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Page 82 text:
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‘lis Sa ial uh : i - poner er: : ‘ TELE RW; MEO POT WSN TEN UNMET ets evaPeaY TUNIee PONV EIONTET 1S THUR) AT MOTE TMeT eve CoN aH. WS Pee TOTES OH-SITIV mNTSTenY NEPSTTTOEvOYTTs Wontvete neo iron Hur ret trOOVODT ce=mrswrstrfisnswev¥vi em NONVSFUNTDNTENNNST Trin rns Vewn te W esac halal talk a led blab VIRGINIA LAW REVIEW Founded in 1913 as an organization for the furtherance and perpetuation of scholarly legal writing, the Virginia Law Review this year entered upon publication of its forty- sixth volume. Highlights of the year’s publication included symposia on Contemporary Problems in Securities’ Regulation and Charitable Giving. Operations wise, the Review experienced a circulation increased by approximately one quarter, an expanded volume | : with individual numbers averaging roughly two hundred pages, and a changed cover and format initiated with a view to presenting a more pleasing appearance to the reading public. Members are invited to join the Review, during the second semester of their first year and the first and second semesters of their second year, on the basis of academic standing and a demonstrated capacity for legal writing. During their tenure members submit one “note” and several ‘“‘decisions” and in addition perform numerous “‘spading”’ or rewrit- ing assignments on work submitted by other members and by outside contributors. Social functions include the annual banquet, a black-tie affair, held this year in De- cember at Farmington Country Club with the Honorable Albert V. Bryan, District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, as guest of honor and speaker, and the spring picnic, a somewhat more informal occasion carried on with beer, baseball and invited guests from the faculty and the law firm of Covington Burling. Owing its genesis, it is said, to discussions taking place over after-dinner brandies in the basement of old Minor Hall, the Review has constantly striven to maintain those qualities of gentlemanly behavior and legal scholarship, often at the considerable ex- pense of its individual member's academic distinction, consistent with the purposes of its founders. | ; i CReeeeeenansnnan ry th haw tae : } | | ma cs 1 First Row, Stennis, Fulton, Cook, Miller, Hiden, Hurwitz, Murphy. Second: Wallach, Gibbes, Reid, Baird, Zehmer, Vogel, Fisher, Conson, Foster, Pleasant, Zimmet. Third: Yoder, Izlar, Pusey, Schwartz, Stewart, Sander, Wetzler, Wiles, Corette, Straub, Grattan, Frankfurt, Henry, Moore. Fourth: Havens, Wollen, Thagard, Arrington, Coldwell, Carneal, Bentley, Cozell, Kershner, Rauh, Kantor, Weiner, Barlow, Peasback, Probert. Fifth; Lewis, Hering, Oppenheimer, Linehan, Denny, Massee, Crompton, Kruteck, Maeder, Walker, Somers, Rhinelander, Dortch. 78 EMumcidssaaidluitbcinclsl SoebdahibadtaettiMetnaidsh Maen itast i arithitiieenie ttt ttitt soem i ee toe ee
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Page 81 text:
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Pac hnaesbddaalaicaylatioinide ilies mesial aan saii sige tiaisnilineddi bee STUDENT ADVISORY COUNCIL | The Student Advisory Council is composed of leaders of the various Law School organizations. Functioning as an unofficial student government, the council coordinates | Law School activities and acts as a liaison between the students and the administration. | The presidents of all Law School organizations, the editors of the various Law School H publications and the class officers are all ex officio members of the Student Advisory } Council. Officers of the Third Year Class serve as officers of the council. The activities sponsored by the S.A.C. range from the ever-popular Law School dances to the successful Law School intramural teams. In addition, the S.A.C. repre- | sents the student body as a member of the American Law Student Association. Philip i . V. Moyles was sent as a representative to the regional and national conventions of the | A.S.L.A. This year, as in the past, the $.A.C. administered the orientation of the First Year Class. Through various committees, a campaign was started to improve the general appearance of Clark Hall and particularly the student lounge, and the class gift of a trust fund for the Law School was discussed and approved. A most interesting meeting was held in conjunction with the Uruguayan seminar. Meeting with the Uruguayan students and their advisors, the council discussed the extent of student government in the Law School and explained the functions of the various Law School organizations.
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Page 83 text:
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EDITORIAL BOARD Andrew P. Miller, Editor Robert B. Hiden, Jr., Articles Editor Joan M. Fulton, Comments and Projects Editor W. Tayloe Murphy, Jr., Virginia Editor H. Clayton Cook, Jr., Executive Editor Neal J. Hurwitz, Notes Editor John H. Stennis, Decisions Editor Charles B. Arrington, Jr. W. Bruce Baird James C. Barlow, Jr. Robert D. Bentley George U. Carneal, Jr. Rufus G. Coldwell, Jr. J. Jay Corson, IV Antoinette M. Cozell Charles S. Crompton, Jr. Collins Denny, III Peter R. Fisher Joseph A. Gibbes George G. Grattan, IV Charles W. Havens, III Samuel J. Henry Grant B. Hering A. E. Dick Howard William H. Izlar, Jr. David C. Linehan Edward C. Maeder, Jr. D. Lurton Massee, Jr. Thomas O. Moore, Jr. Daniel F. O’Keefe, Jr. Jerry L. Oppenheimer David R. Peasback William A. Pusey Rust E. Reid John B. Rhinelander Theodore Sander, III David L. Schwartz Henry E. Simpson C. Van L. Stewart Chester J. Straub Thomas W. Thagard John B. Tyler Laurence Vogel John L. Walker, Jr. Edward S. Wallach Alan R. Weiner Monte E. Wetzler Robert B. Wiles W. Foster Wollen Ronnie A. Yoder Edward E. Zehmer Raymond M. Zimmet BUSINESS BOARD A. Key Foster, Jr., Business Manager Mrs. Mary W. Adams, Secretary Michael P. Frankfurt, Associate Business Manager C. Alexander Buhler, Advertising Manager Robert W. Pleasant, Circulation Manager John E. Corette, III Richard W. Dortch Rhodes Greer Edwin H. Kershner Laurence R. Kruteck David M. Lewis, Jr. Henry H. McVey, III Edward W. Probert B. Michael Rauh Fred L. Somers, Jr. | Mark L. Stanton | Charles F. Stein Barry Kantor Stuart B. Young
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