UCLA Law - Fall 1988, Vol. 12, No. 1

Page 1


The law building addition now under construction became more tangible each day as the structural steel framework took shape this fall. The project-providing clinical program, classroom and faculty office space-is scheduled for July completion. Chancellor Young, Dean Prager andformer Dean Warren turned a ceremonial shovel of earth last October to mark the start of construction.

UCLA Lflw is published at UCLA for alumni, friends, and other members of The UCLA School of Law community. Issued three times a year. Offices al 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles 90024. "Postmaster: Send address changes to Alumni Office, School of Law, 405 Hilgard, Los Angeles 90024."

Charles E. Young/ Chancellor

Susan Westerberg Prager / Dean

Michael T. McManus I Assistant Vice Chancellor, Public Communications

Joan Tyndall / Director of Development and Alumni Relations

Ted Hulbert / Editor

Travis Wall / Editorial Assistant

Valerie Takatani I Art Production

Photography I ASUCLA Photo Service

Peace Makers

he three alumni profiled in these pages work tovvard creating peace, though they themselves would not be the first to say so. James Giffen '68isonthevergeofseeinghis dream of 25 years realized. as he leads initiativesforAmericantradewiththeSovietUnion. Susan Haldeman '77 mediates conflicts that look hopeless, and beyond every dilemma she sees opportunities for creative solutions. Forrest S. Masten '72 helps people caught up in the anger of divorce proceedings to turn their energies into rational,realistic decisions.

All of them challenge society's stereotyped assumptions about what lawyers do. Rather than accentuatingconflictsandseekingtomaketheirside thewinnerwhiletheothersidemustlose, theywork beyond the conflicting interests to find a win/win conclusion. Negotiation is their strong suit. They succeedby "transforming unproductivecompetitive negotiations into satisfying opportunities to solve problems,"touseProfessorCarrieMenkel-Meadow's phrase.

Thoughdifferentindirection. theircareersequally exemplify what Menkel-1'1eadow has described as theoptimalroleforthelawyer skilledinnegotiation: "By helping [clients] articulate their real needs and objectives, legal negotiators vvill increase participation in the decision-making process with less destructive conflict between all those in olved."

To Mosco\lV With A Partnership For Profits

LAST SPRING, James H. Giffen chartered a jumbo jet and flew the biggest-ever delegation of U.S. corporateexecutivestoMoscow.Notlongafterward, aphoto in the New York Times showed Giffenwith MikhailGorbachevas U.S.businessmenand Soviet officials signed a protocol to initiate a trade consortium between the two nations covering products from crackers to computer disks.

Giffen is regarded widely as the one American who hasdonemosttofacilitatetheopeningoftrade between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. "A fresh wind is blowing," he says. "Changes in the Soviet Union bode well not just for the political environment, but also for economic expansion between our two countries."

While openness and restructuring by the Soviets and the implications of those policies for America is today's news, Giffen for the past 25 years has been trying to boost American business in the U.S.S.R. The roots of his effort extend back to Giffen's days as a law student at UCLA. By the time his law school Class of 1968 had graduated, infact,JamesGiffenwaswellalongwiththewriting of his book on The Legal and Practical Aspects of Trade With the Soviet Union.

"Iwenttolawschooltolearnasmuchinternational lawasIcould," Giffenrecalls."Onceintolawschool, I began working with Professor Paul Proehl. I did the footnotes for his book on foreign enterprise in Nigeria. Then Itook aresearchcourseunderProehl andwroteapapercalledTheLegalAspectsofTrade Withthe Soviet Union.OnceIhad written that 100page paper, I realized nothing had been written on the subject for the American businessman or the American lawyer." He turned the paper into a 366page book which was published by Praeger of New York and which Giffendedicatedto Paul 0.Proehl.

The book went through a second edition, and in the years which followed Giffen has testified more than 50 times on the subject of U.S.-Soviet trade forcommitteesofCongress.Hehaspersonallymade morethan 200tripstothe Soviet Union.Lately,he's

James H. Giffen '68

therenearlyeveryotherweek.

Giffen is presidentof The Mercator Corporation, aNewYorkmerchantbank. HealsoheadstheU.S.U.S.S.R. Trade and Economic Council, a private sector organizationcreatedbyagroupofbusinessmen including David Rockefeller. Most recently, Giffen became president of the American Trade Consortium, seven corporations joined together to do what they couldn't accomplish alone. The membercorporationsareFordMotor, Chevron,RJR Nabisco, Archer Daniels Midland, Johnson and Johnson, Eastman Kodak and The Mercator Corporation.

AtatimewhencontactwiththeSovietssuddenly has taken a positive turn, others in the business communityenvy Giffen'srichreservoirofcontacts. One American CEO, returning from a visit to Moscow, said Giffen is on a first-name basis with every important Soviet official. The New York TimesnotedthatGiffen"hasareputationasawheel-

greaserparexcellence.Heissaidtoknoweveryone there is to know in the Soviet Union and to use thosecontactstocutthroughredtape."

Giffen's real interest seems to lie in using that knowledgetohelpAmericanbusinessmengetafoot in the door. Toward that end, in recent months he has been representing U.S. interests in two-tiered negotiations with the Soviets. On one level, there are negotiations for a general trade agreement between the consortium of American corporations andasimilarconsortiumset upby the oviets. On asecondlevel,therearenegotiations O'. erprinciples governingsome 15 to 20jointventures.

"I do a lot of different things," Giffer e".plains whenaskedtodescribehisrole. "First. ! 2:11 ahard negotiator with the Soviets. I also tr: to promote betterrelationsbetweenournations. bofrpolitically andeconomically." Giffeniscarefulnol to elaborate in any detail as he answers a question about his missionas aninformaldiplomat. "Our' the years,"

he allows, "I have been a message-earner between appropriate organizations of the wo oovernments.··

Giffen uses a simple metaphor to clrscribe his work as negotiator ar;cl rneclinto:·. "lt's like l\ o farmers. One has two horsr.s and the otner has t o cows, and each needs only one. o they '.rade. and botharewinners.''

Theprospectofincreasi:1g ir2de betweenthe U.S. and the U.S.S.R. is seen ::iy Giffee as 2 1\ in/1. ·in situation. Perhaps "inc:'ease·· i an ovr.rnt2tement. "There really hasn't been sn rad- ,vith the So iet Union," he says, although official U. · policy since the Eisenhower aclministratior. has favored such trade.

The burden of determining ,\ hether in fact there would be any trade has been placed largely on the shoulders of the American businessman. Typically, initiatives from U.S. corporations ha\ e become entangledinthemazeofSo iel bureaucracy or ha e been ill timed. As an example. Giffen negotiated a $350 million steel-mill contract when he I as vice president of Armco in 1979 only to see it cRncelled dRys later when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan.

Now the timing for trRde seems ripe. This year, ranking executives from American companies have beenshuttlingto Moscowtonegotiatejoinventures for products such as cars and breakfast cereals.

Officials from both the American and Soviet consortiums have been hammering out agreements on tax and accountingrules, multiple re-entryvisas for Americans working in the Soviet Union, and repatriation of hard currency.

"The idea of the consortium is that people could get a critical mass together," says Giffen. "There isnoneedtoreinventthewheelineverynegotiation."

In Russia, gniasing wheels may be more important than reinventing them.

In 1986, as part of Gorbachev's restructuring program, the Soviet Union passed a law allowing foreign companies lo o\.vn 49 percent of joint ventures they mightsetup with Soviet enterprises. But the law was vague on crucial points. For instance, itallows "access·· tothe ·enture'sfinancial data but does not define what access means. Giffen has negotiated lhe right to take copies of financial documents out of the Soviet Union. He also has negotiated agreements on a number of other critical issues.

Given the virtual non-existence of trade between the two countries, the effort by Giffen and his compatriotsintheAmericanconsortiumis breaking ground economically, legally, and certainly in the realm of ideology.

"Gorbachev understands that the economy is his

Number 1 priority," observes Giffen, "so he has to keep a stable international situtation. He has said that he has resigned as an enemy of the U.S. And that brings difficulties to us, because we have run our country on the basis of the Soviet Union being an enemy."

If progress in trade agreements with the Soviet Unioncontinuesonthepresentcourse,itwouldopen to American business access to a market of more than350 millionpeoplewhohavefewmanufactured goods but who are eager to acquire them.

Like the farmers trading horses and cows, Giffen believes, the American people would only benefit from this course of events. If having enemies is important, he concludes, "We are going to have to find a new enemy.''

Making Room For Win/Win Solutions

WHENAtourbusfilledwithseniorcitizenscrashed near Mammoth, killing several passengers and injuring many more, the bus operator had only $5 millionininsurancecoverageforthe52claimswhich were filed. In such a situation, the typical course of negotiation and litigation would result in individual settlements to some claimants but nothing to others.

Susan Haldeman '77, who manages the Southern CaliforniaofficeofAmericanIntermediationService (AIS),wasinstrumentalinworkingoutasettlement approved by all of the 52 claimants. It gave each of them an equitable share of the $5 million policy, while it also avoided the expense and delay of litigation.

"If the insurance carrier had made individual settlements, that would have resulted in the pie being distributed before everyone got a share. The carriercontactedus,"recountsHaldeman, "realizing that what was desired was to make a fair distribution."

First, the mediators held a one-day meeting with all the attorneys involved and the carrier in order

Susan Haldeman '77

to put the facts clearly before every party and to begin the process of formulating a distribution. "What we did was to work out a settlement where theentire $5 millionwasdistributedonanequitable basis to each claimant, so that every claimant received a share of that pot." The distribution plan was accepted during follow-up phone conferences withallclaimantsinthe30daysfollowingtheinitial meeting.

"The really neat thing," says Haldeman with satisfaction, "is that-unlike an arbitration-we achieved the result with the consent of all parties. Everyone agreed to the distribution."

It is at the heart of Haldeman's work to fashion such resolutions to conflicts both great and small. Her office mediates issues in personal injury, construction, real estate, commercial, employment, professional malpractice, and environmental disputes. "It goes on and on from there," she says. Haldemanjoined AIStwoyearsagoasamediator

in the San Francisco office, and then came to Los Angeles last fall to open the Southern California office.

After earning her J.D. in 1977,she clerkedfor two years in federal district court and then was a litigator, eventually establishing her own firm. But she came to the conclusion in 1984 that "there was something better to be doing than litigating lawsuits"-though she "wasn't exactly sure what that was." She took to the road in her motor home for a year, and landed in Santa Barbara where she "becametotallyhookedontheconceptofmediation."

In some instances her work is a matter of finding a win/win solution for parties who are adversaries but who come to her hoping to find their way out of a lose/lose conclusion to their conflicts. Other times, her mostimportantrole ishelpingpeoplesee reality more clearly. Often, she facilitates the negotiation between parties.

This last function is usually what's required in

personal injury matters. Haldeman ill mediate between the plaintiff (usually repre ented by counsel) and the defense atlorne_ or insurance carrier. "We facilitate the neooliation by assisting thepartiesto come to a realistic evaluation oftheir respective positions. Then w explore options for resolution."

Findingout whatthei sues really are ma sound simpleenough,andit certain!} isessen ial. However. in areas such as cons ruction disputes the issues alltoooften are hidden in a ba,T oe of la11suits.

"Typically, the people move into a condominium development and begin finding defects in the construction, such as leaking plumbing or cracks inthewalls. Thehomeov·ners associationthen will filesuit againstthedeveloper or generalcontractor, whointurnwillfileacross-complaintagainstevery subcontractor. What happens in litigation is that no one really knows what the homeowners are complaining about, and it takes a long time in the normal discovery process to figure out vhat the complaintsare andwhohasresponsibilit .·,

Inmediatingthistypeofsituation, Haldemantries togetintothesceneal anearly stage. Apreliminary meeting is scheduled with all the plaintiffs and defendants. At the meeting, Haldeman encourages the plaintiffs to identify clearly the construction defects. If plumbing is the problem, there's no need for the framing subcontractor to participate in the mediation. Conversely, someone who hasn't been namedyetmay needtobepresent.

Then, talking with each of the defendants, Haldeman helps them to identify the information they need in order to assess their potential liability. A schedule is arranged for the exchange of this information on an informal basis. Once that has happened,asecondmeetingoccursv heretheparties evaluate their positions and look at the options for settlement.

One example is the case of two Orange County families in homes that had been built on landfill and were starting to shov cracks. "In one 12-hour day,witheightpartiespresent, 1 ewereableto work out a settlement of the case that saved five years of litigation and $50,000 to £100,000 per party in attorneys' fees," Haldemanrecalls.

Headingintothecase, allthedefendantsassumed the property owners v anted to be rid of thehouses and that the defendants 1, ould be required to buy them back and resell them on the open market. "WhenItalkedtothehomeo ners,"saysHaldeman, "I realized that was not the only option. They were open to a straight dollar settlement where they would take the money and make the repairs." By

day's end, the homeowners were ecstatic and the defendants were also winners by cutting their losses.

"Mediation makes clear what the real interests of the parties are," observes Haldeman. The key to this process iscommunication.

The truth of this is often strikingly clear in employment cases involving wrongful termination, an area where Haldeman has seen a 95 percent success rate in settlement. What the plaintiff may really want-quite different from the expected damages-will be an apology, a letter of reinstatement,oranewletterofrecommendation. "Weferret this out through mediation, and work out a settlement which otherwise would have been totally unknown."

More often than not, parties at a mediation are represented by an attorney. The most significant savings comes in time and court costs. A party agrees to the resolution only after concluding that it is fair and acceptable, so the individual retains controlovertheoutcomeoftheprocess.

One of the great satisfactions of her work, Haldeman concludes, is seeing people resolve conflicts which otherwise would take years out of their lives. The key, it seems, "is just opening up thelinesofcommunication."

A Better Way To Resolve Life's Hurts

WHEN PEOPLE use litigation as their first rather thanlast resort tosolve conflictsinfamilylaw, the legal process all too frequently takes on a life of its own. The clients end up being hurt not by their spouses or lawyers but by an adversarial process whichrunsoutofcontrol.

The mediationprocess can bringthe same people with the same problems to a careful, controlled resolution which leaves everyone involved better abletogetonwiththeirlives.

Thosearethe observations of Forrest S. (Woody] Masten '72, who speaks from the perspectives of

Forrest S. (Woody) Mosten '72

both litigator and mediator. Half his time at Masten & Wasserstrom as a certified family law specialist is spent in family law litigation but the other half is in mediation.

Masten bases his statements on professional and personal experience. Colleagues know him as a litigator trying to infuse family law with more nonadversarialoptionssuch asthosefoundinmediation.

"As a single dad of a four-year-old daughter, I also understand from a personal nature the importance of families resolving their own disputes," Mosten says.

"When people are angry or afraid, they often get hurt by the adversary process itself. Once the process of litigation gets initiated, it often has a momentum of its own. People who otherwise could work things out at far less cost sometimes unwittingly become involved in court action." This is true, Mosten says, despite the fact that family lawyers are generally settlement-minded.

"In litigation, manydecisionsare madeinthehalls of the courthouse under extreme pressure, after thousands and thousands of dollars havebeen spent in preparation, discovery, hearings on little issues that are very expensive.

"In mediation, the same business needs to get done. Children need parenting. The person who has less money needs support. Property needs to be divided, and debts paid, and tax ramifications considered. It is much like the wind-down of a partnership. Very few of those rush to court. People work it out, imperfectly sometirnew trnd often \,·ith impasses that need to be resolved Ho·..e• er, most people can work it out eventusllr or;ce :hey have the information and the assisla,11.:� to negotiate directly. They can do that in media ion-especially with assistance from cnmpi"£en1 1:1dependent counsel."

Many of the same law.'er adversarial stance in litigation" , ·ho take a tough ion on to a different ..

role when they are involved in private mediation," observes Mosten.

"I always recommend that couples have lav yers at the commencement of the mediation process, so the client will have an independent confidant and advisor-to give support. to ad\ise as to strategy, to become part of the agreement building. When a couple reaches an agreement. it is no surprise to the lawyer who has participated in the process and had a major impact on the ultimate terms. At the end, there is an easier drafting and approval process."

More than 70 percent of Mosten·s mediation clients come on referral from the lawyers handling their cases. For the other 30 percent, couples who come directly, Mosten recommends that they retain counsel.

"The client population that takes advantage of mediation is not much different than the population that engages in litigation," he says, although some variableswillmakemediationinappropriate-cases wheretherehasbeengrossoverreachingorstealing, denial of access to children, extreme abuse, lack of capacity, or such great disparity in experience and sophistication that an informed agreement is unlikely.

Those exceptions constitute a very small percentageofpotentialclients. Mostotherpeopleareprime candidates-even those (perhaps especially those) who are engaged in major hostility. "I have found that in private mediation," Mosten says, "lawyers have more control over the result than in litigation, which is a crapshoot."

Most of the mediation cases handled by Mosten's firm involve high assets. The upper-income professional family turns to mediation after researching theavailablealternatives. "Theyeducatethemselves andaremoreawareofthelackofcontrolthatoccurs in hardball litigation," Mosten says.

Becauselegalfees ingross dollarterms are higher in high asset cases, clients also know that in litigation,feesmay be $50,000 to $200,000orhigher. "If the parties mediate, they still will need to get thesameexperts-accountants, actuaries, andsuch; and they still will have lawyers. But because there isn'ttheadversarialposturingandtheextraordinary time spent, the gross cost of this transaction is significantly less in mediation."

Often a mediation won't reach agreement on all issues, but the issues can be narrowed and a procedure such as private adjudication can be negotiated so that, in Mosten's terms, "people are notcaptiveto thecourtsystem."

Whether his role is litigator or mediator, Mosten

askshisclientsattheoutsettomakeavisittofamily law court and observe the process "to see how little time the stranger who is judge has to deal with the family law problems in front of him or her. While the family law bench is excellent, the demands on it are overwhelming. The couple will have to live with the results."

That brings up another advantage of mediation. "It is a process that can be used down the road. Any family lawyer knows that half of our work comes from post-judgment modifications, implementation of agreements, changes because of remarriage, geographical relocation ar.d changing income." In the mediation model, couples can plan in a preventive way for foreseeable problems; in court, the wholephilosophyis to narrow issues and leave non-urgent problems to future court modification proceedings. Mosten cites research showing that mediation cuts down the frequency of future Iitigation.

Mosten believes lawyers have a duty to inform clients that there is the option of mediation-and some bar committees are exploring methods to encouragelawyers in all fields to advise clients on alternative methods of resolving disputes.

"I have always believed that client-centered decisionmaking isattherootofqualitylawyering," Mosten says. "By the way, I learned that first from Professor David Binder who was my mentor at UCLA. I should say also I had the wonderful experience of learning from Professor Louis M. Brown, the father of preventive law, and the opportunity to co-teach with Professor Carrie Menkel-Meadow whose work on negotiation and mediation is a model for practitioners."

One of his most pressing concerns now is making mediation more accessible to the middle-income family law client. Various bar organizations are workingonthatproblem. Twosuchgroups, chaired byMosten,aretheStateBarCommitteeforDelivery ofServicestoMiddle-IncomePeopleandtheDispute Resolution Committee of the Beverly Hills Bar Association.

"The middle-incomefamilyneedsmediationmore than the upper-income family," Mosten observes. "For a salaried family, ten thousand dollars of legal services can affect their standard of life for years."

For the middle-income couple, says Mosten, "a divorce proceeding may be the only time that the legal system touches their lives. These are life problems, the ability to deal with a divorce and resolve it. We like to think that it is an experience that can even teach people something about how to resolve problems in the future. Mediation can do that."

Robert Jordan: More Than A Full Life

ome people have the good fortune to lead a full life. Then there is UCLA School of Law Professor Robert Jordan who seems to have managed several, while barely breaking a middle age stride.

First came Robert Jordan, corporate lawyer at the ew York firm of White & Case. This begat Robert Jordan, professor at the UCLA School of Law. Enter Robert Jordan, the maverick who sacrifices tenure, that sacred cow of academic security, to spend the next decade growing grapes in the Italian countryside.

Having returned to academic life at UCLA, Jordan is now most notably known as the primary author ofa proposednewarticletothe UniformCommercial Code governing wholesale wire transfers.

Seated in his UCLA office surrounded by the art \ 1ork of his talented wife, Robert Jordan is a modest man. Although cooperative, he expresses doubt about the inherent interest of his work. But plenty of people are very interested in what Robert Jordan has to say. Here's why.

Approximately one trillion dollars a day is transferred by wire within the United States alone.

This far exceeds the volume of money transferred daily by check or other means.

Business and financial institutions account forthe largest volume of wire transfers [known in the industry as wholesale wire transfers). Business institutionsincreasingly are using wire transfers to implement cash management strategies which require a constant circulation of dollars toward the highest yielding source of investment.

Aside from some consumer transactions, the wire transfer of money in the Urrited States remains largelyunregulatedby any co,nprehensivestatutory scheme. Nor is there judicial consensus on the rights and obligations created by wholesale\ ire transfers.

When the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws as:ed. .__,chool of Law Professor and former Dean Bill \,Varren .to act as reporter for a project to update 1 rl,cles 3 [Commercial Paper) and4 [Bank Deposits and Collections) of the Uniform Commercial Code and to write a new Article 4A on wire transfers. Warren agreed to the

Ellen Klugman has written for· the .\e,v York Times and other periodicals. She is a regular contributor to this magazine. ,,

project once he had enlisted Bob Jordan. Since that time, the 1v o hRve acted as joint reporters.

s the work hRs evolved, Jordan has taken on primary responsiblity for Article 4A. Article 4A is a joint project of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and the rnerican La1, Institute (ALI), whichis bestknown fo,, such projects as the Model Penal Code and the Rtis'.Elemenls.

''h's been a privilege to work with such a gifted L ga'. analyst,'' says Warren. "He is certainly one of i.he lop minds in commercial law today."

Tliat's quite ;rn accolade. But then, Bill Warren :-ias had ample lime ,rnd opportunity to develop an asse sment of Jordan's talents. Of all the faculty mernbers al UCLA School of Law, Bill Warren probably bestknows Bob Jordan.

They both joined UCLA's law faculty in 1959 and in the 1960s collaborn.ted as the reporters for the Uniform Consumer Credit Code (UCCC) which sought to pro ide a comprehensive regulation of cons\.lmer credit problems. The UCCC has been adoptedin its entiretyin eleven states andportions of lhe statute werethebasis ofstatutesin anumber of other states.

Jordan and WRrren are also co-authors of casebooks, Commercjaf Law (Foundation Press, first edition 1983; second edition 1987); and Bankruptcy (Foundation Press, firstedition 1985, secondedition to be published in 1989).

Consentinglobethereporterontheproposedfund transfersstatuteknownas "Article4A"hasresulted in three years of thought, refinement, and revision by Jordan.

Interim drafts of the proposed revisions to UCC Articles 3 and 4, as well as 4A, will be considered at the 1989 annual meeting of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, at vvhich time 4A is expected to be adopted. After that, Article 4A will be introduced in all the slate legislaturesof the United Stales.

Intheinterim, draftsoftheproposedstatutehave been circulated to groups like the American Bar Association, the NationalCorporate Cash Management Association, the American Banking Association, theFederalReserveandthe NewYorkClearing House among others, to solicit suggestions and support for the proposed terms.

With so many competing interests at stake, it has not been an easy feat to gel the major players to back the proposed statute, but it appears that there is an emerging r,onsensus of supportfor Article 4A.

''Do you know how difficult il is to meld the

various views of these groups?" asks John Lee, Executive Vice President of the New York Clearing House (an organization of all the operative banks in New York City).

'Tm not sure another person could have done it. Bob is very tactful but he's also forceful when he needstobe. Heneverseemstolosehistemper,which is marvelous because he's had to deal with some people who've lost their temper while dealing with the project," says Lee.

"Bob doesn't try to protect his text; he is willing to seek out views from various quarters on many oftheissuesinthedraftingofthisproposedstatute," Lee adds with admiration. These qualities which Jordan has brought to the drafting of Article 4A havemadeitasuccesssofar,whereotherantecedent attempts to tackle a uniform statute on funds transfershavefailed, he concludes.

BillWarrennotesthatArticle4Aisbeingproposed as the basis for the American position on international fund transfers. A drafting cornmittee under the auspices of the United Nations is currently studying this topic and hopes to propose a model code which will be recommended to various countries of the world for adoption.

While other countries have attempted to tackle the problem as well, none are as far along in the drafting of legislation on funds transfers. "We are the only group in the world that has come up with a statute on how to deal with the problems caused by wire transfers," confirms Jordan.

It is ironic to remember that this is the same Bob Jordan who, not so very long ago, was conr,erned only with issues like the acidity of his wine and the fan belts on a tractor.

Jordan had first become fleetingly acquainted with the Italian r,ountryside while teaching comparative law at University of Pisa as a Fulbright Lecturer in 1967-68. Returned lo UCLA, Jordan servedasthelawsr,hoolassociatecleanfrom1968-69.

Then a biochemist friend from Italy called and the families got together at the Jordans' summer cottage in Ontario Canada. The Jordans found themselves talking nostalgically abouttheirtime in Italy andtheir love of her beautiful countryside.

Jordan asked his friend's father to be on the lookout for a farm in the Pisan countryside. In no time, Jordanresignedfrom UCLA, movedhisfamily to Italy, bought and reno ated a run-down farm, and started a winery.

What did this former law professor from urban Los Angeles know about growing grapes? "You teach yourself," explains Jord,rn, nonchalantly with

a grin, brown eyes shining. "It's like anything else. Youlearnit."

It appears that Jordan learned quickly and well. His farm employed four workers full-time, and crews of part-time workers during harvesting season. The Jordan farm produced a chfanti and a lrebbiano [white wine) which soldlocally.

When their children approached college age, however, the Jordan family returned to the United States andBob Jordan resumed teachjng at UCLA.

Forseveralyears, Jordansplithistimecommuting between Italy and the U.S. during vvinter and summer vacations, vvhile continuing to manage his vineyard. In 1980, the Jordans sold their farm and Jordan returned to full-time teaching.

Whenitcomestodrafting Article 4 Jordan uses the same approach to educate himself about fund transfers ashe didin learning about \\inemaking.

"The difficulty in drafting this kind of statute is youhavetounderstandhow thetransfersaremade. what banks do, and how mistakes occur . Jordan notes. "Bill and I went to a lot of banks and sat in their wire rooms," he recalls. "The vvriting of a statute of this kind is a group effort. The final product represents the views and input of a large number of people from the legal and banking and business community." Jordan emphasizes that "in no way does it represent the product of any single individual."

Although Jordan has made substantial contributionstotheacademicandpracticinglegalcommunity duringhisbusycareer,hehadnotintendedtopursue acareerinlawwhenattendingcollegeat PennState in the mid-1940s. In fact, Jordan started out as an engineeringmajor.Dissatisfiedwiththatcurriculum, he and his roommate put their heads together one night in an effort to come up with an acceptable alternative career.

"We found something wrong with every kind of job except law, and that's only because we had no idea what lawyers did," Jordan chuckles.So Jordan went to Harvard Law School. After a brief stint inthe service, he joined White & Case in New York, and then the UCLA Schoolof Law faculty in 1959 AlthoughJordanbeganteaching courseslikeantitrust,agency,equity [forerunneroftoday'sremedies course) and business associations, he now specializesincommerciallawandbankruptcy.DeanSusan Westerberg Prager remembers being a student in Jordan'sbusinessassociationsclassduringthe 19691970 school year. It was a course she didn't expect to enjoy, Prager admits. But she soon changed her mind.

"He was one of the very best teachers I had at UCLA," sherecalls. "Thecombinationofclarity, the rigor with which he taught, and the enthusiasm in hispresentation all came together sonicely."

ThefactthatJordanspentsixyearsasapracticing attorney also has influenced the way he teaches commercial law and bankruptcy.

"I look at law schools as primarily professional schools designed to prepare people for the practice of law, so I tend to look at the subjects that I teach the waya lawyer wouldlookatthem," he explains.

'Tm basically a lawyer, not a philosopher. There aredifferentwaysofworkingintheacademicworld. I didn't really like practicing law-that's why I left it-but I feel some duty to try to prepare students forwhattheywillneedas practicinglawyers.Ialso teach as I do because that's the way I was trained. That'swhatIthinkI'mbest at."

"So if I teach bankruptcy," Jordan continues, browsknitted, "I tend to be statute oriented, rather than theoretical. I want to make sure the students understand what the rules are, so the students end up having their noses in the statutes a great deal of the time. Many studentsdon'tlike that."

Teachingattheschoolsince1959hasgivenJordan a perspective on the evolution of the school's curriculum.

"I see law schools, including ours, as becoming much more academic and theoretical rather than practice oriented. There has been a proliferation of courses in the curriculum. Many of these courses concern a wide range of public policy issues that are important and interesting to law students, but they may not be the issues that are most important to lawyers in the trenches. The courses reflect the interests oftheprofessorswhoteachthem.Increasingly, law professors are apt to be more like other academics in fields such as philosophy, economics and the social sciences rather than to be like practicinglawyers," he observes.

Jordandoesn'tseemtohaveillusionsofgrandeur. He doesn't think he's an exceptional teacher. Although he is able to identify teaching techniques he wishes he were more adept at, he's also honest enoughtoadmitthathedoesn'tknowhowtoremedy his shortcomings, and prdbably won't be changing hiswaysmuch.

Although the silver in Jordan's hair shows the passing of years, he continues to radiate an easy youth and a quiet vigor. A conversation with him is liberally peppered by his chuckles. He appears to be a man who has mastered contentment while avoiding complacency. D

WithinSightofaVictory

The alumni and friends named in this annual report haYe brought the school tothe threshold of success in our goal to raise $7.5 million by the time the UCLA Can:pa�gn end on December 31. As of l\ovember 1, the tota amount raised exceeded $7 million.

His ea y. particularly in a campaign setting, where ooals. percentages and totals are spoken of, to lose s�ght of the importance of each individual gift. It woulc: be wonciPrful to knovv what brings an alum or riern: af the law school to his or her own decision to nrnize a oift. \\'e hear from time to time of reasons: one honors a fa\·orite law teacher, one wants to help st.::engthen an innovative acadPmic program, one ho:1es to encourage students tavvard excellence. The reasons are as varied as is the base of our support. Graduate who er e in the Alaska State Legislature contnbute. those who have achieved seniority and position in m jor law firms across the nation contribute as do g,raduates embarking on their first years of practice. Those who have retired from the profession or \\·ho h3\e utilized their law backgrounds in the pursuit of business or other goals sustain private giving, and law facult at UCLA as well as graduates vvho teach elsewhere make their own decisions to give resulting in the same resounding support of the

law school.

There is much good news in these pages. The total number of donors has risen to 1686, about 22 percent of all alumni. The school now has received 45 major gifts. The Founders have grown to 236 members. These numbers have real meaning in the life of the school. They are translated into summer stipends (which support faculty research), into transportation for the Moot Court team to national competition, into support of a summer program for a group of diversity students as they enter UCLA, and into support for each of the fine academic areas which have given the school its national distinction.

Every gift contributes not only toward our campaign goal but to the net effect of private giving on the quality of the law school experience. It is because of this positive impact that the law school wants to offer its deep appreciation to all of you who have been so generous during the past year, as well as to extend an invitation to those of you who have not yet participated in this effort. Your reasonfor giving will, by definition, be unique and personal. However, the result of your generosity will be the uniformly crucial support of legal education at UCLA. D

UCLA School of Law Donors, 1987-88

(Fiscal year July 1, 1987 to June 30, 1988)

1952

Pof'tir:ipation. 5U%

J umhur ofDonors: 22

Tora/ Grndualcs: 39

C1!css Rr!present£:ti· c:

Cu:·tis B. .FJannirt

** rlhur Alef

*;,._faurice W. B1·alle Jt.

*i-10\.\ ,ird 0. Culpeppi:1·

****Curtis 3. Oanning

***Jami'!s Fernand:'!s

"Juan Bnuer Pisler

rfbur l.V fuzak

'*"S8ld Crayson

****Arthur N Greenber·g

12

****Richard T. Hanna

****Cerr1ldine S. Hemmerling

**'*Bruce I. Hochman

*Sidney R. Kuperberg

"'**J. Perry Langford

****D0nr1ld C. Lieb

****John Chal'les McCr1rthy

'Frederick E. Mueller

xSallie Tiernan Reynolds

*Mr1rtin J. Schnitzer

*Edwr1rd B. Smith, III

*xjoseph N. Tilem

***'I.ester Ziffren

1953

Participation: 30%

Number ofDonors: 12

Total Graduates: 40

Class Representative: Charles A. Zubieta

Ronald Philip Denitz

***James D. Doggett

**Arthur M. Frankel

*James George

*Jerome H. Goldberg

****Ronald B. Labowe

***Donald C. Lozano

***Frank H. Mefferd

*Dorothy W. Nelson

**Jack M. Sattinger

*C. Douglas Wikle

****Charles A. Zubieta

1954

Participation: 29%

Number ofDonors: 26

Total Graduates: 89

Class Representative: Carl Borunkay

****Leon S. Angvire

**John A. Arguelles

***Carl Boronkay

****Thomas L. Caps

****Seymour Fagan

***Harvey Franklin Grant

***Marvin Gross

*Dennis D. Hayden

****Martin R. Horn

Major Gifts to the Law School

Foundations and Corporations

The Ahmanson Foundation

Matthew Bender & Company, Inc.

The David Bernard Memorial Foundation

The Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation

The Joseph Drown Foundation

IBM Corporation

The J. W. & Ida M. Jameson Foundation

The Milken Family Foundation

The Roth Family Foundation

Individuals

Ethel Balter

Norman Bradley Barker '53

Barbara Boyle '60 and Kevin Boyle

Mr. J. R. Campbell

Stephen Claman '59 and Renee Claman

Hugo D. de Castro '60 and Isabel de Castro

Robert E. Decker '57 and Doroth · Decker

Stanley R. Fimberg '60

William D. Gould '63

Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg

Bernard A. Greenberg '58 and Lenore Greenberg

Barry and Jane Halpern

Geraldine Hemmerling '52 and Clifford Hemmerling

****Marvin Juhas

*Eugene Victor Kapetan

****Gerald Krupp

**Jack Levine

****MartinS. Locket

****Sherwin L. Memel

****Billy Gene Mills

*Gordon Pearce

****Roger C. Pettitt

****Norman A. Rubin

****Donald Allen Ruston

William Harold Simon, Jr.

**Donald S. Simons

*Anne P. Toomer

****Robert F. Waldron

*Eric Weissmann

***Eugene L. Waiver, Jr.

1955

ParUcipalion: 28%

·umber ofDonors: 23

Total Graduates: 82

****John S. B rnes

**Richard B. Castle

****Lee J. Cohen

*lv1yrtle Dankers

**Herbert Z. Ehrmann

John R. Engman

*Jason Gair

****Allan S. Ghitterman

**Irving M. Grantt

****Samuel W. Halper

**Joan Dempsey Klein

Martin Horn '54 and Rita Horn

Marvin Jubas '54 and Fern Jubas

William A. Masterson '58 and Julie C. Masterson

Marsha McLean-Utley '64 and Robert Utley

Josiah L. Neeper '59

Gloria Dee Nimmer

Roger C. Pettitt '54

Mariana R. Pfaelzer '57

David G. Price '60 and Dallas P. Price

Charles E. Rickershauser, Jr. '57

Nelson C. Rising '67

George P. Schiavelli '74 and Holli C. Schiavelli

Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro

Henry Steinman '61 and Nancy Steinman

William W. Vaughn '55

Lawrence D. Williams '63 and Shera J. Williams

Lester Ziffren '52 and Paulette Ziffren and Leonard and Emese Green

Anonymous

Law Firms

Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger

Haight, Dickson, Brown & Bonesteel

Irell & Manella

Morrison & Foerster

****Edward Lasker

*Forrest Latiner

**Gerald E. McCluskey

**Raymond F. Moats, Jr

*E. Allen Nebel

**Bruce I. Rauch

**Richard Schauer

*Harold L. Schmidt

****David Simon

*David W. Slavitt

****William W. Vaughn

****Joseph A. Wein

1956

Participation: 32%

Number ofDonors: 23

Total Graduates: 71

Class Representative: Irwin D. Goldring

****John A. Calfas

***William Cohen

**Richard Erwin Cole

**Harold J. Delevie

****Florentino Garza

*Mervin N. Glow

****Founders

***James H. Chadbourn Fellows

**Dean's Advocates

*Dean's Counsel fDeceased

****Irwin D. Goldring

*Lelia Jabin

**H. Gilbert Jones

**Kenneth E. Kulzick

*Howard N. Lehman

L. Guy Lemaster, Jr.

****BernardL. Lewis

****Milton Louis Miller

****Allen Mink

**Norman D. Rose

arvin D. Rowen

"Thomas R. Sheridan

Harvey A. Sisskind

**Herber\ J. Solomon

***Norman E. Stevens

*'J. Howard Sturman

H. Ceorge Taylor

19,,7

Participation.· 18%

1'/urr:Ljer of Donors: 16

Tot2J Grnduaies: 89

Class RcpresentAtives.

James Acrel

DaI id R. Ghckman

***Jarnes Ar;ret

*Richard D. Agay

**** fathias j. Diederich

**David R. Glickman

*Ephrciim J. Hirsch

****Jean nn Hirnchi

*. larv1n Jabin

**Arth1,r· W. Jones

*"Roy A. Kates

*Rober1 A. Knox

*E eretl ' aguire

**** ,1ariana R. Pfaelzer

****Charles E. Rickcrshauser

**Gloria K S11imer

**Ir ing .. Src;n:e1·

**Wells K. \ ·oh.1\end

1956

Partic.ipa.!Jor:: 35't un?[H:::- ot Dunur:::.: -t4

Total Gmdua/es: 'f 25

Class Re,Hes nl&ti es. Wesle.,· L. 1\·uu n. !II

Jo.f:n G. r,:'l rnore

'"'*\\"a�ren j. Abboli

'*Char!i:s S. e\lthom.e 1·

"Gerald S Bar:on

+-±*-:.;\\-1:Harn Calfas

HD:.1ni::. E C:ci,peniei

*Roland A C11ild!;

***Daniel BLndan Conoun

*•Terrill F Cox

Jules A. 02rras, jr.

***Edmund D. Edelman

**Norman L. Epstein

**Hugh H. Evans

****Bernard D. Fischer

*George J. Fransce!l

****Sanford !vi. Gage

**Mitchell lvl. Gold

****Donald A. Gralla

****Bernard A. Greenberg

*Robert A. Hefner

**Harold J. Hertzberg

*Arthur Karma

****RichardL. Kite

****E. P. Kranitz

*Zad Leavy

*Bernard Lemlech

****Fred L. Leydorf

****Arthur lvlazirow

*Louis Meyers

Henry Barron Niles

***Wesley L. Nutten, III

Alfred B. Ruskin

**Irwin E. Sandler

***Ronald L. Scheinman

****Ralph J Shapiro

\Nilliam D. Shaw

***Peter Shenas

****Lewis H. Silverberg

*Frederick L. Simmons

****Arthur Soll

**Roland R. Speers

****Lester E. Trachman

****John G. Wigmore

**Hunter Wilson

**Robert L. Wilson

1959

Partir:ipalion: 2.1%

Number ofDonors: 24

Total Graduates: 112

Class Representative: RichardN. Ellis

***\!\Tillie R. Barnes

****Stanlon P. Belland

**Stanley Black

'jerry A. Brody

'David Cadwell

'*'"Stepher, E. Claman

'**'Richard l. Ellis

'Leon A. Farley

"'"Da\·id \ . Fleming

*Georue Hall

;.lic!'iael Harris

" bert J. Hillman

•*E2rl \\·. Kavanau

""La,,rence Kritzer

"Et.:gene Leviton

"':.,esLe \\'. Lioht

""Dw·.-:cHerschel Lund

'**Robert Craig i\lc lanigal

H*�\!il•on B. ;,._1iJler !aniey Rogers

*h'Johr: H. Roney

***Bernard S. Shapiro

****Charles S. Vogel

****Paul B. Wells

1960

Participation: 35%

Number ofDonors: 38

Total Graduates: 11O

*Howard S. Block

****Barbara D. Boyle

****Sanford L. Brickner

**!vi. Alan Bunnage

****fohn K. Carmack

*Charles W. Cohen

****MartinCohen

**George W. Collins

**Dale V. Cunningham

*Robert W. D'Angelo

****Hugo D. de Castro

****Stanley R. Fimberg

**Leonard Williams Gibson

'"*VictorE. Gleason

****Albert B. Glickman

Theodore A. Goldberg

***Seymour Goldstein

*Lyman S. Gronemeyer

*Ronald J. Grueskin

**Gary S. Jacobs

****Leonard Kolod

**Gary L. Leary

Rodney Moss

***Bruce H. Newman

*Edwin !vi. Osborne

****David G. Price

*Grant E. Propper

*Amil W. Roth

***Zachary Shimer

***Owen A. Silverman

****Stuart A. Simke

*Doris L. Stern

*H. W. Stoltenberg

Richard William Strong

*Stephen C. Taylor

*Emmett A. Tompkins, Jr.

**Alan R. Watts

****Robert J. Wise

1961

Participation: 25%

Number ofDonors: 31

Total Graduates: 123

Class Representative:

Sheldon G. Bardach

***Karl J. Abert

**Leonard Alexander

***John A. Altschul

****Sheldon G. Bardach

**Richard E. Barnard

Richard H. Bein

**Rir.hardH. Berger

**Gary I. Boren

*Donald Jay Boss

***Arthur Brunwasser

**Ralph Cassady

***Hillel Chodos

***Lee F. Colton

***Gerald S. Davee

**Richard S. Diamond

****Alan N. Halkett

*Alfred R. Keep

Adah H. Larisch

**James Lerman

****Robert F. Lewis

*JohnR. Liebman

****Philip S. !vlagaram

William J. McCourt

*Albert I. Moon

**Robert C. Proctor, Jr.

**Don B. Rolley

****James L. Roper

****Herbert E. Schwartz

****Paul J. Shettler

****Henry J. Steinman

**David A. Ziskrout

1962

Participation: 25%

NumberofDonors: 26

Total Graduates: 106

Class Representative:

David A. Leveton

***James R. Andrews

**Robert Berton

**RoselynBrassell

****LeonardE. Castro

**ErwinH. Diller

****Barry V. Freeman

*Hiroshi Fujisaki

****Rodney C. Hill

****DanielJ. Jaffe

***David Kelton

****Stephen Scott King

*Dudley M. Lang

****David A. Leveton

**StuartMandel

*Luke !vlcKissack

*PaulL. Migdal

***Bernard B. Nebenzahl

Kermit K. Purcell

**Harvey Reichard

**Todd R. Reinstein

****Stewart A. Resnick

**Richard A. Rosenberg

**Howard L. Rosoff

****Henley L. Saltzburg

*FosterTepper

**W. Herbert Young

1963

Participation: 27%

Number ofDonors: 32

Total Graduates: 120

Class Representative: Dean Stern

*MelLewis Albaum

****RichardD. Aldrich

****DonMikeAnthony

*GeneAxelrod

*JohnJ. Bardet

*EliBlumenfeld

****LeeW. Cake

**Thomas Chasin

**FrancesEhrmann

**RobertS. Goldberg

**MarvinG. Goldman

****WilliamD. Gould

**RobertT. Hanger

*WilliamFrederickHevler

*Leon F. Hitch

****DavidR. Hoy

****BernardKatzman

RonaldFranklinKeeler

*BennettKerns

**StephenM. Lachs

****MarshallA. Lewis

*KennethL. Maddy

-'***i'dichael ).i. .:\1urphy

*Alban I. i\iles

**Albert B \;orris

**Kenneth E. Owen

*Arnold G. Rudoff

**Irvin L. epko, itz

**�'K nnelh M. imon

*'*Dean tern

****La renc D. ilhams

*C o frey Philip ong

1964

Participation: 25%

1 umber ofDonors: 30

Total Graduates: 120

Class Representatives: David]. Mac Kenzie

EverettF. l\!feiners

***SandorT. Boxer

***JohnR. Browning

****L. MorrisDennis

***JamesD. Devine

****DanielL. Dintzer

***David). Epstein

**RaymondT. Gail

*HarveyGiss

***DavidGreenberg

*LeonardAnthony Hampel

**RobertHillison

*E. LudlowKeeney, Jr.

****EdwardA. Landry

****DavidJ. MacKenzie

****MarshaMcLean-Utley

***EverettF. Meiners

**JamesL. Nolan

**Jeffrey T. Oberman

DennisA. Page

***JamesN. Ries

***MelvynJayRoss

****RobertM. Ruben

****DavidS. Sperber

JamesL. Spitser

*Fredric P. Sutherland

**LawrenceTeplin

*HenryA. Waxman

**DavidWeiss

*JeremyV. Wisot

**Anonymous

1965

Participation: 30%

Number ofDonors: 52

Total Graduates: 175

Class Representative: Stanley R. Jones

**RonaldW. Anteau

****NormanR. Bard

***LaurieBelger

*HowardL. Berman

****WilliamM. Bitting

*DavidBloomgarden

*FrederickD. Booke

***RobertAlanBroder

****Thomas P. Burke

*KennethM. Byrum

****Founders

***James H. Chadbourn Fellows

**Dean's Advocates

*Dean's Counsel

fDeceased

The Founders

Ir. & lrs. Richard D. ldrich ike

'{a�e Bernstein

fr. · � ,rs. \.'illiam .Vl. Bitting

Lo11'lL C. Blanchard lII

Rob • N Bloc

Bloom :.: De ·om

Barbara Dorman Bo .

John G. Branca c• Family anford B,ickner

Mr. & .trs Roy Vl. Brisbois

kip Brille;iham

D nmsCBr v\n

Rinaldo c Lalla Shanna Brutoco

Thomas P. Burke

Joe & Sandee Burton

John S. B rnes, Jr.

1 !r. & !rs. Lee W. Cake

John . Calfas

\i 'illiam Calfas

l\t!ario Camara

Thomas L. & Sue Caps

John I<. & Shirley Carmack

Leonard E. Castro

Jon F. Chait

Art & Lynn Chenen

*Milford W. Dahl, Jr.

****LucindaS. Dennis

*Jerome Diamond

**Stephen C. Drummy

*WilliamJ. Elfving

**George Castelle Eskin

**Julie Finley

**Joseph Edward Gerbac

**James H. Giffen

**David Jay Golde

Gertrude D. Chern

Stephen Claman

Bruce A. Clemens

Lee J. & Joan F. Cohen

Martin Cohen

Cary D. Cooper

Craig D. Crockwell

Michael A. K. Dan

Mr. & Mrs. Curtis B. Danning

Philip D. Dapeer

In memory of Bernard A. David & Zoltan Lebovits

Steven L. Davis

Mr. & Mrs. Hugo D. de Castro

L. Morris Dennis

Lucinda Dennis

M.J. & Dorothy Diederich

Daniel Leonard Dintzer

The Donald S. Eisenberg Family

Richard N. Ellis

William Elperin

Buddy Epstein

Seymour & Florence E. Fagan

Stanley R. Fimberg

Robert James Finger

B. D. Fischer

Ruth E. Fisher

David W. Fleming

Barry V. Freeman

Douglas K. Freeman

Jack Fried

Ellen B. Friedman

Richard & Susan Fybel

Sanford M. Gage

Bernard R. & Shahin Gans

Gilbert & Sukey Garcetti

Florentino Garza

Allan S. Ghitterman

PaulJ. Glass

Bruce S. Glickfeld

Albert B. Glickman

**Jerold V. Goldstein

****Richard Jay Goldstein

****Robert H. Goon

****Stanley R. Jones

****Martin Z. N. Katz

*Jed L. Kelson

George Raymond Kingsley

*Edward C. Kupers

**Ronald L. Leibow

Clarann & Irwin Goldring

Richard Jay Goldstein

Bob & Diane Goon

William D. Gould

William Graham

Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Gralla

Arthur N. Greenberg

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard A. Greenberg

Alan N. Halkett

Samuel W. Halper

Richard T. Hanna

John Gardner Hayes

John W. Heinemann

Geraldine S. Hemmerling

Rodney C. Hill

Jean Ann Hirschi

Harriet & Bruce Hochman

NathalieHoffman

Paul Gordon Hoffman

Rita & Martin R. Horn

David R. Hoy

Howard A. Jacobs

Daniel J. Jaffe

J. W. & Ida M. Jameson

Foundation

Stanley R. Jones

Michael Stephen Josephson

Marvin & Fern Juhas

Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Kahan

Murray 0. Kane

David S. Karton

Martin Z. N. Katz

Bernard Katzman

James H. Kindel, Jr.

Benjamin E. Kingt

Howard E. King

Stephen Scott King

Richard L. & Iris Kite

Leonard Kolod

Ephraim P. Kranitz

Gerald Krupp

****Saul L. Lessler

**Donald Low

**Melvyn Mason

*V. Gene McDonald

H. Lee McGuire, Jr.

**Lawrence H. Nagler

**Jack Newman

*Robert H. Nida

***Andrea Sheridan Ordin

**Ezekiel Phillip Perla

***Louis P. Petrich

Gary Rand

**Lee A. Rau

*Leonard R. Sager

**Stephen A. Schneider

****Fred Selan

****Daniel I. Simon

**Harold J. Stanton

****E. Paul Tonkovich

**Earl William Warren

Ronald B. & Trana K. Labowe

Thomas P. Lambert

Francis J. Lanak

Edward & Madeleine Landry

Richard & Ruth Lane

Edward Lasker

SaulL. Lessler

Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Levenson

David A. Leveton

Robert S. Lewin

Bernard L. Lewis

Marshall A. Lewis

Robert F. Lewis

Fred L. Leydorf

Donald C. Lieb

Monte E. Livingston

Walt Livingstont & Manna

Livingston

Martin S. Locket

David H. Lund

David J. Mac Kenzie

Philip S. Magaram

Martin & Catherine Majestic

Arthur Mazirow

George R. McCambridge

John C. McCarthy

Brenda Powers McKinsey

Marsha McLean-Utley

Evan & Cheryl Medow

Louis M. Meisinger

Sherwin L. & Iris Memel

Jerold L. Miles

Lowell J. Milken

Jeffrey T. Miller

Milton B. & Corrine B. Miller

Milton Louis Miller

Billy & Rubye Mills

Iris & Allen Mink

Victor Berkey Moheno

Morgan, Wenzel & McNicholas

Allan S. Morton

Jeanne Ziering

****Kenneth Ziffren

****Daniel Zipser

1966

Participation: 18%

Number ofDonors: 37

Total Graduates: 211

Robert M. Moss

Michael M. Murphy

Diane & Mark Neubauer

Gregory Soobong Paik

Mary Flynn Palley

Richard G. Parker

Don Parris

John & Rebecca Petrovich

Mr. & Mrs. Roger C. Pettitt

Mariana R. Pfaelzer

James Martin Prager

Susan Westerberg Prager

David Glyn Price

Stanley M. Price

Barnet & Linda Reitner

Stewart Resnick

Ste\ en J. Revitz

Charles E. Rickershauser, Jr.

\'.elson C. Rising

John H. Roney

James L. Roper

\!arguerite S. Rosenfeld

Leonard M. Ross

Sharon Fesler Rubalcava

Robert [ !. Ruben

Echrnrd & . ancy Rubin

Laurence D. Rubin & Elizabeth A. Cheadle

Norman Rubin

Donald Ruston

r. c . !rs. \ !illiam A. Rutter

David S. Sabih

r-lr. & \1lrs. Henley Saltzburg

Richard Sandler

rnold Schlesinger

Herb & Y onne Schwartz

Freel Selan

Robert S. Shahin

Judith Salkow Shapiro

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Shapiro

Paul & Barbara Shettler

Lewis H. Silverberg

Class Representative:

James H. Karp

***Stephen W. Bershad

**Robert B. Burke

****GertrudeD. Chern

*Kenneth I. Clayman

**Roger L. Cossack

Bruce G. Daniels

*Howard L. Ekerling

Stuart A. Simke

Daniel I. Simon

David Simon '55

Kenneth M. Simon

Ronald P. & Donna Slates

In memory of Matthew H. Small

Wayne W. Smith

Arthur Soll

John R. Sommer

Bruce H. Spector

Art Spence

David S. Sperber

Henry Steinman

Richard R. & Phoebe J. Stenton

Richard J. Stone

William F. & Joanne M. Sullivan

Lawrence C. Tistaert

E. Paul Tonkovich

Lester E. Trachman

Barry Winyett Tyerman

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Udko

David E. Van Iderstine

William W. Vaughn

Charles S. Vogel

Reed S. Waddell

Michael Waldorf

Robert F. Waldron

Cynthia & Kirk Wallace

Joseph A. Wein

Paul B. Wells

John H. Weston

John Grant Wigmore

Lawrence & Shera Williams

Robert J. Wise

Charles E. Young

Kenneth Ziffren

Lester Ziffren

Daniel Zipser

Charles A. Zubieta

*Stephen P. Feldman

*Wilford D. Godbold, Jr.

*Robert H. Goldstein

**Joseph G. Gorman, Jr.

**Robert J. Higa

***DennisD. Hill

**James H. Karp

**Robert F. Katz

*David Joseph LaFaille

**Barry H. Lawrence

Arnold Lester

**Arthur S. Levine

*Howard E. Lowe

****Jerold Lane Miles

*Richard H. Millard

*Stephen K. Miller

*William G. Morrissey

*Alan C. Oberstein

*Jerry M. Patterson

Albert U. Prager

*Donald R Price

****Stanley M. Price

**Rosalie L Rakoff

*David I. Riemer

*Frances Rolhschild

*Barr Russell

*Harold E. Shabo

**Joseph L. halanl

*Roger Lawrence L. tanton

*Robert J uIiivan

1967

Participaiion: 26%

umber of.Donors: 66

Total Graduates: 253

Class Represenlalive: 1ichael \'.'aldorf

**Donald Robert Allen

Arthur A ·azian

***Robert B. Axel

*Abraham W. Bailv

*Da •id Joseph Ber�rdo

*" . Iichael Berk

Peter W Blackman

� Kenneth R. Blumer

h*Harland .1. Braun

*Philip lichael Brown

*]a. S. Bulmash

*Daniel \1. Caine

****Cal' . D Cooper

*Leslie Falick

Lawrence H Fein

"**Jon J. Gallo

*'**Gilbert!. Garcelti

*'Eugene M Genson

*Alan 13 Haber

**'"*John Gardner Hayes

'*Lynaed C Hinojosa

**David 1. Horwitz

*Mark Jvener

* I.� 1chael Johnso11

**** Jichael S Josephson

*David L. Kerrigan

**Richard . Kipper

*JeHrey Lake

****Richard A. Lane

*Jeffrey t. Linden

**** 1artin :". lajestic

•lichael t,farcus

**Stefan i\L lason

'***Evan R., ledo ,.

****Louis 1. �ieisinger

** heldon ,\Jichaels

**..*Jeffre.' T. iiller

..Sheldon E. ;1.fiJler

**� iilton J. \Jenne_

** Elliott D Olson

Jon Pierre Paradis

***\/illiam E. Pa erson

**Sleveu Perren

Jason C. Reed

**'*Nelson C Rising

18

*Bernard Rosen

*John R. Schilling

Edwin Schreiber

**Kenneth L. Schreiber

Dennis J.Seider

**Gerald D. Shoaf

Hortense Kleitman

Snower

****Bruce H. Spector

**John C. Spence, III.

***Cary D. Stabile

****Richard R. Stenton

****Lawrence C. Tistaert

**'Franklin Tom

"***Richard Wayne Udko

**Leonard D. Venger

****Michael Waldorf

*'Thomas E. Warriner

Robert A. Weeks

John 1. \i\/ilcox

·Franklin R. Wurtzel

'"iV!e!vin Ziontz

1968

Participation: 27%

·umber ofDonors: 50

Total Graduates: 184

Class Representative: PaulJ. Class

Eugene ac Amos

Steven A. Becker

*T. Knox Bell

*'Lai -rence E. Biegel

Terry H. Breen

"*Bradley W. Brunon

**Robert C. Colton

'*''Craig D. Crockwell

Richard Devirian

**\llichael G. Dib

*·Audrey Bronson Ezratty

*Barr A. Fisher

"David B. Geerdes

*''*Paul J Class

'Earle Cary Goodman

*Lo·.veH Graham

'"Robert F. Harris

"'Robe,'I \:. Harris

Charles F. Ha kins

�-�John\\. Heinemann

David B Johnson

·Stephen C Jones

''Richard H. Kirschner

Ban-,· R. Komsky

'Jerold A. Krieger

**..Francis J Lanak

Pau: \! \lahone

'"Thomas \lichael aney

*James B. !-lerzon

"Dame!,-\ \tiller

•*'·.Allan \llorton

*Ronald E. '.\euhoff

*jot!! Ohlgren

..._*Prentice L. O'Leary

Stuart L. Olster

****Don G. Parris

**Robert L. Rentto

*Terry L. Rhodes

*Richard M. Roberg

**Gordon J. Rose

****Leonard M. Ross

Robert E. Shannon

****Ronald P. Slates

*Douglas E. Stephenson

*Robert B. Treister

Robert Z. Walker

Ivan Weinberg

*Robert Bruce Werner

*Evan G. Williams

*Richard G. Wise

1969

Participation: 23%

Number ofDonors: 44

Total Graduates: 189

Class Representatives:

Michael A. K. Dan

John H. Weston

*Sara Adler

***Michael E. Alpert

Terry Amdur

****F. Keenan Behrle

*Walter L. Blackwell III

*Stephen M. Burgin

**David A. Buxbaum

David Alan Clare

****Michael A. K. Dan

**Kenneth Drexler

**William Finestone

*Jerald Friedman

**Jan C. Gabrielson

**Michael L. Glickfeld

**Raymond H. Goldstone

*Allen M. Gruber

**Diana Woodward Hagle

**Dennis M. Hauser

***Ragna Olausen Henrichs

****Robert L. Kahan

*Gilbert Katen

*Rowan K. Klein

Allan I. Kleinkopf

**Alan H. Lazar

*Elwood Lui

***Michael T. Masin

**Kenneth Meyer

*Richard A. Neumeyer

Gene L. Osofsky

Sally Phillips Pasette

*William M. Pate, Jr.

*Charles G. Rigg

*Toby J. Rothschild

****Roher! S. Shahin

*Michael T. Shannon

**Lionel S. Sobel

****Arthur G. Spence

**Donald J. Stearns

**James F. Stiven

***Diana L. Walker

*Gary Thomas Walker

*Sheldon J.Weisel

****John H. Weston

*Cameron R. Williams

1970

Participation: 22%

Number ofDonors: 40

Total Graduates: 183

Class Representatives:

Terry W. Bird

MarcJ. Poster

***Terry W. Bird

****Skip Brittenham

****Dennis Clinton Brown

*Nicholas Budd

**William H. Burford

****Arthur R. Chenen

***Richard Andrew Corleto

**Richard J. Davis, Jr.

****Steven L. Davis

*Michael M. Duffey

George W. Echan, Jr.

***Gary A. Freedman

****Douglas K. Freeman

****Ellen B. Friedman

*Laura L. Glickman

Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.

*L. Glenn Hardie

*Bruce S. Herwig

*Steven R. Hubert

*Linda S. Hume

*John B. Jakie

****Murray 0. Kane

**William J. Kelleher

*Herbert Jay Klein

***Brian C. Leck

Mark Levin

*Perry E. Maguire

**William McCallister, Jr.

**Robert J. McKay

*Harvey Jay Migdal

**Robert Y. Nakagawa

*David A. Ogden

*Marc J. Poster

****Barnet Reitner

****Arnold Schlesinger

***Scott Jay Spolin

****Richard J. Stone

**Louis D. Victorino

*Wallace L. Walker

Rolf Wheeler

1971

Participation: 26%

Number ofDonors: 71

Total Graduates: 269

Class Representative:

DavidJ. "foe"Burton

*Richard L. Ackerman

*Susan Ellis Amerson

*Shunji Asari

*Dayle L. Bailey

**PaulL.Basile, Jr.

**Theodora Berger

Robert G.Blank

*Warren N.Brakensiek

**Cruger L. Bright

**John ClarkBrown, Jr.

****Rinaldo S. Brutoco

****David J. "Joe" Burton

Judith K. Bush

Wayne S. Canterbury

*Jan Chatten-Brown

***Curtis A. Cole

Mary Jo Curwen

**Allan Cutrow

*FrankJ. DaVanzo

*Allen Fleishman

*Judy Fonda

***Steven Alan Friedman

***Judy A. Fry

****Richard D.Fybel

*RonaldGastelum

**RichardGilchrist

WallaceHull Griffith

**Peter L. Grosslight

**MarcHallert

**Richard W. Havel

**RogerH. Howard

**Marvin L. Isaacson

Thomas B. Karp

****David S. Karton

**James L. Keane

****Thomas P. Lambert

**James W. Lundquist

*Robert P. Mandel

***S. Jerome Mandel

**Jon M. Mayeda

*Michael A. McAndrews

**James B.Mehalick

**Paul S. Meyer

**Marshall G. Mintz

**Richard J. Morgan

****Robert M. Moss

Charles D. Nabarrete

**J. Robert Nelson

Gary Neustadter

*Paul C. Nyquist

**Glenn K. Osajima

***Michael A. Ozurovich

*Ann Parade

**Richard T. Peters

*Steven R. Pingel

****James MartinPrager

****SusanWesterberg

Prager

Richard G. Ritchie

****LaurenceD. Rubin

*Thomas M. Scheerer

George L.Schraer

****Barry W. Tyerman

**Daniel Weber

**Earl M. Weitzman

***Ronald Charles Wilcox

*David B. Wilshin

***David E. \load

**Robert H. Wyman

+*Michael F. Yamamoto

*Stuart D. Zimring

*Douglas B. Zubrin

1972

ParlidpaUon· 17%

\umber of Donor : 47

TotalGcaduales: 283

Cla s Represenlali·.1es.

Curlis 0. Barnes

Howard i' J. Kn e

:.lichael J f..bbotl

*"**Cur'is 0. Barnes

,.George James Barron

hRonald :- t. Ba :er

"Richard .:>, Bl�clter

"*Bob .. Bo, ·ers, Jr.

•:\.lartin J. Brill

*..�Ro,· :-.'.orse Brisbois

Robert T Burke

�william Clevland Clifton

**"*Philip D. Dapeer

*Bruce B. Dennison

**++William Slperm

**Pete:· Q. Ezzell

***Dehorah R Calze

****Bruce� Glick[eld

**Roy Cl1c man

**James Goodman

**James Kashian

*Andr ,.v E. Katz

*Ho1 ard \1 . 'nee

**Joseph Kornwasser

*Bruce },iorris Kramer

**Ho1 ard D. Krepack

!van Lawner

**Ca,· B. Lerman

Dora Levrn

****Robert amue! Lewin

**Sta,1ley t,. �faron

'Scoll

I\!cTntyr_

**John P 1'[ ck

***Louis R ' kip" Milter

*Farr sl •. \ osten

"Roberl M. Popeney

*Mark Ian Resnik

**Linda Riback

**Marc M. Seltzer

**** Va ne \V. Smith

William D. Smith

**William J. Smith

**Leland Alan Stark

**Donald K. Steffen

*Patricia Sturdevant

**Thomas C. Taylor, Jr.

*Richard T. Vogel, Jr.

**James R. Walther

**Ronald G. Zamarin

1973

Participation: 22%

NumberofDonors: 64

To/al Graduates: 292

ClassRepresentatives: BernardR. Gans

Thomas Gutierrez

*Jonathan Airey

**Martin Eliot Auerbach

***Robert D.Ayres

****Donald P.Baker

*Henry S. Barbosa

**David L. Beaugureau

**Dennis S. Beck

*Diane Becker

***Arthur Paul Berg

**Robert Berke

***S. J. Bird

*Randolph M.Blotky

**Timothy Born

"*Gail Frommer Brod

Joel Mark Butler

Pauline Calkin

"***Mario Camara

Steven W. Cobb

Roger P. Crouthamel

"David T. DiBiase

*Joshua Dressler

**Kenneth P.Eggers

*"*Alexander Furlotti

'*'*Bernard R. Gans

"David Howard Gersh

*James Goldman

**** illiam W. Graham

*William Kenneth Hayes

***Joe W. Hilberman

****Nathalie R. Hoffman

*Craig S. Kamansky

**Richard J.Kaplan

**Larry Alan Kay

JohnJ.King

**Abraham D. Lev

*Steven Edward Levy

**Robert F. Marshall

*Laura Kathleen McAvoy

****GeorgeR.McCambridge

***John D.Merrill

*Philip Michels

****Lowell J. Milken

*Douglas C. Neilsson

Richard J.Nuanes

R. Thomas Peterson

Theresa Joan Player

Kenneth Ross

***Ronald W. Rouse

****David S. Sabih

****Richard Victor Sandler

James K. Schultze

**Stacy D.Sharlin

*Carl Shusterman

*Paul L. Stanton

**Kathryne Ann Stoltz

**MichaelR. Sullivan

**Jeffrey E.Sultan

Alan P. Thomas

*Jonathan K. Van Patten

****L.KirkWallace

*Gary A.Wexler

*James F. Wilson, III

**Howie Wollitz

*Marilyn Yarbrough

1974

Participation: 17%

NumberofDonors: 53

Total Graduates: 304

ClassRepresentatives: PaulDouglasBeechen

MarcEpstein

****Julian W. Bailey, Jr.

*William L. Battles

**Paul Douglas Beechen

*Kenneth A. Black

***WilliamH.Borthwick

**Peter C. Bronson

*Jeffery J. Carlson

**Susan Bush Carnahan

Dale A. Chan

****Bruce A.Clemens

***AllanB. Cooper

*R.Stephen Doan

**Michael F. Eng

****BuddyH. Epstein

***MarcEpstein

Gary A. Feess

James L.Foorman

****Jack Fried

***Daniel P. Garcia

*Ezequiel Gutierrez, Jr.

*Barbara A.Hindin

**Rex S. Hungerford, Jr.

**Bruce Kaplan

*Robert S. Kirschenbaum

*Jonathan Klar

*StephenW. Kramer

***Andrew A. Kurz

Robert D. Links

**Ethan Lipsig

**Evan S. Lipstein

Charles L. McKain

Patrick D. McNeal

***Daniel C. Minteer

*Mark H. Mitchell

*Phillip G. Nichols

J. Thomas Oldham

*Daniel C. Padnick

****RichardG. Parker

**Cornell J. Price

****Founders

***James H. Chadbourn Fellows

**Dean's Advocates

*Dean's Counsel

fDeceased

**William C. Rawson, Jr.

****Steven J. Revitz

S. Alan Rosen

Jr1mes J. Rucker

Donald P. Silver

***Daphne Stegman

*Elizabeth Ann Strauss

***Mark A. Treadwell

David H. hite

*Ste en D. \ 'iener

*Jr1sper Vilhams, Jr·

*Willia·n L. Wir.slu\1

**r\l!arc J. \ inthrop

*Richard P. Yang

l975

Pa;-/idpalion: 2.'.1%

1\',.mbe1 ofDonors: Hi

Tota} <>aduates: .1.1i

Class Represeniafix·es:

fasPs LPho,•ils

Brenda Po•.nc:s

. l[cKinsey

Harvey Shapiro

Linda Anisman

*Mel Aranoff

***James D. C. Barrall

Frederick B. Benson

*Richard Besone

·ictoria L. Block

****John C. Branca

"Parmda Brockie

'James R. Brueggemann

*'"\1lirhael J. Budz, n Douglus tv!. Bussey

"*"Jun r. Chait

**Garv A. Clark

Ecin;uncl \ Clarke. Jr.

*Thomas Cohen

"*Shinlev R. Coleile

'Roben · a F. Coltun

"Roberi D. Cunmngham

••**Debor;ch nn David

·B ·ta..e L Dusenberry

�·**Dondd te1en Eisenberg

*"Pa,!1 L. Cale

Robert GaITett

'John B Cnlper

dRohr:rt A Green

*..\nlrw.1 J Cuilford

**John William Hagey

*Michael Halpern

***Michael J. Harrington

Susan T. House

*Evelyn Halderman Hutt

*Larry G. Ivanjack

*Gail D. Kass

*Robert Kaufman

Brian Keefe

**Alex Kozinski

*Robert M. Kunstadt

****Moses Lebovits

*Jan Greenberg Levine

**Margaret Levy

**Romulo I. Lopez

**Karen D. Mack

**Gary W. Maeder

*Craig K. Martin

****Brenda Powers

McKinsey

**Allen Lee Michel

*Gary Q. Michel

**Alan M. Mirman

***Grace Nakao Mitsuhata

*Barbara M. Motz

**Norman A. Pedersen

Richard J. Pekin, Jr.

*David Pettit

***Charles Churchill Read

**Leland J. Reicher

**Robert E. Rich

**Julia J. Rider

Lawrence S. Ross

*Irwin B. Rothschild, III

Rolland S. Roup

****Sharon Fesler Rubalcava

Thomas G. Ryan

**William Waite Sampson

*Barry E. Shanley

**Harvey Shapiro

*David Simon

**Virginia E. Sloan

*Marc I. Steinberg

**Marjorie Scott Steinberg

*Thomas Channing

Tankersley

*Seth Tievsky

**Mark L. Waldman

*Glenn F. Wasserman

*Myles T. Yamamoto

*Young Youhne

*Robert lvl. Zeller

1976

Participation: 23%

Number ofDonors: 69

Total Graduates: 297

Class Representative: Wilma Williams Pinder

'Patricia Elizabeth Anderson

-Lourdes G. Baird

Bruce A. Barsook

- -Elizabeth Ebey Benes

fredric I. Bernstein

-Maribeth Armstrong Borthwick

*Irene Maharam Bovd

**William D. Claster­

**Linda Calkins Diamond

**Richard Kenneth Diamond

*Clyde T. Doheney

***David Clarence Dovle

*Steven Gary Drapkin

Dennis M. Elber

Thomas S. Epstein

*William Fahey

*Gregory Curtis Fant

Janice Feinstein

*David R. Ginsburg

*Catherine Hanan

**Marilyn S. Heise

Alpha Hernandez

****Paul Gordon Hoffman

Creighton C. Horton, II

*Frederik A. Jacobsen

*Gloria Roa Josepher

Frances Wender Kandel

**Richard J. Kalz

*DianeL. Kimberlin

Kenneth M. Kumor

Adrienne Elizabeth Larkin

**John Anthony Lawrence

Beth L. Levine

James M. Lowy

*Cheryl Lutz

Valerie J. Merritt

****Victor B. Moheno

Gay Lynne Natho

****Mark Neubauer

Robert A. Pallemon

*Gordon M. Park

***Peter Paterno

*Kenneth M. Phillips

**Wilma Williams Pinder

**Leonora G. Poe

**Karen Randall

**Anne B. Roberts

Charles H. Rosenblatt

****Marguerite Skiles

Rosenfeld

***Terry A. Rowland

Michael A. Rubel

*Stephanie Rose Scher

**Richard Schneider

*Robert Z. Seligman

****Judith Salkow Shapiro

Harmon Sieff

***John P. Simon

**Marc R. Stein

HS\e\ienn.Suns\\'rne

Bonnie E. Thomson

Eugene Tillman

James J. Tomkovicz

Joseph D. Tuchmayer

*Larry Walker

**Judith Welch Wegner

**Caryl Bartelman Welborn

**Anita Yallowitz Wolman

**Philip J. Wolman

***Dorothy Wolpert

1977

Participation: 20%

Number ofDonors: 64

Total Graduates: 317

Class Representati1·e:

Thomas A. Kirschbaum

Paul Babwin

**Marilyn Barrett

**Francis J. Baum

**Alan G. Benjamin

**Gregory E. Breen

**RochelleBro11·ne

**Carolyn Hopkins Carlburg

*William C. Conkle

Charles E. Curtis

*Gary A. David

*Steven S. Da\·is

Michael S. Dorm,ird

*Kathleen H. Drummv

*Dhiya El-Saden

Teresa Estrada-\!ullaney

**David \V. £\·ans

**Ed11·in F. Feo

*Sharon E. Flanagan

Marlin A. Flannes

*Marcia A. Forsyth

*Kenneth J. Fransen

*Lana Freistat

Joseph l\l. Gensheimer

**Larrv Gilbert

**Paui"E. 8. Glad

*Richard GomezHernandez

***Stephen D. Greenberg

*Bruce M. Hale

**Peter J. Hanlon

*Suzanne Harris

Jill Ishida

Mark Elliot Kalmansohn

**Annette Keller

****Howard E. King

***Thomas A. Kirschbaum

Deborah L. Kranze

*Joseph Kruth

*David P. Leonard

***Lucinda A. Low

**Roger A. Luebs

Hall R. Marston

*Antonia E. Martin

*1cima, 1.Mascin

*Mark D. Michael

*Robert Jay Moore

Donald V. Morano

***Wendy Munger

*Stephen T. Newman

***John E. Pope

***Andre Martin Reiman

**Neil J. Rubenstein

Frederick B. Sainick

*Susan Potter Shanley

**Charles Shephard

*Wayne Allen Siggard

***Gail \1. Singer

*Daniel H. Slate

Carolyn Small

**Mark W. Snauffer

*d*William F. Sullivan

**Marcy J. K. Tiffany

*Debra M. Van Alstyne

**Jonathan R. Yarowsky

***Scott Zimmermann

1978

PRrticipation: 23%

J\umber ofDonors: 70

Total Graduates: 306

Class Representatives: j2mes R. Asperger

Robert N. Block

**1 ·ancy R. Alpert

*James R. Asperger

Judith Bailey

*'Linda D. Bardsley

**Denise M. Beaudry

**Jeffrey S. Benice

****Robert N. Block

***Michael D. Briggs

***Carol "Cappy" Platt

Cagan

*William J. Caplan

**Carol A. Chase

***Hilary Huebsch Cohen

***Melanie Cook

Barrington A. S. Daltrey

*Robert M. Dawson

**David Deutsch

Donn DiMichele

Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.

*David G. Epstein

**David F. Faustman

*Michael D. Fernhoff

*Richard D. Freer

*David J. Garibaldi, III

**Wayne H. Gilbert

*Miriam J. Colbert

**Karin Greenfield-Sanders

**Lorna C. Greenhill

*Madison Grose

**Joseph F. Hart

**Susan J. Hazard

**Daniel C. Hedigan

Ko.n'.nL H.o\hda:1Hancock

**John Philip Howitt

*Marlene Butcher Jones

**Dean J. Kitchens

**Ann Kough

Mark A. Kuller

**Linda M. Lasley

*Linda Kay Lefkowitz

**Frances E. Lossing

*Karen Magid

**Christopher J. Martin

**M. Brian McMahon

*Vernon T. Meador, III

***Helen Melman

*Edmundo J. Moran

**David F. Morrison

*Janet StantonMurillo

**Jean Pierre Nogues

***MichaelNorris

**Donald P. Paskewitz

Cynthia Podren

*Lisa Greer Quateman

*Barbara WeitzmanRavitz

Kneave Riggall

*Michael A. Robbins

*Marietta S. Robinson

*Kay E. Rusland

**Paul S. Rutter

*Sarah Eliot Schnitger

*David I. Schulman

Steven Shuman

**Elaine Stangland

***Kathy T. Wales

*David M. Weber

**Barry M. Weisz

**Timothy J. White

**Gwen H. Whitson

Arlene Falk Withers

*Robin Anne Wright

1979

Participation: 19%

Number ofDonors: 53

Total Graduates: 281

Class Representatives:

RichardJ. Burdge, Jr.

Roberta Kass

Bruce D. May

****Founders

***James H. Chadbourn Fellows

**Dean's Advocates

*Dean's Counsel

tDeceased

*Wayne Alvarez

*Charlotte I. shmun

*Michael Barclay

*Judy S. Bardugo

*Aviva Bergman

*Alan F. Broidy

*Harmon A. Brown

**Richard j Burdge, Jr.

**\![ark R Burrill

*John Louis Carlton

!Ian E. Ceran

* uzeHe C.over

'\Hchael D. Dozier

"John P Eleazarfan

*Doug!2s B. Finlayson

*\'lark\\'. Flor

*James D. Friedman

Linda Cach Ray

lbert Steven Glenn

'Marlene D. Goodfried

*Joel M. Crossman

"Spencer L. Karpf

''Roberta Kass

Wilham Klibanow

*'Kathryn S. Krause

*Joel D. Kuperberg

*'Chui Kwak

*Roger Lautzenhiser, Jr.

**Gail Lees

*Lydia Sue Levin

*Rochelle Marie Lindsey

*Roxanne Lippe]

***JenniferL. Machlin

***Bruce D. May

**James A. Melman

*Timm Andrew Miller

**David S. Neiger

***Andre1N S. Pauly

*Bernard I. Resser

Gilbert Rodriguez

Michael William Schoenleber

1 lark Shipow

Sandra B. Stern

"*Gary St1ffelman

*Lo1\ell \ . Tatkrn

**Kim M. \\'ardla,;:

*'Geraldine Wjle arner

*Rober Ww-:man

Henry �. \' insloc.·

'Sandra [ ).\ eishar!

*"Elizabeth \'eale \'.'inthrop

'David Olson· \'right

Anonymous

1980

Panicipafion: 28

'.\Lmbe�o( Donors: 86

Total Gradua:es: 310

Clas- Represer:iaU·.·es:

Laurence. far/in B r;nan

Lonnie C. Blanchard lli

Laurie Lou Le1·enson

Roy \\'alter Adams, Jr.

.\ a:-:cy L. Anderson

ja:ie Ao 1ama-Martin

··Wm Jeffre; Austin

'Robert Barnes

n nn 0. Baskins

'Harriet Leva Beegun

*. nne Stern Berkovitz

""Laurence MarlinBerman

Andrew Paige Bernstein

\'eila Bernstein

*'*'Lonnie C. Blanchard Iii

**Becky L. Burnham

Estelle Cynthia Chun

**Leslie A. Cohen

*Patricia C. Craig

*Rita Eidson De Boer

*William D. De Grandis

Adelia DeMiranda

*Peter Dion Kindem

*Margaret R. Dollbaum

Dale A. Drozd

James R. Dwyer

****Robert J. Finger

*Alan H. Finkel

****Ruth E. Fisher

*Richard C. Fridell

*Eric Georgatos

Wilbur Gin

Robert D. Goldschein

*Gordon Goldsmith

*Bruce Alan Gothelf

**Herbert Graham

Mark S. Green

**Feris M. Greenberger

*Eric J. Hamermesh

*Debra Hodgson

**Harold C. Hofer

**Laurence Hummer

*Marc W. June

Thomas W. Kellerman

*Kathleen Koch-Weser

Dennis J. Landin

**William Ascher Lappen

*Da ·id A. Lash

JoannLeatherby

Robert T. Lemen

**-LaurieLouLevenson

*Erik R. Lied

--r. SigmundLuther

--·feffrev D. 1 !asters

'Charles D. Meyer

-Ronald\!. Monitz

--.\iec C. i\edelman

"Linda ..\. \!etzer

'\!onica Olson

-·scO!t Paisle

··"\!ary Flynn Palley

-'--Jo'rn George Petrovich

·-Da'. 1d 5. Porter

jJd� ..\. Quan

Ka h!een Hogaboom

Quisenberry

C:-aP G. Riemer

·Todc C. Rinostad

**Daniel Rodriguez

***Leslie Brooks Rosen

Giacomo A. Russo

**Catherine Gibbons

Sabatini

*Millicent N. Sanchez

Irvin W. Sandman

*Stephen Lewis Schirle

*Paul Schmidhauser

Carol Regina Schultz

John A. Seethoff

*Jacob N. Segura

**Peter S. Selvin

*Stuart H. Sobel

**Richard B. Stagg

Susan Jacoby Stern

***Morris L. Thomas

*David F. Tilles

***Michael Van Eckhardt

Anita R. Van Petten

**William R. Warhurst

Carol Cavan Williams

Anonymous 1981

Participation: 22%

Number ofDonors: 74

Total Graduates: 338

Class Representatives:

Regina Covitt

Michael R. Harris

Jean M. Alexander

Marc D. Alexander

*Jan Almquist

*David B. Babbe

Mark Barnes

*John H. Bay

***Kenneth S. Bayer

Susan J. Bell

Jeffrey M. Berke

Catherine Jean Campbell

Paul V. Castellito

****Elizabeth A. Cheadle

*Cornell Chulay

*Pamela Cochran

**Regina Covitt

Judith Kessen Crawford

*John Whitman Crittenden

*Leianne Sexton

Crittenden

Walter R. Dahl

*Julie Anne Davies

*Gregory S. Drake

*Eric J. Emanuel

Patricia Feiner

Michael J. Finkle

*Jean E. Gold Friedman

Andrew S. Gelb

Paul Anthony Graziano

**James I. Ham

**MichaelR. Harris

**JulieHeldman

**JonathanM. Hoff

**ChrisS. Jacobsen

**RichardW. Kaiser

WilliamJ. Kirsch

*Adam H. Kurland

Edwin Ira Lasman

*Shelley Ellen Levine

Karen Lewthwaite

*Karen Matteson

**Carol Laurene Mayall

*Susan Fowler McNally

***Julie S. Mebane

David M. Meyer

AngelaA. Mickelson

*Deborah Mitzenmacher

*Lynn Naliboff

*Jeffrey Lynn Oliphant

*Robert B. Orgel

*John Stephen Peterson

*Stephen J. Rawson

Clark W. Rivera

*Martin Rosen

*Marcy S. Rosenblum

***Rick F. Runkel

Lin Saberski

Scott B. Samsky

Craig Sapin

Jerrold Schrotenboer

*Patricia Ann Shepherd

*Rensselaer j. Smith, IV

Michelle Smith-Pontell

**Jed E. Solomon

**William C. Staley

***Kenneth J. Stipanov

Bruce G. Thompson

*Charles R. Tremper

William L. Twomey

*Judith Ann H. UherbelaL

**Marilee Carol Unruh

*Joan E. Vogel

Lynn Yoshie Wakatsuki

**Peter C. Walsh

*Hoyt H. Zia

Lorence M. Zimtbaum

1982

Participation: 20%

Number ofDonors: 68

Total Graduates: 335

Class Representatives:

Steven C. Glickman

David E. Van Jderstine

***David A. Ackert

*Henry Beck

*Henry Ben-Zvi

**Kent S. Beyer

Thomas A. Bliss

*Ilene Evans Brubaker

*Patrick J. Cain

*George Kris Cassity

***Susan L. Claman

Joan M. Clover

Biana Colton

John M. Dab

*Leah Fischer

Class Representative:

Michael A. Helfant

***H. Deane Wong

*Michael Yaffa

*Samuel Fischer Anonymous

*Jessica K. Frazier

*James A. Friedberg

*Mark J. Fucile

*Rick J. George

*Nori Gerardo

***Steven C. Glickman

Thomas C. Agoston

Ronald A.Baker

Nanc ·A.Baldwin

**Nicholas E. Benes

*Geoffrev A. Berkin

Kristin;Blackwood

Murray J. Goldenhersh 1 !ichaelBroderick

Barry L. Goldner

Teresa LeLouis Goldner

Ellen Gorman

***Richard J. Gruber

***Donna R. Hecht

Kathryn Hendley

*Bryan 0. Hull

Debra Kegel

*Ira Kharasch

**Charles K. Knight

*William Kerry Knowles

***Karin T. Krogius

Laura Landesman

Anita Diane Lee

***Elizabeth Mann

Kenneth A. Martyn

*Daniel M. Mayeda

Scott Mendler

Lee Ann Meyer

Justin E.Budare

Da\'id C.Burkenroad

**Jessica L. Cahen

Andrew W. Caine

*Toni Castaneda

1984

*Naoki Shimazaki

***William E. Simpson

Stacy Sokol

*James·M. Steinberger

**Lee Straus

*Timothy Francis

Participation: 21% Sylvester

Number ofDonors: 63

Total Graduates: 293

Class Representatives:

Paul T. Hayden

Leslie K. Lurie

Dwayne Abbott

*Evelyn 0. Aguilar-

Elizabeth Glazer Chilton Shimazaki

*Kirk D. Dillman

*Lori Huff Dillman

*Andrew Bennett Downs

*David E. Durchfort

***Patrick J. Evans

James G. Foster

*Roger L. Funk

Kerry Gottlieb

Bruce J. Graham

*June G. Guinan

*Michael A. Helfant

Everett C. Hoffman

*Dianne Humphrey

Jerald Mosley ****Howard A. Jacobs

Larry Nathenson

**Jocelyn Denise Niebur

Leslye E. Orloff

*Jane M. Osborne

****Gregory Soobong Paik

**Jay F. Palchikoff

*Michelle Patterson

*Dennis L. Perez

Darien E. Pope

*David W. Reimann

*Bruce Rosenblum

*Jack H. Rubens

*Mark A. Samuels

*Nancy B. Samuels

*Joseph A. Scherer

*Eric B. Siegel

Mark R. Silla

*Steven E. Sletten

****JohnR. Sommer

Diane Carter Stanfield

*Philip Starr

*Edgar J. Steele

***Adam C. Vallejo

****DavidE. Van Iderstine

****Reed S. Waddell

*James B. Woodruff

W. Michael Young

1983

Participation: 19%

Number ofDonors: 65

Total Graduates: 347

*Debra L. James

*Frank R. Jazzo

Virginia La Torre Jeker

Jacquelyn Star Kiether

*Glenn Lorin Krinsky

David B. Kuhlman

*Kenneth L. Kutcher

Barry Lambergman

*Eric GeraldLardiere

Jocelyn Larkin

Monique C. Lillard

*Janet L. MacLachlan

*Daniel B. McCarthy

Terry P. McNiff

Victor H. Mellon

Kimberly S. Mitchell

Anne Elisabeth Morea

Jeffrey David Nagler

Robert K. Olsen

*Marilyn S.Pecsok

**Nora A. Quinn

*RobertB. Reeves

*David S. Reisman

RobertB. Rocklin

*Robina Royer

James C.Scheller, Jr.

Robert Frederick Smith

Jean Spitzer

Robert Harris Steinberg

Chestopher L. Taylor

**Renee P. Turkell

*Clayton Vreeland

Carl R. Waldman

Lise Naomi Wilson

Joan A. Wolff

John S.Bank

**Neil Berger

Bennett A. Bigman

*Julia Birkel

Todd William Bonder

Laura J. Carroll

Bruce Catania

**Ann D. Catron

*Tong-Soo Chung

**Arturo D. Cisneros

Joyce Craig

Richard Cray

*Joy Murakami Crose

**John A. Crose, Jr.

Barbra Lee Davis

Robert B. Ericson

John P. Fernandez

Kathleen M. Forbath

Susan L. Formaker

*Jeffrey A. Galowich

Michael J. Gibson

Julia M. Girard

Joan Lenihan Glazer

**Robert G. Goldman

Brad I. Golstein

Guy Halgren

Laura Whitcomb Halgren

Lisa S. Hamilton

Paul T. Hayden

Michael D. Herbert

Gayle Herman

*Kenneth B. Hertz

*J. Stacie Johnson

Jeffrey Kandel

*Miriam Aroni Krinsky

Sandra W. Lavigna

*Monika Pleyer Lee

*Leslie K. Lurie

Elizabeth Mack

Cynthia Maxwell

Linda Wight Mazur

Dennis Mitchell

Jeremy D. Mussman

Daniel A. Olivas

Barbara Riegelhaupt

Betsy R. Rosenthal

*Elizabeth Gale Sharzer

***Timothy C. Shepard

Leslie E. Sherman

Peter Thomas

*Steven A. Troyer

*David C. Tseng

James S. Uyeda

*Jo Ann E. Victor

Sura Lynda Weiss

1985

Participation: 20%

Number ofDonors: 61

Total Graduates: 300

Class Representatives:

Bryan K. Fair

John M. Moscarino

Anne Beytin Tarkington

*Valerie B. Ackerman

*Christopher B. Amandes

*Robert N. Anfield

*Robert Barnes

Marc E. Bercoon

*Thomas M. Bondy

*Rebecca A. Campbell

Brett J. Cohen

*Heather L. Coughlan

**BradleyJ. Craig

*Jeffrey D. Davine

Geoffrey A. Drucker

*Gary Wayne Dzierlenga

*Lawrence P. Ebiner

Gregory R. Ellis

Bryan K. Fair

*Donald L. Feder

*Daniel J. Friedman

Lynne S. Goldstein

*PameJ.a Karen Hagenah

*Sally C. Helppie

*Jane L. Henning

*Gary Henningsen, Jr.

*Lester Jacobowitz

Derek C. Johnson

Barbara J. Katz

*Susan Keller

*Mark Koop

Mark Levine

*Louise Davis Lillard

Mark Lincoln Lindon

Suzanne Luban

****Founders

***James H. Chadbourn Fellows

**Dean's Advocates

*Dean's Counsel

fDeceased

*Daniel Mansueto

Robert G. Martin

Stephen H. Mazur

**John M. Moscarino

*Teresa F. Ozoa

*P. D. Perez

FrankIyn Perkovich

*Stanley Pierson

Scott D. Pinsky

*Alan S. Polley

Sandra E. Purnell

*George Ann Rice

*Barbara A. Ringness

*Roger M. Rosen

*Susan Sakai

*Harold J. Schaaff, Jr.

Judith A. Schaffert

Michael R. Schaffert

*Robert F. Serio

*Eugene Joseph Smith

*Helene V. Smookler

*Scott Solomon

*Elizabeth Strode

*Steve Susoeff

**Steven A. Swernofsky

*Anne Beytin Tarkington

*Karen Africk Wolfen

*Arnold H. Wuhrman

Michael M. Youngdahl

1986

Participation: 12%

Number ofDonors: 37

Total Graduates: 297

Class Representalives:

DavidPolinsky

Leslie Wallis

*Steven 8. Abbott

Susan Abraham

*Richard W. Aldrich

*J. Robert Arnett, II

Constance C. Arvis

Craig A. Baumann

*Mark Baute

*Edwin Carney

Chi Choy

*Carolyn Comparet

Lori Koontz Davies

*Scott Gillman

*Louis Hering

i*John J. Howard

Lolita K. Buckner Inniss

*Peter C. Jacobs

Harris John Kane

*Kathryn Eileen Karcher

*Eric S. Kentor

*Shelley H. Krall

**Colleen Conway McAndrews

*Thomas H. McFadden

*David S. McLane

James McSpiritt

*Janis C. Nelson

*Robert J. Noriega

*William 0. Nutting

*James Gaughan O'Callahan

Cris K. O'Neall

C. Scott Penner

*David Polinsky

*Kevin C. Quin

Lois J. Scali

Laurie J. Taylor

*Steve G. Vogelsang

*Leslie Wallis

*Cecilia S. Wu

1987

Participation: 10%

Number ofDonors: 29

Total Graduates: 304

Class Representatives: Raquelle Moshontz De La Rocha

Connie R. Kimball

*Michael 8. Africk

*Laura Cubanski

**Raquelle Moshontz De La Rocha

*Kathleen Deeley

*Michael Donovan

*Marc Howard Edelson

*Alan J. Epstein

*Marilyn Formaker

*Gary N. Frischling

*Hilary J. Greenberg

*Melinda A. Hoyt

*John Kern

*Connie R. Kimball

*David L. Krotine

*Jacqueline Jones La Mon

*Marsha 8. Liss

*Robyn Marie Martin

*Karole Morgan-Prager

*A. Bailey Nager

*Alyce L. Raboy

*Todd Reznik

*Robert S. Roden

*Eric Louis Sanders

*Linda Ledeen Schwartz

*Jeremy Temkin

*Robert C. Welsh

*Arnold Fitger Williams

***Grace C. Yeh

*Suzanne Zaharoni

LL.M.

Ulrich Huber, Jr. '86

FRIENDS & FACULTY

William P. Alford

***Dean V. Ambrose

***David & Melinda Binder

****Bloom & Dekom

***George Calkins, II Dern, Mason & Flaum

*Jesse Dukeminier

*Nancy A. Finck

Robert D. Goldstein

***Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye

**Jacoby & Meyers

**Kenneth L. & Smiley Karst

****James H. Kindel, Jr.

***William & Renee Klein

****Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Levenson

****Manna Livingston

****Monte E. Livingston

**David Mellinkoff

***Michel, Cerny & Mirman

****Morgan, Wenzel & McNicholas

***O'Melveny & Myers

***Arthur I. Rosett

****Edward & Nancv Rubin

****Mr. & Mrs. William A. Rutter

***Security Pacific Nalional Bank

****Mr. & Mrs. Lee A. Small

***Joan W. Tyndall

***WilliamD. & Susan C. Warren

****Charles E. Young

OTHER GIFTS

Benjamin. aron

Class of 195--!

Charles English

Justus J\:e\\. Pacific \tlutual Life Insurance Company

\!illard H Ruud

Anonymous

In honor of Alison Anderson \ illiam P Alford

In honor of Michael Asimow

Alschuler, Grossman & Pines

In honor of Stanley R. Fimberg W. Michael & Genny Doramus

In honor of Ronald L. Trevithick

Anonymous

In memory of William R. Bloom

Melissa Sue Kort

In memory of Spencer Brandeis

Constance K. Lushing

Ronald & Barbara Scheinman

Robert M. Shafton

Alan Sieroty

Stuart & Marlene Sieroty

In memory of J. H. Chadbourn

Erika S. Chadbourn

In memory of John Goodwin

Jocelyn Larkin

In memory of Michael Palley

Howard L. Ekerling

In memory of Matthew Small

David I. Schulman

In memory of Jay Zvorist

Harmon Sieff

Every effort was made to ensure the accuracy of our Honor Roll. If there are any corrections or omissions, pleasecontact the School of Law Alumni & Development Office.

DESIGNATED GIFTS

BENJAMIN AARON FUND

Anonymous

MICHAEL C. ALBIN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Carolyn Comparet

DAVID BERNARD MEMORIAL AVIATION LAW LIBRARY FUND

David Bernard Memorial Foundation

JOSEPHINE VAUGHN COOPER SCHOLARSHIP FUND

William W. Vaughn

B. T. DAVIS LIBRARY FUND

In honor of Donald Allen

Howard D. Sacks

John A. Calfas

Stuart L. Merkadeau

EMERGENCY LOAN FUND

Freda S. Hovden

Thomas Morawetz

Anonymous

DAVID H. FRIEDLAND MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Jack Freedman & Patricia Herskovic

Louis & Rosalie Goldstein

Phyllis Ann Kassel

William & Nellie Kent

Donald & Marilynn Koskoff

Florence S. Leter

Judith Lipkin

Stephen E. Mason

Jack & Judie Mount

Dr. & Mrs. Leon Naiditch

Jack Paul

Irwin J. & Lena Pincus

Simon & Irene Wolen

SANFORD M. GAGE AWARDS

Sanford M. Gage

EVA & NATHAN GREENBERG MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Audrey & Arthur Greenberg

MORRIS GREENSPAN MEMORIAL PRIZE FUND

Joseph C. & Ruth G. Bell

HAIGHT, DICKSON, BROWN & BONESTEEL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Haight, Dickson, Brown & Bonesteel

ELISA H. HALPERN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Valerie B. Ackerman

Mr. & Mrs. Neil Baizer

Mrs. David Benovitz

Mrs. Hertzle H. Benovitz

Mr. & Mrs. William Benovitz

Joni Berberian

Marc E. Bercoon

Alice Bishoff

John & Sharon Black

William & Ruth Bloomfield

Bert & Jane Boeckmann

Donald & Elaine Bornstein

Sidney & Muriel Brown

Mrs. Ida D. Campion

Diane R. Cash

Regina Liudzius Cobb

Cohen Furniture Company

Carolyn Comparet

Clare Deffense

Geoffrey A. Drucker

Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Dunn & Family

Larry P. Ebiner & Teresa

F. Ozoa

Helen Edelman

Lillian Epstein

Ethan Allen Inc.

Dr. & Mrs. Robert J. Farkas

Carolyn Fershtman

Herbert & Geraldine Fischer

Andrea E. Fish

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Gappell

Garrett's Furniture

John & Lillian Gill

Maddie Glazman

Lynne Goldstein

Larry & Dona Gratt

Max & Dorothy Green

William & Barbara Green

In memory of Rose & Charlie Greenblatt & Aunt Frieda

Barry & Jane Halpern

Edward & Shirley Haimsohn

Pauline L. Halote

Barry & Jane Halpern

Edward & Sunny Halpern

Halpern's, An Ethan Allen Gallery

Irving Hill

Leslie Hill

Irell & Manella

Mr. & Mrs. Howard Jacobs

Jay & Lorita K. Jacobson

Rose & Abe Jacobson

Jamestown Manor, An Ethan Allen Gallery

Grace Jefferson

Lawrence K. Kalantari

Gail M. Katz & Bruce A. Wessel

James L. Kittle, Sr.

Sam & Lorraine Klein

Roslyn Kleinbard

Harold E. Kliegman

Dr. & Mrs. Edward Kraemer

Karen D. Kraemer

Bess Landsman

Melodie K. Larsen

Barbara Lefcourt

Thelma C. Lenhoff

Jules E. & Betty Lou Levin

Lillian Littenberg

Steve & Diane Marienhoff

Jill A. McWilliams

Dr. & Mrs. Saul Meyer

Brenda Miller

Karen K. Narasaki

Holly R. Paul

Bernhard & Beverly Penner

Scott D. Pinsky

Fred & Emma K. Retchin

Roger Rosen

Frieda Rothman

Stephen Rothman

Stanley & Karen Ruby

Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Ruderman & Family

Harold J. Schaaff

Lila & Sheldon Schein

Shirley & William Schnee

Betty Shaffer

Alan J. Siff

Milton & Lillian Spiegel

Lyndon S. Stambler

John & Renie Steinhafel

Margaret & Stephan Storey

Stephan & Mathilda W. Storey

Alicemarie H. & James A. Stotler

Carol S. Tedman

Jean Timberlake

Clyde Tonsil

Charles & Evelyn Lou Topcik

Raymond F. Triana

Valley Manor

Robert Walker & Jeanne Allen

Walker

Weil & Company

Edward & Jane Weiner

Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Weissman

Karen Wenzel

Allan P. & Norma K. Wilson

Barbara & Carl & Heather Zeiden

Esther B. Zeiden

Sam & Sydel Zeiden

Esther S. Zovod

Rae C. Zovod

Rosa Lee Zovod

Lillian Zucrow

J.W. & IDA M. JAMESON FUND

J.W. & Ida M. Jameson

Foundation

EDGAR A. JONES, JR. FUND

William Gould

JUHAS/HORN FUND FOR STUDENT SUPPORT

Martin & Rita Horn

Marvin & Fern Juhas

BENJAMIN E. KING MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Estelle K. Albert

Michael & Cora Altschuler

Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger

Joyce L. Castagnola

Helen S. Goldstein

Morris & Kitty Halber

Al & Rhoda King

Henrietta King

Bernard & Eleanor Moore

Mark A. & Diane R. Neubauer

Marilyn J. & Morton Oransoff

Frances Schulman

Beverly & Janet Shulman

Samuel & Rose Silverman

SCHOOL OF LAW LIBRARY ENDOWMENT FUND

George P. & Holli C. Schiavelli

PAULA C. LUBIC MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Arthur M. Lubic

Carol Lubic Spitz

GEORGE L. MARINOFF MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Elaine Marinoff Good

BURTON MARKS MEMORIAL FUND

Paul A. Bach

Mark Beck

Art Bell

California Attorneys for Criminal Justice

Philip William Colburn

Herbert & Frances Ehrmann

Sanford M. Ehrmann

Alan Fenster

Paul L. Gabbert

Jason Gair

Richard Hirsch & Michael Nasatir

Audrey & Sydney Irmas

Joyce Ann Karlin

M. M. & Dana G. Maltz

Robert Mann

Jerald W. Newton

Bennet Olan

Bruce I. Rauch

Harold & Sue Ritter

William A. Rutter

HarveyA. Schneider

Arthur Sherman

Victor Sherman

FRANCESE. MC QUADE FUl\D

John Arguelles

Howard S. Block

Stephen & Renee Claman

Hugo & Isabel de Castro

Sanford M. Ehrmann

Stanley R. Fimberg

Marvin & Joy Gross

Alan N. & Mary L. Halkett

Martin R. & Rita Horn

Marvin & Fern Jubas

Leonard & Barbara Kolod

Philip & Marilyn Magaram

Bruce I. Rauch

Rogers & Harris

John H. Roney

Richard & LorettaSchauer

Ralph & Shirley Shapiro

Eric & Mary Louise Weissmann

MORRISON & FOERSTER FUND

Morrison & Foerster

MELVILLE B. NIMMER MEMORIAL FUND

Norma Acland

Hyman & Rose Alford

WilliamP. Alford & Anna M. Howell

Axel aus der Muhlen

William Banks

Barristers of Beverly Hills Bar Association

Sharon Baumgold

Matthew Bender & Company, Inc.

Julie Bisceglia

Alice Cohen Bisno

Neil Boorstyn

Broadcast Music Inc.

Catherine Campbell & Marc

Alexander

Christian & Katherine Castle

Edmund W. Clarke, Jr.

Martin D. Cohn

Copyright Society of the U.S.A.

Jon W. Davidson

Marsha Durko

David G. Epstein

Gregory S. Feis

George Fletcher

Michael Franklin

Linda Gach Ray

Steven & Jeanette Gaines

Michael Gendler

Paul E. B. Glad

Richard J. Kaplan

John M. Kernochan

Rosanne Krikorian

Ke:rne h E. Kc1lzic!<

Freder;ck \'.. La-\rence

\i,,r,'q, C Lil!2�d

Paul c- B_cca \'.arcvs

Rotert(� \1�rftn

\!2,..:in B \lever

\larlz H. \litchell

Lesli \l',elmer

Barb rn D \loom

\'.os1r,n ·. ssur.:1ates

David \!immer

Gloria Dee Nimmer

Ted Obrzut

Andrea S. & Robert Ordin

Donr1ld C. Reinke

John A. Schulman

:vlichael J. Siegel

:1rlvin & Brenda Simensky

Daniel B. Spitzer

Mel & Edith Tolkin

Lois A. Weithorn

Writers Guild Of America, West, Inc.

MICHAEL PALLEY

MEMORIAL FUND

Jerold A. Krieger

Sidney & Susan Lindenbaum

J. Lewis Palley Charitable Trust

Victor & Myrna Weingarten

THOMASD. RABIN

MEMORIAL FUND

Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison

The Lewis A. Glenn Family

Stroock & Stroock & Lavan

Frederic Michael Zinn

WILLIAM A. RUTTER AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN TEACHING

William A. Rutter

IDA & LOUISSTEIN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

Clifford A. & Geraldine S. Hemmerling

COMMUNICATIONSLAW PROGRAM

Cr1lifornia Cable Television Association

Falcon Cable TV

Par.die Telesis Foundation

LAW FIRM MATCHING GIFTS

Arnold & Porter

Cox, Castle & Nicholson

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher

Loeb & Loeb

Morrison & Foerster

Musick, Peeler & Garrett

O'Melveny & Myers

Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler

Proskauer, Rose, Goetz & Mendelsohn

Reid & Riege

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom

Sullivan & Cromwell

CORPORATE MATCHING GIFTS

Aerospace Corporation

Allied-Signal Foundation Inc.

American Medical International, Inc.

Atlantic Richfield Foundation

CBS Inc.

Citibank

Coca-Cola Company

Coopers & Lybrand

Digital Equipment Corporation

Doris Jones Stein Foundation

Exxon Education Foundation

First Interstate Bank of California

Harris Foundation

Hewlett-Packard Company

Hughes Aircraft Company

IBM Corporation

Irvine Company

Kleinwort Benson Cross Financing, Inc.

MCA INC.

Manufacturers Hanover Foundation

Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.

Motorola Foundation

Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company

Occidental Petroleum Charitable Foundation, Inc.

PR! Foundation

Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company

Pacific Telesis Foundation

Peat Marwick Main Foundation

PriceWaterhouse Foundation

Security Pacific Foundation

Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc.

Southern Pacific Transportation Company

Syntex Corporation

TRW Foundation

Time Inc.

Times Mirror

Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.

Transamerica Foundation

Travelers Companies

Foundation, Inc.

Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

US WEST, Inc.

UnionPacific Corporation

Wells Fargo Foundation

Whittaker Corporation

Public Interest Work Expands As Support Continues to Grow

ne UCLA law student drafted a motion for summary judgment and saved an 80-year-old woman from an illegal eviction. Another interviewed Indian plaintiffs in a land claimdisputeon Minnesota'sWhite Earth reservation. A third drafted a litigation manual whichwillbe aresource for lawyers when they represent gay and lesbian clients victimized byhatecrimes.

Representing clients who typically have little access to legal resources was all part of the day's work for these law students. Last summer, eleven students from UCLA School of Law were engaged ina variety ofpublicinterestlaw projects-seeking amnesty forLatinosunderthene\ ImmigrationAct, health care and housing for the poor, remedies in cases of emplo" ment discrimination, and outreach tothe Asian elderly communit

This arra 0 ofpublic interestadvocacy onthepart of la,x studen s was made possible by significant rowth o the Pubiic Interest La\, Foundation at UCL n essential key rn the program's success is th money contributed b students, faculty, alL::nni ofrhela'.\'school. andla\·firmswhichmatch th ir studentemployees' contributions.

In 198 PILF had iust enough funds to award a summer orant to one student. The funds raised last ear enabled a\rnrding of grants totaling :22.500 to this past summer's eleven students. In

addition, public interest fellowshipswereawarded to two graduating third-year students: $2,000 to Alison Hardy for a computer used in her work on AIDS in prison populations, and $6,000 to Robin TomaforhisworkwiththeACLUonFirstAmendmentissues.

Besidesthesummergrantsandfellowships,PILF encourages public interest law through its publication of a Public Interest Jobs Directory, it helps to sponsor an annual Southern California Public Interest Career Day, and it brings speakers and panels on public interest law to the law school throughouttheyear.

So far this year, the UCLA law community has pledged $42,000 to PILF. Most of that comes from studentdonorswhopledgedoneday'sincomefrom their summer jobs. Faculty, administrators and alumni also are contributors. Of the $42,000 raised thisyeartodate,about $1,500isfromalumni. More alumni giving is a goal as the PILF campaign continues this fall, and gifts also arebeing sought from law firms. By comparison, Boalt Hall's public interestlawfoundationraisedabout $90,000ayear ago-halfofitfromalumni.

As the financial base of PILF at UCLA expands, students hope to develop a long-term loan forgiveness program for those who enter lower-salaried public interest careers after law school. Such loan forgiveness programs already are in place at Harvard,YaleandNewYorkUniversity. Theother

pressingneedismoremone_ for summer or'ants and fellowships. While ele en prnje ts '<i.ere funded last summer, more than l 1.\iG lhal many ludecls submitted proposals for uncling.

As students describe proje ts nO\".' con�plei.ed. 1t becomes evident that while performrng invaluable legal services to clients they also gained a wealth of professional experience.

Kat Kozikworked at the \/lexkan :-\mencan Legal Defense and Education Fund's Los Angeles office, doing both legal research and client intake. "\I!_ interviewing skills impro eel dramatically,.. she says,becauseof the high olume ofcases.

Lisa J. McLeod experienced a similar caseload at Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles and became deeply involved in many cases, such as that of an 80-year-old woman whose new landlord tried to evict her illegally. "I drafted a motion for summary judgment in the case, which turned upon an issue thathadnotreallybeendecided," McLeodsays. The judge granted the motion. Her summer taught McLeod "anawfullotaboutpublicinterestlaw" and its continuouschangesof pace.

Toni L. Goodin went to Minnesota's White Earth reservation, interviewing clients in a land claims suit and researching rights of the White Earth Band to hunt, fish and gather wild rice both on and off the reservation. "This experience allowed me to work in the Federal Indian Law area which was valuable, as I want to concentrate on this area of law when I graduate."

Richard Wood concentrated all his time at the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force drafting a litigation manualfor use by practitioners in dealing with the legal aftermath of incidents of violence against gays and lesbians. Writing for the scrutiny ofsupervisingattorneys"wasinvaluableexperience for me, as I was forced to make my writing more clear and precise." Wood noted a high level of professionalpracticeat NGLTF, wherethework "is very important in preserving the civil rights of all people."

Dwight Aarons worked on a broad range of civil rights issues in the new western regional office of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, interviewing clients and preparing an easy-reference outline of state and federal laws applicable in major areas of civil rights litigation. The summer "surpassed my expectations," saysAarons,whofoundthathe "was treated as a valuable member of a highly respected team of civil rights attorneys."

William Monterroso had a similar experience at theCentralAmericanRefugeeCenter,wheredespite limited resources "the dedication and heroic hard work" ofthestaffproducesmiraculousresults.With one attorney and a caseload of 350 files, it was essentialtochecksystematically thestatusofcases. Monterroso interviewed new clients in Spanish to determine the meritsof asylum claims. One reward of the job was "actually witnessing some real results."

RichardNovakwentto BusinessandProfessional People for the Public Interest to develop legal research and writing skills and tolearnmore about large-scale impact litigation, and he accomplished both goals. His projects included a large-scale housingdiscriminationcaseandresearchingstatutes and regulations on tenant protection when public housing is demolished.

Julia Lavine worked for the Prisoners' Legal ServicesofNewYork,wheretherewasanimmense varietyofwork-bothresearchandwriting andher own caseload of clients from the two largest women's facilities in New York City. Her interest wastolearnmoreabouttheproblemsofincarcerated women, especially in the areas of health care and family law. "My expectations were definitely fulfilled."

Two UCLA students who are now focusing their attention on increasing the participation of alumni in PILF are Rick Schkolnick and Doug Wertheimer. AlumnicontributionscanbemadepayabletoUCLA Public InterestLawFoundationandmailed toPILF, UCLA School of Law, Los Angeles 90024. D

HarryG. Balter ChairInLaw

IsEstablished

TheHarryGrahamBalterChairinLaw hasbeenestablishedattheSchoolof Lawwithanendowmentof$500,000 pledgedbyEthelBalter,wifeofthelate HarryGrahamBalter.

Thechairwillsupportteachingand researchinthefieldoffederaltaxlaw, animportantpartofthecorecurriculumofthelawschoolandanareawhere theschoolhasconsiderablestrength.

HarryGrahamBalter,whodiedin 1986,wasadistinguishedtrialpractitionerwhoplayedaleadingroleinthe fieldoftaxfraud.HisbookonTax FraudandEvasion,nowinitsfifth printing,isastandardworkinthefield.

BalterbecameanassistantU.S.attorneyin 1928,shortlyaftergraduating withhighesthonorsfromlawschoolat theUniversityofCalifornia,Berkeley. Attheageof25,hewasoneofthe youngestU.S.attorneysinCalifornia history.HeleftfederalserviceandenteredprivatepracticeinLosAngelesin 1935.

Hewasacontributingeditortothe JournalofTaxation,afrequentspeaker atorganizationsofthebar,andlectured atlawschoolsthroughouttheU.Sand inLondonandMexicoCity.

HeservedaspresidentoftheLos AngelesPsychiatricBoard,theMetropolitanHousingCouncilandtheJewish CommitteeforPersonalService. He alsowasanationalcommissionerofthe Anti-DefamationLeague,helpedtoorganizetheLosAngeleschapterofthe LeagueoftheUnitedNations,andwas presidentoftheMen'sClubofWilshire BoulevardTemple,amongmanyother civicandphilanthropicactivities.

"ThegenerousgiftofEthelBalter, whichhonorsthememoryandlife's workofherlatehusband,willgreatly benefitthefacultyandthequalityof

30

teachingatUCLA'slawschoolfor yearstocome,"saidDeanSusan WesterbergPrager. "Thelawschool willalwaysremaingratefultoMrs. Balter."

HonorsBestowed OnAnderson, Bergman,Eule

ProfessorsAlisonAnderson,Paul BergmanandJulianEulehaveeachreceivedmajorawardsrecognizingtheir excellenceintheclassroom.

ProfessorAndersonwasamongfive facultyontheentireUCLAcampusto receivetheDistinguishedTeaching Award.Innomination,astudentwrote: "Theadjectiveswhichfirstcometo mindwhenIthinkofAlisonAnderson are'clear'and'straightforward."

OthersspokeofAnderson's"patience andkindness,"her"teachingwithout egoorpretention,"andher"profound concernforteachingandher students."

ProfessorBergmanreceivedthe RichardS.JacobsonAwardforthe teachingoftrialadvocacyfromthe RoscoePoundFoundation.Bergmanrecalledanexercisehesometimesusesin aclinicalcourse,whichrequiresstudentstomanipulatechildren'sbuilding blocks. Heclaimsthatinevitablyitis thedayhisclassisengagedinthisexercisethat"visitingdignitariesstopbyto observeUCLA'sfirst-rateclinical program."

ProfessorEulewastherecipientof the1988RutterAwardforExcellence inTeaching,establishedbyWilliamA. Rutter.EulewasalsovotedProfessor oftheYearbythegraduatingclass.

Attheawardceremony,thefactsurfacedthatonestudentonaroutine evaluationformhadnotedthatEule's onlypossibleweaknesswasinhis "upperbody."

Acceptingtheaward,Euleshowedhe couldmatchanyone'shumor."Iamlike agreyhound,"Eulesaid,"Ievenlook likeone-angularface,sleekbuild.The studentwholistedmygreatestweaknessas'upperbody'missedthepoint. It'smysleekbuildthathelpsmerunso fast.Likeanygreyhound,however,I needmyrabbits-thosemechanical animalstheystraptoabaratthegreyhoundtrackandkeepashortdistance aheadoftheleaddog,promptingitto strivejustalittlebitharder,toreach theelusivegoal."Therabbitsinthis analogy,saidEule,werehiscolleagues WilliamWarrenandEricZoltandthe awardestablishedbyWilliamRutter.

Harry Graham Balter
Ethel Balter

StudySeesExclusive CableTVFranchises

AsConstitutional

Exclusivecabletelevisionfranchises donotgenerallyviolatetheFirst Amendment,contrarytotheviewof severalfederalcourtrulingsinCaliforniacases.That'stheconclusionofAdjunctProfessorDanielBrennerofthe SchoolofLawinanarticlepublished recentlybytheDukeLawJournal.

"CabletelevisionoperatorshaveimportantrightsundertheConstitution's guaranteeoffreedomofexpression," saysBrenner,"butit'simportanttodistinguishthedifferentfacetsofcableoperations.Sometimesanoperatoractsas aspeaker,sometimesasaneditor, sometimesasamereconduitfor others."

ProfessorBrenner'sarticle,"Cable TelevisionandtheFreedomofExpression,"presentsaFirstAmendment modelofthecableoperatorandanalyzesthatmodelagainstthescheme createdbythe1984CableCommunicationsPolicyAct.

Brennerfindsthattheimportantexpressiverightsofcableoperatorsand programmersarewell-protectedand thatwould-becableoperatorsdenieda cablefranchisecanstillgettheirmessageoutthroughtimeonleasedand publicaccesscablechannels.

Hecriticizesrecentcasesthathave foundthatexclusivecablefranchising-averycommonpracticebycities-violatestheFirstAmendment.

"Fromeitherthespeaker'soraudience's view,thelossinexpressionduetoa singlefranchiseratherthanmultiple franchisesisslight,"saysBrenner,who referstothesecasesasraising"phantomproblems."

InacompanionpiecerecentlypublishedbytheCOM/ENTLawJournalat HastingsCollegeoftheLaw,Brenner examinestheleadingfranchisingcase, CityofLosAngelesv.PreferredCommunications,Inc.Inthatcase,theU.S. SupremeCourtconsideredbutfailedto decidetheconstitutionalityofexclusivelicensing.

Describingthecourt'sdecisionasoffering"aconfusing,costlyandmostly uselessdirectionforresolvingcable's FirstAmendmentstatus,"Brenner arguesthatitwillbedifficultforcities

toprovethatcableisa"naturalmonopoly"e\·enthoughhead-to-headcable competitionisextremelyrare.

Brennersuggeststhattheproblem \,·ithfranchisingisnotrelatedtothe First.A.mendmentbutrathertocorruption, percei\·edorreal.inthefranchisingprocess...Forexample,inthe1987 Sacramentofranchisingsuit, thejury foundthattheexcludedfranchiseehad beendenieditsFirstAmendment rights," Brennernotes."Butthejury alsofoundthatthefranchisingprocess hudbeentaintedbyfavoritismtoward thewinningapplicant."

Whilenotrulingoutthedesirability ofmu!tiplefranchises, BrennerconcludesthattheConstitution,atleast, doesnotmandatethatresult.

BrennerisdirectoroftheCommunicationsLawProgramattheSchoolof Law.BeforecomingtoUCLAin1986, hewasseniorlegaladvisortothechairmanoftheFederalCommunications CommissioninWashington, D.C.

MagneticOutreach Of1stAmendment TracedinLecture

FacultyContinue SummerTeaching PrograminChina

ProfessorsWilliamAlfordandCarole Goldberg-AmbroseoftheSchoolof LawwereamongfiveAmericanlegal scholarswhotaughtattheChinaCenterforAmericanLawStudyduring JuneandJulyatPekingUniversity.

Studentsintheprogramwere60of China'sleadingyounglegalscholars andministrylegaladvisors,manyof whomlaterweretocometotheUnited Statesforadvancedstudy.

ProfessorAlfordisexecutivedirectorfortheAmericancomponentofthe U.S.-Chinalegaleducationprogram. Facultymembersthispastsummer,in additiontoAlfordandGoldbergAmbrose,wereProfessorWallaceLoh oftheUniversityofWashington,ProfessorCassSunsteinoftheUniversity ofChicagoandProfessorJamesJ. White oftheUniversityofMichigan.

Thiswasthefourthannualsessionof theAmericanlegalstudyprogramat PekingUniversity.

HarrietF.PilpelofNewYork,whodeliveredthethirdMelvilleB.Nimmer MemorialLectureonOctober6,traced the"magneticoutreach"oftheFirst Amendmentandtheexpansionofcivil libertieswithinthepasttwodecades.

"TheFirstAmendment,likemostof thelanguageoftheConstitution,was paintedwithabroadbrushleavingthe detailstobefilledinpiecebypieceby individualsandgovernmentsinlightof theparticulartimeinvolved,"said Pilpel,whoselegalcareerhasspanned suchareasasfreedomofspeech,family lawandthestatusofwomen.

Pilpelhasservedasgeneralcounsel forthePlanned ParenthoodFederation ofAmericaandasvicechairpersonof theAmericanCivilLibertiesUnionnationaladvisorycouncil.Shealsohas pursuedmanyofthefreespeechissues whichwereattheheartofProfessor Nimmer'swork.

InherUCLAlecture,shenotedthat forthefirst 135yearsofconstitutional lawdevelopment,itwasassumedthat theFirstAmendmentonlylimitedthe federalgovernment.NotuntilNearv. Minnesotain1927didtheU.S.SupremeCourtrulethatfederalguaranteesoffreespeechwereapplicableto stateandlocalgovernmentsaswell.

Fiftyyearsago,formsofexpression whichweredeemedworthyofprotectionremainedratherrestricted."Itwas generallyassumedandstated,"Pilpel observed,"thatnotallspeechwasentitledtoconstitutionalprotection.Offensivespeech,libel,obscenity,commercialspeech,fightingwordsanda numberofothercategoriesofspeech wereconsideredtobebeyondthereach oftheFirstAmendment."

Butwithinthelasttwodecades,the SupremeCourtsteadilychallengedthis stringentposition.PilpelcitedCohenv. California,thecasewhichProfessor Nimmerarguedin 1971,asanexample ofthecourt'srecognitionofanexpandedscopefortheFirst Amendment.

Nimmerarguedthattheformnoless thanthesubstanceofspeechmustbe grantedFirstAmendmentprotection. "Toallowthestatetocontrolthe

emotionalimpactofanideaistoallow ittoabridgetheexpositionoftheidea itself." ThanksloNimmer'sanalysis, saidPilpel, '·offensivespeech"became drawnintothe"magneticfield"ofthe FirstAmendment.

PilpelalsodiscussedNewYork Timesv. Sullivan, thelibelcasein whichthecourtruled"thatlibelcan claimnotalismanicimmunityfrom constitutionallimitations. Itmustbe measuredbystandardsthatsatisfythe FirstAmendment."

"Neitherfactualerrornordefamatorycontent," Pilpelsaid, "eitheralone orincombination, wassufficienttoremoveconstitutionalprotectionsfrom criticismofofficialconduct.·• Inwas in thiscase, whicharoseoutoftheci il rightsmovement,thatthecourtforlhe firsttimeappliedFirstAmendment limitslolibellaw.

Pilpel questionedwhetherthe court hasmadesufficientprogressinthe struggletodetermine aworkableand satisfactor, conslitutionalstandard v.iith regardtoobscenity. InRothv. U.S..thecourt adoptedanarro11·definitionofobscenit inwhichthe prosecu-

During her visit to UCLA as the Nimmer lecturer, Harriet Pilpel also spoke in Professor Dan Lowenstein's classroom and met informallywith studentsat a coffee hour.

tionwasrequiredtoshowthatmaterial inquestionwasnotonlyoffensivebut alsolackedany"redeemingsocial value."

Pilpelpointedoutthatthisissuehas remainedproblematicalforthecourt. In1973,forinstance,thecourtmodified thedefinitionstatingthatawork,taken asawhole,mustlack"seriousliterary, artistic,political,orscientificvalue."In thecasethendecided,however, JusticesDouglas, Stewart, Marshall,and Brennanwereindissent,havingconcludedthatitwasimpossibleforthe courttoadequatelydistinguishbetweenobscenematerialandthose formsofexpressionwhichshouldbe protected.JusticeStewart,Pilpel added,"hadatonepointthrownuphis handsonthematter,declaringthathe couldneversucceedindefiningobscenityintelligibly,butheknewitwhenhe sawit."

Finally,shetouchedon thecourt'srecentfindinginthedisputebetween JerryFalwellandHustlermagazine. JusticeRehnquist,writingforaunanimouscourt,ruledinthatcasethat "oneoftheperogativesofAmericancitizenshipistherighttocriticizepublic menandmeasures."Though"vulgar" and"unpleasant", themagazine'ssatire ofFalwellstillconstitutedaprotected formofpoliticalexpression.

Thiscase, Pilpelsaid,hasreassured civillibertarianssuchasherselfover "thefutureoftheFirstAmendment." Yettopreservethegainsachieved withinthelasttwodecadesandtoinsurethatthe"magneticfield"ofthe FirstAmendmentmightbefeltinthose areaswherecensorshipstillexists, Pilpelurgedheraudiencetoremain steadfastinthestruggleforfreespeech.

Classnotes

The 1950s

John Francis Parker '53 has been named chair of the Workers' Compensation and Employers' Liability Committee of the Tort and Insurance Practice section of the American Bar Association for 1988-89.

Richard Agay '57 was appointed a member of the Westwood Community Design Review Board and was elected its first chairperson.

Norman Epstein '58, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge, has been elected chair of the Anti-Defamation League's regional board executive committee.

Zad Leavy '58 was elected president of the Monterey Peninsula Regional Park District by voters in the district. His law practice is in Carmel.

Paul B. Pressman '58 is of counsel to the Orange County office of Morrison & Foerster.

The 1960s

Robert D. Monarch '63 has been appointed judge of the Orange County Superior Court by Governor Deukmejian.

James L. Nolan '64 has been named chair of the Life Insurance Committee of the Tort and Insurance Practice section of the American Bar Association for 1988-89.

Jack Newman '65, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge, was elected president of the Pacific Southwest regional board of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith.

Arnold G. York '65 recently purchased and now publishes The Malibu Times, a weekly community newspaper.

CHRISTIAN MARKEY Jr. '58 has become vice president and general counsel of USC. Markey has been a Superior Court judge in Los Angeles County since 1974. He is a past president of the Los Angeles Bar Association and a former member of the Regents of the University of California.

Outer Critic Circle Awards, including best musical of the 1987-88 season.

Sharon Green '68 has moved her firm from San Francisco to Sausalito. The practice is limited to civil trials.

Allen D. Lenard '68 has become counsel to the firm of Jeffer, Mangels & Butler, and continues to represent individuals and businesses in the music, television, motion picture and home entertainment industries.

Jan C. Gabrielson '69 has been elected president of the Southern California chapter of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers.

The 1970s

Jay W. Jeffcoat '70 has returned from a year's sabbatical of round-the-world travel and has been transferred to the San Diego office of Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye. He will continue civil litigation practice in Imperial, Riverside and San Diego counties.

Joel S. Moskowitz '70 has become a partner resident in the Los Angeles office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and will continue the practice of environmental law.

Richard J. Stone '70 has joined the Los Angeles office of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy as a partner, launching the office's litigation department. He also was recently elected a fellow of the American Bar Foundation. Fellows membership is limited to one third of one percent of lawyers licensed in each jurisdiction.

Barry H. Lawrence '66 has become a member of the firm of Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Handler, resident in Los Angeles.

Richard M. Brown '67 has rejoined the Los Angeles office of the firm of Pepper, Hamilton & Scheetz as a partner, specializing in sports and broadcast law.

Jay S. Bulmash '67, who ceased active law practice in 1984, is now a theatrical producer. His latest effort, "Romance/Romance," is a Broadway musical which recently received five Tony Award nominations, including best musical of the year, and four

Robert Breeze '71 has merged Robert A. Breeze & Associates into the Anchorage law firm of Boyko, Davis, Dennis, Baldwin & Breeze. He continues his specialization in international commercial transactions.

Stanley M. Gordon '71, a partner in Gordon and Drysdale of Newport Beach, was on the faculty of a Washington, D.C., workshop on new Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act regulations. A comprehensive review of the act is being sponsored by the National Real Estate Development Center.

Paul Marcus '71 has left the deanship at the University of Arizona College

of Law after five years of service. This fall, he will be a Visiting Distinguished Fellow at the Criminal L1w Institute, University of Geneva, Switzerland. He will also give a series of lectures in India. After the new year, he will return to law teaching at the University of Arizona.

Richard A. Brown '72 has joined the firm of Spiegel & McDiarmid in Washington, D.C., as a partner and will practice in the field of insurance law.

Gregory M. Post '72, after 12 years as a corporate lawyer, entered private practice two years ago in San Diego. His practice emphasizes real estate, estJte planning (with a specialty in charitable trusts), and buiness law.

Sandra Stillwater '72 has moved her practice to a new office in Los Angeles and is practicing business, real estate and family law.

Mark F. Grady '73, a professor at Northwestern University School of Law. has recei ed the Robert Childres , lemorial Prize for teaching excellence.He teaches antitrust and torts.

Peggy J. Nelson ·73 has become a Judge of the 8th Judicial District in le1\ 1 !exico. The district includes Colfax, ·nion and Taos Counties.

Carl M. Shusterman '73 has been elected chairmanof the Southern California chapter of the American Immigration La vyers Association, an American Bar Association affi!iJte.

James F. Wilson '73 has published Law and Ethics of the Veterinary Profession, a comprehensive 500-page guide on veterinary law. Dr.\ ilson is medical director c1l the Veterir.ar: Hospital of the Univers1t·, of Penns . lvania.

Jeffery J. Carlson' 4 has formed a new 12 1.1.· firm. Dir:kso Carlson ;rnd Campillo. \H,ile ,h ,ir:11 s litigaoion pract1G is ::;rcaL-oc1sed. there 1s ,rn empnas1s on c;:;:11pL, lilioatmn Carl:s,,n also '.1a:=. t e'� ap;im'liEd ·,icechciir of the Conr.11:lee on To •ic ar:d Hazardous ubs'a:-,ces 2nd Env:rnnmerH,ii Ls1·. of ,he ..\n rican Bar SSlJGl?.liOil':s s�c:lion of Tori cind lnuranc ? aciice.

Donald P. Silver·-;-+ o, ar.la \!onit:a is aL,thor o a book titled Computers &

SanDiegoAttorney

HerbertJ. Solomon IsAlumnusofYear

HerbertJ. Solomon'56oftheSanDiego firmofSolomon, Ward, Seidenwurm& SmithhasbeennamedAlumnusofthe YearbytheLawAlumniAssociation. Solomonwaschosenbytheboardof thealumniassociationonthebasisof hislegalcareerandcommunityservice. HeispresidentoftheSanDiegoSymphonyOrchestraAssociation,adirectoroftheUnitedWayofSanDiego CountyandtheUnitedJewishFederationofSanDiegoCounty,andisnationalvicechairmanoftheUnitedJewishAppeal.

HehasbeenvicechairoftheCaliforniaStateBarCommitteeofBarExaminers,adirectoroftheSanDiegoMuseumofArt,andafoundingmemberof theSanDiegoUrbanCoalition.

SolomonwaspresentedtheAlumnus oftheYearawardatadinnerOct.20at theSheratonGrandinSanDiego.

Estate Planning: How to Draft Wills, Trusts and Probate Documents Using WordPerfect.

William Winslow '74 is the author of "Structured Settlements in Employment Litigation," published in the April issue of Los Angeles Lawyer magazine. He is general counsel of ivlerrill Lynch Settlement Services, Inc.

Robert A. Bush '75 and Jesus E. Quinonez '81 are members of the firm of Ta;lor, Roth, Bush & Geffner, which h2s relocated its offices to Burbank.

Robert M. Gans '75 is a principal in the new firm of Froehlich, Gans & Bhickmar located in downtown San Diego. The firm emphasizes civil lit1gat10n and specializes in business, shopping center and real property m2tters.

Joseph K,ibre '75 has become a member of the firm of Oberstein, Doniger & Fetter, located in Century City.

Norman A. Pedersen '75 has joined the firm of Graham & James as a partner in the Washington, D.C., office. He continues to specialize in energy law, administrative law and litigation.

Patricia S. Brody '76 has joined the partnership of Jeffer, Mangels & Butler.

Kim J. Grosch '76 continues in solo practice in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, where he specializes in Social Security disability practice. He married Deborah Ramey in May 1986 andhas three stepchildren. Groschnotes he "would like to hear from UCLA grads who have located or are thinking of locating" inIdaho, EasternWashington or Western Montana.

David Hazelkorn '76 is author of an article on "Incest: How Psychology Can Help the Defense" published in the January-February 1988 issue of the Criminal Law Bulletin.

Gustavo A. Barcena '77 has been appointed chairperson of the Mexican American Bar Association Political Action Committee for 1988-89.

Paul E.B. Glad '77 has become a partner in the firm of Sonnenschein, Carlin, Nath & Rosenthal in San Francisco.

Susan Haldeman '77 is a full-time mediator and manager of the Southern California regional office of American Intermediation Service, located in Santa Monica. The office provides mediation for all civil disputes except family law matters, and Haldeman is particularly involved with the resolution of construction, real estate, envi ronmental and employment disputes.

Elliot B. Kristal '77 has become a partner in the firm of Manatt, Phelps, Rothenberg & Phillips.

Richard N. Rust '77 has become a principal of the firm of Rosen, Wachtell & Gilbert, and will continue to specialize in business and commercial litigation.

Tamar C. Stein '77 is now a partner in the firm of Cox, Castle & Nicholson. She continues to practice land use and real property litigation.

William F. Sullivan '77 has been elected first vice president of the California Young Lawyers Association.

He is a partner at Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison in San Francisco.

Marcy Tiffany '77 was appointed director of the Federal Trade Commission's Los Angeles regional office in July 1987. She and Alex Kozinski '75 are parents of a third son, Clayton, born in January.

HilaryHuebschCohen '78, a principal in the firm of Hirschtick, Chenen, Lemon & Curtis, notes that the firm has relocated in Marina de! Rey. Other principals in the firm include Arthur R.Chenen '70, Bruce M.Cohen '78, and his wife Ramona M. Vipperman '79. The firm specializes in the business representation of physicians and other healthcare clients.

DeborahCrandall '78 has become a partner in the firm of Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue. She is resident in the Los Angeles office, where she specializes in labor and employment law.

David G. Epstein '78 has become associated with the firm of Capretz & Kasdan in Irvine. The firm concentrates on class action, public policy and business litigation.

Kenneth L. Guernsey '78 has rejoined Cooley, Godward, Castro, Huddleson & Tatum, San Francisco, as a partner.

Gary P. Long '78 is a partner of Morrison & Foerster, located in the firm's new Orange County office.

JohnC. Wynne '78 has become a partner of the firm of Duckor & Spradling in San Diego. His practice emphasizes business litigation.

Kneave Riggall '78 has opened offices in South Pasadena, continuing to emphasize income tax law and financial planning for individuals. Recently he received his Master of Laws in Taxation from the University of San Diego.

Harmon A. Brown '79 has become a member of the firm of Schiff, Hardin & Waite in Chicago.

Madelyn J.Chaber '79 has become a partner in the firm of Cartwright, Slobodin, Bokelman, Borowsky, Wartnick, Moore & Harris.

RalphD.H. Fertig '79 has left private practice to become supervising trial attorney for the Southern California office of the U.S. Equal Employment

Opportunity Commission in Los Angeles.

Adam E. Hofberg '79 has joined Security Pacific Business Credit Inc. in Pasadena as an assistant general counsel.

Gail E. Lees '79 has become a partner of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in the Los Angeles office.

Eldon L. Pesterfield ·79 has become a partner in the firm of Sulmeyer, Kupetz, Baumann & Rothman. He will continue to specialize in corporate reorganization, bankruptcy and debtor/ creditor relations.

Lowell W. Tatkin '79 has joined the Los Angeles office of Kelley, Drye & Warren, where he continues to specialize in tax law. He has been an adjunct professor at Pepperdine University School of Law since 1983.

The 1980s

Andrew P. Bernstein '80, Sherrie M. Boutwell '83, Bruce R. Hallett '81, Morgan T. Jones '81, Marilyn D. Martin-Culver '83 and Robert K. Olsen '83 are associates in the Orange County office of Morrison & Foerster.

Dean A. Demetre '80 has become a partner of the firm of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton.

Marsha E. (Diedrich) Durko '80 has become a partner in the firm of Silverberg, Rosen, Leon & Behr. Her practice will continue to emphasize entertainment and business litigation. In 1986, she married former professional football player Sandy V. Durko. They are expecting their first child.

Laurie L. Levenson '80 and her husband Doug were blessed with a baby boy, Solomon Leon Levenson Mirell, born April 28 at 9 pounds, 9 ounces.

Alec G. Nedelman '80 has become a partner in the Century City offices of Loeb and Loeb.

Millicent N. Sanchez '80 has become a principal in the firm of Swerdlow & Florence in Beverly Hills. She joined the firm in 1984. It advises and represents employers in all aspects of labor and employment law.

John A. Seethoff '80 has become a shareholder in the firm of Shidler, McBroom, Gates & Lucas.

Peter S. Selvin '80 has been elected a partner of Loeb and Loeb, where he practices business litigation.

StuartH. Sobel '80 was promoted to senior vice president and legal counsel at American Savings and Loan Association in Stockton.

Stephen Joplin 'so and Jo Ann Taormina '80 have been named partners of Lillock, McHose & Charles.

Morris L. Thomas '80 has established a new partnership, Thomas, Johnson & Thomas, located in Los Angeles.

Anita R. Van Petten '80 is executive vice president at World International Network, located in Beverly Hills and formed by a consortium of U.S., French and British interests.

Diane J. Crumpacker '81 has become a member of the firm of Greenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman & Machtinger. She will continue to represent employers in labor law and employment relations.

James I. Ham '81 has become a partner in the firm of Quinn, Kully and Morrow.

Karen Matteson '81 has joined the Los Angeles regional office of the Securities and Exchange Commission as trial counsel. Earlier, she was deputy regional counsel for the Western regional office of the Commodities and Future Trading Commission.

Michael R. Morales '81 has become associated with the firm of Karma, Coleite & Bence in Torance.

Craig M. Fields '82 has formed the firm of Pritchard & Fields in Century City with Diane E. Pritchard. The firm specializes in business litigation.

Cathryn Gawne-Doxsee '82 has become associated with Jeffer, Mangels & Butler in Century City, where she continues to specialize in corporate and securities law.

Ann J. Murphy '82 married T. Calder Ezzell Jr. in Roswell, New Mexico, in December 1987. She is the chief executive officer of Murphy Operating Corporation, oil and gas producers.

Her husband is an oil and gas title attorney.

Carolyn M. Richardson '82 has become associated with Kindel & Anderson.

Ginny LaTorre Jeker '83 married Anton Jeker, a Swiss national, in May 1986 and moved to Hong Kong in November of that year. They announced the birth of Marc Anthony on April 4, 1988. She is currently a U.S. tax consultant with Deloitte, Haskins & Sells.

Ellen Klugman '83 has been elected president of the California Young Lawyers Association, which represents more than 35,000 attorneys throughout the state.

John Y. Liu '83 is with the Los Angeles office of Lillick, McHose & Charles, practicing product liability and toxic tort litigation.

Victor H. Mellon '83 has become associated with the firm of Greenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman & Machtinger.

Bonita Tyson Rudd '83 is an associate at Hughes, Hubbard & Reed in Washington, D.C. She married Thomas B. Rudd III on Valentine's Day 1987 and gave birth to a daughter, Raven Bonita Rudd, June 4, 1988

H. Deane Wong '83 has joined the Los Angeles office of Heidrick and Struggles, international executive search consultants.

J. Stacie Brown '84 married Robert Johnson in May and now uses the name J. Stacie Johnson. She is associated with the firm of Sanger, Grayson, Givner & Booke.

Lisa S. Hamilton '84 has become an associate of Miller & Holavin in Century City, and is continuing to practice in the areas of corporate law and securities.

Mary Newcombe '84 is a member of the firm of Hedges, Powe & Caldwell inLos Angeles.

Ruben F. Sanchez '84 has become associated with the firm ofLewitt, Hackman, Hoefflin, Shapiro & Marshall in Encino.

Sheila A. Canty '85 remarried Richard Canty in June 1987. She is practicing civil litigation with Robert H. Skemp

After a day offirst-year orientation, Professor Bryan Fair found time to answer one morestudent's questions.

& Associates in Monterey County.

Glenn B. Davis '85 has become an associate with the firm of Manatt, Phelps, Rotherberg & Phillips.

Suzanne Luban '85 has joined the Sacramento Federal Defender's Office as a trial lawyer.

Anne Beytin Torkington '85 has been appointed an administrative judge for the Los Angeles district office of the Equal Employment OpportunityCommission. She will hear federal sector employment discrimination com-

plaints under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Equal Pay Act and the Rehabilitation Act.

Andrew R. Hall '86 and James B.. Woodruff '82 have become associated with Graham & James, where they practice in the litigation department of the firm'sLos Angeles office.

Andrew E. Shapiro '86 married Audrey Tiefenthal August 30 at Piper Sonoma Vineyards. He is in the acquisition finance group of Manufacturers' Hanover, structuring, financing and

advising for leveraged buyouts.

Jonathan Storper '86has become associated with thefirm of Graham & James in San Francisco, specializing in internationallaw and commercial litigation.

Leslie E. Wallis '86and David J. Schindler '87have becomeassociated with Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susmanin Beverly Hills.

Patricia Donahue '87, Barbara A. Finley '84, Rochelle Herzog '85 and Stephanie G. Pearl '85 have become associated with Jeffer, Mangels & Butler.

Patricia A. Libby '87and Michael H. Walizer '87areassociatesof Quinn, Kully and Morrow in Los Angeles.

Joel A. Thvedt '87has become associated with Kindel & Anderson.

Arnold Fitger Williams '87has joined the Fresno firm of Dowling, Magarian, Phillips & Aaron, working in business law transactions, environmental, real estate and commercial law.

IN MEMORIAM

Bruce Alan Gothelf '80

Irving Maxwell Grant '55

Joseph Conrad Jordan '54

Martin S. Locke '54

Robert Owen Price '60

Frederica "Deri" Lord Rudulph '77

Calendar ofEvents

December 9-10, 1988-Thirteenth Annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium, MacgowanHall; Friday, December 9, 2-5:30p.m.;Saturday, December 10, 9 a.m.-3:45 p.m. Contact Carol Afshar (213) 825-2899

Thursday, January 5, 1989-AALS Annual Meetingin New Orleans, UCLA Alumni Dinner, Birra Poretti's Italian Restaurant,JacksonBrewery, 7 p.m. Contact CarolAfshar, (213) 825-2899.

Thursday, February 2, 1989-ABA Mid-Year Meetingin Denver, UCLA Alumni Receptionat the Law Firm of Sherman & Howard, 633 17th Street, Suite2900, 5:30-7:30p.m. Contact Carol Afshar, (213) 825-2899.

Saturday, March 18, 1989-The AnnualSchool of Law Dean's Dinner, UCLAJames E. West Center, 7 p.m. Reception, 8 p.m. Dinner.

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I want to supportthelawjournalsbysubscribingto:

UCLA Law Review ($24)

.BlackLawJournal ($12.50)

ChicanoLawReview ($7.00)

FederalCommunicationsLawJournal ($18)

UCLAJournal ofEnvironmentalLaw & Policy ($15)

UCLAPacificBasinLawJournal ($15)

Subscription checks payable to Regents of UC.

I want lo participatein:

The Law Alumni Association

The MootCourtHonorsProgram.

Placement seminarsforstudents.

Alumni Advisory Program

Fund-raisingfortheSchool

Otherinterests:

NAME CLASS �HONE

ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP

D Checkifaddressisnew.

Mailto: Alumni Office, UCLASchoolofLaw,405Hilgard,LosAngeles,CA 90024

University of California School of Law

Office of the Dean 405 Hilgard Avenue

Los Angeles, California 90024-1476

Address Correction Requested

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