

UCLA


Law

UCLA Law is published at UCLA for alumni, friends and other members ofthe UCLALaw community.
Offices at UCLA School ofLaw, Box 951476, Los Angeles, Calif. 90095-1476
SusanWesterbergPrager: Dean
JoanTyndall: AssistantDean, Development andAlumni Relations
Magazine Staff
Editor: KarenNikos
StaffWriter:SheilaCasey
EditorialAssistants:NancyBerkowitz, RoderickSasis
Photography:MaryAnn Scuehrmann; ASUCLAPhoto Service: Todd Cheney, Scott Quintard, EricMah; BruceCook; Jilly
Design:Barbara Kelly, Brentwood, Calif.
Printer:Typecraft,Pasadena, Calif.
UCLA LawAlumniAssociation Board of Directors
John F. Runkel, Jr. '81: President
Richard D. Fybel '71: VicePresident
DonnaR. Black '75: Secretary/Treasurer
Hon. George P. Schiavelli '74: Alumni Representative
ReneeL. Campbell '80: Immediate PastPresident
KyleB.Arndt '94
Wendy D. Aron '96
Hon. Valerie L. Baker '75
Stanton P. Belland '59
HarlandW Braun '67
Cynthia S. Connors '83
Raquelle de la Rocha '87
Shedrick 0. Davis '87
David I.Gindler '84
Hon. Joan Dempsey Klein '55
DavidW Fleming '59
RichardW Havel '71
GlennL. Krinsky '83
LouisM. Meisinger '67
Hon.Carolyn Richardson Owens '82
HollyR.Paul '91
CarlC. Robinson '77
Sharon F. Rubalcava '75
Shan K. Thever '74
MarcyJ.K. Tiffany '77
DavidC. Tseng '84
An interview with Dean Prager as she concludes her deanship begins on page 2.
She has been a wise and thoughtfulleader, a terrific administrator anda miraculousfund raiser. Aboveall, by her strongcommitment to pursuingacademic excellence inan open and tolerant community offaculty, students and staff, Susan notonly has helped to maintain whatis bestabout this law school, she herself has embodied it.
PROFESSOR DAVID SKLANSKY


ATHE�FALL SEMESTER BEGAN IN 1996, DEAN SUSAN PRAGER ANNOUNCED THAT SHE WOULD BE STEPPING DOWN AS DEAN. As THE DEAN'S SEARCH COMMITTEE SEARCHES FOR A NEW DEAN, 1997-98 MARKS THE END OF '"(HE ERA IN WHICH DEAN PRAGER PLANNED AND IMPLEMENTED TWO CRUCIAL BUILDING ADDITIONS, GREW THE FACULTY INTO THE PRESTIGIOUS, DIVERSE AND MULTI-FACETED GROUP OF PEOPLE THAT IT IS TODAY AND FURTHERED UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW'S ALREADY OUTSTANDING REPUTATION. UCLA LAW MAGAZINE EDITOR KARENNIKOSASKED DEAN PRAGERTO REFLECT ON HER DEANSHIP.
You havejust entered your 16th year as dean, meaning that you have served nearly four times the national averagefor law deans. Tell us about your decision to step down. Why now?
Inyearsofservice, I rank fifthamongABAlawdeans-and I havelongbeenthesenior dean for length ofservice on the UCLA campus. I recently calculated that well more than halfofthe current faculty has never known another law dean-I don't see that as being particularly healthy for them, for me, or for the institution. This place is vibrant because it draws on so many for its strengths. It shouldn't have a dean for life!
What have been some ofyour greatest challenges andjoys in the role ofdean?
One ofthe things I have liked best is the tremendous breadth ofthis position - and I thrive on interaction with people. Your agenda as a dean is endless and often urgent. It is a continuous struggle to move on the more important questions while people are pressing you to pay attention to less important ones.
How would you describe your approach to thejob?
Assemble an exciting, diverse group offaculty and students and then figure out what they need to do their best. I like to think ofmyselfas a flexibly minded facilitator -a person who will see the potential in the institution and help realize it. Sometimes you just step back and get out ofthe way - the new program in Public Interest Law & Policy is a great example. All the ingredients were there - tremendous talent, energy, drive involving a dozen faculty. All I did was say "yes, yes, let's do this!" Other times you have to push and haul, and in those times youjust have to keep at it- to notgive up because something is hard to achieve.
When you took office, you were thefirst woman dean of the Law School, thefirst woman to be selected asdean of our law school in the UC system, and one of only two women in the nation serving as the dean of a major law school. Can you comment on these milestones and how these ''firsts" could be viewed today?
Judge Dorothy Nelson, of our class of 1953, became the first woman dean of an ABA law school when she was selected as USC's dean in 1969. She proved magnificently chat chis could be done and made the path of those for us who followed in her footsteps enormously easier. I like to think that I have in turn made my own contributions in paving the way for other women.
What do you view as the most visible achievement during your time as dean?
Without question, it is the building. The Clinical Wing was completed in 1989, not only expanding our nationally recognized Clinical Program, but providing an enhanced courtyard that is the heart ofthe law school.
We'll soon complete the library, which makes the law school a new landmark on the campus and a model ofhow technology and traditional materials function together. I've seen how persistence, high standards, careful planning, great architects and devoted alums and friends of the school have come together co create something of enduring value. It's been incredibly satisfying for all of us who have worked to implement Bill Warren's vision ofa building that would equal the greatness ofthe school.
What excites you most about theLaw School today?
The young faculty. They represent the future of the Law School. They're highly committed to furthering a truly great public law school here at UCLA. Many of them are already outstanding teachers who care deeply about their students, and they are already pursuing important research agendas relating to issues ofgreat importance to the society - from criminal law reform to the need to develop new ways oflooking at the law in the technological age to the problems of the environment. As I look at this group, and watch them interact with our terrific senior faculty, I know that the future of the school is extraordinarily strong.
What is UCLA Law School known for? What do we do best?


Susanhas brought a rare blend oftalents to the deanship. While compassionate and supportive, she is also unbending in her commitment to excellence inallofits aspects: diversity of faculty, studentbody and opinion; innovation in teaching, and inspiring and eclectic scholarship.
The first thing that comes to mind about UCLA is that we create a wonderful spirit PROFEssoR GILLIAN LESTER ofcommunity in the Law School where students and faculty by and large work to sup-
Dean Susan Prager
Photo byJilly
She is genuine. There is nofacade. WhenSusan raises an issue or makes a statement in public or inprivatethereareno secret speculations afterwardabout her real purposes. She has learned thatthe way to deal with disagreement is notto pretend itdoesn'texist, butto raise the subject and seek avenues to accommodation. Her exceptionalpolitical skills arefounded in thishonestly, along with an unusal sensitivity to people's concerns.
PROFESSOR KENNETH KARST

port one another. So, we've combined the rigor of legal education with a truly supportive environment. The second thing that comes to mind is great teaching. This is a faculty of wonderful teachers, I would stack them up against any law faculty in the nation in effectiveness ofteaching and enthusiasm for teaching. This is a faculty that proves that great scholarship and excellent teaching can and do go hand-in-hand. A third thing that I think anyone around the country would say about the UCLA Law School is that the Clinical Program is unparalleled in its quality, in the thoughtfulness of the approach to how you teach students, the skills that students need to become lawyers beyond the traditional legal, analytical skills that they're so effectively taught by traditional legal education.
So, there's a breadth of opportunity for students. And finally, we have terrific students in what has been for more than 25 years now, one of the most diverse law student populations in the country.
What are today's students like?
We see tremendous accomplishment, remarkable determination and a great measure of idealism that the work the students are training themselves to do will make a difference in the world. Today's students are deeply interested in bringing about law reform. We see this in our Clinical Program as students work to represent the interests of individual clients in often very difficult circumstances for those clients. We see it in the work that students do as they work with faculty on particular research projects that would lead to law reform. We see it in the volunteer service of students in our greater Los Angeles community.
And, these students come together from all segments of society and from a range of political perspectives - from economically and educationally deprived backgrounds to the most privileged of students. We see the qualities that they all have in common, and we see them developing links to one another in their years here that we believe will last a lifetime.
What are the challengesfor your successor?
We don't have but urgently need a large endowment. This is the only thing that separates us from the other great national law schools. The school welcomed its first class in the fall of 1949, graduating 44 people in 1952, and has not even reached its 50th birthday. This means that we have not yet been able to build the magnificent foundation of private support that all of the other great public law schools have built. So, the exciting thing about the next 25 years is that it presents us with the clear challenge that


that is what we absolutely must do to secure the future of our law school.
In the academic arena, what are the biggestfuture challengesfor the Law School?
Well, I think our ability to build a truly diverse institution became one of the essential elements in our greatness. So, one of the challenges will be how to continue to have the diversity that is so important to our society's future and to the exchange about law reform in the classroom in an environment where we are now prohibited - at least in this window of our history - from considering race in an individual admissions decisions.
The second big challenge relates to the way legal education is changing with more specialized programs, and the need for greater faculty resources including environmental and international programs.
What role do you see the Law Schoolplaying in the community, in society?
I see the Law School as playing a major role in guarding and furthering democratic values - particularly in a period where there have been significant economic challenges, we have seen our democracy under greater stress. Law schools play a very important role in protecting and transmitting the values that are reflected m the Constitution and in the continuing evolution of individual freedoms. Law schools play a significant role in law reform. That's what makes them such exciting places.

What
areyouplanning
to do now?
I want to step back and think about just that question. My life will go one direction or the other, from the sustained inquiry of an individual faculty member to a broader leadership role in a university. Serving as the dean of my own law school has been a tremendous privilege, and of course, I will miss it. At the same time, I look forward to the challenges I will face in this next phase of my life and am eager to see the law school that I care so deeply about enter a new era of greatness.
Iwas talking recently with afaculty member at one ofthe most famous law schools on the planet, one not knownfor saying nice things about its competitors. In the context ofour conversationI hadthe occasion to observe: 'We have the best law school dean in the country.'He thoughta moment andrepliedsolemnly, 1 k ))) now.
FORMER DEAN AND PROFESSOR WILLIAM WARREN

PUBLIC POLICYADVOCACY

UCLALaw classworks tochangeslum housingpolicyin L.A.

T\Vt> teachfoture lawyers the skills and techniques of investigation and advocacy. Public policy advocacy relies very much on those skills. As with all our clinical courses, we aim to teach students ways ofthinking they can use in their lawyering lives. In doing that, we also try to teach them that lawyering means more than litigation: it means helping clients and sometimes communities solve problems by the most appropriate methods.
BYKARENNIKOS,EDITOR,UCLALAWMAGAZINE
E STORIES WERE HORRIFYING. RATS BIT PEOPLE WHILE THEY SLEPT. CHILDREN UFFERED FROM ASTHMA AND OTHER ALLERGIC REACTIO STOTHE COCKROACHES THEY WERE FORCED TOSHARE SPACE WITH IN SLUM APARTMENTS-THEONLYHOMES THEIRFAMILIESCOULDAFFORD.THESEWERESOMEOFTHESTORIESCOLLECTEDBYUCLA SCHOOLOFLAW'SPUBLIC POLICYADVOCACYCOURSESTUDENTSINSPRING 1995 ASTHEY PREPARED DECLARATIONSFILED IN SUPPORT OF ASUCCESSFUL LAWSUIT AGAINST ONEOF LosANGELESMORENOTORIOUSSLUMLORDS,MILTONAvOL.
But the students and Professor Gary Blasi, who has taught the course for three consecutive spring semesters, knew that going after one landlord barely would make a dent in a community where 156,000 apartment units - or about 10 percent of the total housing stock- are in substandard condition. So Blasi guided his spring 1997 class a step further. Acting as the investigative staff to a Blue Ribbon Citizens Committee on Slum Housing- co-chaired by the Rev. Donald Merrifield, Chancellor of Loyola Marymount University and Don Mullane, Executive Vice President of Bank of America- Blasi and his students investigated in great detail the housing code enforcement practices of the city and county agencies responsible for slum housing. Their work has resulted in what appears to be the beginnings of a transformation of policy regarding slum housing.
"This is an example of what we try to do here in the Clinical Program, said Blasi," who as an attorney was involved in the first damage and injunction cases against slumlords in the city "We teach future lawyers the skills and techniques of investigation and advocacy. Public policy advocacy relies very much on those skills. As with all our clinical courses, we aim to teach students ways of thinking they can use in their lawyering lives. In doing that, we also try to teach them that lawyering means more than litigation: it means helping clients and sometimes communities solve problems by the most appropriate methods."
This fall, as some of the student researchers headed back to school and others were donning suits for their new law jobs, the Los Angeles City Council adopted in principle the recommendations based on the students work. The recommendations call for, among other things, establishing a unit dedicated exclusively to housing inspections instead of having the responsibility fall to multiple agencies, and providing for routine periodic inspections of housing - rather than responding only to citizen complaints. A recommendation that landlords fix dangerous conditions within 48 hours of receiving a citation or face a city repair bill was signed into law by Mayor Richard Riordan during the summer. In November, the City Council approved a plan to hire 60 to 80 new inspectors to make routine inspections of apartments. The report has recommended that the costs of the improved oversight be offset by collection of fees from landlords or tenams, with costs allocated most heavily to those who violate the law.
"We appear to be in the middle of the most significant reform in housing policy in recent years," said Blasi, who has taught at the Law School since 1991. 'Tm proud that our students were able to play such a vital role in making that happen."
Nancy Mintie '79, who served on the citizens committee and is director and founder oflnner City Law Center, said the students research under Blasi's leadership gave the com-
mittee statisticsandanalysis-academicmusclerequiredtomove public policy forward. "This is unprecedented-that thecity has moved forward on this issue is remarkable." Mintie, who has worked with landlord/tenant issues for nearly two decades in her workwiththepoor,observedthatuntilthestudywasdone,noone hadtakenthetimetoresearchhowthecityhandledhousingcomplaints and howthe process could be improved. "It's encouraging. This is more progress than I have seen in 18 years."
Chancellor Merrifield, of Loyola Marymount University, echoed that praise. "None of this would have been possible without Professor Blasi and his students.Their work was terrific."
Students said they were pleased to see their work produce results.This wasachancetoreallymake adifferenceand see somethinghappen,saidLeo Trujillo-Cox,a 1997 UCLALawgraduatewhoas oneof 12studentsinthecourselooked principallyathowtheDepartmentof BuildingandSafety operated.Studentsalsolooked at the workings of the Health Department and the City Attorney's Office. "We had to assess howthedepartment operated ifweweregoingtorecommendwaystomakeitrun better," he said.
Students found the department did not operate particularly well. For one thing, inspectorsconcentrated mainly on newconstruction- thefees from whichprovide revenue for thedepartment- rather than existing housing. Furthermore, virtually nothing was done aboutproblems inexisting housing unless a complaint was made.
Makingcomplaintsprovedto be achallenge- the process took severalhours forone student whomade acomplaint as part of her research.When she finally found someone with whom to lodge a complaint, shecould not find anyone who spoke Spanish.
Blasi said that while the course gives students some exposure to real-world problems, it alsoteaches them fundamental legal skills, particularly fact investigation, that willhelp studentsregardlessoftheircareer objectives.Thecourse alsogives fundamentallessonsin advocacy. "I explain to students that whether they will work for the NRA or abortion rights, the advocacy skills are roughly the same," Blasi said.
Professor Blasi added that he also tries to impress on students that public policy is an area in which the courthouse is not the natural venue for change, and the judge or jurynot thenaturaldecision-maker."Therearenorulesof procedure; thereis nocourt ofpublicpolicy.Thereisonlythecourt ofpublicopinionandthe politicalsystem,and you must workwithinthat system."
ChrisMailhot,astudentintheclasswhograduatedinMay,saidthatalthough shehas workedinimmigrationlawandperformedotherpublicinterestwork,shehadnotrealized the grand scale of the housing problem in Los Angeles until she met people who live in poor housing. "I didn't really realize that people lived in such bad conditions - it's not somethingwearereallyexposedto,"saidMailhot,whowithotherstudentsattendedatenants meetingheldinCityCouncilwomanJackieGoldberg's office. "Youcanreadabout it, and just go back to your apartment in Westwood andforget about it. Butmeeting these people putafaceon the problem, and I feltwe really couldmakechanges."


NancyMintie'79,amemberofaBlueRibbonCitizens CommitteeonSlumHousing,observesachild'srash, thatwascausedbyanallergytocockroaches. ArdonAlgerphoto
We appear to be in the middle ofthe most significant reform in housing policy in recent years. Tm proud that our students were able to play such a vital role in making that happen.
PROFESSOR GARY BLASI

Plumbingproblemsareacommon complaintinLosAngelesslumhousing. Photo CourtesyofInner CityLaw Center


ABY SHEIL;\ CASEY, STAFF WRITER
STEENAGERS, FRANCIS ]AMES AND ]EFF PRIETO WERE INHABITING DRAMATICALLYDIFFERENTWORLDS. ]AMES SPENT A YEAR IN CHINA GETTING HIS FIRST EXPOSURE TO THE REGION THAT EVENTUALLY WOULD BECOME THE FOCUS OF HIS CAREER. PRIETO WAS LIVING IN SANTA BARBARA AND HAD BEEN DRAWN INTO A LARGECHICANOSTREET GANG.
Today,thesetwoUCLASchoolofLaw alumniworkjustblocksfromeachotheras partofaselectgroupof 15futureleaders knownastheWhiteHouseFellows.
Althoughlittleknownamongthepublicatlarge,thisprestigiousfellowshipprogram attracts approximately 500 applicants and is generally recognized as a springboard to future success. Former White House Fellows include Colin Powell, retired chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Henry Cisneros, former Housing and Urban Development secretary, and Joan Abrahamson, president of theJonasSalkFoundation.
Weareproudthattwoofthe15fellows are UCLA School of Law alumni and thought other alums would be interested in hearing about the lives and work of thesefascinatingindividuals.
Jeff Prieto '95 and Francis James '90 are White House Fellows.
Photo byMichaelA. Milkovich
From the back streets to the White House
"It'shardtoexplainhowempoweringitistobeinagang," saysJeffPrieto'95."People don'tmesswithyou, and yougetrespect." Andalthoughhisgang affiliation exposedhim to the seamy side of life -he has seen both beatings and shootings - older gang members didn't want Prieto to blow his opportunities. They encouraged him to return to school atUC Santa Barbara, where he had been pursuing a bachelor's degree.
Interestingly, Prieto eventually made a career out of something that was a primary focus ofgangactivity: public space. "Historically, Chicanogangs have always foughtover territory," says Prieto. "It's territory that belongs to the public, that no one can own, yet gang members fight to claim that space as their own and prevent other gangs from walking down that sidewalk or using that park."
After graduating with a degree in history in 1983, Prieto joined the city of Santa Barbara Planning Division and worked his way up through the ranks to the position of environmental analyst in 1990. He then spent two years as a senior environmental planner withtheJM ConsultingGroupbeforeenrollingattheUCLA SchoolofLawin 1992. AfterreceivinghisJ.D.,hebeganstudiesatPrincetonUniversitytoearnamaster'sdegree in public affairs in urban and regional planning.
While in law school, Prieto was mentored by Professor Jerry Lopez, who later urged Prieto to apply for the White House Fellowship program and wrote him a letter of recommendation.Hewasaccepted,andin Septembermovedwithhiswifeandtwochildren fromNewJerseytoWashington,D.C.,wherehebeganhisWhiteHouseFellowship.Even after his years of education and achievement, Prieto was reminded of his gang days. "Getting myWhite House security clearance wasa bit moreofachallengefor methanit was for most fellows," he quips.
ReportingtoDonna Shalala, head oftheDepartmentofHealth andHuman Services, Prieto isideallysituatedtoobservepolicyandpoliticsinaction.Secretary Shalalaoversees adepartmentof 60,000employeesthatencompassestheNationalInstituteofHealth, the Food and Drug Administration, and theMedicare,Medicaid andHead Start programs.
Prieto attends meetings with Shalala, discusses projects with her, and gets an insider's viewofgovernment by watching a Cabinet officialinaction.The fellowshipsaredesigned with three main components: a work assignment; purely educational experiences such as lectures; and travel,internationallyanddomestically.The fellowsmeetregularly withhigh level officials from all branches of government. For example, all 15 fellows recently met withRepublicanSenatorJohnMcCainfromArizona,ChairoftheCommerceCommittee, whois widely regarded as theleading Republican candidate for president for2000.
Prieto says chat in Shalala's office he is able to work on the kinds of urban issues he cares about. "Urban space issues arehealth issues," says Prieto of his Health and Human Services work. "Issues of transportation, noise, crowding, park space for recreationthese all dramatically impact the well-being of a neighborhood's denizens."
Prieto has already far outdistanced his former compatriots in gangland, yet he keeps looking back.He is keenlyaware chat the opportunities he has enjoyed are not accessible tomanyLatinos,and with every step forward intotheupper echelonsofpower andprestige,hisdeterminationgrowstousehiseducationandinfluencetoimprovethequalityof life for those still burdened by poverty, lack of education - and poor urban planning. "WhateverI do,I want to serve the larger Latino community," saysPrieto.
Urban space issues arehealth issues. Issues oftransportation, noise, crowding,park spaceforrecreationthesealldramatically impactthewell-being ofaneighborhood's denizens.
)EFF PRIETO


Itwasoften a delicate matter farthem toargue a casebeforea judge who didn't know thelaw but, ofcourse, couldn'tadmitit.
FRANCIS ]AMES '90 ON HIS LEGAL REFORM WORK IN CAMBODIA

Bringing Lawto Cambodia
In January 1994, Cambodia was a country virtually without lawyers. The Khmer Rouge had methodically slaughtered all educated Cambodians in an attempt to return the nation to a simple agrarian lifestyle. In a land of 9 million people, only five lawyers remained.The United Nations drafted a criminal procedure code to replace the laws that the Vietnamese had imported during their occupation of the past 12 years, and the International Human Rights Law Group advertised for an intrepid soul to come to Cambodia and train the first group of lawyers.
Francis James '90 was up to the challenge. He left his job as deputy public defender with the Federal Public Defender's Office in Los Angeles, moved to Phnom Penh and took on the task of training 25 Cambodians in the rudiments of criminal law. "It was a IO-month training, and at the end of it we shut down our school. The next day, we opened as the public defender's office."
The new attorneys soon would find out that they knew more than the judges in the country, most of whom had been appointed for political reasons. "It was often a delicate matter for them to argue a case before a judge who didn't know the law but, of course; couldn't admit it," says James.
Two years later, James founded Legal Aid of Cambodia, which handles both civil and criminal cases for poor clients, and he has since opened two Legal Aid offices in Vietnam. He is working on establishing a similar program in Laos.
These are hefty accomplishments for a 33-year-old, but James has been preparing for it for the past 16 years. He was just 17 when he spent his sophomore year in Taiwan while earning his bachelor's degree in government and Asian studies from Notre Dame. After his graduation, he went to Singapore on a Rotary Foundation scholarship to do graduate work in Chinese language. The next year, 1986, he worked in Dalian, China for the U.S. Department of Commerce, training Chinese managers in American business practices. The following year, he spent eight months working at refugee camps in Hong Kong and Thailand, where he set up an English training program for refugees bound for the United States.
Time spent in developing countries has given James a fresh perspective on life in the United States. ''After four years over there, I see not only how wealthy Americans are, but how rushed and harried we are too. Although Cambodians are poor, they have time with their families and they are generally happy. I don't pity them. In fact, I think we are the ones to be pitied."
As a White House Fellow in Washington, D.C., James works as a special assistant to Ambassador Charlene Barshefsky, the U.S. Trade Representative. "The United States represents only four percent of the world's population," says James. "We will be left behind if we don't understand trade issues."
As for the future, James plans to continue to work in the areas of legal reform, and he may possibly teach. "It is just so true that the more you give, the more you get back," he says. ''And I feel incredibly grateful to have had the opportunities I've had."
LAW SCHOOL WELCOMES LARGE, CULTURALLY DIVERSE CLASS

Tclass of 2000, which is the la,ll'sc in mo« than a decade with 381 scuden�, includes ajourneyman electrician; the found�r of a wholesale trading company who lived inJapan; a young woman who supported her four brothers and sisters and grandmother while working toward her bachelor's degree; and an immigrant from El Salvador whose parents never attended school beyond the third grade.
"The first-year enrollment reflects a changing population, particularly in Southern California," reflected Michael Rappaport, the Law School's Dean of Admissions. "Specifically, we have seen an increase in people who have immigrated - or their parents haveimmigrated- from countries all over the world."
Faculty commented that they appreciate the cultural diversity of this year's class. "I have atremendousinternationalmix in my contracts class," said Professor Arthur Rosett. "It makes for very interesting class discussion.Ithinkthisisagoodclassofstudents who seem happy to be here and eager to learn."
The class is 4.6 percent female and 54 percent male, and 35 percent are from minority groups that are underrepresented in the legal profession. They come from more than 100 undergraduate institutions, are from 17 states and were borri in 17 countries.

The class, which emerged from 3,957 applicants, has 39 Hispanics, 10 African Americans, 82 Asian Americans and one American Indian. When averaging minority enrollments during the previous six years, this represents a 73 percent reduction in African Americans and a 27 percent reduction in Latinos. Asian Americans increased from that period by about 50 percent and American-Indian enrollment decreased by 80 percent.
For the first time in 30 years, UCLA School of Law- which has become a hallmark of diversity in legal education - was unable to consider race in admissions under laws that went into effect this fall. Although UCLA achieved more racial diversity than other lawschoolsundersimilarlegal restrictions, enrollmentofAfricanAmericansdroppedsub-

Professor Cruz Reynoso speaks to students during Teach-In held in September. The Teach-In, organized by students, aimed to educate students and faculty on the effects of Proposition 209 and the Regents' resolutions eliminating affirmative action.


stantially and the number of Latino students also was reduced.
This year, the school considered socioeconomic factors, in addition to grades, test scores and other indicators.
Although numbers of underrepresented minorities dropped, UCLA experienced an increase in the yield of those accepted. ''Although under the UC Regents resolutions were unable to admit as many African American and Latino students as we have in the years following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in the Bakke case, we are very pleased that those underrepresented minority students who accepted our invitations to enroll did so at a substantially higher rate than in past years," said Dean Susan Prager. Recruitment efforts also produced the largest class in more than a decade, forcing students to have to sit on floors and find makeshift desks the first days of class.
"UCLA students, faculty and our admissions staffworked hard to recruit the students were able to admit, and in that connection - our location in Los Angeles, which is such and diverse and vibrant place, is a tremendous advantage," Prager added. A Los Angeles Times article appearing in the Life & Style section in early October cited the environmental factors as a reason for minority students choosing to come to UCLA School of Law.
Dean Prager said she is disappointed in the decline in diversity. "Compared to our historical averages, these figures still represent a significant decline in minority enrollment to the detriment of the university and our increasingly diverse society."
Currently, a committee is reviewing the results of this admissions cycle to determine what, if any, changes should be made for next year. Student groups organized a "TeachIn" in September that brought together students and faculty to discuss anti-affirmative action laws and their implications in a scholarly setting one afternoon. As Associate Dean Stephen Yeazell noted, "The remarkable quality of the teach-in lay in its thoughtfulness. Both the statements and the questions from the audience came to the issues with strong feelings,but with equally strong concern that there be more than feelings about the debate - that there be accuracy, respect for law and understanding."
The University Counsel's office also is working to determine the restrictions that must be imposed in light of the enactment of Proposition 209 - the California initiative that eliminated preferences on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin in public employment, contracting and education. Under the leadership of Vice Chancellor Winston Doby, UCLA is intensifying its efforts to encourage applications as well as to stimulate further efforts to assist students in preparing for their undergraduate years. The Law School will be an active participant and will involve alumni and current students in this effort.
Professor Kenneth Karst speaks to new students on Orientation DayinAugust.
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The Office is now staffed with three new professional counselors, all of us being former legal practitioners. 'We will provide personal counseling appointments to alumni seeking career advice. Moreover, alumni can use the comprehensive resource library, located in the Office, that includes job listings; legal newspapers and periodicals; and information on private and public employers, legal practice areas, and the job search process. A Lexis password is available to you so that you can perform career searches on the Lexis database. The Office now posts all of its job listings on the Internet, with a restricted password for UCLA students and alumni, so that you can have immediate access to the Office's job listings from any location where Internet use is available. For those or you who do not have Internet access, we can mail the Graduate Job Bulletin to you at your request. In addition, ifyou would like access to another law school's resource library outside the Southern California area, the Office can request reciprocity with that school. You are automatically entitled to use the other UC law schoolt career resource libraries, subject to restrictions during certain times of year.
The Office of Career Services can also assist you with all of your hiring needs. The Office will post, at no cost, listings for summet academic year, entry level or lateral positions on the restricted Internet site and in job listing binders available in the Office. Moreover, the Office will collect and send you resumes of candidates who fit your hiring criteria and help arrange interviews on the campus or at your office. You can submit job listing requests to the career services via e-mail at careers@law.ucla.edu; through the Offices Internet site at the Law School home page www.law.ucla.edu (choose Career Services); or by fax to (310) 825-9450.
Since alumni can play a vduable role in the career development of students, the Office has designed a variety of programs and wents to encourage student/alumni interaction and maximize alumni participation in career-related programs. These include a Fall Mock Interview Program in Practitioners Offices, an Annual Government Reception and Information Fair as well as a Small/Mid-Size Firm Reception, a weekly Practice Specialty Brown Bag Lunch Series, an Alumni Mentor Program, and many other informational programs throughout the year.
If you would like to participate in or receive more information on any of the programs or seryices offered by the Office of Career Services, please call (310) 206-1117 or e-mul the Office at careers@lawucla.edu.
Avrv BEnExsoN MALLo\r Assrcr,qNT DEArv FoR C.e.nrza Stautcrs

Newfacultyjoin UCLA Law 'A
sUCLACONTINUESTO BUILDITS CURRICULUM, THE GROUP OF OUTSfANDING SCHOLARSTEACHING COURSES ALSO CONTINUES TO GROW. THIS YEAR AMONG THE NEW FACULTY APPOINTMENTS ARETWO FAMILIAR FACES: KENNETH KLEE, JOININGTHE FACULTY FULL-TIME, HASTAUGHT AS AN ADJUNCT LECTURERFOR 18 YEARS, ANDJILL BROWNWHO GRADUATEDFROM UCLAIN 1991, JOINS UCLALAW AS ITS NEW LITIGATION DIRECTOR, HELPING MANAGE THE LITIGATION HANDLED BY OUR STUDENTS IN THE MANY HANDS-ON COURSES WE OFFER.
NEW FACES WHO JOIN US THIS YEAR ARE DEVON CARBADO, TEACHING COURSES IN CRIMINAL LAW; GAURANG MITU GULATI, IN BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS AND SECURITIES REGULATION; AND WILLIAM RUBENSTEIN, TEACHING CIVIL PROCEDUREANDA (:OURSEINSEXUALIDENTITYANDTHE LAW. FINALLY, OUR FINE LAWYERING SKILLS PROGRAM, IN WHICH STUDENTS LEARN NOT ONLYTHE EVER-IMPORTANT RESEARCH AND WRITING SKILLS BUT ALSO GAIN HANDS-ON EXPERIENCE IN LAWYERING THROUGH SIMULATIONS, HAS ADDED ERIC BARRON TO ITS LIST OF LECTURERS.

Devon Carbado teaches Criminal Procedure and is developing a new course, Criminal Adjudication. Be received his bachelor's degree in 1991 from UCLA, where he received the UCLA Alumni Association's Academic Achievement Award and his J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1994. After receiving his law degree, Carbado joined Latham & Watkins in Los Angeles before being appointed as a Faculty Fellow and visiting associate professor ofLaw at the University of Iowa College ofLaw.
Carbado is the author of "The Construction of 0.]. Simpson as a Racial Victim," Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 1997; and "Motherhood and Work in Cultural Context: One Woman's Patriarchal Bargain," HarvardWomensLawjournal (forthcoming).

Gaurang Mitu Gulati teaches Business Associations and Securities Regulation. He received his bachelor's degree from the University of Chicago in 1988, his master's degree in economics from Yale University in 1991 and his J.D. from Harvard in 1994. He received the Yale University Fellowship. After finishing at Harvard in 1994, Gulati worked for a year as an associate with the law firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton in New York, where he focused on structuring debt transactions and securitizing receivables. He then clerked for the Honorable Sandra L. Lynch of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and for the Honorable Samuel A. Alito,Jr. ofthe United States Court ofAppeals for the Third Circuit in Newark, N.J.
Gulati's publications include: "Why are There so Few Black Lawyers in Corporate Law Firms" 84 CaliforniaLawReview 432 (1996); and "Remnants of Matriliny: Widows of Two Kerala Villages" 76 MANUSHI: journalofWomenandSociety 32 (1993) (with .Leela Gulati).


Kenneth Kleejoined the faculty in fall 1997 as acting professor of law after 18 years as a visiting lecturer.
Klee will teach Bankruptcy in fall 1997 and a new six-unit course in the spring, "Creating Value through RenegotiatingBusinessAgreements."
He has also taught at USC Law Center, and in 1995-96 served as Robert Braucher Visiting Professorfrom Practiceat HarvardLawSchool.
Klee received his bachelor's degree from Stanford University (1971) and hisJ.D. from Harvard (1974), where hewas on the Board of Editors of the Harvardjournalon Legislation. He then served as an associate counsel for the House Committee on the Judiciary, and as a consultant to that body (1977-82), as well as to the United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (1983-84). KleehaspracticedbothwithShutan&TrostP.C.and 1980joinedStutman,Treister &GlattP.C.wherehewasashareholder from 1981 until 1997. During this time Klee has been bothaleadingpractitionerandanactiveparticipantinlawreform efforts; heiswidelypublishedandcitedonbankruptcy law.
Klee's professional activities include being the American Law Institute's representative to the 1996 annual meeting of the NationalConference ofCommissionerson UniformState Laws; adviser to theAmerican Law Institute'sTransnational Insolvency Project; and member of the Judicial Conference Advisory Committee o� Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, by appointment of U.S. Chief Justice, chairperson, Long Range Planning. He served on the National Bankruptcy Conference since 1978, was on its ExecutiveCommittee from 1985-88, and iscurrentlychairpersonontheCommitteeonLegislation.

William B. Rubenstein will be teaching Sexual Orientation and the LawandCivilProcedure. Agraduate of Yale College and Harvard Law School, where he received a Harvard Fellowship in Public Interest Law, Rubenstein clerked for U.S. District JudgeStanleySporkininWashington D.C. He then spent a number of years with the AmericanCivil Liberties Union's national Lesbian and Gay Rights Project and nationalAIDS Project, whichhedirectedfrom1990to1995.
Rubenstein has written extensively about issues concerning sexuality andhealth.
Throughout his years at the ACLU, Rubenstein taught coursesonsexualorientation law at Harvard, YaleandStanford law schools, where he taught basic law courses and courses on sexuality issues.
Barron becomes Lawyering Skillslecturer

Eric Barron joins UCLA School of Law in 1997 as a lecturer in the Lawyering Skills program. He received his bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1985 and his J.D. from University of Michigan Law School in1990.
After law school, he clerked for JudgeJoseph W Hatchett of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. Before joining UCLA, Barron worked in civil litigationatTroopMeisingerSteuber & Pasich.

Alum becomes Litigation Director
Jill Brown'91 has returned ro UCLA this fall as litigation director for the clinical program. She will coteach Discovery & Depositions and Thial Advocacy, with primary responsibiliry for managing the litigation matters worked on by students in these courses. Brown received her bachelor's degree from Harvard (1987) and her J.D. from UCLA School of Law (1991). After receiving her law degree, Brown joined Heller, Ehrman, \flhite & McAuliffet Los Angeles office as a litigation associate. From 7994 to 1997 , she also was a volunteer attorney for the Los Angeles County Bar Association Barristers Domestic Violence Project.
Visiting Faculty
Gatherine Fisk, visiting professor, teaches Labor Law I and Employment Discrimination this fall. She is professor of law at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. Fisk received her bachelort degree from Princeton Universiry (1983), her J.D. from UC Berkeley (Boalt Hall '86), and her LL.M from the University of \Wisconsin (1995). Ar Boalt, Fisk was executive editor and student articles editor of the Berkeley Womenls Law Journal. Nter graduation from law school, Fisk clerked for Ninth Circuit Judge William A. Norris, after which she practiced in Los Angeles and \Tashingron, D.C. Fisk taught at \Tisconsin before coming to Loyola in 1992.
Fiskt publications include: "The Filibust er," 49 Srunford Laut Reuiew l9l (1997, with Erwin Chemerinsky): "The Last Article About the Language of ERISA Preemption? A Case Study of the Failure of txtualism," 33 Haruard. Jourrual 0n Legislation 35 (1996); and Lochruer Redux: the Renaissance of Laissez-Faire Contract in the Federal Common Law of Employee Benefits," 56 Ohio State Law Journal I53 (t995).
Stephen Gardbaum is visiting UCLA this fall from Northwesrern University and is teaching European Union Law and Comparative Constitutional Law. Gardbaum holds several degrees, including a bachelor's degree from Oxford University (1980); C.P.E., The College of Law, London (1981); M.Sc. in sociology, the Universiry of London (1985); M. Phil. in political science, Columbia Universiry (1987); and ph.D. in political science from Columbia (1989)i J.D., yale Law School (1990). At Yale, he was senior editor of The Yale Law Journal (1 eBe-eo).
After taking his solicitort final examination in l9B2 at The College of Law London, Gardbaum became a solicitor with Kingsley Napley of London, working in litigation and European Community law. Later, ar Columbia Universiry, he was a President's Fellow and a graduate Teaching Fellow.
Gardbaum's publications include "Liberalism, Autono fry, and Moral Conflicr," 48 Smnford Law Reuiew 385-417 (1996); "Rethinking Con'stitutional Federalism," T4 Tbxas Law Reuiew 795-B3B (1996); "The Nature of Preemprion," g7 Cornell Law Reuiew757-815 (1994) and many other writings.
Peter Goodrich, formerly dean of the Departmenr of Law and Corporation of London and professor of law at the University of London, Birkbeck College, rerurns as visiting professor this fall. Goodrich, who also taught at UCLA last spring, teaches Conffacts, Torts, Jurisprudence, Legal History, Law and Literature, and Legal Methods.
Goodrich received his LL.B from the Universiry of Sheffield, England (1975), and his Ph.D. from the universiry of Edinburgh (1984). His previous appointments include: associate director, Center for Semiotic Research in Law, Pennsylvania State Universiry; lecturer in jurisprudence, Centre for Criminology and the Social and Philosophical Study of Law, University of EdinburBh; and director of graduate studies and senior lecturer in l.w University of Lancaster. Goodrich is editor-in-chief of Law and Critique and editor for The International Journat fo, the
Semiotics of Law. Goodricht books include : Law iru the Courts of Loue: Literature and Other Miruor Jurisprud,ences, (1996); Oedipus Lex: Psychoanalysis, History Law (1995); and Reading the Law: A Critical Introd,uctioru to Legal Method and, Techniques (1986). Rece nt book chapters and articles include "Gender and Contracts" in Anne Bottomley (.d.) , Feminist Perspectiues oru the Foundational Subjects of Law (London: Cavendish Press, 1996); "Twining's Tower: Metaphors of Distance and Histories of the English Law School," 45 Miami Law Reuiew (1995) 901; and "Law in the Courts of Love: Andreas Capellanus and the Judgments of Love :' 48 Stanford Law kuiett (1996) 601.
Grayson McGouch, currently professor of law at the University of Miami, joins us as a visiting professor in fall 1997. He teaches Wills and Thusts and Federal Tax III. McCouch received his bachelor's degree from Harvard (1979) and his J.D. from Stanford (1 982), where he was associate editor of the Stanford Lau Reuiew. He was a research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright and Competition Law in Munich, Ge rmany. McCouch clerked for Judge Hugh Bownes of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, Concord, N.H. He worked as an associate for the law firm of Sullivan and Vorcester in Boston, and then for the law firm of Dorsey & \Thitney in Minneapolis. He received his LL.M. (Taxation) from Boston Universiry in 1990.In the same year, McCouch was appointed to the faculry of the University of Miami Law School.
McCoucht publications include: Gratuitous Thansfers (4th edition) co-authored with Elias Clark, Louis Lusky, Arthur Murphy, and Mark Ascher, to be published by \flest Publishing Co. in 1998; "\7omen, Fairness, and Social Securiry," 82 lowa Law Reuiew (forthcoming, 1997), co-authored with Karen C. Burke; and "Privattznrgsocial Security: Eight Myths," 74 Thx lVotes 1167 (L997), also co-authored with Karen C. Burke.

Gurtis Milhaupt, an associate professor of law at \flashington University in St. Louis since 1994, joins us as visiting professor this fall to teach Business Associations and Japanese Law.
Milhaupt received his bachelor's degree from Notre Dame (1984) and his J.D. from Columbia University School of Law (1989), where he served on the Columbia Law Reuiew. After graduation, Milhaupt worked as an associate with Shearman and Sterling in New York and Tokyo. He has been an associate research scholar at Columbia and aJapan Foundation Fellow at the University of Tokyo. Milhaupt has also served as a member of the Special Committee on Asian Affairs of the Association of the Bar of New York Ciry. He has taught Business Planning, Comparative Law (Japan), Corporations, and Banking Law
Milhaupt's publications include: 'A Relational Theory of Japanese Corporate Governance: Contract, Culture, and the Rule of Law," 37 Haruard lruterruational Law Jourrual 3 (1996); "Path Dependence and Comparative Corporate Governance," (.oauthored with Ronald Mann) 74 Washingtoru Uniuersity Law Quarterly 31,7 (1996); and "The Market for Innovation in the United States and Japan: Venture Capital and the Comparative Corporate Governance Deb ate," 9l lVorthwestern Uniuersity Law Reuiew 865 (1997).
Xavier Philippe, professor of law at Aix-Marseille in France, joined us as a visiting professor during the fall and taught a three-week course in French public Ia*, which focused on the French system of public law in a European context. Philippe was educated in France where he completed his Ph.D. at the University of AixMarseille III in 1989. From l99l to 1995, h. was supervisor of the chronicle, Tbndering Contrdcts Ln the European yearbook of public administration and associate to the lruternational Yearbook of Constitutiorual Reuiew. Philippe served as vice dean of the faculry of law at the University of Reunion Island. He has been a visiting professor at the Universiry of the \Testern Cape in the Republic of South Africa since 1995.
Michael Small joins us as a visiting professor in fall 1997 to teach Constitutional Law II. Small received his bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan (1982) and his J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center (1986), where he was editor in chief of the Georgetowru Law Journal. As a Fulbright Scholar he studied at the Center for International Human Rights Law, Essex University, England.
Small was an attorney with \flilmer, Cutler & Pickering in Vashington, D.C., where he worked on cases in civil rights, reproductive rights and banking. Small also served as deputy associate attorney general, Department of Justice.
He has published "The New Legal Regime: Affirmative Action After Cronson and Metro," in Lost Opporturuities: A Report oru the Ciuil Rights Record of the Bush Administratioru (Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights, l99I), and "Enforcing International Human Rights Law in Federal Courts: The Alien Tort Statute and the Separation of Powe rs," 7 4 Georgetown Law Journal 163 (1985).

Lionel Sobel '69, professor of law at Loyola Law School, joins us for 1997 -98 as visiting professor. He will teach Entertainment Law in the fall and Copyright in the spring. Sobel received his bachelort degree in economics from UC Berkeley (1965) and his J.D. from UCLA School of Law. At UCLA he was editor of the UCLA Grad,uate Journal and awarded the National Second Prrze in the 1959 ASCAP Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition for the article, "Copyright and the First Amendment: A Gathering Storm?"
After graduating from law school, Sobel practiced law in Los Angeles, becoming a partner at Freedman & Sobel, Beverly Hills. Sobel was an instructor in law at USC Law, and joined the Loyola faculry in 1982. Since 1978 Sobel has been editor and publisher of the Entertainment Laru Reporter, Sobel's publications include: Professional Sports and the Law (Law-Arts Publishers 1977) and Supplement (Law-Arts Publishers 1981); "The Regulation of Player Agents and Lawyer, Chap.1," The Law ofProfessional andAmateur Sports, updated (G. Uberstine, €d., 1990); "soundtrack Music, Chap. 184A," 4 Entertairument Industry Contracts (D. Farber and S. Fox, eds., 1 9BB); "Introduction: Symposium on Independent Producrions," 12 Loyola Entertairument Law Journalxi (1992).

F,ICULTY NOTE,S
Richard Ahel has two books coming out this winter Lawyers: A Critical Reader (New York: New Press) and Speaking Respect, fuspeuing Speech (Chicago: Universiry of Chicago Press). In the spring, he lectured at the 50th anniversary of the Japanese Sociology of Law Association in Tolryo, at Kyoto University and at a conference on the transition to Chinese rule in Hong Kong. In October he spoke at the inaugural meeting of the World Law Institute in Atlanta on transnational lawyering. Former President Jimmy Carter and former Soviet Executive President Mikhail Gorbachev were the keynote speakers.
Professors Abel and Rick Sander are excited to be teaching the workshop for the new Public Interest Law Program for an inaugural class of 27 students.
Michael Asimow spent his sabbatical leave during fall 1997 at the University of Sydney Law School, where he studied Australian administrative tribunals, delivered a lecture comparing American and Australian administrative law and vacationed on the Great Barrier Reef. Drawing on material in Reel Justice: The Cour*oom Goes to the Mouies (coauthored with Paul Bergman), h. gave several lectures in Australia and the U. S. on lawyers as heroes and scoundrels in the movies. Asimow continues to be active with the Sunday Free Legal Clinic, in which UCLA law student and attorney volunteers offer legal assistance in South Central Los Angeles. He welcomes volunteer help frorn alumni. The clinic recently received the Irving J. Fain Award for reform congregations that conduct social action programs of special distinction. It was given to Temple Isaiah, one of the partners in the clinic, by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, which is the national organization of reform synagogues.
Stephen Bainbridge [who has just joined us from the Illinois law faculry following in Bill tffarren's footsteps], has developed a new course on Mergers & Acquisitions, which he is teaching this fall. The course has a transactional emphasis and concentrates on strategic planning in the takeover context. He is finishing up an article on the economics of employee involvement in corporate decision making, which he will present at a conference at Columbia University next spring.
Paul Bergman has had a busy 1997 He wrote a third edition of Trial Aduocacy in a lVutshell, which was published in August. He also wrote a second edition of Represent Yourself in Court and a new book, The Criminal Law Handbook, both for Nolo Press. Based on their book Reel Justice, he and Mike Asimow have been giving film clip- based presentations about legal ethics and trial rules and tactics to law firms, the Los Angeles County Bar Association, the California Judges Association and the Houston Law School's 50th Anniversary Meeting. He is currently working on a book on depositions with Professors Al Moore and David Binder.
David Binder is completing a preliminary empirical assessment of how lawyers respond during depositions when a deponent answers, "I cant recall" or "l dont remember." Along with Professors Al Moole and Paul Bergman, he is also completing a book on deposing adverse witnesses.
Gary Blasi spent two weeks in China last summer, lecturing on United States public interest law at law schools in \7uhan and Beijing, and meeting with lawyers, professors and students who are trying to create a public interest law practice under extremely challenging circumstances. He also furthered the work of the UCLA Law students in the Public Policy Advocacy seminar who were the investigative staff to the Blue Ribbon Citizens' Committee on Slum Housing last spring.
In the past few months, the reports based on the committee's work have been widely publicized and their recommendations have been accepted by both Los Angeles city and county governments. (See Page 6.) Blasi has used the work as an opportunity to gather data for a project that loola at the nature of innovation in public interest law practice.
Ann Carlson, who directs the Frank G. \X/ells Environmental Law Clinic at UCLA, has now added the Property course to her teaching.
the law library addition, to plan.
The fourth edition of Jesse Dukeminier's book, Dukeminier and Blrier, Properfl,will be available in February 1998. It was first published in 1981.
Professor Dukeminier enthusiastically awaits the completion of which he did so much
Jody Freeman recenrly published "Collaborative Governance in the Administrative Srate" 45 UCLA Law Reuiew, No. | (1997) on the potential of ADR instruments such as regulatory negotiation to facilitate collaboration in the regulatory process. This summer, she delivered a lecture to the law faculry of Stellenbosch University in South Africa on environmental federalism in the United States. Professor Freeman will be teaching a new course, Toxic Torts, in spring 1998.
Susan French is teaching a course in community association law using a book that she is co-authoring with \(ayne Hyatt, Adjunct Professor at Emory University School of Law. The course deals with the law governing common-interest communities, such as condominiums and other real estate developments with mandatory homeowner associations. The book will be published in spring 1998 by Carolina Academic Press.
Carole Goldberg presented a paper titled "Overextended Borrowing: Native American Peacemaking Applied to Non-Indian Disputes" at the Universi ty of \flashington symposium on Indian Law. The paper will be published by the Uniuersiry of Washington Law Reuiew. She also recendy published an article, "Pursuing Thibal Economic Development at 'The Bingo Palace,"' 29 Arizona

State Law JournalgT (1997), which was a paper she presented at the October lgg6Indian Gaming Conference at Arizona State. Her article "Public Law 280 and the Problem of Lawlessness in California Indian Country'' appeare d in 44 UCLA Law Reuiew 1405 (1997).
Her most recent projects include working on the third edition of the major treatise in Indian Law, Felix Cohenls Handbook of Federal Indian Law, and writing a paper on Native Americans and affirmative action. She also spoke to a group in Anchorage called Commonwealth North about whether there is such a thing as "lndian Country'' in Alaska. This issue is currently before the United States Supreme Court and has generated a great deal of controversy in Alaska.
Goldberg is now the president of the Los Angeles Hillel Council, serving nine campuses in Southern California.
M is c o nc eiuing Mo th ers, a book by laura Gomez about how public policy on reproduction and crime is made, was released this fall by Temple University Press. Professor G6mez, who also teaches sociology at UCLA, explores the criminalizatton of what she says is a social problem, and how that criminalization was institutionalized through the attitudes and policies of prosecutors and legislators.
Misconceiuing Mothers also looks at the medical and social as well as criminal issues raised with drug-addicted mothers and the babies to which they give birth. While looking at the specific problem of pregnant women's drug use in California in the 1980s and '90s, G6mez also tells a more general story about the political nature of contemporary social problems.
Kenneth Graham has published the eighth volume of his evidence treatise dealing with hearsay policy and the history of the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment. He has also completed the script for the 16th Annual UCLA Law Musical: "IRAC-By George!" which is based on Ira Gershwin's music.
The American Political Science Asociation has awarded Joel Handler the Gladys M. Kammerer Award for his book, Down From Bureaucracy: The Ambiguity of Priuarization and Empowerment. The award has been given every year since l97l for "the best political science publication in the field of U.S. national policy."
In November 1996, Kenneth Karst gave the Robert S. Stevens Lecture at Cornell Law School on "The Coming Crisis of Vork in Constitutional Perspective." A longer version of his lecture was published in the Cornell Law Reuiew. His review essay on Critical Race Theory was published in the Southern California Law Reuieru.
Along with Mark Kelman of Stanford Law School, Gillian Lester has recently completed a book, Jumping the Queue: An Enquiry into the Legal Treatment of Students with Learning
Disabilitir.s. The book considers the ethical and empirical case for extending special benefits to srudents with learning disabilities (such as extra time on exams or individualized education programs), when those same benefits are not available to classmates for whom they might also prove advantageous, such as students with other forms of academic difficulties, students who are socially disadvantaged or gifted students. The authors struggle with the vexing question of how we should distribute scarce educational resources and, more particularly, whether decisions should be driven by individual need or group-based claims. Published by Harvard University Press, it will be on the
bookshelves in January. Meanwhile, Professor Lester is looking forward to her marriage nexr summer to Eric Thlley, a classmate from Stanford who is now a professor at USC Law School.
This semester, while on sabbatical, Christine Littleton is working on articles on sexual harassment. Professor Littleton is chair of the Faculry Advisory Committee to the newly approved inter-departmental program in Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Studies, and will be co-teaching a course in the winter quarrer titled "lnrroduction to LGB Studies."
At the Law School, Littleton will be teaching her Remedies course, in which she allows students to take either two units of problem-based remedies study (good for passing the Bar Exam or going directly into sole or small firm pracice) or four units. The second half of the course explores complex injunctive relief and consenr decrees in civil rights cases. It features guesr appearances from the attorneys who litigated the cases, drafted the consent decrees or monitor the results. Littleton has been asked by the chair of the AALS Remedies Section to give a talk on this approach to teaching remedies at its annual meeting in January.
This is a busy period in Daniel Lowenstein's major field, election law. Litigation is currently under way in California testing the constitutionality of three recent election reforms: term limits, the open primary and campaign finance. He is co-counsel in one of the five consolidated cases challenging Proposition 208, the campaign finance initiative passed by the voters in 1996, and he and his students plan to follow those cases closely.
He has recently written chapters for forthcoming books dealing with the initiative process, voting rights and the constitutional status of political parties. His paper, "You Dont Have to Be Liberal to Hate the Racial Gerrymandering Cases" will be
published in a Stanford Law Review symposium on election law.
Professor Lowenstein reports: "Thanks to some excellent students, ffiI seminar in law and literature last spring was a success, and I will be repeating it in 1998, as well as working at a more advanced level with some of the students who took the basic seminar. One student and I are working together on a paper on Herman Melville's story, "Bartleby, the Scrivener" that we hope will eventuate in a conference paper and, perhaps, a publishable article.
The American Philosophical Association has awarded the David Baumgardt Memorial Fellowship to Steve Munzer. The fellowship will support his research into begging by panhandlers, the homeless and day laborers, as well as begging as a religious ideal practiced by medieval Christian friars and modern Jain ascetics. Mu nzer will give two or three lectures on this topic during the course of his I 8-month fellowship.
Frances 0lsen conrinued her work on Europe with an article in the Yale Law Jourrua[ "Feminism in Central and Eastern Europe: Risks and Possibilities of American Engagement," 106 Yale Law Journal2215-2257 (1997). She also taught a three-week course on feminist legal theory for visiting students from the Universiry of Berlin (Humboldt), where her program on feminist law enters its fifth year. The German students lived with UCLA Law students for a week before moving on to visit six other law schoolsHarvard, Yale, Michigan, NYU, Northeastern and Card ozoand attended seminars given by 22 I'rterican feminist legal theorists.
Five faculty serve as Reporters 0n Restatements
Gary Schwartz was recendy named a Reporter for Restatement (Third) of Torts: Basic Principles, joining an impressive list of faculry for UCLA School of Law who serve as reporters for the American Law Institute Restatementsthe authoriry on law in a particular field. Also serving as rePorrers are Professor Grant S. Nelson, who just prepared the final version of the Restatemenr on Prop erry (Mortgages) with Professor Dale A. \Thitman of the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young Universiry; Susan French, who is a reporrer for Properry (Donative Thansfers); Grace Blumbelg, who is the Reporter for the ALI Principles of Family Dissolution Restatement on Family Law; and William McGovern, who is serving as Associate Reporter for the Restatemenr (Third) of Tlusts.

Professor Olsen spent four months this year in Japan, where she taught the first course in feminist legal theory ever taught at the Universiry of Tokyo Law Departmenta seminar that was bursting at the seams with students and which, by student demand, lasted one to r'wo hours over the scheduled time every meeting. A series of lectures she presented at Ochanomizu Universiry (Japan's equivalent of Radcliffe) is being translated into Japanese to be published as a book in Tokyo.
Professor Olsen is visiting this fall at Cornell, teaching a "compressed" class in legal theory in six weeks (with one quick trip to give a talk in T"Ly"l. She will then spend the English academic year at Cambridge University. Fran reporrs rhat Churchill College, Cambridge, has named her an "Overseas Fellow," which allows her to dine at High Thble (free of charge) the rest of her life and seems to require nothing ln rerurn.
John Shepard Wiley Jr. spent summer 1997 writing, completing two manuscripts that had been lurking in his thoughts late at night. In preparation for a Harvard visit in 1998, he is teaching a heavy schedule this fall. Wileys lawyering on behalf of the California Commission on Judicial Performance remains pending in the state Supreme Court, awaiting an oral argument date. Viley continues to teach as a faculty member of the Federal Judicial Center, most recently visiting federal judges in Minneapolis, San Diego and Lexington, Kentucky.
Schwartz




Tup Lenr LTBRARY CaMPATGN
Hugh
arud
Hazel Darling Library to be dedicated in sprirug ceremonies

s the Law School prepares ro open the new Hugh and Hazel Darling Library, we are proud to announce the completion of the Law Library Campaign. Beginning with the magnificenr commirmenr of $5 million from the Darling Foundarion, and with the years of hard work and generous gifts from so many of you, the alumni and friends of the Law School, w€ have mer the Blresge Foundation's $ r miilion challenge and surpassed our $t+ million goal. \7hen we dedicate the building sometime this spring, we will want ro highlight everyone's participationfrom the extraordinary gifts of $ 1 million or more to the smallest contributions from ,...nt graduates. For now, we invite you to read over the impressive list of donors to this project, and we want to thank them for their participation and their generosiry.
Our volunteer leaders deserve special recognition for their tireless efforts on the Law School's behalf. Ralph Shapiro '58 led the school's Major Gifts Committee in helping us complete the campaign, and our wonderful co-chairs of the Alumni campaign for the Law Library, Richard J. Burdge , Jr. '79 and Deborah David '7 5, should be especially commended for their work related to the Kresge Challenge. Both Dick and Deborah counseled us throughout the IGesge process, making time in their crowded schedules for phone calls, Traregy sessions, committee meetings and letter writing.
Ve all will have stories to exchange at the dedication and *e invite you to come join us for the celebration. \flatch your mail for a notification about the date. h promises to be a wonderfrrl day in the history of the school.
JoaNTvNoau
Asstsrdyr Dru,u, Dwrrcputyr ^euo Atuuwt RturtoNs
Entrance Courtydrd tu be ndrned, for Glichmdns
The Law Schoolt new courtyard at the entrance to the Hugh and Hazel Darling Library will be named in recognition of Albert '50 and Judith Bllir Gli.k * (g.,e,. '5gifor their magnificent gift of $1 million to the Library Campaign. "It is particularly memorable to be able to recognize two individuals whose lives together begarat UCl,Afor their generTr _h.lp and support," said Dean susan Prager. In addition to the ribrary gif,, the Glickmans have made a gift of over $200,000 to establish the Albert and Judith Giickman Scholarship at the Law School. The scholarship will be awarded annually to studenrs selected on the basis of academic merit and financial need.
The Glickmans have been committed and loyal supporters of the law School as well as active volunteers and contributors to numerous philanthropic and business otganizations at the local and national levels. Albert Glickman was honored as the Law Sihoolt Alumnus of the Year in ceremonies held in Los Angeles in 1993.
In october, Judith and Albert made a gift of over $1 million to the University of Southern Mainet Portland Campus Library. In recognition of the Glickmans, commit-

ment, the library has been named the Albert Brenner Glickman Family Librury.ln addition to their other charitable gifts, the Glickmans now support libraries on both coasts!
The Glickmans are active in the arts as well as other cultural and educational organizations in Maine, W'ashington, D.C., Colorado and Southern California. Albert Glickman is former chair and current director of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston and a member of the New England Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. An active volunteer in his community, he is on the Board of Directors for the Portland Museum of Art in the Glickmans' home of Portland, Maine, and serves on the Board of Thustees for the Portland Symphony Orchestra. He is trustee emeritus of the Los Angeles Counry Museum of Natural History and the Aspen Museum of Art in Aspen, Colorado. He is also former chair of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Board of Governors. Albert Glickman is a former member of the President's Advisory Committee to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a position to which he was appointed by President Bush. A long time supporter of education, Glickman is a Sustaining Member of the UCLA Chancellort Associates, serves on the Board of Thustees of the UCLA Foundation, and is a trustee of the University of Maine System. In addition, he is a former trustee of \Testbrook College, the \flaynflete School, and the Spurwink School. The founder and sole proprietor of Albert B. Glickman and Associates, a real estate firm that specializes in commercial projects, Glickman was also a national vice chairman of the National Finance Committee of the 1992 Bush-Quayle campaign.
Judith Ellis Glickman, who served as undergraduate student body vice president while attending UCLA, is an accomplished photographer who has become well-known internationdly for her work with Holocaust subject matter, a special project that began on 1987 when she photographed Holocaust victims in Los Angeles. She is a Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain. In addition to the numerous one-woman shows in which her powerful black-and-white images have appeared, Judith Glickman was featured as part of the exhibit, "'Women in Photography International," which included showings at the Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain and at the Los Angeles Center of Photography. Her work is represented in more that 200 private collections and in special collections throu$out the United States, France, Australia, Denmark and Israel. She has lectured on the Holocaust at colleges and universities throughout the Unites States and at the Royal Danish Embassy in London and the Danish Cultural Center in Edinburgh. She has served as trustee of the Maine College of fut and the Samantha Smith Foundation.
The Glickmans' four children demonstrate the same commitment to the family tradition of community and philanthropic service. Rabbi Jeffrey Glickman has a congregation and lives in South \7indsor, Connecticut with his wife Shauna, a special needs educatot and their four children. Dr. Tigraw Kastenberg teaches pqychology at the University of Pennsylvania. She and her husband, David, a gastroenterologist, Iive with their four children in Haddonfield, NewJersey. David Glickman, a successful entrepreneur living in Los Angeles, is founder and owner of Justice Technology, a major long distance telephone company. His fiancee, Paige Budd, is an attorney. Brenner Glickman and his wife Elaine are studying at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio. They will both be ordained as rabbis in June of 1998.
Judith and Albert Glickman '60.
The law school is permanentb indebted to the HuSh arud Hazel Darling Foundation for its extraordindryt commitment of $5 million t0 su??urt the law libriry.

LANDMARK GIFTS
($1 urrLIoN oR MoRE)
The Ahmanson Foundation
Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation
Albert B. Glickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
The Iftesge Foundation
The Estate ofAnn Rosenfield
FOUNDING GIFTS
($5oo,ooo on MoRE)
David G. Price '60 and Dallas P. Price
R lph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
John Staufl'rer Charitable Thust
LEADERSHIP GIFTS
($250,000 on MoRE)
GTE Foundation
David Kelton '62 and Lenny Kelton
Bob and Marion Vilson
CORNERSTONE GIFIS
($ t oo,ooo on MoRE)
John G. Branca'75 and Family
Jonathan E Chait'75
Philip D. Dap eer'72
Deborah A. Davi d'75 and Norman A. Kurland
Michael T Masin '69 and Joanne Masin
Mark A. Resnik'72 and Shelley Resnik
\7alter, Finestone & Richter Anonymous
ATUMNI CAMPAIGN
BENGHMARK GIFTS
($5o,ooo on vronn)
Stephen Claman '59 andRenee Claman
David Fleming '59 andJean Fleming
Richard V Sandler'73 and Ellen Sandler
The Partners of Henry Steinm m'61
Grry Scott Stiffelm an'79 and Family
Barry \fl Ty.rman'71
William \( Vaughn'55 and Claire Vaughn
SUSTAINING GIFTS
($Z5,OO0 on uonr)
Richard L. Ackerman '71 and Barbara Ackerman
Phyllis Bernard
In Memory of David Bernard '58
Randolph M. Blotky'73 andTeresa Blotky
Harland \fl Braun'67 and Dianne Braun
Pamela Brockie '75
Rinaldo S. Bruto co'71 and Lalla Shanna Bruroco
Richard J. Burdg., Jr. '79 and Lee Smalley Edmon
A. Barry Cappell o'65
R lph Cassady'61
Curtis Cole'71 and Sharon Cole
Melanie Cook'78
Lorraine Cooper
In Memory of Harold Cooper
Michael A. K. Dan '69 and Cecilia Dan
Lori Huff Dillman '83 and Kirk D. Dillman '83
B. D. Fischer '58 and Frances K. Fischer
Jean Bauer Fisler '52
Richard D. Fybel'7t and Susan Fybel
Jon J. Gallo '67 andEileen 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
futhur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Bernard A. Greenberg '58 and Lenore S. Greenberg
Richard \( Havel'7l
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 IGogius '82 and Scott Mason
J. Perry Langford '52 and Diane Langford
Moses Lebovits'75 and DeDe Lebovits
In Celebration of the Lives of Allan and Beatrice Caplan
MargaretLevy'75
Ethan B. Lipsig'74
Frances E. Lossi ng'7
Thomas H. Mabie'79 and Rhonda Heth '80
Philip S. Magaram '61 and Sally Magaram
Louis M. Meisinger '67 and Susan Meisinger
Skip Miller '72 and Sherry Miller
Richard G. Parker'74
\flilma \Williams Pinder '76
In Honor of her Mother, Jessie Williams Rhetta
Susan and Jim Pruger'71
Sheldon \( Pres ser '73 and Debora Presser
Cruz and Jeannene Reynoso
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld'75 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
futhur Soll '58 and Barbara Soll
Herbert J. Solomon'56 and Elene Solomon
Bruce H. Spector'67 and Robin Spector
fut Spe nce'69 and Anne Spence
William F. Sullivan '77 andJoanne Sullivan
Diana L. Walker'69 and Robert E \flalker
Charles E. Young and Sue K. Young
($to,oo0 or more)
Don E. N. Gibson'83
Samuel \( Hdp er '55 and Ruth Halper
Suzanne Harris'77
Kenneth B. Hertz'84
Ronald E. Neuhoff'68
\Vayne A. Schrader'75
Linda Smith '77
Timothy J. \[hit e'78 and Maria \7ong \Mhite
Dorothy \Tolpert'76 and Stanley \Tolpert
($S,OOO or more)
Donna R. Black'75 and JeffreyA. Charlston'75
Robert N. Block'78
Chaber'79,Dean Susan Prager and Martin Majestic'67
Bruce A. Clemens'74
Dhiya El-Saden'77 and Lesley \Volf
Marcia A. Forsyth'77
Daniel J. Jaffe'62
John P. Meck'72
Josiah L. Neeper'59 and Rita H. Neeper
Gloria Nimmer
Union Bank of California Foundation
($z,ooo or more)
Robert J. Finger '80
Paul E. Glad'77
Dennis M. Hauser'69
William G. Knight'72
Lawrin S. Lewin '63
Evan R. Medow'67
Alicia Minana de Lovelace'87
Duane C. Musfelt'76
Ann Parcde'7l
Louis P. Petrich'65
Joan Goodwin Pierson
Fred Selan '65
($t,ooo or more)
Nancy R. Alpert'78
Donald P. Baker'73
Michael Barclay'79
Ann O'Neal Baskins'80 and Thomas C. DeFilipps
Stanton P Belland'59
Stanley E. Cohen'57

Frank Cross Foundation
Margaret R. Dollbaum '80
D. Barclay Edmundson '79
James L. Foorman'74
\Tilford D. Godbold'66
William D. Gould'63
Joshua L. Green '80
Alan N. Halkeft'61
Natalie Hoffrnan'73
Paul G. Hoffmm'76
and Sue Hoffinan
Martha B. Hogan '81
Andrew E. Katz'7l
Laurie L. Levenson '80
Bernard L. Lewis '56
Everett \W. Maguire'57
Valerie J. Merrifi'76
Milton L. Miller'56
John M. Moscarino '85
Peter T. Pater no '7 6
Albert Z. Pruw'72
Norman O. Rose'56
Paul S. Rutter'78
Elizabeth E. Yogt'79
Earl M. Weitzman'7l
John G. Vigmore'58
Lester Zlffren'52
Madelyn
atBay fuea Regional Luncheon in April. Photo by Bruce Cook,

0utstanding Graduate Student
Stephen Haydon '97 was the only one of more than 9,000 UCLA graduate students recognized with the Outstanding Graduate Student Award this year. Steve spent 11 years as a private detective investigating insurance fraud before coming to UCLA Law, where he served as ChiefArticles Editor of the UCLA Law Reuiew. He is now clerk to 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Robert Boochever.
($SOO or more)
Susan B. Carnahan'74
Hillel Chodos '61
Milford \fl Dahl '65
Edwin & Rose Delaney Foundation
Educational Affiliates
In Honor of Laurence Solov'94
Richard N. Ellis '59
David \M Evan s'77
Leon A. Farley '59
Carol A. Foster '93
Jeffrey A. Galowi ch'84
Joseph L. Gattuso '81
John B. Golper'75
Gerald M. Gordon'73
Mark F. Grady'73
Harold W Hofman'65
Michael A. Hood'76
Roger H. Howard'7l
Sherrill Johnson '78
Thomas Kapp '83
Pamela B. Kelly'86
John \ff Kern IY'87
Claude P Kimball'65
Kevin Leahy'93
Gail E. Lees'79
Linda Maisner '75
William A. Masterson '58
Lawrenc e E. May '72
Alan M. Mirman'75
Henry P Nelson '61
Mona Y. Oh '95
Steven S. Oh '95
Prbntice O'Leary'68
David M. Rosman'78
Suzanne K. Roten '90
John D. Schenck'59
Kim T Schokn echt'77
John R. Sommer'82
Lawrenc eTeplin'54
Randolph C. Yisser'74
James E Wilson'73
Edward \( Zaelke '83
Terrilyn Batson Zaelke' 83
($ZSO or more)
-Valerie B. Ackerman '85
John A. fuguelles'54
Deborah L. lrrron'75
Martin J. Barrack '88
David J. Berard o '67
Linley C. Bizik'95
Stanley A. Black '59
Howard S. Block'60
Carl Boronkay'54
Edward A. Carr'87
Jo* M. Clover'82
Dennis A. Cohen'74
\Yilliam C. Conkl e'77
Cynthia Swarthout Conners '83
John M. Contrerx'93
Brian W Copple'87
Elaine R. Costdes '87
Bruce J. Croushore'72
Shedrick O. Davis '87
Sanford R. Demai n'57
David R. Deutsch'78
James R. Dwyer'80
Mark H. Edelson '87
\Yilliam Elpein'72
Alan J. Epstei n'87
Audrey B. Ezratty'68
Sarah J. Fels '89
Allen H. Fleishman'7l
Clifford H. Fonstein '83
Kenneth D. Freundlich '85
Dolly M. Gee '84
Allan S. Ghitterman'55
Harvey Giss '64
Bruce S. Glickfeld'72
Robert G. Goldman'84
Jerold V Golds tein'65
Marc P Goodman '90
Miles Z. Gordon'72
Rupert G. Grant '90
Karin Greenfield-Sanders'78
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr,'70
Andrew J. Guilfo rd'75
Erlinda Guillergan-shreng er '91
Steven A. Heimberg '83
Kathryn Hendley'82
Harold J. Hertzberg '58
Bryan D. Hull'82
Mark Hurwitz '90
Ronald J. Jacobs on'73
Roger Janeway'94
Myron L. Jenkins'70
Linda C. Johnson '85
Randolph K. Joyce'67
Roland R. Kaspar '60
Pamela B. Kelly'86
Peter C. Kelly'85
Howard M. Y:rtee'72
Thomas R. Bkeller'92
Kenneth L. Kutcher '83
G^ry D. Lampefi'74
John D.Lang'65
Philip F.Lanzafame '58
Timothy Lappen'75
Bernard Lauer '54
Melvin S. Lebe '60
Harriet Leva '80
Bernard J. Lurie '80
John \( Mac Kay'82
Paul Maestas '83
Perry E. Maguire'70
Gregory Mclntosh '83
Ann Catron Mc Millan'84
Charles D. Meyer'80
Richard A. Mills '61
Kevin D. Morris'94
Kim T. Nguyen'92
Lyle R. Nishimi '83
Ted Obrzut'74
Joel R. Ohlgren '68
Daniel M. O'Leary'94
Robert B. Orgel '81
Glenn K. Osajima'7l
Gerald S. Papazian '81
Lizbeth Parker '93
Holly R. Paul '91
Debra A. Profio '92
Villiam E Rogers'75
Karen Green Rosin '81
Shelley R. Saxer '89
Frank A. Schafer '85
Ulrike A. Schafer '85
fuchard Schauer '55
Paul Schmidhauser '80
Peter S. Selvin'80
Reza I. Shirazi '88
Steven Sinatra'88
Ronald P Slates '68
N*.y E. Spero '74
Steven M. Strauss '81
Elizabeth Ash Strode '85
Phillip A. Talbert '89
Alexander O. Thmin'95
Jennifer L. Thmin '95
Thomas C. Tanke rcley'75
H. GeorgeTaylor'56
Rodney B. Thatchrcr'74
Rolf F. Guber '75
Peter C. 'Walsh '81
Glenn F. Vasserman'75
Patricia D. \Tatkins '93
Thomas \fl Veidenbach '86
Michael L. \Teiner'94
Mark P \feitzel '80
J^y C.Wei:zler'67
Donna C. \7ells '92
Cynthia Wicker'77
John J. \fligmore '58
Peter Andrew Wissner '73
Michael Wolf '76
H. Deane \Wong '83
Jeffrey A. Young'86

Stuart D. Zimrrng'7l
Frederic M. Zinn'82
David A. Ziskrout '61
($tZS or more)
Alan S. Berman'84
Elizabeth E. Bruton'76
Charles E. Curtis'77
Alan J. Epstein'87
Victoria Goldfarb Epstein '87
Stephen M. Fenst er '63
John P. Fernandez'84
\Yilliam Finestone'69
Debra P. Granfield'76
Darrel J. Hieber '80
Spencer L.IQrpf '79
Randall H. Kennon'73
Glenn Lorin Krinslcy'83
Miriam fuoni Birinslry '84
Linda K. Lefkowitz'78
James Lerman '61
Karla N. MacCary'90
\William T. MacCary III '90
Kathleen A. McDonald '90
Robert Y. Nakagawa '70
Andrea S. Ordin '65
Elizabeth A. Pollock '82
Carol A. Quinn '85
Michael D. Rich'76
Amil \fl Roth '60
Julie A. Ryan '90
Michael E. Schwartz'63
Bonnie E. Thomp son'76
Eugene Tillman'75
Jason S. \Yenglin'94
Cynthia Wicker'77
Clemon \( Villiams'77
Scott Z. Zimmermann'77
Other Gifts
George \( Abele '90
Herman M. Adams '56
Sachin D. Adarkar'95
Philip L. funaudo '68
Christina Bull fundt'94
Kyle B. fundt'94
Judith Bailey'78
Vhlerie L. Baker'75
Lilia O. Ballesteros '85
John J. Bardet '63
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'97
Angela L. Brock-Kyle '83
Gail F.Brod'73
Megan M. Bruce'94
Ron H. Burnovski'94
John K. Carmack'60
Jerrold B. Carrington '82
Jan E. Chatten-Brown '71
Vincent Chow'94
Jill E Cooper '91
Bruce E. Coop erman'77
Mark G. Crawford '88
Charles R. Currey'57
Allan H. Cutler'80
Helen E. Cutler '81
Jeffrey D. Davine '85
Peter F. Del Greco'92
Jeanne M. Dennis '93
Donald T. Deyo '93
Richard S. Diamond '61
Michael M. Duffey'70
Mitchell A. Ebright'7}
John R. Engman'55
David E. Falik'91
Laurie J. Falik'92
Grry E. Felicetti'95
Steven A. Fischer'94
Donald A. Fishman'94
Catherine B. Frink'79
Mark J. Fucile '82
Roger L. Funk'83
Anne E. Garreff'94
Andrew S. Gelb '81
Melinda P. Goldst ein'94
Raymond H. Goldstone' 69
Allan J. Goodman'7}
Jonathan C. Gordon'7l
Marilyn S. Gudel'92
Julie M. Gurdin-Finley'65
Catherine E. Haase'92
Steven \( Hawki ns'94
David Hazelkorn'75
A. I. Herman
Stuart P Herman
Bob T. Hight '55
Stephen E. Holsten'93
Thmi S. Holsten'93
Elizabeth A. Hone '92
Gerson S. Horn '67
Ueli Huber'86
Keith D. Jaasma'95
Joanne G. Janson'84
Daniel S. Javitch '92
Barbara J. IQtz'85
Brian E.Keefe'75
Robert C. Kersey'94
Jacquelyn S. Kiether '83
Kathleen R. Koch-\Weser'80
Mark A. Kuller'78
Sidney R. Kupe rberg'52
Dennis D. Lamont'95
David A. Lash '80
Lee J. Leslie '92
Dora R. Levin '72
Mark A. Levin '70
Stanley \( Levy '65
Steven M. Levy'92
Gilberto A. Limon'75
David L. Llewellyn, Jr.'76
Stephen M. Lobbin'95
Nancy E. Loncke '85
Christine L. Luketic' 9l
Jennifer L. Machhn'79
Paul Marcus '71
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver'83
Ella M. Martinsen'94
Everett F. Meine rs'64
Herbert D. Meyers'77
Mark D. Miller'88
Barbara De Mont Moore'72
Barbara M. Motz'75
Hope G. Nakamura'86
Jeffrey L. Nebel '87
William B. Oden crantz'7 3
J. Thomas Oldham'74
David R. Pettit '75
Nayssan Parandeh '95
Robyn R. Polashuk'94
Stuart M. Price '90
Bruce I. Rauch '55
Leland J. Reicher'75
David S. Reisman'83
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt '84
Robert N. Rigdo n'76
Gerhard Rischbieter'92
Robert B. Rocklin '83
M.ry D. Rodriguez '88
Katherine A. Rutemiller '93
Steven R. Ruth '89
James B. Ryan '93
Thomas G. Ryan'75
Glen Sato '87
Eric C. Sawyer '89
Judith R. Schaffert '85
Michael R. Schaffert '85
Michael \XI Schoenleber '79
George M. Seaman'93
Dennis J. Seider '67
Nancy W Shepard'84
Barbara Silberbus ch' 92
Donald P Silver'74
David A. Solitare'82
James M. Steinberger'84
Janna L. Stewart'82
Kathleen M. Stewart'9z
Peter T. Stoughton '93
Helen D. Sunga'93
Jean E. Thnaka '84
Laurie J. Thylor '86
Anne B. Torkington '85
Tracey G. Thendler'91
James J. Tutchton '90
Judy Umeda '85
Raquel Vallejo '95
Craig E. Veals '80
\Talton Advisory Group Inc. In Honor of Amy Atchison
Thomas E. \Varri ner '67
Robert A. \7eeks '67
John M. Wilcox'67
Steven M. Vilker '90
John D. Windhausen, Jr.'84
Steven D. \Tinegar'94
Richard G. Vise'68
Cecilia S. \7u '86
Andrew J. Yamamoto '88
Michelle S. Yee '91
Danuta M. Zaroda'\2
Steven H. Zidell '85
0ther Law Firm and Corporate Gifts
Latham & \Tatkins Union Bank
1996-97 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
MAJOR GIFTS TO THE LAW Se,;HOOL
Including gifts, pledges and pledge payments
FOUNDATIONS AND CORPORATIONS
Joseph Drown Foundation
The Ford Foundation
J. Wand Ida M. Jameson Foundation
WM. Keck Foundation
Milken Family Foundation
Roth Family Foundation
INDIVIDUALS
Mrs. Harry Graham Balter
John G. Branca '75 and Family
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 '82
Albert B. Glickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
Mark and Kathryn Green
Pamela Green
Fay-Bettye Green Marcus
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Barry Halpern
Geraldine S. Hemmerling '52
Martin R. Horn '54 and Rita Horn
Marvin Jubas '54 and Fern Jubas
Estate ofWalter A. Marco
Arjay Miller and Frances Fearing Miller
Stan Parry '67 and Melinda Parry
Roger C. Pettitt '54
Ralph J. Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
Estate of David Simon '55
Emil Stache
In Honor ofAnn Carlson
Lester Ziffren '52 and Paulette Ziffren and Leonard and Emese Green
LAW FIRMS
Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger
Hufstedler, Kaus & Ettinger
Morrison & Foerster
The Sturdevant Law Firm
UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW
DONORS 1996-1997
(FiscalYearJuly l, 1996 to June30, 1997)
We proudly present this year's Honor Roll ofDonors and wish to extend our appreciation ro alumni, friends, faculty, law firms, corporations and foundations whose names appear on the following pages for their support ofthe law school. These donors made a gift to the Law Annual Fund or to a scholarship or other designated fund between July l, 1996 andJune 30, 1997. The Law Annual Fund provides valuable unrestricted funding that directly supports academic programming and is a critical factor in furthering the excellence for which UCLA Law has come to be known.
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 1994
$125 - 249
Classes of1994, 1995
$75 - 249
Class of1996
$25 -$249
SUPPORTERS
$10 - $124
* This Founderhas made an additional contribution to the LawAnnual Fund in 1996-97.
1952
Class Representative:
John C. McCarthy
Total Graduates: 34
Number ofDonors: 13
Participation: 38%
Library Campaign
Jean Bauer Fisler
Arthur N. Greenberg
Sidney R. Kuperberg
J. Perry Langford
Lester Ziffren
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
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
Martin J. Schnitzer
Edward B. Smith
Class of'52 Fund
John C. McCarthy
Curtis B. Danning
Scholarship Fund
Curtis B. Danning
Henry Steinman
Memorial Fund
Grover Heyler
1953
Class Representative:
Jerome Goldberg
Total Graduates: 38
Number ofDonors: 9
Participation: 24%
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Jerome H. Goldberg
Jack M. Sattinger
Dean's Advocates
Victor Michael Epport
Robert]. Grossman
Frank H. Mefferd
Willard M. Reisz
Dean's Counsel
John U. Gall
Dorothy W Nelson
John F. Parer
1954
Class Representative:
Donald Ruston
Total Graduates: 90
Number ofDonors: 14
Participation: 16%
Library Campaign
JohnA. Arguelles
Carl Boronkay
Bernard Lauer
Founders
Marvin Gross
Dean's Roundtable
Carl Boronkay
Joan Dempsey Klein
*Donald A. Ruston
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Dennis D. Hayden
Dean's Advocates
JohnA. Arguelles
Harvey F. Grant
Eugene V. Kapetan
Jack Levine
HowardW Rhodes
Dean's Counsel
Leonard H. Pomerantz
Jerry Silverman
Jerry Pacht Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Harvey Grossman
Joan Dempsey Klein
1955
Class Representative:
Allan Ghitterman
Total Graduates: 70
Number ofDonors: 13
Participation: 19%
Library Campaign
John R Engman
Bruce I. Rauch
Allan S. Ghinerman
Samuel W Halper
BobT. Hight
Richard Schauer
William W Vaughn
Dean's Advocates
Herbert Z. Ehrmann
Raymond F. Moats,Jr.






Graham A. Ritchie Library Campaign
Richard Schauer +Stanley E. Cohen
Dean's Counsel
Myrtle Dankers
John R. Engman

Everett W. Maguire
Charles R Currey
Sanford R. Demain
David W. Slavin Founders
Supporters
E. Allen Nebel
Bruce I. Rauch
Lee B. Wenzel Memorial Scholarship Fund
Jean Ann Hirschi
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Seymour S. Goldberg
Wells K. Wohlwend
Dean's Roundtable
William B. Vaughn *Jean Ann Hirschi
1956
Dean's Advocates
Class Representative: Richard D. Agay
Irwin D. Goldring
Daniel F. Calabro
Total Graduates: 68 David R Glickman
Number of Donors: 18
Ephraim J. Hirsch
Participation: 26% Roy A. Kates
Library Campaign
Herman M. Adams
George J. Nicholas
Dean's Counsel
Irwin D. Goldring Marvin Jabin
Bernard L. Lewis
Milton L. Miller
Norman 0. Rose
Herbert J. Solomon
H. George Taylor
Founders
Marvin D. Rowen
Hugh H. Evans, Jr.
Robert L. Wilson III
Hunter Wilson, Jr.
Dean's Counsel
Roland A. Childs
Bernard Lemlech
John W. Maloney
Christian E. Markey, Jr.
Ronald L. Scheinman
Nancy B. Watson
Supporters
George J. Franscell
Henry B. Niles II
Alfred B. Ruskin
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Ralph Shapiro
Dr. Roger LeRoy Miller
Fund
Ralph Shapiro
Barry M. Zwick Fund
Ralph Shapiro
Arthur W. Jones
Everett William Maguire
Gloria K. Shimer
Irving Shimer
Supporters
Robert A. Knox
Jerry Pacht Memorial
Dean's Roundtable Scholarship Fund
*Irwin D. Goldring
Gloria Shimer
*Milton Louis Miller Irving Shimer
Herbert J. Solomon
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
William Cohen
Dean's Advocates
1958
Class Representative:
John G. Wigmore
Total Graduates: 113
Number of Donors: 25
Richard E. Cole Participation: 22%
Harold J. Delevie
Howard Lehman Library Campaign
B. D. Fischer
Dean's Counsel
Burton M. Bentley
Donald L. Clark
Mervin N. Glow
Bernard A. Greenberg
Harold J. Hertzberg
Philip F. Lanzafame
William A. Masterson
Charles Gordon Ralph Shapiro
Lelia H. Jabin
L. Guy Lemaster
1957
Iwas reluctant to go to law school because ofthe seriousdebtIincurred asan undergraduate. However, the generosityofMrs. Wenzel eased both myfears and myfinancial troubles. The scholarship allowed me tosleep a bit
easier, knowing thatIwould havefewer loansto pay offafter graduation.
)ENNY Koss,
1959
Class Representative:
Richard N. Ellis
Total Graduates: 99
Number of Donors: 24 Participation: 24%
Library Campaign
Stanton P. Belland
Stanley A. Black
Stephen Claman
Richard N. Ellis
Leon A. Farley
David W. Fleming
Josiah L. Neeper
John D. Schenck
Dean's Partnership
*John H. Roney
Dean's Roundtable
*Richard N. Ellis
Josiah L. Neeper
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Earl W. Kavanau
Lewis H. Silverberg
Arthur Soll
John G. Wigmore
Class Representative: Dean's Roundtable
David R. Glickman
Total Graduates: 80
Number of Donors: 18
Participation: 23%
*B. D. Fischer
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Warren J. Abbott
Gerald S. Barton
Dean's Advocates
Terrill F. Cox
Norman L. Epstein
Dean's Advocates
Stanley A. Black
Leon A. Farley
Leslie W. Light
Robert W. Vidor
*Paul B. Wells
Dean's Counsel
George V. Hall
Michael Harris
Richard M. Levin
Stanley Rogers
Urban J. Schreiner
Bernard S. Shapiro
Anthony A. Spaulding
Supporters
Raymond Ceragioli
Lawrence Kritzer
Roberta Ralph
Stanley R. Weinstein
Jerry Pacht Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Charles Vogel
1960
Total Graduates: 104
Number of Donors: 27
Participation:
Library Campaign
Howard S. Block
John K. Carmack
Melvin S. Lebe
Roland R Kaspar
David G. Price
Amil W. Roth
Stuart A. Simke
Dean's Partnership
Dale V. Cunningham
Founders Gary S. Jacobs
Leonard Kolod
Dean's Roundtable
*Martin Cohen
Edwin M. Osborne
26%
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Roger J. Broderick
Milford A. Bunnage
Bruce H. Newman
Alan R. Watts
Dean's Advocates
Howard S. Block
Robert W. D'Angelo
Victor E. Gleason
Seymour Louis Goldstein
Lawrence Kapiloff
Grant E. Propper
AmilW. Roch
Owen A. Silverman
Stephen C. Taylor
Dean's Counsel
Melvin S. Lebe
Rodney Moss
Leland D. Starkey
Supporters
Roger M. Settlemire
Albert and Judith Glickman
Fund
Albert Glickman
1961
Class Representative:
David Waller
Total Graduates: 113
Number of Donors: 25
Participation: 22%
Library Campaign
Ralph Cassady
Hillel Chodos
Richard S. Diamond
AlanN. Halkett
James Lerman
Philip S. Magaram
Richard A. Mills
Philip S. Magaram
Henry P. Nelson
David A. Ziskrout
Founders
John A. A!tschul
Dean's Roundtable
Ralph Cassady
*AlanN. Halkett
*James L. Roper
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Arthur Brunwasser
Gerald S. Davee
John H. Sharer
Dean's Advocates
Karl J. Aben
Richard A. Berger
James Lerman
John R. Liebman
Don B. Rolley
David A. Ziskrout
Dean's Counsel
Donald J. Boss
Alan L. Freedman
Supporters
Richard H. Bein
Dennis Fredrickson
Jack C. Giantz
William J. McCourt
Jed Scully
1962
Class Representative:
James Andrews
Total Graduates: 102 Number ofDonors: 21 Participation: 21%
Library Campaign
Daniel J. Jaffe
David Kelton
Founders
Henley L. Saltzburg
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Manley Freid
Dean's Advocates
RogerN. Kehew, Jr.
Harvey Reichard
Todd Russell Reinstein
Richard A. Rosenberg
Dean's Counsel
Roselyn S. Brassell
Hiroshi Fujisaki
George C. Halversen
Herbert Laskin
John M. Maller
Stuart K. Mandel
Paul L. Migdal
Richard A. Richards
Mel Springer
Seymour Weisberg
Supporters
Vern G. Davidson
Thomas Kallay
Julius M. Reich
1963
Class Representative:
Lawrence Williams
Total Graduates: 108
Number of Donors: 20 Participation: 19%
Library Campaign
John J. Bardet
Stephen M. Fenster
William D. Gould
Lawrin S. Lewin
Michael E. Schwartz
Founders
Leroy M. Gire
Marvin G. Goldman
Dean's Roundtable
Dean S. Stern
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
*William D. Gould
Robert T. Hanger
Dean's Advocates
Hirsch Adell
Frances P. Ehrmann
Stephen M. Fenster
Robert S. Goldberg
Ronald M. Kabrins
Bennett I. Kerns
Stephen M. Lachs
Norman J. White
Dean's Counsel
Alan R. Golden
Lawrence I. Kirk
Supporters
A. Michael Genelin
Clinical Support Fund
Gene Axelrod
Public Interest Support Fund
Gene Axelrod
1964
Class Representative:
Everett F. Meiners
Total Graduates: 113
Number of Donors: 19 Participation: 17%
Library Campaign
Harvey Giss
Everett F. Meiners
Lawrence Teplin
Founders
Jeffrey T. Oberman
Dean's Roundtable
David Greenberg
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
John R. Browning
Melvyn Jay Ross
George A. Smith
Lawrence Teplin
Dean's Advocates
Raymond T. Gail
William A. Mayhew
Everett F. Meiners
David J. O'Keefe
Martin G. Wehrli
Dean's Counsel
Sandor T. Boxer
Leonard A. Hampel
Michael Miller
Aaron M. Peck
Supporters
Harry C. Harper
Dennis A. Page
James L. Spitser
1965
Class Representative:
Stanley R. Jones
Total Graduates: 165
Number of Donors: 35 Participation: 21%
Library Campaign
A. Barry Cappello
Milford W Dahl, Jr.
Julie M. Gurdin-Finley
Jerold V. Goldstein
Harold W. Hofman
Claude P. Kimball
John D. Lang
Stanley W Levy
Andrea S. Ordin
Louis P. Petrich
Fred Selan
Founders
Manin Z. Katz
Dean's Roundtable
Ronald W Anteau
*Saul L. LessIer
Andrea S. Ord.in
Earl W Warren
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
James H. Giffen
Louis P. Petrich
Martin Stein
Dean's Advocates
Peter R. Bregman
George C. Eskin
Joseph E. Gerbac
Donald Low
Lawrence H. Nagler
Robert H. Nida
Ezekiel P. Perlo
Harold J. Stanton
Dean's Counsel
Stephen C. Drummy
William J. Elfving
Edward C. Kupers
Melvyn Mason
V. Gene Mc Donald
Carlos Rodriguez
Martin Wolman
Supporters
Jerome Diamond
H. Lee Mc Guire, Jr.
Jerry Pacht Memorial Scholarship Fund
Howard L. Berman
A. Barry Cappello
1966
Class Representative:
Stanley M. Price
Total Graduates: 197
Number of Donors: 39 Participation: 20%
Library Campaign
Wilford D. Godbold, Jr.
Founders
Robert B. Burke
Stanley M. Price
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Stephen W Bershad
Joseph L. Shalam
Dean's Advocates
Stephen A. Behrendt
Barbara L. Burke
Roger L. Cossack
Raymond W Ferris
Joseph G. Gorman
Robert J. Higa
Dennis D. Hill
David A. Horowitz
Frederick Kuperberg
David]. Lafaille
Richard H. Millard
Ian F. Robertson
Ronald I. Silverman
Daniel G. Zerfu
Dean's Counsel
Kenneth I. Clayman
Stephen B. Fainsbert
James H. Karp
Arnold T. Lester
Stephen K. Miller
William G. Morrissey
Jerry M. Patterson
Alan E. Robbins
Barry Russell
Ronald L. Sievers
Robert J. Sullivan
Supporters
Thomas E. Andrews
Elaine G. Canty
Joseph D. Canty, Jr.
DonN. Dyer
William M. Egerman
Donald H. Glaser
Joseph Horacek III
Faculty Support Fund
John F. Cooney
Library Support Fund
Richard W Bakke
Lee B. Wenzel Memorial Scholarship Fund
Daniel G. Zerfas
1967
Class Representatives:
Arthur Avazian
Michael Waldorf
Total Graduates: 248
Number of Donors: 70 Participation: 28%
Library Campaign
David]. Berardo
Harland W Braun
Jon J. Gallo
Gerson S. Horn
Gil Garcetti
Randolph K. Joyce
Louis M. Meisinger
Dennis J. Seider
Bruce H. Spector
Michael Waldorf
Thomas E. Warriner
Robert A. Weeks
Jay C. Weitzler
John M. Wilcox
Dean's Cabinet
Stanley G. Parry



Dean's Partnership Supporters
*Evan R. Medow
Founders
Martin F. Majestic
Louis M. Meisinger
Jeffrey T. Miller
Elliott D. Olson
Franklin Tom
Robert J. Wynne
Mel Zioncz
Jeffrey R. Brodey
Clifford Douglas
Leslie C. Falick
Stanley Genser
Michael A. Levin
Michael D. Marcus
John R. Montgomery, Jr.
Howard D. Sacks
*Richard R. Stenton
John M. Wilcox
Dean's Roundtable Public Interest Fund
Samuel P. Delug
Kenneth Schreiber
Stanley G. Parry
Robert E. Shannon
Richard G. Wise
Supporters
Richard C. Devirian
David B. Johnson
Charles J. Post III
Anthony D. Samson
1969
Class Representatives:
Michael A. K. Dan
Michael Shannon
Total Graduates: 181
Number ofDonors: 43
Jerry Pacht Memorial Participation: 24%
James H. Chadbourn Fellows Scholarship Fund
Donald R. Allen
Kenneth R. Blumer
Lawrence H. Jacobson
Karen Berk
Roch Family Foundation
*Richard A. Lane Fund
John C. Spence
Gary D. Stabile
Gil Garcetti
*Michael Waldorf 1968
Dean's Advocates
James A. Albracht
Peter M. Appleton
Library Campaign
Michael A. K. Dan
William Finestone
Raymond H. Goldstone
Dennis M. Hauser
Robert L. Kahan
Michael T. Masin
Class Representative: Art Spence
Paul J. Glass
Total Graduates: 178
Number of Donors: 26
Michael D. Berk Participation: 15%
Ralph L. Block
David R. Carmichael
*Cary D. Cooper
Roger Jon Diamond
Eugene M. Genson
Leonard D. Jacoby
Library Campaign
Philip L. Arnando
Audrey B. Ezratty
Ronald E. Neuhoff
Joel R. Ohlgren
Richard N. Kipper Prentice O'Leary
Jeffrey L. Linden
Stefan M. Mason
*Louis M. Meisinger
Milton J. Nenney
Steven Z. Perren
Jon A. Shoenberger
Hortense K. Snower
Frank A. Ursomarso
Leonard D. Venger
Thomas E. Warriner
Dean's Counsel
James Banks, Jr.
Peter W Blackman
Daniel M. Caine
Mark A. Ivener
W Michael Johnson
David L. Kerrigan
Sheldon Michaels
Sheldon E. Miller
Bruce M. Polichar
John R. Schilling
Michael S. Ullman
Eric R. Van De Water
Robert A. Weeks
Jay C. Weiczler
Franklin R. Wurtzel
Ronald P. Slates
Richard G. Wise
Founders
J. Michael Crowe
Dean's Roundtable
Robert C. Colton
Richard M. Roberg
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Thomas R. Larmore
Thomas M. Maney
Dean's Advocates
Audrey S. Ezratty
Robert F. Harris
Robert N. Harris, Jr.
Ronald E. Neuhoff
Prentice L. O'Leary
Joel R. Ohlgren
Gordon J. Rose
Sanford R. Wilk
Dean's Counsel
Terry H. Breen
Barry A. Fisher
*Paul J. Glass
Lowell E. Graham
Jerold A. Krieger
Supporters
Michael E. Alpert
Terry J. Amdur
Andrew D. Amerson
John R. Domingos
Bruce E. Harrington
Allan I. Kleinkopf
Library Support Fund
James D. Vogt
Public Interest Support Fund
Barrett S. Litt
1970
Law Library Campaign
Richard L. Ackerman
Rinaldo S. Brutoco
Jan E. Chatten-Brown
Curtis Cole
Allen H. Fleishman
Richard D. Fybel
Jonathan C. Gordon
Richard·W Havel
Roger H. Howard
David S. Karton
Paul Marcus
Glenn K. Osajima
Ann Parode
James M. Prager
Total Graduates: 174 Susan Westerberg Prager
Number ofDonors: 25 Barry W Tyerman
Participation: 14%
Library Campaign
Earl M. Weitzman
Stuart D. Zimring
Michael M. Duffey Founders
Allan J. Goodman
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Myron L. Jenkins
Mark A. Levin
Diana L. Walker
Dean's Partnership
*Keenan Behrle
*John H. Weston
Founders
Elwood G. Lui
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
David A. Buxbaum
William Finestone
Dennis M. Hauser
Richard A. Neumeyer
Lon S. Sobel
Dean's Advocates
Sara L. Adler
Kenneth Drexler
Henry R. Fenton
Jeffrey C. Freedman
Jan C. Gabrielson
Raymond H. Goldstone
Kenneth Meyer
Roger W Pearson
Charles G. Rigg
Toby J. Rothschild
Michael T. Shannon
James F. Stiven
Diana C. Woodward
Dean's Counsel
James S. Bianchi
Carol L. Englehardt
Norman N. Piette
John A. McDermott II
William M. Pate, Jr.
William R. Schqen
Donald J. Stearns
Gary T. Walker
Cameron R. Williams
Perry E. Maguire
Robert Y. Nakagawa
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Richard J. Davis, Jr.
William J. Kelleher
Brian C. Leck
Marc J. Poster
Terry L. Tyler
Dean's Advocates
Linn K. Coombs
Linda S. Hume
Myron L. Jenkins
Perry E. Maguire
Dean's Counsel
Paul E. Bell
Michael M. Duffey
William Owen Fleischman
Robert A. Gandy
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Maxine B. Jackson
Herbert Jay Klein
Edwin J. Lucks
Jerald P. Shaevicz
Lawrence F. Stern
Thomas P. Lambert
Dean's Roundtable
Michael A. Ozurovich
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Robert J. Adelman
Steven A. Friedman
Paul S. Meyer
James J. Pagliuso
Kent L. Richland
Bobby L. Smith
Earl M. Weitzman
Dean's Advocates
Douglas A. Bagby
Karen M. Berlie
Allan Cutrow
Joseph H. Duff
Judy Fonda
John J. Frankovich
Marc E. Hallert
Ronald C. Lazof
Charles D. Nabarrete
Eduardo M. Rivera
David C. Tunick
Arthur L. Williams, Jr.
Michael F. Yamamoto
Dean's Counsel
Frederick P. Aguirre
Dayle L. Bailey
Supporters Jerry S. Berger
Barbara T. Gamer
Allan J. Goodman
Mark A. Levin
Robert M. Wright
1971
Robert G. Blank
Cruger L. Bright
Hubert M. Childress
Kenneth H. Cirlin
Frank]. Davanw
Gary L. Gilbert
Class Representatives: Jonathan C. Gordon
David J. Burton
Richard Havel
Thomas E. Horn
Roger H. Howard
Total Graduates: 265 Paul Marcus
Number of Donors: 82 Ricardo F. Munoz
Participation: 31% Paul C. Nyquist




*Laurence D. Rubin
Thomas M. Scheerer
Allen H. Sochel
David B. Wilshin
Robert H. Wyman
Eric Young
Supporters
Anthony S. Alperin
Susan E. Amerson
Jon B. Artz
Tad R. Callister
Thomas R. Cory
Mary Jo Curwen
Millard M. Frohock, Jr.
JudyA. Fry
Wallace H. Griffith
Thomas B. Karp
Robert D. Mosher
Keith I. Morley
Gary G. Neustadter
Richard G. Ritchie
George L. Schraer
Michael S. Sideman
Juliet H. Swoboda
Alan R. Templeman
Clinical Program Support Fund
Pauline G. Johnson
Kenneth L. Kraus
Leonard B. Levine
Library Support Fund
Marshall G. Mintz
Douglas B. Zubrin
Public Interest Support Fund
Harold C. Harr-Hibbrig
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Laurence D. Rubin
1972
Class Representatives:
Curtis 0. Barnes
Howard M. Knee
Total Graduates: 274
Number ofDonors: 64
Participation: 23%
Library Campaign
BruceJ. Croushore
Philip D. Dapeer
Barbara De Mont Moore
MitchellA. Ebright
William Elperin
Bruce S. Glickfeld
Miles Z. Gordon
Andrew E. Katz
Howrd M. Knee
William G. Knight
Joseph K. Kornwasser
Dora K. Levin
Lawrence E. May
John P. Meck
Skip Miller
Albert Z. Praw
+MarkA. Resnik
Marc M. Seltzer
Founders
RichardA. Blacker
William M. Wardlaw
Dean's Roundtable
Patricia Sturdevant
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Bob S. Bowers
LawrenceJ. Briskin
John M. Collins
Noel F. Heal
Gary L. Kaseff
Howard D. Krepack
Gordon R. McDowell
James R. Walther
Dean's Advocates
GeorgeJ. Barron
RafaelA. Cardenas
William C. Clifton
Peter Q. Ezzell
James Kashian
Andrew E. Katz
Bruce M. Kramer
Cary B. Lerman
Stanley E. Maron
Albert Z. Praw
Ralph R. Smith
WilliamJ. Smith
Donald K. Steffen
RichardT. Vogel, Jr.
Dean's Counsel
Richard W. Abbey
MichaelAbbott
Edward W. Abramowitz
Frank C. Aldrich
John M. Baskett III
Philip M. Cohen
Ronald D. Davis
MitchellA. Ebright
Stephen C. Klausen
Scott A. Mc Intyre
Linda B. Riback
DominickW. Rubalcava
Earl D. Smith
Supporters
Glenn H. Angelo
Bruce D. Benjamin
BruceJ. Croushore
TimiA. Hallem
Dora R. Levin
Alan R. Parker
Kenneth C. Salzberg
Frank Sinatra
James H. Wigle
MichaelJ. Woodruff
Clinical Support Fund
Forrest S. Mosten
Public Interest Fund
Benjamin H. Scharf
Jerry Pacht Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Marc Seltzer
1973
Class Representative:
Bernard R. Gans
TotalGraduates: 291
Number ofDonors: 68 Participation: 23%
Library Campaign
Donald P. Baker
Randolph M. Blotky
Gail F. Brod
Gerald M. Gordon
Mark F. Grady
Natalie Hoffman
Ronald J. Jacobson
Randall H. Kennon
William B. Odencrantz
Sheldon W. Presser
Richard V. Sandler
James F. Wilson
Peter Andrew Wissner
Founders
Bernard R. Gans
Nathalie Hoffman
Robert F. Marshall
Sheldon W. Presser
Jeffrey E. Sultan
Dean's Roundtable
James L. Goldman
Ronald W. Rouse
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Martin E. Auerbach
SharonA. Butcher
R. Roy Finkle
Cynthia C. Lebow
Stacy D. Shartin
Dean'sAdvocates
Henry S. Barbosa
Diane L. Becker
Timothy R. Born
Marc P. Bratman
Kenneth P. Eggers
Peter M. Fonda
Gerald M. Gordon
Douglas B. Haynes
PaulJ. Hedlund
Larry A. Kay
Abraham D. Lev
Kathryne A. Stoltz
MichaelJ. Strumwasser
Peter Andrew Wissner
Dean's Counsel
Lois G. Andrews
Robert Berke
Anita S. Brenner
Keith M. Clemens
TimothyJ. Conley
Roger P. Crouthamel
DavidT. Dibiase
Michael L. Dillard
Natan Epstein
JoeW. Hilberman
Randall H. Kennon
FranciscoJ. Marquez
Laura K. McAvoy
Douglas C. Neilsson
JoyceA. Orliss
William C. Price
Carl M. Shusterman
Alan P. Thomas
Leonard E. Torres
Jonathan A. Wright
Supporters
Tony C. Almaguer
JamesA. Baker
Arthur P. Berg
John M. Bransfield
Joel M. Butler
Larry A. Cohen
ArnoldW. Gross
Charles I. Henderson
Guy R. Lochhead
James K. Schultze
1974
Total Graduates: 294
Number ofDonors: 59 Participation: 20%
Library Campaign
Bruce A. Clemens
DennisA. Cohen
James L. Poorman
Gary D. Lampert
Ethan B. Lipsig
Ted Obrzut
J. Thomas Oldham
Richard G. Parker
Donald P. Silver
Nancy E. Spero
Rodney B. Thatcher
Randolph C. Visser
Founders
William Harold Borthwick
Daniel P. Garcia
Ethan B. Lipsig
Ted Obrzut
Dean's Roundtable
*Buddy Epstein
Andrew A. Kurz
Mark Mitchell
James H.Chadbourn Fellows
Paul L. Brindze
Susan B. Carnahan
Allan B. Cooper
Shan K. Thever
Dean's Advocates
Sylvia M. Diaz
James L. Poorman
JosephJ. Kaplon
Robert D. Links
Henry D. Nunez
CornellJ. Price
Nancy A. Saggese
Marshall M. Taylor
J. Anthony Vinal
Donald E. Warner
MarcJ. Winthrop
Dean's Counsel
William L. Battles
Kenneth A. Black
Lawrence Borys
G. Craig Christensen
Walter Cochran-Bond
William S. Davis
FrancescaA. De La Flor
R. Stephen Doan
CharlesA. Goldwasser
BarbaraA. Hindin
Jonathan M. Klar
Charles Margines
Ronald L. Murov
Phillip G. Nichols
Nancy E. Spero
BetsyA. Strauss
Keith L. Wilson
William L. Winslow
Richard P. Yang
Supporters
Ignacio S. Cota
Roman 0. Gallego
Charles L. Mc Kain
S. Alan Rosen
Steven L. Shahbazian
Donald P. Silver
David H. White
Victorio Uherbelau
Jerry Pacht Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Richard M. Kreisler
1975
Class Representatives:
Andrew Guilford
Moses Lebovits
Total Graduates: 307
Number ofDonors: 92
Participation: 30%
Library Campaign
Deborah K. Arron
Valerie L. Baker
Donna R. Black
John G. Branca
Pamela J. Brockie
Jonathan F. Chait
JeffreyA. Charlsron
Deborah A. David
Christopher M. Gilman
John B. Golper
Andrew J. Guilford
David Hazelkorn
Sandra S. Kass
Brian E. Keefe
Timothy Lappen
Moses Lebovits
Margaret Levy
Gilberto A. Limon
Linda Maisner
Alan M. Mirman
Barbara M. Motz
David R. Pettit
Leland]. Reicher
William F. Rogers
Thomas G. Ryan
Thomas C. Tankersky
Wayne A. Schrader
Glenn F. Wasserman
Founders
James D. C. Barrall
Pamela Brockie
Jonathan F. Chait
Karen Mack
Dean's Roundtable
Michael J. Harrington
Alex Kozinski
Stanely G. Rothbart
Mark Waldman
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Robert D. Cunningham
Gerald L. Kroll

Phillip L. Banfield II
Frederick B. Benson
Michael J. Budzyn
Edward C. Clifton
Thomas J. Donnelly
A. Thomas Golden-Grant
Susan T. House
Eugene H. Irell
Hayward J. Kaiser
Gail D. Kass
Robert L. Kaufman
Robert M. Kunstadt
Bill W. Lew
Bruce D. Lowry
Robert W. Lundy, Jr.
Scott D. Miller
Barbara M. Motz
Steven G. Pallios
Irwin B. Rothschild III
*Sharon F. Rubalcava
Barry E. Shanley
David R. Smith
Emily A. Stevens
Marc I. Steinberg
Emily A. Stevens
Lawrence Howard Thompson
Celia Torres
Richard E. Townsend
Duane C. Musfe!t
Peter T. Paterno
Wilma J. Pinder
Michael D. Rich
Robert Rigdon
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Bonnie E. Thompson
Eugene Tillman
Michael Wolf
Dorothy Wolpert
Founders
Michael I. Adler
Maribeth Borthwick
Jenny Fisher
Richard Schneider
Anita Y. Wolman
Philip J. Wolman
Dean's Roundtable
Peter T. Paterno
Judith W. Wegner
Dorothy Wolpert
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
William D. Claster
David Clarence Doyle
Richard J. Katz
James C. Romo
Supporters Harvey Shapiro
Michael C. Baum
Jeffrey D. Gale
Robert M. Garcia
Brian E. Keefe
Calvin Lau
Gilberto A. Limon
Robert D. Mc Guiness
*Moses Lebovits Gary Q. Michel
Allen L. Michel
Grace N. Mitsuhata
Dean'sAdvocates
Linda D. Anisman
Deborah L. Arron
Jeffrey S. Barron
Michael C. Baum
James R. Brueggeman
Edmund W. Clarke
Thomas W. Cohen
Paul L. Gale
Andrew J. Guilford
Steven Hecht
Timothy Lappen
Gary W. Maeder
Alan Mirman
Marsha J. Moutrie
Norman A. Pedersen
David R. Pettit
Robert E. Rich
Thomas G. Ryan
Seth Tievsky
Juan Ulloa
Frank C. Woodruff
John G. Branca Fund
John G. Branca
JerryPachtMemorial
Scholarship Fund
Joseph Kibre
1976
Marc R. Stein
Caryl Bartelman Welborn
Dean'sAdvocates
Lourdes G. Baird
Elizabeth E. Bruton
Linda C. Diamond
Richard K. Diamond
Kenneth L. Friedman
Diane L. Kimberlin
Valerie J. Merritt
David B. Parker
Karen Randall
*Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Bonnie E. Thomson
Eugene Tillman
Lawrence C. Weeks
Dean's Counsel
Richard Avila
Bruce A. Barsook
Alice Cohen Bisno
Barbara A. Blanco
Class Representative: Alben L. Bradley
Richard K. Diamond
Total Graduates: 292
Number of Donors: 84
Leland J. Reicher Participation: 29%
Julia J. Rider
David Simon
Virginia E. Sloan
Marjorie S. Steinberg
Thomas C. Tankersley
Glenn F. Wasserman
Dean's Counsel
Valerie L. Baker
LibraryCampaign
Elizabeth E. Bruton
Debra P. Granfield
David R. Ginsburg
Paul G. Hoffman
Michael A. Hood
David L. Llewellyn, Jr.
Valerie J. Merritt
Stephanie R. Scher Dean's Roundtable
William G. Seaton
Norman P. Tarle
Michael Wolf
Supporters
Stewart A. Baker
Robert M. Barge
Nicholas S. Chrisos
Janice L. Feinstein
Carolyn J. Gill
Marilyn S. Heise
*Paul Gordon Hoffman
Frances W. Kandel
Kenneth M. Kumor
Adrienne E. Larkin
John A. Lawrence
Beth L. Levine
Tomas D. Nunez
Richard G. Opper
J. David Oswalt
Ann Poppe
Harvey M. Schweitzer
Allison B. Stein
Gary M. Stern
Larry Walker
Roland G. Wrinkle
Mark J. Zelin
Clinical Support Fund
James V. Kosnett
Public Interest Support Fund
Paul D. Fogel
Maria D. Hummer
1977
Class Representative:
Gregory E. Breen
Total Graduates: 311
Number of Donors: 85
Participation: 27%
Library Campaign
William C. Conkle
Bruce E. Cooperman
Charles E. Curtis
Dhiya El-Saden
David W. Evans
Marcia A. Forsyth
Paul E. Glad
Suzanne Harris
Herbert D. Meyers
Wendy Munger
David S. Chaney
Jonathan L. Daniel
James P. Donohue
Don M. Drysdale
Thomas S. Epstein
Debra P. Granfield
Richard H. Levin
Richard J. Loa
Cheryl A. Lutz
Peter J. Mc Breen
Robert A. Pallemon
Gordon M. Park
Michael D. Rich
Peter J. Hanlon
Gail M. Singer
John W. Stephens
Marcy J. K. Tiffany
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Andrea H. Bricker
Rochelle Browne
Amey E. De Soto
Elisabeth Eisner
Kenneth J. Fransen
Thomas A. Kirschbaum
Perfisity Mc Ghee
Lawrence J. Poteet
Charles N. Shephard
Jonathan R. Yarowsky
Scott Z. Zimmermann
Dean'sAdvocates
Audrey B. Collins
Ronnie J. Dashev
Edwin F. Feo
Gregg M. Gibbons
Ramon Gomez
Carl J. Klunder
David P. Leonard
Roger A. Luebs
James K. Phelps
John E. Pope
Carl C. Robinson
Neil J. Rubenstein
Tamar C. Stein
Dean's Counsel
Gustavo A. Barcena
Francis J. Baum
Alan G. Benjamin
Peter B. Carlisle
Daniel L. Carr, Jr.
Wayne C. Collett
Bruce E. Cooperman
Angelina Delatorre
Jose A. Gonzales
David R. Kenagy
Martin C. Kristal
Joseph Kruth
Antonia E. Martin
Lana Freistat Melman
Gregory F. Millikan
Durham J. Monsma
Robert J. Moore
Susan P. Shanley
William S. Small
Kim T. Schoknecht
Linda Smith
William F. Sullivan
Cynthia Wicker
Clemon N. Williams
Scott Z. Zimmermann
Founders
Carolyn H. Carlburg
Wendy Munger
Richard R. Purtich
Richard S. Usher
Supporters
Robert M. Angel
Paul A. Babwin
Dave B. Bowker
Charles E. Curtis
Teresa Estrada-Mullaney
Sharon E. Flanagan
Martin A. Flannes
Joseph M. Gensheimer
Richard A. Haas
Dale E. Huffman, Jr.
FIVE UCLA LAW STUDENTS WIN STATE BAR SCHOLARSHIPS




All five ofthe UCLA School ofLaw's candidates for scholarships fromthe Foundationofthe State Bar ofCalifornia were honored in ceremonies during the State Bar Convention in San Diego in September. Wendy Stanford was awarded $5,000, and Jessica Aronoff, Jeannette Jose, Karen Pang and Jason Pu were each awarded $2,500. This happy occasion is only the second time in the history ofthe scholarships that all the candidates from a single school were chosen.
All ofthe winners from UCLA have an impressive history of public service:
Wendy Stanford, who will graduate in spring 1998, has worked as a law clerk for the Public Counsel Law Center, organized canned food, clothing and toy drives for the Sheepfold, a shelter for battered women and children, served twice as a board memberoftheUCLAPublicInterestLawFoundationand served as a consultant for a committee promoting adoption ofchildren who have been exposed to drugs in the womb.
Jessica Aronoff, who will graduate in spring 1998, has volunteered for Break the Cycle, a teen dating violence intervention program, has worked for UCLA's El Centro Legal Hollywood Homeless Youth Legal Clinic and clerked for the Homeless Assistance Project of Public Counsel in Los Angeles. She also is Co-Chair ofEl Centro Legal and Executive Editor of
UCLA Womens Law journal. Jessica serves on the Law Student Public Interest Outreach Committee ofthe Los Angeles County Bar Association Barristers.
Jeannette Jose, who is a second-year law student, has volunteered for the Pilipino American Legal Clinic, worked as an interpreter for a free dental clinic in Mexico and tutored bilingual junior high school students. She is co-chair ofAsian Pacific Islander Law Students Association.
Karen Pang, who is in her second year oflaw school, has been active working with homeless youth in El Centro Legal's clinic, was a VISTA volunteer, working at the Los Angeles Free Clinic, and has lobbied for welfare reform for Immigration and Refugee Services of America. She also has advised Cantonese clients at theLegal Aid Foundation in Chinatown.
Jason Pu, a second-year law student, was a founding memberofAsianand PacificIslandersfor CommunityEmpowerment, a BayAreaactivistgroup. Hehasworked withclientsattheAsian PacificAmericanLegal CenterinLosAngelesandhastaughtconflict resolution to teenagers in East Palo Alto with the East Palo Alto Community Law Project. He is co-chair of Asian Pacific Islander Law Students Association.
Wendy Stanford JessicaAronoff
JeannetteJose
Karen Pang Jason Pu
Jill E. Ishida
Donald V Morano
Loretta Ramseyer
Charles F. Robinson
Sandor E. Samuels
Edward I. Silverman
Carolyn L. Small
Javan J. Wygal
Public Interest Support Fund
Mark T. Johnson
Robin E. Schneider
1978
Class Representative:
Frances E. Lossing
Paul S. Rutter
TotalGraduates: 302
Number of Donors: 82 Participation: 27%
Library Campaign
Nancy R. Alpert
Judith Bailey
Robert N. Block
David R. Deutsch
KarinGreenfield-Sanders
Sherrill L. Johnson
Mark A. Kuller
Linda K. Lefkowitz
Frances E. Lossing
Albert J. Moore
David M. Rosman
Paul S. Rutter
Timothy Joseph White
Founders
Robert N. Block
Melanie Cook
Kenneth D'Alessandro
David F. Faustman
Dean's Roundtable
Hilary Huebsch Cohen
Marietta S. Robinson
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
James R. Asperger
Richard D. Freer
Miriam J. Colbert
Frances E. Lossing
Christopher J. Martin
John Mayer
M. Brian Mc Mahon
J. Michael Norris
BarbaraWRavitz
Michael A. Robbins
Paul S. Rutter
Kathy T. Wales
Ralph Zamudio III
Dean's Advocates
Rudy Aguirre
Sandra L. Buttitta
Carol A. Chase
Michael D. Dozier
Wayne H.Gilbert
KarinGreenfield-Sanders
Madison F.Grose
Kenneth L.Guernsey
Susan J. Hazard
Daniel C. Hedigan
Dean J. Kitchens
Ann L. Kough
Marlo Rene Laws
Elmer J. Lincoln
Karen Magid
HelenWMelman
LisaGreer Quateman
Marc E. Rohatiner
Kay E. Rustand
Anne T. Thomas
Barry M. Weisz
Gwen H. Whitson
Dean's Counsel
Judith Bailey
Michael D. Briggs
Barbara Brown
Michael D. Fernhoff
David J.Garibaldi III
Barbara E. Hadsell
Michael T. Hornak
Marlene Butcher Jones
JeffreyG. Kelly
Linda K. Lefkowitz
Vernon T. Meador III
James J. Moak
Matthew H. Saver
David I. Schulman
Martin T. Tachiki
Anthony Wheeldin
Arlene F. Withers
Supporters
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.
William F.Greenhalgh
Lorna C.Greenhill
Karen L. Hancock
Boyd D. Hudson
Sherrill L. Johnson
Kenneth A. Kramarz
Mark A. Kuller
Robert H. Leibman
Albert J. Moore
Janet S. Murillo
Donald P. Paskewitz
Cynthia T. Podren
Mark S. Scarberry
Elaine Stangland
G. Michael Tanaka
Anne B. Thacher
Paul R. Tremblay
Marc L. Weber
Library Support Fund
Heather S.Georgakis
1979
Class Representatives:
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
Roberta Kass
Robin B. Lappen
TotalGraduates: 269
Number of Donors: 67
Participation: 25%
Library Campaign
Michael Barclay
LawrenceWBerger
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
D. Barclay Edmundson
Catherine B. Frink
Spencer L. Karpf
Gail E. Lees
Rochelle Lindsey
Thomas H. Mabie
Jennifer L. Machlin
MichaelWSchoenleber
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Elizabeth E. Vogt
Founders
Gail Ellen Lees
Rochelle Lindsey
Michael D. Mc Kee
Gary Stiffelman
Kim Mclane Wardlaw
Dean's Roundtable
Aviva M. Bergman
Lloyd A. Bookman
Mark R. Burrill
Jennifer L. Machlin
Timm Andrew Miller
Andrew Stuart Pauly
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Michael Barclay
D. Barclay Edmundson
LindaGach Ray
Spencer L. Karpf
Roberta Kass
David S. Neiger
Sandra B. Stern
Dean's Advocates
Charlotte I. Ashmun
Harmon Brown
Cathy De Roy
Marlene D.Goodfried
George H. Hohnsbeen
James A. Melman
Archur F. Radke
Charles O. Strathman, Jr.
Dean's Counsel
Steven L. Abram
Allan E. Ceran
Suzette Clover
Linda K. Engel
Suzan R. Flamm
Catherine B. Frink
CindyWGraff
Adam E. Hofberg
Joel D. Kuperberg
Lydia S. Levin
Sandra Weishart Marinelli
Gary A. Meyer
Robbie E. Monsma
Jeffrey E. Nelson
Diane V Rathmann
Michael E. Ripley
Karen L. Tachiki
Supporters
LawrenceWBerger
Sigrid Carlson
John Louis Carlton
Bailey R. De longh
Albert S.Glenn
Oleta J. Harden
Otto C. Holz
Robin B. Lappen
David L. Metcalf
Steven A. Micheli
Kathryn J. Nelson
Mary S. Newton
Gilbert Rodriguez, Jr.
JamesG. Scadden
Mark S. Shipow
Shelley Steuer
Martha A. Torgow
Henry S. Weinstock
Ellen Winthrop-Michel
David 0. Wright
Clinical Program Support Fund
Susana T. Salgado
1980
Class Representatives:
Laurence M. Berman
John Cochrane
TotalGraduates: 300
Number of Donors: 83
Participation: 28%
Library Campaign
Ann O'Neal Baskins
Cathy E. Blake
Allan H. Cutler
Margaret R. Dollbaum
James R. Dwyer
Joshua L.Green
Robert J. Finger
Rhonda J. Heth
Darrel J. Hieber
Kathleen R. Koch-Weser
David A. Lash
Harriet Leva
Laurie L. Levenson
Bernard J. Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
Paul Schmidhauser
Peter S. Selvin
Craig E. Veals
Mark P. Weitzel
Founders
David H. Dolinko
Ruth E. Fisher
Feris M.Greenberger
JohnG. Petrovich
Leslie Brooks Rosen
Dean's Roundtable
Renee L. Campbell
Leslie A. Cohen
*Robert James Finger
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
*Ruth E. Fisher
Joshua L.Green
Laurence L. Hummer
Jeffrey C. Krause
F. Sigmund Luther
Lucina L. Moses
Dean's Advocates
WJeffrey Austin
Irene P. Ayala
Anne S. Berkovitz
Andrew P. Bernstein
Neila R. Bernstein
Barbara Biles
Carol A. Clem
JohnWCochrane
Gordon A.Goldsmith
HerbertGraham
Harold C. Hofer
ThomasWKellerman
Harriet Leva
Ida L. Levine
Leslie B. Lindgren
Bernard J. Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
J. Scott Paisley
David S. Porter
Millicent N. Sanchez
Paul Schmidhauser
Moises Vazquez
Jose A. Velasco
Dean's Counsel
RoyWAdams
Istvan Benko
Victory M. Bunsen
Rebecca L. Burnham
Dawne Astride Casselle
Sherrie F. Couser
WtlburGin
DanielG.Gold
Mark S.Green
David A. Lash
Keith A. Lovendosky
Dimitri A. Nibbs
Linda J. Sharpe
David F. Tilles
Mark P. Weitzel
Carol Cavan Williams
Supporters
Jane Aoyama-Martin
Cathy E. Blake
Kevin M. Colton
Allan H. Cutler
William S. Dato
David J. Estrada
Anita R.Gershman
Robert D.Goldschein
Eric J. Hamermesh
Richard A. Jones
William A. Lappen
Joann Leatherby
Ronald M. Monitz


Mary L.Muir
Rosendo Pena, Jr.
Daniel Rodriguez
Sylvia L. Rodriguez
Carol R. Schultz
Frances G. Smith
Laurel S. Terry
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Ruth E. Fisher
Jerry Pacht Memorial Scholarship Fund
Anne Berkovitz
1981
Class Representatives:
Robert B. Orgel
John F. Runkel,Jr.
Total Graduates: 326
Number of Donors: I04 Participation: 32%
Library Campaign
JeffreyM. Berke
Helen E. Cutler
Margaret R. Dollbaum
EricJ. Emanuel
Joseph L. Gattuso
Andrew S. Gelb
Martha B.Hogan
Robert B. Orgel
Lynn G. Naliboff
Gerald S. Papazian
Karen Green Rosin
StevenM. Strauss
Peter C. Walsh
Founders
EricJ. Emanuel
James I.Ham
Marilee C. Unruh
Dean's Roundtable
JamesM. Ash
JulieM.Heldman
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
David B. Babbe
Jed E. Solomon
Dirk W van de Bunt
Dean's Advocates
Regina I. Covitt
John W Crittenden
Leianne S. Crittenden
Walter R. Dahl
Gregory S. Drake
Mark E. Ferrario
Jean G. Friedman
Bruce R.Hallett
Michael R.Harris
Kristin A.Henderson
Samuel Israel
Richard W Kaiser
Lilly Lewis
Karen L.Matteson
Julie S.Mebane
Leslie R.Mitchner
Marcy S.Morris
Robert B. Orgel
John S. Peterson
Jesus E. Quinonez
Martin E. Rosen
Kim V. Sainten
ReedM. Scuria
RensselaerJ. Smith IV
KennethJ. Stipanov
Charles R. Tremper
William L. Twomey
Dean's Counsel
MarkJ. Barnes
Joseph S. Biderman
David F. Brown
AngelaJ. Campbell
*Elizabeth A. Cheadle
Jennifer P. Cody
Julie A. Davies
Robert J. Debitetto
PatriciaH. Feiner
Chris S. Jacobsen
Linda A. Kirios
Susan FowlerMc Nally
Robert P.Meisel
Jeffrey L. Oliphant
JonathanJ. Panzer
David B. Rechtman
Bruce S. Richards
Karen Green Rosin
Lin B. Saberski
Peter C. Walsh
Michael L. Wilhelm
BarbaraH. Yonemura
HoytH. Zia
Supporters
Marc D. Alexander
Victoria D. Armstrong
Annie K. Baker
Ira D. Barron
JeffreyM. Berke
MichaelJ. Bonner
Catherine J. Campbell
Judith Kessen Crawford
DianeJ. Crumpacker
Helen E. Cutler
DelavanJ. Dickson
SusanH. Green
Peter C.Hoffman
Phyllis B. Johnston
WilliamJ. Kirsch
Edwin I. Lasman
Jonathan F. Light
Brent R. Liljestrom
MercedMartin
Therese A.Maynard
DavidMelcer
DavidM.Meyer
Angela A.Mickelson
Lynn G. Naliboff
Maita D. Prout
Clarence L. Ross III
Sharon A. Rudnick
Allen R. Sakai
Craig P. Sapin
Carol A. Schmid-Frazee
Judith A. Uherbelau
Lynn Y. Wakatsuki
Clinical Program Support
Fund
Michael R.Harris
Phyllis B. Johnston
Library Support Fund
Bradley D. Frazier
Lilly Lewis
Public Interest Support Fund
PatriciaM. Ito
Joscelyn C. Jones
Karen Lewthwaite
Jerrold E. Schrotenboer
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Elizabeth A. Cheadle
1982
Total Graduates: 328
Number of Donors: 87 Participation: 27%
Library Campaign
Jerrold B. Carrington
JoanM. Clover
Mark}. Fucile
KathrynHendley
Bryan D.Hull
Karin T. Krogius
John WMacKay
Elizabeth A. Pollock
Thomas C. Sadler
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy B. Samuels
David A. Solitare
John R. Sommer
Janna L. Stewart
DanutaM. Zaroda
FredericM. Zinn
Founders
Susan L. Claman
RichardJ. Gruber
Gregory Paik
Jay F. Palchikoff
Adam Vallejo
Reed S. Waddell
Dean's Roundtable
Edward A. Perlman
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Mary R. Brusewitz
Roberto G. Brutoco
Patrick W Dennis
Carolyn Richardson Owens
James S. Rountree
Steven E. Sletten
Harold A. Tieger
Steven E. Sletten
Harold A. Tieger
Dirk W van de Bunt
Dean's Advocates
Henry Ben-Zvi
Jack G. Cairl, Jr.
Jessica K. Frazier
Cathryn S. Gawne
KathrynHendley
Bryan D.Hull
Ira D. Kharasch
JoanM. Le Sage
Scott T. Maker
John P.Mc Elroy
Leslie R.Mitchner
Bert S. Nishimura
Michelle Patterson
Dennis L. Perez ,Martin E. Rosen
Joseph A. Scherer
Eric B. Siegel
JeffreyH. Silberman
Ilene Evans Trabolsi
Irma K. Zahid
FredericM. Zinn
Dean's Counsel
Oliver W Bordallo
JoanM. Clover
JohnM. Dab
MarkJ. Fucile
James L. Jerue
Debra L. Kegel
David P. Lee
Martin V. Lee
DanielM.Mayeda
RandyH.Milgrom
Dennis A. Ragen
Belinda D. Rinker
JackH. Rubens
Vinay Sharma
ValdoJ. Smith
Philip Starr
Diane S. Van Der Linde
Michael R. Weinstein
Walter W Whelan III
Supporters
Thomas A: Bliss
Biana Coltun
MarcH. Corman
LoriJ. Feiner-Scott
Barbara G. Gerber
Arthur D.Hernandez
Linda D.Hess
GaryM. Joye
Donna N. Lampert
LoraJ. Livingston
Lee AnnMeyer
Rodney R.Mills
Jeffrey P.Molever
Shirley A.Morgan
Larry Nathenson
Leslye E. Orloff
Darien E. Pope
David W Reimann
David A. Solitare
WMichael Young
Danuta M. Zaroda
Samuel N. and Leah S.
Fischer Fund
Leah S. Fischer
Samuel N. Fischer
1983
Class Representative: Michael A.Helfant
Total Graduates: 346
Number of Donors: 88 Participation: 25%
Library Campaign
Angela L. Brock-Kyle
Cynthia Swarthout Conners
Roger L. Funk
Kirk D. Dillman
LoriHuffDillman
CliffordH. Fonstein
Don E. N. Gibson
Steven A.Heimberg
Thomas Kapp
Jacquelyn S. Kiether
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Kenneth L. Kutcher
PaulMaestas
Marilyn D.Martin-Culver
GregoryJ.McIntosh
Lyle R. Nishimi
David S. Reisman
Robert B. Rocklin
Lise N. Wilson
H. Deane Wong
Edward W Zaelke
Terrilyn Batson Zaelke
Dean's Partnership
JamesH. Eisenberg
Founders H. Deane Wong
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Timothy T. Coates
Don E. Gibson
Ede C. Ibekwe
DanielJ. Mc Loon
Dean's Advocates
Mary K. Barnes
Renee T. Brook
CliffordH. Fonstein
Roger L. Funk
Ronald F. Garrity
DeanM. Gloster
June G. Guinan
Michael A.Helfant
DavidJ.Hirsch
Frank R. Jazzo
RuthJones
Roger L. Kohn
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Eric G. Lardiere
Jocelyn Larkin
Anne E. Morea




Marilyn S. Pecsok
Robert B. Reeves
David S. Reisman
Michael T. Zarro
Dean's Counsel
Ronald A. Baker
Kevin C. Brazile
Justin E. Budare
Maria E. Cortez
Marion G. Crain
Sara J. Deubner
Andrew B. Downs
Linda K. Ensbury
Scott A. Forsyth
Kerry Gottlieb
Bruce J. Graham
R. Todd Greenwalt
David Kuhlman
Michael E. Langton
Gregory R Madsen
Paul Maestas
Terry P. Mc Niff
Deborah Y. Monticue
Jeffrey D. Nagler
R. Wayne Olmsted
Byongchae Pak
Nora A. Quinn
Mark G. Schroeder
Susan Silver
Louie L. Vega
Supporters
Thomas C. Agoston
Allen Blumenthal
Andrew W Caine
Margaret A. Chisholm
Jeffrey M. Ettinger
James G. Foster
James L. Gattuso
Everett C. Hoffman
Matthew W Kavanaugh
Jacquelyn S. Kiether
Barry Lambergman
Larry S. Lee
Monique C. Lillard
Victor H. Mellon
Richard V. Normington
M. Christina Ramirez
Nancy B. Reimann
Robert B. Rocklin
Robert H. Steinberg
Robert F. Torres
Carl R. Waldman
Library Support Fund
Paula Mabrey
Public Interest Support Fund
Margaret Stevenson
Henry Steinman Memorial Fund
Mark Flagel
MichaelYaffa Memorial Scholarship Fund
Susan Silver
1984
Class Representative:
Total Graduates: 296
Number ofDonors: 83 Participation: 28%
Library Campaign
Alan S. Berman
John P. Fernandez
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Joanne G. Ganson
Dolly M. Gee
Robert G. Goldman
Kenneth B. Hertz
Joanne G. Janson
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Ann Catron McMillan
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt
Nancy W Shepard
James M. Steinberger
Jean E. Tanaka
John D. Windhausen, Jr.
Dean's Roundtable
Arny B. Lawrence
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Rhonda L. Nelson
Peter C. Thomas
Dean'sAdvocates
Michael D. Compean
Connie Coin Contes
Barbra Shield Davis
Philip S. Gutierrez
Michael D. Herbert
Janet A. Kobrin
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Monika P. Lee
Elizabeth F. Mack
Linda W Mazur
Teresa L. Remillard
James M. Steinberger
David C. Tseng
Dean's Counsel
Marchelle D. Bailey
John S. Bank
Alan S. Berman
ToddW Bonder
Laura J. Carroll
Kathleen Coleman
John A. Crose
Joy M. Crose
Jeffrey A. Dinkin
Susan L. Formaker
Michael J. Gibson
Paul T. Hayden
Joanne G. Janson
Bahman B. Mashian
Mitchell B. Menzer
Gregory M. Nitzkowski
Daniel A. Olivas
Timothy L. Salazar
Rae Sanchini
Timothy C. Shepard
Ronald E. Stoute
Lee M. Straus
Leonard M. Tavera
Edward C. Thoits
Bruce D. Tobey
Steven Alan Troyer
Jo Ann E. Victor
Supporters
Bennett A. Bigman
Kent Brockelman
Kevin K. Callahan
Bruce C. Catania
Pamela G. Chin
Tong-Sao Chung
Tippi Dobrofsky
Kathleen Forbach Esfahani
Barbara A. Finley
Andrew Lawrence Finn
Craig A. Goldman
Brad I. Golstein
Mark S. Gross
Guy N. Halgren
Laura W Halgren
Sarah A. Hiestand
William E. Ireland
Jeffrey Kandel
Elizabeth Alexander King
Sandra W Lavigna
Elizabeth M. Matthias
Cynthia E. Maxwell
Pamela A. Mohr
Jonathan I. Reich
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt
Betsy R Rosenthal
Leslie E. Sherman
Vivienne A. Swanigan
Jean E. Tanaka
Sura L. Weiss
1985
Class Representatives:
Brian Appel
Lynne S. Goldstein
John M. Moscarino
Total Graduates: 291
Number ofDonors: 68
Participation: 23%
Library Campaign
Valerie B. Ackerman
Lilia O. Ballesteros
Jeffrey D. Davine
Kenneth D. Freundlich
Barbara J. Katz
Peter C. Kelly
Nancy E. Loncke
John M. Moscarino
Carol A. Quinn
Frank A. Schafer
Judith R. Schaffert
Michael R. Schaffert
Elizabeth Ash Strode
Anne B. Tarkington
Judy Umeda
Steven H. Zidell
Founders
John M. Moscarino
Dean's Roundtable
Marc E. Bercoon
Carolyn J. Veal-Hunter
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Brian J. Appel
Robert G. Barnes
Sheri Bluebond
David G. Coulter
Alan S. Polley
Dean's Advocates
Valerie B. Ackerman
Christopher B. Arnandes
Lilia 0. Ballesteros
Thomas M. Bondy
Granvill E. Carter
Susan L. Coskey
Michael P. Harrell
Mark Lincoln Lindon
Stephen H. Mazur
John Ossiff
Franklyn W Perkovich
George-Ann Rice
Alicia G. Rosenberg
Harold J. Schaaff, Jr.
Eugene J. Smith
Stacey G. Snider
Steven A. Swernofsky
Dean's Counsel
Craig S. Barnes
Brett J. Cohen
Leonard J. Cruz
Dean B. Eggert
Bryan K. Fair
Lynne S. Goldstein
Sally C. Helppie
Lester Jacobowitz
Gail K. Johnson
Mark Alan Koop
Lynette B. Robe
Scott A. Solomon
Judy Umeda
Supporters
Teri E. Bayer
Meredith L. Caliman
Paul S. Delson
Timothy S. Ernst
Melanie M. Fairchild
Barbara Ringness Gadbois
David R Garcia
Gary A. Henningsen, Jr.
Margarita P. Hernandez
Barbara J. Katz
Louise D. Lillard
Nancy E. Loncke
Suzanne A. Luban
Roy Y. Nakano
David C. Sampson
Judith R. Schaffert
Michael R Schaffert
Michael J. Shpizner
Anne Beytin Tarkington
Edgar E. Villalobos III
Michael M. Youngdahl
Steven H. Zidell
Library Support Fund
Ann E. Clary
Elisa H. Halpern Memorial Scholarship Fund
Laurie A. Genevra Cole
1986
Class Representatives:
Mark D. Baute
Carolyn Comparer Jordan
David Polinsky
Leslie E. Wallis
Total Graduates: 278
Number ofDonors: 72 Participation: 26%
Library Campaign
Ueli Huber
Linda C. Johnson
Pamela B. Kelly
Hope G. Nakamura
Laurie J. Taylor
Thomas W Weidenbach
Cecilia S. Wu
Jeffrey A. Young
Dean's Roundtable
Wang-Ha Cho
Kevin A. Frankel
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Mark D. Baute
Jeffrey L. Tade
Dean's Advocates
Yolanda Arias
Chi Seung Choy
Beth Klein Cranston
Douglas T. Gneiser
Steven M. Kleiman
Shelley Handel Krall
Colleen Mc Andrews
James W McSpiritt
William 0. Nutting
David Polinsky
Lois J. Scali
Laurie J. Taylor
Thomas W Weidenbach
Dean's Counsel
Steven B. Abbott
Bruce D. Agin
Angelo N. Ancheta
Edwin Carney
Frederick M. Entwistle
Andrew R Hall
Louis G. Hering
Robin F. Kaufer
Eric S. Kentor

Hope G. Nakamura
James Gaughan O'Callahan
Timothy E. O'Leary
Anthony L. Press
JohnWScruton
David B. Sett
Leslie E. Wallis
Supporters
Susan K. Alexander
Debby H. Bader
Cesar A. Bertaud
Karen S. Bloom
T. Hale Boggs
James M. Burns
Christine M. Cervenak
Federico M. Cheever
Pamela B. Corrie
Michael E. Di Geronimo
Karen E. Harrison
Mark R. Israel
Harris J. Kane
Edmund}. Kelley
David N. Lyon
Ronald A. McIntire
Stuart L. Merkadeau
Walter R. Mitchell
Jerri H. Pih
Steven A. Plotkin
Matthew J. Solo
Timothy M. Taylor, Jr.
RobertWTeeter
Elaine F. Tumonis
Edgar E. Villalobos
John F. Wester
Janet A. Winnick
Clinical Support Fund
Rau M. Tawacao
Faculty Support Fund
Daniel E. Encell
Library Support Fund
RichardWAldrich
Paul S. Friend
Public Interest Support Fund
Debby H. Bader
Christine M. Cervenak
Ruth M. Zacarias
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Anthony L. Press
1987
Class Representatives:
Joanne M. Morris
Robert C. Welsh
Suzanne Zaharoni
Total Graduates: 304
Number of Donors: 77
Participation: 25%
Library Campaign
Robert C. Bowman
Edward A. Carr
BrianWCopple
Elaine R Costales
Shedrick 0. Davis
Raquelle de la Rocha
Mark H. Edelson
Alan J. Epstein
Victoria Goldfarb Epstein
JohnWKern IV
Alicia Minana De Lovelace
Jeffrey L. Nebel
Glen Sato
Dean's Roundtable
John H. Irons
Dean's Advocates
Edward A. Carr
Melinda A. Hoyt
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Steven M. Schultz
Ann C. Springgate
Joseph R. Taylor
Jeremy Temkin
Steven R. Yonemura
Dean's Counsel
Michael B. Africk
James F. Blake
Lance S. Bocarsly
Catherine M. Brame
Anita T. Davidson
Shedrick 0. Davis
Alan J. Epstein
Victoria Goldfarb Epstein
Leora D. Freedman
Gary N. Frischling
William H. Kahn
Ann A. Kim-Waltzer
Corey E. Klein
David L. Krotine
Marsha B. Liss
Thomas S. Mc Connell
Timothy B. Mc Osker
Rae Sanchini
Glen Sato
Laurie S. Temkin
Bonnie Y. Wai
Garrett J. Waltzer
Robert C. Welsh
Arnold F. Williams
Beth MezoffWilson
Suzanne Zaharoni
Supporters
M. Margaret Rumph Banas
James E. Banks
Robert C. Bowman
EmilyWCard
Lily Chow
BrianWCopple
Robert N. Dale
Steven C. De Baun
Kathleen T. Deeley
Michael D. Donovan
Jamie L. Dubinsky
MarilynWFormaker
Janet L. Gawthrop
AdrienneWGoldstone
Hilary J. Greenberg
Peter Edward Greenberg
Connie R. Kimball
Susan F. Kroll
VickiWLai
Joan S. Leopold
Michele J. Martell
Edmond J. Miller, Jr.
Philip M. Moremen
A. Bailey Nager
Sung B. Park
Alyce L. Raboy
Todd M. Reznik
Archie Sanders III
Linda L. Schwartz
David A. Steinberg
Lauri C. Streeter
Lynn£. Todd
Leslie L. Trutner
William A. Vallejos
Library Support Fund
John C. Chen
Public Interest Support Fund
Ann M. Tomkins
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Leora D. Freedman
La Raza Law Alumni
Association Scholarship Fund
Alicia Minana De Lovelace
1988
Class Representatives:
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
Paul Freese, Jr.
Louis E. Michelson
Total Graduates: 293
Number of Donors: 44 Participation: 15%
Library Campaign
Martin J. Barrack
Mark G. Crawford
Mark D. Miller
Mary D. Rodriguez
Reisa I. Shirazi
Steven Sinatra
Andrew J. Yamamoto
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Sandra S. Ikuta
David Schinasi
Dean's Advocates
James R. Cairns
Jacquelynne M. Jennings
Frank A. Merola
Mark D. Miller
Jason C. Sloane
Dean's Counsel
William J. Atzbaecher
Martin J. Barrack
Rachel M. Bin
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
George H. Brown
Kimberly A. Caswell
Rachel L. Ewing
David B. Felsenthal
James R. Felton
Paul L. Freese, Jr.
Lawrence B. Kupers
Richard S. Moskowitz
Kenneth A. Ostrow
Julia S. Penick
Douglas D. Roberts
Steven Sinatra
Supporters
William S. Anderson
Jeffrey H. Cohen
Tina L. Gentile
Gretchen E. Jacobs
Sharon R. Leib
Teresa De Castro Mc Namara
Louis E. Michelson
Emily B. Miller
Elizabeth C. Nager
Mark}. Price
Janet R Rich
Paul Tumminia
Christopher C. Welch
Clinical Support Fund
Gregg A. Rapoport
Public Interest Support Fund
Steven M. Siegel
Robin S. Toma
1989
Class Representatives:
Steven I. Katz
Caroline R. Kelly
Stuart M. Price
Total Graduates: 273
Number of Donors: 58
Participation: 21%
Library Campaign
Sara Berman-Barrett
Sarah J. Fels
Stuart M. Price
Steven R. Ruth
Eric C. Sawyer
Shelley R. Saxer
Phillip A. Talbert
Dean's Roundtable
Fern M. Billingy
Cedric T. Chou
Ligia I. Hernandez
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Stuart M. Price
Sean P. Treglia
Jon T. Yamamura
Dean's Advocates
Seth S. Gross
Bruce D. Kuyper
John]. Manier
Anna S. Mc Lean
KatherineWPownell
Shelley R Saxer
BradWSeiling
Scot Stone
Phillip A. Talbert
Dean's Counsel
Dwight L. Aarons
Walid S. Abdul-Rahim
Carlos A. Arcos
Susan S. Azad
Christine S. Chua
Janice E. Fogg
Steven I. Katz
Adrienne T. Kentor
Gregory J. Kopta
Nathaniel J. Lipman
C. John Melissinos
Sharon Lea Mitchell
David A. Portnoy
Kevin F. Saer
Richard S. Schkolnick
Steven A. Schuman
Brian J. Schwab
Todd]. Schwartz
Supporters
Erich D. Andersen
WClark Brown
Elena Bocca Dietrich
Howard M. Freedland
Gwendolyn M. Gamble
David M. Goosenberg
Jennifer B. Goosenberg
Caroline S. Katz
Elizabeth E. Kim
Barry Lurie
Rhonda H. Mehlman
Brian J. Mooney
Peter A. Neumann
Cathy Paul
Kenneth E. Petersen
Mark A. Pittman
Henry A. Platt
Nancy K. Platt
Beau Simon
Ferdinand J. Trampe
Public Interest Support Fund
Victor L. Castillo
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Shelley R. Saxer
1990
Class Representatives:
Nargis Choudhry
George Eshaghian
Jens Koepke
Total Graduates: 326
Number of Donors: 47
Participation: 14%
Library Campaign La Raza Law Alumni
George W. Abele Association Scholarship Fund
David K. Barrett
Marc P. Goodman
Rupert G. Grant

Mabel! Y. Aguilar-Fabela
Robert R. Fabela
Mark D. Hurwitz Ida and Louis Stein
Karla N. MacCary Memorial Fund
William T. MacCary III
Kathleen A. McDonald
Suzanne K. Roten
1992
Class Representatives:
Daniel B. Butler
Elaine Mandel
Donna Wells
Total Graduates: 274
Number of Donors: 70
Jeannine K. DePhillips Participation: 26%
Julie A. Ryan 1991
Katherine A. Traxler
James J. Tutchton
Steven M. Wilker
Dean's Advocates
Class Representatives:
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Inez D. Hope
Total Graduates: 322
Number of Donors: 33
Steven J. Levine Participation: 10%
Mary D. Manesis
Suzanne K. Roten
Dean's Counsel
Kimberly Hall Barlow
Lynne M. Brennan
Eric B. Gordon
David L. Hirshland
Maryam Shokrai
Lisa R. Singer
Jan F. Wrede
Library Campaign
Jill F. Cooper
David E. Falik
Erlinda Guillergan-Shrenger
Christine L. Luketic
Holly R. Paul
Tracey G. Trendier
Michelle S. Yee
James H. Chadbourn _Fellows
Jeffrey W. Cowan
Supporters Holly R. Paul
Albert H. Biagas
Carolyn Choi
Nargis Choudhry
Eric S. Hill
Stephanie M. Jackson
Francis J. James
Allison M. Keller
Jens B. Koepke
Richard Lai
James T. Lee
Karla N. Mac Cary
William T. MacCary III
Samuel D. Magavern
Julienne Mc Cammon
Ann M. Mooney
Ann L. Munson Steines
Mark W. Neustadt
Marina T. Sarmiento
Leigh R. Strauss
Robert E. Strauss
Geoffrey M. Sturr
Karin Wolman
Sonia M. Younglove
Clinical Support Fund
Philip E. Cook
Faculty Support Fund
Lloyd Lim
Public Interest Support Fund
Lynne M. Brennan
Mary D. Manesis
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Jerry L. Bregman
Allison Keller
Library Campaign
Paul E. Blevins
Peter F. Del Greco
Laurie J. Falik
Marilyn S. Gude!
Catherine E. Haase
Elizabeth A. Hone
Daniel S. Javitch
Thomas R. Kreller
Lee J. Leslie
Steven M. Levy
Kim T. Nguyen
Debra A. Profio
Gerhard Rischbieter
Kathleen M. Stewart
Barbara Silberbusch
Donna C. Wells
Dean's Advocates
Virginia C. Bennen
Jack S. Weiss
Dean's Advocates
Edward L. Tabakin
Dean's Counsel
Saskia T. Asamura
Mary H. Chu
Jonathan M. Frenkel
Scott A. Silberstein
Susan K. Sullivan
Frieda A. Taylor
Bennett L. Yee
Supporters
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Kevin D. Caton
Teresa Cho
Maria C. Depew
Janet H. Dickson
David E. Falik
Richard L. Hasen
Nicole M. Healy
Andrew R. Herrup
Shirley S. Lu
Edward F. Malone
Mary A. Minette
Shirley D. Ramirez
Jane H. Root
Robert J. Solis
Sallie A. Thieme
Ilana Volkov
Eugene Y. Won
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Debra M. Johnson
Lisa F. Mendel
Holly R. Paul
Marilyn S. Gude! Dean's Advocates
Catherine H. Haase
Bradley M. Kancigor
Suzanne M. Madison
Elaine W. Mandel
Brendan J. Mc Keough
Thomas A. Monheim
Carol A. Foster
Joseph B. Ryan
Dean's Counsel
Jeffrey A. Barker
Linda F. Callison
Kim T. Nguyen Christopher A. Cherry
M_arc J. Nolan Arny N. Keroes
Stuart Patterson Smart Y. Kim
Robert A. Rosztoczy Douglas H. Riegelhuth
Rick D. Seraden
Barbara Silberbusch Supporters
Aaron P. Silberman Robert E. Allen
Eric B. Silberstein Katherine A. Ates
Edward J. Slizewski Vincent J. Badolato
Blithe A. Smith Bryan D. Biesterfeld
Kathleen M. Stewart Julia L. Bond
Paul D. Tripodi II
Karen M. Bray
Eugene Volokh Beverly A. Chaney
Brian P. Waldman Nancy J. Cohen
Thomas A. Waldman Tobias A. Dorsey
Donna C. Wells Jeffrey M. Freedman
Ligi C. Yee
Clinical Support Fund
Howard C. Griboff
Robert W. Haugan
Stephen E. Holsten
Howard D. Russell Tami S. Holsten
Andrew D. Jaeger
Library Support Fund
Stacey A. Kipnis
Raad K. Shawaf
Dean's Counsel
Sonia R. Carvalho
Peter F. Del Greco
Simon M. Furie
Gary T. Gleb
Claudia Madrigal Harrison
James C. Harrison
Stewart S. Harrison
Todd Hart
David]. Korduner
Audrey Lin
Paul H. Luehr
Daniel F. Ortega
Jeffrey S. Silvyn
John Staudinger
Supporters
Kimberly Arouh
Martin R. Barash
Norman H. Becker
Ruth P. Bermudez
Paul E. Blevins
Boaz M. Brickman
Daniel B. Burler
Timothy J. Carlson
Bridget A. Clarke
Larkie D. Darn
Christopher L. Davis
Robert L. Dell Angelo
Joseph H. Eaton
Timothy L. Epp
Jollee C. Faber
Laurie J. Falik
John C. Fish, Jr.
Gregory Fuentes
Pamela G. Gross
Paul D. Tripodi II
Public Interest Support Fund
Gregory Fuentes
Elizabeth A. Hone
Thomas R. Kreller
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Eugene Volokh
Jonathan W. Jaffee
Lisa Payne
Peter T. Stoughton
Anne H. West
Todd A. Wolfe
Daniel Y. Zohar
Public Interest Support Fund
Jeffrey S. Galvin
Lisa Payne
1994
Class Representatives: 1993
Christina Bull Arndt
Class Representatives: Kyle B. Arndt
Jeffrey A. Barker
Karen Marie Bray
Amy Keroes
Hao-Nhien Vu
Total Graduates: 284
Number of Donors: 43
Total Graduates: 294 Participation: 15%
Number of Donors: 40 Participation: 14%
Library Campaign
Katherine A. Ates
John M. Contreras
Jeanne M. Dennis
Donald T. Deyo
Carol A. Foster
Stephen E. Holsten
Tami S. Holsten
Kevin Leahy
Lizbeth Parker
James B. Ryan
George M. Seaman
Peter T. Stoughton
Helen D. Sunga
Patricia D. Watkins
Library Campaign
Christina Bull Arndt
Kyle B. Arndt
Megan M. Bruce
Ron H. Burnovski
Vincent G. Chow
Steven A. Fischer
Donald A. Fishman
Anne E. Garrett
Melinda P. Goldstein
Stephen W. Hawkins
Roger Janeway
Robert C. Kersey
Ella M. Martinsen
Kevin D. Morris
Daniel M. O'Leary
Robyn R. Polashuk
Michael L. Weiner

Jason S. Wenglin
Steven D. Winegar
Dean'sCounsel
Christina Bull Arndt
Kyle B. Arndt
Scott A. Brutocao
Stephen D. Burbach
Oswald B. Cousins
Alex N. Helperin
Marion C. Ingersoll
Christopher E. Jones
Michael B. Levin
Thomas C. Mellor
Sheri Pym
Michael E. Ross
Brette S. Simon
Ronald J. Thompson
Thomas L. Treffert
Supporters
Jaykant H. Bhatt
Anne-Marie N. Blevins
Kent J. Bullard
Anne E. Garrett
Joseph T. Gauthier
Meredith S. Goldberg
StevenW Hawkins
Roger Janeway
Adam B. Kaufman
Robert C. Kersey
Christopher D. Landgraff
Jaleen Nelson
AyW Pellman
Robyn R. Polashuk
Robert E. Scheid
Daniel J. Villalpando
Steven D. Winegar
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Stephanie B. Rubin
1995
Class Representatives:
Kisu Shin
Michael A. Grizzi
Total Graduates: 288
Number of Donors: 30
Participation: I0%
LibraryCampaign
Sachin D. Adarakar
Linley C. Bizik
Gary E. Felicetti
Keith D. Jaasma
Dennis D. Lamont
Stephen M. Lobbin
Mona Y. Oh
Steven S. Oh
N
ayssan Parandeh
Alexander 0. Tamin
Jennifer L. Tamin
Raquel Vallejo
Dean'sCounsel
Linley C. Bizik
S.Elizabeth Foster
Stephen M. Lobbin
Douglas F. McCormick
Pamela Pasti
Holli H. Payne
Kisu Shin
Stephen R. Uriarte
Colleen Y. Yasukochi
Supporters
Gary E. Felicetti
Brian M. Hoffstadt
Heather A. Mactavish
Ben D. Orlanski
Christopher E. Prince
Gregory A. Romero
Lisa D. Rosenthal
Thomas S. Rubin
Paul Ruiz
Alexander 0. Tamin
Jennifer L. Tamin
Cynthia A. Valenzuela
Scott P. Ward
Clinical Support Fund
Seth C. Thompson
Julian Eule Memorial Fund
Michael A. Grizzi
Alinor C. Sterling
1996
Class Representatives:
Wendy Aron
Eric Vanderpool
Total Graduates: 318
Number of Donors: 37 Participation: 12%
Dean'sCounsel
Steven S. Choi
Daniel J. Clark
Virginia F. Flack
Stacey L. Friedlander
Deborah R. Goldberg
Garth E. Hire
Shane H. Hunter
David P. Kowal
Jennifer E. Meier
A. J. Jarasunas
David P. Kowal
Arthur S. Landerholm
Deborah T. Lee
Matthew Mackenzie
Caroline H. Mankey
Jennifer E. Meier
Bradley S. Pauley
Sandra A. Sandoval-Galle
Wendy P. Solganik
Daniel R. Zimmerman
Supporters
Kevin I. Berg
Scott R. Weaver
Clinical Program Support Fund
Alejandro Garcia
Jeffery S. Jacobson
Michael A. Sweet
FacultySupportFund
Matthew B. Berman
Brian S. Hermann
LibrarySupportFund
Bruce P. Barnett
Donna M. Dean
Guillermo C. Guerrero
Mette H. Kurth
BabakE. Mikravesh
RichardW Suh
Michael C. Tu
Public Interest SupportFund
Peggy S. Chen
Kristin L. Gamble
KatherineE. Lewis
StudentActivitiesFund
Stephen P. Foley
David A. Sudeck
FRIENDS AND FACULTY
Founders
David H. Dolinko '80 and Feris M. Greenberger '80
Wendy Munger '77
William D. and Sue Warren
Stephen C. Yeazell and Ruth E. Fisher '80
Dean's Roundtable
M. Constance Salerno Dillion In Memory of John Judson Crimmins '71
*Monte E. Livingston
Budge & Brenda Offer
*William A. Rutter
James H. Chadbourn Fellows
Joel F. Handler
Kenneth and Smiley Karst
Stephen C. Yeazell and Ruth E. Fisher '80
Dean's Advocates
Eli J. Borok
Erika S. Chadbourn
Jesse Dukeminier
William A. Klein
Arthur Samuel Levine
Marlene R. Leviton
Michael D. Mark
David Mellinkoff
John J. Power, Jr.
John S. Wiley
Dean's Counsel
David A. Binder
Daniel J. Busse!
Nina Clifford
Alan Feld
David L. Greenwalt
James A. Hamilton
Werner Z. Hirsch
Don Kula
Albert J. Moore '78 and Sherrill L. Johnson '78
B. Mark Nordman
Garth R. Zeigler
Supporters
Benjamin Aaron
William P. Alford
John and Mary Bauman
Eli J. Borok
Erika S. Chadbourn
Dorothy S. Decker
Patrick Del Duca
Geoffrey Halpern
Lawton H. Hansell
Ueli Huber, Jr.
Bertram K Massing
John C. Mather
Ovvie Miller
Stephen R. Munzer
Grant S. Nelson
Jack Salan
Eugene Volokh
Library Support Fund
FrederickE. & Pompea Smith
FIRM MATCHING GIFTS
Arnold & Porter
Cox, Castle & Nicholson
Davis, Polk & Wardell
Deloitte & Touche
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
Morrison & Foerster
Musick, Peeler & Garrett
O'Melveny & Myers
Sidley & Austin
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION MATCHING GIFTS
AmericanExpress Foundation
ARCO Foundation Inc.
Bankers Trust Foundation
Capital Group Companies, Inc.
Champion International Corporation
Chase Manhattan Foundation
CIT Group Foundation Inc.
CITICORP Foundation
CNA Foundation
Equifax Foundation
First National Bank of Chicago Foundation
GE Fund
GTE Foundation
Hartford Insurance Group Foundation
William & Flora Hewlett Foundation
Hewlett-Packard Company
KPMG Peat Marwick
Foundation
MCA Inc.
Morgan Stanley Foundation
Pacific Enterprises
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Price Waterhouse Foundation
Science Applications
International Corporation
Sony Pictures
Entertainment Inc.
Southern California
Edison Company
State Farm Companies
Foundation
Texaco Foundation
3COM Corporation
Time Warner Inc.
Times Mirror Foundation
Universal Studios
USF&G Foundation Inc.
U.S. West Foundation
Walton Advisory Group Inc.
Wells Fargo Bank
LAW FIRM& CORPORATE SPONSORS OF TWENTYFIRST ANNUAL UCLA ENTERTAINMENT SYMPOSIUM
Armstrong Hirsch Jackoway
Tyerman & Wertheimer
Bloom, Hergott, Cook, Diemer and Klein, LLP
Citadel Entertainment, L.P.
Creative Artists Agency
Hansen, Jacobson, Teller & Hoberman
Interscope Communications, Inc.
Irell & Manella LLP
Loeb & Loeb LLP
Myman Abell Fineman & Greenspan
O'Melveny & Myers LLP
Weissmann, Wolff, Bergman, Coleman & Silverman
Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer
LAW FIRM& CORPORATE SPONSORS OF UCLA LAW SCHOOL GOLF TOURNAMENT
ASUCLA
The Walt Disney Company
Dollar Rent a Car
Paul Glass, JD, CLU
Irell & Mandia LLP
Lexis-Nexis
Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP
Pacific Hotel Associates, Inc.
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP
Showtime Network
Sony Pictures
Troop, Meisinger, Steuber & Pasich, LLP
20th Century Fox
UR What U Eat


DESIGNATEDGIFTS
BENJAMINAARON FUND
Anonymous
MICHAELC.ALBIN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPFUND
MiriamMolayAlbin InMemoryofClyde KeeringandJuliusShaffer
ARNOLD&PORTER SCHOLARSHIPFUND
Arnold&Porter
BAKER&MCKENZIE LAWSTUDENT ASSISTANCEFUND
Baker&McKenzie
BEVRLYHILLSBAR ASSOCIATIONFUND
BeverlyHillsBar AssociationFoundation
JOHNG.BRANCAFUND
JohnG.Branca'75
CLASSOF'52FUND
JohnC.McCarthy'52
CURTISB.DANNING SCHOLARSHIPFUND
CurtisDanning'52& FlorenceDanning InHonorofDavidGill
FrancesI.Palmer
DROWNPUBLIC SERVICEFELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
Jos_ephDrownFoundation
SAMUELN.ANDLEAHS. FISCHERFUND
SamuelN.Fischer'82and LeahS.Fischer'82
JULIANEULE MEMORIALFUND
Grace&MelvinAisenberg
AdrienneAdan
VikramD.Amar
AlisonG.Anderson
GailI.Apfel
EllenP.Aprill
PeterL.Arenella& EllisM.Enlow
Michael&BarbaraAsimow
PaulBergman& AndreaSossin-Bergman
NancyBerkowitz
FredBernstein
ZoeBlumberg
MarcelS.Bollag
JerryL.Bregman'90
TaimieL.Bryant
DanielBusse!
CarlaCasecca
ChatterjeeManagement
Company
ElizabethA.Cheadle'81& LaurenceD.Rubin'71
ErwinChemerinsky
Classof1997
EleanorS.Cottle
Diane&EdwardDaley
JohnE.Donnelly
Fiona&StanleyF. Druckenmiller
MarcL.Engel
Ellen&NormanEule
MillieP.Fenton
GraceFerragamo
ElaineB.Fischel
HarrietZ.Fischer
EdwardC.Flores
WilliamE.Forbach
FortuneMagazine
LeoraD.Freedman'87& AnthonyL.Press'86
JodyL.Freeman
Eric&HildegardGattmann
Ruch&JosephGazes
GaryGladstein
LindaGoldman
Edith&DavidGottlieb
Kenneth&ConnieGraham
Diane&LawrenceGreenberg
Verena&WalterGrenn
MichaelA.Grizzi'95
Ann&AdamHandler
JoelF.Handler
Cindy&Jay BarryHarris
DouglasHershberger& EllenFenton
Bernard&JaneHoch
Lotte&NathanielHoffman
DebraM.Johnson'91
Dorothy&GeraldKalb
Kenneth&RhonaKamer
May Kamer
JeromeKapner
Kenneth&Smiley Karst
AllisonKeller'90
MargaretR.Kiever
William&ReneeKlein
Mary Beth&RobertA.Kors
M.B.&TheodoreH. Lehrman
Bernard&ConstanceT. Levine
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CLASSNOTES
Due to the high volume ofclassnotes received, we regret that we cannot confirm receipt ofall classnotes. You can e-mailyour classnotes to us: alumnews@law.ucla.edu
.1960s
Charles R. English '65 has been appointed to chair the Criminal Justice Standatds Committee of rhe American Bar Association.
Edward Poll '65, a management consultant and speaker, will soon publish a new book, The Professionals Business Handbook. He continues to consult attorneys and other professionals on the business of law.
Irving Greines '66 exhibited his photography at the Sharon Truax Gallery in Venice, California. Termed "Urban Wilderness: Chaos Transformed," rhe photos show the ungentrified, gritty parts of downtown Manhattan, New York.
Lawrence H. Jacobson '67 writes rhac Jacobsen, Sanders & Bordy, LLP merged with the law offices of David S. White and Eric J. Diamond co form Jacobsen, White, Diamond & Bordy, LLP. The firm will continue to practice in rhe areas of business, real estate, environmental, finance, estate planning, tax and civil litigation in all trial, appellate, mediation and arbitration forums.
Jeffrey T. Miller '67 was appointed as a U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of California by President Clinton in May. Prior to his appointment to che Federal Bench, Judge Miller served in rhe San Diego Superior Court for 10 years. After receiving his law degree, Judge Miller spent 18 years in rhe California Attorney General's Office handling primarily civil litigation, and considers his two arguments before the United Scares Supreme Court as career highlights.
He has written several publications for Continuing Education for the Bar (CEB) over the years, with an emphasis on government tort liability and evidence. Although Judge Miller has resided in San Diego since 1973, he still describes himself as a great fan of UCLA and rhe Dodgers.

Mel Ziontz '67 has been appointed to the management committee at Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman. He is a partner in the corporate department.
•1970s
David Ochoa '70 has been appointed vice president of Academic Services at Imperial Valley College in Imperial, Calif. Ochoa was previously CEO of a financial services company in Los Angeles. Ochoa, rhe first in his family to go to college, has an extensive background in education and the entertainment industry.
David R. Glickman '57 was recently honored by the Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles with a Roast/Tribute Dinner for his accomplishments during 40 years of practicing law. Proceeds from the event benefited the Consumer Attorneys Public Education Fund (CAPEF) to support its campaign to preserve the jury system, a cause close to Glickman's heart.

Glickman specializes in major personal injury, product liability and medical malpractice, and has tried more than 300 cases to a Superior Court jury verdict on behalf of his clients. Some of the leading cases in California law are trials and appellate decisions David has personally handled. "I have been privileged to know David," said Deborah David, president of the Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles. "Inaddition to beingagreatlawyer,Davidisalsoincrediblysuccessfulas ahusband and father- which is not always the case withtrial attorneys."
Joan Dempsey Klein '54, presiding justice of the California Court of Appeals in Los Angeles, and Antonia Hernandez '74, president and general counsel of MALDEF, are two of five recipients of the 1997 Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Awards. The award was presented by the ABA Commission on Women in the Profession at a luncheon during the ABA annual meeting in San Francisco.
In addition to being the first female presiding justice of the California Court of Appeals, Justice Klein is also the founder of the National Association of Women Judges and itsglobal extension, the International AssociationofWomen Judges.ShewasthefoundingpresidentofCaliforniaWomen Klein Lawyers in1974.
Hernandez was cited as follows: "Through law, community education and research, Hernandez has worked tirelessly to advance the rights of the country's 24 million Latinos. AsastaffattorneytotheSenateCommitteeontheJudiciary, managingattorneyoftheLincolnHeightsofficeoftheLegal Aid Foundation in Los Angeles, and in her current position with the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund,shehasplayedapivotalroleinexpandingtherightsof women and people of color."
The ABA created the Brent Awards in 1991 to celebrate theachievementsofwomenlawyers.Theawardisnamedfor MargaretBrent,thefirstwomanlawyerintheUnited States ShearrivedintheColoniesin1638 andwasinvolvedin128 cases in eight years.


Hernandez


Robert Weeks '67, a deputy public defender in San Jose, served as chair of the Executive Committee of the State Bar Conference of Delegates in San Diego in September. Last year, he served as vice chair of the same event.
In 1996, Robert was awarded the Santa Clara County Bar's top honor: the Byrl R.SalsmanAward.The award was presentedby the Bar'spresident, Roberta Hayashi, at the San Jose Fairmont Hotel with 150 members in attendance. In Robert's own words: "The award is secret until it is announced. However, the Bar staffhad contacted my wife,
who had secretly arranged to fly my mother, Dorothy
Weeks, down from Portland, Oregon. I did not know my mother was there until I went to the podium and turned around and saw my wife escorting her forward. I was totally stunned and speechless.I recovered enough to remember what Murray Schwartz told my class of '67 as we entered law school - we were there because wewantedto helppeople.I have alwaysrememberedthat and was glad torestate it as I was being honored with the Salsman award by my colleagues."

Ralph M. Ochoa '69, former UC Regent and Sacramento attorney, received the Latino Alumnus of the Year award from the UCLA Latino Alumni Association in October at its annual "Fiesta de Inspiracion" scholarship banquet. Ochoa was honored for his professional accomplishments and his ongoing support of the association's scholarship fund, which provides financial assistance to UCLA students. He was nominated by Gov. Pete Wilson to the Board of Regents in October and his confirmation was pending at time of publication.
Ochoa alsoreceivedhisbachelor'sdegreein zoology from UCLA in 1963.He is a senior and founding partner of the firm, Ochoa & Sillas, which has offices in Los Angeles, Sacramento and Mexico City.
A longtimesupporter of UCLA andthe UC system, Ochoa is amember ofthe UCLA Board of Visitors, a trustee of the UCLA Foundation Board and a member of the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Public Policy Advisory Board. In 1990, he became the first Hispanic to lead the UCLA Alumni Association. He also has served as president of the Alumni Associations of the University ofCalifornia.
Ochoa has served onnumerous boards andcommissionsat the federal, state and local levels of government. He was recently appointed to the California Lottery Commission by Gov.PeteWilson.He also wasrecently nominatedby UC President RichardAtkinson as the Public Member of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC), the Western accreditation entity in higher education.
In the 1970s, Ochoa served as chief of stafftoCalifornia State Assembly Speaker Leo T. McCarthy, and in 1978 accompanied Rosalyn Carter as special ambassador and representative of the President of the United States to the inauguration of President Rodrigo Carazo Odio of Costa Rica.
He resides in Sacramento with his wife, Marty.They have two sons, Matt andChris.
Rick Stone '70 has been elected president of che Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles. His practice ac Zelle & Larson, Los Angeles, is concentrated on solving sophiscicaced business disputes.
Gerald M. Cole '71 has become che Regional Director of the Federal Labor Relations Authority in San Francisco. He now resides in San Ramon, California with his wife, Rikki. His son, Josh, is a senior at Arizona Scace and his daughter, Jennifer, is a junior ac UC Davis.
Paul Marcus '71, Haynes Professor of Law ac che College of William and Mary, has been named acting dean for che 1997-98 year.
Jim Goldman '73 is now serving as president of the Los Angeles Chapter of che Federal Bar Association.
Peter Bronson '74, William L. Nelson, David J. Gullen, and former bankcrupccy Judge Herbert Katz have formed a partnership, Nelson Gullen Bronson & Katz, based in Century City. Previously a partner in Bryan Cave LLP, Bronson practices in the areas of bankruptcy, creditors' rights, and commercial litigation.
Michael S. Rubin '74 has closed his office in San Francisco and accepted a position in che Law Department ac Apple Computer, Inc.
Donna R. Black '75 has been elected chair of the Section of Natural Resources, Energy and Environmental Law of che American Bar Association. She is a partner with Manatt, Phelps & Phillips.
Victoria ("Tori") Block '75, was recendy named chair of che Advocacy Commiccee of che Northern California Chapter of che American Immigration Lawyers Association. The commiccee will push to enact amendments to recent legislation to blunt its harsh effects and to promote legal immigration in the high-tech sector. She has a solo practice in immigration, computer law, and litigation based in San Francisco.
Stephanie Joyce (Topliss) Cole '75 was mistakenly referred co in the spring 1997 magazine as the administrative director of the Alaska Supreme Court. In face, she is the state court administrator for the entire Alaska Court System.
Deborah David '75 is now president of the Consumer Attorney's Association of Los Angeles.
Robert M. Kunstadt '75 has established R. Kunscadc, P.C., an intellectual property law firm in New York City. Kunscadt was a partner at Pennie & Edmonds. He joined chat firm afier a research fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for Patent, Copyright and Competition Law in Munich from 1975 to 1977.
Michael I. Adler '76 has joined Lichter, Grossman & Nichols, Inc. as a partner. The firm is now called Lichter, Grossman, Nichols & Adler, Inc. He continues to practice entertainment law, and his firm represents individuals and companies in television and motion pictures. He is active in charitable activities and serves on the board of Camp Ramah and the Los Angeles Bureau of Jewish Education.
Robert Weeks and his wife,
Nancy ac '67 Reunion

Robert Jay Moore'77 has been named partner at Milbank, Tweed, Hadley Er McCloy. He specializes in debtor/creditor relations and bankruptcy law.
Melanie Gook'78 was named Entertainmenr Lawyer of the Year by the Beverly Hills Bar Association and featured in the Los Angeles Times "The Biz," section in spring of 1997. Her clients include Madonna, Holly Hunter, Tim Burton and Ed Harris. Cook is an attorney with Bloom, Hergoft, Cook, Diemer & Klein.
Ann Kough '78 has been elevated to rhe Los Angeles Superior Courr, serving in the Juvenile Court.
Michae! A. Robbins'78 has been named managing parrner at Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman. The firm is the largest and second oldest in Beverly Hills. Robbins practices exclusively in the area of labor and employment law.
Rochelle M. Lindsey'79 has joined Kelley Drye's Los Angeles office as special counsel for the Corporate Department. She specializes in financial transacrions, mergers and acquisitions, corporate transactions, and secufltles matters.
linda Gach Ray'79 and Rob Owens write that they recendy acquired a minor league baseball team, rhe Helena Brewers. The team is affiliated with the Milwaukee Brewers.
Kim Wardlaw '79 approved a $1.7 million seftlemenrone of the largest everin a housing discrimination case in which middle-class black families were victimized by pop-culture gang stereorypes. Her decision was reported in the Los Angeles Times. \Tardlaw is a U.S. District judge.
.L9B0s
Dennis S. Diaz'80 has joined Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal as a partner resident in Los Angeles. He was formerly a partner with Musick, Peeler & Garrett, and specializes in healthcare law. Diaz was also recently selected to teach the health law course for the UCI Executive MBA Program.
Steven J. Untiedt'80 has been named managing parrner of the law firm Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch LLP Prior to his new posr, Untiedt was leader of the firm's business & technology team and was a member of the firmt management committee. His area is in business transactions, including mergers and acquisitions, financings, and corporate and commercial law matters.
David Babbe '81 has been named managing partner of Morrison & Foerster's Los Angeles office. Babbe has been with the firm since l99l and has headed the litigation department since 1993.
Gregory Feis'81 has been made partner at the \Mashington D.C. office of Shaw Pittman Potts & Tiowbridge. He practices in the areas of mergers, acquistions, joint ventures, securities and general business law.
Greg Bernstein'82 has been appointed to the management committee at Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman. He is a partner in the Entertainment Department.
Thomas Bliss'82 is executive producing 'Air Force One" for Columbia, 'h Thousand Acres" and "Playing God" for Touchsrone Pictures, and producing "Box of Moonlight" for Tlimark Pictures.
Steve Glickman'82 was elected vice-president of the Consumer Attorneys of California. He is also a member of the Board of Governors of the Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles. He and his father, David Glickman '57, practice in Beverly Hills, specializing in plantifft personal injury and medical malpracrice.
Martin E. Bosen '82 andhis wife, Ellen, announce rhe birth of their rwin sons, Matthew and Zachary. Martin practices with the LA office of Barger & \Molen as a litigatlon paftner.
Marilyn S. Pecsok'83 has recently been certified as a specialist in family law by the State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization. She practices in Pacific Palisades with Bill Snyder'58, who is a certified specialist in probate, esrare planning, and trust law.
Rob Noriega'86 and his wife, Lindy, welcomed their third son, Zachary James, in Augu st 1997 Zachary's older brothers are Andrew and Alex, ages 5 and 2.
Nathaniel Christian '87 has joined Blaylock & Partners, a New York Ciry invesrmenr banking firm, as a senior vice president of Business Management. Christian was previously a senior arrorney with the law firm Brown & \7ood, also in New York Ciry.
Thomas L, Hardy '87 is now Assistant District Attorney for Inyo Counry. He heads the Northern Criminal Division and is in charge of white-collar prosecurions and drug and narcotics prosecurions.
Noriko Ellen 0kamoto '87 is now the Assistant General Counsel for Tyco Submarine Systems Ltd., a company that designs, consrructs and maintains undersea fiber optic cable systems.
John J. Tormey lll '87 has started his own law practice in New York, N.Y. He will focus on transactions, contracts, entertainment and intellectual properry.
Jonathan [. Smoller'88 was recendy promoted ro parrner at the Los Angeles office of the Honolulu based Carlsmith Ball \X/ichman Case & Ichiki. He is a general civil litigator, with emphasis on business rorrs.
lisa Jacohsen'89 has been appointed chair of the Labor and Employment Law departmenr at Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman in Beverly Hills. The department represents employers against claims of wrongful termination, sexual harassment and all rypes of employment discriminarion. Jacobsen starfed her career as a commercial litigator at O'Melveny & Myers before joining her currenr firm.
Adam Salis'89 and G. Thomas Drosman'71 have joined Steven Anapoell and Michael Lapin to form Drosman, Anapoell, Lapin & Salis, LLP. The firm practices in the areas of real estate, corporate, tax, estate planning, employment and general business litigation. Salis was previously a real esrare asset manager with Archon Group, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Goldman, Sachs & Company.
Bruce John Shih '89 has joined Latham & Watkins' Los Angeles office. He will be of counsel in their health care practice group. Shih was with the health care departmenr of Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, also in Los Angeles.
jr990s
Sukhdev S. Rye '90 has been hired as Tax Counsel to State Board of Equalizarion member, Johan Klehs. Rye serves on several boards, such as the Assessmenr Appeals Board of Sacramento, Board of Directors of the Asian Bar Association of Sacramento, the Sacramento Tfansportadon Management Association, and the Executive Committee of the Tax Section of the Sacramento Bar Association.
Marina T. Sarmiento'90 has been elevated ro partner ar the Stilson Law offices and the firm changed its name to Stilson/Sarmiento. Sarmiento practices in San Francisco and specializes in litigation and debt and judgment collection. She currently serves as a Board Member for the Filipino Bar Association of Northern California and the Asian American Bar Association of the Greater Bay Area.
Cynthia Gouw'91 recently won her second regional Emmy award for reporting on immigration issues. She also won two "Best of the \(/est" awards for environmental and minority aflairs reporting. Gouw covered the O.J. Simpson trial in Los Angeles for the ABC affiliate network, and traveled to Hong Kong ro cover the historic hand-over ro rhe Peoplet Republic of China. She is currently a News Anchor/Reporrer ar IC(TV Channel 10 in Sacramento. Gouw may be reached by email at cgouw@pacbell.net
Shirley S. [u'91 recently accepted a position with Pacific Theaters Corporation as Corporate Real Estate Counsel.
Steven Levy '92 spenr the first eight monrhs of this year studying Judaism at a yeshiva in Jerusalem. He wrires, "ir was a phenomenal experience." Previously practicing corporate and international law at \[eil, Gotshal & Manges in New York Ciry Levy is now beginning a one-year MBA program focusing on international business at INSEAD, a business school in Fontainebleau, France.
James Brat '97 is the first of this year's graduating class to send a report. As a clerk for Judge Thomas M. Jahnke in Ketchikan, Alaska, Jim is leading a low-key life. His apartment abuts the Ketchikan Creeh where salmon fishing is allowed just one day a year. He is also only a half-mile from the courrhouse, so "hoofs it" to work each day.
The local radio station, KRBD, has become a key aspect ofJimt nighdife. He had no sooner heard the DJ give out the phone number than he heard his request -a Van Halen number -coming over the airwaves. Judge Jahnket secretary hosts a blues show on KRBD and Jim hopes to soon begin hosting a jazz show.
Of his first day of work, Jim says: "I started at B. At 9, the judge came and got me from the library and we went and had coffee with all the other lawyers in town for about an hour. At noon, I walked home for lunch, and at 4, rhejudge told me that it was too hot to work, and to go home for the day. After all, it was almost 80 degrees!"
He goes on to say that he has found out how little law Alaska has and that he gets to pick and choose from other states.

Linda B. Oliver'93 recently joined the firm of James H. Fleming & Associates. Previously with Bailey & Kornblum, she continues to pracdce insurance litigation, mainly in the areas of life, health, and disability. She writes, "On a personal note, I'm getting married to Thomas Montgomery, an accountant."
Howard C. Griboff '93 is arrorney-advisor for the \Tireless Telecommunications Bureau of the FCC in lWashington, D.C. He married A-y L. Gray in October 1996.
Michael Balaoing '94 has joined the California Wellness Foundation as a program operarot working on rhe organizationt Violence Prevention Initiative.
Don Fishman '94 wrires that he is moving back ro Los Angeles from \Mashington D.C. with the same firm, Latham & \7atkins.
Meredith Blake'95 is conrinuing in her work as founder and executive director of Break the Cycle, a nonprofit organizatton that focuses on dating violence prevention, education, intervention and support for adolescents ages 12-19. Break the Cycle sffives ro srem the epidemic of relationship violence through a varierF of programs including: education in schools about the law and dynamics of relationship violence, akernarives to violence, legal rights and responsibilities; resrraining order clinic; and pro bono legal and counseling services and mentor programs.
UCLA Law students, alumni and faculry are an integral part of Break the Cycle, with 24 of them involved with the organizarion as advisors, staff, volunteers, inrerns and donors. There is also an alumni group called Friends of Break the Cycle, which provides financial and emotional support for the organizarion.
Michael Chang '95 has accepted a position with Seiko Epson Corporation as international legal counsel. He will be based in Nagano, Japan, at the legal department of Seiko Epsont worldwide corporate headquarrers. He will focus on international corporate, commercial and intellectual properry law.
Heather A. Mactavish'95 and Jason J. Freelin '95 are h.ppy to announce that they were married on August 23, 1997 in Palos Verdes, California. Several of their former classmates from UCLA Law School were able to arrend. After spending Nvo years in the Los Angeles office of Heller Ehrman \White and McAuliffe, Heather is currenrly clerking for Judge David \fl. Hagen. After clerliing for Judge Michael E. Fondi in Carson Ciry Nevada during the year following law school, Jason joined the law firm of Guild, Russell, Gallagher & Fuller in Reno, Nevada where he and Heather now live.
IN MEMORIAM

"B.T." Davis. who served library for 25 years, dies in May
BOOKER "B.T." DAVIS, WHO TOUCHED THE LIVES OF ALL WHO KNEW HIM DURING HIS MORE THAN 25 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW LIBRARY, DIED LAST MAY IN HIS SANTA MONICA HOME.
Dean Susan Prager,who knew Davis as both dean and student,said at his memorial service: "The deans before me will verify that B.T. is the most asked-about person ever associated with the law school. He knew every student who entered the library by name, and he projected an incredible warmth and concern for each of us."
"I have one especially vivid memory of B.T.'s impact on our lives," Prager continued. "Shortly after I became dean, B.T. unexpectedly came into a room where the Law Alumni Board was meeting. Every face in the room lit up upon seeing him. B.T.- with his amazing memory for names and faces - then proceeded to greet every member of the board by name, save one. She had graduated before B.T. made the journey from Yale Law Library to UCLA in September of 1960."
Davis not only knew the people, he knew every inch of the collections. As Professor David Mellinkoff puts it: "B.T. not only knew the books, he knew where they were! You still can't get that from a card catalog or a computer. B.T. would say: 'Right down this aisle to the first door on your right. Walk straight in 'till you hit the wall. The book you want is in the stacks to your left, second shelf from the bottom.' We miss you, B.T."

The B.T. Davis Library Fund was established in his honor in 1987 after his retirement. Contributions to the fund go toward support of UCLA Law's collections.
Davis, 76, served the Law School from 1960 to 1986, retiring a few months after the law school honored him at a Dean's Dinner.He had suffered from diabetes for many years. Raised in Philadelphia, Davis attended Howard University and was employed in the U.S. Department of Agriculture Library before joining the circulation department of Yale University's Law Library, where he worked from 1955 to 1960. In September 1960, he came to UCLA to become principal library assistant at the School of Law Library. In 1969, he was appointed head of the circulation section. In 1976, he became head of the reserve book room.
One of the most memorable and best-attended Dean's Dinners honored Davis on the newly constructed Royce Hall Terrace one chilly winter night in 1985. Recalled Dean Prager, "It was quite a testament to B.T.'s special place in our hearts and in our history that we chose to celebrate his contributions to the law school and his remarkable sparkle even before he decided to retire.'' Some very special alums and faculty spoke about that night, and relayed their memories. Others sent letters containing their anecdotes about Davis.
Few people in a community can evoke such a swelling of fond memories over so many generations of alumni, students, faculty and colleagues as B.T. did that night for the law school, remembers former Dean Bill Warren.
Fred Smith, the Law School's librarian emeritus who has been a friend and colleague to Davis for many years, remembers their days together in the library fondly: "I don't think anyone could ever tell a negative story about B.T. He was such a warm and resilient human being.Whenever things would get hectic, or they'd run up against a tough customer, B.T. would just shake his head and say: 'Hmmmm, hm, I don't know Fred. I just don't know.' That was the only inkling you had that he was the least bit upset."
Smith said he often took solace and was amused by Davis' calmness: "What I liked best about B.T. was that he was cheerful and had a good attitude. You really couldn't get him down.''

Harvey
Shapiro '76,
first quadriplegic lawyer in state
HARVEY SHAPIRO '76, WHO AS THE STATE'S FIRST QUADRIPLEGIC ATTORNEY, FOUGHT FOR THE RIGHT TO PRACTICE LAW AND BATTLED THROUGHOUT HIS LIFE FOR THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS, DIED AUG. 30 FROM COMPLICATIONS OF PNEUMONIA. HE WAS49. Shapiro, whowas paralyzed fromtheneckdown byadivingaccidentatage 14, never gave in to physical limits. As a child, he toured jails with his uncle, a criminal defense attorney, and was determined early in life to become an attorney. He earned a bachelor's degree from UCLA, graduating magna cum laude, and then earned a law degree from UCLAalthoughhecouldnotturnapageorwrite.Despitetheeffortsofhisfirstemployer and mentor Harland Braun '67, Shapiro wasunable to get the State Bar to allow him extratimeoranadjustedscoreonthe Barexam, buthepassedaftertakinghisexamorally. He was sworn in to the Bar privately by then-California ChiefJustice Rose Bird, and practiced criminal lawwith Braun for ayear before switchingto civilpractice.
Asanattorney, Shapiro helpedshapehandicappedaccesslaws. Heservedas president of Los Angeles' Handicapped AccessAppeals Commission. He was a founding member and chairman of the board of the Western Law Center for the Handicapped, former chairman of the Los Angeles County Commission on Disabilities and former chairman ofthe Mayor'sAdvisoryCouncil on the Handicapped.
HealsoheadedtheboardoftheModernCityRepertoireDanceCompanyandserved on the board of the Fulfillment Fund, a mentoring and scholarship program for disadvantagedyouths.
Shapiro practiced law for 21 yearsin Beverly Hills, the last 10 ofthose years with his former study partner, Mark Waldman '75, handling mostly personal injury cases. Waldmansaid Shapirowasasuccessfulnegotiator, andoftenwasabletogethisopposing counsel to agree to his demands before the case went to trial. He said Shapiro also was giftedatdealingwithclients. "He'sveryempathetic -;- verypatientandcompassionate."
Said DeanSusanPrager: "Heeducatedustotheneedsofthedisabledlongbeforefederal laws were in place." She added that Shapiro often advised the disabled students groupsoncampus, andservedasamentortostudentsatthelawschool.Shapirowasgenerous to the Law Schooland served as a class representative. He regularlyparticipated in phonathonstoraise money for the law annualfund.
Shapiro served asa judgepro tern in Beverly HillsMunicipal Court. He also wasan adjunct professor at UCLA School of Medicine, where he taught a course in medical ethics.
IN MEMORIAM
ERNEST R. BALDWIN '57
JAMES L. BUMPAS '68
DAVID G. CAMERON '69
STANLEY E. COHEN '57
RONALD T. DEISSLER '55
JASON GAIR '55

EDWARD LAsKER '55
EUGENE LEVITON '59
PETER A. NOTARAS '62
WILLIAM D. SHAW '58
WILLIAM 0. TODD '52
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