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Page 29 text:
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LL.B. al student, ntact with her than a d while on ice in K.U. I, and then 1893 and lice Judge sas, 19055 Attorney of Kansas Ordinances :n Lecturer lerj g Chief ansas City, ecializes in e 1918. and LL.B. ly Bar Asso- since 1924. lv. From the e result has ss NV . -of Emporia. Kansas City obtained his of Jackson ost subjects lic Schools: 17 and later LL.B. from 24. iish me with f legal men longer 1 are work- ,vrr 6 s'-W. QR! ff 'E ' ' A . I ' 1 . . L Q t I I W xt Q- si. Sri-mitw O. Si auc,HTrk R. C. XVAN VALKENBURGH GI-Ev A yvlwm, LL B UDB' LI-'B' Instructor lnstructor Instructor Sl'1'1'1-IFN O. SI AUGHTER. Dover. Delaware. Joined U.S.A. before the last war, but because of many and serious injuries suffered, especially in battle of Argonne, he was later assigned to Judge Advocate and defense counsel in court martials in lit. Riley and Leavenworth. He was retired as Capt. in 1921. In his Hrst school in Hillsboro, Md., and his last school. Kansas City School of Law, he had E. N. Powell as teacher-a coincidence. He received LL.B. in 1924, was admitted to Missouri Bar, and in 1929 was attached to our faculty. Roscoe C. XVAN VALKENBURGH. Blue Rapids, Kansas, Obtained LL.B. from Kansas City School of Law, 1926. Was Assistant U.S. District Attorney, 1927-1929, mem- ber of Phi Alpha Delta and is instructor of Municipal Corporations. GLEN A. XVISDOM. Baker, Oregon. Received LL.B. from K.U. in 1913 and was admitted to Missouri Bar soon after. He has been a member of the faculty of this Law School since 1923 and has instructed in most of the subjects. He is a Phi Delta Phi. FRANK L. WlI.KINsoN. Doubters never do realize that some times you do a thing simply because there is nothing else to do. Dad wanted me to be a surgeon and wield a knife, and mother wanted me to be a minister and wield a moral scepter, but since my father, grandfather, and greatvgrandfather were all lawyers, 1 decided lo save money and use some of their books. Klum' Elm ooo, Assistant Registrar. lt is a privilege to be associated with the tiudent body and faculty of the Kansas City School of Law. The work of the Regis- ir.1r's Oflice is interesting and ever-varyingg the daily contacts with students and faculty are 11 very important part of my life, No matter how old I may live to llc. no matter how far 1 may travel, I shall always remember with a lxeen sense of Pleasure the days 1 am now spending at the Law School. Xi 1:1 111 Evaxs, Superintendent. lf an all-absorbing love for the law has. as its iiisjiiration, a passion for the general welfare in the hearts of the earnest students, ielio become associated with us in our Kansas City School of Law as the years go hi. ihen democratic America is safe. QQ. Ifiaaxit LLL XVIt.K1NsoN A.B., LL.B. Lecturer on W'orltmen's Compensatory Law and Federal Employers' Liabil- ity Act. -.. Q Iylakv EIKXVOOD public-H :Xl ici iii Nl. I i iss 13
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Page 28 text:
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N i5: rl JOHN B. GAGIE, A.B., LL.B. ALFRED N' GOSSE-FT! Lecturer on Wills, Bail- ments and Carriers 2' CLAUD B. FLORA, LL.B. Lecturer in Legal Bibliography and Research. l z' l r JAMES H. HARKLESS Post Graduate Lecturer ' A.B., LL-B. CHARLES L. CARR, B.S., LL.B. Lecturer on Private Corporations Lecturer on Evidence JOHN B. GAGE. Kansas City, Missouri. Received A.B. from K.U. and in 1909 LL.B. from Kansas City School of Law and then was admitted to Missouri Bar. He is a member of the American and City Bar Associations. Author of Kelly's Missouri Probate Law. He specializes in probate, insurance, public utility and banking law. A. N. GOSSETT. Bath County, Kentucky. Attended public and private schools in Independence, Mo. Received A.B. from XVoodland College in 1880. Read law in offices of judge F. M. Black and Capt. D. S. Cook until 1881, then obtained LL.B. from Washington School of Law in 1883 and became partner with Capt. Cook. Was Secretary of Board of Election Commission of Kansas City, 1909-1912, Missouri Constitutional Convention, 1922, 19233 Missouri Congress 1925 then to Fifty-third General Assembly, and Municipal Council of Kansas City, 1925, 1930, 1934. CHARLES L. CARR. Quincy, Ill. Received A.B. from Northwestern University in 1913 and LL.B. from that Law School in 1915, and was admitted to Illinois Bar and Missouri Bar in 1916. He was selected for the faculty here in 1922 and lectures on Law of Evidence. He belongs to the American, State and City Bar Associations. He is a Delta Tau Delta and Phi Alpha Delta, and has received Deru and the Order of Coif, His first desire was to be a civil engineer, but because of his respect for the high ideals of the legal profession and recognition that lawyers, for the most part, were civic, business and political leaders of the nation, state and localities, he studied law. I have never regretted my choice. CLAUD B. FLORA. Pomona, Kansas. Educated in Kansas City, Kan., public schools and attended K.S.A.C. at Manhattan, then obtained LL.B. from Kansas City School of Law in 1918. Admitted to Missouri Bar in 1917 and to Kansas Bar in 1918. He began practice in 1924, and has been attached to our faculty since 1929. I began studying law with a view of better Htting myself for a business career, but was later attracted to the practicef, jixmias H. HARKLESS. Belmont County, Ohio. After Civil NVar, he moved to Lamar, Mo., and was a stage driver between Sedalia and Neosho. Later, while herding Texas cattle, he read all the law books he could obtain, then studied under Judge R. V. Robinson of Lamar and was admitted to Missouri Bar when he was twenty years old. He came to Kansas City in 1889, helped organize this school and has continu- ously been engaged in law practice. Member of City, Qex-pres.j , Missouri fex-pres.j , Eid American Bar Associations fMo. vice-pres., , and president of Kansas City Red ross. 20 Q l .ii ,f 1 H l Q. 1 ,gif 1 P HUC, CCIVE Unis .UI puts Mick office schoo City Prose I wi also ll to so give V.E mail sas autht ber Mo., The lum the I enr Law C1 i L' torm- Anon in th Plii 1 eral and I Ll nd i H. A Univ C liar .mil I Quiet 'rims coma Presitil
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