UCLA grads who have helped shape the current administration
Like most oftheir fe LLow UCLA Law grads, they remember the intense discussions about the intricacies ofthe US. Constitution, the la te nights in the library a nd the hallway discussions with their professors about a point made in contracts class that seemingly made no sense
B ut most crucial to their current careers, they remember how law school taught them how to analyze issues and laws-to see things ftom both sides and to consider the opinions ofthe minority as well as the m ajority. Numerous a lumni of UCLA School ofLaw have gone on to professions where they help to make the laws or shape public policy. In this issue, we focus on four alums who have worked or currently work far President Clinton - either in his campaign, on his transition team or in the current administration We also feat ure in th is issue a third-year student who was selectedfar an externship in the White Ho use Office ofthe Counsel to the President.
Thomas Epstein Special Assistant to the President for Political Affairs
As a law st udent in the 1970s, Tom Epstein was a po li t ical idealis t who considered a career in law, but set hi s sights more on a life of pub lic servi ce. He took courses through the clinical program that al lowe d h im to put m ore of the theory he was learning into prac'tice; he sought ex ternships w ith elected officials and public policy organ izati ons
Epste in , wh o gradu ated from th e Sch oo l of Law in 19 76, never dream ed those preparations eventually would lead to a d es k in the Wh ite House
"I really just kind of fe ll into this," Epstein says humbly during a telephone interview from his office in the O ld Executive Office Building, the same co rr idors that h 9-use the vice president and oth er key Cab ine t and presidential staff offices
He volunteered some work for th e Clinton camp aign and had long- time relation ships with several ind ividuals in the future administrati o n. Epstein, who worked in the Jimmy Carter admin istration and for Kat hl een Brown and J o hn Garam endi , was vis it ing Washington D.C. duri11g the
Clinton inauguration wh en h e was called in for an interview. " Two days later, they offered me th e job. Two weeks later, they called , and I was packing up m y family and headin g for Washingcon, " Epstein said of hi s w ife, Susan, and 2-year-old d aughter, Avery.
The admin istration sought out the former Beve rl ywood resident for his expertise on health care iss u es and hi s extensive experience in California politics, Ep stein said.
As one of three special ass ista nts in the Office of Political Affairs , Epstei n h andl es the wes tern states of Californi a, Washingcon and Oregon. A major part of his job is to make sure the president is kept ap pri sed of the hot Californ ia issues- immi gratio n, aeros p ace unemployment, T ij u an a sewage fl ows, water distribution rules, and insurance an d health care reform, to name a fe w.
"Obvio usly, Californi a gets a lot of atte ntion here ," he sa id of the sta t e with 54 el ec toral votes that helped clench the election for Pres ident C li ncon Epste in also lists among his duties th e advisi n g on th e Californ ia schedules of C linton , Hillary Rodham C linton , V ice President Al Gore and other White House officials to maximi ze the political benefits of their visits.
Ironicall y, the "Mr Cali forn ia" of the administrat ion-as Epstein h as b een bill ed in the medi a-was born a nd r aise d in Pennsylvan ia. His po li tical ca ree r b egan, h owever, when h e came to UCLA for law scho o l afte r gradu atin g from the Wharton Bus iness Scho o l.
" UCLA p layed a signifi cant ro le in m y p o liti cal career," Eps t ein said.
As a third-year law st udent , Epstein took an externship with C ity Co un cilm an Zev Yaroslavsky. There, h e met many po litical figures h e lat er wou ld co me to know and work with.
Afte r grad u ation, h e traveled to North ern C ali fornia , and did legal resea rch on alcoho l and criminal law for the UC Berkeley School of Publi c He alth After that, he return ed to South ern Cal iforn ia and worked for Mel Levine's successful campaign for the Californ ia State Assemb ly. H e returned then to Yaros lavsky's office where he worked o n C ity Cou n cil legislation a nd se rved as a m edia represe ntat ive.
From there , his political reach ext ended co th e Jimmy Carter press office and the Adm inistra tion of former Gov. J err y Brown. He later w as appo inted C hief of Staff fo r John Garam endi - a sta te senato r a t th e time. Before h is job w ith
the White House, Epstein served for more than two years as a deputy commissioner under Insurance Commissioner Garamendi. Before that, he also served as a volunteer adviser on Kathleen Brown's victorious state treasurer ~a mpaign. Epstein said his anticipated neutrality in a potential Democratic gubernatorial race between Brown and Garamendi is one of the reasons he was selected for the current post.
Epstein was only distracted from the political sphere once-during the era of Gov. George Deukmejian. Cementing his complete California experience, he worked in the entertainment industry from 1987 to 1990. He was vice president of marketing communications for the Playboy Entertainment Group and was vice president for public affairs for The Disney Channel during those years.
Epstein, 41, harbors no regrets about his dedication to political life while many of his law school colleagues led more lucrative lives practicing law.
"I went to college in the '6os and '70s. I was idealistic," Epstein said. "I thought what I was doing was important, so I didn't mind. I certainly never lost my hope that things could change."
Said Epstein: "A lot of (my law school colleagues) were making a lot more money than I was, but I knew I was having a lot more fun. "
Epstein said his education in law gave him more credibility as he worked his way through the political system. "I understand the legal implications of political issues and the nuances oflegislation."
He said UCLA's clinical program gave him an opportunity to develop his own curriculum-one that better fit his goals . " I feel fortunate to have gone to a law school that gave me the kind of flexibility that I got at UCLA."
Cynthia C. Lebow
Senior Counsel for Policy, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice; Presidential Transition Team; California Issues Director for United Democratic Campaign (Clinton/Gore)
When Cindy Lebow graduated from . UCLA School of Law in 1973, women made up only II percent of the graduating class. Now, she works for the first woman Attorney General in the history of the United States.
"A lot of women from my generation really are breaking through and securing positions they were not getting when I wq-5 in school," Lebow said during an interview in October when she was visiting the campus for her 20-year law school reunion. Today, women make up more than 40 percent of the students enrolled at UCLA's law school as well as law schools around the country. "I came at the beginning, when women were just starting to enter 'non-traditional' careers. Now, I am working for the first woman and one of the most
outstanding attorneys general in the history of the United States," Lebow said of Attorney General Janet Reno. "She is a great role model for women lawyers, and for all women."
Lebow was appointed as Senior Counsel in the Civil Division of the Department of Justice by President Clinton after pursuing a career practicing corporate and civil as well as legislative law-having worked on Clinton's as well as Michael Dukakis's campaign and with the Senate Judiciary Committee. Although she has ended up practicing law in the political arena, she never abandoned her legal career by becoming a lobbyist or going into public relations or journalism as many Washington lawyers do, she emphasized. "What interested me in politics was the challenge in thinking politically and strategically in terms of the law. In politics you can't look at issues narrowly, you have to look at the big picture. Lawyers tend to focus narrowly on the brief they are writing or the deal they are negotiating. Often, you need to focus on what is happening in Congress because it could affect existing law."
Lebow said she honed a lot of her skills at thinking politically when she was General Counsel for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee under Senator Joe Eiden (D-Delaware). From 1986 to 1988, Lebow was responsible for the formulation and development of legislative initiatives and legislative policy, including the drafting of bills and amendments and preparation of legislative oversight hearings in the areas of antitrust, tort and liability reform, Justice Department oversight, white-collar crime, bankruptcy and commercial law. "I always referred to the Judiciary Committee as the Court of Last Resort If you didn't like the results you got in the appeals courts, you came to the Judiciary Committee to see if you could make changes. "
Some of those same areas of law are also now under her purview in th e Department ofJustice, where Lebow oversees the government's legal policies on everything related to civil law. Tort reform, the Federal Rules of evidence and civil procedure as well as medical malpractice and bankruptcy reform are all under review in the ,current administration. At her reunion she quipped that Professor Gary Schwartz is terrified at the thought that she is in charge of tort reform. (Lebow's office will also be involved in forming new policy if a National Health Care System is adopted.)
Lebow would like to see UCLA turn out more people who are interested in practicing law within the government. "It's difficult here ," she said "Los Angeles is 3,000 miles away from Washington; there's a tradition of California ignoring government and the government ignoring California." That is one of the reasons Lebow, a bi-coastal resident for many years, became involved in Clinton's California campaign.
"California was indispensable, with 54 electoral votes, and Clinton knew that. He called California 'the Crown Jewel of the '92 campaign.' Indeed it was ," said Lebow, who worked closely with UCLA Law alum Tom Epstein during the campaign. "Now, California is being looked at more carefully, and it has finally achieved an earlier presidential primary."

A Colorado native, Lebow became a Californian when she entered UCLA. After earning a bachelor's degree in Political Science from UCLA in 1970, she entered the School of Law. Right out oflaw school, she secured a job with Loeb and Loeb in Los Angeles, handling litigation. She conti~ued to do civil and corporate litigation work at firms when, shortly after the tragic death of her husband Allan Lebow ('72), she moved to Washington to become Chief Legislative Assistant to Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-West Virginia) in 1979. Throughout her career, Lebow has pursued her interests in public policy and law. In 1981, she became Chief Counsel for the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, which Byrd chaired, and in 1982, served as Special Counsel to the Democratic National Committee.
Then came more private practice,-this time in Washington. In 1984, she went to work for Senator Biden, first as Minority Staff Director for the Senate Judiciary Committee. In 1986, she became General Counsel to the Judiciary Committee. In that post, she served as the chief substantive lawyer for the committee. She also was responsible for coordination of staff investigations of federal judicial nominations, including those for the U.S. Supreme Court
In 1988, Lebow was Finance Director for Michael Dukakis' 1988 Democratic Presidential Campaign in California After h er work on that campaign, she became Of Counsel to the firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, where she specialized in a legal practice devoted to legislative advocacy and regulatory matters. In 1992, she became California Issues Director for the Clinton/Gore campaign, responsible for preparation of all brie fing materials for th e candidates relating to California. Later, on Clinton's Transition Team, Lebow worked on issues related to the Department of Justice, including review of and recommendations regarding the Justice Department budget.
Lebow commented that she hopes that women like her - in high positions in the Department of Justice~will soon not be as rare as they are today. "This is still, prim arily, a white-male establishment. But, that is changing."
Despite attaining a top position in the Justice Departm en t, Lebow puts h e r ac hievement more simply. 'Tm doing what I always wanted to d o-and that is to practice law."
Richard Veloz
Health Care Advisor, President's Task Force on National Health Care Reform; Congressional liaison to the 18-member Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Richard Veloz, who worked his way through UCLA's Schools of Public He alth and Law as a respiratory therapist , has believed for two d ecades that National Health Care would advance from
academic discussions at political conferences to chats at dining room tables. But Veloz, who graduated from the School of Law in 1985, never envisioned that one day he would be discussing health care reform at the White House with the First Lady and medical experts from around the country.
As Senior Health Care Advisor to the President's Task Force on National Health Care Reform, however, Veloz, 43, has been a primary architect in helping build President Clinton's Health Care Reform Package. "Here I am at the White House discussing health care with people who are world renowned," said Velo z, an East Los Angel es native. Although Veloz speaks modestly about his experiences, his multiple roles in the health care effort and the responsibilities entrusted to him by the White House are evidence of his own expertise in the field.
Velo z serves on the he alth care task force work group committees for long term care and underserved populations. He also was appointed by Hillary Rodham Clinton, Health Care Task Force Chair, to serve as a liaison to the 18-member Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Veloz said he chose a law school education to enhance his career in the health care field. He received his master's d egree in Public Health in 1977, worked as a respiratory therapist, and then attended law school. While at law school, he served as associate editor of the Chicano Law Review. He also was a clerk for the Legal Aid Foundation and the National Health Law Program. He became interested in better health care for the elderly w h en as a clerk h e encountered elderly people having trouble meeting their medical expenses.
Shortly after graduation from law school , Veloz was asked by USC Medical Center to research the feasibility of establishing a Family Practice Residency Program at White Memorial Medical Center in East Los Angeles. He told hospital administrators that he h ad very little background in medical education. "They said, ' That's O.K. , you're a lawyer with a h ealth care b ac kground."' It was then, Veloz realized, that a law school education combined with his health care education would open many doors for him in fields to which he might not otherwise h ave access Veloz becam e Administrative Direc tor for the White Memorial Medical Center Family Practice Residency Program, and today, White M emorial is co nsidered a model program for providing costeffective, comprehensive and affordable heal t h care services to medically underserved communities.
His career took a turn in 1989 when finall y h e accep t ed rep eated offers by Congressman Edward Roybal to work o n health issues in Washington. Velo z sub sequ en tly took a job as st aff direc tor for th e House of Represent at ives Select Com mittee on Aging ch ai red b y Roy b al. At th e time, it was the largest co mmittee on Capitol Hill with 68 Congressional members, four sub co mmittees and a staff of 41. As staff director, Veloz took on policy, legislative and oversi ght
responsiblity in the areas of Health and Long Term Health Care, Housing, Retirement and Income and Human Services. He said his law school education gave him the background he needed to deal effectively with the legislative issues that have arisen in the health care field.
Veloz, who earned his undergraduate degree in history from California State University, Los Angeles, has continually remained active in a variety of civic, professional and volunteer organizations, including the American Public Health Association, the National Health Lawyers Association, the DC Hispanic Bar Association and the Gerontological Society of America. Veloz also worked on the Clinton campaign, and was involved with Ade/ante Con Clinton (Forward with Clinton), a Hispanic organization that campaigned for Clinton. Veloz then served on the Clinton transition team, where part of his responsibilities were to advise on health care issues. Aside from all his work with the presidential administration during the past year, he became engaged to marry Maria Luisa Ochoa, Legislative Director for U.S. Representative Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.).
Veloz said the long hours of research involved in a law school education prepared him well for the Health Care Task Force, where in the formation stages for the past year, participants were expected to arrive at weekly meeting with detailed reports about their research and findings. "It was quite a process," he said. "Ira Magaziner (White House Senior Domestic Policy Advisor) and others would be present, and ask us about various aspects of our research. It was like being grilled by a judge-you had to think on your feet. Law school helped me learn to do that."
The Health Care Task Force participants conducted research, prepared policy papers and met with over 1,500 groups and individuals throughout the country to discuss various approaches to health care reform. "We met with a wide variety of groups concerned with health care-public health groups, social services agencies and doctors." He added : "I am confident that the Health Care Security Act of 1993 is the beginning of a new system that will ensui::e health care services for everyone in this country. I feel proud to have participated in chat process."
Timothy Wright III Director of Domestic Policy for
the Clinton campaign Clinton Transition Team
For Timothy Wright III, it was a long journey from his humble beginnings in Compton, to a UCLA Law School education, to President Clinton's transition team.
Members of the Clinton campaign team sought out Wright, who graduated from law school in 1983, as a person
experienced in urban development and other political issues, he said. Beginning in July 1992, Wright became the Domestic Policy Director for the presidential campaign. As such, he was the highest-ranking African-American in policy serving in any of the three major presidential campaigns. His duties included the development and modification of domestic policy issues, speaking on behalf of candidates Bill Clinton and Al Gore, and in general, keeping track of campaign issues.
"I had worked on campaigns before, but there is nothing like a national campaign," Wright said about the experience. "Everything happens so fast." He said it was a challenge to keep up with news items about the candidates, and to work on ways for the candidates to respond quickly to any statements about them. "If George Bush said something at Martha's Vineyard and we're in Cerritos, we've got to get the information and respond now," Wright said.
From his Clinton-Gore campaign work, he segued to the transition team, and served as Chief Policy Specialist to the Health and Human Services Cluster, which included Health and Human Services; Housing and Urban Development; and the Veteran's Administration. In addition, Wright participated on the confirmation team for Henry Cisneros as Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Wright, senior vice president of a Chicago-based investment banking firm, credits his law school experience with teaching him how to look at the legal ramifications of political issues-a skill he has used every day since he graduated from law school. "Even working at the level of the president, it helps to understand the legal implications of all issues," Wright said. Wright's activities as Chief Justice in the Moot Court Honors Program served as a natural rehearsal for his political life ahead.
"The skills of learning how to get up and talk in front of people-to give a convincing argument, present both sides, and convince a judge of your position, just to be able to think on your feet-clearly that has been an invaluable skill in the world of politics," said Wright, who also gave the commencement speech at his UCLA graduation
Wright, 37, who had long studied civil rights issues, became interested in politics in his second year in law school after seeing then-future Chicago mayor, Harold Washington, speak at a fund raiser in Los Angeles with Mayor Tom _ Bradley. "I decided I believed in Washington, I wanted to work for him," he said of the late mayor. "I had lived in California all my life, and I decided to go east."
So, he left for Chicago after commencement. In Chicago, Wright practiced law with Business and Professional People for the Public Interest. Three years later, in 1986, he served on Mayor Washington's cabinet as Commissioner of Economic Development for the city of Chicago. Wright, who earned a dual bachelor's degree in economics and political science from Claremont Men's College-also served as the special counsel to the mayor. From 1986 to 1987, he was acting director of
intergovernm ental affairs, serving as the mayor's legislative liaiso n to the City Council, the state assembly and Congress Later, he practiced law with Sachnoff & Weaver, a real estate development, corporate and governmental affairs law firm in C hicago.
Wright, a college football player, lives in Chicago with his wife, Karen Nash-a UCLA basketball player and a 1982 graduate of the School of Dentistry-and their three children, Ashley, 7; Timothy IV, 3, and Jasmine, r. Selected as one of Chicago's top 40 businessmen unde r 40, Wright also serves on a committee that is re-examinin g the Illinois co n stitution. He also is a member of several boards and commissions
But he counts his work with the Clinton campaign as a definite highlight in his stellar career.
"The campaign was one of the most d ynamic things with wh ich I ever have been involved ."
John Niblock
Int ern, Office of the Counsel to the President
Third-year law student John Niblock traded in the fam iliar halls of UCLA School of Law this semester for the historic, marble-floored Old Executive Office Building where he now works in th e Office of the Counsel to the Presid ent
Niblock, whose externship was arra nged through UCLA professors Eric Zolt and Evan Caminker, sa id working in the Co unsel's office has b een a "terrifi c, eye-o p ening experience ."
As an intern, Niblock assists in analyzing e thics iss ue s th at arise with presidential appointments, as well as other White House matters. He also spends many hours performing research in the building's Victoria-era lib raries, which "are a little more el egant th an UCLA's library," h e quips Nevertheless, he feels well-equipped in his research and writing skills honed a t UCLA. ''I've h ad great training at UCLA, and it's wonderful to be ab le to app ly what I've learned at this level of governm ent."
Niblock says he has learned a lot about the way the Co un sel's office functions. "Like m any other kinds of lawyerin g, a lot of this job involves co uns eling clients. It's just somewhat unusual-and a little thrilling-that the Counsel's clients h appen to be t h e pres ident of the United States and his staff" He said he h as been impressed by the dedication, intelle ct and collegial ity of the lawyers in the Counsel's office "There is a real sense that the work we do, dealin g w ith ethi cs in government, p lays an important ro le in maintaining the public trust. "
Much of Niblock's work consists of research into the legislative history of ethics laws and their application t o reallife cases. " It's not all glamorous," says Niblock, " but then I'll be called to a meeting in the West Wing of the White House, and I'm reminded-this is pretty important stuff we're doing here ."
For Niblock, going to Washington D.C. was a homecoming of sorts. After graduating from college, he taught learning-disabled 6th through 12th graders in nearby Baltimore, Md. From 1984 to 1987 , h e worked as a legal assistant in Baltimore. During that time, and later, in Los Angeles, h e worked as an artist painting murals and restoring antique furniture.
While Niblock, 33, said he is not interested in pursuing any political office, he has long been interested in th e political d evelop ments in the law He recently wrote an article about the anti-gay initiatives that were on the 1992 ballots in Co lorado and Oregon for the current edition of UCLA Law R eview. The article, "Ami-Gay Initiatives: a Call for Heightened Judicial Scrutiny," takes a look at whether such ballot measures could be in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Niblo ck became interested in the constitutionality of the Colorado initiative, which still is being chall en ged in the courts, while an intern at Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund after his first year of law school.
At the law school , Niblock h as co -chaired the Committee on Gay and Lesbian Issues, and has worked as a volunteer at the Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center. He also is active in the American C ivil Liberties Union. Niblock also is an avid runn er.
Last summer, Niblock worked as a summer associate for the Ce ntu ry C ity office of Proskauer, Rose, Goetz and Mendelsohn, where, amo n g other th in gs, he participated in a variety of pro bono matters. He h as b een selected to clerk for U.S . District Judge A. Wal lace Tashima in Los Angeles following graduation in M ay.
At this point, Niblock said h e is unsure where hi s varied educatio n wi ll lead. "To be sure, m y experiences at UCLA have been eclectic-I've worked for a large private law firm, a public interes t firm and th e Whi te House. N ext year, I'll clerk for a judge." Regardless of where he ends up, Niblock beli eves his q reer will always involve some component of public service. "Many of my UCLA Law professors have encouraged my classmat es and me to gi-ve something back to society," he said. "O ur legal education is a valuable gift " He said he often finds inspiration during his morning runs along the Cap itol Mall before work.
"I look at th e Lincol n M emorial, the Jefferson M emorial, and I am reminded of the progress th at can be m ade , the good that can be done. I guess that sounds corny, but it's true."
Major Gifts to the Law School and the Law Library
FOUNDATIONS AND CORPORATIONS
The Ahmanson Foundation
Matthew Bender and Company, Inc.
The David Bernard Memorial Foundation
The Hugh & Hazel Darling Foundation
Joseph Drown Foundation
The Ford Foundation
IBM Co rpora tion
J.W & Ida M. Jameson Foundation
WM. Keck Foundation
L and S Milken Fo undatio n
Roth Family Foundation
John Stauffer Charitable Trust
INDIVIDUALS
Ethel Balter
Norman B Barker '53
Barbara Boyle '60 and Kevin Boyle
Skip Brittenham '70
Richard J. Burdge, Jr ' 79 and Lee Smalley Edmon
W illiam Calfas '58 and Karin Calfas
J.R. Campbell
Gertrude D Chern '66
Stephen C laman '59 and Renee Claman
Hugo D. de Castro '60 and Isabel de Cas tro
Robert E Decker '57 and Dorothy Decker
Stanley R. Fimberg '60
Albert B. G lickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
William D. Go uld '63
Arthur N. Greenb erg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Bernard A. Greenberg ' 58 and Lenore S. Greenb erg
Barry and Jane Halpern
Geraldin e S. Hemmerling ' 52 and C li fford H em m erlingt
Martin R Horn ' 54 and Rit a Horn
Marvin Juhas '54 and Fern Juhas
Robert Kahan '69 and Diane Kahan
David Kelton ' 62 and Lenny Kelton
William A. Masterson '58 and Julie Masterson
Marsha McLean-Utley '64 and Robert Utley
Arjay Miller and Frances Fearing Miller
Milton Louis Miller '56 and Marceile Miller
Josiah L. Neeper '59
Gloria Dee Nimmer
Roger C. Pettitt '5 4
Mariana R. Pfael zer '57
D avid G. Price '60 and Dall as P. Price
Stewart Resnick '62
Charles E Rickershauser, Jr. '57
Nelson C. Rising '67
Mark Samuels '82 and Nancy Samuels '82
George P. Schiavelli '74 and Holli C. Schiavelli
Ralph Sh ap iro '58 and Shirley Shap iro
Estate of David Simon '55
Arthur Soll '58 and Barbara Soll
Henry Steinman '61 and N ancy Steinman
Benjamin Strauss '61
William W Vaughn '55 and C laire Vaughn
Estat e of Cathleen H. Wh ea t
Lawrence D. Will iams '63 a nd Shera Williams
Kenneth Ziffren ' 65
Lester Z iffren '52 and Paulette Ziffren and Leo n ard an d Emese Green
Anonymous
LAW FIRMS
Baker & McKenzi e
Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger
Haight, Brown & Bonesteel
Hufstedler, Ka us & Ettinger
Irell & Mandia
Mo r ri so n & Foerster
Acknowledging the Challenge
Each year in this edition of the UCLA Law Magazine, we publish our Honor Roll of Donors. This year a substantial portion of the magazine is devoted to the law library addition and the plans for its design and construction as well as the related fund-raising campaign. We hope the description of the library project conveys some of the excitement we feel about it as well as acknowledging the tremendous challenge it presents in terms of gathering financial support. There is another challenge that is every bit as important to the continuation of the law school as we know it-the challenge we face each year when we ask yo u to join in support of the Law Annual Fund
The n am es of alumni , facu lty, friends, law firms, corporations and foundations which are included in the following pages have responded to th e need for unrestricted support that goes directly into the academic program, providing general operating budget relief during four successive years of significant cutbacks in state funding. The response has been gratifying, particularly in a period that could be characterized mildly as unce rtain for many segme nrs of the economy-law practice being among the many. We want to express our deepest ap preciation to those of yo u who find yc ur names in these pages We ho pe chat you will continue to give as you h ave in the past , perhaps even at a higher level, since the n ee d is so much greater And we en courage those of you who h ave not give n for a while, or ever for that matter, to acknowledge ch e challenge with the rest of us and respond by s upportin g UCLA Law this year.
UCLA School of Law Donors 1992-1993 (Fiscal Year July 1, 1992 to June 30 , 1993)
* T his Fou n de r h as m ad e 1963
1973
198 1 1965 an addit ional co nt rib u t io n to Leroy M. G i re
Do n ald P Baker
Elizabeth A. Cheadl e H arold W. Hofman, Jr.
the Law A nnual F und in Marvin Gerald
Goldman Mario Cam a ra
Eric J Ema nual * Stanley R. Jones 1992-1993
Be rnard Ka t zman
Bern a rd R Gans
James I. H am * Sa ul L. Lessler t Deceased
Dean's Cabinet
($5 ,000 o r m ore)
Lawri n S Lewin
Marsh a ll A Lewis
Lawrence D. Wi lliams
Nath alie Hoffman Jo h n F. R u nkel , Jr. A nd rea S. Ordi n
Derrick A n t h ony Hoo Ma rilee C. Unruh 1967
Robert F. Marsh a ll
Sheldon W. Presse r 1982
* G il bert I. Ga rcett i 1964
Rich ard V. Sandle r Su san L. C la man Dav id M. Horwitz 1957
Edwa rd A Lan dry
Rob ert E Decke r D avid J Mac Kenzie
Jeffrey E Sultan
Steven C. G lick man * Bruce H. Spector
Rich a rd J. Gruber
Donn a R. H echt 1969 1959
Jeffrey T. Oberm a n 1974
Wi llia m H arold Borthwick G regory Soobong Pa ik
* Keenan Behrle
* Steph e n C laman 1965 * Robert L. Ka h a n
Thomas P Burke
1965
* Wi lliam M Bitti ng
Bruce A. C lemen s Jay F. Palchi koff * Arr Spence
A Bar ry Cappell o Jack Fried Jo h n R Sommer D iana L. Walke r
Dan G arcia
Richard Jay Goldstein
Adam C. Vall ejo 1975
* John G Bra n ca
Robert H. Goon
Marci n Z N. Ka tz
Fred Selan
Dean's Partnership 1966
($2,500-S4,999)
Ro bert Bertram Burke
Ethan B. Lipsig Dav id E Van Ide rstine, Jr. 1970
Ted O b rzu t
Rich a rd G Parker
1975
Reed S. Waddell R icha rd A. Co rl eto
Brian C. Leck
1983
H oward A. Jacobs 19 7 1
James D. C. Barrall H Dea n e Wong C u nis A. Cole
John G Branca 1985 R ich ard W. Havel 1959
* John H. Roney
Gertrude D. Chern
Baret C. Fink
Pamela Brockie
Jon F. Chait
• David S Karto n
John M. Moscarino • James Martin Prager 1962
Stan ley M. Pri ce
David Kelton 1967
Deborah A. David
Friends a nd Faculty • Susan Wes terberg Prage r
Donald S. Eisenberg J W. & Ida M Jameson
H a rlan d W. Bra u n Moses Lebovits Fo u ndatio n 1972 1977
Cary D. Cooper
Karen D. Mack
Dr a nd Mrs Da niel • Curtis O. Barnes
Steph e n D. G reenberg * Bru ce S G lickfeld
1980
Mich ael A. Grayson
John Gardner H ayes
Renee L. Campbe ll Ric h ard A. Lane
Martin F. Majestic
Founders Evan R. Medow
The Founders program was Louis M. Meisinger estab lished in 1981 by UCLA
Jeffrey T. Mi ll er
Wayn e A. Sch rader
Levenson J oseph K Ko rnwasse r
197 6 Mon n a Liv ingsto n Jo h n P Meck
Michael I. Adler
F redric I. Bernstein
Anh u r Rosen
Lou is R. Mi ll er, lII
Edward and N a n cy Rubin M ark A Resnik
Maribeth Armstrong Borthwick C ha rl es E Young
J enny E. Fisher
D ean's Ro undtable
Marc M. Seltzer
Dona ld K. Steffen law alumn i as a m ean s of Elliott D. Olson
ensuring ann u a l s u pport to t h e Frankl in Tom
D avid R Ginsburg
($1,000-2,499)
Pa t r icia Sturdevant
Victor Ber key Moh e n o Anon ymous law sch ool. M ichael Waldorf
Mark A. Ne u ba u e r
1952
Richard Schneider * Jo h n C. Mc Carthy
1973
Robert J. Wynne * Ric h ard V. Sa ndler
An i ta Yallowitz Wol man
1953
Ronald B. Labowe
Mel Z iomz
1954 1968
Philip J Wolman
1977
Fran k H. M efferd
197 4
* Buddy Ep s te in M arvin Gross
Craig D Crockwell
An drew A. Kurz J. Michael C rowe * Donald A. Ruston
1955 Frank J Lanak
W illiam W. Va u ghn
Al lan S. Morton
1956 1969
Bernard L. Lew is
Marvin D. Rowe n M ic h ael A.K Dan
1957
Jean Ann Hirschi
Carolyn Hopkin s Carlb u rg 1954
Howard E. King Eu gen e L. Wolver, Jr.
Mark A. Treadwell
Wendy M u nger 1975
Rich a rd R. Purcich 1956 Sa ndra Kass G il man
W illiam F. Sull ivan * Irw in D Goldring Timoth y La ppen
Kee nan Behrle 1978
E lwood G Lui
Mich ael T. Masin
Robert S. Shahin
1958 197 0
William Calfas
Den nis E Carpenter
D an iel Brendan Condon
Richard L. Kite
Arth ur M azirow
Robert N Block
Paul Levinson • Moses Le b ovits
Herbert J. Solomon C harles C. Read
Melanie C ook 1958
197 6
Kenneth D 'Alessandro * B.D Fisc h e r Pa tri c ia E Anderson
David F. Fa ustm a n Peter T. Pate rno
C hris t ophe r Kim 19 59
Nicholas Budd * Sanford Bo th man
Dorothy Wolpert
Douglas K. Freema n 1979 Jos ia h L. Neeper 1978
John Mounier, Jr
Arnold Schlesinger
Richa rd J. Burdge, Jr. * Paul B Well s H a rrison D. T aylor
Gail E ll en Lees
Rochell e M Lindsey 1960 1979
Marshall N. Schwartz * Albert B G lickm a n
Timm Andrew Mi ller
Scott J Spolin
Sa nford Bothman
Rich a rd N E ll is
Richard J. Stone
M ich ael D M c Kee * Stua rt A Simke
Andrew Stua rt Pauly 1959
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Kim Mcla n e Wardlaw 1961 198 1
David W Fle ming 197 1 1980 Ral ph Cassad y Jo nat h a n M Hoff
Robert C. McManigal
Rinaldo S. Brutoco M itchell M. Geffen
David J Burton
David Andrew Acke rt * Alan N Halkett
Milton B. Mille r Laure n ce M Berman Jam es B. Woodruff
Ric h a rd D. Fybel Lo nnie C. Blan ch ard lII
1960 Thomas P Lambe rt David Dolinko
john K. c rffi',l.C.k
Michael
"My debt load is considerably lighter than it would have been ifI did not receive the scholarship. As a result, I will be able to pursue the field oflaw I am interested in-criminal prosecution-without having to worry about huge loan debts. "
Paul Watford, third-year law student, Drown Foundation Scholarship recipient
James H. Chadbourn
Fellows
($500-$999)
1952
J. Perry Langford
1953
Arthur M. Frankel
Herbert A. Paskett
Jack M Sattinger
1954
John A. Arguelles
Carl Boronkay
Dennis Hayden
1955
Joan Dempsey Klein
1956
William Cohen
1957
Ephraim J. Hirsch
1958
Warren J. Abbott
Gerald S. Barton
* Lewis H Silverberg
Robert L. Wilson
1959
F.P. Crowell
Lawrence Kritzer
Bernard S. Shapiro
1960
Roger J. Broderick
M. Alan Bunnage
Mark L. Lamken
Bruce H. Newman
Edwin M. Osborne
Owen A. Silverman
Alan R Watts
1961
Arthur Brunwasser
Gerald S Davee
1962
Jerome S. Billet
Luke McKissack
1963
Robert S. Goldberg
* William D. Gould
Robe rt T Hanger
1964
* Edward A. Landry
Melvyn Jay Ross
Lawrence Teplin
1965
George C. Eskin
Lawrence H Nagler
Louis P. Petrich
Martin Stein
1966
Stephen W. Bershad
Wilford D. Godbold, Jr.
Irving H. Greines
Dennis D. Hill
1967
David R. Carmichael
Lynard C. Hinojosa
Michael D. Marcus
W. E. Paterson
Jon A Shoenberger
John C. Spence, lll
1968
Thomas M. Maney
1969
Jerald Friedman
Raymond H. Goldstone
Roger W Pearson
Lon Sobel
1970
Terry W. Bird
William J. Kelleher
Marc J. Poster
1971
William G Cort
Marc E. Hallert
Paul S. Meyer
Michael A Ozurovich
James J. Pagliuso
Kent L. Richland
Earl M. Weitzman
Robert H Wyman
1972
Christopher P. Bisgaard
Howard D. Krepack
Cary B. Lerman
Gordon R. Mc Dowell
1973
Martin E. Auerbach
Ronald W. Rouse
William H. Travis
1974
Allan B. Cooper
William S. Davis
James L. Foorman
Marshall M. Taylor
1975
Jeffrey S. Barron
* Deborah A David
Michael J. Harrington
Larry G. lvanjack
Grace N. Mitsuhata
William F. Rogers
1976
William D. Claster
Craig Cotora
David Clarence Doyle
Marilyn S. Heise
Edward R Ortega
* Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Judith W. Wegner
1977
Gregory E. Breen
Rochelle Browne
Kenneth J. Fransen
Paul E. B. Glad
Peter J. Hanlon
Suzanne Harris
Helen D. Jacobs-Lepor
Thomas A. Kirschbaum
Carl J. Klunder
Lawrence J Poteet
Carl C. Robinson
Charles N. Shephard
Gail M. Singer
John W. Stephens
* William F. Sullivan
Jonathan R. Yarowsky
Scott Z. Zimmermann
1978
Nancy R Alpert
Michael D. Briggs
Frances E. Lossing
Christopher J. Martin
M Brian Mc Mahon
Helen Whiteford Melman
David F. Morrison
J. Michael Norris
Paul S. Rutter
KathyT. Wales
Timothy Joseph White
1979
Aviva M. Bergman
James A. Melman
David S. Neiger
Sandra B. Stern
1980
Ann 0. Baskins
John W. Cochrane
Leslie A. Cohen
Paul A. Fran z
Kathleen Hogaboom
F. Sigmund Luther
Lucina L. Moses
1981
Kenneth S. Bayer
Karen E. Bertero
Michael R. Harris
Robert B. Orgel
Kim V. Sainten
Rensselaer J. Smith, IV
1982
Robert T. Clarkson
Leah S. Fischer
Samuel N Fischer
Karin T. Krogius
Joan M. Le Sage
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy B. Samuels
1983
Timothy T. Coates
Kirk D. Dillman
Lori Huff Dillman
Daniel J. Mc Loon
Robert B. Reeves
1984
Stuart M Rosenthal
Douglas E. Scott
Anonymous
1985
Martha Gage
1986
Elizabeth A Famy
1989
Jon T. Yamamura
Friends and Faculry
Michael R. Asimow
Carole E. Goldberg Ambrose
Joel Handler
Kenneth & Smiley Karst
Grant & Judith A. Nelson
William & Susan Warren
Gary D. Stabile
Elliot Reisz speaks at the law school commencement ce remony last May His father is Willard Reisz, a graduate of UCLA School of Law 's second graduating class in 1953.
Dean's Advocates
($250- $499)
1952
Arthur Alef
Jean Bauer Fisler
Freder ic k E Mueller
Joseph N T ile m
1953
Victor M. Eppert
Jerome H. Goldberg
John F. Parker
Willard M. Reisz
1961
Richard Earl Barnard
James Lerman
John R. Liebman
Don B. Rolley
William F. Stewart
David G. Waller
Anony mo us
1962
Gerald V. Dicker
Erwin H. Diller
Stuart K. Mandel
1968
Audrey S. Ezratty
Robert F. Harris
Stephen C. Jon es
Joel R. Ohlgre n
Richard M. Roberg
Gordon J. Rose
1969
Sara L. Adler
Stephen M. Burgin
David A. Buxbaum
Kenneth Drexler
W illiam Finestone
1973
Dennis S. Beck
Randolph M. Blorky
Timothy R. Born
David T. Di Biase
Ke nne th P. Egge rs
Pete r M. Fonda
J ames L. Goldm an
Douglas B. Haynes
Charles I. Henderson
Joe W 'Hilberman
Ronald J. Jacobson
Randall H. Kenno n
Abrah a m D. Lev ,,. 1954
H arvey F. G ra nt
Jack Levine
* Sherwin L. Memel
1955
Herbert Z. Ehrmann
Raymond F. Moats, Jr.
Graham A. Ritchie
Richard Schau e r
Paul L. M igdal
H arvey Reich ard
Todd Russell Rein stein
Richard A Rosenberg
1963
Gene Axelrod
Eli Blum enfeld
* Lee W. Cak e
Frances P. Ehrm ann
Alan M Ge nelin
Robert B Fraser
Jan C. Gabrielson
Rowan K. Klein
Kenneth Meyer
Charles G. Rigg
Richard B. Wolf
1970
W illi a m H. Bur fo rd
Linn K. Coom bs
Stacy D Shartin
Kathryne A. Stol tz
Gary A. Wex ler
Jam es F. Wi lson, JII
Peter Andrew W issne r
197 4
Peter C. Bronson
Susan B. Ca rnah an "Alumni support
Marc Epste in
Richard E. Cole
Harold J. Delevie
Lelia H. Jabin
H Gilbert Jones
Howard Le hman
Norman D. Rose
Ronald M. Kabrins
Steph e n M. Lachs
Ken L. Maddy
Alban I. N il es
M ichael E Schwartz
Norman J White
Linda S. Hum e
Richard A. Hu tron
Perry E. Maguire
W illiam K. Mc Call ister, Jr.
R obert]. Mc Kay
Robert Y. Nakagawa
Robe rt F. Hira no
Ja n Lawrence Handzlik does much to 19 56
Rex S Hun gerford, Jr make UCLA not
J oseph J. Kap lan
Evan S. Lipstein
Cornell J. Price
merely a gro up of
Mic hael S. Rubin academics, butan
Elizabeth A Strau ss 1964
1971 Sh an K. Thever intellectual 1957 Raymon d T. Gail
J ames E Ac ree J a m es L. Nolan
Lawrence J. Booher, Jr
Dav id R G lic kman
Marvin Jab in
Roy A. Kates
James N. Ries
Geo rge A Smith
Richard B. Wolfe
Robert A. Kn ox · 1965
Everett Willi a m Magu ire
George J. N ich o las
Robert J Adelman
Barry E Axelrod
J ohn C. Brown
Elliott E. Alhadeff
Steph e n C. Drummy
Glor ia K. Shime r Dona ld Low
J. Anthony V ina l
197 5 community, one
Ja mes R Brueggeman
Allan Cutrow that fosters a wide
Judy Fonda
John J Fran kovich
Ronald R. Gastelum
Laura L. G li ckman
Linda P. Jensen
Irvin g Shim e r Jack M. Newm a n Rona ld C. Lazof
Well s K. W o hl we nd Leona rd R Sager
1958
C h a rles S. Althouse
Terrill F. Cox
H a rold J. Stanton
A rno ld G. York
1966
Ca rl A. Albert
Edmund D Edelm an Robert Lee Anderson
Leonard B Levine
Robert P. M a ndel
Paul Marcus
John D. Mc Co n ag hy
Rich ard J. Morgan
R ich ard T. Peters
No rma n L. Epste in Alan J Silver
Hugh H Eva ns, Jr. Roge r L. C ossack
Mi tc h e ll M Gold
Harold J. H e rtzbe rg
Monte C. Fligs te n
J ose ph Gregory G orman
Robert J. Higa
Douglas M. Bu ssey
Jeffrey A. Charlsto n variety of
Edmund W Clarke
Thomas W Coh en scholarship and
Ro b ert D. C un n in gh am
Paul L. Gale approaches to
John B Galp er
Rob ert Ala n Green t eaching. "
Andrew J. G uil fo rd
Jo hn W. Hagey
Samuel D. Ingh a m , JII
Alex Kozinski
Jan G reenbe rg Levi n e
M ichael F. Yam am o ro M a rgare t Levy
Stuart D Z imrin g
Douglas B. Z ub r in
Philip F. La nzafam e D avid A. Horowitz 197 2
Zad Lea vy
Rola nd R. Speers, II
* John Grant Wig more
Hunter Wilson , Jr.
19 59
Stanley A. Black
Jer ry A Brody
Albert J Hillman
Arthur Samuel Levine
G. Greg Aftergood
Rich a rd H. M ill ard G eo rge J. Ba rron
Joseph L. Sh alam
Ron ald M Bayer
Ronald I. Silverm an Bruce B Dennison
Pete r Q Ezzell
1967
Arthur Avazian
Ral p h L. Block
Ke nne th R. Blumer
Roy S. G lickman
Rom ulo I. Lopez
G ary W M aed er
Alan M irma n
Ra mo n Ote ro , Jr.
Norman A Ped e rsen
Scott T. Pratt
Lela n d J. Re ic her
Julia J Rider
H arvey Sh apiro
D avid Simon
Don a ld A. Goldm a n V irg inia E. Sloan
J ames B. Goodma n Marjor ie S. Ste inbe rg
Earl W Kavana u Lawre n ce J Boohe r Ja mes Kas hia n Emi ly A Steve ns
Eugene Leviron
Leslie W. Light
Robert W. V idor
1960
H owa rd S. Blo ck
Roger Jon Di am o nd
Leslie C. Falick
Eugen e M G enson
Leo n ard D Jacoby
Randolph K. Joyce
Stan ley E. Maron
Seth T ievsky
Rob ert M Pope ney G lenn F. Wasse rm a n
Dom inick W Ruba lcava
C ha rles W. Sch n eide r
Robert M Z e ll er
Thomas C. Taylor, Jr 197 6
Ric h a rd Avil a
Dale V. C un nin gh a m J effrey L. Linde n Lourdes Gi ll espie Baird
Ro b ert W D ' Angelo
V ictor E G leason
Stefan M. Maso n
Sheldo n Mi ch ael s
Lo u is M Nive n Mi lto n J N e nney
G rant E Propper
Amil W. Roth
Professo r Steph e n C. Yeazell
Linda C. D ia m ond
Ric h a rd K. D ia mond
Steve D ra pkin
St even Z Pe rre n Ke nn eth L. Friedm an
J as on C. Reed
Step h en C. Taylo r Fra nk A. Ursomarso
Me redith A Ju ry
Rich a rd J. Ka rz
Leo n a rd D Ven ge r Va le rie J M e rritt
Th omas E W arrine r D avid B Parke r
Fra nklin R Wu rtzel
Students
"I am married and have two wonderful childre n. Despite th e fact that my wife works full-time, it seems as though we are never really able to get ahead or provide fo r all the necessities of life. If it were not for the generosity of those who truly care about assisting those who traditionally would not have a chance, I si mply would not be able to attend law school "
Mic h ael A. Ca rde n as, t hird-yea r law student, wh o has rece ived t h e Mex icanAmerican Legal Defe n se a n d Edu cat io n Fu nd Scho lars h ip, th e Ma n uel Gonza lez Ill Me m or ial Sc h o lars hip , th e Law Affili ates of Los An geles Sc h o larsh ip a nd ot h e rs.
Ka ren Randa ll
Anne B Roberts
Harvey Shapiro
Marc R. Stein
Roland G Wrinkle
1977
Francis J. Baum
And rea H Bricker
Ronnie J. Oashev
Gary A. David
Kathleen Houston Orummy
Edwin F. Feo
Marcia A. Forsyth
Gregg M. Gibbons
David P. Leonard
Roger A. Luebs
Tamar T. Mason
Mark D. Michael
John E. Pope
Neil J. Rubenstein
Linda). Smith
Mark W. Snauffer
Marcy J.K. Tiffany
1978
Linda D. Bardsley
David R Deutsch
Michael D. Oozier
Wayne H. Gilbert
Miriam J. Golbert
Karin Greenfield-Sanders
Lorna C. Greenhill
Robert J. Grossman
Kenneth L. Guernsey
Susan J. Hazard
Dean J. Kitchens
Linda M. Lasley
Marlo Rene Laws
Lisa Greer Quateman
Michael A. Robbins
Marietta S. Robinson
Anne T. Thomas
Barry M. Weisz
Arlene F. Withers
1979
Michael Barclay
Lloyd A. Bookman
Cathy Deroy
D Barclay Edmundson
Karin S. Feldman
Linda Gach Ray
Spence r L. Karpf
Roberta Kass
Kathryn S. Krause
Robin B. Lappen
Roger Lautzenhiser
Thomas H Mabie
Jennifer L. Machlin
Marilyn R Moriarty
Charles O. Strathman, Jr.
1980
Robert W. Barnes
Andrew P. Bernstein
Nei la R. Bernstein
Barbara Biles
Becky L. Burnham
Thomas E G ibbs
Darrel J. H ieber
Rho n da ) Heth
Laurence L. Hummer
MarcW.June
Wi ll iam A. Lappen
Harriet Leva
Lauri e L. Levenson
Charles D Meyer
J. Scott Pais ley
David S Porter
Paul Schmidhauser
Jose A. Velasco
1981
David Babbe
Douglas B Canfield
Cornell Chu lay
Walter R Dahl
Mark E. Ferrario
1986
David E Isenberg
Steven M. Kleiman
Colleen C. Mc Andrews
1987
James F. Blake
Raquell e de la Rocha
Roche ll e Gumlia Klein
Marsha B. Liss
Suzanne Zaharoni
Leonard F. Gumlia 1988
Chris S Jacobsen
Richard W Kaiser
Julie S. Mebane
Marjorie E Mikels
Les lie R. Mirchner
Marcy S. Morris
Stephen J. Rawson
William J. Arzbaecher, III
George H. Brown
Richard S. Moskow itz
Kenneth A Ostrow
Wendi G. Royal
David Schinasi
Marrin E. Rosen 1989
Karen Green Rosin
Robert A. Vi ll ani
Kenneth J. St ipanov /
Steven M Stra uss 1990
George M. Eshaghian
Charles R. Tremper
Peter C. Walsh 1991
Hoyt H Zia
Kristin D. Wheeler
1982 1992
Patrick J. Cain
Patrick W. Dennis
Bryan D. Hull
Martin W. Lee
Scott T. Maker
Michelle Patterson
Dennis L. Perez
David W. Reimann
Virginia C. Bennett
Friends and Facu lty
Dav id Mellinkoff
Craig N Oren
Alan G Sieroty
Jonathan & Barbara Varat
Dean's Counsel
Eric B. Siegel (Classes prior to 1991:
Jeffrey H. Silberman $125-$249)
Steven E. Sletten
Ilene Evans Trabolsi (Classes of 1991, 1992: $75-$249)
1983 (Class of 1993: $25-$249)
James H. Eisenberg 1952
Roger L. Funk
June G. Guinan
Michael A Helfant
Ellis G. Joseph
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Jocelyn Larkin
Maurice W. Bralley
Howard O'Neil Culpepper
Sidney R. Kuperberg
Sallie T. Reynolds
Marrin J. Schnitzer
In-Young Lee 1953
David S Reisman
1984
Pamela G. Chin
John U. Gall
Dorothy W. Nelson
Martin B. Weinberg
Barbra L. Davis 1954
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Robert G. Go ldman
Kenneth B. Hertz
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Monika P. Lee
Bernard Lauer
Gerald A. Margolis
Howard W Rhodes
Jerry Silverman
Leslie K. Lurie 1955
Teresa L. Remillard
Peter C. Thomas
1985
Valerie B. Ackerman
Susan L. Coskey
Donald L. Feder
Lynne S. Goldstein
Susan Keller
Stacey G Lassally
Mark A. Levine
Alan S. Po ll ey
Alicia G. Rosenberg
Ronald A Burford
Myrtle Dankers
John R. Engman
Earl H. Greenstein
Forrest Latiner
Marvin H. Lewis
Gerald E. McCluskey
David W Slavin
1956
Herschel T. Elkins
Mervin N. G low
L. Guy Lemaster
H. George Taylor Robert F. Serio
Elizabeth Ash Strode 1957
Steven A. Swernofsky
Richard D Agay
Ernest R. Baldwin
Morris Stone
char informally with Professor Eric Zolt in the law school courtyard during orientation picnic.
"When you give to an institution ofthe quality and prominence of UCLA, strangely enough, you end up being the beneficiary in so " many ways.
David G. Price '60, Co-Chair, Library Campaign Committee
Students get
classmates at the annual fall orientation picnic.
Keith A. Lovendosky
Bernard J. Lurie
Ronald M. Monitz
Linda A. Netzer
Diane Robertson
Daniel Rodriguez
Stephen L. Schirle
John A. Seethoff
Steven J. Untiedt
Moises Vazquez
William R. Warhurst
1981
Jan Almquist
Angela J Campbell
Regina I. Covitt
Steven L. Crane
John W. Crittenden
Leianne S. Crittenden
Gregory S. Drake
Lawrence M. Harnett
Linda A. Kirios
Wesley Kumagai
Shelley E. Levine
Margaret Mack Mason
Karen L. Matteson
Joan A. Mc Carthy
Susan Fowler Mc Nally
Jon B. Miller
Jeffrey L. Oliphant
Lin B. Saberski
Scott B. Samsky
Jodi Siegner
Judith A. Uherbelau
Patrick C. Wilson
1982
Marc H. Corman
Mark J Fucile
Cathryn S. Gawne
Kathryn Hendley
Ira D. Kharasch
Dawn T. Kitagawa
Charles K. Knight
Anita Diane Lee
Carolyn Richardson Owens
Jon I. Richmond
Jack H Rubens
David P. Schack
Joseph A. Scherer
Philip Starr
Brad T. Summers
Edward J. Szymanski, Jr
Troy L. Tate
Harold A. Tieger
Michael R Weinstein
Robert C. Welch, Jr.
Walter W. Whelan, III
Michael A. Yglecias
Irma K. Zahid
1983
Ronald A. Baker
Justin E. Budare
Lilianne G. Chaumont
Margaret A. Chisholm
Andrew B. Downs
David E. Durchfort
Michael T. Eskey
Clifford H. Fonstein
Scott A. Forsyth
Kerry Gottlieb
Bruce J. Graham
Rita M. Haeusler
Deborah L. Hurley
Debra Lynn James
Eric G. Lardiere
Wesley M. Lowe
Daniel B. McCarthy
Terry P. Mc Niff
Robert A. Musicant
Jeffrey D. Nagler
Marilyn S. Pecsok
Joann Ralphs
Maria C. Ramirez
Mark G. Schroeder
198 7
Michael B. Africk
Alan J. Epstein
Gary N. Frischling
Peter Edward Greenberg
Melinda A. Hoyt
Connie R. Kimball
Corey E. Klein
Nancy E. Klotz
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Susan Silver Keith E. Marlowe
Rob e rt H. Steinberg
Robert F. Torres
Lise Naomi Wilson
Michael G. Witmer
Michael Yaffa
1984
John S. Bank
Alan S. Berman
Jeffrey A. Dinkin
Karole R. Morgan-Prager
Steven M. Schultz
Arnold F. Williams
1988
Martin J. Barrack
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
James R. Felton
Paul L. Freese, Jr.
James M. Gelb
Bruce C. Doering Lawrence Kupers
John D. Hart
Linda W Mazur
Raymond Perez
Sharon R. Leib
Frank A. Merola
Jason C. Sloane
James M. Steinberger 1989
Lee M. Straus
Bruce D. Tobey
Steven Alan Troyer
David C. Tseng
Jo Ann Victor
1985
Brian J Appel
Lilia 0. Ballesteros
Robert Barnes
Marc E. Bercoon
Sheri A. Bluebond
Thomas M. Bondy
Rebecca A. Campbell
Les Jacobowitz
John M. Jameson
Daniel Mansueto
Stephen H. Mazur
Maria T. Mercado
John Ossiff
Frank H. Pulido
Steven J Rosansky
Walid Samir Abdul-Rahim
Susan S. Azad
Sarah J Fels
Kerry A. lnsolia
Michael J. Kiely
Nathaniel J. Lipman
Sharon Lea Mitchell
Katherine W Pownell
Steven A. Schuman
Todd]. Schwartz
1990
Lori N. Fujii
Terrence D. Garnett
Eric B. Gordon
Lisa Hauser
John C. Kirkland
Richard Lai
Suzanne K. Metzger
Lisa R. Singer
Joseph N. Velasquez
Harold J Schaaff, Jr. 1991
Alan J. Siff
Saskia T. Asam ura
Helene V. Smookler lnezD. Hope
1986
Steven B Abbott
J. Robert Arnett, II
Mark D. Baute
Ed Carney
Samantha F. Lamberg
William J Morley
Holly R Paul
Steven David Sann
Bennett L. Yee
Carolyn Joan Comparer 1992
Eric J. Diamond
Frederick M. Entwistle
April M. Evans
Kathryn E. Karcher
Janis C. Nelson
William 0. Nutting
Jerri H Pih
David Polinsky
Michael S. Rosenblum
John W. Scruton
Laurie J Taylor
John F. Wester, Jr.
Jose L. Arias
Kimberly Arouh
Timothy J Carlson
Bridget A Clarke
Robert L. Dell Angelo
Lisa Engels-Salas
Jenifer S. Eslami
Leslye M. Fraser
Marilyn S. Gude!
James C. Harrison
Stewart S. Harrison
Todd Harr
Rita Holman
Elizabeth A. Hone
Daniel S. Javitch
Lisa Kim
Stacey A. Kipnis
David J. Korduner
Frank R. Jazzo
Roger L. Kohn
Lee J. Leslie
a chance to meet their new
r
Steven M. Levy
1969
Audrey Lin Terry]. Amdur
Claudia P. Madrigal
Elaine W. Mandel
Debra A. Profio
Parthiv R. Sangani
Kaivan M. Shakib
Sonia R. Sharma
Eric Silberstein
John Staudinger
Brian P. Waldman
Jack S. Weiss
Donna C. Wells
Friends and Faculty
Nancy A. Finck
Supporters
($10-$124)
1953
* Charles A. Zubieta
1955
Wesley H. Mathews
E. Allen Nebel
Bruce I. Rauch
1956
Burton M. Bentley
Donald L. Clark
Jerry Edelman
Harvey A. Sisskind
1958
George J. Franscell
Henry B. Niles, II
Alfred B. Ruskin
Richard H. Caplan
Gary E. Christopherson
Judith A. Gelfand
Bruce E. Harrington
Gilbert Katen
Allan I. Kleinkopf
Gene L. Osofsky
Sally P. Pasette
1970
Roger S. Gross
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Martin K. Harary
Mark A. Levin
Robert M. Wright
1971
Robert G. Blank
Arthur R. Boehm, Jr.
Mary Jo Curwen
Jonathan C. Gordon
Thomas B. Karp
Richard G. Ritchie
George L. Schraer
Alan Robert Templeman
David B. Wilshin
1972
Miles Z. Gordon
Dora R. Levin
Barbara De Mont Moore
1977
Paul A. Babwin
Charles E. Curtis
Martin A. Flannes
Joseph M. Gensheimer
Hall Randall Marston
Gregory F. Millikan
Donald V. Morano
Charles F. Robinson
Edward I. Silverman
Thomas C. Sterling
Anonymous
1978
James R. Asperger
Steven H. Burkow
Cheryl A. Cruz
Barrington A.S .J)altrey
William H. Davis, Jr.
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.
Karen Holliday-Hancock
Boyd D. Hudson
Alex M. Johnson
Kenneth A. Kramarz
Mark A. Kuller
Robe rt A. Levinson
Anna Rose Monguia
Donald Peter Paskewitz
Elaine H. Stangland
Martin T. Tachiki
Paul R. Tremblay
Kenneth C. Salzberg 1979
Frank Sinatra, III
William D. Smith
James H. Wigle
1959 1973
Richard M. Levin
1960
Rodney Moss
Roge~ M. Settlemire
Herbert W. Sroltenberg
1961
Richard H. Bein
Jack C. Glanrz
William J. McCourt
1962
Martin Moses
1964
Dennis A. Page
James Leslie Spitser
1965
Jerold V. Goldstein
H. Lee Mc Guire, Jr.
Stanley R Romain
Jeanne W. Ziering
1966
William M. Egerman
Donald H. Glaser
Anonymous
1967
Alan G. Barry
1982
Jose R. Benavides
Thomas A. Bliss
Joan M. Clover
Jay J. Elliott
Mireille F. Cotsis
Philip D Hodgen
James L. J erue
Debra L. Kegel
Laura Landesman
Kenneth A. Martyn
Jeffrey P. Molever
Jerald L. Mosley
Larry Nathenson
Leslye E. Orloff
Kurt Vandercook Osenbaugh
Darien E. Pope
Dennis A. Ragen
Valdo J. Smith
Ellen Gorman Wacker
1983
Thomas C. Agoston
Nicholas E Benes
Michelle D. Blakemore
Michael F. Broderick
Andrew W. Caine
Michael T. Danis
Jeffrey M. Ettinger
James G. Foster
Alan E. Garfield
Kenneth L. Kutcher
Harmon Allan Brown
Bailey R. D e longh
Susan H. Farmer
Albert S. Glenn
Steven A. Micheli
James A. Baker
Gail F. Brod
Joel M. Buder
Pauline M. Calkin
Alan P. Thomas
Ronald T. Vera
James G. Scadden
Mark S. Shipow
Shelley Steuer
Karen Lynn Tachiki
Henry S. Weinstock
Robert A. Wooten, Jr. 1980
1974
Mary A. Beard
Scott E. Grimes
Antonia Hernandez
Phillip G. Nichols
J. Thomas Oldham
S. Alan Rosen
Donald P. Silver
Nancy Spero-Regos
Randolph C. Visser
1975
Richard Besone
Jeffrey D. Gale
Andrew C. Kauffman
Brian E. Keefe
Calvin Lau
Bruce D. Lowry
Manuel J. Monguia
Thomas G. Ryan
Melinda E. Watson
Peter W. Blackman 1976
Clifford Douglas
Paul M Migdal
Bruce M. Polichar
Robert A. Weeks
John M. Wilcox
1968
Philip L. Arnaudo
Terry H. Breen
David B. Johnson
Robert E. Shannon
Nancy E Loncke
Suzanne A. Luban
P.O. Perez
Lynette B Robe
Douglas Ronald Smith
Corbin A. Weiss
Michael M. Youngdahl
1986
Susan Abraham
Christine M. Cervenak
Daniel E Encell
Joel H. Friedman
Douglas T. Gneiser
Ann E. Habernigg
Susan A. Horn
Harris J. Kane
Robin F. Kaufer
Eric S. Kentor
Anat R. Levy
A. Alan Manning
Cecelia Marden
Ronald A. Mc Intire
David S Mc Lane
Stuart L. Merkadeau
Hope G. Nakamura
Steven A. Plotkin
Anthony L. Press
Patti R. Scheimer
Robert W Teeter
Leslie E. Wallis
Monique C. Lillard 1987
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver
Kimberly S. Mitchell
Robert K. Olsen
Nancy B. Reimann
Chet L. Taylor
1984
Bennett A. Bigman
Kathleen M Bowman
Kent Brockelman
Kathleen Y. Coleman
Jon A. Divens
Roy W. Adams, Jr.
Jane Aoyama-Martin
C.E. Blake
Peter R. Dion Kindem
James R. Dwyer
Jeanne A. Flaherty
Robert D. Goldschein
Robert T. Lemen
Nancy L. Mc Taggart
Lucina L. Moses
Selvino Padilla, Jr.
John H. Renninger
Giacomo A. Russo
Carol R. Schultz
Laurel S. Terry
Carol Cavan Williams
1981
Mark J. Barnes
Lucille H. Baugham
Susan J. Bell
Judith Kessen Crawford
Delavan J. Dickson
Patricia H. Feiner
Bruce A. Barsook
Daniel A. Dobrin
Thomas S. Epstein
Janice L. Feinstein
Carolyn J. Gill
Creighton Clark Horton, II
Kenneth M. Kumor
Adrienne E. Larkin
Beth L. Levine
Nancy J. Madsen
Robert A. Spira
Mark J. Zelin
Paul A. Graziano
Patricia M Ito
Phyllis B. Johnston
William J. Kirsch
Edwin I. Lasman
Therese A. Maynard
David B. Rechtman
Denise M Rose
Craig P. Sapin
Lynn Y. Wakatsuki
Anonymous
Tippi Dobrofsky
Kathleen Forbath Esfahani
Susan L. Formaker
Michael J Gibson
Brad I. Golstein
Guy N. Halgren
Laura W. Halgren
Lisa S Hamilton
William E. Ireland
Jeffrey Kandel
Sandra White Lavigna
Elizabeth M. Matthias
Pamela A. Mohr
Mary Newcombe
Daniel A. Olivas
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt
Betsy R. Rosenthal
Sura L. Weiss
John R. Wylie
1985
Teri E. Bayer
Meredith Lauren Caliman
Bradley J. Craig
Geoffrey A. Drucker
Lawrence P. Ebiner
Gregory R Ellis
Barbara J. Katz
Louise D. Lillard
Alan D. Aronson
M. Margaret Rumph Banas
Emily W. Card
John C. Chen
Brian W. Copple
Alicia C. De Lovelace
Michael D. Donovan
Marc H. Edelson
Victoria Goldfarb Epstein
Marilyn W. Formaker
Leora D. Freedman
Adrienne W. Goldstone
Hilary J. Greenberg
John H. Irons
John W. Kern, IV
Susan F. Kroll
Patricia A. Libby
Lorna]. Loo
Edmond J. Miller, Jr.
Alyce L. Raboy
Gary B. Rosenbaum
Glen Sato
Joel A. Thvedt
Lynn E. Todd
Robert C. Welsh
1988
William Stewart Anderson
Patrick E Bingham
Jeffrey H. Cohen
Mark G. Crawford
Suzanne M Davidson
Alice Maude King
Louis E. Michelson
Mark D. Miller
Sanford M. Pooler, Jr.
Mark J. Price
Robin S. Toma
Reza I. Shirazi
Christopher C. Welch
1989
Carlos A. Arcos
John P. Balazs
Jennifer M. Casey
'1 appreciate the scholarships not only because they relieve some ofthe financial burdens, but they make me feel like my hard work is being recognized "
Sally Costanzo, third-year law student, recipient of the Hortense Fishbaugh Memorial Scholarship, Clifford A. Hemmerling Memorial Scholarship and Law Affiliates of Los Angeles Scholarship.
Elena Bocca Dietrich
Lisa N. Emeney
Debra V. Geist
William H. Hoffman
Steven I. Katz
Gregory J. Kopta
Diane H Koziol
Anna S. Mc Lean
Rhonda H Mehlman
Cathy Paul
David A. Portnoy
Eric C. Sawyer
Richard S. Schkolnick
Beau Simon
Phillip A. Talbert
Eric S Weinstein
1990
Nargis Choudhry
Sandra B Epstein
Francis J. James
llison M Keller
William T. Mac Cary, Ill
Samuel D. Magavern
Julienne Mc Cammon
Tanya R. Meyers
Richard G. Novak
Catherine Perlman
Howard W Schub
Geoffrey M Sturr
Gene M. Witkin
Jan F. Wrede
1991
Lawrence P. Brennan
Ruben A. Castellon
Kevin D Caton
Jeffrey W Cowan
Richard L. Hasen
Debra M Johnson
Rhonda S. Kaye
Scott M. Klein
ShirleyS Lu
Edward F. Malone
Mariana Marin
David F. Martinez
Shirley D. Ramirez
Jane H. Root
Scott A. Silberstein
Elizabeth A. Skorcz
Friends and Faculty
Alison Grey Anderson
Daniel Busse!
Erika S. Chadbourn
Stephen R. Munzer
B. Mark Nordman
Richard H. Sander
Anonymous
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Mark A. Bookman
Lawrence J. Briskin
Susan Gillig
Miles Z Gordon
Arnold W. Gross
Creighton C. Horton II
Andrew C. Kauffman
Suzanne A. Lu ban
Catherine Perlman
Howard W Schub
Alan J. Silver
Douglas R. Smith
Dennis F. Spurling
Moises Vazquez
Gene M Witkin
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Kevin D. Caton
Mitchell M. Geffen ,
Susan A. Horn
Ira S. Levin
Terry P. Mc Niff
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Alan D. Aronson
Nicholas E. Benes
Ruben A. Castellon
Christine M Cervenak
John C. Chen
Daniel A. Dobrin
Clifford Douglas
David P. Fuller
Martin K. Harary
Russell P. Kuhn
Herbert A. Levin
A. Alan Manning
Cecelia Marden
Gordon R Mc Dowell, Jr
Stuart L. Merkadeau
Reza I. Shirazi
Corbin A. Weiss
Jeanne W. Ziering
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT FUND
John P. Balazs
Debra V. Geist
Antonia Hernandez
Elizabeth A Hone
Meredith A. Jury
Martin V. Lee
Joan A. Mc Carthy
Anne T Munitz
Richard G. Novak
Douglas R Smith
Karen Tachiki
Martin T. Tachiki
Robin S. Toma
In Memory of Milt Relin
Jennifer Friedman
Nancy Ramseyer
OTHER GIFTS
Dean V. Ambrose & Carole Goldberg Ambrose
Aronson Foundation
Brown &Wood
Chaleff, English & Catalano
!PRO, Inc.
Ochoa & Sillas
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
Roger & Margaretta Pettitt
J G. Pierson
Mark Scarberry
In Honor of John Bauman
Millard & Barbara Rudd
In Honor of Mac Goodstein
Linda Gach Ray
Robert Owens
In Memory of Clifford Hemmerling
Sallie T. Reynolds
In Memory of Cyril Jones
Anonymous
In Memory ofDeri Rudolph
Paul E B. Glad
In Memory of Matt Small
Bailey R. De longh
FIRM MATCHING GIFTS
Cravath, Swaine & Moore
Davis, Polk & Wardell
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Hallert & Hallert
Kirkland & Ellis
Loeb & Loeb
Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
Morrison & Foerster
Musick, Peeler & Garre rt
O'Melveny & Myers
Sidley & Austin
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION
MATCHING GIFTS
Adobe Systems, Inc
AKZO America Foundation
American Express Foundation
AMFAC, JMB Hawaii, Inc.
Arco Foundation Incorporated
Bankamerica Foundation
Champion International Corp.
Chase Manhattan Bank
Citicorp
CNA Foundation
Coopers & Lybrand
Foundation
Enron Foundation
Ernst & Young
First National Bank of Chicago Foundation
Goldman Sachs
GTE Foundation
William & Flora Hewlett
Foundation
Hewlett-Packard Company
Hormel & Company
IBM Corporation
Irvine Company
KMPG Peat Marwick
Foundation
Liz Claiborne Foundation
MCA, Inc
Pacific Enterprises
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Pacific Resources Foundation
Pfizer, Inc.
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.
Price Waterhouse Foundation
Procter & Gamble Fund
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc
Southern California Gas Co.
Synrex USA, Inc.
Texaco Foundation
Time Warner, Inc.
Times Mirror Company
Transamerica Foundation
TRW Foundation
U.S. Leasing International, Inc
U.S. West Foundation
UNOCAL Foundation
Wells Fargo Bank
Professor Alison Anderson answers questions after class.
DESIGNATED GIFTS
Albert & Nancy Boggess
Lawrence & Karen Boland
BENJAMIN AARON FUND Allen & Pamela Bourgeois
Anonymous (2)
R. Barron Bridges & G lenda
B. Bridges
Allan D. Silver
J.W AND IDA M. JAMESON MELVILLE B. NIMMER
Robert & Beverly Silverberg FUND MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Mark & Rebecca Silverstein J W. & Ida M. Jam eso n FUND
John Arthur J. Skard Foundation David R Gin sburg
Margaret W. Sm ith
MICHAEL C ALBIN MEMORIAL Kenneth & Susan Carpente r William & Priscilla Struthers
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Dr. & Mrs. Richard
In M e mory of Henry Hamrol Cestkowski
BENJAMIN E, KING ME!'IORIAL MICHAEL PALLEY MEMORIAL
Edward & Marie Su lliva n SCHOLARSHIP FUND FUND
James N. Tarr
Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & George J. Lindenbaum & Lester Morley
Meyer S. & Miriam Albin
U.D. & Hansa Desai
Ronald A. Downes
Gary & Ilene Toller Younger Sidney Lindenbaum
Frances Vener
In Memory of Bernard Moore J. Lewis Palley Charitable Fiona Connell & Benjamin Richard & Elizabeth
David R. Wasserman Beatrice Halbern Trust Frankel Drachman
In Memory of Henry Hamrol Richard & Dorothy Dunberg
Daniel & Judith Platus
Anneliese H. Duncan
Janet L. Weiland
RoyH. Weiss
Robert & Nan Woods
JOSEPH KIRSCHBAUM PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORT
MEMORIAL FUND FUND Eli & Florence Dwek
ARNOLD AND PORTER Wendell & Audrey Eaton
Anna Yee J acq ueline Kirschbaum Stewart Resnick
Mr. & Mrs. H arvey L.
SCHOLARSHIP FUND First Morgage Company of Z uckma n
Arnold & Porter Nevada, Ltd.
Steven Y. & Lisa Kirschbaum
Barry & Paula Litt
WILLIAM A. RUTTER TEACHING
Jason Litt AWARD ,=
Dr. & Mrs. Richard Fishman
BAKER AND MCKENZIE LAW Rabbi David & Cynthia
SUDENT ASSISTANCE FUND Freedman, Ariela & Yaron
Baker & McKenzie Moses & Anne Freedman
Kenneth J. Frost
BEVERLY HILLS BAR Joel M. Gales
ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION
Sections 7, 8 & 9
Class of 1995
Linley C. Bizik
Shawn Bjorklun
Ellen Brostrom
Partick Devairakkam Brown
Rau l A Canez
Anita G. & Arthur L. Gamso n
William A. Rutter
LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI
SCHOLARSHIP FUND RALPH AND SHIRLEY SHAPIRO
In Honor of Michael J. Perez STUDENT LOAN FUND
Peter S. Bing Ralph & Shirley Shap iro
Moises Luna
Lynda A. Rome ro UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW PUBLIC FUND
Judyann Glazener & Rich a rd
Beverly Hills Bar Association lsaacman
MARSHALL COGAN
Julia Cantu
Gretchen Carpenter INTEREST AWARDS
Martha Carrillo
LAW SCHOOL CLASS OF 1952
Donna M Baker G lenwood Swim Team
Kristi Cobb FUND
Mr. & Mrs Don Goering
SCHOLARSHIP FUND V icki E. Goering
Marc Fenster
I-Fan Ching Go
Alan G. Benjamin
John C McCarthy Kristin H Brandt
Edward B. Smith III
Beth K. Cransto n Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
David & Marcia Goldman
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis R. Go llub
CURTIS AND DANNING M a rk Grady
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Sylvia & Julius M Greism an
In H o no r of Sarah B Dannin g Mr. & Mrs. Fred Gross
Sheri & Artie Berne Lynn D. Gross
In Honor of Cyd & Richard Robert J. & Maria Harwell
Michael Grizzi
Daryl Hall
Alexander Kas hlinsky
Thomas Kim
Victoria King
Barbara Krieg
Eric Kurtzman Hirsch and Al & Lea Serlin Dr. & Mrs. Michael G.
J ess ica Lazarus
Andree S Daly
LAW SCHOOL RACIAL AND Elizabeth A. Deere
ETHNIC DIVERSITY Ja net H Dickson
COMMITMEMENT AWARD Rich ard D Fybel
Mead Data Central Gary Long
Karole R Morgan-Prager
LIEBERT, CASSIDY AND Morrison & Foerster
FRIERSON
Liebert, Cassidy & Frierson Anthony L. Press
Maria R. Neiman and in Memory of Lou Krall, Hause r
Kenny Kent, Gil Robinson, Robert M Hauser & Family H enry Lien
Sam Katz, George Pappas and William & Audrey Hoppe
Robert Fainer Howard Hughes Properties
C hrist ine Littleton
Michael Luke
Anthony Luna
Michael D. Schwa rtz
PAULA C. LUBIC MEMORIAL Kris G Vyas
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Nancy H. Z amora C urtis & Florence Danning P.O. Jackson
Michael J. Jacobs
ALBERT AND JUDITH Stuart & Sue Jordan
GLICKMAN FUND Todd Kantorczyk
Albert &Judith Glickman Peter & Lynn Kenny
Sheryl McConnell
Elizabeth Pawsat
Holli Payne
Braden Penhoet
Arthur M. Lubic
Carol Lubic Spitz LEE B , WEN ZEL MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
HOWARD P. MILLER Jerry W. Carlton
MEMORIAL FUND Ro bert & Dorothy Decker Dr. & Mrs. Paul Knie
EVA AND NATHAN GREENBERG Vij aya K Kumar
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Mrs. K.V Lakshmikantha
Kelly Perdew
Kathleen Perrin
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro Ron Garver
Angie Rho D avid E Gordon
Paul Ruiz
Wendy Schneider
ALEXANDER & FERDON Mitchell J. Grat z
MUDGE, ROSE, GUTHRIE, William Hiestand FUND Law re n ce M. & M arily n J
Audrey & Arthur Greenberg Lehmer
SCHOLARSHIP PUND Charles Reilly Elaine & Peter Lipman
ELISA H. HALPERN MEMORIAL Shirley Masiee
Ruth L. Se ro u ssi
Kisu Shin
Steph en David Simon
Mudge, Rose, Guthri e, William W. Vaughn
Alexa nder & Ferdon David Weil
SCHOLARSHIP FUND John C. & J a ne H. Mather Daniel Zerfas
William & Barbara Gree n Benjamin & Marilyn Mehr
Barry & J a ne Halpern J oshua M eyer
Geoffrey & M ary Lee Halpern Pacralekh a M. Mitra
Julie M. Smith
Lida Sparer
M athew Scepka
MELVILLE 8. NIMMER Family, Friends & Participants
MEMORIAL FUND in the a nnual golf
Marc D. Alexand er tournam en t
Harvey & Sarah Moseley H aydorTolu Arter, Hadden , Lawle r,
Raquel Vallejo
KAREN C. HAUSER MEMORIAL M a rk E. & Gail G Moses
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Milton & Taryana Moss
Mr & Mrs C lement C. Margaret M. Mullins
Felix & Hall
Audrey W illiams In Hono r of Judge William Skip Brittenham
Neil Wyland
ZIFFREN / BRITTENHAM FUND
Lasarow Ke nne th Z iffren Alpert
Susan G ale Neff
Dr & Mrs Seymour Alpert Werner & Nancy Ne uperc
Richard G Arendt Judith]. Newman
Karin Loya Babst
Sharon & Bert Baker
CLIFFORD A HEMMERLING G regory J Battersby
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Peter D Noe rdlinger FUND
Bloom , D e kom & Hergo tt
Billi e M. Conner
Mary J. & S S. Bajwa J o hn & Martha O 'Keefe G e raldine H e mm erlin g Nora Fascenelli
Gerald & Shirley Baker Jon ath a n F. Ormes
HUFSTEDLER, KAUS & Louise & G eorge Kermode
ETTI N GER SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Martin & Sohara Baren Gayle L. Rawley M argare t R. Kiever Dan, Ellie, Amy & Steve J a mes & Shirl ey Read
Andrea & Robert Ordin
Baren M .G. & C.F. Ryschkew icsc h Hufstedle r, Ka us & Etr inge r Anthony & Sh eil a Saube r
Carl D Barnes J airo Sa ntan a
William Behring Erwin & Esther Schm e rling
Lio nel S Sobel
Timothy J. Spellicy
Charles L. Be nne tt & D avid & Pat Schor J erome J Sussman
Renee E M a rlin -Ben nett Michelle Serra & Jeffrey T h omson & Thomso n Sam & Elizabe t h Bernsen Sandow
Alums tour the recently built clinical wing during a visit to campus.
With deepest appreciation to the following Charter Members of the Founders program for the extraordinary support their gifts h ave provided the law schoo l ove r the past ten years.
19 52
Curtis B. Danning
Arthur N. Greenberg
Richard T. Hanna
Geraldine S. Hemmerling
Bruce I. Hochman
Jo hn C. Mc Carthy
Lester Z iffren
19 53
Charles A Z ubieta
1954
Leon S. Angvire
Thomas L. Caps
Marrin R. Horn
Marvin Jubas
Sherwin L. Memel
Billy G. Mills
Roger C. Pettitt
Norman A. Rubin
Donald A. Ruston
Robert F. Waldron
1955
John S Byrnes, Jr.
Alla n S Ghitterman
Sa muel W. H al per
Edward Lasker
Joseph A W e in
1956
John A. Calfas
Florentino Garza
Irwin D Goldring
Milton Louis M ill er
Alle n Mink
1957
M.J. Diede rich
Mariana R. Pfaelzer
Charles E. Rickershauser, Jr.
1958
B D Fisch e r
Sanford M G age
Donald A Gralla
Berna rd A Greenberg
Ephra im P. Kranitz
Frederick L. Leydorf
Ralph J. Shapiro
Lewis H. Silverberg
Arthur Soll
Les te r E Trach man
John G rant Wigmore
19 59
Stanton Paul Bell and
Ste phe n C la m an
John !:-l. Ro ney
Charles Stim mel Vogel
Pa ul B Wells
1960
Barbara Boyle
Sanford Brickner
Martin Cohen
Hugo D. de Castro
Sta nl ey R. Fimberg
Albert B Gl ickm a n
David G. Price
Stuart A. Simke
Robert J. Wise
1961
Alan N Halkett
Robert F. Lewis
Philip S. Magaram
Paul J. Sheeder
Henry Steinman
1962
Leonard E. Castro
Barry V. Freeman
Rodney C. Hill
Stephen Scott King
Stewart Resnick
Henley L. Saltzburg
1963
Richard D. Aldrich
Don M ike Anthony
Lee W. Cake
Wi ll iam D. Gould
Mich ael M. Murphy
1964
L. Morris D enn is
Daniel L. Dintzer
Marsha McLean Udey
Robert M. Ruben
David S. Sperber
1965
Norman R. Bard
Willia m M Bitting
Lucinda D e nnis
Stanley R. Jones
Saul L. Lessler
E. Paul Tonkovich
Kenneth Z iffren
1966
Jerold L. Miles
1967
G ilbert I. G a rcetti
~ichael Stephen Jose phso n
Nel son C. Rising
Bru ce H Spector
Richard R. Stenton
Lawrence C. Tistaert
Rich a rd W. Udko
1968
Pa ul J. Glass
John W. H e ine mann
Don Parris
Leo nard M Ross
Ro nald P. Sla tes
1969
Robe rt L. Kahan
Art Spence
John H. Weston
1970
Skip Brittenham
Dennis C. Brown
Arthur R. Chenen
Steven L. Davis
Ellen B. Friedman
Murray 0. Kane
Barnet Reimer
1971
David S. Karren
Robert M. Moss
James Martin Prager
Susan Wesrerberg Prager
1972
Curtis 0 Barnes
Bruce S. G lickfeld
Robert S. Lewin
1973
Perer J. Dekom
William Graham
George R. Mc Cambridge
Lowell J. Milken
David S. Sa bih
L. Kirk W a ll ace
1974
Julian W. Bailey; Jr.
Buddy Epstein
Steven J. Revitz
1975
Brenda Powe rs Ba rn es
Sha ron Fes ler Rubalcava
197 6
Paul Gordon Hoffma n
Margu erite S. Rosenfeld
Judith Salkow Shapiro
Friends and Fa culry
James H. Kindel , Jr.
Monte E Liv ingsrnn
Morgan , Wen zel & M cNicholas
W illia m A Rutter
Mr. & Mrs Lee A. Sm all
Every effort was made to ensure the acc uracy of our Honor Roll
If there are a n y correctio ns or omissions, p lease contact the
School of Law Alumni & D evelopment Offi ce
1952 1963 1974
Participation: 31% Parti cipation: 24°/o
Number of Donors: II
Participation: 19%
Number of Donors: 28 N umber of Donors: 58
Total Graduates: 36 Total Graduates: II5
Total Graduates: 300
1984
Participatio n : 17°/o
Number of Donors: 50
Total Graduates : 303
C lass Rep resentati ve: C lass Re prese ntative: C lass Re presentat ive: C lass Represe ntatives:
John C. McCarthy Bernard Katzman M arc Epstein
1953 1975
Barbra L. Davi s 1964
Participation: 33% Participation: 16%
N umbe r of Donors: 13
Participation: 28%
Number of Donors: 19 Nu mber of Donors: 87
Total Graduates: 39 Total Graduates: II8
Total Graduates: 308
Kenneth B. H e rtz
1985
Participation: 16%
Number of Don ors: 47
C lass Representative: C lass Representatives: Class Represe ntati ves: Total Graduates: 296
Jerome Goldberg David J. Mac Kenzie
Brenda Powers Barnes Cl ass Represe ntatives : Everett F. Meiners
Moses Leb ovits
Brian Appel 1954
Part icipation: 15% 1965
H arvey Shapiro John M. Moscari no
Numbe r of Donors: 13 Participation: 22% 1976
Total Grad uates: 89 N umbe r of Donors : 38 Participatio n: 23%
1986
Participation: 15'Vo "What the C lass Rep resentative: Total Graduates: 169
Number of Donors: 68
Donald Rusron C lass Representative: Total Graduates: 293
Stanley R. J o nes
1955
Class Represe ntatives:
Participation: 23% 1966 W illi am Claster
Number of Donors : 17 Participation: 17°/o
Richard K. Diamond
To tal Graduates: 75 N umber of Donors: 36 1977
C lass Representative : Total Graduates: 206 Participat ion: 23%
All an Ghitterman 1967
1956 Participation: 28%
Participation: 29°/o Number of Donors: 71
Number of Donors: 20 Total Graduates : 254
Number of Dono rs: 73
Total G raduates : 316
Number of Donors: 43
Total Graduates: 284 scholarship
Class Representatives :
Carolyn Compare r allowed me to do
David Polinsky Les li e E. Wallis was to take classes
1987 toward my
Participation: 14%
Class Representatives: Total Graduates: 306
Gregory E. Breen
Number of Dono rs: 44 master's degree in
Class Represe ntatives: film producing in
Total Graduates : 69 C lass Representat ives : Kat hlee n Drumm y Raqu elle de la Rocha
Class Rep resentative: Michael D. Marcus 1978
Irwin D. Go ld ring Michael Waldorf
1957
Robert C. Welsh addition to my
Participation: 24°/o
Number of Donors: 7 2
1988 law classes. I 1968
Total Graduates : 303
Participat ion: 9%
Number of Donors: 28
Participation: 20% Part icipation: 16%
Total Gradua tes: 299 could not have Numbe r of Donors: 17 Number of Donors: 29
Total Graduates: 84 To tal Graduates: 183
C lass Representat ive:
Robert N. Block
C lass Rep resenta tive: C lass Represe ntative: 1979
David R. G li ckma n Paul J. Glass
1958 1969
Participation: 26% Part icipation: 26%
Number of Do nors: 31 Numbe r of Donors: 4 7
Total Graduates: 120 Total Grad uates: 184
Pa rti cipation: 20%
Number of Donors: 54
Total Graduates: 273
Class Represe ntatives : worked on both
Stanley Blumen fel d , Jr.
Geo rge H Brown degrees at the Paul Freese, Jr.
Louis E M ic helson sam e time
C lass Representatives: 1989 without the
Richard J. Burdge , Jr.
C lass Representat ive: C lass Rep rese ntative : Robe rta Kass
John G. W igm ore Michael A.K. Dan
1959 1970
Participation: 25% Participa tion : 22%
1980
Partic ipation: 26%
Number of Donors: 80
Total Graduates: 302
Participation : II%
Numb er of Donors: 31 scholarship. "
Total Gradua tes: 27 8
Class Rep resentatives:
Steven I. Katz Shellie Ril ey, second -yea r law
Katherine W. Pown ell st udent, Lee B We n zel Nu mber of Donors : 26 Number of Donors: 39
Total Graduates: w5
Total Graduates: 179
C lass Representati ve: C lass Representative:
Rich ard N. Ellis
Marc J Poster
1960 1971
Class Representa tives: M e morial Scho la rship ,
Lauren ce M Berman
1990 wo rki ng towa rd a M aste r's
Participation : 7')10
Lonnie C. Blancha rd Ill N umbe r of Do nors: 24 Degree in Fine A rts a t UC LA's
John Cochrane
Participation: 24% Participation: 25))10 1981
Participatio n: 21%
Total G raduates : 327 School o f Theater, Film a nd
C lass Representatives : Television
N a rgis C ha udhry
Number o f Dono rs: 25 Number of Donors: 68
Total Graduates: I04
1961
Participation: 19°/o
Number of Donors: 23
Total Graduates : 269
C lass Representatives:
David J. Burton
Richard H avel
Total Graduares: u8 197 2
C lass Re prese n ta tives: Pa rti cipation: 23%
Sheldon G. Ba rdac h ' Numbe r o f Don o rs: 63
Ralph Cassad y Total G radua tes: 278
1962
Participation: 19%
Numbe r of Donors: 20
Total Graduat es: I06
C lass Representatives:
C urtis 0. Ba rnes
Howa rd M Knee
197 3
Part icipation: 19 °/o
N umbe r of Dono rs : 56
Total Gradua tes : 299
Class Rep resen tative:
Bernard R. Ga ns
N u mber of Donors: 71
Total Graduates: 336
George Es haghian
Francis J. James
C lass Represe ntatives: 199 1
Robert B Orgel
John F. Runkel, Jr.
1982
Particip ation : 22%
Nu)llber ofDonor s: 72
Participatio n : 7')10
Numbe r of Dono rs: 24
Total Grad ua tes : 322
C lass Rep rese ntative:
Inez D. Hope
Total G rad uates : 330 1992
Class Representative: Participation: 12%
D av id E Van lderstine , Jr
1983
Participation: 19°/o
Number of Donors: 65
Total Gradua tes: 349
Numb er of Donors: 33
Total Grad ua tes : 276
Class Representatives:
Elaine M a ndel
D e b ra Pro fio
Donn a Wells
Class Represe ntat ives : •:•
Lori Huff D ill man
M ich ael A. Helfant
The 1950s
Bunon M. Bentley '56 who has practiced corporate, securities and real estate law in Phoenix, Ariz. since 1958, has formed a joint venture to open a private Sino/American law office in China to be staffed by Chinese lawyers and administered by American business interests.
David Glickman '57 helped induct his son and law partner, Steven Glickman '82, into membership in the American Board ofTrial Advocates this past April. David was President of the Los Angeles chapter of ABOTA in 1991.
Correction: In the Classnoces of the summer edition of UCLA Law Magazine, the name of the firm of Willie R. Barnes '59 was incorrect. Barnes is a partner with the Los Angeles firm of Musick, Peeler & Garrett, having joined the firm in June 1992
The 1960s
Alben Glickman '60, UCLA's 1992 Law Alumnus of the Year, is Chairman of the Board of Directors of ihe Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston, a 338-member, $10-billion plus central bank serving the six New England states. Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston is parr of the Federal Home Loan Bank System with over $150 billion in assets and more than 3,000 member mortgage lending institutions
Gerald S. Davee '61, a senior partner with Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps, was selected as the Daniel T. Broderick III Memorial Award recipient for 1993 The annual award is presented by the San Diego County Bar Association's Civil Litigation Code of Conduce Committee which includes members from the San Diego Trial Lawyers Association , the San Diego Defense Lawyers and the San Diego Chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates. The honoree is judged according to the Civil Litigation Code of Conduct
Harold L. Greene '63, after serving as Vice-Chair for two years and Chair last year of the State Bar Workers Compensation Section, has been appointed Advisor to the section's Executive Committee
Melvyn Douglas Sacks '64 writes chat he recently presented the first successful Halcion defense in a criminal case presented co a California jury. In the Orange County Superior
Court trial, Harrison D. Kline was found not gµilty of attempted murder, mayhem and other charges in the beating of his father. Kline had testified chat he was under the influence of Halcion and liquor when he beat his father in November 1992.
Ronald W. Anteau '65, a partner in the Los Angeles firm of Simke, Chodos, Silberberg & Anteau Inc., has been elected Vice President of the Southern California Chapter of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers Mr. Anteau is a Certified Family Law Speci a list, and is a Fellow in the American and Internacional Academies of Matrimonial Lawyers.
Andrea Sheridan Ordin '65, former U S Attorney and recent past president of the Los Angeles County Bar Association, has joined Morgan, Lewis & Bockius as a partner in the Los Angeles office, expanding the firm's national litigation and government regulation practices. Ordin will concentrate on appellate work, antitrust and environmental law
Stefan M. Mason '67 now mediates employment and other business disputes, including wrongful termination , sexual harassment and age discrimination claims.
E. Barry Haldeman '69 is a partner in the Century City firm of Greenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman & Machtinger. He specializes in the field of enterrainment law, representing actors, writers, directors, producers, authors and entertainment companies. He also serves on the Board of The Earth Communications Office, an entertainment industry environmental group, and he serves as their pro bono General Counsel.
The 1970s
Mark Silversher '70 has been engaged in law, development and environmental studies in Telluride, Colo. since 1977.
Louis D. Victorino '70 has joined the Los Angeles office of Fried , Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson as a partner in the government contracts practice group.
Paul S. Meyer '71 has been inducted as a Fellow in the American College of Trial Lawyers.
John R. Castello '71 b ecame the Chief Administrative Law Judge and Deputy Director for the Adjudications Division, California Scace Department
of Social Services in February 1993. He is responsible for managing all social service administration hearings in the Scace of California
Jack Avery '73, former Attorney General of Guam and Roland Fairfield '63, former Assistant Attorney General of Guam, have formed a professional corporation known as The Family and Immigration Law Clinic, Inc., in Agana, Guam. Boch are long-time residents of Guam
Kenneth H. Donney '73 has become the Director of Law Career Services at Santa Clara University School of Law. He will also teach a course in communications law as an adjunct professor. He had been an attorney for Bet T zedek Legal Services in Los Angeles.
Kenneth Ross '73 has joined the firm of Bowman and Brooke as partner resident in the Minneapolis office He will continue to practice in product liability in the areas of prevention and compliance, alternative dispute resolution and litigation.
Tim Lappen '75 has been named co the Executive Committee of anti-drug abuse organization DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) California Trained police officers are sent by DARE into fifth- and sixthgrade classrooms weekly for 17 weeks to teach students how to refuse drugs and alcohol.
J. Patrick Maginnis '75 is representing Antoine Miller in the Los Angeles Superior Court case in which Miller is charged in the beating of trucker Reginald Denny at the flashpoint of the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Miller had been charged with attempted murder, but pleaded guilty to lesser charges in November
Lawrence D. (Larry) Walker '76 is serving as Chair of the Board of Directors, Southern California Regional Rail Authority (Metrolink), and is in his second term on the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors He and his wife, Carri, now have two sons - McClellan, 2, and William, 10 months.
Joseph F. Han '78 and his wife, Linda, have two daughters, Alexandra , 4, and Rian, 1. Joseph is now serving as President of the Down Syndrome Association of Los Angeles. He is a Partner in the Beverly Hills firm of
Weinstein and Hart His primary practice is intellectual property and entertainment litigation.
Scott Cooper '79 has joined the firm of Sidley & Austin as a partner and will be located in their downtown Los Angeles office. He specializes in representation of financial institutions and other investors in transactions involving real property
The 1980s
Steven Brower '80 opened and is managing the Orange County office of Ginsburg, Stephan, Oringher & Richman, doing business litigation with emphasis on computer software
Kevin M. Colton '80 recently completed management of a major International Trade Lawsuit as Senior Counsel for Nissan North America The case was watched closely by the Treasury Department, Congress and the Administration, as well as several foreign governments, and affected pending trade legislation. Back from several trips to Japan in connection with the case , Kevin is now responsible for management of Nissan's Dealer litigation throughout the United States. Kevin and his wife, Julie, have a daughter, Taryn, 3, and a son, Brandon, 1.
Cliff Gardner '80 has continued his appellate pracrice in San Francisco. This past year, and by appointment of the Court, he argued his first case in the United States Supreme Court. A marvelous experience that he recommends to all.
Patrick Cole '81 works as a correspondent for Time Magazine in Los Angeles.
Susan Fowler McNally '81 and her husband James McNally proudly announce the birth of their first child, Ian James McNally on March II, 1993. Susan continues to practice with Gilchrist & Rutter specializing in real estate and business transactions.
Donna R. Hecht '81 has become a research attorney for Justice Robert Timlin of the California State Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division Two, located in San Bernardino.
David B. Simpson '81 is a named partner in Wolflick & Simpson, a Glendale-based firm specializing in labor and employment law.
June G. Guinan '83 and Ira D. Kharasch '81 are pleased to announce the birth of Jessica Guinan Kharasch on Aug. 23 , 1992.
Jonathan Rosenoer '83 recentl y became Executive Editor of California · Counsel Connect , a new electronic on-line service linking lawyers across the state and the nation. For the past fe w years, Jonathan has published CyberLaw™ and CyberLex™ , the most widely syndicated and publi shed columns for computer users in the United States. They are made available as a pro bono service to over a half million individuals each month. In the June 1993 issue ofMACWORLD, Jonathan was featured as one of "18 Great Mac Resources " for his legal writing.
Pamela G. Chin '84 is an in-house attorney with Atlantic Richfield Co. (ARCO), managing litigation matters. Sh e has been elected President of the Southern California Chinese Lawyers Association and recently served on Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan's transition team.
Jose Colon '84 joined Gilbert Quinones '86 last year in establishing Colon, Pineiro and Quinones, A Law Corporation, specializing in criminal defense , personal injury, worker's compensation and general civil litigation. Quinones also co-founded the Puerto Rican Bar Association in August 1991.
Steven Goldman '84 is Regional Vice President & General Counsel for McCaw Cellular Communications, Inc. , California/Nevada Region, based in Sacramento.
Wtlliam E. Ireland '84, an attorney at Haight, Brown and Bonesteel, was elected President of the Pomona College Alumni Association in June of this year.
Mats G. Carlston '85, an ass ociate of the law firm of Nixon, Hargrave , De van s & Do yle , has be en elected to partnership He is resident in the New York Ciry office. Among other areas of practice , he represents domestic and foreign institutional lenders in commercial loan transactions, workouts and restructuring.
Gary W. Dzierlenga '85 spent four wee ks this summer in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia as a consultant to the Saudi Arabian Oil Company. He practices as Corporate Counsel in Houston, Texas, ro Star Enterprise, a joint venture between the Saudi Arabian Oil Company and Texaco Inc
Lawrance A. Edwards '85 , general litigation partner in th e Seattle offic e of Lane Powell Spears Lubersky, has been elected President of the Loren Mill e r Bar Asso c iation , which is the oldest bar association of color in Washington.
Bryan K. Fair '85 received the 1992-93 Student Bar Association Outstanding Award at the University of Alabama School of Law. This coveted award is given to a faculty member who has shown a devotion to students in and out of the classroom, has demonstrated excellence in teaching, has made a strong contribution to the law school community and has displayed literary accomplishment
Jose H. Garcia '85 has been elected Partner at Bronson, Bronson & McKinnon , where he specializes in appellate practice. He has also been appointed Vice Chair of the State Bar Advisory Committee on Continuing Education of the Bar for 1993-94 He commutes to Bronson's San Francisco office from his home in Fremont , where he lives with his wife Christiane and their 4-year-old son, Alexander.
John M. Moscarino '85 has become a Partner at O'Neill & Lysaght. He will continue to specialize in civil and criminal business litigation and related practice in both state and federal courts.
Donna West Davis '86 and John Davis celebrated the birth of their first child, Christina Noelle Davis, on June 21, 1993.
Kevin A. Frankel '86, an associate of lrell & Manella, was admitted as a Partner in January. He specializes in Corporate Securities law in the downtown Los Angeles office.
William F. Fritz '86 and Theresa Rodriguez Fritz '87 are pleased to announce the birth of their daughter, Morgan Maria, born on Jan. 6, 1993 and the ope ning of their own firm, The Fritz Law Office, in Santa Rosa, Calif. in July 1993.
Lolita Buckner Inniss '86 has been appointed as adjunct professor at Seton Hall Law School, Newark, New Jersey She has also opened her own office in Princeton, New Jersey, where she specializes in real estate and business law matters.
Bradley E. Neufeld '86 has become a Partner at Best, Best & Krieger He is in the Riverside office representing employers in all areas of labor relations and employment law
Lois J. Scali '86, an associate of lrell & Manella, was admitted as a Partner in January. She specializes in entertainment law in the Century City office.
Thomas L. Hardy '87 is now in solo practice (and enjoying it) in Bishop, Calif., emphasizing criminal and juvenile law.
Arthur M. Rieman '88 has joined the law firm of O'Donnell & Mandell. The firm primarily is a plaintiff discrimination practice. Mr. Rieman concentrates in th e representation of victims of sexual harassment
Sascha (Sarah) Rigdon Bensinger '89 is currently a visiting assistant professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law. She lives in Chicago with her husband, Tyler, and her two children, Emily, 4, and Ethan, 8 months.
Scot Stone '89 is the permanent law clerk to Judge Diane Weinstein of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
The 1990s
Jerry Bregman '90 has left Sidley & Austin to open his own law firm, Bregman & Associates, specializing in corporate reorganization and bankruptcy
Ronaldo Jauregui '90 has just finished two years of service as Young Lawyers Division Liaison to the ABA Commission on Opportunities for Minorities in the Profession.
Sharon I. Juhn '91 was married on June 26, 1993 to Stan Hahn, M.D., a general surgeon at the Newport Beach Medical Group.
Kimberly Arouh '91, after recently completing a one-year clerkship in San Diego with the Hon. David R. Thompson, 9th Circuit Court U.S Court of Appeals, is moving back to the Los Angeles area to become an associate at Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp.
Patricia E. Chavarria '91 has become an associate of the firm Balestreri, Dorigan & Pendleton
Don M. Wade '93 has joined the Banking & Lending Group in the Rochester, New York law office of Nixon, Hargrave, Devans & Doyle.
Peter Arenella is addressing moral culpability issues in a scholarly article that will eventually become a book. He also has delivered several lectures to appellate judges and appellate staff attorneys on the United States Supreme Court's criminal cases from the last term. Professor Arenella has been interviewed extensively by members of the broadcast and print media about the three men charged with bearing trucker Reginald Denny during the Los Angeles riots as well as the trial of the Menendez brothers, charged with killing their parents. Professor Arenella also wrote a two-part series that appeared in the Los Angeles Times OpEd pages this summer discussing the moral accountability of victims when they use lethal violence against their victimizer, such as in the Menendez case and similar cases across the country.
Michael Asimow, who will soon complete a stint as Associate Dean, is a consultant · to the California Law Revision Commission. He is working with the commission on a new California Administrative Procedure Act. The proposed new Act is nearly complete and should be ready to go to the legislature next year.
1 Paul Bergman co-authored a book with a former UCLAW student, Sara BermanBarrett , tided Represent Yourself in Court: How to Prepare and Try a Winning Case The book, released chis fall by Nolo Press , is designed to help lay people who are unable to afford an attorney represent themselves in civil cases. Professors Bergman, David Binder and Al Moore are all working on a trial advocacy textbook. It will be different from all other such books, says Bergman, beca use it will not simply be the umpteenth recitation of standard trial techniques, but rather will describe the factual content of effective trial argument, and demonstrate how one can use the
techniques of trial to present those arguments. The book should be ready by spring 1994.
Stuart Biegel, who teaches in both the School of Education and the School of Law, cowrote " Public Funds for Private Schools: Political and First Amendment Considerations," which appeared in the May edition of the American Journal of Education. The article analyzes the private school choice debate through a review of the political and judicial history of efforts to provide private schools and their patrons with various forms of public aid. It also examines recent Supreme Court rulings that would apply to a constitutional challenge of a federal tuition voucher or tax credit program. Biegel is the assistant director of the Teacher Education Laboratory at UCLA's Graduate School of Education.
Joel Handler, who has been studying reform of social welfare bureaucracies for the past 2 5 years, recently chaired a youth panel of the National Research Council, a non-profit organization advising the federal government. The panel produced a book-length study, Losing Generations: Adolescents in High Risk Settings, which details how the environments of large numbers of youthswhich include poverty, singleparent homes and ineffective justice systems -increase the odds against their successful development. Handler was interviewed about the book on National Public Radio this summer. Also , Professor Handler participated in October in the National Research Council-John F. Kennedy School of Government Invitational Conference on Urban Violence held at the NRC in Washington D.C. Professor Handler was selected as the Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice speaker, and in October
delivered a lecture, "The Politics of Structure: Dece ntralization and Empowerment ," at th e University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.
Kenneth L. Karst, the David G. Price and Dallas P. Price Professor , of Law, has a book due out in December. Laws Promise, Laws Expression: Visions of Power in the Politics of Gender, Race and Religion, published by Yale University Press, considers the social issues agenda for law in the fields of race, gender and religion.
Kristine Knaplund , lecturer in law, continues to head the law school's Academic Support Program. Her efforts include a ten-day summer orientation for entering diversity students, placing teaching assistants in selected first-year sections , and designing courses specifically to help students who are struggling academically so they can imptove th e ir performance in law school. These programs have been instrum e ntal in raising students' grade point averages while in law school, which in turn means they have a better chance of passing the California bar exam. UCLA's first-time pass rate for the July 1992 bar was 90 percent, the highest UCLA pass rate since 1953.
Christine A. Littleton became the Director of the Women's Studies Program at UCLA July 1. She will continue to reach in the law school, combining h e r interests in feminism and wom e n's legal issues. In addition, Littleton recently was elected president of the Board of Directors of the California Women's Law Center, a non-profit public
interest organization founded to extend and protect th e rights of women and girls in California. Littleton also is serving on the Association of American Law Schools' Commission on Meeting the Challenges of Diversity in an Academic Democracy The commission's cask is to facilitate progress in achieving and maintaining diversity in law school faculties, student bodies, scholarship and teaching. A preliminary report is expected later this year.
the University i
Gadlin, recently received a grant from the Hewlett Foundation to begin planning a UCLA Center on lnter-Racial/lnterethnic Conflict Resolution that will be interdisciplinary in nature , involving both research and applied activities in conflict resolution
Grant S. Nelson recently published, with co-author Professor Dale A. Whitman of Brigham Young University, J. Reuben Clark Law School, the third edition of their treatise , Real Estate Finance Law. Part of the West Publishing Co. Practitioner Treatise Series, earlier editions of this treatise have been heavily relied upon by the courts , and it has become the standard national mortgage law reference work for both practitioners and scholars. Professor Nelson, also with Whitman, produced in September Council Draft No. 3 ofthe Restatement ofthe Law, Property-Security (Mortgages) for the American Law Institute This is the third segment of a complex, multipart project that will comprise the first Restatement on land security. Additionally, Professor Nelson was elected a member of the American College of Real Estate Lawyers (ACREL). This national group of lawyers consists of practitioners and academics who have distinguished themselves as real estate law specialists.
Frances Olsen gave a number of lectures at universities in Great Britain, Berlin, Switzerland , and Egypt and at all three law schools in Israel last May and June She also mad e a presentation to the Israeli Department of Justice and participated in a major conference of East and West German feminists organized by the autonomous women's niovement, begun in Eastern Europe Her 1993 talk to the AALS has just bee1,1 published in Constitutional Commentary; the talk she presented last spring to tire American Society oflnternacional Law, Washington D .C., is about to come out in a book; and her paper on " The Sex of Power, " which Professor Olsen presented at an international conference on "Law and Power" in Helsinki, is about to be published in a book in Great Britain. A presentation she )11ade to a conference on "Law and Interpretation" in Tel Aviv is in rhe editing process at the University of Tel Aviv Law Review. She has been named to the Board of Directors of Collective Legal Services, a public interest law organization recently formed in the Bay Area. And , Olsen is the organizer of a conference, "Women in Central and Eastern Europe: Nationalism, Feminism and Possibilities for the Future," to be held at UCLA, April 8-10, 1994-
Richacd H. Sander, acting professor oflaw, is co-directing a government-sponsored, empirical "assessment" of fair housing opportunities and problems in Los Angeles. He said the work is interesting because the federal and local government are again viewing desegregation as a way of addressing the problems of the inner city Policy makers have expressed interest in the research. Also, during the summer, Professor Sander published an analysis of several alternative, inner-city employment srrategies in The Georgetown Law journal. Professor Lucie White wrote about the moral dimensions of poverty in the same issue
Carson Taylor is leading a group of students in Law 406, Public Policy Advocacy, in a study oflegal solutions related to slum housing problems in Los Angeles. Students are reviewing building inspection reports, interviewing -te nants in sub-par housing, writing ameliorative legislation and participating in local commission investigations. The class is made possible by a combination of funding from UCLA and Public Counsel, a non-profit public interest law firm, sponsored by the Los Angeles County Bar Association and the Beverly Hills Bar Association. The program is called the UCLAPublic Counsel Law School Partnership.
William D. Warren coauthored with Professor Robert Jordan a casebook, Bankruptcy, third edition, published by Foundation Press Inc. Jordan and Warren also co-reported "UC C Drafting: Method and Message," in the Loyola Law Re view this year in an issue devoted to a symposium on the revision of Uniform Commercial Code articles 3, 4 and 4A. Warren also chaired the search committee to select the new dean of UCLA's And erson Graduate School of Management which resulted in the appointment of Professor William Pierskalla of the Wharton School. Pierskalla has succeeded Dean J. Clayburn La Force.
Eric Zolt continues his work on designing tax systems in Eastern Europe He spe nt three weeks this summer in Albania working with the Ministry of Finance in preparing for a new property tax and a new enterprise tax system. Zolt also served as codirecror of an Organization for Economic Cooperation and · Development (OECD) semin~r for designing enterprise profits tax systems for tax officials from the Central Asian Republics in Ankara, Turkey, in June.
Friday, January 7, 1994
MLS Annual Meeting in Orlando, Fla. UCLA luncheon for School of Law alums in teaching. Marriott's Orlando World Center Crystal Salon; noon to 1:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, February
4 & 5, 1994
The 18th Annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium, Schoenberg Hall Auditorium, UCLA. Times to be announced
Friday and Saturday, April 8 & 9, 1994
The Second Annual UCLA School of Law Business Bankruptcy Institute, School of Law. Time to be announced.
Saturday, May 14, 1994
Class of'74 Reunion, The Faculty Center, UCLA; 6:30 p.m.
For further information on all events, contact the Law Alumni and Development Office at (po) 825-2890.
Kent L. De Chambeau ' 53
Andrew Haberfield '61
James J. Mahoney '66
Philip J. Mc Carthy ' 73
Wesley L. Nutten '58
Raul Palomo ' 73
Paul R. Steinman '65