The Class of 1958 at the Beginning of the Autumn Quarter, the Law School Welcomed Its Largest Entering Class in Many Years
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2 The Law School Record Vol. 5, No.1 The Class of 1958 At the beginning of the Autumn Quarter, The Law School welcomed its largest entering class in many years. One hundred and thirty-two students, chosen from among 432 applicants, began the work of The Law School. Considerable interest has been expressed by alumni in where our students come from, in terms both of their home communities and of the schools from which they received their undergraduate training. The student body currently numbers 311; these students have attended 159 different colleges and universities located in all sections of the United States and overseas. Institutions currently represented in our student body are: University of Alabama Albion College Allegheny College Amherst College Antioch College University of Athens Aurora College Austin College Baghdad Law School Bard College Bates College The Raymond Scholars. Left to right: Terry Sandalow, Beloit College Chicago, B.A. University of Chicago; Frederic P. Roehr III, Boston University Kansas City, Missouri, B.A. Rice Institute; Solomon Gut Bowdoin College stein, Chicago, A.B. University of Chicago. Not pictured: Bradley University James E. Beaver, Itasca, Illinois, B.A. Wesleyan University. Brandeis University Brigham Young University University of Hamburg Brooklyn College Hamilton College Brown University Harvard University Bryn Mawr College Haverford College University of Buffalo University of Hawaii University of California Hebrew University University of California (L.A.) Hobart College Carleton College Hope College Central State College College of Idaho University of Chicago University of Illinois Clark University Illinois Institute of Technology Colby College Indiana University Colgate University John Marshall Law School University of Colorado Joliet Junior College Columbia University Kalamazoo College University of Connecticut University of Kansas Cornell University University of Kentucky Culver-Stockton College Kenyon College Dartmouth College Knox College DePaul University Lafayette College DePauw University Lake Forest College Drake University Lincoln University Earlham College London School of Economics Far Eastern University Louisiana State University George Washington Law School University of Louisville Georgetown University Loyola University Goethe University Macalester College L'Universite de Grenoble University of Maine Grinnell College Continued on page 14 14 The Law. School Record Vol. 5, No.1 Regulations; Round Table of Selected Problems THE PREPARATION AND PROMULGATION OF THE TREASURY REG ULATIONS UNDER THE 1954 INTERNAL REVENUE CODE, Lau rens Williams, Assistant to the Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Legislation, Washington, D.C. ROUND TABLE OF SELECTED PROBLEMS: An informal discussion of selected problems conducted by a panel consisting of Walter J. Blum, Professor of Law, University of Chicago, Chairman; Frederick O. Dicus, Chapman and Cutler, Chi cago; William M. Emery, McDermott, Will and Emery, Chicago; Paul F. Johnson, Ernst and Ernst, Chicago; Fred erick R. Shearer, Mayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney, Brown and Platt, Chicago; and Harry B. Sutter, Hopkins, Sutter, Halls, Owen and Mulroy, Chicago The Bigelow Fellows for 1955-56. From left to right: Raya Dreben, Harvard Law School; Robert Stoyles, College of Law, State University of Iowa; Andrew [cannes, Oxford Univer sity; and Alan Metoett, Oxford University. Faculty Notes PROFESSOR E. W. PUTTKAMMER was selected last spring The Class of 1958- the of Arkansas to serve as Dis by University University Continued from page 2 tinguished Lecturer for 1955. Professor Puttkammer Marquette University spoke on "Universities as Factors in International Under Maryville College standing." Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mexico WILBER G. KATZ, James Parker Hall Professor of Law, City College University of Manila spoke this autumn at Wesleyan University on "The Miami University Profession of Law-a Social Accounting." Under a joint University of Michigan between and The arrangement Wesleyan University Michigan State College Law a member of this delivers a School, Faculty public University of Mississippi lecture at Wesleyan each year. Professor Katz's lecture University of Missouri was the third in this series. Morehouse College Morningside College the Annual Meeting of the American Bar During University of Munich Association in last DEAN EDWARD Philadelphia August, Murray State College H. LEVI spoke on "Antitrust Policy in Distribution" as University of Nebraska part of a Symposium on the Report of the Attorney Nebraska Wesleyan University General's National Committee To Study the Antitrust University of New Mexico Laws. New Mexico Military Institute University of North Dakota MRs. RAYA S. Fellow for has DREBEN, Bigelow 1955-56, University College of North Staffordshire been named winner of the 1955 Nathan Burkan Memo Northwestern University rial Competition, conducted by the American Society of Notre Dame University Composers and Publishers. Mrs. Dreben, Phi Beta Kappa Oberlin College graduate of Radcliffe College and an alumna of the Ohio State University Ohio Harvard Law School, wrote her prize-winning paper Wesleyan University of Oregon on "Publication and the British Copyright Law." University University of Ottawa On the occasion of the annual meeting of the Associa Palos Verdes College tion of General Counsel, PROFESSOR BERNARD MELTZER ar University of Paris of ranged for a Round Table on Selected Collective-Bar University Pennsylvania State gaining Problems. In addition to presiding over the Pennsylvania College Pomona round table, Professor Meltzer acted as a commentator College Princeton University on the discussion concerning" 'Defensive' and 'Bargain Purdue University Lockouts under the Taft-Hartley Act and Antitrust ing' Queens College Earlier in the Professor Meltzer Legislation." quarter, Reed College spoke to members of the Illinois State Bar Association Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute on the subject of "Employer Free Speech and the Na Rice Institute tional Labor Relations Board." Roosevelt University Vol. 5, No.1 The University of Chicago Law School 15 Rutgers University Indiana Ryukyu University Iowa St. Bonaventure University Kansas St. John's College Kentucky St. Joseph College Louisiana St. Lawrence University Maine St. Louis University Maryland St. Mary of the Lake Seminary Massachusetts St. Mary's College Michigan St. Olaf College Minnesota University of Santo Tomas Missouri Shimer College Nebraska University of the South New Hampshire University of South Dakota New Jersey University of Southern California New Mexico Southern Methodist University New York Stanford University North Dakota Swarthmore College Ohio Syracuse University Oklahoma Temple University Oregon Texas Christian University Pennsylvania Thornton Junior College South Carolina Trinity College Tennessee Union Theological Seminary Texas United States Coast Guard Academy Utah United States Military Academy Virginia Valparaiso University Washington Vanderbilt University Wisconsin of University Virginia FOREIGN COUNTRIES, U.S. TERRITORY: Wabash College England Washburn University France Washington University Germany and Washington Jefferson College Greece Wayne University Hawaii Wesleyan University Iraq Western College for Women Israel Whitman College Japan Whittier College Jordan of University Wichita Philippines Wilson Junior College Wilson Teachers College University of Wisconsin Wittenberg College Woodrow Wilson City College Wright Junior College Yale University School of Law and Economics In terms of their home communities, the current stu dent body represents thirty-five states, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, and nine foreign countries, as fol lows: UNITED STATES: Alabama Arkansas California Colorado Dallin Oaks, right, being congratulated by Assistant Dean Connecticut Ratcliffe on his receipt of the Joseph Henry Beale, Jr., Prize, District of Columbia which is awarded annually to the first-year student whose Florida work in the tutorial program is judged by the Faculty to be Illinois most worthy of special recognition..