University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 74 Issue 1, Winter 2003

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

NORMAN W. SPAULDING, Reinterpreting Professional Identity. Norman W. Spaulding is Acting Professor of Law at the University of California School of Law (Boalt Hall), where he teaches and writes in legal ethics, civil procedure and complex litigation. He joined the faculty in 2000 after clerking for The Honorable Betty B. Fletcher of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and The Honorable Thelton Henderson of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Before clerking, Professor Spaulding practiced environmental law at Skadden Arps Slate Meagher and Flom. He is a graduate of the Stanford Law School.

DOUGLAS L. GRANT, Interstate Water Allocation Compacts: When the Virtue of Permanence Becomes the Vice of Inflexibility. B.A. University of Iowa; J.D. University of Colorado. Douglas L Grant is a Professor of Law at the William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, where he teaches property and water law. He is the co-author, with George A. Gould, of Cases and Materials on Water Law (6th 2000), and is one of the contributing authors of the treatise, Waters and Water Rights (Robert E. Beck, ed.) Professor Grant served as editor-in-chief for volume 39 of the University of Colorado Law Review.

REBECCA J. HUSS, Separation, Custody and Estate Planning Issues Relating to Companion Animals. Rebecca Huss is an Associate Professor of Law at Valparaiso University where she teaches Business Associations, Mergers and Acquisitions, International Commercial Dispute Resolution and the Uniform Commercial Code. A graduate of the University of Iowa (LL.M. 1995) and the University of Richmond (J.D. 1992), her research interests include limited liability entities and animal law. Before joining the faculty at Valparaiso University, Professor Huss practiced corporate law at two large law firms and worked as an attorney for a pharmaceutical company's animal health division.