[7][8] After receiving his law degree, he studied in Grenoble and Paris and visited much of Western Europe.
[12] But three years later, after the Nazi Anschluss of Austria, Fred Herzog was removed as a judge because he was a Jew.
[22] After obtaining his American law degree in 1942 from the University of Iowa, Fred Herzog moved to Chicago and began a new career as an editor-in-chief of legal periodicals and as a lawyer.
[28][29] On January 1, 1976, Fred Herzog became Dean of The John Marshall Law School in Chicago.
[37] Fred F. Herzog died on March 21, 2008, at Swedish Covenant Hospital in Chicago, at the age of 100.
[39] The John Marshall Law School Moot Court Honors Program hosts the Dean Fred F. Herzog Moot Court Competition for students at The John Marshall Law School.
"[45] Judge Buergenthal grew up in a Jewish ghetto in Poland and was one of the youngest survivors of the Auschwitz and Sachsenhausen concentration camps.
[46] The Herzog Memorial Lecture for 2012-13 was delivered on April 8, 2013, by Laurel Bellows, President of the American Bar Association.
[47] The program that day was co-sponsored by The John Marshall Law School and the Chicago Bar Association.
"[49] The 2015 Herzog Memorial Lecture was delivered by Professor Deborah Lipstadt, who spoke on the subject of "The Changing Face of Holocaust Denial in the 21st Century.