KU Law Magazine | Fall 2015

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MAGAZINE FOR ALUMNI & FRIENDS | FALL 2015

4 8 YE A R S AT KU L AW School’s longest-serving faculty member reflects on fascinating, revolutionary ride


KU Law Magazine is published twice a year for alumni and friends of the University of Kansas School of Law. Green Hall, 1535 W. 15th St. Lawrence, KS 66045-7608 785.864.4550 | F: 785.864.5054 law.ku.edu DEAN Stephen Mazza EDITOR & DESIGNER Mindie Paget kulaws@ku.edu | 785.864.9205 CONTRIBUTORS Professor Martin Dickinson Nicole Krambeer Mike Krings Emily Sharp PHOTOS Kelsey Kimberlin Mindie Paget Earl Richardson, L’08 University Archives PRINTING Allen Press, Lawrence, KS

KU Law supports environmental sustainability by purchasing renewable energy certificates (green tags) through the Bonneville Environmental Foundation that offset carbon emissions from producing the KU Law Magazine.

The University of Kansas prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, national origin, age, ancestry, disability, status as a veteran, sexual orientation, marital status, parental status, gender identity, gender expression and genetic information in the University’s programs and activities. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding the nondiscrimination policies: Director of the Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access, IOA@ku.edu, 1246 W. Campus Road, Room 153A, Lawrence, KS, 66045, 785-864-6414, 711 TTY.

LETTER FROM THE DEAN Martin Dickinson and I have a few things in common. We’ve served together on the KU Law faculty. We’ve had the great honor of leading this institution, in separate eras, as its dean. And we share expertise in tax law, a subject I think we can all agree spawns the most riveting courses taught at this school. All kidding aside, I’ve considered Professor Dickinson a trusted mentor for decades. When he offered to reflect on his 48-year tenure at KU Law, I gratefully accepted, knowing the resulting article would provide a unique perspective on the school’s evolution. Most students experience law school in three-year increments marked by intense study and a focus on graduating, passing the bar and launching their careers. As you’ll read in his cover story, Dickinson taught 4,000 such students on their journeys through KU Law. Needless to say, he is qualified to speak with authority about the big picture. And that’s what I find most fascinating about his account — how all the moments stitched together illustrate the values and trajectory of the University of Kansas School of Law. It’s an interesting exercise attempting to connect the dots, for example, from our founding by Populist Dean James Woods Green, who welcomed students of all ethnicities and genders, to our concerted efforts beginning in the late 1960s to actively recruit students of color and help open the legal profession to the influx of women choosing law school, to the success of the bold advocates and leaders we proudly count among our alumni today. Through burning buildings, economic recessions and declining state funding, KU Law has, as Dickinson writes, “demonstrated an impressive capacity to respond to changes in Kansas, the nation, the world and the legal profession while continuing to honor its rich tradition.” Your law school experiences — like the ones recounted in this issue by Judge Jean Shepherd, Tim Connell, Annie Browning Wilson, Rusty Leffel, and Thomas Vaughn – are part of that tradition. And KU Law’s staying power is fueled in no small measure by your unflagging support. When you mentor current students, hire new graduates, share your expertise as a guest lecturer, serve on the Board of Governors, or contribute to a scholarship fund, we all rise together. Because of your generosity, we continue to surge past our $20 million fundraising goal for Far Above — up by $6.5 million with six months still remaining in the capital campaign. That total is built with gifts from 3,464 donors. If my calculations are correct — and I am a tax professor — we just need 536 more donors to reach the number of students Professor Dickinson taught over 48 years at KU Law. Let’s aspire to connect those dots.

Stephen W. Mazza Dean and Professor of Law


CONTENTS KU LAW MAGAZINE | FALL 2015

DEPARTMENTS 2 IN BRIEF

Symposia, lectures, rankings, and a big victory for the Project for Innocence.

19 FACULTY NEWS + RESEARCH

New hires, retirements, research highlights, media appearances, kudos

24 ALUMNI NEWS Photos: Reunion + Homecoming weekend,

Distinguished Alumni honored

27 CLASS NOTES Alumni earn promotions, change jobs, win

awards, and expand their families

34 GIVING NEWS Medallion honorees, Why I Give, Far Above

COVER

48 YEARS AT KU LAW

campaign update

36 DONOR REPORT Recognition of fiscal year 2015 donors 45 IN MEMORIAM Deaths in the KU Law family

LEAVING THE NEST Photos: 2015 graduates become newest flock of Jayhawk lawyers

19

6 NEXT CHAPTER Former students reflect on legacies of retiring faculty Davis, Dickinson and McKenzie

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IN BRIEF

Clockwise from left, Corey Rayburn Yung, professor of law, University of Kansas School of Law; Chrissy Heikkila, executive director, Sexual Trauma & Abuse Care Center, Lawrence, Kansas; and Tamara Rice Lave, associate professor, University of Miami School of Law.

SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS Law symposium explores how colleges should handle epidemic RECENT STUDIES INDICATE THAT nearly one in four female students experience sexual violence during their college years – troubling figures that are attracting national media attention and serious evaluations by universities of how they handle such crimes. Legal scholars and advocates from across the country contributed to that conversation during the 2015 Kansas Law Review Symposium, “Sexual Assault on Campus,” held Oct. 23 at the University of Kansas School of Law. Speakers discussed anti-rape culture,

du/assault

ne at law.ku.e

Register onli

campus sexual violence reform, the gendered use of legality, sexual assault as sexual harassment, the myth of the “perfect victim,” the Title IX “mistake” and other topics. “In September 2014, President Obama launched the ‘It’s on Us’ initiative to address the pressing issue of campus sexual assault. Just over one year later, the Kansas Law Review provided needed attention to the discussion about the proper governmental, cultural and university responses to sexual violence at America’s institutions of higher education,” said Corey Rayburn Yung, a KU Law professor who teaches a course on sex crimes. “With experts from across the nation, we aimed to

Y HALL EDITOR ABB SYMPOSIUM ? CONTACT POSIUM@GMAIL.COM QUESTIONS SYM AT KULAWREV

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shed light on the complex topics of how campuses should handle sexual assault complaints, create a culture that discourages rape and ensure student safety.” Speakers included: n Katharine K. Baker, IIT Chicago Kent College of Law n Tamara Rice Lave, University of Miami School of Law n Corey Rayburn Yung, University of Kansas School of Law n Chrissy Heikkila, Sexual Trauma & Abuse Care Center, Lawrence n Aya Gruber, University of Colorado Law School n Chrysanthi S. Leon, University of Delaware Scholarship associated with the symposium will be published in a spring 2016 issue of the Kansas Law Review.


KU Law graduates outperform peers on Kansas, Missouri bar examinations KU LAW GRADUATES IN THE CLASS of 2015 passed the bar exam in Kansas and Missouri at rates that far exceeded state averages. They also ranked first among all Kansas and Missouri law schools for performance on the Missouri exam. KU graduates taking the Kansas bar exam for the first time in July 2015 achieved a 91.6 percent pass rate, surpassing by a staggering 10.6 percent the state pass rate of 81 percent. Alumni performed even better in Missouri, where 94.7 percent of KU test-takers passed the bar on their first attempt. That showing outpaces by 8 percent the state average of 86.7 percent.

With this outcome, KU ranked No. 1 among all law schools in Kansas and Missouri whose graduates sat for the July 2015 bar exam in high numbers, including the University of Missouri, the University of Missouri-Kansas City, St. Louis University, Washington University in St. Louis and Washburn University. “We are thrilled by the extraordinary success of our hard-working 2015 graduates,” said Stephen Mazza, dean of the law school. “Our students have consistently exceeded the state average when it comes to passing the bar exam – the essential first step for any graduate seeking to practice law.”

CLINICS

Innocence Project client: ‘I had given up, and she gave me my life back’ A LEARNING EXPERIENCE FOR ONE KU Law student turned into a second chance this fall for a woman serving life in prison in connection with a high-profile Topeka murder. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in July ruled that Kimberly Sharp was unconstitutionally convicted in the 2006 slaying of a Topeka homeless advocate. The court handed down the decision based on an appeal by KU’s Project for Innocence. Sharp recently visited KU Law and met Abby West, the 2015 graduate who spent hours poring over trial documents and prior decisions, eventually writing the brief that helped overturn Sharp’s murder conviction and vacate her life sentence. “She fought for me. She went to bat for me,” Sharp told current students in the Project. “I had given up, and she gave me

Kimberly Sharp, left, and Abby West, L’15

my life back. You’ll do that for somebody, so take pride in what you want to do. You will make a difference.” ONLINE | Read more about the case and the court’s ruling at law.ku.edu/kim-sharp

KU EXPANDS 3+3 PROGRAM STATEWIDE STUDENTS AT STATE UNIVERSITIES across Kansas will have an opportunity to accelerate their legal education and save a year of tuition through an expansion of the 3 Plus 3 Program at the University of Kansas. The program will allow high-ability students at participating Regents universities to maximize their undergraduate coursework, earning a bachelor’s degree and a KU law degree in six years instead of seven. Students will spend three years on bachelor’s degree requirements from their undergraduate institution and three years on requirements for a KU law degree. They will graduate with a bachelor’s degree after their fourth year and already have one year of law school under their belt. “We are excited to expand this opportunity to students across Kansas in collaboration with our Regents partners,” said Jeffrey S. Vitter, provost and executive vice chancellor. “It saves students a year of study and undergraduate tuition, and helps ensure that high-achieving students who are interested in legal careers earn their law degrees in Kansas. We know that students who graduate from a Kansas institution are more likely to stay in the state to work and serve the people of Kansas.” The 3 Plus 3 Program is entering its third year at KU with growing enrollment each year since its inception. “KU Law is at the forefront of changing the way students gain a legal education,” said Stephen Mazza, dean of the law school. “Through this expansion of the 3 Plus 3 Program, Kansas will become the first state with a statewide, guaranteed-admission accelerated law degree. Not only will Kansas students benefit from a great legal education at less cost and in less time, but the university and the state will also benefit by being able to recruit the best and brightest prelaw students nationally.”

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IN BRIEF

ADMISSIONS

KU LAW WELCOMES CLASS OF 2018

Richard Buxbaum, the Jackson H. Ralston Professor Emeritus of International Law at the University of California-Berkeley, delivers the Robert C. Casad Comparative Law Lecture on Oct. 8 at KU Law.

When history repeats International law scholar reflects on debt crises at KU’s Casad lecture SINCE THE GREEK DEBT CRISIS BEGAN in 2010, the country has grabbed international headlines with its staggering unemployment and plummeting GDP, international bailouts and strict austerity measures, and speculation that Greece may leave the eurozone. While noteworthy, Greece’s experience is not new. The country’s path is reminiscent of Germany’s attempts to rebuild after World War I, and considering German history may shed light on how leaders can restore growth in Greece. KU Law welcomed Richard Buxbaum, the Jackson H. Ralston Professor Emeritus of International Law at the University of California-Berkeley, to discuss the parallels at the third Robert C. Casad Comparative Law Lecture on Oct. 8. Buxbaum’s presentation, titled “Twentieth-Century Sovereign Debtors: From Germany to Greece,” explored the

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effects of the Treaty of Versailles on the German Reich after World War I. The Versailles terms required Germany to repay steep war debts, resulting in depression and instability. Germany defaulted on its debts, unleashing an economic crisis that helped usher in Hitler’s rise to power, led to war and economic collapse, and instigated the country’s division. Buxbaum studies corporation law and comparative and international economic law and is past editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Comparative Law. He holds an LL.M. from UC Berkeley and an LL.B. and bachelor’s degrees from Cornell University. The Casad lecture series is named in honor of Professor Emeritus Robert C. Casad, who served on the KU Law faculty from 1959 to 1997.

HAILING FROM 72 COLLEGES AND universities with mascots ranging from Shockers to Sun Devils, the Class of 2018 united as Jayhawks this fall to begin their journey toward becoming KU Lawyers. The class includes 126 new J.D. students, 51 percent of whom are Kansas residents. The remaining 49 percent join KU from 25 other states and three foreign countries. Seven students have served in the military, and others have lived, worked and studied around the world. Many class members have been active in politics. The class also includes a professional orchestral tuba player, a legal adviser for a human rights organization in Cameroon, and a lawyer from Paraguay. Beyond the traditional J.D. program, two students enrolled in the 2-Year J.D. Program for Foreign-Trained Lawyers, and seven students entered the Doctor of Juridical Science Program, including a Fulbright Scholar from Egypt. “It’s not surprising that most elected officials at the federal level, many CEOs, many community leaders have a law degree,” Dean Stephen Mazza told the students in his welcome remarks. “After you complete your law degree, you will have the kind of intellect and the skills to be an effective leader. And that’s what we’re hoping for you.” Nine first-year students joined the ranks of KU Law’s Student Ambassadors this year. Learn about them on the law school website (link below).

READ 1L STUDENT STORIES law.ku.edu/ ambassadors


Applied

Enrolled

672 126 Median LSAT

156 Median GPA

3.42 48%

15% minorities

Kansas residents

51% # of states | 25 # of colleges | 72 # of countries | 4 Age range | 19-48 Average age | 25

Two top-20 rankings for KU Law emphasize affordability, value KU LAW IS THE NO. 18 BEST VALUE Law School in the country and one of the top 20 law schools nationwide for students graduating with the least debt, according to National Jurist magazine and U.S. News & World Report. KU finished first in both rankings among law schools in Kansas and the Kansas City area. The Best Value ranking highlights affordable law schools whose graduates perform exceptionally well on the bar exam and have had success finding legal jobs. National Jurist ranked the top 20 schools and assigned a letter grade to the other 45 honorees. “We are pleased that we continue to excel in this ranking because we pride ourselves on delivering an affordable legal education that prepares our graduates for

successful careers,” said Stephen Mazza, dean of the law school. “At KU Law, value isn’t just about reasonable tuition. Our graduates pass the bar exam at a rate that consistently exceeds the state average, and they secure quality employment at a rate that stacks up against the top quarter of law schools in the country.” And law students reach those achievements while avoiding excessive student loans. U.S. News ranked KU Law 20th in the nation among law schools whose graduates finish school with the least debt. “It’s a relief to know that I’ll have choices when I graduate that aren’t defined by financial burdens,” said Julia Leth-Perez, a third-year KU Law student. “I’m getting a great education at KU, and I know I’m prepared for my career in law.”

What’s your #HandsOnKU story? AS YOU THINK BACK TO YOUR LAW school days, what helped best prepare you for the career you’ve built since graduation? If a clinic, skills course, moot court or some other experiential learning opportunity benefited you, we want to hear about it. After we shared on Facebook the story of two recent students who polished their speaking skills and brushed up on courtroom etiquette while helping real clients through KU’s Legal Aid Clinic, 2009 alumna Danielle Davey recalled her own experience in the clinic: “Legal Aid was far and away the most productive use of my time in law school. It not only gave me practical experience in court and with clients that let me hit the ground running in one of the toughest legal job markets in recent history, but it introduced me to practicing attorneys and connections that I still have today.”

Kasper Schirer, L’15, learned about underlying systemic issues that create challenges for indigent clients in KU’s Legal Aid Clinic.

SUBMIT YOUR STORY law.ku.edu/hands-on-ku mpaget@ku.edu

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GREEN HALL NEWS

Leaving the nest 2015 GRADS BECOME

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NEWEST JAYHAWK LAWYERS

View more photos from the ceremony law.ku.edu/grad2015


2014-15 STUDENT AWARDS & PRIZES ORDER OF THE COIF Paul Brothers Jordan Carter Michael Grigsby Jason Harmon Andrea Horvath Genevieve Hursh Christopher Keyser Christopher Meyers Paul Mose Hillary Nicholas Mary Olson Gretchen Rix Kasper Schirer Abigail West WALTER HIERSTEINER OUTSTANDING SERVICE AWARD Jake McMillian* JUSTICE LLOYD KAGEY LEADERSHIP AWARD Jason Harmon* SAMUEL MELLINGER SCHOLARSHIP, LEADERSHIP & SERVICE AWARD Jordan Carter* C.C. STEWART AWARD IN LAW Genevieve K. Hursh ROBERT F. BENNETT STUDENT AWARD Paige Blevins* WILLIAM L. BURDICK PRIZE Elizabeth Hanus MARY ANNE CHAMBERS SERVICE AWARD Bill Walberg GEORGE GARY DUNCAN SCHOLASTIC IMPROVEMENT PRIZE Elizabeth Lobaugh FAMILY FUND AWARD Katherine Malotte

ROBERT E. EDMONDS PRIZE IN CORPORATION & SECURITIES LAW Paul Budd Christopher Keyser FACULTY AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT Hillary Nicholas* Abby West* ROBERT C. FOULSTON & GEORGE SIEFKIN PRIZES FOR EXCELLENCE IN APPELLATE ADVOCACY Best Advocate: Cate Zollicker Finalists: Ashley Akers, Abby Hall & Kendra Frazier Best Brief: Ashley Akers & Abby Hall Second Place Brief: Luke Hangge & Bryce Langford HERSHBERGER, PATTERSON, JONES & ROTH ENERGY LAW AWARD Paul Mose HINKLE LAW FIRM TAX PROCEDURE AWARD Mark Wilkens W. ROSS HUTTON LEGAL AID AWARD Kasper Schirer LAW CLASS OF 1949 AWARD FOR LEADERSHIP Zak Beasley* JANEAN MEIGS MEMORIAL AWARD IN LAW Tamara Combs* Paul Mose* JAMES P. MIZE TRIAL ADVOCACY AWARD Amanda Faber Adam Sokoloff

PAYNE & JONES AWARDS Fall 2014 Kriston Guillot Elizabeth Hanus Andrew Kershen Alison Kryzer Nicole Marcotte Dalton Mott Rachel Shannon Spring 2015 Skyler Davenport Jimmy Gorman Elizabeth Hanus Dalton Mott Maggie Turek Taylor Zimmerman SHAPIRO AWARD FOR BEST PAPER ON LAW & PUBLIC POLICY Nicole Lawson SUSMAN GODFREY TRIAL ADVOCACY AWARD Chris Teters

Clockwise from top left: Spencer Toubia, with his soon-to-be sister-in-law, Abby Davenport; Paul Brothers, Alex Cleeter and Brandon Elliott, wait with fellow graduates for the procession to begin; Tamara Combs; Anita Chappuie; Katherine Waldschmidt and Cooper Mach. (Photos by Kelsey Kimberlin of KU Marketing Communications and Mindie Paget)

UMB BANK EXCELLENCE IN ESTATE PLANNING AWARD Genevieve K. Hursh *Received special recognition at the Hooding Ceremony on May 16 at the Lied Center.

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This account is dedicated to the 4,000 students who have passed through my classes. Every year I am inspired by their talent, dedication and promise.�

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School’s longest-serving professor recounts fascinating, revolutionary ride

4 8 YE A R S AT KU L AW BY MARTIN DICKINSON

I’VE JUST COMPLETED 48 years at KU Law, becoming the longest-serving faculty member in the history of the school, narrowly eclipsing William L. Burdick’s 47 years (1898-1945). It’s been a fascinating ride that included revolutionary changes at KU Law. I have described below the most important, with the thought that this historical perspective may be of interest to both recent and distant KU Law graduates. This account is dedicated to the 4,000 students who have passed through my classes. Every year I am inspired by their talent, dedication and promise. They always give me hope for the future, and it has been a privilege to play a role in their lives.

WOMEN

The most far-reaching change is the dramatic expansion of women’s involvement in the law school and the legal profession. This occurred in the span of a single generation, reflecting a fundamental change in American society.

My mother, Ruth Van Riper Dickinson, graduated from KU Law in 1929, the only woman in a class of 21. In the nearly four decades between her graduation and my appointment to the faculty in 1967, only 3 percent of graduates were women. That all changed with the nine women in the 1970 entering class. The female percentage rose year after year to 37 percent in 1984, and to 47 percent in 1991. (Female enrollment in the 2015 entering class was 48 percent.) While there were never barriers to female enrollment in KU Law, entering the profession was another matter. As late as 1973 many of the most prominent firms in Kansas City maintained longstanding policies against hiring women. I and others at KU Law traveled to Kansas City and talked with the leaders of those firms. Our arguments were pragmatic — that female enrollment would inevitably grow and that firms unwilling to hire women would deny themselves some of the best talent available. Many firm

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1878 F IR be ST LA g (lat in in W C wit er Fr Univ LAS h 1 ase ers SES 3 s r) H ity tud ent all s.

FROM TEACHER TO LAWYER

leaders responded positively, and the rest is history. The female graduates of the 1970s were pioneers in every sense of the word. Their hard work and achievements assured that later graduates would not face the same obstacles. A good example is Judge Kathryn Vratil, L’75, whose hiring as a clerk by the highly regarded U.S. District Court Judge Earl O’Connor sent a powerful message to both bench and bar regarding opportunities for women. She went on to a distinguished career as a practitioner and judge, ultimately succeeding O’Connor as the first female judge on the U.S. District Court for Kansas. A special group of pioneers were “second career” women who left professions traditionally open to women, such as teaching and nursing, and entered the law. Judge Jean Shepherd, L’77, took this path when she left K-12 teaching to attend KU Law. She went on to excel as a prosecutor, private practitioner, Kansas District Court judge, and nationally recognized leader in juvenile law. I believe the presence of these “second career” women, together with many well-qualified traditional students, may have given the mid- and late-70s classes the greatest depth of talent in the school’s history. The ’70s produced many other pioneers who led the way for women. A few examples and the positions to which they ascended: Judge Mary Beck Briscoe, L’73, chief judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit; Catherine McGuire, L’73, counsel, SEC Division of Trading & Markets; Victoria Thomas, L’75, general counsel, University of Kansas; Linda Legg, L’75, chief counsel, SBC Communications; Judge Linda Trigg, L’76, Johnson County District Court judge and president, Kansas Bar Association; Jennifer Gille Bacon, L’76, shareholder at Polsinelli PC and president, Missouri Bar Association; Lydia Beebe, L’77, corporate secretary and chief governance officer, Chevron Corporation; Sheila

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JUDGE JEAN SHEPHERD,

L’77, was one of the KU Law women pioneers of the 1970s. Like several of her female classmates, Shepherd pursued law as a second career, leaving behind the fields traditionally open to women at the time. When she entered law school in 1974, Shepherd was a nontraditional student, a single mother and former high school teacher. The campus had changed since she earned her undergraduate degree in 1968. Women were allowed to wear jeans to class, and students were consumed with the Vietnam War and civil rights, making for a much more “aware and involved” student life. “I could never have described what would have been the perfect career, my true vocation, but that’s what I ended up doing. My teaching background was instrumental in that happening because I always valued areas of the law that related to children and families and thought that’s where a difference could be made for the future. “I think teaching was the best training I had for being in control of a courtroom. There’s a lot of teaching that goes on in the courtroom, explaining people’s rights

Judge Jean Shepherd, L’77

and the process. There’s a look that students and adults get when they’re nodding their heads but don’t understand. You need to recognize that look and rephrase things, find other words to use so people can get some clarity. Sometimes the excuses people use are like all those excuses for why homework didn’t get done, only at a different level. “In teaching, you learn how to act like you’re in charge even though you’re not sure you are, and there were certainly moments like that in the courtroom. You make important decisions and you mete out consequences that are hopefully appropriate, but people have to understand the process. If people feel they’ve been heard and if they feel they understand what happened, there are few complaints.” — Emily Sharp


Bair, L’78, chair, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The entry of women to the faculty has been no less dramatic. There were no women faculty members until 1971, when Louise Wheeler joined us. The number grew to five by 1980. Today, 19 of our 42 faculty members are females.

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I.F. firs BRA D to t Afri LEY gra can be du ate -Ame come fro rica s m KU n Law

1887

Dean Martin Dickinson (left) surveys progress on the construction of new Green Hall.

DEMAND FOR LEGAL EDUCATION

Until the mid 1960s, legal education was in low demand. At most law schools, including KU, admission was virtually assured unless the applicant’s academic record was so weak that prospects for success in law school were remote. In 1964 KU Law received only 158 applications for 104 seats. That began to change in 1966, when applications rose over 300. By 1970 the interest of American young people in social issues, including the Vietnam War, civil rights for minorities, equality for women and environmental concerns had grown dramatically. Accelerating legislation and litigation involving these issues convinced young people of the central importance of lawyers and the legal system. Suddenly, legal education was a hot commodity. Applications at KU Law rose to 575 in 1970 and ultimately to 1,640 in 1972 — the highest ever. For lawyers and others who assumed that their children could

readily be admitted to KU Law, as in the past, this was a rude awakening. Often, politically powerful individuals pressured us to admit their favored applicants. But we were able to hold our ground and adhere to strictly objective admissions standards. After a few years, our merit-based approach became known and accepted, and the political pressure disappeared. Demand gradually moderated but remained elevated enough that admission continued to be highly competitive for four decades. The 2008 recession hit the law profession hard,

jobs became scarce, and applications plummeted at KU and across the nation. In order to maintain the quality of the student body, the entering class size was lowered from 165 in 2010 to a 42-year low of 107 in 2013. The 2014 and 2015 entering classes were somewhat larger at 129 and 126.

NEW GREEN HALL

The original Green Hall was completed in 1907 and housed 127 students. By 1974, nearly 500 students were crowded into the old building. A new structure was essential.

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THE BIG MOVE

ANNIE BROWNING WILSON, L’78, saw the move as a preview of the coming transitions in her life and the lives of her classmates. “We were leaving the comfy confines of old Green in the heart of campus and moving to the suburbs. Our law school days filled with precedent and legal theory would soon be replaced by graduation and the reality of the modern world.”

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OR Ha IGIN stu ll com AL G de nts plete REEN enr d; 1 olle 27 d

TIM CONNELL, L’78, remembers the move as bittersweet. “After two and half years we had come to love being scrunched by too many people between classes, sitting on the steps watching people walk by, and the convenience of the nearby union. It was old and crowded, but we were used to it. We weren’t going to be able to climb out the window after class anymore. But we weren’t going to miss going to class on Saturday morning while the band marched by either. They had movers box up the books in the stacks, but I was working for the Defender Project. We boxed up the files, put them in a pickup and moved over to new Green ourselves.”

1907

A private fundraising drive in the early 1960s proved unsuccessful, and it was clear that public funding would be needed. When I was offered the deanship in May of 1971, I accepted on the condition that a new building would be provided from public funds. In September of 1971, the university published an $85 million list of capital construction priorities ($496 million in 2015 dollars). The law school was nowhere on the list. In response, I orchestrated an intense lobbying campaign, which was vigorously supported by students, faculty and alumni. By the spring of 1972, we were No. 1 on the list. A key figure in achieving this victory was Fred Six, L’56, then president of the KU Law Society (our alumni advisory board), and later a highly regarded justice of the Kansas Supreme Court. Now we had to run a gauntlet to get legislative approval. Topeka boosters and some Washburn alumni argued that the KU and Washburn law schools should be combined and located in Topeka — the seat of government. Wichita boosters, observing the greatly increased demand for legal education, argued that a third

1929 RU DIC TH V fro KIN AN wo m KU SON RIPER ma g n in Law, radu a c the ates lass onl of y 21

The last classes were held in old Green Hall on Saturday, Oct. 15, 1977, and the first classes were held in new Green Hall on Monday, Oct. 17.

law school should be created in Wichita. The 1973 legislative session would be crucial. I knew that we could not leave the outcome to the unpredictable machinations of legislative debate. So, in the fall of 1972, I visited every lawyerlegislator in his or her hometown. This turned out to be one of the most satisfying experiences in my nine years as dean. I was received with gracious hospitality wherever I went, and every lawyer-legislator — whether a graduate of KU, Washburn or another law school — gave me time to make the case. Perhaps as a result of this effort, the initial appropriation for new Green Hall sailed through the 1973 session without a hitch. We were on our way. The last classes were held in old Green Hall on Saturday, Oct. 15, 1977, and the first classes were held in new Green Hall on Monday, Oct. 17. The building was dedicated on Feb. 21, 1978, under the leadership of former President Gerald Ford.

MINORITIES

Dean James Woods Green, founder of KU Law, was a genuine Populist. The doors of the law school were open to everyone


from the very start. KU Law graduated its first AfricanAmerican student in 1887 and its first female student in 1889. This was a half-century or more before many allegedly elite Eastern law schools opened their doors to anyone other than white males. Minority enrollment, however, remained rare. In the 70 years following the graduation of the first African-American student in 1887, only 23 graduating classes included African-Americans, typically only one in each class. So in 1969, KU Law, like other law schools throughout the nation, began efforts to recruit minority students. The first class with a significant number of minority students entered in 1970. By 1973 there were 9 percent minority students in the entering class. The minority percentage gradually rose into the low teens and stayed there through the next four decades. The 2015 entering class included 15 percent racial minorities. The first African-American faculty member, Marilyn Ainsworth Yarbrough, joined us in 1977.

PRIVATE FUNDS

For the first century of KU Law’s existence, private funds played only a limited role. The state of Kansas was expected to provide funding for all the basics, and tuition costs were low. In 1971-72, for example, the total amount raised from private donors was only $24,038 ($138,616 in 2014 dollars). By the 1990s, the state had begun to reduce its contribution, and tuition costs rose dramatically. Private funding became increasingly vital, and scholarship assistance became essential if students were to avoid massive debt. Increasingly, deans have had to devote much of their time to fundraising, and with increasing success. Dean Stephen Mazza has achieved remarkable results,

Thomas Vaughn, L’78 (top right) on the steps of old Green Hall with classmates, including Judge Julie Robinson, L’81 (back left).

MINORITY RECRUITING BUILDS ON OPEN ADMISSIONS POLICY THE SUMMER BEFORE Thomas Vaughn entered KU Law in 1975, he got his first homework assignment in the mail — not from a professor, but from the Black Law Students Association. “We were to brief a case and then discuss it at the first BLSA meeting,” said Vaughn, L’78. “I was like, ‘These guys really take this stuff seriously.’ They were determined to have successful students [of color].” Vaughn, who grew up attending segregated schools in Arkansas, recalls starting law school as one of nine African-American students in his class. At least six of those nine graduated and passed the bar, he said. “I had worked for IBM and been in the military. Being a minority in a majority setting didn’t pose challenges for me,” Vaughn said. “I had a good network of classmates, good relationships with professors, and good support from upperclassmen.” In fact, it was former BLSA president Louis Sturns, L’73, who

recommended that Vaughn consider KU Law in the first place. They met while stationed at Fort Hood, Texas — Sturns as an officer in the U.S. Army JAG Corps and Vaughn as an enlisted soldier. Sturns told Vaughn about KU Law’s efforts to increase minority enrollment and provide financial assistance to make legal education accessible to minority students. Vaughn eventually followed in Sturns’ footsteps as BLSA president and even served KU Law as a minority recruiter. He graduated with a joint degree in law and business, passed the bar exam and has operated a successful private practice in Chicago since then. Vaughn has also been a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Trustee since 1999. He remembers Martin Dickinson as formal, but fair. “We knew without him saying so that he recognized that KU ought to be graduating students to go into segments of society where we were underrepresented.” — Mindie Paget

KU LAW MAGAZINE 13

CONTRIBUTED BY THOMAS VAUGHN

KU the LAW on Defe LA U e leg of t nder NC a h H P l e inc aid nat roje ES arc era clinics ion’s ct, ted firs f t clie or nts

1965


1969

1970

S GIN BE iting , W u LA recr ents ld KU ively stud nghe olicy act ority on lo ns p o min lding missi i d u b na e op

E FIR N O I il: UN mo AS in tur nter S N KA mpus er Ce ional Ca mput , Nat Co bed atrols m bo ard p Gu

The Kansas Union in flames, 1970

helping to raise more than $26 million during KU’s current Far Above capital campaign.

1971

R, ELE E H ulty E W e fac S I U d al LO t fem , hire r s e r fi mb me

BURNING BUILDINGS I arrived at the law school just in time to witness the turmoil of the late 1960s, related primarily to the Vietnam War and racial issues. The Kansas Union was burned and the computer center bombed. The National Guard patrolled campus, and law faculty slept overnight in Green Hall to assure its preservation. Student interest in political issues is less visible today, although there is great concern about the environment and sustainability. Many students express their ideals through volunteering rather than traditional political activity. STUDENTS There were 80 students in the 1967 entering class when I arrived at KU Law. The great majority came

14 KU LAW MAGAZINE

straight from undergraduate work, primarily at KU. Other Kansas schools — especially Kansas State University — were well represented. There were a few military veterans. The 2015 entering class was far more diverse. The 126 new students came from 25 states and 73 undergraduate institutions. Their ages ranged from 19 to 48. Forty-eight percent were women, and 15 percent were minorities. Ten had prior graduate degrees. In 1967 there were only three student organizations — two legal fraternities and the Student Bar Association. Law Wives was very active. Intramural sports teams were an important outlet for student energy. The diversity of student interests is much greater today. In addition to the traditional Student Bar Association, there are 27 student organizations, ranging from the Sports and Entertainment Law Society to the St. Thomas More


RUSTY LEFFEL, L’73, was

a leading voice in Students Concerned for Higher Education in Kansas, a group of student leaders who advocated for higher education funding. In the early 1970s, student protests had soured the public’s perception of campus activism, and the Kansas Legislature cut university funding. Leffel’s group rallied students to demonstrate support for education through open communication, respectful dialogue and a commitment to the principles of a free and open society. KU still presents the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award annually to students who demonstrate concern for furthering the ideals of the university and higher education. “Law school helped us study, understand, research, present and advocate for all sides, knowing that the underpinning of

democracy is the ability to argue, discuss, and dialogue,” Leffel said. “People were mad at KU. Too many unfortunate things [were happening]: the union fire, the National Guard troops patrolling campus, faculty and students spending the night on campus, the shooting and bombing. We started seeing the Legislature cutting funding for KU. As students, we felt we had a stake in this. We needed to express our concern that higher education is important. So we did. “The quote on the Campanile reads, ‘Free government does not bestow repose upon its citizens, but sets them in the vanguard of battle to defend the liberty of every man.’ You have to always be on lookout to challenges to liberty. Examples will change every decade, new issues will come up, but that’s what law school teaches: tools for a lifetime of activism.” — Emily Sharp

1977 MA YA RILY Afr RBRO N AI me ican- UG NSW mb Am H, O er, eric first RTH hir a n ed fac ulty

LAW STUDENTS CHAMPION RESPECTFUL ACTIVISM AT KU

Society. Intramural sports teams still exist but are much less visible. The homogeneity of the student body in 1967 produced a tight social cohesion. This was evident in the annual Fun Day gathering held in the spring at the farm of Professor Charles Oldfather. Everyone went. Today, few gatherings attract more than a small segment of the increasingly diverse student body. There are commuters and noncommuters, males and females, married and unmarried, parents and nonparents, diverse academic and political interests, many students with prior work experience, and a wide variety of ethnic, geographical and undergraduate backgrounds. It’s a rich blend. While overall social cohesion may be somewhat reduced, I have observed little or no friction among this wide array of students. Although competition for grades and jobs has become more intense in recent years, the relationship among students appears to remain positive. In my last class I took a confidential survey of my students, asking what they thought to be the best two characteristics of KU Law. The top aspects they named were a collegial, supportive atmosphere and a close-knit community. Approachable professors was a close third. An interesting development in recent years is student volunteering. Several student organizations raise funds and solicit gifts of food, clothing and toys for the underprivileged. The 2015 Thanksgiving food drive organized by the Black Law Students Association produced more than 7,150 food items for families in need, and volunteer tax students prepared 224 tax returns for low-income taxpayers in 2015.

THE CLASSROOM

The curriculum available to our students has greatly expanded: from 71 courses in 1967 to 158 courses Rusty Leffel, L’73

KU LAW MAGAZINE 15


1980

NE de W G d led icate REEN b Ge y fo d in c HA rald rm er LL For er P emo res ny d ide nt

PER pro CA pro duct PITA be fs ran ion o SCH h OL Ha ind C ks 4 f KU th L AR rva rd hicag in n aw LY (19 o, a 80 Stan tion, -19 f 83 ord, )

1978

I’m convinced that many students have become little more than stenographers, trying to record all that is said, but with little thought applied.”

16 KU LAW MAGAZINE

in 2014. The broader curriculum provides greater opportunities for specialization. Today KU Law offers eight certificates, evidencing substantial coursework in a given field, ranging from advocacy to tax. KU Law remains one of the nation’s leaders in providing clinical opportunities for students. In 1967, there were four clinics or externships in which academic credit could be earned for law practice activities; today there are 12. In 1967, there was one jointdegree program — the combined MBA and J.D. Since 1967, KU Law has developed 10 more joint-degree programs that permit achievement of a J.D. and a master’s degree in a compressed time. The fields range from urban planning to health services administration. KU Law sent students to compete in only one moot court competition at the national level in 1967. Today KU Law students travel to participate in nine national moot court competitions, ranging from bankruptcy to sports law. The Kansas Law Review is now accompanied by a second journal — the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy. Interestingly, the courses required for graduation today are much the same as in 1967, except that Agency, Commercial Law, and Judicial

Remedies have dropped off the list. An innovative Lawyering course is now required in the first year, and students must complete upperclass courses emphasizing writing and professional skills.

GRADE INFLATION

Grade inflation began in the 1970s and quickly became endemic throughout higher education — including at KU Law. The median grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) for the 1967 graduating class was 2.45. For the 2015 graduating class, it was 3.17. KU Law now has a required grading curve for most classes that is intended to prevent further inflation.

COMPUTERS

Notebook computers are now ubiquitous in the classroom. The teacher faces an array of computer lids, with students hidden behind. I’m convinced that many students have become little more than stenographers, trying to record all that is said, but with little thought applied. I have real doubt that computers have enhanced learning. But there’s good news for teachers: Most students now prepare exam answers on their computers. It’s a delight for teachers compared to handwritten bluebooks.


TUITION

Annual tuition and fees for a Kansas resident in 1967 totaled $438 for an academic year ($3,096 in 2015 dollars). The 2014-15 tuition and fees for an academic year totaled $19,985. In constant dollars, tuition has increased more than six-fold. Since 1980, KU undergraduate tuition has increased by 8 percent annually, while inflation has increased by only 3.5 percent annually. Much of this increase is attributable to a dramatic reduction in the state’s role in funding higher education over the last 30 years. The tuition increase problem is not unique to KU. KU Law tuition for 2014-2015 was within $1,000 of the cost at Missouri, UMKC, Washburn and Oklahoma. Many other state schools were much higher. For example, Colorado resident tuition was $31,548, and Texas was $33,162. In fact, the National Jurist magazine has ranked KU Law the 18th Best Value Law School in the nation. Vigorous fundraising by Dean Mazza and his predecessors has provided scholarship funds that help offset the increased cost. Sixty-eight percent of the 2014 entering class received scholarship assistance.

STUDENT LOANS

Student loans were available in 1967, and the 1967-68 catalog asserted that “To date the Law School has been able to make at least $1,000 in loans available to each third-year student who needs to borrow.” ($1,000 in 1967 is equivalent to $7,096 today.) The dramatic escalation in tuition since then has made loans a way of life for most students. Eighty-two percent of 2014 graduates had student debt, with an average load (both undergraduate and law) of $74,890 at graduation. The KU Law situation is better than at other schools. U.S. News and World Report has ranked KU Law among the top 20 law schools in the nation for lowest average debt at graduation. Nationwide, student debt now exceeds $1.3 trillion. The dramatic expansion of student debt over the last 30 years is the most disturbing development I have witnessed during my 48 years in teaching. I believe there are three causes: (1) Most states have dramatically reduced the extent of their support for public higher education; (2) university administrators, realizing the availability of virtually unlimited resources from government-guaranteed loans, have raised tuition levels to “whatever the market will bear”; and (3) students, observing the comfortable circumstances of their baby boomer parents, now demand a higher standard of living. In 1967, summer jobs and modest assistance from parents permitted the vast majority of students to graduate debt free. Today, massive debt loads can impair graduates’ lives for many years. Student debt affects the jobs students can accept. It can defer family formation and the purchase

NOW

THEN

3

27

in 1967 Two legal fraternities, SBA

today STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

Affinity groups, legal practice areas

158

672

for 104 spots in 1964

for 126 spots in 2015

APPLICATIONS

Record = 1,640 in 1972

71

158

in 1967 Including 4 clinics & externships

today

COURSES OFFERED

1

course in 1967 Ø int’l students, minimal faculty scholarship

Including 12 clinics & externships

10

SELECT INTERNATIONAL ELEMENTS

courses today 24 foreign students, robust scholarship

438

20K

dollars annually 1967-68

dollars annually 2015-16

RESIDENT TUITION & FEES

Few

61

interviews in 1967

interviews in 2014-15

No Career Services Office

CAREER SERVICES

Career Services staff of 3

KU LAW MAGAZINE 17


SOURCES | Data for this article were drawn from a variety of sources, including KU Law catalogs; KU Laws and its predecessors; KU Law Career Services, Admissions, and Registrar reports; National Jurist and U.S. News and World Report; and various University Archives materials. The article ranking 1980-83 KU Law scholarship production fourth in the nation is at Swygert & Gozansky, 35 J. Legal Education 373 (1985). Photos courtesy of University Archives, Kenneth Spencer Research Library, University of Kansas Libraries.

of homes. It discourages saving for retirement, much less saving to finance the education of the next generation. Most importantly, the debt problem signals to young people the demise of intergenerational responsibility. Americans have traditionally sacrificed to make life better for the next generation. I fear that casting this massive debt burden on our youth evidences abandonment of that responsibility.

JOBS

KU Law did not operate a placement office in the 1960s, and only a handful of employers conducted interviews at the law school. Today we employ three full-time personnel in our Career Services Office. During 2014-2015, 61 employers interviewed students at the law school, and 662 job openings were posted. In 1967 only a few students joined major firms in Kansas City, Missouri, and a few more went to large firms in other states. Placement was heavily centered in Kansas, with many students going to Wichita, Johnson County, and small and medium-size towns throughout the state. The great majority entered private practice or government work. In some respects, the placement pattern now is similar. Fifty-three percent of the 2014 class entered private practice, with another 24 percent opting for judicial clerkships, government work or public interest positions. Fifty-eight percent took jobs in Kansas, with another 22 percent accepting positions in Missouri, almost all in the Kansas City area. The rest scattered widely to 12 states.

18 KU LAW MAGAZINE

The KU Law presence is now much greater in the largest Kansas City firms. KU is now a major, and sometimes the principal, source of talent for firms that in 1967 hired almost entirely from the University of Missouri and Eastern schools, principally Michigan and Harvard.

INT’L STUDENTS, PROGRAMS

International involvement has expanded dramatically. In 1967, KU Law offered a single international law course and had no international students. Today there are 10 courses addressing international law or the law of foreign countries. Study abroad opportunities are available in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Turkey. In an effort to bring the world to KU Law, the school has created three degrees primarily for lawyers from foreign countries. In addition, the school welcomes visiting scholars from other lands. Last year, 24 foreign students and four visiting scholars studied in Green Hall. Countries currently represented are China, Korea, India, Bangladesh, Mauritius, Turkey, Lebanon, Libya, Nigeria, Oman, Saudi Arabia and Italy.

LAW LIBRARY

As one would expect, the change in the law library’s role has been revolutionary. In 1967, “retrieval” of legal materials involved only what we today call “hard copy” (printed books). Today computer retrieval has dramatically displaced much of traditional “hard copy” research. KU’s Wheat Law Library staff has responded to this revolution with imagination and foresight, enabling

both students and faculty to maximize computer retrieval opportunities. Another change was less visible but crucially important. When I became dean in 1971, the law library was not autonomous. Its budget and personnel were managed by the KU Libraries system. This was unusual among law schools, and KU Libraries administrators had difficulty understanding the crucial role the library plays in legal education. In 1973, with the very effective help of law librarian Bernard Reams, I was able to achieve autonomy for our law library so its budget and personnel would be controlled by KU Law.

FACULTY SCHOLARSHIP

Prior to the 1960s, KU Law did not have a strong scholarly tradition. That all changed with the talented young faculty that Dean James Logan and his successors brought to the school. By the early 1980s, our productive faculty was the envy of other schools. A national study of legal scholarship over the period 1980-1983 concluded that per capita scholarly production of full professors at KU Law ranked fourth in the nation behind only Chicago, Stanford and Harvard. Faculty productivity has remained high. During 2014 our faculty produced seven books and 54 articles and book chapters, while delivering more than 160 scholarly and professional presentations.

CONCLUSION

Since its founding 137 years ago, KU Law has granted 10,810 degrees. Seventy percent (7,547) of those degrees were granted during the 48-year period covered by this article. So the great majority of KU Law graduates have participated in the dramatic changes I’ve described. Over the last five decades, KU Law has demonstrated an impressive capacity to respond to changes in Kansas, the nation, the world and the legal profession while continuing to honor its rich tradition.


NEXT C HAPTER Former students reflect on legacies of retiring faculty MIKE DAVIS | Centennial Teaching Professor Emeritus of Law On faculty 1971-2015 | Dean 1980-1989 | Interim Dean 2005-2006 I think Mike Davis’ greatest legacy is he was always KU Law’s best cheerleader. Nobody thought higher of KU Law than Mike Davis, and no one gave their career more. I don’t think there’s anyone over the years who I feel was more influential at KU Law. This comes about by being an advocate for what you’re doing. We’re now seeing our rankings, acceptance rate into law firms, wages — all have increased dramatically just in the last 10 years. If you’re the head cheerleader, you deserve praise.” — Doug Wheat, L’74, Westlake, Texas, Partner, Southlake Equity Group LLC

MARTIN DICKINSON | Robert A. Schroeder Distinguished

Professor Emeritus of Law On faculty 1967-2015 | Dean 1971-1980 Professor Dickinson’s breadth and depth of knowledge and experience, coupled with his dedication to teaching, are the roots of his legacy. He stressed that our learning didn’t begin and end in school. He enthusiastically jumped in to guide my independent research on a specific part of the tax code that we covered in one class session — charitable split interest gifts — because he said he didn’t know enough about them and would like to. I made my entire career out of specializing in that area of tax law. I don’t know if I would have had the confidence to follow this path, which at the time was rather uncommon, without his support and encouragement. That is just who he is.” — Barbara Melbourne, L’88, Bettendorf, Iowa, Vice President of Development, Community Foundation of the Great River Bend

SANDRA CRAIG MCKENZIE | Professor Emeritus of Law On faculty 1979-2015 | Director, Elder Law LL.M. Program Professor McKenzie was among the first female professors at KU Law. That alone is a legacy to be proud of, but she has done so much more. Her legacy includes her dedicated work for women in the law and her leadership on equal rights and safe space for LGBTQ students at Green Hall. She consistently provided classroom experiences grounded in practical application, a community space that was safe for all students, and she fostered a collegial atmosphere for students to grow and learn how to self-advocate, never wavering in her dedication to equity and justice.” — Lindsey Collins, L’14, Kansas City, Missouri, Elizabeth M. Gallup, MD, JD Mental Health Fellow & Staff Attorney, KU Medical-Legal Partnership

KU LAW MAGAZINE 19


FACULTY NEWS

In the news FACULTY EXPERTS “That kind of threat to the independence of the judiciary strikes me as invalid under the separation of powers principle.” Professor Richard Levy provided constitutional analysis in the New York Times of a bill signed by Gov. Sam Brownback that would defund state courts if they struck down a 2014 law that removed some powers from the State Supreme Court.

“It’s a myth that either the Trans-Pacific Partnership or the Export-Import Bank are engaged in free trade.” Professor Raj Bhala offered expertise in ongoing coverage by international news agency Sputnik of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade pact being negotiated in unusual secrecy between the United States and 12 Asian and Pacific Rim nations.

“On the other hand, what actually happens in consumer class action litigation is it often has a lot of costs to businesses and doesn’t seem to yield much benefit to consumers at least in terms of payout.” Professor Stephen Ware was quoted in a Wall Street Journal article about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s proposal to give borrowers more rights to sue banks and credit card companies.

“It’s unfortunate they had to go through a legal battle to get the state to do what, realistically, they should have done in the first place. My clients are happy that both of their names are going to be on their child’s birth certificate.” Adjunct Professor David Brown spoke with Kansas Public Radio about a case in which the Kansas Department of Health and Environment initially declined to list two women as parents on a birth certificate, despite a law allowing the practice for children born through artificial insemination.

20 KU LAW MAGAZINE

ADVOCACY

Law professor argues twice in one week before SCOTUS A UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAW PROFESSOR ARGUED before the U.S. Supreme Court twice in one week in a pair of cases: one involving the Eighth Amendment and capital punishment, and the other alleged discrimination in banking. Stephen McAllister, the E.S. & Tom W. Hampton Distinguished Professor of Law, appeared before the court Oct. 5 in the case Hawkins v. Community Bank of Raymore. On Oct. 7, he appeared on behalf of the state of Kansas in Kansas v. Jonathan Carr and Kansas v. Reginald Carr Jr. The arguments marked his eighth and ninth appearances before the high court. The banking case is a test of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, designed to prevent discrimination in lending against women based on gender, marital status and other factors. The Carr case is centered on brothers Jonathan and Reginald Carr, who were convicted of capital murder for brutal quadruple murders they committed in Wichita in December of 2000. They were sentenced to death, but the Kansas Supreme Court overturned their sentences in 2014, holding both that the jury instructions in the Carrs’ sentencing were inadequate and they should not have been tried jointly in the same proceeding. McAllister said that while two appearances before the court in three days may be unusual, the opportunity provides both unique professional experience and invaluable teaching material he can bring to his classes. — Mike Krings

law.ku.edu/faculty law.ku.edu/faculty-news


RESEARCH

Indigenous knowledge can be key to fighting climate change WHILE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES HAVE DEVELOPED knowledge over centuries to manage their lands and adapt to challenges such as rising sea levels or wildfires, they are still deeply affected by climate change. Two University of Kansas professors have authored research exploring cases of indigenous communities that have had success in applying traditional knowledge to fighting climate change and how American and international law falls short in preventing exploitation of those tribes and methods. Elizabeth Kronk Warner, professor and director of the Tribal Law and Government Center at the School of Law, and Joseph Brewer II, assistant professor in environmental studies, have published a working paper, “Guarding Against Exploitation: Protecting Indigenous Knowledge in the Age of Climate Change.” The study shares examples of tribes that have developed knowledge of how to ameliorate drastic effects of climate change on their

native lands as well as indigenous communities that have developed their own laws governing how their traditional knowledge can be used outside of their communities. “The inspiration for this article was everyone would talk aspirationally about how we should be using traditional knowledge to help fight climate change, but none of us knew exactly how to do that,” Kronk Warner said. “Unfortunately, we came to the conclusion there really isn’t a good legal remedy in the existing categories of intellectual property law to protect traditional knowledge.” — Mike Krings

RESEARCH

Legal system should help citizen innovation survive and thrive THE TIME HAS COME FOR A PHILOSOPHICAL CHANGE in the way the American legal system, government and private business view innovations created by private citizens, a KU Law professor argues in a new law review article. Andrew Torrance, Earl B. Shurtz Research Professor at KU Law and visiting scientist at the MIT Sloan School of Management, and his colleague, Eric von Hippel, T. Wilson Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, have co-authored “The Right to Innovate,” a Michigan State Law Review article that offers three approaches to protecting “citizen innovators” and their right to engage in noncommercial innovation to satisfy their own needs and to share their innovations freely for the betterment of society. Citizen innovators often abandon inventing when faced with governmental scrutiny or legal action because they are either unaware of their rights or lack the resources to hire

attorneys to defend them. To combat this chilling effect, the authors include a “toolkit” for innovators to help them understand their rights. “The fact that innovation is coming from new sources is wonderful for society,” Torrance said. “But the legal system is better at crushing citizen innovation than fostering and protecting it. What Eric and I are concerned about is that, if you don’t recognize this vital source of innovation, and protect it from overregulation and overzealous application of intellectual property, you risk destroying it.” “We need to celebrate these valuable amenities and enlist the law to ensure they survive and thrive.” — Mike Krings

KU LAW MAGAZINE 21


FACULTY NEWS

BOOKS

Textbook’s tenaciously non-Western approach reflects world in which law students will practice Euro-centric or Washington insider-centric book. The reason is the non-Western world is the one in which our students will be practicing.”

RAJ BHALA, ONE OF THE WORLD’S FOREMOST EXPERTS in international trade law, has authored the 4th edition of “International Trade Law: An Interdisciplinary, NonWestern Textbook.” First published in 1996, the book provides a comprehensive analysis of the field. “Since 1996, which was just after NAFTA and the World Trade Organization were born, the field of international trade law has greatly broadened and deepened. The broadening has come in that the field is now viewed at two levels, both theoretical and practical. The deepening is largely because of the proliferation of items put on the international trade agenda,” said Bhala, associate dean for international and comparative law and the Rice Distinguished Professor at KU Law. “In choosing cases and illustrations, the book is tenacious in using non-Western examples,” Bhala said. “It’s not a

“They will work in a world in which India is the largest freemarket democracy and most religiously diverse country, in which China’s rise is undeniable but its future uncertain, and in which European economies aren’t dominant, as Greece’s recent troubles demonstrate,” Bhala continued. “It’s imperative to prepare students for that future, even if they plan to work completely domestically.” — Mike Krings

BOOKS

Professor demystifies federal civil jurisdiction in ‘Nutshell’ book A KU LAW PROFESSOR’S NEWEST BOOK ATTEMPTS TO simplify one of the most challenging topics covered in a standard first-year civil procedure course: subject matter jurisdiction of federal courts. Lou Mulligan’s “Federal Civil Jurisdiction” (2015) is part of West Academic’s “In a Nutshell Series.” Although the volume is aimed primarily at students studying civil procedure, it could also be of value for students in other courses covering topics such as federal courts, complex litigation and civil rights. The book is also intended to provide practitioners with a refresher on the basics of federal civil jurisdiction. “Because jurisdiction brings to the fore complex issues of constitutional law, federalism principles and tactical

22 KU LAW MAGAZINE

advantage, students often find it a challenging topic,” said Mulligan, professor of law. “This book aims to help students digest this material by use of charts, examples and decision trees, which render the material more accessible without glossing over key aspects of the analysis.” This marks Mulligan’s third book. He is the sole active author of “Kansas Civil Jury Instruction Companion Handbook” and a co-author of “Kansas Code of Civil Procedure, Annotated.” — Mindie Paget


NEW HIRES

Nationally recognized nonprofit law expert joins KU Law faculty ONE OF THE NATION’S leading authorities on nonprofit law has joined the KU Law faculty as the Professor from Practice. Bruce R. Hopkins, who has published more than 30 books in the field, will teach courses including Nonprofit and Tax-Exempt Organizations. “I care very much about the role of nonprofit organizations, particularly charities, in U.S. society and try to pass along some of that passion in the classroom,” Hopkins said. “Lawyers, including young ones, have a tendency to serve on nonprofit boards. I want to instill in the students not only nonprofit law basics but a sense of the importance of this type of service.” Early in his practice, Hopkins began teaching nonprofit law as an adjunct professor at George Washington University and authored the first book on the subject. After working at large firms in Washington, D.C., he joined a small firm to free up more time to write and speak. He started what is now the second longest-running national conference in the field and has written a monthly newsletter for 32 years. Most recently, Hopkins practiced for nearly two decades at Polsinelli PC in Kansas City, Missouri, where he helped build a substantial nonprofit law practice group. “I come from a family of teachers. I wanted to be a lawyer, but apparently some teaching genes came my way. The areas of tax law that I teach are rather complex, and I enjoy the challenge of presenting the material in a way the students can understand,” Hopkins said. “I also enjoy being at the KU law school. The more I am here, the more I want of the experience.” — Mindie Paget

Honors FACULTY KUDOS Outka honored with sustainability leadership award, interdisciplinary starter grant Professor Uma Outka received two awards for her commitment to sustainability and research on climate change mitigation, renewable energy and fossil fuels. KU’s Center for Sustainability recognized Outka with a Sustainability Leadership Award, highlighting leadership and creativity in addressing environmental, economic and social responsibility issues on campus and in the community. Along with colleagues in the School of Architecture and School of Public Affairs and Administration, Outka received a $10,000 interdisciplinary grant from The Commons to explore how local energy transitions can make communities more accessible and equitable. Outka and her colleagues plan to organize a symposium and develop a research team to produce a written work exploring local energy transitions and social justice.

AALS to recognize Drahozal for service as exemplary mentor to junior faculty Professor Christopher Drahozal will be honored in January by the Association of American Law Schools for his service to legal education through exemplary mentorship. Drahozal, associate dean for research and faculty development and the John M. Rounds Distinguished Professor of Law, will be recognized along with a dozen other professors by the Section on Business Associations during the AALS annual meeting in New York. In nominating Drahozal, his faculty colleagues noted, “Even beyond his own example of scholarly excellence, Chris’ generosity in advising and guiding junior faculty has contributed to our development as scholars and to the professional achievements of all of our junior colleagues over the years.” Drahozal is an internationally known scholar whose writing focuses on the law and economics of dispute resolution.

KU LAW MAGAZINE 23


ALUMNI NEWS 1

5

2

6

3

7

4

8

24 KU LAW MAGAZINE


9

Coming home KU Law celebrated Reunion and Homecoming weekend October 30-31 with alumni from across the country. We extended a special welcome to the classes of 1975, 1985, 1990, 1995 and 2005 for their milestone reunions. Thank you for sharing your time with us! 10

11

12

1

Lydia Beebe, L’77, shares a laugh with her husband, Chuck Doyle, L’78, and friends during the KU Law Homecoming tailgate party.

2

Linda Legg, L’75 (center), catches up with Dean Stephen Mazza and fellow 1975 alumna Cathleen Chandler Stevenson during the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception at The Oread.

3

Betsy Blake, L’05, reconnects with Professor Laura Hines during the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception.

4

Otto Newton, L’75, and his wife, Rosa Lee, chat with Dean Stephen Mazza during the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception.

5

Board of Governors member Jabari Wamble, L’06, converses with fellow alumni at the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception.

6

Lauren Fletcher and Heather Hall, both L’05, enjoy the company of classmates at the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception.

7

Amy Davis Coopman, L’95, visits with a friend during the All-Reunion Cocktail Reception.

8

David Stevenson, Cathleen Chandler Stevenson, L’75, Paula Starr and Ted Starr, L’75, pause for a photo during KU Law Homecoming tailgate festivities.

9

A group of 1985 graduates poses for a class photo (l-r): Andrew Hwang, Ray Simmons, Justice Carol Beier, Diana Dietrich, Judge Mary Murguia, Janet Murguia and Annie Waxman Lopez.

10 Brad Lippert, L’90, enjoys the KU Law Homecoming tailgate party on Campanile Hill. 11 Board of Governors member Emily Metzger, L’80 (right), embraces Yvette Leerskov Gardner, L’90, during the All-Reunion Cocktail Party at The Oread. 12 Andrew B. Hwang, L’85, catches up with Professor John Peck during the All-Reunion Cocktail Party.

Photos by Earl Richardson, L’08 KU LAW MAGAZINE 25


EARL RICHARDSON; CONTRIBUTED BY BRAND FAMILY

ALUMNI NEWS

With distinction

Three alumni earn KU Law’s highest honor Three KU Law alumni with distinguished careers in academia, law practice and the judiciary received the Distinguished Alumni Award, the law school’s highest honor, at a ceremony on May 2 in Lawrence. The award is presented annually to graduates who have distinguished themselves through exemplary service to the legal profession, their communities, KU and the state or nation.

NICHOLAS KITTRIE, L’50

JOHN W. (JACK) BRAND, L’59

JUSTICE LAWTON NUSS, L’82

Born in the U.K., Kittrie is a distinguished University Professor of Law and former dean of American University Washington College of Law in Washington, D.C. With expertise in American and international public and criminal law, Kittrie has served as counsel to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and is chair of the United Nations Alliance of NGOs on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice. Kittrie has authored and edited more than 15 books and is often consulted as an expert on political offenders, terrorism, war crimes, extradition and sentencing.

Brand’s career with the Lawrence law firm Stevens & Brand, co-founded by his father in 1925, spanned nearly 48 years. He represented Commerce Bank and assisted the Kansas Department of Insurance with receivership litigation. Brand served as president of the Douglas County Bar Association, fellow of the American and Kansas bar foundations, member of two governmental ethics commissions and chair of several Kansas Bar Association committees, receiving the KBA Outstanding Service Award in 1999. Brand died May 12, 2015.

A fourth-generation Kansan and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, Nuss spent the first 20 years of his legal career practicing with Clark, Mize & Linville in Salina. He served as president of the Kansas Association of Defense Counsel, which also awarded him the Distinguished Service Award and Defense Research Institute Exceptional Performance Citation. Gov. Bill Graves appointed Nuss to the Kansas Supreme Court in 2002, and he became chief justice in 2010. He is the court’s liaison to the Kansas District Judges’ Association and the Kansas Board of Law Examiners.

WHO WILL BE NEXT? Submit nominations by January 15 | law.ku.edu/distinguished 26 KU LAW MAGAZINE


ClassNotes

Items were received or collected prior to Nov. 1, 2015. Submit your news online at law.ku.edu/keep-touch. KU Law Magazine relies on alumni for the accuracy of information reported. 1947 Hon. Richard Dean Rogers, who is celebrating his 40th anniversary as a judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas in Wichita, stepped down from the bench in August to become an inactive senior judge. A Kansas native, Rogers’ varied career includes serving as an Air Corps captain and bombardier in WWII, instructor, city commissioner, county attorney, mayor, general counsel, and legislator in both the Kansas Senate and House of Representatives. In 1975, President Gerald Ford nominated Rogers for a seat on the U.S. District Court. He was confirmed on July 31, 1975, and commissioned on Aug. 5 the same year. He received senior status on July 1, 1989. 1954 Gene Balloun, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. He was recognized for expertise in Bet-the-Company Litigation and Commercial Litigation. 1963 Robert E. Donatelli joined the Pennsylvania office of Norris McLaughlin & Marcus PA after nearly 50 years with his successful trusts and estates and real estate firm, the Law Office of Robert E. Donatelli. He practices in the estate planning and administration group. 1969 G. Phillip Shuler III was recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2016 in the area of Litigation – Labor and Employment. Shuler is a partner with Chaffe McCall LLP in New Orleans. 1971 Bill Sampson, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the

2016 edition of Best Lawyers. He was recognized for his expertise in Bet-theCompany Litigation, Commercial Litigation, Litigation – Banking and Finance, and Product Liability Litigation – Defendants.

chief judge of the Harvey County District Court and will become a senior judge for the Kansas Court of Appeals. Walker will continue as an adjunct professor at Bethel College, where he teaches political science.

1972 Stephen M. Joseph, a founding member and chair of the Criminal Law Division at Joseph, Hollander & Craft LLC in Wichita, was honored for his Criminal Defense practice by Missouri & Kansas Super Lawyers 2015. He was also recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2016 for his expertise in Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar and Criminal Defense: White-Collar, and ranked by Chambers USA in the sector of General Litigation: White-Collar Criminal and Government Investigations.

1974 Larry D. Leonard was elected chairman of the Board of Regents for Tulsa Community College for the 2015-2016 academic year. He is a senior partner in the Tulsa firm of Leonard & Rineer PC.

1973 Hon. Mary Beck Briscoe stepped down as chief judge of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in September 2015, but remains an active judge on the circuit. President Bill Clinton appointed Briscoe to the federal appeals court in 1995, and she became chief judge in 2010. Hon. Karen Mitchell Humphreys, a magistrate judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas, was inducted into the KU Women’s Hall of Fame at the 2015 Women’s Recognition Banquet hosted by the Emily Taylor Center for Women & Gender Equity. Since 1970, the Hall of Fame has honored more than 200 exemplary KU alumnae, faculty and staff women who serve as role models for students as career women and community leaders. Hon. Richard Walker is retiring as

1976 Ross A. Hollander, a founding member of Joseph Hollander & Craft LLC, was named Best Lawyers’ 2016 Labor Law-Management “Lawyer of the Year” for Wichita and was recognized for his legal expertise in the areas of Employment Law – Management and Litigation – Labor and Employment. He was also ranked by Chambers USA in the Labor/Employment Litigation sector and spotlighted in the sector for General Litigation: Mediators. Additionally, Hollander was honored by Missouri & Kansas Super Lawyers 2015 for his work in Employment Litigation: Defense. Hollander chairs the firm’s Civil Litigation and Employment Law Division. 1977 Lydia I. Beebe has joined the San Francisco law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC as senior of counsel. Previously, Beebe served for 20 years as corporate secretary and chief governance officer of Chevron Corporation. Last spring, she received the National Judicial College’s Advancement of Justice Award, honoring those who have demonstrated dedication to improving justice in the judiciary. Tim Pickell was elected and in June became president of the Kansas Association

KU LAW MAGAZINE 27


ALUMNI NEWS

for Justice, formerly the Kansas Trial Lawyers’ Association. He “looks forward to leading the fight to preserve the independence of our Kansas Judiciary from attacks by the executive and legislative branches of late.” Stan Sexton, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. He was recognized for expertise in Commercial Litigation, Litigation – Environmental, Personal Injury Litigation – Defendants, Product Liability Litigation – Defendants. 1978 Sheila C. Bair began her tenure Aug. 1 as president of Washington College, an independent liberal arts college in Chestertown, Maryland. Bair is the school’s 28th president and the first female to serve in that role since the college was founded in 1782. Bair also delivered the keynote address at the Third Annual Women in Housing Leadership Forum on Sept. 18 in Dallas. Martha Hodgesmith was one of three disability advocates featured in KU’s 2015-2016 Women of Distinction calendar. Hodgesmith serves as associate director of the Research and Training Center on Independent Living at KU’s Life Span Institute. Hodgesmith has advocated on behalf of people with disabilities throughout her legal career. Jeffrey S. Southard is retiring in June to begin a mediation practice after 20 years as in-house trial counsel for Farmers Insurance. Southard plans to specialize in personal injury and other types of civil cases. While at Farmers, he tried more than 75 jury trials and was named attorney of the year by Farmers in 2008. David G. Tittsworth has come out of retirement to join the investment management practice at the law firm of Ropes & Gray. He began service in June as counsel in the firm’s Washington, D.C., office. Tittsworth recently completed an 18-year tenure as president and CEO of the Investment Adviser Association, a nonprofit organization that represents

28 KU LAW MAGAZINE

the interests of SEC-registered investment advisory firms before Congress, the SEC, the CFTC and other regulators. 1979 Marie Woodbury, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by her peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. She was recognized for expertise in Product Liability Litigation – Defendants. 1980 William F. (Brad) Bradley Jr. will retire from NIC Inc. on Dec. 31, 2015. He currently serves as executive vice president, chief administrative officer, general counsel and corporate secretary for the company. Bradley has been with NIC for 20 years and was involved with e-government for nearly 30 years. Founded in 1992, NIC is the nation’s leading provider of official government websites, online services and secure payment processing solutions. Hon. Janice Miller Karlin was appointed by Chief Judge Mary Beck Briscoe, L’73, to become chief judge of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, effective Sept. 4, 2015. Karlin has been a bankruptcy judge for the District of Kansas since 2002 and is serving her second five-year term as a member of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel. Bruce C. Mallonee, of Bangor, Maine, was sworn in June 17 as a justice of the Maine Superior Court, the state’s upper court of general jurisdiction. Mallonee previously served on the Maine District Court and as a partner at Rudman & Winchell LLC. Irma S. Russell, L’80, joined the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law as the Edward A. Smith Chair. She previously served as dean and professor at the University of Montana School of Law. 1981 Walt Cofer, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. He was recognized for expertise in Product Liability Litigation – Defendants.

Scott W. Mach, of Popham Law Firm PC in Kansas City, Missouri, has been selected as a member of the Nation’s Top One Percent by the National Association of Distinguished Counsel. The association aims to objectively recognize attorneys who elevate the standards of the bar and provide a benchmark for other lawyers. Mach practices workers’ compensation and personal injury law. Hon. Julie Robinson, of the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas, was inducted into the KU Women’s Hall of Fame at the 2015 Women’s Recognition Banquet hosted by the Emily Taylor Center for Women & Gender Equity. Since 1970, the Hall of Fame has honored more than 200 exemplary KU alumnae, faculty and staff women who serve as role models for students as career women and community leaders. Robinson was the first AfricanAmerican woman to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas. 1982 Jim Muehlberger, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. He was recognized for expertise in Mass Tort Litigation / Class Actions – Defendants. 1983 Dennis D. Depew was chosen by Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt to lead the division in Schmidt’s office that handles civil lawsuits. Depew is from Neodesha and has had a private law practice for more than 30 years. He served as the Kansas Bar Association’s president in 2013 and 2014. The division Depew leads is the principal defender for the state, its agencies and its employees when they are sued. Mark W. Knackendoffel, CEO and founder of The Trust Company, headquartered in Manhattan, Kansas, has expanded to establish a branch office in Lawrence. The Trust Company, established in 1992, has grown to nearly $800 million in assets and a staff of 27 employees. It also has a branch office in Columbia, Missouri.


1984 John M. Holt, news anchor at WDAF-TV FOX4, emceed the inaugural Kansas City Armed Forces Day banquet, “Celebrating Freedom & Honoring Service,” on May 16 at the Kansas City Convention Center. Hosted by the American Fallen Warrior Memorial Foundation, the banquet brought together hundreds of active duty military personnel, reservists, veterans, their families, and business and community leaders. Matt Keenan, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2016. He was recognized for expertise in Product Liability Litigation – Defendants. 1985 Justice Carol Beier, of the Kansas Supreme Court received the Betty M. Drees Distinguished Alumnae Award from KU’s Women in Medicine and Science organization at its annual awards dinner. The award recognizes men and women who represent the best of KU alumni, with priority given to alumni from the School of Medicine, School of Nursing or School of Health Professions whose efforts reflect a lifelong achievement of “supporting a legacy of influential women.” Stephen Hopkins was appointed to the Maricopa County Superior Court by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey. Before opening his own law firm in 1995, Hopkins was a trial lawyer at Snell & Wilmer LLP for 10 years. Sarah A. Strunk was elected chair of Fennemore Craig PC’s board of directors. In her new role, Strunk leads the firm’s strategic growth, client service and professional development initiatives. She practices business and finance law and has been with Fennemore Craig’s Phoenix office since 2000. Joe Rebein, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. He was recognized for expertise in Commercial Litigation. Jay Simpson, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was named Best Lawyers 2016 Lawyer of the Year in Tax Law. Only a single lawyer in each practice area and designated metro area receives Lawyer of the Year recognition. He was also recognized for expertise in Litigation and Controversy – Tax, Tax Law. 1986 Jo Hardesty, director of Legal Services for Students at the University of Kansas, received the Outstanding Woman Staff Member Award at the 2015 Women’s Recognition Banquet hosted by the Emily Taylor Center for Women & Gender Equity. Scott Sayler, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2016. He was recognized for expertise in Personal Injury Litigation – Defendants.

Scholarships make a KU education possible for future leaders Supporting KU with your gift will benefit students for generations. To learn more, please visit giving.farabove.org.


ALUMNI NEWS

1988 Mark Bannister and Mike Jilka, in collaboration with first-year KU Law student Derek Ulrich, co-authored “Striking Gold, Not Dynamite When Using Social Media in Employment Screening,” 32 Hofstra Labor & Employment Law Journal 1-29 (2014). Elizabeth A. Schartz, a partner in the Dallas law firm of Thompson & Knight LLP, was selected for inclusion in the 2015 Chambers USA “Leaders in their Field” legal directory by Chambers & Partners in the area of Labor & Employment Law. Chambers USA lists attorneys who are recommended from in-depth interviews with peers and clients. She was also recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2016 in the areas of Employment Law-Management and Litigation-Labor and Employment.

of Oil and Gas Law. Villarreal is a partner in the Dallas firm of Thompson & Knight LLP.

1989 Stephen L. Sapp joined the Dallas office of Schiff Hardin LLP as a partner in the corporate and securities group. He focuses his practice on public and private offerings of debt and equity securities, mergers and acquisitions, and corporate and securities reporting and compliance. Sapp previously worked at Locke Lord LLP.

1992 L. James Berglund II, a partner with the Dallas law firm of Thompson & Knight LLP, was selected for inclusion in the 2015 Chambers USA “Leaders in their Field” legal directory in the area of Antitrust Law. He was also recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2016 in the areas of Antitrust Law, Commercial Litigation and Litigation-Antitrust. Lecia Chaney accepted a position as associate general counsel with Insperity, a professional employment organization in Kingwood, Texas. Most recently, Chaney was a partner at Colbin Chaney Saenz & Rodriguez LLP in Brownsville, Texas.

1990 Hon. Roseann Ketchmark was confirmed as a federal judge for the Western District of Missouri. President Obama nominated Ketchmark in November 2014, and the U.S. Senate unanimously approved her appointment in September 2015. Ketchmark previously served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the Western District. Madeleine McDonough, a partner at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, was selected by her peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. She was recognized for expertise in FDA Law. McDonough also practices in the firm’s Washington, D.C., office. Debra Villarreal was recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2016 in the area

30 KU LAW MAGAZINE

1991 Michael J. Armstrong was appointed by Kansas House Speaker Ray Merrick to serve on the Kansas Water Authority (KWA). Armstrong has served as general manager of WaterOne since 2003. Based in Lenexa, it is one of the largest independent, nonprofit public water utilities in the state. The KWA is responsible for advising the governor, the Kansas Legislature and the director of the Kansas Water Office on water policy issues. Curtis L. Winegarner received the 2015 Defender of Distinction award from the Missouri State Public Defender. Winegarner joined the Missouri State Public Defender office in 1997 after several years in private practice and currently serves as a trial team leader in the Kansas City office.

1993 Harry Herington received the Center for Digital Government’s 2015 Leadership by Example Award. Herington is CEO and chairman of the board at Olathe-based NIC Inc., the nation’s leading provider of official government websites, online services and secure payment processing solutions. 1994 Hon. Michael D. Burrichter, Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed an administrative law judge for the U.S. Social Security Administration. He was sworn in March 13 at a ceremony in Washington, D.C. Holly A. Dyer, a partner at Foulston Siefkin LLP in Wichita, has been installed as president of the Wichita Bar Association for

2015-2016. Dyer, who practices commercial and complex litigation, has also been named by Benchmark Litigation as a Local Litigation Star and one of the Top 250 Women in Litigation in the United States. Kim Jones, a board member for the Mid-America Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce and a partner in the Kansas City firm of Seyferth Blumenthal & Harris LLC, was featured in Camp magazine, Kansas City’s Voice for the LGBT and Allied Community. Jones discussed her work as a labor employment lawyer, her dedication to the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, and her love for her wife and Kansas City. 1995 Karen K. Cain joined Littler’s Kansas City, Missouri, office as a shareholder. A lead defense litigator, Cain’s experience includes individual and class claims, including defense of lawsuits filed by the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission. She has also defended claims of discrimination, harassment, retaliation, constructive discharge and more. Cain previously served as counsel in the Kansas City office of Bryan Cave. Sal Intagliata was honored in the 2016 edition of Best Lawyers in America for his legal expertise in Non-White Collar Criminal Defense. Intagliata practices with Monnat & Spurrier Chartered in Wichita. 1996 Hon. Deborah Hernandez Mitchell was appointed in July to serve as a judge for the 18th District Court by Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback after the retirement of Judge Joseph Bribiesca. Hernandez Mitchell, of Wichita, previously practiced at the law firm Woodard Hernandez Roth & Day LLC. 1998 Megan L. Brackney, a partner at the New York firm of Kostelanetz & Fink LLP, was elected as a Fellow of the American College of Tax Counsel. Membership in the professional association of tax attorneys is


limited to a maximum of 700 tax attorneys across the United States. She also published an article in the New York Law School Law Review titled, “Reporting Loss Transactions: Too Much of a Good Thing.” 1999 Sarah Deer received the Spirit of Excellence Award at the ABA Midyear Meeting in San Diego, California. The award celebrates the efforts and accomplishments of lawyers who work to promote a more racially and ethnically diverse legal profession. Deer is a professor of law at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota. Eric D. Madden was selected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2016. In addition, his firm was named Litigation Department of the Year Finalist by Texas Lawyer. Madden is a partner in the Dallas office of Reid Collins & Tsai LLP, a trial boutique firm. 2000 Christopher M. Joseph was honored by Best Lawyers in America 2016 for his work in Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar. Joseph manages the Topeka and Lawrence offices of Joseph Hollander & Craft LLC. He was also honored by Missouri & Kansas Super Lawyers 2015 in the practice area of Civil Litigation. Kirk A. Patten, assistant chief of fisheries for the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, was chosen by the National Conservation Leadership Institute as part of the ninth cohort of Fellows for its 2014-2015 leadership development program. Since 2006, 36 conservation professionals join the ranks of Fellows selected each year from state and federal agencies, non-governmental organizations and companies working in the natural resources industry. Kirk resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Robert G. Vaught joined the Phoenix office of Quarles & Brady LLP, serving as of counsel in its labor and employment practice group. He counsels human resources and risk management personnel regarding Title VII, ADEA, FMLA, ADA, OSHA, wage and

Twins Julian Sebastião Perez Marques and Luciana Lynnde Conceição Marques, were born July 13, 2015, to Jobrina Nicole Perez-Marques, L’03, and her husband, Ryan Marques. hour matters, hiring and discipline issues and wrongful discharge complaints. 2001 Stacia Boden joined the Office of General Counsel at Wichita State University as associate general counsel. She previously served as general counsel for a private, nonprofit college in Overland Park and as a partner at Kutak Rock LLP in Wichita. Andrew Steinberg became executive vice president and chief business officer of the Atlanta Hawks Basketball Club. Steinberg previously served as executive vice president of business operations for Sporting KC. 2002 Diane L. Bellquist was recognized as a Missouri & Kansas Super Lawyers Rising Star in the area of Administrative Law. She is an attorney at Joseph, Hollander & Craft LLC in Topeka and Lawrence. Lt. Col. Drew G. Roberts is a staff judge advocate in the U.S. Air Force. He is stationed at Buckley Air Force Base in Aurora, Colorado. Dan Zmijewski, L’02, and Chris Dove, L’03, partnered together to form DRZ Law LLC in Kansas City, Missouri. They focus their practice on business and

financial litigation, business owner disputes, real estate litigation, intellectual property litigation, and student abuse cases. 2003 Shalini Shanker was appointed to a four-year term on the NCAA Division I Softball Committee. James Owen joined the Drury Alumni Association’s Alumni Council, which serves as the association’s governing body. Drury University is located in Springfield, Missouri. Owen works for the Missouri Office of Administration in Jefferson City. Beatriz Ibarra formed Ibarra Elder Law LLC in 2015 in Overland Park. She focuses her practice on assisting elderly and disabled individuals and their families with long-term care decisions, Medicaid planning, estates and trusts, special needs planning, probate and other issues. Ibarra also speaks fluent Spanish and works to raise awareness within the Hispanic community of the importance of planning for the future. Jobrina Nicole Perez-Marques and her husband, Ryan Marques, welcomed their first children – twins Julian Sebastião Perez Marques and Luciana Lynnde Conceição Marques – on July 13, 2015.

KU LAW MAGAZINE 31


ALUMNI NEWS

Jacob B. Smith was promoted to partner in the Phoenix office of Squire Patton Boggs LLP. He focuses his practice on federal and state income tax matters, including mergers and acquisitions, private equity transactions, real estate transactions, tax planning for limited liability companies, partnerships and corporations, and international tax issues in cross-border transactions. 2004 Steve Allton, a staff attorney at Legal Services for Students at the University of Kansas, was recognized among the 2015 KU Men of Merit. The honor goes to a group of students, faculty and staff positively defining masculinity through challenging norms, taking action and leading by example while making contributions to the university and/or the community. 2005 Matthew E. Austin was promoted to president of Caliber Development Co., a commercial real estate development and management company based in Oklahoma City and owned by Wexford Capital. Prior to joining Caliber in 2010, Austin was an associate at Polsinelli PC in Kansas City, Missouri, where he focused on real estate zoning and tax incentives. 2006 Aidan Koster was featured on the cover and accompanying story in the December 2014 edition of Corporate Counsel. The article discussed the growing trend for operations managers or legal administrators to run non-legal functions in corporate legal offices. Koster also holds a Master of Public Administration from the University of Kansas. Sean J. O’Hara became president of the Sandra Day O’Connor American Inn of Court for 2015-2016. He previously served as vice president. Stanley Wan was elected partner in the Beijing headquarters of Commerce & Finance Law Offices. His practice focuses on antitrust, litigation/arbitration, and capital markets. 2007 Takafumi Komatsubara became in-house legal counsel at Coca-Cola (Japan)

32 KU LAW MAGAZINE

He teaches international arbitration and litigation with a focus on international, U.S., English and German law. In addition to his bar admissions in New York and Germany, Heppner is an English barrister and solicitor advocate. Holly Perkins was elected a new member in the Lawrence and Kansas City offices of Joseph Hollander & Craft LLC. Perkins defends large and small employers in state and federal courts and agencies. She is a member of the boards of directors of the Lawrence Humane Society and the Shelter Inc. in Lawrence.

Aidan Koster, L’06 (left) Company, Limited in June. He was previously an attorney in TMI Associates’ Tokyo office. Bryan E. Meyer joined the Kansas City, Missouri, office of Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP as a patent attorney. Meyer previously operated a private practice he established in 2010. Andrew Newton, patent counsel at Qualcomm Inc. in San Diego, California, was named a 2015 Top Attorney by the San Diego Daily Transcript. The Transcript conducts a peer voting process to determine the best lawyers in San Diego County, and Newton was recognized for his expertise in Intellectual Property-Transactional. Newton formerly practiced at Fish & Richardson PC (San Diego) as both an intellectual property litigator and patent prosecutor. Bobby W. Pineda was appointed as city prosecutor for the City of Green River, Wyoming, in February 2015. Pineda operates a private practice that he established in 2008 and has acted as the alternate municipal court judge in Rock Springs, Wyoming, since September 2013. 2008 Heiko Heppner, who is counsel in the litigation and dispute resolution department of global law firm Clifford Chance, was appointed professor of law at Fuzhou University Faculty of Law, China.

2009 Nathan Betzen, president of the XBMC Foundation, spoke by invitation on a panel discussing trademark policies as they relate to open source software at the Software Freedom Legal Center’s fall conference at Columbia Law School in New York. Marcela Cristina Blanco, an attorney at Diaz Reus and head of the firm’s office in Bogotá, Colombia, has been recognized among the Top 50 Female Lawyers who specialize in Latin America by the editorial staff of Latinvex. Blanco is licensed to practice in the U.S. and Colombia and represents Diaz Reus clients in international and domestic litigation and arbitration in both countries. She is the co-author of “Business Crime in Colombia” for the 2014 and 2015 editions of The International Comparative Legal Guide to Business Crime. Michelle A. Delgado attended U.S. Army Officer Candidate School and graduated over the summer. She joined the Air Defense Artillery branch and will serve as an air defense officer for the Army. Casey Y. Meek was named to the Missouri & Kansas Super Lawyers Rising Stars list in the area of Criminal Defense. Meek is an attorney at Joseph, Hollander & Craft LLC in Topeka and Lawrence, focusing on DUI and traffic crimes defense.


2010 Jennifer Lauren Berry accepted a position as deputy city attorney in the Office of the San Diego City Attorney, Civil Advisory Division. Berry was previously an attorney at the firm of Paul, Plevin, Sullivan & Connaughton LLP. Chris Grenz accepted a position as in-house counsel at Sprint, where he will advise the marketing, advertising and communications group. He formerly practiced at Bryan Cave LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, where he worked in both the commercial litigation and labor and employment law client service groups. Rury L. Grisham joined the Alexandria, Virginia, law firm of Nath, Goldberg & Meyer as a patent attorney. Grisham was formally with the firm of Roberts Mlotkowski Safran & Cole PC and the United States Patent & Trademark Office. Matthew T. Schoonover joined Koprince Law LLC in Lawrence, Kansas. His practice focuses on federal government contract law. Schoonover also writes about government contracting on SmallGovCon. Schoonover previously practiced commercial litigation in Phoenix and Kansas City. 2012 Christian B. Corrigan is serving as a research attorney for Justice Caleb Stegall of the Kansas Supreme Court. Brian S. Duerksen joined the GSO Capital Partners LP in-house legal team at the end of May. GSO Capital Partners is located in New York City. Matthew T. Kincaid joined the Kansas City office of Dysart Taylor Cotter McMonigle & Montemore PC as an associate attorney. Kincaid was previously an associate attorney with Martin, Pringle, Oliver, Wallace & Bauer LLP. Ann Parkins accepted a partner position in the McPherson law firm of Wise & Weber LC. Parkins is licensed to practice in Kansas state and federal courts and is a member of the Kansas and McPherson bar associations. 2013 Torrance Parkins was sworn into office as a McPherson County attorney

upon the resignation of David Page. Parkins previously served as municipal prosecutor for the city of Marquette. Eric A. Sader won a contested election to represent the social work profession on the National Association of Social Workers’ National Committee on Nominations and Leadership. Sader serves as Region Representative X, covering the states of Arkansas, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, New Mexico and South Dakota. Joseph A. Schremmer joined the Wichita law firm of Depew Gillen Rathbun & McInteer LLC as an associate attorney. Schremmer previously served as in-house counsel for Gressel Oilfield Service LLC and as an associate with Withers Gough Pike Pfaff & Peterson LLC. 2014 Aaron J. Steventon joined Andreas Law Office in Winfield, Kansas. Steventon maintains a general practice, including divorce, criminal and juvenile defense, landlord-tenant, immigration and other civil matters. 2015 Jordan A. Carter joined the global product liability group at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri. She focuses her practice on complex product liability litigation with an emphasis on tobacco. During her time at KU Law, Carter was the executive note and comment editor for the Kansas Law Review and served as a teaching assistant in the Lawyering program.  Jason Rhae Harmon joined the pharmaceutical and medical device litigation group at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri. Harmon represents product manufacturers in complex litigation across the United States. While at KU Law, Harmon served as a staff editor on the Kansas Law Review and argued on the winning team that wrote the best brief in the In-House Moot Court Competition.

Thomas Hiatt joined the Kansas City, Missouri, office of Spencer Fane LLP as an associate in the litigation and dispute resolution practice group. Joseph McGroder joined Graves Garrett LLC in Kansas City, Missouri, as an associate supporting the firm’s commercial litigation, white collar criminal defense and free speech, campaign finance and election law practice groups. He previously worked at a regional personal injury firm. Katherine E. Malotte joined the civil litigation and employment law department of Joseph, Hollander & Craft LLC in Wichita. She focuses her practice on federal and state employment law, intellectual property, negative covenants, and contract disputes. Paul Mose joined the torts group at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri. At KU Law, Mose earned awards for top oral advocate and best brief in the In-House Moot Court Competition and served as a note and comment editor for the Kansas Law Review. Mary Olson joined the global product liability group at Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP in Kansas City, Missouri. She served as an articles editor on the Kansas Law Review and finished third in KU Law’s In-House Moot Court Competition. Austin Strobel is an associate in the Idaho Falls, Idaho, law firm of Hawley Troxell. Alyse M. Zadalis joined Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP’s Kansas City, Missouri, office in the pharmaceutical and medical device litigation group. At KU Law, Zadalis served as an editor on the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy and a member of the Moot Court Council. n

KU LAW MAGAZINE 33


GIVING NEWS

Bever Dye LC Accepted by Chris Robe, L’72

Walter L. Cofer, L’81 & Nicola R. Heskett

Janice Miller Karlin, L’80 & Calvin J. Karlin, L’77

Matthew Keenan, L’84 & Lori Keenan

Teresa M. Meagher, L’79 & T. Bradley Manson, L’78

Sen. John Vratil, L’71 & Teresa Vratil

The Worrall Family Larry Worrall, L’57 & Beverly Worrall Michelle Worrall Tilton, L’88 (left) Rachel Worrall Smith, L’90 (right)

34 KU LAW MAGAZINE


WHY I GIVE

The James Woods Green Medallion

KU Law honors its top donors The law school honored recipients of the James Woods Green Medallion at a dinner on May 2 in Lawrence. The medallion, named in honor of the law school’s first dean, recognizes those whose cumulative contributions to the school exceed $25,000. This year’s honorees are pictured here with their medallions. The following recipients were unable to attend the ceremony: n Jennifer Johnson Kinzel, L’78 n n

n n n n

Bradley G. Korell, L’97 Deborah Cawley Moeller, L’91 & Michael Moeller, L’91 Eric, L'84 & Tracy Namee Mike, L’84 & Elaine Riggs Steve, L’82 & Sandra Walton Martha S. Warren, L’87

Photos by Earl Richardson

“When I was at KU Law, I was working three jobs and finished law school in two years instead of three. Travel was not an option. I’ve done a lot of traveling since then, though, and I know Mike believes strongly in the value of studying abroad. We thought this fund would be the best way to show the important role Mike played in my life.” Douglas Wheat, L’74, Westlake, Texas $100,000 to establish the Professor Michael Davis Legal Study Abroad Fund with his wife, Laura

“When Larry became sick, he thought it was important to start his own fund. I wanted to continue with his wishes, so I am funding an endowment in Larry’s name. If my sons and I can help a student stay in school and be less in debt, we will be glad.” Janet O’Neal, Leawood, Kansas $35,000 pledge to create the Larry O’Neal Law Scholarship Fund in memory of her late husband, Larry O’Neal, L’72

KU LAW MAGAZINE 35


DONOR REPORT

WITH SINCERE THANKS TO OUR DONORS Far Above Progress Campaign runs through June 2016. Pledge securely online at kuendowment.org/law

$26,584,339.88 through October 30, 2015 3,464 donors $25M

$20M

$20M GOAL SURPASSED!

GIFTS $14,949,857.38 $15M

REALIZED* | $1,575,706.63 $10M

PLEDGES | $1,428,775.87

$5M

PLANNED GIFTS $8,630,000.00

*Realized bequests and lifetime gifts

36 KU LAW MAGAZINE

JAMES WOODS GREEN MEDALLION HONOREES The James Woods Green Medallion honors donors whose cumulative giving to the University of Kansas School of Law is $25,000 & above. Honorees whose names are italicized are deceased. MOST RECENT HONOREES Bever Dye LC Walter L. Cofer, L’81 & Nicola R. Heskett Janice Miller Karlin, L’80 & Calvin J. Karlin, L’77 Matthew, L’84 & Lori Keenan Jennifer Johnson Kinzel, L’78 Bradley G. Korell, L’97 Teresa M. Meagher, L’79 & T. Bradley Manson, L’78 Deborah Cawley Moeller, L’91 & Michael Moeller, L’91 Eric, L’84 & Tracy Namee Mike, L’84 & Elaine Riggs Sen. John Vratil, L’71 Steve, L’83 & Sandra Walton Larry, L’57 & Beverly Worrall, Michelle Worrall Tilton, L’88 and Rachel Worrall Smith, L’90 PAST HONOREES Constance M. Achterberg, L’53 Frank A. Ackerman, L’80 Donald D. Adams, L’64 & Ann Wees Adams Terry Arthur, L’69, & Virginia Thomas Arthur Jennifer Gille Bacon, L’76 J. Eugene Balloun, L’54 Richard A. Barber, L’34 Mrs. Richard A. Barber Barbara Blake Bath, PhD & Thomas D. Bath, PhD Lydia I. Beebe, L’77 & Charles E. Doyle, L’78 Blake A. Biles, L’75 Richard L. Bond, L’60 & Suzanne Sedgwick Bond William F. (Brad) Bradley Jr., L’80 John K. Bremyer, L’46, & Jayne Williamson Bremyer Hon. Clayton Brenner, L’28 Daisy E. & Paul H. Brown Max & Mary Brown Professor Emeritus Robert C. Casad Barkley Clark Gertrude Clark Peggy A. Clark John D. Conderman, L’69, & Patricia R. Conderman Teresa Blatchley Conkey Mary K. Connell O. J. Connell Jr., L’38 Donald L. Cordes, L’59 Professor Mike Davis & Faye Davis Mark M. Deatherage, L’85 Suzanne M. Decker Michael F. Delaney, L’76, & Kathleen L. Delaney Glen W. Dickinson Professor Martin Dickinson & Sallie Dickinson Carolyn A. Dillon & Richard W. Dillon William R. Docking, L’77, & Judy O. Docking Robert L. Driscoll, L’64 Gary Duncan, L’74, & Adrianna D. Gonzales Duncan Ruth Adair Dyer, L’21 Mildred A. Early

David S. Elkouri, L’78 Clem Fairchild Dorothy Feir, PhD Bruce A. Finzen, L’73 David H. Fisher, L’38 & Mary Frances Fisher Charles L. Frickey, L’69 Loren M. Gensman Roland D. Gidney Jr., L’47 Donald W. Giffin, L’53 & Esther Brown Giffin Ernest J. Goppert, L’17 David J. Gottlieb & Rita Sloan Gottlieb Frederick B. Gould, L’89, & Julie Pigott Gould Brian G. Grace, L’67 Jordan L. Haines, L’57 & Shirley Cundiff Haines Barry D. Halpern, L’73 & Cynthia A. Halpern Kenneth M. Hamilton, L’47 & Ruth Hamilton Roberta B. Harkness Minnie I. Harms Edward J. Healy, L’79 Harry H. Herington Jr., L’93, & Cindy Herington Alvin D. Herrington, L’57 Al J. & Sylvia M. Herrod Elma A. Holdeman Alice A. Hook Charles H. Hostetler, L’63 & Julie A. Hostetler Mrs. A. Bryce Huguenin John E. Hurley Jr., L’62 & Jo Sicking Hurley Elizabeth Ann Hylton Hon. Theodore B. Ice, L’61 & Sue H. Ice Howard M. Immel, L’38 & Sue Immel Balfour & Margaret Jeffrey Arne L. Johnson Family Trust Richard Kane Professor Mike Kautsch & Elaine Kautsch Larry E. Keenan, L’54 John M. Kilroy Jr., L’73 Fred C. & Mary Robinson Koch Thomas G. Kokoruda, L’72 Florence M. Kuske Linda S. Legg, L’75 & Hon. Lawrence G. Crahan Hon. James K. Logan & Beverly Logan Robert W. Loyd, L’62 & Mary Jo Loyd Lyle D. Lutton Jr., L’50 & De Nell T. Lutton Daniel J. Lyons, L’77 & Maryanne Lyons Lucy E. Mason, L’92, & Cris Sena Glenn E. McCann, L’40 Madeleine M. McDonough, L’90 Brian K. McLeod, L’89 Eunice H. Melik Col. Edward A. Metcalf III, L’49 Professor Keith G. Meyer & Janet A. Meyer Dara Trum Miles, L’87 & Robin J. Miles, L’86 George D. Miner, L’22 John R. Morse, L’75 Jeffrey S. Nelson, L’80 & Lisa K. Nelson Hon. Ronald C. Newman, L’70 Holly Nielsen, L’82 Bernard E. Nordling, L’49 & Barbara A. Nordling Charles H. Oldfather Jr. Hortense Casady Oldfather Bernard V. O’Neill Jr., L’76 & Marion W. O’Neill Hon. James W. Paddock, L’56 Marjorie L. Page Robert A. Page, L’53 Mary Louise Parker Diane S. Parrish, L’79 Professor John C. Peck, L’74 & Pamela C. Peck Patrick E. Peery, L’81


William B. Pendleton, L’57 Mary Ruth Watermulder Petefish Arthur C. Piculell Jr., L’65 & Dee W. Piculell Donald H. Postlethwaite, L’26 & Ruth Lawless Postlethwaite Jean Humphrey Proffitt & Roy F. Proffitt Raymond F. Rice, L’1908 & Ethel Rice John M. Rounds, L’39 Hon. M. Kay Royse, L’78 Joan R. Ruff, L’73 & Dennis P. Wilbert, L’73 Bill R. Sampson, L’71 Drucilla J. Sampson, L’96 Elizabeth A. Schartz, L’88 Janet Manning Schroeder Robert A. Schroeder, L’37 Kelley D. Sears, L’74 & Jane A. Sears Carolyn Henry Shinkle & J. Frank Shinkle, L’41 Mary Maurine Shurtz Richard L. Sias, L’54 Beatrice Siegel Leo R. Sissel, L’50 Justice Fred N. Six, L’56 & Lilian Six Christopher Smith, L’72 Glee S. Smith Jr., L’47 & Geraldine B. Smith Shannon L. Spangler, L’87 & Michael E. Spangler Frank L. Snell, L’24 Mary Ellen Stadler Roger D. Stanton, L’63, & Judith Duncan Stanton Kate Stephens Hon. Donnan Stephenson, L’48 & Patricia Ledyard Stephenson John D. Stewart, L’40 & Hannah T. Stewart Mikel L. Stout, L’61 & LeAnn R. Stout Peter E. Strand, L’79 & Sheila C. Strand Edna J. Sullivan & James E. Sullivan, L’29 Willard B. Thompson, L’58 Erma B. & Frank E. Tyler Omer G. Voss, L’39 & Annabele K. Voss Omer G. Voss Jr. Katherine Hall Wagstaff & Robert W. Wagstaff Gary A. Waldron, L’79 & Carol A. Foster Charles R. Wall Martha S. Warren, L’87 Perry D. Warren, L’73, & Janet Beebe Warren Professor William E. Westerbeke Douglas D. Wheat, L’74 & Laura L. Wheat Houston L. Whiteside Willard G. Widder, L’49 Karl T. Wiedemann Paul L. Wilbert, L’38 Susan Scott Wilner R. Dean Wolfe, L’69 Marie S. Woodbury, L’79 & Daniel C. Claiborn, PhD Stanley N. Woodworth, L’78 Robert S. Wunsch, L’58 & Barbara Bateman Wunsch Paul Yde, L’85 & Sarah Elder D. Spencer Yohe, L’54 FIRMS & FOUNDATIONS Barber Emerson LC Chevron Products Company Fleeson, Gooing, Coulson & Kitch Foulston & Siefkin LLP Hampton & Royce LC Hinkle Elkouri Law Firm LLC Hite Fanning & Honeyman LLP Kansas Women Attorneys Association Leon & Lee T. Karelitz Trust Lathrop & Gage LLP Morris, Laing, Evans, Brock & Kennedy, Chartered Polsinelli Shalton Flanigan Suelthaus PC Snell & Wilmer LLP The Ethel & Raymond F. Rice Foundation

Ross Foundation Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP Shook, Hardy & Bacon Foundation Shughart Thomson & Kilroy PC Stinson Morrison Hecker LLP Wagstaff & Cartmell LLP Wal-Mart Stores Inc. DEANS CLUB AMBASSADORS $10,000 & above Constance M. Achterberg Martin W. Bauer & Ann M. Bauer Lydia I. Beebe & Charles E. Doyle William F. Bradley Jr. & Roberta Harding Jo Ann Butaud Mitchell C. Chaney & Susan K. Chaney John D. Conderman & Patricia R. Conderman Mary Kathleen Connell Paul F. DeBauge & Janice B. DeBauge Professor Christopher R. Drahozal & Kaye M. Drahozal David S. Elkouri & Debbi C. Elkouri Professor Emeritus David J. Gottlieb & Rita Sloan Gottlieb Edward J. Healy & Helen B. Healy Elizabeth Ann Hylton Jennifer Johnson Kinzel Linda S. Legg T. Bradley Manson & Teresa M. Meagher Brian C. McCormally Madeleine M. McDonough Cathy A. Reinhardt & Norman A. St. Laurent Elizabeth A. Schartz Christopher Smith & Diana P. Smith Patrick J. Stueve & Janna M. Stueve Mark A. Van Blaricum & Jackie DeSouza Van Blaricum Professor William E. Westerbeke R. Dean Wolfe & Cheryl L. Wolfe Marie S. Woodbury & Daniel C. Claiborn, PhD Larry Worrall & Beverly Cope Worrall Paul L. Yde & Sarah R. Elder DEANS CLUB BENEFACTORS $5,000-$9,999 Marshal B. Allshouse & Amy Allshouse Jennifer Gille Bacon & Charles Bacon Bion J. Beebe & Vicki Storm Beebe John P. Bowman & Katie-Pat Bowman R. Steven Davis & Kim Bowen Davis Charles L. Frickey & Diane Paris Frickey Brad Korell & Justin McNulty Hon. James K. Logan & Beverly Jennings Logan Robert W. Loyd & Mary Jo Loyd Dean Stephen W. Mazza Christopher K. McKenzie & Manuela Albuquerque Robin J. Miles & Dara Trum Miles Deborah Cawley Moeller & Michael D. Moeller Eric S. Namee & Tracy Lynn Namee Janet M. O’Neal Bill Sampson & Drucilla Mort Sampson Mikel L. Stout & LeAnn R. Stout Jeffrey L. Stowell & Carol A. Stowell Howard T. Sturdevant & Gail L. Sturdevant H. Steven Walton & Sandra M. Walton Martha S. Warren DEANS CLUB PATRONS $3,000-$4,999 Joseph R. Alexander Jr. J. Eugene Balloun Walter L. Cofer & Nicola R. Heskett

Georgia K. Erickson Mark C. Hegarty & Janelle K. Hegarty Jo Sicking Hurley Brian A. Jackson Larry E. Keenan & Patricia L. Degner-Keenan Matthew D. Keenan & Lori Hickman Keenan Mon Yin Lung & Dr. Wai-Yim Ching Daniel J. Lyons & Maryanne Lyons Brian K. McLeod Nathan J. Muyskens, Esq. Jeffrey S. Nelson & Lisa K. Nelson Evan J. Olson & Susan Woodin Olson Hon. Gerald L. Rushfelt & Debbie Rushfelt Scott W. Sayler & Nancy Zarda Sayler Lori R. Schultz & A. Bradley Bodamer Stephen M. Schutter & Karen Zambri Schutter Scott B. Strohm Richard K. Walker Jo E. Wochner & William J. Wochner DEANS CLUB $1,000-$2,999 Frank A. Ackerman & Tim Cook Ernest Adelman & Barbara Boley Adelman Ramona K. Kantack Larry D. Armel & JoAnne Armel Corey D. Babington & Tyra C. Babington Orval F. Baldwin II Justice Carol A. Beier & Richard W. Green Daniel A. Belhumeur & Ree A. Belhumeur J. Rod Betts Anne H. Blessing & William R. Blessing Hon. Donald W. Bostwick & Jill D. Bostwick John W. Brand Jr. & Barbara Sample Brand Cynthia R. Bryant Marian Mussatto Burns & Clyde M. Burns Brandee L. Caswell & Brian J. Weakley Matthew B. Cobb & Darcy Cobb Melissa L. Conboy & William E. Mountford II Tim Connell Gary E. Cooper & Elfriede Cooper Robert W. Coykendall Hon. Daniel D. Crabtree & Maureen M. Mahoney Stephen J. Craig & Joan Stover Craig Peter K. Curran & Virginia Schubert Curran David L. Davenport & Sally Nelson Davenport Professor Emeritus Michael J. Davis & Faye S. Davis Mark M. Deatherage Michael F. Delaney & Kathleen Gibbons Delaney Professor Emeritus Martin B. Dickinson Jr. & Sallie Francis Dickinson Bryan J. Didier & Jeremy Wilkins Didier Daniel H. Diepenbrock & Paula Diepenbrock Michael E. Dill Donald N. Dirks Robert E. Donatelli & Katherine Donatelli Lauren E. Douville Robert L. Driscoll & Marilyn Rockwell Driscoll Sarah A. Duckers & Hon. Mark D. Davidson Sonnet C. Edmonds & Christopher S. Edmonds Melvin L. Ehrlich & Yvette Leerskov Ehrlich Justin D. Elkouri & Mica Elkouri Kent R. Erickson & Lisa R. Erickson Marc K. Erickson & Lindsey Pease Erickson Timothy J. Evans & Mary S. Evans Jane A. Finn, PhD Bruce A. Finzen Myron L. Frans Shelly L. Freeman & Kimberly A. Jones Robert H. Gale Jr. & Linda C. Gale Teodoro Garcia Jr. Lawrence C. Gates & Jeanne K. Gates

M. Katie Gates Calderon & Pedro D. Calderon Donald W. Giffin & Esther Brown Giffin Hugh W. Gill IV & Ingrid Olson Gill Timothy A. Glassco C. Peter Goplerud III & Mariette Brodeur Jeanne Gorman C. Andrew Graham & Constance Fox Graham Edward H. Graham & Julia N. Graham Jonathan H. Gregor Barry D. Halpern & Cynthia Zedler Halpern Casey S. Halsey & Paula Bush Halsey Nancy Fligg Hampton Anne Fleishel Harris John E. Hayes III Professor John W. Head & Lucia Orth Head Lindsey Morse Heinz & Bradley D. Heinz Harry H. Herington Jr. & Cindy Herington Alvin D. Herrington Mark D. Hinderks & Mary Ann Hinderks James R. Hubbard & Susan B. Hubbard Matthew R. Hubbard Ryan J. Huschka Hon. Theodore B. Ice & Sue Harper Ice Scott D. Kaiser Calvin J. Karlin & Hon. Janice Miller Karlin Christopher J. Kaufman & Allison Draffan Kaufman Professor Mike A. Kautsch & Elaine Kautsch Kevin K. Kelly & Christy Brady Kelly William T. Kemper II Charitable Trust Robert F. Kethcart & Stephanie A. Kethcart Frank H. Kirk & Nancy A. Kirk Peter C. Knops & Barbara A. Knops Shirley Williamson Kovar & Linn S. Kovar, PhD Thomas H. Krueger & Jean Krueger Eric A. Kuwana & Karen E. Miller-Kuwana Hon. Edward Larson Hon. Steve A. Leben & Ann E. Warner, MD Linda L. Lee Travis D. Lenkner & Erin Delaney Donald A. Low & Diane C. Low John W. Lungstrum & Linda E. Lungstrum Justin M. Lungstrum & Emily Lungstrum Michael W. Mahaffey Crystal Whitebread Mai Thomas P. Maltese Col. Karen E. Mayberry Barbara L. McCloud Robert J. McCully & Stacey Diane McCully Douglas C. McKenna & Nina Schloesser McKenna J. Nolan McWilliams, Esq. Elizabeth A. Meekins S. Lee Meigs Taylor Professor Emeritus Keith G. Meyer & Janet A. Meyer John R. Morse & Kay Stine Morse Hon. Mary H. Murguia John C. Nettels Jr. Michael F. Norton & Susan Roffman Norton Timothy M. O’Brien & Melinda Cadle O’Brien Bernard V. O’Neill Jr. & Marion W. O’Neill Gary L. Olson & Vicki A. Olson Hon. James W. Paddock & Ruth Davenport Paddock Professor John C. Peck & Pamela C. Peck Robert C. Perry J. Michael Porter & Ruth Merz Paul D. Post & Kay Kelly, LSCSW Ann J. Premer & Rich Federico Douglas R. Richmond James A. Riedy Michael L. Riggs & Elaine P. Riggs Chris Robe & Debra A. Robe

KU LAW MAGAZINE 37


DONOR REPORT Hon. Julie A. Robinson Reginald L. Robinson & Jane McGarey Robinson Dale W. Rufenacht & Cindy L. Rufenacht Stephanie S. Sankar Professor Elinor P. Schroeder Kelley D. Sears & Jane A. Sears Angela M. Seaton William H. Seiler Jr. J. Stanley Sexton & Tommye C. Sexton Professor Jan Bowen Sheldon, PhD & James A. Sherman Richard L. Sias John W. Simpson & Carolyn C. Simpson Stephen N. Six & Professor Elizabeth Brand Six Glee S. Smith Jr. & Geraldine B. Smith Holly Pauling Smith John L. Snyder & Diane P. Snyder Gentra Abbey Sorem & James R. Sorem Jr., PhD Kenneth W. Spain Byron E. Springer & Marion Peltier Springer Cathleen Chandler Stevenson & David A. Stevenson Jennifer Malone Stevenson & Ronald P. Stevenson Peter E. Strand & Sheila C. Strand Jon A. Strongman Robert C. Sturgeon & Linda Ann Sturgeon Professor Ellen E. Sward Mark R. Thompson & Barbara E. Thompson Earl D. Tjaden & Shirley A. Tjaden Kristen V. Toner & Ryan M. Toner Robert W. Tormohlen Kirk Underwood Thomas E. Vaughn John Vratil for State Senate Perry D. Warren & Janet Beebe Warren Burton W. Warrington Lanette M. Wickham & Frank J. Rebori Arthur O. Wilkonson & Leslie A. Wilkonson J. Robert Wilson & Marguerite J. Wilson David L. Wing & Kristin D. Wing Neal H. Woodworth & Erin Woodworth Stanley N. Woodworth & Nancy G. Woodworth Robert S. Wunsch & Barbara Bateman Wunsch Lijuan Xing, SJD Stephen L. Young CAMPANILE CLUB $500-$999 John G. Atherton Joel A. Bannister Brian L. Becker F. Richard Bernasek & Regina Y. Bernasek Mark P. Buyle & Kristy Line Buyle Staci L. Cooper Shelli Crow-Johnson & Lyndon M. Johnson Heywood H. Davis & Louise Swigart Davis Laura A. Denk Deborah S. Doud John D. Dunbar & Karin M. Dunbar Pauline Peppercorn Dye Marc E. Elkins & Jana B. Elkins Anne Murray Emert & Mark T. Emert Parthenia B. Evans & Dan T. Evans Laura D. Fent Patrick X. Fowler & Susan J. Fowler Perry L. Franklin Daniel C. Gibb & Amanda Gibb Lindsay Robbins Grise & Matthew Grise Andrew F. Halaby & Ann Marie Halaby Thomas A. Hamill & Janice T. B. Hamill Blake T. Hardwick & Monica Grewal Hardwick Marilyn M. Harp & Marc A. Quillen, PhD

38 KU LAW MAGAZINE

Lewis A. Heaven Jr. & Paula Butz Heaven David R. Hederstedt & Valerie Hederstedt Andrea G. Horvath Molly Westering Hunter & Mark Hunter Joy Noakes Isaacs Blythe Ridenour Jones & Christopher R. Jones Christopher M. Joseph & Jaime Marie Joseph Edward M. Kaplan Professor Pamela Keller & John W. Keller, MD Nicholas Kemp & Jennifer Booth Kemp, MD John A. Koepke Patricia A. Konopka Jason P. Lacey & Skye D. Lacey Joe L. Levy & Pat Pote Levy Steven K. Linscheid Terry L. Malone & Monica S. Malone James M. Marion Charles D. Marvine & Professor Joyce Rosenberg Marvine Margaret F. Mathewson Lori Connors McGroder Philip C. McKnight & Jill McKnight Peter R. Montecuollo Paul T. Moxley Professor Lumen N. Mulligan & Emily Vrabac Mulligan Jane P. Murphy & Barry L. Murphy, MD Tamara L. Niles & R. Lance Niles Donald L. Norman Jr. Jacqueline Egr Pueppke Stephanie J. Quincy L. Michele Reeves Bradley S. Russell & Mary Frances Russell Ryan J. Schletzbaum Kari S. Schmidt & Jeffrey R. Emerson Keith C. Sevedge & Jan M. Sevedge Floy Lambertson Shaeffer David E. Shay & Kimberly R. Shay Hon. Lawrence E. Sheppard Neil R. Shortlidge & Renee Sproul Shortlidge James J. Sienicki & Chirl Ann Sienicki Hon. David H. Sivright Jr. Charles F. Smith Jeffrey S. Southard Beverly J. Thomas Willard B. Thompson & Barbara L. Thompson Michael L. Walden & Chasitie Burgess Walden James R. Walters & Mary Clayton Walters Professor Stephen Jordan Ware Sara E. Welch Douglas B. Westerhaus & Victoria R. Westerhaus Mark J. White & Margaret A. Justus Robert E. Williams & Mary L. Williams Melanie D. Wilson Rebecca A. Winterscheidt & Robert J. Werner Cynthia S. Woelk Hon. William S. Woolley & Debra Lee Barnett CRIMSON & BLUE CLUB $300-$499 David C. All & Priscilla A. All Patrick H. Allen Ernest C. Ballweg Larry J. Bingham & Ann H. Bingham Robin C. Blair & Deborah M. Blair Laura J. Bond & Fred L. Bond III Michael S. Boohar & Jennifer J. Boohar Bradley L. Brehm & Judith L. Brehm Lawrence J. Brennan Hon. Mary Beck Briscoe & Charles A. Briscoe

Anthony D. Burgin Mark S. Carder Steven Chang Christopher P. Colyer Christopher C. Confer & Allison Ross Confer Timothy E. Congrove Kevin M. Connor & Anne L. Connor Crissa A.S. Cook & Jerald J. Cook Timothy R. Cork & Janice Irwin Cork Carolyn W. Coulson Richard L. Cram Diana L. Dietrich Michael A. Doll Ed W. Dosh Max E. Eberhart & Nina Gillig Eberhart Ryan M. Eisenbraun Regent Timothy R. Emert & Barbara Meitner Emert John M. Gaffney & Barbara A. Gaffney Capt. Matthew G. Goble Sharon E. Greenfield Elizabeth A. Harris Richard G. Hunsucker & Carol A. Hunsucker Frank W. Hursh & Mary Walker Hursh Bruce R. Jeide Topper Johntz & Linda D. Johntz Heather A. Jones Jamie Huffman Jones Brenda Roberts Kissam Sharylyn Gelvin Lacey Paul C. Lantis Terry C. Matlack & Cathy Matlack Carrie A. McAtee Cindy Brunker McClannahan & John B. McClannahan Sandra Craig McKenzie Debra M. Hart McLaughlin Ryan J. Mize N. Royce Nelson & Linda L. Nelson Carlos J. Nolla John D. Osborn & Sarah P. Osborn Stephanie B. Pedersen Melissa M. Plunkett R. Kent Pringle & Cathy M. Pringle Larry G. Rapp & Dianne J. Rapp Bernard D. Reams Jr., PhD Brenda Petrie Register & Benton W. Register Forrest T. Rhodes Jr. & Tiffany L. Rhodes Hon. Janice D. Russell Robert T. Schendel & Cynthia A. Schendel, LSCSW Amanda C. Sheridan Justice Fred N. Six & Lilian O. Six Ann G. Soderberg & Mark A. Soderberg Shannon L. Spangler & Michael E. Spangler Erin E. Syring Susan Krehbiel William Aaron A. Wilson Jr. Katherine Bollig Zogleman 1865 CLUB $100-$299 Alex P. Aguilera Collin B. Altieri & Dana M. Altieri Mark A. Andersen & Susan E. Andersen Eric N. Anderson & Bonnie J. Anderson Steven R. Anderson & Carole Twork Anderson Xavier Andrews Angela S. Armenta Hon. G. Gordon Atcheson & Cheryl A. Pilate Matthew E. Austin & Lindsey Austin John M. Avondet & Jamie Avondet Neal R. Axton & Sarah E. Deer Caroline A. Bader & Travis M. White

Katherine J. Bailes, JD, PhD Anthony J. Balden Sarah Emile Lynn Baltzell & Brian P. Baltzell Frank S. Bangs Jr. Grant D. Bannister & Stephanie J. Bannister Mark C. Bannister & Melanie R. Bannister Jon R. Barbee Eric W. Barth & Maggie A. Barth Jonathan C. Becker & Ruth E. Becker Amy Schieferecke Beckstead & Charles A. Beckstead Stephen J. Bednar Bryce B. Bell Dale W. Bell & Linda L. Bell Patricia A. Bennett & Michael G. Haefele Lisa Walter Beran & Gerald William Beran Jr. Victor A. Bergman & Susan D. Bergman, MD Bruce A. Berkley & Kelly Staggenborg Berkley William Bevan III & Gail M. Bevan Elizabeth Blake Carolyn McMinn Blakemore & David L. Blakemore Marjorie A. Blaufuss & Larry J. Libeer Lawrence W. Blickhan Alice Boler Bolin Karen L. Borell & Barbara R. Stein, PhD Martin R. Brown Brent J. Burtin & Theresa O’Connor Burtin Hon. Michael B. Buser & Holly L. Buser Granville M. Bush IV & Lynne Scheufele Bush Samuel Butler IV Jan Fink Call Stacey A. Campbell Terrence J. Campbell & Kristin S. Campbell Kenneth D. Cannon & Claudia N. Cannon Stephen C. Chambers Shuang Leng Chen Kingsley W. Click Bryson R. Cloon & Mary McCaffrey Cloon William P. Coates Jr. & Kathryn Hillyard Coates Christopher S. Cole Kenneth L. Cole Stephen M. Cole & Vicky J. Cole Stuart R. Collier Noreen L. Connolly & Robert G. Cohen David L. Corliss & Sarah Roecker Corliss Brent N. Coverdale & Michel Coverdale Roy G. Crooks Daniel A. Cunningham Peter F. Davidson Adam S. Davis Nathaniel Davis Jr. John P. DeCoursey Paul M. Dent & Deborah K. Simpson Dent Troy A. Dierking R. Stanley Ditus Philip V. diZerega Brian T. Docking & Emily Cassell Docking Darcy Domoney & Jill Weiss Domoney James N. Edmonds & Mary Lew Edmonds Rick J. Eichor John R. Eichstadt Sparkle Ellison, JD, PhD Charles A. Etherington & Joni Walk Etherington Richard E. Felton Edwin H. Fields & Aramide Fields Bradley R. Finkeldei & Amy Sutton Finkeldei Gregory L. Franken Matthew D. Franzenburg Leena Phadke Fry & Joshua A. Fry John J. Gates & Carolyn K. Gates Tony L. Gehres & Shawna L. Gehres Martha Gershun & Don Goldman Jon W. Gilchrist James R. Gilliland & Karen Gilliland


Keith A. Goehring & Carol Goehring Krista B. Goering & Lauren E. Goering Susan K. Goering Mark S. Goldman & Sandra Goldman William E. Goss Arch G. Gothard III Leon B. Graves David R. Green Larry Greenbaum Linda G. Griffith Timothy J. Grillot & Janette K. Grillot Robert I. Guenthner & Susan S. Guenthner Gary H. Hanson & Jeanne M. Hanson Nathan C. Harbur & Kim B. Harbur Dave Harder Kurt A. Harper & Kelly R. Harper Richard C. Harris Joe A. Harter William D. Haught Charles R. Hay & Deanne Watts Hay Jay E. Heidrick & Melissa M. Heidrick S. Andrew Heidrick D. Randall Heilman & Joyce E. Heilman Paul B. Henrion II & Rebecca A. Henrion Bernard J. Hickert Seanna L. Higley Laura J. Hines & Brian Mulhern N. William Hines Jr. & Jean S. Hines Wyatt A. Hoch & Mary Ann Hoch Alicia Talbert Holmes & Damon G. Holmes James D. Holt & Karen T. Holt Ryan C. Hudson Deborah J. Hyde James M. Immel & Carol Harlin Immel Ralph R. Inman & Sandra Wood Inman Katharine Irvin Beau A. Jackson & Laura S. Jackson Hon. Teresa J. James Michael D. Janke Donald D. Jarrett Milos J. Jekic Wendy M. Jenkins Hon. Crystal Nesheim Johnson Karen I. Johnson Roger D. Johnson Shannon Cohorst Johnson Donald A. Johnston & Alice Ann Dowell Johnston Heather A. Jones Michael W. Jones Alan Joseph & Diane Oliver Joseph Gina Kaiser & David Gale William A. Kassebaum & Jennifer M. Kassebaum Korey A. Kaul Jeffrey A. Kennard & Rachel Deleon Kennard Michele A. Kessler & Owen W. Harbison Rachel J. Kibler-Melby Celeste Holder Kling & Robert W. Kling, PhD Erika K. Knopp & Ryan C. Knopp, MD Timothy J. Knopp Christel Koranda David J. Kornelis Stephen D. Kort & Ellen L. Kort Stuart M. Kowalski Lydia H. Krebs Robert E. Krehbiel & Janice B. Krehbiel Miguel L’Heureux Philip C. Lacey & Nancy Owens Lacey John C. Landon Meredith S. Lang Stephen J. Lautz Sara J. Lechtenberg-Kasten, JD Sarah T. Lepak Robert L. Lesh Ronald L. Leslie & Joleen M. Leslie Clayton D. Lewis Jeffrey Li

Robert R. Lohse Jr., DDS & Kathy J. Lohse Eric V. Love & Jennifer Emerson Love Professor Quinton D. Lucas David H. Luce & Debi Luce Barbara A. Lundin & Lawrence P. Daniels Phyllis Savage Lynn & Randall S. Lynn Richard A. Macias Peter T. Maharry & Robyn S. Stone Hon. Bruce C. Mallonee & LeeAnne Plumb Mallonee Hon. Michael D. Mance Coy M. Martin David R. Maslen Wynetta Massey Pamela Meador Mattson & Lynn P. Mattson Brian R. Matula Morgan T. McCreary Ann McElhenny Sean M. McGivern Samuel I. McHenry Christopher M. McHugh & Jennifer K. McHugh Hon. Robert S. McQuin & Lorene Gentle McQuin S. Richard Mellinger Eric B. Metz & Susan J. Metz Eric T. Mikkelson & Margo L. Mikkelson R. B. Miller III & Holly R. Miller William S. Mills & Peggy Mills Nancy L. Mitchell & David W. Mitchell, PhD John H. Mitchelson & Beverly Ramsey Mitchelson Kevin F. Mitchelson & Frances Mitchelson William M. Modrcin Jr. Paul J. Mohr Judith A. Moler & Donald L. Moler Jr. Laura Dakhil Monahan & Bradley M. Monahan Adam R. Moore & Jen Stackhouse Moore Hon. Jerry Moran & Robba Addison Moran Stephen R. Morgan & Paula M. Morgan Jeffery B. Morris Michael A. Morrow & Virginia L. Morrow Daphne Nan Muchnic Robert B. Neill & Margaret E. Neill Stephen D. Nelson & Dianna Johnson Nelson Mike Nichols & Diane Nichols Leslie A. Nielsen Evan E. North Darin A. Nugent Bert Nunley Justice Lawton R. Nuss S. Patrick O’Bryan & Shannon Kerr O’Bryan James A. Oppy James M. Owen Kyungjoo Park Ann Elliott Parkins & Torrance R. Parkins Sandra J. Patti Jeffrey D. Peier William T. Pendergrass Kathryn Pruessner Peters C. J. Poirier Steven B. Pollicoff Hon. James A. Pusateri & Jacqueline A. Pusateri Jomana J. Qaddour Erica Ramsey & Eric Ramsey Christopher S. Raynolds & Abigail Morris Raynolds Benjamin A. Reed Hal C. Reed Ronald S. Reuter Christie F. Reynolds & David O. Reynolds John L. Richeson & Jan Erni Richeson George E. Rider & Jeannene E. Rider Amy Whalen Risley Shon C. Robben & Michelle Travisano Robben

Lauren E. Roberts Hon. Trish Rose Devin K. Ross Duane K. Ross Leon E. Roulier & Barbara Hauck Roulier Karen Ruckert March M. Runner Rebecca A. Ryan William H. Sanders Jr. John O. Sanderson & Joann L. Sanderson William K. Sauck Jr. Nancy Racunas Saugstad & Lee Saugstad Gerald Sawatzky & Wilma Sawatzky Vincent P. Schmeltz III Jennifer Vogel Schroeder Brian J. Schulman & Jami Levine Schulman Veronica R. Sellers & Jere D. Sellers Chris Sharp & Frank Sharp Andrew R. Shaw & Laura Hall Bethany C. Shelton Todd A. Sheppard Eldon J. Shields & Bonnie Shields Adam M. Siebers Rachel Emig Simek Ray E. Simmons Xavier Simonsen Diane W. Simpson Kent L. Singer Frederick K. Slicker & Claudia Fincham Slicker Amy Logan Sliva David G. Smith Steven P. Smith & Deborah J. Smith Christopher P. Sobba Christine Kay Solso & Robert J. Huber John O. Somers & Karen Thiele Somers David A. Sorenson Elizabeth McJimsey Souder & Wallace W. Souder Jr. Wesley H. Sowers Jr. Carl E. Stallard Randolph W. Starr Christopher L. Steadham & Shanna C. Steadham Edwin A. Stene & Sally L. Stene Darin D. Stowell Gordon B. Stull & Carol J. Stull Michael L. Sullivan Linda L. Sybrant Leslie A. Tabb Maj. Gen. Clyde Butch Tate II, Retired & Lynn Klotz-Tate Lance C. Templar Leah Terranova A. R. Thomas & Alice Stevinson Thomas Gabrielle M. Thompson & Oliver L. Weaver, PhD Gerald A. Thorpe & Patti H. Thorpe Kathryn Marie Timm Stephen M. Todd & Carlene M. Todd Tom Triplett & Christie Triplett Thomas M. Tuggle & Suzanne F. Tuggle Kimberley H. Tyson Julie L. Unruh Thomas M. Van Cleave III James D. Van Pelt Larry S. Vernon & Jill A. Casado John A. Vetter Brad A. Vining Richard Y. Wada & Margaret Anami Wada A. Scott Waddell & Delane D. Waddell Martha Braun Wallisch & William J. Wallisch III Hon. Marcia K. Walsh John C. Wesley & Millicent Hunt Wesley Charles E. Wetzler WB Whitney & Renate Baltmanis Whitney Deborah L. Wilkerson & Kevin M. Wilkerson Gaylen R. Williams

Martha Logerman Williams & Jeffery Williams Christine Dudgeon Wilson & Lawrence B. Wilson John P. Woolf & Mary L. Woolf James D. Wright Hon. Wendel W. Wurst & Rhonda Wurst William M. Yanek II Jeannie P. Yockey-Fine & Michael R. Fine Corey R. Yung & Betty B. Yung Jonathan N. Zerger & Heather S. Zerger JAYHAWK CLUB $10-$99 Douglas L. Adams Jr. & Judith Abeson Adams Betty W. Alderson Joshua K. Allen & Katherine Benson Allen Robert K. Anderson Katharina E. Babich Robert H. Backus William J. Bahr & Rachelle D. Bahr Doyle Baker John W. Barbian Judith Ranabargar Bearden Carol Y. Berns & Jeffrey P. Berns Joshua I. Berry Russell C. Brown Ryan C. Brunton & Mariam Moussa Brunton Mary A. Cabrera Brutrinia D. Cain Larry D. Card & Minnie E. Card George L. Catt & Sherrill Lynn Catt Lecia L. Chaney Martha J. Coffman & Patrick T. Curtiss Antonio R. Cortest Marshall L. Crowther & Sandra Garvey Crowther, EdD Clark H. Cummins William C. Daniels Jr. Juliann C. Morland DaVee David W. Davis & Rhona Thorington Davis Le Roy Lewis De Nooyer Dennis A. Dietz & Sheila G. Dietz Dan A. Dunbar Tyler J. Emerson Jeffrey S. English Ryan M. Evans Benjamin F. Farney & Etta Williams Farney Elizabeth Walker Fowler & James R. Fowler Gene H. Gaede & Jannelle Robins-Gaede Jana Patterson Gagner & David W. Gagner Garry B. Gammon Ronald F. Gann Vera M. Gannaway & Stephen A. Gannaway Peggy Glazzard, EdD, JD Col. James L. Green, Retired Lindy S. Grell Steven W. Grieb Katherine A. Harkin & Kenneth R. Harkin Courtney M. Harness Sally Cross Herrington David W. Howard & LeAnn Stuewe Howard Julie D. Hower Loren T. Israel & Maya Israel, PhD Casey B. Johnson David B. Jones & Ellen Jones Gordon A. Jones Michael R. Keenan Loy W. Kirkpatrick Derele W. Knepper Tricia M. Knoll Tim Lahey & Laurette Lahey Julie M. Larson Mary W. Lehoczky & John Lehoczky III Leilani R. Leighton Brett D. Leopold Bob Londerholm & Bev Londerholm

KU LAW MAGAZINE 39


DONOR REPORT Roger W. Lovett Robert L. Luce & Julie A. Luce James W. Lusk & Hon. Nancy Niles Lusk J. Donald Lysaught Jr. Christopher M. Magana & Jennifer Reschke Magana William W. Mahood III & Michelle Elwell Mahood Katherine E. Marples H. Philip Martin Paul S. McCausland Jean B. Menager Michael C. Moffet Patricia Russell Moffet Rick G. Morris David P. Mudrick & Mary Walker Mudrick Susan Mussell Andrea E. Nelson Chad S. Nelson Art J. Neuhedel Stephany J. Newport & Kenton L. Newport Lee M. Novak Aaron B. Oleen Heather Faier Ousley Tim V. Pickell James P. Pottorff Jr. & Judith E. Pottorff Bobby E. Potts & Vicki L. Potts Lloyd E. Rigney Leland E. Rolfs Joy Wickliffe Root Eric A. Sader Darry G. Sands & Charlotte A. Sands Kathryn A. Seeberger & James T. Seeberger Kristen Seiler Rex N. Shewmake Jr. & Mary Jane Shewmake Courtney Pedersen Sipe & Adam J. Sipe Nancy J. Spies Robert E. C. Stites Cathy S. Stueckemann & Lt. Cmdr. Daniel L. Stueckemann, Retired Douglas C. Stuhlsatz Minal P. Unruh Katie McClaflin VanWagner Amanda G. Voth & Anthony J. Voth Patrick R. Watkins Dana L. Watts Jamie L. Weese George W. Yarnevich & Margaret E. Yarnevich Charles F. Zarter & Carolyn Eymann Zarter Guillermo G. Zorogastua

ERICKSON FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP was established by Kent Erickson, L’90, Marc Erickson, L’94, and Georgia Erickson, BA’58. It will provide scholarships for students with academic merit.

NEW FUNDS BRADLEY FAMILY LEGAL INTERNSHIP was established by William F. Bradley, L’80, and Roberta Harding. This fund will provide stipends for students who obtain internships with nonprofit organizations or government agencies in the area of public interest law.

WORRALL FAMILY MEDIA LAW FUND was established by Larry Worrall, L’57, Beverly Worrall, BS’52, Michelle Worrall Tilton, L’88, and Rachelle Worrall Smith, L’90. This fund will provide support for media law programming.

JO ANN BUTAUD LAW SCHOLARSHIP FUND was established by Jo Ann Butaud, L’81, and will provide scholarships. JACK E. DALTON LEGAL WRITING AWARD was established by Janol Lee Dalton in honor of Jack E. Dalton, L’53. This fund will provide student awards for excellence in legal writing. PAUL AND JANICE DEBAUGE PRE-LAW FUND was established by Paul DeBauge, L’63, and Janice DeBauge. This fund will sponsor an annual event at the School of Law for pre-law students at Emporia State University.

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HINKLE LAW FIRM SCHOLARSHIP will provide scholarships for Kansas residents. JACKSON LEWIS LAW SCHOLARSHIP was established by the firm of Jackson Lewis PC. This fund will provide scholarships. MIKE AND ELAINE KAUTSCH FIRST AMENDMENT FUND was established by Professor Mike and Elaine Kautsch. This fund will provide support to the Media, Law & Technology Program or other future programs at the law school that focus on First Amendment and related areas of law. MARTIN, PRINGLE, OLIVER, WALLACE AND BAUER LAW SCHOLARSHIP will provide scholarships to students with strong ties to Kansas or the Kansas City metro area who have a desire to practice law in Wichita or the Kansas City metro area. LARRY R. O’NEAL LAW SCHOLARSHIP was established by Janet M. O’Neal in honor of her late husband, Larry R. O’Neal, L’72. This fund will provide scholarships for 3Ls who have been involved with the Kansas Law Review and have a strong academic record. VRATIL FAMILY LAW SCHOLARSHIP was established by John Vratil, L’71, and Teresa Vratil. This fund will provide scholarships for Kansas residents. WITHERS, GOUGH, PIKE, PFAFF & PETERSON LAW SCHOLARSHIP will provide scholarships for Kansas residents. DEAN AND CHERYL WOLFE KU LAW MOOT COURT OFFICE FUND was established by R. Dean Wolfe, L’69, and Cheryl L. Wolfe, BS’69. This fund provided support for the construction of a dedicated office to house the KU Law Moot Court Program.

WORRALL FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP was established by Larry Worrall, L’57, Beverly Worrall, BS’52, Michelle Worrall Tilton, L’88, and Rachelle Worrall Smith, L’90. This fund will provide scholarships. LIBRARY SUPPORT FUNDS Hazel A. Anderson Law Library Fund Louise Ahlstedt Beebe & Jack E. Beebe Law Library Fund Thomas W. Boone Law School Library Fund Ruth Adair Dyer Law Library Fund Clem W. Fairchild Law Fund Friends of the University of Kansas Law Library Arthur W. Hershberger Memorial Law Book Fund

Frank G. Hodge Memorial Library Fund KU Law Library Unrestricted Fund Kate McKay Memorial Book Fund Evart Mills Memorial Book Fund Douglas D. & Laura L. Wheat School of Law Opportunity Fund LAW FIRM, CORPORATE & FOUNDATION GIFTS Armstrong Teasdale LLP Asian American Bar Association of Kansas City Baird Holm LLP Belin Foundation Bever Dye Foundation Black & Veatch Corporation The Law Offices of David J. Brown LC Chevron Products Company Clark, Mize & Linville, Chartered Dentons US LLP Foulston Siefkin LLP Freeman & Fowler LLC Hinkle Law Firm LLC Hite, Fanning & Honeyman LLP Hovey Williams LLP Husch Blackwell LLP Jackson Lewis PC Johnson County Bar Association Arne L. Johnson Family Trust Kansas Bar Association Kansas Bar Foundation Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Association Kansas Womens Attorneys Association Leon and Lee T. Karelitz Trust KC Lesbian, Gay & Allied Lawyers William T. Kemper II Charitable Trust Korell & Frohlin LLP KU Endowment Kutak Rock LLP Lathrop & Gage LLP Lewis, Rice & Fingersh LC Littler Mendelson Foundation Inc. Martin, Pringle, Oliver, Wallace & Bauer LLP Morris, Laing, Evans, Brock & Kennedy, Chartered Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, PC Payne & Jones Foundation Payne & Jones, Chartered Polsinelli PC The Ethel & Raymond Rice Foundation Ross Foundation Seyferth Blumenthal & Harris LLC Shook, Hardy & Bacon Foundation Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP Sloan, Eisenbarth, Glassman, McEntire & Jarboe LLC Kate Stephens Trust Stinson Leonard Street LLP Sunflower Foundation: Health Care for Kansans Triplett, Woolf & Garretson LLC UMB Bank NA United States District Court Bar Registration John Vratil for State Senate Wagstaff & Cartmell LLP Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Wichita Bar Association Withers, Gough, Pike, Pfaff & Peterson LLC MATCHING GIFTS Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP Apple Inc. Phillips 66 Company Ernst & Young Foundation ExxonMobil Foundation McGuireWoods Kansas City Southern

KPMG Foundation Faegre Baker Daniels Foundation Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP Mustang Fuel Corporation Aetna Foundation Inc. Seigfreid Bingham PC Kinder Morgan Foundation Bank of America Charitable Foundation Chevron Humankind Matching Gift Program Thomson Reuters KU Endowment Deloitte Foundation ONE Gas Foundation Inc. Snell & Wilmer LLP GIFTS RECEIVED IN HONOR OF Professor Katie Cronin Professor Michael J. Davis Professor Martin B. Dickinson Jr. James R. Hubbard, L’68 Hon. Steve A. Leben, L’82 Carla Stovall Steckline, L’83 Professor Melanie D. Wilson Francis and LaVerne Winterburg Family GIFTS RECEIVED IN MEMORY OF Sarah McKeighan Casad Peggy A. Clark Charles N. Henson Jr., L’55 C. Frederick Ice, L’24 Mildred Branine Ice Andrew K. Keenan, L’05 Professor Emeritus William A. Kelly, L’49 Philip C. Kissam Philip C. Lacey, L’74 Kenton J. Mai, L’89 Hon. Nelson Timothy Stephens OTHER FUNDS Beebe/Doyle Family Classroom Fund Richard L. & Suzanne Sedgwick Bond Fund Walter Brauer Faculty Support Fund Daisy E. & Paul H. Brown Elder Law Fund Robert C. Casad Comparative Law Lectureship Class of 1971 Fund Donald L. Cordes School of Law Opportunity Fund Charles L. Decker Fund Dean Martin Dickinson Tax Policy Lecture Mary Ann Mize Dickinson Memorial Garden Fund G. Gary Duncan Fund Elder Law Program Fund David H. Fisher Law Fund Loren M. Gensman Fund David & Rita Gottlieb Family Fund GUF/Law School Unrestricted Jordan L. & Shirley Haines Law Faculty Fellowship Kenneth M. & Ruth Elizabeth Hamilton Law Fund John W. Head International Law Research Fund Ed & Helen Healy Law School Opportunity Fund Hinkle Elkouri Conference Room Fund Charlie & Julie Hostetler Pre-Law Dinner Fund Humphrey School of Law Discretionary Fund Ice Family Fund Joy M. Johnson Trust for the School of Law Leon Karelitz Charitable Trust Kansas Defender Project Kansas Law Review Law School Building Fund Law School Dean’s Discretionary Account Law School Media, Law & Policy Program Legal Aid Clinic Fund


Linda S. Legg & Lawrence G. Crahan Professionalism Fund James K. Logan Fund Fred B. Lovitch & Michael J. Davis Law Fund Jana Mackey Support for Public Advocacy Fund Robert B. McKay Memorial Fund Medical-Legal Clinic at the Southwest Boulevard Family Health Care Clinic Richard F. Mullins Moot Court Competition Fund John A. Naill School of Law Fund Judge Edmund L. Page Jurist-in-Residence Program Polsinelli Shalton Welte Suelthaus Fund Don & Ruth Lawless Postlethwaite Fund Public Interest Law Fund William O. Rice Law Fund Robert A. Schroeder Family Teaching Fellowship Shook, Hardy & Bacon Center for Excellence in Advocacy Shughart, Thomson & Kilroy Fund Fred N. & Lilian Six Unrestricted Law School Fund James Barclay Smith Fund Snell & Wilmer Courtroom Renovation Fund Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens Lecture Stephenson Lectures in Law & Government Fund Stinson Morrison Hecker Fund Tax Certificate Program Fund Tribal Law & Government Center Fund Gary A. Waldron & Carol A. Foster Law School Dean Discretionary Fund Gary A. Waldron & Carol A. Foster Law School Fund Douglas D. & Laura L. Wheat School of Law Opportunity Fund Houston Whiteside Fund Dennis P. Wilbert & Joan R. Ruff Fund Paul L. & Florine T. Wilbert Fund Wolfe Family Moot Court Assistance Fund Paul Yde Law & Economics Fund PRIZES & AWARDS Barber Emerson LC Blue Book Relays Robert F. Bennett Student Award Fund William L. Burdick Prize Mary Anne Chambers Service Award G. Gary Duncan Scholastic Improvement Prize Robert E. Edmonds Prize for Corporation & Securities Law Family Fund Robert C. Foulston & George Siefkin Prizes for Excellence in Appellate Advocacy Hershberger, Patterson, Jones & Roth Energy Law Award Walter Hiersteiner Outstanding Service Award Hinkle Law Firm Tax Procedure Award W. Ross Hutton Prize Howard M. & Sue Immel Annual Teaching Award Lloyd M. Kagey Leadership Award Law Class of 1949 Leadership Award Janean Meigs Memorial Award in Law Fund Samuel Mellinger Scholarship, Leadership & Service Award James P. Mize Trial Advocacy Award Dean Frederick J. Moreau Faculty Award Larry R. O’Neal/Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP Law School Award Fund Payne & Jones Lawyering Program Award Shapiro Award for Best Paper on Law & Public Policy Sonnenschein Scholars Program C. C. Stewart Award

Susman Godfrey Trial Advocacy Fund UMB Bank Excellence in Trust Planning Award PROFESSORSHIPS Centennial Teaching Professorship Connell Teaching Professorships in Kansas Law E. S. & Tom Hampton Professorship John H. & John M. Kane Distinguished Professorship Raymond F. Rice Distinguished Professorship in Law John M. Rounds Distinguished Professorship in Law Robert A. Schroeder Distinguished Professorship Earl B. Shurtz Law Professorship J. B. Smith Distinguished Professorship in Constitutional Law Frank E. Tyler Professorship in Law Robert W. Wagstaff Distinguished Professorship in Law Paul E. Wilson Professorship in Law SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS Constance M. Achterberg & C.L. Clark Scholarship Mark H. Adams Sr. Memorial Scholarship Warren D. Andreas Scholarship in Law Association of Corporate Council Mid-America Chapter Scholarship Richard A. Barber Scholarship Beebe/Doyle Family Scholarship Judge Willard M. & Lucile H. Benton Memorial Scholarship Berkley Memorial Scholarship in Law Bever Dye Scholarship John Emerson Blake Memorial Scholarship Book Exchange Scholarships Bremyer Summer Intern Scholarship Fund Judge Clayton & Cecile Goforth Brenner Scholarship in Law Claude E. Chalfant Memorial Scholarship John W. & Gertrude Clark Scholarship Claude O. Conkey Memorial Scholarship O.J. Connell Jr. Law Scholarship Glen W. Dickinson Scholarship in Law William & Judy Docking Law School Scholarship Port & Mildred Early Scholarship Judge A. M. Ebright Memorial Scholarship Elkouri Family Expendable Scholarship Fund Ethics for Good Scholarship Fleeson, Gooing, Coulson & Kitch Scholarship Foulston Siefkin 2L Scholarships Foulston Siefkin Diversity Scholarship Foulston & Siefkin Law Review Scholarship Gould Family Scholarship Fund Jordan & Shirley Haines Scholarship Thomas H. Harkness KU Law School Scholarship Sally Harris Scholarship Aldie Haver Memorial Scholarship in Law The Help of Our Lord & Saviour Jesus Christ Scholarship Harry Herington Law Enforcement Scholarship Al J. & Sylvia M. Herrod Law Scholarship Hite, Fanning & Honeyman LLP Scholarship Michael H. Hoeflich & Karen J. Nordheden Scholarship in Law Enos A. Hook Memorial Scholarship Oliver H. Hughes Memorial Scholarship A. Bryce Huguenin School of Law Scholarship Judge Walter A. Huxman Scholarship Arthur M. Jackson Memorial Scholarship

Elmer C. Jackson Jr. Scholarship in Law for Black Americans Margaret S. Jeffrey Scholarship Grant in Law Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy Scholarship Fund KC Lesbian, Gay & Allied Lawyers (KC LEGAL) Scholarship Kansas Women Attorneys Association Jennie Mitchell Kellogg Scholarship Calvin & Janice Karlin Annual Scholarship Andrew Keenan Memorial Scholarship Kirk Family School of Law Dorothy Arlene Bates Kirk Scholarship Law Class of 1953 Scholarship Law School Class of 1925 Scholarship Law School Scholarship Fund Linda Legg KU Law Scholarship Robert W. Loyd Scholarship in Law Frank A. Lutz Memorial Scholarship Kenton Mai Memorial Scholarship Minorities in Law Scholarships Harriet & Mancel Mitchell Scholarship in Law Peter A. Manville Family Law Scholarship John R. Morse Law School Scholarship Ronald C. Newman Scholarship Major Eugene H. Nirdlinger Memorial Scholarship Bernard E. Nordling Scholarship Gary Olson Scholarship Judge Earl E. & Jean Ann O’Connor Memorial Scholarship Charles H. Oldfather Scholarship Joseph O. & Mary Louise Parker Scholarship Peery Family Law Scholarship Olin K. & Mary Ruth Petefish School of Law Scholarship Polsinelli Shalton Welte Suelthaus Diversity Scholarship Polsinelli Shughart Scholarship Public Interest Summer Stipends Charles B. Randall Memorial Scholarship Ethel & Raymond F. Rice Scholarships Rice Scholar Legacy Ross Foundation Law School Scholarship Judge M. Kay Royse Scholarship in Law Judge J. C. Ruppenthal Memorial Scholarship Stephen & Janice Scheve Law Scholarship Fund Richard & Vivian Schmidt Law Scholarship Robert A. & Janet Manning Schroeder Scholarships in Law Elisha Scott Memorial Scholarship Professor William R. Scott Scholarship Seigfreid, Bingham, Levy, Selzer & Gee Law Scholarship J. Frank & Carolyn Henry Shinkle Memorial Scholarship J. Frank Shinkle Student Aid Fund Shook, Hardy & Bacon Scholarships Professor Earl B. & Mary Maurine Shurtz Tribal Lawyer Scholarship Clarine Smissman JD & Edward Smissman PhD Scholarship in Law Carl T. Smith Memorial Scholarship Glee & Geraldine Smith Law Scholarship Snell & Wilmer Alumni Law School Scholarship William C. Spangler Memorial Scholarship Judge Robert F. Stadler Memorial Scholarship Evelyn, Richard & Blanche Thompson Scholarship Leslie T. Tupy Scholarship Suzanne Valdez & Stephen McAllister Scholarship Voss Kansas Law Scholarship Wal-Mart Legal Diversity Scholarship

Frederick L. Ward Memorial Scholarship J. L. Weigand Jr. Notre Dame Legal Education Trust Scholarship Willard G. Widder Scholarship Karl T. Wiedemann Scholarship in Law Paul R. Wunsch Scholarship CLASSES 1947 Glee S. Smith Jr. & Geraldine B. Smith 1949 Robert L. Lesh 1950 Aaron A. Wilson Jr. 1951 Richard C. Harris Joe L. Levy & Pat Pote Levy Roger W. Lovett 1952 William E. Goss 1953 Constance M. Achterberg John G. Atherton Donald W. Giffin & Esther Brown Giffin Frank W. Hursh & Mary Walker Hursh J. Robert Wilson & Marguerite J. Wilson 1954 J. Eugene Balloun Marian Mussatto Burns & Clyde M. Burns Larry E. Keenan & Patricia L. Degner-Keenan Gerald Sawatzky & Wilma Sawatzky Richard L. Sias 1955 Donald N. Dirks Bob Londerholm & Bev Londerholm 1956 Hon. James W. Paddock & Ruth Davenport Paddock Justice Fred N. Six & Lilian O. Six Carl E. Stallard John C. Wesley & Millicent Hunt Wesley 1957 R. Stanley Ditus Benjamin F. Farney & Etta Williams Farney Alvin D. Herrington Loy W. Kirkpatrick Larry Worrall & Beverly Cope Worrall 1958 Heywood H. Davis & Louise Swigart Davis Sally Cross Herrington Hon. Gerald L. Rushfelt & Debbie Rushfelt Willard B. Thompson & Barbara L. Thompson James D. Van Pelt Robert S. Wunsch & Barbara Bateman Wunsch 1959 John W. Brand Jr. & Barbara Sample Brand Col. James L. Green, Retired Thomas H. Krueger & Jean Krueger Edwin A. Stene & Sally L. Stene 1960 Edward H. Graham & Julia N. Graham Hon. Edward Larson Byron E. Springer & Marion Peltier Springer

KU LAW MAGAZINE 41


DONOR REPORT 1961 Lawrence J. Brennan Pauline Peppercorn Dye N. William Hines Jr. & Jean S. Hines Hon. Theodore B. Ice & Sue Harper Ice Mikel L. Stout & LeAnn R. Stout 1962 Robert W. Loyd & Mary Jo Loyd Howard T. Sturdevant & Gail L. Sturdevant 1963 Lawrence W. Blickhan Gary E. Cooper & Elfriede Cooper Paul F. DeBauge & Janice B. DeBauge Robert E. Donatelli & Katherine Donatelli Richard G. Hunsucker & Carol A. Hunsucker Robert L. Luce & Julie A. Luce Michael A. Morrow & Virginia L. Morrow Hon. James A. Pusateri & Jacqueline A. Pusateri Charles E. Wetzler 1964 Patrick H. Allen Robert L. Driscoll & Marilyn Rockwell Driscoll William D. Haught Bobby E. Potts & Vicki L. Potts Leon E. Roulier & Barbara Hauck Roulier Tom Triplett & Christie Triplett Robert E. Williams & Mary L. Williams 1965 Ernest Adelman & Barbara Boley Adelman David C. All & Priscilla A. All Bradley L. Brehm & Judith L. Brehm Marshall L. Crowther & Sandra Garvey Crowther, EdD Regent Timothy R. Emert & Barbara Meitner Emert David R. Hederstedt & Valerie Hederstedt James M. Immel & Carol Harlin Immel Karen I. Johnson Topper Johntz & Linda D. Johntz Ronald L. Leslie & Joleen M. Leslie John L. Richeson & Jan Erni Richeson WB Whitney & Renate Baltmanis Whitney 1966 Stephen C. Chambers Peter K. Curran & Virginia Schubert Curran Max E. Eberhart & Nina Gillig Eberhart C. Andrew Graham & Constance Fox Graham Donald A. Johnston & Alice Ann Dowell Johnston Hon. Lawrence E. Sheppard Stephen M. Todd & Carlene M. Todd Thomas M. Van Cleave III 1967 John D. Dunbar & Karin M. Dunbar Robert I. Guenthner & Susan S. Guenthner Thomas A. Hamill & Janice T. B. Hamill Roger D. Johnson Frank H. Kirk & Nancy A. Kirk William T. Pendergrass Duane K. Ross Thomas M. Tuggle & Suzanne F. Tuggle Charles F. Zarter & Carolyn Eymann Zarter 1968 Larry D. Armel & JoAnne Armel Judith Ranabargar Bearden Hon. Donald W. Bostwick & Jill D. Bostwick

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George L. Catt & Sherrill Lynn Catt Peter F. Davidson James R. Hubbard & Susan B. Hubbard William S. Mills & Peggy Mills Gary L. Olson & Vicki A. Olson C. J. Poirier Frederick K. Slicker & Claudia Fincham Slicker John O. Somers & Karen Thiele Somers David A. Sorenson Wesley H. Sowers Jr. John P. Woolf & Mary L. Woolf

Stephen D. Nelson & Dianna Johnson Nelson Robert C. Perry Dale W. Rufenacht & Cindy L. Rufenacht John O. Sanderson & Joann L. Sanderson Rex N. Shewmake Jr. & Mary Jane Shewmake Kenneth W. Spain Nancy J. Spies Randolph W. Starr Hon. Marcia K. Walsh Perry D. Warren & Janet Beebe Warren

1969 Ernest C. Ballweg Kenneth D. Cannon & Claudia N. Cannon John D. Conderman & Patricia R. Conderman Timothy J. Evans & Mary S. Evans Charles L. Frickey & Diane Paris Frickey Arch G. Gothard III John D. Osborn & Sarah P. Osborn Ronald S. Reuter Hon. David H. Sivright Jr. A. R. Thomas & Alice Stevinson Thomas R. Dean Wolfe & Cheryl L. Wolfe

1974 Stephen J. Bednar David W. Davis & Rhona Thorington Davis Paul M. Dent & Deborah K. Simpson Dent Dennis A. Dietz & Sheila G. Dietz Melvin L. Ehrlich & Yvette Leerskov Ehrlich John R. Eichstadt Lawrence C. Gates & Jeanne K. Gates C. Peter Goplerud III & Mariette Brodeur David W. Howard & LeAnn Stuewe Howard Shirley Williamson Kovar & Linn S. Kovar, PhD Stephen R. Morgan & Paula M. Morgan Mike Nichols & Diane Nichols John C. Peck & Pamela C. Peck Paul D. Post & Kay Kelly, LSCSW Hal C. Reed Darry G. Sands & Charlotte A. Sands Kelley D. Sears & Jane A. Sears William H. Seiler Jr. Eldon J. Shields & Bonnie Shields Michael L. Sullivan Larry S. Vernon & Jill A. Casado Gaylen R. Williams

1970 Frank S. Bangs Jr. William Bevan III & Gail M. Bevan Rick J. Eichor Philip C. Lacey & Nancy Owens Lacey John W. Lungstrum & Linda E. Lungstrum James A. Oppy 1971 Bill Sampson & Drucilla Mort Sampson Arthur O. Wilkonson & Leslie A. Wilkonson 1972 Jon R. Barbee F. Richard Bernasek & Regina Y. Bernasek William P. Coates Jr. & Kathryn Hillyard Coates Le Roy Lewis De Nooyer Ronald F. Gann James R. Gilliland & Karen Gilliland Alan Joseph & Diane Oliver Joseph Hon. Michael D. Mance H. Philip Martin Samuel I. McHenry R. B. Miller III & Holly R. Miller Jane P. Murphy & Barry L. Murphy, MD N. Royce Nelson & Linda L. Nelson Bernard D. Reams Jr., PhD Chris Robe & Debra A. Robe Christopher Smith & Diana P. Smith Richard Y. Wada & Margaret Anami Wada George W. Yarnevich & Margaret E. Yarnevich 1973 Hon. Mary Beck Briscoe & Professor Emeritus Charles A. Briscoe Granville M. Bush IV & Lynne Scheufele Bush Stephen J. Craig & Joan Stover Craig Bruce A. Finzen Garry B. Gammon Barry D. Halpern & Cynthia Zedler Halpern Joe A. Harter Bruce R. Jeide Gordon A. Jones Edward M. Kaplan Robert E. Krehbiel & Janice B. Krehbiel Linda L. Lee Douglas C. McKenna & Nina Schloesser McKenna Paul T. Moxley

1975 Martin W. Bauer & Ann M. Bauer Victor A. Bergman & Susan D. Bergman, MD Bryson R. Cloon & Mary McCaffrey Cloon Leon B. Graves Charles R. Hay & Deanne Watts Hay David J. Kornelis Linda S. Legg Donald A. Low & Diane C. Low Barbara A. Lundin & Lawrence P. Daniels Michael W. Mahaffey Pamela Meador Mattson & Lynn P. Mattson Paul S. McCausland S. Richard Mellinger Michael C. Moffet John R. Morse & Kay Stine Morse Cathleen Chandler Stevenson & David A. Stevenson Gordon B. Stull & Carol J. Stull Earl D. Tjaden & Shirley A. Tjaden Kirk Underwood Richard K. Walker James R. Walters & Mary Clayton Walters 1976 Jennifer Gille Bacon & Charles Bacon Bion J. Beebe & Vicki Storm Beebe Larry D. Card & Minnie E. Card Antonio R. Cortest Nathaniel Davis Jr. Michael F. Delaney & Kathleen Gibbons Delaney Donald D. Jarrett Gina Kaiser & David Gale John A. Koepke J. Donald Lysaught Jr. David P. Mudrick & Mary Walker Mudrick Bernard V. O’Neill Jr. & Marion W. O’Neill

Leland E. Rolfs Floy Lambertson Shaeffer Neil R. Shortlidge & Renee Sproul Shortlidge Beverly J. Thomas Gerald A. Thorpe & Patti H. Thorpe Douglas B. Westerhaus & Victoria R. Westerhaus 1977 Lydia I. Beebe & Charles E. Doyle Robin C. Blair & Deborah M. Blair Alice Boler Bolin Karen L. Borell & Barbara R. Stein, PhD Hon. Michael B. Buser & Holly L. Buser Kingsley W. Click David L. Davenport & Sally Nelson Davenport Ed W. Dosh Jane A. Finn, PhD Nathan C. Harbur & Kim B. Harbur Lewis A. Heaven Jr. & Paula Butz Heaven Paul B. Henrion II & Rebecca A. Henrion Calvin J. Karlin & Hon. Janice Miller Karlin Daniel J. Lyons & Maryanne Lyons Evan J. Olson & Susan Woodin Olson Kathryn Pruessner Peters Tim V. Pickell Brenda Petrie Register & Benton W. Register James A. Riedy Hon. Janice D. Russell William H. Sanders Jr. J. Stanley Sexton & Tommye C. Sexton Jan Bowen Sheldon, PhD & James A. Sherman Robert C. Sturgeon & Linda Ann Sturgeon John A. Vetter Cynthia S. Woelk 1978 Tim Connell Timothy R. Cork & Janice Irwin Cork R. Steven Davis & Kim Bowen Davis Deborah S. Doud David S. Elkouri & Debbi C. Elkouri Robert H. Gale Jr. & Linda C. Gale Jeanne Gorman Elizabeth A. Harris Michael D. Janke Jennifer Johnson Kinzel T. Bradley Manson & Teresa M. Meagher William M. Modrcin Jr. George E. Rider & Jeannene E. Rider Hon. Trish Rose Jeffrey S. Southard Thomas E. Vaughn Martha Braun Wallisch & William J. Wallisch III David L. Wing & Kristin D. Wing Stanley N. Woodworth & Nancy G. Woodworth 1979 Dale W. Bell & Linda L. Bell Anne H. Blessing & William R. Blessing Martha J. Coffman & Patrick T. Curtiss Robert W. Coykendall Jeffrey S. English Gene H. Gaede & Jannelle Robins-Gaede John M. Gaffney & Barbara A. Gaffney Marilyn M. Harp & Marc A. Quillen, PhD Kurt A. Harper & Kelly R. Harper Edward J. Healy & Helen B. Healy Paul J. Mohr Larry G. Rapp & Dianne J. Rapp Peter E. Strand & Sheila C. Strand Marie S. Woodbury & Daniel C. Claiborn, PhD


1980 Frank A. Ackerman & Tim Cook Orval F. Baldwin II Carol Y. Berns & Jeffrey P. Berns Carolyn McMinn Blakemore & David L. Blakemore John P. Bowman & Katie-Pat Bowman William F. Bradley Jr. & Roberta Harding Stuart R. Collier Susan K. Goering Linda G. Griffith Bernard J. Hickert Ralph R. Inman & Sandra Wood Inman Hon. Bruce C. Mallonee & LeeAnne Plumb Mallonee Ann McElhenny Hon. Robert S. McQuin & Lorene Gentle McQuin Eric B. Metz & Susan J. Metz Jeffrey S. Nelson & Lisa K. Nelson R. Kent Pringle & Cathy M. Pringle Linda L. Sybrant Mark R. Thompson & Barbara E. Thompson Hon. Wendel W. Wurst & Rhonda Wurst 1981 Ramona K. Kantack Hon. G. Gordon Atcheson & Cheryl A. Pilate J. Rod Betts Jo Ann Butaud Mitchell C. Chaney & Susan K. Chaney Walter L. Cofer & Nicola R. Heskett Hon. Daniel D. Crabtree & Maureen M. Mahoney John P. DeCoursey Darcy Domoney & Jill Weiss Domoney Stuart M. Kowalski David R. Maslen Margaret F. Mathewson Cindy Brunker McClannahan & John B. McClannahan Daphne Nan Muchnic Hon. Julie A. Robinson Robert T. Schendel & Cynthia A. Schendel, LSCSW Christine Kay Solso & Robert J. Huber 1982 Kenneth L. Cole Roy G. Crooks Marc E. Elkins & Jana B. Elkins Parthenia B. Evans & Dan T. Evans Tony L. Gehres & Shawna L. Gehres Timothy J. Grillot & Janette K. Grillot Casey S. Halsey & Paula Bush Halsey Gary H. Hanson & Jeanne M. Hanson Mark D. Hinderks & Mary Ann Hinderks Wendy M. Jenkins John C. Landon Hon. Steve A. Leben & Ann E. Warner, MD Mary W. Lehoczky & John Lehoczky III Terry L. Malone & Monica S. Malone Terry C. Matlack & Cathy Matlack Brian C. McCormally Christopher K. McKenzie & Manuela Albuquerque S. Lee Meigs Taylor Kevin F. Mitchelson & Frances Mitchelson U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran & Robba Addison Moran Susan Mussell Justice Lawton R. Nuss William K. Sauck Jr. Maj. Gen. Clyde Butch Tate II, Retired & Lynn Klotz-Tate Gabrielle M. Thompson & Oliver L. Weaver, PhD

1983 Mark S. Carder Richard L. Cram Michael A. Doll Myron L. Frans D. Randall Heilman & Joyce E. Heilman Wyatt A. Hoch & Mary Ann Hoch Michael W. Jones Timothy J. Knopp Stephen D. Kort & Ellen L. Kort John H. Mitchelson & Beverly Ramsey Mitchelson Timothy M. O’Brien & Melinda Cadle O’Brien Jeffrey D. Peier Cathy A. Reinhardt & Norman A. St. Laurent Kari S. Schmidt & Jeffrey R. Emerson Keith C. Sevedge & Jan M. Sevedge James J. Sienicki & Chirl Ann Sienicki Xavier Simonsen Diane W. Simpson Amy Logan Sliva Gentra Abbey Sorem & James R. Sorem Jr., PhD H. Steven Walton & Sandra M. Walton Rebecca A. Winterscheidt & Robert J. Werner 1984 Robert K. Anderson Brian L. Becker Gregory L. Franken Keith A. Goehring & Carol Goehring Larry Greenbaum Hon. Teresa J. James Matthew D. Keenan & Lori Hickman Keenan Celeste Holder Kling & Robert W. Kling, PhD Tim Lahey & Laurette Lahey James W. Lusk & Hon. Nancy Niles Lusk Richard A. Macias Eric S. Namee & Tracy Lynn Namee James P. Pottorff Jr. & Judith E. Pottorff Christopher S. Raynolds & Abigail Morris Raynolds Michael L. Riggs & Elaine P. Riggs Chris Sharp & Frank Sharp Kent L. Singer Christine Dudgeon Wilson & Lawrence B. Wilson Stephen L. Young 1985 Robert H. Backus Justice Carol A. Beier & Richard W. Green Michael S. Boohar & Jennifer J. Boohar Melissa L. Conboy & William E. Mountford II Mark M. Deatherage Daniel H. Diepenbrock & Paula Diepenbrock Diana L. Dietrich Charles A. Etherington & Joni Walk Etherington Peggy Glazzard, EdD, JD Robert J. McCully & Stacey Diane McCully Nancy L. Mitchell & David W. Mitchell, PhD Judith A. Moler & Donald L. Moler Jr. Rick G. Morris Hon. Mary H. Murguia John C. Nettels Jr. Lauren E. Roberts Ray E. Simmons John W. Simpson & Carolyn C. Simpson Mark J. White & Margaret A. Justus James D. Wright Paul L. Yde & Sarah R. Elder

1986 Lisa Walter Beran & Gerald William Beran Jr. Marjorie A. Blaufuss & Larry J. Libeer Martin R. Brown Daniel A. Cunningham Sarah A. Duckers & Hon. Mark D. Davidson Mark S. Goldman & Sandra Goldman Anne Fleishel Harris Steven K. Linscheid David H. Luce & Debi Luce Col. Karen E. Mayberry Robin J. Miles & Dara Trum Miles Donald L. Norman Jr. Scott W. Sayler & Nancy Zarda Sayler Kathryn Marie Timm Hon. William S. Woolley & Debra Lee Barnett 1987 Jan Fink Call Dave Harder James D. Holt & Karen T. Holt Michele A. Kessler & Owen W. Harbison Bert Nunley Reginald L. Robinson & Jane McGarey Robinson Lori R. Schultz & A. Bradley Bodamer David E. Shay & Kimberly R. Shay Shannon L. Spangler & Michael E. Spangler Patrick J. Stueve & Janna M. Stueve Kimberley H. Tyson Martha S. Warren 1988 Eric N. Anderson & Bonnie J. Anderson Katherine J. Bailes, JD, PhD Mark C. Bannister & Melanie R. Bannister Patricia A. Bennett & Michael G. Haefele Kevin M. Connor & Anne L. Connor David L. Corliss & Sarah Roecker Corliss Clark H. Cummins William C. Daniels Jr. Patrick X. Fowler & Susan J. Fowler Perry L. Franklin Shelly L. Freeman & Kimberly A. Jones Jana Patterson Gagner & David W. Gagner Jon W. Gilchrist S. Andrew Heidrick Katharine Irvin William A. Kassebaum & Jennifer M. Kassebaum Michael F. Norton & Susan Roffman Norton Lee M. Novak Bradley S. Russell & Mary Frances Russell Elizabeth A. Schartz Kathryn A. Seeberger & James T. Seeberger Steven P. Smith & Deborah J. Smith Cathy S. Stueckemann & Lt. Cmdr. Daniel L. Stueckemann, Retired 1989 Jonathan C. Becker & Ruth E. Becker Laura J. Bond & Fred L. Bond III Kevin K. Kelly & Christy Brady Kelly Phyllis Savage Lynn & Randall S. Lynn James M. Marion Wynetta Massey Lori Connors McGroder Brian K. McLeod Stephany J. Newport & Kenton L. Newport Douglas R. Richmond Joy Wickliffe Root 1990 Mark A. Andersen & Susan E. Andersen John W. Barbian Stephen M. Cole & Vicky J. Cole

Shelli Crow-Johnson & Lyndon M. Johnson Kent R. Erickson & Lisa R. Erickson Richard E. Felton Mark C. Hegarty & Janelle K. Hegarty Crystal Whitebread Mai Madeleine M. McDonough Robert W. Tormohlen Susan Krehbiel William Jeannie P. Yockey-Fine & Michael R. Fine 1991 Katharina E. Babich Doyle Baker Bruce A. Berkley & Kelly Staggenborg Berkley Mark P. Buyle & Kristy Line Buyle John E. Hayes III Eric A. Kuwana & Karen E. Miller-Kuwana Brian R. Matula Deborah Cawley Moeller & Michael D. Moeller Stephanie J. Quincy 1992 Brent J. Burtin & Theresa O’Connor Burtin Mary A. Cabrera Lecia L. Chaney Timothy E. Congrove Nicholas Kemp & Jennifer Booth Kemp, MD Peter C. Knops & Barbara A. Knops Christopher M. Magana & Jennifer Reschke Magana Robert B. Neill & Margaret E. Neill Ann G. Soderberg & Mark A. Soderberg Lanette M. Wickham & Frank J. Rebori 1993 Staci L. Cooper Troy A. Dierking Dan A. Dunbar James N. Edmonds & Mary Lew Edmonds Jonathan H. Gregor Harry H. Herington Jr. & Cindy Herington Loren T. Israel & Maya Israel, PhD Pamela Keller & John W. Keller, MD Eric V. Love & Jennifer Emerson Love William W. Mahood III & Michelle Elwell Mahood Debra M. Hart McLaughlin Carlos J. Nolla Brian J. Schulman & Jami Levine Schulman Veronica R. Sellers & Jere D. Sellers Todd A. Sheppard Stephen N. Six & Elizabeth Brand Six Elizabeth McJimsey Souder & Wallace W. Souder Jr. Deborah L. Wilkerson & Kevin M. Wilkerson 1994 Douglas L. Adams Jr. & Judith Abeson Adams Christopher S. Cole Laura A. Denk Marc K. Erickson & Lindsey Pease Erickson Vera M. Gannaway & Stephen A. Gannaway Jeffrey A. Kennard & Rachel Deleon Kennard Patricia A. Konopka Eric T. Mikkelson & Margo L. Mikkelson Amy Whalen Risley Shon C. Robben & Michelle Travisano Robben Stephen M. Schutter & Karen Zambri Schutter John L. Snyder & Diane P. Snyder Douglas C. Stuhlsatz Erin E. Syring

KU LAW MAGAZINE 43


DONOR REPORT 1995 Cynthia R. Bryant Stacey A. Campbell Hugh W. Gill IV & Ingrid Olson Gill Alicia Talbert Holmes & Damon G. Holmes Tricia M. Knoll Coy M. Martin Nathan J. Muyskens, Esq. Leslie A. Nielsen Scott B. Strohm 1996 Andrew F. Halaby & Ann Marie Halaby Sara J. Lechtenberg-Kasten, JD Charles D. Marvine & Professor Joyce Rosenberg Marvine Philip C. McKnight & Jill McKnight Rebecca A. Ryan Nancy Racunas Saugstad & Lee Saugstad Leslie A. Tabb Julie L. Unruh 1997 William J. Bahr & Rachelle D. Bahr Grant D. Bannister & Stephanie J. Bannister Terrence J. Campbell & Kristin S. Campbell Edwin H. Fields & Aramide Fields Sharon E. Greenfield Korey A. Kaul Brad Korell & Justin McNulty Lloyd E. Rigney Vincent P. Schmeltz III Lance C. Templar 1998 Neal R. Axton & Sarah E. Deer Brandee L. Caswell & Brian J. Weakley Matthew B. Cobb & Darcy Cobb Brent N. Coverdale & Michel Coverdale Laura D. Fent Teodoro Garcia Jr. Brian A. Jackson Barbara L. McCloud Angela M. Seaton 1999 Marshal B. Allshouse & Amy Allshouse Anthony D. Burgin Noreen L. Connolly & Robert G. Cohen Bradley R. Finkeldei & Amy Sutton Finkeldei Heather A. Jones Peter T. Maharry & Robyn S. Stone Darin A. Nugent Holly Pauling Smith 2000 Ryan M. Evans John J. Gates & Carolyn K. Gates Lindy S. Grell Julie D. Hower David B. Jones & Ellen Jones Heather A. Jones Christopher M. Joseph & Jaime Marie Joseph Jason P. Lacey & Skye D. Lacey Stephen J. Lautz Justin M. Lungstrum & Emily Lungstrum Christopher M. McHugh & Jennifer K. McHugh Adam R. Moore & Jen Stackhouse Moore Chad S. Nelson J. Michael Porter & Ruth Merz Forrest T. Rhodes Jr. & Tiffany L. Rhodes March M. Runner 2001 Collin B. Altieri & Dana M. Altieri Corey D. Babington & Tyra C. Babington Amy Schieferecke Beckstead & Charles A. Beckstead

44 KU LAW MAGAZINE

Erika K. Knopp & Ryan C. Knopp, MD Tamara L. Niles & R. Lance Niles Jacqueline Egr Pueppke Karen Ruckert Christopher P. Sobba Jeffrey L. Stowell & Carol A. Stowell Michael L. Walden & Chasitie Burgess Walden William M. Yanek II

2006 John M. Avondet & Jamie Avondet Anthony J. Balden Steven Chang Elizabeth Walker Fowler & James R. Fowler Matthew R. Hubbard Lydia H. Krebs Benjamin A. Reed Kristen V. Toner & Ryan M. Toner

2002 Joshua K. Allen & Katherine Benson Allen Bryce B. Bell Ryan C. Brunton & Mariam Moussa Brunton Timothy A. Glassco Krista B. Goering & Lauren E. Goering Jay E. Heidrick & Melissa M. Heidrick Molly Westering Hunter & Mark Hunter Hon. Crystal Nesheim Johnson Blythe Ridenour Jones & Christopher R. Jones Mon Yin Lung & Dr. Wai-Yim Ching Art J. Neuhedel Stephanie B. Pedersen Ann J. Premer & Rich Federico Rachel Emig Simek Jon A. Strongman Mark A. Van Blaricum & Jackie DeSouza Van Blaricum A. Scott Waddell & Delane D. Waddell

2007 Angela S. Armenta Crissa A.S. Cook & Jerald J. Cook Leena Phadke Fry & Joshua A. Fry M. Katie Gates Calderon & Pedro D. Calderon Steven W. Grieb Ryan J. Huschka Shannon Cohorst Johnson Sean M. McGivern Laura Dakhil Monahan & Bradley M. Monahan Aaron B. Oleen Heather Faier Ousley Minal P. Unruh Amanda G. Voth & Anthony J. Voth Jamie L. Weese Guillermo G. Zorogastua

2003 Eric W. Barth & Maggie A. Barth Ryan M. Eisenbraun Jamie Huffman Jones Scott D. Kaiser Carrie A. McAtee Katherine Bollig Zogleman 2004 Christopher C. Confer & Allison Ross Confer Bryan J. Didier & Jeremy Wilkins Didier Katherine A. Harkin & Kenneth R. Harkin Courtney M. Harness Seanna L. Higley Jeffrey Li Jeffery B. Morris James M. Owen Christopher L. Steadham & Shanna C. Steadham Jennifer Malone Stevenson & Ronald P. Stevenson Darin D. Stowell Jonathan N. Zerger & Heather S. Zerger 2005 Matthew E. Austin & Lindsey Austin Joel A. Bannister Elizabeth Blake Carolyn W. Coulson Philip V. diZerega Brian T. Docking & Emily Cassell Docking Anne Murray Emert & Mark T. Emert Daniel C. Gibb & Amanda Gibb Ryan C. Hudson Robert F. Kethcart & Stephanie A. Kethcart Meredith S. Lang Travis D. Lenkner & Erin Delaney Sarah T. Lepak Clayton D. Lewis Miguel L’Heureux Elizabeth A. Meekins S. Patrick O’Bryan & Shannon Kerr O’Bryan Kyungjoo Park Steven B. Pollicoff Katie McClaflin VanWagner

2008 Sarah Emile Lynn Baltzell & Brian P. Baltzell Daniel A. Belhumeur & Ree A. Belhumeur Adam S. Davis Justin D. Elkouri & Mica Elkouri Matthew D. Franzenburg Christel Koranda Thomas P. Maltese J. Nolan McWilliams, Esq. Andrea E. Nelson Stephanie S. Sankar Brad A. Vining 2009 Caroline A. Bader & Travis M. White Brutrinia D. Cain Christopher P. Colyer Michael E. Dill Lindsey Morse Heinz & Bradley D. Heinz Beau A. Jackson & Laura S. Jackson Rachel J. Kibler-Melby Julie M. Larson Jomana J. Qaddour Devin K. Ross Andrew R. Shaw & Laura Hall Bethany C. Shelton Amanda C. Sheridan Burton W. Warrington Patrick R. Watkins 2010 Steven R. Anderson & Carole Twork Anderson Joshua I. Berry Juliann C. Morland DaVee Blake T. Hardwick & Monica Grewal Hardwick Christopher J. Kaufman & Allison Draffan Kaufman Paul C. Lantis Erica Ramsey & Eric Ramsey Ryan J. Schletzbaum Adam M. Siebers Dana L. Watts 2011 Alex P. Aguilera Capt. Matthew G. Goble Lindsay Robbins Grise & Matthew Grise

Milos J. Jekic Evan E. North Melissa M. Plunkett Kristen Seiler Courtney Pedersen Sipe & Adam J. Sipe Neal H. Woodworth & Erin Woodworth 2012 Shuang Leng Chen Lauren E. Douville Sparkle Ellison, JD, PhD Deborah J. Hyde Leilani R. Leighton Ryan J. Mize Ann Elliott Parkins & Torrance R. Parkins David G. Smith Lijuan Xing, SJD 2013 Russell C. Brown Samuel Butler IV Tyler J. Emerson Joy Noakes Isaacs Casey B. Johnson Michael R. Keenan Morgan T. McCreary Eric A. Sader Jennifer Vogel Schroeder Robert E. C. Stites 2014 Xavier Andrews David R. Green Katherine E. Marples Jean B. Menager Peter R. Montecuollo 2015 Andrea G. Horvath Charles F. Smith

This donor report covers fiscal year 2015, which ran from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015. Please bring omissions or errors to the attention of Mindie Paget: mpaget@ku.edu 785-864-9205


IN MEMORIAM 1949 Robert L. Lesh La Mesa, California March 7, 2015

1958 Richard H. Rumsey Wichita, Kansas June 7, 2015

1984 Ronald P. Clevenger Independence, Missouri March 8, 2015

1950 Arthur Noel Nystrom Overland Park, Kansas October 7, 2015

1959 John W. “Jack� Brand Jr. Lawrence, Kansas May 12, 2015

Randel L. Messner Pittsburg, Kansas April 10, 2015

1951 Russell N. Barrett Wichita, Kansas April 24, 2015

1966 Ronald L. Fobes Leesburg, Florida January 31, 2015

Wilbur G. Ostrum Austin, Texas April 7, 2015

1970 Donald R. Paxson Topeka, Kansas September 6, 2015

1952 Robert G. Walmer Leawood, Kansas March 9, 2015 1953 Kenneth D. Travis Bellaire, Texas September 18, 2015 1956 Alan B. Slayton Independence, Missouri April 8, 2015 1957 Richard F. Adams Kansas City, Missouri April 18, 2015 William B. Pendleton Lawrence, Kansas May 15, 2015

1973 Theodore A. Livingston Chicago, Illinois May 13, 2015 1978 Brian A. Salvay Woodridge, New York March 11, 2015 1979 Steven C. Townsend Shawnee Mission, Kansas May 30, 2015 1983 Colin C. Gage Kansas City, Missouri August 27, 2015

1987 Kirk Dean Auston Great Bend, Kansas March 29, 2015 1991 Michael D. Moeller Kansas City, Missouri May 4, 2015 1992 Patrick J. Henderson Overland Park, Kansas August 10, 2015 2L Jimmy Gorman Lawrence, Kansas September 2, 2015


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