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Page 22 text:
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Wfzlfer E. Meyer Visiting Rerenrcb Proferrar of Law Graduating from Harvard College in 1939, Professor Foote continued his studies at Columbia and the University of Penn- sylvania. He served as Instructor and Associate Director of Legal Research at Pennsylvania and then joined the law faculty of the University of Nebraska from 1954 to 1956. In that year, Profes- sor Foote returned to Pennsylvania. Professor Foote is on leave of absence from Pennsylvania to work on his research here, finishing a teaching book on family law which emphasizes the impact upon the law of the behavioral sciences. He will do no formal teaching. He has taught Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Family Law, Criminal Dispositions and Behavioral Science, Torts, and Legal Writiilg. Born: 1917g Cambridge, Massachusets. A.B.,. 1939, l-larvardg M,A., 1941, Columbiag LL.B., 1953, Penn- Sylvania. PAUL ABRAHAM FREUND Car! M. Loeb Uzzizferyily Proferror After receiving his S.j.D. from Harvard in 1932, Professor Freund clerked for Mr, justice Brandeis. Later he served on the legal staffs of the Treasury Department and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. From 1935 through 1939, he was in the oilice of the Solicitor General of the United States and also served as Special Assistant to the Attorney General. Professor Freund has served on the Law School faculty since 1959, with the exception of a four-year stay with the Depart- ment of justice during the war. He is co-editor of a Casebook on Constitutional Lawg his pub- lished Works include 011 Umlezwfnmlivzg the Slfjireme Collrl. He teaches Constitutional Law and Constitutional Litigation. Born: 19085 St. Louis, Missouri. AB., 1928, Wtisliingtcvn Universityg LL.B., 1931g S.j.D., 1932, Har- vardg LL.D., 1954, Columbiag 1956, Wasliingtcmn University, Llni' versity of Louisville. LON LUVOIS FULLER Cnrler Pi'ofe.r.r0r of Gezzeml IHl'f.l'l1I'7llf67ICE Professor Fuller has been in the Held of legal instruction since 1926. He has been associated with the faculties of the University of Oregon, the University of Illinois, and Duke University. He joined the faculty of the Law School in 1939. From 1941 to 1945, concurrent with his teaching activities at the Law School, he was in private practice in Boston. Professor Fuller holds a Philips Award of the American Phil- osophical Society, which he won in 1936 for an essay in Juris- prudence. He has also edited Colleclezl Readings in Problem.: of f111'irpi'f1zleme, and a casebook on Contracts. Professor Fuller teaches Contracts and jurisprudence. He also has a seminar in jurisprudence. Born: 1902g Hereford, Texas. A.B., 1924g j.D., 1926, Leland Stanford University. 16
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Page 21 text:
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CHARLES FAIRMAN Proferror of Law Professor Fairman has taught courses in law and government at Pomona College, Williams College, Stanford University, Washington University, and Harvard. Participating in both World Wars, he served as a Colonel in the judge Advocate General's Olhce from 1942 through 1946. Professor Fairman's published works include The Lmzf' of Mm'- lial Rifle, Mr. jffylire Miller and lbe Sifflrerlle Court, 1862-1890, and Amerirzuz C07l.1'lfllllf0llrZf DEL'Aff0lI.1', Rev. Ed, 1950. Professor Fairman is on leave of absence while working on a history of the Supreme Court from 1864-1888, under the Perma- nent Committee for the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise. Born: 18973 Alton, Illinois. A.B., 1918. University of Illinoisg PhD., 1926, Harvardg LL.B.., 1934, University of Londong S,j.D., 1938, Harvard. RICHARD HINCKLEY FIELD Profeum' of Law After graduating from the Law School in 1929, Professor Field engaged in private practice in Boston until World War II, when he became General Counsel for the Office of Price Admin- istration. He returned to the Law School in 1946 as a member of the faculty, l-le is co-editor, with Professor Kaplan, of a casebook on Civil Procedure. From 1957 to 1959 he served as Reporter for the Rules Advisory Committee in Maine, and he is co- author of Maine Civil Prm'lice. This year he is teaching Civil Procedure, Trial Practice, and Evidence. Born: 19053 Phillips, Maine. A.l5.. 19265 l.l..li,, 1929, Harvard. ROGER FISHER I Proferror of Law After graduation from the Law School in 1948, Professor Fisher spent two years in Paris as an assistant to the General Counsel of the European headquarters of the Economic Cooper- ative Administration. He then entered private practice with a Washington, D. C. Hrm from 1950 through 1956, working largely in the international field. Professor Fisher then joined the Department of justice as an Assistant to the Solicitor Gen- eral before coming to the Law School faculty in 1958. He is teaching Civil Procedure and Legal Methods in Inter- national Disputes. Born: 1922, Winnetkzx, Illinois. A.B., 19433 l.l..li., 1948, Harvard. 15
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Page 23 text:
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S1-IELDON GLUECK ' Roscoe Pound Projermr of Law Professor Glueck has been advisor on the American Law In- stitute's Youth Correction Authority Code and Penal Code, a member of the U. S. Supreme Court's Advisory Committee on Rules of Criminal Procedure, a U. S. delegate to several Inter- national Prison Congresses, and a consultant to the late Justice Robert I-I. Jackson on the trial of war criminals. For many years, he has been engaged with his wife, Dr. Eleanor Touroff Glueck, in researches on correctional and juve- nile delinquency problems, reflected in numerous pioneering studies including Five Hlllll!I'6!! Crimimll Ctireefxr, One Thon- .rmzcl fll'I'L'llff6 Delizzqifelllr, I.!lII'rlI!6'ff7lg fllifeuile Delillqllency. Born: lS96g Wfarsziw, Poland. A.B., 1920, George hXftlSl'llH,1ll'0D Universityg LLB., L1..M., 1920. National University Law School, A.M., 1922, Ph D., 1924, Har- I.1..D., 1949, University of Tliessalonikag Sc.D,, 1958, Har- CHARLES MONROE HAAR Profeuor of Law Entering the Law School in 1941, Professor I-Iaar left shortly thereafter for a tour of duty in New Guinea and the Philippines as a Naval Intelligence Ofhcer. Graduating in 1948, he was awarded a Sheldon Traveling Fellowship and spent a year in England, where he wrote Lama! Planning Lum in 11 Free Soriely. From 1950 to 1952, Professor Haar lectured at New York University and was a consultant for the Town Planning Commis- sion of the United Nations. I-Ie spent 1959 in England on a Rockefeller Foundation Grant. Professor I-Iaar has written Federal Crea!!! and Prizffzle Hunting, and he has edited a casebook on land-use controls. Professor I-Iaar teaches Property I and seminars in Land Use and Real Estate Transactions. Born: 1920, Antwerp, Belgium. A.B., 1940, New York University, M.A., 1941, University of Wis- consin, LL,B., 1949, Harvard. LIVINGSTON HALL PI'0f6.1'.1'0l' of Lau' After four years of private practice and one year as an Assist- ant United States District Attorney in New York, Professor Hall joined the Law School faculty in 1932. From 1938 to 1958, he served as Vice Dean of the school, he was Acting Dean during the spring of 1959. During the war, he was with the O.P.A. and later with the Army Air Corps in the Southwest Pacific. Professor I-Iall is a member of the Judicial Council of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and of the Executive Com- mittee of the Massachusetts Bar Association. He has co-edited casebooks on Criminal Law and Agency. This year he is teaching Agency and Commercial Law. Born: 19033 Chicago, Illinois. Ph.15.. 1923, University of Chicago, I.1,.15., 1927, Harvard. 17
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