Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 32.djvu/196

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HARVARD LAW REVIEW
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Harvard Law Review Published monthly, during the Academic Year, by Harvard Law Students «  SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, S2.60 PER ANNUM 85 CENTS PER NUMBER Editorial Board » George E. Osborke, President Charles M. Thorp, Jr., Note Editor Harold J. Laski, Book Review Editor Carl H. Baesler Maurice Klein Joseph Davis Cloyd Laporte Isaac B. Halpern Victor Levine Harold W. Holt H. Wm. Radovsky Henry H. Hoppe Clarence J. Young The Law School. — The registration in the School for the last twelve years is shown in the following table: Res. Grad. . Third year . Second year First year . Unclassified Specials . . 1907-08 1908-09 1909-10 1910-11 1911-12 191 2-13 — 2 3 6 187 178 219 176 191 238 217 186 311 296 289 287 — 82 76 84 70 3 4 5 171 198 280 63 714 169 207 244 _^ 684 759 799 808 744 Res. Grad. . Third year . Second year First year . Unclassified Specials . . 1913-14 1914-1S 1915-16 1916-17 1917-18 1918-19 4 169 197 260 64 69s S 167 197 288 68 177 226 308 66 730 786 10 213 234 335 64 5 73 87 96 31 o 292 3 37 24 36 13 I 114 Naturalization of Aliens. — As Professor Valery has pointed out/ one effect of the war is quite certain to be a heightened interest in the question of each individual's nationality. Incidentally, it is worthy of note that the existence of war and the passage of certain legislation re- lating to it have raised old questions concerning naturalization in a rather novel way. Naturalization of an alien in the United States involves two legal acts. First, the express and absolute renunciation by the applicant of his old 31 Harv. L. Rev. 986-87.