truck
which it was loading.

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This fact quite ruined the morale of the Negro laborers and also called a
halt to the wc&gt;rk at that point. The Smithsonian people had been notified of the
discovery and when we arrived several scientists were in the spot and were
superintending the digging. They were working with great care and precision
cutting the bank evenly up and down so that the position of the bones could be
noted as they dug the sand from around them.
It was quite fascinating to see the skulls unearthed, looking for all the
world when first discovered like balls, only gray, like damp sand. When the sand
had been brushed away from the skull, its hollow eye sockets appeared and the
lower jaw dropped off, having now no pressure of sand to hold the jaw in the
position it had occupied for centuries,
We saw several skeletons unearthed and I took some moving pictures of
the process. The scientists declared that the great quantity of skeletons and the
positions of the bodies indicated that it was a common grave for the burial of
Indian braves killed in some pre-historic battle among the local tribes.
While young Gleason had been intent on Spanish moss, he was quite
fascinated by the box of bones that the Smithsonian party had collected. He was
eager to secure a skull as a souvenir but I was not willing that he should do so
even if the m~n had permitted. But as it was he managed to secure two jaw
teeth from thE! ruins and came away happy.
In fact he espied a tree full of Spanish moss nearby and we grownups
pulled down enough of it for him to stuff a pillow. When we drove back to the
hotel he was still in rapture over the treasures he had secured. Mr. Crist was
quite insistent that we take dinner at his house that evening and set the time
when he and Mrs. Crist would call for us at the hotel.
The afternoon was well spent and when we had inspected the park
opposite the hotel it was within half and hour of time for our hosts to arrive.
Young Gleason then realized that he had not climbed a palm tree and he
announced hiis intention of remedying the neglect at once.
He selected a young palm of the Palmetto variety - a cabbage palm - that
had shed its cluter jacket of husks up to a dozen or fifteen feet from the ground.
Gleason had on his best suit but the trunk looked clean and inviting, so up he
went, all the while exclaiming "Oh Boy" or some such ejaculation. When he had
climbed as high as he desired he looked down at me in triumph but the exertion
had quite winded him, so he began to slide back to earth.
Then it was that I noticed that his smiled vanished and a startled look
came into his face. The seat of his trousers as well as the insides of his legs
hugged the trunk very closely and as the small boy came down the trunk he was
aware that something dreadful was happening to him. The trunk was covered
with slender needles of fiber all pointing upward and the very fact that had helped
him climb now hindered his descent except at the cost of collecting a million
needles that pricked through the cloth to the very hide of the boy.
When he reached the ground he was a wreck. His clothes were literally
filled with needles that prevented him from walking or even straightening up. So
it was not only an act of mercy but necessity as well that I assisted him to pick
the fibers out of his pants. It must have been an amusing tableau but between

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us we made him quite comfortable in his nether anatomy before the Crists'
arrival.
Mrs. Crist proved to be a vivacious and charming young lady, not long
married and proud of her domestic establishment. Gleason Jr. made a great hit
with her and with some of his astonishing grownup remarks quite bowled her
over. He assisted her with the dishes, I believe, or at least it sounded to me as
though he were doing so. We spent a delightful evening and Mrs. Crist invited us
to go with them to Serasota Beach the next forenoon.
That night in the hotel was a revelation in more ways than one. The bed
was none too comfortable despite the fact the rooms were $10 a day per. The
weather was hot and the horrible thirst-provoking water of Florida had already
given me considerable distress in the stomach. I got up in the night to endeavor
to draw some cool water from the faucet. When I turned on the light I beheld a
most amazing sight.
In the hotel, so new that it smelled of plaster, there were untold hoards of
cockroaches. They had quite covered the top of the wash bowl in my room and
were holding a convention around my toothbrush. One old granddaddy was in
the act of making an oration over it. When the light went on, such a commotion
and scattering to places of safety then took place.
Although the weather had looked somewhat dubious when we went to
bed, yet morning dawned in tropic brilliance. There were no meals served in the
hotel, so Gleason and I went our way to a restaurant. It was kept in brigands of
some sort because every item on the menu was a hold up.
Of course, this didn't mean anything to Gleason and he proceeded to
order a three or four dollar breakfast only to find that when he had consumed
some kind of dry breakfast food the could have been purchased in Boston for
fifteen cents he couldn't hold any more and was obliged to send the rest back to
the kitchen - I paying for it, of course. After that I obliged him to order and eat
before ordering again so that his appetite would keep pace with his needs and
capacity.
Mrs. Crist came for us at the scheduled time and drove for miles through
tropical scenes to the Ringling section of Serasota. We took some moving
pictures. Mrs. Crist and Gleason staged an animated scene that came out very
well on the screen. Construction work prevented us from reaching the beach by
automobile, so we left the machine and clambered over planking of a bridge that
was in process of building. Our hostess was very agile and attracted a great deal
of attention from the workmen. They were not at all annoying in their attitude so
we gained the beach with nothing to mar the pleasant adventure of the morning.
The sand of the beach was white and dazzling in the tropical sunshine.
There was, moreover, a very stiff breeze blowing, and fine sand rained upon us
at all times. Mrs. Crist was rather small of stature and quite slender so the wind
was somewhat of an affliction to her.
Gleason was filled with joy at the strange and beautiful shells to bE~ found
on the beach, so we became shell hunters, helped along somewhat by the
breeze from the gulf. One amusing incident remains in memory. We spi1ed a
small party of boys camping out in the beach. They had a pup tent and close

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besides it in the sand was a fire of driftwood. When we approached them they
told us they were spending the day on the beach but had not watch with them,
and wondered how long it would be before sunset. They said they had eaten
dinner and supper and would go home at sunset. But inasmuch as it was
between 10 and 11 o'clock in the forenoon I informed them that they would need
several more meals if they wished to avoid starving before sunset. Their chagrin
over the fact that they had eaten all their food was very ludicrous. However, they
were good sports and when I forced them to take some money for the horde of
shells that they had gathered and insisted upon giving to Gleason, they felt
better.
We returned from our excursion and made a visit to the fish market on the
edge of the bay or harbor just in time to see the pelicans getting their morning
meal. It seems that the fishing boats tie up at a certain hour of the morning an
the marksmen or the fishermen, I am not quite clear after the lapse of time, dress
the fish and hurl the offal to the feathered garbage cans.
The pelican is a large bird with a bag under his chin, a long neck and a
raucous voice. Such a clamor as those birds set up, squawking and flapping
wings, jostling each other in the water, swearing and scolding if somebody else
gobbled their unsavory looking mess that he or she was after. Of course I took
moving pictures, as usual.
I must not forget the fishing trip that son and I enjoyed that afternoon. I
chartered a motor boat had my first experience at trolling the sea for monsters.
One giant mackerel was our only catch and I could him within ten minutes after
leaving the wharf. We raced through miles of winding waterways among islands
in the bay.
Gleason and I were looking for alligators but it was somewhat too early in
the season for the creatures to be out. The boatman finally took us out into the
gulf and tried some deep sea fishing without success. The sea was very rough
and the wind was hot. I got sunburned but this was of small consequence beside
the fact that the tropical sun roasted the last vestige of the "flu" out of me and for
the first day in nearly three weeks I was free from fever.
There is little else to tell of the Florida trip. We entertained the Grists at
sinner in the swell hotel of the city (not the one at which we were rooming) and
took the train for Georgia. I was surprised at the great distances in the Southland
for the trip to Atlanta was much more lengthy than I had anticipated.
We arrived in the famous city - famous for Sherman's march from "Atlanta
to the sea" as well as for other things. It was Sunday
(Written in Chicago, Ill August 19, 1930.)
and we were glad of a brief period of rest from out trip through the picturesque
southern mountalns.
Dean Hamilton Douglas came for us that evening, however, and took us to his
mother's home for an evening call. I had known her husband, a fine old southern
gentleman, and found the widow to be a very gracious hostess. We spent a
pleasant evening in this home so typical of the South at its best. Gleason was
delighted with all that he saw and experienced. I am sure that he gave equal
pleasure to the grownups who showered him with attentions.

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Our progress for Monday was light so far as the forenoon was concerned but at
noontime I was to be the guest at a luncheon given in my honor at the Capital
City Club. While I had expected this to be a modest little affair where I would
meet informally with a few of the graduates of Atlanta Law School, I was quite
amazed to find that in the reception rooms awaiting my coming was a most
distinguished array of leaders of bench and bar.
Not only were the chief justices of the Superior Circuit of the Court of
Appeals and the Supreme Court but Governor Clifford Walker of Georgia was
also soon to arrive. Southern hospitality quite outdid itself.
Then when we filed into the special dining room and seated ourselves
around a great oval table, I was placed between Governor Walker and Dean
Douglas. The only disturbing fact was that I was expected to make an after
sinner speech to this distinguished array of orators. The dinner was a very jolly
affair.
When I was introduced I gave them a very informal and heart to heart talk
on the need of greater understanding between the north and south and of the
obliteration of memories of old wrongs growing out of the Civil War. My talk
evidently made a very strong appeal to the emotional Southerners, for Governor
Walker followed me with on of the most eloquent speeches on the same theme
that I ever heard.
With his hand on my shoulder as he talked, he assured me that 'When a
Republican Congress and a Republican President enacted a bill for the minting
of a special Stone Mountain Memorial Coin, they had wiped the stain of traitor
from Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and all the great Southern leaders. He
declared that the Mason and Dixon line had been forever erased.
It happened that I had in my briefcase a copy of my new textbook on
evidence. Desiring a permanent souvenir of the meeting, I used the flyleaf of this
book to secure a complete autographed roster of those present.
When the very pleasant occasion had ended, Dean Douglas took me and
my small son to Stone Mountain where the very impressive work of sculpturing
the mountainside was in progress. That evening I made an address to the
students of Atlanta Law School and thus fulfilled the main purpose of the trip. I
was received with great honor by the students and was surprised to be greeted
by a graduate of Suffolk Law School who had learned of my visit through the
newspapers.
Tuesday was also a lively day from the standpoint of sightseeing, visiting,
etc. Governor Walker had invited me to call at the executive offices. Of course I
took Gleason along, and of course he was the center of attraction.
Governor Walker has a great way with children. He seated Gleason in the
Governor's chair (one occupied by Alexander H. Stevens of Civil War fame) and
declared him Governor for one minute. Then he took him around the offices,
showing him pictures and relics of former governors, all the while talking to him in
the most entertaining manner.
From the Governor's office we went to the Supreme Court to return Chief
Justice "Dick" Russell's courtesy of the day before. Judge Russell is a tall, rawboned man. He told me that his ambition had been to have eighteen children,

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but he fell short by two. That he was a very entertaining host goes without
saying. When he had chatted a while, he called in the Associate Justices of the
court and after he had introduced me to each and we stood together, the Chief
Justice exclaimed "He don't look like a dammed Yankee, does he?" In fact, I
heard it said more than once when I was in Atlanta that in appearance and
speech I could quite easily pass for a native of Georgia. This is no doubt due to
the circumstance that our ancestors came from the same section of England and
that in isolated communities the original manner of speech had for the most part
been preserved in both sections of the nation.
There was another luncheon engagement to be met, this time with the
alumni of Atlanta Law School, and this, of course, required another speech.
Gleason Jr. was with me at these affairs. Dean Douglas was planning to give us
an afternoon of sightseeing and we, in fact, set out on such a trip, but were
obliged by a very alarming circumstance to abandon it and dash back to the
hotel. Gleason was seized with a violent attack of indigestion. We called the
house physician, undressed the youngster, and did everything possible to relieve
him. To say that we were alarmed at his condition is to put it mildly. The way we
dashed about for remedies! Hot water bottles, a syringe and other needed
articles were procured in frantic haste. It was surely a historic moment when two
law school deans united their efforts in giving young Gleason an enemal
When Dean Douglas had rendered all the assistance possible, he went
home to break the news to his wife, for she had planned an elaborate dinner for
us, as the final act of courtesy before our departure. We both agreed that
Gleason's condition was too serious to think of my leaving him.
Dean Douglas called me by telephone twice after leaving. The first time
found Gleason resting comfortably and the second time the invalid astonished
me by declaring from his bed that he was beginning to feel hungry. So I
promised to bring him over and we would feed him some gruel or something.
But there was no gruel diet for him. No sir, Gleason sat at the table with
us and ate a man-sized dinner. It was quite amazing to us grownups to see how
completely he had recovered from his ghastly sickness of the afternoon.
Dean Douglas' household was peculiar. He was divorced from his first
wife and his young son was living with the mother. By a strange twist of fate,
Douglas had married a divorced woman who had a son about the age of his own.
The strangest feature of all was the fact that the woman's former husband had
retained Dean Douglas to divorce him. The two were still friendly but each was
obliged to visit his own child from an automobile in front of the respective houses
of their divorced wives.
We returned to Boston by rail stopping for a day in Washington en route
reaching home after an absence of two weeks. One very gratifying result of this
trip was that in June of 1926 I received a telegram from Dean Douglas stating
that the Trustees and Facuity of Atlanta Law School had voted unanimously to
confer upon me the degree of L.L.D. I was unable to be present at the ceremony
but received the document in due course. Thus, one of the ambitions of my life
was realized.

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In closing the entries for the school year of 1925-26, it should be noted
that Miss Caraher's sister Mrs. Margaret Gillespie was added to our mimeograph
and clerical force, so that we now have four women (Miss Antorietta Cranpa,
stenographer, Mrs. Gillespie, who operated the mimeograph machine and did
general clerical work, Mrs. Edith M. M_ , who was a filing clerk and assistant
recorder as well as Miss Caraher herself) and one man (H. Rossiter Snyder)
busily engaged in performing the duties that Miss Catherine and I had formerly
carried, with the building program as an additional burden. This additional staff
was, of course, warranted by the growth and added prosperity of the school.
Rev. Henry S. Snyder continued as assistant treasurer.
In the Review Department, Hiram had long been obliged to employ a part
time staff of correctors of student papers. But during the year he added a full
time assistant, Harry Bloomgberg, a recent graduate of the school. Alden
Cleavland, who for several years had been manager of the school bookstore,
was also assisting in the correction of papers.
During the summer of 1926, it became apparent to me that the necessary
school expenses, mounting as they must with the necessary expansion of our
work, would soon make serious inroads upon our tuition receipts unless we
increased our tuition rates. The limit of growth had well been reached and a
recession of the tide of post-war registration must soon manifest itself and thus
cause a crisis in our treasury which for some years must pay very heavy sums of
on bonds and mortgages.
Accordingly, in August 1926, the Trustees met and voted to increase the
tuition to $140 a year to all students who might enter after March 1927. This was
a very important decision, the wisdom of which has abundantly been
demonstrated in the years since.

Events of 1926-27
Advance registrations indicate that the impending change in tuition rates
would cause a great increase in the freshman class for 1926-27, and so it
proved. Before the close of registrations for the mid year entering class we had
men which is doubtless the largest
reached the phenomenal figure of
class that we may ever expect to enroll. The grand total of students for the year
rose to 2440 men.
Now that school affairs have become so well ordered and the school itself
had attained a degree of financial independence, I felt that we ought to turn our
attention to the alumni of the school. Our roster of graduates has now attained
impressive proportions and although various attempts have been made to
organize them into an association, these attempts have invariably met with
disaster. The latest attempt had been made by me in 1925 when I called the
various classes that had graduated to a mass meeting and urged them to
organize. But inasmuch as the latest class to graduate had the majority vote and
they knew no one in the earlier classes, they elected their own men to office and
thus ruined all prospects of a true alumni association.

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In January 1927 I placed before the trustees and faculty a new plan of
reorganization. Under the plan I was to act as director for the first six months,
during which time I hoped to get the alumni sufficiently acquainted with each
other so that they might organize a truly representative association.
The school was to finance the attempt and in my call for a great mass
meeting to be held in March 10, 1927, I suggested several constructive plans.
1. Monthly meetings of the organization except during July and August.
2. A monthly magazine devoted to Suffolk and Suffolk graduates.
3. Appointment of committees on Judicial appointments and election to public
office of Suffolk graduates.
4. A housing committee to make plans for a permanent home of the association
on Beacon Hill.
The convention for organization was to be held in the school auditorium
and on the appointed night came the gathering of the clans. To my surprise and
annoyance I learned that a certain disgruntled element among our graduates had
boasted their intention of wrecking the movement. But I did not intend that any
such disloyal tactics should be permitted free reign in the meeting.
A musical program was one feature of the evening. Martin W. Powers
'25, sang several solos and my good wife sang three selections, all of which were
enthusiastically received/
The name of the new organization was the first item of business and after
some debate the name "Suffolk Law Alumni Association" was adopted. The
question of issuing an alumni catalog provoked a warm debate and the matter
was finally tabled until the question of expenses could be investigated. The
question of a clubhouse was discussed at considerable length, but no positive
action was taken.
After this meeting had adjourned, George H. Spillane of the faculty came
to me with a suggestion that we form a "committee of founders," each member of
the committee donating $100 toward a building fund. The idea looked good to
me and at a faculty meeting held during the following week I had Professor
Spillane explain the plan to his associates. I led off with a subscription of $400,
and before the meeting was over we had a total of pledges of $2300.
Later, at my suggestion, the Trustees voted to purchase a clubhouse and
offer it rent-free provided the alumni would raise enough money for alterations
and equipment of the building.
These facts were duly announced to the alumni both in a mimeographed
notice and in the first issue of the Suffolk Alumni News which appeared early in
April 1927. I was the editor of the new publication during the year 1927.
At the alumni meeting of May 12, 1927 a circumstance developed that well
nigh terminated my earthly career. For some days I had been suffering from a
strange internal malady that seemed to me to indicated appendicitis. On
Tuesday morning I remember that I went to James E. Prior and told him of my
symptoms. He declared that I did not have the suspected malady and prescribed
a strong cathartic. We were in the midst of an annual rush preceding the final
meeting of the faculty, so I worked with no apprehensions of trouble. On

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Wednesday morning, however, I noticed whenever I coughed (I was recovering
from a heavy cold) a stabbing pain in the vicinity of my right hip. Another visit to
the doctor was much like the first - assurance that I could not have appendicitis
and advice to try another drastic purging of the bowels.
By Wednesday night I was becoming somewhat groggy but I managed to preside
at the Faculty banquet and the "agony session" on the graduation list that
followed the dinner. Thursday morning found me a trifle better and so I labored
diligently clearing up the details of some left over cases and preparing for the
alumni meeting for that evening (May 12th, to which I have already referred).
Prior to that meeting my symptoms became so alarming that I made sure
that James H. Brennan would be present to take my place as presiding officer in
case I collapsed. During the evening, while the men were gathering, I talked with
one or two graduates who had been operated upon for appendicitis and one of
the told me that his warning pains had been located near his hip. I, therefore,
became convinced that I was facing a very serious crisis in my life.
I gave not intimation of my condition to the alumni who assembled in the
school that evening and although I was obliged to lean on the pulpit for support I
managed to keep on my feet until the evening was over. Immediately after the
meeting, however, and the nervous tension had abated, I suffered a virtual
physical collapse. The pains that had made the previous night a period of torture
now returned in alarming spasms. A great trembling seized me so that it was
with difficulty that I climbed the stairs to our apartments in the school building.
It was then nearly eleven o'clock but I managed to get Dr. Prior by
telephone. When I described my symptoms he seemed distressed and alarmed.
He advised me to go at once to the emergency ward of the Massachusetts
General Hospital. So I called a taxi. Before going downstairs I awakened my
wife and told her not to be alarmed for I was merely going to the Massachusetts
General for advise and might stay the night in the emergency ward.
Poor girl! She was very much alarmed and excited and wanted to
accompany me or have Allan go. But I concealed my real condition as much as I
could and assured her that the taxi was probably at the door and that the trip
would be over in a moment, the hospital was so near.
Although the month was May, I was so full of chills that I put on my fur
coat and wobbled out to the waiting taxi. It was an ancient machine and seemed
to me absolutely springless as we clattered down the rough streets that led to the
hospital. Every jounce added fresh torture, so that before I reached the
emergency I was scarcely able to leave the taxi. Only with great effort did I
manage to climb the steps and enter the office.
At this distance of time the recollection of events of that midnight
adventure bear all the earmarks of nightmare. A man at the desk directed me to
a room off the nearby corridor with instructions to remove my clothing, saying
that a surgeon would look at me in a moment. A painful and desperate business
it was for me but I somehow managed to accomplish the task and climb onto a
white cot bed that awaited me. If I had been chilled before the moment of
touching the cold sheets of the bed, I was now thrown into a chill that caused my
teeth to chatter in spite of all my efforts at self-control.

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A young man in white raiment, pad and pencil in hand, came to me
presently and began to ply me with questions as to my name and previous
condition of servitude (?) . Then to my surprise he volunteered the information
that I was born in Maine and was the Dean of Suffolk Law School. Ill as I was,
this circumstance surprised me until he had explained that he roomed with one of
my students and had recently read ''The Impossible Task," a history of our
building campaign which I had published the previous fall.
Then cam a surgeon, Dr. John Hodgson, also in white who enquired my
symptoms and tapped and prodded my abdomen. He was apparently mystified
and declared that I should be held for observation. Inasmuch as I was not a
charity patient it would be necessary to remove me to the Phillips House. If
necessary, he would operate on me. I insisted upon knowing how much his fee
would be in such an event and he named a figure that I considered very
reasonable. Perhaps if he had known who it was he would have charged a great
deal more. However, I did not, as it turned out, hold him to his original figure but
added a substantial amount to the fee.
The removal to Phillips House was arranged by Dr. Hodgson who
promised to see my again as soon as I was installed in a room. An attendant
came with a white wagon, a cot bed on wheels and I was transferred to its icecold surface. Again, I was seized with a chill - this time more violent than before.
Then began a nightmare journey the like of which could scarcely occur to me
again in this life.
Struggling to control my chattering teeth, I looked up at a grotesquely
changing ceiling as the wagon rolled down the corridor, into other subterranean
corridors where steam pipes occupied the space above me, with wheels and
valves and elbows in most amazing array. All the while I was aware of a
protesting, squeak from one of the wheels of that wagon, a squeak that rose and
fell in dirge-like cadence cutting my overwrought nerves like a knife.
Then to cap the climax of and to add a sort of nightmare horror to the
journey, I was suddenly aware of two roaring furnaces side by side, their great
mouths emitting a dazzling glare of white heat, and the crazy attendant was
wheeling me straight into them. But this was more than nightmare delirium for as
it proved, the corridor passed between two furnaces.
My next recollection was of the ride up the elevator to a room in the
Phillips House and of the transfer to another cold bed. By this time I was so
exhausted by chills that my condition was beyond description. However, a deftfingered nurse took me in charge, placed hot water bottles at my feet and did
much to relieve my distress. Dr. Hodgson came and examined me again. He left
some medicine to be administered at regular intervals and left me in the care of
the nurse.
It was several hours - in fact almost morning - before I dropped into a
doze, no doubt induced by opiates. But during that wakeful period, I wrestled
mentally with all the unsettled problems of the school year and jotted down in a
little memorandum book with the intention of dictating full instructions to my
secretary, Miss Catharine Caraher, when morning should come.

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Shortly after 8 AM. Hiram arrived at the hospital full of alarm at my
condition and through him I sent a reassuring word to Elizabeth and information
that she would be allowed to see me after nine o'clock. She came very promptly
and we discussed the impending operation from all angles and its implications. I
arranged a plan for temporary finances during my illness and explained my
various life insurance policies in event of my death. She was very courageous
and helpful as she has ever been in every crisis. But she bade me a somewhat
tearful farewell at parting because she knew that before her next visit I would go
on the operating table.
At my request, Elizabeth sent Catharine, with checkbooks, ledger and
senior records for a final session of business. For some three hours I dictated
letters and memoranda. I signed checks and also gave Catharine a note to the
bank to supply her with funds in case of an emergency. We labored on Senior
leftovers and as far as possible arranged the details and duties that would
intervene between then and graduation time. The details of my will and estate,
real and personal, were gone over at some length and Catharine was given full
directions how to proceed in case of my death. Thus my house was put in order.
Alden Cleveland, the new alumni secretary, came for further instructions in
matter s of the new association.
I had already determined not to force another night without having my
appendix out and had sent word to Dr. Hodgson. So now I had the children
come to visit me. Allan came along for a brief manly visit, full of courage and
good cheer.
Marian and Gleason came together. It happened that, during their visit,
my room was shifted to a less expensive section of the building. I had thriftily
decided that a view of the harbor was not worth several extra dollars a day especially when I would not probably feel well enough to enjoy it.
So they gave me a room on the second floor overlooking an inner
courtyard. I was transferred, bed and all, to the new room. The two children
were ushered in immediately, so we finished our visit. They both clung to me
and wept before leaving because the dread of an operation oppresses even
children.
It must have been nearly five o'clock when the children left me. Of course,
I was to have no supper because the operation was to occur as soon as the
necessary arrangements could be made. I heard the doctor telephoning for the
assignment of the operating room and for nurses and for an assistant physician.
To tell the truth, it was all somewhat nerve wracking to me now that I had
committed myself to the operation and in fact ordered it to be performed. Dr.
Hodgson is a very mild-mannered little man. He was uncertain whether I had
appendicitis and the case might have dragged on for days without action on his
part had I not taken the decision into my own hands.
A circumstance that I have not mentioned was that this was Friday the 13th
of May, and to Catharine and some others, the thought of my being operated
upon on this alleged unlucky day was very disconcerting. I was urged to wait
until the next day, but not being superstitious, the date did not disturb me.

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However, I had sentenced myself to the knife and had a very lively horror
of ether because of previous experience when I had had excessive palpitation
when passing under the influence of ether.
Fortunately, there was very little time for reflection. The hospital was a
business place. A painfully plain and painfully embarrassed nurse came in to
make me ready for the operation. In other words, she was to shave all the hair
from my body from below my armpits to the lowest point where the operation
might extend, thus to make ready for the adhesive tape used in bandaging.
I doubt if that girl had ever shaved a patient before. She was armed with a
safety razor and had very little idea how to use it. After she struggled a while I
took pity on her and did most of the work myself while she looked on. The
shaving was the job of this particular nurse, but others came. One brought me a
peculiar kind of long legged garment with feet attached that pulled on like rubber
boots and fastened at the hips.
Another pinched my arm and gave me a hypodermic of some kind of dope
intended to quiet the nerves before taking ether. By that time the wagon cot was
rolled in my room and I was transferred from the bed to it. A white garmented
orderly rolled me to the elevator and took me to the anteroom of the operating
chamber.
I caught a glimpse of the business like operating table and the white clad
automatons, the nurses and doctors that stood at attention. It seemed to me that
they all wore masks of white gauze or something and I could not have
recognized Dr. Hodgson in the lot.
There was one doctor, however, who took charge at once.
"My but you are tall," he exclaimed as he looked me over in my sheeted
and strapped down condition. "Now I understand why your children are so much
taller than the average - I'm the school physician at Bowdon School. Now, I'm
going to give you the anaesthetic.
I explained to him my previous experience with ether and ask him to watch
my heart action. This he promised to do. Then he brought the mask slowly up to
my face and I heard a slight hissing sound as though they were also using gas.
"Breathe deep - breath deep," he repeated over and over and I did so with
strange and overwhelming results. I could feel his finger throbbing on my temple
and hear his voice in the most reassuring "All right" - "all right," in regular
rhythmic repetition. Except for that steady reassurance I should have become
quite alarmed at the buzzing in my ears, the pounding drumfire of my pulses and
the wild hallucinations that engulfed me. I seemed to be floating a million miles
from my body, but far back in the distance I head the reassuring "all right," and
knew that the doctor was standing guard over my body. In fact, I all the turmoil of
my reeling senses I listed with all my might for that voice when I head it.
But the time came when there was no reassuring voice, only a mighty
roaring as of all the trumpets that ever blew - wild hallucinations and almost
unendurable spasms of agony. Someone was in the room with me, ghostlike in
the dim light, begging me to lie still and laying hands upon me. Waves of
consciousness and greater waves of oblivion succeeded each other and the first
conscious thought was of gratitude to God that when I was thus helpless there

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were those who were fighting for me and who would do everything human
possible to save my life. Curiously enough, there was the thought also that the
money I had saved when in health was now able to shield me when on the
borderline of eternity, for I was paying these people to render this service.
But my gradual return to consciousness was shot through with the horrible
realization that my bronchial tuber were fairly plugged with mucus and every
breath I drew had the effect of strangulation that induced a spasmodic cough that
hurt me most frightfully. Then I realized that I was bound up in bandages from
my hips to my heart - tight, unyielding and vitally necessary. Then I knew that I
had been cut open and sewed up and this it was the stitches of the fresh wound
that caused such excruciating agony when I coughed. Then I tried to minimize
the number of coughing spells.
Of course I realized that unless that mucus was removed from my
bronchial tubes it meant death but I was also aware that if moved up and down
valve-like with my breath and must be expelled by coughing. To control the
coughing spells and make every one count now engaged my every effort. It was
indeed a grim battle that I fought in the early morning of May 14, 1927 in that
room in the Phillips House, with a special nurse at my bedside.
You see, I had been under ether six hours and it was nearly one o'clock in
the morning when I first demanded the time. During this long period of
unconsciousness the very croupy cough from which I had recently been suffering
flamed up afresh and I had a well-developed case of ether pneumonia.
My method of fighting was to hold myself as rigid as possible, breathing in
as slowly and quietly so not to draw the mucus further down into my lungs and
then to continue with each exhaled breath to give the obstruction a little upward
kick until it rose high enough so that the next inevitable spasm of coughing could
clear some of it away.
But every spasm of coughing, and they came at least once in every ten
minutes despite all my efforts, was agony such as I would never dream a man
could live through for any length of time. That I was tearing my wound open and
that I was bleeding internally was the thought that possessed me. The cold
sweat that poured from my head and face with each spasm kept the nurse busy
wiping it away or changing my pillow. Even the sheet became sodden.
But there was not escape for me - no pause for rest possible - the fight
had to go on in the same way - else the devils I hell staged continuous
convulsions of torture. I believed I once begged the nurse to have somebody
shoot me the next time I coughed. However, like all horrors of physical pain, it
could not last. I gradually gained on my enemy, so far as the strangling
obstruction was concerned.
Daylight came and as early as the hospital authorities would permit, my
dear anxious wife was permitted to see me. I had demanded also that Catharine
be permitted to bring my mail. This was reluctantly granted and the young lady
arrived but she was too wise to bother me with business matters. She reported
that all was well at the school. The newspaper reports of my illness and
operation were read to me.

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But neither to my wife or secretary was I more than a ghastly shadow of
my former self. The coughing was now fairly under control but the nausea of
ether poisoning was riding me hard. It was not until noontime that the nurse
succeeded in inducing me to vomit and thus to relieve the nausea.
Well, it was grim and desperate experience for the first eight days. Ether
pneumonia, with high fever and great debility of body, quite wore away my
strength and flesh. Unable to eat for more that a week, I probably lost more than
thirty pounds in weight.
There was in fact one day and night when my life was despaired of and
the newspapers carried stories that alarmed my students and friends. Elizabeth
was quite broken down with worriment and distress and Hiram grew very
pessimistic and blue.
I shall always feel that on the night when my fever was at its height the
nurse saved my life by plastering my body above the bandages with Balm Ben
Gay, thus inducing rivulets of perspiration that necessitated changing of pillow
slips and sheets. But when morning came my temperature was almost normal.
During my entire stay at the hospital my room was continuously stuffed
with the most gorgeous flowers. Friends sent many of them but the bulk of them
were from the students. Each of the classes had contributed generously to a
fund, which they turned over to Miss Catherine to purchase flowers in their
behalf. She visited me practically every day and thus kept an eye on the supply
of flowers, sending more whenever she saw the opportunity.
It was indeed a great consolation to have my wife and children visit me
daily during this trying time. Elizabeth usually came in the morning and the
children after school, except during the critical days when Elizabeth, Catherine
and Hiram were the only visitors permitted. Dr. AZ Conrad of Park Street
Church, and Rev. Harry B. Hill, of Tremont Street M. E. Church, as well as Rev.
Henry I. Bailey, a former pastor of the Temple Street Church, were also welcome
visitors. After the ban was lifted, my room was like my office. My secretary came
with the mail, took dictation and discussed the regular problems of the school.
We even had the annual meeting of the Board of Trustees in my hospital
room. To one as active and continually engaged in mental work as I have always
been these comings and goings of relatives and friends was welcome relief from
would otherwise have been a tedious convalescence.
It must not be supposed that with the turning of the tide of fever I became
at once free from pain. On the contrary, I found the occasional paroxysms of
coughing an enemy that stabbed into my vitals. The inevitable gas pains and the
general discomfort of body made it difficult to remain long in one position. The
nurses were very kind indeed. For the first eight days I had special nurses night
and day and, of course, their sole job was to wait on me.
But when the special nurses were dispensed with, I found that the regular
nurses were very considerate of my comfort. The nurse that I have mentioned as
preparing me for slaughter was one of the day staff and her special chum was a
sort of alternate with her. To this pair I owe a great debt of gratitude (the hospital
rules, as I later found, forbade any genuine reward to either) for they each made
it a point to breeze into my room with some cooling drink at frequent intervals, or

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to straighten my pillows change the slips, for in my weakened condition I
perspired like Scotch mist. They frequently came strolling in with the welcome
statement that they had nothing to do for the moment and would I like an alcohol
rub for my sorely afflicted back. Of course, I never declined their services for of
all applications of a hospital invalid most persistent is the inevitable discomfort of
the skin of back and shoulders from lying on bed. In my case, the bandages had
cut grooves in my hide and where the adhesive tape had been removed the skin
was very much irritated. The cooling rub was therefore a welcome relief.
The barber who visited me daily after the first few days was an Italian of a
very simple and fun loving nature. When he found that I could tell funny stories
he took great delight in hearing them, for he tried to learn them to retell to his
friends. There was one about Pat and Mike in a dark cellar that pleased him very
much and he called for it several times. "If yere alive spake and if yere dead say
so," was to him the most mirth provoking of "Irish bulls."
I managed to read a good deal during my stay in the hospital for I suffered
from insomnia and never could sleep without some kind of opiate for there was
just enough physical discomfort, even in the latter part of my stay at the Phillips
House to keep me awake at night. My arms still bear evidence of punctures of
hypodermic needles made during May 1927.
Not all the nurses were as agreeable as the ones I have mentioned.
There was one strong-jawed man-killer who was on night duty for a time. We
has one notable clash and only one for she learned her lesson. She came into
my room at 9 p.m. one evening and informed me that it was bedtime. The bed
had a mechanical devise for raising a patient to a sitting posture. She unjacked
this in spite of my protest that I was not sleepy and feared that I might not be able
to sleep. I explained my insomnia, etc.
But the masculine lady took away my glasses and my dressing gown.
She informed me that although other nurses may have spoiled me, she did not
intend to do so. After I had lain awake in the darkness for half an hour or more
and had become restless I rang for the nurse and asked her to fix my bed so that
I could read. She refused.
In my irritable condition her conduct was very exasperating. I switched on
my bed light and made certain investigations of the framework of the bed. Being
very strong in my arms, I contrived to jack up my bed into the sitting position. I
then rang for the nurse. Her consternation and rage was very amusing to me.
"That was a very dangerous thing to do. You may have hurt yourself a
great deal."
"Perhaps, but that is your fault," I retorted. "I am not in jail, you know, and
I am paying for the services rendered, so if you will kindly bring me my glasses."
"I won't do it," she declared.
"All right," I said. "You wouldn't jack up my bet, but I did it myself. I shall
get out of this bed and get the glasses."
She crossed the room and gave me the glasses.
"Now, the book I was reading." She got it. "And my dressing gown." She
took that from the closet. She evidently didn't like my triumphant grin when I

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thanked her. She didn't dare to slam the door when she went out but if I ever say
a mad nurse, she was that nurse.
The sequel to t he story is that at 1 o'clock she came in and gave me the
usual sleeping· shot in my arm, still mad but convinced that I could not be bossed
by a mere nurse.
The hospital as an institution is a world by itself whose business is the
caring for suffering and dying humanity. The sick room hears few echoes from
the outside world, at least from the nurses themselves. But one event occurred
during my stay at the Phillips House that caused great excitement among nurses
and patients alike - Lindbergh's epoch making Atlantic flight. My bronchial
pneumonia had just passed its crisis when I read in the morning paper (yes, I had
the daily papers even during the worst of my illness) that a young man had taken
off from New York all alone in an attempt to fly across the Atlantic. I remember
my reaction to the news. I was sure that the young man had gone to certain
death because I believed that even if his plane was adequate to the task, I would
be impossible for one man to pilot it for so many hours without sleep or rest. So,
I dismissed the matter from my mind except that I felt sorry for the latest "stunt
victim." Two French fliers had been lost in a similar attempt a few days before.
But when the news came that Lindbergh has actually crossed the ocean
and had been seen flying over Ireland and evidently heading for Paris, his
announced goal, it thought the entire hospital into a firment of excitement. The
news seemed too good to be true. That a marriageable young man was the hero
of the exploit thrilled every yearning female heart in the establishment.
Confirmation of the report and additional news came over the cables from
Europe. It was reported by the starry eyed nurses that the bells of the city would
ring loud and long at the first authentic report that the young hero had landed in
Paris. And ring they did in due time. Such a pealing of bells and blowing of
whistles I have not heard since Armistice was signed! It was a thrilling momenteven for me in ill and feeble condition. An American lad had captured the
imagination of the entire world. It was glorious to be alive in such an age of
romance and adventure.
Speaking of being alive reminds me of the warm gladness that crept into
my soul when I realized that I had passed the crisis of illness and was practically
assured of further years of usefulness. I had been through the valley of the
shadow and knew what it was to face the apparent necessity of leaving my life
work unfinished. There was one night - the night of crisis when the nurse worked
so hard over me - that I gave up all reasonable hope of living an clung to life
more in the spirit going down with my colors at the mast head than from any
reasoned belief that my ebbing strength could outlast the storm.
So I associated with Lindbergh's victory with my own triumph over
pneumonia. I date a new era of my life from that hospital room in the Phillips
House in May 1927. I there rededicated myself to the service of humanity as a
thank offer to God for having granted me a new lease on life.
Dr. Hodgson was making regular visits to my bedside and I was an
interested observer of all that he did in changing my bandage and inspecting my
wound. I forgot to say that from the first day I had possessed the grisly relic and

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treasure trove of the operation. The appendix was of the type known as an
inverted appendix. It was about six inches long when first removed. It had been
corkscrewed into my intestines instead of lying flat on the surface as all such
unnecessary troublemakers are supposed to be. It was due to the fact that Dr.
Prior and the others had been so deceived for to press or tap on the orthodox
spot produced no reaction at all. The trouble was inside and that is why I felt it
near the hip.
Dr. Prior came into the hospital the morning after the operation and
assured me what a real tremor in his voice how glad he was that I had insisted
upon my own diagnosis of appendicitis. Had I not done so, my appendix would
probably have ruptured before I received surgical aid.
This reminded me that for at least ten years I had suffered from the most
alarming and devastating attacks of what I supposed to be indigestion. A pain so
excruciating that all the world turned black before my eyes and I fell to the floor in
a dead faint was now explained by this operation. It was the diseased and
inflamed appendix that had caused it all. I remembered also the warning that Dr.
Chas. Hammond of Hanover had given me once - at least seven years before that I was suffering from chronic appendicitis and would die of some attack if I did
not have the thing cut out. This warning I had regarded as the mere guess of a
country doctor. But now I regard him an eminently wise physician despite his
provincial surroundings.
During the latter part of my sojourn at the hospital I had an orderly who
had been a former student of mine. He told me that he had been in the operating
room the night when I was operated upon and had seen the entire affair. It was
therefore my privilege, even though I was unconscious at the time, to see
through this young man's eyes the whole scene reproduced. The long cut
necessitated by the position of my appendix and the delicate operation itself!
What he told me was later confirmed by the surgeon. While they had me on the
table, they made a thorough search of my abdominal organs to be sure that the
appendix was my only weak spot.
The wound itself was about six inches long, as I observed when the
surgeon first removed the bandage. A nice piece of needlework it was, the
sewing up of the wound. For a long time after the wound was healed, I could
count the stitches etched in the skin, and my recollection is there were twenty of
them. But as an additional security against rupture, Dr. Hodgson had inserted
about four stitches of catgut, spaced some distance back of the regular stitches.
This precaution alone had saved me from fatal tearing during my
convulsions of coughing. As it was, the sawing on all the stitches has been so
violent as to tear the flesh around them and the holes around the catgut were
greatly enlarged. In fact, the angry appearance of the stitches gave the surgeon
some concern and he treated the wound with powerful antiseptic each say, finally
being obliged to remove the stitches entirely and strapping me tightly to avoid
rupture.
For several days the holes were the catgut stitches had been, exuded pus
so that the bandages looked as though I had had a hemorrhage. When they had
all healed but one, Dr. Hodgson gave reluctant consent to my leaving the
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hospital. I had already been up around the room and even into the invalid's
porch but I felt like a man of ninety trying to carry a millstone at his waste. It was
curious about the exceedingly heavy feeling in my abdomen. Although I was still
more than twenty pounds lighter that when I entered the hospital, I fancied that I
must weigh as much as a horse. The burden on my legs caused me to stagger
when I walked and if I had not worn what amounted to corsets around my waist, I
could not have navigated at all.
My faithful nurses came to visit me the night before I left and each of them
was rejoiced to find me so far recovered that I wished to leave the hospital.
Knowing that the plain one who had given me so much attention was so poor that
she was obliged to use an ancient dollar watch in her work of taking the pulse of
her patients, I later procured for her a beautiful wrist watch, specifically designed
for nurses, with an illuminated second hand that traveled all the way around the
dial. A less conscientious girl might have kept it but she returned it to me with a
letter overflowing with gratitude cut assuring me that the rules of the hospital
forbade any nurse to accept a gift of gratuity from a patient of former patient. So
daughter Marion fell heir to the treasure instead.
It must have been
,..
\,&lt;,t,;t,:'.' .:,;;:;:Fi:'·:~rJ::·v;1~ r;1-t~m~,&gt; : ~r.1 :~t~\:':~~f'
Memorial Day when I left the
hospital, for I took the family
by surprise when I buzzed up
from my office in the school
building to ask for help in
climbing the stairs. Memorial
Day would explain why the
office staff was absent.
Elizabeth and the children
came flying down to welcome
me home, and we had a
joyful reunion.
With the help of Allan's broad shoulders, and assistance from Elizabeth, I
managed to climb the stairs. When I reached our sunny living room, however, I
was so exhausted that I began to doubt the wisdom of coming home so soon. By
all tokens, I should have stayed another week, but so many important events
demanded my presence at the school building that I felt an imperative urge to
make the attempt.
The gladness of being home again, of viewing familiar scenes, and being
in the bosom of the family did much to combat the appalling weakness of body
that oppressed me. Elizabeth and the children did everything possible for my
comfort, but the pain and discomfort of my scarcely healed wound made me
more of less restless and ill at ease.
For several weeks I had been negotiating the purchase of the building at
73 Hancock Street as the home for the Alumni Association. I had, in fact, held
several conferences with Ralph Jackson, the architect, concerning alterations,
while I was still in the hospital. The day following my return from the hospital I
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went down the office and transacted various important items of business - one of
them was the passing of papers for the Alumni Building.
Catharine had managed school affairs so efficiently during the three
weeks of my absence that there was no accumulation of routine matters. She
had taken over my duties of Dean in the arranging of details of graduation, had
arranged the program, and superintended the printing of invitations,
announcements, and souvenir programs. She had also arranged for the program
of the first alumni banquet to be held the evening of June 151• I told her, that with
so capable an executive as she, the school could get along very well without a
Dean. She retorted that if I insisted upon working as soon, the school would be
very likely to lose me permanently.
A part of the first day, of course, was spent in bed; but that evening I was
taken by taxi to the Alumni Banquet at the Bellevue. While it was a risky thing to
do, yet I felt that the best way to allay the concern over my condition was to show
myself in public, however feeble I might be.
Nobody who has not experienced what I have been through can
appreciate how much it meant to me to sit at the head table and look over the
mighty host of graduates that were assembled that evening. Because of my
condition, I ate little and arranged to leave early.
No speech of mine was ever received with more vociferous applause that
the brief address that I made on that
occasion. But the effort cost me a
great deal of physical energy, for I
nearly collapsed afterward and got
out of the banquet room with
considerable difficulty.
The day following day, June
2"d, was Commencement Day and I
managed to attend the class day
exercises in the school auditorium in
the morning. For the first time, I
wore my new Doctor of Laws gown.
My appearance on the platform was
the cause of a great demonstration.
Although I was listed to speak, the
effort was considered too great for
me in my condition. In fact, I
suffered greatly during the long
program. I was told afterwards that I
looked so yellow and hollowcheeked in my gaudy robes that
many of the audience were afraid
that I might not be able to remain
until the diplomas were awarded.
The twinges of pain that came
periodically are vivid recollections.

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Dr. Hodgson came to our apartments several times to dress my wound.
Because he was so friendly and easy going, I persuaded him to go to the country
with me on the day following graduation. While I realized the risk I was running
in making such a trip and while my wife and close friends were appalled by the
idea, yet with my surgeon to accompany me, no one could offer valid objection.
The fact was that June was calling me with irresistible appeal to look upon
the things I had planted prior to my operation. I was eager also to sit at the

Well-loved farm in Norwell. Even during my illness I had seen to it that Harold
went down to Norwell once a week to feed my trout so I was sure that I could
give the surgeon a trout dinner.
The trip was accomplished successfully. The trout dinner was fully up to
expectations. This was the first of many trips to the country. It irked me, at first,
to be so helpless. The doctors had told me that I would not be able to use a how
or a scythe all summer, but within two weeks I had made cautious beginnings at
both.
I wonder if physicians do not make a mistake in forbidding exercise to a
patient under circumstances such as mine. At any rate, I watched my own
reactions very carefully and soon found myself gaining in strength and health. To
be sure, it was a long time before the feeling of having a great load in my
abdomen had entirely vanished. There was also a paralyzed section between
the cut which had been made parallel to the medial line of my abdomen and that
medial line itself. The nerves had been severed and it was more than a year
before they were reestablished and the numbness disappeared.

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The first considerable undertaking of the summer was an automobile trip
to New Brunswick early in July. I forgot to mention that shortly before my
appendicitis operation I had gone to New Brunswick by rail, taking Marian and
Gleason with me. I was searching ancient records to locate a tract of land
granted by the crown to my great grandfather Simeon Williams. In my first trip I
located the official record of the grant in the colonial archives in Frederickton N.B.
On the second trip I took Allan as a travelling companion. We visited my
sister Maude in Livermore Falls and picked up Uncle Leonard for the balance of
the trip. He returned with me to Boston.

Maude in 1905
Leonard and Susan Williams

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Our first objective was Bangor, where my brother Harold was engaged in an
effort to divorce his unfaithful and ignoble wife, Lotti. This developed into a
bitterly contested suit that occupied several days. He had grounds for a dozen
divorces but the difficulty was that the "poor sap" has condoned nearly all of
those infidelities that he could prove.
When he had won the divorce suit, we headed for Houlton, Me., where
there were some records that I wished to examine. We arrived there Friday
afternoon in time to search the records. Saturday morning, in good season, we
set out form Woodstock, N. B. By a singular coincidence, just as we crossed the
borderline into Canada, and headed up the dusty hill, my car began to knock in
the most alarming manner. I then realized that the oil was low, and I turned back
toward Houlton for oil. The engine acted quite scandalous and after oil had been
procured it acted just as it had, so I limped back to Houlton for repairs.
Fortunately, there was a garage in town where they understood Knight
motors. They took the engine apart after great toil and persistence, only to find
that one of the sleeves had fractured. This being the case, there was nothing to
do but send to Boston for a new sleeve.
It was then quarter of twelve. Fortunately, I reached the MacAlamarr
Company in Boston by telephone just as they were closing for the day. More

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fortunately still, the man who answered the phone was the salesman, Morley,
who sold had sold me the car in December 1925. At that time, I had accidentally
punctured the delicate honeycomb of the radiator of my previous car. This had
occurred on a Sunday morning when I was all set to go the country with the
children and Florence Reed of Brooklyn, N.Y. Rather than lose our day of
picnicking, I had purchased a new car of Mr. Morley, who by chance was taking
his own car from the service station.
So now, in my call from Houlton, he was greatly delighted when, after
telling him of my mishap, I asked him if he had a car ready for immediate
delivery.
"The finest car you ever laid eyes on and I'll deliver it in twenty minutes." I
laughed and assured him that he would be a double-eyed magician if he could do
it, for I was about four hundred miles away. This staggered him a bit, but he was
eager to make the sale and was not at all adverse to a weekend trip. So he
agreed to start as soon as possible with the new car, to bring with him a sleeve
for the disabled car and drive it back to Boston.
The fact that I had bought a car by telephone and that it was coming over
road to me was soon known all over town. My disabled car had excited great
admiration for it was one of the most expensive cars ever seen in that region.
That the new car was to be six cylinders and more expensive was also known.
Sunday forenoon, about eleven o'clock, as I was sitting on the piazza of
the hotel, writing on my autobiography of early days, a magnificent new car came
gracefully around the square and drew up to the hotel steps. A dusty and smiling
Mr. Morley climbed out and greeted me.
He had brought his wife and another couple along, so I made them my
guests at dinner. Before dinner, however, I drove the wonderful new machine
enough to become accustomed to its different mechanisms and manner of
operation. We arranged financial terms, so after dinner I was free to resume my
journey into the wilds of Canada.
This time, we crossed the border and climbed the hill without mishap. To
be sure, I was a bit uneasy at being obliged to drive an unregistered vehicle so
far. To cap the climax, I found when I faced the immigration officials my license
was missing. It then flashed upon me that when I went to the hospital, they had
taken everything out of my pocketbook and sealed the same in an envelope.
The missing document was in Boston. Fortunately, I had with me some catalogs
of Suffolk Law School containing my picture. This proved the open sesame and I
was given the necessary authorization to visit Canada.
It was a hot and dusty drive to the quaint little town of Woodstock, N.B.,
which is situated on the bank of the St. John River. I had visited it in April and
had then made the acquaintance of an aged resident whose grandfather had
been a celebrated missionary to the scattered settlements of the regions
thereabouts. It was this same missionary who had married my great-grand
parents Simeon Williams and Harriet Kenney in this very town.
The old gentleman, who wore a fur trimmed coat even in midsummer, was
greatly excited to see me appear I my new car, the like of which had never been
seen in his locality. But we did not tarry long in Woodstock, for my purpose was

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to push on to Frederickton for the night. You see, I had experience with the hotel
accommodations of Woodstock, as had Gleason and Marian when the had
accompanied me on an earlier trip.
We drove down the remarkably picturesque St. John's Valley, with the
river usually in sight on our left. I still vividly recall the many covered bridges that
we encountered as well as the very narrow highway; and the dust. Oh, such rich,
thick dust! From this statement, it may rightly be conjectured that we were not
the only travelers on the road. Because it was Sunday afternoon and July, there
is no doubt more traffic than usual was out on dusty highway.
We encountered automobiles and horse drawn vehicles, and as we drove,
we overtook many such. As may be imagined, it was difficult to pass them
because of the narrowness of the highway and the further fact that the aforesaid
highway was flanked on either side by a ditch that held unpleasant possibilities.
The necessity of maintaining some semblance of grade in the roadbed had
caused the highway builders (I will not call them engineers) to fill across a ravine
so the road stood eight to ten feet above the marsh or ravine. But in no case did
I observe a fence or railing to safeguard the traveler,
While this sort of road is dangerous, in any case, yet where there is a
curve in the highway, it is a positive menace to safety. Accidents must be of
frequent occurrence and would no doubt be more so except that dangerous
spots are encountered so frequently that a reasonably careful driver is on his
guard at all times for what he may encounter next.
One accident occurred just before we reached the scene - but happily
without fatal results. It seemed that a party of young people, two or three young
men and an equal number of girls, were out for a ride in a rickety open fliwer.
While rounding a curve at too high a degree of speed the machine careened from
the roadbed, pitched its occupants into the marsh and flopped down beside
them. We stopped and took a picture of the scene. The car was on its side and
its late occupants obligingly posed on its prostrate carcass. The ditch or gully at
that point was at least eight feet below the roadway.
As we progressed down the winding river we beheld, from time to time,
the most glorious of vistas of terraced banks and full, smoothly flowing river.
Everything was in deep green, for the seasons are later in that region than in
Massachusetts. So we say the fields in their first verdure as well as the trees
with newly set leaves. Then, too, the soil of the river is no doubt, very rich.
We reached the picturesque city of Frederickton in time for a late supper.
Then, in the evening, we walked underneath stars along the promenade of a
great park or common that extends along the river. As I remember it, the park is
near the parliamentary and public buildings. Cannon were mounted here and
there. I believe they are some trophies from the world war.
Young people were skylarking around, and youthful couples, and some
not so youthful, were strolling arm in arm in the romantic half light along the river.
We were up in good season next morning because my chief business in
New Brunswick was to see for myself the land that had been owned by my
ancestor and to find out from the records of the town of parish of Oromoets if
they had any reference to Simeon Williams. I had in my possession a large map

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of the locality and by the aid of the clerk I the registry I has located the land as
lying in a gore between two highways indicated on the map. Both of these roads
originated at the highway along the St. John River.
While I set out in high hopes of finding the road without much difficulty, I
soon discovered that the country was sparsely settled and the roads radiating
from the main highway were neither inviting nor well marked. In the hope of
securing information, I stopped at a farmhouse, and leaving Uncle Leonard and
Allan in the car, I advanced to the front door. The house was a humble cottage
and very silent when I knocked.
In the pause before anyone answered my summons, I made personal
acquaintance with some of the largest and fiercest mosquitoes that it was ever
my ill fortune to meet. The air was fairly vibrant with their ominous songs. A
slatternly woman, at length, came to the door. She eyed me with suspicion and
answered me with a brogue that betokened a foreign origin, possibly French. If
she were to be believed, the first road of the two mentioned was near at hand.
We, in fact, soon reached it - a country road leading off through a field. I
was a one-horse highway for sure, and I had misgivings as I turned my beautiful
and massive car into it. Has I so much as dreamed what was ahead of me, I
would certainly have avoided that horrible road. Once in it, however, there was
not turning for a car such as mine. It grew from bad to worse, and I soon found
that we were in a cedar swamp.
Little rivulets crossed the road here and there with rough hurdle-like
bridges over them. The marshy roadbed was for the most part corduroy (i.e.
Rendered somewhat more passable by logs laid across it like sleepers under a
railroad track) and the way were obliged to charge across these awful places with
my heavy car to avoid being mired was truly alarming to the well members of the
party. But for me, alas! With my scarcely healed wound, every jounce was
torture.
That swamp was apparently endless and one desperate mile succeeded
another until we had covered five miles and came out onto firm ground thanking
God that we had escaped with our lives. I am sure no car ever got such a
baptism as that new car of mine. As for myself, I was a physical wreck. The only
fortunate thing about this terrible ordeal was that we did not meet any teams until
we reached solid ground. The natives evidently knew better than to venture into
the swamp.
It was the unanimous opinion of all three of us that any land in such an
unpromising locality would not be worth anything and that our trip to New
Brunswick was a total loss. When we reached the fork of the roads and turned
back on the other road that enclosed the land, we experienced a great relief.
This was a very good road. It led past beautiful Oromocto Lake and trough
picturesque country.
In due season we reached the village itself and set out to rouse the keeper
of records. We found that the registry was kept by a lady, but business of land
records was so infrequent that the registry room was open only be appointment.
I soon located some very interesting information. Contrary to family
tradition, Simeon Williams had sold the land in 1821.

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We retraced our way to Frederickton where we partook of noonday meal
and then pushed on to further adventures.
My map had indicated a road that led across country to the Maine border,
crossing the St. Croix, as I remember it, at Vanceboro. It was country road all
the way and such hills and valleys I have never seen. Why the road could be
seen on the next hill hanging like paper on the wall, the hills were so steep. For
my powerful car, however, the hills had no terrors. But how we did hate to meet
other cars. They could be seen in the distance with a great cloud of dust around
them and hovering over them. Our only consolation was that we gave each of
them about twice as much dust as they gave us, for we traveled faster.
Allan was the most cheerful member of our dusty party, for he seemed to
derive real satisfaction from the woes of the driver who encountered out traveling
dirt storm, for he would gleefully exclaim as we passed the unfortunate driver,
"Another Injun bit the dust."
Thus we progressed. We crossed into Maine and kept on through the
same sort of roads until we reached the Bangor-Houlton Highway. Then with
thanks giving did we drive to Bangor for supper and for a night's rest. The return
to Boston next day was easily accomplished and I felt that, for an invalid, I had
accomplished a truly remarkable journey.
My recovery if strength was swift indeed. On July 20, 1927, I climbed to
the top of Pilgrim Monument in Provincetown and suffered no ill effects from the
exertion. I worked about the farm much as usual and before school opened in
the fall was as "hard as nails" physically.
But I must not overlook the supreme event of the summer of 1927 - the
Convention of the American Bar Association when I broke into the arena and
tackled the law school trust. The story of that convention has already been told
in the columns of the Alumni News, so I will insert the printed story herein.
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The school year of 1927-28 opened with an increased attendance despite
the fear that the Freshman class was not as large as the banner class that had
entered during the previous year. We had in fact experienced an abnormal
freshman registration at that time because the class of 1930 was to be the last
class to enjoy the $100. Rate of tuition and many registered to avoid the higher
rate. The increase in total attendance was of course due to the fact that the
upper classes were larger than usual.
After the Buffalo convention I received many inquiries concerning my
"Resolution" and the Brief that accompanied it. I also learned from investigation
that Mr. Strawn had "double crossed" me in the matter of the nominating
committee. The By-laws called for a committee of three. He had unlawfully
appointed a committee of five for the obvious purpose of putting over his own
prearranged slate of officers.
Fearing that the gain we had apparently made would be rendered _gatory
I sent out to those who had attended the convention a circular letter, explaining
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contained in the "brief' which I enclosed for their inspection. This brought a very
considerable response but it also called forth a very remarkable outburst from
Silas H. Strawn , the new President of the American Bar Association. He wrote
what he termed a "formal letter" to me which he caused to be published in the
October 1927 Bar Association Journal. This letter took me to task for statements
reflecting upon the integrity of his late associated in the section of Legal
Education. While he did not call me a liar in so many words, he made the
inference so clear that it could not be ignored. To tell the truth, I was glad that he
had thus opened a controversy that I foresaw would lead to important results. To
be thus singled out for the wrath of the President of the Association publicly
expressed in a printed letter was to focus the attention of the Association upon
me.
But the mean spirited and short seeing Strawn and his associates
committed another great tactical error. Immediately upon receiving through the
mail a copy of Strawn's proposed letter I wired the editor of the Journal (October
14, 1927) requesting equal space in the same issue that published his letter for
me to reply to the same. The editor of the Journal wired that the letter was
already in type and that the issue had been made up so that it was impossible to
publish my reply in the October issue. I immediately dispatched another
telegram asking for space in the November issue. To this telegram I received the
evasive response by mail that the Journal could not commit itself in advance and
this it would be necessary to see the copy.
I accordingly prepared under date of October 19, 1927, a letter summarizing
the essential facts upon which I relied for proof of my contention that the section
of the Legal Education had been captured by the university crowd and that the
American Bar Association was being exploited for the benefit of the Association
of American Law Schools.
Shrewdly believing that Strawn forces would refuse to permit the publication
of so damaging a letter I purposely loaded it with dynamite in order that when it
came to light it might prove all the more effective. True to my forecast, the Editor
of the Journal wrote to me rejecting the manuscript as "controversial."
I took command with Dean Carusi of the National University Law School
and he agreed with me that the proper course for me to follow was to send out a
"reply" in which I would include all the correspondence as well as my brief, thus
placing the whole controversy before the Bar Association. Dean Carusi
contributed $300 to the expense of the project.
Dean Lee of John Marshall Law School, however, chided me for thinking
such a thing and declared that he would not be a party to it since he had made
peace with Mr. Strawn and had not intention further to antagonize him.
On November 11, 1927, I mailed out about 25,000 copies of my "Reply to
Open Letter of Silas H. Strawn." It went out to the members of the Bar
Association - a ringing challenge to Mr. Strawn and the conspirators. I recited
the fact that a personal attack on my veracity and judgment had been published
in the Journal and that that periodical, supported out of our joint contributions,
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I stated that my suppressed letter "drags into the light of day things that were
doubtless thought to have been hidden from the Bar Association and from the
public. It involves the very men whom Mr. Strawn defended in his letter." I also
declared that I refused to be muzzled and that at great expense I was taking the
only course open to me of personally circularizing the entire association.
Well, the response to this letter and to the questionnaire asking whether
they believed that the "standards" could under present conditions be enforced in
their state without injustice to deserving men. Was very heartening indeed.
Some abusive letters I received, but surely 90% of the replies were strong
endorsements of my position. Thus another stade of the law school fight was
accomplished.

Events of 1928
School duties were numerous and exacting but I nevertheless found time
during this year to write a new textbook on Private Corporations. Having already
purchased four houses on Beacon Hill, 32, 34, and 59 Hancock Street as well as
2 Myrtle Street, I added to my holdings in December 1927 by purchasing #5
Hancock Street. This house was then in operation as a lodging house and an
elderly lady of Irish extraction was in charge - Phoebe Brown.
I liked the appearance and decided to let her manage the place for me.
While Phoebe remained, the venture was quite successful, but she finally had to
return to Ireland and left another lady in charge. This was not so good and
during the last few weeks of my ownership the place lost money. Fortunately just
a year from the day I purchased the property I was able to sell it for a net profit of
several thousand dollars.
In the spring of 1928 I purchased #40 Hancock Street, but there my real
estate buyings on Beacon Hill ended. Miss. Catharine was an efficient collector
of rents and rejoiced whenever the first of the month arrived. But as an
investment the Boston property did not net me more than savings bank interest,
so I declined to purchase any more of it.
During the winter of 1928 we had a considerable fight on our hands with
the Legislature because of the drive of the Massachusetts Bar Association to
raise the standards by enacting a "fitness" bill. Fortunately I was able to marshal
a sufficient array of those opposed to the measure to halt its progress. Martin M.
Lomasney, James H. Brennan and others joined in speaking against it before the
legislature committee. Eventually the bill was killed in a spectacular fight on the
floor of the house.
For some time I felt the need of a library or private study adequate to
house my personal library. In January 1928 the Trustees voted to give me
authority to proceed with the plan.
The only available space was on the roof adjoining the apartments
occupied by my family. Here however was space enough to enable me to supply
another personal need. My sleeping hours are necessarily irregular and my
custom for years has been to work more or less at night or in the early morning

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when writing a book. To disturb the family by going to my little study on the
Temple Street side had frequently been a sufficient deterrent to cause me to
waste sleepless hours in my bed in the little sleeping chamber occupied jointly
with my wife.
So in the new building plan I included the design of a bedroom and private
bath adjoining the library, so that I might work to my heart's content without
disturbing the family. Ralph Jackson was the architect of the new addition and
John C. Pritcher was the builder.
The work progressed in a satisfactory manner and beautiful and spacious
apartments were constructed. When the place was complete my wife dubbed it
"the Imperial Suit." It was decorated and furnished in appropriate manner. I was
fortunate enough to secure a solid mahogany director's table that for twenty
years had been the director's table of the Massachusetts General Hospital. I also
purchased a dozen mahogany chairs that went with the table - chairs with leather
upholstery - the last word in comfort and beauty of design on massive lines.
So it came to pass that in this beautiful new workshop I completed my new
textbook on Private Corporations as well as finished my chief duties of the school
year 1927-28.
United States Senator Royal Copeland of New York was our
commencement speaker that year. We gave a luncheon in his honor at the
Bellevue immediately before the exercises which were held in the evening in
Tremont Temple. I had invited a group of Trustees and their wives as well as
Professor and Mrs. Dallas Lore Sharp. Mrs. Sharp had been a classmate in
college of Senator Copeland and I thought it would be a splendid thing to give
them a brief reunion.
For some reason there were more guests than we expected and all seats
were filled when Professor and Mrs. Sharp breezed in. They were late because
of the difficulty of finding a parking place for their car. We met the joyful
emergency of vacating the regular table and giving place to Mrs. Sharp beside
the Senator while Professor Sharp and I ate at a little serving table in the corner.
He was bubbling over with good humor and he and I enjoyed a delightful few
minutes together during the meal.
The exercised were a grand success although Joseph F. O'Connell who
presided as chairman nearly turned the affair into a political rally by his
introduction of the speaker of the evening. Politics were then in the air and the
governor of New York, Alfred E. Smith was being boomed for the Democratic
nomination for President and it required very little to kindle exuberant Democracy
into wild outbursts of enthusiasm. The Senator's speech was eloquent; some
declared it more eloquent than logical and sound. But it was noticeable that
Democrats were satisfied and it was only from Republicans that we heard vocal
complaints.
Thus ended the school year of 1927-28 in which we attained our highest
point in total enrollment of students - 2604 students.
The annual convention of the American Bar Association was the chief
event of the summer of 1928. It was held in Seattle, Washington.

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New Hampshire Bar Association
In recording the events of the summer of 1928 I accidentally omitted one
of the most significant events so far as I personally was concerned - the New
Hampshire Bar Association Convention. It seems that Louis Wyman, Esq.
President of the association had attended the session of the Buffalo convention
when we staged our fight against the entrenched monopoly of law schools.
Although an advocate of college monopoly himself, he conceived the idea that it
would enliven the annual meeting of the bar association of his home state to
have me address them on the subject of legal education.
When he invited me to speak his plans were no doubt vague but he did
not tell me that it was to be a joint debate and that the chairman of the board of
law examiners of New Hampshire, reputed to be one of the ablest law examiners
in the state, was my opponent. In fact, I did not learn of this until seated at dinner
with the president and my opponent just before speechmaking. We had met at
Manchester (NH) Country Club on a very hot day, June 30, 1928. The lawyers
had gathered in goodly numbers for a golf tourney and field day so that the size
of the audience was more of less problematical. I found, however, that my
"Reply to Silas H. Strawn" had been read by many and that I was regarded with
some interest. Mr. Wyman told me that I would speak after his own address and
would be followed by Mr. Demond. This was not entirely to my liking so I urged
that there were two reasons why Mr. D. should precede me - 1st, that of
deference to his age and position - 2"d, that he was going to speak for the ABA
standards and I was to oppose them. So it was agreed that I should speak last.
I must confess, however, that I later feared that I had made a mistake.
President Wyman spoke drearily for an hour and Mr. Demond occupied a second
hour. For an audience to sit through two hours of speechmaking when the golf
course was under the window was somewhat of an endurance test and I
expected to see the crowd depart before my turn came. Both speakers had
labored so hard to prove the college standard as the only proper one that when I
rose to speak I faced a decidedly hostile audience; -- ----- --- -- ---Having learned, however, that Mr. Dermod was himself a self-educated
lawyer, having never gone to college or law school, I captured the attention of the
audience by paying him a handsome tribute and offering him as exhibit one in
proof of my contention that a man may become a great lawyer even though
poverty in youth may have denied him both college and law school training.
He had told something of his own early life which gave me an excuse for a
similar recital of why I had become a champion of the poor boy. I then launched
into my prepared speech and before I had gone far the audience had kindled to
the theme in a most gratifying manner. When I touched upon the medical school
monopoly and how it had annihilated the country doctor, leaving great districts
without medical attention there was a fervent response from the entire audience.
The ovation that I received at the close of my talk was an event long to be
remembered. When the tumult had begun to die down Jeremiah Doyle of
Nashua, one of the most popular lawyers of the state, and a very excitable man
leaped to his feet and cried out, "I'd like to see the man who would dare to ask
the State of New Hampshire to adopt the college requirement." Whereupon the

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audience went into another salvo of applause. Mr. Demond edged out of the
crowd and apparently received no congratulations. As for myself, it was a full
hour before I could get away. Lawyers and judges crowded around me and
discussed matters of legal education. Judge Bingham of the U. S. Circuit Court
was especially friendly and gave me some additional points that I later used with
telling effect in the controversy in Seattle.
I had my New Hampshire speech printed and it will later be seen how
effectively it was used at the Seattle convention.

Events of 1928-29

D

The school year of 1928-29 opened according to
schedule but with about two hundred less students than
during the previous year. I had foreseen that the crest of
the wave of post-war registration would soon be past and
that a return to normal attendance figures could be
expected. This has influenced me in urging upon the
Trustees an advance in tuition rate. Because of this
change, we now had two classes paying the new rate of
tuition ($140.) which slightly more than counterbalanced
the decrease in tuition-paying students.
The first important event of the school year was the
announcement by the Board of Bar Examiners of
Massachusetts, made public during the latter part of
September 1928, that beginning with the December
examination, they would hold applicants responsible for the
history of law.
Quite naturally, I supposed that the Board was in a
position to suggest some book from which students might
glean the necessary information. At a conference with
Hollis R. Bailey, the chairman, however, I learned that the
Board had no single book in mind. After a few days I
received from him a list of about twenty books made up by
the librarian of the Social Law Library. I have already
made a survey of the bibliography of the subject and had
found books not listed by librarians.
Here was a dilemma indeed! No single book had a
complete story of the law and the most of them were so
vague as to be valueless to a student. Legal history was
scattered through a whole library of reference books - thus
rendering it impossible to secure the information that the
Board of Bar Examiners required.
There seemed to be but one course for me to
pursue and that was to write a textbook on the subject. An
appalling task, truly, but one that must be executed under
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the day following commencement in sightseeing. Mr. Boynton and my good wife
made up the party when we set forth in my car to the south shore.
One of the graduates had learned of this projected trip and having some
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connections with the Church of the Presidents in Quincy, he arranged for us to
call there and visit the tombs of John Adams and John Quincy Adams. When we
reached the church the Rector and others were ready to do the honors, so
Senator Walsh was received with due ceremony. The great moment of the visit
was of course going down into the subterranean crypt where the Adams great
men were at rest.
An solemn and austere resting place where no sun has ever shone, dark
and damp with the all pervading breath of earth is this secret, or at least well
guarded shrine. The massive stone caskets were lettered with the names of the
dead Presidents. Their women folk - the wives whose names are also known in
history -were there in the tomb. Funeral wreaths, possibly months old, were on
the caskets. A visitor's book was there for us to sign. President Coolidge and his
wife had signed the book during the previous summer. When we had affixed our
signatures, we took our leave of the place and drove onward to Plymouth.
Senator Walsh was a more talkative and companionable man that I had
supposed. He sat with me in front and took great delight in getting back at my
wife for giving me directions from the rear seat. He told a story and told it very
well of a man who drove his wife to the station where she was to take a train. He
told of her various remarks of caution and alarm at this and that and the other

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wayside happening and of the husband's parting caution to the wife to "Please let
the engineers run the train."
Our visitor was of course familiar with the poetic description of the coast of
New England. When I brought the car to a halt at the parking space near the
Plymouth Rock shrine, he declared in some bewilderment "But where is the stern
and rock bound coast-why this is a low and sandy shore?"
We returned to my Norwell place after giving the sights of Plymouth a
hasty inspection. I had promised a trout dinner but was greatly dismayed when
reaching the cabin and the trout pond to find that the pestilential herons had just
raided the pond. The water was discolored by the commotion that the birds had
made. The trout were milling around and we could see them occasionally.
Try as we might we could catch only two fish - I think the Senator caught
them. We cooked the fish for Senator Walsh and Mr. Boynton. Fortunately we
had some canned chicken on hand in the hope chest, so we made out a meal.
Needless to say I was chagrinned and disappointed at the incident. But the day
itself was a success from all material viewpoints and Senator Walsh departed
with every indication of a well-pleased guest. At every subsequent meeting in
Washington - and I have seen him many times since then - he has been most
cordial.
The summer of 1929 was filled with the usual routine. I alternated
between Boston and Norwell all the while preparing for the new year by laboring
on the school records to determine what students should be promoted, what men
required to repeat the work of the previous year and - the hardest task of all - to
decide the fate of those whose records justified dismissal for inferior scholarship.
My first impulse was to decline because of the brevity of the notice but I
finally agreed and Mr. Davis told me that a Miss Boll would call upon me the next
morning and explain the proposition. I later learned the Mr. Cleveland had talked
with Mr. Davis (a student in the Junior class) about my desire to try out radio.
Miss Boll arrived in accordance with her appointment and discussed the
nature of the expected address, I agreed to speak if I could select a topic in
which I was very much interested, "Equality of Opportunity." I was in fact just
then preparing a speech for the American Bar Association Convention and could
use the portion of the address dealing with the subject. Thus it was arranged.
On Sunday afternoon I took a taxi to the Statler Hotel. Station WBZA is
located on the sixteenth floor. The elevators reach only to the fourteenth floor.
As I walked up the remainder of the flight of stairs I could hear music coming in
muffled tones from the studio. Never having visited a radio station before I came
early enough to be instructed in the use of the microphone. Alden Redmond,
chief announcer of the station was on duty.
We decided that it would be better for me to be seated with the
microphone beside me. I have since graduated from that method and now stand
during the broadcast, but it was probably wiser- and certainly easier upon me
physically to sit in that first momentous broadcast.
Miss Helene Boll gave me a flattering introduction, being first introduced
by Mr. Redmond. I have since learned that some people have stage fright before
the microphone. But I seemed to take to it as naturally as a telephone. My

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opening sentence , after a formal "Ladies and gentlemen of the Radio audience"
was, "May I reassure you at the beginning of my remarks that this will not be a
high-how lecture but a straight from the shoulder talk on one of the vital problems
of the day." For exactly half and hour I held forth closing on the very last moment
of the period by reciting Edgar Guest's poem "The Birth of Greatness."
Of course I was glad to have the period over and my first radio talk an
accomplished fact. But I was not prepared for the outburst of enthusiasm that
greeted me. Miss Boll I knew to be rather a gushing lady. Her enthusiasm
therefore meant little to me. To have Mr. Redmond the blase announcer who
had suffered so many years from having speeches and programs declare that my
radio debut was a "corker" - that I had a marvelous radio voice etc. was quite
astonishing. Before I left the station I began to get telephonic congratulations.
My folks at home were very enthusiastic. Professor F. Morse Wemple of the N.
E. Conservatory of Music was an auditor at our radio. He expressed
astonishment at what the radio did to my voice, declaring that I had great
possibilities and so on.
Letters began to pour in from such distant places as Eastport, Maine, so I
was constrained to believe that the radio was my great opportunity. How to take
advantage of that field was the great problem.
One night shortly after my talk on WBZ-WBZA, I thought of a plan.
Suppose I should suggest to Miss Boll that she might intimate to the officials at
WBZA that I was in a receptive mood and might be induced to give a series of
talks over their station. Miss Boll was full of enthusiasm at the idea and promised
to talk with Mr. Clark, the Program Director of the station. That she did so is
evident from the letters that will be found on the next two pages. Because I
regard them of great significance in the chain of important events to which they
lead, I feel that the original letters should be preserved in this manner.

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October 9• 1929.

Mr. Gl'l)tUion I. • .Archor, Denn.,

Suffolk LAW School,
Boston, :Mass.
Desr Dean Aroher:
I learned with plftRsure rro~ Miss Hel~no Boll that
you looked with favor on giving waokly leoturos on
oriMlnal law cw~r thoso atntiona.
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r;e .feol that sunh a sorioa or tnlks would be vory
worthwhile snd if ngrconble to you, wot:i.ld 11k$ to
.sohodulo tho 8er1os on Tllesday aftarnoons froui
4 i 16 until 4-i 35 boglnuing 1n Hovumbor.
It thb ar:rangor:16nt h1Gl!)h "1th your thu, o.nd pla.n,
will you kindly got in touoh w1 th :me ,stating tlae dnte

yoa would lik$ to begin the looturos.
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John f,,) Olnr'lc
Dlreotb'r or Programs, \fBZ-l'iIJZA

�112

Children in College
In writing this journal I have entirely omitted a very important development in our
family. Allan graduated from Boston Latin School in June 1926. He was an
honor student in everything but mathematics so was able to secure certification
in 13 out of 15 points for entrance to Boston University. In September he entered
the College of Liberal Arts and at once distinguished him in his studies. During
his sophomore year he was one of two or three in the entire college to make an
average of A for the first semester. For the record he received an official letter of
congratulation from the faculty. Yet because of a stupid rule of the college Allan
was not eligible to continue beyond his sophomore year.
Under these circumstances I transferred him to Harvard College. But in
making the transfer he was obliged to take a cut of one letter in all of his marks at
BU and was unable to complete the course in time to graduate in June 1930.
As for daughter Marian, she received her diploma from the Girls High
School in June 1929, having no special difficulty except in Mathematics, I
discovered, however, that the colleges of New England were refusing all students
who did not make honor grades in high school. Some of them had a long waiting
list at that. Boston University and Colby were the only colleges open to her even
by examinations. Having to decide between them, I chose Colby College. One
of the reasons was that I felt that Marian needed the discipline and experience of
dormitory life.
Elizabeth and her mother were quite appalled at the idea and Marian was
none too enthusiastic, but I took her with me to Maine and visited the college.
She was pleased at the things she saw at the college and it was arranged that
they would send the examinations for Marian to take at the High School.
Unfortunately the examinations fell upon very strenuous closing days of
the high school and daughter was greatly run down. She took one examination
when in such condition that she fainted afterward. The ladies then staged a
revolt against the idea. They were willing to have Marian give up all thought of
college rather than persist in so heartbreaking a task. But I wired to the college
for delay. My request was granted so daughter went on and, to our delight,
passed a goodly number of subjects.
By a rule of the college, however, if a candidate failed, they were required
to do the entire task again in September. I went to Waterville and "labored with
them."
I told them that Marian was hoping to go to Europe during the summer and
urged that unless some concession could be made she would have to choose
between college and Europe. The authorities agreed.
Marian and Allan joined a Cook Tour and spent five happy and strenuous
weeks in Europe. Daughter finished up all her entrance conditions but Math.
Later she took a special tutoring and passed that also, thus becoming a fullfledged college student.
The result of that year in college upon daughter Marian was most
gratifying. But I am getting ahead of my story for there were other important
events in the fall of 1929 that are yet to be recorded.

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The Memphis Convention
The law school world was more or less agog over impending happenings
at the Memphis Convention. It was known for many months that I was to make a
formal address at the next meeting. The topic which I had selected "Facts and
Implications of College Monopoly of Legal Education" was also announced in the
tentative program of the meeting of the Section of Legal Education.
That the college monopoly crowd was filled with alarm and were
marshalling their forces was also self-evident. My great moment was coming, for
which I had fought for three years. I resolved that my speech should be the most
clear cut and logical indictment that it was possible for me to frame. Having
prepared it with great care, I had it printed and carried with me to Memphis a
sufficient number of copies for general distribution.
Those who made the trip to Tennessee were Misters Boynton, O'Connell.
Evens, myself, H.J. Archer, James H. Brennan, Geo. F. Hogan and John L.
Hurley. We reached Memphis Monday morning October 20, 1929 and at once
set to work. The renewing of acquaintance with lawyers who we had met at
previous conventions was of great importance. The making of new friends and
the lining up of forces for the expected battle of Tuesday kept all of us on the
move.
The plan for the section meeting of Tuesday was of course formulated b
William Draper Lewis. He could not avoid the necessity of giving me my
opportunity to speak but he managed to inject several unexpected Bar
Examination addresses into the forenoon with the obvious purpose of limiting my
time and using up a great part of the morning for safe and boresome topics.
The Ball Room of the Peabody Hotel was the place appointed for our
meeting - a very large hall and one that required amplifiers. On Monday
afternoon I dropped into the Ball Room to observe the acoustic properties and
found the amplifiers working splendidly.
But on Tuesday morning when we gathered for the great event I found to
my dismay that the amplifiers had been taken away. Whether that was to
handicap me I never knew, but the fact remains that Tuesday was the only day
when the amplifiers were not in working order in the hall.
I took a seat in the front row at one side. William R. Evans was beside
me. My manuscript was ready. To be sure Mr. Boynton, Dean Lee and others
had assured me that my speech was much too long, so I had cut it down what I
could. Mr. Boynton, in his quaint way had said - "No souls are saved after the
first twenty minutes."
The official report of the meeting shows that it was called to order by
Chairman Lewis at 10 AM. After the purely formal portion of the meeting, Dean
Lewis read his address as chairman. H. C. Horacle gave his report as advisor.
George R. Nutter of Boston read his paper. The secretary of the Board of Law
Examiners of Pennsylvania did likewise. The time had then been consumed up
to eleven thirty. A Mr. Clark of New York who was to speak and suggested that I
be allowed to go on with my address and he would use the remaining time.

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

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· This impressed me as a clever strategy to blanket the effect of my
address. I met the issue by expressing my desire that Mr. Clark's paper be read
immediately, which was done. All the while I noted with satisfaction that the
great hall was filling up. Chairs were being brought in and arranged. Men were
streaming in. It was a source of gratification to me to realize that they were
coming in for the one purpose of hearing me make my long sought expose of the
law school conspiracy. In other words, I was expected to furnish the fireworks
and well I knew the fireworks that I had to offer them.
By the time Mr. Clark had finished and I was ready to take the platform the
hall was jammed. Men were standing by the hundred; there must have been
more than a thousand people in the room.
I had brought with me a bound volume containing the records of meetings
of the Association of American Law Schools and of the election throughout the
period of the conspiracy. I had come fully armed with books and documents.
These I carried with me when I mounted the raised platform and took my place at
the rostrum.
While I had feared the ordeal of speaking with no microphones, especially
after some of the previous speakers had been heckled with cries of "louder'', yet
the moment I began to speak all such feelings vanished. I was filling the hall with
ease. George Hogan who cruised around the outskirts of the crowd later
reported that my voice rang out clear and distinct into the farthest corners of the
Ball Room.
I was on familiar ground for Equality of Opportunity, my Radio speech,
was the first part of my address. While my audience was obviously hostile at the
beginning I had been speaking only a few minutes when I was convinced of a
change of attitude. Everyone was listening to my arguments in regard to equality
of opportunity and agreeing with the sentiments expressed on that score.
After I had won the first genuine burst of applause the way was easier.
Laughter and applause were frequent during the last half of my talk and when I
finished that gave me an ovation that would have done credit to a political rally. I
was congratulated right and left and had a hard time to get out of the Ball Room
in time to get a bit to eat before the afternoon session.
It was the consensus of opinion among all my friends and associates that
if the matter could have been put to a vote at the close of my address the
assembly would have voted overwhelmingly, not only to clean house in the
section which was my main objective, but to reverse the action previously taken
by the Bar Association on the college requirement.
Lewis and his crafty associates Strawn, Tolman and others had so
arranged matters that no motions could be voted on until after 4 P.M. when the
expected to throw the entire strength of the other sections into the section of
Legal Education to overwhelm us. As it transpired, this result was accomplished.
All sections but one of the Association adjourned toward the end of the afternoon
because they couldn't get a quorum to do business. Everyone was in the section
of Legal Education.
The annual report of the Ar;nerican Bar Association for 1929 contains my
lengthy address in full. It also carries the complete story of the proceedings of

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the section or Legal Education. I took no part in the afternoon session except as
a spectator. But it was a wild and furious talk fest in which Dean Lee, James H.
Brennan and John L. Hurley distinguished themselves but accomplished nothing
except to get into the record of some meeting some interesting reading matter for
those who did not attend.
Dean Lee made an unwise attempt to amend the so-called standards be
rewording the entire standards as they would be with his suggested change. I
am convinced that if he had offered his mild changes in the form of an
amendment instead of a substitution that the result would have been different,
but the hue and cry was used that "the insurgents" were trying to wipe out the
standards hitherto adopted.
This gave the astute college monopoly crowd their opportunity to save
their faces for the offered a resolution affirming the standards. Those present
were for the most part ignorant of the real wording of the standards but they were
as ready to end the long drawn our wrangle by adopting this resolution as they
would have been to reaffirm faith in the theory that the earth was round. So the
great field day ended in burying Dean Lee's substitution and the adoption of the
movement to reaffirm.
We were apparently defeated, but when the election of officers came we
found that the Nominating Committee (under pressure from the Executive
Committee, as I afterward learned) had given us the housecleaning for which I
had fought. Lewis, Sanborn and the old guard we one and all omitted from the
list of officers. Horack, on whom I had centered my chief attack, because of
President of the Association of Law Schools he was nevertheless serving the
American Bar Association as Advisor of the Section of Legal Education at a
$10,000 a year salary, was soon to lose his job also, thus completing the
housecleaning.
Radio Lectures on Law

My radio lectures on criminal law began on November 1ih and at once
attracted the interest of the public despite the fact that they were first given at
4:15 P.M. when the audience would naturally be women. But letters came in by
scores and hundreds asking that the experiment be made a regular feature.
After some weeks I was given an evening assignment. How fortunate the hour of
that assignment was I did not realize until later on, but it was form many weeks at
7:15 P.M., immediately following "Amos and Andy" a feature that had attracted
nation-wide attention because it was really a funny dialogue between two
supposed colored men who were forever getting into absurd scrapes.
On two different occasions I talked in Sunday afternoon in the same series
in which I had made my initial bow. By January 1930 I had so far made good
with the New England audiences that Mr. Clark took up the matter with the
National Broadcasting Company with a view to giving me a national hookup.
What came of that attempt will later be seen. But there were other events that
require at this juncture to be set forth in detail.

)

$UFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

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Involved in Politics

J

)

The beginnings of a given chain of events are often remote from the event
itself. Such was the case in my controversy with Frederick W. Mansfield and its
resulting projection of myself in a minor degree into the Mayoralty campaign of
Boston. Now I had always been very friendly with Mr. Mansfield since as State
Treasurer he had joined with the Attorney General and Secretary of State in
waiting upon Governor Walsh in 1914 to urge him to sign our school charter. I
had met him at various times since that date and had been friendly to him in his
unsuccessful campaign for Governor.
I had noted with his interest his activities in the Judicial Council and had
regarded him as kindly disposed toward the self-educated lawyer. When he was
elected as President of the Massachusetts Bar Association by a little group of
men in January 1929 I had been present. My congratulations had been very
genuine because he was succeeding George R. Nutter who had been working
for years to make an aristocracy of the Bar, being the Massachusetts
representative of the insidious movement for a college monopoly. In Mr.
Mansfield I was sure that we had a safe leader.
What was my surprise therefore on the morning of March 13, 1929 to read
in the Boston Post and other newspapers that in the previous evening Mr.
Mansfield had made a speech before the Women's Lawyer's Association in
which he declared that the bar requirements in Massachusetts were woefully low
and stamped as fallacious the argument that "a poor boy or girl who cannot
afford to go to college should be allowed to become a member of the bar by
studying nights after he or she is through a day's work."
This statement aroused my indignation. Having occasion to address the
alumni of the Suffolk Law School that evening, I made a spirited reply to Mr.
Mansfield. I pointed out that Mansfield himself had never gone to college and
that when he was running for Governor on the Democratic ticket he had declared
that he had gotten legal education "when working night and day in the drug
business." I suggested that now that he could afford it, he go to college.
The publicity given to this exchange with the President of the
Massachusetts Bar Association quite naturally attracted wide attention. As the
city election or rather primaries approached, it was well known that the group of
which Mr. Nutter was the head wire pluming Mr. Mansfield to run against former
Mayor James M. Curley for the office of Mayor. The matter was uncertain for
some days.
Late on evening after school had closed and I was clearing up an
accumulation of work, my office phone rang and Daniel G. Gillen, one of our
graduates and a former secretary to Mayor Curley, was on the line. He asked
me if I could give him the facts as to my controversy with Mr. Mansfield, what the
latter had said and what my reply had been. He was urgent to get the material
for immediate use. So I invited him to come to the school as soon as possible,
and I would in the meantime go through my files for the necessary information.
Thus I knew that Mansfield was to run for Mayor. And run he did. Mr.
Gillen made very effective use of this material. The campaign became more and

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more heated as the weeks passed and it was evident that the contest would be
close for all the elements that were opposed to Mr. Curley had combined to
support Mansfield as the peerless knight of Reform.
While I was at the Memphis Convention I received a telegram from Mr.
Curley (sent our by former Congressman McNary, no doubt) inviting me to speak
in Curley's behalf at a great meeting of lawyers to be held in Tremont Temple on
Saturday night October_. Inasmuch as I could not return until Saturday
morning, I had a good alibi for not speaking.
When I reached Boston, I found the political situation in such ferment that I
decided to visit Martin Lomasney and the Hendrix Club where they were to hold a
great Sunday before election meeting. Frankly, I was concerned lest Mansfield
and the forces of reaction should be victorious. I had a pleasant chat with the old
warhorse of the West End. In his back room, shut off from the mob that crowded
the hall where speaking was in progress, Martin literally champed the bit as he
cogitated upon what he should say.
He had made notes in his large and somewhat illegible handwriting. He
would never permit me to remove my hat in his sanctum. He always wore his
own and insisted that democracy required everyone else to wear theirs. In his
friendliness to me, Mr. Lomasney went over the main points of his speech,
slapping his notes as he held them in his left hand and calling upon me to say if
he was not right. Of course I agreed with him for he and I were of one mind on
the issue before the people.
This was the first time for years, at any rate, that Martin had supported
Curley. There was no love between them now. A lieutenant rushed in to
announce that Mr. Curley had arrived and suggested that Mr. Martin go into the
office to greet him. "No, No," he barked. "Put him on. Let him speak. I won't
come out until he's through."
The old chieftain seemed disposed to keep me in the back room, but I told
him I was curious to hear Curley's speech, so he dismissed me with a wave of
his hand. There was a suffocating stench of humanity in the hall and I had
difficulty getting into the hall far enough to see the speaker. Mr. Curley made a
very effective address to a most enthusiastic and demonstrative audience.
When he was forcing his way out of the press, he passed near me and
greeted me very warmly.
"Dean Archer," he said in passing, "I would like to have you come to the
Garden rally tonight and say a few words." To this I demurred. "Come anyway
and sit on the platform," he urged. To this I agreed on. Somewhat later, while
Lomasney was himself occupying the rostrum, a man came to me with a
message from Mr. Curley telling me how to reach the platform at the Garden
rally.
Boston Garden, the great North Station Auditorium had just been
completed. Mr. Curley Campaign Committee had engaged it for a mammoth
Sunday evening rally. The newspapers had forecast a great crowd, for fiery
speeches were expected.
The meeting was scheduled for eight o'clock. I arrived somewhat before
that hour only to find some twenty thousand people jammed into the vast

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amphitheater and speechmaking already in progress. If I had not had an
invitation for the platform it would have been very difficult to secure a seat at all.
The platform itself was no place of special honor inasmuch as it was very large
and was jammed with politicians and friends of politicians, a motley host of
nondescript humanity. There must have been several hundred on the platform.
A seat was found for me at the extreme left in about the third row between
two very buxom ladies long past their prime and were able to fill the space
allotted to me, for each of them was wider than the space allotted to them.
Such a variety of speeches as I heard during the two hours before the
arrival of ex-Mayor Curley. This gave me a chance to study the unbelievably
vast crowd that filled the main floor and rose tier upon tier to the very heavens, or
at least to a height where humans appeared as pygmies. I shuddered at the
thought of speaking in such a place, and congratulated myself that I had declined
the Mayor's invitation.
Although my radio talks had already made a decided hit and I was
beginning to receive that flattering attention from radio fans that sometimes
fatally inflates the vanity, yet I had no illusions about my place in this scheme of
things. I even began to take some comfort in the thought that I was concealed
from any likelihood of being seen by the eloquent Ex-Mayor and called into the
footlights.
John F. Fitsgerald, a former Mayor and perennial politician, was speaking
when Mr. Curley and his party arrived. It was nearing 10 P.M. and the meeting
was to be broadcast between 10 and 11. This was no doubt why Fitzy made so
long-winded a speech - he wanted to have part of his talk broadcast.
When he had finished, I say one of the committeemen standing up and
looking my way, beckoning to someone. Not dreaming that he was beckoning to
me I looked beyond me and saw a prominent politician standing in the wings. I
made a sign to him that he was wanted, so he joyfully clambered over feet and
legs and made his way to the area where the speaking was going on.
But to my amazement he was bolted and an excited individual charged
past him to me and said, "Mayor Curley wants you to come up front." The band
was playing and they were waiting - marking time. It was an awkward
predicament for me, but the thought flashed across my mind that perhaps Mr.
Curley wanted the audience to see that I was there and that Suffolk Law School
was with him in the contest.
So I clambered over feet and made my way hurriedly to the center of the
floodlight section. Mayor Curley rose to his feet and clasped hands with me
while the crowd cheered - not necessarily at me but because they were waiting
for something to happen, and it was happening. "Speak to them," he urged, ''Tell
them about Mansfield and how he's against the poor bay." He literally pushed
me toward the microphone and the presiding officer stated to introduce me.
If I had felt like a tiny individual in the midst of a vast universe before I
opened my lips to speak, I became a variant atom when I opened my lips to
speak. Actually, I could not hear my own voice. So vast was the space into
which I was seeking to project it I was morally certain that I was wasting precious
time by remaining on my feet at all.

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What I did not learn until afterwards was that my voice rang out clear and
strong, thanks to the amplifiers, to the farthest circle of the audience and, better
still, reached a cast audience all over New England that were tuned in by radio.
Fortunately I went through with what I was half persuaded was a dumb
show. I left the microphones greatly vexed with myself that I had not come
prepared to make a real speech. Not until I had heard from many of the Garden
auditors and the listeners in over the radio that I had made one of the most
dramatic, sincere, and convincing speeches of the evening did I regain my selfassurance over the incident, or recall much that I had said.
My speech was brief. I began by saying that I was not a politician and had
never made a political speech. I should speak entirely from the angle of a school
man. I asserted that I came there merely because I respected and admired
James M. Curley because he had proved himself a friend of the common people,
had proved his integrity and ability in the public office. I stated that I had no
personal ill will for his opponent Mr. Manfield. I admired the ability that had
enabled him to raise himself from poverty and obscurity to a place of power and
distinction. But I stated that now that he had attained his present dizzy height as
President of the Massachusetts Bar Association he had forgotten his humble
beginnings of youth and had turned to strike down the poor boys who must follow
in his footsteps. I described the iniquitous college monopoly scheme and
branded Mansfield as its leader in Massachusetts. I again contrasted Curley with
Mansfield and declared, "I have nothing but admiration for a self made man who
reaches out the helping hand to others like himself. I have nothing but contempt
for the self made man who forgets his own days of poverty and seeks to strike
down those who seek to follow in his footsteps." I closed with an appeal to vote
for James M. Curley.
Mr. Curley thanked me very warmly for my address and for days I heard
echoes for the radio audience.
The election came off on schedule and it proved one of the most exciting
political battles of recent years. After school Tuesday night I went down to
Curley headquarters to watch the election returns. Such a mob of sour faced,
stunned and silent people I never saw. Curley had apparently gone down in
defeat.
Everyone said that his unfortunate radio speech of the night before when
he mercilessly attacked a Jewish lady of prominence who was campaigning for
Mansfield had lost him the election. This lady had preceded him at the
microphone and had mad statements that stung the high strung warrior into a
fiery denunciation of the lady as having offered her services to him before going
to Mansfield.
However true the accusation might have been it alienated the Jewish vote
and turned many others against Mr. Curley. It was a political error of the first
magnitude. So I watched the returns with a feeling of dismay almost as keen as
that of some of the prominent politicians who were expecting appointments from
the new mayor.
But the tide in the returns turned toward our candidate. Mansfield's lead
became less and less. The crowd began to murmur with hope. What a yell burst

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students who were contemplating the December 28 examination.
The method of treatment was a serious problem. Others has written on
the subject who apparently knew a great deal about the historical development of
certain legal remedies but totally without appreciation of their significance in light
of political history - the result being a succession of essays about one legal
remedy or anther and without coherence or human interest. Historians like
Green has also touched upon the development of law but had written without
knowledge of the law itself.
My plan was to write from the two-fold viewpoint of the student of history
and the student of law. I resolved to paint in vivid colors the background of
political history, thus giving the student a connected story of the development of
the law, for I proposed to demonstrate that every great legal innovation originated
under the stress and need of the period in which it originated. In other words, I
would interpret laws newly emerging as the attempted solution by the people of
special problems of their own day.
Just as the Magna Charta and the Declaration of Independence would be
mere platitudes unless interpreted in the light of history, so also all the great laws
and statutes must be understood. In this spirit, I set to work.
Fortunately for me I was so gripped by the task at hand that it was a real
joy to labor long hours at research and composition.
Histories, encyclopedias and learned tomes were my constant
companions, My study table was covered with books and I moved around the
table checking up this and that item of history or law. But it was that knowledge
of history, that I had acquired through some forty years of reading for the sheer
love of it that guided me in the stress of my literary endeavors. All that I had
gained in the reading of the history of law readily fused itself into the greater
background of historical knowledge. It was therefore a more or less exciting and
stimulating task to check up that knowledge by reference to the multitude of
authorities at my command.
I worked what might be termed a double shift. I sometimes began at there
o'clock in the morning and usually not later than four thirty so that by nine o'clock
I had accomplished many pages of manuscript. No doubt, I neglected my school
duties during these strenuous days, but my very capable secretary delighted in
the responsibility thus thrust upon her. She guarded me against every
interruption except of the most imperative nature.
I was thus enabled to work until lunchtime. By that time I was usually
mentally exhausted and glad to take a midday nap. The nap, however, invariably
refreshed me so that I was able to return to my task with redoubled speed.
I wrote the first page of the book at 4 AM. on the morning of October 1,
1928 and completed the manuscript at noon November 11th, just forty days later.
In fact I jokingly declared that like the flood the outpouring of ink from my fountain
pen continued for forty days and forty nights. There were four hundred and forty
pages of printed book so that my "History of Law'' easily takes first place in
magnitude of output of all my literary efforts.
The printing of the book was a story in itself. I had arranged with Puritan
Linotype for the setting up of the manuscript as fast as I produced it so that when

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the last page was written over half of the book was already set up. This I was
able to put the book on the market about sixty days after I wrote the first chapter,
which, I think, will stand as a record achievement.
The sale of the book was immediate and widespread. It has received a
great deal of praise from sources that brought genuine satisfaction.
In January 1929 the Honorable Joseph F. O'Connell and I journeyed to
Miami, Fla. to do some work where it would count by appearing at the session of
the Executive Committee of the American Bar Association. The story has been
reduced to writing as will be seen from the following:
(Not included in this document JAA)

D

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Even before setting forth on the Florida trip O had laid the keel of a new
book or series of books. The value of illustrative material in connection with law
teaching had long been a settled conviction with me. But I had become
increasingly aware of the need of more of it in our classes. So I conceived the
idea of working out a series of "Digests" of cases as parallel volumes to my
textbooks already in use. Criminal law was the first subject selected for
treatment.
All the way to Florida except during the sleeping hours found me reading
and digesting cases from "Beale's Criminal Law Cases," a case book of the
Harvard series. While at my hotel at Miami Beach, and also on the way back, I
followed a like course of action.
After my return I devoted all available time to the task and before the close
of school in June 1929 I had the pleasure of seeing my first "case book" come
from the press.
For the commencement orator that year I had the good fortune to secure
U.S. Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana. In fact I had tried unsuccessfully for
several years to persuade Senator Walsh to come to Boston for that purpose.
There is quite a story with securing the his consent on this occasion, and I was
obliged to wax eloquent in my description of the school and its mission in order to
prevail upon him.
The Senator arrived in Boston on Commencement morning on a train
several hours late. I took him to visit city hall and the Governor's office. He was
invited to address the Senate and I had the honor of sitting on the platform with
him. We had no sooner left the Senate than a delegation from the House came
to invite him to address that body also. His address was similar to that in the
Senate - a simple message of greeting and an invitation of the members to
attend the Suffolk Law School Graduation if they wished to hear him speak at
length.
The Senator's speech at Tremont Temple on commencement night was a
very scholarly and instructive address, especially impressive to our great
audience because of the prominence of the orator. It received its due share of
newspaper attention.
In my invitation to Senator Walsh I had urged upon him that he be my
guest for a day or two and visit some of our historic shrines. He agreed to spend

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forth when the tabulation disclosed that Curley had closed the gap and was
actually in the lead. There were groans when Mansfield returns gave him again
first place. But the tide had definitely set in for Curley and victory by a narrow
margin was at last assured.
The crowd came pressing into the headquarters. The street filled as if my
magic and soon the hero of the hour arrived on the scene. It required a strong
bodyguard of police to make a way for him. But he struggled forward smiling,
happy, and tired. He mounted a box and stood there while the most deafening of
cheers rang out and continued for minutes. All the while the successful
candidate was bowing and greeting his personal friends whom he saw wedged in
the crowd. I was one of those whom he greeted specially.
I was later invited "to sit in the seats of the mighty" at the Mayor's
inauguration in January 1930.
One of the early acts of the Curley administration was to make ready for
the celebration of the Boston Tercentenary. While I was very naturally interested
in the celebration because of my ancestors Mayhew, Ruggles and others of the
original settlers of Boston, yet I had no expectation of participation in an official

way.

)

My first intimation that the Mayor had me in mind came when I received a
letter dated Jan. 27th, inviting me to join a committee of three hundred to launch
the Boston celebration. Gladly I accepted the invitation.
The first meeting was called for Jan. 31, 1930 to convene in the Old South
Church. On the morning of the meeting I read in the newspaper that I had been
appointed to the Executive Committee. There was a measure of satisfaction in
this fact for I found that President March of Boston University, Judge Robert
Grant and other celebrities who attended the first meeting were not thus honored.
But news of honors came to me by degrees and I was as much surprised
as anybody to have my name read at the meeting as one of the three vicechairmen of the General Committee.

Chairman of Radio Broadcasting Committee

J

The first meeting of the Executive Committee of the Boston Tercentenary was
called by John F. Fitsgerald, Chairman of the General Committee, to meet at City
Hall February 3, 1930. Knowing that the time was very limited within which we
could make plans I went to the meeting prepared to make definite suggestions.
This was fortunate for I found that the entire personnel of the committee
were in the dark, mentally groping for ideas. They were agreed, however, that
the task was an appalling one. The amount of money that would be required for
advertising alone was set by some members who were experts in such work was
set a half a million dollars.
But not even in the first enthusiasm of the moment no members were so
rash as to declare this an amount that could be raised. In the midst of their
gloomy and pessimistic utterance I arose with what I felt should be a note of
optimism.

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I expressed the opinion that we were entirely overlooking the most potent
and up-to-date mode of advertising now existing - the radio. I called attention to
the appalling expense of magazine and newspaper advertising and the long
delays that must result before the advertising could reach the attention of the
reading public. I pointed out the self-evident fact that the radio gave us
instantaneous contact with the very people we wanted to reach.
Having had some months of experience as guest speaker over WBZWBZA, I advanced the opinion that the great Tercentenary Celebration could
secure advertisements of free time over the air from the various radio stations of
New England and of the nation. In fact I was very optimistic on this score.
To my surprise however there was not a single comment on my
suggestion, which piqued me somewhat. The fact was, rio doubt, that all of the
other members of the committee felt that my idea was fantastic and impractical.
They accordingly passed over it in silence.
After the meeting I broached it again to John F. Fitzgerald and he said it
was a good idea if it would work. He then made the diplomatic suggestion that I
investigate the matter and report to the next meeting.
I thereupon interviewed John L. Clark, Director of Programs of the stations
over which I then making weekly broadcasts. He was favorably disposed toward
the project and promised every possible aid.
As a result of my report the Executive Committee commissioned me to act
as chairman of the radio committee. With the co-operation of Chairman
Fitzgerald, Mr. Brown and Mr. Keenan, I drew up a list composed of
newspapermen and managers of various broadcasting stations of Boston.
By good fortune every man nominated agreed to serve, so my fellow
members of the committee were the following:
Charles W. Burton, Manager Station WEEI
John L. Clark, Program Director, Stations WBZ-WBZA
Willard DeLue, Radio Dept. Boston Globe
Harold E. Fellows, Greenleaf Advertising Agency
William G. Gavin, Boston Herald
Bartholomew F. Griffin, Boston News Bureau
Ralph LeRoy Harlow, Manager Stations WNAC-WEAN
Forrest P. Hull, Boston Transcript
Rush T. Jones, Christian Science Monitor
Walter R. Meins, Roxbury Historical Society
James W. Reardon, Boston American
Joe Toy, Editor Boston Traveler
The first committee meeting was held in my library at Suffolk Law School
on February 13th. I outlined to them a tentative plan for a two-fold program of
radio broadcasting:
( 1) Local broadcasts in which all local stations would be asked to donate
broadcasting time in a three month series of radio talks.
(2) Nation wide broadcasting in which the Columbia and National Broadcasting
Company would be asked to join, donating the time.

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,..-)
'-.-..... ,/

)

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The plan looked feasible to me and I had drawn up a letter addressed to the
great New York companies which I had hoped the committee would sign as a
body, so that I might take it to New York in a projected interview with the
officials of the great chains. The committee were well nigh unanimous in
declaring the plan hopeless. Mr. Burton of WEEI declared that the national
chain to which his station belonged would not look with favor upon it. Mr.
Harlow of WNAC made a similar declaration of the Columbia chain. In fact
they figured that my plan for the chain broadcasting would cost about
$200,000. They were of the opinion that unless we were prepared to spend
that amount of money my trip to New York would be fruitless.
I assured them, however, that it could do no harm to try. Mr. Clark of
WBZ-WBZA agreed to go with me to introduce me to the officials at NBC.
The committee wished me luck but declined to sign the letter. Mayor James
Curley, however, had more faith in my mission and gave me a splendid letter
of introduction to the National Broadcasting Company.
Before going any farther with my story it may be well to go back a bit to a
matter that becomes very significant in light of developments soon to be
unfolded in connection with the National Broadcasting Company.
The success of my law broadcasts had been so pronounced that Mr.
Clark, the Director of Programs of WBZ-WBZA, had written to the officers of
NBC urging them in the strongest terms to take my talks onto a national hook
up. This letter was dated January 14, 1930. The proposition was apparently
under advisement for some time but under date of January 23d Phillips
Carlin, Assistant to the Vice President in Charge of Programs, wrote a very
diplomatic letter to Mr. Clark declining to give me a try out.
'We have given the matter careful consideration," he wrote, "but, base on
precedent and past experience, we have decided it would be better not to get
into this sort of series. Were we to do this, we should apply to the American
Bar Association for a speaker to be assigned, since naturally we would want
the endorsement of that supreme authority in a matter of this kind.
However law is different in every state and, to a considerable extent,
technical in matter and not possessing mass appeal unless made
sensational, and we feel that it would be better to steer clear of it."
Thus three weeks after my law series had been rejected by the NBC
officials I was proposing to make an attempt to interest them in a totally new
field of broadcasting which involved advertising, the very field from which the
great broadcasting chains derived their chief revenue.
After deciding to go to New York I chanced to be talking to one of our
newspapermen, and he asked me if I had talked to "Hap" Myers, the New
England representative of the National Broadcasting Co. This was a new
lead which I followed up immediately by making an appointment with Mr.
Myers. I went to his office in the Little Building.
Walter Myers is a very magnetic and friendly young man with a rare
combination of business ability and vision (business men are all too often
lacking an imagination and relying wholly upon tried and established custom).
He kindled at once to my plans. Realizing that he would be a valuable ally I

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invited him to be a member of my committee, and also to accompany us to
New York.
He agreed to do so. He did more than that. He called the National
Officers by long distance telephone and made an appointment for us to see
them on February 18th_ Desiring to be well prepared for what I knew to be a
fateful interview I invited Mr. Myers and Mr. Clark to meet at my office at noon
on February 1th and go to lunch with me.
We lunched at the Bellevue and got on famously. By appointment we met
in the South Station ready to take the midnight train for New York. Well, we
didn't get to bed on the sleeper until after one o'clock, all because "Hap"
Myers was entertaining us in the men's room with the most fascinating yarns.
He had been a newspaper reporter before entering the radio field.
As a newspaperman he had had much to do with the late Harry Houdini,
the magician. Houdini, it will be remembered, was very skeptical of spirit
mediums and took great delight in exposing their fraudulent practices. Mr.
Myers had witnessed many of Houdini's dare devil exploits and held us quite
spell bound it the recital thereof.
We were reluctant to retire but oh so much more reluctant to arise after
our brief and fitful slumbers! The porter's sad voice was inexpressibly doleful
to us when he came to declare that we would have to get up. Mr. Myers
sleepy protest from the berth below me was eloquent of my own feelings.
The backache that I had been entertaining for several days was still with me
when we three emerged from the train into the subterranean mysteries of the
Grand Central Terminal.
Our appointment was for 1OAM, so we agreed to meet at the Hotel
Victoria at about 9:30. I purchased tickets for our return trip, ate a frugal
breakfast and fared forth for a shave. I customarily, when in New York City
went to outside talent, having learned from experience that the railroad
barbershop gives one whirlwind shave that leaves the face more surprised
that barbered.
Thinking that the brisk air of winter would prove beneficial to my aching
head I walked down Forty-Second Street to Times Square, and thence down
Seventh Avenue to Hotel Victoria. It was too early for our appointment so I
sat in the hotel lobby and wrote for some time. When I went to Mr. Myer's
room I found that he and Mr. Clark were having breakfast in the room. We
discussed plans for our meeting with NBC, then took a taxi to the Fifth
Avenue building.
My headache was doing its throbbing worst when we met the celebrated
announcer Phillips Carlin. He was already in the corridor of his own floor (the
12th) ready to go up to the 15th floor where Mr.. Elwood's office is located. My
first impressions of Mr. Carlin were written down at that time. From the
manuscript I will quote the following:
"Mr. Carlin is a thick set men of medium height. His hair is gone on top,
so far a real hair is concerned but there is a fairly thick carpet of fuzz that
keeps him from being really and nakedly bald. His eyes are dark and full of
good-humored animation. When we met him today a dark stubble of a beard

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was manifest on his jaws and cheeks. I fancy he needs to shave about twice
a day.
"As I gazed upon this sturdy, unromantic appearing artist of the air I
thought of the many times I had heard his voice over the radio and how I had
pictured him as tall an slim - a sort of Lindbergh. I still have the same mental
picture of Graham McNamee, but as for Carlin, when I hear him again I shall
picture him as he is, a well-fed, practical business executive.
"I remarked to him that I had expected him to be much taller and
commented on the fact that my own radio fans had the curious impression
that I was short and thick-set. He explained that men with high pitched voices
were usually pictured in that way, where radio fans are equally sure that a
man with a deep voice is tall and angular like Abraham Lincoln.
"After some delay we were admitted into the executive offices of Mr. John
W. Elwood, the Vice President. He is a large man, tall and broad, with a fine
intelligent countenance. He greeted us very cordially and with a smile that is
very genuine - a broad smile in which one saw white teeth with definite
spaces between them, every tooth distinct and not crowded into one mass.
"I presented my "credentials" from Mayor Curley which he read and
commented upon approvingly. It was made clear from the onset that the
Tercentenary was well known to them.
"What relation does your committee bear to that of Mr. Herbert Parker?"
he asked.
I explained that Mr. Parker was chairman of the State Committee and that
I was vice chairman of the newly formed committee for the Boston
Tercentenary. Thus there was no relationship between us except that before
coming to New York as chairman of the Radio Broadcasting Committee I had
insisted that I be clothed with authority to speak for the radio men in all
groups now engaged in Tercentenary work.
This was fortunate for I later learned that Mr. Parker had incurred the
displeasure of the NBC officers by a singular manifestation of self-importance.
He had written to NBC suggesting the importance of having the chief events
broadcast. They had responded very graciously and had invited Mr. Parker to
call for an interview the first time he chanced to be in New York. Mr. Parker
had thereupon written them that he was a very busy man with little leisure to
come to New York but that he would be glad to have them come to see him in
Boston.
For the officials of so great an organization to be bidden to come to
Boston to visit the self-important ex-attorney general was a most unfortunate
blunder that might have been fatal to my cause. But Mr. Parker in his letter
had given them to understand that he was not seeking favors but expected to
pay for broadcasting. This in itself was a serious obstacle in my path.
But when Mr. Elwood opened the business of the conference by asking
me how much time on the air I was prepared to buy, I met the situation by
frankly declaring that I could not offer to buy a single hour on the air, that I
cam hat in hand asking the cooperation of NBC as a matter of public service.
Of course, I explained that because of the unfortunate circumstances in which

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we found ourselves we were unable to raise money and dared not promise or
pledge any such accomplishment.
But in stressing the opportunity of public service I had unwittingly
appealed to Mr. Elwood's vulnerable spot. HE demurred to the idea however
and stated that "Worlds Fairs" and "Sesquicentennials" were usually "flops"
anyway and in view of the fact that we had no money to spend he did not see
how the Boston celebration could be anything but a colossal failure.
This gave me the very opening that I desired. I pointed out that we were
not staging a world's fair, so that we were not to build attractive and
expensive settings for pageantry, but were simple to rededicate the great
shrines of America in our midst that were already venerated by millions. I
enumerated these shrines one by one and launched into an earnest argument
to show the spiritual significance of the celebration. I pointed out the great
need now existing to bring the America people back to a realization of the
ideals upon which the Nation was founded.
The argument made a distinct impression but they were still unable to see
how the radio could play a very great part in the process. To this I replied that
Christ taught his greatest truths by parables. And that we proposed to teach
these great lessons of patriotism not by preaching but by human interest
stories of early days, showing how in Boston the great experiments in
democratic government, not merely for itself and America, but for the world,
were successfully worked out. I cited the story of the squabble over the
widow's pig that caused the Massachusetts legislature to separate into a
Senate and a House, thus giving the Nation one of its greatest lessons in
practical agencies of government. I then read to them the broadcast that I
had prepared entitled "The Pig That Caused A Political Revolution." That
story won them over completely. They asked if I had any other such
entertaining yarns. I could supply any number they desired.
Vice-President Elwood then asked if I would come to New York once a
week and broadcast these stories to the school children of America. He said
that five million boys and girls were then listening in to the Walter Damrosch
Series on Appreciation of Music, which series would end soon. He offered to
put me on for a series of stories on early colonial history and assured me that
it would be broadcast for about forty stations, from the Atlantic to the Rick
Mountains. Of course, I accepted the offer immediately. He then offered an
evening series to begin on June 3rd, a coast-to-coast hook-up that would
reach twenty-five million listeners. This would enable us to put on notable
speakers, Mayor Curley of Boston, Governor Allen, Calvin Coolidge, Senator
Walsh, Senator Borah and others. Of course, I accepted that proposition at
once.
We also worked out a marvelous plan for an international broadcast of a
number of seven minute speeches by a relay of speakers in the same
program, one from Boston Common, one from Lexington, one from Faneuil
Hall, one from Plymouth Rock, etc., also including a broadcast from London,
one from Germany and so on. Perhaps I should add that this last plan was
the only one that failed of accomplishment and that it failed because we could

�126

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not secure speakers of National prominence to come to Boston on the 4th of
July. But I did have the satisfaction of seeing NBC carry out this very
program on September 18, 1930 in connection with the advance publicity for
the American Legion Convention.
The effect upon my Broadcasting Committee of this overwhelming victory
was curious indeed. Not a single one of those who had been most vocal in
declaring the plan a wild dream ever after appeared in a meeting of the
committee. In fact, the attendance after the first meeting was so slim that we
held only three meetings. After all, it was not necessary to bother these busy
men with details after they had approved my general plans for the two series
of broadcasts. These details must of necessity be worked out by the
chairman and the broadcasting companies.
It must not be supposed, however, that my course was smooth sailing. Mr.
Harlow of WNAC, a member of the Columbia Broadcasting chain, at once
offered his resignation. He chose to regard my tying up with NBC as an act of
favoritism. He admitted, however, that he had assured me in strongest terms
that Columbia would not have given me a sympathetic hearing. He admitted
also that there was a spirit of rivalry between the two great chains that would
have rendered it necessary to choose between them.
I found, however, that Mr. Shepard, the owner of WNAC was the real party
who was angry and that Mr. Harlow was acting under orders of his chief. So I
went to see the choleric gentleman. My confidential report to Mayor Curley
and his reply were as follows:
March 6, 1930
Memorandum for Mayor Curley.
On March 5, 1930, as Chairman of the Radio Broadcasting Committee of
the Tercentenary I held an hour's conference with John Shepard 3rd and Roy
Harlow because of Mr. Shepard's refusal to let Mr. Harlow continue to serve
on our committee. Mr. Shepard professes to act in a sort of dignified protest
in behalf of the Columbia Broadcasting Company because the National
Broadcasting Company are to make the first broadcast of the Tercentenary
series. His reasoning is so extraordinary that I feel you should be informed in
case the question should come before you in the future. I have endeavored
to be very diplomatic and friendly and flatter myself that I have succeeded.
In the first place I took care that Mr. Harlow, the manager of WNAC
(representing the Columbia chain) as well as Mr. Clark (Blue Network of
National) should be on the broadcasting committee.
When we held the first meeting of the Committee I presented my plan of
going to New York to appeal to the National and Columbia chains to take on
the series as a patriotic service to the Nation. I had hoped that one chain
might run a series the first of the week and the other the last of the week.

)

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An anvil chorus of disapproval from everybody except Mr. Clark greeted
my proposal. Mr. Burton declared that National would not be interested. Mr.
Harlow said that he was positive Columbia would not listen to me for a
moment unless I came ready to pay cash for the series. Mr. Burton figured
that it would cost over $180,000 to put on my plan.

I insisted that I was going to New York and try it out and requested the
committee to sign a joint appeal to the broadcasting companies for aid in
celebrating the Tercentenary of the Nation's birth. The committee refused to
sign.
Now Mr. Shepard takes the attitude that even after my plan had been
pronounced a wild "pipe dream" by the committee that it was then my duty to
have arranged a joint conference of the officials of the two big chains or not to
have presented the plan to anyone. He admitted that these hostile chieftains
would probably not have listened to me for a moment and that I would not
have gotten a dollar of free broadcasting for the City. But he insists that it
should have been done that way.

D

Now, as you know, I went to National headquarters with my friend Mr.
Clark and with Mr. Myers, the N. E. Representative of National. They secured
an audience for me and I succeeded in convincing the officials of the National
that my plan was not a pipe dream but an opportunity of rendering a great
public service. I brought back assurances of about a quarter of a million
dollars worth of free broadcasting.
Mr. Shepard says it was "very unfortunate" and that now that Columbia
"has been slighted" by my giving National first chance he will advise
Columbia, if the question arises, not to give us any advertising over the air at
all.
He said that unless I was prepared to junk everything and start over again
it was all off so far as Mr. Harlow's membership in our committee was
concerned. I told him that I had accepted the offer of the National
Broadcasting Company for the preliminary broadcasts and that the offer
stipulated that National, while the broadcasts were running, should have
exclusive right. I felt that if they were giving us so much they had a right to
ask something in return. I stated that we were in honor bound to keep our
promise and that any other course would be suicidal to the Tercentenary and
the City's interests.
I urged upon him, in the interests of New England, that he co-operate in
plans for New England broadcasts even if he chose to stand on his dignity in
regard to Columbia (which, by the way, knows nothing about it and would
probably not given us anything anyway). But when Mr. Shepard is standing

�128

up for his dignity he does a thorough job if it and we must proceed without Mr.
Harlow.
I did extract a sort of promise from Mr. Shepard that WNAC will help in
local broadcasts. I put the question to him squarely whether he would refuse
this help because WNAC had not helped us frame the program. He said that
he was merely interested that they should not help frame a program that their
rivals could use.
Thus endeth the Chapter.
Cordially yours,
GLA/D.

DEAN.

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CITY O.F BOSTON

OFFICE 01.' THE MAYOR
CITY HAT..L
JAMES M, CURLEY
Maunr

Mar oh 11, 19 30.

Dean Gleason L. Archer•
20 Derne st.,
Boston, Mass.
MY dear Mr. Aroher:

I have just completed reading of your interesting experience with Mr. Shepard, Jr., of WNJO,
and I rejoioe that you stood firm and achieved your
goal.

I have had similar experiences with this station

and have not been as suooesarul at all times as you
have been.
With every good wish and assurances ot my
desire to cooperate, I am,
Sincerely yours,

.,/4.-~
Mayor.

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Saturday, April 19

WLOE

7:30- 7:45 P.M.

Speaker - Hon. Gasper Bacon, President Massachusetts Senate
Topic - - "Spirit of'76 in Colonial Days"
Monday, April 21

WEEI

10:30 - 10:45 P.M.

Speaker - John Jackson Walsh
Topic - - "The Appeal of the Tercentenary"
Wednesday, April 23

WLOE

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Miss Elizabeth M. Herlihy
Topic - - "Relation of Other New England Colonies to Massachusetts Bay Colony"
Thursday, April 24

WLEX

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Walter R. Meins
Topic - - "Founding of Roxbury"
Friday, April 25

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-seven stations
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "Haunted by Skulking Savages"

Sunday, April 27

WNAC

11:45 A.M.

7:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Hon. Edward P. Barry
Topic - - "The Fight for Democracy in New England"
NBC Broadcast

11:45 A.M.

Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "Massasoit Makes Peace"
Saturday, May 3

WLOE

7:30 - 7:45 P.M.

Speaker - Hon. J. C. Joseph Flamand
Topic - - "The French Colonists of Early New England"
Wednesday, May7

WEEI

7:00 - 7: 15 P.M.

Speaker - Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "John Oldham and the Pequots"
Wednesday, t\.1.ay7

WLOE

Speaker - Richard W. Hale
Topic - - "Bringing Charter to New England"

J

8:30 - 8:45 P.M.

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Thursday, May 8

WLEX

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Richard K. Morton
Topic - - "Home Life of the Puritans"
Friday, May 9

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "Wilderness Aristocracy and Democracy"

Thursday,May 15

WBZA

11:45 A.M.

5:30 - 5:45 P.M.

Speaker - Edwin D. Mead
Topic - - "The Historical Background"
Friday, May 16

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "How Boston Clashed with Stuart Kings"

Saturday, May 17

WLOE

11:45 A.M.

8: 15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Albert Hurwitz
Topic - - "The Jewish Pioneers in New England"
Tuesday, May 20

WNAC

8:30 - 8:45 P.M.

Speaker - Bartholomew F. Griffm, Editor Boston News Bureau
Topic - - "Financial History of Early New England"
Wednesday, May 21

WLOE

8:30 - 8:45 P.M.

Speaker - Professor Frank Vogel
Topic - - "German Contributions to New England"
Friday, May 23

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "The Pig that brought Us Our Senate and House"

Saturday, May 24

WLEX

11 :45 A.M.

8: 15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Rev. W. Sikora
Topic - - "The Polish Settlers ofNew England"
Thursday, May27

WEEI

7: 15 - 7:30 P.M.

Speaker - William C. Crawford
Topic - - "The Boston Massacre"

SUFFOL!{ Uf\llVEHSITY

J

BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�130

(Library Jan 4, 1931)

~

1

'···-·'

,'

I went forward with my plans for the broadcast that I was to give over NBC
and also with the plan that I had proposed to the Broadcasting Committee for the
local broadcasts. In order to accomplish this is was of course necessary to get
the local stations to broadcast for us free of charge. After what NBC had agreed
to do there was no very great difficulty about it. Each of them came in on the
plan. By each I mean WEEI, WBZ-WBZA, WNAC, WLOE, WLEX.
Then when I had the program well outlined and had opened the local
series by a personal broadcast over WNAC on March 1]1h, John F. Fitzgerald
returned from Florida. Fitzy blew up, because he had not led off, I suppose, and
raised a great row about my having exceeded my authority. This occurred at the
first meeting after his return. I responded with some indignation to his tirade
assuring them that the Executive Committee had been consulted at every stage
of the proceedings and had approved of my plan. Col. Pierce Guthrie was so
indignant about Fitzgerald's attitude that he came into the fray and declared that I
had accomplished more for the Tercentenary than all others put together and that
Fitzgerald should thank me instead of bawling me out.
This was the beginning of trouble with John F. but I kept on with the very
engrossing duties of the chairmanship. A part of the program is as follows:
Monday, March 17

J

WNAC

4:45 - 5:00 P.M.

Speaker - Gleason L. Archer, Chairman Broadcasting Committee
Topic - - "The Bradford History and the Winthrop Journal"
Saturday, March 22

WLOE

7:30 - 7:45 P.M.

Speaker - Robert F. Denvir, Jr. "Boston Record"
Topic - - "The Western Colony at Weymouth"
Monday, March 24

WEEI

7:15 - 7:30 PM

Speaker - Hon. Frank G. Allen, Governor of Massachusetts
Topic - - "John Winthrop, Founder and Governor"
Thursday, March 27

WLEX

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Forrest P. Hull "Boston Transcript"
Topic - - "The Salem Colony"
Saturday, March 29

WNAC

7:30 - 7:45 P.M.

Speaker - Hon. John F. Fitzgerald
Topic - - "Meaning of the Tercentenary"
Tuesday, April l

WBZ

10:30 - 10:45 P.M.

Speaker - Hon. Leverett Baltonstall, Speaker of the House
Topic - - "Watertown and the Colony"

)

SUFFOU&lt; UNtV(£.RSff't
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�131
Saturday, April 5

WLOE

7:30 - 7:45 P.M.

Speaker - Frank Chouteau Brown
Topic - - "Willian Blaxton and the Removal to Boston"
Tuesday, April 8

WNAC

8:30 - 8:45 P.M.

Speaker - Judge Frank Leveroni
Topic - - "The First Winter in Boston"
Wednesday,April9

WLOE

8: 15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - William W. Lundell
Topic - - "Sir Henry Vane in New England
Thursday, April 10

WLEX

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Judge Michael H. Sullivan
Topic - - "Settlement of Dorchester"
Friday, April 11
NBC broadcast over chain of thirty-five stations. Key Station WEAF
11 :45 A.M.
New York.
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "Myles Standish and the Redskins"

My first appearance over a national hookup was of course a momentous
one for me. I knew that eminent experts would be sitting in judgment upon me.
It must be remembered that NBC had put me on for this series without giving me
an audition - no doubt an unheard of thing with them.
When I went into the great studio where silence and solemnity and
ceremony reigned as to all save the performer, I found another program in
progress. I was to go on immediately and to use a new type of microphone. It
was only human that I should have been under a considerable nervous tension,
but I fancy they never realized it. The NBC people seemed pleased with my
performance and I received many congratulations. Elizabeth and the home folks
who could listened in were in and all pleased with the way the broadcast came
over the air.
Tuesday, April 15

WEEI

6:35 - 6:48 P.M.

Speaker - Richard K. Morton
Topic - - "Indians in Colonial Times"
Friday, April 18
NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-five stations.
Key Station WEAF New York.
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "Death Stalks the Pilgrim Fathers"

)

11:45 A.M.

�134

Friday, May 30

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
11 :45 A.M.
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "New England Confederation and King Philip War"

Tuesday, June 3

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
Key Station WEAF New York
Speaker - Dean Gleason L. Archer
Topic - - "John Winthrop and the Puritans"

Wednesday,June4

WLOE

7:15 P.M.

8:30- 8:45 P.M.

Speaker - Judge Frank Laveroni
Topic - - "Italian Pioneers in New England"
Thursday, June 5

WBZA

5:30 - 5:45 P.M.

Speaker - Sherman L. Whipple
Topic - - "Lexington to Bunker Hill"
Saturday, June 7

WXLE

8:15 - 8:30 P.M.

Speaker - Carl W. Johansson
Topic - - "Scandinavian Contributions to New England"

J

Tuesday, June 17

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
WEEI Boston
7:15 P.M.
Speaker - Mayor James M. Curley
Topic - - "Spirit of Independence in Colonial Boston"
Note: Because of Mayor Curley's great bereavement in the death of his beloved wife which
occurred at this time, Mr. Wilfred E. Kelley substituted at the microphone.
Tuesday, June 24

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
WRC Washington D.C.
Speaker - Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers
Topic - - "Governor Andros in New England"

7:15 P.M.

Tuesday, July l

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
WRC Washington D.C.
11 :45 A.M.
Speaker - U.S. Senator David I. Walsh
Topic - - "How New England Confederation Paved Way for Nation

Tuesday, July 8

NBC Broadcast
Chain of thirty-eight stations
WEAFNewYork
Speaker - Ex-Mayor John F. Fitzgerald
Topic - - "Patriots and Poets of New England"

)

11:45 A.M.

�135

The air tour of "The New Arbella" to advertise the Tercentenary and the Legion convention
hinged upon securing a national broadcast from the plane. The Boston Herald had promised to
finance the trip if such a broadcast could be secured. The sponsors of the trip had almost given up
hope but they brought the matter to me as chairman of the Broadcasting Committee just as I was
leaving for a conference with NBC officials on our regular program.
I persuaded them nor only to stage the broadcast from the plane while flying over New
York City, but also to have Graham McNamee deliver the broadcast. Incidentally I wrote the script
for McNamee's talk and had the pleasure of sitting in the control room of the studio that broadcast it
while the broadcast was going on.
The second opportunity of service was in connection with the great Watertown celebration.
Thirty-six hours before the affair I learned that Ex-President Coolidge was to speak and that the
local committee had been unable even to secure a local broadcast of the affair. I reached Vice
President Elwood by long distance telephone in the late evening and the next morning the National
Broadcasting Company broke open its programs and arranged a nation-wide broadcast of ExPresident Coolidge's address.

D

J

As the result of my success in putting over the "New Arbella" broadcast for the Boston
Herald that paper reciprocated by publishing my NBC broadcasts in full each week in the Boston
Sunday Herald. Not only that, but they had an artist illustrate them each week.
There was another and very significant development that arose our of the historical
broadcasts. Mr Sharp advised me to take the script to the Century Company. Mr Ferrin, the
treasurer, was a great admirer of Prof. Sharp. When I arrived for an interview I received a very
cordial welcome (Gleason Jr. was with me). I found that Mr. Ferrin had received one of the letters
that I has sent out at the time of Prof. Sharp's death. He was quite impressed by my ability to write.
Mrs. Anne Stoddard of the Juvenile books department was called in. She took the
manuscript of the various talks and promised to report as soon as possible over the possibility of
their forming a nucleus for a book. The report was very favorable and later in the summer I
prepared some preliminary chapters of a book on Plymouth Colony. The first draft was more
historical in style than they desired so I worked out a new plan - to build the story around the life of
William Bradford. So a royalty contract was drawn up. I had the satisfaction of being urged to
include in the contract offer for two other books on colonial history.
But there was another result that came out the broadcasting of the Tercentenary that has
borne great fruit. Before the series ended I suggested to Phillips Carlin that if NBC would like to
have me fill in on Tuesday evenings at 7:15 during the dull weeks of summer, I would be glad to
stage some law talks. He accepted the suggestion but stipulated that it would have to be at my
expense and that I would have to come to New York for the broadcasts.
So immediately after the close of the historical series I began a new series entitled, "Laws
that Safeguard Society." My fist talk was given July 15th, 1930. They went out over a coast to
coast chain. Before long, sufficient interest had been aroused to warrant Mr. Carlin in giving me
assurance that my talks would continue in the fall.
In August 1930, the American Bar Association Convention was held in Chicago. After the
housecleaning in the section of Legal Education that had been accomplished during the previous
year I had no special reason to urge further reform in the section itself. It seemed to me, however,
that the time had come to undertake a bit of reforming in the standards of legal education that had
been foisted upon the American Bar Association by the university schools. These schools had felt
so free to formulate rules for all law schools it might prove wholesome discipline if we were to
reform some of the evils in the university schools themselves.

�136
(At 'ti1is' point Ohn lrmRD 8mlth delivered
hiA nd(l~RR. Sr.o pnJro OJln.)
1trr. UIPnFl&lt;ln L. Arr.her, of MH.•mc-hn11elta: '
l\lr. Obalrmnn, a point ot Information.
Cbntrman Smith: Stnte'.7our point, J.&gt;e11n •
Arrher.
l\lr, Archer: According to the constu11Unn·- el nmenrlnumt ndoptt'1I two yr.n~ flJ?O, thltt is
0

The fact that lawyers and judges are
being displaced generally on law school faculties
and all teaching in the university schools is being
turned over to doctrinaires who have never
practiced law seemed to me an evil that was
open to attack. I therefore prepared a resolution
designed to place the Bar Association on record
as condemning the practice and calling for at
least 50% of all law teaching by men who have
had practical experience in the legal profession.
How to present this resolution was the chief
problem. The committee in charge of
arrangements for the meeting had resorted to the
old strategy of filling up all the time allotted for the
meeting with formal papers. The meeting was
scheduled for Tuesday August 19, 1930 at 2 P.M.
On the morning of that day I conceived of
a plan for checkmating the aforesaid strategy.
My plan succeeded as will be seen from the
following extract from the official minutes. The
president or rather chairman of the section had
just read his report. Before he could start the
formal program I got the floor.
I had thus rendered it impossible for
those on the steam roller to avoid having a
business meeting. They could no longer claim
the courtesy to guest speakers who filled up all
the time inadvertently prevented them from
permitting adequate opportunity for discussion. I
had also put on record the method by which we
had been outvoted in Memphis.

to he D huAlnC?M mef'tlng. Now, I nbservr. rnun
th&lt;' r,ro,trnm that we hnve n fnlrl1 run pTo·
grnin
formal 1,a11er11 nnd dl8&lt;."usslons. J
W&lt;&gt;nld Uke, ther&lt;!&gt;Core, to know 410w 1011 will
n1'fmrlton the time bf!twcen 1h11 rlls.:1111.ct!on on
bnr exnmlnn1.lons nncl tb.e poSRible discussion
or lnw Mehool ml!tboda.
Chnlrmnn Srnlth: The 1m,,::ra111 n11 "'" lmve
rlt'~1,01C'fl It, wlll ha through In nJ,ont one hour
frn1r1 nnw. 'J'lae fantml pnpcrs a111I .Uk,~llNtlnn
nml Nm ot.ber bualnel!S wlll e~rlnfnt.r not

or

f.nJcc tnore Umn the time left'tor the nrterno&lt;,n,

. os

wP.

lu1 Uete, am] we &amp;ee no remron to an-

tlclr,nlr. lbnt It will.
AfT. Arebcr:
4 o'clock, then, we wlll

n,

rencb new burdnr.sR?

,..:, t'hnlnnnn Smith: Before then, at lcnAt 1 Utnt
. J111 011r nnUrlpnllon.
J\fT. Areher: Very well. Now, thr.rc Is 011e
olh&lt;?T 1&gt;nlnt of lnfor1m,tlon:
We nre In R ver, 1m1nll 1't1mtt. JAJflt yr:11· we
Jmcl n TM1 Jnrgo room. I'r•l"slhlr Mir. ,11nlc~Jtl~ U1nt nrose Jut rcnr wUl nol nrJ!IC(! In t.hf11
-· m~llng, b11t J wnuld like to n11k who wlll ha

entttled to Tote uron any IDft tfora or bmllu&lt;'SA
lhnl mny come 11p? ·wm It he lhPRU who
hn \"r. hNtrfl thr fllRen~h•m1? J n ntJ1r.r 1t'ortl$J,
f11 tltl11 to be n dr.llhrrnlh·P mrrtlnlf, or nrc• we
lo hnvn ·,dmck trooJ't.1' rmchh11( In nt. f•lu• lni;t
mhmle nnd outvote tho..~ wlao hihe hmrrl tl1e
dehnt~?
Ohnlrnum Smith: Perbapa J'OU dlll uot hear
nm t&lt;'nd Uu~ rcaoluUc,n, wtaM1

1vnR

lt&gt; t111e

er- ,

fN.'t thnt nll tile 1nrml'K'tS regh:ifrrcd In Rt·
tmulnur:-&lt;? hf're are e11tltled to parUclj1ftte In
thlA merllng.
~
Irr. ArC"her: TruP.1 but that snn1r. thlnJt wns
clone Jnst yrnr, amt 1 kno,v All R&lt;•cllom~. with
our exct'11Unn, e11Ape11derl. nnd U.e,- n 11 come
lufn ot1r meeting of tJ1e·seeUon on J~n.l Edu-

cation.
.
Chnlrmnn Bmllb: I did not kno\V Ntn.t
Thr.;r ct'rtnlnly crnmnt get In ber~ to-rl1111 In
thr. erO\\'tlro condlUon
lhlB room now.
-

)

...

of

--

'T

�Illness and Death of Dallas Lore Sharp
In the summer of 1929 there befell a very sad event for us all. One day in July I received a postal
from Mrs. Sharp saying that Professor Sharp was at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital for observation and
needed cheering up. I called upon him that very day.

)

My poor doomed friend was in a bad way. His face was unusually flushed and his voice unusually
slow. But he was very glad to see me and we had half an hour together. He was inclined to feel that there
was no real trouble and expressed hope that he could go down to my place the next Saturday. I promised to
call on my way home to see if the doctors would let him go.
Alas, when I called Saturday morning he was on the operating table being operated on for a brain
tumor. That was about July 29, 1929. Well, the operation disclosed to the surgeon at least that the tumor
was incurable. He therefore removed a large section of his cranial bone in order to relieve the pressure.
This resulted in a relatively painless progress of the disease.
Dallas was a mere ghost of himself thereafter, a witful and plaintive figure. The sparkling eye and
the smiling face were gone. Starring, frightened and sometimes irrational eyes looked out of a face that
resembled as a caricature almost the familiar features of Dallas Lore Sharp. The body lived on for four
tragic months. Several weeks were spent in the hospital but the balance of the time at Mullein Hill. Mrs.
Sharp and Morrison showered the doomed man with every loving attention.
They told me that I was the first beside the family to be permitted to see him. He recognized me
and managed to muster a half smile and to converse with me after a fashion. My visits seemed to cheer him
so I called upon him whenever I could.
He had spells when he was able to read with his family, especially in the evening and seemed quite
normal. Singularly enough these spells continued almost to the end. I saw him the day before he died. He
was virtually in a coma at the time. Morrison tried to rouse him but I begged him not to disturb the poor soul.
I wrote a letter for Mrs. Sharp about this time to send out to his friends. She was receiving so many
inquiries that it was utterly impossible to answer them. This letter was read at his funeral and as a part of
the ceremony and was declared by critics to be "literature."
SUFFOLK uf·HVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�137

I,

ctinirmnn Smith: All Sn fat1tr of nceepUng
tin, rP.port of t11e Nomlnntlng Committee a,ld
the election of these ofDc:era, RfplfJ by snyfng
••Aye..•• ContrarJ', •·No..•• The motlou. ..la carrlecl.
·
·
The Seeretftr:, reports he baa caat one balJot In fn'l'or ot nn th&amp; offlcerl named by th&amp;
1
Nomlnatlni Committee,
The next or&lt;ler ot bualness Jg def.erred
btlSlnCffB. Jf there la any. I lnow of no do-

· ..... _. .... Ing staff au practicing IRwJ~r• ancl te&gt; au!&gt;- '..
atltutotherefor mtte theorists who h1t-ve never. ;
prncttcerl Jaw, anti who cannot, therefore, uu.- ·
- ·· · · · ·- d~tslaud the ethleal ·probleoie of tbe actbe

prnctltloner., Dor lmpBTt to students ethical ·
--····· : pl•lnnce to luhlre practice. therefore he It .
Re..1UJtv~, tha.t. the Amvlcan Bar AMOCt-.tlon gt&gt; on rt-Corel as dlsappro•lnr the aald In- :
·- - ·• novn.tlon nnd as recom1uet1dlng tha.t Jn ever, ·.
ap1,rovl'11 111w &amp;cbool at tean halt of all la"
. t~nY \msint!«S as a mntt~r ot T~ortl. The _:.. --··· tenclatng therein be eonducted by lawyers Ill
Becreblry Informa mo the~ .Ill no fl•f~
actl•e practice or b;, men who ha Ye ttcretofore ·
business. 80 r11r as the record Is mnttmed.
had at J.~t ttn years of uperlence In aetlve
11

Thnt brlDP 118 to tbe -point of comdderlng MW .....- ....... , prncl.1te.'~

)

'lVhel'('ft&amp;. Jnw Rel1nola l11tve now almo.c;t •.
, tlre!y 91~et'l Jnw offlees In th~ tTrdnh11:. •
. of pro.qpcetl'fe lnwyrrA, U1111 clrprlvlng l11w

atnclonts or ,lnT 'hr clnY t""ontnrt wm, 1nWJ"f'r11
nnd wtflh lhe pntctlcal probltlfflB ot the PTO•
"fe1.t11lon, nml
••w1tcfft\tt. the! \'t~nl l~mt-cney at
scbon1s thAt lu:·r~tofnro hn ioe '1Nm ftJlp1'0Yed by
thla Aallodatl00t la to banish from their teach• ,

th\!'""'

- ··-·-·--· .....

J

.

buslne&amp;.CI..
·
Now, Mr. Chnlrmn11t and gentlemen ot the
Mr. GJeaeon L. Archer, of . Boston: Mr.
· Sectlort, we JJR'fe ll$tenrc1 to some tttJ' nllle.
Ohalnnan-.-.
·
·
-· -- ···1 a'D&lt;l cotustn,d\-.:~ an&lt;l lnstmetbe d\tilCUarion •
.Chairman 'kmlth: Mr. J:reber.
. of Bar examinations and the problems bt ·
M.r. Areher: I b&amp;T~ a res&amp;lutloa to otrer, - - - - which the Bar Examiner- ta beset.. Quite nat,.
.and an ~ianetton or the resolution. I think I
· umlly Dar Examiners are blamed It newlf ad~
1t ~\&lt;1 i\\l b~ ~ 11ltb\n ~1ht mtft\1\te. I \
muted J11w1era prove of Inferior quality. Bar
ha.ve htul some copies of the re.solutfon pre- a. .. ·-·-- mxnmlHC!.fll. h,m·~ver, ean deal only with the
pared and t will ba•e them dlll:rlb\lte&lt;I. I ~
mnterfat thnt comes to theJr b11nd11 and re- ~
tbfnk the lawyers will be glad to see them, •·
8J)Onalhlllty ft&gt;l· H,e adequacy or lnadequncy of
· ,io they wlll know what tam ta1kln11bout.
:--·-.,...~this mnter2nl lies with H,e law 1ehoots atKI
Chntrrnan Smith: WIii J'Otl pnas Jt to the
not wlfh the Bar Fl,rn.mlnore.
Secretnr1 tor reading,
It sr.cms to me thnt ther~ 1s powlni 11p In
'Air, )\rehe-r: 1 ~Ill rcn,l It, •.reeJr.
lc,tffl r.clttcntfon n V('fry •1an~rouA ri10VP.1Dmt
OhatMnnn SmHb: Jt would bn better to ni1ul
thnt f.hrffltr.nfl tn bring OY~ grrnt.C?r evil#
the rest,ltatlon l'O that we would bow wl1nt
us,on ua. It llt very fitting ruad pro~r. there•
you\' roC!n\Rtk9 aT&amp; al\i1T~ t.o. I t1o not
tnrr. thnt the Am&lt;'rlcan JJor AMOCltlUon
wt11h to mnke U7 parlfflmentn.Q' Jaw11, but
!hnnld be aRkecl to tnka Mme positive actlnn
t'hnt 18 tho mmal cam-om and tb&amp; onnl method
· to &lt;!'f&gt;mtternct thtl moven1cnt..
o( pr~nUnr: a 111111 ttr ot new. b111tln~~ ff)r 1
\V\1ta,n tbP. y,nAt 20 yt'flm a powcrl'lll ,trnonp
the consltlcrntfon of t)JP. hot1Rt?, tor the mover .
&lt;&gt;f tlH'nrlstR among Um Jnw tenehers ot the
1 . · A8Sttf"lnflon rif Amerlcnn '-"ff School" bn.ft
to nnme thn new hueh1efUI, state wbnt It. IA.
Mr. Attlter: Ver, ,veU, the_n. I wm rend
deTelol'ed a Ax~ pollcJ of btu,lsblnat tl"\\m lnw
Ille rnsnlotlott:
·
school faculties nll lnwycn nnd JnclJes. natl
nwhereRs, the prnctlce ot law Jnvolves many
aubsUtotlng tor them mere ltt(lll acholnr" who
problems of profeastona1 ethles and prnctlce
ha•e never practlcecl 1nw, nnei In Rome (!O&amp;es
torn"'rb nsshnltnt~tl \\J law $\utltnta in bnv
who btlT"e nev(&gt;I' JJftf:IAf'd tht, B"r exan1f111ttlon
I
• D ~ , t1irm.1~h r.nntnct with membrrA or :
·111 11n7 atatt".. Rncll men, however tonmccl In
the bar and throngl, training ,Sn office routln(!...." ··· · ... the t11cor7 of 11nv. nro ()f1vtously not qua11fled
an,\
1&lt;\ pttle- r,tt,tt1,oolhe 1nwyers 1n the Intensely
... prnctlcnl prohl&lt;'ms or nn exneth1,c profeaalo11.
At ht'1.11t thP.y cnn mtar&lt;'IY turn out Ufrorl111'8 like
thr.n1ffrh·rR. Th~y rt1nnot t"n"t' t,._1 etht-ct,
hrrnu'-P mr:r llPl'CJ lin,1 no rnnlnctR \tlUs t?flllrnJ
prol11r1n~ e&gt;f Ut~ r,rofeMlon.
'J"lhn
'&gt;f 1111 fllNJt'l11fB liit to ltrr·o1110
fnrtbt't .nntl r11rthM' rf'movNl rrnm nm prn'!Ur.n I wnrhl ot 11ffa Ira Wf', th~refC"&gt;re. fln,I lhlA
gro11 1, ft~llr.i thnt the t~ehln,r ~, 1nw ·
81\~uld ~m~
e"XelnRhP. \,1J1th1N1&amp; ot men

t""""''"·'"

n,~

�138

,

.. . ·:

···;.
• \ ':;;i•·•,·rJ''•'lf:\\,~
............ . 1•rnctldng lnw.rcr 1119 a l('ftcf1rr~ :, ;ilen~·~; ·r:1
bar, f&lt;&gt; fn~ure rtclunl fll!rsonnf neqnnfntnnce,·
i!-.
,: nnd lnffucnce, wlt.h ff1e "'hole atndrnt borl:,,
fon&lt;•hh1it or lnw lu1s hrrn mn,lo lnrgely 4 ~~
•·lol~forNI Jtrof(lflslnn, lt1C'k1nst th~ h1111,lrnt1on' 1\'l
J In Ol'ifor to mi11hmd~i' thP. 1,rnctleal as well u
, tlln thoorotl(!QI Hlrfo of tho lnw.''
nt flu, 1u·rs1•11f, thr ,·n rlr&gt;tl k nmvlecl,to n.dll (he .·."
"l~lom or th&lt;' mnn trnh1f'lll nt tho nu OI wen t
·1
Ohnlrmnn Rnillh: Yon h1n-o h('nrcl f110 rw1ns hy the huokA.
'
·
:~ :i·
_.. olullou otrt.•~11 na a aubsUtnte tor Denn Arch-,
er·s reRolnUon.
llr. O. lV. Ooo,lwln, or Jlllnokt: l want te11 · ~~
.' )Ir. J~e: VC'ry !~w of yon. I nm 8111&lt;', rn- ~- ..
npol11Jrfzo lo m.r frlenr1, llffln Arrher. for belns. ;·
- jo)'e&lt;l the pr('8ldf'nl'A nrhlrNIS mor1? tlinn J dfrJ,
so rnn,rh In r(•gnnl tn hlR mothm.
• ,;.
becnu~ It. tonk me bnrk to tho ·rnlifu•r r:ul.r
Chn trmnn SmiU1: Ob, l:Je Is the l1est &amp;port In ~.1·
.~ dn,rs In thr lOt')(hl fn ro•mecU011 with the meet.:
tlle roorn.
·
:_J'il
· 1ngs of tblt1 A~,rocfntfon.
7'
·1'.)
Now, ·1n conn~tlon wlfl1 this present reso,.
Mr..,mn&lt;'!I Tl. HN•nnnu, of MnAAR&lt;'hURt'ftll: 1-.1:
• Jntlnn; 111,on n11 own ('!'lflCrfonce &lt;'f nt-nrI nm Jn r,n·or nf lhC' 11rlnrl111«' or thP. rf!t:0- ~ ,.
ly 80 yeRrl
nn cxec~tlve of a Jaw r;chool
luflnnR Jlrt'Af'ntNl hy I&gt;mn Arclter and Rlao , .•
In Ohle1igo, ~h~rP. the m('mf,nra of fl•&lt;' f'nr.h;\· n,•n n TA'r.
~
nlty nre nil prnctlclng lnwrc~. Her1&gt;t myRC'lr,
I lac-Hr,·&lt;" I hr prlncf11fr 1.. n 111mmt1 on(". The ~~~
,vbo prnctlrNI for II numl'C'r of yeA111. n1r ob,:t•nt1c•mnn from f 1 hfc•n,rn, not 1hr ,tN1flf"mnn ,·
M€'rvatlm1 bnl:I hecm thll\ tltnt you rnnnot Im•
tthn luuc Jn.!o.t. Ppok(•H, hut tJ1p prr,·lou.M F&gt;t&gt;c•nk- .'/.i
r,R.rt
stml&lt;'nf~ n lrnnwl('(lge of t'h&amp; flplrlt ot
f'r, 111 th(' front row, Mh1 we WC'rr t11kh1K nn
tho Jaw el'.C&lt;'ttl thro11~!a tflo 1nout41s nf mrn
hullrr•d ~hip nf lhr• mll•'J?&lt;"R nnd nf thl' rt1t•
who hnl'"&lt;' cngn~I In lh• pmetloo--mf'n ot
ntnrly r•,mi:ilUnft'fl tlny tn,v flf•l1ooli:1. Thnt flf ~·
hlJh cl1nmctrr, mr.n or lf'nr11tng In the tnw.
11nt 11ft. Mr. Cfrnh·mnn. Thf'y, fhrm1rrlTt•A. hnl"e
•
Tho llhulrnta In thr. dny ~hooh1 who come
('olm• lnfn ('flllrt. nn.1 gof1f'n on tfle '"Jtnct1s ;:i
to our Relmol. for vnrfottfl rc1umn~. not N111t
11tn n,J. anrl nnr nr 1hrm Wf'nt to fhr wltraf'BS . .\
the evening RChool ht h('ft('r thnn tho •lfl1
Rhrnc1 nnd h,u:1 lf'Rffnt'rl thnt fhf' lfr.gnl rNJufrc- ~
ttrhool. l111t fnr N&gt;tmomlr. rron!llonA, hn'\"r fohl
mf'rlht 11rp too fuw, nml nt thrtr lmchzh•n••O t ·.
..
t11e or the Jnc-k ut Jm-1,f rntlnn 111 thP rln:,
Utr 1~111 rrqulJ'f'mt•nt11, or hlgJ1rr lf'gi1l require- L.:
R«~l1oot11: thnt ft lr:i RC'lf-r.vldont: fth&lt;1 whP!l
nwnf~. "'""' n1,t•rt1\"&lt;'fl hy 1hhi Ai:ii:in(•lnflon.
j -

·l

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-

w.

..

·I

'i, -X" • )('

.._. ·-· ·,· ---

,u,

tn

they hnve bent&lt;I, our

lft('D

tflt'Y nt on&lt;.'8

MJ,

tJant ht the kin"· of tMcldng tber fet'l should
be l?lvcn In nu 1ttilootA.
T..ct me 11n7 this. thnt In the- day RChnnJa oe
the co11ntr1 thoro Is r,:rowh1g up n clRRS or
tc11C'11en who nTc rlithl out of the law s;r.hooltJ;
MOmc of them nrc fyl'Of\ perhRJ&gt;'lt In the profr.eslnn. 'f onnJC mt'n hnTe come to me ufiklng
to be np110lute,1 t('llt'hC'rs. I naked tl1rm,
"Ilrtve 1011 C'frr tnu~ht?" "No." "WJ1cn
lllrl rou grn,lnnle from 1nw Aehoot?'' 11l,m1t
,Jm1er, trnm thr llnrvnr,t I.Alw $&lt;.•hoot,.. or "tho
Unh·ftrMlf y nf ehlr.n~.u

· I hnve bllen ldurl to tho11r. ro1mg m~n 01uJ I
b;oko to!Je tntt•llh:etace to t11r.m thnt we t1c•
t"t"Jtt no on&lt;' tl·ho hnl' not uut at lenst flvo
· s~un, or 1u·11C'fft'P. In 1hr luw! nml 1hf'Y lanve
told hlP, "\\'h,r, 11 elll!&gt;!'-ftlllf~ or mlt11• w:ua

·

.
•

·I

_)

....

tnkt•n ort t11h1 lnl'll yrnr to h•ru-h. lie \\'HM nu A
No. I Ahuh•nl.'' ,\ntl lhot ts cluno ln n nmnbor
ot t11c- •h1y tnw !W.•houh,.
•
I snhmlt, If wo nr4' going to 1,rmlnr.n lnwyers 1111n~h ,u:1 tbo Jnw~·(•rA nr llm 1mi:ct). who
wm &lt;11•\'rlntl Into Jud,:M llk~ tmme. of the
grt•flt Jml,r~ nf f It~ pn,-it. WP. Juu'1' iot fo R•~t
hnck lo n ,11m~r1•ut Ryl'll'ln. A Rynh•m of In,
~f ruction lllll'l tutlf'h In tlo In nmnhlh,,c n lnw·
f Pr. "'11 h I ho h1f r,Htuclion or I he AO·•'.n lh•tl
c•nse R,rRlrm. rt m•,\' m,t.-.· or h•nc·h('r" hnR 11r!19.
e-n. In f\hlt'~ or mc•n llkt• Storr nml P1tr1-1on~
of Jlnn-ru,J. )h\;,:ht. IIIH) (1111~ nf (~n)nm'flfn,
Crm1&lt;'l' nnd (:,m,ph,•11 or 1m~1tl~t111, Minor or
\'lr,:luln. umr ,Jn"'tl,•c• llnrhrn or Wn~hln1J:lnn.
J'OtlllJf mrn, rr,...11 uni or Ill\\'" 111c;honl, wllh 110
C''!'li:Jwrh•1wt' In r,r,wt lf'&lt;', nr IIU!l'l' f yr«lfl, lm~niht
u1• on 1hr c,1~r ,:::,·~lf'm, nrl' l-.c•h1,t lnlt·ntlnet'fl
nR h•nd1rrs In ,Inf In\\" fq'•hnol11. Atul I o-,lny
only 11ror~~lm,nl lrtll'h('rR (ol1owln~ llm t·ni:re
A\"Rtcm nrr tomul In nil mr ,•mlmn,I niul ,.hilt
u·nh·('rrdty l11w 1--«·honfR of the cnm1ll'y. 'l'ht•RC
Bt·hoo18 not ot1JJ Ignore hut dbtpnrnge .U1e

··,- ---·--.

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Now, the)' aumot turn around now· and f .:·

,, ..

thron,:1, thrlt r.1mk«-flrnnn h&lt;lrC rmy wa ore tnklni: n K1n1• nt lh(•m, h~nn~c. hy,tnklng t.he wit•
nNlR ~Inn~. Umy urc 01,r.n to rurl.hc-r •lll&lt;'l'II IonIn,: thnt twrtnlnR lo tho en~ Ht lmm1, nnd lhlR
flUr.-ly ,,rrtnlm;c tf) 1h" ,-ni;c b1 dltqml.i", hrcomie
It ltlvrA it l&gt;rlt~r ('(lncn tln11n I oJ'tllOtlttnlty to
tbu ,;.hult•ntR or f hnRC ~J,ools.
'J'l1r ~rnlJNnnn from Now 'l'ork, n mNnhc&gt;T

nr tlw llonr,1 or 1.mv J•~xnmlr1(\f11 thN1\ ha Rn·
R\\"1 1 r

h• 111wRH11nF1 h.v unu of the fnrulry, wlH'n

lbc•y ,mhl, .. \\'h~• don·t son JUl"ff our hnnor

nll'n r· ,-,1111«~ rl.srhl. ht1&lt;·k nt lham nml Mid In
Rt1hKlnnr.r "H1•1~11 nR&lt;? tJwy 110 not know nny1hln,:." Ami tlmf. fH tru~. Air. Chnlrnmn. I
do not knnw or nn honor mnn rn nny ~hoot,
&lt;lr (rum 1111y Nf·ho~,I In ll:1K.,;,1u·lm.!Wf.l~, who
nnw fie 11 ~m~'C·H1'1r111 lnw3,·,•r. 1fo h, w111·Jd11g
for- lrum $;,O to $1UO n W&lt;'l'k Jookh1g 111&gt; h1w
aml 11r1•J1111"lnJt hrtrfH for mr.11 llke- lhr. grn-

;m

1--:-

G
t ~
I

r-:
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I

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t-... -

or ~o or
1111•.i,:r n11•u who r-n1rn11t ,to h1h, t•onrl nt,mr.
·.-....
Tlan!-:&lt;• Hwn work ror .m«'n of r~11rrit"n&lt;~.
I
Xow. Mr. ChnJrmnn, rxpc-rl111l('r ls tJ1e hr,;t
tl:'ltri1 ..,-. 111 th&lt;• 01,1 (-ommonwrnllh
lfaSRn·
t•hnf.1•1fR lhf'.'y 'hn\'~ th,\ rnfo tlmt. no man enn
IH• n11Jtni11tr•1I hr nnr ~111K•rlur eonrt to rrrmt-111rnl n rrhnlu:11111 n ,.,q,it:11 c·n~ 1111lc,M he hnA
• br.t'n n mrmhc&gt;r of llll' Unr fur t(!n ,f('.nNI, hr.~nu~ tl1r)" r«-r•,1,:t11b1t• Ille vnhm of rx1H rl1'J1~e-.
An,1 U1N1• IA n rult• 111 nnr Un UNI Rhlh"A C'nni;tlf.nflnn 11rnf nn m,111 rn11 hr ll Con~rt'ft!IUIUtn
·Of Uu• HnllNI Htnf Nt nnlll l1r IH 2a, ·,md no
rnnn c•,m It(' n Hnllr"fl Hlnlf't. ~rnnl()r unfit ho
1!11 Xi. " thn,-;i• ru·o,·h,lnn.H wt•r(• 1'0111111 '""'
1n1f Info nnr C'omd II nt Ion In 1n·ovld&lt;&gt; •·~tlf'rl•
'{lfl&lt;'t' for thr lnw-rnnklu,: hotly nr Arnrrh'11,
wtw ~honhl rx1wrlN11•r he tmrrrd 111 t.h~ lnw
~-t,onlR of nur ,·onnlr7? Wr rlo not wnnt
t.l1rory. Our ,•o11rgt'A nrn f'ult of "hm1A'' nm1
U,•1111111 rrn111 Cl1ic't1go who hln'R

or

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tlwuriNC,

w'SUff=m 'UnfVJt~~rrtn
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

�139

f~'v•:1 ,·

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T.lie American Law School,.Review · . .,: :·. :··.\
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!Ut'ftr8. entfrelf dlvore~l from prartlCO nnd.

M' have never hnd PXJH?rlence nt the nn.
. 1·119 ,.~· rNu1 tho formil nf tllo reanlntlon
,rhfob I have pro,;osod. I wl,.h to dlAcna them
1,rleftr. ·.
,. •• 111 altcntlt&gt;n hns b~n rnlt&lt;'«1 mnn:, Um&lt;'tl

-'during the pnst ten

:renrR

to the

)OM

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to lc,ml

edueatlon lnvoJv&lt;!d In I.he tr.nrlcnr.y to dll!Cftrft
(practldnJt lawycMI ns f)l"N!cyfo111 of law Rlu·
dent&amp;·· After nearly ll qm,rt~r ot ft century
~of ex-p~rtence ns n Jnw srhool ~ccufh•e, I 111n
.•ftrm!.r of thn enn\'lrtlnn thnt the, (lnfy propor
• cher of law atudcnbf le the man wO:tc,, hH a

···-·-··: .. •
·

•

• ....

~

~7(~::~\li

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·' ···•.

M"·~~;t~t:·\;t .

much when· I· WRA told that the mOfrl: [IOpular.1 .
profr.t1i:eor tand hnd but one Jaw caae which wn1h.
tu n jnstlcP.'a f'OQrt In '1Vbleh ho wae the do- 1 t
frm'lnnt nncl lhnt lte rm,t f11e CRl!le•• Ile 1"ftl fi
vnry conrtr.uus nml, of courge, prNl'nlocl llto'
conflicting decisions from the vnrlon11 jul1RtH~, •.
ttons, hut be wna so much a 11&lt;:holnr Incl a
gnnUemnn thnt J10 pl'CIICnlt"rl eflC'h aide wUll:
mwh flcfr.renm for tbR court. lh11t hftd pre,., .
no1mM'&lt;1 It thnt lhe 11tu&lt;1tmt tllrl not percehe . l

·1

..o.-·-···· for Wf?~kR whcll1&lt;'r het lnclfnNI tnwardR one
view or U1e other, nnd wlien lie dJd espre,a
.
·- _
~~
.cl
•
· -• .t -~ · -·· ·· -&gt;·· ....--·an opinion;
In such n mHd 1ml NJnlTOC!nl ~
.••+! .'kground hoth of )C'gRl knowledge nnd of
wny thnt It mncltt but HUle lm1•rttnlon, 11111
practical ~Xt&gt;&lt;'rlMtL'C nt the nnr. ln my own · · · ~ · · · :tl't the ahulr.nt. \'\'as &lt;''l:lw-«~ftd nt th(' -..11d ot the ~.;
··achool every tnacber Is n mrml,er of tho lln~- ··
1enr to IHlSS nn (·~tu11luallon t!onrnrmfng to
,,..ehuacu~ nnr, nnd the nv&lt;"tHA'" 1,crlocl or '
hlff rlrwic. As nsnn.1 ot tlH! mMC-s Wl'r~ h1· •L
.'jm,mbc.-niht1, In iho 1~n1 11rot,.'RRlon nmong
}IOllwtkn1 ntld lhe 1m1,~r11 were to he grudC'C1
1thc,1n lu lei% J&lt;'R"', "'lUt some who h11-ve hcen
ncl'nrcllng to the RUltdlons U1nt tho ,tlYt'n . ~
~.~olive prnctltlnur.ra t'or more a.inn 80 yrnue.
-·· - -·· •. 1,ror~or Jm,T mncJP. of thl'm, It hecnmo lnrg~J.f · ...
, ... Tho .Attorn..-y (;~nemt of MnYRrlm:i1rlt.~ la
a trAt of tho memory, 11nd ol no prac:Uml · ,:
one or onr prof&lt;'R-ctorll. We 1,n,·r ft 111,:hlr hon· ·
· vnlnP..
·
'
.orcd Judgo on our tc-neblng 111tnff, two A~hJf nnt ---···· "1 Jm \"C" Alnc&gt;C h&lt;'nr,t a drnn r&gt;f lhe JJnrvnrd ·t·
;;
tJnftl'd SftltNI AttornttyR rtre on ont' f'ncullJ'
J.inw S&lt;'hool ~fnfr flint lu ncldtng to tho tene1_.
:
tooebtns Jn,porlant conr.sea. Others ate lend• ------• Jn,: fnrt-o Ut~y tlltl IH&gt;t \VIRlt tt» dmw In men . ~
,en nt the nnr.
of c·~ru•rltmr.o front lhc- hrnm nnd (h(' hnr, b11t !:·
Now. I 81jhmft, gt•nlh•men, thRt lllUCh In.
lll'&lt;'frrrrd to c1P. velop tllt'lr own proressorll In
..
stt1tctora l'RH tiring mom of h1s1JlrRtlttJ1 nnd .. · -,,. • · · thrlr own wny."
.
.
praetfonl nlct lo our f'-t111lrnt11 t1mn nn nnny of ~ Now. Mr. Chnlr11inn. J move the adopUon ·~,
thoorlstR who llnt'o rrd\-rr l'nJtflgNI In th~ rough
of thr rMolntlnn m, r(mc1.
~
. ~d tumhle or prnctkae nt th~ nnr.
- ·· - ·· Mr. llnx o. LIM, of Illinois: I &amp;eeond tho ·t:
Rtu•l(!nt" lllok tip with Tene!'nttlon lo u,e man
•
mol Ion.
·,
who hnfl mndc good In the prorem!lon to which -···-·····
1\lr. vnmlcn·ort. o( Wr.,.t Vlrglnln: 1 bnt"lt :"
~ey nRpll'f!.
rrrut ll&lt;'11tl1 n11 the fUIJl&lt;'rR thnl. llr. Arcbor ;-,
1
· (l('ntlr.mcn, If we 11rc R••lng tQ tM&lt;&gt;h bn)'l't ·
Jtnfl pnbltJJhC!'tl on tblA i:rnC'rt1l 111.thJ~t. J enn- '-'
• aTlntlori. "·e IIP.IN!t tenrhera whn thcnumJvrs ._ __ -···- rdtlrr ll ROhlewhnt In Uir. nnturo of an action :\:
have hlld t•rncllenl nxperlt'»ce In n,·lnUcm nnd
nC the Amrrlenn Dnl" A111anclntlon. At1 a 101111 ,
not mere theorlatR who 1\nve ueTer macle n solo -·· .... __ . rlf!l&lt;!,tl'Rlon nmy Cnk.o plnffl on thla pnper, m11.n1 f,,
flight. If we- 11re to fC'nch ronng men to Jlf&amp;Cof which ,;tnlemenlll I clo not n,lmU. 1 wm
tlce IRW, nnd to Hvo 111&gt; to lhr. noble trndUlonR
:nioTc thr 1nrtfomi question nnd coll for a vote. ,.

f

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t·

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the 1cgnl 1,rof('R.qton wllllr. M llrncffoln,r.
It. Rtnnr!s to rrcucnn t.hnl '""o nmld: gh·e 1.hrn1 ot 1
lmRt Mme tNAehctA whn hn,e Jmd pracUcal 1 .

,e:rpcrlence nt tl1ft Dnr.
;•
. I will concltnl~ hy r&lt;-mllng to :rou trf&gt;n1 a I
lf'tfor wfllch l hnTe Ju111t reeelv&lt;'d from an 1
ftgNl New Ynrk IIIWYM on thlR

,·er1

((U(?Stlon. :

·

,
.,

l

I

L~~~~P.1~ ~-~~.:.

'l'hlR

'.':~f..]~!.~_mcll~rntccl

J&gt;rr.vlonA •11wallnn, wbleb the Oblllnno,1 de-

i clnrc&lt;l

1
From the stn11tlvolnt of 40 years of 1&gt;ractlce. ! .
he wrltl'B ft!I folloffll:
~· ····· ···-- ·
. "I ftm not an 11&lt;h'('ICnlc oC Clm nbollUon of the
·JRW' Flehool: u1,oo the contrnry, I oon:d,lt'r tlu1t ...••• • ...
J lmve br.m stmnf.ly p,rh-ltf'gt!tl fn hnvlng st1r.nt I
two yoon at Ute Unrmn1 I.AlW Sehool, two!
11c-m~RtnrA nl the unhendly nt noun. Uermn117, ·..... ··• - ··
.Ami nttcndNl foclnl'NI ~t. n Ft('nch tn,v schqol t
ffllcn comatrled wllb nn .American law nfilce 1.... . ... .
.fn Pnrla, brat'l do r.m1t.-ml tt1nt th~ lnw stu,lc-nt
. of t.o-dny If oo more prepnrN1 to tnkc chnrg;n,
of R clll"nt'A ht'°rrflls t lm11 n Altulcnt of nn. vll(A• ·
tJon wonld he lo t.nkP roJnmnm1 or R slafp, h1td
··he hn&lt;l 110 ~x)l('rlt•nr(~ nt srn.
"Whrn I nrrlvl'&lt;l nt 1hr IJnnnrd J,nw ·
Sr.J1noi, th~ ("hnnJ!t, In fhr lt•nc·hlng rortu1 trnm
ltm ~%JK'rlt"neNI Jm·l!!:h1 tn the ,loc•trlnRlrn wns .
wc•ll umlt't" wny 1rncl tho ntmo,qdmm, rom.
twtrNI wlt.h thnt fo whM, I hml ll&lt;'eome nc.. l"llfllmncrl In thr tuw omc•(' In Oltln, nlmrn;t 1

r

(MoUon f«"&lt;'fllltlr,l.)
,
1·1t~ motion tor the prevloua quesUon Wnll 1cnrrll'«l.
· µ
JI r. Wl111nm llrntK•r Lr.wl,:t, of :rrnne:,hnntn. tintov&lt;1I n rr.t'omd,hirn lion or f hta moUon, tor tho !··

t·

ont nf orcl('r.
• 1'1r. fthvnrfl T. J~ of mtnols. np1&gt;00letl
from tbn dcc:151on or the ('),air, whlc-11 w1111
flf'Cor111~,1, nnd I.he dcchclon of t.hr r11Qlr wns
ovt'rr11lr.1l. A motl&lt;&gt;n for ~r.o,111hlt'rnUon or
th&lt;' mnUnn rrir th~ 1,revlot1!t quMJllon WRH Uwn

cnrrlrrl. nnrl tlJ!ot('UR.•don was reopened on tlu•
n,ntlo'n befnre tt1P Rceflnn •
Tht, ,;inllon of Mr. A.G. Eberle, or l\fhvioort,
n" nm~nrll'(l by :Mr. Ooor,:e F. lfultl,:nn, (\f
IllinnlR, Co limit 11chnte on ltr. Ard1cr•R moUon to ftve minutes for ench speaker wns mrrlrrl.
Mr. J,1(1(\: Afr. Chnlrmn1J, lnf11rfl nnc1 l?f'llt14!·
11wn: I 1l(•fdrr to offer a aul1111tllul~ for Ur.
Arr•hf•r"R N'11111lulfon:
••n,.,.111h·c,,J, lhnt nvc•ry 111&gt;1•tnvC'tl 111 w Rrhool
Rhft11 Jm,·(• rimo11,t Ua tM11·hrt'111 n tmtnc-t('nt nom·
brr
J'll'nrtlr•ln,r lnwyl'fl'I. or tnwy&lt;-rs who
Jtll\'C bild rd JC!'n~t l~n r~nra· t':qwtlrn~ nt the

or

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SUFFOLK U\'. '.VERSlTY
B0S10N

ARCHIVES

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�140

Space will not permit the insertion of the debate on my resolution. Suffice is to say that
what I had desired came to pass - an exciting debate. The university law school men were greatly
alarmed. If the resolution passed they were virtually ruined because many of them would lose their
jobs. If they talked against lawyers being qualified to teach law they were likely to engender wrath
for themselves in the American Bar Association. The affair ended by the whole matter being
referred to the council for investigation and report at the next meeting. This means that they will
have a merry fight next year at convention.
One rather unexpected event occurred at the meeting of the Massachusetts delegation.
When the state council was elected my name was first on the list which probably did not please the
University men any too well. I was also very much pleased to see Josiah Marvel of Delaware, for
several years a friend of mine, elected President of the American Bar Association. The sequel of
the election was very sad. Before Mr. Marvel had been in office many weeks he died of heart
failure. The Executive Committee therefore elected Chas. A. Boston to fill the vacancy. Boston is
one of the old "varsity guards."
A pleasant feature of the convention was that daughter Marian and Gleason Jr.
accompanied me on the trip. Elizabeth did not go because Allan who had for five weeks been in
Cuba on a snail hunt for the Museum of Comparative Zoology of Harvard University was expected
back that week and his fond mother could not think of being away when he returned.
Hiram did not dare to go because of the danger of hay fever. He was living very close to
the office so that he might minimize that distemper.
My National broadcasting was originally scheduled to close the first of September but I had
the satisfaction of being invited to continue until January 1st. Later, in the fall, the National
Broadcasting Co. did me the honor of voting to pay me $50 as an allowance for expenses - a
generous figure to one of my frugal habits. The allowance began the last week in October.
From time to time I received very pleasing evidences that my law talks were being
appreciated in various parts of the country. Lawyers and judges and law teachers as well as public
officials, probation officers and police wrote to me in terms of high praise.
In September the last of the Tercentenary programs were held. Owing to the "political"
illness of John F. Fitzgerald, I became acting chairman of the Boston Tercentenary. On the day of
the great parade, Sept 17, 1930, I stood beside Madame Schumann Heink of the Court of Honor
on Tremont Street {near Park Street Station) and reviewed miles of the parade before the
Governor and Mayor arrived.
The law school opened September 22, 1930 with a somewhat diminished attendance. The
great industrial depression had hit the school rather hard. A surprisingly disastrous result in the
July bar examinations was also somewhat responsible for the result.
The radio publicity that I was receiving no doubt did much to stabilize the situation. Some
unexpected political publicity also came to me because of the withdrawal of John F. Fitzgerald from
the race for Democratic nomination for Governor. This came very suddenly. Mayor Curley was
opposed to the other two candidates for reasons that seemed very cogent especially when
explained by Curley himself. He therefore urged the people to nominate Fitzgerald and then have
the Democratic Committee substitute a name in his place. He asserted that he could suggest fifty
men better qualified than Joseph B. Ely for Governor. He included my name in the list. A day or
so later he reduced the list to four and still included my name. Of course I treated the reference as
an empty compliment.
I attended a rally shortly after and at the very urgent request of the Mayor I sat on the
platform. This paved the way for dragging me into making a brief address in which I disclaimed
any political aspiration. Marian was with me on the platform and it was all very exciting for her.

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In October I began writing my History of Plymouth Colony and completed the first volume
about Christmas time. Mr. Curley appointed me to a Conference Committee on Unemployment
early in October, which gave me an opportunity to extend my acquaintance among the leaders of
the University group in Massachusetts. He called upon me for a speech at the first conference and
also at number of subsequent occasions.
Early in the summer a young man named John Griffin came to me for information for a sort
of legal symposium for the American Magazine. I gave him quite a lot of information, thinking that I
was helping a worthy scribe and not expecting any credit for myself. Imagine my surprise therefore
when the December issue of the American Magazine came out with an extended interview with
me. My first knowledge of the article came when I was attending an unemployment conference at
Tufts College. A professor from the graduate school of business administration of Harvard, whom I
have never before seen, congratulated me upon it.
Because I was pleased with the splendid way in which the article was handled, I wrote a
letter of thanks to the managing editor. In my letter I suggested that I would be glad to furnish them
with some articles on law. Promptly I received a cordial letter from Hugh Leany, one of the editors,
inviting me to call for a personal interview. On my next trip to New York I availed myself of the
invitation and found Mr. Leany a very cordial and genuine character.
But I had already visited the Postum Building and the Collier &amp; Co. offices. They publish
Collier's, The American Magazine, The Woman's Home Companion, etc. Weeks before I had
visited F. D. Morris, one of the editors of Collier's and had shown him samples of my chapters of
the Plymouth History, hoping it might be serialized by Collier's. Mr. Morris later told me he was
ready to see me. My hopes had been somewhat raised but Mr. Morris told me that they were too
much committed to other things to have space for serialization but that they could use a 4000 word
article on The First Thanksgiving.
After my visit to Mr. Leany I thereupon had assurance that two of Collier's periodicals
would accept articles from my pen. Thus out of my radio activities had emerged great possibilities
in a literary way. Perhaps I should add that the Century Company assignment (which also came
from radio publicity) has resulted most gloriously, for Mrs. Stoddard of the Juvenile Book
department declares my book a "knockout", "the way history should be written," etc.

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But in this lengthy recital concerning
my own literary activities I must not
forget to mention that my talented
wife whom I had vainly urged for
years to do some literary work,
actually did take up poetry two years
ago. Frankly, when she began there
seemed to be nothing out of the
ordinary in her verses. She was
rendered quite blue and discouraged
by husbandly criticism. Our good
friend, Dallas Lore Sharp, gave her
some valuable criticism in the early
spring of 1927 and then again a few
days before his fatal operation. Her
work grew better and better until she
began to produce poems that seemed
to me amazingly good.
She was ambitious to put
them into a book to give away at
Christmas 1930. Early in the fall she
and I selected about one hundred
poems and I agreed to have them
published as my Christmas present to
her. About $475 it cost me for 250
books bound in red leather, a very
artistic de lux addition. The book has
made a very great sensation among
all her friends. She is now {January
1931) getting some very excellent
newspaper publicity. I feel that I have
"raised" a poet and am very proud of
my literary wife.
Returning to the matter of Radio broadcasts. For six months I had been occupying the
Thursday evening period devoted each year from January to June to the Federation of Woman's
Clubs program "The Voters' Series." This meant that when January came I would lose my
network.
To my satisfaction, however, the National Broadcasting Company voted to give me a
different evening. They finally hit upon Saturday evening at 7:15 to begin January 10, 1931. To
my further satisfaction, we immediately built up for my talks a larger chain hookup than the Voter's
Series are now enjoying. Not only do I get a coast to coast hookup of my own but it goes over
WEEI in Boston and WCSH is Portland, two stations that were not in my original chain.
I submitted a low article to Mr. Lerny of the American merely to test out a certain type of
story but since it was based on a single case it did not meet his needs. He outlined two topics for
me to treat "Ignorance of Law No Defense" and "Circumstantial Evidence," both of which he now
has in his hands for consideration.

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On Dec 11, 1930 I had the honor of delivering an address before the Men's Club of the
Congregational Church in Augusta, Me. Frank E. Mace, formerly of Great Pond, and the first
teacher I ever had in school, was my host. I was received with great honors. Governor Tudor
Gardiner was very cordial to me. Chief Justice Pattengal of the Supreme Court had me in his
office for an hour. The next day I visited my daughter Marian in Waterville. Frank Fozier, an old
teacher of mine, now a doctor in Fairfield came to see me.
An incident occurred while in Waterville that caused me great uneasiness. My eyes had
given me some difficulty and I had done to a nearby doctor early November for a new set of
glasses which I put on November 14th. Almost two weeks later, while writing my History in my
room at Hotel Victoria I was seized with pain at the base of the brain on the left side rear.
This had troubled me off and on until the morning of December 13th when it became so
alarming that I decided that there was something desperately wrong with me. Because I was to
take Marian to the college oculist in Waterville, I had him examine my eyes. He could find no
evidence of brain trouble, reporting that the optic nerve looked healthy, etc. So he changed my
glasses. By good fortune as I thought I secured a new set of lenses before going to spend
Saturday evening with Frank Fozier of Fairfield. I then discovered, to my horror, that the focal
length of the lenses was so short that I would not be able to see to broadcast. Dr. Fozier took me
to a druggist named Archer. He dabbed in things optical. I cautioned him to study the lenses and
be sure to restore the old ones in proper order.
Well, he had just two guesses and he guessed wrong. So I was so badly used up
Saturday that I routed out the doctor who had given me the short focus glasses and had him
reverse the lenses. Then of course I could see again. But I returned to Boston on the Sunday
P.M. train pretty badly bunged up - terrific headache and so on.
The following Monday I went to my regular oculist, Dr. Jones, and got a prescription. The
maker of the glasses ground out some new one and put them in so that when I went to New York
December 15th I had the new glasses. My condition improved somewhat but after a time my old
trouble came back more pronounced than ever.
Again I went to Dr. Jones complaining that the distance portion of my bifocals was not as
clear as the old glasses that I had worn for years. Jones examined me again and declared that the
glasses were right except that the bifocal parts were not centered over my eyes. He gave me a
new prescription to a Dr. Ralph Wright whom he declared to be very skillful. Dr. Jones also
examined for possible brain trouble but could find none.
The new glasses were made. I patiently waited for the trouble to clear up but it persisted.
Finally I went to Dr. Wright and told him Dr. Jones had refused to give me the "myopic" element in
the new glasses that had been in the former ones, saying that I was too old for that type of glass. I
ordered Dr. Wright to make a new set of glasses on my own prescription - a distant vision like the
old glasses - bifocals like the new.
Then the next morning January 14th I had so very bad an attack of pain in my head that I
decided that ax-ray was necessary. I got in touch with the Massachusetts General Hospital and
was referred to a specialist, Dr. George Clymer of Bay State Road. I went to see him that
afternoon. He examined me for evidences of brain trouble and confessed himself baffled. He sent
me to Dr. Morrison for an x-ray and promised to let me know by Friday what the verdict was.
Now it happened on Friday morning my new glasses were ready. While I was after them
Dr. Clymer called my office and told Catharine for me not to bother with changing glasses for the xray disclosed trouble in the vertebrae of my neck. I was told to do at once to Dr. Swain, an expert
in such matters.

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Well, I went to see Dr. Swain. He gave me a very careful going over, after questioning me
on the length of my symptoms. He then studied the x-rays and told me that I had strained the neck
and injured the nerves by reason of the fact that my new glasses had caused me to tip the head
back and crowd the knobs of the spinal column together.
It would be necessary for me to take exercises to correct my "scholarly stoop" and
straighten up the neck. He sent me upstairs to his gymnasium where a husky female nurse of
uncertain age put me through "a course of sprouts" the result of which I was to appreciate by
degrees.
That night I went to New York to give the second of my new series of talks on "Laws that
Safeguard Society." All day Saturday I was sick abed in my hotel room. I ached all over,
especially in the neck and chest, as well as in my abdominal muscles. My broadcast was
successful, however. After my return to Boston I was somewhat of an invalid Sunday. On Monday
I went to the osteopath and had some missionary work done on my muscles. That was last
Monday.
So now we are almost caught up to date with this Journal.
I should not forget the splendid magazine write-up in Hie Mitchell Chapple's National
Magazine for December. Joe himself did the article, which was very laudatory, filled with puffs and
gusts of praise.

)

Saturday January 24, 1931
Well, it seems good to be caught up again after seven years of backsliding. I hereby
promise to keep abreast of events hereafter.
My third broadcast was delivered tonight. It is now 10:45 P.M. and since returning to my
room from the radio station I have written thirteen pages in this book.
Today I called upon Collier &amp; Co. and did quite a bit of "shopping.8 For one thing I brought
my promised story of the First Thanksgiving to Mr. Morris of Collier's. He was more or less noncommittal but promises to report to me one week from today.
Being unable last week to seem Mr. Leamy because he was ill with a cold, I tried today
while at the editorial rooms and learned, to my delight, that he had just been promoted to Managing
Editor of the American Magazine. He will see me next Saturday.
It so happens that Mrs. Stoddard of Century Company has urged me to have my book
serialized. One of the periodicals suggested had been Collier's. I have already spoken of the
result of that attempt. She had also spoken of the Woman's Home Companion. Last Saturday in a
telephone conversation, I found that she was acquainted with the editor of the Companion. I
therefore suggested that she give me a lead there by talking to the editor herself.
Not having heard from Mrs. Stoddard, I was really inclined to think that the matter had
slipped her mind in the rush of work. But after having executed two missions at Collier &amp; Co.'s
editorial rooms, I thought it could do not harm to investigate. Miss Gertrude Lane, the editor, was
out ill. Her secretary Mildred Burton was in however, and to my delight I found that she had just
received a letter from Mrs. Stoddard.
Miss Burton was very gracious and seemed genuinely interested. My radio activities quite
evidently made a hit with her. She asked me many questions concerning it. We discussed the
scope of the book and I read a bit of it to her. I left a carbon copy of the MMS. Well, we will see
what we will see!
Now as to my headaches, it is rather too early to crow but everything, either my new
glasses (built according to my own prescription, as before indicated) or the change in posture has
practically cured my trouble. This lifts a great load from my mind.

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For weeks I was uncertain whether I had a tumor of the brain or some other fiendish
trouble, the eye difficulty was so baffling. I could not be sure whether my mental activities were
over or not. For some weeks I have been harboring a very ambitious plan for the establishment of
a great evening University but the possibilities of brain trouble forbade any elaboration of the
scheme.
Now, however, my hopes are reviving. Several things must be done as preliminary steps:
(1) Suffolk Law School must adopt a complete high school requirement prior to entrance of
students, (2) We must have a regular all year preparatory school and abolish the more or less
inefficient summer school. (3) We must make arrangements as soon as possible for lengthening
our law course or increasing our lecture hours.
Two weeks ago my secretary Miss Catharine evolved the brilliant idea of turning our
preparatory work over to the Berkeley Preparatory School. With this suggestion I have evolved a
plan for taking over Berkeley and its staff as an official department of the projected Suffolk
University - the preparatory department for law school, college and other departments we might
care to establish.
About a week ago I saw Dr. Payson Smith, the Commissioner of Education, and discussed
the idea of a college in which a limited number of required subjects would be offered instead of a
vast array of electives. He took very kindly to the ideal and gave me some valuable suggestions
both for the Preparatory and College departments.
I am now conducting negotiations with Dr. George Hipkinson, the founder of Berkeley
Preparatory School, and feel very confident that we will work out a satisfactory merger plan. We
meet again next Tuesday afternoon.
Thus the new year begins - the twenty-fifth year of Suffolk Law School - with many great
possibilities just around the comer.
By the way I forgot to mention that I am not broadcasting history of Plymouth over WBZWBZA on Tuesday evenings at 7:45 P.M. I have give two such broadcasts and the response thus
far is very gratifying.
Wednesday,Feb.4, 1931
Strenuous days have elapsed since my last entry in this book. The second semester has
opened with the smallest mid year class for some years, owing in part to the general business
depression and also to the fact that I have been very strict in admission requirements. We now
admit only those who have the full high school equivalent before beginning work.
This is a part of a new plan for the general improvement of the institution. Beginning nest
fall, we will have a high school department with day and evening session. This will make it
possible for us to give all comes adequate training and in proper order. Hitherto we have faced the
necessity of admitting them as special students with the hope of making up their requirements in
the summer school or of turning them away to shift for themselves in very difficult field for
educational gleanings. The new Department will also be useful in cases where me supposed to be
equipped in English prove to be otherwise. This may save many men who now fail to make good.
But we have in prospect far more ambitious plans for the school than a mere preparatory
department. This is the twenty-fifth year of the school. We propose to celebrate it by laying plans
for the establishment of a College of Liberal Arts in the near future. The college would have a
curriculum limited to those thing that every educated man should know. English, Mathematics,
French or German, Physics, Chemistry, History, and Economics r some such array of fundamental
subjects. This would render it possible to conduct the college at a low tuition rate for both day and
evening students. The idea would be to secure the employed man.

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If we could offer to ambitious boys in far off places an opportunity to earn their education
by placing them in positions in or near Boston, it might answer a great need. I should favor also
allowing credit toward the degree for satisfactory work at their daily tasks in industry.
For several weeks I have been studying the field of preparatory schools with an idea of
taking over, if possible, some established Preparatory School, thus achieving at one stroke a
genuine basis for further academic development. For some time I negotiated with the Berkeley
Preparatory School but a few days ago decided that their demands were quite beyond reason.
Yesterday I called in Mr. Carroll M. Wheeler, proprietor of the Wheeler School, whom I
have known for some years. Last evening we arrived at a tentative understanding that looks very
promising. He will come again tomorrow evening for a more definite conference.
Daughter Marian has been having a bat time with her eyes or perhaps with her general
health, so that she has been worried about the outcome of her first semester work at Colby
College. Some days ago she wrote me that she felt sure she failed in Mathematics, which was her
weakness anyway. What was my relief and pleasure to have her telephone me Monday night
saying that she heard from her exams and that she had passed in everything.
Elizabeth had had the pleasing experience of singing over the radio {Station WSSH) at
Tremont Temple. This occurred last Friday evening. Her voice came over very well and it certainly
sounded good. One of the speakers in the program honored her by reading one of her poems over
the radio. Her poems still garner letters of praise from far and near wherever she has sent the little
book.
My history broadcasts over WBZ-WBZA have been transferred to Sunday afternoons {3 3:15 P.M.) beginning next Sunday. This will restrict my activities somewhat. It interferes with my
plan to visit Marian February 22, but I have decided to have Gleason Jr. take my place at the
microphone. He reads very well and I am sure that his broadcast of my Plymouth story will make a
great hit with the radio audience. For a fourteen-year-old boy to do such a thing is unheard of.
Thursday Feb. 5, 1931
Mr. Wheeler's name is not Charles but Carroll. This I learned when we signed the
preliminary agreement this evening. I like that little man - and he is little so far as stature is
concerned, about five feet I should judge. But he has been a devotee of wrestling and he has a
grip in his small hand that is like that of blacksmith or an osteopath.
Well, we came to a definite understanding and all that now remains is for the Trustees to
ratify the agreement. The Wheeler Preparatory School becomes our official preparatory
department and with it comes Mr. Wheeler himself at $3,000 per year, plus 200/o of the net savings
of the school for the next five years. I will establish the school at 59 Hancock Street. This will
means that Ted Baker moves out, but he is very agreeable to that plan.
Yesterday I spoke on Capital Punishment before the committee on Judiciary, for last year.
I acquired quite a reputation as a defender of the system. The National Civic League recently did
me the honor of using extracts from my address of last year before the Judiciary Committee as
their reply to the official argument of the proponents of the abolition of the death penalty - the two
opposing vie'NS being printed in one broadside for public distribution.
It was suggested yesterday take on Clarence Darrow for a radio debate on this question.
Today I wrote to Phillips Carlin, passing on to him the suggestion for his consideration.
Monday Morning Feb. 9, 1931
Saturday in New York City I had an extended conference with an editorial lady named
Harding at the American Magazine editorial rooms. Mr. Leamy has assigned her to my law

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articles. She gave me some good suggestions as to the method of handling the article "Ignorance
of Law Excuses No One."
I was very much shocked to learn from the press dispatches of the death of my friend
Dean Charles F. Carusi of the National University Law School. It was very sudden indeed. He
was on a vacation trip in Florida when influenza seized him. A man a fleshy as he no doubt had
little chance in the hot climate of Florida.
My Saturday evening broadcast went over well. Yesterday afternoon I gave the first of the
Sunday afternoon talks in continuation of the history series. Despite the sleet and storm Elizabeth
and son Gleason accompanied me, walking to and from the Hotel Statler. Gleason had an audition
while there and demonstrated a good radio voice. For a fourteen-year-old he is a splendid
specimen. He stands five feet ten inches and is well filled out.
Daughter Marian has surprised herself by passing all her 1st semester college subjects in
spite of her poor health during the first semester. She expected to make her first public
appearance as a member of the Colby College Glee Club in Fairfield yesterday, which is of course
a great event for her. I am very proud and happy at the ability and downright pluck that she has
manifested in Waterville. But she was always a very determined girl, bent on having her own way,
which is a good thing when a person desires to obtain a worthy goal.
My weight this morning a la Adam is just under 190 pounds.
Evening Feb. 9, 1931
Elisabeth and I entertained her New York cousins, Florence and Connie and her husband
Jimmie Gleason. We went to the Parker House for dinner and fared sumptuously. Afterward we
returned to my library for a movie show and a general good time. I read the story of the sailfish
and also a chapter from the Pilgrim Story. Allen entertained them with snails and yet more snails,
all of which they enjoyed for the artistic coloring and designs of aforesaid snails.
Allan is still strong for snails. The sun rises for him with a necklace of snails and it sets
with a halo of snails. He can talk about little else except the science of snailology.
Feb 11, 1931
Yesterday I developed symptoms of a very severe cold. School duties and the necessity
of attending a meeting of the "old timers" (or early classes of Syffolk Law School) at the Alumni ·
House kept me up until nine o'clock last evening. But I took a hot bath and drank some hot
lemonade as a measure of protection before returning last night. This morning I am somewhat
groggy from the cold but able to be at work on a broadcast subtiffed "Homicide by Accidental Killing
of Another." This is for a date five or six weeks from now. Faculty meeting tonight, well attended
and successful
Feb. 12, 1931
Still struggling with the cold. Went to Dr. Prior this evening and got several kinds of
medicine. I managed to work all day and succeeded in finishing the broadcast mentioned last
night, as well as starting another.
Today Mr. Wheeler and I signed papers for the transfer of the Wheeler Preparatory School
to Suffolk Law School. Quite a number of conferences where held by me with disappointed seniors
and their friends. Mid year graduation occurs next Wednesday evening February 18th.

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Feb. 15, 1931
I returned from New York City early this morning as usual. While away from Boston I had
attended to my NBC broadcast and held two important conferences with publishers. At the
Century Company I found Miss Stoddard very enthusiastic over my new book. We named it
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"Mayflower Heroes." I brought back the manuscript of some early chapters to give them a final
revision.
At the American Magazine I found that my recent contribution on 'Ignorance of the Law No
Excuse" had been approved by Mrs. Sherman, "contract editor", and by Hugh Leamy, the
Managing Editor, but was still to be "censored" by Mr. Flowers, the "Editor in Chief."
This afternoon Elizabeth accompanied me to WBZ and we took a walk after the broadcast
was over. All along Beacon Street was an immense throng of people in marching formation to visit
the State House where the body of General Clarence Edwards was lying in state in the Hall of
Flags. Hero worship is a healthy sign.
As I came into the bathroom a few moments ago I had a singular adventure. Intending to
take a bath I had put on the electric radiator. Passing the radiator as I have done so often with the
cords of the bathrobe dangling behind me, it chanced that the silk tassel of one came in contact
with the radiator. It at once burst into flame and if I had not been very swift in my actions, the
blooming thing being behind me would have burned my silk bathrobe and enveloped me in a sheet
of flame. Fortunately I was able to catch it, like a dog chasing its tail, and hold the blazing thing
away at arms length, finally being obliged to run water on it to extinguish it. As it was, no special
damage was done. I even saved a reasonable portion of the tassel itself.

J

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February 17, 1931
How serenely we sometimes march through danger without a thought that danger is nighJ
When I came up to bed last night I did so without the slightest intimation that I had just scared a
burglar out of the executive offices down stairs. This is the first time in the history of the school that
a burglary has ever been attempted. The story of the affair is as follows.
Dave Richmond locked up the building at about 9:30 P.M. Apparently the burglar was well
posted on the lay of the land and had secreted himself in the building. When the lights went out he
evidently got busy with a glasscutter and tried to cut out the comer of the glass door to the
secretary's office in order to insert a hand and turn the knob. But finding that it was wire glass he
gave up the attempt. He then unscrewed the steel grill from the Treasurer's window and
clambered into the stenographer's room, evidently believing (as there was) that there was money in
Catharine's roll top desk. He started to jimmy it open. He was then scared away.
No doubt he had just started work on the desk when I opened the front door and came on
the concourse. By the time I had opened the office door the burglar had gone into the
stenographer's room and by the time I had done into my own office and hung up my hat and coat
he had made his escape. He might, of course, been concealed in the darkness of the
stenographer's room. But before coming up to bed I went in that room in the darkness and got a
drink of water. What a chance that burglar had to pop me off or club meJ
Today was the anniversary of my luncheon with John Clark and Hap Myers before our
New York trip when I won the NBC victory, so today we three men and our respective wives met at
the Parker House for a dinner. Afterward we had movies in my study.
Tues.Feb.24, 1931
Having just returned from Waterville, Me. Where I have been visiting daughter Marian.
Say, I am very proud of that girl. She has fought her way through college "Math" and it was a
grueling contest. She has now cleared up all the conditions with which she entered college. Her
professors are full of admiration for her splendid qualities and so express themselves to me. She
is by all odds the most distinguished in appearance of any of the girls that I have seen at Colby.
Her brown eyes and dark hair set off her very unusual face which reminds me a great deal of her

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mother. She is tall and slim and has most excellent
taste in dress. But it is of her mental development that I
am most happy. She is getting a great deal our of her
college course, especially in English and history in which
subjects she is majoring.
When I arrived in Waterville Sunday about 3
P.M., I hurried to Elmwood in order to hear son
Gleason's broadcast. Marian and her roommate Louise
Tinkham arrived at about the same time. But we could
not get WBZ over the hotel radio so we hurried over to
Dr. Bessey's office. The Doctor managed to get the
station but it did not come out clearly so we were all
disappointed.
But I have learned this morning that Gleason
made a whale of a hit with his broadcast. Everybody
said that his voice is a great deal like mine saying it is no doubt better for he started out with a
better natural voice than I have. His mother says that it was one of the proudest experiences of
her life to hear her youngest performing so wonderfully on the radio. So I have an understudy who
can step into my shoes whenever anything interferes with my radio engagements.

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Wed. Feb.25, 1931
Today, for the first time in two months I drove to the farm with my car. It was a delightful
day, with warm sunshine melting such snow as remains from our recent storm. The roads were
entirely free from ice or snow. The bees were out enjoying the unexpected warmth.
I pruned one vineyard and started another one behind the stone garage. I also pruned the
young apple tees across the street from the house. I picked over my apples and dried out the
dampness in the house by running a brisk fire in the fireplace nearly all the afternoon. In order to
keep the Electine radio from damage by dampness I customarily run it for an hour or two each trip not that I listen to it, simply turn it on and let it amuse itself. I visited the Reverie and fed the one
lone first that I found in the trout pond.
I forgot to mention that yesterday I spoke before the Committee on Legal Affairs in
opposition to a bill that comes up every year to abolish all electric signs within a wide radius of the
State House. It is of course aimed at the Chevrolet sign on Beacon Street but it would deprive us
our school sign as well as sweep down every sign on hotel and theatre in the proscribed area.
Conrad Crooker, the notorious leader of the wits, was the only one who spoke in favor of the bill. I
created a great deal of mirth at his expense by declaring my amazement in seeing him appear as a
prohibitionist who would prohibit by law innocent electric signs. "He who fought for years for the
sacred right of the individual to be 'lit up' would now deny Beacon Hill the right to be lit up at night."
This sally at his expense quite convulsed the committee and those present at the hearing.
My regular argument follows the lines of that of last year when I made the Art Commission
quite frantic by satirical comments on their taste in art for Beacon Hill. "There is on beauty of life
and another beauty of death" I declared, "and evidently the Art Commission favors the beauty of
death.
Perchance the Art Commission favors the beauty of death for Beacon Hill. Come to think
of it we already have white wings recently affixed to our magnificent old brick State House. That in
itself is at least a suggestion of the great hereafter- and the peace of death.
Now you are urged to cut out all signs of life from the vicinity of the white winged capitol.

�150

)
"-·-·/

I know not how you feel about it gentlemen but when I cross the common as I frequently
do at night the light and life of the electric signs against the sky is a thrilling spectacle. It makes me
glad that I live in a city that is throbbing with life. When I drive up Beacon Street at night and se
that great aurora borealis that bursts upon the eye even though it is an advertising sign I think how
much more cheerful it is than if we faced a dead skyline of crape-like housetops.
Every great city of the world now prides itself on the pulsing life if its illuminated skyline at
night. New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and other American cities encourage private initiative in
the matter of illuminated signs. No doubt they exercise some supervision over the artistic quality of
the signs themselves.
If I were a member of the Art Commission I would be glad to have something to distract the
attention of the visitor from too sudden a vision of the extraordinary art of the State House. We
Bostonians are accustomed to it now but the ordinary visitor experiences a genuine shock when he
beholds the beautiful Bulfinch front between the two alabaster wings.
They murmur, "Oh what a pity- too bad you didn't have an Art Commission." But we have
to keep that fact as dark as the Art Commission would keep Beacon Hill.
Of course I did not advocate anything that would in the slightest degree interfere with the
spectacle of the State House, wings or no wings, but I see no reasons for any such drastic
recommendation as this. I would submit in closing that the Art Commission should confine itself to
art and not allow itself to be drawn into any commercial controversies.
March 3, 1931
Back from New York and Washington. My usual NBC broadcast occurred Saturday night.
On the following day I went to Washington, a tedious trip for it rained all day. When I arrived at the
Continental in Washington it was after 3 P.M. Being more of less a wreck I rested until suppertime
and then went to the theatre where I spent a pleasant evening. Yesterday morning I set out on my
campaign for a commencement speaker. Senator Wash was friendly but could give me little aid.
Senator Fess however was very cordial and as it proved very helpful indeed. He sent me first to
Senator Elect Wallace White of Maine but I found that White is to be abroad at the time. I saw
Senator Davis of Pennsylvania but he could not give me a definite answer.
Later in the day I sent a not to Senator Fess, telling of White's inability to speak and asking
suggestions. In a short time the Senator came into the lobby looking for me. He took me into the
Senate reception room and introduced me to Senator Hastings of Delaware. Senator Fess had
apparently explained the whole matter to him for he readily agreed to come.
Catharine is toiling daily on the semester reports, keeping track of failures and worrying
more or less over losses in enrollment due to the hard times as well as natural causes. Leonard
Williams is at home sick with mumps. The girls are worried lest they have the same unfortunate
malady
March 9, 1931
Leonard is still confined to his bed with complications following mumps. No other cases
have thus far occurred in the office staff.
Just now I am in the midst of a most interesting experiment. For some weeks I have
received repeated requests for copies of my National broadcasts on law. It has been in my mind
for some time to test out the matter of getting out a book composed of all broadcasts from the
beginning to the 36th of 40th broadcast. Saturday I discussed the plan with Phillips Carlin and found
him favorable provided no financial matters were mentioned over the air.

)

�151

J

)

So in my broadcast on Saturday evening I mentioned the possibility of getting out a
memorial edition containing pictures of all concerned in the series - announcers and all. I asked all
who were interested in procuring the book to write for particulars at once.
The first mail this morning had twenty requests and the continued to arrive all day until
tonight. I have fifty-two. It will be interesting to see how the west responds to the plan for they
seem to be very much interested out there. There should be quite a bit of fan mail tomorrow.
March 11, 1931
Yesterday's mail fulfilled expectations with more than a hundred splendid letters {106 in
fact) so with such a beginning there is no doubt about the wisdom of proceeding with the book.
One curious development was a book editor of the Century Company {evidently a radio fan) wrote
urging me to give the book to the Century Co. to publish for me. Of course I shall not do this
because I can get it out myself so much quicker and just as I want it whereas there are many miles
of red tape with a larger company.
Well, last night I {with Elizabeth) attended a treat banquet given at the
Hotel
ballroom { now called ..............................................................
who had been appointed a special justice in the Roxbury District Court. Of course I had to make a
speech and to my chagrin my voice played me a mighty mean trick. There was a frog in my throat
and I simply could not make myself heard. Always before in such a situation {at least for the past
two or three years) I have managed to pitch my voice at a high thin key and get my message
across. But last night I was quite disgusted with public speaking except over the radio. Only last
Friday night I made a very good speech in a banquet hall in the Statler at a banquet given by the
Forty and Eight, an organization connected with the American Legion. Floyd Giccins was
supposed to be the guest of honor but owing to illness he had to send Captain Hawks, the famous
aviator, instead. Hawks and I and a representative of Mayor Curley were the only speakers.
Perhaps I should add that on February 26th I was the guest of honor of the Pawtucket {RI)
Chamber of Commerce and spoke for three quarters of an hour with a clear voice. My audience
seemed delighted with my speech {Laws that Safeguard Businesses).
But now after this experience I shall certainly fight shy of speaking engagements of all
sorts. What does it profit me to make a national reputation as a speaker over the radio to millions
of people and then to have my voice play such a trick in a hall that other speakers of no reputation
can fill with ease? Well, I simply wont do it in that particular hall again or in any other where
acoustics are bad.
March 12, 1931
Fan letters in quantity came in yesterday and two payments for the new book. A busy day
for me reading fan letters, conferences with students, school problems, working on catalogs, not to
mention addressing envelopes {during my resting periods - for change of work is a rest) and
mailing out announcements for my new book.
I am impressed by the fact that in my fan mail are numbers from blind people who write
most appreciative letters, thus testifying to the value of this modern wizardry the radio One ten
year old boy wrote to me - a most charming little letter in boyish scrawl.
Wonders will never cease! My old enemies Frank Palmer Spure and Dean Everett A.
Churchill of Northeastern are in friendly relations and negotiations with me {at my initiative) on the
common problem of a five-year course for evening law schools. I am announcing in our new
catalog that all classes, after next year's (1931) entering class, will be under a five-year system.
This action is influenced more or less by the fact that it is becoming increasingly difficult for evening
students to gain admission to the bar. Averages for Suffolk men have been falling in an appalling
fashion. Speare said to me recently that it was becoming almost impossible for evening students

�152

to gain admission to the bar at all. The Bar Examiners have been hinting that evening students
should study for five years. Then too, the Judicial Council made a bitter attack on evening law
schools last January and published some astounding figures based upon recent examination
returns. The re[ort declared for five year evening course.

)

January 12, 1932.
Having been so absorbed with a multitude of duties that I have neglected to write out the
events that have transpired since last March. I will now summarize them.
The demand for publication of my talks became so great that I decided to publish the book.
It made a handsome volume. Two thousand copies have been printed and nearly all have been
sold.
A very sad even for me occurred on April 24th in the death of
my father at Great Pond. A telegram came from Susie on the night of
April 23rd as I was about to leave for New York. I phoned to Hiram and •
he started for Maine with the understanding that I would come directly
from New York to Great Pond. So I drove through by machine only to
learn when I reached Bangor that father was dead.
It was somewhat of a comfort to me that one month before this
sad event Father had been able to hear my voice over the radio in the
old home and I had spoken to him personally, praising him for his
worthy and upright life. The wonder of it all gave him the last great
thrill of his earthly life. How peaceful he looked in death. I had never
seen him in a full beard and there was a certain majesty about his
countenance that I had somehow missed during his life.
The funeral was held in the old home. Uncle Claud and his
family were there and the house was crowded. Uncle Leonard
preached the funeral sermon. I spoke a brief eulogy and read
Elizabeth's beautiful poem on "Death" from her little book "Poems on
Nature and Human Nature." The sad procession to the hilltop
cemetery and the last act in the long drama of life for my father left him sleeping beside my mother
from whom he had been separated for more than a quarter of a century.
The contacts with the American Magazine that were established during the winter failed to
produce any noteworthy results. The special articles that I prepared at their request were not in
line with their usual journalistic styler and they urged me to permit the material to be handled by a
"ghost writer," under my name, of course. This I refused to permit. They had already sent a
special writer to make a feature story based on my career, but it turned out that he was only a
special writer for the Boston Post which is extremely hostile to Suffolk Law School. Now would
have been policy for this man to prepare an acceptable article for the American Magazine on me
while doing feature work for the Post?
At any rate he waited for six weeks before writing a word and then practically reproduced
the article that had appeared in the "American" concerning me in 1926. So the magazine rejected
it on the ground of lack of novelty. I was of course very indignant at such shabby treatment.
Plans for the Wheeler Preparatory School went on apace. The trustees voted, at the
expense of about eleven thousand dollars, to remodel two buildings at the corner of Hancock and
Myrtle Street into a real school building. This work occupied the summer months but when it was
finished the result was very pleasing to the eye.

�153

Then in September the school opened. Whether it was the depression, with hard times of
unprecedented severity, or Mr. Wheeler's lack of executive ability, but the school got off to a bad
start, so that we had only a handful of day students and only such evening as were sent to the
Wheeler Preparatory School by the law school itself.
At this very time I was obliged to do to Atlantic City to attend the American Bar Association
Convention. At this convention I found a solid line-up of University men to protect their group from
any limitation being placed their activities as will be seen by the following.

)

�153
~

,.._. . /

Then in September the school opened. Whether it was the depression, with hard times of
unprecedented severity, or Mr. Wheeler's lack of executive ability, but the school got off to a bad
start, so that we had only a handful of day students and only such evening as were sent to the
Wheeler Preparatory School by the law school itself.
At this very time I was obliged to do to Atlantic City to attend the American Bar Association
Convention. At this convention I found a solid line-up of University men to protect their group from
any limitation being placed their activities as will be seen by the following.
The following pages were not scanned, as the material was copy of The Law School Review Proceedings on the Section of Legal Education pages 320-329. Pages 328, 329 are pertinent to
the outcome and are included

SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

)

�154

~
.......
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·

'·, · · ~ fl, .. : The

.· ..: .~ri~ . .
American· Law ·School: Review·, ''l-( l · · ·; . . ( l..-

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1contrn110 to ,pr~~atfth~~ ~• :
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r.[Ot'C pl~BUl'C', nlld
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.
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in or&lt;lcr. Wo hnte n\rent •. ...
: Mr. Olnrk: ·y()nr sorrow, )fr. Ohnlrrhan;·11.
n,nt
to
nn e:dcnt. ·
tbnt tM ~. __ . · my Joyt nnd thnt of .the ¥"lhf'rlng herb:' bb~·t~!.
to11-~~·
, ~mlt.h: The cbllh' TU1cs r. ronn-, ·
I wM1 tn ~,:prN!lfl tn 7011 alf my apprcclnUo~;,;:i~
· l.,hn1rmn1
:,u,\ni•w.;, n~ n.rrnngl"tl 1,r tt, iinnr;~ ~ ·= .
nt the honor which :rou have confc~cd .nP; .~~~
nnl~r of
nil nnle!t..11 th1A mN'tlng c
· :__•:.. •. on naP. nnd n1t.c:ure 7n11 U1nt I Jlkewfso· 1111• :: q
1
&lt;"11• wm pre\" nlotlon 10 duu,ge tt.
Jtrr.clnlo t11e J1en.Ty r~sr,onslhiliti ot actlng· l~ J!'fJ'J
\t, 1 Ju~n~ !!itgular ortler l~_ .. __
tbl~ po~ltlon na ~nt!C&lt;'.ttMr to our present ablo-1.\f
.. Orlcs O . ~ .~:
...=:. ·. .... .
~linlrmnn nnd his able pffilceeMorsr two ot~~·::,1
"·Jiom J1:rvn nlrr.ndy pnrtielpnli'fl In the ox-~,\i.~~
("ff•f,-M of th ... c1ny. • Antl wU h t hrir exn hlplo
.
······-- .. - ···-.· 1
hrfnre mr.. nnd wllll Liu• n~~rtntlon which ~'.~~r~
lui ,·r. hnc1 tor fonr rcnr11 with the Connell, .' ·..
llr. Ar,·b~r: b n·~W bU$llnr.!$ In orclC'r?
tmcl the n~sn:rnnrr of 'thP. !O~Unued help of:~.-~~
Chnlrmnn Rrnith~ Arror1Uug to lh~ 1,ro- thn pr-rR&lt;•nt dmlrmnn, who tll going to eerv~ ~,;~
,
irrnm, thC' next orclrr ·wouhl hr. rcJ•ort (lf tlm mmh1 on tlmt bonrrl. nml ~rllc11lnrl1-nnd&lt; ,.:. 1
Nomhu1th1g Comn1ltlce.. Is tho Nomlnnlln,: fell" fhla I npJ•(.ln) to rem, for wtt1,o11t the SU~ :;J,'1
port of lhc ~r.clfon, I cnn .,ln Jlttle-I hoJ&gt;O :::'R :'
1 t
tG •
Com mitt~ rt'iu 1 &lt;&gt; rrpot i
wo 1ihnl1 go on to n yrnr nr e\'NI Afl'l\ltr re-' t ~''.)
]tc,port of th~ Ne&gt;mlnnlln,: Commil lf'r.
,rnlt11 th:m lho,r Mlh:1fn&lt;'lnry rC'Anlts wblcb/J ~.j
ltC'J'lnrt of the Nomlnntb,,: Cc&gt;mmU.tN•: The Mr. t,::mflh lm,t ontllnNI. whlclt hnvo be~n ae- ,
1 11
NnmlMtht" Committee ltlAAf'~tR the follow- c·om1&gt;1hd1r,1 U1IR yrnr: nn11 Jmrtlcnlnrl1 I re~.· .[{,,
Ing 11omln:1Uo11s:
jnl(·o thnt n·e nrc 11M1tt'&lt;!d of tho continued .'/r
1:i'or CJmlrmnn--John KJrklnn(l Clnrk or n~r,ci~lnnc~ nf our nbJc nnd rfflchmt adviser:· :f_;·/
Nr.w l"l)rk:
"·ho lms c-antrlbutecl so much to theso results.'., !
,

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to

I

t;,~go,: ''"it"'
:

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r

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t

\Fico Chnlrman--J11dgc Oscnr JlnHntn of

l\linnl'Mtn:
~r~rc,bJry-Alexnmlet Anclrcm,

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ot

North

Cnrollnn;
}lrmhf'rA of tlln Connell:
.. :• For Four 1·t'nnl' T&lt;'rm: Geor,:c IT, Rmifh

of utnb, to encceed blmselr;

n.

Alnn Ste-

\"P.11R.

}"or 'J"hrco Years· Te-rm: F.ngcnr. f-Clnnlry
or T(nnMs;
fi"e1r ~r"·n Yr.ars' Term: C'hnrlrs JJ. J)nnhnr

t1f 1..011 biln nn ;

f RF.1&gt;4llt1'J.n'R NoTP.:

•
1"hf' nltt&gt;te

,,·nB lho
r1•1•ort ns m:ulP.. Rnbi:w,rn('nlly n Jl11l wnA
hnmtrd Ille rr~11ort~r eonlnlulng. in nildlrlon
In lhe nl,o,·~ nnmMt. lhe 11nnm of Willlnm A.
J hi YR nFt mem l~r ot the Connell for 1hr. llm'&lt;?
,·r~r tf'rm~ nnrl Jnn1NC Ornrton Jfo.;:C'TA RR
;nNnhor of t hn Councll for th~ two Y&lt;'ft r tC'rm :
nn1I ThM1lorr. Frnnctfl Gr,•t"n, M mf'mher of
th,• Comwll r,,r tll~ t'llle yN1 r tl'rrn.1
Mr. 'l"c-rrlhc-rry (J,onhdnnn): I mrn·~ lhnt
nnmhlnt lnnfl ho ~Jo91r1l nnd thr. Rerrhu): bo
,11rcctN1 to &lt;'Rflt lhr. hn11ot or U1c mcc.-tlng for
1hl' n.. uf.l&lt;'mf'II 11nmhu11c·cl.
frl1•, 111olfon \\'89 ~C('(ltl()NI, mul (he fll1CS•
tlnn h~lng tnkrn, lt Wft8 unnnimo11sly n~1·cet1

to.)
IThc R('(.'rf'tnr1 f11t'rr.11pon r.n$t one hnlloC
hr th~ Nomlnnt·
lni: C01nmltt.l'e. nnd tbe &lt;"hnlr rlr.elnrNI th~nl

&gt;

J thnllk l'OII.

( 'lmlrmnn ~mlth: l nr::Jcctecl to hnl'O re- . . l
porlNl nnd ii::umrnnrl1d'rl, f ho rrtmrt thn.t. J1n11 ; ..q.·
hrrn. mnllr., nncl I wonlrl Jlke to state tllat It · :. ·
clflf-S not contnln nnrtlllng thnt r0f)11lrt'8 ac- · · :'Ucm. other thnn ffi•rh·h1,r It; thllt It sets·
I
fnrlh tbo pro,:-r~ mmlc l'l'fJ' much as tho
~·
t"hnl:rrnnn stnh?d U In Ids rr.mnrkr:e, c:itcept that
it c•onlnfns n tnlmlnfr•l Rtnt.r.mrnt hy ~tntf'Jt
nfl to wlmt Uu•lr ftJlrc·lde nc&gt;f.h·lllcs Jaue hr.cm.
b II your ""lflh thnt. th&lt;' rrport be received
nnci 'in&lt;"nr1"•rntPtl In I h&lt;' mbmtes?
·'
Mr. l\lot&gt;rc (Nrw Jr11tcy): t moTl' thnt tho
rrr,nrt ()f tlio ('011ndl on TA",tnl Jr,durntlon be

&lt;.

ret..•h·Nl ftllll lnr.orpornlr,1 In the mhmtr.s.

fl.'be Jn&lt;.,Uon

WAR

sr.cr,mfocl. nnd the ques-t·

tlr,r1 l1l'l11,: tnkPa,. It wna ngrc-l'd to.)
,
Chnlrmnn Nmlth: TJ1ftt ronclmlt•a the for•.

mnl ,,nrt oC our moeUng, nnd mm· bmdnc11S
Is now In orclrr.
Mr. Areh1•r (Mn,u.inchueett1): I huve a 1·eR·
olntlnn lo olTf'r.
l'hnirnnm Rmllh: Urn11 Ar.. Jmr, &lt;ti BORton.

is 1·,..io,ml:1.ro for Uie puri,osn of ofl'~rh1g n refl-

oluflnn.
'.\lr. Ardmr: 'l'be r~l11Uo11 la ns foHo"·s:
Hrsoh·rcl. Tlmt the Amerknn nnr A~Clncfn.
t lnn ,:o on f('CC)rfl R.fl rN"OmmC'ndlng thnt h1
r,·r·r~· n111,rm·&lt;'&lt;l lnw srhonl, nt ll-nst J1n1! of nlt

C-h&gt;c•lNl,)

Jnw tunC'hlnsr U1f'rt-in ho rnnrlnrtt'fl hr Jnwrers
h1 nc·t h·r. 1•rnl'lit•r, or hy mrn whn hn,·e bll.lu~rto hnrl nt lenst ten y~nrs' cxpt'rh~11cc In active,

Chnlrmnn !;mUl1: 1 Jin,·P. tho J&gt;lr:umrp C'&gt;!
y1rM;l'nt.ln~ 1\lr••Tohn i,lrklnntl f'lnrk, who wm1
&lt;'lf'C"f&lt;'d pre.sh1ent. I nm ,;nrr.r to i::ny thnt nndt-r
rn1«'S It Is tile clnl)"'
thC' 1•rr~rnt

prnrl 1,•r.
·
I nwl my~&lt;·lf 111 the ,·ery hn11py pn~IU&lt;&gt;ll or
SUJ!.tH•,al Ing Rnm~t hing to 1\"lllrh lhC' OJlpmdtlon
n111,n Tf'11tl1 nJ?Ff'r11. The 011ros1Uon last :,~r

fo1• the gC'11fJ('ffl&lt;"tl nominntNl

)

u,r

or

BOSTON

ARCHIVES

i·

- .· r

�155

j&gt;:: . '.

·. Procetidin~:pfthe'Section on ~·- EdllUU~~\~

. 'no'RS npp1&gt;!W1l to tJ1e prcnml,Jr.. It wnfl Anlft hy
notoncl Wl~morr. thnt nil tha lnw schoolR comfR
Sn thP.
I J&gt;llerl, RO wf\ntouly1hr. J1nrm nf p11ttln~ lt Tnlrr.tl
rr.corcl? 'J'hP.
oppo111tlon thnt u-ns

.,
Ill

grent nmny 1mr11 I hue bflffl '•ti
SN!tlon anal lum1 l1ra\rd 1tM1• .a· wintlir.liele:
nhout Um dcar.nclrnre of the lcwlll 11l'Of...SOD,: ,,
nr1d ·~~lnlly nbont the lnwPrlnr 1tand1N1 ." ~·
1\'nA ()J&gt;JmAltlon ~hnt mnclo me J1nppy, h~cauRa or np11ll,•n11tr:1 f,nr ndnsl11111lo11 to tlae 111\l~),lfi'.
Jt trtn~llt me thnt my flv&amp; yeom of cfTort ron- stnd&lt;'n1s of lm'I Ar~hnolft.
. ,, , ,•, ,i)\,i,
'tlnce,t J &gt;eon J,P.wls thnt lho nnr AHAoclntlon
I go n wny trntny rr.Jolt~•I 11, tbt' t1t1t .. · 'f.i:;f
,;honlfl not &lt;llr.tat.o to In\\' !i!f•ltoollJ whom t.h"Y mr.nt mncl~ h.r thr. ~&lt;mllrmnn rrmn l'r11nt11l,11• I t)l
RllouhJ r.c-h,ct n,s ff'ncJum, or l:nv. .Jt'h·e yenr~ n!n lhnt Um Commlttr.n on Ollnrnf•lt'r nnd •it. i.'. ;~.
nito thP. Rnr Aii=~ncfnUon snlrl tbnt tJu~y ~ho11ld nr~. or Urn nnr or l'rnnsyh·nnln, aftc-r ·-,/~.!
going o,·C'r !-lomr. twr.h·~ nr flf'f 1'1'11 taumlrNI · ·, .' ·
1 htt'l,"8 n er.rtnln nmnhr.r &lt;,f full-time prore&amp;.;oTA,
Wns thS1t (Jlctntln~ to tJui lnw "SChools1 The &lt;'mHlfdntes wi1h n ftno tooth t•nrnh; touml 1.-"· /
Hnr·Aiv;oc•lntfon nJ~o Rnld tlmt they flhoulrt lhnn fh·c 1wr c&lt;'l1t, tl1At111nllfl&lt;'1l. I lhlnlc our' ,
bn.vc n r.&lt;'rtnln nnmhr.r of lmokA. WM thnt own Rtnh&gt; or lllinul~-nrul f11n ,:,•crc,t.ftry ot
rllr.bltlng to the 1nw ,;ehooh•? ThP.y ntF:o ~nlrl the Hnr A~~nr.l:11 Ion or cmr Rtntr. ht now Ji1·rte.
thnt nll np1,1lr:rmlFJ for n&lt;hnhod()n f:lho,11&lt;1 hn~P. l nt---J1ntt hn&lt;l thnt i,;nme- r"prrlrurP, nrnl I.
nt len11it two 1rnr.s in collr~~. Thrn In Hnr- wnnt to 1-ny lhnt In tt)lltf' nr :sll th~ rf'fl&lt;'cftun
fnln, In 1!127, wo wrre RnN'MUtfnt In g&lt;'Ulnit cn~t nc,on lnw Phttlt&gt;r1IA tmlny, t.hry nrc ot :lllct
thnt tntrrprrt.ril thnt thnt ,cbouhl menn ,-nmo 111,rh elmrn&lt;'h!r ,u,1 f hr. n11wr ;1·outll
Ntlll\"nt,..nt of h,.o yr.nr1 In collrate." Now we the emmtr.r. 'l'hry nrP. n111•d with thn n111hl•
Are tdms,ly n!llduir yon In 1ml Uald Into 1hr rrr.- tlnn nml "llf'TJ!)' ntul rNw,lnflnn ,,r )·011 n&lt;'t1llti•
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�156

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)

January 27, 1932
I am writing these words on the eve of the most critical battle I have ever fought since my
law school battles began. Tomorrow I meet the Board of Bar Examiners in what might be called
mortal combat, for I am impeaching them before a Legislative Committee for malfeasance in office.
Unless I win the contest Suffolk Law School has a bitter future indeed.
It is proper therefore that I should set down the facts that have led to this desperate
impasse. First in order is perhaps an encounter at the Bar Assn. Convention with J.C. Collin, the
Chairman of the RI Bar Examiners, who was circulating a report that the Theologs marked our
exam papers at Suffolk. I demanded an explanation for he had asserted that I had told him so, the
only basis being a statement I had made that Theologs acted as monitors in class. I informed him
that a bar examiner ought to have intelligence enough to know the meaning of the word monitor.
Well, I later learned that he had asserted that the bar examiners of Massachusetts were
our to get Suffolk Law School or words to that effect. "There has been a great change in the board
within two years," he had asserted. The more I pondered the remark the more convinced I was
that he was right.
Two weeks after the convention we learned that Collins had been well informed in advance
for the result of the July Bar Exam was another crushing defeat for Suffolk an average of 16% or so
against 52% for the corresponding exam six years before. Therefore I went diligentiy to work to
collect statistics on our record over a period of years and to trace its downward course especially
after certain changes in the personnel of the Board.
Men told me quite freely that the Examiners had brutally informed them that they had
written a good paper but would not pass because they had not attended a day law school. The
mischief of it was that since they had not yet passed, none of them would dare testify, lest the
examiners have revenge upon them.
When I explained the dilemma to the trustees and suggested filing bills in the Legislature
they were afraid. There was some hope that the examiners themselves might start something. So
I waited until the end of December but no bills were filed. For months I had been trying to secure
information concerning a rumor that the Examiners were farming out papers to other lawyers for
correction. But the thing had been done so secretly and tracks covered so skillfully that it was quite
impossible to find any clue to the mystery.
So I began to work on some bills for legislative action. Just as Legislature convened I met
John J. Irwin in front of the school building and got to telling him of our troubles with the examiners.
He told me that Bailey had flunked him three times and had assured him that he would have
passed if he had gone to a day school. Thus he declared that he was willing to testify to.
A few days later I went to the office of the State Auditor to see George E. Murphy of the 1st
Deputy Auditor, to ask aid in tracing expenditures of the Board of Bar Examiners. He was not in
but a clerk told me that the information would be in the comptroller's office. So I hied me hither and
asked to see the records concerning the board.
An obliging lady made several attempts and finally brought out a sheaf of papers that fairly
took my breath away, for lo! My long search was rewarded at last. There were the vouchers filed
by the lawyers who had corrected the papers. Five men whose names were utterly unfamiliar to
me had corrected the Jan 1931 and the July 1931 exams at 50 cents a book. Wow, but that was a
joyous victory.
Then I hurried back to the office and consulted my bar exam summaries, finding that one
of the men named had been a lawyer less than three months when he corrected the January 1931
exam. Considerable investigation was necessary to get together all the facts concerning the secret

�157

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five but I got it assembled and found that four of the five were young Harvard men and the other a
Boston University Law School man.
Then I discovered that the Examiners had increased their budget from $9,411 in 1925 to
$19,000 in 1931. Since this had to be raised from fees from applicants it gave me an additional
clue to the reason for such a wholesale slaughter of candidates.
Then cam the great question of whether I could risk the future of the school by striking the
examiners in so sore a spot as the precious secret of theirs. After much deliberation I decided
despite the pessimistic wails of Catherine, Leonard and others to stake all in the great contest that
must need rock the Bay State from Cape Cod to the Berkshire.
Two bills which with the help of Martin Lomasney (splendid old warhorse of the West End)
I framed were filed and tomorrow we come to grips in the hearing room. The matter is pending
before Joint Judiciary. With indecent haste the Clerk of the Committee listed the bills for hearing at
this early date.
When I returned from New York Sunday morning and learned of the hearing I knew that I
must work fast if I were to attract public attention to the bills. The newspapers were silent despite
the sensational nature of the measures.
So on Sunday evening as a prelude to my broadcast on Plymouth history I threw our my
first ringing challenge in the following form. Broadcasting from WBZ-WBZA:
"For more than two years and a quarter I have had the great privilege of talking to you over
these stations, bringing to you each week a message either of law or of history. I have often said
to you that my purpose is not merely to instruct or to entertain but rather to do my bit to bring
people face to face with the great truths, truths of the laws that safeguard our liberties of today, and
of the great problems of democracy that were worked out for us by noble and God fearing men and
women in New England of three hundred years ago.
"But my life interest is vitally focused upon the preservation to present and future
generations of that democracy in education and in the opportunities of life which our ancestors
transmitted to us. The first broadcast that I ever gave over the radio in September 1929 entitled
"Equality of Opportunity" for the children of rich and poor. In that broadcast I pointed out to you a
great and nation-wide movement to close the doors of the legal profession in the face of young
men and women who are obliged by economic necessity to work for a living while studying law.
That movement seeks to create a monopoly of the legal profession in favor of the graduates of
certain day law schools.
"In more than two years over the air I have not since mentioned the movement in
Massachusetts. But the time had come when I must mention it. The Board of Bar Examiners of
Massachusetts for two years have been flunking evening students at an astounding rate, and
giving themselves airs of conscientious guardians of the public against inferior lawyers.
"What must we think therefore, at the sudden revelation that these men, paid by the
Commonwealth to correct examination papers of appeal for the bar, have secre~y been farming out
papers to newly admitted day law school graduates for correction at 50 cents a book.
"Incredible, you may say. No such injustice is possible in Massachusetts! I thought so too,
until with my own eyes I saw in the comptroller's office at the State House a few days ago the pay
vouchers signed by these men, giving names and addresses and a charged for correcting the Jan
1931 and the July 1931 bar examinations. To my amazement I learned that one of this striplings
had been admitted to the bar only three months before he assumed the heavy responsibility of
passing upon the examinations of earnest and deserving young men and women who had been
studying law in evening law schools for a year before he entered Harvard Law School. Is it any
wonder that the bar exam success has dropped from an average by year of 54% to about 16%? Is

�158

it any wonder that the legislature of Massachusetts is about to take a hand in this matter? I learned
only this morning upon my return from New York that here will be a hearing before the committee
of Judiciary on this matter next Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. Quite naturally I am ablaze with
indignation and with preparation for that hearing.
"So you see, Ladies and Gentlemen, this generation has its problems and its duties just as
did the Pilgrim Fathers. They struggled to preserve eternal principles of human liberty against
those who perhaps honestly and mistakenly believed that privileges and opportunities were for the
elect and not for the sons and daughters of the laboring man. So in this new crisis, whether you
believe that the number of lawyers should be kept down, I am sure that you agree with me that for
a State Board secretly to delegate its duties in this outrageous manner is not conductive to justice,
nor to fair play, nor to public respect for our institutions of government, supposedly of the people,
for the people and by the people."

)

j

January 28, 1932
Well, the great battle has been fought and the State is still agog with excitement! To begin
with, the Boston Post came out this morning with a grand story of the impending conflict. This was
an unexpected help for I had believed that the newspapers were close against me. So convinced
had I been of this fact that yesterday I went to John Clark of WBZ-WBZA and told him of the
desperate battle in which I was about to be asking for radio facilities if the same could be given
without danger to himself. John is a valiant soul and he kindled to my story, pledging 100%
support. When I came away he had arranged for six-week day broadcasts for the next two weeks.
So the Post story was an unexpected stroke of good fortune. It attracted a great deal of public
attention.
Thanks to the thorough way in which I had lined up my own students for hearing day we
had a very large crowd in the corridor and it became necessary to adjourn to the Gardner
Auditorium which itself filled up. My speech was of course the chief feature of the hearing because
it was I who had discovered the sensational facts. The Boston Post as will be seen in the clippings
on the next two pages had already broken the news to the public. This accounted for a goodly
portion of the throng that gathered to witness the battle. Chairman Hitchcock was sitting at the end
of the table at which I stood when delivering my "Phillioci" against his board and he certainly looked
worried and wilted.
When it came to his turn to speak he began by denying my charges but before he was
through he had admitted them all by implication if not in so many words.
The newspapers came out with hostile headlines "Archer Rebut by Hitchcock" and the like
but the facts reported and the speech by Hitchcock even as reported gave the readers the
information that was in itself a vindication of my stand.
On the day following the hearing I wrote a letter to Chairman Hitchcock telling him that I
was planning to discuss the bar exam situation over the radio and that if he would care to reply to
me in the same way I would be glad to arrange for him to have equal time on the air free of charge.
After his weak showing at the hearing I felt quite certain that he would not dare to accept
my offer. Sure enough he declined to enter the lists with me. Before leaving for New York I had
prepared my first broadcast on the bar exam situation to be delivered Sunday Jan 31st in place of
my "Heroic Days of Plymouth Colony."
Sunday noon when I was busily engaged on the preparation of my Thursday broadcast
someone rang the doorbell. I sent Allan down. He reported that there was a man to see me. I
was surprised and delighted to find that the visitor was former Mayor Malcom E. Nichols who had
come to congratulate me on the splendid showing I had made in the fight and to tell me of a young
...'.)SITY.
\

ARCHIVES

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BOSTON

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�160

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man who had been grievously mistreated by the bar examiners.
My Sunday evening broadcast went over with a bang. I
was in good voice and so full of suppressed feeling at the time
that those who listened in declared it my greatest success as a
broadcaster.
The radio program "Bar Exam Abuses in
Massachusetts" ran on the following dates: Sunday Jan 31 6:15 PM,
Tuesday February 2- 7:45 PM
Friday February 5 - 5 PM
Sunday February 7 - 6:15 PM
Tuesday February 9- 7:45 PM
Thursday February 11 - 1:30 PM
Friday February 12 - 5 PM
Closing as I did on Lincoln's birthday gave me a grand
opportunity for driving home truths that needed to be told.
Before going to New York I completed the text of a
forty-one page manuscript (typewritten MSS) brief to be filed
with the Legislative Committee.
New York City, February 13, 1932
Having brought the story up to date so far as the main
facts are concerned I may as well size up the situation as it now
stands. It is reported that the Committee of Judiciary will hold
an Executive Meeting on the bill on Monday. John V. Mahoney,
my chief reliance on the committee, has hopes that we will win
in the committee, but of course if we do it will be a tremendous
victory, due almost entirely to my radio campaign.
Harvard and BU, the bar association and those behind
the drive of the college monopoly are working desperately to
save the Bar Examiners. The thought occurred to me some
days ago that if this corrupt and unjust board were saved it
would have to be by Republic votes. So I have been pointing
out to some of the Republican leaders that Democratic
spellbinders could use that fact with devastating effect in the
campaign next fall. Since they have seemed to grow very
concerned over the matter I have hopes that it will prove a
strong factor in the decision of the committee.
There is no blinking the fact, however, that unless I win
in the Legislature Suffolk Law School will be in grave danger.
Of course it was facing ruin anyway as things were going, for
the examiners were flunking 85 percent of our candidates and
no school could stand that long. Whatever the outcome I have
taken the only courageous and manly stand that was open to
me. On the day before the hearing when Catharine was
pleading with me not to attack the Bar examiners openly lest

�161

J

we have to close the school, I replied, "I would sooner do that than play the coward." That
sentiment still holds good. I cannot believe that God will permit the type of work that we are doing
to be destroyed by so sinister a movement as this college monopoly scheme. The door of
opportunity must be kept open to the poor and oppressed and it should be possible to awaken the
people of Massachusetts to their duty in this matter. Whether my radio talks have already
accomplished that, time alone can demonstrate.
Suffolk Law School has been very hard hit by the depression. There is also a hostile
friction in our board of trustees led by Joseph F. O'Connell. He and I quarreled two or three years
ago over his tendency to demand large sums of money for some legal services in connection with
tax matters with the city and also for his attendance at Bar Association Meetings. He had a way of
declaring that he has lost cases or fees while absent at convention and demanding that the school
make good his alleged losses.
Finally, we had a fiery clash two years ago over an insulting telegram that he sent me from
New York City as the result of seeing a hostile letter in the mail bag of the Boston Post. This letter
was written by some falsifier who claimed that I indulged in stories over the radio ridiculing the Irish
- merely because I had cited cases in which Irish dependants were concerned. This caused very
bitter feelings because I wrote him a scorching letter denying his right to condemn without taking
the trouble to investigate the facts. Though he stormed for some time, vowing vengeance and so
on he finally returned to trustee meetings. I have never felt any confidence in his fair words since
then.
He and James Swift apparently got together on a scheme to require fees for services as
trustees and finally so engineered matters that each member of a so called "executive committee"
should receive $2000 a year and President Boynton $2500.
I have resented this for the past two years as an unjustified raid on the treasury because none of
them are doing more that attend
two or three meetings a year and
it costs the school $12,5000.
Well, last fall when I found
that we were facing a deficit for the
year, I informed the board that
drastic retrenchments were in order
and asked them to adopt a rule for a
fee of $500 instead of $2000. They
at once retaliated by calling for an
audit of my books as treasurer. In
fact my treasury accounts has never
been approved since my row with
O'Connell.
H~ insisted two years ago on
having an auditory committee, of
which he was a member, but the
committee never functioned. My
report of last June was held up in
the same manner. The auditor
finally selected was a well known
public accountant. Pride.
It was a great nuisance to
President Thos. Boynton and Elizabeth Archer

§UffDLK UNIVERS1T¥
BOSTON

ARCHJVES

�162

have an accountant in the office for two weeks or so but it ended, as I knew it must in his finding
that my accounts were correct except that he criticized the method as "crude." He recommended a
system.
Now in the midst of a life and death struggle for the school's future I am handicapped by an
ugly looking situation in our own board of trustees. A meeting will be held next Wednesday. No
member of the board has given me the slightest assistance in the legislative fight or has manifest
any interest in it, vital as it is to the school's future.
O'Connell has one way of making trouble, in that he owns a $20,000 bond that was due
January 1st but which I understood he was willing to let run until another year. Yesterday I received
a letter angrily demanding the $20,000. That will be up in the meeting of Wednesday.
Well, now let us look as something more cheering, the overwhelming success of my NBC
series of broadcasts. They are now being published word for word in the "Radio Digest" each
month, a fact which places me at the top of the world so far as radio is concerned.
The manner in which this came to pass was so sudden and dramatic that it deserves more
space than remains in this book. Last spring I had written, at the suggestion of John Elwood, an
article on "Education by Radio." The press relations department liked it and one of the men had
kept a copy of it to send to "Radio Digest."
I had very little hopes of having it accepted. Months went by. The man who had taken the
article left NBC and the article was quite evidently lost.
On November 21, 1931 I called at the office of "Radio Digest" and met the editor Harold P.
Brown. To my delight I found that he and his family had already discovered my law talks and were
listening in each week. He had already a little article for the December number concerning me.
Never in my experience did I ever make friends with a man so quickly.
When he learned of my book "Mayflower Heroes," then just off the press, he became very
enthusiastic and I promised him a copy. He declared his wife would like to meet me, so I invited
him to come with her to the studio the following Saturday and we could talk history late into the
evening. This invitation he accepted on the spot. I left the article "Education by Radio" with him.
He notified me by letter that he accepted it for the January number.
On November 28th Editor Brown and his wife were guests of mine at NBS, which created a
sensation there. We spent the evening together, and during the evening Mr. Brown said that he
liked my broadcasts so well that he would like to have me give him a page of similar material each
month. Of course I was glad to accept the offer. While riding back to Boston the brilliant scheme
popped into my head of suggesting that my new series of talks on Domestic Relations (to begin on
NBC network on December 19th) be reprinted each month. When I reached Boston I sat down and
wrote Mr. Brown outlining the offer and sending him a copy of the script for the first talk.
He wrote back that the idea appealed to him and he would take it up with the publishers.
They also agreed, so he rushed into the January issue the first two talks (in addition to my special
article) so it was quite an Archer number. Mr. Brown had me come to his house in Tarrytown early
in January. Then he and his eldest daughter, a college girl, visited the studio and attended the
theatre with me afterwards.
When Allan's birthday came along I had him come to New York to celebrate. Miss. Brown
and her father spent the afternoon with us, took in my broadcast (Jan 23d) and then Mrs. Brown
and her oldest son joined us for a theatre party. We saw "Hay Fever," an unusual comedy. A very
pleasant friendship has thus been established - Thus I end this volume eleven years and two
months in the making.

_)

SUFFOLK UNiVt.HSt iY
BOSTON

ARCHIVES

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                <text>Record American news clipping of John Joseph Moakley at the Suffolk University Law School graduation, 6/16/1956</text>
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                <text>16 June 1956</text>
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                <text>Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)</text>
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                <text>Series 11.02 Non-congressional Papers: Personal Papers, Box 1 Folder 12</text>
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                <text>&lt;p&gt;View the &lt;a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100.pdf"&gt;finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers&lt;/a&gt; for more information (PDF).&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>Copyright Record American. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the John Joseph Moakley Archive &amp; Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.</text>
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Ralph Ince offers his latest; Ptoc:I~~~
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fOlk' ~heatre ， the co祖ing week. Tne
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lfice , wit.h--.its dangers an Ç1 thrills.: is 1:
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Ralph Ince , the great pr
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ID 1May 9 A more Interestlng ánd 阻= 1t~
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day. Pa伽 Weekly ， a 8pecial sce~ic
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in “ Pleasure Seekers" are the leading
attractions at the Suffolk TheatrA
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of nature's wonder.s ~明 d the Pathe
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sWEdUE TEEATER!
Conway Tearle in "'l' he Road -o f:
川 λm1}ition ，"
and Elaine HammerS Istein in “ Pleasure 8eekers" are the
!t 1 feature attractio lÌ s at the 8uffolk
u . tlleater , Bostou's ideal picture house ,
1 just in rear of the 8t'!-te House , for
,S I the current week. Jackle Coogan in
"'1 a special picture appears not the
- Ileast a 佐 ected by the enormouS
"1 crοwds that' followed the youngest
,e I screen star in his first visit to New
l , IYork.
a I Another view of nature's wonders ,
- 1and the Pathe bi-weekly complete
S I the bilL The management has put
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I populàr prices-15 and 25 cents , I (
r I nìaking the 8u宜。lk the.ater the low - I 、
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houBe in B曲ton. '門
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有

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rear OI 1:&gt;U1le .ti OUSe, week 01
9th.
刊
Bessie Love in her best picture
“Bonnie May" is depicted in all her
I fascinating ch制'!l1S
The Pathe 可Teekly， a new scentc of
'þ
Nature's Wonders , and Charlie C ap
lin in his first re-issue “ His Night
IOut" 個心plete th-e big bill. The performance is 'con位nuo咀 s from 12 m. to
;1 10 :30 p m.
呵。\.Itl l.'唱1 ，

斗 May

可申明~"

、

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D15RNE STS.

，-，"→ E可~' &amp;OHTl悶。US 2..10:30

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1、，"1J!)8TONt~HDEAL ,PICTURE' 'HOUSE"

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EARLE

WELUA閉S

斗-"一，

At the new Suffolk Theatre , a 'x叫ghbor~J 1- 一 卓有聘者

司 I ho~d ~icture-house lately opened at;:':reni峙;H ‘

久(

and Derne Streets below Beac咕!":~
Earle Williåms will be screene(j':市:Jd-而
in t l1e photo-play “ Diamonds Adrift"
λlma Ruben e:, late of “ Humoresqu e" wúî ,
川 be filmed in “ Thoughtless Women." Travèl、 h
plctu肘， news刑 ctur個 and a comic--fii~!
i WHl also be u n r o l l e d - l

r-\

、

m

會，

“

ADRIFT

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二三三三三屆

-干干守串岩卉

享E至盟E誼商

甜，

SUF
e

EARLE WILLIAMS

wlùiã這yus

Aαrift，"

featùrií
豆豆!

器組單純攏到

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品、，一咒?于-

DIAMOND'S ADRIFT

!lzlraldhhbhf
I Sllffolk

悶。TE

Theatre

一

Next week s program ('O l1 SiSLS of Earle
“ Diamondsλrlrift" Alma
Rubens of Humo 爬 sque fame wiU be
1 sho\\ n in "T l1 onghtlcss V\一Olnen "
A
|叩 ecial 'scenic of 11ature's \yonde凹， local
I and national 1 eYÎe\VS and the latest c: om11 edy "\vill complete the b i1l. 'I' he performI

NOTE
NOTE

11 耳Nilliams in
\ 1

ALMA RUBENS

i\~…叩…us ~.\~ ;J{\\l11~
Ip.~~
_Jμ沙4 吭li} 2f

THOUGHTLESSWOMEN

J 苟 i }.'V屯甜甜

1.su吋ATRE;
EaHFJ;在klfret評m.e
(

oonsJsts .,
Alma Rubens fn “啊， ::onFJdrift'"

ιspe叫劃I 岫nhofna □，立個全~"l

ν川

l?i4
EEdN

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心

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2

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么立蛇肉

SUFFOLK;Ziii要;2

久

m
則

ever to visit a new pic!ure theatre in
Bostoö. The management bas just!
completed arrange田 ents wi~b the lead 令
ing film companies of tbe country tc
sbow all the big 5tars at tbe SuffoV

DIAMONDS ADRIFT

N

OOO
TTT
EEE
錯8品澀EEaz品蠶豆豆品
TFR智慧都歸E

,

iOEDmeMT叫le 叫 ets. The 恥 n﹒
i Ì1 g week saw one of lhe lar莒 est crowds

RLE WILLIAMS

、、\

Suffolk Theatre
、世/可
Boston's ideal pfcture bouse 。宜 ers a 1
I splendid program of star for tbe week I r.
受~mmencing April 18. Tbis new and
cO &gt;:D fortable picture tbeatre is located
opposite tbe State House , at tbe corner :ç.

Theatre ，可

NOTE
NOTE
NOTE

ALMARUBENS

Next week's progra血 consists of the I
popular screèn idol , Earle Wi.l liams , in 1
岫 exciting love a :ff叫.
'J Dj amonds I &gt;
Adri fL." Alma Rubens of Humoresque I t
fame will be shown jn 且 picture that I ;
ev 的 womau sbould seei "Th。可htless
Women" A special s的nic of nat U1 e's'lt
wonde叫 lo叫 .and n'at ronal reviews ,
I a. nd the lat 的 t comedy will compl 叫 e I "
.1 the big bill. Tbe llerformanoe)s con- 卜
:inllo, s: ,from ~ p.m to 1胸 P 且﹒卡
u

I;
11

THOUGHTLESS WOMEN

;

i \

一、.

?LT J\ih--I叫 P闊的 Cura叭，一拉
、 b濟gl!，1&gt;''''''' ---可 f

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艾

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�句兩僻綴楞輛輛數都令

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一一一一一一IchieC
yi
SUFFOLK THEATRE
1Boy" ‘
d I As the live wire news writer of a Iat Gc
ic 1-'0 daily paper, --", Williams in i ~Il:.?!
1big
Earle
--,-_.
__ I ductio
汽油 I his latest picture ,“It Can Be Donei' I ;;;~nth
1 .~ 1has a fine opportunity to show his 1th~;':;:~i
I ,10 Iresourcefulnes~ a?d :leve:_ ac!ing to I f~r th~
!前 I the patrons of the Su缸 olk theatre ,:
.' " 1Boston's Ideal Picture House' , Ju......jIGORD ,
I
UC
VU;'' - just
--，.~

~V';:;' l，. VU;':)

M

~-~"，

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Q, l

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/ ::其 iv立叫誨。訊:1::tfdepicts a i
叭的~\-D~
Istories, “The Informer ,"

!

,nd I characteristic role of a girl of the I Agai.
;t~; 1rebell~on period
A special Chapli_n 1triu~p
ik~ 1 comedy , a neW scenic' o!_ _nàtu:~'s 1 Door.'~ .
v 一\ wonders and the Pathe_ Bi-weekly , I to the'
:nd I with a new addition by t?e ma~age: 1~;'d Gc
吋 .1 ment of the “TOPiC~ ，.~f ".th~ I)a_y，'~ 1
y~ste 也
~Ï-l make up a. picture bill that :-Îvals I
1the best that has ever been shown 1have 11
t
...,... ....."'..., u
Y: Iin aoy picture _house
I~;o'st "'~
;;'_1 The theatre is 2' y far t~~ cqolest I""í;:'- tï
picture house in Boston The man- I
~.i lö

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呢

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SUFFOLK

心

THEATRE

agem 削 ha s 扣 試 ft
閻 j us t 叭

&gt;&gt;1仆
ms侃叫圳lat i。開 叫 叭 叭 句仆山‘ 叫 峙蚓串斟 hig咐ues肉
l 叫 n 0f
討
t
U
川
ι h、c din I于
1
I power motor driven 恥 r-coo !ihg fan I in thi
E jwh叩h sends the air 圳、 γ ﹒、伽 1 pr~v.io:
m \ th~;;t;e ;'~;d此oriUln fI ()..
d~~ !a !_?t
扎 1 ~~_~~~:.. :_-_~;=--=-:;_-._-::- ~_，.. ..., ，;........~...
\ grees oooler than ont of doors --_ 1 Pro1
L-;st-f;;t~rd-~Y--~仙 Bost~~ swelt-I tur~ li
~~ I er~g- -u~der 伽 ter抽 c rise of 伽) ~~=~~~l
)f 1th~~;'l~~;t肘 the S吋 olk th阻tre 1s?-eneE
~'= 1::;;
g~~~ its patrons a temperature of \ ~':;_~ ,
I Pickf
167 degrees.
油!
一一一_
jBaok'
l4 1,

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~______

flU哼飢似“

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I

一一二← v三 J 可 to， I~

SUFFOLK THEATRE-"-Ea而 Wil 兩面sr
the popular sC l' een idol , wi lI be sbown
in a comedy drama full of !ntense in~ere.st at tbis ideal picture hopse , just
in the re.al' of tbe State H0 1l se , éommencfng tbè week of tbe 23d. The
põpular slsr bas never appeared 10
sucb !l n advantage as in Il is lalest 1:
productioD. As the Ii ve.wire uews 1:
writer of a dailý paper be is sbown in 1:
contact wilb tbe m!l ny exciting inci-I!,
d~n，IS tbat befall a big city r恥 rter. ,1'
Tbere is enougb material in tbis pic I
tU l' e to satidfy pictu l' e lovers of tbe I
famous Vitagr !l ph Stal' in his latest \ :
achiévement , and whicb will add to
his popularity as the most popula l'
SC l' een idol of tbe day. Tbe Pathe
，bi-week 旬， another s Pß cial scenic of
natu 悶'~ ~o~ders.' 事 I ip-roaring comedy and tbe' topics o( the day willl 毛
complete.the bill. Popular prices of I Î
1 5e and 25c prevai l. - T, be -perform- \ ;

1-'

Comæencing the week of May
130 the Suffolk th叫叫 Boston's
ideal picture house, just in the rear
of the state hous巴， will 0任er 些
splendid hill of feature attractions ,
changing on Mondays and Thur子
days
For the first three days the feature attraction will be Alice Calhoun in “ The Charming Deceiver,"
and the last three days w i1l be
II shown “ A Western Adventure,"
I starring \Villiam Fairbanks.
I The latest comedies, Pathe biI weekly, a pictureesque view of nature's wonders, and topics of the
day make up the bill, which is continuous from 12 M to 10 30 P.M.

/

,

1a削位ti!?us f m m u m
\10.30 p.m_:_'

I

ke

_,

THEATRE
Just in rear of State House
“ BOSTON'S IDEAL PICTURE HOUSE"
CONTINUOUS-IZ NOON TO 10.30
WEEK OF MAY 30
W.EEK OF MAY 30
EXCLUSIVE PICTURES! SHOWN HERE ONLY!
THURS., FR I., SAT.
MON.， TUCAEL , WED.
鼠H
/
ALlCE CALHOUN
WM. F AIRBANKS
!u
m
11
“ A Western Adventurer"
“ The Charming Deceiver"
.
LATEST COMEDY!-PATHE .BI-WEEKLY
PRICES-15c ANÐ Z5c
NAT U. RE'S WONDERS
eHANGE OF PROGRAMME MONDAY AND THURSDAY

SUFFOLK

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SUFFOJjK THEATRE
I
恥 M so u d 岫 M E "m F趴 U 圍 圍 m 恤 ，g
1 The Suffolk Theatre, rear of stát.. 1‘
tu
恤 r m m 叫一 2， UK 、M M賦 A~l 的 巾 m 旭 gy
主 E主 ouse， wish開 to inform its patrons I
d
'" I that the theatre will be closed for a I ~，
扭 M f F u團叫 拭風 A h 尬l Bm 叫 m -e MM
( 1short while，的 the man~~~m_ent i~1 ~1
L
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. I completing the final installation ot I ~，
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也
胸 Hd 旬的 J 油 叫 -m 肘滑 e M b t"
7
, I in New England
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t
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m
爭 I equipment and surely .!he fi ，，:;~!Y
m M 一
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,
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抽 E M 打 叫 m
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可

~~on to 10;30 p m. , witb popular I t
.\ prices of 15c and 25c.

7'C叫佇~

可~tf '-1"

……

1 加iVith

k

x

the greatest a11.star cast of

the season, a big Vitagraph feature,
“ Neglected wives',, will be the
headl1nEattI acbon at the sutroll王

Oαmmen C1呵
…臼I
叫
lC
叫

A big surrounding bi 11 吋 ∞ 山 0 f C ome­

I dies. the Pathe bi.weekly, a 詛肘W
ew

叫
2 I :;:~1;_-~ f 叫ure's wond帥， will '" ~
吋 n
-ikiup 伽 plωre bill for th

j!

趴討 three days.

$
s

_

Ant O叩叫凹 山伽 凹
叫 叮 也i ∞ f O re 帆
伽 oM 盯 1
t n泊 臼 n
丘
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a screen art

sp巴cial，

1

~…即 、. . ~.

.ι)一← 彷戶海肌f
_"，1f

S \J FFOLK THEATRE '" I 1'(/
、
1 he mana g-ement of the Suffol l&lt; I r! 2.,.(
\'1 Theatre , rear of St孔 te Housc , Bos- 1~ { I ,
] I ton. wishes to inform its patrons I
.1
i I that the thcatre will -b e dosed for I
,
1
、 I a short while , as the fina 'l works I
'1
'0 11 也 e cαmpleting ()1 the largest 121
J '2_'pe , or7' a_n 'In 叫 t~~at;e_~n _)[e;v , ,
Ellgola吋 is be ng rushed S as tr , I '(心
o.
delmand the use 01 this theatre I 至
1
durillg the hours 叫， eduled lor its 121:1
1
。，pclliìí g
ThÌs magnificeηt $50 ,000 I-'~
1
p'pe organ will he the last thing 1_
J
~l organ equipme 川 a吋叫阿 ly thc 1"':
fillest 'ill usic ever heard in an} 1
作Boston 'picture' house will be giv. 11
dgdgflee--tfs?
i 011 the Su菇。 Ik Theatre patrons on 11
ihehml川耳叫 i泣的 u
I gust
11
,

1-'

,

'，heatr皂， rear of the state house ,

i f'內 只"
n

J

j

10 .....

,

九點&lt;\，.\.&lt;~，

,.,.,

THE THEATRES 叫.

SUFFOLK THEATRE - Witb tbe I
all.sta l' cast of tbe season , a 1
b;g- :Vitaglapb featu~e，“ Neglected i
Wives ，"刷 1I be tbe beadline att l' a竺
\ tion at tbe Su宜。 Ik theat l' e , rear ot
1Slate Bouse , commencing Monday ,
June 6. 在 bi~'~url'ounding .~ill òf !己
medies , tbe" Patbe bi-w~ekly; .~ I W
riew scenic of natu的 wonders; 'wi
1
m晴ke'呻 tbe picture bill !?l' tbe 宜叩門e
tbree davs. , Antonio Mo~eno ， i.n I ~
i “:rh~ee~s~~'é~s:'~~ sei'een IIrt speci l1 J! ! ?!
is -b;il~d for Tbmsday , F l'iday and-i i'
i\ Sat~~d~y， witb a compfet~. c? !l ng! , f I
o

SUFFOLK

With the greatest 01 &lt;1 11 star 個 st Il
01 品。 s'e .a so~ ， a big Vitagra,ph le.~-I
ture “ Ne g-lelcted Wives" will be 伽 1 ~
'hea'dline -att nl! clÌ' on at the, Su 旺。 Ik 1
Tlhe副 tre ， r&lt;~alr ,011 the Sta te House , 1
es 己 ing Monday , J une 6
l'
A :b ig s,,:ï'r rounding bi l1 01 c ombi-weekly , a new
', 'edi e&lt; s'. t:he Pa the
lmni
W1onders , w i1l
七 of Nature's
沾沾已 up 仙 e pkture bi11 for t , e
h
first three days
À.'ll t~;';i-;; '11or'ello in “ Three
Selvells" a Screen Art Speaia.l is
吐
I billed lor Thursday , Frida~ an
I Saturday 'wi t.h a complete change
c 1 '01 programme in tlhe extra fi_I ms
The 口 erformancel ís contlnuous
from 12 noon to 10.30 p m wit-h
popular prices of 15 and 25 cents

'/

Q'l' eatest

THEATRE
Just in rear of State ,House
“ BOSTON'S IDEAL Pl CTURE HOUSE"
CONTINUOUS-12 NOON TO 10.30 P. M.
WEEK OF JUNE 6
WEEK OF JUNE 6
EXCLUSIVE PICTURES! SHOWN HERE ONLY!
MON., TUE 鼠， WED.
THURS., FRI., SAT.
ANTONIO MORENO
“ Neglected Wives"
with
m
ALL STAR CAST
11
“Thr，曲 Sevens"
LATEST COMEDIES! .....,PATHE BI-WEEKLY
PRICES-15c AND 冒 冒.c
E,
NATURE'S WONDERS
ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROGRAMME MON. AND THURS

ζ
村中計三依/~位ωψ"
'1
SUFFOLK THEATRE
I~

~吋

,

is bi11ed
Satur-

If~~' Th叫Slù吋 Friday and
ur 趴叫
叫
m
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臼
i 川in the 巴Xtr昀 釗lms.
gra m
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The performance is contmuous
￡ ro111I2oo to IO3O PLI p with popcents.
ula1' prices of 15 and 25

11
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BOSTON'S IDEAL PICTURE HOUSE"

CONTINUOUS-12 NOON TO 10:30 P. M.
11 (
WEEK OF MAY 16 - --WEEK OF MAY 16 ~

11

EXCLUSIVE PICTURES!

SHOWN HERE ONLY!

I if

--'1 ELAINE HAMMERSTEINlll

CONWAY TEARLE

.:.

IN
"
IN
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THE ROAD OF AMBI Tl ON 11
PLEASURE SEEKERs
JACKIE COOGAN
LATEST NEWS
NATURE'S WONDERS

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PRICES-1Sc.-2Sc.-PRICES
BOSTON'S LEADING PICTURE HOUSE

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Earle Williams , the popular screen I 1
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11ouse, jllst in the rear of the State IJoh
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~I Suffolk Theatre , Bosto且 's ide.a l "pí'Cr 1 ture h011se , just in the re叫“ the
State House， ωmmencing week of
, I 耳1:.a y 23.
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PICTURE HOUSE" _ _. __ __ 1I : 1 Earle Wi Jl iams
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IWEEK OF MA Y 23
WEEK OF MA Y2311_ '1 仙的11 i! dol. wi'1l íbe -~-how~ - i~--~ I(
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~ONTINUOUS-12 N∞N TO 10:油 P.M.
1:14iter臼tit the sufolkh叫rejEos-l
I~XCLUSIVE PICTURESl SHOWN HERE O N L Y ! f h f j to的 Idea'l P 叫 ur1e Hou叫 just in /:
I
_-- --:::.. _':-:~::-:'-_- __.-:::- -::--'-. -:--- 11: 'lt he rear of the State Housé. com.I'"
EARL E. WILLIAMS
11
MARY PICK. FORD
1/ 11 1 ;;:;:~n~i;;-g ~'e，~k'of-iÌ~y'2Yo" … 1 '
IN
11
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The popular ,star has never ap- I
IT CAN BE DONE"
叫“THE INFORMER"
11 ~ ! Ill_e ar".d t~ such advantage as 1n 1t
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TOPICS OF THE DA Y
PRICES-1Sc, 2Sc 11 '
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SUFFOLK THEATR.E
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BOSTON'S IDEAL PICTURE HOUSE"
WEEK OF MAY 23
WEEK OF MA Y 23
CONTINUOUS-12 NOON TO 10:30 P. M.
EXCLUSIVE PICTURES! SHOWN HERE ONLYl
MARY PICK. FORD
EARL E. WILLIAMS
IN
IN
“ IT CAN BE OONE" 11 “1iHE INFORMER"
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LATEST NEWS-NATURE'S WONDERS

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TOPICS
Auditorium of Suffolk Theatre in the New Suff。叫Ik Law
Derne and Temple Streets恥， Boston
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There is a film blll of stars at the
Suffolk, the new theatre at the corner ot
Temple and Derne stree區. oppos!te the
State H。間。. E缸﹒'l e Williams 1Î1“ Diamonds Adr!ft" and Alma Rubens 6f
"HumoresqueH fame ln “ Thoughless
Wome丸" are the fe a.ture. There 1s a
riotous comedy wlth B ll! y 執Test. The
performance !a contlnuoua from 2 P.
C氓的 10:30 P. ~ι

們

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5UFFOLK- THE~T岫 -.The 咐:
-1 111m Ml! of stars a. t the Suffolk 'r hea 川、
.1 t峙， Temple and D凹，ne streets , op- I :,
;'"'1 posite the state House , created mu('h
也~ I ~nt~us時 sm in y甜 terday's audíences.
-; I Earle Williams in 帥 exciting love \ 1
story, “Diamcmds Ad叫~，" ~~.~s__~u~~ I ~
i :':l!!，Iau~e~，. w h_i_l_e Al .a Ru!，開s In 1.
叫 HThoughtlè8S Wo U1凹" touched t 加 l ﹒
ζ1 ~~~!':~_. ~~ the large.. audlenoe.
Th&amp;
1 p';'Í'formance is C"O ntlnuous from 2
J p. m. to 10:30 p. m.

zi
:r:

~uffolk Tbeatre
Tbe program for tbe week of Aprii
25t h at Boston's ldeal Pict山 e bouse , !
corner.of Temp!e and Derne stleet. , op-I
q po別 te'the Slate House , will consist of a \. "
great bill of film favorites ,
I
/'
Tlle pictnre sensation of the season ,
, 1 ~'Wo 阻 en Men Love ," w 仙 William I Mi
j I Dasmo 叫，坦 arguelite Ma l&gt; b and Mar- 1 M
J I tha' Mansfield , tbe Ziegfeld FI0lic Ilat
o I beauty , .180 Evan Fontaine , the Mid- I 0益
。 I nigbt F lO lic St 肘， in a. story of unusual I Mu:,
沿 1 interest by Cballes T. Dazey , autbor of I E.
0 1 “Ol d Kentucky" will b,eadline the big! Ak
;0 I bill.
I Fo~
)0 1 Bessie Love in The Midlanders ," a 1 SOD
~O I sto 'r y of Pioneel 廿 o Cl ety in tbe colo lÍ ul! Edv
Mississipp. Valley, is tbe exlra added
e. A special comedy of Cbatlie
Cbaplain in a reissueof" A Nigbt iD th('
00 I 訕。 w ，" Nature's WOllders and local
00 I and 、 national re種 ew s. comnle.t e tb

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,

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A~ 心…的lk Th阻隔， mncr:
。 f Temple and Derrie st凹e妞 IOPPO..
sl尉 'the Sta個 House， a big bill I
of tllm favorites is Q扭叮ed this weelc. ~
One of the picture sensations of the I
2eason, "Women ~巫師1 Love ," with ]
W ilI lam Desmond, Marguerite Mar 間，
M肘tha Mansfield, the Zlegfeld Fro \l c
hAalltv. and Evan Fontaine, the Míti- ~
;忌地ht" Frollc -.s恥， will h叫伽叫:
It - is a story of unusual Interest_ ùy
CharJes T. IJãzey, autllO r of “'Old Ken. '
tucky." Bessie Lo 'v e ìn “'The Mid.
lander$:' a stor_y qf l.)i o~~er lif已 in tne
E在 íssíssippi Valley，但 the extr可a reature. Charlie Chaplin in a re ‘ issue.
A l'體K'ht in the Show，'~ Nature's
可可onders ， and local and national re ...
v-i ews complete the bi l1.

司令 ul ìì:e，ui詰ne th1l blg. bi)l.

LB平均LoTe in "The :Midl叫ers/

rJå

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story of plon明r 甜ciety 1n the C01~Ð:L:f'llt ，:MlS串.lssippi V紛ley， 18 the e于
Ui起草樹學.d teature A speci泣 come
主 lofCharlie Chap1in ln a re-issue , "A
L純ht :iU"",t b.e $ll}l'Y'，"，，，，N仰的 Won­
rd~品 a甜 local and nat10nal revlew8
complete i he splendid bill.
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LK~ NE …「呵凹叫…且可茍芯
叫俯圳間
岫
OLK CO師INUOUS 12---10:30
臨……已
U80STO閥 '8

WE i;KOF ApRIL25
SHOWN HERE ONL Y I
~ensation

The

Da品ling

01

WEEK OF ~PRIL 25
E斑。LU81VE PtCTURES
S甜甜n

,

Euàn Burrow.

Fontαine

In addii抽11
S個r

(The Miclnight Frolic

WANT IN

Cost回ne_S叩." c，個f

WOMEN MEN LOVE
:r
J
B

CHABLES

ú. Dt哲Bst誰呢品，43個軍個個嘟"

WIL Ll AM DES醋。ND， MARGUERITE MARSH
and MARTHA 鵬'ANSFIELD， ZIEGFEL9 FROLIC

MARSH
ZIEGFElD FRO LlC

and

WEEK OF AP嘲 L 2S
EXCLU訓 VE PICTURES!

The Sensation 01 the Season
Da:zling Scene_Beautiful

'~:WllLlAM DESMOND，翩翩GUERITE

'-J
MARTHA 臨且NSFIELD，
iB.-eO:L"f more c /zarmi nJl tha n lat!!_ αive Thom恥
.y.

IDEAL PICTURE HOUSE"

SHOWN HERE ONLYI

the

B:r個門叫思?混沌$02533咀即向"

.=

“ BOSTON'S

WEEK OF APRIL 2S

Scene_Beczutiful Costume_Superb Caat

'WOMEN MEN LOVE

'J.-'-jI? t

SUFFOLK 嗚嗚Ef謊報告

IÞEAL PICTURE HOU8E"

i.

Beaut品 morø charming than late Oliøe Tho.冊ti.. In tztltlition
E棚1 Burro叫s Fontaine (The Mid叫ght Frolie StllJ')

'Starrlng the Princeft

Chtu'n也w

。F Pioneer Society in thè ColorFul

已

一丸

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﹒

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一-_一

}占-一

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、金色塾，摳之 J

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S'EE WHAT MEN REALLY WANT lN WOMEN
EXTRA-ADDED ATTRACTION_;'EXTRA

THE MIDlA閥 DERS
BESSIELOVE

駕駛

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f-v 于考/

SUFFOJJI{ THEA'l'RE
I The program for the week of April
.125th at Boston's ideal picture house ,
; 1corner of Temple an吐 Derne s恤， oP-I ,
l Iposite the State House , will consist I ;
1;
) lof a great bill of 宜 1m favorites
. I The picture sensation of the se恥 1:
;峙。口，“ Women Men Love" with Will司 1:
Iiam Desmond , Marguerite l\i arsh and I :
3iMartha 耳1ansfioJd ， the ZiegfeJd frolic I ;
1 Ibeauty,
also Evan Fontaine, the I ~
Imidnight frolic 耳t缸， in a story of un- I :
J uSllal -intere.st ')拖了 Charles T. Dazey, I
l&amp;uthor of “ Öld Kentucky" will headc 1 j;
[ llin~ 伽 bigbilli
I Bessie Love in “ The Midlanders ," 1 !
a story of 'þi oneer society in the col- I '
orful Missis 剖 ppi valley, Is the extra
川 added feature
A special comedy of
i IChá l' ll-ê Chaplin in a re-issue “ A
\INight in the Show," Nature's Won.
司 ders and local and national reviews 1
I
Icomplete the splendid bilL

可 祖臼~γ- 叮祖凶
~tl 血 nus泊1 泌 倒甜 防 恤 蝴 :三
i:ntωere s t b ir C'harleωs
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BOSTON SUNDAY 本 AD可

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I The program fo r- thc wcek of April I BCJ
p 125 at Boston's ideal picture house , 1so、
~， : corner of T凹nple and Derne s峙， op-I co'
,V 1posite thè State HouEe , will consist
1- lof “ Women Men Love ," with W il1 iam
,_ ! De smond , Marguerite Marsh and
v 1Martha Mansfiêld , and Bessie Love I +,
ic lin “ The Midlanders," a story of I .-二
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Commenci時 Monday ， May 2, t-he I 73
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AT THE THEATRES
SUFFOLK THEATRE-Tbe p l' ogram
for the week of April 25 at B~s~on's
ldeal picture house , corner of Tempte aEd Deme streets, opposite the
State honse , will consist of a _great
bill of film {avorites. The pìc_t~re
sensation of the se!lson W om éD Men
Love with William Desmond , Marguarite MarshMd Marsha Mansfteld , the Ziegfeild Fro!!c be~ut~_ al~o
Ë~~~ Fountalne、 tbe M1 dnight l&lt;'rolic
sta1'. ih a story of Ìl nnsnal jnter~~~
by 已harles T. Dazey. authoÌ' of Old
Ke~tucky will headline the h!g bill.
Bessie Love in Tbe Midlanders , a
etory of pioneer so_~iety .in t.he colorfnl -Misslssippi valley ,. is th_e. extra
added f e a' t- U l' e. A sppcial .com
edy of Charlie 9baplin_. i~ a 1'e-!~.sue
ANight in th~ Sh?W , ~atu~es on ders ‘ ~nd local and national reviews
complete thè,spleúdid bill.

'Y

SUFFOLK THEATRE

Ir

…

τhe picture bill at the Sufl' olk The思主rG、 1.
lis mPIetew愉 S旭凹﹒“w…叩門

Love," with a well-known O st" '..o:t.U
l1
screen favor!tes , heado: the biÌL "Tliè 1;
Midlanders," sta1Ting Bess!e Love. is I
I
Selected news and 1.:
1 the extra feature. _-::~;-_"-."~"': .~':-I';
1:::-::,.:::':--:_ -::::;.:; Bcen!c of nature'肉
revlèw恕， a 叩 ecjal
1wollde間 and Charl!e Chapun In h!s ftrst
, 1rêls5ue,“A Night !n thl' Show,"_ Ille.KjlS
i 1a popular progr!tmme.ι

/

沁&amp;可以圳海以你
一

一一一戶一一一-惱L一---一前".;;-"""，荐:-=vç;-;-一-

MOVIESEE云云Ytk五VSCHOOL
IN BOSTON
The Su旺。 lk School of Law , which is "
閃 g'u1ar accepted 1aw 凹 hoo1 in 'the _~it-~ ， 卓缸削
h
缸n
la
吭
v hich has for alu F]01 叩
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1叩
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叫
promlne nt 1avvJ~er S In 切 凡" has pu t Intωo a
凹
干
凹
t owr
叫
new bu ildin 且 1 tJ us t erected a 叭IC tu re theatre
叫
吐 戶址
p 仇盯
T~e sho~s_a;e for th~-pubti~::_:_;;t Ci~~a~h~
pupi}s~a :， d films of popuîa-~- ~~-rt ~;~d'" i;;~
receipts from the theatre are used to pay
for the b111lding Thc open1ngwas hIonday
?ight with “ A Chil~ fo~ _S_afc " The per~rmance rU lI s fr0111 2 to 1030
-一-一-_一_一一一。一一一-一一一_一-?現 11/(

,.,

1111

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一

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Pðthê
VOL.2

APRIL 21 , 1921

No. 是

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�Registration in Law Schools-Fall of

29

1922

Registration in Law Schools Fall of 1922

M
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H←

山時geof Law ,
Birmingbam, Ala..
University of Alabama Law School,
University, Ala...
University of Arizona Department of
Law, Tucson, Ariz.......
University of Oalifornia School of Jurisprudence, Berkeley, Oa l.
Third Y凹 r Ourriculum
F'ourth Year Curriculum......
1 St Yinc凹t S 巴 hool of Law , Loyola 001lege, Los Angel間， Oal.
Gniversity of Southel官 Califorllia La w
School , Los Angeles , Oa J....
Hastings Oollege of Law , San Francis
P旬， Oa l.....
Uniyersitγof St. Ignatius Law School,
8an F'rancisco, Oal..
Y :\1 O. A. Law School , San Francis叭，
Cal
Lelnnd Stanford, Jr , University La、v
School, Stanford University, Oal.
UnÏ\'crsity of- Oolorado Department of
Law, Bou1der, 0010 . ., .
Uniyersity of Denver 8011001 of Law,
Denver, COI0....
Westminster Law 8choo1, Denver , 0010
1 Hartford College Qf La w, Hartford ,
Oonn.
Yale Law Seh001 , New Haven , Oonn....
Catl1 0lic University ofλmerica Law
Sch001 , Wasl1 ington, D. C ..
Georgetown L' niversity Law Scl1 ool ,
可"ashingt0n ， D C.
l\ Iornillg Schoo1 ..
L且te Afte吐'noon School .
, George
Washington University Law
School， Washington , D. C.
National University ];.aw School, Washington , D. C
Y. l\I C. 庄 Law School, Washington ,
BirrmA~m': !3é王山dμ

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25

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46

56

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37

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21

11

141

131

125

39

42

33

72

48

26

29

175

26

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11生

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20

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54
62

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109

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82

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87

115
312
376

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324

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Howard Üniversity , Washington , D. C
John M. Langston School of Law，嗎Tash­
ingto喧， D. C...
1

70

22

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56
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3

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8CHOOL
Washington College of Law, Washington , D C.
University of Florida Law 8chool ,
Gainesville , Fla....
Uniw l' sity of ,Georgia Law 8chool ,
Athens, Ga....
Atlanta Law 8chool , Atlanta , Ga . .
La mar 8chool of Law, Emory University , At1anta , Ga...
Mercer University Law 8chool , Maco:且， Ga. ..
University of Idaho La w School , :'I10sco嗎"
Idaho
Coll&lt;裙e of Law , Ill inois-Wesleyan University , Bloomingto且， Ill.
C11icDgO Law Sc11001 , C11icago , Ill. .
De Paul University Law Scho01 , C11icago , Ill.
Day 8c11001
Eveniug 8c11001 .
Jo11n J\l a l' s11all Law 8chool , Chicago,
III
I且yola University La、v 8c11001 , C11icago ,
III
1 Mayo Fede 1' ated Colleges , College of
Law, C11icago , Ill.
Nort11western Unive 1'sity Law 8c11001 ,
C11icago , Ill.....
Gnive1'sity of Chicago La w 8chool , Chicago , 111.
Unive1' sity of Ill inois Law 8c11001 , Chicago , Ill.
Indiana l7 nivel' sity Law 8chool , Bloomington , Ind.
Benjamin Harrison La w 8c11001 , Indiannpolis , Ind.
D l' ake University Law 8chool , Des
Moines , Ia、Na. ...
Iowa State Unive1' sity Law School ,
Iowa City , I o.wa. '. . . . .
Unive1' sity of Kansas Law School , La w1'ence, Kan.
可Vas11bu1'n College School of Law, Topeka , Kan....
State University College of Law , Lexington , 1:王y ..
Je1l'erso且 Sc11001 of Law, Louisville, Ky.
University of Louisville Law Dellartment , Louisville , Ky.
Loyola Unive1' sity Law School , New
Orleans , La........
Tulane University Law Sc11001 , New 0 1'leans , La
University of l\faryland Law SC11001 ,
Baltimore, Md
Boston University Law Sc11001 , Boston ,
:M ass
Northeastern University Scho01 of Law ,
Boston , Mass
NO l' t11easte 1'n Univel' sity School of Law ,
Spring宜eld ， Mass
Northeastern Unive1' sity Scho01 of Law ,
'Vorcestel', lI ass.....
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171
190

64

18

15

34
50

16
45

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195

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67

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35

26

357

82

48

26

62

33

19

53

33

6

70

58

50

212

123

131

84

39

20

59

50

42

45

35

35

41

40

116

101

66

56

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156
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5

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197
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21

16

82
45

23

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41
58

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16

8

9

101

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166

161

358

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167

315

172

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73

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33

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University of Florida Law 8chool,
Gainesville, Fla.
Uniwrsity of ,Georgia Law 8Chool,
Athe也 S， Ga....
Atlanta Law 8choOl, Atl且且ta， Ga..
Lamar 8chool of Law, Emory University, Atlanta, Ga ..
Mercer University Law 8chool, ~Ia­
co且， Ga. .........
TJniversity of Idaho Law 8c11001, )1 osco \y, Idaho..
Colle~e of Law, lllinois-、\Vesleyan University, Bl∞mi且gton， Ill........
Ohicngo Law 8chooì , ChicilgO, IlJ. •.•••
De Paul University Law 8c11001, Chicago , 111.
Day 8choυ 1..
Evenillg School .
John 1\Iarsl1 all Law 8c11001 , Ohkago,
Il!
Lo yola Uniγersity La w 8&lt;:hool , Chicago,

61

56

101

45

24

70
75

42
50

19

131
125

26

21

17

64

36

28

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20

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20

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18

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25

60
88

49
67

32
35

26

82

48

26

62
Ill.
1 Mayo Federated ColI eges, College of
53
Law, Chicago, 111
N"orthwes[ern University Law School,
Chicago, Il1.
70
University of C11icago Law 8chool, Chi司
212
cago, Ill.
University of I1l inois Law 8ch001, Chi84
cago, Ill.
!ndiana University Law 8chool, Bloomin且 tο且， Ind...
59
Benjamin Harrison Law 8chool, 1ndianapolis, Ind ..
45
Drake Uni ersity Law 8chool , Des
Moines , 10wa . .
35
Iowa 8tate University Law 8chool,
Iowa City , Iowa.................... 一 101
University of Kansas Law 8ch""" L也w-祖國‘

33

19

33

8

58

50

G生

15

34
50

190

32
Ahvunu
wo7

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Ka且....

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. . . . . . . ...._

Washburn College 8c11001 of Law, To" 主m
1m, Kan.
8tate University College of 1品押， Lexington , Ky...
Jeffersoll Sch∞1 of L間， Louis l'il泊 Ky
U且iγersity of Louisville L趴，1' Derurtment , Louisv ilJ e , Ky . .
I,oyola University Law Schoο1 ， Nevv
Orleans. La.
Tulane University Law 8chool, New Orleans, La
UnÎvel' sÎty of :vra l' yland Law 8cl1001 ,
Baltimore, M c1
Boston lJniversity Law 8chool, Boston,
:\Jass.
Kortheastern L: niversity 8chool of Law ,
Boston佇lìI ass

16

123

131

39

357
156

18

132
92
5

1甚

20

50

197
470

4

143
F 旬，

42

ι。

226
80

35
41

40

116

66

56

223

37

5日

30

10

5

41
58

38
40

23

16

8

9

101

62

43

25

20

19

230

166

161

358

24是

167

315

172

100

73

660

33

18

11

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69

45

20

9

25

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Nortl1 eastern University 8c11001 of Law,
8pr包19自 eld， :Mass
Nortl1 eastern University 8c11001 of Law,
1\~ orcester, Mass...
1 New school classes not yet com ]J lete.

2生

21

151
82

16

4
。

T
12

106
103
40
218

3

67
557

10

T

786

99
*To be subtracted.

�Registration in Law Schools Fall of 1922
Note: Registration figures were obtained in October, 1922. Schools
are arranged alphabetically by states. Some of the schQols in the
list have lengthened their cour時間 that this table does not show
in every instance the 且umber of years of study that is now required.

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56

49

37

142

23

15

10

83
51

49
52

30

34

21

11

1 生1

131

125

39

42

33

72

48

26

2 !l

175

26

7

12

生

49

22

70

3生

324

25

66
.190

5 223

435
114

t20是

'15

45

20

24

54

73

62

24

18
20

tlS
109

18
82

73

28

24

17

2

115
312

oa oγ

253

87

376

240

201

New school classes not yet complete.

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Howard Dniγersity，可Vashingto且， D. C
John M Langston School of La w , Washington , D. C...
1

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Birmingham-Southern Co l!ege of Law,
Birmingha血， Ala ..... .
University of Alabama La w School,
University , Ala ..
University of ArÌzona Department of
Law, Tucson, Ariz...........
University of Oalifornia School of Ju、
risprudence, Berkeley , Oa l.
Third Year Curriculum .
Fourth Year Ourriculum..
1 St. Vincent School of Law , Loyola 001lege, Los Angeles , Cal...
University of Sontl1 ern California La w
Schoo1, Los Ange1es, Cal....
Has_tings Oollege of L品W ， San Francisco, Oa1..
Uniyersity of St. Ignatius Law School.
San Francisco, Oal.....
主.:M 0 A. Law School , San Francisco ,
Ca l.
Le1nnd Stanford, Jr , University La w
School, Stanford University, Oa l.
University of Oo1orado Department of
Law, Boulder, 0010
Lniyersity of Denver School οf Law,
Denyer, Colo
司司'estminste l' Law School, Denver , 0010
1 Hartford Co l!ege of L削，v ， Hartford ,
Conn.
Yale Law School , Kew Haven , Conn. ..
CathoIic University of America Law
School , Washington , D. O. .,.
Georgetown University Law Schoo1 ,
Washington , D. C.
Mor且ing School .
La te Afternoon Sehool....;..
George Washington University Law
S'chool, Washington, D. C ..
National Uni 'l' ersity Law SChool, Washington , D. 0
宜. M. O. A. Law School , Washingto且，

H

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145
106
56
274

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30

69

1205

78

923
650

30
45

38

42

11

14

12

60
125

ilU

3

是0

*To be subtracted.

JO 1I'B_J-Sfooq嘻的可叮叮OH'BJlS自立

�31

Registration in Law Schools-Fall of 1922
-

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SCHOOL
5
。 5
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如
Portia Law School, B的ton， Mass.. .•• ..
9
個
(1
Su宜。Ik Law School. Boston , Masß.山足~.，!".
、一 -'Iïá:rvard University 'La W SChóòl , Cam: 已
431
,
tridge , ì\I a i3 s. . .. • •
181
D活troit College of Law , Detro泣， Mich ..
University of Detroit Law School, De97
troit , Mich...
University of :ðIi chigan Law School,
183
Ann Arbor , Mich ..
耳Iinnesota COllege of La、N'， )linneapolis ,
131
l\Iinll.
Northwestel'且 College of Law , Minneap
。1詣， l\!i nll.....
University of Minnesota Law School,
131
l\linneapolis, Minn
131
St. Paul.College of La、v， s t. Paul , ì\Iinn.
University of Mississippi Law School,
34
l;niversity , Miss...
University of lIlissouri Law School,
41
Columbia, Mo
Kansas City School 01 Law , Kansas
鉤 心4
City, 'Mo.................
q
1
4 d全
民
Y. )f C 且 Law School, St. Joseph , Mo.
υ
Benton College of Law, St Louis , 1旺。."
City College of La w and Finullce, St.
42
LouiS, Mo.
St. Louis University Institute of Law ,
120
8t. Louis , Mo. ..
WastlÎ ngton University Law 8chool, 8t.
V

Lοuis ，

':\10...

University of l\Iontana La、v School,
Missoula, Mont
Uniyersity of Nebraska La w Scllool,
Lincoln, Neb......
Creighton University Law SChool , Omaha , Neb.............. ..
University of Omaha School of La w ,
Omaha, Neb. ,.
New Jersey Law School, Newarl" N. J.
)、. .Alhany Law School, Albany , N Y
_]!&lt;loklyn L~ School, Brooklyn, N Y... ,
Buffalo La w School , Buffalo, N. Y
哦Co rnell Law School , Ithaca , N. Y......
Columbia University 8chool of Law,
New York City........
i，，~ Fordham University School of Law,
--New York City..
New York Law School , New York City..
2" ~e-:^，.~or~.i~且iversity Law SChool , New
, York Oity.
Syracuse University Law SChool , Syracu間， N. Y....
Univ臼 sity
of North Carolina La w
8Chool, Chapel H iIl, N C..
Trinity College Law SChool , Durham ,

;ø

N

C...

Wake Forest College Department of
Law , Wake Forest, N. C.
Wilmington Law 8Chool, Inc , Wilmington , X. O.
University of North Dakota Law
School , Grand Forks, N. D.. .
。 hio N orthern University Col'ege of
La w, Ada , Ohio....

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519
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87
96

272
278

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171
13
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31

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6生

64

55

29

212

24

20

17

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65

66

68

72

62

52

32
299
135
592
102
55

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201
186

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18
108
76
210
50
23

416

16

2

93
565
302
1128
223
105

23

651

14

12生2

2

17

10

243

207

171

548
444

423
193

257
108

617

467

315

91

70

51

212

65

40

6

111

11

9

25

23

6

6

17

12

9

38

70

60

20

150

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25

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37

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160
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Z 且kron Law SChool , Akron , Ohio ...
College of Law, University of Cincinnati, Ci泣cinnati， Ohio. ....... .
主. M. C. 且. Law School , Cincinnati,
Ohio.
St Xavier College Law SChool , Cincinnati , Ohio. ................ .
Cleveland Law School, Cleveland, Ohio
John lVIarshall Law School, Cleveland,
Ohio.
Western
Reserve
Universíty
Law
School, G1eveland, Ohio.............
Univer官ity of Ohio Law SChool, COIUIllbus, Ohio......
St John's Universíty Law School , Tol edo , OllÌo........
Yonngslown Ass'n School of Law,
Youngstown , Ohio.....
Oklahomæ University College of Law ,
Norman , Okl..
N Ol thwestern College of Law, Portland,
0 1'e .............................. .
W ilJ amette University College of La吭
Salem, O1'e...
Dickinson School of La w, Carlisle, Pa..
University of Pennsylvania Law SChool,
Philadelphia, Pa......
Te ll1 p1e University La w Schoo1, PhiJ adelphia , Pa..................
DU'I uesne University Law School, Pittsburgh, Pa...
Pitts!mrgh Law School, Pittsburgh , Pa..
Xortheastern University School οf Law,
Providence, R r....
University of South Carolina Law
School, Columbia , S C
University of South Dakota La w School ,
Velmillion, S. D.
Chattanooga Law School, Chattanooga ,
Tenn.
Unív凹 sity of Tennessee L也w Schoo1,
Knox &gt;111e. Tenn
Cumberland University Law School,
Le]Jano日， Tenn
Unìversity of Memphis Law School ,
i\I emphis , Tenn.
Yanderbilt University Law School, :1\ aRhville , Te且且
University of Te主as Law School, Austin , Tex...
l'niversity of Virginìa Law School,
Char lottesville, Va..
τVashillgtoll alld Lee 苟且iversity Law
SchoOI , Lexington , 1'a..
1\' 01 1'ol1r Night L叫罵， School , :Norfolk, Va.
T. C Williams Schoo1 of Law, Richmond , Va.
Evenìng Division...
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Uni\'ersity of Washi且gto且 Law School,
Seattle, Wush..
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Chari、〉仗esville， Va..
Washil1 gtol1 and L是e U l1iversity Law
School , Lexil1 gtol1, Va
Nolfolk Night La w School, :NOl folk , Va.
T. C. \可ilJiams School of Law, Richmond , Va.
Eveni l1 g Division...
Morning Di vision..
I了niversity of Washi l1gton Law School,
Seattle，可Vash........... .

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正丸 kron Law SchOOl, Akron , Ohio..
孔令ì1ege of Law 1 U且iversity of Cincinnati, Uincinnati , Ohio ..
Y. M. C. A. Law Sehool, Cincinnati ,
Ohio
St. Xavie1' College Law School, Cincin甸
nati , Ohio.
Cleveland Law School, Cleveland, Ohio.
John Ma 1'shall Law SChool, Cleveland,
Ohio.
Western
Rese 1've
University
Law
SChool, Cleveland, Ohio.
Uniγe1'sity of Ohio La、v School, Cο1日lU'
bus, Ohio ..
St John's Unive1'sity Law School, Tol•
do, Ohio...
Youngstown Ass'n School of La嗎?'
Youngstown , Ohio......
Oklaholllil! University College of Law,
Norma旦， Okl..
No1'thwestern ColJ ege of La w, Portland,
O 1'e.
Willamette Unive1'sity College of Law,
Salem, O1'e... ‘.
Dickinson School of La、弋 Carlisle， Pa..
Univel'sity of Pennsylvania Law School,
Philadelphia, Pa. .
Temple University Law School, Philadelphia , Pa...
Duquesne University Law School , Pittsburgh , Pa......
Pitts\}urgh Law School, Pittsburgh, Pa ..
Northeastern University School of Law,
Providence, R 1..
University of South Carolina Law
SChool, Columbia, S. C
University of South Dakota Law School ,
Vermillion, S D... .
ChattmlOoga Law S~hool， Ohattanooga ,
Tenn.
University of Tennessee Law School,
Knox ille. Ten且 ..
Cumberland University Law School,
Lebano l1, Tenn
Ul1 iversity of :\'Ier口，下:'aw School ,
lU emphis, T :m.
Vanderbilt Uni\'el''''
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Portia Law SChoOl, Boston, Mass.......
Sufl'olk Law School, Boston, Mass . .
IJarvard University La w SChool, Cambrid_ge, .M ass. .
Detroit College of La w, Detroit, Mich...
U且iversity of Detroit Law School, Detroit , Mich.......
University of :ð1i chigan Law School,
Ann Arbor , Mich...
Minnesota College of Law, Minneapolis,
Min且"

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St. Paul College of La w, St Paul , Minn.
U且ivel'sity 01 耳，1i ssissippi Law Scllool,
liniversity, l\Ii ss..
University of Missouri Law Scho01 ,
Columbia, 1\10...
Kansas City School of Law , Kallsus
City, ')10.....
主. 31 C. A. Luw Sch001, St. Joseph，耳10
Benton CoJle皂e of Law, St. Louis , Mo .‘
City College of La w alld FillUllCe, St.
Louis, Mo...
St Louis University Institute of La w ,
8t. L品 uis ，1\1o....
Washington University Law 8c11001, 8t.
Louis, ';\10....
University of 1\1on個 na Law 8c11oo1.
1\1issoula , Mont ..
Lniversity of Nebraska Law 8c11001,
Lincoln, Neb
Crei色hton University Law 8chool, Omaha , Neb.. .............. .......... •
University of Omaha 8chool of Law ,
Omaha, Neb............
New Jersey La w School, Newark , N J.
AlhallY Law 8chool, Albany, N Y..
Brooklyll Law 8chool , Brooklyn, N Y.."
Buffalo La w 8chool , Bu缸alo， N. Y...
Cornell Law 8cho'ol, Ithaca. N. Y. .
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New Yorlr City...
Fordham University 8chool of Law,
Xew YO l'lr City
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New York Unive l' sity Law 8chool , New
芷ork City.. ‘.. ...........~
8ylacuse University Law 8choOl, Syracuse, N. Y......... ..•.. ... ..•....
University of North Carolina Law
8Chool , Chapel R i1l, N C...
Trinity College Law 8chool , Durham,
N C.... ..
可九γal，e Forest College Department of
Law, Wake Forest, X. C.
可Vilmington Law 8chool, Inc , Wilmingto虹， N. C.........
Ulliversity of North Dakota Law
School , Gl'alld Forks, N D...
。 hio North凹n University CoEege of
La w , Ada, Ohio.......... ..

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�SUFF~~~

REAR 0 1'" STATE HOUSE
T'emple and Derne Streets

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LARGEST THEATRE ORGAN IN NEW ENGLAND
ProgramW種 Monday

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ANNOUNCl:流 ENT
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The New Suffolk Theatre-_"姐1 5e何e the publicEvery Day- from 11 k M. to 10 P. 'M., with the Best
Pictorial Programmes Procurable
Co~nd

lBring Your Family

POPULAR PRICES-15c AND 25c

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Special-HEAR THE GREAT ORGAN Wed. and Sat.

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Suffolk Law School
SPECIAL BULLETIN
September, 1922
BAR EXAMINATIONS

BRADLEY PRIZES

Twenty-two “Suffolk" men passed
the July bar examinations. Wh iIe
this is a smaIIer number than Iast year.
yet the Class of 1922 whose member~
would 且a turaIIy compose the buII of
the successfuI candidates, was our
“war class" and our smalIest class for
years-59 students. About twenty per
cent. of the class had already passed
the bar before graduat!on. An unusua lI y Iarge numbe 1' of 1922 men did not
take the ba 1' examinations, having
pursued the course without intention ot
becomlng Iawyers. Tbe 1'eco1'd ot the
cI ass with the bar examiners is the1'efo 1'e to its credit.

Th1'ough the generosity of Mrs.
JuIian D. FairchiId of New York City,
Suffolk Law SchooI has recently received a 8ubstantial gift. The income
f 1'om this fund wiII be devoted to prlzes
to be awarded annualIy, and to be
named in memory of Mrs. ~irchiId's
father , the Iate Charles L. Bradley of
New Haven, Connecticut.
The Bradley Pr!zes wiIl be $10 in
goId to the three students who win
first honors a8 folIows: The first y個 E
student who makes the hlghest gen.
eral average in Contracts; the ilecond
year student who makes the hlghest
generaI average ln ReaI Property; the
thlrd year student who :makes the
hlghest generaI average ln Constitu
tionaI Law.

,

GROWTH OF TIIE SCHOOL
Du1'ing the coming year Suffolk Law
SchooI wilI eclipBe a lI p1'evious records.
Registration of new students f 1'om
June 1st to August 15th, was exac tIy
three times as great as the registration for the same period Iast year.
This does not m凹 n that our nearly
six hundred Freshme且 of Iast year wiII
be replaced by a cIa閱 three times as
la 1'ge. It does mean that we wiII have
a considerable increase--probablY a
totaI of over seven hundred Freshmen ,
with a totaI attendance in aII class也S
of approximately fiftee且 hundred stu.
dents.
The eagerness of men to enrolI in
Suffolk Law SchooI fs gratifying evidence of the widespread renown that
the institution has won as a t 1'aining
schooI fo 1' Iawyers and business men.
In fact, hundreds of our p 1'esent students are taking the regula 1' Ia w course
as a business asset, and they have no
intention of practicing Iaw or even taking the ba 1' exam!nations.

SCHOLABSHIPS
The annnal 8cholarship awa 1'ds a 1'e
as fo lIows:
J oseph G. Toland of Charlestown, Ied
the Jun!or Class for the third year,
maintaining an average of 89 5/6%
fot the year. He is awarded the Frost
Scholarship for 1922-23. Thls is the
fourth prlze won by Mr. Toland since
he entered the schooI.
The next ln scholastic rank are as
fo lIows: Edward J. Gar!ty, 87 5/12%;
Joseph W. Buckley, 86%%; John J.
Donahue, 86%%; Lawrence E. Hanson ,
8:3 5/12%; James J. C惚， 84 7/12%.
In the Sophomore Cla間， John J.
Mo1'larty of La wrence stood 宜rst with
an average of 87ν12%. Mr. Moriarty
has been awarded the Boynton Scf?oIarship for 1922-23.
The next in rank in the Sophomore
Class were as fo lIows: Robert T. Bam.
ford , 86% %; John H. Eat潤 Jr..

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86 1/6%; Axel H. Hanso且， 84 7/12%;
Jolm W. MacLeod, 84 5/12%.
ln the Freshman Class two scholarships have been awarded , owing to the
closeness of the contest between the
two leaders: John H. Hωley of Ayer,
and John F. Maher, Jr. , of Lynn. On
the face of the records when the
scholarship announcements were made
in July , Mr. Maher was apparently
卸的 and Mr. Hooley second.
Later,
however, when Dean Archer was making an 0血cial check of the records , he
discovered that one of the recorders
had made an error of one per 凹的. in
transcribing Mr. Maher's marks from
the original records to the 0益cial card.
The corrected figures show Mr. Hooley's average to be 87 7/12% and Mr.
Maher's average to be 87 誰%.
The standing of their nearest competitors were as follows: Joseph 1.
Holland 87 116%; Edward J. Donahue , 87%; Andrew GhirardelIi, 87%;
Francis L. Sheeha且， 87%; John J.
Rochefort , 86% % William H. Shanno且， 86%%; Jo間 N. Jane, 86 2/3%;
William P. Doher旬， 86~也%; Edward
J. McGrath, 86 5/12%; John A. 1. Nagle，的 5/12%; Henry W. Walter ,
863/12%.
THE BAR ASSOCIATION
MOVEMENT

•

一;三-三一:干干一

There is no danger that the two-year
college requirement will ever be 臼1acted into la w in :Massachusetts.
Even if it were, Su宜。lk Law School
would have nothing to fear from its
operation.
可Ve have enough college
men now i且 the school so that, if all
others were eliminated, we would still
have more students than the majority
of the day law schools that are boosting the movement. But the movement
is wrong in principle. It would disqualify 97% of our young people from
aspiring to an honorable profession. It
would deny to the son of the working

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man the pricele咽 privilege of qualifying by his own efforts in the evening
schooIs for the profession of Ia w and
the broad avenue of public service to
which it leads.
Sull'olk Law School's chief mission
is 切 keep open that avenue of opportunity. It is, therefore , co-operating
heartily with the newly organized National Association of Evening La w
Schools, Dean Archer being Secretar.j'
and Treasurer of the Association. The
Associa tion has already successfully
defended the rights of evening law
stl1dents 1n several State bar associations where indorsement of the two
year college rule has been a ttempted.
The report has just been received
that the National Conve且tion of the
Disabled American War Veterans has
passed a resolution condemning the
two-year college move血ent.

TUITION
Members of the Sophomore and Junior Classes are required to pay the
$5 incidental fee in connection with
their first payment of tuition September 18th_ The Freshman Class, however, having paid the $5.00 registration
fee , will pay the regularly quarterly
payment of $25 for their first instalment of tuition duri且g opening week.
主ttendance to classes wiII be by attendance coupons issued, as last year,
upon payment of tuition. Thus, upon
paying the 直rst quarter's tuition the
student wiIl receive a strip of coupons
covering every lecture for that quarter.
NOISY STUDENTS
Suffolk Law School welcomes 個 rn­
est, serious students. It will not tolerate trillers nor whispering or noisy
的udents.
The officers of discipline.
stationed in each classroom, report offenders to the Dean池。白白. Pers{stent
o宜enders
are dismissed from the
schooI.
REGISTRATION IN UPPER
CLASSES
Reguiar students of the Sophomore,
Junior and Senior classes wil! register
in class by fi lIi ng out attendance cards
on opening night.

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一一

SPECIAL BULLETIN

Seventeenth Annual Program
Opening Week
September 18-22nd, 1922

FRESHMAN CLASS

、

Monday

The growth οf the school has made
necessary the taking over of the school
theatre as a lecture hall for the Freshman Class. The ordinary theatre entrance will not be used. The Freshman Cla閥 will enter the school build.
ing in the ordinary way (by the Derne
Street entrance) and pass down the
stairs to the basement. Connecting
doors from the basement corridor admit
to the the通tre.

Equity : Hall 1
Lecturers-Prof. Leonard and
Mr. Ha lIoran

Monday
Torts
First Di vision, 6-7 :30 P.M.,
Suffolk Theatre
Second Division, 7 :35.9 :05 P. M. ,
Sutl'olk Thea tre
Lecturers-Profs. Baker and Henchey

Tuesday

Bills and Notes : Ha lI 1
Lecturers-Profs. York and Du tl'ey
Friday
Real Property: Ha lI 1
Lecturers一-Prof. Partridge and
Mr. Smith

JUNIOR CLASS
(Early and Late Di visions)
Monday
Evidence : Hall 2
Lecturer-Prof. Douglas

Tuesday
Contracts

Tuesday

First Division, 6-7:30 P.M.,
Su tl'olk Theatre
Second Di vision, 7 :35-9 :05 P. M. ,
Sutl'olk Theatre
Lecturers-Profs. Hurley and Spillane

Wills and Probate: Hall 2
Lecturer-Prof. Atherton

Friday

SENIOR CLASS

Criminal Law
First Di vision, 6-7 :30 P.M. ,
Su宜。，lk

Friday
Bankruptcy : Ha l! 2
Lecturer-Prof. Thomp30n

(Early anù Late Divisions)
Theatre

Second Division, 7 :35-9 :05 P. M. ,
Su tl'olk Thea tre
Lecturers-Profs. Douglas and Fieldillg

SOPHOMORE CLASS
(Early and Late Divisions)
The 6 P. M. Di visions of the SOPho.
mo l'C Class wil! meet in the same ha!ls
used by the class as Freshmen-Ha!ls
1 and 4. The 7 :35 P. M. Di visions will
meet in Hall 1.

•

Monday
Carriers: Hall 4
Downes

•

Lecturer~Prof.

Tuesday
Pleading and Practice: Hall
Lecturer-Prof. Wyman

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Friday
Corporations: Hall 4
Lecturer軒-Profs. York and Donahue

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Quizzes and Examinations
First Semester, 1922 - 23.
Problem work wiIl begin on October 16th.
Quizzes in aIl subjects wiIl be given once a month. There wilI be
five questions in each subject. Students will be given from 6 .45 to 9.30
to answer the three sets of questions.
In the first semester exams , one night will be devoted to each subject, and the examination wíII consist of 切n questions. Th自 schedule
for the first semester is as fo Ilows:
Fresbman and Senior Clall倒
October Quiz
Wednesd叮 Evening

D的ember

i!

November 1

November Quiz
Wednesday Evening

November 29

Quiz

Wednesday Evening

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December 20
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Sopbomore and Junior Classel
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October 18
November Quìz
Wednesday Evening
November 15
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening
December 13

、、

First Sem自ster Examinatìons For AlI Classes
January 15-19, 1923

、'"

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
18.24 DERNE STREET
Boston, Mass.

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Suffolk La w School
'Special Message from the Dean
times past presented di益cult problems
fo 1' the school autho 1'ities. The man
who cheats in his school work and
eludes detection may go fo 1'th as a
g1'aduate and then dese 1'vedly fail time
Il fte 1' time in the State ba 1' examina.
tions. The man who shi 1'ks his school
work, doing the least he can possibly
do and get a pass mark, oftentimes
failing and 1'epeating his wo 1'k , is anothe1' candida te fo 1' ba 1' examina tion
disaste 1'.
Neithe1' type of student should be
pe1'mitted to inju 1'e the institution by
his continued presence.
With the
growth of the school more st 1'ingent
1' ules become necessa 1'y to cu1'b this so 1't
of thing. Our most earnest efforts a1'~
being di 1'ected to this end. The following 1'ules will take e宜ect immediately.

Studems of Su宜。lk Law School:
Greetings and best wishes for the
new school yea 1'!
Although p 1'essu 1'e of duties may p1'event me from g1'eeting each of you
pe 1'sonally , please 1'emembe1' that a cordial welcome always awaits you in my
o扭扭.

The greatest yea 1' of Su宜。lk Law
histo 1'Y is surely befo 1'e us.
We have now the largest enrollment of
any day 0 1' evening la w school in the
wo 1'ld. In quality of se 1'vice we wish
always to outdistance our competitors.
We a 1'e al 1'eady doing much more for
our students than any othe 1' evening
law 凹hool.“ P1'ogress" has eve 1' been
our watchwo 1'd. P 1'ogress means incre也sing standards of efficiency in ou 1'
Faculty and depa 1'tments of adminis
tration. It means also the development
of measu1'es to encou1'age 0 1' enfo 1'ce
diligent application on the pa 1't of
eve 1'Y student who wishes to maintain
his class standing.
Schοol's

CHEATING IN CLASS OR IN
SCHOOL WORK

TRUSTEES IN ACTIVE
PABTICIPATION
Beginning this yea 1' the trustees of
the school will participate mo 1'e than
ever before in school affairs. On Friday evenings of e溫ch week one of the
trustees will be lit the school building
to visit classes. They will participate
in f 1'equent confe1'ences in my 0益ce and
with the Di1'ecto 1' of our P 1'oblem and
Quiz Department in o1'de 1' that they
may gain mo 1'e intimate knowledge of
the school and its special problems.
They will also mingle f 1'eely with the
students befo 1'e and afte 1' lecture In
short, they will lend all possible aid
to 1'ende1' Su宜。lk Law School a g1'eate 1'
institution.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
While a g1'eat majo 1'ity of our students ad血irably exemplify the school
motto of “honesty and diligence," yet
there is a small mino 1'ity who have in

I

He 1'etofore, the Dean has dismissed
students only upon positive evidence of
dishonesty. Maný men have been suspected whose guilt could not be established. He 1'eafte 1', we will act upon the
p1'inciple that a student who allows
himself to be placed in a manifestly
comp1'omising position (such as whispe 1'ing in e主amination 0 1' quiz , who ex四
amilles any memoranda du 1'ing an examination 0 1' quiz , 0 1' otherwise conducts himself in a suspicious manne1')
forfeits his p1'ivileges as a student and
cannot continue e芷cept at the discretion of the Dean.
The same rllle will apply to men who
pass in answers to problems identical
with allswers of othe1' men. Eve 1'Y
problem a且swe1' should be the man's
own work. To copy anothe1" s answe 1',
0 1' to permit such answer to be copied ,
are both offenses that indicate dishon.
esty of the doers , to be acted upon ac'
co1'dingly N0 honest student, if he
avoids the appearances of evil, nee c1
fear a summon符 f1'om my 0扭扭.

.
私下

L、

�AY
、
iS啥
叫
什
1
1
1

THE LAZY STUDENT

PROBLEM WORK REQUIREMENTS

No excuse will be received for failure
faithfully to perform all the work incident to a gi ven course. The a verage
student, with the average amou且t of
time can maintain a rank of a t least
70% in all sUbjects. lf he i8 too lazy
to do his work properly. the sooner he
i8 dropped from our student roster the
better for all concer.且ed.
This much should be understood:
We are not in a drive to overwo1'k our
students. The great majority of them
are doing their work wonderfully well.
But we are in a drive to oust every
stude且t who is not willing to do his
very best day by day , who hopes by
hook or by crook to s前ure a degree
which he does not deserve. No man
who i8 reaIly giving the best that is in
hi血， yet occasionally fails to pass , need
fear anything but kindly treat且ent
from my 0扭曲. Ou1' object is 80Iely and
simply to do our best for our students
by insìsting that they co-operate wholeheartedly 旭 Upholding the motto of
their school-"Honesty and Diligence."

The test of understanding of the law
is ability to apply it co1'rectly. Such
ability comes from practic(! in apply.
ing principles to conc1'ete cases. Henc色，
our constant review , problem , quiz and
examination work.
This， ωbe e質問tive， should be done
as required in the booklet “ Int1'oduc.
tion to the Study of Law." Therefore ,
no credit will be given for any problem,
quiz 0 1' examination answer unless it'
1.

The passing mark continues at 70%.
Students who receive at least 60% in
the first semeste1' of a full year subject
may receive a conditional pass. 口， in
the second semester, thei1' rank in the
same subject is high enough to raise
the ave1'age for the year to 70% , the
condìtion of the 宜rst semeste1' will
automatically be removed.
Students who incur co且ditions in
more than two subjects in their Fresh.
man 01' Sophomo1'e year may at the
discretion of the Dean be 1'equired to
repea t the entire work of tha t year
before continui且g the work of the ne芷t
higher year. Students who incur conditions in more than three subjects of
the Junior year may not , except witn
the permission of the Dean and Facnlty, be candìdates for the degree at the
next Commencement.
Students whose work is unsatisfac.
tory for more than one year may be
denied the privilege of continuìng in
the school.

",

Stat由 the rule of law 宜的t， in as
few words ‘ as possible and i且 a
paragraph by itself;

2. Shows clearly in the analysis why
and how the rule applies to the
facts , a且d states an unequivoca!
conclusion;
3. 18 confined to one hundred
0 1' Iess;

word侶，

4. Written on the front side of the
problem sheet, and~in theωse of
-tí\ .是當峙。r examination} each answer
written in consecutive order;

5. Writte咀'Thgibly /何 se i J'1lr or 屆賽也
p必到νÍl nd wcit兔 ac~hà咽了)

FLUNKS

"

、

;

6. Filed when due , neither before nor
after. Late ones s函。uld be l1: iven
0 1' mailed to the 報話緝令~i&amp; explanation of tardiness. F叫1 credit
w i!l not be given for late problems.
and no credit at all if received a;f)8lo、w J (，7""~
立
t~ ans~rs of~er s1Aden部 have

been cofteèteil' and' 的前正、

.

Monthly abstracts must be 宜led in
。omplete

se
.ts~ecurely

fa~ten~ιto.

)

gether, IÍI'個P玄妙荷包致;l5彭 IeI:(:孟話ζ二三..~-.，玉

的dit wH凶弘斜輯、~迫少曲也A均

押。恥、
After papers are marked students
will be furnished with correct answers
to all questions 、叫 lïîese should be
kept for review purposes‘
This,&gt;,sheet J!rlI.ou ld- b少叫preserw告岳的
reførflnce._ J
一、F

GLEA;rú骨氣aλRCHER，

/'
September 2民 1922.

勻

題句
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........_ Deali.
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晶晶繼繃峙帥"

-~一一一一一一一一

一-一~←~'-'-~-~~----'-一-一一~O!:.~-了三了三二 L 三

t土

�~

SuffoIk Law SchooI

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PROBLEM ANSWERS
At the December Faculty meeting
several important questions were decided. One of them was a suggestion
by Profes.sor Downes for the prep-

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Ied Suffolk Law SchooI to work out
the folIowing system:
The finaI examination is equaI to
one half the semester credits. The
other half is divided between quizzes
and problems in the folIowing manner: The totaI problem credits are
added and divided by 直ve (fa iIure to
hand in one or more problems thus
reduces the average). The average
thus obtained is added to the three
quizzes and the total divided by four.
If one quiz is missing the total is
divided by three and ten per cent is
then deducted from the average. If
then the result is added 切 the examination grade and divided by two we
have the student's semester average.
Semester reports are, therefore, issued
to a lI students who have completed
the required ab的racts.
The passing grade is seventy per
cent. Students who in the first semester attain an average of Iess than
seventy but :m,ore than sìxty in a full
year subject may be g"iven a conditional pass (C. P.). If the second semester aver:a ge in the same subject is
sufficiently hi哲h to raise the average
of both semesters to seventy, the conditional pass becomes absolute.

阿

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In the Freshm,an Abstract Book for
the second semester, no division is
made in the Table of Cases , but the
following arrangeme租t wilI be satisfactory:
If one third of the Torts cases are
prepared and passed in during February; one third in March; and one
third in ApriI, !t wiIl satisfy the
rules.
The same is true in Contracts and
Agency.

伽

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W翎

h

心

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謊
這
FRESHMAN ABSTRACTS

可

吋

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w

的

u鼠

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前
Fn U h 他 m m …J hr rt
如 吋
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m ra
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SEMESTERm A VERAGES
M
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The experience of many years in
m
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FEBRUARY BULLETIN
F 的 •.
h 3
Ed J
WHHHHHHHHilli--HHIll--HI
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�一一一一一一-一一
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Second Semester Prohlems and QuÎzzes
M… 心 心耐 吼耐心 叫…
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The following important notice should be observed. Heretofore, we
have given Junior and Sophomore quizzes on the same evening. It has
been found , however, that there is more or less confiict because of men
who have conditions to make up so we will make the folJ owing chang，臼﹒
JUNIOR AND FRESHMAN
March 7; Apríl 4; May 2.
(Problems in each subj且t)
Problems No. 6 Feb. 26, 27, Mar. 2.
“
Nι7 Mar. 12, 13, 16.
“ No. 8 Mar. 19, 20, 23.
“ No. 9 Apr. 9, 10, 13.
No.10 Apr. 16, 17, 20.
QUIZZES:

“

…

心­

…

May 16-Wednesday-Torts-Constitutional Law.
May 17 一司 Thursday 一- Equity and
Trusts.
May 21-Monday-Deeds , Mortgages,

…

叫 …

25.

Mnv 22- Tuesday - Landlord anà
Tenant--Partnership.
May 23-Wednesday-Real Property
-Agency.

作 。
凹

一

etc. ，.一-Contracts.

、、

SENIOR AND 80PHOMORE
Feb. 28; Mar. 21; Apr九
(Problems in each subjec七}
Problems No. 6 Mar. 5, 6, 9.
“ No. 7 Mar. 12 ，詣， 16.
No. 8 Mar. 19, 20, 23.
No. 9 Apr. 2, 3, 6.
“ No.10 Apr. 9, 10, 13.
QUIZZES:

…

Commencement-Thursday, May 24

…
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心干嗎f 叩 t;_~，，;;;-.. 聽-;;;'=已一

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Suffolk Law School
JULY BULLETIN
CLASS DAY EXERCISES

11

The Cαla s s Day e芷 er
岫間
削
附叫his yea r were
叮 盯
he ldí n Su宜o lk Thea $岫 叫
叫 旬
叫
叫 r ea t1ω00'、划 肘 A M
凹
叫
e 10 ck
on commence血 ent day. The student addresses were of unusually high order ,
particularly

Fred肘íc

W.

L呻vejoy's

class

poe 血
阻

11

11

11

11
11

The progr am 附 s 岫 follows:
凹 wa
帥
Class President
Thomas R Norton
Salu七訕。 ry
Edward J Garity
Class History .
Roy E CODnOr
Class Poem
Frederic W. Lovejoy
Class ProPheCy
'l'homas J L Meehan
()lass Oration
Daniel J Gillen
Class Will
Thomas A 到 nn
Flag :Presentation
Edward F Wallace
Class Presentation
r:I.'imothy J. Driscoll
V~ledictory
.
Joseph G Toland

11

candida馳，

two other st u
趴 ldent s ， beÍn莒
吋 的

叫 tw叫y-o且e year s of 咿
un
nd吋叫
n叮 削
凹肘叫i 宜 ca te S 叫 co血 plet l恥
c e 叫.咕 泊 抗 倒 0 f
肘 rt
叫叩
on.

SENATOR BORAH'S ADDRESS
Senator William E. Borah of ldaho

liv盯叫
ed

a

ment Exercises of Su宜。 lk Law School on
May

筍， 1923.

His

Walsh's place as

orator.

cancel his speaking engagement by
graph.

te尬，

Dean Archer went to Washington

immedi的ely ，

and after a very strenuous

day of campaigning , succeeded in reaching Senator Borah per80nally and secur-

siding. Hon. E. Mark Sullivan , Corporation Counsel of the City of Boston spoke

ing his services even though thc senator

Congressman PeterF. Tague

had already dictated his inability to acceþt

spoke for the N ational House
Co血 mence血 ent

C0血 mencement

parture for Europe he was obliged to

exercises werp held at

with the Hon Joseph F O'Connell , Vicepresident of the Board of Trustees pre 旬

Preceding the

the neces-

Owing to Senator Walsh's sudden de-

2 P M in Suffolk Theatre , May 25 , 1923 ,

forthecity.

the血。 was

sity of maintaining peace by a World
Court rather than by the discredited
阻 ethod of war.
Senator Borah paid a very graceful
tribute to the persuasive ability of Dean
Archer in inducing hi血 to ta ke Senator

COMMENCEMENT
Co血血。ncement

dωe-

no祖岫 addre間 的 Co血血e n盼
ble
凹

the invitation that had been sent

oration

hi 血 by

special delivery

by U. S. Senator Wm. E. Borah , three
honorary degrees of LL B. were conferred

SCHOLARSHIPS

bytheschool: upon Senator Borah , Former
A的 orney General Thomas J. Boynton who

The Wal.h Scholarohip
The Walsh Scholarship , awarded t。 他的

has been President of the Board of Trustees 01 the school since it was chartered

11

student who 血恥的ains the highest general

in 1914 , and upon Assistant Di strict At-

11

average for 七he Freshman year , falls this

torney of Suffolk County Henry P. Field-

11

year;o Thomas J. McGreal of Somers-

ing of our faculty.

11

worth , N H

I1

of 911-6 per cent for the year.

The singing of Miss

M 肘ian E.

Mulhall ,

, who 血 aintained an average

11

11

ranks second with an average of 901-2

11

per cent.

exce!l ence

Suffolk Theatre was packed

to the doors during the exercises.

11

grees were conferred upon ninety three

、叫:::.._

De-

11

Francis E.

D帥dy

and 01 Mr. James P. H. Roane of tbe
graduating class was of a high order of

John C. L.

of West Somerville

Bow血 an

of Boston and

Edwin W. Goodale of Everett are tied for

À

場驛

�~p

BRADLEY PRIZES

third honors having maintained an aver
age Qf 90 1-4 per cent.
Roy F. Teixeira of Boston stands
fourth with an average of 89 5-12 per
,

Through the generosity of Mrs. Juli"n
D. Fairchild of New York Cíty , Suffolk
Law School has recently receíved a sub-

eθnt

Nor田 an

A. Walker of East

stand雪 fifth

cent.
J ohn H.

'-'

stantial gíft The income from tbis fund
will be devoted to prizes to be awarded

Wey血 outh

with an average of 891-6 per

Bogret個 Qf

annually , and to be na回 ed in memory of
Mrs Fairchild's father , the Iste Charles

Dorchester ranks

L. Bradley of N ew Haven , Connecticut.
The Bradley Prizes wíll be $10 in gold
to the three students who win 直 rst honors

si芷th

with an ..verage of 89 per oent
Solomon Baker ranks seventh with an

average of 88 1-2 per cent.

as follows: The first year student who
makes the highest gen~r乳1 average in

Boynton Scholarship

Contracts; the second year student who

The Boynton Scholarship awarded to
that student of the Sophmore Class who
maintains the highest general average for
the year , is awarded this year to Jose N.
J ane of the Cubsn Consulate , who has
maintained a general average forthe year
of 89 5 哺 6 per cent
His n叩帥 competitor was Edward J
Kelch of Dorchester who maintained a
general average for the y酬。f 881-12p肘
cent.
The 血nding of other high men
follows:
几 血 R R EmDDE ι 什 M 時 bbnbs
hHHnd u 叮
WUonoc
H m eo ff
m ο
o M
間 趾 吋 P
叮
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R s XO 叩
m d
叫 恤
開
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e W
內
&lt; 而
m &gt;
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的 山間 巾 M A
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the year , w阻 won by John C. L Bοwman of Boston , who maintained an aγer­

咿 of 92 3-4 per cent
His nearest competitors were John H
Bog叫te of Dor伽 st肘 and Francis E.
Deady of West Somerv il1 e, who each
mainiained an average of 91 3-4 per cent

The Bradley Prize awarded to that stud-

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The Frost Scholarship , awarded to tha\
student of the Junior Class who maintains
the highest general ave叫e for the year ,
was won by John W. MacLeodof Chelsea ,

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The Bradley Prize awarded for the
híghest general average in Contracts for

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makes the hi耳hest general average in Real
Property; 1;he third year student whο
血 akes the highest gBueral average in Con8titutíonal Law.

who co血 pleted the year with an average

ent in the

SophomorθClass

who maín-

taíns the highest general a"erage in Real
Property for the year , was won by J ose N
Jane of the Cuban Consnlate , who 血 ain-

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taiued an average of 92 1-4 per cent
His nearest competitor was Edward J
Kelch of Dorche的er ， who 血 ade an a. ver-

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age of 92 per cent

11
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of 87 9-10 per cent.
巨
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eωompe t itor was Sh肘
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Albert T. Doyle of Cambridge ranked
fifth with an average of 85 per cent.

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average of 901-2 P肘 cent.

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JULY 10, 1923

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Suffolk Law School
SPECIAL BULLETIN
September, 1923
THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR

Five men who should qnalify for the
degree in May 1924 were on the successful
Ii st.
Robert T Bamford '24 George 8. Drew'24
Eruest D. Cooke'但 Alfred W. Ingalls '但
George A. O'Donohue 羽生

Advance registrations indicate a FreshClass considerably larger than last
ye肘 's mammoth enro11血 ent when more
than seven hundred new men registered.
The growth of 8u宜。lk Law 80hool is one
ofthe 血 ost astonishing developments in
THE NEW ANNEX
the history of legal education.
Work on the new annex will begin early
Eight years ago the school trusteesconin 8epte 血 ber. It will be a eontinuation
sidered tltat accomodations for four hund- i of our present building , carrying out the
red students were ample fοr the future I architectural lines in a very i血 pressÍve
growth of the institution. Four year通 ago i manner. It will be four stories high , forty
by eighty eight feet , eaeh floor containing
this Fa11 the total attendance had reached
a ha11 comfortably seating four hundrad
591 students, and we set about the desper.
men , thus insuring a血 ple accomodations
ate undertakin宮， under the ch e.otic COnfor Su宜。 Ik Law 8choo 1' s growing fa血ily.
ditions of the ti血 es ， of providing a new
building adequate for the future growth
PRESIDENT COOLl DGE
of the schoo l. When we dedicated our
A circu血 stance of which 8u宜。Ik Law
preSQnt home in April 1921 we felt SUre
8"hool is justly proud is that the cornerstone of its new home waß laid on August
that never again would we be oblíged to
4 , 1920 by Calvin Coolidge , now President
build , yet in less than two years we were
of the United 8tates The layìng of the
forced to purchase additionalland for the
corner i! tone was the 宜 rst public appearerection of an annex. Over fifteen hunItnce of Governor Coolidge after his no血 i­
dred stude耳的， prospective lawyers , and
nation for the vice-p凹 sidency. His ad_
dress on that occasion was a notable on6.
business men who desire legal training ,
The ceremony was shown on the screen in
.he largest body of law students in the
the News of the Day in 且 1m theatres all
world, were enrolled last ye肘 in 8uffolk.
οver the country.
The school has in its
AFresh血 an Class no larger th e. n that of
arch訪問 a motion picture fihn showing
l e.st year would swell our total attendance
the entire a宜sir from the arrival of the
\0 over 1600 students , but the entering
Governor and his staff to the completion
of the ceremony of the laying of the corCl e. SB now pro血ises to break a11 re開 rds.
ners色one.
8urely our new ann8X cllnnot be complet司
PresidentCoolidge's friendship for 8ufed too soon.
folk Law 8chool was attested in a very
pleasing way by his presenting to its Dean
in December 1920 a large photograph
BAR EXAMINATIONS
upon which is written in his own handwriting To Gleason L. Archer, with
8uffolk graduates made a gratifying
regards , Calvin Coolidge". This picture
record in the J uly bar exa血 inations. One of
adorns the mantle in the Deari池。血ce.
the most surprising features of the result
The Deanalso prìzes veryhìghJyapersonhowever, was the high record made by
alletter received from the President since
undergraduates who took the examination.
his Il ccession to the presidency.
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SPECIAL

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SCHOOL ST ANDARDS
The attention of thωstudents is "喜ain
drawn to rules that have been found neeessary to meet the e\'ar recurring proble血
。f students who incur conditions in their
law study.
We are loath to dismiss m個 who de8ire
to continue as specíal studen七s after failing in their regulM work. E :s:perience
has demonstrated , howe\'er 他的阻 en who
resort to "eleventh hour crllm 血 íng" are
rarely a credit to themsel\'es or to the
school We cannot per血 ít them to continue in our clssses. While we seek to
temp凹 Our rules wi七h me開了， yet during
the co且 ing year the followiug necessary
r Ílles , as previously announced ,will apply
to all students.
1. Students who incur conditions in more
than two subjects in their Freshman or
Sopho血Ore year 血 ay at the díscretion of
the Dean be required to repeat tbe entire
work of that year before continuing the
work of the noxt higher year. In other
cases of condítions students 血 ay be permítted to contínue with their class , at the
8a血 e tíme reviewíng the subjects conditioned ,but all conditions must be remo\'ed
within one year from the time of ineurring
them.
11. Students who ha\'e auy conditions at
the completion of thair Junior year may
not , e:s:cept with the per血 ission of the
De..n and Faculty , be caudidates for the
degree at the next Com 血 encement.
III. Students whose work is unsatisfactory for more than one year will be denied
the privilege of continuing in the schoo l.
WRITE lN INK
The di ffi.culty of correcting papers written in pencil ís so great that ít has become
necessary to insist that hereafter all work
be wri en in ink or typewritten. The correcting department has been gi\'en permission to reject all iJl egibly written
answers ,or to severely penalize the offeuder8. Every stndent shonld provide hi血 self
with a fonntain pen if he wishes to get full
credit for his quizzes and examinations.

“

MONTHLY ABSTRACTS
All stlldents are required to pass in
written abstracts of cases , one set in each
subject per month. These cases are found
in the cJ 8SS case books. For every set of
abstracts missing 3 per cent will hereafter
be deducted from the 駒血 e8ter average of

已‘~

BULLETIN
the student. Should this deduction result
in a condition such condition 血 ust be 間­
moved iu the ordinary way and uot by a
late 且 ling of the misßing a bstracts.
TRUSTEES A T SCHOOL
L ll.st year we inaugurated the eustom
of ha\'ing the trustees of the school in
Con的 ant touch with the a宜airs of the institution. This plan will be continued this
year. Me血 be凹 of the board will take turns
in \'isiting classes , and will participate in
frequeut conferenees with 七，he Dean. They
will mingle freely with the students before
and after lecture. In short , they willlend
all possible aid to render Suffolk Law
School a greater institution.

TUI Tl ON
of the Sopho血 ore and J unior
Classes are required to pay the $5 incidental fee iu connectiou with their 宜rst payment of tuition Septe血 ber 17th. The
Fresh血 an Class , howev肘， having paid the
$5.00 registration fee , will pay the regular quarterly paymeut of $25 for their
宜rst inst.lment οf tuition during opening
week. Ad血 íttance to classes will be by
attend8J也ce coupons issued , as last year ,
upou p ll.yment of tuitiou. Thus , upon
paying the 直rst quarter's tuition the
student will receive a strip of coupons
covering e\'ery lecture for that quarter.
Me血 bers

NOISY STUDENTS
Law School welco四 es earnest,
serious 8tudents. It will not 個 Jerate
tri咀ers nor whispering or noisy studentli.
The 0扭cers of discipline , stationed ín
each classroom , report offenders to the
Deau 勻。ffi.ce. Persistent offenders are
dismíssed from the school.
Su宜。Ik

REGlSTRA TION IN UPPER
CLASSES
Regular stndeuts of the Sophomore ,
J unior aud Senior classes will register in
class 1y 宜 lling out attendance eards on
opening uight.
DEAN ARCHER'S NEW BOOKS
The stndents will be int~rested to learn
that in spite of the heavy duties of the
past year Dean Archer has completed two
textbooks , one on Criminal Law , and the
other on Real Property. The Cri血 inal
Law textbook was written during the first
89回 ester， and Real Property during the
second semester.

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SPECIAL

BULLETIN

Eighteenth Annual Program
Opening Week
September 17-22nd, 1923

FRESHMAN CLASS
The growth of the school has
ruade necessary the taking over of
the school theatre as a lecture hal!
for the Freshruan Class. The ordinary theatre entrance will not be
used. The Freshruen Class wil1 enter the school building in the ordinary way (by the Derne Street entrance) and pass down the stairs to
the basement. Connecting doors
from the basement corridor admit
to the theatre.
Monday
Torts
First Di vision , 6-7: 30 P. M. ,
Suffolk Theatre
Second Di vision , 7 :35-9 :05 P. lVI.
Su宜。 lk Theatre
Lecturers一

Profs. Baker and Henchey
Tuesday
Contracts
First Di vision , 6-7 :30 P.M.
Suffolk Theatre
Second Di vision , 7 :35-9 :05 P.M.
Su宜。 lk Thea七re
Lecturers-一

Profs. Hurley and Spillane
Friday
Criminal Law
First Division , 6-7 :30 P. l\f.,
Suffolk Theatre
Second Division , 7:35-9:05 P.M. ,
Suffolk Theatre
Lecturers一

Profs. Douglas and Fielding

SOPHOMORE CLASS
Early and Late Divisions
The 6 P. M. divisions of the Soph-

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一一←一一

omore Class will meet in Hal! s 1
and 3. The 7 :35 P. M. Di visions
will meet in Hal! 1.
Monday
Equity: Hal! s 1 and 3
Lecturers- Prof. Leonard and
Assistant Professor Halloran
Tuesday
Bills and Notes: Halls 1 and 3
Lecturers-Profs. York and Duffy
Friday
Real Property:
Hal! s 1 and 3
Lecturers-Prof. Downes and
Assistant Professor Getchel!

JUNIOR CLASS
(Early and Late Di visions)
Monday
Evidence: Hal! 2
Lecturers-Profs. Douglas
and Garland
Tuesday
Wills and Probate: Hall 2
Lecturer-Prof. Halloran
Friday
Bankruptcy: Hal! 2
Lecturer-Prof. Thompson

SENIOR CLASS
CEarly and Late Di visions)
Monday
Carriers ; Hall 生
Lecturer-Prof. Downes
Tuesday
Pleading and Practice: Hal! 4
Lecturer-Prof. Wyman
Friday
Corporations: Hall 4
Lecturers-Profs. York
and Donahue

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Quizzes and Examinations
First Semester,

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1923-24

Problem work will begin on October 17th.
Quìzzes in all subjects will be given once a month. There wìll be
five questions in e也ch subject. Students will be given from 6.45 to 9.30
to answer the three sets of questions.
In the first semester exams , one night wìll be devoted to each subject, and the examination will consist of ten questions. The schedule for
the first semester is as follows:
Freshman and Junior Classes
October Quiz
/,.l
October Si ~
Wednesday Evening
November Quiz
" .'1
Wednesday Evening
November.,2!! \
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Wednesday Evening

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October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
November Quiz
嗎ì ednesday Evening
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening

October

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November iiι1
December 扭

First Semester Examinations For All Classes
January

14.18, 1924

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
18-24 DERNE STREET
Boston, Mass.

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STANDARDS OF SCHOLARSHIP
IN SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL

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By

Gleason

L.

, LL. B.,

Archer

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Dean and Founder
OCTOBER, 1923
A PUBLIC INSTITU Tl ON
Suffolk Law School is a public lnstitution of national impo1'tance. To
its doo 1's have come fo 1' training the
la 1'gest numbe 1' of law students eve1'
gathe l'ed in one institution in the
world. lts responsibilities as a pubIic institution have 宜neasu1'ably inc1'eased.
In the broadest spirit of democ1'acy
its doo 1's a 1'e open to all aspiring
young men wh() have a't least
a pa1'tial high school t 1'aining. We
have no sympathy with the spirlt
abroad tha志 would exclude all bu七 col­
lege t 1'ained men f 1'om the law schools
of the country. Some of the most
briIliant inteIl ects of every gene1'ation
are found in men wh() we1'e forced t()
become wage ea1'ners at fou1'teen or
fifteen yea1's of age. For such men
Suffolk Law School p1'ovides a high
school education as well as law t 1'aining of high o1'der.
We give every student whom we
admit .an even chance, but every man ,
coIlege g 1'aduate or not , is on pl'obation. He will be dismissed if he does
not make good.
In the multitude that come to as
the1' e a 1'e necessarily some to whom
the tasks of the class 1'oom are 'to。
great. There are some who , upon
t 1'ial , p1'ove unfitted for the study of
law. The 1'e a 1'e those who a l'e indolent 0 1' dishonest. The task of the
school is , the1'efore , to sif七 out all
such , and to graduate those only who
demonst1'ate sound cha1'acte1' and mental capacity. Thus only can it perform its full duty to the public in
training competent legal advise 1'S.
、 Rules fo 1' the sifting out of the unfit must necessarily be more 0 1' 1ess
a 1'bit1'ary. Students must be judged
by their school 1'eco1'ds. No Ja w school
in the United S'tates has a more high-

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Iy developed system of written work
than Suffolk Law Schoo J. Each of
ou 1' students is 1'equired to answer
in the examination room three hund1'ed legal questions (contained in the
regular quizzes and examinations)
each year. He must also w1'ite thi1'ty
legal opinions (p 1'oblems fo 1' home
wo 1'k) each yea1'. He has, the1'ef，‘A 、
an opportunity to demonst l'ate hl.
exact value as a student.
Brilliant men do not make a low
ave 1'age in th1'ee hundred and thirty
oppo 1'tunities to prove their b1'illiancy.
Stupid men will not make -a b 1'illiant
reco 1'd in any numbe 1' of opportunities.
Upon these truths we base ou 1' elimination pl'ogram as he 1'ein set fo 1'th.
THE STUDENT WHO INCURS
~
CONDITIONS
For seve1'al yea1's we have been analyzing methods and 1'esults of methods to discover if possible the ways
in which Suffolk Law School could
l' ender the greates't assistance to its
students and to the public as well as
to protect and upbuild its own 1'eputation as an institution of learning.
We have arrived at seve1'al very
definite conclusions each of which will
have vitaI bearing on the futu 1'e administration of school affai1's.
Fi1'st , that 'the very excellence of
our methods 0: te， achi時 contains an
element of danger to the schooI's reputation unless supplemented by a
deftnite system for the weeding out
of mis宜ts. '日 lazy 0 1' stupid men can
repeat wo1'k indefinitely and when at
las七 reaching 70 pe 1' cent in conditioned subjects g 1'aduate f 1'om the
school , they are no c1'edit to Suffolk
La w School.
Beginning last yea1', however, we
inaugu 1'ated a camplaign fo 1' the speeding up of Iazy students and the elimi-

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STANDARDS OF SCHOLARSHIP
ord for the first three years has averaged below 7[. per cent rr. ay at the
discretion of the Dean be required to
take a general review, repeating
quizzes ιnd examinations in a11 subjects in which his grade is low, before being a110wed to take his senior
work.
IV. Studen'ts whose work is unsatisfactory for more than one year
may be denied the privilege of continuing in the school.

nation of misfits. This campaign is
already bearing fruit. This year 、rill
see the complete adoption of t 1te new
system. It will not mean th且t good
studen'ts will need to work harder,
bu't that poor students must speed
up or be dropped.
Our second conclusion is tha't the
greatest service we can render a student is to hold him to strict accountability for his work. To make allowances for iIIness or absence :for one
eause or another does not cure the
defect in the man's training. I:f
through misadventure or the pressure of every day duties he needs
five years to complete the course , he
must take the extra time i:f he wishes
the degree of Bachelor of L且ws from
8u賀。lk Law School.
Wh ile seventy per cent is the passing grade, the student's average in all
subjects for the 自 rst three years
should approximate 75 per cent if he
wishes to graduate in four years.
Should such average fall below 75
per cent the s'tudent may be. required
to spend a year in general review beÍore taking the senior work. A poor
l'ecord ìn such revìew will be a barrier to graduation. To avoid confusÌ間1， the rules hereto:fore issued that
are still in force are now combined
for the informatìon of the students.

WRITTEN WORK
All written answers that receive
Jow marks for defective EngIish IIr
for obvious inabiIity of the student to
analyze the fac'ts and apply the law
plainly involved therein will be kept
on file and not returned to the student. The student will be notified,
however, of such fac't. If similar
papers accumulate the writer will be
summoned in for a conference with
the head of the problem department.
If the defect is faulty English the
s't udent will be required to take
special work in English one evening
a week either before or after law
lectures until his work is satisfactory.
Such classes will be conducted in Hal!
8. A charge of $5 for six lessons
will be assessed upon all who are
under discipline for faulty English.
If the student fails 't o improve after
re.asonable trial he will be dismissed
from the school. If the de:fect is an
inability to write logical answers and
after -reasonable trial the problem department fail to note satisfactory
progress, the student will be dismissed

STANDARDS OF SCHOLARSHIP
I. Students who incur conditions
in more than two subjects in their
Freshman or Sophomore year may at
the discretion of the Dean be required
to repeat the entire work of that
year before continuing the work of
the next higher year. In other cases
of conditions students may be permitted to continue wi'th their classes,
at the same time reviewing the subjects conditioned but all conditions
mus't be removed within one year
fronr the time of incuning them.
II. Students who have any conditions at the completion of their Junior
year may n仗， except wi'th the permission of the Dean and Faculty, be
candidates for the degree at the next
Commencement.
IU. Studenti whose licholastic rec-

~

APPEALS FROM MARKS
E Jtperience has demons'trated that
men who complain most Ioudly of unjust marks in the schooI are the
very men who make poor records
in the bar examinations. In 'the
past, the head of the problem department has been obliged to devote
nearly all of his conference evenings to “ chronic kickers" seeking
to have 'their worthless answers reread and reappraised. Hereafter no
oral appeals will be co阻idered. Stu-

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OF S C R 0 L A R S 1王 1 P

Every p 1'oblem answer should be the
man's own wo1'k. To copy another's
answe1', 0 1' to permit such answe1' t。
be copied, are both offenses that inindicate dishonesty of the doers , to
be acted upon accordingly.

dents who feel that theì 1' answel'S
have been too seve1'ely g 1'aded may
have them 1'esubmitted to the COI"recto1' under the following condi:tions.
(1) Appeals must be made within one week from the 1'etu1'n
of the graded pape1'.
(2) The appeal must be in writing and mu的 set fo1'th the
1'easons why the answe1' is
entitled to a bette1' ma1'k.
(3) The appeal must be accompanied by the original answer in exactly the same
state as when 1'e吧。rded in
the official 1'eco1'ds.
(4) All appeals will be conside1'ed by the head of the p 1'oblem department and the corrector who graded the paper.
CONDITIONAL PASSES ABOLISHED
He1'etofo1'e we have conside1'ed a
first semeste1' average of sixty pe1'
cent 叮 ove1' in a full yea1' subject as
a conditional p如此丘， then , in the
sccond semester in 'the 凹me subject
the student attained an average sufficiently high to 1'aise the ave1'age for
the yea1' to seventy, the conditional
pass became absolute. This plan,
howeve 1', has not been conducive to
the bes'七1'esults. Easy going students h&amp;ve 1'elied too much upon
the 1'edemptive powers of second semester work.
Hereafter no condìtional passes will
be allowed. Each semester will stand
fo 1' itself.
CHEATl NG IN WRITTEN WORK
Åny student who seeks 0 1' 1'eceives
aid in quizzes 0 1' examinations is unworthy to continue in the schoo1.
Guilt is dì但cult to establish. Any
student who allows himself to be
placed in a manifestly compromising
situation in the examimition 1' ()om
(such as whispering, examining memoranda or otherwise conducting himse!f in a suspicious manner) will be
summoned to the Dean's office and
disciplined or expelled at the disc1'etion of the Dean.
The sa,me 1'ule will apply 切 men
who hand in answe 1's to problems
ide租tical with answe1's of othe1' men.

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CHARGE FOR REVIEW WORK
It has hitherto been the custom of
the school to pe1'mit students to repeat wo1'k at half price. Experiencll
has demonslrated , however, that the
student who has failed in a subject
once needs more attention from the
problem department than the ordinary
student. Failure in studies should be
penalized. Hereafter students who are
obliged to 1'epeat work because of
failure therein will be required to pay
the same tuition ,&amp;8 regular students.
I
0

PROBLEM WORK REQUIREMENTS
The test of understanding of the
law is ability to apply it correctly.
Such ability comes from practice in
applying principles to conc1'ete cases.
Hence , our constant review, problem ,
quiz and examination work. This, to
be effective , should be done as required in the booklet “Introduction
to the Study of Law." 1n answering
a problem , quizz 0 1' examination question the following 1'ules should be
strictly observed:
(1) State the 1'ule of law first , in as
few words as pûssible and in a paragraph by itself.
(2) Show clea1'ly in the analysis
why and how the 1'ule applies to the
facts , and state an unequivocal conclusion.
(3) Confine the answe1' to one hundred wo1'ds 0 1' less.
(4) Wr吐te on the front side of the
p l'oblem sheet, and in cases of quizzes
0 1' examinations each answe1' written
in consecutíve o1'der.
(5) Write legibly.
(6) File problems when due ,
neither before nor after. If nec間a
sarily absent the p1'oblem answer
should be mailed to the 1'eco1'uer
with expla,nation of ta1'diness. Full
cr可~dit wi11 not be given for lø.te
problems and no c1'edit at a11 if received after the answers of other

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一

::::;?have bemcomded

WR-ITE JN INK
The difficulty of correcting papers
written in pencil is so great that it
has become necessary to insist that
hereafter a lI work be written in ink
or type、間、itten. The correcting department has been given permission to
1 eject all ilI egibly wri位 ~n answers
令r severely to penalize the offenders
Eve l' y student should provide himself
with a fountain pen if he wishes to
get fu l! credit for his quizzes and ex-

1I

a 虹口 nations.

11

1I

.1

/

'‘

如叫 from the semester average of

iI ~~e

student ir
Should 仙 阻 deduction result in a cont hi s
11
dition such condition must be removed
1I
~~the 01'吋吋
dinary way and 叫 by a late
n
位阿 O f 伽 m帥心
吋
吋站
Ís S
峙
s 叫 abs 叫s. No
!I 均跆 幼 甘缸 wiII 悅 昀明訪吋 after
1 at e a bst rac侮
be r ec ei ve d
i the semester marks have been made
I1 'C up.
11

l
,i

1:
I1

MONTHLY ABSTRACTS
All students are required to pass
ín written abstracts of c刮風 one 叫
in each 叫ject ~，er month. These cases
are found in the class 削 e books

f

一一一

and 吟 11 ::.~.~_ e~吋咐。f abstracts missing
1 three per cent will hereafter be dei

11
11

11
11
11

SPECIAL NOTICE
Except in speciaI cases Registration
of new 伽dents will close October
15th
The totaI emoIJment this year according to present indications will !J e
~b~~t-17ÕÕ ~:t~d~;t~
The fir~t F叫man pr，枷ms wiII be
g附n 叫 d吋g the week of October
15th.

�"常向于九
;":":'j~

".

ι

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
DECEMBER BULLETIN
MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS
Registration is already going on
for the mid-year entering class which
begins work the last Monday of
January. The work of each semester
of the Fr eshman Class is arranged
as a separate unit. Problems , quizzes
and examinations of the second semester are based entirely upon second
semester work. New men are thel' efore pel' mitted to pursue the regular
work with the Class of 1927. They
are advised to read the firs七 half of
the Cont1'acts te耳tbook. The same
is t 1'ue of To 1'ts , but they wiII not
be held 1' esponsible fo 1' the work covered in the first semester.
The manne1' of procedure for men
ente l' ing in January is to continue
with the l'egular class unt iI they
g l' aduate , then to return for the first
semester Freshman work. This gives
them an exceIIent chance for review.
Whether we wilI have mid year graduations wilI depend upon the wishes
of the men who are eIigible to graduate at such time. Thus far they have
preferl' ed to wait and graduate in
May , since they a1' e eIigible to take
the bar examinations that are held
in January, and there is no object in
securing a degree in an off season
graduation.
THE ANNEX
We a l' e very proud of the beautiful
annex that has arisen with such
speed at No. 51 Temple Street.
Many cl' itics declare that the new
structure is even more beautiful than
the main bu iIding.
The first sod was turned on
September 7th and the exte1'ior of
the building was completed by
December 1的. Like the main bu iI d)u宮， it was erected under the personal supe l'vision of Dean Gleason
L. Archer.
The secret of the phenomenal
speed with which this massive addition was erected Ii es in the fact that
Dean Archer had kept in touch with

\

his more loyal and e血 cient Ii eutenants who worked for him on the
original bu iIding. As ea1'ly aS last
Spring he arranged to have these
foremen report for wo 1'k early in
September.
J oseph Lemay of Lawrence , superintendent of construction on the
original bu iIding , has acted in Iike
capacity in the present enterprise.
John Brick (what's in a name?)
was foreman of the b1'icklayers in
both bu iI dings.
Henry Lamp1'on,
ca 1' penter foreman , was a workman
on the o1'iginal bu iI ding. J oseph
LeMay, foreman of the labo 1'ers, is
a new recruit , but made good as his
namesake had done.
Another reason for speed , was that
the Dean instructed Superintendent
Lemay to man the job so far aS
possible with Frenchmen , for he had
observed on the original job that Joe
was greatly handicapped by the fact
that at the psychological moment he
could not swear at the ItaIian
labo l' ers in their own language. lt
was not altogether safe to swear at
the lrish labo 1'ers at any time , but
with all the workmen , excepting
masons , of Joe's own nationality
wonders were accomplished. Neither
accidents nor st1'ikes marred the
ol' derly progress of affai1's , a remarkable record where at times some
eighty men were working together.
They we1' e like one happy and busy
fam iI y.
The high spot of the week was
always on F 1'iday at about 12 :15 P. M.
when Dean A1'cher paid off the mob.
No Santa Claus waS ever received
with mo 1' e joyful welcome than he
was at such times.
The Dean had a few hair raising
expe 1'iences , 0 1' would have had if his
hair we 1' e no so thin , but he escaped
without injury except to his clothing.
One experience wilI bear repeating.
A tempo 1'ary freight elevator consisting of a platform with two upc
right a 1'ms connected by an overhead

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c工 assc 己，工 :1 Qontracts , cspccially \'fhGre th0 exami 口ι元 ion
marks run 工。1寸 ， i f a maηhas bcen doing good work ho 可JÍ 工l
be give 口已:，;J 2，己已 limrk i主泣 is semc 己 tLJ 工 avc 工 agc is 65% ú:'
over.

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thc abili ty to 8.口 S'， lcr q1λíz
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a poor recor 丘 i 口 tllc first seffiCSthcir class stailding. 工工 in
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a工工 oV;Tcd to );]ε:1((; u三七~lC íirsJc scmcs 七 cr 1i1O 工 k by quizzes and
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FGbruary 工，工 924.

I

←一一

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�1

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
FEBRUARY (1924) BULLETlN
of the Review Department There will
be no sessions on Thursday evenings for .A
the c1 ass in English Composition since "
only four st l1 dents vote吐 for that
evemng

DEDICATl ON OF THE ANNEX
Dedication of the annex will be held
on March 10, 1924 The list of 5peaker5
will be anno l1 nced at a later date as well
as the program itself We are having
preparcd a historicaJ fiJm of the buiJding
enterprise from the beginning This will
incl l1 de the film of the laying of the
cornerstone by President Cooli吐ge We
are planning to have a moving picture
五 1m of the trustees and facu 1tv of the
school marching from the main buílding
to the annex We wish also that it might
be possible to have the ell !Í re student
hody pass in review before the camera
so that we might at future Commencements throw on the screen the complete
historic panorama from April 1920 \0
February 1924 The matter of student
partícipation wil1 be tal自n up in class
later on
THE COURSE IN PUBLl C
SPEAKING
Th亡 course in Publíc Speakin宮， to be
given by Presiden\ Delbert M Staley
of the “Co[[ege of the Spoken Word"
wi I1 begin Thursday evening, February
14泊， and continue for twelve weeks
There will probably be two sessions , one
at 6 P M and another at 7 :35 P M
The char且 e for the courSe will be $1000
to regular students, $2000 to others
This course is open to all students in
the 5chool whether or not they registered in the preliminary vote taken on
J anuary 15th
ENGLl SH COMPOSITION
A special course in English Composition wi l1 be given at the 5chool on reg 口，
lar school evenings from 7 ‘ 45 to 9:∞
P M. The first se5sion will be held 可)n
Friday evening, February 15血， at which
time the dass will organize and decide
upon the evenings for the sessions The
course w i1l be given by Robert E Grandfield , Secretary of the Industrial Accident Board and a graduate of Su旺。Ik
Law Schoo~ in the CI且 ss of 192 1. Ìl1r
Grandfield will be assisted in this work
by Professor Hiram J Archer , D&gt;1' ector

、

/

s

NO SPECIAL REVIEW COURSES
The special review courses offered to
Freshmen , Sophomores and Juniors will
not be given this year because of the
lack of interest of students OnJy seven
Fr 泣þmen voted for the review , twelve
Sopn哲mores and four J uniors

@

WHY THE EXTRA EXPENSE?
Perhaps it may be asked 前hy Suffolk
Law School goes to the heavy expense
of preparing p 1'oblems and monthly examinations when other schools content
themselves with giving on.e examination
of ten questions at the end of a course
In addition to the heavy outlay in preparation of these questions we have another and gl eater expense in the C0 1'rection and recording of this great volume of answe[s Surely it would be the
easier way to eJiminate a11 of this labor
and expense, especia Jly in view of the
fact that we do not charge our students
au)' more tuition than any other schools do
for mere classroom attendance and an
ex α tn1:nα twn

0 侃 ce

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The answer is that Suffolk Law
School was founded and has been maintained 0 \1 the principle that it give its
utmost to its students , and at the lowest
tuition rate that is possibJe to mainiain
its standards of work
ANOTHER INNOVA TION
But for the past two years we have
been conducting another .experiment unheard of among law 5chools, llam 'lly the
hiring of officers of disci口 line and the
lar且 e corps of monitor5 for our q l1 izzes
and examinations This experimellt has
been a great success It has protected
the majority of the class against thoughtless and noi5Y dist t1 rbers of lecture
periods. This system is also ef! ectively
comhating the tendency of men t l? cheat
d t1l íng ex且叮linations Nothing can 50

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�2

FEBRUARY (1924) BULLETIN
Mondays-Legal

demoralize a school or so injure its
stude l1 ts as the giving of assistance by
one sSudent to another in exams.
But in order to combat this tendency
we no longer rely upon positive proof of
dishonesti as a condition ~precedent to
We are insuspending the student
structing our monitors that unless they
catch a student red-handed in dishonesty
they are not to make a spectacle of him
before the class by obliging him to go
to the Dean's office immediately The
new orocedure is to make careful note of
the suspicious conduct and when the
suspected party turns in his book the
same is to be held out by the monitor
and a special report thereon made to the
Dean Students who think they are “ getting away with it" in lhe examination
room may thus find themselves sum
moned before the Dean to give reason
why they should not be suspended or
expelled Men who expose themselves
to temptation by sitting next to their
iriends and indulging i11 communicati011S however innocent may find their
law school careers cut short by their
own folly
Stude11ts must avoid not
only the evil itse!f but the appearance of
evil, for that appeara11ce may be as
harmf111 to their classmates as actl1 al
dishonesty.

'

APPEALS
Students should not fìle appeals from
marks until the oftìcial answers have
been distrib l1terl to the class Before
fìling the appeal the student should very
carefully examine his OWll work and
see to it that there is a just groulld
for the appeal, otherwise it is useless
to file it
SECOND SEMESTER SCHEDULE
We are very happy to announce that
James M Swift, a member of our Board
of Trustees and former Attorney General of Massach l1 setts , has accepted an
appointment to the departme11t of C011stilutional Law His associate will be
Assistant Attorney-General J oseph E
Warner Mr Swi缸's appointment relieves Professor Hiram J Archer of the
heavy burden of work that he carried
last vear , the 吐 epartment of review req l1 iring a11 his time
The s巴 cond semester lect l1 re schedule
is as follows:
Freshman Class
Mondays-Torts (6:00 and 7 :30 P M) ,
Professors Baker and Henchey.
Tuesdays-Contracts (6:ωand 7 :30
P. M ), Profe~sors Hurley and Spillane
Ftidays-Agency (6 :00 and 7 :30 P í\ T ),
Professors DO l1 glas and Fielding

Ethics

(Beginning

ì\I arch 10th will divide time with Torts) ,

Professors Baker and Henchey
Sophomore Class
Mondays-Equity and Trusts (6 :00
and 7 :30 P M) , Profs Leonard and
Halloran
Tuesdays-Bills. and Notes (f ol1 owed
by Landlord and Tenant) (6:00 and
7_:30 P M) , Profs. York, Duffy and
Keezer
Fridays-Real Property (6 :00 and
7 :30 P l\I ), Profs Downes and Getchel l.
Junior Class
MOl可 days-Constitutional Law (6 :00
and 7 :30) , Profs Swift and \V arner
Tuesdays 一.D eeds ，
Mortgages and
Easements (6 :00 and 7 :30 P. ì\I ), Profs
Evans and Smith.
Fridays-Sales (f ollowed by Partnership) (6 :00 and 7 :30 P M) , Prof
D l1-ffy and Mr Barry
Senior Class
Mondays (until the middle of March ,
also other evenings per week as listed 011
special scehdule for Seniors) , Bar Review Lectures , followed by Suretyship
Tuesdays-Pleading ancl Practice (6:∞
and 7 :30) , Profs Wyman and Garland
Fridars-Corporations (6 :00 and 7 :30) ,
Profs D011ahue and York

、

QUIZ SCHEDULE FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
FRESHMAN CLASS (九Nednesday
evenings) , March 5, April 2, April 30
SOPHOMORE CLASS (Wednesday
evenings) , F eb 27, March 凹， April 23
]UNIOR CLASS (Wednesday evenings) , March 5, !\pril 2, April 30
SENIOR CLASS (Wednesday evenings) , Feb 27, March 19, April 23
Problems will begin in the Freshman
and Junior Cl asses on Feb 25th.
Problems will begin in the Sophomore
and Senior Classes on March 3rd
SECOND SEMESTER EXAMS
í\ Iay 14---W ednesday
Torts
May 15-Thursday Equity and Trusts
May 19-Monday
C011stitutional Law
I\Iay 20-Tuesday
C:: ontracts;
Deeds, 1\1 0rtgages and Easements
May 21-Wednesday
Landlord and Tenant
May 22-Thursday
Agency
í\ fay 23-Friday
Real Property and Partnership
COMMENCEMENT
Wednesday , May 28 , 1924.

章、

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�4 、叫‘郁

LAW SCHOOL

SUFFOL豆豆

~

-一

APRIL (1 924) BULLEτIN
C A N CULIAEUnvnpNW叮
EN TR
LV 3E
L

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~:-' .Sept~~ber， 1921 , the School of

Reli(5iou~ Educ a:ti~n-~f -'Ê~o ;t~;;vU~:

versity became?a tenant of SufFolk
Law School under a Eve-yearIease恥的 lease contained a ca;;~~lí~ti~;:;
Clause vJhereby either party could
cancel the !ease at the end of three
yeays by gmng a six months, prior
no~ee };t "':l' iting of such intentí~;~
?n , Mâ~~þ _1 _:--1924 , s~fr~ik"L;;;;
School-TIGtiaed Boston university of

,

E岳重位已詩:謠:忌器
azecital of the following facts :
、vhen the lease was entered into
it was the expectation of both parties
that the same lecture halls would do
for both schools, one using them dur~n_g ~he d~ aúd the -~th~~'-i;; ~th~
evenlng.The rent under the lease
、vas therefore set at so low aEEure

站括:說:是JEitti

of janltor serVIce, heat, and SO forth.
The growth of SIIfolk Law School,
howwoer , made it impossiblEfoT the
two schools to contII111e in the same
lecture halls-The law schodwas
obliged to build a lecture annex, and
in February, 1924, virtHally turned
over tlleventJrR main buildlng to Boston University: Suffolk Law School
質
叫
can 戶戶herefOre hardly be expected to
cOIn1tb11n11u1e the Boston UIn1iVe1s1 ty lease
誌
?;z;J7%O
the bui ldirl.g.
江 貝
The_ authoritles ~f
Boston UEIVersity have recosnized
FhIS latter fact and have been seeL•
mgto secure a new .lease at an ad.
Vanced rental..Certam reasons, how
ever, reIIGer it Impossible for sufTdk
Law sphool to renew the lease at
any prIceor to sublet to any other
pa;:!":y; t~_ chief of thes~ b~rn~
Fir.s t: The pres叫 V的 inadequate
s~~?o.l library m1Î~t- b;&gt; Je~ lalged by
叫
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un~versity

on the second 丑001:'.
sec。nd2The coREested eEetlltive
ofEces of Sufolk Law School Innst
be enlarged, and the only available
spacels that nOW OECIIPied by the
st;2ti;:-the SCII叫 of Religious
.Thira:Sufolk Law School is o口 en備
時 a day depart間的 in SepteIEer,

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APRIL (1924) BULLETIN
CALLAGHAN PRIZE.
Senor Jose N. Jane of the Cuban
Consulate is continuing his scholastic
triumphs. Last year he w o_n the
Boynton Scholarshæ for 宜rst honors
in the Sophomore élass ,_ and also the
Bradley Prize for the highest average in Real Property.
His latest recörd ís in winning the
Callaghan Prize which is awar~ed annually to the student who makes th_e
highest general average t&lt;? _the_ mi~­
dle of hls Junior Year. Mr. Jane's
average is 87 2-3rds.
His- nearest competitor is Edward
J. Kelch , who maintained an average
of 86 2回 3rds.
Averag.es of other high men are as
follows:
(3) Henry M. Duggan 84 23/30%
(4) William P. Doherty
84 2/5 0/0
(5) Charles S. Donovan .84 115 %
(6) Harry Kalus
84 2/15 物
(7) John W. Cussen
)
) 83 23/30 %
Wm. J. Hines
Henry W. Walter )
(8) Leo W. Higgins
)
John F. O'Leary ) 83 19/30 %
J oseph C. Welch )
(9) John H. Hooley
)
Thos. J. Kelley
)
83 1/5 %
(10) Eugene L. Cuneo .82 9/10 %
(11) Louis H. Steinberg 82 11/15%
(12) John F. Thornton
(Rox.)
82 7/10~品
Mr. Jane was educated in Cuba ,
followed by two years in Columbia
University , prior to entering Suffolk
Law School.
DEAN ARCHER VISITS LAW
SCHOOLS.
Dean Archer recently spent a day
in New York City visiting the three
largest evening law schools of the
metropolis, Brooklyn Law School,
Fordham Law School , and the law
school of New York University. Our
newly projected day department and
the contemplated enlargement of our
Hbrary were the moving causes for
the tríp , since his mission was chie丑y
to study the day departments and
library equipment of the three
schools. The results were very gratifying and lend much encouragement
to our plan of a day department.
Every courtesy was extended to Dean
Archer by all three schools. The
renown now enjoyed by Suffolk
Law School should be a matter of
pride to every Suffolk man.

DAY DEPARTMENT

.

Evening law schools in other cities
have found it advisable to open day
classes for the acc'O mmodation of
men whose hours of employment
make evening sessions difficult or
impossible. Brooklyn Law School ,
New York Universíty Law School and
Fordham Law School which rank next
to Suffolk in number of evening
students, each have day departments.
Each report that two-thirds of their
entire enrollment are either day or
late afternoon students.
After a careful survey of law
schools in other cities and of conditions in Boston , Dean Archer has
recommended to the Board of Trustees , and the Board has adopted the
recommendation that Suffolk Law
School open a day department in
September , 1924.
His recommendation involves the
offering of F門reshman work only next
year and increasing day courses annually until the entire curriculum is
running both day and evening.
The course wi1l occupy four years.
Classes wi1l be held on the same da~月，
covering exactly the same ground and
facing the same problems , quizzes
叩d examinations as in the evening
schoo l. For obvious reasor凹 the day
students would be required to take
their monthly quizzes and examinations in the evening with the other
students.
One great advantage of the day
and evening classes will be that a
day student who misses his regular
lecture may be allowed to make it
up by attending the evening lecture
in the same subject. Evening students wi1l be given the privilege of
day attendance occasionally if they
know in advance that they cannot be
here on a given evening.
The tuition will be $100 a year as
in the evening school , subject to the
same terms of payment.
Lecture hours in the day are still
uncertain , for only by experiment
can we hope to determine the most
convenient hours for day classes. A
tentative plan , based upon the e芷­
perience of other schools will permit students to choose between a
division from 10:00 A. M. to 11:30
A. M.; 12 :30 to 2 :00 P. M. , or 4 :00
to 5 :30 P. M. Torts on IVlondays ,
Contracts on Tuesdays, and Criminal
Law on Fr idays.
Regular members of the Faculty
will handìe 七heir respective subjects.

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LAW 5CH()()L W ë. S
Septemher 19, 1906, by
令、、
Gleason L. Archer at 6 Alpin巴 Str闕，
、Roxbury Nine students were presr 手三斗仁 F 一
ent on opening night
The living
room l) f a mode可 t apartment of a
newly-wed couple was the schoo l' s onl)' c1ass r00111
duríng the firsr year i\Ir Archer was its on1 1' te且cher
unti1 i\ Iarch , 1907, when he engagecl Arthur \\'
:\IacLean to teach Partnership , a course origina l1 y
assignecl to Hiram J Archer , who was unahle 約旦 lve
it because of a serious illness
Founde c1 without en c!owment or fi口ancia1 backin旦，
the scho01 surviverl its early years onlv through the
invincible courage and seH-sacri 且 ce of its FouncleL
\\'ithout sa1ary ancl often on borrowed money . he
maintained the institution until its incorporation when
he cOlweyecl the scho01 to the present trustees by 且
cleecl of gih
1l1ir!lt ~raðltatr!l
i\ Lw 17 , 1909
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(1) Ro1and E

l1 rown 、 passed llar in ::\Iassachusetts
June , 1908 Attornev il1 110st011
(2) George L Bush , passed bar in Wisconsin , 1910
Engage c\ in lmsiness
(3) Carl Collar, passerl har in ]\[assachusetts
December , 1908 Connected with White Star
Steamship C0 in N ew York City
(4) George A Dougl瓜， passecl bar in ::\Iassachusetts
Tuk 1909 人ttorney in 13ost0l1, Pmfessor 廿 f
Law , Suff01k Law School
Received first law

de~ree i 只 sued bγSCh001 ‘ :-'[aγ、 1914
八

(5) James F O' l) rÌen , passec1 bar in J\ Iassachusetts
Deceml1 的
1910
人tt0rnCY il1 Fall River anc!
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�IDQr J\uuturrsury
1n January, 1912, Suffolk Law Schoo
the Legislature of lI Iassachusetts for a cl
power to confer law degrees
The splendid fight made by J oseph P
student member of the Legislature , tog
Dean Archer's tireless efforts , won 50 ma
for the school that in spite of the combined
of universities , bar associations, the State
Education and the Governor, the charter 、
Legislature by a narrow margin only to be
Governor Foss.
1n January , 1913‘ although Foss was still
Dean Archer renewed the 五ght for a chat
same powerful opposition was encount,
victory in the Legislature was more pr
Governor Foss then perpetrated his
“ Pleasant Easter" joke by filing a secret
afterward assuring Dean Archer that the
become a law without his signature Dean
scathing denunciation of Governor F oss
deception probably killecl the governor politi c&lt;
charter was passed over the veto in the Hous
in the Senate after a desperate 自 ght by the (
1n November , 1914 , Governor Foss. n
an independent , was defeated by David 1. \,
received only 20.000 votes as against 20C
preYl0US year The charter bill was again
to the Legislature by Dean Archer This
pl'府gress was like a triumphal march
On l\
1914, within an hour from the time Calvin
then Presiclent of the Senate , had signed a (
of its enactment in that bodv , Governor W
affixed his signature and the hill became a 1;

GLEASON L. ARCHER
DEAN AND FOUKDER

Anthor of nine sne"essfullaw text books

Builder of l\Iain Bnilding and Annex

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1n January , 1912, Su宜。lk Law School petitioned
the Legislature of i\1assachusetts for a charter with
power to confer Jaw degrees ,
The splendid fight made by J oseph A Parks , a
student member of the Legislature , together with
Dean Archer's tireless efforts , won so many friends
for the school that in spjte of the combined opposition
of universities , bar associations , the State Board of
Education and the Governor , the charter won ín the
Legislature by a narrow margin onl)' to be vetoed by
Governor Foss ,
1n January , 1913、 although Foss was stiU governor ,
Dean Archer renewed the fight for a charter The
same powerful opposition was encountered , 1mt
victory in the Legislature was more pronounced
Governor Foss then perpetrated his ceJebrated
“ Pleasant Easter" joke by 的時 a secret veto and
afterward assuring Dean Archer that the bi1l had
become a law without his signature . Dean Archer's
scathing denunciation of Governor Foss for this
deceptíon probably killed the governor po Jì tically The
charter was passed over the veto in the HOHse but lost
in the Senate after a desperate fight by the Governo r.
1n November , 1914, Governor Foss , running as
an independent , was defeated by David 1 Walsh and
received onl)' 20 ,000 votes as against 200 ,000 the
previous year. The charter biII was again presented
to the Legislature by Dean Archer. This time its
progress was Ii ke a triumphal march On March 10,
1914, withín an hour from the time Calvin Coolidge,
then President of the Senate , had sígned a certificate
of íts enactment ín that bodv , Governor Walsh had
affixed hìs sìgnature and the hìll became a law

恥
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Ehr

The lIain lmilding represents Dean 1\rc11巴r~s
greatest triumph over c1 ifficulties K ot onl)' was hc
oh 1iged to raise aI1 the 1110ney 10r the jlurchase of land
司 nd crccti()n () f the huildin且可 1 t. Jackin名 a h l1 ilding
m
COlltraιtor ， wa持 dra fted h\ the '1 ru:;(ees "f the 只 chooJ
tu erect the lmilding
Through freight emhargo巴 s ，
strikes an c1 failure of banks where loans hacl been
日 egotiated ， by pledging his own cre(!i t , he kept on
until the task was accomplished

The (刊'crcrow r\ cd conr!ition ()f our n巴1
cO l11 jlletecl less than two years hefore , con
school authorities in the Fall of 1922 that
space was necessary Dean Archer was give
hy the trustees to take such measures as 11
to him necessary . Accordingly , on F巴bruar~
h巴 purchasecl in the school's beha!f the 01 ,
house at 51 Temple Street adjoining th巳 scl
11l品， and several 1l1 0nths Jater succee c1 ed in
the yacant Jand between it ancl the First II

2日的làtng l!I afrll
Oct 16, 1919 八 ppointment of J3 uilding CO l11l11 ittee;
Gleason L Archer , George A Frost , Jamcs .:\I
Swift

Feh 11 , 1920 Building site at CO f!1 cr of Temple
an c1 Derne Streets purchase c1
lIarch 2-April 6 , 1920
April 29 , 1920

01d huildings clemolishe c1

Corn巴的心 ne

Aug 4 , 1920

、

laid

hy

Hon

j\ [av

1S

1921

()cto ]J er 2-9

ßy carcful ~h()ring \1 p ()f thc massiγ1
the workmen average孔。 ne 110 0r per 、
though thc mas (J ns were unahle to build
cnough to keep pace with such progress
was jloure c1 in less than six weeks from the
of structnral work All w()rk was unc1巴r th
sU jJ ervision 0 f the Dean As in the const
the main buil c1 ing , he purchase c1 a11 material
thc payro11 and a l1 lmsiness details of the
、^'ith no assistants other than his regular
), Jiss Caraher The fìrst use of the Annex \
J \1 niors n11(1 兒。 ph (Jl1l ores on Fcbrunry S, 1ç
11001 且，

Derlication of 1 il(ling.
1l1

First strike

occuτred

“ SY l11Jl athetic strike"

J annary 1, 1921

Plasterers' strike

January 20 , 1921 General strike (tieing up heating ,
plU111 hing ancl electrical work)
Fehruary 1, 1921 Dean Archer , who had clirectecl n11
11l1 ilc!i ng operatin l1 s except the ahove SUh-co l1 tract日，
took 仆vcr th的 e nlso ancl cnmplctcd thc 1 ildin g:,
1l1

正

Bricklayers b巴gan work on September 24tl
sa l11 e time carpenters began the forms for 1
日仆。 r

Cal\'in

Co仆 liclge
April 汰.

The lease 01 tenants expire c1 on Ser
1923 , an c1 on S 巴ptember ïth , while the 01
was heing wrecked, J oseph Lemay, cc
superinten c1 ent of the main buil c1 ing , startec
the foun 臼tion of the rear wa l1 on Ri c1ge可

心、記

Excavations for foundations hegun

AIIIIEX

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The 叭.'el" cr(\wíled cO !1(!iti()日。 f

our ncw lmilding ,
less than two years hefore , convinced the
schnu[ authorities in the Fa l1 of 1922 that adclitional
space was necessary Dean Archer was given authority
hy the trustees to take such 111巴asures as might see111
to him necessary Accorclingly , on February 15 , 1923 ,
he purchased in the 5chool's behalf the olcl clwelling
house at 51 Tem jJ le Street adjoining the school build, ing , and several 111onth5 later succeeclecl in purchasing
theγacant land between it and the First 1\! E Church

ts Dean !\rcher' s
N ot 0111y was he
lC purchasc of la l1 d

叭)l11 pJeted

Jackin 呂立 J ll1 iJding

、 lees ,,[

the Schuol
freight cmbargoe旨，
re loans hacl heen
:reclit, hc kept 011

Ltil c\ ing COl11mittee;
Frost , J ames 1\1.
corner of Temple
c ngs c1 emolishecl ,
1i
foundations hegun
by

Hon

Calvin

\;-:、

TIv careful shoring Ujl ()f the m且ssi\'e concrete
workmm a\'eragec\ nne 旺。門 r per week. even
though thc maSO l1 S werc l1 nable to 1J uilcl wa l1s fa5t
enough tn keep pace with such progress The roof
was poured il1 Ies可 than six weeks fro111 the beginning
of structural work 人 11 work was un c1 er the personal
supcrvision of the Dean As in the construction of
the main building, he purchase c\ a11 mateτials ， hanclled
the payroll and al1 husiness c\ etails of the enterprise
with no assistants 日ther than his reg ular s巴cretaτy ，
1\ fiss Caraher The 伍的 t use of the Annex was 1)\γthe
Juniors an c1 SOjlh (Jl11 orcs 011 February 肉、 1924
Hoor5 同 the

'1111g

(tieing up heating ,
Iho hac\

The lease of tenants eX jJ irecl 0口 Septcmber 1,
ancl on Septcm1J er 7th, while the old builcling
was being wreckecl , Joseph Lemay , construction
superintenclent of the main builcling , startecl work on
the foundation oi the rear wall on Ridgeway Lane
13ricklayers hegan w口 rk on Septemher 24th At the
sa l11 e time carpenters hegan the forms for the second
f1 0u
19之 3 ，

cliτecter\

all

lhov巴 suh-c口ntracts ，

Jlctecl the bnildin 艾

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l\IOKDA Y EVE :::--r ING , l\ IARCH 1

1924
1 OVERTuRE-"Black Diamond"

2 F1L "I! -Laying the Cornerstone of l\ Iaii
by Calvin 亡。仆 lidge ， August 4, 19-'
3 , TRIO-Violin , 'Cellü ancl Piano
(a) “ Seren 以 le"

(b) “ Rosary"

0伍cer ，

4 ADDRESS by Presiùing
。 'Connel l，

Hon ,

Yicc-President Boarcl of

5. FOR THE FACèTfY-Gleason L Archer ,
Founcler.
的.

FOR THE C1TY OF BOSTON-Hon.
Curley , l\I ayor

7
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SELECTION-吐3 (lhemian

Girl"

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9. l\IEDLEY
LAW SCHOOL BUILDING FROM STATE HOUSE GROUNDS
SHOWING ANKEX

AτLOWER

10 ORATJON-U. S Senator Dayid 1 Wa

EKn Tow ARD CHURCH

11

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..\IONDA Y EVENING, MARCH 10th
1924
1

2
3

OVERT t' RE_ “Bl ack Diamo l1 d"

Gruenwald

Fn"'I-Laying the 仇，γ〉 叫伽
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TRIo-Violin , 'Ce l1 o and Piano
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4 ADDRESS by

pmfd1月 O伍的、 Hon.

J oseph F.

。℃OIMIdi-VICE-president Board of TrustEE5.

5. FOR THE

)1',

FounrIF心le叫 L. Archer , Dean and

6 FOR THE Cny ()F BOSTOK-Hon. T
Curley, kfanr

OI1.jaIIIESEf

7. SELEcTION-"13uhel1l ian Girl"

義

Balfe
8FOR TEE TR[VSTEIES-Thomas J-BOJFTIltOIL President of Board uf Trustees.
rE

HOVSE GROUNDS

\

9 l\IEDLEY

Tow ARD CHVRCH

Langley
10 ORATION_U. S Senator David I. Walsh

‘'

11. lII EDLEY

Lake
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b.\, H i'IlI'\' Quartctt l' of Roston

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408

TIIREE OTHER HALLS OF SIMILAR CAPACITY IN ANNEX

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At 2 o'clock in the Afternoon

&amp;
John Edward Fentoll

Presiding 0 fficer .
Vice-President of the

Hon. J oseph F. O'Connell
Trustees

Boæ叫 of

Music
Sheridan J ennings Thorup
Harry J ames Dooley

Orchestra

For the Faculty .
Dean and

Fo呵呵 der

of Suffolk

Solo
Albert William Chapman
Morris Stone
J ohn Whitman MacLeod

J. L. Ford

Address.
Music

Orchestra

F()r the Trustees .
Hon. Thomas J. Boynton
President of the Board of Trustees
C011ferrillg of H onorary Degrees

Music

Orchestra
QJ: ll l1lmrnmnrnt OOratilln
United States Senator Henry F. Ashurst

M usìc .

Orchestra

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Congressman Peter F. Tagae

Albert Gerard Tierney
John Hancock Eaton, Jr

Gleason L. Archer
School

Thomas A.

Edmund F. Richards
Lt. Co1. Alfred

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Samuel Bacherman
Benton Bates Bailey
Thomas Howard Barry
Carro1! Hilton Beers
Cha r1 es Berenson
Charles Henry Bolster
Anthony Augustine Bonzagni
Edward Michael Bradley
Thomas Henry Bresnahan, Jr.
F rancis J oseph Buckley
W il1 iarn Charles Burke
Garrett Henry Byrne
Leo Francis Caldwell
J ohn Patrick Carey
Joseph Augustine Caulfield
Albert W il1iam Chapmal1
Arthur Grover Cleveland Chapman
Alden Milton Cleveland
Joseph Michael Coffey
Francis Paul Cogger
J ohn J oseph Concannol1, J r
Ernest Decatur Cooke
Raymond Johl1 Cotter
Edward Augustine Cronin
Leo Joseph Cronin
Daniel Jerome Crowley
J ohn J ames Crowley
Daniel J oseph Curran
James Francis Daley
Thomas Aloysius Delmore
J ames Charles Donahue
Harry J ames Dooley
Albert Thomas Doyle
Matthew Henry Doyle
George Starkey Drew
W il1iam Henry Duggan
J ames J oseph Dunphy
John Hancock Eaton, Jr.
Wi Jliam Henry Egan
Jarnes\ Samuel Ellis
George BartI ett Farrell

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nf ij1!j. i&amp;.

John Edward Fenton
Edward Isadore Finks
Jacob Finks
J oseph Kieran Finn
Mark Leo Flaherty
Michael John Flaherty
Louis Isaac Fleischman
George Ross French
Alfred James Lawrence Ford
J oseph Bartholomew Gailius
Ronald Haley
Frank Foster D Giacomo
1的 lliam Leonard Gilligan
Isador Gillman
Samuel Goldman
W il1 iam Fanton Ambrose Graham
Axel Herman Hanson
Herbert James Hickey
Harry Sidney Horne
Morris Horowitz
W i11 iam Clinton Hyland
Otis E Jli ott J ohnson
Thomas Henry Kane, Jr.
Timothy Francis Kel1 eher
James Francis Kel1y
Edward James Kirk, Jr.
Edward Albert Ko l1 en
Alan Kr avitz
Edward Augustus Lacey
J eremiah J oseph Lane
Elm甘 George Lawler
William Harold Leahy
J oseph LewÎs
Walter J oseph MacDonald
John Whitman MacLeod
Clarence Edward Marsh
J oseph George Mazur
John Francis McAuliffe
Thomas Patrick McAweeney
John James McCarthy
J oseph Warren McCarthy

J ohn J oseph McDonough
Joseph Peter McFar\and
Lewis James McHardy
Michael Daniel McLaughlin
J ames Francis Mo11oy
J ohn J ames Moriarty
John Leo Morris
Philip Irving Murray
Daniel William O'Brien
Christopher James O'Byrne
George Francis O'Keefe
Frank Joseph Penney
Roderick J oel Peters
Louis Ph i1ip Rabinovitz
Leo Augustus Reed
Edmund Francis Richards
Charles Philip Riley
Russell Sullivan Riley
J oseph Francis Roarke
J ames J oseph Ryan
Thomas Leo Ryan
Daniel Saltzman
Owen Martin Sandiford
Morris Schneider
Morris Stone
Benjamin Lewis Schwalb
Harry Shatz
Albert Ka nnah Shimelovich
Walter Goddard Shuttleworth
Bernardino Silva
Francis J oseph Tague
Thomas Francis Teehan
Sheridan J ennings Thorup
Albert Gerard Tierney
Anthony T. Tutt!e
Joseph Francis Twohig
Raymond Young Urquhart
Louis Joseph Walsh
W il1 iam Francis Walsh
C! air Alfred Warren
Emil Norman Winkler

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GLEASON

FOUNDEO IN 1906

StateHouse

ARCHER.

L L. B.

Dean

Largest Evening Law School
in the World
Opp~.ite~
個，l' wing

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~uffnlk 石U1U身r4nnl

of

18, 24

T.l.phon.H阿market 836

DERNE STREET. BOSTON

Near Court House

@

Short walk from
North and South Stations
Subway. and T unnels
FOUR YEAR COURSE

6.00 and 7.35 Divisions
01 Classes

OFFICE OF THE DEAN

T吋IÍOIl $1ωper y開r

in four $25 instalmenta

JuJ. y 26.

3LAJ

1924...

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J

Dear 1ifr.
1t i s high1y í學por泊的 that you 工 ay
the proper foundation for your law study. lTany ousy
men find it necessary to take five years to comp 工 ete
their 工 aw course.

Your record last year índicates that
you need to spend the ex七 ra year 工aying the proper
foundation in the important Fres11roan suojec七 s.
If you wish to return to schoo1 1
shall have to ask you to repeat the Fres h.'11an work
and make the highest possib工e record in order to insure your future sU.ccess"

紛

Very t. r 1J ly y011":'8)

GLEASON L. ABCBER ,

GLA/C.

DE.A.N.

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GLEASON
FOUNDED IN

1906

至多uffnlk

Largest Evening_ Law School
in the World
Qpposite rear wing of
StateHoU8e

18.24

1JlUUl 學tlJnnl

L. ARCHER , L L. B
Dean

T eJephone Haym.rket 836

DERNE STREET , BOSTON

Near Court House

會

Sbort walk &amp;om
South Stations
Sùhwaya and Tunnels

N。叫‘曲d

FOUR YEAR COURSE

6.00 and 7.35 Divisions
01 Classes

OFFICE OF THE DEAN

$100 per y回τ
in four $25 instalments

T前tion

Ju工y

26 t 1924.

Dear
工 nclosed herewith you will find a
statement of your conditions in your school work.

工 think you have made pn earnest effort , a -'1 d regret that y0 1.:. :h.ave &gt;:ot ì:J.{i 1:: e 們付呵。峙
cess.

-~

1 do not know whether you have any
idea of returnìng to schoo1 in the Fall. but 七 hink
it well to àdviβe you that 工 cou1d 的主 permit you
to continue. 80 to do wOu工d be to waste your time
and money~

中

Very sincerely

心

yo 泣rs.

GLEASOl'J" L. ARCHER ,

GLA/C.

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EZTRACT FR ClM 1924‘, 1925 CATALOCUE
(Page 30)
糕!

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Conditio 口 s.

l川
Stndents who incur condjtio :n s in T'l 0re
than two 缸江bjec~s in their Freshm~n or So~!homore
year may 多 at the Jisc~etion 0 工 t l'le :D eaγ1 ， be required to repεa七七 he en七 ire \'lork ùf t "h at y 令 ar
before continuing the work of the next hig.h er year ..
1n other case~ cf conditio九 s stuients may be per 咀
mi 七 ted to cC l1 tim~e wi th 七 hejr cLwseß" at the same
time :r evieW 1.rlg the subj ects ccnd.l tioncd s but a.11
condi ti0116 nms 七 be removed withia οne year f工 om
the time of incu工 ring 七 hem.

2. Studen3 βwho have any conditions at the
cornplet ion of t~1e ir .Junior year :m ay not J except
1uith .j,.he pe :rmisslcD of t幻e Dean a. mi }J'aeul t:r 、1:; e
cand i. äates for 七 he deg 主 ee at the next Commence~ent.
3~
S七 udents whose scholastic record for
the fi rst t. l1'兮兮 ye8, rs has average 己 be 1, 0"" '1'5 per
cen-+; :rn ay" &lt;1有 t~j.e d is ~:r e 七 ion of the Daan be 1' e 咀
quired tυtal{!; 己 gene :r.'al !'evieη. 工 e "9 8 :'斗 t:.'~~1g quizzes
an 主 ex叫 lnó;r. -:'o'~， s i. n all sUb.i ec ~S irl which his grade
is 1οw. befùre 1:&gt; ein名 all O'wed 七 O 七 ake his Senio.r
work ..
1

4. Students whcse work i6 uns~tiβfactory
f or more than (\ηe yea玄 may be deniect 七 he :p工 ì';.rilege
of con 七 inuìng in 七泣e sch :J ol.

Suffolk Law Scnool ,
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Suffo1k Law Schoo1
18-24 Derne Street
Boston ..

Class

班主，

Dear Sir:
An examination of your 1aw school
record reveals the fol1ovJÌng subj ects in
which you are conditioned~
主連平.21.

What

Mus 七 Be

Done

Remarks:
G:臼AS ON

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Aug. 1924 ..
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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
JULY BULLETIN
ASHCRAFT SCHOLARSHIPS
We a1' e happy to announce the
establishment of th1'ee new schola1'ships to be awa1'ded annually and in
the same manne1' as the Walsh, Boynton and F 1' ost Schola1'ships , except
that the Ashc1'aft Schola1'ship will go
to the man in each class who finishes
second.
These scholarships apply this yea1'
fo 1' the' 直rst time and will be equal
to one-half the regnlar tuition of the
candidate.
1\111'. Ashc 1'aft is a lawyer now living in Brighton. He won his own
legal education th1'ough great difficulty and has a wa1'm symp, athy fo 1'
young men who a1'e working thei1'
way th1' ough school. While he has
not made a pe1'manent endowment
fo 1' the schola1'ship , he has al1'eady
transmitted the check fo 1' the th1'ee
schola1'ships available fo 1' 1924-5 , and
promises to forwa1'd a simila1' check
annually he1'eafter. His letter to the
Dean is self-explanatory:

“My dear Dean Arche

1':

Please give th1' ee schola1'ships annually to thl' ee good boys , whomsoever you choose , one a Sophomore ,
one a Junio1', and one a Senio1'.
1 want to help boys in their efforts to get an education , as 1
needed help at their pe1'iod of life.
Kindly expect a check annually
hereafte 1' on J uly 1st fo 1' not less
than this amount fo 1' the same purpose.
Ve1'y sincerely yours,
(Signed) A. M. ASHCRAFT ,
Attorney-at-law.

如

CLASS DA Y EXERCISES
Class Day exercises we1'e held in
Suffolk Theatre at 10 A. M. on May
28th. The student add1' esses were
of unusually high o1'de1'. The p1' ogram was as follows:
流

淌 VM
Y

Class P1' esident . John E. Fenton
Salutatory
. Sheridan J. Tho 1'up
Ha1'ry J. Dooley
Class History
Class Poem . Albe1't W. Chapman
Class Prophecy
Morris Stone
Class Oration
John W. MacLeod
Class Will .
Edmund F. Richards
Flag Presentation
Lt. Co l. Alfred J. L. Ford
Class Pr esentation Albert G. Tierney
Valedicto l' Y
John H. Eatoll Jr.
COMMENCEMENT
Commencement exercises were held
in Suffolk Theatre at 2 P. M. on
May 28th. Hon. Joseph F. O'Connell , vice-president of the Board of
Trustees presided. Dean Archer's
address was entitled “ Enfo 1'cement of
Our Laws." Hon. Thomas J. Boyn
ton , President of the Board of Trustees , spoke for the Trustees.
U. S. Senator Henry F. Ashurst
delivered a very able oration. A
feature of the program that was appreciated by all was the conferring
of the honorary degree of LL. B.
upon Senator Ashurst, a courtesy
similar to that extended to Senator
William E. Borah of ldaho, who was
our orato1' last year.
One other hono 1'ary degree was
conferred upon Frank Keezer 0 1' our
Faculty.
The music by Cronin's Orchestra
and solos by Thomas A. Delmore of
the Senior Class were keenly app 1'e! ciated by the audience.

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JUL Y BULLETIN
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Michael J. Sheedy of South BosFRESHMEN SCHOLARSHIPS AND I ton , 85 1/12 0/0.
PRIZES
Ignatius J. O'Connor of DorchesThe Walsh Schola帥ip for 1924
was won by Benjamin S叮der of
Chelsea , who maintained a general
average of 87 1/12 0/0 for the Fr eshman year.
The Ashcraft Scholarsl旬， awarded
to the man who 宜nishes second , was
won by Harry Rose of Revere w恤
an average of 86 1月 0/0.
The standing of oth E) r high men
was as follows:
Keelah Bouve of Hingham , 86 '\Íl 0/0.
Sidney Cross of Beachmont ,
85 2 月 0/0.
Frederick G. Hart of Boston ,
85 2 月%.
Mark L. Crockett of Wollaston.
84 5 月 0/0.
'

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I

I 84

Raymo吋 W. Moore of Atlantic ,

1/3 0/0 .
I Norman A. Walker of East WeyI mouth , 84 1 月 0/0.
I Peter F. Curran of Jamaica Plain ,
I 84 0/0.
I
J ames J. Flynn of Melro吭 84 0/0.
P. Austin M acCo rma
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扎
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Morton W. Titlebaum of Boston ,
1 84 0/0.
The Bradley Prize of $10 in gold
was awarded to Patrick F. X. Nagle
of South Boston for maintaining the
highest generaI average in ReaI
Property, with an average of 88 % 0/0.
I
~ ~is ~earest competitor w的 John
I C. L. Bowman. who maintained an
South I average of -~;;-，;:
I :，~n::~::; 87 0/0.

呵;

Charles E. Mahoney of
Boston , 84 1/3 0/0.
Wi11 iam Aronoff of Newtonvi11 e,
84 14 0/0.
J ohn M. Kennedy of Lynn , 84 %.
The Bradley Pr ize of $10 in gold
awarded annually to the man who
maintains the highest average for the
year in the subj ect of Contracts was
won by Benjamin Snyder with an
His nearest
average of 87 % 0/0.
competitor was Fr ederick G. Hart,
who maintained an average of 87 %.

./

•

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I

JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIPS AND
PRIZES

SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIPS
AND PRIZES

The Frost Scholarship for 1924
was won by Wi1liam P. Doherty of
Brighton , who maintained an average
of 88 5/14 % for the Junior year.
The Ashcraft Scholarship was won
by Edward J. Kelch of Dorchester
with an average of 85 2/7 0/0.
Other men with high averages
were as follows:
Haηy Bloomberg of Roxbury ,
I 84 13/14 0/0.

The Boyr巾n Scholarship for 1924

1

W的 won by Patrick F. X. Nagle of

1

Jose Jane of the Cuban Consulate ,
84 4/7 0/0.
South Boston , who maintained an I Thomas J. Kelley of West Someraverage of 87 1 月 0/0 for the Sopho- I ville , 84 1/7 %.
more year.
James P. Rose of Jamaica Plain ,
The Ashcraft Scholarship was won I 84 1/7 0/0.
by J ohn C, L. Bowman of Dorchester I
with an av前age of 86 5/6%.
The Bradley Prize of $10 in gold
The standing of other high men I was won by Wi11 iam P. Doherty of
was as follows:
1 Brighton , who maintained an av位age
RoyF. TeixeiraofBoston, 86 1/6 0/0. I in ConstitutionaI Law of 90 0/0.

'

、 1

SUFFOLK LA W SCHOOL-19th yωr ， New day departmen t.
Evenings 6 and 7:30; registration daily 9:30-5:00 , also Monday and
Friday evenings
18-24 Derne St. (rear of State House) Hay. 0836.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1924) BULLETIN
BAR EXAMINATION SUCCESS

/

Every Suffolk man has reason to
be proud of the July 1924 bar examination record of Suffolk Law
School men. Fifty-nine successful
candidates received their entire
training in Suffolk Law 8chool,
while three otl,ers received a part of
their law school t 1'aining he 1'e. One
hundred and one Suffolk men have
passed the Massachusetts Ba1' since
January 1, 1924.
The reco1'd of the Class of 1924
is notewo 1'thy. One hund 1'ed and
twenty-th1'ee men 1'eceived the deg1'ee of LL. B. in May of this yea1'.
Forty-th1' ee of the class have not
yet taken the examination in Massachusetts. Out of the eighty graduates of 1924 who have made the
at七em阱，在fty-th1' ee
have already
passed, making 66lh % successful,
while seven othe1' n凹-graduate membe1's of the Class of 1924 have
passed the ba1' examinations in July
1923 , January and July 1924.
Because of the p1'opaganda that
has been ci1'culated by a ce1'tain
other rival evening law school, and of
current advertisements claiming vast
supe1'io 1'ity, Dean Arche1' has pe1'sonal司
ly investigated the official records of
the Ba1' Examiners of the July examination of both schools and finds
the following:
Fifty-three membe1's of the Class
of 1924 of the rival school took the
July ba1' examinations and thi1'ty of
them were successful. This makes
an average success of 56 32 月 3rds%.
As for the record of the Class of
1924 of Suffolk Law School, seventytwo took the July examination and
forty-five passed, giving us an ave1'age of 6 2lh %. These facts speak
for themselves and requi1'e no
comment.

Joseph Daley, '25
J. Wa1'1' en Killam , '25
Robe 1't A. G1'eene , 25
Elme1' G. Lawler, '24
The fact that three Junio 1's were
successful in this examination should
be very encouraging to their classmates.

d

PROFESSOR EVANS HONORED
WiI mot R. Evans. J 1'.. a t 1'ustee
of Suffolk Law School since the
charte1' was granted , and now Professo 1' of Deeds , Mortgages and
Easements , has recently been honored by appointment as U. S. Commissioner for Massachusetts. Pr ofessor Evans has rendered noteworthy service to Suffolk Law School
both on the Board of Trustees and
on the Faculty. All who al'e acquainted with him thoroughly appre(!iate his ability and integrity. The
Federal government is fo be co耳，
gratulated on securing the services
of so able a man. The appointment
will not inte1'fere with his relations
to the schoo l.
THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR
Advance registrations indicate a
F 1'eshman Class even large1' than
last year's mammoth eIl1'ollment
when mo 1' e than seven hundred new
men registered. The registrations
up to August 20th were 25 % above
Fr eshman 1'egistrations for that date
last year. We 岫羽 no 吋吋 的tic s tω
h av e
s tat is 討 閃 0
討 吋
base Îorecasts fo 1' the new day de
•
par tm巴 n t and the size of “討 討 旭
吋
d i vi ions
廿 is
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s.
趴吋
b u t the m a jol'l泊 y of those 1' egis te in
旭叫 叮 t
叫
訴 討 缸叮叫l'吋.吐
fo 1' day würk seem tωo favo1' the 10
A. M. division.
e

MAINE BAR EXAMINATIONS
8tudents of Suffolk Law School
are now appea1'ing in eve1'y list of
successful app Iicants fo 1' the Maine
Five Suffolk
ba1' examinations.
men , four of them unde1'graduates,
took the Julv 1924 bar examinations
in Maine and four of them we1' e successful.

?

SCHOOL LIBRARY
Alterations a1'e being made to extend the school lib 1'ary along the
enti1' e front of the main building.
A totally new equipment will be installed befo1' e school opens, and a
considerable numbe1' of books will
be added.
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
The executive offices are on the
right hand side of the main entrance
on Derne St1'eet. The bookstol' e and
p1'oblem department occupy the left
wing. The smoking room and men's
wash room are in the basement of
the main building. The libra1'Y oc-

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cupíes the entire Derne Street front
on the second 宜。 or.
All classes of the evening department will be held in the annex during the coming year.
In order to avoid confusion in the
entering and leaving of classes students are requested to observe the
following triffic regulations." They
will enter the main building and pass
into the annex through the long corridor on the second floor and turn
to the left. The corridor opens on
the third floor of the annex. Fr eshmen wi!l, therefore , go up one 宜ight
to Hall No. 4. Other classes will
distribute themselves àccording to
the schedule , but each class is reQuested to enter the lecture halls
through the left hand entrance.
When the six o'clοck division is dismissed they are requested to leave
through the Temple Street side ,
passing down the stairs and out into
the street , thus avoiding the congestion of meeting the second division
in the main corridors.
Freshman students should report
September 22nd in the division they
desire to attend, either 6 P. M. or
7:30 P. M.

“

NO SMOKING

\

\_

Students are forbidden to smoke in
any part of the building except the
basement of main building. In the
past we have permitted considerable
latitude in this respect, but smoke
fìlled corridors are a nuisance and
interfere with the proper ventilation
of the classrooms and m ust be discontìnued.
TUITION
All students except Freshmen are
required to pay the $5.00 incidental
fee 前th the 如此 'quarterly payment due on September 22nd. The
Fr eshman Class , however, having
paid the $5.00 registration fe巴， will
pay the regular quarterly payment
of $25.00 for the fìrst instalment
of tuitìon during opening week.
Admission to classes will be by
attendance coupons issued to students upon payment of tuition. Thus,
upon paying the fìrst payment a
student will receive a strip of coupons covering every lecture for that
quarter.
Tui七ion should be paid at the
Treasurer's window at the rìght of
the main entrance , or in case of
overflow in the secretary'巴。但ce.

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REGISTRATION IN UPPER
CLASSES
Regular students of the Sophomore , Junior and Senìor classes will
register in class on opening night by
fì 11ing out attendance cards, dìstributed durìng the lecture.
NOTICE TO STUDENTS WITH
CONDITIONS
Although it is announced in the
current catalogue that students who
are requìred to repeat subjects will
be charged the regular rate of tuition , this is not intended to apply to
condtionsl incurred during the past
year. For conditions incurred up to
June 1, 1924, and repeated during
the coming year the old rate for review work will apply一$10 for each
single semester subject and $20 for
each full year subject.
If a student is required merely to
repeat quizzes and examination in
the subject the charge is $5.00 for
each subject so repeated. Fees for
review work should be paid within
one month from the beginning of the
semester in which they take each reVl ew.
For all conditions incurred hereafter with an average below 55 %
the subject at regular rates of tuition. Conditions between 55 and 70 %
may be removed by repeating quizzes
and examinations for which the
charge continues to be $5.00 per
subject.
DAY DEPARTMEN1'
Students in the new day depart:
ment are requested to repol' t at the
school buiI ding on September 22nd
at least fì.fteen minutes before the
hour scheduled for the division in
which they have registered. Classes
will then be organized and a definite program announced. The subjects will be as follows: MondayTortsj Tuesday-Contractsj Fr iday
Criminal Law.

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SEPTEMB ]J R (1924) BULLETIN

3

NINETEENTH ANNUAL PROGRAM
OPENING WEEK

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SEPTEMBER 22nd-26th
EVENING DEPARTMENT
(Two professors are listed for
each course, one taking the 宜的t division on one week and the second division the following week, and thus
alternatìng throughout the year.)
FRESHMAN CLASS
(The Fr eshman Class will meet in
Hall 4, fourth fioor of annex. They
will enter by main building on Derne
Street, pass up the stairs to second
fioor of main building , and down
corridor to annex.)
Monday-September 22nd一
Tort..
1st Division. 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Baker. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Henchey.
Tuesday-September 23rd一
Contracts.
1 日t Di vision. 6-7.30 P. M.
Prof.
Hurley. 2nd Division, 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Spillane.
Friday.一-September 26th一­

Criminal Law.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Douglas. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Pr of. Fi elding.
(Books may be puichased at the
school bookstore.)
SOPHOMORE CLASS
(Sophomores will meet in Hall 2.
second floor of annex.)
Monday-September 22nd一
Equity.
1st Division ， ι7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Leonard. 2nd Division , 7 :35司 9:05
P. M. Pr of. Halloran.
Tuesday-September 23rd一
Bills and Notes.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
York.
2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Duffy.
Friday-September

JUNIOR CLASS
(Juniors will meet in Hall 1, first
floor of annex.)
Monday-September 22nd.一
Evidence.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Douglas. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Garland.
Tuesday-September 23rd一
wm. and Probate.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Halloran. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Assist. Prof. Kiley.
Friday-September 26th一
Bankruptcy.
1st Division, 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Thompson. 2nd Division , 7 :30司
9.05 P. M. Asst. Prof. Avery.

SENIOR CLASS
Seniors will meet in Hal1 3, third
fioor of annex.
Monday-September 22nd一
Carriers.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Downes. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Donahue.

@

Tuesday-S句tember 23rd一

Pleading and Practice.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Wyman. 2nd Division, 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Garland.
Friday-September

26th一

Ccrporations.
1st Division , 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
York.
2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Donahue.

26th一

Real Property.
] st Division, 6-7 :30 P. M. Prof.
Downes. 2nd Division , 7 :35-9 :05
P. M. Prof. Getchell.

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sUF:B'OLK LA'N 3CHOOL
18-24

Derne St.

Bosto 口，

Augus 七 5 ，

1925.

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Student

In recording the averages for the year 1924 斗 25 on our
official record cards , 1 ‘find 七 hat you l:tàve condi tions
in 七 he fol1owing subjects:
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means quizzes and exam must be takèn
P_ 1I means subject mus 七 be repeated.

The charge for taking qui 研 es 即ld
$5.00 per subj e 此， due witÌl .first

exωfor\one semester
quar 七 erts 七 uition for

is

七 hat semes 七 er.

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The charge for repeatingasubJec 七 whi1e carrying on the
Ineguj..月 W前k is 站ïo pe~-suQject payable with the first
p a.ymen七 of 七 ui 七 ion for that semester.
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Passage of Bar Exams
IIPercentage Smaller Than Usual-Suffolk Next,
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Northeastern Third, B. U. Fourth-Only 343
心I I
Successful Out of 748
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The Ii$t gìven out by the bar ex- I s:~， e_.b~~is， Northeastern Won an aver_llall曲的 of candìd制s who su仰脖 !"ge of 48 per 叫 •
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I C~11~id~t.;s ~~iíi. p~~;;;t 伽mselv閉 for
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th~i; \ ~f which 91 Wel""ð successful 1'he fig- t '" as rated as an excellent stuðent and
、 M 叫 ures give Suffo!k a s岫WhIEher per-i was one of 伽 I阻ders in his class
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凹
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tbn,( DllÌver剖 ty recGín~neñd'èd 200 , of I m叭叭Iho qualifle扎
執'ho凹的 passed.
I Mrs. Clara B. Bruce , col&lt;1red. a mother !
因 Suffo!k graduates fared better th仙 I o.f s~veral children, àlso is ir1C!uded in i
,T.lthe general average of those from Sdf , jthe list of succesaful candldates.~' S1;e';
..~ I:01k: 8óme had studi'èd in that schòoI I was ,. an 11onor .tudent at Boston Uní-:
,- \f前 less ~~a:r: the^.':eq)lir~d time of fou l' 1versity law school 的?也 ;:ée y~;'~~~- g~~d- 1
v I o:ea1's Of the 1926 層raduates 121 took I uating w岫 the class of18zelast June!
~ \ the examination and 64 pa&amp;sed , giving I with cum laude honors.
Suff01k a 52 per cent. ayera軒的 the I "O weri A Gallagher甄別n ot former I
United States Atti. Dàriie1 J. ，Ga 11aghe ;'1
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Anothe.r imccessful newspaper man
who passed is Charles J :M cCarthy of
East_,B?ston. He graduated from Bos,tOll C'ollege thre E\ years ago.
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L!ST OF CANOIOATES
The !ist of successful candldates is
as follows:

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�QUIZZES and EXAMINA TIONS
FIRST SEMESTER 1924-25
Problem work wiII begin on October 20th.
Quizzes in all subjects will be given once a month. There
will be five questions in each subject. Students will be given from
6 : 45 to 9: 30 P.M. to answer the three sets of questions.
In the first semester exams , one night will be devoted to each
subject, and the examination will consist of ten questions.
The schedule for the fìrst semester is as follows:
FRESHMAN and ]UNIOR CLASSES
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October 22
November Quiz
Wednesday Evening
November 19
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening
December 17
SOPHOMORE and SENIOR CLASSES
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October 15
November Quiz
Wednesday Evening

November 12

Wednesday Evening

December 10

December Quiz

FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS for ALL CLASSES
January 14th - Wednesday
]anuary 19th 一-Monday
January 20th - T uesday
] anuary 21 st - Wednesday
January 22nd- Thursday
January 23rd- Friday

T orts, Evidence
Equity, Carriers &amp;
Conflict of Laws
Contracts, Wills &amp;
Probate
BilI s &amp; Notes, Plead.
ing &amp; Practice
Criminal Law. SaJes
Real Property &amp;
Corporations

September 1924
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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
OCTOBER (1924) BULLETIN
NINETEEN HUNDRED STUDENTS
THIS YEAR
Fr eshman 1'egist1'ation is still in
p1'og1'ess so final figu 1'es cannot be
given except app1'oximately. New
students will continue to be 1'eceived
until about the middle of Octobe1'.
The mid-yeal' 1' egist1'ation will also
add its quota. The same p1'opo1'tion
of inc1'ease afte1' opening week as
that of p1'evious yea1's will give us a
total en1'ollment of ve 1'y close to one
tho ut! and Fr eshmen. This will be
nearly th1' ee hund 1'ed above last
yea1" s high 1'eco1'd. The new day de司
pa1'tment is largely responsible for
the additional numbers. Registration in the upper classes will total
at least nine hundred , thus giving us
a new high record of nineteen
hundred men , a gain of two hundred
over 1923-1924.

NEW DAY DEPARTMENT
The new day department is now
organized , this year having Freshman
students only. Next year it will have
Freshman and Sophomore classes and
thus continue progressively until the
work of all four years is being given
during the day.
Dean A1"cher has taken a vote of
all day students who applied du1'ing
the summer with a view to finding the
hours of meeting most satisfactory
to all , and has decided upon a forenoon divi'sion from 10 to 11 :30 , and
an afternoon division from 4 to 5 :30
P. M. The 10 o'clock clivision seems
to be the more popular of the two ,
although a good many teachers and
business men are finding the four
o'clock session admirably suited to
their needs.
One feature of the additional department that will be appreciated
especially by business men is that
they have four possibilities of attending lectures on busy days. If
u.nable to attend their regular division they may attend any oÎ the

three other divisions of the day and
evening, and CQver the same work.
This applies to evening students as
well as to day students since the
work will be exactly the same in all
Freshmen classes for a given day.
Thus on Tuesdays a person may find
the same lecture in Contracts by attending ~ther at 10 A. M. , 4 P. M. ,
6 P. M. , or 7:35 P. M.
A CHANCE TO HELP ONE
ANOTHER

、

Every year we have quite a number of students who are seeking employment. Every loyal Suffolk man
who is in a position to employ others
or who knows that there are vacancies in his place of employment will
be rend e1'ing a service to his classmates by 1'eporting the matter to the
Dean's 。但 ce. He will also be doing
a favor to his own employers by securing the services of high grade
men. Thds employment bu1' eau is
conducted by the school gratuitously
and depends for its efficiency upon
the co司 operation of its students.
REVIEW WORK
Students who incur conditions in
their studies last year were notified
during the summer of what they
must do to clear up their record. In
some instances these notices came
back because the addressee had
moved. All students are therefore
warned that they must, whether they
1' eceived notice 0 1' not , make up these
conditions this year.
There is a
charge of $5.00 for repeating quizzes
and examinations per subject for one
semester, and $10.00 per semester
for repeating the entire work in a
subject.

院

司，

ST ANDARDS OF SCHOLARSHIP
1. Students who incur conditions
in two or more subjects in their
Freshman or Sophomore year (may
at the discretion of the Dean) be re-

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�OCTOBER (192 4:) BULLETIN

2

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4

五、4

quired to repeat the entire work of
that year before continuing the work
of the nex七 higher year. In other
cases of conditiorr百 students may be
permítted to continue with their
classes , at the same time reviewíng
the subj 巴巴ts conditioned , but a Jl conditions must be removed within one
year from the time of incurríng them.
2. Students who have any conditions at the completíon of their Junior year may not, except with permission of the Dean and Faculty, be
candidates for the degree at the next
Commencement.
3. Students whose scholastic record for the f1 rst three years has averaged below 75 per cent may at the
discretion of the Dean be required
to take a general review, repeating
quìzzes and examinations in a Jl subjects in which his grade is low, before being allowed to take his senior
work.
4. Students whose work is unsatisfactory for more than one year
may be denied the privilege of continuing in the school.

、

起

BAR EXAM FEVER

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Exam Fever" is a malady
that breaks out in every Seníor
class.
The symptoms are the
cutting of lectures, or hurrying from
class before lectures are over, together with general demoralization
of school work. Persons so a也icted
are found to be taking a bar review" from some of the many outside reviewers, in the hope of passìng
the state bar examinations in January of the senior year. Many promising students have ruined their
chances of a good record in the bar
examination by such an attempt.
In nearly all cases it retards admission to the bar rather than advancing it.
For example: Some years ago a
certain student who had made an
excellent record in Suffolk Law
School during his 晶rst three years,
conceived the idea of beating his

“

」

4仇

classmates to the profession. He began to take bar reviews at the end
of his Junior year. His school work
su賀ered greatly.
The resul七 was
that he spent three years after graduation before passing the bar, which
he should have passed at the first attempt if he had kept to his school
work as he should. He paid more
for bar reviews than his four years'
tuition at the school.

“ Bar exam fever" ís already
manifest in the p1'esent Senio1' class.
It is an evil that must be cured if
Suffolk Law School is to accomplish
the utmost fo 1' its students. We are
not wi Jling to accept responsibility
for the results of outside bar review8
while students are ín the school.
Thìs is in no sense a condemnation
of professional bar reviewers. Many
of them are doing excellent work.
Our position is this: We give our
students everything they need to
pass the bar e芷aminations if they will
loyaJl y follow our directions to the
end of their Senior year. We train
them year by yea1', but in the last
year they need a 1'eview that will
bring back to their minds somethìng
òf the clear comprehensìon of
each subject that they had when
they went over it. It is like taking
a time exposure with a camera. If
the camera is moved duríng the process, the picture is blurred and
ruined. If the student takes an outside bar review, the whole field of
law is t 1'eated f 1' om a different angle
and confusion instead of clarity
results.
The best possible bar review for
a Suffolk man would be to study for
and take our monthly examinations
in Fr eshman , Sophomore and Junior
subjects. Hìs corrected papers would
tell hìm exactly how he stood with
reference to the bar examinations.
If he could not pass them he could
not pass the bar e:x:aminations without further study. One of the dangers of the outside bar review is that

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OCTOBER (1924) BULLETIN

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the student tries to obtàin through
his ears what he can obtain only
through hard personal work. The
only thing that can be depended upon in the great day of the bar examination is what the student has
gained through hard plodding hours
of study.
The day is at hanð when we will
adopt a rule that no man shall receive a degree from this institution
who is not willing to give us undivided attention to the end of his
coU1' se. We give him a ba1' 1'eview in
the second scmeste1' of hi3 Senior
year, superio1' fo 1' his needs to anything to be obtained outside , since
it Ís the Suffolk View Point by Suffolk Professors of the subjects to be
reviewed. This review is a1'ticulated
w:th the Senio1' work so that no undue strain be put upon the student.
THE WORK OF THE YEAR
During the coming year the same
inflexible policy of holding eve1'y
student to strict accountability will
continue. Equal treatment for a11 ,
special favors fo 1' none, is OU1'直xed
motto.
Neither illness, lack of
time nor any othe1' excuse will be
received as a substitute for work
we11 done. No student will be promoted until he has done his work.
The lazy, the stupid , and the dishonest are not wanted in Suffolk
Law School.
Appeals from marks (unless it be
in the tabulation of averages) will
be abolished hereafter. Expe1'ience
has demonstrated that nearly a11 appeals are groundless and from
chronic flunkers." The welfare of
the school demands that our very
busy correcting department should
no&lt;t be required to read the same
papers twice if no good is to come
of such reading. We are sure that
on the average , sub3tantial justice
will be done to a11; hence the new
rule.

“

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ATTENTION , FRESHMEN!!
The attention of the Fresliman
&lt;J lass is ca11ed to the fact that a11
Suffolk Law School students are expected to observe the following 1'ules:
( 1) Thoroughly to
work covered in class.

review

a11
J

(2) Prepa1'e the written abstra啦
cases contained in the class abstract book as ca11ed for by the
schedule in the Table of Contents in
the front of the book. T&gt;lU S, a11
Torts , Contracts and Criminal Law
cases in the October list should be
abstracted and deposited in the
Freshm m Abstract Box in the main
corridor before the end of October.
Rules for abstracting cases wiIl be
found in the booklet entitled Introduction to the Study of Law."
。f

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“

(3) Hand in written answe1's to a11
problems that a1'e passed out in
class. Such problem answe1's are due
one week from the day they are
passed out in class; thus, Torts
problems are due on the fo11owing
Monday, Contracts on Tuesday, and
Criminal Law on Friday. They must
be filed in the Problem Box on the
exact date due , neither the day before nor the day afte1'. If a student
is necessarily absent he should mail
his problem in time to arrive on the
day due , or the morning after.
嘻

(4) Present himself for written
examination at 6:45 P. M. on the
Wednesday evenings scheduled for
monthly examinations. He should
fi1'st obtain at the booksto1'e the of司
直cial quiz books (three for five
cents). He i3 not a110wed to leave
the 1' oom after once entering until
after 7:45 P. M. at which time a11
s七udents will have had opportunity to
enter the examination ha11s. A11
examinations are to be written in
ink. Examinations will close at
9:30 P. M.

�、、
織r'

QUIZZES and EXAMINATIONS
FIRST SEMESTER 1924 - 25
Problem work will begin on October 20th.
Quizzes in all subjects wiU be given once a month. There
will be five guestions in each subject. Students wiU be given from
6: 45 to 9: 30 P.M. to answer the three sets of questions.
In the first semester exams, one night will be devoted to each
subject, and the examination will consist of ten questions.

v

The schedule for the 且(st semester is as follows:

'
、

FRESHMAN and jUNIOR CLASSES
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October 22
November Quiz
Wednesday Evening
November 19
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening
December 17
SOPHOMORE and SENIOR CLASSES
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October 15
November Quiz
Wednesday Evening
November 12
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening

‘恥

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December 10

FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS for ALL CLASSES
January 14th - Wednesday
T orts, Evidence
Equity; Carriers &amp;
January 19th - Monday
Conflict of Laws
January 20th- Tuesday
Contracts, Wills &amp;
Probate
January 21st- Wednesday
Bills &amp; Notes, Pleading &amp; Practice
Criminal Law - Sales
January 22nd- Thursday
Real Property &amp;
January 23rd- Friday
Corporations
October 1924

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The NOBLEST career is devoted to the welfa.re of other
b uma.n be旭 gs. Those that 血ine fo:禍， bri11認nt ligh甸姐姐S﹒
切可" a.ft甜甜溫shne甜 grows di且 and is forgotten. are men
tha.t h包.ve LIVED for others and DIED for the血 when necesøa.ry.
可1Vork for glory, for your fellow man, for a. noble reputa.tlon , if you have it IN yoU.
But be prep a.red for i且gra;說.tude， ca.1u血.ny; a.nd then you
won't be disappointed.
The picture a.bov回 dtow官 youhozv the y旬ung III祖祖
DREAMS aboui lt very o:f扭n. He w詛1 oe the •• servant a.nd
noble bene:t:島的or 01 his fellow man." 宣力aey will recogzdze
!lús work and crowds w i11 ga品:her to do h 1m honor.
Th e little picture f品，rther down shows what the crowds
US;UALLY do to the ma.n that works for others.
They throw =ud 的 hi血， aCCUSe h 1m 01 dishonesty, selflshne臨 and scheDling.
Gos sip, envy, ma.lice, hatred, a.ll shoot
their arrows at h包n or pick up the =ud of slander a.nd throw
it at him. He is luok:y if he escapes with his life.

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主合用'e k耳。啊ledge and. tn此h t.o líis. fe110啊=en.
They burned
益1m副主.ve; for his pains.
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idea. They h nged h im.
.-. Giordano Bruno, discovering gTeat truths ahead of others,
去'ave knowledge and truth 1;0 his. fellO'明它nen.
官:"hey burned
bi血 alive， for his pai:r祖.
G也li1eo sought 1;0 free 油e world from ig宜。'ranCÐ..
斑，
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itsaxi毀，抽血且g around the su且
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øf ignorance a且.d t-he t-eaclti且.gs of superst:品ion t-ha品 had lasted
f:or ce迦.t-uries.
He was 'co血，pelled 1;0 g前 doVl咽。n his knees and swear
tl血色 he abhö叮ed， aþj祖red and denounóed his o Wn teachfu~ ﹒
well ths品 they w;缸。 TR.UE， a.nd e而n a.s he' Wa.s
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exclaiming，叫 Ohl Libe1"t仇 what- cri血，es are coinín主的ed'fu '!;hy
'na.me t-" ..
The dream of glory based on public service rarely comes

Take the host of noble women who worked t hi- ough a
century to est-ablish w'o咀.an su宜rage， and ma.ke of t-he mot-hers
pf the world somethfug better than slaves of tbe k品chen
h恤~_.__圍起_j
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、it;rue.

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SUFFOLK LA W SCHOOL BYSTEM

5TUDY OF PRINCIPLE5 A FEA.
TURE OF 5UFFOLK LAW
5CHOOL 5Y5TEM.
Before founding Sufl'olk Law
School 1 definitely -decided that th~
study of the great fundamental
principles of law should be our main
efl' ort. But 1 decided also that the
mere study of principles would not
accomplisn our purpose. The em.
ployed man, using a part of his recreation hours for study couldnot
be expected to enthuse over a “ dry
as dust" lecture on principles or
abstract theory. But if every prineiple of law eould be shown in its
vital relation to human life , as for
example how the law of criminal
responsibility a fl'ected the case of
John Smith's wife who had assisted
her husband in reducin g- Jones to a
“ total wreck," such principle could
readily be forgotten. That every
principle of law had its intensely
human and dramatic side 1 well
knew. This, then , should be our
steadfast endeavor: to drive home in
ourlectures every princípIe of Iaw
by iIl ustrations of how that principle
applied in the great arena of human
life.
1 saw also that in other New Eng.
land law schools the whole efl'ort of
instruction was directed to advance
work merely, one principle after
another being covered in class , never
to be heard from again until examination time. But examinations ill
such schools came at the end of the
subject. 1 did not believe then and
do not believe now that ten questions
could possibly be a fair test of a
year's work in Contracts. or any
other subject.
It impressed me while a student
that in order to fix in the mind
technical and elusive principles of
law the student needed persistent review work. Experience as a teacher
re-emph且sizes that impression.
One
of the features of thë Su fl'olk Law
School system is that a portion of
every lecture is devoted to oral review of important principles discussed in previous lectures. Thus, by
constant reiteratìon our students
~aye the opportunity of definitely
fixing in mind the great fundamentãl
principles of law.
THE SUFFOLK LA執r SCHOOL
SYSTEM OF TODAY.
During the eighteen years since
1906 when the school was founded.
we have _ gradually developed an &lt;Í
elaþo!::te~ one of -the most unique
and , 1 believe , most efficient methôds
~ ~eachi_ng_ lllw . that exists today.
We have had the intense gratificatiõn

由國溢血之一

of seeing the school develop from a
little cla-ss of nine students- into the
largest law school in the world.
There are nine important featurel
of the Sufl'olk Law School system,
which occupies four years of part
time study.
First: Method of Giving Advanc.
Work: We never require studentil
to read text books or lecture notes
in advance , despite the fact tha七
such text bóoks or notes are in their
hands in complete form from th.
beginning of the course. They bring
their texts to class. Students are
called upon in turn to read aloud to
the class, paragraph after paragraph.
thus introducing new topics which
are _immediately e芷pounded and re.
e:mphasized by the professor in
charge. He will point out the im.
portant and vital portions and per.
haps give additional illustrations so
that every student has the opportun.
ity to gafn a clear conceptioñ- of the
principle under discussion. Our aim
is to impart accurate and positiv.
k J_l o,!led !l'e of the great fundamentals
of the law. A vivid and forceful
first impression lays the foundation
for efl'ective work: Under the Suffolk Law School System the profes.
sor is responsible for that first
i:mpression. Under the case system
~he student gropes blindly for that
impression in the maze of technical
language and judicial reasonings.
Second: C1aaa Room Review: We
tak~ !}!&gt; chances on a student doing
or failing to do his review work. Ã
portion of every lecture , fiftee :n
minutes to half an hour or more. il
devoted to an ora1 quiz by the professor in charge. Students are call1ld
upon to answer questions on the
~mportant princip1es covered in the
last few lectures~ Thus the class is
taken again and again over each important principle so that they should
n_ ot fail to gain that clear knowledge
that comes only from persisteñt
review. work. The case system nas
no such method of review.
Third: Home Work Invo1ving Re.
,!i o:,!,_ To build legal knowledge by
faithful daily work- is our idea[ Tõ
insure fidelity to that ideal we resort
to an exceedingly practical and effective means. -1' 0 -be sure. we have
month1y and semester-final. examinations that spur the student to COIlstant endeavor , but our problem
",ork automatically forces the student to spend dili g' (mt hours with the
principles previously covered in cl asø.
Legal problems, or 'statements of the
fac~s in actual cases, 3re given to the
students three times a week aft釘
the first month of each semestQr.

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These problems are to be worked out
at home. Studenta are given no clue
切 where the answers may be found
阻.cept that they involve principles
of law already covered by the class.
One week from the date of issuance
of a problem the answer must be
passed in in writing. Thus, failure
to answer, or ineffective work, bl'ing
corresponding penalties to the student. Here , again, does our system
diifer from. the case system.
Fourth:
Monthl,. Examinations.
All students , under. the Suffolk Law
School system, are required to take
and pass written examinations in a11
subjects once each month. Examination nights are assigned at the beginning of each semester and always
fa l1 on other than a regular school
night. Thus in a subject like Contracts, or any other fu11 year subject,
。ur students have eight examinations
per year instead of one examination
as under the case system. There is
no tem口 tation under our system to
cram for examinations; faithful and
constant review work being the sole
m~ans of attaining satisfactory results.
Fifth: Correction of Prohlems
a.nd Examinations. In otber schools
and under other systems, the professors in charge of courses- correct and
grade the students' examination
papers. _ But _ such papers are not
returned to the studen-t and he has
!lo ?pportu_nity to profit by his eηors
in foim of añswer or in' statements
。f law.
In Suffolk Law SchooI. however.
the professors themselvès do not
correct examination papers. The
correcting and grading of problems
and examination answers are dele~ated _
to a corps of experts who
~ve minute and painstaking atten~ion to each paper. - The work of thill
&lt;l:epaTtI!l e~t is fully as important as
that of the fac1!-lty, since , through
the correctors, the - students receive
that personal attention essential to
th_eir_ development. This delegation
øf the _ correcting and grading of
p '.l pers has made_ possible -uniformity
o_f tr!，!a~ment and rigidity of grading
that brings out the best that is in the
Itudent.
This department, unknown to other
schools , and handlingo over three
hundred thousand ii1 di社dual answers
in 1924-25 alone , costs thousands of
dollars to Suffolk Law School. - But
i~ insures trained and efficient stuclents.
Not _only__ does the Review Depart戶
!llent_ haIlßle the _correcting work,
but the diredor of the dep~artmeI;t
edits or prepares a11 probÎem and

u

examination questions before having
them stencilled and printed.. He
also prepares an official answer to
each problem and examination question. with the citation of 前le case
from which it was taken. These
answers are printed and distributed
to the students for comparison with
their own answers.
Sixth:
Recordin&amp; Department.
All corrected papers go to the Recording Department before being
released to the students. In deter~
mining a student's rank in a given
subject for a semester we have a
threefold record upon which such
rank is based一-his problem average,
his monthly examination average ,
and his semester final examination.
This result is affected also by his
abstract work which wi11 be explained hereafter.
Seventh: Return of Papers to
Students. In the main foyer of the
school building are specially constructed steel cabinets;- one battery
of cabinets for receipt of problem
an8wer• -a cabinet for each class:
a _bat!ery o~ cabinets f&lt;!r the receipt
。f written abstracts. and still anothêr
and more extensive array of cabinets
for the z: eturn of corrected papers.
The Freshman Class alone has ihree
cabinets _ for the return of papers,
with a folder for each student.- 1白
these cabinets are placed by the
filing clerks the corrected papers of
the students so that when- the students next come to the school building it is but the work of a moment
for the individual to secure his corrected papers.
Eighth: Written Ab.tract.. In
working out the Suffolk Law School
system of teaching we have made
~se. ~f a11 f~at~res- of ot~~r systems
~hat in .~&gt;U! ~udg_ment could properly
be applied in ihe training -of _meñ
who _m_ust w_ork f&lt;!r a livlng. Apprec_iating tþ. at the _case syste În
teaches men how to deducfól law- from
actual cases, we require a su但 cient
II:.mou~t__!&gt;f c:ase reading to develop
that ability, but we do ñot employ ft
:;s a I!leans _ teacllÏng law. Stuof
dents in each class are- required to
prepare written abstracts of f l' om
twelve to sixteen cases a month. To
provide them with the necessarv
material we have compiled semester
case books for each class that ~an
~e procured at the school bookstore
for a small sum.
Ninth: Student Conduct Re前1I守ted. In a11 ~nstitutions where large
cla~se~ a~~t:.. b!e ， crowd psychology
m
and the di但5:_ulty o~ identifying 01fenders 1!-sualI y result in whisperin宮，
noise and confusion , distressing aliké

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL SYSTEM

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MID YEAR ENTERING CLASS
SECOND SEMESTER BEGINS
FEBRUARY 2 , 1925

work covered by the class after February
2 , 1925.

The mid year entering class will begin
work on February 2nd , at the opening of
the second semester. This year's class
prom 凹的 to be the largest and in many
res pects the best that we have ever enro lI ed Men wbo were unable to enter in
September , senato間，開p l"esentatives and
others engrossed in &lt;'l ections find our 血 id
year entering class a great boon We long
ago found it neces.a.y to divíde the Frsshman year into ~wo distinct divisions , the
work of each being independent of the
other so that men entering at mid year
血 ight not be handicapped by lack of
knowledge of the 直 rst semester year.

Mid year students are advised to read
the first ha ]f of the text books in Torts
and Contracts in order that they may understand the relation of the second semester work to the whole topic , but , as befor。
indicated , they are not heH responsible
for any prillciples trea\ed in the first
semester.

The subjects to be covered in the second semester are Torts II , Contracts II ,
Agency and Legal Ethics.
Torts 1 COVArs ‘ 'Assault and Battery, '.
"Falselmprisonme的，'，‘ 'Malicious Prosecution ," "Slander and LibeI ,"“ Alienation and Seduction" and “ Deceit "
Torts II , on the other hand , deals with

“ Infringement of Copyrights &amp; Patents , ,.
“ Unfair Competition," "Interference

with Contract Rights ,"“ Vio l3tion of
Righ個 of Support of Land ," and a number of other personal wrongs totally
different from those covered in the 且rst
semester work.
。 ontracts II covers “I!1 egal Contracts , ,.

The 宜了叫 semester topic of Criminal
Law, being co血 pleted in January , is succeeded in the second semester by a new
subject , Agency. Ethics will be given in
March and Apri l.
WORK BY YEARS OF MID. YEAR
CLASS
Fe bruary 1925 J une 1925
Freshman 2nd Half
September 1925...June 1日26
Sophomore Year
September 1926. June 1927...Junior Year
September 1927. June 1928 ..Senior Year
September 1928 .January 1929
1st Half Freshman
(Eligible to take Bar Examinations in
January 1929.)
The mid-year class wi1l graduate 叫他。
next regular Co血 mencement ， June 1929,
or may , if the clasB desire , receive their
“ sheepskins" in J anuary 1929.

“ Interpretation

of Contracts ,"‘ 'Operation of Contrac紹，'，“ Reformation and
Resciseion ,' ,“ Performance and Excuses
for Non - Perfor血 ance ，"“ Brellch ， IInd
Remedies for Breach of Contract ,. Each
of these topiCB are di宜erent from those
covered in Contracts I.
All problems , qUizz6S and examinlltions
of the øecond semest叮叮e based upon

COST FOR SECOND SEMESTER
1924.25
Registration ..............$ 5.00
Tuition ..................... 50.00
(Payable $25 Feb. 2
Payable $25 Mareh 30th)
Books ........ .............. 11.75

e investigator for the
1dation. By the “ yardis meant that method
a student's training by
E hours he has spent in
l, totally disregarding
f how the time is spent,
extended discussion of
tensive study of prin19 schools with a three
)ast that their students
,wo hours an evening,
week , thus meeting the
of the Iocality. lri our
iV ever, the amount of
md review work that
lS been required to d。
, important than mere
ndance.
河 CLUSION.

vised a system in Su!001 under which, if a
t do intelligent and
review work and give
s in him to his studies.
1 by speedy disaster at
our ever vigilant coraent. The Suffolk Law
has the unique quality
ch of its students oern through an imperthat spendidly trãins
m_t and _automatically
laggard and the in;em is not di但cult. It
lan a fair chance to
But it does proceed
eory that the only
ess to our students is
D_ strict accountability.
ild their legal ed ucã'ul and conscientious
, week and month by
; when they go forth
1ey will be a credit to
to their Alma Mater.
ETTS BAR EXAMS.
men have passed the
ons in Massachusetts
(January and July)
:essful in other sta tes.
1924 examination
1mbers of the Class of
[ Law School took the
ld forty-five were sucan average of 62 'h %.
f_ interest to compare
th that of the rival
school.
Fifty-three
e Clas8 of 1924 took
nation and thirty were
king an average of

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL SYSTEM

to the lecture1' and to the great majority of earnest stu~ents. III S_uffolk -Law School we have evolved a
unique method of supp1'essing cl~~s
room offend ei' s. Two men , usually
students from the School of Theology
of Boston University, are stationed
in eaeb lecture hall charged with the
duty of constant oversight of the
stud巴nts and of repo 1'ting to the
Dean's office any who offend. The
same system ope1'ates on examínation
nights. Men suspected of cheating
a 1' e likewise repo1'ted. All se1'ious
offenders are promptly suspended
and summoned before a trial boa1'd
of which the Dean is chairman. The
board has before it not only the
written repo1't of the monitor making
the accusation, but permits o1'al testirnony of accuser and accused before
rendering judgment.
Su宜。 Ik Law Sehool System A. a
Mental Training. Ou1' system is in
no sense a mere memory c1'am.
Whìle it does give the student a positive knowledge of lègal p 1'inciples
that other systems do not, yet it goes
beyond to the reaUy great achievement of training men to tbink in
.traight 扭扭曲組d to apply legal
theory to the praetieal affairs of life.
The case system is claimed to have
the merit of impa1'ting mental training. But we believe th泌 Ìn this important field the Suffolk Law School
problem wo 1'k alone renders ou1' s抖，
tem greatly superÌor.
Under the case method the student
has placed before him to be read at
his leisure both the facts of a case
早nd the judge's opinion of the facts.
He is not called upon to do any
。rigÌnal thinking.
He is not asked
to solve 泣le que的ion but me1' ely to
read and analyze the court's solution.
Unde1' the Suffolk Law School
p1'oblem system we do not give the
student the entire case to be read.
He 1'eceives merely the essential
facts. No amount of 1'esearch will
o1'din::rily enable him to find the
actual case upon which the p1' oblem
Ìs based. He must work the answe1'
out for hímself. He must analyze
the facts and write a judicial
opinÌon. Can anyone question for a
moment that this method is vastly
superío1' as a mental t 1'aining to mere
1'eading and analysis unde 1' the case
system?
WE 00 NOT EMPLOY “ YAROS Tl CK METHOO."

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Suffolk Law School specializes Ìn
teaching law to men who wo 1'k fo 1'
a livin書﹒ It does not employ the
“ ya1'dstick method" recently cri-

ticized by the investigator for the
Carnegíe Foundation. By the yardstick method" is meant that method
of measuring a student's training by
the number of hours he has spent in
the classroom, totally disregarding
the question of how the time is spent,
whether in an extended discussíon of
facts 0 1' ín intensive study of p 1'inciples.
Some evening schools with a three
yea 1' cou1'se boast that their students
attend class two hours an evening,
six evenings a week , thus meeting the
yardstick test of the locality. In our
judgment, however, the amount of
home study and review work that
the student has been 1'equi1'ed to do
is vastly mo1'e impo1'tant than me1'e
classroom attendance.

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CONCLUSION.
We have devised a system in SuffoJk Law School under whicb , Ìf a
man does not do inteIIigent and
conscÌentious reVÌew wo 1'k and give
the best that is in him to his studies.
be is overtaken by speedy disaster at
the bands of our eve1' vigilant c衍，
recting depa1'tment. Tbe Suffolk Law
School system has the unique quality
of giving to each of its students personal attention through an imper百onal system that spendidly trains
the 1'eal student and automaticallv
eliminates the laggard and the incompetent.
But our system is not difficult. It
gives every man a fai 1' chance to
make good. But it does proceed
upon the theo1'Y that the only
~enuine kíndness to our students is
to hold them to st1'ict accountability.
Th ey must bu i1 d their legal education by faithful and conscientious
wo1'k , week by week and month by
month ,_ so that when they go forth
as graduates they will be a c1'edit to
themselves and to thei1' Alma Mate1'.
MASSACHUSETTS BAR EXAMS.
b101Sufolk men have passed the
ar e芷 aminations in Massachusetts
alone in 1924 (Janua1'Y and July)
with many successful in othe1' statès.
In the July 1924 examination
aeventy-two members of the Class of
1924 of Suffolk Law School took the
examination and forty-five were successful, makÌng an average of 62 1h %.
It may be of inte1'est to compare
this record with that of the rival
evening law school.
FÌfty-th1'ee
membe1's of the Class of 1924 took
the same examination and thirty we1'e
successful, making an average of
56 32/53 0/0 .

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
FEBRUARY (1925) BULLETIN
and refreshing as in a recent tría1 when
one defendañt, after 1istening to the
monitor's testimony against him , exclaime吐 excitedly: “The charge is exhorbitant弋
Exhorbitant or not , any
man who for any reason whispers or
communicates wi i:h a fellow student
hereafter and is reported to the trial
board wi1l be punished by canceIlation
of the examinations of the evening,
even though he may have been innocent of dishonesty. lf proven dishonest
he wilI be expelled from the school
Monitors are not required to raise a
disturbance ín class but merely to hold
out the exam papers of the culprit and
file in connection with them written accusations
A student' s first warning
that he has been caught may we lI be a
summons before the Trial Board where
he will meet his accusers face to face ,
and make such defense as he may be
able.

TRIAL BOARD
Nearly every examination se泣。口，
whether monthly or final examinatlOll5,
yields a list of defendants to appear before the Trial Board Whíle only a
few of those who have appeared before
the Board during the first semester
have actually been suspended from the
school, yet there are many whose
monthly examinations have been cancelled for indiscreet conduct in class,
and only a few who have been exonerated from all blame
Students must bear ín mind that they
w iIl be j udged by circumst且ntial evi.
dence To appe::lio. to be acting díshonest紗， wiIl resul_ a summons before
the Board if 0呵"" of 0白r wide awake
monitors observes the action. No man
can whisper or communicate in any way
in the examination room innocent紗， because aIl students should know that
communication in 且ny form Îs absolutel)月 prohibited. When students go to
the examination room they must be prepared for the ordinary needs of the
evening. To attempt to borrow a pen ，
eraser, or blotter is, a violation of ru1es
that merits punishment
Men who take with them into the
‘.,,_class room typewritten notes or any
material that might aid them in the exam are j eopardizing their future in
Suffolk Law School Whether or not
they receive help is immaterial Intent
to cheat is as bad as the actual offense
since it indicates that the man is dishonest Possession of a "crib" in the
examination room is similar to possession of burglar's too1s and cannot be
excused on the gro口nd that no use was
ma c1 e of same
While we regret the necessity of
watching onr st l1 dents 50 closely, yet
ol1 r investigations during the first semester have more than j l1 stified the system We have uncovered several very
umq口 e methods of attempted dishonesty,
and in each case have tal.的1 prompt
mé'asures to checkmate similar attempts
thereafter
We have received many extraordinary
exc口 ses and pleas , but none so frank

LATIN DIPLOMAS
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Every year t1í e Senior Class sends
a committee to the Dean's 0品ce 伐，
questing that we depart from our 凹，
tablished custom anâ award diplomas
in Latin Strangely enough the men
who are most insistent upon a Latin
diploma are usua Ily the very ones
who have never studied Latin in their
lives. Just why they should prefer a
meaningless rigmarole in Latin to the
digni丘ed and beautiful diploma that has
become a trade mark of Suffolk Law
SchooI is hard to say. To put the name
of the school in La tin would conceaI
its identity from alI but Latin scholars
since it would be Schola Iuris Suffolklensls
1n 1914, when we were confronted
by the problem of Latin or English diplomas,. the school authorities decided
not to follow the archaic and absurd
custom of the Latin diploma. This is
an American Im.tit的ion. We conduct
all our teaching in the English language
We do not teach Latin in any department of the school An English diploma
is the only suitable (we for a progressive institution Sl1 ch as øurs

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FEBRUARY (1925)
1t is gratifying to note that the
Massachusetts 'Institute of Technology
uses English in its diploma. Tufts CoIlege
has abandoned Latin. Even Harvard itself
is changing to EngIi sh. Within a few
years all the institutions th01t follow
the fashions set by Harvard wiII be
using EngIi sh also. It would be very
absurd for Suffolk Law School, a
pioneer in this new movement,! to abandon it at the behest of a few students
who desire a Latin diploma to dazzle
cI ients as ignorant of 也 e mysteries of
Latin as they themselves. The EngIish diploma stands as a permanent
policy of Suffolk Law School
SECOND SEMESTER SCHEDULE
The second semester lecture schedule
is as foIIows:
Freshman Cla甜
Mondays-Torts (1 0.00 A M; 4 :00,
6:00; 7 :30 P M.) , Professors' Baker
and Henchey
Tuesdays一 Contracts (10 :ωA M;
4:∞; 6:∞; 7 :30 P. M) , Professors
I;[url巴y and Sp iIl ane.
Fridays-Agency (10:∞ A. M.; 4:00;
6:∞ ;_7 :30 P M.) , Professors Douglas
and Fielding.
Mondays-Legal Ethics (Be胃inning
March 16th will divide time with Torts):
Professors Baker and Henckey
Sophomore Class
MO!Idays-Equity and Trusts (6:∞
and 7 :30 P M.) , Profs Leonard and
Halloran
T llesdays-B i11 s and Notes (foIlowed
~y"Landlord and Tenant) (6:∞ and
~)O P. M.) , Profs York, Ì&gt; uffy and
.l'..eezer.
Fridays-Real Property (6 :∞ ànd
7 :30 P. M) , Profs bownes' and GetcheIl.
Junior Class
Mondays-Constitutional Law (6 :00
and 7 :30) , Profs Swift and Warner.
Tuesdays-Deeds , Mortgages
and
asements (6 :00 and 7 :30 - P M) ,
Profs. Ev.a ns and Smith
Fridays-S刮目 (followed by Partnership) (6:00 and 7:30 P. 1'11.), Profs
Baktlr and Hogan in Sales; Pro'fs Duffy and Barry in Partnership

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Senior Class
Mondays-Suretyship and Domestic
~elatiorlS (beginning March 16th) Professor Downes

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BULLETIN

Tuesdays-Pleading
and
Practice
(6:∞ and 7 :30) , Profs Wyman and
Garland
Fridays-Corporations
(6:ωand
7 :30) , Profs. Donahue and Y or k.
Bar Review , Jan 28-June 19th. The
Faculty
MONTHLY EXAMINATIONS
All examinations begin at 6 :45 P. M.
Freshman Class
Wednesday, March 4.
Wednesday, April 1.
Wednesday, May 6
Sophomore Class
Wednesday, February 25 回
Wednesday, March 18.
Wednesday, April 22
Junior Class
Thursday, March 5.
Thursday, April 2.
Thursday, May 7.
Senior Class
Wednesday, February 25.
Wedne晶 d 旬， Malrch 18
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Wednesday, Apr iI 22
_
SECOND SEMEST E'R'
EXAMINATl ONS
Wednesday, May 20, Torts , Legal
Ethics
Thursday, May 21 , Equity and Tr肘ts
Monday, May 25 , Constitutional Law
Tuesday, May 26, Contracts
Wednesday, May 27, Landlord and
Tenant.
Thursday, May 28, Deeds, Mortgages
and Easements.
Friday, May 紗， Agency
!y on~ay， J;111e 1 R_;;al. Prop,e.rty.
:,
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Tuesday, J une 2, Partnership.
COMMENCEMENT
Wednesday, June 3泣， 1925.
SPECIAL ASHCRAFT PRIZES
Five prizes wiIl be 且warded to the
Senior Class through the generosity of
A. M. Ashcraft, Esq The man who
makes the highest average in the six
bar review examinations will be entitled
to the first prize. The four other prizes
wi1l be awarded in order of rank. The
prizes wiII be paid May 10, 1925
1st Prize一$15.
2nd "
10
3rd "
10
4th "
10
5th"
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MEETING PROPAGANDA
WITH FACTS
BAR EXAM RECORDS DISPROVE
Y. M. C. A. “ ADS."
For several years 8uffolk Law 8chool has ignored adverse
propaganda , carried eV6n to the extent of public advertisements ,
by a certain rival evening law schoo1. Patience ceases to be 8
virtue , however , when we find that a wide-spread misapprehensíon
of the facts has gained Cuηency. To meet propaganda and misrepresentation with facts is the object of thís bulletin.
Northeastern Law 8chool of the Boston Y. M. C. A. advertises
publicly that a "much higher percentage " of its graduates have
passed the Massachusetts Bar than the graduates of any other evening law 8chool , obviously intending to create the impression that
its present graduates are making a higher average than the present
graduates of 8uffolk Law 8choo1. 8uch an allegation is false and
misleading if viewed in the sense ín which the ordinary person
would understand it.
In a special sense the statement may , perhaps , be true , since
Northeastern (Y. M. C. A.) Law 8chool was founded eight years
before 8uffolk , and its alumní list covers nearly twenty-three ye品rs
as against 8u:ffolk's list of less than fif七een. The older a school ís ,
the higher its percentage becomes , since a long list of alumni overshadows recent graduates who fai l.

MASSACHUSETTS BAR EXAMINATION RECORDS
But the real test i目， and should be , how the present day 2'radu司
ates of the two schools are faring in the Massachusetts bar examinations. To ascertain the exact facts Dean Gleason L. Archer of
8u:ffolk Law 8chool , with the consent of the Chairman of the
Board of Bar Examiners , has had his sem吼叫'Y copy the entire
records of the July 1924 and the January 1925 bar examinations.

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The law 8chool histo1'Y of every candidate in both examinations has
been cha1'ted. The 1'eco 1'ds have pe 1'sonally been checked by Dean
A1'che1' to gua1'd against e1'1'o1'. The following statistics have been
V自1'ified with utmo的 ca1'e and we believe them to be absolutely
uncont 1'ove1'tible.
Suffolk 1924 Wins By 8% in July and 20% in January
Examinations

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In the July 1924 ba1' examination the av:e1'age of the Class of
1924 of Su益。lk Law School was 61 3-7% , whe1'eas the ave1'age of the
class of 1924 of the Boston branch of No1'theaste1'n was 53 17-41 % .
In the Janua1'Y 1925 ba1' examination the a.ve1'age of the Class
of 1924 of Su宜。lk Law School was 62 26-27 0/0, while that of the
Boston b1'anch of NO l'theastern (Cl ass of 1924) was only 42 6-7%.
Thus , in the July examination Suffolk excelled its rival by eight
pel' cent. , while in January 1925 its average was mo 1'e than twenty
pe1' cent. above that of N01'theastern.
A VERAGE OF ALL APPLICANTS-SUFFOLK WINS

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Not only has the Cl ass of 192生 of Su宜。lk Law School scored a
signal victory over the Clas8 of 1924 of the othe1' 8chool , but in
each examination the g l'OSS average of all applicants , g1'aduate and
undergraduate alike , has given Suffolk a clea1' ma1'gin over its
boastful rival.
In the July 1924 e芷amination fifty-eight Su宜。lk men were successful , this being 405-18% of all Su宜。lk men taking the examination. In the same examination twenty-eight No 1'theaste1'n men
(Boston Division) were on the successful list , or 37 31-37ths of all
the men f 1'om that schoo l.
In the January 1925 exam , thirty-金ve Suffolk men were successful , this being 5216-17% of a11 applicants f 1'om Suffolk. At
the 8ame time nine men from the Boston branch of Northeastern
passed the examination , this being 37均% of all who attempted the
examination from that school.
SUMMARY OF EXAMINATION RECORDS

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The following summa1'y may be of interest:
July

192至 Bar

Examínatíon

Tota! Graduate and Under-Graduate

1924- C!ass A!one

SUFFOLK

58 passed (40 5-18%)

I 43 of 1924 (613-7%)

NORTHEASTERN

28

I 22 of 1924 (53 17-41%)

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(3731-37 0/0)

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1925

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Examination

Total Graduate and Under-Graduate
SUFFOLK

35 passed (52

NORTHEASTERN

9

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(37

16-67 努)

1924 Class Alone

I 17 of 1924 (6226-27%)

1-29的

3 of 192生

(426-7 0/
0)

THIRTY.FIVE OUT OF NINETY
It is interesting to note that in the January examinations
(1 925) ninety men were on the successful list (12 women 81so).

The following schools contributed to the list of men:
Suffolk Law School
Boston Universíty Law
No的heastern (Boston)
“
(Springlield)
Harvard Law School
Georgetown Law Schoo!
SeaUering
Total (men)

35
25
9
2
6
6
7
91)

8uffolk Law 8chool thus contributed more than one-third of
all the successfu1 ma1e candidates , the remaining 611-9 0/0 being
shared by eight other 1aw scho018. Cou1d any testimony more e1oquently express the growing efficiency of Suffo1k Law S(',hoo1's
system of teaching? In spite of a growth unparalleled among law
8choo1s , an increase from 591 in February 1920 to over 2 ,000 students in February 1925 , the school , through its constant review
work and monthly examinations , has kept that personal touch with
its studen凶， impos8ib1e under a di宜erent system , even in a small
8choo1.

TWELVE SENIORS PASSED JANUARY EXAMINATION
In the January 1925 examination twe1ve members of the C1ass
of 1925 of 8u宜。lk Law 8choo1 were on the successful1ist in Mas8achusetts. They are as follows:
Martin B肘kal
Arthur J. Brown
Neil T. Curran
Leo M. Finen
John H. Gilbοdy
WilJíam H. Hilbrunner

WilI iam F. Kilduff
Frank J. Lehan
J ohn J. Leonard
J. Leonard Smith
Allen N. Swain
Charlea L. Thebeau

Mr. Thebeau also passed the Maine Bar Examination in February. Likewise , Henry M. Duggan of the 8enior C1ass.

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BAR EXAMINATION SUCCESS IN MAINE

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Suffolk Law School ís no longer a mere local institution. Students are 宜。cking to it from widely separated points from Maine
to the middle West. Many of its graduates never take the Massachusetts bar examinations but return to their home States for the
examination.

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One developrnent of recent years is the rernarkable record rnade
by Suffolk men in Maíne. In the August 1924 exarnination in the
latter State eighty per cent. of Suffolk applicants were admitted.
In February 1925 a Suffolk student , Charles L. Thebeau of the
Senior Cl ass , rnade the highest average of any suc巴essful candidate ,
as will be seen from the following extract from a letter received by
Dean Archer frorn Philip G. Clifford of Portland , Maine , Secretary
of the Board of Legal Examiners:
“ Replying to your le er of February 12th 1 110m glad to con宜rm the information you have received that Charles L. Thebeau had the highest general
average of any student at the February bar examinations. His average was 84."

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AFFIDAVIT OF DEAN ARCHER
Boston , February 17 , 1925
Gleason L. Ar巴her ， Dean of Su宜。lk Law
School , and rnade oath that every staternent in the foregoing bulletín is truej 他的 they are based upon the official records of the Massachusetts bar examiners as transcribed jointly by himself and his
secretary , Miss Caraher , and carefully veri宜ed with the original j
that only such men have been included as had attended for at least
two years at either Suffolk or (Boston) Northeastern and that in
case of men who had attended both schools for an equal length of
tirne 七he sarne were excluded from consideratìon.
Su宜。lk ，

SS.

Person包Hyappeared

Before rne ,
(Signed) Alden M. Cleveland ,
Notary Public
My commission expires Feb. 21 , 1930

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MARCH (1925) BULLETl N
COMMENCEMENT ORATOR
We are very fortunate this year
in having for our Commencement
Orator, United States Senator William H. King of Utah. This is in accordance with our custom inaugurated three years ago of securing for
our commencement speaker each
year some outstanding national ngure who' can bring to our students a
vital message on the great problems
that confront the nation.
Dean Archer's annuaI trip to
Washington on this quest has been
singularly successful in winning for
Sutfolk Law SchooI the respect and
approbation of many of the leading
men of the nation. The Dean's
greate的 personal triumph was in securing U. S. Senator William E.
Borah as 'commencernent orator in
1923 , even after the Senator had declined both by Ietter and in person.
The well known A1'cher pe1'sistence
and persuasion , howeve1', p1'evailed.
With so iIl ustrious a predecessor as
Senator Borah, it is now comparitively easy to secure the se1'vices of
any Senator we choose.
And , now we have anothe1' outstanding figure from the great west,
a worthy successo1' of Senators Bo1' ah
of Idaho and Ashurst of A1'izona. It
is well for us Easterne1's to hear the
points of view of leade1's f 1'orn the
vi哲orous and
liberal West. Commencement day is Wednesday, June
3, 1925.

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SENIOR HONORS
Jose N. Jane , of the Cuban Consulate , has crowned his 1'emarkable
ca l' eer as a student in Sutfolk Law
School by winning nrst hono1's , thus
becoming the valedictorian of his
class. Fol' a man comparitively unfamiliar with the English language
to win honors at all in Sutfolk , with
its immense amount of written wo 1'k ,

is well nigh impossible. Senor Jane
has made the wonderful 1' ecord of
winning the Bradley prize in Real
Property, the Boynton Scholarship ,
the Callaghan prize and now the valedictorianship , with a general average to the middle of the senio1' year
of 8621/46%.
The contest for second place was
exceedingly close. William P. Doherty has an ave1'age of 85 31/46% ,
while Edward J. Kelch has an average 0至 85 28/品%. Mr. Doherty,
unde 1' the 1'ules of the SchooI , is
therefore entitled to be Salutato1'ian
at the Class Day e芷ercÍses in the forenoon of commencement day. Both
contestants have won hono 1's befo1'e.
Mr. Kelch won the Ashcraft Scholarship Iast yea1'. M1'. Dohe1'ty won
the B1'adley prize in Constitutional
Law and also the Fr ost Schola1'ship
Iast yea1'.
CALLAGHAN PRIZE FOR 1925
The CaIlaghan prize , the Cyclopedic Law Di ctionary, given to the man
who maintains the highest average
to the middle of the Junior yea1', is
won this yea1' by J ohn C. L. Bowman with an ave1'age of 87 11/15 %.
Roy Tiexei1'a is second with an aver司
age of 86 4 月% ; Thomas .J. McG1' eal
is third with an ave1'age of 86 1] /30
%. Fourth , Norman A. Walker;
Fifth , Peter F. Curran; Sixth , Raymond W. Moore; Seventh , John F.
Deve1'; Eighth , Patrick F. X. Nagle
and Frank G. Licbtensteìn.

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ASHCRAFT SCHOl. ARSHIPS AND
PRIZES
The Ashcraft scho13 1'ships w iJl be
awa1'ded again this yea1' to the men
finishìng wìth second hono1's in
Fr eshman , Sophomo1' e and Junio 1'
classes. These schola1'ships 31'e in
the form of annual donations to the
school , made for the purpose b y, A.

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MARCH (1925) BULLETIN

M. Ashc1'aft, Esq. This yea1' M1'.
Ashc 1'aft has extended his gene 1'osity
into a new fìeld. He has offe1' ed
fìve p1'izes to the Senio1' class fo 1' excelI ence in the six Ba1' Review examinations. The p1'izes wi lI be paid
by the School , May 10, 1925.
1st P 1'izé
.. . .
$15.
2nd"
....
10.
10.
31'd "
4th "
10.
5th "
5.
SPECIAL FRESHMAN PRIZE
A special p1'ize of $25. in tuition
has been offe1'ed by one of the substantial business men in the School
(who does not wish his name to be
known) to the man at least twenty直ve yea1's of age who stands highest
in “ Cont1'acts" this yea1'. If, the 1' efore , the winner of the B1'adley prize
in the F 1' eshman class is of the requisite age , he wiII win both p1'izes.
Otherwise the Anonymous P 1'ize w iII
go to the highest man of the age
above specified.
THE QUESTIONAIRE
The 1'esults of the questionai 1' e
conducted at the school on March
1 7th should be of interest not only
to the educational wo1'ld but to the
pubIic in general.
Suffolk Law School with its 2018
students represents the highest development in the new e1'a of professional education of those who
“ earn and learn." Exact statistics
on this new phase of educlltiona!
work have hitherto been la巴king.
That the heads of families and leaders of indust1'ial Iife in la1'ge numbe1's are in our classes has long been
known to us. But the questionaire
exceeded ou1' expectations. Fo1' instance , in the Senior Class with its
260 students , 48 % are married
men. They have an aggregate of
135 chiI dren. The oldest man in the
class is 61 years of age , the ave1' age
age of the class being 30 yea 1's.
42 悅耳也 we 1' e in miIita1'Y service during the WO l' ld Wa1', many of them
being commissioned 。但cers.

These figures va1'y s Ji ghtly in the
Junio 1' and Sophomore classes. In
the Freshman Class, the raw recruits,
consisting of 954 men , we find the
following statistics: 26 % are married
men. They have an aggregate of
250 chiIdren. .The oldest man in the
class_ is 59 y E) a 1's of age. The ave1'age is 26 yea1'.s,. 33%% were in
m iIi tary service dur.ing ,the World
.
Wa1'.
The geographical distribution of
the birthplaces of the students discloses the fact that 81 'h % were
born in the United States , with
71 'h % born in Massachusetts alone.
8 7 月 0% were born in Europe; 3 'h %
in the B1'itish Isles; 3 'h % in Canada;
1% in Asia.
In Ji nes of racial division the comparison is even more interesting
since it discloses the fact that the
children of immigrants compose
about 54 % of the student body.
The descendants of over twenty nationalities mingle in harmonious fellowfhíp in this great law school.
The Senior Class are , of course ,
the sU 1'vivo 1' s of the siftíng p1'ocess
and f0 1'm the most interesting g 1'oup.
53 3 月 9 % of I1'ish parentage
18 'h句也 of English and Scotch parentage
12 2/19 % of Hebrew pa1'entage
5 5/19 % of Italian pa1'entage
with small pe1'centàges of many
othe1' races.
Statistics of the enti1'e school a 1' e
as follows:
11'ish
48 'h %
Jewish
181在中b
English &amp; Scotch 16 'h %
ItaIian
6%
F 1'ench
3% %
Dutch &amp; Ge 1'man 1 ~直%
Neg1'o
1%%
Polish
114 %
Portugese
1%
1%
Swedish
whiIe Swiss , Spanish, Armenians ,
Albanians , Lithuanians , Aust1'ians ,
Indians , Hindoos and Japanese ín
va1'ying propo 1'tions compose the bal司
ance of the student body.

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Number of Massaohusetts App1ieants............672
Successfu1 Candidates ••• ~ ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .335 (51
App1icants from Suffolk Law Sohoo1............163
Successful Suffolk Law Sohoo1 耳聞. • • • • • • • • • • • 0101
App110ants from Boston University............196
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FOUNDED IN 凹的
Spaciou., up.to-datë New Bui1dinga
Main Building Erected 1920.21
Anoex Erected 1923戶24
Opp個ile rear wing of
Slate Houae
5hort Walk from
North and South Station.
Subwa,.. and TunneJs
FOUR YEAR COUR5E
Day 5e 開 10DI
10.00 A: M.; 4.00 P. M.
Evening Sesai&lt;!_nl
6.00 P. M.; 7.35P.M.
Tuition $100 per year
in four $25 inatalments

ju1fulk 1JlU1U
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DERNE STREET,

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Telephone Ha:vmarket 0836

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OFFICE OF THE DEAN

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Dear

GLEASON L ARCHER. LL B.

Sir~

In c1工ecld 口 g Up the tuition records for
8cho01 year 0 工工 S24-25 Vle fi l1 d t11at you have
neglecteιyour 泣。 COUl1七 to the a hJ OUl1 t indicatecl
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If this l;J atte .t' 工 ~3 llOt se 七 tleò. i r:ι叫!.iately you "土工l
be suspende d.工 rom 七 he schoo1 •
.A 8Urγey i 己 nOVí bein~": made oí studen 七 s
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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL

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AUGUST (1925) BULLETIN

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FRESHMAN REGISTRATION.
While we do not contemplate the
necessity of limiting our Fr eshman
enrollment this year, yet it is quitθ
possible that we may be obliged to
deny late comers the prilvilege of
choosing what division they will join.
Last year we had something over
nine hundred Fr eshmen and the 6
P. M. division filled Hall Four of the
annex almost to capacity. HaU Four
seats fo叮 hundred men.
If this year's class divides on the
same proportionate lines it wi1l be
necessary to assign late comers to
one of the three other divisions ,
either the 10 A. M. , 4 P. M. , or 7 :35
P. M. , for this year's registration of
new students promises ta eclipse a lJ
previous records.
Registrations to August 1 of this
year were more than double those
of the same date la的 year. This
does not mean that we shal1 enroll
e~ghteen hundred new men , but it
does indicate a considerable increase
over last year's mammoth enr叫lment‘
The growing reputation and suc司
cess of Suffolk Law School bring us
students from an ever widening
range of territory. The men thus
far enrolled are of unusually high
order of intelligence and general
training.
DAY DEPARTMENT
The second year of the day department will begin on the same
date as the evening classes, September 21 , 1925.
Last year Fr eshman work only
was given in the day classes. This
year the work will extend to Fr esh!Yl an and Sophomore years, with sessions in each from 10 A. M. to 11 :30
A. M. , and also from 4 :00 P. M. to
5:30 P. M.
REGISTRA TION HOURS
The 。但ce is open for registration
of new students daily from nìne to
five , and also on Monday , Wednesday and Friday evenings.
REGISTRA TION IN UPPER
CLASSES
Regular students of the Sopho司
more, Junior and Senior classes wi1l
register in class on opening night by
filling out attendance cards distributed during the opening lecture.

COMMENCEMENT
The Commencement exercises of
June 3, 1925 , were in some respects
the most brilliant ever held a七 Suf­
folk Law Schoo l. U. S. Senator Wm.
H. King of Utah delivered the chief
address of the day to an audience
even greater than that which listened
to U. S. Senator Borah in 1923.
Hon. W. R. Evans, Jr. , of the
Board of Trustees, was presiding
。但 cer.
Governor Fuller and Mayor
Curley each delivered eloquent ad司
dresses.
Dean Gleason L. Arche l' spoke for
the trustees and facul七y. The addresses were broadcast through
station WNAC. Two hundred and
eight men received the degree of
Bachelor of Laws.
STEINBERG SCHOLARSHIP
We are happy to announce the
establishment of an endowed scholarship, to be awarded in July 1926 for
the first time and annually thereafter, to the student who has made
the highest general average in
scholarship for the first two years of
the law school course. But the most
gratifying feature of the incident lies
in the fact that the donor of the
scholarship is one of our most recent
皂:raduates ， Louis H. Steinberg of the
class of 1925.
Mr. Steinherg is a striking illustration of the successful business men
who are being attracted_ to Suffolk
Law School each year:
Having
worked his way up from the ranks
and built up one of the most successful business houses of greater
Boston , the Massachusetts Lime and
Cement Company of which he is the
President, he has a warm symp的hy
for the young man who wins hìs
educat10n by hard work. The Steinberg Scholarship is a monument to
the spirit of sympathy and cooperatìon that Suffolk men hold for
those who follow in 七，heìr footsteps.
It will be of interest also to know
that Dean Archer , when confronted
with the problem of investment of
位1e scholarship fund , was able to turn
to one of Mr. Steinber宮's classmates ,
Martin W. Powers , 1925 , of the 01d
Colony Trust Company. Mr. Powers
purchased for the school a gilt edged
industrial bond bearing interest at

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AUGUST (1925) BULLETIN

•

6 % and maturing in 1945. The
coupons from this bond wiJ1 thus
benefit Suffolk students for 七wen七y
years before reinvestment becomes
necessary.
FRESHMAN SCHOLARSHIP AND
PRIZES
For the 直.rst time in the history of
the school a scholarship has been won
by a member of the teaching profession. Although we have many
teachers each ye缸，r in our student
body they are not usually in the prize
winn iJn g líst. But Assistant Professor
Arthul' W. Hanson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who
also teaches at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Adrni:n istra t1 on, has scored a rernarkable
victory by winning the Walsh 8cholarship , the Bradley Prize and the
Special Prize in Contracts.
Pr ofessor Hanson's scholastic average for the Freshman year is
90 5/6 %, a noteworthy ach~evement，
for but seven men in the class of
nine hundred won an average of
85% or over.
The Ashcraft Scholarship awarded
to the man whιranks second in
cl揖S. was won bvThomas J. Ryan ,
J ?, 01 Marbleñe詞， wìth an average
of 86 2 月%. Mr. Ryan is a machine
designer in the employ of the United
8hoe Machinery Company.
The other high men were:
(3) Joseph Cole of Lynn , 86~毛
(Secretary, Overseers of Poor).
(4) Gurdon 1. Mead of Winchester,
85 2 月% (Sales M且 nager).
(5) Kenneth B. Williams of Jay,
Maine , 85 7/12% (Deputy
Clerk, U. 8. Circuit Court of
Appeals).
(6) L Ç&gt;悔 E. Baker of 8alem ,
8 忘!!~'1志 (Real Estate and lnsur官nce).

(7) Edward T. Dobbyn of Quincy,
85 1/4% (D esign Draftsman ,
Fore River Shipyard).
A special prize of $25 in tuition
donated by a fellow student, the
Treasurer of a large corporation , to
the man at least twenty-five years
of age who wins first honors in Contracts was won by Professor Hanson
with an average of 89 % %.
The Bradley Prize of $10 f01 直rst
honors in Contracts ，切 a student of
any age, also goes to Pr ofessor Hanson. His nearest competitor was
Louis E. Baker, w]th a rank of 89%.

以品在ι

SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIPS
AND PRIZES
The Boynton Scholarship for 1925
was won by Harry Rose of Revere
with an average of 93 7 /12 ~毛 for the
Sophomore year. Mr. Rose won second honors in the Freshman Class
last year.
The Ashcraft Scholarship was won
by William M. Travers of Roslindale
with an average of 915/6%.
The standing. of other high men
was as follows:
(3) Benjamin Snyder of Chelsea ,
91%%.
(4) William A. Welch of Peabody,
91%.
(5) Hugh J. Conway of Beverly,
89 2 月%.
(6) Samuel Eisenstadt of Roxbury ,
887/12%.
(7) Sidney
Cross
of
Revere,
88 5/12%.
(8) James H. Kieran of Salem,
87 11/12%.
(9) John B. Hynes of Dorchester ,
87% 0/0.
Wayne A. Sanders of Dorchester, 87 強%.
(10) John H. Lee of South Boston ,
的 1 月%.

The Bradley Prìze of $10 , awarded
to the student maintaining the highest average in Real Property, was
won by Benjamin Snyder of Chelsea
with an average of 94 %. His nearest competitor was Harry Rose of
Revere , 93 月~%.
JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIPS AND
PRIZES.
The Frost Scholarship for 1925
was won by Fr ank G. Lichtenstein of
Boston, with an average for the
Junior Year of 86 1/14%.
The Ashcraf七 8cholarship for 1925
was won by John F. Dever of Brook司
line with an average of 85 51/56 0/0.
Other high men were as follows:
(3) Abraham 8. Vigoda of Boston,
85 19/28%.
(是) Roy F. Teixeira of Boston ,
85 17/28 0/0 .
(5) John C. L. Bowman of Dorchester, 85 33 /56 ~也.
(6) Daniel F. lVI cNeil of Beverly,
853/7%.
Alfred E. Keough , Jr. , oí Melrose
won the Bradley Prize of $10
awarded for the híghest average in
Constitutional Law, his average being 85%%.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1925) BULLETIN
BAR EXAMINA TION SUCCESS
The June 1925 bar examination
was anothe1' overwhelming triumph
fo 1' Suffolk Law School.
Despite the immense growth of the
school ou1' ba1' examination ave1'age
is steadily imp1'oving and ou1' lead
ove1' othe1' schools inc1'eases with each
ba1' examination.
The foIlowing statistics we1'e taken
f 1' om the official 1'ec01'ds of the Massachusetts Ba1' Examine1's on August
19, 1925, by Dean A1'che1' and his
sec1'eta1'y. They have been checked
with care to avoid the possibility of
e1'1'o1'.

Total number of applicants from
Massachusetts
672
Successful candidates f 1'om Massachusetts
335
Applicants from Suffolk Law
School
163
Successful Sufl'olk men
101
(61 57/63%)
Applicants from B.U.Law School 196
90
Successful B. U. Law students
(45 45/49'}也)
Applicants from Northeastern
Law School (a11 b1'anches)
109
Successful No 1'theastem students 43
(39 49/109%)
CLASS OF 1925 ALONE
The above fìgu 1'es include a11 graduates and unde1'graduates who took
the 1'ecent June examination. If we
conside1' the Class of 1925 alone the
1'elative 1'ecords of the three schools
a 1'e as fo11ows:
Su賞。Ik Law School '25
106
72
Successful candidates
(67 49/53%)
B. U. Law School '25
138
77
Successful candidates
(55 55/69 0/0)
Northeastern Law School (Bo l5ton) (1925)
50
Successful candi:dates
23
(46%)

NEW HAMPSHIRE BAR EXAMS.
One Su宜。lk man , Thomas J. McG1'eal '26 , took the New Hampshire
July examination , having fìnished
but th1'ee yea1's at Suffolk. It is
gratifying to note that while only
eight out of a11 the candidates
we 1'e successful, M1'. McG 1'eal was one
of 位1e fo 1'tunate ones.
Suffolk men
wi11 be especia11y pleased at this 1'esu!t fo 1' McG1'eal has been superintendent of the schoo! building fo 1' seve1'a! yea1's and is justIy popula1' with
the students. He will p1'actice law
in New Hampshire , but will continue
his attendance at Suffolk and 1'eceive
the degree with his class next June_
THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR
Advance 1'egist1'ations continue to
indicate a 1'eco1'd b1' eaking year.
Fr eshman regiSt 1'ations up to August
21st we1'e 91 % above that of last
yea1' at the same date.
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
The executive offices a 1'e on the
right hand side of the main entrance.
The booksto1'e and the p1'oblem depa1'tment occupy the left wing. The
smoking room and men's wash rooms
a 1'e in the basement of the main
building. The lib1'a1'Y occupies the
entire Derne Street f 1'ont of the second floo 1'.
A11 evening classes meet in the
large ha11s ÎIn the Annex.
Day
classes me的 in the main building,
E片reshman Class in Hall 4 , and the
Sophomore Class in Hall 2.
Admission to a11 classes will be by
attendance coupons issued upon payment of tuition. Thus upon paying
the fì 1'st qua1'te1" s tuition a student
will 1' eceive a st1'ip of attendance
tickets cove1'ing every lectu1'e fer that
quarte 1'. Since attendance is compulso1'Y and the 1'ecord is checked
from attendance coupons students
should see to it that their names a 1'e
legibly written 01' p1'inted on each
coupon.

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SEPTEMBER (1 925) BULLETIN

9

school bookstore at the left of the
entrance.
The cost of the first
semester books is as follows:
Freshman Class $10.75
Sophomore Class 10.75
Junior Class
8.25
Senior Class
1 1. 00

W ork in all classes begins September 21st. Students should plan to
secure their books and pay the first
instalment of tuition during the preceding week, thus avoiding long waiting in line on opening evening.
All students should report on opening day at the hour scheduled for the
division which they desire to attend
for the ensuing year.

REGISTRATIONS
New students register at the office of the Dean. Applications must
have the approval of the Dean before
applicants can attend classes. Attendance cards will be filled out
during opening lectures. Sophomore ,
Junior and Senior students are not
required to re-register except by filling out attendance cards in class during opening week. This formality is
very essential, for the attendance
cards furnish an alphabetical index
of our entire student body, with current addresses of the students.

TUITION
Tuition should be paid , on or before the date specified, at the Treasurer' s window at the right of the
main entrance, or in case of，、 conges­
tion, at the secreta均勻。但 ce. )?h e
privilege heretofore permiitted
delayed or fractional paymel}t~ has
been abused so greatly in ,.the ':past
that the school has been obliged to
abolish it entirely.

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The Treasurer's window will be

f open for the receipt of tuition for

PROFESSOR JOSEPH F.
O'CONNELL
Former Congressman Joseph F.
O'Connell , a well known Boston lawyer, and Vice-Pr esident of our Board
of Trustees, will assist Professor
Halloran this year in the very important subject of “ Wills and Pr obate." Dean Archer's new textbook
on “ Wills &amp; Probate" will be used
as the basis of the course.

days each quarter, as follows:
‘一!句
Daily 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. , aIso Mon.
、---_-.;.___ day, Tuesday and Friday evenings.
Sèþ恥lllÞer 1(-24 for first quarter.
Novembe:r----2司會 for second quarter.
Jan. 間-Feb. 4 for third quarter.
March 間 -25 for fourth quarter.
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Students who fail to pay their
tuition before the close of the payment period will automatically be
suspended and will not be reinstated
except upon written application setting forth a reason for delay that
satisfies the school authorities of the
good faith of the petitioner.
To the first payment for Sophomore , Junilor and Senior Classes the
annual incidental fee of $5.00 should
be added, making $30 for the first
payment of tuition. F片reshman students who have already paid the incidental or registration fee will pay
the regular $25.00.
BOOKS
Books may be procured at the

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NEW HONORS FOR
DEAN ARCHER

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Suffolk students will be interested
to know that the Atlanta Law School,
At1 anta, Georgia, has recently
adopted the Dean's textbooks in the
subjects of Torts, Agency, Equity
and Evidence. Dean Douglas of Atlanta Law School visited Su質。lk Law
School last Spring and is planning to
adopt the Suffolk method of teaching.
They will eventually use all the
Archer textbooks.

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A new evening law school has been
formed in Milwaukee , Wis. , and the
.d ean has written to the Trustees of
Suffolk Law School for permission to
use “ Suffolk me位lOds" and “ Suffolk
text books."
A new evening law school beìng
formed in San: Dìego , California, is aIso
planning to use Dean Archer's textbooks. Thus the “ Suffolk Method"
wins converts in far distant parts of
the Nation.
STUDENTS WITH CONDITIONS
Every student in the Sophomore ,
and Senior classes who finished the school year with any law
conditions was supposed to receive
a notice from the Dean's office no悅，
fying them of their conditiJo ns and
stating how they are to be cleared
lI P during 前le coming year. Through
thoughtlessness on the part of many
students who change their maíling
address through the school year and
neglect to notify the 0鈕 ce ， many of
過lese notices were returned by the
post office. It has therefore been im]l ossible to reach through the mail
all students who have conditions to
make up during the coming year.
Students who have not received a
notice
should
inquìre
at
the
office just what they are expected to
do this year.
J-Il nior

MONTHLY TESTS.
Day students are required to take
the same monthly tests and semester
examÌnations as the evening students
and at the 甜 me hours , viz. 6 :45 tø
9 :30 P. M. No exceptions can be
made. Every students must plan in
advance for the evenings a lIotted to
his class.

F~

day,
ainpgpa1

To whisper or communicate with
another student in the examination
room , to give or receive aid , to use
“ cribs" or any other method of cheating wiIl be punished by suspension or
expulsion. Suspieious eonduet in the
examination room without actual
proof of eheating wiIl result in a
summons before the Trial Board.
Suffolk Law School wiII not tolerate
dishonest students, or those who have
to be watched because of suspicious
conduct.

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N 0 student will be permìtted to
Ieave the examìnation room before
7 :45 P. M. and no late student may
enter after the first man has left.

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The dates of the monthly tests are
as follows:
Freshman Cla..
Wednesday, Oct. 28
Wednesday, Dec. 2
Wednesday, Dec. 28

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First Semester Exams, Jan. 13 , 19 , 27.

Fi rst Semester Exams,

IMPORTANT.
80th Treasury and book .tore will
be open day and evening September 14,
15 and 18th for the ac c:ommodation of
.tudent. who wi.h to avoid the ru.h of
opening night.

First Semester Exams, Jan. 21 , 25 , 28.
Senior Cla...
Wednesday, Oet. 21
Wednesday, Nov. 18
Wednesday, Dec. 16
First Semester Exams, Jan.18 , 20 , 22 .

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Junior Cl...
Thursd呀， Oct. 22
Thursday, Nov. 19
Thursda'y, Dec. 17

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Sophomore CI個﹒
Thursday, Oct. 29
Thursday, Dec. 3
Thursday, Dec. 29

Students who have been n@ti宜ed to
reIJeat the year wìll be excused from
nothing but the abstracts, provided
they were turned in the previous
year. Repeating a year generally
means no advance work. Eighty percent perfect attendance is also required of repeat students.

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SEPT E.

A new evening law school h
ormed in Milwaukee , Wis可 E
ean has written to the Trus
:uffolk Law School for permÎ!
lse “ Suffolk methods" and "
ext books."

A new evening law schoo
'ormed in SanDiego , Californi~
,janning to use Dean Archer
,ooks. Thus the “ Suffolk lV、
vins converts in far distant 1
he Nation.

STUDENTS WITH COND l'

Every student in the Sopl
funíor and Seníor classes VI
shed the school year wíth a
~onditíons was supposed to
I notice from the Dean's offil
'ying them of their conditilo
:tating how they are to be
Ip during the coming year. 'I
houghtlessness on the part 0
:tudents who change theír
Lddress through the school y
lcglect to notify the office, n
主lese notices were returned
拍的。值 ce. It has therefore b
lossible to reach through tl
Lll students who have condit
nake up during the comínj
~tudents who have not rec
lotíce
should inquire
a
'的 ce just what they are expE
io this year.

‘

‘

Students who have been nGi
the year will be eXCUSE
nothíng but the abstracts, p
~hey were turned in the p
Y'ear.
Repeating a year gE
means no advance work. Eigl
cent perfect attendance is l
quíred of repeat students.
~e !l eat

lMPORTANT.
80th Treasury and book .t
be open day &amp;nd evening Septell
15 and 18th for tbe accommod,
.tudenb who wi.h to avoid tbe
opening night.

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL SYSTE l\1

STUDY OF PRINCIPLES A FEATURE OF SUFFOLK LAW
SCHOOL SYSTEM.
Before founding Suffolk Law
~chool 1 definitely decided that the
study of the g1' eat fundamental
principles of law should be ou 1' main
effo1't. But 1 decided a1so that the
mere study of princip1es would not
accomplish our purpose. The employed man, using a part of his 1'ecreation hours for study cou1d not
be expected to enthuse ove1' a “ d1'Y
as dust" ledu1' e on principles 01'
abs七ract theory.
But if every prindple of law could be shown in ìts
vital 1'elation to human life , as fo 1'
example how the law of criminal
responsibilíty affected the case of
John Smith's wife who had assisted
he1' husband in reducing Jones to 且
“ total wreck," such princip1e could
not 1'eadily be forgotten. That every
principle of law had its ìntensely
human and dramatic side 1 well
knew. This, then , should be our
steadfast endeavo1': to drive home
in ou1' lectures eve1'y principle of
law by illustrations of how that pl'inciple applied in the great a1'ena of
human life.
1 saw also that in other New England law schools the whole effo 1't of
instruction was directed to advance
work merely, one principle after
another being covered in class , never
to be heard from again until examinatìon tìme. But examinations ín
such schools came at the end of the
subject. 1 did not believe then and
do not believe now that ten questions
could possibly be a fai 1' test of a
yea1" s wo 1'k in Contracts , or any
othe1' subject.
It ímpressed me while a student
that in o1'der to fix in the mind
technícal and elusíve principles of
law the student needed persistent
review work. Experience as a teacher
r e- emphasizes that imp1'ession. One
of the features of the Suffolk Law
School system ís that a portion of
every lectu1'e ís devoted to o1'al 1' eview of important prindples discussed in previous lectu1'es. Thus , by
constant reiteration our s.tudents
have the opportuníty of definitely
fixing in mind the great fundamental
p1'inciples of law.
THE SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SYSTEM OF TODAY.
During the yea1's since 1906 when
the school was founded , we have
gradually developed and elabo1'ated
one of the most unique and , 1 believe , most efficíent methods of
teaching law that exists today. We
have had the intense grati直cation of

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seeing the schoo1 deve10p from _a
1itt1e -class of nine students into the
largest law school in the world.
There a1'e nine important featU 1' es
of the Suffolk Law School system,
which occupy four yea 1's of part
time study,
Fi!'st: Method of Giving Advance
Work: We neve 1' 1' equire students
to read text books or leéture notes
in advance , despite the fact that
such text books 01' notes a 1' e in their
hands in comp1ete f0 1' m f 1' om the
beginning of the cou1'se. They b 1'ing
thei1' texts to class. Students are
called upon in turn to 1'ead aloud to
the class , pa1'agraph afte 1' pa1'ag1'aph,
thus int1'oducing new topics which
a1'e immediately expounded and 1'eemphasized by the professo1' in
charge. He will point out 七he ímportan七 and vital po 1' tions and perhaps give additional i1lustrations so
that every student has the oppo~tu_n­
ity to gain a clear conception of the
p1'inciple under discussÍon. Our aim
is to impart accurate and posit;ve
knowledge of the great fundamenta1s
of the law. A vivid and forceful
first ímpression lays the foundation
fo 1' effective work. Unde 1' the Suffolk Law Schoo1 System the p1' ofesso1' is 1'esponsible fo 1' that first im:pl' ession.
Under the case system
the student gropes blindly for that
imp1'ession in the maze of technical
language and judicia1 reasonings.
Second: Class Room Review: We
take no chances on a student doing
or faíling to do his revíew wo 1'k. A
po1'tíon of eve1'y lectu1'e , fifteen
mínutes to half an hou 1' 01' mo1'e , is
devoted to an o1'al quiz by the p1' ofessor in charge. Students a 1' e calied
upon to answe1' questions on the
ímportant p1'incíples covered in the
last few lectu1' es. Thus the class is
taken again and again over eac h impo1'tant pl'inciple so that they shou1d
not faíl to gain that clear knowledge
that comes only from pe1'sistent review wo 1'k. The case system has
no such method of review.
Third: Home Work Involving Re.
view. To build lega1 know1edge by
faithful daily wo 1'k is ou1' ideal. To
insure fidelity to that i吐 eal we resort
to an exceedingly practica1 and ef司
fective means. To be sure , we have
monthly and semester-final examinations that spur the student to constant endeavor, but our prob1em
wo1'k automatically forces the student to spend diligent hou 1's with the
pl' incìples p1'eviously cove1'ed in class.
Legal prob1ems , or statements of the
facts in actual cases , are gíven to the
students three tímes a week after
the first month of each semeste1'.

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一一一

Twentieth Year Begins Sept. 21st, 1925.
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FRE5HMAN CLA55
Monday.一一Sept. 21一-TORTS

10-11 :30 A. M. Prof. Baker, HaU 4 , Main Bldg.
4- 5 :30 P. M. Prof. Henchey, Hall 4, Main Bl dg.
6- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Baker, Hall 4 of Anne:x:
7 :35-9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Henchey, Hall 4 of Annex.
Tuesday-S ept. 22一-CONTRACT5
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofs. Hurley and Spillane, alternating.
Fríday-Sept. 25一-C RIMINAL LA W
(Hours and lecture ha lIs as above stated.)
Profs. Douglas and Fi elding, alternating.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Monday一-Sept. 21-EQUITY
10-11 :30 A. M. Pr of. Leonard , Hall 2, Main
4- 5:30 P. M. Pr of. Hallor甜， Hall 2, Maìn
6- 7:30 P. M. Prof. Leonard, Hall 2, Main
7:35-9:05 P. M. Prof. 鼓alloran，在all 2, Main
Tuesday-Sept. 22-BILL5 &amp; NOTE5
(Hours and lecture halls same as on Monday)
Pr ofessors York and Duffy, alternating.
Fr ìday-Sept. 25一-REAL PROPERTY
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Downes and Getchell, alternating.

Bldg.
Bldg.
Bldg.
Bldg.

JUNIOR CLA55
Monday一-Sept. 21一-EVIDENCE

6- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Douglas, Hall 1, Annex
7 :35-9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Garland , Hall 1, Annex.
τuesday-Sept. 22-WILLS &amp; PROBATE
(Hours and lecture halls as on Monday)
Professors Halloran and O'Connell , alternating.
Friday一-Sept. 25-BANKRUPTCY
(Hours and halls as above.)
Professors Thompson and Avery, alternating.
SENIOR CLA5S
M &lt;!Inday一-Sept.21一-CARRIERS

6- 7.30 P. M. Prof. Downes, Hall 3 , Annex
7 :35-9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Donahue , Hall 3, Annex
Tuesday-Sept. 22一-PLEADING &amp; PRACTICE
(Hours and lecture halls as on Monda.y)
Profs. WymaJl and Garland, alternating.
Fl iday一-Sept. 25一-CORPORATION5

(Hours and lecture halIs as above 泌的ed.)
Pr ofs. Y&lt;l r l: and Donahue, alternat是.ng.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SPECIAL MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN

學

SEPTEMBER 21 , 1925
faculty , correcting department, and
stafl' workers is responsible for Suffolk Law School's great success.

GREETINGS!
In behalf of Sufl' olk Law SchooJ ,
1 welcome you , one and all , and extend to you an assurance that our
great and growing institution enters
the new school year with increased
efficiency and zeal in your behalf.
For nineteen years we have been
conducting epoch making innovations
in legal education , gradua11y improving and perfecting our methods of
training and administration.
An
evening school that can train men of
moder、ate
educational background
who are working at regular employment, to equal and even surpass those
of a university in which men are
required to devote a11 their time to
law study , becomes a note-worthy
institu七.ion. Such is Sufl' olk's record
and reputation.
Nor is its Bar Examination success con宜ned to Massachusetts. The
most recent illustration of Sufl' olk
e伍 ciency was in the August bar examina七ion in Maine.
Of forty six
applicants from a11 schooJs but twenty
six were admitted. Ten men from
Su fl' olk took the examinations and
seven were admitted. But one graduate failed , the other two failures
being “ lame ducks" who had failed
to graduate from Sufl' olk.

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THE SCHOOL YEAR 1925-26.
The great strides in public recognition and appreciation made by Suffolk Law School in the past few years
have placed additiona1 bui: dens and
responsibilities upon us. That we are
meeting those responsibilities and
even increasing the e飯ciency of the
institution in fa悶。f the greatest
infiux of students ever known among
law schooJs is a matter of congratulation to every person connected with
the in的itution. The harmonious and
earnes七
cooperation
of trustees,

I

On this opening day of the year it
is we11 to reaffirm to the students,
, old and new, some of the chief rules
f under which they will be governed
during the ensuing year. It i8 our
desir巴 to keep those rules as few and
Iì as simple as is consistent with the
, welfare of the school and great army
'" ; of students.
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But it is a1so necessary that such
rules be rigorously and impartially
enforced. No student has a right to
expect 租e to make exceptions in his
case. No appeals to sympathy and
no physicians' certificates can relieve
men of any part of the school work.
If necessary work is not done when
it should be done and the student
fails in a course he must repeat the
same.

]

If he is sentenced to repeat the entire work of the year (and more than
one hundred students were so sentenced during the past year); or
iE he is dismissed from the school for
poor scho1arship (twentyfivemen:were
so dismissed recently) there is no way
of evading the sentence. Students
bave appealed in vain to faculty
members, trustees , and alumni in an
endeavor to secure a new verdict. A
man is judged upon hi8 record and
nothing else.

、

It behooves every student therefore
to see to it that he does his best in
a11 things at a11 times; that he i5 absolutely honest in a11 his school work
and does nothing that can expose him
to the suspicion of being dishonest.
But one Sufl' olk graduate in a11 the
history of the school has proven a
discr吋it to the institution. We are
proud of that record and we intend
to maintain it by rigorous weeding
out of students under suspicion.

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�1 wish to invite the attention of
the student:田 to the following ru1es
in addition to those contaìned in the
schoo1 cata10gue.
CONDUCT IN EXAMINATION
ROOM
Any man who conducts himself in
a suspicious manner in the examinatìon room wilI be dismissed from tbe
8cboo1. Positive proof of dishonesty is not necessary to justify dismissal. Suffolk Law Schoo1 will not
tolerate dishonest students or those
who have to be watched.
Our monitors are students from
the SchooI of Theology of Boston
University. They are men of higbest
character.
They wilI not accuse
a student of dìshonesty without a
serìous cause. Men who are so care1ess of their reputation as to act like
dishonest men have no right to complain if they are judged according1y.
OBEDIENCE TO RULES
One of tbe first duties of a 1awyer
should be obedience to 1aw. A 1aw
school itself is typical of the wor1d
at 1arge. Ru1es of the scboo1, necessary for the welfare of all, are
virtually 1aws. Law students who
wi1fully violate such ru1es cannot be
e芷pected to become 1aw abiding
lawyers.
1 have instructed the monitors to
report to my 。但ce a11 men who violate rules of tbe 8chool, whether in
the classroom , library, or in the corridors; who are' discourteous or un團
gent1emanly.
Whenever su但cient
evidence accumulates to convince me
that such action is necessary 1 will
dismiss the offenders from the school.
BAR EXAMS BY
UNDERGRADUATES
One of the perennia1 prob1ems of
the school has been the reck1ess taking of bar examination8 by undergraduates. The scboo1 has hitherto

been powerless to prevent such
occurrences. Even when 1 have refused to sìgn a certìficate on the
ground of the applicant's record of
failures in the school , men have succeeded in taking the examinations to
their own discredit and to the detriment of the 8cho01.
At a meeting of the Board of Trustees held February 5, 1925, the fo110wìng vote was passed. “ VOTED ,
That hereafter any student who takes
the Massachusetts Bar Examìnatìons
without the consent of the school
authoritìes wìll not be elìgib1e for the
degree of LL. B. at the next Commencement or at any future tìme except with the express permissìon of
the Trustees."
Hereafter Senior students who contemplate taking the January e芷ami­
nation can secure permission on1y by
applying to the Dean not later than
October 15th preceding. If he is
satìsfied that the applicant, by law
office study or otherwise , wi1l be ab1e
to meet the four year requirement of
七he bar examiners, and is further
satìsfied that the scho1astic standing
of the applicant gives him a reasonable cbance of success he will issue
written permission based upon two
conditìons.

-

(1) That the applicant maintaìn
a creditab1e record in his regular
work, and
(2) That he take and pass the
monthly tests in the Fr eshman and
Sophomore work for October, November and December as a means of
demonstrating that his review work
has not been neglected.
A fee of ten dollars will be charged
for the eighteen examinations (nine
E門reshman ，
nìne Sophomore) of
October, November and December.
GLEA80N L. ARCHER
DEAN

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�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
NOVEMBER (1925) BULLETIN
WEIGHED IN THE BALANCE
Suffolk Law School gives every
student a reasonahle opportunity to
roake good. Most students make a
poor record in the October tests.
This is due either to inexperience or 、
the fact that they have no七 yet struck
their pace in the work of the year.
But the reaction to such failure on
the par七 of the individuals concerned
的 once sets in motion that great process by which men are ever measured '
and grouped in the 5cale of ability
and worth.
The weak-kneed individual, the
characterless man of brief enthusiasms，的 once fades out of the
picture. One jolt or two or three i
are enough to turn him from this
purpose or any other. But to the
worthwhile man , such tempo1' a1'Y defeats are mere challenges that stir
to life the fighting spirit within him.
There are othe1' battles to be fought, !
for each semester is a campaign with
S1芷 pitched battles 0 1' examination
evenings in which to make good. The
ave1'age of the semester i5 the impo此ant thing.
The worthwhile man
will 1'aise that ave1'age to the proper
point, despite one or more tempora1'y
defeats.
Thus, students are weighed in the
balance. The records in the Dean's
o品 ce are eloquent testimony of the
result. Don't be a quitte1'! Give
yourself a fair chance. If you then
fail it is proper and even necessary
to withdraw from the school.
BEWARE OF TUI Tl ON DODGING
We are now in a campaigu to rid
the school of tuition dodgers. Men
who do not pay their bills on time ,
who borrow tickets from their classmates and thus evade the rule barring delinquents from class , are inherently dishonest. It matters not
that they intend to pay at their own
convenience. They are law breakers
when they wilfully violate the rules
of the school.
Such men would
clea1'l y be dange1'ous men in the p1'o周
fession of law.
On October 20th a prominent
member of the Junior class was dismissed from school fo 1' borrowing
tickets and attending school when
under suspension. Other men have
met a similar fate.

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The second quarter's tuition must
be paid between November 2nd and
14th. Any student who has not paid
his tuition by November 14th will
automatically be suspended , and if
he attends lectures on borrowed
tickets will be dismissed from the
school.
STATE LIBRARY
The State Library is maintained
by the Commonwealth for the benefit of the general public. During recent years it has been quite generally overrun by law students. Compiaints have come to us that some of
our own students have been guilty of
whispering and disturbance in the
library. Our school library has ample space for all oÏ our students who
have time to study in the day.
Any Suffolk man who casts discredit upon his school by making himself a nuisance in the State Library
or elsewhere will be suspended or
expelled , depending upon the seriousness of his offense.
Rowdyism and lawlessness cannot
be indulged in by any Suffolk man
anywhere without forfeiture of his
school privileges if it comes to the
attention of the school authorities.
While we do not claim, technically,
to have the right to regulate the
conduct of our students outside of
the school building, yet if knowledge
comes to us of conduct that refiects
upon a students' character and in欄
dicates that he would not make a
worthy member of the legal profession we _have a right and a duty
to dismiss him.
MID YEAR ENTERING CLASS
In accordance with our custom , a
new entering clas s: w i1l be formed at
the beginning of the second semester,
February 1, 1926. Men entering at
that time w i1l not be able to complete
their work until January 1930. The
method of precedure is for them to
continue with the class of 1929.
They w i1l not be held responsible this
year for anything covered by the
class during the first semester. All
problems and examinations given in
the second semester will be based
upon work covered by the class after February 1 , 1926.

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N 0 V E M B E R (1925)

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Students of the mid yea1' ente1'ing
class will next yea1' take Sophomo1' e
wo 1'k and thus continue with the
class of 1929 until that class graduates. They will then 1' eturn fo 1' the
first semeste1' of the F 1'eshman yea1'.
Expe1'ience has demonstrated that
men who take the fi 1'st semester
F 1' eshman wo 1'k afte 1' having cove1' ed
the othe1' subjects acqui1'e a very
tho 1'ough grasp of the Fr eshman subjects immediate1y prio1' to taking the
ba1' examinations , thus making an
espeda11y high 1' eco1'd when passing
the ba1'.
THE BAR EXAMINATION
SCANDAL
While the who1e affair is still
sh1'ouded in a myste 1'y which the A ttorney Genera1's office is 1abo1'ing to
soIve, yet it is su伍 ciently apparent
that fraud occurred in the July 1925
ba 1' examinations. Certain scoundrels ,
的 yet unnamed , sto1e advance copies
of the ba 1' examination questions and
sold them to some of those who we1'e
to take the examination. It is improbab1e that many app1icants cou1d
have been found who we1'e dishonorab1e enough to yie1d to the temptation.
The wou1d be victims we1' e appa1'ently se1ected by the conspi1'ato 1's a day 01' two befo1'e the examination , and app1'oached by myste1'ious strange1's whose identity is difficu1t to establish. That seve1'a1 Suffo1k men we1' e so app 1'oached and indignantly spu1'ned the offe1' is known.
Whethe 1' othe1's were so ignob1e as to
yie1d does not yet appear. The Atto 1'ney Gene1'a l' s 。但ce has not yet
reported but is said to have a numbe1' of graduates of each of the 10ca1
1aw schoo1s unde1' suspicion. A man
from one schoo1 (not Suffo1k) 凹，
fused to answe1' questions. While
we hope that no Suffo1k men may
have been guilty of dishonesty in the
examination , yet if they we 1' e they
a 1'e unt1'ue to a11 of ou1' teachings and
cannot expect anything but condemnation f 1' om Suffo1k Law School.
One of the most unfo 1'tunate 1'esu1ts of the affair is that hund1' eds
of applicants who passed the June
examination honestly and fai 1'1y a1'e
ob1iged to 10se thei1' ha1' d ea1'ned victory and take the examination in
Janua1'Y 1926.
Shame on the scound1'e1s who sold
the examination papers and shame on
the dishonest ones who purchased
them! If 1awye1's we 1'e conce1'ned
they shou1d be disbarred and sent to
prison , and no pe1'son who p U1:chased
a paper shou1d ever be pe1'mitted to
practice 1aw in this commonwealth.

B U L L E T 1N
STUDENTS WITH LOW MARKS

Recent investigations condueted
by Dean Arche 1' indicate the necessity of app1ying strictly 1'u1e 3 on page
thi1'ty-two of ou1' cu1'1' ent cata1og ,
adopted a yea1' ago but which has
not yet been put into ope1'ation.
“ 3. Students whose scho1astic
record fo 1' the first three yea1's has
avecraged be10w 75 pe1'cent may a七
the disc1' etion of the Dean be 1'eq口 i1'ed to take a gene1'a1 1' eview, 1' epeating tests and examinations in a11
subjects in which their grade is 10w,
befo1'e being allowed to take Senior
wo 1'k."
Expe 1'ience has demonstrated that
men whose 1'eco1'd is slight1y above
the passing g 1'ade need more than
fou 1' year回 fo1' thei1' Iaw cou1'se. To
confe1' the Iaw degree upon them is
no kindness to them , fo 1' the bar examine1's by flunking them w i!I extend
thei1' training pe1'iod fo 1' one 01' two
years. Ba1' 1' evi1ews a 1'e hasty su1'veys
of a broad fie1d and ve1'y poo1'
substitutes fo 1' the tho 1'ough wo1'k of
OU1' schoo l.
One of the annoying featu 1'es of
the situation is that it is the 10w
grade man who is most confident of
himse1f and 1east 1'eady to accept
advice. P 1'io1' to the 1ast ba1' examination Dean A1' cher made a ca1'efu1
su1'vey of the c1ass of 1925 , conside1'ing not only the 1aw 1'eco1'd but a1so
the scho1astic attainments of each
member. He checked off the names
of those whom he believed shou1d
take a th01' ough 1'eview and wait UTItil January before taking the examination. He then wrote to each
advising them acco 1'ding1y. To his
chagrin a much Ia1'ge1' propo1'tion of
those so advised took the examination than was the case of those whose
1'ecords we1'e c1ea1'.
The 1'esu1t was
even wo 1'se than he had feared.
Nea1'1y six out of eve1'y seven of
those who dis1' ega1'ded his advice
failed. The cont1'ast with the 1'eco1'd
of thei1' bette1' prepa1' ed c1assmates
is illuminating: But fifteen pe1' cent
oÌ those who had won thei1' degrees
by a narrow ma1'gin we 1'e successful whe 1' eas eighty pe1'cent of those
with a 1'eco1'd ove1' seventy-five pe1'cent we 1' e on the successfu1 list.
The 1'u1e will not be put into effect_until the 1'eco1'ds of the p1' esent
yea1' a 1'e comp1ete , but the p1'esent
Senio1' c1ass may expect that classmates who make a bad 1'eco1'd this
year and have a histo 1'Y of failures
and “1' epeats" will be he1d ove1' and
not pe1'mitted to graduate until they
have properly trained themse1ves.

~I

�f

這\

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS (1925-6)
SECOND SEMESTER BEGINS
FEBRUARY 1, 1926.
The mi'd year ente1'ing class will
begin wo1'k on Feb1'uary 1 的， at the
opening of 位1e second semester.
This mid year class is becoming of
increasing impo 1'tance. Each year
there are many prospective students
who , for political or business reason目，
are unable to begin work with the
regula1' clas,s in Septembe1'. The mid
year class enables them to begin
their law training eight months
earIier than if they waited until the
next 1'egular class.
We long ago found it necessary to
divide the Fr eshman year into t啊。
distinct divisions , the work of each
being independent of the other so
that men entering at mid-yea1' might
not be handicapped by lack of knowledge oÎ the 益rst semester wo 1'k.
Men entering in Feb1'ua1'Y , 1926
will be eligible to take the January,
1930 ba1' examinations. Statistics
show that OU1' mid-yea1' men make an
even higher pe1' centage in the Janua1'y examinations than men oÎ the
1'egular class in the J uly examina“
tions. This is pe1'h aps due to the
fact that they a 1'e somewhat more
mature in years , but the taking oÏ
F 1' eshman fi1'st semeste1' subjects immediately prior to the ba1' examinat i. on is oÏ unquestioned value , since
many oÎ the bar questions are based
upon the b1'oad Ïundamentals cove1'ed
in the F門reshman yea1'.
It is interesting to note that a1though the mid-yea1' men take exactly the same wo1'k in the second
semeste1' as the othe1' students their
ave1'age oÎ success in the second
semester is s!ightly higher than the
regu!ar class. Last J une 64 % oÎ
the mid year men were promoted as
against about 60 % Îor the entire
class.

J

SUBJECTS COVERED
The subjects to be covered in the
second semeste1' are Torts II , Contracts H , Agency and Legal Ethics.
Torts 1 covers “ Assault and Batte1'Y,"“False Imprisonment ,"“Malicious Prosecution,"“Slande1' and
Libel ,"“ Alienation and Seduction ,"
and “ Deceit."

Torts I!, on the other hand , deals
with “ Infringement of Copyrights &amp;
Patents,"“Unfair Competition ," and
a n "':lm ber _ othe1' personal wrongs
of
totally different from those covered
in the fìr的 semester work.
Contracts II covers “Illegal Contracts, " “Interpretation of Contracts, " “Operation of Contracts ,"
“ Reformation and Recission." etc.
Each of these topics are differi:m t
from those covered in Contracts I.
A lI problems, tests and examinations of the second semester are
based upon work covered by the class
:J fter February 1 , 1926.
Mid year students are advised to
read the fìrst half oÎ the te芷t books
in Torts and Contracts in order that
they may understand the relation of
the second semester work ito the
whole topic , but, as before indicated.
th~y ~:r:e not held 1'esponsíble fo 1' aný
principles treated in -the first semester.
The 宜 rst semeste1' topic of Criminal Law, being completed in January, is succeeded in the second sem~s!e_r by___a _ new sUbject, Agency.
Ethics will be given 1n Marèh añd
April.

'/

WORK BY YEARS OF MID-YEAR
CLASS
Feb1'uary 1926
June 1926
Fr eshman 2nd Half
Septembe1' 1926
June 1927
Sophomore Year
September 1927
June 1928
Junio 1' Year
September 1928
June 1929
Senio1' Year
September 1929
Janua1'Y 1930
1st Ha1f Freshman
(Eligible to take Bar Examinatio.!!~ in January 1930.)
T~e mid-year _class 'will graduate
at the next 1'egula1' Commeñcement.
J~me 1930 , 0 1' -may, if the class d
síre, receive their “ sheepskins" in
Janua1'Y 1930.
COST FOR SECOND SEMESTER
1925-26
Regist1' ation
$ 5.00
Tuition
50.00
(Payable $25 Feb. 1
!,ay?ble $25 April 5)
w
41-no
‘i-nnu
"4-nd
Books
-m hυ

e.:

-

-OOA

Total

.

w
h
u

'

-1ll

t
i

1到
h

月
1
語道車
.申晶

y叫
A

q內

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學、

MID-YEAR
EOOKS NEEDED FOR SECOND
SEMESTER.
Archer on Torts
$2.75
Archer on Contracts
3.50
Archer on Agency
2.75
Introduction to Study of
Law
.75
Notes on Legal Ethics
1. 00
Abstract Book
1.00
Total
$1 1.75
All the ábove books may b 巴 pur­
chased at the school bookstore on
first fioor of main building.
CLASSES
Mondays-Torts.
Tuesdays一-Contracts.
Friday佇-Agency.

CHOICE OF CLASSES
10
4
6
7 :35

A.
P.
P.
P.

M.-Freshman
M.-Fr eshman
M.-Freshman
M.-Fr eshman

Hall , Anne芷
Hall , Anne芷
Hall , Annex
Hall , Annex

Students rnay choose any of the
four sessions of the day and evening.
If ull3ble to attend their regular
division , they may attend any other
that is more convenient. Evening
students may attend in the day if
necessary.
Credit for such attendance is obtained from ‘ the tickets taken by the
monitor at the door of the lecture
hall. For a ticket to b巴 valid it
must be countersigned by the student
using it. Ellch student, upon payrnent of tuition is given a “ mileage
strip" of tickets suffici'ent fOI、 ea(h
lecture of the quarter for which he
pays.
Freshrnan Hall , Annex , is reached
by going down the long central corridor on the Second :fl. oor of muin
building to the annex , then turning
to left and going up one fiight.
EXAMINATION NIGHTS
Monthly examinations for the
Freshman classes are held on Wed間
nesd a,y evenings for a11 divisÍons.
Students should plan upon these
dates and not permit anything to in-

BULLETIN
terfere , for they will not be allowed
to take the examinations 的 any other
time. Day students are required to
take the same monthly tests and
semester examina七ions as the evening
students and at the same hours.
ExamÌnfltions start at 6 :45 P. M.
and continue until 9 :30 P. M.
Men who live long distances from
Boston and have dì飯 culty in train
schedules will be allowed to begin
wo1k in a specìal room at 6 P. M. No
student wìll be permitted to leave
until 7 :45 P. M. , and no student wiIl
be permitted to ent巴r the examination halls after 7 :45 P. M. The relation between these two provisions
should be apparent.
FRESHMAN MONTHLY TESTS
FOR SECOND SEMESTER
Wednesday, March 3一-Torts ， Contracts, Agency (5 ques. each).
Wednesday, April 7-Torts, Contracls, Agency (5 ques. each).
Wednesday, May 5-Ethics, Contracts, Agency (5 ques. each).
SECOND SEMESTER EXAMS.
Wednesday, May 19一-Torts and
Legal Ethi:cs (5 ques. each).
Tuesday, May 25-Contracts (10
questions) .
Friday, May 28-Agency (10 questions) •
ABSTRACTS
Students in each class are required
to prepare w l' itten abstracts of from
twelve to si芷teen cases a month. To
provide them with the necessary materiι.1 we have compiled serneste 1'
cl!ß e books for each class that 0an
be procured at the school booksto1'e
for the sum of $1.00. Rules fo 1' preparing abstracts will be found in
“ Introduction to the Study of Law."
HOW TO REGISTER
Call in person at the Dean's office
with your application propel'ly filled
out; or secure a blank and fill it out
2t the time. Ttle application must
be accompanied by the $5.00 registration fee.

，?-"，金 2

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If.I

�SPDCIAL
斗8， 0

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TO

l:ID 又返.R E血湖北缸瓦.

l.'r~e a t t e n t i 0 n 0f the 2二id Yea工 ]!'xes l1man Cla 后 S i6 calle d. to tne
t t J:.L a tι工 1 Su:rt 011: La'if 3chool studen t. s éu'e e二:pe ci ed t 0 obse 斗 γe 七 lle

fo11owing 工 u工 es:
'I'ho 工 OUI.)11~，;工 eγi 臼w a 工 1

1.
2.

'\lOllc 00γered 111 01asβ.
ì?工 itten abstl t&gt; cts of 七 he cases containcd 1n the c1ε~SS
cook anc~ f11e tlle abs 七 racts as required by the schedu1e of

Pre ;;8，玉 e

8，bstrac 七

cases on the Feb 工 ua工 Y 1i8 七 i11 'for 七 s ，
shou1d be abstracted and depos1 七 ed
i11 the ?工 e 己:丘吉e 口 ~ ••bs 毛主 ac 七 J?o 三;:， 1 n t 11.e :m a1 n c 0 r 工 iι 。玄， by 七 he 1ast clay
01 了;ebrw斗工 y. rtl:les for a-ústracting ca 己 es \71 工 1 b e f 0 und i 11 七he bookle t:
en 七 it1ed 1I1.D.!:斗斗斗且具斗拉拉立泣且已且1 1:臼." F:3-i工 ure to fi1e 的 str'aci s
1e 昆山1ts 1n a 6:; deduction f工'om semes 七 e 工
γe 工 a巴 C.
3.
}~ancì. 1 口 YIl' i t 七 e 口 ans凡;.r e 工 S 七 o a11 prob1ems t~孔 t are passed out 1n
c1as s e.x:ac 11y 0ηe ì.7 oek 1 工 OJ:'1 the day 叫 γen out; thus Jμ2 problems
ale a工，viays i 0 be turned 1n on 山且位，ê_，么叫i泣起 011 Tue i3 da:vê_, a. nd
抖抖泣。 n 早已丘之主﹒
lJ ach liJ U 叫 be fi 工 ed on the 立正是已拉拉拉立， nei ther
the d. ε，y 泣豆主立主主 110 工 the day a1 七 er. 工 f a studeηt i s necessari1y absent
he shou1 è;.古立了 hisp 工 ob1emτ了可玄e secretary's office in time to arr1ve
on 七 11e 已&amp;. Vi:18;1 正且乏， 。工 &amp;七 the γery 1a 七 est ， thc morning 已 f 七 8 1'.
4.
Take t l1 e \7工 itten ex臼uinatio l1 s on the ì'!ednesday eve 口 ing 己已 chedu工 eó
3:'0 工 mont lJ.ly t eμt 5 •
E.xall1ηinatio 口 s ancl tcβ 七 s begiη P工 01
昀且P 企工y a 七 6:45 P.l\[
心
Ge 七 t11 ce of 工 1c Íé已
立
1工
Ü exam
βbooks Ð，七 t 11.e bool;:st or0 玉í;7inéι 0\7 before going to
l.
ca8es the:.: e111.

Tlm鼠 1 a11 七 he

Contlac 仁 SC 口 ð.. “c: enc :;/ 工 es)ect1γe 工y

.

tl10
泣

ex剖缸，
主品孔叫叫);
aλ
芯

工 G (;tγe uníil 7; 45 P.}
平正iL.
Late comerβwi11 no 七 be adruitted after
?: 45 P. 1'- I. E:x:.ar!iD é1 tion 忍. close at 9:30 P.M. A斗工 c.:zamina t: ions JjlUSt be
'&lt;;~i工 i 志 ten in i 此.肘，以 ent 己 should 1)工 cγ i ð. u t h0 1ilf3 e1γes w1th 10u111a1n pens
b8fo 工 e Going -(0 e:;~é11，] i l1é斗 t i 0 n I 0 or., •
i!.l lεtn E .7 C G l~ 0 D 工。blerns and cxams mus 七 1) 0 ì 7r i t t (; 11 0 口 the 工 equ工工 ec
:r 1
blz\nks ullich r~ 8..y a~vmys bo obt ú. in c: d at the ßcho01 boolw 七。工 e.
Ii you l-;.斗γ己口 ot 工 eccivod a CO})y of tllo ::?I'oblCL1 an c1 eXD.mination
Gchodule io 工 t lLE; sQcond :3己 m8βte l: app1y 1" or 0 日 o at thG secreta工 y's
C 丘 L 口口 O 尤
&amp;

。工 1ioe.
0 訂了心血口 ~.)=:.~i ~~"fIBiT工 L鳴，士3:JR甘晶晶了 25 ， 工 926 ， 工甘心耳，叮OOL TlillJ~笠m
E工::J Y立lili F早早fli丘'E H ~.l ILL J3JJ (几 v.:m BY ?HOF.

A b?ECL心工;3CTû-rl司 ::_;'O P.岱平
i:. J. A-也 ;3叉， 工J 工 IUCTC斗 OJ:,

(-

IUγ工立 1 DEP..:品 TiiliHT.
T瓦:J PU五?08lJ
3::TP~ L:3CTU~8 ::L勾1' 0 :C]~.?:.:';'~I:T 1'0 自己 lill71 S TUDInrT S J叮叮丘σ}
了OrtK泣IOUID J::': DOiT:;J.
Ol:LY 口、 TS TlJDEï.TT 沾沾 EOU~.:J) B ?:R已 S}Jl'~T
Il

foun先

•

i 工 ß t ，] lob"Ie:Jτnd.忱的 an謊言γa古 2前台ned l~lan;y of
to have 工 eceive à.工 0\7 marks.
1'11.is hapl)enS eγery year.

'Jhen :y OU1 l

EJ 叮 be

OF ThIS
1,THI 1' TEH

n !E

you

fDUl叫 t 以當Eui 叫 en 俐。舖圳工 ea王 1y begin to 叭叭工

2le)ha \ftfai1e cJ. i 口紅驅車~ii 工 st mon t1斗_y te 芯t: s • Do no t Ll éì.l:e t; hi S .Lli s taJ~e •
if youx' Y:Jo..工 }c li豆豆 J1en 臼 to be lo寸 bear 'in r:叫 nd 七 ha 七 a 1)οor x'ecord in
t :lese f土 rst retuxus wil1 not mean fai 工 ure in 1.- 11e semes 七 erfs ，\，iQ工 k if
ycu a工 e 己 uf 工 icien 七 1y 品工 1igent during 七 11e reElainde 工 of 七 11e semes 七 er.
Semester aγe 工 ages in each subject a 工 e rnade up from the fiγe
\
l) 工 ob1ems t t .i:l e tl-:.工 ee monthly tests , and ~斗 sel:lester fina1 exalaina t: ion.
\
7 (JjC 斗i:l. the .1'ιssi l1[，日叫 :z 工 equi 工 ed in each subj e ct.
一的一一 d “
酬
、--一一?lease 工 eö ê'i: iòer' that the lectures cannüt be i l1 terr'u'，)七 e d. to
11γer te1e:; l1 one YJessages to you'...i n C1aS8 or 七 o ca11 you to the
te1epho 口 e.
1-、íe fjεac; es receiγ。à. dUI'ing 工 ecture hours wi11 be ~oßted on
the bu斗 18t in boa工èL in the n a. in co 工 r iclor • 工羊. you fai1 t 0 100k a t this
boar' è. the 0 1'工 iCB L Ì10U工 d not be b工 al1J ed fo 1' faili ng to deliγe1" messages
to you.
3t u已 GGisZiL1LL ing i 七 necessary lO 工 eaγe class 5 or 10 m1nuies be正。工 e 1ecl u工(; i 己 uVC 工 8hou1 0.巳 ecurc a '\r工 ittcn permìssiυn from the offìce
be 工 ore goi :1[:; to ü J. as8.
JUl unusua11y 1a工 ge nUJl1 DQ 工 of s i: uden t: s are
Gυming to thc office OD Ðchoo1 n1ghts 10 sccu 工 c ca工 1y passes.
In
caBes 01 己 ?ccia: cmcrgency we allow th1εprivi 工 egc ， but i 七 shou1d not
be invokcd cxcept fo 工 impera t i ve reaSons. Those vlho 1eave c 工 ass òe 串
:;_' 0 工 e the 1801 u工 e 18 ove 工 miSB a part or a11 of the or-a1 revicw and ar{ ,
叫 crious1y jeopal d. izing their chances of passing cxamin的 ion8.
J 立 1、

。

u

f

f

、川

μ

、、

每心，

叫:叫為峙叫恥地

L沾沾心斗扭曲阻~

.、

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斗目-品品已這

一、

�學:想轉'"

e

『ζ

February
Gent1emen

of 七 he

23

1

工 \7 26 0

Senior ClasG:

1 wish to invi 七 e :y ou工 atten 七 ion to 七 l1.e rnQS 七 serio 1..1 s
þl'oblel:î now oonfront inG the sohoo 1. The imaense 尺lovi1: 11 of
the soho01 o. nd the inces 己o. nt demands u)on my 七 ÏIi1 e l'Jave
11itherto rendered impossib1e i r1diγìdua1 con 七o. c t wi t:11 the
stuclents and the oppor 七 un 立七 y to exp1ain ourreηt. 1)1' οb 工 ems of
admi nist 工 ation in the diffe 工 en 七 de)art lIJ ents which. if understood by t11e students , wo 1..1 1企 in most c o. ses si1ence murmurings
of 悍 Scoi1ten 七.
The 口， toc t 七 her'e h o.ve oeen g :r ievances 仙的 Z
oou斗cl 1l8.ve 工 emedied promp 七 1y had 1 knowll the f o. o 七 s ín tiIJe.
of this state of affairs ，。工 go. ni ze 工 s
8e1f ìnteres 七 or out 01'
,
t 0 and f 工'0 in 七 he 8choo1
o. nd e1sewhere 11 knooldng" the ins 七it: u七 ion.

í'o. king

adγo. n1age

dìsco 工 cl o. nd un 工 es 七 1 e1t11e 工 for
n 為七l..U 0. 1 "cussedness"
h o. ve passed

of

b1λ土工 ding

1 11aγe invited the ol o. ss offioers and 80me 0 七 hers of
the Senior C1ass whose 10ya1ty is unquestioned to y" eet Y,1e ín a
conference 七 o co 口l:l 1der' and l)erfec 七 a p1 o.t1 w11i c11 1 11aγe par 七 ia工 1y
wor l: ed out for o. n or"ganization wi 七 11iu t: he 己 c11001 of 0. 11 10y o.1
student s in tlleγD.rious c1 o. ss groul' s. í' he rough ou t:工 ine of my
:p l o. n 18 aβ f' ol 工 o 'iti' S :
In e&amp;o11 division of eγery c1ass there are ~a 汀Y 10y 8.1
uho o. re doing cood work und wínning aver o. ges 0γer"
75%. Let such men 0 工 ganíze a 80 工 t of vigi1ance comrnittee
(:g e 1' 11;乳ps knoγ'lt1 aSβuffoH: Loyalt :y .A. 8soC ia t ion) ple d. ged to u :phold a 七 a11 times 七 he 工 eDU七 a 毛 ion é, nd honor of their alY:1 a mater
ag心 in8t﹒ unfair and unj us 七 criticisms
， and to bring to the
0.七 t (;口 t10 口 of my office any causes of comp1ain 七， w11ether of
ma工 ks 0工 r~horwi8e) that seem wor 七11y of a 七七 entlon ..
s 七 uιe l1七 s

1 wi11 a :p point regu工 ar d o. tes for meeting8 withγarious
in a ùody o. s frequent1y as possib1e , but in 0 工:de 工，
th o. t tllel e be a cont inuous mean 巴 01 contac 七 be 七 ween the s 七 uden 七
body and 1".1';} office) my lJl a 口 comprehends the elec 七 ion by the 10yal
org8.nizatío i1 in e o. ch c1ass gr'oup of one 0 工 more lei)resent o.七 ives
to sit with me í 工 equent1y in 0. body 七 o be known o. S the "Deanfs
Co. binet". T11e 工 e a 工 e a 七 present twelve 0 工o. ss g 工 OUi.J s in 七 he
80hoo1 七 o tal1y 1..1口 acquo. inted with one another.
By means of this
cabi 口 et the intere 臼 ts and needs of the en 七 ire s 七 ude nt bod:y mo.y
be b 玄 ought to m:y D.七七 en 七 io 口， misunders 七 andings e1irnínated o. nd D.
greater degree of efficìency at 七 ainetG 工o. S8 g工 OU)s

也呵，

可

司給"t../

， 11

酬，再

\，_，、
i 、古今!J

ù";.!!'

1 should be g1ad of suggestion8
critícisms of this plan 1rom any member

~ ，~\

'?zlt
、

1

Students with high r o. tìng in any problem or' examinatio 口
ma::,: be de sígna 七 ed in eacll 01 o. ss by the correcting departmen 七 as
a committee to assist flunke 工 S 七。 an unde 工 standiηg of their
errOIs , 80 th o. t ninet :y -five percent of appeals to the department mo.y be disposed of a 七七 he sou工 ce.

恥、

土司在:

了 ou工 S

fo!' mutual

coopera 七 ion ，

G五&amp;ì.SON

Suffo1k

旬，

L叫íf

8c11001.

0 工 constructíve
of 七 he c1 o. ss.

L.

.ARCl面R ，

D1M.N.

�瞬時，

明﹒

-圓圓

內呵呵哺愣頭轉防軍-:&lt;/'}?

幽幽幽幽圈圈幽幽圓圓圈圈圈圈

I

、

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MARCH (1926) BULLETIN
COMMENCEMENT ORATOR
United States Senators have become a recognized feature of Suffolk
Law School Commencements. The
presen七 chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee , Senator Wi!liam
E. Borah of Idaho , was our Commencemen社 orator in June , 1923;
Senator Henry F. Ashurst of Arizona in 1924; Senator William H.
King of Utah in 1925.
Dean Archer's annual trip to
Washington has resulted in a widening circle of friends among the lawmakers of the upper branch of Congress, both for himself and for Suffolk Law School. Every national
leader who has spoken at the school
has carried away with him a profound
admiration for the institution , so that
no law school is better known in
senatorial circles than is Suffolk Law
School.
We are very fortunate this year
in securing for Commencement orator one of New England's most progressive and fearless leaders, Senator George H. Moses of New Hampshire. Commencement day is Thursday, June 3, 1926.
SENIOR HONORS

Under the rules of the school two
of the class day speakers are designated by the school on the basis of
scholarship. The man who holds first
place ìn his class at the middle of
the senior year becomes valedictorian while hìs nearest competitor becomes salutatorian. The remaining
class day speakers are elected by the
class.
John C. L. Bowman of Dorchester
has won the coveted first place with
an average of 87 7-28. Mr. Bowman

won the Bradle y;、Prize in the Fr eshman year for first honors in Contracts; the Ashcraft Scholarship for
second honors ìn the Sophomore
year and the Callaghan Pr ize at the
middle of hìs Junior year. This is
the third tìme ìn five years that first
honors ìn the Senìor Class have
passed over the college graduates and
gone to a man who entered the
school with an incomplete high school
traìning and was obliged to attend
our preparatory departmént to qualify for the degree. Mr. Bowman attended the Summer Prep School during the summers of 1923, 1924, and
1925. He will be thirty years old
ìn May, 1926.
Second honors and the Salutatory
goes to Roy F. Tiexeira of Boston
whose scholastìc average ìs 86
75-92%. Mr. Tiexeìra is thirty two
years old. He came to this country
from the Cape Verde Islands and has
won his education chiefly in the evening schools. He is a graduate of
the Central Evening High School.
It is interestìng to note that nearly
a11 of the honor men are over thirty
years old.
Other men on the high honor list
are as follows:
(3) Norman A. Walker of East
Weymouth (age 31) , 85 39-46%.
(4) John F. Dever of Dorchester
(age 33) , 85 18-23 '1毛.
(5) Abraham S. Vìgoda of Bo ston (age 28 years) , 85 61-92%.
(6) Frank G. Lichtensteìn of
B9!it9n (age 21) , 85 15-23 %.
) Solomon Baker of Malden
(age 30) , 85 8-23%.
(~)
Daniel F. McNeil of Beverly
il:é 36) , 85 '1忌，
神)
Raymond W. Moore of Attantic (age 30) , 84 22-23%.

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�E1:ARCH (1926) BULLETIN

2

(1~
Philip Seletsky of Dorchester (age 22) , 84 7-23%.
(13) Patrick F. X. Nagle of So.
Bos七on (age 32) , 84 9-46%.
O~)
John H. Bogrette (age 23) ,
o:f Dorchester , 82 33-46 %.

DELAYED RETURNS
By a series of misfortunes the
correcting department has been delayed in returning several sets of
examination papers from the first
semester rnid-year exarns , thus resulting in an unusual delay. The
lawyer who corrected the Criminal
Law papers was handicapped by an
operation for appendicitis. One of
the correctors of the Wills examination was unable to complete his task
in time owing to the birth of twins
in his family-and what young father could be expected to correct wills
immediately after such an important
event. Two other sets of e芷amina­
tions were delayed by the necessity
of re-marking some of the questions.

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SCHOLARSHIPS
The Ashcraft Scholarships are bein!; discontinued and will not be
awarded this year. For two years
these have been given to the men
who finished with second honors in
the Fr eshman , Sophomore and Junior
classes respectively. There are at
present two scholarships that may
hereafter replace the Ashcraft SchoIarships , the Steinberg Scholarship
and Archer prize.
The Steinberg
Scholarship , endowed by Louis H.
Steinberg of the class of 1925, will
hereafter be awarded to the student who finishes second in the
Sophornore year , equal to one-half
the Junior tuition. This year, however, as announced in August, it will
go to the man who ranks first at the
end of the first two years' work.
But in order that students may
not be disappointed by the termina-

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tion of the Ashcraft Scholarship ,
Dean Archer has personally paid into
the school treasury the same amount
that Mr. Ashcraft has so kindly paid
for the past two years. The same
prizes will therefore be awarded next
June as formerly.

THE BARRISTERS' CLUB
In order to encourage scholarship
in the school and also to a宜。rd a
means of closer contact between the
Dean's office and students , Dean
Archer is working on a plan to
formulate in each division of the several classes an organization to be
known by some appropriate title such
as “ The Barristers' Club."

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In each unit also will be appointed
a special committee to consider alleged grievances of their classmates.
particular甘 in low marks.
90 % of
t!I es~ la~ter appeals would not go to
the Review Department if someone
who understand-s the law could point
out to the student author exactlv
'Yha_t he has written in his paper.
Authors are like young môthers.
T~~y ~an never see -anything wrong
with their own offspring.

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Af~er the _sifting _ out procese ,
genuine appeals may be transmitted
to the head of the _ Review Department, who will sit as a member of
the Dean's Cabinet.
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It is intended that each C1 ass
“ Chapter" of the club shall continue
after graduation , with the same
right of representation in the Dean、
Cabinet. Thus , school , students and
alumni may have a continuous means
o_f contaet and understanding that
should mean much to the future of
the institution .

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To be eligible to the club an apP垃cant m~st be in good standing and
have a scholastic average of at least
75% in his studies. Each class unit
of the club will be entitled to elect
~ne or more representatives to the
Dean's Cabinet, - which will meet at
stated intervals to discuss sehool
problems.

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3

MARCH (1926) BULLE 'l' IN
The
occur
28th;
sumed

EASTER RECESS
Easter Recess this year will
during the week of March
regular sessions w i1l be reApril 5的.

MONTHLY ABSTRACTS
The attention of the mid-year
Freshman is called to the fact th的
all students are requil'ed to pass in
written abstracts of cases at the end
of every month. These cases are
found in the Freshman Abstract
Book. They should be written in
ink, securely fastened together and
filed in the Freshman Abstract Box
in the main corridor. For every
monthly set of abstracts missing a七
the end of the semester two points
will be deducted from the semester
averages.
WRITE IN INK
All problems, tests and examinations should be written in ink ,
otherwise credit will not be given
for answers. Every student should
provide himself with a foun個in pen.
BAR EXAM OF JAN. 1926
No bar examination of recent
years has excited more public interest than that of January , 1926.
Thìs interest arose from widespread
charges of irregularity in the July,
1925 examination , which resulted in
its cancellation. The winners in the
July e芷amination were therefore 1'equired to 1' epeat the regula1' examination in January, 1926. The Board
of Bar Examiners gave attention fi 1'st
to this speciaJ Jíst, announcíng the
returns thereon about three weeks
after the examination d\ate.
The
second list , announced Februa1'Y
17吭. contained the names of the
regular January applicants.
In both lists Suffolk Law School
made its usual high ave 1'age. This
result should effectually siI ence the
whispe 1'ing campaign of slander and

ínnuendo that was indulged in so
íreely by enemies of the school in
the intervening four months after
the discove 1'Y of the fraud.
Suffolk was the only law 8chool
fo 1' men in which every suecessful
candid.ate of July faced the examiners in January. Our school was
c1'edited wìth 101 successful candidates in July, but one p 1' oved to be
a special who had spent only one
yea1' in Suffolk. He took the Janua 1'y examination but his name is not
included in the revised Iist of the
100 who took the exam ove1', only
one fa i! ed on the law, one had not
finished with the Character Committee and one was an a Iíen who will
be sworn in soon. The reco 1'd of the
three law schooJs of Boston is as
fo Il ows:
Suffolk Law School
Total applicants
ìn July, 1925 164
Succeeded in July ,
1925
100
Succeeded in Jan. ,
1926
98

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= 59 31-41 0/0

Boston University Law School
Total applicants
in July, 1925 196
Succeeded in J u!ly 90
Succeeded in Jan. ,
1926
80 = 40 40-49 0/0
NorthelUl tern (all br..nches)
Total applicants
in July , 1925 108
Succeeded in July 42
Succeeded in Jan. ,
1926
41 = 37 26-27 0/0
STATISTICS OF JANUARY , 1926
EXAM
The second Iist , issued Feb. 17.
Suffollc L..w School
Total applicants
in second list 115
Passed , second list 68
59 3-23 '!毛

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4

MARCH (1926) BULLETIN

Boston Univeraity Law
Total applicants
in second list
81
Passed, second list 3&lt;; = 44

12-的%

Note: This a旬'Irage 叩as erroneously 何­
po吋'ed in the Boston G!o品e in the morning edìtion as heing higher than Suffo/k's a叫rage
hut correcteá in the evening paj帥r.

Northeastern, (all 'b ranehes)
Total applicants
in second list
56
Passed , second list 24 = 41 11-14 %
NA TIONAL RECOGNITION
The success of an institution is
usually recognized by the pubIic
through honors accorded to its
founder or executive head. Suffolk
Law School is now receiving widespread recognition in this very manner. Dean Gleason L. Archer is the
present medium of recognition for
the school, as witness the fo11owing:
On December 7 , 1925 , the President of the American Bar Association appointed Dean Archer as special assistant to the Commissioners
on Uniform State Laws. This was in
accordance with a vote of 位1e Executive Committee of the Bar A鈍。 cia­
tion calling for the appointment in
each State of assistants to the Commissioners to speak hefore Legislative committees in behalf of laws
proposed by the Commission.
Dean Archer is the only appointee in
Massachusetts. On January 14th, he
appeared before the Committee on
Judiciary in behalf of uniform bills
on “ Declaratory Judgments and Decrees" and "Discharge of Joint Obligors". The other speakers were
Commissioners Ho IIis R. Bailey and
Professor Williston of Harvard Law
School.
On December 20 the Brooklyn
Eagle Sunday magazine ran a fu Il

page special story , with an artist's
sketch of Dean Archer. This story
was syndicated , thus receiving wide
publicity.
In the Ameri Cjan Magazine for
February, 1926 , appeared a feature
story concerning the Dean which has
brougl:J.t ium an avalanche of mail
from a11 parts of the United States
and Canada.
The Elliott Service Co. of New
York City has just gotten out, in its
Americanization campaign , a poster
containing a special message from
Dean Archer together with an excellent likeness of the author. This
poster wiIl be used in great indus~
trial centers where workers are
likeIy to congregate.
Dean Archer has recently accepted an invitation to write for a
new history of the United States a
thousand word monograph on “ Webster's Reply to HaYl'l e" and also a
monograph of similar length on “ The
Lincoln-Douglas Debates."
The most recent honor is an invitation to visìt Atlanta Law Scnool
in Atlanta , Ga. , to lecture at the
schoo l. Dean Archer's text books
are now being used ìn Atlanta Law
School. Dean Douglas in e芷tending
the invitatìol'l wrìtes:
You will be glad to know that we
have been most successful in the use
of your books. Our faculty are d elighted with them and we only wish
that you had them in more subjects.
The students prefer them to the Horn
books on account 咄 your wonderful
condensation. You certainly have
eliminated a lot of rubbish."
The Dean has accepted the invitation and will go to Atlanta during
latter part of March. He will deliver
several lectures to the students of
Atlanta Law School as welI as participate in faculty' conferences on
law school problems in general.

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Bar Exam Bills of 1926
Analyzed by GLEASON L. ARCHER
Dean , Suffo!k Law Scboo/

FEBRUARY, 1926
THE PRESENT LAW
Three b i1ls are now pending in the
Massachusetts Legislature to amend
the present law as to educational
qualifications of applicants for the
bar. This law provides that if an
appllcant has fulfi l1ed for two years
the requirements of a day or evening high schooI or schooI of equaI
grade he shaIl not be required to
take any examination as to his general education.
HOUSE BILL 366
The first b i1l is House B i1l No. 366
sponsored by the Boston Bar Association. 1七 ostensibly seeks to delegate
to the Supreme Court the power to
fix educational standards of applicants by striking out the provision
relating to high school education.
This same power was formerly exercised by the Supreme Court. It
resulted in such chaos that for ten
years prior to the Lomasney B i1l of
1915 there was no certainty what the
regulations would be from year to
year. The Supreme Cour七 is a very
much overworked tribunal. It canno七 be expected to give adequate attention to bar examination rules , and
must rely upon the recommendations
of others.

BAR EXAM BILLS OF 1926

2

The real object of House B ilI ~o.
366 is obviousÏy to pave the way for
the American Bar Association Vro gram of two years of c:: ollege requirement. for with such powe l::, o 1:1 r
Supr已me Court would immediately
beêome the object of concerted p~r:
;~ã~i;-;; fro Ìn" this very powerful
organizatÍ&lt;lU.見

The college requireme_n,t , so advocated would bar a11 ambitious men
who were obliged to become wage
ei~:;ers before attending college.
Statistics show that 98 % of th e
young men of Am~:ica _ are~ i~ t~~~
èlass.- Such men , if of _su但 ciently
strong character' and abi:ity ,. ma~
q~;lily through eveni~g schoo~s a !l d
home" study [or any de g;r ee_ of e~~­
;;~iio~ that may be- obtaÎned outsid~
o~(d-~y colleges: From ~he !latu~~ ~f
thi;;:gs they~ cannot abandon .the~r
dutie~ as wage-earners to a~~end ~?_I­
lege: even though they could qua~i~y
io 但 ter.
They must learn while
theyearn.
The stabìlity of Ameriean _institu:
tio~~--depends .upon_le !lvi~g the rqad
open , however diffic~l~.. it . may 旬，
í6r-rÚ en of genuine _abili~y t~ satisfy
t lÌ. eir ambitlons either in the profession of law or in public seryi~e.
Mo~-;C character is nôt assure_? _~y
mere education.Our disbaned district attorneys , both of them ~ni­
~;er~ity gradu.ates, are c~ses__in _p oi~~.
N-;r-i~ genuine aÍJHity fa~a:ly h.!nqi~~ppëd =by lack o~ _educatio l}. • P:ob;'blÝ -the- "ablest address ~ m.~d~ before
the" Committee on Judici~ry_ on
January 27 , 1926 , w_as. made ~f a
~~~--;'ho lÌ.~d never had more than
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BILL 串 OF

1926

3

a grammar school training, yet the
highest talent of the bar and of the
universities was 值lere represented.
If the proponents of House Bill
No. 366 genulnely desire to raise the
standard to a hígh school educa七ion
merely they should transfer their
suppor七 immediately to House Bill
No. 508. The fact that this latter
bill does not meet their approval is
strong evidence that their design i..
more far reaching. House BilI No.
366 is a dangerous maasure.
HOUSE BILL 508
The second bill is House Bill No.
508 , introduced by Hollis R. Bailey,
Esq. , Chairman of the Board of Bar
Examiners. No man in Massachusetts is better qualified to understand
the real needs of this community
than he , for he has given twentythree years of devoted service to the
commonwealth as chai'r man of the
Board of Bar Examiners.
Mr.
Bailey's bill provides that if a
student is not a graduate of a day
high school or school of equal grade
he may, nevertheless , qualify in the
following manner:
(b) By satisfying the requirements as to general education of any
law school in the commonwealth
entitled to confer the degree of
LL. B., which requires a high school
education or its equivalent as a pre司
requisite for the degree."
This is virtually to enact into law
the present requirement of the
evening law schools of the commonwealth. Suffolk Law School has
for eleven years required a hígh

“

4

BAR

EXA 也 BILLS

OF 1926

school education or its equivalent,
and within the last three years the
Northeastern
Law
School
has
adopted a simflar standard. This bill
would leave the way open for ambitious men , for each of the evening
law schools maintain a preparatory
department. This bill is safe and
sane and should be supported by all
who believe that the law as it
now stands is inadequate.

‘

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HOUSE BILL 582
The third bill is House B i1l No.
582 drafted by Judge Cohen , Chairman of the Character Committee of
Suffolk County. This bill provides
tha七 after the word “ character" the
words “ and fitness" should be added.
If by “ fitness" is meant merely
temperament and personality or
sanity of the applicant there can be
no objection to it. If it can be
construed to cover educational requirements it is vague and open to
objection.
I七 certain:y presents an issue that
should receive careful consideration.
A differently constituted character
committee might declare a man unfit" for very inadequate reasons.
Bias, race prejudìce and the like
might enter in. Candidates might
find after they had met the tests
of the State Board of Bar Examiners
that they were debarred from practice by a county committee of a bar
association in no way responsible to
the State 0 1.' the Legislature.

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SCHOOL

至且盟主 a1 返學2平立 jι立♀且呈i 立之 J品之

For years we haγe :p ro 七 es 七 ed agai nst 七 he taking of outside bar reviews
by undergraduates. Suffo1k Law School has a righ七七 o ho 工d every candi 闡
date for the degree 七 o four years of intensive 七 raining 正主主斗主且主斗旦
且主斗立♀ 1.
1 七 is dis1oya1 an à. dishones 七 for any 己 tudent 七 o defraud the
S 011001 ou 七 of the 工 as 七 and mos 七 vi 七 a1 year of his training by transferring his a11egience and his 七 ime 七 o an outside "bar revìewer ;'.
lie 七 hen sligh七 s hìs 80hoo 工'Ivork ， cu七 s 1ec 七 ures ， and fo110ws the schoo 工
bar revievl cou :tse in the mos 七 perfunc 七 ory manner.
立♀tic立起斗旦旦泣泣起且主斗泣泣立ζgaf主立主主斗立主其旦旦♀主且立已立斗立站且早已­
工且正泣且 undergrad且是主立正主斗 ζ立盟主主主且已通早已且主1 乏主立足主斗立立主斗盟主注2且
斗之三2平泣平，是直且 ine1i 只 ibi1
乏主主主♀ receive 主斗立起立盟主主 m Suffo1k La耳

School thereafter.
工 f a studen七 has made a good record in the schoo 工 and ìn his Senior
year devo 七 es earnes 七 effor 七七 o reviving c 工 ear ~nderstanding of his
Freshman and Sophomore work he c 缸1 pass 七 he s 七 E的 e bar ex 缸立im的 ions
wi 七 hou七七 he necessi 七 Y of paying 七 ribu 七 e 七 0 缸ly one of the 七 en bar 1' e 祖
γie\一'[8 r8 now doing business in Massachuse 七七 s.
1n Îac 七 some good s 切國
dents fai 工 in t he bar exam 泊的 ions every year because 七 he 01比泣的間，
view confuses 七 heir men七 a1 pic 七 ure of 七 he 1aw by 七 rea七 ing i 七 from a
different ang 工 e. The rllnd has no camera shu七七 er for sna:p sho 七 s. T iI田
exposures on1y produce permanen七 resu1七 s. To change t he :ræ nta1 viewpoin七 just before the bar examina七 ions is of七 en fa七 al.
The man wins
or 10ses on 七 he c1e ar unders 七 anding acquired by persona工 endeavor
七 hrough his four years.
.He never wins by a 為uperficia工 reγiew.

The bar reγiewer has bu 七七 emporary popu 工 ari 七 y. 工f 七 he 1' eγiewer se .
cures a group of we1 工乞 rained s 七 uden七 s a七七 he beginning 七 here resu1 七 S
a grand record in 七 he bar examina乞 io 口s. :Bu 七 as soon as 七 he reviewer's
repu七 a七 ion a七七 racts the i 工工七 rained and Ilgamb 工er 國 sou 工 e d!' app 工 ioan 七 s
he meets the universa1 fa七 e of faì 工ure. Thus in the recen七 examina 闡
tion , reviewers who diγided 七 he fïe1d be 七 ween 七 hem severa1 years ago
are now reduced 土 n :patronaεe and success so 七 ha七 one had seven pass
and 七 we 工ve fail; ano 七 her had 七wo pass and ten fai 工; an. d 七 he oldes 七
and most experienced reviewer of a工 1 had 七 hree :p ass and 七 v181ve fai 工.
Pa七 ronage has 七 urned 七 o 0 七 her gods 缸ld wi 工工 oon七 inue to 七 urn.
A har 輛
γes 七 of over seventeen thousand do 工 lars was apparently reaped by the
various bar reviewers before the Ju 工 y examina七 ion. 工七 is interes 七 ing
to no 七 e in :p assing 七 hat ou七 of those who took 七 he various bar reviews
one hundred and eleven passed whi 工 e one hundred and five failed. 80
far as oan be de 七 ermined from 七 110 law sohoo1 reoord of applican七 s from
Su ffo1k who joined this oredu 工 ous throng 七 he resu1七 was a工 mos 七 exac 七團
ly wha七七 heir sohoo 工 records indica七 ed it would be. 8evera1 good
s 七 udents fai 工 ed - on8 having indulged in 七 he 工uxury of two outside
bar reviews.

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工 f a man has 笠Bde a ~oor record or has even secured his degree by
mercy of the 1)8an and Facu 工 ty ， no bar revicw c 誼1 he1p him much. An
ana1ysis of the rece 口七 ex印在 inaGion 工 ist disc1ose8 七 he fac 七 that twen七 y­
one stud3n七 8 who had been warned by ])e8n Ar cher , ei 七 her 七 hi8 year or
recent 工y ，七 ha七七 bey h 2..d insufficien七七 ra土 ning 七 o becoue 工a:\t1yers disre 自
garded t he Warl咕咕。 EZ丘之立在立♀f 且提起i1抖" The ne 七 resu1七 is 怖的
the reγie\{θrs have 工 evied a 七。 II of near1y fif 七 een hundred do1 工 ars
on this C;1'oup a主 ono ， the 1三en h ::1ve rece i ved a t~b 工 ack eye 11 in t he bar
ex 印在 inatio 泣， and 七 he bar eXéll了li 118"七 ion average of Suffo1k Law Schoo1
has suff0red , a工七 hough no 七 enoue;h 七 o dep 1' ive 七 he schoo1 of i 七 s 工ead
over 1' i va1 schoo 工 S 。

Bu 七 tbere

is ~lother aspec 七 of the case tha七七 ranscends a11 0 七hers.
In order to ob 七Oo in recrui 七 s from our Senio 1' C 工 ass each year i 七 is
necessary for the 1' eγiewers 七 o co 訂 vince a por 七 i on of 七 hem tha七 the
8011001 i8 no 七 giving 七 he r1 sufficien七七 raining 七 o pas8 七 11e bar examina七 10 1l S.
How s 七 uden七 mora工 e i8 七 hus undermined cach year is s 七 riking 工y
i1工us 七 rated lJ y t h'3 七 ac 七 ics of 80me of 七 110 more unscrn:pu工 ous of 七 ho
bar reviewers. They se 工 8C 七 80me onc 8e 1'1ior 1iiTho is known 七 o be ]J opu 工 ar
and influen七 ia工 and offer him 乞 he bribe of a free bar reγiew for hims e1f , or a. Commissi on on a工 1 C 1assms..七 es induced by him 七 o j oin 七 heir
主 aview.
The success of βuch f:Lgen七 depends upon hO ìJV much he c a口 under­
mine 七 118 r:: 0 1' a1e of his c 1assma七 es 0 1' impe 已le 七 he work of 七 he schoo1
bar reγiewo Wi 七 h s. evera 工 such agen七 s working in our cor 1' idors and
01 8. 88rOO 1:JS i 七 is sma工 1 wonder tha七己 very Senio 1' class of recen七 years
has be come raore 0 1' 1e 88 demora 工 izode
The
1as 七

ex七 remes 七 o vyhich 七 hey vd 工工 go is i11us 七1' ated by ro~ inciden七 of
year that has jus 七 come 七 o 工 igh七 a
A prominen七 member of the

C 工 ass ， qui 七 e obvious1y the agent of a certain reγiewer ， was
endeavoring 七 o persuad8 one of his c 工 aSSfl1ates to join the re -v iew. Wh en

Senior

the other doc1ared his fai 七h in the so11001 七 he agent asser七 ed his
to bet him 品 500 tha七 no 訟ember of 七 he c 工 ass cou1d pass
七 110 bar review wi 七hou 七 an outside bar review.
Theβe 吐ue1 is that despi 七 e his reγiev{ 七 he 'I agen
f1un}:e 丘 t he .Ju 工y examim的 ion and the other
m缸1 passed withou七七11.e a立工 eged assis 七 ance 0 f e.n ou 七 side 1' eγiew.
工n
fεG 七 more 七 han one ha工 f of the 工 926 s 七 u a. en七 S on the s Ll ccessfu 工工 is 七
七 ook no ou 七己 ide bar review$
wil 工 ingness

七情

For severa工 years we h r:we been 七 es 七 ing ou 七 a new form of bar review
designed to ob1ige Seniors 七 o do p8 rs ona工 and effec 七 ive reγiew work
in the Freshman. and Sophomore subj ec七 s. Las 七 ye ar a11 Seni ors Yfho
desired 七 otal臼七 he .Je....nuary 1926 exarnina七 io~ were ob1iged to take and
I)ass a 工工 mon七 hly 七 es 七 s in 七 he Freshman and Sophomore subje c 七 s. Fif七 een
mûn made the 七1' i a1 and f our 七 een of them passed the bar ei 七hGr in .January or .Ju 工y 1926. The fif 七 een七h man 七 ook 七wo ou七 side ba之 reviews and
f 2i. led in 七 11e .Ju1y exar:lÍ na七 ion. The 七 i m.e 11as come for dras 七 ic acticn
ìn comba七 ting 七 he evi1βof ou 七 side bar reviews.

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Vfe a1ready he.λle a ru 工e tha七 a11 candida七 es :f or 七 he degree must take
and pass examinations in a工工 Freshman and Sophomore subjects. Under
a new ru 工 e es 七 ab 工 ished by 七 he Board of Trus 七 ees the former custom of
a 8ing1e exwmina七 ion in each subjec 七 has been abo1ished. The review
γli11 now be spread over the en七 ire year.
A11 Seniors must 七 ake and
pass the ~onth工 y tests in 七 he Fr eshman and 3ophomore subjec 七 s for both
semesters. They wi 工 1 be given appropria七 e revie ì:'l lectures prior to
each tes 七. Tests wil1 be 80 arranged as 七 o avoid conf 工 ict "'üi 七h 七 he
regu 工 ar Senior tests.
The review of ~unior subjec 七 s wil 工 be given
in lJfay and June as f ormerly. S七 uden七 s who enter a七 mid year and 8.re
úot eligible to graduate un七土工 ~anuary wi11 not be required to 七 ake
the first semester Freshman tes 七 s bu 七 vlill 七 ake 七 he second semes 七 er
te 的 s

(如 eShman)

of 七 he Se 叫閃 year.

We 100k forward 七 o a very successfu 工
a high bar examination record as 七 he
genera立

,

year for 七 he C1ass of 1927
and
resu1七 of the improved sys 七 em of

revíeVl.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
AUGUST (1926) BULLETIN
DEAN ARCHER'S NEW HONOR
Dean Gleason L. A1'che1' enjoys the
dis七 inction
of 1'eceiving the first
Docto1' of Laws degree eve1' conferred by Atlanta Law School in the
thi1'ty-two years of its history. This
hono 1' was confer1' ed at the Commencement exercises in Atlanta ,
Geo 1'gia, on June 9 , 1926.
It will be 1'emembe1' ed that Dean
Archer's law text books were adopted
for classroom use by Atlanta Law
School ove1' a yea1' ago. So gratified
were the school authorities by 位1e
results of the expe1'iment that last
Ma1'ch they pe1'suaded the autho 1' to
visit Atlanta as guest of the school
and delive 1' a series of lectures to
students and alumn i. These lectures
were also thrown open to the public.
The Dean's new LL.D. dêgree is ample evidence that his lectu1'es we 1' e
appreciated.
THE SUMMER SCHOOL
The summer p 1' eparatory school
closes on August 1 1th afte 1' ten
weeks of intensive work. Professors
Furfey and Scanlan are teachers in
the South Boston and B1'ighton high
schools respectively and b 1'ing to
七;Þ.ei1' wo1'k a wealth of experience.
They unde 1'stand the needs of our
students and hold them to exacting
standards of scholarship. It is inte1' esting to note that notwithstanding the great 1'ecent growth of
Suffolk Law School the summe1' attendance is 203 as against 225 last
year. The explanation is that each
year there are 1'elatively fewe 1' men
in the school who have not completed thei1' high school training.
The depa1'tment is maintained fo 1' the
benefit of men who have been out
of school for yea1's and who in thei1'
youth attended but did not graduate
from high schoo l. By attending the
summe1' school they a 1'e enabled to
complete their high school equivalent.
THE NEW YEAR
Advance 1'egistration indicates an
incoming class even la1'ge 1' than last
yea1" s Freshman host which was approximately eleven hundred.
The
twent-first yea1' opens on Monday ,
Septembe1' 20th. A special bulleti:n
containing the p 1'ogramme of open司
ing week as well as imp01'tant
notices will be issued about Septembe1' 1st.
The day department will begin its
third yea1'.
It will now include
Junior subjects so that all classes ,

except the senio1' class , will meet in
fou 1' divisions:
10:00 -11:30 A. M.; 4:00 - 5:30
P. M.; 6:00 -7:30 P. M. and 7:35\):05 P. M.
TUITION NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that a11
students entering Suffolk Law School
after February 1927 will pay a
highe1' tuition 1'ate than that now in
force.
A11 students now in the
school , 01' who ente1' before the end
of Februa1'Y next, will continue at
the $100 rate provided their attendance is continuous and they are
not obliged by inferior scholarship to
d1' op back into a class that is paying
the higher rate. The trustees have
not yet determined the exact amount
of the inc1'ease. It will be at least
$25 , but not more than $40.
Fo1' years we have maintained the
oId rate of $100 despite the fact
that since 1921 the cost of operation
of the Rchool has increased five fold.
Instead of merely giving lectu1'es and
one examination in each subject as is
the custom in other schools we give
weekly problems and mon七hlyexami­
nations. Every problem and every
examination question is carefu11y
p1' epared from actual cases , it is
edi七ed ， stencilled , p 1'inted and distributed to the students. The entire
building is devoted to examinations
during forty-eight evenings each year
with a large staff of outside monito1's in attendance. P 1' oblems and
examinations are corrected with
great ca1'e by a staff of experts. Each
answer is 1' eco1' ded and returned to
the student togethe 1' with a copy of
the 。但 cial answer. These featu 1'es
unknown to other schools 訂 e maintained at a very heavy expense.
Since 1920 we have built a new
building and an annex , at g 1'eat cost.
The mo1'tgage and bond payments
a 1' e fixed chiuges of considerable
magnitude. To meet a11 these obligRtions and maintain the quality of
work for which Suffolk Law School
is becoming famous we must increase
OU1' tui七ion 1'ate.
BAR EXAMINA TIONS
The ba1' examination returns fo 1'
the July 1926 examin且 tion have not
yet been issued by the State Boa1'd
of Examine1's.
It is inte1'esting to note that eve1'y
Suffolk man who passed in the July
1925 examination (which was late1'
cancelled fo 1' a Il eged fraud) submitted himself fo 1' re-e主amination in

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AUGUST (1926) BULLETIN

•

January 1926 , and every man was
successful, giving us a clear score of
100%.
In the second list, which was the
regular January 1926 _examinatio位，
the three local schools for men made
the following record.
SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
Total applicants
115
Successful
68 59n3%
BOSTON UNIVERSITY LAW
SCHOOL
TotaI applicants. 81
Successful
36 441127%
NORTHEASTERN (All Branches)
Total applicants
56
Successful
. " 24 41 1;1 4 %

=

=

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FRESHMAN SCHOLARSHIPS AND
PRIZES
The Walsh ScholarshÍp awarded to
the man who has maíntained the
híghest general average in Fr eshman
subjects during 1925-6 was won by
Ives Atherton of Nashua , N. H. , with
a general average of 87%2%.
The Archer Scholarsh旬， awarded
for second honors, goes to Irving
Merkelson of Roxbury with an aver司
age of 87%.
Other high men are:
Maxwell H. Robínson , 86 1:JÆ2%.
George H. Toole, 85%%.
J ames J. Hanlon，的1，4，%.
Henry H. Deítchman , 85%%.
Thomas W. Hoag, 85%%.
Frank L. Mullett, 85%%.
Paul E. Rowe , 85%%.
Charles Y. Berry , 85 %, %.
George W. Toom呵， 85 %, %.
Bradley Príze. The Bradley prize
of $10.00 is awarded annually to the
student maintaining the highest g凹，
eral average in contracts. In 1925 四6
Frank T. Farrell of Winthrop and
Maxwell H. Robinson of Lowell each
received 88 % in contracts. Their
nearest competitor was Charles Y.
Berry with an average of 87%, %.
The prize will not be divided f_or the
Dean has arranged that both Mr.
Farrell and Mr. Robinson receive the
full amount of the prize.
SOPHOMORE SCHOLARSHIPS
AND PRIZES
Steinberg Scholarship. The Stei泣，
berg scholarship estabIished last year
by Louis H. Steinberg of the Class
of 1925 is awarded for the first time
thís year. It goes to the studen七 who
has maintained the highest general
average during the Freshman and
Sophomore years. Thomas J. Ryan,
Jr. , of Beverly is the fortunate man
with an average of 88%. His nearest competitor ís Henry T. Dolan

叫

with an average of 87%%; Louis E.
Baker comes third wíth an average of
87 %; Thomas J. Greehan is fourth
with an average of 86 19/24 %.
Boynton Scholarship. The Boynton scholarship , awarded annually to
the man who wins first honors for the
Sophomore year, is won by Henry T.
Dolan of Salem with an average of

90~%.

Archer Scholarship. Archer schoIarship for 1926 , awarded to the man
who finishes second in his class ,
goes to Thomas J. Greehan of Cambridge with an average of 89%2%.
The other high men are as follows:
Thomas J. Ryan, Jr. , ofBeverly 8913% ;
Patríck A. lY1 enton of Somerville
88%%; Bernard F. Gately of Medford 88 % %; John H. Gilbert of
West Roxbury 88*%; William H.
Beigin of
Cambridge 87 1:JÆ 2 % ;
William C. O'Meara of Quincy
87%%; Lawrence D. Ferguson of
Quincy 87%%; Douglas W. Barlow
of Newtonville 87 %, %.
Bradley PrÍze. The Bradley prize
of $10 awarded to the student maintaining the highest average in Real
Property was won by Henry T. Dolan
of Salem with an average of 90 月4%.
His nearest competitor was Maurice
H. Birnback of Dorchester with an
average of 89 %, %.
JUNIOR SCHOLARSHIPS AND
PRIZES
Special Junior Prize. The special
Junior prize awarded for the last
time this year to the man who finished first in the work of the first
two and one-half years was awarded
to Harry Rose of Revere with an
average of 89%. His nearest compeûtors were Benjamin Snyder and
William A. Welch, each receiving
88~5%.

The Frost Scholarship. The Fr ost
scholarship for first honors in the
Junior year was awarded to W ilIiam
A. Welch of Peabody with an average of 89%.
The Archer Scholarship for 1926
for second honors in the Junior
year was awarded to Harry Rose with
an average of 88 o/I6%. Other high
men were Kenneth B. Williams
88%%; Arthur W. Hanson 87 % %;
Sydney Cross 87 3/14%; William A.
Travers 87功%.
Bradley PrÍze. The Bradley prize
of $10 awarded to the student maintaining the highest general average
in Constitutional Law was won by
Wyman P. Fiske of Somervil峙， with
an average of 92%. His nearest
competitor was Kenneth B. W i1liams
with an average of 91&lt;;&gt;忘，

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1926) BULLETIN
BAR EXAMINATION RETURNS

GENERAL lNSTRUCTlONS

In the 話如sachusetts bar examination of July 1926 , Suffolk Law
School again led its rivals both in
number of successful candidates and
in percentage of success, being second only to Harvard Law School in
percentage. Our average was not as
great in thi.s examination as usual
owin;g to the fact that twenty-one
m閱 (fourteen of whom were in the
school last year) who had been advised by Dean Archer not to take the
bar examination wi.thout additional
t 1'aining dis1'ega1'ded the advice and
“ took a chance". Every one of the
twenty-one fa i! ed, thus mater吐ally
lowe1'ing ou1' ave1'age in 七.he July examination , although not enough to
deprive the school of its lead over
rival schools.

The main entrance to the school
building is on Derne Street, directly
opposite the 1'ear wi.ng of the State
House. The rìght wìng of the first
floor, as one enters the building ,
contains the Dean's offi凹， the S咚"
retary's office and the Treasur er""s
window.
The left wi.ng of offices is occupied by the school book store , stenographic rooms and the office of the
Director of the Review Department.
The men's lounging room and lavatory a 1'e in the basement.
The school
entire Derne
second flopr.
four lecture
dor leading to

All classes ~品iW枝re-J晶必!'--4ay
meet ìn the annex: Fìrst
floor, Junior Hall; second fioo 1',
Sophomore Hall; third floor , Senior
Hall , and fourth fioor , Freshman
Hall.

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An analysis of the official r帥，
ords of the State Board of Ba1' Examiners covering the July 1926 examination discloses the follo wi. ng:
Harvard Law School
Total applicants
73
Successful
. . .. 41
186
92

= 49甸的中也

Northeastern
Total applicants
168
Successful
. . .. 82

= 48的位%

B. U. Law School
Total applicants . 200
Successful
. . . . .. 90

To attend classes, students enter
the buildin'g from Derne Street and
pass up the stairs to the second fioor;
thence down the long corridor to the
annex and turn to the left. The
6 :00 P. M. divisions are required to
leave the lecture halls by the Temple
Street exits, since the main co訂泌的
at 7 :30 P. M. is filled with students
of the 7 :35 divisions seeking admi ssion to thè various lecture halls.

== 56 1773 0/0

Suffolk Law School
Total app1icants
Successful

= 45 0/0

The above 金gures include graduates and non-graduates who claim the
major part of their training in the
school to which they are credited.
The record of the class of 1926 of
Suffolk Law School (applicants 121 ,
f叫 65) is 53叫21% ， whereas
that of its ne前帥 rival in the ab們
list (applicants 95 , successful 46) is
48%\1%.

library occupies the
Street front on the
On this floor also are
halls and the corrithe annex.

Admission to classes is by attendance tickets issued to the student upon the payment of his tuition ,
each student receiving a strip of
tickets coveI吐ng every lecture of the
quarter for which he pays.
Since attendance Ìß compulsory
and the record is checked from
these coupons , students should see
to it that their names are legibly
written or p1'inted on each ticket.
Lectures in a11 classes begin on
September 20th.
Students should
||plan to secure the neeeSEary books
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possfble~ j;hus a~õiding co~ge~Úõ;;' õ;

opening evening.

21ST YEAR OPENS ON SEPTEMBER 20TH

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SEPTEMBER (1926) BULLETIN

TUITION
Should be paid on or before September 20th ，的 the treasurer's window at the right of main entrance
or , if congested , at the s巴 cretary勻
。 ffice.
Only the regular quarterly
payments will be accepted.
The Treasurer's window will be
open for the receipt of tuition for
the first qua 1'ter, day and ev巴 ning，
on the following dates: Sept. 13 , 14 ,
16 ， 1 寸， 20 ，!21 and 24. Stud 巴nts (other
than Fr eshman who register after
that date) who tender payment after September 24th must present in
\vriting a reason for the delay that
satisfies the school autho 1'ities of the
good faith of the petitioner.
Fr eshman students , having already
paid their registration fee , will pay
$25 for the first qua1'ter's tuition.
Sophomore , Junior and Senior students are required to pay the annual
incidental fee of $5 with the first
quarter's tuition , making $30 for the
first payment.
COST OF BOOKS
All books necessary for the course
are for sale at the bookstore window
at the left of the ent1' ance. The cost
for tl冶 金rst semester is as follows:
Freshman books
$10.75 .
Sophomore books
1 1. 00.
Junior books
9.00
Senior books
1 1. 25
A list of books for each class will
be found on the school bulletin board
in the main corridor. also at the
bookstore window.
IMPORTANT
Both Treasury and Book Store will
be open day and evening, Sepìember
13 , 14 and 17 , for the accommoda.
t1 0n of students who wish to avoid
standing in line for long periods
on opening nig h_t.
REGISTRA TIONS
New students register at the office of tbe Dean by fi l!i ng out a
formal application blank and- depositing therewith the registration fee of
$5. All applications must have the
approval of the Dean before applicants can attend classes.
Sophomol'e , Junior and Senior
students are not required to l' e-register _e xcept by fi !li ng out attendan~e
~::lrds in class during opening night.
This formality is very essential , -fOT
the attendance cards furnish an
且 IphabeticaI index of our entire student body, with current addresses of
al 1.

MONTHL Y TESTS
Day students are required to take
the same monthly tests and semester
examinations as the evening students
and at the same hours, viz: 6 :45 to
9 :30 P. M. Students lacking evening
train service are allowed ,to begin
examinations at 6:00 o'clock. No
exceptions can be made.
Every
student must plan in advance for the
evenings allotted to his class.
No student will be permitted to
Ieave the examination ha Il b 巴 fore
7 :45 P. M. and no late student may
enter after the first man has left.
The dates of the monthly tests are
as follows:
FRESHMAN CLASS
\
Wednesday, October 27. 弋，、.
Wednesday, December 1. .".九
Wednesday, December 29. .戶 F
First semester exams, Jan. 11 , 14, 17.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Thu1'sday, Octobe1' 2 1.
Thu1' sday, November 18.
Thursday, December 16.
First semeste1' exams , Jan. 6 , 13 , 20.
JUNIOR CLASS
、.
Thu1' sday, October 28.
Thu1' sday, December 2.
Thursday , Decembe1' 30.
Fi1' st semeste1' exams, Jan. 10 , 17 , 2 1.
SENIOR CLASS
Wednesday, Octobe1' 20.
Wednesday , November 17.
Wednesday, Decembe1' 15.
First semeste1' exams , Jan. 5 , 12 , 19.
PROBLEM WORK
Problems fo 1' home wo 1'k begins
after the fourth week of school ,
about October 20th. Mimeog1' aphed
questions are given out each week
and students a 1'e 1' equi1' ed to pass. in
thei1' written opinions one week f 1' om
the date given out.
FRESHMAN SCHOLARSHIP
Th1' ough an unfortunate e1'1' o1' the
name of James M. Cla1'y of the class
of 1929 was not included in the list
of high hono 1' men published in the
August Bulletin. Mr. Cla1'y's ave 1'age rank fo 1' the year was 87 1; 5. 2% ,
thus entitlin.g him to fi 1'st honors in
the Fr eshman cIass. The awards 丸S
announced will stand. M1'. CIa1'y will
be given a special schola1' ship equal
in value to the Boynton schola1'ship.

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�SEPTE M: BER (1926) BULLETIN

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STUDENTS WITH CONDITIONS
Eve1'Y yea1' the 1'e is a conside1'able
list of students whose scho1astic 1'eco 1'd is such that they a 1'e o1'de 1' ed by
the Dean to 1' epeat the p1' evious
yea1" s wo 1'k , without the pl'ivilege
of taking advance work. Last yeal'
sevel'a1 students were expelled fo l'
disregardìng the notice and 1'egistering with their former class. Men
who cannot be trusted to obey the
rules of the school have no right to
a continuation of its privìleges.
A11 conditions must be removed
a yea 1' from the date of inc UlTíng them. Any student , therefore , who incurred a condition last
year and is permitted to go on with
hís c1ass must remove such condítion
during the coming school yea1'.
wi七hin

SENIOR REVIEW
The Seniol' ba1' 1'eview will take a
new fo 1'm this year. Instead of an
intensive review of Freshman and
Sophomore subjects during the second semester , with a sing1e examination in each subject, the review
will be spread over the entire year.
Seniors vvill take the regular Freshman and Sophomore month1y tests
of bo位1 semesters and 1' eceìve the
1'egula 1' 1'evìew of Junior subjects
during May and June. This will better enable the school to check up
their legal knowledge. It wìll distribute the burden ove1' the year and
ensure pe1' sonal review work on the
part of the student. Special faculty
coachíng will be given to the senìor
class before each monthly test.
For seve1'al years we have been
expe1'imenting wíth this form of 1' eview. Fifteen Senio1' s t 1'ied it 1ast
yea 1' and fou 1'teen of them passed the
ba1' examinations at the 卸的 tría1.
The fifteenth man took two outsìde
ba 1' 1' eviews and tlunked the ba 1' examination.

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In this connection it is inte1' estín早
to note a new rule of the school, to
the effect that if any student takes
an outside bar review before gradua司
tíon he will forfeit his degree. This
1' ule is to p 1' otect the school and its
students agaíns七 the harmful results
of cuttìng classes and neglecting
school work to attend an outside bm、
1'eview.
The mental confusion resulting from such a 1' eview is often
highly disastrous. Students cannot
regaín mastery over prevìous wo 1'k
by hearing reviewe 1'S hastily discuss
legal principles f 1' om a totally new
angle. Personal and intensíve 1' eview of topícs once well known is an
absolute necessíty. The substítution
of the monthly tests for the single
examination will enfo 1'ce pe1'sonal
revrew.
PROFESSOR EV ANS HONORED
Professor Wilmot R. Evans , last
sp1'ing elected President of the Boston Five Cents Savings Bank , is rece'i ving congratuJations upon the
opening of the spJendid new h0111e
of the bank on School street 011
August 切， 1926. We are happy to
announce that Professor Evans w ilJ
contínue to teach his course in Deed 丐，
Mortgages and Easements at Suffolk
Law Scho01 , even though hís new
duties have made necessary the gí、~
ing up of his lucrative law practice.

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SEPTEMBER (1926) BULLETIN
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER

鉤，

1926

FRESHMAN CLASS
Monday, September 20一-TORTS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Prof. Baker, Freshman HaU , 4th Floor, Annex
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Pr of. Henchey, “ “ “ “ “
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Baker, “ “ “ “
‘,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Henchey, “ “ “ “
Tuesday, September 21一一CONTRACTS.
(Hours and lecture hall as above stated.)
Professors Hurley and Spillane alternating.

/

Fr iday, September 24-CRIMINAL LAW.

(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Douglas and Fielding alternating.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Monday , September 20-EQUITY.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Pr of. Leonard , Sophomore Ha lJ, 2nd Floor ,Annex
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Prof. Halloran, “ “ “ “ “
6:0 札 7 :30 P. M.
Pr of. Leonard, “ “ “ “ “
7 :35- 9 :08 P. M. Pr of. HaIIoran, “ “ “ “ “
Tuesday, September 21一-BILLS AND NOTES.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Duffy alternating.
Friday, September 24-REAL PROPERTY.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Downes and Getchell alternating.
JUNIOR CLASS
Monday, September 20一-EVIDENCE.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Professor Douglas , HaU 4 , Main Building.
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Professor Garland , Hall 4 , Main Building.
6:00- 7:30 P. M. Pr of. Douglas, Junior Hall , 1st Floor , Annex
7:35- 9:05 P. M. Prof. Garland , Junior Hall, 1st Floor , Annex
Tuesday, September 21一-WILLS AND PROBATE.
(Hours and lecture ha Jl s as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Halloran and O'Connell alternating.
Friday, September 24一-BANKRUPTCY.
(Hours and Iecture ha Jls as above stated.)
Professors Thompson and Avery alternating.
SENIOR CLASS
Monday, September 20-CARRIERS.
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Pr of. Downes in Senior Hall , 3rd Floor , Annex
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Dillon in Senior Hall , 3rd FIoor , Annex
Tuesday, September 缸-MASS. PRACTICE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Wyman and Garland alternating.
Friday, September 24一-PRIVATE CORPORATIONS.

(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Bloomberg alternating.

、

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
NOVEMBER (1926) BULLETIN
TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY
The twentieth anniversary of the
founding of Suffolk Law School occurred on September 19 , 1926. Obviously it was impossible to celebrate 七he event at that busy time
without great inconvenience to the
multitude then seeking to register
for the year. Since th~n our scho_ol
program- has been so full that a public celebration would have been
di血cult.

It has therefore been decided that

位le

most lasting and dignified manner of celebrating this important
birthday of the schooIis to bring _the
history _of the institution up to date
by publishing a second volume covering the pel哇。 d from September 1919
onward.
Under the title
Building a
School". the story of its first thirteen yeàrs has already been 'Yr~~~en.
But its greatest and _most_ thrilling
years have occurred since them.
How many of our studellts are
aware that tlt奄 campaign that resulted in this splendid three qua:r_:ter
million dollar building was undertaken with less than ten thousand
dollars of available funds and built
entirely on bo叮 owed money in the
face of the greatest build~g _cris_i~
in the history of N ev.:_ England?
Freight embargoes , st!~k~s， ~e.ar­
riots- and law suits provided exciting
and anxious days and weeks-all ~f
which are set fórth in Dean Archer's
new book “ The Impossible Task".
So great a critic _as Dallas ~ore
Sharp ,- for twenty-fi"e year_!!_ .Pr ofessor' of English in Boston University and one -of t~e mos~ emine~t of
American authors has written a Foreword for the book in which he describes it as of epic character".
In lieu of the expense of a public
celebration this book will be presented with the compliments of the
school to all students who are in
attendance during this Jubile e_ 1cear
and who apply -in "'!_iti~g b~fo.re
Nõ~ember 3Ô~ ì926. Blanks wi1l be
provided for this_p.urpose at th~ sec;
;~ta:~y'~-- o-ffice. ,,!heñ c?:un~~rsigned
by the secretary tþe ~pp!ication. may
b~ exchanged át the boo~s.tore_fo~ .~
copy of
The Impossible Task".
Additional copies maÿ þe _s~cured .at
the regular price 01 $1. 25 , at the
school bookstore.

“

“

“

TUITION NOTICE
r_r:he firs~ qu_arter of the school year
ends on Fri day evening, N ovember
12 , 1926. Every student must therefore provide himself with attendance
coupons for the second quarter before attending lectures on Monday,
November 15th. Monitors will be iñ~
structed to exclude all students who
have neglected to pay their tuition.
The excuse of “a line a mile long"
will not be received. If a student
spends an hour or two standing in
line and misses his lecture November
15th he is himself to blame. Twentythree hundred students cannot pay
tuition in one day or one evening but
the treasury window will be open
every day and also Monday, Tuesday and Friday evenings during the
week prior to November 15th.

•

NAMELESS PAPERS
Every student should sign his
name to each problem , test and examination paper. Every year we receive hundreds of nameless papers.
Students' records suffer accordingly.
A man who is so careless that he cannot train himself to sign' his own
name is very poor material for the
legal profession. Nameless papers
will promptly go into the fire this
year. Our office staff is too busy
to devotG endless time to the bringing out of papers in the “ orphan
asylum" for possible adoption by
students who have failed to receive
credit for a certain problem. A
nameless paper with a high mark
upon it is sometimes claimed by several.
The fumace will hereafter
settle all disputes.
--'

We earnestly request all students
to co-operate with the attendance
recorders by signing their attendance tick \l ts with ink instead of pencil. Hundreds of attendance tickets
that have been passed in this year
cannot be read because of the
careless signing of names in 哩mcil.
St udents wlfh condltIons who ãesire to attend a lecture for review
purposes before taking the monthly
tests are asked to write “ special review" on the aUendance ticket for
that lecture instead of signing their
names so as not to confuse the attendance recorders.

Have you turned in your October Ab.tracts?

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MID YEAR ENTERING CLASS BEGINS ON
JANUARY -24,' 1.9-2-乎了 /方
The mid-year entering class will
begin work at the opening 01 the.
second semester , on January 斜拉
This mid-year class is becoming 01
increasing importance. Each year
there are many prospective students
who , for political or business reasons , are unable to begin work with
the regular class in September. This
enables them to begin their law
training eight months earlier than if
they waited until the next regular
class.
We long ago found it necessary to
divide the Freshman year into two
distinct divisions , the work 01 each
being independent 01 the other, so
that men entering at mid-year
might not be handicapped by lack of
knowledge 01 the first semester's
work.
Men entering in January :J..9.2'( will
be eligible to take the January 193~-­
bar examinatión.
Statistics show
that the mid-year men , having
taken the first semester Freshman
work just prior to the bar examination make an unusually high record.
Students forget much of the great
fundamentals of the law during their
10ur year course. To get back to
those fundamentals in the regular
Freshman classes is very helpfu l.
Wjt are , in fact, beginning to requjte all Seniors'. to review the
卸的hman and Sophomore subjects
during their Senior year, taking the
ánonthly tests in place 01 the bar
teview' Îormerly given in 也e school.
、

SUBJECTS COVERED
The subjects to be covered in the
second semester are Torts II , Contracts I!, Agency and Legal Ethics.
Torts 1 covers Assault and Battery" ,“False Imprisonment" ,“Malicious Prosecution" , “Slander and
Libel",“Alienation and Seduction" ,
and Deceit" ì í:γ三

“

“

Torts II, on the other hand , deals
with InÏringement oÏ Copyrigh七s
and Patents",“Un1air Competition" ,
and a number of other personal
wrongs totally different from those
covered in the first semester work.
Contracts II covers “Ill egal Contracts 九“ Interpretation
of Contracts" , “Operation 01 Contracts" ,
“ Reformation and Recission弋 etc.
Each of these topics are different
from those covered in Contracts 1.
AlI problems, tests and examinations of the second semester are
based upon work covered by the class
a:fter January 1927.
Men entering at mid-year, however, are advised to read the first
hali of the text books in Torts and
Contracts in order that they may understand the relation of the second
semester work to the whole topic ,
but, as be10re indicated , they are not
held responsible for any principles
treated in the first semester.
The subject of Criminal Law, being completed in the first semester,
is succeeded by Agency in the second
semester.

“

TOT AL COST FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
ge i$istration
$5.00
Tuition (2 payments):
戶，
January 24th , $2-5 ;OU
- -.,..
.,
March 21st,
25.00 . .驗。rγ 之 J
Books
..."
1 1. 75 i /,
$66.75
NOTt: All persons registering after March 1 , 1927 , will come' in under the new tuition rate of $140 a
ye肘. Students now in the school and
the Mid-Year Class entering in January ~927 wiI1 be enti tI ed to the present $100 rate during their entire
four year course. Students who by
1'eason 01 inferio1' scholarship 01' absence from schooI are obliged to d1'op
back into any class paying the higher
rate wilI automaticaIly come unde1'
that rate.

已

�.,

NEEDED FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
A 1'che1' on To 1'ts
. .., .. $2.75
Arche1' on Cont1'acts . .. .. 3.50
Arche1' on Agency .. ..._
2.7~
Introduction to Study of Law
.75
Notes on Legal Ethics
1. 00
Abstract Book
1. 00

BOOKS

Total
$1 1. 75
(All ûf the above books may be
purchased at the .sc~oo.~ ~ooksto1'e on
ftrst fioo 1' of main building.)
CLASSES
On&lt;Mondays-lhè 5ubject of To1'ts
is co.vered.. Tuesdays , Cont1'acts , and
Fddays , Ágency.
Lectu1'es are held at 10 A. M. ,
4 P. M. , 6 P. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Students may choose any of the
fou 1' sessions , alte1' nating f1' om one
to anothe1' when convenient. Evening students may attend a day class
wheneve1' necessa1' y.
Attendance of students is reeo i:' ded
froin the tickets taken by the monito1's at the doors of the lectu 1'e hálls.
Fo 1' a ticket to be valid it must be
countersigned (in ink) by the student usihg it. Each student , upon
payment of the current quarter's
tuition is ,g iven a st1'ip of twentÿfou 1' tickets, su鈕 cient for èách lectu1'e of the quarte1' fo 1' which he
pays.
The Fr eshman Hall Annex is
reached by going down the long
central corrido1' on the second floor
of máin building to the annex , then
turning to left and going up one
fiight.
The schedule of men ente1'ing in
January 19 2'7 is as follow貝:
'L
Fr om Janua 1'Y 192 7" to June 1921
-SecoÍt d half of Freshman year.
From Septembe 1' 1921 to June 192 8"f
一-Còniplete Sophomore year.κ-2， t)
F1' òm Sèptember 192~to June iizι
-Complete Junior year.
From Septembe1' 192 9' to June 1930
-Complëtè Se'nior year.
Fr OID. Septembèr 19.30 1;0 Januá1'y
1931
三-Fìrst half of Freshman yeå';.
(Eligible to take ba1' exaínination
in January 193 1.)
The mid-year class inay either 1'ec'ëive thei1' "sheepskins" Í_n Janua1'Y
19"31 0 1' at t4è 1'égùla1' Comínencement exe1' cises in June 193 1.
;.'一

EXAMINA Tl ON NIGHTS
Monthly examinátions fo 1' the
Fteshnìan classes a 1'ë held on
Wednesday evenings fo 1' all divisions.
Students should plan upon these
dates and not pe1'mit anything to inte 1'fere , fo 1' they will not be allowed
to take the examinations at any othe1'
time. Day students are required to
take the same monthly tests and
semeste1' examinations as the evening
students and at the same hou1's.
Examinations statt at S;:，揖 P. M. à Ii. d
continue until 9 :30 P. M. Men who
live long distances f l'om Boston and
háve difficulty about evening t 1'ain
schedules will be allowed to begin
wOl'k in a special 1'oom at 6 :00 P. M.
No student will be pe1'mitted tò leave
until 7 :45 P. M. , and no one permitted to ente1' the e芷amination
rooms afte 1' 7 :45 P. M. The 1'elation beh\1 een these two pl' ovisions
should be apparent.
FRESHMAN MONTHL Y TESTS
FOR SECOND SEMESTER
Wednesday, March ,2-Torts , Contracts , Agency (5 ques. each).
Wednesday, March 80 - TO l'ts ,
Cont1'acts, Agency (5 ques. each).
Wednesday, Ap 1'il 27-'-Ethics , Con"
t 1'acts, Agency (5 ques. each).
(Second , semeste1' final examination dates to be announced later.)

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ABSTRACTS
Students in each class are 1' equired
to prepa1' e written abst1'acts of from
twelve to sixteen cases a month. To
provide them with the necssary mate1'ial we have coinpiled semeste1'
case books for each class that can
be p1'ocured at the school booksto1' e
fo 1' thè sUm of $1. 00. RiIles for
preparÍng abst1'acts will be fou :iJ. d in
“ I :iJ.f1'odùction to the Study of Law".

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HOW TO RE Gl STER
Application blanks can be procured by mail 0 1' by calling in person
at the sec1'eta1'y's office. A personal
inte1'view with the Dean is requi1'ed
at time of filing. A $5.00 1' egist悶，
tion fee must accompany the application. It will be 1' eturned if the
applicant is not admitted.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
FEBRUARY (1927) BULLETIN
SUFFOLK NOW LARGEST
LAW SCHOOL
According to the figures compiled
by the American Law School Review
for law school enrollment throughou七
the country for the year 1926-27
Suffolk Law School is now the largest law school in the United States
as against the second largest last
year. This should be gratifying to
a11 Suffolk students and graduates.
The six largest law schools in the
United States (and there are no
large law schools outside of the
United States) are as follows:
Suffolk Law SchooI
2340 students
New Jersey Law SchooI 2310
“
Brooklyn Law School 2305
New York University
Law SchooI
1901
“
St. J ohn's CoIl ege of
Law
. 1899
“
Fordham Law School 1 是 80
“
The January 1927 class is by far
the largest mid year enro Ilment
since the plan was inaugurated some
seventeen years ago. It promises to
be double that of last year's record
enroIIment at this time. Our totaI
registration this year promises to
reach 2450 students.
The attention of the Mid Year
Entering Class is caIIed to a series of
special forty-five minute lectures on
1ntroduction to the Study of Law" ,
which wiIl be given by Asst. Professor Bloomberg in Hall 1 of Main
BuiIding, beginning on Tuesday ,
February 1st. These lectures wiIl
be given at the close of each division on that day. The dates Of
the balance of the lectures will be
announced at that time.
COURT PROCEDURE FOR
SENIORS
Profes.品。r George A. Douglas wil1
give a series of lectures on Law
Office and Court Procedure to the
Senior Class on Monday evenings
beginning on January 24th and continuing throughout the first half of
the second semester. Actu aI jury
trials will form a part of this course.
This is not an elective course. Attendance is compulsory. Under the
dynamic Ieadership _
of Pr ofessor
POUghlS every Senior should speediIy
Iearn how to try cas巴 s in court like
veterans of the profession.

“

“

For the benefit of the new students
a few important rules regarding
problems and abstracts are here repeated.
Problem work will begin on February 14th.
Tliere are three steps to take
in answering every problem: F缸，泣，
ana1yze the facts carefully before writing a word. Decide what
ru1e of law the problem comes under, and reason out mentally the
whole situation to see if you are right
and just what the answer should be.
Second. State fully, in writing,
the rule of law covering the point involved.
Third.
Analyze , carefully but
brie宜y， in writing, the facts in the
case and concisely apply the law to
the facts. Then state your conclusion in unequivocal terms.
This problem work provides a powerful incentive for review, since no
problem is given until the principle
of law that governs it has already
been covered in the re那lar work of
the class-room. Every student can
know for a certainty that somewhere in his back work exists the
legal principle for which he seeks.
Duplicate answers, nameless papers and problems found in abstract
boxes will receive no credit whatever. If you find that you have accidentally dropped your problem in
an abstract box it wi1l be necessary
to re-write the problem and file it in
the proper box.
ABSTRACTS
The preparation of written abstracts is a definite part of our system of instruction.
Every year
students fail to prepare and turn in
thelr abstracts when due , thus 108ing six points from the term average
of each subjec t. The method of prepadng abstracts is set forth in detail on pages 44 to 48 of the “ 1ntroduction to the Study of Law".
Tbe lists of cases due each month
will be found in the table of cases
in the Semester Abstract Book.
ln this bu11etin you wilI find listed
the dates when problems wiIl be dis"
tributed in all classes. If you are
not pres_ent in cI ass when a problem
is issued you can secure one in the
secretary's 。但 ce on the following
day. Problems cannot be secured at

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the office on the day they are due
to be handed Ín. These problems
are to be worked out 的 home and
直led in 值1e problem box in the main
corridor exactly one week from the
date given out, neither the day before nor the day after. For exam‘
ple: File Torts answers always on
Monday, Contracts on Tuesday, and
Agency on Friday. In case it i~
impossible for a student to attend
and file his problem on the day due ,
on account of sickness or absence ,
he wilI receive fuII credit if the
problem is mailed to the secretary's
õffice on the day due. Late problems deposited in the problem box
wilI receive no credit.
STUDlfNTS WITH CONDITIÕNS---All conditions incurred by a
student must be removed within a
year from incurring the same. The
school records reveaI that a numbe :r
of students with first semester conditions did not even attempt to re司
move them thÌs year. Men with
second semester conditions should
beware of this error. AII fees for
conditions must be paid within a
month from the beginning of the
semester in which review work is
taken.
We find it necessary to repeat the
request to students who are making
up conditions to sign their regular
class after their name to insure correct filing of returned papers.
EXCELLENT RECORD
The school authorities are deeply
gratified by the high average of
scholarship
manifest
this
year
throughout the school. The Class of
1928 should be congratulated upon
the híghest general average for the
first semester of the Junior year of
any class of recent years.
This
class has maintained a consistently
high average duríng the Freshman
and Sophomore years and is now
demonstrating its ability to carry
on" in the same manner.
Our Freshman Class is not only
the largest ever enrolled in the
school , but Dean Archer's new policy
of declining to admit special students
is bearing fruit in a higher average
of scholarship and the lowest “ casualty" list of recent years.
The Sophomore and Senior Classes
are making creditable records , but
nothing beyond the average of
previous Sophomore and Senior
classes.

“

All students of the mid year entering class may secure a copy of
f. Dean .Archer's anniversary volume
f “ The Impossible Task" by applying
to the secretary's office before March

一，

j1，的7

DANGEROUS ADVICE

i
.~

恥 Dea的心ion has been
called to the fact that some students
have been advised , presumably by

l outside bar reviewers. to discontinue
their law school course after two
i years and take a bar review with
1 home study as a means of insuring
1 success. No advice could be more
\ ~angerou~ to a law studen七
The
bar examination records are eloquent
on this poínt.
í

The following are a few examples
o:f incompleted law courses where
bar revíews and law office study were
substituted. These were taken from
the official records of the July 1926,
Massachusetts bar examination.
Ex. 1. Studied law in Suffolk
three years. No degree. Took several bar reviews. Has ílunked bar
exams. six times since 1922.
Ex. 2. Studied in a day law school
two years, balance in law office. Has
failed eight times in bar exams
sìnce Jan. 1922.
Ex. 3. Studied three and one half
years in a day Iaw schooI. Law office
study. Has failed eight times since
Jan. 1922.

a 、

Ex. 4. Studied five years in a
day law school. Took several bar
reviews. Has :failed eight times since
July 192 1.
Ex. 5. Studied four years in
evening law school (not Suffolk).
Took six different bar revìews.
Flunked bar exams :f ourteen times.
Ex. 6. Studied four years in two
different day law schools. Took several bar reviews. Has ílunked bar
twenty-one tìmes.
The moral is se1f evident. Success in law, as in all other fie1ds of
human endeavor, is purchased only
by faithful and conscientious labor.
There are no Sll ort cuts. Systematic
trainìng in a regular law school is
vastly superior to any other method
o:f law study.

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�FEBRUARY (1927) BULLETIN
AN AMUSING ALIBI
One of the most amusing alibis
tl~at we have ever heard is the excuse given by the officials of certain
law schools for their inability to
equal Suffolk's bar examination reco d. “ We train men for the profession pf law and not for the bar
e主aminations ，" they say.
As if a
studen七 who lacked technical understanding when he graduated would‘
by some mysterious ripening of
knowledge acquire it afterward!
Eve l' y lawyel' who has been in the
profession for any length oÏ time,
irrespective of the school from which
he graduated , will confess that he
knew more technical law the day he
graduated from law school than he
ever knew afterward.
Eve l' ybody who knows anything
about the training we a l' e giving oUl'
students in Suffolk Law School at the
p l' esent time knows that we are training them in the fundamentals of the
law as no other school and no other
system is able to t 1'ain men who are
working for a living. They are being t 1' ained fo 1' the p1'ofession , and
our bar examination successes are
testimony of this fact.

,

PUBLIC SPEAKING
The special cou1' se in Pub1ic
Speaking will begin Thursday, Feb1' ua1'y 10 , 1927 , and will continue
for twelve weeks , in three divisions ,
10 A. M.. 6 P. M. and 7:35 P. M.
Professor. Delbert M. Staley, President of the College of the Spoken
W ord" will conduct the course as
usual. It is open to students in all
classes. The fee of $10 is payable
on 0 1' befo1'e Februa1'Y 10th.

“

LEGISLATIVE MA TTERS

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There will be another legislative
battle this yea1'.
Let no one be deceived by the innocent appearance of the two bills
thus far listed in the bulletin of the
Massachusetts Legislature. Whether
the suggestion is contained in the
Governor治 Inaugu1'al message recommending that the Supreme Court
be empowered to make rules for admission to the bar 0 1' in House Bill
309 (Judge Cohen's bill of last year
relative to fitness of applicants for

i

3

the bar) the purpose of those who
are really behind them is the same.
They be Jieve that the profession of
law should be restricted to college
trained men and are working with
great zeal and astuteness to put over
their program.
By “ they" we mean an association
of day law schools and certain graduates of these schools who apparently believe that unless a man has
a college training he is necessarily
deficient in culture and in ethical
unde1'standing.
Strangely enough,
until the establishment of evening
law schools in 1890 the day law
schools that are now so concerned
over the problem did not require
even a high school education themselves and confer1' ed the law degree
after two years of attendance.
Dean Archer has in the press a
complete history of the movement
from its inception in 1900 when the
American Law School Association
was founded. In this booklet he sets
forth , f 1' om the 1' ecords of the
association itself, the various un司
successful 的tempts to induce the
American Bar Association to assist it
in its campaign against the evening
law schools. He proves also from
their records that the American Bar
Association was committed to the
“ two year college rule" by reason of
these day law school men attending
in a body the section of Legal Erln司
cation of the Bar Association and
“ outvoting them" , in accordance
with a scheme proposed in the December 1919 Session of the Association of American Law Schools by
the dean of a local law school.
This bulletin exposing the entire
scheme will be ready for distributicn
shortly. Every Suffolk Law School
man who believes that the door of
opportunity should be kept open to
the 97 % of young people who have
no opportunity to attend co l1 ege ,
should make known such views to his
Representative and Senator.

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FEBRUARY (1927) BULLETIN

4

SECOND SEMESTER
SCHEDULE OF PROBLEM, TEST AND EXAM
CLASSES
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DATES FOR ALL

Problems in all c1 asses wi1l be handed out on the following dates:
Problem
Problem
Problem
Problem
Problem

No.
No.
No.
No.
No.

1
2
3
4
5

Monday
February 14
March
7
March
14
March. 28
是
April

Tuesday
February 15
March
8
March. 15
March
29
April
5

Friday
February 18
11
March
18
March
April
1
April
8

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Thursday, February 17th
Thursday, March
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Thursday, Ap 1' il
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Thursday, Feb1'uary 24th
Thursday, March
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Thursday, Ap 1'il
21st

Wednesday , Ma 1' ch 2nd
Wednesday, March 30th
Wednesday, April 27th

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SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS
May 16th一-Equity and Trusts.
May 17th一-Torts.
May 18th一-Deeds ， M0 1't皂:ages and Easements
May 19th一-Landlo1'd and Tenant.
May 20th 一-Pa1'tnership.
May 23rd一-Cont1' acts.
May 24th一-Real Property.
May 25th-Agency
May 26th一-Constitutional Law.
There will be no lectU1' es during the week of April 1 1th (Spring
Recess) although the April Test for Senio1' s will be held during that
week.
Students a 1' e positively fo 1'bidden to whisper 01' communicate with
another in any way during tests or examinations. To copy from another or to use notes or cribs" will result in immediate expulsion.
Students who are so 心 careless of their reputations as to persist in acting
in a suspicious manner dU l'ing a test or examination will be dismissed
from the school even though not actually proven guilty of cheating.
To place test questions or test books on the vacant seats between
students is forbidden , since it offers temptation to cheat.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
APRIL (1927) BULLETIN
NEW RULES NECESSARY
The abuse of privileges by the few
has made necessary every restrictive
rule now in operation in Suffolk Law
Schoo l. For two years we have been
endeavoring to protect the classes
against disturbance by tardy students
and those who try to leave fifteen
minutes to one half an hour before
the close of lectures.
Some months ago the rule went
into effect that the doors would be
closed at the beginning of each lec.
ture period and opened every five
minutes to admit tardy students, but
we found that this process continued
for three quarters of an hour, exact.
ly half the lecture period.
A rule then went into effect that
the doors would be locked to all late
comers at the end of half an hour.
This was an improvement but we
soon discovered that smoking room
drones" had formed the habit of
coming in a body to attend lectures
one minute before the doors were
locked. We have lately changed the
closing time to fifteen minutes af.
ter the hour.
Another custom of attempting to
leave the class room before the close
of the lecture period became so
prevalent that it was necessary to
prohibit leaving early without special
permission from the 。但 ce procured
in advance. This worked well for a
time but recently it became neces.
sary to withdraw this privilege also
on account of its widespread abuse.
Social engagements and the most
trivial excuses were alleged as rea.
sons for leaving early. But it has
now developed since the withdrawal
of the privilege of 0 血 cial pass that
students have found a way to evade
the rule against leaving class by
pleading necessity of visiting. the
men's room and thus escaping from
the lecture ha11.
Experience and observation have
demonstrated that the great majority of these offenders are men who
are attempting to trade on the reputation of Suffolk Law School without any serious purpose of hard
work on their own part.
The
“ smoking room drone" and the borrower of ideas for problems answers
who never writes an answer except
at the school after conferring with
others, and the “ social butterfly"
have no place in this great hive o~
industry. The sooner we are rid of
them the better.

“

The fo11owing rules are hereby
promulgated to increase the efficiency
of the classroom:
1. Any student who makes a
business or social engagement that
interferes with full attendance at
one or another of the four divisions
of his class will forfeit either the
lecture or the engagement.
2. Any student who unnecessarily
lingers in the smoking room , corridors or library after the beginning of
the lecture which he elects to attend
may be reported to the Dean's office
and upon repeafed offenses may be
suspended or expelled.
3. Lecture hall doors wiIl be
locked fifteen minutes after the beginning of lecture and no student
may enter thereafter nor leave until
the close of lecture except those
students who , because of train
schedules, legislative duties or the
like , possess written permission from
the Dean to enter late or leave early.
4. Any student who leaves the
Iecture hall in violation of the fore.
going rule must take his hat and
coat, and thereby become automatically suspended. If he thereafter attends class without having
in the meantime made satisfactory
explanations at the Dean's 。但ce he
will be dismissed for the balance of
the school year. Thus the burden
is on the student himself irrespec司
tive of notice of his offense from the
Dean's office.
5. Students may secure written
lJ ermission to enter class late or to
leave early only by furnishing proof
that train schedules and other conditions render such privilege absolutely necessary.. But if in the
Deaú's judgment the privilege sought
wilI seriously interfere with the
stud~mt's progress in school he wiIl
be denied the privilege and a11 unexpended tuition wí11 be refunded.
6. Strict attention to lectures
is the duty of a11 students. Any
student who indulges in whispering
or in the preparation of problem
answers in CIass wi1l be reported by
the monitors for his offense.
PROBLEM ANSWERS
Problems are intended as home
work.
Students are allowed one
week in which to prepare answers
thereon. with the expectation that
they wí11 review their back work and

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devote considerable time to the 80 ,'
lution of the problems. Many students , however, defeat the very pur.
pose of problem work, with resulting
i.njury to themselves, by waiting until the very night the problem is dU El
and then attempting, in the library
or smoking room , to work out a hasty
answer in time to file it in th('
problem box. There are some who
的tempt to secure aid from others.
Such a practice is fatal to a student's
progress. Unless he has had the ex
perience of wo 1'king out his answer
by himself he will fail lamentably in
the monthly tests and examination~
All p 1'oblem answers should be writ
ten at home and should rep 1'esent
the best thought and English at the
student's command.
JUDGE SULLIV AN
We are happy to announce the addition to ou1' Faculty of Judge
Michael H. Sullivan of the Dorchester District Court, who will assist
Pr ofessors Evans and Smith in the
subject of Deeds, Mortgages and
Easements. P1'ofessor Evans finds
his duties as P 1'esident of the Boston Five Cents Savings Bank so exacting that he cannot teach more
than one of the four lectures in
Deeds each week. Judge Sullivan
will take the other lecture for Professor Evans while Professo1' Smith
will c Q.n duct his 1'egular two lectures eàch week. Judge Sullivan's
brilliant record while Chairman of
the Fi nance Committee of Boston as
well as his reputation as a jurist
render him a worthy addition to the
Faculty.
PROF函fS OR DOUGLAS'S T ASK
We are all much gratified at the
able defense being presented by
Professor Geo 1'ge A. Douglas in the
great murder trial now in progress
in East Cambridge.
Professor
Douglas was appointed by the court
to defend Peter McLaughlin , alleged
to have been one of the carbarn bandi郎， three of whom have already been
executed fo 1' the offense. If anyone
can save McLaughlin from the electric chair our strenuous professor in
Criminal Law will doubtless accomplish it.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
All students will be interested to
know that the alumni of the school
are being organized unde 1' the direction of Dean Arche 1'. Attempts
have been made in past years to
work out plans by which the various
alumni units could be consolidated
Prior attempts have been unsuccessful owing to the fact that men in
different classes were utter strang司
ers to one another, and in the election of 。但 cers one class usually
dominated.

In February of this year the Trustees decided to take a hand in the
matter and drafted Dean Archer for
the task of organization. He is to
act as Directo 1' until January 1,
1928 , at which time the permanent
organization will be fo 1'med. Dean
Archer's policy as outlined at an
alumni convention called by him on
March 10th has several interesting
features. They may briefiy be summarized as follows:
First: Monthly meetings with educational features.
Second: Monthly bulletin devoted
to school and alumn i.
Third: Alumni catalogue to be
issued on or about January 1, 1928.
Fourth: An alumni club house on
Beacon Hill with a resident secretary
and headquarters for 七he various
committees necessary to the proper
functioning of the association.
The new attempt is meeting "而 th
enthusiastic response. The convention on March 10th was a decided
success. Plans are well under way
fo 1' a club house. Graduates are enrolling as charter members. An Executive Committee of Founders , each
of whom is donating One Hundred
Dollars or more to the club house
project is being formed.
The regular meetings of the
association will be held on the sec司
ond Thursday evening of each
month except July and August. The
following are chai1'men of the committees already formed:
Committee on Judicial Appointments, Wilmot R. Evans of the Board
of Trustees , Chairman.
Committee on Club House , Louis
H. Steinberg '25 , Chairman.
Committee on Election to Public
。但 ce ， Thomas J. Boynton , Board of
Trustees, Chairman.
Committee on Publications, Gleason L. Archer, Chairman.
Committee on By-Laws, Hiram J.
Archer of the Faculty, Chairman.
Membership Committee , George A.
Douglas '09 of the Faculty, Chair虹lan.
~

John J. Heffernan , Suffolk '18 ,
President of the City Council of
Boston , will be one of the speake1's
at the meeting of April 14th, to be
held in the school auditorium.
2420 STUDENTS
The new catalogue will be issued
in April.
The official roster of
students discloses the fact that we
have 2420 students this year. This
places Suffolk L晶w School considerably in the lead of all other law
schools in point of numbers. There
a 1'e nearly- 1200 students in the
Freshman Class alone.

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Dean of Suffolk Law sa聶証二一一一一← r
Two bills that were defeated last
year have reappeared in the legislative hopper for 1927. The fìrs七 is
the bill known in 1926 as “ House
Bill 366", then sponsored by the
Boston Bar Association. It reappears this year in the Governor's
Inaugural Message, and is now listed
as a part of 8enate Bill 1. The
second bill is the “ Fitness BiIl" so
called , now House Bill 309.
SENATE BILL NO. 1
Address. 80 much as
relates to giving the Supreme Court
power to make rules for admission
to practice as attorneys at law."
The Supreme Court possessed this
very power from 1897 to 1915. Why
was it taken away? Because the
Supreme Court had so exercised that
power as to bring virtual chaos to
legal education in Massachusetts. So
many new rules , impractical and unworkable , were promulgated , later to
be altered and amended , that there
was no forecasting from year to year
what the regulations would be during the following year.
This is no reflection upon the in.
telligence or the high sense of duty
of the members of that great
tribuna l.
The Massachusetts Supreme Court is a very much overworked department of the Commonwea!th. Its Justices have no time
for independent investigation自. Suggestions and recommendations of
Bar Associations , especially where
there is no opportunity for the other
side to be heard , are likely to be
accepted and approved as a matter
of course.
During the latter years of the
Supreme- Court's control of le_gal
education , law schools and law
students were treated to a series of
surprises. The first that any of us
knew of impending changes was
when new rules were announced by
the Board of Bar Examiners as the
law of the land,“signed , sealed and
delivered". That is why the legislature took over the 50b in 1915.
The “ Lomasnev Bil1" so called ,
fìxed in our statute丹 (Gen. Laws ,

“Governor's

、

Chap. 221 , Sec. 36) the provision
that if an applicant possessed two
years of day or evening high school"
such applicant, if the requirements
as to law study had been complied
with , was eligible to take the state
bar examinations.
This is a very low requirement,
but since every law school in thé
Commonwealth now requires of its
students a high school education or
its equivalent , the minimum requirement has become a dead letter. But
the Lomasney statute brought peace
to legal education in Massachu-setts.
The greatest advances in general
education and sound sCholarshlp ever
known in this Commonwealth have
been made during the period since
1915.
The effort to induce the Legislature to renounce its oversürht of
legal education and cast the burden
again upon our overworked Supreme
Court should deceive no one. 1t is
a part of a nation wide campaign to
reestablish the college monopoly of
legal education that was overthrown
in 1836.
This campaign is being conducted
in the name of the American Bar
Association but , as is proven in my
recent pamphlet “ 1s a College
Monopoly of the Legal Profession
Desìrable?" the parties really in
interest are certain day law schools
who captured the section of Legal
Education of the American Bar
Association by strategem for this
very purpose in August 1920.
They know that as long as the
Legislature controls the situation
there is no hope of victory for their
scheme.
日， however , the Supreme
Court is empowered again to make
fTUles they hope toprevail.That
court would immediately become the
ob5ect of concerted persuasion of
national dimensíon胃It might. and
þrobably would , yield to their importunitìes. Even though the Governor has been induced to mnke this
recommendation , the bill is none the
less dangerous. It should be de.
feated.

“

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1927
Thursday, June Second, Nineteen Hundred and

Twenty;圍Seven

�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
AUGUST (1927) BULLETIN
THE NEW YEAR
School reopens Monday, Septe~­
ber 19. 1927.- While it is too early
to forécast the exact enrollment of
the school this year the indications
are that it wilf exceed last year's
mammoth attendance. This increase
will probably occur i~ t~e llPper
classês rather than in the Freshman
Class, which was filled to capacity.
last year.
The Dean's annual. survey indicates the following increases in the
three upper classes over the sam~
'classes ôf last year. This is _based
upon the “ survivals" from J unior
Sôphomore and Freshman clas~es.
Señior Class-sixty per cent larger.
Junior Class-thirty-seven per cent
larger.
Sophomore Class 一- forty-three per
cent larger.
Last year's Freshman Cla~s 'Yas
abnormaíly large owing to the im.
pending chang.e- in tuition .rate. Th,e
registration of ne ", men 1S proceeQ~
ing along normal_li l! es this y~.~r. and
it 1s not- expected that we wil!_ have
to resort to-limitation of enrollment
in any of the four Fr esh!lla_n d~"yi~i?ns
unless in the six o'clock division
which is always the most_popular.
The day department 'Yill this y~ar
for the - first time have senior
classes meeting at 10 :00 A. M. and
4 :00 P. M. The department was
inaugurated in September , 19?4 , for
Fr eshman only. The class of 1~28
has therefore been the pioneer class
in the day departmen七 which has now
grown tô a very respect~ble siz~.
Last year we had upwarQs of six
hundred students of Freshman ,
Sophomore and Junior day divisions.
TUITION NOTICE
The old rate of tuition applies to
all members of the classes of 1928 ,
1929 and 1930. The new rate of
$140. a year applies to all :m embers
óf the Cl ass of 1931 and future
classes.
For years we have maintained the
old tuition rate of $100. despite the
fact that since 1921 we have completed our main building and e t: ected
an annex, incurring a very heavy
building debt as well as greatly increasing the cost of maintenance of
the school. Not only that but we
have year by year increased the
quality of service rendered to our
students.
Suffolk Law School is giving to its
students advantages of training that
no other part-time law school in the
United States can offer. The ex國
penses of maintenance of the school
Ïl ave increased five fold since 1920.

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If we are to maintain the quality of
work for which the school has become famous we are obliged to increase our tuition to the modes七 fee
above indicated.
A NEW COURSE
For years we have offered an
èlective course in “ Public Speaking."
Those who have taken the course
have profited so greatly that the
school has decided hereafter to include it in its regular curriculum in
order that all students may have the
advantage of it. It is highly important that lawyers or business men
be able to express themselves not
only in writing but orally as wel l.
The course will be offered for the
first time to this year's Freshman
Class. It will be given by Dr. Delbert M. Staley, Pr esident of the College of the Spoken W ord. Sessions
will be on Thursdays for ten weeks
in each semester, the dates to be announced in a later bulletin. There
will be no charge to members cif the
class of 193 1.
Students who have had experience
in public speaking or who have
studied it in other schools and wish
to be e芷cused from the course may
apply for examination by a faculty
committee after the opening of
schoo l. If found to be quali益 ed they
will be excused from attendance.

/

REGISTRATION
Members of the classes of 1928 ,
1929 and 1930 will register in class
September 19th by filling ou七七he
large index cards that furnish us
with the 。但cial addresses of the
students for the year.
In other
words, no formal re-registration is
necessary.
A lI new students , however , are re c
quired to 金11 out a formal applica"
tion for admission containing full information concerning the applicant.
If this application receives the approval of the Dean the student is
admitted and the application goes into our records as a permanent source
of information concerning the student. These applications are bound
in book form each year. In recent
years the mammoth size of the
Freshman Class has made necessary
two volumes of applications each
year.
Registration blanks may be obtained on request. Since a personal
interview with the Dean is ordinarily
necessary before admission , it is well
for an applicant to fill out the application at the school and present
it in person. Dean Archer is a七 his
office day and evening on Mondays
and Fridays during the summer , but

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�AUGUST (1927) BULLETIN
after August 15th will be at his desk
every day and evening except Thu悶，
days- anâ SaturdayS: During ~he
week of August 29th to September
3rd. the Dean will be absen七 from
Boston , attending the Amerícan Bar
Associatíon Conventíon , whích meets
this yea1' in Buffalo , N. Y.
ALUMNI CL,u B HOUSE
On June 1 , 1927 , Suffolk Law
School took title to the splendid old
Colonial house at 73 Hancock street,
on the h i1l beside the State House.
The reason fo 1' the purchase was to
provÍde the Suffolk Law A1um l! i
Ässociation with a suitable headquarters. Alterations are now_ being made and the building wi1l be
turned over to the Association , rent
free , early in September, 1927.
The building will contain a
lounging 1' oom and lavatory on the
first floo 1'; a lib1'a 1'Y on the second
floor; committee rooms on the third
floor. It will a150 p 1'ovide !ivÍng
quarters for an alumni secretary.
The building will be dedicated early
in October.
The club house is one of the results of the efforts of Dean Gleason
L. Archer, who was drafted by the
Trustees last March to organize the
alumni of _the school. A monthly
m~gazine__ has already been esta!).
lished. Various alumnÍ committees
h_ave been formed and the organization is on its feet in real earnest.
Alden M. Cleveland '24 is Alumni
Secretary.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZE
AWARDS
FRESHMAN CLASS
Walsh Scholarship
Awarded to the man who has
maintained the highest general average in Freshman subjects during the
year 1926汀， was won by Karl W.
Baker of Belmont, with _ a general
average of 89 "4 %.
The Archer Scholarship
Awarded for second honors, goes
to Thomas E. Walker of Boston.
wh_o se average for the year was

Bradley Prize
Awarded to the man finishíng with
the highest average for the year in
Real Pr operty, is awarded to Clifford
Z. Christopher of Belmont, whose
average for the year was 88 o/J.6 %.
The competition was very close.
James M~ Clary of Beverly and
George H. Toole of Milton each
made an average of 88 * %.

Other high men were.
Roger A. Stinchfield of Clinton ,
Me.
88 "4 %
Charles A. CusÍck of Boston 的 lh%
Co1'nelius F. Dineen of Brockton
86%2%
Chal'les W. GafI ney of Somel'ville
86 "4 %
Jòseph J電 Sonigan， J l'. of
Salem
86 月4%
Joseph L. Donovan of Hyde
Park
85%%
William F. Walls of Chelsea 85 %, %
William D; Houlihan of Quincy 850/1 2%
Bradley Prize
Awarded annually to the student
maintaining the highest average for
the year in Contracts". was won
by Charles A. Cusick of Boston ,
with an average of 92lh %. His
nearest _competitor was Ro ger A ,
Stinchfield, with an average of
92 "4 %.

Archer Scholarship
Awarded to Adam Stefanski of
Salem. who ñnished second in the
Junior Class , with a general average
of 88 1%6 0/0.
Other- high men were as follows:
Thomas J.- Ryan , Jr. of
Beverly
_ __ _ 88%2%
Bernal'd -F. Gately of Medford
87 5%8%
Joseph Cole_of ~ynn _ _
87&lt;;也
ThoÎn as J. Greehan of Cambridge
86~%
Edward T. Dobbyn of Quincy 86 0/1%
Charles E. Le ahy of ~oston 8ß'}}鑫%
ifënry -T. D()_lan_ óf ~a]~m.
8 6__~'1?
Thomas M. Burke of Mattapan 86&lt;;也
Harry Sesnovich of Dorchester 86 &lt;;也
Bradley PrÎze
A warded to Adam Stefans!,i. _of
Saïë~ - for having maJntai~ed th~
iiigh~~t -average -in Constitutional
Law (90lh %).

89~4%.

“

寸吼仇

SOPHOMORE CLASS
Boynton Scholarship
A warded to Ma:iwell Robinson of
Lowell , who won first honors Ín the
Sophomore Class , wÍth a general
average of 89%2% for the year.
Archer Scholarship
Awarded to Everett 1. Flanders of
Boston , who finÍshed the year in
second place , wÍth an average of
88 ;t2%.
Other hÍgh honor men were as
follows:
James M. Clary of Beverly 88 %
Nelson S. Kaplan of Roxbury 87%%
John B. NunesofNewBedford 87lh%
Claude S. HartwellofWaverly 87 月4%
John M. Kennedy of Lynn
87 ;\s %
Clifford Z. Christopher of
Belmont
87*2%
Samuel Seletsky of Dorchester 87*2 %

Jι 扒

J

Steinberg Scholarship
The Steinberg Scholarship is
awarded to the man who makes the
highest general average ~or _the first
two years of the law ~choo!_ c~)Ur~e.
Maxwell Robínson of Lowell is the
prÍze winner with an average of
88 1;8 %. J ames M. Clary of Beverly
is a close competitor with an average of 87 1124 %. Mr. qary _ has
rriade so excellent a record that Dean
Archer is awarding him a spec!al
scholarship equal in value to the
Steinberg Scholarshlp.
JUNIOR CLASS
Frost Scholarsl i'P
Awarded to Patrick A. Menton of
Watertown. who finished ñrst in the
Juniol' Class, wÍth a general average
of 90串串 0/0.

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�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1927) BULLETIN
MAINE BAR EXAMINA Tl ON
Su質。 lk Law School has for years
maintained a very high average i.n
the Maine Bar Examinations. In the
examination of August of this _year
the Class of 1927 of Suffolk Law
School made a 100 per cent record.
Three members of the class , William
M. Daley, Arthur F. Osborne and
Kenneth B. Williams took the examination and a11 three of them
were successful. Kenneth Williams
won the unusually high mark of 85
per cent. Only one other among the
41 applicants made a higher average.
R. John Henderson of the class of
1926 was also on the successful list.
Only three graduates fa iI ed. One of
them had been out of schooI ten
years before trying the examination
and another three years , while the
thìrd was a member of the Class of
1926.
MASSACHUSETTS RETURNS
LATE
Owing to the illness of one of the
bar examiners the returns from the
July bar examinations will not be
ready until the second week of
September at the earliest.
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
For the benefit of the incomin l!:
Fr eshman Class the _ fo11owing instructìons are set forth.
Lectures in all c1 asses begin on
September .1 9th.
Students should
plan to purchase the necessary books
and secure their fÌ rst quarter'"
tickets during the week preeeding
the beginning of Iectures and thus
avoid the congestion on opening day.
The main entrance to the school
building is on Derne Street, directly
opposite the rear wing of the State
House. The right wing of the 益 rst
fioor , as one enters the building,
contains the Dean's office , the Secretary's office and the Treasurer's
window.
The left wing of 。但 ces is occupied by the school book store , and
office of the Director of the Review
Department.
The men's lounging
room and lavatory are in the basement.
The school library occupies the
entìre Derne Street front on the

second fioor. On this fioor also are
four lecture ha11s and the corridor
leading to the annex.
All classes meet in the annex:
Fìrst ffoor , Junior Hall; second fioor ,
Sophomore Hall; third ffoor , Senior
Hall , and fourth floor , Freshman
Hall.
To attend classes, students enter
the building from Derne Street and
pass up the stairs to the second
floor_; thence down the long corridor
to the annex and turn to- the left.
The 6 :00 P. M. divisions are require__cl to _leave the lecture ha11s by
the Temple Street exits , sìnce thè
main corridor at 7 :30 P. M. is filled
with students of the 7 :35 divísions
seeking admìssion to the various
lecture halls.
Admissìon to class is by attendance
t!ckets issued to the student upon
the payment of his tuition , ëach
student receiving a strip of 'tickets
cove~ing ~ve~ _lecture of the quar的r for which he pays.
Since attendance is compulsory
and the attendance record is checked
from these coupons , students should
see to it that their names are legibly
written in ink or printed on -each
ticket.
TUITION
Tuítíon should be paíd on or before September 19th.
To avoid
congestion the members of the
Sophomore , Junior and Senior classes
are requested to pay at the Treas.
urer's window at the right of the
maín entrance. All new students
are requ_ested to pay in the secre.
tary法。但ce.

The first quarterly payment of
the Sophomore , Junìor and Senior
classes should include the $5 ìncidental fee , thus making the payment
$30. The first Freshman quarterly I
payment under the new schedule is \
$35.

目

IMPORTANT
Both Treasury and Book Store wiI1
be open day and everung, September
15, 16 and 17, for accommodation
。f students who wish to avoid standing in line for Iong periods 。區。pen­
ing night.

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SEPTEMBER (1927) BULLETIN

PUBLIC SPEAKING
The lectures in the course in Pub.
lic Speaking must of necessity be
scheduled on other than F門reshman
test weeks. since all members of the
Class of 1931 are required to attend.
The fir的 semester -schedule is as
follows:
October 5 , 19 , November 2, 9 , 16,
23 , December 7 ,-14. Le ctures will be
held in the school auditorium at
10 :00 A. M. , 4 :00 P. M. and 7 :35
P. M. Dr. Delbert M. Staley, President of the College of the Spoken
W ord, will be in charge.

、、
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COST OF BOOKS
All books necessary for the course
are on sale at the bookstore win司
dow at the left of the entrance. The
cost for the first semester is as follows:
Freshman books
$10.75
Sophomore books . 1 1. 00
Junior books
. .. 9.00
Senior books
1 1. 25
A list of books for each class will
be found on the school bulletin
board in the main corridor, also at
the bookstore window.
REGISTRATIONS
New students register at the office
of the Dean by fi l1i ng out a formal
application blank and upon acceptance depositing therewith the
registration fee of $5. All applica.
tio~ns must have the approval of thι
Dean before applicants can attend
classes.
Sophomore , Junior and Senior
students are not reQuired to reregister except by filling out attendance cards in class during
opening night.
This formality is
very essential , for the attendance
cards furnish an alphabeticaI index
of our entire student body , with current addresses of alL

"

MONTHLY TESTS
Day students are required to take
the same monthly tests and semester
examinations as the evening students and at the same hours，吋z:
6 :00 to 9 :30 P. M. No exceptìons
can be made. Every student must
plan in advance for the evenìngs
allotted to his class.
Although the regular e芷aminations
will begin at 6 :00 o'clock, students
whose business hours or train
schedule render it necessary will be
permitted to enter as late as 7 :45
and to remain until 10 :00 P. M. , but

、
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no student will be permitted to enter
the examination hall after 7 :45 P. M.
and no student may leave the examination until that hour.
The dates of the monthly tests
i且i且__cl.q且es_ arA "" Tollowa:戶SENIOR CLASS
,!, hursday, October 13.
Thursday, November 10.
Thursday, December 8.
~i:st_ ~semester exams. , January
5 , 12 , 18.
JUNIOR CLASS
}y ednesday, October 19.
}Y ednesday; November 16.
Wednesday; December 14.
Fi!~t semeiter exams., January 10,
16, 20.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
,!, hursday, October 20.
Thursday, November 17
,!, hursday, December 15.
F~r~t se lTI ester exams. , January 4 ,
11 , 17.
FRESHMAN CLASS
Thursday, October 27.
Thursday , December 1.
Thursday; December 22.
Fi!~t semester exams. , January 9 ,
13 , 19.
PROBLEM WORK
Problems for home work will begin after 位1e fourth week of school,
about October 17th. Mimeographed
questions are handed out in a l1
classes each week and students are
required to pass in their written
opinions one week from the date of
issuance. The schedule of problems
will be issued in a later bulletin.
STUDENTS WITH CONDITIONS
Every student in the Sophomore ,
Junior and Senior classes who finished the past sch()ol year with any
law conditions should already have received a notice from the Dean's office notifying him of such conditions
and stating how they are to be
cleared up during the coming year.
Through thoughtlessness on the part
of many students who change their
mailing - addresses during the school
year and neglect to notify the office , many of these notices were returned by the post office. It has
therefore been impossible to reach
through themail all students who
have ~conditions to make up during
位1e coming year.
Students having
conditions to clear _ and _who have
up
not received a notice should inquire

昆

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一一

SEPTEMBER (1927) BULLETIN
at the 0氮肥 just what they are expected to do this year.
S七udents who have been notified
to repeat the year w ìl1 be excused
fr0m nothing but their abstracts
provided they were turned in the
previous year.
Repeating a year
generally means no advance work.
EMPLOYMENT BUREAU
At the beginning of each school
year we have many students from
Maine , New Hampshire and Vermont
who are seeking employment in this
vicinity. Any student who knows of
an opening in his own organization
will be rendering a service to all
concerned if he will inform the
Dean's Secretary, Miss Caraher , who
has charge of the Employment
Bureau.
IMPORTANT
During the past few years the disturbance of Iectures by tardy students as we I1 as students leaving
cI assrooms before the close of the
Iecture period became so prevalent
that in February, 1927, the fo I1owing rules were promulgated to increase the e但 ciency of the classroom. They are here repeated for
the benefit of new students.
Lecture hall doors will be locked
fifteen minutes after the beginning
of the lecture. No student may
enter thereafter nor leave until the
cI ose of the lecture period.
Any student who leaves a lecture
hall in violation of this rule becomes
automatically suspended.
If he
thereafter attends c1 ass without having in the meantime made satisfactory explanation at the Dean's
office he will be dismissed for the
balance of the school year.
Students may secure written permission to enter c1 ass late or to leave
early only by furnishing proof at the
office that train schedules and other
conditions render such privilege absolutely necessary.
Any student who makes a business or social engagement that interferes with full attendance at the
division he has elected to attend
must forfeit either the lecture or the
engagement.
SENIOR REVIEW
All Seniors are required as a part
of 位le fourth year work to take a
general review of the first three
years' work and to pass examina-

3

tions in the F門reshman and Sophomore subjects. The new system distributes the burden over the entire
year instead of over one semester
as formerly.
It insures personal
and intensive study on the part of
the student , since every senior is required to prepare for and pass the
regular monthly tests for the Freshman and Sophomore classes. Such
a review brings back the “ old landmarks" and the clear understanding
tha七 enabled the student to pass
each subject in the first instance.
The intensive review of the Junior
subjects will be given in May and
June.
Profiting by our experience of la_st
year we are 80 arranging the month于
ly &lt;t ests that Senior, Sophomore and
Freshman tests fall on successive
weeks.
Seniors are given spe_cial
review lectures in each subject during the week preceding each test,
the Freshman and Sophomore professors coming directly from their
own classrooms at the close of regular le的ures of the 10:00 A. M. ,
6 :00 P. M. and 7 :35 P. M. divisions.
There will also be special all-eve恥
ing reviews on the nights preceding
the tests, open onl y. to Seniors.
The charge for this unique and
exceedingly -valuable review is $10
a semester-, payable at the beginning
of each semester.
It is open to
Suffolk Law School Seniors only.
The first semester Senior Review
Schedule is as follows:
October, 1927.
Sophomore reviews:
Oct. 14 , 17 , 18 , 19. Test Oct. 20
Freshman reviews:
Oct. 21 , 24 , 25 , 26. Test Oct. 27
No "Vember, 1927.
Sophomore reviews:
Nov. 14 , 15 , 16.
Test. Nov. 17
Freshman reviews:
Nov. 25 , 28 , 29 , 30. Test Dec. 1
December, 1927.
Sophomore reviews:
Dec. 9, 12 , 13, 14. Test Dec. 15
Freshman reviews:
Dec. 16 , 19 , 20 , 2 1. Test Dec. 22
O'CONNOR ON FACULTY
Charles S. O'Connor '13 , former
member of the Boston School Committee and a prominent Boston lawyer, has been appointed _ to the
faculty.
He will assist Professor
Henchey in the subject of Torts.

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�4

SEPTE !I1 BER (1927) BULLETIN
SCHEDULE

OF CLASSES

TWENTY-SECOND YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 19, 1927
Students should report on opening day at the hour scheduled for the
division which they decide to attend for the ensuing year.
FRESHMAN CLASS
Monday, Sep.t ember 19-TORTS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Prof. Henchey , Freshman Hall , 4th Floor, Annex
4:00- 5:30 P. M. Prof. O'Connor, Freshman Hall, 4th Floor, Annex
6:00- 7:30 P. M. Pl' of. Henchey, Fr eshman Hall , 4th Floor , Annex
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M. Prof. O'Connor, Freshman Hall, 4th Floor , Annex
Tuesday, September 20-CONTRACTS.
(Hours and lecture hall as above stated.)
Professors Hurley and Spillane alternating.
Friday, September 23-CRIMINAL LA W.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Douglas and Fielding alternating.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Monday, September 19一-EQUITY.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Prof. Leonard , Sophomore HalI, 2nd Floor , Annex
4:00- 5:30 P. M. Prof. Halloran , Sophomore Hall , 2nd Floor , Annex
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Leonard , Sophomore Hall , 2nd Floor, Annex
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.. Prof. Halloran Sophomore Hall , 2nd Floor , Annex
Tuesday, September 20一-BILLS AND NOTES.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Y ork and Duffy alternating.
Friday, September 23 , REAL PROPERTY.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Downes and Getchell alternating.
JUNIOR CLASS
Monday, September 19一-EVIDENCE.
10:00-11:30 A. M. Prof. Douglas , JunÌor Hall ,
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Prof. Garland , Junior Hall,
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Douglas, Junior Hall ,
7:35- 9:05 P. M. Prof. Garland , Junior Hall,
Tuesday , September 20-WILLS AND PROBATE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Ifa110ran and Powers alternating.
Friday, September 23一-BANKRUPTCY.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Thompson and Avery alternating.

/

1st
1st
1st
1st

Floor,
Floor,
Floor,
Floor,

SENIOR CLASS
Monday, September 19-CARRIERS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Prof. Downes, Senior Hall, 3rd Floor,
4 :00- 5 :30 P. :M. Pl' of. Dillon.
Senior Hall. 3rd Fl oor.
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Pr of. Down郎， Senior HaU, 3rd Fl oor;
7 :3á- 9 :05 P. M. Prof. D î1lon ,
Senior HaU, 3rd Floor ,
Tuesday, September 2 。一-MASSACHUSETTS PRACTICE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Wyman and Garland alternating.
Fr iday, September 23一-PRIV ATE CORPORATIONS.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Bloomberg alternating.

/

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

..
.;.

�SUFFOLK
20

LA V(

SCHOOL

1)erne S七 ree七

BOSTon
SPEC工AL

Iv1E SSAGE TO THE

to \ex:p ress to each of you/the sil\cere gr a.七 i tude t J:tat
to the 的.þdents and especial王 yj 乞 o your 帆ass for 乞he beβuti­
fu 工 flowers and the cheering message厚的的 cam有 to my sick r 。你
from you. 工 had \:乳 very c 工 ose ca工工﹒ j You boys c~n never know þow
much your expres~ions of 工 oya工七y apid sy訂~athy a~sisted me in
主 wish

主 feel

crì 七 ìca工 hours.

My hea工 th i
now excel 工 eni九 主即立 looking ~orward to tno 乞her
busy year and 甜n e pecially p1~ased a七 the ou七lo l;&gt;k for 七he 戶 1ass
of 1928. You have certaín1y ýíndícated my faíth\in you byjfínishìng the Juníor yea vüth 2 2-王 /nen free from condi 七'ii ons and 且 24
o乞 hers entitled t 。
ry Seni Ø- work 七hìs year. Ma~ing dueja工工 0'1冒卸的
:f or mid-year men yo
c 工 as :;i should gradua七 e from 2"i. 5 七。.3'00 men
next June.
The splendid work

of 七he

C1as&amp; of 1928

shou工d

be crowned

wi 七h

__~Jà" _P~，~.._.h均h.--~ωωd. in 均為 2且晶晶茲的L~ng.~J The Senior year wìll
c_

na'七ural工y

be a strenuous one because a 七horough review of Freshman
and Sophomore subjec 七 s is now a regular feature of 七he Senior year.
The \~ise student ~'Jil1 begin nO'l:l to review his Freshman 缸ld Sophomore subjec 七 s 主 n order 七 o ligh七en his burdens a.nd ensure a more
thorou皂h understanding of 七he who工e fie1d of 七he 工a"ìí.
No hasty
and superficial bar review can possibly accOmp 工 ish w泣的 our general revi eVIJ ';Ü七h mon七hly tes 七 s 主 s aCCO訂lplishing. Every Senior rm且st
real 1 y 叫七ud
工勾 s 此
dy 七he Freshman and So:phomore sub je c 乞站 扣 叮 泣臼
拇
均 閃 s i n 0 r er 七 o pa，
吋
帥 ss

伽切叫向
S.

品 1 /AJ
i必心
μ
本已

玄
A s :pecia1 :p戶 嗨毯ress 吵
ro 白
cþd七 vü1 王 be pO S 七切 d 叩 七J;fe Bu工口工e 七位 rτ
臼 e
0n
吼 iñ
order tha:t/ 七 he S棋也ζp rJ. ay knOYi exac 七工 y ÿihat 七he Freshman and Sophomore~' 前 e covering fror且'i~eek 七 o wee~. -B前侃一話。
ior 七。企.ac証，L:t.e.s t.
Duri ng 垃1e
week preceding the FreslIDlan or Sophomore 乞 es 七 s ~I three quar七 er hour
reviews for Seniors wilI be he1d ~七工1:30 A.M.~I 7:30 P.M." and
also at 9:05 P.I去." on each school day. Seniors will pass from
their regu 工 ar hal 工 into a review ha1 工 there to be J:re七 by the
professor who has jus 七 taken 七he Freshman or So:phomore 忌" as the
case may be" 。而rer the review of 七he subj~ct 主 n hand for an intensive review of the fìe 工已七 o be covered in 乞he 七 est.

:3 0 缸 d 主 n

May

A regular bar review of Junior subjec七 s wi1l be given during
The c os 七 of the Senior review wi1工 00$工o a semester ,

a.nd J une •

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�2

Suffo工k Law Schoo1 exacts of every candida乞 e for a degree
four years of intensive trair吐時且主斗且具立訟且已1... The takir港
of an outside bar review whi1e an undergraduate wi1l resu工t in
dismissa1 from 七he schoo1 and ine1igibi1i 七 y for 七he degree 七here­
after.

Sa many goad stU(峙的 s in 七 he pas 七 have been hope1ess 工J{， confused by outside bar revieV1S tha七七he school was ob工 iged 七 o enac 七
the above rule to safeguard its s 七uden七S 缸ld i tse1f agains 七七he
wiles of 七he cormr】ercia1 ‘'Revievmr '九
主 n order 七 o ob七 ain recrui 七 s from our Senior class each year
it is necessary for 乞 he ou七 side reviewers 七 o convince a por七 ion
of them tha.七七he schoo 工 is no 七 giving 七 hem su:fficien七七 r a.i ning to
pass the bar exawinations. 工n times past some of the more unscrupu10us of 七he ou:七 side reviewers ÌI'lQ uld se 工ec 乞 some popular and
ìnf工uent.ia工 Senìor w1d ofÎer hìm a free revìew and perhaps a
commìssìon ìf he cou工 d secure a cer七 ain number of classmates to
j oin the reTieVi. \1i 七h several such agen七s working in our corridors 七 o undermine the mora1e of 七he 5choo 工 i 七 was a cha工 lenge
that 工 ed us to work out a new and vas 七工y superior form of review
and 七 o prohib j.七七he taking of 七he confusing ou乞side reviews.

BAR EXAMINATIONS.
Any undergradua乞 e "\"iho takes 七he bar examinations without~
the consen 七 of the school forfei 七 s a11 schoo1 privileges and
becomes ine 工igib工 e for the degree.
Th e necessi 七 y for this ru 工e is obvious.
主f 七he schoo 工 records
disclose that a student is man立 fes 七工y un:p repared 七 o pass the exaw.ina七 ions i 七 has a right 七 o pro七 ec 七 its reputation by expe 工工íng
students ......ho w.ilfu11y persist in taki~耳七he examina七 ion.
Bu七 now as 七 o gradua七 es:
Through a series of years 1 have
studied the records of our students 七 o de 七erinine 乞he reason for
success or failure in bar eX 2JD.ina七 ions. In 七he summer of 1925 工
advised cer 七 a主 n gradua~七 es to wa土七 unti 工七he J anuary ex a，."11Í na七 íon.
85頁 of 七hose who dísregarded my advice failed.
In 七he summer of
19 之6 every one who d主 sregarded my advice fai 工 ed.
This is no
evidence of :p rophetic powers on my par 七. I have simply learned 七o
in七 erpret

studen 七 records.

Due 七 o my serious illness I was unao工 e to advise 七he C1ass
of 1927. I know now 七hat a 工 arge :pe rce n七o.ge of men v.ho ough七
七 o have wai.七 ed rushed into the July 1927 examina七 i on..
Wh ether
there will be a heavy slaugh乞 er i8 ye 七七 o be seen. If we make
a good record it wi 工工 be a happy surprise to me.

J晶晶晶孟咎由:也

�一~一一一-一--、__.~ ~占祖國-“恤‘~白白血斗

3
主 will make my survey of your class in Apri 工工 928 and advise
accord主 ngly.
Of course you wil王 receive 七，11e degree pri or to
乞he JU工y bar examina乞 ion and wi 工 1 have 七he rìgh七 to disreg a.rd my
advice.
1 hoþe however that 七he members of 七he Cla.s s of 1928

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wi 工 1 a工 low me to assist 七hem 主 n making 七 he highes 七 bar exarninat 主。口 record e"ll er 七 allied by a.ny class in the his 七 ory of the
schoo1.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOO'L
OCTOBER (1927) BULLETIN
DEDICATION OCTOBER 12th
Every student who possibly can
arrange to do so should attend the
Dedication of the Alumni Club
House on Wednesday, October 12th.
The new Alumni home is at 73 Hancock Strilet, opposite the 8tate
House , and but a few rods from the
school building. The club house will
be open for inspection from 4 :00 to
6 :00 P. M. on October 12th.
The great event of the celebration
w ilI occur in the Law School audi
torium at 8 :00 o'clock. An especially interesting and impressive :rrogramme has - been arranged.
The
chief speaker of the evening wìll be
former U. 8. Senator J. Hamìlton
Lewis of IlIinois , whose fame as an
orator is nation-wide.
80 far as we know this is the first
club house ever to be established by
the alumni of an evening law schoo l.
The building with its high ceilings
and spacious halls is especially well
adapted for club purposes. In making alterations great care has been
ta k: en to preserve the colonial char‘
acter of the buiI ding.
Students are privileged to bring
one guest each but should call at the
o品 ce of the Dean's secretary for
admission tickets.
‘

\

PUBLIC SPEAKING
The course in Public 8peaking began Wednesday, October 5th, and
will continue on the following
Wednesdays: October 19 , November
2 , 9 , 16 , 23 , December 7 , and 14.
The Iectures are being held in the
Fr eshman HaII. Four divisions are
maintained , corresponding in hours
with the regular courses , 10:00A.M. ,
4:00 P. 耳L ， 6:00 P. 1\瓜 and 7:35
P. M.
The course is open to Freshmen
students without tuition charge. It
is compulsory as to aII Freshman except those who have already acquired proficiency in the art of
docution. Those who desire to be
excused from the course should appear before a faculty committee to
be appointed by the Dean.
The 金rst “ elimination trials" will
be held October 17th and 21st at the
close of the regular lectures. The
4 :00 P. M. and 6 :00 P. M. divisions
will meet in Hall 1 of the Main
Building. Each student will be permitted to take the platform and

•

demonstrate his ability either J:ì y an
original speech or by rendering
something he has committed to
memory.
This provision does not a'P ply to
clergymen , of whom there are several in class.
Wh i1 e the faculty
committee would no doubt derive
benefit from a sermon , yet the Dean
will take
judicial notice" of the
pro位ciency of clergymen without 呵，
quiring a demonstration.

“

CONCERNING TESTS AND
EXAMS.
Every Su fÌolk Law School student
is expected to observe the following
rules in regard to monthly test!r::
Thoroug1ìly to' review aW work
covered iri class up to the scheduled
test.
Present himself for a written examination once a month on the date
scheduled for his c1 ass.
Purchase three 0飯 cial test books
at the bookstore before entering the
examination room. These are very
inexnensive: test books three for five
cents; semester examination books
five cents each.
一月之.
---\

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CONDUCT IN EXAMINA TION
\
\
ROOM
I
iThe carrying of text books， note叫{
l. brief cases or book bags into an ex司 j 、
\ amination: room is strictly prohiöited. i
To have such in' one's possessfon 1
during an examination' is a source of'
temptation and will be deemed a
suspicious circumstance.
The time ,
worn excuse that he came to the
examination room direct from the
library where he had been studying
i and h-ad no place to leave his books
will not be 1' eceived. Articles prop司
erly labeled may be left wi七:h the
librarian , at the owner's risk since
the librarian cannot be expected to
know the students personally.
Leaving test papers , either printed
questions -or the written telòt 01' blank
examination books on the vacant
seats between students wiU also be
i regarded as suspicious conduct.
\ Many cases that have come to the
f attention of the Trial Board during
1the past yea1' were caused by this
: careless hàbit.
\ Whispering to or communicating
í with another in any manner during
'an examination is strictly forbidden.
r Two summonses before the T 1'ial
i Board of the same student for susI picious conduct ma:y- result in perf inanent suspension from the school.

/'

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�oc事。iB直~ (1927) BULLETIN

2

\

HOURS OF TESTS AND
EXAMINATIONS
All tests begin at 6 P. M. Stu&lt;!ents ha~e the privilege of entering
from 6 P. M. to 7 :45 but no one is
allowed to enter the examination
room after 7:45 P. M. No one w il1
be a110wed to leave the examination
room before the last man is in at
7 :45 P. M. At 9 :30 P. M. a11 papers
tnust be passed in.
Day students are required to take
the same monthly tests and semester
examinations as the evening students
and at the same hours , viz.: 6 :00
to 9 :30 P. M. No exceptions can be
made‘ Every student must plan in
advance for the evenings a110tted to
his class.
Although the regular examinations
will begin at 6 :00 o'clock , students
whose business hours 01' t 1' ain schedule render it necessary will be pe1'mitted to enter as late as 7 :45 and
to 1' emain until 10 :00 P. 1\1.
叫一

一一一~一一一一一一一一_._-__/
SENIOR REVIEW

In the Septembe 1' Bulletin the
announcement of -the senior review
did not include review sessions at
the close of the 4 :00 o'clock division
lectu 1' es.
The co1'1' ection is now
made. There will be a th1' ee qua1'te 1'
hou1' senior 1' eview immediately following each of the four divisions on
the dates indicated below.
The
Sophomore and Fr eshman professors
will come directly from thei1' own
class1' ooms at the close of their 1' egular lectures. The 4 :00 P. M. and 6 :00
P. M. divisions , owing to lectures
immediately following in the Senior
Ha11 , will adjourn to Hall 1 in the
Main Building. The Wednesday reviews will run from 6 :00 to 9 :00
P. M. and are open to students of
a11 divisions. A11 review lectures in
this series are limited to Suffolk Law
School senio1' s only.
The first semester Senior Review
Schedule is as follows:
Octòber, 1927.
Sophomore reviews:
Oct. 14 , 17 , 18 , 19. Test Oct. 20
Freshman reviews:
Oct. 21 , 24 , 25 , 26. Test Oct. 27
November , 1927.
Sophomore reviews:
Nov. 14 , 15 , 16. Test Nov. 17
Freshman reviews:
Nov. 25 , 28 , 29 , 30. Test Dc(!. 1
December, 1927.
Sophomore 1' eviews:
Dec. 9 , 12 , 13 , 14. Test Dec. 15
Fr eshman reviews:
Dec. 16 , 19 , 20 , 2 1. Test Dec. 22

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NAMELESS PAPERS
Eve 1'Y year we 1'eceive hundreds
of nameless papers.
If a student
wishes to receive credit for his work
he must train himself to sign his
name on every problem answer and
examination book.
TRIAL BOARD
The Trial Board has become a
recognized feature in Suffolk Law
Schoo l.
All students accused of
cheating or suspicious conduct in
tests or _examination are required to
appear before the Board.
Accusations are presented to the
Board in written form. The monitors who make the accusations are
also called upon to give oral versions
of the offence in the presence of the
accused student who has oppo1'tunity
to answer 0 1' explain. The Dean's
secretary takes stenographic notes
of the trial that are later transcribed
for the school records.
The monitors are instructed that
unless they catch a student redhanded in dishonesty they are not
to make a spectacle of him befo 1'e the class by obliging him to
gG to the Dean's office immedlately. Instead they are to make
a careful note of his conduct
and when the suspected party turns
in his books they are to be held out
by the monitor and a special report
the1' eon made to the Dean.
The student's first warnirig that he
has been suspected may well be a
summons befo1'e the Trial Board.
Every student should therefore
pay strict attention to his own affairs in the examination room. He
should neither give nor 1' eceive information. He should not sit nea1'
any of his personal friends least
there be a temptation to whisper on
some innocent matter that might
involve him in difficulties. To avoid
the appearance of evil is extremely
important.
ST ATE LIBRARY
The State Library is of course
open to every citizen of the Comn1onwealth.
The tendency of law
students to monopolize tables and to
create distu1'bance by whispering is
an ever present t 1'ial to the library
authorities.
We are proud of the fact that
very few Suffolk men _have ever
been reported for such offenses.
Those few have been dealt with
summarily, for the school will not
permit a person to rem~in as a s t_udent if he casts discredit upon the
institution by his conduct 、;vithin the
school or out of it.

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OCTOBER (1927) BULLETIN
TELEPHONE CALLS
Students are again reminded that
they must not permit _their lady
friends or business acquaint且nces to
telephone to the school and _expe~t
messages to be delivered to them in
class õr to call them to the telephone.
If this were permitted we wou1 c!
need a staff o[ messenger boys and
no lecture could continue u :ilinterrupted for ten minutes, in successíon.
可v;' simply cannot interrupt our lect祖res for such causes.
Nor should Miss Caraher be subjected to angry tirad~s ， ~s_ she j~
every school evening, by friends of
the students who insist that such
students be called out of class on a
matter of “ extreme importance."
N ot long ago the Dean was i_nduced to send- for a student on the
plea that his sister was dying. Si~ce
the Dean's telephone was t !J. us
usurped he had immediate _proof that
the “ sister" who was dying was
somebody else's sister and _ she was
dying to _go to the theatre that evenlng.
The executive offices of the school
are extremely busy in the serio_us affairs of the school.
We will put
notices on the bulletin board if they
seem important , but no p~_rs~m_ except a physician will be called from
clãss. Exceptions will of co?rs_e b~
made in mâtters of life and death
but no “ dying sisters" need apply.
One young lady pestered us _S?
persisteñtly a year or two ago with
messages for a certain you_ng_ I? ~n
that o-ne night when she _asked ~im
to meet her at a certain trysting
place the Dean printed a _lar g; e_ si~n
for the young mân's benefit with the
result that over forty classma~es ~~­
sisted the young man in keeping hlS
date.
A SUGGESTION
While Dean Archer appreciates
very deeply the custom ~hat ha~
grown up of late in some_ classe!, 0主
students - rising to their feet whenever he enters- the room to make announcements , yet he does not need
this physical expression to a~su_re
him 0 1' the respec-t and regard of t þ. e
students.
His experience in_ the
hospital last May when_ _the clas~es
co n:Î bined to transform his room into a bower of blossoms throughout
his illness can never be forgotten.
He therefore urges the stlldents to
keep their seats whenev~!:. he enters
the -lecture room. It will save embarrassment to him if he can come
and go freely without creating a disturbance of any sort.

SECOND SEMESTER
Through an error of the printer
the calendar of 1926-27 was repeated in the 1927-28 catalog thereby confusing the dates for the cur嘲
rent year. The second semester begins on January 30th instead of January 24th as erroneously stated in
the catalogue.
PROBLEMS
In this bulletin will be found
listed the dates when problems will
be distributed in all classes. If you
are not present in class when a
problem is issued you can secure one
in the secretary's office on the following day.
Problems cannot be secured at
the 0能ce on the day they are due to
be handed in. Problems should be
worked out at home and filed in the
problem box exactly one week from
the date given out, neither the day
before nor the day after.
Thus ,
Tort answers should be filed on
Mondays , Contracts on Tuesdays and
Criminal Law on Fridays.
In case it is impossible fo世 a
student to attend school and file his
problem in person he will receive
credit if it is mailed to the secretary's office on the day due. Late
problems deposited in the box will
receive no credit.
GRADUATES , ATTENTION!
Any graduate of Suffolk Law
School will be permitted to attend
the Senior review or any classes in
the school during the current year
free of charge. This includes also
the privilege of sitting in at the
tests and examinations and of having
their papers graded.
Frankly , this is an experiment. If
we find that the same zeal will be
put into the work as though the men
were paying the $100. or more that
the privilege is worth , it will become
an established custom of the schoo l.
Our first idea was to charge a nomínal fee but since the service is to
be gratuitous we might as well dispense with the registration fee
entirely.
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OCTOBER (1927) BULLETIN

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
FIRST SEMESTER
SCHEDULE OF PROBLEM AND TEST DA TES FOR ALL CLASSES
Problems in all classes will be handed out on the following dates:
(Due exactly one week from day passed out.)

1
2
3
4
5

Fr iday

Tuesday

E直 onday

Problem No.
Problem No.
Problem No.
Problem No.
Problem No.

October
18
October
25
November 8
November 22
. . December 6

October
17
October
24
November 7
November 21
December 5

October
October
November
November
December

21
28
11
25
9

TEST DATES
JUNIOR CLASS

SENIOR CLASS

Wednesday, October
19.
Wednesday, November 16.
Wednesday, December 14.

Thursday, October
13.
Thursday, November 10.
Thursday, December
8.

FRESHMAN CLASS

SOPHOMORE CLASS

Thursday, October
27.
Thursday, December
1.
Thursday , December 22.

Thursday, October
20 ‘
Thursday, November 1 :i
Thursday, December 學 15

FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS
January 1 1th
12th
16th
,‘
17th
“
18th
“
19th
20th
‘,
23rd
24th
25th
26th
“
27th
“
Christmas

Equity and Trusts.
Carriers and Conflict of Laws.
Torts.
Evidence.
Bills and Notes.
h
Massachusetts Pr actice.
Contracts.
Wills and Probate.
Real Pr operty.
Corporations.
Criminal Law.
Sal閱(i1 o semester exam. in Bankruptcy.)

Recess一-Weeks

of Decemher 25th and January

1比

Chl$ses Resum e -January 9th.
First Semester Examinations-January 11 th to 27th.
Lectures will not be held during examination weeks (16th to 27th).
January 30, 1928-Second

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一一一一一一一一-一一一一一一一、

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS
BEGINS JANUARY 30, 1928
The Mid-Year Ente 1'ing Class will
begin wo 1'k at the opening of the
second semeste 1', on Janua 1'Y 30th.
This mid白year class is becoming of
increasing impo1'tance.
Each year
there are many prospective students
who , for political 0 1' business 1' easons ,
a 1' e unable to begin wo 1'k with the
regular class in Septembe1'. This enables them to begin their law training eight months earlie 1' than if they
waited until the next regular class.
1月1e long ago found it necessary to
divide the F 1' eshmen year into two
distinct divisions , the wo 1'k of each
being independent of the othe1', so that
men ente 1' ing at mid-yea 1' IDight not
be handicapped by lack of knowledge
of the fi 1' st semester's wo 1'k.
Men entering in Janua1'Y, 1928 , w iIl
be eligible to take the Janua1'Y, 1932 ,
bar examination. Statistics show that
the mid-year men , having taken the
益rst semester Freshman work just
prior to the ba1' examination make
an unusually high record. Students
forget much of the great fundamentals
of the law during their four-year
cou1' se. To get back to those fundamentals in the regula 1' Freshman
classes is very helpfu l.
SUBJECTS COVERED
The subjects to be covered in the
second semeste1' a 1'e To1'ts 日， Contracts 日， Agency and Legal Ethics.
Torts 1 covers “A自自 aul t and Bat扯
tery ,"
licious Prosecution ， "ε Slander and
“‘
Libe 1 ，"“Alien且t ion
訓
位
and Seduct ion ，"
討
and “ Deceit ," etc.
To 1'ts II , on the othe 1' hand , deals
with “ Infringement of Copyrights and
Patents, " “Unfaì 1' Competìtìon ," and
a number of other pe1' sonal wrongs
totally di宜 e1' ent from those covered in
the first semester wo 1'k.
Contracts II covers “Il legal Contracts , " “ Interp 1' etation of Contracts ,"
“ ûperation of Contracts , " “ Reforma-

,#

tion and Rescission ," etc. Each of
these topics are dìfferent from those
covered in Contracts 1.
All p 1' oblems , tests and examina司
tions of the second semester a 1'e based
upon work covered by the class after
Janua 1'Y, 1928.
Men ente 1'ing at mid-yea 1', however ,
a 1'e advised to 1'ead the fi 1' st half of
the text books in To 1'ts and Cont 1'acts in o1' de 1' that they may unde 1'stand the 1'elation of the second semeste 1' work to whole topiδ， but, as
befo 1'e indicated , they a 1'e not held 1' e呵
sponsible fo 1' any principles t 1'eated
in the first semeste 1'.
The subject of Criminal Law, being
completed in the first semester, is suc.
ceeded by Agency in the second
semester.

\

PUBLIC SPEAKING
A course in Public Speaking has
been added to the Freshman schedule
this year.
D 1'. Delbe 1' t M. Staley ,
President of the College of the Spoken
可'Vo 1' d， is the professor in charge. The
purpose of the course is so to t 1' ain
our students that they may acquire
ease and effectiveness in o 1' al expression.
The course is open to Freshmen
students without tuition charge. It
is compulsory as to all Freshmen except those who have already acquired
proficiency in the art of elocution.
Those who desire to be excused from
the course should appear before a
faculty committee to be appointed by
the Dean.
The cou1' se is given on WednesdaY8
throughout the enti1' e semeste1'.

,

TOTAL COST FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
Registration ................................... $ 5 00
Tuition (two payments):
January 30th ......….. ...$35.00
耳ifarch
19th .... ., ••• .,. 35.00
70.00
Books .................. .............. .............. 12 .4 0
$87 .4 0

j
、

�MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS

2

BOOKS NEEDED FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
Archer on Torts ..............................$
Archer on Contracts _.....….............
Archer on Agency ... .....................
Introduction to Study of Law......
Notes on Legal Ethics ..................
Abstract Book “...........……...............
Problem and Abstract Pad ……...

2.75
3.50
2.75
.75
1. 25
1. 00
.4 0

$12 .4 0
(All of the above books may be purchased at the school bookstore on first
fioor of main building.)

1

CLASSES
The subject of Torts is given on
Mondays; Contracts on Tuesday日，
and Agency on Fridays.
Lectures are held at 10: 00 A. 1\ι;
4 :00 P. M.; 6:00 P. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Students may choose any of the four
sessions , alternating from one to another when convenien t. Evening students may attend a day class whenever necessary.
Attendance of students is recorded
from the tickets taken by the monitors
at the doors of the lecture halls. For
a ticket to be valid it must be countersigned (i n ink) by the student using
i t. Each student , upon payment of the
current quarter's tuition is given a
strip of twenty-four tickets , sufficient
for each lecture of the quarter for
which he pays.
The Freshman Hall Annex is
reached by going dOWll the long central corridor on the second ftoor of
main building to the allnex , then turning to left and going up one ftight.
The schedule of men entering in
January , 1928 , 1s as follows:
From January , 1928 to JU l1 e , 1928.
Seco l1 d half of Freshmal1 year.
From September , 1928 to June , 1929.
Complete Sophomore year.
From September , 1929 to June , 1930. 、
Complete Junior year.
From September, 1930 to JUl1 e , 193 1.
Complete 8e11ior year.
From September, 1931 to January,
1932. First half of Freshmal1 year.
(Eligible to take bar examination in
January , 1932.)
The mid-year class may receive
their “ s11eepskins" in either Januuary , 1932, or at the regular Commencement exercises in June , 1932.

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EXAMINA TION NIGHTS
Monthly examinations for the Freshman classes are held on Wednesday
evenings for all divisions. Students
should plan upon these dates and not
permit anything to interfere , for they
will not be allowed to take the examinations at any other time. Day
students are required to take t11e same
monthly tests and semester examinations as the evening students and at
the same hours.
Examinations start at 6: 00 P. M.
and continue until 9: 30 P. 1\直
Men
who live long distances from Boston
and have di也 culty about evening train
schedules will be allowed to enter as
late as 7:30 P. M. and remain until
10: 00 P. M. No student will be permitted to leave the examination room
until 7: 45 P. M. , and no ona permitted
to enter the examination rooms after
7: 45 P. M. The relation between these
two provisions should be apparent.
FRESHMAN MONTHL Y TESTS
FOR SECOND SEMESTER
可Vednesday--l\iarch 8
Torts , Contracts , Agency (Five
questions each).
可lVednesday--April 12
Torts , Contracts , Agency (Five
questions each).
Wednesday一-May 3
Ethics , Contract日， Agency (Five
questions each).
SECOND SEMESTER EXAMS
Contracts
耳fay 22
Torts and Ethics
May 27
Agency
May 31
ABSTRACTS
Students in each c1 ass are required
to prepare written abstracts of from
twelve to sixteen cases a month. To
provide them with the necessary material we have compiled semester case
books for each class that can be procured at the schooI bookstore for the
sum of $1. 00. Rules for preparing abstracts w iII be fou l1 d in booklet,“Introduction to the 8tudy of Law ," and
w iIl Iater be explained in class.
HOW TO REGISTER
Application blanks can be procured
by ma iI or by ca lIi ng in person at the
secretary's office. A personaI interview with the Dean is required at
1.ime of 宜Iil1g. A $5.00 registration fee
must acco口lpany the application. It
w ilI be returned if the applicant i8 not
admitted.

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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
DECEMBER (1927) BULLETIN
APPEAL FROM MARKS
Dean Archer has worked out a new
plan for the handling of the vexatious
matter of appeals from marks. Long 、
experience has
demonstrated that
those who customarily complain of injustice at the hands of our correcting'
department belong to the “ fiunking
fringe" of their class. They meet the、
same fate in the State bar e芷amina­
tions as they do in our schoo1. They
are obliged to repeat the examinations •
again and again. Ninety-five per cent
of a11 appea1s from marks are groundless. To save the other five per cent
from injustice , we have hitherto been
obIiged to waste much valuab1e time
of a very much overworked 0益cia1.
•
The Director of the Review Department is obliged to work night and day
in research; in the editing of examination , test and prob1em questions; the
setting of standards for correctors ,
and the oversight of their returned
work. To oblige him to leave this
work , so necessary for the we1fare of
all, and devote hours to utterly absurd
ap :p ea1s , as well as attem:p ted harangues from indignant authors , is an
injustice to everybody.
Dean Archer has been making a personal investigation of the matter and
has he包，rd many ap:peal cases. In a11
but three cases , every man except
those who received a mark of zero,
deserved 1ess than he received. For
exam:p1e: A man with a college degree,
Sophomore, appealed from a mark of
30% on one of his test answers a few
days ago. His rule of 1aw did not
a :pp1y to the question at a11. 1主is discussion was entire1y beside the point,
but he did say that the plaintiff cou1d
recover, which ha :p pened to be the conclusion reached by the official answer.

The Dean cou1d not convince 垃 that
h im
his conc1us ion wa自 valueless until he
討
gave him the foωllowi ng 剖 臼 (which
扭
s imi le
is repeated for the bene盒t of those
who write similar answers):
State House i自 1arger than the Park
Street Church. Therefor白， the plaintiff
can recover."
Many answers , if analyzed, are precisely as foolish as that. The di益­
culty is that students who write foo1ish answers are generalIy incapab1e of
analyzing them , or too lazy to analyze
them , or were not the real authors. We
sometimes suspect, fro宜1 arguments
made by appe l1ants , that we have
f! unked , not only the student but also
some lawyer who “ hel:p ed" him. The
Dean's new plan is as follows:
In order to appea1 from a mark the
student must obtain from the secre.
tary's 0益 ce a specia1 blank. This
should be filled out with statement of
reasons for appea1. Then, if he can
secure an endorsement from some
fe l10w student who received a mark of
at least 80% , who w iIl certify that he
has read the answer and be1ieves that
the mark assigned to it is such that it
deserves rea:p praisa1, the Dean wiU
give it prom:pt attention.
It is confidently be1ieved that this
method of procedure will resu1t in
eliminating need1ess appea1s , for a
student who has successfully answered
the same question wil1 be able to
point out the errors in the other's
answer , thus rendering an appea1 unnecessary.

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PURPOSE OF PROBLEMS
The pur:p ose of prob1em work is to
teach our students , in the quiet of
their own homes to solve legal questions and to prepare logical answers

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DECEMBER (1927) BULLETIN

under circumstances that permit the
very best mental e宜ort of which the
student is capable. If one will do this
faithfully , pondering, analyzing and
solving the problems by his own unaided e宜ort， even though he may not
always attain a high mark, he will
gain self-reliance and ability victori.
ously to face tests and examinations.
If on the other hand , instead of fac.
ing the problem personally and alone
he joins with other s. in solving 此， he is
cheating himself and losing the opportunity of training for the crucial hours
of the monthly tests and examinations.
In any group of men one man is sure
to reach the conclusion ahead of the
others. 司司Thile they are still groping
and fioundering mentally he announces the decision and others have
lost the opportunity of mental victory.
The man with the most active brain
in any such group acquires the development and the others become
the leaners and parasites. Though
they may pass from Freshmen to
Sophomores and to Junior classes in
Su宜。 lk Law School they do not make
progress. They belong to the “ llunk.
ing fringe" whose wail grows more
dolorous as they approach the Senior
year.
They are stilI undeveloped
Freshmen-because of their own lazi.
ness and fo Ily.
Then there is another type of man
who cheats himself out of the oppor.
tunity of mental growth-the "re.
search artist ," who prides himself on
finding the case on which the pro blem
was based. He works hours and some.
times days to locate the case and then
writes out a digest of the judge's de.
cision. How is that practice to help
him in the examination room when no
research is possible?
If Su宜。lk Law School intended the
student to use merely his eyes in solv.
ing these problems we would print the
citation or, better, reprint the case and
save our library books from being de.
stroyed by mad searchers for the
original case.

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Some years ago we gave the prob.
lem average equal value with the test
average and the examination. But we
found that some of our men with high
averages could not pass the State bar
examinations. Investigation revealed
that men thus failing were “ research
men" who never did any original
thinking if they could help it. Rather
than abolish problems entirely we re.
duced their value so that the problem
average now counts for one.eighth of
the semester average instead oî one.
third as formerly.
But still the “ research evil" grows.
A recent class lost eighty per cent of
its membership from the Freshman
year to graduation time, and even then
made a wretched record in the State
bar examinations. Investigation re.
vealed the following situation. In the
Freshman year some “ research men"
in class conceived the plan of supply.
ing their classmates with the òriginal
case in problem work with the result
that increasing numbers took the
“ easiest way" and did not even do research work. Is it any wonder that
the members of that class llunked by
wholesale , and that the scholastic
average declined every year? Students
will doubtless hear the corridor gossip
even now to the e宜ect that the school
marks students frightfully hard after
the Sophomore year. That is not true ,
but we do expect students to grow in
ability to answer questions from year
to year, and naturally hold Juniors
and Seniors to a higher degree of per.
formance than we did when they were
Freshmen.
Why will men pay money for legal
training and then side-step systematic
mental drill , the most important part
of that training? To be sure they are
obliged to think rapidly in the exami.
nation room , but if the brain has not
undergone systematic development in
analysis and logic through the prob.
lem work their answers are very likely
to be meaningless jumbles of words.

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DECEMBER (1927) BULLETIN
The sooner our students realize that
the classmate who broadcasts the an.
swer to a problem before it is passed
妞， is an enemy to his classmates and
not a friend , the sooner will this
vìcìous practice be discontinued.
Every problem that is given in any
class is based upon work already
covered in class. There is no need of
going outside the te芷t book or notes
for the principle that governs. If the
student's brain is properly functioning
he should be able to analyze the facts
in the problem and apply the law to
the facts.
This cannot be done in a few
mínutes or perhaps in a few hours. It
is something to be studied from every
angle , carried about mentally and
labored upon at odd moments. Men
who do this become strong and selfre1iant. They do not join the mad orgy
of problem writing in the library,
stairs , corridors and smoking room on
the night the problem is due. They
regard this as home work and such it
is intended.
Our next objective is to destroy the
evil practice that is growing up among
our students in regard to problem answers. The 1ibrary is for legitimate
research and will hereafter be reserved for such. The frightful congestion of problem nights must, and
will be, abolished. Men who neglect
to write out their problem answers before coming to the school at the
lecture when the problems are due will
be denied the privilege of writing
them out in the school building or of
filing them thereafter.
Students will also be required after
this semester to write upon their problems the following a血 davit:
Affidavit
hereby certify upon my honor
that the problem herewith submitted
is entirely my own work, and that 1
have not received aid thereon nor discussed it with any person.

“1

Signature,.....….….….“...................…"

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CHRISTMAS RECESS
The Christmas recess this year will
begin on December 25施， and end
January 9th, thus giVipg students
ample opportunity':,tp,:;revie.y their first
semester work and- p的 pare for the
first semester mid-year examinations.
SECOND SEMESTER
The second semester opens Janu司
ary 30th and not on January 23rd , as
stated in the 1927-28 catalog.
CHANGE IN BAR EXAMINATION
RULES
The State Board of Bar Examiners
have recen tIy announced a new rule
giving applicants who have failed in
one examination only the privilege of
taking the ne刮目ucceeding examination. Thereafter, the applicant must
wait a year. The “ flunking fringe" of
our classes will welcome this opportunity of failing twice in one year , but
our worth-while students who do faithful and intelligent work , w il1 continue
to demonstrate the Su宜。lk custom of
passing at the first attempt.
STATE LIBRARY
The State Librarian is greatly aunoyed every year by law students who
endeavor to make the place a club旬
room without regard to the rights of
others. Su宜。Ik men are warned that
if any of them are reported for infraction of rules in the State Library ,
they will be suspended or expelled , according to the nature of the offense.
MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS
The Mid-Year Entering Class promises to be larger than usual this year.
It will begin work with the opening of
the second semester, January 帥， 1928.
The Freshman year is so divided
that men may enter at the middle of
the year without any special handicap
from having missed the first semester
work. A special bulletin has been
issued for the benefit of those desiring
to enter at mid year.

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4

DECEMBER TESTS
Senior-December 8th.
Junior -December 14th.
Sophomor e -December 15th.
Freshman-December 22nd.

FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS

\

January 11th
12th
16th
17th
18th
19th
20th
23rd
24th
25th
26th
27th

Equity and Trusts.
Carriers and Gonfiict of Laws.
Torts.
Evidence.
Bills and Notes.
Massachusetts Practice.
Contracts.
W i11s and Probate.
ReaI Property.
Corporations.
Criminal Law.
Sales (no semester exam. in Bankruptcy.)

Christmas Reeess-Weeks of December 25th and January 1s t.
Classes

Resume一-January

9th.

Lectures will not be held during examination weeks (16th to 27th).
January 30, 1928-Seeond semester begins.

SECOND SEMESTER PROBLEMS
Monday
Tuesday
Problem 1 February 20
February 21
2 March 5
March 6
3 March 12
March 13
4 March 19
E直arch 20
5 April 9
April 10

Friday
February 24
March 9
March 16
E直arch 23
April 13

SECOND SEMESTER TESTS
SENIOR CLASS

SOPHOMORE CLASS

February 23rd一-Thursday
E在arch 22nd-Thursday
April 18th一-Wednesday

March 1st一-Thursday
March 29th-Thursday
April 26th-Thursday

JUNIOR CLASS

FRESHMEN CLASS

~ebruary 29th-Wednesday
March 28th-Wednesday
ApriI 25th-Wednesday

March 8th一-Thursday
April 12th-Thursday
May 10th一-Thursday

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�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
FEBRUARY (1928) BULLETIN
SUFFOLK'S RECORD IN MAINE
BAR EXAM 100%
Suffolk Law School has scored another remarkable record in the
Maine Bar Examination given in
Bangor in February , 1928.
Four
Suffolk men participated and all
four were successful in spite of the
fact that only two were graduates.
One is a member of the Class of
1928. The names of the successful
candidates are:
F. William Hochberg, '26
Richard H. Armstrong, ex '24
Edmund F. Richards , '24
Lloyd La Fountaine , Senior.
PROF. EVANS
Suffolk men will be interested to
know that Professor Wilmot R.
Evans, in addition to his responsibilities as President of the Boston
Five Cents Savings Bank , has been
elected President of the
Lawyers
Mortgage Investment Corporation" ,
a million do lI ar corporation organized in February, 1928. He is also
slated to be President of the
“ Lawyers Title Insurance Company"
now being organized. This corporation will also be capitalized for one
million dollars.
These additional
duties will not interfere ""沾自 the
splendid service that Pr ofessor Evans
is rendering to the school in his
course in Deeds , Mortgages and
Easements.
He teaches in the
evening divisions.
SENIOR CLASS
The second semester work for the
Senior Class will be somewhat less
strenuous than that of the first
s!lmester. On _Monday evenings for
the first eight weeks ProÎessor
Douglas will conduct jury trials and
practice work of great interest and
value to the students.
There w ilJ
be no problems , tests or examinations in this course.
Beginning on March 26th , Professors Downes and Keezer w i1l lecture on Domestic Relations and
Suretyship. There will be no tests
or written work in this course.
Practice will continue on Tuesdays
and Corporations on Fr idays throughout the semester.
In these two
courses there will be the usual number of problems and tests , the
se lll:e_s ter averages being based upon
problems and tests up - to May 1st.
No senior abstracts will be required

“

during the second semester. The bar
review work in Freshman and
Sophomore subjects will continue in
the 關me manner as the first semes.
ter.
Seniors will participate in
Freshman and Sophomore tests but
will not be reQuired to take final
examinations.
Beginning early in
May review lectures in Junior sub
jects' will be taken up.
This will
continue until the latter part of
June , giving ample opportunity for
review - of all Junior courses. The
dates of these lectures will be published in a later bulletin.
BILLS AND NOTES
The importance and difficulty of
the subject of Bills and Notes has
led the school authorities to lengthen
the course somewhat. It will now
continue until the middle of the
second semester. The first two tests of
the second semester will be on Bills
and Notes and all the Tuesday problems of the semester. The average for
Bills and Notes will be computed on
the basis of the problems and tests.
It will be figured in with the first
semester average in determining
whether the student passes the
course. Landlord and Tenant will
follow on Tuesday evenings , beginning on March 20th.
Credits for
this subject will be based upon the
third test and 宜 nal examination ,
which will be Landlord and Tenant
only.
COURSE IN PUB Ll C SPEAKING
The course in Public Speaking will
be given in two divisions in the
evening only instead of day and
evening as in the first semester. This
is rendered necessary by the smaller
number who will find it necessary to
take the course.
Because of the
holiday (Feb. 22nd) the 益rst lecture
wiU occur on Thursday evening , February 23rd , but the remaining lectures will be given on Wednesdays.
The dates of lectures are as follows:
Thursday, February 23rd.
Wednesday, February 29th.
Wednesday, March 14th.
Wednesday , March 21st.
Wednesday , March 28th.
Wednesday, April 11th.
Wednesday , April18th.
Wednesday , April 25th.
6 :00 and 7 :30 classes.

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The course is given b口Y' Professor
Delbert N. Staley , Pr esident of the
College of the Spoken W ord. There
is no tuition charged to members of
the Fr eshman Class.
Others may
participate by paying the usual $10
fee.
Students in the Fr eshman Class
who did not pass this course in the
first semester will be required to repeat the work in this semester.
Notice will be mailed to a11 students
who are obliged to repeat this work.
SALES-PARTNERSHIP
The course in Sales will end on
March 16th.
Partnership will begin on the following Fr iday，耳!J:arch 23rd.
In addition to the mid-year examination , the first two tests and the

first three problems of the second
semester w i1l be devoted to Sales;
the fourth and fifth problems, test
three and the final examination to
Partnership.
PROBLEM ANSWERS
The attention of a11 classes is
ca11ed to the fact that beginning
with the second semester problem
answers must bear the following
affidavit:
“ 1 hereby certify upon my
honor that the problem herewith
su'bmitted is entirely my own
work. 1 have not received aid
thereon nor discussed it wÍth any
fellow student before writing
rny answer."
Signature

SECOND SEMESTER PROBLEM, TEST AND EXAM

DATES

Watch a Il dates carefully. Disregard Freshman Test dates printed in
Mid-Year Bulletin (January) -and subsfitute these.
Problems for AII Classes Handed Out
Monday
Tuesday
Fr iday
Pr oblem No. 1
Feb. 20
Feb. 21
Feb. 24
Problem No. 2
March 5
March 6
March 9
Problem No. 3
. March 12
March 13
March 13
Problem No. 4
March 19
March 20
March 23
Problem No. 5
April 9
April 10
April 13

1

EASTER RECESS-WEEK OF APRIL lst-NO LECTURES
SECOND SEMESTER TESTS IN ALL CLASSES
FEBRUARY TESTS
Senior Class一-Thursday ， February 23rd
Junior Class一-Wednesday ， February 29th
Sophomore Class-Thursday , March 1st
Freshman Class一-Thursday ， March 8th
MARCH TESTS
Senior Class一-Thursday， March 22nd
J unior Class一-Wednesday ， March 28th
Sophomore Class一-Thursday ， March 29th
Fr eshman Class一-Thursday， April 12th
APRIL TESTS
Senior Class一-Wednesday ， April 18th
Junior Class一一可V- ednesday , April 25th
Sophomore Cl卸任-Thursday ， April 26th
Freshman Class一-Thursday， May 3rd
Final Examination Dates will be published in a Later Bulletin.
SENIOR REVIEW DA TES
February 24 , 27 , 28 , 29一-March 1st, Sophomore Test
March 2 , 5 , 6 , 7一-March 8th , Freshman Test
March 23 , 26 , 27 , 28一-March 29th Sophomore Test
April 9 , 10 , 11一-ApriI 12th Freshman Test
April 20 , 23 , 24 , 25一一April 26th, Sophomore Test
April 27 , 28 , May 1 , 2一-May 3rd, Freshman Test
Seniors are not required to turn in abstracts for the second semester.

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APRIL (1928) BULLETIN
FRESHMAN CLASS

COMMENCEMENT ORATOR
Students will be delighted to know
that on Dean Archer's recent trip to
Washington he secured as Com司
mencement Orator for this year
United States Senator Royal S.
Copeland of New York.
Senator Copeland is one of the
outstanding figures in the National
Capitol and has rendered distinfished service in the United States
enate.
He is a splendid speaker
and is sure to bring an inspi1'ing
message.
CLASS DA Y HONORS
Under the rules of the school the membe1' of the Senior Class who has
made the highest scholastic ave1'ageup to the middle of the Senio1' yea1' is
entitled to the hono 1' òf being Valedicto 1'ian at the Class Day exe1' cises.
Thomas J. Ryan , J 1'., of Ma1'blehead will be the Valedictorian this
year having maintained an ave1'age
of 8 伊始3 %. It will be 1' emembe1' ed
that Mr. Ryan has won other honors
in the school. In his F 1'eshman year
he won the Ashc 1' aft Schola1' ship with
an ave1'age of 86% %, in the Sophomo1' e
yea1' he won theSteinbe1'gSchola1' ship
awarded to the man who had made
the highest general average fo 1' the
fi 1' st two years , his average at that
time being 88%. During the Junior
year he stood third in his class.
Second honors entitling the winner
to be Salutatorian go to Patrick A.
Menton of Watertown. His average was 87 1 %3&lt;}毛
Mr. Menton finished
fourth in his Sophomore year and
won the Frost Scholarship for excellence in wo1'k in his Junior year.
The ten men standing next in line
from the two winners are as folIows: Bernard F. Gately, Thomas J.
Grenier, Henry T. Dolan , William C.
O'Meara , Louis E. Baker, Edward T.
Dobbyn , Adam Stefans肘， Douglas
W. Barlow, Timothy L. - Sullivan ,
John J. Ryan , John H. Gilbert.

‘

A real treat is in sto1' e fo 1' our
students in the coming to Boston of
Assistant Attorney-General George
R. Farnum. an old friend and classmate of Dean Arche1'.
He has
promised to give _ two lecturei? on
“Pr ofessional fdeals" to the students
of Su fÏ olk.
The first lecture will occur at 10
A. M. and the second at 7 :30 P. M.
on Tuesday , May 1st. The early divisions will be dismissed five minutes
earI y and pass immediately to the
scho-ol auditorium where the lecture
will be held.
CHANGE IN PROBLEM SCHEDULE
An important and far reaching
plan will be inaugurated next yea1'
in the p 1' oblem schedule. The purpose of the problem feature of our
work is to train students in the
p 1' oper method of handling legal p 1' obems; how to analyze an actual set
of facts and to write a logical opinion thereon. Thus they may acquire
ability to face tests and examinations.
Hitherto we have continued problem
work up to the end of the Senior year.
Analysis of student records , however, convinces us that the object of
problems has been accomplished by
the end of the Sophomore year. Beginning next year we will discontinue written problems in the Junior

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APRIL (1928) BULLETIN
and Senior Classes and substitute
therefor an additional five-question
monthly test.
By thus relieving such students of
the burden of problems we w i11 enable them to centralize their efforts
upon the mastery of legal principles.
Twelve individual five-question tests
and three ten-question examinations
each semester w il1 furnish abundant
incentive for study. Tasks w i11 not
be lightened but the emphasis will
be changed and the results in
scholastic achievement will undoubtedly be increased.
有Ve have added to ou 1' sta fl' in the
Pr oblem Department so that four
lawyers now devote their entire time
to the preparation and correction of
papers. \Ve have a considerable list
of lawyers who devote a part of
thei1' time to correcting papers. After_ _t his year the correcting work
will be so thoroughly organized under
a stafl' of experts that no appeals
from marks w il1 be justified or
permitted.
The change wìll mean the elimination of uncertainty as to the value of
a student's work , thus enabling the
Dean to dismiss lazy or incompetent
students at an earlier date than is
now possible.
This process w i11
prove highly beneficial to every
student in the schoo 1.
OFFICE HOURS
A very serious situation confronts
the school because of the very democratic nature of the institution.
There has been laid upon the Secretary and the Dean a tremendous
burde~ of more or less unnecessary
interviews , appeals from marks.
tuition alibis and the like.
These
time-consuming interruptions from
the necessary work of the school

must be curtailed as much as
possible.
Miss Caraher, of course , bears the
heavier burden for her 。但 ce is a
buffer between the students and the
Dean's office. She has recently suffered a physical breakdown and for
a time her physician feared nervous
prostration. The school has sent her
to Bermuda on a vacation in which
to bu ì1 d up her strength , but her
work must be lightened.
An analysis of the situation demonstrates that fully 75% of the demands upon her time come from a
sma11 minority of the students and
are ~holly unnecessary. No school
ever had a more tireless 0 1' efficient
executive than has Suffolk Law
School
in
Miss
Caraher.
The
n~tural chiyalr:l' of the young men
who attend this school. _ now that
atten~ion ， w il1 surely prompt them
to refrain from bu1' dening her with
any unnecessary requests or visits.
She_ must be permitte-d to recover her
health a~d ~o c_arry _on her very important duties free from needless interruption.
-We dislike to establish office hours
when students can seek an interview
with the Dean , but it is obvious that
his time belongs in the service of a11
the students and he should not be
interrupted except on important
matters.
JUNE 5th, 1928
Class Da y_ Ex~cises w i11 be held
1:_h~s ~ear_at 2:00 ]:&gt;. M. Tuesday , June
5th , in the school auditorium. - , Commencement exercises will be held at
7 :30 P. M. on the same day in Tremon~ T~mple._
he change to the
eve~ing hour !s for the greater c~~-:'
venience of the students and their
friends.

:r

SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS.
Wednesday
Thursday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday

May 16 ,
May 17,
May 21 ,
May 22 ,
May 23 ,
May 斜，
May 衍，
May 28 ,
May 29 ,

Constitutional Law
Equity &amp; Trusts
Torts
Deeds , M. &amp; E.
Landlord &amp; Tenant
Contracts
Partnership
Real Property
Agency

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�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1928) BULLETIN
MAlNE BAR EXAMINATION.
AUGUST 1928
Nine of the twenty-five men who
passed the 1\直 aine bar examination of
August 1928 , received their training
in Suffolk Law SchooI.
In other
words 口lore than one-third of Maine's
latest lawyers were trained in our
schoo l.
The following analysis of
results should be of interest:
Eleven members of the Class of
1928 of Su貪O lk Law Sc
址
examjnation and eight of them were
successful, making an average of
success for the class of 72%1 % . The
three who failed made an average
within five points of pRssing.
One graduate of the Class of 1927
took the examination and passed.
Three graduates of the Class of 1925
took the exam and failed. Four men
who had been dropped from the
school for inferior scholarship were
also on the unsuccessful 1ist.
These results emphasize anew the
truth that our school records indicate with substantial accuracy whether a man is likely to pass or fail in
bar examinations.
Every one of
the nine who passed had a scholastic
record that would forecast his success.
Of the graduates who failed ,
five had past records that would
occasion no surprise at their failure ,
since each incurred conditions or
were obliged to repeat courses while
in school. As for the four men who
were dropped from the school for 妞"
ferior scholarship their failure was
to be expected.
The results for the State , according to newspaper accounts , were
14twenty-five successful candidates out
of sixty". making an average success
of a11 candidates of 41%%.
Sixteen
Suffolk graduates made an average
success of 54 等金今已， but as before indicated the Class of 1928 made a
72%1 % successful average.
The successful list is as fo11ows:
Arnold J. Bowker '28
位mon J.
Darivoff '28
Edward B. Karp '28
Abraham S. Lezberg '28
Clifton E. Mack '27
J ohn J. McGee '28
Lawrenee P. MeHugh '28
Harry Sesnovich '28
Abner R. Sisson '28

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
For the

benefit of the incoming
Class and to refresh recolleetions
of
students
of
other
classes the following information is
set forth herewith.
Lectures in a11 classes wi11 begin
on Monday, September 17th. Classes
will meet at 10 A. M. , 4 P. M. , 6
P. M. , and 7 :30 P. M. on Mondays ,
Tuesdays and Fridays. Students are
required to attend only one lecture
a day, at the time most convenient
to
each individual.
Transferring
from one division to another is per:m issible at any time without notifying the 0血 ce.
Procure the necessary text books
required for each course.
As admission to classes is by a ttendance tickets only, it will be necessary for every student to take care
of his first instalment of the year's
tuition on or before September 17th.
He will then receive a strip of
attendance tickets covering lectures
through the first quarter.
Since attendance is compulsory'
and attendance records are checked
from these admission tickets the
name should be either W' ritten in ink
or printed legibly on each ticket.
This is very important.
Classroom doors wi lI be locked fifteen minutes after the beginning of
each lecture.
No student will be
permitted to enter thereafter nor
leave until the close of the lecture
period.
Students are requested to make no
appointments , business or social, that
will interfere with fu l1 attendance at
lectures.
N 0 student will be called
to the telephone.
Both Treasury and bookstore windows wiU be open during the day
and evening during the week of September 10th for the accommodatiol'l
of students who wish to avoid standing in line for long periods on opening day.
The classes of 1929 and 1930 are
entitled to the former tuition rate of
$100. Their first quarterly payment
together with the incidental fee will
amount to $30.
Sophomores will pay the incidental
E干reshman

LECTURES IN ALL CLASSES WILL BEGIN ON
SEPTEMBER 17th

�2

SEPTEMBER (1928) B ULLETIN

fee with their first quarterly payment , making $40 in all.
The F干r-eshman Class , however , having paid the incidental fee at the
I; hne of registering, will pay $35 only
for the first quarter.
All classes wilI meet in the annex:
.J unior 1王 all ， lsj; fioor; Sophomore
E主all ，
2nd fioor; Senior Hall , 3rd
floor; F、reshman Hall , 4th fioor.
Students enter the building from
Derne Street (main entrance) and
pass up the stairs to the second
fioor; thence down the long corridor
to the annex and turn to the Ieft.
The school library occupies the entire Derne Street front of the second fioor.
PROBLEM WORIζ
In the Freshman and Sophomore
classes problem ::i for home work will
begin after the fourth week of
school , around October 15th. In accordance with the announcement
made in the April Bulletin. .J unior
and Senior classes will hereafter be
excused from problem work , since
experience has demonstrated that
during the Freshman and Sophomore
years the chief purpose of the preparing of problem answers Îs attained. Mimeographed questions w i1l
be handed out in class each week
according
to
schedule
contained
nereln.
S冶udents will be required to hand
i.n for correction their written opinions exactly one week from the date
of issuance. Instructions for answering
problems will be published in a later
bulletin.
In. the .J unior year four regular
monthly tests 明rill be given each
semester in addition to the semester
examinations.
The Senior program
being already full the regular schedule of three tests and semester finals
will be adhered to.
COST OF BOOKS
All books necessary for first semester courses are on sale at the school
bookstore in the main corridor at the
left of the entrance.
Freshman . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.75
Sophomore . . . . . . . . . . .
10.25
.J unior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.50
Senior '" . . . . . . . . . . ..
12.00
The complete 1ist for each class
with prices òf each book will be
found on the bulletin board in main
còrridor and at the bookstore window.
STUDENTS WITH CONDITIONS.
Every student who finished the
I?a~t school year with any law cònditions should already have received
a notice from the Dean's office notifying him of such conditions and

stating how they are to be made up
during the coming year.
Through
thoughtlessness on the part of many
students who change their mailing
addresses during the school year and
neglect to notify the 0 血 ce ， many
l1. otices were returned by the post office. It has therefore been impossible to reach through themail all
students finishing the year with conditions. Such students who have not
received notices should make inquiry
at the office as to just what they are
expected to do during the coming
year.
Students who have been notified to
repeat the year are excused from
nothing but abstracts (provided they
were turned in the previous year).
Repeating a year generally means no
advance work.
CLASS OF 1929
Every member of the Class of
1_929_, _ he has not already done so ,
if
should as soon as possible and not
later than October 30 ‘ 1928. submit
proof of general edùcation. to the
secretary's 0 晶 ce. Every year Seniors
~nd themselves ineligible to go on
the preliminary list of candidafes for
th~ ~egree because they have not
submitted their proofs and find ìt
di血 cult to obtain them on time.
The school management , therefore.
considers it wise to require submis':'
sion of proofs during the first semes~~r~
If a student fs a graduate of
hìgh school .o~ .prepar~t?iy sch?ol.he
~ay _p :z: esent his proof by producing
!Iis dipl()ma ()r better stiil by appl y..
ing to the school from whicn he has
g:raduated for a statement certifying
the date of his graduation. If he is
rio_t a graduate of a high school but
relies upon scholastic equivalents , he
should appl-y to the school in question as early as possible after- the
fall term begins. This refers to preþaratory work other than in the Suffolk Preparatory Department.
We
will take judicial notice of our own
records when the time comes.
SENIOR REVIEW
All Seniors are required as a part
of the fourth year work to. take a
general review of the firs七 three
years' work and to pass examinations
in the F干reshman and Sophomore suhjects. The burden is distributed over
the year in the following manner:
To _ take and pass all monthly tests
and semester examinations that are
given t c) the Fr eshman and Soph omore classes during thé' year.
A
speciaI chart showing the progrèss of
the classes in question wi I1 be found
on the Senior bulletin board in main

�3

SEPTEMBER (1928) BULLETJN
corridor so that all may know what
topics need be reviewed in preparation for the scheduled tests.
These tests are so arranged that
they do not confiict with regular
Senior tests.
They are so spaced
that Seniors will have the maximum
of opportunity to prepare for them ,
coming on successive weeks. During
the week prior to each monthly test
Seniors are given , at the close of
their regular Senior lectures , special
forty-five minute reviews by Freshman
and
Sophomore
professors
(coming directly from their own
classrooms to the Review Hall) in
their own subj ects , thus ensuring the
latest law and most effective presentation. These reviews are held at

11:30 A. M. , 5:30 P.
and 9 :05 P. M.

1'1位， '了 :30

P.

孔直­

The sole object of the review is to
oblige each Senior to review and repossess himse1f of the s a_ me clear understanding that he had of the subj ects when they were taken in the
first instance.
Seniors are warned
that they must study diligently if
they wish to secure passing marks in
Freshman and Sophomore subjects.
They will be held _to an aver a_ge of
75 % in this review work.
Conditions therein wiU bar from graduation.
Readjusting the Senior bu_rden by excusing the class fr~m problem work affords additional opportunity for home study.

FIRST SEMESTER SCHEDULE OF PROBLEM AND TEST DATES
FOR ALL CLASSES
Due exactly one
(Problems wiII be handed out on the following dates.
week from day given out.)
PROBLEMS
Fr iday
Monday
Tuesday
October 19
Problem No. 1.... October 15
October 16
November 2
Problem No. 2.... October 29
October 30
Problem No.. 3. . .. November 5
November 6
November 9
November 16
Problem No. 4.... November 12
November 13
Problem No. 5.... November 26
November 27
November 30
TESTS
Senior Class
Sopholnore Class
Thursday , October 11th
Thursday, October 18th
Thursday , November 8th
Thursday, November 15th
Thursday , December 6th
Thursday , December 13th
J unior Class
Freshlnan Class.
、iV ednesday ， October 10th
Thursday , October 25th
VVednesday, October 31st
Thursday , November 22nd
VVednesday , November 21st
Thursday , December 20th
可iV ednesday ， December 19th
SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS
Senior Class
VVednesday , January 9th一-Carriers and Confiict of Laws~"
Thursday , January 17th一-Massachusetts Pleading and Practice.
可司Tednesday ， January 23rd一-Corpora tions .
.J unior Class
Tuesday , January 15th一-Evidence.
Monday, January 21st-一一可Vills and Probate.
Thursday, January 24th-" Sales (no exam. in Bankruptcy).
Sopholnore Class
Thursday, January 10th-"Equity and Trusts.
VVednesday , January 16th一-Bills and N otes.
Tuesday , January 22nd一-Real Pr operty.
Freshlnan Class
Monday , January 14th-Torts.
Friday , January 18th-"-Contracts.
Fr iday, January 25th一一Criminal Law.
Students attending day classes are required to take the same monthly tests and semester examinations as the evening students and .at the
same hours.
No exceptions can be made.
Every- student must plan in
advance for the examination evenings allotted tò his class.
All tests and examinations will begin promptly at 6 P. M. and end
at 9 :30 P. M. However. students whose business hours or train schedules
render it necessary wil1 be permitted to enter -after (; P. M.; and until
7:45 P. M.
N 0 student will be permitted to enter the examination room after
7 :45 P. M. , and no student permitted to leave until that hour.
ð

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SEPTEMBER (1928) BULLETIN

FIRST SEMESTER, 1928-29
SCHEDULE OF CLASSES
TWENTY-THIRD YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 17, 1928
Students should report on opening- ~ay ~t the þ. our scheduled for
the di~isi~~-~hich they ~decide to -attend for the ensuing year.
FRESHMAN CLASS
MONDA Y , September 17-TORTS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M.
Pr of. Henchey, Fr eshman
.4 :00-- 5 :30 P. M. Prof. O'connõ:í-, Freshman
6:00- 7:30 P. ~直.
Prof. Henchey , Freshman
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Pr of. O'Conno去， F干reshman
TUESDAY. Sepb!n1 ber 18一-CONTRACTS.
(Hours and lecture halls as abov t::_ state~.)
Professors Hurley and Spillane alternating.
FRIDA Y. September 21-CRIMINAL LA、高r.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Douglas and Fielding alternating.

Hall ,
Hall ,
Hall ,
Hall ,

4t~ Floor, ~nnex

4th Fl oor , Annex
4th Floor , ~nnex
4th Floor, Annex

SOPHOMORE CLASS
MONDA Y , September 17一-EQUITY AND TRUSTS.
10:00干 11 :30 A. M.
Prof. Le onard , Sophomore Hall ,
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M.
Pr of. Halloran, Sophomore Hall ,
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M.
Pr of. Leonard , Sophomore Hall,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Pr of. Hallorari , Sophomore Hall,
TUESDAY, September 18一-BILLS AND NOTES.
(Hours a n. d lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Duffy alternating.
FRIDAY, September 21-REAL PROPERTY.
〈正主ours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Downes and Getchell alternating.

2nd
2nd
2nd
2nd

Floor,
Floor,
Fl oor ,
Fl oor ,

JUNIOR CLASS
MONDAY, Septen. ber 17-EVIDENCE.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M.
Pr of. Douglas , Junior Hall , 1st Fl oor ,
A :00- 5 :30 P. M.
Pr of. Garland , Junior Hall , 1st Floor,
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M.
Pr of. Douglas , Junior Hall , 1st Fl oor,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Pr of. Garland , Junior Hall , 1st Floor,
TUESDAY, September 18-WILLS AND PROBATE.
〈正主 ours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Halloran and Powers alternating.
FRIDAY , September 21-BANKRUPTCY.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Pr ofessors Thompson and A very alternating.

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

SENIOR CLASS
MONDAY , Septem'ber 17一一CARR I'ERS.
10:00-11:30 A. M.
Pr of. Downes, Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor ,
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M.
Prof. Dillon ,
Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor,
6 :00- 7:30 P. M.
Prof. Downes, Senior Hall , 3rd Floor,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Prof. Dillon ,
Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor,
TUESDAY, Se ptember 18一一.MASSACHUSETTS PRACTICE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors 可iVyin.an and Garland alternating.
FR1DAY, September 21 一-PRIVA TE CORPORATIONS.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Bloomberg alternatlng.

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

�'SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
AUGUST (1928) BULLETIN

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ATTORNEY-GENERAL WARNER
It is a matter of deep gratification
to Suffolk Law School that Hon.
Joseph E. Warner , for several years
Professor of Constitutional Law in
Suffolk , has won the high honor of
being elected by the Legislature t~
the
office
of
Attorney - GeneI" al
of 1\在 assachusetts. Shortly after he
was appointed to the faculty of Suffolk Law School 1'.1 r. Warner was appointed Assistant Attorney-General
by Attorney-General Jay _R. B~nto!?-.
It is sigñificant that when the iIlstarred “ Reading regime" was under
investigation by the Legislature no
shadow of suspicion rested upon
Joseph E. Warner. But it is more
significant that when 1'.1r. Reading resigned under fire and the Legislalature was under the duty of electin!!: a successor it turned almost
un-animously to J osep h_ E. Warner
and was applauded by the public for
its choice.
For years 1'.1 r. Wárner was Speaker of the House of Representatives
and was later considered the logical
man for Lieutenant Governor but
was nosed out in the race for that
office by Alvan T. Fuller. It is a
peculiar coincidence that his opponent on that occasion should be
the Governor who administered the
oath of office as Attorney-General
to 1'.1 r. Warner , thus restoring him
to a high place in the public service.
We are happy to announce that
the Attorney General will continue
to teach Constitutional Law in Suffolk Law Schoo I.

~

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ASSISTANT ATTORNEYGENERAL SIMONEAU
The first graduate of Suffolk Law
School to become an Assistant Attorney-General of Massachusetts is
Edward Simoneau of Marlboro who
was appointed to the staff of Attorney-General Warner a iew days
ago.
1'.1 r. Simoneau has had an unusual
and romantic career. Denied early
educational advantages and obliged
to leave school at fifteen he nevertheless persevered in his ambition to
secure an education. The turning
point in his life occurred in 1914
when at the age of twenty-four , a
shoe factory worker with a family to

對

support, he came to Boston and interviewed Dean Archer with reference to his chances to become a
lawyer. He was accepted as a student and for four years he attended
Suffolk Law School , taking the regular law course and three summers in
the preparatory department. He received his degree of LL. B. from Suffolk in 1918 and was admitted to the
1'.1assachusetts bar in July , 1919.
Shortly thereafter he gave up his
regular occupation and devoted his
entire time to the practice of law.
In less than nine years this young
man whom the “ two years in college" rule would have barred from
the profession of law has won a
distinguished place for himself in
the commonwealth.
He became city solicitor of Marlboro , the city of his birth; he became Mayor of the city and served
with great distinction; he was elected
to the State Senate and soon became
Chairman of the Committee on
Legal Affairs , one of the most important committees in the Legislature. He is now Assistant Attorney呵
General , probably the first evening
law school man to attain that high
honor. The career of this modest,
upright and hardworking young man
should be an inspiration to Suffolk
men generally.

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NEW HAMPSHIRE
BAR ASSOCIA TION
On June 30 , 1928 , Dean Gleason
L. Archer was the guest of the New
Hampshire Bar Association at its
Annual Convention in Manchester.
The invitation to address the convention was extended some months
previously as the result of agitation
concernirig the two year college rule.
The Dean was requested to speak on
the topic of legal education.
The meeting was in the nature of
a joint debate. It had been advertised extensively and the attendance
was very g_ratifying.
One of the
leading lawyers of the State , the
Chairman of the New Hampshire
Board of Bar Examiners , was selected to present the side of the college men. N ot being a college man
he did not commit himself unqualifiedly to the plan of excluding noncollege men from the profession but
he presented statistics of the New

.
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4
6

�2

AUGUST (1928) BULLETIN

Hampshire bar examinations tending
to prove the wisdom of the move:ment.
The success of the two year coIIege movement has no doubt been
largely due to the fact that no one
appe ai- ed to present the side of the
non-college man. Dean Archer's address created a profound sensation,
eliciting much applause and a genuine ovation at the close. One eminent lawyer made a brief speech
condemning the two year college"
movement -and was cheered to the
echo.
Dean Archer was congratuIated by judges and lawyers and
assured that his speech had turned
the tide in New Hampshire.
The
speech
was reprinted and distributed with very marked results at
the American Bar Association Convention in Seattle, Washington , last
month.
SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS FOR
1928-29
FRESHMAN CLASS.
The “ David I. Walsh S c:holarship"
equal in value to one-half the annual
tuition of the winner is awarded in
August of each year to the student
who has maintained the hi穹hest general average in scholarship during
the Freshman Year. The scholarship
this year is awarded to J ames G.
Morris of Roxbury , who completed
the year with a general average of
88 %, %.
The “ 'Arc: her S c: holarship" for the
Freshman Year equal to one-half the
recipient's tuition -and awarded at the
close of each year to the Freshman
finishing second in his class is awarded to Robert Gilman of Dorchester.
who finished the year with a general
average of 88 Ya %.
Other high men were:
Victor E. Landstrom of Middleboro
8n生2%
Arthur X. Koerber of Dorchester
. .. . 86%%
Anthony J. J. Rourke of
Prides Crossing
86%%
J. Joseph Muldowney of North
Andover
86%
執行lliam
C. Maiers of J amaica Plain .
85 %, %
William H. Clark of Wollaston
.
85%%
John J. Dunn of Jamaica Plain 85%%
George R. Keough of South
Boston
. 85 % %
Charles W. Díck of Medford 85%. %
Bradley Prize.
The Bradley prize awarded annualIy to the student maintaining the

“

highest average for the year in the
subject of Contracts is won by
Robert Gilman with an average of
92% %. His nearest competitor was
Anthony J. J. Rourke , with an average of 90%.
SOPHOMO R.E CLASS
The Boynton Scholarship. A scholarship of the value of one-half the
annuaI tuition known as the “ Thomas
J. Boynton Scholarship" , is awarded
annua lI y to the student who maintains the highest generaI average for
the Sophomore Year.
The winner
for 1927-28 is Roger A. Stinchfield
of Clinton , Maine , who completed the
year with an average of 91%4%.
The “ Archer S c: holarship" equal
to one-half the recipient's tuition and
awarded annually to the student who
finishes second in the Sophomore
Class goes this year to Karl W.
Baker of Belmont, who flnished wíth
an average of 91 %.
Their nearest competitors were:
Charles A. Cusick of Dorchester
.,
•
9 0;i4 %
Frank S. Dewey of Marlboro 88%%
Joseph T. Cumiskey of Medford . .
. . . " 87 1 *4%
Leo A. Kíng of Lynn ..
87%%
Thomas E. Walker of Brockton
.. 87%4%
Moses Shyavitz of Haverhill 86% %
Dewey Archambault of Lowell . ., .
86%4 'ì毛
Louis F. Katz of Revere.
8 6 y.. %
Philip Hurwitz of Salem.
86 %
Joseph J. Sonigan of Pea1 從4%
body
. .. ..
. 85
Bradley Prize
The Bradley prize awarded annually to the student maíntaining
the highest average for the year in
the subject of Real Property goes
this year to Karl W. Baker with an
average of 9 是% %.
His nearest
competitor was Roger A. Stinchfield
with an average of 93% %.
The Steinberg Scholarship establìshed by Louís H. Steinberg of the
Class of 1925 as a token of loyalty
to Sutfolk Law School and of sympathy for those who must earn their
way to an education is awarded annually to the student who has attained the highest generaI average
for his flrst two years and is equal
in value to one-half the tuition of
the Junior Year. The scholarship for
1927-28 is awarded to Karl 可V. Baker
who completed the two years with
an average of 90 % %. His nearest
competítor was Roger A. Stinchfield
with an average of 89 4%6%.

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�AUGUST (1 928)
JUNIOR CLASS.
Frost Scholarship.
A scholarship
of the value of one-half the annual
tuition known as the
George A.
Fr ost Scholarship" is awarded annually to that student who maintains the
highest general average
for
the
Junior Year.
The award for 192728 goes to Morris B. Shapiro of
Framingham ,
who
completed
his
Junior Year with an average of
90~14%.

The Archer Scholarship equal to
one-half the recipient's and awarded
at the close of each year to the student who finishes second in the Junior Class is awarded this year to
Maxwell H. Robinson of Lowell , who
maintained a general average in his
Junior Year of 8 9lh 0/ ,
0
Other high men were as fo Ilows:
George H. Toole of Milton ..87 特%
ames _M. Clary of Beverly. .86%%
Edward J. Hanrahan of Jamaica Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . 86特%
Morris Miller of Roxbury. . . 86 VJ. 4 0/
0
Leo Hurwitz of Dorchester. 85%%
C Iifford Z. Christopher of Belmont.
'. .. .. . . , . . ' . . .85 軒%
Henry H. Deitchman of Mattapan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •
85 今已
Bradley Prize
The Bradley prize awarded each
Y~ 3:r to the student maintaining the
highest average for the year iìi the
subject of Constitutional Law is
awarded this year to Maxwell H.
Robinson , who finished with an average of 92 今已. His nearest competitor was Morris B. Shapiro with an
average of 919忘.

.:r

THE NEW YEAR
While it is too early to forecast
the size of the Freshm-an Class. advance registrations indicate that it
、;vill _exceed that of last year by a
considerable margin. Business men ,
brokers , bank officials , teachers and
other 虹len of maturity and experience in life are as usual well represented in the class.
School opens September 17th.
A
special bulletin , giving co 口lplete information concerning opening week ,
first semester test dates and the Iike
will be issued early in September.
TEXT BOOK ON
“ CORPORATIONS"
The text book on “Pr ivate Corporations" , on which Dean Archer
was working from December, 1927.
until last June , will be ready .for usè
next month.
It is now in the bindery.
The book is similar in all re-

NE'月，

BOOKS FOR LIBRARY
A very valuable addition to the
school library is an additional set of
Massachusetts
Digest"
in
eleven
volu口les ， a gift oÎ the Class of 1928.
This token of loyalty to the school
and under-graduate students is deeply appreciated.

“

COURSE IN LEGAL HISTORY
The Board of Bar Examiners of
Massachusetts have announced a new
requirement for
future
examinations.
The topic of Legal 1主 istory
will be added.
Suffolk Law School
will
accordingly institute
a
new
course on that subject to be given
in the second semester of the Senior
Year.
Further information will be
furnished in a later bulletin.

'

和

3

spects to the other text books by the
same author and should render this
difficult course less of a burden to
the Senior Class.
Heretofore the
subj~ct has been based upon mimeographed notes.
A text book , however , with Dean Archer's well known
system of illustrative cases should
give the student a clearer under且
standing than he could gain from a
note course.
COMM'ENCEMENT EXERCISES
The Commencement exercises held
on June 5th, although now past history, deserve especi :iJ. mention. Two
hundred and fifty-eight men were
graduated , the largest class in the
history of the school. Judged by its
scholastic record also it was the best
class to date.
Throughout its four
years it _ maintained consistently high
scholarship and set an example of
~lass h 3:_rmony that was very - pleasing to the schoo I. Much of this was
due 11. 0 doubt to the leadership of
the President of the class. Charles
F. J_. McCue of Cambridge.
The class day exercises were held
in the school auditorium at 2 P. 1\直­
of Qommencement day and were
largely attended.
The Commencement exercises were held in Tremont
Temple at 7 :30 before an audience
that overflowed the great hall with
several hundred stand :fng in the aisles
and around the room.
Many were
turned away.
The Commencement
Orator was United States Senator
Royal S. Copeland of New York , who
de Iivered a very interesting address
on national affairs. The Trustees and
Faculty were present on the 抖的­
form in caps and gowns. Honorable
Joseph F. O'Connell , vice-president
of the Board of Trustees , presided.

“

、

BULLETIN

�4

AUGUST (1928) BULLETIN

AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIA TION
One of the major controversies in
the American Bar Association is being waged over the two year college
requirement. As is well known this
was announced as an association
policy eight years ago despite the
fact that the great majority of the
members of the association and the
majority of its high officials are noncollege men.
From the first Dean Archer has
denounced the movement. While he
believes that a college education is
highly desirable and should be secured by every man that can do so ,
he nevertheless contends that it is
un-American and unjust to say that
a man must attend a particular type
of institution or be :forever barred
:from the legal profession and all
to which the law is a stepping stone.
Dean Archer claims that the rising
cost o :f education is rapidly putting
college training out of reacl!: of
young men who must support themselves or others.
He urges that if
college is to be a requirement the
bar association should set itself to
work to secure the establishment of
evening colleges in all great centers
of population.
For one man to attempt to oppose
a movement of national dimensions
would seem to be the height of
folly but the fact is that in the _Buffalo
Convention last year Dean
Archer won his fight to put the Bar
Association on record in favor of
evening colleges. This he well knew
to be :f ar from the desires of the
group that controlled the Section of
Legal Education , so during the past
year he has continued the _ agitation
and has won a very :f ormidable support in all states of the Union. On
the opening morning of the Se_attle
Convention , recently held , the leading newspaper of Seattle published
the Dean's picture on the front page
with a feature story concerning the
fight he was making in the assoc站，
tion.
The details of the contest wili be
outlined in a :future issue of the
Alumni News.
Dean Archer in a
spectacular battle secured the adoption o :f two amendments to the Constitution o :f the American Bar Association.
One provides for a referendum of the association policies and
the other will 0 blige all sections of
the bar association- to meet hereafter on Tuesdays. The significance o :f
the 宣rst amendment should be at
once apparent.
The second amend-

ment is aimed at the Section of Legal
Education which for the past few
y_ears has been exceedingly active
throughout
the
Nation
twelve
months a year but has refused to
hold a business meeting at convention time as other sections have done
where its policies could be discussed
in the open.
At a dinner of the Section held
&lt;:)n Thursday _ evening , July 27th ,
Dean Archer delivered an address in
which he proved from their own
records that those in control of the
Section were the very “ conspirators"
~ho _ engineered the _ capture of the_
Section of Legal Education eight
years ago and that the two year college rule originated in 1915 in the
law school association and not in
1921 as they claimed.
He also
:f orced them to admit that the salaried 0血 cial of the section who is
going about the country to secure
the adoption of the two year col!eg~ rule has been for years- and stiII
is Secretary of the Association of
American Law Schools. the Unive~ity School Group.
The crusade for improving the
profession of law was demonstrated
to have been intended by its authors
as a means of suppressing evening
law schools.
He proved from their
own _records that they plotted to use
the Bar Association as a screen and
to mak~ the Bar Association pay the
biIIs.
It was brought out that the
Association is now paying out of its
treasury $15 , 000 a year for the use
of the Section of Legal Education.
The result o :f Deari Archer's efforts at the Seattle Convention iSi an
awakened
sentiment
against
the
“ conspirators" that renders their
continuance in power very uncertain.
A referendum on the whole
proposition is not unlikely.
But another fact , significant of
Suffolk Law School's newly acquired
standing in the American Bar Association , should not be overlooked.
Mr. O'Connell o :f our trustees , 'was
re -e lected to the General Council of
the Association and instead of one
member of the State Council as last
year Suffolk won all four. This was
not intentional , however , :f or two of
our trustees were nominated for the
Council by persons outside our delegation.
The new members of the
State Council are James M. Swift
and Thomas J. Boynton of the trustees and Professors James H. Brennan and George F. Hogan , graduates
of Suffolk and members o :f its
faculty.

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可
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、

•

�SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
SEPTEMBER (1928) BULLETIN
MAINE BAR EXAMINATION.
AUGUST 1928
Nine of the twenty-:five men who
passed the Maine bar examination of
August 1928 , received their training
in Su質 olk Law School.
In other
words more than one-third of Maine's
latest lawyers were trained in our
school.
The following analysis of
results should be of interest:
Eleven members of the Class of
1928 of Suffolk Law School took the
examination and eight of them were
successful. making an average of
success for the c1 ass of 72 0/3.1 %. The
three who failed made an average
within 益ve points of p月 ssing.
One graduate of the Class of 1927
took the examination and passed.
Three graduates of the Class of 1925
took the exam and failed. Four men
who had been dropped from the
school for inferior scholarship were
also on the unsuccessful list.
These results emphasize anew the
truth that our school records indicate with substantial accuracy whether a man is likely to pass or fail in
bar examinations.
Every one of
the nine who passed had a scholastic
record that would forecast his success.
Of the graduates who failed ,
:five had past - records that would
occasion no surprise at their failure ,
since each incurred conditions or
were obliged to repeat courses while
in school. As for the four men who
were dropped from the school for inferior scholarship their failure was
to be expected.
The results for the State , accord司
ing to newspaper accou Il t_s , were
“ twenty-:five successful candidates out
of sixty" , making an average success
of all candidates of 41%%. Sixteen
Suffolk graduates made an average
success of 54 耳含 9忌， but as before indicated the Class of 1928 made a
72學生1 % successful average.
The successful list is as follows:
Arnold J. Bowker '28
Simon J. Darivoff '28
Edward B. Karp '28
Abraham S. Lezberg '28
Clifton E. Mack '27
John J. McGee '28
Lawrence P. McHugh '28
Harry Sesnovich '28
Abner R. Sisson '28

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
For the bene:fit of the incoming
Fr eshman Class and to refresh recollections
of
students
of
other
classes the fo l1 owing information is
set forth herewith.
Lectures in all classes will begin
on Monday, September 17th. Classes
will meet at 10 A. ]\瓜， 4 P. M. , 6
P. M. , and 7:30 P. M. on Mondays ,
Tuesdays and Fridays. Students are
required to attend only one lecture
a day , at the time most convenient
to each individual.
Transferring
from one division to another is permissible at any time without notifyíng the 0血 ce.
Procure the necessary text books
required for each course.
As admíssíon to classes is by attendance tickets only , it wiU be necessary for every student to take care
of hís :first instalment of the year's
tuition on or before September 17th.
He wi l1 then receive a strip of
attendance tickets covering lectures
through the :first quarter.
Since attendance is compulsory
and attendance records are checked
from these admission tickets the
name should be either 'W'ri t:t en in ink
or print'瞳d legibly on each ticket.
This is very important.
Classroom doors will be locked :fifteen minutes after the beginning of
each lecture.
N 0 student wiII be
permitted to enter thereafter nor
leave until the close of the lecture
period.
Students are requested to make no
appointments , business or social , that
wiII Ìnterfere with ful1 attendance at
lectures. N 0 student will be called
to the telephone.
Both Treasury and bookstore windows will be open during the day
and evening during the week of September 10th for the accommodation
of students who wish to avoid standing in line for long periods on opening day.
The classes of 1929 and 1930 are
entitled to the former tuítion rate of
$100. Their :first quarterly payment
together with the incidental fee wilI
amou~t to $30.
Sophomores will pay the incidental

LECTURES IN ALL CLASSES WILL BEGIN ON
SEPTEMBER 17th

�、

2

SEPTE l\'l BER (1928) B ULLETIN

fee with their :first quarterly pay旬
making $ 4 0 in all.
The 五千reshman Class. however. having paid the incidental fee at the
time of registering, will pay $35 only
for the :first quarter.
All classes will meet in the annex:
JunÌor Hall , 1st fl. oor; Sophomore
E主 all ，
2nd fl. oor; Senior 1主 all ， 3rd
fioor; Fr eshman 1王 all ， 4th fl. oor.
Students enter the building from
Derne Street (main entrance) and
pass up the stairs to the second
floor; thence down the long corridor
to the annex and turn to the left.
The school library occupies the entire Derne Street front of the second floor.

stating how they are to be made up
during the coming year.
Throug}
thoughtlessnass on the part of 口lan
students who change their mailin
addresses during the school year an
neglect to notify the 0 品 ce ， man 宅
notices 、;v ere returned by the pos七 of
:fi ce.
It has therefore been lmposs:
ble to reach through themail al
students :finishing the year with conditions. Such students who have not
received notices should make inquiry
at the office as to just what they are
expected to do during the coming
year.
Students who have been noti :fi ed to
repeat the year are excused from
nothing but abstracts (provided they
were turned in the previous year).
Repeating a year generally means no
advance work.

me帥，

PROBLEM WORK
In the Fr eshman and Sophomore
classes problems for home work will
begin after the fourth week of
school , around October 15th. In accordance with the
announcement
made in the April Bulletin , Junior
and Senior classes will hereafter be
excused from problem work , since
experience has demonstrated that
during the Freshman and Sophomore
yea~s the _ chie f_ _purpose of the preparing of problem answers is at~ain~d. Mimeographed questions w il1
be handed out in class each week
~ccording
to
schedule
contained
nereln.
Students 可rill be required to hand
in for correction their written opinions exactly one week from the date
of issuance. Instructions for answering
problems will be published in a later
bulletin.
In _ the Junior year four regular
monthly tests wiU be given -each
semester in addition to the semester
examinations.
The Senior program
being already full the regular schedule of three tests and semester :fi nals
will be adhered to.
COST OF BOOKS
All books necessary for first semester courses are on sale at the school
bookstore in the main corridor at the
left of the entrance.
Freshman . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.75
Sophomore . . . . . . . . . . .
10.25
.J unior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.50
Senior . .'. . . . . . . . . . . ..
12.00
The complete list for each class
with prices of each book wiIl be
found on the bulletin board in main
corridor and at the bookstore window.

CLASS OF 1929
Every member of the Class of
1_929_, _if he has not al1' eady done so ,
should as soon as possible and not
late 1' than October 30. 1928. submit
proof of general edúcation to the
sec1' eta 1'y's 0 丘ìce. Every year Seniors
:find themselves ineligible to go on
the p 1' eli lF ina1'Y list of candidates fo 1'
th~ ~egr~e because they have not
submitted thei1' p 1'oofs and :find ìt
di血 cult to obtain- them on time.
The school management , the1'efore.
conside1's it wise to 1'equi 1' e submis':'
sion of p 1' oofs du 1'ing the :fi rst semester.
If a student fs a graduate of
high school 0 1' preparator-y school he
~ay _p z: esent hi s_ p 1' oof by p 1' oducing
~is dipl&lt;?ma or better stiÎ I by apply--:'
ing to the schooI from whicli he -hãs
~rad~ated !o_r a statement certifying
the date of his graduation. I f he is
not a g 1' aduate of a high school but
relies _upon scholastic equivalents , he
should apply to the scliool in question as early as possible after the
fall term begins. This refe 1's to prepa1'ato 1'y work othe 1' than in the Suffolk P 1'eparatory Depa1'tment.
We
will take judicial notice of our own
1' eco 1' ds when the time comes.
SENIOR REVIEW
A!l Seniors are required as a part
of the _ fourth year work to take a
gene1'al review of the 金rst th1'ee
yea1's' work and to pass examinations
in the F干reshman and Sophomo 1' e subjects. The bu1'den is dist1'ibuted over
the year in the following manner:
To _ take and pass all monthly tests
and semester examinations that are
given to the Freshman and Sopho .,.
more classes du 1'ing the yea1'.
A
special cha1't showing the prog1' ess of
the classes in question will be found
on the Senior bulletin board in main

STUDENTS WITH CONDITIONS.
Every student who finished the
~ast school year with any law conditions should already have received
a notice from the Dean's office noti司
令ing him of such conditions and

品L

/
./'

�SEPTEMBER (1938) BULLETIN
corridor so that all may know what
topics need be reviewed in preparation for the scheduled tests.
These tests are so arranged that
thÐY do not conflict with regular
Senior tests.
They are so spaced
that Seniors will have the maximum
of opportunity to prepare for them ,
coming on successive weeks. During
the week prior to each monthly test
Seniors are given , at the close of
their regular Senior lectures , special
forty-five minute reviews by Freshman
and
Sophomore
professors
( coming directly from their own
classrooms to the Review Hall) in
their own subjects , thus ensuring the
latest law and most effective presentation. These reviews are held at

11:30 A. M. , 5:30 P. M. , 7:30 P. M.
and 9 :05 P. M.
The sole object of 'the review is to
oblige each Senior to review and repossess himself of the same clear understanding that he had of the subjects when they _ were taken in the
first instance.
Se芷江 ors are warned
that they must study diligently if
t; hey wish to secure passing marks in
Fre-shman and Sophomore subjects.
They will be held to an average of
75 % in this review work.
Conditions therein wíll bar from graduation.
Readjusting the Senior bu_rden by excusing the class from problem work affords addi七ional opportunity for home study.

SEMESTER SCHEDULE OF PROBLE 品直 AND TEST DATES
FOR ALL CLASSES
(Problems wilI be handed out on the following dates.
Due exactly one
week from day given out.)
PROBLEMS
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Problem No. 1.... October 15
October 16
October 19
Problem No. 2.... October 29
October 30
November 2
Problem No. 3 ... November 5
November 6
November 9
Problem No. 4.... November 12
November 13
November 16
Problem No. 5.... November 26
November 27
November 30
TESTS
Senior Class
Sophomore Cla時
Thursday , October 11th
Thursday, October 18th
Thursday , November 8th
Thursday , November 15th
Thursday , December 6th
Thursday , December 13th
Junior Class
Freshman Class
可Vednesday， October 10th
Thursday , October 25th
VVednesday, October 31 的
Thursday , November 22nd
V/ednesday, November 21 的
Thursday, December 20th
可Vednesday， December 19th
SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS
Senior Class
VVednesday , January 9th一-Carriers and Conflict of Laws.
Thursday, January 17th一-Massachusetts Pleading and Practice.
VVednesday , January 23rd一-Corporations.
J unior Class
Tuesday, January 15th一-Evidence.
Monday , January 21s仁一-"\司Tills and Probate.
Thursday, January 24th一-Sales (no exam. in Bankruptcy).
Sophomore Class
Thursday, January 10th-Equity and Trusts.
VVednesday , January 16th-Bills and Notes.
Tuesday , January 22nd一-Real Property.
Freshman Class
Monday , January 14th一-Torts.
Friday, January 18th-Contracts.
Friday , January 25th一-Criminal Law.
Students attending day classes are required to take the same monthly tests and semester examinations as the evening students and at the
same hours.
N 0 exceptions can be made.
Every student must plan in
advance for the examination evenings aUotted to his class.
All tests and examinations wi lI begin promptly at 6 P. M. and end
at 9 :30 P. M. However , students whose business hours or train schedules
render it necessary will be permitted to enter after 6 P. M. , and until
7:45 P. M.
N 0 student will be permitted to enter the examination room after
7 :45 P. M. , and no student permitted to leave until that hour.
FIRST

3

�.~

/

4

SEPTEMBER (1 928) BULLETIN

FIRST SEMESTER, 1928-29
SCHEDULE OF CLASSES
TWENTY -THIRD YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 17 , 1928
Students should report on openin g- day ~t the hour scheduled for
the division which they -decide to attend for the ensuing year.
FRESHMAN CLASS
MONDAY , Septe:rn ber 17一-TORTS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M. Pr of. Henchey, Freshman
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M.
Prof. O'Connor. Fr eshman
6:00- 7:30 P. M.
Prof. Henchey , Freshman
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Prof.O'Connor , Fr eshman
TUESDA Y. Se'Dre:rn ber 18一一CONTRACTS.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Hurley and Spillane alternating.
FRIDAY , Septe :rn ber 21 一-CRIMINAL LA W.
(王主 ours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Douglas and Fielding alternating.

Hall ,
Hall ,
Hall ,
Hall ,

4tþ E! oor , Annex
4th Fl oor , Annex
4th Floor , Annex
4th Floor , Annex

SOPHOMORE CLASS
MONDA Y , Septe:rn ber 17-EQUITY AND TRUSTS.
10 :00-11 :30 A. M.
Prof. Le onard , Sophomore Hall ,
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Pr of. Halloran , Sophomore Hall ,
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. Prof. Leonard , Sophomore Hall ,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M. Pr of. Halloran , Sophomore Hall ,
TUESDA Y , Septe:rn ber 18一-BILLS AND NOTES.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Duffy alternating.
FRIDAY , Septe:rn ber 21-REAL PROPERTY.
(1主 ours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Downes and Getchell alternating•

2nd
2nd
2nd
2nd

Floor ,
Floor ,
Floor ,
Floor ,

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

.J UNIOR CLASS
MONDAY , Septeilnber 17一-EVIDENCE.
10:00-11:30 A. M. Prof. Douglas , Junior Hall , 1st Floor , Annex
4 :00- 5 :30 P. M. Pr of. Garland , Junior Hall , 1st Floor , Annex
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M. pr.of. Douglas , Junior Hall , 1st Floor , Annex
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Prof. Garland , Junior Hall , 1st Floor , Annex
TUESDA Y , Septe :rn be'r 18一-WILLS AND PROBATE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Halloran and Powers alternating.
FRIDAY , Septe :rn ber 21 一-BANKRUPTCY.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors Thompson and Avery alternating.

SENIOR CLASS
MONDAY. Septe:rn'h er 17一-CARRIERS.
10:00-11:30 A. M. Pr of. Downes, Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor ,
4 :00"" 5 :30 P. M. Prof. Dillon ,
Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor ,
6 :00- 7 :30 P. M.
Prof. Downes , Senior Hall , 3rd Floor,
7 :35- 9 :05 P. M.
Prof. Dillon ,
Senior Hall , 3rd Fl oor ,
TUESDAY, Septe:rn ber 18一一MASSACHUSETTS PRACTICE.
(Hours and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors τV"yman and Garland alternating.
FRIDAY , Septe:rn ber 21-PRIVATE CORPORATIONS.
(Ho~rs and lecture halls as above stated.)
Professors York and Bloomberg alternating.

'
可;~:-.

Annex
Annex
Annex
Annex

一一一一-一

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                <text>This scrapbook documents aspects of George Christopher Kendall’s early life and career from 1903-1944. Kendall was born on August 22, 1885 in British Guiana, South America. He was employed as a letter carrier for the government post office from 1901 until 1910 and later managed a theatrical group called the Merry Makers. Kendall emigrated to the U.S. in 1911 but after four years left for Canada to work for the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Between the years of 1915 and 1921, Kendall travelled between Canada and the U.S. to attend Armstrong Tech High School in Washington D.C. and New York Electric School in New York City. During his residency, he studied at the Wheeler Prep School. He then entered Suffolk Law School in 1924 and graduated in 1928 but never practiced law. Kendall spent most of his adult life in Boston and Woburn, MA. The scrapbook includes his Canadian passport, employment papers, handwritten journals, academic certificates, license renewals, wedding invitations, personal photographs, cancelled will, and sheet music written by Kendall.</text>
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'
---_--~-t ' --:---INDEX TO_ ,SUFFOLK LAW NEWSPAPER- -_ ·
:1970 to May 198-5 · · 1--------Note. Oni'y-:-s-elected items. have oeen indexed. This set iS the
_________ __
·best tJia_t __could b~ amassed at this ti~e. _ A list of-~-t--he-i-'s-s-u-e:s-----c-_-·_____ ·.
---i~d;~ed. follows:
'· ·
· -, '
S-uffolk_ate (one issue) 19?0? ~
1 ·
- -·-_-D-i-e-t--a~I~-e-.-2~M-a-y-147--J _____
1

.

Di Ct a_ I I no •. 3 De C. 11 ' '1'9-2.3
7
'
Di .c t a I I I no • 2 - }ie c • 2 , 1 9 7 4
I
··:\(\( ----Dicta IV nos. i-~ 1975-1976
· · •
,... ./Di__s,t_a V nos·. 1-7 1976-1977
C1.;__!.:____· ·
- Di c t a . VI no s • 1 - 1 1 1 9 77 - 7 8
J?i. c y·a VII nos •. _1-13 197~-!8_;;-;7~9~-· {'-..,=-----~~----------=-~-_:_-----:--:------,--~-----:
_:.i _J1i.c-t.a--V--- - H:-rsr7 9-:S 0
Dicta .lX nos. 1:-4 1-980-81
Dicta X nos. 5-9 1981-82
Diit~: XI.nos. 1,2 1982_
_New. Dicta:_!. no~,~- l-7_0982-1984
Dicta: II JlOS .• 1-=-71- 19'8·3~8Y
- Dicta. III nos. 1-5 1984-85
I_- --

-.!,..ABA J,aw student

divis:i.,pn ·by Robert Bonsignore
.·
-...._ ·
.
. III no. 5 May 1985
-~-----:-----c,a,o\d--vice apout vice'-by Nick Poser.II_[ no. ·2 -...Nov. 1984
~ffirmat'ive action by Jeremy Silve.rfine
X no. 9. Dec 10,
19 81. t
Alternative r~lease policy ·needed? (grad.~)
Vil no. 9 March lz', 1979
__ '.A~ican w_ay (jury .duty) _
.
·.
-~nd on~ view from without by Jeff Chamoerlain (humor on
interview process_) .IV no. 2 No;. 1975
. Antip~rno -law: yes- or not? Mike Hussey and Erin Kemple
III rio. 2 Nov. 1984
XI no. 2 Apri~ 1, 1982
April Fool's day piiody page
Army policy-on Drugs by Rick Con n1~ 11 y
I I Oc t • 19 8 3
--------- ,.,·.. ~- .--irs-saulting--.:_he wcnlr:::e"tili'c by Mart Bona hi.re fg-ra--des-)·- III no. 5 May 1985
Attorney pro-Tiles by Sar.ah Carter and Patti Lynch (John
II no. 2.Nov. 1983Harwood)
.AL L-orney Pr:.o file by Nancy Aldrich (Alice Hanlon'balances motherhood and law)
II no. 3 De·c. 1983
Attorney profile by Nancy Aldrich (Dian~ Moriarty)
Ii nQ. 6 April ~984
Attorney Strangelqve by Dan iemire (moot court oral
advocacy experience) ..
VIII no. 11 April 3, 1980
~B.
. ·\
1

I- -

,-c,,

_

-=--~Y Jeff Baker

I no. 3 New _picta Nov. 1982
on blackacre •• ( prop~rty etc.) by Jeff Bak'e:r
I no • 4 New Dicta D__e_c..-1-9-8-2-____:___------1
·B.a·ker on b__Lac.ka-G--I'-e-{moot court) hy Jeff Baker
ct a Fe 1:i-.-r 19 8 3 f ·\...

1"-'----------~a:k~r

L-~~-_:____:_..~=~~-

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- .. -.-

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B-a-k.ar on b)ackacre ·br j°eff~Baker (ch.oosing frie_n_d_s-)1 no."' F-New i)4.:e ta___Ma i:'ch
Baker on blackacre by Jeff Baker (lasf exams)
::I no. /~New D~!:;ta~A-pr
_ _ _ _ _·,,,B.a-.lee:r1 ·on Bl'ac~acre by. Jeff_ Bake-r (seat s_election)
·--------.. II O,ct.
Baker on blacka~re by Je~f Baker (Study grdups)
II no. 2w Nov.

,. -....., __
.._

.. i. ~ .

·--.-.---~-~·-.-

_:_,__.__:____:_.c____~~:____-.::~~---

19 8 3-:

~

1983
1983
1983

II no.
-1983
___B~aker O,Jl_ .blackacre bx_ Jeff Bake_r (moO:t~c-0ur&amp;r&lt;.I.L.l~~_.._,'-------~=----I------- - ____
______ ___
·n ri: • . Feb. 1984
B~ker on Blackacre by Jeff Baker
II no. 6 April 1984
.Baker on blackacre -by Jeff Ba-ker· (exam.s) __I I IJ,o.• LJ!i.a_l9_84 ___ ·
Ba-k""'k-e for-m--.- ·
--- - -~--vTno. 7 Feb, - ,1
19 77
Bailey and Balliro discuss law·
IX no. ·3 Nov. 25, 1980
- - - - - - ~ B a l s a dominates ___sBi 'bud-get meeting ·
V n-0. 2 _9ct. t976
Balsa statement on racial v101.-en-c-e- 1 i-n.B.os_top
·- - - ~ VIII no~ 6 Nov. 28, 1979
Bat_tered women"ls -advocacy by Diane Margo-1-in ·
-----------"-- - - 111 no. 2 NOV .--..-1-n9:--.-gn4------- - - - - - -

er,

Bi.b.l_i_o_g._r_~~phi_c_tl__e._~~~Y_Q_g_~vi dence by. _E. ·J. Bander
-_
__
- · ··
·
- · Vol._ 8 n~2- Sept.24, 1979..
JHg brother is here by E.J.Bander (CO!llputers in
. unive-rsity)
I no. 2 New Dicta Oct. 19.82
Board ends automatic grants by·David Hickey
no.
-Bo·ok. or't_h_e~mo-nth - _!eview of Wren and Wren the legal
rese·arch manual_ by-··o-ar'1erie-Daniele
II no. -4 Feb. 1984
Book: of-t"ne--inon·t1f:- Bardot M. P.· by P&gt;.. P. Herbert reviewed
by Darlene Daniele__
- -----~ _ II no. 5 Mar 1984
.
BU to buy Suffolk
VII- no. 11 April 10, 1979
BU master o( ~a~pr~gram by Lenard B. Zide
I no. 4 New -Dicta-=-=-Dec. 1982
- Byting by apple by -E.J,Ba-nder I no. 3 New Dicta Nov. 1982

-c-

--·----=---=~~~=-~-- _

--L -

-¥

Call of the wall~t beckons.stud~nts bey;nd Suffolk by
~-,r,
Alli~_ Weir__ (su_ppliment;_in_g ir1come)
Vo!. IV no, 2 Nov. 197·5
--'---· --- - - -e-ap1-or-1--1-Jnni:-±·s-hme n t -a modest :-pro po s a 1
--------.--------_---:-.------•--f-110:--5::~New-~Dic.t:a Feb. -1983, II no. 7 May f91f4
Chec~list for.constitutional, law and U.S. Supr_e_me Courty · b y E , J'. B and e r
.,,
VI I I n o • 6
No v • 2
1 9 7- 9
Check~l_s_t__ for legal r~_sea·rch in law reviews ·oy E.J.
-~-cc-~
Bander
VIII no. 3 Oct. 8, 1979,
updated IX no. 1 Sept. 22, 1980
.-Cl~r~ (Gerard) on the Urban Lawyer
X no. 9 Dec. 10, 1981
Clark competition by Ma.rty He_rnandez
II no. 4 Feb, 1984
Clark competition by ,Jeff Baker
_ II no. 5 ~1ar 1984
Comments by the Directo-r of plaeement on the SBA re~port ·
CD~-Vi co)
_
VIII no. 13
M-ay 9, 1980
~G-o-111111-u-t-e-F 's lament by Dar] ene M •. Daniele
I. no.
G.o_m._p_u_t'e rs and the .. 1 aw :. i s S ~ f fo 1 k b e·h :i. n d : qy J e .f f B a k er
~~2-:",:-~_ ---==-.:..-=.~~~=no.:. :-~- Fe~~- _
1

e, ·

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. ·,· r

t

s p·e a·k-s--' -0'~1 aw: a na'~crH :Les
X no. 7 -May 4, 198T_"""_._________ _
Consequences· of academic revi·ew - report'4&gt;y Dohna.:·E.
Cohen and Scott Lewis
X no. 7 May .4, _1981.
Conseq·u·ences of academic review: where do you sta·nd-------~~VII (VIII ?)no •. 10 - March U, 1980
. ~- - ..'
Co.nvicts:-·judicial outca'sts--.-by Mary Trombly (Prof~ Ward's.
Prisoner's rights c_o.;.1rs~)
.. VIII no. 9 Feb--:-:-:-2,- 1980
Courts implement· equ-al· rights in stat'e by Pamela Lind-m.ar1c

I

n

4 F

Creativity v,s. Law by Nancy Aldrich
II no. 5 March 1984
---Cur"ri cul um. change.~e-'7-ai ua t ions discussed by committees by.
Bi 11 J3.o w_l i.n.g..
.VI I I- n o..-4..-:.0.c.t.... -:2.2-,--1-9-7-9- - - - - C 1,1 r r i cul um propos·a1
'No. l,·Nov. 1970?
C-urriculum proposals· to be considered ··by faculty
subcommittee by Ceci1ia Bal.dwin
VIII no. 7 Dec. 12,.--1979
'
-DDean de-tails new_. rule·s;- i;_egs~::E_A-2_r-il- fool.~.I-~ no-. 5 Apr'i°l

. °1 ; -· 1'976: -

-

Dean for a d-ay by Maura H.

'·

Sylvester

1 no.

2 New Dicta
--ocr 1 1;9132
3 New··Dicta

Dean for a day by Je.remy Silverfine ·1 No.
1982
~-,
Dean for a day by Robert C. Kautz I no. 4 N~w Dicta Dec.
~.,,..--:--=&gt;'&gt;'';.,
19~!2
---:----.----------~e.art1..__fo..r more ~~h :r; j st o pb er S ,· JJ'j l.J...i..a-m-s.,,-----'--------I no. 6.New Dicta March 1983 1
Deau· 1_s-T.rst · or -·Re coiii.inenae·a re"a.'dTng by·Ma:rl&lt;e·- and-'""B~n-aer-,--.- ·
reviewed by Rick Connelly
II no. 7 ~ay 1984
· Debate is on (critique of 'Baker and Hussey)
_
-:-c-II 110·. 3 Dec. 1983
.De Li.so, John. Anno~_tnent of new scho.ol n~wspaper Suffolkate....
No. 1 N6v. 1970?
~e ~iso~and company enier~ain pre-law advisors •••
IV no. 2 Nov. 1975
Deli.so named assistant d.ean
X no. 9 Dec. 10, 1981
Deliso says, "I'm fair,game"
IX no. 2 Oct:--.,,z,7=,~·-'!'1o9-'ll8e-#O-----~-----~·~
Dershowit z. o.n per j i:1ry :- whe'n Wl 1 I cops come~ean? by
..:: C =· -:L..::..
Peter Doody
, II no. 6 Apr 1984
Dicta· poll yields many .. surprises
V, no. 1 Sept. 1976
Nov.

Dicta's pick of watering holes

(e~aLuation of bais)
_
I no. 3 Nov. 1982 New Di-ci:a
1Dism·antling of the. Bill. o-f rights
J.e.ff ~&lt;?°fien
.
'-- - - - m .no.
1984
~--Divestiture: is it- right for Suffolk Univers-ity by .arrell.
Banks
III no. 4 M~r 1985
1
Dos and don.t.s by Edward· J. Ba-nder
II no. 5 Mar 1984
Dr. Johnson on the. Law by Edwa'Td--.:J-. --B-and.e.r
III no. 1 Oct 1984
II no. 3 1Dec. 1983
ndez
Dream e
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2&gt; A p~_i 1_:_J_ , · 1 9 8 2
;lj'I' no. ·2· Nov •.: 1984
Edffice comple~
E:J~~an~e;
Editor.,.s lam'ent - things- I-should have ·1cnown oy~ifiy - Defranciscco .. ·
X no. 7 May 4, 1981
81 g.raduate presents class_ a·wards by Corinne Merni:n
X rfo. 7 May 4, 1981
-83 grads - be prepared :::-...Ji_d_vic·e for evenitrg studen-t.s on
. bat exam by Tom Hammond . .
I
2 New Di c·ta Oct~ 1982

i~

XI

n_o_._

0

..

··

..
-Y no. 5 Ma~·c'h ·
da--tion estab-Hshes cha ter:.. by Frederic·k .
-: :---;-·- Wa-tson
···
X no. 9 -nee. 10, 1981
---~
Aa essay on eating a~d drinlfl.tr"g in the-law 1 - i b ~ ~ - y - - ~ - - - - - - - Edward - ~ n ~ e r
.__ I no.~· 7 New Dicta- ~~ 198-3
-Evening law· school 1.01
1 no. 1 New Dicta Se'f&gt;t 8, .1982·
Evening student .gains house seat by Alex _Weir (Mark
.Fitzsimmons)
,
V
4 Feb •. 1977
. '·., Exa"m-writing by R,i_~b Tµr_coJ:te ___VU_I no. 7
Dec. 12·, 197-9

---

no ...

.:..F..:.

VII no •. i3
May· 14,. 1979
Fac~lty/c-0urse evaluations
Fatal v!sion by Joe McGinniss reviewed by Nancy Aldrich
·
. III no~-- 2 Nov. 1984
A 'few ebd~of the year thoughts by Ric·k Connelly
I no. 7 New ~icta April 1983
l-'-~---.:.-~===F:::::j=f:!'.tc,1.-Y'.--=___wa=c,l-X-L--1=='===:'.o=l.~ca y_e yp_ur 1 _a W Sc_ h O O LQy Ri Ck CO nn e.1.Ly'
-----·------.
.
I no, 6 New Di~ta Mar 1983
&gt;Final report of the ·sBA Chairperson by Debby Bagg·
X----no. r-May 4, 19 81
Financial aid
I -qo: 4 ·New Dicta Dec. 1982
F~nartcial ii~ n~ws
1 no. 2 New Dicta Oct 1, 1982
F-inancia1 aid notes
IX no. 4 Dec. - 1 ~ 1980
I
Financial alternativ:es by-.Robert J, Glovsky (money market
funds, -tre·,fs-1.iry s··ecurities, ba1* deposits)
·'
I no. 2 New Dicta Oct. 1982
First year jitt~rs b~-Marty Hernandez
II ~o. 3 Dec. 1983
First .year law sc.hool exams': the bane of the stud.ent, the
promoter of hysteria by Mike Hooker
III no. 3 Dec. 1984
Flunking out "~" by Jeffry Spahr (what happens when you
fl u n k· out) - - - - ' -I--n-o.- -4 New D!-e t-a-D.e-;G--, - 1-9-8 2
Flunking out - respose to article by anonymous strident
·
L no, 5 New Dicta Feb. 1983
Former defender to lodge suit (W.G.Hollingsworth0
·V no. 2 Oct, 1976
Fdrum on the SBA - Art Luongo &amp; Fran Fitzgerald
-.JJ-1 I I--n-o-..---6--lfo.v~-·2..8-,.---1..91 9
Fourth Amendment rights: is the excl~sionary rule dying?
. by Jeff Cohen
· II no, 6 April 1984, II no •. 7- May 198_4
Free love on trial by Jerem~~Silverfine _
I no. 6 March 1983
FrJ;?edman n__~~es perjury conflicts by Marian M,
-----~---- ---wo·tot-ki-eWid-z° (Monroe H._)
V no.
-G-

..

Tlie Gallagher Incident

(la• review imbroglio)
Vo1.' II, no.
. l

(

••

I

2 May 1973

•-.._

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.

Ge rt'ne r speaks --h~.re on~, sex disc r i.mi naJ:_i_o~ _ by Ma_r~i.i:rn"'- ~ - ~ ~ : :__
Wolotkiewicz
.
V no. ·-5 March ·.f.97J--Getting the summer job by Matt Erskine III. no. 5 May.1985
God, i n-c. ··
- _________ : --- -_ --- -- -------- ·· ..:._ H-:__Oe-t~--1~3
Grade· comp~omf°.'se· (edi.torial)
V no~ 4 Feb. 1977
Grade. mean· relea-se awaits faculty vote
v-· ae. _·). Nov. 197-"6
Grad.es are in on first-ever SLS evaluation by Alex Weir
Vol. IV .no. 1 - ~ ~-rs··
·,

·"'t'-·

·-~-~ ..

---~:.··

-H-

HALSA on acr·onyms by Isabel M.

Vi.dal ahd· :rere__Vieg:o
· I I no. 2 Nov.

1983
a sa p~om1nen
in na
W.ol.o-kiewicz
\Lt. No, __2 April-. 1, 1_978
Has·sett new- SBA j?res; night ,electi·on'-a-voided
-----------· -_/.
V no. 7 Apr.:i. r:· 19_7.7
Henderson (Wade J) c-q_lloquiu.m add_ress X no. 9 Dec. 10,
1981
.
Herita~e proj~ct: t'f·acing the· -1 aw school's history
VII:! no. 3 Oct~ .8, 1979
- H~y -;Jo·e, how have t.hese last three ·years treated youz _by
Jimmy·Roberti
_ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . . :._I,=___cI.. . . .::.n:__::co .• 4 Feb. 1984·
High and dr~ at 7-5 bi Mary ·C. Trombly
VI· II no • 4 0-c t , . 2 2 , 1 9 7 9
How can you defend those_ people by James Kunen 'revi'ewed ______ __h_y___Mi.c.h.a.al-----1:lJ..Ls s ey
II I no.. 1 Oct. 1 8
How m; ch i s Ho 11 i n gs ••• w o r-t h? res o 1 v e d ·
·
· VII no. 9 March· 12, •1979
How prOfe. . ssors assess exams bu Prof, John-. S .. Geer
......
V no,, 4 Feb. 197'7
-~-How- ~0" avoid- being called on (humor drawi-ngs a-rra',. ·
----V rlo. 3 Nov.-· 1976
comment_s_)___
· · How to_ do your best on law school exams, a -review -·of---:-John
Dela~ey book by M. Jeffrey Spahr
I no. 2 New Dicta,Oct. }982
How to find.a.case by.._E,J. Ban-der VIII ·no.· 4 Oct.-.22,
19 7 9
----How to start a law practice by Th_eodore P. Orenstein
l no. 2 New Dicta Oct. 1,. 1982-J _·
How to sta.rt a law practice by Theodore Orenstei.n
I no •.. 3 New ·Dicta. Nov. 1_98.2 ~
~----~
How to start a law practice (i n-s ui:- a·iu:e) ' .
. :r n~. 4 New Dicta Dec. l 9tl 2
,,,
How to start a law practice by Theoj~re ·orenatein
I no, (, New -Dicta Mar.ch 1983
How to start a law pract...ice bi Theodore P. Oren&amp;teirt
I no. 7 New Dicta.Aapr 1983
(cli~nt develop~ent)

,.,r

-

-I-

_::_

- ~· _
__.•:!._

I am what I am by Jim Roberti (O'Donnell bo~'-'Dp. D~adly.,
·
.
· II no.- 2. Nov. 1983
Force)
If Jack ~icholson were a trial lawyer by Jeff Baker•
. II ~o, § April 1984
Da¥id-Rose Williams!'.&gt;n
III no. 2
Mexico b
No •
-In the splkit of ~razy Horse by_Peter Matthissen reviewed
by Fain Gildea·
III no. 1 Oct.-\984'

\·,
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tn·£.al)ib.i:j,;ity of technology: time to dispel the -myth by
I.he Phantom Cook
·----- VIII· no. 12 April 8, .1980 :
Int'erv:t·{~ with Frank Bellotti
.X no.· 5 Mart:.ii 16, 1981 :· .
Intervi.ew Wi:-th P:ro'f. Kati ..
;VII no. 4-0ct-•. 30, J978 .
Intervi.ew;_ _Art.htir MiDer by Diinne D.DiBla'si
·
t-'--c--------..,.--......,...------------------1±---no. 7 Ne 1v Dicta Ap.r. 19 8 3
Interv:f:-1:!W by Cindy SQr;:ci o
_ II no, 2· Nov. 1983
Interviewer Sender talks' -about interviewi'ng·by E,M.
-·caJiahan .
-----;V ..
·It's oeficial Suffolk gets accr"'W·ita·ti?n·V·I.no. 7 Feb;
.,,I"
.JO, 1977.
y
aye _ urn a_um
Vi.II no. 7 D.e c. 12, 1979
0

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___,_J.fc)jj; -Sm.-i-th·: t:Zhe='fi n~ 1 days by'

.
. .
III no. 4-Mai:cq 1985
rhyme co;test .finalists
· . ..
.
. .
I no. 7 New Dicta Apr.fl 1983
. ·\,..., . . . . .
.
Job hunt 1981: placement office points tbe way to .
.
·' X 110 ._ · 8 _Nov. 9 ,-'"_ 1·9.81
.··em pl_g_yme n t b-y P a_ul White
__ J_ob ·hunITri.g: ·.the necessiiy of geograpJliLfl~:id]&gt;il.Uy_hy_
- - - - - -hfnn_._P-r-e-n-d·e-r-ga-s-t;
VTII no. 6 Nov. ·21f~ 19 7 9
.
.J o-hn the~-chef i ~ r v i ewed - by Mike Ho6-ker
.
..
.
.
II I no. 1 . O,c t 19 8 4
------------a~'o'hc-n---::-W;.h-1-;-7t-_e·•·_s--w'h-c-.i.-:-t e 1
..
..
t e r r a w( o u fTi ning·)-~
·- .
.
i r10. 1 New 'Dicta Sept 8, 198'2.
John White•·s ... White·letter law (comme.rcially~pr:e,parea
.
outU:nes)
I no. 2 New Dicta Oct. 19@2
Justice League of Superheroes vs. Batman by Eki~ P•rker
and Todd Smith
-- II no.· S Mar 1984
)

Studen-t. )

Jfmmi

.

·p·ub1fu-s--=-{tli~ -n~on --s tud,..yi.ng

--

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.

Moi~lli

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-KKapttein - law:;r,er a·s _agen.t by Paul Rufo V no. 3 Dec.
Knowing a little about a lot (space across frQp law.,.
school by Mary E. Trombly
VIII no. S Nov. S,
-L.

1976
1~79

Lack of response to grad party miffs '79
alumni.C.C.Baldwin VIII no. 3 0.ct. 8, 1979
Larkin ••• what makes Frank run?__
Vol._JJ:,____N.o..........2-M.a.y 1973
. La-w deans det?'e*6nce racial violence VIII no. 6 Nov. 28,
_
1979
Law educatiq_ns_ costs up for 80-81. VIII no. 9 Feb. 2, 1980
Law Ie~iew Reform
.Vol. II no. 2 May·l973
Law review. selection provess · I· no. 3 ·New Dicta Nov. 1982.
Law school is a love/hate relation·ship by L1!}da J,
Malkowski
·
IX no. 2 Oct. 27, 1980Law school by proxy an alternative approach -by Dante R.
Gallucci
I no. 7 New D:i,cta April 1983
Law school experience: narcole'psy to nirvana by Mike
I .
Hooker
III no. S. May 1985
new appointment by
Tom Carey
..
.
_ .
.
..c..-- --V-o-1..,...,I-v-·no-;·--i-o}y-:-·- 19TS~
--~laCO.S rashes oµt at legal establishmen~~-X-1_:t_g__tili.s.ts
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X no. 9 Dec. IO,. 1981
Lib,,rarian Barfder joins sta.f·f
\TII ·no. 1 Setp. 11, 1978
Li"br·i:rry··c.-letk bare; sou_l
V no. 1 ·sept 1 ~ .
_ ,._List of def_initions -of law by Prof. Stephen Hicks·.·
-· - . ·v-I~I-r---NO-;- ----?· -n-ec •- h , 1-9 7 9
-~-----~------~--Lo-r-r.aign_ Cove on privacy, credit hours IV no. 4 ---F'e-b·.- 19:1-6.Librarian 4yn.ch retires; by Ric.hard Mori_ VI no. 6 Dec.
'12 , 19 7 7
·too_kin
back. and ahead b
Steve Kramer VII no. ri A ril
23, 1979

---

·l 982LP_s dt;em~~
- .... ---

-·

-

. : __:: °"C..

by-

F~e~- Hos..i~tns

Sep.t.

1. no_.- . l

8,

-11::..-

.

. McEttrick.,,:,Joseph.~ Fee shifting:

the winds of change
V no.- 3 Nov. 1976
McLllughl.i n award b'y ~arl:y-'-He'tnandez
II _ne. 4 Feb. 1984
Making of 1·awyers:,.wh.a't's left ·out by Michael Hussey
no. 3 Dec-. 1983
-Making. the g,tade by lfi'ck - Connelly
II no. 4_,F-e-b-.- f984
Mass. lemon l'aw by Diame-.M1,ear_n . ..._ .--------:-YY-no. 2 Npv. ~.983
Mess~g-e from. the Chair~y Debby Bfagg (SBA reportT
VIII no·. 13 May 9, 1980
· Model an:,swe.r
·_y- np. 3 Nov. 1976
Model answer: an idea whose time has come (humor)
·- ..,
' - IV no. 'S-Ap.ril 1, 1976
'Moot. cour:t competition winners
. _ Xl .. no. 2 April 1, 198 2__
·Mod't court ·c1ett·er. by eveni-ng students as to)
· - .:· . ·vr=r:,,.-n-o. 8 Feb, 2:6, 19 "7-9
Moot c~urt board by Adrienne Markham
VII I n.o • 1 1 9 7 9
~.Moo""'t .cou-ri".boai;d by Richard McGbvern
Ill no. 1 Oct. 1984
.Moot,, Court ·19:80".'"1-981 {bo·x -score-of names of teams--and---what ihey accomplifh·e=ct-)- ·
X no. 7 May 4, 1981
Moot ~o;rt.executive board recovers scholarship grants
VII no. 2 -Oct. 2, 1978
Moot court justice (E.J,Bander)
VII.,.:I)!p., 8 Feb •. 26, 1979
-~
Moot. court mad-e simple by Rich Turcotte·
Feb.· 12 ,' 1979
Mo.at cou,rt adds video, gears up for ne·w·year by Alex ·weir
V. no • - 1 Se pt • 1 9 7 6
Moot court ·notes.
. I no, 4 New Dicta Dec. J.J82
Mo o t co u r t t e a m·s- by Ma r t y H e r n a:-n d e x
I I no • 4 Fe b • 1 9'8,,4
Moot court team·s take nation-a4;..7t,:l;_tle8"} III no. 5 May_ 1985
_
More positi_y_~ attitude needs to be show·n by ::i"tudents by_________..------B·:irl 1 0 I Hare
VI nb • 5 NOV. 3 0 ,
Mr • Do o 1 e y a ru!, Mr • fra n d e r
· X n o • 6 Apr i 1 9 ; 1 9 8 1
~
Mr. Dooley-on commencement speecheB by·R.J.Bandir
II I ·.no. 5 May 19 8 5
- Murderer convicted by mock trial court
III no. 3 Dec. 84
Mu t ua 1 f-u-n s
:Ro-b-e--:i;....t,.-d.:..!-&lt;)-V.s-ll'.¥---------------11
I· no •. 3. New ~Dicta_!!.9~-l.98L-- -~~~. · M:y tr i p to _Ch !_!lJLl:i y E_. J • B c!__!l_Q.~-r:-------.:--+1-1&gt;--"no:-;-3 Dec . 1 9 8 4

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New SBA by-laws passed
VI no. 8 Mar ch·l=:,,'-T97fF-.
. New Woburn state re pr·e sent a_tiye __~i~!c__ P ale o lo~g.o..§.:._J~y_....,B::=i""'-J=J='~··=·==,~--~.......-='==111--OLli-?re
.
v n o....:......3---o v. 1.9.1................=···~6
. Night st ude·n ts d·emand e 1 e ct iv es b-y Kenneth Myers
VII no. 3 Oct •. 16, 19'18
No AALS accreditation fok Suffolk in 1976
V no. 3 Nov.
--1976
Non l e gal_ ~ar~,-~_~s~ .] a W.Y e..r s.;-- .a-n--ABA-r~,pj;,.r-t:==--cc· -~ -_. - - - -.. -_-.- · Nuclear power:- -y-e-a or ,.J:1.ay?

-

./

'

JJ

No •. 3 Nov.

1976

----- ---.-L

,.o,·:srien ·hangs em up (Joh.n F.X~)
V n..o. 2_0ct. __ 19)6
- -on~roe-a-ter1: reiiponeiible. advocate _Q.L_-R__rofessional
.
peformer? '-b-y--Herb Travers
VIII no.. 7 Dec. 12, · 1979
..&gt;
Qn .. la·w:.,.examina-tions.' strang..e hypothetics by Thomas J.
'Filbi'.n (poem)
·.
· -IV· no~ 5: April l__,_ 1976- - On '-r,..ac.:i.sm and the Law (Derrick A •. Bell Jr.)
-·--"-- .I~I-.. -n.o--.---- ·--5---c-Ma-~-- 19-8.4_:_
· - 01L.s..tuaying by Riclc Connelly
'II no. 7 May 19.84
_One down two . . go by . Robin.Moroz 1 no. 1 New,Diet Sept
..... to
--·-:~ ·- --·-/....
.
8, 1982
0.ne percenJ solution: the Nader's Raid-er -in law stude·nt
IX no. 2 Oct. 27, ·1980
Open door grade policy by Al an Weir
.V · no.. 1. Se pt 19] 6
· Open letter from the SBA board of gover:-~ .
_
~--VIII no. S Nov. S, 1979
Oppehheim defedds moot court
VII_no. 9 March f2, 1979
Ortwein, Bernard.• Plea bargaining, a necessity
------------------, ----;.
V no. 2 Oct. 1976
O'Toole·on 4-pgrading_ _by Alan King_
IV no.2 Nov. 1975
:

Over th~

transom by Jeff ~aker (why I went to Law School)
II no. 7 May 1984

-p-·-

ParCtime _jobs by Nancy Aldrich
II no. 2 Nov. 1983
The Partners - book revie-w - by Jeff Baker
_
I I no. 3 Dec. 19 8 3
'Personalities and persiflage by Mi~e_Hooker (interveiw of
· III no. 4 March 1985
Gaither Brown)
•
Phantom co;k •••. (financial ~id)
VII no. i2 April 23, 1979
Pl~cement expansion absolutely iiecessary IV No. 10 April
14, 1978
Placement office report by Mike Hussey
III no~4 Mar 1985,Placement offj.ce ur·ges ~isits b.y all stud_ent·S
'
VIII No. 1 1979
Placemen..L..steering committ·-e·e formed by Lynn Prendergast
·
_ _.Y_III no. 10 March 11, 1980
·~ ----~~- - ---Pl:a·nning ptoblems plague social committ_ee func.tions
.. XIIT D&lt;h' 5- Nev. S, :i-9,7:9
----~---~--'-~_..P..,n"'_J_i~~..g-a.~i~n"S~h a r a; s men t by Daniel H. Perlman
--- , -- ,,IL ~no·. --2Nov. 1983
.Politics· as usuaJ at .the law review ~...B'al:h~~ine_ Downing
.

----·-·,--·

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Practice 'of law

Ji.mmy Morell~ style by Rick c:onnelly
I . n o...._5_:New Di:c ta Feb
19 83.
""1'.rep~ring fen:· arr -1 rrre-r-v-e-rw-1,y----r.""11"ur.:e-n.c.c_e_ J ~ s·tyol e
---.
T no·. 4 New Diet.a Dec.:: 1982
President Fulham retires· after ten 'years ·at· Suffolk .
. V:rII: no. 13 .May 8, 1980
.
Priirnrrers' rigbts defended by Paul Rufo (Prof._Cla.r..k.._)_·:'" __ _-_~-- ._·_ ' _____ _
~ _3___n_o.....:.:._s ...,M.a.r-e-~l 9-~ ~
~~..
lis (evidenee)
II no .• 2 ~ · 1983
Pro-choice actions u~der att~ck~br_Michael Hussey
.

----~-"""a=-=--------------------------··

.

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_

·

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Profil~ of _Bob Woolf b_y Davicl_ T:l_!_ l-!~ntel
--· I no. 4 New Dicta· Dec. 1982
Prosecutor's program by Nancy ·Wagg-ner
II no. 5 Mar 1984
Pros_ecutor's s.tory by Nick Pos-er (Grimin~L piosechti-on of
"'
III no. 3 Dec·. 1984
the poor) ·
Put library books on the shelves by Maris Eshreman
VI no. 4 Nov. 14, 1·977 •

-RReagan's Tbrihinf battle with legal standar~s .by Mike
-n n.0-. 6 A p r.W-1':9 8 4
Hussey
Red Hat·_goes bfg time "
II Oct. 1983
Rehnqpist plans May Suffolk.visit
IV no. 5 April 1, !976
-Re"Je--ction letter· ·(a poem) by Jack McGreen I-I no. 7 May
1984
~port on word proce_ssing for students ancl- faculty
Ii no. 4 Feb. 1984
Report: Suffolk Law School planning board meeti~g-by
Jeffrey Long
I no. 7 New Dicta April 1983
··- --- Re-·quired co1frses hinder stidents· by;_ Robert Sins.heimer
VI no. 3 Oct. 27, 1977
Res· ju_dicata·
the year in reviewX no. 7_ May 4, 1981
Resources in placemen·t 11 brary by Ca·thy Boskey
'.
I · no • 5 New Di ct a Feb • 1 9 8 3
Response to professi~nal responsibility (evaluation of
course on) by Roger D. Donoghue
1 no. 3 'New Di.eta Nov.· 1982
iesume saturday and _the search for em~loyment by Darlene
Dani.els_
---- -.. l no. -1--New Di-e-t-a---S-e-p-t:-=-8-'--,-:.;--l--'9.-8-2-·
Revising the Mass. criminal justice s~stem
III no. -2 Nov. 1984
Rewarding year fo·r ·a11 ·in mo·o-t c·o1rr:t ·prog-rams-by- Aarienn:e-· - - -Ma'-F-kham •
VIII no. 11 Ap-r-il 3, 198-0
Roll call oreeds c-0dd.led lawyers by Randy .Warren
(attendance critique)
.
V no. 4 Feb. 1977
. lRubino lays s.tr·aight line on gay rights: things are
changing by Alan K;ing.
IV no. 2 Nov; 1975

-s--

.S.a..t..g.e.nt_ I&gt;J_!!gs night school
I no. 2 New Dicta Oct-. 1982
SBA, facultycol.ITd-e on funding r~ferendum issue
-=-c------.
- . - - - - - - - ~ -IV no. 3 Dec. 197 5
__;-==sB_A _f_un:d-f-ng-"'-'m:et1i-0&lt;i ~ i-~ mad n·;-;~--i;-y-tre_x_
V no. -1 Se pt- - -'
--.,--::-'
1976
SB-A-makes- appro'priat_i~ns
VII no. 5 N"&lt;iv. 26: 1978 --:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __...,....._."-"'-Ul.Cl--"·~rs bud g~-- a 11 ocat i ~-n s for 7 9-8 0
-·
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VIII np. 5 ·No.v.· 5, 1979 ·
SBA and D~cta embroiled in controversy. III no. 4 M_ar:i985 .
XI no. l Mar 3, 1982.
-SB-A- pla.ns__f.o_r_$_pring
SBA·_ po 1 :Ct i cos? ( f i_n_anci al pro ced-ure s) V--no. -2-0ct·.-----l-9-7f,--c:
SBA :studf findsl Suffolk's placjment services inadequate
.
. '
VIII no: 13 May 9, 1980
Sl&gt;A votes· to· head eff .S:ULAB lottery by Alan ·King
___--·__________. . . ] ' t l ~ ~ . o .- 2 Nov.
School opens with some new procedures
V no. _l Sept. 1976""
.-s·e--c-crrrd-:-a-n.-n-ua-1 Edwar_d J. Barr~~_E_-~&lt;!i_s~in uished essa
(due
process ·and book overdues)
TI no.- 4· Feb----:--T9-84.
·
:Re1i"po.n.s.e· t·o··abo.ve e,s.say---by_ D. W.,..:Sear~_ IL ---RG.------5 Mar 1984
Sexual harrassine¢ no laughing matter by· Fredrick ·Watson I no. 6 New DJcta March 1983
--S-h:a-d-e-s-:-e-f-g-re--y-:-by--R1. c-lc---e-o·nne-t-1--y--fi--r:rterverw ex per i e"U:_c-e_)_ _ --.
.
II n-o, 2 Nov. 1983
.
Sheriff facts court deadline by Paul Rufo and John Riihie
(Kearney)
VI no. 2 Sept, 30, 1977
-So-.--wh-at-. do .you__tb:i.!!,k? by Cee Cee Baldwin (women and l~w)
VIII no. 9 Feb. 2, 1980 _;--.Some reflection~ of the first year class by Sharon Liko
_____.
·
__VIILno__._l__D._ec. J2..,::_19T9
Sons of Suffolk controversy
II no. 6 April 1984
S. pr i n g r e·v u e d r aw s, n e a r f u 11 ho u s e VI no , 1 1 · AR r i 1 2 ~...... ·
1978
__ __:_ _.___S.t-ude.n.t-a.i..d.-i::0---b e based on need " - VI no. 3 ·Oct. 27, 1977
Stuaent as a teacher of childrirn (outsi..de jo.bs).
I·V no , 4 F e b • 1 9 7 6
St-ucien·t-as admin°{"st:-·rator by Ale~ We'ir (on Eddie Jenkins)
V ·no. 2 _Oct. 1976
Student fn a Small firm (intern~ship) by Ted Harris
______-~----cS---______..._.---_.V no. 1 Se pt.. 19 7 6
Studen·fs get voice in facu-1-t-y . ....committ:ees.
------: ___ _
Vol. II, no. 3 Dec. 17; 1973
Students on WBZ with "Legal Briefs"
V no. 4 Feb. 1977
Student Strike set
VI no. 9 April 1, 1978
S_uffo]k-Bankrup.t---------V no. -0 A-pr-i-l l-,_--l-9--7_3
· Suffolk._ community loses biggest supporter (Frank J.
Donihue)
VIII no. 2 Sept. 24, 1979
Suffolk dedicates Pallot library
1 no. 3 New Dicta Nov.
1982
· Suffolk holds anniversary colloquium (Law School
_______
Training, the.Urban°L'awyer and Ne·e-ds of di.e Public~ America's
unfinished agenda)
X no, 8 Nov. 9, 1981
Suffolk hosts CLEO institute
I no. 2 New 'Dicta Oct. 1982
~-----S-U-f--f-0~1-k's inquiring photographer: are you content with
- · _ ____!.b.e.-:admlui stratLo.n,.!_!,_po-licy. of· havTng:_ex:·ams after the
- - s,~~e~ break rather t:han·-be-ro-re
;_·
III, no. 3 Dec. 1984
· • What are your favorite and ileast favorite aspects
-of S.uffolk?
III no. 4. Ma-rch 1985
· Suffolk profe~sor r~appoin~ed to co-chair national
~'CO n f e re_Jl.-ce- 'of 1 a wye r-S- -and -S c.i e.n-t i-S t S-(~M.i.l.to.n..:.Xa_t z )_
·
"[-lY--. IX no. 1 sept 19, 1980
10
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Suffolk stude·nt a_i;gues be tore -""s·Jc--.an.d wins .. bY irt}lU:r-.G.
1
Lt1oiigo
IX no. 2 Oct. 27, 1980
1
Suffolk iuition-up $340 still lowest of priva~es
III no. 4 March 198-5
Suffolk University a profile
II no. 3 Dec. 1983
Su£ f o..llc....Dni-.v- __w..el co me s.-:.D-r ·• Per 1 man, New P r·e s id en·t
_
..
·IX no • 1 Se pt 1 9 ; l 9 8 O
·Su-f-fol ~ ve-te-r-aa- -br-i-eH~OG--k-i-e---s-----b-y----.-cR-0--b-e-r----C-R-u-m-r-i-l-l-'--- - - ------ ---,---- -- - - - 'I

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Suing the local

police department by Mik~ussey
II no, 5 Mar -1984
- SULAB by Rick -Connelly
II· no. 6· Apr --1§84
SULAB- p-r-0posaf for credit increase. by Bradf9rd Louis on
r
.VIII no. 12 April 18,. 1980
SULAB; two credits in reality by Mary E. T·rombly -VI II n O • ---s--N-ov-;_;-2--S , - -1--9 7 -9: .
-T- -

--

-

-~

A talk with the Law by Sylvanus K.

I. Ibenaria (interv{ew
with a law)
III' no. 2 Nov. 1984, III no. 4 Mar 1985
Tenure (unsigned student article)
I no. -5 New Dicta Feb. 1983
-- ,Tenure .=--a. no-cut K by Rich Connelly
- -- ----------- --I nuy-3--Ne-w--Di. ~uv;-1""91:n
lhree blocks so far away by Michael Ru~sey~(Charles St.
Jail)
f--..
III no. 1 Oct. 1"984

The three credit blues by Chris Williams

-

I no. 2 New Dicta Oct. 1982
Too many _lawyers? by Michaef Hussey
II no. 4 Feb.· 1984·
Tools of the trade by Alfred I Males~n
~•
1 no. 1 New Dicta Sept.-.::'"8, 1982
Tort law and taught law by E.J.Bander (10 most famous
tort cases)
VIII no. 12 April 8, 1980
.l
________________ -----'I.D..r..:t..s__ p.r_o.L...aiili __ w:lf~ propose remeclies for nonsmokers by
, ··
Anr;l.rew Sigal (Prof. BrJdy)
VI no. 6 -Bee. 12, 1977·
Transnational law jl gains recognition from
administration
V1I no-. 2 Oct. 2, 1978
Transnational selection process by 0 William DeVoe
--- - - - ---It---- --·
-- -------I no. -4·-New -Diet-a -De-c. - 19-8-2
Trial tactics not often used (anecdotes about law) by
E.J.Barider
VIII no. 9 Feb·. 2, 1980
Trustees alot $10,000 for heritage prject
.
yII no. 11 April 10, 1979----•------------~T~r~1~1s~te_e.s__r_a_i_s~e tu i t ion ; dean _ c i t_e s ___ hi g her· co s_t_s________________
-·
V no~ 4 Feb~ 1977
Truth vs. consequence (eviden~e) by David Friedman
·- II no. 3 Dec. 1983
Tuition _hike: _g"oo_d things are ~n the way b) Bob Marra
VII (VI1I?)no. 10 March 11·, 1980
____________T~u.i..t.i..o_n __u_JL $ ~-2 0 i IJ J971:lA.Sigai and M:w. VI no. 8 Ma 13,
.
b

-

-

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1978

by Ralph ~-.\
TwEinty nine ·reasons Il'Ot to go co La.r school
II no. 2 Nov. 1983'
Warner and To-ni - Ih.ara
,_.
_1;1_11_9_._ 6__ 1\.pr.i~ 19_1:!4 .
-. --- ~--- Who - s.a-i.d-..~ .:.by.:_.Rdw..ar..d~J_,__B_-a_n_d_1~_ __
_:r_.

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Unanswered questions abou.t exa~s

-v-

by Mary Tro·mbly
____ .
1V J; II no .. 8 Feb • 5 , i 9 8 O
Uniqu·e facts _abou.t hub law school plac~ment · of-fices
____ _
VI no. 10 Apr.il 14, 197.8
University counseling center ~ffers help to ·1aw students
X no. 8 Nov. 9, 1981

pa:;=::a=======~F(O£CPl:'f!ltn:ffi:lt;.Saa:·"r"ry=-de f e nii e-r-s-·by=-M1rr·ty. --Hern ana e z
r

Ya t e d u e · n e c

II no. 6 _April 1984
} 7 on A AT S by Ao g_r e w s·~ g a 1 S-L-n.u-.~-.....,...J.-Va,.,____ _ _ __,,._---'-'-----'----i
14, 197.7

-wWelcome to Cathy Bo·\3key by ·Darlene M. Daniele (advise to
students· looking for jobs)
I no. 2 New ·Dicta- Oct. 1982
What tb.Efy see is what you get! (interviewing savvy)
.
IV no. 4 F~b.:.-:-1976
What-you were afraid to ask about raw school
VI no. 9 Apri-1 1,- 1918
Whe~re are the books? by Marian M. Wolotkiewicz (criticism
of s·tude t res-helving)
'
·_v no~---3 Nov. 1;'97'6.c.-------------:cw=h-e e~as all the money gone? ----vTf .no-: 6 Dec. r2,--1-ns
Wh ·re the jobs ~re and aren't; report from the placement
office by, Shar_on Li-ko
VIII no. 5 _Nov. 5, 1979
. Wlio·• s · best befote'" the te.st? _b~ Fred Watson (compari'so-a--of
_b.a-I'_:·review courses)
I no. 3 New Dicta Nov_. 1982
Who's really_the top of the hub by Rick Connelly (Dreier
on .Bosto_n-p0l-i-tics)
II no. 3 Dec. 1983
WLC speaker ·gives hints to job hunters by Marian M.
~-~
Wolotkiewicz
'
V no. 4 Feb. 1977
W.6men's law caucus .•• battered women by Diane Ma_Lgolin
III no. -5 May 1985

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