The editors of the Harvard Law Review deserve congratulation for the success of their magazine during the first year of its existence. The Review was started for the purpose of extending the influence of the Law School and of affording a medium through which the work of the professors and students might be given to the public. The standard was set very high at the beginning, and it has been well maintained, as those who have read the numbers of the Review can testify. The editors promise to continue the same policy in the future and the prospects for the next volume shows that the promise will be fulfilled. The earnest support of all who are interested in legal matters will be needed during the coming two or three years, which will be the most critical in the history of the magazine, and it is not too much to ask that that support be heartily rendered by the members of the University.
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GAIN OF FIFTY-NINE.