Chicago lu̍t-su kong-hōe

Chicago lu̍t-su kong-huē
Lūi-hêng Tsū-guān-sìng Bí-kok lu̍t-su kong-hōe [en]
Chóng-pō͘ Bí-kok Illinois tsiu Chicago
Hōe-oânhip
20,000[1]
Bāng-chām Chicago Bar Association Home Page

Chicago lu̍t-su kong-huē (ing-gú: Chicago Bar Association, sok-siá: CBA) sîng-li̍p tī 1874-nî Bí-kok Chicago, sī tsi̍t-ê tsū-guān sìng lu̍t-su kong-huē, ióng-iú 20,000 guā miâ huē-guân. Kah kî-thann lu̍t-su kong-huē kāng-khuán, Chicago lu̍t-su kong-huē kuan-tsù ê sī tsit-gia̍p tō-tik, sîng-guân tsi-kan ê koo-thong hia̍p-tiāu, í-ki̍p huat-ha̍k tshî-sio̍k kàu-io̍k.Kong-huē sio-tú-thâu Chicago loop [en] khu ê John Marshall Law School [en] huat-ha̍k-īnn.[1]

Tiōng-iàu sîng-guân

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Tù-bîng sîng-guân [en] pau-kuat Illinois tsiu ê tāi-piáu 1922-46 nî hām 1948-50 nî) David Ivar Swanson [en] kah tù-bîng lu̍t-su Earl B. Dickerson [en], in teh tsuè-ko huat-īnnHansberry sòo Lee àn [en] it-àn piān-hōo.[2]

  1. 1.0 1.1 About the CBA Archived September 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. (Eng-gí)
  2. Blakely, Robert (2006). Earl B. Dickerson: A Voice for Freedom and Equality. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. p. 144. ISBN 9780810123359.  (Eng-gí)

Guā-pōo liân-kiat

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