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1988 - The Boys (and Girls) of Summer
A national conference on the Free Trade Agreement is held at Osgoode. Osgoode student representatives take first place in the final round of the Niagara International Moot competition against the team from Dalhousie. A controversial ban limits smoking in the Law School to two designated rooms. New student groups include the Osgoode International Law Society and a Native Law Student Association. Student sports teams now include hockey, softball, touch football, inner tube water polo, broomball, and basketball. Golf, squash, and ping pong tournaments are held regularly. Here, touch football enthusiasts toss the pigskin around the front lawn of Osgoode.
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1987 - La Belle Province
The Obiter Dicta celebrates its 60th anniversary. James Curry MacPherson is appointed Dean of Osgoode, while Louise Arbour becomes the Associate Dean. An exchange program between the new Centre for Research in Public Law and Public Policy and the Centre de Recherche en Droit Publique de l’Université de Montréal is established. The Nelson Mandela Law Society is established as part of the world-wide movement against Apartheid in South Africa.
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1984 - Into the Future
The Osgoode Hall Law Journal is now run jointly by students and faculty. Faculty members actively solicit contributions and provide overall direction, while students oversee the daily work of the Journal. Editing is now done on a “word-processor,” providing many of the staff with the opportunity to use a computer instead of a typewriter. A special one-day conference on feminist legal theory is organized by Professor Mary Jane Mossman. Mock Trial remains as popular as ever.
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