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Page 27 text:
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CHARLES MONROE HAAR Prokssor of Law Entering the Law School in 1941, Professor Haar left shortly thereafter for a tour of duty in New Guinea and the Philippines as a Naval Intelligence Officer. Graduating in 1948, he was awarded a Sheldon Travelling Fellowship and spent a year in England, where he wrote Lana' Planning Law in a Free Sociegz. From 1950 to 1952, before joining the faculty, Professor Haar lectured at New York University and was a consultant for the Town Planning Com- mission ofthe United Nations. Among his numerous publications, Professor Haar has written Federal Credit and Private Housing, and has edited a casebook on land-use controls. He is currently teaching Property I, and semi- nars in Land Use Planning and Land Reform. Born: 19203 Antwerp, Belgium. A.B., 1940, New York University, M.A., 1941, University of Wisconsing LL.B., 1949, Harvard. W. -3' 26 EDWARD C. HALBACH, JR. Visiting Professor of Law On leave from the University of California, Berkley, School of Law, where he is a professor, Visiting Professor Halbach has pub- lished numerous articles and two syllabi on property law. In addi- tion to teaching extensively in this field, he has served on the Committee on Charitable Trusts of theAmerican Bar Association, section on real property. Professor Halbach has also taught at the University of Iowa, Col- lege of Commerce. He is currently teaching Trusts here at Harvard. Born: 19319 Clinton, Iowa. l3.A., l953gj.D., 1958, University of Iowa, LL.M., 1959, Harvard. LIVINGSTON HALL Prokssor of Law After graduating from the Law School magna cum laude, Profes- sor Hall spent four years in private practice, and one year as an Assistant United States District Attorney in New York before be- coming a member of the faculty in 1932. In 198, he was named Vice Dean, a post which he held for 20 years, and during the spring of 1959, was appointed Acting Dean, During the war, he was with the O.P.A. and later with theArmy Air Corps in the South- west Pacific. Professor Hall is a member of the Judicial Council of the Com- monwealth of Massachusetts and of the Executive Committee of the Massachusetts Bar Association. He has been the co-editor of case- books on Criminal Law and Agency. Born: 1903, Chicago, Illinois. Pli.B., 1923, University of Chicagog LL.B., 1927, Harvard: S.j.D. fHon.j, Sul- folk University, 1955.
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Page 26 text:
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LON LUVOIS FULLER Carter Professor of General fu risprudence Professor Fuller has been in the field of legal instruction since 1926. He had been associated with the faculties of Duke, Oregon and Illinois before joining the Harvard staff in 1939. Mr. Fuller was Chairman of the Committee on Iegal Education at Harvard from 1944 to 1947. In 1948, he received the Carter chair. Presently, he is the President of the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy. The Professor has been the editor of Basic Contract Law, 77ze Problems of jurisprudence and has authored The Law in Quest of 1tseM and the famed Law Review article, The Case of the Spelun- cean Explorers , which has appeared in ten anthologies, and has been translated into Spanish and Arabic. Born: 1902, Hereford, Texas. A.B., 19243 j.D., 1926, Stanford University. GRANT GILMORE Wsiting Professor of Law Professor Gilmore is visiting this year from Yale Law School, where he is William K. Townsend Professor of Law. In addition I0 teaching Contracts, he also has the third year section of Com- mercial Transactions. Professor Gilmore earned a Ph.D. in Romance Languages and taught at Yale for three years before entering Yale Law School, where he earned his LL.B. in 1942. He practiced law in New York City and was in the Office of General Counsel of the Navy Depart- ment from 1944-46. He was appointed to the Yale Law School faculty in 1946. He has also been a visiting professor at the law schools of the University of California at Berkeley, Columbia, and the University of Chicago. Born: 1910, Boston, Massachusetts. A.B., 1931, Ph.D., 1936g LL.B., 1942, Yale. SHELDON GLUECK Roscoe Pound Professor of Law Professor Glueck has been Adviser on the American Law Institute's Y0l1th Correction Authority and Model Penal Code, a member of the U.S. Supreme Court's Advisory Committee on Rules of Criminal Procedure, a U.S. delegate to several International Prison Con- gresses, and a consultant to the late justice Robert H. jackson on the trial of war criminals. For many years, he has been engaged with his wife, Dr. Eleanor Tourofl' Glueck, in research on correctional and juvenile delinquency problems, which has been .reflected in numerous pioneering studies including 0776 Thousand juvenile Delinquents, and Unraveling juvenile Delinquency. With Professor Hall, he has co-authored Cases in Criminal Law ana' its Enforcement Bern: 18964 Warsaw, Poland. A.B., 1920, George Washington Univcrsityg LL.B., LL.M., 1920, National Uni- versity Law Schoolg A.M., 19225 Ph.D., 1924, Harvardg LL.D., 1949, Unl- versity ofThessalonikag Sc.D., 1958, Harvard.,
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Page 28 text:
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HENRY MELVIN HART, JR. Dane Prokssor of Law Professor Hart spent one year clerking for Mr. justice Brandeis before returning to his alma mater in 1932 as an Assistant Profes- sor of Law. In 1937-38, he was Head Attorney in the Office of the Solicitor General, in 1940-41, Special Assistant to the Attorney General As- signed to Immigration and Naturalization, in 1945-46, General Counsel, Office of Economic Stabilization. Since 1937, Professor Hart has been on the American Law Institute's Advisory Committee on the Model Penal Code, and in 1961, he was appointed to the A.L.I. Advisory Committee on the Study of Jurisdiction of the Fed- eral Courts. Among his numerous writings, he has collaborated with Professor Wechsler of Columbia on Y7ze Federal Courts and the Federal System. Born: 1904, Butte, Montana. A.B., 1926, LL.B., 1930, S.j.D., 1931, Harvard, LL.D., 1953, Columbia. DAVID RICHARD HERWITZ Professor of Law A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pro- fessor Herwitz entered the Law School in 1946, where he was a member ofthe Board of Student Advisers and the Law Review. In 1949, Mr. Herwitz served as an attorney with the Tax Court in Washington, D. C. He returned to the Law School in the follow- ing year as a Teaching Fellow. Between 1951 and 1954, he prac- ticed in Boston and lectured at Northeastern Law School, joining the Harvard faculty in the latter year. Together with Professor Trautman, Professor Herwitz has written the third edition of Amory and Hardee, Cases and Materials on Accounting. He is currently conducting courses in Accounting, Corporations Finance and Business Planning. Born: 1925, Lynn, Massachusetts. ll-S-. 1946, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, LL.B., 1949, Harvard. MARK DEWOLFE HOWE Prokssor of Law Professor Howe clerked for Mr. justice Holmes upon graduation from the Law School in 1933. After practicing in Boston, he was appointed to the University of Buffalo Law School faculty in 1937, and became Dean three years later, at the age of 34. In 1945, he was appointed a Professor at Harvard. Mr. Howe was on leave for 1961-62, primarily preoccupied with the second volume of his contemplated three volume biography of Justice Holmes. Aside from the first volume of the set fMr fuslice Holmes, The Shaping Yearsj, Mr. Howe has also been the Editor of The Holmes-Pollock Letlers C 2 vols.j, The Holmes-Laskz' Lellers C2 vols.j, and the editor and co-editor of a number of casebooks, including one on Constitutional Law. Born: 1906, Boston, l1'I2lSS2l.Cllll5C11S. A-B.. 1928, L1..1s., 1933, Harvard. xi 3 1 4
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