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Six years' service as president of the Chicago Crime Commission well prepared Frank J. Loesch for the subject of his speech, "The Duty a Lawyer Owes to the Public" which he delivers at 8 o'clock tonight in Langdell Hall. It is rumored that Mr. Loesch was one of the members of the mysterious "secret six" that swore to clean up crime in Chicago.
As assistant to the state's attorney of Cook County, he helped put many gangsters behind the bars. During his career as a lawyer in Chicago, Mr. Loesch was special state's attorney for Cook County to investigate frauds, and chief special assistant attorney general of Illinois, to investigate bombings and kidnappings in elections. In 1929, President Hoover appointed Mr. Loesch one of the eleven members of the National Committee on Law Observation and Enforcement.
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