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John Marshall Kernochan, the law
professor, composer and music publisher who founded Columbia Law
School’s Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts and whose
pioneering work in intellectual property law helped spur stronger
protections for artists, died Monday at his home in Jamaica Plain, Mass.
He was 88.
He died from complications suffered from a recent fall.
Kernochan, who published and encouraged such American composers as
Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Ward, William Bergsma, Donald Waxman and
Allen Shawn, became heavily involved while a professor at Columbia Law
School as an advocate for artists’ intellectual property rights, and was
among those who prodded the United States to amend its own copyright
laws so the U.S. could become a party to the Berne Convention for the
Protection of Literary and Artistic Works in 1989.
``Jack thought it was very important for the United States to become
part of the world copyright community and recognize in our own laws some
of the principles that European countries already had established,’’
said Adria C. Kaplan, the former executive director of the Kernochan
Center for Law, Media and the Arts, which Kernochan established in 1986.
``Jack was a leading copyright scholar and one of the most prominent
Americans in the international copyright arena, as well as a wonderful
human being.’’
Kernochan entered what some then considered a barren field of law and
became a strong advocate for the rights of artists, musicians and
writers well before the rise of the Internet drew renewed attention to
the significance of copyright and intellectual property law. The
Kernochan Center has encouraged the development of instruction at the
Law School in topics such as intellectual property, copyright,
trademarks, the regulation of electronic media, and problems arising
from new communications technologies.
``John Kernochan was a joyful companion, a gracious and gentle man, a
tireless and effective advocate for all creators of intellectual
property and a visionary teacher whose influence, through his Columbia
Law School students, will affect the rights of artists for generations
into the future,’’ said Morton L. Janklow, a former Kernochan student
who graduated from Columbia Law School in 1953 and went on to become a
prominent literary agent.
Kernochan also developed the U.S. chapter of the Association Littéraire
et Artistique Internationale, originally created by Victor Hugo and
others to press for international authors’ rights.
``Jack left an indelible mark on the field of intellectual property and,
of course, on our Law School,’’ said Columbia Law School Dean David
Schizer.
Kernochan, the Nash Professor Emeritus of Law, had two careers as a law
professor. He focused initially on the law of legislation, training
students how to write and interpret statutes. He directed Columbia’s
Legislative Drafting Research Fund from 1952 to 1969, organizing
projects and studies in witness immunity, financial protection against
nuclear hazards, arms control and health and air pollution regulation.
``He was very influential in that field,’’ said Arthur Murphy, Columbia
Law School’s Joseph Solomon Professor Emeritus in Wills, Trusts, and
Estates. ``There were a lot of people wandering around Congress who were
Jack’s students.’’
Kernochan was also a member of President Kennedy’s Commission on the
Status of Women, which helped lead to women’s rights legislation in the
late 1960s.
Murphy first met Kernochan during their initial week as first-year
students in Columbia Law School’s Class of 1948. He said Kernochan had
``a wonderful sense of humor,’’ and he was initially attracted to
Kernochan’s ``imaginative use of expletives.’’ Murphy recalled an
evening in later years when they attended an opera in Manhattan.
Kernochan, an avid theater fan, found the opera too pretentious and
muttered some caustic asides that sent Murphy and others in their group
into such fits of laughter they had to leave the theater.
Colleagues also appreciated his thoughtfulness. Jane Ginsburg, who
Kernochan recruited to Columbia Law School, recalled that early on
Kernochan exhibited distinctive academic generosity when the two
collaborated on an article.
``Despite his entitlement by seniority and prestige to top billing, he
insisted that the publication bear my name first,’’ Ginsburg wrote in a
1990 tribute to Kernochan in the Columbia-VLA Journal of Law and the
Arts. ``That kind of graciousness and modesty is typical of Jack, and
may be all the more noteworthy for its too-infrequent absence from the
academy,’’ wrote Ginsburg, now the Morton L. Janklow Professor of
Literary and Artistic Property Law.
``Professor Kernochan was a mentor that any student would be lucky to
find once during their studies. Copyright law was his ideal
discipline,’’ said Bob Shaye, founder of New Line Cinema and a Kernochan
student in the early 1960s. ``He was an aesthete, who published the
music of Sibelius, a keen scholar who clearly grasped the nuance, and
justice, of intellectual property law, a humanist in understanding how
to encourage his students to digest and excel, and an all-around great
guy who could joke with the wittiest, and observe with the most
incisive. He meant a great deal to me, and he is sorely missed.’’
Tom Rothman, a chairman and chief executive of Fox Filmed Entertainment,
the parent company of 20th Century Fox, is another former Kernochan
student. ``He was an inspiration - sharp of mind, quick of wit, bold of
idea and, above all, kind of heart,’’ said Rothman, a 1980 Columbia Law
School graduate. ``The intellectual property bar, generations of
Columbia Law students, and his family have lost a giant. Jack would have
put it more simply: he was a hell of a guy.’’
Kernochan was born August 3, 1919, the only child of composer Marshall
Kernochan and Caroline Rigney Hatch, a World War I nurse.
As editor of his high school yearbook at St. Mark’s School in
Massachusetts, he produced memorable verses on that year’s graduates,
which kicked off a lifelong pastime of writing doggerel verse and bawdy
limericks. He also composed religious music. Four Christmas songs he
wrote at 15 are still in print, though soon after adolescence he became
a confirmed agnostic, sometimes claiming to be Druid.
After a year at Princeton, he dropped out to devote himself to
composing. He studied under Howard Brockway, and spent a year visiting
Finnish composer Jan Sibelius. Kernochan composed several choral and
orchestral compositions, which were later recorded. He transferred to
Harvard University, graduated in 1942, and married Adelaide
Chatfield-Taylor, the daughter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's
assistant treasury secretary Wayne Chatfield-Taylor. She died in January
of 2007.
When the U.S. entered World War II, he enlisted. On his way to his
posting, he composed his best-known recorded song, “As I Go Riding By.”
During World War II, with the 76th Division in Northern Europe,
Kernochan worked behind the lines to help direct attacks during the
winter of 1944 and the spring of 1945. “Somewhere along the line, it was
decided that Bronze Star medals should be dealt out liberally, and I was
delegated to write some of the supporting citations,’’ he once wrote,
illustrating his bent for self-deprecatory humor. ``After I had done a
few, I was told, `Jack, you write these well. While you’re at it, write
one for yourself.’’’
After the war, he took advantage of the GI Bill to attend Columbia Law
School. He graduated in 1948, and Columbia Professor Harry Jones
persuaded him to join the law school faculty, where he served into his
70s.
When his father died in 1955, Kernochan took over his father’s music
publishing company, Galaxy Music Corporation. He inspired a revival of
English and Italian madrigals by publishing a series edited by the late
Thurston Dart. He helped fund and produce some of the outstanding
American operas of the 20th century, including Robert Ward’s Pulitzer
Prize-winning “The Crucible” and Douglas Moore’s “Carrie Nation.”
An inveterate Francophile, Kernochan spent his sabbatical years in
France, where he studied flute and off-color French argot. At home, at
Columbia Law School and abroad, he routinely drafted people for
impromptu madrigal singing sessions. A collection of his bawdy limericks
and other verses, “Gardeyloo,” was published on the Web.
Kernochan is survived by his five children: John, of Cambridge, MA, a
real estate developer; Denny, of Santa Monica, CA, a business professor
at California State University, Northridge; Sarah, of New York City, a
filmmaker; Wayne, of Wellesley, MA, a senior IT analyst; and Rose, of
New York City, an editor at Columbia College Today; as well as nine
grandchildren.
Columbia Law School is planning a memorial service for Professor
Kernochan. Details are not yet available. The family said that in lieu
of flowers, donations may be made to the Kernochan Center for Law, Media
and the Arts at Columbia Law School, 435 West 116 Street, Box A-2, New
York, NY, 10027, Attn: Kristin Lynch.
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