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182 HOUSTON LAW REVIEW
29. Jane C. Ginsburg, The Right to Claim Authorship in U.S. Copyright and
Trademarks Law, 41 HOUS. L. REV. 263 (2004).
30. Paul Goldstein, Copyright on a Clean Slate, 48 HOUS. L. REV. 691 (2011);
William O. Hennessey, Protection of Intellectual Property in China (30 Years and More):
A Personal Reflection, 46 HOUS. L. REV. 1257 (2009); F. Scott Kieff, IP Transactions: On
the Theory & Practice of Commercializing Innovation, 42 HOUS. L. REV. 727 (2005);
Doug Lichtman, Understanding the Rand Commitment, 47 HOUS. L. REV. 1023 (2010);
Robert P. Merges, The Concept of Property in the Digital Era, 45 HOUS. L. REV. 1239
(2008); R. Anthony Reese, What Copyright Owes the Future, 50 HOUS. L. REV. 287
(2012); Joel R. Reidenberg, E-Commerce and Trans-Atlantic Privacy, 38 HOUS. L. REV.
717 (2007).
31. Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306, 327 (2003).
32. The phrase was popularized by Paul Harvey, who used it as the title of a
segment of his long-time radio broadcasts.
33. See generally Joyce, Driven, supra.
34. Id. at 4.
35. Remarks at University of Houston Law Center Gala (Mar. 23, 2013).
36. See Joyce, Driven, supra, at 4–9.
37. Id. at 8.
38. Id. at 17–20.
39. See generally Joyce & Hoffman, Boldly, supra.
40. See Joyce, Driven, supra, at 15–17; Joyce & Hoffman, Boldly, supra, at 41–44.
41. See Joyce, Driven, supra, at 23 n.53; Joyce & Hoffman, Boldly, supra, 41–42.
42. See Joyce & Hoffman, Centered, supra, at 80–81.
43. Id. at 78–81.
44. See Joyce & Hoffman, Boldly, supra, at 48–50.
45. See Joyce & Hoffman, Centered, supra, at 81–84.
46. See Joyce & Hoffman, Leap, supra, at 116–19.
47. Id. at 119–22.
48. The Law Center had discontinued its ambitious building program after the
opening of its second teaching unit during Decade 2. See Joyce & Hoffman, Boldly, supra,
at 42–43. Now occupying what HLR members confidently (but, as Allison would prove,
erroneously) expected was the Review’s permanent home, nothing much remained to do
but spiff up the offices from time to time. See, e.g., Joyce & Hoffman, Leap, supra, at 123.
49. See Joyce & Hoffman, Leap, supra, at 122–26.
50. Id. at 122.
51. The editors of Board 43 and 44 nearly had a repeat of the force majeure events
caused by Tropical Storm Allison when Hurricane Rita threatened the Houston area in
September 2005. As the fourth most intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded approached
from the Gulf of Mexico, the students “had to evacuate the basement as the rest of
Houston was packing up and jamming the freeways.” Decade 5 Oral History of Houston
Law Review (Mar. 8, 2013) (on file with Houston Law Review), moderated by Michelle
Gray (Editor in Chief of Board 48), with Alex Roberts (Editor in Chief of Board 43),
Christine McMillan (Editor in Chief of Board 44), Matthew Hoffman (Editor in Chief of
Board 49), and Peter Danysh (Editor in Chief of Board 50) (quoting Roberts). Luckily for
the city of Houston and Houston Law Review, the Houston area largely escaped major
damage.
52. According to Christine McMillan of Board 44, on one of her first days on the job
she was cautioned by one of the dedicated faculty advisors that “the Law Review does not
publish late and we are in fact a well-oiled machine.” Id. (quoting McMillan).
53. Joyce & Hoffman, Leap, supra, at 123–25.
54. And this, notwithstanding challenges such as multiple authors withdrawing
from a symposium for reasons completely unrelated to HLR, see Board Report (Oct. 13,
2009) (on file with Houston Law Review), Hurricane Ike causing a multi-day closure of