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Page 16 text:
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JOHN C. MCCOID II Professor of Law Civil Procedure, Insurance, Conflicts Professor McCoid received his B.A. and LL. B. degrees from Vanderth University in 1950 and 1953 respectively. He is a member of the Bar of the states of Iowa and Virginia and is a member of the American Bar Association. From 1956 to 1957, Mr. McCoid was a teaching fellow at Harvard Law School instructing in the first-year group program, a seminar in the application of first year courses. In 1957, he joined the Law School faculty as an Assistant Professor of Law. He was made a full Professor in 1963. PETER C. MANSON Professor of Law Criminal Law Professor Manson, who r e c e iv e d his B. A. degree from the Unive rsity of Florida and his LL. B. degree from the University of Virginia, joined the Virginia law faculty upon his retirement from the Army in July, 1960. On the same date, he' was appointed Director of the Joint Committee on Continuing Legal Education of the Virginia State Bar and The Virginia State Bar Association. In this latter capacity, Mr. Manson organizes and pre- sents continuing 1 e 9 all e du c a ti on institutes for the practicing lawyers in Virginia. While in the Army, Mr. Mansonhad various assignments as a staffjudge advocate and in the Office of the Judge Advo cate General in Washington. He was also an Instructor and Chief of the Military Division at the JAG School in Charlottesville from 1955 to 1959. CARL McFARLAND Professor of Law Administrative Law, Legislation Professor McFarland received B.A. , M.A. , LL.B., and LL.D. degrees from Montana State University and an S.J.D. from Harvard. He has practiced before various administrative agencies, state and federal courts, in- cluding the Supreme Court of the United States. After serving as a visiting Professor at the Law School in 1940- 50, Mr. McFarland returned to Montana State University where he served as President from 1951 to 1957. In 1958, he was welcomed back to the University on a permanent basis. Mr. McFarland has written extensively in the field of Administrative Law and among his many writings is a case-book on Administrative Law, co-authored with the late Judge Arthur T. Vanderbilt in 1952. Mr. McFarland served as co-editor of the Montana Revised Statutes in 1936. Special Assistant to the U. S. Attorney General in 1937-39.
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Page 15 text:
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CHARLES OSCAR GREGORY Professor of Law Torts, Labor Law ProfessorGregory received his A.B. and LL.B. degrees from Yale in 1924 and 1926 respectively. From 1926-28, he practiced law with a New York City firm. In 1928, Mr. Gregory accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin and from 1930-36,he was an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Chicago. In 1936, he took a leave of absence to serve in the Department of Labor as Solicitor of Labor. During World War II, he served on the War Labor Board. Mr. Gregory came to the University of Virginia as a Professor of Law in 1944. He is widelyknown as the author of Lab-gr ale! the LE: Cases aggl- Materials g1 Torts, and as a leading labor arbitrator. PETER LOW Assistant Professor of Law Criminal Law, Procedure ,N. I.L. , Criminal Law Seminar Mr. Low received an A. B. degree from Princeton in 1959 and graduated from the University of Virginia Law School in 1963. From 1963-64, he served as clerk to Mr. Chief Justice Earl Warren of the United States Supreme Court. Mr. Low joined the faculty of the Law School in 1964. In addition to teaching, he is faculty advisor to the Criminal Law Research Organization. A. E. DICK HOWARD Assistant Professor of Law Constitutional Law, Evidence, Legal Philosophy Mr. Howard received a B.A. degree from the Un versity of Richmond in 1954 and graduated from the Law School in 1961. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in 1959-60,receiving a B.A. toxom degree in 1960. During 1961-62, he was associated with the Washington, D. C. firm of Covington and Berling. From 1962-1964, Mr. Howard was law clerk to Mr. Justice Black of the U. S. Supreme Court. He joined the faculty at the Law School in 1964.
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Page 17 text:
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EDWARD A. MEARNS, JR. Associate Dean and Professor of Law Torts, Legal Philosophy Professor Mearns received a B.S. degree from Yale University in 1951 and graduated kom the Law School in 1958. Prior to entering law school, he served as a Lieutenant in the U. 3. Navy. Immediately after gradu- ation, Mr.Mearns was appointed an Instructor of the Law School. Last year, Mr. Mearns was a Fullbright Lecturer on American Law at the University of Messina and the Uni- versity of Rome. He returned to the Law School in 1963 to assume additional duties as Assistant Dean. Mr. Mearns was appointed Associate Dean and a Professor of Law in 1964. l3 DANIEL J. MEADOR Professor of Law Evidence, Federal Courts, Legal Method Constitutional Litig ation Seminar Professor Me ador came to the Law School in 1957 with a diversified leg 31 background. He received his B. S. from Auburn in 1948 and his LL.B. from the Uni- versity of Alabama in 1951. He served in the Army Judge Advocate General's Corps for two ye ars and earned and LL.M. degree from Harvard in 1954. Thereafter, Mr. Meador became law clerk to Justice Hugo Black of the United States Supreme Court. Immediately before joining the faculty of the Law School, Mr. Meador was associated with a law firm in Birmingham, Alabama. CHARLES PATTERSON NASH Professor of Law Admiralty, Conflict of Laws, Evidence Professor Nash holds a B. S. degree from the Virginia Military Institute and a LL.B. from the University of Virginia. After two years in private practice in Hunt- ington, West Virginia', Mr. Nash returned to the Uni- versity as an Associate Professor of Law in 1927. He was appointed a full professor in 1937. Mr. Nash is the editor ofLaLw-gf Evidence EVirginia
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