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JOHN K. CLARK TO CONTINUE AS LECTURER IN LAW SCHOOL

Well-Known Lawyer Will Give Course on "New York Practice."

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

John Kirkland Clark, member of the law firm of Clark, Prentice & Roulstone, of New York City, who has been delivering a course of lectures on New York Practice at the Law School on Saturday mornings, has been invited to give the course again in 1920-21. Hitherto the lectures on New York Practice have been given only in alternate years, but the increased size of the Law School and the large number of those planning to practice in New York has led the Law School Faculty to give the course annually.

Mr. Clark graduated at Yale University in 1899 and took his law degree at the Law School cum laude 1902. While at the University he was an editor of the Law Review, a University debater, and captain of the basketball team. On graduation, he began practice in New York, and in 1910, became an Assistant District Attorney of New York Country. During his four years' service, he prosecuted the cases arising out of the Carnegie Trust Company failure and the Curran Investigation of the Police Department.

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