UCLA Chancellor Charles Young prepares with Law Professor and Academic Senate Chair Carole GoldbergAmbrose to present the UCLA Medal of Honor to President Bill Clinton. Law Professor and Vice Chancellor for Academic Personnel Norman Abrams looks on. The President was presented UCLA's highest honor at UCLA's 75th Anniversary Convocation in May. Clinton was the keynote speaker.
Vol. 18, N ° 1
Fall 1994
UCLA Law is published at UCLA for alumni, friends and other members ofthe UCLA Law community. Offices at 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, 90024.
Susan Westerberg Prager: Dean Joan Tyndall: Assistant Dean, Devewpment and Alumni Relatiom
MagazineStaff
Karen Nikos: Editor
Photography: ASUCLA Photo Service Qohn Chung and Terry O'Donnell); and Maryann Stuehrmann
Editorial assistants: Parrish Sadeghi, Jean Lieu,Aaron Shonk
Design: Lausten/Cossutta Design, Los Angeles
Printed by Typecrafr, Pasadena, Calif.
UCLA LawAlumni Association Board ofDirectors
Robett B. Burke '66: President
Hon. Laurence D. Rubin '71: Vice President
Alan M. Mirman '75: Secretary
Renee L. Campbell '80: Treasurer
Timothy Lappen '75= Immediate Past President
Deborah A. David '75
Raquelle de la Rocha '87
Richard D. Fybel '71
Andrew J. Guilford '75
Frederick Kuperberg '66
S. Jerome Mandel '71
Michael D. Marcus '67
Grace N. Mitsuhata '75
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld '76
John F. Runkel, Jr. '81
Mark A. Samuels '82
Linda Smith '77
John H. Wesron '69
W Keith Wyatt '77
Stephen D. Yslas '72
cover: Ralph and Shirley Shapiro (center) with students in the law school courtyard named for the Shapiros. Students are Lisa Rosenthal, Raquel Vallejo, Courtney Lee, David Boyko, Kisu Shin and Estevan Garcia.
PROFESSOR WILEY BRINGS HIS VERSATILITY TO THE CLASSROOM
STUDENTS USE LEGAL SKILLS TO PROTECT THE ENVIRONMENT
COMMENCEMENT 1994
KARST RECEIVES RUTTER AWARD
STUDENTS, ALUMS AND FACULTY RECOGNIZED FOR PUBLIC INTEREST WORK
FACULTY NEWS
ALUMNI NEWS
COURTYARD NAMED FOR RALPH AND SHIRLEY SHAPIRO
ESTATE PLANNING
MAJOR GIFTS TO THE LIBRARY CAMPAIGN LIBRARY CAMPAIGN UPDATE
1993-94 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
CLASSNOTES IN MEMORIAM
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
ProfessorWiley brings versatility to the classroom
HE AWAKENS STUDENTS TO FASCINATING intracacies of antitrust law in finely choreographed class discussions. And he can just as easily spew out trial anecdotes about his years in the Los Angeles U.S. Attorney's Office when he prosecuted the most active bank robber in American history. Or Professor John Wiley Jr. can entertain with tales of the pranks he and fellow law clerks used to play on their judges.
His versatility, broad academic interest and honest concern for students make Wiley one of the most respected professors on campus, as evidenced in part by his 1990 University Distinguished Teaching Award. When you measure in his deadpan wit, Wiley becomes one of the best-liked professors in the law school.
Wiley, 41, began as an Acting Professor of Law at UCLA in 1983 following two prestigious clerkships first for Judge Frank M. Coffin of the U.S. Court of Appeals First Circuit and then for Justice Lewis F. Powell of the U.S. Supreme Court. Wiley had achieved a master's degree in Economics and his J.D. at UC Berkeley.
Although he came to UCLA as a new teacher, student evaluations from his first years in teaching do not betray any lack of teaching experience. To the contrary, they discuss how from the beginning Wiley's aplomb in class was that of an experienced professor. His commitment to treating students "like a peer instead of a peon," as was written in one evaluation, is lauded by students and colleagues alike.
Professor Wiley claims no sorcery in his classroom effectiveness: "The key, I believe, is to make student interest a priority on a daily basis," he says. "Early in my career, Professor Ken Graham pointed out to me that teachers have to win their students' interest before there can be any effective communication at all. How right he is. The substance might win the Nobel Prize... but if presentation fails to interest any student, communication is rotten."
One way Wiley captures interest is to lift students' heads out of their notebooks and encourage them to focus on the discussion instead of their notes. He hands out his lecture notes to students. "I started that after going to
"Though
he had not taught the course before, he immediately got the class immersed in the case materialsnotfrom a dry, pedantic perspective, but from the perspective of someone who had observed first-hand how thecriminal laws we were studyingactually operate. "
PAUL WATFORD ' 94
"The key, Ibelieve, is to make studentinterest a priority on adaily basis...The substance mightwin theNobel Prize, but ifpresentation fails tointerest any student, communication is rotten."
PROFESSOR JOHN WILEY
graduate school in economics where it is common practice," he explains. "I don't know why all law professors don't do it. I have to prepare the lecture notes anyway, so they might as well have the benefit of them."
Students say that the notes help them understand the material as the class begins, enabling discussion to enhance the subject matter rather than simply amplify the material. Wiley compares students paying attention in class to lawyers remaining attentive in court. "If you spend too much time taking notes during direct examinationand not enough time listening-you can't conduct an effective cross examination. It's the same line of thinking."
Much of Wiley's lawyerly wisdom comes from legal practicehaving been a federal prosecutor during a four-year leave of absence from UCLA that just ended last year. He said his courtroom experience gave him a fresh perspective on his teaching as well as in his academic interests.
Paul Watford, who graduated from the law school last spring and is now serving a clerkship with Judge Alex Kozinski of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, said the federal criminal law class he took from Wiley last year was vibrant and animated.
"Though he had not taught the course before, he immediately got the class immersed in the case materials-not from a dry, pedantic perspective, but from the perspective of someone who had observed first-hand how the criminal laws we were studying actually operate," says Watford. "Instead of teaching the course strictly in terms of abstract concepts, he gave us a mixture of insightful anecdotes, funny stories and vivid illustrations of the types of criminal activides that are prosecuted under federal law."
Of his expansion into criminal law, Wiley says: "I decided I was a little young to be so specialized." While during the '8os his scholarly writing and teaching centered on antitrust and intellectual property law, he recently has expanded into scholarly studies of federal sentencing laws, parole and other criminal law issues. He has also commented for the media on various criminal cases, including the O.J. Simpson case.
When Wiley joined the U.S. Attorney's office in 1990, he wasn't at first directing his attention to criminal law. "John was originally brought into the office because we thought he'd be perfect for antitrust and major fraud cases," said his former supervisor in the U.S. Attorney's office, Steve Clymer. "But after he went through training, all he wanted to do was prosecute bank robberies," added Clymer,
who served on the counsel team that prosecuted LAPD officers in the federal Rodney King beating case. "He wanted to do cases where people point guns at each other. And John was particularly good at prosecuting those kinds of cases." Recently, Wiley has served as Counsel to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary regarding the nomination of Ruth Bader Ginsberg. He also assisted the committee in preparing for the hearir,1.gs on the nomination of Stephen Breyer to the U.S. Supreme Court.
As if that is not enough, Professor Wiley has continued to work in patent, trademark and copyright law, as well. He recently consulted for a petroleum company fighting a trademark suit for donating trash bags for a cleanup day. The plaintiffis a janitorial company that formerly supplied the trash bags.
Recent articles addressing copyright and patent law have appeared in the American Economic Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, UCLA Law Review and law reviews at Yale, Columbia, Duke and Harvard, to name a few.
Wiley's colleagues say they have been impressed by his teaching and breadth of legal talent as well as his ability to make very difficult subjects accessible. "One of the more impressive things about John as a teacher and scholar is his range," notes Professor Stephen Yeazell. "He can move from an esoterically technical, quasi-mathematical argument over economic theory to a series of insights about how juries think about bank robbers, and then to questions of whether a book jacket design infringes on the trademark of a similar book. Lots of us have thought about one of those areas; John is special because he knows about all of them."
Beyond academics, Professor Joel Handler said he is impressed by Wiley's sense of community spirit and willingness to take on extra work-whether that be to serve as advisor to an LL.M. student, work on a faculty committee or supervise a student's independent research project.
"When I first arrived at UCLA-now almost IO years-I was immediately impressed with the extraordinary amount of colleagueship of John Wiley," states Professor Joel Handler. "And my initial impression has not changed. He is a person who really cares about the community and makes the law school such a pleasant place. To use an old-fashioned expression, John is a brick."
KNBC Reporter Phil Shuman interviews Professor Wiley about evidence in the O.J. Simpson murder case.
Envirnnmental Law students and Pro essor Ann Carlson second fr fom/1ght, s�rvey pollution in Santa Monica Bay near the home
sea hons.
Students use legal skills to protect the environment in new clinical course
FOR ROY BIENAVIDEZ, it was personal conviction that made him want to become involved in UCLA's new Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic. His cousins, who live outside of Mexico City, can only get fresh water a few hours a week because their water supply has become so polluted.
Fellow student Michael Deen gave a similar reason. "I live in Southern California...the environment is an important issue here. I thought this would be a great opportunity to combine practical experience and effect environmental change at the same time."
For them and eight other students, the newly established Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic has provided a unique opportunity to explore a relatively new field of law in a hands-on environment with plenty of one-to-one instruction and guidance from faculty.
"Clearly, environmental law is a burgeoning area of the law, with new issues and new challenges being raised all the time," says Professor Ann Carlson, an experienced attorney who joined the faculty this fall to teach the course with Professor Al Moore.
"Environmental law is such an important issue in Southern California," Carlson added. ''And UCLA has taken an integral step in training its students to handle cutting-edge complex litigation that will help protect the Southern California environment."
The six-unit clinical course is supported by the joint efforts of both the Law School and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). It is named for Frank G. Wells, the former President and Chief Operating Officer of the Walt Disney Co., who was tragically killed in a helicopter crash last April. Wells was an avid environmentalist who demonstrated a commitment to our environment in myriad ways. He created the Santa Monica BayKeeper, a citizen's group aimed at protecting the environment and the new clinic's principal client. The clinic supplements the already thriving courses in the Clinical Program such as the fulltime Clinical Semester as well as such courses as Trial Advocacy and Estate Planning.
In the Environmental Law Clinic students derive hands-on experience in complex national regulatory schemes as a means to solve local environmental problems. Students, most of whom are in their third year, examine policy issues
"Clearly, environmental law is a burgeoning area ofthe law, with new issues andnew challenges being raised allthe time."
PROFESSOR ANN CARLSON
Environmental Law Clinic students Andre Bates and Willy Hernandez discuss a lawsuit students prepared that seeks cleanup of the Santa Monica Bay.
Students in the Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic hail from a variery of backgrounds in education and careers-each bringing their own knowledge to the cases at hand. Students above gather at Santa Monica Bay site endangered by pollution.
unique to environmental practice. In their first case, the NRDC and clinic, acting as co-counsel for plaintiffs NRDC and the Santa Monica BayKeeper, filed suit against Los Angeles County, maintaining that the county failed to properly monitor and reduce polluted storm water and urban runoffin the Santa Monica Bay, as required by federal law under the Clean Water Act. The students also assisted NRDC in its trial preparation of a major case against The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) for its repeated violations of a Clean Water Act permit.
The clinic allows students to work on a mixture of large and small cases, both federal and state, involving citizen enforcement actions under vario�s environmental statutes, especially actions under the Clean Water Act against polluters of the Santa Monica Bay. Students will work on larger cases with the NRDC and smaller cases referred by the Santa Monica BayKeeper, an environmental investigator who operates out of a research boat that patrols the Santa Monica Bay monitoring for pollution.Students confirm that the work has been challenging.
David R. Boyko, a third-year student with an engineering degree, said he enjoyed using some of his technical knowledge to prepare cross examination questions for an expert defense witness. He said such preparation has given him a look into what real practice would be like. "Law School teaches you how to study the law," said Boyko, who worked for a law firm this summer that included some environmental practice. "I took a clinical course to supplement that education-a clinical course teaches you how to practice law."
Beth Pawsat agreed. "We have been working on many of the aspects of filing a case, doing depositions, cross-examinations and we get to do this under the guidance of faculty We wouldn't get that in a law firm."
She said the workload has been extensive-similar, she believes, to what it will be like when she works on cases when she becomes a lawyer. "I don't know about the other students," she sighed, glancing at her classmates. "But I spent about 30 hours outside of class preparing for two hours of cross examination. It's a lot of work," she added as other students nodded in agreement.
Nonetheless, students and professors Moore and Carlson agreed, students often are eager to complete the work because it gives them a chance to put into practice the concepts they have been learning in other courses during their law school career. "We see it time and again, students who have the opportunity to represent a real client become reinvigorated about practice," Moore says.
Bienavidez, who is interested in practicing environmental law when he graduates, said his experiences in the clinic have been eye opening. In preparation for his own first deposition, he accompanied Carlson to a deposition of a defendant witness in the Caltrans case. "It was interesting to see the tactics of the opposing counsel," he said, smiling. "He got out dental floss and was flossing his teeth-just trying to show how worthless he thought the questioning was."
Professor Moore emphasized that putting the students into the role of lawyer while they are still in school is invaluable. "Often, associates at a law firm don't get a chance to get any feedback on their work because their supervisors are busy. Here, we have the time. It's our job to give them the training and the feedback they need to be effective lawyers."
"We
have been working on many ofthe aspects of filing a case, doing depositions, crossexaminations...and we get to dothis underthe guidance offaculty. We wouldn't get that in a lawfirm."
BETH PAWSAT STUDENT
'Tve been very impressed bymy students. They bring so much to the classfrom their experiences, which is very refreshingperspectivesI didn'treally have in law school. Their ability to speak notjust from a review of the material but from their own experience is both challenging and gratifying as a teacher."
GREYSON BRYAN
Asampling ofother new classes at UCLAW
THEHEADLINE-GRABBINGTOPIC ofinternationalbusinesslaw--especially asitrelatesto PacificRimcountries-isexploredinaseminartaughtby GreysonBryan,InternationalLaw: Comparative Regulation of International Business.
ComparisonsaremadetoJapan,explainsBryan,becauseofitsstatus asamajortradepartnerwiththeUnitedStatesandbecausebothitsmeans andendsoftendifferfromthoseoftheUnitedStates. China'sregulation ofinternationalbusinesssimilarlyiscitedforcomparisonbothbecauseit isa developing country andhasaneconomyin transition fromcomplete statecontroltomoremarketorientation.
"Thisisanexcitingclassbecausewecritiquecurrentregulatory solutionsfromtheviewpointofboththepolicy-makerandthedeal maker,"says Bryan,whocoordinatesInternational PracticeinCalifornia for O'Melveny &Myers. ''Aparticularlyfascinatingaspectoftheclassis thatissueschangeevery day," hesaid,referringtocurrentglobaldiscussionsrelatedtothe GATT Uruguay RoundandconsiderationofaCode of Conductfor U.S. businessesinChina.
then stand up to the challenges from other students. That's what we need to know how to do."
A class exploring the various ways American law has responded to the diversity that exists within sexual orientation is being co-taught this semester by Jon W Davidson, Senior StaffAttorney of the ACLU Foundation of Southern California, and Professor Christine A. Littleton, a member of the law faculty who also chairs the UCLA Women's Studies Program. Starting from a base of the multiple meanings and dimensions of sexual orientations, students in this course-entitled Sexual Orientation and the Lawexamine relationships between sexual orientation and other social divisions, such as gender, race and religion. The greater part of the course is devoted to a study of issues arising under four major topics as they relate to civil rights of lesbians, gay men, and others with a non-traditional sexual orientation.
The four topics include liberty (including government regulation of sexual practices through criminal law); equality (especially constitutional theory and anti-discrimination law as they apply to unequal treatment in the military, public and private employment and public accommodations); expression (both First Amendment rights and privacy issues; and family (including marriage, partner rights, parenting and custody).
"As lesbians and gay men gain visibility, so do sexual orientation issues in the law," says Davidson. Littleton adds: "It's very gratifying to have UCLA make this effort to stay on the cutting edge of developments in the law."
A recognition that progressive lawyers have become increasingly involved in community economic development and community organizing as supplements and alternatives to the direct representation of individual clients is addressed in two new clinical courses: Community Outreach, Education and Organizing, and Local Economic Development, taught by Gerald Lopez. "For all the buzz about community economic development, community education and community organizing, you can look long and hard and still not find serious training in these areas," says Lopez. Addressing this void, these courses are specially designed to train students to work with lowincome groups as partners in solving everyday problems and long-term needs.
In the Community Outreach course, students combine classroom study with fieldwork, reading case studies of outreach, education and organizing campaigns as well as working with community groups to develop effective programs.
In Local Economic Development, through classroom and field work, students look at the dynamics of local economies, primarily in the urban and suburban United States; how development plans respond to the needs of low-income populations; and how economic development lawyers might conceive of and execute their work to be more responsive to the aspirations of relatively marginalized communities.
Derrick Bell, commencement speaker, Professor Kimberle Crenshaw-Professor of rhe Year and faculty speaker, and Dean Susan Prager lead rhe procession as graduation ceremonies begin last May. Bell, a noted civil rights expert and academic leader, attracted national attention in 1990 when he rook leave from his professorship at Harvard Law School ro protest the school's failure to hire tenured minority women professors.
Graduating class president, Hao Nhien Qui Vu, known to all as "Vu," shares a moment with Professor Kimberle Crenshaw and keynote speaker Derrick Bell before addressing rhe audience and graduates. Vu was a recent immigrant from Vietnam when he began studies at Purdue University, struggling to learn the English language while pursuing a bachelor's as well as master's degree in math before coming to law school.
Commencement 1994
'1wishI could guaranteethat taking risks, even making sacrifices to protest unfair policies or conditions, willinvariably bring reliefI can't.I have been very fortunate-thusfar; butI know that speaking out can result inlost jobs, ruined opportunities, and damaged careers.During a period ofeconomic hardship and an evertighteningjob market, this is no smallrisk. Taking a stand, however, can also end harassment and win respect.It can bring about the change you seekfor yourselfand alsofor othersfacing similar hurdles.In addition, an unexpected victory may occur in an unexpected way long after a protest is made andforgotten."
DERRICK BELL, VISITING PROFESSOR OF LAW, NYU LAW SCHOOL, IN COMMENCEMENT SPEECH TO STUDENTS AT UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW, MAY 22, 1994.
Adaku Eronini, newly graduated from the LL.M. program, celebrates with her infant.
Graduate Jason Wenglin and Dean Susan Prager
Karst is selected for RutterAward
PROFESSOR KENNETH KARST, who has taught constitutional law and federal courts courses at UCLAW for 29 years, was given the Rutter Award for Excellence i.nTeaching at ceremonies last spring.
"This award is long overdue," said Dean Susan Westerberg Prager as she praised Karst's teaching throughout the years. "He could be teaching anywhere," she said, noting his national reputation for scholarship. "But he has chosen to teach here."
Bill Rutter established the award in 1979 to recognize effective, dedication and creativity in teaching. Rutter is the father of the Gilbert Outline, creator of the leading bar review course in the state and the founder of the Rutter Group. Last year the award was presented to longtime Law School Professor John Bauman. Past recipients have included Stephen Yeazell, David Binder, Gerald Lopez, Jesse Dukeminier, Leon Letwin,William Warren, Michael Asimow, Murray Schwartz, Gary Schwartz, Julian Eule, Grace Blumberg, Jonathan Varat, Kristine Knaplund, Carrie MenkelMeadow and John Bauman.
Regarded as one of the nation's leading constitutional law scholars, Karst was quick to give credit to his subject matter rather than himself In accepting the award, Karst said he remembers that the late entertainer Ed Sullivan often referred to himself as a "pointer."
"When material is interesting enough," Karst added, "all you have to do it point at the subject. All education, in the end, is self education."
Besides writing numerous books and delivering many prestigious lectures on constitutional law issues, Karst has been recognized at his home campus. He was the 74th Annual Faculty Research Lecturer at UCLA in 1993, becoming the second law school professor in the history of the lecture to receive the honor. He also won the University's DistinguishedTeaching Award in 1980 and has been elected twice by graduating classes as Professor of the Year.
Bill Rutter congratulates Kenneth Karst, UCLA's David G. and Dallas P. Professor of Law, upon receiving the Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Students, alums, and faculty recognized for public interestwork
Pamela Mohr (UCLAW '84) gestures with the lengthy lists of public interest award recipients as she accepts the Antonia Hernandez Public Interest Award given in recognition of outstandingpro bona activity by an alum at award ceremonies last March. Mohr is the founder of The Alliance for Children Rights in Los Angeles.
Professor Michael Asimow smiles as he is paid tribute for his work in bringing members of the legal community and UCLA students together to help those in need of legal work in South Central Los Angeles. Asimow was awarded the Fredric P. Sutherland Public Interest Award in recognition of outstanding pro bona service as a faculty member.
The Public Interest Committee is now seeking nominationsfor public interest awards in thefollowing categories: alum; student (awards are given to one second-year and one thirdyear student each year); and faculty. Nominations should reach the Law School by January 31, and should include all relevant information that will assist the committee in making its selections. Awards will be announced at a law school ceremony in March. Send nominations to: Karen Mathews, UCLA School of Law, 405 HilgardAvenue, Los Angeles, CA 90024.
PILF SEEKS GIFTS FOR AUCTION
Student Jennifer Rose is given the Nancy J. Mintie Public Interest Award in recognition of outstanding pro bona activity as a third-year law student. Gary Felicetti received the Joseph Harriston Duff Public Interest Award for a second-year law student.
The Public Interest Law Foundation seeks donations of everything.from autographed baseballs to dinners at oceanside restaurants-and anything in between or beyond-for its second annual auction. The auction, which raises moneyfor grants awarded to students who take on public interestjobs during their summer break, will be held February 23. Donations may be mailed to PILF, care ofWendyAron, UCLA School ofLaw, 405 HilgardAvenue, LosAngeles, 01 90024. Those with questions about the auction may call the PILF office at 310 206-8625.
photos byJohn Chung, ASUCLA Photo
A look at what some of the faculty are doing
Michael Asimow has worked actively for several years on a new California Administrative Procedure Act as a consultant to the California Law Revision Commission. He has completed an article on the scope of judicial review of the decisions of California administrative agencies. He is active in the Administrative Law Section of the American Bar Association and in Americans for Peace Now, a group working to support the Middle East peace process. Asimow has also formed a legal service program which functions on Sunday mornings at the First AME Church in South Central Los Angeles. Volunteer UCLA Law students interview clients, and supervising attorneys drawn from Temple Isaiah and from the church give legal advice. Public Counsel provides additional assistance.
Steven K. Derian, Lecturer in Law, won the 1994 Luckman University Distinguished Teaching Award for lecturers this spring, the first time a law school faculty lecturer has won this campus-wide honor. Derian continues to teach Sports Law and Trial Advocacy. Derian and students in his Trial Ad class appeared on CNN in September when they were working on cross examination and final arguments in a simulated criminal case. The class was filmed as part of a segment on the practice of criminal defense law.
Patrick Del Duca, who teaches European Community law as an adjunct professor, attended an international environmental conference in Venice, Italy, in June 1994. At the conference participants debated the merit of an
international tribunal to assist in resolving environmental disputes. He is preparing an essay on this topic for the Environmental Law Institute, the professional association of U.S. environmental lawyers headquartered in Washington, D.C. In April 1994 Del Duca was a featured speaker (in Spanish) at meetings organized in Santiago, Chile, by the University of Chile law faculty, the Chilean Copper Commission, and the Chilean Foreign Investment Board. As a U.S. lawyer, he examined how Chile's new environmental regulations would affect Chile's important mining sector.
Carole Goldberg-Ambrose served as Chair of UCLA's Academic Senate during the past year. The organization represents UCLA's 4,000 tenure-track faculty. Besides her Senate work, she, along with a team of lawyers from the Native American Rights Foundation and producer/director Bob Hicks, worked to produce scripts for a series of documentaries that provide instruction in Native American law. The films will be used to train legal services attorneys, law students, and students at tribally controlled community colleges. The project is funded by the Legal Services Foundation. Professor Goldberg-Ambrose has published two articles about Native American life and law and a chapter entitled "Tribal Governments and the Encounter" in Unheard Voices: American Indian Responses to the Columbian Quincentenary I492-I992.
Joel Handler is working with colleague Zeke Hasenfeld (UCLA Social Welfare) on a book, The Organization ofWelfare: Dilemmas and Solutions. They received a grant for the book from the Twentieth Century Fund. He just finished his manuscript for: The Politics ofStructure: The Ambiguity ofDecentralization, Privatization, and Empowerment. He also wrote, '"Ending Welfare As We Know It:' Wrong for Welfare, Wrong for Poverty," to be published this fall in the Georgetownjournal on Fighting Poverty. He is finishing a book, Standing Still: Welfare Reform in the Nineties, to be published by Yale University Press in September 1995.
Kenneth L. Karst, recipient of the School of Law's William Rutter Award last spring, gave the Phelps First Amendment Lecture at Tulane Law School in March 1994. The lecture dealt with the free exercise of religion and focused on the animal sacrifice case in Hialeah, Florida. He also spoke on
a panel at the Thurgood Marshall Institute at UC San Diego commemorating the 40th anniversary of Brown v. Board ofEducation. Karst's book, Law'sPromise, Law'sExpression: Visions ofPower in thePolitics ofGender, Race, andReligion, recently published by Yale University Press, considers the social issues agenda for law in the fields of race, gender, and religion.
Kristine Knaplund organized the UCLA Conference on Advanced Issues in Academic Assistance last June; sixty law professors and academic support professionals attended the threeday workshop. She continues to head the law school's Academic Support Program. Her efforts include a IO-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 improve their performance in law school. These programs have been instrumental 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, Chair of UCLA's Women's Studies Program, continues to work toward broadening the University's interdisciplinary programs in two directions. The Women's Studies Program is petitioning for the establishment of a Ph.D. program in women's studies and is also assisting in the development of an undergraduate program in lesbian, gay, and bi-sexual studies.
Daniel Hays Lowenstein has written an article for publication in the fall on the question of whether term limits for members of Congress are constitutional (he maintains they are not), an issue that the Supreme Court may decide during the 1994 term. While continuing his work on a textbook in election law, Lowenstein digressed from his normal legal pursuits last year venturing into law and literature with "The Failure to Act: Concep-
tions of Law in The Merchant of Venice, Bleak House, Les Miserables, and Richard Weisberg's Poethics," recently published in CardozoLaw Review.
"" Carrie Menkel-Meadow is on .. sabbatical this fall in Wa�hington D.C., where she 1s working on •";: Y , several scholarly articles on legal ethics, Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and feminist theory. She also consults with several federal agencies, the federal courts and the Justice Department on a variety of issues concerning ADR. Menkel-Meadow has given papers or taught classes at several eastern universities and conducts extensive ADR training programs for the government, law firms and other entities. When she returns in the spring, MenkelMeadow and the University Ombudsman, Howard Gadlin, will serve as Co-Directors of the Center on lnter-Racial/Interethnic Conflict Resolution. The Center was funded by a grant from the Hewlett Foundation last year and emphasizes both research and applied activities in conflict resolution.
Stephen R. Munzer has published ' several articles on property rights of body parts and recently published an article on Aristotle's Biology. In addition to Property, he teaches history and "inscription" of the human body.
Clyde Spillenger spoke on "Advocacy Scholarship: The Ethics of Scholars' Participation in Public Policy Debates" at the 90th Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, held in New York in September 1994. His review of Gerald Posner's Case Closed and Peter Dale Scott's Deep Politicsand theDeath ofJFKappeared in the spring 1994 issue of the RadicalHistoryReview.
Frances Olsen recently lectured extensively in Europe -Great Britain, Italy, Switzerland, and Germany. In Germany, she also met frequently with members of three universities to assist in organizing and developing feminist legal theory programs. She is also organizing a program for Oxford University. Besides her recent periodical
publications in Germany, Switzerland, Israel and the United States, Olsen has published a casebook on Family Law, and she soon will publish two volumes on Feminist Legal Theory for international distribution. She also organized a three-day international conference on Women and Nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe, bringing a number of scholars from Eastern and Western Europe to UCLA. A former fellow at the Rocefeller Center in Bellagio, Italy, Olsen also worked with a public interest law organization in the Bay Area.
Rick Sander has a longstanding interest in the problem of urban segregation. His interest came to a crest chis year when Sander became President of the Fair Housing Congress of Southern California in January 1994; and soon thereafter, he helped the Congress secure an $11-million grant from the federal government for an experimental program that fosters racial and economic desegregation through housing subsidies. While completing a book-length study of changes in the dynamics of housing segregation in Los Angeles during the past forty years, Sander works with local and federal officials on other integration initiatives.
Gary Schwartz has been serving as an Advisor to the Restatement of Products Liability; also, as an Advisor to the Restatement of Apportionment. He participated in a conference at Cornell Law School last March on Legal Implications of Health Care Reform. He served as visiting scholar for a month last April at the University of Hawaii Law School. He spoke in September at an International Conference held at the University of East Anglia on the topic of tort law and economic loss.
Eugene Volokh testified in August before the House and Senate subcommittees on intellectual property, regarding the Takings Clause implications on the GATT Copyright Act. He has been invited to a conference at Yale in December, where he will speak on "The First Amendment in Cyberspace," and to a conference at Santa Cruz in January, where he will talk about "Constitutions and 'Survivor Stories."'
Stephen Yeazell published an essay, "The Misunderstood Consequences of Procedural Reform" in WisconsinLawReview in spring 1994, arguing that modern civil procedure has realigned the power relationships between trial and appellate courts. Yeazell argues that over the past fifty years we have moved from the age of trial to the age oflitigation, the latter characterized by intense pretrial activities and a low civil trial rate. For the most part,appellate courts have not changed the principles that determine when they will review a case. This results in an increasing number oftrial court rulings chat are effectively insulated from appellate review. This year Professor Yeazell will commence a revision of his civil procedure casebook.
Eric Zolt has written an article, "Tax Issues Arising from Privatization in the Formerly Socialist Countries," published in Georgetown University's Law and Policy inInternationalBusiness. For part of the summer,Zaic worked with the Ministry of Finance in Romania in preparing the corporate profits tax for submission to Parliament this fall. He continues his work in lessdeveloped regions as he serves as a visiting professor at New York University Law School this fall.
Courtyard named for Ralph and Shirley Shapiro
In a festive celebration in the evening shade of the redwood trees that shelter the garden setting, more than 300 alumni, faculty, students and friends celebrated Ralph' 58 and Shirley Shapiros' dedication and generosity to the Law School by formally naming the Law School courtyard in their honor. "The warmth and depth of Ralph and Shirley's concern for students and faculty has been truly remarkable," noted Dean Susan Prager.
Shirley Shapiro, remembering her years as an undergraduate attending class in UCLA's spacious grounds, emphasized the importance of providing green, open spaces in an urban environment, and at a law school where such rigorous academic work is pursued. "Ralph and I are very pleased that our names are associated with a peaceful, calm place where students can refresh themselves in a quiet outdoor setting-an outdoor room," she said in addressing the gathering. Ralph Shapiro spoke of his cherished friendships among those in attendancelaw school colleagues from the first decade the school was open as well as
Arthur Greenberg '52, U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer '57, Ralph Shapiro '58 and Norm Epstein '58, Associate Justice for the Second District Court of Appeal.
Ralph Shapiro
Shirley Shapiro
friends he has made throughout his career. "I feel very fortunate that I have known all of the deans of the Law School as friends." "I can assure you that when I went to law school," he quipped, "I never dreamed I would ever know a dean as a friend."
Ralph Shapiro, who received degrees in business administration '53 and law '58 from UCLA, provides tireless support for UCLA. He participates on the UCLA Foundation Board of Trustees and the Board of Visitors. He was named the Law School's Alumnus of the Year in 1983. He served on the committee for the UCLA Campaign, and he now serves on the campaign committee for the Law Library.
Ralph Shapiro was one of the original organizers of the Founders program, which helped build a strong base of annual giving at the school. Shirley Shapiro received her bachelor's degree in education from UCLA in 1959 and is active in numerous campus-wide activities. The Shapiros also have supported medicine, child development, athletics and the arts at UCLA throughout the years.
Said former dean and Professor Bill Warren: "Ralph is a leading member of a small group of alums who offer generous support to the law school and never asks for anything."
Dean Prager noted the central role the courtyard plays in the law school's environment: "The exceptionally mild climate in the irrigated semi-desert of the Los Angeles basin enables us to use this beautiful outdoor space all through the daylight hours most days of the year. The quiet beauty and informality of this particular space furthers the spirit of community which is so important to our law school."
Shirley Shapiro, Barbara and Arthur Soll '58
Associate Dean Julian Eule, Professor Gerald Lopez and his son, Luke.
Assistant Dean of Students Barbara Varat, U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer and Lenore Greenberg.
Estate Planning
This is the second in a regular series on estate planning. Much ofthe permanent endowment which supports law schools, private and public, was established throughgiftsinwillsandotherplannedgivingvehicles. As UCLA lawschoolmoves through itsfifthdecade, itsfoturewilldependincreasinglyonthehelp ofitsalumni. The law school willhost several estate planning seminars this year with accompanying continuing legal education credit.
Jon J. Gallo*
In our first column, we looked at powers of attorney as a means of managing property and making health care decisions in the event of incapacity. This column begins a discussion of fundamental estate planning concepts that we will build on in future columns.
The Internal Revenue Code taxes the transfer of property by gift or inheritance through two interrelated tax systems: the Estate and GiftTax and the Generation-SkippingTransferTax.
TheEstateand GiftTaxtreatsalllifetimetransfersasfalling into one of three categories: (i) those that are exempt from gift tax, (ii) those that are gifts but which are not subject to gift tax, and (iii) taxable gifts.
Four types of transfers are exempt from gift tax, irrespective of the amounts involved. Exempt transfers consist of: (i) gifts to certain tax exempt organizations, such as the UCLA Law School (the charitable deduction); (ii) gifts to your spouse,butonlyifheorsheisaUnited Statescitizen (themarital deduction); (iii) tuition payments made directly to a school; and (iv) payments directly to a health care provider for medical expenses. There is no requirement that the person on whose behalfyoumakethetuitionormedicalcarepaymentsberelated to you.
All other lifetime transfers are gifts. However, to prevent small lifetime gifts from being hampered by the tax laws, the first $10,000 of gifts to each donee each year is exempted from the gift tax laws by theannual exclusion.There is no limitto the number of recipients. A husband and wife may jointly give $20,000 a year to as many beneficiaries as they desire.
The $10,000 annual exclusion is available only for gifts classified by the tax laws as present interests. A gift is a present interest ifthe recipient has the right to the immediate use ofthe gifted property. All other transfers are gifts of a future interest and do not qualify for the annual exclusion. For example, an outright gift to your child of $10,000 is a present interest, whereas a similar gift to a trust for your child would be a future interest if the trust provides that distributions to the child rest in the discretion of the Trustee.
Lifetime transfers that are neither exempt nor sheltered by the annual exclusion are taxable gifts. Taxable gifts therefore consist of (i) any gift of a future interest and (ii) gifts of present interests that exceed $10,000. Thus, the gift to your child in trust in the preceding paragraph would be a taxable gift. Similarly, an outright gift of $12,000 to your child would be a taxable gift of $2,000 ($12,000 gift less $10,000 annual exclusion equals $2,000 taxable gift.)
Taxablegiftsaresubjecttoaprogressivegifttaxrate.Therate schedule is progressive, beginning with an effective bracket of 37% and reaching 55% for transfers in excess of $3,000,000.
Eachpersonpossessesacreditagainstgifttaxesknownasthe unified credit. The unified credit exempts the first $600,000 of taxable gifts from the gift tax.
We can illustrate the use of the unified credit by assuming that a husband and wife jointly make an outright gift of $100,000 to a child. Each will be treated as making a $50,000 gift. The first $10,000 of each gift will be exempted by each parent's gift tax annual exclusion. The remaining $40,000 will reduce each parent's unified credit by that amount and each would then have a unified credit remaining of $560,000.
Any gift tax credit that you do not fully utilize during your lifetime turns into an estate tax credit when you pass away. If the husband in our example above were to pass away, his remaining $560,000 gift tax credit would become a $560,000 estate tax credit and his estate would be subject to estate tax only to the extent that it exceeded that amount.
The Estate Tax is simpler than the Gift Tax. Two types of transfers at death are exempt from estate tax: (i) transfers to tax exempt charities and (ii) transfers to a surviving spouse. Unlike the Gift Tax (which does not exempt transfers to a non-citizen spouse from gift taxation) the EstateTax will exempt transfers to a surviving non-citizen spouse from estate tax but only if the transfer is to a specialized type of trust known as a Qualified Domestic Trust. All other transfers at death are subject to estate tax.
Taxable transfers at death are taxed using the same progressive tax rates that apply to taxable gifts during lifetime. Even so, lifetime gifts are actually taxed at a substantially lower effective rate than transfers at death!
The next column will compare the taxation of lifetime gifts and transfers at death and look at basic estate planning for the married couple.
*]on Gallo, class of1967, is a parmer in the LosAngeles lawfirm ofGreenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman &Machtinger. A CertifiedSpecialist in Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Law, California BoardofLegal Specialization, Gallo serves as Chair ofthe annual UCLA-CEB Estate Planning Institute, which draws approximately 300 experiencedestate planners to a two-day program eachyear.
For more information on the seminars andplannedgiving contactJoan Tjndallin the Alumni &Development Office (310) 206-1121.
You Are Invited
AS GREAT LAW TEACHER AND SCHOLAR KEN KARST said years ago to a group of entering students, we regard the law school as a community. Those of us who have spent some time at the law school see its truth proved again and again.
This fall, we experienced that sense of community at the informal ceremony honoring Ralph '58 and Shirley Shapiro as we named the beautiful law courtyard for them. More than one of the guests who were not alums of the school said they wished somehow they could be involved, chat it almost seemed that we had created a family here. We think of the law school in that way. Over time, the faculty and staff, students and then alumni continue to draw together and draw others in after them in an everwidening bur somehow still intimate circle. Those of us who have been drawn in know what that means and how it feels. Those of you who are reading this and are puzzled, or who remember but have since drifted away, may question our sentimental thinking.
Perhaps David Price '60 says it best: "When you give to an institution of the quality and prominence of UCLA, strangely enough you end up being the beneficiary in so many ways." Alumni who give back reconnect with the school and in turn this community. Faculty and staff recognize and respond to them simply because they are familiar names and faces. And it is in the contributing that you become part of this extraordinary network of people.
Your contribution can involve coming to one of the law school events, lectures or class reunions. Some of you volunteer to participate in the school's innovative clinical program, working alongside faculty and students, or host dinners for students in your home. Many of you have made gifts to the Law Annual Fund, and a few special donors have made important gifts to the Library Campaign (or to some other part of the law school program), that will have an impact for decades to come. The ways to participate are as various as the people, now of all ages and backgrounds, who make up chis vital community.
The following pages list alumni, faculty and friends, law firms, corporations and foundations who have contributed to the law school. They are an important part of this special place. We extend our deepest thanks to them for their irreplaceable support in troubling economic times. We invite those of you who are not listed on these pages to reconnect with us and continue to widen the circle.
SUSAN WESTERBERG PRAGER Dean
JOAN TYNDALL AssistantDeanforDevelopmentandPublicRelations
Los Angeles County District Attorney Gil Garcetti '61 shares a moment with srudents at the Ralph and Shirley Shapiro Courtyard Dedication in September.
The Library Campaign has seen significant progress since we announced it publicly in last fall's issue of this magazine. The Ahmanson Foundation made a leadership gift of $1 million to support the project just days after the January 17 earthquake. In our grant application to the The Ahmanson Foundation, we emphasized the importance of expanding and renovating the library all in the context of the risk to the law school's accredidation because of the library's inadequacies. The proposal went on to describe the library's pivotal role as an important regional resource.
Including the Cornerstone Gifts, listed on these pages, and the increasing momentum of the Alumni Campaign, the total gifts and pledges in hand now total $8.5 million. Leaving nearly $5.5 million to raise, Dean Prager and the volunteer leadership of the Campaign have determined that roughly $1.5 million more still needs to be raised in the Alumni Campaign effort. Co-Chairs of that effort, Richard J. Burdge, Jr. '79 and Deborah A. David '75 and their committee, have been actively seeking potential gifts from alumni at the $25,000-$99,999 level. Dean Prager and the volunteer leadership foresee the remaining funds coming from major gifts from foundations, corporations, law firms and individuals-alums and other members of the communiry.
Assuming the state portion of the funding is in place by the end of fiscal year '94-'95, the law school plans to break ground in the fall of 1995. It will be important for the Campaign pledges to be in hand by that time. Needless to say, raising the remaining gifts is an enormous challenge for the school and one which will demand much from those involved.
If you are interested in learning more about the Library Campaign, please contact Tobi Inlender or Joan Tyndall in the Development Office at (310) 206-n21. Your participation will be warmly welcomed and deeply appreciated.
Former and current Library Committee members Lida Sparer, Tiffanie Wagner, Nikola Mikulicich '93 and Alex Tamin with model of library addition.
1993-94 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
Major Gifts to the Law School
Includinggifts,pledgesandpledgepayments
Foundations and Corporations
Joseph Drown Foundation
The Ford Foundation
J.W and Ida M. Jameson Foundation
WM. Keck Foundation
Milken Family Foundation
Individuals
Ethel Balter
Skip Brittenham '70
Gertrude D. Chern '66
Hugo D. de Castro '60 and Isabel de Castro
Stanley R. Fimberg '60
Samuel N. Fischer '82 and Leah S. Fisher
Albert B. Glickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Barry and Jane Halpern
Geraldine S. Hemmerling '52
Martin R. Horn '54 and Rita Horn
Marvin Jubas '54 and Fern Jubas
Arjay Miller and Frances Fearing Miller
Roger C. Pettitt '54
Estate of David Simon '55
Kenneth Ziffren '65
Lester Ziffren '52 and Paulette Ziffren and Leonard and Emese Green
Anonymous
Law Firms
Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger
Hufstedler, Kaus & Ettinger
Morrison & Foerster
UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW
DONORS 1993-1994 (Fiscal Year July 1, 1993 to June 30, 1994)
Each year, the Law Annual Fund, with the help of volunteer class representatives, encourages financial support from alumni, friends and faculty, corporations and foundations. The fund helps to ensure a most valuable source ofunrestricted funding which goes directly toward academic programs with rhe greatest need.Giving levels are as follows:
DEAN'S CABINET
$5,000 or more
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
$2,500- $4,999
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
$1,000-$2,499
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
$500-$999
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
$250-$499
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Classes prior to 1991
$125-$ 249
Classes of1991, 1992
$75-$249
Class of1993
$25-$249
SUPPORTERS
$ 10-$ 124
1952
Class Representative:
John C. McCarthy
Tocal Graduates: 35
Number ofDonors: 10 Participation: 28o/o
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Lester Ziffren
JAMES H.CHADBOURN FELLOWS
J. Perr
Edward B. Smith lll
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Arthur Alef
Jean Bauer Fisler
Frederick E. Mueller
Joseph N.Tilem
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Maurice W Bralley
Sidney R. Kuperberg
Martin J. Schnitzer
1953
Class Representative:
Jerome Goldberg
Total Graduates: 40
Number ofDonors: 9 Participation: 22%
JAMES H.CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Jack M.Sattinger
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Victor Michael Eppdrt
Jerome H. Goldberg
Frank H. Mefferd
John F. Parker
Willard M. Reisz
Marrin B. Weinberg
DEAN'S COUNSEL
John U. Gall
Dorothy W.Nelson
1954
Class Representative:
Donald Ruston
Total Graduates: 90
Number ofDonors: 12
Participation: 13%
FOUNDER
Marvin Gross
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Donald A. Ruston
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
John A. Arguelles
Carl Boronkay
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Harvey F. Grant
Eugene V. Kapetan
Jack Levine
Howard W. Rhodes
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Gerald A. Margolis
Jerry Silverman
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Edmond]. Russ
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Marrin R. Horn
1955
Class Representarive:
Allan Ghitrerman
Total Graduates: 74
Number ofDonors: 13
Participation: 17%
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Samuel W Halper
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Joan Dempsey Klein
Richard Schauer
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Raymond F. Moats, Jr.
Graham A. Ritchie
Harold L. Schmidt
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Myrtle Dankers
John R. Engman
Forrest Latiner
David W. Slavin
SUPPORTERS
Gerald A. McCluskey
E. Allen Nebel
Bruce I. Rauch
Class Representative:
Irwin D. Goldring, Chair
Total Graduates: 69
Number ofDonors: 21
Participation: 30%
FOUNDERS
Bernard L. Lewis
Marvin David Rowen
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
William Cohen
Irwin D. Goldring
Milton Louis Miller
Herbert J. Solomon
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard E. Cole
Harold J. Delevie
Lelia H. Jabin
H. GilbertJones
Howard Lehman
Norman D. Rose
Karl M. Samuelian
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Burton M. Bentley
Jerry Edelman
HerschelT. Elkins
Mervin N. Glow
H. George Taylor
SUPPORTERS
Charles Gordon
L. Guy Lemaster
JohnW Miner
Harvey A. Sisskind
1957
Class Representative:
David R. Glickman
Total Graduates: 83
Number ofDonors: 13
Participation: r6%
FOUNDER
Jean Ann Hirschi
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOW
SUPPORTERS
Jules A. Darras, Jr.
GeorgeJ. Franscell
Sanford M. Gage
Henry B. Niles II
Alfred B. Ruskin
1959
Class Representative:
Richard N. Ellis
Total Graduates: 103
Number of Donors: 18
Participation: 17'Yo
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
John H. Roney
David R. Glickman FOUNDERS
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Seymour S. Goldberg
MarvinJabin
Gloria K. Shimer
Irving Shimer
Wells K. Wohlwend
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Richard D. Agay
Sanford R. Demain
EphraimJ. Hirsch
Everett William Maguire
RichardT. Mudge
SUPPORTERS
Daniel F. Calabro
1958
Class Representative:
John G. Wigmore
Total Graduates: 117
Number of Donors: 24
Participation: 20%
FOUNDER
Dennis E. Carpenter
Richard N. Ellis
DavidW Fleming
Milton B. Miller
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Josiah L. Neeper
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Stanley A. Black
Jerry A. Brody
F. P. Crowell
Leon A. Farley
EarlW Kavanau
Eugene Leviton
LeslieW Light
RobertW Vidor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
George Vollmer Hall
Michael Harris
Stanley Rogers
SUPPORTERS
Richard M. Levin
Jason H. Ross
Bernard S. Shapiro
1960
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE Total Graduates: 104
B. D. Fischer Number of Donors: 23
Lewis H. Silverberg Participation: 22%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FOUNDERS
FELLOWS
WarrenJ. Abbott
Robert L. Wilson
John K. Carmack
Gary S. Jacobs
Leonard Kolod
DEAN'S ADVOCATES DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Terrill F. Cox
Edmund D. Edelman
Norman L. Epstein
Hugh H. Evans, Jr.
Mitchell M. Gold
AmilW Roth
Stephen C. Taylor
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Rodney C. Hill
DanielJ. Jaffe
Number of Donors: 25
Participation: 2ro/o
DEAN'S COUNSEL FOUNDERS
CharlesW Cohen
Leland D. Starkey
Emmett A. Tompkins, Jr.
SUPPORTERS
Lyman S. Gronemeyer
RonaldJ. Grueskin
Rodney Moss
Roger M. Settlemire
1961
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
James R. Andrews
Erwin H. Diller
Roger N. Kehew, Jr.
DavidJ. MacKenzie
JeffreyT. Oberman
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Stuart K. Mandel FELLOWS
Todd Russell Reinstein
Richard A. Rosenberg
DEAN'S COUNSEL
RobertJ. Berton
Roselyn S. Brassell
Hiroshi Fujisaki
Class Representatives: Paul L. Migdal
Sheldon G. Bardach
Ralph Cassady
Total Graduates: n6
Number of Donors: 19
Participation: 16%
DEAN'S CABINET
James L. Roper
FOUNDERS
John A. Altschul
Sheldon Bardach
James L. Roper
Herbert E. Schwartz
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ralph Cassady
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
KarlJ. Abert
Richard Earl Barnard
Arthur Brunwasser
Gerald S. Davee
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard H. Berger
Don B. Rolley
DEAN'S COUNSEL
DonaldJ. Boss
Carl V. Moroney
RaymondJ Sinetar
Mel Springer
Seymour Weisberg
SUPPORTERS
Herbert Laskin
Julius M. Reich
1963
Class Representative:
Bernard Katzman
Lawrence Williams
Total Graduates: n4
Number of Donors: 21
Participation: 18%
FOUNDERS
Leroy M. Gire
Marvin Gerald Goldman
John R. Browning
Edward A. Landry
James N. Ries
MelvynJay Ross
Lawrence Teplin
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
RaymondT. Gail
Ralph D. Malmquist
Clarence A. Ridge
Kenneth L. Riding
David Weiss
Richard B. Wolfe
William L.Yerkes
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Michael G. Dave
Leonard A. Hampel
Robert G. Mandell
Everett F. Meiners
David]. O'Keefe
LeslieR. Pinchuk
SUPPORTERS
LeoW Kwan
Dennis A. Page
James Leslie Spitser
Marshall A. Lewis FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Lawrence D. Williams
William A. Ward
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE LAW LIBRARY FUND
Richard D. Aldri
Bernard Katzman
Dean S. Stern
Jeremy V. Wisor
1965
JAMES H. CHADBOURN Class Representative:
FELLOWS
Stanley R. Jones
William D. Gould Total Graduates: 169
RobertT. Hanger Number of Donors: 34
Gordon I.Yanz Participation: 20°/o
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
SUPPORTERS
RichardH. Bein
Jack C. Glanrz
WilliamJ. McCourt
Ira D. Riskin
Jed Scully
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Marrin Cohen FUND
Hugo D. de Castro
Stuart A. Simke
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
HaroldJ. Hertzberg FELLOWS
Ephraim P. Kranitz
Roland R. Speers II
Hunter Wilson, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Arthur Karma
Zad Leavy
Bernard Lemlech
Ronald R. Silverton
Nancy M. Watson
RogerJ. Broderick
Milford A. Bunnage
Bruce H. Newman
Alan R. Watts
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
David A. Ziskrout
1962
Total Graduates: 104
Number of Donors: 21
Participation: 20%
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
David Kelton
Howard S. Block FOUNDERS
DaleV. Cunningham
RobertW D'Angelo
Victor E. Gleason
Edwin M. Osborne
DanielJ. Jaffe
David A. Leveton
Henley L. Saltzburg
Eli Blumenfeld
LeeW Cake
Frances P. Ehrmann
DEAN'S CABINET
William M. Bitting
Stephen M. Fenster FOUNDERS
Ronald M. Kabrins
Bennett I. Kerns
Stephen M. Lachs
Alban I. Niles
Michael E. Schwartz
NormanJ. White
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Wallace R. Davis
Robert H. Goon
Martin Z. N. Katz
Fred Selan
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Saul L. Lessler
Andrea S. Ordin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Alan M. Genelin FELLOWS
Elliott E. Alhadeff
SUPPORTERS
Joel F. Mc Inryre
1964
Class Representatives:
DavidJ. Mac Kenzie
Everett F. Meiners
Total Graduates: n8
Robert A. Broder
George C. Eskin
Louis P. Petrich
Martin Stein
EarlW Warren
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
MilfordW Dahl, Jr.
StephenC. Drummy
Walter G. Howald
Ronald L.Leibow
Lawrence H.Nagler
Jack M.Newman
John C.Nolan
Ezekiel P. Perlo
Carlos Rodriguez
Leonard R.Sager
Harold J.Stanton
Arnold G.York
Barry Russell
Harold E. Shabo
Tobey H. Shaffer
Ronald L. Sievers
Michael G. Steiniger
Daniel J.Tobin
SUPPORTERS
Donald H.Glaser
DEAN'S COUNSEL CLINICAL SUPPORT
Sidney F. Croft FUND
Jerome Diamond
William J.Elfving
Marshall S.Freedman
Gary J.Dunlap
1967
Paul S.Almond
DEAN'S COUNSEL "Scholarships allowstudents
Abraham W. Baily to pursue work in a broad
Lawrence H.Fein
Mark A.Ivener range ofsettings. Because
Lawrence H.Jacobson
W. Michael Johnson ofmyscholarship, Iwas
Richard N.Kipper able toworkon issues
Arthur L.Linson
Sheldon E.Miller affecting under-represented
Edwin C.Schreiber
Rudolph C.Shepard communitieslastsummer.
Hortense Kleitman Snower
Edward Van Gelder Not only did my
Jay C.Weirzler
Edward C.Kupers scholarship enable me to
Robert H.Nida Class Representatives: SUPPORTERS
Marrin Wolman
Michael D.Marcus
Michael Waldorf
SUPPORTERS Total Graduates: 252
David Bloomgarden Number ofDonors: 65
Richard L.Borgen Participation: 026%
Thomas M.De Forest
H.Lee Mc Guire, Jr. FOUNDERS
1966
Harland W.Braun
Cary D.Cooper
John Gardner Hayes
Class Representative: Richard A.Lane
Stanley M.Price
Martin F. Majestic
Total Graduates: 201 Evan R.Medow
Number ofDonors: 42 Louis M. Meisinger
Donald R.Allen work onissuesthatIfound
Alan G.Barry
Peter W.Blackman interesting, but it also
Paul M.Migdal helped me to serve
Bruce M.Polichar
Richard R.Stenron communities that truly
Grover P. Walker
Robert A.Weeks need legalservices. JJ
John M.Wilcox
1968
Class Representative:
LINDA SANCHEZ, RECIPIENT
Paul J. Glass OF THE IRELL & MANELLA PRO Participation: 21%
FOUNDERS
Robert B.Burke
Gertrude D.Chern
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
Jeffrey T. Miller
Total Graduates: 180 BONO SCHOLARSHIP
Elliott D.Olson Number ofDonors: 24
Franklin Tom
Michael Waldorf
Robert}.Wynne
Mel Zionrz
Participation: 13%
FOUNDERS
J.Michael Crowe
Allan S.Morton FELLOWS
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Stephen W.Bershad Gilbert I.Garcetti
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
Joseph Gregory Gorman David M.Horwitz FELLOW
Irving H.Greines
Dennis D.Hill
Bruce H.Spector
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
DEAN'S ADVOCATES FELLOWS
Stephen A.Behrendt
Roger L.Cossack
Stephen D.Drushall
Monte C.Fligsten
Wilford D.Godbold, Jr.
Robert}.Higa
Joseph Horacek II
David A.Horowitz
Arthur Samuel Levine
David I.Riemer
Tobey H.Shaffer
Joseph L.Shalam
Ronald I.Silverman
Robert J.Sullivan
Daniel G.Zerfas
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Thomas E.Andrews
Kenneth I.Clayman
Donald L.Everhart
Stephen B.Fainsbert
Michael K.Inglis
James H.Karp
Frederick Kuperberg
Arnold T. Lester
Susan W.Liebeler
Howard E.Lowe
Stephen K.Miller
William G.Morrissey
Stephen F. Peters
Stuart J.Rosen
Harland W.Braun
David R.Carmichael
Roger J.Gunson
Richard A.Lane
Stanley G.Parry
John C. Spence III
Gary D.Stabile
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Arthur Avazian
Louis J.Bachlede
Michael D.Berk
Ralph L.Block
Kenneth R.Blumer
Roger Jon Diamond
Leslie C.Falick
Lynard C.Hinojosa
Elizabeth A.Famy
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Audrey S.Ezratry
Robert F. Harris
Stephen C.Jones
Prentice L.O'Leary
Joel R.Ohlgren
Gordon J.Rose
Paul M.Schwarrz
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Earle G.Goodman
Lowell E.Graham
Jerold A.Krieger
James B. Merzon
Ronald E.Neuhoff
Robert B.Treister
Sanford R.Wilk Summer program students
Richard G. Wise get their introduction to Law
Leonard D.Jacoby SUPPORTERS School in August.
Kenneth A.Kleinberg
Jeffrey L. Linden
Michael D.Marcus
Stefan M.Mason
Milton J.Nenney
Steven Z.Perren
Jason C.Reed
David B.Johnson
Steven N.Karznelson
Charles J.Post Ill
Robert E.Shannon
Ronald P. Slates
FACULTY SUPPORT
Jon A.Shoenberger FUND
Michael S.Ullman
Frank A.Ursomarso
Thomas E.Warrin
Richard C.Devirian
"With the extra assistance inmy pocket, I was ableto concentrate my efforts on mystudies. Inthat respect, the scholarship was really timely. However, the same weekI receivedthe scholarship, the donor was threatened inthe midst of theMalibufires. Do not forgetyour donors-they are humantoo. "
MANUEL G. GONZALES, III
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
RECIPIENT, NAME WITHHELD
Class Representative:
Michael A.K.Dan
Total Graduates: 184
Number ofDonors: 42
Participation: 23%
FOUNDERS
Keenan Behrle
Elwood G.Lui
Michael T. Masin
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Keenan Behrle
Jerald Friedman
Robert L. Kahan
Arthur G.Spence
Diana L.Walker
JAMESH.CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Roger W. Pearson
Lionel S.Sobel
Richard B.Wolf
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Sara L.Adler
David A.Buxbaum
William Finestone
Larry N.Prager
Jan C.Gabrielson
Michael L.Glickfeld
RaymondH.Goldstone
Rowan K. Klein
KennethH.Meyer
Richard A. Neumeyer
Charles G.Rigg
David P. Rudich
James F. Stiven
DEAN'S COUNSEL
James S.Bianchi
Stephen M.Burgin
Richard A.Curtis
Kenneth Drexler
David B.Epstein
Norman N.Piette
Jeffrey C.Freedman
Robert E.Glasser
John A.Mc Dermott II
D.Marshall Nelson
William M.Pate, Jr.
TobyJ.Rothschild
Michael T. Shannon
Gary T. Walker
SUPPORTERS
TerryJ.Amdur
Allan I.Kleinkopf
Tom A.Robinson
John W Stephens
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Carol L.Engelhardt
1970
Class Representative:
Perry E. Maguire
Marc J. Poster
Total Graduates: 179
Number ofDonors: 31 Participation: 17'Yo
FOUNDERS
Scott J.Spolin
Richard Stone
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Richard A.Corleto
JAMESH.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
RichardA.Hutton
Jay W.Jeffcoat
William]. Kelleher
Brian C.Leck
Marc J.Poster
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Linn K.Coombs
Laura L.Glickman
Lawrence WHait
Linda S.Hume
Edwin J.Lucks
Perry E.Maguire
William K.Mc Callister, Jr.
Robert J.Mc Kay
Robert Y.Nakagawa
Terry L.Tyler
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Paul E.Bell
Michael M.Duffey
Ellen B.Friedman
Roger S.Gross
Steven R.Hubert
John B.Jakie
Myron L.Jenkins
Herbert Jay Klein
Robert S.Michaels
Wallace L.Walker
SUPPORTERS
GeorgeW Echan, Jr.
Allan J.Goodman
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Mark A.Levin
1971
Class Representatives:
David J.Burton
RichardHavel
Total Graduates: 268
Number ofDonors: 58
Participation: 22%
FOUNDERS
Rinaldo S.Brutoco
Richard D.Fybel
Thomas P. Lambert
Barry Tyerman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Curtis A.Cole
Richard W.Havel
David S. Karton
James Martin Prager
Susan WesterbergPrager
JAMESH.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
RobertJ.Adelman
Steven A.Friedman
Paul S.Meyer
Richard D.Norton
Michael A.Ozurovich
James J.Pagliuso
Richard T.Peters
Kent L.Richland
Bobby L.Smith
Earl M.Weitzman
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Barry E.Axelrod
Douglas A.Bagby
Jeffrey A.Berman
David J.Burton
Allan B.Cutrow
Judy Fonda
Ronald R. Gastelum
Christopher Gruys
Ronald C.Lawf
Leonard B.Levine
Robert P. Mandel
Paul Marcus
John D.Mc Conaghy
Ann Parade
Michael F. Yamamoto
Stuart D.Zimring
Douglas B.Zubrin
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Richard L. Ackerman
Susan E.Amerson
Warren N. Brakensiek
Tad R. Callister
Percy Duran III
Gary L.Gilbert
Stanley M.Gordon
George D. Kew
Martin S.Lipton
Robert D.Mosher
Ricardo F. Munoz
Paul C.Nyquist
GaryJ.Siener
AllenH.Sochel
Eric R.Young
SUPPORTERS
Robert G.Blank
Mary Jo Curwen
Millard M.Frohock, Jr.
Jonathan C.Gordon
Thomas E.Horn
Thomas B. Karp·
Thomas M.Scheerer
George L. Schraer
Michael S.Sideman
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Judith K. Bush
1972
Class Representatives:
Curtis O. Barnes
Howard M. Knee
Cary B.Lerman
Total Graduates: 277 Number ofDonors: 55
Participation: 20%
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Joseph K. Kornwasser
FOUNDERS
Richard A.Blacker
Philip D.Dapeer
Moises Reynoso Luna
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE 1973
Roy S. Glickman
Howard Krepack
John P. Meck
Louis R. Miller Ill
Mark A. Resnik
Marc M: Seltzer
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Curtis O. Barnes
Cary B. Lerman
Gordon R. McDowell, Jr.
Forrest S. Masten
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Ronald M. Bayer
Bob S. Bowers, Jr.
W. Daniel Clinton
Peter Q. Ezzell
Gregory L. James
Gary L. Kaseff
James Kashian
Andrew E. Katz
Howard M. Knee
Bruce M. Kramer
Stanley E. Maron
Robert M. Popeney
Albert Z. Praw
Charles W. Schneider
Donald K. Steffen
Thomas C. Taylor, Jr.
RichardT. Vogel, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
MichaelJ. Abbott
Ernest P. Burger
Kenneth B. Dusick
Mitchell A. Ebright
Alan R. Jampol
Stephen C. K.lausen
Linda B. Riback
Emilio L. Saenz
Griffith D. Thomas
Stephen D. Yslas
SUPPORTERS
Peter A. Barbosa
James E. Brown
Philip M. Cohen
BruceJ. Croushore
Timi A. Hallem
Ivan Lawner
Dora R. Levin
Rodney B. Lewis
KennethC. Salzberg
JeromeJ. Schlichter
William D. Smith
JamesR. Tucker
CLINICAL SUPPORT
FUND
Richard. W. Abbey
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
WilliamJ. Winslade
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Class Representative:
Bernard R. Gans
Total Graduates: 298
Number of Donors: 65
Participation: 22%
DEN'S PARTNERSHIP
Larry A. Kay
Guy R. Lochhead J. Thomas Oldham
Lawrence P. Mortorff
Joyce A. Orliss
TheresaJ. Player
Alan P. Thomas
William H. Travis
Bruce R. Wallace
Andrew W. Robertson
S. Alan Rosen
Donald P. Silver
David H. White
Marc]. Winthrop
CLINICAL SUPPORT
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
RichardV Sandler FUND
FOUNDERS
Donald P. Baker
Mario Camara
Bernard R. Gans
Nathalie Hoffman
Robert F. Marshall
Sheldon W. Presser
Jeffrey E. Sultan
Michael D. Marans
Michael D. Rodgriguez
1974
Class Representative:
Marc Epstein
Total Graduates: 295
Number of Donors: 55
Participation: 19%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FOUNDERS
FELLOWS
Marcin E. Auerbach
Randolph M. Blocky
Abraham D. Lev
RonaldW. Rouse
L. KirkWallace
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Dennis S. Beck
Timothy R. Born
DavidT. Di Biase
Michael L. Dillard
Kenneth P. Eggers
R. Roy Finkle
Peter M. Fonda
Jimmy L. Gutierrez
Douglas B. Haynes
Charles I. Henderson
Joe W. Hilberman
RonaldJ. Jacobson
Randall Howe Kennon
Stacy D. Shartin
Kathryne A. Sro1
MichaelJ. Srrumwasser
Jonathan K. VanPatten
Gary A. Wexler
TimothyJ. Windle
Peter Andrew Wissner
Robert A. Wooten, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Henry S. Barbosa
Robert Berke
Ralph W. Boroff
Gail F. Brod
Joshua Dressler
Natan Epstein
David Hayes Gardner
Walter F. Kowalick
StevenEdwardLevy
RobertV Madden
Laura K. McAvoy
R. Thomas Peterson
PatrickC. Quinlivan
Kenneth Ross
E. Nathan Schilt
Carl M. Shusterman
William G. Knight
Richard D. Williams
SUPPORTERS
James A. Baker
Diane L. Becker
Joel M. Buder
Pauline M. Calkin
William Harold Borthwick
Bruce Clemens
Jack Fried
Ethan B. Lipsig
TedObrzut
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Buddy H. Epstein
Andrew A. Kurz
Richard G. Parker
Marshal] M. Taylor
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Allan B. Cooper
Daniel C. Minteer
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Michael D. Abzug
Robert D. Bass
Paul L. Brindze
Peter C. Bronson
Silvia M. Diaz
Marc Epstein
James L. Poorman
Robert F. Hirano
SusanJ. Holliday
JamesV Jordan
Evan S. Lipstein
Elizabeth A. Strauss
J. Anthony Viccal
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Charles L. McKain
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Norman A. Pedersen
ScottT. Pratt
LelandJ. Reicher
JuliaJ. Rider
David Simon
Virginia E. Sloan
Emily A. Stevens
Thomas C. Tankersley
Seth H. Tievsky
Mark L. Waldman
Glenn F. Wasserman
Robert M. Zeller
Charles Margines DEAN'S COUNSEL
Linda D. Anisman
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Frank G. Houdek
Victor B. Kenton
David G. Vander Wall
1975
David Arredondo
Frederick B. Benson
Richard Besone
Victoria L. Block
Richard S. Conn
Bruce L. Dusenberry
Lucy T. Eisenberg
Class Representatives: Roberta Lee Franklin
Brenda Powers Barnes A. Thomas Golden
Moses Lebovits
Julie J. Rider
Harvey Shapiro
Total Graduates: 307
Number of Donors: 81
Participation: 26%
DEAN'S CABINET
John G. Branca
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Alex Kozinski
FOUNDERS
James D. C. Barrall
PamelaJ. Brockie
Jon F. Chait
Donald S. Eisenberg
Karen D. Mack
Wayne A. Schrader
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Edward C. Clifton
Deborah A. David
SusanT. House
Evelyn Balderman Hurt
Robert L. Kaufman
Robert M. Kunstadt
Allen L. Michel
Gary Quincy Michel
Barbara M. Motz
MarshaJ. Moucrie
Irwin B. Rothschild Ill
Barry E. Shanley
David R. Smith
Marc I. Steinberg
Lawrence Howard Thompson
Juan Ulloa
RobertJ. Waters
Mark S. Windisch
SUPPORTERS
Jeffrey D. Gale
Brian E. Keefe
Calvin Lau
Thomas G. Ryan
Frank C. Woodruff
Sandra Kass Gilman CLINICAL SUPPORT
Timothy Lappen FUND
Moses Lebovits
Charles Read
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Michael C. Baum
Joel B. Castro
William W. Sampson
William L. Bardes FELLOWS LAW LIBRARY FUND
Paul D. Beechen
Kenneth A. Black
Alan M. Mirman
William F. Rogers
Norman C. Olsen
Lawrence Borys PUBLIC INTEREST
Susan B. Carnahan
Ignatius S. Cota
R. StephenDoan
Gary A. Feess
Charles A. Goldwasser
Ezequiel Gutierrez, Jr.
Antonia Hernandez
Barbara A. Hindin
Jonathan M. Klar
Nancy A. Saggese
Robert F. Tyler, Jr.
Jasper Williams, Jr.
William L. Winslow
Richard P. Yang
SUPPORTERS
Michael R. Daymude
Scott E. Grimes
Phillip G. Nichols
DEAN'S ADVOCATES SUPPORT FUND
James R. Brueggeman
EdmundW. Clarke
Thomas W Cohen
Robert D. Cunningham
Paul L. Gale
M. Glenn Gilbert
John B. Galper
Robert Alan Green
AndrewJ. Guilford
John W. Hagey
MichaelJ. Harrington
Steven Hecht
Samuel D. Ingham Ill
Margaret Levy
Romulo I. Lopez
Gary W. Maeder
Robert D. Mc Guiness
Gilberto A. Limon
1976
Class Representatives:
William Claster
Richard K. Diamond
Total Graduates: 292
Number of Donors: 66
Participation: 23%
FOUNDERS
Michael I. Adler
Frederic I. Bernstein
MaribethArmstrong
Borthwick
Jenny E. Fisher
David R.Ginsburg 1977
Victor Berkey Moheno
Mark A.Neubauer
Richard Schneider
Philip J.Wolman
Anita Yallowitz Wolman
Class Representatives:
Gregory E.Breen
Kathleen Drummy
Total Graduates: 314
Number of Donors: 71
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE Participation: 23%
Patricia E.Anderson
PeterT. Paterno FOUNDERS
Judith W Wegner
Dorothy Wolpert
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
William D.Claster
David Clarence Doyle
Marguerite S.Rosenfeld
Caryl Bartelman Welborn
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard Avila
Lourdes Gillespie
Baird
Barbara A.Blanco
Linda C.Diamond
Richard K.Diamond
Kenneth L.Friedman
Debra P. Granfield
Paul Gordon Hoffman
Joel A.Jacobs
Richard J.Katz
Valerie J.Merritt
Marc R.Stein
Carolyn Hopkins Carlburg
Howard E.King
Wendy Munger
Richard R.Purtich
William F. Sullivan
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Suzanne Harris
SUPPORTERS
Robert M.Angel
Paul A.Babwin
Peter B.Carlisle
Charles E.Curtis
David W.Evans
Marcin A.Flannes
Lana Freistat Melman
Herbert D.Meyers
Donald V.Morano
Michael H.Pinchak
Charles F. Robinson
Frederick B.Sainick
KimT. Schoknecht
Edward I.Silverman
Carolyn L.Small
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Carl C.Robinson FUND
Scott A.Cardiner
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Alan G.Benjamin
Rochelle Browne
Karin Greenfield-Sanders FOUNDERS
Lorna C.Greenhill
Robert J.Grossman
Kenneth L.Guernsey
Susan J.Hazard
John P.Howitt
Dean J.Kitchens
Linda M.Lasley
Marlo Rene Laws
Karen Magid
John G.Mayer
Henrietta E.Mosley
Jean Pierre Nogues
Michael A.Robbins
Marietta S.Robinson
Harrison D.Taylor
AnneT. Thomas
Timothy Joseph White
Gwen H.Whitson
Scott A.Cardiner
Kenneth J.Fransen LAW LIBRARY FUND
Lawrence J.Poteet
Charles N.Shephard
Gail M. Singer
Scott A.Cardiner
Cynthia H.Rushing
John W Stephens fUBLIC INTEREST
William F. Sullivan
Marcy J.K.Tiffany
Jonathan R.Yarowsky
Scott Z.Zimmermann
SUPPORT FUND
Robin E.Schneider
Roland G.Wrinkle 1978
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Francis J.Baum
DEN'S COUNSEL
Bruce A.Barsook
Alice Cohen Bisno
Gregory C.Brown
Elizabeth E.Bruton
ClydeT. Doheney
Gregory C.Fant
Alpha Hernandez
Michael A.Hood
Richard H.Levin
Cheryl A.Lurz
Jon R.Mower
Duane C.Musfelt
Robert A.Pallemon
Gordon M.Park
Anne B.Roberts
Michael A.Rubel
Carmen M.Rugnetta
Harmon J.Sieff
Bruce C.Stuart
Bonnie E. Thomson
Eugene Tillman
Lawrence C.Weeks
SUPPORTERS
Robert M.Barge
TeresaT. Birchard
Daniel A.Dobrin
Thomas S.Epstein
Carolyn J.Gill
Frances W. Kandel
Kenneth M.Kumor
Adrienne E.Larkin
Beth L.Levine
Marc C.Mc Guire
Richard Opper
James D.Oswalt
Ann Poppe
Richard J.Burdge, Jr.
Gail Ellen Lees
Rochelle M.Lindsey
Gary Scott Stiffelman
Kim Mclane Wardlaw
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Joel M.Grossman
Timm A.Miller
Andrew Stuart Pauly
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Aviva M.Bergman
Mark R.Burrill
Roberta S.Kass
Jennifer L.Machlin
James A.Melman
DEAN'S COUNSEL DEAN'S ADVOCATES
David J.Garibaldi III
Heather S.Georgakis
Daniel C.Hedigan
Alex M.Johnson
William A.Johnson
Jeffrey G. Kelly
Ann L.Kough
Linda Kay Lefkowitz
Douglas Mc Carthy
Edmundo J.Moran
Kent Y. Mouton
Janet S.Murillo
Lisa Greer Quateman
Class Representative: Maurice L.Russell
Robert N.Block
Andrea H.Bricker
RonnieJ.Dashev
Gary A.David
Frances E.Lossing
Paul S.Rutter
Total Graduates: 303
Matthew H.Saver
Deborah C.Saxe
David I.Schulman
MartinT. Tachiki
Kathleen Houston Drummy Number of Donors: 78 Ralph Zamudio III
Edwin F. Feo
Marcia A.Forsyth
Gregg M.Gibbons
Will D.Johnson
David P. Leonard
TomarT. Mason
Mark D.Michael
John E.Pope
Neil J.Rubenstein
Mark W.Snauffer
William K.Wyatt
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Dave B.Bowker
Bruce E.Cooperman
Amey E.Desoto
Lawrence J.Dreyfuss
Dhiya El-Saden
Ronald W.Hillberg
Deborah L.Kranze
Martin C.Kristal
Joseph L.Kruch
Antonia E.Marcin
Peter W. Mason
Carol L.Matsunaga
Gregory F. Millikan
Arturo J.Morales
Daniel H.Slate
Marsh Tanner
Cynthia Wicker
Anonymous
Participation: 26%
FOUNDERS
Robert N.Block
Melanie Cook
Kenneth D'Alessandro
David F. Faustman
Christopher Kim
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Frances E.Lossing
JAMES H.CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
SUPPORTERS
Steven H.Burkow
Barringron A.S.Daltrey
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.
William F. Greenhalgh
Karen Holliday-Hancock
Boyd D.Hudson
Mark A.Kuller
Linda J.Lacey
Robert H.Leibman
Sarah E.Schnitger
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Nancy R.Alpert FUND
Michael D.Briggs
Byron L.Dare
Sandra L.Buttitta
Christopher J.Martin LAW LIBRARY FUND
M.Brian Mc Mahon
Helen Whiteford Melman
J.Michael Norris
Barbara W. Ravitz
Paul S.Rutter
KathyT. Wales
Arlene Falk Withers
Michael M.Kam
Anne B.Thacher
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Carolyn Y. Morgan
DEAN'S AVOCATES 1979
James R.Asperger
Judith Bailey
Carol A.Chase
Hilary Huebsch Cohen
David R.Deutsch
Michael D.Dozier
Lair C.Franklin
Wayne H.Gilbert
Miriam J.Colbert
Cla.ss Representatives:
Richard).Burdge, Jr.
Roberta Ka.ss
Robin B. Lappen
Total Graduates: 273
Number of Donors: 50
Participation: 18%
Michael Barclay
Shirley E.Curfman
Cathy E.Deroy
D.Barclay Edmundson
Karin S.Feldman
Linda Gach Ray
Marlene D.Goodfried
Spencer L.Karpf
Robin B.Lappen
Roger E.Laurzenhiser
Sandra Weishart Marinelli
Arthur F. Radke
Bernard M.Resser
Charles 0.Strathman, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Allan E.Ceran
John P. Eleazarian
James D.Friedman
Joel D.Kuperberg
Sandra L.Lackey
Lydia S.Levin
Thomas H.Mabie
Kathryn J.Nelson
Michael E.Ripley
Michael W. Schoenleber
Karen L.Tachiki
SUPPORTERS
Harmon Allan Brown
Bailey R.De longh
Albert S.Glenn
Philip W. Green
Steven A.Micheli
Gilbert Rodriguez, Jr.
James G.Scadden
Mark S.Shipow
Shelley Steuer
Martha A.Torgow
Henry S.Weinstock
Elizabeth N.Winthrop
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Ralph D.Fertig
1980
Class Representatives:
Laurence M. Berman
Lonnie C. Blanchard Ill
John Cochrane
Total Graduates: 301
Number of Donors: 78
Participation: 26%
FOUNDERS
Laurence M. Berman
Lonnie C. Blanchard III
RobertJames Finger
Ruth E. Fisher
Feris M. Greenberger
Mary Flynn Palley
John G. Petrovich
Leslie Brooks Rosen
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Renee L. Campbell
Leslie A. Cohen
Robert D. Goldschein
Debra Hodgson
Harold C. Hofer
Nancy L. Mc Taggart
Glen D. Moffett
Craig G. Riemer
Diane Senske Robertson
Sylvia L. Rodriguez
Giacomo A. Russo
Carol R. Schultz
Frances G. Smith
Juana V. Webman
Carol Cavan Williams
JAMES H. CHADBOURN CLINICAL SUPPORT FELLOWS FUND
Ann O'Neil Baskins
Paul A. Franz
Jacob N. Segura
Darrel J. Hieber FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Kathleen Marston Hogaboom
F. Sigmund Luther
Lucina L. Moses
Paul A. Schmidhauser
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
RobertWBarnes
Andrew P. Bernstein
Neila R. Bernstein
Daniel E. O'Brien
1981
Class Representatives:
Robert B. Orgel
John F. Runkel, Jr.
Total Graduates: 332
Number of Donors: 76
Barbara Biles Participation: 23%
Thomas E. Gibbs
Herbert B. Graham FOUNDERS
Laurence L. Hummer
MarcWJune
Mark D. Kremer
William A. Lappen
Harriet B. Leva
Laurie L. Levenson
Ida L. Levine
Bernard J. Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
Eric J. Emanuel
James!. Ham
John F. Runkel, Jr.
Marilee C. Unruh
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Karen Green Rosin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Monica E. Olson FELLOWS
David S. Porter
DEAN'S COUNSEL
W. Jeffrey Austin
Anne S. Berkovitz
Amador L. Corona
William D. De Grandis
Alan H. Finkel
Richard C. Fridell
Daniel G. Gold
Gordon A. Goldsmith
Joshua L. Green
Mark S. Green
Rhonda J. Heth
ThomasWKellerman
Kathleen Koch-Weser
KathleenT. Lax
Erik R. Lied
Linda A. Netzer
Cheri O'Laverty
Herman R. Quiroga
Samuel D. Reyes
Stephen L. Schirle
StevenJ. Untiedt
Gail Anderson Windisch
SUPPORTERS
Roy W. Adams, Jr.
Jane Aoyama-Martin
Amy L. Applebaum
C. E. Blake
Dennis S. Diaz
RobertJames Finger
Anita R. Gershman
Wilbur Gin
Kenneth S. Bayer
Jonathan M. Hoff
Martha B. Hogan
Robert B. Orgel
Rensselaer J. Smith IV
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
David B. Babbe
Douglas B. Canfield
Walter R. Dal
Gregory S. Drake
Mark E. Ferrario
Jean G. Friedman
James A. Gorton
Leonard F. Gumlia
Chris S. Jacobsen
RichardWKaiser
Karen L. Matteson
Marjorie E. Mikels
Bruce]. Miller
Leslie R. Mitchner
Gerald S. Papazian
StephenJ. Rawson
Martin E. Rosen
William C. Staley
Steven M. Strauss
Charles R. Tremper
Peter C. Walsh
Hoyt H. Zia
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Jan Almquist
Mark J. Barnes
David F. Brown
Angela J. Campbell
Regina I. Covitt
JohnWCrittenden
Leianne S. Crittenden
Julie A. Davies
Gregory S. Feis
Barry L. Goldner
Paul A. Graziano
Jonathan F. Light
Brent R. Liljestrom
M�rgaret Mack Mason
Joan A. Mc Carthy
Susan Fowler Mc Nally
Julie S. Mebane
Jesus E. Quinonez
David B. Rechtman
Lin B. Saberski
Scott B. Samsky
Jodi Siegner
Kenneth J. Stipanov
William L. Twomey
Judith A. Uherbelau
Rita B. Weinstock
Stanley D. Williams
Barbara H. Yonemura
SUPPORTERS
SusanJ. Bell
Jeffrey M. Berke
Judith Kessen Crawford
Patricia H. Feiner
Phyllis B. Johnston
Linda A. Kirios
William]. Kirsch
Edwin I. Lasman
David M. Meyer
Deborah Mitzenmacher
Karen E. Perper
Craig P. Sapin
Lynn Y. Wakatsuki
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Jenny S. Choo
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Maita D. Prout
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Samuel Israel
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Reed M. Scuria
1982
Class Representative:
David E. Van Iderstine, Jr.
Total Graduates: 330
Number of Donors: 77
Participation: 23%
FOUNDERS
Susan L. Claman
Steven C. Glickman
Richard J. Gruber
Donna Hecht
Gregory S. Paik
Adam Cavazos Vallejo
Jay F. Palchikoff
David E. Van Iderstine, Jr.
Reed S. Waddell
"Thefirst year at law school is inevitably stressful, but when Ireceivedmy scholarship, some ofthat stress was relievedandI was abletofocus more of my energy on class work. "
TIFFANY WALLOCK
LEE B. WENZEL MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT
Students at the Pro Bono and Public Interest Law Career panel and reception this fall.
''Receiving the alumni scholarship was particularlyvaluable to me for two reasons. First, it lightened significantly my financial burdenfor this year. More importantly, however, it mademefeel like a part ofthe UCLA family, and helped me to understand the importance ofgivingback to the UCLA community onceI become an alumna. "
TSAN MERRITT-POREE, RECIPIENT OF THE GAIL MCKINNEY WHEAT SCHOLARSHIP
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Samuel N. Fischer
Karin T. Krogius
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Roberto G. Brutoco
Leah S. Fischer
Gerald A. Klein
Joan M. LeSage
Mark A. Samuels
Steven E. Sletten
Dirk W. Van De Bunt
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Henry Ben-Zvi
Kent S. Beyer
Patrick J. Cain
Patrick W. Dennis
Bryan D. Hull
Debra L. Kegel
Martin V. Lee
Cynthia L. Leppert
Elizabeth D. Mann
John P. Mc Elroy
Carolyn Richardson Owens
Dennis L. Perez
Nancy B. Samuels
Eric B. Siegel
Jeffrey H. Silberman
Harold A. Tieger
Ilene Evans Trabolsi
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Lawrence P. Best
Marc H. Corman
John M. Dab
Mark]. Fucile
Rodrigo A. Guerra, Jr.
Kathryn Hendley
James L. Jerue
Ira D. Kharasch
Charles K. Knight
Daniel M. Mayeda
Lou Ann McLean
Trudi L. Michel
Jerald L. Mosley
Michelle Patterson
Jack H. Rubens
David P. Schack
Joseph A. Scherer
Jean E. Scott
Philip Starr
William B. Tully, Jr.
David Van Iderstine
William M. Young
Irma K. Zahid
SUPPORTERS
Donald I. Berger
Thomas A. Bliss
Jerrold B. Carrington
Joan M. Clover
Jay J. Elliott
Laura S. Landesman
David P. Lee
Kenneth A. Martyn
Scott M. Mendler
Lee Ann Meyer
Jeffrey P. Molever
Larry P. Nathenson
Leslye E. Orloff
Elizabeth A. Pollock
Darien E. Pope
Dennis A. Ragen
David A. Solicare
Ellen Gorman Wacker
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Vinay Sharma
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Vinay Sharma
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Harry J. LeVine
Class Representatives:
Lori HuffDillman
Michael A. Helfant
Total Graduates: 347
Number ofDonors: 78
Participation: 22%
FOUNDER
H. Deane Wong
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Robert B. Reeves
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Timothy T. Coates
Kirk D. Dillman
Lori HuffDillman
James H. Eisenberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Renee P. Brook
Patrick J. Evans
Scorr A. Forsyth
Roger L. Funk
Dean M. Gloster
R. Todd Greenwalt
June G. Guinan
Michael A. Helfant
David]. Hirsch
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Jocelyn Larkin
In-Young Lee
Daniel J. Mc Loon
David S. Reisman
Edward W. Zaelke
Terrilyn B. Zaelke
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Ronald A. Baker
Randall P. Beighle
Angela L. Brock-Kyle
Justin E. Budare
Marion G. Crain
Andrew B. Downs
David E. Durchforr
Linda K. Ensbury
Michael T. Eskey
Clifford H. Fonstein
Don E. Gibson
Kerry Gottlieb
Bruce J. Graham
Kellye S. Hoffman
Cynthia Hollos
Deborah L. Hurley
Debra Lynn James
Frank R. Jazzo
Roger L. Kohn
Eric G. Lardiere
Wesley M. Lowe
Paul Maestas
Anne E. Morea
Marilyn S. Pecsok
Nora A. Quinn
Joann Ralphs
Maria C. Ramirez
Mark G. Schroeder
Susan Silver
Robert F. Torres
Louie L. Vega
Lise Naomi Wilson
Michael G. Wiemer
Michael Yaffa
SUPPORTERS
Kristine Blackwood
Allen Blumenthal
Pamela C. Bromberg
Andrew W. Caine
Gregory L. Castle
Jeffrey M. Etringer
James G. Foster
Alan E. Garfield
Everett C. Hoffman
Larry S. Lee
Monique C. Lillard
Jeffrey D. Nagler
R. Wayne Olmsted
Robert K. Olsen
Byongchae Pak
Nancy B. Reimann
Robert B. Rocklin
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Thomas G. Adams
Stephanie L. Choy
Deborah Y. Monticue
Tina L. Tamai
Carl R. Waldman
Class Representatives:
Kenneth B. Hertz
Total Graduates: 300
Number ofDonors: 63
Participation: 21%
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Timothy C. Shepard
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
David I. Gindler
Kenneth B. Hertz
Stuart M. Rosenthal
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Julia L. Birkel
Barbra Shield Davis
Robert B. Ericson
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Monika P. Lee
Linda W Mazur
Teresa L. Remillard
Peter C. Thomas
DEAN'S COUNSEL
John S. Bank
Alan S. Berman
Todd W. Bonder
Pamela G. Chin
John A. Crose, Jr.
Jeffrey A. Dinkin
MichaelJ. Gibson
Elizabeth Alexander King
Peter M. Kunstler
Ann C. McMillan
Myron D. Moye
Timothy L. Salazar
James M. Steinberger
Lee Strauss
Patricia J. Titus
Bruce D. Tobey
Steven Alan Troyer
David C. Tseng
Jo Ann Victor
SUPPORTERS
Bennett A. Bigman
Kent Brockelman
Kathleen Y. Coleman
Michael D. Compean
Connie Conces
Kathleen Forbath Esfahani
Susan L. Focmaker
Brad I. Golstein
Philip S. Gutierrez
Guy N. Halgren
LauraW. Halgren
Paul T. Hayden
Elizabeth M. Matthias
Cynthia E. Maxwell
Pamela A. Mohr
Daniel A. Olivas
Jay A. Polscein
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt
Betsy R. Rosenthal
Nancy Ware Shepard
Jean E. Tanaka
Edward C. Thoics
Alison M. Turner
Sura L. Weiss
John D. Windhausen, Jr.
John R. Wylie
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Gregg A. Farley
Craig A. Goldman
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Bruce C. Catania
John P. Fernandez
Dolly M. Gee
1985
Class Representatives:
Marc E. Bercoon 1986
Sheri A. Bluebond
Susan L. Coskey
Donald L. Feder
Pamela K. Hagenah
Daniel Mansueto
Stephen H. Mazur
David J. Meyer
Alan S. Polley
Susan E. Sakai
Elizabeth Ash Strode
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Brian J. Appel
Thomas M. Bondy
Rebecca A. Campbell
David G. Coulter
Bradley J. Craig
Lawrence P. Ebiner
James R. Eskilson
Lynne Susan Goldstein
David J. Gudino
Lester Jacobowitz
Duncan D. Lee
Mark Lincoln Lindon
Michael S. Loeffier
Diana L. Maranon
David C. Sampson
Alan J. Siff
Scott A. Solomon
Hilary M. Stone
Judy Umeda
Corbin A. Weiss
SUPPORTERS
Ruben Baeza, Jr.
Meredith L. Caliman
Heather L. Coughlan
Jonathan R. Davis
Paul S. Delson
Geoffrey A. Drucker
Melanie M. Fairchild
Stephan J. Francks
Barbara J. Katz
Louise D. Lillard
Sherri Lira
Nancy E. Loncke
Veronica P. Longstreth
P. D. Perez
George Ann Rice
Barbara A. Ringness
Anne Beytin Torkington
Arnold H. Wuhrman
Michael M. Youngdahl
Steven H. Zidell
Anonymous
Brian Appel CLINICAL SUPPORT
Lynne S. Goldstein FUND
John M. Moscarino
Total Graduates: 295
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE 1988
Class Representatives: Alicia Minana de Lovelace
Mark D. Bauce
Carolyn Comparer Jordan
David Polinsky
Leslie E. Wallis
Total Graduates: 282
Number of Donors: 44
Participation: 16%
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Charles F. Sayre
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOW
Kevin A. Fcankel
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Wang-Ha Cho
April M. Evans
David E. Isenberg
James W Mc Spiritt
Laurie J. Taylor
Colleen Mc Andrews Wood
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Steven B. Abbott
J. Robert Arnett II
Lynne M. Belusko
Edwin Carney
Eric J. Diamond
Frederick M. Entwistle
Randal L. Golden
Craig A. Horowitz
Steven M. Kleiman
William 0. Nutting
Anthony L. Press
Thomas W. Weidenbach
SUPPORTERS
Susan Abraham
Richard W Aldrich
Constance C. Arvis
Karen S. Bloom
James M. Burns
Federico M. Cheever
Daniel E. Encell
Joel H. Friedman
Mark A. Gochman
Karen E. Harrison
Louis G. Hering
Mark R. Israel
Linda C. Johnson
Harris J. Kane
Robin F. Kaufer
A. Alan Manning
Cecelia Marden
Ronald A. Mc !mire
Hope G. Nakamura
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Nathaniel H. Christian Ill
Charles W Jenkins, Jr.
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Marsha B. Liss
Steven M. Schultz
Jeremy H. Temkin
Class Representatives:
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
Paul Freese, Jr.
Louis E. Michelson
Total Graduates: 295
Number of Donors: 33
Participation: 11%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Michele M. Valdez FELLOWS
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Michael B. Africk
Alan D. Aronson
James F. Blake
Robert E. Feyder
Leora D. Freedman
Gary N. Frischling
Peter Edward Greenberg
Melinda A. Hoyt
William H. Kahn
Connie R. Kimball
Rochelle Gumlia Klein
Nancy E. Klotz
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Keith E. Marlowe
Thomas S. Mc Connell
Lou A. Merritt
Beth M. Mezoff
Karole Morgan-Prager
Mark T. Roohk
Ann C. Springgace
David A. Steinberg
Julie E. Stodolka
Arnold F. Williams
Suzanne Zaharoni
SUPPORTERS
M. Margaret Rumph Banas
Robert C. Bowman
EmilyW. Card
BrianW. Copple
Shedrick O. Davis III
Michael D. Donovan
Valerie A. Durbin
Alan J. Epstein
Victoria Goldfarb Epstein
Marilyn W Formaker
Hilary J. Greenberg
John H. Irons
John W. Kern IV
Susan F. Kroll
Joan S. Leopold
Patricia A. Libby
David Schinasi
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
William J. Arzbaecher III
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
Julia S. Penick
Jonathan Sears
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Marcin J. Barrack
George H. Brown
James R. Felton
Paul L. Freese, Jr.
James M. Gelb
Sharon R. Leib
Frank A. Merola
Mark J. Price
SUPPORTERS
William Stewart Anderson
Patrick E. Bingham
Kimberly A. Caswell
Andrew S. Gabriel
Charles O. Geerhart
Robert B. Hutchins
Gretchen E. Jacobs
Alice M. King
Amy H. Klein
Scott P. Lenga
Louis E. Michelson
Mark D. Miller
Sanford M. Pooler, Jc.
Janet R. Rich
Linda M. Rio
Thomas R. Sestanovich
Christopher C. Welch
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Steven Sinatra
LAW LIBRARY FUND
David B. Felsenthal
PUBLIC INTEREST
Lorna). Loo SUPPORT FUND
A. Bailey Nager
David A. Ossencjuk
Alyce L. Raboy
Steven M. Siegel
Douglas R. Smith
Number of Donors: 63 FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Participation: 21%
Diana L. Maranon
Patti R. Scheimer
Elaine F. Tumonis
Patricia M. Weaver
Janet A. Winnick
Cecilia S. Wu
Gary B. Rosenbaum 1989
Glen Saco
Linda Ledeen Schwartz
Joel A. Thvedt
Ann M. Tomkins
Class Representatives:
Steven I. Katz
KatherineW. Pownell
Total Graduates: 276 FOUNDER LAW LIBRARY FUND
John M. Moscarino
Karen Africk Wolfen
JAMES H. CHADBOURN PUBLIC INTEREST
FELLOWS SUPPORT FUND
Martha Gage Rock
Alicia G. Rosenberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Valerie B. Ackerman
Lilia 0. Ballesteros
Robert G. Barnes
Susan E. Nash
Douglas R. Smith
1987
Leslie L. Trurner
Robert C. Welsh
Class Representatives: CLINICAL SUPPORT
Number of Donors: 31
Participation: 11%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Leora A. Freedman FUND FELLOW
Raquelle de la Rocha
Robert C. Welsh
Edward A. Carr
Suzanne Zaharoni LAW LIBRARY FUND
Total Graduates: 303
Number of Donors: 61
Participation: 20%
John C. Chen
Jon T. Yamamura
DEN'S COUNSEL
Walid S. Abdul-Rahim
Susan S. Azad
William H. Hoffman
Kerry A. lnsolia
NathanielJ. Lipman
Sharon Lea Mitchell
Patricia A. Penner
KatherineW: Pownell
Vitonio F. SanJuan
Shelley R. Saxer
Richard S. Schkolnick
Steven A. Schuman
Livingston S. Wong
MichaelJ. Perez
Anne E. Pings
Audrey L. Sokoloff
Suzanne St Pierre
Geoffrey M. Sturr
Jan F. Wrede
SoniaM. Younglove
FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Kristin M. Coe!
Lloyd-Lim
LAW LIBRARY FUND
KristenM. Coe]
SUPPORTERS PUBLIC INTEREST
W. ClarkBrown SUPPORT FUND
Jennifer M. Casey
Elena Bocca Dietrich
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORTFUND
Barbara G. Mikalson
Michelle S. Yee
1992
Class Representatives:
Daniel B. Buder
Elaine Mandel
DebraProfio
Donna Wells
Total Graduates: 274
Number of Donors: 46
Participation: 17%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
MarkW: Neustadt FELLOW
Virginia C. Bennett
PUBLIC INTEREST SUPPORTERS
SUPPORTFUND
Lillis E. Grove
Carmel B. Sella
1993
Jesse &Laurie Ada
Michael R. Asimow
JohnW: Brewer
Erika S. Chadbourn
Nancy A. Finck
Werner Z. Hirsch
Class Representatives: Bernard W: Nebenzahl
Debra L. Alligood B. Mark Nordman
Jeffrey A. Barker
Karen Marie Bray
Amy Kernes
John P. Weidenbach
NeilW. Wiley
Total Graduates: 296 CLINICAL SUPPORT
Number of Donors: 20 FUND
Participation: 7%
David A. Binder
DEAN'S COUNSEL OTHER GIFTS
JeffreyA. Barker Chaleff, English &Catalano
Tobias A. Dorsey Lebovits &David
Judith E. Gordon The Rutter Group
Steven I. Katz
Lisa N. Emeney 1991
Caroline Kelly
Kevin M. Kelly
GerardoJ. Lopez
Barry Lurie
Anna S. Mc Lean
Rhonda H. Mehlman
Class Representative:
Inez D. Hope
William]. Morley
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Total Graduates: 324
Number of Donors: 38
Cathy Risa Paul Participation: n%
David A. Portnoy
Beau Simon
CLINICAL SUPPORT
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Jeffrey W: Cowan
Paul W: Poareo
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Elizabeth Anne Hone
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kimberly Arouh
Sonia R. Carvalho
Peter F. Del Greco
Robert L. Dell Angelo
Alison A. Heartfield Anonymous
Steven E. Holsten
Sam S. Oh FIRM MATCHING GIFTS
Lizbeth Parker Cravath, Swaine &Moore
Michael E. Reisz Davis, Polk &Wardell
Anita G. Rivas Deloitte & Touche
Patricia D. Watkins Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Stanley M. Yukevich Jeppson & Lee
Lisa Engels-Salas Loeb &Loeb
Marilyn S. Gude!
James C. Harrison
SUPPORTERS Marr &Marchant, A Law
Bryan D. Biesterfeld Corporation
Stewart S. Harrison Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp FUND
Carol A. Cocek
Eric H. Imperial
FACULTYSUPPORT FUND
Matthew C. Wagner
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Dwight L. Aarons
1990
Class Represemarives:
Nargis Chaudhry
George Eshaghian
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Elizabeth A. Anthony
SaskiaT. Asamura
William P. Donovan
Gretchen A. Ford
Carl 0. Graham
lnez D. Hope
Rhonda S. Kaye
Samantha F. Lamberg
WilliamJ. Morley
Holly R. Paul
Lisa Kim
DavidJ. Korduner
Steven Edward Levy
Audrey Lin
Claudia P. Madrigal
Kaivan M. Shakib
John Staudinger
Brian P. Waldman
Jack S. Weiss
Donna C. Wells
Janell H. Yokota
LAWLIBRARYFUND Morgan, Lewis & Brockius
Christopher A. Cherry Morrison &Foerster
Matthew R. Fishier Musick, Peeler & Garrett
HowardC. Griboff O'Melveny &Myers
Stephen E. Holsten Sidley &Austin
Andrew D.Jaeger Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
AmyN. Kernes &Flom
Robert F. Kornegay,Jr. Ware &Freidenrich
Richard A. Ward Wilmer, Cutler &Pickering
FRIENDS AND CORPORATE AND
Steven D. Sann SUPPORTERS FACULTY FOUNDATION MATCH-
Edward L. Tabakin
Monica E. Tait
ScottN. Yamaguchi
FrancisJ.James Bennett L. Yee
Total Graduates: 327
Number of Donors: 28 SUPPORTERS
Participation: 8%
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
George M. Eshaghian
Suzanne K. Metzger
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Eric B. Gordon
Mary D. Manesis
Joshua Rosenfeld
SUPPORTERS
Margaret H. Bang
Nargis Choudhry
Sandra B. Epstein
FrancisJ.James
Allison M. Keller
John C. Kirkland
SarahSchwabAmbrogi
Dayna S. Babikian
Terrance Bing-Parks
Lawrence P. Brennan,Jr.
Teresa Cho
Daniel H. Devaney
Michael L. Elowe
Karin Lyn Gustafson
Richard L. Hasen
Debra M.Johnson
Edward F. Malone
Mariana Marin
KaraM. Andersen ING GIFTS
Jose Luis Arias
William D. Becker
TimothyJ. Carlson
Patricia E. Chavarria
FOUNDERS Adobe Systems Inc.
MannaLivingston Aerospace Corporation
Arthur Rosett Akzo Nobel Inc.
William & SusanWarren Allied-Signal Foundation Inc.
Bridget A. Clarke American Express Foundation
Jenifer S. Eslami
ToddHart
Daniel S.Javitch
Stacey A. Kipnis
Thomas R. Kreller
ElaineW: Mandel
BrendanJ. McKeough
Leonard S. Perlman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE AMFAC/JMB Hawaii Inc.
DanielJ. Busse! ARCO Foundation Inc.
William E. Forbach AT&T Foundation
Carole Goldberg-Ambrose & Bankamerica Foundation
Dean Ambrose Chemical Bank
William &Renee Klein Cigna Foundation
Monte E. Livingston CIT Group Foundation Inc.
Cruz Reynoso Citicorp
Debra A. Profio Coca-Cola Company
Parthiv R. Sangani
Richard Villasenor
Shirley D. Ramirez CLINICAL SUPPORT
JAMES H. CHADBOURN Coopers &Lybrand
FELLOW Foundation
Kenneth & Smiley Karst Ernst &Young Foundation
Grant &JudithNelson First National Bank of
Kirsten E. Rurnik FUND ChicagoFoundation
Scott A. Silberstein
Deborah]. Wilson
Isaac H. Winer
Ligi C. Yee
CLINICAL SUPPORT FACULTY SUPPORT FUND
Lydia C. Lai FUND
Richard Lai
Karla N. Mac Cary
Jill F. Cooper
Thomas A. Bloomfield
Jollee Faber
WilliamT. Mac Cary Ill LAW LIBRARYFUND LAWFACULTYFUND
Samuel D. Magavern
Julienne Mc Cammon
Ann M. Mooney
Michael B. Garfinkel
Andrew R. Herrup
Paul E. Blevins
Lillis E. Grove
Debra G. Hochman
DEAN'S ADVOCATES Fleet CharitableTrust
Allen R. Balton Glaxo Inc.
Kristine Knaplund Glendale Federal Bank
David Mellinkoff Goldman Sachs Fund
Craig N. Oren GTE Foundation
Alan G. Sieroty Heller International
Jonathan &Barbara Varat Corporation
William &Flora Hewlett
DEAN'S COUNSEL Foundation
Maribeth Evans
Hewlett-Packard Company
Hormel Fqods Corporation
Hughes Aircraft Company
EL CENTRO LEGAL
MERIT SCHOLARSHIP Irvine Company FUND
KPMG Peat Marwick
Foundation
Robin A. Ayres
Christopher&Kimberly
Lehman Brothers Inc. Felicetti
Liz Claiborne Foundation
MCA Inc.
Northwestern Mutual Life
Fred&Lucille Felicetti
Gary Felicetti
Kenneth&Connie Graham Foundation
Pacific Enterprises
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
William&Renee Klein
Leon&Alica Letwin
William&Susan Warren
Pacific Resources Foundation Chemical Bank
Paramount Communications
Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Price Waterhouse Foundation
DAVID H. FRIEDLAND
MEMORIAL SCHOLARProcter&Gamble Fund SHIP FUND
Science Applications In memory ofDavid H. International Friedland
SONY Pictures Entertainment Various Donors
Southern California Gas Company
Syntex USA Inc.
EVA&NATHAN
GREENBERG MEMORIAL Texaco Foundation SCHOLARSHIP FUND
3-COM Corp.
Time Warner Inc.
Times Mirror Company
Transamerica Foundation
TRW Foundation
University of Massachusetts
U.S. Leasing International Inc.
U.S. West Foundation
Arthur&Audrey Greenberg
MORRIS GREENSPAN
MEMORIAL PRIZE FUND
Joseph&Ruth Bell
ELISA H. HALPERN
MEMORIAL SCHOLARUNOCAL Foundation SHIP FUND
Warner-Lambert Company
Wells Fargo Bank
Westinghouse Foundation
DESIGNATED GIFTS
BENJAMIN AARON FUND
William&Barbara Green
Barry&Jane Halpern
Edward&Sonya Halpern
KAREN HAUSER
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Lawrence&Karen Boland
Anonymous Fabulous Pharmacy Frances Vener
MICHAEL ALBIN
MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- CLIFFORD A. SHIP FUND HEMMERLING MEMOIn Memory of Meyer S. Albin RIAL SCHOLARSHIP Herta, Elaine, Grant and FUND
Marlene Anne Stern Berkovitz
Geraldine S. Hemmerling
ARNOLD&PORTER Ralph&Shirley Shapiro SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Arnold&Porter J.W. AND IDA M. JAMESONFUND
"Asasingleparent,
Iappreciatethe
BAKER&MCKENZIE LAW J.W. &Ida M. Jameson scholarships STUDENT ASSISTANCE Foundation FUND because they help Baker&McKenzie
BENJAMIN E. KING
MEMORIAL SCHOLARme payfor much- BEVERLY HILLS BAR SHIP FUND
ASSOCIATIONFOUNDA- Buchalter, Nemer, Fields& needed childcare TION FUND Younger Beverly Hills Bar Association Beatrice Halbern costs so thatIcan Ralph&Shirley Shapiro
MARSHALL COGAN d " SCHOLARSHIP FUND
JOSEPH KIRSHBAUM stu ry.
Ralph&Shirley Shapiro MEMORIAL FUND
Paula&Barry Litt
CURTIS B. DANNING Jacqueline Kirshbaum LORETTA RAMIREZ, SCHOLARSHIP FUND Steven&Lisa Kirshbaum RECIPIENT OF THE In Memory of Patricia Bingham, Martin Gendel, PAULA C. LUBIC Hal Lovitz and in Honor of Mena&Mike Pappas,
MEMORIAL Barry Russell and Lea Serlin SCHOLARSHIP Curtis&Florence Danning
''More than any other challengein my life, the challenge in law school has been to focus. Having aclear focus and explicit directives has been crucial Fortunately, my scholarship had the immediate impact oflifting financial burdens and helping me to focus on aday-today basis. "
IATONYA WASHINGTON, RECIPIENT OF THE PAUIA C. LUBIC MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
LA RAZA LAW
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Peter Bing in Honor of Michael J. Perez
Alicia Minana de Lovelace
Daniel Olivas
Cruz Reynoso
THE LAW LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Harland W. Braun '67
Dhiya El-Saden '77
Samuel W. Halper '55 and Ruch Halper
Timothy J. White '78 and Maria Wong White
Dorothy Wolpert '76 and Stanley Wolpert
LAW SCHOOL CLASS OF 1952 FUND
John McCarthy
PAULA C. LUBIC
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Arthur M. Lubic
Carol Lubic Spitz
GEORGE L. MARINOFF
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Elaine MarinoffGood
FRANCES E. MCQUADE FUND
Craig Cocora
MILKEN FAMILY FOUNDATION FUND
Jonathan & Rochelle Greene Foundations of the Milken Families
HOWARD P. MILLER MEMORIAL FUND
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
MORRISON & FOERSTER FUND
Morrison & Foerster
MUDGE, ROSE, GUTHRIE, ALEXANDER & FERDON SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Roger H. Landis
Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, Alexander & Ferdon
MELVILLE B. NIMMER MEMORIAL FUND
Joseph J. Beard
Billie Connor
F. Jay Dougherry
David A. Gerber
Louise & George Kermode
Margaret R. Kiever
David Nimmer
Andrea S. Ordin
Lionel S. Sobel
Thomson & Thomson
MELVILLE B. NIMMER SCHOLARSHIP FUND
David R. Ginsburg
Time Warner Inc.
MICHAEL PALLEY MEMORIAL FUND
George & Edith Lindenbaum
WILLIAM A. RUTTER TEACHING AWARD
William A. Rutter
RALPH & SHIRLEY SHAPIRO STUDENT LOAN FUND
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
SHEPPARD, MULLIN, RICHTER & HAMPTON SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
THELEN, MARRIN, JOHNSON & BRIDGES SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Curtis A. Cole
UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW PUBLIC INTEREST AWARDS
David Babbe
Alan G. Benjamin
Kristin H. Brandt
Andree S. Daly
Janet H. Dickson
Richard D. Fybel
Morrison & Foerster Foundation
Anthony L. Press
Lizabeth Rhodes
Michael D. Schwartz
Kris Vyas
Nancy H. Zamora
LEE B. WENZEL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jerry W. Carlton
Ronald B. Garver
David E. Gordon
Charles P. Reilly
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
Clyde E. Tritt
William W. Vaughn
David I. Weil
Mark D. Wenzel
Daniel G. Zerfas
Family, Friends & Participants in the annual golf tournament
ZIFFREN/BRITTENHAM FUND
Skip Brittenham
Ralph & Shirley Shapiro
Kenneth Ziffren
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The
1950s
Irwin Goldring '56 received the prestigious Arthur K. MarshallAward 1994,Trusts & Estates Section, Los Angeles County Bar Association.
The 1960s
William F. Stewart '61 has recently been appointed Commanding General of the 40th Infantry Division (Mech) and promoted to the rank of Major General. He was in charge ofthe National Guard response to the Norchridge Earthquake. He is also the Director of the Los Angeles CountyGeneral Services Department. For 25 years prior to his appointment as Director, he was a member of the Los Angeles County Counsel's Office andwas the Executive County Counsel at the time of appointment to his current department head position.
Ronald W. Anteau '65, a partner in the L.A. firm of Simke,Chodos, Silberfeld & Anteau, Inc., has been appointed to the Family Law Executive Committee of the State Bar of California. Mr. Anteau is a Certified Family Law Specialist, and is a Fellow in theAmerican and International Academies of Matrimonial Lawyers.
Barry A. Taylor '67 has been appointed aLos Angeles Municipal CourtJudge.
Robert A. Weeks '67 has been elected co the Executive Committee of the Conference ofDelegates of the State Bar of California for athree-year term, 1993-96. He has also been selected as a Co-Chair of the 1995 Bar Leaders Conference,which will be held in early March 1995 in Long Beach. InSeptember,Robert joined his daughter and 2,000 ochers in a 470-mile bike trip, "Cycle Oregon."
Leonard Venger '67 has joined Manatt, Phelps & Phillips' LosAngeles office as an equity partner and senior litigator. He left Buchalter, Nemer,Fields &Younger after more than 26 years at the firm where he had been a senior litigation partner and Chairman of the Board during 1993.
Barry A. Fisher '68 was inducted into Academia Mexicana de Derecho Internacionalin January 1994 and has since becomeVice Chair of the ABA First Amendment Committee. For the past several months, Barry has been working on Belarus and Moldava constitution and legislation reform, becameSeniorVicePresident of the Human Rights Advocates International, and in December, its delegate to the Paris UNESCO Human Rights conference.
Lee Silver '68 is currently chairingThe Economic Development Council of the City of Beverly Hills.
David G. Cameron '69, who has been a member of theLos Angeles County Historical Landmarks and Records commission since 1985 and its Chair since 1992, has been appointed by Governor Pete Wilson co the Scace Historical Resources Commission, and was sworn in on May 16 by Superior CourtJudge Stephen M. Lachs '63. In addition to a solo practice in wills and probate and pro bono work in historic preservation law, he consults onresearchand documentation of real estate and buildings.
Alan H. Lazar '69 is a partner at the Marina del Rey firm of Berger, Kahn, Shafton, Moss, Figler, Simon & Gladstone which specializes in insurance, business and professional liabilitylitigation.
The 1970s
Nicholas Budd '70 has been admitted co the French Bar as an avocat au barreau de Paris. He is a member of the Paris office of White & Case, specializing in international trade and international secured transactions.
&Jay Bloom '71 was appointed as a judge of the San DiegoMunicipal Court in 1990 and re-elected for a new six-year term inJune of 1994.
Robert L. Watson, Jr. '71 was selected to receive the Outstanding Director Award at the Black Board of Directors Project Banquet on October 21, 1994 in Phoenix,Arizona. This award is given annually to an individual who has had significant impact on society rhrough service on major boards and commissions in the public or private sectors. Watson isChairman & CEO ofThe Lauren Group, Inc., headquartered in Phoenix.
Richard Booker '72, a Beverly Hills attorney, was appointed by PeteWilson to the California Housing Partnership Corporation, a state agency that raises funds for housing projects sponsored by non-profit charitable groups.
John Marshall Collins '72 co-managed his wife Zoe Lofgren's Democratic primary election victory for the 16th Congressional District seat in Congress.If his wife is successful in the general election,Collins will be opening a law office in Washington,D.C., while maintaining his offices in San Jose, California. He also hopes to be involved in working on Congressional issues.
Lawrence D. Ginsburg '72 is a founding parrner of Little, Pedersen,Fankhauser & Cox, L.L.P., Dallas,Texas, where he practices corporate and securities law.
Joshua Dressler '73, had a criminal law casebook published byWest Publishing Company in May 1994- le was adopted by approximately forty law-schools in its first year of use.
Antonia Hernandez '74, president and general counsel of the MexicanAmerican Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), recently was honored by the UCLA LatinoAlumni Association. She was honored for both her professional accomplishments and her involvement with the Latino Alumni Association at its fall scholarship banquet Sept. 16.
Marilyn Holle '74 in September received the California Scace Bar's 1994 Loren Miller Legal Services Award for her career promoting equal access rights for disabled people.The award is given annually co an individual in recognition of outstanding contributions in the area of legal services delivery to the poor and ocher disadvantagedpeople.The Bar cited her handling of a case in which the California Supreme Court upheld the rights of persons with disabilities to have custody of their children, among ocher accomplishments.
Charles Margines '74 was appointed as a judge of the CentralOrange County Municipal Court. Before his appointment, Margines was a criminal defense attorney who was certified as a specialisein criminallaw by che board of Legal Specialization ofthe Scace Bar of California. He lives in Cowan Heights with his wife and three children.
Mel Aranoff'75 has joined Horgan, Rosen,Beckham & CorenofTolucaLake, as a partner. He continues his practice of creditors' rights, bankruptcy and commercial litigation for financial institutions.
Donna R. Black '75 has been electedViceChair of the Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law Section of theAmerican Bar Association and will become Chair of theSection in two years. As a partner in the L.A. office of Baker & Hostetler, she represents clients in Superfundandocher hazardous waste-relaced mattersand airqualityissues.
Gary Pohlson '75 has been elected President of the Orange County Bar Association for 1995. Pohlson is a partner in the firm of Pohlson, Moorhead & Goethals in Laguna Hills.
Juan Ulloa '75 was elected Judge of the Superior Court for Imperial County in the June 7, 1994 Primary Election. He will cake office onJanuary 3, 1995.Juan served asJuvenile Court Referee (Pro-Tern) for two years. He lives in El Centro,California with his wife Rosie, and their five children.
Durham Monsma '77 and Robbie Tyrell Monsma '79Durrie has been transferred co Denver to become Vice President, Law and Administration, forJeppesen Sanderson, Inc., the world's leading producer of flight information. Robbie has moved herAlternative Dispute Resolution training and practice with her, continuing her partnership in Stott Monsma & Associates, conflict management training and system design. She is working on a master's degree in Theology.
Jonathan R. Yarowsky '77 has been named as one of the 100 Most Influential Lawyers in the Nation, according to the latest survey published in The National Law Journal. He is General Counsel co the House Judiciary Committee.The Committee's broad jurisdiction, ranges from constitutional law and civil rights to antitrust, product liability, bankruptcy and immigration law.
Nancy R. Alpert '78 has joined LifetimeTelevision, the cable channel based in New York City with an emphasis on women's programming, asVice President ofBusiness & Legal Affairs. Nancy participated in the annual 45-mile ''5 Boro" bike ride through the boroughs of NewYork.
Boyd Hudson '78 is the cochair of cheTaxationSection of thePasadenaBar Association.TheSection holds monthly meetings in the Pasadena area on various taxation topics.The meetings qualifyfor continuing legal
education credit. Individuals who wish to receive notices of upcoming meetings should contact Boyd at: Martin & Hudson, 350 West Colorado Blvd., Suite 320, Pasadena, CA 9uo5.
Ralph D. Fertig '79 has been elected President of the Humanitarian Law Project/ lnternational Educational Development, Inc., a nongovernmental organization with consultative status to the United Nations dedicated to advancing and protecting human rights and humanitarian law.
Phyllis Ann Siegel '79 has been appointed vice president and senior counsel at Sanwa Bank California, where she will counsel the bank's trust division. Previously a partner at Schwartz & Siegel, she also serves on the Breast Cancer Advisory Board at the UCLA Medical Center, Radiation Oncology Department, and the Executive Board of the Center TheatreGroup Volunteers, where she is assistant treasurer. In the spring of 1993, Siegel taught a course for the UCLA Attorney Assistant Training Program.
The 1980s
Millicent N. Sanchez '80 became a named shareholder at Swe;dlow, Florence & Sanchez, a management labor and employment law firm in Beverly Hills. She represents management in litigation before state and federal courts and administrative agencies. Millicent is active in numerous local and statewide bar associations and speaks on a wide range of labor and employment issues to California organizations and businesses of all sizes.
Julie S. Mebane '81 and Kenneth J. Stipanov '8r welcomed their second child, Kristen, into the world on February ro, 1994- They practice law together at the San Diego firm of Scalone, Sripanov, Ya/Ta & Mebane, handling real property, intellectual property and general business transactions. Julie has completed a two-year term asGeneral Counsel to the UCLA Alumni Association Board of Directors. Both are active in fund raising for the UCLA Foundation in San Diego.
Cathryn S. Gawne '82 opened Cathryn S.Gawne, a Law Corporation in March 1993. The firm specializes in the representation of small businesses with particular focus on women-owned businesses. Cathryn and her husband Dale are expecting their third baby in November who :,viii joinGreg, 3 1/2, and Katie, I year old.
Elizabeth D. Mann '82 has been named a partner with Howrey & Simon after acquiring extensive experience in securities, commercial and international litigation, including complex Racketeering ln8uenced Corrupt Organizations and libel actions while practicing at the firms of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and Langberg, Leslie, Mann &Gabriel.
Kenneth Martyn '82 recently settled a major plaintiff's medical malpractice case in which his client received the highest damages award by the Hawaii Medical Claims Conciliation Panel in char state's history. He and his wife, Kendra, live on the North shore of Oahu along with their two sons, ages 3 and newborn.
John R. Sommer '82 has now joined the national law firm of Baker & Hostetler as Of Counsel in its L.A. office. He will concentrate his practice in intellectual property protection and related litigation, particularly in the areas of trademark. and copyright enforcement agains,t counterfeiters.
Angelo N. Ancheta '83 became executive director at the Asian Law Caucus in San Francisco in October. The Asian Law Caucus is the nation's oldest legal services and civil rights organization serving the Asian-American population. He had been at Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA).
Torn Agoston '83 is working in Tokyo with IBM'sGlobal Network business with responsibility for projects in Indonesia, Taiwan and Korea.
David B. Kuhlman '83 recently joined the San Diego law firm of Ramseyer & Dunn as a partner. His practice includes business, real estate and construction litigation.
Pamela G. Chin '84 was appointed as a commissioner of the California Commission on Uniform State Laws and attended the 103rd National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in Chicago. The Uniform Commercial Code and Uniform Limited Partnership Act are bur a few examples of laws promulgated by the National Conference. Pam also serves as a Trustee for rhe Los Angeles County Bar Association (LACBA), an Executive Committee Member of the Corporate Law Departments Section of LACBA and a Director of the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles. Pam continues to practice in-house as a Senior Attorney for ARCO. Her husband, Marvin M. Lager, was appointed as a Judge of the Municipal Court, Los Angeles Judicial District, earlier this year.
Michael J. Gibson '84 has coauthored a new textbook, "An Introduction to Paralegal Studies," which was published by South-Western Publishing Company in 1993.
Glenn Davis '85 formerly a partner of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, has joined the Amsterdam-based Roadrunner Records as its Executive VicePresident.
Steve Susoeff '85 lives on a ranch near Cedar Ciry, Utah, where he is the director of the Southern Utah HIV Task Force and works as an alcoholism and addictions counselor. In recent years he has published several short stories and essays in Christopher Street and other gay literary magazines.
Konrad L. Trope '85 is an adjunct professor at California Western School of Law in San Diego teaching an innovative course called "Advanced Topics in Entertainment Law and Finance." The course combines theoretical and clinical aspects of entertainment transactions and litigation. In January 1995, he will be teaching a course at
UCLA called "The Arts, Censorship and the First Amendment." The course is offered through UCLA's Committee on Educational Development and the College of Letters and Science.
Arnold H. Wuhnnan '85 married Candi Kass on June 6, 1993 and started his own freelance business, Arnold H. Wuhrman-"Your Occasional Associate," which provides independent contracting services to commercial and bankruptcy lawyers. He also was admitted to the California Bar in December, making it his third state of admission after Indiana and Illinois.
Mary M. Kasper '86, has been promoted to Senior Counsel for Vons. Mary will now concentrate on real estate related legal matters including negotiating and drafting leases, purchase agreements, reciprocal easement agreements and development agreements relating to acquisitions, developmenr and maintenance of Vons real properties.
David Kay '86 has become a partner in the firm of Demon Hall where he will direct the firm's China PracticeGroup from its Beijing office. David lives in Beijing with his wife, Gabrielle, 4 year old son, Benjamin and 2-year-old, Hannah.
Corey E. Klein '87 was made a partner in the Century City law firm ofGaims, Weil, West & Epstein on January 1, 1994. He continues to practice business litigation.
Michael D. Schwartz '87, an attorney with the L.A. City Attorney's Office has been elected presidenr-elect of the Barristers Section of the L.A. County Bar Association: Michael is a County Bar delegate to the State Bar Conference of Delegates, has been a guest teacher at Benjamin Franklin High School through the adopt-aschool project and El Camino Real High School through the Street Law Project, and has provided more than 400 hours of pro bono representation for clienrs of Public Counsel.
Sara Berman-Barrett '89 co-authored a book titled Represent YourselfIn Court: How to Prepare and Try a Winning Case, with UCLA Law Professor Paul Bergman. The book was published and released by Nolo Press in December 1993.
The 1990s
Michael Perez '90 and Patti Chavarria '92 will be married in San Diego on New Year's Eve, 1994- Doug Wertheimer '90 will be a member of the wedding parry. Michael recently joined the Office of the U.S. Attorney, Trial Section. He was previously with Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison. Patti is an associate at Balestreri, Dorigan & Pendleton.
Sukhdev S. Rye '90 recently received his LL.M. in Taxation fromGeorgetown University. He was an associate with Weinrraub,Genshlea & Sproul in his hometown of Sacramento and was selected to participate in "Leadership Sacramenro," a program of rhe Sacramento Chamber of Commerce which idenrifies and trains future city leaders. In 1992, Sukhdev served on the Bill Clinton for Presidenr Steering Committee in Sacramento.
Steven M. Levy '92 has moved from L.A. to New York City and is working as a corporate attorney at the law firm of Weil,Gotshal & Manges.
Kaivan M. Shakib '92 moved to Hong Kong in June 1994 where Cravath, Swaine & Moore opened a new office. He plans to live there for a year and a half.
IN MEMORIAM
Mel L. Albaum '63
Robert E. Decker 57 Vincent}. De Simone '85
Tracy L.Gilderneister '81
John C. Kenmonth '61
Barry R. Komsky '68
Stanley C. Levinson 52
Richard B. Rolnick '78
Jack Schwarrzman 59
Michelle Smith-Pontell '81
Douglas E. Stephenson '68
Mary K. Wente '87
Dean Prager has announced that Barbara Varat, the Law School's Dean of Students since 1982, will join Professor Julian Eule as Associate Dean as soon as a new Dean of Students is recruited. "Professors give up a great deal to serve the school as Associate Dean, and I hope that the experience and good judgment that Barbara brings to the role will provide strong continuity and significantly greater support for the faculty and the Dean," said Susan Prager.
Law School Seeks New Dean ofStudents
UCLA Law is seeking a person with interpersonal, organization and leadership skills, and the ability to work effectively with an exciting, diverse student population to succeed Barbara Varat as Dean of Students. Knowledge of UCLA Law, aJ.D.degree and experience as a lawyer are preferred. Possible involvement with continuing education programming is contemplated. The Dean of Students must have initiative and be flexible in order to respond effectively to changing needs and priorities and to find multiple solutions to problems. The role requires a frm commitment to a high level of service to students and faculty in a demanding academic environment.
For further information, call or write Marylene Forman at the law school: (310) 825-4143. Letters ofinterest together with a complete resume and at least two letters of recommendation may be addressed to Dean Susan Prager or Associate Dean Barbara Varat. (Please do not direct telephone inquiries to the Deans.)
Barbara Varat
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December 1994
Classof59 Reunion
Faculty Center-California Room
Saturday, December 3, 1994
5:45 p.m. Tour ofthe law school
6:30 p.m. Reception
7:30p.m. Dinner
The BarAdmissions Swearing-In Ceremony Schoenberg Auditorium
Thursday, December 8, 1994
7p.m.
School ofLawAdmissionsProgram
Law School Room 1347
Sunday, December 18
n a.m.
January 1995
UCLA School ofLawdinnerforAlumsin Teaching at Association ofAmericanLaw SchoolsAnnualMeeting
January 7, 1995
Anacapri's Restaurant; 6:30 p.m.
New Orleans, Louisiana
The IrvingH. GreenMemorialLecture
Wednesday, January 25, 1995
William Vaughn '55; Partner, O'Melveny & Myers Law School, 4 p.m.
February 1995
Ken Graham's Law SchoolMusical Benefit for Public Interest Law Foundation.
February 5, 1995
TheI9thAnnualEntertainment Symposium*
February 10-11, 1995
Schoenberg Hall Auditorium PublicInterestLawFoundationAuction
February 23, 1995
For more information, call PILF at 310206-8625
UCLA Law Review Symposium: "Immigrants and theAdministration ofPublic Benefits"*
February 25, 1995
Times and specific location to be announced
March/April/May/June
Class Reunions '55-'60-'65-'70-'75-'80-'85
Date and times to be announced
*MCLE Credit offered
TheLaw School willbe publishinga new alumni directory infallI995, which willinclude indexing by geographic region, class year and area ofspecialization. Watch your mailfor more information.