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This collection consists of item records that link to, and cite, resources outside of the Moakley Archive's collections that have been included here for use in Suffolk University student exhibits.
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Clip of Michael Linquata describing the event to unveil Suffolk's new mascot in 1950
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A more modern version of Suffolk University's Ram mascot
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Suffolk University Records
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The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
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Suffolk University Strike, button
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1970
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Button created for the Suffolk University Strike in protest of the Kent State shootings and the Vietnam War.
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUJ-001.003 Special Materials: Memorabilia, Objects, Box 1
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Vietnam War, 1961-1975—Protest movements
College students
Student protesters
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SU-1857
memorabilia
Student protests
Students
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Text
Suffolk University Class Profiles: a research guide
Moakley Archive and Institute
www.suffolk.edu/moakley
archives@suffolk.edu
Introduction
In 2006, the Moakley Archive completed a research project to find out more about
Suffolk University Law School’s earliest graduates. This guide includes information
about the classes and biographical information about a selection of graduates discovered
using sources such as Suffolk University records, U.S. Census records, and other sources
such as local newspapers. The classes covered were limited to 1909-1915 because there
weren’t adequate records for the earliest classes of 1906-1908.
Research Guide Sections
1. Early Law School Student Profiles
• Roland Edward Brown, 1909
• George Louis Bush, 1909
• Carl Collar, 1909
• George Arthur Douglas, 1909
• James Francis O’Brien, 1909
• Lewis Austin Adams, 1910
• James T. Bergen, 1910
• Ernest Palmer Bradstreet, 1910
• Emanuel Cohen, 1910
• Ole Martin Dahl, 1910
• Robert Timothy Healey, 1910
• Bernard Joseph Killion, 1910
• Charles Francis Murphy, 1910
• Harry H. Nayor Suffolk Law School 1910
• Edwin LeRoy Weiscopf, 1910
• Thaddeus Alexander Kitchener, 1913
• Louis E. Pasco, 1914
• Harry Ernest Burroughs, 1915
• Thomas Vreeland Jones, 1915
• Shichiro Hayashi, 1922
• Thomas Joseph Lane, 1925
• Joseph David Paté Sr., 1927
• Harry Hom Dow, 1929
p. 2
p. 3
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p. 4
p. 5
p. 6
p. 7
p. 8
p. 9
p. 10
p. 11
p. 11
p. 13
p. 14
p. 14
p. 15
p. 15
p. 16
p. 18
p. 20
p. 20
p. 21
p. 22
2. Early Law School Class Profiles (1909-1915)
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Early Law School Student Profiles
Roland Edward Brown, Suffolk Law School 1909
Roland Edward Brown was born August 26, 1880. 1 His mother, Margaret (b.
1857), was born in Canada, and his father, whose name is unknown, was born in
Massachusetts. 2 The 1900 census indicates that at that time, 19-year-old Roland was
living at 178 Columbia Street, Cambridge, Mass., with his 15-year-old brother, Chester
(b. 1884), his mother, and his stepfather, William Hamilton (b. 1869 in Canada), who was
a carpenter. 3 Margaret and William had been married for one year at that point. 4 The
census also indicates that Margaret had given birth to two other children in addition to
Roland and Chester, only one of whom was still living. 5 Also residing with the family
were two boarders. 6
In 1900, Roland E. Brown was serving as an apprentice in the chemical industry. 7
In 1901, he married a woman named Ethel Blanche. 8 His son, Alphonso, and daughter,
Margaret, were born less than two years apart around 1902 to 1904. 9 In December of
1906, he began the winter term at Suffolk Law School, enrolling in Torts and Criminal
Law classes. 10 In June of 1908, Gleason Archer gave him “the certificate of two years’
study” that enabled him to take the bar examination, even though he was only in his
junior year. 11 Archer indicates that Brown was “a machinist by trade,” but nonetheless in
June, 1908, became Suffolk Law School’s first student to pass the bar exam. 12 He
graduated in 1909 as one of five students in the first Suffolk Law School class. 13
Roland E. Brown’s employment history is somewhat ambiguous. He was an
apprentice in the chemical industry, and Gleason Archer writes that he was a machinist,
but the 1913 Cambridge Directory lists him as a lawyer. 14 Archer also writes in 1919
that while he did become a lawyer, Brown chose not to enter into active law practice in
1
World War I Draft Registration Card 2672/3151, September 12, 1918.
United States Census 1900, Massachusetts, Middlesex, Cambridge, Enumeration District 691, Sheet 18.
3
U.S Census 1900,Ibid.
4
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
5
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
6
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
7
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
8
Roland Edward Brown Marriage Record, 1901, from Massachusetts Vital Records 1841-1910 Database,
accessed via the New England Historical Genealogical Society, http://www.newenglandancestors.org;
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Middlesex, Cambridge, Enumeration District 55, Sheet 11B;
United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Middlesex, Cambridge, Enumeration District 9-34, Sheet 1B.
Note: Brown’s wife is listed in the 1920 census as Ethel B. Brown and in the 1930 census as E. Blanche
Brown.
9
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
10
Archer, Gleason L. Building a School, Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, p.51.
11
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p.86. Note: For students entering prior to 1913, the Suffolk Law School
program consisted of three years of study, so a student’s junior year was his second or middle year.
12
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p.86.
13
Suffolk Law School Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
14
Cambridge Directory, 1913, p. 354.
2
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favor of working for the Barbour Stockwell Company of Cambridge. 15 Brown’s
profession in the 1920 census is unclear, but the place of employment appears to be
Stockwell Co. 16 Both the 1923 Cambridge Directory and the 1923 Boston Register and
Business Directory list him as a lawyer, and the 1930 census lists his place of
employment as a court. 17 While the time frames are unclear, it is evident that Brown
was in fact a lawyer and did in fact work for the Stockwell Company at some point in his
life. Beginning in at least 1913 until at least 1930, Brown lived at 10 Centre Street in
Cambridge, and in 1923 his law office was located at 40 Court Street in Boston. 18
________________________________________________________________________
George Louis Bush, Suffolk Law School 1909
Very little is known about George Louis Bush. He enrolled at Suffolk Law
School during the second week of classes in the fall of 1906 and graduated in 1909 as one
of five in the school’s first graduating class. 19 In his “Sketches from Life” for a 1919
Suffolk Law School pamphlet, Gleason Archer indicates that George L. Bush at some
point relocated from the Boston area to Wisconsin to practice law. 20 George L. Bush is
listed in both the 1928 and 1936 Suffolk Law Alumni Directories, but neither directory
lists an address for him. 21
________________________________________________________________________
Carl Collar, Suffolk Law School 1909
Carl Collar was born on June 4, 1885, to William (b. 1865) and Alice Collar (b.
22
1862). He was the oldest of three children in a family of two boys and one girl. 23 By
1900, the family lived on Crescent Avenue, Revere, Massachusetts. 24 The household
also included a nephew (b. 1878) and a niece (b. 1883). 25 All members of the family,
including the niece and nephew, were born in Maine. 26 In 1900, 14-year-old Carl Collar
15
Archer, Gleason L., “Sketches from Life” in Suffolk University Historical Pamphlet Series #1, 1919,
reprinted 1978 by Suffolk University Law School, p. 11.
16
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
17
Cambridge Directory, 1923, p. 345; The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923, Vol. 87. Boston:
Sampson and Murdock Company, 1923, p. 682; U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
18
Cambridge Directory, 1913, p.354; U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.; U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.; The Boston
Register and Business Directory: 1923, Ibid, p.682.
19
Archer, Gleason L. Building a School. Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, p. 50; Suffolk Law Alumni
Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
20
Archer, Gleason L. “Sketches from Life” in Suffolk University Historical Pamphlet Series #1, 1919,
reprinted 1978 by Suffolk University Law School, p. 11.
21
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1928, p. 172; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.
15.
22
World War I Draft Registration Card 316/A1686, September 12, 1918; United States Census 1900,
Massachusetts, Suffolk, Revere, Sheet 17A.
23
U.S census 1900, Ibid.
24
U.S census 1900, Ibid.
25
U.S census 1900, Ibid.
26
U.S census 1900, Ibid.
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was attending school while his father was employed as a carpenter and his mother was
not employed. 27
In 1904, Carl Collar’s second cousin, Gleason L. Archer, tried to convince him to
attend the Boston University College of Liberal Arts, but Collar instead began working at
a Boston steamship company whose office was located on State Street. 28 In 1906, at age
21, Collar began studying law under Gleason Archer. 29 In January on 1909, Collar, then
a senior at the Suffolk School of Law, became the second of Archer’s students to pass the
Massachusetts Bar Examination. 30 He graduated in 1909 as one of five in Suffolk School
of Law’s first graduating class. 31
By 1918, Carl Collar was living in Glen Ridge, New Jersey, with his wife, Mary
(b. 1889 or 1890), and his young son, Carl, Jr. (b. 1917). 32 The Collars evidently spent
some time in California, as Carl, Jr. was born there. 33 He was employed as a clerk by the
International Mercantile Marine Company located on Broadway in New York City. 34 By
1919, he was an accountant for the White State Line, a subsidiary of the International
Mercantile Marine Company. 35 By 1920, he and his wife and son were living in
Rutherford, New Jersey, where they lived until at least 1930. 36 He was at that time
working as a bookkeeper for a shipping company, presumably the White Star Line, where
he continued to work until at least 1928. 37 He probably continued to work there until at
least 1930, when the census lists his occupation as accountant in the shipping industry, or
possibly until at least 1936, when his business address was 1 Broadway, New York City,
a probable location of the White Star Line Office. 38
________________________________________________________________________
George Arthur Douglas, Suffolk Law School 1909
George Arthur Douglas was born in 1884 in Massachusetts. 39 His mother, Susan,
moved to the United States from Ireland in 1865. 40 His father (name unknown) was also
born in Ireland. 41 George was one of seven children, but by 1910 only he and two of his
siblings were living. 42
27
U.S census 1900, Ibid.
Archer, Gleason L., Building a School, Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, pp. 17, 19.
29
Archer, Gleason L., Building a School, Ibid., p. 21.
30
Archer, Gleason L., Building a School, Ibid., p. 101.
31
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936., p. 15.
32
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.; United States Census 1920, New Jersey, Bergen, Rutherford
Borough, Enumeration District 107, Sheet 10A.
33
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
34
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
35
Archer, Gleason L., “Sketches from Life” in Suffolk University Historical Pamphlet Series #1, 1919,
reprinted 1978 by Suffolk University Law School, p. 11.
36
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid., United States Census 1930, New Jersey, Bergen Rutherford Borough,
Enumeration District 2-218, Sheet 1A.
37
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1928, p. 173.
38
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid., Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
39
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1561, Sheet 16B.
40
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
41
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
42
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
28
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archives@suffolk.edu
In 1906, George A. Douglas enrolled at Suffolk Law School, graduating in 1909
as one of five in the school’s first graduating class. 43 By 1910, 26-year-old George was
living at 14 Grant Street, Boston, Mass., with his 70-year-old widowed mother and 72year-old aunt, Mary J. Douglas. 44 He was employed as a lawyer in his own law
practice. 45 Also in 1910, he began teaching at Suffolk Law School and continued to do
so until 1934. 46 Around 1918, he married a 21-year-old woman named Norma who was
born in Massachusetts but whose mother and father were born in England and Germany,
respectively. 47 He still had his own law practice, which by at least 1923 was located at 6
Beacon Street, Room 216, Boston, Mass. 48 He and Norma lived at 1754 Col[onial?]
Road in Boston, as did Norma’s brother, Herman Hemmem, a druggist who at that time
was unemployed. 49
Around 1921, George A. Douglas’ daughter, Audrey, was born, and around 1924,
his son, George, was born. 50 By 1930, the Douglas family was living at 86 Blue Hill
Parkway in Milton, Mass. 51 Also residing with them was their 22-year-old servant, a
man whose last name was Jones and who had come to the United States from Ireland in
1927. 52 By 1936, George A. Douglas still had his own law office at 6 Beacon Street in
Boston. 53
James Francis O’Brien, Suffolk Law School 1909
James Francis O’Brien was born on January 5, 1878, in Fall River, Mass. 54 His
parents, Edward and Mary (Doyle) O’Brien, were born in Ireland and came to the United
States as children. 55 His father was employed as an overseer in the textile mills of Fall
43
Archer, Gleason L. Building a School. Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, p.50; Suffolk Law Alumni
Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
44
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
45
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
46
Faculty Spreadsheet compiled by Kristen Bourque, Project Assistant for Suffolk University Law School
Dean’s Office.
47
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 287, Sheet 10; United
States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Milton, Enumeration District 11-62, Sheet 4A.
48
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.; The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923, Vol. 87. Boston: Sampson
& Murdock Company, 1923, p.684.
49
U.S Census 1920, Ibid. Note: The street name on the 1920 census appears to be Col Road, but that could
be a shortened version of Colonial Road or Columbia Road.
50
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
51
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
52
U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
53
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
54
Hutt, Frank Walcott, ed., “James F. O’Brien,” A History of Bristol County Massachusetts, Historical and
Biographical Volume III. New York and Chicago: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc., 1924,
p.313.
55
Hutt, Frank Walcott, Ibid.
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River. 56 He had at least two sisters and two brothers. 57 He attended both the Fall River
public schools and the parish school of Sacred Heart Church in Fall River. 58
In 1895, at the age of 17, James F. O’Brien enlisted in the Navy, serving during
the Spanish-American War and the Philippine Insurrection. 59 When he was honorably
discharged from the Navy, he enrolled at Rogers and Allen Business College. 60 Prior to
enrolling at Suffolk Law School in 1906, Gleason Archer writes that O’Brien had tried to
enroll at several other law schools, but was turned away. 61 Archer decided to give him a
chance, and although O’Brien was almost forced to drop out, he ultimately graduated in
1909 as one of five members of the school’s first graduating class. 62 He was able to
finance his education by working at Suffolk Law School as a janitor, in Gleason Archer’s
office and at a restaurant. 63 After passing the bar in 1911, he opened law offices in Fall
River and New Bedford, Mass. 64
In April of 1917, James F. O’Brien voluntarily enlisted in the Navy upon the
United States’ entry into World War I. 65 He served in a variety of posts, including
gunnery instructor, battalion commander and lieutenant, before being honorably
discharged in September of 1919. 66 In 1922, he ran unsuccessfully as a Democratic
candidate for Bristol County district attorney. 67 He served as judge advocate of the
Spanish American War Veterans and was a member of many other veterans and fraternal
organizations, including the United Spanish War Veterans, American Legion and the
Fraternal Order of Eagles. 68
On July 7, 1923, James F. O’Brien suffered a stroke from which he never fully
recovered. 69 He died in 1925 at the age of 47, survived by his wife, Elizabeth V.
O’Brien, four daughters and two sons, as well as two sisters, two brothers, and his
mother. 70
________________________________________________________________________
Lewis Austin Adams, Suffolk Law School 1910
56
Hutt, Frank Walcott, Ibid.
Obituary, Fall River Globe, date unknown, 1925.
58
Hutt, Frank Walcott, Ibid; Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
59
Hutt,, Frank Walcott, Ibid; Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
60
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
61
Archer, Gleason L., “Sketches from Life” in Suffolk University Historical Pamphlet Series #1, 1919,
reprinted 1978 by Suffolk University Law School, p.10.
62
Archer, Gleason L, Ibid; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
63
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid.
64
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
65
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
66
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
67
Hutt, Frank Walcott, Ibid., Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
68
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
69
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
70
Obituary, Fall River Globe, Ibid.
57
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Lewis Austin Adams was born on November 12, 1886, in Booth Bay Harbor,
Maine to Frank and Elizabeth Adams, both also of Maine. 71 He was the oldest of five
children in a family of two sons and three daughters, although at some point prior to 1900
his mother had given birth to a child that by that year was no longer living. 72 By 1900,
the family had moved from Maine to Boston, Mass., where his father was employed as a
motorman. 73 They lived at 90 Whitfield Street. 74 At this time, 13-year-old Lewis was
attending school. 75
Around 1907, Lewis A. Adams enrolled at Suffolk Law School, graduating in
1910 as one of ten in the school’s second graduating class. 76 At this time, he was still
living with his parents and four siblings, although by 1910 the family had moved to 16
Westville Street in Boston. 77 In April of 1910 he was working as a glassworker in a shop,
but by 1917 he had his own law practice at an office on Tremont Street in Boston. 78 Also
by 1917 he had moved to 306 Washington Street in Boston, presumably with his parents
and siblings since the entire family, except his sister, Florence, was living at that address
in 1920. 79 According to his draft registration card, Lewis A. Adams was not able to join
the Armed Forces during World War I because his left leg was disabled and he was nearsighted. 80
By 1920, 33-year-old Lewis A. Adams was still single and living with his parents
and four of his siblings at 306 Washington Street, and still had his own law practice. 81
________________________________________________________________________
James T. Bergen, Suffolk Law School 1910
71
World War I Draft Registration Card 1241/70, June 5, 1917; United States Census 1900, Massachusetts,
Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1466, Sheet 3. Note: In the 1900 census, Lewis Adams’ mother
name is unclear, but does not appear to be Elizabeth, although the 1910 and 1920 censuses both list her
name as Elizabeth. Also, the 1900 census spells Lewis’ name as Louis, but the later censuses spell it as
Lewis.
72
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1568, Sheet 8A; U.S
Census 1900, Ibid.
73
U.S Census 1900, Ibid. Note: It is possible that the family moved to Massachusetts around 1899, since
the 1910 census lists all of the children, ranging in age from 23 to 13, as being born in Maine, except 11year-old Bernice, who is listed as being born in Massachusetts. The 1900 census, however, lists daughter
Ella (Eleanor in the 1910 and 1920 censuses, b. 1888), as being born in Massachusetts, and the 1920 census
lists daughter Bernice as being born in Maine.
74
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
75
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
76
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
77
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
78
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.; WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
79
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.; United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston,
Enumeration District D422, Sheet 16B.
80
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
81
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
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James T. Bergen was born around 1884 in Massachusetts to Canadian parents. 82
His mother, Honora Bergen, was widowed by 1910. 83 By 1910, 26-year-old James was
living at 97 [Lauriat] Avenue, Boston, Mass., serving as head of a household that
included his 60-year-old mother, his 28-year-old brother, Joseph, and his 23-year-old
sister, Margaret. 84 His mother had given birth to seven children, but in 1910 only four of
them were living. 85 By April of 1910, James was employed as a letter carrier for the
United States Mail Service. 86
Later in 1910, presumably after three years of study, James T. Bergen graduated
from Suffolk Law School as one of ten in the school’s second graduating class. 87 By
1920, he had moved to Detroit, Michigan, where he lived in an apartment at 27 Palmer
Avenue West and was employed as a lawyer. 88 By this time 38-year-old James had been
married for about two years, but his wife did not live with him. 89 A man named William
J. Topley, who was evidently James’ business partner, did live with him. 90
By 1930, James T. Bergen was still employed as a lawyer in Detroit and had
bought a house at 10427 American Avenue. 91 At this time, his wife, Mildred, was living
with him, as was his 39-year-old sister-in-law, Esperance Lee, and his and Mildred’s
adopted daughter, Mary, who turned two in the summer of 1930. 92 By 1936, his law
practice was located at 709 Hammond Building in Detroit. 93
________________________________________________________________________
Ernest Palmer Bradstreet Suffolk Law School 1910
Ernest Palmer Bradstreet was born in 1882 in Massachusetts. 94 His parents were
also born in Massachusetts. 95 Around 1907, at age 25, he enrolled at Suffolk Law
School. 96 Around 1908, he married a woman named Clara, who was about 23 years old
at the time. 97 One year later, his son, Ernest R. Bradstreet, was born. 98
82
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1638, Sheet 9B.
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
84
U.S Census 1910, Ibid. Note: The street name on the 1910 census is unclear, but appears to be Lauriat
Avenue. Currently no street was found in Boston with that name
85
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
86
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
87
Suffolk Law School Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
88
United States Census 1920, Michigan, Wayne, Detroit, Enumeration District 81, Sheet 8A.
89
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.; United States Census 1930, Michigan, Wayne, Detroit, Enumeration District 82531, Sheet 5B.
90
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
91
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
92
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
93
Suffolk Law School Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
94
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Essex, Danvers, Enumeration District 119, Sheet 7A.
95
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
96
Suffolk Law School Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15. Note: Ernest Bradstreet most likely
enrolled in 1907 because at that time the SLS program of studies took 3 years to complete, and he
graduated in 1910.
97
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
98
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
83
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By April of 1910, Ernest P. Bradstreet and his family were renting part of a house
at 60 North Putnam Street, Danvers, Mass. 99 The house was owned by 81-year-old
Elijah Bradstreet, who lived there with his wife, 76-year-old Ellen, and daughter, 55year-old Ella. 100 The relation between Ernest and Elijah is unclear; it is possible that
Elijah was Ernest’s father, although if that was the case, Elijah and Ellen would have
been 53 and 48
years old, respectively, when Ernest was born. 101 By this time, Ernest was self-employed
as a music teacher. 102
Later in 1910, Ernest Bradstreet graduated from Suffolk Law School as one of ten
in the school’s second graduating class. 103 By 1920, however, at age 37, he was
employed at a railroad station working with the telegraph system. 104 He was still renting
part of the house on Putnam Street, although ownership of the house had transferred to
Ella Bradstreet, most likely following the deaths of Elijah and Ellen. 105 No evidence has
been found that he practiced law.
Emanuel Cohen, Suffolk Law School 1910
Emanuel Cohen was born on May 22, 1882 in England. 106 He came to the United
States sometime between 1900 and 1907. 107 He enrolled at Suffolk Law School in 1907
and graduated in 1910 as one of ten in the school’s second graduating class. 108 He
became a naturalized United States citizen in 1911. 109 By 1918, he was living at 29 Beals
Street in Brookline, Mass., and had his own law practice located at 294 Washington
Street in Boston. 110 He was still living at that address in Brookline in 1920, when the
census indicates that he was one of two roomers living with the Abrahams family. 111 At
that time he was still practicing law. 112
99
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
101
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
102
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
103
Suffolk Law School Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
104
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Essex, Danvers, Enumeration District 29, Sheet 3A.
105
U.S Census 1920, Ibid. Note: The 1920 census lists the street name as Putnam, not North Putnam, but
the house number (60) is the same, as is the family that owned it.
106
World War I Draft Registration Card 1824/143, September 11, 1918; United States Census 1920,
Massachusetts, Norfolk, Brookline, Enumeration District 165, Sheet 7A.
107
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid. Note: The year of Cohen’s immigration is unclear on the 1920 census record,
but it appears to be 190[?], and he must have arrived prior to 1907 since that is when he enrolled at Suffolk
Law School. Also, only one 1920 census record was found for an Emanuel Cohen living in Massachusetts,
so while it has not been confirmed that this record refers to the Emanuel Cohen who attended Suffolk Law
School, that is believed to be the case, since the man listed was a lawyer. Also, the draft registration card
and 1920 census have been confirmed as for the same person, since the home addresses are the same.
108
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
109
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
110
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.; Boston 1918. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Company, 1918, p.
1807.
111
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
112
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
100
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In 1928, the Suffolk Law Alumni Directory listed Emanuel Cohen’s address as
unknown. 113 In 1930, Cohen was living at 87 Fuller Street in Brookline with his two
single sisters, Jane (32) and Hilda (28), both of whom came to the United States from
England in 1922. 114 At that time, he was working as a film salesman. 115 The 1936
Suffolk Law Alumni Address lists his address (presumably his work address) as 1397
Beacon Street in Boston. 116
Ole Martin Dahl, Suffolk Law School 1910
Ole Martin Dahl was born between 1869 and 1875 in Norway, coming to the
United States in 1890. 117 In 1905, he answered an advertisement for a law class to be
taught by Gleason Archer. 118 By this time, he was working as a house painter and
decorator, and Gleason Archer visited him at his shop in response to his inquiry about the
law class. 119 Archer writes that Ole Dahl “had ruddy cheeks and a good natured face,
altogether prepossessing except that his English was very faulty,” and that Ole was
concerned that he was too old (at least 30 years old) to be taught about law. 120 Despite
these concerns, Ole Dahl attended Archer’s first law class in October of 1905, and
enrolled at Suffolk Law School at its inception in September of 1906. 121 He graduated in
1910 as one of ten in Suffolk Law School’s second graduating class. 122
By 1920, Ole Dahl was still working as a house painter and was lodging at a
house in East Boston, along with eight other lodgers and at least one family. 123 By 1917,
he had married a woman named Margie (b.1889 or 1890) who was born in Massachusetts
113
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1928, p. 173.
United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Brookline, Enumeration District 11-15, Sheet 9B.
Note: As with the 1920 census, only one 1930 census record was found for an Emanuel Cohen living in
Massachusetts. Although there is a slight age discrepancy between this record and the 1920 record, the two
records are believed to be for the same person, given that they both list Cohen as being born in England and
coming to the United States in 1905 (the unclear date of arrival in the 1920 census is probably 1905).
115
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
116
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15. Note: 1397 Beacon Street, at least today,
is in Brookline, not Boston; Beacon Street extends from Boston into Brookline, but address numbers
Boston end at 999. Also, since the type of establishment located at 1397 Beacon Street is unknown, it is
possible that it was the location of the film sales business for which Cohen was working in 1930.
117
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, East Boston, Enumeration District 50, Sheet 6B;
United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 13, Sheet 16A. Note:
There are discrepancies between the ages listed for Ole M. Dahl on the 1920 and 1930 census records, but
both records are believed to be those of the same person. The two census records both list the year of
arrival in the United States as 1890.
118
Archer, Gleason L. Building a School, Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, p.20.
119
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p.20.
120
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p.20. Note: Archer’s note that Ole Dahl felt as though he might be too old to
take a law class indicates that the 1930 census, from which it can be deduced that Dahl would have been
about 35 in 1905, is probably correct, since if the 1920 census is correct, Dahl would have been about 30 in
1905, which is not an uncommon age at which to study law.
121
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p.20, p.48.
122
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
123
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
114
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but whose parents were Norwegian. 124 Around 1918 his first son, Fulman, was born, and
around 1923, his second son, Earl, was born. 125 By 1930, at around 60 years old, he
owned a home in Boston where he lived with his wife, sons, and also his widowed fatherin-law, Ole Haff. 126 Ole Haff had come to the United States from Norway in 1887 and
was working for a contractor (despite being 73 years old). 127 By this time, Ole Dahl was
working as an attorney. 128 By at least 1923 and until at least 1936, his law office was
located at 73 Tremont Street in Boston. 129
Robert Timothy Healey, Suffolk Law School 1910
Robert Timothy Healey was born September 22, 1883 to Dennis (1850-1902) and
Mary Healey (1855-ca. 1919). i He was the fourth of five children in a family of three
boys and two girls. ii By 1900 the family lived at 27 Belmont Street, Somerville,
Massachusetts. Robert continued to live there until a few years after his mother’s death
around 1919. iii Dennis Healey listed his occupation as merchant in the 1900 census, but
his death record in 1902 lists him as a machinist. iv Mary A. Healey was born in Ireland
and immigrated to the U.S. in 1872 at the age of 27. v
In 1900, 15 year-old Robert T. Healey was employed as a clerk. vi Gleason Archer
indicates that he enrolled in “Archer’s Evening Law School” in the spring semester of the
1906-1907 school year. vii While he attended law school in the evenings he was employed
as a machinist at an iron foundry. viii He graduated from Suffolk Law School in 1910. ix By
1918 Healey had opened a law office, R. T. Healey, at 6 Beacon Street, Boston. x
After his mother’s death he became the head of the household in Somerville,
living with his single siblings Mary (40), Rachel (38) and Arthur (30). By 1922 Healey
married and by 1930 was widowed. He left the house in Somerville and bought a house
on Sumner Street in Newton, Massachusetts. In 1930 he lived there with his sister Mary
and his daughters Mary (7) and Alice (2). xi He maintained his law practice at 6 Beacon
Street through at least 1936. xii
Bernard Joseph Killion, Suffolk Law School 1910
Bernard Joseph Killion was born around 1885 in Massachusetts to Irish
parents. 130 He was fourth of at least eight children in a family of three girls and five
boys. 131 His three older siblings, Thomas, Mary and Margaret, were all born in Ireland
and had come to the United States in 1883. 132 It is probable that his parents had died by
124
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
126
U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
127
U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
128
U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
129
The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923, Vol. 87. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Company,
1923; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
130
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1553, Sheet 14B.
131
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
132
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
125
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1910, because at that point, he and his siblings all lived together, with his sister Margaret
as head of the household. 133
In 1907, Bernard Killion began attending Suffolk Law School, admitted “on trial”
by Gleason Archer because he was not well-educated or “of the intellectual type,” but
had “a fervent desire to study law.” 134 At that time, he was working for an insurance
company. 135
By April of 1910, 25-year-old Bernard Killion was still working at an insurance
company. 136 He was living at 10 Oswald Street in Boston, Mass., along with his seven
siblings, Margaret (26), who was head of the household, Thomas (30), Mary (28),
Katherine (23), John (21), James (19) and William (15). 137 All of his siblings were
employed at either a shoe factory or a grocery store, except Margaret and William, who
were unemployed. 138 Later in 1910, Killion, having proved himself in the classroom,
graduated from Suffolk Law School as one of ten in the school’s second graduating
class. 139 After graduating, he continued to work in the insurance field because he had
been promoted, but soon began operating a law office in the evenings. 140
On April 10, 1916, Bernard Killion became the first Suffolk graduate to argue a
case before the United States Supreme Court. 141 He, along with Charles Toye and Joseph
F. O’Connell (a former Massachusetts congressman who was one of the original
members of the Suffolk Law School Board of Trustees and later served as its vice
president), represented Henry C. Callaghan in his petition for a writ of certiorari to the
Superior Court of the State of Massachusetts. 142 This meant that Callaghan, after having
lost in a case in the Superior Court of Massachusetts, petitioned, with the aid of his
lawyers, for the case to be reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court. 143 The petition was
denied. 144
Around 1918, Bernard Killion married Dorothy Agate, who had come to the
United States from England in 1891. 145 In 1919, his son, Bernard Jr., was born. 146 By
1920, the family was living at 70 Francis Street in Boston, as were Dorothy’s parents,
Adelaide and Harry Agate, both of whom had come to the United States from England in
133
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
Archer, Gleason L., “Sketches from Life” in Suffolk University Historical Pamphlet Series #1, 1919,
reprinted 1978 by Suffolk University Law School, p. 12.
135
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p. 12.
136
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
137
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
138
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
139
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
140
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p. 12.
141
Archer, Gleason L., Ibid., p. 12; Henry C. Callaghan, Petitioner, v. The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, 241 U.S. 667 (1916).
142
Henry C. Callaghan, Petitioner, v. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Ibid.
143
“Certoriari,” Tech Law Journal Glossary, http://www.techlawjournal.com/glossary/legal/certiorari.htm.
144
Henry C. Callaghan, Petitioner, v. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Ibid.
145
United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Brookline, Enumeration District 11-18, Sheet 12A.
146
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 369, Sheet 6B.
134
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1910. 147 At this point, Killion was practicing law full-time. 148 From at least 1923 to
1928, his law office was located at 294 Washington Street, Room 505, in Boston. 149
By 1930, Bernard Killion had bought his own home at 41 Naples Road in
Brookline, Mass., and had four more children, Harry (9 in 1930), Richard (1) and Barbara
(an infant). 150 Dorothy Killion’s parents were still living with the family. 151 The Killion
family was evidently somewhat wealthy, as their home was valued at $20,000 (their
neighbors’ homes were valued at $14,000 and $15,000), and they had live-in servants,
three young women from Ireland named Julia, Kathleen and Barbara. 152 By 1936,
Killion’s law practice was located at 11 Beacon Street in Boston. 153
In 1944, Bernard Killion returned to Suffolk University Law School, this time as
a member of the Board of Trustees, on which he served as Vice Chairman from 1950 to
1953. 154 Also in 1950, he was appointed a life member of the Board of Trustees. 155
During his tenure on the Board of Trustees, and perhaps beginning sooner, he was
a member of the law firm of Killion, Connolly and Williams.156 After the 1961-1962
academic year, Killion is no longer listed in the SULS Catalogue as a member of the
Board of Trustees, so it is probable that he died in 1961 or 1962. 157
Charles Francis Murphy, Suffolk Law School 1910
Very little is known about Charles Francis Murphy. He enrolled at Suffolk Law
School probably in 1907 and graduated in 1910 as one of ten in the school’s second
graduating class. 158 Because Charles Francis Murphy was such a common name in the
Boston area during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and there are no Suffolk Law
School records on him, it is difficult to positively identify a Charles Francis Murphy from
a census record or draft registration card as the one who graduated from Suffolk in 1910.
One draft registration card was found for a Charles Francis Murphy who was born
January 23, 1877, lived in Boston, and was an attorney. 159 No accompanying census
147
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
U.S Census 1920, Ibid.
149
The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923, Vol. 87. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Company,
1923, p. 687; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1928, p.184.
150
U.S Census 1930, Ibid.
151
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
152
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
153
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
154
Suffolk University Law School Catalogue, 1944, p. 7; Suffolk University Law School Catalogues, 19461955, various pages. Note: Suffolk Law School became Suffolk University Law School when the
University was chartered in 1937. Dates of Killion’s membership on the Board of Trustees were also taken
from the Microsoft Excel Trustees Spreadsheet created by Susan F. Archdeacon in the Suffolk University
Law School Dean’s Office.
155
Suffolk University Law School Catalogue, 1950, p. 7.
156
Suffolk University Law School Catalogues, 1946-1962, various pages.
157
Suffolk University Law School Catalogues, 1960-1967, various pages.
158
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
159
World War I Draft Registration Card 2156/2296, September 12, 1918.
148
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record was found. Charles Francis Murphy is listed in both the 1928 and 1936 Suffolk
Law Alumni Directories, but neither directory lists an address for him. 160
Harry H. Nayor, Suffolk Law School 1910
Harry H. Nayor enrolled at Suffolk Law School presumably in 1907 and
graduated in 1910 as one of ten in the school’s second graduating class. 161 By 1918, he
had a law practice at 53 State Street, Room 426, Boston, Mass., where it was located until
at least 1936. 162 By 1924, he was also a registered Justice of the Peace and was living in
Brookline, Mass. 163 By 1944, he was still living in Brookline, and his address was listed
in the Brookline Directory as 25 Thatcher Street. 164
Edwin LeRoy Weiscopf, Suffolk Law School 1910
Edwin LeRoy Weiscopf was born in 1884 in Massachusetts to Augustus and
Fannie Weiscopf. 165 He attended Suffolk Law School, graduating in 1910 as one of ten
in the school’s second graduating class. 166 In 1910, 26-year-old Edwin lived at 4 Enfield
Street in Boston, Mass., with his father (48), mother (48), younger brother (14), younger
sister (12) and single aunt (55). 167 The family also employed a maid named Lizzie
(45). 168 At this time, Edwin was working as a salesman in his father’s china shop. 169
By 1920, Edwin Weiscopf had married a woman named Minnie, whose parents
were German, and had two young daughters, Louise (4 ½ in 1920) and Jeanne (2 ½ in
1920). 170 The family was living at 3 Dwight Street Extension, Brookline, Mass. 171 In
1920, Edwin was still working as a salesman, although the industry he was employed in
is unclear. 172 By at least 1924, he was selling hotel and restaurant supplies from a
business, presumably his own, located at 5 Knapp Street in Boston. 173 Also by 1924, he
160
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1928, p. 190; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.
15.
161
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
162
Boston 1918. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Company, 1918, p. 1812; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory,
30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
163
The Boston Directory for the Year Commencing August 1, 1924. Boston: Sampson & Murdock
Company, 1924, pp. 109 and 937.
164
Brookline City Directory. 1944, p. 451.
165
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1603, Sheet 15B.
Note: Both the 1910 and 1920 censuses list Edwin Weiscopf’s father’s birthplace as New Hampshire, but
the 1910 census lists his mother’s birthplace as Michigan and the 1920 census lists it as Illinois.
166
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
167
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
168
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid. Note: Enfield Street is located in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston.
169
U.S Census 1910, Ibid.
170
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Brookline, Enumeration District 162, Sheet 1B.
171
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
172
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
173
The Boston Directory for the Year Commencing August 1, 1924. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Co.,
1924, p. 1462.
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and his family had moved to 18 Denton Terrace in the Roslindale neighborhood of
Boston. 174 He operated his hotel and restaurant supply business until at least 1936. 175
While no evidence has been found that Edwin Weiscopf practiced law, he is listed in the
1924 Boston Directory as both a Justice of the Peace and a Notary Public. 176
________________________________________________________________________
Thaddeus Alexander Kitchener, Suffolk Law School 1913
Thaddeus Alexander Kitchener, class of 1913, is believed to be the first black
graduate of Suffolk Law School. 177 He was born March 3, 1884 in Kingston, Jamaica to
Robert Kitchener and Evelina Brown. 178 He graduated from Wolmers High School in
Jamaica. 179 He was a resident of 93 Kendall Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts by March
12, 1908, when he married Mary E. Smith of Annapolis, Maryland. 180 In 1909 he applied
for admission to Suffolk Law School and was accepted by Gleason L. Archer on August
8. 181 At the time of his admittance to Suffolk, Mr. Kitchener was employed as a janitor at
Simmons College, 300 The Fenway, Boston. 182
Mr. Kitchener graduated from Suffolk Law School in 1913. 183 His World War I
Draft Registration card indicates that he continued to be employed as a janitor at
Simmons College as late as 1918 and lived at 38 Seattle Street in Boston. 184
Louis E. Pasco, Suffolk Law School 1914
Louis E. Pasco was born on February 17, 1878, in Baltimore, Maryland. 185 His
father, whose name is unknown, was from Mexico, and his mother, Elizabeth (b. 1856),
174
The Boston Directory…1924, Ibid, p. 1271.
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
176
The Boston Directory…1924, Ibid., pp. 110 and 1505.
177
Marriage Record vol. 581, page 55, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841–1910, from original records
held by the Massachusetts Archives. Online database: NewEnglandAncestors.org, New England Historic
Genealogical Society, 2004. World War I Draft Registration Card 4041/A4647, September 12, 1918. Note:
Kitchener is listed as “colored” in his marriage record and as “negro” on his World War I Draft
Registration card.
178
Marriage Record, ibid. Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, July 5, 1909, SLS
Registrations 1908-1913, application number 36. Note: His Suffolk admission application gives his birth
date as March 3, 1884.
179
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
180
Marriage Record, Ibid.
181
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
182
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
183
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.15.
184
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
185
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, September 26, 1910, Suffolk Law School
Registrations 1908-1913, Application 27.
175
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was born in Virginia. 186 He had two step-siblings. 187 He attended grammar and high
school in Baltimore, but left school without graduating at the age of 14 to go to work. 188
He attended evening high school for six years at some point prior to 1910. 189
By 1900, 22-year-old Louis Pasco was living at 7 Walnut Street in Brookline,
Mass., with his mother, stepfather, James Matthews (b. 1858), grandmother, Eliza Diggs
(his mother’s mother, b. 1835), step-sister, Consuela (b. 1886), and step-brother, James
(b. 1897). 190 At this time, he was working at a bank. 191 In 1901, he married a woman
from South Carolina named Bertha. 192 In 1910, he lived at 2 Vila Street in Boston,
Mass., with his wife and four children, Elizabeth (7), Bertha (6), Alice (4) and Louis (an
infant). 193 He was still working at a bank, specifically the National Shawmut Bank on
Water Street in Boston, as a statement clerk. 194
In September of 1910, Louis Pasco applied and was accepted to Suffolk Law
School. 195 Pasco, whose mother was black and father was Mexican, graduated from
Suffolk Law School in 1914 as one of the first graduates of both African and Hispanic
descent. 196 After graduating from law school, Pasco continued to work as a clerk at the
National Shawmut Bank until at least 1918. 197
In 1920, 42-year-old Louis Pasco and his family were still living on Vila Street in
Boston. 198 By this time he had a fifth child, a son named Wendell who was born
probably in 1917. 199 At this time Pasco was still employed as a bank clerk, probably at
the National Shawmut Bank, although the 1920 census does not list a specific bank. 200
No evidence has been found that he practiced law.
Harry Ernest Burroughs, Suffolk Law School 1915
186
United States Census 1900, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Brookline, Enumeration District 1023, Sheet 16.
Note: The 1900 and 1910 censuses lists Pasco’s father’s place of birth as Mexico, but the 1920 census lists
it as Maryland.
187
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
188
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
189
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
190
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
191
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
192
United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 1539, Sheet 3B.
193
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
194
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.; Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.; World War I Draft
Registration Card 1189/1349, September 12, 1918.
195
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
196
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 16. Note: The 1900 census lists Pasco as
black, the 1910 census lists him as mulatto, and the 1920 census lists him as white.
197
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
198
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 369, Sheet 11A.
199
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
200
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
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Harry Ernest Burroughs was born on April 15, 1890, in Volenia, Russia. 201 He
came to the United States in 1903 and began working as a newsboy in Boston. 202 In
1911, around age 21, he enrolled at Suffolk Law School, graduating four years later in
1915. 203 He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1913. 204 By 1917, he was living at 722
Commonwealth Avenue and had his own law practice. 205 He served in World War I,
then returned to his law practice. 206 By at least 1923, his office was located at 18
Tremont Street, where it remained until at least 1936. 207 In the 1924 Boston business
directory, he is listed as a Justice of the Peace. 208
In 1927, Harry Burroughs established the Burroughs Newsboys Foundation to
give newsboys between the ages of 12 and 17 the opportunity to learn, socialize and
develop leadership and other skills. 209 The Foundation also provided college
scholarships. 210 A newsboy himself as an adolescent, Burroughs felt compelled to
provide “wholesome adult guidance” to young boys who often had to provide for
themselves their families by working in the adult world, thus missing out on some of their
childhood. 211
In 1935, Burroughs, by then a very successful lawyer, bought a summer camp in
Poland, Maine, called Camp Maqua and devoted it to his Newsboys Foundation. 212 The
camp opened in 1936 under the new name of “The Agassiz Village of the Burroughs
Newsboys Foundation” after Alexander Agassiz, the son of naturalist Louis Agassiz and
father of Maximilian Agassiz, who financed the camp. 213 The camp was open to
Burroughs Newsboys Foundation members, as well as “any other boy age 6-17 who was
part of a trade group.” 214 In only its fifth summer, in 1940, Agassiz Village housed one
thousand campers. 215 Though it has experienced some changes, the camp still operates
201
World War I Draft Registration Card 1494/567, January 5, 1917.
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 5, Sheet 21B;
“Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Suffolk University Press Release,
September 27, 2005, http://www.suffolk.edu/opa/news/nathanmiller.html. Note: The 1920 census indicates
that Burroughs came to the U.S. in 1903, but his obituary says that he came in 1904.
203
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 16. Note: Burroughs’ admissions application
is missing from the 1908-1913 Law School Registrations volume.
204
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
205
WWI Draft Card, Ibid.
206
Obituary, New York Times, December 19, 1946, p. 29.
207
The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Co., 1923, p. 683;
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 16.
208
The Boston Directory for the Year Commencing August 1, 1924. Boston: Sampson & Murdock Co.,
1924, p. 107.
209
Obituary, Ibid.; “Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Ibid.
210
Obituary, Ibid.
211
Obituary, Ibid.
212
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village.” Welcome to Agassiz Village,
http://www.agassizvillage.org/h/history.asp.
213
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village,” Ibid.
214
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village,” Ibid.
215
“Big Newsboy Camp Hails Benefactors,” New York Times, August 24, 1940, p. 11.
202
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today as Agassiz Village, Founded by Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Burroughs, and caters to
both boys and girls of diverse backgrounds. 216
In Boston, the Burroughs Newsboys Foundation was located at 10 Somerset
Street, which is now the site a Suffolk University dormitory. 217 This dormitory, which
opened in the fall of 2005, was dedicated as the Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall, named
after the founder of Nathan R. Miller Properties, Ltd. of Boston 218 In addition to being a
prominent Boston real estate developer and donating $2 million to Suffolk University,
Nathan Miller is also a former Burroughs Newsboy and was one of the first Agassiz
Village campers. 219 The Burroughs Newsboys Foundation is commemorated by an
exhibit in the lobby of the Miller Residence Hall. 220
In addition to running the Burroughs Newsboys Foundation and Agassiz Village,
Harry Burroughs was also an author. His book Boys in Men’s Shoes was published in
1944 and is both an account of his life and a social commentary on child workers. 221
Burroughs efforts to improve the chances of success for young working boys did not go
unrecognized by his alma mater; Suffolk University granted him an honorary degree of
Doctor of Human Letters sometime between 1937 and 1946. 222
In December of 1946, Harry Burroughs died at the age of 56. 223 At that time, he
was living in Brookline, Mass. 224 He was survived by his wife, Hannah, two sons, Harry
E. Jr. and Warren H., and a daughter, Jean. 225 Warren Burroughs is currently the
Honorary Chairman of the Board of Trustees at Aggasiz Village. 226 The Burroughs
Newsboys Foundation lasted only five more years after Burroughs death, closing in
1951. 227
Thomas Vreeland Jones, Suffolk Law School 1915
Thomas Vreeland Jones was born May 7, 1874, to Nichols (b. around 1853) and
Harriet Jones (b. around 1855) in Paterson, New Jersey. 228 He was the second of five
216
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village,” Ibid.
“Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Ibid.
218
“Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Ibid.
219
“Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Ibid.
220
“Suffolk University to Dedicate Nathan R. Miller Residence Hall,” Ibid.
221
Van Vechten, C.C., Review of Boy’s in Men’s Shoes: A World of Working Children by Harry
Burroughs, from The American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 50, No. 6, May 1945, p. 562, accessed via
JSTOR online database, http://www.jstor.org
222
Obituary, Ibid. Note: It has been assumed that Burroughs received the honorary degree between 1937
and 1946 because Suffolk University was not incorporated until 1937, and Burroughs died in 1946.
223
Obituary, Ibid.
224
Obituary, Ibid.
225
Obituary, Ibid.
226
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village,” Ibid.
227
“Year by Year History of Agassiz Village,” Ibid.
228
World War I Draft Registration Card 2503/1646, September 12, 1918; United States Census 1880, New
Jersey, Passaic, Paterson, Enumeration District 154, Sheet 6; Suffolk School of Law Application for
217
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children in a family of three boys and two girls. 229 By 1880 the family lived at 75 Bridge
Street in Paterson. 230 In 1880, Nichols Jones was employed as a coachman, while Harriet
Jones was a homemaker. 231
Prior to the age of 15, Thomas V. Jones attended grammar school in Paterson. 232
On June 3, 1896, he married a woman named Caroline (b. 1874 or 1985), who was also
from New Jersey, and the two then moved to Cambridge, Mass. 233 He got a job as a
superintendent of the Second Society of Universalists office building at 28 School Street,
Boston, Mass. 234 On March 29, 1897, his son, John Wesley Jones, was born, and on
November 3, 1905, his daughter, Lois Mailou Jones, was born. 235 By 1910, he was still
working at the Second Society of Universalists office building (where he also lived with
his family) as superintendent. 236 His wife worked from home as a milliner. 237
At some point, Thomas V. Jones attended the Y.M.C.A. preparatory school in
Boston, leaving the school at age 35. 238 In September of 1911, he enrolled in the evening
division at Suffolk School of Law. 239 He received his degree in 1915. 240 His daughter
indicates that he entered the real estate field after graduating, but she also indicates that
he was a superintendent for thirty years (until the late 1920s), so it is possible that he
worked in real estate, possibly real estate law, on the side. 241 His draft registration card
from 1918 lists his occupation as janitor for the Second Society of Universalists. 242
Admission, September 29, 1911, SLS Registrations 1908-1913, no application number. Note: Jones’ draft
registration card lists his date of birth as May 7, 1874, but a biography written by his daughter, Lois Mailou
Jones Pierre-Noel, for a Thomas Vreeland Jones Scholarship fund pamphlet lists it as April 7, 1874.
229
U.S Census 1880, Ibid.
U.S. Census 1880, Ibid.
231
U.S Census 1880, Ibid.
232
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid. Note: Jones indicates that he attended grammar
school in both Paterson, NJ, and Boston, MA, but he didn’t move to Massachusetts until after he was
married in 1896, so it is unclear to what school he is referring.
233
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, “Thomas Vreeland Jones,” from the Thomas Vreeland Jones
Scholarship Fund pamphlet, Suffolk University, n.d.; United States Census 1910, Massachusetts, Suffolk,
Boston, Enumeration District 1350, Sheet 1B
234
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid.
235
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid.
236
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid., Note: The terms superintendent and janitor were probably used
interchangeably because Lois Mailou Jones Pierre-Noel describes her father as superintendent, but the 1910
census and Thomas V. Jones’ WWI draft registration list his occupation as janitor.
237
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
238
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid. Note: It is unclear why he was attending the
school so late in his life.
239
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
240
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.16.
241 241
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid
242
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid., WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.
230
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Thomas V. Jones died on December 7, 1934. 243 Several decades after his death,
his family, friends and the Black American Law Students Association at Suffolk
University Law School established the Thomas Vreeland Jones Scholarship Fund at
Suffolk Law to provide financial assistant to minority law students. 244
________________________________________________________________________
243
244
Pierre-Noel, Lois Mailou Jones, Ibid.
Thomas Vreeland Jones Scholarship Fund pamphlet, Suffolk University, n.d.,
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Shichiro Hayashi, Suffolk Law School 1922
Shichiro Hayashi was born on August 5, in either 1877 or 1879, in Mibu,
245
Japan.
He attended grammar school, then went on to high school in Utsunomiya,
about sixty miles from Tokyo, Japan. 246 He left school at age 20 with hopes of going
abroad. 247 At one point he studied law in [Yoimon], Japan. 248
By September of 1918, Shichiro Hayashi was living at 26 Arlington Street,
Cambridge, Mass., and was employed as a cook. 249 On September 12, 1918, he applied
and was accepted to Suffolk Law School. 250 He graduated from Suffolk Law School in
1922. 251 By 1936, he was still living at 26 Arlington Street in Cambridge. 252
By 1942, Shichiro Hayashi had moved to New York City, where he was living on
East 71st Street with his wife, Christine. 253 At this time, he was unemployed, probably
retired. 254 He eventually moved to Cherokee and/or Gracie, New York. 255 He died in
New York in September of 1968. 256
Thomas Joseph Lane, Suffolk Law School 1925
Thomas Joseph Lane was born on July 6, 1898, in Lawrence, Mass., to Patrick
and Mary Lane, both of Ireland. 257 By 1900, he was second youngest in a family of three
sons and one daughter. 258 His mother had given birth to seven children, but he and his
brothers, Patrick and John, and his sister, Nellie, were the only ones still living at this
time. 259 Patrick Lane was employed as a teamster. 260 The family lived at 92 Abbott
Street in Cambridge. 261
245
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, September 12, 1918, SLS Registrations 1918-1919,
no application number; Shichiro Hayashi, Social Security Death Record, September 1968, accessed via
http://www.familysearch.org; World War II Draft Registration Card 1385, 1942. Note: Shichiro Hayashi
wrote on his SLS admission application that he was born in 1879, but his Social Security death record and
his WWII draft card indicates that he was born in 1877.
246
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
247
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
248
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
249
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
250
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
251
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 23.
252
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 23.
253
World War II Draft Registration Card 1283, 1942.
254
WWII Draft Card, Ibid.
255
Social Security Death Record, Ibid.
256
Shichiro Hayashi, Social Security Death Record, Ibid.
257
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, September 19, 1921, SLS Registrations 1921-1922,
no application number; United States Census 1900, Massachusetts, Essex, Lawrence, Enumeration District
353, Sheet 4.
258
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
259
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
260
U.S Census 1900, Ibid.
261
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
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Thomas J. Lane attended Packard Grammar School in Lawrence and graduated
from Lawrence High School in 1916. 262 By 1918, he was employed as a retail clerk on
Essex Street in Lawrence. 263 He continued working as a retail clerk until at least 1921,
when he applied and was accepted to Suffolk Law School. 264 He graduated from Suffolk
Law School in 1925. 265
Soon after graduating from Suffolk Law School, Thomas J. Lane began a private
law practice in Lawrence, and in 1927, he was elected as a Democrat to the
Massachusetts House of Representatives. 266 By 1930, he was still living at 92 Abbott
Street in Lawrence, but now he was living with just his father and his brother, Thomas
(both his mother and Thomas’s wife had died by that year). 267 Sometime after 1930, he
married a woman named Jane (maiden name Murphy). 268 He served in the state House of
Representatives until 1937, and then served in the state Senate from 1939 to 1941. 269 He
was elected to the United States Congress in 1941 in a special election after the death
Congressman Lawrence J. Connery of Lynn. 270 He was re-elected to the next ten
Congresses, but was not re-elected to the Eighty-eighth Congress of 1962. 271 In 1956, he
was indicted for failing to pay taxes and served four months in Danbury Prison in
Connecticut. 272
After losing re-election to Congress, Thomas J. Lane continued to practice law
and served on the Massachusetts Governor’s Council from 1965 to 1976. 273 He was
active in the American Legion and an ardent supporter of veterans’ rights and benefits. 274
He died on June 14, 1994, in Lawrence and is buried at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in
North Andover, Mass. 275
Joseph David Paté, Sr., Suffolk Law School 1927
Biography written by: Catherine M. Pate (granddaughter)
Born: September 1, 1900 – Died: June 14, 1981
“Joe” was born in Somerville, Massachusetts. He graduated from Boston College
High School in 1917 where he was a member of the debating society. He then went on to
Boston College and graduated in 1921 with a Bachelor of Arts degree and honorable
262
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
World War I Draft Registration Card 464/1458, September 12, 1918.
264
Suffolk School of Law Application for Admission, Ibid.
265
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p.29.
266
Thomas J. Lane Biography, Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress,
http://bioguide.congress.gov; Obituary, Boston Globe, June 16, 1994, p.16.
267
United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Essex, Lawrence, Enumeration District 5-130, Sheet 25A.
268
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
269
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
270
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
271
Thomas J. Lane Biography, Ibid.
272
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
273
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
274
Obituary, Boston Herald, June 16, 1994, p.76.
275
Obituary, Boston Globe, Ibid.
263
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mentions in Astronomy and Geology. He studied law at Suffolk Law School, received his
degree in 1927, and passed the bar on his first try.
All through his high school and college days he was involved in the theater, either
as an actor, producer, or manager. He worked as a councilor and drama coach in the
summer at Granite Lake Boys camp in NH. He went on to manage a theater in the Boston
area.
He was a member of temporary reserves in the Coast Guard, and played trombone
in the Army band entertaining troops during World War I.
He practiced law during the Great Depression, but not many people could afford a
lawyer. He sold telephone advertising for a while to make ends meet. In the 1930s, he
had two five and dime stores, one in Orient Heights, and one in Teele Square called the
Paty Needle Company. He ran a side wholesale business importing sewing needles from
Germany (which was started by his father, Bernard A. Paty) until events of World War II
ended trade with Germany and the business collapsed. Starting in the early 1940s, he
worked 27 years for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Later, he was a realestate developer in Maine.
Joe enjoyed painting and developed a special style that involved painting with oils
on wood panels. His favorite subjects were ships and scenes he imagined from American
colonial days.
In 1926, Joe married Mary Beatrice White, (teacher, 1917 graduate of Lesley
Normal School, now Lesley University), and during the great economic Depression and
after, ably and lovingly supported his wife and five children.
From information in the family archives and from memories of his son, J. David Paté, Jr.
Harry Hom Dow Suffolk Law School 1929
Harry Hom Dow was born on March 13, 1904, in Hudson, Mass., to Hom Soon
and Alice Dow, both Chinese immigrants. 276 He was the oldest of six children in a
family of three sons and three daughters. 277 After Harry was born, he and has parents
relocated from Hudson to Boston, where Hom Soon Dow opened a laundry business, the
H.S. Dow Laundry Company, that became quite successful. 278 Harry attended the
Dwight Grammar School, presumably in Boston, for eight years. 279
In 1916, Hom Soon Dow passed away, leaving management of the laundry, which
had begun to suffer in the face of rising competition, to his wife. 280 Although Harry was
still in school at the time, he helped his mother, who had no business experience, take
over the laundry, move it to a new location (70 West Dedham Street in Boston) and make
276
Suffolk Law School Application for Admission, September 9, 1925, Suffolk Law School Registrations
1925-1926, A-L, no application number; “Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” [Boston Globe], October 6,
1929. Note: It is believed, but has not been confirmed, that the article about Harry Dow’s mother and the
family’s laundry business appeared in the Boston Globe; it could have appeared in another local paper.
277
United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston, Enumeration District 171, Sheet [?]A.
278
“Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” Ibid.
279
SLS Application for Admission, Ibid.
280
“Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” Ibid.
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it thrive. 281 He worked at the laundry for several years, then began working in the
insurance business, all while still in school.282 He took one course (mechanical drawing)
during the summer of 1918 at Lincoln Preparatory School, formerly Northeastern
Preparatory School, on Huntington Avenue in Boston, then attended Boston English High
School from September of 1918 to March of 1921. 283
By 1920, 15-year-old Harry Dow, his mother, and his siblings, Nellie (14),
Howard (12), Nettie (8), Hamilton (6) and Nora (4), were living at 371 Shawmut Avenue
in Boston. 284 A 1929 newspaper article about the H.S. Dow Laundry Company states
that Harry continued to work in the insurance business after leaving high school, but by
1925, he had returned to his family’s laundry. 285
In 1925, Harry Dow enrolled at Suffolk Law School. 286 On his admission
application, he listed as one of his references Joseph F. O’Connell, a Boston lawyer and
former United States congressman who served as on the Suffolk Law School Board of
Trustees from its inception and as its Vice President from 1919 to 1936. 287 By this time,
Harry had moved to another house on Shawmut Avenue, number 385, with his mother
and three of his siblings. 288 He began working for the United States Immigration and
Naturalization Services in 1928. 289 He graduated from Suffolk Law School in 1929 and
that same year became the first Chinese American to be admitted to the bar in
Massachusetts. 290 By 1930, he was still living at 385 Shawmut Avenue. 291 The 1930
census states that he was a lawyer at that time, probably for the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Services. 292 Also, the 1936 Suffolk Law Alumni Directory lists his
address as 124 West 72nd Street, New York City, but it is unclear whether this was a
home or business address. 293 Nonetheless, by 1948, Harry Dow had a private law
practice, dealing specifically with immigration law, with offices in Boston and New York
City. 294
281
“Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” Ibid.
“Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” Ibid.
283
SLS Application for Admission, Ibid, Appendices, Transcripts from Lincoln Preparatory School and
Boston English High School.
284
U.S. Census 1920, Ibid.
285
“Chinese Mother Wins Big Battle,” Ibid.; SLS Application for Admission, Ibid.
286
SLS Application for Admission, Ibid.
287
SLS Application for Admission, Ibid.; “O’Connell, Joseph Francis,” from the Biographical Directory of
the United States Congress, http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=O000026. Note:
Various Suffolk Law School catalogues and directories were consulted to determine O’Connell’s years of
service on the SLS Board of Trustees.
288
SLS Application for Admission, Ibid.; United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Suffolk, Boston,
Enumeration District 13-198, Sheet 1A.
289
Obituary, Boston Globe, January 24, 1985.
290
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 43; Obituary, Ibid.
291
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.
292
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid.; Obituary, Ibid.; Dow, Frederick H. “Harry H. Dow, Esq.” Harry H. Dow
Memorial Legal Assistance Fund Nineteenth Year Annual Report: 2003-2004, p. 8.
293
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, Ibid.
294
Obituary, Ibid.; Dow, Frederick H., Ibid.
282
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Harry Dow retired in 1963 and spent the next twenty years doing volunteer work
in Boston, serving as a legal adviser for many organizations that were dedicated to
serving the city’s less privileged citizens. 295 He was particularly concerned with issues
facing Boston’s Chinatown neighborhood and his home neighborhood of the South
End. 296 He served on the boards of many organizations, including Boston Legal
Services, the South End Health Center, South End Neighborhood Action Program, Inc.
and Central Boston Elder Services, Inc. and advised groups including the Chinese
Consolidated Benevolent Association. 297
Harry Dow also served in World War II as a captain in the Army Intelligence
Corps and in the Korean War. 298
Harry Dow died in January of 1985 after being hit by a truck on Boylston Street
in Boston. 299 He was survived by his second wife, Rita (Lee), four sons, Frederick H.,
Alexander H., Roderick H. and William H., one daughter, Mu Ying Dow, and six
grandchildren. 300 William and Mu Ying Dow are children by his first marriage. 301
Copyright Information: Copyright ©2006 Suffolk University.
i
World War I Draft Registration Card 3347/1164, September 20, 1918; United States Census 1900,
Massachusetts, Middlesex, Somerville, Enumeration District 950, Sheet 140A; United States Census 1910,
Massachusetts, Middlesex, Somerville, Enumeration District 1010, Sheet 178A. Note: The 1900 census
appears to erroneously reports his birth year as 1874.
ii
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
iii
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid; U.S. Census 1910, Ibid. United States Census 1920, Massachusetts, Middlesex,
Somerville, Enumeration District 440, Sheet 18B; United States Census 1930, Massachusetts, Middlesex,
Newton, Enumeration District 9-388, Sheet 1B.
iv
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid. Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841–1910 From original records held by the
Massachusetts Archives. Online database: NewEnglandAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical
Society, 2004. Note: Dennis Healey is reported as born in Massachusetts in the 1900 and 1910 censuses,
but his death record and the 1920 and 1930 censuses list the Healey children’s father as born in Ireland
(1920) and Irish Free State (1930).
v
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid. Note: Healey’s World War I Draft Registration Card lists her name as Mary M.
Healey.
vi
U.S. Census 1900, Ibid.
vii
Archer, Gleason L. Building a School. Boston: Gleason L. Archer, 1919, p. 52.
viii
U.S. Census 1910, Ibid.
ix
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
x
WWI Draft Registration Card, Ibid.; The Boston Register and Business Directory: 1923. Boston, MA:
Sampson & Murdock Company, 1923, p. 686; Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936,
p.15.
xi
U.S. Census 1930, Ibid. Note: The Newton house’s value is listed as $8,000 in the 1930 Census.
xii
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 30th Anniversary, 1936, p. 15.
295
Obituary, Ibid.
Obituary, Ibid.
297
Obituary, Ibid.
298
Obituary, Ibid.
299
Obituary, Ibid.
300
Obituary, Ibid.
301
Obituary, Ibid.
296
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25
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Title
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Other related resources
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This collection consists of item records that link to, and cite, resources outside of the Moakley Archive's collections that have been included here for use in Suffolk University student exhibits.
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Suffolk Law School Class Profiles and Biographies 1909-1929
Date
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2006
Description
An account of the resource
In 2006, the Moakley Archive completed a research project to find out more about Suffolk University Law School’s earliest graduates. This guide includes information about the classes and biographical information about a selection of graduates discovered using sources such as Suffolk University records, U.S. Census records, and other sources such as local newspapers. The classes covered were limited to 1909-1915 because there weren’t adequate records for the earliest classes of 1906-1908. This document also includes individual bios for individuals from later classes.
Suffolk University Firsts
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Text
FORD HALL
November 26, 1933
PROFESSOR FRIEDERICH SCHOENEMANN
"Why I believe in the Hitler Government."
Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,
When I left Harvard in 1920 I did not know that my home coming would be so very interesting. I left
as a private citizen, and I come again as a private, German citizen. And I am somewhat reminded
tonight of an experience I had in New York the other day when a showman said he would tell a
risqué story. And somebody in the audience objected and said - you are not going to tell that story
here, are you? And the actor said, "Well, I have told that story to a Boston woman's club - and they
liked it - in fact they liked it so much they offered me their home - brick by brick.
Now, there is one thing you need not be afraid of: I won't pull any propaganda stuff. You need not
believe any word I tell you. I will just try to give you as fair and as frank a picture of my Germany, as
I have seen it, as I lived there. I think too highly of you to try propaganda. But I think the mere
shouting of, "Down," or "Boo," does not mean anything at all; for history is not accomplished in one
or the other way - and then what will the evening, the night mean to all of us and to history? Five
yea.rs from now we will know both you and I, where we have gone; and that will prove perhaps more
than all the excitement tonight whether we are right - that is some of you - or I, was right. That is the
best test, and about this I am sorry to say too, we cannot speak tonight.
I hope we can clarify. the issues by being as unemotional as possible and that is why I wish to say
from the very beginning, to try to put yourself into the right perspective: That is, do not generalize
hastily and don't interpret the struggles and the great experiment of revolution and. maybe even the
reaction of Germany - do not try to interpret that only from the standpoint of the news item.
You know the definition of news as given by a Mr. Dana, a few decades ago; Mr. Dana, said in a
book of his, "That when a dog bites a professor that is to be expected - But that when a professor
bites a dog, that is news." And a good deal of what has been printed about the new Germany. I am
sorry to say makes me think of that definition of Mr. Dana's.
Now we are in the midst of a great revolution, and how can you expect the Germans to be normal rather than in an abnormal state of mind when century old traditions and institutions have been
uprooted. We are trying today new things - some of them may be nonsense others may be great; only
the future as I said can tell. But we try our best - and we try as honestly as it is possible; we try it as
�energetically as possible. We try, may be not always wisely - I will say from the very beginning, that I
am not here to excuse anything that cannot be excused -my conscience is just as good as yours. And
I would not dare to say that the wrong that has been committed is not a wrong. But both you and I,
are not always in a position of saying exactly, whether a certain wrong was committed, the same way
we were told it was committed - in the papers, in the press. And besides we must also see, that the
revolution of Germany is amongst the most unbloody, I think, in history. And as I told you in the
beginning, I can give you only a picture as seen through my eyes.
A Voice: Let us have some facts.
A few weeks before I left Germany, an English newspaper man came to me and said, "Why must
you Germans be so very different. Now when other people make a revolution they have a few weeks
of bloodshed; why didnit you go to the......and a few other places in Berlin, and murder a few
thousands of people and then the world would believe in your revolution. Now you expect us to
believe in your revolution - and you have not murdered enough - for me."--Cries of, "Boo, Boo," from the audience.
I am just telling you what he said. Now there is one thing of course that you will want to know about,
right from the beginning, and as long as I have anticipated that - I seen some of them; I made it my
special business to go there, unannounced - and I will say I succeeded. And I have seen one, amongst
the largest of the concentration camps. And I must say, even from the critical point of view there
was nothing that could be called dirty or abnormal or mean-- (Interruption by the audience.)
Of course when you ask some of the prisoners, they would say, "I don't know why I am here;" but if
you were to look up the police records you would find that in most of these concentration camps
there were at least forty per cent of the people who had prison records and some of the other people
interned were concerned with certain complications; but these things would be explained later on. I
was present at one of these concentration camps - one of the largest - and a good many of the people
were taken out of the camp and were sent to special courts, where the regular court procedure took
place, and a good many of them were released after sometime because nothing serious was found
against them. But in most of the cases I thought - even though it is certainly not nice to be
imprisoned I had sympathy with all of these people; but I still have the feeling which I had then, that
it was more human to put people into these camps than murdering them.
(Demonstration and loud cries from the audience.)
Now that may sound funny to you, but I mean every word of it. It is certainly - at first in the
beginning of the revolution many things were committed that should not have been committed - I
�said before I am not going to excuse anything of that. But on the other hand you must be fair; in
times of revolution, of social and economic unrest you cannot expect people to be quiet, normal; but
the longer the thing. lasted, the more the authorities got control of it, and today, I should not
overstep the bounds of decency and truth by saying that the authorities have the situation in their
hands fully and properly -(Interruption by audience.) So that today a man cannot be sent to a
concentration camp and held there fore more than a few days - and - so that his case is examined
quickly and decided up. (Interruption.)
Now we Germans, we have not changed - that is, of course, one thing you cannot understand. But I
was here in the states, all through the war; and in my presence, Americans - even university
professors, fine gentlemen, said the very meanest and the most poisonous things about my own
country and people that could be invented or surmised by a evil imagination. And then all at once it
seemed they discovered I was there, and of course they said, "Schonemann, you are all right." Well,
of course I feel a little bit like that now. But I have not changed, my people have not changed - and if
I could use statistics here tonight I would say with George Bernard Shaw, that you might perhaps
find in any single records, files - police records, statistics that there were so and so many percentages
of murderers; so and so many percentages of thieves and pickpockets, and so on. And that every
nation, to a certain extent lived up to those statistics. And you know, George Bernard Shaw made
quite a good point of that in war time, when everybody was saying that the Germans were Huns and
that the others were angels; and that the ways of the Huns were the ways of evil and that the
weapons of the others were the weapons of mind and democracy.
Now there is. another thing that I want to mention and that you are asking me for - you are asking
me for facts, and that is the thing that has been puffed up into the only question that regards the
New Germany - and that is the Jewish question.
Now even. to that question there are two sides. We hope all of us in Germany, we hope that in a few
years from now even the Jewish question will be an episode of-the national revolution: An episode
only and that we will have come to a modus vivendi between the two races. But in order to
understand the situation you will also have to know that a good deal of the Jewish question, can be
explained by certain statistics.
Now the Jews in Germany number about six hundred thousand; but as early as 1925, we had about
seventy--five thousand Jews of foreign birth, in Prussia alone. Now this brought the question of the
Eastern Jew into the whole German Jewish question. Every fifth Jew in Germany, let us say the day
before yesterday was foreign born - and some of the most recent importations were certainly
amongst the most, I might say the saddest cases - they were mixed up with several cases of
corruption, and we have never had-----(Cries, of Liar, liar.)
�Well, if your think that the cases of corruption we have been through for the last fifteen years are not
bad, you are sadly mistaken - not all of them I am happy to say, not all of them: (Interruption.)
Mr. Coleman: No interruptions from the floor or gallery, Please.
A good many of the people like,....and....and a few others were Jews, and these were the worse corruption cases. Now of course, bad people, abnormal - as I say when the revolution started - it is not
easy to distinguish between a good and a bad Jew especially--- (Interruption.) Well, you see, I started
with this thing because you asked for it - you asked for facts. I cannot explain this fact, only the way
that we Germans look upon it - that is a great majority today: And I can interpret those facts only the
way a moderate will interpret them. I said at the beginning I do not excuse - that is - anything that
has been done in a way, let us say, in a criminal or inexcusable way. I cannot be fairer than that, I
think. But you must listen to my facts if you are really to understand and interpret them.
But this Eastern Jew question would not have explained the antagonism - it was the revolution, the
revolution of 1918; there is no question - and that was mainly prepared and started by Jews, like, Carl
Leibnecht--A Voice: Carl Leibnecht, was not a Jew
Mr. Coleman: Wait until the question period. (Continued interruptions.)
Carl Leibnecht, was a Luxembourg Jew...the revolution in Moscow was made...Eisner and most of
his friends were Jews----(Interruptions, continued.) Well you see, there is only one choice, either we
discuss this thing in a fair way, or we don't discuss it - I am ready not to discuss it-A Voice: Tell the truth
Mr. Coleman: How is he going to tell the truth if you will not let him—
I say again, generalizing, that many of the leaders of the revolution of 1918, were Jews, and in this
way discredited the name of the Jew before the German people. Now also many of the instigators of
that revolution were Jews, many I say: and besides in Berlin alone we had come to a certain
monopoly in certain professions - eighty per cent of our stage directors and managers, were Jews;
and more than fifty per cent of the lawyers in Berlin --- (loud and continued applause) In certain
Berlin hospitals it was impossible for a Christian - a gentile to get a position----(Interruption.) I
sometimes wonder why it is you are so excited; these things have been printed in many, many
papers all over the world, America included---Voice: 'What's wrong with it---
�Well the one thing that is wrong about it is that the German people did not wish that monopoly - and
that is why they fight it. And that is really what started the Jewish question, and the regulation of
certain - in certain professions . Now of course that means a hardship to many. Of course, in many
cases I think the wrong ones have been expelled - and in many cases, excellent national minded Jews
have been fired that should not have been. But after that - after the first revolutionary excitement
was over; and the first terrible thing of every revolution as it takes place in this world - we have tried
to come to reason and to a certain moderation.
Now as early as May, we have made a federal law regulating civil service, and this law says: If you
were a civil service man before the first of August 1914, whether Jew or Gentile, you are safe
(Laughter and interruptions.)
Well, that is a fact: Besides people with honorable war records were safe whether Jew or Gentile,
and their children or parents.
Now we have really come to a modus vivendi; in the University of Berlin there are dozens of Jewish
professors, especially in my department of philosophy - I have to hurry home in December in order
to examine a Jewish girl, one of my best students - we get along all right---(Laughter and interruptions)
Wait a minute - wait a minute; in the city of Berlin, all of the Jewish stores are doing business,
department stores, almost as before. Well, here at Vorkeyn's, before I left, I bought several things I
needed for my trip to America I also went to Teitz's, another large department store, Jewish
department store in Berlin, before I came aboard my ship on my way to America.
Now we realize today, we have got to get along with our Jewish people and we will come to a much
better understanding; but one thing will certainly not happen: a livable and possible state of affairs
will not come about if a one sided, unfair and hostile and even half crazy opposition always comes
from foreign countries in this way----(Interruption.) Well, is it not psychology? It is the only true
psychology: If you Americans were told by the Mexicans, or the British or the French or the
Germans, that this and that were wrong - now certain inequalities can be understood by the
moderates - and could be understood by the moderates in your country - the Government would
even heed certain of the warnings; but as soon as you indulge in the boycott - propaganda, that is
boundless, and unjust what can you expect - can you expect that moderate measures will be taken in
such a case?
So I think if Germany were left alone - all warnings and all the other protests will be taken care of;
�there is no question about that. But if Germany were left alone, Germany will work out a living
condition that is fair to both sides, that is my fair and frank opinion - believe it or not. That is all I can
say.
Now you hear so much about Hitlerism and about Hitler. According to your papers and your public
opinion, or part of it at least, he must be a paranoiac at least; or a madman - a mad dog, some of them
call him.
(Loud applause)
See, if we could settle the difficulties of all the nations in this simple manner, it would be beautiful;
then we could just excite ourselves so that we shouted down, or even reprimanded certain violent
things in all the others. But I think we are all just a little lower than the angels, and we must try to
hide always what all of us do. I think this very minute, all over the world a good deal of violence is
done and a good deal of wrong is done - and all of the different nations sin in unison. Now I want to
say that Hitler is neither of them; neither a paranoiac nor a madman, but to us he is a political leader.
He has got as you know a popular mandate of forty millions or more of votes, the other day---(Interruption)
Well you see I knew you would laugh; but that does not change the fact, by the way—
(Loud laughter)
Well you see, if you knew really ten per cent as much of Germany as I know, you would realize that
we have quite strict laws for our elections. We have still and I think we are going to have that as long
as we are Germans, a secret ballot.
(Loud laughter)
And some stories that have been circulated here about how the votes were counted, they are to us
Germans simply ridiculous.
Now why do we call Hitler our leader? Because the common people - you see his movement is an
appeal from below, not from above; he did not get hold of the professors, the intellectuals - the
professors did not understand what he was after - but the common people understood him. We
know today one thing - that Hitler is clean as a politician--(Interruption.) He has not taken - Hitler to us is clean and not self seeking; that is why he has the
�trust of the German people. And if you would know him personally a good deal of your opposition
would go just like this, (Indicating.)
(Loud interruption)
Now to us national socialism is not a mere accident but a great movement, whose triumph was
inevitable. The votes of course control the statesmen and the politicians and so to a certain extent
Hitler will have come to power through the mistakes of others.
And here again one can say perhaps a word about the others, outside of Germany. If they had
behaved not quite so stupidly, especially concerning the Versailles document; if they had not turned
down every decent proposal by the German people and they had not gone on in their stupidity; and
if they would have understood, that you cannot make a great people second rate, or make them
accept an inferiority complex. If they had but understood that a defeat is something serious, but that
defamation is worse inevitably worse. And that a proud nation cannot stand - that it may be forced to
stand it for sometime - but cannot stand it for all time. And that is why Hitler and national socialism
brought about a new nationalism.
He understood this tendency amongst the German people in all classes by the way, from the bottom
to the top, and because he understood this national unrest, that is why he was able to unite the
German's nationally.
And here a word must be said about the Youth movement. Now four years ago when I toured the
states I was asked about that movement. The people of America seemed to expect almost everything
from that Youth movement in Germany, the millennium included. But the Youth movement has
done one great thing, it has brought the German people close together.
Now when right before the World War these youngsters from Berlin hiked out and forgot about
certain conditions of intellectualism and class feeling, and went to the common people and went to
the peasants sometimes they were ridiculed for imitating the folk dances - they sung the folk songs
and they certainly came nearer to the hearts of the common people. Now these members of the
Youth movement - they started with a dozen which afterwards grew to three millions, just before the
World War broke out it took the shape of soldiers of the fighters in the front. And these two
elements together explained easily why Hitler was able to get the support of the younger generation,
in trying to unite the German's as a nation. And when he shouted; and this was his slogan that went
through Germany, again and again: Deutschland über alles
It found echo in millions and millions of the Germans. In this way Hitler has been able to give a new
nationalism - a new face to the Germans. A new nationalism; it does not mean militarism - but a
belief in honor, as he writes in his book - one that is not an empty term; one that it is impossible to
�live in this world without. And I think nobody can deny that. Hitler has given back to the German's
that certain sense of honor as a nation, and he has given back to them a new political unity - but he
has not only talked about it; he worked for that unity, for that national and political unification, by
creating a new political organization of the empire - as we say, of the Reich - it is a faulty translation.
It has nothing to do with empire policy or imperialism; but it is the translation of, Reich - that is the
federal union of all the German states. He succeeded, and his Government with him, in bringing
about the,.... which means the co-ordination of the different states to the Reich; the empire, the
federation through a certain federal law. And that is responsible for the institution of the governors;
federal governors in the different parts of Germany:
Now a year and a half ago we had a strange thing happen to us, especially in Prussia. We: had two
governors, one de facto and the other de jure. That is when the von Papen regime came in, it took
hold of the Government in Prussia; but the old Government did not go out; it went to the Court, and
out state Court was not wise enough to distinguish between political and other reasons, but decided
half upon political and half upon juristic opinions. The outcome was wonderful, we had really two
Governments - one practical and one theoretical. So that when the incident of the celebration of a
certain great poet's birthday came up in Germany there were two beautiful documents, one
presented by the de facto Government - and the other none the less beautiful but without the official
seal, this was the de jure Government - without the official seal of state. Quite a ludicrous situation
and one of which every Prussian is thoroughly ashamed of to this day.
Now that has been done away with; we are as to organization and administration in the German
Reich, united. The old Mason and Dixon line has disappeared -- we call that the millennium. But the
organization has been taking hold of the people - most of the people Our Government knows that
patriotism is not enough - that may be a fair weather sentiment but it does not hold in times of stress
and unrest.
Patriotism is good for a monarchy may be during prosperity. But Hitler understood that in order to
give national pride to the masses of the German people, you must add social justice - and that again
is why the people of Germany believe in him.
National socialism believes in private property, but it does not believe in uncontrolled private profit.
That is we are after a social state, social in the deepest state of the word.
There is no confiscation preached in Germany - or exercised; but it is a national socialism.
Now I will take you back a few years before the war. You will remember that in the 1880's, Prussia
startled the world by founding a kind of a state socialism. At first we Germans were denounced as
paternalistic; but we started social legislation, and when the World War broke out there was an
�American by the name of Frank O. Howe, who wrote a book called, Socialist Germany, in which he
said: "That in all matters of social legislation, the Germans were ahead of all the other nations by at
least a generation.”
Now this was true at the time and it is true even today. Now Germany really started with the social
mindedness, that has been imitated as late as 1911. For instance, David Lloyd George, almost
virtually took over the whole system of the Prussian state socialism - social legislation - and even
imitated a few of the things we had in our system, for instance the unemployment insurance feature--the dole.
Now this very fact of social mindedness, in a modern state and an efficient state shows enough the
sentiment, in the sense of application in this state. Now national socialism builds on that.
Hitler fought against two things, in order to bring about this national socialism; he fought against
Marxism and Communism. Marxism, has to us two meanings; the one, is a certain theory of life and
history; everything is led back to economics and the entity of all social endeavor is the class - class
war-fare is just as natural as class interest. Now we get a good deal of that class warfare in Germany.
Only he who has lived through it will be able to understand that.
About a year ago, an American journalist came to my office; this man said that he was quite
disturbed over the German situation. Here in Berlin you could murder a man, and say it was done
for political purposes. The murderer would be sent to prison may be for a year or so, but if he had
some good connections he might be let off in less than a year and he could then exercise his political
belief further. Now, there was something wrong about our law and about the enforcement of our
law.
So many of our Social democrats were very satisfied with the jobs they had; and instead of being real
true leaders for the people they were what we call today, "Bunsen." I think that is almost as beautiful
as what you call here, "Bosses" - perhaps even worse – for you see a boss can be chased out of a job if
he is not fit for it. But a Bunzen, if he ever becomes a state official, that is, gets a position that is for
life of course you cannot get him out easily, and that is why so many of our politicians enjoyed their
wonderful berths - they wanted to stay in these positions for the rest of their lives.
There is a story of an accident that happened to the automobile of three Ministers of State; it
happened on a Sunday morning and the chauffeur drove up to this certain garage and asked the
attendant if he would look at the car in the hope that it could be repaired. And the attendant at the
garage replied, that it was a Sunday morning, that he had worked enough during the week and that,
therefore, he could not repair the automobile. "But," said the chauffeur in an excited tone of voice,
"this is something serious; it is extraordinary, there are three Ministers of State in this automobile did you know that?" Whereupon the attendant at the garage said, "'What, three Ministers of State -
�well at least one amongst them will be a plumber."
Now this incident shows of course the mark of Berlin humour. But it has also a serious undertone
there is a good deal of bitter truth in it.
We had in Germany a certain Catholic Party the Centrist Party; about one-third of our Catholics
belong to it - not all of the Catholics by any means. And to a certain extent it was not fair to call it a
Catholic Party because there were other Christian denominations in this party. But the Centrist
Party had two wings, one a left end one a right and it could flutter its wings just the way it wanted.
Now the Socialists and the Centrists together, they did a wonderful things.
It was about one hundred years ago that a Dr.
, a fine Catholic publicist wanted to criticize a
certain politician, and he said, "The trouble about these religious party people is that when they itch
religiously, they scratch themselves politically. I mean by that if you attack such a religious party
politically, that party will say I have nothing to do with politics, but I am religious. If you attack that
party religiously, from the religious point of view it can say just the other way around. And that is
one of the reasons why the Centrist Party has been rather a bane to the national unification of
Germany. I want to say again, that only a minority of the Catholic people in Germany belong to the
Centrist Party. We have a feeling in Germany, both Catholics and Protestants that the end of the
Centrist Party has helped to bring about a better understanding between the two religions - you
cannot make political capital any more out of religious things. The interests of the Catholics have
not been touched and it is only within a few months that we have concluded a concordat between
Germany and Rome. But there is one very significant paragraph in the agreement which I hope both
Rome and the German Government will live up to the obligations contained within that paragraph,
which is, "That the priests from now on must not get mixed up with politics, and especially not with
party politics." Now I think that has taken a certain religious poison out of party politics - and we are
glad of it. Of course we have had concordats before - between Bavaria and Rome, and Prussia and
Rome. But we have never had a concordat between Bavaria and the Empire, on the one side, and
Rome on the other side. So we say that here a great thing has been accomplished.
I have been asked if it is really true that with the passing of the Centrist Party, class war has been
taken out of the German body politic. Well I think to a certain extent it has. But all these things
cannot be done in a jiffy; you have to have some patience. The other day I heard a Young Turk
speaking on ten years of New Turkey - well it is true that we have not had one year of the new
Government in Germany and yet you look to it for remarkable changes - it is too soon to expect
results - you will have to be fair end patient.
Now we say quite frankly today, that we have a one party state. Whether that is right or wrong or
wise or not, only the future can tell. But since we decided for the one party state we have been
becoming meaner and more dishonest than ever before. Well you see, you do not know what you are
�- what you will come to in this country - you do not know yet.
Now it has been said that the labor unions have no representation in Germany. That is not true. We
had a certain supremacy of the socialistic and rather radical socialist labor unions in Germany; and
that did not help us very much since so many of the leaders of those unions were not true leaders;
were just Bunzen, as said before; but they have very wisely now united in a national labor front;
where labor and the state and capital are together.
Perhaps you will remember the epidemic of conferences and the arranging of compromise measures
- sometimes between capital and labor; and at all these conferences you will probably recall that
there was a very distinguished representative of the people, Doctor Charles W. Eliot of Harvard
College; but in these conferences the other two parties usually compromised at the expense of the
representative of the people - mostly on the backs of the people. Now in Germany today that can no
longer be done - if you regulate capitalism you must also regulate labor union supremacy; the
interests of the people as presented by the state and through the state can be taken care of, to my
mind and to the mind of the majority of Germans much better in the conditions of today. Whether
that will work out all the different problems is a matter for further discussion.
But it is not true as has so often been said, not only in America but elsewhere that labor is unorganized and that labor is not heard. The nationalistic side of socialism is one thing but the socialistic side
is just as veritable a thing.
And I have had the feeling here tonight that you do not quite realize what it is that you are booing
and criticizing here. I think our socialism in Germany is a real socialism, based on the experience of
the Prussian state; but think that your NRA business is state socialism in the Prussian - German,
sense of the word.
There are many times when the old methods of doing things must be discarded. For instance in
times of money inflation and of threatened money inflation, the old methods of cow bargaining must
give way to quick action through the government: And that is exactly the German position today.
We in Germany have come to a new conception of state; that of course is not definitely settled.
We are as yet in the middle of a revolution as I said before.
Now what about the flag raising and all the celebrations of which you have heard so much about?
Well, I think here is a great sense to that. Now the German people have been characterized as a dull,
phlegmatic people, with night caps on their heads; quiet, industrious, opinionated, good people but
slow; that they could always be fooled easily by some other smarter fellow, because they were not
politically minded and because they did not think of organizing politically; they were so
individualistic that even the American brand of "Rugged individualism," was as nothing compared
�with the individualism of the German people. For even when three Americans come together there
is but one mind; whereas when three Germans have a meeting there is at least four or five different
opinions. All this is to a certain extent has been done away with. For, when you force parts of a
people to join and become into the whole in a parade or celebration; to march in one great
enthusiastic parade you weld them together into a solid mass thinking all for the same objective - you
can follow; you have to keep step, you have to think of the other fellow; you have to keep step with
the big drum. You begin to learn something of what the other fellow wants in his life and you have to
cooperate. These parades also give to the people to the masses a feeling of their oneness, of their
bigness; and these celebrations have to a great extent accomplished what I suggested before, that
new oneness of the people.
About a year ago it was impossible to get the different big suburbs of Berlin to take part in one
celebration. This year on the first of May, we had a national celebration in which a million and a half
people came together - and they were not driven together. But even the intellectuals were glad after
they had seen the light, to cooperate. And in my suburb alone about nine hundred people of the
different classes of the population voluntarily marched together in a big parade. How was it a year
ago in May of 1932? They had an international celebration - they had only the red flag of eternal
revolution in the streets; you had assaults and even bloodshed and a good many other incidents that
should not have happened. There was certainly no unity of the people; there was class against class.
But on this first of May, 1933, we have at least tried honestly to bring the classes together. And it has
succeeded marvelously; and that is my honest opinion - (Laughter) Because there was a certain new
idealism in the ranks of the common people; because there was a feeling that we have got to stand
together.
Perhaps you do not realize in what a terrible economic fix we are. We have been bled white by the
Peace Treaty -- the so-called, Peace Treaty of Versailles. Financially we are in a very bad state:
Economically also we have been bled white. Then we are a nation of exporters as you probably
know; and then, first came the shrinkage of the pound; afterwards the dollar went through the same
fluctuations, and then we experienced the difficulty of a certain boycott: (Loud applause) And all of
those difficulties have helped to bring about a bad state of affairs in Germany so that this winter is
sure to be a severe test of our new national socialism. If we get through this winter in Germany all
right, national socialism will stay - and it will stay for a long period. Mind my words. Because -- I
think this new idealism is an idealism of sacrifice; and in this respect we are not so very different
from you today. Here also there is that which appeals to the man who has, to give in order that he
who has not be helped. There is also a program for procuring employment for those out of work; and
our Government is working hard to secure employment for all those in need of positions.
But our economic system is really as rotten as it possibly could be; and yet this new idealism, this
idealism of sacrifice - (Laughter) - whether you believe it or not is not essential here - but I know it,
and we Germans; this new idealism of sacrifice is necessary to make us solve these huge, these
�almost unsolvable problems -- is necessary, really to help us to stand together, to work together in
the common interest.
And it is more than just a sentiment; there is organized effort. You have heard a great deal about
propaganda. The German for, Propaganda. does not mean the same as the English word; we have no
word for "Proselyte," in German. The German word means all that is contained in the English word,
"Publicity."
Now we have never known in Germany as a people what East Prussia meant; we have never known
for the last five or six years what the needs of the peasants were - we have learned step by step;
different German tribes have been brought together; East, West, South and North. The
townspeople and the peasants have come together, they have joined in all those big parades
together; have come together in a popular movement to meet on natural ground ; and finding that
the yokel from a small country town is on just the same footing with the white collared tradesman.
This summer when there was a fear and unrest in Germany, many of the summer vacationists
cancelled, their trips of Germany; this created a situation. Nevertheless the Government did a thing
which no Government ever before has done, and that was to invite all the youngsters, high school
boys and girls, college graduates and all and give them round trip tickets to Bayreuth –
(A Voice, "were there any Jews among them?")
I should not wonder but what there were a few Jews among them; I have Jews in my classroom; and
wherever I go in Berlin there are Jews. Now this action on the part of the Government in sending
gratis all these people to the music festival certainly gave to a large part of the population a great
experience, one that they will never forget.
Now there has been another thing that has shown the new spirit in Germany. Our theatres have in
many places been forced to close because of lack of patrons. Recently there has been an effort put
forth whereby the different suburbs would subscribe for a number of tickets; in different parts of the
city of Berlin, they would subscribe to so many tickets from the different theaters - in this way we are
going to be able to support a few of the leading theatres; and in this movement the common people
have come to a realization of the fact that they are as much a part of the movement as the rich and
well-to-do; that they are really a pert of the new German policy and have an equal share in all that is
for the best of the whole people. And it works fine.
There is certainly a tendency towards a great deal of cultural unity. And religion is on the forward
march. You hear a good deal about a certain group of radicals; but again I say in times of revolution,
you cannot expect all people as moderate - as let us say, you are tonight. But, our churches are really
attended today. And I want to say here that the religious privileges and right, of no Jew have ever
�been hurt in Germany - we have never been intolerant - (Laughter). We have of course radicals yes, and I am to an extent. We have radicals, and you have read in the papers recently that a certain
Dr. Krause, said some very stupid things. Well, men like Dr. Krause, will say a lot of more stupid
things ; but there is always a certain amount of moderation coming to the foreground which will in
time bring about a better understanding. These questions dealing with church organization
and with the different creeds will in time be amicably settled and a good many of the high hatted,
radical German Christians will learn their lesson and accept the spirit of moderation. But I think the
majority of us have not lost our heads - we are still as good, or as bad as we always were.
In economics little has been done to lessen the tax burdens on account of the many demands on the
public exchequer. We have as I said before been really bled white; and the taxes in many cases were
so unjust, that many other nations would not have borne them. But we are a very patient nation; and
is that so especially of the middle class, which was in despair because the old regime would take no
steps to relieve these heavy tax burdens; buy the new regime has tried to do it. We discovered a few
months ago the condition that some of the people had come to - there were about six thousand
house maids in Berlin out of work. The new Government decided to cut down the social premiums;
for instance under the old arrangement I had to pay seventeen marks a month for my maid; and that
has under the new policy been cut to three marks; (Laughter) of course I can only give you these
items just as it was, of course if you do not understand the significance I cannot help it. Besides, for
the income tax a maid, is treated in the same way as a child; for every child or every maid an
allowance is made on your income tax. Now these two things have brought employment for at least
three or four weeks to more than sixty per cent of those unemployed house maids. Of course this is a
little thing but if the little things were not done they would soon mount to unconquerable
proportions.
The Government is trying to solve these difficulties; they are slow to be sure, but there is the spirit,
they are trying to solve them.
Now the Germans have been accused of a spirit of certain self sufficiency. And I want to say that
that has been forced upon us. We believe as a nation in a certain international give and take in
economics. But nothing has been done to help us. The British and the Americans have told us that
on account of the shrinkage of the currency of course we would be in trouble. Now only the other
day we were told that America had recognized Russia, and what a wonderful thing that would be for
America; and that the Germans would be the losers for that. And that is about - (Loud applause)
Now in summing up I would like to say that we have tried an experiment; we are in the midst of it we do not know how it will come out. But we Germans feel that a good rally things have been
accomplished - whether foreigners say so or not is a matter of secondary importance to us. We hope
that some day they will understand our difficulties. But remember this please as significant; oh, you
show certain of the elements of internationalism is in your hearts - the laws of Germany after a time
�will also be your laws - but if you think bad - for instance if you have the boycott against Germany
you are hurting not only the Germans - the German capitalists, but also the German Jew - the
merchants; of course you do.
Now as I said before we are trying to cooperate in a spirit of national pride and social justice (Laughter) We want to have a combination of the social state and private property - we do not
believe in confiscation; we think that we do not.
I said we were in the midst of a great revolution - in the midst of a great experiment: We do not harm
anybody. I went to say again as I said before, I think I cannot be more decent - I sometimes think I
am more amiable than you are. I say again that where a wrong has been done, that it has to be righted
or the wrong falls back on the wrongdoer. But that applies to you as well, my dear friends - that
belongs to all of us.
Now I say again, Germany does not harm anybody. And if Germany were left alone she would
certainly solve her own problems, in her own somewhat pedagogical but somewhat thorough and
social way.
Questions and Answers.
Question: Who financed Hitler's popular movement, and for what purpose?
Answer: Hitler is the only politician on this earth able to charge for the privilege of getting into his
organization. Now after a while, when he has a few hundred of thousands of members in his
organization or party movement, he charged them in addition from three to five marks a month.
Now that makes a good deal of money today. There are more than a million and a half in the party
movement today and that means a considerable income to the party treasury every month. You do
not need any capitalist in such a case, to finance such a popular movement for many mites make a
huge sum.
Question: If the Hitlerites are so innocent why do they want the head of Einstein as a trophy or a
souvenir?
Answer: I do not think you will find one German in the entire population of sixty-five millions who
would like to have his head - as a souvenir. But I can tell you a few things about Einstein; you see he
got a so called Einstein tower, it was given to him as a present from Prussia - and the German,
Prussian tax-payers paid for it; he was made a present of the tower from the municipality of Berlin,
as he was given his big house - that only has been taken away. So much was made of that only the
�other day by the German representative of Einstein - but these were only presents that were then
away again.
Question: Do you not believe that of all the German Jewish professors who have been expelled from
Germany, there are not among them some great men?
Answer: Certainly some extraordinary men; no question of that -- (Interruption) Well not, just wait
- what is great? Do you know whether Einstein will be called great twenty-five years from now?
Question: I would like to ask the speaker; how is the program for social justice in Germany, which
you have told us about, consistent with the way in which we have treated the Jews; which Mrs.
Barron was about to tell us about, but of which we already know?
Answer; I think I have answered the Jewish question as decently as I could; but I want to say again
that if a certain thing has not been consistent with that policy of social justice, the future will show it.
That is all I can say.
Question: How can cultured, educated Germans like yourself, Professor, follow as a leader
uneducated men with records, which have been recited to us by the questioner?
Answer: well, first of all most of the names given are the names of men who can dictate to me or to
any other educated German --yes I say, everyone in Germany - (Interruption) ; Oh, I am not afraid
of anything. Every word I said tonight can be reported to Germany. And another thing, is that
neither you nor I, know the details of private lives - -I do not want to go into that here.
Question; Do you think that it is just that a German like yourself, should be given the right of free
speech in America when in Germany, one from America, say, who wanted to stand for a republican
form of government, etcetera might be put in a concentration camp?
Answer: Don't you want to be better than that?
Question: What is the popular German concept of Aryanism - how valid do you think it is
anthropologically, sociologically or any other 'ogically speaking?
Answer: About Aryanism, we are about as undivided of opinion as you are about NRA We German
�professors we are still investigating these things, and I want, to tell you that if we arrive at any
definite conclusion through our research we will say so.
Question: I would like to know if the speaker deliberately omitted to speak about the Reichstag fire?
Answer: I omitted it because the investigation is not closed yet. If I knew what the German Court
will finally decide I could tell you tonight. As I said before if you knew only ten percent as much of
Germany as I know, you would be aware that we have a decent body of jurists and judges - and I
think that nobody denies that. And I ask why in any other country they should
allow such disgraceful conduct to be shown the court procedure of a great nation as has recently
been witnessed through the mock trial held in London as a travesty on the Reichstag fire?
Question: You said that the Jews in Germany were corruption; was that because they were so highly
educated and displaced the Germans in large numbers in the professions - or was it because the
Germans were too lazy to become educated?
Answer: I think I need not speak of German education in this country even--I think that is settled
even in this country. But on the other hand I want to say this one thing; I have not said that the Jews
were corruption; but I said that roughly, so many Jews were identified with corruption cases--and I
stick to that.
Question: There are various countries in Europe which the speaker told us adopted the policies of
the Germany of 1911. What single country in the world has adopted the present policy of Germany?
Answer: We do not wish any other country to adopt our policy. We believe all of us Germans, that
national socialism is not for export; so we do not care what other people think about our matters.
Question: Before the Hitler regime, professor Schoenemann, had to pay seventeen marks for a maid
he has told us; now that the Hitler regime is in power he has to pay only three marks; will you tell us
professor, if that is the reason why you believe in the Hitler government?
Answer: well, I think that was a slip on your part, for I said - in the way of social premiums, etcetera-perhaps I did not make it clear. Of course you have to pay between thirty five; and fifty marks for a
decent maid, in Berlin; but the, three, part I want to explain: The seventeen marks consisted of a
premium for sickness insurance; validity insurance; unemployment insurance and things of that
kind. And instead of these charges to pay now, you have only three marks to pay--that is, you, as the
�boss of the house I may say; you only pay much less for the social things than ever before--for these
premiums.
Question: The speaker said, if we knew Hitler--really knew him we would have no opposition to
him. Do we not, an intellectual nation know Hitler through his story, "My Battle", and what he
thinks of the entire Jewish world?
Answer: I think you cannot do him justice only by reading this book--but not in the English edition-I am not responsible for that-even that would not be sufficient. The book was published in 1925; it is
a very subjective story. It is the life story of him, but it was written when he was in prison and in a
way had to justify before the world what he was after. So as a book--it is certainly a one sided book
and it is not a primer of politics. But certainly you cannot judge a man by one book. .There was an
interview published only a few days ago, that Hitler gave to one of the leading French journalists;
and this French journalist said, "If his book is filled with diatribe against France it should be
remembered it was written when Hitler was suffering martyrdom in prison and since then the man
has evolved greatly."
Question: Is it not true that Hitler's dogma of Aryanism, provided the growing youth of Germany
with racial jealousies and animosities and made possible Hitler's political success?
Answer: I cannot see any great relation between the two - I mean what you mean - that he puffed
himself up first as an Aryan, and then he came into power-Question: I meant instead of presenting himself as an individual, inspired, unselfish - for the benefit
of humanity - instead he probably used a dogma making use, psychologically of the mass reaction;
namely, jealousies, animosities--thereby using it as a stepping stone for his own success?
Answer: No, I do not think so. I think to a certain extent he made use of the certain antagonisms
against the Jews. That is true to an extent. But I do not think his ultimate success had anything to do
with the dogma of Aryanism.
Question: If you are not sure how the present political philosophy of Germany will work out - why
should there by propagandizing in this country?
Answer: That have I to do with propaganda--well* I was invited to come here to present my case
and I came.
�Question: If Germany is seeking to work out
her own problems within herself, why is she seeking to put Nazism into Austria and thus to gain
greater power for herself?
Answer: She is not putting Nazism into Austria - she is already there. And Dolfuss don't want to
have general elections. Outside of Vienna they are ninety to one hundred percent Nazi. That's the
fact--my fact.
Question: What was the reason for professor Lessing's murder.
Answer: I do not know.
Question: Is the Austrian Hitler, the one to judge between good Jews and bad Jews among the six
hundred thousand in Germany--is he to judge that all of the six hundred thousand are bad?
Answer: Certainly not; he does not do it.
A voice: I have just come from Palestine where I met hundreds and thousands of refugees from
Germany; and what Mrs. Brin could not tell you I could and take hours and tell it to you clearly and
not as moderately as you did here tonight, because I know-
Question: How can you reconcile Hitler's protestations of peace with the declaration in his book in
favor of the philosophy of force?
Answer: Now there is one thing I would be very happy to have, and this the necessary information
to answer in full all of the intelligent questions of one thousand people. Now there is one thing I like
best, it is in an American poem, and that line runs, "Be merciful to me a fool". In answer to your
question I can only say what I said before that Hitler's book is not a primer of practical politics or
policies - a man who is in power will have to act differently from a man who is not in power: And
when he wrote that book he did not even think of getting the power one day.
Question: As an American journalist who has been in Germany, I would like to ask the professor a
question. He has attempted to approve of Hitler’s government by saying that employment is being
bettered in Germany. I would like to ask him, if the unemployment situation is being bettered in
�Germany by the discharging of non-Nazi members of factories and in replacing them with Nazi's;
and putting the discharged men on pensions and relief roles?
Answer: I have heard this before; but you certainly cannot solve the unemployment problem in this
way. I do not think the national government--which, by the way does not consist only of Hitler and
his people; but there are a few independents--Dr. Schmidt, present federal administrator of labor is
independent--of course unemployment cannot be solved in that way. But I think it would be crazy on
the part of the Germans if they did that. I cannot believe that we are half as stupid us this measure
would imply.
Question: Supposing the speaker were a Jew, would he speak in the way he did tonight?
Answer: Why, certainly not - but if I were a nationally minded Jew, I would certainly speak--not the
way you would have expected me to have spoken tonight. I know of many cases, and I am proud of
these very Jews, friends of mine; who have still today--still believe in the Germany of today. Oh,
they are numberless. I am happy to say there are numberless cases of nationally minded Jews. They
are organizing today to fight for him: And if they show their character and all that is fine in their race
I am sure they will win. And this is the belief I have with them.
* * *
John Fitch
Parkway 2378*R
�
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PDF Text
Text
KEEP THE NAZIS OUT- BO TO'
OF'
• THE FORD HALL FORUM, under cover of the slogan of "free speech", has -invited a
representative of the Hitler Government of murderers . and anti-Semites to ·speak at their
Forum next Sunday evening, November.26. -.
·DEMONSTRATE!
• COME AND· SHOW your unalterable ·opposition and indignation against Hitlerite terror
and reaction I·
OUTSIDE.FORD HALL
-
(Ashburton Plar
off Bowdon Streb,
.
Sunday, NO~
vember Z6-7.oo p. m.
• IN THE LAST FEW DAYS, scores of protests have been se?S.t to David K. Niles, directot
of the Ford Hall Forum, demanding that he cancel the Nazi speaker. Replying to our protest, Mr. Niles stated that he is against Hitler, but believes 1n allowing Hitlerites to present
their views. In response to his letter, the John Reed Club of Boston sent the following
communication:
John Reed Club
. 825 Boylston Street, Boston
November 20. 1933.
Mr. David K. Niles, Director
:,
--:---Ford H a ll For u m
·
_,-~ __
Boston, Mass.
.·.
Mv dear S ir :W e have receive d y our answer -to our -le tter and c an•
not heh> expressing surprise at - -the extent to which you
chain yourself to an untenable logic.
While on the one hand you insist that you are deter•
mined to fight against Fascism, ·on the other, hand, as a
defender of "free speech" even for Hitler Fascists, you .are
yourself destroying t he effectiveness of your fight. Indeed,
you become a means of spreading Fascist propaganda, a
defender of Fascist propaganda.
·
.
You say that the meeting at which Schoennemann is
invited to speak will be utilized to expose Hitlerism, and
Fascism in general; we simply cannot agree on such a form
of anti•Fascist struggle. You do not seem to realize the fal- ·
lacy of your logic, the consequences of such a logic: you do
not differentiate between a philosophy \vhich calls for clar•
ification, AND A NEW TREND OF CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT A MOST BRUTAL DICTATORSHIP OF
· CAP ITALI SM which requires just such a propagandist
as Schoennemann to make it palatable to .the unsuspecting
victim. Your "fight" again st Hitler's Fascism, against this
band of murderers, of German Kaiserists and chauvinists,
is no fight at all.
_
,
Further, you must realize that while you are permitting
Hitlerites to speak under your auspices, you are serving as
the doorman to introduce Hitlerites into countless Ford
Halls of the United States, where they will conduct, not a
1
simple_propaganda of their "philosophies", but will organize
Fascism, will organize a combined struggle with the Ku Klux
Klan and other reactionar.y bodies, against the great masses
of American workers.
Here is the position, t hen__.___t.Q_ which your logic · drives
.;;o.u · NDIRE CT BEAR
_J'.E.,
~
_ ~
~
It is a position that tlie F_
~
<a ---~ - - "'" a "'
means of spreading their v enom against the workers, against
the Jewish people and against the Negro people, through
their ally, the Ku Klux Klan.
•
You signify in your letter your intention of maintaining your freedom of fighting Fascism in your own way. If we
do not convince you of your untenable position, with all its
consequences, you must understand, on your side, that we
s ignify our full right of maintaining OUR freedom in ap·
plying OUR methods of fighting Fascism, preventing the
Fascists from spreading their propaganda in the United
States, demonstrating against Fascism, proving our solidarity with the oppressed masses of Germany, with the op·
pressed Jewish people, with the defendants in the infamous
Reichstag trial.
.Your methods oblige us not only to organize to prevent
Fascists from speaking in Boston, but to_ rally other organ•
izations in support of our position. At the same time, your
methods oblige us ·. to expose your attitude an ·attitude
which sets you , up as a defender in this country, of capitalist dictatorship at its murderous worst.
In order to head you off from the contradiction into
which you are sailing, so that we may still fight shoulder
to i;houlder against the common enemy, we emphatically
demand that your invitation to Professor F ; Schoennemann
be withdrawn.
.
Yours verv truly,
EXECUTIVE BOARD, JOHN REED CLUB.
--
• GIVE NO OPPORTUNITY to the Fascist murderers who are killing and torturing ·
thousands of workers and Jewish people, who are responsible for the scandalous Reichstag-trial frame-up, to spread their venom here in Boston I Send protest telegrams, letters
and postcards demanding the cancellation of the Nazi speaker to David K. Niles, Ford
Hall Forum, Little Building, Boston.
• THE JOHN REED CLUB, an organization of workingclass artists, writers and intellectuals, calls upon all workers and -professionals, all Jewish people, all anti-Fascists and all
organizations to appear outside Ford Hall, Sunday evening, at 7 :00 to demonstrate against
Nazi propaganda being brought into Boston.
John Reed Club, 825 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
~-
1
�
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Friederich Schoeneman's 1933 Lecture at Ford Hall Forum, Why I believe in the Hitler Government, transcript and poster
Date
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26 November 1933
Description
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English
Subject
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Schoenemann, Friederich
Ford Hall Forum
Germany -- Politics and government -- 1918-1933.
Nazi propoganda
Anti-Nazi Movement--United States
Ford Hall Forum
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Part 515
Cuban Assets Control Regulations; News Organizations; Travel
Transactions; Intellectual Property.
AGENCY: Office of Foreign Assets Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule; amendments.
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the President's announcement of October 6,
1995, the Treasury Department is amending the Cuban Assets
Control Regulations t~ add 3 interpretive sections concerning the
authorization of travel transactions related to research, freelance journalism, and educational activities in Cuba. A general
license is added to permit travel to Cuba once a year in cases of
extreme humanitarian need. Statements of licensing policy are
added concerning the availability of specific licenses for public
performances, educational exchanges, activities of human rights
organizations, and the reciprocal establishment of news
organization offices. Payment of expenses for intellectual
property protection in Cuba is also authorized. In addition, a
number of clarifying technical amendments are included in this
final rule.
EFFECTIVE DATE: [insert date of filing]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven I. Pinter, Chief of
Licensing (tel.: 202/622-2480), or William B. Hoffman, Chief
Counsel (tel.: 202/622-2410), Office of Foreign Assets Control,
Department of the Treasury. Washington, D.C. 20220.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Availability
This document is available as an electronic file on The
Federal Bulletin Board the day of publication in the Federal
Register. By modem, dial 202/515-1387 and type "/GO FAC." or call
202/512-1530 for disks or paper copies. This file is available
for downloading in WordPerfect, ASCII, and Adobe AcrobatTM
readable (* .PDF) formats. The document is also accessible for
downloading in ASCII format without change from Treasury's
Electronic Library ("TEL") in the "Business, Trade and Labor
Mall" of the FedWorld bulletin board. By modem dial 703/321-3339,
�and select self-expanding file "Tl lFROO.EXE" in TEL. For Internet
access, use one of the following protocols: Telnet = fedworld.gov
(192.239.93.3); World Wide Web (Home Page)=
hhtp://www.fedworld.gov; FTP = ftp.fedworld.gov ( 192.239. 92.205).
Background
On October 6, 1995, President Clinton announced a number of
changes to the administration of the Cuban embargo intended to
promote democratic change in Cuba. Accordingly, the Office of
Foreign Assets Control is amending the Cuban Assets Control
Regulations, 31 CFR part 515 (the "Regulations"), to implement
these measures.
Section 514.416 is amended to expand the interpretation of
the term "research and similar activities" to include research
conducted on behalf of an organization with an established
interest in international relations. Individuals acting on behalf
of such an organization may apply for a specific license to
authorize travel-related transactions in Cuba. Section 515.417 is
added to the Regulations to establish the basis on which specific
licenses to authorize travel-related transactions will be granted
to individuals engaging in free-lance journalism. Section 515.419
is added providing an interpretation of the term "educational
activities." Specific licenses will be available for individuals
who are attending certain meetings of international organizations
in Cuba. Undergraduates' travel to Cuba for study toward a degree
may be licensed if the activities are sponsored by a college or
university.
Sections 515.527 and 515.528 are amended to authorize
transactions including payments to the United States by Cuban
nationals and payments to Cuba by U.S. companies and individuals
related to the protection of intellectual property. A new general
license is established at§ 515.560(a)(l)(iii) to permit travel
to Cuba once a year to visit close relatives in circumstances of
extreme humanitarian need. Clarifying amendments are made to
§ 515.560(g) to make clear that "fully hosted or sponsored"
travelers may not use the charter services authorized pursuant to
§ 515.566. Section 51 5.565 is amended to provide that specific
licenses may be issued for public performances or public
exhibitions in Cuba. A new§ 515.572 is added to the Regulations
which states that specific licenses may be issued on a case-bycase basis to permit the establishment of offices for news
organizations in the United States by Cubans and in Cuba by U.S.
persons.
A new§ 515.573 is added to the Regulations authorizing
educational exchanges for Cuban and U.S. scholars, as well as
2
�study in a Cuban academic institution by graduate and
undergraduate students. Section 515.574 is added to the
Regulations to allow for specific licensing of activities of
human rights organizations and other non-governmental
organizations to support the Cuban people.
In addition, certain technical amendments are included in
this rule. The term "authorized trade territory'' is redefined in
§ 515.322. Sections 515.413 and 515.561 are being removed from
the Regulations. Section 515.413, concerning certain engineering
advice, related to a general license that is no longer included
in the Regulations; accordingly,§ 515.413 is being removed as
unnecessary. Section 515.561 was originally incorporated into the
Regulations to authorize travel in support of transactions
authorized under an earlier version of§ 515.559. The continued
authorization of travel transactions is inconsistent with the
present limited scope of§ 515.559. Finally§ 515.563 is amended
to clarify that remittances related to emigration from Cuba
continue to be authorized under general license.
Because the Regulations involve a foreign affairs function,
Executive Order 12866 and the provisions of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553, requiring notice of proposed
rulemaking. opportunity for public participation, and delay in
effective date, are inapplicable. Because no notice of proposed
rulemaking is required for this rule, the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, does not apply.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 515
Administrative practice and procedure, Air carriers, Banks,
banking. Cuba, Currency, Estates, Exports, Fines and penalties,
Foreign investment in the United States, Foreign trade, Imports,
Informational materials, Publications, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities, Shipping. Travel
restrictions, Trusts and trustees, Vessels.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 31 CFR part 515
is amended as set forth below:
PART 515--CUBAN ASSETS CONTROL REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 515 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. App. 1-44; 22 U.S.C. 6001-6010; 22
U.S.C. 2370(a); Proc. 3447, 27 FR 1085, 3 CFR 1959-1963 Comp.,
p. 157; E.O. 9193, 7 FR5205, 3 CFR 1938-1943 Comp .. p. 1174;
E.O. 9989, 13 FR4891, 3 CFR 1943-1948 Comp .. p. 748; E.O.
3
�12854, 58 FR36587, 3 CFR 1993 Comp., p. 614.
Subpart C--General Definitions
2. Paragraph (a) of§ 515.322 is revised to read as follows:
§ 515.322 Authorized trade territoxy; member of the authorized
trade territoxy.
(a) The term authorized trade territoxy includes all
countries, including any colony, territoxy, possession, or
protectorate, except those countries subject to sanctions
pursuant to this chapter. The term does not include the United
States.
*****
Subpart D--Interpretations
§ 515.413 [Removed and Reserved]
3. Section 515.413 is removed and reserved.
4. The introductoxy text of paragraph (a) and paragraph
(a)(l) of§ 515.416 are revised to read as follows:
§ 515.416 Professional research and similar activities.
(a) Section 515.560(b) sets forth the criteria on which
specific licenses for transactions related to travel to, from,
and within Cuba may be issued for persons engaging in
professional research and similar activities of a noncommercial,
academic nature. Persons traveling to Cuba to engage in
professional research must engage in a full work schedule in
Cuba, and there must be a substantial likelihood of public
dissemination of the product of their research. No transactions
related to tourist or recreational travel within Cuba are
authorized in connection with professional research, except those
that are consistent with a full schedule of research activities.
( l) Persons are considered to be engaging in professional
research for purposes of this section:
(i) If they are full-time professionals who travel to Cuba
to do research in their professional areas and their research is
specifically related to Cuba; or
(ii) If they are acting on behalf of an organization with an
established interest in international relations to collect
4
�information related to Cuba.
*****
5. Section 515.417 is added to subpart D to read as follows:
§ 515.417 Free-lance journalists.
(a) Section 515.560(a)(2) authorizes travel transactions for
journalists who are regularly employed in that capacity by a news
reporting organization. For individuals who wish to travel to
Cuba to do research for a free-lance article, specific licenses
will be issued pursuant to § 5 l 5.560(b) on a case-by-case basis
upon submission of an adequate written application including the
following documentation:
( 1) A detailed itinerary and a detailed description of the
proposed research; and
(2) A resume or similar document showing a record of
publications.
(b) To qualify for specific licensing pursuant to
§ 515.560(b), the itinerary for the proposed research in Cuba for
a free-lance article must demonstrate that the research
constitutes a full work schedule that could not be accomplished
in a shorter period of time.
6. Section 515.41 9 is added to subpart D to read as follows:
§ 515.419 Travel related to educational activities.
(a) Section 515.560(b) provides, in part, that specific
licenses will be issued to persons for travel to Cuba for clearly
defined educational activities. Transactions related to travel
and maintenance in Cuba for the following activities will be
licensed upon submission of an adequate written application:
( 1) Attendance at a meeting or conference held in Cuba by a
person with an established interest in the subject of the meeting
or conference, provided that:
(i) The meeting or conference is organized by an
international institution or association that regularly sponsors
meetings or conferences in other countries; and
(ii) The purpose of the meeting or conference is not the
promotion of tourism in Cuba or other commercial activities
5
�involving Cuba that are inconsistent with this part; and
(2) Activities related to study for an undergraduate or
graduate degree sponsored by a college or university located in
the United States.
(b) Transactions related to travel that is primarily tourist
travel, including self-directed educational activities that are
intended for personal enrichment, will not be licensed pursuant
to§ 515.560(b).
Subpart E--Licenses, Authorizations, and Statements of Licensing
Policy
7. Section 515.527 is revised to read as follows:
§ 515.527 Certain transactions with respect to United States
intellectual property.
(a) Transactions related to the registration and renewal in
the United States Patent and Trademark Office or the United
States Copyright Office of patents, trademarks, and copyrights in
which the Government of Cuba or a Cuban national has an interest
are authorized.
(b) This section authorizes the payment from blocked
accounts or otherwise of fees currently due to the United States
Government in connection with any transaction authorized in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) This section further authorizes the payment from blocked
accounts or otherwise of the reasonable and customary fees and
charges currently due to attorneys or representatives within the
United States in connection with the transactions authorized in
paragraph (a) of this section.
8. The section heading and the introductory text of
paragraph (a) of§ 515.528 are revised to read as follows:
§ 515.528 Certain transactions with respect to blocked foreign
intellectual property.
(a) The following transactions by any person who is not a
designated national are hereby authorized:
* * * **
9. Paragraphs (a), (b) and (g) of§ 515.560 are revised to
6
�read as follows:
§ 515.560 Certain transactions incident to travel to and within
Cuba.
(a)(l) General license. The transactions in paragraph (c) of
this section are authorized in connection with travel to Cuba by:
(i) Persons who are officials of the United States
Government or of any foreign government, or of any
intergovernmental organization of which the United States is a
member, and who are traveling on official business;
(ii) Journalists regularly employed in that capacity by a
news reporting organization; or
(iii) Persons, and persons traveling with them who share a
common dwelling as a family with them, who are traveling to visit
close relatives in Cuba in circumstances that demonstrate extreme
humanitarian need, provided that the authorization contained in
this paragraph may be used only once in any 12 month period. Any
additional transactions must be specifically licensed pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section.
·
(2) Nothing in this section authorizes transactions in
connection with tourist travel to Cuba, nor does it authorize
transactions in relation to any business travel not otherwise
authorized by specific license issued pursuant to this part.
(b) Specific licenses. Specific licenses authorizing the
transactions in paragraph (c) of this section may be issued in
cases involving extreme humanitarian need to persons or persons
living in the same household, who seek to travel to visit close
relatives in Cuba of such persons more than once in a calendar
year. Specific licenses may also be issued to persons to travel
to Cuba for humanitarian reasons based on a demonstrated
compelling need to travel, for professional research and similar
activities consistent ·with § 515.416, for free lance journalism
consistent with§ 515.417, for clearly defined educational
activities consistent with § 515.419, for religious activities,
for activities of recognized human rights organizations
investigating human rights violations, or for purposes related to
the exportation, importation, or transmission of information or
informational materials as defined in§ 515.332.
( 1) For purposes of this section, the term close relative
means spouse, child, grandchild, parent, grandparent, great
grandparent, uncle, aunt, brother, sister, nephew, niece, first
cousin, mother-in-law, father-in-law, daughter-in-law, son-in-
7
�law, sister-in-law, brother-in-law, or spouse, widow, or widower
of any of the foregoing.
(2) Nothing in this section authorizes transactions in
connection with tourist travel to Cuba. Travel to Cuba that is
characterized as falling within the criteria specified in
paragraph (b) is prohibited unless specifically licensed.
•••••
(g)( 1) For purposes of this section, all necessary
transactions involving fully sponsored or hosted travel to, from,
and within Cuba are authorized, provided that:
(i) No person subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States shall make any payment or transfer any property or provide
any service to Cuba or a Cuban national in connection with such
travel; and
(ii) The travel is not aboard a direct flight between the
United States and Cuba authorized pursuant to§ 515.566 of this
part.
(2) Travel shall be considered fully sponsored or hosted for
purposes of this section notwithstanding a payment by the person
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States for
transportation to and from Cuba, provided that the carrier
furnishing the transportation is not a Cuban national.
§ 515.561 [Removed and Reserved]
10. Section 515.561 is removed and reserved.
11. Section 515.563 is revised to read as follows:
§ 515.563 Family remittances to nationals of Cuba.
(a) Specific licenses may be issued on a case-by-case basis
authorizing remittances to a close relative of the remitter or of
the remitter's spouse who is a national of Cuba and who is
resident in Cuba or in the authorized trade territory. Such
remittances will be authorized only in circumstances where
extreme humanitarian need is demonstrated, including terminal
illness or severe medical emergency.
(b) Remittances to any close relative of the remitter or of
the remitter's spouse who is a national of Cuba or who is
resident in Cuba are authorized for the purpose of enabling the
8
�payee to emigrate from Cuba to the United States, in an amount
not exceeding $500, to be made only once to any payee, provided
that the payee is a resident of and within Cuba at the time the
payment is made.
(c) The term close relative used with respect to any person
means such person's spouse, child, grandchild, parent,
grandparent, great grandparent, uncle, aunt, brother, sister,
nephew, niece, first cousin, mother-in-law, father-in-law, sonin-law, daughter-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-law, or
spouse, widow, or widower of any of the foregoing.
12. Paragraph (c) is added to§ 515.565 to read as follows:
§ 515.565 Transactions in connection with public exhibitions or
performances.
*****
(c) Specific licenses may be issued in appropriate cases for
transactions incident to participation by a person subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States in a public exhibition or
performance in Cuba.
13. Section 515.572 is added to subpart E to read as
follows:
§ 515.572 Transactions by news organizations.
(a) Specific licenses may be issued authorizing all
transactions necessary for the establishment and operation of
news bureaus in Cuba whose primary purpose is the gathering and
dissemination of news to the general public. Transactions that
may be authorized include, but are not limited to, those incident
to the following:
( 1) Leasing office space and securing related goods and
services;
(2) Hiring Cuban nationals to serve as support staff;
(3) Purchasing Cuban-origin goods for use in the operation
of the office; and
(4) Paying fees related to the operation of the office in
Cuba.
9
�(b) Specific licenses may be issued authorizing transactions
necessary for the establishment and operation of news bureaus in
the United States by Cuban organizations whose primary purpose is
the gathering and dissemination of news to the general public.
(c) Specific licenses may be issued authorizing transactions
related to hiring Cuban nationals to provide reporting services
or other services related to the gathering and dissemination of
news.
(d) Note: The number assigned to a specific license issued
pursuant to this section should be referenced in all import
documents, and in all funds transfers and other banking
transactions through banks organized or located in the United
States, in connection with the licensed transaction to avoid the
blocking of goods imported from Cuba and the interruption of the
financial transactions with Cuba.
14. Section 515.573 is added to subpart E to read as
follows:
§ 515.573 Transactions related to educational exchanges.
Specific licenses may be issued on a case-by-case basis
authorizing the following:
(a) Transactions related to teaching at a Cuban academic
institution by an individual regularly employed in a teaching
capacity at a college or university located in the United States,
provided the activities are related to a college or university
academic program;
(b) Transactions related to the sponsorship of a Cuban
scholar to teach or engage in other scholarly activity at a
college or university located in the United States;
(c) Transactions related to participation in a formal course
of study at a Cuban academic institution by a graduate or
undergraduate student; and
(d) Transactions related to the organization of activities
described in paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section.
15. Section 515.57 4 is added to subpart E to read as
follows:
§ 515.574 Support for the Cuban people.
10
�(a) Specific licenses may be issued on a case-by-case basis
for transactions intended to provide support for the Cuban people
including. but not limited to, the following.
( 1) Activities of recognized human rights organizations; and
(2) Activities of individuals and non-governmental
organizations which promote independent activity intended to
strengthen civil society in Cuba.
(b) Licenses will only be issued pursuant to this section
upon a clearly articulated showing that the proposed transactions
are consistent with the purposes of this part and that no
significant accumulation of funds or financial benefit will
accrue to the Government of Cuba.
Dated: October 13, 1995.
R Richard Newcomb,
Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Approved: October 13, 1995.
John P. Simpson,
Deputy Assistant Secretaiy (Regulatoiy, Tariff & Trade
Enforcement).
[FRDoc. 95-25976Filed 10-17-95; 11:09am]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-F
TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER ON OCTOBER 20, 1995 ....
11
�
Dublin Core
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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DI-1304
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Summary of Cuban Assets Control Regulations; News Organizations; Travel Transactions; Intellectual Property (31 CFR Part 515)
Description
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This is part of a series of documents related to the Helms-Burton Cuban Embargo legislation (H. R. 927)
Source
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 8 Folder 84
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Text
Documents
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PDF
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United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
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Cuba
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��
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Title
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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DI-1303
Title
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Major Provisions of H.R. 927 Draft Conference Report (emphasis on changes from House passed version)
Date
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circa 1995
Description
An account of the resource
This is part of a series of documents related to the Helms-Burton Cuban Embargo legislation (H. R. 927)
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 8 Folder 84
Type
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Documents
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PDF
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English
Subject
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United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
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updated 12/1/95
*=SFRC Member
Member
STAFF
PHONE
HR 927 Including Title III
OPPONENTS TOTAL: 44
Akaka, Daniel (D-HI)
Baucas, Max (D-MT)
Biden, Joeseph (D-DE)*
Bingaman, Jeff (D-NM)
Boxer, Barbara (D-CA)
Bond, Christopher (R-MO)
Breaux, John (D-LA)
Byrd, Robert (D-WV)
Bumpers, Dale (D-AR)
Chaffee, John (R-RI)
Conrad, Kent (D-ND)
Daschle, Thomas (D-SD)
Dodd, Chris (D-CT)*
Dorgan, Byron (D-ND)
Exon, J. James (D-NE)
Feingold, Russ (D-WI)*
Feinstein, Dianne (D-CA)*
Ford, Wendell (D-KY)
Glenn, John (D-OH)
Grams, Rod (R-MN)*
Harkin, Tom (D-IA)
Hatfield, Mark (R-OR)
Inouye, Daniel (D-HI)
Jeffords, James (R-VT)
Johnston, J. Bennett (D-LA)
Kassebaum, Nancy (R-KS)*
Kennedy, Edward (D-MA)
Kerrey, J. Robert (D-NE)
Kerry, John (D-MA)*
Kohl, Herb (D-WI)
Levin, Carl (D-MI)
Leahy, Patrick (D-VT)
Lugar, Richard (R-IN)*
Mikulski, Barabra (D-MD)
Moynihan, Patrick (D-NY)
Moseley-Braun, Carol (D-IL)
Murray, Patty (D-WA)
Nunn, Sam (D-GA)
Pell, Claiborne (D-RI)*
Pryor, David (D-AR)
Rockefeller, John (D-WV)
Sarbanes, Paul (D-MD)*
Simon, Paul (D-IL)
Wellstone, Paul (D-MN)
Paul Cardus
224-6361
Cari Dohn
224-2651
Stephanie Eglinton
224-5042
224-5521
Marco Jaramillo
224-3553
Matt Kagan
224-5721
Jeff Kuhnreich
Sarah Lyons
224-4623
224-3954
Lisa Tuite
Brian Moran
224-4843
224-2921
John Seggerman
Tom Mahr
224-2043
Brad VanDam
224-2321
Janice O'Connell
224-3953
Jeremy Bates
224-2551
Andy Johnston
224-4224
Robyn Liberman
224-5323
Kelly Amis
224-3841
Kimberly Caney
224-4343
Pat Buckheit (f.)
224-3353
Pat Eveland
224-3244
Rosemary Guiterriez
224-3254
Karen Mattson
224-3753
Keith Gouveia
224-3934
Lori Schultz-Heim
224-5141
Casey Ilvino/Raymond Paul 224-5824
Derek Schmidt
224-4774
Trina Vargo
224-4543
Lorenzo Goco
224-6551
Nancy Stetson
224-2742
Naomi Baum
224-5653
Rich Arenberg
224-6221
Tim Reiser
224-2414
Andy Semmel
224-4814
224-4654
Julia Frifield
Michael Lostumbo
'224-4451
Dana Bender
224-2854
Tom Scott
224-2621
Rocky Reif
224-3072
Ed Hall
224-4642
Todd Menotti
224-2353
224-6472
Ken Levinson
Vince San Fuentes
224-4524
Todd Stein/Mark Norman
224-2152
Colin McGinnis
224-5641
�L~ANING OPPONENT : 4
Roy Phillips
Kristin Michel
Barry Phelps/Winston Lott
Chuck Blahous
224-6621
224-3441
224-4124
224-3424
Robert McArthur
Ron Lewis/Nick Wise
Colin Davis
Domenici, Pete (R-NM)
Gorton, Slade (R-WA)
Helfin, Howell (D-AL)
Simpson, Alan (R-WY)
224-5054
224-2315
224-3744
Bob Koffman
Bill Triplet
Linda Menghetti
Carter Pilcher
Randy Schieber
Tami Parent
Dave Davis
Glenn Tait
Sharon Waxman
Walter Lohman
Robyn Cleveland
Ian Butzezinski
224-6154
224-5444
224-3224
224-5941
224-6244
224-5852
224-5922
224-6142
224-4744
224-2235
224-2541
224-2441
Undecided TOTAL: 3
Cochran, Thad(R-MS)
DeWine, Mike (R-OH)
Grassley, Charles (R-IA)
LEANING PROPONENT TOTAL:
12
Ashcroft, John (R-MO)*
Bennett, Robert(R-UT)
Bradley, Bill (D-NJ)
Brown, Hank (R-CO)*
Bryan, Richard (D-NV)
Campbell, Ben Nighthorse (R-CO)
Hutchinson, Kay Bailey (R-TX)
Kempthorne, Dirk (R-ID)
Lautenberg, Frank (D-NJ)
McCain, John (R-AZ)
McConnell, Mitch (R-KY)
Roth, William (R-DE)
PROPONENTS TOTAL: 33
Abraham, Spencer (R-MI)
Burns, Conrad (R-MT)
Coats, Dan (ff:!..IN)
Coverdell, Paul (R-GA)*
Cohen, W (R-ME)
Craig, Larry (R-ID)
D'Amato, Alfonse (R-NY)
Dole, Bob (R-KS)
Faircloth, Lauch (R-NC)
Frist,Bill (R-TN)
Graham, Bob (D-FL)
Gramm, Phil (R-TX)
Gregg, Judd (R-NH)
Hatch, Orin (R-UT)
Helms, Jesse (R-NC)*
Hollings, Ernest (D-SC)
Kyl, Jon (R-AZ)
Inhofe, James (R-OK)
Lieberman, Joeseph (D-CT)
Lott, Trent (R-MS)
Mack, Connie (R-FL)
Murkowski, Frank (R-AK)
Nickles, Don (R-OK)
Pressler, Larry (R-SD)
Reid, Harry (D-NV)
Robb, Charles (D-VA)*
Santorum, Rick (R-PA)
Shelby, Richard (R-AL)
224-4822
Sob Kerry
Lori Staley
224-2644
Pam Sellers
224-5623
Todd Lyle
224-3643
Jim Bodner
224-2523
Elizabeth Criner
224-2752
Craig Syracuse
224-6542
Randy Scheunemann
224-6521
John LePore
224-3154
Michael Miller
224-3344
Bob Gerber
224-3041
Mike Champness
224-2934
Vas Alexopolous
224-3324
Paul Matuk
224-5251
Dan Fisk/Gina-Maria Lichaz 224-4651
James Assey
. 224-6162
Janine Esperne
224-4521
Frank Zachston
224-4721
John Lilley
224-4041
Kirstin Chaole
224-6253
Paul Dean
224-5274
Joan Morgan
224-6665
Steve Moffitt
224-5754
Robert Hoffman
224-5842
James Ryan
224-3542
Peter Cleveland
224-4024
Patty Stolnacker
224-6324
Terry Lynch
224-5744
�Snowe, Olympia (R-ME)*
Smith, Bob (R_NH)
Spector, Arlen (R-PA)
Stevens, Ted (R-AK)
Thomas, Craig (R-WY)*
Thompson, Fred (R-TN)*
Thurmond, Strom (R-SC)
Warner, John (R-VA)
Ken Peel
224-5344
Tom Lankford
224-2841
Bill Roseneau/Craig Synder 224-4254
Ann Marie Murphy
224-3004
Rich Houghton
224-6441
Kurt Silvers
224-4944
Mele Williams
224-5972
Judy Ansley
224-2023
NOT VOTING TOTAL 1
Packwood, Bob (R-OR)
Kinka Gerke
224-5244
�
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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DI-1302
Title
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List of Congressional votes for H.R. 927 including Title III
Date
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1 December 1995
Description
An account of the resource
This is part of a series of documents related to the Helms-Burton Cuban Embargo legislation (H. R. 927)
Source
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 8 Folder 84
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Text
Documents
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PDF
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English
Subject
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United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
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Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Cuba
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/334e6318e0e055fb7ee402bdd5755efd.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=udf4FLdTSQeWYWIUHYJnFQSh1yyK63FadhWFSUjf479AngDnrLLN7j2s62snxvP4UAliB-9p-tWNzg6-zEC-h%7EExm6CLjwSvtnRHOXqBZrJppRg7QeWEskNPubyC8a86-BrFcXY7Zoa2l4OJ0E1qXu-weWzQCkOTALMtukKVkzZ9ciqrYJvZHrnyu9fi8lHfB1Y8aAYPzI9Lxmz9udDuF-9BeOm6ovUui5-8kYAJIY1jkKxNWe1nPmiznDvXg4HuGPqi26mYdsSXmu4A2xLZFG2iD8l7dnPg93ucQq11BX81ZmXNV5aYTKdeI8ZOG9uxNvnFCaSPnF2p-MtpZv3yTw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
4c80669e248192772534c1bf048e3434
PDF Text
Text
11/27 /95
18:20
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STATE LEG AFF.
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CONFERENCE REPORT ON HELMS-BURTON
Although it is unclear whether the draft Conference Report on
Helms-Burton legislation accurately reflects what the
Conference will ultimately decide, the draft report adopts
significant portions of the more radical House bill.
It will
closely resemble the bill that Secretary Christopher has
recommended that the President veto.
In all but two or three
areas in which there is a substantive difference between the
House and Senate versions, the Conference Report adopts the
version that is more objectionable to the Administration.
Iitle III
While the number of lawsuits likely to be brought under Title
III has been reduced as a result of Conference changes, these
changes to do address our underlying principled objections.
The impact of Title III on our relations with allies, prospects
for settling certified claims, our broader international claims
practice, and for Cuba's transition would still be extremely
negative.
Our international law objections remain applicable.
(See separate description of the revised Title III.)
Title IV (Visa Ineligibility for ''Traffickers"}
It appears certain that Conferees will include some version of
the House provision, global in scope, barring entry into the
U.S. by "traffickers" in expropriated property.
It is
possible, however, that the language may be softened to allow
that Administration flexibility in determining when to apply
the exclusion.
In either case, implementation would be
problematic and would create serious friction with our allies.
Re~uirements
for
Transition and
Democratic
Governments
Conferees will adopt the strict requirements, closer to the
House version, for both a transition and a democratic Cuban
Government. Among the requirements for a transition government
are that it dissolve the Department of State Security and that
Fidel or Raul Castro not be included in such a government
(regardless of whether they had agreed to elections and other
democratic reforms.)
IFI
Programs during a TransitLQ.D
While conferees will adopt Senate language allowing U.S.
support for IFI loans during a transition in Cuba, the
requirement to oppose Cuban memberships in IFis until a
democratic government is in power could -- depending on the
rules of the applicable IFI
make it effectively impossible
to approve loans.
Assistance Plan tor Cuba Under Transitipn/Pemocratic
Governments
The draft report indicates the Conference will adopt the House
version of the provisions concerning assistance to Cuba under
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2 -
future governments. Although the House version contains a
provision which appears to permit planning for assistance
determined to be 11 essential to the successful completion of the
transition to democracy," which could cover democracy-building
and other types of assistance beyond humanitarian aid, the
provision is so badly drafted as to create considerable
ambiguity about its scope. The House version still would
require additional authorizing legislation before the USG could
provide any assistance. This latter element would reduce the
attractiveness of Title I I as a "carrot'' for change in Cuba.
Remittances
The Conferees will adopt the Senate's sense of Congress
provision concerning circumstances under which the USG should
generally license remittances or travel-related transactions.
There is no indication, however, that the Conferees will delete
the House language which appears to prohibit~ remittances
until there is a transition government in Cuba.
li.ews Bureaus
The authorization for news bureaus stipulates that the
authorization is available only if, among other things, Radio
and TV Marti journalists are allowed to gather news in Cuba
without interference before any news bureaus are established.
This would essentially contradict our statements to both the
public and the Cuban Government regarding implementation of the
President's October 6 measures. Although we may, as a
technical legal matter, be able to proceed with the President's
news bureaus decision on the basis of separate statutory
authority, the inclusion of the purported requirements could
create a significant political difficulties for our news
bureaus policy.
support for the Cuban People
Language will be included authorizing U.S. assistance to
support democratic groups in Cuba, but with a requirement that
"no funds or assistance be provided to the Cuban Government."
Since the GOC or its entities (such as state-run hotels) could
derive limited, indirect financial benefit from assistance,
this language could interfere with our grant to Freedom House
or other projects.
Russian Aid
Conferees will adopt Senate version of the restrictions (which
are broader in scope than those in the House version) on
assistance to NIS states for involvement with SIGINT facilities
in Cuba and will include the House provisions restricting
assistance to countries or entities that assist in the
completion of a nuclear power plant in Cuba. The Conferees
will preserve the waiver/carve-out provisions which make these
provisions less problematic.
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Sugar/Trade
The mild Senate version of the provision concerning trade with
countries which import Cuba sugar, which simply exhorts the
Administration to enforce current law, will be adopted.
Civil Penalties
The Conference report would preserve the Senate language
authorizing the Administration to make use of civil penalties
in enforcing embargo regulations on educational, religious and
other travel. This would be useful.
�11/27 /95
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STATE LEG AFF.
Helms-Burton Title III - conference version
The revised version of Helms-Burton Title III likely to be
approved by House-Senate conferees includes several significant
changes.
While these changes will reduce in practical terms
the scope of problems the bill would cause by either limiting
the numbers or delaying the filing of lawsuits, they do not
address the central objections the Administration has expressed.
Signifi~ant
o
Changes
During the first two years after enactment, only certified
claimants could file suit against "traffickers.'' Cuban
Americans with claims could file them after that time.
This change would for a time significantly reduce the
potential number of Title III suits filed.
o
Court judgments against the Cuban Government and its agents
and instrumentalities would not be enforceable against
transition or democratic governments.
(Because of
ambiguities in the language, courts might rule that
judgments against Cuban governmental agencies and
instrumentalities could be enforced against those entities
but not the government itself -- even after a transition.
This change would address to some extent our concerns
that such judgments would burden future governments
while they are trying to resolve property issues and
begin Cuba's economic reconstruction.
It would also
discourage suits against the current Cuban Government,
since there would be little possibility of recovering
damages.
o
A filing fee would be established to defray the costs of
processing cases in federal courts.
While it is not clear that such a filing fee would
cover all costs nor eliminate all the administrative
problems the suits, this change will allow proponents
to argue that Title III will be "budget neutral."
o
The "threshold" property value requirements for a Title III
is $50,000, not including interest,
Our reading of the
bill suggests that a suit could be filed if EITHER the
value of the property at the time of the taking of property
OR its current "fair market value" exceeds $50,000.
While this new threshold may reduce the number of
eligible claimants somewhat, there would still be a
large pool of eligible plaintiffs.
The Foreign Claims
Settlement Commission certified 259 claims with a
principal value over $50,000.
The value of many
properties on which other certified claims are based
will likely have appreciated to more than $50,000
since then.
We have no record of how many properties
now claimed by Cuban-Americans would be valued at more
than $50,000.
l4J 005/011
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STATE LEG AFF.
-
2 -
o
Several changes to the bill would in effect allow almost
all claimants, particularly certified claimants, to seek
treble damages.
o
The authority of the President to suspend Title I I I suits
after a transition government is in power is clearer now.
Any exercise of this authority by the President would
be extremely difficult in practical terms, and could
give rise to takings litigation against the U.S.
o
Certified claimants would get first priority if a pool is
established, e.g. a class action settlement fund, to pay
Title III lawsuits.
This change attempts to address the concerns of
certified claimants.
o
The bill now sets a two year statute of limitations period,
such that suits may not be brought more than two years
after trafficking occurs.
While this could preclude some old cases, the broad
definition of utrafficking" to include 11 use" of
property means that ongoing trafficking, even if it
began more than two years ago could still serve as the
basis for a lawsuit.
Central Administration Concerns that Remain
o
The right of action, no matter how limited, still will be
challenged by our allies as an improper extra-territorial
application of U.S. law. We would strenuously object if
other countries sought to deter U.S. investment in Germany
or China in this fashion.
o
Even a more limited number of suits will still constitute a
dangerous precedent that, if followed by other countries,
would increase the litigation risks of U.S. businesses
abroad.
o
In current form, the bill would in fact permit lawsuits
against U.S. companies investing in u.s.-claimed properties
in Cuba after a transition government is in power.
o
Title III still circumvents, and so undermines, the
internationally recognized and accepted claims resolution
process.
It will still complicate USG efforts to seek
compensation for certified claimants.
14] 006/011
�11/27 /95
18: 22
'5'202 647 9667
STATE LEG AFF.
-
3 -
o
The new version of Title III still damages prospects for a
transition to democracy.
It will allow the Cuban
Government to depict the U.S. -- and particularly Cuban
Americans -- as poised to take away homes and schools.
It
sends the wrong signal to the Cuban people about how the
U.S. intends to seek resolution of claims, and what role
the U.S. is prepared to play during a transition.
o
Title I I I might still generate a large number of lawsuits
in U.S. federal courts. Fees might not fully cover added
costs, and the administrative burden will still likely be
onerous.
o
Title I I I still permits suits against agencies and
instrumentalities of foreign states -- and perhaps foreign
states themselves, in a manner which is not supported under
international law.
f4J 007 /0ll
�11/27 /95
18:22
'6'202 647 9667
STATE LEG AFF.
Talking Points on Revised Title III
o
The right of action, even if limited, is an improper use of
federal courts and an improper extra-territorial
application of U.S. law. Our allies will still strongly
object to this version of Title III. N.!a would strenuously
object if other countries sought to deter U.S. investment
in other countries in the world in this fashion.
o
The bill will still constitute a dangerous precedent that,
if followed by other countries, would increase the
litigation risks of U.S. businesses abroad.
o
Title III still circumvents, and so undermines, the
internationally recognized and accepted claims resolution
process.
The U.S. Government has been very successful in
obtaining compensation for U.S. claimants in other
countries under this process.
o
Title III will still complicate USG efforts to seek
compensation for certified claimants.
It will be difficult
and time-consuming to sort out which claimants have
received damages under Title III, which have not, which
cases are still pending, etc. These delays will hurt both
U.S. claimants and Cuban efforts to privatize assets.
o
Among the primary targets of lawsuits could be U.S.
businesses investing in Cuba after a transition government
is in power.
o
The new version of Title III still damages prospects for a
transition to democracy.
It will allow the Cuban
Government to depict the U.S. -- and particularly Cuban
Americans -- as poised to take away homes and schools on
the island.
The bill sends the wrong signal to the Cuban people
about how the U.S. intends to seek resolution of
claims, and what role the U.S. is prepared to play
during a transition.
o
Title III might still generate a large number of lawsuits
in U.S. federal courts. Fees might not fully cover added
costs, and the administrative burden will still likely be
onerous.
14] 008/011
�11/2i/95
18:23
'6'202 64i 966i
STATE LEG AFF.
What's Wrong with Helms/Burton?
Administration Talking Points
0
:the Belms bill would not promote a peaceful transition in
Cuba.
New sanctions against foreign investors
("traffickers") would p:r:ovide a rallying point for Castro
_inside Cuba, and allow him to keep the focus on "U.S.
aggression" rather than on the need for reforms.
0
The bill's attempts to increase existing pressure on the
Cuban government would likely be counterproductive, and
could be more damaging to
interests than to ~astro.
u.s.
0
The bill would create serious fricticns with our allies at
a time when they are becoming more active and helpful in
promoting human rights in Cuba. Because of its
extra-territorial reach, the Helms bill will focus allies'
attention on opposing U.S. policy, rather than on pressing
for democracy in Cuba.
0
While U.S. policy is to discourage foreign investment in
Cuba, particularly when it would involve expropriated U.S.
properties, our efforts to deter it should not prompt us to
sacrifice our broader inte~est~ or undermine valuable
principles of international law.
0
Title III of the bill, which would allow U.S. nationals
with e~propriation claims against Cuba to sue in U.S.
courts third country nationals who invest ("traffic") in
those properties, is a bad iooa.
It could clog up u,s, courts with a flood of lawsuits,
filed mainly by Cuban-Americans.
It would complicate prospects for resolving the claims
of certified U.S. claimants (and hamper future Cuban
privatization efforts) by tying up properties in
court.
Certified U.S. claimants oppose this bill.
It would create a dan9erous precedent that, if
followed by other countries, ~o~ld ex~ose U.S.
investors in Eastern Europe, China or elsewhere .t.o.
lawsuits in third countries anywhere in the world
brought by disgruntled property claimants.
It would be extremely difficult to justify under
international law and has already drawn harsh
criticism from our allies.
o
The u.s. expects to negotiate successful resolution o±
certified claims with a future Cuban Government under
existing international law, and assist other U.S. claimants
as well.
o
The
already has in place against Cuba its toughest and
most comprehensive ecQnQrnic embargo.
The embargo has
helped to force the limited but positive economic changes.
o
Let's keep international pressure on Castro, not focus it
on ourselves.
u.s.
[4J 009/011
�11/27 /95
18: 23
14] 010/011
STATE LEG AFF.
'6'202 647 9667
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
OFFICE
Qj:
MANAGE.MEW ANO BUOCil:T
WASHINGTON, D.C. 2'06Q3
September 2 o,
199 5 ( SENT)
(House)
STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. ~22 - Cuban Liberty ang Democr~tic solid~rjty Act
(Burton (R) IN and 43 co•ponsors)
The Aciminis~ration suppo~ts tha central objective ot H.R. 927,
i.e., to promote a peaceful transition to democracy in cuba.
However, H.R. 927 contains a number o! aeriously objectionable
provisions that would not advance U.S. interests in Cuba and
would damage other U.S. interests. Therefore, the President•s
senior advisers would recommend that H.R. 927 be vetoad unless
the follo~ing ~revisions are deleted or amended:
The bill would encroach upon the President's exclusive
authori~y under the Constitution to conduct tor~ign
affairs, or otherwise unduly limit th& President's
!lexioility, by purporting to require the President or the
Executive branch to pursue certain courses o! ac~ion
regarding Cuba.
Mandatory provisions should be replaced
with pr~eatory language in the !ollowing sections: l02(b);
1 o4 (a) ;
11 o (b) ;
112 ; 2 o1 ; 2 o2 ( e) ;
2 a 3 ( c) ( l) ; and 2 a J ( c) ( J) .
The e~emption in section l02(d} from civil penalty
auehority for activities relatQd to research, education and
certain oth~r purpo5es, and the burdensome requirement for
an agency hearing for civil penalties in other oases,
greatly limits the effactivQnQSS or civil penalties as~
tool for improving embargo enforcement. Section 102(d)
should be amended to address this shortcoming.
Section 103 should be amended to make the prohibition of
certain rinancing transactions subject to the discretion of
the President.
section 104{a) should be amended to urge U.S. opposition to
Cuban membership or participation in Intornational
Financial Institutions (IFis) only until a transition
government is in power to enable the lFis to support a
rapid transition to democracy in CUba. Section 104(b),
which would require withholding U.S. payments to IFis,
could place the U.S. in violation of international
commitments and undermine their ef!ective tunctioning.
This ~ection should be deleted.
sections 106 and llO(b), ~hich would dony foreign
asei~tance to countries, i ! they, or in tho c~se ot
�11/27 /95
18: 24
'5'202 647 9667
STATE LEG AFF.
[4J 011/011
2
section llO(b), private entities 1n these countries,
provide certain support to Cuba, should be deleted.
Section 106 would undermine i~portant U.S. support for
reform in Russia. Section llO(b) is cast .so broadly ae to
have a profoundly adverse affect on a ~ida range of U.S.
Government activities.
Section 202(b) (2) (iii), which would bar transactions
related to family travel and remittances from relatives of
Cubans in the United States until a transition government
is in power, is too inflexible and should be delQted.
Sec~ions 205 and 206 would establish overly-rigid
requirements for tr~nsition and democratic governments in
Cuba that could lGave the United States on the sidelines,
unable to support clearly positive developments in Cuba
when such support might be essential. The criteria ahould
be "factors to be considered" ra'thCilr than requirements.
By failing to provide stand-alone authority for assistance
to a transition or democratic goverrunent in Cuba, Title II
signale a lack of U.S. resolve to support a transition to
democracy in Cuba.
Title III, which would create a private cause of action !or
u.s. na~ionals to sue foreigners who invest in property
located entirely outside the United states, should ge
deleted. Applying U.S. law extra-territorially in this
fashion would create friction with our allies, be difficult
to defend under international law, and would create a
precedent that would increase litigation risks tor U.S.
companies abroad. It would also diminish the prospects of
settlement o! the claims ot the nearly 6,000 U.S. nationals
whose claims have been certified by the Foreign Claims
Settlement Commission. Secause U.S. as well as foreign
persons may De suQd under section 302, this provision could
create a major l8gal barrier to th• participation of U.S.
businesses in the rebuilding o! Cuba onca a transition
.begins.
Title IV, which would require the Federal Government to
exclude from the UnitQd States any parson who has
confiscated, or 11 traffics 11 in, property to which a u.s.
citizen h~s a claim, should be deleted. It would apply not
only to Cuba, but wcrld-vide, and would apply to foreign
nationals who are not themselves responsible tor any
illegal expropriation of property, and thus would create
friction with our allies. It would rQquire tha State
Department to make difficult and burdensome determinations
about property claims and investment in property 4broad
which are outside the Department'9 traditional area of
expertise.
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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DI-1301
Title
A name given to the resource
Drafts of conference reports on the Helms-Burton bill (H.R. 927)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
October 1995
Description
An account of the resource
This is part of a series of documents related to the Helms-Burton Cuban Embargo legislation (H. R. 927)
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 8 Folder 84
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
Rights
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Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Cuba
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/988c2fd6b4df976a9bcdfe322784f78a.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=lYf3ARIJdRLT29vndaE5ISLJs1U-Teh6x%7E1QX2fKgidLsMDHEa0E7G5Z4KtgWf9TZP52REyXXtEqkawxzNMXQCJhyBPy5xj8bCmOxL0iX0dpokfEpzvvNFPI%7EVrWsWAZUeOdKhEozDBzMEifX3dr8xeeSxYN093xpL9XnP--luPCFQ50IuRwAZlpj40gcFp9lbQm3OAgifJ9cA4yf993%7EiDROq1UxjhXiuEhkd%7EUAcP2kydbVBacmSQ20TGcg1qwI5GIhUcRWU6MHBxrOSR7O3mFLP%7ERDcCf93CY3MpNwakTk3Z9I28hoY2Z8sEQ13MwroEHXpFjcwuH4mNezT46jQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
f2986cd01685961814625a7a2c01f574
PDF Text
Text
What's Wrong with Helms/Burton?
Administration Talking Points
0
The Helms bill would not promote a peaceful transition in
Cuba.
New sanctions against foreign investors
("traffickers") would provide a rallying point for Castro
inside Cuba, and allow him to keep the focus on "U.S.
aggression" rather than on the need for reforms.
0
The bill's attempts to increase existing pressure on the
Cuban government would likely be counterproductive, and
could be more damaging to U.S. interests than to Castro.
0
The bill would create serious frictions with our allies at
a time when they are becoming more active and helpful in
promoting human rights in Cuba. Because of its
extra-territorial reach, the Helms bill will focus allies'
attention on opposing U.S. policy, rather than on pressing
for democracy in Cuba.
0
While U.S. policy is to discourage foreign investment in
Cuba, particularly when it would involve expropriated U.S.
properties, our efforts to deter it should not prompt us to
sacrifice our broader interests or undermine valuable
principles of international law.
0
Title III of the bill, which would allow U.S. nationals
with expropriation claims against Cuba to sue in U.S.
courts third country nationals who invest ("traffic") in
those properties, is a bad idea.
It could clog up U.S. courts with a flood of lawsuits,
filed mainly by Cuban-Americans.
It would complicate prospects for resolving the claims
of certified U.S. claimants (and hamper future Cuban
privatization efforts) by tying up properties in
court. Certified U.S. claimants oppose this bill.
It would create a dangerous precedent that, if
followed by other countries, could expose U.S.
investors in Eastern Europe, China or elsewhere .t.Q
lawsuits in third countries anywhere in the world
brought by disgruntled property claimants.
It would be extremely difficult to justify under
international law and has already drawn harsh
criticism from our allies.
0
0
0
The U.S. expects to negotiate successful resolution of
certified claims with a future Cuban Government under
existing international law, and assist other U.S. claimants
as well.
The U.S. already has in place against Cuba its toughest and
most comprehensive economic embargo. The embargo has
helped to force the limited but positive economic changes.
Let's keep international pressure on Castro, not focus it
on ourselves.
�Questions and Answers on
The Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act
(The Helms/Burton Bill)
1.
Isn't Helms/Burton just what we need to get rid of Castro?
Shouldn't we toughen U.S. policy?
2. Haven't recent changes in the Helms bill taken care of all
the Administration's problems?
3. Would Title III lawsuits really violate international law?
4. Shouldn't we try to move international law in the direction
of penalizing "traffickers?" Wouldn't U.S. business be
better off?
5. Will Title III help U.S. claimants get their properties
back, or get compensation for their losses?
6.
Is there any hope U.S. claimants will get compensation from
Cuba without Title III? What about Cuban-Americans who
weren't U.S. citizens when their property was taken?
7. Can the Cuban Government be sued under Title III? Does
international law permit that?
8. How may lawsuits are likely to be filed?
9. How will Helms/Burton affect Cuba's transition process once
a transition government is in power?
10. What do U.S. allies think about the bill?
Question:
Won't the Helms/Burton legislation give Castro the "final push"
necessary to get rid of him? Shouldn~t U.S. policy be
toughened?
Answer:
o
The Helms bill would NOT promote a peaceful transition in
Cuba.
The bill's attempts to increase existing pressure on
the Cuban government would likely be counterproductive.
o
New sanctions against foreign investors ("traffickers")
would provide a rallying point for Castro inside Cuba, and
allow him to keep the focus on "U.S. aggression" rather
than on the need for political and economic reforms.
o
The bill would also create serious frictions with our
allies at a time when they are becoming more active and
helpful in promoting human rights in Cuba.
o
It is difficult to find new, constructive ways to apply
pressure on the Castro regime because the U.S. already has
in place against Cuba its toughest and most comprehensive
economic embargo, The embargo has helped to force the
limited but positive economic changes taking place in Cuba.
o
While the U.S. discourages foreign investment in Cuba,
particularly when it would involve expropriated U.S.
properties, such investment will not ultimately determine
the fate of the Cuban regime. Our efforts to deter it
should not prompt us to sacrifice our broader interests or
undermine valuable principles of international law.
�-
2 -
Question:
Haven't the revisions made in the Helms Bill resolved all the
concerns the Administration expressed about the bill earlier?
Answer:
o
No. The Administration still opposes the bill in its
current form.
o
The Helms bill would not promote a peaceful transition in
Cuba.
( see previous question.)
o
In addition, many of its provisions recklessly disregard
broader U.S. interests and relationships and could be
difficult to defend under international law.
o
We are particularly concerned about Title III, which would
create a "right of action" for U.S. nationals with property
claims in Cuba to sue those who invest ("traffic") in those
properties in U.S. courts.
Question:
Would Title III lawsuits really violate international law?
Answer:
o
The right to sue created in Title III would represent an
unprecedented extra-territorial application of U.S. law
that would be very difficult to defend under international
law. The principles behind Title III are not consistent
with the traditions of the international system.
o
U.S. allies have already objected to what they see in Title
III as an improper extra-territorial extension of U.S. law.
o
This right to sue is different from existing provisions of
law which permit U.S. courts to apply principles of
international law in that it involves an extra-territorial
applicaton of U.S. law.
o
The provisions permitting suits against agencies and
instrumentalities of foreign states present still other
legal difficulties.
o
The Department of State has prepared a more detailed
discussion of legal considerations regarding Title III,
which is attached.
�-
3 -
Question:
Shouldn't the U.S. try to "move" international law in the
direction of Title III? Wouldn't U.S. business be better off?
Answer:
0
U.S. business interests abroad would be significantly
damaged if the rest of the world were to follow the
precedent that would be established by Title III.
0
It is well-settled international practice that questions of
ownership of property is determined by the state in which
that property is located.
0
It is the expropriating government that is responsible for
confiscations in violation of international law, not
subsequent investors.
0
Businesses and investors worldwide rely on the
determinations of title made by the governments in the
countries in which property is located.
0
U.S. businesses engage in more international investment
than those from any other country, and profit from these
established "rules of the game."
0
If other countries adopted laws like Helms/Burton, however,
U.S. businesses investing in China, the former East Germany
or Israel, for example, could find themselves subject to
unforeseen lawsuits by disgruntled property claimants from
third countries in the courts of those third countries.
Question:
Will Title III help U.S. claimants get their property back, or .
get compensation?
Answer:
o
Just the opposite. Title III will enormously complicate
the U.S. Government's ability to settle property claims
against Cuba. That's why most U.S. claimants are on record
as strongly opposing these provisions.
o
A flood of pending lawsuits during Cuba's inevitable
transition to democracy and market economics will delay
privatizations and other reforms.
o
Pending lawsuits will also make it more difficult for the
U.S. Government to negotiate a government-to-government
claims settlement agreement because we will likely be
required to determine, on a case-by-case basis, which of
the nearly 6,000 U.S. claimants have availed themselves of
the Title III provision.
�-
4 -
Question:
Is there any hope for certified U.S. claimants to get
compensation without Title III? What about Cuban American
claimants?
Answer:
o
Yes.
In the last several years, the U.S. Government has
negotiated government-to-government claims settlement
agreements in a number of countries that have resulted in
significant compensation for U.S. claimants We expect to
do the same for -- or otherwise satisfactorily resolve
U.S. citizen claims against Cuba when conditions are
right.
(The current Cuban Government would be unlikely to
agree to appropriate terms.)
o
While a government-to-government claims settlement
agreement would cover only expropriations that violated
international law -- those involving claimants who were
U.S. citizens when their property was taken, the U.S.
Government intends to encourage future Cuban Governments to
establish a mechanism under Cuban law to resolve all
property claims, including those of Cuban Americans.
Question:
How many lawsuits are likely to be filed under Title III?
Answer:
o
The truth is that no one knows how many lawsuits will be
filed under Title III, but the universe of potentially
eligible claimants could number in the hundreds of
thousands. While not all eligible claimants would file
suits, if even a relatively small percentage of them did it
could clog up U.S. courts and greatly complicate the tasks
of resolving claims and assisting Cuba's economic recovery.
o
While it could be difficult for plaintiffs to obtain
damages from defendants without assets in the U.S., that
would not prevent plaintiffs from filing suits to obtain
default judgments for use in later negotiations.
Question:
Could the Cuban Government be sued?
international law?
Would that violate
�-
5 -
Answer:
o
Title III permits suits against "any person or entity,
including any agency or instrumentality of a foreign state
in the conduct of commercial activity." The bill thus
appears to permit suits against agencies and
instrumentalities of both the Cuban and other foreign
governments in circumstances that go well beyond existing
law and that would be highly problematic under
internationally-accepted priniciples of foreign sovereign
immunity.
o
Other ambiguities in the bill create at least the
possibility that foreign states themselves -- not only
their agencies and instrumentalities -- could be sued in
U.S. courts. This would present even greater difficulties
under international law and damage to the interests of the
U.S. Government.
Question:
How will the Helms bill affect transition and democratic
governments in Cuba?
Answer:
o
o
While the bill calls for the development of a ''plan" for
U.S. and international assistance to transition and
democratic governments, it contains no authorization of
funds to provide such assistance.
The bill suggests that only limited humanitarian assistance
should be offered to a transition government in Cuba at the
very moment it would most need U.S. help in consolidating
democratic and free market institutions.
o
The U.S. would also be barred from supporting Cuban
membership in the IMF, World Bank and IDB until there is a
democratic government in power, effectively preventing many
of the kinds of support for a transition government these
sources could offer.
o
The requirement in section 104 that the President withhold
U.S. contributions to these institutions if loans to Cuba
are approved over U.S. objections could violate the U.S.
Government's commitments to those organizations and
undermine their effectiveness.
o
If the purpose of Title II of the bill is to offer hope and
incentive to those inside Cuba who seek change, the current
version offers little prospect for significant U.S. help.
�-
6 -
o
Worse still, Title III of the bill will make it extremely
difficult for a transition government to resolve property
claims and privatize state enterprises, and so actively
hamper the efforts of such a government to restore
stability and prosperity to the Cuban economy.
o
Perhaps one of the most objectionable aspects of Title III
is that it will hurt U.S. business seeking to enter the
Cuban market once the transition to democracy begins.
Ironically, the most likely targets of Title III lawsuits
would be U.S. companies seeking to participate in the
rebuilding of a free and independent Cuba.
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
Document
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Dublin Core
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Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DI-1297
Title
A name given to the resource
Talking Points regarding What's Wrong with the Helms-Burton bill (H.R. 927)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
circa 1995
Description
An account of the resource
This is part of a series of documents related to the Helms-Burton Cuban Embargo legislation (H. R. 927)
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 8 Folder 84
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Cuba
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/a5c4177372ffb2a5243d740ac1c4336b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=XrqMmLCSp-Zue50zRoJgZwVcNrzZpWtFQH9yaa14%7EO9pu-6FptcPpheZRlvC%7E2t6ntrbpvPsxwvG7dtkZnFdO%7Er1Heoqhi99G5YQ1tZp8e39U09IVM%7EWFkCj8x7hIxcW2Yqvl91foXrkA1WKhkY751FEGGII%7Ek26Ra7-K-Q8B%7E-TPrGI5ySjNtDtDEJjQvVE3F-vVHVpiR75KGe6lFhUHGEalYju3-y3iR3ERAV3VrVV-SvBtW65e65%7Ey%7EQDXtSbfirEleZ1A4Z6RHrSFCg8rBUIW34CAmWr77EBHg05IUp77CccMobNvvKgBIdIsaH8WVKZwOjPsMigD0K-orwnjQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
cfa081d953e663cbd83a6a00678ae532
PDF Text
Text
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 19, 1996
CONTACT: Karin Walser
w:202-225-7300
h:202-232-6550
Jim McGovern
w:202-225-8273
h:202-546-8933
Mike Ryan (ABC
Forum on Cuba)
h:202-543-3210
MOAKLEY STATEMENT ON CUBA TRIP
WASHINGTON -- Congressman Joe Moakley released the following
statement from his office today on his recent trip to Cuba:
"I traveled to Cuba for two basic reasons --- first, to try
to create an atmosphere in which relations between the US and
Cuba could be improved; and, second, to find ways to support
ordinary Cuban people.
My trip was hosted by the ABC Forum on Cuba, a non-profit
organization dedicated to educating US citizens on issues related
to Cuba and to supporting the activities of NGO's promoting human
rights and helping the Cuban people.
Our delegation consisted of 23 participants ranging from
business leaders to NGO's like the Boston-based Oxfam America.
I met with a variety of people while in Cuba -- including top
Cuban government officials, church leaders, dissidents, NGO's,
foreign diplomats, US officials.
I even had the chance to visit a small group of farmers who are
working with Oxfam on a project to increase agriculture
production for sale on the open market. These farmers and all
the ordinary people I had the chance to meet, were excited to
talk with our delegation and candid about their hopes for closer
ties with people in the United States.
In addition, my aide Jim McGovern and I had a 2 hour private
meeting with Cuban President Fidel Castro. Afterwhich, the Cuban
leader met with our entire group for another 2 hour session. I
told President Castro that we are at a crossroads in terms of USCuba relations. The United States Congress is nearing final
action on the so-called Helms-Burton Bill which, if signed into
Joe Moakley, U.S. House of Representatives, Room 235, Cannon Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20515, 202-225-7300
~ ·
�Moakley release
page 2
law, will strengthen the current economic embargo and end any
possibility for improved relations anytime in the near future.
I told President Castro that there must be more movement in
Cuba with regard to human rights and economic reforms -- and
urged him to act now. He seemed responsive and pledged to give
my request very serious and immediate consideration.
We also had an excellent meeting with Jamie Cardinal Ortega
the Roman Catholic Cardinal in Cuba. His Eminence told us
that the official position of the Catholic Bishops was against
the US embargo for humanitarian reasons. He also was very clear
about his continued concerns regarding human rights abuses that
currently exist in Cuba.
On a related matter, I raised with the Cuban leadership my
hope that they would invite Pope John Paul II to visit Cuba
during his visit to the Caribbean later this year.
My trip began and ended with important meetings with Cuban
dissident groups. While these people suggested that the
difficulties in Cuba run much deeper than the economic hardships,
a majority of those we met expressed opposition to the HelmsBurton legislation.
One of the things that stunned me the most about my trip is
the explosion of independent entrepreneurship. There are roughly
208,000 independent family businesses operating in Cuba. This
entrepreneurship is allowing people greater personal freedom from
government controls. When people are no longer dependent on the
government for their jobs, they are freer from economic coercion.
I got the sense that the Cuban government recognizes that these
small businesses are necessary for the country's economic
viability and are accepting the political space that they create.
In fact, Caritas (a Catholic charitable organization in
Havana) described its plans to establish training programs to
help these fledgling businesses succeed. Michael Ryan, President
of ABC Forum on Cuba, which organized the trip said: "It was
great to see our group get excited about helping support the
Cuban people, particularly in their efforts to form small
businesses and independent NGOs. A number of our participants
expressed a real desire to support these efforts after we
concluded our trip."
The European Union is about to hold talks with the Cubans on
closer economic ties -- and is using this opportunity to urge the
Cuban government to improve its human rights record. The United
States could have ten times more leverage with Cuba than the
�Moakley release
page 3
Europeans if we got serious about improving relations. Right now
the embargo leaves us completely out of the picture.
I'm afraid
if we let Helms-Burton become law, we will lose an important
opportunity to improve the situation in Cuba. Of all the
meetings I had, there was consensus on one thing -- that the
future of Cuba will be decided by Cubans on the island. The
degree to which we can encourage positive change will depend on
whether or not we defeat Helms-Burton.
-30-
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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DI-1292
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List of ABC Forum on Cuba Participants as of 1/12/1996
Date
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12 January 1996
Description
An account of the resource
This is part of a series of documents related to the planning of a Congressional trip to Cuba in 1996. The group held a conference called US-Cuba: A New England Perspective.
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.06 Legislative Assistants' Files: Stephen LaRose, Box 9 Folder 99
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PDF
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English
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United States--Congress
United States--Foreign Relations--Cuba
Cuba
Cuba -- Foreign relations -- United States.
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Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Cuba
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c115173a348395aed6ac5ecc414df3bc
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W
SuffolkLA
SUFFOLK LAW ALUMNI MAGAZINE | FALL 2008
A Singular CAREER
A Shared ETHOS
Harry Hom Dow JD ’29
�
A Singular
Career,
[ 10 ]
Suffolk Law alumni Magazine | fall 2008
�
Ethos
A Shared
By Thomas Gearty + meaghan agnew |
photo montage by anastasia vasilakis
fall 2008 | Suffolk Law alumni Magazine
[ 11 ]
�T
The portrait of Harry Hom Dow JD ’29 looks like most yearbook
photos: a glimpse of a fresh haircut under the mortarboard,
a new tie peeking through the neck of the black robe, the soft
illumination of another young face.
But the story of the man in the photo is anything
but typical. In 1929, Dow, a newly minted graduate of Suffolk University Law School, was poised to
make history as the first Chinese American admitted
to the Massachusetts Bar. And though he couldn’t
have known it at the time, he was also on the verge
of a groundbreaking career in public service, one that
would reflect his selfless values, his indomitable spirit,
and the ethos of the institution that first gave him the
chance to succeed.
The script for Dow’s extraordinary life is now at
Suffolk Law. His children have donated Dow’s collected papers to his alma mater—24 boxes of photographs, legal files, letters, press clippings, and other
documents—where they will become part of the
Suffolk University archives.
F
or Suffolk Law Dean Alfred Aman, the papers
represent a vital piece of Suffolk Law’s legacy. “It’s
important to realize that a big part of Suffolk’s history as a law school is that it provided opportunities
for individuals of great ability, like Harry Dow, who
would not have had the chance at any other place,”
Aman says. “This is a wonderful opportunity to learn
more about his life and his career—and how it reflects
back on our institution.”
An Early Promise
T
he early decades of the 20th century
were an era of official prejudice against
Chinese immigrants. The Chinese
Exclusion Act of 1882 prohibited entry
to the U.S. by all Chinese people except merchants,
teachers, students, officials, and existing legal residents. “The coming of Chinese laborers endangers
the good order of certain localities,” the law stated.
[ 12 ]
Suffolk Law alumni Magazine | fall 2008
Initially enacted as a 10-year policy, the act was made
permanent in 1902.
B
ut Hom Soon Dow was a business owner, and so
in 1902 he and his wife Alice immigrated to rural
Hudson, Massachusetts, from the Toisan district of
China. When their first child, Harry, was born in 1904,
the family moved east to the city of Boston, eventually
settling on Shawmut Avenue in the South End.
An ambitious man with an entrepreneurial spirit
and an idea for a new business, Hom Soon Dow
opened H. S. Dow Laundry, the first fully mechanized
wet laundry in Boston, in 1907. With a head start
over the competition and an edge in technology, Hom
Soon’s business began to thrive. Soon he had customers all over Boston and purchased several trucks for
deliveries. His family grew at a similarly rapid rate:
after Harry, the Dows added three girls and two more
boys to their brood.
I
n 1916, Hom Soon Dow died suddenly from a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 40, leaving behind a
cloud of uncertainty over the fate of the family’s lifeblood. In the United States in the early 20th century,
it was rare to find a company owned by a woman,
let alone one run by a Chinese widow with no business experience and six children. But Alice Dow decided not only to manage the laundry—with help from
young Harry—but to expand it.
I
t was a bold decision, but misfortune struck again
almost immediately. Alice Dow forged ahead with
an existing plan to relocate the laundry to a more
modern, up-to-date facility on West Dedham Street.
However, the deal went bad, ostensibly over a contract dispute and other issues; family lore says Alice
and her children were hoodwinked. The Dows were
left practically penniless.
Fourteen-year-old Harry felt the weight of the world
on his slender shoulders. As the eldest son in a Chinese
�
family, he had a special obligation to assume responsibility for his mother and siblings. Yet despite his best
efforts, the family’s fortunes had sunk even lower.
T
hen and there, the teenage Harry made a vow to
himself: he would study law so that no one would
take advantage of his family, or other families like
his, ever again.
A Merging of Like Minds
O
n the other side of Boston Common,
Suffolk Law School was making a name
for itself as an institution committed
to education for all. Gleason Archer,
Suffolk Law’s founder and dean, was emphatic in his
insistence that Suffolk Law provide “an open door
for opportunity.” By decade’s end, Suffolk Law was
one of the largest law schools in the nation, with an
enrollment of more than 2,000 students. The student
body was made up overwhelmingly of working-class
evening students; Archer also spoke proudly of the
school’s “cosmopolitanism,” a then-current term for
racial and ethnic diversity. It was an institution that
prided itself on reaching out to those who might not
otherwise be given an opportunity to succeed. And it
was the perfect fit for a young man like Harry Dow.
Included in the archival material is Dow’s 1925 law
school application: a one-page, single-sided document
with just enough space to list his educational credentials, employment, and two references, including
one from Suffolk Law trustee and U.S. congressman
Joseph F. O’Connell. Three letters can be discerned
scrawled at the bottom of the page: GLA, the initials
of his interviewer, Gleason Archer, who personally accepted Dow for admission.
T
he young man made the most of the opportunity.
During the day he worked at the family’s laundry, helping to keep it afloat; at night he dove into a full load of
law classes. By his final year of law school, Dow was
holding down a full-time job as a translator for the
U.S. Bureau of Immigration while attending classes
and pitching in at the family laundry whenever he had
a free moment. Dow graduated in 1929; soon after,
he and a few friends rented a cottage outside of the
A Dow family photo from the mid-1920s. Back row, left to right:
Harry Dow, Nellie Dow, Hammie Dow, Howard Dow. Front row,
left to right: Grandmother Dow, Nora Dow, Nettie Dow.
city for a month to study for the bar. Several months
later, Dow found out that he had passed the grueling
exam, thus becoming the first Chinese American ever
to gain admission to the Massachusetts Bar.
In a Boston Globe article celebrating his achievement, Dow was asked what he planned to do next.
“I hope to champion the cause of the Chinese in this
country,” he replied.
Fighting the Good Fight
I
t was, for a time, a dream deferred. After passing the bar, Dow went into government service,
a temporary move that became long-lasting
after the stock market crash of 1929. “It did
fall 2008 | Suffolk Law alumni Magazine
[ 13 ]
�
not seem prudent to give up the certainty of a monthly
paycheck,” Dow wrote to Joseph E. Warner, his former professor at Suffolk Law, who went on to serve
as the Massachusetts state attorney general and a superior court judge.
D
ow spent nearly two decades in the “government
rut,” as he called it, transferred to the New York office
of the Bureau of Immigration in 1931. Dow was too
old to be drafted when World War II started, but he
enlisted voluntarily in 1942. He served in military intelligence, eventually leaving the service in 1947 with
the rank of captain.
F
inally, Dow could fulfill his pledge to dedicate his
skills full time to the Chinese community. He was
“perfectly positioned,” as his son Fred Dow puts it,
to open his own immigration practice. He was smart,
understood Chinese language and culture, and had
experience inside the Immigration Bureau. Above all,
he knew firsthand what it meant to be given a chance
to succeed.
D
ow’s timing was ideal. The repeal of the Chinese
Exclusion Act in 1943 finally permitted Chinese
Harry Dow, with his ever-present pipe, in the early 1980s.
[ 14 ]
Suffolk Law alumni Magazine | fall 2008
residents to apply for U.S. citizenship, and for wives
and children in China to join their husbands and
fathers in the United States. Even though stringent
quotas permitted only a tiny number of Chinese to
enter the country each year, the cultural climate
was changing, and immigration law services were
increasingly in demand.
“
My practice is almost exclusively among the
Chinese and in the immigration and naturalization
field,” he wrote to Judge Warner, “and since the
Chinese community in New York is larger than that
of Boston, I maintain an office there to draw upon the
greater source of clientele. And so my time is spent
between both places.”
D
ow’s documents from that time vividly attest to
the depth of his professional commitment. Stacks
upon stacks of neatly organized files—many labeled
“App. for Admin,” or “application for admission to the
U.S.”—contain government forms, legal correspondence, handwritten case notes, photos, telegrams, and
money order receipts, all meticulously organized by
date and year. They tell the tales of family men securing passports to travel back to China to retrieve wives
and children; of young boys traveling from Hong Kong
to New York to reunite with their families; of Chinese
American residents petitioning for naturalization. In
one instance, Dow himself gives an affidavit on behalf
of a client in order to help him secure life insurance
from the Veterans Administration.
One file in particular stands out. In April 1951,
Hoey Moy Fong, then 15 years old, saw his passport
application turned down due to “wide discrepancies
regarding material facts concerning which you and
your alleged relatives should have been in agreement.” According to documents, Dow spent the
next two years fighting to prove Fong’s relation to
his family was legitimate and thus secure his U.S.
citizenship. Eventually, Dow traveled with Fong
and several family members to Washington, D.C.,
and spent two days arguing the case in U.S. District
Court. The final judgment in that case—a copy of
which is still contained in Fong’s file—came down on
April 29, 1953, just days shy of Fong’s 18th birthday.
In it, Judge Edward C. Tamm “adjudged, ordered,
and decreed that the plaintiff, Hoey Moy Fong, is
and has been since birth a citizen and national of the
United States.” Dow had won.
But those years were also difficult. Dow struggled
to adjust to the financial roller coaster of private prac-
�
tice after two decades of government service. “I’d be
better off on relief or collecting unemployment insurance,” he complained in a letter to an army buddy.
Moreover, as a Chinese American working full time
as an attorney in the 1950s, Dow faced an enormous
amount of scrutiny. According to the 1950 U.S. census, there were fewer than 130 Asian American attorneys working in the entire country during that time;
in the Northeast, including New England, there were
fewer than 15. Dow wasn’t just fighting to better the
circumstances of his fellow man; he was working by
example to break down existing prejudices against the
Chinese American community.
B
y 1958, however, Dow had found his professional
footing. He was operating thriving law offices on
Bayard Street in New York City and Chauncy Street
in Boston. His finances had stabilized, and he was in
the process of building a house on Long Island for his
wife and children. He often hosted get-togethers for
his extended family, and had developed a fondness for
fancy suits. The future seemed assured.
A
nd then, for the second time in Dow’s life, the roof
fell in.
Victim of McCarthyism
I
n the early 1950s, perceptions of Chinese
Americans had taken a hard turn. U.S. Senator
Joseph McCarthy had spent the late 1940s
stoking anti-communist sentiment; soon, the
country was in the grip of the Second Red Scare.
Although most historical accounts of this time focus
on the blacklists and the Americans unfairly accused
of harboring communist ties, Chinese Americans
were deeply affected as well. When China became a
communist country in 1949, scrutiny of the Chinese
American community only increased. Many Chinese
residents were unfairly investigated and sometimes
deported without warrant, and businesses and reputations were ruined.
Dow was the victim of such smear tactics. In 1958,
one of Dow’s clients was charged with smuggling illegal immigrants into the United States; Dow was swept
up in the investigation and indicted. He was forced
to spend more than a year defending himself against
charges of collusion, testifying repeatedly in front of
grand juries—and watching a groundbreaking career
30 years in the making crumble into dust.
“
Even though he beat the grand jury indictment,
they pretty much blackballed him at the INS,” recalls
son Fred Dow. “Nobody would return his calls. He
couldn’t get any business done because he was a suspect. He was tainted.”
B
y the time Dow extricated himself from legal peril,
he had already shipped his wife and children back to
Boston to live with his sister at the old homestead on
Shawmut Avenue. He hung on in New York for a while
longer but could not revive his wounded career, and
eventually he followed his family back to the South
End in 1960. It must have all been tragically familiar
to Dow: once again, his family was nearly penniless,
the victims of a prejudiced society. Yet Dow’s belief
system was still firmly intact. And so, with almost
nothing left to give but himself, Dow once more dedicated himself to the disadvantaged.
“Nobody would return his calls.
He couldn’t get any business
done because he was a suspect.
He was tainted.”
A Good Neighbor
I
n the 1960s, the city of Boston was at a crossroads. A decade before, urban renewal had
become Boston’s battle cry, and the Boston
Redevelopment Authority (BRA) was established in 1957 with a broad mandate to remake large
sections of the city.
B
ut renewal was a double-edged sword. When in
1959 the BRA cast its eye on the South End for the
nation’s largest urban renewal project, neighborhood
activists knew they had to be better organized if they
were to resist demolition without relocation. Over the
next two decades, in project after project, South End
residents successfully fought to retain the multiethnic,
economically diverse character of the neighborhood.
A
nd Harry Dow was front and center in the effort.
Mel King, a longtime community activist and lifelong South End resident, recalls Dow’s invaluable
work on behalf of the neighborhood.
fall 2008 | Suffolk Law alumni Magazine
[ 15 ]
�
“
They [the BRA] were going to do something drastic, but by then we were organized to try to deal with
making sure that there was tenant participation in it,”
King says. “And having someone like Harry with his
background and his legal mind made a substantial difference in the discussions we were having.”
D
ow put his legal skills to particularly good use
as a member of the Emergency Tenants Council
(ETC), formed in 1968 in response to a BRA plan to
tear down a large swath of the South End between
Tremont and Washington streets to build luxury
housing. With Dow’s guidance, ETC was able to
wrest control of the parcel from the BRA and build
Villa Victoria, a low-income housing development
for a largely Puerto Rican community that still exists today.
M
ichael Kane, now the executive director of the
National Alliance of HUD Tenants, says Dow played
a central role in formulating “the very practical,
programmatic solutions that showed other people
how you could do things like build racially integrated housing that was also economically diverse
and attractive.
“
There weren’t too many examples of that around at
that time,” adds Kane, who also calls Dow his mentor.
“And I think the South End, with Harry’s leadership
and others, showed you could do that.”
S
oon Dow expanded the reach of his activism,
focusing on the needs of the poor, the elderly, and
the otherwise underserved. He was elected a board
member of the South End Neighborhood Action
Program (SENAP), which today offers community
development programs such as rental and fuel assistance, family advocacy and counseling, career development and counseling, and an emergency food pantry. (His papers contain reams of notes from monthly
SENAP meetings.) He was also instrumental in the
1969 founding of the South End Community Health
Center, which today serves as a model for private,
community-based health care.
D
ow was also still deeply committed to the local
Chinese American community. In the early 1970s,
Paul M. Yee JD ’74, now a solo practitioner in
Boston, was living in the South End while attending
Suffolk Law. One day, Dow knocked on Yee’s door,
introduced himself, and asked Yee to run for an
at-large seat on the South End Project Area
Committee. Dow explained that this important
[ 16 ]
Suffolk Law alumni Magazine | fall 2008
neighborhood committee needed Chinese voices—
and by the time Dow walked back out the door, Yee
had agreed to run.
“
He was just inspiring. I’ve never run for anything
in my life, and I wasn’t involved in neighborhood politics, but he just had a very gentle, persuasive way,”
Yee recalls, adding with a laugh: “I still scratch my
head and say, ‘Well, how did he do it?’”
I
n his later years, Dow devoted much of his time to
board work, serving on the boards of almost a dozen
organizations, including the South End Community
Health Center, Central Boston Elder Services, United
South End Settlements, the Massachusetts League of
Community Health Centers, Greater Boston Legal
Services, and South Cove Community Health Center,
to name just a few.
Paul W. Lee, a partner at Goodwin Proctor LLP,
served with Dow on the South Cove board. “He
was a very thoughtful councilor. He would listen to
the discussion at the board level, then formulate his
thoughts and conclusions and then speak,” Lee says.
“His opinions were so highly respected that when he
spoke, everybody listened very closely, and what he
recommended based on his knowledge and his years
of experience ended up usually being the structure of
whatever we were working on.”
Dow never resumed a paid legal career, living on
Social Security in a subsidized apartment in the South
End. But even as his previous life as an immigration
attorney faded into memory, Dow reveled in his new
sense of purpose as a community activist.
“I think he really saw the soul of the community,”
Fred Dow says. “He connected with so many people.”
A
nd in that regard, he was again emulating the values of his law school alma mater.
“Harry Dow going on to do public service again
epitomized the founding values and purpose of
Suffolk Law,” says former dean Robert Smith. “I
think his story really resonates with what this law
school is all about.”
An Enduring Legacy
T
ragically, in 1985, Dow was struck and
killed by a truck on Boylston Street in
Boston. He was 80 years old. The outpouring of tributes and accolades was so
intense that it surprised even some family members,
�
who were unaware of how much Dow had done for
his neighborhood. At Dow’s funeral, friend and fellow
activist Martin Gopen spoke movingly of Dow’s community work. “He did not accept, or find acceptable,
inadequate health services, unsatisfactory housing,
injustice for the poor, lack of respect or dignity for
people, especially senior citizens,” Gopen said in his
eulogy. “His advocacy went beyond ‘what could be’ to
‘what should be.’”
T
hat same year, Paul Lee and several other area
attorneys founded the Asian American Lawyers
Association of Massachusetts (AALAM). It was only
then, Lee says, that he realized the true significance
of Dow’s achievements. Fifty-five years after Harry
Dow became the first Chinese American admitted to
the bar, the AALAM founders could still only find
two dozen Asian lawyers practicing in the commonwealth. When the group’s members decided to establish a legal assistance fund to provide legal services
to the needy, they named the fund after Harry Dow.
F
or almost 25 years, the Harry H. Dow Memorial
Legal Assistance Fund has carried on Dow’s legacy.
The fund works to strengthen the capacity of the
Asian American community through outreach and advocacy work. One of its longest and most substantial
programs is its sponsoring of internships at the Asian
Outreach Unit of Greater Boston Legal Services. This
past summer, the recipients were two Suffolk Law students, third-year student Sean Chen and second-year
student Anna Nguyen, both of whom point to Dow as
an influence.
“
Dow’s life and work have inspired me greatly to
continue to be a part of this ongoing cause to bring
about the social justice and equality to the Asian
American community,” says Nguyen.
In the future, Dean Aman would like to see Dow’s
legacy honored at Suffolk Law with a scholarship for
students interested in pursuing a career in immigration law. “It would be an extraordinarily important
way of honoring his legacy to know that there would
be Dow scholars at the school addressing today’s immigration challenges,” Aman says.
In the meantime, anyone who wants to learn about
Harry Dow’s remarkable achievements can come to
Suffolk Law, and to the archives.
“Life presents itself in many ways,” says Fred Dow.
“I think my father showed the core of his humanity in
responding to life’s conditions and situations.”
Paper Trail
Fortunately for posterity’s sake, Harry Dow felt his handwriting
was “atrocious.” He typed all his letters, frequently starting with an
apology for using the impersonal machine. As a result, his personal papers provide an unusually meticulous record of his life
and career.
Deciding where to house his life’s record, however, was not an
easy task for his family. The University of California Berkeley, known
for its impressive archives on the history of the Asian immigrant
experience, had long hoped to acquire the Dow collection. But former dean Robert Smith felt strongly that the papers belonged at
Suffolk Law.
At a 2002 Harry H. Dow Memorial Legal Assistance Fund fundraising dinner, Smith approached Fred Dow and his siblings and let the
family know Suffolk Law was interested in acquiring the papers.
Over the course of several years, he continued to engage them in
a conversation about how the school could preserve and promote
Harry Dow’s legacy. When Dean Alfred Aman came to the law school
in 2007, he took over the dialogue.
In the end, the Dow family was persuaded.
“After thinking about it, we felt these papers really belonged in
Boston and at Suffolk, because Suffolk opened up the opportunity
for my father,” says Fred Dow. “Suffolk is going to take care of these
papers well—I believe that.” –TG
The archives staff—from left, Derrick Hart, Nicole Feeney, and
Julia Collins—pose with Harry’s sons, Alex Dow and Fred Dow, after
transporting the Dow papers to Suffolk Law in December 2007.
fall 2008 | Suffolk Law alumni Magazine
[ 17 ]
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Harry Hom Dow Papers, 1911-1985 (MS 111)
Description
An account of the resource
The papers of Harry Hom Dow, the first Chinese American to pass the Massachusetts Bar and a 1929 Suffolk University Law School graduate, document his personal life, legal career, and community activism. The largest section of the collection contains client files from his private law practice where he represented client on immigration and naturalization issues.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Article about Harry Hom Dow in the Suffolk University Law School Alumni Magazine, Fall 2008
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2008
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2d34898f237b87061a524bead11c045c
PDF Text
Text
REPUBLICAN BROKEN PROMISES
from the House Rules Committee Democrats:
"We very specifically made the decision early on in our Contract
with America that we would bring up all ten bills under open
rules."
Speaker-elect Newt Gingrich told reporters November 11, 1994
Roll Call, February 13, 1995
'Chairman' Solomon Says He Plans to Grant Open Rules on 75 Percent
of Bills Next Year
Roll Call, November 28, 1994
- -
---
________________________________________________________ _
APPLYING REPUBLICAN DEFINITIONS
TO REPUBLICAN RULES IN 104TH CONGRESS
REPUBLICANS PROMISED
REPUBLICANS DELIVERED
Number
of rules
Percent
of total
Number
of rules
Percent
of total
Open
21
70%
7
23%
Restrictive
9
30%
23
76%
APPLYING REPUBLICAN DEFINITIONS
TO REPUBLICAN RULES ON CONTRACT ITEMS
REPUBLICANS PROMISED
REPUBLICANS DELIVERED
Number
of rules
Percent
of total
Number
of rules
Percent
of total
Open
24
100%
8
33%
Restrictive
0
0%
16
66%
In the 103rd Congress, Republicans defined restrictive rules as
follows:
Restrictive rules are those which limit the number of
amendments which can be offered, and include so called
modified open and modified closed rules as well as completely
closed rules and rules providing for consideration in the
House as opposed to the Committee of the Whole.
�TALKING POINTS ON FLOOR PROCEDURE IN THE
104TH CONGRESS
FROM THE HOUSE RULES COMMITTEE DEMOCRATS
** In the
103rd Congress the Republicans defined restrictive rules as
follows:
Restrictive rules are those which limit the number of
amendments which can be offered, and include so called
modified open and modified closed rules as well as completely
closed rules and rules providing for consideration in the House
as opposed to the Com1nittee of the Whole
However, in the 104th Congress the Republicans have changed their
math. Now modified open rules are put into the "non-restrictive"
column when they present their tables.
** Using the Republican scoring method, bills in this Congress have
been considered under a restrictive process 74% of the time and under
an open process only 26% of the time. On Contract legislation the
Republicans have used a restrictive process 67% of the time and an
open one just 33% of the time.
** Not included in this chart are three bills which should have been
placed on the Suspension Calendar (they were in the 103rd Congress)
which were brought up under open rules.
** They were not included because the Democrats, when in the
majority, would not bring non-controversial Suspension Calendar bills
before the House under special rules.
** In this Congress when these bills were considered, no amendments
were offered and only one required a recorded vote which was 427-01 (H.R. 400).
** The bills are H.R. 101, R.R. 400 and R.R. 440.
�&'
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•••
•••'-'
~
-.•.
BILL#
TITLE
RESOLUTION#
PROCESS USED FOR FLOOR
CONSIDERATION
AMENDMENTS IN ORDER
H.R. 1
•CONTRACT•
Compliance
H.Res. 6
Closed
None
H.Res. 6
Opening Day Rules Package
H.Res. 5
Closed; contained a closed rule on H.R. 1
within the closed rule
None
H.R. 5
Unfunded Mandates
H.Res. 38
Restrictive; Motion adopted over Democratic
objection in the Committee of the Whole to
limit_ debate on section 4; Pre-printing gets
preference
NIA
HJ.Res. 2
• CONTRACT•
Balanced Budget
H.Res. 44
Restrictive; only certain substitutes
2R;4D
H.Res. 43
Committee Hearings Scheduling
H.Res. 43 (OJ)
Restrictive; considered in House no
amendments
NIA
H.R. 2
• CONIRACT•
Line Item Veto
H.Res. 55
Open; Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
H.R. 665
• CONIRACT•
Victim Restitution Act of 1995
H.Res. 61
Open; Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
H.R. 666
• CONIRACT•
Exclusionary Rule Refonn Act of
1995
H.Res. 60
Open; Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
H.R. 667
• CONTRACT•
Violent Criminal Incarceration Act of
1995
H.Res. 63
Restrictive; 10hr. Time Cap on amendments
NIA
H.R. 668
• CONTRACT•
The Criminal Alien Deportation
Improvement Act
H.Res. 69
Open; Pre-printing gets preference; Contains
self-executing provision
NIA
H.R. 728
H.Res. 79
Restrictive; 10 hr. Time Cap on amendments;
Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
• CONTRACT•
Local Government Law Enforcement
Block Grants
H.R. 7
National Security Revitalization Act
H.Res. 83
Restrictive; 10 hr. Time Cap on amendments;
Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
Death Penalty/Habeas
NIA
Restrictive; brought up under UC with a 6 hr.
time cap on amendments
NIA
S.2
Senate Compliance
NIA
Closed; Put on suspension calendar over
Democratic objection
None
H.R. 831
To Pennanently Extend the Health
Insurance Deduction for the SelfEmployed
H.Res. 88
• CON1RACT •
• CONTRACT•
H.R. 729
• CONTRACT•
Restrictive; makes in order only the Gibbons
amendment; waives all points of order;
Contains self-executing provision
10
--,
�The Paperwork Reduction Act
H.Res. 91
H.R. 889
Emergency Supplemental/Rescinding
Certain Budget Authority
H.Res. 92
Restrictive; makes in order only the Obey
substitute
lD
H.R. 450
•CONTRACT*
Regulatory Moratorium
H.Res. 93
Restrictive; 10hr. Time Cap on amendments;
Pre-printing gets preference
NIA
H.R. 1022
* CONTRACT*
Risk Assessment
H.Res. 96
Restrictive; 10hr. Time Cap on amendments
NIA
H.R. 926
•CONTRACT*
Regulatory Flexibility
H.Res. 100
Open
NIA
H.R. 925
• CONTRACT*
Private Property Protection Act
H.Res. 101
Restrictive; 12hr. time cap on amendments;
Re.quires Members to pre-print their
amendments in the Record prior to the bill's
consideration for amendment. waives
germaneness and budget act points of order as
well as points of order concerning appropriating
on a legislative bill against the committee
substitute used as base text.
lD
H.R. 1058
•CONTRACT•
Securities Litigation Reform Act
H.Res. 105
Restrictive; 8 hr. ti.me cap on amendments;
Pre-printing gets preference; Makes in order the
Wyden amendment and waives gennaness
against it.
ID
H.R. 988
•CONTRACT*
The Attorney Accountability Act of
1995
H.Res. 104
Restrictive; 7 hr. time cap on amendments;
Pre-printing gets preference.
NIA
H.R. 956
•CONTRACT•
Product Liability and Legal Reform
Act
H.Res. 109
Restrictive; makes in order only 15 gennane
amendments and denies 64 germane
amendments from being considered.
SD; 7R
H.R. 1158
Making Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations and Rescissions
H.Res. 115
Restrictive; Combines emergency H.R. 1158
& nonemergency 1159 and strikes the abortion
provision; makes in order only pre-printed
NIA
H.R. 830
• CONTRACT*
Open
amendments that include offsets within the
same chapter (deeper cuts in programs already
cut); waives points of order against three
amendments; waives cl 2 of rule XXI against
the bill. cl 2. XXI and cl 7 of rule XVI against
the substitute; waives cl 2(e) of rule XXI
against the amendments in the Record; 10 hr
time cap on amendments. 30 minutes debate on
each amendment.
...
,,.
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�HJ.Res. 73
• CON1'RACT •
Tenn Limits
H.Rcs. 116
Restrictive; Makes in order only 4
amendments considered under a "Queen of the
Hill" procedure and denies 21 germane
amendments from being considered.
lD; 3R
H.R. 4
•CONTRACT•
Welfare Refonn
H.Res. 119
Restrictive; Makes in order only 31 perfecting
amendments and two substitutes; Denies 130
gennane amendments from being considered;
The substitutes are to be considered under a
"Queen of the Hill" procedure; All points of
order are waived against the amendments.
5D; 26R
H.R. 1271
• CONTRACT*
Family Privacy Act
H.Res. 125
Open
NIA
H.Res. 126
Open
NIA
H.R. 660
f OrrJ,._,A< :(Housing for Older Persons Act
H.R. 1215
• CONTRACT*
The Contract With America Tax
Relief Act of 1995
H.Res. 129
H.R. 483
Medicare Select Extension
H.Res. 130
Restrictive; Self Executes language that makes
cuts contingent on the adoption of a
balanced budget plan and strikes section 3006.
Makes in order only one substitute. Waives all
points of order against the bill, substitute made
in order as original text and Gephardt
substitute.
1D
Restrictive; waives cl 2(1)(6) of rule XI
against the bill; makes H.R. 1391 in order as
original text; makes in order only the Dingell
substitute; allows Commerce Committee to file
a report on the bill at any time.
ID
tax
• Contract Bills, 67% restrictive; 33% open.
•• All legislation, 74% restrictive; 26% open.
••• Restrictive rules are those which limit the number of amendments which can be offered, and include so called modified open and modified closed rules as well as completely
closed rules and rules providing for consideration in the House as opposed to the Committee of the Whole. This definition of restrictive rule is taken from the Republican chart of
resolutions reported from the Rules Committee in the 103rd Congress.
•••• Not included in this chart are three bills which should have been placed on the Suspension Calendar. H.R. 101, H.R. 400, H.R. 440
�SPECIAL REPORT
100DAYS ...
And Counting
Passage of Contract Bills
F
ollowing are the votes the House took on passage of
bills incorporating the "Contract With America."
Also with each vote, listed by vote number, is the president's position on the bill, when available, and a reference to the Weekly Report story about the action. (R Republicans; D - Democrats; ND - Northern Democrats; SD - Southern Democrats; I - Independent)
6. H Res 6. Rules of the House - Committee Staff
Cuts. Adopted 416-12: R 224-0; D 191-12 (ND 132-7, SD 59-5);
I 1-0, Jan. 4. (p. 13)
7. H Res 6. Rules of the House - Baseline Budgeting.
Adopted 421-6: R 225-0; D 195-6 (ND 132-5, SD 63-1); I 1-0,
Jan. 4. (p. 13)
8. H Res 6. Rules of the House - Term Limits for
Speaker and Chairmen. Adopted 355-74: R 228-0; D 127-73
(ND 80-56, SD 47-17); I 0-1, Jan. 4. (p. 13)
9. H R.~s 6. Rules of the House - Proxy Voting Ban.
Adopted 418-13: R 228-0; D 189-13 (ND 128-11, SD 61-2); I 1-0,
Jan. 4. (p. 13)
(
118. HR 668. Criminal Alien Deportation. Passed 380-20:
R 216-1; D 163-19 (ND 116-13, SD 47-6); I 1-0, Feb. 10. (p. 456)
129. HR 728. Anti-Crime Block Grants. Passed 238-192:
R 220-9; D 18-182 (ND 6-130, SD 12-52); I 0-1, Feb. 14. A "nay"
was a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 530)
145. HR 7. National Security. Passed 241-181: R 223-4; D
18-176 (ND 6-130, SD 12-46); I 0-1, Feb. 16. A "nay" was a vote
in support of the president's position. (p. 535)
157. HR 830. Paperwork Reduction. Passed 418-0: R
228-0; D 189-0 (ND 131-0, SD 58-0); I 1-0, Feb. 22. A "yea" was
a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 608)
'
174. HR 450. Regulatory Moratorium. Passed 276-146:
R 225-2; D 51-143 (ND 20-115, SD 31-28); I 0-1, Feb. 24. A
"nay" was a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 610)
183. HR 1022. Risk Assessment. Passed 286-141: R 2262; D 60-138 (ND 23-113, SD 37-25); I 0-1, Feb. 28. A "nay" was
a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 679)
187. HR 926. Regulatory Overhaul. Passed 415-15: R
228-0; D 186-15 (ND 127-11, SD 59-4); I 1-0, March l..(p. 679)
~
10. H Res 6. Rules of the House - Open Committee
Meetings. Adopted 431-0: R 227-0; D 203-0 (ND 139-0, SD 640); I 1-0, Jan. 4. (p. 13)
197. HR 925. Private Property Rights. Passed 277-148: R
205-23; D 72-124 (ND 33-103, SD 39-21); I 0-1, March 3. A "nay"
was a vote in support of the president's position. (pp. 680, 679)
-11. H Res 6. Rules of the House - Tax Increase
Limitation. Adopted 279-152: R 227-0; D 52-151 (ND 23-116,
SD 29-35); I 0-1, Jan. 4. (p. 1.'3)
199. HR 9. Omnibus Regulatory Overhaul. Passed 277141: R 219-8; D 58-132 (ND 23-110, SD 35-22); I 0-1, March 3. A
"nay" was a vote in support o_f the president's position. (p. 679)r
12. H Res 6. Rules of the House - House Audit.
Adopted 430-1: R 228-0; D 201-1 (ND 138-1, SD 63-0); I 1-0,
Jan. 4. (p. 13)
207. HR 988. Civil Litigation. Passed 232-193: R 216-11;
D 16-181 (ND 4-133, SD 12-48); I 0-1, March 7. (p. 745)
15. HR 1. Congressional Compliance. Passed 429-0: R
229-0; D 199-0 (ND 137-0, SD 63-0); I 1-0, Jan. 5. (p. 16)
51. H J Res 1. Balanced-Budget Constitutional
Amendment. Passed 300-132: R 228-2; D 72-129 (ND 34-105,
SD 38-24); I 0-1, Jan. 26. A "nay" was a vote in support of the
president's position. (p. 266)
83. HR 5. Unfunded Mandates. Passed 360-74: R 230-0; D
130-73 (ND 79-60, SD 51-13); I 0-1, Feb. 1. (p. 361)
95. HR 2. Line-Item Veto. Passed 294-134: R 223-4; D 71129 (ND 44-94, SD 27-35); I 0-1, Feb. 6. (p. 441)
97. HR 665. Victim Restitution. Passed 431-0: R 229-0; D
201-0 (ND 139-0, SD 62-0); I 1-0, Feb. 7. A "yea" was a vote in
support of the president's position. (p. 455)
103. HR 666. Exclusionary Rule. Passed 289-142: R 2207; D 69-134 (ND 36-103, SD 33-31); I 0-1, Feb. 8. A "nay" was a
vote in support of the president's position. (p. 455)
216. HR 1058. Securities Litigation. Passed 325-99: R
226-0; D 99-98 (ND 57-80, SD 42-18); I 0-1, March 8. (p. 744)
229. HR 956. Product Liability. Passed 265-161: R 220-6;
D 45-154 (ND 18-120, SD 27-34); I 0-1, March 10. (p. 744)
269. HR 4. Welfare Overhaul. Passed 234-199: R 225-5; D
9-193 (ND 3-135, SD 6-58); I 0-1, March 24. A "nay" was a vote
in support of the president's position. (p. 872)
277. HJ Res 73. Term Limits Constitutional Amendment. Rejected 227-204: R 189-40; D 38-163 (ND 22-117, SD 1646); I 0-1, March 29. A two-thirds majority vote of those present
and voting (288 in this case) is required to pass a joint resolution
proposing an amendment to the Constitution. (p. 918)
283. HR 1240. Child Sex Crimes Prevention. Passed 4170: R 225-0; D 191-0 (ND 132-0, SD 59-0); I 1-0, April 4. A "yea" was
a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 1030)
287. HR 1271. Family Privacy Protection. Passed 418-7:
R 225-0; D 192-7 (ND 132-4, SD 60-3); I 1-0, April 4. (p. 1030)
109. HR 729. Death Penalty Appeals. Passed 297-132: R
226-1; D 71-130 (ND 34-103, SD 37-27); I 0-1, Feb. 8. (p. 456)
295. HR 1215. Tax and Spending Cuts. Passed 246-188: R
219-11; D 27-176 (ND9-130, SD 18-46); I 0-1, April 5, 1995. A "nay"
was a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 1010)
117. HR 667. Prison Construction. Passed 265-156: R
206-20; D 59-135 (ND 28-106, SD 31-29); I 0-1, Feb. 10. A "nay"
was a vote in support of the president's position. (p. 456)
297. HR 660. Senior Citizens' Housing. Passed 424-5: R
228-0; D 195-5 (ND 136-2, SD 59-3); I 1-0, April 6. (p. 1030)
1006 -
:\PRIL 8. 1995
CQ
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15: 49
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P.02
THE AMENDMENT PROCESS UNDER SPECIAL RULES
REPORTED BY THE RULES COMMITTEE, 1
193RD CONGRESS V. 104TH CONGRESS
(As of April 5. 1995)
Rule Tvpe
'
103rd Congress
104th Congress
Number Percent
Number
of rules
of rules
Percent
of total
of total
Open/M:odified-open2
46
44%
21
49
47%
8
9
9%
0
0%
TOTALS:
104
100%
29
100%
I
28%
Closed4
I
72%
Modified Closed3
f
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i.
I:
I
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1
This table applies only to rules which provide for the original consideration of bills. joint
resolutions or budget resolutions and which provide for an amendment process. It does not apply
to special rules which only waive points of order against appropriations bills which are already
privileged and are considered under an open amendment process under House rules.
l:l
''.
!
2
An open rule is one under which any Member may offer a gennane ame.ndment under the
five-minute rule. A modified open rule is one under which any Member may offer a gennane
amendment under the five·minute rule subject only to an overall time limit on the ameng.ment
process and/or a requirement that the amendment be pre·printed in the Congressional Record.
3
A modified closed rule is one under which the .Rules Committee limits the amendments
that may be offered only to those amendments designated in the special rule or the Rules
Committee report to accompany it, or which preclude amendments to a particular portion of a
bill, even though the rest of the bill may be completely open to amendment.
4
A closed rule is one under which no amendments may be offered (other than amendments
recommended by the committee in reporting the bill).
.:
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,
15:50
FROM
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SPECIAL RULES REPORTED BY THE RULES COMMITTEE, 104TH CONGRESS
(As of April S, 199S)
H. Res. No~ Ru!e TY.Re
(Date rept.)
_)-..•
ROLL CALL NH-:SF'HPER
..•.
•
I
H. Res. 38
·_.(1/18/95)
0
Bill No.
Subject
Disposition.
of Rule
H.R. 5 --Unfunded Mandate Reform
A: 350-71
(1/19/95)
MC
H. Con. Res. 17- Social Security
H.J. Res. 1 • Balanced Budget Amndt
A: 255-172
(1/25/95)
H. Res. 51
(1/31/95)
0
H.R. 101 - Land Transfer, Taos Pueblo
Indians
A: voice vote
((2/1/95)
'j.
H. Res. 52
(1/31/95)
0
H.R. 400 - Land Exchange, Arctic Nat'l.
Park & Preserve
A: voice vote
(2/1/95)
I
H. Res. 53 ·
(1/31/95)
0
H.R. 440 - Land Conveyance. Butte
County. Calif.
A: voice vote
(2/1/95)
H. Res. 55
0
H.R. 2 - Line Item Veto
A: voice vote
(2/2/95)
H. Res. 60
(2/6/95)
0
H.R. 665 - Victim Restitution
H. Res. 61
0
H. Res. 44
(1/24/95)
(2/1/95)
I
'!
!
I:
A: voice vote
'
(2n/9S)
l,1
l'
H.R. 666 • Exclusionary Rule Reform
(2/6/95)
H. Res. 63
it
A: voice vote
(2n/9s)
MO
H.R. 667 - Violent Criminal Incarceration
(2/8/95)
A: voice vote
(2/9/95)
H. Res. 69
(2/9/95)
0
· H. Res. 79
MO
H.R. 728 • Law Enforcement Block Grants
MO
H.R. 7 • National Security Revitalization
PQ: 229·100;
A:227-127
(2/15/95)
I
lq
I,
I
!'
(
'I
A: voice vote
(2/10/95)
H. Res. 83
I·
..(2/10/95)
H.R. 668 - Criminal Alien Deportation
A: voice vote
(2/10/95)
1:.
1.:
,..
Ii:
~2/13/95)
it:'
'I
I:
H. Res. 88
MC
H.R. 831 · Health Insurance Deductibility
PQ: 230-191
A: 229-188
('1./21/95)
H.R. 830 - Paperwork Reduction Act
A: voice vote
('2/16/95)
H. Res. 91
0
(2/21/95)
H. Res. 92
(2121/95)
(2/22/95)
MC
H.R. 889 - Defense Supplemental
A:282-144
(2/22/95)
1'
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15: 50
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2255373
P.04
3
H. Res. No. Rule Type
Bill No.
Sublect
{Date rept.)
Disposition
of Rule
H. Res. 93
.(2/22/95)
MO
H.R. 450 - Regulatory Transition Act
A: 252-175
(2/~3/95)
H. Res. 96
MO
H.R. 1022 - Risk Assessment
A: 253-165
.(2/34/95)
(2/27/95)
H. Res. 100
(2/27/95)
0
H.R. 926 - Regulatory Refonn & Relief Act
A: voice vote
(2/28/95)
H. Res. 101
~2/28/95)
MO
H.R. 925 - Private Property Protection Act
A: 271-151
H. Res. 104
(3/3/95)
MO
H.R. 988 - Attorney Accountability Act
H. Res. 103
MO
H.R. 1058 - Securities Litigation Refonn
(3/3/95)
H Res. 105
MO
(3/1/95)
A: 257-155
(3n/9S)
(3/6/95)
H. Res. 108
(3/6/9S)
H. Res. 109
Debate
A: voice vote
(3/6/95)
H.R 956 - Product Liability Reform
A: voice vote
(3/8/95)
PQ: 234-191
MC
(3/8/95)
A: 247-181
(3/9/95)
H. Res. 11.S
(3/14/95)
•
H.Res. 116
(3/15/95)
MO
H.R. 1158 - Making Emergency Supp. Approps.
A: 242-190
(3/15/95)
MC
H.J.Res. 73 - Tenn LirnitS Const. AmdmL
A: voice vote
(3/28/95)
H.Res. 117
(3/16/95)
Debate
H.R. 4 - Personal Responsibility Act of 1995
A: voice vote
(3/21/95)
H.Res. 119
MC
~
A: 217-211
(3/22/95)
(3/21/95)
H.Res. 125
(4/3/95)
0
H.R. 1271 - Family Privacy Protection Act
H.Res. 126
(4/3/95)
0
H.R. 660 - Older Persons Housin£ Act
...
A: 423-1
(4/4/95)
l
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4
H. Res. No. Rule Tvpe
Bill No.
Subject
(Date rept.)
H.Res. 128
of Rule
MC
(4/4/95)
H.Res. 130
(4/S/95)
Dispositio!l
H.R. 1215 • Contract With America Tax Relief
Act of 1995
MC
A: 228-204
(4/5/95)
H.R. 483 - Medicare Select Expansion
Codes: 0-open; MO-modified open; MC-modified closed: C-<;losed: A-adoption vote: PQ-previous question vote.
Source: Notices of Action Taken. Committee on Rules. 104th Congress
�'We very specifically made the decision early on
in our Contract with America that we would bring
up all ten bills under open rules."
Speaker-elect Newt Gingrich told reporters
November 11, 1994
Roll Call, February 13, 1995
'Chairman' Solomon Says He Plans to Grant Open
Rules on 75 Percent of Bills Next Year
Roll Call, November 28, 1994
�
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
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The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
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Press package for Roll Call from the House Rules Committee Democrats on "Republican Broken Promises"
Date
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12 April 2001
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Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 07.03 Press Releases, Box 6 Folder 246
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=97CD508C4A7F337052ABBE22F85910A0E44681B1">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
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Documents
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PDF
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English
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United States--Congress
United States --Congress-- House--Committee on Rules
Identifier
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DI-1282
Rules Committee
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'~,,:f" :_:'λ 如何那句(
,1
Ralpb Iocetbé great prod
bis Iste.'t pIoduotioo io “ Out
8i:lO WS" al tbe 晶u宜。 1k Theatr. ,
1 ;;;r";f S~~te Hou帥, W Ii~k of M
血 or~ ioteresHng aod exoiting
" I bas not been witnessed for
呵 I Al1 th. great w Ol'ks of tbe
r~ 1 四 oun 叫 p伽 e witb 山 d
‘
I thrills is pictilred in
Out of
. . " I\ Snows."
回
Bes.ie Love in her best plctilre
n)e May" is dépioied in a11
1 \ ing cbarms.
I Tbe Pathe Weekly , a new
, I Nature'. Wonderl函, aod Charlie I
1 in bis first re.issue ,“Hi s Nigh
I complete tbe big blll. Tbe
I a I) oe is
I
τHEA.:rRE'
The pictur勻的! at the Su t'follr Theis one of lmuch va Í-i ety
“ When
Dawn C即:ne" Rn'q.“Hearts and Masks"
are the two :rjjms~ _A spe叫al comedv of
Chaplin , 5'atrbank~, IÔd ::M:cc~;::~--ia~i~
Dempsey 帥d .J~mes J Corbett~- all in
。 ne
picture. was' a genuine t 'r eat.
Pathe weekly a l1 d a new seenic o!
nature's wonders complete the bill
~tre.
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'Illrosperous financial dond~tion "nd ~dth l'
ñeaiiy its complèment of members
fj
, ;'
SUFF瓦E干豆豆ATRE
I
Ralph Ince offers his latest; Ptoc:I~~~
tion. “ Out of the Snows," at the SufC 1.
fOlk' ~heatre , the co祖ing week. Tne
greaf feat~ of the famous m_ounted 'PQ~ 1:
lfice , wit.h--.its dangers an Ç1 thrills.: is 1:
ihm pietutkd B
IJove in “B叫el
May''-, vil11、 also be s l1o wn. Th<i: Pathe Ü
iwee時…剖開ic of …
swon-l
ders,在 nd Charlie Chaplin in "His Nlght
Out" complete the bill.
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SUFFOLK 宜'HEAT
Ralph Ince , the great pr
ters his latest prod uctlon
-1 the Snows," at the Su宜。Ik theatre. I 呵
1::ar of State House , fo 1' the week'-O'f 1L
ID 1May 9 A more Interestlng ánd 阻= 1t~
悶 1 ?íti!.'g pictu r,e h臼 not been wltnessed 1 叫
I for"\;ome tl吐le. All the greai:-';';;;k; 1 制
l~~ I ot the famoús m:~;;nt;;-d
ic"e:';lth I
r~ 1its dangers and thrills, is pl~tu~ed! 10
..: 1 in ‘ 'Out of the Snows"
-- .._ _- 1 缸
ιI ,,_Bessie _Love in her best Plcture,!即1
叫“Bonnie May ," is deplcted ln '''':iÏhe~ 1 11 動
“ -1 fasc!natìng cha 1'ms.
_ì
The Pathe weekly, a new scenlc ot
Nature's wonders , and Charlle Chap-= I ~n in hls flrst re-issue “ His Night If 1"
I ~)ut;" comple~e the. blg bill. The It.。
_. 1perform間的 is contlnuous from 12 I 叩
381 m. to 10:30 p. m.
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SUFFOLK THEATRE-Bosω且'8 IdeIl\也
pictúre hou駝, juat inthe rear of tbe T
State House; offers 1I 00th主'r spleodid \ ;
"p biìï~f~i;ltfl:e -~t~;s ,?!: t~e ~eek~~f \;
M~y Ì6. -Conway Tellrle in ,Tbe
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"Hammerstein io' Pleasure Seekers
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ll supmme admiration in this 的or可 of
môdern times. J acki e. Coogan in a
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ï;ge tb~ youngest screen st.a~ of t~:
day. Pa伽 Weekly , a 8pecial sce~ic
~fJ Natures Wondérs , complete the
1 star bill wbicb is continuous from
的 I ~~~n 山 10.30 p. m. popular pri帥 i
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1"
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一一一一一一-
SUFFOLK THEAT R. E
'1 COllway Tearle !n “ The Road of I Ambition" and Elaine Hammerstein
in “ Pleasure Seekers" are the leading
attractions at the Suffolk TheatrA
for the current 示reek. Another view
of nature's wonder.s ~明 d the Pathe
'1 bi-weekly complete the'bill
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ii
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
~~:?,,::.re:~ 伽 summ 叮 pol川 ~fl
I populàr prices-15 and 25 cents , I (
r I nìaking the 8u宜。lk the.ater the low - I 、
est 'pr'iced llrst-class mqvtng picture 1,
houBe in B曲ton. '門
1
一一一一丸
!(
s
1
fI
、
"一…士正主半世略:~~.,時f至5旦旦詛咒_:\I_',--'",.:,;0.:'1"..:::::旦~
坦白~一一一一一一
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“
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一一…
�:ZZL品JTZ4日可叫 Jam叫﹒ 1
帥~tì. ~~~~ 叫 news is…~\
aainterestlnlzEcenleof Natures l
W()nde:rff;Complete 伽 prograDl.
有
'‘
rear OI 1:>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~"
、
叫心~. -~'-'亂啦甜插鐘泌蠟喝咖穆她雖鳥~~l'''''''''''''' •
�在
y
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局
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At
)Suffofk
';自
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議;;臨端:!!
話告說:說:毒品;在
此~a}斗imtLj
-區可
、
STAR ALMÒST
、
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‘忌
D15RNE STS.
,-,"→ E可~' &OHTl悶。US 2..10:30
\
1、,"1J!)8TONt~HDEAL ,PICTURE' 'HOUSE"
\
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孟函
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忱
此
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
ι"
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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
LkukfTFa--
ì
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
!
心
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,
, 叫
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J的叫γ~/~/)-/..
/
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 >: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 >
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>''''''' ---可 f
、.
艾
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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
~-~",
.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
/J'C'::Il..
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AU....""
v.
,
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呢
叫
SUFFOLK
心
THEATRE
agem 削 ha s 扣 試 ft
閻 j us t 叭
>>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,
'!
} . \ O'
\
~______
flU哼飢似“
ι而 Lb_ ~
j
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
k
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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
U
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. I completing the final installation ot I ~,
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伽 larg叫 pipe organ in any th臨t叫 :l
也
胸 Hd 旬的 J 油 叫 -m 肘滑 e M b t"
7
, I in New England
I叫
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到
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盯 泌 制
t
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m
爭 I equipment and surely .!he fi ,,:;~!Y
m M 一
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I music ever heard in any Boston prc- p
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抽 E M 打 叫 m
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|theatre patrons on the zeopeni呵。 ti
a 捌 al a m d 油
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r
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,
E
Íl!
It說:24t ♂:;uzlfZoJEH
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
l
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< 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<\,.\.<~,
,.,.,
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 <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<~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< 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
江的
臼
i 川in the 巴Xtr昀 釗lms.
gra m
且
泣 an
口
i
d
\
,
f
,.
'"
The performance is contmuous
£ ro111I2oo to IO3O PLI p with popcents.
ula1' prices of 15 and 25
11
f
、
品
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FFOLK
SUFFOLK
“
r:: u
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re 凹
…
阻
RE
Just in
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
l'
THE ROAD OF AMBI Tl ON 11
PLEASURE SEEKERs
JACKIE COOGAN
LATEST NEWS
NATURE'S WONDERS
﹒
必
PRICES-1Sc.-2Sc.-PRICES
BOSTON'S LEADING PICTURE HOUSE
一
一一
.1'
iI
11
J
• -1
/,
l
J
i
I
叫抖抖~們~,.t./'
于fFU.- I-[L1}.
千古J好!1 L;1
-...>:半ι~-主斗一一:..._
1
0'
SUFFOLK THEATRE
r 仆,~
S~FF.<>LK THEATRE
I
‘恆。砌的 id;;ì - p~ct~~~ --house" I 叫“Boston's 山 al pkture Ih ouse" /
J;ist;~ -rær -,~f-;he ~Î:~t~' h叫峙。 f. I j' {U~t i~ r臼 r of the state ñ'ous~, ~f-I
'~ers ;~~th~r-'spi~~did-bjQr;T'p;~-/
1~~~S_ ~,~oth~r sl'le吋 d hj'lI of p 呵
叫re stars 加 the we~k -';i M~/î6.1
I'tu;:.e_ :_ta.:~ 加 the week of .M ay' 16
\
訕訕:2忠712sUJ泣JC此iliAZ:23:',1說:心?JLEJCL:il
.:: I theme that -J; ;-;-be;; ~;;"'~~~;~;t~ I I theme__ that has been an 'ev~;l;-~t: I
li時 effect on:-~-lI -~h~s~--f;ri~;;~-;t I
I !ng effe.ct on all whose fortune it I
,ps 切 witlless this star prodl叫 io~" I i is .,.;-? .wit;,;ss this star pro_duction
1 _ Elain~ Hã;;'lI;:;~;st~i-;:;ι‘Pleasure l i Elaine hmme削 ein În “ Pleasure '
I Seek帥~" ';ff~-~;--;--~'~h;~le- ~T~~~ I ' S
I usual int er es t
忱 閃討
Charmi ng and
叮1'U叮
戶 叫 " i?teres t.
i usua 1
Charmj'ng and
ιIbeautifull , she wins admi叫 ion-i~
1'~e.a utifull , she wins adrr叫 tion in
this sl' orÝ of mod~-;n ti~~~-"'~"'"
I thi s s.tory_of modem times
J ackie Cóogan , in a special pi• ! l JackIe 心。gan , in a 恥 cial pkI ture shows to ,g ood adva,n 阿 e the l!ture shows to good adV叫
you I est sc閃e n 討 叮 0 f the -day
山
時
凹 s ta r
f I yo;:n~est sc閃閃 star of the day
Pathe weekly , a speω~~e~i~ , I , I___~.a均研冷 ly, a 恥叫1 間nl c '0
of
we
吋
比
i nat ur e'旭 wonders , cômplete t!he b iI l I 、 1 n~tu\e 可 won吐 ers, complete t, e bi I1
仙閃 5
h
! which is continuous f;om -n~';~ iiii 1 1~h_i~c, h_i s _c(:m tin~ous from noon ti 日 1
l1030P M
Popular pmm151.|IO3OP M
Popu伽 pnc 叫 Î51
lMd25cents, prmuljla吋 25cents, prevail
l
“
泊 r
,,
∞ d
d m
..-~于一一-
u
品~\~\tð~ ~ .).', IP. f
ω十~" ~\叭叭恥.~
___'--.戶平
♂
)一…
SUFFOLK 啞EA咽也
~咽,-一一l、
rv-e,.
I sto
, li~t科
Earle Williams , the popular screen I 1
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rt'i;溢ma full ot intense lnterest at the~ wlt:
t弱的Ik theatre , Boston's ideal plcture I ac t.
11ouse, jllst in the rear of the State IJoh
llouse , commencing Monday.
Ithe
、 ~"The popular star has never ":P-[Q山A
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i必test production ,“It Can Be Done." [wee
.~Ìl the live 司 wire news writer of a I gral
ttaily paper he is sh9wn in contact
曾ith the many excitlng Incidents
'-h at befall a big city reporter:
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E .a rle W!ll iams,也e popular scrèen 11
s idol , will be shown in a coined~
drama full of interise interest .at thel'
~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.
I The popular st .a r I:fa s:! never ap九 l
• \ peared to such adv.antage as in his I
lat曲t produciion. As the live-wir哉!
news writer of a daily páper he is
shown In contact with the many ex-I 什
citilÌg Incidents that .b efall a big city L
reporter.
The Pathe Bi-Wee社 ly , .anofher special scenic of nature's wonders, a
i:' I rip-roaiing comedy .and the tοpics of
'" 1 the day will complete the bill. POll-1 可 ι
ular prices of 15 個 d 25 cents lll'e~1 -'
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SUFFOLK THEATRE
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IDEAL - --- --::. ---:::--:
PICTURE HOUSE" _ _. __ __ 1I : 1 Earle Wi Jl iams
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the popula r 'i
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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1 竺~, I comedy drama full of , ntense ;11i
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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 /:
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_-- --:::.. _':-:~::-:'-_- __.-:::- -::--'-. -:--- 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
凹
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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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11 ;
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TOPICS OF THE DA Y
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SUFFOLK THEATR.E
何一
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rl i has a fine opportunity to show h iS.
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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
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e I Earle .Wi l1iams , i'n an exciting love
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a I the! large audience
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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
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-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&
1 p';'Í'formance is C"O ntlnuous from 2
J p. m. to 10:30 p. m.
zi
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~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 ,
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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> 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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。 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
J
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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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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r
一-_一
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h
S'EE WHAT MEN REALLY WANT lN WOMEN
EXTRA-ADDED ATTRACTION_;'EXTRA
THE MIDlA閥 DERS
BESSIELOVE
駕駛
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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&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
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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
pioneer society in the colorful Mis- 1~,
sis口 ppi valley , as the extra added I ë
feature
1
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IB叫
II picture house will consist two big I te
Daw且臼me" 8,ll d Cc
, i "!fearts and l'(asks ,"
!川
0計
‘ I An exclusÎve comedy show且 herel y
j
T ---P-~~--..&_"""-~-"")-~~一:x:>.-r.:::-Uõ
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IF'
Commenci時 Monday , May 2, t-he I 73
,,! I picture program at Boston's ideall16
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in
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<'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&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
叩
叩
1叩
S ome of the mos t
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
�"椒、空嗯?→-一
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
d。
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 ,
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9
15
。
匈
2壘。
201
1205
78
30
69
925
650
30
45
38
42
11
14
12
60
iJU
125
3
40
等 To
be subtracted
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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<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.....
1
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19
131
125
26
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36
28
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20
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171
190
64
18
15
34
50
16
45
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195
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49
67
32
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
223
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30
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32
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156
132
18
92
5
14
197
470
4
143
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80
24
21
16
82
45
23
151
41
58
40
16
8
9
101
62
是3
25
20
19
230
166
161
358
24生
167
315
172
100
73
660
33
18
11
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69
45
20
9
25
99
New school c1asses not yet c()m]J iete.
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1 0'6
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s
67
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Washington College of Law, Washing-
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171
44
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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<:hool , Chicago,
61
56
101
45
24
70
75
42
50
19
131
125
26
21
17
64
36
28
。
20
*10
20
。
18
是5
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
,
時也C鳥
Ka且....
'"
. . . . . . . ...._
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
T
69
45
20
9
25
-.31.恥
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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6
46
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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104
145
106
56
274
10
71
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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
14Ft
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
_]!<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....
L
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55
J
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261
215
232
123
90
109
132
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1019
519
255
4
3
419
347
t205
87
96
272
278
54
51
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40
30
171
13
41
98
27
Q
u
η
J
8
40
H
246
HOO--A
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n AVnwuna-
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8
4
31
27
142
9生
6生
64
55
29
212
24
20
17
13
7是
65
66
68
72
62
52
32
299
135
592
102
55
100
60
2
W
u
r
u
u
201
186
"
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4
n
可
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n
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4
a
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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
T
745
142生
25
20
37
75
160
1:!
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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 >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...
J\f orning Divisiοn. .
Uni\'ersity of Washi且gto且 Law School,
Seattle, Wush..
1
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61
14
23
2
生
79
49
17
哇5
237
40
153
30
123
195
112
70
77
61
58
195
123
67
42
232
28
10
38
30
35
32
125
75
55
255
45
37
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53
20
78
13
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117
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63
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45
201
26
9
99
57
65
58
11
5
139
38
22
15
8
83
40
19
22
23
18
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54
167
22
115
513
29
406
122
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52
251
238
30
10
260
118
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81
5
55
178
9白
50
40
113
43
123
113
62 •
293
58
102
73
233
40
20
50
44
12
13生
8
46
51
18
25
- 25
not yet complete.
58
20
201
壘。
140
53
38
149
�The American Law School Review
32
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61
14
23
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79
49
17
45
237
40
153
30
123
195
112
70
77
61
58
198
123
67
42
232
28
10
38
30
35
32
125
75
55
255
45
37
38
120
18
20
53
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13
120
117
78
43
95
63
62
5生
97
31
59
45
118
201
26
9
22
57
65
58
11
5
139
38
22
15
8
83
40
19
22
23
18
9
167
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115
513
406
29
122
25
1
52
251
238
30
10
33
260
81
5
55
178
50
40
43
25
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62
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58
102
73
233
40
20
50
8
44
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12
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46
25
51
18
58
53
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........... .
N ew school
們
門S
呵Q
肉
J呵V
.
心
113
Ten且..
l'lliversity of Texas T."w SChool , Aus~
ti口, 1'ex....
l'l1iyelsJ -y of Vil' ginia La、11 School,
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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''''
School, Nafth-
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90
20
201
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149
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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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Northwestern COllege of Law, :\linneap
University of l\Ii nllesota Law SCho01,
'Minneapolis, Min且......... •••• •••
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. .
a
Columbia University School of L, w ,
New Yorlr City...
Fordham University 8chool of Law,
Xew YO l'lr City
New York La w Schο01, Ne押 YOl'k City.
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.......... ..
日
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272
278
131
131
87
5生
96
51
3生
40
41
30
27
2日是
45
171
13
41
90
9
27
42
31
27
120
142
94
64
64
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20
65
66
68
72
62
52
32
299
135
592
102
55
27
156
91
299
71
25
18
108
76
210
50
23
243
207
171
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444
423
193
257
108
617
467
315
91
70
51
212
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111
11
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25
23
6
6
17
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60
20
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525
42
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100
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416
55
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212
17
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302
1128
223
105
23
651
14
1242
745
2
17
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25
20
37
75
160
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�SUFF~~~
REAR 0 1'" STATE HOUSE
T'emple and Derne Streets
、
LARGEST THEATRE ORGAN IN NEW ENGLAND
ProgramW種 Monday
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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
一一-~....,;,先發鯽妒一
一一一一一一一一
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-一一一一
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.
一一
一一
一一
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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
是
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.
.
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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& 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.
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After papers are marked students
will be furnished with correct answers
to all questions 、叫 lïîese should be
kept for review purposes‘
This,>,sheet J!rlI.ou ld- b少叫preserw告岳的
reførflnce._ J
一、F
GLEA;rú骨氣aλRCHER,
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September 2民 1922.
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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.
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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.
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FRESHMAN ABSTRACTS
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FEBRUARY BULLETIN
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Second Semester Prohlems and QuÎzzes
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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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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
叩
R s XO 叩
m d
叫 恤
開
甜 m
e W
內
< 而
m >
叫J
部
的 山間 巾 M A
N
叩 叮 $
唔 an f-M
E
T
抽 I
M m
札
恥 叫
叫 M
叫
“
Fro.t Scholarship
is as
ι
3
弱
1
切
11
11
11
11
11
幼
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-
的
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 ,
u
11
The Bradley Prize awarded for the
híghest general average in Contracts for
必
4
7
11
紛
4
7
e
11
11
紛
7
8
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-
11
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-
I!
age of 92 per cent
11
11
of 87 9-10 per cent.
巨
EIi s nea酬志叫川 阿例
eωompe t itor was Sh肘
“甜
e討
Thoru p of 恥仰叫 咐 , 咱o 血叫 叫咖古拋 i n“州 n
叫
叩
l
R slinda I e
切
aint 叫血 a
tai
旭 叩
'..>
;;, 3-10
average for the yθar of_T7 "_10 per cent.
n a . non i-
R 伽 rb川叫
吋 叮
叮τT
Ba mford
岫
11
1I
11
higβh帥 g e nera I ave呵e in C恤耐ution al
抖叫
阻
叫
閻叫
叫
Law , was won by John W. MacLeod of
of Ip 蚓
到
岫 nH.
Ea叫r. 叫
,川川,
of
f
恥枷 l 叫
叫
s
f叫h with an average of 86 1-5 per c叫,
Albert T. Doyle of Cambridge ranked
fifth with an average of 85 per cent.
1
|lBa血 ford of Ip師
1I
average of 901-2 P肘 cent.
11
JULY 10, 1923
...
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I 一一
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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
皂,一
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-
.&
d
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,
d
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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Decem ber Quiz
Wednesday Evening
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Sophomore and Senior Classes
October Quiz
Wednesday Evening
November Quiz
嗎ì ednesday Evening
December Quiz
Wednesday Evening
October
2 <1~/
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-
/,\
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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S T A N D A RD S
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&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 ,&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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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
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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
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!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.
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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
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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.
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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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FGbruary 工,工 924.
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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>1' ector
、
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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
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α ye αγ
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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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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←一一一
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LAW SCHOOL
SUFFOL豆豆
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APRIL (1 924) BULLEτIN
C A N CULIAEUnvnpNW叮
EN TR
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L
BASE
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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;> Je~ lalged by
叫
,
ri
司!即
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<? _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
:0-/,\、
fOllnded
~
h
@可
(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!
:\cw l1 cc1 forcl
h
'-'
J
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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<
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
a
、3
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.
-一月,昆主
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R
xt books
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
。
、
、、、
、、
'"
Annex
、 1
、
互
�J
IDl1 1' Æaht 1ß uil Ìltng
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
J
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.
Wqr í\ ltltrX
lll!J
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
\
、
9
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….
干 γ 悶悶7"'~i' 叭,如何恥
一啊i"""'"們
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m tratton
l'Ìl
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
OO
SELECTION-吐3 (lhemian
Girl"
FnvR Td Tf Ta -d1r T-u
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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
l\I EDLEY
A'Iusic by J-I ozry
L
Qu 日1' 1 州 e
of Bnst ,
d
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11lrðiratfult
..\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
拘押于勾?叩 迫 仿n的tOωone
句
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of 站 ín 趴削111
l\[a n
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?ca!"n C< ltllhlghAugust4, 19JO
TRIo-Violin , 'Ce l1 o and Piano
(a) “ Serena心 ..
(b) “ R o s a T 1 . : - I V i d o 1,
Nez'in
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
]l,lusir
b.\, H i'IlI'\' Quartctt l' of Roston
、\
9
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ANNEX , SEATS
408
TIIREE OTHER HALLS OF SIMILAR CAPACITY IN ANNEX
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1924
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一一一一
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也l1mmruumrùt
'rogram
At 2 o'clock in the Afternoon
&
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
FL p?J析
hU
nu
n
trn
,
;1
一一
Del但bre
Congressman Peter F. Tagae
Albert Gerard Tierney
John Hancock Eaton, Jr
Gleason L. Archer
School
Thomas A.
Edmund F. Richards
Lt. Co1. Alfred
Lιw
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C!ranàt?l nlrn fnr
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
t4r Ilrgm
nf ij1!j. i&.
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
'‘
44
.
一←一一一-一一
一一.~-~‘羊毛A峙平心一一一
一一
]
一~揖4且~一也ι}ι~ 咽通過也一中
�Il'A
盟國讀罷吾
心
丸品
一、、
GLEASON
FOUNDEO IN 1906
StateHouse
ARCHER.
L L. B.
Dean
Largest Evening Law School
in the World
Opp~.ite~
個,l' wing
L.
~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...
、、
屯,乎是\
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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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 &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 >: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 ,
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EZTRACT FR ClM 1924‘, 1925 CATALOCUE
(Page 30)
糕!
還
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" <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:> 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
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Done
Remarks:
G:臼AS ON
L. ARC :IfßR
'DEJ四.
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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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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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.
'
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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
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吋
d i vi ions
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趴吋
b u t the m a jol'l泊 y of those 1' egis te in
旭叫 叮 t
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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
-
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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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
$5.00 per subj e 此, due witÌl .first
exωfor\one semester
quar 七 erts 七 uition for
is
七 hat semes 七 er.
•
The charge for repeatingasubJec 七 whi1e carrying on the
Ineguj..月 W前k is 站ïo pe~-suQject payable with the first
p a.ymen七 of 七 ui 七 ion for that semester.
、.\'
Fu ll charge for repeating thc ycar.
壘,
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GLA/心肝、,1 -_.....
DEAl{.
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��siHarvaMHoids
Passage of Bar Exams
IIPercentage Smaller Than Usual-Suffolk Next,
叫 I
Northeastern Third, B. U. Fourth-Only 343
心I I
Successful Out of 748
i
11)'
The Ii$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 •
I 臼削 l 宮叫伽枷帥…叫
圳
M
吋
II
吟
叫
mi
叫1n11|
∞
c OMPLETE LI
KE |held
E
July 2contained
some 伽 i
The
叩 of
all who
pa幅“枷咐:
DS!"-ISES 叫阿…川EiG是內心:一旦心;t給
~ lït, on11 343 llassed.
I C~11~id~t.;s ~~iíi. p~~;;;t 伽mselv閉 for
:- I
^
^ o n. t", I ~ a. n
I admission to the bar ín the supreme
:;-The \
HARVARD lN .L~AD. ,
1; u吋:吋 c
肛吋 dω
川
M
扣 仙i<沁岫
LJ
附
we d 崎 I
吋
0 '\1
c
Harva rd , as usual 旭
肘 缸
抑
1 ed 怯 li s t ,
t he 間
剖
;立芯芯吋!古芯叫比;立;立心:f?立 ;
£
z£;i;
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1:
Cc
bu t
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m
肘 叫 ! 閻叫叫 errγ wa s 佔叫ird and Bo s t叩 Uni ve 2 但 I ;:;~祖凹叫
肘 m 帥
St 口
甘 了1
掛喇
前
廿凹
卜
盯
a r l閃 H Inne
叫
I ~剖
句 was fouγth.
1
盯伽
h仙 a vera宮e of his 扭r s t 叫悅 叭 巨e i
盯 凹
間 a temp t
耽
叫
泊
nb叫叫IO'~恥ar d 間削1 吋
叫 s e凶 u p73m叩. of 吶 釗叫I g叫u叫色紅 rrom
吋 凹叩
11t
w hon1
泊 t 缸
叫
λ::i 帥sed Suff耐 recomm叫ed 196 m側, 1 圳的1 Jast June At the law 叫叫 he I
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
1
缸
a 吋;~ Ice nta直e 伽11 恥州m咖 n , 吶 恤帥酬
n
盯
口 N
w hi
ntl 恥叫d B Be nnîson of 伽 B。
凹
伽 11lp 咐 m帆。f whom 82 passed. B除 1 1'1 盯枷啊。ne of several new恥per
芯
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<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&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
叫
缸
pa 白 ed the exa zr削
叩
哎
Un ive1's lty 旭 w school he Was an honor
剖 盯 副
1 a、
student He 抬怨 now a can(1 ldat e 臼。T
1
挂出
封
岫 f
the 110 minat lon of Representatlve from
叫
叫
~、h a圖
Dorchester.
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.
.- --,
'1
<
L!ST OF CANOIOATES
The !ist of successful candldates is
as follows:
i…
,
K帥 D J H
Abrams. S wA 、
Kaut血an.
_. Keatit睹. E V
Aiseúberr
- _, - -"'v.-部里直JJy, F C
Adelberg,、 J\'~"___
An~o吋
哼哼1、'I' LR
、、、、、
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-
111
�之『
�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 &
Conflict of Laws
Contracts, Wills &
Probate
BilI s & Notes, Plead.
ing & Practice
Criminal Law. SaJes
Real Property &
Corporations
September 1924
x
i
。
v卅
M五
#
,
L包U
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i
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呵,
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-
、.
._
�OCTOBER (192 4:) BULLETIN
2
‘
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
“ Bar
L
'
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
、
�3
OCTOBER (1924) BULLETIN
/
'"
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<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.
“
,
"
,
.
、
色、、
ATTENTION , FRESHMEN!!
The attention of the Fresliman
<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>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
,
“
(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
&
均?
December 10
FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATIONS for ALL CLASSES
January 14th - Wednesday
T orts, Evidence
Equity; Carriers &
January 19th - Monday
Conflict of Laws
January 20th- Tuesday
Contracts, Wills &
Probate
January 21st- Wednesday
Bills & Notes, Pleading & Practice
Criminal Law - Sales
January 22nd- Thursday
Real Property &
January 23rd- Friday
Corporations
October 1924
�了
一;叫已叮叮嗚
司 fγ-
4
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吼一一~
A good. cl白白 nèvv.gpaper -w ith the: Iá.:rgestγhomell
deliver<三 d circulation in New England~
一﹒"
j
Wise 1\查an Says
Them Shoot"
l'
LFWez
That's the Best
p,耳rt
She'更
~~Let
of the Fun and It's Soon Over
,
d
已
全
心
"
告辭
位
懿
默
?
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.
Jnøtea.d
O~
ANY 且也w-ho
belongs
.a.n: appol
'WO n.t ttl8.k.e
a. g1rl unless ehe giveø h
AND 曲曲扭曲已曲。'w'
hø r.tur n.s her m.one
ONE
晶晶﹒岫""'".馳
。n a. oorn-e r
ø且 nigl
up a. bUl o 'L e1 ghteen f"
l
HE 帥ood 由,ere
l………
(一… ωitREA……Tbe …atll
i.. a target for ..land…叫
Sliòging.
Lueky if' he lives through it.
øo long
s1 d ev,
holes ln the
J
John Brown wanted to f'ree the slaves, a.nd 血的帥。也ed
.. g'ood idea. _They h !,:nged h也
Glo:'=dano Bruño, discovering: great truths ahead 01 _o thers,
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.
Ga.lil.èo. sough:色 to f'ree 油e world fro= ignorance. He
.nnouuoed that- the world was round, that _it revolved on
H l!l
h a.d 扭曲a.ve t: hr
fore she show- ed up
'T'HE
10 1'1 駒r a girl keept
ln.!!害. the rougher bea
put 'Y- P 'W1t"h.
|“You
S
By D
。則“F
�遠處&
M E E
叫
苦
目
詰
叫
恥
訕
......ea.d
A NY
m
Z
U
…
訕
d
亡
閉
T
泣
的
~
"W"ho belonga
won.t Jn.ake a且a.Pþol
unlesø ehe g1v e'fJ. h
:rna.n
a. g1rl
AND 曲曲扭 sh.. 且叩Z
he :re t.urns h&r mone
ôN El晶晶。 kept: & !te
。n ø. oorn-er Ð且n.1g1
up a blll 0 1: e1ghtee n. c,
H El戲曲d 世ere
1011g
øo
holes ln the
11
This is hoW" it REALLY is usually.
The
xnaft
th a.t
1
iL 的個即如前,hers ia …ω…叫…叫﹒|
I .1iri.ging. Lucky if he lives through it.
I
John Brown want-ed. 1;0 free t-he s la.ves , a.nd t-h a.t- seemed
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,
也,nnounced tha七 the world w耳s round, ths品 it re申olved on
itsaxi毀,抽血且g around the su且
He upset t-he 酷upid ideas
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
the ea的b he is s a.id. 1;o h品有,e deèlared u且der
.she. %n串串'ßs.."γ
血. ~ood
a.
èarth SU
HEl
s生 de'執
扭曲a.Vß thr
s b.o show-ed up
h....
fσre
THE lo~ger a
g~rl k~ep:
lng. the rougher bea
put up 'Wit h..
I"YouS
By]
ON
..,
AS口E哩主1lS'1"ICATElD
Posseaøes authen世o !k
Of th<eo W'O'再LD 阻a
of' the :M::mN a.n.ð
rr.
IN
ø..nd
l3ecause s: be k曲。w;過 H罔
To AlO亮PLY her know~
可)\70]\在這益N
She 量ð both 且I去MJ:REl
Bought
A:B可:'E思主.
A 邱歹Pl'n'!l理:pcA.~D
May
kno~
GO吃用:>
s.'
~
a.nd
:r
.S()司
she
,<玄R
yran'&, a.n位
讀.nd, wh() lloped to live' i且 honor among a. ne甘
people, .a祖.d died,重nstead, under tJ阻 g祖犯lotfue blade
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
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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 <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~ !}!> 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
<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& 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<!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 .~>U! ~udg_ment could properly
be applied in ihe training -of _meñ
who _m_ust w_ork f<!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__!>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 <'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 & 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
Tota l......... ...... $66.75
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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.
“
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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?想轉研F于一
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> 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
:g
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"
5
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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
」
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
/
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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�一
Jα鈍uary
1925
Bαr
Examination
Total Graduate and Under-Graduate
SUFFOLK
35 passed (52
NORTHEASTERN
9
“
(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.
司各
4MNP
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."
“
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.
c'
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.
•
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 & Scotch 16 'h %
ItaIian
6%
F 1'ench
3% %
Dutch & 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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�紹昌草草 S豆豆單單牆邊益孟晶惡峰謹
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
如ooessf'u 1 Bø斜 on University 耳聞. • • • \) • • • • • • • • 的
峙>p 11oants
Successful
from Northeastern (&11
Northe倒 tern 萬en
甜
2/3:頁)
(悅的/悶的
(45
45/49;頁)
branc胸前 ..109
時
• .的{紛紛1/109頁)
學趙堯.Ql.趟車豆品錯萃
~p1ioants
Suooessful
from
5U即缸瓦,
25... • • • • .106
72
SUFF位革,站. • • • • • • • • • • ••
(帥的y'5 糾
紛p l1 oa.nts from Boston Universi ty '25.. 138
Suooessful Bonston University '25...... 77 (55
APplioants
Successfu1
.August
from 恥的he細tern (Bo ston)...50
Northe細詢問
.23 (4~俏
21 , 1925.
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�GLEASON 1. ARCHER , LL. B.
多t4nnl
Dean
Telephone H.lI market 0836
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find that you haγe
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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<!_nl
6.00 P. M.; 7.35P.M.
Tuition $100 per year
in four $25 inatalments
ju1fulk 1JlU1U
18.24
j學tquul
DERNE STREET,
D.an
Bo
Telephone Ha:vmarket 0836
運會
OFFICE OF THE DEAN
c 工a8S
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"t'會
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
belovi:
七 he
;』
The balance of your v!ri 七七 en work 工 or 七 he
year wi1~ be he1斗三 n t11e 0 工 fi ♀ e until this account
ìs cleared U). You are entitle 斗七 o l-eceiγe no in工 ormation concerning your standing lηthe 8c11001.
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
who customarj.1:y de 2.<:斗泣丸氾 paying 七 2lei 工苟 〈包 Uε立 七 er 工 y pay 咀
y
乙 r 1 ar
血 ent 己 tOWG. r益吐
立工 ds the close of 8c11001 ar1d 七 11u 芯 finis11
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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
•
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>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 & 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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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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SEPTEMBER (1925) BULLETIN
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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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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 &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'.
�~,.
司I
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 & 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 & 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 <!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 & 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<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.
•
I
F
l
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.
f、
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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但--
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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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起孟晶且恥于工午一一
..
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.
了一一凡
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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
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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 &
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)
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Total
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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
~TOTICE
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> 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&. Vi:18;1 正且乏, 。工 &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
'<;~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
&
。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.
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叫:叫為峙叫恥地
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斗目-品品已這
一、
�學:想轉'"
e
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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&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
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1 should be g1ad of suggestion8
critícisms of this plan 1rom any member
~ ,~\
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、
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&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-:</'}?
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.
司,
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-
~
喝
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.
\
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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�司\、
多
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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MARCH (1926) BULLETIN
Boston Univeraity Law
Total applicants
in second list
81
Passed, second list 3<; = 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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a
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<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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BAR EXAM
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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SUFFOLK
L A V!
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.
Sep七 ember 工,工 926.
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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 %
=
=
=
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<;>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.
.di泣si=.s..
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
11
11
說iZIZ1322tZE:cf;Zg鳴;ET;;
11
11
11
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
3
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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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4
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<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.
H一、通費
�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
、
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
、
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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TEST DATES
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Thursday, February 17th
Thursday, March
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Thursday, Ap 1' il
14th
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FRESHMAN CLASS
Thursday, Feb1'uary 24th
Thursday, March
24th
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
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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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�Class Day
and
COIDm.encelDent
Suffolk
Exercises
Lα w
School
Tremont Temple
Boston, Massachusetts
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<;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<;也
Harry Sesnovich of Dorchester 86 <;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 %
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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 <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;>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& 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 •
/
�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
you
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
\
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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<!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
甸、'‘司~l&""}考前向叮咚..",......."﹒哼一-----
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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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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
$87 .4 0
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�MID-YEAR ENTERING CLASS
2
BOOKS NEEDED FOR SECOND
SEMESTER
Archer on Torts ..............................$
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.
\
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.
、 J車
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,.....….….….“...................…"
/
3
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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DECEMBER (1927) BULLETIN
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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SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
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<}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 ]:>. 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.
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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 & Trusts
Torts
Deeds , M. & E.
Landlord & 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
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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.
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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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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
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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
. .. ..
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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
<:)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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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
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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.
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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<?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
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
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Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-1390
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Law School Bulletin clippings scrapbook
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1921-1928
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUA-012.001 University Administration: Public Affairs, Communications and Marketing, Public Affairs: News clippings and scrapbooks
Description
An account of the resource
Title on cover: "Clippings--Suffolk 1921 (April-June), Law School Bulletin 1922-1928." The scrapbook includes clippings about: Suffolk Theatre ("Women Men Love," and others), Fall 1922 Law School registration figures, Suffolk Law School Bulletins (September 1922-September 1928, not inclusive), March 1924 Dedication of Annex and Tenth Anniversary of Signing of School Charter ceremony program, Commencement 1924, 1927 ceremony programs, Gleason Archer correspondence, manuscript pages, 1924-1925 Catalogue extract, June 1925 Bar Exam results, and Bar Exam Bills for 1926 and 1927.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Mixed Material
Albums
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--Law School
Scrapbooks
Clippings
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Scrapbooks
-
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556c86a487498edfadde96a9cb8e23ed
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-0314
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University President Daniel H. Perlman (1980-1989) and David Reisman at the College of Liberal Arts (CLAS) 50th Anniversary Convocation
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
24 September 1984
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Series SUJ-004.001 Special Materials: Photographs: Campus Events and Student Activities
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7013445
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Anniversaries
Suffolk University--College of Arts and Sciences
Perlman, Daniel H., 1934-1994
College presidents
Events
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Events
Suffolk Presidents
Suffolk University
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/dafc173daea05bbaf6e879bd479e9168.jpg?Expires=1712793600&Signature=M8ePmag-KksuQhuM8b5mBsNsXr8vk332JHaC0MIt2cPiUQNOMN83m-hhpnuUt0GIpeOzzwkoptU6zDaFksG0dc8lX2jOxGhM1nQXFi4oGFOG5MI86v6lEUbQBP3-Sbnf2vaC-jYLmkMegyXFWnzH3TMi%7En8Q6wRYuoXB--WGpKtFeRjAewQCG4m4UKwwG0MZdhJ%7Eqop1GKPX4SeS9jbbIg7TkqPeGqKFy%7ETlKgl-jh7ZxMN7wTa94zIRjBNeIl3qe7W4-EqKnyKJTcnxwreI1gc%7ENUOj-bDdAgp6-O3aUKXcG5ZC5hUnnkt7PJ-3WJCpfS9rLB4LhnSOyydD%7EHMAkA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
78a2de163a4cae14ef4119ab3a7e3756
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-0225
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Professor Malcom Barach and President Fulham receiving plaque at the dedication of the new newsroom funded by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
undated
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Series SUJ-004.001 Special Materials: Photographs: Campus Events and Student Activities
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Events
Fulham, Thomas A.
Barach, Malcolm J.
Universities and colleges--Faculty
College presidents
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Events
Faculty
Suffolk Presidents
Suffolk University
-
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1ce9fa74bdacb575b3f56e96c7882b59
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-0222
Title
A name given to the resource
Attendees at Suffolk University's 90th Anniversary event
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1996
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Series SUJ-004.001 Special Materials: Photographs: Campus Events and Student Activities
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Description
An account of the resource
Pictured: Diane Modica, Vice President Marguerite J. Dennis, Dorothy "Dottie Mac" McNamara, alumna Rosalie Warren
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7013445
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Anniversaries
McNamara, Dorothy "Dottie Mac"
Warren, Rosalie L.
Dennis, Marguerite J., 1946-
College administrators
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Administrators
Alumni
Events
Suffolk University
-
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d340904b2e98d277f18a03e11d9e29d1
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-0214
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Dean John Brennan (SBS) and unidentified man, sitting behind table with pens poised
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
undated
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Series SUJ-004.05 Special Materials: Photographs: People-Administration & Faculty
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--School of Management
Events
Brennan, John F.
College Administrators
Universities and colleges--Faculty
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Administrators
Events
Faculty
Sawyer Business School
-
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5b05050ff7648551fb64c00986a8acf6
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
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Identifier
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SU-0211
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Professor Joel Corman (SBS) explains the C.O.R.M.A.N. Model for success
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
undated
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Series SUJ-004.05 Special Materials: Photographs: People-Administration & Faculty, Box 4
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7013445
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--School of Management
Universities and colleges--Faculty
Classrooms
Corman, Joel
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Classrooms
Faculty
Sawyer Business School
Suffolk Campus
-
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e8642a1351985a54e70625e22c17d752
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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SU-0208
Title
A name given to the resource
Group photograph at Suffolk University's Sawyer School of Management dedication ceremony
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1995
Description
An account of the resource
Pictured: (L-R) Dean John Brennan, Carol Sawyer Parks, Mayor Thomas Menino, James Linnehan, President David J. Sargent
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Photographs
Format
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JPG
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7013445
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--School of Management
Building dedications
Sawyer, Frank
Educational facilities
College buildings
Sawyer, Carol Parks
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Events
Sawyer Business School
Suffolk Campus
-
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242e7317e8126819d195387ec48dcf71
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
1914 Charter establishing Suffolk University Law School
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1914
Description
An account of the resource
Signed by the Speaker of State House of Representatives, President of State Senate, and Governor of Massachusetts (includes a Certificate certifying the charter to be a "True Copy" with the seal of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts)
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Series SUA-015.001, OS
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--Law School
Certificates
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-0111
Suffolk Law School
Suffolk University Firsts
-
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e6507667a1cd32553064f617b41627ea
PDF Text
Text
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DI-0754
Title
A name given to the resource
Memorandum to House Foreign Policy Aid from Bill Spencer, Cindy Buhl, and Ann Burtwell regarding commentaries on the Jesuit trial in El Salvador and potentially ending U.S. aid to El Salvador. Also includes newspaper clippings from The Boston Globe, "U.S. should not subsidize Salvadoran murders" ; America, "Milestones in El Salvador" ; and America, "The El Salvador trial in the Jesuit case," 10/8/1991, 10/12/1991, 10/19/1991, 10/21/1991
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
October 1991
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 03.04 Legislative Assistants' Files: James P. McGovern, Box 19 Folder 308
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7005441
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
United States--Foreign Relations--El Salvador
Jesuits--El Salvador
Assassination--Investigation--El Salvador
El Salvador--Armed Forces
Trials--El Salvador
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100.pdf">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
El Salvador
Military aid
-
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ddf94fc089329d0747d6e27dd77922ae
PDF Text
Text
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Description
An account of the resource
The Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers document Joe Moakley’s early life, his World War II service, his terms served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Senate, and his service in the United States Congress. The majority of the collection covers Moakley’s congressional career from 1973 until 2001. <br /><br />Use the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/academics/libraries/moakley-archive/moakley-papers/ms100_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=B12D6C6C7164568D0537E426483AB65CC5DFF80D" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> for a summary of the entire collection, including non-digitized materials. <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100_findingaid.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"></a>
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
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Identifier
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DI-0079
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper advertisement promoting the Law Offices of John Joseph Moakley and Daniel Healey in South Boston, Mass.(left and right pieces)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
21 June 1962
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Congressman John Joseph Moakley Papers, 1926-2001 (MS100)
Series 11.04 Non-congressional Papers: Special Materials, Box OS 4 Folder 18
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Clippings
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
JPG
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
tgn:7015007
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Moakley, John Joseph, 1927-2001
Advertisements
South Boston (Boston, Mass.)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright South Boston (MA) Tribune. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the John Joseph Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/MoakleyArchive/ms100.pdf">finding aid to the John Joseph Moakley Papers</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Joe Moakley
-
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d7651d1046acc5c5e4c55e295a32b301
PDF Text
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 ·\...
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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&r<.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>.. 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
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--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
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X no. 7 -May 4, 198T_"""_._________ _
Consequences· of academic revi·ew - report'4>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.
~.,,..--:--=>'>'';.,
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<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 ~<?°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
\.
oy
t,:.
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;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>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
>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 & 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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·.-...
.
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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&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!'.>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'
\·,
-~ -~---- --- .·-··1.-··------··'"··
-----·-·"·
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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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.
. .
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]>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
--
-;-.
- _----
...-
-
..
.
Moi~lli
-(
et
-.
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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
~_.:_--"---'-~------~------·---·------1, ---· ---·- -----..
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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.:..!-<)-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>--"no:-;-3 Dec . 1 9 8 4
:rr
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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
..>
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<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
.
----·-·,--·
8
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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=-=--------------------------··
.
, r
_ ..:...,-- -~ a.
_
·
_ •.
-~--
_
--
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>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<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"<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>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_-~<!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
C
..
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--
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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
Y
..L
LLV •
C"
-
...
.... -
.t"""' •
--11:
,·n,1
,..
..., t
-
. - _
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
-
-
,. .,..,:
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_.
-u-
" •
0
11
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�- ~ - - - - ~ - - - ~ _ -.. _ - . ·----· ··-:-c -----
'
.
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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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Index to issues of Suffolk University Law School's student newspaper Dicta
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1970-1985
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUH-001.002 Student Newspapers: Dicta, Box 1
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Periodicals
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University--Law School
Student newspapers and periodicals
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-1831
Suffolk Law School
Suffolk Publications
-
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3c98ec36f4f4786cd4eaf6956b46dbae
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Dublin Core
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Identifier
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SU-1823
Title
A name given to the resource
Portrait of Suffolk University Professor Rick Beinecke
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1990-1999
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUJ-004.05 Special Materials: Photographs: People-Administration & Faculty, Box 7
Type
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Still image
Photographs
JPG
Coverage
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tgn:7013445
Subject
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Universities and colleges--Faculty
Suffolk University--School of Management
Suffolk University
Rights
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Copyright is retained by the creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.</p>
Sawyer Business School