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8-31-1959 Law School Announcements 1959-1960 Law School Announcements Editors [email protected]

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FOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER

Announcements

The Law School

FOR SESSIONS OF 1959 • 1960 TABLE OF CONTENTS

OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION .

OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION .

I. LoCATION, HISTORY, AND ORGANIZATION 3 II. GENERAL STATEMENT 4

III. ADMTSSTON OF STUDENTS ...... 4

Admission of Students to the Undergraduate (J.D.) Program . 4 Admission of Students to the Graduate (LL.M.) (l.S.D.) Program 5

Admission of Students to the Certificate Program...... 5 Admission of Students to the Graduate Comparative Law and Foreign Law

Programs . 5

IV. REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREES 5 The Undergraduate Program 5 The Graduate Program 6

The Certificate Program . . . . . 6 The Graduate Comparative Law Program (; The Foreign Law Program 7 V. EXAMINATIONS, GRADING, AND RULES 7

VI. COURSES OF TNSTRUCTTON . 8

First-Year Courses. . . . . 8 Second- and Third-Year Courses. 8

Seminars...... 11 Courses for the Summer Session, 1959 13 Courses for the Summer Session, 1960 13

VII. SCHEDULE OF COURSES BY QUARTERS, 1959-60 14

VITI. PROFESSORSHIPS AND TEACHING FELLOWSHIPS 15

IX. GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS AND RESEARCH AND SPECIAL FUNDS 15

X. PROGRAM OF RESEARCH IN LAW AND THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES 16 XI. THE COMPARATIVE LAW RESEARCH CENTER 16

XII. THE LAW REVISION PROGRAM . 16

XlII. THE LAW-EcONOMICS PROGRAM 16

XIV. STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS AND LOANS 17

XV. CONFERENCES, MEETINGS, AND LECTURES 19

XVI. STUDENT ACTIVITIES AND HONORS 20 22 XVII. PLACEMENT .

XVIII. BUILDINGS AND LIBRARY XIX. THE LAW SCHOOL RESIDENCE 23 XX. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE. 24 25 XXI. THE CHAPEL .

XXII. PHYSICAL EDUCATION . 25

XXIII. THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE 26

XXIV. SUGGESTIONS FOR PRE-LEGAL STUDY 27

XXV. FEES AND OTHER INFORMATION • 27

XXVI. STUDENTS IN RESIDENCE, 1958-59 . • 28

XXVII. THE VISITING COMMITTEE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW SCHOOL. • 35 XXVIII. THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW SCHOOL 36 XXIX. COUNCIL OF PAST PRESIDENTS, THE LAW SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 36

XXX. PUBLICATIONS OF THE FACULTY, 1958-59 • 36

James Parker Hall, Dean oj the Law School, 1904-28. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) Harry A. Bigelow, Dean oj the Law School, 1929-40; Professor oj Law, 1904-49. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) Ernst Freund, Projessor of Law, 1894-1932. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) R. Floyd Mechem, Professor oj Law, 1903-29. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) Edward W. Hinton, Professor of Law, 1913-34. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) G. in George Bogert, James Parker Hall Professor Emeritus of Law. (From a portrait the Law Library.) Kenneth C. Sears, Professor Emeritus of Law. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) Law Ernst Wilfred Puttkammer, Projessor Emeritus oj Law. (From a portrait in the Library.) John P. Wilson. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) Weymouth Kirkland. (From a portrait in the Law Library.) John D. Rockefeller, Founder oj the University, with , its first President. International House

Hutchinson Court

Albert Merritt Billings Hospital

Four landmarks major among the one hundred buildings on the Quadrangles oj the Universit)1 oj Chicago. II THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO II POUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEPELLER

Announcements

The Law School

SESSIONS OF 1959-1960

VOLUME LIX AUGUST 31, 1959 NUMBER 9 The statements contained in these Announcements

are subject to change without notice.

Published by the University of Chicago at the University of Chicago Press, 5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago 37, , in nine issues annually. The Announcements are issued twice each in October and February, three times in March, and once each in May and August. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Chicago, Illinois, under the act of August 24, 1912. THE LAW SCHOOL

OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION*

LAWRENCE A. KIMPTON, Chancellor of the University. JOHN I. KIRKPATRICK, Vice-Chancellor of the University. R. WENDELL HARRISON, Vice-President and Dean of the Faculties. WILLIAM B. HARRELL, Vice-President in Charge of Business Affairs. WARREN C. JOHNSON, Vice-President in Charge of Special Scientific Programs. JAMES M. SHELDON, JR., Assistant to the Chancellor. WILLIAM V. MORGENSTERN, Secretary of the University.

EMERY T. FrLBEY, Vice-President Emeritus.

EDWARD H. LEVI, Dean of the Law School, The Law Quadrangle. ROGER C. CRAMTON, Assistant Dean and Chairman of the Graduate Committee, The Law Quadrangle. Jo DESHA LUCAS, Assistant Dean and Dean of Students, The Law Quadrangle. JAMES M. RATCLIFFE, Assistant Dean and Director of Placement, The Law Quadrangle. CLARA P. SMITH, Assistant to the Dean, The Law Quadrangle.

HERMAN H. FUSSLER, Director of the Library, Harper Memorial Library, Room MIO. ALBERT F. COTTON, Bursar. JOHN P. NETHERTON, Dean of Students. WILLIAM J. VAN CLEVE, Registrar. CHARLES D. O'CONNELL, Director of Admissions.

OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION

FRANCIS A. ALLEN, A.B., LL.B., J.S.D. (hon.), Professor of Law. WALTER J. BLUM, A.B., J.D., Professor of Law. NORMAN BURSLER, A.B., Research Associate (Associate Professor) and Law Librarian. ROGER C. CRAMTON, A.B., J.D., Assistant Professor of Law. WILLIAM W. CROSSKEY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. BRAINERD CURRIE, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., JUR.Sc.D., Professor of Law. AARON DIRECTOR, PH.B., Professor of Economics. ALLISON DUNHAM, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. HARRY KALVEN, JR., A.B., J.D., Professor of Law. STANLEY A. KAPLAN, PH.B., J.D., LL.M., Professor of Law.] WILBER G. KATZ, A.B., LL.B., S.J.D., James Parker Hall Professor of Law. NICHOLAS DEBELLEVILLE KATZEN BACH, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. PHILIP B. KURLAND, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law. EDWARD H. LEVI, PH.B., J.D., J.S.D., Professor of Law. LEON M. LIDDELL, A.B., B.L.S., LL.B., Law Librarian and Professor of Law.] KARL N. LLEWELLYN, A.B., LL.B., J.D., Professor of Law. Jo DESHA LUCAS, A.B., M.P.A., LL.B., LL.M., Associate Professor of Law. BERNARD D. MELTZER, A.B., J.D., LL.M., Professor of Law. SOJA MENTSCHIKOFF, A.B., LL.B., Professorial Lecturer. MAX RHEINSTEIN, DR.UTR.lUR., JURIS.DoKTOR (hon.), Max Pam Professor of Comparative Law. MALCOLM P. SHARP, A.B., A.M., LL.B., S.J.D., Professor of Law. ROSCOE T. STEFFEN, A.B., LL.B., LL.D. (hon.), John P. Wilson Professor of Law. SHELDON TEFFT, A.B., LL.B., B.A., B.C.L., M.A. (OXON.), Professor of Law. HANS ZEISEL, DR.JUR., DR.POL.SCI., Professor of Law and of Sociology.

* Where no office location is given after the name, it is to be understood that the office is in the Administration Building, 5801 Ellis Avenue. t Beginning January 1, 1960. t Beginning February 1, 1960. 2 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

EDWARD J. C. ALBUM, A.B., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. GEORGE J. ALEXANDER, A.B., LL.B., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. RICHARD K. BAIN, A.B., B.C.L., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. BERNARD W. M. DOWNEY, LL.B., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. R. CORYDON FINCH, A.B., J.D., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. CHARLES M. JACOBS, AB., J.D., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. PETER B. POWLES, A.B., LL.B., Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Instructor. WALTER VAN GERVEN, DR.IuR., Teaching Fellow in Foreign Law Program.

HENRY J. KAGANIEC, AB., LL.B., DR.JUR., J.D., Director of the Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. MORRIS J. WEXLER, S.B., LL.B., Lecturer in Law.

GEORGE G. BOGERT, AB., LL.B., James Parker Hall Professor Emeritus of Law. ERNST W. PUTTKAMMER, A.B., J.D., Professor Emeritus of Law. KENNETH C. SEARS, A.B., J.D., Professor Emeritus of Law.

ERNEST A. HAGGARD, AB., S.M., PH.D., Professor of Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois. (Research Associate on the Arbitration Project.) EDWARD A. SHILS, A.B., Professor of Sociology and of Social Thought. FRED L. STRODTBECK, A.B., A.M., PH.D., Associate Professor of Social Psychology. (Consult­ ant on the Jury Project.)

HARRY V. BALL, A.B., A.M., PH.D., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. ROBERT G. CALDWELL, S.B., A.M., PH.D., LL.B., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. JOHN A. CRITTENDEN, A.B., A.M., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. WILLIAM TUCKER DEAN, A.B., J.D., M.B.A., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. RITA JAMES, A.B., A.M., PH.D., Research Associate on the U.S.P.H.S. Mental Health Project. IREDELL JENKINS, A.B., AM., PH.D., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. ELLEN KOLEGAR, A.B., A.M., Research Assistant on the U.S.P.H.S. Mental Health Project. DAVID MATZA, A.B., A.M., PH.D., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. EDWARD S. OVERMAN, S.B., PH.D., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow. JOHN SCHMIDHAUSER, A.B., A.M., PH.D., Law and Behavioral Science Senior Fellow.

SUMMER QUARTER, 1959 JESSE J. DUKEMINIER, JR., AB., LL.B., Professor of Law, University of Kentucky; Visiting Professor of Law. JAMES F. HOGG, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., S.J.D., Associate Professor of Law, University of Minne­ sota; Visiting Professor of Law. THE HONORABLE ROGER J. TRAYNOR, A.B., J.D., PH.D., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of California; Visiting Professor of Law. THE LAW SCHOOL 3

I. Location, History, and Organization The University of Chicago is located on the South Side of Chicago, eight miles from the center of the city. Its grounds lie on both sides of the between Washington and Jackson parks; its plant includes nearly a hundred buildings. The new Law School buildings, completed for the Autumn Quarter, 1959, occupy a square block

on the Midway between Greenwood and University Avenues. They are connected with the Burton-Judson Residence Halls and are opposite the American Bar Center. The University of Chicago was incorporated in 1890, the product of the interest of the Baptist denomination in establishing a strong and well-equipped college at Chicago to serve the West. The University of Chicago includes: (1) The College. (2) The four Divisions-Biological Sciences, Humanities, Physical Sciences, Social Sciences. (3) The six Professional Schools-Graduate School of Business, Divinity School, Law School, Graduate Library School, School of Medicine, School of Social Service Administration. (4) University College, which includes the center for adult education, located in down­ town Chicago, and the Home-Study Department. (5) The Libraries, Laboratories, Mu­ seums, Clinics, and Institutes. (6) The University Press. A school of law and jurisprudence was contemplated in the original plan for the University of Chicago. The school, according to William Rainey Harper, the first presi­ dent of the University, should be more than a training institution for admission to the bar. An education in law, President Harper said, "implies a scientific knowledge of law and of legal and juristic methods. These are the crystallization of ages of human prog­ ress. They cannot be understood in their entirety without a clear comprehension of the historic forces of which they are the product, and of the social environment with which they are in living contact. A scientific study of law involves the related sciences of his­ tory, economics, philosophy-the whole field of man as a social being." Consequently, the Law School was not to be an institution that had a merely nominal connection with the University, and it was not to be separated either by location or by spirit from the University at large. It should be an organic part of the University, in close touch with . the other divisions, embodying the spirit and purpose of university life and, in turn, [ contributing to that life. In 1902 President Harper's plan was approved by the Trustees, and the Law School

. was opened in October of that year. The goal of the School as stated in the first An­ nouncements was "to afford adequate preparation for the practice of law as a profession in any jurisdiction in which the common law prevails, and to cultivate and encourage the scientific study of systematic and comparative jurisprudence, legal history, and principles of legislation." The construction of the first law building was made possible through a gift from John D. Rockefeller; the cornerstone was laid on April 2, 1903, by President Theodore Roosevelt. The University of Chicago Law School has been a member of the Association of American Law Schools since the School was founded in 1902. It has been on the approved list of the American Bar Association since the standards of that association were adopted in 1921. 4 THE UN1VERSITY OF CHICAGO

Il, General Statement The undergraduate curriculum of the Law School is designed to provide the essential training required for preparation for the practice of law, and for scholarly work in law. Emphasis is placed on a knowledge of the history, principles, and purposes of legal in­ stitutions, the operation of these institutions in the modern world, and the development of skills of legal craftsmanship. The basic curriculum incorporates the traditional legal fields and disciplines essential to the work of the law. Where relevant and practicable, the data and theories of the social sciences are used to further the study of law. The usual, although not exclusive, form of instruction is the case method; emphasis is also placed on individual instruction through a legal writing and research program which is required of every student. Opportunity for specialization is provided in the second and third years of each student's program. The graduate program is planned to provide opportunity and guidance for research in law. A special graduate program exists for foreign students whose undergraduate law training has not been primarily in the field of the common law and who desire to do research in comparative law, and for graduates of American law schools who seek training in the civil law. The research work of the School is intended to further the knowledge of legal institutions, to enrich the instruc­ tional program of the School, and to contribute to the administration of justice.

III. Admission of Students

All applications for admission are subject to the approval of the faculty. The first­ year class in the undergraduate (J.D.) program is limited to approximately 140 students.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS TO THE UNDERGRADUATE (J.D.) PROGRAM

Application for admission to the J.D. Program may be made by students who will have received a Bachelor's degree from an approved college prior to beginning their study in the Law School. It is not required that applicants for admission present college credit in any specified subjects. In exceptional cases students who have not satisfied the requirements for a Bachelor's degree from an approved college prior to entering the Law School, but who have had three years of college work, may be admitted to the J.D. Program. Students in the College of the University of Chicago may be admitted after having secured a certificate of completion of General Studies. Students are selected principally upon the basis of their college records, the material furnished in their applications for admission, and the results shown on the Law School Admission Test. In special cases a personal interview with the applicant may be re­ quired. Preliminary questions concerning admission to the Law School and requests for copies of the application form should be addressed to the Dean of Students, The Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37. Completed applications, official tran­ scripts of all college and university records, and letters of recommendation should be sent directly to the Law School. Arrangements should be made by applicants to take the Law School Admission Test administered by the Educational Testing Service, 20 Nassau St., Princeton, New Jersey. The results of this test should be reported directly to the Dean of Students, The Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37. The Law School Admission Test will be given at selected locations throughout the country on November 14, 1959; February 20, 1960; April 9, 1960; and August 6, 1960. Graduates of an approved law school whose studies have been primarily in the com- THE LAW SCHOOL 5 mon law may apply for admission to the third year of the undergraduate school as candidates for the J.D. degree. Graduates of an approved foreign law school whose studies have not been pri­ marily in the common law may apply for admission as candidates for the J.D. degree in regular course. The requirements for this degree may be met in part for such students by the recognition of credits not to exceed 45 course hours (11 � units), if performance in residence demonstrates the effective value of the student's work in a foreign system.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS TO THE GRADUATE (LL.M.) (J.S.D.) PROGRAM

Application for admission to the graduate (LL.M.) (J.S.D.) program is limited to students who are the holders of a first degree in law from an approved law school, whose undergraduate work has been primarily in the common law, and who are quali­ fied for advanced research in law. The degree of Master of Laws (LL.M.) is awarded only to students who have been admitted to candidacy for the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence (J.S.D.). Application for admission must be made upon a form obtained from the Dean of Students, The Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37. The completed form should be submitted directly to the Law School.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS TO THE CERTIFICATE PROGRAM

Graduates of an approved foreign law school whose studies have not been primarily in the common law may apply for admission to the program designed to give a one­ year introduction to Anglo-American law. Upon completion of this program, such students will be given a certificate of attendance and a certificate for courses success­ fully completed.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS TO THE GRADUATE (M.COMP.L.) (D.COMP.L.) COMPARATIVE LAW AND FOREIGN LAW PROGRAMS Application for admission to the Graduate (M.Comp.L.) (D.Comp.L.) Comparative Law and Foreign Law programs is limited to the following students: 1. For the Graduate Comparative Law Program, those students who are graduates of an approved foreign law school, and whose previous training, though not in the common law, qualifies them to undertake advanced research in law. 2. For the Foreign Law Program, those students who will have received a first degree in law from an approved American law school prior to beginning their studies in the Foreign Law Program. Application for admission to the Graduate Comparative Law and Foreign Law programs must be made upon a form obtained from the Dean of Students, The Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37.

IV. Requirements for Degrees THE UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM The degree of Doctor of Law (J.D.) is awarded to students who (1) have been in resi­ dence for nine full quarters; (2) have shown by their standing in course examinations and by their individual investigations and reports a mastery of the fields for which they receive the requisite units of credit; (3) have shown an adequate mastery of English; and 6 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

(4) have successfully completed the work in the elective seminars or equivalent individ­ ual work approved by the faculty. A single course unit is the equivalent of four hours per week for one quarter. To qualify for residence for a full quarter, the student must take and complete 12 or more course hours (3 course units). Credit for 135 course hours (33% course units) and the maintenance of the required academic standing are needed for graduation. The degree of Doctor of Law, cum laude, is awarded to candi­ dates who have satisfied the requirements with distinction. Graduates of an approved law school admitted as candidates for the J.D. degree must be in residence for three full quarters, have received credit for 44 course hours (11 course units), and have main­ tained the required academic standing.

THE GRADUATE PROGRAM The degree of Master of Laws (LL.M.) is awarded to students who have completed with distinction the residence work required for the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence and, after submission and approval of a detailed outline and partial draft of a disserta­ tion, have been admitted to candidacy for the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence. The degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence (J.S.D.) is awarded to students who have been in residence for three full consecutive quarters, have completed their studies with dis­ tinction, and, after admission to candidacy for the degree, have submitted a dissertation that is accepted by the faculty as a creditable contribution to legal science. To qualify for residence for a full quarter, the student must take and complete 12 or more course hours (3 course units). The program is individually arranged with the student's faculty adviser and is expected to occupy the student's full time. The work may include any seminar or course open to undergraduates, with such supplementary work as may be required. It may consist of independent study or research as may be individually arranged. If the work in residence is completed with distinction, and a detailed outline and partial draft of the dissertation are submitted and approved, the student will be admitted as a candidate for the doctorate. Thereafter the candidate's thesis must be submitted to the faculty for its approval within a reasonable period of time as set by the candidate's thesis committee. Students receiving the J.D. degree from this Law School and accepted as candidates for the J.S.D. degree may apply to the Committee on Graduate Studies for permission to satisfy up to two academic quarters of the residence requirement through off-campus activities approved in advance by the Committee. This application must be made prior to the award of the J.D. degree. Bigelow Teaching Fellows accepted as candidates for the J.S.D. degree may satisfy one academic quarter of the residence requirement during their three-quarter period as teaching fellows.

THE CERTIFICATE PROGRAM

A certificate of attendance or a certificate for courses successfully completed will be given to graduates of foreign law schools who have been admitted to the Certificate Program, have been in residence for three full quarters, and have participated in the seminar in Problems of American Law for Foreign Students (588).

THE GRADUATE COMPARATIVE LAW PROGRAM In the Graduate Comparative Law Program, the degree of Master of Comparative Law (M.Comp.L.) is awarded to students who have completed with distinction the residence work required for the degree of Doctor of Comparative Law (D.Comp.L.). The degree of Doctor of Comparative Law (D.Comp.L.) is awarded to students who THE LAW SCHOOL 7 have been in residence for three full consecutive quarters, have completed their studies with distinction, and, after admission to candidacy for the degree, have submitted a dis­ sertation that is accepted by the faculty as a creditable contribution to the literature of comparative law. To qualify for residence for a full quarter, the student must take and complete 12 or more course hours (3 course units). The program is individually ar­ ranged with the student's faculty adviser and is expected to occupy the student's full time. At least half of the student's work in residence must be devoted to some phases of Anglo-American law. If the work in residence is completed with distinction, and a detailed outline and partial draft of the dissertation are submitted and approved, the student will be admitted as a candidate for the doctorate. Thereafter the candidate's thesis must be submitted to the faculty for its approval within a reasonable period of time as set by the candidate's thesis committee.

THE FOREIGN LAW PROGRAM In the Foreign Law Program, the degree of Master of Comparative Law (M.Comp.L.) is awarded to students who have successfully completed the two years of work as required in the curriculum of the program. The first year of work consists of three quarters of residence at the University of Chicago Law School, during which period a major portion of the student's time will be spent in intensive and systematic study of the private law of France or Germany. The second year of work will be carried on, under guidance and supervision, in a foreign country. Upon the successful comple­ tion of the curriculum of the Foreign Law Program and the submission, within a reason­ able period of time thereafter as set by the faculty, of a thesis that is considered by the faculty to be a significant contribution, the candidate will be awarded the degree of Doctor of Comparative Law (D.Comp.L.)

v. Examinations, Grading, and Rules Normally a written examination is required at the completion of each course. The work of each student is graded according to the following scale: A, 80 and above; B, 74-79; C, 68-73; D, 60-67; F, below 60. These grades are recorded as numerical grades in the Office of the Law School and as letter grades in the Office of the Registrar of the University. A minimum grade of 60 is required before credit may be received for the work involved. Maintenance of the required academic standing is a prerequisite to con­ tinuation in the school and to candidacy for a degree. To maintain the required aca­ demic standing, a student must receive a minimum weighted grade average of 68 for the work of each academic year. A student who receives a failing final grade during any given academic year must maintain a weighted grade average of at least 69 for that academic year. A student receiving two failing final grades in anyone academic year, or three failing final grades during his period of residence at the School, will not have maintained the required academic standing. A student who completes his work for the degree of Doctor of Law with a weighted grade average of 78 or better will have satisfied the requirements for the degree with distinction. Regular class attendance is required as a condition of receiving credit for work done. The privilege of membership in the School may be withdrawn for unsatisfactory class­ work or attendance. After the first four weeks of any quarter, a student is not permitted to withdraw from a course, seminar, or special work for which he has registered that quarter, unless special authorization is given by the Dean. To qualify for residence for a full quarter, the student must take and complete 12 or more course hours (3 course units). 8 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

VI. Courses of Instruction

The program of each student is subject to the approval of the Dean. Normally all work for the first three quarters is required. A legal writing, research, and moot court program is also required of every student. Students are permitted to specialize in the second and third years. Members of the faculty may prescribe special qualifications for admission to particular courses or seminars. Unless special permission is granted, the student must take all courses listed below for the first-year program. The numbers in parentheses at the end of each course de­ scription represent the value of the course in terms of course hours per quarter. In order to achieve credit for 135 course hours in nine quarters, the student must take an average of 15 course hours (33,4 course units) per quarter. Unless special per­ mission is granted, no student may take more than 17 course hours in any quarter.

FIRST-YEAR COURSES 301. Elements of the Law. The functions and problems of tribunals. The theory of legal rules and of the law crafts. The theory and practice of American case law, espe­ cially in regard to principle, precedent, statute, and justice, are developed with inten­ sive study of selected case materials. Aut (3), Win (2), Llewellyn. 302. Contracts. Promises and consideration-the bargain; fairness, duress, mistake, supervening events, default as an excuse, damages; an introduction to multiple-party transactions. Aut (3), Win (3), Spr (2), Sharp. 303. Criminal Law and Administration. General doctrines of criminal liability, crimes against persons and property, legislative problems of criminal-law revision; selected problems of procedure, administration, and constitutional rights. Aut (3), Win (3), Allen. 304. Civil Procedure I: Jurisdiction and Judgments. Introduction to adjective law; division of business and function between state and federal courts; choice of forum; jurisdiction over persons and things; venue; kinds of judgments, res judicata and col­ lateral estoppel; full faith and credit. Spr (4), Currie. 305. Property. Present and future interests in land and chattels; restrictions on the creation of future interests; conveyances inter vivos, including land contracts; adverse possession and statutes of limitation. Aut (2), Win (3), Spr (4), Dunham, Tefft. 306. Torts. Protection of personal integrity, including freedom from contact, defa­ mation, etc.; compensation for personal injuries; protection against injuries to property interests; protection of consumers, purchasers, and investors; protection of business and other interests from wilful invasion; theories of civil liability. Aut (3), Win (3), Kalven. 307. Agency. Study of vicarious liability, workmen's compensation, and the alloca­ tion of risks in various types of business organizations, with emphasis on the effect of employer control of business operations and profit-taking. Spr (5), Steffen. 348. Tutorial Work I. Intensive training in analysis, research, and exposition. Aut (2), Win (2), Spr 0), Katz and Bigelow Teaching Fellows.

SECOND- AND THIRD-YEAR COURSES

With the exception of the required second-year tutorial work, the program for the second and third years is elective. Courses recommended, but not required, as second­ year courses are marked with an asterisk. 400. Equity." The origin and development of equitable remedies and their role under present conditions. Aut (4), Tefft. 401. Administrative Law.* The powers and procedures of administrative agencies in the United States. The constitutional position of the administrative agency; procedural THE LAW SCHOOL 9

problems relating to the exercise of administrative power; and the methods and extent of judicial control over administrative action. Spr (4), Cramton. 402a-l. Constitutional Law.* Judicial review; problems of federalism; the Com­ merce Clause; intergovernmental immunities.' Win (4), Kurland. * 402a-2. Constitutional Law. Due process and equal protection of the laws; civil liberties; political and social rights; military powers.' Spr (4), Allen. 402b. Constitutional Law.* The Constitution of the United States. A developmental presentation of the usual topics of constitutional law. Attention is given to the political background of the Constitution; the process of drawing and adoption; the intended meaning of the document; and the process by which the accepted modern theories of the Constitution came to be substituted therefor.' Win (4), Spr (4), Crosskey. 403. Commercial and Investment Paper.* A study of commercial and banking trans­ actions, with particular regard to the development and use of notes, drafts, checks, bonds, and share certificates, the concept of negotiability, and the problem of statutory codification." Aut (5), Steffen. 404. Accounting.* Introduction to accounting techniques and the interpretation of financial statements." Aut (3), Katz. * 405. Economic Analysis and Public Policy. The pricing process and the allocation of resources in a free-market system; monopoly and restraint of trade; monetary theory and the credit system; industrial fluctuations; economic analysis and economic policy.' Aut (4), Director. 406. Family Law. Marriage and the family as social and legal institutions; legal relations between members of the family and between the family and outsiders; dis­ solution of the family. (4), Rheinstein. [Not offered in 1959-60.] 409. Civil Procedure II: Trial Practice. Pleading; parties; deposition and discovery; pretrial hearings; trial motion practice; division of function between judge and jury; verdicts. Aut (4), Kurland. 410a. Corporation Law.* Distribution of control; application of the fiduciary prin­ ciple to directors, officers, shareholders, and promoters; the procuring and maintaining of corporate capital. Win (5), Katz. 410b. Corporation Law.* Distribution of control; application of the fiduciary prin­ ciple to directors, officers, shareholders, and promoters; the procuring and maintaining of corporate capital. Spr (5), Kaplan. 411. Commercial Law Practice.* Problems in the law of sales, letters of credit, chattel security, and collection of negotiable instruments with special emphasis on the techniques of problem analysis, counseling, and statutory construction.s Win (3), Spr (3), Mentschikoff. 444. Mortgages. A study of real estate and chattel mortgages and related types of security, with emphasis upon enforcement and liquidation. Win (4), Tefft. 450. Tutorial Work II. Analyses of problems of legislation and administrative regu­ lation from the perspective of preparing and drafting policy papers, statutes and regu­ lations, and materials in support thereof. Techniques for improving professional stand­ ards of drafting and the limitations imposed by the nature of the legislative process will be explored. Actual drafting, under supervision, of statutes and related materials will be required." Aut (2), Win (2), Spr (2), Katzenbach and Bigelow Teaching Fellows.

1 Students taking Constitutional Law may elect 402a-l or 402a-2 or both, or may take 402b. Students electing to take all three Constitutional Law courses must secure the permission of the Dean. 2 May be taken with Law 411.

3 Recommended in connection with Law4l0a or 410b and 503. Students who have had as much as a year of college accounting must secure permission of the instructor prior to registering for Law 404.

4 Recommended as preparation for Law 503, 504, and 505. 5 May be taken with Law 403.

6 Required of second-year law students who may take Tutorial Work II either in the Autumn and Winter quarters or in the Winter and Spring quarters. 10 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

502. Decedents' Estates. Intestate succession; limitations upon testamentary power; execution and revocation of wills; contest of wills; will substitutes; probate and administration. Spr (4), Rheinstein. 503. Trusts and Fiduciary Administration. The creation and termination of trusts; contemporary use of the trust device; constructional problems; fiduciary administra­ tion. Aut (4), Dunham. 504. Labor Law. The legal framework for collective bargaining, strikes, picketing, lockouts, and other forms of pressure; the relationship of that framework to the general problem of regulating monopoly; the selection of the collective-bargaining represent­ ative and the relationship of the representative to the individual employee, including the regulation of the internal affairs of labor organizations; the negotiation, adminis­ tration, and enforcement of collective-bargaining arrangements. Win (4), Meltzer. 505. Law of Competition and Monopoly. The structure of American industry, the theory of competition and monopoly; the development of patents and trade-marks; problems of unfair competition; the enforcement of the antitrust laws against re­ straints of trade and against monopoly. Aut (5), Director, Levi. 506. Evidence. The law governing the proof of disputed issues of fact in trials at law and equity, with incidental treatment of hearings before administrative agencies, includ­ ing burden of proof, presumptions, and judicial notice; the functions of judge and jury; the examination. competency, and privileges of witnesses; the exclusionary rules of evidence. Aut (6), Meltzer. 507. Modern Real Estate Transactions. A study of land marketing transactions with particular regard to problems of the development of urban land, of marketing urban land, whether by sale or by lease, of financial acquisition of urban land, and of market­ able title and title examination. The problems are illustrated with materials from the area of marketing of housing. Spr (4), Dunham. 508. Conflict of Laws. The problems arising when significant aspects of a case relate to more than one state or country. Aut (4), Currie. 510. Jurisprudence: Law in Our Society. A common-sense approach to a selection of basic problems facing the lawyer today as a craftsman, as a citizen, and as a person. Written critiques required weekly. Spr (4), Llewellyn. 511. Legal Argument. The general theory of argument, centered on the appellate brief. Preparation, critical discussion, and rewriting of briefs built on transcripts of records. Limited enrolment. Aut (4), Llewellyn. 513. Insolvency and Reorganization. Credit aspects of inflation and deflation; prob­ lems of investment, debt, and failure in a fluctuating economy; debtor relief, including corporate reorganization plans; corporate capital structures. Win (4), Blum. 515. State and Local Government. Selected problems in state constitutional and ad­ ministrative law and the general legal principles applicable to the operation of counties, cities, and towns. Win (4), Lucas. 516. State and Local Taxation. A study of selected problems dealing with the power to tax and limitations placed upon such power by the federal and state constitutions; the chief sources of state and local tax revenues; and problems of conflict between tax systems in a federal state. Federal Taxation I is a prerequisite. Spr (4), Lucas. 517. Federal Jurisdiction. History of federal judiciary acts; structure and business of the federal courts; nature of federal judicial function; diversity of citizenship jurisdic­ tion; federal question jurisdiction; jurisdictional amount; removal jurisdiction; juris­ diction to enjoin federal courts; three-judge courts; law applied by federal courts. Spr (4), Kurland. 518. Admiralty. Admiralty and maritime jurisdiction; marine insurance; carriage of goods; charter parties; general average; rights of seamen and other maritime workers; collision; salvage; maritime liens and ship mortgages; limitation of liability. Win (4), Currie. [Offered in alternate years. Not offered in 1959-60.] 519. International Law. A study of the role and utility of legal practices and doctrine in the world-power process. Aut (4), Katzenbach. 520. Federal Taxation I. Income taxation of individuals: the rate structure; the defini- THE LAW SCHOOL 11

tion of income; the exclusions and deductions; the treatment of gains and losses from property; the taxable unit and the attribution of income. Aut (3), Blum. 521. Federal Taxation II. Income taxation of partnerships, corporations, and other business entities: the corporate income tax; the taxation of shareholders; the compara­ tive tax treatment of partnerships and corporations; the accounting aspects of income taxation; the relationship of taxation to monetary and fiscal policy. Federal Taxation I is a prerequisite. Win (3), Blum. 522. Federal Taxation III. Estate planning: the income taxation of trusts and estates; the estate and gift taxes; the conservation of family estates from a tax point of view; the social and economic implications of progressive taxation. Federal Taxation I is a pre­ requisite. Spr (3), Blum. 525. Regulated Industries. A study of some of the legal and economic aspects of fed­ eral regulation of selected industries, with primary emphasis on the transportation in­ dustries :rrestrictions on entry; abandonment; adequacy of service; rate regulation; and acquisition of control. Win (4), Cramton, Director. 526. International Commercial Problems. A study of international sales transactions with emphasis upon methods of remittance; financing; cartelization; governmental con­ trols over currency and commodities, such as exchange controls, quotas, licenses, and tariffs; state trading; and taxation of income from foreign sales. Aut (3), Katzenbach, Llewellyn, Mentschikoff, Steffen. 527. International Investment Problems. A study of legal and economic factors in­ fluencing the international flow of capital, particularly in the form of direct investment in foreign subsidiaries. Problems of organizing, financing, and operating foreign com­ panies will be examined with particular emphasis upon national and international law regarding concessions, subsidies, licensing, monopoly, and competition; expropriation and protection of property abroad; copyright and patent protection; taxation of foreign business; and related problems. Win (3), Katzenbach, Llewellyn, Mentschikoff, Steffen.

SEMINARS

550. Seminar: Community Property. A survey of community property laws of the United States and a comparison with common law marital property rules. Student will be required to prepare a detailed paper on some one subject. Win (3), Dunham. [Offered in alternate years. Not offered in 1959-60.] 551. Seminar: Contracts. Problems illustrated principally by questions of suretyship and insurance. Permission of the instructor is required. Win (3), Sharp. 552. Seminar: International Commercial Business Problems. A seminar in which stu­ dents explore independently in more detail problems raised or suggested by the discus­ sion in Law 526 or Law 527. Limited to students who have taken Law 526 or Law 527. Spr (3), Katzenbach, Llewellyn, Mentschikoff, Steffen. 553. Seminar: Reasoning and Law. The functions of logic and other experiences in the law. Permission of the instructor is required. Spr (3), Sharp. 554. Seminar: Civil Liberties. An analysis of selected aspects of this large subject, with emphasis on freedom of speech. Spr (3), Cramton, Kalven. 556. Seminar: Securities Regulation. A study of the problems in the issuance of cor­ porate securities. Win (3), Kaplan. 562, 563. Seminar: Law Revision. Examination of the need for uniformity in areas suggested by the National Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. Preliminary investi­ gation and preparation of uniform statutes. Specific topics to be announced. Two sepa­ rate seminars. Win (3), Spr (3), Lucas. 564. Seminar: Law Revision. Examination of problems currently being worked upon by the International Law Commission in areas suggested by the U.S. Member of the Commission. Preliminary investigation and drafting of proposed treaties and codifica­ tions of customary international law. Win (3), Katzenbach. 566. Seminar: Money, Banking, and Employment. Discussion of past and proposed plans for dealing with the problem of economic instability. Win (3), Director. 12 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

567. Seminar: Law and Criminology. An examination of a variety of issues of crimi­ nal-law administration including juvenile delinquency, probation, parole, and the or­ ganization of correctional systems. Emphasis is given to the evaluation of relevant criminological materials. Win (3), Allen. 569. Seminar: The Ratification of the Constitution. Attention is focused on what oc­ curred in New York, and an attempt is made to evaluate the famous Federalist papers read in the context in which they originally appeared. Spr (3), Crosskey. 571. Seminar: Labor Law. An examination of selected problems of labor law, includ­ ing problems involved in the drafting, administration, and enforcement of collective­ bargaining agreements. The basic course in labor law is usually a prerequisite, but stu­ dents who have had relevant practical experience or relevant work in other departments may be admitted with consent of the instructor. Spr (3), Meltzer. 572. Seminar: Tort, Risk-Bearing, and Insurance. A study of (1) the institution of liability insurance and of other devices for risk and loss distribution; (2) the impact of insurance and risk theory on the current law of torts; and (3) the possibilities of large­ scale legislative changes, with emphasis on workmen's compensation and social in­ surance analogies. Spr (3), Blum, Kalven. [Not offered in 1959-60.] 574. Seminar: Comparative Law: Sociology of Law. The function of law in society; its rise in primitive society and its forms in archaic and developed societies; its role in the international community of nations. Win (3), Rheinstein. [Not offered in 1959-60.] 575. Seminar: Criminal Procedure. A critical study of the criminal-law processes at various stages from arrest to appeal. Primary attention will be given to the Illinois prac­ tices, but consideration will also be given to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, model legislation, and proposals for procedural reform. Aut (3), Allen, Wexler. 576. Seminar: Public Regulation of Land. A survey of various regulatory laws con­ trolling land use, such as housing and building codes, zoning and planning, anti-nui­ sance statutes, fencing and party wall statutes, water regulation, etc. Win (3), Dunham. 577. Seminar: Urban Land Planning. Consideration of the legal, economic, and socio­ logical aspects of planning. In 1959-60 the problem considered will be regional planning with the Northeastern Illinois Metropolitan Area Planning Act as the point of depar­ ture. Spr (3), Dunham. 578. Seminar: Conflict of Laws. Individual research in, and group discussion of, basic problems of methods and objectives in the conflict of laws. The course in Conflict of Laws (508) is a prerequisite except for students enroled in that course in the Autumn Quarter. Registration for the seminar is subject to the approval of the instructors and will be at the beginning of the Autumn Quarter. Win (3), Currie and other members of the faculty. 583. Seminar: Investment Banking. An examination of Securities and Exchange Commission procedures in the light of current investment banking house practices. Aut (3), Steffen. 585. Seminar: Patents. Theory and operation of the patent system; patentable sub­ ject matter; acquisition, enforcement, licensing, and assignment of patent rights; com­ mon-law and statutory protection of other forms of industrial property. Spr (3), Levi. 586. Seminar: The Supreme Court. An analysis of work of the United States Supreme Court and its opinions for the current term. Enrolment is limited and by permission of the instructors. Aut (3), Cramton, Currie, Dunham, Kurland. 588. Seminar: Problems of American Law for Foreign Students. Introduction to the study of American Law for foreign students through discussion of fundamental prob­ lems and through comparison with institutions of the civil-law countries. Aut (2), Win (2), Rheinstein. 591,592,593. Seminar: Civil Law. Contracts, torts, property, and family law under the systems of the French and German civil codes. This seminar constitutes a part of the Foreign Law Program; properly qualified students who are not in the Foreign Law

. Program may be admitted fo the Autumn Quarter. Aut (6), Win (6), Spr (6), Rhein­ stein, Van Gerven. THE LAW SCHOOL 13

596. Seminar: Church and State in American Constitutional Law. A historical and contemporary analysis of the judicial application of the relevant portions of the First Amendment of the Federal Constitution. Win (3), Kurland. 597. Seminar: Oil in the World Community. A study of the legal, economic, and po­ litical problems raised by the international structure and operation of the oil industry. Spr (3), Katzenbach. [Offered in alternate years.] 598. Seminar: The International Control of Atomic Energy. An inquiry into the prob­ lems of controlling atomic resources in the trans-national community. The seminar will explore problems both of weapons control and of development of industrial usage. Spr (3), Katzenbach. [Offered in alternate years. Not offered in 1959-60.]

COURSES FOR THE SUMMER SESSION, 1959 301. Administrative Law. (4) Soia Mentschiko./f. 402. Trust and Fiduciary Administration. (4), James F. Hogg. 407. Modern Real Estate. (4) Jesse J. Dukeminier, Jr. 408. Conflict of Laws. (4) The Hon. Roger J. Traynor. 413. Insolvency and Reorganization. (4) Wilber G. Katz.

COURSES FOR THE SUMMER SESSION, 1960 The Law School will be in regular session in the Summer Quarter of 1960. A special announcement will be made at a later date concerning the courses to be offered. VII. Schedule of Courses by Quarters, 1959--60 * REQUIRED FIRST-YEAR COURSES Autumn Winter Spring

HOURS HOURS HOURS Contracts 3 Contracts 3 Agency 5 Criminal Law 3 Criminal Law 3 Civil Procedure I 4 Elements 3 Elements 2 Contracts 2 Property 2 Property 3 Property 4 Torts 3 Torts 3 Tutorial I 1 Tutorial I 2 Tutorial I 2

SECOND- AND THIRD-YEAR COURSES Autumn Winter Spring HOURS HOURS HOURS Accounting= e 3 Commercial Law Administrative Law 4 Civil Procedure II 4 Practice= b 3 Commercial Law Commercial and In- Constitutional Law Practice 3 vestment Papers» b 5 (302a-l)a, f 4 Constitutional Law Competition and Mo- Constitutional Law (302a-2)a, f 4 nopoly 5 (302b)a, f 4 Constitutional Law Conflict of Laws 4 Corporation Law (302b)a, f 4 Economic Analysis (31Oa) 5 Corporation Law and Public Policy- 4 Federal Taxation lid 3 (31Ob) 5 Equity- 4 Insolvency and Reor- Decedents' Estates 4 Evidence 6 ganization 4 Federal Jurisdiction 4 Federal Taxation I 3 International Invest- Federal Taxation nr- 3 International Com- ment Problems 3 Jurisprudence 4 mercial Problems 3 Labor Law 4 Modern Real Estate International Law 4 Mortgages 4 Transactions 4 Legal Argument 4 Regulated Industries 4 State and Local Taxa- Trusts and Fiduciary State and Local Gov- tion= 4 Administration 4 ernment 4 Tutorial lie 2 Tutorial IIe 2 Tutorial lie 2

SEMINARS Autumn Winter Spring HOURS HOURS HOURS Civil Laws 6 Church and State 3 Civil Laws 6 Criminal Procedure 3 Civil Laws 6 Civil Liberties 3 Investment Banking 3 Conflict of Laws 3 International Com- Problems of American Contracts 3 mercial Problems 3 Law for Foreign Law and Criminology 3 Labor Law 3 Students 2 Law Revision=-Uni- Law Revision-Uni- Supreme Court 3 form Laws 3 form Laws 3 Law Revision-Inter- Oil in the World Com- national Law 3 munity 3 Money, Banking, and Patents 3 Employment 3 Ratification of the Problems of American Constitution 3 Law for Foreign Reasoning and Law 3 Students 2 Urban Land Planning 3 Public Regulation of Land 3 Securities Regulation 3

a Normally taken as second-year courses. b Students may take both Commercial and Investment Paper and Commercial Law Practice. C Course required for the second year; to be taken either in the Autumn and Winter quarters or in the Winter and Spring quarters. d Federal Taxation I is a prerequisite. e Recommended in connection with Law 410a or 410b and 503. May not be taken for credit by stu­ dents who have had over a year of college accounting. f Students taking Constitutional Law may elect 402a-l or 402a-2 or both, or may take 402b. Students electing to take all three Constitutional Law courses must secure the permission of the Dean. g In the Foreign Law Program. Consent of instructor is required. * This schedule is subject to change. THE LAW SCHOOL 15

VIII. Professorships and Teaching Fellowships The John P. Wilson Professorship in Law was established in 1929 with funds contrib­ uted for the John P. Wilson Memorial Foundation by John P. Wilson, Jr., and Anna Wilson Dickinson as a memorial to their father, John P. Wilson, for many years an eminent member of the Chicago Bar. The present holder of this professorship is Roscoe T. Steffen. The James Parker Hall Professorship in Law was established in 1930 by the alumni of the School in memory of James Parker Hall, Dean of the School from 1904 until his death in 1928. The present holder of this professorship is Wilber G. Katz. The Max Pam Professorship in Comparative Law was established in 1935 in memory of Max Pam, for many years an eminent member of the Chicago Bar, with funds allo­ cated by the Trustees under the will of Mr. Pam. The present holder of this professorship is Max Rheinstein. Under the will of Leo Spitz, J.D. 1910, provision is made for the establishment of The Caroline and Henry Spitz Professorship, in honor of Mr. Spitz's parents. This is a professorship in world organization, law, and government, and related problems, in­ cluding the protection of human rights and the peaceful settlement of international legal and political disputes. Under the will of Harry A. Bigelow, the University is to receive, upon the death of certain life-beneficiaries, the remainder of a trust fund for the establishment of The Harry A. Bigelow Professorship in Law. Mr. Bigelow was Dean of the Law School from 1929 to 1939, and a member of the Faculty of the Law School from 1904 until his death in 1950. The Harry A. Bigelow Teaching Fellowships were established in 1947 in honor of Harry A. Bigelow. The fellowships are awarded to law graduates of high standing.

IX. Graduate Fellowships and Research and Special Funds

The Law School has available a number of fellowships for graduate students. These include: The James Nelson Raymond Fellowship, which was created in 1933 and 1934 by Anna Louise Raymond. The Law Fellowships, which are supported by gifts of Law alumni to the Law School. University Fellowships, a limited number of which are reserved for research students in law. A limited number of special fellowships are available to students in the Foreign Law Program. The amount of these fellowships is $7,500 each, payable over the 21-month period of the Program. Fellowships for a year of study at the University of Chicago Law School are available to a limited number of students from the British Commonwealth who are graduates in law or in jurisprudence of universities of the British Commonwealth. Application for fellowships in connection with graduate work leading to a graduate degree should be made to the Dean of Students, The Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37. Special Research Fellowships are available in connection with the various research programs of the School made possible through special grants and through gifts of Law alumni to the Law School Fund. The Law and Behavioral Science Research Fellowships are available as a result of a grant from the Ford Foundation; preference for these fellowships is given to teachers of law or of the social sciences. Application for these 16 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO fellowships should be made to the Dean of the Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago 37. The Frieda and Arnold Shure Research Fund was established in 1945 by Frieda and Arnold Shure for the publication of legal studies of immediate importance for the public welfare. The Arnold M. Chutkow Memorial Fund was established in 1958 as a memorial to Arnold M. Chutkow, J.D., 1951, through a gift from Samuel Chutkow, 1920, and the friends and classmates of Arnold Chutkow. The income of the Arnold M. Chutkow Memorial Fund is allocated by the Dean of the Law School toward the expenses of student contestants in moot court competitions and for the benefit of the University 0/ Chicago Law Review. The Leonard M. Rieser Fund was established in 1959 by the family and friends of Leonard M. Rieser, for many years an eminent member of the Chicago Bar, and a former Lecturer in Law at this law school, as a memorial to him to be used in a manner consistent with his wide and varied interests in law.

X. Program of Research in Law and the Behavioral Sciences A program of research in law and the behavioral sciences has been made possible through a grant from the Ford Foundation. Four projects are now being conducted: (1) The nature and operation of the jury system. (2) The characteristics and performance of arbitration as a sublegal system. (3) A study of court congestion and judicial admin­ istration. (4) A study of intestate inheritance. As a result of this program, the study Delay in the Court by Zeisel, Kalven, and Buchholz (Little, Brown & Co.) was published in July, 1959. XI. The Comparative Law Research Center The Comparative Law Research Center was established in 1949 to promote research in the field of international legal relations. The Center provides opportunities for quali­ fied students from the United States and abroad to obtain training in the techniques appropriate to this field. The Center serves also as a clearing house of information for foreign research and teaching institutions and provides advice to scholars and students abroad who are engaged in international studies touching upon American law. Professor Max Rheinstein, Max Pam Professor of Comparative Law, is Director of the Center.

XII. The Law Revision Program The Law Revision Program is under the direction of a faculty committee of which Professor Allison Dunham is Chairman. The Program includes studies and drafting on topics selected by the faculty committee from suggestions received from the Council of State Governments, the Conference of Attorneys General, the Conference of Chief Justices, the Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, and committees of bar associa­ tions. The Law Revision Group has participated in a draft of a proposed Illinois Habit­ ual Criminal Act, the Illinois Savings and Loan Act of 1955, the Habitual Offender Act, an amendment to the Condemnation Statute to provide for quick taking, the prepara­ tion of the Housing Code of an Administrative Procedure Act, and preparatory work on a proposed revision of the Illinois Criminal Code.

XIII. The Law-Economics Program The Law-Economics Program is under the general direction of a faculty committee of which Professor Aaron Director is Chairman. During the academic year 1957-58, the THE LAW SCHOOL 17 results of a study in the area of the development of inventions and large-scale enterprise was published: Jewkes, Sawers, Stillerman, The Sources of Invention (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1958). Annual publication of The Journal of Law and Economics, under the editorship of Professor Aaron Director, was begun in the autumn of 1958.

XIV. Student Scholarships and Loans The Law School awards a limited number of full-tuition National Honor Scholarships to outstanding students designated by selected colleges. In addition, a number of schol­ arships are available each year for law students of outstanding ability who need financial assistance. Some of these scholarships are for full tuition, some for half-tuition, and some for amounts in excess of the tuition charge. In the case of veterans, scholarship awards may be made as cash grants to supplement government living allowances. A substantial proportion of Law School scholarship aid is reserved for entering students. The Henry C. Murphy Scholarship Endowment provides aid for worthy boys to secure an education, preference to be shown to those who plan to adopt journalism as their profession. The La Verne Noyes Foundation Scholarships (for veterans of World War I and their descendants) are awarded on the basis of service in the armed forces of the United States in World War 1. In addition to the general University Scholarships, the Law School has available the following: The James Nelson Raymond Scholarship, established in 1930 from a fund given by Anna Louise Raymond in memory of her husband, James Nelson Raymond. Two Francis Kosmerl Fellowships, each in the amount of $1,000, were established in 1948 by a bequest under the will of Francis Kosmerl, J.D. 1918. The Class of 1915 Scholarship, a full-tuition scholarship endowed by the Class of 1915, is awarded annually, upon vote of the Law Faculty, to an outstanding student in the Junior Class of the Law School. The Edwin B. Mayer Scholarship provides tuition aid to a student in the Law School. The Leo F. Wormser Scholarships were established in 1935 by friends of Leo F. Wormser, J.D. 1909, for many years an eminent member of the Chicago bar, as a memorial to him. In 1940 a gift to this fund was made by Mrs. Leo F. Wormser in memory of Mr. Wormser's mother, Mrs. Frida Wormser; and from time to time addi­ tional gifts have also been made to this scholarship fund by the family and friends of Leo F. Wormser. In 1956 the Leo F. Wormser Memorial Fund was augmented by a bequest from the estate of Mrs. Leo F. Wormser. The James B. Blake Scholarship Fund was established in 1951 as a memorial to James B. Blake, J.D. 1907, by his friends. The Mary Beecher Scholarship is awarded to an outstanding graduate of a women's college in the entering class of the Law School. The Phi Sigma Delta Scholarship, established by the members of Phi Sigma Delta fraternity, will provide a full-tuition scholarship for an outstanding law student during the academic year 1959-60. Chicago Title and Trust Company Foundation Scholarships, awarded to outstanding students, have been made possible through gifts to the Law School by the Chicago Title and Trust Company Foundation. The Arnold 1. Shure Scholarship, to be awarded by the law faculty to a deserving law 18 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

School by Frieda Shure in honor of the thirtieth anniversary of the graduation from the Law School of Arnold Shure. The Floyd Russell Mechem Law Scholarships, limited to not more than four, to be awarded annually to an entering law student and renewable for the second- and third­ year of Law School work, were established in 1959, to be supported by annual law alumni and other gifts, as a memorial to Professor Floyd R. Mechem, for many years a member of the law faculty. Each of the Floyd Russell Mechem Law Scholarships pro­ vides a stipend of $2,000. The Class of 1959 Scholarship was established in 1959 through contributions of that class to support the annual award of a scholarship. Application for scholarships should be made upon a form obtained from the office of the Dean of Students of the Law School. An exception to this procedure is made in the case of the award of a National Honor Scholarship. This award is granted upon the rec­ ommendation of a participating college, and application for it should be made to that college. In addition to scholarship aid, the Law School has available several specially en­ dowed loan funds, as well as general University loan funds. The special loan funds available exclusively or preferentially to students of the Law School include: The Harry A. Bigelow Loan Fund was established in 1929 by the Law Class of 1929 in honor of the late Dean Bigelow. It is available to law students. The Law School Student Loan Fund is available to students in the Law School. The Bernhardt Frank Loan Fund was established in 1952 by Louis H. Silver, J.D. 1928, in honor of his brother-in-law, who was for many years a member of the Chicago Bar and an outstanding appellate lawyer. The Ernst Freund Loan Fund was established in 1922 by the late Professor Ernst Freund and since his death has been augmented by other contributions. It is available to law students. The Raphael and Rose Golde Loan Fund was established in 1955 by provision of the will of the late Joseph A. Golde, J.D. 1915, in memory of his parents. The James Parker Hall Loan Fund was established by the alumni of the Law School in I memory of the late Dean Hall. It is available to law students. The Floyd R. Mechem Loan Fundfor Law Students was established in 1921 by the late f Professor Floyd R. Mechem. � The Harvey Puchowitz Loan Fund was established in 1955 by friends of Harvey Puchowitz in his memory. The Ernst W. Puttkammer Loan Fund was established in 1956 by students in the Class of 1958.

The Anna Louise Raymond Loan Fund was established in 1932 for the benefit of stu­ dents in the Law School, preference to be given to women. The Julius Rosenthal Fund was established in 1903 in memory of Julius Rosenthal il(1 by the late Judge Julian W. Mack, formerly a professor in the School. It is available to � students in the Law School. The Frederick and Edith Shaffer Sass Loan Fund was established by Frederick Sass, Jr., Ph.B. 1930, J.D. 1932, and Louis Sass, S.B. 1932, in memory of their parents. Prefer- Ilt� ence is given to students in the Law School. �,'I The Ben and May Shapiro Loan Fund, established by Robert B. Shapiro, J.D. 1935, in �� THE LAW SCHOOL 19

memory of his parents, is available to students, preferably in the Law School, who are dependent in whole or in part upon their own efforts to secure an education. The Clark B. Whittier Law Loan Fund was established by Professor Clark B. Whittier, a former member of the University of Chicago Law School faculty. An application form for a loan may be obtained from the Office of the Dean of Students of the Law School.

xv. Conferences, Meetings, and Lectures The Law School recognizes its responsibility as a law center to contribute to the development of law through research and co-operation with the profession. It recog­ nizes also the importance of such activities as broadening influences in the education of law students. Special student seminars with members of the Bench and Bar are an integral part of the program of the School. Among those who participated in such seminars during the year 1958-59 were The Honorable Hugo L. Black, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; The Honorable Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr., United States District Judge for the District of Massachusetts; Sir Leslie Knox Munro, Ambassador of New Zealand to the United States and immediate past President of the General As­ sembly of the United Nations; Professor Zelman Cowen, Dean of the Faculty of Law of the University of Melbourne; The Honorable Robert Tieken, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; The Honorable Walter V. Schaefer, Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court; Thomas E. Sunderland, Esq., Vice-President and General Counsel, Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); The Honorable Walter L. Pope, Judge of the Federal Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; Sir George Paton, Vice-Chancellor, University of Melbourne; Lloyd K. Garrison, Esq., of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison; Professor K. O. Shatwell, Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Sydney; The Honorable Richard B. Austin, Judge of the Superior Court of Cook Coun­ ty; The Honorable John V. McCormick, Judge of the Illinois Appellate Court; Alder­ man Leon M. Despres of Chicago's Fifth Ward. Public lectures were given by Albert E. Jenner, Jr., Esq. of Thompson, Raymond, Mayer, Jenner and Bloomstein; Sir Leslie Knox Munro ; Dr. Hans B. Thorelli, Re­ search Consultant to the General Electric Company; The Honorable Charles E. Wyzan­ ski, Jr.; Frank D. Mayer, Esq. of Mayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney, Brown and Platt; Professor Zelman Cowen; Professor Paul A. Freund of the Law School of Harvard University; Professor Denis V. Cowen, Dean of the Faculty of Law of the University of Cape Town; The Honorable Lowell B. Mason, former Commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission; Anthony Lewis, Supreme Court correspondent of the New York Times. The Law School sponsors an annual three-day Conference on Federal Taxation, fea­ turing papers by tax specialists drawn from all over the United States. The conference is planned in co-operation with members of the tax bar in Chicago. Professor Walter Blum is in charge of the Law School's participation in this Conference. The Ernst Freund Lectureship was established in 1953 in honor of a distinguished member of the Law Faculty from 1902 to 1932. In 1953 the Ernst Freund Lecture was delivered by The Honorable Felix Frankfurter, Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, on "Some Observations on Supreme Court Litigation and Legal Educa­ tion." In 1955 the lecture was delivered by The Honorable Walter V. Schaefer, '28, Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois, who spoke on "Precedent and Policy." In 1958 20 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO the Ernst Freund Lecture was delivered by The Honorable Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr., Judge of the United States District Court for Massachusetts. On March 1, 1960, the Ernst Freund Lecture will be delivered by The Right Honorable The Lord Alfred Thompson Denning. The C. R. Musser Lectureship, an endowed lectureship in honor of a distinguished citizen, was established by the University in 1955 out of funds previously given to the Law School by the General Service Foundation. The lectureship is awarded for a public lecture on some phase of the problems of government, to be given by an experienced citizen who has held public office. The Henry C. Simons Memorial Lectureship was established in 1955 as a biennial lectureship in the field of law and economics, in honor of Henry C. Simons, for many years a distinguished member of the Faculty of the Law School and of the Department of Economics. The first Simons Lecture was given in February, 1958, by George Stigler, then Professor of Economics, Columbia University, on "The Goals of Economic Policy." The second Simons Lecture will be delivered on November 18, 1959, by Profes­ sor Jacob Viner of Princeton University. Suitable dedicatory exercises and a special convocation will be held during 1959-60 to celebrate the completion of the new law buildings. The cornerstone ceremonies for the new law buildings were held on May 28, 1958. Participating in the ceremonies were The Right Honorable The Viscount Kilmuir of Creich, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, and The Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States.

XVI. Student Activities and Honors The University of Chicago Law Review, founded in 1933, is published by the School under the management of a Board of Editors composed of students. Students ranking highest in scholarship upon completion of their first year are invited to become com­ petitors for election to the staff of the Review. From this group the editorial staff and the Board of Editors are chosen. For the year 1958-59, the Editor-in-Chief was Alan Washburn. The Managing Editors were Kenneth Howell and George Saunders. The Associate Editors were Richard Allen, Merlin Baker, George Bobrinskoy, Robert Doan, Michael Douty, R. Corydon Finch, John Gilhooly, Kenneth Haberman, Julius Kaplan, Mark Lieberman, Robert Lofts, Robert Martineau, Frank Mayer, Eric Rosen­ feld, Herma Hill Schreter, Amy Scupi, Richard Scupi, and John Voortman. The Co­ Editors-in-Chief for 1959-60 are Howard Miller and Joseph Sax. Managing Editors are Neil Adelman, David Floyd, and Robert Hamilton. The Associate Fditors are Roger Bernhardt, Matt Eytan, Joseph Kaplan, Monroe McKay, Edward O'Dell, Arthur Smith, and Stephen Waite. The Moot Court Committee conducts the Hinton Competition, a two-year round­ robin moot court program open to all students after their first year who wish to advance their technique in the art of brief writing and oral argument. Prizes are awarded to winners of the competition; the team that represents the Law School in national com­ petition is selected from among the most successful competitors in the second year. Chairman of the Committee during the academic year 1958-59 was Frederic S. Lane. The Committee made the following awards for achievement in the 1958-59 competition: Frederic S. Lane, George L. Saunders, Jr., competition winners; Stuart Applebaum, Jon Smock, Arthur Winoker, best brief; Robert Rachlin, best oral argument. The Law School's team in the 1958-59 national competition was composed of Rufus Cook, Robert Doan, and Michael Padnos. The 1959-60 national moot court team is composed THE LAW SCHOOL 21

of Stuart Applebaum, Robert Rachlin, Harvey Stephens. The Chairman of the Com­ mittee for 1959-60 is John A. Spanogle, Jr. The Student Lawyer Journal, national publication of the American Law Student As­ sociation, is published in Chicago. Its editorial staff is composed entirely of University of Chicago Law School students, chosen for their writing ability. The student staff is re­ sponsible for all aspects of the publication. Editorial consultants are Jo Desha Lucas, Associate Professor of Law; Earl Hagen, Director, American Bar Association Law Stu­ dent Program; and James M. Spiro, American Bar Association Director of Activities. The Editor-in-Chief for 1958-59 was Gloria Martinez; for 1959-60, the Editor-in-Chief is Elliott Cohen. The Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic, made possible through a gift from Mr. Edwin F. Mandel, was established in 1957 to provide needed legal services for indigent persons and for the training of law school students in the handling of cases under supervision. Henry J. Kaganiec is Director of the Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. The faculty committee on the clinic is composed of Nicholas Katzenbach, Chairman, Francis Allen, and Malcolm Sharp. The 1958-59 officers were Matthew Brislawn, President; Maurice Oppenheim, First Vice-President; James Weldon, Second Vice-President; Joseph Mur­ phy, Secretary-Treasurer. The officers for 1959-60 are H. Collyer Church, President; David James, First Vice-President; Evan Kjellenberg, Second Vice-President; and Philip Bransky, Secretary-Treasurer. The University of Chicago Law School Student Association is composed of the entire student body and is affiliated with the American Law Student Association, a national organization sponsored by the Junior Bar Conference and the American Bar Associa­ tion. The Student Association sponsors various legal and social functions throughout the year. The 1958-59 officers were John Gilhooly, Chairman; William Doherty, Secre­ tary; Richard Newhouse, Treasurer. The President of the Senior Class for 1959-60 and Chairman of the Council of the Association is Jerome Dixon. The Chicago Chapter of the Order of the Coif is an honor society founded to encour­ age and to advance the ethical standards of the legal profession. Its members are elected each spring from the ten per cent of the graduating class who rank highest in scholar­ ship. In 1958-59 the elected members were Richard H. Allen, George V. Bobrinskoy, Jr., Robert L. Doan, John V. Gilhooly, Herma C. Hill, Kenneth Howell, Frank D. Mayer, Jr., and George L. Saunders, Jr. The Joseph Henry Beale Prize, named in honor of the first Dean of the Law School, is awarded to the first-year student whose work in the first-year tutorial program is judged by the Faculty to be most worthy of special recognition. The prize for 1958-59 was awarded to Nancy McDermid. The Walter Wheeler Cook Prize, named in honor of a distinguished member of the Law Faculty from 1910 to 1916, is awarded to the student whose work in the second­ year tutorial program is judged by the Faculty to be most worthy of special recognition. The prize for 1958-59 was awarded to Norman G. Kurland and Joseph L. Sax. The Institute for International Order offers two prizes for winning essays on subjects designated annually. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company and the Bancroft-Whitney Com­ pany, joint publishers of American Jurisprudence, annually make available the relevant separately bound subjects from American Jurisprudence as an award to the highest rank­ ing students in various course areas. The Lawyers Title Award, sponsored by the Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, 22 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

Richmond, Virginia, is awarded annually to a student for excellence in work in the field of real estate. The award was given in 1958-59 to Richard H. Allen. The Edwin F. Mandel Award is made annually to that member of the graduating class who, during his law school career, has contributed the most to the Legal Aid program, both in the quality of the work done and the conscientious exercise of legal aid responsi­ bilities. The award for 1958-59 was made to Matthew E. Brislawn. The Nathan Barkan Memorial Competition Prizes, sponsored by the American So­ ciety of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, are available annually to two students whose papers in the field of copyright law are deemed by the Faculty to be worthy of the prizes. The" Wall Street Journal" Award is given annually to a student for excellence in work in the field of corporation law. The award for 1958-59 was given to Robert F. Lusher.

XVII. Placement

The Law School maintains a placement office to help students find suitable employ­ ment after their graduation. In collaboration with the Law School Alumni Association, special placement groups in large cities, and the University's general placement office, it secures information about openings in law offices, corporations, and government offices throughout the country, and furnishes information about University of Chicago Law School graduates. The Placement Office also assists in arrangements for teaching positions; through the Comparative Law Center, efforts are made to place properly qualified students in research centers and other institutions abroad and to help foreign students to find opportunities for study and research in American law. Early in their third year, students submit placement data indicating their plans and preferences after graduation. It is important that these records, which facilitate appro­ priate recommendations, be filled out accurately and kept up to date. Accordingly stu­ dents whose plans or preferences change during the third year are asked to indicate such changes to the Placement Office. In the event that a student enters the armed forces following his graduation, the facilities of the Placement Office are available to him upon his return to civilian status. All third-year students have a personal interview with Dean Ratcliffe, who is Director of Placement. Other members of the faculty are also avail­ able for consultation and advice.

XVIII. Buildings and Library Beginning with the Autumn Quarter, 1959, the Law School will occupy the new Law Buildings on the south side of the Midway Plaisance, connected with the Burton-Judson Residence Halls on the west, and opposite the American Bar Center on the east. The Law Quadrangle contains four connected buildings: the Auditorium-Courtroom Build­ ing; the Classroom-Seminar Building; the Library-Office Building; the Administration Building. The buildings, designed by Eero Saarinen, use twentieth-century materials, techniques, and design concepts. The architect has related the new buildings in the quadrangle to the Burton-Judson Residence Halls and to the American Bar Center. An open court, with a reflecting pool, is at the center of the group of buildings. The Auditorium-Courtroom Building contains an auditorium seating 475 and a com­ pletely equipped courtroom seating about 190. The Auditorium-Courtroom Building is situated in such a way that it is directly accessible to the public. Rooms on two floors on both sides of the Courtroom are provided for judges, court officials, and lawyers. The Classroom-Seminar Building lies between the Auditorium Courtroom and the Library-Office Building. There are five Seminar-Conference Rooms, accommodating THE LAW S C H 0 0 L 23

18 to 43 students, ana rour Ciassrooms varying m capacity from 85 to 175. A large area for student lockers and lounges is located on the lower floor. The Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic is also located in the Classroom-Seminar Building with direct access to University Avenue on the east. The Building includes a wide arcade-like corridor that funs along the open court side of the structure and connects with the Auditorium­ Courtroom Building. The Library-Office Building includes a lounge and exhibition and conference area on the first floor. On the second floor is the Reading Room of the Law Library, together with the Library administrative offices, the Rare-Book Room, and two conference and reception rooms. A balcony overlooking the Reading Room is occupied by stacks and study areas, The University of Chicago Law Review offices, and special rooms. Each of the next three floors contains a central core of stacks surrounded by a ring of faculty and research offices. Each floor contains a student study-room, a special collec­ tion room, an office for a student organization, and carrels. The Library-Office Building is air conditioned. The Administration Building contains a suite of offices for the administrative activi­ ties of the School and a faculty conference room. The Building also includes a public corridor connecting the Law Buildings with the Burton-Judson Courts, which make available student housing facilities, lounges, dining halls, and private dining rooms. The Law Library collection covers substantially all fields and systems of law. The Anglo-American Law section contains an almost complete collection of the statutes, session laws, and reported decisions of the courts of each jurisdiction, together with digests, encyclopedias, loose-leaf services, periodicals, and the principal treatises. It in­ cludes also an extensive collection of the original briefs and records of cases in the Su­ preme Court of the United States and a representative collection of the reports and opinions of the federal and state administrative agencies and of the proceedings of the various bar associations. The International and Foreign Law section contains basic source and secondary materials relating to early legal systems and the law of continental European countries, including the latest codes, laws, decisions, and current periodicals. There are also special sections on legal history, including biography, jurisprudence, com­ parative law, canon law, and international law. Materials on the laws of the oriental countries, ancient and modern, can be found on the Quadrangles in the library of the Oriental Institute. Law students have ready access to the other libraries of the Univer­ sity, to the library of the nearby Public Administrative Service, and to the library of the American Bar Center. The Law Library has four special funds at its disposal to supplement general library appropriations. These are the James Nelson Raymond Memorial Fund, established in 1929 by Anna L. Raymond as a memorial to her husband, James Nelson Raymond, an eminent businessman of Chicago; the Wallace Heckman Memorial Fund, established in 1929 by Mrs. Wallace Heckman as a memorial to her husband, Wallace Heckman, busi­ ness manager of the University from 1903 to 1924; the William B. Hale Fund, estab­ lished in 1944 by the family of Mr. Hale for the collection of materials for research and study in the field of monopoly; and a special Law Library endowment fund which has been established for the Law School under the guidance and with the help of Arnold I. Shure. XIX. Linn House, the Law School Residence Linn House is the Law School Men's Residence, located in the Burton-Judson Courts and connected with the new Law School buildings. There are common-room and 24 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO lounge facilities as well as living quarters for law students. The lounges in Burton­ Judson Courts also provide a meeting place for law students and a center for extra­ curricular activities of the Law School. The John B. Phillips Memorial Library, established by the classmates of John B. Phillips, J.D. 1941, who was killed in action at Tarawa, is housed in the Law Lounge in Burton-Judson Courts as an open-shelf collection of general cultural books pertain­ ing to the law. Applications for residence in Linn House or inquiries concerning other housing accommodations should be addressed to the Student Housing Office, The University of Chicago, 5801 Ellis Avenue, Chicago 37. Arrangements may be made by law students not rooming in the Hall to take regularly lunch or dinner, or both, in the Burton-Judson Courts dining-room. Unless special arrangements are made, the assign­ ment of rooms is for a period of three academic quarters.

xx. International House

International House, with accommodations for over five hundred residents (men and women), is a gift of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and is designed primarily to provide living quarters for qualified students from abroad and for American students. Full-time graduate students and upperclass undergraduate students registered in the University of Chicago and in other colleges and universities in the Chicago area are eligible for resi­ dence at International House. Accommodations are available also on a quarterly, short­ term, or transient basis to visiting foreign faculty members, scholars, research associ­ ates, and fellows. International House offers a varied program of cultural and social activities planned to give opportunities for the students to acquire knowledge of each other's customs and culture. Informal discussion groups interpret the historical, political, and sociological aspects of various countries. Social events include dances, concerts, receptions, and pro­ grams presenting activities of a national character. Opportunities are provided for for­ eign and American students to work together in many types of student enterprises. A broad program of community hospitality allows foreign students to meet American families and to visit American homes. Tours are arranged quarterly to Chicago's out­ standing industries and historical centers. The office of the Adviser to Foreign Visitors is located in International House. For­ eign students are welcome at any time to consult with the Adviser on immigration mat­ ters, on personal problems, and on problems of adjustment to conditions in a new land. Individual consideration is given to each student upon arrival, and efforts are made to relate him or her quickly and in a friendly way to the new environment. Quarterly rates for rooms in International House are as follows: for double rooms

. equipped with individual beds, $75.00 to $99.00 per person; for single rooms, $85.00 to $120.00. Weekly short-term rates (applicable for a minimum period ofresidence of two All weeks) are one-tenth of the quarterly rate. The rate by the day is $2.50 per person. rooms are furnished except for towels, which may be rented for an additional $2.50 per quarter. Moderately priced meals are served in the cafeteria, which is open to all univer­ sity students and faculty members. All inquiries should be addressed to the Office of Admissions, International House, 1414 East Fifty-ninth Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. THE LAW S C H 0 0 L 25

XXI. The Chapel

RICHARD E. VIKSTROM, A.M., Director of Chapel Music. HEINRICH FLEISCHER, PH.D., University Organist. JAMES R. LAWSON, A.B., LAUREAT, Chapel Carillonneur. Sunday morning services of worship are held throughout the academic year in the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Students and faculty members participate in the service. The Dean preaches on about half the Sundays of each quarter; on the other Sundays the guest preachers include members of the Federated Theological Faculty and outstanding churchmen from all parts of the nation and abroad. Special services are scheduled for the major seasons of the Church Year: Advent, Christmas, Lent, Holy Week, and Pente­ cost. The sacrament of Holy Communion is celebrated each quarter. The Chapel is open daily for private meditation and prayer. Membership in the University Choir is open to all qualified students. The Choir sings at the Sunday services and, accompanied by members of the Chicago Symphony Orches­ tra, gives four or five major concerts each year. These include such works as Handel's The Messiah and Bach's St. Matthew Passion and Mass in B Minor as well as modern works of sacred music. Frequent organ concerts are given by the University Organist and by distinguished guest organists. Carillon concerts are played each Sunday and Wednesday by the Chapel Carillonneur. The University Chapel is the center of a wide variety of student groups organized for religious fellowship and activities within the University and for social service in the city. These groups plan their own programs with the advice of counselors or of student pas­ tors chosen by the authorities of their respective churches. The Jewish, Episcopal, and Roman Catholic groups have for their activities houses of their own near the Quad­ rangles. A number of Protestant groups co-operate with the University in maintaining Chapel House, adjacent to the Chapel at 5810 Woodlawn Avenue, for their joint activi­ ties. Information may be secured, and appointments with the officers or counselors of the several groups may be made, through the Chapel office.

XXII. Physical Education

The University has an extensive athletic plant and encourages the broadest participa­ tion of its students in the Physical Education program. The Frank Dickinson Bartlett Gymnasium contains basketball, badminton, and vol­ leyball courts, space for gymnastics, wrestling, fencing, squash, weight lifting, and hand­ ball, and a swimming pool. The Field House provides facilities for practice and enjoy­ ment of a variety of athletic sports under favorable conditions in cold months and in bad weather. It contains a removable basketball floor, a track, a baseball diamond and batting cage, five tennis courts, a golf-driving range, and a football practice field. The University also maintains outdoor tennis courts, two large playing fields, baseball diamonds, golf greens, a one-quarter-mile cinder track, and an ice-skating and hockey rink. provides equipment for the program of athletics for women. The building contains a gymnasium, dance room, games room, swimming pool, golf cages, bowling alleys, billiard room, and shower and dressing quarters. To the south of Ida Noyes Hall is the Midway Plaisance, where the Chicago Park District provides three hockey fields. 26 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

XXllI. The Student Health Service STAFF

HENRIETTA HERBOLSHEIMER, S.B., M.P.H., M.D., Director of the Student Health Service and Associate Professor of Medicine. JAMES E. CASSIDY, M.D., Chief of the Student Health Service General Medical Unit, Assistant Director of the Student Health Service, and Assistant Professor of Medi­ cine. JOHN KRAMER, M.D., Chief of the Student Health Service Mental Hygiene Clinic, As­ sistant Director of the Student Health Service, and Associate Professor of Psychiatry. J. ALLEN MARSHALL, M.D., Assistant Chief of the Student Health Service General Medical Unit and Assistant in Medicine. MORTON MILLMAN, M.D., Assistant Chief of the Student Health Service Mental Hy­ giene Clinic and Instructor in Psychiatry. MIRIAM ELSON, A.M., Chief Psychiatric Social Worker in the Student Health Service Mental Hygiene Clinic and Psychiatric Social Worker in the Department of Psychi­ atry. OLGA GILLOEGLY, S.B., M.D., Physician in the Student Health Service and Assistant in Medicine. ALPHONSE GNILKA, M.D., Physician in the Student Health Service and Assistant in Medicine. MARJORIE HAYES, M.D., Psychiatrist in the Student Health Service and Assistant in Psychiatry. ALICE IcHIKAWA, A.M., Psychiatric Social Worker in the Student Health Service and in the Department of Psychiatry. SUSANNE E. LARSH, A.B., M.D., Physician in the Student Health Service and Assistant in Medicine. MORTON LIEBERMAN, PH.D., Psychologist in the Student Health Service and Instructor in Psychology. NANDOR SZENT-GYORGYI, M.D., Physician in the Student Health Service and Assistant Professor of Medicine.

The Student Health Center is a part of the medical plant of the University, which is comprised of hospitals, clinics, and medical-research facilities. The complete facilities of the Health Service are available to students in the quarters when they are registered and for a week following any such quarter. Eligibility for service is further defined by pay­ ment of the quarterly registration and general service fee. An entrance medical examination is part of registration. Coverage includes ambula­ tory care in SHS; costs of hospitalization are covered by the Health Service up to a limit of one week for any single illness provided that the condition did not exist before admission to the University. Since any illness can best be diagnosed in the clinic, emergency room, or hospital, the Health Service does not provide house or room calls. A new student must make arrangements for the entrance medical examination at the time he registers. Failure to make this arrangement or to keep an appointment already made for such examination entails added cost to the Health Service. To offset this cost, an extra service fee of $3.00 must be paid to the Health Service by the student. For a more complete description of services available, the Student Handbook should be consulted. From time to time students with special health problems affecting their own welfare or that of the University community may be recalled to the Health Service. Failure of a student to comply with this request of the Health Service is reported to the Dean's office. THE LAW S C H 0 0 L 27

XXIV. Suggestions for Pre-legal Study The Law School does not require that applicants for admission present college credit in any specified subjects. A broad general education is thought more important for the student of law than specialized study in fields closely related to law. a education Such general should include study of the social sciences, including eco­ nomics, political science, and history; the humanities, especially philosophy and litera­ ture; and the elements of physical and biological sciences and mathematics. It is also of great importance that a law student should have acquired habits of precision, fluency, and economy in writing and speaking.

XXV. Fees and Other Information

Application fee. An application fee of $5.00 must accompany the original application for admission to the University. No part of the fee is refundable nor is it applicable as an advance payment on other fees. Tuition fee. The tuition fee in the Law School is $300 a quarter. A student is required to pay full tuition unless a reduced program of work and a reduction of fees are ap­ proved by the Dean. Registration and general service fee (including Health Service). A fee of $20 a quarter. Residence-hall fees. Room and board are available in Linn House at a cost of $879 for the nine-month academic year. Deposit on admission. An applicant who is accepted for admission into the Law School is required to make a deposit of $35 within four weeks after notice of acceptance has been sent. This deposit will be applied on the tuition fee and will be refunded only in the event that illness or other sufficient cause prevents an applicant from entering the School at the beginning of the quarter for which he has been accepted. 28 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

XXVI. Students in Residence, 1958-59

NOTE. In cases where no state is mentioned, Illinois is understood.

Abbreviations: C. = College; U. = University; S. = School; Inst. = Institute; Sem. = Semi nary; Acad. = Academy. ABRAMSON, FREDERICK B., New York, N.Y., A.B., Yale U. ABRAMSON, SIDNEY P., St. Paul, Minn., A.B., Carleton C. ACHERMANN, PETER, Lucerne, Switzerland, LIC. EN DROIT, U. of Geneva Law S. ADELMAN, LOIS, Chicago, U. of Chicago. ADELMAN, NEIL, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. ADICKES, ROLAND, Konigstein, Germany, A.M., U. of Chicago. ALLEN, ALFRED S., Winnetka, A.B., U. of Notre Dame. ALLEN, RICHARD H., Wilmington, Del., A.B., Bowdoin C. ALSCHULER, BENJAMIN P., Aurora, A.B., U. of Virginia. ANDERSON, DAVID K., Flossmoor, A.B., Princeton; LL.B., U. of Illinois. ANNETT, JAMES D., Weston, Mass., A.B., Tufts U. APPLEBAuM, STUART A., Chicago, A.B., Harvard U. BABB, DAVID R., Barrington, S.B., Beloit C.; M.B.A., American U. BADER, JACK L., Honolulu, Hawaii, B.B.A., U. of Hawaii. BAKER, MERLIN, Provo, Utah, S.B., Brigham Young U. BAST, ROBERT E., Springfield, A.B., Illinois C. BAUMBACH, CHARLES R., South Milwaukee, Wis., A.B., M.B.A., U. of Chicago. BEATTY, JAMES H., Kentland, Ind., A.B., DePauw U. BECKER, DAVID M., Chicago, A.B., Harvard U. BELL, IRA S., Chicago, A.B., Northwestern U. BERNHARDT, ROGER, Chicago, A.B., A.M., U. of Chicago. BERNSTEIN, JULES, Brooklyn, N.Y., A.B., Brandeis U. BILLS, ROBERT c., JR., San Francisco, Calif., A.B., Stanford U. BLAKE, GEORGE P., Munster, Ind., S.B., U. of Notre Dame. BOBRINSKOY, GEORGE V., JR., Chicago, A.B., Amherst C. BONSIGNORE, JOHN J., East Hartford, Conn., A.B., Trinity C. BRANDZEL, GENE B., Chicago, B.B.A., U. of Michigan. BRANSKY, PHILIP L., Chicago, A.B., Northwestern U. BRISLAWN, MATTHEW E., Pullman, Wash., A.B., Washington State C. BROMBERG, BRUCE L., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. BROUDE, RICHARD F., Chicago, S.B., Washington U. BRYNESTAD, LORENZ I., Winona, Minn., A.B., St. Olaf C. BUONOMO, DONALD G., White Plains, N.Y., A.B., Colby C. BURMAN, HAROLD S., Wilmette, S.B., U. of Wisconsin. BURNS, MARTIN H., JR., Winnetka, A.B., Princeton U. BURNS, WILLIAM E., Akron, Ohio, A.B., U. of Chicago. BUTLER, KENNETH V., Overland Park, Kan., A.B., Yale U. CADITZ, GERALD M., Los Angeles, Calif., A.B., U. of Chicago. CANNON, JOHN M., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. CARLS, RICHARD E., Glen Rock, N.J., A.B., Princeton U. CARLSON, RONALD G., Chicago, A.A., Wright Jr. C.; U. of Chicago. CARR, CLAIRE E., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. CASTLE, CRAIG, Fond du Lac, Wis., A.B., Lawrence C. CASTLE, JOHN W., Chicago, A.B., Princeton U. CHERNOFF, MICHAEL G., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. CHURCH, HAROLD c., JR., Midland, Mich., A.B., Albion C. CLAAR, E. ALAN, Chicago, A.B., Yale; M.B.A., Harvard U. CLANTON, WAVERLY B., Donora, Pa., A.B., U. of Pittsburgh. COHEN, ELLIOTT, Skokie, S.B., Northwestern U. COHEN, LAWRENCE M., Chicago, B.B.A., U. of Michigan. COOK, RUFUS, Fairfield, Ala., A.B., Talladega C. COWAN, GARY L., Livingston, Mont., A.B., A.M., Montana State U. CRANDUS, NORMAN, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. CREWS, JEANNE S., Nashville, Tenn., A.M., Vanderbilt U. CUNNINGHAM, EDWARD J., Barrington, A.B., Yale U. CURTIS, MARY ANN, Dalton, Mass., A.B., U. of Chicago. DARRAH, GEORGE R., Flint, Mich., A.B., Xavier U. DECKER, DONALD 0., Cumberland, Md., A.B., Swarthmore C. DEKoRTE, RICHARD W., Franklin Lakes, N.J., A.B., Amherst C. THE LAW S C H 0 0 L 29

DIAMONDSTONE, PETER, New York, N.Y., A.B., Queens C. of the City of New York. DIXON, JEROME F., JR., Evanston, A.B., U. of Notre Dame. DOAN, ROBERT L., Dayton, Ohio; S.B., Indiana U.; S.M., U. of Illinois. DOHERTY, WILLIAM P., JR., Bridgeton, N.J., A.B., Haverford C. DOUTY, MICHAEL B., Chicago, A.B., Swarthmore C. DOWLING, DONALD c., Chicago, A.B., Brown U. EAGON, DIANA STANDAHL, Reidsville, N.C., A.B., U. of Chicago. EARL, ANTHONY S., St. Ignace, Mich., A.B., Michigan State U. EASTON, WILLIAM S., Lowville, N.Y., A.B., Hamilton C. EBERHART, EDWARD K., Wooster, Ohio, A.B., C. of Wooster. EGAN, DONALD E., Chicago, S.B., Marquette U. EIGER, LAWRENCE H., Chicago, B.B.A., U. of Michigan. ELLEDGE, RICHARD R., Painesville, Ohio, A.B., Carleton C. EMERICK, EDWIN L., JR., Seattle, Wash., A.B., Reed C. EYTAN, MATT, Washington, D.C., S.B., Wilson Teachers C.; A.M., Columbia U. FANNING, DONALD A., Troy, N.Y., A.B., Wittenberg C. FAULSTICH, JAMES R., Elmhurst, S.B., Indiana U. FINCH, RONALD C., Anna, A.B., Trinity C. (Conn.). FLANAGAN, THOMAS E., Chicago, S.B., Loyola U. FLOYD, DAVID K., Farmingdale, N.Y., A.B., Trinity C. (Conn.). FORREST, JAMES E., Pomona, Calif., A.B., Pomona C. FOSDICK, WILLIAM D., Williamsville, N.Y., A.B., Harvard U. FOSTER, HENRY H., Pittsburgh, Pa., A.B., LL.B., U. of Nebraska; LL.M., Harvard Law S. Fox, RICHARD C., Chenango Forks, N.Y., A.B., U. of Rochester. FRIED, DAVID, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. FRITZSCHE, SYBILLE, Bonn, Germany, S.M., Purdue U. FUCHS, ROBERT, Jersey City, N.J., A.B., Rutgers U. GEDVILA, GABRIEL E., Cicero, A.B., U. of Chicago. GEIER, JOEL S., Bronx, N.Y., A.B., U. of Chicago. GEMMA, ALFRED J., Cranston, R.I., A.B., Brown U. GEORGE, ROBERTA J., Chicago, A.B., U. of Connecticut. GERSTEIN, ROBERT H., Chicago, A.B., U. of Illinois. GILHOOLY, JOHN V., Providence, R.I., A.B., St. John's Sem. GILLIS, KENNETH L., Chicago, S.B., Illinois Inst. of Technology. GLICK, ROBERT M., Chicago, S.B., U. of Pennsylvania. GOLDBERG, PERRY, Bayside, N.Y., A.B., M.B.A., U. of Chicago. GOODMAN, GERALD, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. GOSSELIN, JOHN W., Aurora, A.B., Beloit C. GRANT, FRED K., Nampa, Idaho, A.B., C. of Idaho. GRANT, HALDON K., Chicago, S.B., Purdue U. GREENWALD, LEONARD, Brooklyn, N.Y., S.B., Cornell U. GRIFFITH, CHARLES E., Nashville, Tenn., A.B., U. of Chicago. GRUENBERG, WILLIAM A., Chicago, S.B., U. of Wisconsin. HABERMAN, KENNETH S., Chicago, S.B., U. of Pennsylvania. HALE, LLOYD A., Vancouver, B.C., Canada, A.B., U. ofBritish Columbia; A.M., U. of Toronto. HALLEY, WILLIAM, Wilmington, Calif., A.B., St. Mary's C. HAMILTON, CLARENCE E., Macon, Ga., B.B.A., Emory U. HAMILTON, ROBERT D., Wheaton, A.B., Oberlin C. HANDELSMAN, SIMON, Chicago, A.B., Dartmouth C. HANFLING, NORMAN, Oak Park, A.B., U. of Chicago. HARTER, RICHARD M., Columbus, Ohio, A.B., Yale. HARTHUN, LUTHER A., Lansing, A.B., Valparaiso U. HARTIGAN, DONALD F., Chicago, S.B., Loyola U. HATTER, TERRY J., JR., Chicago, A.B., Wesleyan U. HAUGE, PAUL H., Northfield, Minn., A.B., St. Olaf C. HAUTZINGER, JAMES E., Omaha, Neb., A.B., Grinnell C. HEISE, RICHARD A., Chicago, B.S.C., DePaul U. HEMSTAD, RONALD B., Willmar, Minn., A.B., St. Olaf C. HENDERSON, STANLEY D., Waukon, Iowa, A.B., Coe C. HENRY, JAMES D., River Forest, A.B., Holy Cross C. HERSH, SEYMOUR, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. HICKMAN, LAUREN c., Sioux City, Iowa, A.B., Harvard U. HILL, HERMA c., Dallas, Tex., A.B., Southern Methodist U. HINTZKE, EDWARD S., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. HOFFMANN, JOHN M., Springfield, A.B., Swarthmore C. HOLLOMAN, DAVID c., Arcadia, Fla., A.B., Davidson C. HOPEWELL, RICHARD J., Sioux Falls, S.D., A.B., U. of Chicago. 30 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

HOUCK, RAYMOND D., Mount Savage, Md., A.B., Hampden-Sydney C. HOWELL, KENNETH, Birmingham, Ala., A.B., U. of Alabama. HUBER, THOMAS W., Marion, Ohio, AB., U. of Pennsylvania. HURWITH, MARY E., Evanston, A.B., Syracuse U. IMHOFF, ROBERT A., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. INSLEY, GORDON, Bern, Switzerland, A.B., Hamilton C. JACOBS, WILLIAM H., Western Springs, AB., S.B., U. of Chicago. JAMES, DAVID L., St. Petersburg, Fla., A.B., Harvard U. JAMES, ERNEST K., JR., Winston-Salem, N.C., A.B., U. of North Carolina. JANIS, DONALD L., New Britain, Conn., A.B., Boston U.; A.M., U. of Connecticut. JEFFERY, CLARENCE RAY, Tempe, Arizona, A.B., Ph.D., U. of Indiana. JERSILD, THOMAS, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. JERVIS, OLIVER W., Flossmoor, A.B., U. of the South. JEVONS, JACK 0., Wakefield, Kan., A.B., U. of Kansas. JOHNSON, EARL J., Orlando, Fla., A.B., Northwestern U. JOHNSTON, ROBERT G., Alea, Hawaii, U. of Chicago. JONES, ROMA E., Chicago, AB., Fisk U. JUBINSKY, JOHN, Jermyn, Pa., A.B., Colby C. KAHN, JULIAN, Chicago, A.B., Roosevelt C. KAMEN, RICHARD, Chicago, AB., U. of Chicago. KANDLER, GERALD, Philadelphia, Pa., A.B., Antioch C.: LL.B., U. of Pennsylvania. KANE, JOSEPH T., Philadelphia, Pa., S.B., Temple U. KAPLAN, JOSEPH H. H., Hagerstown, Md., A.B., Johns Hopkins U. KAPLAN, JULIUS, Washington, D.C., A.B., Wesleyan U. KARCAZES, GEORGE D., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. KATZ, BENNETT R., Long Beach, N.Y., A.B., Hobart C. KATZ, ERWIN I., Toledo, Ohio, AB., Yeshiva U. KELLOGG, DARRELL D., Hiawatha, Kan., A.B., U. of Kansas. KEMP, L. HUGH, La Grange, Ga., AB., A.M., Emory U. KIFFIN, CHARLES W., Omaha, Neb., AB., U. of Nebraska. KITE, MURRAY L., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. KJELLENBERG, EVAN M., Cincinnati, Ohio, AB., Dartmouth C. KLAASEN, A. JOHN, Holland, Mich., A.B., Hope C. KLEIN, JOHN J., Valley Stream, N.Y., A.B., Colgate U. KLEIN, NORMAN I., Brooklyn, N.Y., AB., Brooklyn C. KOLOMS, HARVEY X., Chicago, S.B., Northwestern U.; J.D., DePaul Law S. KOPMAN, CHARLES E., St. Louis, Mo., A.B., Yale U. KORT, FRED, Storrs, Conn., PH.B., A.M., PH.D., Northwestern U. KOSSOFF, SINCLAIR, Chicago, A.M., U. of Chicago. KOSTOPOULOS, ELENIE P., Portland, Ore., AB., U. of Chicago. KOTLER, MILTON, Chicago, A.M., U. of Chicago. KREBS, FRED, Bern, Switzerland, U. of Geneva, U. of Bern. KRUG, LEONARD A., Kansas City, Mo., A.B., U. of Missouri. KUBY, RAYMOND J., East Cleveland, Ohio, AB., Antioch C. KURLAND, NORMAN G., Bridgeport, Conn., A.B., U. of Connecticut. LAGOMARCINO, JOHN, Burlington, Iowa, A.B., Amherst C. LAND, STEPHEN A., Reading, Mass., A.B., Bowdoin C. LANE, FREDERIC S., Chicago, S.B., U. of Pennsylvania. LANGERMAN, RICHARD, West Hartford, Conn, A.B., Wesleyan U. LANGROCK, PETER F., Beechurst, N.Y., A.B., U. of Chicago. LARSON, ROBERT S., La Porte, Ind., U. of Chicago. LAVIK, ARNE R., Knoxville, Tenn., U. of Chicago. LEBOLD, SHELDON L., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. LEMON, PATRICK, Ridgefield, Wash., AA., Clark JT. c.; A.B., Whitman C. LESER, HANS G., Freiburg, Germany, J.D., U. of Freiburg. LEVINE, GENE N., Brighton, Mass., A.B., Boston U.; PH.D., Columbia U. LEVY, HAROLD, Paterson, N.J., AB., U. of Chicago. LIEBERMAN, MARK S., Bangor, Me., A.B., U. of Maine. LoFTS, ROBERT L., Alton, A.B., U. of Chicago. LONGACRE, JAY K., Marion, Ind., A.B., Wabash C. LOOMOS, FRANKLIN D., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. LOPEZ, CHESTER H., JR., Portland, Me., A.B., Colby C. LUSHER, ROBERT F., Perrysburg, Ohio, A.B., U. of Chicago. Lux, GEORGE M., Chicago, A.B., St. Joseph's C. LYNN, SHELDON L., Hammond, Ind., A.B., Reed C. LYON, BETTY B., Farmington, Mo., A.B., J.D., U. of Chicago. MACHYOWSKY, GREGORY, New Market, N.J., A.B., U. of Rochester. THE LAW SCHOOL 31

MACKAY, DONALD A., Yonkers, N.Y., A.B., Dartmouth C. MAHOOD, RICHARD W., Elmhurst, A.B., Hamilton C. MALKUS, JAMES A., Chicago, U. of Chicago. MANASTER, IRA B., Chicago, S.B., Northwestern U. MARTENSON, DAVID L., Rockford, 111., A.B., Millikin U. MARTIN, DONALD, Chicago, U. of Chicago. MARTINEAU, ROBERT J., Oconot, Wis., S.B., C. of the Holy Cross. MARTINEZ, GLORIA P., EI Paso, Tex., A.B., Texas Western C. MAYER, FRANK D., JR., Chicago, A.B., Amherst C. MESTON, MICHAEL c., Aberdeen, Scotland, LL.B., U. of Aberdeen. METZGER, BERTRAM L., Chicago, A.B., U. of Notre Dame. MILLER, HOWARD B., Los Angeles, Calif., A.B., George Pepperdine C. MINTZ, JOHN A., Portsmouth, Va., A.B., Maryville C. MITCHELL, JOHN A., Chicago, A.B., Cornell U. MITCHELL, JOSEPH H., Muncie, Ind., A.B., Wabash C. MOHAMMED, AHMED F., Baghdad, Iraq, A.B., Baghdad Law C. MOHR, DAVID L., Chicago, PH.B., M.B.A., U. of Chicago. MORRISON, IAN W., Quincy, A.B., Knox C. MORRISON, JOHN W., Waukegan, A.B., Trinity C. (Conn.). MOULD, CHRISTOPHER M., Philadelphia, Pa., A.B., Princeton U. MUNITZ, GERALD F., New York, N.Y., A.B., U. of Michigan. MURPHY, JOSEPH A., Chicago, S.B., U. of Illinois. MYERS, SAMUEL D., Chicago, A.B., U. of Illinois. MACDOUGALL, DONALD J., Victoria, Australia, LL.B., U. of Melbourne. McCRAY, ROBERT, Park Ridge, A.B., Northwestern U. McDERMID, NANCY, Nashville, Tenn., S.B., A.M., Northwestern U. McDONOUGH, THOMAS B., Chicago, AB., S.T.B., A.M., S.T.L., St. Mary's of the Lake Sem. McKAY, BARRIE G., Huntsville, Utah, S.B., Brigham Young U. McKAY, MONROE G., Huntsville, Utah, S.B., Brigham Young U. NATHAN, LAURANCE P., Chicago, S.B., U. of Illinois. NEAL, PATRICIA, Mooresville, Ind., A.B., Antioch C. NELSON, HERBERT 0., Chicago, S.B., U. of Chicago. NEWBERGER, J. MICHAEL, Chicago, S.B., Northwestern U. NEWHOUSE, RICHARD H., JR., Louisville, Ky., S.B., S.M., Boston U. NEWMAN, MELVIN S., Chicago, S.B., U. of Illinois. NICHOLSON, THOMAS, Scarsdale, N.Y., A.B., Princeton U. NIGHTINGALE, PAULINE c., Seattle, Wash., AB., Whitman C. NIGHTINGALE, WILLIAM, Walla Walla, Wash., A.B., Whitman C. NORGREN, ROBERT L., Oak Park, A.B., Beloit U., J.D., Northwestern U. NUSSBAUM, MICHAEL, New York, N.Y., AB., Hofstra C,'; AM., Columbia U. O'DELL, EDWARD, JR., Lowell, Mass., A.B., Brown U. OGLE, RICHARD N., Springfield, Ohio, A.B., Wittenberg C. O'MEARA, ARTHUR c., Chicago, A.B., Beloit C. O'NEILL, STEPHEN J., Naugatuck, Conn., U. of Chicago. OPPENHEIM, MAURICE H., Santa Ana, Calif., AB., U. of Michigan. OWEN, NATHAN P., Miami Beach, Fla., B.B.A., U. of Miami. OWENS, RICHARD F., Fox River Grove, A.B., Knox C. PADGITT, DONALD L., Galesburg, AB., Knox C. PADNOS, MICHAEL, Chicago, A.B., Wesleyan U. PARKS, ALBERT L., III, Providence, R.I., AB., Kent State C. PARTNOY, ROBERT W., Huntington, N.Y., A.B., Yale U. PECK, HERBERT I., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. PEEBLES, CARTER D., Oak Park, A.B., De Pauw U. PENNIMAN, ALFORD R., Rockford, A.B., Carleton C. PETERSON, COURTLAND, Blanca, Colo., AB., U. of Colorado; J.D., U. of Leiden. PETRIE, JAMES S., Norwich, Conn., A.B., U. of Connecticut. PHOENIX, GEORGE E., JR., Chicago, S.B., Georgetown U. PINCUS, SIGMUND R., Washington, D.C., A.B., George Washington U. POSTMUS, LAWRENCE J., Chicago, A.B., Wheaton C. PRITZKER, DONALD N., Chicago, AB., Amherst c., AB., Harvard U. PROFFITT, JOHN D., Lebanon, Ind., A.B., Wabash C. PRUZANSKY, JERRY, Chicago, S.B., U. of Illinois. RACHLIN, ROBERT D., W. Hartford, Conn., AB., Yale U. RAMELB, CARLOS D., Kakuku, Hawaii, A.B., U. of Chicago. REID, DENNIS N., Greendale, Wis., U. of Chicago. REID, ELLIS E., Chicago, A.B., U. of Illinois. REILLY, GEORGE F., Libertyville, A.B., Illinois C,'; S.M., South Dakota State C. 32 THE UN IV E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

RELIC, PETER D., Cleveland, Ohio, A.B., Bowdoin C. REMER, THEODORE G., Chicago, LL.B., Chicago Kent College of Law; J.D., John Marshall Law S. RESNICK, MICHAEL, Skokie, A.B., Carleton C. REYNOLDS, ROGER E., Denver, Colo., A.B., Harvard U. RICHARDS, VAN R., Alexander, N.Y., A.B., Colgate U. RICHMOND, WILLIAM P., Cicero, A.B., Albion C. ROCK, RONALD S., Chicago, A.B., Ripon C. ROMAIN, RICHARD, New York, N.Y., U. of Chicago. ROOKER, CLIFTON K., Modesto, Calif., A.B., Brigham Young U. ROSENFELD, ERIC S., Pittsfield, Mass., A.B., Harvard U. ROSENTHAL, DONALD B., Brooklyn, N.Y., A.B., Brooklyn C. SACK, EDWARD, Brookline, Mass., A.B., Tufts C. SADD, WILLIAM W., Wheaton, A.B., Denison U. SALZBERG, JOHN P., Wilmington, Del., A.B., Oberlin C. SAMUEL EL FISHAWY, SAAD, Cairo, Egypt, LIC. EN DROIT, Cairo U. SATTER, JOHN G., JR., Chicago, A.B., U. of S. Dakota. SAUNDERS, GEORGE L., JR., Birmingham, Ala., A.B., U. of Alabama. SAX, JOSEPH L., Chicago, A.B., Harvard U. SCHLEPHORST, HUBERT F., Hubertusweg, Germany, Philipps u., Wilhelms U. SCHLESINGER, JAN M., New Milford, N.J., A.B., Tufts C. SCHNEIDER, LAWRENCE R., Cleveland Heights, Ohio, A.B., Kenyon C. SCHREIBER, PAUL, Palos Park, A.B., Lawrence C. SCHREIBER, RICHARD J., Hammond, Ind., A.B., Indiana U. SCHWARTZ, THOMAS D., Carbondale, A.B., Southern Illinois U. SCRIGGINS, LARRY, Bethesda, Md., A.B., Middlebury C. SCUPI, AMY, New York, N.Y., A.B., Queens C. of the City of New York. SCUPI, RICHARD, Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. SECOR, NEALE A., Maywood, N.J., A.B., Drew U. SELBOURNE, DAVID M., Manchester, England, B.A., Oxford U. SELFRIDGE, CALVIN, Winnetka, A.B., Northwestern U. SENN, RICHARD H., Chicago, A.B., Swarthmore C. SEYMOUR, McNEIL V., St. Paul, Minn., A.B., Princeton U. SHAW, GORDON M., Chicago, U. of Chicago. SHIELDS, HAL D., Springfield, Ohio, A.B., Wittenberg C. SHUCH, SANDOR 0., Bronx, N.Y., A.B., U. of Chicago. SHUSTER, CARL H., Teaneck, N.J., A.B., Trinity C. (Conn.). SIEGEL, RICHARD H., Cleveland Heights, Ohio, A.B., Western Reserve U. SMITH, ARTHUR H., Union Springs, N.Y., A.B., Colby C. SMITH, ROBERT J., Chippewa Falls, Wis., A.B., A.M., U. of Chicago. SMITH, THOMAS G., Charlotte, N.C., S.B., A.M., U. of North Carolina. SMITH, WILLIAM J. H., Washington, D.C., A.B., Duke U. SMOCK, JON D., Chicago, A.B., U. of Chicago. SOLOMON, ARTHUR M., Brooklyn, N.Y., A.B., U. of Chicago. SOUKUP, DAVID W., Elmhurst, S.B., Iowa State C. SPANOGLE, JOHN A., JR., Shelbyville, Tenn., B.S.E., Princeton U. SPANTON, DONALD M., New York, N.Y., A.B., Cornell U. SPOERL, GLENN H., Chicago, A.B., DePauw U. STEENSTRA, HENRY J., JR., Paterson, N.J., A.B., Calvin C. STEPHAN, GEORGE P., Milwaukee, Wis., S.B., U. of Wisconsin; LL.B., U. of Wisconsin. STEPHANS, HARVEY B., Springfield, A.B., Bowdoin C. STERN, HERBERT, New York, N.Y., A.B., Hobart C. STOLL, GARY G., Denver, Colo., S.B., U. of Chicago. STRICKLAND, DONALD A., Tacoma, Wash., A.B., Reed c., A.M., U. of Chicago. STUMBO, RICHARD R., Hastings, Neb., A.B., Carleton C. SUKIJASOVIC, MIODRAG, Beograd, Yugoslavia, Beograd U. TEBOREK, JAMES S., Riverside, A.B., Carleton C. TELLAM, ARTHUR G., Toledo, Ohio, A.B., U. of Chicago. THOMPSON, RICHARD E., Downers Grove, A.B., Kenyon C. THOMSON, EDWARD N., Santa Barbara, Calif., A.B., Reed C. TOIZER, ALFRED, Philadelphia, Pa., S.B., Temple U. TOMASCHOFF, ERWIN A., Jerusalem, Israel, A.B., George Washington U.; M.B.A., U. of Chi- cago. TRITSCHLER, THOMAS c., Evanston, A.B., Brown U. TURNER, ALLEN M., Chicago, B.B.A., U. of Wisconsin. TURNER, HOWARD, Lincolnwood, A.B., U. of Chicago. UNVERZAGT, GEORGE W., Elmhurst, A.B., Elmhurst C. THE LAW S C H 0 0 L 33

VALENTINO, JAMES J., Oak Park, U. of Chicago. VELONJS, NICHOLAS, Indianapolis, Ind., A.B., Brown U. VENUTI, EMIL J., Chicago, A.B., De Paul U. VON HIPPEL, Eike, Freiburg, Germany, U. of Freiburg. VOORTMAN, JOHN, Grand Rapids, Mich., A.B., Michigan State U. WAGENSELLER, KIRK W., JR., Chicago, A.B., Notre Dame U. WAHAB, IBRAHIM I., Baghdad, Iraq, M.CoMP.L., U. of Chicago. WAITE, STEPHEN K., Olean, N.Y., A.B., Hamilton C. WALKER, Ross P., Richmond, Ind., A.B., Earlham C. WANGER, STANLEY, Rocky Ford, Colo., A.B., U. of Colorado. WASHBURN, ALAN V., Rapid City, S.D., A.B., Shimer C. WEED, PERRY L., Philadelphia, Pa., A.B., Hamilton C. WEINSTEIN, MARVIN R., Quincy, Mass., A.B., Williams C. WELCH, JAMES M., Corpus Christi, Tex., A.B., U. of Texas. WELDON, JAMES E., Glenside, Pa., A.B., Amherst C. WERNER, CHARLES A., Elgin, A.B., Shimer C.; M.B.A., U. of Chicago. WESSLING, DONALD M., Chicago, S.B., A.M., Northwestern U. WIER, ROBERT H., La Grange Park., A.B., Elmhurst C. WIGGEN, RALPH E., Chicago, A.B., A.M., U. of Chicago. WILKINSON, HARRY G., Belleville, Mich., A.B., U. of Michigan. WILKS, RICHARD B., Irvington, N.J., A.B., Antioch C. WILLE, PAUL, Waukegan, A.B., Lake Forest C. WILLIAMS, KEITH A., Oberlin, Ohio, A.B., Oberlin C. WINOKER, ARTHUR, New Rochelle, N.Y., A.B., Cornell U. WITTENBERG, DAVID M., Chicago, S.B., Ohio State U. WOULFE, JOHN C., St. Paul, Minn., A.B., Illinois C. WRAY, GEORGE A., Evanston, A.B., U. of Detroit. WRIGHT, CHARLES A., Chicago, A.B., Knox C. YALOWITZ, EDWARD, Chicago, S.B., Purdue U. ZALUTSKY, MORTON H., Schenectady, N.Y., A.B., Yale U. ZAVIS, MICHAEL W., Chicago, S.B., U. of Pennsylvania. ZINN, DONALD S., Marshall, Mich., A.B., Swarthmore C. ZUNDEL, DAVID, Seaside, Oregon, A.B., Reed C.

RESIDENCE OF MEMBERS OF THE STUDENT BODY

No. of No. of Students Students

UNITED STATES: North Carolina...... 3

Ohio...... 17 Alabama . 3 Oregon...... 2 Arizona . 1 Pennsylvania...... 9 California . 8 Rhode Island...... 3 Colorado . 4 South Dakota...... 2 Connecticut . 7 Tennessee...... 6

Delaware . 2 Texas...... 3 District of Columbia . 4 Utah...... 3 Florida . 4 . 2 2 Virginia.. Washington...... 6 �:��\�'. '. : : : : ::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : 3 Wisconsin...... 6

Idaho . 1

Illinois . FOREIGN COUNTRIES Chicago . 95

Outside . Chicago Australia...... 1

Indiana . i} Canada...... 1

Iowa . Egypt '" ...... 1

Kansas . � England , .. .. 1

. 1 Kentucky Germany...... 5

Maine . 2 Iraq ,. 2

. 4 Maryland Israel...... 1

Massachusetts . 8 Scotland...... 1

. 7 Michigan Switzerland...... 2

Minnesota . Yugoslavia...... 1 Missouri . � Number of students 358

Montana . 1

Nebraska . 3 Number of states represented (including

...... 38 New Jersey . 11 the District of Columbia).

...... 10 New York . 32 Foreign countries represented. 34 THE UN I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES REPRESENTED IN THE STUDENT BODY

No. of No. of Students Students

...... University of Aberdeen...... 1 Harvard Law School. I

...... University of Alabama...... 2 Haverford College. I

...... Albert Ludwig University...... 1 University of Hawaii. 3

...... Albion College...... 2 Herzl Junior College. I

...... American University...... 1 Hobart College. 2

...... Amherst College...... 6 Hofstra College. 1

...... Antioch College...... 4 College of the Holy Cross. 1

...... University of Arizona...... 1 Hope College. . I

...... Augustana College...... 1 College of Idaho. 1

...... Baghdad Law School...... 1 University of Idaho. 1

...... Bard College...... 1 Illinois College. 2

...... Barnard College...... 1 Illinois Institute of Technology 2

...... Beloit College...... 4 University of Illinois. 25

. . . University of Bern...... 1 University of Illinois Law School. .. . I

...... Birmingham Southern College...... 1 Indiana University. 3

...... Boston College...... 1 Iowa State Teachers College. . 1

...... Boston University...... 3 John Marshall Law School. .. 1

...... Bowdoin College...... 4 Johns Hopkins University. 1

...... Brandeis University...... 1 University of Kansas. . 2

...... Brigham Young University...... 4 University of Kansas City. 1

...... University of British Columbia...... 1 Kent College of Law. 1

...... Brooklyn College...... 4 Kenyon College. 2

...... Brown University...... 6 Knox College...... 4

...... Cairo University...... 1 Lake Forest College. 1

...... University of California...... 2 Lawrence College. 2

...... Calvin College...... 3 University of Leiden...... 1

. . Carleton College...... 6 Louisville Municipal College...... 1

. . . University of Chicago...... 69 Loyola University (Chicago)...... 4

...... The Citadel...... 1 Macalester College. . . . . 1

. . . Clark Junior College...... 1 University of Maine...... 1

. .. Clark University...... 1 University of Mainz...... 1

Coe College...... 1 Manhattan College...... 1

. . . Colby College...... 3 Marquette University...... 2

. . Colgate College...... 2 Maryville College...... 1

Colorado University...... 2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. . 1

Columbia University...... 9 University of Melbourne...... 1

Cornell University...... 5 Mercer University...... 1

Dartmouth College...... 4 University of Mexico...... 1

Davidson College...... 1 University of Miami...... 2

Denison University...... 1 Michigan State University...... 3

DePaul University...... 3 University of Michigan...... 7

DePauw University...... 3 Middlebury College...... 1

University of Detroit...... 1 Millikin University...... 1

Drew University...... 1 Mills College...... 1

Duke University...... 3 University of Minnesota...... 2

Earlham College...... 2 University of Missouri...... 1

...... I Elmhurst College. . 1 University of Montana. .

...... 2 Emory University. . . . . 2 Montana State College......

...... 2 Fisk University. . 2 Morton Junior College. . . . .

...... 1 University of Frankfort. . . . . 1 Mount Holyoke College......

...... 1 University of Freiburg...... 2 University of Nebraska......

. . 1 University of Geneva Law School...... 1 University of New Mexico...... 2 George Pepperdine College...... 1 New York University. . . .

. 1 George Washington University...... 4 Niagara University......

. . . . 2 Georgetown University...... 1 University of North Carolina......

. . . 1 ...... Gettysburg College...... 1 North Park College......

. . 1 Grinnell College...... 3 University College of North Staffordshire

, 12 Hague Academy ofInternational Law. .. 1 Northwestern University

. .. . 5 Hamilton College...... 5 Northwestern University Law School. . .

. . 5 . . . Hampton-Sydney College...... 1 University of Notre Dame...... 5 ...... Harvard University...... 10 Oberlin College...... THE LAW SCHOOL 3S

No. of No. of Students Students

...... Ohio State University. 1 Syracuse University...... 1

...... Ohio Wesleyan University. 1 Talladega College...... ]

University of Omaha... 1 Temple University. . 2

...... University of Oregon. . 1 University of Tennessee...... I

...... University of Oviedo. .. . I University of Texas...... I

...... Oxford University. . .. 2 Texas Western University...... I

...... University of Paris...... I Thornton Junior College...... I

... .. University of Pennsylvania...... 6 University of Toledo...... I

...... Pennsylvania State...... I University of Toronto...... 1

...... Philipps University...... I Trinity College (Connecticut)...... S

. . . .. University of Pittsburgh...... I Tufts University...... 2

...... Pomona College...... I Valparaiso University...... 2

. . .. . Portland State College...... 1 Vanderbilt University...... 1

. . . . . Princeton University...... 10 University of Vienna...... 2

...... Providence College...... 1 University of Virginia...... 3

...... Purdue University...... 3 Wabash College...... 4

Queens College of the City of New York 2 Washington State College...... I

...... Reed College...... 6 Washington University...... 3

Ripon College...... 1 Wesleyan University...... 4

University of Rochester...... 2 Western Reserve University...... 2

Rockhurst College...... 1 Wheaton College...... 3

Roosevelt University...... 5 Whitman College...... 3

Rutgers University...... 1 Wilhelms University...... 1

Saint John's Seminary...... 1 William and Mary College...... 1

Saint Joseph's College...... 1 Williams College...... I

Saint Mary's College...... 1 Wilson Junior College...... 2

Saint Mary's of the Lake Seminary. .. . . 1 University of Wisconsin...... 6

Saint Olaf College...... 3 University of Wisconsin Law School. . . 1

San Francisco City College...... 1 Wittenberg College...... 3

Shimer College...... 3 Woodstock College...... 1

University of the South...... 1 College of Wooster...... 1

South Dakota State College...... 1 Wright Junior College...... 1

University of South Dakota...... 1 Xavier University (Ohio)...... 3

. Southern lllinois University...... 2 Yale University...... 9

Southern Methodist University...... 1 Yale Law School...... 1

Stanford University...... 1 Yeshiva University. 1

University of Stockholm...... 1

... Swarthmore College...... 4 Number of Schools Represented 196

XXVII. The Visiting Committee of the University of Chicago Law School HENRY F. TENNEY, '15, Chairman

JOHN POTTS BARNES, '24 EDWARD D. McDOUGAL, JR., '23 LAIRD BELL, '07 WILLIAM A. MCSWAIN RICHARD BENTLEY FRANK J. MADDEN, '22 LAURENCE A. CARTON, '47 LOUIS M. MANTYNBAND, '20 ANDREW J. DALLSTREAM, '17 FRANK D. MAYER, '23 THE HON. CHARLES H. DAVIS, '31 KENNETH F. MONTGOMERY HERBERT C. DEYOUNG, '28 PAUL H. MOORE, '23 HOWARD ELLIS, , 15 THOMAS R. MULROY, '28 THE HON. SAMUEL B. EpSTEIN, '15 BERNARD NATH, '21 OWEN FAIRWEATHER, '38 CASPER W. OOMS, '27 ' MORRIS E. FEIWELL, 15 NORMAN H. PRITCHARD, '09 THE HON. HUGO M. FRIEND, '08 GEORGE A. RANNEY, JR. DWIGHT P. GREEN, '12 ERWIN W. ROEMER TAPPAN GREGORY THE HON. WALTER V. SCHAEFER, '28 GEORGE E. HALE, J.S.D., '40 SYDNEY K. SCHIFF, '23 BEN W. HEINEMAN THE HON. ELMER J. SCHNACKENBERG, '12 THE HON. HARRY B. HERSHEY, '11 THE HON. U. S. SCHWARTZ ALBERT E. JENNER, JR. FOREST D. SIEFKIN, '19 CLAY JUDSON, '17 THOMAS E. SUNDERLAND CHARLES R. KAUFMAN P. NEWTON TODHUNTER, '37 WILLARD L. KING, '17 LYNN A. WILLIAMS GLEN A. LLOYD, '23 HARRY N. WYATT, '21 36 THE U N I V E R SIT Y 0 F CHI C AGO

XXVIII. The Alumni Association of the University of Chicago Law Schoo] ANDREW J. DALLSTREAM, '17, President WILLIAM G. BURNS, '31, Vice-President EDWARD D. McDOUGAL, JR., '23, Vice-President P. NEWTON TODHUNTER, '37, Secretary LAURENCE A. CARTON, '47, Treasurer MORRIS B. ABRAM, '40, Atlanta, Ga. ROBERT McDOUGAL, JR., '29, Chicago, III. ' RONALD J. ARONBERG, '57, Chicago, Ill. GEORGE B. McKIBBIN, 13, Chicago, Ill. IRVING 1. AXELRAD, '39, Los Angeles, Calif. FRED H. MANDEL, '29, Cleveland, Ohio. CHARLES W. BOAND, '33, Chicago, Ill. ARNOLD H. MAREMONT, '26, Chicago, Ill. STUART B. BRADLEY, '30, Chicago, Ill. FRANK D. MAYER, '23, Chicago, Ill. THE HON. JACOB M. BRAUDE, '20, Chicago, ABNER J. MIKVA, '51, Chicago, Ill. Ill. THOMAS R. MULROY, '28, Chicago, Ill. LEO J. CARLIN, '19, Chicago, Ill. BERNARD NATH, '21, Chicago, III. JOHN A. ECKLER, '39, Columbus, Ohio. CASPER W. OOMS, '27, Chicago, Ill. OWEN FAIRWEATHER, '38, Chicago, Ill. KEITH 1. PARSONS, '37, Chicago, Ill. MORRIS E. FEIWELL, '15, Chicago, Ill. GEORGE B. PIDOT, '30, New York, N.Y. JACOB L. Fox, JR., '47, Chicago, Ill. ALEXANDER L. POLIKOFF, '53, Chicago, Ill. THE HON. HUGO M. FRIEND, '08, Chicago, THE HON. WALTER L. POPE, '12, San Fran- Ill. cisco, Calif. RAYMOND GOETZ, '50, Chicago, Ill. HERBERT PORTES, '36, Chicago, Ill. DWIGHT P. GREEN, '12, Chicago, Ill. JOHN C. PRYOR, '10, Burlington, Ia. ANDREW C. HAMILTON, '28, Chicago, TIL THE HON. WILLIS W. RITTER, '24, Salt Lake CHARLES F. HARDING III, '43, Chicago, Ill. City, Utah. J. GORDON HENRY, '41, Chicago, Ill. MAURICE ROSENFIELD, '38, Chicago, Ill. THE HON. HARRY B. HERSHEY, '11, Taylor- MAURICE A. ROSENTHAL, '27, Chicago, Ill. ville, Ill. CHARLES F. Russ, JR., '51, Chicago, Ill. SIDNEY J. HESS, JR., '32, Chicago, Ill. FREDERICK SASS, JR., '32, Washington, D.C. GEORGE C. HOFFMANN, '28, Springfield, Ill. JOHN D. SCHWARTZ, '50, Chicago, Ill. THE HON. IVAN LEE HOLT, JR., '37, St. Louis, ARNOLD 1. SHURE, '29, Chicago, Ill. Mo. LOUIS H. SILVER, '28, Chicago, Ill. CARROLL JOHNSON, '36, Knoxville, Ia. DANIEL C. SMITH, '40, Tacoma, Wash. JOHN JOHNSON, '40, Washington, D.C. RICHARD J. STEVENS, '38, Chicago, Ill. NATHAN N. KAPLAN, '25, Detroit, Mich. LOWELL C. WADMOND, '24, New York, N.Y. STANLEY A. KAPLAN, '33, Chicago, Ill. EDWIN L. WEISL, '19, New York, N.Y. PAUL R. KITCH, '35, Wichita, Kan. JEROME S. WEISS, '30, Chicago, Ill. GLEN A. LLOYD, '23, Chicago, Ill. HUBERT L. WILL, '37, Chicago, Ill. KENT V. LUKINGBEAL, '42, New York, N.Y. HARRY N. WYATT, '21, Chicago, Ill. JAMES J. MCCLURE, JR., '49, Chicago, Ill. DUDLEY A. ZINKE, '42, San Francisco, Calif.

XXIX. Council of Past Presidents The University of Chicago Law School Alumni Association MORRIS E. FEIWELL, '15, Chairman HENRY P. CHANDLER, '06, Washington, D.C. GLEN A. LLOYD, '23, Chicago, Ill. THURLOW G. ESSINGTON, '08, Chicago, Ill. CHARLES F. McELROY, '15, Springfield, Ill. THE HONORABLE HUGO M. FRIEND, '08, Chi- JOHN R. MONTGOMERY, '25, Chicago, Ill. cago, Ill. THOMAS R. MULROY, '28, Chicago, ill. SIDNEY S. GORHAM, JR., '30, Chicago, Ill. PAUL M. O'DONNELL, '09, Evanston, Ill. DWIGHT P. GREEN, '12, Chicago, Ill. NORMAN H. PRITCHARD, '09, Chicago, Ill. , ALICE GREENACRE, 11, Chicago, Ill. THE HONORABLE ELMER J. SCHNACKENBERG, JOSE W. HOOVER, '09, Chicago, Ill. '12, Chicago, Ill. A. L. HOPKINS, '08, Chicago, Ill. CHARLES P. SCHWARTZ, '09, Chicago, Ill. CLAY JUDSON, '17, Chicago, Ill. HENRY F. TENNEY, '15, Chicago, Ill. WILLARD L. KING, '17, Chicago, Ill. HARRY N. WYATT, '21, Chicago, Ill. URBAN A. LAVERY, '10, Chicago, Ill. HORACE A. YOUNG, '24, Chicago, Ill.

XXX. Publications of the Faculty, 1958-59 FRANCIS A. ALLEN La Responsabilite penale des societes privees en droit Americain, 28 Revue Internationale de Droit Penal 9 (1957). The Supreme Court and State Criminal Justice, 4 Wayne L. Rev. 191 (1958). THE LAW SCHOOL 37

The Supreme Court, Federalism, and State Systems of Criminal Justice, 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 3 (Autumn, 1958). Effective State Post-Conviction Procedures (Preliminary Draft), A.B.A. Section of Judicial Administration (August, 1958). Criminal Justice, Legal Values, and the Rehabilitative Ideal, Journal of Criminal Law, Crimi- nology, and Police Science. Cesare Bonesana Beccaria, Ency. Britannica. Hawlev H. Crippen, Ency. Britannica. Thomas Erskine, Ency. Britannica. Sir Matthew Hale, Ency, Britannica. John Marshall Harlan, Ency. Britannica. Jack the Ripper, Ency. Britannica. George Jeffreys, Ency. Britannica. Henri Desire Landru, Ency. Britannica. Sir Samuel Rotnilly, Ency. Britannica. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, Ency. Britannica. Frederick Moore Vinson, Ency. Britannica. WALTER J. BLUM How the Courts, Congress and the IRS Try To Limit Legal Tax Avoidance, 10 The Journal of Taxation 300 (1959). Bank-Plan Financing and the Cost ofLife Insurance, 36 Taxes-The Tax Magazine 377 (1958). Also in The Insurance Law Journal 475 (July, 1958). The Tax Idea of the Decade, 37 Taxes-The Tax Magazine 379 (1959). NORMAN BURSLER Comment on Chemical Manufacturers Chapter in Whitney, Antitrust Policies, Vol. II, pp. 457-58 (Twentieth Century Fund, 1958). Area Development of Foreign and British Commonwealth Legal Materials in Proceedings of Workshop on Law Library Problems. Northwestern University Law School, October 25, 1958. ROGER C. CRAMTON Supersession and Subversion: Limitations on State Power to Deal with Issues ofSubversion and Loyalty, 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 24 (Autumn, 1958). Pennsylvania v. Nelson: A Case Study ill Federal Pre-emption, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 85 (1958). The Supreme Court and State Power to Deal with Issues of Subversion and Loyalty, 43 Minn. L. Rev. (1959). BRAINERD CURRIE On the Displacement of the Law of the Forum, 58 Col. L. Rev. 964 (1958). Notes Oil Methods and Objectives in the Conflict of Laws, 1959 Duke L. J. 171. The Constitution and the Choice of Law: Governmental Interests and the Judicial Function, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 9 (1958). ALLISON DUNHAM Do Hard Cases Make Bad Economics, 4 How. L. Rev. 50 (1958). Sixty Different Succession Laws, 46 Ill. B. J. 741 (1958). A Legal and Economic Basis for City Planning, 58 Col. L. Rev. 650 (1958). City Planning: An Analysis of the Content of the Master Plan, 1 J. of Law and Econ. 170 (1958). Report of the Committee on Planning and Developing Metropolitan Communities, Section of Real Property Probate and Trust Law, Proceedings of Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, August 25-26, 1958, p. 76. Role of the State Supreme Court ill the Adjudication of Federal Questions, 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 140 (Autumn, 1958). Congress, the States and Commerce, 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 54 (Autumn, 1958). Flood Control Via the Police Power, 107 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 1098 (1959). A Trustee's Dilemma as to Principal and Income, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 405 (1959). Review of Roetinger: Supreme Court and State Police Power: A Study ill Federalism, 43 Minn. L. Rev. 183 (1958). Review of Schwartz: The Supreme Court: Constitutional Revolution ill Retrospect, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 176 (1958). HARRY KALVEN, JR. with Hans Zeisel and Bernard Buchholz: Delay in the Court (Little, Brown and Company, 1959). Strict Liability in Symposium on the Jurisprudential Basis of the Law of Strict Liability, 9 Loyola L. Rev. 3] (1958). Some Comments on the Law and Behavioral Science Project at the University ofPennsylvania, 11 J. of Legal Ed. 94 (1958). 38 THE UNIVERSITY or CHICAGO

WILBER G. KATZ The Case for Religious Liberty in Cogley, ed., Religion in America (1958). Christ and Law, 12 Okla. L. Rev. 57 (1959). NICHOLAS DEB. KATZENBACH Sharable and Strategic Resources: Outer Space, Polar Areas, and the Oceans, Proceedings, American Society of International Law (1959). With LEON LIPSON: Preliminary Report 011 the Law ofOuter Space, American Bar Foundation (1959). Review of Domke (ed.): International Trade Arbitration, 4 Student Lawyer Journal 32 (1958). PHILIP B. KURLAND The Administration of Criminal Justice in England: Some Invidious Comparisons, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 193 (1958). Lord Brougham, Ency. Britannica. Lord Campbell, Ency. Britannica. Lord Cockburn, Ency. Britannica. Distribution of Judicial Power between National and State Courts, 42 J. Am. Jud. Soc. 159 (1959); also in 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 145 (Autumn, 1958). Mr. Justice Holmes, Ency. Britannica. Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 26 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 1 (1958). The Supreme Court and Its Literate Critics, 64 Yale Review 596 (1958). The Supreme Court, the Due Process Clause, and the In Personam Jurisdiction ofState Courts, 25 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 569 (1958); also in 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 65 (Autumn, 1958). Lord Thurlow, Ency. Britannica. Review of Berns: Freedom, Virtue and the First Amendment, 25 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 560 (1958). EDWARD H. LEVI The Political, the Professional and the Prudent in Legal Education, 11 J. of Legal Ed. 457 (1959). Section 7 of the Clayton Act and the Regulated Industries, How To Comply with the Clayton Act, 1959 Antitrust Law Symposium (Commerce Clearing House, Inc.), p. 136. Jo DESHA LUCAS Review of Rhyne: Municipal Law, 11 J. of Legal Ed. 147 (1958). BERNARD D. MELTZER The Supreme Court, Congress and State Jurisdiction over Labor Relations, 8 U. of Chi. L. S. Record (Special Supp.) 95 (Autumn, 1958); Part I of this article, revised to reflect selected subsequent developments, was also published in 59 Col. L. Rev. 6 (1959); and Part II, in 59 Col. L. Rev. 269 (1959). MAX RHEINSTEIN Judicial and Administrative Control of the Liquidation of Decedents' Estates. General Report. 5th International Congress of Comparative Law, Brussels, Belgium. Conflict of Laws, Ency. Britannica. Preface to von Knieriem: The Nuremberg Trials (Chicago, Henry Regnery, 1958). Review of Lundstedt: Legal Thinking Revised, 33 Tulane L. Rev. 728 (1959). The Child at Law. Report of the 28th Ross Pediatric Research Conference (passim). ROSCOE STEFFEN "Irrevocable" Credits and the Law, J. of Business Law, 438 (1958). With HARRY KALVEN, JR.: Memorandum (amici curiae), In re George Anastaplo, filed June 9, 1959. FREDL. STRODTBECK with David C. McClelland, Alfred L. Baldwin, and Urie Bronfenbrenner: Talent and Society (Van Nostrand & Co., Inc., 1958). Also reprinted excerpt in Sklare: Sociology of Jews in America, pp. 147-65 (Free Press, 1957). The Family in Action, 34 Child Study 14 (1958). Review of Winch: Mate-Selection: A Study of Complementary Needs (Harper & Bros., 1958),24 Amer. Sociological Rev. 437 (1959). Review of Atkinson (ed.): Motives in Fantasy, Action and Society: A Method of Assessment (D. Van Nostrand Co., 1958), 64 Amer. J. of Sociology, No.6 (1959). HANS ZEISEL with Harry Kalven, Jr., and Bernard Buchholz: Delay in the Court (Little, Brown and Com­ pany, 1959).

Chicago

Kansas City

Los Angeles

New York

that The pictures above show Jour Jrom among the meetings oj alumni oj the Law School are held Jrequently throughout the nation. Law School students during a tour oj the American Bar Center. The Center, national head­ quarters jor administration and research oj the American Bar Association, is located directly across the street from the new Law Buildings.

A meeting oj one oj the round tables during the annual meeting oj the International Association oj Legal Science, which brought to the Law School more than 730 delegates jrom twenty-two countries. The Lounge oj the Law School Residence Hall

The Law Library has an extensive collection oj rare law books and manuscripts

The Board oj Editors oj the University of Chicago Law Review jor 1958-59 Projessor Malcolm Sharp conducts his class in Contracts

The Planning Committee oj the Law School's Federal Tax Conjerence, with some oj the Conference speakers. The Tax Conjerence, now in its twelfth year, brings together experts in the fieldjor a three-day meeting. Viscount Kilmuir, Lord High Chancellor oj Great Britain, speaks injormally to law students in the Law Lounge.

George Saunders, Jr., of Birmingham, Alabama, and the University oj Alabama, and Frederic C. Lane, oj Chicago, S.B., University of Pennsylvania, winners oj the Hinton Compe­ tition jor 1958-59. Sir Leslie Knox Munro, Ambassador oj New Zealand to the United States and past president oj the General Assembly oj the United Nations, meets with a class in international law at the Law School.

Hon. ]. Lee Rankin, Solicitor General oj the United States, at dinner with students, Faculty, and guests oj the Law School. Professor Karl Llewellyn makes a point in a discussion with Professor Malcolm Sharp; the two Faculty members had been invited by the students to debate issues oj the law oj contracts. This meeting was part oj a regular weekly series in which judges, practitioners, and members oj the Faculty meet informally in the Law Dormitory with students.

The benchjor the final round oj the Hinton competition. Left to right: The Honorable Edwin Robson, Judge oj the United States District Court; The Honorable Hugo L. Black, Justice oj the Supreme Court oj the United States)' and The Honorable Walter V. Schaefer, J.D. '28, Justice of the Supreme Court oj Illinois. Lawrence Postmus, Class oj 7959, meets with his Tutor, Bigelow Fellow David Horsley, Jor one oj their regular consultations.

A law student consults with a client oj the Edwin Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. Law students staff the Clinic, under the supervision oj a Jull-time attorney. The Board oj Editors oj the Student Lawyer, national journal jor law students sponsored by the American Bar Association and edited by the students oj the Law School.

The Honorable William Brennan, Associate Justice oj the Supreme Court oj the United

States 1 with law students in the Law School Residence Hall. The Honorable Tom Clark, Associate Justice oj the Supreme Court oj the United States, in an informal meeting with law students during a recent visit to the School.

The dinner given annuallyjar entering students by the Faculty A rear view of Courts, a the Law students are housed in the Burton-Judson showing portion of surrounding grounds. Courts, which are directly connected with the new Law Buildings. The Chiej Justice oj the United States addresses the dinner held in observance oj the laying oj the cornerstone oj the new Law Buildings The American Bar national administration and research the Center, headquarters jor oj American Bar Association, is located on the campus oj the University oj Chicago, immediately adjoining the new Law Buildings. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR FOR THE YEAR 1959-1960

1959

SUMMER QUARTER

June 22 Monday Registration for the Summer Quarter June 23 Tuesday Classes meet (except in the School of Medicine, which begins Monday, July 13) July 4 Saturday Independence Day: a holiday Aug. 23 Sunday Convocation Sunday Aug. 28 Friday Summer Convocation; Summer Quarter ends (except classes in the School of Medicine, which end October 3)

AUTUMN QUARTER 28- Sept. Monday- Orientation Period Oct. 7 Wednesday }undergraduate Oct. 3 Saturday iRegistration for the Autumn Quarter (except of entering Oct. 5 Monday f undergraduates) Oct. 5-7 Monday- Wednesday }Registration of entering undergraduates Oct. 6 Tuesday Classes in the Divisions and Professional Schools meet Oct. 8 Thursday Classes in the College meet Nov. 26 Thursday Thanksgiving Day: a holiday Dec. 13 Sunday Convocation Sunday Dec. 18 Friday Autumn Convocation Dec. 19 Saturday Autumn Quarter ends

1960

WINTER QUARTER Jan. 4 Monday the Winter Quarter; classes meet Jan. 5 Tuesday }Registrationfor Jan. 30-Feb. 5 Undergraduate Orientation Period for Midyear entrants Feb. 8 Monday Midyear classes meet Mar. 13 Sunday Convocation Sunday Mar. 18 Friday Winter Convocation Mar. 19 Saturday Winter Quarter ends

SPRING QUARTER Mar. 28 Monday for the Spring Quarter; classes meet Mar. 29 Tuesday }Registration May 30 Monday Memorial Day: a holiday June 5 Sunday Convocation Sunday June 10 Friday Spring Convocation: Conferring of Graduate and Profes­ sional Degrees Convocation: Conferring of Undergraduate Degrees June 11 Saturday [Spring 1Alumni Day; Spring Quarter ends ANNOUNCEMENTS

The following Announcements of the University of Chicago are available for distribution and will be sent upon application made to the Director of Admissions, Box X, The University of Chicago, Administration Building, Room 203, Chicago 37, Illinois.

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS

GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN THE DIVISIONS

THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

THE DIVINITY SCHOOL

THE LAW SCHOOL

THE GRADUATE LIBRARY SCHOOL

THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

THE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRAnON

UNIVERSITY CoLLEGE

THE HOME-STUDY DEPARTMENT

THE SUMMER QUARTER