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The second of the series of three conferences inaugurated by the Law School Society of Phillips Brooks House for the benefit of those undergraduates who are contemplating entering the Law School will be held in Phillips Brooks House on Wednesday, March 24, at 7.30 o'clock.
At the first meeting, Professor W. B. Munro spoke on "Law as a Preparation for men intending to enter Public Life." At the coming conference Mr. Arthur D. Hill '90, of the firm of Hill, Barlow, and Homans, and former district attorney for Suffolk County, will speak on "Should a man enter law, and how should he go about it?" Mr. Hill will discuss the problem from the point of view of a practising lawyer. E. D. Smith 2L., chairman of the executive committee of the Law School Society, will preside.
These conferences have three main objects in view. First, to inform men intending to become lawyers about the demands of the profession, what qualities tend toward success, and what difficulty, expense, and constancy of purpose a thorough training entails; second, to outline the undergraduate course of study most desirable as preparation for work in the Law School; and third, to enable prospective candidates to meet Law School men, and discuss with them the various phases of the work of training for the profession.
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