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Page 24 text:
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HELEN HARGRAVE Associate Professor of Law Miss Hargrave graduated from the University of Texas in 1926 with an LL.B. degree after having been on the staff of the Law Review. She is a recipient of the Order of the Coif. She came to the law school in 1929 its Assistant Law librarian and in 1940 was promoted to LawLibrarian, a position she held for the next twenty-five years. She held the presidency of the American Association of Law Libraries from 1958 to 1959. In 1950, she became an assistant professor, and since I960 has been an associate professor teaching Legal Research. Miss Hargrave is a member of Kappa Beta Pi. WILLIAM ORR HUIE Sylvan Lang Professor of Law Mr. Huic is a graduate of Henderson State College (B.A. 1932) and of Texas (LL.B. 1935). He received an S.J.D. degree from Harvard in 1953. His private practice, now limited to occasional consultation, included a year with Greenwood, Moody, and Robertson, Austin (1935-36). He was senior attorney for the Office of Price Administration (1942-43). A professor since 1946, Mr. Huie first joined the faculty in 1936 as an assistant professor. He was Assistant Dean from 1946-48 and became the Sylvan Lang Professor of Law in 1965. He has served as a visiting professor at the University of California at Berkeley (summer 1956), at U.GL A. (summer 1961) and at Harvard (1961-62). He was a member of the State Bar Committee that drafted the Texas Probate Code, adopted in 1955. While in law school, he was Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review, was a member of the Chancellors, and received the Order of the Coif. Professor Huie teaches PropertyRights, Trusts, Oil and Gas and aseminar in Oil and Gas. Mr. Huic, a member of Phi Delta Phi, has authored a casebook on Marital Property Rights and co-authored one on Oil and Gas. He serves on the Graduate and Research Work and Budget and Personnel Committees. GUSM. HODGES Professor of Law Mr. Hodges received his B.B.A. (1930) and his LL.B. (1932) from the University of Texas. He was a member of the Texas Law Review, recipient of the Order of the Coif, and a member of Chancellors. He then went into private practice in Dallas for eight years until he joined the faculty in 1940 as a professor. A former Texas Commissioner on Uniform Laws, Mr. Hodges, a member of the State Bar, served the Texas Bar Association on the Committee on Administration of Justice (concerned with rules of procedure). He still engages in occasional consultation on the appellate level. He has authored a book on Special Issue Submission in Texas, and co-authored Texas Trial and Appellate Procedure and Texas Judicial Process before Trial. Mr. Hodges, a member of Phi Delta Phi, serves the law school on several committees and teaches Introduction, Procedure II and III. 5 tn.lio
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Page 23 text:
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LINO A. GRAGLIA Distinguished Professor of Law LL.B. from Texas. He has also received the lege, a LL.D. from Louisiana State. Be- ginning as an Instructor in Law in 1915. He rose to the rank of Professor of Law in 1920 at the University. After practicing for six years, he became Dean, on leave, of the University of North Carolina School of Law, and during that time, he was named Professor at Yale. He was Dean of Northwestern Law School for eighteen years. Mr. Green then returned to the University as a Professor of Law. He has written many articles for legal periodicals, and his publications include: Rationale oj Proximate Carat. Judge and Jury, Cases on Relations, The Judicial Process in Tort Cases, Traffic Victims, and My Philosophy of Law. LEON GREEN Associate Professor of Law Mr. Graglials a graduate ofCity Collcgcof New York (B.A. 1952) and of Columbia (I.L.B. 1954) where he wrote on the Columbia Law Review and was twice Harlan Fiskc Stone Scholar. Although he hits not taught before, he came to Texas eminently well qualified for the courses he teaches in Government Regulation of Business, Constitutional Law, and Regulated Industries: from 1954 to 1956, he worked with the U. S. Department of Justice in civil trial and appellate practice. From then until 1959, he was with the law firm of Covington and Burling in Washington. D. C., in antitrust, administrative, and labor law. Between I960 and 1963. he engaged in antitrust litigation for Dewey, Ballentine, Bushby, Palmer, and Wood in New York City' and after that in antitrust and regulated industries litigation for Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside, and Wolff, New York City. Since he joined our faculty in 1966, he has shown himself a competent teacher. He is on the Standards Committee, Honor Council, University Housing and the Inns of Court Program committees and is admitted to practice before the New York and Washington, D. C. Bars. ROBERT W. HAMILTON Professor of Law Mr. Hamilton received his degrees with high honors from Swarthmore (B.A. 1952) and from Chicago (J.D. 1955), where he was Managing Editor of the University of Chicago Law Review, received the Order of the Coif, and won the Walter Wheeler Cook Prize. Upon graduation, he served a year as law clerk to Mr. Justice Dark of the U. S. Supreme Court. After that, having been admitted to the D. C Bar in 1956, Mr. Hamilton was an associate of the law firm of Gardner, Morrison, and Rogers, Washington, D. C, engaged in corporate, administrative, and real estate practice. He is co-author of a book. Uniform Commercial Code in Texas— Lending Officers Manual. and has written on securities problems. He serves the law school on the Scholarship committee and teaches Contracts, Business Administration I, and Securities Regulation. 19
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Page 25 text:
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CORWIN W. JOHNSON Professor of Low The Pcrcgrinus Dedicatee in 1958, Mr. Johnson came to the law school with an A.B. (1939), and aJ.D. (1941 ) from Iowa, where he was a Phi Beta Kappa, Comment Editor of the Iowa Law Review, and recipient of the Order of the Coif. He has also been honored as a Sterling Fellow at Yale. After his graduation, he was a Special Agent for the F.B.I. (1942-46), taught a year at Iowa, and came to Texas as an assistant professor in 1947. Admitted to the Texas, Iowa, and California Bars. Mr. Johnson has served on the Planning Commission for the City of Austin (1954-56), on the Texas Bar Committee on Water Rights (1955-60). on committees of the Association of American Law Schools, on the Texas Water Code Advisory Committee (1965-66), and on the Executive Committee of the University of Texas Institute of Public Affairs (1958-64). He is presently on the American Bar Association Committee on Water Rights and on the Advisory Board, University of Texas Center for Research in Water Resources. Mr. Johnson has taught as a visiting professor at Pennsylvania (1958) and during several summers at Chicago, North Carolina, Missouri, U.C.L.A., and George Washington. With Professors Cribbet and Fritz, he has co-authored a casebook on Property, and has written numerous articles on property, water law, and land use. He is a member and the faculty adviser of Delta Theta Phi and serves on the Curriculum, Graduate, Interdisciplinary, Internationa] Legal Studies and Summer School Committees. He teaches Property, Land-Use Planning, Water Law and Seminar on Housing for the Poor. PAUL J. G. KAPTEYN Visiting Professor of Law Mr. Kaptcyn received hisLLM. (1950)and hisLLD. (i960, cum laude) from Leiden University, the Netherlands. He taught International Law at Leiden from 1953 to I960 and is presently a Professor of International Law at Utrecht University. From I960-1963 he served as an official of the European Division of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He is a former President of the Dutch U. N. Association. Mr. Kaptcyn hits authored a book on The Parliament of the European Oval, Steel Community (in French), and a Report on a Dutch Investment Guarantee System (in Dutch). He teaches International Law and Common Market Law. ALBERT P. JONES Professor of Law With his B.A., M.A. (1927), and LL.B. (1930) degrees from Texas, Mr. Jones became an associate of Baker, Botts, Andrews, and Wharton where he remained until 1943 when he became a partner in Helm and Jones, Houston. He specialized in insurance and tort and compensation law. In 1963, he became First Assistant Attorney General of Texas, having joined the law school faculty the year before as a professor. While in law school, Mr. Jones was Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review, a Grand Chancellor, and a member of the Order of the Coif. He has been honored as a Peregrau Dedicatee (1964), as President of the Texas State Bar from 1950 to 1951, and as a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. He has co-cditcd a casebook on Texas Trial and Appellate Procedure, and another on The Judicial Process in Texas Prior to Trial. Mr. Jones has been admitted to practice belore the Texas Bar. the United States Supreme Court, the Fifth Circuit. Court of Appeals, and the U. S. District Courts for the Southern, Eastern, and Western Districts of Texas. He is a member of the Supreme Court of Texas Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure and a member of the Budget and Personnel, Placement and Moot Court and Oral Advocacy Committees. He is a member of Phi Delta Phi and teaches courses in Procedure II and III, Federal Courts, and Legal Profession.
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