LIBRARY The Law Library contains over 55,000 volumes and adds about 2,500 volumes a year. Its statutory material includes Federal statutes, statutes from all American states, and some foreign statutes. Its collection of published court reports includes those of the U. S. Supreme Court, the courts of last resort in all American states, se- lected state lower court reports, complete British reports, and many Canadian and other foreign reports. It subscribes to all leading American legal periodicals and to selected foreign ones. It has numerous American and British legal encyclopedias, digests, texts, treatises, and other legal materials. In addition to the collection in the law library, the University Library, located in an adjoining building, contains an additional col- lection of over 10,000 volumes of law books relating to specialized legal fields. ORDER OF COIF The College of Law has a chapter of The Order of the Coif, a legal scholarship society with chapters at the leading law schools of the country. The purpose of Coif is to foster a spirit of careful study and to mark in a suitable manner those who have attained a high level of scholarship. Election to the society is based on scholarship and character. To be eligible for consideration, a student must be in the upper ten per cent of his graduating class and be eligible for graduation with Honors. UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LAW REVIEW The University of Florida Law Review is published quarterly by the student Edi- torial Board assisted by the faculty advisors. Approximately half of the publication is written by the students, and the remainder, written by specialists in various fields, is selected and edited by the Editorial Board. Emphasis as to subject-matter is on Florida and federal law. The work furnishes intensive training in research, organization, analysis and style. Members of the Editorial Board are elected on the basis of scholarship and past performance of law review work. After the third semester, hour credit towards graduation can be obtained for work satisfactory to the faculty advisors, but no letter grades are given for this work. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS The John Marshall Bar Association is the student bar association affiliated with The Florida Bar and open to all members of the student body. It arranges for promi- nent members of the Bar to address the law students, and has committees which advise with the faculty on matters of common interest. Delta Theta Phi, Phi Alpha Delta, and Phi Delta Phi, national legal fraternities, and Phi Delta Delta, national legal sorority, have active chapters at the College. PRIZES AND AWARDS American Jurisprudence Awards.-The publishers of American Jurisprudence award a bound volume of an appropriate title from American Jurisprudence to the