Excerpt from The Calyx, 1912, Vol. 18
As a student of the law, as an advocate at the bar, and as a teacher of the law. Professor Staples is doubtless best known to the general public. For many years he has been regarded as one of the most learned and able lawyers of Virginia. He has been. From the beginning. An untiring student of the law. He has the legal mind and the legal temperament. As an advocate at the bar, he was reckoned as a master of the Socratic art. I have frequently heard that he had few equals in examining witnesses. As a teacher of the law. He is painstaking, exact, conscientious and thorough. The students rally about him. They are with him in the class-room, on the campus. And in his home. They love him. They trust ‘him. They seek his advice on any and on every conceivable subject, all the way from the complex problem of matrimony to the simple matter of suggesting the most available remedy lot a bad cold. I know of no man who com bines in a finer way the charm and grace of the old time and the freedom and direct ness of the new. This combination of qualities in a teacher means, of course. That he is gifted with the genius of getting close to young men. It is a fact that service to young men is, with Professor Staples, an instinct, a passion, a creed.
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