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6月13日 Judge Everett没上过这位老法官的课,只是听不少同学抱怨过他年纪大了讲课不清楚。除了所有人都知道的那些正事轶事(诸如是本地大户根深叶茂什么的)之外,对他也没有更多了解了。只是三年里不多的个人接触当中,觉得这是一个特别和善的老爷子。还记得第一年那会儿参加mock trial正好是他做法官,trial是晚上搞的,显然老头儿很乏了,坚持到最后连等陪审团出verdict都差点忘了。可是第二天在图书馆迎面碰见,老头儿还是笑容可掬颤颤巍巍地伸出手,拍拍肩膀,把前一天晚上已经说过的鼓励的话再重新表达一遍。最后一次见到老法官就是法学院的毕业典礼了,老师们坐在台上,他坐在老师当中最前面一排,每个毕业生上台受了佩带之后,下台前都会正好经过老头儿面前,包括我自己在内,只要有学生目光转向他,他就会欠起身来握手祝贺。那天老师们退场的时候看见他走路一瘸一拐的成都似乎比平时还要更严重,但南方老绅士那种最经典的和蔼欣然的表情完全没变,我想也没有人会想到一月之后人就已去了。不过老爷子已届八旬,也算是喜丧,数十年中既当法官又当大学教授,加上家底殷实,在这南方小城论起社会地位和富足想来都难有他人可比,应该也不会留下太多遗憾、而只令旁人羡慕了。 老法官四月份曾经给法学院的学生群发邮件,呼吁大家在离开杜兰姆之前都要去本地的古迹Bennett Place看一下,因为此处是当年内战南军受降之处,他的父亲和他本人都曾为保护这处遗迹向州政府和联邦政府做了不少游说,还计划明年内战结束145周年的时候邀请总统过来演讲。八月份离开前,我想我会去看一下。 The Honorable Robinson O. Everett, 81Robinson O. Everett, Duke University professor of law and senior judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, passed away during his sleep on June 12, 2009. He was 81. Everett was one of the country’s most prominent and respected authorities on military justice. He served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces for 10 years as chief judge. His work as counsel to the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary in the 1960s helped lead to legislation that modernized the U.S. military court system. A beloved member of the Duke Law community, Everett served on the school’s faculty for 51 years. He taught courses in military justice, criminal law, sentencing, and criminal procedure. He taught his last class during spring 2009. Throughout his tenure at Duke Law, he was a kind and cheerful presence and a warm, caring mentor to students, many of whom got their first jobs with his help or sought his advice on life and work in the law. “For so many Duke Law alumni, Judge Everett is Duke Law School," said David F. Levi, dean of Duke Law School. "He embodied the qualities of leadership and service in and through the law. He was a model of the citizen-lawyer. He made a difference to his community, his profession, and his country. His distinguished career as a law professor and judge has been an inspiration to faculty, students and alumni at Duke Law School for over 50 years. We will all miss his ready smile, his generosity of spirit, and his inexhaustible supply of ideas for new projects and new opportunities for students and for this Law School. “Robbie had friends and admirers all over the country,” Levi added. “Even before I came to Duke, I had heard that Judge Everett was a hero to many in the field of military justice. Once I became dean, I was struck by how many of our alumni also looked to Professor Everett for guidance and for example. The legal profession has lost one of its most distinguished members, and we have lost our great and good friend.” A Durham native, Everett was born on March 18, 1928, to two prominent local attorneys, Kathrine R. Everett, one of the earliest women graduates of UNC Law School (Class of 1920), and Reuben O. Everett, one of Duke University’s first law students (Trinity Class of 1906). He graduated from high school in 1943, attended Phillips Exeter Academy for one year, and in June 1944 enrolled at the University of North Carolina. Later, he transferred to Harvard University, where he was a Wendell Scholar and received his AB magna cum laude in 1947, at the age of 19. In 1950, Everett graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where he had served two years on the Harvard Law Review. Everett began teaching at Duke Law School shortly after graduating from law school; at 22 years old, he was the youngest person ever to teach at Duke Law. He became a full-time member of the faculty in 1957 and gained tenure in 1967. In 1959, he completed a master’s of law degree at Duke. In 1951, Everett joined the U.S. Air Force. He served on active duty for two years during the Korean War in the Judge Advocate General’s Department. Upon his release from active duty, he became a commissioner of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals. He was a member of the Air Force Reserve from the day he enlisted as a private in 1951 until April 1978, when he retired as a colonel. In the fall of 1955, Everett returned to Durham to practice law and subsequently joined a firm with his parents. He often recalled as one of his proudest moments the day in 1954 when he was sworn into the U.S. Supreme Court Bar along with his parents. From 1955 to 1980 he was engaged in private law practice in North Carolina and at various times in the District of Columbia. He also was an officer of and counsel for various business organizations and nonprofit corporations. His legal practice included administrative law; civil and criminal appeals; commercial real property; commercial litigation; construction litigation; zoning and land-use regulation. Everett also was actively involved in redistricting litigation. From 1992 to 2000 he was a plaintiff and attorney for the plaintiffs in North Carolina’s congressional redistricting litigation; he argued four times before the U.S. Supreme Court in connection with the issue. In 1956 Judge Everett published a textbook, Military Justice in the Armed Forces of the United States, and throughout his career he wrote numerous articles on military law, criminal procedure, evidence, and other legal topics. As associate editor of Duke’s Law and Contemporary Problems, one of the nation’s most respected law journals, he edited and prepared forewords for various symposia on many topics. From 1961 to 1964 Judge Everett served part-time as counsel to the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, and from 1964 to 1966 he was a consultant for that subcommittee. During this period he participated actively in extensive studies and hearings that led to the enactment of the Military Justice Act of 1968, which created the position of military judge and formalized the military court system. In February 1980, President Jimmy Carter nominated Everett to the U.S. Court of Military Appeals. He served as chief judge from 1980 to 1990, when he assumed senior status. He returned to teaching at Duke Law School full time in 1990. In the classroom, he was known as much for his trademark black suit and yellow tie as he was for his courtly manner and consideration toward students. “I remind students and myself that law is a great profession that provides some wonderful opportunities for service to others and is also a means to a productive life,” he recently said in an interview. In 1993, Everett founded the Law School’s Center on Law, Ethics, and National Security to support and encourage teaching and scholarly research on national security law topics and to host conferences and seminars in the national security field. His legal scholarship addresses issues relating to military justice, criminal procedure and redistricting, among other topics. Everett was active in a leadership capacity in the North Carolina Bar, the American Bar Association and other local, state, and national bar organizations, and in the Durham community. He was a commissioner on Uniform State Laws and in various law reform efforts. A life member of the American Law Institute and of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, Everett was a director of the American Judicature Society. He served on the advisory committee on the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and Evidence from 1988 to 1991, and from 1991 to 1993 he was a member of the Committee to Review the Criminal Justice Act of 1964 (the Prado Committee). He received the American Bar Association’s Morris I. Liebman Award in 2000, the John J. Parker Memorial Award from the North Carolina Bar Association in 2004, and the Professionalism Award from the North Carolina Chief Justice’s Committee on Professionalism, among many other honors. He was the first recipient of the Judge Advocates Association’s Life Service Award, which is now named for him. An equally active civic servant at Duke Law School, Everett served on the now-defunct Private Adjudication Center board of directors and the Law Campaign Committee, and he chaired his Law Reunion Committee. In 1993, Judge Everett received the Charles S. Murphy Award for public service from the Duke Law Alumni Association. In 2008, he was honored with Duke’s A. Kenneth Pye Award, in honor of his 50 years on the Duke Law School faculty. Everett provided substantial financial support to the Law School, taking a special interest in financial aid and student needs. His philanthropy included establishing the Reuben Oscar and Robinson O. Everett Scholarship Endowment at Duke Law School in 2002. With myriad accomplishments to choose from, Everett consistently stated that his proudest moment was persuading his wife, Lynn McGregor Everett, to marry him in 1966. Everett is survived by Lynn and their three sons, Rob Jr., Greg, and Luke. Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, June 16, at 11 a.m. at Durham First Presbyterian Church. Inquiries may be directed to the Clements Funeral Home, (919) 286-1224. (zz)Shakespear and the Law Law and literature. At Chicago. http://uchicagolaw.typepad.com/faculty/2009/06/video-shakespeare-and-the-law-conference.html#more So entertained by the scenes after a day of bar review... Talks are also good, as here: 6月3日 Effective Propoganda 101 Lesson 1: Avoid Self-Ridiculing If you received your assignment months or even a year ago, have been sitting there thinking as hard as possible how to deal with it, and then get something like this: Then you should really go f$%k yourself in the corner... If you don't get it, which is more than likely, here're the hints: 1. Was there anything actually going on when they attempted to make the shots? --Nothing 2. Suppose they did expect to capture something with the camera, but weren't you almost certainly able to make sure that nothing would actually happen anyway? 3. If so, what's the difference between letting them shoot and get nothing, and letting them shoot and get that nothing plus the umbrella-bearing clowns you just lent them? Didn't you just make their photo of the day? -Institutionalized stupidity. Period. |
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