Dedication Address
Chicago-Kent Law Review
Volume 68
Issue 1 Chicago-Kent Dedication Symposium
Article 3
December 1992
Dedication Address
John Paul Stevens
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John P. Stevens, Dedication Address, 68 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 5 (1992).
Available at: https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/cklawreview/vol68/iss1/3
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DEDICATION ADDRESS*
THE HONORABLE JOHN PAUL STEVENS
Thank you. President Collens,' Dean Matasar, fellow judges, and
friends of the law school. There are many reasons why I'm very happy
to be with you on this wonderful occasion. I will discuss only three,
although there are several others.
First, of course, I am especially pleased to see the new courtroom
dedicated by Chicago-Kent College of Law to my old friend Judge
Marovitz, 2 who is with us today. I need not talk for long about Judge
Marovitz because I endorse everything said yesterday when the City of
Chicago renamed Plymouth Court after him. 3 President Reagan recently said, "I knew Thomas Jefferson; ' '4 in a similar vein, let me suggest,
as many of you may not realize, that Judge Marovitz actually discovered
Plymouth Rock. 5
Judge Marovitz and I have been good friends for many years, and I
have always been impressed by his uncanny ability to settle cases. Others
share my admiration for the Judge; the breadth of his support throughout the community is indicated by the fact that both the Daughters of the
American Revolution and the Independent Voters of Illinois have bestowed honors upon him. 6 He always could see both sides of a difficult
* This essay is based on the informal remarks by Justice Stevens at the Chicago-Kent
Dedication Convocation, September 11, 1992. The Convocation concluded a week of events
celebrating the dedication of the new Chicago-Kent College of Law; Illinois Institute of Technology,
Downtown Campus. See also Ilana Diamond Rovner, Dedication Remarks, 68 CHI.-KENT L. REV.
11 (1992).
1. Lewis Collens, Dean, Chicago-Kent College of Law, 1974-90; President, Illinois Institute of
Technology, 1990. See Richard J. Conviser, Of Dreams and Cathedrals:A Tribute to Lewis Collens,
65 CHI.-KENT L. REv. 661 (1989).
2. Senior Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois; Kent College of Law, Class of 1925.
3. Plymouth Court runs between Van Buren and Jackson Streets in downtown Chicago. It
terminates on the north at the Dirksen Federal Building, where Judge Marovitz holds court. See
Robert Davis, Judge Makes a Name that Lasts in Court, CHI. TRIB., Sept. 9, 1992, Chicagoland, at
6.
4. Reagan's remark during his speech at the Republican National Convention was a clever
play on Lloyd Bentsen's "I knew John Kennedy" quip from the 1988 campaign. See CHI. TRIB.,
August 23, 1992, Editorial, at 2.
5. Chief Judge William J. Bauer of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
once explained that Judge Marovitz is the only federal judge who was born in a log cabin that he
built with his own hands. See Mara Tapp, Abraham Lincoln Marovitz at FourScore and Five, ILL.
LEGAL TIMES, Mar. 1990, People, at 8.
6. Judge Marovitz received a special award for 60 years of outstanding public service. He was
a state senator before becoming a federal judge. In 1950 he was the recipient of the IVI's first best-
CHICAGO-KENT LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 68:5
issue.
Second, I'm happy to be here to greet your new dean, Richard A.
Matasar. Much has been said about Dean Matasar, but I want to mention one additional detail. While preparing for another assignment, I
found his article 7 about Boyle v. United Technologies Corporation,8 a case
in which a majority of the current Supreme Court created a new defense
for government contractors against tort liability: the military contractor
defense. 9 I dissented in Boyle, 10 suggesting that this kind of law-making
is institutionally better suited for the legislature than for a free-wheeling
judiciary."I The same sort of judicial law-making at work in Boyle occurred again recently, when the majority in Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes responded to a perceived lack of legislation by itself changing the law of
habeas corpus.' 2 In his article, Dean Matasar wrote some unkind things
about the free-wheeling judicial lawmaking in Boyle.' 3 I would have
been glad to sign his dissent.
The third reason, of course-the main reason I'm here today-is to
celebrate this wonderful new building.' 4 As President Collens mentioned, I am a native Chicagoan. My father had a part in contributing to
the skyline of Chicago, so I'm always very proud of this city. Every
major improvement in Chicago increases this great pride.
Concurrent with the Dedication Year of Chicago-Kent College of
Law, Chicago is celebrating the twenty-fifth year of the Picasso sculpture
in Daley Plaza. 15 Chicago-Kent's interests are broader than merely the
law. Many universities now offer courses and programs in combined
legislator award. See Jody Temkin & William Recktenwald, Phelan Tells His County Health Plan,
CHI. TRIB., Jan. 22, 1990, Chicagoland, at 1.
7. Michael D. Green & Richard A. Matasar, The Supreme Court and the ProductsLiability
Crisis: Lessons from Boyle's Government ContractorDefense, 63 S. CAL. L. REV. 637 (1990).
8. 487 U.S. 500 (1988) (holding that federal tort immunity for government contractors
preempts state laws that would impose liability on military contractors for product design defects).
9. Id. Because of Boyle's ambiguity as to its scope, Green & Matasar alternately refer to the
defense as "the government contractor defense" and "the military contractor defense." See Green &
Matasar, supra note 7, at 640 n.3.
10. 487 U.S. at 531 (Stevens, J., dissenting).
11. "When [a] novel question of policy involves a balancing of the conflicting interests [between
a] governmental program... and the rights of the individual... I feel very deeply that we should
defer to the expertise of the Congress." Id. at 532 (Stevens, J., dissenting).
12. Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes, 112 S. Ct. 1715 (1992). In Keeney, in a novel application of the
strict "cause and prejudice" standard, a 5-4 majority of the Court denied an evidentiary hearing to a
habeus petitioner who had failed to develop his claim in state court proceedings, despite the petitioner's lack of procedural default or deliberate bypass. The petitioner, who did not speak English,
pled guilty to manslaughter. He later claimed that he did not understand his interpreter. Id.
13. Green & Matasar, supra note 7, at 709-13.
14. See supra note *.
15. See Elizabeth Chur, How Bill Hartman Wooed Picasso and Won the Prize, CHI. TRiB., Aug.
9, 1992, Arts, at 7.
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