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Page 114 text:
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-lFORUM lfzliliff'-1'11-Clziwf . .imwriufc lfdiinr ROY.'Xl. li. ROOIJ fiuclzlfy fl.r.vm'1'11!v Stuff .hil'LAl'1'flll'-X' THE BRIEF CASE IIQYINH XX'0l.Fli Q nufrrlvulzugf Iidzlnrxz XY.-XLTICR .-X. MAXSl:llil.l1 HAR IRYING 5. XVOLFE . SAIIL LEVIN RISOX T. XV.-XTSON . wir. is, GILES . Jos. 1. FINN FTICR a four-year transitory period, the Brief Case is now firmly 5 established as the law review of the lletroit College of Law. lff' 1 5. , . . , Starting in Xoveniber, l92o, as a paper devoted to school news, the Brief Case is now the outstanding' legal publication in the City of Detroit. The year 1929-30 was particularly progressive. Not only was each issue featured with a leading' legal treatise, but the supplementary material was of equal importance. ,Xnd to the student and lawyer, the Brief Case was of equal interest. The Brief Case has received communications from all parts of the country commenting on the various aspects of the paper. The staff acknowledges great indebtedness to its contributors, who have spent no little time and energy in compiling' their contributions. To lrving XYolfe, '30, lfditor-in-Chief, goes the credit for organizing such a splendid staff. And to the staff as a whole goes the credit for estab- lishing a paper worthy of being' referred to as the legal publication of the Detroit College of Law. Page One Hundred Ten
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Page 113 text:
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THE STUDENT lfiirizlfy lx't'f11'u.n'11iizlizv lfdifnr-i11-C11iff If fff' 11111 . P1'l'.v1'f1'l'11f nf .S'i'11iu1' Clam . Ri11,ri11v.r.t .llu11ug1i'1' l7o1'11111 . . . I'im'-P1-u.v1'z1r11I nf S'u11in1' Clfmy 1,Y1'g1l1ll I'irv-1'1'v,vidv11f of .S'u11iu1' Cluxx llhiyl P1'c.r1'1fv11t of .llid-Ivvur .5'l'11im' Class . . P1'v.r1'dv11f of flllllilll' Clilsx K.S't'ffi'111l1v1'-IMyI Pllridvizt nf JIUIIUI' Cilusx 1.S'vf'lt'111l1v1'-.Yfull!I 17l'l'XIlfl'lIf nf .llid-I'i'i11' Jmiim' Cluxx . . . 1Jl'l'Xl.!il'IIf of .S'11N10111111'v Class I.N'4'j1fc111l1t'1'-Ilu-vI f,l'1'.TIliL'llf nf .S!7f',Zl7Ill!77'L' Class ISaplv111lu'1'-.Y1'l1lzfI P1'c.vidr11t of Snf1lzn111o1'c Class l1'il'l7Vll!IVj'l . . Pluxriaiviit nf l71'v5l111m11 Class I.5'rf1Iv111l1c1'-IMyI PI'l',VI.l1L'I1f of lf7'4'Xl1IIIHlI Class IScfitr111lu'r-.YiylifJ P1't'.ridv11I nf .lllid-liflll' 1 1'v5lz111u11 Ciluxx . . ljI'l'5IdL'lIf nf .S'4'11if11' Cilusx 4l7uli1'1m1'yI . ronuml COUNCIL XX'II.I.I.-XM KRICHBACM SIIJNEY E. STEPHENS HARRISON T. XY.-XTSON . . ,IOHN NELSON ,l. LAMAR NEXYI-BERRY S.tXML'EI. HERNSTEIN . . O. C. HOLMES XYALTON B. MOORE . . FRANK G. C.-XLSER THOM.-XS .-X. JACQUES . j.-XMES M. FLYNN . HOMER BLISS . RALPH KEYES . . P. G. HORLER LARENCE IJCSENBURG . CHARLES H. KING . XYILI-ICR YEARSLEY The Student Council is an organization composed of representatives of the faculty and of the student activities. .Xll class presidents, including the presidents of all college organizations. participate. as do also the Editor-in-Chief and the Business Manager of the Forum, the latter men with the Editor of the Brief Case are members ex-officio. The Student Council supervises the various activities of the student body at large, and all general committees in charge of social and student affairs are under the control of this body. This organizations chief function is to acquaint the arlininistration of the college with the desires and problems of the student body. Page One Hundred Nme
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Page 115 text:
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FORUMi'- D.C.L. NIGHT AT THE DETROIT REPERTORY THEATRE U account of the year 1929-30 would he complete without mention ot the Detroit College of l.aw night at the Detroit Repertory Theater. The first occasion of its kind, it proved tu be such a fine L .. evening that it is hoped the affair may be repeated in other years. xs:f,Q. ' 0 The presentation was one of especial interest In law students and attorneys. it being The Sabine lYonien, by the Russian playwright. Leonid Andreyeff. The whole story is highly satirical and humorous through- out, depiciting the trials and tribulations of the Sabine men, when the Roman soldiers, having founded an empire hy force of arms, seek to perpetuate it by taking to themselves some wives, and select the beautiful Sabine spouses, Hardened soldiers, who have campaigned so long that they have for- gotten the dainty methods of courtship, use the only method with which they are familiar, and swoop down upon the Sahines. taking the women by force, and carrying them off amid feminine shrieks and the wordy remon- strances of the husbands. .Xnclreyetif has an ax to grind, apparently, for he shows that the Sabine men. having elevated book-wisdom above all other values, have brought physical deterioration upon themselves, and a consequent inability tu meet the forceful rush of the burly Romans. It is only a matter of time when the stolen women have forgotten their husbands, and are blissfully estab- lished as the wives of their strong abductors. .Xfter the passage of a year or so, the Sabine men, armed with ponder- ous law hooks, and treatises in which they have exhausted all the known legal arguments against the crime of abduction, appear on the scene to re- claim their wives, not hy force, but hy entreaty and debate. The Romans. in the meantime, domesticated as they have never been before. have lost their former physical greatness, and are well on the way to becoming as soft and effeminate as the Sabine men. The whole play would probably point out .'Xndreyeff's notion of the deteriorating effect of domesticiation upon erstwhile strong men. Playwright .-Xndreyeff was a lawyer-an unsuccessful lawyer. The per- formance was in charge of the law students. and many D. C. l.. students took part in the play. lYinniett XYright, director of the Repertory, also took the prominent role of Scipio. Qther students participating were lilmer Tiny Broker as a Roman soldier, Dale Dohn as Paulus. Smith Ira Champlin as the Sahine professor, and Mott as one of the Sabine husbands. Jefferson Hoxie was chairman of the affair. Also of interest to law students was a one act play by Russell Mc- Laughlin, a member of the Detroit bar. and now dramatic critic on the Detroit News. He called his piece Hell and ably delineated the reactions of three former residents of the earth upon finding themselves confined to the darker and, reputedly. hotter regions. The entertainment was well attended and all in all proved a complete Success. Page One Hundred Eleven
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