Lord Chorley, LSE Staff, Department of Law 1924-1946
1895-1978
'For many years he was very closely connected with the life of LSE, since 1924 as a lecturer in commercial law, and subsequently, from 1930 to 1946, as Sir Ernest Cassel Professor of Commercial and Industrial Law. He was made a peer in 1945, and in the following year, having been appointed Lord in Waiting in Clement Attlee's Government, he resigned from the Chair. But for years he continued on a part-time basis to teach the special subjects which he had made particularly his own, and to supervise research students. To the end of his days he maintained his links with the School. They were strengthened when in 1970 the School recognised his services by making him an honorary fellow.' Extract from his obituary by Otto Kahn Freund, LSE Magazine, June 1978, No55, p.8
Cette image est issue de la collection The Commons du site Flickr. Les organismes y partageant leur collection déclarent qu'à leur connaissance, aucune restriction de droit d'auteur ne fait obstacle à leur diffusion, pour l'une des raisons suivantes :
l'œuvre est dans le domaine public car les droits d'auteur ont expiré ;
l'œuvre a été rattachée au domaine public pour d'autres raisons, tel que le non respect des conditions nécessaires pour renouveler des droits d'auteur ;
l'organisme est détenteur des droits d'auteur mais ne ne souhaite pas exercer son contrôle ou ;
l'organisme possède des droits suffisant pour permettre à des tiers d'utiliser ces travaux sans aucune restriction.
Merci d'ajouter des bandeaux de licence supplémentaires à cette image si des informations plus spécifiques sont disponibles à propos du statut de cette image. Consultez Commons:À propos des licences pour plus d'informations.
No known copyright restrictionsNo restrictionshttps://www.flickr.com/commons/usage/false
{{Information |Description=Lord Chorley, LSE Staff, Department of Law 1924-1946 1895-1978 'For many years he was very closely connected with the life of LSE, since 1924 as a lecturer in commercial law, and subsequently, from 1930 to 1946, as Sir Ernest C