U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra students about the everyd 1·c Day . 0 Connor tells ay Ile of a Jusuce.
Vol. 20, No. 1
Fall/Winter 1996
UCLA Law is published at UCLA for alumni, friends and ocher members of the UCLA Law community Offices at 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, 90095
Susan Westerberg Prager: Dean
Joan Tyndall: Assistant Dean, Development and Alumni Relations
Magazine Staff
Karen Nikos: Editor
Photography: Maryann Stuehrmann; ASUCLA Photo Service: Scott Quintard, Todd Cheney
Editorial Assistants: Sheila Casey, Alisa Perren
Contributing Writer: Elizabeth Vella
Design: Lauscen/Cossucta Design, Los Angeles
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UCLA Law Alumni Association Board of Directors
Renee L. Campbell 'So: President
John F. Runkel Jr. '81: Vice President
John H. Weston '69: Vice President
Richard D. Fybel '71: Secretary-Treasurer
Holly R. Paul '91: Alumni Representative
Hon. Laurence D. Rubin '71: Immediate Past President
Stanton P. Belland '59
Donna R. Black '75
Cynthia S. Conners '83
Shedrick 0. Davis '87
Deborah A. David '75
Raquelle de la Rocha '87
Hon. Joan Demp�ey Klein '55
David W. Fleming '59
Richard W. Havel '71
Fredrick Kuperberg '66
Glenn L. Krinsky '83
Louis M. Meisinger '67
Hon. Carolyn Richardson Owens '82
Mark A. Samuels '82
Hon. George P. Schiavelli '74
Linda Smith '77
Hon. Gary L. Taylor '63
Shan K. Thever '74
David C. Tseng '84
W. Keith Wyatt '77
ON CAMPUS: •Public InterestAwards •Commencement
ALUMNI NEWS Reunion day
ALUMNI OF THE YEAR: Four honored asAlumni ofthe Year at Dean's Dinner
FACULTY
Law School initiates program in Public Interest Law and Policy
byProfessorAlison GreyAnderson
THE UCLA LAW SCHOOL APPLICATION FORM has a new page this year: "Program in Public Interest Law and Policy." I enjoy looking at it, even though bureaucratic forms are not usually my favorite reading. After a year of meetings, proposal drafting and discussions with faculty and administrators, we finally have a Public Interest Program at UCLA.
The law faculty established the new Program in May, and the first class will enroll in fall 1997. Program students will take a special lawyering skills class and a public interest workshop in their first year, and participate in seminars in their second and third years.
UCLA Law School has long attracted students interested in public interest and policy issues. The school has one -of the strongest public interest law faculty in the country, and sits next to a new School of Public Policy and Social Research, in a city that is a living laboratory for every conceivable social problem.
The Program planners-Professors Gary Blasi, Jerry Lopez, Richard Abel, Richard Sander, Ann Carlson and Alison Andersonform the core of the public interest faculty.
Public Interest faculty come from a variety of backgrounds
Blasi joined the faculty in 1991 as a nationally recognized public interest advocate and activist in the areas of housing, welfare, and homelessness. He has served as lead counsel in significant law reform cases, been an innovative user of computer technology in the public interest sphere, and written extensively about homelessness and welfare rights.
Lopez, who taught at UCLA from 1978 to 1985, returned to UCLA in 1994 from Stanford Law School, where he held the Kenneth & Harle Montgomery Chair in Public Interest Law and developed an informal program in public interest lawyering. Author
Rick Sander and student Marlene Garza discuss a research project on fair housing
of a book about progressive lawyering, he is currently teaching community economic development and community organizing.
Abel, on the faculty since 1974 and currently Connell Professor of Law, is an internationally known scholar of the legal profession and the sociology of law as well as a long-time teacher of torts and the legal profession. Trained not only in United States Law but in African law, particularly that of South Africa and Kenya, Abel adds a comparative and critical scholarly perspective to the faculty mix.
Professor Joel Handler, holder of the Maxwell Chair, joined the faculty in 1985. He is a distinguished social scientist and scholar of welfare and institutional reform. Handler teaches poverty law and health law, and like Abel, has served as president of the Law and Society Association. Handler combines distinguished scholarship and membership on various national committees with a strong interest in supervising the individual research projects of his poverty law students.
Sander, at UCLA since 1989, is an economist as well as a lawyer. He is known for his efforts to apply social science techniques to problems in law and legal education and for his reform efforts in the fair housing area. Sander brings a critical eye and substantial expertise to the use of quantitative data relevant to legal and policy problems. He recently taught a course in quantitative methods.
Carlson joined the law school faculty in 1994 as director of the new Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic. A litigator, Carlson worked in the state legislature before attending law school, and now teaches a variety of environmental courses.
My background is in business and private law. I have a longstanding interest in teaching experimentation and curricular reform, and the chance to combine a curricular experiment with the public interest led me to serve as unofficial coordinator for the new Program.
The genesis of the Program
The new Public Interest Program originated in a faculty reading and discussion group organized by Lopez in 1994. We met occasionally to discuss economic development and related social problems, and were all struck by how exciting it was to pool our collective insights and perspectives on specific social problems. One day, a group member said, "We should do this as a seminar for students interested in public interest and policy problems." From fall 1995 on, we had the assistance of Cathy Mayorkas, our new Director of Public Interest Programs. As a holder of both a JD and MBA who had most recently spent several years administering a school-reform project in Los Angeles, she brought both legal and administrative experience to the project.
DAVID EPSTEIN '64 PLEDGES $50,000 TO FUND PUBLIC INTEREST SUMMER FELLOWSHIPS
David Epstein, whose work helped to changeunclaimedpropertylawsthroughoutthenationandmakeiteasierforcitizenstoclaimpropertyduethem,isfundingpublicinterestsummerfellowshipsto encouragestudentstopursuepublicinterestlaw.
"I wanted to make sure that the best andthebrighteststudentsaregoingtobe able to participate in this program," he saidofhiscontribution. Fellowshipsallow studentschoosingtoworkinpublicinterest law to collect a stipend. The stipend can helpstudents defer the costs of their education andpreventthemfromhaving to take a private sector job to pay their tuitionbills.
Epstein, who graduated from UCLA Lawin 1964,hasspentmostofhislifein public service, sometimes while taking partinhisownbusinesspursuits.
Epstein, referred to as an "unclaimed propertyguru" in a recent Boston Globe article detailing his vanguard work in unclaimed property law, attended UC Berkeleyonanathleticscholarship.After (continued)
graduatingfrom UCLA Schoolof Law in 1964, his career followed a variety of paths, including work in private practice in which he represented boxer Ken Nortonandprofessionalfootballrunning backEric Dickerson.
He later campaigned and worked for Governor Jerry Brown when the state decided to sue banks for not reporting unclaimedpropertyaccounts. Duringthat time, Epstein worked to improve California'smethodsoflocatingandnotifyingtheownersof unclaimed property.
He served as Reporter to the Uniform Law Revision Commission on the 1981 Uniform Unclaimed Property Act, which standardized unclaimed property law throughoutthe nation. In 1984, he publishedafive-volumetreatiseofUnclaimed Property Law and Reporting Forms. Takinghiseffortsnationwide,hewasconsultantformorethan40stateswhodecided to improve their laws governing unclaimed property. Throughout the nation, Epstein, as special counsel 11nd consultant to the Unclaimed Property Clearinghouse, identified corporations andother entities that were underreporting unclaimed property, persuaded them to be audited and then supervised the audits. These efforts opened the door for more consumers to track down their unclaimedpropertyeasily.
Epsteinsaidheencouragesotherattorneysandfuturelawyerstotrytocombine their private interests with the public good. Hesaidattorneysplanningtowork inthepublic interestneedto evaluatethe changing times, where less public money is available for publicinterests. "We need anewapproachtooldproblems," hesaid. "Therearefundsavailable; it's amatter_of creatinganawarenessfortheneed."
We want the Program to prepare graduates to make outstanding contributions in public interest law and policy. The curriculum combines classroom teaching, clinical instruction, individual and group research, client advocacy and community education. Our students will learn to use varied problem-solving and methodological tools, particularly quantitative and qualitative social science. Students will study public interest problems such as housing, race relations and the environment, as well as institutional and policy considerations of delivering legal services to groups with limited access to such services.
In planning the Program, we consulted with our admissions and career services administrators, both of whom enthusiastically embraced the idea. Dean Susan Prager was an avid supporter as well, and saw the Program as a possible forerunner of other specialized Programs in business, entertainment and international law.
Students will be diverse
We expect our first class to come from a variety of background. Some may be right out of college, others will have worked as community organizers, consumer advocates, legislative assistants or in business. A few will have academic backgrounds-they may have done graduate work in finance, anthropology or environmental science and worked for policy groups or think tanks.
They will vary in age, experience, political viewpoint, educational and social background, but will all share a common desire to tackle daunting social problems, represent underrepresented groups or interests, or otherwise further the public interest.
Professor Joel Handler confers with students on a project.
Program in Law andAmerican Indian Studies formed at UCLA
CONTINUING TO BE A LEADER IN the field of American Indian Law, UCLA Law School will begin offering a joint degree in Law and American Indian Studies in fall 1997. The integrated program will allow participants to earn a combined J.D. and master's degree and will span four years, as opposed to the five years it would take to complete both programs separately.
The joint degree program is directed by Carole Goldberg-Ambrose, a UCLA Law professor since 1972. A scholar in American Indian law, she is co-author of the 1982 edition of Felix Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law, as well as author of numerous other articles on the subject of Federal Indian Law and Tribal Law.
"Our new program is the first of its kind in the nation, and comes at a time when gaming, environmental and adoption disputes are multiplying," says Goldberg-Ambrose. "We want to train lawyers who can draw upon a comprehensive understanding of tribal cultures when they frame legal claims and interact with clients."
UCLA has a long history of involvement in Native American studies. In the early 1970s, the first modern casebook on the subject of Federal Indian Law was developed by UCLA Law School Professor Monroe Price. Ten years later, UCLA created one of the first interdisciplinary master's degree programs in American Indian Studies. For 26 years, UCLA has funded the American Indian Studies Center, an organized research unit that serves as a focal point for many campus activities related to Indian Law and Indian Studies.
Joint degree program participants must be admitted to both the School of Law and the Master's Degree Program in American Indian Studies. Applicants who have worked with tribes or who have demonstrated an interest in Native American issues through academic study or volunteer activities are especially welcome. "This new joint program is the latest example of how UCLA law students benefit from being part of a world-class university," says Ambrose. 'Tm proud that UCLA is leading the way in merging cultural and legal studies and addressing pressing Native American issues."
•:•
Students bring law and business to the negotiating table
byKaren Nikos
DANIELLE MANDELBAUM SIGNED UP FOR the Elements of Economic Organization class last spring because she wanted to prepare herself for a nontraditional legal career she plans in the entertainment business. But, as she learned what would be expected in the hands-on course, she was not so sure she was ready to examine and negotiate leveraged buyouts and real estate foreclosures.
"It was a little intimidating at first," says Mandelbaum, a third-year law student now working an externship at the Directors Guild of America. "But it was the greatest," she said of the class, which brings together MBA students as well as law students to examine, structure and negotiate business transactions in a life-like setting.
Although Mandelbaum had taken a few courses at the Wharton School during her undergraduate years at University of Pennsylvania, she did not at first feel prepared to face high-level business transactions required in the course. The innovative class is taught by law Professor Eric Zolt and business Professor Al Osborne. Knowing she would need these skills as a lawyer, she plunged ahead anyway. She was glad she did. "It was the first class I had taken that employed so many useful, real-life skills. Once I got the numbers in perspective, I realized that the larger picture was what's most important to the transaction."
Zolt and Osborne, Director of the Price Center for Entrepreneurial Studies of the Anderson School of
Management at UCLA, say Mandelbaum's revelation illustrates the purpose of the class. Although they prefer students have some business background, the main objective is for students to develop a whole picture and gain enough perspective to "do the deal."
Using real or at least very life-like transactions, with accompanying term sheets, spread sheets, projections, contracts and other paper work supplied by professionals working similar transactions, business 'and law students prepare their transactions, write analysis papers, draft agreements, prepare negotiation strategies and read background articles during the week. They meet outside class to plan their negotiation. Ar a three-hour class once a week, students then dissect the transaction, working through its intricacies while playing the roles of various parties in the transaction with guest speakers from the business world.
Outside speakers bring to the students an array of transactions, including venture capital financing, leveraged buyouts, real estate foreclosures, cable TV systems acquisitions and movie co-production arrangements. Attorney Kenneth Ziffren '65, of Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer, for example, led a discussion of a movie industry transaction after a joint venture had gone sour. Diana Walker '69, of O'Melveny and Myers, led the class in a discussion in structuring a compensation package for a new chief executive officer. Ruth Fisher '80 and Greg Morgan taught legal drafting to unsuspecting business students. Faculty and students agree that the guest speakers' contributions are invaluable.
"One of the most interesting aspects of the class was the emphasis on evaluating deals through different perspectives," said Robert Wasseerman, a third-year law
Law Professor Eric Zolt. Zolr and Osborne, of the Anderson School, teach Elements of Economic Organization.
Professor Al Osborne
student who has just entered the M.B.A. program and took the class last spring. "We were required to assume a variety of roles. We played the parts of the creator or developer, the conservative banker, and the venture capitalist. When we work in a law firm, we often won't have the opportunity to choose who we want to represent."
"You really only learn how to do deals by doing them, by experience," says Osborne. "This course gives them a unique opportunity to develop a sense of what really matters in structuring transactions and business arrangements before they face it in their careers." Adds Zolt: "It is difficult to be a good lawyer unless you understand the basic economics of a transaction. Litigators need this as much as business lawyers because much litigation involves business transactions gone bad." To assist students with background knowledge they might need to understand each person's role better, each professor teaches some auxiliary classes to help students who need assistance in either law or business. Business students, most of whom have real-world business experience, get a legal primer from Zolt. Law students get some assistance in basic business principles from Osborne.
One of the strengths of the course, the professors and students agree, is that students must learn teamwork. Teams of four, comprising two law students and two business students, examine the transactions. "They learn to work as a group to come to a successful conclusion on a deal," says Osborne. "Students are not always wanting to do that, but you have to tell them this is real. They have to finish the transaction."
Zolt and Osborne say they enjoy seeing the students learn from each other. "I am impressed by what the students bring to the class," says Zolt, who in 1995 took over the class from Professor Bill Klein, who previously taught and built the framework of the course with Osborne. Some students had experience in banking, some worked in law firms, others worked in the entertainment business. They helped each other see the different sides of the transaction, and what the transaction would mean to different parties, the professors explain.
"They see a large number of transactions and experience a lot of individual deals," says Zolt. When stu-
dents negotiate a movie transaction, for example, individual students on the four-person teams play the roles of representatives of the studio, the investor, the producer and whatever other parties are involved. This way, they learn what is important to the different individuals involved in the deal. The exposure for both business and law students is integral, both professors agree.
"We want the students to leave with a good appreciation of the business purpose of transactions and what each party to the transaction seeks to accomplish," says Zolt.
Robert Wasserman goes over materials for his Elements of Economic Organization class, which he took lase spring.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor visits Law School
u.s. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE Sandra Day O'Connor told an audience of more than 350 students and faculty that she continues to learn about the law even after serving 15 years on the nation's highest court.
"I still feel that I'm learning every day," Justice O'Connor said in explaining to students the day-to-day duties of justices during her visit September 16.
The justice had met informally with some faculty in the early afternoon before speaking to students for an hour, half of which was taken up with questions and answers. The justice's visit was so popular that the number of students wishing to attend far outnumbered the seats available in a lecture room as well as an overflow classroom equipped with video.
"I wanted it to be a very informal visit without a lot of special events so I could see the source of some of my wonderful law clerks at the Supreme Court," Justice O'Connor told students. "UCLA has provided some of the law clerks to my chambers for a number of years now, and a few of them have circled back to your faculty." Professors John Setear and Daniel Bussell clerked for Justice O'Connor, as did Professor Eugene Volokh, who graduated from UCLA Law in 1992. Other alums who served as O'Connor clerks include Sandra Segal Ikuta '88 and Kevin Kelly '89. Brian Hoffstadt '96 is currently clerking in her court.
Injecting humor into a description of her job and the duties of the high court, Justice O'Connor commented: "We only really do three things." Supreme Court justices' main jobs, she explained, are to decide which cases they will consider, do "homework," or research the cases before them, and write opinions. "That's it. A simple job. A simple job description, anyway." The justice also pointed out the realities, illustrating the time it takes to thoroughly read through all of her work. "I wake up every morning and start reading, and I'm still reading when I go to bed at night."
The justice, in her first visit to UCLA School of Law, said she purposely had sought to visit the school in an informal setting. In the morning, she visited the advanced Constitutional Law course taught by Professor Kenneth Karst, who had coincidentally assigned students one of her opinions on libel the weekend before.
Students Steve Heydon, Theresa Magno, Sarah Gill and Nicole Duckett meet with the justice.
Justice O'Connor meets with faculty: From left are Associate Dean Stephen Yeazell, Professor Rick Sander and Professor Eugene Volokh, who served as law clerk for O'Connor.
Nicole Duckett, a second-year law student who was one of four students asked to escort the justice to her talk with students, said she was pleasantly surprised to see the justice in her class that morning with Professor Karst. When I saw the assignment, I was thinking, "this is great. I knew I was going to meet the justice Monday and here I am reading her work," Duckett remembered. "I turned around in class, and there she was."
Justice O'Connor's down-to-earth approach evoked a warm response from students. "It was wonderful to meet her," Duckett added. "She is so personable. She has written a lot on criminal procedure and constitutional issues, which is what I'm interested in."
In answering questions of students, O'Connor talked about time constraints required on decisions on the death penalty, writs and injunctions, as well as the opportunity for the justices to see a whole variety of cases-from decisions on antitrust, to criminal law matters to water rights. O'Connor, who became the first woman appointed to the Supreme Court after President Ronald Reagan nominated her in 1991, said it has been somewhat of a relief not to be the only woman on the high court since the appointment of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. "It used to be people would say, 'How did she vote?' The addition of another woman has alleviated that somewhat."
Reflecting on her visit, Professor Evan Caminker said: "My students were impressed by Justice O'Connor's personal warp1th as well as her dedication to deciding difficult cases carefully and fairly. First-year students come to view the law expresssed in Supreme Court opinions as impersonal, abstract, and inaccessible. Just seeing Justice O'Connor and hearing her speak reminded them that behind the written words lie real people grappling with real and complex problems. Justice O'Connor's presence brought home an important lesson not easily taught: The law is necessarily shaped by human experience and judgment."
''I
wanted it to be a very informalvisit without a lot ofspecial events so I couldsee the source of some ofmy wonderful law clerks at the Supreme Court."
JUSTICE SANDRA DAY o'CONNOR
O'Connor speaks to her former law clerk, Professor John Setear, and Professor Evan Carninker, who clerked for Justice William Brennan.
AN INTERVIEW WITH PROFESSORS
PAUL BERGMAN AND MICHAEL ASIMOW
AccuracyTakes a Back Seat in Hollywood
by Sheila Casey
Armed with a search warrant, police show up at the home ofa man under suspicionfor murder. They do not, however, lookfor a murder weapon.
A defense lawyer in a malpractice case eliminates a key expert witness by sending him on a Caribbeanvacation.
On the stand andfightingfor custody ofher son, a distraught mother is subjectedtoprying questions about her boyfriendsand sex life.
The stuff of drama, the stuff of high emotion-but legally accurate? Not on your life, say Paul Bergman and Michael Asimow, authors of the recently published Reeljustice: The Courtroom Goes to theMovies,. an analysis of the law as depicted in film.
The above scenarios, from "Presumed Innocent," "The Verdict," and "Kramer vs. Kramer," are just a few of the legal oddities roasted in this litigator's eye-view of Hollywood. Seventy films are examined for legal authenticity and evaluated for entertainment value-then awarded from one to four gavels.
The book, by UCLA Law professors Asimow and Bergman, and published by Andrews and McMeel, points out where objections should have been made and weren't, evidence was entered that never should have been allowed, and witnesses were led blindly down the garden path as judge and opposing counsel looked benignly on.
Asimow has been teaching at UCLA since 1967 with a focus on contracts, income tax, administrative law, and business associations. Bergman has been teaching at UCLA since 1970. He teaches a variety of clinical classes, as well as trial advocacy and an evidence course.
"With my focus on civil cases and Paul's focus on criminal cases, together we can handle nearly any legal issue apt to come up in a popular movie," says Asimow.
Bergman and Asimow made an hourlong presentation to the
Bette Davis stands trial for killing her lover in "The Letter."
classes of '66, '71, '76, '81 and '86 at UCLA Law's Reunion Day Celebration in September. Using clips from "The Letter" with Bette Davis, and "The Verdict" with Paul Newman, the group discussed how attorneys should have handled the situations depicted in the films.
In the spring, they will teach a course, "Law and Popular Culture," which will use much of the material they gathered for the book.
The book has gone into a second printing, and Asimow and Bergman have been featured in various media, from the Los Angeles Times to NBC's "Today Show" to Court TV's "Prime Time Justice."
We put together some questions we thought alumni might have about the collaborative project.
Judy Holliday's hat becomes a crucial point in a trial where Spencer Tracy plays the prosecuting attorney and Katharine Hepburn plays his wife, the defense attorney, in MGM's "Adam's Rib," 1949, one of nearly 70 movies analyzed in ReelJustice.
What inspired you to write this book?
Asimow: Paul had been using movies for teaching, and we realized there were no reference books on the subject.There is a huge number of books about film, but none about courtroom movies.
Bergman: I like to use movie clips during lecture to illustrate key points. A trial is complex-it involves many different parties all playing precisely defined roles. Movie scenes provide an excellent "shorthand" for quickly demonstrating interactions that would be cumbersome to describe in a lecture. I started out using them in my evidence class, and now use it in trial advocacy and street law as well.
What aspect ofthe law is most misunderstood, as a result ofthe movies?
Bergman: The extent to which law constrains what goes on in a courtroom.In the movies, lawyers can halt the trial at any time to make speeches, can put on witnesses just for dramatic effect, and don't know much about rules of evidence.The movies portray lawyers as having more power than they really do.
Is there a danger is having the populace misinformed about law due to their movie-going?
Asimow: It is a shame when people are misinformed. All of us have to be jurors from time to time, so we should understand the process. All the big issues-abortion, school prayerget resolved in the courts.
What aspect oflaw is well understood as a result ofthe movies?
Bergman: The emotions that are behind legal arguments.That these are not just debates about legal policy, that people have their blood and sweat involved in what goes on in a courtroom.The movies have well-illuminated certain issues, such as capital punishment, in a way that debate cannot.To hear Orson Welles in "Compulsion" argue against the death penalty, or to see Susan Hayward, in "I Want to Live," receive the death penalty, forces people to deal with it in a way that they otherwise wouldn't.
What's your favorite courtroom drama?
Bergman: If I was stranded on a desert island with only one movie, it would be "Inherit the Wind." It depicts an important historical issue, the acting is great, and it has some powerful courtroom scenes.
Asimow: My personal favorite is "To Kill a Mockingbird." It's told from a child's perspective, it gives a realistic portrayal of the south, and Atticus Finch is a heroic lawyer.
Heroic beyond belief?
Asimow: Not beyond belief, but definitely an exception.There are plenty of heroes working in law offices today.They don't get any appreciation or any money.They take pro-bono cases for nothing but altruistic reasons.
What's the best example ofa big error in a well-known movie?
Bergman: "The Verdict," with Paul Newman, is filled with preposterous happenings, such as the defense attorney planting an undercover spy to seduce Paul Newman.
Students get their copies of ReelJustice: The Courtroom Goes to the Movies, signed by Professor Asimow.
Newman is a drunk who violates every known ethical rule. Near the end, a surprise witness supplies a damning document. The judge sustains an objection to it-to a document that has never been entered into evidence. And as a final thing-the case goes to jury after the judge has already stricken all the evidence. With no evidence, the judge should enter a judgment for the defendant, but he sends it to the jury.
Are there legal stories that have been given short shrift by the movies? Good stories that get ignored while others get overdone?
Asimow: The vast majority of movies are about criminal law because they tend to be considered the most dramatic. Civil cases get short shrift, but they can pack every bit as much intensity. "Philadelphia'' was a job discrimination case, "The Verdict" was about personal injury and "Class Action" dealt with product liability. These all pack a wallop of emotion. Also, family law stories, such as "Kramer vs. Kramer," can be gut-wrenching.
Comment on the depiction offemale lawyers in movies.
Bergman: It has been atrocious. Women are shown either as incompetent, such as Demi Moore in ''A Few Good Men," or they are too emotional with no judgment, fall in love with the client, lose their objectivity and need someone else to guide them through. They are depicted in stereotypical ways, partly because the formula says that the hero always needs to ride in to rescue the damsel in distress.
Does inaccuracy in a movie lessen your enjoyment of it?
Asimow: When it is over the top, it does. But certain things are done so much they don't bother me anymore-such as lawyers making speeches in the middle of a trial.
Bergman: Only if it is really preposterous. After all, any real trial is mostly very boring. To get it all into a two-hour movie, they have to cut out the dreary parts.
I am as much into entertainment as anyone else. If I wanted to see a real case, I'd go sit in Superior Court.
The book is very funny. Are both of you wits?
Asimow: Most of it is Paul. He is great with one-liners.
Clinical program volunteers wait for Professor Paul Bergman to sign their copies of Reel Justice: The Courtroom Goes to the Movies.
Law student medals in Paralympic competition
Editor's note:
Cara Dunne, a third-year law student, and her tandem riding partner, ScottEvans, a student workingon a doctoral degree in astronomy at UCLA, won a silver and a bronze medal in theParalympics this summer. Blind since she was5 after contractinga rareform ofeye cancer, Dunne graduatedfrom Harvard She came to UCLA School ofLaw after beating a secondary bout ofcancer. In her account ofher experiences at the Paralympics, the Olympicsfor disabled people, Dunne draws parallels between her athletic triumphs and conquering cancer.
When U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno took the podium to address the more than 5,000 athletes from 127 countries at the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Games Closing Ceremonies, I steeled myself for a hoard of cliches. What significance could a phrase such as "triumph of the human spirit" hold for anyone who hadn't lived in a world where finishing a law school paper at 3 a.m. is never a good excuse for skipping
6 a.m. weight training? Yet, as Reno continued to speak, I sensed that she was not professing to "understand" these things. She was merely stating a respect for those of us who "knew," and her tone caused me to fl.ash back to three of the most important days of my life and the events that would be etched upon my soul forever.
August 17, 1996
It was getting harder to breathe as my hammering heart seemed to squeeze my lungs to a pulp. Sitting side by side in the waiting area, Scott and I concentrated on remaining calm and relaxed as the Italian tandem team members before us readied themselves to start. Everything we'd done that morning had been calculated to prevent us from dwelling on the distractions of the race. Today was my best event: the kilometer. We'd already broken the world record, unofficially, in training. We knew that as sprinters, Scott and I were capable of a great performance. But as eight of the first 14 racers smashed the old I-minute, 15.01 world record, my heart began to plunge. Our personal best had been 1:14.35. The time to beat for the last 15 minutes, set by our American teammates, was 1:12.9. Adrenaline would provide some extra benefit today,- but, two and half seconds worth? Desperately trying to screen out the crash of tools and
Scott Evans, a UCLA doctoral student, and UCLA law student Cara Dunne, saddle up in practice.
dang of gears and the shrieks of coaches in dozens of languages (probably shouting the same things), I drew down into myself, searching for a respite.
What flashed through my mind was a screen split down the middle. One side revealed a scene from three years ago that day. I recognized the hospital room where a pale, bald figure hunched shivering at the edge of her bed. The physician had just informed her that the chemotherapy was not working. The bone cancer was back. The steady dick-clack of the IV machine would soon be punctuated by the jangle of the bell, signaling the end of the infusion. With every fiber of her being, she was concentrating on making it past that jangling bell. Her future hung in the balance.
On the other side of the split screen was the world where coaches screeched, pumps hissed and frenzied athletes dashed about looking at the scoreboard. The figure from three years past hunched on the grass embankment, uniformed in a red, white and blue skin suit, clutching her helmet and waiting. Hands clenched into fists of concentration, she bit her lip. A bell jangled to signal that the Italian team was working its way toward becoming the new world record holders at 1:11.46. I snapped back to reality with a start. That first image was too remote. It was not connected to this world where "winning wasn't everything, it was the only thing."
Evans and Dunnepedaltovictory in 1996 Paralympics competitioninAtlanta.
On wobbly legs, I mounted the track, trying not to slip as my cleats scratched the wooden-banked surface. We wished each other luck. "Don't forget. We're gonna take this kilo outta the yard," Scott said, trying to sound calm. Our coach leaned over and whispered "One minute, twelve, Cara. OK, just do it."
"The United States team of Evans and Dunne taking the track," boomed the announcer, who went on to inform the crowd what our personal best kilo time was. It hung like a silent challenge in the air.Today, 1:14.35 would not even rank us in the top ten. I tried to squeeze it out of my mind to stay empty and focused. I was so eager to start I practically slapped Scott when he told me to "tap me when you're ready." He nodded at the official. "Flag is up! Attention riders!" We rose mechanically from the saddle and I wondered for a millisecond how I was supposed to take this kilo "out of the yard" when iron-heavy legs and cotton-filled lungs made the prospect of taking it out of the saddle seem bleak.The gun crashed, and the bike seemed to spring off the line of its own accord. Our fastest time for the standing half lap had never dipped below 14.0 in training. Now it registered at 13.2-adrenaline's first little contribution? ''And down," Scott commanded. In sync, we collapsed into the saddle, crunched into the aerodynamic kilo position. Electric squibs of searing energy coursed through my legs and exploded through the pedals. Flames of adrenaline shot through my blood. My mind was ablaze with determined fire. The kilo is raging, outrageous, sick and awesome.There is no holding back; it's as hard and fast as you can go for four laps. Scott once said that a kilo packs into a little more than one minute "more misery than any human being should ever have to suffer.'' Just one crucial minute to make the impact of a lifetime.
The roar of the crowd seemed remote and distant. Even our teammates and coaches bellowing out in the infield seemed disconnected from this reality where legs and lungs teetered on the edge of simultaneous explosion. I kept aiming for that bell. When its welcome jangle signaled the final lap, I faced the biggest challenge yet.The urge to back off was overpowering.The bike felt as if a piano had been loaded onto the back wheel.
That was when the shadow of that three-year old image flitted through what was left of my conscious mind. Three years ago, backing off would have been fatal; it was not an option. I had to keep pushing toward the bell. Backing off at this moment would have meant a little relief and a lifetime of guilt. I
The roar ofthe crowd seemed remote anddistant. Even our teammates and coaches bellowing out in the infieldseemed disconnected from this reality where legs and lungs teetered on the edge ofsimultaneous explosion. Ikept aimingfor that bell. When its welcomejangle signaled thefinal lap, I faced the biggest challenge yet. The urge to back off was overpowering. The bike felt as ifa piano had been loaded onto the back wheel.
couldn't win this race without Scott, but I could screw it up by myself Pedal stroke after tedious pedal stroke I battled on. My muscle power was gone, so I poured my adrenalinedrenched spirit into the last few seconds. Sounds faded in and out. Lines on the track grew blurry for Scott. "Over," he gasped.The front of the bike swished crazily as he fought exhaustion. My head dropped onto his back. I didn't await the announcer's verdict because I had nothing left at that moment. I was empty, expended. Vaguely, it registered that we'd moved into second. We both tumbled off the tandem and lay face down in a grass-filled gully while teammates, coaches and volunteers Hocked around with wet towels, ice pack and Power-aid. Our time of 1:12.095-the new American record-smashed our own personal record by 2.3 seconds and obliterated the world record by 3.01.
Listening to the Italian national anthem celebrate the gold medalists, I felt no disappointment, only overwhelming joy. Snagging the silver was no comparison to the sense of personal accomplishment. fu Scott put it, we gave that kilo more than all we had.
August
19, 1996
Yesterday we'd high-fived the crowd and posed for pictures in front of the scoreboard after setting an American and Paralympic record in the 200-meter qualifying sprint, just .05 off the world record. After defeating the Brits and advancing to face the Australians in the semi-finals, we faced one of the Games' most challenging moments. When the Aussies used two questionable maneuvers, our gold medal visions evaporated. Huddled on the ground amid spilled Poweraid and scattered equipment, we shared tears and gritted our teeth against the urge to wallow in self-pity. Pulling ourselves together, even smiling as we mounted the track, we plunged into the less-than-ideal scenario of having to race our American teammates for the bronze. Amazing how adrenaline-charged you can become in your mad, last-chance effort to snag an international medal. Luckily, we snagged that bronze after two heats of the sprint competition.
August 26, 1996
Much more than flowers and saucer-sized medals made this whole experience one of the greatest victories of my life. I thought about the fourth-place finish in the 3-kilometer pursuit, an event I'd consistently convinced myself I could not do. There was the 40-mile road race where I could barely fight nausea and exhaustion (and after which I spent four hours in the medical tent). I remembered the social highs and lows of life in the fishbowl atmosphere of a predominantly male cycling team, the chaotic confusion of the Olympic village, and communication rifts to mend with my racing partner. Perhaps Janet Reno was right. It all came down to triumph of the human spirit-a triumph over one's self doubts and failures. That hospital image from three years ago had everything to do with the present. One bell would never have rung for me if I had not forged beyond the first.
7th Annual Public InterestAwards
UCLA Law celebrated the 7th Annual Public Interest Awards ceremony last May. In addition to recognizing the more than 50 students who earned "Give 35" public interest service awards for performing 35 or more hours ofpro bono work during a year, the ceremony honored the recipients of several special public interest service awards. •!•
The recipients of the 7th Annual Public Interest Awards, from left to right: Holly Traube, Stewart Kwoh, Janai Nelson, Rick Sander and Kelly Rozmus. Stewart Kwoh, '74, who has been the Executive Director of the Asian Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California since 1983, received the Antonia Hernandez Award for his involvement in a wide array of community issues, including his participation as a board member of Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium. He is a board member of RLA (formerly Rebuild Los Angeles), the Coalition for Humane Immigration Rights of Los Angeles, and other community groups and is a past Commissioner and past President of the Los Angeles City Human Relations Commission.
Mintie (left) presents her eponymous award to Janai Nelson in recognition of Janai's commitment to public interest work, which she has demonstrated in her volunteer activities, in her academic and intellectual pursuits and in her work experiences. Janai has been active in the Black Law Students Association (BLSA) and the UCLA Law Review, in addition to clerking for the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles and working as a volunteer and Executive Committee member of the First African Methodist Episcopalian Legal Clinic.
Gary Blasi, last year's recipient of the Fredric P. Sutherland Public Interest Award, presents this year's honor to Rick Sander. Professor Sander received the award in recognition of his longstanding commitment to public interest law, including his work as President of the Fair Housing Congress of Southern California and as Co-Director of the Los Angeles City and County Fair Housing Assessment Study.
Holly Traube and Kelly Rozmus, who co-chaired the Public Interest Law Foundation, are presented the Joseph Hairston Duff Award by Duff. Rozmus spent last summer working for Public Counsel on its Homeless Youth Project and its Children's Rights Project. Traube has also demonstrated her commitment to public interest law by volunteering for El Centro Legal's Landlord-Tenant clinic and working with Public Counsel's Children's Rights Project as a fellow in UCLA's Child Abuse and Neglect Interdisciplinary Program.
The UCLA Public Interest Law FoundationAnnual Auction raisesfonds for grantsfor UCLA Law Students who dopublic interest or pro bono work during the summer.
Nancy
Professor of the Year David Sklansky addresses students.
Student Speaker David Kowal approaches the podium as faculty look on.
Southside Christian Palace Youth Choir sings at commencement ceremony.
Alex Kozinski '75 speaks at Law School's 45th Commencement
Commencement Speaker Alex Kozinski, who has in the past six years taken four UCLA law clerks under his tutelage at the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, encouraged '96 graduates to pursue their dreams in whatever career they choose.
Also speaking was Professor of the Year David Sklansky, who is only the second Professor of the Year ever selected whose time at the law school was more brief than the graduates. Professor Eric Zolt was so distinguished in 1987. Sklansky, a former federal prosecutor, came to UCLA two years ago to teach criminal law and criminal procedure.
Student speaker was David Kowal, a Yale graduate who now is clerking for Ninth Circuit Judge Wallace Tashima. •!•
Judge Alex Kozinski reviews the commencement program with his former teacher, Dean Susan Prager, as the ceremony begins.
Judge Alex Kozinski
Reunion Day 1996
Alums from the classes of'66, '71, '81 and '86 got together for a day offun and memories September 28. Nearly 300 attended the daylong event at UCLA that included MCLE credit seminars given by the faculty, a reception and class dinners.
Two 1966 alums, Dennis Hill and Ken Clayman, share a laugh.
Rinaldo Brutoco '71, Professor Paul Bergman, Hon. Larry Rubin '71 and Robert Weiss '71.
Member of the class of '66 recall old times.
Roger Cossack '66 shakes rhe hand of his former professor, John Bauman.
Three women from the '86 class-Jerry Pih, Lois Scali and Leslie Wallis-with an unidentified man.
Class of'71 members
Alums from the class of'71, left, Bobby Gene Smith, second, Steven R. Pingel, fourth, Angela Pickett, and fifth, David Wood.
WAXMAN ALUM OF THE YEAR 1994 PUBLIC AND COMMUNITY SERVICE
A LETTER FROM PRESIDENT CLINTON and a special preview of the newly renovated Powell Library, which has been retrofitted for earthquake safety while retaining its original architectural splendor, were among the highlights of the annual Dean's Dinner in April where our Alumni of the Year were honored. Honorees for 1994 were U.S. Representative Henry A. Waxman '64 and Justice William A. Masterson '58. For 1995, Antonia Hernandez '74 and Kenneth Ziffren '65 were given special recognition. Waxman and Hernandez were both honored for their public and community service achievements, while Ziffren and Masterson were given the award for professional achievement.
The letter from the president congratulated the alumni awardees and commended the Alumni Association for its "longstanding dedication to excellence in higher education and to justice for all."
In introducing Waxman '64, Professor Kenneth Karst thanked Waxman for serving as an exemplary ambassador for UCLA, having spent most of his life in public service. In accepting his award, Waxman said he would always remain thankful for the values he learned in law school and for his desire for the law to "make a difference in people's lives."
"One of the things UCLA Law School always stood for-it was always a place where we valued hard work, honesty, fairness and justice," he said. Waxman, who was born in
Los Angeles, earned a bachelor's degree from UCLA before attending law school. He currently represents California's 29th Congressional District, which encompasses most of West Los Angeles as well as Hollywood Hills and Los Feliz.
Second District Court of Appeal Judge Joan Dempsey Klein '63 introduced her colleague, William A. Masterson '58, who graduated Order of the Coif and served on UCLA Law Review.
"Of my colleagues, I can say some are smarter and some are nicer, and he's the smartest and nicest of any of them," she said as she introduced Masterson, who worked his way through high school, college and law school and was the first person in his family to go to college.
"We have known and admired him," former dean and Professor William Warren began in introducing Kenneth Ziffren, "and unless you have been under a rock, you know he is one of our most wellknown and respected alumni."
Ziffren '65, first distinguished his law school as law clerk to Chief Justice Earl Warren. His uncle, Lester Ziffren, is a member of UCLA Law's first graduating class. Kenneth Ziffren said it was a "series of ironies" that led him to where he is today. "My college life was not exemplary," he quipped. At the top of his field, Ziffren was a founding partner in the predecessor firm to the entertainment firm of Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer (all four named partners are UCLA Law alums). Ziffren is known for his incisive mind and his capacities as a consensus builder.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Boland, who taught in UCLA Law's Clinical Program for many years, introduced Antonia Hernandez '74 as a woman whose career has been shaped by her life experiences. Born in Mexico and growing up in a family of migrant farm workers, Hernandez initially studied education, receiving a bachelor's degree and teaching credential from UCLA. Hernandez is president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), a national litigation and advocacy organization that protects the civil rights of the nation's Latinos.
In accepting her award, Hernandez credited affirmative action policies. "If it wasn't for affirmative action, I wouldn't be able to do what I do today. It has opened the door for someone like me and for that I thank UCLA."
UCLA SchoolofLawAlumniofthe Year
1994
Henry Waxman '64
William Masterson '58
1995
Antonia Hernandez '74
Kenneth Ziffren '65
Renee L. Campbell '80, President of the Alumni Board of Directors, presents an Alum of the Year Award to Antonia Hernandez 74.
Judge Joan Dempsey Klein '54, of the Second District State Court ofAppeal, with Henry Waxman '64.
Judge William A. Masterson '58 of the Second District State Court ofAppeal and his daughter, Barbara Masterson.
Ken Ziffren with his uncle, Lester Ziffren, a member of UCLA Law's first graduating class in 1952.
Stark and Steinberg join faculty
Kirk Stark has joined the faculty as Acting Professor of Law to teach courses in taxation. He received his bachelor's degree in foreign service from Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service (1989), where he majored in International Law, Relations and Organization. After graduation, he worked in the Capital Markets Division of the Inter-American Development Bank, assisting in the issuance of securities in Europe, Japan and the United States. Stark then went on to study law at Yale Law School, where he was articles editor of the Yale Law journal and research assistant to Professor Michael Graetz. At Yale, he received two scholarships and took first prize in the Americanjournal ofTax Policy student writing competition. Upon graduation from Yale in 1994, Stark became an attorney on the tax team of King & Spalding, where he worked in corporate and partnership taxation. His publications include: "City Welfare: Theory, History, and Practice," 27 Urban Lawyer 495 (1995); "Letting States Sell Their Right to Issue TaxExempt Bonds," 61 Tax Notes 1619 (December 27, 1993); and "Rethinking Statewide Taxation of Nonresidential Property for Public Schools," 102 Yale Law journal 805 (1992).
Richard Steinberg has joined the faculty as an Acting Professor of Law to teach international trade regulation and international business transactions.
Steinberg received his Ph.D in political science and his J.D. from Stanford University. He was a MacArthur Fellow at Stanford and a Ford Foundation Fellow at Harvard University. He then worked as Assistant General Counsel with the U.S. Trade Representative in Washington, D.C., and later was an associate with Morrison and Foerster of San Francisco.
Most recently, he was project director of the Roundtable on the International Economy (BRIE) at UC Berkeley, as well as a lecturer at Boa!t Hall School of Law.
New Assistant Dean for Career Services named
A new Assistant Dean and two new Placement Officers have joined the UCLA Law School Office of Career Services. The office finds part-time, full-time and summer jobs for students and alumni.
Amy Berenson, who has experience in both career services and in law practice, has been selected as the Law School's new Assistant Dean for Career Services.
For the past two years, she has been an Assistant Director in the Office of Career Services at Georgetown University Law Center, where she also received her law degree. Prior to her stint at Georgetown, Berenson was a StaffAttorney in the Enforcement Division of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission and was an associate in the Washington, D.C. office of Kirkland & Ellis. During the summer, when the position was vacant, Catherine Mayorkas, who is director of Public Interest Programs, stepped in as Interim Assistant Dean for Career Services.
Late last spring, Bill McGeary and Jason Mascarenas, who did so much to professionalize UCLA Law's career planning services, announced their decision to leave UCLA. Acknowledging their decade-long contributions, Dean Susan Prager said: "Bill and Jason successfully advised thousands of law students during their time at UCLA Law, and in recent years also took on significant responsibilities for the Admissions arena as well." Last year, their efforts were enhanced by the work of Rosemarie Benitez '90, who has returned co the Central Valley to join the Davis Law School's career services staff.
Shead and Moeller Join as Officers
Lori Shead has come on board as a Placement Officer. After receiving her J.D. from USC in 1995. She then worked as an associate in transactional real estate law at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton.
Shead is active in the American Bar Association, the Los Angeles County Bar Association, the Black Women Lawyers Association and the Women's Law Association of Los Angeles.
Elizabeth Moeller has also been hired as a Placement Officer. She graduated from Loyola Law School in 1991, and has practiced law at the Los Angeles offices of Pepper, Hamilton and
Scheetz and at Graham & James as a litigator.
Moeller is a member of the California State Bar, the California Women Lawyers Association, the LA County Bar Association and the Barristers Bench & Bar Relations Committee.
Alums are encouraged to notify the Office of Career Services with any information about job opportunities, at (31O) 206-1117. The office also produces a biweekly employment newsletter, the Graduate Job Bulletin, for interested alums.
Employers are encouraged to list their openings for experienced attorneys as well.
Three new lecturers teach lawyering skills
Janet Dickson began teaching Lawyering Skills and assisting in clinical courses this fall. She received her bachelor's degree in political science and her J.D. from UCLA, where she was a member of Order of the Coif Dickson was managing editor of the UCLA Law Review (1990-91). She then worked as an associate with the law firm of Morrison & Foerster, specializing in labor and employment law. While in Law School, Dickson received the American Jurisprudence Award in Civil Procedure, Criminal Law and Legal Research and Writing. She is the author of "The Emerging Rights of Adoptive Parents: Substance or Specter?" published in 38 UCLAL. Rev,917 (1991).
Dana Gardner joined the UCLA law faculty in fall 1996 as a lecturer in the Lawyering Skills program. She was a University of California Regents Scholar and received her bachelor's degree in history from UC San Diego (1988). She received her J.D. from Yale Law School (1991), where she was articles editor of the Yale Law and Policy Review. Before coming to UCLA, she practiced law for four years with the Los Angeles office of McKenna & Cuneo, where she specialized in the area of of complex business litigation. Gardner clerked for the Honorable Judith N. Keep, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of California (1991-92).
Thomas Holm joined the faculty as a lecturer in Lawyering Skills and to assist in clinical courses in fall 1996. He received his bachelor's degree in psychology from Carleton College in 1987, undertook graduate study in public policy at the at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute, and received his law degree from the University of Minnesota Law School (1992), where he was Note and Comment Editor ofthe University ofMinnesota Law Review (1991-92). He clerked for the Honorable Arthur Alarcon, United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit (1992-93), and worked as an associate with the law firm of
Morrison & Foerster. In law school, Holm received the ABA's Edward J. Devitt Scholarship for excellence in trial advocacy. He is also the author of the Note, "Aliens' Alienation From Justice: The Equal Access to Justice Act Should Apply to Deportation Proceedings," 75 Minn.L.Rev. 1185 (1991).
Visiting Professors
Visiting Professor Stephen Bainbridge teaches and writes about corporate and securities law. Bainbridge received his J.D. degree from the University of Virginia School of Law, graduating Order of the Coif, where he was on the editorial board of the Virginia Law Review. He was the research and projects editor of the Virginia Journal ofInternational Law. He also holds an undergraduate degree from Western Maryland College and a graduate degree in chemistry from the University of Virginia.
After graduating from law school, Bainbridge clerked with then-Chief Judge Frank A. Kaufman of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. He then practiced law with Arnold & Porter in Washington, D.C. He joined the faculty of the University of Illinois College of Law in 1988, was promoted to associate professor in 1992 and to professor of law in 1994.
Professor Bainbridge was a Salvatori Fellow with the Heritage Foundation from 1994 to 1996. He is a member of the Christian Legal Society and the American Law & Economics Association. While visiting at UCLA, he is living in Westwood with his wife, Helen, and golden retriever, Samantha.
Linda Beres, professor at Loyola Law School of Los Angeles, is teaching criminal law this semester at UCLA. Beres received her J.D. from the University of Southern California Law School, where she received the Law Alumni Award (for the highest scholastic average) and the Outstanding Woman Law Graduate Award. After law school Beres clerked for Judge Terry J. Hatter, Jr., U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, and Judge Warren J. Ferguson, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She then practiced law at Munger, Tolles, and Olson before joining the faculty at Loyola Law School. Her primary teaching and research interests are criminal law, and criminal and civil procedure. She is currently co-authoring, with Thomas Griffith, "Do Three Strikes Laws Make Sense? Habitual Offender Statutes as a Method of Crime Control." She is on the Board of Directors of the ACLU of Southern California, and has also taught criminal law at USC.
Professor Ann M. Burkhart is visiting from the University of Minnesota Law School during fall 1996. She graduated magna cum laude from the University of Illinois College of Law and clerked on the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Before joining the Minnesota faculty, she practiced with Sidley & Austin in Chicago and with Alston & Byrd in Atlanta. She is an Adviser for the Restatement of Mortgages, chairs the Legal Education Committee of the ABA Section of Real Property, Probate and Trust Law, and serves on the Executive Council and the Legislative Committee of the Minnesota State Bar Association Real Property Section. She has twice received the outstanding teaching award at the University of Minnesota Law School. While at UCLA, she is teaching property and real estate finance.
Eric Orts is a visiting professor of law at UCLA in the fall 1996 semester, teaching Business Associations and Corporate Governance. In winter 1997, he will be visiting at the University of Michigan Law School. He is associate professor of legal studies at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, and has taught also at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. His research interests are in corporate law, environmental law, and jurisprudence.
Prior to joining the Wharton faculty in 1991, he was a Chemical Bank fellow in corporate social responsibility at Columbia University School of Law. He also practiced law for two years at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York City. He graduated from Oberlin College (B.A. with honors 1982), the New School for Social Research (M.A. in political science 1985), the University of Michigan Law School Q.D. cum laude 1988), and Columbia (LL.M. 1992, J.S.D. 1994).
Cheryl I. Harris, an assistant professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law, continues as a visiting professor at UCLA this year. Her work has focused on affirmative action, race, property and gender. A forthcoming article for Cardoza. LawReview is entitled "Finding Sojourner's Truth: Race, Gender and the Institution of Slavery." "Whiteness as Property" app'eared in the HarvardLaw journalin 1995.
Michael Asimow and Paul Bergman have been enjoying the success of their recently published book discussing and rating lawcentered f-ilms,Reel justice (see separate story). They have been involved in book signings as far away as England, as well as radio and television interviews. Paul Bergman's current projects are a book on depositions with Al Moore and David Binder, a book on criminal law for Nolo Bergman Press, and a third edition of his Trial Advocacy nutshell. Michael Asimow and Paul Bergman are also planning a course that they will offer in the spring, "Law and Popular Culture."
Evan Caminker focused his research during summer 1996 on Proposition 209, the California Civil Rights Initiative. In addition to providing consultation services to various public interest groups, he has co-authored an article on the topic. The article observes that certain ways of disestablishing affirmative action programs might be unconstitutional and explains why the ecru arguably runs afoul of prevailing Supreme Court Equal Protection case law.
Carole GoldbergAmbrose has finished a book, Planting Tail Feathers: Public Law 280 and Tribal Survival, published by the American Indian Studies Center, which addresses tribal and state authority on reservations in California and a few other specially situated states. One of the chapters is co-authored with a former student, Timothy Carr Seward '93, and began as a directed research project. She is also working on the next revision of the Felix
Asimow
CohenHandbook ofFederalIndianLaw, which is the dominant treatise in the field. Professor Goldberg-Ambrose is writing an article about Native Americans and affirmative action. She recently completed a major report for the Congressionally- chartered Advisory Council on California Indian Policy, ''A Second Century of Dishonor." (The title is a play on words of a book published in 1886 by Helen Hunt Jackson, A Century ofDishonor.) This report documents the many ways chat California tribes are disadvantaged (fiscally, legally) in comparison with tribes elsewhere in the United States. Last spring, Professor Goldberg-Ambrose taught a course in Indian law that was carried live via video to UC Berkeley's Boalc Hall School of Law.
Kenneth Graham has recently completed the eighth volume of his treatise on evidence ( a comprehensive history of the right of confrontation) and he. has completed the script for the 15th annual Law School Musical. Professor Graham will soon teach a course in the undergraduate Honors Collegium that compares the evidentiary practices of journalists, historians and scientists with the laws of evidence.
Jerry Kang collaborated chis summer with three other Asian-American law professors-Sumi Cho of DePaul, Gabriel Chin of Western New England and Frank Wu of Howard-to write a policy analysis of affirmative action as it relates to Asian Americans. Its title is, "BeyondSelf Interest:Asian-PacificAmericam Towarda Community ofjustice."
William Klein published the sixth edition of Business Organization andFinance (with J. Coffee) chis spring. He also has submitted manuscripts for the third edition ofthe casebook, BusinessAssociations (with M. Ramseyer) and for the eleventh edition of a casebook, FederalIncome Taxation (with J. Bankman). And, he adds, so far the fly fishing has been great this year.
Kristine Knaplund will be teaching Torts for the first time chis spring. The course will be designed for students who want to work intensively on their analytical and writing skills. The course will have a maximum of 25 students, and she will use problems, weekly writing assignments and small groups to teach Torts along with skills.
She and Rick Sander are proceeding with their national study on gender differences in law school. Thirty schools administered their survey to their entering first-year classes in fall 1995, and provided extensive background information on each student and each school. They are now analyzing the data to see whether any law schools have a "gender gap." and, if so, whether they are trying to account for it.
David Mellinkoff, Professor Emeritus, was the speaker at the April 30 luncheon seminar of the Justices of the Second District Court of Appeal. The topic of the seminar was "Opinions on Opinions." He gave the justices his opinions on how to read opinions.
He also conducted a May 17 session of the 1996 California Judicial Research Attorneys Institute. This is a program of the California Center for Judicial Education and Research, for lawyers who write opinions and memos for the judges. Although, he notes, he has never written an opinion, Professor Mellinkoff's topic was "How to Write Better Opinions."
Eugene Volokh will be teaching a new seminar on legal and criminological issues related to gun control during the 1996-97 year. He also has been writing on free speech, the law and computer technology, and state right-to-keep-and-bear-arms constitutional provisions. His primary research interests include free speech, religious freedom, the Establishment Clause, gun control, affirmative action, constitutional law, law and computer technology, and copyright.
John Shepard Wiley Jr. recently has served as a faculty member for the Federal Judicial Center in locations as diverse as Duluth, San Diego, New York City and Phoenix. At some of these federal judicial education venues, Wiley has been the sole presenter; at others he was part of a traveling FJC faculty team. Wiley's topics have covered various aspects of intellectual property law, emphasizing new statutes and recent decisions from the Supreme Court of the United States. In these presentations, Wiley says, he has marveled at the gusto with which federal judges exit boring lectures.
Professor Christine Littleton, second from left, receives an award last spring from the Los Angeles County Commission for Women for her volunteer work in women's issues.
Alison Grey Anderson becomes 18th Rutter Award recipient
IN RECEIVING THE I8TH RUTTER AWARD for excellence in teaching, torts and contracts Professor Alison Anderson spoke of a memorable moment she remembered in the movie, "The Miracle Worker." She recalled the turning point in the film, when a young blind Helen Keller suddenly understood that the word "wawa'' (water) inscribed upon her hand signified a material object.
"The scene is a teacher's fantasy-a fantasy that somehow a teacher can make the connection for their students through information, figures of speech and images," said Anderson. "Teachers hope that in using the tools that students already have, they will help students learn to put together the pieces."
Anderson's dedication to helping students make connections, often in discussing difficult concepts and legal theories, is just one of the reasons that she was chosen to receive this year's Rutter Award. "She contributes to the development of the rest of us as teachers," said Dean Susan Prager during the ceremony last spring. Professor Karst added: "She is constantly reflecting on teaching in her conversations with the faculty." Dean Prager read many of the positive comments provided by past and present students of Anderson's. "She has a rare ability to present complicated subject matter in a way that makes it seem simple," praised one student. Others described her as "clear and straightforward" as well as "powerful yet compassionate."
Perhaps the greatest acclaim came from Paul Rutter, son of award creator Bill Rutter and a former student of Anderson's. Although illness prevented award founder Bill Rutter from attending the event, Paul's insights into
Anderson's teaching abilities augmented the ceremony. "She's a teacher's teacher," said Rutter. "The breadth of what she covers is outstanding."
Paul Rutter's observations about her teaching ability coincide with the goals of the award, created in 1979 by Bill Rutter. Bill Rutter, father of the Gilbert Outlines (a law study guide for students), the Rutter Group series and a Bar review course which long ago became the model for the genre, also has created awards at other California campuses to celebrate dedication in teaching. But this one was special, Paul added, because of his own positive experiences as a student of Anderson's.
Anderson has been a favorite of students since her first years as a professor-she received UCLA's Professor of the Year award only five years after receiving her law degree. Anderson said the Rutter Award was especially meaningful. "I have taught at other law schools as a visiting professor, once at Harvard and once at USC, but each time I was so happy to come back to UCLA Law because I really missed the students here."
"The students here have a great willingness to engage the material in a direct way, to say what they really think. In addition, the students here are such nice, good people. It sounds like a mundane compliment, but those qualities don't usually go along with talent, ambition and drive."
Anderson became the ninth faculty member of the Law School to receive both the Rutter Award and the campus-wide Distinguished Teaching Award. Past recipients of the Rutter Award include Stephen Yeazell, David Binder, Gerald Lopez, Jesse Dukeminier, Leon Letwin, William Warren, Michael Asimow, Murray Schwartz, Gary Schwartz, Julian Eule, Grace Blumberg, Jonathan Varat, Kristine Knaplund, Carrie MenkelMeadow, John Bauman, Ken Karst and Steven Derian.
The Law Library Campaign: Nearing the Goal
AS OF THIS WRITING, THE Law Library Campaign is nearing completion. We wanted to report the good news to the school's many alumni and friends. The spring issue of this publication detailed major gifts to the Campaign, in particular a $1-million Challenge Grant from The Kresge Foundation. We anticipate being able to report to Kresge by its December 1 deadline that the school has reached its fund-raising goal.
The Library Campaign, as you will see when you read through the list of donors that follows, has been a marvelously broad-based effort. Following the Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation's pathbreaking $5-million commitment to help UCLA fund the expansion and renovation of the Law Library, classmates David G. Price '60 and Stanley R. Fimberg '60, CoChaired the law school's first volunteer Library Campaign Committee. Under their leadership, a number of significant gifts were secured, including a $500,000 gift from the John Stauffer Charitable Trust and a magnificent commitment from The Ahmanson Foundation for $1 million. In addition to a number of major individual gifts, it was this early private support that played such an important role in ensuring that the State of California's promised funds for nearly half the cost of the project would not be jeopardized.
The Alumni Campaign for the Law Library, Co-Chaired by Richard J. Burdge, Jr. '79 and Deborah David '75, has been enormously important in these later stages of the Campaign. The Alumni Campaign having delivered over $2 million has been a critical element in reaching the target of $14 million in private funds. More significant, however, than the pure dollar amount raised is the number of individuals - alumni and friends - who stepped forward to make what was for many a very large gift, in many cases the largest charitable gift they had ever contemplated. We wish there was space here to recall the wonderful stories that went along with the gift decisions. They are truly priceless. Perhaps when we all gather to dedicate the new library sometime in the academic year 1997-98, we will collect these tales that, by then, will have taken on a historical perspective.
Ralph J. Shapiro '58 chaired the concluding phase of the Campaign's major gifts effort. Under his firm and warm leadership, the newly convened major gifts committee drew in support from some of the Campaign's most generous donors, among them a critical $350,000 gift from the GTE Foundation - the first major corporate gift in the law school's history - and a $250,000 gift from Bob and Marion Wilson.
And it was the commitment to this project, encouraged by Chancellor Young, of a portion of Ann Rosenfield's estate that virtually assured our ultimate success. Mrs. Rosenfield's bequest was left to the UCLA Foundation under the direction of David Leveton '62. David felt it would be in keeping with Mrs. Rosenfield's affection for the law school to commit $1.5 million to the library project. In recognition of this wonderful gift, the new law library's East Reading Room will be named in Mrs. Rosenfield's memory.
This summer, everyone should have received an invitation to participate in the Library Campaign at a level that felt right to them. To date the school has received over $80,000 in gifts from this invitation, gifts which range from $25 to $10,000. We think the response is wonderful and representative of our belief that every gift counts. As you will also see on these pages, the law faculty organized a campaign of their own and contributed to the success of this effort.
Many of you have spoken to us about the difficulty of the Campaign, the stress of fund raising or the numbers of calls necessary to reach such ambitious goals. We can only reply that the Law Library Campaign has been a wonderful adventure for us and a unique opportunity. Along the way, we have been able to expand the circle of friends who play such an important role in the law school community and together we have made an enormous difference in the future of our law school.
Joan Tyndall Assistant Dean, Development and Alumni Relations
LibraryAdministrator Charles Cannon shows the progress ofthe library project as it looked in September. Members ofthe classes of'66, '71, '76, '81 and '86 celebrated their reunions with a series ofrours, continuing legal educationseminars and dinners September 28.
The Law Library Campaign
The law school ispermanently indebted to the Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundationfor its extraordinary commitment of $5 million to support the law library.
LANDMARK GIFTS
($I million or more)
The Ahmanson Foundation
Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation
The Estate ofAnn Rosenfield
FOUNDING GIFTS
($500,000 or more)
David G. Price '60 and Dallas P. Price
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
John Stauffer Charitable Trust
LEADERSHIP GIFTS
($250,000 or more)
GTE Foundation
Bob and Marion Wilson
CORNERSTONE GIFTS
($roo,ooo or more)
John G. Branca '75 and Family
Jonathan F. Chait '75
David Kelton '62 and Lenny Kelton
Michael T. Masin '69 and Joanne Masin
Mark A. Resnik '72 and Shelley Resnik
Anonymous
Alumni Campaign
BENCHMARK GIFTS
($50,000 or more)
Stephen Claman '59 and Renee Claman
Philip D. Dapeer '72
David Fleming '59 and Jean Fleming
Richard V Sandler '73 and Ellen Sandler
Gary Scott Stiffelman '79 and Family
Barry W Tyerman '71
William W Vaughn '55 and Claire Vaughn
SUSTAINING GIFTS
($25,000 or more)
Richard L. Ackerman '71 and Barbara Ackerman
Phyllis Bernard In Memory of David Bernard '58
Randolph M. Blocky '73 and Teresa Blocky
Pamela Brockie '75
Rinaldo S. Brutoco '71 and Lalla Shanna Brutoco
Richard J. Burdge, Jr. '79 and Lee Smalley Edmon
A. Barry Cappello '65
Ralph Cassady '61
Curtis Cole '71 and Sharon Cole
Lorraine Cooper In Memory of Harold Cooper
Michael A. K. Dan '69 and Cecilia Dan
Deborah A. David '75 and Norman A. Kurland
Lori Huff Dillman '83 and Kirk D. Dillman '83
B. D. Fischer '58 and Frances K. Fischer
Richard D. Fybel '71 and Susan Fybel
Jon J. Gallo '67 and Eileen Gallo
Gil Garcetti '67 and Sukey Garcetti
Sandra Kass Gilman '75 and Christopher Gilman '75
David R. Ginsburg '76 and Dena Ginsburg
Irwin D. Goldring '56 and Clarann J. Goldring
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Bernard A. Greenberg '58 and Lenore S. Greenberg
Richard W Havel '71
Robert L. Kahan '69 and Diane Kahan
David S. Karton '71 and Cheryl A. Karton
James H. Kindel, Jr.
Joseph K. Kornwasser '72 and Hana Kornwasser
Karin T. Krogius '82 and Scott Mason
Moses Lebovits '75 and DeDe Lebovits In Celebration of the Lives ofAllan and Beatrice Caplan
Margaret Levy '75
Ethan B. Lipsig '74
Frances E. Lossing '78
Thomas H. Mabie '79 and Rhonda Heth '80
Louis M. Meisinger '67 and Susan Meisinger
Skip Miller '72 and Sherry Miller
Richard G. Parker '74
Wilma Williams Pinder '76
In Honor of her mother, Jessie Wi lliams Rhetta
Susan and Jim Prager '71
Sheldon W Presser '73 and Debora Presser
Cruz and Jeannene Reynoso
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld '76 and Morton M. Rosenfeld
Edward and Nancy Rubin
Thomas C. Sadler '82 and Eila C. Skinner
Mark A. Samuels '82 and Nancy B. Samuels ' 82
Marc M. Seltzer '72 and Christina A. Snyder
Lewis H. Silverberg '58
Stuart A. Simke '60
Arthur Soll '58 and Barbara Soll
Herbert J. Solomon '56 and Elene Solomon
Bruce H. Spector '67 and Robin Spector
Art Spence ' 69 and Anne Spence
William F. Sullivan ' 77 and Joanne Sullivan
Diana L. Walker ' 69 and Robert F. Walker
Chancellor Charles E. Young and Sue K. Young
FACULTY GIFTS
Benjamin Aaron
Richard Abel
Alison G. Anderson
John A. and Mary H . Bauman
Paul B. Bergman and Andrea Sossin-Bergman
David A. and Melinda Binder
Daniel J. Busse!
Ann Carlson and Carl Moor
Raquelle de la Rocha
Julian N. and Carole Eule In Memory of Nancy Finck
Carole Goldberg-Ambrose
Mark Grady
Kenneth W and Conn ie Graham
Joel Handler
Kenneth L. and Smiley Karst
William A. and Renee Klein
Kristine Knaplund
Gillian Lester
Leon and Alita Letwin
Christine A. Littleton
Linda Maisner
William and Karharine McGovern
David Mellinkoff
Carrie Menkel-Meadow
Albert J. Moore and Sherrill L. Johnson
Wendy Munger
Grant S. and Judy Nelson
Susan and Jim Prager
Cruz and Jeann en e Reynoso
Arthur I. Rosett and Rhonda Lawre nce
Richard H Sander
Myra Saunde rs and Paul Kaufman
David A. Sklansky
Joan and Harold Tyndall In Memory of Nancy Finck
Jonathan D . and Barbara Varat
William D . and Sue Warren
John S. Wiley
Chancellor Charles E. and Sue Young
Eric M. Zolt
$10,000 OR MORE
Harland W Braun '67
Samuel W Halper '55 and Ruth Halper
Suzanne Harris '77
Kenneth B. Hertz '84
J. Perry Langford '52 and Diane Langford
Ronald E. Neuhoff '68
Wayne A. Schrader '75
Linda Smith '77
Timothy J. White '78 and Maria Wong White
Dorothy Wolpert '76 and Stanley Wolpert
$5,000 OR MORE
Donna R. Black '75 and Jeffrey A. Charlscon '75
Robert N. Block '78
Bruce A. Clemens '74
Dhiya El-Saden '77
Marcia A. Forsyth '77
Daniel J. Jaffe '62
John P Meck '72
Josiah L. Neeper '59 and Rita H. Neeper
Gloria Nimmer
$2,000 OR MORE
Robert J. Finger '80
Dennis M. Hauser '69
William G. Knight '72
Lawrin S. Lewin '63
Evan R. Medow '67
Alicia Minana de Lovelace '87
Ann Parode '7l
Louis P Petrich '65
Joan Goodwin Pierson
Fred Selan '65
$1,000 OR MORE
Michael Barclay '79
Stanton P Belland '59
Frank Cross Foundation
Margaret R. Dollbaum '80
D. Barclay Edmundson '79
James L. Foorman '74
Wilford D. Godbold '66
Alan N. Halkett '61
Natalie Hoffman '73
Paul G. Hoffman '76 and Sue Hoffman
Martha B. Hogan '81
Andrew E. Katz '72
Laurie L. Levenson '80
Bernard L. Lewis '56
Everett W Maguire '57
Valerie J. Merritt '76
Peter T. Paterno '76
Albert Z. Praw '72
Elizabeth E. Vogt '79
Earl M. Weitzman '71
Lester Ziffren '52
$500 OR MORE
Milford W. Dahl '65
Edwin & Rose Delaney Foundation
Educational Affiliates
In Honor ofLaurence Solov '94
Richard N. Ellis '59
Leon A. Farley '59
Carol A. Foster '93
Jeffrey A. Galowich '84
Joseph L. Gattuso '81
John B. Galper '75
Gerald M. Gordon '73
Roger H. Howard '71
Sherrill Johnson '78
John W. Kern N '87
Claude P. Kimball '65
Gail E. Lees '79
William A. Masterson '58
Prentice O'Leary '68
Suzanne K. Roten '90
Alexander 0. Tamin '95
Lawrence Teplin '64
Randolph C. Visser '74
$250 OR MORE
Valerie B. Ackerman '85
John A. Arguelles '54
Martin J. Barrack '88
David J. Berardo '67
Linley C. Bizik '95
Stanley A. Black '59
Howard S. Block '60
Carl Boronkay '54
Edward A. Carr '87
Joan M. Clover '82
Cynthia Swarthout Conners '83
Brian W Copple '87
Bruce J. Croushore '72
Shedrick 0. Davis '87
Sanford R. Demain '57
David R. Deutsch '78
James R. Dwyer '80
William Elperin '72
Alan J. Epstein '87
Sarah J. Fels '89
Allen H. Fleishman '71
Clifford H. Fonstein '83
Dolly M. Gee '84
Allan S. Ghitterman '55
Harvey Giss '64
Robert G. Goldman '84
Jerold V Goldstein '65
Miles Z. Gordon '72
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr. '70
Andrew J. Guilford '75
Steven A. Heimberg '83
Kathryn Hendley '82
Harold J. Hertzberg '58
Bryan D. Hull '82
Roger Janeway '94
Myron L. Jenkins '70
Linda C. Johnson '86
Randolph K. Joyce '67
Howard M. Knee '72
Thomas R. Kreller '92
Philip F. Lanzafame '58
Bernard Lauer '54
Melvin S. Lebe '60
Harriet Leva '80
Bernard J. Lurie '80
William T. Mac Cary Ill '90
John W. Mac Kay '82
Paul Maestas '83
Perry E. Maguire '70
Ann Catron Mc Millan '84
Charles D. Meyer '80
Kim T. Nguyen '92
Lyle R. Nishimi '83
Ted Obrzut '74
Joel R. Ohlgren '68
Robert B. Orgel '81
Glenn K. Osajima '71
Lizbeth Parker '93
Holly R. Paul '91
Debra A. Profio '92
William F. Rogers '75
Karen Green Rosin '81
David M. Rosman '78
Shelley R. Saxer '89
Richard Schauer '55
Paul Schmidhauser '80
Steven Sinatra '88
Ronald P. Slates '68
Nancy E. Spero '74
Steven M. Strauss '81
Elizabeth Ash Strode '85
H. George Taylor '56
Rodney B. Thatcher '74
Peter C. Walsh '81
Glenn F. Wasserman '75
Patricia D. Watkins '93
Thomas W Weidenbach '86
Mark P. Weitzel '80
Jay C. Weitzler '67
Donna C. Wells '92
Cynthia Wicker '77
Peter Andrew Wissner '73
Michael Wolf '76
H. Deane Wong '83
Frederic M. Zinn '82
David A. Ziskrout '61
$I25 OR MORE
Elizabeth E. Bruton '76
Charles E. Curtis '77
Stephen M. Fenster '63
William Finestone '69
Debra P. Granfield '76
Spencer L. Karpf '79
Glenn Lorin Krinsky '83
Miriam Aroni Krinsky '84
Linda K. Lefkowitz '78
James Lerman '61
Michael D. Rich '76
Amil W Roth '60
Julie A. Ryan '90
Michael E. Schwarcz '63
Jason S. Wenglin '94
Scott Z. Zimmermann '77
OTHER GIFTS
Christina Bull Arndt '94
Kyle B. Arndt '94
Valerie L. Baker '75
Lilia 0. Ballesteros '85
David K. Barrett '90
Lawrence W Berger '79
Jeffrey M. Berke '81
Sara Berman-Barrett '89
Cathy E. Blake '80
Paul E. Blevins '92
Robert C. Bowman '87
Angela L. Brock-Kyle '83
Gail F. Brod '73
Jerrold B. Carrington '82
Jan E. Chatten-Brown '71
Jill F. Cooper '91
Bruce E. Cooperman '77
Mark G. Crawford '88
Charles R. Currey '57
Jeffrey D. Davine '85
Peter F. Del Greco '92
Richard S. Diamond '61
Michael M. Duffey '70
Mitchell A. Ebright '72
Laurie J. Falik '92
Catherine B. Frink '79
Mark]. Fucile '82
Roger L. Funk '83
Melinda P. Goldstein '94
Allan J. Goodman '70
Jonathan C. Gordon '71
Marilyn S. Gude! '92
Catherine E. Haltom '92
Steven W Hawkins '94
A. I. Herman
Stuart P. Herman
Stephen E. Holsten '93
Elizabeth A. Hone '92
Daniel S. Javitch '92
Barbara J. Katz '85
Brian E. Keefe 75
Robert C. Kersey '94
Jacquelyn S. Kiether '83
Sidney R. Kuperberg '52
David A. Lash '80
Lee J. Leslie '92
Mark A. Levin '70
Steven M. Levy '92
Stephen M. Lobbin '95
Nancy E. Loncke '85
Christine L. Luketic '91
Jennifer L. Machlin '79
Paul Marcus '71
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver '83
Everett F. Meiners '64
Herbert D. Meyers '77
Barbara De Mont Moore '72
Barbara M. Motz '75
J. Thomas Oldham '74
David R. Pettit '75
Bruce I. Rauch '55
Leland J. Reicher '75
David S. Reisman '83
Robert N. Rigdon '76
Robert B. Rocklin '83
Katherine A. Rutemiller '93
Thomas G. Ryan '75
Eric C. Sawyer '89
Michael R. Schaffert '85
Dennis J. Seider '67
Nancy W Shepard '84
Barbara Silberbusch '92
Donald P. Silver '74
James M. Steinberger '84
Kathleen M. Stewart '92
Peter T. Stoughton '93
Helen D. Sunga '93
Jean E. Tanaka '84
Laurie J. Taylor '86
James J. Tutchton '90
Walton Advisory Group Inc.
In Honor of Amy Atchison
Thomas E. Warriner '67
Robert A. Weeks '67
John D. Windhausen, Jr. '84
Steven D. Winegar '94
Richard G. Wise '68
Cecilia S. Wu '86
Andrew J. Yamamoto '88
Michelle S. Yee '91
Steven H. Zidell '85
Union Bank
Latham & Watkins
Gifts to the Law School 1995-96
The School ofLaw is appreciative ofthose donors-alumni and.fiends, lawfirms, corporatiom andfoundatiom-that have supported the school during the pastyear. Private support ofthe law schools outstanding students, faculty and programs becomes more and more an integral part ofstrategic and academic planning as statefonds diminish.
The private institutions have long known it is the partnership with our natural constituncies that will make us strong into the next century and beyond. On behalfof all who will benefitfromyour generosity, please acccept our warm thanks.
Major Gifts to the Law School
Includinggifts,pledges andpledgepayments
Foundations and Corporations
Joseph Drown Foundation
Foamex International Inc.
The Ford Foundation
J. Wand Ida M. Jameson Foundation
WM. Keck Foundation
Milken Family Foundation
Roth Family Foundation
Individuals
Ethel Balter
Gertrude D. Chern '66
Hugo D. de Castro '60 and Isabel de Castro
David Epstein '64
Stanley R. Fimberg '60
Samuel N. Fischer '82 and Leah S. Fischer
Albert B. Glickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Barry Halpern
Geraldine S. Hemmerling '52
Martin R. Horn '54 and Rita Horn
Marvin Juhas '54 and Fern Juhas
Arjay Miller and Frances Fearing Miller
Roger C. Pettitt '54
Ralph J. Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
Estate of David Simon '55
Lester Ziffren '52 and Paulette Ziffren and Leonard and Emese Green
We are pleased to present rhis year's Honor Roll ofDonors reflecting gifts received from alumni, friends and faculry, foundations, and corporations between July 1, 1995 and June 3o, 1996. Alumni donors are listed under their year ofgraduation and in the category which reflects the level and designation oftheir gifr/s.
Each year,The Law Annual Fund, with the help ofvolunteer class representatives, encourages financial support from alumni, friends and faculry, corporations, and foundations. The fund helps to ensure a most valuable source ofunrestricted funding which goes directly toward academic programs wirh the greatest need. Giving levels are as follows:
FOUNDERS
A program established many years ago to encourage high level annual support in the form ofa ten year pledge, those appearing in this category are currently completing their pledge.
DEAN'S CABINET
$5,000 or more
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
$2,500-$4,999
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
$1,000-$2,499
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
$500-$999
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
$250-$499
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Classes prior to 1993
$125-249
Classes of1993, 1994
$75-249
Class of1995
$25-$249
SUPPORTERS
$10-$124
* This Founder has made an additional contribution to the Law Annual Fund in 1995-96. t Deceased
1952
Class Representative:
John C. McCarthy
TotalGraduates: 35 Number ofDonors: 15 Participation: 42%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Arthur N. Greenberg
Sidney R. Kuperberg
J. Perry Langford
Lester Ziffren
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Saul Grayson
J. Perry Langford
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Arthur Alef
Jean Bauer Fisler
Frederick E. Mueller
Joseph N. Tilem
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Laverne M. Bauer
Maurice W Bralley
Sidney R. Kuperberg
Sallie T. Reynolds
Martin J. Schnitzer
SUPPORTERS
Edward B. Smith
CLASS OF '52 GIFT
John C. McCarthy
CURTIS B. DANNING SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Curtis B. Danning
1953
Class Representative:
Jerome Goldberg
Total Graduates: 40 Number ofDonors: IO Participation: 25%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Jerome H. Goldberg
Bernard Kaufman
Frank H. Mefferd
Jack M. Sattinger
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Victor Michael Epport
Willard M. Reisz
DEAN'S COUNSEL
John U. Gall
Dorothy W Nelson
John F. Parker
Martin B. Weinberg
1954
Class Representative:
Donald Ruston
TotalGraduates: 89
Number ofDonors: 16
Participation: 18%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
John A.Arguelles
Bernard Lauer FOUNDERS
Marvin Gross
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Carl Boronkay
Joan Dempsey Klein
*Donald A. Ruston
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Dennis Hayden
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
John A. Arguelles
Harvey F. Grant
Sanford N. Gruskin
EugeneV Kapetan
Jack Levine
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Nicholas Kasimatis, Jr.
Bernard Lauer
Gerald A. Margolis
Jerry Silverman
SUPPORTERS
Leonard H. Pomerantz
1955
Class Representative:
Allan Ghitterman
Total Graduates: 73
Number ofDonors: 15 Participation: 21%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Bruce I. Rauch
Allan S. Ghitterman
SamuelW Halper
Richard Schauer
William W Vaughn
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Herbert Z. Ehrmann
Raymond F. Moats, Jr.
Graham A. Ritchie
Richard Schauer
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Myrtle Dankers
John R. Engman
Earl H. Greenstein
Forrest Latiner
DavidW Slavin
SUPPORTERS
E. Allen Nebel
Paul M. Posner
Bruce I. Rauch
LEE B. WENZEL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
William W Vaughn
Class Representative:
Irwin D. Goldring
Total Graduates: 69
Number ofDonors: 18
Participation: 26%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Irwin D. Goldring
Bernard L. Lewis
HerbertJ. Solomon
H. George Taylor
FOUNDERS
Marvin D. Rowen
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Irwin D. Goldring
*Milton Louis Miller
Herbert ].Solomon
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Norman D. Rose
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard E. Cole
HaroldJ. Delevie
Albert S. Golbert
Lelia H. Jabin
H. Gilbert Jones
Howard Lehman
Norman D. Rose
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Donald L. Clark
HerschelT. Elk.ins
Mervin N. Glow
SUPPORTERS
Harvey A. Sisskind
H. GeorgeTaylor
1957
Class Representative:
David R. Glickman
Total Graduates: 83
Number ofDonors: 18 Participation: 22%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Everett W. Maguire
Charles R. Currey
Sanford R. Demain
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
David R. Glickman
Seymour S. Goldberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard D. Agay
Daniel F. Calabro
EphraimJ. Hirsch
MarvinJabin
Roy A. Kates
Robert A. Knox
Gloria K. Shimer
Irving Shimer
Wells K. Wohlwend
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Ernest R. Baldwin
Everett William Maguire
RichardT. Mudge
SUPPORTERS
Seymour S. Goldberg
ArthurW Jones
Terry C. Smith
1958
Class Representative:
John G. Wigmore
Total Graduates: n6
Number ofDonors: 25 Participation: 22%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
B. D. Fischer
Bernard A. Greenberg
HaroldJ. Hertzberg
Philip F. Lanzafame
William A. Masterson
Ra!ph Shapiro
Lewis H. Silverberg
Arthur Soll
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*B.D. Fischer
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
WarrenJ. Abbott
Gerald S. Barton
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Terrill F. Cox
Norman L. Epstein
Hugh H. Evans, Jr.
Philip F. Lanzafame
Robert L. Wilson
Hunter Wilson, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Roland A. Childs
Arthur Karma
*Ephraim P. Kranitz
Bernard Lemlech
Christian E. Markey, Jr.
Nancy M. Watson
SUPPORTERS
KennethW Downey
GeorgeJ. Franscell
Alfred B. Ruskin
Ronald L. Scheinman
MARSHALL COGAN SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ralph Shapiro
PETE KAMERON FUND
Ralph Shapiro
FRANCES ANDJERRY LEIGH FAMILY FUND
Ralph Shapiro
LEVINSON, MILLER, JACOBS & PHILLIPS FUND
Ralph Shapiro
FRANCES E. MCQUADE EMERGENCY LOAN FUND
Ralph Shapiro
HOWARD P. MILLER MEMORIAL FUND
Ralph Shapiro
DR. ROGER LEROY MILLER FUND
Ralph Shapiro
RALPH & SHIRLEY
BARRY M. ZWICK FUND
Ralph Shapiro
1959
Class Representative:
Richard N. Ellis
Total Graduates: IOO
Number ofDonors: 23
Participation: 23%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Stanron P. Belland
Stanley A. Black
Stephen Claman
Richard N. Ellis
Leon A. Farley
DavidW Fleming
Josiah L. Neeper
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
*John H. Roney
FOUNDERS
Richard N. Ellis
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Milford A. Bunnage
Bruce H. Newman
Alan R. Watts
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Howard S. Block
RobertW D'Angelo
Victor E. Gleason
Seymour Louis Goldstein
Grant E. Propper
AmilW Roth
Stephen C. Taylor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Charles W. Cohen
RonaldJ. Grueskin
Melvin S. Lebe
John G. Nelson
Sherman Rogers
Huey P. Shepard
Leland D. Starkey
Emmett A.Tompkins,Jr.
SUPPORTERS
Lawrence Kapiloff
Rodney Moss
Roger M. Settlemire
ALBERT ANDJUDITH
Josiah L. Neeper GLICKMAN FUND
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Jerry A. Brody
EarlW Kavanau
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Stanley A. Black
Leon A. Farley
Albert Glickman
1961
Class Representative:
David Waller
Total Graduates: n4
Number ofDonors: 21
Eugene Leviton Participation: 18%
LeslieW. Light
Robert W Vidor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
George Vollmer Hall
Michael Harris
Richard M. Levin
Sranley Rogers
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Ralph Cassady
Richard S. Diamond
Alan N. Halkett
James Lerman
David A. Ziskrout
Bernard S. Shapiro FOUNDERS
Donald C. Wickham
SUPPORTERS
Raymond Ceragioli
Roberta Ralph
Stanley R. Weinstein
1960
John A. Altschul
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ralph Cassady
*Alan N. Halkett
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Richard Earl Barnard
Total Graduates: Arthur Brunwasser 104
Hillel Chodos
Number ofDonors: 30
Participation: 29%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Howard S. Block
Melvin S. Lebe
David G. Price
AmilW Roth
Stuart A. Simke
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Dale V Cunningham
FOUNDERS
Leonard Kolod
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Martin Cohen
Edwin M. Osborne
SHAPIRO STUDENT LOAN FUND
Ralph Shapiro
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
RogerJ. Broderick
Gerald S. Davee
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard H. Berger
James Lerman
Don B. Rolley
Sherman A. Silverman
David A. Ziskrout
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Gordon I. Yanz
SUPPORTERS
Richard H. Bein
Richard S. Diamond
Dennis Fredrickson
Jack C. Glantz
WilliamJ. McCourt
Donald C. Mc Daniel
Jed Scully
1962
George R. Royce
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Michael E. Schwarcz A. Barry Cappello
Class Representative: Norman]. White
James Andrews
Total Graduates: 103
Number of Donors: 23
Participation: 22%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
DanielJ.Jaffe
David Kelton
FOUNDERS
David A. Leveton
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Manley Freid
DEAN'S COUNSEL
*tLee W. Cake.
Alan R. Golden
Joel F. Mc !ntyre
Richard N. Parslow,Jr.
SUPPORTERS
Ronald F. Keeler
1964
Class Representative:
Everett F. Meiners
Total Graduates: n6
DEAN'S ADVOCATES Number of Donors: 28
Erwin H. Diller Participation: 24%
Roger N. Kehew,Jr.
Todd Russell Reinstein
Richard A. Rosenberg
MilfordW. Dahl,Jr.
Jerold V Goldstein
Claude P. Kimball
Louis P. Petrich
Fred Selan
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ronald W. Anteau
Harold W. Hofman,Jr.
*Saul L. Lessler
Andrea S. Ordin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
George C. Eskin
James H. Giffen
Ronald L. Leibow
Louis P. Petrich
Martin Stein
Earl W. Warren
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Harvey Giss
Everett F. Meiners
DEAN'S COUNSEL Lawrence Teplin
James R. Andrews
Lawrence C. Bragg
Roselyn S. Brassell
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
James N. Ries
Hiroshi Fujisaki FOUNDERS
John M. Maller
Stuart K. Mandel
Paul L. Migdal
Richard A. Richards
RaymondJ. Sinerar
Mel Springer
SUPPORTERS
Thomas Kallay
Arthur Kessler
Herbert Laskin
Harold Mazirow
Julius M. Reich
1963
Class Representative:
LawrenceWilliams
Total Graduates: 110
Number of Donors: 23
Participation: 21%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Stephen M. Fenster
Lawrin S. Lewin
Michael E. Schwartz
DavidJ. MacKenzie
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
David Greenberg
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
John R. Browning
MelvynJay Ross
George A. Smith
Lawrence Teplin
Martin G. Wehrli
Richard B. Wolfe
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
John R. Benson
Raymond T. Gail
Everett F. Meiners
Clarence A. Ridge,Jr.
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Howard L. Berman
Peter R. Bregman
Milford W. Dahl,Jr.
George C. Eskin
Jerold V Goldstein
Walter G. Howald
Donald Low
Lawrence H. Nagler
Jack M. Newman
Robert H. Nida
Ezekiel P. Perlo
HaroldJ. Stanton
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Jerome Diamond
Stephen C. Drummy
WilliamJ. Elfving
Marshall S. Freedman
Jack Goldman
Edward C. Kupers
Melvyn Mason
V Gene Mc Donald
Leonard R. Sager
Martin Wolman
Geoffrey P. Wong
Kenneth L. Riding SUPPORTERS
David Weiss
DEAN'S COUNSEL
H. Lee Mc Guire,Jr.
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
VincentT. Bugliosi MEMORIAL FUND
Leo W. Kwan
Michael Miller
Andrea S. Ordin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Stephen W. Bershad
Irving H. Greines
Dennis D. Hill
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Stephen A. Behrendt
Barbara B. Burke
Roger L. Cossack
Raymond W. Ferris
Monte C. Fligsten
Wilford D. Godbold,Jr.
Robert H. Goldstein
Joseph Gregory Gorman
RobertJ. Higa
Frederick Kuperberg
David I. Riemer
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kenneth I. Clayman
James H. Karp
Arnold T. Lester
Stephen K. Miller
William G. Morrissey
Jerry M. Patterson
StuartJ. Rosen
Barry Russell
Tobey H. Shaffer
Ronald L. Sievers
DanielJ. Tobin
SUPPORTERS
Thomas E. Andrews
William M. Egetman
Stephen B. Fainsbert
CLINICAL PROGRAM
SUPPORT FUND
Daniel G. Zerfas
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
KennethSchreiber
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Donald R. Allen
Kenneth R. Blumer
Lawrence H.Jacobson
Stanley G. Parry
John C. Spence
Gary D. Stabile
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Joel S. Aaronson
Peter M. Appleton
Arthur Ava2ian
Ralph L. Block
David R. Carmichael
Cary D. Cooper
RogerJon Diamond
Leslie C. Falick
Lynard C. Hinojosa
Randolph K.Joyce
Jeffrey L. Linden
Stefan M. Mason
MiltonJ. Nenney
Steven Z. Perren
Jon A. Shoenberger
Frank A. Ursomarso
Leonard D. Venger
Thomas E. Warriner
Michael N. Weiss
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Abraham W. Baily
Gary Barnett
Michael D. Berk
Peter Blackman
LawrenceJ. Booher
David W. Condeff
Lawrence H. Fein
LEE B. WENZEL W. MichaelJohnson
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Daniel G. Zerfas
1967
Class Representatives:
Arthur Ava2ian
Michael Waldorf
Total Graduates: 250
Number of Donors: 72
Participation: 29%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
PaulJ. Litz
Michael D. Marcus
Sheldon Michaels
Paul M. Migdal
Sheldon E. Miller
John R. Schilling
Hortense K. Snower
Barry A. Taylor
Michael S. Ullman
Robert A. Weeks
Jay C. Weitzler
SUPPORTERS
Paul S. Almond
James Banks,Jr.
Clifford Douglas FOUNDERS
Leroy M. Gire
Marvin G. Goldman
DavidJ. O'Keefe OTHER LAW FIRM AND DavidJ. Berardo
Aaron M. Peck
Ronald Tuller
CORPORATE GIFTS
Latham & Watkins
Kenneth M. Young Union Bank
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE SUPPORTERS
*Bernard Katzman
Dean S. Stern
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Harry C. Harper
Dennis A. Page
James L. Spirser
1966
Class Representative:
Stanley M. Price
FACULTY SUPPORT Total Graduates: 200
William D. Gould FUND
Robert T. Hanger
Alban I. Niles
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Harland W. Braun
JonJ. Gallo
Gil Garcetti
Randolph K.Joyce
Evan R. Medow
Louis M. Meisinger
DennisJ. Seider
Bruce H. Spector
Thomas E. Warriner
Robert A. Weeks
Number of Donors: 32 Jay C. Weitzler
Leonard A. Hampel Participation: 16%
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
William A. Mayhew
Wilford D. Godbold,Jr.
Eli Blumenfeld FOUNDERS
Frances P. Ehrmann
Stephen M. Fenster
Robert S. Goldberg
Ronald M. Kabrins
Bennett I. Kerns
Stephen M. Lachs
1965
Class Representative:
Stanley R.Jones
Total Graduates: 167
Robert B. Burke
Stanley M. Price
Mark A. Ivener
Michael A. Levin
John R. Montgomery,Jr.
Bruce M. Polichar
Jason C. Reed
Howard D. Sacks
Arthur D. Schonfeld
Grover P. Walker
Robert Wasserwald
John M. Wilcox
KENNETH A. KLEINBERG
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP FUND
*Evan R. Medow
FOUNDERS
Martin F. Majestic
Louis M. Meisinger
JeffreyT. Miller
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE Elliott D. Olson
Lawrence I. Schwartz
Franklin Tom
Mel Ziontz
Kenneth A. Kleinberg
1968
Class Representative:
PaulJ. Glass
Total Graduates: 178
Number of Donors: 25
Number of Donors: 37 Participation: 14% Participation: 22%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Ronald E. Neuhoff
Joel R. Ohlgren
Prentice O'Leary
Ronald P. Slates
Richard G. Wise
FOUNDERS
J. Michael Crowe
Frank J. Lanalr
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ronald E. Neuhoff
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Robert C. Colton
Richard M. Roberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Robert F. Harris
Robert N. Harris, Jr.
Stephen C. Jones
Joel R. Ohlgren
Gordon J. Rose
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Barry A. Fisher
Lowell Graham
Jerold A. Krieger
James B. Merzon
PrenticeL. O'Leary
Charles J. Post III
Terry L. Rhodes
Sanford R. Wilk
SUPPORTERS
PhilipL. Arnaudo
Terry H. Breen
Richard C. Devirian
David B. Johnson
Robert E. Shannon
Richard G. Wise
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Sara L. Adler
Kenneth Drexler
William Finestone
Jan C. Gabrielson
Raymond H. Goldstone
Rowan K. Klein
John A. Mc DermottII
Kenneth Meyer
Richard A. Neumeyer
RogerW Pearson
Andrea R. Schrote
James F. Stiven
Diana C. Woodward
DEAN'S COUNSEL
James S. Bianchi
Stephen M. Burgin
Richard H. Caplan
David A. Clare
David B. Epstein
Henry R. Fenton
Norman N. Flette
Robert B. Fraser
Jeffrey C. Freedman
Carol E. Freis
Arnold K. Graham
Steven E. Moyer
William M. Pate, Jr.
Toby J. Rorhschild
Donald J. Stearns
GaryT. Walker
Cameron R. Williams
SUPPORTERS
Terry J. Amdur
Andrew D. Amerson
Michael A. Cowell
John R. Domingos
Bruce E. Harrington
John G. Kerr
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Linn K. Coombs
Richard J. Davis, Jr.
William J. Kelleher
Brian C. Leck
Marc J. Poster
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
*Ellen B. Friedman
Laura L. Glickman
Richard C. Goodman
Myron S. Greenberg
Linda S. Hume
John B. Jakie
Myron L. Jenkins
Perry E. Maguire
Wallace L. Walker
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Paul E. Bell
Michael M. Duffey
William Owen Fleischman
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Steven R. Hubert
Herbert Jay Klein
Robert J. Mc
Kay
SUPPORTERS
Allan J. Goodman
Mark A. Levin
Rodney 0. Lilyquist, Jr.
Robert M. Wright
1971
James J. Pagliuso
RichardT. Peters
Kent L. Richland
Bobby L. Smith
Earl M. Weitzman
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
AllanCutrow
Judy Fonda
John J. Frankovich
Ronald R. Gastelum
Ronald C. Lazof
John D. Mc Conaghy
Arthur L. Williams, Jr.
Michael F. Yamamoto
Stuart D. Zimring
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Paul L. Basile
Robert G. Blank
Wayne S. Canterbury
Jan E. Chatten-Brown
Gary L. Gilbert
Marc E. Hallert
Thomas E. Horn
Marvin L. Isaacson
Linda P. Jensen
Paul Marcus
William P. Moore
Paul C. Nyquist
Kenneth K. Okel
Thomas M. Scheerer
Gary J. Siener
Allen H. Sochel
David C. Tunick
Robert H. Wyman
Class Representatives: Eric R. Young
David J. Burton
Richard Havel
Total Graduates: 267
Number ofDonors: 71
Allan I. Kleinkopf Participation: 27%
Sally P. Pasette
LIBRARY SUPPORT
1969 FUND
Class Representatives:
Michael A. K. Dan
Michael Shannon
TotalGraduates: 182
Carol L. Engelhardt
JamesD. Vogt
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
Number ofDonors: MEMORIAL FUND
LAWLIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Richard L. Ackerman
Rinaldo S. Brutoco
Jan E. Chatten-Brown
Curtis Cole
Allen H. Fleishman
Richard D. Fybel
Douglas B. Zubrin
SUPPORTERS
Susan E. Amerson
Jon B. Artz
TadR. Callister
Thomas R. Cory
Mary Jo Curwen
Frank}. Davanzo
Millard M. Frohock, Jr.
Jonathan C. Gordon
Thomas B. Karp
Robert D. Mosher
Gary G. Neustadter 55 Lon S. Sobel
Jonathan C. Gordon
Richard G. Ritchie Participation: 30%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Michael A. K. Dan 1970
William Finestone Total Graduates: 176
Dennis M. Hauser Number ofDonors: 30
Robert L. Kahan Participation: 17°/o
MichaelT. Masin
Art Spence
Diana L. Walker
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Michael M. Duffey
Allan J. Goodman
RichardW. Havel
Roger H. Howard
Davis S. Karton
Paul Marcus
Glenn K. Osajima
Ann Parade
James M. Prager
Susan Westerberg Prager
BarryW. Tyerman
Earl M. Weitzman
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP Max F. Gruenberg, Jr. FOUNDERS
*John H. Weston
Myron L. Jenkins
Mark A. Levin
Rinaldo S. Brutoco
Richard D. Fybel
George L. Schraer
Michael S. Sideman
CLINICAL PROGRAM
SUPPORT FUND
Joseph H. Duff
1972
Class Representatives:
Curtis O. Barnes
Howard M. Knee
Total Graduates: 276 FOUNDERS Perry E. Maguire
Elwood G. Lui
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ragna Olausen Henrichs
DEAN'S CABINET
Richard A. Corleto
*Robert S. Shahin FOUNDERS
JAMES H. CHADBOURN Scott J. Spolin
FELLOWS
David A. Buxbaum
Dennis M. Hauser
MichaelT. Shannon
Lon S. Sobel
Richard B. Wolf
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Richard A. Hutton
*Scott J. Spolin
Thomas P. Lambert
Barry W. Tyerman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*David J. Burton
Curtis A. Cole
Ann Parode
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Robert J. Adelman
Jeffrey A. Berman
Leonard B. Levine
Michael A. Ozurovich
Number ofDonors: 51
Participation: 18%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
Bruce J. Ctoushore
Philip D. Dapeer
Barbara De Mont Moore
Mitchell A. Ebright
William Elperin
Miles Z. Gordon
Andrew E. Katz
Howard M. Knee
William G. Knight
Joseph K. Kormusser
John P. Meck
Skip Miller
Albert Z. Praw
Mark A. Resnik
Marc M. Seltzer
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Marc M. Seltzer
FOUNDERS
Richard A. Blacker
Philip D. Dapeer
William M. Wardlaw
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Skip Miller
James R. Walther
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Cary B. Lerman
Gordon R. Mc Dowell, Jr.
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
*Curtis O. Barnes
Ronald M. Bayer
John M. Collins
Peter Q. Ezzell
Deborah R. Gatzek
Alan R. Jampol
Gary L. Kaseff
James Kashian
Andrew E. Katz
Bruce M. Kramer
Stanley E. Maron
Lawrence E. May
Albert Z. Praw
Donald K. Steffen
Richard T. Vogel, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
HaroldJ. Berkus
Martin J. Brill
Kenneth B. Dusick
Mitchell A. Ebright
James B. Goodman
Stephen C. Klausen
Linda B. Riback
Dominick W. Rubalcava
Emilio L. Saenz
William D. Smith
Griffith D. Thomas
Edward A. Woods
Stephen D. Yslas
SUPPORTERS
James E. Brown
Roger W. Crissman
Bruce J. Croushore
Timi A. Hallem
Dora R. Levin
Barbara De Mont Moore
Kenneth C. Salzberg
Frank Sinatra
1973
Class Representative:
Bernard R. Gans
Donald P. Baker
Bernard R. Gans
Robert F. Marshall
Jeffrey E. Sultan
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Bruce A. Clemens
James L. Foorman
Ethan B. Lipsig
Ted Obrzut
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE J. Thomas Oldham
Ronald W. Rouse
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Martin E. Auerbach
Timothy Born
R. Roy Finkle
Stacy D. Sharrin
Howard N. Wollitz
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Henry S. Barbosa
TimothyR. Born
Kenneth P. Eggers
Petet M. Fonda
James L. Goldman
Gerald M. Gordon
Richard G. Parker
Donald P. Silver
Nancy E. Spero
Rodney B. Thatcher
Randolph C. Visser
FOUNDERS
William Harold Borthwick
Dan Garcia
Ethan B. Lipsig
Ted Obrzut
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Buddy Epstein
Andrew A. Kurz
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
Douglas B. Haynes FELLOWS
Joe W. Hilberman
Larry A. Kay
Abraham D. Lev
Michael D. Marans
Kathryne A. Stoltz
MichaelJ. Strumwasser
Jonathan K. Van Patten
Gary A. Wexler
James F. Wilson III
Peter Andrew Wissner
DEAN'S COUNSEL
DavidT. Dibiase
Joshua Dressler
Randall H. Kennon
Steven Edward Levy
Douglas C. Neilsson
R. Thomas Peterson
Kenneth Ross
Carl M. Shusterman
Michael R. Sullivan
Alan P. Thomas
Timothy J. Windle
Paul L. Brindze
Allan B. Cooper
Mark A. Treadwell
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Peter C. Bronson
Susan B. Carnahan
Dennis A. Cohen
Silvia M. Diaz
James L. Foorman
Robert F. Hirano
James V Jordan
Alexander W. Kirkpatrick
Robert D. Links
Michael S. Rubin
Shan K. Thever
Donald E. Warner
DEAN'S COUNSEL
William L. Battles
Kenneth A. Black
Lawrence Borys
JeffreyJ. Carlson
Robert A. Wooten, Jr. G. Craig Christensen
SUPPORTERS
James A. Baker
Diane L. Becker
John M. Bransfield
Joel M. Butler
Pauline M. Calkin
Arnold W. Gross
Gregory M. Hansen
Charles I. Henderson
Kendall H. Mac Vey
Joyce A. Orliss
James K. Schultze
William H. Travis
CLINICAL PROGRAM
SUPPORT FUND
Roger P. Crouthamel
Michael D. Marans
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Ignacio S. Cota
R. Stephen Doan
Daniel W. Douglass
Gary A. Feess
Charles A. Goldwasser
Antonia Hernandez
Barbara Hindin
Sharon F. Jackson
Nancy M. Knight
Mark E. Mahler
Charles Margines
Phillip G. Nichols
Mark P. Paul
Robert L. Ray
Jeriel C. Smith
Nancy E. Spero
French Stone
Betsy A. Strauss
William L. Winslow
Richard P. Yang
Total Graduates: 294 Alex Furlotti SUPPORTERS
Number of Donors: 59
Participation: 20%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN 1974
Frederick B. Benson
1975
Class Representatives: Victoria L. Block
Brenda Powers Barnes
Andrew Guilford
Moses Lebovirs
Harvey Shapiro
Total Graduates: 307
MichaelJ. Budzyn
Edward C. Clifton
Roberta F. Colton
Bruce L. Dusenberry
Robert G. Garrett
Victor J. Gold
Number of Donors: 85 A. Thomas Golden-Grant
Participation: 28%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
Valerie L. Baker
Donna R. Black
John G. Branca
Jonathan F. Chair
Jeffrey A. Charlston
Deborah A. David
John B. Golper
Andrew J. Guilford
Sandra S. Kass
Brian E. Keefe
Moses Lebovits
Margaret Levy
Barbara M. Motz
David R. Pettit
Leland_]. Reicher
William F. Rogers
Thomas G. Ryan
Wayne A. Schrader
Glenn F. Wasserman
FOUNDERS
James D. C. Barrall
Pamela Brockie
Jonathan F. Chait
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Charles C. Read
Allen L. Michel
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Robert D. Cunningham
Christopher M. Gilman
Robert Alan Green
Susan T. House
Evelyn Balderman Hutt
Samuel D. Ingham III
Larry G. Ivanjack
Gail D. Kass
Robert L. Kaufman
Robert M. Kunstadt
Barbara M. Motz
Irwin B. Rothschild III
Sharon F. Rubalcava
Marc I. Steinberg
Lawrence Howard Thompson
Juan Ulloa
James D. Vandever
Mark S. Windisch
SUPPORTERS
LucyT. Eisenberg
Jeffrey D. Gale
MichaelJ. Harrington
Brian E. Keefe
Calvin Lau
Jan Greenberg Levine
Gilberto A. Limon
Gary Quincy Michel
Norman C. Olsen
David R. Pettit
Thomas G. Ryan
Barry E. Shanley
Seth Tievsky
JOHN G. BRANCA FUND
John G. Branca
1976
Sandra S. Kass Class Representative:
Alex Kozinski
Alan Mirman
Grace N. Mitsuhata
Richard K. Diamond
Total Graduates:
292
Number of Donors: 73
Harvey Shapiro Participation: 25%
DEAN'S ADVOCATES LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Deborah L. Arron
Jeffrey S. Barron
Donna R. Black
James R. Brueggeman
Joel B. Castro
Jeffrey A. Charlston
Edmund W. Clarke
Thomas W. Cohen
Paul L. Gale
John B. Golper
Andrew J. Guilford
John W. Hagey
Gerald L. Kroll
Romulo I. Lopez
GaryW Maeder
Norman A. Pedersen
LelandJ. Reicher
Julia J. Rider
Debra J. De Bose
James R. De Bose
Scott E. Grimes
Thomas A. Johnsen
Randolph M. Blocky Total Graduates: 295 J. Thomas Oldham
Gail F. Brod
Number of Donors: 61
Gerald M. Gordon Participation: 21% S. Alan Rosen
Natalie Hoffman
Sheldon W. Presser
Richard V Sandler
Peter Andrew Wissner
FOUNDERS
Steven L. Shahbazian
Michael J. Siegel
Rodney B. Thatcher
David H. White
David Simon
Marjorie S. Steinberg
Emily A. Stevens
Thomas C. Tankersley
Glenn F. Wasserman
Robert M. Zeller
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Linda D. Anisman
Valerie L. Baker
Elizabeth E. Bruron
Debra P. Granfield
David R. Ginsburg
Paul G. Hoffman
Valerie J. Merritt
Peter T. Paterno
Wilma J. Pinder
Michael D. Rich
Robert Rigdon
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Michael Wolf
Dorothy Wolpert
FOUNDERS
Michael I. Adler
Fredric I. Bernstein
Maribeth Armstrong
Borthwick
Mark A. Neubauer
Richard Schneider
Philip J. Wolman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
James E. Eakin
Peter T. Paterno
Judith W. Wegner
Caryl Barrelman Welborn
Dorothy Wolpert
JAMES H. CHADBOURN LIBRARY CAMPAJGN
FELLOWS
Patricia Anderson
William D. Claster
David Clarence Doyle
Joel A. Jacobs
Richard J. Karz
Marc R. Stein
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
RichardAvila
Lourdes G. Baird
Gregory C. Brown
Elizabeth E. Bruton
Linda C. Diamond
Bruce E. Cooperman
Charles E. Curtis
Dhiya El-Saden
Marcia A. Forsyth
Herbert D. Meyers
WendyMunger
Linda Smith
William F. Sullivan
CynthiaWicker
Scott Z. Zimmermann
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Stephen D. Greenberg
Richard K. Diamond FOUNDERS
Kenneth L. Friedman
Debra P. Granfield
ValerieJ. Merritt
Jon R. Mower
Carolyn Hopkins Carlburg
Wendy Munger
Richard R. Purtich
David B. Parker DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Karen Randall
Michael D. Rich
*Howard E. King
Carl C. Robinson
Bruce C. Stuart Gail M. Singer
Bonnie E. Thomson
Eugene Tillman
DEAN'S COUNSEL
BruceA. Barsook
Alice Cohen Bisno
Barbara A. Blanco
Rudolfo R. Cardenas
ClydeT. Doheney
James P. Donohue
Don M. Drysdale
Thomas S. Epstein
Richard H. Levin
Cheryl A. Lurz
PeterJ. Mc Breen
Duane C. Musfelt
Robert A. Pallemon
Gordon M. Park
Anne B. Roberts
*Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Robert H. Rotstein
Stephanie R. Scher
Harmon Sieff
JamesJ. Tomkovicz
Dorrie E. Whitlock
Michael Wolf
SUPPORTERS
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Andrea H. Bricker
Rochelle Browne
Elisabeth Eisner
KennethJ. Fransen
Paul E. B. Glad
Charles N. Shephard
JohnW Stephens
MarcyJ. K. Tiffany
Jonathan R. Yarowsky
Scott Z. Zimmermann
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Gregory E. Breen
Wayne C. Collett
Gary A. David
Kathleen Houston Drummy
David A. Gerber
Gregg M. Gibbons
Will D.Johnson
David P. Leonard
Lucinda A. Low
TomarT. Mason
John E. Pope
NeilJ. Rubenstein
Marsh Tanner
Stewart A. Baker W Keith Wyatt
David S. Chaney
Nicholas S. Chrisos
Jonathan L. Daniel
Daniel A. Dobrin
CarolynJ. Gill
FrancesW Kandel
Diane L. Kimberlin
Kenneth M. Kumor
Adrienne E. Larkin
Beth L. Levine
Richard G. Opper
Ann Poppe
FACULTY SUPPORT
FUND
CliffordH. Brown
1977
Class Represenrarive:
Gregory E. Breen
Tora! Graduates: 313
SUPPORTERS
Robert M. Angel
Paul A. Babwin
Peter B. Carlisle
Charles E. Curtis
TeresaEstrada-Mullaney
Sharon E. Flanagan
Martin A. Flannes
Joseph M. Gensheimer
Jill E. Ishida
David R. Kenagy
Sara R. Larz
Mary A. Mohrman
DurhamJ. Monsma
Donald V. Morano
Charles F. Robinson
Susan P. Shanley
Edward I. Silverman
Carolyn L. Small
Vera A. Weisz
1978
Class Representative:
Frances E. Lossing
Paul S. Rutter
TotalGraduates: 303 Number ofDonors: 90 Participation: 30%
LIBRARYCAMPAJGN
Robert N. Block
David R. Deutsch
Sherrill L. Johnson
Linda K. Lefkowitz
Frances E. Lossing
David M. Rosman
TimothyJosephWhite
FOUNDERS
Robert N. Block
Melanie Cook
Kenneth D'Alessandro
David F. Faustman
Christopher Kim
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Frances E. Lossing
Marietta S. Robinson
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
James R. Asperger
Robert M. Dawson
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Alan G. Benjamin
Dave B. Bowker
Daniel L. Carr, Jr.
Robert Clasen
Audrey B. Collins
Bruce E. Cooperman
Lawrence J. Dreyfuss
DavidW Evans
Mark E. Kalmansohn
Deborah L. Kranze
Marcin C. Kristal
JosephKruth
PeterW Mason
Lana FreistatMelman
Herbert D. Meyers
Mark D. Michael
Gregory F. Millikan
RobertJ. Moore
ArturoJ. Morales
James K. Phelps
Russell C. Swarrz
Number ofDonors: 77 Cynthia Wicker
Participation: 25% ClemonW Williams
David R. Deutsch
Michael D. Dozier
Lair C. Franklin
Wayne H. Gilbert
Karin Greenfield-Sanders
RobertJ. Grossman
Kenneth L. Guernsey
Daniel C. Hedigan
Alex M. Johnson
DeanJ. Kitchens
Ann L. Kough
Marlo Rene Laws
Karen Magid
Lisa Greer Quateman
Michael A. Robbins
Barry M. Weisz
Gwen H. Whitson
Arlene F. Withers
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Judith Bailey
Michael D. Fernhoff
SusanJ. Hazard
Sherrill L. Johnson
Marlene ButcherJones
Jeffrey G. Kelly
Linda K. Lefkowirz
Robert A. Levinson
AlbertJ. Moore
Robert M. Ozell
Maurice L. Russell
Matthew H. Saver
David I. Schulman In Memory ofMatthew
Small
Steven C. Shuman
MartinT. Tachiki
SUPPORTERS
Cheryl A. Cruz
Barrington A. S. Daltrey
Byron L. Dare
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.
Lorna C. Greenhill
Madison F. Grose
Karen L. Hancock
Joseph F. Hart
Boyd D. Hudson
Mark A. Kuller
LindaJ. Lacey
Robert H. Leibman
Janet S. Murillo
Gary W Nevers
Donald P. Paskewitz
CynthiaT. Podren
Richard D. Freer
MiriamJ. Golbert
John P. Howitt
Linda M. Lasley
ChristopherJ. Martin
John Mayer
M. Brian Mc Mahon
Helen Whiteford Melman
J. Michael Norris
Barbara W Ravirz
Harrison D. Taylor
AnneT. Thomas
KathyT. Wales
Ralph Zamudio III
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Nancy R. Alpert
Linda D. Bardsley
Michael D. Briggs
Sandra L. Buttitta
Carol A. Chase
Hilary Huebsch Cohen
Douglas H. Collom
David M. Rosman
Deborah C. Saxe
Elaine Stangland
G. MichaelTanaka
Paul R.Tremblay
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
WilliamJ. Rea, Sr.
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Barbara E. Hadsell
1979
Class Representatives:
RichardJ. Burdge, Jr.
Roberca Kass
Robin B. Lappen
Tora! Graduates: 273
Number ofDonors: 60
Participation: 22%
CourtJudge David B.
ofrhe U.S. Court of Appeal for theD.C. Circuit andJudge Deanell Reece Tacha ofthe 10th Circuit Court ofAppeals judge the Moot Court competition.
Moot
Senrelle
Moor Court Student Holly Traube makes an argument in UCLA:s Moot Court competition last spring.
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Michael Barclay
LawrenceW Berger
RichardJ. Burdge, Jr.
D. Barclay Edmundson
Catherine B. Frink
Spencer L. Karpf
Gail E. Lees
Th'mnas H. Mabie
Jennifer L. Machlin
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Elizabeth E. Vogt
CLINICAL PROGRAM
SUPPORT FUND
Diane V. Rathman
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
LawrenceW Berger
1980
Class Representatives:
Laurence M. Berman
John Cochrane
Total Graduates:
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Anne S. Berkovitz
Dawne Astride Casselle
William D. De Grandis
James R. Dwyer
Alan H. Finkel
Wilbur Gin
Mark S. Green
David A. Lash
Robert T. Lemen
Leslie B. Lindgren
Richard B. Stagg
Mark P. Weitzel
Samuel Israel
Chris S.Jacobsen
Karen L. Matteson
Julie S. Mebane
JohnW MacKay
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy B. Samuels
Frederic M. Zinn
Leslie R. Mitchner FOUNDERS
Marcy S. Morris
Robert B. Orgel
Gerald S. Papazian
Martin E. Rosen
Kim V Sainten
Kenneth J. Stipanov
Steven C. Glickman
RichardJ. Gruber
Gregory Soobong Paik
Jay F. Palchikoff
Adam Cavazos Vallejo
Reed S. Waddell
DEAN'S COUNSEL DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE FOUNDERS
Gail Ellen Lees
Michael D. Mc Kee
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Kim Mclane Wardlaw
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Mark R. Burrill
Jennifer L. Machlin
Andrew Stuart Pauly
Sandra B. Sterri
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Michael Barclay
Aviva M. Bergman
D. Barclay Edmundson
Karin S. Feldman
MarkW Flory
Roberta S. Kass
James A. Melman
Timm Andrew Miller
Mary S. Newton
David S. Neiger
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Shirley E. Curfman
Cathy Deroy
Marlene D. Goodfried
Spencer L. Karpf
Robin B. Lappen
Roger Lautzenhiser
Arthur F. Radke
Elizabeth E. Vogt
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Harmon Allan Brown
Allan E. Ceran
Suzette Clover
Linda K. Engel
Penelope Glass
Joel D. Kuperberg
Lydia S. Levin
Eugene R. Madrigal
Sandra Weishart Marinelli
Gary A. Meyer
Michael E. Ripley
MichaelW Schoenleber
Karen L. Tachiki
SUPPORTERS
Sigrid Carlson
John Louis Carlton
James D. Friedman
Linda Gach Ray
Albert S. Glenn
Steven A. Micheli
Robbie E. Monsma
300
Number of Donors: 78
Participation: 26%
LIBRARY CAMPAlGN
Cathy E. Blake
Margaret R. Dollbaum
James R. Dwyer
RobertJ. Finger
Rhonda J. Heth
David A. Lash
Harriet Leva
Laurie L. Levenson
Bernard J. Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
Paul Schmidhauser
Mark P. Weitzel
FOUNDERS
Laurence M. Berman
Lonnie C. Blanchard
Ruth E. Fisher
Feris M. Greenberger
Leslie Brooks Rosen
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ann 0. Baskins
Renee L. Campbell
Leslie A. Cohen
*RobertJames Finger
Ruth A. Fisher
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Andrew P. Bernstein
Carol Cavan Williams
Gail A. Windisch
SUPPORTERS
Jane Aoyama-Martin
Ann O. Baskins
Istvan Benko
Cathy E. Blake
William S. Daro
Peter R. Dion Kindem
Richard C. Fridell
EricJ. Hamermesh
Debra Hodgson
SusanJacoby-Stern
Nancy G. Karlin
Joann Leatherby
Leslie B. Lindgren
Nancy L. Mc Taggart
Mary L. Muir
Rosendo Pena, Jr.
Craig G. Riemer
Carol R. Schultz
StevenJ. Untiedt
Craig E. Veals
William R. Warhurst
Juana V Webman
1981
Class Representatives:
Robert B. Orgel
John F. Runkel, Jr.
Toral Graduates: 330
Number of Donors: 78
JohnW Cochrane Participation: 24%
Doreen M. Curtis
Thomas E. Gibbs
Joshua L. Green
Laurence L. Hummer
Jeffrey C. Krause
F. Sigmund Luther
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Amy L. Applebaum
WJeffrey Austin
Irene P. Ayala
RobertW Barnes
Andrew P. Bernstein
Neila R. Bernstein
Carol A. Clem
Margaret R. Dollbaum
Paul A. Franz
Gordon A. Goldsmith
DarrelJ. Hieber
Harold C. Hofer
MarcWJune
William A. Lappen
Gilbert Rodriguez,Jr. Harriet Leva
Mark S. Shipow
Shelley Steuer
Henry S. Weinstock
Elizabeth N. Winthrop
David 0. Wright
MarkJ. Barnes
Joseph S. Biderman
Robert E. Braun
Robert T. Clarkson
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Regina I. Covitt FELLOWS
JohnW Crittenden
Leianne S. Crittenden
Julie A. Davies
Marjorie L. Fox
Wesley Kumagai
Shelley E. Levine
Margaret N. Mason
Susan Fowler Mc Nally
Creighton D. Mills
Naomi Norwood
Jeffrey L. Oliphant
Jesus E. Quinonez
David B. Rechtman
Karen Green Rosin
Lin B. Saberski
Scott B. Samsky
Jodi Siegner
Steven M. Strauss
William L. Twomey
Judith A. Uherbelau
Peter C. Walsh
Patrick C. Wilson
SUPPORTERS
Victoria Davis Arrristrong
Jeffrey M. Berke
Gary S. Craig
Judith Kessen Crawford
DelavanJ. Dickson
Patricia H. Feiner
Andrew S. Gelb
Paul A. Graziano
Patricia M. lro
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Jeffrey M. Berke
EricJ. Emanuel
Joseph L. Gattuso
Martha B. Hogan
Robert B. Orgel
Karen Green Rosin
Steven M. Strauss
Peter C. Walsh
FOUNDERS
Marilee C. Unruh
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
David B. Babbe
SusanJ. Bell
Angela J. Campbell
Julie M. Heldman
Jonathan M. Hoff
Jed E. Solomon
DirkW van de Bunt
Phyllis B.Johnston
Linda A. Kirios
WilliamJ. Kirsch
Edwin I. Lasman
Therese A. Maynard
David Melcer
David M. Meyer
Lynn G. Naliboff
Maita D. Prout
Craig P. Sapin
Lynn Y. Wakatsuki
Barbara H. Yonemura
Lorence M. Zimtbaum
1982
Class Representative:
David E. Van lderstine,Jr.
Total Graduates: 330
Number of Donors: 77
Participation: 23%
Debra L. Kegel
Ira D. Kharasch
Carolyn Richardson Owens
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy B. Samuels
Eric B. Siegel
Steven E. Sletten
Harold A. Tieger
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Henry Ben-Zvi
Patrick J. Cain
PatrickW Dennis
Kathryn Hendley
Bryan D. Hull
Joan M. Le Sage
JohnW Mac Kay
Leslie R. Mitchner
Michelle Patterson
Dennis L. Perez
Joseph A. Scherer
Jeffrey H. Silberman
Stephen R. Thames
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Donald I. Berger
OliverW Bordallo
Joan M. Clover
Marc H. Corman
JayJ. Elliott
MarkJ. Fucile
Cathryn S. Gawne
RickJ. George
Barry L. Goldner
Theresa A. Goldner
James L.Jerue
Debra L. Kegel
Anita Diane Lee
David P. Lee
Daniel M. Mayeda
Lisa B. Oppenheimer
Elizabeth A. Pollock
Dennis A. Ragen
DavidW Reimann
Jack H. Rubens
Philip Starr
William B. Tully, Jr.
Diane S. Van Der Linde
*David E. Van Iderstine,Jr.
Michael R. Weinstein
SUPPORTERS
Thomas A. Bliss
Donald D. Bradley
Jerrold B. Carrington
Laurie L. Levenson
Bernard J. Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
Linda A. Netzer
J. Scott Paisley
David S. Porter
Paul Schmidhauser
DEAN'S ADVOCATES LIBRARY CAMPAlGN
Jan Almquist
Douglas B. Canfield
Walter R. Dahl
Gregory S. Drake
Mark E. Ferrario
Michael R. Harris
Jerrold B. Carrington
Joan M. Clover
Mark J. Fucile
Kathryn Hendley
Bryan D. Hull
Karin T. Krogius
Robert A. Chernoff
LoriJ. Feiner-Scott
Anna Hitchcock
Laura Landesman
John P. Mc Elroy
Scott M. Mendler
Lee Ann Meyer
Rodney R. Mills
Jeffrey P. Molever
LeslyeE. Orloff
Kurt V. Osenbaugh
Darien E. Pope
Belinda D. Rinker
ValdoJ. Smith
David A. Solicare
EllenGorman Wacker
William M. Young
Danuta M. Zaroda
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Michael F. Broderick
MarionG. Crain
Andrew B. Downs
David E. Durchfort
Linda K. Ensbury
Scott A. Forsyth
BruceJ. Graham
R. ToddGreenwalt
Toni C. Haley
Kenneth L. Kutcher
Wesley M. Lowe
Paul Maestas
SAMUEL N. AND LEAH S. Terry P. Mc Niff
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Douglas S. Brown
Barbra Shield Davis
Susan L. Formaker
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Michael D. Herbert
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Monika P. Lee
Linda W. Mazur
Daniel A. Olivas
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Brad I. Golscein
Stacy M. Leopold
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
SUPPORT FUND
Sharon D. Collins
Myron D. Moye
Teresa L. Remillard LA RAZA LAWALUMNI
Douglas E. Scott
David C. Tseng
ASSOCIATION
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Timothy F. Sylvester FISCHER FUND
Samuel N. and Leah S.
Deborah Y. Moncicue
Jeffrey D. Nagler
Fischer R. Wayne Olmsted
1983
Byongchae Pak
Nora A. Quinn
Nancy B. Reimann
Class Representative: Mark G. Schroeder
Michael A. Helfanc
Total Graduates: 348
Bennett M. Sigmond
Susan Silver
Number of Donors: Chet L. Taylor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Paul R. Anderson
Marchelle D. Bailey
John S. Bank
Neil H. Berger
Alan S. Berman
ToddW. Bonder
Victoria C. Brown
Michael J. Gibson
Leslie K. Gilbert-Lurie
1985
Class Representatives:
Brian Appel
Lynne S. Goldstein
John M. Moscarino
TotalGraduates: 293
Number of Donors: 68
Participation: 23% 72 Lise Wilson
Participation: 21%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN SUPPORTERS
Thomas C. Agoston
Angela L. Brock-Kyle
Cynthia Swarthout Conners
Roger L. Funk
Kirk D. Dillman
Lori HuffDillman
Clifford H. Fonstein
Steven A. Heimberg
Jacquelyn S. Kiecher
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Paul Maescas
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver
Lyle R. Nishimi
David S. Reisman
Robert B. Rocklin
H. DeaneWong
FOUNDERS
H. Deane Wong
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
James H. Eisenberg
Jeffrey M. Ettinger
James G. Foster
Alan E. Garfield
Ronald F. Garriry
Stephanie K. Harlan
Matthew W. Kavanaugh
Jacquelyn S. Kiecher
Larry S. Lee
Tracy Greenwald Lincenberg
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver
Kimberly S. Mitchell
Richard V. Normington
Robert B. Rocklin
Robert H. Steinberg
Robert F. Torres
Carl R. Waldman
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Margaret Stevenson
JAMES H. CHADBOURN 1984
FELLOWS
Timothy T. Coates
JuneG. Guinan
Ede C. Ibekwe
In-Young Lee
Class Representative:
Kenneth B. Hertz
Total Graduates:
300
Number of Donors: 81
QanielJ. Mc Loon Participation: 27%
DEAN'S ADVOCATES LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Renee P. Brook
Cathryn A. Campbell
Cynthia Swarthout Conners
Clifford H. Fonscein
Roger L. Funk
Steven A. Heimberg
Michael A. Helfanc
QavidJ. Hirsch
Frank R. Jazzo
RuchJones
Roger L. Kohn
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
EricG. Lardiere
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Dolly M. Gee
Robert G. Goldman
Kenneth B. Hertz
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Ann Catron McMillan
NancyW. Shepard
James M. Steinberger
Jean E. Tanaka
John D. Windhausen, Jr.
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Marilyn S. Pecsok FELLOWS
David S. Reisman
EdwardW. Zaelke
Terrilyn Batson Zaelke
Kenneth B. Hertz
Elizabeth F. Mack
Denise Massingale-Lamb
Peter C. Thomas
Robert G. Goldman
Philip S. Gutierrez
JoanneG. Janson
Joel T. Kornfeld
Ann Catron Mc Millan
Raymond Perez
Jane Pon
NancyW. Shepard
James M. Steinberger
Lee M. Straus
Edward C. Thoits
PatriciaJ. Titus
StevenAlanTrorer
Jo Ann Victor
Debra K. Weiner
SUPPORTERS
Bennett A. Bigman
LauraJ. Birkmeyer
Kent Brockelman
Bruce C. Catania
PamelaG. Chin
Tong-Sao Chung
Constance C. Conces
Joyce I. Craig
Tippi Dobrofsky
Kathleen Forbach Esfahani
John P. Fernandez
Craig A. Goldman
Brad I. Golscein
Guy N. Halgren
Laura W. Halgren
Paul T. Hayden
Sarah A. Hiestand
William E. Ireland
Jeffrey Kandel
Elizabeth M. Matthias
Mitchell B. Menzer
Dennis Mitchell
Katherine T. Pratt
Jonathan I. Reich
Barbara F. Riegelhaupc
Betsy R. Rosenthal
Beth A. Shenfeld
Leslie E. Sherman
Evelyn A. Shimazaki
Naoki Shimazai
Jean E. Tanaka
Leonard M. Tavera
Sura L. Weiss
John D. Windhausen, Jr.
John R. Wylie
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Valerie B. Ackerman
Lilia O. Ballesteros
Jeffrey D. Davine
BarbaraJ. Katz
Nancy E. Loncke
Michael R. Schaffert
Elizabeth Ash Strode
Steven H. Zidell
FOUNDERS
John M. Moscarino
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Marc E. Bercoon
Robert F. Serio
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
BrianJ. Appel
Franklyn W. Perkovich
Alan S. Polley
Alicia G. Rosenberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Valerie B. Ackerman
Christopher B. Amandes
Robert Barnes
Sheri Bluebond
Susan L. Coskey
DavidG. Coulter
Donald L. Feder
John M. Jameson
Stephen H. Mazur
DavidJ. Meyer
John Ossiff
Lynette B. Robe
Martha Gage Rock
Dr. Helene V. Smookler
Elizabeth Ash Strode
Steven A. Swernofsky
Rosario M. Tobias
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Craig S. Barnes
Carlos Cordova
Lynne S. Goldstein
LesJacobowitz
Susan Keller
MarkAlan Koop
Duncan D. Lee
Carol A. Quinn
George-Ann Rice
Joseph A. Rogoff
John A. Rosenfeld
HaroldJ.Schaaff,Jr.
AlanJ.Siff
Scott A.Solomon
Hilary M.Stone
Konrad L.Trope
Judy Umeda
Corbin A.Weiss
SUPPORTERS
Andrea F. Bradley
Meredith L.Caliman
Laurie Genevra Cole
Jeffrey D.Davine
Jonathan R.Davis
Paul S.Delson
Melanie M.Fairchild
Kenneth D.Freundlich
Barbara Ringness Gadbois
David R.Garcia
DavidJ.Gudino
Michael P. Harrell
Margarita P. Hernandez
Louise D.Lillard,, Nancy E.Loncke
Stanton C.Marcus
Michael D.Mc Daniel
Judith R.Schaffert
Michael R.Schaffert
Anne BeytinTorkington
Michael M.Youngdahl
STUDENT ACTIVITIES SUPPORT FUND
CharlesJ.Fanning
Class Representatives: Mark D.Baute
Carolyn ComparerJordan
David Polinsky
Leslie E.Wallis
Total Graduates: 279 Number of Donors: 59 Participation: 21%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Linda C.Johnson
LaurieJ.Taylor
Thomas W Weidenbach
Cecilia S.Wu
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Wang-Ha Cho
Kevin A.Frankel
JAMES H.CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Mark D.Baute
Charles F. Sayre
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
David E.Isenberg
Shelley Handel Krall
Colleen Mc Andrews
William 0.Nutting
David Polinsky
LaurieJ.Taylor
Thomas W. Weidenbach
Jeffrey A.Young
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Angelo N.Ancheta
Mark D.Baute
Ed Carney
Chi S.Choy
James P. Cooper III
Frederick M.Entwistle
Joel H.Friedman
Douglas T. Gneiser
Louis G.Hering
Brockton D.Hill
Craig A.Horowitz
Carolyn C.Jordan
Robin F. Kaufer
Steven M.Kleiman
Frances T. Mahaney
James W.Mc Spiritt
Hope G.Nakamura
James Gaughan O'Callahan
Jerri H.Pih
Anthony L.Press
Cecilia S.Wu
SUPPORTERS
Susan Abraham
Debby H.Bader
Karen S.Bloom
Eileen D.Bradley
Pamela B.Corrie
Lori A.Davies
Daniel E.Encell
Andrew R.Hall
Lolita B.Inniss
Mark R.Israel
Lawrence P.Jacobson
HarrisJ.Kane
Eric S.Kentor
Ronald A.Mc Intire
David S.Mc Lane
Stuart L.Merkadeau
Robert B.Mesrop,Jr.
LoisJ.Scali
David B.Sett
Patricia M.Weaver
John F. Wester,Jr.
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Denise M.Meyer
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Ruth M.Zacarias
Class Representatives
Joanne M.Morris
Robert C.Welsh
Suzanne Zaharoni
Total Graduates: 304 Number of Donors: 55 Participation: 18%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Robert C.Bowman
Edward A.Carr
Brian W Copple
Shedrick 0.Davis
Raquelle de la Rocha
AlanJ.Epstein
JohnW Kern IV
AliciaMinana De Lovelace
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Alicia Minana De Lovelace
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Joy Cheng
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
James F. Blake
Edward A.Carr
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Michael B.Africk
Katherine M.Basile
Elaine R.Costales
Shedrick 0.Davis
Leora D.Freedman
Christopher W Hammond
Sally A.James
William H.Kahn
Rochelle Gumlia Klein
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Marsha B.Liss
Keith E.Marlowe
Ann I.Park
Mark T.Roohk
Glen Sato
Lynn E.Todd
Robert N.Treiman
Bonnie Y.Wai
Stephen R.Waldron
Suzanne Zaharoni
SUPPORTERS
M.Margaret Rumph Banas
Robert C.Bowman
Brian W Copple
Laura W Cubanski
Robert N.Dale
Michael D.Donovan
Jamie L.Dubinsky
Marc H.Edelson
AlanJ.Epstein
Victoria G.Epstein
Marilyn W Formaker
Adrienne W Goldstone
HilaryJ.Greenberg
Peter Edward Greenberg
Susan F. Kroll
Patricia A.Libby
EdmondJ.Miller,Jr.
Philip M.Moremen
Karole R.Morgan-Prager
Alyce L.Raboy
Gary B.Rosenbaum
Linda L.Schwartz
Lauri C.Streeter
Laurie S.Temkin
Joel A.Thvedt
Leslie L.Trutner
STUDENT ACTIVITIES SUPPORT FUND
William A.Vallejos
LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI
Association Scholarship Fund
Alicia MinanaDe Lovelace
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Robert D.Brownell,Jr.
Michael E.Calligan
Linda M.Edwards
Carlos K.Goodman
Eric C.Jensen
Frank A.Merola
Jason C.Sloane
AndrewJ. Yamamoto
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Nabil L.Abu-Assal
William J.Arzbaecher
MartinJ.Barrack
Frank W Chen
Jon E.Drucker
James R.Felton
Paul L.Freese,Jr.
James M.Gelb
Ilene M.Goldberg
Alice M.King
Lawrence Kupers
ThomasJ. Leary
KarenJ.Mc Phee
Wayne L.Morrow
Elizabeth H.Pugh
MichaelJ.Russo
Steven Sinatra
SUPPORTERS
William S.Anderson
Shere R.Bailey
Patrick E.Bingham
Kimberly A.Caswell
Jeffrey H.Cohen
David B.Felsenthal
Andrew S.Gabriel
Charles 0.Geerhart
Tina L.Gentile
Sandra L.Goldberg
Gretchen E.Jacobs
Arny H.Klein
Sharon R.Leib
Louis E.Michelson
Mark D.Miller
Julia S.Penick
Sanford M.Pooler,Jr.
Mel I.Powell
MarkJ.Price
Martha E.Raymond
Janet R.Rich
Linda M.Rio
Thomas R.Sestanovich
Christopher C.Welch
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Rachel M.Bin
Steven M.Siegel
Class Representatives
Stanley Blumenfeld,Jr.
Paul Freese,Jr.
Louis E.Michelson
Total Graduates: 293
Number of Donors: 55
Participation: 19°/o
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
MartinJ.Barrack
Mark G.Crawford
Steven Sinatra
AndrewJ.Yamamoto
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Sandra S.Ikuta
EricJ.Diamond
Melinda A.Hoyt
Jeremy Temkin
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Eric H.Imperial
Anna S.Mc Lean
Stuart M.Price
Shelley R.Saxer
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Dwight L.Aarons
Carlos A.Arcos
Susan S.Azad
Kerry A.Bresnahan
W.Clark Brown
Janice E.Fogg
Steven I.Katz
Caroline Radparvar Kelly
MichaelJ.Kiely
NathanielJ.Lipman
Sharon Lea Mitchell
Patricia A.Penner
Richard S.Schkolnick
Steven A. Schuman
BrianJ.Schwab
ToddJ.Schwartz
Scot Stone
Eric S.Weinstein
Livingston S.Wong
SUPPORTERS
Erich D.Andersen
Gale S.Baker
John P. Balazs
Mohamed Y.Cassim
Victor L.Castillo
Christine S.Chua
Carol A.Cocek
Howard M.Freedland
David M.Goosenberg
Jennifer B.Goosenberg
Upinder S.Kalra
Caroline S.Katz
Kevin M.Kelly
AdrienneT. Kentor
GregoryJ.Kopta
Diane H.Koziol
Barry Lurie
Rhonda H.Mehlman
BrianJ.Mooney
Jorge Pineda
Mark A.Pittman
David A.Portnoy
Gregory L.Rickard
Steven R.Ruth
Eric C.Sawyer
Beau Simon
Sean P. Treglia
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Bruce D.Kuyper
1990
Class Representative:
Steven I.Katz
Caroline R. Kelly
Stuart M.Price
Total Graduates: 274
Number of Donors: 55
Participation: 20%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Sara Berman-Barrett
SarahJ.Fels
Eric C.Sawyer
Shelley R. Saxer
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Class Representatives
Nargis Choudhry
George Eshaghian
Jens Koepke
Total Graduates: 328
Number of Donors: 43 Participation: 13%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
David K.Barrett
William T. MacCary III
Suzanne K.Roten
Julie A.Ryan
JamesJ.Tutchton
David Schinasi
Cedric T. Chou
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
JonT. Yamamura
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
George M. Eshaghian
Suzanne K. Roten
Audrey L. Sokoloff
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kofi C. Bentsi-Enchill
Eric B. Gordon
Michael B. Green
Kimberly Hall Barlow
Karla N. Mac Cary
WilliamT. Mac Cary III
Joseph N. Velasquez
SUPPORTERS
Diane E. Birnholz
Richard M. Birnholz
Sandra B. Epstein
Laurence B. Frank
Eric S. Hill
Francis J. James
Allison M. Keller
Richard Lai
Alexandra K. Le
Sherry A. Lear
Lloyd Lim
Samuel D. Magavern
Julienne Mc Cammon
Tanya R. Meyers
Ann M. Mooney
Ann L. Munson Steines
Richard G. Novak
Melissa D. Obegi
Anne E. Pings
Geoffrey M. Sturr
James J. Tutchton
Jan F. Wrede
Sonia M. Younglove
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Robert R. Fabela
Carol J. Garris
Michael A. Plumleigh
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Lula F. Ballton
M. Irene Daniel
Jeffrey B. Mc Inryre
Michael D. Seplow
STUDENT ACTIVITIES SUPPORT FUND
Lisa R. Singer
IDA AND LOUIS STEIN SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jeannine K. DePhillips
1991
Class Representatives:
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Inez D. Hope
Total Graduates: 322
Number of Donors: 60 Participation: 19%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Jill F. Cooper
Christine L. Luketic
Holly R. Paul
Michelle S. Yee
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Jeffrey W. Cowan
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Sung J. Hwang
Holly R. Paul
Edward L. Tabakin
DEAN'S COUNSEL
SaskiaT. Asamura
Lawrence P. Brennan
Jose H. Diaz
Janet H. Dickson
Gretchen A. Ford
Carl 0. Graham
Samantha F. Lamberg
Anne E. Lederer
Laura J. Schwartz
Scott A. Silberstein
Scott N. Yamaguchi
Bennett L. Yee
SUPPORTERS
Charles F. Ahern
Sarah S. Ambrogi
Peter J. Bowers
Jill 1. Brown
Kevin D. Caton
Teresa Cho
Jill F. Cooper
Daniel H. Devaney
Jonathan M. Frenkel
Michael B. Garfinkel
Seth A. Grob
Karin L. Gustafson
Richard L. Hasen
Nicole M. Healy
Michael A. Heller
Andrew R. Herrup
Debra M. Johnson
Rhonda S. Kaye
Shirley S. Lu
Edward F. Malone
Mariana Marin
Ma
ry A. Minette
William J. Morley
Shirley D. Ramirez
Kirsten E. Rutnik
Jeffrey L. Slusher
Robert J. Solis
Susan K. Sullivan
Sallie A. Thieme
Stephanie H. Villafuerte
Ilana Volkov
Eugene Y. Won
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Robert J. Solis
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Charles F. Ahern
Alethea W. Brinkerhoff
Janet H. Dickson
Mitchell Keiter
Frieda A. Taylor
Greg M. Zipes
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Mary H. Chu
Shari R. Michels
1992
Class Representatives:
Daniel B. Butler
Elaine Mandel
Donna Wells
Total Graduates: 274 Number of Donors: 78 Participation: 28%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Paul E. Blevins
Peter F. Del Greco
Laurie J. Falik
Marilyn S. Gude!
Catherine E. Haltom
Elizabeth A. Hone
Daniel S. Javitch
Thomas R. Kreller
Lee J. Leslie
Steven M. Levy
KimT. Nguyen
Debra A. Profio
Kathleen M. Stewart
Barbara Silberbusch
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Lillis E. Grove
James C. Harrison
Claudia P. Madrigal
Donna C. Wells
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Virginia C. Bennett
Peter F. Del Greco
Jollee C. Faber
Leslye M. Fraser
GaryT. Gleb
Barbara L. Hamilton
Stewart S. Harrison
Todd Hart
Lisa Kirn
David J. Korduner
Thomas R. Kreller
Steven M. Levy
Audrey Lin
Stuart Patterson
John Staudinger
Jack S. Weiss
SUPPORTER-S
Kara M. Andersen
Jose L. Arias
Sandra I. Barrientos
Norman H. Becker
William D. Becker
Paul E. Blevins
Thomas A. Bloomfield
Daniel B. Bueler
Erik D. Buzzard
Bridget A. Clarke
David M. Cohen
Robert L. Dell Angelo
MichaelT. Donovan
Joseph H. Eaton
Jenifer S. Eslami
John C. Fish, Jr.
Charles M. Fontana Garcia
Russell I. Glazer
Gregory Fuentes
Simon M. Furie
Marilyn S. Gude!
Catherine E. Haltom
B. Everett Hendrickson
Daniel S. Javitch
Bradley M. Kancigor
Lee J. Leslie
Paul H. Luehr
Suzanne M. Madison
Elaine W. Mandel
Brendan J. Mc Keough
Thomas A. Manheim
Marc J. Nolan
Daniel F. Ortega
Debra A. Profio
Parthiv R. Sangani
Rick D. Seraden
Barbara Silberbusch
Aaron P. Silberman
Eric B. Silberstein
Jeffrey S. Silvyn
Blithe A. Smith
Thomas M. Smith
Mark B. Tuvim
Richard L. Villasenor
Eugene Volokh
Brian P. Waldman
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Howard D. Russell
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
KimT. Nguyen
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Paul D. Tripodi II
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Elizabeth A. Hone
Carolyn Y. La
Lance E. Winters
1993
Class Representatives:
Jeffrey A. Barker
Karen Marie Bray
Arny Kernes
Total Graduates: 295 Number of Donors: 50 Participation: 17%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Carol A. Foster
Stephen E. Holsten
Lizbeth Parker
Katherine A. Rutemiller
PeterT. Stoughton
Helen D. Sunga
Patricia D. Watkins
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Carol A. Foster
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Jeffrey A. Barker
John F. Bazan
Bryan D. Biesterfeld
Karen M. Bray
Linda F. Callison
Judith E. Gordon
Thomas J. Gray
Arny N. Kernes
Stuart Y. Kim
Sam S. Oh
Lizbeth Parker
Michael E. Reisz
Douglas H. Riegelhurh
Katherine A. Rutemiller
Joseph B. Ryan
PeterT. Stoughton
Helen D. Sunga
Patricia D. Watkins
Stanley M. Yukevich
SUPPORTERS
Lisa A. Anderson
Vincent J. Badolato
Julia L. Bond
Nancy J. Cohen
DonaldT. Deyo
Tobias A. Dorsey
Jeffrey M. Freedman
Robert W. Haugan
Alison A. Heartfield
Raquel E. Hecht
Stephen E. Holsten
Elizabeth Vella '96 is congratulated by Dean Susan Prager after receiving her diploma.
Tami A. Holsten
Jonathan W.Jaffee
Lisa C. Mc Arthur
Lisa Payne
VictoriaJ. Shabanian
NeilJ. Squillante
Richard A. Ward
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Eileen S. Kerr
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Robert E. Allen
Beverly A. Chaney
Joshua A. Gratch
Howard C. Griboff
Joan E. Marquardt
Todd A. Wolfe
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Mark R. Drozdowski
Jeffrey S. Galvin
ThomasJ. Gray
Nathan E. Laks
PeterT. Stoughton
1994
Class Representatives:
Christina Bull Arndt
Kyle B. Arndt
Hao-Nhien Vu
TotalGraduates: 283
Number of Donors: 60 Participation: 21%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Christina Bull Arndt
Kyle B. Arndt
Melinda P. Goldstein
Stephen W. Hawkins
RogerJaneway
Robert C. Kersey
Jason S. Wenglin
Steven D. Winegar
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Mani Adeli
Christina Bull Arndt
Kyle B. Arndt
RogerJaneway
John F. Niblock
Robyn R. Polashuk
Brette S. Simon
Jason S. Wenglin
SUPPORTERS
Jaykant H. Bhatt
KentJ. Bullard
Stephen D. Burbach
Frank M. Candelaria
Donald A. Fishman
Hector G. Gallegos
Meredith S. Goldberg
Melinda P. Goldstein
Alex N. Helperin
Marion C. Ingersoll
Adam B. Kaufman
Christopher D. Landgraff
Michael B. Levin
Thomas C. Mellor
Ay W. Pellman
Sheri N. Pym
Maria A. Salas-Mendoza
Robert E. Scheid
Theodore K. Smith
David W. Stevens
RonaldJ. Thompson
DanielJ. Villalpando
Hao-Nhien Q. Vu
Patrick D. Walravens
Steven D. Winegar
Lester I. Yano
Stephanie A. Yee
CLINICALPROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Oswald B. Cousins
JosephT. Gauthier
Robert C. Kersey
Doris A. Mendenhall
Jaleen Nelson
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Mary M. Appleron
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Scott A. Brutocao
KentJ. Bullard
Linda A. Christian
Steven A. Fischer
Melinda P. Goldstein
Rebecca S. Gudeman
Viddell L. Heard
Christopher E.Jones
Pamela Lew
Seema L. Nene
Laurence G. Solov
DanielJ. Villalpando
Lester I. Yano
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Jaykant H. Bhatt
James R. Cracolice
Yolanda S. Wu
Stephanie A. Yee
STUDENT ACTIVITIES SUPPORT FUND
Michael E. Ross
1995
Class Representatives:
Kisu Shin
Michael A. Grizzi
Total Graduates: 288
Number of Donors: 44 Participation: 15%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Linley C. Bizik
Stephen M. Lobbin
Alexander 0. Tamin
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Jennifer L. Barbosa
Linley C. Bizik
JeffreyW. Dulberg
AngelaT. Edwards
Christopher M. Flosi
I-Fan C. Go
Michael A. Grizzi
Alexander D. Hoehn-Saric
Brian M. Hoffscadt
Todd D. Kantorczyk
Stephen M. Lobbin
Ben D. Orlanski
Holli H. Payne
Paul Ruiz
DavidJ. Ryan
Kisu Shin
Alexander 0. Tamin
Stephen R. Uriarte
Cynthia A. Valenzuela
David S. Warner
Colleen Y. Yasukochi
SUPPORTERS
Thomas S. Rubin
CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPPORT FUND
Yael Feinreich
Caroline H. Park
Seth C. Thompson
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Patrick S. Brown
Douglas F. McCormick
Peter D. Taylor
Scott P. Ward
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
Mona Y. Cho
Heather A. Mactavish
Joshua A. Meyer
Charles I. Newton
Pamela Pasti
Steven A. Rivers
Seth C. Thompson
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
Gary E. Felicetti
Heather E. Harris
Peter A. Hernandez
Joshua C. Mendelsohn
Jeffrey M. Prieto
Lisa D. Rosenthal
Joon W. Song
Lida Sparer
Friends and Faculty
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
*William A. Rutter
FOUNDERS
David H. Dolinko '80 and Feris M. Greenberger '80
Arthur I. Rosett and Rhonda
Lawrence
William D. and Sue Warren
Stephen C. Yeazell and Ruth E. Fisher '80
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Joseph M. Girard
*Monte E. Livingston
Budge & Brenda Offer
Stephen C. Yeazell
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Carole Goldberg-Ambrose and Dean Ambrose
Joel F. Handler
Kenneth and Smiley Karst
William and Renee Klein
Jonathan D. and Barbara Varac
Marilyn Yerkes
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Daniel J. Busse! In Memory of Nancy Finck
JesseJ. Dukeminier,Jr.
Kristine Knaplund
Arthur Samuel Levine
David Mellinkoff
John J.Power,Jr.
Alan G. Sierory
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Paul Boland
RobertJ. Caustin
Robert D. Goldstein
Jonathan D. Goodwin
ThomasJ. Gray
Patricia L. Leach
Shelley E. Levine
Albert J. Moore and Sherrill L. Johnson '78
B. Mark Nordman
SUPPORTERS
Benjamin Aaron
William P. Alford
John and Mary Bauman
EliJ. Borok
Erika S. Chadbourn
Dorothy S. Decker
Patrick Del Duca
Alan Feld
Geoffrey Halpern
Lawton H. Hansell
Ueli Huber,Jr.
Bertram K. Massing
John C. Mather
OvvieMiller
Stephen R. Munzer
Grant S. Nelson
Jack Salan
Eugene Volokh
CLINICAL PROGRAM
SUPPORT FUND
David & Melinda Binder
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Stephen C. Yeazell
LIBRARY SUPPORT FUND
S.C. Clark
Firm Matching Gifts
Arnold & Porter
Cox, Castle & Nicholson
Cravath, Swaine & Moore
Davis, Polk & Wardell
Deloitte & Touche
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Loeb & Loeb
McGuire, Woods, Barde & Boothe
Morgan, Lewis & Beckius
Morrison & Foerster
Musick, Peeler & Garrett
O'Melveny & Myers
Pillsbury, Madison & Surro
Sidley & Austin
Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett
Corporation
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
Snell &Wilmer
Sullivan & Cromwell
White & Chase
Corporate and Foundation Matching Gifts
Adobe Systems Inc.
ARCO Foundation Inc.
Aronson Foundation
Bankamerica Foundation
Capital Group Companies, Inc.
Chemical Bank
Cigna Foundation
CNA Foundation
Combined Health Appeal of California
CIT Group Foundation Inc.
Enron Foundation
Exxon Education Foundation
First Interstate Bank of California Foundation
Ford Motor Company
GE Fund
J. Paul GerryTrust
GTE Foundation
William & Flora Hewlett Foundation
Hewlett-Packard Company
Hormel Foods Corporation
Hughes Aircraft Company
KPMG Pear Marwick
Foundation
MCA Inc.
Morgan Stanley Group Inc.
Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Northwestern Mutual Life Foundation
Pacific Enterprises
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Price Waterhouse Foundation
Procter & Gamble Fund
SONY Pictures Entertainment
Telesis Foundation
Texaco Foundation
Time Warner Inc.
Times Mirror Company
United Way of Santa Clara
County
USF&G Foundation Inc.
U.S. West Foundation
UNOCAL Foundation
Warner Lambert
Designated Gifts
BENJAMIN AARON FUND
Anonymous
MICHAEL C. ALBIN
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
In Memory ofCason
ELISA H. HALPERN
LEVINSON, MILLER, MEMORIAL
JACOBS & PHILLIPS
SCHOLARSHIP FUND FUND
In Honor ofthe Marriage of RalphShapiro '58 and Shirley Barry and Kay Halpern Shapiro
Jay and Lorita Jacobson
Sylvan and Roberta Zeiden
William & Barbara Green
Barry Halpern
PAULA C. LUBIC
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND McCorkle
Miriam Molay Albin
Stanley & Bernelda Brown
CharlesWDumm
Oretha & Barry Harrington
Curtis & M:trgaret Marston
Lois M. McCorkle
Robert & Lucile Morris
Rose Jacobson
ShirleyWasher
KAREN HAUSER
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Lawrence & Karen Boland
Carolyn and Kenneth D.
Daniel & Judith Platus Brody Foundation
Morgan & Mayrene Rice
ARNOLD & PORTER
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Arnold & Porter
BAKER & MCKENZIE LAW
Cynthia Schmidt Freedman
Julius & Irene Hauser
Arthur M. Lubic
GEORGE L. MARINOFF
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Gina L. Carroll
Elaine MarinoffGood
Wendy Sue Stockton
FRANCES E. MC QUADE
EMERGENCY LOAN
Michael & Deanna Hauser FUND
Larry & Miriam Penney
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley
In Honor ofMoses and Anne Shapiro Freedman
Frances Vener
MILKEN FAMILY STUDENT FOUNDATION FUND
ASSISTANCE FUND
Baker & McKenzie
JOHN G. BRANCA FUND
CLIFFORD A. Milken Family Foundation
HEMMERLING
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
HOWARD P. MILLER
MEMORIALFUND
John G. Branca '75 Thurston & Rosella James Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
CLASS OF '52 GIFT
John C. McCarthy
J.WAND IDA M.
JAMESON FUND
J.W& Ida M. Jameson
MARSHALL COGAN Foundation
DR. ROGER LEROY
MILLER FUND
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Shapiro
Ralph Shapiro '58 & Shirley
Shapiro
JOSEPHINE VAUGHN
COOPER SCHOLARSHIP
PETE KAMERON FUND
Ralph Shapiro '58 & Shirley
MORRISON & Shapiro FOERSTER FUND
BENJAMIN E. KING FUND
In Memory ofJosephine
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Vaughn Cooper Beatrice Halbern
John H. Hadley
CURTIS B. DANNING
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
In Memory ofMax Berger
Morrison & Foerster
PANAYOTA "PENNY"
NANOPOULOS
MEMORIAL
In Memory ofHerman
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Glaser
Beverly K. Shulman
Rose L. Silverman
Diana & Gabe Estrada
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
MEMORIAL FUND and Sam Kerzner and In KENNETH A.
Honor ofManny & KLEINBERG FUND
Ruth Spero, Howard
Kollirz & Albert.Serlin
Kenneth A. Kleinberg '67
Curtis Danning '5z & LA RAZA LAWALUMNI
Florence Danning ASSOCIATION
DROWN PUBLIC
SERVICE FELLOWSHIP
PROGRAM
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Mabell Y. Aguilar-Fabela
Aronoff& Soukup
William P. Alford
Edward J. Chalfie
SamuelWand Gerta B. Katz
George & Louise Kermode
Margaret R. Kiever
David Nimmer
Andrea S. Ordin '65
Lionel S. Sobel '69
Thomson & Thomson
In Memory ofEddie M. KellyTillery
Joseph Drown Foundation Candelaria
SAMUEL N. AND LEAH S.
Robert R. Fabela
AliciaMinanaDe Lovelace
FISCHER FUND '87 and RobertW
MICHAEL PALLEY
MEMORIALFUND
Sidney and Susan
Samuel N. Fischer '8z and Lovelace Lindenbaum
Leah S. Fischer '8z
Timothy F. Sylvester '84 J. Lewis Palley Charitable Trust
ALBERT AND JUDITH LAW SCHOOL CLASS OF GLICKMAN FUND
1952 FUND
Albert Glickman '60 and John McCarthy '52
Judith Glickman
MORRIS GREENSPAN FRANCES AND JERRY
MEMORIAL PRIZE FUND LEIGH FAMILY FUND
Joseph & Ruth Bell
WILLIAM A. RUTTER
TEACHINGAWARD
William A. Rutter
RALPH & SHIRLEY
SHAPIRO STUDENT
Ralph Shapiro '58 and LOAN FUND
Shirley Shapiro
Ralph Shapiro '58 & Shirley
Shapiro
SHEPPARD, MULLIN, RICHTER & HAMPTON
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Sheppard, Mullin, Richrer & Gifts made by Alumni Hampron in Celebration of their Reunion Year
IDA AND LOUIS STEIN
MEMORIAL FUND
Jeannine K. DePhillips '9o
FRANK G WELLS
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
CLINIC FUND
Foamex International Inc.
LEE B. WENZEL
M EMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jerry Carlron
Ronald Garver
David Gordon
Jay Herron
Chuck Reilly
William Vaughn '55
David Weil
Mark D Wenzel
Daniel G. Zerfas '66
Family, Friends & Participants in the annual golf tournament
BARRY M. ZWICK FUND
Ralph Shapiro ' 58 and Shirley Shapiro
Ifyou are not a donor and are interested in joining UCLA Law's growing family ofsupporters, please call (31 OJ 2061123
Every effert was made to ensure the accuracy ofour Honor Ro ll
If there are any correcti on s or omissions, please contact the School ofLaw Alumni & Development Office.
C lass of 1966
JAM ES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOW
Josep h Shalam
DEAN'S ADVOCATE
David Horowitz
DEAN ' S COUNSEL
Ian Robertson
Alan Robbins
SUPPORTERS
Elaine Ca nty
Joseph Canty
Don Dyer
Donald Glaser
FACULTY SUPPORT
John Cooney
LIBRARY SUPPORT
Richard Bakke
Class of 1971
DEAN 'S ADVOCATE
Douglas Bagby
DEAN 'S COUNSEL
Dayle Bailey
Cruger Br ight
Roger Howard
Paul Marcus
Michael Yamamoto
SUPPORTERS
Robert Blank
Millard Frohock, Jr.
Judy Fry
Gary Gilbert
Jonathan Gordon
Thomas Horn
Thomas Scheerer
George Schraer
Juli et Swoboda
Alan Temp leman
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Kenneth Kraus
Pauline John so n
Leonard Lev ine
LIBRARY SUPPORT
Marshall Mintz
Douglas Zubrin
PUBLIC INTEREST
Harold Hart-Nibbrig
Class of 19 76
DEAN ' S COUNSEL
Jonathan Daniel
Debra Granfield
Michael Rich
SUPPORTERS
Richard Avila
Don Drysdale
Janice Feinste in
Pa ul Fogel
Marily n Heise
James Kosnett
LIBRARY SUPPORT
Bradley Frazier
Gary Stern PUBLIC INTEREST
Larry Walker
PUBLIC INTEREST
Maria Hummer
Class of 1981
DEAN 'S ADVOCATES
Patricia Ito
Kare n Lewt hwaite
Jerrold Schrotenboer
Class of 1986
DEAN 'S COUNSEL
Frances Mahaney
Wa lter R. Dah l Anthony L. Press
Michael Harris
Lilly Lewis
SUPPORTERS
Robert Orgel T. Hale Boggs C hri stine Cervenak
DEAN'S COUNSEL Lolita Inni ss
Roberr Meisel
SUPPORTERS
Ann ie Baker
Jeff Berke
Julie Davies
Patricia Fe iner
Mark Israel
Edmund Kel ley
Pamela Kelly
Stuart Merkadeau
Jerri Pih
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Susan Green Rau Tawatao
Lind a Kirios
Wi lli am Kirsch
Jonathan Li ght
LIBRARY SUPPORT
Richard Aldrich
Brent Liljesrrom Pau l Friend
Angela Mickelso n Pamela Ke ll y
Sharon Rudnick
Craig Sapin
PUBLIC INTEREST
Debby Bader
CLINICAL SUPPORT Christine Cervenak
Michael Harris
Phylli s Johnsron
Remember: You can e-mailyour classnotes to alumnews@law.ucla.edu
1960s
Gary J. Grimm '65, formerly legal counsel to the CaliforniaRegionalWater Quality Control Board, San Francisco Bay Region, has established a law practice as environmental counsel with emphasis on water quality-related matters, land and resource preservation and regulatory facilitation. His office is in the San Francisco Bay area.
L. Christian Hauck '65 has been CEO of Sunflower Electric Power Corporation in Hays, Kansas, since 1988.
Alumni Directory correction: Sidney Sealine and Robert Thomas, both from the class of I966, were inadvertently omitted from the Class Listing in The UCLA School of Law Alumni Directory 1995.
Susan Liebeler '66 LLB is pleased to announce the establishment of Lexpert Research Services in Malibu. The former chair of the International Trade Commission, professor of law and partner in the law firm oflrell & Manella, she has formed Lexpert to provide high-quality legal research to attorneys and corporate law and intellectual property departments.
Dan Caine '67 has been appointed to the Small Business Improvement Council for the state of Washington. The council makes recommendations to the governor and Legislature to improve the climate for small business in the state.
James F. Stiven '69 was selected to fill a vacancy as a U.S. Magistrate Judge on the federal bench in San Diego. He reports that he is pleased and gratified by this appointment.
1970s
Gary M. Borofsky '70 has become "of counsel" of the Century City law firm ofWeinstock, Manion, Reisman, Shore and Neumann. He and M. Neil Solarz continue to practice corporate, business, estate and tax planning, as they have for the past nine years, under the firm name of Borofsky and Solarz. He has been a contributing author to Prentice Hal] Tax Idea Service. He has also been a member of the Beverly Hills Bar Association for over 20 years, including serving as chairman of its Law Practice Management Committee.
Mark Silversher '70 has been engaged in law, development, water, hydroelectric and environmental studies in Telluride, Colorado since 1977-
Stuart M. de Haaff'71 has joined Underwriters Reinsurance Company as general counsel to its operating, underwriting and service companies.
Paul Marcus '71, Haynes Professor of Law at the college of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, was selected by the graduating class as the school's "Outstanding Professor." Marcus was on sabbatical leave chis past year completing the new edition of his book, The Entrapment Defense, (The Michie Co.). In addition, he delivered talks to law groups in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and Brazil during the course of the year.
Richard Blacker '72 writes on his behalf as well as on behalf of Robert Enders '75, Mark Windisch '75, Anica Lee '82, Jon Cohn '88, Gary Koch '89, Shana Torem '94 and Karen Weinstein '94 chat they have all been practicing at Weissberg and Aronson, Inc., a Californiabased firm specializing in "health law," the representation of health care organizations and professionals. The firm celebrated its 20th anniversary in 1993, having grown from eight to 75 attorneys and become one of the largest health law practices in the country during that period.
They are pleased to report chat effective chis past February, the firm has merged with the 150-year-old, Milwaukee-based, 475-attorney firm of Foley and Lardner.The result has been the creation of the I5th largest firm in the country, and, with Foley's existing 25-attorney health care practice, the largest health law practice in the country. The combined firm will retain the Foley and Lardner name, but will be known as Foley LardnerWeissburg & Aronson in California.
Blacker and wife, Rita, are also delighted to announce the birth of their second grandson, Ian Spencer Christenson, at Cedars Sinai on Easter.
Bruce M. Kramer '72, Maddox Professor of Law at Texas Tech University School of Law, recently co-authored a supplement to the 6th edition of Cases and Materials on Oil and Gas Law (Foundation Press). Along with Professor Martin, Professor Kramer will be taking over the annual revision of the multi-volume treatise entitled The Law of Oil and Gas, originally authored by Howard Williams and Charles Meyers. He recently testified before the Alaska Public Utilities Commission on matters relating to the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field. More importantly, he writes, his oldest daughter Cassie will be married in Keystone, Colorado, having recently graduated from TexasTech University.
Randolph M. Blotky '73 has been appointed executive vice president of Warner Bros. Worldwide Consumer Products. Consumer Products includes licensing, studio stores) interactive entertainment,WB sport and WB toys. Blotky joined the consumer products division as senior vice president in 1990. Prior to that he was with MGM/UA Telecommunications, United Artists Television and CBS Productions.
Paul Beechen '74 is head of his own firm, Law Offices of Paul D. Beechen, as of May, 1996. He is located in Century City.
Ethan Lipsig '74 has just published Downsizing through BNA Books. Downsizing is the first comprehensive treatise on the legal, financial, human resources and tax implications of layoffs, exit incentive programs, and other reduction in force (RIF) devices. It is also a practical guide to
implementing RIFs, containing dozens of model RIF forms, both in hard copy and diskette form. Ethan Lipsig, a partner since 1982 in the Los Angeles office of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, specializes in employment Jaw, employee benefits law, and, he writes, not surprisingly, RIFs.
Phil Nichols '74 is a founding partner of Pircher, Nichols & Meeks, a Century City real estate law firm that has handled $30 billion in real estate transactions since its founding in 1983. He serves on the board of directors for Shelter Partnership. Shelter Partnership is a private organization that advises other nonprofit organizations about creating homeless shelters and low-cost housing, and helps businesses donate surplus merchandise in a tax-favorable manner. Lase December, Nichols was honored by the Century City Chamber of Commerce for his involvement in the community.
Robert M. Kunstadt '75 had an essay published in the National Law Review on the topic of copyright protection for "sports moves," such as tennis player Chris Even's two-handed backhand or basketball player Bob Cousy's behind-the-back pass. The essay received wide exposure by being covered by Sports Illustrated, The Wall StreetJournal, Business Week, ABC, the BBC and CNBC.
Thomas G. Stolpman '75 was elected this past June to serve as the 1996-97 president of the State Bar of California. He is a trial attorney in Long Beach who has spearheaded efforts to change the State Bar's policy on cameras in the courtroom and has addressed jury reform. A partner at Stolpman, Krissman, Elber, Mandel & Katzman, he said he will work toward implementing a master plan to "recreate the culture" of the bar in the coming year. "We will seek to open up communication between the bar, its members, legislators, the state Supreme Court and the public," he explains. "Our mission is to make the bar more responsive than any voluntary bar."
Eugene Tillman,'76 has been named president of the 8,000-member National Health Lawyers Association. He is a partner in Reed, Smith, Shaw and McClay and Jives with his wife, Bonnie E. Thompson ('76), and their two teenage sons in Chevy Chase, Maryland. Bonnie is involved in the development of affordable housing for the elderly.
Suzanne Harris '77 has formed a new partnership, Harris-Ginsberg LLP, with Larry A. Ginsberg. The new firm wiU specialize in all aspects of family law, including dissolution of marriage, custody and visitation and adoption. The two principals are Certified Specialists in Family Law and Harris is a Fellow of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. They practiced Jaw together previously at the family law firm Trope and Trope.
Lucinda A. Low '77 has become chair of the ABA's 15,000-member section oflnternational Law and Practice. She will serve for the 96-97 ABA year and is the first woman chair in the
60-year history of the section. Lucinda is currently a partner in the Washington, D.C., firm of Miller & Chevalier, where her practice emphasizes international joint ventures, project financing, and counseling and investigations regarding the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Paul Waldau '78 is at the University of Oxford completing a dissertation on the ropic of animals in the world's religions. In January 1997, he will begin a year as a senior fellow at the Harvard Center for the Study of World Religions. He is the American Coordinator for The Great Ape Project. He is heading their challenge to laws that treat the "other" great apes (gorillas, chimpanzees and orangutans) as property rather than persons.
Madelyn J. Chaber '79 of San Francisco's Wartnick, Chaber, Harowitz, Smith and Tigerman, was nominated as 1996 Trial Lawyer of the Year by Trial Lawyers for Public Justice. She obtained the largest jury verdict ever against the cigarette industry: $1.3 million compensatory and $700,000 punitive in Horowitz v. Raybestos-Manhattan.
Dave Metcalf '79 reports that he has worked for the past fifteen years as a law clerk for Federal District Judge Marion J. Callister in Boise, Idaho.With the judge's retirement, Metcalf is now a law clerk for Federal District Judge B. Lynn Winmill. His wife, Faye, and he have six children, two adopted from India.
1980s
Mark Garrett, '80 has co-authored, TransportationP/,anningon Trial: The CleanAir Act and TravelForecasting, with Dr. Martin Wachs of UC Berkeley. The book examines a lawsuit filed against the Metropolitan Transportation Commission of the San Francisco Bay Area. The suit was brought by a consortium of environmental groups claiming noncompliance with the Clean Air Act. Garrett has also recently co-authored a study of the effect of rent control in several California cities, which will be published by Fannie Mae.
Mark P. Foster '81 has opened a law practice in Charlotte, North Carolina, that concentrates on criminal defense and business litigation. He also serves as staff judge advocate for the 4th Maintenance Battalion, Marine Corps Force Reserve. Prior to that, he was a deputy DA with Orange County, an associate with Palmieri, Tyler, Wiener, Wilhelp and Waldron in Irvine, California, and a trial attorney. In 1994, he married the former Renee Manning.
Daniel Marquez '81 has been named directing attorney for the consumer law and housing law units of the Legal Aid Foundation of LA. Marquez divides his time between the Legal Aid offices in South-Central and the Pico-Union office.
Maita Deal Prout '81 was named managing partner of the LA office of Whitman Breed Abbot and Morgan in January 1996. The office represents domestic and foreign clients in corporate and securities law, asset transfers, commercial law, finance, real estate, labor and employment, bankruptcy and insolvency, environmental law, intellectual property and litigation.
Marilee C. Unruh '81 announces the formation of Goodsmith, Gregg & Unruh, a Chicago firm offering expertise in commercial litigation, employment law, real estate and finance mergers and acquisitions.
Leslie B. Fried '82 writes that he, his wife, Riki, and their four children have moved to Jerusalem, where he has assumed a position as Director of Special Projects for the David Shapell College of Jewish Studies. They encourage any UCLA Law alumni to look them up on a visit toJerusalem or e-mail them at rfried@actcom.co.il.
Christopher C. King '82 has been admitted as a Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales and a Mitglied der Rechtsanwaltskammer in Germany. King is a partner at the Frankfurt, Germany office of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. He specializes in international mergers and acquisitions.
Tom Agoston '83 has been working in Tokyo for the past five years for the IBM Global Network. He is currently Program Manager for Internet Dial Services and reports that he enjoys Asia immensely.
Jim Baca '83 continues as partner with the 40attorney law firm of Atkinson, Andelson, et al., specializing in the representation of public school districts. He and his wife, Cindy, announce the birth of their fourth child, Sarah-a girl (finally, he writes)-born August 23, 1995.
Monique C. Lillard '83 is serving as a visiting professor at William and Mary College of Law in Williamsburg, Virginia, during fall semester 1996. She, her husband and their son (born August 1995) drove across the country in August from their home in Moscow, Idaho, where she is a professor of law at the University ofldaho.
Betsy R. Rosenthal '84 writes that she gave birth to their third child, Joel Aaron Rosenthal, on May 4, 1996. "He distracts our other two, Adam and Sara, from fighting as much. I am doing some creative writing in between changing diapers." Her husband, David Rosenthal, has a successful real estate appraisal company called Curtis, Rosenthal and Associates.
Michael P. Harrell '85 became a partner in the New York branch of Debevoise & Plimpton on July 1, 1996. He is a member of the firm's investment management group and has recently had an emphasis on private investment funds and acquisitions. He is co-author of "Banking in Hungary," BankingandtheLaw, and "Who Will Win the Battle for Hungary's Telecoms Company," InternationalFinancialLawReview.
Patti Scheimer Bednarik '86 has-left her job as assistant district attqrney to start her own mediation busines§, "Arguments to Agreements," in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Her volunteer work, pet therapy, pairs dogs with patients at the State Hospital. She also does volunteer mediation with Neighborhood Dispute Settlement. She formerly taught trial advocacy at Widener Law School and has organized a mediators training and educational group. She is married to Joe Bednarik.
Janet Anne Winnick '86 has joined the West Coast office of the Morgan Stanley Real Estate Fund as general counsel. Winnick was a partner with the Los Angeles-based law firm of Allen, Matkins, Leck, Gamble & Mallory. A transactional attorney, she represented major commercial building owners, contractors, property managers, portfolio purchasers, and lenders in connection with a variety of contracts and agreements.
Jerry B. Hodson '87 has joined Miller, Nash, Wiener, Hager & Carlsen LLP as an associate. He practices environmental law, securities litigation and general commercial litigation.
Raquelle de la Rocha '87 has left her post as a lecturer at UCLA Law and is "of counsel" at the firm of Ballard, Rosenberg & Golpher in Universal City. She will continue to serve out her five-year term as president of the LA City Ethics Commission.
Vincent F. Bennett '88 has joined the LA law firm of Gordon, Edelstein, Krepack, Grant, Felton and Goldstein. He practices personal injury law, with an emphasis on medical malpractice, products liability and complex torts. Prior to joining the firm, Bennett was with Arias and Ozzello.
Kimberly Caswell '88 writes: "My husband, Ken, and I had a daughter Jade Midori, in March. I telecommute from our home at the beach to my job in Tampa as in-house counsel for GTE."
Amy Klein '88 was ordained a rabbi by the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. She will be serving as the director of congregational relations at the Religious Action Center in Washington, D.C., teaching and motivating Jewish congregations to participate in social justice projects in their home communities.
Lisa M. Jacobsen '89 was recently named partner in the Beverly Hills law firm of Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman, LLP. She practices in general litigation and also specializes in labor and employment law. She has previously represented employers in state and federal courts in both jury and non-jury trials, and has successfully defended employees in claims of wrongful termination, harassment, retaliation and discrimination on the basis of race, sex, religion, sexual orientation, physical handicap and pregnancy.
1990s
Tina-Marie Baskin '90 has joined the Portland firm of Miller, Nash, Wiener, Hager & Carlsen LLP as an associate. Baskin was formerly with Kell, Alterman & Runstein.
Sandy Epstein '90 has joined Endeavor as a literary agent representing television and feature writers.
Elliot M. Flies '90 has joined Oppenheimer, Wolff & Donnelly in their St. Paul, Minnesota office. Formerly with Nelsen, Thompson, Pegne & Thornton, Elliot will continue to focus on insurance coverage and commercial litigation.
Joy (Benham) Mangano '90 reports that in 1993, she was forced to retire from the practice of law due to chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. Prior to her illness, she worked at the LA office of Skadden, Arps, Sherman & Sterling. In 1994, she and her husband, Frank, relocated to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where they have been politically active trying to presecve the semi-rural nature of the beautiful North Valley where they reside.
Thomas N. Hudson '92, who was voted "Most Likely to Run for Office," by the class of 1992, has lived up co his reputation. After two years as the youngest-ever county chairman of the Alameda County Republican parry, he won the Republican nominarion for state Senare in the 9th District on March 26, 1996. The 9th District includes Oakland, Berkeley, and Richmond in the Bay Area.
David J. Kordiner '92 is now general counsel at the Director's Guild of America. He and his wife, Joan Krimston, welcomed their first child, Zachary Asher, on December 30, 1995.
Daniel T. Young '92 has joined the Cleveland law firm of Thompson Hine & Flory P.L.L. as an associate in the corporate and securities practice group. Daniel will focus on mergers and acquisitions, private placements of securities, securities offerings for publicly held companies, scare securities laws and joint ventures. He was previously with Squire, Sanders & Dempsey in the public law practice area.
Captain Marc A. Koonin '93 recencly transferred to the Office of the StaffJudge Advocate for the U.S. Army Garrison at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland. His duties entail acting as a military labor counselor and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney as well as handling administrative law issues for the command.
Rafael A. lcaza '94 was recently elected chairman of the 14th Assembly District's Republican Central Committee, representing rhe Berkeley area. He has secved for the past two years as general counsel co the Alameda County Republican parry.
Darci Elaine Burrell '95 has been hired by the Legal Defense Fund after secving an externship with them.
Correction
Due to an error by a telemarketing vendor, ThomasP.Dunlap '74,JoeIngber '60 and WilliamB. Wong '85, were erroneously listed in the ''InMemoriam"section ofthe spring/summer UCLA Law magazine. DougNelson, Interim Assistant Vice Chancellorfor Finance and InformationManagement, has written to the alumni listed notifj,ing them ofthe error and apologizingfor the mistake. UniversityRelatiom and UCLA School ofLaw now have asystem in place to avoidfaturemishaps ofthis kind.
Clarification
A report on the death ofStephenMeyers '67in the spring/summeredition ofUCLA Law magazine inadvertently omitted that 1972 UCLA School of Law graduate Forrest Mosten was afounding partner in theLegal Clinic ofJacoby &Meyers.
IN MEMORIAM
Henry Steinman Jr. '61
Henry Steinman, who distinguished his young law school by becoming one of the first graduates to head up the New York office of a distinguished law firm, died chis summer in Connecticut where he lived with his wife, Nancv Rawn Steinman.
Born in Los Angeles 'in 1932, Henry Steinman was a lifelong UCLA student, having attended University Elementary School's summer session beginning at age 11. His mother had worked for UCLA, and his stepfather was chairman of the UCLA Physical Education Department.
As an undergraduate at UCLA, Henry Steinman was a stellar athlete, playing baskerball under CoachJohn Wooden. Steinman earned his bachelor's degree in physical education in 1954 and his LLB. from the law school in 1961. He graduated Order of rhe Coif and was Editor in Chief of UCLA Law Review, going on to clerk for ChiefJusrice Earl Warren.
Steinman joined the firm of Latham & Watkins in 1961 and moved to New York to open the firm's office there in 1985, serving until his death as a managing partner. David W. Fleming '59, of Latham & Watkins, said Steinman was integral in building up the firm's successful New York office. "Henry was an interesting, brilliant attorney who was a wonderful individual as well. He was just a terrific person," Fleming said in remembering his colleague. The firm has established a trust fund in Henry's memory that will benefit UCLA School of Law.
Steinman was a generous supporter of UCLA and its law school. He was a member of the Chancellor's Associates, and he was among the alums who came forward to create the Richard C. Maxwell Chair in recognition of former Dean Maxwell.
He was deputy mayor of the UCLA Olympic Village when the Olympic Games were held in Los Angeles in 1984, and he also served as outside counsel to the '84 Olympic Committee.
Nancy Finck, former Director ofLaw Annual Fund
Nancy A. Finck, who was the Director of the UCLA Law Annual Fund for eight years, died in April. She was sick for a short time and then hospitalized for three weeks in Cooley Dickenson Hospital in Norrhampron, Massachusetts. She was 62.
Anyone who worked closely with Nancy knew what a fine person she was-principled, careful and kind. Alumni involved with the Law Annual Fund remember Nancy for her tireless efforts on their behalf. Michael Waldorf '67, former class representative and past chair of the founders' Committee, remembered Nancy: "Nancy was a gentlewoman, a person of enormous integrity," Michael r��alled. "She always made certain the volunteers had everything they needed. She made our work easy.
Nancy had recently returned to Massachusetts afrer living for 20 years in California. She retired from UCLA when the third early retirement incentive program rolled around. Remaining in LA. for another year and a half, she made plans to move back to New England, where her family lived and where she was raised. She designed and built a beautiful home and had just moved in a short time before she died.
A graduate of Mount Holyoke College, she received a master's degree in business administration from San Francisco State University. Before coming to UCLA, Nancy had worked at the University of Santa Clara and earlier had been employed in both the admissions and the development offices at Mount Holyoke.
Some of you knew her through a shared love of music, especially opera. She never missed an exhibit at UCLA's Fowler Museum or the jacarandas when they bloomed in the Franklin Murphy Sculpture Garden. Nancy traveled to every continent except Antarctica and continued to learn all the while. She felt education was one of the keys to a rewarding life.
Dean Susan Prager commented recently, "Those of us who worked with Nancy are better for having known her. She will be missed."
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December
1996
Bar Swearing-In Ceremony
Thursday, December 12 at 7:00 p.m.
Location: Schoenberg Hall Auditorium
January 1997
American Association ofLaw SchoolsReceptionfor alumni in law teaching
Saturday, January 4 at 8:30 p.m.
Washington D.C.
Alumni Association Downtown Luncheon
Date: TBA
Location: City Club
February
1997
21st Annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium
Friday & Saturday, February 7 & 8
Location: Schoenberg Hall Auditorium
Melville B. Nimmer Memorial Lecture Monday, February 24
Location: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History
March 1997
Annual Public Interest Law Foundation Auction
Thursday, March 6
Location: TBA
April
1997
Moot Court Reception
Date: TBA
Location: TBA
Welcome Reception
Sunday, April 13
Location: School ofLaw
Annual Dean's Dinner
Date: TBA
Location: TBA
Alumnus ofthe Year Award Ceremony
Date: TBA
Location: TBA
May 1997
Commencement
Sunday, May 18
Location: TBA
Alums invited 15th Anniversary showing of Law School Musical is Feb. 1
Alums are encouraged to attend the special 15th Anniversary production of the annual Law School Musical: ''Anti-Kids 'n Fun," on Saturday, Feb. 1, 1997.
Based on Irving Berlin's ''Annie Get Your Gun," the traditionally zany production will be staged at the Northwest Campus Auditorium located at the Sunset Village Commons. Insults to attorneys, the law school and its professors and administrators are guaranteed.
The musical raises money for the law school. For tickets, send a check for $10 and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Professor Ken Graham. Indicate whether you want to see the 7 p.m. or 9:30 p.m. show.