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Nathan Roscoe Pound (October 27, 1870 – June 28, 1964) was an American legal scholar and educator. He served as dean of the University of Nebraska College of Law from 1903 to 1911 and was dean of Harvard Law School from 1916 to 1936.
Zechariah Chafee Jr. (December 7, 1885 – February 8, 1957) was an American judicial philosopher and civil rights advocate, described as "possibly the most important First Amendment scholar of the first half of the twentieth century" by Richard Primus. [1]
Roscoe Pound (1870–1964 ... William Roscoe (1753–1831), English historian and botanist whose standard author abbreviation is Roscoe; ... Roscoe family, ...
Laura Pound was a director of the Lincoln public library, and a prominent member of literary and arts associations and of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Nebraska, being elected state regent several times. They had three children, Roscoe Pound, Louise Pound, and Olivia Pound, a highschool Latin teacher. [6] [7]
The first reference to Law in Action may have been a 1910 article by Roscoe Pound, the Harvard Law School dean whose work was a forerunner to the legal realism movement. [1] From there, the concept caught hold at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where the law in action concept is most prevalent today.
Robert Pound (1919–2010), American physicist; Roscoe Pound (1870–1964), American legal scholar and educator; Stephen Pound (born 1948), British Labour Party politician; Stephen Bosworth Pound (1833–1911), lawyer, senator and judge; Thaddeus C. Pound (1833–1914), American politician and businessman, brother of Albert Pound and ...
In 1911, understanding Mackey's 25 points to be a summary of Masonic "common law", the legal scholar Roscoe Pound (1870–1964) distinguished seven of them as landmarks: [9] Belief in a Supreme Being (19) Belief in immortality (20) That a "book of sacred law" is an indispensable part of the "furniture" (or furnishings) of the Lodge (21)
However, the dean relented after a call from Roscoe Pound, the former dean of Harvard Law and a Munger family friend. [10] Munger excelled in law school, [11] becoming a member of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau and graduating in 1948 with a J.D., magna cum laude. [8] [12] In college and the Army, he developed "an important skill": card playing.