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GENEROSITY
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legacy
SUPREME COURT
Leaders for the Global Common Good
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human rights
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Dear alumni and friends,
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sotomayor vists UW Law
Innocence Project Northwest celebrates 15th anniversary UW Law part of innovative Tech Policy Lab Asian Law Center celebrates 50th anniversary
Departments A L AW D E G R EE I N AC T I O N
Yoichi Shio ’04
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B O O K S & B E YO N D
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I N T H E S P OT L I G H T
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Features
R E C EN T FAC U LT Y N E W S
SID at 20
C L A S S N OT E S
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In these pages are also the names and faces of friends who have passed on, people whose legacy and impact will be felt for decades to come. Among them is Wayne Gittinger ’57, who was a lifelong supporter of the University of Washington School of Law. In fact, the office that I’m writing this from is named after Wayne and his wife Anne. Wayne was always willing to serve on the school’s boards and committees, and said yes to whatever was asked of him.
55 58
Honoring the Legacy, Eyeing the Future
IN MEMORIAM
Jack MacDonald
R EP O R T TO D O N O R S
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42
65
His Historic Gift
Q&A
24
with Professor Eric Schnapper
Last fall, we also lost Jack MacDonald, a 1940 graduate of our school. You will read about Jack’s remarkable story in this issue and I think you’ll be inspired by the same generosity, vision and fierce
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10 28 UW Law Volume 67 Spring 2014 Dean Kellye Y. Testy Editor Alison Jones
Copyright 2014 University of Washington School of Law. All rights reserved. UW Law is published once a year by the University of Washington School of Law. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Sharon Ernst, Grace Feldman, Stuart Glascock,
Alison Jones, Annica Mattus and Tiffany Sevareid CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Kerry Dahlen, Matt Hagen, Alison Jones, Devon Kelley, Tiffany Sevareid and Jack Storms
2
DESIGN Jo-Ann Sire
24
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spirit that always impressed me when I spent time with Jack. He cared deeply for the University of Washington School of Law and was compelled to give back to the institution that he felt gave him so much. His investment will reach every corner of the law school and every student who studies here for generations. There have also been happy occasions throughout this year. A few months ago, I got to attend the 100th birthday party of John Davis, a classmate of Jack’s, at Davis, Wright, Tremaine, the law firm he founded. John is our oldest living alumnus, and as I looked around the room at this celebration, I got to see the faces of generations of attorneys influenced by this great man. In the midst of these losses and celebrations, I was struck by the inspiring legacy our alumni offer. Our graduates exemplify giving and service and motivate me to continue to work hard to build the kind of school that serves not only our profession, but our world. This inspiration doesn’t just live in the past, however. I see it every day in the faces of the students currently walking our halls, dedicating themselves to the study of law to make positive change and to solve the world’s most pressing problems. At a press conference last fall, I told the world that the future of the University of Washington School of Law has never been brighter. I believe that now more than ever. It is a belief founded on the generosity of our alumni, the dedication of our faculty and staff, the caliber of our students and the power of our community. Thank you for being a part of it.
EDITORIAL OFFICE AND SUBSCRIPTION CHANGES
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Gates Foundation donates $1 million to support public service
As this academic year nears its end and I think back over all the tremendous accomplishments of our students, faculty, staff and alumni over recent months, I am filled with pride and optimism for the future of our great school. The pages of this magazine are filled with stories of new initiatives, historic milestones, bold ideas and inspiring philanthropy. These stories reflect the aspiration of this institution, to be a place that creates leaders for the global common good.
UW Law, William H. Gates Hall, Room 383 University of Washington School of Law Box 353020, Seattle, WA 98195-3020 Email: uwlaw@u.washington.edu
Kellye Y. Testy Dean, UW School of Law James W. Mifflin University Professor
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Law School News
MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN
3
news LAW SCHOOL
U.S. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE
Sotomayor visits UW Law
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR TOOK QUESTIONS FROM UW LAW STUDENTS ABOUT THE LEGAL PROFESSION, CAREER PROSPECTS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC SERVICE
4
Sotomayor, who is the third woman and first Latina
Prior to her appearance at the law school, Justice
United States Supreme Court Sonia Sotomayor
to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, spoke about the
Sotomayor spoke at the Husky Union Building to a
visited UW Law and met with students, faculty,
importance of diversity in legal education as well
crowd of 1,200 students, mostly undergraduates,
staff and guests to answer questions about her
as the need to teach students at a young age to
as part of a book tour for My Beloved World, her
life, the legal profession and public service.
be active citizens and agents of change.
2013 autobiography that chronicles her journey
“We are extremely honored to have had the
“Justice Sotomayor’s visit was a privilege and
chance to welcome Justice Sonia Sotomayor to
inspiration,” said Assistant Professor Lisa
the University of Washington School of Law,”
Manheim. “We feel so fortunate to have benefited
said Dean Kellye Testy. “Having worked as a
from her candor and generosity of spirit as she
prosecutor, a federal judge, an appellate judge, as
discussed a wide range of topics, including public
“We couldn’t ask for a better example of someone
well as in private practice before her appointment
education, overcoming adversity and the role of
who is a leader for the global common good,”
to the Court, she was able to share unparalleled
service in the legal profession.”
said Dean Testy. “Justice Sotomayor’s historic visit
from the South Bronx through her diverse legal career to her appointment to the Supreme Court. She also spoke at a Seattle Town Hall event later in
insights with members of our community about
and lifelong commitment to public service will
life as a lawyer and a jurist.”
offer inspiration to UW Law for years to come.”
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the evening.
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JUSTICE SONIA SOTOMAYOR AND DEAN KELLYE TESTY
On March 10, 2014, Associate Justice of the
5
GATES FOUNDATION DONATES
INNOCENCE PROJECT
$1 Million
15th
to support public service at UW Law
NORTHWEST CELEBRATES
ANNIVERSARY
PROFESSOR JACKIE MCMURTRIE WITH KEYNOTE SPEAKER BRIAN BANKS
To kick off 2014, the Bill & Melinda Gates
The William H. Gates Public Service Law Program
On April 4, 2013, the Innocence Project
IPNW honored its 2013 award winners: Innocence
Foundation announced a $1 million gift to the
was established in 2005 with a founding gift from
Northwest (IPNW) celebrated its 15th anniversary
Champions Jack and Leslie Hamman, for their
University of Washington School of Law in honor
Bill and Melinda Gates, who wished to honor Gates
with an awards dinner and celebration. Current
advocacy and the impact of their award-winning
of William H. Gates Sr.’s 88th birthday. The
Sr., a prominent Washington State attorney, for
and former students, volunteers and community
book, On American Soil: How Justice Became
gift will be used to fund efforts to support and
his career-long dedication to public service. The
members gathered to pay tribute to IPNW
a Casualty of WWII; Innocence Advocate
expand public service law activities on campus.
program awards five full scholarships on an annual
exonerees who have fought to regain freedom
Congressman Adam Smith, whose vigilant efforts
Gates Sr. received his law degree from the
basis to first-year students entering the UW School
from wrongful imprisonment in Washington and
helped secure the release of UW alumnus Jason
University of Washington School of Law in 1950.
of Law J.D. program in exchange for a commitment
honor the 2013 award recipients.
Puracal who was wrongly imprisoned in Nicaragua;
graduation.
The event featured a keynote address by NFL player Brian Banks. Exonerated after a wrongful
criminal defense and civil rights attorney who has devoted hundreds of pro bono hours working on
of our law school,” said Kellye Testy, James W.
Continued support from the Gates Foundation
rape conviction in California, Banks recounted
Mifflin Professor of Law and Dean at UW Law.
from that time has led to the development of a
his fight to clear his name and resume a dream
“The Gates family has been an extraordinary
centralized hub for all public service and public
of joining the NFL. Banks offered inspiration to
partner in our efforts to reinforce public service as
interest programs at the law school. Activities
Washington’s exonerees and resounding support
In addition to celebrating its 15-year anniversary,
a core value of our law school, and it is an honor to
include providing public service advising for
for the work being done by IPNW.
IPNW also achieved other significant successes
collaborate with them on efforts to promote justice
law students and alumni, supporting student
in recent months. It represented five of seven
and serve the common good.”
organizations focused on public service/interest,
clients who were exonerated in Washington
enhancing collaborations with legal services and
State in 2013, leading the state to rank 4th in the
community organizations and administering a pro
nation for exonerations last year, and was called
bono honors program.
“an extraordinary asset for Washington State
IPNW’s founder and director, was also awarded
expanded activities and the most recent gift from
the William O. Douglas lifetime achievement
the Gates Foundation will ensure that this position,
award in November 2013, the highest honor from
which was scheduled to expire in 2015, will be in
Washington State’s American Civil Liberties Union.
place for another ten years. WILLIAM H. GATES SR. WITH GATES SCHOLARS FROM THE CLASS
LAW SCHOOL
news
the wrongfully accused.
Times in an editorial. Professor Jackie McMurtrie,
an Assistant Director in 2010 to support these
OF 2016 AT THE PROGRAM’S ANNUAL DINNER: MICHAEL HUGGINS,
PAUL STATLER, ROBERT LARSON AND TYLER GASSMAN,
SARAH CHAPLIN, BILL GATES SR., SHIZUKO HASHIMOTO, THOMAS
RECENT EXONEREES, AT THE IPNW CELEBRATION
MILLER AND MICHAEL JETER
IPNW cases and supporting efforts to advocate for
and rule of law in our democracy” by the Seattle
Gates Sr. provided support for the hiring of
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and Pro Bono Award recipient Joseph Pierce, a
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Foundation’s incredible gift and continued support
to work in public service for five years following
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“We are profoundly grateful for the Gates
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UW Law part of innovative
Tech Policy Lab In September 2013, the University of Washington
“In a nation where technology moves at an ever-
In bringing together experts from the three
announced the launch of a pioneering laboratory
rapid rate, policymakers can lack the technical
schools, the Lab serves as both an intellectual
designed to examine cutting-edge issues such
knowledge they need to address how networks,
hub and resource center for both policymakers
as cybersecurity, consumer privacy and online
devices and software operate, so the Lab’s deeply
and technologists. Research will focus on
censorship, and to improve national policies
interdisciplinary approach to addressing these issues
complex policy issues emerging from 21st century
on new technologies. Dean Kellye Testy and
marks a creative, critical step forward,” said Ryan
technology, including online privacy, piracy,
Professor Ryan Calo joined leaders from UW and
Calo, Assistant Professor at the UW’s School of Law
big data, public records access and wearable
Microsoft in announcing the launch of the Lab and
and one of the Lab’s three founding directors along
technology, and on improving technology policy
Microsoft’s founding gift of $1.7 million.
with UW Associate Professor Tadayoshi Kohno, from
outcomes.
Computer Science and Engineering, and Professor Batya Friedman, from the Information School.
Lab teams comprised of both students and faculty will identify, test and examine new technologies in order to provide policymakers
PROFESSOR RYAN CALO DISCUSSES THE LAB WITH HIS CO-DIRECTORS, PROFESSOR BATYA FRIEDMAN AND PROFESSOR TADAYOSHI KOHNO
UW PRESIDENT MICHAEL YOUNG, DEAN KELLYE TESTY AND PROFESSOR RYAN CALO ANNOUNCE THE LAUNCH
with a rigorous research base and evidence-based
OF THE TECH POLICY LAB WITH THE LAB’S CO-DIRECTORS
recommendations for decision-making.
AND LEADERS FROM MICROSOFT
To address these and related questions, the founding directors hope to create publications, training sessions and suites of tools to enable policymakers to better understand what the technological implications of regulatory decisions might be. Reciprocally, the Lab will help technologists understand how their technical decisions interact with current policies and provide tools to support dialogue between
“The brilliance of this Lab – perhaps the first of its kind in the world – lies in bringing computer scientists and engineers together with legal and policy experts to help improve technology policy,” said Microsoft Executive Vice President and General Counsel Brad Smith. “The Tech Policy Lab will help policymakers keep up with the pace of technical innovation.”
service legislative staffers, academics, counsel and
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press working on technology issues.
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technologists and policymakers. The Lab will also
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LAW SCHOOL
news
97
A S I A N L AW C E N T E R C E L E B R AT E S M I L E S T O N E
50th ANNIVERSARY
UW LAW ALUMNI AND ALC HONOREES CELEBRATE THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY
UW Law’s Asian Law Center (ALC) recently
The impact of the program is now felt around the
The award recipients at the event last June also
commemorated its 50th anniversary with a
globe, with multiple generations of LL.M. and
referenced these bonds, with each honoree saying
year-long celebration, including a special event
Ph.D. graduates serving as leaders in all areas
how much the faculty, staff, librarians and fellow
on June 13, 2013 recognizing the lifetime
of law, business, government and academia.
students from UW Law meant to their education
achievements of five distinguished alumni
Many return to their home countries to influence
and propelled them to where they are today.
throughout Asia: Mr. Tasuku Matsuo M.C.L ‘69,
profound economic, political, academic and legal
from Japan; Mr. C.J. Kim Ph.D. ‘72, from Korea;
reforms. “These graduates are people with well-
Mr. Liu Guoyuan LL.M. ‘82, from China; Mr. Erman
developed social consciences and a real sense
Rajagukguk LL.M. ’84, Ph.D ‘88, from Indonesia;
of public service,” said Senior Advisor Veronica
and Mr. Tay-sheng Wang LL.M. ’90, Ph.D. ‘92,
Taylor, former director of the center.
from Taiwan.
The accomplishments of the honorees speak to the heart of the program, and to its survival, said Eddy. “That is the real mark of the success and importance of the program, and that is its real continuing legacy.”
Alumni join the international network of legal expertise that is rooted in both deep scholarship
Distinguished Japanese scholar Dan Fenno
and friendship – relationships forged over
then called the Asian Law Program in the early
DAN FENNO HENDERSON (CENTER) WITH 1968 LL.M. AND
rigorous study, lively debate and multi-lingual,
1960s and laid the foundation for the pioneering
M.C.L. GRADUATES (L TO R) GRIFFITH WAY, TOSHIO MIYATAKE,
multi-cultural exchanges at the center. Those
program, the oldest center of its kind in the
YASUHIRO FUJITA AND EUGENE LEE
bonds, said Professor Jon Eddy, a 1969 UW law
United States. Renamed the Asian Law Center
school graduate and former director of the center,
at the turn of the 21st century, it has been
“become a living, continuing legal education
recognized worldwide as a preeminent center of
program as our graduates interact over the years
classical scholarship, teaching and public policy
among themselves and with us.”
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work on Asian and comparative law.
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Henderson took over as director of what was
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LAW SCHOOL
news
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Students, alumni and distinguished guests celebrate a turning point for the Sustainable International Development Law LL.M.
Future By Stuart Glascock
“Time flies when you are out changing the world.”
With those words, UW School of Law Dean Kellye
vowed, will continue to educate leaders for the
Testy saluted Professor Emeritus Roy Prosterman
global common good, a “centerpiece of the law
at the 20th anniversary celebration for the
school’s mission.”
Sustainable International Development Law LL.M., a graduate program he founded.
of course, play to the natural strengths of their
The program concentrates on using the law as a
prime location — a vibrant, thriving Pacific Rim
tool for justice and poverty alleviation in developing
gateway city priding itself on being outward-
countries, while also protecting the planet and
looking, internationally engaged and ahead of the
conserving its resources for future generations.
intellectual, social and geopolitical arc.
While at UW Law, SID students learn about multiple avenues to address these challenges from the rule of law and governance to international environmental law, social entrepreneurship and corporate social responsibility.
As she takes over directorship of the program, Ramasastry expects to provide students with new tools and more practical training during their studies. She enthusiastically highlights current students who are championing a wide
“It’s a remarkable achievement, Roy,” said
range of international human rights issues from
Dean Testy. “We have alumni working all over
global health to climate disruption. Ramasastry
the world.” About 100 students, alumni and
cites multiple examples: one student devotes
distinguished guests braved a chilly February
his studies to the underlying causes of human
night to come together in the warmly-lit and
trafficking in the Philippines and the role business
collegial confines of Senators Magnuson and
can play in helping victims to rebuild their lives.
Jackson Trial Courtroom of William H. Gates Hall.
Another assists lawyers in developing countries
In addition to commemorating the anniversary milestone, Testy leveraged the opportunity to look ahead and gently steer the program further into the 21st century. Introducing UW School of Law professor Anita Ramasastry, SID director since 2013, Testy promised the law school would build on the significant legacy. The SID program, Testy
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The law school and its SID graduate program,
in filing environmental lawsuits against mining companies. Another current student strives to improve the criminal justice system in her native Uganda. Sick of the blanket of toxic smog that hangs over parts of China, a Chinese student is determined to use law and the courts to confront air quality evils.
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the Legacy, Eyeing the
founder and sets sights on the next generation of global leaders.
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SID at 20: Honoring
A special gathering marks a major milestone, honors an esteemed
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A New Generation of Global Leaders
“They are tackling the new challenges of the 21st century,” Ramasastry said, “and we want to equip
This year’s Barer Fellows hail from diverse
them to rise to those challenges.”
backgrounds including human-rights, anti-human
During the year in the SID program, students
trafficking and intellectual property. Fellows
take practice-based classes, which are designed
this year are: Akello Florence Owinji, Uganda;
to develop strong practitioners, Ramasastry
Benjamin E. Aritao, Jr., Philippines; Charles
said. One of these courses focuses on global
Mutasa, Zimbabwe; Stella Wangechi Ngotho,
corruption, dubbed “a challenge for all of our
Kenya; Hon. Lorraine Dinna Ogombe, Kenya; Tin
students.” The program allows students to
Nyo Nyo Thoung, Mynamar.
develop real-world skills while forging connections with NGOs, she said.
Reintroducing the New Director Ramasastry knows the modern, global playing complex challenges. She has taught at UW Law for 17 years. She earned high-level experience in international development law on the global stage. Most recently, she was a senior advisor in the Obama Administration working in the Department of Commerce on anti-corruption, business and human rights and trade policy in emerging markets such as Vietnam, Colombia,
Two clinical opportunities for experiential
Yoichi Shio, Director, Law and Justice Division, Governance Group, for the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). JICA is an independent government agency that coordinates
part of a global movement,” human rights lawyer
official development assistance around the world.
and current Barer Fellow Stella Wangechi Ngotho
It is tasked with assisting economic and social
said at the anniversary party.
growth in developing countries. In short, it is the Japanese equivalent of USAID.
be a human rights lawyer dealing with victims of
Shio graduated from the SID program in 2004
historical injustice. She thought coming to the UW
but navigated a homecoming to help celebrate
to study would be daunting, but she acclimated
the program’s 20th anniversary. “What I learned
quickly. “The SID program is multi-disciplinary
in Sustainable International Development really
and cuts across the board in a big way,” she said.
helped me to perform my duties,” he said.
“It makes us look at the world in a very new and
“Professors enlightened and influenced me to this
different perspective.”
day.” He also praised the “ideal environment for study,” the close-knit group of fellow international
anti-corruption
learning punctuate the program: one targeting international development, one focused on
A member of the class of 2014, she sees things differently than when she started. “The SID
students and the network of alumni around the world, “especially in Asia.”
Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey and Indonesia.
human rights.
An expert in the fields of business and human
Perhaps the most significant recent development
mental tools that I cannot wait to get back to
“In my work, in the development field, we face
has been the inclusion of students from a new
Kenya to implement all the opportunities that I see
many challenges,” Shio said. “Sustainable
fellowship program that provides specialized legal
for my country. I am very blessed and grateful and
International Development is ideal training for
education in economic development. The Barer
I cannot wait to create opportunities for others,
finding solutions to those situations. I am very
Institute for Law and Global Human Services,
the same way opportunities were created for me.”
proud that SID is my alma mater. I hope the SID
rights, anti-corruption and commercial law and development, Ramasastry’s scholarly work centers around the impact of commercial law on economic growth and development. She has advised the World Bank, U.S. Agency for International Development and many other development organizations. The SID program now boasts 20 current participants. Among other cutting edge topics, they study specific courses in law as a tool of poverty alleviation, global environmental
program keeps growing for the next 20 years.”
established by Stan Barer, ’63, and his wife, Alta, began in 2012-13 to bring skilled practitioners
from lower and middle income countries for a year of study at UW School of Law.
DEAN KELLYE Y. TESTY CELEBRATING 20 YEARS OF THE SID PROGRAM WITH PROFESSOR ROY PROSTERMAN, PROFESSOR ANITA RAMASASTRY AND OTHERS
“The unification of the Barer Fellows program with the SID program is truly revolutionary,” Testy said.
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protection and corporate responsibility.
program has bequeathed me with such strong
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International Trade Administration of the U.S.
their skills in related professional careers is
“Tonight signifies and confirms to us that we are
At a very young age, she realized she wanted to
field as well as its seemingly insurmountable
Among the SID LL.M. alumni who are applying
14
15
a standing ovation for his work at Landesa and the law school, he smiled and said he
of a single person, becomes the producer of individual
was overwhelmed.
land rights in a long list of countries including India and China.
major milestone, the lasting impact of Professor
Instead of reminiscing about the past, the
Prosterman and the important work left to do.
Roy Prosterman has done just that and it is awesome.”
revered law professor outlined goals for the
alumni, Dean Testy also offered praise for the SID program, commenting on the importance of this
Speaker after speaker praised Prosterman, a world-renown land rights advocate, for championing land tenure reform for the planet’s poorest people. In addition to launching the graduate program, he founded and built up a leading nonprofit, Landesa (formerly called the Rural Development Institute) that has made a
next 20 years of international development.
WILLIAM H. GATES SR., CO-CHAIR OF THE BILL & MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION
The multi-cultural, multi-generational audience hung on his every word. His presentation – at once scholarly, lawyerly and replete with
Landesa CEO Tim Hanstad Hanstad ‘95 also chose
dramatic personal anecdotes about international
to attend UW Law to study under Prosterman
adventure in some dangerous places –
and wound up forging a lasting partnership.
enchanted the admiring listeners.
In his remarks, he pointed out that Landesa
human rights
was “birthed in this law school” and noted that
huge impact reducing poverty around the globe.
Among the lofty goals for international
The UW School of Law has long enjoyed strong
development he firmly believes are within reach:
institutional ties with Landesa, which currently
establishing more “house-and-garden” plots for
employs at least a dozen UW School of Law
the world’s poor (small, roughly tennis court-
“Roy is an absolutely remarkable human being,”
graduates, many of them SID alumni.
size parcels that can provide food and income);
Hanstad said. “He epitomizes integrity, generosity,
expanding micro-credit programs; and improving
altruism. Roy, thank you for the gift you have
women’s land rights.
given to the law school, to humankind and to my
In all, over 100 Landesa employees engage
governments, aid agencies and NGOs in India, China and countries in Africa – more than 50
Concluding his remarks, Prosterman insisted on
countries in all. Over the years, Landesa won the
sharing the credit for the success of Landesa
attention of heads of state, political dignitaries
and SID. “Keep in mind it was a group effort,”
and powerful global development agencies.
he said earnestly. “I may be the public face for
Landesa actively advised lawmakers and had a
Landesa employs more SID graduates than any other enterprise.
family. You truly personify a leader for the global common good.”
In 2006, Prosterman won the prestigious Henry R. Kravis prize for nonprofit leadership
CHANGING THE WORLD
from Claremont McKenna College. The
some but much of the work was done by others.”
Over the years, Landesa secured funding from
prize selection committee called Landesa
direct role in helping millions of families own the
To seal the point, he called out several longtime
leading charities and individual donors including
“an extraordinarily effective advocate for
land they farm.
colleagues in attendance.
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. USAID
international land law and policy.” It described
and the World Bank also contract with Landesa
Prosterman as a “worldwide champion of land
— now headquarted in downtown Seattle — as
rights for the world’s poor.” He donated the
research consultants.
$250,000 prize to his innovative institute.
In a statement for UW LAW magazine, William
Landesa works to help families secure rights
H. Gates Sr., co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates
to land so that they can sustainably grow their
Foundation, enthusiastically applauded the mild-
harvests and reap the benefits of their labor.
mannered but extremely influential professor.
Ramasastry’s work embraces that legacy, with
“It is not often that an organization, inspired
the mission of extending it far into the future,
by the convictions of a single person, becomes
ensuring that future generations of UW Law
the producer of individual land rights in a long
graduates keep on changing the world.
Among those alumni was UW Vice Provost for Global Affairs, Jeffrey Riedinger. A 1980 graduate of the law school, he initially came to the university to study with Professor Prosterman and became his research assistant. They traversed the planet, reinforcing the belief that secure land tenure is crucial to sustainable international development, particularly in countries where agriculture is prominent but many households are landless. In heartfelt remarks, Riedinger called Prosterman
16
“ It is not often that an organization, inspired by the convictions
land rights list of countries including India and China. Roy
passionate and persistent. “He made a huge
Prosterman has done just that and it is awesome,”
difference in thousands of peoples’ lives.”
Gates wrote.
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In addition to testimony from students and
After students and alumni gave Prosterman
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Celebrating an Awesome Legacy
17
Myanmar
Uganda
Social Business/Enterprise, Anti-Human Trafficking
RESEARCH INTERESTS: Global
RESEARCH INTERESTS:
PROGRAM: LL.M.
in Sustainable International Development Law
As Aspart partof ofthe theBarer BarerInstitute Institutefor forLaw Lawand andGlobal GlobalHuman HumanServices, Services,created createdin in2010 2010to to focus focuson onthe themultidisciplinary multidisciplinaryrole roleof oflaw lawin inpromoting promotinghealth, health,education educationand andeconomic economic development, development,UW UWLaw Lawhas haswelcomed welcomedthe thesecond secondclass classof ofBarer BarerFellows Fellowsto tothe thelaw lawschool. school.
BENJAMIN BENJAMINE. E. ARITAO, ARITAO,JR. JR.
How will you apply what you’ve learned when you return home? First, I am inspired to continue my work in preventing human trafficking as well as providing a new future for the victims in my home country. As co-founder of a social enterprise that provides livelihoods to survivors of human trafficking and to those that are at risk, I know we are part of a larger global effort against trafficking that is continually growing. Second, I feel significantly more equipped to share the lessons learned as a lawyer and what we are learning as social entrepreneurs. I plan to support the recently filed Philippine House Bill on social enterprises and make recommendations based on my studies as a Barer Fellow, as well as my experience on the ground. Third, I am more aware of the importance of the judicial system and of having the kind of rule of law that truly benefits society.
Stella W. Ngotho Kenya Business and Human Rights, International Human Rights Law
RESEARCH INTERESTS:
LORRAINE LORRAINE OGOMBE OGOMBE
PROGRAM: LL.M.
TIN TINNYO NYONYO NYO THUOUNG THUOUNG
SSTELLA TELLAW. W. NGOTHO NGOTHO
CHARLES CHARLES MUTASA MUTASA
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in Sustainable International Development Law What inspired you to apply for this Fellowship? I had reached a point in my life where I felt the need for intellectual and social stimulation, to get out of my comfort zone, travel and interact with people from all over the world. I wanted an opportunity to share the knowledge I had acquired from my human rights experience in East Africa and also learn from other people’s experiences and interests.
Business, Corporate Law PROGRAM: Visiting
Scholar
How will your course of study influence your work? Since Myanmar changed its political system to a democracy about three years ago, we are trying to fill in in gaps in our knowledge and approaches to current development issues. The Barer Fellowship will help fill some of Myanmar’s knowledge gaps. Learning why the rule of law and sustainable development are critical to Myanmar’s future will influence my daily work at the Attorney General’s Office.
Lorraine Ogombe Kenya Intellectual Property, Criminal Law
RESEARCH INTERESTS:
PROGRAM:
LL.M. in Intellectual
Property What has been a highlight of your fellowship? I have enjoyed the cultural and professional diversity among the Barer Fellows and, in fact, among the entire University of Washington School of Law. As a result of this diversity I have learned vital lessons in interacting and socializing with people from different backgrounds, skills I can apply to my work as a Kenyan Magistrate. Outside, the classroom, I have been fortunate to interact with attorneys from the oldest and largest law office in Seattle, K&L Gates. My professional mentor from this office, Kate Spelman, has been generous in sharing her time and vast experience in intellectual property and law practice in the U.S.
Florence Owinji Akello Human Rights, Rule of Law, International Criminal Court, Sustainable Development
PROGRAM: LL.M. in Sustainable International Development Law
What is the most important thing you’ve learned during your course of study? I have realized that Uganda, like many countries, is full of many problems but lacking solutions. Poor administration of justice and human rights abuses are some factors affecting development. In Uganda, observance of human rights still remains a very great challenge. Uganda recently passed an anti-pornography law, the first of its kind in the region, prohibiting women from wearing miniskirts and revealing blouses. This law violates a woman’s fundamental right to liberty and free association. I hope that lessons learned from this program will help me provide support to women through advocacy to know their rights, and I urge the Ugandan government not to sit back and watch women’s right continue to be abused in such a manner. The sections in the law that undermine the dignity of a woman should be revised or deleted.
Charles Mutasa Zimbabwe Human Rights, Governance, Health, Poverty Reduction, Land Issues, Civil Society
RESEARCH INTERESTS:
PROGRAM: LL.M. in Sustainable International Development Law
How will you apply what you’ve learned when you return home? There are a number of take home lessons for me. Most importantly, learning how the rule of law links to development and how it can be used to impact development. I now understand that the land tenure issues and legal reforms in my country hold the key to production and sustainable development.
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RESEARCH INTERESTS:
BARER FELLOWS
FLORENCE FLORENCE OWINJI OWINJIAKELLO AKELLO
Tin Nyo Nyo Thuoung
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M EE T T H E
Benjamin E. Aritao, Jr. Philippines
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Jack MacDonald His Historic Gift & Unusual Life and whose generosity made headlines around the world MACDONALD ON LEAVE, MERCHANT MARINES.
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A closer look at the man who left UW Law the largest gift in the school’s history,
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Jack MacDonald, a 1940 graduate of the University of Washington School of Law, who lived the majority of his life
The Secret Millionaire Jack MacDonald was born in Prince Rupert, British Columbia on May 5, 1915. His paternal grandfather,
with purposeful secrecy and frugality, gained widespread,
Alexander MacDonald emigrated from Scotland to
international attention in the fall of 2013 for the “secret”
moving his family west. When he was three years old,
fortune he had built, and then gave away, following his death
where his father, Frederick MacDonald, started a
Ontario in the 1830s and operated a mill there until Jack MacDonald moved with his family to Seattle successful meat packing business in the city.
on September 13, 2013.
Jack attended college at UW, and after graduating from law school, served in the United States Army
MacDonald bequeathed nearly $187 million
“The UW was good to me,” MacDonald once
to the three causes he cared most about: the
said. “I felt I owed them something as long as
UW School of Law, Seattle Children’s Research
I was able.”
Institute and the Salvation Army. The $56.1 million he designated to the School of Law, the largest gift in the school’s history, will create, among other things, an endowed chair and support scholarships for law students and the programs that empower them to make positive change in the world.
in the South Pacific during World War II. He then returned to Seattle and worked for 30 years as an attorney for the Veterans Administration. During that time, he inherited money that his parents had
While the size of MacDonald’s gift, the largest
earned from MacDonald Meat Co. and began
philanthropic gift in Washington state last year
stewarding the family trust. He spent his spare time
and the sixth largest in the country, was certainly
studying the stock market and reading the Wall
notable, it was MacDonald’s personal story that
Street Journal, and as his investment portfolio grew,
caught the attention of the world.
so did his reputation for extreme frugality. MacDonald clipped coupons from newspapers, rode the bus around Seattle and purposefully wore old clothing in an attempt not to look “rich.” He once bought an entire freezer’s worth of frozen orange juice, simply because it was on sale. He was
C. HENRY HECKENDORN ‘48, JOHN DAVIS ’40,
a frequent attendee of UW Law’s Golden Alumni
DEAN TESTY AND JACK MACDONALD AT THE
Reunion lunches, which he would arrive at by bus.
2011 GOLDEN ALUMNI REUNION LUNCHEON
“Jack would come up and greet me with holes in his sweater and tell me he got dressed up for me,” recalled Dean Kellye Testy. It was these aspects of his personality that captivated the public’s attention
MacDonald clipped coupons from newspapers, rode the bus around Seattle, and purposefully wore old clothing in an attempt not to look “rich.”
and friends knew that MacDonald had been quietly accumulating a sizeable fortune. On November 26, 2013, two days before Thanksgiving, the three beneficiaries held a press conference, announcing the gift. Within hours, the story went viral, garnering
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Prior to November 2013, only a small circle of family
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following the announcement of his historic gift.
press coverage around the world. 22
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ABC News, USA Today, Good Morning America,
When asked about MacDonald’s legal career,
the Huffington Post and NPR all ran stories about
Dennis said that Jack rarely spoke about himself
the gift, not to mention hundreds of other media
or the early years of his life, but was clearly proud
outlets across the globe. Jack’s “secret” fortune
of his education from the University of Washington
wasn’t a secret anymore.
School of Law. “He went to all the bar conventions and closely followed the careers of his law school
The Man Behind the Headlines Watching this unfolding media frenzy was Regen Dennis, Jack’s stepdaughter. In 1971, he had married her mother, Mary Katherine Moore, who he met working at the Veteran’s Administration. Dennis recently attended UW Law’s annual event for friends and alumni of the law school in Palm
at UW Law gave him the tools not only to have a long and successful career, but also to manage his family’s trust. He believed that a background in law was the basis for understanding politics and business and society.”
questions about what life was like with Jack and
stepchildren, but only spoke with them openly
what the media might have missed.
about it after their mother had passed away.
quiet, shy attorney and a man of routine who did nothing for fun. My mom opened the doors to his world. She was vivacious and very social and right away they began to entertain, travel and go to parties.”
a strong loyalty to his family. What a guy. REGEN DENNIS – JACK’S STEPDAUGHTER
their ranks and felt strongly that his legal education
Jack didn’t keep the trust a secret from his
I barely knew him,” said Dennis. “He was a
He was an example of sensible investing, frugal living, unselfish giving and
colleagues,” she said. “He was honored to be in
Springs, CA and took the time to answer a few
“When Jack married my mom, my brother and
Jack’s integrity was unwavering. He was unquestionably fair to everyone.
Following a health scare eight years ago, Jack asked Ms. Dennis to write his obituary, so he could know what it would eventually say. At that time, he made it very clear that he wanted to be remembered as a philanthropist. “I’m sure he never imagined how famous he would be,” said Dennis. “For the past fifteen years, I had followed
the valuations of his trust,” she continued, “so
out folks in order to get them back on the road to
I was sure when he passed away and this all
self-support, he would most want his donations to
became public that it would cause quite a stir. It’s
the law school to result in the successes of lawyers
a great tale of a quirky man who lived frugally and
who would honor his legacy of integrity, common
left a generous legacy to do good.”
sense and generosity.”
When asked to elaborate about her stepfather’s
“Jack’s integrity was unwavering,” Dennis
philanthropic legacy and what he hoped his
concluded. “He was unquestionably fair to
gift to UW Law would accomplish, Ms. Dennis
everyone. He was an example of sensible
said it was Jack’s hope to help young, bright,
investing, frugal living, unselfish giving and a
ambitious students achieve life success. “Just
strong loyalty to his family. What a guy.”
as he would love to know that his donations to Seattle Children’s might result in a major medical breakthrough and his donations to the Salvation Army might result in rescuing some down-and-
(R TO L) MACDONALD AND HIS WIFE MARY WITH SUPREME COURT JUSTICE ANTONIN SCALIA 1992; MACDONALD WITH DEAN EMERITUS RON HJORTH AT THE 2010 GOLDEN ALUMNI REUNION LUNCHEON; MACDONALD’S STEPDAUGHTER, REGEN DENNIS, WITH DEAN KELLYE TESTY AT A RECEPTION HONORING JACK IN JANUARY
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philanthropist
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By Sharon Ernst 26
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UW Professor Eric Schnapper Has Argued Before the Supreme Court for Over 40 Years…and has Enjoyed Every Minute of It
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In his 18th appearance in front of the Court on November 4, 2013, Schnapper argued Sandifer v. U.S. Steel Corp. He argued that the protective gear worn by unionized steelworkers is not clothing. If clothing, workers do not have to be compensated for the time spent putting the protective gear on before work and taking it off after, because federal law excludes time spent changing clothes from the time unionized workers are paid. Professor Schnapper argued this protective gear wasn’t clothing, and that the time spent donning and removing the protective gear is time that should be compensated. On January 27, 2014, the Court sided with U.S. Steel Corp.
A: I think what made it interesting to someone who wasn’t steeped in the details of legal issues is that the case really turns on a common sense question which is, “What sort of things do people call clothes?” A number of lower courts had held that anything a person could wear would be clothes and that would include a watch or a toupee or a henna decal on your face. That’s clearly wrong, but it’s really hard to articulate and delineate exactly which things people call clothes and which things they don’t. So it was a very funny argument at times while the Court struggled with things like airbag vests that horseback riders wear or aqua lungs or things like that. Q: You’ve argued before the Court on many occasions. How does it differ from being in front of other courts?
PROFESSOR ERIC SCHNAPPER WITH CO-COUNSEL AND CLIENTS AFTER ARGUING BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT IN NOVEMBER, 2013
Q: You’ve been arguing cases in front of the Court for over 40 years. How is it different now compared to when you first started? A: I think the main difference is the Court asks a lot more questions now than it used to. The other difference is, the Court is hearing about half as many arguments as it did in the 1970s. That may be related to the number of questions you get because they’ve got twice as much time to prepare for each case. And I’d say now you’re very aware of who the swing justice is if it’s going to break in a 5-4 way.
Sometimes you spend a certain amount of time mastering details, section numbers or where things are in the record, although that was not a big deal in the steelworkers’ case. Q: You take on these cases pro bono. Why is that?
SUPREME COURT Although the steelworkers didn’t win their case, the hearing itself won notoriety for the lively banter and unusual topics discussed. The proceedings included references to thorns, bird hunting, the South Pole, neck braces, chain mail and knife scabbards, among several other unusual subjects. Megan Garber of The Atlantic described the oral argument as “…amazing. As in, one-for-the-record-books, court-caseas-epic-literature amazing.” She also referred to it as the “most delightful Supreme Court argument in history.” We asked Professor Schnapper about this particular case, as well as what it’s like to be in front of the Supreme Court, how he prepares, and how it has changed since he first stood in front of nine justices 40 years ago.
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A: It’s different first of all because there are a lot more people there than in your typical lower court. Also, you get barraged with questions. You spend almost all of your time just answering questions. There’s a real range of views on the Court too. And they’re not trying just to figure out who should win this case, but what the general rule in this area of the law should be.
It’s also different because you’re aware when you’re doing it that you’re getting these questions from people who are really historic figures. Every lawyer knows the names of every one of the justices and the chief justice. You get a question from Justice Kennedy, and it’s like an argument about the meaning of the Constitution with one of the founding fathers. These are just famous, historical people. We’ve all read opinions by everybody on that bench. As Pete Carroll said when the Seahawks beat San Francisco and were going to the Super Bowl, “How cool is this?” and the answer is, “It’s really cool!” You never get tired of this. It’s very fun.
Q: How do you prepare to go before the Supreme Court?
A: The largest part of it is trying to figure out the questions that I’ll be asked. By the time I’m done, I’ll have identified 50 to 100 different questions. Then I try to think out not just “the” answer, but three or four or five answers because sometimes the way the question is phrased calls for a different kind of answer. Sometimes you have to have more to say than you’d use at first blush. You give a short answer and hope not to spend more on it, but you have more to say if it goes that way.
You also spend some time thinking about what general points you want to try to get across, although you don’t have a lot of control over that. You think a fair amount about what you’re going to say in the first couple of sentences. Sometimes you get a half sentence out and sometimes a whole page. But you never know how much time you’re going to get before the justices start asking questions, so you have to plan for a couple of minutes, knowing that might not happen.
A: Because I’m delighted to be able to do this sort of thing and you can’t do this kind of work for money because the clients don’t have any money to pay you. So if you want to do it, you do it for free and I’m happy to do it. I’d much rather be doing this than helping some big corporation sue some other big corporation. Q: How do you choose which cases you will take on?
A: If I’ve got a case that’s been decided in the Court of Appeals and the question is, should I try to help the plaintiff side get to the Supreme Court, those choices are governed to some extent by the kinds of cases the Court will take. If there’s a reasonable chance the Court will take it and I think the plaintiff’s position is right, then I am happy to take the case on. Q: Do you have a favorite moment from your 40 years of experience with the Supreme Court?
A: Definitely yes! My favorite moment happened in November this past year when I moved my son’s admission to the Supreme Court bar. It was a something I’d been looking forward to doing ever since I heard he was interested in going to law school many years ago.
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Schnapper has been a Professor of Law at the University of Washington School of Law since 1995. He is also one of the leading appellate attorneys representing workers in employment law cases in the U.S. and has a long track record appearing before our nation’s highest court.
Q: What do you think made the steelworkers’ argument so interesting?
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Professor Eric Schnapper argued his first case before the U.S. Supreme Court during President Nixon’s first term. Since then, he has argued 17 additional cases before the Court, and filed briefs in 70 more.
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LAW DEGREE PROPELS YOICHI SHIO ’04, ON GLOBAL STAGE
By Stuart Glascock
A Law Degree in Action Alumnus takes his LL.M. in Law and Sustainable International Development to a global platform as head of a major division of a leading international aid agency.
Before he started his LL.M. in Law and Sustainable International Development, Yoichi Shio had already earned a law degree and garnered valuable professional experience. He had also forged ambitious intentions for his graduate education. In fact, he knew exactly what he wanted from graduate school: to understand rule of law systems, to closely relate his studies to his chosen vocation and to
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pass the bar exam and be admitted to practice.
SHIO AT UW LAW IN FEBRUARY 2014
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BY ALL ACCOUNTS, HE ACHIEVED
Shio directs JICA’s Law and Justice Division,
THOSE GOALS.
responsible for a gamut of legal aid projects.
Then, after he finished his LL.M., he rolled up
They range from helping write new legislation
his sleeves and dug in after landing a dream job
to improving policies at prosecutors’ offices and
within his field. Shio heads a division of the Japan
ministries of justice. The division also aims to
International Cooperation Agency (JICA). The
improve access to justice systems in developing
1,800-employee government agency is Japan’s
countries, and it supports legal assistance to
equivalent of the U.S. Agency for International
the poor.
Development (USAID). Like USAID, JICA works with countries on every continent supporting critical improvement projects such as building
GRADUATE STUDIES LINK TO GLOBAL PROJECTS
bridges, schools, roads, ports–and judicial
Earlier this year, UW Law professor and SID
systems.
program director Anita Ramasastry introduced her former student at a 20th anniversary
“I am head of a division which handles rule of
celebration for the graduate program. “I am so
law systems,” he said in an interview. “I have
pleased that he was able to join us from Japan,”
many opportunities to work with professionals
she said. “He has had a remarkable career. He
from different organizations, legal professionals
was such a wonderful student when he was here.
from Japan and also from abroad. In those daily
We are so pleased that he has gone forth and
activities, what I learned (at UW Law) is very useful.”
works in the field.”
Shio has directed a number of Japan’s technical
Before UW, Shio worked in Vietnam for a
China, Mongolia, Uzbekistan, Nepal, Indonesia, East Timor, the Philippines and other Asian and African countries. Last year, he led JICA’s mission to Myanmar to establish a new technical assistance project with the Attorney General’s Office and the Supreme Court. “What I learned in SID really helps me in what I do,” Shio said. “It gave me confidence when I discuss international law with my colleagues.”
from the University of Tokyo, but he wanted to understand the legal system in the United States. His Japanese legal education was grounded in theory, he said, but it did not focus on actual cases. Legal experts from various international aid agencies advised him to attend graduate
MAKE IT MEMORABLE
“I remember these classes,” he said, especially
After graduation from UW School of Law in 2004,
courses taught by Professor Ramasastry and
he was admitted to the bar in New York.
Professor Roy Prosterman.
Collegiality with his SID network of friends and
school in the United States. After careful
Law classes challenged him academically;
associates continues. “I still have contact with my
research, he chose UW School of Law.
he recalled they were “very hard.” Initially,
classmates,” he said. Especially since he began
he struggled with his English and expressed
traveling extensively to numerous Asian countries
himself in group settings with some difficulty.
on behalf of JICA, Shio has encountered many
However, the professors were “kind and patient
more alumni from UW School of Law.
with comments and corrections.” He praised
“Instantly, we felt intimacy that we are graduates.
the faculty for their “passion for educating
We are Huskies,” Shio said. “That makes my work
international students.”
very easy.”
A close-knit cadre of international students (many
His SID degree laid the foundation for
from Asian countries) populated the law school’s
advancement, he said. He benefits from it daily.
While in the SID program, “I learned how the rule of law evolved in the United States and
In internal documents, Tokyo-based JICA calls
how many legal problems can be recurring,”
for “the sound development of the Japanese and
he said. He cited civil rights as one example
global economy by supporting the socioeconomic
of a recurring theme or pattern of cases that
development, recovery or economic stability of
re-emerges.
developing regions.”
PROFESSORS, CLASSMATES
SID and Intellectual Property Law and Policy programs. They also helped ensure Shio’s success at UW. “Talking with them helped me a lot,” he said. “They are professionals. Many had rich legal
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projects with Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar,
SHIO VISITING THE DIRECTOR GENERAL OF THE SUPREME COURT OF MYANMAR IN FEBRUARY 2013
couple of years after receiving his law degree
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assistance projects. He has spearheaded such
experiences in their own countries.” 32
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Books &
Collaboration
Grace E. Feldman
What does collaboration look like? To some,
Behind the scenes (or the shelves rather),
The collaborative efforts of the Law Library are
Recently, the Law Library joined its biggest
the thought of collaboration invokes visions
collaboration abounds as well. Collection
not confined within its walls; they stretch beyond
collaborative effort yet. The Law Library along
of a busy and noisy group—working together,
development librarians maintain close
the state of Washington to reinforce UW Law’s
with all the University of Washington Libraries
sharing ideas and tossing documents across
relationships with UW Law faculty to inform Law
national presence. Together with the Ohio
moved to connect with the world’s largest
tables strewn with coffee cups, pens, pencils,
Library decisions to purchase resources and
State University Moritz College of Law and the
shared catalog. Joining 36 other college and
iPads, laptops and notepads. Although the
subscribe to databases. Technical services staff
University of Pittsburgh School of Law, staff
university libraries in Oregon, Washington, and
Gallagher Law Library might seem like a hushed
acquire, catalog and prepare print materials for
of the Gallagher Law Library coedit the Legal
Idaho—known as the Orbis Cascade Alliance
place to a cursory visitor, it houses a busy, lively
patron use while also preserving the existing
Scholarship Blog (http://legalscholarshipblog.
(http://www.orbiscascade.org), the Law Library’s
and wonderfully collaborative group. At the heart
collection for future researchers. Technical
com). The blog facilitates the legal academy’s
participation in moving to a shared catalog
of the Law Library’s primary mission to support
services staff also focus on building and
development and dissemination of scholarship
unlocks countless opportunities for collaboration.
the curricular and research needs of UW Law is
maintaining electronic tools that help library
by alerting law professors (and aspiring law
This collaboration will translate to improved
a dedicated group of librarians and library staff
users locate resources. Circulation and resource
professors) to upcoming conferences and
resource sharing and will allow broader access
who share resources and expertise with students,
sharing staff manage and monitor materials,
calls for papers. The blog also informs readers
to materials for students, faculty, staff and other
staff, faculty and members of the Seattle
helping to connect visitors with resources both
about colloquia and workshops for papers
library visitors! You can try out the beta version
community and beyond.
in the library and in other libraries (via interlibrary
at law schools around the country each day.
of the new catalog at the Gallagher Law Library
loan). Reference librarians consult with UW
With over 500 followers on Twitter, the Legal
website (http://www.lib.law.washington.edu).
Law faculty to provide research and reference
Scholarship Blog represents a valuable resource
services that informs their excellent scholarship.
to legal academics across the country. The
Reference librarians also meet with UW Law
Legal Scholarship Blog is just one of countless
students both in their classes and one-on-one, to
collaborations that the Law Library contributes to
provide individual research instruction for their
in support of UW Law.
around the Law Library, collaboration can be found everywhere: in the carefully selected materials waiting to be shelved at the Circulation Desk, in the visitors asking questions at the Reference Office, in the law students working together in the new Student Org Space on L2 and in the researchers using library-sponsored databases at the computer terminals.
papers and assignments. The guided instruction provides students with skills to find the best resources efficiently, allowing students more time to write and develop their projects. Working together means improving the quality of the work of UW Law students, faculty, staff and other Law Library visitors.
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collaborative environment for UW Law. Looking
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The Law Library takes pride in fostering a
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Beyond
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Cruden Environmental Lecture April 16, 2013
Commencement June 9, 2013
April 16, 2013: UW School of Law, with support of the environmental and energy lawyers at Marten Law, hosted John Cruden, President of Environmental Law Institute as the environmental Leader in Residence. Mr. Cruden’s two day visit culminated in a special public presentation “Where Have All the Leaders Gone? Environmental Law at a Crossroads” at the Rainier Club.
Faculty, staff, graduates and guests celebrate the 2013 UW School of Law Commencement. 2 LEONARDO FLOR ’13 DELIVERS HIS REMARKS 3 SHAWNA DEANE ’13 WALKS ACROSS THE STAGE WITH HER CHILDREN 4 VANESSA HUNSBERGER ’13 AND BRIAN FERRASCI-O’MALLEY ‘13
1 DEAN TESTY, JOHN CRUDEN AND BRAD MARTEN
5 DEAN TESTY CONGRATULATES GATES SCHOLAR YURIJ RUDENSKY ‘13 6 THE CLASS OF 2013 WITH FACULTY, DIGNITARIES AND SPECIAL GUESTS
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in the SPOTLIGHT
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Golden Alumni Reunion Luncheon September 12, 2013
1 HERBERT FULLER ’54 EMCEES THE PROGRAM
A special reunion luncheon for those who graduated from UW Law before 1963.
2 WALDO STONE ’49, A LOYAL ATTENDEE OF THIS ANNUAL EVENT 3 PROFESSOR AND DEAN EMERITUS MARJORIE ROMBAUER ‘60
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in the SPOTLIGHT “Promoting Diversity in Law School Leadership” October 11, 2013
4 NEW BAR ADMITTEES ARE SWORN IN AT THE KCBA
Dean Testy partnered with the Society of American Law Teachers and Seattle University to host this year’s gathering of current and aspiring deans.
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5 DEAN TESTY, PROFESSOR CYNTHIA NANCE (UNIV. OF ARKANSAS SCHOOL OF LAW), PROFESSOR ANGELA HARRIS (UC DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW), DEAN CAMILLE NELSON (SUFFOLK LAW), ASSOC. DEAN NATASHA MARTIN (SEATTLE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW)
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King County Bar Association Bar Swearing In October 8, 2013
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UW Law Tailgate October 12, 2013
2013 Roger L. Shidler Lecture Series October 22, 2013
This annual event brings Husky Law Dawgs together to cheer on the UW football team.
The Law, Technology & Arts Group (LTA) hosted Judge Margaret McKeown as the first of two speakers in the 2013 Shidler Lecture Series. She spoke about legal and constitutional issues spawned by the popularization of the Internet.
1 LINDA NORMAN ’85 AND DAN SATTERBERG ‘85
3 BOB JAFFE ’72 AND ROB HUNT
2 GLORIA WALLSTROM AND JACK ALHADEFF ‘67
4 CHRISTINE SISKA AND SEAN SISKA ‘13
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5 SCOTT DAVID, PROFESSOR SEAN O’CONNOR, JUDGE MCKEOWN, DEAN TESTY, PROFESSOR TOSHIKO TAKENAKA AND PROFESSOR ROBERT GOMULKIEWICZ
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in the SPOTLIGHT This event recognizes our alumni award recipients and this year welcomed our anniversary classes from 1963, 1973, 1983, 1993 and 2003.
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7 LAW SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT GERALD SWANSON ’96, RECENT GRADUATE AWARD RECIPIENT AMIT RANADE ’03, DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD RECIPIENT LISA STONE ’85, HENRY M. JACKSON DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENT JUSTICE TOM CHAMBERS ’69, DEAN TESTY AND SERVICE RECOGNITION AWARD RECIPIENT JOE BROTHERTON ‘82
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8 JAMES BLACK ’73, PROF. DWIGHT DRAKE ’73, STEPHANIE BLACK, DEB HARREL, ARLEY HARREL ’73, NICK MILLER ’73, KAREN NEWBILL AND GARY NEWBILL ‘73
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Celebration of Distinction Oct 25, 2013
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Visit From Professor Jagdish Bhagwati Nov 19, 2013 In partnership with UW’s Jackson School of International Studies and the Henry M. Jackson Foundation, UW Law sponsored a public lecture featuring Prof. Jagdish Bhagwati on “Why Growth Matters.” Prior to the event, Prof. Bhagwati met with law students at Gates Hall. 1 PROFESSOR BHAGWATI ANSWERS QUESTIONS FROM LAW STUDENTS IN MACFARLANE LOUNGE
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FACULTY & ALUMNI
News
in the SPOTLIGHT
SPRING 2014
UW President Michael Young Delivers First Asian Law Lecture of 2014 Jan 21, 2014 The Asian Law Center hosted President and UW Law Professor Michael Young to present on his area of specialty as part of the ALC Speaker Series.
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2 DEAN TESTY, PRESIDENT YOUNG AND PROFESSOR DONGSHENG ZANG
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Collaborative Empirical Study of High School Students’ Interactions with and Perceptions of School Resource Officers, Association of American Law Schools, Bellow Scholars Committee Workshop and Clinical Writers Workshop, Sept. 27, 2013 (New York, NY)
CRAIG ALLEN
Publications ITLOS Orders Russia to Release ARCTIC SUNRISE and Its Greenpeace Protestors, Opinio Juris (Nov. 25, 2013). Law of the Sea Tribunal Resoundingly Affirms the Sovereign Immunity of Warships and Orders Ghana to Release Argentine Tall Ship ARA Libertad, Opinio Juris (Dec. 15, 2012).
Presentations Moderator, Leadership and the Arctic: Why It Matters, Energy Council, 2012 Global Energy and Environmental Issues Conference, Dec. 6, 2012 (New Orleans, LA) KIMBERLY AMBROSE
Presentations The Clinical Legal Education Movement: How Socially Relevant Experiential Learning Opportunities Can Transform Our Teaching, Our Students and Our Communities, Southeast Asia Legal Education Conference: Preparing Lawyers for Tomorrow’s Society and Profession, Oct. 1, 2013 (Surabaya, Indonesia) Analyzing the Role of the School Resource Officer on the Educational Environment from the Students’ Perspective: A Law School Clinic’s 42
Representing Youth—A Narrative Teaching Text in the Making, The City Law School, City University, The 2013 Applied Legal Storytelling Conference, Jul. 2013 (London, UK) The Globalization of Legal Education: Integrating International LLM and J.D. Students into Litigation and Non-Litigation Clinics in the U.S., Association of American Law Schools, Conference on Clinical Legal Education, May 1, 2013 (San Juan, PR)
HELEN ANDERSON
Publications The Psychotherapist Privilege: Privacy and “Garden Variety” Emotional Distress, 21 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 117-56 (2013). From the Thief in the Night to the Guest Who Stayed Too Long: The Evolution of Burglary in the Shadow of the Common Law, 45 Ind. L. Rev. 629-67 (2012).
The Ethics of Tax Lawyers & Tax Accountants Partnering: Plus Ça Change, Plus C’est La Même Chose, University of Washington School of Law Tax Program, Duties to the Tax System, Oct. 4, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
U.S. Supreme Court Considers Indian Gaming Case, Seminar Group, Northwest Gaming Law Summit (Dec. 2013)
Presentations Frenemies of the Court: The Many Faces of Amicus Curiae, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquia Series, Feb. 13, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
A Problem-Prone Promise: Recurring Issues in Fulfilling the Federal Trust Responsibility to Indian Nations, University of Oregon School of Law, Seventh Annual Rennard Strickland Lecture, Nov. 2013 (Eugene, OR)
But Did It Make Any Difference? Addressing Harmless Error, Washington State Office of Public Defense, CLE, Nov. 30, 2012 (Seattle, WA)
Testimony, U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, hearing on “wildlife management authority within the state of Alaska under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act and the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act,” Sep. 19, 2013 (Washington, DC)
How to Avoid “Hitting the Wall” with Service, Second Annual Western Regional Legal Writing Conference, Aug. 11, 2012 (Eugene, OR)
Washington State Office of the Attorney General, Indian Law Conference, Public Law 280 Issues (Jun. 2013) Indian Trust Land Issues, Seminar Group, Northwest Gaming Law Summit (Dec. 2012) President Nixon, Self-Determination and the Trust Relationship, The Smithsonian, National Museum of the American Indian, Nov. 2012 (Washington, DC)
Moderator, Rights of Victims vs. Rights of Juveniles in Conflict with the Law—The Rules of Harmonious Construction of Law, International Colloquium on Juvenile Justice, Mar. 18, 2013 (New Delhi, India) Panelist, Administration of Juvenile Justice: Regional and National Challenges, International Colloquium on Juvenile Justice, Mar. 17, 2013 (New Delhi, India)
Presentations
Panelist, Resources on Reservations, Stanford Law School, Contemporary Issues in Indian Law Conference, Feb. 7, 2014 (Stanford, CA)
ROBERT ANDERSON
Publications Report of the Commission on Indian Trust Administration and Reform, Final Report [to the] Department of the Interior (Robert Anderson, Comm’r primary author and editor, 2013). 101 pages & apps. Negotiating Jurisdiction: Retroceding State Authority over Indian Country Granted by Public Law 280, 87 Wash. L. Rev. 915-64 (2012). Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law (Robert T. Anderson et al. eds., LexisNexis 2012). 1452 pages.
Panelist, Intergovernmental Cooperation Among Tribes, States, and the United States, Harvard Law School, Tribal Courts and the Federal System, Nov. 8, 2012 (Cambridge, MA) THOMAS ANDREWS
Publications Tom Andrews, Karen Boxx & Ann Murphy, Washington Community Property Deskbook (4th ed. Washington State Bar Association 2014). 1 vol. Tom Andrews, Rob Aronson, Mark Fucile & Art Lachman, The Law of Lawyering in Washington (Washington State Bar Association 2012). 1 vol.
Utility Model and Design Protection for Domestic Innovations in Russia, University of Washington School of Law and Indian Society of International Law, Intellectual Property Policy Seminar, Dec. 2012 (New Delhi, India) KAREN BOXX
ROBERT ARONSON
Publications
Publications
Tom Andrews, Karen Boxx & Ann Murphy, Washington Community Property Deskbook (4th ed. Washington State Bar Association 2014). 1 vol.
Robert H. Aronson & Maureen A. Howard, The Law of Evidence in Washington (5th ed. Matthew Bender 2013). 1 vol. The Law of Evidence in Washington (4th ed. LexisNexis 2003 & Dec. 2012 supp.) 1 vol. Tom Andrews, Rob Aronson, Mark Fucile & Art Lachman, The Law of Lawyering in Washington (Washington State Bar Association 2012). 1 vol. ANNA BAKHMETYEVA
Presentations Technology Transfer in Russia, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Globalization of Medical Science Industry and Technology Transfer Strategies Seminar, Dec. 2013 (Tokyo, Japan) Doctrine Works Made for Hire under U.S. Copyright Law, Saint Petersburg Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Sep. 2013 (Saint Petersburg, Russia) Doctrine Works Made for Hire under U.S. Copyright law, Ushinsky State Scientific Pedagogical Library, Sep. 2013 (Moscow, Russia) IP Protection of Software under the U.S. Copyright and Trade Secret Laws, Russian State Academy of Intellectual Property, Sep. 2013 (Moscow, Russia) The U.S. Trade Secret Law, High School of Economics, Sep. 2013 (Moscow, Russia) Specialized IP Court in Russia, Microsoft, Country Reports, Apr. 2013 (Redmond, WA)
Karen E. Boxx & Katie S. Groblewski, Washington Trust Law’s Extreme Makeover: Blending with the Uniform Trust Code and Taking Reform Further with Innovations in Notice, Situs, and Representation, 88 Wash. L. Rev. 813-902 (2013). Karen E. Boxx & Terry W. Hammond, A Call for Standards: An Overview of the Current Status and Need for Guardian Standards of Conduct and Codes of Ethics, 2012 Utah L. Rev. 1207-73.
Presentations The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: The Use of Joint Revocable Trusts for Married Couples in Community Property States, American College of Trust and Estate Counsel, Fall Meeting, Oct. 25, 2013 (Fort Worth, TX) Ten Shades of Community Property, Washington State Bar Association and Estate Planning Council of Seattle, 58th Annual Estate Planning Seminar, Oct. 22, 2013 (Seattle, WA) No Place Like Home: Estate Planning with Residential Real Property, Washington State Bar Association and Estate Planning Council of Seattle, 58th Annual Estate Planning Seminar, Oct. 21, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Son of Trust Act: Virtual Representation and 2013 Amendments to Washington Trust Law, Washington State Bar Association Real Property, Probate and Trust Section Midyear Meeting, Jun. 8, 2013 (Pasco, WA)
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Recent Faculty News
Community Property Hot Topics, Washington State Bar Association, Community Property Law in Washington: Current Issues for Experienced Practitioners, Apr. 11, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Washington Update, Portland Estate Planning Council, 41st Annual Estate Planning Seminar, Feb. 8, 2013 (Portland, OR) Ethics Update, Washington State Bar Association, Same Sex Marriage, Registered Domestic Partnerships and Committed Intimate Relationships: What You Need to Know, Dec. 5, 2012 (Seattle, WA) STEVE CALANDRILLO
Publications Steve Calandrillo & Dustin E. Buehler, Eggshell Economics: A Revolutionary Approach to the Eggshell Plaintiff Rule, 74 Ohio St. L.J. 375-422 (2013).
Presentations Eggshell Economics: Putting Humpty Dumpty Back Together Again, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquia Series, Oct. 2012 (Seattle, WA) RYAN CALO
Publications
Digital Market Manipulation, University of California-Berkeley Law School, Privacy Law Scholars Conference, May 28, 2013 (Berkeley, CA) Panelist, Has Big Data Gone Too Far? Are Concerns about Privacy Stifling Innovation? How Does the Law Grasp Big Data?, University of Washington School of Law, May 23, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Books by Supreme Court Justices, 38 J. Sup. Ct. Hist. 94-117 (2013).
JENNIFER FAN
Ronald K.L. Collins & David M. Skover, On Dissent: Its Meaning in America (Cambridge University Press 2013). 179 pages.
Panelist, The Role of Your Law School and Other Graduate Schools in Your Entrepreneurial Ecosystem: Tapping the Free Legal Advice Right Next Door, Association of University Technology Managers, 2014 Annual Meeting, Feb. 21, 2014 (San Francisco, CA)
“And Yet It Moves”—The First Amendment & Certainty (University of Washingon Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 2013-28). Ronald K.L. Collins & Lisa G. Lerman, Disclosure, Scholarly Ethics, and the Future of Law Reviews: A Few Preliminary Thoughts, 88 Wash. L. Rev. 321-31 (2013).
Presentations
Taking Data Seriously: Market Manipulation in the Digital Age, Yale Law School, Thomson Reuters Speaker Series, Mar. 28, 2013 (New Haven, CT)
Panelist, Speech Rights: Legal History as Intellectual History, Society for U.S. Intellectual History, 2012 Conference and Annual Meeting, Nov. 1, 2012 (New York, NY)
The Future of Drones in America: Law Enforcement and Privacy Considerations, U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Hearing on the Future of Drones in America: Law Enforcement and Privacy Considerations, Mar. 20, 2013 (Washington, DC)
DWIGHT DRAKE
Moderator, Responses to the Failure of Mandated Disclosure, Washington Law Review, 2013 Symposium: The Disclosure Crisis, Feb. 28, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Technology and the Future of Privacy, National Public Radio’s Weekend in Washington, Nov. 10, 2012 (Washington, DC)
Publications Business Organizations in a Planning Context: Cases, Materials and Study Problems (West 2013). 974 pages. Business Planning: Closely Held Enterprises (4th ed. West 2013) (American Casebook Series). 789 pages.
Presentations An Idea for Broken Washington, Nov. 2013
Robots & Privacy, 21st USENIX Security Symposium, Aug. 9, 2012 (Bellevue, WA)
Consumer Subject Review Boards: A Thought Experiment, 66 Stan. L. Rev. Online 97-102 (2013).
RONALD COLLINS
Publications Nuanced Absolutism: Floyd Abrams & the First Amendment (Carolina Academic Press 2013). 240 pages. Foreword, Exceptional Freedom—The Roberts Court, the First Amendment, and the New Absolutism, 96 Alb. L. Rev. 409-66 (2013).
MELISSA DURKEE
Publications Persuasion Treaties, 99 Va. L. Rev. 63-130 (2013).
Money, Demography and Immigration Reform, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Feb. 7, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Presentations
The UW Entrepreneurial Law Clinic, University of Washington School of Law Asian Law Program, Afghan Scholars, Nov. 15, 2013 (Seattle, WA) The UW Entrepreneurial Law Clinic, Tech Law Group, Nov. 13, 2013 (Seattle, WA) The UW Entrepreneurial Law Clinic, Association of Corporate Counsel, Sep. 11, 2013 (Seattle, WA) IP Entrepreneurship, University of Washington School of Law, Center for the Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property, Jul. 31, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, Serving the Start-Up Ecosystem’s High-Growth and University IP Businesses, University of Texas, 12th Annual Transactional Clinical Conference, Apr. 2013 (Austin, TX) Guest Lecturer, Law & Entrepreneurship course, University of Washington School of Law, Apr. 3, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Moderator, Creating, Sustaining, and Growing an Organization, University of Washington School of Law, Trina Grillo Retreat, Mar. 23, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Moderator, Open Book Club: A Conversation with Neal Stephenson, Oct. 18, 2012 (Seattle, WA)
Code, Nudge, or Notice?, 99 Iowa L. Rev. 773-802 (2014).
Tiny Salepeople: Mediated Transactions and the Internet of Things, IEEE Security & Privacy, Sept.-Oct. 2013, at 70-72.
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Internet of Things: Privacy and Security in a Connected World, U.S. Federal Trade Commission Workshop, Nov. 19, 2013 (Washington, DC)
Border Battles and Beyond, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Law and Humanities Program, Jan. 5, 2013 (New Orleans, LA)
MARY FAN
Publications Street Diversion and Decarceration, 50 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 165-209 (2013). The Case for Crimmigration Reform, 92 N.C. L. Rev. 75-148 (2013). Custom, General Principles and the Great Architect Cassese, 10 J. Int’l Crim. Just. 1063 (2012).
Presentations Guns and Suicidal Violence, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Guns, Violence and Children Panel, Jan. 3, 2014 (New York, NY) Roundtable: Departing from the Criminal Law Paradigm, 2013 International Drug Policy Reform Conference, Oct. 26, 2013 (Denver, CO) You’re Watching Me, I’m Watching You, and the Police Are Watching Us Too, American Civil Liberties Union, 2013 Northwest Civil Liberties Conference, Sep. 27, 2013 (Portland, OR) Plenary Panel: Fresh Solutions for Intractable Problems, Association of American Law Schools, Criminal Justice Conference, Jun. 9, 2013 (San Diego, CA) Money, Demography, and Immigration Criminalization Reform, University of Amsterdam & Vrije Universiteit (VU), Illegalities Regimes Conference, May 31, 2013 (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Rape Law, University of Washington Women’s Law Caucus, May 2, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Federal Practice CLE, A Six-Pack Lineup of Pending Criminal Cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, Federal Bar Association, Dec. 6, 2012 (Seattle, WA) ROBERT GOMULKIEWICZ
Publications Software Law and Its Application (Aspen Publishers 2014) (Aspen Casebook Series). 578 pages. Clarifications and Complications in Enforcing Open Source Software Licenses, in Research Handbook on Intellectual Property Licensing 76-98 (Jacques de Werre ed., Edward Elgar Publishing 2013). Xuan-Thao N. Nguyen, Robert W. Gomulkiewicz & Danielle M. Conway, Intellectual Property, Software, and Information Licensing: Law and Practice (Cum. Supp. 2013 BNA Books). 564 pages. Xuan-Thao N. Nguyen, Robert W. Gomulkiewicz & Danielle M. Conway, Intellectual Property, Software, and Information Licensing: Law and Practice (Cum. Supp. 2012 BNA Books). 530 pages.
Presentations Panelist, Altai @ 21: Software Copyrights Revisited, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley Center for Law and Technology, Oct. 25, 2013 (Berkeley, CA) Software Licensing: Getting a “Better” Deal, University of Houston Law Center, Oct. 17, 2013 (Houston, TX) Fostering the Business of Innovation, University of Washington, Department of Philosophy, Simpson Center for the Humanities, and the Information School, Information Ethics and Policy Conference, Apr. 26, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
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Can You Do This under TEDRA?, Washington State Bar Association, 10th Annual Trust and Estate Litigation Seminar, Apr. 25, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
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Ethics Issues in Estate Planning, American Bar Association, 39th National Conference on Professional Responsibility, May 31, 2013 (San Antonio, TX)
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Publications
Duties to the Tax System—Reflecting at a Century’s End, 140 Tax Notes 1595-99 (2013).
Robert H. Aronson & Maureen A. Howard, The Law of Evidence in Washington (5th ed. Matthew Bender 2013). 1 vol.
Legal and Policy Developments for U.S. Exports under Current U.S. Law: Environmental Issues, Law Seminars International, Energy Exports in the Northwest: The Public Policy and Legal Issues at Play and Their Likely Outcomes, Oct. 24, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Demand Side Securities Regulation, Brigham Young University School of Law, 2013 Rocky Mountain Junior Scholars Forum, Nov. 8, 2013 (Provo, UT)
Presentations Teaching Ethics—Incorporating Ethical Issues from Basic Tax to LLM Courses, American Bar Association Section on Taxation, Mid-Year Meeting, Jan. 17, 2014 (Phoenix, AZ) Legal Ethics and Tax Advice, 19651985, University of Washington School of Law Symposium on Duties to the Tax System, Oct. 4, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Maureen A. Howard & James H. Seckinger, State v. O’Neill (6th ed. National Institute for Trial Advocacy 2012). 84 pages. Want to Be a Better Trial Lawyer? Teach Trial Skills!, De Novo, Apr. 2012, at 24.
PENNY HAZELTON
Help: I Need an Expert!, De Novo, Feb. 2012, at 19-20.
Publications
STEWART JAY
Specialized Legal Research (Penny A. Hazelton ed., Aspen Supp. 2012).
Presentations The Law Library: Creative and Strategic Innovation in the Midst of Change, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 3, 2014 (New York, NY) Legal Research and Writing, Washington State Bar Association, Readmission CLE, Feb. and Aug. 2012, Feb. and Aug. 2013, and Mar. 2014 (Seattle, WA) Moderator and speaker, When Worlds Collide: Keeping the Planets Aligned During Times of Opportunity and Change for Law Schools and Law Libraries, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 7, 2012 (Washington, DC) GREGORY HICKS
Publications Gregory A. Hicks & Devon G. Peña, Customary Practice and Community Governance in Implementing the Human Right to Water—The Case of the Acequia Communities of Colorado’s Rio Culebra Watershed, 18 Willamette J. Int’l L. & Disp. Resol. 185-210 (2010).
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There Is No Summer in the Courtroom, De Novo, Aug. 2012, at 16.
The Long-Term Tort: In Search of a New Casual Paradigm for Natural Resource Damages, 2013 Harvard/ Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, Jun. 14-15, 2013 (New Haven, CT) Protecting Ecosystem Services: Problems of Mixing Law and Ecology, Center of Environmental Law & Policy, CLE Seminar, Dec. 7, 2012 (Seattle, WA)
Publications
Presentations Constitutional Mischief: The Promise and Perils of Judicial Review, University of Washington School of Law, Installation of the Pendleton Miller Chair in Law, Feb. 27, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Publications Passive with a Purpose, De Novo, Aug. 2012, at 15. SANNE KNUDSEN
Publications Amicus Curiae Brief of Law Professors on Issue Exhaustion in Support of Petitioners, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency v. EME Homer City Generation, LP, Nos. 12-1182, 12-1183 (U.S. Sept. 10, 2013). Brief for Law Professors as Amici Curiae on the Propriety of Administrative Deference in Support of Respondent, Nw. Envtl. Def. Ctr. v. Decker, 133 S. Ct. 1326 (2013) (No. 11-338, No. 11-347).
Escaping Entity-Centrism in Financial Services Regulation, University of Connecticut School of Law, 2013 Junior Scholars Workshop on Financial Services Law, Jun. 14, 2013 (Hartford, CT)
PATRICIA KUSZLER
Publications ANITA KRUG
Publications The Modern Corporation Magnified: Managerial Accountability in Financial Services Holding Companies, 36 Seattle U. L. Rev. 821-55 (2013) (invited symposium). Investment Company as Instrument: The Limitations of the Corporate Governance Regulatory Paradigm, 86 S. Cal. L. Rev. 263-319 (2013). Discerning Public Law Concepts in Corporate Law Discourse, in Private Law: Key Encounters with Public Law 265-87 (Kit Barker & Darryn Jensen eds., Cambridge University Press 2013). Escaping Entity-Centrism in Financial Services Regulation, 113 Colum. L. Rev. 2039-115 (2013).
Curricular Integration Chapter, Conference on Clinical Legal Education, Building on Best Practices in Legal Education, Apr. 29, 2013 (San Juan, PR)
Book Review, 31 Law & Hist. Rev. 475-76 (2013) (reviewing Kristen Stilt, Islamic Law in Action (2011)).
Contemporary Issues in Bioethics (8th ed. Tom L. Beauchamp, LeRoy Walters, Jeffrey P. Kahn & Anna C. Mastroianni eds., Wadsworth 2013). 777 pp.
Discussions on Disability Law and Policy (Patricia C. Kuszler & Christy Thompson Ibrahim eds., Carolina Academic Press, 2014). 449 pages. CLARK LOMBARDI
Publications Clark Lombardi & Nathan J. Brown, Islam in Egypt’s New Constitution, Foreign Pol’y (Dec. 13, 2012). Designing Islamic Constitutions: Past Trends and Options for a Democratic Future, 11 Int’l J. Const. L. 615-45 (2013). Constitutional Provisions Making Sharia “A” or “The” Chief Source of Legislation: Where Did They Come From? What Do They Mean? Do They Matter?, 28 Am. U. Int’l L. Rev. 733-74 (2013).
ANNA MASTROIANNI
Publications
Effy Vayena, Anna Mastroianni & Jeffrey Kahn, Caught in the Web: Informed Consent for Online Health Research, Sci. Translational Med., Feb. 20, 2013, at 1-3.
Panelist, Escaping Entity-Centrism in Financial Services Regulation, 2013 International Conference on Law and Society, Jun. 1, 2013 (Boston, MA) Panelist, The Regulation of Financial Market Intermediaries: The Making and Un-Making of Markets, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Joint Program of the Securities Regulation Section and the Financial Institutions and Consumer Financial Services Section, Jan. 4, 2013 (Washington, DC)
Origins of the Privileges and Immunities of State Citizenship under Article IV, 45 Loy. Chi. L.J. 1-70 (2013).
SARAH KALTSOUNIS
Securities Laws and Unincorporated Entities, American Bar Association, 2013 LLC Institute, Oct. 2013 (Arlington, VA)
The Constitution as Agreement to Agree: The Social and Political Foundations (and Effects) of the 1971 Egyptian Constitution, in Social and Political Foundations Effects of Constitutions 398-425 (Denis J. Galligan & Mila Versteeg eds., Cambridge University Press 2013).
Lisa V. Brock & Anna Mastroianni, Clinical Ethics and Law, Ethics in Med. (Jan. 22, 2013).
LISA MANHEIM
Publications Redistricting Litigation and the Delegation of Democratic Design, 93 Boston. U. L. Rev. 563-620 (2013). DEBORAH MARANVILLE
Publications Teaching Statute Reading Basics in a First Year Doctrinal Course: A “Handout” and Suggested Classroom Exercises, Law Teacher (Inst. for Law Sch. Teaching), Spring 2013, at 18-20.
Presentations Clinical Legal Education in the IP Context: Ideas from the U.S. Experience, Workshop on Innovations in Indian IP Teaching and Research, Feb. 16, 2014 (New Delhi, India) Discussant, Experiential Education in a Changing World: The Problem of Definitions, Sequencing in Experiential Education for Building on Best Practices in Legal Education, Clinical Theory Workshop, Feb. 7, 2014
Effy Vayena, Anna Mastroianni & Jeffrey Kahn, Ethical Issues in Health Research with Novel Online Sources, 102 Am. J. Pub. Health 2225-30 (2012).
Presentations Panelist, Informed Consent in Health Research in the Online Environment, Medicine 2.0, 6th World Conference on Social Media, Mobile Apps, and Internet/Web, Sep. 23, 2013 (London, England) SHANNON MCCORMACK
Presentations Moderator, Avoidance, Ethics, and International Perspectives, University of Washington School of Law Tax Program, Duties to the Tax System, Oct. 4, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Tax Abuse According to Whom?, University of California Hastings College of the Law, 16th Critical Tax Theory Conference, Apr. 13, 2013 (San Francisco, CA) KATHLEEN MCGINNIS
Presentations Civil Procedure and the U.S. Legal System, University of Washington School of Law, Summer Institute in Transnational Law and Practice, Aug. 30, 2013
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Recent Faculty News
Copyright Year in Review, Washington State Bar Association, 18th Annual Intellectual Property Institute, Mar. 8, 2013
JACQUELINE MCMURTRIE
Publications Introduction [Third Annual Public Defense Conference], 11 Seattle J. for Soc. Just. 853-66 (2013).
Copyright Fundamentals, Washington State Bar Association, Intellectual Property Section, Intellectual Property Fundamentals for the Business and Transactional Attorney, Sep. 21, 2012 (Seattle, WA)
SEAN O’CONNOR
Publications The Real Issue Behind Stanford v. Roche: Faulty Conceptions of University Assignment Policies Stemming from the 1947 Biddle Report, 19 Mich. Telecomm. & Tech. L. Rev. 379-422 (2013). Taking, Tort, or Crown Right? The Confused Early History of Government Patent Policy, 12 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 145-204 (2012).
Presentations Using Formal Discovery to Develop Evidence of Innocence in Habeas Cases and Teaching the Law in a Clinic Environment, 2013 Innocence Network Conference, April 20, 2013 (Charlotte, NC)
Ted Sichelman & Sean O’Connor, Patents as Promoters of Competition: The Guild Origins of Patent Law in the Venetian Republic, 49 San Diego L. Rev. 1267-82 (2012).
The Rise of the Exoneration Movement in the United States, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Jan. 30, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
PETER NICOLAS
Method+ology and the Means of Innovation, Syracuse University School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Dec. 5, 2013 (Syracuse, NY)
THEODORE MYHRE
Publications
Presentations Client Counseling and Interviewing: Exploring Underlying Interests, University of Washington School of Law, Summer Institute in Transnational Law and Practice, Sep. 2012 (Seattle, WA) Court Review of Arbitration Awards: Understanding Judicial Opinions through Statutory Interpretation and Common Law Analysis, University of Washington School of Law, Summer Institute in Transnational Law and Practice, Sep. 2012 (Seattle, WA) SIGNE NAEVE
Publications Trade Dress, in Intellectual Property in Common Law and Civil Law 224-47 (Toshiko Takenaka ed., Edward Elgar 2013).
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Conducting 50-State Research and Evaluating Information Resources, Washington State Legislature, 2012 Legislative Staff Academy, Oct. 2, 2012 (Olympia, WA)
Presentations
Peter Nicolas & Mike Strong, The Geography of Love: Same-Sex Marriage & Relationship Recognition in America (The Story in Maps) (5th ed. Peter Nicolas and Mike Strong 2014). 36 pages. Gay Rights, Equal Protection, and the Classification-Framing Quandary, 21 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 329-79 (2014). Evidence: A Problem-Based and Comparative Approach (rev. 3d ed. Carolina Academic Press 2014). 888 pages. Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity, and the Constitution (Carolina Academic Press 2012). 612 pages. CHERYL NYBERG
Publications Subject Compilations of State Laws 2011-12: An Annotated Bibliography (Boast/Nyberg 2013). 295 pages.
Panelist, Managing Know-How in Global Value Chains and International Technology Transfer, International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property, the World Intellectual Property Organization, Israel Patent Office, and Israel Ministry of Justice, From IP to NP (Net Profit), Nov. 2013 (Tel Aviv, Israel) Patent Exhaustion and New Business Models: Sales, Servitudes, and Services, Washington State Patent Lawyers Association, Nov. 2013 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, Managing Know-How in Global Value Chains and International Technology Transfer, World Trade Organization, Public Forum 2013, Oct. 2013 (Geneva, Switzerland) The Overlooked French Influence on the Constitution’s IP Clause, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Oct. 24, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Panelist, Innovation in Commercial Context: The Role of the Financial System, George Mason University School of Law, Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property, The Commercial Function of Patents in Today’s Innovation Economy, Sep. 12, 2013 (Arlington, VA) Law-Business Entrepreneurship Programs, University of Maine School of Law and School of Business, Jul. 2013 (Augusta, ME) Panelist, Reconnecting with the Digital Narrative?, World Creators Summit, Jun. 5, 2013 (Washington, DC) Participant, Copyright, Creativity, and Commercialization Roundtable, George Mason University School of Law, Center for Protection of Intellectual Property, Jun. 2013 (Dana Point, CA) IP Inputs and Outputs: The Web of Transactions in Developing and Commercializing Technology, Katholieke Universitie, Quinz Global Law Professor Public Lecture, May 2013 (Leuven, Belgium) Guest lecturer, IP/Tech Transactions and Commercialization, Hanken School of Economics, Fundamentals of IP, May 2013 (Helsinki, Finland) Featured speaker, Ownership and Exhaustion in IP Commercialization, Katholieke Universitie, Towards a New Patent Paradigm, May 2013 (Leuven, Belgium) Law, Innovation and Entrepreneurship—How to Commercialize Art, Science, and Technology, World Intellectual Property Organization, World IP Day, Apr. 26, 2013 (Helsinki, Finland) Participant, Patented Inventions and Promoting Innovation Roundtable, George Mason University School of Law, Center for Protection of Intellectual Property, Mar. 2013 (Half Moon Bay, CA) Moderator, The Student Researcher Perspective, York University, Osgoode Law School, IPOsgoode: Sparking Innovation with Students, Mar. 2013 (Toronto, Canada)
Panelist, U.S. Academic and University Perspective on Students’ Role in Invention and Commercialization, York University, Osgoode Law School, IPOsgoode: Sparking Innovation with Students, Mar. 2013 (Toronto, Canada)
Teaching Informs Research, Northwest Regional Legal Writing Conference, University of Oregon Law School, Aug. 10, 2012 (Eugene, OR)
Panelist, Commercialization, Michigan State University College of Law, Intellectual Property, Information and Communications Law Program, IP for Creative Upstarts, Nov. 2012 (Lansing, MI) Comments on Chief Judge Rader’s Perspectives on IPR and Anti-Dumping Laws, Peking University, ChinaUS Symposium on Legal Practice of IPR Protection and Anti-Dumping, Oct. 2012 (Beijing, China) License Theory of the Corporation, Cardozo University, Faculty Colloquium, Oct. 2012 (New York, NY) Commercializing IP, York University, Osgoode Law School, Sep. 2012 (Toronto, Canada) Reverse Payment Settlements under Hatch-Waxman, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, The State of Patent Litigation: A Conversation with the Federal Circuit, Sep. 2012 (Bloomington, IN) KATE O’NEILL
Publications The Content of Their Characters: J.D. Salinger, Holden Caulfield, Frederick Colting, 59 J. Copyright Soc’y U.S.A. 291-345 (2012). Copyright Law and the Management of J.D. Salinger’s Literary Estate, 31 Cardozo Arts & Ent. L. J. 19-44 (2012).
Presentations From Trailer Parks to Wall Street: Contract Doctrine and Practice in Context, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty “Brown Bag,” Feb. 19, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Introduction to the Fair Use Defense in Copyright Law, Mini-Conference: Fair Use for Scholars and Teachers of Modern Literature, University of Tulsa College of Law, Feb. 20, 2013 (Tulsa, OK)
ELIZABETH PORTER
Publications Tort Liability in the Age of the Helicopter Parent, 64 Ala. L. Rev. 533-87 (2013). TERRY PRICE
Presentations Moderator, Now That Health Care Reform Is Here, What Additional Changes Might We See in the Days Ahead?, Northwest Health Law Advocates, The Affordable Care Act: What’s New in Washington State and How Will It Affect Your Clients, Nov. 15, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Bringing the State Public Policy Debate into the Classroom, Sixth Annual Midwest Family Law Consortium Workshop, Apr. 6, 2013 (Madison, WI) Health Care Reform Implications for Family Law, Northwest Health Law Advocates, Health Care Reform in Washington State—What Comes Next, and How Will It Affect Your Clients?, Nov. 30, 2012 (Seattle, WA) ROY PROSTERMAN
Publications Enhancing Poor Rural Women’s Land Rights in the Developing World, 67 J. Int’l Aff. 147-64 (2013).
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Chief Judge Rader’s Material Contribution to Geographic Indicator Analysis, 7 Wash. J.L. Tech. & Arts 467-99 (2012).
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Publications
Publications
Property, Privacy and Power: Rethinking the Fourth Amendment in the Wake of U.S. v. Jones, 22 B.U. Pub. Int. L.J. 67-128 (2013).
Closing the Governance Gap in the Business and Human Rights Arena: Lessons from the Anti-Corruption Movement, in Human Rights Obligations of Business 162-90 (Surya Deva & David Bilchitz eds., Cambridge University Press 2013).
Presentations Economic Migration Gone Wrong: Trafficking in Persons Through the Lens of Gender Labor and Globalization, Indiana University School of Law, Indiana International & Comparative Law Review Symposium: Moving to Opportunity: Examining the Risks and Rewards of Economic Migration, Feb. 21, 2014 (Indianapolis, IN) Convener and speaker, Human Trafficking in the United States: An Introduction, National Conference of Appellate Court Clerks, 40th Annual Meeting, Aug. 2013 (Seattle, WA) Legal English for International Attorneys, University of Washington School of Law, Patent and Intellectual Property Law and Practice Summer Institute, Jul. 2013 (Seattle, WA) Sexual Violence and the Nexus of State, Federal and International Law: Addressing Human Trafficking, University of Washington School of Law, Gender, Violence and the Law, May 2013 (Seattle, WA) What Can Comparative Legal Studies Learn from Feminist Legal Theories, Law and Society Association, Annual Meeting and 2013 International Conference on Law and Society, May 2013 (Boston, MA) Moderator, International Trade Agreements and Human Trafficking, University of Washington Women’s Center Anti-Trafficking Taskforce, University of Washington School of Law, and Seattle University Law School, Human Trafficking in an Era of Globalization: Forced Labor, Involuntary Servitude and Corporate & Civic Responsibility International Conference, Jan. 2013 (Seattle, WA)
50
Presentations Speaker, U.S. Department of State, Workshop on Government Procurement and Human Rights, Jan. 15, 2014 (Washington, DC) Invited lecturer, University of Yangon Faculty of Law, Faculty Development Seminar on Challenges of Globalization and the Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective, Nov. 25, 2013 (Myanmar) Expert, United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Roundtable on Issues of Corporate Accountability for Gross Human Rights Abuses, Nov. 2013 (Geneva, Switzerland) Human Trafficking Symposium, Oregon State Bar Association, Oct. 15, 2013 Invited participant, World Economic Forum, Roundtable on ICT and Human Rights, Jun. 2013 (Geneva, Switzerland) Moderator, University of Washington School of Law, Asian Law Center, Inclusive Development in Burma—What Are the Legal Challenges?, May 13, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, Addressing Forced Labor and Trafficking in Supply Chains, Institute for Human Rights and Business and Coca Cola, Conference on Business and Human Rights and Labor Trafficking at Coca Cola, May 8, 2013 (Atlanta, GA) The U.S. Government’s Approach to Business and Human Rights, United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Working Group on Business and Human Rights and the International Corporate Accountability Roundtable, Civil Society Consultation for US Country Visit, Apr. 23, 2013 (Washington, DC)
Panelist, Disclosure in Speech, Washington Law Review, 2013 Symposium: The Disclosure Crisis, Feb. 28, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights Sector Guidance, ICT Sector Roundtable, Information and Communication Technology Sector Roundtable, Jan. 31, 2013 (Brussels, Belgium) Legal Responsibility of Businesses for Violations of International Human Rights, University of Utah College of Law, 2013 International Law Colloquium, Jan. 25, 2013 (Salt Lake City, UT) The Human Rights Dimension of Business Operations Amidst Conflict: What Role for States, Catalan Institute of Peace, Companies in Conflict Situations, Jan. 18, 2013 (Barcelona, Spain) BETH RIVIN
Presentations Human Rights and Accountability for Access to Women’s Health Services in Indonesia, University of Gadjah Mada, Mar. 22, 2013 (Jogjakarta, Indonesia) Holding Governments Accountable for Women’s Right to Access Health Services: A Case Study from Indonesia, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Global Oncology Lecture Series, Feb. 25, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
Presentations Keynote, Comments on the Slow Start of Climate Change Law for “Climate Refugees,” University of Washington School of Law and Washington Journal of Environmental Law and Policy, Climate-Migration, Local Conditions and Law: Food Security, Land Tenure and Gender, Feb. 7, 2014 (Seattle, WA) The Other History of U.S. Environmental Law, Association of American Law Schools, Sections on Environmental Law and North American Cooperation Joint Program: 40 Years of Environmental Law and Natural Resources Law–A Retrospective Look, Jan. 6, 2013 (New Orleans, LA) The Si’lailo Way—Indians, Salmon, and the Law on the Columbia River, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 10, Native American Heritage Month, Nov. 29, 2012 (Seattle, WA) Harvard Law School, The Clean Water Act at 40, Oct. 11, 2012 (Cambridge, MA) Keynote, Environmental Law, Environmental Justice, and Human Rights: The Obvious Synopsis, University of Oregon School of Law, New Directions for Human Rights and the Environment: A Symposium Inspired by Svitlana Kravchenko, Sep. 28, 2012 (Eugene, OR) STEPHEN ROSENBAUM
WILLIAM RODGERS
Publications
Publications
The Legal Clinic Is More Than a Sign on the Door: Transforming Law School Education in Revolutionary Egypt, 5 Berkeley J. Middle E. & Islamic L. 39-70 (2012).
Environmental Law (Thomson/West Supp. 2013). 4 vols. Giving Voice to Rachel Carson: Putting Science into Environmental Law, 28 J. Land Use & Envtl. L.61-69 (2013). Environmental Law in Indian Country (Thomson/West 2013 Supp.). 506 pages.
Engendering a Clinic: Lessons Learned from a Domestic Violence Clinical Course in Qatar, 2013 Int’l Rev. L. 1-24.
Presentations Workshop leader, Lawyering Skills and Alternative Dispute Resolution, Academic Legal English Winter Workshop for Law / Shari’a Faculty and Students, Feb. 22-Mar. 6, 2014 (Mazer-e Sharif, Afghanistan)
“Those Women Whose Defiance You Have Cause to Fear”: Contextual Factors Affecting the Teaching, Learning and Advocacy about Issues of Domestic Abuse in Non-Western Settings, with Mary Pat Treuthart & Sara Chandler, Global Alliance for Justice Education Conference, Dec. 13, 2013 (Delhi, India) Panelist, Should U.S. Courts Enforce International Human Rights?, Federalist Society for Law & Public Policy Studies, Seattle University Chapter, Oct. 24, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Beyond the Fakultas’ Four Walls: Linking Legal Education, Practice and the Legal Profession Through Co-Teaching, Universitas Airlangga Faculty of Law, Southeast Asia Legal Education: Preparing Lawyers for Tomorrow’s Society and Profession, Oct. 1, 2013 (Surabaya, Indonesia) Comparative Mental Health Disability Law and Policy: Involuntary Commitment, Stanford Law School, May 1, 2013 (Stanford, CA) Ashley X Comes of Age: Reshaping the Social System, with Julia Epstein, UCLA Law School, Including Disability: How Legal Discourse Can Shape Life’s Transitions, Mar. 22, 2013 (Los Angeles, CA) Ashley X Comes of Age: Alternatives to Socio-Sexual Restructuring, University of Washington, Disabilities Studies Series, Jan. 11, 2013 (Seattle, WA) The Legal Clinic in Egypt: It’s More Than a Room with a Sign on the Door, University of Washington School of Law, Global Mondays Series, Oct. 15, 2012 (Seattle, WA) US-Japan Disability Rights Law and Policy Exchange, Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund, Aug. 30, 2012 (Berkeley, CA)
ZAHR SAID
Publications Mandated Disclosure in Literary Hybrid Speech, 88 Wash. L. Rev. 41974 (2013). Fixing Copyright in Characters: Literary Perspectives on a Legal Problem, 35 Cardozo L. Rev. 769-829 (2013). Only Part of the Picture: A Response to Professor Tushnet’s Worth a Thousand Words, 16 Stan. Tech. L. Rev. 349-68 (2013). A Response to Madhavi Sunder’s From Goods to a Good Life: Intellectual Property and Global Justice, Concurring Opinions (Sep. 11, 2012). Incorporating Literary Methods and Texts in the Teaching Tort Law, 3 Calif. L. Rev. Circuit 170 (2012).
Presentations Interpretive Complexity in Copyright and Trademark: Comparing Substantial Similarity and Likelihood of Confusion, Santa Clara School of Law, 2014 Works-in-Progress Intellectual Property, Feb. 7, 2014 (Santa Clara, CA) Comparing Substantial Similarity and Likelihood of Confusion: A Metacritical Analysis of Copyright and Trademark, Cardozo School of Law, 2013 IP Scholars Conference, Aug. 9, 2013 (New York, NY) Comparing Methodological Transparency in Copyright and Trademark: A Metacritical Analysis, Law and Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2013 (Boston, MA)
S P R I N G 2 014
ANITA RAMASASTRY
Panelist, Disclosure in Speech, Washington Law Review, 2013 Symposium: The Disclosure Crisis, Feb. 28, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
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DANA RAIGRODSKI
51
Recent Faculty News
Unexpected Twists in the Affordable Care Act Decision, Jurist (Jul. 13, 2012).
Teaching Health Care Ethics in Rural Ethiopia: Mistakes Made and Lessons Learned, Harborview Medical Center, Ethics Forum, Nov. 14, 2012 (Seattle, WA)
Designing Model Homes for the Changing Medical Neighborhood: A Multi-Payer Pilot Offers Lessons for ACO and PCMH Construction, 42 Seton Hall L. Rev. 1519-47 (2012).
Poster, Monitoring HIV Policy Interventions in PEPFAR Partnership Frameworks, Second Global Symposium on Health Systems Research, Nov. 1-3, 2012 (Beijing, China)
Magnifying Deterrence by Prosecuting Professionals, 89 Ind. L.J. 511-58 (2014).
Teaching Health Law in Rural Ethiopia: Using a PEPFAR Partnership Framework and India’s Shanbaug Decision to Shape a Course, 9 Ind. Health L. Rev. 485 (2012).
Unexpected Twists in the Supreme Court’s ACA Decision, Washington State Legislature, Legislative Academy, Oct. 3, 2012 (Olympia, WA)
Publications
Publications
Presentations The Affordable Care Act’s Next Act: Upcoming Federal Regulatory Issues, Northwest Health Law Advocates CLE, Nov. 15, 2013 (Seattle, WA) The Affordable Care Act: Implications for Public Health, Northwest Center for Public Health Practice, Summer Institute, Aug. 13, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Emergency Response: Diaper Rash, Chest Pain and Medicaid Payments in the Emergency Department, American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics, 36th Annual Health Law Professors Conference, Jun. 8, 2013 (Newark, NJ) State of Implementation: Primary and Preventive Care under the ACA, Northwest Regional Primary Care Association, May 20, 2013 (Anchorage, AK) The Affordable Care Act at Three: Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, May 2, 2013 (Seattle, WA) The ACA at Three, University of Washington, Public Health Week, Apr. 2, 2013 (Seattle, WA)
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Review of Labor and Employment Law Decisions from the United States Supreme Court’s 2010-11 Term, 27 A.B.A. J. Lab. & Emp. L. 329-63 (2012).
Strategies for Adopting, Implementing, and Monitoring HIV/AIDSRelated Law Reforms, Partnership Framework Policy Monitoring Workshop, Caribbean and Central American Countries, Sep. 13, 2012 (Miami, FL) ERIC SCHNAPPER
Publications Amicus Curiae Brief of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers Supporting Respondent, Plumhoff v. Rickard, No. 12-1117 (U.S. Feb. 5, 2014). Reply Brief, Lawson v. FMR LLC, No. 12-3 (U.S. Oct. 30, 2013). Reply Brief, Sandifer v. U.S. Steel Corp., No. 12-417 (U.S. Aug. 19, 2013). Brief for Respondent, Madigan v. Levin, No. 12-872 (U.S. Aug. 2, 2013). Brief for Petitioners, Lawson v. FMR LLC, No. 12-3 (U.S. Jul. 31, 2013). Brief for Petitioners, Sandifer v. U.S. Steel Corp., No. 12-417 (U.S. May 13, 2013). Brief for Respondent, Oxford Health Plans LLC v. Sutter, No. 12-135 (U.S. Feb. 21, 2013). Reply Brief, Kloeckner v. Solis, No. 11-184 (U.S. Aug. 13, 2012).
SCOTT SCHUMACHER
Publications
HUGH SPITZER Robert F. Utter & Hugh D. Spitzer, The Washington State Constitution (2d ed. Oxford University Press 2013). 309 pages. Organizing Interlocal Entities: What Form is Best . . . and Does the Interlocal Cooperation Act Need a Rewrite?, in Proceedings of the Washington State Association of Municipal Attorneys, Spring Conference, 2013, at 15-1 to -19 (2013).
Presentations Keynote Address, Advocacy for Civic Education: A 230-Year Quest, Civic Education Day, Feb. 17, 2014 (Olympia, WA) 100 Years of State Constitutional Law, with Justice Charles Johnson, Washington Courts Historical Society, 100 Years of Justice: Looking Back, Looking Forward, Nov. 22, 2013 (Olympia, WA) The Washington State Constitutional Convention (1889 and All That), Legislative Scholars Program for Teachers, July 18, 2013 (Olympia, WA) Limitations on Legislative Action: Constitutional Limitations, State and Federal, Washington State House of Representatives and the Washington State Bar Association, Law School for Legislators, Jan. 10, 2013 (Olympia, WA)
Presentations Panelist, Washington Women Lawyers, Annual Event CLE: You Can’t Say That!—Examining the Ethics of Attorney Communications, Oct. 11, 2013 (Seattle, WA) Moderator, The Role of Lawyers in Social Justice Movements, Access to Justice, Annual Goldmark Luncheon, Feb. 15, 2013 TOSHIKO TAKENAKA
Publications Chiteki zaisanhō no jitsumuteki hatten [Developments in the Practice of Intellectual Property Law] (Ryu Takabayashi, Toshiko Takenaka & Ryoichi Mimura eds., Nihon Hyōronsha 2012). 426 pages. Jan Krauss & Toshiko Takenaka, Construction of Efficient and Balanced Patent System: Patentability and Patent Scope of Isolated DNA Sequences under U.S. Patent Act and EU Biotech Directive, in Constructing European Intellectual Property: Achievements and New Perspectives (Christophe Geiger ed., Edward Elgar 2013). Chiteki zaisanhōgaku no rekishiteki chōkan [Historical Perspective of Study of Intellectual Property] (Ryu Takabayashi, Toshiko Takenaka & Ryoichi Mimura eds., Nihon Hyôronsha 2012). 378 pages. Chiteki zaisanhō no kokusaiteki kōsaku [International Perspective of Intellectual Property Law] (Ryu Takabayashi, Toshiko Takenaka & Ryoichi Mimura eds., Nihon Hyôronsha 2012). 571 pages. Chiteki zaisanhō no Rironteki Tankyu [In Depth Analysis of Intellectual Property Law] (Ryu Takabayashi, Toshiko Takenaka & Ryoichi Mimura eds., Nihon Hyôronsha 2012). 462 pages. First-Inventor-to-File under the America Invents Act: A View of First-to-File Lawyer and a View of First-to-Invent Lawyer, in Intellectual Property in Common Law and Civil Law 50-74 (Toshiko Takenaka ed., Edward Elgar 2013).
Toshiko Takenaka & Yves Reboul, Employee Invention System: Comparative Law Perspective, in Intellectual Property in Common Law and Civil Law 365-400 (Toshiko Takenaka ed., Edward Elgar 2013). Intellectual Property in Common Law and Civil Law (Toshiko Takenaka ed., Edward Elgar 2013). 454 pages. Chiteki zaisan hōgaku no rekishiteki chōkan [An Historical Birds-Eye View of the Study of Intellectual Property Law] (Takabayashi Ryū, Mimura Ryōichi & Takenaka Toshiko eds., Nihon Hyōronsha 2012). 378 pages. Toshiko Takenaka & Yves Reboul, Shokumu hatsumei seido no hikakuhōteki kōsatsu [Comparative Law Considerations Concerning the Employee Inventions System], in Chiteki zaisanhō no kokusaiteki kōsaku [The International Blend of Intellectual Property Law] 331-69 (Nihon Hyōronsha, 2012). Chiteki zaisanhō no kokusaiteki kōsaku [The International Blend of Intellectual Property Law] (Takabayashi Ryū, Mimura Ryōichi, Takenaka Toshiko, Imamura Tetsuya, Shimanami Ryō & Yokoyama Hisayoshi eds., Nihon Hyôronsha 2012). 571 pages. LEA VAUGHN
Publications Feeling at Home: Learning, Law, Cognitive Science, and Narrative, 43 McGeorge L. Rev. 99-1030 (2012).
Presentations Psychological Science and Appellate Practice, King County Bar Association, Appellate Section, Feb. 11, 2013 (Seattle, WA) WALTER WALSH
Presentations Keynote, Glucksman Ireland House, New York University, Religious Freedom in America, 1813 to 2013— Bicentennial Reflections on People v. Philip and Court’s in Session: America’s First Test of Religious Freedom, Apr. 2013 (New York, NY)
KATHRYN WATTS
Publications Richard H. Seamon, Andrew Siegel, Joseph Thai & Kathryn Watts, The Supreme Court Sourcebook (Aspen 2013). 720 pages. Judges and Their Papers, 88 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1665-1734 (2013). Rafael I. Pardo & Kathryn A. Watts, The Structural Exceptionalism of Bankruptcy Administration, 60 UCLA L. Rev. 384-460 (2012).
Presentations Panelist, Developments in Administrative Law, Part 2, American Bar Association Section of Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice, Administrative Law Conference, Nov. 8, 2013 (Washington, DC) Senior commentator, New Voices in Administrative Law, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 5, 2013 (New Orleans, LA) Panelist, Annual Developments in Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice, American Bar Association, Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice, Administrative Law Conference, Oct. 26, 2012 (Washington, DC) MARY WHISNER
Publications Louis Brandeis—Lawyer, Reformer, Justice, 13 J. Gilded Age & Progressive Era 128-31 (2014) (reviewing Melvin I. Urofsky, Louis D. Brandeis: A Life (2012)). There Oughta Be a Law—A Model Law, 106 Law Libr. J. 125-34 (2014).
S P R I N G 2 014
SALLIE SANFORD
University of Maryland Law School, Health Care Reform Roundtable, Mar. 1, 2013 (Baltimore, MD)
MICHELE STORMS
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Expansion States and Options to Brief for Petitioner, Kloeckner v. SoPERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL NEWS FROM ALUMNI Address Affordability and Churn, lis, No. 11-184 (U.S. Mar. 28, 2012).
Reverse Engineering Textual Meaning, Stanford Law School, 12th Annual IP Scholars Conference, Aug. 9, 2012 (Stanford, CA)
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Recent Faculty News
Other Uses of Legislative History, 105 Law Libr. J. 243-54 (2013). Bitten by the Reading Bug, 105 Law Libr. J. 113-22 (2013). RON WHITENER
Presentations Panelist, Tribal Criminal Jurisdiction: Theory and Practice, Harvard Law School, Tribal Courts and the Federal System, Nov. 8, 2012 (Cambridge, MA) JANE WINN
Publications Jane Winn & Benjamin Wright, The Law of Electronic Commerce (4th ed. Aspen 2014 no. 1).
The Impossible Ethics of the Real, Critical Legal Conference, Sep. 16, 2012 (Stockholm, Sweden)
The Impact of Social Media and Big Data on Information Privacy Law in the US, Sungkyunkwan Law School, Nov. 2, 2012 (Seoul, Korea)
Publications
Information Security Governance Challenges in the US: Recent Developments, Sungkyunkwan Law School, Nov. 1, 2012 (Seoul, Korea) The US-PRC UnionPay WTO Dispute: Bringing the Back Office Front & Center, Hong Kong University School of Law, Asian Institute of International Law, Oct. 5, 2012 (Hong Kong) Reflexive Adaptive Authority in New Governance, Monash University School of Law Centre for Regulatory Studies, Sep. 6, 2012 (Melbourne, Australia)
Jane K. Winn & Louis de Koker, Introduction to Mobile Money in Developing Countries: Financial Inclusion and Financial Integrity Conference Special Issue, 8 Wash. J.L. Tech. & Arts 155-63 (2013).
Presentations WTO PRC Electronic Payment Services Case: Who Won? Who Lost?, Fudan University, 8th Annual Shanghai Forum, May 25, 2013 (Shanghai, China) Delhi Consensus? The Role of ICT Standards in Inclusive Growth, National Law School University, 10th Annual Asian Law Institute Conference, May 24, 2013 (Bangalore, India) E-Payment Services in China: The UnionPay Case, AmCham China, Nov. 29, 2012 (Beijing, China)
Sherry L. Leysen & Alena L. Wolotira, Innovative Displays in Law Libraries, AALL Spectrum, July 2013, at 17-19. Googling the Law: Apprising Students of the Benefits and Flaws of Google as a Legal Research Tool, 21 Persp: Teaching Legal Res. & Writing 33-37 (2012). From a Trickle to a Flood: A Case Study of the Current Index to Legal Periodicals to Examine the Swell of American Law Journals Published in the Last Fifty Years, 31 Legal Reference Services Q. 150-83 (2012). DONGSHENG ZANG
Presentations Panelist, Land Tenure, Water Rights & Climate Migration, University of Washington School of Law and Washington Journal of Environmental Law and Policy, Climate-Migration, Local Conditions and Law: Food Security, Land Tenure and Gender, Feb. 7, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Governance of Global Mobile Money Networks: The Role of Technical Standards in Mobile Money in Developing Countries, 8 Wash. J.L. Tech. & Arts 197-244 (2013).
Jane K. Winn & Angela Zhang, China’s Golden Tax Project: A Technological Strategy for Reducing VAT Fraud, 4 Peking U. J. Legal Stud. 1-33 (2013)
ALENA WOLOTIRA
The West in the East: Max Weber’s Nightmare in “Post-Modern” China, Conference on Max Weber and China: Culture, Law and Capitalism, Sep. 5, 2013 (London, England) LOUIS WOLCHER
Publications Foreword, in Michelle Farrell, The Prohibition of Torture in Exceptional Circumstances xi-xiv (Cambridge University Press 2013). Book Review, Wash. Indep. Rev. Books (July 11, 2013) (reviewing Thane Rosenbaum, Payback: The Case for Revenge (2013)). Cultural Diversity and Universal Human Rights, 43 Cambrian L. Rev. 44-63 (2012).
Presentations On Speechlessness, Critical Legal Conference, Sep. 6, 2013 (Belfast, Northern Ireland)
Local Government’s Liabilities in Responding to Climate Change, University of Wisconsin Law School, Global Legal Studies Center, Adapting to Climate Change: Devising a Novel Legal Framework for Climate Migration, Nov. 10, 2012 (Madison, WI) DAVID ZIFF
Publications Dear Chief Justice Roberts: Please Tell Justice Scalia to Be Quiet, 10 Legal Comm. & Rhetoric: JALWD 265-71 (2013) (reviewing Ryan A. Malphurs, Rhetoric and Discourse in Supreme Court Oral Arguments: Sensemaking in Judicial Decisions (2013)).
Class Notes 50s WILLIAM H. GATES SR. ’50 was
selected as the 2013 Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus by the University of Washington, the University’s highest honor.
systems. He earned the Doctor of Education degree and taught at four universities. After retiring from public service in 1998, he joined the graduate faculty of Seattle Pacific University in educational leadership. BUD WALSH ’70, a former Deputy
60s CONGRESSMAN NORMAN D. DICKS ’68, former U.S.
Representative for Washington’s 6th District, received the Washington Law Review’s 2013 Inspiration Through Service Award. JEFFREY ’67 AND SUSAN BROTMAN were the recipients of
the 2013 Gates Volunteer Service Award, an annual award presented by the University of Washington and UW Foundation to recognize and honor individuals whose long-term volunteer service and philanthropy have encouraged others to similarly support the UW.
Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, participated on a panel celebrating 50 years of federal efforts to provide crossgovernment weather forecast services. JOANNE FOSTER ’77 was named
2013 Lawyer of the Year by the National American Indian Housing Council, representing 463 tribes and tribal housing organizations throughout the United States.
70s
JEFFREY RIEDINGER ’80 was
named Vice Provost for Global Affairs at the University of Washington. MIKE KING ’84 published
Democracy’s Missing Arsenal, the first volume of a three-part work that imagines a world in which the Confederate Army won the Civil War. NANCY KRIER ’86 was selected to
serve full time in the Office of the Washington State Attorney General as its Open Government Assistant Attorney General.
STEVEN HUDSON ’86 was named
GARY NEWBILL ’73 retired from
Northwest University as Dean and Professor Emeritus of Education in 2012. Upon graduation from UW Law, Newbill served Northshore School District as General Counsel. Leadership roles followed in four other Washington districts, including assistant superintendent for human resources, curriculum and instruction, finance, business, and operations; and Superintendent of Vashon Island and Dieringer school
80s
CRAIG JOHNSON ’77 joined
Parsons, Behle & Latimer’s Corporate and Environmental, Energy and Natural Resources Departments and will concentrate his practice on mergers, acquisitions, mining law and related transactions.
Partner at Preti Flaherty. He previously practiced as Of Counsel, and is based in the firm’s Augusta, Maine office, working with its Energy and Telecommunications Group, Climate Strategy Group and Government Affairs Group.
S P R I N G 2 014
Some Guidance about Federal Agencies and Guidance, 105 Law Libr. J. 385-94 (2013).
What Happens When Supply Chain Partners Are Turned into Law Enforcers?, Global Supply Chain Council, Annual Conference, Nov. 7, 2012 (Shanghai, China)
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Thanks and Being Thanked, 105 Law Libr. J. 561-66 (2013)
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Class Notes
general counsel for Port Madison Enterprises and a Suquamish Tribe official, was appointed to the President’s Commission on White House Fellowships.
invited to be a member of the Litigation Counsel of America, a trial lawyer honorary society whose membership is limited to less than one-half of one percent of American lawyers. Turk is a shareholder with the national law firm Polsinelli.
CHRISTA ZAMORA ‘97 recently
DAVID STEVENS Y PEREZ ’99
RION JOAQUIN RAMIREZ ’98,
accepted an appointment as a federal Administrative Law Judge for the Social Security Administration. Prior to her appointment, she served as a Chief Administrative Judge for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
began working as a prosecutor with EULEX in Pristina, Kosovo, prosecuting cases of corruption under the Kosovo Criminal Code. Prior to that, he worked as a Justice Advisor in Afghanistan, mentoring judges, prosecutors, defense counsel and law enforcement.
00s DAVID PERKINS ’05 was elected partner in Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP’s Corporate Department. He was also named a New York Rising Star by Super Lawyers in 2013 for real estate. TRISH K. MURPHY ’96 founded
Northwest Workplace Law PLLC. The firm represents employers in labor and employment law matters and performs independent workplace investigations. LISSA KAUFMAN ’96 was awarded
the 2014 Judge Mercedes Deiz Award from Oregon Women Lawyers, which recognizes a person who has made an outstanding contribution to promoting minorities in the legal profession and in the community.
DAVID BABAIAN AND ADAM HOUSTON ’13 graduates of the UW
ANDREW TURK ’92 has been
Health LL.M. program presented papers at the John Marshall 5th Annual Review of Intellectual Property Law Symposium. JESSICA BELLE AND KAYLA FELD ’13 published an article with
TERRANCE KEENAN ’06 was promoted to Member (Partner) at Foster Pepper PLLC. He is a member of the Creditors’ Rights and Bankruptcy and Real Estate practices.
KIRSTEN KOESTER ’06 was
KIM BOROWICZ ’07 recently
CHRISTOPHER DODD ’06 was elected partner at Kutak Rock LLP in Scottsdale, AZ. He works in the firm’s public finance department, focusing primarily on serving as bond, underwriter’s, borrower’s and disclosure counsel on public finance transactions for cities, counties, school districts, colleges and universities, hospitals, 501(c)(3) organizations and state agencies.
completed a disability exchange program with Handicap International in Tajikistan. Borowicz, a disability rights attorney at Access Living, met with disability officials and presented on disability rights. GUIPING LU ’03 was promoted
AMELIA BOONE ’09, an associate at Skadden in Chicago, took 2nd overall and 1st among women at the “World’s Toughest Mudder” competition in November, 2012.
to counsel at Latham & Watkins LLP. He is a member of the Corporate Department, where he advises clients on corporate and securities matters, including US and international equity and debt offerings, M&A and private equity transactions and venture capital financings.
MICHAEL DOUGLAS ’06 was hired
CHRIS KODAMA ’06 was promoted
as the SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium’s general counsel.
to counsel at Davis Polk. Kodama is in the Corporate Department, practicing in the firms’ Tokyo office. MATTHEW HEDBURG ’02 was
elected as a shareholder by Bullivant Houser Bailey PC. His practice focuses on insurance law and he is located in the firm’s Portland office. CRISTÓBAL JOSH ALEX ‘01
by Seattle Mayor Ed Murray to lead the Office of Civil Rights. Prior to her appointment, Lally worked as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Western District of Washington State.
launched the Latino Victory Project, a political advocacy organization focused on immigration reform. He is the organization’s president.
promoted to Member (Partner) at Foster Pepper PLLC. Koester is a member of the firm’s Business practice and focuses on transactional law.
AMBER PENN-ROCO ’11 joined Galanda Broadman as an Associate, where her practice focuses on complex land and environmental issues and multi-party litigation involving tribal sovereignty, torts and hazardous materials.
CLAIRE NEWMAN ’12 joined the Seattle firm Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton as an Associate on the Native American Practice Group.
10s LILLIAN HEWKO ’11 received the Reproductive Justice Fellowship at the National Women’s Health Network. ELIZABETH HAWKINS ’10 received
the Take Action Award from the King County Coalition Against Domestic Violence for her work on behalf of immigrant survivors of violence. WYATT GOLDING ’11 secured an agreement to protect wildlife in Washington State. A staff attorney at the Washington Forest Law Center, Golding helped King County reach a deal with the Trust for Public Land to purchase forest land on Squak Mountain in Issaquah.
DANIELLE NICKLAS ’11 recently
joined the law firm of Neubert, Pepe & Monteith, P.C. in New Haven, Connecticut as an Associate focusing on health care, general business, and finance & banking.
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PATRICIA LALLY ’98 was appointed
Andrew D. Feld M.D. J.D. in the AGA Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Journal.
S P R I N G 2 014
90s
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57 57
CL A SS OF 1948
JACK TUELL passed away on January 10, 2014. He
CL A SS OF 1949 CL A SS OF 194 3
JOHN RUSSELL passed away at the age of 101 on June
CHARLES “CHUCK” GLEISER passed away at the age of
30, 2012.
93 on February 4, 2012. RALPH VERCOE passed away on July 18, 2012.
CL A SS OF 1936
HERMAN “BUD” ANDERSON passed away on March 20, 2012. A Northwest native, Herman served in the U.S. Army during World War II in India after college, and married Vivian Peterson in 1947.
CL A SS OF 194 0
ESTHER JOHNSON passed away September 20, 2012. She earned a degree in journalism from the University of Iowa before attending the UW School of Law. After earning her master’s degree in law from Columbia University, Esther was recruited to assist with the Nuremberg trials in Germany, where she worked for three years. Johnson then returned to Seattle where she established a private law practice and served on the Washington State Bar Code of Professional Responsibility Committee, before retiring in 1995.
Following his time at the University of Washington, Vercoe entered the U.S. Army. He was a Staff Sergeant in the 3062nd Quartermaster Corp, 899 Tank Destroyer BN, serving in the European Theater of World War II where he was at the Battle of the Bulge, and Honorably Discharged in 1945. Following the war, he worked for Federal Electric Co. in Alaska, then moved to New York, where he was a Fraud Investigator for the Social Security Department until he retired.
JACK MACDONALD passed away on September 13, 2013. After serving in the U.S. Army in the South Pacific, Jack was an attorney for the Veterans Administration in Seattle for 30 years.
58
SIDNEY R. BUCKLEY passed away on November 12, 2013. Before law school, he served in the U.S. Army in the European Theater of World War II. Buckley was elected prosecutor for Stevens County in 1956 and then elected to the Superior Court in 1972.
ROGER JONES passed away at the age of 92 on April
29, 2012. A Seattle native, Jones served in the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Coast Guard and was a member of the Last Man’s Club of WWII. He was the President of Seattle Tent and Awning Company and the Northwest Hospital Foundation, and served as Chairman for the Lake Union Drydock, Young President’s Organization and Northwest Hospital.
CL A SS OF 1947
LYLE SCHNEIDER passed away on February 23,
2013. After finishing his first year of law school, Lyle entered the U.S. Navy and served in Pearl Harbor and the South Pacific before being stationed at Port Orchard. Schneider was honorably discharged as a Lt. Commander at the end of the war and returned to the law school to finish his legal education. He worked with his father-in-law in the firm Elliott & Schneider, which became Schneider, Gibson and Jarvey where he retired in 2005.
RICHARD SMITH passed away on July 4, 2013. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and the Korean War before being discharged as a lieutenant commander. Richard practiced law in Yakima where he served as a deputy prosecutor and also in private practice. He served as the President of the Yakima County Bar Association in 1976 and was a board member and President of the Yakima Chamber of Commerce.
CL A SS OF 1951
CL A SS OF 194 5
WILLIAM “BILL” BRANIGIN passed away July 29, 2012.
After earning his law degree, he entered the U.S. Navy as a lieutenant during World War II. Branigin was the legal counsel for the Carroll Mortgage Company for 30 years and was a member for the Appraisal Institute, Seattle Mortgage Bankers Association and the Washington Mortgage Bankers Association.
CLIFTON COLLINS passed away on February 4, 2012. A World War II veteran of the U.S. Navy and a Purple Heart recipient, Collins played center on the University of Washington football team. He established a law practice in 1949, and eventually formed a partnership with Nels Hansen as the Collins and Hansen Law Firm. He served as the Grant County Democratic Party Chairman and cofounded Columbia Basin Microwave, which sent Seattle television signals east of the Cascades.
F. LEE CAMPBELL passed away on December 17, 2012. He served as an infantry officer in the 102nd Infantry Division during World War II and was awarded the Combat Infantry badge and the Bronze Star medal. He was a member, managing partner and president for Karr Tuttle Campbell, and served on the Association Board of Governors and the Seattle/King County Bar Association. He was appointed to the Washington State Judicial Conduct Commission in 1981 and was awarded the Award of Merit and Honor in 1982.
CL A SS OF 1950
WILLIAM “BILL” HELSELL passed away on December
20, 2012. A veteran, Helsell enlisted in the U.S. Navy pilot training program and returned to active duty during the Korean War and the Cuban Missile Crisis. After receiving his law degree, he served in the office of the U.S. Attorney and as a partner in Helsell Fetterman LLP before retiring in 1994. William also served on the Boards of Directors of Seattle Preparatory School and the Museum of Flight, and was a member of the University of Washington Futures Committee. DELBERT JOHNSON passed away on June 18, 2012. He was a veteran of World War II. TIMOTHY TUERCK passed away on March 9, 2012.
Tuerck earned the Purple Heart and Silver Star Medal for his actions in Europe during World War II. He then graduated from UW Law and moved to San Francisco in 1958, where he worked at the Internal Revenue Service. Later, he worked as the western region chief legal counsel for the U.S. Department of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms until he retired in 1986.
DONALD “DON” FLEMING passed away on August 4, 2013. He served in the U.S. Army and was deployed in Germany and France during World War II. He served, and was later appointed Commissioner, in the U.S. Court of Claims. He was a senior partner with LeSourd, Patten, Fleming & Hartung and in 1985, began practicing law independently. Fleming was recognized by the Washington State Bar Association for over 50 years of membership and service to the public. With Juvenile Court Judge William G. Long, Fleming cofounded the Juvenile Court Conference Committee in Bellevue that provided counsel to at- risk youth to help them avoid prosecution and incarceration. PAUL SOLOMON passed away May 29, 2012. While
serving in the European Theater during World War II, Solomon earned his Combat Infantryman badge as a marksman and a Good Conduct Medal. He then earned his law degree and worked as an Assistant Attorney General and in the Washington State Liquor Control Board until his retirement in 1993. Post retirement, Solomon worked as a court appointed arbiter and volunteered in his community.
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CL A SS OF 1935
enlisted and served in the Army Air Corps where he flew B-24 Liberator bombers based in Italy during World War II. David was a partner in the law firm of Hoof, Shucklin and Harris before retiring in 1995. He served on the Probate Review Committee at the King County Courthouse and was appointed the first Justice of the Peace on Mercer Island in 1960.
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In Memoriam
served in the Army Air Corps during World War II and practiced law in Edmonds until 1950. Tuell later graduated from the Boston University School of Theology in 1955, and was elected as a Bishop of the United Methodist Church in 1972. He served as the President of the Council of Bishops of the world-wide United Methodist Church from 1989 to 1990 and retired from being a Bishop in 1992.
DAVID HARRIS passed away on December 7, 2012. He
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in Memoriam
CL A SS OF 1954
CL A SS OF 1955
MAX SORIANO passed away on September 15, 2012. After high school he served as a ship’s officer in the Merchant Marines during World War II and the Korean War. After law school he worked as an admiralty lawyer and founded his own shipping company.
MYRON “MIKE” CARLSON passed away on March 2, 2012. After graduating from high school he enlisted in the U.S. Navy V-5 Naval Pilot Training Program. He was a King County Deputy Prosecutor, joined Anderson Hunter in 1957, and founded his own firm where he practiced until his retirement in 1992. Myron was elected to the Board of Governors of the Washington State Bar Association where he served from 19861989, and served on the Board of Governors of the Washington State Trial Lawyers Association for three years.
BENJAMIN WESTMORELAND passed away on
JAY W. HAMILTON passed away on January 8, 2013. Hamilton enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1945 and served in China, and was an attorney in private practice after earning his J.D. He was appointed by Governor Daniel Evans to the Kitsap County Superior Court as a judge in 1970. He retired from the bench in 1982 and worked as the in-house legal counsel and Chief Executive Officer of The Gear Works in Seattle until his retirement. RICHARD KELLEHER passed away on November 13, 2012. He practiced law until August 2012. ROBERT SKIDMORE passed away on August 8, 2013.
He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and the Korean War. Robert practiced law for almost 50 years, mostly in private practice in Colville. MURRAY GUTERSON passed away on October 4, 2013.
During his legal career of over 50 years, Guterson served as a King County deputy prosecutor and an assistant United States attorney. He practiced at the firm Culp, Dwyer, Guterson & Grader, and its successor Mcnaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren.
CL A SS OF 1953
CHARLES “BUD” TULIN passed away on August 6, 2012. A UW track and field athlete and graduate of the UW ROTC program, Tulin entered the U.S. Air Force after attending law school and served in the Judge Advocate General’s office of the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base. After his service, he was a Territorial Judge in Alaska and, in 1958, opened his private law practice.
MAURICE EPSTEIN passed away on March 2, 2013. He
enlisted in the U.S. Army after graduating high school, and served in Japan and Korea until 1947. After law school, he worked in the Washington State Attorney General’s Office and then worked in private practice with friend and partner John Hay. He served as County Court Commissioner for King County from 1978 to his retirement in 1995. EUGENE “GENE” GREENWAY passed away on
February 25, 2012. He served in the armed forces as a Merchant Marine in World War II and as a JAG Lieutenant for the U.S. Air Force. Eugene was an active member of the Washington State Bar Association and practiced law for more than 50 years. PHILLIP TRACY passed away on September 21, 2012. After serving in the U.S. Army in Korea and earning his J.D., he entered private practice. Tracy was active with the Washington State Bar Association, the American Bar Assocation and the Pierce County Bar Association. H. DONALD “DON” GOUGE passed away on January 23, 2014. He joined the U.S. Army in 1942 and was the pilot in the 8th Army Air Corp based in England, where he was awarded citations for bravery. Gouge opened a law office in Renton where he practiced for nearly 40 years.
J. DIMMIT SMITH passed away on September 13, 2013. CL A SS OF 1956
BETTY BINNS FLETCHER passed away October 22, 2012. She was the first woman to become a partner at a Seattle law firm, K&L Gates, and the second woman to be appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Fletcher was an active member of the Washington State Bar Association and from 19721973 served as the first female president of the King County Bar Association in Seattle.
CL A SS OF 1957
WILLIAM “BILL” MAYS passed away on August 21, 2012. After law school, he started his career with the firm Gavin, Robinson, Kendrick, Redman, and Mays in Yakima. Later he ran the Tacoma office of Williams Kastner. Mays was a recipient of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association’s Distinguished Service Award in recognition of his volunteer service to amateur golf in the Northwest. JAMES GOBER passed away on June 9, 2013. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served in the South Pacific from 1943 to 1946. Gober joined the firm Lee Campbell after earning his law degree. He was later appointed Justice of the Peace and the first District Court Judge in Lewis County. Gober retired as a Lewis County Court Commissioner after over 50 years in the legal field. IRWIN TREIGER passed away on October 20, 2013. He joined the firm Bogle & Gates where he was Managing Partner for five years and Chair for eight years. Later, he worked as an attorney with Dorsey & Whitney and then Stoel Rives, where he was Of Counsel. He served in leadership positions in the Washington State Bar Association, American Bar Association, American Bar Foundation, American College of Tax Counsel, American Tax Policy Institute and American Law Institute. D. WAYNE GITTINGER passed away on March 6, 2014. He played baseball for the University of Washington as an undergraduate and was a member of the Board of Editors of the Washington Law Review while at UW Law. After graduating, Gittinger attended Officer Candidate School and served in the U.S. Coast Guard. Later, he joined the law firm of Lane Powell in Seattle, where he spent over 50 years practicing corporate law. He served on the boards of numerous organizations, including the Seattle Sports Commission, the Seattle Police Foundation, the First Tee of Greater Seattle and the Business Council of the Seattle Human Society. He and his wife Anne established the D. Wayne and Anne Gittinger Endowed Professorship and two scholarships at UW Law. The law school’s Dean’s Suite was named in his honor.
CL A SS OF 1958
WILLIAM “BILL” FRASER passed away on August 18, 2012. After graduating from UW Law with Honors, he worked at the Kitsap County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, then entered private practice. FRANK GUSTIN passed away on March 20, 2012.
After graduating from law school, he became a Pierce County prosecutor in Tacoma. In 1961 he moved to Salt Lake City and practiced family law with his father at Gustin & Gustin. Later he formed Gustin Kastin Adams & Liapis, was general counsel for Equity Oil for 38 years, and served as counsel at Dart Adamson & Donovan until his retirement. ROBERT HUGHES passed away on August 13, 2012.
Before attending law school, he served in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War and earned his B.A. in Civil Engineering from Seattle University. He practiced as a patent attorney in Sumas and Bellingham, and authored many books on patent law.
CL A SS OF 1959
WILLIAM “BILL” STOEBUCK passed away on November 18, 2012. He attended the University of Washington School of Law after serving in the Korean War with the Air Force. He taught at the University of Denver College of Law, Harvard Law School, and at the UW School of Law where he was named the first Judson Falknor Professor of Law in 1995 and retired from teaching in 2007. Stoebuck was a member of the Order of the Coif and Of Counsel at Karr Tuttle Campbell. DUANE STOOKEY passed away on June 24, 2012.
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Before he attended the law school, he served in the U.S. Army Air Corps. Smith was an attorney with the firms Monheimer, VanFredenberg and Smith; Smith, Smart, Hancock and Tabler; and Graham and Dunn as an expert in commercial real estate law.
September 27, 2013. He practiced law for 50 years.
THOMAS S. FOLEY passed away on October 18, 2013. He represented Washington’s 5th congressional district for 30 years as a member of the House of Representatives from 1965 to 1995. He was elected Speaker of the House in 1989. Prior to serving in Congress, Foley worked in private practice, as a prosecuting attorney in Spokane, in the office of the Washington State Attorney General and as special counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. In 1997, he was appointed by President Clinton as the U.S. Ambassador to Japan. He received the Washington Medal of Merit, the state’s highest honor, in 2003.
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CL A SS OF 1952
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in Memoriam
CL A SS OF 1960
CL A SS OF 1963
CL A SS OF 1970
ROBERT LAMB passed away on August 17, 2012. He
EVERETT PLUMB passed away on October 4, 2012. He
JOHN DICK passed away on August 14, 2012. Prior
practiced law in Pierce County for 35 years.
JAMES R. THOMAS passed away on March 31, 2013. CL A SS OF 196 4
RAGNAR ENGEBRETSEN passed away on March 21,
2012. He served in the U.S. Army in Norway, and was appointed a Municipal Judge by Ronald Reagan in 1972. Ragnar was elected a Superior Court Judge in 1980.
CYNTHIA WILLS passed away on June 11, 2012.
CL A SS OF 1961
LAUREN STUDEBAKER passed away on February 16, 2012. He was active in coaching youth soccer for 28 years, coached three state championship teams, and was voted U.S. Youth Soccer State and Regional Coach of the Year in 1996. Studebaker was also recognized by the Washington State Bar Association for 50 years of service representing the public with the highest level of professionalism and dedication.
2013. He practiced as an attorney in Seattle and Bellevue for over 40 years.
CL A SS OF 1967
TERRENCE MCCAULEY passed away on January 24, 2013. He attended UW Law after serving in the U.S. Army and was the City Attorney for Cashmere and Leavenworth. He received the Professionalism Award in 2012 from the Chelan/Douglas County Bar Association.
MURRAY A. MCLEOD passed away on February 2, 2014.
JOHN BRIGHT passed away on April 8, 2013. He joined
BARRY WOLF passed away on September 19, 2012.
CL A SS OF 1962
EARL HILL passed away on May 19, 2013. He served
in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II and was active in Roi-Namur, Guam, and Okinawa. After earning his law degree, he practiced mainly in the fields of mining and aviation. DAVID HOFF passed away on August 16, 2012. His
CHARLES COVELLO passed away on September 14,
Farris, Bangs & Horowitz after law school and served as Counsel to Governor Daniel Evans. Bright was the Chief of Consumer Protection and Antitrust Division of the Washington State Attorney General’s Office from 1973 to 1977. Afterwards, he joined Keller Rohrback where he became partner and remained in private practice as a civil trial lawyer until his retirement in 2009.
CL A SS OF 1969
HERBERT “HERB” GELMAN passed away on June 13,
THE HONORABLE THOMAS CHAMBERS passed away
drafted into the U.S. Army and served during the Korean War. Erickson then clerked for the Nevada Supreme Court after earning his law degree. He cofounded the firm Erickson, Thorpe & Swainston, and was a member of Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity, the Insurance Defense Counsel, the American Bar Association and Reno’s local Prospector’s Club.
CL A SS OF 1972
During his time in law school he was the Editor in Chief of the Law Review and practiced for over 40 years after earning his law degree.
8, 2012. She practiced law in Seattle and Montana and retired from practice in 1988. In 1991, Morgret cofounded the Crafts Forum on CompuServe and actively managed it until 2009. THOMAS PUGH passed away on December 15, 2012.
A member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, he worked with his father in his manufacturer’s representative business and was the founder of the Hearth, Patio and Barbecue Association.
CL A SS OF 1979 CL A SS OF 1974
RICHARD “RICK” SLAGLE passed away on August 9, 2012. He practiced in his own law firm for 15 years.
KRISTEN FLUHRER passed away on January 16, 2013.
STEVEN “STEVE” BRANOM passed away on July 4,
ROGER ERICKSON passed away on May 3, 2013. He was
CL A SS OF 1977
KATHRYN “KATHY” MORGRET passed away on July
CL A SS OF 1965
law practice focused on securities and civil litigation, including class action and environmental litigation. He tried more than 100 cases and is a past president of the Washington State Bar Association, Western States Bar Conference and the Seattle Public Defender Association. Hoff was also a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. 2012. He served as an officer in the Air Force before attending law school, and went into private practice after earning his J.D. He served as the President of the Franklin Pierce School Board and as a 12-year trustee at Evergreen State College.
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CL A SS OF 1971
2013. He began working as an Attorney General for the State of Washington. Branom spent the majority of his legal career as an attorney for Hackett, Beecher and Hart, where he practiced civil litigation, insurance coverage and mediation. He was also an Attorney General for the State of Washington. on December 11, 2013. Justice Chambers was first elected to the State Supreme Court in 2000 and was reelected to a second term in 2006. Prior to joining the court, he worked as a trial lawyer for more than 30 years in Seattle. Throughout his career, Justice Chambers was very involved in the legal community, serving as the president of a number of statewide professional organizations, including the Washington State Bar Association.
She was the first female director of the Snohomish County Public Defender’s Office. A specialist in international tax law, she retired from KPMG in 2011.
CL A SS OF 1980
MARGARET PARTLOW passed away on
January 25, 2013. CL A SS OF 1975
RICHARD MCNEES passed away on September 30,
2012. He joined the U.S. Navy in 1940 and was a naval aviator for 32 years. After earning his law degree he was in private practice until 1988.
CL A SS OF 1976
NANCY MILLER passed away on May 30, 2012. She was the Secretary-Treasurer and President of the League of Women Voters and joined Jones, Grey and Bayley (later Stoel Rives) practicing real estate law. Miller was also the Chair of the Board of REI from 1981 to 1983 and served as the Chair of the Real Property Probate and Trust Section of the Washington State Bar Association.
CL A SS OF 1987
LORI SALZARULO passed away on February 10, 2013. After graduating from law school, she joined Garvey Schubert Barer with a focus on real estate. She chaired the firm’s Public Service Committee and was a volunteer with the King County Neighborhood Legal Clinics.
CL A SS OF 1988
KATHRYN BECKERMAN passed away on August 22,
2012. She was a public defender for The Defender Association of Seattle.
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After law school, he opened his law office in Okanogan and was joined by Judge Joseph Wicks, his father-in-law, in 1962. During his legal career of 50 years, he served as the Deputy Prosecutor under Rod Young and as the Superior Court Judge of Okanogan County.
to attending to law school, he was a Peace Corps volunteer, utilizing his engineering skills in Thailand. He began practice as an Assistant Attorney General with the Washington Attorney General’s Office. In 1983 he joined Springer, Norman, and Workman, where he became partner and later retired in 2007.
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practiced law for over 50 years.
JAMES TRUJILLO passed away on October 13, 2013. He completed the U.S. Marine Corps’ Platoon Leaders Candidate Program and was honorably discharged in 1974. After law school, he became the deputy prosecutor for King County and started a private practice law firm in Bellevue that became Trujillo Peick Lingenbrink & Maglady. Trujillo also served as the President of the Washington State Hispanic Bar Association, Regional President of the National Hispanic Bar Association and was on the Board of Governors for the State Trial Lawyers Association.
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in Memoriam
CL A SS OF 1991
EDWARD GROSS passed away on July 1, 2013. An
accomplished academic, Gross was awarded the Governor General’s Gold Medal when he graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1942. He was invited by the Chinese government to lecture on American higher education and held academic positions at Washington State University, the University of Minnesota and the University of Washington until his retirement in 1989.
CL A SS OF 1994
JENNIFER FOLLETTE passed away on September 4, 2012.
CL A SS OF 1998
KRISTIN MILES passed away on June 23, 2012. She
worked as an Assistant Attorney General in the UW Division and Social Health Services Division for 14 years. Miles authored chapters in the Washington Health Law Manual and was a board member of the Washington State Society of Healthcare Attorneys.
CL A SS OF 20 02
JOHN FARRELL passed away on July 10, 2013.
REPORT TO
Donors 2012–13
Friends JOANNE RODDIS passed away on September 16, 2013.
64
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Note: The University of Washington School of Law is deeply grateful to our many alumni and friends whose annual gifts, large and small, help create futures for our students, promote faculty scholarship and support justice throughout the world. Every effort is made to ensure the accurate listing of donors, and we sincerely apologize for misspelling or inadvertently omitting the names of any donors. We appreciate the opportunity to correct our records, so please advise us of errors by using the enclosed envelope or call the Advancement Office at 206.685.9115.
S P R I N G 2 014
Roddis and her late husband, Professor and Dean Richard S. L. Roddis, joined the law school community in 1968. She created the Richard Roddis Fund to support the Gallagher Law Library and did much to build the Gallagher Society that recognizes lifetime giving to the law library.
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School of Law Annual Summary of Income and Expenditures
Giving Percentages by Year
JULY 1, 2012 – JUNE 30, 2013
CLASS YEARS WITH AT LEAST ONE LIVING ALUMNUS THAT MADE A GIFT TO UW LAW IN 2012-13
G I F T S R EC E I V E D Contributions by Purpose 55%
STUDENT SUPPORT
$724,031
27%
UNRESTRICTED
$457,749
17%
$27,547
1%
FACULTY SUPPORT TOTAL
27% YEAR
17%
$2,699,588 1%
Outstanding pledges and unrealized testamentary gifts total $1,412,087. Total fundraising activity $4,111,675.
Contributions by Group CORPORATIONS TO LAW
$761,833
28%
LAW ALUMNI TO LAW
$758,077
28%
ORGANIZATIONS TO LAW
$540,524
20%
FOUNDATIONS TO LAW *
$391,702
15%
FRIENDS TO LAW **
$246,937
9%
OTHER UW ALUMNI TO LAW TOTAL
$515
20%
15%
28%
9%
<1%
$2,699,588
28% <1%
Outstanding pledges and unrealized testamentary gifts total $1,412,087. Total fundraising activity $4,111,675.
YEAR
PERCENT
AMOUNT
YEAR
PERCENT
AMOUNT
1969
14% $23,875
1992
5% $1,000
1947
7% $150
1970
21% $10,350
1993
8% $4,600
1948
20% $7,736
1971
10% $13,000
1994
6% $7,715
1949
7% $200
1972
12% $12,125
1995
6% $25,218
1950
10% $6,635
1973
10% $24,330
1996
8% $5,954
1951
4% $320
1974
17% $12,836
1997
6% $9,300
1952
9% $950
1975
13% $25,750
1998
5% $3,176
1953
23% $6,725
1976
18% $41,955
1999
6% $1,910
1954
22% $2,475
1977
13% $27,526
2000
7% $5,663
1955
19% $1,750
1978
11% $8,180
2001
4% $2,695
1956
16% $2,350
1979
10% $35,350
2002
7% $2,715
1957
15% $201,650
1980
12% $5,660
2003
6% $3,350
1958
15% $6,965
1981
9% $4,790
2004
8% $2,925
1959
13% $1,650
1982
18% $13,790
2005
7% $4,483
1960
17% $42,650
1983
13% $4,103
2006
8% $2,170
1961
29% $3,391
1984
15% $57,120
2007
14% $6,686
1962
13% $1,550
1985
9% $55,051
2008
8% $2,630
* Includes: all types of foundations and trusts
1963
9% $4,450
1986
10% $12,080
2009
12% $15,025
** Includes: non law alumni (faculty, former faculty, former staff, friends, parents, retired staff, current staff, students and visiting scholars/faculty)
1964
16% $2,125
1987
7% $2,250
2010
11% $1,760
1965
14% $3,300
1988
9% $8,895
2011
9% $2,561
1966
10% $4,685
1989
7% $7,389
2012
13% $2,343
1967
17% $26,195
1990
6% $7,025
2013
55% $3,125
1968
10% $5,800
1991
7% $6,260
E X PE N D I T U R E S FR O M G I F T S INCLUDES FUNDING FROM ENDOWMENTS
3%
Expenditures by Purpose STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS *
$3,380,027
42%
CLINICS, PROGRAMS, AND CENTERS *
$3,283,442
41%
FACULTY SUPPORT AND ENDOWED
$1,019,073
13%
13%
41%
PROFESSORSHIPS AND CHAIRS ENDOWED LECTURESHIPS AND VISITING PROFESSORSHIPS FACILITIES
$255,152
3%
$49,462
1%
42%
* William H. Gates Public Service Law Program expenditures are part of Student Scholarships and Clinics, Programs and Centers categories.
1%
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AMOUNT
14% $10,000
1940 55%
PERCENT
S P R I N G 2 014
$1,490,261
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PROGRAM SUPPORT
67 67
Report to Donors
Members have lifetime giving totaling $25,000 or more. Acknowledgment of the John T. Condon Society Founding Members, Laureates and Benefactors can also be found on our donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.
Greater Everett Community Foundation
Lifetime giving totaling $100,000 to $999,999 to the School of Law.
Greenwall Foundation
Lifetime giving totaling $1,000,000 or more to the School of Law. Anonymous
Anonymous (6)
Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen (FM)
Frederick Smith Virginia Smith ‘46 (D)
M. John ‘69 & Mattie Bundy (FM)
Sophie & Wilbur Albright (D)
Douglas Hendel ‘56 (FM)
Max ‘52 & Ruth Soriano (D) (FM)
John ‘61 (D) & Sybil Burgess
William & Katherine Andersen Jr. (FM)
Professor Dan Henderson (D)
Alice & Edna Athearn (D) (FM)
The Henry M. Jackson Foundation (FM)
Aviation Working Group
Herbert B. Jones Foundation
Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich (FM)
Japan Foundation
Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel (FM) Frederick Betts ‘33 (D) (FM) Judith Bigelow ‘86 (FM)
Jean Johnson ‘82 & Peter Miller ‘83 (FM) Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation
The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jon ‘76 Bridge (FM)
K & L Gates
The Bullitt Foundation
Katherine Kellogg Smith Trust
Clarence ‘30 & Vivian Campbell (D)
Nanci Kertson
Cloud L. Cray Foundation
Michael Kates Trust
Ed Kim ‘95 King County Bar Association
Richard Cray (D)
Steve & Kathy Berman (FM)
Gordon Culp ‘52 (D) (FM)
Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman (FM)
Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis
C. Calvert Knudsen ‘50 (D (FM)
Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
The Korea Foundation
Evelyn S. Egtvedt (D)
Colonel Josef ‘31 & Muriel Diamond (D)
Kreielsheimer Foundation (FM)
D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger (FM) Landesa Rural Development Institute Microsoft Corporation Elisabeth Miller (D) William & Sally Neukom (FM) Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock (FM) Linden Rhoads ‘11 (FM) The Seattle Foundation The Tulalip Tribes United Way of King County University of Washington School of Law Foundation
Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd (FM) Marie Donohoe ‘63 (D) The Dorsey & Whitney Foundation
King County Bar Institute
Theodore & Pamela Kummert (FM) Sam Levinson ‘25 (D) Gordon Livengood ‘52 (D)
David Stobaugh ‘75 & Lynn Prunhuber ‘79 Stuart Foundation Washington Research Foundation
Casey Family Foundation
Washington State Bar Association Philip Weiss ‘23 (D) Carrie Welch (D)
Condon Society
Lifetime giving totaling $25,000 to $99,999 to the School of Law.
Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation
Helen Adams (D) Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama (FM) Thomas Allison ‘72 (D) & Kimberlee Brackett American College of Trial Lawyers American Bar Association Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84
Robert McMillen (D) (FM)
Dean Judson ‘19 & Dorothy Falknor (D) Donald Fleming ‘51 (D) The Ford Foundation Foster Pepper PLLC Marion Garrison (D) (FM)
William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr. (FM) Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88 (FM) Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder
(FM) FO U N DING M EM B ER
Perkins Coie LLP (FM) Preston Gates & Ellis, LLP (FM) Progeny 3, Inc. Puyallup Tribe of Indians Quil Ceda Village Riverstyx Foundation Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr. (FM) Joseph & Katherine Ryan Katie Sako ‘87 & Kendall Flint (FM) Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr. (FM) The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan
Coleman Foundation, Inc.
Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams
Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger (FM) Ernest Falk ‘28 (D)
Charles ‘61 & Donna Cole (D) (FM)
Comdisco, Inc.
The Honorable William ‘52 (D) & Vasiliki Dwyer (FM)
Larry ‘63 & Judith Mounger Jr. (FM)
Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation
Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins
James ‘39 (D) & Kathleen Arneil
Veida Morrow ‘24 (D)
Center for Children & Youth Justice
Anonymous (12)
Bruce ‘49 & Jean Maines (D)
Evergreen Legal Services
Michael Cason
Children’s Home Society of Washington
John Applegate ‘41 (D)
Charlotte Malone (D)
Diana ‘86 & Charles (D) Carey Jr. C. Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson (FM)
Jack MacDonald ‘40 (D) (FM)
Scott Dunham ‘75 & Barbara Eliades (FM)
Robert ‘73 & Katherine Campbell
Paul Van Wagenen ‘73
Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman
Mary Gates (D)
(D) DECE A SED
King County Bar Foundation
SSA Marine, Inc.
Willaim (D) & Virginia Lowry ‘38
Garvey Schubert Barer (FM)
68
John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Stan ‘63 & Alta Barer (FM)
Bill & Melinda Gates (FM)
James ‘35 & Jane Bryson (D) Charles Stimson Bullitt ‘49 (D)
Kenneth ‘40 (D) & Nona ‘42 Cox (FM)
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton
James & Janet Sinegal
Greg Amadon (FM)
Michael ‘64 & Lynn Garvey (FM)
W. Hunter (D) & Dorothy Simpson (FM)
Gerald & Carolyn Grinstein (FM)
The Boeing Company Condon Society Laureates
Spencer Short ‘24 (D)
The Honorable Betty ‘56 & Professor Emeritus Robert Fletcher (D) (FM) James ‘71 & Marlene Fletcher Floyd & Pflueger, P. S. Foley Family Charitable Foundation William ‘74 & Carol Foley II (FM) Carl Franklin (D) Dennis Franklin ‘78 & Melinda Yee
Morrison & Foerster, LLP
Japanese American Society
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
Japan/U.S. Friendship Commission Eric & Ingrid Jarvis The Honorable Peter ‘62 & Sally Jarvis Jeffers, Danielson, Sonn & Aylward (FM) Michael B. Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich
Marjorie Jones (D)
Jennifer Gavin
James & Diana Judson
Earl Phillips ‘34 (D)
Timothy Gavin ‘91 (FM)
Kao Corporation
General Service Foundation
Day ‘29 & Susan Karr (D)
Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles (FM)
Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, LLP
Peter & Sally Glase
W.H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask (FM)
The Glenhome Foundation Glenhome Trust Stanley Golub ‘36 (D) Gordon Derr, LLP Laura Grace
Clydia Cuykendall ‘74
Greenwood Shopping Center (FM) Camden Hall ‘65
John ‘40 & Ruth (D) Davis
John ‘78 & Patty Hammar
Mabry Debuys ‘79 (D)
Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc.
Carl Koch ‘40 (D) Henry Kotkins Sr. ‘35 (D) Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane (FM) Lane Powell, PC The Lane Family Foundation Linda Larson ‘78 & B. Gerald Johnson (FM) Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee Ronald ‘71 & Toshiko Lee Legal Environmental Assistance James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.
Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D) Heller Ehrman LLP
Lawrence & Mary Ann Bailey
The Honorable Carolyn ‘53 & Cyrus (D) Dimmick
Barbara & Professor Wallace Loh (FM)
James Hilton ‘59 (FM)
Dorsey & Whitney, LLP
Ruth Lothrop (D)
Barbara Barbee-Pelzel
Lloyd DuCommun ‘34 (D)
Akimitsu LL.M. ‘95 & Kaoru Hirai
Peter ‘65 & Marian Lucas
Bardehle Pagenberg Dost Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80
Robert ‘61 & Judith Duggan
Dean & Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth (FM)
Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.
Jack (D) and Becky Benaroya (FM)
Barney Ebsworth
John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster (FM) The Honorable Alfred ‘48 & C. Lillian Holte (D)
John ‘53 & Doris Ellis
The Honorable Charles Horowitz ‘27 (D)
Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons
Professor Mary Hotchkiss
Sylvia Epstein (D)
Gary ‘75 & Chris Huff
Betts, Patterson & Mines, P.S.
Fenwick & West LLP
Boehmert & Boehmert
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP
James & Rose Hunter ‘39 (D) (FM)
Bogle & Gates Law Offices Mary ‘75 & David Boies (FM) F. Ross Boundy ‘71 Alexander ‘63 & Cornelia (D) Brindle Sr.
Leslie Fishel Jr. (D) Daniel ‘88 & Frances Fisher (FM)
Dan ‘66 & Diane O’Neal (FM)
William & Carrie Garrison (D)
Denny Miller Associates, Inc.
Family of Homer Bergren ‘35 (D) (FM)
The Norcliffe Foundation
Pacific Coast Banking School
Greater Kansas City Community Foundation
James Ellis ‘49 (FM)
The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen (FM)
Professor Ralph (D) & Anne Johnson (FM)
Charles Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01
William Bennett ‘95 & Michele Borovac (FM)
Sharon Nelson ‘76
Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison (FM)
Deloitte & Touche Foundation
Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong, P.C.
Jack ‘58 & Lora Mullin (FM)
P&E C Miller Charitable Foundation
Martin ‘65 (D) & Diane Crowder (FM)
Richard ‘74 & Mary ‘75 Ekman
Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse
Yasuhiro Fujita ‘68 (D)
Graduate Program in Taxation (FM)
Duty Free Shoppers Ltd.
Jonathan ‘80 & Lynn Mott (FM)
Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle
Costco Wholesale Corporation
Dana Corporation Foundation
Janet Wright Ketcham Foundation
Byron & Alice Lockwood Foundation
The Macfarlane Foundation Norman ‘66 (D) & Judith Maleng Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69 Frank McAbee (D) The McIntosh Foundation McNaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren PLLC Polly ‘87 & David McNeill (FM)
Arthur Paulsen ‘46 (D) (FM) Walter Pitts ‘52 (D) (FM) Pogo Producing Co. Cheryl Pope William Pope ‘79 (FM) Wayne L. Prim Foundation Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim Constance ‘78 & Rodney Proctor Public Interest Law Association Karl ‘79 & Lianne Quackenbush Josef Rawert ‘09 Dale ‘39 & Evelyn Read ‘40 (D) Helen Reardon Agnew (D) Eric & Heather Redman (FM) Bruce ‘77 and Alida Robertson (FM) ROC/US Technology Cooperation The Rock Foundation Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer Ropes & Gray The Runstad Foundation Mary Ryan (D) S.O.S. Foundation Safeco Insurance Company Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D) Thomas ‘73 (D) & Greta Sedlock (FM) Seed I.P. Law Group, PLLC Shidler McBroom Gates & Lucas (FM) Beryl Simpson ‘85 Skokomish Tribal Office
Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Thelma Hutchinson (D)
Denny & Sandra Miller (FM)
Catherine Smith ‘79
James & Nancy Irwin
Hugh Miracle ‘34 (D)
Eugene Smith ‘56 (D)
Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel
Mitsubishi Research Institute
Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe
Frank & Ella Moquin (D)
Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith
Thelma Moriarty (D)
S P R I N G 2 014
INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS
Condon Society Benefactors
uw law
JOHN T. CONDON SOCIET Y
Smith Goodfriend, P.S.
NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY
69
Report to Donors
Evelyn Cruz ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe Jr. (FM) Carlyn ‘81 & George (D) Steiner (FM) William & Augusta Steinert (D) R. Jack. ‘64 & Sandra Ann Stephenson (FM) Professor Emeritus William ‘59 (D) & Mary Stoebuck (FM) Eleanor Stokke (D) Carl Stork (FM) Daniel ‘55 & Susan Sullivan
Members have lifetime giving totaling $15,000 or more to the Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library at the School of Law. Acknowledgment of the Marian Gould Gallagher Society can also be found on the law library donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.
HENRY SUZZALLO SOCIET Y
DONORS by GIVING LE VEL
Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel
Members have made testamentary or other planned gifts to the School of Law.
Gifts reported here are those received this fiscal year and do not include pledges or other unrealized contributions or bequests.
Anonymous (4) Edna Alvarez ‘67 Edward ‘78 & Laura Chandler
$100,000 OR MORE
Osamu Hirakawa ‘77 Dean & Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth***
Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman
Seed I.P. Law Group, PLLC*
John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster**
Dunn Charitable Foundation
Sonderhoff & Einsel Law and Patent Office
Lynn ‘80 & Clinton Chapin
Robert Dunn (D) Ruth Dunn (D) Esther Johnson ‘40 (D) Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP Ed Kim ‘95 The Macfarlane Foundation
Patricia Allendoerfer
Perkins Coie Charitable Foundation Josef Rawert ‘09
The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jon ‘76 Bridge***
Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr. Brad Marten
Kevin Stock Stoel Rives LLP Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/ Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka
Inslee, Best, Doezie, & Ryder, PS* International Corporate Accountability Roundtable Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe
David & Daphne Tang*
Dan Kilpatric ‘76 & Colleen Kinerk ‘77
Tani & Abe
Kim & Chang
Van Ness Feldman GordonDerr
Craig ‘82 & Danna Kinzer Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Marten Law Group Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69
Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison
Vasiliki Dwyer
D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger***
Pacific Bankers Management Institute
$2,000 TO $4,999
Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott
Microsoft Corporation***
Perkins Coie LLP*
Texas Instruments Incorporated
James Ellis ‘49
Quil Ceda Village
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Anonymous (2)
Donald ‘54 & Kay Thoreson (FM)
Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison
Washington State Bar Association*
Ropes & Gray LLP Joseph & Katherine Ryan
American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers
$25,000 TO $99,999
S.O.S. Foundation
AMPACC Law Group, PLLC
The Seattle Foundation***
William & Sylvia Bailey
Garfield & Cynthia Jeffers
Sophie Albright (D)
United Way of King County
Bardehle Pagenberg Dost
Michael Jeffers ‘64
American Bar Association
Paul Van Wagenen ‘73***
Kenneth ‘88 & Lisa Baronsky
Alan Kane ‘65
Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84
Professor Deborah Maranville*
$5,000 TO $9,999
Thomas Bingham ‘77 & Patricia Char
Paul Metzner
Alice & Edna Athearn (D)*
Anonymous (3)
Diana ‘86 & Charles Carey (D) Jr.*
Barbara Barbee-Pelzel
Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams**
Florence Carkeek (D)
Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka Lyn Tangen ‘74 & Richard Barbieri (FM) Tani & Abe
Laura Crawford ‘86 Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis
Edith Tollefson (D)
Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80
Gail Gordon ‘77
Tousley Brain
Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich
Douglas Hendel ‘56
Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle
Professor Charles & Betty Corker (D) & Family
William Hochberg ‘83
Irwin ‘57 & Betty Lou Treiger (FM) Robert & Kathleen Trimble (FM) U.S. Charitable Gift Trust United States-Japan Foundation United Way of Snohomish County Nancy & Fred Utter Van Ness Feldman GordonDerr Verizon Communications Inc. W.A. Franke Washington State Bar Foundation Griffith ‘49 & Patricia Way Paul Webber ‘62 (FM) Werner Erhard Foundation Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison
Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis Lloyd A. DuCommun ‘34 (D) Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D) Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton
Nanci Kertson
The Family of Lawrence Hickman ‘36
Keith ‘72 & The Honorable Lynn Kessler
Professor Mary Hotchkiss & Mary Whisner
Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher
Partners of Levinson, Friedman, Vhugen, Duggan, Bland & Horowitz
Thomas Loftus ‘57 Wallace & Barbara Loh
Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.
Virginia Lowry
Polly ‘87 & David McNeill
Judith Maleng
Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot
W. H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask
Dean Richard & Joanne Roddis (D) & Family
Polly ‘87 & David McNeill
Professor Emeritus Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer
Ralph ‘62 & Bonnie Olson
Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D)
John ‘52 & Jacqueline Riley
Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot
Center for Children & Youth Justice Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder*
Boehmert & Boehmert* Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson** Colonel Josef ‘31 & Muriel Diamond (D) Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd**
King County Bar Foundation
Dorsey & Whitney, LLP*
Landesa Rural Development Institute
Scott Dunham ‘75 & Barbara Eliades**
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson*
AIP Patent & Law Offices
Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins** Connelly Law Offices
The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53
David ‘61 & Mary Williams
Garvey, Schubert & Barer
William Snyder ‘89/LL.M. ‘06
Catherine Smith ‘79
Woodcock Washburn
William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr.
John ‘53 & Doris Ellis*
Bagley & Virginia Wright Foundation
Diane ‘76 & Larry Stokke
Smith Goodfriend, P.S. Virginia Smith ‘46 (D)
Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc.
Juli Farris Franzosi Dal Negro Setti
Charles & Barbara Wright
Professor Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobell
The Honorable Alfred Holte ‘48 (D)***
Mario Franzosi
Paul ‘67 & Kathryn Whelan
D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young
NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY
$10,000 TO $24,999
Lynda & The Honorable Donald Horowitz Professor Mary Hotchkiss*
Anonymous (4)
Keith ‘72 & Lynn Kessler**
Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman
Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear, LLP
Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich*
Merchant & Gould
(D) DECEASED
Nakamura & Partners
Brian ‘77 & Elizabeth Morrison Jack ‘58 & Lora Mullin The Honorable Susan Owens
Peterson Wampold Rosato Luna Knopp
Bruce Dick ‘82 & Rexanne Gibson ‘82
John Frank & Delia Jampel
Washington State Bar Foundation
Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels
David Perkins ‘05
Skokomish Tribal Office
The Honorable Eugene ‘37 (D) & Esther Wright
Maiwald Patentanwalts GmbH
Clydia Cuykendall ‘74***
The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan
Squaxin Island Tribe
Beth Loveless
Esther Park ‘00
Riverstyx Foundation
Paul Van Wagenen ‘73
Deborah Livingstone
Cutler Nylander & Hayton, P.S.
Joseph & Katherine Ryan
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.**
Patrick ‘88 & Karen Crumb
W. J. Thomas Ferguson ‘67
Professor Jane & Peter Winn
Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee**
Pendleton and Elisabeth Miller Charitable Foundation*
Joanne Roddis (D)
Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle
Fenwick & West LLP
Professor Daniel Laster & Sharon Hazzard
The Honorable John & Gwen Coughenour
Toni C. Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock
William G. McGowan Charitable Fund
The Lane Family Foundation
Earthrights International Professor Jonathan ‘69 & The Honorable Deborah Eddy
Frommer Lawrence & Haug LLP Jose ‘76 & Olive Gaitan John Garner ‘77*** Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles Klaus Gradischnig Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton*
Professor William Rodgers Jr.* Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94 Laurie Rosini Starbucks Coffee Company David Stobaugh ‘75 & Lynn Prunhuber ‘79 Osamu Tanaka LL.M. ‘94 Donald Theophilus III ‘89 Arthur Tsien ‘78 & Judith McGuire*** Unitalen Attorneys at Law Professor Kathryn & Andrew Watts Mary Whisner** Professor Jane & Peter Winn* Woodcock Washburn Michelle Wu Yuasa & Hara
* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
S P R I N G 2 014
Squaxin Island Tribe
MARIAN GOULD GALL AGHER SOCIET Y
uw law
Sonderhoff & Einsel Law & Patent
71
Report to Donors
Michele & Jack Storms
Karen & Michael Collins
Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel***
JAMS, Inc.
Daniel Syrdal ‘75**
Douglas Jacobsen ‘54
AILA Washington Chapter
Judicial Dispute Resolution LLC
Dean Kellye Testy & Tracey Thompson
Margaret Clements & David Allen
The Honorable Joan ‘75 & George Allison
Eiji Katayama
James Torgerson ‘84 & The Honorable Morgan Christen**
Terry Abeyta ‘76
Eric Anderson ‘94 & Stephen Tollafield
Charles ‘65 & Nancy Kimbrough
Arnold ‘59 & Carol Barer*
Richard ‘77 & Christine Kitto Jr.
Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80
Shelley Kostrinsky
Clemens Barnes ‘69 & Lisa Anderson
Brian ‘71 & Marilyn Kremen Professor Patricia Kuszler
Mark Beatty ‘79
Julie Lanz ‘01 & Max Ochoa
Major Joshua Berger ‘03
Kathleen Lemly
Stephen ‘93 & Julie Bishop
Douglas Love ‘88 & Rachel Running
The Boeing Company*** Bruce ‘81 & Christine Borrus The Honorable Robert ‘58 & Cathy Bryan
Dario Machleidt ‘09 Kara & Ken Masters John McKay Jr.
Samual & Loretta Chapin
Professor Jacqueline McMurtrie & William Gales
Chehalis Confederated Tribes
Jerry ‘68 & Darlene McNaul***
Steven ‘93 & Jungyeol Cho
Steven Miller ‘00
William ‘75 & Kathleen Collins**
Laurie Minsk ‘84 & Jerry Dunietz
Stephanie Cox
Donna Moniz ‘82*
Crissa Cugini ‘85
National Christian Foundation
Darren Carnell ‘95**
Charles Curran ‘60 John ‘70 & Zona Deweerdt Scott Dinwiddie ‘95 & Andrea Menaker ‘95 Professor Dwight ‘73 & Kathleen Drake
The North Ridge Foundation* Douglas Ogden ‘89** Oh-Ebashi LPC & Partners
Bruce Duff ‘89
Professor Kathleen O’Neill & David Laskin
Charles ‘71 & Jane Ekberg***
Timothy Parker & Barbara Boivin
Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott**
Judy Pigott
Professor Mary Fan
Robert ‘79 & Diane Pittman
Cynthia Fester*
James & Doreen Rigos
Daniel Finney ‘88**
J. Thurston & Catherine Roach
Daniel Fisher ‘88
Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle Irwin (D) ‘57 & Betty Lou Treiger** Nancy Vandercook ‘82 Michael ‘96 & Dina Wampold Washington and Mediation Services Karen Weiland Edward & Mary Wendell Jr. David ‘61 & Mary Williams* Craig Wright ‘91 H. Kevin ‘89 & Anne Wright Koichi & Yukari Yamaoka
Richard Cleva ‘79*
The Honorable Peter ‘62 & Sally Jarvis
Stew Cogan
John ‘70 & Emilie John
Barbara & Philip Cutler
K & L Gates
Abigail Daquiz ‘04 & James Babcock
Thomas Keane ‘78 & Martha Noerr ‘78**
Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
Professor Lisa Kelly
Richard Dykstra
Diane Kero ‘81
Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger**
Professor Alan Kirtley & Lon-Marie Walton
Ramona Emerson ‘91 & Brian McMullen
Professor Anita Krug
Katherine Fletcher & Kenneth Weiner Donovan Flora Aline Flower Elizabeth Ford Thelma Franco Robert Free ‘75 & Carolyn Corker-Free*
Jeremy ‘92 & Tara Larson Steven Lawrenz The Honorable J. Robert Leach ‘76 & Vickie Norris* Robert ‘97 & Jennifer Leinbach Clark Lin ‘08
$500 TO $999
Susan French ‘67
Paula Littlewood ‘97*
Danika Adams ‘07 & Matthew Litke
Robert Friedman ‘77 & Anita Davidson
Betty Lukins
Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama Professor Craig ‘89 & Joyce Allen Kimberly Ambrose ‘89 American Arbitration Association Amgen Foundation, Inc. Jessica Andrade Adam Andrews ‘09
Jason Froggatt ‘95 & Wendy Lister The Honorable Carol ‘54 & Herbert ‘54 Fuller John Gadon ‘83 Mark ‘90 & Diane Gary Rebecca ‘02 & Kevin Glasgow Todd Gluth Professor Julia Gold
Rebecca Andrews ‘03 & Scott Olmsted
Peter Goldman & Martha Kongsgaard
The Honorable Marlin Appelwick ‘79 & Sharron Sellers**
Michelle Gonzalez Gordon Tilden Thomas & Cordell LLP
J. Patrick ‘76 & Peggy Aylward
Claire ‘86 & Paul Grace* Douglas Green ‘78***
Jan Baisch
Mark Griffin
Martin ‘70 & Andrea Lybecker*** Patrick ‘91 & Pauline Madden
Mills Meyers Swartling, PSC Grayce & Robert Mitchell Morrison & Foerster, LLP Mundt MacGregor LLP Nagashima Ohno & Tsunematsu
Professor Louis & Susan Wolcher
Robert Choo Jeffrey Christensen ‘07 Beth Clark ‘84 Professor Tom Cobb & Kevin Francis Gerald ‘70 & Jeannie Coe Joshua Colangelo-Bryan ‘99 Lauren Conner Elizabeth & Scott Coplan Lisa & Bruce Corker* Robert Crees ‘56*
Nicholas Hesterberg ‘09 & Maria Forero Jayanne Hino ‘83 William Hochberg ‘83 Michael Hoge ‘75 Brooks Holland Lenny Hom* Walter ‘62 & Theodora Howe Jr. Gary ‘75 & Chris Huff Sylvester ‘79 & Marlys Jaime*** Richard ‘82 & Agnes Johannsen
Judy & Michael Crutcher
Jeffrey ‘93 & Cassandra Johnson
The Honorable Ronald Culpepper ‘76
Raymond Johnson ‘77 Brent ‘99 & Amy Jones
Leon Dayan
Professor John Junker
William Deasy ‘63
Alan ‘65 & Cheryl Kane***
Decagon Devices, Inc.
Kathy’s Women’s Lunch Group
Anne ‘89 & J. Scott Denko Roy ‘02 & Truwyn Diaz Signe Dortch ‘99 & Christopher Black ‘01 Dominick ‘56 & Aurora Driano* Elizabeth Dunn
The Honorable Kelsey Kawano ‘84 John Knox ‘82 & DeeAnn Sisley* Jeffrey ‘86 & Suzanne Koontz
The Honorable Robert ‘78 & Seda Lasnik
Lori Nomura ‘93 & Hossein Nowbar ‘93
Anonymous (2)
Howard ‘61 & Diane ‘61 Engle Jr.***
Andrew Lauersdorf
Leslie ‘00 & Mark Olson
Susan & Richard Ahearn
Federal Bar Association
John Osborn
Sara Ainsworth ‘96
Sally ‘95 & Kurt Feldman
John Peterson ‘07
Amy Alexander ‘11 & Gabriel Kangas
Gordon ‘73 & Robin Ferguson
James Amber
Joanne Foster ‘77
Karen Andersen ‘86 & Michael Matthews
Richard Gans ‘88 & Jennifer Turner
Professor Thomas & Lauren Andrews
Glenda Gertz
Klara ‘96 & Professor Gregory Hicks
Jeffrey ‘74 & Pamela Pewe
John ‘78 & Patty Hammar Daniel ‘77 & Margaret Hannula*
Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr.**
Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen
John ‘82 & Christine Smith
The Honorable Mary ‘58 & Thomas Brucker*
Vanessa Power ‘00 Quinault Beach Resort & Casino Cameron & Tori Ragen Thomas ‘84 & Tracy Read*** Charles Robinson ‘81
Mark ‘87 & Margo Huth
Skylee Robinson ‘09
Innocence Project NW
Professor Emerita Marjorie Rombauer ‘60*
* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
James Williams
David ‘94 & Miriam Chiappetta
$250 TO $499
Scott ‘83 & Barbara Borth
(D) DECEASED
Marc ‘82 & Rochelle Wilhelm**
Colton Carothers ‘11
Hope Herron
Eric ‘87 & Susan Lansverk
Andrew & Brenda Bor
Faith Ireland
James Wendell ‘13
Byrnes Keller Cromwell, LLP
Earle Hereford Jr. ‘73 & Margaret Winsor*
Gregory Edmiston ‘87/LL.M. ‘99 & Debra Leith ‘87
Elizabeth Schubert ‘05 & Carl Ton
Evan ‘56 & Elizabeth Inslee
Washington Fire Chiefs
Dennis Burman ‘77
The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen*
Savitt Bruce & Willey LLP
Stokes Lawrence, P.S.
Ronald & Kiti Ward
Lt. Colonel Harold Brown ‘84
The Honorable Frederick ‘61 & Jean Hayes
Michael ‘81 & Karin Kuntz
Darrell ‘68 & Nina Hallett
Richard Hopp ‘76 & Debbie Walsh
Ivy Wang
April Brinkman ‘05
David & Kimberly Eckstein
Saltchuk Resources, Inc.
Robert ‘73 & Katherine Campbell**
Teresa Wakeen
Elizabeth Hawkins ‘10
Molly ‘04 & Daniel Eckman*
Lynn Hall ‘91
John ‘70 & Rebecca Steel*
Wakeen & Associates
Donald Harrison ‘74
The Honorable Philip ‘72 & Dorothy Brandt
The Honorable Mary Yu
The Honorable Robert Peterson ‘53
Ann Hemmens
Eric Volz
Michael ‘72 & Virginia Hall
Professor Karen Boxx ‘83
Lien Yu ‘97
The Honorable Robert ‘58 & Mary Harris
Marjorie & Lembhard Howell
JoAnne Tompkins ‘80 & Jon Schorr
Chun Ng ‘91 & Pei Wang
Charles Blumenfeld ‘69 & Karla Axell
Craig ‘56 & Jean Campbell
Philip Thompson ‘82 & Elizabeth Dolliver**
Sharon Nelson ‘76
Camden Hall ‘65
Professor Hugh Spitzer ‘74 & Ann Scales
Terrell Marshall Daudt & Willie
Gerald ‘61 & Michelle Hahn
Jill Bowman ‘81
Karen Kruse ‘90 & Bruce Cross*
John Binns Jr. ‘64
Troy Hansen
Gerald LL.M. ‘96 & Bridget Swanson II
The Boston Foundation
Roxanne Eberle ‘09
Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr.*
Feliciana ‘78 & Professor William Burke*
Swanson Capital Management, LLC
President Michael & Marti Young
John ‘55 & Lynn Gose
Christopher ‘75 & Cheryle Hirst*
Diane ‘76 & Larry Stokke
James ‘53 & Patsy Nelson
Hall Zanzig Clafin McEachern, PLLC
Bradley Johnson Attorneys
Shannon ‘56 & Donna Stafford**
Cynthia Whitaker ‘76 & Dan Carmichael
William & Rita Bender
Akimitsu LL.M. ‘95 & Kaoru Hirai
Shan Sivalingam ‘07
Nicholas Miller ‘73
The Runstad Foundation
Lourdes Fuentes ‘96
Morris ‘63 & Donna Shore
David Whedbee ‘04
Breean Beggs ‘91 & Laurie Powers ‘91
Victor ‘52 & Darlene Haglund
Hatsushi Shimizu
Aurora ‘97 & David Martin
Stanton ‘86 & Bette Beck
Foster Pepper PLLC
Jon Schneidler ‘69
David ‘83 & Sharon West
Ruckelshaus Center Foundation
Renee Griggs
B. Michael Schestopol ‘73 & Sarah Mann
Maisano Mediation, LLC
Joanne Roddis (D)
Gary ‘74 & Kristen (D) Fluhrer ‘74
72
The Honorable Ernest Kubota ‘58*
Ryan, Swanson & Cleveland, PLLC
Jorgen Bader ‘61*** Brian Balch ‘81 Keith Baldwin ‘66 Baumgartner, Nelson & Wagner, PLLC Marsha Beck ‘72 John Bishop ‘51 Jenessa Boleda ‘07
Cari Laufenberg ‘03 Kris Lee ‘90/LL.M. ‘91 Jonathan Leptich ‘08 Jeremy Lieb ‘13 Derek Loeser ‘94 & Katherine Van Kessel Robert MacAulay ‘82 & Keri Ellison*
Steven ‘07 & Emma Gillespie
Donald ‘68 & Brenda Mallett***
Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88
Professor Anna Mastroianni & Gregory Shaw
Michael Gotham ‘93 & Kenneth Wingard Jikizizwe Gqiba-Knight ‘09 & Carrie Evans Rita ‘84 & John Griffith
Gail Mautner The Honorable Richard ‘70 & Janis Miller Bernard Minsk
S P R I N G 2 014
Mark ‘67 & Julie Hutcheson
uw law
$1,000 TO $1,999
Carol Moody ‘80 73
Report to Donors
Douglas Anderson ‘77 & Anne Noonan
Satoru Nagasaka LL.M. ‘01
David & Sri Thornton
James Nelson ‘80 & Meredith Copeland ‘82
Richard Titus Jr. ‘78**
Edwin ‘56 & Jeanne Anderson Jr.
William Nelson ‘68 Kiichi Nishino Thomas O’Grady
Professor Michael Townsend & Jenny McCloskey Hubert ‘66 & Margueriette Travaille
Mark ‘88 & Marlee Anderson Thomas ‘67 & Saloma-Lee Anderson
John Demco & Patricia Cirtaut
Emily ‘04 & Denver LL.M. ‘07 Gant
David Huang LL.M. ‘71/ Ph.D. ‘75
Ishbel Dickens ‘02
Andrew Gauen ‘74
Juvella & Joseph Huang
Charles ‘65 & Lorna Diesen
Thomas Gayton ‘70
Christopher Hutton
Donna Leong ‘79 & Robin Uyeshiro*
Stephen Camden ‘67
Maureen Dightman ‘73
Jeffrey ‘88 & Jennifer Letts
Donald ‘83 & Linda Dimmitt
Jennifer ‘92 & Randolph ‘92 Geller
Lori Irwin ‘83
Jeffrey Capeloto ‘86
Ross Jacobson ‘76
Sherry Leysen
Aaron Caplan
Professors Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobell ***
Constance Jarvis ‘55
Richard & Anne Lichtenstadter
C&G Law Group, P.S. Professor Steve Calandrillo & Chryssa Deliganis*
Jessy Ang
Doreen Cardin
James Arkoosh ‘79
Stanley Carlson ‘65***
Sarah ‘02 & Scott Armstrong
Cynthia Carroll ‘95
The Honorable Robert ‘54 & Elizabeth Utter
The Honorable Sharon Armstrong ‘74
Brent Carson ‘86 & Jill Burday-Carson
John ‘75 & Vickie Peick
The Honorable Frederick ‘68 & Jane Van Sickle*
Teresa ‘83 & Professor Robert Aronson
Aline Carton
Peick Law Group, P.S.
Ruth & Herman Wacker
John ‘69 & Susan Cary**
Mary Peterson ‘01
Lori Walls ‘07 & John Garibaldi
Associated Counsel for the Accused
Nicholas Drader ‘00 & David Eldred ‘96
Holley Cassell
V. Marc ‘76 & Beth Droppert
Robert ‘72 & Joan Cathcart
Timothy Drury ‘90
Cathy Catterson
Richard ‘76 & Lynn Du Bey
Anastasia Caviris ‘01
Chris Duehle ‘90
Andrew Chan ‘02
P. Wickstrand ‘70 & Sheila Dufford
Randall Olsen ‘06 & Terra Clarke Olsen David ‘70 & Anna Oswald Dean Pedersen Charles Peery ‘62
Post-Prison Education Program Rebecca ‘05 & Valentin ‘05 Povarchuk Milbert ‘62 & Rachel Price** The Honorable Norman ‘58 & Barbara Quinn Amit Ranade ‘03 & Jennifer Faubion ‘07 Edwin Rauzi ‘81 & Shana Chung*** RealNetworks Foundation Ronald Renshaw Kristina Ringland ‘09
The Honorable Michael ‘79 & Lois ‘80 Trickey
Raymond ‘76 & Marie Walters*** The Honorable Kim Wardlaw Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
F. Andrekita Silva ‘87 & Philip Mealand Grant ‘53 & Nancy Silvernale Jr. Cameron Smith ‘03/LL.M. ‘04 Snohomish County Superior Court Kazuaki Sono ‘69 Evelyn Cruz Sroufe ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe William Stevenson Julie Straub-Barreto & Professor Matthew Barreto Michael Tardif ‘74
(D) DECEASED
Louisa Barash & Scott David
Esther Bartfeld ‘98 & Roger Wynne
John Whalen LL.M. ‘06
Rando ‘90 & Ketia Wick
Shoalwater Bay Tribe
Ian & Lynne Bannerman
James Weisfield ‘91 & Kelly O’Connell-Weisfield
Heidi Sachs ‘81 & John Friedhoff
Barbara ‘84 & Peter Sherland
Magda Baker ‘00
Jeff ‘12 & Heather Barnum
Jack Whisner
Sabina ‘02 & Evan ‘02 Shapiro*
William ‘97 & Yao LL.M. ‘98 Bailey
Joseph ‘81 & Kathryn Weinstein
Alan Ross ‘00 & Peggy Keene
Professor Eric Schnapper & Professor Susan Casteras
Badgley-Mullins Law Group
Kristen Barnhart
Douglas ‘84 & Elizabeth Wheeler*
Betty ‘78 & Professor Lawrence Schall
Ellen Bachman ‘74**
John Wechkin ‘96
David ‘83 & Donna Robbins
Daniel Satterberg ‘85 & Linda Norman ‘85
74
John ‘55 & Susan Tomlinson
Kevin Byrd
The Honorable Jay White ‘71 Wild Sky Law Group, PLLC Phillip ‘69 & Constance Winberry*** Michael Withey Ya-Ling Wu ‘08 The Honorable Thomas ‘68 & Yvonne Wynne Motohiro Yamane LL.M. ‘07 & Ha Ju
Jared Barrett ‘07
Jerry Bassett ‘72*** Ronald Beard ‘93 The Honorable Mary Becker ‘82 Melanie Beckwith ‘11 John ‘65 & Susan Bergmann
Maria & Brett Bickerton Robert Bilow ‘70 & Jeannine Mehrhoff*** Alison Blair ‘06
$100 TO $249
Nicole ‘07 & Emmanuel Borromeo
The Honorable Gerry ‘64 & Christine Alexander The Honorable Lesley Allan ‘83 Alsdorf Dispute Resolution Robert Alsdorf Emily Alvarado ‘09
The Honorable Richard Clifton Molly Cohan ‘77 Richard ‘71 & Jane Cohen** The Honorable Bruce ‘61 & Karen Cohoe
Robert Bowditch Jr. ‘67 Ellen Bowman & Gary Morse Donald Brazier Jr. ‘54** Skylar Brett ‘12 Thomas & Virginia Brewer Rear Admiral Herbert Bridge & Edith Hilliard Amanda Brings
David Doran ‘90 The Honorable Robert Doran
Susan & Patrick Dunn Deborah Dwyer ‘89 & Lawrence Field
Michiko ‘74 & Bernard Crampe Murray & Lillian Crawford Derek LL.M. ‘11 & Paige LL.M. ‘04 Crick Crissy Field Dog Group John Crosetto ‘05 Stephen Crossland Michael Cummins ‘94 Gary ‘65 & Marilyn Cunningham*** Donald Dahlgren ‘60 Harold Daniels Mark Davidson ‘75
Timothy & Susan Gilmore
James Johns
Danielle ‘99 & Michael Githens
Bertil ‘65 & Nancy Johnson
Chris Goelz & Joanne Abelson Brad Goergen ‘02 Paul Goldberg ‘67 Abigail Goldy ‘01 Jeffrey Gonzales ‘82*
George Farber ‘93 Philip ‘49 & Lindy Faris Harry Fay ‘70
Henry ‘62 & Catherine Haas Professor Alon Halevy Shelley Hall ‘98 Shelley Halstead Richard Hansen ‘74 Goro Hashimoto LL.M. ‘86 John ‘53 & Geraldine Hay Beau Haynes ‘11 & Idalia Limon Genevieve Hayton ‘09
Jeanette Henderson ‘88
Alicia Feichtmeir ‘09
Hendricks & Lewis, PLLC
Grace Feldman
Professor Joseph Henke ‘64 & Julie Speidel
John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr. Jennifer Mahalingappa ‘00
M. Gerald Herman ‘60 & Antonie Humphreys Zachary ‘06 & Heidi Hiatt Marie Higuera ‘95
Roberta ‘80 & Charles Katz Jr. Dean Kawamoto Kathleen Keasler Stanley Kehl ‘73 & Karen Fie Kathryn Kelly Robert ‘66 & Mary Keolker* H. K. Bruss Keppeler ‘66 Christine Kim ‘10/LL.M. ‘11 David ‘71 & Karen King Brent ‘93 & Peggy Kinkade* William Kinsel ‘88 Megan Kirk ‘02 Dustin ‘99/LL.M. ‘99 & Mary Klinger Mary ‘74 & Professor Alan Klockars*** Professor Sanne Knudsen & Todd Wildermuth David Ko LL.M. ‘07 Ming Yat Ko The Honorable Ted ‘64 & Marian Kolbaba
Robert Mahon III LL.M. ‘96
Daniel LL.M. ‘07 & Kristen Manson Donald Marinkovich ‘59 Jennifer Marlow ‘10 Nicholas Marritz ‘11 Hugh Matsubayashi ‘97 & Ivy Chen Mari Matsumoto ‘07 & Taylor Black James McAteer ‘54 Pamela McClaran ‘88 Kevin McClure ‘95 James McCullagh ‘97 Robert McGinness Alexandra McKay ‘05 The Honorable Larry McKeeman ‘76 & Cynthia Treharne Jack ‘59 & Carolyn McMurchie** Tom Melancon Ian Mensher ‘07 Jenifer Merkel ‘03 MFR Law Group LLC
Senator Albert ‘78 & Sally Kookesh
John & Diane Michalik John Mooring ‘75
Rodman Miller ‘50**
Mary ‘82 & Karl ‘82 Forsgaard
Deborah Hilsman ‘83
The Honorable Kevin Korsmo ‘82
Larry Fox
Jessica Hoerschelmann ‘10
Lisa Kremer ‘08
Karen Hoewing ‘77 Michael ‘59 & Anne Holmes*
The Honorable David ‘78 & Peggy Kurtz***
George ‘77 & Patsy Holzapfel
Margarida Kuwan
Scott ‘97 & Jennifer Morris*
Teresa Kuwan Winnie Kwan
G. Rick ‘70 & Susan Morry***
Anna Franz ‘08 Kristen Fraser ‘91
Craig Day ‘92
Frederick ‘65 & Carol Frederickson
Amy De Santis ‘11
Steve Fredrickson
Ward ‘93 & Boni Buringrud*
Shawna Deane
Patricia & Michael Frost
Shon Hopwood
Teresa ‘03/LL.M. ‘04 & Matthew Byers
Aimee Decker ‘09 & Kevin Higinbotham
Alison Gaffney ‘12
Wesley Hottot ‘08
* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
Donna Lurie
J. Richard Manning
Marc Greenough ‘94
Jon ‘86 & Jane Hongladarom
William ‘69 & Kathleen Britton*
Vivian Luna ‘77 & Caesar Pizano
Elisabeth Manheim
Jeffrey Fehr ‘02
James ‘78 & Barbara Fitzgerald
John Ludlow ‘76
Robert Kaplan ‘69 & Professor Margaret Levi
James ‘60 & Ulla Feeley
Aydin Firuz ‘12
Paula Johnson
Patrick Loney ‘11
Andrew ‘04 & Hillary Greene
C. Henry ‘48 & Beatrice Heckendorn
Mary Lou Fenili & Karen Hansen
Nathan Johnson
W. Charles & Gretchen Lobitz
Melissa Kane
Oriana Halevy ‘00
The Honorable Ellen ‘82 & Douglas Fair*
Jennifer Johnson ‘99
Richelle Little ‘07
Thom ‘76 & Julie Graafstra
Susan ‘79 & Terry Egnor**
Muriel Epstein
The Honorable Charles Johnson ‘57*
David Linnan
Andreas ‘99 & Professor Sarah ‘03 Kaltsounis
Benjamin Halasz
Josephine Ennis ‘13
Bruce Johnson ‘13
Irene Leonard
Stephen Good ‘67
Eleanor Edwards-Holbrook ‘53
Maurice Epstein ‘54 (D)
Lee Covell ‘69
Michael B. Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich
Don Gulliford ‘68 & Sharon Setzler
Scott ‘91 & Christine Edwards
Professor Stewart Jay
Warren Gilbert Jr. ‘54
Malcolm Edwards ‘57
Stacy Connole ‘02 & Sims Weymuller ‘02
Anne ‘76 & George Counts
Jayne Gilbert ‘89
G. Keith ‘52 & Naomi Grim
Howard ‘84 & Linda Coleman
The Honorable Susan Cook ‘85
Daniel ‘80 & Emily Gibson
Vasiliki Dwyer
Rudy ‘75 & Julie Englund
Jose-Angel Correa ‘85
Wayne ‘64 & Mary Booth Jr.
Ahlers & Cressman, PLLC
Timothy Clifford ‘60
Colonel ‘99 & Stacey Betz Jr.
Jingxin Zhan LL.M. ‘12
Arthur ‘79 & M. Elizabeth Abel
Carolyn Cliff ‘84
David ‘88 & Melinda Cook
Donna Bond ‘04
3M Foundation
John ‘73 & Susan Clees
The Honorable Daniel Berschauer ‘72 & Phyllis Edwards***
Hania Younis ‘09
Anonymous (2)
Jennifer ‘08 & Jerry ‘08 Chiang
Merrilyn & James Donaldson
Steven Gerttula ‘77
Bruce Leech
Professor Maureen Howard ‘86
James Ladley ‘61 Jeff Lane ‘09 Irma Laxamana ‘99 Serena Lee
Sarah Moran Delores Morris Jeff ‘67 & Julia Morris
Mary Moseley ‘87 Richard ‘61 & Mertie Muller**
S P R I N G 2 014
The Honorable A. Wallace & Kiyo Tashima
uw law
Kirk LL.M. ‘96 & Darcy Muzzy
Shunichi Nakagawa ‘81 75
Report to Donors
Theodore Schultz ‘67***
Fredric ‘72 & Tana Reed*
Thomas Nast ‘77
Milton ‘07 & Tara Reimers III
Professor Scott & Moira Schumacher
The Honorable Dorothy Nelson
AJ Rei-Perrine ‘04
Betty Ngan ‘82 & Tom Mailhot
Ana Selvidge Richard Settle ‘67
Clark Nichols LL.M. ‘12
Geoffrey ‘72 & Teresa Revelle*
Bradley ‘88 & Ann Shannon***
Mark ‘84 & Mary Nielsen
James Reynolds ‘67
David Norris ‘78
Eric Rhoades ‘12
Cynthia Sharp ‘10 & Lincoln Kamell
Jule ‘98 & Frederick Northup Sr.**
Sarah Rice ‘93 & Timothy Allen ‘04
Robert ‘70 & Patricia Nostrand
Nita Rinehart ‘89
Janet & Bruce O’Connor Cooper ‘08 & Lauren ‘09 Offenbecher Theodore Olson ‘61 Rufus ‘63 & Bonnie Orr Joni Ostergaard ‘80 & William Patton Michael Overlake ‘08 & Rosemary Tyksinski
Glade LL.M. ‘07 & Tamera Risenmay Daniel Ritter ‘63 Professor Beth Rivin
Cynthia Shaw ‘84 G. William Shaw ‘78 & The Honorable Laura Inveen ‘79 David Shelton ‘70 & Frauke Rynd Allison Sherrill ‘12
Robert ‘72 & Senator Linda Parlette
Martin ‘84 & Genevieve Rollins
Phillip Singer ‘01
Gavin Parr ‘00*
Amanda Rose
Linda Parrish ‘90 & Craighton Goeppele ‘91
Stephen Ross
Jamie Perry John Pettit ‘73 & Constance Miller
Linda Roubik ‘85*** Alan ‘81 & Suzanne Rubens* Yurij Rudensky ‘13 Karen Russell
Teresa Pottmeyer ‘82 & Geoffrey Trowbridge William Powell ‘56 Arlene Price** Terry Price ‘01 Neil Proto Gregory Provenzano ‘82 The Honorable Justin Quackenbush Fred Rapaport ‘82 & Christine Sutton*
(D) DECEASED
The Honorable Charles ‘55 & Eleanor Smith Gerald Smith ‘70***
Alan ‘96 & Kathryn Souders
Nicole Ryan
The Honorable Mariane ‘84 & Judge Michael Spearman
Yoshiko Saheki* Susan Sampson ‘74 Faye Samuels
The Honorable Richard Sanders ‘69
Warren Postman
Shannon Skinner ‘82 & Thomas Tanaka ‘82
Elizabeth ‘94 & Paal Ryan*
Susan & Robert Pike
Ana-Maria Popp ‘07
Sisu Logging Company
Randy & La Dean Smith
Kasey Sancewich LL.M. ‘07
Pop Multimedia Inc
Natasha Singh ‘07
The Honorable John ‘59 & Ann Rutter Jr.***
Douglas ‘87 & Cecille Phillips Grzegorz Plichta ‘04
Todd Terbeek Devin Theriot-Orr ‘03 & Amber Vora Robert Thiel LL.M. ‘98 Paul Thonn ‘55 Keith Tichenor ‘69
Patrick Trompeter ‘04
Richard Simkins
Aaron Perrine ‘02
Karl Tegland ‘72*
J. Ronald ‘68 & Barbara Sim**
James ‘80 & Mary Rohrback
Ruby Pediangco ‘94 & Matt Shumway
William ‘91 & Susan Taylor*
Beth Touschner
Michael & Janet Parks
Michael Pedhirney ‘04
Fredric & Marylin Tausend
Susan Shyne ‘85 & Kirk Dawson
Michael ‘86 & Susan Rogers
Brian Sander ‘03
Martha Sandoval ‘07 & Robert Kristjanson Sallie & Christopher Sanford Suzanne Sarason ‘81* Mark Scheibmeir ‘81 & Wendy Tripp ‘81 Robert Schillberg ‘59
Snell & Wilmer, LLP
Judithe Speidel Eric ‘97 & Robyn Stahl Michael Stanley ‘78 Maxine Stansell ‘79 The Honorable Robert ‘61 & Dolores Stead Craig ‘70 & Sheila Sternberg Denise Stiffarm ‘96 The Honorable Waldo ‘49 & Norma Stone The Honorable James ‘71 & Cheryl Stonier
Diego Gavilanes ‘76
Ruth Darden ‘74
Meghan Gavin
Roger Brodniak ‘00
Don Dascenzo ‘78
Malik Gbenro
Thomas Brookes ‘89
Gavin Davis ‘13
Lesli Genstler ‘88
James Brown LL.M. ‘05
William Davis ‘98*
Stephen Brown ‘80
Dennis de Guzman ‘96
Christian LL.M. ‘97 & Aimee Gianni
Kim ‘78 & Bridget Buckley
Derrick De Vera
Michele Buckley ‘11
Robin Dean ‘10
Zana Bugaighis ‘08
Geoff Deane
Winnie Cai ‘06 & David Paul
Emily Deckman ‘05
Hugh Cain ‘82 & Anne Clark
Jeffrey DeGroot ‘13
Daniel Cairns
Michelle DeLappe ‘09/LL.M. ‘10 & Avilio Villamediana
Patsy Wosepka & Shashi Karan
Jeannette & Eli Yim
John Roberts
Darryl & Victoria Parker
Zachary & Allison Daniels
Nicole Brodeur
Faye Tao
Pamela Tonglao ‘99
Kerry Robinson
W. Earl Britt
Bruce Witenberg & Nancy Carel
Thomas Wyrwich ‘12
Neal ‘64 & Linda Shulman
Joan Robinson ‘77
Bruce ‘84 & Janet Winchell
The Honorable Philip ‘76 & Darlene Talmadge
Bethany Roberts
Simburg, Ketter, Sheppard & Purdy
Vernon Pearson (D)
Jordan Talge ‘11
Robin Robbins
Charles ‘60 & Marilyn Roe Jr.
David & Sarah Patton
Christopher Sweeney ‘04 & Brandon Loo
Michael Shinn ‘92 & Ellen Lairson
Joel ‘70 & Helen Paget
Patrick Dunn & Associates, LTD
76
Howard ‘61 & Lavonne Reser*
Barbara Selberg ‘87
Akane Suzuki ‘99 & Alexander Rea
D. Douglas Titus LL.M. ‘98
Russell ‘67 & Sara Tousley Amy Tucker LL.M. ‘00 Patrick ‘65 & Rebecca Turner** Richard Ullstrom ‘83
Atsushi Yamashita LL.M. ‘93 D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young Wei-Mou Yu LL.M. ‘06 JoAnn Yukimura ‘74 & John Wehrheim GIFTS OF $1 TO $99 Anonymous Charles ‘67 & Mary Lou Adams Bogdan Albu ‘12 Andrew ‘08 & Amanda Aley Perveen Ali ‘04
Connie Wan ‘06 John Ward ‘54 Charles Warner ‘47 Ian Warner ‘11 The Honorable Thomas ‘66 & Mary Warren
Caitlin Carroll
Samuel Andrews LL.M. ‘08 Teymur Askerov ‘12
Kenneth ‘84 & Ellen ‘85 Weber Ann Wennerstrom ‘08 Ronald Weston ‘85
Alexander Casey ‘10 Richard Caulfield Sara Cho
Michael Douglas ‘06 The Honorable William ‘78 & Laura Downing Dominick Driano Jr. LL.M. ‘98 Barbara Dunham ‘12 Darcie ‘04 & Yosef Durr Harold Dyger III & Joanne Moore Julieanna Elegant ‘09
Cyrus Christenson LL.M. ‘12
Gregory Ellis ‘08
Allison Bannerman ‘12
James Cissell ‘87 & Linda Johnson
Kathryn Engel ‘13
Michael Bayley ‘92
Katherine Clark ‘11
Amanda Beane ‘02
Charles Coleman III ‘74
James & Ruth Beardsley
Flannary Collins ‘02
Kelsey Beckner ‘09
Duncan Connelly ‘10/LL.M. ‘10
Mark Bailey ‘96 Amanda Ballantyne ‘12
Stephanie Bell ‘96
Julia Conway ‘12 Rachel Cook ‘13
Caroline Bercier ‘13
Keith Cooke & Lynda Zeis
Norman Best ‘86 & Susan Taylor
Adam Copley Professor William Covington
Timothy Billick ‘13
Sarah Cox ‘13
Ian ‘01 & Karena Birk
David & Mariana Crawfod
Sara Bliss ‘10
Caroline Crenna ‘87
Karen Bloom ‘08
David Cromwell ‘13
Robert Boruchowitz & Floye Sumida
Gary Cronk ‘64
David ‘75 & Julie Schnapf
Robert ‘52 & Cynthia Wetherholt
The Honorable Jack Scholfield ‘48
Paul Street ‘73**
Dwight Wheaton II ‘97
Lucille Scholfield (D)
Dorothy Streutker ‘82 & Ray Wichmann
Edward ‘76 & Margaret White
Karl & Jennifer Schrader
Jack ‘65 & Peggy Strother
Ronald Whitener ‘94
Kathleen & Devon Brewer
Bruce ‘83 & Pamela Schroeder
Margaret Sundberg ‘84***
Antoinette Wills
Emily Brice ‘11
Neil Sussman ‘82
Richard ‘76 & Catherine Wilson
Tina Eve Brier
* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
Tiffany Cartwright
David ‘55 & Nancy Dorsey
Charlene Choi ‘13
Leva Aubin
Christopher Strawn & Brynn Blanchard
Jenifer Schultz
Nicole Carsley
Patrick Doherty
Constance Ellingson ‘76 & Roger Cohen
Jessica Belle ‘13
Karen Watts
Jacob Dishion ‘13
Anastasia ‘09 & Matthew ‘10 Anderson
Washington Mediation Association
John ‘73 & Mary Watts*
Rebecca Carlson ‘10 /LL.M. ‘10
Benjamin ‘08 & Mindy ‘08 Carr
Bee Good Marketing
Laura Watson ‘98
Alyson Dimmitt
Kirsten ‘04 & Douglas Ambach
Washington Defender Association
Carolanne & Eric Watness
Garth ‘96 & Bridget Carlson
Hilary Carpenter ‘05
Charlotte ‘10 & Ibn Archer
Professors Walter Walsh & Anita Ramasastry
Jessica Dickinson
Altria Group, Inc.
Paul Vercruyssen ‘11 Ronald Wagenaar ‘84**
Kevin Diaz ‘96
Nikki Carlsey
Robert ‘83 & Janice Carmichael
Nicholas Anderson ‘04
Sarah Derry ‘13
Kathleen Callahan
Joan Altman ‘12
Vandeberg Johnson & Gandara, LLP Valerie Villacin ‘03
Charles Caldart ‘74 & Mary Kopas
Jade Bradfish ‘13 Andrea Bradford ‘12 Jessica Bran ‘05 Wesley Brenner ‘08
Marissa Cruz Michael ‘84 & Jean Cummings Janis ‘76 & John Cunningham Melissa Cunningham ‘13 Stephanie Curry ‘13 Tobias Damm-Luhr ‘10
Professor Jennifer Fan Jay Farrell LL.M. ‘07 Brian Ferrasci-O’Malley ‘13 Elizabeth Findley ‘13 Jaina Fisher ‘09 Alec Fisken Jr. Leonardo Flor ‘13 Elisa Ford ‘04 Steven ‘90 & Louise Forrest* Richard Forsell ‘80** Molly Foster ‘13 Lara Fowler ‘04 Jeffrey Frank Jonathan & Louise Franklin Elisabeth Frost ‘07 Everett Fruehling ‘91 & Lynne Thomas Tamara Gaffney Linda ‘86 & Gerald Gallagher Courtney Garcia ‘06 Nancy Garland ‘10 Scott Garrison ‘13 Gerard ‘83 & Jill Gasperini
Justin Gillette Phillip Gladfelter Paula Gluzman Darcey Goelz ‘09 Sherrie Goff ‘86 Rachel Gold ‘06 & Joshua Miller Benjamin ‘11 & Holly ‘10 Golden Rebecca Goodman Ken Gordon Miriam Gordon ‘13 Margaret Gorham Gail Gorud ‘82 David ‘58 & Carolyn Gossard Jr. Carole Grayson Michelle Gregoire ‘13 Michael Grem ‘13/LL.M. ‘13 Michelle ‘10 & Joseph Grienauer Lindsey Grieve ‘10 Kathleen Grohman ‘13 Lauren Guicheteau ‘13 Janet Gwilym ‘12 & Bing Tso Jr. Joseph Haberzetle ‘99/LL.M. ‘00 & Katherine Gardner Donald ‘65 & Mary Hale Garrett and Marcie Hall Herbert Hamada ‘74 Hilary Hammell ‘12 Josh Hansen Fred Harrington & Najmi Voss Bradford Hashimoto ‘13 Lena Haslund ‘07 Katy ‘07 & Robert ‘07 Hatfield Nick Hathaway Lisa Hayes ‘99 John ‘53 & Phyllis Hazelwood Robert Heller ‘84 Benjamin Hellerstein ‘10 Dennis Helmick ‘70 Lara Hemingway ‘00/LL.M. ‘01 Daniel ‘83 & Susan Hendrickson Katherine Herche ‘10 Heather Hightower ‘13 & Wesley Kovarik The Honorable Stephen Hillman ‘75 Joseph Hoffmann ‘84 & Mary Hennighausen Hoffmann
S P R I N G 2 014
Timothy Redford ‘83**
Karen ‘06 & Todd Nashiwa
uw law
Mehdi Nakhjiri & Erika Bliss
Douglas Hojem ‘80 77
Report to Donors
Susan Larrance ‘00
Robert ‘57 & Harriet Redman
Carol Mortensen ‘03
Joseph ‘04 & Lisa Rehberger
Andrew Murphy ‘13
Paula Simon ‘10
Darryl ‘82 & Jann Vhugen
Sumeer Singla ‘02
Matthew Viers ‘12
Jane & Jay Reich
Sean-Paul ‘13 & Christine Siska
Megan ‘08 & Jeffery Vogel
Jennifer Murray ‘05
Christopher Reitz ‘12
Tammy Sittnick ‘06
Rodney ‘70 & Nina Waldbaum**
Benjamin Lawver
Jenna Musselman Yott
Anna Revelle ‘07
Courtney Skiles ‘13
Christopher Wall ‘12
Sasha Lazarevich ‘11
David Myers LL.M. ‘12 Professor Theodore Myhre
Skyline at First Hill Residents’ Association
Rachael Wallace
Jeremy Lazowska ‘07
Sarah Reyneveld ‘11 & Joel Merkel Jr.
Amber Leaders ‘11
Kianoush Naficy ‘10
Timothy Reynolds ‘13
Pauline Smetka ‘80
Joseph Nagy ‘05/LL.M. ‘06
Richard J. Forsell, P.S.
Jonathan Smith ‘13
Spencer Hutchins ‘13
Gordon Lerman ‘13 & Jonathan Smith
Daniel Richards
Karl Smith ‘09
Shirley Hvalsoe
Tal Lev
Valerie Rickman ‘13
Leslea Smith ‘85
John ‘62 & Marli Iverson***
Kerem Levitas ‘09
Megan Rinehimer ‘10
Kurtis Smoke
Janet ‘03 & Professor Andrew Jacobs
The Honorable Roger Lewis ‘54*
Renata Robertson ‘13
Matthew Souza
Robert Jacoby
Jenna Lieske
Anna Robinson
Ann Spangler
Noah Jaffe ‘10
Jefferson Lin
Nancy Roehm
Abby St. Hilaire
Meena Jagannath ‘10
Robin ‘74 & Elizabeth Lindley
Kenneth Hong ‘13 James Howe ‘80 & Janet Gros Jacques** Lauren Hruska Thomas Hudson ‘13 Hana Hughson Vanessa Hunsberger ‘13
Ryan Jager ‘13 Aurora Janke ‘12 Emily Jarvis ‘09 Ralph Jefferson ‘06 Andrew ‘09 & Laurel Jennings Tor Jernudd ‘13 Frances & William Johnson Maureen Johnson LL.M. ‘11 Barbara ‘73 & Craig Johnston Ethan Jones ‘13 Tyson ‘06 & Joan Kade Bree Kameenui-Ramirez ‘03 & Miguel Ramirez Tanya Karwaki ‘96/LL.M. ‘12 Clifford Kato ‘13 Patrick Keefe Terrance Keenan ‘06 Meghan Kelly ‘11 Danny Kikuchi
Jaclyn Lasaracina Shannon Lawless ‘10 & Paul Crisalli
Ari ‘10 & Candace Neumann Ann & John Nez Christopher Noe ‘80 Benjamin O’Donnell ‘13 Chris Olah ‘12 Karl ‘86 & Melinda Oles Jody Olney ‘13 Elisabeth Oppenheimer
Andrea Lisenbee ‘99
Cherise Oram LL.M. ‘98
Professor Clark Lombardi & Greta Austin
Dylan Orr ‘09
Mindy Longanecker ‘10 Timothy Lovain ‘83 Jeanine Lutzenhiser ‘13 Lianne Malloy ‘84 Maria Manza Lee Marchisio ‘12 Kathryn Marckworth ‘13
Ashley Painter Alyson Palmer ‘13 Kelly Paradis ‘13 Grant Parker ‘88 Parker Law Firm Richard Paroutaud ‘75 Glen ‘97 & Madelyn Pascual**
Karin Rogers ‘09 Edith Rohrback Luke Rona ‘12 Stephen Rosenbaum Kendra Rosenberg ‘11 Lawrence Rozsnyai ‘06 Bryan Russell ‘13 Burt Ryan Katherine Sadlon ‘06
Shara Svendsen ‘06 & Alejandro Cumplido
Rosa Pazhouh ‘13
Kennedy & Anthony Sanderson
John McCormack ‘73* Professor Shannon McCormack Erin McCoy
Joanne Kim ‘13
Joyce McCray-Pearson
Michael Kim ‘12
Ellen ‘99 & Michael McCurdy
Chelsea ‘09 & Matthew Peters Alanna Peterson ‘13 Erin Pettigrew ‘12 Juli Pierce ‘04 Joshua Piper ‘06 Michael Pirog ‘11 Sean Plunkett
Alice Stokke & Jerome Kraus
Mallory Sullivan ‘13
Margo Martin ‘12
Thomas McCall Jr. LL.M. ‘81 & Kathleen Taimi
Caleb Stewart ‘12
Scott Samuelson ‘93 Beverly Sanders
Steven & Nena Peltin
Jan Stephens
Samuel Strauss ‘13
Frank ‘57 & Carol Payne
Janet ‘90 & Tim May**
Amanda ‘10 & Paul Stephen
Joseph Sakay ‘93 & Lisa Lee Lauren Sancken ‘10
Emily Pechar
Quentin ‘70 & Sherry Steinberg
Clifton ‘13 & Winifred Stratton III
Alec Paxton ‘13
Scott Matheson ‘01
William ‘07 & Stephanie Stafford III
Rachel Saimons ‘13
Danan Margason ‘10 & Aubri Goldsby ‘11
Jiewoo Kim ‘13
Bryan King ‘07
Herbert Swanson ‘48 Mary Swift ‘12
Rachel Santamaria-Schwartz ‘10
Michelle Taft ‘13
Kana Sasakura
Katherine Tarlock
Andrea Schmitt ‘07
TeisResources
Heather Schoonover
Russell Terry ‘09
Jay Schulkin Fallon Schumsky ‘13
Toby Thaler ‘76 & Beckey Sukovaty
Linda Sellers ‘88
Janet Thoman ‘06
Laurence Severance ‘80
Joyce Thomas
Julie Severson ‘12
Martin Thompson LL.M. ‘09
James Sfekas ‘07
Rebecca Thompson ‘13
Sammuel Shaddox ‘13
Emily Toler
Isidore Shapiro
Lori Tonnes-Priddy ‘13
Marc & Lori Shapiro
Danh Tran
Stanley Sharp ‘66
Jonathan Tse LL.M. ‘09
Trisna Tanus ‘13
Sanjay Walvekar ‘13 Emily Warden ‘94* Paul Weideman ‘09 Christian ‘01 & Kathryn Weinmann
GIF TS IN HONOR AND IN MEMORY OF FAMILY AND FRIENDS
During the 2012-13 Fiscal Year the School of Law received gifts in honor of and in memory of the following individuals and groups
David Wendells ‘66 & Marie Sutera-Wendells Ann Westberg John Wheaton
In honor of the Class of 1982
Williams, Kastner & Gibbs, PLLC
In honor of the Class of 2013
Brenda Williams ‘97 Charlotte Williams ‘10 Todd Williams ‘10 & Emily Smithgall Ashley Wilson Elliott Wilson ‘13 Jan Wilson Lewis Wilson ‘72* Jesse Woo ‘13 Alexander Wu ‘08 Yolanka Wulff ‘94 F. A. & Donna Yates Anne Yip ‘05
In honor of Bill Anderson ‘80 In honor of Satchel Joseph Black In honor of Molly Cohan and Brenda Williams In honor of Signe Dortch ‘99 and Lori Walls ‘07 In honor of Laura K. Fox In honor of Bill Gates Sr. ‘80 In honor of Becky Gifford In honor of Professor John O. Haley ‘71 In honor of Malin Hamblin In honor of Michael Hanrahan In honor of Professor Penelope A. Hazelton In honor of Professor Ralph Johnson In honor of Professor Lisa Kelly
John Yip ‘13
In honor of Will Kim ‘13
Ryan Yoke ‘13 & Leah Hampson-Yoke
In honor of Professor Jackie McMurtrie In honor of Rudy Rudolph
Thayer York
In honor of Dean Kellye Testy
Sears Young
In honor of Mark Will Tyson ‘13
Erika Yuen ‘05
In honor of Professor Kathryn A. Watts
Laura Zanzig ‘13
In honor of Mary Whisner and Professor Mary Hotchkiss
Daniel Zavala ‘13
In memory of John H. Bright lll ‘67
Zelle Hofmann Voelbel & Mason LLP
In memory of Professor Charles E. Corker
David Ziff Tiffany Zinter ‘08
In memory of The Honorable Lee Creighton ‘87 In memory of Patricia Jane Curran
Earl McGimpsey ‘71
Pitman ‘85 & Victoria Potter
Professor Kathleen McGinnis
PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP
Kathleen Kline ‘13
Harry ‘77 & Marjolein McLachlin*
Joseph Probst ‘12 & Jennifer Howard
Shaunta Knibb ‘97
Amanda McLean
Elisa Pupko & Michael Pope
Peter Koski
Kerra Melvin ‘13
Anne Purkey ‘13
Maya Mendoza ‘07 & Travis Exstrom ‘07
The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan
Lindsay Tuiasosopo
Tony Quang ‘13
Mike Meredith ‘12
R. M. Holt, Inc. P.S.
Kelly Sheridan ‘11
United Way of Silicon Valley
Clarence Rabideau ‘55
Adam Sherman ‘13
Sean Urban
In memory of Professor Paul Steven Miller
John Rafter ‘13
Ashley Sherwood ‘13
In memory of Stanley Samuels ‘56
Hollis-Anthony Ramsey ‘13
Daniel ‘13 & Heather Shickich
Pongtawat Uttravorarat LL.M. ‘11
In memory of Darlene Sherrick
Barbara Vallarino ‘02
In memory of Professor William Stoebuck ‘59
Mia Shiraishi ‘13
Joseph Vance ‘95
In memory of Judge James R. Thomas ‘60
Andrew ‘92 & Virginia ‘92 Shogren
Daniel Velloth ‘11
In memory of Leonard Thomas
Ronald Kinsey Jr. ‘67 David Klein LL.M. ‘11 Kathleen Kline
Judith Kovarik Anne Krepick LL.M. ‘06 Sarah Kriss LL.M. ‘10 Carolyn Krol Carly Kummerlowe ‘13 Kristen Kussmann ‘00 Alice Kwan Chris Lampkin
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The Honorable Frank Morrow ‘71
(D) DECEASED
Jeremiah Miller ‘08 Megan Miller Janelle Milodragovich ‘05 Leon Misterek ‘62 Kristen Mitchell ‘01 Paul Mollard
Heather Rankie ‘09 Elizabeth ‘12 & Scott Rasmussen
* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
Reba Turnquist
Yuliya Ziskina Yan Zou ‘13 Jenna Zwang
In memory of Professor Joan Fitzpatrick In memory of Betty ‘56 and Robert Fletcher In memory of Doris Gordon In memory of The Honorable Alfred O. Holte ‘48 In memory of Juan Gabriel Ibarra ‘99 In memory of Scott Lukins ‘54 In memory of Edward Malcolm In memory of Norm Maleng ‘66
S P R I N G 2 014
Chris Lanterman
Kimbrely ‘97 & Brooks Holtom
uw law
Richard ‘58 & Gerene Holt
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Report to Donors
L AW FIRM ANNUAL CHALLENGE
WASHINGTON L AW SCHOOL FOUNDATION
The seventh year of the Law Firm Annual Challenge saw tremendous support and alumni involvement. Alumni participation grew to 68% at participating firms and companies.
President
B OAR D MEMB ER S
Vice President
The Honorable Gerry Alexander ‘64 Bean Genry Wheeler Peternell
Don Theophilus ‘89 Swedish Medical Center Foundation
Top Finishers
Joel Benoliel ‘71
GROUP 1 (30+ ALUMNI)
Costco Wholesale Corporation
Growth of the Law Firm Annual Challenge
PERKINS COIE LLP
78%
FOSTER PEPPER
71%
ALUMNI PARTICIPATION THROUGH LFAC
Immediate Past President
GROUP 2 (11 - 29 ALUMNI)
68% 60%
INTELLECTUAL VENTURES
July 1, 2012-May 1, 2014
52%
53%
2009-10
2010-11
100%
LANE POWELL
94% 25%
GROUP 3 (10 OR FEWER ALUMNI) PETERSON WAMPOLD ROSATO LUNA KNOPP
100%
MONTGOMERY SCARP
100%
30%
34%
Linda Ebberson ‘76 Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson
Treasurer
Gregory Gorder ‘85 Intellectual Ventures
Judith Bendich ‘75 Attorney at Law David Broom ‘63 Paine Hamblen LLP Rick Dodd ‘70 K&L Gates Daniel Finney ‘88 Witherspoon Kelley
Robert Flennaugh ‘96 Law Offices of Robert Flennaugh II PLLC
Kenneth Schubert, Jr. ‘64 Garvey Schubert Barer
Robert Giles ‘74 Perkins Coie
Sabina Shapiro ‘02 Foster Pepper PLLC
Colleen Kinerk ‘77 Cable, Langenbach, Kinerk & Bauer, LLP
David Tang K&L Gates
Craig Kinzer ‘82 Kinzer Real Estate Services & Denny Hill Capital, LP Elizabeth Leedom ‘84 Bennett Bigelow & Leedom
Michael Wampold ‘96 Peterson Wampold Rosata Luna Knopp Craig Wright ‘91 Gordon Thomas Honeywelll
31%
PRE LFAC
2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2011-12
2012-13
L AW SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIREC TORS
July 1, 2012-May 1, 2014
S U P P O R T T H R O U G H L FAC H A S T R I P L E D S I N C E Y E A R 1
President
Learn more about the Challenge at law.washington.edu/lfac
Vice President
The Law Firm Annual Challenge serves as the foundation for an organized and mutually beneficial partnership to sustain and grow the UW School of Law for the betterment of the legal community and beyond. Special thanks to the Law Firm Annual Challenge representatives for their hard work and support:
Megan Vogel ‘08, Davis Wright Tremaine Sabina Shapiro ‘02, Foster Pepper PLLC Bruce Robertson ‘77 and Ken Schubert ‘64, Garvey, Schubert & Barer Nick Drader ‘00, Graham & Dunn PC Joe Sakay ‘93, Hillis Clark Martin & Peterson Greg Gorder ‘85 and Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94, Intellectual Ventures Kent Carlson ‘67 and Rick Dodd ’70, K & L Gates Diana Carey ‘86, Karr, Tuttle, Campbell
Shannon Lawless ‘10, Ryan, Swanson & Cleveland PLLC Mindy Longanecker ’10, Seattle City Attorney’s Office Howard M. Goodfriend ‘84, Smith Goodfriend, P.S.
D. Wayne ‘57 (D), Tim DeFors ‘09 and Paige Davis ‘04, Lane Powell, PC
Kimberly Eckstein Assistant Dean, UW School of Law
Jack Ding ‘11 Desh International Law
Eugene Lee ‘66 Blakemore Foundation
The Honorable Bobbe Bridge ‘76 Center for Children & Youth Justice
Faculty Director
Paula Littlewood ‘97 Washington State Bar Association
Darren Carnell ‘95 King County Prosecutor’s Office
Leonor Fuller ‘84 Fuller & Fuller
Maurice Classen ‘04 MacArthur Foundation Kendra Comeau ‘11 Patterson Buchanan The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53 U.S. District Court
Dwight Drake ‘73 Professor of Law, UW School of Law
Arley Harrel ‘73 Williams Kastner & Gibbs The Honorable Ken Kato ‘75 Retired, Mediation/ Arbitration Lisa Kremer ‘08 Gordon Thomas Honeywell
Mindy Longanecker ‘10 Seattle City Attorney’s Office Suzanne Love ‘05 King County Prosecutor’s Office Scott Morris ‘97 Inland Construction Christina Richmond ‘07 U.S. Department of Justice Skylee Robinson ‘09 Stoel Rives LLP
Arley Harrel ‘73, Williams Kastner PLLC Paul Vercruyssen ‘11, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Special thanks to Greg ’85 and Val Gorder who made a matching challenge as part of the Law Firm Annual Challenge. In addition to alumni support, the Law Firm Annual Challenge received contributions for special projects or matching funds from the following groups:
L AW SCHOOL ADVANCEMENT COMMIT TEE MEMBERS
July 1, 2012-May 1, 2014 Chair
Stanley Barer ‘63 Saltchuk Resources Inc. Judith Bendich ‘75 Attorney at Law
Tom Montgomery ‘90, Montgomery Scarp Heidi Sachs ‘81, Benjamin Golden ‘12 and Martha Sandoval ’07, Perkins Coie LLP
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Secretary
Sarah Reyneveld ’11, Washington State Attorney General’s Office
Guy Towle ’77, Miller Nash LLP
Felix Gavi Luna ‘97 and Mike Wampold ‘96, Peterson Wampold Rosato Luna Knopp
C. Deep Sengupta ‘01 Fed Ex Trade Networks
Geoffrey Revelle ‘72 and Skylee Robinson ‘08, Stoel Rives LLP
Derek Loeser ‘94, Keller Rohrback LLP Dan Satterberg ‘85, King County Prosecutor’s Office
Treasurer
Nathan Barnes ‘12 Condominium Law Group
Smith Goodfriend, P.S.
Joel Benoliel ‘71 Costco Wholesale Corporation
Joseph Brotherton ‘82 The Brotherton Companies Kimberly Eckstein Assistant Dean, UW School of Law Gregory Gorder ‘85 Intellectual Ventures
John Huckabay Earl Lasher ‘66 Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson Bruce Robertson ‘77 Garvey Schubert Barer
S P R I N G 2 014
Molly Eckman ‘04, Cozen O’Connor
Bruce Borrus ‘81, Riddell Williams P.S.
Rebecca Glasgow ‘02 State Attorney General’s Office
VOTING MEMB ER S
uw law
David Stobaugh ‘75 and Steven Strong ‘75, Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong
Gerald Swanson ‘96 KOM Consulting PLLC
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BOX 353020 SEATTLE, WA 98195-3020
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