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  • HLS Student Seeks to Reform Presidential Debates

    September 15, 2004

    When the 2004 presidential debates begin this month, few will be watching more closely than George Farah '05. Indeed, he's worried that most American voters will be dozing before the first question is asked or, worse, "voting with their remotes" by clicking over to something more entertaining, like major league baseball.

  • Professor Arthur Miller on His Teaching Career and the State of the Legal Profession

    September 10, 2004

    A member of the HLS faculty since 1971, Professor Arthur Miller '58 discusses his teaching career, the state of the legal profession and "My Cousin Vinny."

  • Three Professors Join Tenured Faculty

    September 8, 2004

    The Harvard Law School faculty has added three tenured professors to their ranks, a move that will broaden the school’s coverage of different subject areas and bring increased depth and diversity to existing subjects. The additions include two new hires and the promotion of an HLS assistant professor.

  • Ogletree statement concerning corrections in All Deliberate Speed

    September 3, 2004

    I write to express my profound apologies for serious errors I made during the final days of the research and production process for my recent book -- errors which resulted in several paragraphs from another book appearing in my own, without quotation marks or other attribution. The errors were avoidable and preventable, and I take full and complete responsibility for them.

  • Charles Hieken

    Patently Supportive

    September 1, 2004

    A principal at Fish & Richardson in Boston, Charles Hieken '57 has practiced all aspects of intellectual property law for more than 50 years. He and his wife, Donna, recently made a gift to the school to establish the Hieken Professorship in Patent Law.

  • Archibald Cox '37

    Once to Every Man and Nation

    September 1, 2004

    For many Americans, the late Archibald Cox '37 is known for his role as solicitor general during the Kennedy administration and even more as Watergate special prosecutor in 1973.

  • In Memoriam – Fall 2004 Bulletin

    September 1, 2004

    1920-29 | 1930-39 | 1940-49 | 1950-59 | 1960-69 | 1970-79 | 1980-89 1920-1929 Paul Martinson ’29 of New York City died March 20, 2004. A partner in litigation…

  • Katherine Locker '98

    The Squeaky Wheel

    September 1, 2004

    Katherine Locker '98 knows that children with disabilities who are in the foster care system are some of the most vulnerable people on the planet.

  • Col. Will Gunn in uniform

    Honor Bound

    September 1, 2004

    In a nondescript building in suburban Virginia, two subway stops from the Pentagon, a team of a half dozen or so defense lawyers works on what is perhaps the toughest--and most controversial--legal assignment in America.

  • Steven Wax

    Defending One, for All

    September 1, 2004

    Last spring, an Oregon attorney named Brandon Mayfield was arrested by the FBI and jailed for two weeks. He was suspected of being linked to the Madrid train bombings, thanks to the FBI's mistaken match of a fingerprint to a print found on a bag of detonators near the scene.

  • Frederick P. Hitz

    I Spy

    September 1, 2004

    In his recent book, "The Great Game: The Myth and Reality of Espionage," Frederick P. Hitz '64 gives credence to the saying that truth can be stranger than fiction.

  • Walter Seward wearing Harvard hat

    Survival of the Fittest

    September 1, 2004

    Some honors take longer to attain than others. More than 75 years after graduating from law school, 108-year-old Walter Seward '24 ('27) has earned distinction as Harvard's oldest living graduate.

  • Jamie Gorelick '75

    Inside out

    September 1, 2004

    It was December 2002 when House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt called Jamie Gorelick '75 to offer her the last Democratic slot on the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States.

  • Juliette Kayyem '95

    Legislative proposals headed for Congress

    September 1, 2004

    Professor Philip Heymann '60 and his colleague from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government Juliette Kayyem '95 say Congress should provide much-needed legislation to deal with a number of issues that have emerged in the last three years in the fight against terrorism.

  • Getting real

    September 1, 2004

    Ever since Professor Philip Heymann '60 began teaching a class on terrorism in the winter of 1988, it's drawn a crowd.

  • Philip Heymann sitting at his desk

    Talking about terror

    September 1, 2004

    A Harvard Law School professor says a unilateral war on terror will not succeed. His solution: contain and isolate extremists by repairing frayed alliances and finding common ground with mainstream Islam.

  • Law in a time of terror

    September 1, 2004

    Four HLS professors consider whether the old rules apply when the enemies don't wear uniforms and are willing to die with their victims.

  • Hearsay: Excerpts from faculty op-eds Fall 2004

    September 1, 2004

    “If the pattern holds, then the record industry’s response to file sharing–trying to block the technology altogether–would generate the worst of all possible results. To…

  • Meeting of men in cowboy hats

    South of the Border

    September 1, 2004

    Charlotte Sanders '05 and José Rodriguez '06 did legal outreach this summer to help workers who pick America's produce. They reached out all the way to Mexico.

  • Professor Robert Mnookin '68 and Israeli lawyer Ehud Eiran lead the seminar.

    The Other Side of the Story

    September 1, 2004

    On a day when Israeli and Palestinian forces clashed in Gaza and negotiations in the region were at a standstill, a group of Harvard Law students in a classroom half a world away examined some of the challenges that have made the negotiation process so difficult in the Middle East and other lands torn by ethnic and religious strife.

  • Professor Richard H. Fallon

    Fallon on the Supreme Court and Medical Marijuana

    September 1, 2004

    This winter, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in a tug-of-war between the states and the federal government over drug policy. We asked constitutional law expert Professor Richard H. Fallon to predict how the Court will rule.