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8 Takeaways From Harvard’s Task Force Reports
A case editor, note editor and book review editor for the Harvard Law Review have recently been appointed by the officers elected last month. The Board of Editors for 1922-23 now consists of the following:
James Mount Nicely 2L, of Muncie, Ind.--Editor-in-Chief.
Charles Stuart Hedden 2L, of Newark N. J.--Treasurer.
Arthur Bergin Dunne 2L, of San Francisco, Cal.--Case Editor.
Samuel Henry Maslon 2L. of Minneapolis, Minn.-Note Editor.
Malcolm, Pitman Sharp 2L, of Madison Mis.--Book Review Editor.
The Harvard Law Review, founded in 1887 by a few students of the Law School, is the oldest of student legal publications. The management is entirely in the hands of a board feditors elected annually from the highest standing men in the second and third year classes. While these men write all the news as well as editorials dealing with decisions of the courts and current legislative policies, longer article of interest are contributed by eminent practitioners and members of the faculty of the Law School.
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