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1943 - Come On, Canada!
At home, Osgoode students continue to support their classmates despite their reduced numbers. The Obiter Dicta publishes lists of individuals serving in the Canadian Armed Forces, messages of encouragement from Dean Falconbridge, tongue-in-cheek editorials about ‘What to Do in an Air Raid,’ and ads for Victory Bonds.
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1943 - Playing Catch-Up
Similar to the First World War, Osgoode Hall formed its own contingent of the Canadian Officer’s Training Corps. Here they are at Niagara Camp, 1940. The Law School agrees that unlike what was offered to returning World War I veterans, there will be no short-cut summer courses for returning students. Instead, plans are laid for refresher courses to help lawyers return to practice.
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1942 - Long-Distance Education
The Law Society of Upper Canada forms the Special Committee on Wartime Educational Services. As a result, Osgoode Hall becomes one of the sponsors of an informal Commonwealth law school in overseas prison camps. Captain J.R. Turnbull (first-year student), from Windsor, and W.L. McGregor (second-year student), write their law exams as a prisoner-of-war, proving that barring death, no one can escape finals.
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