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Byse
Receives HLSA Award
Clark
Byse lived up to the legend. Renowned as the model for John Houseman’s
portrayal of Professor Kingsfield in The Paper Chase, Byse showed
his distinctive style while accepting the Harvard Law School Association
Award in June. After critiquing Dean Robert Clark’s introduction, Byse
took aim at Jacques Salès LL.M. ’67, the most recent HLSA president, who
had noted that award winners should make a “substantive” talk.
“I
considered discussing the current status of the nondelegation doctrine
in American administrative law or perhaps an analysis of the legal enforceability
of tenure contracts in American higher education. Then I realized he couldn’t
have meant that kind of substantive remarks,” said Byse. “But what
did he mean? I do not know, and when I asked him, he gave me the
unhelpful reply that I should decide.”
After 60 years of teaching,
Byse could indeed decide. The Harvard Law School Byrne Professor of Administrative
Law, Emeritus spoke about his career, “how an impecunious graduate of
a state teachers college became a member of the faculty of Harvard Law
School.”
It was a career, he said, marked
by fortuitous circumstances. After graduating from State Teachers College
in Wisconsin in 1935, Byse turned to his father for $200 to get an advanced
degree in history. His father, however, would give Byse the money only
if he used it to attend law school, and he enrolled in the University
of Wisconsin Law School. Byse’s father was so intent, in fact, on his
son not becoming a teacher that he persuaded a superintendent to withdraw
an offer for Byse to teach high school.
But teach he did, beginning
in 1939 as an instructor and assistant professor at the University of
Iowa, where he taught constitutional law, equity, and administrative law.
After serving in the United States Navy and as an attorney with the Board
of Economic Warfare and the Securities and Exchange Commission during
World War II, Byse became an assistant professor at the University of
Pennsylvania Law School in 1946. Byse joined the Harvard Law School faculty
in 1957 as a visiting professor. He was appointed professor in 1958, Bussey
Professor of Law in 1970, and Byrne Professor of Administrative Law in
1976. He became professor emeritus in 1983 and that year became a visiting
professor at Boston University School of Law.
Earlier this year, Byse also
received the Distinguished Columbian in Teaching Award from Columbia Law
School, where he earned his LL.M. and S.J.D., and the Silver Shingle Award
from Boston University School of Law.
Also, in October 1999,
Harvard Law School’s graduate program established six S.J.D. fellowships
named in Byse’s honor. The Byse Fellowships are awarded to outstanding
students in the S.J.D. program who have completed their oral examinations
to help fund their dissertation work.
The HLSA Award, the highest
honor given by the association, recognizes sustained or extraordinary
service to the legal profession and Harvard Law School as well as contributions
to the public welfare that exemplify the values of the School.
Byse called his appointment
to the faculty at HLS the apex of his profession as a law teacher. He
praised his colleagues and the five deans with whom he served. Yet he
did rebut Dean Clark’s contention that he practiced “tough love” in the
classroom. It was love, he said, pure and simple.
“As richly satisfying as my
collegial relationships have been, even more rewarding have been my associations
with my students, a truly exceptional group of young men and women who
have enriched my life and to whom I’m forever indebted,” Byse said. “I
say to them and to all the School’s alumni, thank you for your generous
support of the School and its mission.” |