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  1. Harlan Fiske Stone Scholars. Established in 1946 by the Faculty of Law, in memory of Harlan Fiske Stone, Law 1898, Lecturer in Law 1899-1903, Adjunct Professor of Law 1903-1905, Professor and Dean of the Faculty of Law 1910-1924, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court 1925-1941, and Chief Justice of the United States 1941-1946.

    • Harlan Fiske Stone Scholars
    • James Kent Scholars
    • Other Honors

    The Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar honors designation was established in 1946 in memory of Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone, an alumnus of the law school as well as a former member of its faculty and dean of the school from 1910-1924. Stone Scholar honors are awarded at the end of each year in recognition of "superior academic achievement" which is def...

    The James Kent Scholar honors designation was established in 1923, named for James Kent, the first Professor of Law on the Columbia faculty. Kent Scholar honors are significantly more difficult to achieve than Stone Scholar honors, and achieving them during the 1L year of the law school is considered a significant achievement. Kent Scholar honors a...

    The law school has a number of awards that it grants for excellence in particular subjects or skills. Two prizes of note, though, are the John Ordronaux Prize, which is usually granted to the student, male or female, with the highest academic average in the graduating class, and the Pauline Berman Heller Prize Fund, which recognizes the female stud...

  2. The fourth dean of Columbia Law School and 12th chief justice of the United States is the namesake of the Law School’s prestigious Harlan Fiske Stone Moot Court Competition held every spring. Harlan Fiske Stone 1898 epitomizes the intellectual leadership and public service ethos that are synonymous with Columbia Law School.

  3. Columbia Law School awards Harlan Fiske Stone Scholarships to students who demonstrate superior academic performance. Yale Law School awards the Harlan Fiske Stone Prize each fall to winners of the Morris Tyler Moot Court competition. Personal life. His brother was Winthrop Stone, president of Purdue University.

  4. 18 de abr. de 2024 · Harlan Fiske Stone was an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1925–41) and the 12th chief justice of the United States (1941–46). Sometimes considered a liberal and occasionally espousing libertarian ideas, he believed primarily in judicial self-restraint: the efforts of government to meet.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Google Scholar provides a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature. Search across a wide variety of disciplines and sources: articles, theses, books, abstracts and court opinions.

  6. HARLAN FISKE STONE: TEACHER, SCHOLAR AND DEAN1 YOUNG B. SMITH* Most Americans will remember Harlan Fiske Stone as the twelfth Chief Justice of the United States. Most members of the bar will think of him in terms of his contributions to the development of the law, as practitioner, as public administrator and as jurist. His pupils in