FRONT COVER: WangAnshi (1021-1086 A.D.), a famous Chinese officialfrom the Sung dynasty. He played an important role in reforms in government, education, andlaw.
ABOVE: Qin Shi Huang Diintroduced a rule oflaw in China buthis reign as emperorwas despotic.
os Angeles. An international city. A major port. A legal center. Once known for its navel oranges, the city has grown into a sophisticated metropolis, with an unsurpassed gateway to Asian trade.
Growth of a city does not always go hand in hand with maturation of its institutions. But in the case of Los Angeles and UCLA's School of Law, the growth and maturation are keeping right in stride.
UCLA has become more international-and not just in the diversity of students whoattendits classes. At the law school, the course offerings in internationallaw and theprofessors who teachthosecourses have tripled in the last two years.
"We think UCLA now has the strongest international law program on the West Coast," said Professor Arthur Rosett, who has been on the School of Law faculty since 1967. "We are one of a small number of programs around the country that has the competence to offer an impressive variety of courses, and we've done it with a modest amount of resources."
Things were not always so good. For several years, Rosett was the only tenured faculty member teaching international law, a positionhe found himself in after an impressive international program began to erode in the early seventies.
There were several reasons for the erosion. First, some professors left for other posts. Secondly, the political climate incertain foreign countries changed, undermining some international programs. And lastly, the search for professors to replace those who
left was a long and hard one.
But the search for professors has paid off and paid off well. In the last two years, the law school has recruited two fine specialists to its ranks.
Phillip R. Trimble, who joined the faculty in 1981, has held a number of impressive government posts and brings to the School a clear public policy and economic vision of international relations.
William P.Alford, who joined the School in July of 1982, is an expert on Chinese law and legal history. With the five degrees he holds-including graduate degrees in Chinese and Chinese history, and British and American law-he brings with him a valuable comparative law expertise that is augmented by his experience practicing international law in Washington, D.C.
The faculty have developed new programs and projects in international law. One of these is the UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal, a unique studentrun law journal of international circulation that focuses on the legal issues affecting countries that rim the Pacific Ocean. And another is a graduate law degree program that is attracting students from all over the world.
UCLA has reached a level of maturity where it can afford to offer an increased range of courses and programs to its students, Rosettnoted. "As an institution, we've done a good job with our basic cur-
RebeccaMorrowiseditorofLosAngeles Lawyermagazine, a former reporterfor the Los Angeles Daily Journal, and a free-lance writer.
Inset: A humorous caricature, painted by a Chinese
artist for Professor Rosett during a recent visit to the People's Republic, now hangs in Rosett's office.
ArthurRosett
riculum. Now we can begin to turn to other things that contribute to agreat law school.
"LosAngeles," he added, "has grown up the same way UCLA has." As a major port, a major city,and a major cultural and legal center, the city has gone through the same growing pains as the law school. "Thereisarealinternationalbarherenowandthatis verymucha reflectionofthematurationoflawpracticein LosAngeles."
The Prime Mover
Themanwhohasseenandhelpedtopromotesomeof the changes in the international law offerings at UCLA is Professor Arthur Rosett.
Rosett, 48, is understandably pleased about the international law courses and programs the School now offers its students. His pride and joy is the
graduatelawdegreeprogramwhich attracts students fromall overthe world to UCLA's campus. Formany years the law school has been authorized to granl graduate degrees in law, but until 1979, no regular program was offered that led to those degrees. Bui now,thelawschoolhasasmallprogramwhichoffers a Master of Laws degree.
"The program," according to Rosett, "is unique among law schools in America.'1 Students take stan· dard courses and examinations and augment their studieswith agraduate seminar. Butthe secrettothe program'ssuccessliesintheone-on-oneattentionthe students receive.
"Theuniquepartisthateachstudentisassignedto a faculty advisor," Rosett explained. "Each faculty advisorhasonestudentperyear,sothereissustained and intimate contact on a tutorial basis between the studentandtheprofessorinanareaofspecialinteresl
to each.
"It's a great program; it's a gold-plated program," he added.
"The graduate seminar starts off as an intensive introduction to these foreign graduate lawyers who are being put in American law school classes." These students, Rosett explained, may be well versed in the legal systems of their own countries, but know little about the nuances of American law.
Right now. the law school is inundated with over 500 requests for applications to the program. Only eight to 10 students are selected each year to participate
"We primarily hope that we're going to be drawing future foreign scholars and government officials, although a very high percentage of our students are practitioners," Rosett noted. Last year, the 10 participants in the program came from six countries. This year, the eight program participants represent Japan, Pakistan, France, Germany, Korea, and Switzerland. The list of qualifications of former and current program participants is impressive as well. Those noteworthy include an Icelandic judge, professors from Korea and Switzerland, practitioners withsixor seven years experience from Denmark and Luxemburg and, from Malaysia, a former legal adviser to the United Nations high commissioner on refugees.
Rosett's one frustration with the program is that "it is very difficult to draw as widely as we would like because financial aidisunavailable. Wearelimitedto people with independent resources or those from nations which provide support to their students for overseas study. This is particularly frustrating," he added, "in drawing students from Africa and the Latin American countries."
Rosett's assistancein getting this program startedis but one of his contributions to the international law capabilities of the school. He teaches a course in international businesstransactions, a seminar on the European Economic Community, and a comparative law course on Japanese law
Rosett acknowledges that comparative law can be the study of formal legal systems used in other countries. "But knowing Section 423 of the Japanese Civil Code won't be of great usefulness unless you have a feel for Japanese cultural attitudes toward litigation and dispute resolution," he said. "For the typical American lawyer dealing with the Japanese, the legal concepts are easier to handle than the cultural gaps. To really understand the different legal institutions, you have to understand the social ways in which the Japanese operate."
Rosett sees Japan, and the maturation of its legal, political, and economic systems as one of three im-
portant international developments now occurring. The other two, he believes, are the development of new legal institutions in the People's Republic of China and the growth of European law.
While he yielded to Professor Alford on Chinese law, Rosett, the resident expert in European legal systems, is fascinated by the changes occurring in Europe, particularly "as European countries, which have so jealously maintained their separate legal systems for centuries,try to harmonize and create a new set of institutions through which Europe will be governed." Partofthechange,headded,isreminiscentof thepowerexercisedbythe MarshallCourtduringthis country's early days.
Rosett came to UCLA as a criminal faw professor, but his interests have expanded into many areas. Among courses he has taught are contracts, trial tactics and techniques, international business transactions, and religious legal systems.
That eclecticness is also found in the activities he haspursued.FromtheChancellor'sCommitteeonthe Center for the Study and Reduction of Violence to the Committee on Pacific Basin Studies, Rosett has servedinmanycritical areasof University affairs. On the international front, he has been a guest professor and lecturer at the University of Gottingen in West Germany and the Karl MarxUniversityof Economics in Budapest.
A law clerk on the Supreme Court of the United States from 1959to 1960, anassistant U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York from 1963 to 1966, and an attorney with Patterson, Belknap & Webb in New York from 1963 to 1966, he has looked at the world through many perspectives. He also served as associate director for the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice from 1965 to 1967 and as a lecturer at Columbia University School of Law from 1965 to 1967.
The Public PolicyPerspective
Phillip Trimble's resume looks like an excerpt from Who's Who in America. From his work with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to his post with the State Department, from deputy mayor of New York City to United States Ambassador to Nepal, his experience commands respect. As if his professional ascent were not enough, Trimble also climbs mountains and has led several expeditions, including one to the top of Mount Everest.
Trimble, 44, joined the faculty at UCLA in 1981. He brings a well-rounded public policy and economic perspective bred by the breadth of experience in government.
II
American Ambassador to Nepal in 1980, Trimble is received by the King and Queen. In a less formal moment (inset, below) he relaxes after mountain climbing.
Phillip Trimble
The courses he teaches-international law, international economic law and organization, and two seminars, one in law, foreign policy and national security and the other in international regulation of military power-all focus on the overlapping roles that laws, legal institutions, governments, the military, and international businesses and organizations play in theformation ofinternational relations.
They are courses which reflectTrimble's belief in the benefits of studying international law. "I try to give students some notion of how institutions of governmentworkandhowthelawplaysaroleinthe various problems lawyers face in making those institutionswork.That'stherealvalueofinternational law. You learn something about how governments relate to each other, how they make decisions, and how they allocateauthority between themselves."
As the world becomes increasingly interdepen-
dent,Trimbleseestheperennialprotectionisttendencies to be all the more threatening. "There is a tendency in the United States and among all the industrialized countries to seek to protect their own workers and their own markets at the expense of foreign interests."
But he stressed that the attempts of various countries to solve their own economic problems at the expense of foreign economic interests only creates a process of retaliation and re-retaliation. "Once that sort of thing starts to happen, itcould set off a chain reaction that would be difficultto contain."
Trimble'sunderstandingoftheinterdependencyof the world is easy to trace. He received his master's degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacyin1959, attendedtheUniversityofRangoon in Burma as a Fulbright scholar from 1959 to 1960, and capped his education with a law degree from
Harvardin1963.Andasearlyas1971,whenheserved as staff consultant to the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he expressed his worldwide view professionally.
Then,his major concern was nuclear arms control andheexpressedhis views in apaper writtenforthe committee entitled "Prospects for a Comprehensive NuclearTestBan." Inthepaper,Trimblearguesthata comprehensive testing ban on nuclear weapons wouldeffectivelypreventcountriesfromdeveloping newweapons."Ifwehadacomprehensivetestbanin the sixties," he said, "there wouldn't be any MERVs and we wouldn't have the problem we now have of Minuteman vulnerability."
From his post with the Senate committee, Trimble wentonto the State Department, where he served as anassistant legal adviser for economic affairs.There, heworkedonthedevelopmentofEast-Westtradeand wasinvolvedin negotiations andimplementationof trade agreements with Romania, Canada, Hungary, andthe U.S.S.R.
His most delicate and simultaneously tedious negotiation, he remembers, involved an oil-grain trade deal with the Soviet Union. "Negotiations get tedious after a while, particularly if there is no interest in negotiating an agreement. I don't think there was ever any understanding on either side" of the U.S.-U.S.S.R. oil-grain deal, he explained. "We assumed the Soviets would sell us oil below OPEC prices and we in turn would sell them grain.I don't thinktheSovietseverhadany intention ofundercutting the OPEC price," he added, lamenting the fact that everything in the agreement was negotiated except the price. That difference, he said, shelved the agreement.
From the State Department, Trimble switched to anotherlevelofgovernmentandbecame firstcounsel to the mayor and then himself deputy mayor of New York City.Alongtimesupporter and friend of Mayor Ed Koch,Trimblehada number ofimportantresponsibilities, including supervising the effort to obtain federal loan guarantees for the city.
"The loans were critical to getting New York City out of its fiscal crisis," Trimble said. "I spent a lot of timein Washington, during 1978 and 1979,talkingto congressmen and senators to achieve that legislative goal. Even though everybody said we'd never get it, weeventually did."
Once that was accomplished, Trimble found himselfin1980 inyetanotherchallengingpositionasthe �mericanAmbassadortoNepal. "Nepalwasthebest JobIeverhad," Trimblesaid,recountingthepolitical turmoilthecountryfaced during histenurethere. "It was a very important time in the political develop-
ment of Nepal. The country was going through a period of constitutional change. Essentially, there had been some violent disturbances that did not amounttoarevolution,butitcalledintoquestionthe viability of the monarchy and the system of government that hadgovernedNepalfor 20 years."
Trimble, who had "very close" relations with the King of Nepal,noted that the king "moved shrewdly tobroadenthepoliticalparticipationandtodevisean alternate system of government. And as far as I can tell," headded,"it worked."
Despitehisdramaticcareeringovernment,Trimble is happy with his teaching post at UCLA. "I had always thought I might end up inteaching," he said. "And it was theappropriate time for me to break off the government service. I had enjoyed that, but I found that combination of experiences largely satisfiedmyinterest and curiosity.
"And,"headded,"Iliketoturntonewchallenges."
The Comparative Expert
UCLA'slatestadditiontoitsinternationallawfaculty is William Alford. At first glance, one is both surprisedandawedbyAlford.Helooks,foraprofessorat a leading legal institution,to beyoung-and indeed he is. But in this instance, youth is no deterrent to wisdom;atage34,Alfordmightwellbelabeledoneof thecountry'sleadingscholarsinChineselegalaffairs.
A steadfast advocate of comparative law study, Alford sees a dual benefit in such an intellectual pursuit. "I think comparative law can be used not onlytoteachstudentsaboutforeignlegalsystemsbut, more importantly,can lead them to ask fundamental questions about our own legalsystem.This, in turn, can promptstudentstoexaminethegeneralitiesthat we assume to be universal."
ThestudyofEastAsia,headded,isveryimportant because trade between the United States and East Asiaisnowgreaterthanthe U.S.'stradewithEurope. "Itisimportantthatwetrainlawyerstocomprehend howpeopleinEastAsiathinkandhowtheyapproach law, for there certainly are great differences in our understandings of law and legal process."
Alford views China not only as a fascinating area for American law students to study,but as an important one as well. The first and perhaps the most obvious reason to study China is that it is the most populous country in the world, containing approximatelyone-fourthof the world's people.
"The Chinese conducted a census this summer with the help of American computers," Alford said. "Before the census began, there was uncertainty in Chinaastothe size of thepopulation, with estimates
ranging between 950 million and 1.2 billion people. Thenumberofpeopleaboutwhichuncertaintyexists (the census results not yet having been released) is greater than the population of the United States."
But putting numbers aside, China, too, offersarich history of more than 4,000 years that has a long legal tradition. One can trace Chinese law back well over 2,000 years, Alfordsaid. And there aredistinctdifferencesbetweentheAnglo-AmericanandChineselegal traditions that make their comparative study worthwhile. "There is far less concern in the Chinese legal system, bothhistoricallyandatthepresenttime, with what we in the West would describe as inalienable, fundamental individual political rights. Conversely, inthe Chinesesystem, thereisa much greateremphasis on communitarian values-upon the community and upon the responsibilities of all in a group to one another.
"TheChinesetraditionholdslawinaverydifferent light," said Alford. "Although the Chinese early on developed sophisticated legal codes, they have placed far less emphasis upon formal, written law than is the case in the Anglo-American tradition. Written law was essentially seen as a necessary, but not preferred, tool to reinforce governmental authority, if education and group persuasion failed to lead the populace to act in a socially productive manner."
Despite China's long standing ambivalence regarding written law, in the last five years the country has undergone great change in the field of law. For much of the first 30 years of the People's Republic of China (1949-1979), the communist government believed that a strong legal system was not desirable. "The communists did not have enough trained legal personnel of their own to staff the entire country. They did not want to rely upon people from the previous
Inset: William Alford and Sargent Shriver confer with China's Vice Premier Yao Yilin (right) in the Great Hall of the People, Peking.
William Alford
government becausethey didnot trust them,"Alford explained. Moreover, after several early experiments withdeveloping theirown brand of socialist legality, they relied increasingly on other means to reshape society. "Law was too slow for them."
However, the Chinese found by the late seventies thatthey didneedthelawtoreshapesociety.Thelaw, they felt, would reinforce efforts to build a new, strong, modern China. "In addition," Alford continued, "the Chinese economy was also in less than ideal condition. China had not made as much progress economically as hoped and the leadership sensed that law was needed to order the economy internally and attract foreign investment."
The effects of those changes have been dramatic and instantly noticeable in Chinese society, he said. During the Cultural Revolution (which ran from the mid1960stothemid1970s),China had only one law schoolincontinuous operation. "Since1976," Alford said,"theChinesehaveputmucheffortintolawand legaleducation. Chinanow has some25 lawschools with a total enrollment of approximately 8,000 students.In addition, law journals are being published after years of hiatus, a weekly legal newspaper is published in Peking, and efforts at popular legal education, through such media as pamphlets, books andradioprograms, are taking place."
AllthisfuelsAlford'sinterestinChina,aninterest hebeganinhigh school. "Inhighschool,intheearly sixties, I was interested in history generally and China had more of it than any other culture with which I was familiar. It seemed fascinating," Alford said.Hesatiatedsomeofhiscuriosity aboutChinain "summer programs for precocious kiddiesinterested inthingslike Chinese history." But when hereached Amherst College in 1966, Alford discontinued his pursuit of Chinese history and instead focused on Americanand British studies since he felt "ignorant aboutourown history and culture."
From 1970 to 1972,duringafellowshipprogramat CambridgeUniversity inEngland,Alford'sinterestin Chinesehistory rekindled.Althoughformally studying English and legal history, Alford became acquainted with other students interested in Chinese history and law. Those associations led him at first informally and then formally to study China,itshistory, andits language.
Alford's rekindled interest occurred prior to the commencement of ping-pong diplomacy. "I remem?erreadingabouttheping-pong team goingtoChina m �97_1 and thinking, 'It's a good thing I got started agamm Chinesestudies becausethere's goingtobea floodofactivity with China."'
So enthralled did Alford become that after Cam-
bridge, hewenton to YaleUniversity where he gota masters inChinese in 1974 and a masters in Chinese history in1975. ThenheenteredHarvardLawSchool in1975-amove,hesaid,whichseemedto combine his variousinterests in lawandChinesematters.
Upon graduation from Harvard in 1977, he joined the Washington, D.C., firm of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Kampelman, wherehe specialized in generalcorporateandinternationaltradelaw.Hiseducation and reputation opened doors for Alford in Washington.Hegottoknowanumberofpeopleinthe Chinese embassy and found himself, from time to time,beingconsultedonChineseissuesbyofficialsof the federal government, state governments, international organizations, andmajorfoundations.
Alfordisexcitedto beat the UCLASchool of Law. Notonly ishepleasedwiththeexpansion goingonin internationallawofferingsattheSchool,heisequally impressed with the other internationally related resources the University has, particularly concerning East Asia.
"UCLAhas an impressive exchangeprogram with Chinese institutions. There are 150 scholars and students from China here at UCLA, although none are law students," he noted. But Alford hopes to have full-time law students in residence at UCLA and to arrange for School of Law students and faculty to spend time in China. Already, he is working with faculty members at Columbia and Harvard to set up legal exchange programs designed to bring young Chineselegal scholars to the U.S.
Inaddition,Alfordhasstartedhisownexchangeof materials with Chinese legal scholars and law schools; they, in turn, have sent him research materials.
Rightnow,Alfordalsoactsasthefaculty advisorto the UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal, a studentproducedjournal that has, according to several law schoolfacultymembers,thepotentialtobeanimportantpublication.
The Students Take Charge
As the face of the international law faculty at UCLA haschanged, so, too, hastheinterestoflaw students in international law. Last April, the first issue of the UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journalwaspublished; itis the only student-edited and producedlaw review in theUnitedStatesthatfocusesspecifically onthelegal andbusinessissuesofthenationsthatrimthePacific Ocean.
Lawstudents atUCLAhadpreviously assisted the International Law Section of the American Bar Association in putting out a publication called The
International Lawyer. But the logistical difficulties caused by the student board of editors being located in California and the ABA editor being located in Texas prompted students to try to publish their own journal,explainedcurrentjournaleditorMariaProtti'83.
With the assistance of Professor Rosett, founding editors Nicolas Benes '83 and Elizabeth Pollock '82 obtained a $10,000 grant from the UCLA Graduate School of Management and its Pacific Basin Economic Study Group. With that financial boost, the students were able to proceed.
"For a multitude of reasons,the Pacific Basin just seemedlikeaperfectfocalpointfora journal," Protti explained. "First of all, there was no other journal thatconsideredthePacificBasin,andsomanyevents inthenewswerehappeningthroughoutthebasinthat were not beingstudiedin depth."
Indeed,activityintheareawasbooming.Alessening of legal obstacles to American investment in Japan, a more open door to Chinese trade, and the securingof AmericaninterestsinafalteringMexican economy were but three examples of the increased economicinterdependenceandactivityhappeningin countriesin this part of the world.
"It would be no exaggeration to say that the last fifteen years have seen amarked shift in the international orientation of Americans away from Europe andtowards anarea surroundingthe Pacific Ocean," wrote Nicolas Benes on the editor's first page of the firstissue. "Whetheritbe the Vietnam War,'catching up'withJapan,democratisminChina,theresurgence of Mexico or separatism in Canada,the fact remains that we increasingly find our attention drawn to a different quadrant than before.
"Inadaptingournational,corporateandindividual strategies to this shift,there are no obstacles greater than those caused by our ignorance and inability to communicate with the forces of change. Obviously, the same is true for our foreign trading partners. By servingasaninternationalforumforcommunication and discussion the Journal hopes to make a significant contribution to world peace and prosperity."
Tomake theJournalaconduitforcommunication, Protti stressed that the focus will be on the needs of both the international scholar and the international practitioner. "And we want the Journal to have a business focus and not just a public law focus," she added.
Already, the international law community seems receptive to the student produced publication. Even before the first issue was published,journal editors sold 40 subscriptions at $15 each. Feedback on the
first issue,too,was very positive,Protti noted.
The first issue featured articles on banking lawin Japan,business practices in the People's Republic of China, and international regulation of fishing in the Pacific.
The second issue will deal with issues in Philippine,Mexican,Canadian and Australian law.
Throughthe journal'sboard ofadvisors,agroupof lawyers and professors of law and management from various countries, the students keep in touch with practitioners in areas as diverse as Japan, Latin America, and China. "Generally, they tell us what they see happening in their practiceorintheareasin whichthey teach," Protti said. Togainmoreinformation,the students also pore over copies of the Asian Wall Street Journal, the East Asian Executive Reports,and other pertinent law journals.
The board of advisors is not the only group affiliated with the journal that is diverse. According to Protti, this year's journal staff is comprised of students who speak Spanish, Korean, Japanese, Filipinoand Mandarin.
This year's student staff, only the second in the journal's existence,consistsof 11editors and 40staff members. Andeventhoughtheprocessof selectinga new staff does not start until March, Protti said that inquiries of interest are already coming in.
While the editors search for practitioners of a high caliber to write for the publication,theyalsoencouragestudentstowrite.Infact,theeditorsjuststarteda new program called the Cooperative Research Program,in which they connect experts in the field, be they practitioners or professors, with students who are interested in writing. The product: a jointly written article. "Such a program is needed because so manytimestheattorneyswho are in the field can do the analysisandknow what isgoing on,but they just don't have the time to write the citations and collect the authority to support theirviews," Protti said.
Eventhoughmuchoftheyearremains,studentson the journal this year have already made important contacts that they will pass to their followers. Students at the School and on externships in Washington, D.C., and in San Francisco are contacting embassies, members of congress, federal regulatory commissions,law schools,and law firms to broaden thepublication'sexposure.
One thing seems clear: if dedication helps make a good journal,then UCLA is on its way to publishing animportant international resourcefor the countries of the Pacific Basin. 0
DonaldG.Hagman: GlimpsesofaRemarkableLife
isworkwasmany-faceted, aswashis life. ProfessorDonald G.Hagmanwas a prolific and internationally prominentscholaronlanduse, urbanplanning, and housing law He brought a pertinent analysis to innumerable real-lifeprojects. In all that he did, he was unassuming, kind, and supportive.
ProfessorHagmanfelltohisdeathonJune20while vacationinginNorthernCalifornia. Thetotalityofhis extraordinary life became more fully glimpsed by colleagues, students, and friends who gathered on October11tosharetheirinsightsandexperiencces in amemorial program at UCLA.
Madelyn Glickfeld, an urban planner and one of Don Hagman's students, described a realization which had come to her and many others as they thought about Professor Hagman:
"No one knew all the sides of DonHagman; I only learnedthis after his death. Those who workedwith Don thought of him as a confirmed workaholic, permanently connected to his typewriter. To his wife Ilene and their children, Don was a family man; his work, however prolific, played a minor role in their lives. To the dean, Don spent a significant amount of timeparticipating in the affairs of the School of Law andthe University. To people who worked with Don on state, county, and local commissions, advisory committeesandtaskforces, heseemedtodevotemost ofhistimetocivicandcommunity affairs. Withallof these other 'lives,' the volume of work that he pro ducedwas staggering."
Although his teaching at the School of Law was centered on land use planning, Professor Hagman frequently taught a wide range of other subjects. He
was the author of more than a dozen books and numerousarticlesinlawreviewsandotherscholarly journals. He was widely recognized for the conferences that he organized in continuing professional education, andhelecturedfrequentlythroughoutthe nationonlanduseplanning, stateandlocaltaxation, andenvironmentalsubjects.Hewastheeditorof The Land Use and Environmental Review, publishingthe bestarticles written in that field each year.
DeanSusanWesterbergPrager, writinginthe UCLA Law Review, gives this glimpseof her colleague: "Don was 50 yearsoldbut looked40.Helovedhis work and his whole life. His audacious, sometimes irreverentsuggestionsfortheresolutionofimportant socialproblemsstimulateddebateandbroughthimto greatprominenceinthefieldsoflanduse, urbanplanning, andhousinglaw.Don'sworkwasoftenventuresome, risky, andmemorable. WindfallsforWipeouts, for example, will stimulate discussion for decades to come."
One of the current dean's predecessors, Dean Richard Maxwell, received a letterearly in Professor Hagman'steachingcareer. ThelettertoDeanMaxwell was from thegreatAmerican legalhistorian, Willard Hurst, who wrote about DonHagman:
"He has, I believe, a deep-centered desire to make hislifeasusefulandcreativeashecan.Heisthekind of man whowillgivethefullloyaltyofhispowers to his colleagues and his institution, and who will becomeavaluedresourcenotjustofhislawschool, but of his University."
The truth of that prediction is affirmed by these words from Professor Gary T. Schwartz:
"As one walked the (law school's] third-floor hallway, one wouldalmost always find Don inhis office,
reading, typing, or talking with a student or a landusevisitor. In atypicalyear hegarnered moreinvitations and honors than most of us receive during a decade; while this pleased him, it also seemed to amusehim, at least slightly.
"In a sense, he worked all the time, yet somehow hadallthetimeleftovertospend with hisfamily As one former student of his wrote: 'As a hard worker, DonsetastandardIhavetriedhardtomeetinmyown life As a human being, he reminded me often of the moreimportant thingsin life-friendship, appreciationof others, peace of mind.'
"Don believed strongly that a scholar has obligations that run to his community He contributed his own ideasto the public debate even when-perhaps especially when-their expressionwouldlikelyrender him distinctly unpopular. Don eventually acceptedanappointmentto the advisory committeeon housing for the City of Santa Monica. Under his leadership, the committee developed proposals that borethestrongstampof Don'soriginality-proposals thatbothconfoundedtheconservativesandconfused the radicals."
Bytheearly1970s, DonHagman'sprodigiouswork as a researcher and writer had established him as oneofthemostpromisinglanduseandlocalgovernment scholars of his generation, note Professors Daniel R. Mandelker of Washington University and A. Dan Tarlock of Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago-Kent College of Law, writing in the UCLA Law Review. "This promise was quickly and completely fulfilled."
Hagman's WindfallsforWipeouts, observeMandelker and Tarlock, "has shaped much of the current debateabout land-owners' rights to compensation as the result of losses caused by public regulation." Justice Brennan cited Windfalls in his path-breaking dissent in San Diego Gas and Electric Co. v. City of San Diego, a fact which caused Professor Hagman to bejustifiably proud.
Important work of this calibre was published continuously during Hagman's career.
His long-time colleagues Mandelker and Tarlock give this analysis of Professor Hagman's scholarly position:
"As a scholar, DonHagman stands squarely in the middle of two intellectual currents. The founding generation of land use scholars often accepted quite uncritically the need for government intervention in theurbanenvironment. Itfollowedthattheprincipal function of the law was to eliminate old and archaic constraints on the exercise of the police power. He was too young to accept uncritically the New Deal approach to public law. Professor Hagman was
equallytoooldandperhapstooexperiencedtoaccept uncritically the neo-conservative criticisms of land use andenvironmentalregulation. He was, however, a keen student of this revisionist movement and was considerably influenced by its stress on the teaching of welfareeconomics.
"Because his mind was toolively, his work cannot be neatly reduced to one or two transcendent concepts; hisscholarlylegacy isthere to be enjoyed and minedratherthan reduced toa theory."
Professor Hagman's hornbook, Urban Planning, published in 1971 has become the standard short reference work in its field; two years later, he publishedhis casebook, Public Planning and Control of Urban Development, which is widely used and admired. To this day, the casebook contains the most searchingandcriticalexaminationofwhat itis planners try to accomplish. Further, as his colleagues observe, "ProfessorHagman had an unerring eye for thesimple,directstatementthatwenttotheheartofa matteroften obscuredbyexcessive technical 'jargon' and a wonderful wit, so that the casebook has the additional virtue of being a delight to read."
Inthesecondeditionofhiscasebook,DonHagman wrote: "My mission in life includes striking a blow for plain, fun talk having its place in the legal literature sun."
His national treatise published in 1971, Urban Planning and Land DevelopmentControlLaw, broke newgroundintheareasofurbanrenewal,taxationas a land use control device, and race and poverty issues. The U.S. Supreme Court turnedto the book for a definitive definition of condemnation.
DonHagman's direct, open style characterized his work and his relationships.
Professor Gideon Kanner of Loyola Law School summeditupinthesewords: "Theguywasgreat. He knew what he was doing."
ProfessorLeonLetwin,afacultycolleagueatUCLA andearlieragraduatefellowwithHagmanatHarvard Law School, said at the memorial program: "It is striking,thelargecircleofpeopleDonhastouchedin educating, stimulating, and at times provoking. He was direct, open, frank, wholly without guile. He called it as it was; there was no second or third meaning."
Hagman's wife Ilene and their children, Mary, Christopher,andSteven,receivedthissamequalityof nurturefromDon.Speakingonbehalfofthefamilyat the October 11 memorial, Mary Hagman gave this glimpseoflife with herfather: "Hisadvicewasalways phrased in terms of suggestions. He let us grow to becomeindividuals. Lifewith my father wassimple, down-to-earth living." D
AGoalBasedonRealities
lumni and friends of the School of Lawarebeingaskedthisyeartotakea bigger step than has ever been taken before in providing the private support that is essential in the School's program.
A goal of $450,000 has been set for 1982-83. The goal, when compared to a total of $312,000 in gifts during1982-83,meansthatsupportfromalumniand friends thisyearmust increasebyalmost45percent. Seen in percentage terms alone, the goal could seem almost too ambitious. It is a goal established by alumnithemselves, throughthe Dean's FundAdvisory Council. The decision that this year's target mustbe $450,000isbasedoncurrentrealitieswithin theSchool, andthedeterminationofalumnitomaintain UCLA's rank qS one of the nation's leading lawschools.
In years of stringentappropriationsfrom the state, the unrestricted funds given by alumni and friends are an urgent necessity to maintain the School of Law's basic program.
Listed on these pages are the names of more than 1,100 donors who supported the School in 1981-82. Their gifts totaled $312,000, with an additional $33,400 coming from the annual UCLA Entertain-
mentSymposium. "Onbehalfoftheentirelawschool community," said Dean Susan Westerberg Prager, "let me express our immeasurable gratitude to all of the alumni and friends whose names appear here."
The1,100individualswhoparticipatedbygivingto the Schoollastyearrepresented asignificantincrease over the total who gave just one year earlier, when there were approximately 800 donors.
That kind of growing involvement by more and more alumni, again this year, will be the key to success in reaching the goal of $450,000.
Two major developments sparked the past year's successinprivatesupport. First, astrongervolunteer network was spearheaded by the creation of the Dean's FundAdvisory Council. Second, anewdonor group-The Founders-was formed, witheachofits members committed to give at least $10,000 to the School overthenext decade, andatleast $1,000 each year. The Founders also set a goal of attaining 200 members within the charter year, and already have realized half of their goal.
The new network of volunteers, with representatives from each class, dramatically is increasing the total number of law alumni who support the School ingifts of all sizes.
Marvin Juhas '54 chairs The Founders and serves
UCLASchoolofLawDonors, 1981-82
(Fiscal yearJuly1, 1981to June 30, 1982)
1952
Participation: 45%
Number ofDonors: 17
Total Graduates: 38
*Arthur Ale£
Richard Jay Collins
Howard 0.Culpepper
**Curtis B.Danning
Jean Bauer Fisler
***Arthur N.Greenberg
***Richard T. Hanna
***Geraldine S.Hemmerling
**Bruce I.Hochman
**J.Perry Langford
**Donald C.Lieb
*John C.McCarthy
Norbert J.Mietus
Sallie T.Reynolds
**Martin J.Schnitzer
Joseph N.Tilem
***Lester Ziffren
1953
Participation: 26%
Number ofDonors: 11
Total Graduates: 43
**NormanB.Barker
*Victor M.Epport
*Arthur Frankel
*Donald C.Lozano
*Frank H.Mefferd
Dorothy W.Nelson
*John F.Parker
JackM.Sattinger
**C.Douglas Wikle
*Robert V.Wills
***Charles A.Zubieta
1954
Participation: 22%
Number ofDonors: 21
Total Graduates: 94
*Leon S.Angvire
*John A.Arguelles
*Carl Boronkay
*Seymour Fagan
*Harvey F.Grant
*Harvey M.Grossman
***Martin R.Horn
*Fred Jonas
***Marvin Jubas
*Eugene V. Kapetan
Gerald Krupp
Jack Levine
W.WalterLivingston
***Martin S.Locke
***Sherwin L.Memel
Gordon Pearce
***Roger C.Pettitt
*Howard W.Rhodes
Norman A.Rubin
Donald S.Simons
Ann P.Toomer
1955
Participation: 20%
Number ofDonors: 17
TotalGraduates: 87
***John S.Byrnes, Jr.
*Lee J.Cohen
Myrtle I.Dankers
*Herbert Z.Ehrmann
**SanfordM.Ehrmann
**AllanS. Ghitterman
*IrvingM. Grant
*EarlH. Greenstein
***Samuel W. Halper
***Edward Lasker
**Marshall M. Litchmann
Gerald E. McCluskey
*Richard Schauer
*HaroldL. Schmidt
***David Simon
**William W. Vaughn
***Joseph A. Wein
1956 Participation: 27%
Number ofDonors: 21
Total Graduates: 77
Herman M. Adams
***JohnA. Calfas
DonaldL. Clark
William Cohen
*HaroldJ. Delevie
*Jerry Edelman
**Florentino Garza
**IrwinD. Goldring
*H. Gilbert Jones
***Benjamin E. King
*Kenneth E. Kulzick
Howard N. Lehman
*BernardL. Lewis
Ralph L. McKnight
***Milton Louis Miller
**Allen Mink
*Thomas J. Reilly
Marvin D. Rowen
**Karl M. Samuelian
**HerbertJ. Solomon
J. Howard Sturman
1957 Participation: 38%
Number ofDonors: 35
Total Graduates: 93
**James Acret
Richard D. Agay
**Daniel F. Calabro
with Ralph Shapiro'58 asco-chairofthe Dean's Fund Advisory Council. Other members of the executive committee are Skip Brittenham '70, Hugo de Castro '60, Stanley Fimberg '60, GeraldineHemmerling '52, and George Mccambridge '73.
In addition to The Founders, there are three other major support groups: James H. Chadbourn Fellows, Dean's Advocates, and Dean's Counsel. Chadbourn Fellows give $500 or more annually, Dean's Advocates membership is designated by gifts of $250 to $499, and Dean's Counsel membership is open to those who give $125 or more.
These gifts are now essential in the educational program of the School. A year ago, Dean William D. Warren told alumni: "We cannot survive, let alone excel, without increased support from our graduates and friends." Thisyear, Dean Prager has underscored that message: "The School's reputation is based upon the faculty. It is essential that we increase our private support program to keep up the level of faculty support."
Unrestricted gifts from alumni and friends to the Dean's Fundpaytheexpensesof facultyrecruitment, provide faculty with stipends for research, and support lawstudentsasresearchassistantstothefaculty
The faculty research stipendsprovide amost basic exampleof whygrowthinprivategivingissourgent. This past year, the Dean's Fund allocated stipends of $4,000 each to 20 professors, enabling them to continue their research and writing through the summer months.
**CharlesR. Currey
**JamesJ. Dambach
*John L. Dambach
**Robert E. Decker
*SanfordR. Demain
*DonaldJ. Drew
**David R. Glickman
**Seymour S. Goldberg
**HerbertH. Hiestand, Jr.
*Ephraim J. Hirsch
**JeanAnn Hirschi
*JackHofert
**MarvinJabin
**ArthurW. Jones
Benjamin Kagan
RoyA. Kates
**RobertR. Kirkpatrick
*MichaelK. Lanning
*EverettW. Maguire
*Robert A. Memel
**L. Raymond Millard
**George J. Nicholas
**RaymondH. Olinger
**MarianaR. Pfaelzer
RoderickB. Riccardi
*Gloria Shimer
*IrvingA. Shimer
TerryC. Smith
**NormanL. Vetter
**LeeB. Wenzel
*RobertS. White
**Wells K. Wohlwend
1958 Participation: 24%
Number ofDonors: 30
Total Graduates: 126
**WarrenJ. Abbott
*Charles S. Althouse, II
HarmonR. Ballin
Terrill F. Cox
***RobertL. Dicker
***Founders
**James H. Chadbourn Fellows
*Dean's Advocates
Twoexamplesillustratetheimportanceofthesummer research stipends:
-ProfessorWilliamA. Klein'sresearchstipendfor 1982 enabled him to begin his revision of the Bittker andStonecasebook, Federal Income Taxation,andto write two papers. The first paper describes "ThePutUp-Or-Shut-Up Strategy in Business Negotiations;" the second, "The Modern Business Organization: BargainingUnderConstraint,"developsanewtheory ofthelaw of businessorganization, bringing together law and economics, and it will be published in. the Yale Law Journal.
-Professor Grace Ganz Blumberg, through her summer research stipend, was enabled to complete first drafts of law review articles on two interrelated topics: maritalpropertylawtreatmentofprofessional goodwillandprofessionaleducationacquiredduring coverture. "These topics cry out for economic and accounting analysis," notes Professor Blumberg.
Law faculty salariesaremodest by comparison with thosethroughoutthelegalprofession;facultysalaries at the UCLA School of Law range from $33,000 to $70,000. Without the summer research stipends, many professors could not continue their scholarly work during the summer. An increase both in the amountandthenumberofstipendsisurgent. Increasing the stipends next year to $5,000 each andmaking an additional 10 stipends available would require an increase of $70,000 in this one program alone.
Private support during the past year has helped to strengthen programs such as those in communica-
Number ofDonors: 33 RodneyMoss Total Graduates: 126 BruceH. Newman ***RodneyM.Berke EdwinM. Osborne **HowardS.Block ***DavidG.Price IvonB.Blum *GrantE.Propper
tions law and entertainment law. Professor Charles M. Firestone, who directs the communications law program, says that the externships, public forums, colloquia, and symposia in communications never would happen without support that comes from the Dean's Fund and the Corporate Partners Program. Now there are increased needs. "It is a burgeoning field of law and industry," observes Firestone. "We are retooling to address the latest legal issues occasioned by the technological communications revolution."
Private support provided four word processors, which have been put to good service by the secretaries who work at a ratio of one secretary to six professors. More modern equipment of this type is needed throughout the School.
The clinicalprogram, where excellent teaching recently received national honors from the American College of Trial Lawyers, is a prime example of the needforequipment. Clinicalteachingrequiressmall, video-equipped clasrooms. For years, the School's clinical classrooms have been scheduled to maximum use throughout the day and even into the evening hours, both by regular classes and by students doing individual exercises. This past year, Dean's Fund money equipped another clinical classroom. Theequipmentfor justoneroom costs $10,000 to $15,000. "We need more teaching rooms in the program," says Assistant Dean Marsha Diedrich.
Thelawlibrary, too, reflects this needfor adequate facilities "Funds are needed for dense storage stacks,
Amil Roth
**JohnR. Schell
**OwenA. Silverman
***StuartA. Simke
*StephenC. Taylor
AlanR. Watts
1961
Participation: 23%
Number ofDonors: 29
Total Graduates: 126
**SheldonG. Bardach
KarlJ. Abert
**Leonard Alexander
*JohnA. Altschul
*RichardE. Barnard
RichardH. Bein
Richard H. Ber&er
AlanL. Freedman
**Mitchell Geffen
JackC. Glantz
***Alan N. Halkett
*James Lerman
***Robert F. Lewis
JohnR. Liebman
**Donald C. McDaniel
*Christina J. New
*Robert C. Proctor, Jr.
*James L. Roper
**HerbertE. Schwartz
ThomasJ. Scully
**PaulJ. Shettler
***Henry Steinman
Gordon I. Yanz
1962
*Donald J. Boss Participation: 28%
**Arthur Brunwasser
*RalphCassady
*HillelChodos
**Gerald S. Davee
*Richard S. Diamond
Number ofDonors: 30
Total Graduates: 106
*James R. Andrews
Robert J. Berton
**Jerome S. Billet
which would enable us to put more books into the samesquarefootage,"saysLawLibrarianFrederickE. Smith. "I'vegottheestimateandtheplans, butIdon't have the money." Library users can readily see the other needs: reading rooms that should be refurbished,referencesystemswhichmustbebroughtinto linewith current technology.
Students benefit in a multitude of ways when alumni give to the School. Unrestricted funds this past year helped students who desperately needed help. Emergency loans paid the rent for working students strapped for funds until payday; loans helped other students with medical and dental emergencies. These loans, notesAssistant Dean Barbara Koskela, have had a repayment record of 100 percent. Withasmallpoolofresources, however, the loanfunds soon become depleted each semester.
Privatesupportduring the pastyearprovidedseed moneytostudentswhoorganizedaconferenceonthe legalconcernsofLatinos,andmadeitpossibleforthe Moot Court Honors Program to bring prestigious judges to campus.
Takingalltheneedsofthefaculty, thefacilities,the students, and the educational program into account, the School's alumni leadershipreached a clear conclusion. The goal of $450,000 in private support this year is a necessary goal. In 1982, the UCLA School of Law ranksamongtheverytop inthenation. Keeping that position is the challenge of every UCLA law alumnus. D
*ErnestL. Bishop
RoselynS. Brassell
MelSpringer
*SeymourWeisberg
***LeonardE. Castro W. Herbert Young
*Gerald V. Dicker
*ErwinH. Diller 1963
***Barry V. Freeman Participation: 28%
**Hiroshi Fujisaki
Number ofDonors: 33
*PhilipC. Greenwald Total Graduates: 120
*E. BelmontHerring
**RodneyC. Hill
**DanielJ. Jaffe
**DavidKelton
***StephenScott King
*Dudley M. Lang
**David A. Leveton
StuartR. Mandel
*Luke McKissack
PaulL. Migdal
Harvey Reichard
ToddR. Reinstein
***Stewart A. Resnick
*RichardA. Rosenberg
***Henley L. Saltzburg
*RaymondJ. Sinetar
***RichardD. Aldrich
**DonMike Anthony
**Lee W. Cake
*JohnM. Carmack
Thomas H. Chasin
*Frances Ehrmann
BurtonH. Fohrman
**JayG. Foonberg
*LeroyM. Gire
Robert S. Goldberg
*Martha Goldin
Marvin G. Goldman
***Founders
**James H. Chadbourn Fellows
*Dean's Advocates
'
**William D. Gould
Robert T. Hanger
WilliamF. Heyler
***DavidR. Hoy
Ronald M. Kabrins
**Bernard Katzman
Bennett Kerns
BillG. King
*StephenM. Lachs
**Lawrin S. Lewin
**MarshallA. Lewis
***Michael M. Murphy
Alban I. Niles
*Kenneth E. Owen
GeorgeR. Royce
*MichaelE. Schwartz
**Irvin L. Sepkowitz
***KennethM. Simon
**Dean S. Stern
Norman J. White
**Lawrence D. Williams
1964
Participation: 25%
Number ofDonors: 31
Total Graduates: 122
John L. Angier
*Olga Boikess
**Sandor T. Boxer
**JohnR. Browning
***L. Morris Dennis
Raymond T. Gail
Harry C. Harper
*LeoW. Kwan
**EdwardA. Landry
ByronJ. Lawler
*DavidJ. MacKenzie
Ralph Malmquist
*WilliamA. Mayhew
***William M. Bitting
*DavidBloomgarden
**Robert Broder
**Thomas P. Burke
*A. Barry Cappello
*MilfordW. Dahl, Jr.
*Darryl A. De Cuir
***Lucinda S. Dennis
*Stephen C. Drummy
William J. Elfving
*GeorgeC. Eskin
Julie Gurdin Finley
**Jerold V. Goldstein
**RichardJay Goldstein
Robert H. Goon
*JayW. Heckman
***Stanley R. Jones
**Martin Z. N. Katz
Claude P. Kimball
**SaulL. Lessler
*Donald Low
*Melvyn Mason
*Anthony X. McDermott
Lawrence H. Nagler
Jack Newman .
Robert H. Nida
*JohnC. Nolan
Joel S. Peck
**Thomas D. Peckenpaugh
**LouisP. Petrich
*Lee A. Rau
Charles G. Rubin
*Stephen A. Schneider
**Fred Selan
*Harold J. Stanton
***E. Paul Tonkovich
*Arnold G. York
***Kenneth Ziffren
**EverettF. Meiners 1966
Michael Miller Participation: 12%
**JamesL. Nolan
David J. O'Keefe
AaronM. Peck
Jerry A. Ramsey
JamesN. Ries
**Melvyn Jay Ross
***Robert M. Ruben
*GeorgeA. Smith
**Stephen Warren Solomon
***DavidS. Sperber
*AlanJ. Stein
LawrenceTeplin
*Martin G. Wehrli
Sam V. Weir
Jeremy V. Wisot
*WilliamL. Yerkes
1965
Participation: 23%
Number ofDonors: 40
Total Graduates: 176
***Norman R. Bard
**Laurie Helger
Number ofDonors: 26
Frances Rothschild
*Joseph L. Shalant
*Ronald I. Silverman
Barry A. Fisher
GaryW. Gantz
*David B. Geerdes
RobertW. Thomas ***Paul J. Glass
1967
Participation: 18%
Number ofDonors: 44
Total Graduates: 250
*Donald R. Allen
Arthur Avazian
Robert Axel
A. W. Baily
*Michael D. Berk
RalphL. Block
KennethR. Blumer
*HarlandW. Braun
*Thomas C. Brayton
*Earle Gary Goodman
**Sharon Hultner Green
*RobertN. Harris
**JohnW. Heinemann
Steven N. Katznelson
*Richard H. Kirschner
Barry R. Komsky
*Thomas R. Larmore
Allen D. Lenard
Paul M. Mahoney
*James B. Merzon
**Daniel A. Miller
*Allan S. Morton
Marlene A. Nicholson
**Joel R. Ohlgren
*CaryD. Cooper **Prentice L. O'Leary
LeslieC. Falick
*Harold S. Fleischman
StuartL. Olster
**Michael R. Palley
***Gilbert I. Garcetti ***Don G. Parris
Charles L. Goldberg
Alan B. Haber
Michael Hackman
Mark Ivener
Jordan J. Paust
Charles J. Post, III
Robert L. Rentto
*Terry L. Rhodes
W. MichaelJohnson ***Leonard M. Ross
***Micl.ael S. Josephson **Terry Shagin
JeffreyMichaelLake **Lee I. Silver
RichardA. Lane
Jeffrey L. Linden
*Martin Majestic
*StephanM. Mason
Jeffrey R. Matsen
*Jeffrey T. Miller
*MiltonJ. Nenney
*Elliott D. Olson
Steven Z. Perren
**Nelson C. Rising
Bernard J. Rosen
*Dennis J. Seider
Gerald D. Shoaf
Total Graduates: 211 Hortense Kleitman Snower
RobertL. Anderson
**GertrudeD. Chern
KennethI. Clayman
*Roger L. Cossack
Kenneth L. Cotton
**RichardG. Duncan, Jr.
**William M. Egerman
*Harvey S. Gilbert
Wilford D. Godbold
Joseph G. Gorman, Jr.
*Irving H. Greines
*Michael K. Inglis
*James H. Karp
Merrill H. Karpf
Steven L. Leighton
*Arthur S. Levine
*JeroldL. Miles
Stephen K. Miller
*Fadlo Mousalam
Marianne B. Noll
*Stephen F. Peters
DavidI. Riemer
***Bruce H. Spector
John C. Spence, III
*HowardL. Stone
**Lawrence C. Tistaert
*Franklin Tom
***RichardUdko
Leonard D. Venger
*Michael Waldorf
MichaelN. Weiss
John M. Wilcox
1968
Participation: 20%
Number ofDonors: 38
Total Graduates: 188
Steven A. Becker
Terry Howard Breen
Terrance J. Brutocao
*Robert C. Colton
**Craig D. Crockwell
**Audrey Bronson Ezratty
**RonaldP. Slates
Douglas E. Stephenson
1969
Participation: 21%
Number ofDonors: 41
Total Graduates: 192
Sara Adler
Michael E. Alpert
Thomas C. Armitage
F. Keenan.Behrle
Stephen M. Burgin
Gary E. Christopherson
Michael A. K. Dan
*John R. Domingos
*Kenneth Drexler
*D. Earl Ellis
Henry R. Fenton
**Ronald A. Feole
*Robert B. Fraser
JeffreyC. Freedman
*JanC. Gabrielson
Judith A. Gelfand
RobertE. Glasser
*Bruce E. Harrington
Ragna Olausen Henrichs
**Robert L. Kahan
*John G. Kerr
Allan I. Kleinkopf
Robert Kusior
Elwood Gon HoLui
*John A. McDermott, II
Frank E. Merideth, Jr.
Kenneth Meyer
JohnE.Mueller
Richard A.Neumeyer
GeneL.Osofsky
WilliamM.Pate, Jr.
Brian L.Rexon
*Toby J. Rothschild
Andrew C.Schutz
**RobertS.Shahin
*JosephShemaria
LionelS.Sobel
***ArthurG.Spence
*DianaL.Walker
***JohnH.Weston
*Richard B. Wolf
1970
Participation:19%
Number ofDonors: 34
Total Graduates: 178
StewartL.Bell
TerryW.Bird
***HarryM.Brittenham
*Dennis C.Brown
W.Nicholas Budd
***Arthur R. Chenen
LinnKirby Coombs
JamesM.Cordi
*Steven L.Davis
*Benjamin Fogel
**Gary Freedman
***EllenB.Friedman
RobertA.Gandy, Jr.
StephenGilbert
LauraL.Glickman
MartinK.Harary
L.Glenn Hardie
AlanR.Herson
*SandraMcDonald
Hovanesian
StevenR.Hubert
*Linda S.Hume
*JayW. Jeffcoat
***Murray 0.Kane
HerbertJ.Klein
*BrianC.Leck
JamesM.Leonard
Perry E. Maguire
JohnF.Mounier, Jr.
RobertY. Nakagawa
*JulianA.Pollok
*BarnetReitner
*ScottJ.Spolin
ThomasE.Stindt
TerryL.Tyler
1971
Participation: 17%
Number of Donors: 45
Total Graduates: 271
ShunjiAsari
CrugerL.Bright
Clark Brown
TadR.Callister
WayneS.Canterbury
Curtis A.Cole
*Allan B.Cutrow
Frank J.Da Vanzo
Blanche Deight
Richard H.Dwiggins
Michael Robert Evans
*John James Frankovich
MillardM.Frohock
*RichardD. Fybel
Ronald R.Gastelum
Michael C.Gering
Gary L.Gilbert
Richard I. Gilchrist
Michael Jay Gittleman
*Peter L.Grosslight
Marc Elliot Hallert
*RichardW.Havel
Roger H.Howard
Thomas B.Karp
***DavidS.Karton
*ThomasP. Lambert
**Ronald C.Lazo£
Ira Marcus
JamesB.Mehalick
*MarshallG.Mints
***RobertM.Moss
RicardoF.Munoz
Glenn Osajima
Ann Parade
*Richard T.Peters
**James Martin Prager
**SusanWesterbergPrager
Alan S.Rich
**Laurence D.Rubin
GeorgeL.Schraer
BarryW. Tyerman
Earl MelvinWeitzman
Arthur L.Williams, Jr.
Winfield D.Wilson
StuartD.Zimring
1972
Participation: 12%
Number ofDonors: 33
Total Graduates: 284
Michael J.Abbott
Jean-RobertAlfred
***Curtis 0.Barnes
George J.Barron
Richard A.Blacker
Richard Edward Booker
James E.Brown
Robert T. Burke
*Philip D.Dapeer
**WilliamElperin
Peter Q.Ezzell
Deborah R.Gatzek
***Bruce S.Glickfeld
Roy S.Glickman
Lawrence NathanGuzin
JamesP.Kashian
IvanLawner
CaryB.Lerman
DoraLevin
Joel A.Levine
***RobertS.Lewin
JoanLangworthy Loizeaux
MichaelD. Luppi
Joel S.Marcus
**GeorgeA.Mazarakis
ScottAlbertMcIntyre
*LouisR.Miller, III
*RobertM.Popeney
Albert Z.Praw
WilliamJ.Smith
*LelandAlanStark
Donald K.Steffen
EdwardA.Woods
1973
Participation: 16%
Number ofDonors: 49
Total Graduates: 300
MartinE.Auerbach
*DonaldP.Baker
Dennis S.Beck
DianeL.Becker
JoelMarkButler
**Mario Camara
Valerie Helaine Colb
David TaylorDi Biase
MichaelLouisDillard
JoshuaDressler
KennethP.Eggers
R.Roy Finkle
**Alexander Furlotti
BernardR.Gans
**MichaelS.Gatzke
David HowardGersh
GeraldM.Gordon
***WilliamW.Graham
DouglasByron Haynes
JoeW.Hilberman
*NathalieR.Hoffman
CraigS.Kamansky
*RichardJ.Kaplan
JohnJay King
LawrenceL.Kuppin
Cynthia C.Lebow
*AbrahamD.Lev
Marlene S.Litvak
Guy Raymond Lochhead
RichardE.Marks
Robert F.Marshall
***GeorgeR.McCambridge
BruceT.McIntosh
***LowellJ.Milken
Eugene CharlesMoscovitch
Douglas C.Neilsson
***RaulPalomo, Jr.
R.ThomasPeterson
DavidLittell Pierce
TheresaJoanPlayer
*Ronald WesleyRouse
***DavidS.Sabih
*Richard Victor Sandler
William Arthur Soroky
Arthur 0.Spaulding
Kathryne AnnStoltz
JeffreyE.Sultan
AndreaGeisler Throne
***L.Kirk Wallace
1974
Participation: 11%
Number ofDonors: 33
Total Graduates: 302
*JulianW.Bailey, Jr.
*PaulDouglas Beechen
*Wm.Harold Borthwick
Susan Bush Carnahan
*Bruce A.Clemens
*AllanB.Cooper
***Buddy H.Epstein
*MichaelA.Floyd
JamesL.Foorman
EzequielGutierrez, Jr.
Barbara Anne Hindin
WilliamM.Kahane
*BruceL.Kaplan
Bruce M. Kramer
StephenW.Kramer
David C.Larsen
*RobertD.Links
*Daniel C.Minteer
*TimothyJ.Muris
PhillipG.Nichols
J.T.Oldham
*RichardG.Parker
WilliamCharles Rawson, Jr.
***StevenJ.Revitz
MichaelStewartRubin
*JamesJ.Rucker
*GeorgeP.Schiavelli
MichaelJ.Siegel
*DaphneM.Stegman
ElizabethA.Strauss
*Karl 0. Tuschka
RobertJ. Wayne
WilliamL.Winslow
1975
Participation: 19%
Number ofDonors: 59
Total Graduates: 313
MelvinArano££
LloydW.Aubry, Jr.
*JamesD.C.Barrall
JayW.Bestmann
VictoriaLynnBlock
**JohnG.Branca
VictorJ.Burnstein
*GaryAlan Clark
*StanleyR.Coleite
PaulL.Gale
RobertGerald Garrett
*JohnB.Golper
***Founders
**James H. Chadbourn Fellows
*Dean's Advocates
Judy L. Gray
AndrewJ. Guilford
JohnWilliamHagey
MichaelLawrenceHalpern
MichaelJ. Harrington
Steven Hecht
MarkJ. Huebsch
EvelynBalderman Hutt
RobertCliveJones
Jabe Robert Kahnke
GailD. Kass
*Sandra S. Kass
DeborahProwlerKoeffler
*Alex Kozinski
RobertM. Kunstadt
TimothyLappen
*MosesLebovits
Jan Greenberg Levine
*MargaretLevy
*KarenD. Mack
GaryW. Maeder
***BrendaPowers McKinsey
John W. Messer
*AllenL. Michel
Gary Q. Michel
Alan Michael Mirman
BarbaraManheimerMotz
Norman A. Pedersen
*Charles C. Read
*Leland J. Reicher
Julia J. Rider
IrwinBernard Rothschild
Clyde T. Doheney
*David Clarence Doyle
GregoryCurtis Fant
David R. Ginsburg
CatherineB. Hanan
Marilyn S. Heise
***Paul Gordon Hoffman
Maria D. Hummer
*RichardJosephKatz
Adrienne Elizabeth Larkin
Michael DavidRich
Gloria Roa
AnneBarbara Roberts
*Charles H. Rosenblatt
**Marguerite Skiles Rosenfeld
Terry A. Rowland
Stephanie L. Scher
Richard Schneider
*JudithSalkow Shapiro
**JohnP. Simon
Robert A. Spira
Marc R. Stein
Gary M. Stern
Steven H. Sunshine
Eugene Tillman
Lawrence C. Weeks
Judith W. Wegner
CarylB. Welborn
*Anita Yallowitz Wolman
*PhilipJ. Wolman
*Dorothy Wolpert
*SharonFesler Rubalcava 1977
ThomasG. Ryan Participation: 15%
*WilliamWaiteSampson
*Wayne A. Schrader
Barry E. Shanley
David Anthony Simon
Virginia E. Sloan
DavidR. Smith
MarcI. Steinberg
*MarjorieScottSteinberg
**R. J. Strong, Jr.
Thomas Channing Tankersley
Seth H. Tievsky
Mark L. Waldman
Mark S. Windisch
1976
Participation: 14%
Number of Donors: 43
Total Graduates: 297
RobertPaul Applegate
*LourdesG. Baird
Stewart A. Baker
ElizabethE. Benes
*FredricIanBernstein
*MaribethA. Borthwick
Irene Maharam Boyd
Beatrice Joy Braun
CliffordH. Brown
William D. Claster
**Craig Cotora
Richard K. Diamond
Number ofDonors: 48
Total Graduates: 321
Marilyn S. Barrett
*Alan G. Benjamin
Sondra Berchin
Andrea H. Bricker
Rochelle Browne
Wiiliam C. Conkle
Bruce E. Cooperman
Charles E. Curtis
Gary A. David
StevenS. Davis
StephenL. Englert
Teresa Estrada-Mullaney
Sharon E. Flanagan
Martin A. Flannes
Joseph Michael Gensheimer
Stephen D. Greenberg
Jeffrey H. Greiner
BruceM. Hale
Suzanne Harris
Ronald W. Hillberg
*HowardE. King
*Thomas A. Kirschbaum
Deborah L. Kranze
Joseph L. Kruth
DavidP. Leonard
**Lucinda Low
LyndaSue Mabry
Peter W. Mason
Tamar T. Mason
Mark D. Michael
JohnStonewallMiller, Jr.
Gregory Fulton Millikan
**Wendy Munger
Marcy L. Norton
James K. Phelps
*John E. Pope
*Andre Martin Reiman
Frederick B. Sainick
Charles N. Shephard
Daniel H. Slate
*A. Catherine Steel
WilliamF. Sullivan
Robert M. Tanner
*Marcy Jane Tiffany
Debra M. Van Alstyne
Lee D. Williams
**Jonathan R. Yarowsky
Scott Z. Zimmerman
1978
Participation: 23%
Number ofDonors: 68
Total Graduates: 297
LynneRene Alfasso
Nancy R. Alpert
James R. Asperger
*JudithBailey
Denise M. Beaudry
M. Brian McMahon
David H. Miller
Mary Clare Molidor
Albert J. Moore
Kent Y. Mouton
Janet Stanton Murillo
Stephen T. Owens
Cynthia Podren
Barbara W. Ravitz
Kneave RiggaII
Marc E. Rohatiner
Gregory D. Roper
Scott E. Roth
Kay E. Rustand
Paul S. Rutter
Mark S. Scarberry
**Pierre John Schlag
Sarah Eliot Schnitger
David I. Schulman
StevenC. Shuman
Kathy T. Wales
*David M. Weber
*Barry M. Weisz
Timothy J. White
Gwen H. Whitson
Evan Stuart Widlitz
Robin Anne Wright
Barbara Lee Behrens 1979
Howard M. Bidna Participation: 17%
Michael D. Briggs
Steven Howard Burkow
CarolPlatt Cagan
Carol A. Chase
Bruce M. Cohen
Hilary Huebsch Cohen
Julia Strickland Conroy
Melanie Cook
William Henry Davis, Jr.
Robert M. Dawson
EricF. Edmunds, Jr.
David G. Epstein
DavidF. Faustman
Michael David Fernoff
Number ofDonors: 50
Total Graduates: 295
WayneD. Alvarez
Michael Barclay
Aviva M. Bergman
Jeannette Myra Bernstein
YvonneBloom
Robert W. Boos, II
Jon D. Botsford
AlanFrank Broidy
Harmon A. Brown
Mark Rhodes Burrill
JohnL. Carlton
Allan E. Ceran
LairC. Franklin L. SuzetteClover
David J. Garibaldi, III G. Alexis De La Garza
Miriam J. Golbert
MichaelD. Dozier
Lorna C. Greenhill D. Barclay Edmundson
Lisa M. Greer
SusanJ. Hazard
Daniel C. Hedigan
*MaryannM. Hohn
SherrillL. Johnson
MariettaS. Jones
*FernBarbaraKaplan
Jeffrey G. Kelly
DeanJ. Kitchens
Ann L. Kough
*Kenneth Alan Kramarz
MarkP. Leach
Linda K. Lefkowitz
Robert A. Levinson
Frances E. Lossing
ChristopherJ. Martin
JohnP. Eleazarian
Susan Hope Farmer
DouglasB. Finlayson
Linda Gach
*George H. Hohnsbeen
**RichardJosslin
Roberta Susan Kass
JoelD. Kuperberg
*Robin Lappen
LydiaSue Levin
Rochelle Marie Lindsey
**JenniferL. Machlin
Bruce D. May
KimAnitaMcLane
James Allen Melman
Steven A. Micheli
Timm Andrew Miller
RobbieElizabeth Monsma
Elizabeth A. Neale
David S. Neiger
Diane Douglas Odell
GilbertRodriguez
John B. Shi�izu
Phyllis A. Siegel
Shelley Steuer
GaryScott Stiffelman
Ramona M. Vipperman
Leslie Brooks Rosen
Giacomo A. Russo
Stephen Lewis Schirle
John A. Seethoff
Richard B. Stagg
John Jeffrey Stick
Morris L. Thomas
Steven J. Untiedt
WilliamR. Warhurst
Geraldin Wyle Warner 1981
RobertM. Waxman Participation: 19%
Henry Weinstock
Number ofDonors: 65
SandraIlene Weishart Total Graduates: 337
*Christopher P. Wells
JohnF. Whisenhunt, Jr.
Ellen Winthrop-Michel
1980
Participation: 15%
Number of Donors: 50
Total Graduates: 319
Michael Harry Artan
Irene P. Ayala
Harriet Leva Beegun
AnneS. Berkovitz
Cathy E. Blake
VictoriaM. Bunsen
EstelleCynthia Chun
Carol A. Clem
WilliamD.De Grandis
David Howard Dolinko
Margaret R. Dollbaum
Rita E.Eidson
*RobertJ. Finger
Ruth Ellen Fisher
Paul A. Franz
RichardCharles Fridell
Michael Steven Gendler
Gordon Allan Goldsmith
Herbert Graham
Feris M. Greenberger
Darrel Jeffrey Hieber
Jean M. Alexander
Marc D. Alexander
Jan Almquist
David B. Babbe
Annie K. Baker
Mark James Barnes
Kenneth S. Bayer
Susan M. Bernstein
Patrick D. Bingham
MichaelJ. Bonner
David F. Brown
Paul V. Castellito
**Elizabeth A. Cheadle
C:ornell Chulay
Regina I. Covitt
Judith Kessen Crawford
John W. Crittenden
Walter R. Dahl
Julie Anne Davies
Eric J. Emanuel
Patricia Arkin Feiner
Mark Ernest Ferrario
Michael J. Finkle
Clark W. Rivera ***Monte E. Livingston
Marcy Sue Rosenblum
Karen Green Rosin
Mary Elizabeth Royce
John F. Runkle
Kim V. Sainten-Smith
Scott Bruce Samsky
Benjamin D. Scheibe
Reed Malcolm Scuria
Jed Ellis Solomon
William Christopher Staley
Laurie Louise Volk
Peter Carl Walsh
Barbara H. Yonemura
Lorence M. Zimtbaum
FRIENDS AND FACULTY
Clark Alexander
*Arthur Anderson
Myer Ball
*Melinda & David Binder
James H. Birdsall
Marie Elizabeth Brown
Beatriz & Donald Cameron
John Carrol
Julia Costanzo
Bertie & Jack Levkowitz
Diane Becker & N.D. Lyons
John Mackel
Michael Marans
Frances & John McQuade
*Ruth & David Mellinkoff
James Nelson
Valerie C. Nixon
Jon P. Paradis
Susan Passovoy
Narciso S. Ricasa
Ralph S. Rice
Sanford Rosen
Robert M. Ruden
Elaine & Edwin Schreiber
Meredith & Jon Shoenberger
Stanley Siegel
HerbertSolomon
Doris Stein
Jana Sturman
Marilyn H. Stolpman
David Throne
**Susan & William D. Warren
Warren Wegner
Arlene& G. D. Withers
Stephen Yeazell
**Charles Firestone **CharlesEdward Young
**Susan & George Fletcher
**Ilene & DonaldHagman
Gary Heppell
Jeffrey W. Johnson
Marlene & Richard Jones ***Founders
Lawrence L. Kippin
**Jomes H. Chadbourn FeJ/ows
Pamela & AndrewJurz *Dean's Advocates
LAW FIRM, CORPORATE Lawler, Felix & Hall
Knute Terrance Garcken AND MATCHING GIFTS MCAInc.
Paul Anthony Graziano
Elizabeth L. Hanna
Lawrence M. Harnett
Michael R. Harris
Arthur Andersen & Co. Morgan, Lewis & Backus
Arnold & Porter
Morrison & Foerster
AtlanticRichfield Fdn. Music, Peeler& Garrett
Atlantic Richfield Company Northwestern Mutual Life
*Martha Burroughs Hogan Bechtel Foundation
Chris S. Jacobsen
Debra Hodgson **John Jacobson
Harold C. Hofer
Laurence Lecato Hummer
Susan B. Jacoby
Marc W. June
Thomas W. Kellerman
Richard W. Kaiser
Linda A. Kirios
Steven C. Kiser
O'Melveny & Myers
Beefeater Foundation Pacific Mutual Life
Hathaway Berkshire, Inc. Insurance Co.
Covington and Burling Reavis and McGrath
Cox & Associates
Rifkind, Sterling &
Exxon Education Foundation Lockwood Inc.
William Hunter Lake Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye Santa Fe International Corp.
Edwin Lasman
A. Knox Kimberly Ely J. Malkin
*William Ascher Lappen
Monica Elodie Lebenzon
Robert Thomas Lemen
Laurie Lou Levenson
Ana Maria Lopez
*F.Sigmund Luther
Mary D. Mitchell
Linda A. Netzer
Marsha L. Neuman
*Mary Flynn Falley
JohnGeorge Petrovich
Howard Posner
DanielRodriguez
Margaret Mack Mason
Joan Alice McCarthy
Gulf & Western Industries Security Pacific Charitable
Hewlett Packard Co. Fund
Hughes Aircraft Company Union Pacific Corp.
IrvineCompany Wells Legal SearchInc.
Julie Shaffer Mebane Jacoby & Meyers
Robert P. Meisel
Marjorie E. Mikels
Bruce Joel Miller
Joel Montanez Murillo
Jeffrey Lynn Oliphant
Robert B. Orgel
Gerald S. Papazian
John Stephen Peterson
Stephen J.Rawson
Catherine L. Rich
Wilmer Cutler & Pickering
COMMUNICATIONS LAW PROGRAM
*American Telephone & Telegraph Co.
The Benton Foundation
The Fundfor the Environment
*The Harris Foundation
*John and Mary R. Markle Foundation
Continued on Next Page
Continuedfrom Preceding Page
Southern Pacific TransportationCo.
*Tandem Productions/TAT
Communications
*Times Mirror Co.
*Partners ($5,000 or more)
DESIGNATED GIFTS
Devon Marie Green Memorial Fund
Ccnlmv City Bar Association
Sharon Green
Robert Harris
Greenberg Memorial Scholarship
Arthur N. Greenberg
Donald Hagman Memorial Fund
Norman /\brams
Leonard Adler
Robert 11. /\!water
Beatriz and Donald Cameron
Richard Delgado
Charles B. Embree. Jr.
Susan and George P. Fletcher
Margaret R. Kiever
Daniel H. Lowenstein
Gloria and Melville B. Nimmer
Ralph S. Rice
Murrav L. Schwartz
Karen 0. Stone
Susanand William 0. Warren
Allan Lebow Memorial Fund
Beckv C. Davis
Garv.Jacobs
Cv1{thia Lebow
Paula C. Lubic MemorialScholarship /\rthur M. Lubic
Carol L. Spitz
George L. MarinoffMemorial Scholarship
Alvin B. /\lpcrt
Saul L. Brown
Elaine tlarinoff Good
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Knopf Levin, Ballin. Plotkin & Zimring
Murray Nagdimon
Schulenbergand Warren Inc.
Union Financial Corporation
Mary Pickford Foundation Scholarship
Mary Pickford Foundation
Rubalcava Fellowship
Dominick and Sharon Rubalcava
Matthew Small Memorial Fund
Anne S. Berkovitz
Mortimer and Louise Brenner
Elaine G. Mainthow
M. Salwen
David I. Schulman
Mrs. David H. SmalI
Mr.and Mrs. Lee Small
Mr.and Mrs. Stephen J. Small
Gerald and Marilyn Ungar
Marcia and Jerome Wolff
News
James
H.
Chadbourn:
His Imprint Here Was Without Equal
Professor James Harmon Chadbourn, whose vears at the UCLA School of Law from 1950 to 1963 made a lasting and unequalled imprint upon countless students. diedon September 28.
Chadbourn was Fessenden Professor Emeritus at Harvard Law School. where hehad taught from 1963 until his retirement in 1974.
Throughoutthe '50s and early '60s. Professor Chadbourn was the essence of UCLA to his students. ''His fans arc legion." observed Professor WiIIiam D. Warren. "He was the most popular teacher who ever taught here."
A seniorsupportgroupof the School. the Chadbourn Fellows. was formed in recentvears to honor Professor Chadbouin and it continues that purpose. Chadbourn was. during his tenure at UCLA. alsodesignated with the honorof ConnelI Professor.
Connell Professor Emeritus Ralph S. Rice said of ProfessorChadbourn: "He wasunique. He was notonly unique. he wasthe first guyto arrive atworkin the morning and often the last lo leave atnight. He lovedstudents, buthe pretended tobe very irascible with them. In a business where egos often are out of control, he had thehighest ratio of humilitylo talent of anybody I know."
Another word that instantlv is associated with Chadbourn, added Rice. is "courage.'' Chadbourn "was never quiet when it was time lo talk, whenit was timetotake a position."
Professor Chadbourn's principal courses wereevidenceand civil procedure, thoughhe also taught numerous other subjects.
His great work was Wigmore on EFidence (Chadbourn Revision). which he completed two years ago just before he became too ill to continue further work.
Chadbourn received his bachelor's
James H. Chadbourn
degree from The Citadel in 1926 and his J. D. from the University of North Carolina in 1931. Ile taught al the law schools of Duke and Pennsylvania before coming to UCLA.
A memorial service was held on October 12 at Christ Church in Cambridge.
RepresentingTalent Is Symposium Focus
On December10-11
Business and legal aspects of representing talent in broad-ranging areasof the entertainment industry willbe examined by experts from the East and West Coasts at the seventh annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium December 10-11 in Royce Hall. The symposium is presented bythe School of Law and the UCLA Entertainment SymposiumAdvisory Committee. The two-day program will feature speakers fromthe legal and business communities, who will cover
majoraspects 0� representing recording tists songwnters, authors, play- ar . ht's and motion picture and tele- wng , . d vision actors, writers, directors an producers.
Hours of the sessions are2 to5:30 Friday, December 10, and 9 a.m. p.m. b 1 to5 p.m. Saturday, Decem er 1 .
Titled "The Business and Leg�! A ects of RepresentingTalent m the sp " h Entertainment Industry, t e sy�1posium is being coordinated by M1c�ael S. Sherman of Greenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman & Machtinger and Peter J. Oekomof Pollock, Bloom & Deko_m.
"We will examine not only the fundamentals of representing talent,_but alsocurrent trends in the entertamment industry," said Sherman. "We will present panelists conducting simulated negotiations in order to illustrate thegiveandtakeof the negotiating process.
"The symposium is intend�d for thoseinvolvedin the entertamment industry, including producers, executives, agents, attorneys, accountants, businessand personal managers, and themembersof the creative community with whom they are concerned," Shermansaid.
Sessions on Friday, December 10, will focuson sound recordings and music publishing.
Topicson Saturday, December 11, will be book publishing, legitimate stage productions, pay television and homevideo, and deal makingin motionpictures and free television.
Theenrollment fee of $175 includes the symposium, the accompanying syllabus, and a luncheon on Saturday. Enrollmentsare being accepted by Bea Cameron, UCLA School of Law, Los Angeles, CA90024, phone (213) 206-1121.
Law School Benefits From Special Funds
The School and its students continue tobenefit from scholarships, memo rials, and otherspecialfundsestab lishedby alumniand friends.
Listedhereare anumberof special funds which have been established in recentmonths.
Matthew Small Memorial Fund
The fund was established by the family and friends of Matthew Henry Small'79. Its purpose is to promote social justice through legal education, and the fund specifically will support the clinical and externship programs of the School.
Matt Small's practice in legal services exemplified a deep commitment to social justice; during his law school years, he served in an externship at a seniorcitizens center, and continued this interest in his practice after receiving his J. D. in 1979.
David I. Schulman '78 of Santa Monica is assisting the Small family of New York in matters related to this memorial.
Marionand Dr. Sidney Leveton Memorial Scholarship Fund
DavidA. Leveton'62 establishedthe scholarship fund in memory of his belovedparents, Marion and Dr. Sidney Leveton.
The scholarship will be awarded annually to a student who demonstrates the ability, interest, and acumen which is commensurate with the standards expected of the legal profession.
Donald Hagman Memorial Fund
The Donald Hagman Memorial Fund was established to continue work in the spiritof the distinguished UCLA lawprofessor who died in an accident last June.
The Donald Hagman Memorial Fund willbe used to support researchin urban housing. Professor Hagman, a member of the UCLA law faculty since 1963, was a major scholar in the field of land use planning.
Michael Palley Memorial Fund
Family and friends of Michael Palley '68 established the fund in his memory, followinghis untimely death.
Palley's loyalty to the School was intense and even in failing health he maintained his participation; among otherefforts, he was instrumental in establishing an endowed teaching chair for the School. Funds in the Palley memorial will be used for purposes of greatest need in the School's program.
David Simon Scholarship
David Simon'55 established the scholarship as his "personal t�ibute t? the outstanding legal educat10n which I receivedat UCLA."
The scholarship will be awarded annually to a student of outstanding academic achievement in need of financial assistance, in the hope that recipients will later make a positive
contribution and impact upon the School and the community at large.
Allan C. LebowMemorial Fund
Cynthia C. Lebowestablishedthis fund in memory of her husband, Allan C. Lebow '72. The memorial has grown through the support of friends an_d family, and each year itwill provide a guest lectureship atthe School, enhancing theacademicprogram in the field of law andpublicpolicy.
The Allan C. Lebow Memorial Lecture will be aspecial event annually in the law schoolcalendar.
AlumniDirectory NearsCompletion
All telephonecontacthas been completed by HarrisPublishingCompany, publishers of the School'salumni directory. The telephonecontactverified information whichalumniprovided on the directory questionnaires and the information currently held on alumnirecords.
At the sametime, the telephone representatives ofthepublishingcompany invited alumnito purchase personal copies of the directory.
The directory is tentatively scheduled for releasein January, 1983. If you have notreceived acopy by February 15, 1983, orif youare interested in ordering a copy andhavenot heard from the publisher, youmay contact Dor�en Luff, Customer Service Representative, Bernard C. Harris PublishingCompany, Inc., 3 BarkerAvenue,White Plains, New York 10601.
ClassReunions
Class of '52
On May 23, 1982, the first class to graduate from the UCLASchool of Law gathered at a dinner held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. JosephTilem to celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of its graduation.
Class of'57
On June 26, 1982, theClass of'57 held
its 25-year reunion with adinner dance held at the James E.West Center. To commemorate theoccasion, the class presented to theSchool agift of $12,000. The gift resulted from broad participation by the class.
Class of '62
Members of the Class of '62 celebrated the first 20 years with a Japanese dinner held on June 12, 1982, at the Yamashiro restaurant in the Hollywood hills.
Class of'72
The Riviera Country Club was the site of the ten-year reunion of the Class of '72. The theme was a Hawaiian Luau and the band played until past midnight.
Class of '77
On June 26, 1982, theClassof '77 gathered at a barbecue at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
PILF Grantees Aid Battered Women, Veterans, Refugees
Students provided legalassistanceand counseling to batteredwomen, helped American veterans tosecuretheir rights, and aided CentralAmerican refugees in thefirst three projects funded by the Public Interest Law Foundation (PILF).
Organized only a year ago, PILF is supported entirely by lawstudents and alumni responding to a severe need for public interest law and legal services work.
The three initial projects funded by summer grants to UCLA law students illustrate the needs which PILF aims to meet.
Elena Popp-Bellingham '84 worked during the summer at CentroLegal in Santa Monica. Her project was to counsel and give legal assistance to womensuffering from spousal abuseaproblemwhichshe found to be "particularly urgent with Hispanic women, because of language barriers."
John Williams '83, himself a Vietnam veteran, was enabledthrough his PILF summer grant to assist indigent and other needy Vietnam vets in a project at the Vet Center in Venice.
As part of his summer PILF project, Williams helped to establisha Viet-
nam veteran department at the Los Angeles County Bar Association.
Hereferred more complex cases to veteran attorneys, but personally wrote briefs and represented many clients at quasi-judicial Veterans Administration hearings and before the Veterans Appeals Board.
Asthe result of Williams' P!LFfundedproject, this work is now being continued by other attorneys. Also, Williamsiscontinuinghis own participation ona part-time, volunteer basis.
The third recipient of a PILF summer grant, Katherine Hanrahan '84, helped to organize a legal assistance office at theImmigration and Naturalization Service Detention Center in El Centro, California.
This work at the detention center in El Centro is now staffed by a full-time attorney. and efforts are being made to raisefundsfor increased staff.
PILF's goals for the current year are to expand its membership, fund summer grants again, and add year-long grants for public interest law projects.
For information on PILF, contact Kerry Gottlieb, Public Interest Law Foundation, UCLA School ofLaw, Los Angeles, CA 90024.
Faculty Notes
Rod Margowill be teaching aviation law again in theSpring semester. Margo recently addressed theAviation LawAssociation of Australia in Sydney on the jurisdiction of U.S. courts over foreign aviation interests, and some aspects of aviation product liability. He has been appointed an associate editor of Shawcross and Beaumont, Air Law (fifth edition), the leading text on English aviation law.
Henry W. McGee, Jr., was visiting professor at the University of Madrid (Complutense) during the Spring semester, 1982. In addition to the appointment, he received a research fellowship from the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, the organization which administers Fulbright grants.
An annual section ofFaculty Notes appears in the Spring issue of the magazine.
Classnotes
Alan M. Albright'76 and R. Stephen Doan '76 have become partners in the lawfirm ofAdams,Duque & Hazeltine.
Nancy R. Alpert '78 has recently become associated with the firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York City Prior to that she was associated with the Los Angeles firm of Hahn, Cazier & Leff.
John B. Bartos '73 was appointed assistant regional counsel, western re gion, U.S. Immigrationand Naturalization Service. He served the previous six years as a general attorney in the LosAngeles district office, specializing in citizenship, naturalization and expatriation law
Denise Beaudry '78 was recently selected to fill a position in the airport division of the Los Angeles City Attorney's office. The division represents the Department of Airports, which includes Los Angeles, Ontario, Van Nuys and Palmdale airports.
Robert J. Berton '62 was appointed by GovernorBrown and confirmed by the California Senate as a member of the California Law Revision Commission. In 1982 he is serving as chairman of that commission. Thisyear the major topics for considerationby the commission are matters involving reform of probate, community property and realestatelaws.
Victor P.Bonfilio'72 earned a Ph.D. in clinicalpsychologyin 1980. He is in private practice of psychotherapy with children and adults and divorce counseling inSan Francisco and Oakland, in association with the California Medical Clinic for Psychotherapy and Pacific Child andFamily Counseling Center.
Jeffrey J. Bosshard'68 has left the firm ofBosshard, Morgan & Glidden to openhis own office. His practice emphasizes familylaw, probate, and business, including computerlaw.
The traditional barbecue after orientation providesmembers ofthefirstyear class a time torelax and formnewfriendships.
Gardner. Offices are located in San Francisco and Squaw Valley.
Mary-Lynne Fisher '76 has become acting clinicaldirectorof Loyola Law School whereshe has been a clinical professorsince1980.
RobertaLeeFranklinmoved to Lassen County, specializingin insurance defense litigationinLassen, Plumas, and Modoc countieswithherown firm of Thorntonand Franklin.
BradleyD. Frazier '81 has become associated with the law firm of Cox, Castle & Nicholson.
Jan. C. Gabrielson'69 is associated with the firm of Stuart B. Walzer in Century City, specializinginfamily law. Heis a memberof the State Bar Family Law Section executive committee and is the Section'sliaison to the California Law Revision Commission.
PeterC. Bronson '74 has become a partnerin the Beverly Hills firm of Levy & Norminton.
Clifford H. Brown '76 has become a partnerin the law firm of Ervin, Cohen & Jessup.
Allan E. Cerao '79 recently asssociated with the Los Angeles office of Rogers & Wells. He continues to practice businessand real estate litigation.
Hilary Huebsch Cohen '78 addressed theAssociationof California Symphony Orchestras on "The Role of the Board: Legal Responsibilities and Liabilities/Attracting New Board Members" at the Association's14th annual confere�ceheld at the University of Cahforma, Santa Barbara, in August.
MelanieCook '78 has become associated withthe Beverly Hills law firm of Cooper, Epstein & Hurewitz.
H�go D. De Castro '60, Judge Billy G. Mills'54,and Nelson C. Rising '67 have been appointed to the prestigious postoftrustee of the UCLA Foundation.
Joshua Dressler '73 has accepted a tenured faculty position at Wayne State University Law School in Detroit, Michigan. Forthe past five years he has been professorof law at Hamline University School of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Kenneth Drexler '69, formerly a partner of Chickering and Gregory, announces the formation of Drexler & Leach with offices in San Rafael, California. The firm will emphasize civil litigation and family law.
Joseph Duff'71 received the State Bar of California'sLoren Miller Legal Services Award at the state bar convention in Sacramento. Duff, 36, is the youngest person to receive the award since it was established in1977. He has devoted much of his professional careerto representing the NAACP.
BruceW. Dodd '65 was recently reelectedto the Santa Barbara Superior Court for a second six yearterm. He is presently serving as presiding judge.
Robert Fiedler '81 and Clifford Gardner '80 announce the formation of a partnership for the practice of law under the firm name of Fiedler and
Michael C. Gering '71 announces his withdrawalfrom the law firm of Virtue & Scheck, Inc., as a senior litigator shareholder and theopening of his law offices underthe name ofThe Law Offices of Michael C. Gering Offices arelocated in Newport Beach. He also announces the association of Sterling A. Smith from Sacramento.
David R. Ginsburg '76 has become a partnerin the law firm of Sidley and Austin.
Lisa Greer '78 hasreturnedto Los Angeles afterfouryearsin private practicein New York City. She is now associatedwith Lawler, Felix & Hall in downtown Los Angelesandshe practices with its corporate/international/ realestate group.
Steven G. Hamilton '66 was promoted to the position of vice president general counsel and secretary of the Garrett Corporation. He joined Garrett's legal department in1968. Garrett's headquartersarein Los Angeles.
Bernice Hernandez '79 is an attorney with the Los Angeles Public Defender's office.
Nathalie Hoffman '73 is resident partner of the Los Angeles office of Graham & James. She specializes in entertainmentandgeneral businesslaw.
Arthur Karma '58 and Stanley R. Coleite '75 announcetheformation of a partnership forthepracticeoflawunderthe firmname of Karma & Coleite. Louis J. Khoury '73 willbe ofcounsel tothe firm.
Ric Kilmer '79 formerattorney forthe Muckleshoot Indian Tribe in Auburn, Washington, has been appointed supervisingprosecutorforthe NorthwestIntertribalCourtSystem,a consortium offourteen Western Washington Indian tribes. Hecontinuesto representthesetribes in Indianchild welfaremattersin tribal,state,and federalcourts.
Sandra E. Kohn '66 hasrelocated herlawofficesasasolo practitioner toEncino. Herpractice emphasizes realestate,condominiumlaw, and family law.
James Victor Kosnett '76 hasbeen namedvicepresidentofSystemCorporationof America. Togetherwith Grant& KosnettLaw Corporation,SCA hasdevelopedand willbemarketing computersoftwareincludingasophisticatedlawofficemanagementand researchsystem.
Alex Kozinski '75 was appointedby PresidentReagan asChief Judge ofthe U.S. Claims Court. The claims court, whichwascreatedby the Federal CourtsImprovementActof1982, inheritsthetrialjurisdiction ofthe U.S. CourtofClaims, hearingtax,contract, patent and other claims againstthe U.S. government. Thecourtislocated in Washington, D.C.; itsjudges hold trialsthroughoutthe UnitedStates.
Mark A. Kuller '78 hasbeen appointed totheposition ofattorney advisor, office ofTaxLegislativeCouncil,U.S.Treasury Department. Previouslyhewasassociatedwiththe Los Angeleslaw firmof Troy, Malin, Pottinger& Castlen.
Ira L. Kurgan '78 hasjoinedthe West Coastlawdepartmentof CBS, Inc. in Los Angeles.
Joel A. Levine '72 isnowassociated withtheSantaMonicalawfirmofStern & Miller.
Hugh H. Linstrom '75 became a partner inthe NewYorkCity lawfirmof MendesandMount.The firmspecializesininsurancelawanddefense litigation.Linstrompracticesinthe
firm'sLosAngelesoffice.
EugeneMoscovitch '73 isonleavefrollJ hisSanta Monicalawpractice and is servingasstatewideissuesandresearcn directorof"Bradley forGovernor."
Joel Montanez Murillo '81 announces thathe isnowengagedinthegeneral practiceoflaw.Hisoffice islocated in Fresno.
Duane C. Musfelt '76 hasbecome a partneroftherecently openedSan Franciscooffice ofLewis, D'Amato, Brisbois & Bisgaard. He continuestospecialize incivillitigation.
Jordan Paust '68 wasamemberoftwo panelsatYale LawSchoolin April, NationalSecurity Claims& Minority Rights, and HumanRightsinDomestic Courts.Jordan wasalso a panelistatthe University ofGeorgia in May on Humanitarian Lawin Internal Conflicts. Most recent articles include "Transnational FreedomofSpeech," 45 Law and Contemporary Problems (Duke, 1982); "IsthePresidentBoundby the Supreme Law ofthe Land?-Foreign Affairsand NationalSecurity Reex-
amined," 9 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly (1982).
Jonathan M. Purver '64 and coauthor Lawrence Taylor have written two articles, "Legal Research: A Solid Foundation for the Successful Criminal Defense," Trial, Volume 18, Number 9, (September, 1982) and "The Criminal Appeal: Writing to Win," Case and Comment, Volume 87, Number 5 (September-October 1982).
Gary M. Robinson '80 has joined the law firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges in New York City. He is specializing in trusts and estates law.
Tom Robinson '69 was granted academic tenure at the University of Arkansas School of Law Commencing with the 1982 school year, he has joined the faculty of the University of Miami School of Law in Coral Gables, Florida, where he will be teaching in the J.D. program, tax masters, and the graduate program in estate planning.
Laurence D. Rubin '71 has been appointed to the Los Angeles Municipal Court, Santa Monica Judicial District.
Daniel J. Salomon '75 has opened his own law firm under the name of Fest & Salomon in Van Nuys. He emphasizes personal injury and family law.
Marilyn M. Smith '76 has been elected principal in the law firm of Knapp, Petersen & Clarke.
Arthur0. Spaulding, Jr. '73 has become a partner of the law firm of Cox, Castle & Nicholson.
Marqie A. Spiszman '81 has become associated with the law firm of Knapp, Petersen & Clarke.
Lionel S. Sobel '69 will be spending the1982-83 school year at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles as a visiting professor teaching torts, antitrust, and sports law. He will continue to serve as editor of the Entertainment La� Reporter, a twice-monthly peri odical which he started in 1979. In 1977, Lionel and Gary Freedman '70 founded Freedman & Sobel, a firm that has grown to eight lawyers including partner Michael Baum '75 The firm's �ractice emphasizes business litiga tion, corporate and family law.
Arthur Soll '58 , after many years as a sole practitioner, has joined the firm of Simke, Chatlos, Silberfeld & Soll, Inc. The firm deals exclusively with litigation matters. Arthur Soll continues to specialize in divorce, insurance and business litigation.
Richard P. Staley '74 was appointed city attorney of Thousand Oaks. He was assistant city attorney for three and a half years and previously a deputy city attorney in Oxnard.
Doris L. Stern '60 has been appointed associate counsel of American Savings, a federal association, and First Charter Financial Corporation.
Richard J. Stone '70 has become a partner in law firm of Sidley & Austin.
H. George Taylor '56 is president of the Eastern Bar Association of Los Angeles County for the 1982-1983 year.
Robert W. Thomas '66 was appointed to the Los Angeles Superior Court.
Richard P. Towne '79 has joined the Beverly Hills law firm of Hayes & Hume. He practices business and entertainment litigation. He has also joined the faculty of the UCLA Attorney Assistant Training Program, where· he will teach a course in entertainment law and litigation.
Diane Ward '77 has become associated with the Los Angeles office of Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson.
Glenn F. Wasserman '75, after six years with the U.S. Department of Transportation ln Washington, D.C., and New York City, has returned to Los Angeles and is associated with the firm of Weiser, Kane, Ballmer & Berkman. The firm specializes in community redevelopment and land use law.
Michael N. Weiss '67 has been elected second vice president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association. Prior to assuming his new office, Michael was secretary of the association for the past three years, and is past president of the South Florida chapter.
James F. Wilson, DVM, JD '73 is adjunct lecturer at the University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine, teaching jurisprudence and law for the veterinarian and veterinary business management. He is a partner in the Four Corners Veterinary Hospital in Concord, and coauthor of the forthcoming book, Business Management in Veterinary Medicine.
Wells K. Wohlwend '57 has been elected by the UCLA Foundation to serve as its general counsel. He previously served as general counsel to the UCLA Alumni Association (19781980) and has been a member of the UCLA Foundation Board of Trustees since 1977.
Robin Anne Wright '78 was elected as Reno Municipal Court Judge, City of Reno, in June of 1981. She challenged the incumbent and is now serving a four year term. Prior to that she was in private practice.
Barbara H. Yonemura '81 has joined the California Department of Health Services, office of legal services, in Sacramento.
NECROLOGY
Michael R. Palley '68 of the Los Angeles Bar in August, 1982.
Matthew H. Small '79 of the Orange County and Santa Monica Bars in May, 1982.