Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC)

 - Class of 1949

Page 5 of 30

 

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 5 of 30
Page 5 of 30



Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 4
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Page 5 text:

I l CI-I1XRLES H. LIVENGOOD CPIfXRLES L. B. LOWNDES M.KLCOI.1XI MCDERMOTT DOUGLAS B. NIAGGS JOHN DEI. PEBIBERTON D.-XLE F. STANSBURY luslice was possible in old Englcznd only if each case got proper nilentiorz, so the Lord High Chfmcellor had Vlice-Chancellor: to assist him. Duke Law School has cz high faculty-sludefzt ratio, :md all its professors are as learned as they are colorful .... his charming wife. After Mr. Livengood's course in criminal law you knew a good lawyer who could help you have your likeness removed from the Post Office Bulletin Board. A'S'pose you heard a splendid lecture in a class, which was concluded in the hall. S'pose that the lecturer was able to lean back in a chair, hold a notebook on his knee, eat lifesavers, clean his tie, and give one of the best darned lectures you ever heard all at the same time. Who would it be? Why, Mr. Lowndes. Has Maggs gotten you yet? Being gotten by Mr. Maggs was an experience you still re- member. You were certain that you had memo- rized Mr. Cardozo's opinion, but you hadn't caught the meaning of the last thirteen words in the second sentence, third complete paragraph at the bottom of page 761. You have silently thanked him many times since, however, for training you to read carefully. Uncle Mac, as Mr. McDermott was affection- ately known, pushed the law to you from the book and his sleeve. He was one of the best teachers you had, and a fine gentleman. Maestro Pemberton was the one who sought to make us realize the past, present, and future of every opinion and every set of facts. Mr. Stansbury always impressed you as having just stepped off King's Bench, and for that rea- son you called him Lord Stansburyf' Everyone, without exception, liked Mr. Stansbury, who could always be counted on to help the students with their problems. Mr. Wilson's task was to make you less pro- vincial and see beyond the backyard fence and into International Law, a job for which he was well suited. There they are, the men who have shared your triumphs and failures on this highway over which you have just passed. You were probably not aware of it, but they were there with you. For you see, in each of us there was a little of each of them. PAGE 5

Page 4 text:

W. BRYAN BOLICI-I IOHN S. BRADWAY EDWIN C. BRYSON BRAINERD CURRIE ROBERT KRANIER ELVIN R. LATTY S YOU turn into that part of life's highway where the shadows are looking toward the east, you might glance back from your ever as- cending position on this road through the valley of life to recall that first hill-Duke Law School. There, through the haze of time, you will be able to distinguish fourteen men who helped you over that rise and on to greater heights. Let.'s look back a moment .... You remember Mr. Bradway. Marriage is a good thing was his favorite dictum. He was a jolly fellow, who was always busy, but never too busy to help you with your problems. Then there was Mr. Bolich, better known as the Baron. He wasn't a baron, of course. He was a real property professor with a language all his own. Pennsyltucky, as far as he was con- cerned, was a place where a notorious republi- can might lind himself in jail for tempting the court without getting a chance to trial before the immortal twelve. You never saw much of Mr. Bryson your first two years, but he was the sort of person whom everyone liked and wanted to know. You al- ways thought Of him as a prince of a fellow. PAGE 4 VicefChancello1's Mr. Currie was a quiet person who believed in the students asking the questions, a fact which was always less embarrassing than being asked, in Law School. Time was of the essence with Mr. Horack, one-time Dean and a fine old gentleman, who went on leave at the end of the 1948 year. You had jolly well better know the law when Mr. Kramer gave an exam. He hadn't been teaching much longer than you had been going to law school, but had already made a name as an excellent instructor, whom all admired for his keen mind. If and when the smoke cleared, you could see Mr. Latty, provided, of course, that number 23 was false which would conceivably result in num- ber 67's being tl'LlC. He was the man who could teach a week's accounting between pulls, and three years of it in two Weeks, along with a course in Agency. Cactus lack could always be depended on to attend our student functions, which we appreciated, especially when he brought



Page 6 text:

Trial by Deposition HE LAST MILE-There is an impression among Hrst- and second-year students that third-year men are a sophisticated group who have left the world of briefing and reviewing to pass into an airy realm of easy contemplation. But in fact, pending graduates feel just as keenly as their first-year brothers the uncertainty that lies ahead. The Bar Examiners and the prospect of practice can engender the same feeling of inse- curity as the Casebook Method. As third-year men, they realize that they are to become the freshest of all freshmen-candidates to practice. But most of the third-year men look forward with anticipation rather than awe to the future. After all they have run their obstacle course from res ipsa to res gCSt21C, and whatever fate may bring to them it can never be so initially mysterious. Indeed an appearance of short-lived exaltation lf ludges in the Courts of Equity reached decisions only after long and careful considerrztion of zurirzcn de- positions. The law student undergoes a three-year trial, and professors decide his fate in each course after grading examination papers. may well be pardoned this battle-worn group as they receive their diplomas. BUT SOME GO FURTHER-Yet, a few hardy souls, for many reasons fnot too easily understood by a majority of their brethrenj elect to return to law school for a year of graduate study. Some want to teach, knowing that today a graduate degree is an almost essential prerequisite to this phase of the profession. Others desire a more thorough legal foundation, perhaps with an eye to specialization in some particular Held. As stu- dents their motives and ways of thinking differ on many things, but all are cognizant of the ad- vantages of possessing a graduate degree in law, whether in order to go into actual practice, teach, or enter the business world. GRADUATE STUDENTS lilrsi row, left to right: Laurent Frantz, Ben johnson, Bueford Herbert, Bill Stanford, Iim Daniels. Serozzzl row: Bill Lemmon, Earle Thomas, Nat Beaman, Hollis Owens, lack North. PAGE 6

Suggestions in the Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) collection:

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 26

1949, pg 26

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 29

1949, pg 29

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 13

1949, pg 13

Duke University School of Law - Prolocutor Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 10

1949, pg 10


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