Justice Anthony M. Kennedyofthe U.S. Supreme Court engaged law studentsin afree-ranging explorationofthe court's processes and answered questions oncurrent issues when he visitedtheSchoolof Lawin October.
UCLA Law is published al UCLA for alumni, friends, and other membersof The UCLA School of Law community. Issued three Limes ii yec1r. Offices al 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles 90024. "Postmaster: Send c1clclress 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, PublicCommunications
Joan Tyndall I Assistant Dean, Development and Alumni Relations
Ted Hulbert / Editor
Steve Ruken / Editorial Assistant Photography / ASUCLAPhotoService
Collaborations
heir work returns the word "collaborate" toitsoriginalmeaning: they labor together.Thelaw studentswhose projects are profiled here iilustrate legal education at its best. The students and their professors have formed learning/ teaching situations which are genuinely collaborativein their nature.
Motivated by insights they gained in an administrative law class, students became the catalysts for a major conference which attracted national scholars to UCLAtoexploretimelyissuesinthefield. Executing a myriad of detailsfor this undertaking, working side-by-side in collaboration with their professor, their successful program illuminated the field of administrative law for an audience of 200 judges, scholars and students.
Other collaborations profiled here show students and faculty searching together for solutions to the problems of prenatal drug exposure, excessive costs of litigation in an area of high technology, needed reform of banking laws, and environmentalblightin the U.S.-Mexico border zone. In each instance, it's interestingtoseehowstudentshavebeeninspiredby
their earlier work in one class or another to probe deeper for solutions to real problems.
Thefacultygiveallthecredittotheirstudents. The students are quite earnest in giving credit to their faculty mentors.Itis a sign, nodoubt, that they have labored together
New Light on Administrative Law
When they enrolled in Professor Michael Asimow's course in Administrative Law last spring, students couldn't have guessed the eventual outcome of their explorationsintothis often-neglected areaofthe law.
"Administrative law doesn't sound terribly interestingtoalotoflawstudents,"admits Martin Barash. "Itisoftenanignoredareaofthelaw," agrees Parthiv Sangani.
But the insights which Asimow brought to his classroom, combined with the experiences of students as they worked in this field, resulted in a deeper appreciation ofadministrative law as an area
vvhich profoundly impacts people's lives. In turn, that perception of the importance of administrative law led student editors of the UCLA Law Review to organize a recent national symposium at UCLAwhich illuminated current issues in this burgeoning field.
The Novembersymposium grew, in largepart, from a desire by the UCLA Law Review to organize a major scholarly symposium to mark the review's 4oth anniversary. Editor-in-chief Jack Weiss and other members of the editorial board knew that Asimow could attract to such a conference leading scholars in the field of administrative law. ProfessorAsimow, whois a consultant to the Law Revision Commission redrafting the California Administrative Procedure Act, also agreed to serve as faculty chair of the symposium.
The symposium, as it developed, was something of a phenomenal success. Close to 200 judges, attorneys, scholars and students at the day-long program filled the law building's largest lecture hall. Profes-
sor Jerry L. Mashaw of Yale gavethe keynote address. Other presenters included Professor Asimow, President Paul R. Verkuil of the College of William and Mary, Professor Peter L. Strauss of Columbia, and Professor Harold H. Bruff of the University of Texas. Commentators were Chief Judge William R. Robie of the U.S. Immigration nd Naturalization Service, Professor Lucie White of UCLA, Professor Daniel B. Rodriguez of UC Berkeley, and Judge Alex Kozinski of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The UCLA Law Review will publish the papers presented at this symposium on "Contemporary Issues in Administrative Adjudication" in its June 1992 issue.
What might not have been apparent at the symposium was the depth of involvement by law students who worked for months in organizing this major scholarly program.
Martin Barash recalls a meeting of the UCLA Law Review editorial board when the symposium was
Parthiv Sangani, Martin Barash, Professor Michael Asimow
Brenda Sutton and Professor Lucie White
firstbeingcontemplated. "Partofthedecisionbythe (lawreview) editorialboardonwhethertogoahead," recalls Barash, "came down to whether there were people who would take the lead in putting the conference together. Parthiv and I looked at each other andknew thatthiswasthekindof projectthatwould be fun and worthwhile, so we stepped forward and volunteered."
WithProfessorAsimowasthefacultychair, Barash and Sangani agreed to serve as student co-chairs. "Jack Weiss kept a fire lit under us over the summer months when we had the distraction of being at work," said Barash.
The two student co-chairs both are the first members of their families to study law.
Parthiv Sangani, before deciding to become a lawyer, had intended to become aneconomistandstudied economics at the University of Pennsylvania. A native of India,hecameasarefugeetothe U.S.atthe ageof 7 afterhisfamilyandtheentire Indiancommu-
nity living in Uganda were expelled under the reign of Idi Amin.
"Mostpeoplenevergotocourt," observesSangani, "and any kind of legal encounter they have is more likely to be with an administrative board." That reality underlined his interest in working on the administrativelaw symposium.Sanganireadconsiderably on his own to prepare for the conference, in addition to regular meetings with Asimow. "Professor Asimow is terrific, he is really wonderful," Sangani noted.
Barash, who grew up in Woodland Hills, returned to Southern California after a four-year sojourn to Princeton. There, he majored in politics and Americanstudiesandforhisthesis wroteapolitical biographyofPeterGoldmark,Jr., whoiscurrentlypresident of the Rockefeller Foundation.
SanganiandBarashhavebothworkedinmajorlaw firms during their summers.
Barash describes the experience in administrative
law asgiving breadth to hisconceptof legal practice. "Before I took Professor Asimow's class, I did not understand just hovv great an impact administrative law has on our day-to-day lives. More decisions take placein administrative settingsthanincourtrooms."
While participating in Public Counsel's homeless advocacy project last summer, Barash also had the opportunity to put his administrative law course to work.As one example, he recalls the case of a homeless veteran who had been denied general relief, the mostbasickindofwelfareassistance;whilethesocial serviceagencywasadamantthatthecasewasclosed, Barash was able to get it reopened since the veteran hadn't received proper notice. "The bottom line is that I was able to do a betterjob as a result of having taken Professor Asimow's course."
Like the entire staff of the law review, Barash and Sangani were heartenedwhen the Novembersymposiumresulted inalargeturnout. "Thefeelingissimilartowhathappenswhenyouthrowapartyandsend out invitations," said Sangani. "You never are sure people willshow Weweregladwhen somany did."
A Focus on Prenatal Addiction
Brenda Sutton has learned that misguided attitudes about social problems can be a real impediment to finding effective solutions.
Take, for example, the problem of prenatally drugexposed infants. In a seminar on extreme poverty taughtbyProfessorLucieWhitelastyear,BrendaSutton began researchingcommunityand legislativeresponses to prenatal drug exposure.
She linked her research with work completed as one of four law studentsselected to studyin UCLA's broad Interdisciplinary Fellowship on Child Abuse and Neglect. The legal study within the fellowship was directed by Professor Robert Goldstein, and the fellowship also involved placement with Public Counsel's Children's Rights Project directed by UCLAlaw alumnus Pam Mohr
As an outgrowth of the two programs, Sutton has continued her research and writing on prenatal drug exposure. Sutton pointsout thatshe doesn'tidentify herselfasachildadvocate,havinglearnedthatwhen well-meaning people "go in with an idea of fixing a child's life, asopposedtofiguring out whathasgone wrong with the whole system, the children often are separated from their support systems."
There has been a failure onthe part ofpolicy makersto "gointothecommunitiesandmakeameaningful inquiry," Sutton said. "This is a life-threatening
failure. In focusing on children, a whole generation of people is being written off, which only feeds into feelings of hopelessness and despair - which do lead to drug use and crime."
Inresearchingthe legislativefacetsoftheproblem, she found Lucie White "a very accessible source for brainstorming. Professor White was a great help as I outlinedandrewrotedraftsinthedevelopmentofmy subject."
Researching legislative hearings and interviewing community leaders who have addressed prenatal substance abuse, this second-year law student discoveredavastdisparitybetweenlegislative attitudes and the real issues as perceived within the AfricanAmerican community
Sutton found within the legislative hearing transcripts, again and again, a focus on a punitive approach to pregnant drug users who refuse treatment. All too often, however, Sutton said, "the reality is that there is no adequate treatment available." She adds, "There seems to be an almost de!iberate ignorance on the part of legislators in forming responses to the problem of prenantal drug addiction."
It represents an abuse of legislative resources, she said, to "create the fiction that these women are refusing treatment - when in the Los Angeles area there are waitinglists to receive treatment forprenatalsubstance abuse." Sutton's research found that in 1989,therewere less than 500 treatmentslotsin Los Angeles County for 15,600 women, with an average waitingperiodofthreetosixmonths. Suttonbelieves that more appropriate questioning would have includedanaggressiveinquiryintotheformulaforsuccessful prevention andtreatmentplans forpregnant, drug-addicted women.
In reviewing studies regarding the incidence of prenatal substance abuse, Sutton found that while the media often headline stories on "crack babies" and the indifference of the African-American community, the problem of prenatal substance abuse extends beyond racial and economic boundaries. The problem is compounded, she noted, by those who regard drug use in Beverly Hills as glamorous at the sametimethatdruguseinethniccommunitiesisthe occasionfor"anincrediblepresenceofpoliceforce."
While she hasn't yet reachedherfinalconclusions on the problem of prenatal substance abuse, Brenda Sutton is certain that a change in perception about the problem's source must occur. "If more people owned a part of the problem," she concludes, "there would be a more reasonable response in terms of treatment."
Bill WrightandProfessor Richard Sander
An Economic Analysis of Copyright
Bill Wright was struck by the fact that in complex litigation involving computer software copyright issues, the costs of litigation are extremely high and at times the wrong parties seem to prevail. Using law and economics theory,Wrighthasdeveloped amodel to analyze these problems and to suggest how the undesired consequences of computer copyright litigation might be diminished.
Wrightentered law school with a Ph.D. in physics; afterbeginninga career inresearchwith Texas Instruments, he was "frustrated as a scientist" and opted to make a career change. In law school, he gravitated toward patent law; that led to a summer position in intellectual property with Spensley, Horn, Jubas and Lubitz.
When Wright as a first-year law student took Pro-
fessor Richard Sander's property course, he was introducedto the economicsperspective which Sander (who holds a Ph.D. in economics) brings to his courses. "I liked that mode of analysis," Wright recalls; later, when Wright began his ambitious project of analyzing problems in computer software litigation,itseemednatural toturnto Sanderforguidance.
Wright had also studied law and economics in a seminar with Professor Sander last spring. "It was a wonderful group of people, including a number who had done graduate work in economics. It was a rich, intellectually stimulating class," Wright says.
Wright enlisted Sander as his instructor for an independentstudies course,during which Wright's paper -a case study in computer software copyright law - progressed through three drafts. "We talked at great length about the issues," explains Wright, "and he made various suggestions, including articles I should read to gain further perspective."
Wright's paper essentially uses an economic
Marilyn Gude] andProfessor Alison Anderson
model of how parties act in a lawsuit, what their economic incentives are, and what their strategies should be - based on their stake in the outcome of the lawsuit. He relates thisframeworkto the context of complex computer software litigation.
Copyright lawsthatworkwellfor normal modesof expression, such aswritingor music, requireajudge or jury to have a deepunderstandingof thematerial; this may be too much to demand when it comes to technical matter such as a computer program. The trieroffactisforcedtolooktoothergroundsinreaching a decision; the party which invests more in the litigationis likely to win.
Another problem in this field is that givingexcessive protection to copyright owners can reduce the choices available to the consumer Wright notes that among software professionals there is an antipathy toward copyrightlaw, callinginto question the tenet that copyright will serve as anincentive for innovation. But this is not a reason to abandon software
copyrightlaw. Whatisneeded, Wrightsays,is "toset the level of protection at the rightlevel."
Among his cone!usions, Wright finds that "the technical nature of the subject matter makes expert testimony essential to the fair adjudication of aninfringementdispute. Inorder topromotefairnessand efficiency, thetrialjudgeshouldusethepretrialconferencetolimitthe expert testimonytoitsnecessary extent. Limiting the possible expense of presenting testimony will reduce the bias toward the wealthier party that existsin complex litigation."
Professor SandersaysWrightisanexceptionalstudentwithgreatpromise-but Wrightin turn claims that the noveltyof his approach stemsfrom Sander's advice. "My work with him has been really rewarding, andthemostintellectuallychallengingaspectof my time at UCLA."
Banking Law: A Needed Reform
Marilyn Gudel knew firsthand the harmful consequences which antiquated laws have had on the bankingindustry Beforebecomingalawstudent,she had been a bank vice president in Chicago. Both through on-the-job experience and academic research, she knew that the world of banking and the world of investments were separated by laws which originated at the time of the Great Depression.
Why this separation should continue more than half a century later was a question that fascinated Gude! during her years in banking. Later, in law school, her interest deepened; she began a study of thecourtdecisionswhichhaveinterpretedtheGlassSteagall Act since its enactment in the 1930s.
Gudel, as she studied the judicial construction of this act, found that she needed more understanding of the world of securities. The help she needed was provided by Professor Alison Anderson,who served
as Gudel's mentor in an independent studies program. "Certain things in the court opinions didn't make sense to me," Gudel recalls. As Anderson critiqued Gudel's writing, she also broughtinto the totalequationarationalefor the laws which regulate securities.
Inthewakeofbankfailuresduringthe Depression, therewasabeliefthatunderwritinginvestmentshad contributed to theproblem. "Thatbelief is nottaken seriouslyany longer," Gude! points out.
"TheGlass-SteagallActisanattempttofreezeinto lawonetransientmomentinthehistoryofU.S.financial institutions," Gudel writes. "The history of the caselawshowstwodevelopmentsthathavemadethe Actobsolete.First,thegrowthofadministrativeregulation offinancialmarketshasmitigated the dangers ofthe 1930s.Second,thetransformationofthefinancialenvironmenthasallowedthesecuritiesindustry to make significant inroads into traditional banking activities. This development has increased both the
Professor Henry McGeeJr. and Carlos Escobedo
riskiness of banking and the need for bank diversification."
Recent court decisions,in fact, leave a rather confusing pattern of interpretation of the Glass-Steagall Act. "Thecourtshavehadahardtimetryingtograpplewithwhatbankscanandcannotdo," saysGude!. Various proposals which have been before Congress inrecentyears, includinga Bush Administrationbill which died recently, would repeal the act in its entirety.
There are those who would argue that underwriting mutualfundsandotherequitiesisriskybusiness forbanks. "Thequestionis," saysGude!, "whetherit is riskier to underwrite equities than to lend a companymoneyforsixmonths,sincethecompanymight default."
Moderntechnologyandachangeinthewaypeople do business mean that there are·now two separate entities-banksandinvestmentfirms-whichoffer servicesthatareverysimilarfromaconsumer'spoint of view.
"Public concern about the soundness of the nation's banking system is at its highest since the 1930s," Gude! concludes. "Thus,nowisagoodtime for new, comprehensive banking legislation which wilI bothprotectdepositorsandallowbankstofairly compete in today's financial marketplace."
A Challenge for Mexico and U.S.
WhenCarlosEscobedostudiedpollutionofMexico's New River for a seminar in environmental law, the project literally tookhimbacktohisoriginalsources. In a field trip to gather material on the pollution problem, Escobedo traveled to the river's mouth in Mexicali - where he was born.
Escobedo and other students in Professor Henry McGee's seminar a year ago studied environmental and land use problems in the U.S.-Mexico border zone. As Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Chicano-Latino Law Review this year, Escobedo is helping to edit papersfromthatseminarwhichwillappearaspartof a special issue of the journal focusing on the U.S.Mexico free trade agreement and related environmental issues.
EscobedotracedtherouteoftheNewRiverfromits
origininMexicali,hisbirthplace,totheImperialValley and the Salton Sea. The sea literally is being killed, he said, by toxins in the river Waste is dumped into the New River by U.S. industries in Mexico,attractedtherebycheaplabor Mexico,forits part, is failing to enforce environmental laws.
InCalexico,Escobedomet witha cityofficial who is a chief proponent for cleaning up the New River, and together they toured a 60-mile stretch of the problem. They saw toxic foam floating on the water and warning signs which, generally, seem to go ignored.
"TheconclusionIhavecometoisthatMexicoand the U.S.mustworktogether tocleanuptheriverand to police the factories that are dumping their wastes indiscriminately," says Escobedo.
Some of the other problems of environment in the border zonewhichEscobedo andhis colleagues will address in the Chicano-Latino Law Review are air pollution, nuclear wastes, and the health hazards of shanty towns on the border
Impact of the free trade agreement is a second major concerninthisproject, explainedEscobedo. "We are focusing on U.S.-run industries, maquiladoras, being built in Mexico supported by the Mexican workingclass.Thereisagreatamountofcriticismon the Mexican side of the border of these companies which take advantage of the fact that people will work for very low wages and no benefits."
Escobedo acknowledges that the free trade agreement is a complex subject. "It is a good thing and a badthing. Many people willgetjobs.Othersseeitas a sell-out."
After being an undergraduate at UC Berkeley, Escobedo spent two years working for a number of immigration agenciesincludingtheInternationalInstitute of Los Angeles, the Labor Immigrant AssistanceProject ofthe AFL-CIO, andthe National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials. Hisinteractions with attorneysinthose officeswhetted his own desire to study law
The seminar with Professor McGee, according to Escobedo, provided "an excellent opportunity to pursue a project of individual interest." And, says McGee,Escobedoistheperfect example ofalaw student who has learned how to integrate legal study with communityinvolvement.
JulianEule: One ofa Kind
ulian Euleisanoriginal.Hisscholarship in constitutional law has defined an entirely distinctive field of inquiry, and his scholarly writing is markedbyastyle whichishisalone. Studentsknow Euleintermsofanunbridledpassion for his subject; long after a classroom lecture has ended, his animated pursuit of a principle typically spills out into the corridors.
Julian Eule's intensityis punctuated by a sense of humorsosubtlethat thelaughter ofrecognition often comes long after Eule has thrust out some original gem.
16 (at the State University of New York at Stony Brook) and by 23 he had graduated Cornell Law School. After a year with Shearman & Sterling in New York City, a clerkship on the U.S. Court of Appealsfor the 2nd Circuit, and a stint as special legal counsel tothegovernorofConnecticut, heearnedan LL.M. at Harvard. He began teaching law school atage 27 and was tenured by Temple Universityat age 29. When asked how he accomplished so much so early in life, Eule says, "I don't sleep. I work fast. I clearly don't constipate over things." When he was 17, he knew who he wanted to marry. "I decided I wanted to marry my wife within several weeks of meeting her," Eule saysquiteearnestly. (He and Carole Eule were, in fact, married several years later -
after his first year as a law student at Cornell.)
Julian Eule had just turned30 when he argued his first case before the Supreme Court of the United States. He won the case 9-0. Another lawyer asked how it felt to win a unanimous decision at such an early age. "I said, 'It's all downhill from here.' That statement was more prophetic than I had intended, because two months later I was diagnosed with cancer.''
In the midst of Eule's second bout with Hodgkin's disease, UCLA called to offer him a visiting professorship. "Since age 13,Ihadwantedtomoveto California - but my wife had no desire to come here. I was extremely weak and on chemotherapy when the call came.Inamomentofweakness,mywifesaid, 'If you finish the treatment and are disease-free for a year, we'll trythemovetoCalifornia.'Ithinkshewas convinced she would not have to make good on her
promise."
As it happened, Eule's recovery was UCLA's gain. He accepted the visiting professorshipin 1984 and a year later he joined UCLA's faculty permanently as Professor of Law.
Eule's closest connection to cancer in recent years is the occasional class he co-teaches with an oncologist at UCLA's School of Medicine on the patient's perspective on chemotherapy. "It is an attempt to sensitize doctors to the patient's experience," Eule explains.
ChosentwicebyUCLAlawstudentsasProfessorof the Year,inadditiontoreceivingtheRutterAwardfor Excellence in Teaching, Eule is admired equally by his students and his peers. "His knowledge of the subject matter is incredibly vast," said one of his constitutionallaw students. Enumerating the factors thatmake Eulesuchapopularprofessor,anotherstu-
dent wrote: "Where tobegin? His masteryof thesubject. His incredible enthusiasm. His friendliness to students. His sense of humor. And more."
A faculty colleague, Professor Evan Caminker, characterizes Eule as "passionate about much of whatheteaches.Hegetswiredinclass,andpacesthe roomatbreakneckspeed, whichreflectshispassion. His students regard him as a very effective teacher."
Eulehimselfbelievesthetwokeystohissuccessin teaching are his level of enthusiasm and his humor. "Most professors have a good grasp of doctrine and can explain it clearly, but humor is my edge."
His humor is irreverent while being sensitive. Often Eule is the butt of his own jokes- which generallyaredeliveredwithastraightface."Inthefirstfew weeks, students in my first-year classes aren't sure whethertolaughatwhatIsay; onlyafterthey'vebeen around a while do they realize when I'm joking."
WhenareporteraskedEuletonamethethreegreatest obstacles in his life, he responded: "Cancer and the fact that I grew up poor." "Those are only two obstacles," continued the reporter, "I need a third." Eulethoughtamoment,thensaid, "My mother." The reporterdutifully recordedthatstatement,notrecognizing it was intended as a joke.
Eule'spenchantforobscurehumorisrivaledbyhis fascination with trivia. "I love collecting useless information. People will tell you I know more about things of noimport than anyone else they ever met,·· he asserts. Onesuspects thisinterest in trivia is only Eule's mechanism to rest his mind briefly from the largerissueswhichoccupyhim; alistofhisscholarly publications confirms that suspicion.
Just published is his article on "Promoting Speaker Diversity: Austin and Metro Broadcasting" 1990 Supreme Court Review (Unirnrsit�· of Chicago,
"Mostprofessors haveagood grasp of doctrineand can explain it clearly, but humoris my edge."
1991), analyzing the two cases in which the court gave its approval to government action designed to "enhance the relative voice" of some members of society at the expense of others. In that article, Eule predictedthat the court's "newfound willingnessto tolerate the promotion of speaker diversity" is not likely to lead further for the time being, because of the departures of Justices Marshall and Brennan.
The Supreme Court Review is a book of invited articles, edited by University of Chicago faculty; the constitutional law scholars included annually are a mixofsuperstarsandrisingstars.ProfessorEulewill again be contributing an article for next year's edition of the review; that article will be on General Motors v. Romein, a case from Michigan which the U.S. Supreme Court isexpectedto hearin December anddecide inthespring.Eulecalls Romein "themajor case on retroactivity in the last 30 years."
Whenthe Supreme Courtof Michigandecidedthe case, both the majority and dissenting opinions quotedEule'searlierarticleonretroactivity,"Temporal Limits onthe Legislative Mandate:Entrenchment and Retroactivity" 1987 American Bar Foundation Research Journal (Vol. 2) 379. Eule was commissionedbythefoundationtowritethatarticle,receiving the Samuel Pool Weaver Constitutional Essay Prize in supportof the project.
Professor Eule is also a frequent speaker at conferences which the Federal JudicialCenterin Washington, D.C., organizes throughout the country for federaljudges.Eulesaystherepeatinvitationssaymore about a professor's abilityto inform in an entertaining manner than they do about ability to think deeply
Again, his colleagues probably would challenge thatbitof modesty.
"Julian is carving out a field of constitutional law scholarship that is distinctively his own," says Professor KennethKarst."Atatimewhenmostconstitutionalscholars havebeenwritingaboutissuesofsubstantive liberty and equality, Julian has taken an institutional view of constitutional law thatfocuses on the structures of government. One of the most impressive featuresof hisworkisthathe hasdemonstrated the importance of those structures to the li-
berty and equality issues which the rest of us have been spending our time on."
Eule's 1987 article on entrenchment and retroactivityillustratesthatpoint.Analyzingthelimitations oflegislative authority,the article highlightstheconcern when alegislatureseekstotranscend-forward or backward in time - its limited delegation from the electorate. "We assume legislatures cannot bind future legislatures, but we have never defined why thisisso; itisanassumption," Eulesays. "Exploring the reasons behind the assumption sheds light on a wholerangeofissues,includingthecontractsclause, the amendmentprocess, and retroactivity."
Eule also explored structural issues in his more recentarticle,"JudicialReviewofDirectDemocracy" 99 Yale Law Journal1503 (1990). The article'sthesis is that "arguments for judicial restraint indeed play outdifferently when courts reviewthe constitutionality of direct expressions of the electorate," and its ultimate conclusion isthat "judicial reviewofdirect democracyfrequentlycalls for Jess rather than more restraint" on the part of courts.
"By asking whether courts should review initiatives inthe same wayastheydolegislation" (andby concludingthatthestandardofreviewshould infact be greater), says Eule, "I am able to examine democratic government and compare itwith a republican form of government, andto explorecentral issues at the core of society."
Professor Eule sometimes describes his scholarshipasthatofa heretic,questioningbasicintuitions. "Iliketotakeissueswhichweeither haven'tthought about at all, or where we've had long-standing assumptionswhicharegenerallyunquestioned.Sometimes I conclude that the assumption is correct, but often I challenge it. This process sheds light on a whole group of issues."
Eule says each of his scholarly articles represents an attempt to define some area of the law and, in doing so, to explore and identify particular ways in which the democratic process can break down. For example, in his 1982 article, "Laying the Dormant Commerce Clauseto Rest" 91 Yale Law Journal 425, Eule looked at the process by which courts balance thebenefitsandburdens in interstate commerce reg-
"Whatarethelimits on enforcing lawsagainstsome groups butnot others?"
ulation; he found that the actions of courts in this area were badly in need of clarification.
Professor Eule currently is at work on an article examining discriminatory administration of the law - the problem when law on its face is neutral but enforced inanunequalmannerbyprosecutors,agencies,orothers.AquestionEuleraisesis: Whatarethe limitson enforcinglawsagainstsome groupsbutnot others?
"The constitutionality of law is dependent not only on what the law is, but who created it," Eule says.In his article on "Judicial Reviewof Direct Democracy," Eulesuggestedthatthesamelawmightbe constitutional if passed byalegislatureyetunconstitutional if promulgated by thevoters. "Theconstitutionality of law is not dependent only on what has beendone,butwhohasdoneit." Hiscurrentresearch on discriminatory enforcementextendsthis analysis in terms ofadministrators versus legislators.
Beyond his teaching and writing, Eule finds a world filled with interests. "I like doing almost everything, and I become very involved in whatever I amdoing." Lastsummer he wentscubadivingfor the
"The constitutionalityoflaw is dependent not only on what the law is, but who created it."
first time and was completely immersed. He enjoys beingaportraitphotographer;imagesof hischildren, Lisa and Brian,grace his office as fine examples.
Candidly, says Eule, "Ican'timagine anywhere I'd rather be than UCLA. Lastyear,I chaired the faculty appointments committee; convincing people that UCLAisawonderfulplacewastheeasypartfor me.'·
Some law schools have a reputation for collegiality, others for diversity. "This law school is both collegial and diverse," says Eule. "We have not achievedour uniquequalityby being homogeneous. At UCLA there is a diversity of scholarship style, a diversityof experience. Everybody brings something to it.It's great to be a part of such a community."
Focus: The Law Annual Fund
It needs to be said at the beginning: the present academicyear1991-92 isayearwheneverysinglegift is essential tothefinancialhealthofthe Schoolof Law.
Law schools are unique among professional schools, in the fact that they rely almost entirely on thegenerosityofalumniforfinancialsupport. Thisis especially true in the case of the Law Annual Fund. Bit by bit, gift by gift, one name at a time, the Law Annual Fund has grown over the past fifteen years from $30,000 to just over $600,000.
Last year, the fund held steady with the previous year -a good result in difficult economic times. This year we hope to gain ground. Itwon'tbe easy. It will mean that each person must realize that his or her gift, at whichever level he or she is capable of, will make the critical difference between continued growth and slipping behind. The law school simply
cannot afford the latter.
Serious budget cuts across the University campus are having a dramatic impact onacademicplanning. In our law school, the Annual Fund plays a key role in augmenting campus resources. Built into the school's budget as it is, the Annual Fund supports a range of programs, faculty needs and student activities. Itwouldbeasadchoicetoreducefundingtoany of these areas.
The entire law school community extends its thanks to all of the individuals who knew their gift would be important. We invite previous donors to continue their tradition of generosity this year and hope that others of you reading through these pages willdecidetoaddyournamesaswell. Onenameata time. That's just the way it's done.
UCLA School ofLaw Donors 1990-1991
(Fiscal Year July 1, 1990 to June 30, 1991)
1952
Participation: 57%
Number ofDonors: 20
Total Graduates: 35
Closs Representative: John Charles McCarthy
**Arthur Alef
*Maurice W. Bralley
*Howard O'Neil
Culpepper
****Curtis B. Danning
***Jean Bauer Fisler
***Saul Grayson
****ArthurN. Greenberg
****Richard T. Hanna
****Geraldine S. Hemmerling
****BruceI. Hochman
*Sidney R. Kuperberg
***J. Perry Langford
****Donald C. Lieb
****John C. McCarthy
**Frederick E. Mueller
*Sallie T. Reynolds
*Martin J. Schnitzer
***Edward B. Smith, III
**Joseph N. Tilem
****Lester Ziffren
1953
Participation:26%
Number ofDonors: 11
Total Graduates: 42
Closs Representative: Charles A. Zubieto
***James D. Doggett
**ArthurM. Frankel
*John U. Gall
*Jerome H. Goldberg
****Ronald B. Labowe
**Donald C. Lozano
*Dorothy W. Nelson
*JohnF. Parker
**WillardM. Reisz
***JackM. Sattinger
****Charles A. Zubieta
1954
Participation: 26%
NumberofDonors: 23
Total Graduates: 90
Closs Representative: Seymour E. Fagan
****Leon S. Angvire
***John A. Arguelles
***CarlBoronkay
****Thomas L. Caps
****SeymourE. Fagan
**HarveyF. Grant
****Marvin Gross
**Dennis Hayden
****MartinR. Horn
****MarvinJubas
**Eugene V. Kapetan
****Gerald Krupp
**Jack Levine
****Sherwin L. Memel
****Billy G. Mills
****Roger C. Pettitt
*Howard W. Rhodes
****Norman A. Rubin
*E. Allen Nebel
**H. GilbertJones ****M. J. Diederich ****Donald A. Ruston **Bruce I. Rauch
***Bernard P. Silverman *Graham A. Ritchie
*Jerry Silverman **Richard Schauer
*KennethE. Kulzick ***DavidR. Glickman
**Hm,vard Lehman **EphraimJ. Hirsch
L. GuyLemaster ****JeanAnnHirschi
*AnneP. Toomer **HaroldL. Schmidt ***PaulLevinson **Marvin Jabin ****Robert F. Waldron ****WilliamW. Vaughn ****Bernard L. Lewis **Roy A. Kates ****JosephA. Wein ****MiltonLouisMiller **RobertA. Knox 1955 ****Allen Mink **EverettW. Maguire
Participation: 27% 1956
**Norman D. Rose ****Mariana R. Pfaelzer
Number ofDonors: 21 Participation: 36% ****Marvin D. Rowen ****Charles E.
Total Graduates: 79
****John S. Byrnes, Jr.
Number of Donors: 25
Harvey A. Sisskind Rickershauser. Jr.
Total Graduates: 70 ***HerbertJ. Solomon **Gloria K. Shimer
Class Representative: ***NormanE. Stevens **IrvingShimer ****LeeJ. Cohen
*Myrtle Dankers
Irwin 0. Goldring *J. Howard Sturmant **\\/ells K. Wohlwend
*LauraL.Glickman **H.Stuart Kinder **Thomas E.Warriner Terry J.Amdur **Myron S.Greenberg ****ThomasP.Lambert Robert A.Weeks ****KeenanBehrle **Jan LawrenceHandzlik **RonaldC.Lazof Jay C.Weitzler
In Memoryof Bernard A. David & Zoltan Lebovits (Gift of Deborah A. David & Moses 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
David F. Faustman
Stanley R. Fimberg
Robert James Finger
Baret C. Fink
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. & ShahinGans
Gilbert & SukeyGarcetti
Dan Garcia
FlorentinoGarza
Allan S. Ghitterman
David & DenaGinsburg
Leroy M. Gire
Paul J. Glass
Bruce S. Glickfeld
Albert B. Glickman
StevenC. Glickman
MarvinGeraldGoldman
Clarann & IrwinGoldring
Richard JayGoldstein
Bob & Diane Goon
William D. Gould
WilliamGraham
Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Gralla
MichaelA. Grayson
Arthur N. Greenberg
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard A. Greenberg
Marvin & JoyGross
Alan N. Halkett
Samuel W. Halper
Richard T. Hanna
JohnGardner Hayes
Donna R. Hecht
John W. Heinemann
Geraldine S. Hemmerling
Rodney C. Hill
Jean Ann Hirschi
Harriet & Bruce Hochman
Nathalie Hoffman
PaulGordon Hoffman
Derrick Anthony Hoo
Rita & Martin R. Horn
Gary S. Jacobs
Howard A. Jacobs
Daniel J. Jaffe
J. W. & Ida M. Jameson Foundation
Stanley R. Jones
Michael Stephen Josephson
Marvin & Fern Jubas
Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Kahan
Murray 0. Kane
David S. Karton
Martin Z. N. Katz
Bernard Katzman
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher Kim
James H. Kindel, Jr.
Benjamin E. King t
Howard E. King
StephenScott King
Richard L. & Iris Kite
Leonard Kolod
Ephraim P. Kranitz
Gerald Krupp
Ronald B. & Trana K. Labowe
Thomas P. Lambert
Francis J. Lanak
Edward & Madeleine Landry
Richard & Ruth Lane
Edward Lasker
Gail Ellen Lees
Saul L. Lessler
Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Levenson
David A. Leveton
Lawrin & Linda Lewin
Robert S. Lewin
Bernard L. Lewis
Marshall A. Lewis
Robert F. Lewis
Fred L. Leydorf
Donald C. Lieb
Diane & Mark Neubauer In Memory of Matthew H.
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey T. Oberman
Small
Elliott & Elisa Olson (Gift of Mr. & Mrs. Lee A.
Gregory Soobong Paik Small)
Jay & Marijane Palchikoff
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
Rochelle M. Lindsey & Ted Barnet & Linda Reitner
Obrzut
Ethan Lipsig
Monte E. Livingston
Walt Livingstont
Stewart Resnick
Steven J. Revitz
Wayne W. Smith
Arthur Soll
John R. Sommer
Bruce H. Spector
Art Spence
David S. Sperber
Scott J. Spolin
Henry Steinman
Richard R. & Phoebe J. Stenton
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Richard J. Stone
William F. & Joanne M.
Sullivan
Jeffrey, Kathy, Amy, Alison
Charles E. Rickershauser, Jr. & Emily Sultan
Nelson C. Rising
Lawrence C. Tistaert & Manna Livingston
Martin S. Locket
Elwood & Crystal Lui
Moises Luna
David H. Lund
David J. Mac Kenzie
Karen D. Mack
Philip S. Magaram
Martin & Catherine Majestic
Robert F. Marshall
Michael & Joanne Masin
John H. Roney
James L. Roper
Leslie Brooks Rosen
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Arthur Rosett & Lucie Cheng
Leonard M. Ross
Marvin D. Rowen
Sharon Fesler Rubalcava
Robert M. Ruben
Edward & Nancy Rubin
Laurence D. Rubin
Arthur Mazirow & Elizabeth A. Cheadle
George R. Mccambridge
John C. McCarthy
Michael D. Mc Kee
Marsha McLean-Utley
Robert Craig McManigal
Evan & Cheryl Medow
Louis M. Meisinger
Sherwin L. & Iris Memel
Jerold L. Miles
Lowell J. Milken
Jeffrey T. Miller
Norman A. Rubin
Mr. & Mrs. John F. Runkel, Jr.
Donald A. Ruston
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Rutter
David S. Sabih
Mr. & Mrs. Henley Saltzburg
Richard V. Sandler
Arnold Schlesinger
Richard Schneider
Wayne A. Schrader
Lin & Franklin Tom
E. Paul Tonkovich
Lester E. Trachman
Barry Winyett Tyerman
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Udko
Marilee C. Unruh
Col. & Mrs. Adam Vallejo
David E. Van Iderstine
William W. Vaughn
Charles S. Vogel
Reed S. Waddell
Michael Waldorf
Robert F. Waldron
Cynthia & Kirk Wallace
Kim McLane Wardlaw
Joseph A. Wein
Paul B. Wells
John H. Weston
John Grant Wigmore
Lawrence & Shera Williams
Robert J. Wise
Philip J. Wolman
Cheryl L. & Marshall N. & Anita Yallowitz
Milton B. & Corrine B. Miller Schwartz Wolman
Milton Louis Miller
Billy & Rubye Mills
Iris & Allen Mink
Victor Berkey Moheno
Morgan, Wenzel & McNicholas
Allan S. Morton
Robert M. Moss
John Mounier
Wendy Munger
Michael M. Murphy
Herb & Yvonne Schwartz
Fred Selan
Robert S. Shahin
Judith Salkow Shapiro
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Shapiro
Paul & Barbara Shettler
Lewis H. Silverberg
Stuart A. Simke
David Simon '55 t
Ronald P. & Donna Slates
H. Deane Wong
Robert J. Wynne
Charles E. Young
Kenneth Ziffren
Lester Ziffren
Mr. & Mrs. Mel Ziontz
Daniel Zipser
Charles A. Zubieta
Continued from Page 19
**RicardoF. Munoz
*JosephR. Nelson
*PaulC. Nyquist
**Glenn K. Osajima
***Michael A. Ozurovich
***James J. Pagliuso
**Ann Parode
****James MartinPrager
****Susan Westerberg
Prager
***Kent L. Richland
Richard G. Ritchie
**Eduardo M. Rivera
****Laurence 0. Rubin
*ThomasM. Scheerer
George L. Schraer
*AlJen H. Sache!
****Barry Winyett Tyerman
**Earl M. Weitzman
**David B. Wilshin
***David E. Wood
***RobertH. Wyman
*MichaelF. Yamamoto
**Stuart 0. Zimring
*Douglas B. Zubrin
1972
Participation: 18%
Number of Donors: 51
Total Graduates: 286
Class Representatives:
Curlis 0. Barnes
Howard M. Knee
MichaelAbbott
**G. Greg Aftergood
***Jean-RobertAlfred
****Curtis 0. Barnes
**George J. Barron
**ChristopherP. Bisgaard
****Richard A. Blacker
****Roy M. Brisbois
**W. Daniel Clinton
Bruce J. Croushore
****Philip 0. Dapeer
**Bruce B. Dennison
*Kenneth B. Dusick
****William Elperin
**Peter Q. Ezzell
***DeborahR. Gatzek
****Bruce S. Glickfeld
**JamesKashian
*HowardM. Knee
*William G. Knight
***Joseph K. Kornwasser
*Bruce M. Kramer
Ivan Lawner
**CaryB. Lerman
Dora R. Levin
****RobertS. Lewin
*Gordon J. Louttit
****MoisesLuna
**Joel S. Marcus
***StanleyE. Maron
*Scott A. McIntyre
***JohnP. Meck
*ForrestS. Masten
**Robert M. Popeney
***Mark A. Resnik
**Linda B. Riback
**DominickW. Rubalcava
**CharlesW. Schneider
***Marc M. Se!tzer
Frank Sinatra, III
****WayneW. Smith
William D. Smith
**William J. Smith
**Leland Alan Stark
**Donald K. Steffen
Michael C. Stewart
*PatriciaSturdevant
**Thomas C. Taylor, Jr.
*Griffith D. Thomas
*Richard T. Vogel, Jr.
***Edward A. Woods
1973
Participation: 22%
Number of Donors: 68
Total Graduates: 303
Class Representative:
Bernard R. Gans
*Jonathan Airey
*Lois G. Andrews
**Martin E. Auerbach
*Robert D. Ayres
****DonaldP. Baker
JamesA. Baker
*Henry S. Barbosa
**DavidL. Beaugureau
**DennisS. Beck
*Diane L. Becker
***ArthurP. Berg
*Robert Berke
**RandolphM. Blotky
*Roger W. Boren
**Timothy R. Born
GailF. Brod
Joel M. Butler
Pauline M. Calkin
****Mario Camara
*StevenW. Cobb
**DavidT. DiBiase
Joshua Dressler
**KennethP. Eggers
*R. RoyFinkle
**Peter M. Fonda
****Bernard R. Gans
**JamesL. Goldman
**GeraldM. Gordon
****WilliamGraham
**CharlesI. Henderson
**JoeW. Hilberman
*ThomasP. Hobbs
****Nathalie Hoffman
****DerrickAnthony Hoo
*Craig S. Kamansky
*RandallH. Kennon
**Lawrence L. Kuppin
***CynthiaC. Lebow
**Abraham 0. Lev
*StevenEdwardLevy
RichardE. Marks
****RobertF. Marshall
*Laura K. McAvoy
****George R. McCambridge
****Lowell J. Milken
**DouglasC. Neilsson
R. ThomasPeterson
TheresaJ. Player
***SheldonW. Presser
*PatrickC. Quinlivan
Arthur S. Robinson
Kenneth Ross
***RonaldW. Rouse
****David S. Sabih
****RichardV. Sandler
James K. Schultze
**StacyD. Sharlin
*Carl M. Shusterman
**Kathryne A. Staltz
***MichaelR. Sullivan
****JeffreyE. Sultan
AlanP. Thomas
***James H. Tuggle
****Kirk L. Wallace
**Gary A. Wexler
DanielH. Willick
*Michael E. Wine
*MarilynV. Yarbrough
1974
Participation: 19%
Number of Donors: 58
Toted Graduates: 307
Class Representative:
Marc Epstein
****JulianW. Bailey, Jr.
*William L. Battles
*KennethA. Black
****William Harold Borthwick
**Peter C. Bronson
*Jeffrey J. Carlson
****Bruce A. Clemens
*Dennis A. Cohen
***Allan B. Cooper
*Debra J. De Bose
*JamesR. De Bose
*R. Stephen Doan
****Buddy Epstein
**Marc Epstein
***James L. Foorman
****JackFried
****Dan Garcia
*Ezequiel Gutierrez, Jr.
*Barbara Hindin
**Rex S. Hungerford, Jr.
**Bruce L. Kaplan
**JosephJ. Kaplan
**RobertS. Kirschenbaum
*JonathanM. Klar
*NancyM. Knight
***Andrew A. Kurz
****EthanLipsig
**EvanS. Lipstein
*JosephA. Martinez
*John A. Meyers
***DanielC. Minteer
*Mark Mitchell
****TedObrzut
J. Thomas Oldham
**DanielC. Padnick
****RichardG. Parker
**Cornell J. Price
*NancySpero Regos
****Steven J. Revitz
S. Alan Rosen
*Michael S. Rubin
Michael J. Siegel
DonaldP. Silver
*ShermanL. Stacey
**Daphne M. Stegman
**Elizabeth A. Strauss
**MarshallM. Taylor
**Shan K. Thever
***Mark A. Treadwell
**J. Anthony Vittal
**Donald E. Warner
**DavidH. White
*JasperWilliams, Jr.
*Keith L. Wilson
*William L. Winslow
***Marc J. Winthrop
*RichardP. Yang
*HowardM. Zidenberg
1975
Participation: 27%
Number ofDonors: 82
Total Graduates: 309
Class Representatives:
Brenda Powers Barnes
Moses Lebovits
Harvey Shapiro
*Mel Aranoff
*Valerie L. Baker
****BrendaPowersBarnes
****James 0. C. Barra!!
FrederickB. Benson
*Victoria L. Block
****John G. Branca
****Pamela Brockie
**JamesR. Brueggeman
Douglas M. Bussey
****JonF. Chait
***Gary A. Clark
**EdmundW. Clarke
*John R. Clewett
**ThomasW. Cohen
**RobertaF. Colton
*Robert 0. Cunningham
****Deborah A. David
**ThomasJ. Donnelly
*Bruce L. Dusenberry 1976
****Donald S. Eisenberg
*Roberta Lee Franklin
***Judy G. Fridkis
Jeffrey D. Gale
**Paul L. Gale
Robert G. Garrett
**Sandra Kass Gilman
**John B. Galper
Participation: 26%
NumberofDonors: 78
TotalGraduates: 302
Class Representatives:
**Anne B. Roberts
****Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
*RobertH. Rotstein
***TerryA. Rowland
*Stephanie R. Scher
*Clarke B. Ho!land
Jill E. Ishida
*MarkE. Kalmansohn
Jeffrey P. Kane
*Michael C. Ke!lar
William F. Fahe: ****RichardSchneider ****HowardE. King
Gregory C. Fant
****Michael I. Adler
**Robert Alan Green ***Patricia E. Anderson
***AndrewJ. Guilford
**JohnW. Hagey
**StevenHecht
*Susan T. House
*Evelyn Balderman Hutt
**SamuelD. Ingham, III
*Robert Z. Seligman ***Thomas A. Kirschbaum
****Judith Salkow Shapiro
***JohnP. Simon
Robert A. Spira
*RichardAvila ***MarcR. Stein
**Lourdes Gillespie Baird
StevvartA. Baker
*CharlesF. Barker
Bruce A. Barsook
**ElizabethE. Benes
*Gary M. Stern
*BruceC. Stuart
*Carl J. Klunder
Martin C. Kristal
*Joseph Kruth
**DavidP. Leonard
**Lucinda A. Low
*Lynda S. Mabry
*StevenH. Sunshine Hall Randall Marston
Bonnie E. Thomson
Eugene Tillman
***Larry G. lvanjack ****Fredric I. Bernstein ***Judith W. Wegner
*Gail D. Kass
*RobertL. Kaufman
*Alice CohenBisno
***CarylBartelman
*Barbara A. Blanco Welborn
Brian E. Keefe ****MaribethArmstrong ****Anita Yallowitz
***Alex Kozinski Borthwick Wolman
*RobertM. Kunstadt **Gregory C. Brown ****PhilipJ. Wolman
***Timothy Lappen ***William D. Claster ***Dorothy Wolpert
*Antonia E. Martin
*Peter \/1/. Mason
*Tamar T. Mason
*Carol L. Matsunaga
**John S. MiIler. Jr.
Gregory F. Millikan
*Mary A. Mohrman
Arturo J. Morales
Donald V. Morano ****MosesLebovits ***CraigCotora
**Margaret Levy
**HughA. Linstrom
**RomuloI. Lopez
Bruce D. Lowry
****KarenD. Mack
**Gary W. Maeder
*RolandG. Wrinkle ****Wendy Munger
**Linda C. Diamond 1977
**Richard K. Diamond
Clyde T. Doheney
*JamesP. Donohue
***DavidClarence Doyle
*Don M. Drysdale
*Rebecca I. McKee ***James E. Eakin
*Gary Quincy Michel
ThomasS. Epstein
***Grace N. Mitsuhata *\\/illiamF. Fahey
*Barbara M. Motz
**Norman A. Pedersen
*Gregory C. Fant
Janice L. Feinstein
Participation: 25%
NumberofDonors: 78
*Stephen T. Newman
*Thomas A. Nitti
*Catherine S. Norian
**JohnE. Pope
TotalGraduates: 318 ***CarlC. Robinson
Class Representatives: *Neil J. Rubenstein
MarcyJ. K. Tiffany
Debra M. Van Alstyne
Paul A. Babwin
Fred Sainick
KimT. Schoknecht
*Susan Potter Shanley
*Gustavo A. Barcena ***Charles N. Shephard
**Francis J. Baum
Edward I. Silverman
***CharlesC. Read **KennethL. Friedman ***AlanG. Benjamin ***Gail M. Singer
**Leland J. Reicher
CarolynJ. Gill
RobertE. Rich ****DavidR. Ginsburg
**Julia J. Rider
*IrwinB. Rothschild, III
*Dave 8. Bowker **Daniel H. Slate
***Gregory E. Breen
Carolyn SmalI
DebraP. Granfield ***Rochelle Browne **William S. Small
***MarilynS. Heise ****CarolynHopkins **John W. Stephens
Rolland S. Roup ****PaulGordonHoffman Carlburg
*Blair E. Stump ****SharonFesler
Rubalcava
Thomas G. Ryan
****WayneA. Schrader
*Barry E. Shanley
**Harvey Shapiro
**David Simon
**Virginia E. Sloan
DavidR. Smith
*MarcI. Steinberg
**Marjorie S. Steinberg
**Emily A. Stevens
*Thomas C. Tankersley
*Lawrence Howard
Thompson
SethTievsky
RichardE. Townsend
*Juan Ulloa
**Mark Waldman
**GlennF. Wasserman
**Charles J. Wisch
*FrankC. Woodruff
*MylesT. Yamamoto
**RobertM. Zeller
**Bruce G. Iwasaki
*Gloria R. Josepher
Frances W. Kandel
**RichardJ. Katz
*Diane L. Kimberlin
*WilliamC. Conkle ****WilliamF. Sullivan
George A. Crawford
**Gary A. David
*StevenS. Davis
*Marsh Tanner
***Marcy J. K. Tiffany
*Debra M. Van Alstyne
*Kathleen Houston ***JonathanR. Yarowsky
KennethM. Kumor Drummy
Adrienne E. Larkin
RichardH. Levin
*Dhiya El-Saden
***Scott Z. Zimmermann
Anonymous
Teresa Estrada- 1978
BethL. Levine Mullaney
*CherylA. Lutz
Nancy J. Madsen
**Valerie J. Merritt
****VictorBerkey Moheno
*Duane C. Musfelt
Gay L. Natho
****Mark A. Neubauer
*Richard G. Opper
*EdwardR. Ortega
RobertA. Pallemon
*GordonM. Park
**David 8. Parker
***Peter T. Paterno
*Wilma J. Pinder
MichaelDavid Rich
**George 0. Feldman Participation: 26%
**EdwinF. Feo
Martin A. Flannes
**MarciaA. Forsyth
***KennethJ. Fransen
**Lana L. Freistat
*Joseph M. Gensheimer
*Gregg M. Gibbons
**Larry L. Gilbert
***Paul E. 8. Glad
**Ramon Gomez
***Stephen D. Greenberg
*Jeffrey H. Greiner
*Alberto C. Guerrero
**Suzanne Harris
Number ofDonors: 80
Total Graduates: 305
Class Representatives:
James R. Asperger
Robert N. Block
*Kevin 0. Allen
****Founders
***James H. Chadbourn Fellows
**Dean·s Ad1·ocotes
*Dean's Counsel
tDeceosed
***NancyR. Alpert
*James R. Asperger
JudithBailey
**LindaD. Bardsley
****RobertN. Block
*BernardineBrandis
***MichaelD. Briggs
Steven H. Burkow
***CarolPlattCagan
*WilliamJ. Caplan
**CarolA. Chase
***HilaryHuebsch Cohen
*Douglas H. Collom
****Melanie Cook
Barrington A. S. Daltrey
*Byron L. Dare
**David R. Deutsch
**MichaelD. Dozier
**Denise M. Dumon
*EricF. Edmunds, Jr.
****DavidF. Faustman
*MichaelD. Fernhoff
**LairC. Franklin
*DavidJ. Garibaldi, III
**WayneH. Gilbert
*David Glubok
**Robert J. Grossman
**Karin Greenfield-
*Modesto Rios
**MichaelA. Robbins
**MariettaS. Robinson
**Kay E. Rustand
**PaulS. Rutter
*David I. Schulman
*RubenH. Scott
Steven C. Shuman
G. MichaelTanaka
**Harrison D. Taylor
**Anne T. Thomas
***Kathy T. Wales
*SamuelH. Weiss
**BarryM. Weisz
**Timothy Joseph White
*Gwen H. Whitson
ArleneF. Withers
1979
Participation: 28%
Number ofDonors: 78
Total Graduates: 280
****GailEllenLees
*Lydia S. Levin
****RochelleM. Lindsey
***ThomasH. Mabie
***Jennifer L. Machling
*Sandra Weishart
Marin,_,;;;
*BruceDoelkerMay
****MichaelD. McKee
***James A. Melman
StevenA. Micheli
*TimmAndrew Miller
***RobbieE. Monsma
**MarilynR. Moriarty
**DavidS. Neiger
DianeD. Odell
***Andrew StuartPauly
**Deborah A. Pitts
*NicholasS. Politis
*Bernard M. Resser
*CarolA. Clem
**JohnW. Cochrane
***Leslie A. Cohen
Kevin M. Colton
AllanH. Cutler
*WilliamD. De Grandis
*MargaretR. Dollbaum
**RonaldM. Dorfman
****Robert James Finger
*AlanH. Finkel
****RuthE. Fisher
***Paul A. Franz
AnitaR. Gershman
*Thomas E. Gibbs
RobertD. Goldschein
*GordonA. Goldsmith
***HerbertB. Graham
*Joshua L. Green
*MarkS. Green
**FerisM. Greenberger
James G. Scadden ***Rhonda J. Heth
MichaelW. Schoenleber
Class Representatives: MarkS. Shipow
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
Roberta Kass
Bruce DoekJer May
*NancyL. Abell
*WayneD. Alvarez
*Gary M. Stamler
**Sandra B. Stern
Shelley Steuer
****Gary ScottStiffelman
**Charles 0.
***DarrelJ. Hieber
DebraHodgson
Kathleen Hogaboom
**Laurence L. Hummer
**MarcW. June
*ThomasW. Kellerman
*Kathleen Koch-Weser Sanders
**Lorna C. Greenhill
**Robert J. Grossman
**SusanJ. Hazard
KarenHolliday-
Hancock
**JohnP. Howitt
*BoydD.Hudson
*Alex M. Johnson
*WilliamA. Johnson, Jr.
*MarleneButcherJones
*Jeffrey G. Kelly
J. Steven Kennedy
****ChristopherKim
**Dean J. Kitchens
*Ann L. Kough
Kenneth A. Kramarz
*Mark A. Kuller
***Linda M. Lasley
*Linda Kay Lefkowitz
***Frances E. Lossing
*VictorB. Mac Farlane
*ManuelD. Martinez
*John Mayer
**M. Brian McMahon
*Vernon T. Meador III
***Helen Whiteford
***PeterJ. Anderson
*CharlotteI. Ashmun
**Michael Barclay
**AvivaM. Bergman
**LloydA. Bookman
**AlanF. Broidy
*Harmon Allan Brown
****RichardJ. Burdge,Jr.
***MarkR. Burrill
*John Louis Carlton
*Allan E. Ceran
*Suzette Clover
Bailey R. De Iongh
*G. Alexis DeLa Garza
*ArthurR. Engel
*DouglasB. Finlayson
*SuzanR. Flamm
**Mark W. Flory
*JamesD. Friedman
**Linda GachRay
AlbertS. Glenn
*MarleneD. Goodfried
*NicholasB. Goodhue
CindyW. Graff
*PhilipW. Green
***JoelM. Grossman
*MarkS. Hawley
Strathman, Jr.
***LowellW. Tatkin
Martha A. Torgow
Valerie Vines
GabrielC. Vivas
**ElizabethE. Vogt
****KimMcLaneWardlaw
*RobertM. Waxman
*MarkD. Kremer
*David A. Lash
RobertT. Lemen
**HarrietLeva
**LaurieL. Levenson
*Erik R. Lied
*KeithA. Lovendosky
*BernardJ. Lurie
HenryS. Weinstock ***F SigmundLuther
*RichardD. Weiss
**AshleyF. White
**Elizabeth N. Winthrop
**EricB. Yeldell
1980
Participation: 28%
Number ofDonors: 87
Total Graduates: 308
***Jeffrey D. Masters
NancyL. McTaggart
**CharlesD. Meyer
*MaryD. Mitchell
*RonaldM. Monitz
MaryL. Muir
**AlecG. Nedelman
*Linda A. Netzer
*Selvino Padilla, Jr.
Class Representatives: **J. ScottPaisley
Laurence M. Berman
Lonnie C. Blanchard III
*HarriettE. Abubakr
****David Andrew Ackert
Jane Aoyama-Martin
*W. Jeffrey Austin
**Ann 0. Baskins
*IstvanBenko
****MaryFlynnPalley
RosendoPena, Jr.
****John G. Petrovich
**DavidS. Porter
*Samuel D. Reyes
CraigG. Riemer
***Sylvia L. Rodriguez
****LeslieBrooksRosen Melman
*EdmundoMoran
***David F. Morrison
*JanetS. Murillo
**Jean PierreNogues
***J. MichaelNorris
***Sara Pfrommer
CynthiaT. Podren
**Lisa Greer Quateman
*Barbara W. Ravitz
*Bernice Hernandez
*AdamE. Hofberg
**SpencerL. Karpf
**Roberta Kass
WilliamD. Klibanow
**Kathryn S. Krause
*Joel D. Kuperberg
*Sandra L. Lackey
**RobinB. Lappen
**RogerLautzenhiser
*Anne S. Berkovitz
****Laurence M. Berman
**AndrevvP. Bernstein
**NeilaR. Bernstein
*BarbaraBiles
C. E. Blake
****Lonnie C. BlanchardIII
**BeckyL. Burnham
*TheresaF. Bustillos
*DawneAstrideCasselle
Giacomo A. Russo
**Catherine G. Sabatini
Irvin W. Sandman
*Stephen L. Schirle
**PaulSchmidhauser
CarolR. Schultz
*JohnA. Seethoff
*RichardB. Stagg
SusanJ. Stern
tJo Ann Taormina
LaurelS. Terry
***Morris L. Thomas
***DavidF. Tilles
*StevenJ. Untiedt
***Patricia AnnWallace
**WilliamR. Warhurst
1981
Participation: 27%
Number ofDonors: 93
Total Graduates: 341
Class Representatives:
Michael R. Harris
Robert B. Orgel
John F. Runkel, Jr.
*BenjaminC. Alvarez
**David Babbe
*Annie K. Baker
Mark J. Barnes
*John H. Bay
***Kenneth S. Bayer
*JeffreyM. Berke
**KarenE. Bertero
**JosephS. Biderman
*Douglas B. Canfield
*PaulV. Castellitto
****ElizabethA. Cheadle
*CornellChulay
*Regina I. Covitt
*StevenL. Crane
JudithKessen Crawford
***JohnW. Crittenden
***Leianne S. Crittenden
*Diane J. Crumpacker
HelenE. Cutler
Julie A. Davies
DelavanJ. Dickson
*GregoryS. Drake
**Eric J. Emanuel
Patricia H. Feiner
*BradleyD. Frazier
**JeanEllenGold
AndrewS. Gelb
PaulA. Graziano
**Leonard F. Gumlia
***James I. Ham
*Lawrence M. Harnett
***MichaelR. Harris
**Allen D. Hine
***Martha B. Hogan
**ChrisS. Jacobsen
Phyllis 8. Johnston
**Richard W. Kaiser
*Linda A. Kirios
WilliamJ. Kirsch
*Michael J. Klein
**CharlesK. Knight
**WesleyKumagai
EdwinI. Lasman
*DavidM. Leon
KarenLewthwaite
**BrentR. Liljestrom
*ElyJ. Malkin
*Margaret Mack Mason
*Karen L. Matteson
*Susan Fowler McNally
**Julie S. Mebane
*RobertP. Meisel
David Melcer
David M. Meyer
***Marjorie E. Mikels
*JonB. Miller
*Creighton D. Mills
**Leslie R. Mitchner
*James I. Montgomery
*Jeffrey L. Oliphant
***Robert B. Orgel
**Gerald S. Papazian
*Jesus E. Quinonez
**StephenJ. Rawson
DavidB. Rechtman
*Bruce S. Richards
*VictorRodriguez
*Denise M. Rose
**Marcy S. Rosenblum
**KarenGreenRosin
**DennisS. Roy
****John F. Runkel, Jr.
Scott B. Samsky
*GlennP. Sapaden
CraigP. Sapin
*JodiSiegner
***RensselaerJ. Smith, IV
***JedE. Solomon
**KennethJ. Stipanov
*Steven M. Strauss
**CharlesR. Tremper
*WilliamL. Tvvomey
*JudithA. Uherbelau
****Marilee C. Unruh
***Dirk W. vande Bunt
*JoanE. Vogel
**Laurie L. Volk
****Founders
***James H. Chadbourn
Fellows
**Dean's Advocates
*Dean's Counsel
tDeceased
Lrnn Y. \\'akat uki
*P�terC. \Valsh
PatrickC. Wilson
*Hoyt H. Zia
Lorence M. Zimtbaum
1982
Participation: 26%
,\'umber of Donors: 87
Total Graduates: 334
Class Representati1·es:
Ste1·en C. Glickman
Dm·id £.
\an lderstine, Jr.
·Henn· Ben-Z1·i
Jo e R. Bena1·ides
···Donald l. Berger
Thomas A. Bliss
'LisaCase
*Raj P. Chabra
*Robert A. Chernoff
****Susan L. Claman
*RobertT. Clarkson
*BianaColtun
Patrick W. Dennis
*Larry S. Dushkes
*Jay J. Elliott
***Leah S. Fischer
*MichellePatterson
**DennisL. Perez
DarienE. Pope
*David A. Prestholt
DennisA. Ragen
**David W. Reimann
*Carolyn M. Richardson
*JonI. Richmond
**JamesS. Rountree
*JackH. Rubens
**MarkA. Samuels
**NancyB. Samuels
*JosephA. Scherer
*EricB. Siegel
**Jeffrey H. Silberman
**StevenE. Sletton
ValdoJ. Smith
****JohnR. Sommer
*PhilipStarr
**EdgarJ. Steele
JamesR. Stewart
*AnneE. Storer
*Brad T. Summers
*EdwardJ. Szymanski, Jr.
Troy L. Tate
*HaroldA. Tieger
*IleneEvansTrabolsi
****AdamC. Vallejo
***Samuel N. Fischer ****DavidE.
*Mark J. Fucile
Cathryn S. Gawne
*RickJ. George
*Nori Gerardo
****Steven C. Glickman
Murray J. Goldenhersh
VanIderstine, Jr.
Ellen Gorman Wacker
**Patrick]. Evans
*ScottA. Forsyth
JamesG. Foster
*RogerL. Funk
AlanE. Garfield
**DeanM. Gloster
***RicardoJ. Gomez
*KerryGottlieb
*BruceJ. Graham
**ChristalK. Grisham
*JuneG. Guinan
*MichaelA. Helfant
**DavidJ. Hirsch
*KellyeS. Hoffman
*DeborahL. Hurley
**EdeC. Ibekwe
****Howard A. Jacobs
*DebraL. James
*FrankR. Jazzo
**EllisG. Joseph
RogerL. Kohn
Kenneth B. Hertz
Pamela A. Mohr
*JohnS. Bank
*TheresaJ. Barbosa
*AlanS. Berman
BennettA. Bigman
*ToddW. Bonder
KathleenM. Bowman
ConstanceC.
Brockelman
KentBrockelman
*Kevin K. Callahan
*LauraJ. Carroll
*CharlesR. Chapman
*PamelaG. Chin
KathleenAnn Yocca
Coleman
JohnG. Connolly
**BarbraL. Davis
**BruceC. Doering
Kathleen Forbath
**GlennLorin Krinsky Esfahani
*DavidKuhlman
**KennethL. Kutcher
BarryLambergman
*EricG. Lardiere
*JocelynLarkin
MoniqueC. Lillard
**Wesley M. Lowe
*PaulMaestas
*MarilynD. Martin-
****ReedS. Waddell Culver
*Michael R. Weinstein
*Robert C. Welch
*Walter W. Whelan, llI
****RichardJ. Gruber ***JamesB. Woodruff
*DeeA. Hayashi
****Donna R. Hecht
*Kathryn Hendley
PhilipD. Hodgen
*Irma K. Zahid
*Frederic M. Zinn
1983
*BryanD. Hull Participation: 22%
James L. Jerue
**GaryM. Joye
Benjamin M. Karlin
DebraL. Kegel
*Ira D. Kharasch
*WilliamK. Knowles
***Karin T. Krogius
***Joan M. Le Sage
*DavidP. Lee
**John W. Mac Kay
*Kurt A. Mac Lean
***ScottT. Maker
*Elisa M. Martinez
*Daniel M. Mayeda
*Randy H. Milgrom
JeffreyP. Molever
**Jerald L. Mosley
LarryNathenson
*BertS. Nishimura
*Elisabeth B.
Oppenheimer
LeslyeE. Orloff
****GregorySoobongPaik
****JayF. Palchikoff
Number of Donors: 76
Tota/Graduates:347
Class Representatives:
Lori Huff Oil/man
Michael A. He/font
Thomas C. Agoston
*RonaldA. Baker
*GeoffreyA. Berkin
*SherrieM. Boutwell
*AngelaL. Brock
MichaelF. Broderick
*Jessica L. Cahen
MarkP. Canada
*Toni Castaneda
*ElizabethG. Chilton
*MargaretA. Chisholm
MarionG. Crain
MichaelT. Danis
*KirkD. Dillman
*LoriHuff Dillman
*AndrewB. Downs
*David E. Durchfort
JamesH. Eisenberg
*MichaelT. Eskey
**DanielJ. McLoon
VictorH. Mellon
KimberlySievwright
Mitchell
JeffreyD. Nagler
RobertK. Olsen
*MarilynS. Pecsok
*NoraA. Quinn
*JoannRalphs
*MariaC. Ramirez
**RobertB. Reeves
NancyB. Reimann
**DavidS. Reisman
*Stephen M. Rice
Robert B. Rocklin
MarkG. Schroeder
*Susan Silver
RobertH. Steinberg
*AlanJ. Talbott
ChetL. Taylor
*Louie L. Vega
*ClaytonJ. Vreeland
*Lise Naomi Wilson
**MichaelG. Witmer
*Joan A. Wolff
****H. Deane Wong
*Michael Yaffa
1984
Participation: 24%
Number of Donors: 72
Total Graduates: 303
Class Representatives:
*JamesA. Florack
SusanL. Formaker
*JeffreyA. Galowich
MichaelJ. Gibson
JoanLenihanGlazer
*RobertG. Goldman
BradI. Golstein
GuyN. Halgren
LauraW. Halgren
*MichaelD. Herbert
Gayle Herman
**KennethB. Hertz
Neal R. Kipnis
*JanetA. Kobrin
**MiriamAroniKrinsky
***JaneB. Kroesche
*PeterM. Kunstler
MeillingF. Lee-Harden
RobertJ. Lipkin
*LeslieK. Lurie
*AnnaS. Masters
ElizabethM. Matthias
LindaW. Mazur
ScottB. McCormack
DennisMitchell
JoyceCraigMitchel1
PamelaA. Mohr
**C. Eric Munson
*Jeremy D. Mussman
Mary Newcombe
Daniel A. Olivas
*JanePon
*HarrietS. Posner
**Teresa L. Remillard
*JaiH. Rho
BarbaraF. Riegelhaupt
*JamesE. Rogan
BetsyR. Rosenthal
**DouglasE. Scott
*JudithR. Seligman
*ElizabethGaleSharzer
**�TimothyC. Shepard
LeslieE. Sherman
*JamesM. Steinberger
*LeeM. Straus
**TimothyF. Sylvester
Leonard M. Tavera
*PeterC. Thomas
Jordan Trachtenberg
*Steven Alan Troyer
*James S. Uyeda
**LouisM. Vasquez
*Jo Ann Victor
SuraL. Weiss
JohnR. Wylie
1985
Participation: 20%
Number of Donors: 60
Total Graduates: 296
George AnnRice
LynetteB. Robe
*StevenJ. Rosansky
**Alicia G. Rosenberg
**SusanE. Sakai
*HaroldJ. Schaaf£, Jr.
*AlanJ. Siff
*EugeneJ. Smith
*Helene V. Smookler
*Scott A. Solomon
Janice L. Sumler-Lewis
**Steven A. Swernofsky
**Rosario M. Tobias
Anne Beytin Tarkington
ArnoldH. Wuhrman
Michael M. Youngdahl
Class Representatives: 1986
Bryan K. Fair
John M. Moscarino
*ValerieB. Ackerman
*BrianJ. Appel
*Lilia 0. Ballesteros
*RobertBarnes
*MarcE. Bercoon
*Sheri A. Bluebond
*Thomas M. Bondy
*RebeccaA. Campbel1
*Carim Charles
*JoanneT. Chou
**SusanL. Coskey
Bradley J. Craig
H. Douglas Daniel
Lawrence P. Ebiner
GregoryR. Ellis
BryanK. Fair
**DonaldL. Feeler
Andrea E. Fish
**JeanineFriedman
**Martha Gage
**LynneS. Goldstein
*David J. Gudino
*MichaelP. Harrell
**JaneL. Henning
*Les Jacobowitz
*JohnM. Jameson
**SusanKeller
*Mark AlanKoop
*Mark A. Levine
Participation: 13%
Number of Donors: 36
Number of Donors: 45 William Stewart
Total Graduates: 306 Anderson
Class Representatives:
*WilliamJ.
Raquelle M. Arzbaecher, III
De La Rocha
Connie R. Kimball
*Michael 8. Africk
M. Margaret Rumph
Banas
*JamesF. Blake
Emily W. Card
*LauraW. Cubanski
Martin J. Barrack
*StanleyBlumenfeld Jr.
*GeorgeH. Brown
*Michael E. CalIigan
JeffreyH. Cohen
Mark G. Cravvford
*Suzanne !i. Davidson
*Teresa De Castro
RobertN. Dale McNamara
*Raquelle !vi.
De La Rocha
KathleenT. Deeley
MichaelD. Donovan
MarcH. Edelson
AlanJ. Epstein
VictoriaGoldfarb
Total Graduates: 283 Epstein
Class Representatives: MarilynW. Formaker
David Polinsky
Leslie E. Wallis
*StevenB. Abbott
SusanAbraham
*J. Robert Arnett, II
*Ed Carney
Federico !i. Cheever
*CarolynJ. Comparet
Lori A. Davies
*FrederickM. Entwistle
**Elizabeth A. Farnv
**Sheila B. Grishan{
Lolita K. Buckner Inniss
**DavidE. Isenberg
LawrenceP. Jacobson
Harris J. Kane
RobinF. Kaufer
LeoraD. Freedman
Gary N. Frischling
AdrienneW. Goldstone
HilaryJ. Greenberg
**PeterEdwardGreenberg
*Melinda A. Hoyt
JohnH. Irons
*ConnieR. Kimball
*Corey E. Klein
*Rochelle GumliaKlein
*NancyE. Klotz
David L. Krotine
*Marsha B. Liss
KeithE. Marlowe
*Robyn M. Martin
*Beth M. Mezoff
*Annette Delv!ichele
PaulJ. Feldman
*David 8. Felsenthal
*JamesR. Felton
*James !i. Gelb
*Stanley E. Germany
*Diana L. Gordon
*Lisa H. Hauser
Robert B. Hutchins
*Monireh !i.
Kazemzadeh
*Lawrence Kupers
*SharonR. Leib
*Frank A. Merola
LouisE. Michelson
Elizabeth Carr Nager
*Kenneth A. Ostrow
JuliaS. Penick
Sanford M. Pooler. Jr.
MarkJ. Price
*Wendi G. Roval
***David Schinasi
*JasonC. Sloane
*Kristin H. Smith
ChristopherC.
EdmondJ. Miller, Jr. Welch, Jr
KaroleR. Morgan- 1989
**EricS. Kentor Prager
*StevenM. Kleiman
AnatR. Levy
**ColleenC. McAndrews
DavidS. McLane
Hope G. Nakamura
*JanisC. Nelson
*Trang-MyT. Nguyen
William 0. Nutting
*JamesGaughan
LouiseD. Lillard O'Callahan
MarkLincolnLindon
*Michael S. Loeffler
NancyE. Loncke
**DanielMansueto
StephenH. Mazur
*AliciaJ. Moore
**JohnM. Moscarino
Roy Y. Nakano
*SusanE. Nash
P. D. Perez
*Alan S. Polley
*Frank H. Pulido
SandraE. Purnell
*CarolA. Quinn
**JerriH. Pih
DavidPolinsky
AnthonyL. Press
MichaelS. Rosenblum
PattiR. Scheimer
**JohnW. Scruton
LaurieJ. Taylor
RobertW. Teeter
*LeslieE. Wallis
JohnF. Wester, Jr.
*CeciliaS. Wu
1987
A. Bailey Nager
AlyceL. Raboy
*Todd M. Reznik
GaryB. Rosenbaum
GlenSato
LindaLedeen Schwartz
*AndreaL. Stein
**JeremyTemkin
LynnE. Todd
AnnM. Tomkins
*Robert N. Treiman
*RobertC. Welsh
*ArnoldF. Williams
***GraceC. Yeh
1988
Participation: 11%
Number of Donors: 34
Total Graduates: 300
Class Representatives:
Participation: 6%
Number of Donors: 18
Total Graduates: 280
Class Representatirns:
Steven l. Kotz
John J. Monier
Kotherine \\I . Po1l'IlelI
*Kerry A. Bresnahan
*Christine S. Chua
Steven I. Katz
*Gregory J. Kopta
Barry Lurie
JohnJ. Manier
*Peter A. Neumann
Cathy Paul
Mark A. Pittman
****founders
***James H. Chadbourn
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr. fellows
George H. Brown
Teresa De Castro
Participation: 15% McNamara
**Dean's Advocates
*Dean's Counsel
tDeceased
*David A. Portnoy
*Katherine W. Pownell
*RichardS. Schkolnick
ToddJ. Schwartz
*JonathanSears
Bertram C. Simon
*ScottStone
*Robert A. VilJani
*Jon T. Yamamura
1990
Participation: 8%
Numberof Donors: 25
Total Graduates: 327
Class Representatives:
Nargis Chaudhry
Francis J. James
Jens B. Koepke
Geoffrey M. Sturr
*NargisChaudhry
*Jeannine K. Dephillips
*Sandra B. Epstein
*George M. Eshaghian
*LoriN. Fujii
*FrancisJ. James
*SaulC. Janson
*Allison M. Keller
*JohnC. Kirkland
*Jens B. Koepke
*Ase 0. Kuasi-Gassaway
*RichardLai
*SherryA. Lear
*DarrenJ. Lewis
*SamuelD. Magavern
*Julienne McCammon
*SuzanneK. Metzger
*TanyaR. Meyers
*KarlaL. Nefkens
*AndrewL. Pickens
*Anne E. Pings
*SuzanneSt. Pierre
*Geoffrey M. Sturr
*AndreaR. Susnir
*JosephN. Velasquez
LL.M.
*VitonioF. SanJuan '89
****Founders
***Jomes H. Chodbourn Fellows
**Deon's Ad,·ocotes
*Deon·s Counsel
tDeceosed
FRIENDS AND FACULTY
William P. Alford
***David & MelindaBinder
****Bloom & Dekom
CaroleCambon
Erika S. Chadbourn
*JesseJ. Oukeminier, Jr.
***Exxon Corporation
*Nancy A. Finck
***WilliamE. Forbath
***Carole A. Foster & Gary A. Waldron
***Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
**Carole Goldberg
Ambrose
****J.W.andIda M. Jameson Foundation
***Kenneth & Smiley Karst
****James H.Kindel, Jr.
***William A.Klein
****Or. & Mrs. Daniel Levenson
****MannaLivingston
****MonteE. Livingston
**DavidMellinkoff
*Martin & Hudson
****Morgan, Wenzel & McNicholas
*Masten & Wasserstrom
***O'Melveny & Myers
*CraigN. Oren
**Polston, Schwartz, Hamilton & Fenster
*Mark J.Ramseyer
****ArthurRosett
****Edward & NancyRubin
****William A.Rutter
***MurrayL.Schwartz
*Alan G. Sieroty
****Mr.& Mrs. Lee A. Small
***Stutman,Treister& Glatt
Jonathan & Barbara Varat
***William & Susan Warren
****CharlesE. Young
Every effortwas made to ensurethe accuracy of our HonorRoll.If thereare any corrections oromissions, please contact theSchool of Law Alumni & Development Office.
FIRM MATCHING GIFTS
Briggs & Morgan
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton
Corbett & Kane
Cravath, Swaine & Moore
Davis, Polk & WardweII
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Hallert & Haller!
Loeb & Loeb
McDormott, Will & Emery
Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
Morrison & Foerster
Munger, Tolles & Olson
Musick, Peeler & Garrett
O'Melveny & Myers
Proskauer, Rose, Goetz & Mendelson
Sidley & Austin
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
Ware & Freidenrich
Whiteand Case
CORPORATE MATCHING
GIFTS
Allstate Foundation
American HomeProducts Corporation
American Honda Motor Company. Inc.
American Medical International. Inc.
AtlanticRichfield Corporation
Bank of America Foundation
Champion International Corporation
CIT Group Foundation, Inc.
Citicorp
Coopers & Lybrand
Exxon Education Foundation
FirstNational Bank of Chicago
General Electric Foundation
Goldman Sachs & Company
GTE
HewlettPackardCompany
Hughes AircraftCompany
IBM
IrvineCompany
KPMGPeatMarwick Foundation
Marsh & McLennan
Companies, Inc.
MCA, Inc.
Motorola Foundation
Pacific Enterprises
Pacific Mutual Life
InsuranceCompany
PacificResources, Inc.
Pacific Telesis Foundation
ParamountPictures
Pfizer, Inc.
PhilipMorris, Inc.
PriceWaterhouse
Principal Financial Group Foundation, Inc.
Procter & Gamble
Security Pacific Natioal Bank
Syntex Corporation
ThiokolCorporation
Ticor TitieInsurance Companyof California
TimesMirrorCompany
Transamerica Foundation
TRW Foundation
TwentiethCentury Fox Film
UNOCAL
U.S.LeasingInternatioal
U.S. West Communications
OTHER GIFTS
Laurence Berman & Nancy Hamlin
DavidBinder
Chaleff, English & Catalano
Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp
In Memoryof DeriRudo!ph
PaulE. B. Glad
InMemoryofMatthew Small
BaileyR.DeIongh
DavidI. Schulman
DESIGNATED GIFTS
BENJAMIN AARON FUND
Herbert& Margery Morris
Anonymous
AHMANSON FOUNDATION EASTASIAN LIBRARY FUND
Ahmanson Foundation
BAKER & McKENZIE LAW STUDENTASSISTANCE FUND
Baker & McKenzie
BEVERLY HILLS BAR ASSOCIATION FOUNDATIONFUND
Beverly Hills Bar Association
JOHN G. BRANCA FUND
John G. Branca
MARSHALLCOGAN SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
COMMUNICATIONS LAW PROGRAM
Pacific Telesis Foundation
JOSEPHINE VAUGHN COOPER SCHOLARSl1IP FUND
Mr. & Mrs. William W. Vaughn
CURTIS B. DANNING SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Danning, Gill, Gould, Diamond & Spector
Curtis B. Danning
Joshua Kaplan
Mr. & Mrs. A. M. Serlin
Richard & Trude Skolnick
B. T. DAVIS LIBRARY FUND
James B. Woodruff
DEAN'S DISCRETIONARY ENDOWMENT
William & KarinCalfas
ALBERT & JUDITH GLICKMAN FUND
Albert & Judith Glickman
EVA & NATHAN GREENBERG MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Audrey & Arthur Greenberg
MORRIS GREENSPAN MEMORIALPRIZE FUND
Joseph C. & Ruth G. Bell
HAIGHT, BROWN & BONESTEEL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Haight, Brown & Bonesteel
ELISA H. HALPERN MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
William & Barbara Green
Barry & Jane Halpern
Edward I. & Sunny Halpern
Geoffrey, Mary Lee, Brian & Leslie Halpern
ScottD. Pinsky
In Honorof Mr. & Mrs. Victor Morheim
Sylvan Zeiden & Roberta Brown
HUFSTEDLER, MILLER, KAUS & BEARDSLEY
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Francisca Araiza
Hufstedler, Miller, Kaus & Beardsley
IRELL& MANELLA PRO BONO SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ire]I & ManeIla
J. W. & IDA M. JAMESON FUND
J. W. & Ida M. Jameson Foundation
EDGAR A. JONES, JR. FUND
William D. Gould
BENJAMIN E. KING MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
In Memory of Henrietta King
Estelle Albert
Michael T. & Cora Altschuler
Sophie Halber
Bernard H. & Eleanor H. Moore
Frances Schulman
JOSEPH KIRSCHBAUM MEMORIALFUND
Jacqueline Kirschbaum
Mr. & Mrs. Steven Y. Kirschbaum
Barry & Paula Litt
Jason Litt
Joshua Litt
LA RAZA LAW STUDENTS
Roth Family Foundation
LAW LIBRARY EAST ASIAN GRANT
The Commemorative Associationfor the Japan World Exposition
LAW LIBRARY ENDOWMENT FUND
George P. & Holli C. Schiavelli
SAUL L. LESSLER LAW SCHOOLSUPPORT FUND
Saul L. Lessler
LIEBERT, CASSIDY & FRIERSON SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Liebert, Cassidy & Frierson
LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION COMMERCIALLAWAND BANKRUPTCYAWARDS
Los AngelesCounty Bar Association
PAULAC. LUBIC MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Arthur M. Lubic
Carol Lubic Spitz
GEORGE L. MARINOFF MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Elaine S. Marinoff Good
MORRISON & FOERSTER FUND
Davidand Melinda Binder
Morrison & Foerster
MELVILLEB. NIMMER MEMORIALFUND
MargaretR. Kiever
Gloria Dee Nimmer
Andrea & Robert Ordin
MARTIN C. PACHTER SCHOLARSHIP FUND
AlIred, Maroko. Goldberg & Ribakoff
Alschuler. Grossman & Pines
Clifford R. Anderson. Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Gerald A. Belkin
Dr. & Mrs. Murray A. Brown
Business Enterprise Appraisal Company
Norman J. Caris
Bernard B. Cohen
Douglas S. Cohen
Robert M. Cohen
Hyman 0. Danoff t &
Love M. Danoff
Val Dodd
Donner, Schrier & Zucker
Joseph & Stephanie Duenas
Eisfelder & Eliaser
Theresa Estrada
Daniel R. Feldstein
Samuel& Leah Fischer
Manley Freid
Elizabeth L. Freston
Henry Friedman
Sanford M. Gage
Max A. Goodman
Haberfeld & Perlberger
Robert & Mary Hilleary
Kahan, De Maloff & Fiese
Kairys, Lippman, Weisel. Kipper & Destefano
Lebovits & David
Alexandra Leichter
Liberty Agencies, Inc.
Ronald A. Litz
Margaret Llamas & Family
Martina Llamas
Richard & Antoinette Llamas
Roger L. Malkus
Mary M. Mann
Michael D. Marans
Ovvie MiI!er
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Monroe
Gregory & Frances Morales
Michael Maroko
Mosten & Wasserstrom
F. Patricia Mudie
Nastasi White, Inc.
Charmaine Nesoff
Novian & Novian
Joan Patsy Ostroy
Pachter & Schaffer
Melvin A. Pachter
Wendy Thyne Pachter
Steven & Cynthia Peck
Alain G. Rogier
Mr. & Mrs. Sherwin M. Rosenthal
The Rutter Group
Jack & Alice Salan
Schaffer & Lax
Robert & Doris Schaffer
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Dana Sherman
SommerAppraisalService, Inc.
Spector, Buter, Hoberman & Buzard
Rebecca J. Thyne
Jack& Roselyn Weinberg
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MICHAELPALLEY MEMORIALFUND
J. Lewis Palley Charitable
Trust
In Honorof Sidney Lindenbaum
Martin & Marjorie
Goodman
Mildred Hattenbach
George & Edith Lindenbaum
Mr. & Mrs. Hy Schatz
Frieda & Norman Simon
Ariine & George Sobel
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PAUL, HASTINGS, JANOFSKY & WALKER SCHOLARSHIP FUND
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William A. Rutter
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UCLA SCHOOLOF LAW PUBLICINTEREST AWARDS
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Kenneth Ziffren
Two Faculty Members Are Reporters For ALI Restatements
Two members of the faculty, Professor Susan Fletcher French and Professor Grant Nelson, are providing national leadership as the scholars chosen to be Reporters for the American Law Institute's current Restatement of the Law in two substantive areas of Property.
Nelson, who joined UCLA's faculty this fa!1 as Professor of Law after having been a visitor here, is CoReporter for the Restatement of the Law, Third - Property - Security (Mortgages). Also serving as CoReporter on this project is former Dean
Susan Fletcher French Dale Whitman of the University of Missouri, Columbia.
Professor French, who joined the faculty in 1989, is Reporter for the Restatement of the Law, ThirdProperty - Servitudes.
The role of Reporter is one which signifies major distinction in scholarly achievement; at the same time, it represents a great commitment on the part of the individual scholar.
The American Law Institute is the national organization, headquartered in Philadelphia, which since the 1920s has produced Restatements of the law in Property, Torts, Contracts, Restitution, Conflicts of Law, and other areas. The Restatements seek to create uniformity in each area of substantive common law.
"To be selected as a Reporter for one of the ALI Restatements is considered a high honor in the academic world," noted Professor William Warren. "The ALI strives to engage the outstanding scholars in the relevant field for its Grant Nelson Restatements. Scholars are attracted to these positions because they know that their work will shape the law in the area for many years in the future."
Professor French, who teaches courses in Property, Trusts and Wills,
and Private Land Use Arrangements, is noted for her scholarly articles which have explained the often mysterious doctrines of servitudes in comprehensible fashion.
Servitudes law governs the devices used to implement private land use arrangements by tying rights and obligations to ownership or occupancy of interests in land. It includes the law governing easements, profits, and covenants running with land. It does not include the law of mortgages or other real property security interests.
In a seminal article which Professor French published in 1982, she analyzed existing doctrine and proposed a complete reconceptualization and restructuring of the law of servitudes.
"I concluded that there was no longer any need to maintain separate bodies of law for easements, profits, covenants, equitable servitudes and executed parol licenses, and that substantial simplification of the law could be achieved by unification, coupled with abandonment of obsolete and redundant doctrines."
The new Restatement for which Professor French is Reporter adopts the unified approach.
Among her law review articles in this area are "Toward a Modern Law of • Servitudes: Reweaving the Ancient Strands," 55 Southern California Law Review 1261 (1982); "Design Proposal for the New Restatement of the Law of Property - Servitudes," 21 U.C.Davis Law Review 1213 (1988); and "Servitudes Reform and the New Restatement of Property: Creation Doctrines and Structural Simplification," 73 Cornell Law Review 928 (1988).
Professor French has also written in the areas of future interests and wills. Her research interests include Latin American property and successions law. She spent a sabbatical year at the University of Chile's Faculty of Law in Santiago in 1982-83, and hopes to return to Latin America for additional research in the near future.
Professor Nelson, the Co-Reporter for the current ALI Restatement of the Law in the area of Mortgages, is co-author with Professor Whitman of the major treatise in this area of law, Rea/ Estate Finance Law (2nd Edition, 1985). Nelson is also the co-author of Real Estate Transfer, Finance and Development (3rd Edition, 1987), as well as casebooks in the fields of
Property and Remedies. He has just completed work on the fourth edition of the Real Estate Transfer casebook, which will be published in mid-1992.
Professor Nelson's two major projects now are work on a third edition of the treatise on Real Estate Finance Law, which will be published in two volumes, and the ALI Restatement on Mortgages.
"This is the first time the ALI has attempted a Restatement of the law of Real Estate Mortgages," explains Nelson. "Back in the 1940s, there was a Restatement of Security, largely dealing with personal property."
The Restatement has taken on added meaning, he says, "because mortgages are more and more being sold as securities in the secondary market. Some minimal national uniformity in the law governing mortgages is increasingly important."
Among Professor Nelson's law review articles are "Installment Land Contracts - The National Scene Revisited," Brigham Young Law Review 1 (1985) and "The Impact of Mortgagor Bankruptcy on the Real Estate Mortgagee: Current Problems and Suggested Solutions" 50 Missouri Law Review 217 (1985).
For both French and Nelson, the work as Reporters on the ALI Restatements of the Law involves a long-range commitment. The process involved in formation of a Restatement requires meticulous research and entails broad consultation and thorough deliberation over a period of years.
The Reporter first divides the subject into manageable segments. The Reporter then prepares a draft of blackletter and comment for each segment, which goes to an advisory committee of lawyers, professors and judges with expertise in the area. Interested members of the Institute are also invited to meet with the Reporter to discuss the draft through participation in a members consultative group. After thorough discussion with the advisers, the Reporter revises the draft for presentation to the Council of the American Law Institute, a group of 60 generalists that might be called a Who's Who of American law. If the Council approves the draft for submission to the entire membership, the draft is presented for debate at the Institute's annual meeting. If approved, the draft becomes the formal "tentative" draft- the first stage in the
process when there is something which can be cited as having been approved by the Institute.
For each segment of the work, this entire process is repeated. Finally, all of the "tentative draft" segments are combined and submitted to the full ALI membership for adoption. As the culmination of this exhaustive process, the draft finally becomes the official Restatement of the Law.
Forbath Reinterprets HistoryofLaw's Impact on U.S. Labor
Scholars and policy-makers generally agree that U.S. labor laws provide far fewer protections for workers than do the laws of other major Western industrial nations. "A key reason for the paltriness of American labor law and social provision lies in the fact that American workers never forged a classbased political movement to press for more generous and inclusive protections," says Professor William Forbath of the School of Law.
A major new book by Professor Forbath shows that, contrary to conclusions by earlier labor historians, the role of law in shaping American labor policies was so pervasive that encounters with courts and judgemade law actually altered labor's agenda during a crucial period of history.
Forbath's book is titled Law and the Shaping of the American Labor Movement, and it was published in May by Harvard University Press. Forbath's study breaks new ground as it analyzes law's role in the development of U.S. labor history.
Professor Forbath argues that during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, courts played a crucial role in shaping the modern American labor movement. Judicial review and administration of labor legislation helped make broad social reforms seem futile to the founders of modern American trade unionism. The proliferation of judicial bars against strikes riveted labor's political energies on the goal of industrial liberty
This judicial ascendancy in the field of labor during a long era shaped labor's own vision and strategies,
Forbath concludes. "Courts shaped labor's strategic calculus: in more subtle ways, law also altered labor's ideology Labor leaders at alI levels began to speak and think more and more in the language of the law. They forged an eloquent law-inspired rights rhetoric that fueled a campaign of mass defiance of the courts and eventuallv won over many in the nation's po!it(cal elites.
"As a language of protest and reform, law proved Janus-faced, at once enabling and confining. Common law doctrine was open-ended enough to enable labor's self-taught jurists to construct alternative interpretations of labor's collective liberties, and those interpretations found encouragement from a handful of dissenting jurists. Moreover, constitutional tradition carried recessive radical strains, from which workers created an eloquent case for defying judge-made law and demanding recognition of their suppressed rights.
"On the other hand," says Forbath, "labor's embrace of a law-inspired, laissez-faire rights talk displaced a more radical vocabulary of reform. In this fashion, mingling coercion and consent, the legal order encouraged a reshaping of the labor movement's dominant ideology."
Professor Forbath sees a present point to this account of the past. Organized labor, he says, is in the worst trouble it has seen since the era examined by his research. "Once again, labor is searching for a new agenda. Labor leaders, academics and policymakers are debating anew the role that law and government should play in American industry; they may profit from considering past debates, past choices and their consequences."
In Next Issue: 40 Years ofHistory
The next issue of UCLA Law will feature the 40th anniversary of the School of Law in historical recollections, photos, and retrospectives on the first four decades of the school.
GaryL. Blasi
Three Professors Bolster Faculty In Several Areas
The law faculty hasgainedstrengthin severalessentialareasthisyear with the addition ofActingProfessors Gary L. Blasi, George H. Brown, andJohn Setear
ActingProfessor Brown will teach Contractsin the spring semester; beginningnextfall he plansto teach BusinessAssociations, Securities Regulation, andAccounting and the Law.ActingProfessorSetearis teaching International Environmental Law andContracts this year
ActingProfessor Blasiisteaching FactInvestigationinthefall andin the springhewill teachin the Clinical Semester, anintensive coursein which theClinicalProgram setsup an actual law firm; faculty serve assenior partners and students as junior associatesinthefirm, which pursues real casesin real courts.
Blasijoins UCLA after13 yearswith theLegalAid Foundationof Los Angeles. Whilethere, Blasiserved as directorofthehomeless litigationunit, directing attorneyof the eviction
George H. Brown defenseunit, andstaff attorney. Blasi has been honored withnumerous awards, includingPublicCounsel's IndividualAchievementAward (given annually to one attorneyin Los AngelesCounty) andthenational Durfee Foundation Award (givenevery two yearsto fiveattorneysinthe U.S.).
Inaddition, hehaslecturedand authorednumerousarticles about litigation onbehalf of the poor, including"SocialPolicyand Social Science Research on Homelessness" (Journal of Social Issues), and"The Role of LegalAid Organizationsin Helping HomelessPersons", appearing in Homelessness: a PreventionOriented Approach.
Through UCLA'sClinicalProgram, Blasiwillattempt tolinkstudentswith organizationslitigatingfor therightsof the poor, with thegoal of strengthening the connectionbetween thelaw school andpublicinterest groupsinthe Los Angeles area.
UCLAisnotunchartered territory to Blasi.In1989, hejoinedtheadvisory committee of the Graduate School of Architecture and UrbanPlanning and participated intheComprehensive Project onIncome Distribution and Povertyin LosAngeles. Blasi lectured inthe UCLA Department ofPyschiatry andBiobehavioral Sciences during the 1987-88school year.
John Setear
Now as aninsider at UCLA, Blasiis "extremelyimpressed with the level of abilities, resources, andcommitmentat the law school."
BeforejoiningtheLegalAid Foundationin1978, Blasi was a partnerinthelaw firm of Smith, Honig, Blasi, Yavenditti, and Smith. Since 1981, he hasbeen president of Lexisystems, a consulting firm assistinglaw firms and legal services programsinthe utilization of computer technology.
Blasi's community serviceis as distinguished ashis legal experience Formerly president of the National Coalition of the Homeless, he also sits onthe Board of Directors and steering committees of theCalifornia Homeless Coalition, theLosAngeles Countywide CoalitionfortheHomeless, andtheLos Angeles Homeless Health Care Project.
"Public servicelegal workis intellectually challenging and fun," Blasisaid in aninterview earlier this year. "I want to correct the myth that we only put legalband-aids on millionsof little problems."
Rather thanattending law school, Blasiworked as alegal apprentice for fiveyearsbeforehisadmission to the California State Barin 1976. He holds an M.A.in politicalsciencefrom Harvardand a B.A.in political science from Oklahoma, where hewas a Fulbright Scholar.
George H. Brown has always considered UCLA a special place. While a student in the joint degree program at UCLA's School of Law and Graduate School of Management, Brown became deeply involved in the academic and local community As editor-in-chief of the National Black Law Journal, for example, Brown was able to devote attention to voting rights, alternatives to the electoral process, and more generally the black political agenda. Volunteering at the Tenants Action Center enabled him to learn more about social issues like unemployment and housing.
Brown's time away from the University environment was educational as well. Three-plus years as associate attorney in the litigation department at O'Melveny and Myers stimulated an interest in the area of corporate takeovers, particularly concerning the rights and interests of nonshareholder constituencies in corporations.
O'Melveny and Myers partner William Vaughn said of Brown: "He's terrific. His work is superb. We don't want to lose him."
Brown's prior experience includes a two-year stint at Twentieth Century Fox, as manager of financial planning and reporting in the television division, and two years at Peat Marwick, where as senior auditor Brown planned and conducted audits of various commercial enterprises. His clients ranged from those in the entertainment and insurance industries to municipalities.
Brown is excited to be re-entering University life. "UCLA is a wonderful place," he said. "There's something unique about the law school community It's such a comfortable, open environment in which to learn, and that's what makes the law school a particularly special place."
In his extremely spare time, Brown enjoys running, football, basketball, and chess.
John Setear brings a suitcase full of legal and University experience from the eastern United States. After receiving his B.A. degree in economics magna cum laude from Williams College in 1981, he attended Yale Law School, where he was editor-in-chief of the Yale Law Journal.
Following graduation from law school, Setear clerked in 1984-85 for Judge Carl McGowan of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit. He then clerked for Justice Sandra Day O'Connor at the U.S. Supreme Court. Of O'Connor, Setear says "she was very fair and always wanted to hear both sides of every issue. And she even remembered all of our birthdays."
After his clerkships, Setear worked as a policy analyst in the Behavioral Sciences Department of the RAND Corporation, working in the Santa Monica office of RAND as well as the Washington, D.C., office. During this period he also taught as a visiting adjunct professor in the Economics Department of Williams College.
After spending much of his life in Chicago and the Northeast, Setear is rather pleased to return to the fun and sun of Southern California. Nevertheless, he plans to stay off the freeways.
The climate at the law school also pleases Setear "The faculty members here are the most personable, interesting, and human I've encountered," he said. "You can fit all of their egos into the faculty lounge with room left over - and it's not a very big room."
Setear's current research reflects an interest in regime theory, such as under what conditions nations will cooperate with each other with respect to international law and environmental issues. (He is developing a course in international environmental law as an addition to UCLA's curriculum.) When not researching in this area, he plays the blues harmonica.
Judge Higginbotham To Visit School As Regents Lecturer
Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., of the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals will visit the School of Law as a Regents Lecturer during the spring semester.
The designation of Regents Lecturer is awarded by the University of California to very distinguished individuals who have made their mark in fields outside the academic world. Regents Lecturers customarily participate in teaching classes, conduct seminars with students and faculty, and give a public lecture Judge
Higginbotham is likely to take part in such classes as Constitutional Lav, Criminal Procedure, Appellate Advocacy or Federal Courts.
\'
Higginbotham was appointed to the U.S.3rd Circuit Court of Appeals by President Jimmy Carter in 1977. In 1964, when named U.S. District Judge by President Lyndon Johnson Higginbotham became one of the fiTst blacks appointed to the federal bench. That same year, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce named Higginbotharn one of the Ten Most Outstanding Young Men in America
Higginbotham was a member and vice-chairman of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, and a memeber of the National Commission on Reform of the Federal Criminal Laws. His extensive experience in the law includes his publication of more than 70 articles, as we!1 as a book In the Matter ofColor (Oxford University Press, 1978). He has lectured at the Pennslyvania, Yale. Michigan, New York Harvard, and Stanford University Law Schools.
Born in Trenton, New Jerse. in 1928. Higginbotham attended Purdue University and Antioch College as an undergraduate before earning his LL.B. from Yale University. He has reslded in Philadelphia for many years.
Lourdes Baird '76 Is AlumnusofYear
Lourdes Baird '76, U. S. Attorney for the Central District of California, was honored as UCLA Law Alumnus of the Year during a ceremony at the law school's 40th anniversary celebration in October.
Presentation of the award was made by Judge Dorothy Nelson '53 of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. herself a recipient of the Alumnus of the Year Award in 1967. Judge Nelson said that Lourdes Baird was selected as this year's recipient for "her record of service to the legal profession. to the community, and to the law school."
Baird is one of the most powerful federal prosecutors in the country. Her district includes seven Southern California counties with some 12
million residents, the most populous federal judicial district in the U.S. Born in Ecuador, she was the youngest of seven children in her family, which moved to Los Angeles when she was a year old. She spent her youth in Catholic schools and graduated from Immaculate Heart High School. In 1966, when she began her college studies as a night student, she had already enrolled the youngest of her three children in school. She moved quickly through Los Angeles City College, UCLA, and the UCLA School of Law.
In quick succession, Baird became a federal prosecutor, a private attorney, and a respected judge. Appointed to the bench of the East Los Angeles Municipal Court in 1986, she was elevated to the Los Angeles Superior Court two years later.
Carson Taylor To Coordinate Project In Public Interest
Carson Taylor has joined the School of Law faculty this year to direct a new public interest law project. He is also a lecturer in law and supervisor of students in the Clinical Program.
Taylor will lead a joint effort between UCLA and Public Counsel to increase student involvement in public interest work. Public Counsel is the largest pro bona public interest law firm in the United States.
Taylor says the program is designed to provide students with meaningful public interest experiences, enabling them to view public interest law as an ethical responsibility that is exciting and intellectually challenging.
Professors Albert Moore and Gary Blasi teach Fact Finding and Investigation with Taylor. In the course this year, students learn various discovery techniques through their involvement in real-life slumlord cases in Los Angeles.
In the spring, Taylor will participate in the Clinical Semester, in which the clinical program sets up an actual law firm with faculty serving as senior partners and students as junior associates.
Taylor brings over 21 years of private practice experience to UCLA. As president and a founding member of Taylor, Roth, Bush & Geffner, he specialize9" in personal injury, as well as criminal defense work ranging from misdemeanor tresspass to first-degree murder trials.
"I have always wanted to do things in law that have social meaning," said Taylor "Right now I am interested in evaluating how public interest work shapes the viewpoints of law students."
While at UCLA, Taylor hopes to correct existing misconceptions about public interest work. "Many people believe it embraces only one political viewpoint," he said. "In fact, all political spectrums apply to public interest Jaw."
A major problem in the delivery of legal services, Carson observes, is the fact that many disadvantaged people go without representation because they cannot afford to hire a lawyer. A significant part of public interest law is "figuring out how to help those disenfranchised who cannot afford representation." The joint UCLAPublic Counsel effort should address these problems, he said.
Nominations Are Open For Alumnus ofYear
Nominations for the Alumnus of the Year Award for 1992 are now being received by the Law Alumni Office, with a December 15 deadline for submissions. All law school alumni and faculty are encouraged to submit nominations for the award.
The Alumnus of the Year Award is presented to a graduate of the School of Law for distinguished work in an area of law, or for community service, or for service to the University and School of Law The award selection also recognizes the contributions of an alumnus toward enhancing the reputation of the school.
Nominations are reviewed by a committee of the board of directors of the Law Alumni Association and the final candidates are voted on by the full board.
Letters of nomination should include the nominee's name with class year, career highlights, community service, other honors and awards received. In addition to the letter of nomination, outlining why the nominee is deserving of the Alumnus of the Year award, it is suggested that two supporting letters of recommendation should be submitted.
Lourdes Baird
Carson Taylor
The 1970s
Classnotes
The 1950s
Richard C. Wulliger'56 was appointed to theLosAngeles County Regional Planning Commission by Supervisor Edmund Edelman.
Willie R. Barnes '59 has been admitted to thepartnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman,the WestCoast expansion ofKattenMuchin & Zavis. He isin theLosAngeles office.
The 1960s
Barry V. Freeman '62 has joined the firm of Morgan,Lewis & Bockius as a partner. Hewill continue topractice in theareas of creditor's rights, and loan workouts and restructuring, and will also bea member of the firm's business andfinance section initsnational bankruptcyandreorganizationpractice group.
Jay G. Foonberg'63 received the Harrison Tweed SpecialMeritAward fromtheAmericanLaw InstituteAmerican BarAssociation Committee on Continuing Professional Education. The award, the onlyoneof its kind presentedthis year, recognized Foonberg's longtermefforts in continuing legaleducation. His programon "Howto Startand Build a Law Practice," offeredtwiceayear by the LosAngeles County Bar Association, originated as a UCLA StudentBar program in the 1960s.
Edward Poll'65 receivedthe Leader of the YearAwardby the General Practice SectionoftheAmerican Bar Association.Hereceivedthe national award specifically for his leadership in helpingcreateandguidethegrowth of the General Practice Section of the StateBarof California.
Fred Selan'65 is nowof counsel to Jeffer,Mangels,Butler & Marmara.
IrvingH. Greines '66, partner in Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, was elected 1991-1992presidentof the CaliforniaAcademyofAppellate Lawyers.
Donald R. Allen'67continuesto practiceenergyand electricutilitylaw in Washington, D.C.,and is becoming increasingly involved in Colorado River matters.After twentyyears in Africa, his firm, Duncan &Allen, sold its Kinshasa, NairobiandAbidjan offices tothe residentpartnersin those offices.
CraigD. Crockwell'68 has been admittedtothe partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coastexpansion of Katten Muchin & Davis. He isin theLosAngeles office.
Eugene W. Comroe '69 has become the 1991 Presidentof theLosAngeles Trial LawyersAssociation.
Barrett S. Litt'69announced the formation ofLitt, Marquez & Fajardo, a public interestlaw firminLos Angeles which works to protectthe rights of racial,ethnicand language minorities, thepoor,andwomen.Thefirm's slum litigation unitrepresents nearly 1000 Latinotenants.
Sanford Wilk '68, who previously spenteighteen years in themotion pictureindustryas Vice Presidentand CounselatColumbia, Warners, and 20th Century Fox,recentlycelebrated hisfifth anniversaryasanagentfor NorthwesternMutualLife in Warner Center. Healsorecentlycelebrated his fifthweddinganniversarywith his wife Marlene, and the birthof his first grandchild.
Mark Silversher '70 has established a resource developmentand law practice, operating since 1977 in Telluride, Colorado.
PaulL. Basile, Jr. '71, practicing primarily inthe fields oftax anrl. business lawand emphasizing business and individual tax plannino, estateplanning. and probate. announced the relocation of his of';ces to West Olympic Boulevard in Lo Angeles. Heis of Counsel to Wolf. Rifkin & Shapiro
Robert M. Moss '71 has moved his officesto Santa Monica, at the Colorado Place complex. He continues his solo practice, speciaIizing in personal injuryand employment litigation, and workers' compensation.
Gregg Ziskind '72, who specializes in the placementofpartner-level lawyers and theinitiation of law firm mergers for the legal searchfirm of Ziskincl. Greene andAugustine in Los ' ngeles, has announced the opening oi Ziskind, Greene & Cooper, devotedto the placementoflegal secretaries. paralegals,and other lawyersupport personnel.
,\
KeithM. Clemens '73 has been appointedaCommissioner of the Los Angeles Superior Court. He is presentlyhearingfamily law matters in the North Valley branch.
MarilynYarbrough '73 has received the MargaretBrent Women Lawyers of Achievement Awardfrom the American Bar Association Commission on Womenin the Profession. Yarbrough served as Dean of the Universityof Tennessee College of Law from 1987to 1991 and is a visiting faculty member this year atthe Universityof WestVirginia. occupying the William J. Maier, Jr., Chair.
Peter C. Bronson '74. alitigation partner atLevy & Norminton in Los Angeles. is the 1991-92 chair ofthe Los AngelesCounty BarAssociation's Provisional & Post-Judgement Remedies Section.
Gina Despres '74 has joinedthe Capital
Group, a Los Angeles based investment management company. She is special counsel and assistant to the chairman in the Washington, D.C., office.
Michael S. Rubin '74 has opened his law office is San Francisco, emphasizing transportation law and litigation. He is also immediate past president of the Association of Transportation Practitioners.
Eve Triffo '74 has been admitted to the partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman,the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. She is in the Los Angeles office.
Victoria L. Block '75 has become an associate of the firm of Morgenstein & Jubelirer, in San Francisco.
James R. Brueggemann '75, a partner in the firm of Pretty Schroeder Brueggemann & Clark, is now serving as president of the Los Angeles Intellectual Property Law Association.
Steven M. Klein '75, executive vice president and general counsel at Lewis Galoob Toys, Inc., has recently been elected their chief administrative officer
MitchellA. Rofsky '75 has been named president of Working Assets Money Fund in San Francisco, a $240-million fund which invests in money market securities that it believes will have a positive social impact. Rofsky began his career as an attorney advocating banking reform with Ralph Nader's Public Citizen. Most recently, he was president of Heritage Square Development Corporation in Washington, D.C., helping to develop real estate in underserved inner-city communities.
Nancy Jean Shaw '75 of Anchorage has been appointed the first Federal Public Defender for the District of Alaska by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. A separate office of the Federal Public Defender was established for the District of Alaska in mid-1991. Previously, services were provided through a branch office where Shaw was supervising attorney.
RichardW. Esterkin '76 has become of counsel to the Los Angeles office of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius. He is a member of the litigation section, where
his practice focuses on bankruptcy and financial litigation.
Karen Randall '76 has been admitted to the partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast Expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. She is in the Los Angeles office.
Sharon Baumgold '77 has authored the 1991 edition of the CEB Civil Action Guide on Handling Appellate Writs. She and her husband, Roy, are also the proud parents of Hava Ariana Baumgold Young, born on August 17, 1991.
Denise M. Beaudry '78 is currently a partner with her brother Robert in the Beaudry Law Offices, located in Los Angeles and San Diego. The focus of their practice is asset protection and estate planning. They also provide other legal services, including tax planning, business planning, corporations, partnerships, real estate, and some litigation.
James E. Blancarte '78 has joined the law firm of Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmara in Century City as head of the firm's international law practice.
DavidG. Epstein '78 has recently become a partner at Capretz & Kasdan in Irvine, where he does business, construction and civil rights defense litigation. He was also a recent fourtime winner on "Jeopardy."
Kneave Riggall '78 has been designated as a CertifiedSpecialist in taxation law by the California Board of Legal Specialization. He recently published two tax articles: "Rolling Over Gain on a Home: Ins Must But Outs Can't," Family Law News and Review 23 (Spring 1991}; and "The 1031 Solution: Out-Spouses Are Not Out of Luck," Family Law News and Review 7 (Summer 1991}.
Don G. Rushing '78 has been elected to serve as managing partner of Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye, from 1992 through 1994. He will act as the chief operating and executive officer of the firm.
Douglas L. Walton '78 is moving to France to teach international trade law at the American University of Paris.
RicKilmer '79 has been elected the first president of the newly formed
Northwest Indian Bar Association in Seattle, Washington.
Nancy E. Lasater '79 has announced the formation of her law office, located in Washington, D.C.
The 1980s
Steven Brower '80 has been admitted to the partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. He is in the Irvine office.
Leslie A. Cohen '80 recently gave birth to a baby girl, Allison Laura Kiekhofer. Cohen has practiced bankruptcy law with Levene & Eisenberg in Century City since 1986.
Allan H. Cutler '80 has gone into solo practice, with emphasis on personal injury and workers' compensation, maintaining offices in downtown Los Angeles, mid-Wilshire, and Santa Monica. His wife, Helen E. Cutler '81, has her own real estate brokerage in Pacific Palisades.
Constance H. Harriman '80 is a member of the board of directors of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (Eximbank). Eximbank is the independent U.S. government agency that assists American exporters through a variety of loan guarantee and insurance programs.
Anita R. Van Petten '80 has married and changed her name to Anita R. Gershman. She is now president and chief operating officer of World International Network (WIN).
RichardP. Fajardo '81 has announced the formation of Litt, Marquez & Fajardo, a public interest law firm in Los Angeles which works to protect the rights of racial, ethnic and language minorities, the poor, and women. The firm will emphasize litigation in the areas of police abuse, housing discrimination, voting rights, the poor and women's issues, while practicing in other areas as well.
Michael R. Harris '81 has announced the formation of EFP Associates, financial planning and tax preparation
for high net worth individuals and corporate executives.
Neil B. Katz '81 is a partner in Collins, Robillard & Katz in Torrance. The firm specializes in real estate, taxation, estate planning and litigation. He emphasizes representation of institutional and individual creditors in bankruptcy and foreclosure proceedings, and landlord-tenant matters.
JonLight '81 and his wife Angela have new twins, Katherine & Elena, born early on January 28, at a collective 5 pounds. All are now doing fine in Camarillo.
Lawrence P. Best '82 is a senior deputy district attorney for Riverside County and currently deputy-in-charge of the Palm Springs office. In July he was appointed to the City of La Quinta Community Services Commission. He and his wife Robin had their third child, Brian Allan, in November 1990.
Kent S. Beyer '82 has been admitted to the partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. He is in the Los Angeles office.
Jeffrey J. Douglas '82 has opened his own office is Santa Monica, emphasizing criminal defense and the protection of First Amendment rights in state and federal courts and on the trial and appellate levels.
Randy H. Milgrom '82 has ceased practicing law, and has moved with his family to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to continue writing childrens' books and struggle with the novel form.
David E. VanIderstine '82 has been admitted to the partnership of Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. He is in the Los Angeles office.
Steven Ray Garcia '83 recently became a partner in the Los Angeles office of the Chicago-based firm Peterson & Ross. He is still litigating, emphasizing title insurance, real estate, and appellate work. He also co-wrote a chapter on "Ownership Transfer" in The Real Estate Handbook (2nd edition, 1990), Dow Jones Irwin.
June Guinan-Kharasch '83 and Ira Kharasch '82 announce the birth of their first child, Samantha Adelynne Kharasch, on May 7; she weighed 6 pounds, 13 ounces.
MichaelYaffa '83 has become a partner in Shannahan, Smith, Scalone & Stipanov in La Jolla, specializing in corporate and bankruptcy law.
John S. Bank '84 has been named a partner in the firm of Rudnick & Wolfe in Chicago, Illinois.
Todd W. Bonder '84 has become a partner in the firm of Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman.
Jose Colon '84 left the Public Defender's Office in July 1990 and recently opened his own office, specializing in criminal defense and personal injury
Lawrence H. Goldberg '84 has become a partner in the firm of Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman.
Steven Goldman '84 is currently regulatory counsel for McCaw Cellular Communications, Inc., in its Washington, D.C., office.
Paul T. Hayden '84 has been promoted to Associate Professor of Law at Indiana University School of Law, Indianapolis. He was named Outstanding Law Professor of the year by I.U. students for 1989-90.
B.J. Cling '85 has accepted a clerkship with Chief Justice Burton Lifland of the Bankruptcy Court, southern district of New York.
Michael P. Harrell '85 has moved from the New York to the London office of Debevoise & Plimpton, where he continues to work in the areas of international mergers and acquisitions, and corporate finance.
Valerie E. Kincaid '85 has become associated with Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. She is in the Los Angeles office.
Janice Sumler-Lewis '85 has been selected as a 1991-1992 Judicial Fellow at the Supreme Court of the United States; her fellowship began in August.
As a Fellow at the Supreme Court, she is working in the Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice.
Steven H. Zidell '85 has become associated with the Law Offices of Lisa Greer Quateman in Santa Monica after three years at Morgan, Lewis and Bockius. He will continue to specialize in real estate and corporate law.
Scott A. Ziegler '85 has become a member of the firm of Toptani & Ziegler in New York.
Lolita K. Buckner-Inniss '86 has recently formed Sumners, Council, and Inniss, in Trenton, New Jersey The firm specializes in education law, real estate, and matrimonial motion practice.
Lisa Oratz '86 announces the birth of her son, Joshua Ryan Oratz, on Julv 1. 1991.
Robert N. Sacks '86 has formed a law firm with Bruce Ross, a friend and former colleague. The firm is named Ross & Sack. It includes four attorneys.
Marc H. Edelson '87 has formed the firm of Hoffman & Edelson in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania The firm focuses on real estate, corporate law and commercial litigation.
Tim McOsker '87 is the Assistant City Attorney in cities of Santa Clarita. Downey and Manhattan Beach. He is also associated with Burke, Williams and Sorensen in Los Angeles, and specializes in municipal law.
David A. Ossentjuk '87 writes that he has had kidney transplant surgery. He recently returned to practice with the downtown Los Angeles firm of Hanna and Morton, where he works primarily in the areas of energy, natural resources and commercial litigation.
William H. Anderson '88 is now with Topa Equities, LTD., as vice president and general counsel.
David A. Blumenfeld '88 has become associated with Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast Expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. He is in the Los Angeles office.
Sara J. Berman-Barrett '89 is developing a bar review course with Professor Paul Bergman, focusing primarily on the performance test for the California Bar Exam. She has also created the course entitled "Performance Test Review" (PTR), which will be offered through UCLA Extension beginning in May 1992.
The 1990s
JoanE. Lambert '90 has become associated with Katten Muchin Zavis & Weitzman, the West Coast expansion of Katten Muchin & Zavis. She is in the Los Angeles office.
DerekW. Li '90 has become an associate of the newly formed public interest law firm, Litt, Marquez & Fajardo, located in Los Angeles.
IN MEMORIAM
Jack G. Magnus '64
Mary CatherineFord '82
Mary T. Jackson '76
Patricia Huey Mason '55
RichardAmandoMendoza '77
Stuart Harlan Sobel '86
Frederic Paul Sutherland '64
Calendar ofEvents
Sunday, December15, 1991Assistant Dean Michael Rappaport describes the current admissions process in the nation's law schools, with advice for prospective students and their parents. Room 1347 Law Building, 11 a.m.
Saturday, January 4, 1992 - At AALS Annual Meeting in San Antonio, Texas - UCLA dinner for School of Law alums in law teachingBoccaccios, 8 p.m.
Friday & Saturday, February 7-8, 1992 - 16th Annual Entertainment Symposium and Ethics Seminar, Schoenberg Hall Auditorium, UCLA.
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