< Page:The Green Bag (1889–1914), Volume 01.pdf
This page needs to be proofread.

198|The Green Bag.|}}

was opened, as appears from the University Calendar for the respective years. Vear. 1859- 60 1860-6l 1861-62 1862-63 1863-64 1864-65 IS65-66 1866-67 1867-68 1868-69 1869- 70 i870-71 1871-72 1872- 73 1873- 74 1 874- 75 1875- 76 1876-77 187778 1878-79 i879-80 1880-81 1881-82 •882-83 1883-84 1884-85 1885-86 1886-87 1887-88 1888-89

.•

No. of Students. pO 159 I29 134 221 260 385 395 387 342 308 . 307 348 33i 3i4 345 321 309 . 384 406 • • 395 371 395 333 305 262 286 338 341 400

The decrease in 1884-85 was no doubt occasioned largely by the lengthening of the period of study. For every subsequent year there has been a steady gain, this year the number going up to four hundred. While the Calendar of the University so states the fig ures, as a matter of fact the Law Announce ment will show more than that number in attendance, and that since the Law School was opened there was never a larger body of students in attendance on its lectures than are there this year. Neither the rapid multi plication of law schools in different parts of the country, nor the fact that the standard re quired for admission and graduation has been materially advanced, have operated to de

crease the number of students in attendance. Probably no law school in the United States has a longer roll of Alumni than has this. More than thirty-five hundred of its gradu ates have gone forth to the active duties of their profession. Mr Justice Harlan, of the Supreme Court of the United States, has accepted an invitation, extended to him by the law alumni and undergraduates, to address them at the Commencement in June. Those familiar with the Law School have noted with pleasure the fact that an increased number of college-trained men arc here pur suing their law studies. The law students were quite jubilant because at a recent " Pro nouncing Contest" held in University Hall, at which the Law and Literary Depart ments were represented by picked men, the banner of victory floated over the Law Department. The Law Library is one of the best con nected with the Law Schools of the United States. For a number of years it was of humble proportions, but it has within the last five years been much augmented and improved. It now contains about ten thou sand volumes, embracing the reports of every State in the Union, as well as those of the Federal Courts, and a good collection of those of England, Ireland, and Canada. The current reports of the United States and of England are placed on the shelves as they are issued. The leading legal periodicals are regularly taken and kept on file, including the Law Quarterly Review (London), the Journal of Jurisprudence (Edinburgh), the Juridical Review (Edinburgh), the Amer ican Law Register, the American Law Re view, the Criminal Law Magazine, the Albany Law Journal, the Central Law Journal, and the Federal Reporter. Students from any State in the Union are thus enabled not only to consult the reports of their own and other States, but to keep abreast of the best thought of the profession in this and other countries as it finds expression in the leading legal periodical literature, as well as in the

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.