UCLA Law - Fall-Winter 1998, Vol. 22, No. 1

Page 1


UC LA

The Magazine of the UCLA School of Law Vol, 22, No. 1 • Fall/Winter 1998

UCLA Law is published at UCLA for alumni, friends and other members of the UCLA Law community.

Copyright 1998 UC Regents

Offices at UCLA School of Law Box 951476, Los Angeles, Calif. 90095-1476

Jonathan D. Varat, Dean

Robyn B. Puntch, Interim Director of Development

UCLA Law Magazine Staff

Karen Nikos

Editor

Randolf Arguelles, Roderick Sasis

Editorial Assistants

Mary Ann Stuehrmann

ASUCLA Photo Service: Todd Cheney

Photographers

Barbara Kelly

Designer

Typecraft Printer

UCLA Law Alumni Association Board of Directors

Richard D. Fybel '71

President

Donna R. Black '75

Vice President

Hon. George P. Schiavelli '74

Secretary/Treasurer

Richard W. Havel '71

Alumni Representative

John F. Runkel, Jr. '81

Immediate Past President

Kyle B. Arndt '94

Wendy D. Aron '96

Hon. Valerie L. Baker '75

Harland W. Braun '67

Cynthia S. Conners '83

Beth K. Cranston '86

Shedrick 0. Davis '87

Lori Huff Dillman '83

David W. Fleming '59

David I. Gindler '84

Dee A Hayashi '82

Glenn L. Krinsky '83

Josiah Neeper '59

Dennis L. Perez '82

Hon. Steven Z. Perren '67

Hon. CarQlyn Richardson Owens '82

Carl C. Robinson '77

Sharon F. Rubalcava '75

Shan K. Thever '74

Marcy J.K. Tiffany '77

William A Vallejos '87

On the Cover:

The sunlit sky filters through the wood-lath ceiling of the Moore Ruble Yudell-designed Fourth Floor

Reading Room of the new Hugh and Hazel Darling Law Library. The tower provides a distinctive study environment for UCLA Law students and offers a bold exterior eastern gateway to the campus. Photography by Todd Cheney, ASUCLA Photography 2 8 11 12 16 28 32 56

DEAN PRAGER HONORED IN TRIBUTE DINNER

FACULTY PUBLISHED IN THE SUPREME COURT REVIEW

STEWART KWOH '74 NAMED MAcARTHUR FELLOW

MEET OUR STUDENTS

Brian Bills

Nicole Reyes

John Schafer

FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION

New faculty join UCLA Law New in Career Services

Visiting faculty News about the faculty Faculty books in print

CLASSNOTES

THE UCLA LAW CAMPAIGN

The Honor Roll of Donors Estate planning

BECOME MORE INVOLVED IN YOUR LAW SCHOOL

DEAN PRAGER HONORED IN TRIBUTE

DINNER AFTER 16 YEARS AS DEAN

"Youmay remember himas 'theShadow.' Lamont Cranston andSusan resemble oneanotherinthat they havetheability tocloudmens minds. Iampersonally aliving victimtributetothat."
KennethZiffren

RCHITECT," "BU/LDER," "FRIEND," "VELVET 1-IAM�ER" WERE WORDS f USED TO DESCRIBE pUSAN WESTERBERG ,/ PRAGER AT A TRIBt1TE DINNER HELD IN HER HONOR-!I'rJUNE AT THE REGENT BEVERLY WILSHIRE HOTEL IN BEVERLY HILLS. BUT KENNETH Z!FFREN '65 SUMMED UP THEDEAN OF UCLA's LAW SCHOOL FOR 16 YEARS IN HIS OWN WAY. ZIFFREN, PRINCIPAL OF THE UCLALAW-DOMINATEDENTERTAINMENTLAW FIRM OF Z!FFREN, BRITTENHAM, BRANCAAND FISCHER - AND RECENTLY APPOINTED ADJUNCT FACULTY MEMBER - LIKENED PRAGER TO THE ORSON WELLES-NARRATED CHARACTER OF LAMONT CRANSTON.

"You may remember him as 'the Shadow,' " Ziffren explained. "Lamont Cranston and Susan resemble oneanother in that they have the ability to cloud men's minds. I am personally a living victim tribute to that," Ziffren told a laughing audience. In a segment of the program in which a few alumni and faculty spoke from the podium, Ziffren explained how Dean Prager had talked him intojoining the UCLA campaign, co-chairingthe new Board ofAdvisorsfor theLaw School and serving theschool ina varietyofotherways. "I don't knowhowshedoesit, butIloveherfordoingit. Thank you, Susan."

In tributes that were sometimes tearful, other times humorous and often irreverent, the"bestdeanofanylawschoolinthecountry," asdescribedbyformerDean Bill Warren, received a rousing sendofffrom an appreciative crowd. Prager herselfjoined

Above: Wilma Williams Pinder '76, right, leads the crowd in a napkin-waving salute to Dean Designate Jonathan D. Varat as he is formally introduced as dean.
Right: Law Alumni Board President Richard Fybel presents to Dean Susan Prager the Lifetime Achievement Award. Other recent awards Prager has received are featured on page 4.

in the ribbing. As she choked back tears while receiving from her classmate, Law Alumni Board President Richard Fybel, UCLA's first Lifetime Achievement Award, hereafter to be called the Susan W Prager Award, Prager quipped: "I don't even want to think about how many non-billable hours we have in this room tonight."

Packingthe room as Prager stepped down as dean after 16years were alumni, faculty, a collection of Prager's former associate deans; Chancellor Emeritus Charles E. Young and his wife Sue Young, staff, friends and family The guests included prominentjudges, deans, law firm partners, company presidents and people from various other walks of life; or,accordingto Fybel: "more than 400 of her closest friends."

Members of the Dean Search Committee - Wilma Williams Pinder '76, Ralph Shapiro '58 and Professor David Sklansky - introduced Dean Designate Jonathan Varat, with Pinder leading the crowd in a napkin-waving salute to the new dean. "We need to give him the same respect and support that we gave to Susan. Since I'm a country bumpkin," Pinder, a Los Angeles assistant city attorney, continued, "I want you to greet him by waving your white napkin." In a wave of white linen, DeanVarat walked to the lectern, introduced himself, and paid tribute to Prager and,"the home that Susan built." In a speech in which Varat commended Prager's achievements in buildingnot only the physicalstructure but also the internalcollegialcommunity, he relayed a story he had heard shortly after hejoined the faculty.

"[Professor] JesseDukeminiertoldmeinaconversationheprobablywon't remember, that a young woman faculty member had such evidentjudgment and leadership talentthatshewouldsomedaysurelybecomedean. EvenJesseprobablywasunaware,

:-"Susanis equippedwith whatIcallthevelvet hammer. Shehasthe courage todeliver a messagedirectlyand honestlybutwithcompassionandsensitivity. Susanalwaysgives 200percenttothis lawschool."
AssociateDeanBarbaraVarat discussingherlongcareerwithPrager
Darren Scott Mason, his wife, Karin Krogius '82, and Steve Sletten '82, join in the napkin salute to Dean Designate Jonathan D. Varat.

"Thebuildingsshe hasbuilt, thequality ofthefacultyshehas recruited, theseare obvioustoanyone whoknowsanything abouttheschool, but shehasdonemuch thatisn'tobvious .. What is uniqueabout herandsoappealing tome is thatnotonly hasshedonegreat things, butshehas somehowremained theopen, loving, friendly, caring personthatshewas atthebeginning."

Ralph'58and Shirley Shapiro name SusanWesterberg Prager Endowed Fund

In recognition of the dedication, achievements anp contributions of Dean Susan Prager to UCLA School of Law, Ralph '58 and Shirley Shapiro have named an endowed fund in her honor. The Shapiros contributed $50,000 to start the Susan Westerberg PragerEndowedFund.

RalphandShirleyShapiroencouragealumniandfriendstoaddtothisfundsothatit may grow and allow its benefactors to contribute to the Law School's future in Dean Prager'shonor.

Dean Pragerhonoredby UCLAandlocalorganizationsforcommunityservice

Sinceannouncingthatshewouldstepdownasdean,manylocalandUCLAorganizations havechosentohonorDeanSusan Westerberg Pragerforhercontributionstothecommunity, including the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the Los AngelesLegalAidFoundation,theSanta Monica BayKeeperandthe UCLALatinoAlumni Association.

TheLegalAidFoundationhonored Pragerin Novemberwiththe MaynardTollAward inrecognitionofherleadershipinpublicserviceandthelegalprofession.Theaward,presentedataluncheonindowntownLosAngeles,hasbeengivenannuallyfor 13yearsto anattorneywhosepublicserviceandcommitmenttolegalservicesforthepoorareinthe besttraditionsofthelegalprofession.TheawardwaspresentedbyformerU.S.Secretary ofStateWarrenChristopher,whoworkedwith Pragerformanyyearswhentheyserved ontheStanford University BoardofTrustees. Lastyear,MALDEFhonored Pragerwithits LegalServicesAward.

TheSantaMonica BayKeeperpresented PragerwiththeBayKeeperCircleAwardlast year,anannualawardpresentedtoanindividual "whohasmadeanoutstandingcontributiontotheprotectionandtherestorationofour Bay." Shewasrecognized,inparticular,forco-foundingtheLawSchool'sFrankG.WellsEnvironmentalLawClinicin 1994.The Clinicworkswiththe BayKeeperandother environmental entities,usinglegalresources topreventandstoppollution intheLosAngelesareawhiletraininglawstudentsinenvironmentallaw.

The UCLALatinoAlumniAssociationbestowedon Pragerthe MadrinaAward,which isgivenannuallytoapersonwhohasmadeanexceptionalcontributiontotheacademic andprofesionalsuccessofLatinostudentsat UCLA.Theassociationhonored Pragerfor "[having) influencedageneration oflegalscholarsandlawyerswhohavemaintaineda strong commitment to social justice and equality, many of whom have dedicated their careerstoservingthelegalneedsintheLatinocommunity."

Wilma Williams Pinder, Ralph Shapiro and Professor David Sklansky, all members of the Law School Dean Search Committee, gather to introduce Dean Designate Jonathan D. Varat.

however, that Susan would become dean so soon and remain dean for so longthough I am surethathe, liketherest ofus, isgratefulthatshedid."

Prager was 39 when, with the encouragement of outgoing Dean Bill Warren and her husband,Jim Prager, she decided she would submit her name for consideration as dean. They made this life-changing decision even though their daughter, McKinley, was a toddler. (Their younger daughter, Case, would be born while she was in office - during an important faculty meeting Prager understandably missed). "Jim didn't even takea breath," Prager saidofthe discussion theyhad beforeher decision to pursue the deanship. "He said, 'I think you can think about doing it. I think you should think about doing it, and if you can [become dean], then we will find a way tomakeit work.' Andhe'sbeenhelpingmemakeit workalloftheseyears."

Prager became the first woman dean of a University of California law school and wasoneofthefirstwomendeansofanAmericanBarAssociationlawschool(Thefirst was Dorothy Wright Nelson '53, former USC Law dean, now judge of the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals). A 1971 graduate of UCLA Law, Prager went on to becomeoneofthelongest-servinglawdeansin thecountry,andsheappointedmore thanhalfofthecurrentUCLA law faculty

Her seniority and command for the job, even in her early years, won her the respect not only of her law school and UCLA colleagues in California, but throughoutthenation. VaratdiscussedhisimpressionsuponattendingarecentABAseminar for new law deans. "She, the Bruin Dean, was asked, as she had been several times before, to impart her wisdom to aspiring dean cubs like me. I know you are aware what a leader in legal education nationally Susan is, but I wish you could all have experienced, as I did, not just the qualities that we know so well, but the hushed

''Jimdidn'teventake abreath. Hesaid, 'Ithinkyoucanthink aboutdoingit.Ithink youshouldthinkabout doingitandifyoucan [becomedean], then wewillfindaway tomakeitwork.' Andhe's beenhelping memakeitworkall oftheseyears."
Susan Westerberg Prager, Arjay and Frances Fearing Miller Professor of Law

tones of reverence that were whispered throughout the group whenever Susan spoke or evenappeared."

Roy Aaron, president of the UCLA Foundation, spoke of a similar reverence for PrageratUCLAandinthecommunity: "Susan,youmakemeveryproudtobeamember of the legal profession."

Antonia Hernandez'75, president and general counsel for the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, talked about Prager's determination, despite obstacles, such as during the library fund-raising campaign. At the time of the librarycampaign,intheearly'90sduringoneoftheworstrecessionsinhistory, Hernandezwas in the midst ofa campaign for MALDEF "She said, 'You know, Antonia, we will succeed.' "

"What I love about Susan," Hernandez said, "is that there is nothing she can't do once she sets her mind to it.''

"Asapropertyteacher, Iwanttotalkaboutbricksandmortar,"saidProfessorJesse Dukeminier in his tribute speech that evening. Dukeminier, who served on the committee that consulted on design of the library, expressed his admiration for Prager's successfulquestforfundsthatledto the "crownjewel ofthelawschool" -the Hugh andHazel DarlingLawLibrary,which openedin August. He praised Prager's supervision of the project during every step, which he said led to its greatness. "She .. . is a great leader - first mystudent, then my teacher."

Jim Prager (third from right), Professor Jerry Kang and Susan Prager greet guests.
"Susanisoneofthe mostenjoyablepeople withwhomIhavehad thepleasureofworking."

Charles E. Young, Chancellor Emeritus, appointed Prager and two other law school deans during his tenure

Clockwise, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Jack Newman '65 and Ventura County Superior Court Judge Steven Z. Perren '67; Chancellor Emeritus Charles E. Young; Dean Susan Prager with Barbara Boyle '60 (left) and Melanie Cook '78 (right); Jonathan D. Varat; and Kenneth Ziffren (center).

t,

cho\arsseekingcommentaryonsomeof = thelatestis uesfacingthel�hprnmeCourtdonothavetolookmuchfurtherthan t e- CLAl;;aw-acult nii,rare onor,threeoftheLawSchool'sprofessorshavebeen publishe in-the mostrecent Supreme,Court Review, ascholarlyjournalpublishedat -. -� I i � thel:Jniversityofi:;hicago.,r:=:- '"l I

Professor'"'DavidSl<larik�,aformerfederalprosecutorwhoteachescriminalprocedure,examine"cl]ourrecentS�meCourtcasesapplyingsearchandseizurerulesto trafficstops,andcriticizedtheCourtforignoringtheimpactofrace.ProfessorEugene Volokh, who in addition to his constitutional scholarship and coursework teaches cyberlaw, addressed in his article the Court's invalidation of the Communications DecencyAct.ProfessorEvanCaminker,whoalsoteachesconstitutionallaw,lookedat the Court'sreasoningbehinditsinvalidationofenforcementprovisionsintheBrady Handgun Vfolence PreventionAct, otherwise known as the "Brady Bill." Notably, a fourtha ti goutofthetotal11articlesintheReview,"EntrenchingtheDuopoly:Why tneSupremeCourtShouldNotAllowtheStatestoProtecttheDemocratsandRepublicans from PoliticalCompetition," was written by Richard L. Hasen, a UCLA Law graduate(1991)whoservedasvisitingprofessorattheLawSchoolinspring1998.

"ApartfromtheUniversityofChicago,Idon'tthinkanysinglelawfacultyhasever hadsomanyauthorsinthesamevolume,"saidUCLALawProfessorKennethKarst, rhohaspreviouslybeenpublishedinthesamejournal. "ItisquiteacoupforUCLA l_tobe so strongly represented in the1997 edition. Ifthereisonepublicationinthe country tha 1s read by virtually all constitutional scholars, it is the Supreme Court Review."

Asafederalprosecutor,Sklanskydealtdailywithissuesoffairnessinthecriminal justicesystem.Headdressestheseissuesintheclassroomnow,teachingCriminalProceduretoUCLALawstudents. "Itseemedtomethen,anditseemstomenow, that crimina4¥:trelawhaspaidalotofattentiontoindividualizedfairness,butoften hasbeenins ficientlyconcernedwithequality"In"TrafficStops, MinorityMotorists, andthefutu ·ftheFourthAmendment,"Sklanskywrotethatthejustices'decisions intrafficstopcasesstronglyfavorlawenforcementwhiledisregardingtheimpactof

race. "For example, when the Court talks about police pulling over a car, it doesn't think about how the experience might be different for minority motorists."

Sklansky'sarticlefocusedonfourcases: Ornelasv. UnitedStatesand Whrenv. United States, both handed down in the1995 term, as well as Ohiov. Robinette andMaryland v. Wilson, both heard during the 1996 term. Together, Sklansky argued, these cases illustrate not only the Court's increasingly pronounced appreciation for the diffficulties of law enforcement, but also, and more troublingly, its growing insensitivity in Fourth Amendment cases to the distinctive concerns of minorities. That insensitivity, he suggested, is closely related to certain other defects of seach and seizure doctrine, including its exclusive focus on issues of informational privacy, and its excessive reliance on an often fictional notion of consent.

Caminker, in "Printz, State Sovereignty, and the Limits of Formalism," found fault with the Court's reasoning behind its 5-4 decision in Printz vs. United States, which invalidated the enforcement provisions of the Brady Bill gun control law. In its ruling last year, the Court held that the Brady Act's interim requirements imposed on state law enforcement officers violate the federal constitution because "the federal government may not.compelthe states to implement, by legislation or executive action, federal regulatoryprograms."

Specifically, Congress passed the Brady Bill in 1994 to amend existing federal gun control laws. The new law requires prospective purchasers of guns to wait five days whilelawenforcementofficersinthejurisdictionverifythattheyarenotforbiddenby local, state or federal laws from owning a gun. This was an interim measure intended to be in force until an FBInational check system is implemented in late 1998.

Caminker wrote thatJustice Antonin Scalia, in writing the majority opinion finding those provisions unconstitutional, did not adequately support with "text, structure, and history" the Court's conclusions. "For me, this piece bridges two different interests of mine - one is my interest in federalism itself. The other is the methodological question of translating constitutional meaning into doctrine," explained Caminker,whohastaughtconstitutionallawatUCLAsince1991 andispreparingto teach a seminar on meaning and constitutional doctrine. He said that the Court

Clockwise from top: Professors Eugene Volokh, David Sklansky and Evan Caminker.
"Thepieceis basically criticizing theSupreme Court forpretending thatitsdoctrine derivesdirectly fromthemeaning offederalism, ratherthancritically self-acknowledging thatit's making choices."
ProfessorEvanCaminker

inevitably does two things in any constitutional case. First, the Court engages in textual, historical, structural, and sometimes other methodological inquiries to determine the meaning of the Constitution, or a specific provision thereof. Second, the Court must construct a workable doctrine that can map the meaning in a concrete way and can be applied across a range of future cases.

"I am interested in the disjunction between these two," Caminker said. "The piece is basically criticizing the Supreme Court for pretending that its doctrine derives directly from the meaning of federalism, rather than criticallyself-acknowledging that its making choices."

Caminker wrote in his article: "Justice Scalia's opinion embraces 'interpretive formalism,' by which I mean the Court takes a formalist approach to interpreting the meaning of the Constitution." He continued: "The Court eschewed a more 'functionalist' approach to interpretation, in that it pointedly avoided a sensitive assessment of whether such commandeering undermines any of the diverse values or purposes thought to underlie our various divisions of governmental authority, either at its founding or today."

Volokh examined the Court's decision in Reno v. ACLU, which dealt with a recurring First Amendment problem: When may the government restrict adult access to sexuallysuggestiveor profane speech in order to shieldchildren?

TheRenocasedealtwiththeCommunicationDecency Act,whichin 1996 banned material that "depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory activities or organs" from ·all parts of the Internet, except for those sites that charge for access. Volokh wrote that the Court correctly found this restriction overly broad, with no "safe harbor" for speech that has substantial value. But in the process,Volokh said, the Court wrongly claimed that its decision was essentially cost-free. "The opinion blithely asserted that there could be other methods that were as effective as the CDA at shielding children fromindecency,and yetlessrestrictive ofspeech; ifthatwere so, Congresscould�ave had its cake and eaten it, too - it could have shielded children and protected adult speech. But if you look carefully, it turns out that this is probably false. Congress was facedwithagenuinechoice: Shieldchildrenwhilerestrictingadults,or freeadultsand leave children unshielded."

The Court, Volokh concluded, reached the right result, but for the wrong reason. "Free speech," he said, "demands certain sacrifices, and the Court should have acknowledged this. It should have said that, yes, the CDA was the least restrictive way of effectively shielding children, but it was still unconstitutional because it imposed too much of a burden on constitutionally protected speech to adults. This would have been more candid, and it would have provided a more valuable precedent for the future."

MACARTHUR FOUNDATION FELLOW

Stewa\t Kwoh '74 was a pre-med student at UCLA when a campus protest cause¥himtorethinkhiscareerpath.Riotpolicestormedananti-VietnamWar and 1vil rights rally sponsored by the Asian-American Student Alliance. Two stugents were arrested, and others were injured during the clash. Rather than ,aid the.wounded, Kwoh aided the arrested, bailing out thejailed students. He decided then that a career in law would be more to his liking.

He later applied toUCLA School ofLaw and was accepted.

"I chose UCLA Law so I could continue to serve the community in which I lived," said Kwoh, who grew up in Echo Park and then Silverlake, where he still lives. Althoughhe qualifiedfor the UCLALawReview, Kwohinsteadstarteda student collective program that provided legal services in Chinatown and Little Tokyo. This establishedthetiesthatwouldleadto theAsianPacific AmericanLegalCenter'sfoundingin 1983 with thecollaborationofministers,attorneys andcommunityleaders.

As co-founderand executivedirector of the Asian PacificAmerican Legal Center of Southern California Kwoh, in June, became the first Asian-American attorney and human rights activist recognized with the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur FoundationFellowship.Hewillreceivea $300,000grantduringafive-year period, a recognition that he gladly shares with other community activists. Kwoh said thegrant,commonlyknownasthe"geniusgrant," recognizesnotonlyhisownachievements, but those of all legal community activists.

"Asians and non-Asians all felt that their work was recognized, too," Kwoh said about receiving the honor.

KwohsvisionandleadershiparereflectedbytheAsianPacificAmericanLegalCenters growth into the largest Asian-American legal services and civil rightsorganizationin the United States. More than 15,000 people per year seek the centers services, which focus onthreemajor programs: legalservicesfor thepoor,civilrights andinterethnic relations improvement.TheAPALCtacklesissuessuchasdomesticviolenceandcitizenship. Ithas helped 6,000 people to become U.S. citizens in the past two years. The center employs 40 staff members, who speak eight languages in addition to English and Spanish, and draws on more than 500 volunteers,two-thirdsofwhomare attorneys.

"Our staffis very committed; but they don't get paid well," said Kwoh, who plans to use half of the $60,000 increment he will receive this year for long-overdue staffraises. The Asian Pacific American Legal Center relies on private funding from foundationsand corporationsforits $2millionbudget.Kwohwillusetheotherhalffortaxesonthegrant.

The MacArthur Fellowships are characterized by their "no-strings-attached" awards for therecipients, who are free to use the awards asthey please. No one applies for the fellowship, but instead an anonymous committee keeps the process, and the names of nominees, a secret until the grants are announced.

Later,Kwohplanstouse someofthegrantmoneyto help publisha book onAsianAmerican civil rights heroes andheroines.

"Iwantpeopletoknowaboutthem,whathappenedineachcase,andtomakethem accessible to high school students," said Kwoh, who taught a civil rights seminar at UCLA Law School during the 1995-1996 school year. "I've always felt we need an accessible book that tells their stories."

"Asiansandnon-Asians allfeltthattheir work wasrecognized, too."

StewartKwoh, Co-founderand ExecutiveDirectorof Asian PacificAmerican LegalCenterof SouthernCalifornia, aboutreceiving theprestigious MacArthurfellowship inrecognitionofhis communitywork

MEET OURSTUDENTS

Becauseour alumnioftenfon'tgettomeetour students, weincludeinthismagazineprofilesofthree�four outstandingstudents. Theseindividualshrebeenfeaturedinrecentrecruitmentmaterialsdistributedtoapplicantsto t�eLawSchool, and wethinkqur alumnimagazinereaderswillenjoythetremendousbreadthofintereststheyrepresent.

Brian Bills '99

Bachelor's degree, political science/international relations, UCLA

1998 summer associate, Morrison & Foerster, San Francisco, corporate transactions

Summer clerk, 1997, Occidental Oil & Gas Corp., Los Angeles

BlackLaw Students Association

Journal of International Law and ForeignAffairs

Teachingassistant in Lawyering Skills '97-'98

Moot Court Honors, Distinguished Advocate (best briefl '98

wnBrianBillsdiscoveredthat his.las-Vegashighschooldidnothavea debateteam,hepetitionedtheprincipal tostartone.Whenhediscoveredthe needforahomecarwashservice,he beganhisownbusiness.AndwhenBills finallygottolawschool,heparticipated inUCLALaw'son-campusinterview program (OCIP) and succeeded in securingalegaljobhisfirstsummerto gethislawcareerontherighttrack.

"Ihadwantedtobealawyerever since "Billssays,motioningwithhis handtoindicatetheheightofayoung child.'Thelegalformwasalwayscomfortableforme-it'slinearandlogical. Acomfortablefit,"continuesBills,28,whowantstoonedaycombinehislegaleducationandexperiencewithhisbusinessacumenandworkininternationalcorporate transactions.

SettinggoalsandmeetingthemhavebeenthenormforBills,whohascontinued toformbusinessesincarcareandacademictutoringsincehisteen-ageyears.(He recentlycutbackonthehourshespendsteachingtestpreparationcoursestodevote mostofhistimetolawstudies.)

Billswasaskilleddebatereveninelementaryschool,andcompetedondebate teamsbothbecauseheenjoyedthechallengeandbecausehethoughtitwouldbe goodexperienceforhisfuturecareerasalawyer.Asahighschoolsophomore,hepetitionedtostartadebateteam,andcoacheddebateatjuniorhighschoolsduringthe twoyearsittooktogettheteamapproved.Bythetimehissenioryearrolledaround, Billsandotherdebaterswerecompetingfortheirhighschoolontheteamthat,Bills adds,"isstillgoingstrong."Allthewhile,Billshadbeenstartinghisownbusiness.

HisentrepreneurialcareerbeganonedaywhenBillsandafriendwerehavingtheir carwashedatabusinesswhoseownerwasgoingtoshutitdown.Aregularcustomer, thinkingtheteen-ageboysworkedthere,askedBillsandhisfriendiftheycouldcontinuetoservicehercarafterthebusinessclosed.Seeingthepotentialinheroffer,Bills acceptedandbegansolicitingothercustomersforfutureservice.Bills'TLCHomeServiceCarWashwasborn.

"The business mushroomed," Bills explained. They learned the trade, and began to offer detailing at customers' request. The following summer, they handed out fliers and hired more teen-agers to handle the extra work. The business was flourishing by the time Bills had graduated from high school, and he was then dealt another good fate card while working part-time in the electronics department of a service merchandising business. A customer asked him to help with a problem he was having with his cordless phone. Bills obliged, and the man turned out to be a vice president for Hilton Hotels. Before Bills knew it, he had cut a deal to contract with Las Vegas Hilton to detail their limousines. "I decided I should take the business more seriously, filed for a business license and formed a company called Auto Extremes."

"We had tons of business, and the money was phenomenal," says Bills. But Bills knew he wanted more out of life than washing cars, so after working for a few years to save for college, he moved his business to California to attend UCLA, financing his undergraduate education with his profits. As a political science and international relations major, he participated in the speech and debate team and the pre-law society as well as co-founded a social fraternity. He later started Academic Advantage, a company he still operates that offers tutorial services for K-12 students as well as SAT, LSAT and other graduate school preparation. Bills then used his skills to design a test preparation program for the YMCA in the Koreatown section of Los Angeles.

Bills said his decision to attend UCLA School of Law was easy. "I knew I would want to practice law in California, so I wanted to attend law school in California." Two years later, Bills says: "I couldn't be in a better position. UCLA has worked out great for me."

He had the opportunity to work during his first summer as a clerk at Occidental Petroleum. During his second year, he chose from among many job offers to work at the prestigious San Francisco-based Morrison & Foerster.

Bills enjoys the faculty at UCLA Law. During his first year in law school, he was pleased to be able to take Criminal Law from Professor Peter Arenella. "Professor Arenella has made the strongest impression on me. He is a great professor, and a great one to have your first year. He is dynamic, aggressive and very demanding."

He also praises Professor Kirk Stark, from whom he took Federal Tax Law. "He is one of the shining stars here. That was a class I was happy to attend, but had not expected to enjoy. He had a way of making the subject enjoyable."

"Icouldn'tbein abetterposition. UCLA hasworked outgreatforme."

Nicole Reyes 2000

Bachelor'sdegree in public policy andsociology from Brown University,'95

Graduate Fellow with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, '95-'96

Summer Associate with Arnold & Porter, Denver, 1998

1998 California State Bar Association Scholarship winner

First inher extended family to attend college

Nico){Reyes

hailsfromwesternNebraska,whereherfamily laboredforthree gG};erationsinthesugarbeetfields.Sheobservedtheinjusticesenduredbythelocal Mexican-Americancommunity,anditinspiredhertobreakoutofthemoldthatwas seeminglycastforher."TherewerenoprofessionalMexicanAmericanswhereIlived," saysReyes."Iresolvedtobecomeone."

Reyeshadastrongrolemodel,however,inherfather,whoworkedasalineman forapowercompanyAfterwinningaracialdiscriminationsuitagainsthisemployer, hedeclinedamonetarysettlementinlieuofasimpleacknowledgmentbythecompanythattheyhadengagedforyearsindiscriminatorypractices."Hewantedaremedythatwentbeyondjustoneinstanceofinjustice,"saysReyes.

Reyes'academicabilitieswererecognizedearly, andshewasoneof30highschool studentschosenfromaneight-stateareatoparticipateinanadvancedsummerprogram.AsastudentintheMid-AmericanConsortiumofScienceandEngineering Achievement,Reyesdisassembledandreassembledatransistorradio,workedwith robots,and"sawthattherewassomuchmoretolifethanwhatIknewinwestern Nebraska,"shesays.

SheenteredBrownUniversity,whereshestudiedpublicpolicyandsociology.After graduation,ReyeswasawardedafellowshipwiththeCongressionalHispanicCaucus Institute.SheworkedfirstastheelectedofficialscoordinatorforLatinoOutreachfor theDemocraticNationalCommittee(DNC)beforebeingofferedapermanentjobas theDNC'snationalfielddirectorforyouthoutreach.Inthiscapacity, shedirecteda nationalstrategyforregisteringvotersage18-29,registering1millionnewvotersand bringing6millionyoungvoterstothepollsin1996.

ReyeswasattractedtoUCLAbecauseofthePublicInterestProgram,butnowfinds herselfconsideringotheroptions."Myviewhaswidenedsomuchsincearrivinghere thatInowfeellesssureofwhatIwantthanwhenIarrived,"shemuses.

ShetookCivilProcedurewithProfessorDavidBinderandunexpectedlylearned aboutmanyotherareasoflawaswell."Heshowedusnotonlycivilprocedure,"says Reyes,"buthowitfitstogetherwithotherareasoflaw.Heisaseasonedlitigator,yet hasbeenincrediblypatientandkindwithus."

"Mybiggestsurpriseherehasbeenthefriendliness,"shesays."Althoughweare ultimatelyincompetitionwitheachotherforgradesandjobs,studentsreallyhelp eachotherout."Reyeschalksthisuptothegenerosityofthefaculty, whom,she believes,setanexamplethatthestudentsfollow."I'veneverhadaprofessorbereluctanttohelpornotstickaroundafterclasstoanswerquestions,"shesays."Iexpected themtobeunapproachable,butthey'renot."

Becausehelovedthewilderness,oneo[JohnSchafer\firstplansasan18-yearoldwastobecomeaLosAngelesCountySheriff'sdeputyandjointhedepartment's searchandrescueteam.HestudiedatGlendaleCommunityCollegeandbecamestudent body president. He also co-founded a chapter of Rotaract (sponsoredby the RotaryClub)andledthegrouponatriptoMexico,bringingfood,medicalsupplies andclothingtothreeorphanagesnearTijuana.

Duringthistime,SchafersplanschangedandhedecidedtotransfertoUCBerkeley, wherehereceivedhisbachelor'sdegreeindevelopmentstudies. SchaferparticipatedinCal-in-the-Capitol,spendingthespringsemesterofhisjunioryearinseminarsonpublicpolicyandleadership,andthesummerasaninternforSenatorJohn SeymourinWashington,D.C.

Duringhissenioryear,hespentasemesterinBudapest,Hungary,asanexchange student.Aftergraduation,hespentthesummerinParislearningabouttheEuropean Unionwith25other(mostlygraduate)students.

HethenworkedfortheNationalPolicyForuminWashington,D.C.,theDanLungrenfor(California)AttorneyGeneralcampaign,andtheAsia-PacificMediaCorp.in Hanoi,Vietnam.WhileinVietnam,Schafernegotiatedjoint-ventureandlicenseagreementswithvarious governmental entities. "ThetimeinHanoiwasone ofthemost rewardingperiodsofmylife,"saysSchafer."Buttheinvestmentprojectwewereworkingonfellthrough."

HereturnedtoCalifornia,spendingtheyearpriortolawschoolasaSenateassociateforstate SenatorRaymondHaynesin Sacramento. "Itwasreally motivatingto havearoleinmakinglawrightbeforeenteringlawschool,"saysSchafer.

AtUCLALaw,SchaferhasbeenactiveinboththeMootCourtandtheStudentBar Association,whichisthestudentgovernmentatlawschool.Healsohasservedasthe studentrepresentativeontwofacultycommittees.Hewasstaffeditor,leadarticleeditorandmanagingeditorforthe UCLAJournal ofInternational Law and ForeignAffairs. Inhisleisuretime,hetookadvantageoftheUCLArecreationcenter,enrollinginasailingclassattheUCLA.AquaticCenterinMarinadelRey

"Iloveithere," SchafersaysofUCLALa. "Theadministrationisoutstanding.At someschools,thedeanofstudentsislikeawarden.Here(LizCheadle)ismorelikea student'sbestfriend."

Schafer found a friend in ProfessorRichard Steinberg, who holds a doctorate in internationalrelationsinadditiontohislawdegree."Hehasbeenmymentorsince DayOne,"saysSchafer. "Hehasagreatopen-doorpolicy"

Becauseheplanstobecomeacorporateattorney,Schaferrecentlytookanewclinicalcourse, "Renegotiating Business Contracts," withProfessorKennethKlee.While the class was very challenging, Schafer appreciated the opportunity to learn "realworld" legal skills. "Professor Klee is a great full-time addition to the school after spending20yearsinprivatepracticeandteachingonanadjunctbasis.Ifeelmuch betterequippedwiththeskillsnecessarytoeffectivelyenterthelegalprofessionright outoflawschool."SchaferisworkingwithProfessorKleetostartacontractswriting competitionsimilartotheMootCourtcompetition.

Schaferisplanningacareerininternationalcorporatelaw,andhasajoblinedup atBaker&McKenzieinPaloAlto,California."It'soneofthelargestinternationallaw firmsintheworld,"says Schafer.'Tmreallylookingforwardtoit."

John Schafer'99

Willwork at Baker & McKenzie in Palo Alto after graduation

Vice President, Student Bar Association at UCLA, '97-'98

Summer internship with U.S. Senator John Seymour as part of Cal-in-the-Capitol program, 1992

Bachelor's degree in development studies, UC Berkeley, '93

Summer 1997:

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Summer Honors Program, Washington, D.C.

Summer 1998: Baker & McKenzie

FACULTY

Meet thenewfaculty

�tephen Gardbaum joins the µcLA faculty after visiting here last fall from Northwestern University :chool of Law, where he had taught s1ipce 1991. He will teach European Union Law, Comparative Constitutional Law and Constitutional Law. Gardbaum earned his bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics and economics(EPE.)fromOxfordUniversity in 1980, an M.Sc. in sociology from theUniversity ofLondonin1985,aPh.D. in political science fromColumbiaUniversityin1989,andaJD. fromYale Law School in 1990.

Prior to coming to the United States from Britain in 1985, Gardbaum studied attheCollege ofLaw, London asaRobinson ScholaroftheLawSocietyandwasadmittedasasolicitorofthe Supreme Court of England and Wales. He practiced law in the areas of litigation and European community law at the London firm of Kingsley Napley

Gardbaum's scholarship has focused on constitutional law and thefoundations ofliberal,legalandpoliticaltheory Recent publications include "Liberalism, Autonomy, and Moral Conflict," StanfordLawReview (1996),"NewDealConstitutionalism and the Unshackling of the States," University ofChicago Law Review (1997), and "The Federalism Implications of Flores," WilliamandMary Law Review (1998). His currentresearch is in theareaofcomparativeconstitutionallawand,inparticular,the comparative structure of constitutional rights.

Cheryl Harris, who visited at UCLA School of Law in the 199596 and 1996-97 academic years, joins the faculty this fall. She has been an assistant professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law since 1990. Focusing her work on affirmative action, race, property and gender, she is the author of many articles, including, "Whiteness as Property," which appeared in The Harvard Law Review in 1995. She formerly served as a senior attorney for the city of Chicago and as an attorney for the Chicago Park District. Professor Harris was a criminal defense attorney in private practice for five years following law school. She has a law degree from Northwestern University Law School and a bachelor's degree from Wellesley College.

Timothyl Malloy joins Professor Ann Carllson to co-direct the Law School's ·Frank G. Wells Environmental taw Clinic. After receiving his law/degree from the University of Pe¢nsylvania in 1986, Malloy cler�kd for Judge Donald W Vaib..rtsdalen of the United States ristrict Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in 1986-87, before working as a tax associate at Wolf, Block, Schorr & Solis-Cohen from 1987-90. He brings a variety of environmental law experience to UCLA. From 199095, Malloy was a Senior Assistant Regional Counsel at EPA, Region III. He then joined the environmental law firm of Manko, Gold&KatcherinthePhiladelphiaareaasapartner. In 1994, Malloy was a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, presenting a course: "Hazardous Waste: Principles of Regulation." From 1996-98 he taught environmental law as an adjunct professor at Rutgers University School of Law, in Camden, NewJersey

He is the author of "Once More Unto the Breach: The Regulation of Hazardous Waste Recycling" for the Villanova University EnvironmentalLawJournal, 1996.

Randall Peerenboom teaches in the areas of international and comparative law, with an emphasis on Chinese law. His courses include a survey course on law thatexamines the role of law in Chinese society, bothpastandpresent,anda course ondoingbusiness in Chinese. Heis one of only a handful of scholars outside China who can read and analyze both classical and contemporary Chinese law, and he significantly augments our growing international and comparative law faculty He received a master'sdegree in Chinesereligionin1987anda doctoraldegree in comparativephilosophyin1990 from the University of Hawaii. After receiving his JD. in _ 1993 from Columbia University, Peerenboom worked for a year as a litigator in Honolulu, then spent 1994-98 negotiating international business transactions in Beijing, China.

Peerenboomiscurrentlyworkingonacomparativeprojecton the rule of law inChina,a study ofhuman rights and their relationtoculture,andasurveyofarbitralawardenforcementinthe

PRC. His recentpublications include: LawyersinChina: Obstacles toIndependenceandtheDefenseofRights (Layers Committee on Human Rights, 1998) and LawandMoralityinAncientChina: The SilkManuscriptsofHuang-Lao (SUNY Press, 1993).

Jonathan Zasloff teaches Torts, CriminalJustice Policy, Administrative Law, and Legal History. He received his bachelor's degree from Yale in 1987 and earned his M.Phil. from Cambridge in 1988. He received a master's degree from Harvard in 1990. Serving as articles editor of the Yale Law Journal, Zasloff completed law school there in 1993 and went to clerk for a federal appeals court judge in Boston.

In 1994, Zasloff became a staff attorney (with a Skadden Arps fellowship) with Public Counsel in Los Angeles, representing AFDC recipients in disputes with the welfare bureaucracy and assisting microbusinesses in low-income areas. From 1997 to 1998, Zasloff worked for a public interest law firm and specialized in environmental, land use, and consumer fraud issues. He currently serves as a consultant to the California State Assembly on a wide range of policy issues including public safety, education, and welfare.

Zasloff's scholarly interests center on how public institutions can respond effectively to social problems. In particular, he focuses on antipoverty issues, criminal justice, international relations, and urban policy. He is also completing a doctoral dissertation in American history from Harvard.

Beforejoining the faculty, Zasloff had completed three articles: "Abolishing Coercion: The Jurisprudence of American Foreign Policy in the 1920s," 102 Yale LawJournal 1689 (1993); "The Tyranny of Madison," 44 UCA Law Review 795 (1997); and a forthcoming article in theJournal ofLaw and Politics, "Children, Families, and Bureaucrats: A Prehistory ofWelfare Reform."

Shiffrin joins Law School as assistant professor

Seana Shiffrin has joined UCLA Law as an assistant professor. She teaches Autonomy and Fundamental Constitutional Rights. Since 1993, she has been an assistant professor in the UCLA Philosophy department, where her work

focuses on ethics and political philosophy. She received her bachelor's degree from UC Berkeley in 1988, her B. Phil. and D. Phil. from Oxford in 1990 and 1993, respectively, and her JD. from Harvard in 1996.

While at UC Berkeley, Shiffrin received a medal for being the university's most distinguished undergraduate. At Oxford University in England, where she was a Marshall Scholar, she specialized in political and moral philosophy and Kant. At Harvard, she graduated magna cum laude and was an editor of the Harvard Law Review.

Shiffrin's published works include: "Moral Autonomy and Agent-centred Options," Analysis 51 (1991); "Developments in the Law - DNA Evidence and the Criminal Defense," Harvard LawReview May 1995; and "Advance Directives, Autonomy and Beneficence," in Dworkin and His Critics (Oxford: Blackwell, forthcoming 1998).

Kubota joins Clinical Program

Carolyn Kubota joins the faculty in fall 1998 to teach both ciil and criminal trial advocacy and will be further developing the Law Schools criminal clinical offerings. After receiving her law degree from Cornell, where she was notes editor for the Cornell International Law Journal, Kubota clerked for U.S. District Judge Herbert Murray of the District of Maryland. She then worked for three years at Latham & Watkins in Los Angeles, litigating business matters in both state and federal courts. Most recently, Kubota spent 12 years as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Major Frauds Section of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles, working two years in a supervisory role as deputy chief. As an Assistant U.S. Attorney, Kubota specialized in the ivestigation and prosecution of complex financial crimes. She prosecuted former officers of Financial News Network and United Press International in a major bank and securities fraud case, resulting in the conviction of five defendants. She also prosecuted the former chairman of Financial Corporation of America (parent corporation of American Savings and Loan Association) on loan and real estate fraud charges.

Twonewlecturerstoteach Lawyering Shills

Sharon Gold has joined the faculty to teach Lawyering Skills, the UCLA Law course that includes basic instruction in legal research and writing as well as lawyering skills, and to assist in teaching DepositionsandDiscoveryinComplex Litigation. She received her bachelor's degree from the University of Illinois in 1987 and herJD. from Columbia in 1990. She is a memberofthe BarassociationsofIllinois, CaliforniaandWashington, D.C.

After receiving her law degree in 1990, she joined the Chicago officeof Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom where she practiced in the area of telecommunications. From 199296, she worked at Irell & Manella in Los Angeles, before moving to the litigation department at Troy & Gould, also in L.A.,

Newintheadministration

Professor Robert Goldstein and Law Librarian

Myra Saunders named associate deans

Robert Goldstein, who has taught at UCLA Law since 1983, has been named an associate dean, taking over from Stephen Yeazell, who has resumedteaching. DeanJonathanD. Varatnamed himandLaw Librarian

Myra Saunders as associate deans during the summer. Saunders, in a new position, will remain as librarian while assisting Dean Varat at the administrative levels of the entire Law School asassociatedean.

NewinCareer Services

Mimi Chang has been hired as the new Assistant Director and Section Advisor, taking over the position fromLoriShead.Afterreceivingher J.D. from Temple University School

for more than two years. She previously has taught law at De PaulUniversity College of Law.

Ilana Rubenstein also will teach Lawyering Skills. She received her bachelor's degree, with honors, from the College of William and Mary in 1990, and herJD., magna cum laude, from the University of Michigan Law School in 1993. Whileat Michigan LawSchool,she was an associate editor for The MichiganLawReview.

After receiving her law degree, Rubenstein clerked for U.S. DistrictJudgeJohn Davies (UCLA Law '59) of the Central District of California. From 1994-98, she was a litigation associate at the firm of Munger, Tolles & Olson in Los Angeles.

Barbara Varat has served as an administrative associate dean since 1995, and will continue to serve in that capacity.

Goldsteinwillassumethecentral rolemosttraditionallyperformedby the associate dean, including the shepherding of faculty appointments and other duties associated with the faculty and programmatic decisions within the Law School.

Saunders, in addition to directing the library, will assist in areasofstrategicplanning, budgetanalysisandspecialprojects - duties she had increasingly taken on in recent months in addition to the library renovation.

of Law, she worked as a litigation associate at O' Flaherty, Cross, Martinez, Ovando&Hatton. Shereceivedherbachelor's degree from UCLA. Elizabeth Moeller has been promoted fromAssistantDirectortoAssociateDirectorofCareerServices.

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InternationalLabor Office's coordinatingcommittee, which preparesthe European Supreme Labor CourtJudges meetings, organized by the International Labor Office. Goldberg has several publications, including the leading text books in Hebrew on Labor and Employment Laws, National Insurance Laws, SafetyatWork,anda book in EnglishonLaborLaw (1982). Hehasalsowritten anumber ofarticles.

Antonio La Pergola joined us as a visiting professor in fall 1998 to teach European Union Law. He has also been visiting professor at other schools in Italy and abroad, includingJohn Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; UniversityCollege, Dublin; Externado deBogota (Colombia),Universidad Nacional de La Plata (Argentina), University of Texas Law School (Austin), and the Law School of the University of Puerto Rico. La Pergola has anLL.M. from Harvard Law School.He hasbeena professor of Constitutional andInternationalLawattheUniversitiesofPadua,BolognaandRome.LaPergola served asjudge and later as president of the ItalianConstitutional Court, has served on the European Court, and has authored major constitutional reforms in Italy. He has chaired the Commission on Democracy Through Law since its establishment, and has been active in the creation of new constitutional regimes inwhathadbeentheEasternBloc. Hisworks-severalmonographs and a large number of essays -cover different areas ofConstitutional LawaswellasEuropeanLawandComparativeLegalStudies. Manyofhiswritings have been translatedinto English,Spanishandotherlanguages.

Professor Setsuo Miyazawa gives a seminar in Public Interest Lawyering in Japan for UCLA's Center for Japanese Studies during his UCLA visit this fall.

Setsuo Miyazawataught "Law,Crime and Society inJapan: An Introduction" this fall. Miyazawa received his education in both Japan and the United States. He earned his LLB. (1970), LL.M. (1972) and J.SD (1987) from Hokkaido University, Japan; and an MA (1976), M.Phil. (1980), and Ph.D. (1985) insociologyfromYaleUniversity. He was also aHarvard-YenchingFellow atHarvardLawSchool (1984-85).

In Japan, Miyazawa was an Associate Professor of Law at Hokkaido University from1979-83;in1983hejoinedthelawfacultyofKobeUniversitywhereheispresently ProfessorofLaw. MiyazawahasbeenaVisiting Professor at Osgood Hall Law School at YorkUniversityinCanada(1995)andattheUniversityofWashington(1996). He was the MitsubishiVisiting Professor ofJapanese Legal Studies at Harvard LawSchool in1997.

Miyazawa has published extensively in both Japanese and English. His works include Crime Prevention in the Urban Community, in English, ed. with Koichi Miyazawa (Deventer: Kluwer,1995); TheReality of the LegalProcess, in Japanese (Tokyo: Nihon Hyoronsha,1994), "TheEnigmaofJapanasaTesting Ground for Cross-Cultural Criminological Theories," in David Nelken (ed.) ComparativeLegalCultures(Aldershot: Dartmouth,1997),and "FortheLiberal TransformationofJapaneseLegalCulture: AReview of the RecentScholarship andPractice," Kobe UniversityLawReview, No. 29,1995.

StanleyRoss,currentlyamemberofthelawfacultyoftheUniversityofNew South Wales in Sydney, Australia, teaches Professional Responsibility. He received his bachelor's degree from Brooklyn College, CityUniversity of New York (1961), hisJD. from UC Berkeley (Boalt Hall) in 1964 and his master's degree from San Francisco State University. Ross was awarded the Major DinkenspielScholarshipinLawatUCBerkeley (1963-64),aFordFoundation Summer Workshop Fellowship on European Economic Community Law and was an International Legal Fellow with the Ford Foundation at theUniversity ofParis.He is amember oftheCaliforniaBarandhasbeenadmittedas a barrister inNewSouthWales, Australia.

Ross' work experience includes clerking with the InternalRevenueService in San Francisco and practicing maritime and administrative law with Lillick, Geary,Charles&AdamsofSanFrancisco. In1967,hehelpedfoundtheBerkeleyNeighborhoodLegalCenter,andlaterservedasactingdirectoroftheBerkeley Neighborhood Legal Services. He was a manager and tax consultant with PriceWaterhouseinSydneyandisamemberoftheProfessionalConductCommitteeof theBarAssociation ofNewSouthWales.

Ross has been avisiting professoranda lectureratseveralschools,includingBostonCollege LawSchool,UCBerkeley, ArizonaStateUniversity, Columbia University, Auckland University, Makerere University in Uganda, the UniversityofPapua New Guinea,andWarwickUniversity,England.

Ross' many publications include: Income Tax - A Critical Analysis, 2nd edition with P Burgess (Sydney: Law Book Company, 1996); Ethics in Law: Lawyers' Responsibility and Accountability in Australia (Sydney: Butterworths, 1995); and Ethics for Tax Practitioners (Sydney: Australian Tax Research Foundation, 1993).

Guy Scoffoni, Professor ofLaw and designated member of the "Commission de Specialistes" at the University of Aix-en-Provence in France, returned to UCLA this fall after apreviousvisit in 1996. He taughtComparativeAdministrative Law: The European Systems. Scoffoni received his education in France,wherein1986hecompleted hisdoctoratewith highhonorsfromthe Universite deParis.Hehasalso servedasactingdeanof thelaw facultyat the University of Avignon (1994-95). He is a member the Research Group on ConstitutionaljusticeattheUniversityofAix-en-Provence,andtheEuropean HumanRightsResearchInstituteattheUniversityofMontpellier.Scoffonihas taught at the University of Paris (1983) and the University of Montpellier (1988). He was avisiting professorat theUniversity of Bologna, Italy (1993), UniversityofLouvain,Belgium (1994)andavisitinglecturerattheUniversity of Chuo, Tokyo (1995). He has taught in the areas of Constitutional Law, AdministrativeLaw,CivilRightsandCivilLiberties,EuropeanLaw,FiscalLaw, and Comparative Law.

Scoffoni has a substantial number of publications to his credit, mostly in French.Theyinclude CitizenshipandRightsinMulticulturalSocieties(incollab, oration), edited by M. Dunne and T.Bonazzi (Keele University Press, 1995) andothers.

Faculty Notes

Richard Abel, Connell Professor of Law, published two more books: Lawyers:A Critical Reader (New York: New Press, 1997) and Speaking Respect, Respecting Speech (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998). This past year, he followed an extensive lecturing schedule. Abel lectured on the following topics at the following locations: on global lawyering at the World Law Institute in Atlanta in October; on hate speech at the AALS Conference; on British lawyers at the Law and Society Association meeting in Aspen in June; on the British legal profession to the law Society of England and Wales and the lord Chancellors Department; on legal aid in a committee room at the House of Commons and to the Committee for a National legal Service; and on English lawyers at Onati, Spain. In the spring, Abel will teach a seminar that the Program in Public Interest Law and Policy is offering to its second-year students (Professor Gary Blasi teaches the class in the fall). Under Abel's direction, the class will conduct a case study of the "Concrete Mountain" in Huntington Park, which

the Environmental law Clinic helped litigate under Professor Ann Carlson. The clinical students' efforts resulted in ridding a predominantly Latino community of an air-polluting pile of rubble left from the post-earthquake construction in Los Angeles. A judge declared the pile a public nuisance, and ordered the recycling business that left it there to remove the pile.

Peter Arenella gave a lecture at a special criminal justice symposium at the University of Chicago law School where the leading criminal procedure scholars from across the country were ivited to participate. The lecture will form the basis of an article, "The Perils of T.V legal Punditry," scheduled for publication this fall in a special symposium issue of the University ofChicago LegalForum. He also delivered several lectures concerning various criminal justice system issues for legal and civic groups across the country. He appeared on CBSs "Face the Nation" to discuss the Kaczynski Unabomber case and to criticize the government for not accepting a guilty plea that the government ultimately accepted several weeks later when it became apparent that Kaczynski might represent himself.

Michael Asimow recently addressed the Judicial Division of the American Bar Association on 'Judges in Film." He spent last fall at Unversity of Sydney Law School in Australia and is working on a comparative piece on U.5. & Australian administrative law. The 2nd edition of StateandFederal AdministrativeLaw (West 1998), written with Arthur and Ronald Levin, was recently published.

In April, Stephen Bainbridge gave the Donald A. Gianella Memorial lecture at the Villanova University School of la. His paper, "Corporate Decisionmaking and the Moral Rights of Employees: Participatory Management and Natural Law," will be published in a future issue of the Villanova LawReview. In February, he presented the same talk to a faculty workshop at Case Western University School of Law.

In May, he presented "Prvately Ordered Participatory Management: An Organizational Failures Analysis," to the

Labor, Discrimination, and Family Law session of the American Law and Economics Association annual meeting. Bainbridge had presented that manuscript to the ColumbtaLaw School Sloan Project on Corporate Governance Conference on Alternative Perspectives on Corporate Governance. In November L997 he had presented it Lo a George Mason University School of Law faculty workshop. The paper will be published in a future issue of the Delaware Journal of Corporatton Law. Bainbridge recently published two articles rnLiber$ magazine, a widelydistributed journal of religious liberty issues. "suspect Class?," in the July/August 1998 issue, dealt with the free exercise rights of university student groups, and "Nothing for Us: Should Public Libraries Fear Religious Literature?," in the March/April 1998 issue, dealt wrth the concerns that have led some public libraries to refrain from bupng Christian fiction or theology.

Paul Bergman recently gaYe a talk to the Pacific Northwest Justices. The second edition of his book, The Criminal Law Handbook; ts in production now. Based on their book Reel Justice, he and Michael Asimow have given talks to numerous groups of lawyers, judges and non-lawyers at such venues as conferences, public libraries and book signings.

Kimberl6 Grenshaw, broadcasting from UCLA Law, will be teaching a new course in the spring on both coasts by utihzrng the School of Law's videoconferencing capabilities that were installed as part of the Hugh and Hazel Darling Law Ltbrary project. Crenshaw and Columb ra Law Professor Conrad Johnson, who will teach from Columbia in New -{ork, will offer "Civil Rights: Race-Concious Remedies." The seminar will explore contemporary conflict about race-concious remedies using the Internet as both a resource and as a project platform. A secondary issue is to explore the extent to which new technology has created alternative means of orga nrztngpublic discussiott relating to critical issues of law and social policies.

Jody Freeman delivered a paper on Regulatory Negotiation at the Administrative Law Section of the Association of American Law Schools Conference in San Francisco. In June, Freeman gave a paper al the Law and Society Conference in Aspen, Colorado, or Alternative Dispute Resolution in Public Law. She is now working on two articles: the first on the private performance of public responsibilities and its

implications for administrative law, and the second on federal-state relations in environmental regulation. Freeman taught a new course, Toxic Torts, for the first time last spring.

Garole Goldberg received a significant grant from the Department of Education, Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education, to support the development of tribal law curricula at four tribally controlled community colleges around the country. She will codirect this project with Professor Duane Champagne, Director of UCLAs American Indian Studies Center.

This is the first year UCLA wrll have students enrolled in the joint degree program in Law and American Indian Studies. There is one first-year student, and one student who joined the program after her second year.

In connection with the program, Goldberg will offer an Indian Law Clinic for the first timea non-litrgation clinic that will focus on tribal legal development. They will take on projects involving the revision of tribal constitutions, the drafting of tribal legal codes, the establishment of tribal courts, and the formation of tribal enterprises, enabling the students to learn about representation in a crosscultural context.

Laura E. Gomez isin themidstof a seven-month researchsabbatical in New Mexico. Sheisresearching criminallitigation duringthe late 19thcentury, during New Mexico's status as anAmerican Territory and when larger numbers ofAmericanimmigrants came to the region. Her first article from this project will be completed thiswinter andis tentatively titled '"A Stranger Within the Community:' The Coming ofthe Railroad and Criminal TrialJury Verdictsin San Miguel County, 1876-1881."

Aspart ofthe Program in Public Interest Law and Policy, Christine Goodman taught a new course, the public interest Lawyering Skills class, which isthe first-year legal skills course required ofstudentswhoenter the Law School's Programin Public Interest Law and Policy:

Along withHarvard Law professor LucieWhite, Joel Handler, Maxwell Professor of Law, has recentlycompleted abook, HardLabor: Poor WomenandWorhinthePost-Welfare Era, scheduled for publication thisfall by M.E Sharpe. He also wrote apaper entitled, "The Moral Construction of Social Citizenship" InJuly, Handler attendedthe Society forthe Advancement of Socio-Economics meeting in Vienna.

Kenneth Klee, whopermanently joined our faculty just last year after manyyears asan adjunct professor, sharedhisbankruptcyexpertise nationwide this year asheadvised national legislators and others on the flawsin proposed bankruptcy reformlegislation.Among hisrecent activitieswere hispresentation of alegislation report attheannual meeting ofthe National Bankruptcy Conference andatthe72nd National Conference of BankruptcyJudges. Klee, whowas aprincipal drafter ofthe 1978 U.S. Bankruptcy Code, also spokeatan education paneldiscussion ofthe Commercial Law League ofAmericawhere

hepresented: "HotTopics: The Government andBankruptcy:" Herecently becamea founding member ofthe International Insolvency Institute, and heremainsamember oftheU.S. Supreme Court'.sJudicial Conference Advisory Committee on Bankruptcy Rulesandwill continueto work on bankruptcy litigation rules he played a role indrafting.

Kleehasalso developeda new clinical course: CreatingValue through Renegotiating Business Contracts.

Gillian Lester andMark Kelman of Stanford Law School wrote Jumpingthe Queue: AnInquiry intothe Legal Treatment ofStudentsWith LeamingDisabilitiespublishedin FebruarybyHarvard University Press. The Canadiancasebook, LabourandEmploymentLaw, on whichshecontributedmaterialon employmentdiscriminationand served asaco-author,waspublishedinAugust

by Queen's University Press. Her article, "Careers and Contingency," which analyzes proposals for reform of temporary and part-time employment, will be published involume51 of StanfordLaw Review, November 1998.

Thissummer,Lester married Eric Talley, a classmate from Stanford who is now a professor at USC Law School.

Professor Morris speaks at Royce Hall during a celebration in which a seminar room

Last March, Herbert Morris presented two papers at a Conference at theColumbia Law School. One paper was "How Should a ModelCode Define the Nature and Purposesof Punishment7," while the other is named in his honor. was a response to a paper on the topic "How Might a Model Code Reconcile the Objectivist and Subjectivist Theories of Attempt Liability." He also published one piece: "What Emma Knew: The Outrage Suffered inJorge Luis Borges' 'Emma Zunz'," Indiana JournalofHispanicLiteratures, pp. 165202 (1997).

Professor Morris was honored last spring by many friends and colleagues at a reception naming the newly renovated Royce Hall's Seminar Room 306 in hishonor.Alumni of the Humanities Department honored Morris for his service to thedepartment during the time he was dean of humanities-19831993. A program handed out in tribute

to Morris at the receptionheldin his honor last April said: "Herbert Morris brings good judgment, high principle, abundant humor, and personal warmth to all of his activities, andhis colleagues find pride and pleasure working with him."

From the period of May 1997 through October 1998, Steve Munzer held the David Baumgardt Memorial Fellowship from the American Philosophical Association. This enabled him to work on a number of articles on the legal regulation of the homeless and on the religiousandphilosophicalaspects ofmendicancy.

Munzer wrote an article, "Human Dignity and Property Rights in Human Body Parts," inJ.W Harris, editor, Property Problems: FromGenestoPension Funds (London, The Hague, and Boston: Kluwer Law International Ltd., 1997). He gave a lecture on "A Special Case of Property Rights in Umbilical Cord Blood for Transplantation" to the AmericanPhilosophicalAssociation in Philadelphia in December, and to the Columbia Legal Theory Workshop in April.

Munzer is currently writing an article with Molly A. Holman on property rights in genes and gene fragments (expressed sequence tags).

William Rubenstein's casebook, CasesandMaterialsonSexual Orientationand The Law was published by West Publishing Company in 1997. Rubenstein authored a teacher's manual and annual updatesin 1998.

In the past year, Rubenstein has published a series of articles about "the gay bar" -i.e., the experience of lesbians, gay men, andbisexualsin the legalprofession. He also moderated the Plenary Session at the NationalLesbian & Gay Law Association Lavender Law Conference in October 1997in West Hollywood.

In addition to his work on issues of sexual orientation law, Rubenstein teaches and writes about civil procedure and complex litigatfon. His last article about procedure was recently excerpted in a new casebook, Complex LitigationandtheAdversary System (Tidmarsh and Trangsrud eds., Foundation Press, 1998).

During his year off from teaching, courtesy of the John M Olin fellowship, Eugene Volokh has written many arttcles in his interest areas. They include: "Common-Law Religious Freedom" (circulated for publication in August 1998); "Freedom of Speech, Shielding Children, and Tianscending Balancihg," L997 Supreme Court Reyiew L4l; "The Amazing Vanishing Second Amendment," 73 New York. T.Jniversi$ Law Reyiew 831 (1998); "The Commonplace Second Amendment," 73 I\ew York Uniyersig Law Reyiew 793 (1998); "Freedom of Speech and Independent Judgment Review in Copyright Cases," 107 Yale Law Journal 243I (1998) with Brett McDonnell; "Freedom of Speech and Injunctions in Intellectual Property Cases," 48 Duhe Law Journal (forthcoming 1998) with Mark Lemley; "Writing a Student Article," 48 Journal Legal Education 247 (forthcoming 1998); "Using the Second Amendment as Teaching Tool in Constitutional Law Classes :' 48 Journal Legal Education (f.orthcoming I 998) with Bob Cottrol, Sandy Levinson, Scot Powe, and Glenn Harlan Reynolds).

Eugene also testified, at the invitation of Congressional subcommittees, about civil disobedience and about race-based contract set asides.

John Shepard Wiley Jr. successfully prosecuted a controversial judge discipline case in the California Supreme Court and published an article in the AIe w Palgraye Dictionary of Econlmics and the Law. He taught atHarsrard Law School during the winter as a visiting professor. As for his mountainclimbing escapades, he wrote: "Chickened out at base of Half Dome after bear and earthquake," which summarily describes an arduous climb he attempted this summer.

Eric Zollwas a visiting professor at Yale Law Schoo1 (fall 1997) and ar Aoyama Gakuin in Tokyo (summer 1998). He coauthored with JoeI Rabinowrtz a paper on "Tax Nothings" presented at the University of Chicago's 50th Annual Federal Tax Conference and presented a paper on "Prospects for Fundamental Thx Reform: Comparisons between the United States and Japan" at Tokyo University He continues his advisory work on designing tax systemsworking with the U.S. Treasury Department and the IMF in Argentina, China and Russia. His travel schedule, he writes, has resulted in a further decline in his akeady fragile tennis game.

Faculty boohs in print

The followingbooks, written by IICA faculty, were recently published.

I Jumping the Queue: An Inquiry into the Legal keatment of Students With Learning Disabilities (Harvard University Press, 1998) by Gillian Lester and Mark Kelman, Stanford Law School. In this new work, Gillian Lester and Mark Kelman explore alternative conceptions of the principle of equal opporrunity as it applies to students who have been classified as learning disabled. Lesrer and Kelman weigh legal and ethical issues surrounding the federal law that directs local school districts to accommodate students with learning disabilitiesfor instance, allotting them extra time to complete exams. The authors also address the question of how extra educational resources should be distributed, exposing the growing conflict between those who want to distribute scarce resources to children with special needs and those who seek to eliminate other group inequalities.

I Lawyers in China: Obstacles to Independence and the Defense of Rrghts (Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, 1998) by Randall Peerenboom. Writing for the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, Randy Peerenboom asserts in this book thar although the main impetus for social reform and legal change in China must come from

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morally responsiblefor their clients? Havewomen and racial minorityapplicantsto thebar fared better or worsein recent years? Who doesand whodoes not obtain legal services? What benefits dosmall firmshaveover large firms? Howdoeslawschoolmake students more conservative? Doesthelegal profession reallyhelp createamorejust society? Thisbook, editedby UCLA's Connell Professor of Law RichardAbel, isengagingreading for lawyersand laypersonsalike.

• SpeakingRespect, RespectingSpeech (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998) by Richard Abel What dothe 0.]. Simpson trial, thefeminist critique of pornography, electoral politicsand the furor over TheSatanicVerses all havein common? In SpeakingRespect, RespectingSpeech, RichardAbelargues thattheunifying thread throughout theseand other cases ofprofound social conflict is thedemand for respect that underlies the controversy Abel explores thewaysin which speech can become hurtful and proposesa solution that minimizes theequally real threats to freedom of speech. Asanalternative to thefamiliar yetinadequateresponses tohurtful speech-including civil libertarianismandregulation by thestate -Abel proposes thata kind ofinformaldisputeresolutiontake placein, for example, schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods, the very venues where respect is constructed.

• Thesecondedition of Paul Bergman's popularbook Represent Yourselfin Court (Berkeley, California Nolo Press, 1998) was published this year.

RECENTCASEBOOKS ANDEDITIONS

CommunityAssociationLaw (Carolina Academic Press, 1998) bySusan French andWayneHyatt (Emory Law School). This casebook willbeused in courses designed togive students thebackground theyneedtoassist developersofcondominiums, planned developments and other common interest communities in designing property owner associations.

Bankruptcy, 5thed. (Foundation Press, 1998) byDanielJ. Bussel, with WilliamWarren.

RealEstate Transfer, FinanceandDevelopment, 5thed. (West Group, 1998); Land TransactionsandFinance, 3rded. (West Group, 1998) by GrantNelsonand D. Whitman.

CasesandMaterialsonSexualOrientationandtheLaw(WestPublishing Company, 1997); byWilliam Rubenstein.

ConstitutionalLaw: CasesandMatenals (Foundation Press, 1997) by Jonathan D. Varatwith Edward L. Barrett,Jr. and William Cohen.

CommercialLawFourth Edition (Foundation Press, 1997), NegotiableInstruments, Paymentsand Credits (Foundation Press, 1997), andSecured Transactionsin PersonalProperty (Foundation Press, 1997) byWilliamD. Warrenwith Robert L.Jordan.

FederalRules of CivilProcedure; With SelectedStatutesand Cases (Little, Brown, 1997)byStephenC. Veazell.

RESTATEMENTS

GrantS.Nelson-Restatement (Third)on Property (Mortgages), with Professor DaleA. Whitman (oftheJ. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham YoungUniversity) was published in summer 1997.

GraceBlumberg hasbeen working on the child support and new cohabitation chapters of theepicAmerican Law Instituteproject PrinciplesoftheLawof Family Dissolution. In recognition of her efforts to rethink and recast family law, Blumberg and her co-reporters were awarded theAll's only chair, theAmi CutterChair, this pastJune. Drafts of five of the Principles' chapters havebeen published in thepast year.

GaryT. Schwartzis thesole Reporter for Restatement (Third)of Torts (Basic Principles).

1950s

Arthur N. Greenberg '52 received the American Jewish Committee ilearned Hand Award for outstanding service to the legal profession at ceremonies this past year. The award is named ffi" Judge Learned Hand , aL Americ an jurist and humanitarian. Greenberg is a founding partner of the Los Angeles law firm of Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger. A member of the first graduating class, he was also once chosen as Alumnus of the Year by UCLA Law.

Gharles Adams '56 writes to inform that his book,, Those Dirty Rotten Taxes: The Tax Revolts that Built Amenca (Free Press), was reviewed in the March24, 1998 Wall Street Journal, and adds that some of the "old timers" from the classes of the 50s are "still alive and kicking."

1960s

Kenneth Ziffren '65 returns to UCLA School of Law as a lecturer in the 199899 school year. He also taught last spring. He will teach two courses, Entertainment Tiansactions, and Pay Per View. Ztffren, a founding partner in the predecessor firm to the renowned Los Angeles entertainment law firm of Zrffren, Brittenham, Branca Ez Fischer, is a member of the UCIA Executive Board for the Medical Sciences and serves on the UCLA Campaign Cabinet. He has served as a neutral mediator in resolving the Writers Guild strike in 1988, and was the special outside

CLASSNOTES

counsel to the NFL in negotiating contracts with the networks. He has been highly involved in the annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium and many o[her School of Law events as a speaker and board member. He was Law School Alum of the Year in 1995.

Sheldon Michaels'67 has retired from AT&T as Director of Litigation for the Western U.S. and joined Berman, Berkley 6r Lasky as Of Counsel specialrzrngin employment law. He is also vice president of Internal Dispute Resolutions, Inc., a provider of ADR seruces.

Rowan K. Klein '69 participated in a 1998 Mental Health Law Symposium at Loyola Law School. He also lectured thrgughout the state on representing prisoners be,fore the parole board on behalf of th'b California State Bar. He still actively practices criminal law and prison Hw. Klein was an adjunct profesror ufuCLA School of Law from L975 ro i98 l

1970s

David 0. Garter '72 was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in October to become a federal district judge for the Central District of California. Carter has served as an Orange County Superior Court' judge since 1982, following service as a Municipal Court judge beginning in 1981. After receivrng his law degree from UCIA in 1972, Carter was an assistant district attorney in Orange County for nine years. He tried more than 25 murder cases as a proseculor.

David Ginshurg '76 was the executive producer for two 1998 Emmy-award winning television productions , "Gta," an HBO movie, and "Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella," which aired on ABC. Currently, Ginsburg is president of the Motion Picture Group of Alliance Atlantis.

Edwin F. Feo '77 has been elected to the three-person Executive Committee of the New York-based international law firm of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley 6c McCloy. A banks Global senior partner in MilProject Finance Group,

he hasheaded theLos Angelesoffice sinceJanuary 1996.

Barbara Ravitz '78 hasbeenelected totheAmericanAcademyofAppellate Lawyers. She isa partner inthe civil appellate law firm of Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland. She servedasa lecturer atUCLASchool ofLaw from 1981to 1985.

Kneave Riggal'78continuestochair thePasadena Bar Association's TaxSection.Riggal recentlypublished his 26th and 27th tax law articles: "Comprehensive TaxBase Theory, Transaction Costs, and Economic Efficiency" 17 Virginia TaxReview 295 (1997); and "Income Reporting Requirementsfor Lawyers and Law Firms," LA Lawyer July/August1998.

1980s

Angela Campbell'81, whoteaches at GeorgetownUniversity Law School, had her working paper "Ads2Kids.com: Should GovernmentRegulateAdvertisingtoChildrenon theWorldWide Web7" published inprint andonthe WorldWide Web.

JimJerue'82 has cofoundedJerue & Perkins, a smallChicagofirmthat representsprofessional investors, entrepreneursand healthcare providers in transactional matters.Jim chairs the Chicago Bar Association's Corporation and Business LawCommittee.

DavidThompson'83 was sworn into the OrangeCountySuperiorCourt on August 10, 1998.

Kim MclaneWardlaw '79 sworninto Ninth Circuit

After serving two years as U.S. District Judge in Los Angeles Kim Mclane Wardlaw '79, was sworn in as a judge of the Ninth Circuit U.S. CourtofAppealsonAugust 3. Wardlaw seems to have a knack for speedy confirmations. In October 1995, she zipped through theconfirmation hearings for her nomination totheU.S. DistrictCourtfortheCentral District in a mere six minutes.

Careful preparation - including a review of her notes from UCLA law professor Ken Karst's federal courts class- assisted her in the process, shesaid during an interview for storythat appeared in the spring 1996 issue of UCL<\ Law following herappointmentto the federalbench. Morerecently, shespedthroughtheU.S. Senateconfirmation processtoearn her seat ontheNinthCircuitjustsixmonths after her nomination byPresidentBillClinton.Wardlawwassworn in by Central District Chief Judge Terry Hatter,Jr.President Clinton signed her commission that same day

Lisa HamiltonKlein'84 hasrecently joinedtheCorporate Department of KattenMuchin &Zavis' LosAngeles officeasa partner. She concentrates her practice in mergers and acquisitions and corporatefinance, including public and privatesecuritiesofferings and debt restructurings. Kleinalsoserves asoutside counsel to bothpublic and private companies in manufacturingandservice industries.

James E. Rogan'84, who waselected tothe105th U.S. Congress in 1996, serveson the HouseJudiciaryCommitteeand theCommerce Committee, and isassistant majority whipin theHouse. DavidTseng '84 was appointed Chief Assistant Treasurer for the City a�d

County of San Francisco on April 1, 1998.

Robert N.Anfield'85 has beennamed vicepresident and medical director for claimsatProvident Companies, Inc., North America's leading provider of disability insuranceandrelated products. Anfieldwill leadongoing development ofthe company's medical management ofdisabilityclaims. He isa member of theAmericanCollegeof Occupational and Environmental Medicine and is board certified in family practice.

James Cooper'86 co-authoredChapter 35, "Prior Convictions; Other Bad Acts" in California CriminalLaw: Procedure andPractice, 4thed. (Continuing EducationoftheBar).

Donnell Rubay '82

After practicing law for nine years, primarilywith the law firm of Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro, Donnell Rubay taught high school English and Social Studies. Four years ago, she left teaching to write. Her first book, a children's picture book entitled Sticheen:JohnMuirandtheBrave LittleDog was published byDawn Publications in October.

Sticheen retellsJohn Muir's classic story of his true adventure on an Alaskan glacier with the little dog, Stickeen. During their adventure, Muir and his small friend encounter great danger and both must call upon true courage to save their lives.

While writing this book, Donnell consulted with a picture book "expert"her daughter, Anastasia, now 10.

Nancy Oppenheim '86, after spending 10 years as a trial and appellate attorney, recently completed an M.A. in Applied

---- Linguistics and a Ph.D. in Cognition. She is a professor in the School of Business at Fort Lewis College.

David A. Ossentjuk '87 has left Hanna and Morton, where he had been a partner since 1995, and is helping IrvinebasedJackson, DeMarco & Peckenpaugh open offices inWestlakeVillage.

Joseph E. Boyland '88 has been selected a partner in the law firm of Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott. He practices in the firm's Boston office and concentrates in employment, business and regulatory litigation. Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott has offices

in Boston, Washington, D C, and throughout Pennsylvania and Florida.

Jennifer (Bollinger) Goosenberg '89 and David Goosenberg '89 write that they are the proud parents ofa healthy and happy baby boy,Jerry Elijah, born December 31, 1997.

1990s

Mary-Christine Sungaila '91 appeared before the United States Supreme Court, arguing for reinstatement ofa sexual assault conviction of a Tennessee mayor, which had been overturned by a federal appeals court.

Scott Masel '93 is the Bureau Chief of the Civil Litigation division of the Florida Attorney General's office.

LeeWilson '94 has recentlyjoined the firm of Katten Muchin & Zavis' Los Angeles office as an associate in the CorporateDepartment. He concentrates his practice on mergers & acquisitions

and corporate finance.Wilson has represented numerous companies in the entertainment and telecommunications industries, including Fox Television in its acquisition of the Los.Angeles Dodgers and Turner Broadcasting System in its acquisition by Time Warner.

Glen A. Rothstein '95 hasjoined the litigation department of Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman, where he will litigate in the fields of business, commercial, and intellectual property and entertainment industry-related matters.

Marco Antonio Firebaugh '97 won a seat in the California Assembly representing the 50thDistrict of LosAngeles. Firebaugh, aDemocrat, defeated Republican candidate Gladys O. Miller, winning 85% ofthe votes in the November election.

Kelly Rozmus '97 has recently published her second law review article since graduating. The piece, which was originally prepared for Law 340 as an independent study project focusing on education reform within the context of the San FranciscoDesegregation Consent Decree, can be accessed through either Lexis or Westlaw at 1998 Brigham Young University Educationand LawJournal 103.

Scott McVarish '98 has recently been hired by the California Teachers Association (CIA) and willjoin their in-house legal team.

Stephanie BennettAndrews '98 has recentlyjoined the firm of Katten Muchin & Zavis' Los Angeles office as an associate in the litigation department. Her primary practice areas include all aspects of general business and entertainment litigation.

LEGAL WORK BEHIND LA. SHAES

MichaelD. Berk '67 balances lawpracticeandpro bona work

M\

1chael D. Berk, a1967graduateofUCLA Law, managesan 1mpress1ve hst of pro bono activities while carrying a full partner's loadat Pircher, Nichols & Meeks, a 45-attorney, Los Angeles-based real estate law firm.

Inadditiontohisworkintheartsandotherphilanthropiccauses,perhapshismost rewardingworkisthatwhichhedoesforL.A. Shares,anorganizationthatbrokersprivate-sector donationsofoverruns, overstocksand "reusables" toschoolsandnonprofits across Los Angeles County.

L.A. Shares is the single largest donor of goods and materials to Los Angeles City schools, the Recreation and Parks Department, senior citizen community centers, and other nonprofit organizations, says L.A. Shares executive director Bert Ball. (L.A. Sharesdistributedapproximately $9millionworthofitemsin1997aloneandexpects to match or exceed that amount by the end of1998).

Supporters include major corporations such as IBM, Dupont, American Express and several Hollywood studios, whose post-production surpluses now go to theater groups instead of landfill sites because of L.A. Shares. Recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency last year as exemplifying the ultimate reuse program, L.A. Shares' goods and services are free to both the donor and the recipient.

Berk first heard about the innovative concept in1993. "It sounded like a win-win situation for everyone," recalls Berk, then a partner at Rogers & Wells.

At that time, a city Cultural Affairs Department program called Materials for the Arts redistributed excess materials from film studios to local theater groups.Working pro bono, Berk and Rogers & Wells associate Veronique P Bardach spent about 75 hours restructuringthe program into a stand-alone, not-for-profit organization with a broader mandate than its government predecessor. The result was L.A. Shares.

L.A. Shares then asked Michael Berk tojoin its board of directors, which includes three members of the Los Angeles City Council, the president of Sony Pictures and a senior vice president of Paramount Studios.

"Mike'smorethanalegaladvisor; he's ourmoralcompass," emphasizesBall,agraduate of the Producers Program at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television (1992). As a board member, Berk continues to provide legal advice when neededcheckingcontracts, leases and other documents, andproviding legal counsel in other L.A. Shares matters.

Berk, who graduated Order of the Coif, clerked forJustice Raymond L. Sullivan at the California Supreme Courtbeforeenteringprivatepractice.Heandhiswife,Karen, have two sons,Jeffrey, 30, andAndrew, 28.

Berk's advice to attorneys consideringa pro bono project: "Youdon'thave to start with something big. Start with something you're comfortable with - some organization, project or task that interests you. Then see how you feel. It may sound trite, but it is a very rewarding feeling to know that you are doing good deeds for their own sake."

Michael Berk sits among the goods at the L.A. Shares warehouse.

CAMPAIGN uCLA SCHOOL OF LAW

The Campaignforthe UCLASchoolofLaw, whichbeganonJuly 1, 1995andwillconclude onJune30, 2002, seekstoraiseatleast $45 millionasapartofCampaign UCLA'slargergoal of $1.2billion. TheSchoolofLawfacesnumerous challengesasitembarksonitssecond50years andentersthe21stcentury. Ourprioritiesin theyearsaheadaretoincreasedramatically ourunrestrictedendowmentandthescopeofthe LawSchool'scurriculum, academicprogramsand intellectualfarums. Oursuccessfully concluded LawLibrary Campaignprovidesthecornerstone ofthe Campaigngoal, andthemagnificentnew HughandHazelDarlingLawLibrary is themost visiblesymbolofthesuccesswehavehadsofar. Yetwehavemorethanhalfourgoalstilltomeet, anditwilltakethehardworkanddedicationof allofustoensurethattheSchoolofLawcontinues tobeastrong, vital, excitingplaceforstudents, faculty, staff, andallouralumniandfriends. Thesuccessofthe Campaigndependsonyou. Yourongoingcommitmentwillmaintainthe LawSchool'sexcellencefarbeyond2002.

Wearegratefultothefallowingindividuals, law firms, foundationsandcorporationsforleadership giftsandpledges, andtoeveryonewhohasjoined the Campaignatalllevels.

$5 Million and above

HughandHazel Darling Foundation

Richard L Stack, Trustee

Estate ofDavid Simon '55

$1 Million - $4,999,999

TheAhmanson Foundation

GertrudeD. Chern'66

AlbertB. Glickman '60 and JudithEllis Glickman

The Kresge Foundation

Estate ofAnnRosenfield

David Leveton '62, Trustee

$500,000- $999,999

Ethel TeppBalter

Honoring the Memory of Harry Graham Balter

David G. Price'60 and Dallas P. Price

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro

John Stauffer CharitableTrust

Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer Foundation

$250,000 - $499,999

David Epstein '64

GTE Foundation

Milken Family Foundation

Bob and MarionWilson

$100,000 - $249,999

John G. Branca '75 and Family

JonathanF Chait '75

Philip D. Dapeer '72

DeborahA David '75 and NormanA. Kurland

Betty Gershuny Denitz

In Memory of Ronald P. Denitz '53

JosephDrownFoundation

Philip Magaram '61, Trustee

Samuel N. Fischer '82 and Leah S. Fischer '82

David Fleming '59 and JeanFleming

J W and Ida M.Jameson Foundation

Fred L Leydorf '58, Trustee

David Kelton '62 and Lenny Kelton

Estate ofWalterMarco

Michael T Masin '69 and Joanne Masin

MarkA Resnik '72 and Shelley Resnik

The Partners of HenrySteinman '61

Walter,Finestone &Richter

Robert]. Wynne '67

Anonymous

$50,000 - $99,999

A Barry Cappello '65

Stephen Claman '59 and Renee Claman

JonJ Gallo '67 and Eileen Gallo

RothFamily Foundation

RichardV Sandler '73 and Ellen Sandler

Emil Stache In Honor of Professor Ann Carlson

GaryScott Stiffelman'79 and Family

BarryW Tyerman '71

WilliamW Vaughn '55and Claire Vaughn

$25,000 - $49,999

Richard L Ackerman '71 and BarbaraAckerman

StantonP. Belland '59 and Esther L Belland

Phyllis Bernard

In Memory of David Bernard '58

RandolphM. Blotky '73 and Teresa Blotky

Harland W Braun '67 and Dianne M. Braun

PamelaBrockie 75

Rinaldo S. Brutoco 71and Lalla Shanna Brutoco

RichardJ. Burdge,Jr '79and Lee Smalley Edmon

A. Bary Cappello '65

Ralph Cassady '61

Curtis Cole 71and Sharon Cole

Melanie K. Cook 78and WilliamA. P Woods

Lorraine Cooper

In Memory of Harold Cooper

MichaelA. K. Dan '69and Cecilia Dan

Lori HuffDillman'83 and Kirk D. Dillman '83

B. D. Fischer '58and Frances K. Fischer

Jean Bauer Fisler '52

Richard D. Fybel 71and Susan Fybel

Gil Garcetti '67and Sukey Garcetti

Sandra Kass Gilman 75and Christopher Gilman 75

DavidR. Ginsburg76and Dena Ginsburg

IrwinD. Goldring '56and ClarannJ. Goldring

ArthurN. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg

BernardA. Greenberg '58and LenoreS. Greenberg

RichardW Havel 71

Robert L Kahan '69and DianeKahan

Daid S. Karton 71and Cheryl A. Karton

JamesH. Kindel,Jr.

Kenneth Kleinberg '67 and HelenKleinberg

Joseph K. Kornwasser '72 and Hana Kornwasser

KarinT. Krogius '82 and Scott Mason

MosesLebovits 75and DeDe Lebovits

ln Celebration of the Lives of Allan and Beatrice Caplan

Margaret Levy 75

EthanB. Lipsig '74

Frances E. Lossing 78

ThomasH. Mabie '79and Rhonda Heth '80

Philip S. Magaram '61

MichaelT. Masin '69and Joanne E. Masin

Louis M. Meisinger '67and Susan Meisinger

Skip Miller 72 and SherryMiller

Richard G. Parker 74

Stan G. Parry '67and Melinda Parry

WilmaWilliams Pinder 76 In Honor of her Mother, Jessie Williams Rhetta

Professor SusanPrager '71and Jim Prager 71

SheldonW Presser '73 and Debora Presser

Professor Cruz Reynosoand Jeannene Reynoso

Marguerite S. Rosenfeld 76and MortonM. Rosenfeld

Roth FamilyFoundation

Edward andNancy Rubin

Thomas C. Sadler '82 and Eila C. Skinner

MarkA. Samuels '82 and Nancy B. Samuels '82

Marc M. Seltzer '72 and ChristinaA. Snyder

Lewis H. Silverberg '58

StuartA. Simke '60

Arthur Soll'58and Barbara Soll

HerbertJ. Solomon '56and Elene Solomon

Bruce H. Spector '67and RobinSpector

Art Spence '69and Anne Spence

WilliamF Sullivan '77and Joanne Sullivan

Richard Riordan and members of the firm

Diana L Walker '69and TimothyJ. White '78and Robert F Walker Maria WongWhite

KimMclaneWardlaw 79and DorothyWolpert 76 and William M. Wardlaw 72 StanleyWolpert

ProfessorStephen C. Yeazelland Ruth E. Fisher '80

Charles E. Youngand Sue K. Young

$10,000 -$24,999

Professor BenjaminAaron

ProfessorAlison GreyAnderson

DonE. N. Gibson '83

SamuelW Halper '55 and Ruth Halper

SuzanneHarris 77

KennethB. Hertz '84

J. Perry Langford '52 and DianeLangford

Ronald E. Neuhoff '68

WayneA. Schrader 75

Linda Smith 77

$5,000 - $9,999

Donna R. Black 75 and JeffreyA. Charlston '75

Robert N. Block 78

Bruce A. Clemens 74

Dhiya El-Saden 77

MarciaA. Forsyth 77

DanielJ.Jaffe'62

John P. Meck '72

JosiahL Neeper'59and Rita H. Neeper

Gloria Nimmer

Union Bank of California Foundation

ProfessorWilliamD. Warren andSueWarren

Mayor
Riordan & McKinzie, Timothy Sylvester '84, DanaWarren, and Lawrence Weeks '76, speak to students, facultyand staff at a panel discussion "Venture Capital Transactions" at the Law School in September.

THE HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Fiscal Year July 1, 1997 to June 30, 1998

Weproudlypresentthisyear's Honor Rollof Donors andwishtoextendourappreciation toalumni,friends,faculty,lawfirms, corporationsandfoundationswhosenames appear onthefallowingpagesfortheirsupport oftheLawSchool. Thesedonorsmadeagift totheLawAnnualFundortoascholarship or other designatedfundbetweenJuly 1, 1997 andJune30, 1998. TheLawAnnualFund providesvaluableunrestrictedfundingthat directly supportsacademicprogramming andisacriticalfactorinmaintainingthe excellencefor which UCLA Lawhascometo be known. Thispastyearhasbeenafantastic year for theLawSchool. GiftstotheLaw AnnualFundtotaledmorethan$730,000for thefiscalyear endingJune30, 1998,which representsa43%increaseover theprevious year'stotalanda23%increaseover thetotal forthefiscalyearendingyearJune30, 1996, ourhighestyear tothatdate. Bysustaining andbuildingonthismomentum,alumni andfriendsoftheSchoolofLawwillhelp tobuildanunprecedentedbaseofsupport forthefuture.

Dean's Cabinet

$5,000 or more

Dean's Circle

$2,500 or more

Dean's Roundtable

$1,000-$2,499

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

$500-$999

Dean's Advocates

$250-$499

Dean's Counsel

$125 - $249

Dean's Counsel

Classes of 1996, 1997, 1998

$75 - $249

Supporters

$1 - $124

Founders

The Founders Program was established many years ago to encourage a high level of annual support in the fortn of a 10-year pledge Those who appear in this category are currently completing their pledge.

CLASS OF 1952

Total Graduates: 33

Number of Donors: 13

Participation: 39%

Dean's Roundtable

J. Perry Langford

John C. McCarthy

Lester Ziffren

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Saul Grayson

Dean's Advocates

Arthur Alef

Frederick E. Mueller

Edward B. Smith lll

Dean's Counsel

Maurice W Bralley, Jr.

Sidney R. Kuperberg

Martin J. Schnitzer

Law Library Campaign Fund

Jean Bauer Fisler

Arthur Greenberg

The Robert A. Pallemon '76 Memorial Fund

Bruce I. Hochman

45TH REUNION CLASS OF 1953

Total Graduates: 37

Number of Donors: 12

Participation: 32%

Reunion Committee

JeromeGoldberg

Willard M. Reisz

Dean's Roundtable

Jack M. Sattinger

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Jerome H. Goldberg

Daren T. Johnson

Dean's Advocates

Victor M. Epport

Dorothy W Nelson

Sallie T. Reynolds

Robert B. Steinberg

Dean's Counsel

John U. Gall

RobertJ. Grossman

John F Parker

Martin B. Weinberg

Supporters

Charles A. Zubieta

CLASS OF 1954

Total Graduates: 89

Number of Donors: 15

Participation: 17%

Dean's Roundtable

Carl Boronkay

Donald A. Ruston

Founders

Marvin Gross

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Leon S. Angvire

Marvin Gross

Dean's Advocates

John A. Arguelles

Harvey f Grant

Eugene V Kapetan

Jack Levine

Sherwin L. Memel

Howard W Rhodes

Dean's Counsel

Bernard Lauer

Gerald A. Margolis

Leonard H. Pomerantz

Jerry Silverman

CLASS OF 1955

Total Graduates: 70

Number of Donors: 10

Participation: 14%

Dean's Advocates

Herbert Z. Ehrmann

Raymond f Moats, Jr.

Graham A. Ritchie

Richard Schauer

Dean's Counsel

Mynle I. Dankers

John R. Engman

Earl H. Greenstein

William W Vaughn

Supporters

Bruce I. Rauch

Law Library Campaign Fund

Samuel W Halper

CLASS OF 1956

Total Graduates: 67

Nnmber of Donors: 17

Participation: 25%

Dean's Cabinet

Irwin D. Goldring

Dean's Circle

Milton L. Miller

Dean's Roundtable

Nor;nan D Rose

Founders

Marvin D. Rowen

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

William Cohen

Richard E. Cole

Dean's Advocates

Harold J. Delevie

Lelia H. Jabin

H. Gilbert Jones

Howard N. Lehman

Dean's Counsel

Burton M. Bentley

Donald L Clark

Herschel T. Elkins

Mervin N. Glow

LawLibrary Campaign Fund

Irwin D. Goldring

Bernard L Lewis

Norman D. Rose

Herbert J. Solomon

DEAN'S

CIRCLE

A Message from the Chair

L4-fi>

been and continues to be a vital component of the well-being of UCLA Law, making it possible for the School to compete for the best professors, offer scholarships to the brightest students, supply cutting edge technology in the classroom and seize opportunities to develop new and imaginative programs. Great law schools are made, not born, and as alumni, it is our responsibility andourprivilege to makesure thatthe Law School grows strongerand is abie to meet the challengesof providing the best possible legal training to future generations of UCLA Law students. Please join me and all the members of the 1997-98 Dean's Circle in making a significant commitment to the school today, and into the 21st century. Your support makes a critical difference in what our school can provide to its students, the profession, andthe communityat large.

The Dean's Circle has been established to recognize and honor the individuals who have shown leadership in annual support of the School of Law by making a gift of $2,500 or more to the Law Annual Fund within a given fiscal year. Here we would like

Seltzer '72, Chair to welcome and thank the founding members of the 1997-98 Dean's Circle:

Keenan Behrle '69

Stephen D. Greenberg '77 and Budge and Brenda Offer

Richard J. Burdge, Jr. '79 and Myrna Greenberg Stan G. Parry '67 and LeeSmalleyEdmon

Ragna 0. Henrichs '69 Melinda Parry

The Hugh and Hazel Maria Hummer '76 Harriet Posner '84

Darling Foundation Stanley R. Jones '65 Charles Read '75

RichardL. Stack, David Kelton '62 and John H. Roney '59

Trustee Lenny Kelton

DaleV. Cunningham '60

ProfessorLeon Letvvin

JamesL. Roper '61

Marc M. Seltzer '72 and Deborah A. David '75 and FrederickL. Leydorf '58 and Hon. Christina Snyder

Norman A. Kurland MaryLeydorf

James H. Eisenberg '83

Evan R. Medow '67

Robert S. Shahin '69

RalphJ. Shapiro '58 and David W. Fleming ·59 and Milton Miller '56 and Shirley Shapiro

Jean Fleming Marcy Miller

William D. Gould '63

Professor Wendy Munger '77

John H. Weston '69

Marc M.

CLASS OF

1957

Total Graduates: 79

Number of Donors: 17

Participation: 21%

Dean'sRoundtable

Jean A. Hirschi

Founders

Jean A. Hirschi

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Richard D. Agay

Seymour S. Goldberg

Dean's Advocates

David R. Glickman

Ephraim J. Hirsch

Marvin Jabin

Arthur W Jones

Roy A. Kates

George J. Nicholas

Gloria K. Shimer

Irving A. Shimer

Wells K. Wohlwend

Dean's Counsel

Everett W Maguire

Richard T. Mudge

Morris Stone

Law Library Campaign Fund

Sanford R Demain

40TH REUNION

CLASS OF

1958

Total Graduates: 112

Number of Donors: 24

Participation: 21%

Reunion Committee

Ralph]. Shapiro

Dean's Cabinet

Frederick L. Leydorf

Ralph J. Shapiro

Dean's Roundtable

Frances andJerry Leigh

FamilyFund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Levinson, Miller,Jacobs

Bernard A. Greenberg & Phillips Fund

Harold J. Hertzberg

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Warren J. Abbott

Gerald S. Barton

Dean's Advocates

Terrill f Cox

Nonnan L. Epstein

Hugh H. Evans

Ephraim P. Kranitz

Philip F Lanzafame

Nancy B. Watson

John G. Wigmore

Robert L. Wilson III

Hunter Wilson, Jr.

Dean's Counsel

Roland A. Childs

Bernard Lemlech

Ronald L. Scheinman

Supporters

Ralph J. Shapiro

Howard P. Miller

Memorial Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Dr. Roger LeRoyMiller Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Ralph and Shirley Shapiro

Student Loan Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

BarryM. Zwick Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Dean's Counsel

George V Hall

Michael Harris

Richard M. Levin

Stanley Rogers

Jason H. Ross

Russell F Schooling

Donald C. Wickham

Supporters

Raymond Ceragioli

Leon A. Farley

Lawrence Kritzer

Roberta Ralph

Robert H. Stopher

Dean's Advocates

Robert W D'Angelo

Victor E. Gleason

Ronald J. Grueskin

Grant E. Propper

Amil W Roth

Owen A. Silvennan

Stephen C. Taylor

Dean's Counsel

Charles W Cohen

Lyman S. Gronemeyer

Melvin S. Lebe

Emmett A. Tompkins, Jr.

Stanley R Weinstein Supporters

Law Library Campaign Fund

Stanton P. Belland

Stephen Claman

CLASS OF

CLASS OF 1960

1959

Total Graduates: 100

Total Graduates: 103

Number of Donors: 26

Number of Donors: 25 Participation: 25%

Participation: 25%

Dean's Circle

Dean's Circle

Dale V Cunningham

Rodney Moss

Roger M. Settlemire

Law Library Campaign Fund

Roland Kaspar

David G. Price

Stuart A. Simke

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Amil W Roth

CLASS OF

George J. Franscell 1961

Arthur Kanna

David W Fleming

John H. Roney

Dean'sRoundtable Total Graduates: 112

Henry B. Niles II Manin Cohen

Alfred B. Ruskin

Class of 1958 Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Marshall Cogan

Scholarship Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Pete Kameron Fund

Ralph J. Shapiro

Law Library Campaign Fund

Bernard D. Fischer

Lewis H. Silverberg

Dean's Roundtable

Richard N. Ellis

Edwin M. Osborne

Josiah L. Neeper Founders

Gary S. Jacobs

James H. Chadbourn Fellows Leonard Kolod

Earl W Kavanau

Bernard S. Shapiro

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Roger J. Broderick

Dean'sAdvocates M. Alan Bunnage

Stanley A. Black

Leslie W Light

Robert W Vidor

Paul B. Wells

Seymour L. Goldstein

Bruce H. Newman

Number of Donors: 25

Participation: 22%

Dean's Circle

James L. Roper

Dean's Roundtable

Ralph Cassady III

Founders

John A. Altschul

JamesH. Chadbourn Fellows

Arthur Brunwasser

Gerald S. Davee

Mitchell M. Geffen

Alan N. Halkett

Dean's Advocates

KarlJ. Aben

LeonardAlexander

Richard H. Berger

JamesLerman

JohnR. Liebman

DonB. Rolley

Dean's Counsel

Lawrence S. Frankel

Alan L Freedman

Supporters

RichardH. Bein

DennisW Fredrickson

Jack C. Glantz

WilliamJ. Mccourt

ThomasJ. Scully

Dean's Counsel

JamesR. Andrews

*Roselyn S. Brassell

HiroshiFujisaki

Philip C. Greenwald

George C. Halversen

John M. Maller

PaulL Migdal

Mel Springer

Jan P Vetter

Supporters

Stuart K Mandel

Law Library Campaign Fund

DanielJ.Jaffe

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

CLASS OF Hiroshi Fujisaki

1962

Total Graduates: 101 35TH REUNION

Number of Donors: 21 CLASS OF

Participation: 20%

Dean's Circle

David Kelton

1963

Total Graduates: 110

Number of Donors: 27

Participation: 24%

Founders Reunion Committee

DavidA. Leveton

WilliamD. Gould

James H. Chadbourn Fellows Dean's Circle

Manley Freid

HarveyReichard

William D. Gould

Dean's Roundtable

Dean's Advocates Bernard Katzman

Jerome S. Billet

Roger N. Kehew,Jr.

HerbertLaskin

KenMaddy

Dean S. Stern

ToddR. Reinstein Founders

RichardA. Rosenberg

LeroyM. Gire

MarvinG. Goldman

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

RobertT. Hanger

AlbenB. Norris,Jr.

Dean's Advocates

Eli Blumenfeld

Frances L Ehrmann

Stephen M. Fenster

Robert S. Goldberg

Ronald F Keeler

Bennett I. Kerns

Steven M. Lachs

Richard K. Quan

GeorgeR. Royce

MichaelE. Schwartz

Dean's Counsel

JohnJ. Barder

AlanR. Golden

Ronald M. Kabrins

Lawrence I. Kirk

AlanJ. Ludecke

Alban l. Niles

Supporters

BernardPolston

LawrenceM. Schulner

Law Library Campaign Fund

Lawrin S. Lewin

CLASS OF

1964

Total Graduates: 115

Number of Donors: 27

Participation: 23%

Founders

JeffreyT. Oberman

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

JohnR. Browning

RobertE. Kayyem

MelvynJ. Ross

GeorgeA. Smith

LawrenceTeplin

Martin G. Wehrli

Dean's Advocates

RaymondT. Gail

RalphD. Malmquist

Everett f Meiners

KimH. Pearman

Richard B. Wolfe

Dean's Counsel

JohnR. Benson

Leonard A. Hampel,Jr.

Harr C. Harper

Leo W Kwan

MIChae\ Miller

DavidJ. O'Keefe

Aaron M. Peck

RonaldA. Tuller

RayA. Yinger

Supporters

Eleanor Luster

WilhamA. Mayhew

DennisA. Page

James L Spitser

Law Library Campaign Fund

Harvey Giss

Dean's Advocates

HowardL Berman

Stephen C. Drummy

George C. Eskin

JosephE. Gerbac

Ronald L Leibow

V GeneMcDonald

LawrenceH. Nagler

JackM. Newman

Robert H. Nida

Ezekiel P. Perlo

HaroldJ. Stanton

Dean's Counsel

LaurieR. Belger

Sidneyf Croft

WilliamJ. Elfving

GeorgeR. Kingsley

AlvinJ. Korobkin

*Edward C. Kupers

MelvynMason

Martin Wolman

Supporters

David Bloomgarden.

MilfordW Dahl,Jr.

JeromeDiamond

CLASS OF JackGoldman

1965

StanleyW Levy

Total Graduates: 166 H. LeeMcGuire,Jr.

Number of Donors: 36 LeeA. Rau

Participation: 21%

CarlosRodriguez

Dean's Circle Law Library Campaign Fund

StanleyR.Jones A. Barry Cappello

Dean's Roundtable

RobertA. Broder

JamesH. Giffen

SaulL Lessler

Louis P. Petrich

Fred Selan

Melville B. Nimmer

Memorial Fund

Andrea Sheridan Ordin

The Robert A. Pallemon '76

James H. Chadbourn Fellows Memorial Fund

Andrea Sheridan Ordin

Martin Stein

CLASS OF 1966

Total Graduates: 201

Number of Donors: 36

Participation: 17%

Dean's Roundtable

Wilford D. Godbold,Jr.

Lawrence 1. Schwanz

Founders

Robert B. Burke

Stanley M. Price

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Stephen W Bershad

Joseph L. Shalam

Daniel G. Zerfas

Dean's Advocates

Roger L.Cossack

William M. Egerman

MonteC. Fligsten

Joseph G. Gorman,Jr.

RobertJ. Higa

Dennis D. Hill

David A. Horowitz

Merrill H. Karpf

Frederick Kuperberg

Alan E. Robbins

Ian F Robertson

H. Reed Webb

Dean's Counsel

James M. Epstein

Stephen B. Fainsbert

Arnold I. Lester

Howard E. Lowe

Stephen K Miller

William G. Morrissey

AlanC. Oberstein

StuartJ. Rosen

Harold E. Shabo

Tobey H. Shaffer

Ronald L. Sievers

Kenneth A. Wood

Supporters

Thomas E. Andrews

Donald H. Glaser

Steven L. Leighton

Law Library Campaign Fund

Wilford D. Godbold

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

RobertJ. Higa

CLASS OF 1967

Total Graduates: 249

Number of Donors: 74

Participation: 29%

Dean's Circle

Evan R. Medow

Stan G. Parry

Dean's Roundtable

Donald R. Allen

Samuel P Delug

Michael S.Josephson

Martin F Majestic

Founders

Louis M Meisinger

Elliott D. Olson

RobertJ. Wynne

Mel Ziontz

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Kenneth R. Blumer

David R.Carmichael

Charles L. Goldberg

William E. Paterson

Kenneth L. Schreiber

JohnC. Spence III

Gary D. Stabile

Michael Waldorf

Dean's Advocates

Joel S. Aaronson

Peter M. Appleton

Arthur Avazian

Ralph L. Block

Cary D.Cooper

RogerJon Diamond

Lawrence H.Jacobson

David L. Kerrigan

Richard N. Kipper

Jeffrey L. Linden

Stefan M. Mason

MiltonJ. Nenney

Steven Z. Perren

Bruce M. Polichar

Jon A. Shoenberger

Hortense K. Snower

Frank A. Ursomarso

Leonard D. Venger

Thomas E. Warriner

Robert A. Weeks

Michael N. Weiss

JayC. Weitzler

Franklin R. Wurtzel

Dean's Counsel

Gary Barnett

Daniel M.Caine

David WCondeff

Humberto X. Davila

Clifford Douglas

LeslieC. Falick

Lawrence H. Fein

Stanley Genser

LynardC. Hinojosa

Mark A. Ivener

W MichaelJohnson

Sheldon Michaels

Sheldon E. Miller

John R. Schilling

RudolphC. Shepard

Richard R. Stenton

Michael S. Ullman

Supporters

LouisJ. Bachleder

Abraham W Baily

James H. Banks,Jr.

DavidJ. Berardo

Harold S. Fleischman

Michael D. Marcus

Howard D. Sacks

*Eric R. Van de Water

Denis P White

John M. Wilcox

Law Library Campaign Fund

Harlan Braun

Gil Garcetti

Kenneth A. Kleinberg

Louis M. Meisinger

Bruce H. Spector

Roth Family Foundation Fund

Gil Garcetti

Jerry Pacht Memorial

Scholarship Fund

Hortense K Snower

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Franklin Torn

30TH REUNION CLASS OF 1968

Total Graduates: 182

Number of Donors: 35

Participation: 19%

Reunion Committee

Barry A. Fisher

Ronald P Slates

Dean's Roundtable

RobenC.Colton

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Thomas R. Larmore

Thomas M. Maney

Dean's Advocates

Terry H. Breen

Audrey B. Ezratty

PaulJ. Glass

RogerJ. Gleckman

Robert F Harris

Robert N. Harris, Jr.

Stephen C. Jones

Joel R. Ohlgren

Gordon J. Rose

Sanford R. Wilk

Evan G. Williams

Dean's Counsel

Frederick W Clough

Barry A. Fisher

Lowell E. Graham

Jay W Jones

Jerold A. Krieger

Daniel R. Milgrom

Prentice L. O'Leary

Charles J. Post lll

Susan G. Schaefer

Anthony J Truex

Richard G. Wise

Supporters

William H. Abronson

Eugene M. Amos, Jr.

Philip L. Arnaudo

Lawrence E. Biegel

Charles B. Carey

David B. Johnson

Jordan J. Faust

Robert B. Treister

Law Library Campaign Fund

Ronald E. Neuhoff

Michael Palley '68

Memorial Fund

Anthony Truex

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

David A. Buxbaum

Richard A. Neumeyer

Lionel S. Sobel

Dean's Advocates

Leslie H. Abramson

Sara L. Adler

Stephen M. Burgin

Kenneth Drexler

Henry R. Fenton

Norman N. Flette

Larry N. Frager

Robert B. Fraser

Jeffrey C. Freedman

Jan C. Gabrielson

Raymond H. Goldstone

Diana W Hagle·

Bruce E. Harrington

Rowan K. Klein

Roger W Pearson

Charles G. Rigg

Toby J Rothschild

Andrea R. Schrote

Michael I. Shannon

Donald J. Stearns

James F. Stiven

Dean's Counsel

Andrew D. Amerson

James S. Bianchi

Richard H. Caplan

John R. Domingos

Carol L. Engelhardt

David B. Epstein

Howard R. Gilstrap

Robert E. Glasser

CLASS OF Allen M. Gruber

1969

Kenneth H. Meyer

Total Graduates: 182 Ralph J Morgan

Number of Donors: 56

Participation: 30%

Dean's Circle

Keenan Behrle

Ragna O. Henrichs

Robert S. Shahin

John H. Weston

William M. Pate, Jr.

Gary I. Walker

Cameron R. Williams

Supporters

Terry J Amdur

Michael A. Cowell

E. Barry Haldeman

Frederick E. Herra

John G. Kerr

Allan I. Kleinkopf

Howard A. Krom

William R. Schoen

John W Stephens, Jr.

Law Library Campaign Fund

Roben L. Kahan

Michael I. Masin

Arthur G. Spence

Diana L. Walker

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Elwood G. Lui

CLASS OF 1970

Total Graduates: 175

Number of Donors: 29

Participation: 17%

Dean's Roundtable

Nicholas Budd

Scott J. Spohn

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Dennis C. Brown

Richard J. Davis, Jr.

William 0. Fleischman

Myron L. Jenkins

William J. Kelleher

Brian C. Leck

Marc J. Poster

Terry L. Tyler

Dean's Advocates

Linn K. Coombs

Laura L. Glickman

Linda S Hume

John B. Jakie

Herbert J Klein

Perry E. Maguire

Dean's Counsel

Arthur R. Chenen

Michael M. Duffey

Richard C. Goodman

Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.

Bruce S. Herwig

Steven R. Hubert

Robert J McKay

"Yourcontributionhas enabledmetoaccept thehonortoworkatthe LegalAidFoundationof LosAngeles (LAFLA)in helpingbatteredimmigrant womenfileself-petitions undertheViolenceAgainst WomenAct (VAWA). Withouttheworkthatthe attorneysandlawclerks dounderVAWA,many ofthesewomenwouldbe forcedtogobacktolives ofphysicalandemotional abuse,orwouldbedeported totheirhomecountries, oftenhavingtoleave belovedchildren,parents, andsiblingsintheU.S."

AileenAlfonso Duldulao, Classof2000 Recipientofsummerfellowshipmadepossible byagiftfrom David Epstein'64

Supporters

Geoffrey C. Adams

Frederick R. Bennett lII

Allan J. Goodman

Mark A. Levin

Robert Y. Nakagawa

Robert M. Wright

CLASS OF

1971

Total Graduates: 267

Number of Donors: 68

Participation: 25%

Dean's Roundtable

Richard W Havel

Richard D. Norton

Michael A. Ozurovich

Ann Parade

Richard T. Peters

Earl M. Weitzman

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Allen H. Fleishman

Judy Fonda

Steven A. Friedman

Leonard B. Levine

William P. Moore

Kent L. Richland

Bobby L. Smith

Robert H. Wyman

Stuart D. Zimring

Dean's Advocates

Barry E. Axelrod

Karen M. Berhe

Jeffrey A. Berman

Allan B. Cutrow

John J. Frankovich

Ronald R Gastelum

Marc E. Hallert

Roger H. Howard

Ronald C. Lazof

Dean's Counsel

Frederick P. Aguirre

Susan E. Amerson

Jerry S. Berger

Robert G. Blank

Hubert M. Childress

Gary L. Gilbert

Jonathan C. Gordon

Thomas E. Hom

Marvin L. Isaacson

Linda P. Jensen

Jon M. Mayeda

Ricardo F. Munoz

Paul C. Nyquist

Kenneth K. Okel

Thomas M. Scheerer

Allen H. Sochel

Juliet H. Swoboda

David B. Wilshin

Eric R. Young

Supporters

Jon B. Artz

Wayne S. Canterbury

Thomas R Cory

Mary J. Curwen

Millard M. Frohock, Jr.

Harold C. Hart-Nibbrig

Thomas B. Karp

Gary G. Neustadter

Richard G. Ritchie

Michael S. Sideman

Law Library Campaign Fund

Richard L. Ackerman

Rinaldo S. Brutoco

Curtis A. Cole

Richard D. Fybel

Richard W Havel

David S. Karton

Ann Parode

Jim Prager

Professor Susan

Paul Marcus Westerberg Prager

Richard J. Morgan

Robert D. Mosher

David C. Tunick

Barry W Tyerman

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Michael Yamamoto

CLASS OF

1972

Total Graduates: 278

Number of Donors: 57

Participation: 20%

Dean's Circle

Marc M. Seltzer

Dean's Roundtable

Andrew E. Katz

Patricia T. Sturdevant

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

john M. Collins

Deborah R. Gatzek

Gary L. Kaseff

Cary B. Lerman

Dominick W Rubalcava

James R Walther

Founders

Richard A. Blacker

Dean's Advocates

Richard W Abbey

Frank C. Aldrich

Philip M. Cohen

James B. Goodman

Miles Z Gordon

Noel F. Heal

Gregory L. James

James Kashian

Howard M. Knee

Bruce M. Kramer

Stanley E. Maron

Lawrence E. May

Forrest S. Mosten

William]. Smith

Donald K. SLeffen

Richard T. Vogel, Jr.

Edward A. Woods

Dean's Counsel

Edward W Abramowitz

John M. Baskett, Ill

Bruce D. Benjamin

Harold J. Berkus

Robert T. Burke

Ronald D. Davis

Kenneth B. Dusick

Mitchell A. Ebright

SLephen C. Klausen

Linda B. Riback

Benjamin H. Scharf

William D. Smith

Stephen D. Yslas

Supporters

Glenn H. Angelo

Karen S Blasingame

James E. Brown

Roger Crissman

Bruce J. Croushore

Timi A. Hallem

Dora R. Levin

Barbara D. Moore

Kenneth C. Salzberg

Earl D. Smith

Law Library Campaign Fund

Lawrence J. Briskin

Philip D. Dapeer

Andrew E. Katz

Joseph W Komwasser

John P. Meck

Skip Miller

Albert Z. Praw

William M. Wardlaw, Sr.

25TH REUNION

CLASS OF

1973

Total Graduates: 290

Number of Donors: 55

Participation: 18%

Reunion Committee

James Goldman

NathalieHoffman

CynthiaLebow

LauraMcAvoy

SheldonPresser

Ronald I Vera

Dean's Roundtable

Ronald W Rouse

Founders

Nathalie Hoffman

Robert F. Marshall

Sheldon W Presser

Jeffrey E. Sultan

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Martin E. Auerbach\;",

Donald P. Baker

Mario Camara

Michael L. Dillard

R. Roy Finkle

Peter M. Fonda

Gerald M. Gordon

Michael D. Scott

Stacy·D. Shartin

Michael J. Strumwasser

Dean's Advocates

Timothy Born

Marc P. Bratman

Keith M. Clemens

Roger P. Crouthamel

David T. Dibiase

Kenneth P. Eggers

David H. Gardner

James L. Goldman

Douglas B. Haynes

Ronald J. Jacobson

Larry A. Kay

Randall H. Kennon

Abraham D. Lev

Douglas C. Neilsson

Kathryne A. Stoltz

Peter A. Wissner

Dean's Counsel

Lois G. Andrews

Timothy J. Conley

Joshua Dressler

Joe W Hilberman

Craig S. Kamansky

Steven E. Levy

Laura K. McAvoy

Joyce A. Orliss

R. Thomas Peterson

Carl M. Shusterman

Supporters

James A. Baker

Arthur P. Berg

John M. Bransfield

Joel M. Butler

Larry A. Cohen

Mark F Grady

Guy R. Lochhead

Richard E. Marks

Theresa J. Player

James K. Schultze

Law Library Campaign Fund

Donald P. Baker

Randolph M. Blotky

Nathalie Hoffman

Sheldon W Presser

CLASS OF 1974

Total Graduates: 298

Number ofDonors: 56

Participation: 18%

Dean's Roundtable

Paul L. Brindze

Buddy H. Epstein

James L. Foorman

Andrew A. Kurz

Founders

William H. Borthwick

Daniel P. Garcia

Ethan Lipsig

Ted Obrzut

JamesH. Chadbourn Fellows

Susan B. \i;amahan

Allan B. Cooper

Silvia M. Diaz

Shan K. Thever

Dean'sAdvocates

Peter C. Bronson

Alexander W Kirkpatrick

J. Anthony Vittal

Donald E. Warner, Jr.

Dean's Counsel

William L. Battles

Paul D. Beechen

Kenneth A. Black

Lawrence Borys

Jeffery J. Carlson

G. Craig Christensen

Walter C. Cochran-Bond

R. Stephen Doan

Barbara A. Hindin

Jonathan M. Klar

Charles Margines

Ronald L. Murov

Phillip G. Nichols

Michael S. Rubin

Carol D. Scott

Nancy E. Spero

Betsy A. Strauss

Rodney il. Thatcher

Robert F Tyler, Jr.

Victorio Uherbelau

Steven D. Wiener

William L. Winslow

Richard P. Yang

Supporters

Ignacio S. Cota

Francesca A. De La Flor

David G. Dizenfeld

Roman 0. Gallego

Scott E. Grimes

Nancy M. Knight

Terry A. Marcellus

Charles L. McKain

S. Alan Rosen

Steven L. Shahbazian

Donald P. Silver

Mark J. Urban

Law Library Campaign Fund

Susan Bush Carnahan

Bruce A. Clemens

James L. Foorman

Ethan B. Lipsig

Richard G. Parker

CLASS OF 1975

Total Graduates: 309

NumberofDonors: 78 Participation: 25%

Dean's Circle

Deborah A. David

Charles Read

Dean's Roundtable

Alex Kozinski

Grace N. Mitsuhata

Mark Waldman

Founders

James D. Barrall

Pamela J. Brockie

JamesH. Chadbourn Fellows

James D. Barrall

Robert D. Cunningham

Robert A. Green

Allen L. Michel

William F Rogers

Sharon F Rubalcava

Dean'sAdvocates

Linda D. Anisman

Valerie L. Baker

Michael C. Baum

James R. Brueggemann

Michael J. Budzyn

Edmund W Clarke, Jr.

Thomas W Cohen

Paul L. Gale

Victor J. Gold

John B. Golper

Steven Hecht

Susan T. House

Margaret Levy

Romulo I. Lopez

Gary W Maeder

Ramon Otero, Jr.

Norman A. Pedersen

Leland J. Reicher

Julia J. Rider

Barry E. Shanley

David Simon

Virginia E. Sloan

WhenIcomparemyopportunities andprospectsthedayIstartedhere andthedayIleftherethereisahuge difference. Thisisavery competitive business, andyouwillseethatyour educationstandsuptothebestofthe eastern schools. Thatissomething thatisimportanttome, andIgive backtothelawschoolbecause [my -education] hasmeantalottome.

Rich Parker '74

Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C.

Senior Deputy Director, Bureau of Competition

Formerly with O'Melveny &Myers

(In comments to Professor John Wiley's antitrust class.I

"Receiving [thisaward] was

oneofmy truly happymoments inschool. Your kindnessand generosity inmotivatingstudents isgreatly appreciated . .

JudgePachtsetsanexample towhichIcanaspire."

Maya Alexandri, Class of 1998

First recipient, Jerry Pacht Memorial Constitutional Law Award

Marjorie S. Steinberg

Emily A. Stevens

Thomas C. Tankersley

Glenn F. Wasserman

Mark S. Windisch

Robert M. Zeller

Dean's Connsel

Brad N. Baker

Frederick B. Benson

Victoria L. Block

Edward C. Clifton

Robert G. Garrett

A. Thomas Golden-Grant

Andrew J. Guilford

Larry G. lvanjack

Gail D. Kass

Robert L. Kaufman

Robert M. Kunstadt

Bruce D. Lowry

Gary Q. Michel

Scott D. Miller

Barbara M. Motz

Steven G. Pallios

lrwin B. Rothschild III

Marc I. Steinberg

Lawrence H. Thompson

Seth H. Tievsky

Celia Torres

Juan Ulloa

James D. Vandever

Supporters

Jeffrey D. Gale

Brian E. Keefe

Calvin Lau

Gilberto A. Limon

Robert D. McGuiness

Robert E. Rich

Thomas G. Ryan

David C. Shilton

John G. Branca Fund

John G. Branca

Law Library Campaign Fund

Deborah A. David

Christopher M. Gilman

David Hazelkorn

Sandra S. Kass

Moses Lebovits

Margaret Levy

The Robert A. Pallemon '76

Memorial Fund

Valerie Baker

CLASS OF 1976

Total Graduates: 291

Number of Donors: 84

Participation: 28%

Dean's Circle

Maria D. Hummer

Dean's Roundtable

Peter I. Paterno

Judith S. Shapiro

Judith W Wegner

Dorothy Wolpert

Founders

Michael I. Adler

Fredric I. Bernstein

Maribeth Borthwick

Jenny Fisher

Mark A. Neubauer

Richard Schneider

Anita Y. Wolman

Philip Wolman

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

William D. Claster

Linda C. Diamond

Richard K. Diamond

David C. Doyle

Richard J. Katz

Karen E. Randall

Marc R. Stein

Dean's Advocates

Bruce A. Barsook

Gregory C. Brown

Elizabeth E. Bruton

Kenneth L. Friedman

Carolyn J. Gill

Richard G. Opper

Ann Poppe

Robert N. Rigdon

Allison B. Stein

Gary M. Stern

Diane L. Kimberlin Law Library Campaign Fund

ValerieJ. Merritt

Victor B. Moheno

]. David Oswalt

David B. Parker

Harvey M. Schweitzer

Bruce C. Stuart

Bonnie E. Thomson

David Ginsburg

Michael A. Hood

Duane C. Musfelt

Wilma Williams Pinder

Marguerite S. Rosenfeld

Dorothy Wolpert

Eugene Tillman The Robert A. Pallemon '76

James]. Tomkovicz Memorial Fund

Dean's Counsel

Richard Avila

Alice C. Bisno

Barbara A. Blanco

Albert L. Bradley

Don M. Drysdale

Thomas S. Epstein

Paul G. Hoffman

Richard H. Levin

Cheryl A. Lutz

Douglas G. Mason

Peter]. McBreen

Barbara Blanco

Diane Kimberlin

James M. Lowy

PeterJ. McBreen

Duane C. Musfelt

Margaret O'Hara

Wilma Williams Pinder

Karen Randall

Michael Rich

Gloria Roa

Judith Wegner

William Nakano

Gordon M. Park Memorial Fund

Anne B. Roberts

Michael A. Rubel

Bruce G. Iwasaki

Stephanie R. Scher CLASS OF

Robert Z. Seligman 1977

Norman P Tarle

Larry Walker

Michael Wolf

Supporters

Clyde I. Doheney

Paul D. Fogel

Bruce G. Iwasaki

Frances W Kandel

Kenneth M. Kumor

John A. Lawrence

Beth L. Levine

Gay L. Natho

Tomas D. Nunez

Total Graduates: 315

Number of Donors: 84

Participation: 26%

Dean's Cabinet

Stephen D. Greenberg

Dean's Circle

Professor Wendy Munger

Dean's Roundtable

Howard E. King

Peter W Mason

Gail M. Singer

John W Stephens

Marcy J. Tiffany

Founders

Richard Purtich

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Alan G. Benjamin

Andrea H. Bricker

Rochelle Browne

Kathleen H. Drummy

David W Evans

Kenneth J. Fransen

Gregg M. Gibbons

Thomas A Kirschbaum

Charles N. Shephard

Jonathan R. Yarowsky

Scott Z. Zimmermann

Dean's Advocates

Marilyn Barrett

Gregory E. Breen

Daniel L. Carr, Jr.

Robert L. Clasen

Wayne C. Collett

Audrey B. Collins

Gary A. David

Teresa Estrada-Mullaney

Edwin F. Feo

Ramon Gomez

David P. Leonard

Lucinda A. Low

Durham J. Monsma

James K. Phelps

John E. Pope

Neil J. Rubenstein

Susan P. Shanley

Tamar C. Stein

R. Marshall Tanner

Dean's Counsel

Gustavo A. Barcena

Francis]. Baum

Dave B. Bowker

William C. Conkle

Bruce E. Cooperman

Lawrence J. Dreyfuss

William S. Dunlevy

Sharon E. Flanagan

Mark E. Kalmansohn

Deborah L. Kranze

Martin C. Kristal

Joseph Kruth

Antonia E. Martin

Tamar T. Mason

Carol L. Matsunaga

Herbert D. Meyers

Gregory F. Millikan

Mary A Mohrman

Robert J. Moore

Cynthia H. Rushing

Daniel H. Slate

Thomas C. Sterling

Supporters

Robert M. Angel

Paul A. Babwin

Eileen A. Brown

Charles E. Cunis

Martin A. Flannes

Catherine B. Grant

Mark T. Johnson

Sara R. Latz

Lana F. Melman

Arturo]. Morales

Donald V Morano

Michael H. Pinchak

Frederick B. Sainick

Robin E. Schneider

Edward I. Silverman

Carolyn L. Small

Vera A. Weisz

Javan J. Wygal, Jr.

Law Library Campaign Fund

Dhiya El-Saden

Marcia A. Forsyth

Paul E. Glad

Suzanne Harris

William F. Sullivan

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Jill E. Ishida

20TH

REUNION CLASS OF 1978

Total Graduates: 304 Number ofDonors: 79 Participation: 25%

Reunion Committee

Robert N. Bloch

LindaK. Lefkowitz

Frances E. Lossing

Pat O'Toole

Dean's Roundtable

James R. Asperger

Douglas H. Collom

John G. Mayer

Marietta S. Robinson

Kay E. Rustand

Founders

Melanie K. Cook

David F. Faustman

Christopher Kim

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Hilary H. Cohen

Miriam J. Golbert

Daniel C. Hedigan

John P. Howitt

Ann L. Kough

Linda M. Lasley

Elmer J. Lincoln, Jr.

Karen Magid

Christopher J. Martin

M. Brian McMahon

Helen W Melman

J. Michael Norris

Barbara W Ravitz

Michael A: Robbins

Paul S. Rutter

Martin T. Tachiki

Gwen H. Whitson

Ralph Zamudio Ill

Dean's Advocates

L. Diane Bardsley

Michael D. Briggs

Carol A Chase

David R. Deutsch

Michael D. Dozier

Wayne H. Gilbert

Karin Greenfield-Sanders

Madison F. Grose

Robert J. Grossman

Kenneth L. Guernsey

Susan J. Hazard

Alex M. Johnson, Jr.

Dean J. Kitchens

Marlo R. Laws

Linda K. Lefkowitz

Janet S. Murillo

Robert M. Ozell

Lisa G. Quateman

Matthew H. Saver

Anne T. Thomas

Barry M. Weisz

Dean's Counsel

Sandra L. Buttitta

Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.

Michael D. Fernhoff

Robert Flores

Heather S. Georgakis

Barbara E. Hadsell

Michael T. Hornak

William A Johnson, Jr.

Marlene B. Jones

Jeffrey G. Kelly

Robert A Levinson

Vernon T. Meador III

James J. Moak

Mary C. Molidor

Henrietta E. Mosley

Don G. Rushing

David I. Schulman

Arlene F. Withers

Supporters

Judith Bailey

Barbara Brown

Karen L. Hancock

Boyd D. Hudson

Mark A Kuller

Robert H. Leibman

Mark S. Scarberry

Anne B. Thacher

Anthony Wheeldin

"Iamfindingmyeducation at UCLASchoolofLawtobe achallengingandenriching experience. Iwasexcitedto discoverduringmyfirstyear ofstudythatlawcanoffer suchdepthand varietyto boththescholarandthe practitioner. Ilookforward tojoining theprofessional community, andhopeto onedaybeabletohelpa studentinthewaythatyour scholarshiphashelpedme."

Alycia Degen, Class of 2000

Recipient of the lrell & Manella Scholarship

Law Library Campaign Fund

RohenN. Block

Melanie K Cook

FraneesE. Lossing

TimothyJ White

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

MartinT Tachiki

G. Michael Tanaka

CLASS OF 1979

Total Graduates: 273

Number ofDonors: 66

Participation: 24%

Dean's Circle

RichardJ Burdge,Jr.

Dean's Roundtable

MichaelBarclay

Aviva M. Bergman

MarkR Burrill

Joel M. Grossman

Spencer L Karpf

Jennifer L Machlin

Timm A. Miller

Andrew S. Pauly

Founders

RichardJ Burdge,Jr.

Rochelle Lindsey

Gary S. Stiffelman

Kim M. Wardlaw

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

ShirleyE. Curfman

Linda K Engel

Linda Gach-Ray

Roberta S. Kass

JamesA. Melman

David S. Neiger

Karen L Tachiki

Dean's Advocates

AlanF. Broidy

HarmonA Brown

CathyE. De Roy

Marlene D. Goodfried

Joel D. Kuperberg

Roger E. Lautzenhiser,Jr.

Lydia S. Levin

Mary S. Newton

Arthur F. Radke

Bernard M. Resser

Dean's Counsel

StevenL Abram

Charlotte L Ashmun

AllanE. Ceran

Suzette Clover

SuzanR Flamm

James D. Friedman

CindyWGraff

SandraWMarinelli

Bruce D. May

Robbie E. Monsma

MarioF. Moreno

Marilyn R Moriarty

Michael E. Ripley

MichaelWSchoenleber

Elizabeth N. Winthrop

David 0. Wright

Supporters

LawrenceWBerger

JohnL Carlton

Bailey R De Iongh

Douglas B. Finlayson

CatherineB. Frink

Albert S. Glenn

Nicholas Goodhue

Otto C Holz

StevenA. Micheli

DavidA Raynes

Gilbert Rodriguez,Jr.

Mark S. Shipow

MarthaA Torgow

Henry S. Weinstock

Law Library Campaign Fund

RichardJ Burdge,Jr.

Thomas H. Mabie

Gary Scott Stiffelman

Elizabeth E. Vogt

KimMclaneWardlaw

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Karen L Tachiki

CLASS OF 1980

Total Graduates: 305

Number ofDonors: 80

Participation: 26%

Dean'sRoundtable

Ann 0. Baskins

LeslieA. Cohen

RobertJ finger

Founders

ProfessorDavid H. Dolinko

Feris M. Greenberger

Leslie B. Rosen

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Andrew P. Bernstein

Neila R Bernstein

CarolA Clem

Doreen M. Curtis

Ruth E. Fisher

Thomas E. Gibbs

Joshua L Green

Feris M. Greenberger

MarcWJune

Laurie L Levenson

Ida L Levine

F. Sigmund Luther

Dean's Advocates

AmyL Applebaum

WJeffreyAustin

Irene P. Ayala

Anne S. Berkovitz

MargaretR Dollbaum

PaulA Franz

GordonA Goldsmith

Herbert Graham

DarrelJ Hieber

Thomas W Kellerman

Jeffrey C. Krause

Harriet B. Leva

Leslie B. Lindgren

Charles D. Meyer

Linda A. Netzer

J. Scott Paisley

David S. Porter

Daniel Rodriguez

Paul A. Schmidhauser

John A. Seethoff

Moises Vazquez

Mark P Weitzel

Gail A. Windisch

Dean's Counsel

Dawne A. Casselle

Robert T. Lemen

Rosendo Pena, Jr.

John H. Renninger

Giacomo A. Russo

Susan J. Stem

Law Library Campaign Fund

Feris M. Greenberger

Rhonda J. Heth

Laurie Levenson

Bernard J. Lurie

The Robert A. Pallemon '76

Memorial Fund

Laurie Levenson

William Nakano

William D. De Grandis Memorial Fund

Dennis S. Diaz

Alan H. Finkel

Wilbur Gin

Daniel G. Gold

Jane Aoyama-Martin

Estelle C. Chun

CLASS OF

Knox Kimberly 1981

Kathleen R. Koch-Weser

David A. Lash

Total Graduates: 332

Number of Donors: 81

Joann Leatherby Participation: 24%

Alec G. Nedelman

Craig G. Riemer

Catherine G. Sabatini

Linda J. Sharpe

Steven J. Untiedt

Supporters

Jane Aoyama-Martin

Istvan Benko

Barbara Biles

Cathy E. Blake

William S. Dato

Dale A. Edrich

Jeanne A. Flaherty

Anita R. Gershman

Mark S. Green

Eric J. Hamermesh

Debra Hodgson

David A. Juhnke

Dean's Roundtable

Julie M. Heldman

Margaret M. Mason

Founders

Eric J. Emanuel

James I. Ham

Marilee C. Unruh

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

James M. Ash

David B. Babbe

John W Crittenden

Leianne S. Crittenden

Michael R. Harris

Lilly Lewis

Julie S. Mebane

Marjorie M. Mikels

Reed M. Scuria

Jed E. Solomon

Kenneth J. Stipanov

Steven M. Strauss

Dean's Advocates

Mark J. Barnes

Regina I. Covitt

Walter R. Dahl

Robert J. Debitetto

Bruce R. Hallett

Lawrence M. Hamett

Jonathan M. Hoff

Karen L. Matteson

Marcy S. Morris

Robert B. Orgel

Gerald S. Papazian

Jesus E. Quinonez

Bruce S. Richards

William L. Twomey

Michael L. Wilhelm

Dean's Counsel

Michael J. Bonner

Robert E. Braun

Julie A. Davies

Ned S. Goldstein

Kristin A. Henderson

Chris S. Jacobsen

Linda A. Kirios

Wesley Kumagai

Edwin I. Lasman

Shelley E. Levine

Robert P Meisel

Lynn G. Naliboff

Jeffrey Oliphant

Jonathan J. Panzer

Karen G. Rosin

Judith H. Uherbelau

Joan E. Vogel

George M. Wallace, Jr.

Peter C. Walsh

Supporters

Victoria D. Armstrong

Susan]. Bell

David F. Brown

Gary S Craig

Judith K Crawford

Gregory S. Drake

Patricia H. Feiner

William B. Francke

Andrew S. Gelb

Phyllis Johnston

Michael H. Korpi

Karen Lewthwaite

Merced Martin

David Melcer

David M. Meyer

Scott B. Samsky

Craig P Sapin

Jerrold E. Schrotenboer

Stephan A. Seideman

William C. Staley

Lynn Y. Wakatsuki

Stanley D. Williams

Hoyt H. Zia

Law Library Campaign Fund

Joseph L. Gattuso

Panayota Nanopoulos

Memorial Scholarship Fund

Richard P Fajardo

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Joseph S. Biderman

Patricia M. Ito

Wesley Kumagai

Lynn Y. Wakatsuki

Hoyt H. Zia

CLASS OF

1982

Bruce Rosenblum

James S. Rountree

Dean's Advocates

Henry Ben-Zvi

Jose R. Benavides

Cathryn S. Gawne

Bryan D. Hull

Elizabeth D. Mann

William K. Mills

Leslie R. Mitchner

Michelle Patterson

Dennis L. Perez

Martin E. Rosen

Joseph A. Scherer

Eric B. Siegel

Jeffrey H. Silberman

Jocelyn D. Thompson

Ilene E. Trabolsi

Walter W Whelan III

Dean's Counsel

Donald I. Berger

Donald D. Bradley

Joan M. Clover

Mark J. Fucile

Rick J. George

Mireille F Cotsis

Rodrigo A. Guerra, Jr.

Total Graduates: 340 Anna J. Hitchcock

Number of Donors: 88 James L. Jerue

Participation: 25%

Dean's Roundtable

Dirk W Van De Bunt

Founders

Steven C. Glickman

Richard J. Gruber

Susan Claman Gruber

Gregory S. Paik

Jay F Palchikoff

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Mary R. Brusewitz

Robert T. Clarkson

Kathryn A. Hendley

Ira D. Kharasch

Joan M. Le Sage

Scott T. Maker

Benjamin M. Karlin

Charles K Knight

Laura S. Landesman

David P Lee

Kenneth A. Martyn

Lou A. Mclean

Lee-Ann Meyer

Randy H. Milgrom

Ann J. Murphy

Kurt V Osenbaugh

Elizabeth A. Pollock

Dennis A. Ragen

Belinda D. Rinker

Jack H. Rubens

Vinay Sharma

Valdo J. Smith

Philip Starr

Edward J. Szymanski, Jr.

"Ienjoyedmysummerat
the U.S.Attorney'soffice .

Ireceivedvaluablelitigation

Lori HuffDillman

David Durchfort

Eric G. Lardiere

JodiL Levinson

MarilynPecsok

RobinaRoyer

David S. Reisman Law Library Campaign Fund

Dean's Counsel Kirk Dilman

Ronald A. Baker

Lori Huff Ditman

Michael F Broderick Don Gibson

Janet L. Castaneda

Cynthia S. Conners

Maria E. Cortez

Edward Zaelke

Terrilyn Zaelke experience. Iassistedwith

Dean's Cabinet

James H. Eisenberg

Marion G. Crain

WilliamNakano trialpreparationand

Founders

Linda K. Ensbury Memorial Fund

Dale A. Head

Jason W Chin observedtwotrials."

Wendy Pearson, Class of 2000

First recipient,

The Robert Pallemon Memorial Fund

Supporters

Thomas A. Bliss

Marc H. Corman

Carey L. Critchlow

Lori J. Feiner-Scott

Barbara G. Gerber

Richard B. Hall

Donna N. Lampert

Thomas M. McMahon

Scott M. Mendler

RodneyR Mills

Jeffrey P. Molever

Shirley A. Morgan

Larry P. Nathenson

Leslye E. Orloff

Darien E. Pope

Law Library Campaign Fund

Karin T. Krogius

Thomas C. Sadler

Mark A. Samuels

Nancy B. Samuels

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Helen M. Hayse

William C. Hsu

Da,id P. Lee

Martin V Lee

Daniel M. Mayeda

Neil R. Nagano

Bert Nishimura

David A. Solitare 15TH REUNION

Inna K. Zahid CLASS OF

Danuta M. Zaroda 1983

Samuel N. and Total Graduates: 356

Leah 5. Fischer Fund

Number of Donors: 84

H. Deane Wong

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

John S. Brandon

Timothy T. Coates

Patrick J. Evans

June G. Guinan

Ede C. Ibekwe

Roger L. Kohn

In-Young Lee

Daniel J. McLoon

Lise N. Wilson

Edward W Zaelke

Terrilyn B. Zaelke

Dean's Advocates

Renee T. Brook

Cathryn A. Campbell

Mark P. Canada

Clifford H. Fonstein

Scott A. Forsyth

Roger L. Funk

Ronald F Garrity

Dean M. Gloster

Steven A. Heimberg

Michael A. Helfant

David J. Hirsch

Frank R. Jazzo

Ruth Jones

E. George Joseph

Glenn L. Krinsky

Eric G. Lardiere

Samuel N. Fischer and Participation: 23% Jocelyn Larkin

Leah S. Fischer

Kenneth L. Kutcher

Morgan A. Lamb

Barry Lambergman

Jodi L. Levinson

Ronald E. Levinson

Marilyn D. Manin-Culver

Larry S. Lee

LyleR Nishimi

Myra Sun

Anthony J. Taketa

Debbie L. Young

Jeffrey D. Nagler CLASS OF

R. Wayne Olmsted

Byongchae Pak

Nora A. Quinn

Mark G. Schroeder

Susan Silver

Claudio 0. Wolff

Supporters

Thomas C. Agoston

Rafael G. Armijo

Allen Blumenthal

Stephanie L. Choy

Pamela L. Coe

Brian G. Eberle

Jeffrey M. Ettinger

James G. Foster

Alan E. Garfield

Jacquelyn S. Kiether

Larry 5. Lee

Victor H. Mellon

Dolores M. Nelson

Robert B. Rocklin

James C. Scheller, Jr.

Mark R. Snyder

Robert H. Steinberg

Margaret Stevenson

Robert F Torres

Paul Maestas

ReunionCommittee

Mary Barnes

Cynthia Conners

Terry McNiff

Deborah Y. Monticue

Marilyn 5. Pecsok

1984

Total Graduates: 306

Number of Donors: 86

Participation: 28%

Dean's Circle

Harriet S. Posner

Dean's Roundtable

Kenneth B. Hertz

Stuart M. Rosenthal

Peter C. Thomas

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Barbra S. Davis

Jeffrey A. Galowich

Linda W Mazur c

Teresa L. Remillard

Dean's Advocates

John S. Bank

Susan L. Fonnaker

Dolly M. Gee

Lawrence H. Goldberg

Robert G. Goldman

Philip S. Gutierrez

Joanne G. Janson

Miriam A Krinsky

JanetA. Kobrin

Monika P Lee

Ann C. McMillan

Gregory M Nitzkowski

Daniei A. Olivas

Douglas E. Scott

Bruce D. Tobey

David C Tseng

Dean's Counsel

Alan S Berman

LauraJ. Birkmeyer

Todd W Bonder

Pamela G Chin

OIga N. Dean

Jeffrey A Dinkin

Robert B Ericson

James A. Florack

Laruy S. Kohorn

Joel T. Kornfeld

Elizabeth M. Mauhias

Rhonda L. Nelson

James M. Steinberger

Lee M. Straus

Leonard M Tavera

Edward C. Thoits

Steven A. Troyer

Kathleen Yocca Coleman

Supporters

Bennett A. Bigman

Paige Campbell

Bruce C. Catanta

Richard C. Cray

Kathy E Esfahani

Andrew L. Finn

Michael J. Gibson

CratgA. Goldman

Brad I. Golstein

Guy N. Halgren

Laura W Halgren

Paul T. Hayden

Sarah A. Hiestand

Lisa H Klein

Sandra W Lavigna

Cynthia E. Maxwell

Pamela A. Mohr

Mury Newcombe

Jonathan I. Reich

Barbara E Riegelhaupt

Leslie E Sherman

Ronald E Stoute

John R Wylie

Alan J Zuckerman

Law Library Campaign Fund

Kenneth B Hertz

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Pamela G Chin

Doily M Gee

Eriko Matsumoto

Jane Pon

Barry A Rosenbaum

Naoki Shimazaki

Evelyn A Shimazaki

Jean E Tanaka

David C Tseng

CLASS OF 1985

Total Graduates: 312

Number of Donors: 72

Participation: 23o/o

Dean's Roundtable

Martha G Rock

Robert E Serio

CarolynJ. Veal-Hunter

Founders

John M Moscarino

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Brian J. Appel

Robert G Barnes

Sheri Bluebond

John M. Jameson

Pamela D Kelly

Peter C Kelly

Stephen H Mazur

Harold J Schaaff, Jr.

Stacey G Snider

Reba W Thomas

Judy Umeda

Dean's Advocates

Valerie B Ackerman

Christopher B Amandes

Lilia O Ballesteros

Donald L. Feder

Lynne S. Goldstein

Margarita P Hernandez

Mark L. Lindon

John Ossiff

Carol A Quinn

A1icia G Rosenberg

John A. Rosenfeld

Scott A. Solomon

Elizabeth A Strode

Dean's Counsel

Carlos Cordova

Lawrence P Ebiner

Heather C. Francks

Stephan J. Francks

Kenneth D. Freundlich

Jane L. Henning

Lester Jacobowitz

Mark A. Koop

Alicia J. Moore

George-Ann Rice

Lynette B Robe

Joseph A. Rogoff

Eugene J. Smrth

Stephen A, Tuggy

Supporters

Michael L. Baum

Teri E Bayer

Meredith L. Caliman

Jeffrey D. Davine

Paul S. Delson

Geoffrey A Drucker

Stephen A. Ellis

Timothy S. Ernst

Melanie M. Fairchild

Barbara R. Gadbois

David R. Garcia

Carol L. Hoffman

Gail K. Johnson

Barbara J. Katz

Sarah M. Killory-Rodriguez

David M. Lester

Louise D. Lillard

Montgomery K. Mahon

Robert G. Martin

Frankiyn W Perkovich

Anthony Rodriguez

Judith R. Schaffert

Michael R. Schaffert

Beth A. Schroeder

Michael J. Shpizner

Eric W Sigg

Anne B Torkington

Michael M. Youngdahl

Steven H. Zideil

Law Library Campaign Fund

John M. Moscarino

CLASS OF 1986

Total Graduate s: 293

Number of Donors: 60

Participation: 20o/o

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Chi S. Choy

Douglas T Gneiser

James W McSpiritt

Dean's Advocates

James P Cooper III

Daniel E Encell

Andrew R HalI

Craig A. Horowitz

Steven M Kleiman

Shelley H. Krall

Murray Markiles

Colleen C. McAndrews

William O Nuuing

Roy E. Ogden

Anthony L. Press

Sandra A. Seville-Jones

Laurie J. Taylor

Thomas W Weidenbach

Jeffrey A. Young

Dean's Counsel

Steven B. Abbott

Bruce D. Agin

Richard W Aldrich

Eileen D. Bradley

Edwin Carney

Beth K. Cranston

EricJ. Diamond CLASS OF Supporters

Frederick M. Entwistle

JoelH. Friedman

Louis G. Hering

David E. Isenberg

FrancesT. Mahaney

Hope G. Nakamura

Timothy E. O'Leary

Jerri H. Pih

David Polinsky

DavidB. Sett

David P. Steiner

Timothy M. Taylor,Jr.

Leslie E. Wallis

Patricia M. Weaver

DonaldJ. Willey

Supporters

SusanAbraham

SusanK. Alexander

DebbyH.Bader

PattyS.Bednarik

CesarA.Bertaud

KarenS.Bloom

JamesM.Burns

LoriA. Davies

S. KendallFlagg-Kunert

PaulS. Friend

KarenE. Harrison

MarkR Israel

Lawrence P.Jacobson

HarrisJ. Kane

Denise M. Meyer

StevenA. Plotkin

RickA. Schroeder

Julian Eule Memorial Fund

Colleen C. McAndrews

Law Library Campaign Fund

Linda C.Johnson

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

R. MonaTawatao

1987

Total Graduates: 315

Number of Donors: 78

Participation: 24%

Dean's Advocates

JamesFBlake

MarieH.Bruggeman

Shedrick 0. Davis lII

AlanJ Epstein

Victoria G. Epstein

Leora D. Freedman

MelindaA. Hoyt

johnW Kern IV

Mark E. McKeen

RaeSanchini

GlenSato

JeremyH. Temkin

Dean's Counsel

MichaelB. Africk

Alan D. Aronson

Katherine M.Basile

RonS.Best

Elaine R Costales

Anita T. Davidson

Dame! L Feder

RobertE. Feyder

GaryN. Frischling

AdrienneW Goldstone

WilliamH. Kahn

AndreaLevitt-Stein

MarshaB. Liss

KeithE. Marlowe

KaroleR Morgan-Prager

MarkT. Roohk

AnneC. Slater

Mark K Slater

JulieF Stodolka

BonnieY. Wai

Robert C. Welsh

Beth M. Wilson

SuzanneZaharoni

Alyce L Alfano

James E.Banks,Jr.

RobertC.Bowman

Randolph T.Boyle

EmilyW Card

JohnC. Chen

JeffreyA. Chine

Brian W Copple

Robert N. Dale

Steven C. DeBaun

Kathleen T. Deeley

Michael D. Donovan

Law Library Campaign Fund

Marc H. Edelson

The RobertA. Pallemon '76

Memorial Fund

AndreaLevitt Stein

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

ReidS Honjiyo

NorikoE. Okamoto

10TH REUNION

Jamie L Dubinsky CLASS OF

Marilyn W Formaker 1988

HilaryJ. Greenberg

ConnieR Kane

DavidJ. Kaplan

Susan F Kroll

VickiW Lai

PatriciaA. Libby

Robyn M. Martin

Thomas S. McConnell

EdmondJ. Miller,Jr.

Ann I. Park

Todd M. Reznik

ArchieSanders lll

Michael D. Schwartz

DavidA. Steinberg

Lauri C. Streeter

Joel A. Thvedt

Lynn E. Todd

WilliamA. Vallejos

Stephen R. Waldron

ClarissaC. Weirick

Julian Eule Memorial Fund

JohnC. Chen

Michael D. Schwartz

La Raza Law Alumni

Association Scholarship Fund

AliciaMinana DeLovelace

Total Graduates: 306

Number ofDonors: 47

Participation: 15%

Reunion Committee

GeorgeBrown

JamesR Felton

JamesM. Gelb

IleneM. Goldberg

CarlosK. Goodman

PatrickD. Hadley

Alice M. King

LawrenceB. Kupers

Sharon R. Leib

Teresa D. McNamara

KarenJ. McPhee

MarkD. Miller

RichardS. Moskowitz

KennethA. Ostrow

MarkJ. Price

ElizabethH. Pugh

EricJ. Rosenbloom

StevenM. Siegel

StevenSinatra

PaulJ. Tumminia

AndrewJ. Yamamoto

DavidP Felsenthal Supporters

James Felton

SharonRosen Leib

LouisMichelson

BethHengeveldPugh

ThomasSestanovich

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

SandraS. Ikuta

DavidSchinasi

JasonC. Sloane

Dean's Advocates

JamesR Cairns

MichaelE. Calligan

FrankA. Merola

DouglasD. Roberts

Dean's Counsel

WilliamS. Anderson

WilliamJ. Arzbaecher lil

MartinJ.Barrack

JeffreyA.Breinholt

GeorgeH.Brown

JulieA. Cochran

Jeffrey H. Cohen

PaulJ. Feldman

Charles O. Geerhart

Gretchen E.Jacobs

EricC.Jensen

Sandra E. Lester

LouisE. Michelson

EmilyB. Miller

JuliaS. Penick

LorneR Polger

SanfordM. Pooler,Jr.

JanetR. Rich

Julian Eule Memorial Fund

LorneR Polger

Steven M. Siegel

CLASS OF

1989

DavidM. Goosenberg

JenniferB. Goosenberg

Total Graduates: 288 KerryE.Hernandez

Number of Donors: 50

Participation: 17%

Dean's Roundtable

BruceD. Kuyper

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

Susan S. Azad

SeanP Treglia

JonT. Yamamura

Dean's Advocates

W ClarkBrown

Kirsten S. Ellis

KennethM. Fitzgerald

MichaelJ. Kiely

ShelleyR. Saxer

BradW Seiling

ScotStone

PhillipA. Talbert

Upinder S. Kalra

Caroline S. Katz

NathanielJ. Lipman

BarryLurie

Anna S. McLean

Rhonda H. Mehlman

JorgePineda

Eric C. Sawyer

BrianJ. Schwab

Janet K. Scott

Beau Simon

Matthew C. Wagner

Sung]. Yim

Law Library Campaign Fund

SarahJ. Fels

WilliamNakano

Memorial Fund

Therese M. Terlaje

Dean's Counsel CLASS OF

DwightL Aarons 1990

CarlosA. Arcos

William K. Enger

CynthiaJ.Howey

StevenI. Katz

CarolineR. Kelly

Gregory]. Kopta

Thomas A. Marrinson

Daniel C. McGuire

C.JohnMelissinos

SharonL Mitchell

HenryA. Platt

NancyK. Platt

DavidA. Portnoy

KatherineW Pownell

StevenA. Schuman

Supporters

ErichD. Andersen

VictorL Castillo

Kirsten S. Ellis

Gwendolyn M. Gamble

Total Graduates: 333

Number of Donors: 55

Participation: 16%

Dean's Roundtable

AudreyL Sokoloff

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

JeannineK. DePhillips

GeorgeM. Eshaghian

StuartM. Price

Dean's Advocates

KimberlyHall-Barlow

AllisonM. Keller

StevenJ. Levine

MaryD. Manesis

MichaelA. Plumleigh

Dean's Counsel

Tina-MarieBaskin

Diane E. Birnholz

Richard M. Birnholz

Lynne M. Brennan

Eric B. Gordon

Saul C.Janson

KennethA. Kirley

Da,�d M. Klanstenfeld

Julia M. Lavine

Karla N. MacCary

William T. MacCaryIII

Mary K. O'Connell

StephanieJ. Parr

MichaelJ. Perez

Joshua Rosenfeld

Suzanne K. Roten

JulieA. Ryan

Maryam Shokrai

Jan F Wrede

Supporters

BrendaAguilar-Guerrero

Nancy L Boxwell

Johnna C. Cho

Michael G. Clateman

Philip E. Cook

LaurenceB. Frank

Eric S.Hill

Francis].James

Richard Lai

Lloyd Lim

Julienne McCammon

AnnM. Mooney

Melissa D. Obegi

Andrea E. Reisbord

Suzanne St. Pierre

Leigh R. Strauss

Robert E. Strauss

GeoffreyM. Sturr

James]. Tutchton

StevenM. Wilker

SoniaM. Younglove

Neil L Zola

"Ihadtheopportunity toworkfortheNAACP LegalDefense&Educational Fund, Inc. inLosAngeles asasummerlawclerk. Itwasawonderfuland worthwhileexperience."

Eric T. Burton, Class of 2000

Recipient of summer fellowship made possible bya gift from David Epstein '64

Gene Chao Memorial Fund

FrancisJ.James

David L Klatsky

AndreaReisbord

JanE Wrede

Panayota Nanopoulos

Memorial Scholarship Fund

DerekW Li

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Francis].James

DerekW Li

CLASS OF

1991

Total Graduates: 330

Number of Donors: 62

Participation: 18%

Dean's Roundtable

HollyR. Paul

James H. Chadbourn Fellows

JeffreyW Cowan

Dean's Advocates

Carl 0. Graham

Leeanna lzuel

BrianJ. Pass

RobertE. Stenson

Edward L tabakin

FriedaA. Taylor

Dean's Counsel

Elizabeth S. Anthony

SaskiaT. Asamura

JamesP Beaubien

Fredric R. Brandfon

LawrenceP Brennan.Jr.

Agnes S. Chiu

MaryH. Chu

MariaC. Depew

WilliamP Donovan

JonathanM. Frenkel

SamanthaF Lamberg

Christine L Luketic

DavidF Martinez

Kathy B. Phelps

ShirleyD. Ramirez

Edward N. Sabin

LauraJ. Schwartz

Scott N. Yamaguchi

Bennett L Yee

Supporters

Sarah S. Ambrogi

Mark E. Birnbaum

Jill l. Brown

KevinD. Caton

Teresa Cho

Thomas A. Clayton

Michael L Elowe

Rafael S. Figueroa

Kenneth C. Goodsell

RichardL. Hasen

InezD. Hope

Maria P Hoye

DebraM.Johnson

Rhonda S. Kaye

Mitchell Keiter

ScottM. Klein

JennyLee

Ilyse Levine

DavidM. Logan

MarianaMarin

Jose A. Mendez

William]. Morley

DouglasM. Ramler

Paul P. Sagan

Eric E. Sagerman

SallieT. Sanford

Ann C. Schneider

DeborahJ. Wilson

EugeneY. Won

Gene Chao Memorial Fund

Mary Chu

Charles C. Corney

David F Martinez

Julian Eule Memorial Fund

DebraM.Johnson

Law Library Campaign Fund

Christine L Luketic

WilliamNakano Memorial Fund

Alexander H. Fukui

Suet F Lim

CLASS OF 1992

Total Graduates: 285

Number ofDonors: 65

Participation: 22%

Dean's Advocates

MartinR. Barash

Virginia C. Bennett

TimothyJ. Carlson

Peter F Del Greco

James C. Harrison

ClaudiaM. Harrison

StaceyA. Kipnis

Robert D. Offer

Jack S. Weiss

Dean's Counsel

Lawrence A. Abelson

Stuart l. Block

Sonia R. Carvalho

Robert L DellAngelo

Laurie Falik

Stewart S. Harrison

LeeJ. Leslie

Audrey Lin

SuzanneM. Madison

ElaineW Mandel

Patricia C. Perez

KaivanM. Shakib

Jeffrey S Silvyn

John Staudinger

AaronP. Silberman

Jeffrey S. Silvyn

EdwardJ. Slizewski

Blithe A. Smith

ThomasM. Smith

John Staudinger

Supporters

William D. Becker

MelanieJ. Bingham

David A. Carrasco

BridgetA. Clarke

PatrickM. Dunlevy

Timothy L Epp

Gregory Fuentes

Pamela G. Gross

ToddHart

B. Everett Hendrickson

Elizabeth A. Hone

Daniel S.Javitch

DavidJ. Korduner

Thomas R. Kreller

SimonR. Liversidge

Thomas A. Manheim

Jeffrey D. Nedrow

Parthiv R. Sangani

AaronP. Silberman

EdwardJ. Slizewski

BlitheA. Smith

Thomas M. Smith

Mark B. Tuvm

John C. Ulin

BrianP. Waldman

ThomasA. Waldman

Emily B. Weinstein

Joseph C. Wendlberger

Sara H. Wilson

Jessica R. Wolff

Ligi C. Yee

Gene ChaoMemorial Fund

David Carrasco

BetsyL Cotton

Peter Del Greco

Claudia Harrison and James Harrison

ToddHart

ElizabethAnne Hone

Ernie Nishii

James Riordan

TonyRodriguezand

Dorothy Rodriguez

Law Library Campaign Fund

Thomas R. Kreller

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Carolyn Y. La

5TH REUNION CLASS OF 1993

Total Graduates: 303

Number ofDonors: 50

Participation: 16%

Reunion Committee

RoberlAllen

Daniel Felsenthal

Jeffrey Freedman

Andrew Hurley

Gerde A. Kleykamp

Jae Lee

Helen Dien Sunga

Daniel Zahar

Dean's Advocates

LindaF Callison

CarolA. Foster

BrianM. Grossman

WilliamM. Litt

JosephB. Ryan

Dean's Counsel

John F Bazan

ChristopherA. Cherry

Mark R. Drozdowski

David B. Fischer

AlisonA. Heartfield

Andrew D.Jaeger

Tracy D.Johnson

NathanE. Laks

Lisa C. McArthur

LindaB. Oliver-Montgomery

Douglas H. Riegelhuth

Supporters

Robert E. Allen

LisaA. Anderson

KatherineA. Ates

VincentJ. Badolato

ToddD. Benjamin

BryanD. Biesterfeld

Beverly A. Chaney

Alice H. Choi

NancyJ. Cohen

DonaldT. Deyo

Sybille Dreuth

James]. Farrell

Jeffrey 5. Galvin

Joshua A. Gratch

Howard C. Griboff

RobertW Haugan

Stephen E. Holsten

Tami S. Holsten

JonathanWJaffee

James D. Kozmor

JayM. Miller

Sam S. Oh

MichaelE. Reisz

Adam B Schair

Thomas E. St. Germain

Peter T. Stoughton

KennethH. Taylor

Patricia D. Watkins

Anne H. West

ToddA. Wolfe

BrianJ. Wright

StanleyM. Yukevich

DanielY. Zahar

La Raza Law

Alumni Association

Scholarship Fund

Andrew L. Hurley

CLASS OF 1994

Total Graduates: 293

Number ofDonors: 48

Participation: 16%

Dean's Advocates

StevenW Hawkins

Kevin D. Morris

Thomas L. Treffert

Dean's Counsel

AngelaM. Bellanca

StephenD. Burbach

RonH. Bumovski

Oswald B. Cousins

Anne E. Garrett

Christopher E.Jones

Matthew S. Levinson

Doris A. Mendenhall

Jeffrey H. Mintz

ShanaMintz

Vicki G. Norton

Robyn R. Polashuk

Brette S. Simon

Ronald J. Thompson

Patrick D. Walravens

Supporters

Jaykant H. Bhatt

Megan M. Bruce

Scott A. Brutocao

Alan E. Calhoun

Guy F Candelaria

Marc S. Dohan

Donald A. Fishman

Hector G. Gallegos

Joseph I. Gauthier

Patrick Gibbs

Jonna C. Hoffman

Marion C. Ingersoll

Roger Janeway

Adam B. Kaufman

Susanna M. Kim

Christopher D. l.andgraff

Michael B. Levin

Michael L. Meeks

Jaleen Nelson

Sheri Pm

Michael E. Ross

Christopher S. Ruhland

Robert E. Scheid

Karen R. Thorland-Eckstrom

Daniel J. Villalpando

Robert P. Wargo

Karen R. Weinstein

Steven D. Winegar

Lester I. Yano

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Albert Y. Muratsuchi

CLASS OF 1995

Total Graduates: 298

Number of Donors: 41 Participation: 13%

Dean's Advocates

Troy A. Doyle

James H. Ellis

Elizabeth M. Honon

James K. Sakaguchi

Dean's Counsel

Andre Y. Bates

Lynne S. Bourgault

S. Elizabeth Foster

Alexander D. Hoehn-Sane

Paul R. Kassabian

Douglas F McCormick

Melissa R. McCormick

Stephen R. Uriarte

Supporters

Stephen F Case

David S. Cox

Paul M. Eckles

Yael Feinreich

Gary E. Felicetti

Michael A. Grizzi

Peter A. Hernandez

Brian M. Hoffstadt

Gregory K. Jones

Caroline W Lee

Stephen M. Lobbin

Heather Mactavish Freelin

Joshua A. Meyer

Ben D. Orlanski

Caroline H. Park

Jeffrey M. Prieto

Steven A. Rivers

Gregory A. Romero

Lisa D. Rosenthal

Paul Ruiz

Josephine A. Sanchez

Jennifer R. Scullion

Shane M. Spradlin

David M. Taub

Steven H. Usdan

Scott P Ward

Julian Eule Memorial Fund

Michael A. Grizzi

Braden W Penhoet

Law Library Campain Fund

Linley C. Bizik

CLASS OF 1996

Total Graduates: 331

Number of Donors: SO

Participation: 15%

Dean's Advocates

Catherine P. Portillo

Dean's Counsel

Michael C. Abel

Frederick J. Hughes

Dana C. Johnson

Diana S. Ponce-Gomez

Max B. Shiner

Norman Y. Wong

Stephen R. Wong

Supporters

William J. Aceves

Wendy D. Aron

Bruce P Barnett

Matthew B. Berman

Brad L. Brown

Michelle M. Castro

Alejandro Garcia

Deborah R. Goldberg

Gabriel G. Gregg

Guillermo C. Guerrero

Christopher N. Hackerman

Brian S. Hermann

A. ]. Jarasunas

David P Kowal

Janice M. Kroll

Carmen B. Krueger

Mette H. Kurth

Scott L. Kurzban

Arthur S. l.anderholm

Deborah I. Lee

Katherine E. Lewis

Amy C. Liu

Caroline H. Mankey

Jennifer E. Meier

State Senator Richard Polanco, chair of the Latino Legislative Caucus, speaks to stud,rnts and guests before his keynote address at the second annual Latino/Latina Law Student Conference held at UCLA School of Law in October. The conference brought students from law schools throughout the country to discuss educational and political issues.

Sean O. Morris

David K. Nelson

Janai S. Nelson

Babak E. Nikravesh

Aaron V O'Donnell

Ivana Ognjanovic

Chnstopher H. Paray

Lisa M. Pondrom

Gerardo Preciado

Loretta M. Ramirez

Nadia A. Shabaik

Lise K. Strom

Eric S. Vanderpool

Elizabeth C. Vella

Scon R. Weaver

Regina R. Wong

John G. Yslas

Daniel R. Zimmerman

CLASS OF 1997

Total Graduates: 336

Number of Donors: 7

Participation: 2%

Supporters

Susan Alker

Pamela D. Barnes

Melissa F Cardish

Linda S. Goldman

Christina Y. Lai

Jennifer L. Mandigo

La Raza Law

Alumni Association

Scholarship Fund

Jaime Guerrero

Gifts From Faculty, Friends & Parents

Dean's Circle

Professor Benjamm Aaron

Budge and Brenda Offer

Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation

Richard L. Stach, Trustee

Professor Leon Letwin

Professor Wendy Munger '77

Dean's Roundtable

Professor David A. Binder and

Melinda Binder

Professor Jesse Dukeminier

Thomas W Ford

Arthur M. Lubic

Professor Cruz and Jeannene Reynoso

William and Sally Rutter Jeanne Merel

Professor Myra Saunders and Jordan D. Miller

Paul Kaufman

BHP Minerals International, Inc. LAW FIRM AND Titleist

Champion International CORPORATE SPONSORS UCLA Athletics

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Munger Corporation OF THE 22ND ANNUAL Vinaigrettes Cafe

DeanJonathan D. Varat and Professor Stephen R. Munzer The Chase Manhattan UCLA ENTERTAINMENT Wilshire Realtors

Barbara A. Varat

Otis Pease Foundation SYMPOSIUM

DESIGNATED GIFTS TO Founders

Judy and John Postley CIGNA Foundation

Frederick E. Smith The CIT Group Foundation

$5,000 THE SCHOOLOF LAW

Professor William D. Warren and Creative Artists Agency

Sue Warren

Joan and Harold Tyndall CNA Insurance Companies

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP Fiscal Year July 1, 1997

Mark D. Whatley Foundation to June 30, 1998

James H. Chadbourn Fellows The Coca Cola Company International Creative

Judith C. Angel and GIFTS FROMLAW FIRMS Deloitte & Touche Foundation Management, Inc. Arnold & Porter

Robert Salvaria AND CORPORATIONS The Dexter Corporation Sony Pictures Entertainment Scholarship Fund William Morris Agency Arnold & Porter

Susan C. Berman Eott Energy Corporation

Dean's Cabinet Ziffren, Brittenham, Saundra Carter Equifax Foundation Baker & McKenzie Law

Professor Joel F Handler

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP Ernst & Young Foundation Branca & Fischer

The Ziffren, Brittenham, Student Assistance Fund Professor Kenneth Karst Exxon Educational Foundation

$2,500 Baker & McKenzie Branca & Fischer Foundation

Professor Richard C. Maxwell First Chicago Foundation Armstrong Hirsch Jackoway Beatrice "Trix" Gendel Fund

Theodore N. Miller Dean's Circle First National Bank of Chicago Tyerman & Wertheimer

Joan Palevsky Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison LLP Foundation Bloom, Hergott, Cook, Beverly Hills Law Guild

Dean's Advocates

Eli J. and Lois S. Borok

Professor Daniel J. Busse!

Professor William Klein and Renee Klein

Patricia L. Leach

Arthur S. Levine

Marlene R. Leviton

Greenberg Glusker Fields The Fluor Foundation Diemer and Klein LLP

Claman & Machtinger LLP GE Fund

Beverly Hills Bar

Chase Securities, Inc. Association Fund

Morrison & Foerster LLP General Motors Foundation Dewey Ballantine LLP Beverly Hills Bar Association

Munger, Tolles & Olson

Pacific Life Insurance Company

GTE Foundation Diamond & Ostrow LLP Foundation

Hewlett Packard Company Hansen, Jacobson, John G. Branca Fund

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Home Savings of America Teller & Hoderman

John G. Branca '75 Meagher & Flom Hormel Foods Corporation lrell & Manella LLP

Troy &: Gould

IBM International Foundation Katten Muchin & Davis

Intel Foundation Loeb & Loeb LLP

Gene Chao Memorial Fund

William P Alford

Professor David Mellinkoff LAW FIRM MATCHING GIFTS The Irvine Company Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP David Carrasco '92

Donn B. and Margaret S. Miller

Dean's Counsel

KPMG Peat Marwick Foundation New Line Cinema Mary Chu '91 Arnold & Porter

Dawn C. and Evan G. Anaiscourt Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison LLP

Professor Michael R. Asimow Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP

Robert K. Berenson

McClatchy Newspapers, Inc. O'Melveny & Myers LLP

Charles C. Corney '91

Microsoft Corporation Universal Studios, Inc. Betsy L. Cotton '92

Motorola Foundation Weissmann, Wolff, Bergman, Peter Del Greco '92 Loeb & Loeb

Erika S. and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius

James H. Chadbourn

Northwestern Mutual Life Coleman & Silverman

Foundation

Claudia Harrison '92 and

James Harrison '92 Morrison & Foerster LLP

Shirley J. and Donald E. Cole Musick, Peeler & Garrett

Patrick Del Duca

Ronald L. Fein

Alan D. and Anne Feld

O'Melveny & Myers

Sidley & Austin

Skadden, Arps; Slate,

Pacific Enterprises LAW FIRM AND Todd Hart '92

Pacific Life Insurance Company CORPORATE SPONSORS

Pew Charitable Trusts OF THE 2ND UCLA LAW

The Proctor & Gamble Fund SCHOOL GOLF TOURNAMENT

San Diego Gas & Electric

Elizabeth Anne Hone '92

Francis J. James '90

David L. Klatsky '90

David F Maninez '91 Meagher & Flom LLP ASUCLA

Cheryl D. and Company

Sullivan & Cromwell

Lyman S. Gronemeyer

Raymond M. lhori

H. Bruce Kimball

Bruce R. Lederman

Shaklee Corporation

Southern California Edison

American Golf Corporation

The Walt Disney Company

CORPORATE AND FOUNDA- Dollar Rent-a-Car

TION MATCHING GIFTS

Professor Gillian Lester 3Com Corporation

Roselyn 5. Lipkis

Gene Lucero

Abbott Laboratories Foundation

Adaptec Inc.

Christian E. Markey lII Alcoa Foundation

Dr. and Mrs. Allen W Mathies

James E. McNally

ARCO Foundation

BankAmerica Foundation

Texaco, Inc.

The Times Mirror Foundation

Time Warner, Inc.

USF&G Foundation

US West Foundation

Universal Studios, Inc.

Unocal Foundation

Paul J. Glass '68

North American Title

Insurance Company

Ernie Nishii '92

Andrea Reisbord '90

James Riordan '92

Tony Rodriguez '92 and

Dorothy Rodriguez

Jan F Wrede '90

Northwestern Mutual Life Class of 1958 Fund

Reebok

Ralph Shapiro '58 and

Stern, Neubauer, Shirley Shapiro

Greenwald &: Pauly

Marsliall Cogan

Pete Kameron Fund

Edward W Zaelke '83 and Gary Kawaguchi

Panayota Nanopoulos Scholarship Fund

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Terrilyn B. Zaelke '83

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro

Shirley Shapiro

La Raza Law Alumni

Julian EuleMemorial Fund Association Scholarship Fund

Nancy R. Berkowitz Jaime Guerrero '97

Professor David A. Binder and Andrew L. Hurley '93

Melinda Binder

Alicia Minana De Lovelace '87

John C. Chen '87 and Robert W Lovelace

Class of 1997

Morrison & Foerster Foundation

Professor Carole E. Goldberg Law Library CampaignFund**

Michael A. Grizzi '95

Joel f Handler

Yeheskel Hasenfeld

Debra M. Johnson '91

Jerome Kapner

Professor Kristine S. Knaplund

Rod D. Margo

Colleen C. McAndrews '86

Professor Richard L. Abel

Donald P. Baker '73

Linley Bizik '95

Lawrence J. Briskin '72

Susan B. Carnahan '74

Sanford R. Demain '57

Marc Edelson '87

Professor Grant and Sarah J. Fels '89

Judith Nelson

Braden W Penhoet '95

Lorne R. Folger '88

Professor Arthur I. Rosett

Murray, Phyllis, and Renee Rubin

Michael D. Schwartz '87

Ann Schwartz

Steven M. Siegel '88

Dean Jonathan D. Varat and Barbara A. Varat

Professor Eric M. Zolt

James L. Foorrnan '74

Joseph Gattuso '81

Harvey Giss '64

Paul E. Glad '77

Wilford D. Godbold '66

Frances andJerry Leigh

Family Fund

Ralph Shapiro '58and

Shirley Shapiro

Wesley '81and Kathy Kumagai Memorial Scholarship Fund

Karen Kwong

Carolyn Y. La '92

Larry S. Lee '83

David P. Lee '82

Martin V. Lee '82

Levinson, Miller,Jacobs & Derek W Li '90

PhillipsFund

Suet f Lim '91

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Elwood G. Lui '69

Shirley Shapiro

Howard P. Miller

Memorial Fund

Eriko Matsumoto '84

Olga A. Aguayo

Richard P. Fajardo '81

J.L. Ludwig, Inc.

Christy V. Keeny

Abby]. Liebman

Derek W Li '90

Paula K. Litt

Linda R. Philion

Anne K. Richardson

Daniel M. Mayeda '82 Traber, Voorhees & Olguin

Roy Miyamoto

Albert Y. Muratsuchi '94

Melville B. Nimmer

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Memorial Fund

Shirley Shapiro

Dr. Roger LeRoy Miller Fund

Neil R. Nagano '82

Sumiye & Elaine Nakano

Arnold Ng

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Kelvin Nishikawa

Shirley Shapiro

Morrison & Foerster Fund

Morrison & Foerster

William Nakano

Memorial Fund

Jane Aoyama-Martin '80

Professor Carole E. Goldberg Asian Pacific American

Feris M. Greenberger '80 and Legal Center

Professor David Dolinko

Professor Joel f Handler

David Hazelkorn '75

Nathalie Hoffman '73

Michael A. Hood '76

Samuel N. and Roland R. Kaspar '60

Leah S. Fischer Fund

Linda Johnson '86

Samuel N. Fischer '82 and Andrew E. Katz '72

Leah S. Fischer '82

Thomas Kreller '92

Laurie Levenson '80

Joseph S. Biderman '81

Jason W Chin '83

Pamela G. Chin '84

Duncan Chow

Estelle C. Chun '80

Eng & Nishimura

Hiroshi '62 & Misako Fujisaki

Alexander H. Fukui '91

Dolly M. Gee '84

David Halm

Lyle R. Nishimi '83

Margaret R. Kiever

Andrea Sheridan Ordin '65

Thomson & Thomson

Jerry Pacht Memorial

Bert '82 & Audrey Nishimura Scholarship Fund

Stannyyvonne Oishi

Elliot Elgart

Noriko E. Okamoto '87 Beatriz Foster

Jane Pon '84

Barry A. Rosenbaum '84

Amil W Roth '60

John T. Saito

Rick Sakurai

Naoki Shimazaki '84

Evelyn A. Shimazaki '84

Todd & Liz Shimoda

Erlinda Shrenger

Myra Sun '83

Karen L. Tachiki '79

Martin T. Tachiki '78

Anthony J. Taketa '83

Diane Tan

G. Michael Tanaka '78

Myra D. Fox

Sam Hellinger

Michelle Katz

Marsha H. Kwalwasser

Maimon Leavitt

R. Marilyn Lee

Susan A. Loewenberg

Hortense K. Snower '67

The Robert A. Pallemon '76

Memorial Fund

Anonymous

John W Amberg

Percy Anderson

Judith Ashmann and Morris Greenspan Memorial

Lawrin S. Lewin '63

Stan Hatanaka

Jean E. Tanaka '84 Prize Fund

Bernard L. Lewis '56

Joseph and Ruth Bell

Elisa H. Halpern Memorial

Scholarship Fund

RoseJacobson

CliffordA. Hemmerling

Memorial Scholarship Fund

Dr. and Mrs.

Alfred D. Katz

J.W. and Ida M.Jameson Fund

J.W and Ida M. Jameson

Christine Luketic '91

Duane C. Musfelt '76

John Moscarino '85

Helen M. Hayase '82

George and Yuki Hayashi

Dee A. Hayashi

Robert J. Higa '66

Professor Grant and Wiley Higuchi

Judith Nelson

Ronald E. Neuhoff '68

Ann Parode '71

Albert Z. Praw '72

Norman 0. Rose '56

Fred Selan '65

Reid S. Honjiyo '87

William C. Hsu '82

Jill E. Ishida '77

Patricia M. Ito '81

Bruce G. Iwasaki '76

Francis J.James '90

R. Mona Tawatao '86

Therese M. Terlaje '89

Franklin Tom '67

David C. Tseng '84

Lynn Y. Wakatsuki '81

David & Lynn Yada

Michael Yamamoto '71

Kent Yamayoshi

Lester I. Yano

Debbie L. Young '83

Hoyt H. Zia '81

Robert Gerst

Valerie Baker '75

James Berliner

Robert Biniaz

Barbara Blanco '76

Howard 0. Boltz

Robert S. Brewer

Brad D. Brian

Christine Byrd

William Matthew Byrne, Jr.

Robert R. Calo

Suzanne B. Conlon

Anstruther Davidson Foundation Elizabeth Vogt '79

Donna Cox Wells '92

Bill & Masako Kaneko

Wynn Kaneshiro

Adam Dawson

Bert H. Deixler

Chtistina McKee

Michael Palley '68

Deferred Gifts

Planned gifts from alumni and Michael C. and Edward M. Medvene Memorial Fund friends provide important support

Colleen McGrath Denison

Eric Dobberteen

Dwight B. Moore

Anthony Truex '68

The UCLA School of Law recog- to the School of Law. Such gifts

Jeffrey W Moro[ nizes the exceptional generosity establish a meaningful memorial

John P. Doyle and Carol A. Chase MartinJ. Murphy

Roth Family Foundation Fund of those individuals who have for the donor or someone the Rick Drooyan and Anita Dymant

Gil Garcetti '67 and made commitments to include donor wishes to honor, while Sukey Garcetti the School of Law in their estate enabling the donor to assist in James R. Dunn

Donna R. Eide

Duane Musfelt '76

Michael D. Nasatir

Buck andJudy Newell

William A. Rutter

plans through planned gifts such the continuing growth of the as bequests, pooled income school. A carefully planned

Sharon Ellingsen Trischa O'Hanlon Teaching Award funds, gift annuities, chatitable estate can help you avoid or Etic '81 and Denise Emanuel

Margaret O'Hara '76

William A. Rutter reduce taxes, increasing the

Donald Etra O'Neill, Lysaght & Sun trusts, gifts of life insurance, and amount you can leave to your

SaulJ. Faerstein

Ian Fan

Michael W Fitzgerald

Andrea Shetidan Ordin '65

Ralph and Shirley Shapiro gifts of property Such generosity heirs and favorite charities. Student Loan Fund aud foresight will guide the

Wilma Williams Pinder '76 If you wish to provide for the

William C. Price

Frederick Friedman and John B. Quinn

Janet Sherman

Howard and Lucy Gest

DanielJ. Gonzales

Melinda Haag

Thomas A. Hagemann

Michael D. Hawkins

Dale Head '83 and Family

Mark O. Heaney

Brian Hennigan

Alice C. Hill

Bruce I. Hochman '52

Nathan Hochman

Ralph C. Hofer

Donald A. Holcombe

Janet C. Hudson

DzintraJanavs

Diane Kimberlin '76

George and Pam King

David W Quinto

Karen Randall '76

Ralph Shapiro '58 and School of Law as it meets the School of Law in your estate

Shirley Shapiro challenges of the century ahead. plan, or if you have already done

Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & We gratefully acknowledge the so but have not yet informed us,

Hampton Scholarship Fund fllowing individuals: please contactthe Development

Michael Rich '76 and Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & John A. Altschul '61 Office at(310) 206-1121.

Debra Granfeld

Andria K. Richey

Gloria Roa '76

Entique Romero

Karen A. Rooney

WilliamJ. Sayers

Adam Schiff

Mary A. Sedgwick

Shati K. Silver

Professor David Sklansky

Peter Spivack

Hampton

Ethel Tepp Balter If you are not a donor and wish

In Memory of to join UCLA Law's growing

Emil Stache Public family of supporters, please Harry Graham Balter

Interest Fund call (310) 206-1121.

Emil Stache

In Honor of

Professor Ann Carlson

Michael Yaffa Memorial

Scholarship Fund

Ellen B. Yaffa

Stefan Stein and Barry M. Zwick Fund

Andrea Levitt Stein '87

Stevens & O'Connell

Nancy Wieben Stock

Gertrude D. Chem '66

Hugo D. De Castro '60 aud We make every effort to ensure

Isabel De Castro the accuracy of our Honor Roll.

Betty Gershuny Denitz If there are any corrections or

In Memory of omissions, please contact the

Ronald P. Denitz '53 School of Law Office of Develop-

Albert B. Glickman '60 and ment and Alumni Relations at

Judith Ellis Glickman (310) 206-1121.

Philip S. Magaram '61

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Frances Matlin

Shirley Shapiro *Deceased

Robert S. Michaels '70 and

The School of Law is Cheryl Pitcock Michaels **Gifts and pledges to the

Bonnie Klapper and James Stoner Ill grateful to the following Frieda Oxman Law Library Campaign Fund

Lonny Schwartz

William Stein

Carol L. Rowen of $5,000 and above are listed alumni and friends for Eugene Kramer

Dominic Surprenant

Charles L. Kreindler

William A. Rutter in the Campaign section of

Michiko Takahashi directing significant the Honor Roll. Foundation or Estate

John L. Kuray Talcott, Lightfoot, gifts to the School:

Hartiet Leva Vandevelde & Sadowsky

Laurie Levenson '80

John F. Libby

James M. Lowy '76

Ronni B. Maclaren

Carolyn Turchin

David Leveton '62

Katherine L Vaughns Tustee, Estate of Ann Rosenfield

John F. Walsh III

Frederick L. Leydorf '58

Judith Wegner '76 Trustee,]. W and Steven G. Madison

Manatt, Phelps & Phillips

Nora M. Manella

Kay March

Robert andJuli Marshall

A. Howard Matz

ProfessorJohn Shepard WileyJr. Ida M. Jameson Foundation

Alexander H. Williams

Stephen V Wilson

Philip Magaram '61

Trustee, Joseph Drown

George H. Wu Foundation

Debra Yang

Steven and Diane Zipperstein

Richard L. Stack

Trustee, Hugh and Peter J. McBreen '76 Hazel Darling Foundation

PlANNING FOR THE FUTURE

Betty Denitzestablishesaplannedgift in memory ofher husband, Ronald Philip Denitz '53

Havng

bothgrownupintheDepression,RonaldPhilipDenitzO.D '53)andhiswife �ettyDenitzplacedahighvalueonearning,saving,investingandgivingatanearlyage. AfterRon'sdeathin1991,BettybegantothinkaboutinvestinginUCLA.Itwasanatural choice.RonandBettybothhadgraduatedfromUCLA,ashadtheirchildren,FredandDoreen. "BecauseofourstrongattachmenttotheUniversityand,inparticular,totheSchoolsofEducationandLaw,"Bettyreflects,"itmadesensetocreatealegacyattheLawSchoolinRon'smemory.That'swhyImadeaplannedgifttofundfellowshipsforfutureUCLALawstudents."

RonandBettymeteachotherwhentheybothattendedseparateLosAngeleshighschools, andfateassuredthattheywouldmeetagainmanytimesthroughoutthenextseveralyearsrepeatedlylosingtouchbutfindingtheirwaybacktoeachother.Destinysawtoitthattheymet upagain,thistimeforgood,whenRonwasclerkingforthedowntownLosAngelesofficeofLoeb &LoebandBettyworkedaroundthecornerforGeneralSteamshipCorporation. Ronhadapassionforlaw.AsalawstudentatUCLA,Ronservedonthe UCLALawReviewand graduatedOrderoftheCoif.Duringhislawcareer,hevolunteeredhistimeasaconsultanttothe CaliforniaLawRevisionCommission.RonstartedinprivatepracticeinBeverlyHillsbeforejoiningTishmanRealtyandConstructionCompany(laterknownasTishmanWestCompanies)practicingrealestatelaw.Heservedasgeneralcounseluntilhisdeath.Ronhadalwaystakentimeout forpeople,bothinhisfamilyandinhiscommunity.InadditiontomentoringandprovidingguidancetohisandBetty'sowntwochildrenandgrandchildren,hewasaJewishBigBrotherformany yearstoayoungboywhomhecontinuedtoguideintoadulthoodandthroughouthiseducation. HealsowasaleaderinBoyScoutsformanyyears.In1959,Ronwasawardedtheprestigious CarnegieHeroMedalAwardaftersavingaboyfromcertaindeathinBalboaBay,NewportBeach, whentheboybegandrowningafteranelectricshockaccidentinthewater.Despitethedangerof plungingintoelectricallychargedwaters,Ron-whohadbeensailinginthearea-jumpedin tosavehim.

Betty,whohadreceivedbothateachingcredentialandhermaster'sdegreeineducationfrom UCLA,soughtadvicefromateamofprofessionalswhenitcametimetoplanherestate.Afterconferringwithherestateattorney,aCPA,andherlifeinsuranceagent,aswellasUCLAdevelopment staffandfaculty,BettydecidedtosupportboththeSchoolofLawandtheGraduateSchoolof Education&InformationStudies(GSE&IS).HergifttotheSchoolofLaw,throughanIRAdesignationandaprovisioninherlivingtrust,allowsUCLAtoestablishanendowedfellowshipin Ron'sname.

TheRonaldPhilipDenitzFellowshipFundwillexistinperpetuity,providingfinancialassistancetodeservingstudents.Bettyrecognizestheimportanceofprovidingsupporttoeducation atUCLAthroughestateplanning,andsheencouragesotherUCLAalumniandfriendsto"give thoughttoyourphilanthropy."

"UCLAismyfamily'suniversityhome,"shesays."Ithasplayedaprofoundandverymeaningfulroleinourlivesandcontinuestobespecial."

"Itmadesense tocreatealegacy attheLawSchool inRon's memory. That's why Imade aplannedgiftto fundfellowships forfuture UCLA Lawstudents."

Becomemore involved in your law school

I want to support the law journals by subscribing:

D TheUCLAJournalof InternationalLaw&ForeignAffairs /{domestic$20, foreign$24)

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Interestedingivingsomepractical experiencetoastudentor recentgraduate?The OfficeofCareerServicesencourages alumnitoconsiderUCLASchoolofLawstudentsand recentgraduates forpart-timeorfull-timepositions. CalltheCareerServicesOffice, (310)206-1117.

Youcansubmitjoblistingsforstudentsandlawyersvia e-mailatcareers@law.ucla.edu;throughtheOffice'sInternet siteattheLawSchoolhomepage(www.law.ucla.edu), choose"CareerServices"orbyfax(310)825-9450.Alumni alsocanaccessthe GraduateJobBulletinandotherservices. Callore-mailtheofficeformoreinformation.

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Robert Denham (top left) of Munger, Tolles & Olson, and former CEO of Salomon Bros., and UCLA Professor Kenneth Klee (top right) comment on apaper by Stanford Law Professor William H. Simon (bottom right) at a UCLA School of Law faculty colloquium in October. The paper, "The Kaye Scholer Affair: The Lawyer's Duty of Candor and the Bar's Temptations of Evasion and Apology," analyzed charges brought by the Office ofThrift Supervision against the Kaye Scholer firm - and the Bar's response. Simon'swork also looked at the legal ethics controversygenerated in the firm's representationofCharles Keating and his associates. Professor Stephen Yeazell (bottom left) moderated the panel discussion.

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TheUmversily 1s gralclul for the support itreceives from friends and alumm, One of the ways our thanks is expressedis throughlisLmg the name of donorsin variouspublications. Should you wishthatyourname notappearasa donor,pleasenotifyusifyouhave not already doneso,

FIDUCIARY R.fSPONSIRlLlTYOF THEl:C:LAFOUNDATION

The UCLA Foundation 1s a Californianon-profit, publicbenefit corporation organized for the purpose of encouragingvoluntary private gifts, trusts and bequests for thebenefitofthe UCLA campus, Rcsponsib1lity for governance of TheFoundation, including mvestments, isvestedin its Board ofTrustees

RECOVERY Of OPERATINC COSTSFROMPRIVATE GIFTS

TheFoundation's policy 1s to invest on a short-termbasis allgifts unul livepercent (5%) of the principal is earned for the support ofUCLA development and related programs unless gift instructionsorappropriatecampusadministratorselectto provide this amountimmediately. Withthe exccpnon ofgiftsfor endowment purposes, additional mvestment income Will also support theseactivities.

The UCLA School ofLawAnnual Fund

PLEASE COUNT ME AS A SUPPORTER OF THE LAWANNUAL FUND!

$5,000+

$2,500-$4,999

$1,000-$2,499

D Deans Cabinet

D Dean's Partnership

D Dean's Roundtable

$500- $999

$250 - $499

$75 - $249

D Chadbourn Fellows

D Dean's Advocates

D Dean's Counsel - Classes of 1996, 1997, 1998

Pleasecomplete:

Name Address City State__Zip

Enclosedismygiftof$ ____

Pleasemakecheckspayableto The UCLA Foundation/Law. Fund 5126 CJR

D Myemployerhasamatchinggiftprogram and the matching gift formisenclosed.

[J I prefertomakemygiftviacreditcard: D Visa D Mastercard D Arner. Express Card No.-- - -

ExpirationDate_ Signature

Thankyou foryour tax-deductiblegifttotheUCLA SchoolofLaw' THE

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