fall afternoon in the Ralph and Shirley Shapiro Courtyard.
Vol. 19, No. 1
UCLA Law is published at UCLA for alumni, friends and other members of the UCLA Law community Offices at 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, 90095
Susan Westerberg Prager: Dean
Joan Tyndall: AssistantDean, Development andAlumni Relations
Magazine Staff
Karen Nikos:Editor
Photography: Maryann Stuermann, ASUCLA Phoco Service ( Terry O'Donnell, Scott Quintard, Eric Mah)
Edicorial Assistants:Elizabeth Vella, Jean Lieu
Contributing Writer: Elizabeth Vella
Design: Lausten/Cossutta Design, Los Angeles
Printed by Typecraft, Pasadena, California
UCLA Law Alumni Association Board of Directors
Robert B. Burke '66: President
Hon. Laurence D. Rubin '7r: VicePresident
Alan M. Mirman '75' Secretary
Renee L. Campbell 'So: Treasurer
Timothy Lappen 75: ImmediatePastPresident
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 Mitsuhata '75
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld '76
John E. Runkel, Jr. '81
Mark A. Samuels '82
Linda Smith '77
John H. Weston '69
W Keith Wyatt '77
Stephen D. Yslas '72
Graduates in public interest law get help with loans
A LOAN FORGIVENESS PROGRAM implemented in 1993 at UCLAW has enabled a few graduates with limited incomes to pursue public interest careers without worrying about mountains of loan debt. Funded solely by contributions, the UCLAW Loan Assistance Program helped three recent graduates repay student loans. The three individuals profiled in these pages offer inspiration for those who practice law under less hardship. The graduates who have received loan assistance all have low incomes that barely provide a living allowance in the areas in which they live.
Students, under the advice and encouragement of Professor Alison Anderson, rook the initiative to get the program offthe ground. The loan program was made possible largely by Stewart Resnick '62. He proposed a challenge grant whereby he offered to match funds for public interest work raised by students. Alumni can designate "public interest programs" in their gifts if they wish to contribute to this fund.
SUSANNE M. RYAN
'94
Founder and Director ofOld Pueblo Law Center
The center primarily serves women in abusive relationships who need legal assistance. It is the only service ofits kind in the Tucson, Arizona area where she has opened the center.
Sue Ryan spent most of her career in public service, working with the homeless in Los Angeles' Skid Row and conducting a shelter for homeless women in East L.A. (House of Ruth) for eight years prior to entering law school. So when she obtained a law degree, it seemed only natural that she would continue her avocation in some way.
"This is a life commitment for me," proclaims Ryan, 35, who started the Old Pueblo Law Center in Tucson, Arizona shortly after graduating from law school last year. Ryan had often thought she would like to live in Arizona, and upon graduating from law school moved to that state and took the bar exam. While waiting for her bar results during the summer of 1994, she volunteered at various women's shelters in Tucson. She saw through her volunteer experience that although there were women's shelters where battered
women could get immediate help for domestic violence, little follow-up legal help was available.
She opened Old Pueblo Law Center to help women with that follow-up. Old Pueblo Law Center assists victims of domestic violence. Specifically, Ryan helps women obtain restraining orders, provides legal assistance and representation. For divorce and custody actions, Ryan offers legal defense for victims falsely charged with crimes by their abusers. She may also assist women on how to deal with the court system by, for example, providing victim representation if their abuser is being prosecuted. Ryan also gets help from volunteer attorneys in the community and law students from University of Arizona Law School. Old Pueblo handles most cases with no fees because most of the women are far below the poverty line.
"There is such a tremendous need here," she said. "There's nothing else like Old Pueblo for these women-I'm all they have. They need an attorney with whom they can be very open-who understand the emotional abuse they are suffering, who can be a strong, relentless attorney for them." Ryan said she considers giving honest advice as a major part of her job. "Their husbands tell them-'you leave, you lose custody.' They are afraid. At Old Pueblo, they get truthful legal advice and supportive representation and advocacy so they can have the confidence to leave an abusive situation."
Running her own law clinic has been a rigorous learning experience. "I get a lot of support from attorneys in the community, in the courts, and the judges even seem to know about Old Pueblo. That's encouraging," she says. Finances are always scarce, since she has had to fund the center herself. University of Arizona Law School recently supplied a Public Interest Law Foundation grant for students to work at the center. Ryan earns some income by working in the Tucson courts' Judicial Supervision Program. Ryan hopes to secure public funding to lower costs so that she can devote all of her time to Old Pueblo Law Center.
"If I could do this full time," she says, "I could help so many more people."
When times get tough and she feels in need of inspiration, Ryan recalls the advice of UCLA Law Alum Nancy Mintie, who founded Inner City Law Center in Los Angeles after graduating in 1979: "Somedays it will get scary. Just put your eye on the light and keep walking toward it."
"And that's what I do," says Ryan, who was active in El Centro Legal, various other public interest projects and was Editor of the Docket, the law school newspaper, while in law school. She sought the advice of Professor Alison Anderson, who has long been a staunch supporter of students pursuing public interest law. For further guidance, Ryan also has looked to Gary Blasi, who teaches in the clinical program and has spent many years as a lawyer on behalf of the poor and homeless.
Anderson praised Ryan's project. "Sue spent a lot of time during law school thinking about and planning for her Old Pueblo project," Anderson said. "She demonstrated great initiative, courage and persistence in embarking on her public interest career. Just as Nancy Mintie was an inspiration to Sue, I am sure Sue will serve as a model for future law students."
"This is a tremendous personal commitment," says Ryan. "There's a lot of learning, doing-and learning."
Karen Nikos
"This is a life commitment for me."
SUSANNE M. RYAN
QUALIFICATIONS FOR APPLICANTS TO THE UCLAW LOAN ASSISTANCE PROGRAM:
Applicants must engage infull-time, law-related workfor a tax-exempt, non-profit organization or a government agency, although the committee supervising the program has authority to waive the full-time requirement in some cases.
The initial applicationfor assistance must be made within three years of graduation, and ajl applicants must reapply each year for assistance. Those who leave public interest work in less than six years will have all loans extended by the programforgiven.
Assistance amounts granted to individuals will vary depending on the applicant's income and on total education loans. Amount of assistance is limited by thefunds availablefor distribution each year, with the neediest applicants having priorityfor assistance.
THANH
NGO '94
Asian Law Caucus
ThanhNgo became one of what he says is only a handful of Vietnamese American public interest lawyers when he graduated from UCLAW in 1994. As a legal pioneer,Ngo was awarded a two-year echoing green Fellowship with the Asian Law Caucus to help integrate Asian American tenants into San Francisco's public housing projects.
"I feel fortunate to have the opportunity to work with an underepresented community," saysNgo who earns $25,000 a year from the echoing green Foundation which provides public service fellowships for young people with skills, energy and vision to improve society.
Traditionally, explainsNgo, public housing has served as an important gateway out of poverty for many poor and immigrant families. In San Francisco's public housing pro
«Thanh has an acute sense ofinjustice and is driven to do something about it. Inever doubted from thefirst day I met Thanh the kind ofwork he woulddo when he graduated.
PROFESSOR GARY
BLASI
jects today, however, tenants find that crime, drugs and violence have replaced stability and opportunity. Many Asian American tenants feel threatened and alienated by their living environments.
"We are using litigation, community organizing and individual advocacy to improve life for tenants who lack skills and resources to resolve the difficulties of integration," says Ngo. His work will become even more important, he says, as Congress dismantles the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and shelves many programs aimed at improving public housing.
Ngo's work has been partly shaped by his background. In 1975, he escaped Vietnam with his family and settled in Southern California. His personal experiences as a refugee have impacted his work with Southeast Asian immigrants.
"Many tenants have a refugee mentality in which survival of the family eclipses community development," explainsNgo, 28. "Our hope is that this will improve as immigrants build ties and stop viewing America as a transition place."
Ngo works closely with tenants and housing managers to enforce systemic changes resulting from court-approved settlement agreements for cases filed on behalf of Southeast Asian families living in public housing projects. Under the
settlements, San Francisco's housing authority must investigate tenant complaints, change the housing transfer policy, train staff about hate crime and increase funding for police protection.
Organizing Vietnamese American tenants to get to know each other and create a sense of community is another challenging aspect of his job.Ngo helped create the Multicultural Afrerschool Program at Valencia Gardens, which brings schoolchildren together with college mentors.The program encourages tenants to participate in their housing community, thereby reducing their feelings of isolation and fear.
AlthoughNgo's public interest legal career may seem destined, by the time he finished his undergraduate education he had yet to meet a lawyer.The Claremont-McKenna graduate who majored in international relations initially considered a career in international affairs. He then explored law by working as a paralegal. AsNgo began meeting public interest lawyers who worked with organizations like the ACLU and the Asian American Legal Center, he considered the politics in his own community of Vietnamese Americans and decided to go into law. "I saw how lawyers can use their legal skills to create social change for marginalized communities,"Ngo says.
UCLAW proved to be a great school forNgo, who describes the administration as "flexible and public interest friendly."Ngo, who was active in Moot Court and the Asian Pacific Islander Law Students Association, was among a group of law students who persuaded the school to create a new course called "Critical Legal Studies" with Professor Richard Abel.Ngo says the class was a "great experience that helped demystify power dynamics in law."
Ngo was also inspired by UCLAW professors who shared their real-life experiences as public interest lawyers. "Professor Blasi was a great mentor for me," he says about Gary Blasi, who spent years providing legal services to the poor before joining the UCLAW faculty as a professor in the Clinical Program. "His clinical course in public policy advocacy gave me great preparation for the work I do now."
Blasi spoke ofNgo's work: "Thanh has an acute sense of injustice and is driven to do something about it. I never doubted from the first day I met Thanh the kind of work he would do when he graduated.
"It is gratifying to know," Blasi said, "that in some small way our work here at the law school eventually helps poor immigrant tenants find some security and justice in the projects of San Francisco."
When his fellowship ends next summer,Ngo hopes to expand his traditional legal skills and continue his commitment to community-based lawyering. While Ngo's substantial college and law school loans leave him feelip.g like he "has a mortgage but no house," he feels lucky to pursue a public interest career.
"This is the right career for me�one that I'm proud of choosing."
ELIA GALLARDO '94
Equal Rights Advocates, San Francisco Works with victims ofdomestic violence through echoing green Fellowship
For Elia Gallardo, some of the greatest challenges of coordinating a statewide effort to curb domestic violence are logistical.
"Many of the women we are trying to reach don't have phones," says Gallardo who works with the Farmworker Women's Leadership Project (Lfderas Campesinas) as an echoing green fellow with San Francisco's Equal Rights Advocates. Battling geographic limitations, Gallardo has traveled throughout the state-as far north as Oroville and as far south as Imperial Valley-to reach the women. About 5,000 women farmworkers throughout California have participated in the Domestic Violence Project that Gallardo helps spearhead.
The Domestic Violence Project recently received nationwide recognition for its innovative work. Despite competition from over 400 applicants, the Project was awarded one of seven domestic peace prizes of $10,000 each given by Marshalls department store to organizations dedicated to preventing domestic violence.
Gallardo herself was able to participate in the Domestic Violence Project after earning one of the highly prized echoing green Public Service Fellowships. The echoing green Foundation gives graduates of selected professional schools the chance to start their own public service or non-profit organization or begin new projects wihin exisimg non-profit organizations. Gallardo decided to serve women in rural communities because legal services for chem are almost nonexistent.
"Our clients are monolingual Spanish-speaking women farmworker Latinas who live in rural communities where access to information and legal resources is severely limited," Gallardo explains. "An abusive partner can also stop a victim from seeking help. Our goal is to empower these women by providing them with information on their legal rights and the resources available to chem."
In connecting to the community, Gallardo has relied on her research abilities and communications skills, including her fluency in Spanish. "We're reaching out to women that society doesn't reach," she says.
Because domestic violence is a sensitive, private issue, the Project coordinators have creatively encouraged women to attend local conferences on domestic violence by also including sessions on pesticides and AIDS education. Outreach efforts also include informal home meetings and follow-up visits where community organizers are trained how to educate women about laws and resources. In that effort, Gallardo is compiling a guide of local resources such as shelters, crisis lines and legal services that are available for victims of domestic violence.
One of the most valuable aspects of Gallardo's fellowship, which she began shortly after graduating from UCLAW and
taking the California Bar last year, is that she has been introduced to women whose long histories of political activism have inspired and educated her. "We are all learning from each other," she explains. "We treat each other as peers-equal value is given to formal education and real-life experience."
In choosing a law school, UCLAW's friendly attitude toward public interest law was important to Gallardo. "It was the best law school for me. The public interest program was great and I had the chance to take some incredible classes," says Gallardo, who cites Professor Gerald Lopez's book, Rebellious Lawyering, as one of her sources of inspiration.
Issues facing California's Latina/Latino community have long been important to Gallardo. She worked with several public interest organizations throughout law school, including the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF), Public Advocates and the California Women's Law Center/ Women's Coalition. She also coordinated the law school's volunteer program with the Central-American Refugee Center.
Gallardo, who earns $25,000 a year from her fellowship, has chosen to continue her work with the Project after her twoyear fellowship ends next summer. For her next undertaking she plans to provide legal services to undocumented farmworker women based on the federal "Violence Against Women Act." Under the 1994 Act, women are allowed to self-petition to immigrate to the United States if their abusive, documented partners prevent them from doing so.
As a community lawyer, Gallardo says she has learned to listen to her clients and help turn their vision into reality. "One thing I have learned during the past year is to let the women I work with be my guiding force."
Elizabeth Vella '96
Elia Gallardo, at right, with colleagues.
Law library con1puter services
manager Frank Lopez views the law school's home page on the World Wide Web
Explore UCLAWon the Web
o.K., so You'vE HEARD ALL OF THE World Wide Web wordplay. But the virtual reality is, you can now run into UCLAW while cruising the information superhighway.
To look at the law school's home page on the Web, sign on to the Internet and visit the site: "http://www.law.ucla.edu."
A photo of the front of the law school, in color, will download before you. Within a few seconds, a microcosm of the UCLA School of Law will appear on your screen. From there, you can use your mouse to click on one of several categories. You can look up our faculty research interests, peek at the law school calendar, or even read the annual admissions bulletin and download an application to law school.
In the near future, you will be able to access the law journals and find out about some of the law school student groups through our Web page. Internally, students already can use the Web site to look up job prospects and check on interview opportunities through the bulletins regularly distributed by the Career Services Office.
Perhaps most importantly, Web cruisers within the law school community can get the latest information on the library construction project and learn how best to access materials through the Research section of the Web page. Library users can access the UCLA online catalog, ORION, for catalog information as well as various other Law School catalogs throughout the country and the world. Also available online are a monthly list of recent book acquisitions, which can be accessed through the Web site's library page, and many practice exams for courses at the law school.
"The World Wide Web is a great new way to electronically distribute information, in effect-publish," said Jim Gerken, Web Site Administrator. "Our faculty and students can easily provide pages of information to each other and the world at the 'click of a button'. It's improving the way teachers teach and students learn by making more information readily available."
Elsewhere on the Net, you can learn more about Cyberspace law or submit a poem to a selective online magazine because of UCLA law school's activity on the World Wide Web.
Stuart Biegel, a lecturer who also serves as a lecturer on the faculty at UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, has launched a Web site called the UCLA On-line Institute for Cyberspace Law and Policy. The Web site is "http://www.gse.ucla.edu/iclp/hp.html." Law faculty throughout the world have already commented on the usefulness of this service, which explores law and policy from both the teaching and research perspective. First amendment law, privacy issues, equity and safety concerns and intellectual property issues can be explored at this Web site. The Web page guides its readers to major cases and key statutes in Cyberspace Law and serves as a guide to the field of cyberspace law.
Professor Eugene Volokh, who teaches Constitutional law and intellectual property at the law school, recently has started, with his brother, Alexander, an on-line poetry magazine. "The Occasional Screenful: An Edited Electronic Magazine of Short Poetry" is free. To subscribe, send e-mail to "listserv@netcom.com." To submit poetry, e-mail: "volokh@law.ucla.edu."
And, don't forget, you can send your classnotes by e-mail to: "alumnews@law.ucla.edu." •:•
Professor French deciphers some of law's mysteries
byEliz;a,beth Vella 96
PROFESSOR SUSAN FLETCHER FRENCH, LIKE A PROFESSIONAL SLEUTH, relishes the chance to attack new legal puzzles and put the pieces together, solving them with both ingenuity and patience.
Her engaging personality, dry wit, and enthusiasm for teaching have made Professor French popular with students and faculty alike. She earns praise for her ability to make subjects like property and wills and trusts come alive in the classroom.
It is her fascination with problem-solving that is helping her to pioneer a growing field known as common interest community law-a field of law that has exploded since people began living in planned single-home and condominium communities with some commonly owned property. "Property owner associations are flourishing, creating many unresolved legal dilemmas," explains French. "I enjoy the challenge of these new problems."
When one moves into a new residential development, chances are that it is governed by a property owner association. These associations are a popular way for a common interest community to provide group ammenities and security by spreading costs among residents. At the same time, these associations impact the lives of many and raise unsettled legal problems such as what legal standard should be applied to directors, and whether "exclusive" policies are enforceable, explains French. In her research and writing, Professor French is on the forefront of this new, hybrid field, which she says is "comprised of law that governs both municipal governments and nonprofit corporations."
In addition to her legal scholarship in common interest community law, Professor French is recognized as one of the top names in the field of property. In 1986, the American Law Institute (ALI) honored French by selecting her as the Reporter for the Restatement ofLaw, Third, Property (Servitudes). The Philadelphia-based ALI is the premier organization devoted to national law reform. It produces Restatements of the Law in areas including property, torts, contracts, restitution and conflicts of law which are designed to clarify both common law principles and statutory regulations.
With her appointment, French became the first woman reporter for the ALL During the lengthy, deliberative process, French will draft the Restatement and then revise it based on comments from ALI committees of judges, practitioners and academics. French calls the Restatement "an exciting project" because it gives her an opportunity to explore unresolved questions, suggest solutions and restructure a subject so that it makes sense. She also serves as an adviser to the Reporter for the Restatement ofLaw, Third, Property (Donative Transfers).
Making inroads in a new field of law, or even being a lawyer, was not something French had always set out to do. As an undergraduate at Stanford, French planned a career as a high school French teacher until a seminar on jury trials inspired her co consider a career in law. "I loved the class," says the Seattle
'1foundthat a climate ofcivility prevails at UCLAWFaculty membersgenuinely appreciate each other. "
PROFESSOR
SUSAN FRENCH
native, "and a legal career became an appealing option." Professor French acknowledges her attraction to law may have been inherited. French's mother is a federal judge on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and her father is a former University of Washington professor who now teaches at Hastings. Her brother, whose own nomination for a judgeship on the Ninth Circuit is pending confirmation, is on the Boalt Hall Law School faculty
After graduating from Stanford, French enrolled in law school at the University of Washington. She excelled, serving as the Articles Editor of the Washington LawReview and finishing first in her class. As her law school days drew to a close and she prepared for a career, French found that law firms refused to even interview female law students on campus. "Firms said they just 'weren't ready' to hire a woman," she explains. Outraged by the flagrant discrimination against women, French took matters into her own hands, sought out interviews on her own and secured a job at a Seattle firm where she concentrated on estate planning and probate.
After eight years of practice in Seattle, French was ready to teach. "I had always wanted to teach, but I wanted to get experience in the real world first," she says. In 1975, Professor French began her teaching career at UC Davis, teaching property, her favorite course back when she was a first-year law student. For French, the fact that "no one has to lose" makes teaching a refreshing alternative to litigation. "I also enjoy the ability to pursue ideas as far as you want to take them, unlike in practice where you are restricted by what the client is willing to pay."
She joined the UCLAW faculty in 1989 after spending a year as a Visiting Professor and discovering how much she enjoyed UCLAW's intellectually stimulating environment. "Teaching law has proved to be a real joy for me."
"I found that a climate of civility prevails at UCLAW Faculty members genuinely appreciate each other," says French. "I was also excited about the chance to be on the same faculty with Jesse Dukeminier, who is one of my heroes."
Students commend French for her mastery of property and wills and trusts. As one student commented in an evaluation, "Susan French is so obviously expert that she makes the complex seem simple." Another applauded her dry sense of humor and her ability to "whittle down to the important essentials and explain difficult concepts with ease. She makes me look forward to class."
Outside of class, French is an avid sailor and outdoorswoman. Upon moving to Los Angeles, she became captivated by the culture and climate of Southern California. "I love living close to the ocean," says French, who keeps a 34-foot Catalina in Marina Del Rey with her partner Dick Bell, a former professor of Chemical Engineering at UC Davis. He is now director of Science and Technology at the law firm of Luce, Forward, Hamilton and Scripps. French, who also enjoys hiking, skiing and wine tasting, is a renowned hostess whose skills at entertaining have been appreciated by many of her students.
Looking forward, French plans to finish the Restatement on servitudes within the next two years and publish a casebook on property. She expects to devote more time to the growing subject of common interest communities.
Professor French also plans to continue her straightforward approach to teaching law, choosing to use plain English and demystify her subjects whenever possible. "It's fun to explore ideas-to take them apart and put them back together," she says. "Cleaning out the dirty closets of the law has been my life's work."
Brief notes about what the faculty are teaching, studying and researching
Reginald Alleyne was a speaker at the Cambridge seminar on Employment Law and Policy in the New Europe at Cambridge University in England chis summer. He and Sir John Wood, professor of law at Sheffield University in England, compared employment dispute resolution procedures in England and the United States.
Peter Arenella continued to serve as a legal consultant to ABC News and KTLA Channel 5 throughout the Simpson trial. Professor Arenella's work was highly praised in an Oct. 9,post-verdict LA Times story that analyzed media coverage about the Simpson case: "Indeed, one of the regular "Legal Pad" contributors, Peter Arenella of UCLA Law School, was cited in interview after interview as having provided the most reasoned, insightful analyses of all the expert commentators, not just in The Times but on ABC and KTLA Channel 5,where he also served as a regular analyst." Arenella, who teaches Criminal Law and will teach a clinical course based on the Simpson case next semester, has been the featured speaker at numerous events. He spoke on whether there should be television coverage of high-profile cases at a California Trial Lawyers Association meeting in San Francisco; he delivered the Simms lecture, an endowed lecture at the University ofNew Mexico Law School, in early November; and he was honored by the Italian-American Lawyers of Los Angeles. He is working on two law review articles in conjunction with both the Simms lecture and an upcoming symposium on the Simpson case at USC Law Center.
Carole Goldberg-Ambrose is currencly working on a report commissioned by the Advisory Council on California Indian Policy This Council was established by Congress in 1992 for the purpose ofdetermining the special needs of California Indians as compared with Indians elsewhere in the country. She
writes chat there is a long history of federal funding and programs slighting California Indians, and ofCalifornia Indians receiving especially disadvantageous legal treatment. She expects chis report will ultimately be transformed into an academic book, focusing on the plight and survival of California tribes in the 2oth century.
She also recencly published two articles: "OfNative Americans and Tribal Members: The Impact of Law on Indian Group Life" in the Law and Society Review, and "Heeding the 'Voice' of Tribal Law in Indian Child Welfare Cases," in Law andAnthropology.
Alison Anderson visited Kiev, Ukraine, this fall under the auspices of the AALS to participate in planning a professional development program for Ukrainian law professors and also to assist the four law schools in the Ukraine on issues relating to law teaching.
Michael Asimow is spending pare ofthe fall semester at Witwatersrand University Law School in Johannesburg,South Africa, doing research on administrative law in South Africa under the new constitution. Asimow and Paul Bergman have written Reeljustice: The Courtroom Goes to theMovies, a book about courtroom movies that will be published early in 1996.
And, Paul Bergman adds, that Reeljustice should be enjoyable and educational for lawyers, • courtroom film buffs and everyone else. They analyze the legal issues raised in about 70 courtroom movies.Some are recent dramas ("A Few Good Men," "Class Action"). Others are widely-known classics ("Inherit the Wind," "Anatomy of a Murder," "12 Angry Men"). Still ochers are less well known but classic films, such as the 1939
Bette Davis movie, "The Letter." Bergman also has written, with David Binder and Al Moore, a new textbook, TrialAdvocacy: Inferences, Arguments and Techniques.
Stuart Biegel, a lecturer who also serves as a lecturer on the faculty at UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, is delving further into the world of cyberspace law. He is addressing cyberspace law and policy from both the teaching and research perspective-exploring privacy issues, first amendment law,equity and safety concerns and intellectual property issues. He has launched a Web site called the Online Institute for Cyberspace Law and Policy. The Web site is "http: // www. gse. ucla. edu/ iclp/ hp. html." Law faculty throughout the world have already commented on the usefulness of this service.
Ann Carlson, who joined the faculty in fall 1994 as a lecturer, has been named Acting Professor of Law. She is the Director ofthe Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic, which is in its second year of operation. The clinic is supported by the joint efforts of the law school and the Natural Resources Defense Council. Professor Carlson earned her bachelor's degree in political science from UC Santa Barbara and her J.D. from Harvard Law School, graduating magna cum laude. Prior to attending law school, Carlson was employed by various offices ofthe California state government, including the California Senate Office of Research and the Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee. She practiced law for the firm of Hall & Phillips, specializing in public interest environmental consumer litigation, from 1989 to 1994.
Raquelle de la Rocha, lecturer in law, captured headlines this summer when she was nominated by Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan as president of the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission.After
being confirmed by the City Council, she resigned from her position on the California Fair Political Practices Commission (she could not hold both positions). The Los Angeles Daily Journal featured a front-page profile on de la Rocha shortly after her appointment.
Jesse Dukeminier, Professor Emeritus, continues to teach and write. He recently completed the fifth edition of Wills, Trusts and Estates, which was published last April by Little,Brown & Co. "The Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities and the GST Tax: New Perils for Practitioners and NewOpportunities," appears in RealProperty, Probate and Trustjournal 185. "The Uniform Probate Code Upends the Law of Remainders" appears in 94 Michigan Law Review 301 (1995).
After three years' service as Associate Dean, Julian Eule has returned to full-time teaching. He lectured this summer in Strasbourg, France, at the Council of Europe. He discussed the role that voter initiatives and referenda ought to play in emerging democracies. Stephen Yeazell has replaced Eule in the Associate Dean position.
Laura Gomez recently chaired two panels at the annual Law & Society Association meetings in Toronto: "Feminism, Sexuality and Ideology: Meaning of Motherhood and Family," and "Rethinking Theory and Practice in Socio-Legal Studies of Gender." She is in the process of finishing a book about California legislators and prosecutors, Misconceiving CrackMoms: Lawmakers, Prosecutors, and the Politics ofa Social Problem, to be published by Temple University Press in 1996. She is teaching an innovative course this semester: Gender and Crime. The seminar explores gender differences in criminal participation and looks at gender disparity in the criminal justice system.
,-.--• This spring, Princeton will publish Joel Handler's book Down FromBureaucracy: The Ambiguity ofPrivatization and Empowerment. The book is about the United States in the midst of a re-organizing government, decentralization, de-regulation and privatization. It
examines the consequences of these changes on the empowerment of relatively powerless groups such as welfare clients, patients, students, tenants and ordinary citizens. His most recent book, The Poverty ofWe/fareReform, is in bookstores now and has received some media attention.
Kristine Knaplund, senior lecturer in law, has been reappointed to the Minority Affairs Committee of the Law School Admission Council. As a member of that committee, she helped plan the LSAC Academic Assistance Workshop held in San Diego in June. The workshop was attended by 120 faculty and administrators. Also, her article authored with Professor Richard Sander, "The Art & Science of Academic Support," appears in the July 1995 issue of the journal ofLegal Education. Last Spring she received the university-wide Harriet and Charles Luckman Distinguished Teaching Award for lecturers.
Daniel Lowenstein's election law casebook is out in print chis fall. This is the first collection of American election law cases co be published since 1877 to his knowledge. Developments since then, Lowenstein points out, justify an update. Emphasis is on districting, minority voting rights, ballot measures, parties and campaign finance. He is also teaching with Bob Stern from UCLA's Political Science faculty a seminar: "Scandal and Corruption."
h�Carrie Menkel-Meadow, as • � , Co-Director of the UCLA ·1 . Center for the Study and Resolution of Inter-racial/Inter ethnic Conflict Resolution, cosponsored a conference on public education, dispute resolution and multiculturalism research at UCLA in April. She also received an honorary Doctorate of Laws degree at the dedication of Quinnipiac Law School in Connecticut in October. Professor Menkel-Meadow has spent much of the year training federal and state judges in the use of alternative dispute resolution methods.
Professor Menkel-Meadow published, "Portia Redux: Another Look at Gender, Feminism and Legal Ethics," in the Virginiajournal ofLaw and Social Policy as well as a myriad of other writings and lectures. She recently was elected to the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of the American Bar Foundation.
Al Moore, David Binder and Paul Bergman have just completed a new trial advocacy textbook-Trial Advocacy: Inferences, Arguments and Trial Techniques, which will be published by West Publishing Co. and is due out soon.
IGrant Nelson has continued to write about property and land finances, completing"Rethinking Future Advances Mortgages: A Brief for the Restatement Approach, 44 Duke Lawjournal 657 (1995) (with Dale Whitman) and Restatement oftheLaw ofProperty, Third, (Mortgages): Tentative Draft No. 4 (1995). (Co-reporter with Dale Whitman). He also has completed his part of Basic PropertyLaw, a new edition of a West Publishing Casebook that is scheduled to be delivered to the publisher late this fll. His co-authors are William Stoebuck of the University of Washington and Dale Whitman of Brigham Young University.
After teaching courses on legal theory and constitutional law at the University of Berlin (Humboldt) and presenting talks in Germany, Poland, Austria and England, Professor Frances Olsen made some 13 presentations in Japan and China on a trip co attend the Fourth World Conference on Women-where she participated in both the NGO Forum in Huairou and the UN Conference in Beijing. In the past year, she was named co-chair of the UCLA Chancellor's Commission on the Status of Women and elected Chair of the Section on Women in Legal Education of the Association of American Law Schools. She presented papers at several conferences in the United States, gave a series of lectures in Canada, and had several new publications in Europe and the United Scates, including a two-volume set on FeministLegal Theory.
John Setear has been appointed as a Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars for spring 1996.
Professor Setear's proposed research project is "Law at the Gates: The utility of International Law at the Boundaries of War and Intervention." He is one of 31 scholars selected for the program.
David Sklansky, who joined the faculty last year to teach criminal law and evidence classes, has written about federal drug sentencing laws in "Cocaine, Race and Equal Protection," 47 Stanford Law Review 1283, 1995.
Lucie White, who had taught at UCLA since 1987, has joined the law faculty at Harvard Law School effective for the 1995-96 academic year. Professor White, known for her work in UCLA's Clinical Program-particularly in her work for the poor-will be missed by her UCLAW colleagues and students alike.
Eugene Volokh is teaching a new course-Law of Government and Religion. He also is writing about free speech issues related to the Internet and other areas. Outside First Amendment law, he is doing research on economic liberty under scare conscicutions. He and his brother, Alexander, recently started an on-line poetry magazine, which has been the subject of a few feature articles. The LA Times carried a story about their venture in September.
IJohn Shepard Wiley Jr recent- ly has spoken on three occasions to judges in the Federal Judicial , Center's National Judicial Workshop series on the topic "New Developments in Intellectual Property." He continues to speak often at the U.S. Attorney's office, where he prosecuted criminal cases for four years.
Professor Wiley also has been active in commenting to the media on criminal law issues, particularly on state and federal rules of evidence-which he teaches. Professor Wiley was specially assigned to prosecute a Northern California judge for the Commission on Judicial Performance during the summer and fall.
IEric Zolt led a seminar last spring on che 'Tax Aspects of the Contract with America." ,, The different perspectives of class members resulted in lively, though non-violent, discussions.
Professor Zolc continues consulting for the U.S. government on advising countries in reforming their tax systems to be more compatible with a market economy. This past summer, he worked in Albania, Russia and Vietnam. Unforcunacely, he says, he does not get co keep che frequent flier miles.
Yeazell becomes associate dean
Stephen C. Yeazell, who has taught ar the law school since 1975, has become Associate Dean. He rakes over the three-year post from Julian Eule, who has resumed teaching. Yeazell, whose research and teaching interests are in the area of civil procedure, is the author of one ofthe definitive rexes on civil procedure. His animated lectures and engaging teaching style have become legendary.
Associate Dean Yeazell received the UCLA-wide University Distinguished Teaching Award in 1979 and he was the first recipient of the law school's Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Kang and Freeman join faculty
Jerry Kang joined the faculty as Acting Professor last fall but took a year's leave of ,...., absence to develop information policy at the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration in Washington D.C. He is teaching Civil Procedure this
fall and will teach a new class tided ''Asian American Jurisprudence" in the spring.
.)I�iii Professor Kang, who earned his law degree from Harvard Law School and was a supervising editor of the Harvard Law Review, participated on two panels this fall. At the Second Annual Conference of Asian Pacific American Law Professors, held at John Marshall Law School in Chicago, he addressed the issue of Asian Americans and affirmative action. At a symposium entitled, "Innovation and the Information Environment" at the University of Oregon School of Law, he spoke on the issue of information privacy. In addition, Professor Kang testified before the Federal Trade Commission on consumer privacy issues emerging on rhe information superhighway.
Jody Freeman has joined rhe faculty as an Acting Professor of Law to reach environmental and administrative law. She has taught law in Canada and recently taught administrative law as an adjunct professor at Boston College Law School. She recently consulced on a government report on forest policy in British Columbia. Professor Freeman has published a number of articles on feminist legal theory and law and social change. She currently is writing articles on regulatory negotiation, drug regulation at the FDA and habitat conservation planning under the Endangered Species Act. she plans to produce a book on cooperative governance in the Administrative state, which is based on her doctoral dissertation. She has an LL.M. and SJD from Harvard Law School. Her LLB. is from University of Toronto, where she was articles editor of the law review and a staffmember of the legal services clinic. She clerked at the Ontario Court of Appeal and worked briefly in both the litigation department of Goodman and Goodman in Toronto, and at the Public Interest Advocacy Center in Vancouver before pursuing her doctorate at Harvard.
New lecturers and visiting faculty
Lynn Alvarez, a visiting professor who practices immigration law in Los Angeles, is teaching immigration law and professional responsibility. The professional responsibility class focuses on public interest and government service attorneys. Professor Alvarez practiced law full-time at the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles and is a Certified Specialist in Immigration and Nationality Law. Last year, she served as a moderator for an Immigration Law Symposium sponsored by UCLA Law Review, "Burden or Benefit: A symposium on immigration and the allocation of public benefits."
Diane Bimholz, a 1990 graduate of UCLA Law School (Order of the Coif), has joined the faculty as a full-time lecturer in ..____r;.a UCLA's Lawyering Skills program. Upon graduating from UCLA, Birnholz clerked for U.S. District Court Judge Irving Hill. She then served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Los Angeles where she prosecuted a wide variety of cases, including firearm, armed bank robbery, escape, assault and narcotics violations, before joining the office's Major Frauds Unit, where she prosecuted franchise fraud and other investment fraud schemes.
Christine Chambers Goodman joined the faculty this fall as a lecturer in the Lawyering Skills program. She is a 1991 graduate of Stanford Law School where she was on the Board of Directors of the Third Annual Women of Color and the Law Conference, took courses in the lawyering for social change curriculum and was editor of the Journal of Law, Gender and Sexual Orientation. Goodman has spent the past four years as a litigator, first at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips and then at Gipson, Hoffman, & Pancione. Her experience includes general litigation, entertainment and breach of contract litigation, intellectual property and constitutional law.
Cheryl I. Harris, an Assistant Professor at Chicago Kent College of Law, joins UC� as a visiting professor for the 1995-1996 Year. She teaches Civil Rights and a seminar in Race Conscious Remedies this fall. She will teach Constitutional Law in the spring. A graduate of Northwestern University School of Law, Professor Harris worked for a Chicago law firm doing trial and appellate work in the area of criminal defense, and she was appointed Senior attorney for the City of Chicago in 1984. She later served as First Assistant General Attorney for the Chicago Park District in 1990. She served as National Co-Chairfor the National Conference of Black Lawyers from 1988 to 1992. Her work has focused on issues of affirmative action, race and property, and more recently, on gender and race. She has also participated in several conferences and consulted with lawyers and legal scholars involved in the framing of South Africa's new Constitution. She recently was a parnc1pant in a symposium on slavery sponsored by the Cardozo Law School and this fall will be addressing issues of identity in an AALS-sponsored workshop on jurisprudence. Professor Harris recently published "Race As Property'' in the Yale Law Journal
Martha Matthews, a visiting professor this year, is teaching Public Policy Advocacy with Professor Gary Blasi and Civil Rights Law in the spring. She attended Boalt Hall School of Law while concurrently enrolled in a Ph.D. Program in Jurisprudence and Social Policy. Professor Matthews served as a law clerk at all three levels of the federal court system-including clerkships for then Judge Stephen Breyer and for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackrnun. She worked as a staffattorney for the past five years at the National Center for Youth Law in San Francisco. She previously was a staff attorney for Legal Services for Children in that city.
Therese Maynard, Professor of Law at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, joins UCLA as Visiting Professor this fall to teach Business Associations and Securities Regulation. A 1981 graduate of UCLA School of Law, Maynard worked for the firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, specializing in securities litigation matters before joining the Loyola faculty in 1983. She also serves on the Advisory Board of the Securities Regulation Law Journal and is a frequent contributor to lnSights: The Corporate & Securities Law Advisor. Her earlier article, "Section 12 (2) of the Securities Act: A Remedy for Fraudulent Post-distribution Trading" 20 Securities Regulation Law Journal 152 (1992) was cited last term by the dissent in Gustafson v. Alloyd Inc., 115 S. Ct. 10651 (1995), the Court's most recent pronouncement in the federal securities fraud area.
1990 UCLAW grad joins Career Services
In an institutional effort to enhance employment opportunities for UCLA students, Rosemarie Benitez '90 has come on board in a new position as Career Services Placement Officer.
Benitez will counsel students and graduates and will assist with career educational programs. Benitez, who most recently worked as the Testamentary Attorney for AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA), also will work closely with the Alumni Assocation to develop and build a career placement network with our 9,800 law school alumni.
"We want to increase full-time, summer and part-time employment opportunities for students," says Benitez, who also worked as a litigation associate for the firm ofJeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro.
Benitez is active in the Los Angeles County Bar Association, Women Lawyers Association ofLos Angeles and the Mexican-American Bar Association, where she participates on many oftheir committees.
Benitez, faculty and the Alumni Association are also currently engaged in an effort to find employment for the 1995 graduates who are still seeking fulltime employment. Alums are encouraged to notify the Office ofCareer Services with any information about job opportunities. The number is (310) 206m7. The office also produces a bi-weekly employment newsletter, the Graduate Job Bulletin, for distribution to interested alums.
Employers are encouraged to list their openings for experienced attorneys as well.
Mayorkas is new public interest coordinator
Catherine Mayorkas, who has worked in education reform in Los Angeles during the past three years, is promoting public interest and pro bono work among UCLAW students as the new UCLNPublic Counsel Public Interest Director. Mayorkas, who earned her law degree from Georgetown University Law Center and her MBA from UCLA's Anderson Graduate School ofManagement, was most recently CoDirector ofthe Los Angeles Learning Centers, a national education reform effort focusing on public education in multi-ethnic, urban communities. Before that, Mayorkas practiced law for six years, specializing in business litigation.
The UCLA/Public Counsel Public Interest Director is the cornerstone ofa partnership between UCLAW and Public Counsel, the public interest arm ofthe Los Angeles and Beverly Hills Bar Associations. Mayorkas is serving as the principal liaison between law students, UCLAW and Public Counsel. Her mission is to expand the breadth and depth of UCLAWbased public interest and pro bono activities to enhance the coordination ofthese activities with those ofother local law schools and community legal service organizations. "She has really been invaluable to PILF in that she's created a database oflocal volunteer opportunities in the area which has injected new life into the 'Give 35' program," said Holly Traub, Co-Chair ofPublic Interest Law Foundation. "She is incredibly dedicated to the position." Mayorkas is also directing her efforts toward integrating public interest activities into the law school curriculum. Said Mayorkas: "It is important that we reaffirm the significance ofthe contribution that can be made by law students and the importance of instilling in students a sense ofresponsibility toward their community."
The Public Interest Committee is now seeking nominationsfor public interest awards in thefollowing categories: alum; student (awards aregiven to one secondyear and one third-year student each year); and faculty. Nominations should reach the Law School byJanuaryJI 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 the spring. Send nominations to: Catherine Mayorkas, UCLA School ofLaw, 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, C4 90095.
Abel, Handler and Schwartz named to endowed chairs
Professor Richard Abel has become the sixth faculty member to be appointed as the prestigious Michael J. Connell Professor of Law. Abel, long among the most prolific of scholars on the UCLA law faculty, has written four and edited five books and has produced about 75 scholarly articles, most ofthem in peer-reviewed rather than law student-edited journals.
Abel has among the broadest international reputations among UCLAW faculty, producing a lifetime ofwork in three expansive categories. His scholarship encompasses law and development; the legal profession and legal services; and tort law. His prodigious body of writing includes many classic works that have reoriented thinking and stimulated whole new lines of research. Abel's writing bridges connects formal legal doctrines with the sociology of law and the anthropology oflaw. Professor Abel, who has taught at UCLA since 1974, is known in the classroom as a dedicated and creative teacher, encouraging independent thinking among his students, as reflected in their evaluations. Abel's students learn an abundance about the interaction oflaw and social policy. Abel teaches courses in Torts, the Legal Profession, and Critical Legal Studies, and he has taught in the undergraduate program courses such as Law and Society, and Sociology of American Lawyers.
Abel has lectured throughout the world, and counts among his honors the prestigious English law lecture, the Chorley Lecture, at the London School of Economics, which he delivered in 1985. In 1992, Abel delivered the Hamlyn Lectures-the most prestigious law lecture series in England. He is only the second American to have received this honor in 45 years of the lecture series' existence. The Hamlyn Lectures resulred in a recent book of Abel's: Speech and Respect, which takes him into the field ofConstitutional Law. He, like his colleague and fellow chairholder Professor Joel Handler, has served as president of the Law and Society Association.
Two other recent books give a glimpse ofAbel's breadth ofinterests. Politics by Other Means: Law in the Struggle Against Apartheid, 1980-1994, examines the role law played in the changes that have remade the political and culrural regimes ofSouth Africa. In this account Abel looks at "law" operating on three levels: that ofthe apartheid regime, the legal challenges that a small number ofSouth African lawyers and judges made to that regime, and, perhaps most important, the "enduring faith in justice" (in the words of the foreword by South African President Nelson Mandela) found among ordinary South African people. Abel shows how South
T·HE IAW&socIETY �EADER
Rick Abel and some of his recent books.
African lawyers slowly chipped away at the various aspects of the regime. He concludes with a cautious but inspiring assessment of the rule of law: "[DJid law make a difference? The bottom line is an unambiguous yes.The opposition secured victories in court that eluded them elsewhere at least partly because of law... The legal battles described in this book did not win the war by themselves. But they empowered the masses while offering some protection from state retaliation....They forged one of the few bonds across racial lines.The handful of lawyers who helped blacks overthrow three centuries of white domination in South Africa should be proud of the role they played."
Abel continues to explore the connections of law with the broader social order in another recent book, TheLaw and Society Reader. In this book, collecting writings from a group of scholars, contains an excessively modest but also revealing glimpse into Abel's view of himself as a scholar: "When asked what I study,I usually respond gnomically: everything about law except the rules." The excessiveness of the modesty, Abel's colleagues will testify, comes from his disavowal of interest in the rules. As Professor Stephen Yeazell puts it, "If you believe Rick Abel doesn't know anything about the rules,I have a bridge I'd like to sell you."
The Connell Chair was first associated with the law school in 1952 when members of the formative faculty, Rollins Perkins and James Chadbourn, were both named Connell Professors. Professor Ralph Rice, as well as former Deans Richard Maxwell and William Warren held the Connell Chair.The chair became vacant when Bill Warren officially "retired," a change in status that all of his students and colleagues are happy to say did not stop him from continuing actively to teach and write at UCLAW
JOEL HANDLER
MaxwellProfessor ofLaw
B.A. Princeton University, I954;JD. Harvard, I957
When Professor Joel Handler came to UCLA in 1985, he had already held two endowed chairs, including a university-wide endowed chair-the Vilas Research Professor of Law at the University ofWisconsin.Now the prolific scholar has been honored at UCLA with the Richard C. Maxwell endowed chair. Professor Handler is recognized nationally among the two or three best people working in his dual fields of social welfare law and the legal profession.In all of Professor Handler's work, he has been concerned with legal and social conditions that enable disadvantaged people to improve their lives, either through cash assistance programs, advocacy, or with state or bureaucratic programs and agencies.
These concerns have led him to a wide range of issues. His first book examined the practicing bar in a small midwestern city ( TheLawyer andHis Community, 1972). From there he went on to look at the social movements and the legal system, with special emphasis on lawyer's roles ( TheDeservingPoor, 1971; ReformingthePoor, 1972).In the latter part of the 1970s, Professor Handler began to examine the social service system, writing books about the influence of popular morality on welfare systems, and on the ways in which law shaped the discretion of social service workers (Lawyers and thePursuit ofLegal
Joel Handler confers with some of his LL.M. students.
Rights, 1978; SocialMovements andthe LegalSystem, 1978). This inquiry in the welfare system broadened into a more general analysis of at the ways in which lawyers have shaped the what Handler calls The Conditions ofDiscretion (1986), a book arguing, among other things that "bureaucratic sensitivity" need not be an oxymoron. In all of this work Handler grounds himself in social science, in principles of administrative and procedural law, and in social realities. He has taken unpopular positions, questioning the efficacy of public interest lawyers in ameliorating poverty.
Handler's most recent work tackles another timely and controversial issue: welfare and welfare reform. In The Moral Construction ofPoverty (1991) he examines the ways in which moral ideas about the poor have shaped (and, Handler argues, distorted) welfare policies for several centuries. He continues this examination in his most recent book, The Poverty of Welfare Reform, (1995), which has just a few months after publication, gained broad attention for its exploration into the current political topic. In it Handler argues that we are fundamentally misdirecting our efforts in welfare reform: we ought to be thinking not about rules for eligibility and cut-offtimes, but about much broader structural problems in job markets. Only when we address these can we hope realistically to move the welfaredependent permanently into the work force. Finally, in a book expected out next year, Down From Bureaucracy: The Ambiguity ofPrivatization andEmpowerment, Handler examines the United States in the midst of a re-organizing government, decentralization, de-regulation and privatization. He devotes special attention to the consequences of these changes on the empowerment of relatively powerless groups such as welfare clients, patients, students, tenants and ordinary citizens.
A recitation of these writings might lead one to fear that Handler spent his time locked in his office avoiding students as unwelcome interruptions. Not so. Handler's students praise his accessibility and kind and caring attitude. His offerings in health and poverty law are important parts of the School's curriculum. He has lavished special attention on a very time-consuming form of teaching-that of his supervising of students writing papers and completing special projects and his work with the LL.M. students. Professor Handler's individual attention to these students has become essential. His willingness to take on individual work with the graduate seminar, aimed at systematically providing a comparative law framework for LL.M students has strengthened the law school's academic program.
Beyond the university, Handler has devoted considerable time to public service. For the National Research Council he chaired the Panel on High-Risk Youth, charged with making recommendations on adolescents at risk. Most recently, he was appointed to a National Academy of Sciences Commission on the Status of Black Americans-a commission on which there are only two law members among a group of distinguished social scientists. He has served on a number of task forces and panels dealing with children, welfare, poverty issues and public interest law.
The Maxwell Chair was created in 1987 by a group of UCLA law graduates to honor Professor Richard Maxwell, who served as the second Dean of the school from 1959 to 1969. Major donors includee Norman Barker, Stephen Claman, Stanley Fimberg, Bernard Greenberg, William Masterson, Josiah Neeper, Rogger Pettit, Mariana Pfaelzer, Charles Rickershauser, Henry Steinman, and Ralph Shapiro.
The third holder of the Maxwell Chair, Handler succeeds Jesse Dukeminier and William Klein. Like William Warren, Professors Dukeminier and Klein have nominally "retired" but remain active in teaching and writing at UCLAW Asked about his feelings on being named to the Maxwell chair, Handler commented: "Dick Maxwell set the foundation-a law school that remains devoted to tolerance, diversity, and excellence. I'm proud to have a chair named in his honor." He adds, "I love to write, can't believe I get paid for it."
"Gary Schwartz is one of the most distinguished torts scholars in the nation. Iam very pleased to have someone ofhis statureas thefirst occupant ofthe Warren Chair."
Gary Schwartz has been appointed the first William D. Warren Professor of Law.The chair was established in 1992 after a number of alumni joined to make gifts ro honor Professor and former Dean Bill Warren.
Gary Schwartz has had rwo academic careers. Early on he established himself as a scholar in urban studies, writing about the powers of local government and about the interstate highway system. The work on the highway system is still relied on by scholars studying the Eisenhower presidency and urban transportation policy
During the following years, Professor Schwartz's scholarship took a different path as he began to concentrate on tore theory and tort history in the 1970s. He has produced more than 20 articles since 1978, mostly about torts.
Schwartz's works are in the top ranks of torts scholars throughout the world. One can appreciate the measure of that achievement if one considers that every law school in the United States has from rwo to six people working in the torts field. What then makes Schwartz's work so remarkable? In brief, its qualities arise from painstaking care combined with a deep grasp of basic principles and a scrupulous fairness to all pofnts of view. The result is a broad, balanced, untendentious search for truth-qualities in the finest academic tradition.
Recent work displaying these virtues include: "Reality in the EconomicAnalysis of Tort Law: Does Tort Law Really Deter?," 42 UCLALawReview 377-444 (1994), "A National Health Care Program: What Its Effect Would Be onAmerican Tort Law and Malpractice Law (National Health Care Reform on Trial), 79 CornellLawReview 1339-81 (1994),"Waste, Fraud, andAbuse in Workers' Compensation: The Recent California Experience," 52 MarylandLawReview 983-1015 (1993); "The Beginning and the Possible End of the Rise of Modern American Tort Law," 26 GeorgiaLawReview (601-702 (19912); "The Myth of the Ford Pinto Case," 43 RutgersLawReview 1013-1068 (1991); "Explaining and Justifying a LimitedTort of False Light Invasion of Privacy," 41 Case WesternLawReview 885-919 (1991).
When Gary Schwartz writes,American legal academics listen.And what he writes often turns out to be about a decade ahead of the current popular wisdom. In 1981 he wrote an important essay whose thesis was that the law of strict liability for defective products wasn't "strict" at all: at its core lay a principle not of strict liability but of negligence.That thesis has become widely accepted. More recently he has argued that the expansion of tort liability that characterized the 1960s and 1970s has largely stabilized-even as the popular press has discovered it-and that courts are not creating new claims on a weekly basis.
Not just prescience but broad range characterize Schwartz's scholarship: he has written of product liability, malpractice, privacy, insurance, negligence theory, procedure and remedies in tort cases and tort history, with a recent perceptive essay on the workers' compensation system for good measure.
Law students love Gary Schwartz. Student evaluations regularly attribute near-divinity to him: "If Schwartz were a religion, I'd convert;" "He is the tort god and keeps us laughing all the time;" "Just rwo words: TORT GOD." Professor Schwartz earns this adoration with a combination of qualities: his ability to sort through complex legal doctrines and his skill at policy analysis; his care and thoroughness in responding to student questions; and his gentle humor. In addition to his regular classes, Schwartz teaches the torts segment in the law school's annual intensive rwo-week summer program designed to introduce 50 to 60 volunteer students from the diversity admissions pool to law school. Professor Julian Eule, who like Professor Schwartz is a recipient of the annual Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching, says of Professor Schwartz: "There's a reason we ask Gary to teach every year-he does it well, the students like him, and Kris Knaplund (director of the summer program) and I don't get bored, even after listening to him for the sixth time."
The Warren Chair was endowed by a group of former students and admirers who wanted to celebrate their mentor's achievement in teaching and scholarship. Donors include: Barbara '60 & Kevin Boyle, Skip Brittenham '70, Gertrude Chern '66, Stanley Fimberg '60, Leonard & Emese Green and Lester '52 & Paulette Ziffren, Martin R.'54 & Rita Horn and Marvin '54 & Fern Jubas, Milton L. '56 & Marceile Miller, Ralph '58 & Shirley Shapiro, Lawrence D.'63 & Shera Williams, and Kenneth Ziffren '65 Asked for his thoughts on Gary Schwartz's being named to the chair, Bill Warren said, "Gary Schwartz is one of the most distinguished torts scholars in the nation. I am very pleased to have someone of his stature as the first occupant of the Warren Chair."
Committee begins work on admissions policy following Regents' vote
DEAN SUSAN PRAGER HAS APPOINTED A Committee on Admissions Policy to look at new policy options in the wake of theUC Regents' action prohibiting the consideration of race or ethnicity in admissions decisions.
''As we begin to evaluate our admissions policies, I want to underscore an important point: While the Regents have forbidden us to use race or ethnicity in admission decisions, they have not rejected diversity as a central goal of the University," Dean Prager said in announcing the committee. "Indeed, the Regents have explicitly and emphatically endorsed diversity."
"We make these changes despite our deep institutional disagreement with the majority of the Regents on this issue and our dismay at their willingness to act against the strongly expressed positions of theUniversity President, all of the Chancellors and Executive Vice Chancellors in our nine-campus system, the Deans of all the law schools, the official representatives of the faculty and designated student representatives," Prager said. The anti-affirmative action resolution becomes effective in the 1997 academic year.
The committee will develop background material, study options and make recommendations to the full faculty-the body with the authority to recommend admissions policy toUCLA Chancellor Charles Young. The committee is led by two outstanding lawyer-Professors, Al Moore and Cruz Reynoso, who will serve as Co-Chairs. Professor Moore teaches in the Clinical Program and Professor Reynoso, former Justice of the California Supreme Court, currently serves as Vice Chair for theU.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Other faculty on the committee are Grace Blumberg, Kristine Knaplund, Grant Nelson and David Sklansky. Students serving on the committee are Leo Trujillo-Cox, a second-year student who also serves as the Student Bar Association president, and Teresa Magno and Marco Firebaugh, who also are in their second year atUCLAW
The faculty on the committee include two recent Admissions Committee Chairs-Professors Moore and Nelson, and two others, Professors Blumberg and Knaplund, who have spent a significant part of their teaching careers analyzing the qualities that contribute to success in legal education for
individual students. Students Trujillo-Cox played an important role in the Regents' discussions of the issues this summer.
Professor Ken Karst, who chaired the Admissions Task Force for the law school in 1978-79, has agreed to serve as consultant to the Committee, as has Professor Kimberle Crenshaw. Dean of Students Liz Cheadle will staff the committee and coordinate the work of other law school staffas needed.
Dean Prager said the challenge will be to design a program that produces the diversity that the law school believes is essential to the pursuit of an excellent academic program while complying with the law made applicable by the Regents' vote that UC "shall not use race, religion, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin as criteria'' for admissions. The resolution applied to employment and contracting practices is effective January 1, a year sooner than that for admissions.
The admissions policy considerations must be complete by this spring, Dean Prager stressed, in order for the school to prepare for the admission cycle, which begins with the distribution of printed materials related to admissions in the late summer of 1996 and culminates in the enrollment of the class that begins law school in August 1997. For this reason, the committee has been asked to report to the faculty by February l, 1996 to enable the faculty to have time for careful consideration and action before the end of the spring semester.
"The class entering in 1996-or, those applying this academic year-will be governed by the admissions policies that have served us so well since 1979," Dean Prager said. "I ask our alums and others in our law school community to make this clear to prospective applicants whose applications are due no later than January 16."
Dean Prager emphasized that despite changes being made necessary by the Regents' vote this summer, the law school must continue to strive for diversity, reflecting on the achievements the institution has made through diversity. "Our achievements in diversity were commented on with awe by our accreditation inspection team for the American Bar Association and Association of American Law Schools during site inspection last spring."
"Given that so many of us have chosen to become a part of chis institution in significant part because of the quality and extent of UCLA Law's diversity, we need to work together now to keep the institution strong. In my view, the need for UCLA to continue contributing in significant ways to the building of a well-functioning, multi-racial environment in our state has never been more important," Dean Prager continued. "We will strive, within the legal constraints that apply to us, to provide an educational environment here at the school that is informed by the richness and quality that diversity provides."
As the law school looks at admissions policiesfollowing the Regents'policy passed in the summer, the special committee onAdmissions Policy seeks your suggestions on how the school should modify the current admissions system to respond to the directive. Alumni shouldwrite to committee members or the Dean's office with their comments and suggestions.
Estate Planning
Jon] Gallo*
This is thefourth in a regular series on estate planning. Much ofthe permanent endowment which supports law schools, private and public, was established throughgifts in wills and other plannedgivingvehicles. As the UCLA law school movestotheendofitsfifthdecade, itsfuturewilldependincreasinglyonthehelp ofitsalumni.
In our past two columns, we have been examining the basics of the estate and gift tax laws. This column examines the other transfer tax system that affects estate planning: the GenerationSkipping Tax.
The gift and estate tax is based on the assumption that a transfer tax will be collected each generation. However, it is relatively easy to avoid incurring such taxes every generation. For example, a parent could leave property in a trust that provides benefits to her, or her children, during their lifetimes and, upon the death of all children, provides for distribution to grandchildren. Even if the children served as Trustees and received liberal benefits from the trust, the trust could be drafted so that it would not be subject to estate tax upon the children's deaths and the property would pass estate tax free to grandchildren.
In addition, retaining the property in trust would offer protection against claims of the children's creditors and, to some degree, against claims by ex-spouses, if any. If the property instead is left to the children outright, it will be fully subject to claims of creditors and ex-spouses, as well as being subject to estate tax when the child passes away.
According to a study published by the Brookings Institution in 1979, the DuPont family used such multigenerational trusts to pass almost $500 million through several generations from the founding of the company in the 19th century until the mid 197o's at a total gift and estate tax cost of less than $25 million-an effective aggregate tax rate of about 5 °/o.
So, why not leave your entire estates in trust for your children for their lifetimes and then pass the property tax-free to your grandchildren? The reason is the generation-skipping transfer tax that was enacted by Congress in 1986 in order to collect a transfer tax at each generation. The generation-skipping transfer tax imposes a 55% tax whenever property is transferred two or more generations below the generation of the original transferor. Not only is the generation-skipping transfer tax imposed at a very high rate, but it is imposed in addition to and after payment of the gift or estate tax. The cumulative effect of both taxes is close to confiscatory.
Each taxpayer possesses a $I-million exemption from the new generation-skipping tax. Only aggregate gifts and bequests to grandchildren or younger beneficiaries in excess of $I million ($2 million for a married couple) will be subject to the new tax law.
Many clients who would otherwise leave their entire estates outright to their children use their generation-skipping exemptions to create an exempt generation-skipping trust for their children and grandchildren funded with $2 million of cash or property. In such an estate plan, assets in excess of $2 million would be distributed to the children, either immediately or at designated ages.
Utilizing the generation-skipping tax exemption in this manner offers two important advantages:
• Any appreciation in the value of the assets allocated to the exempt generation-skipping trust will escape all transfer taxes when the children die and will pass tax free to the grandchildren.
• The trust may be protected from the claims of creditors and, to some degree, from claims of ex-spouses. Had the trust been properly left to the children outright, the property would be subject to such claims.
Two important dates should be kept in mind if you intend to take advantage of your $I-million exemption from the generation-skipping tax: 1986 and 1992. 1986 was the year Congress enacted the current generation-skipping laws. If your estate plan was drafted prior to 1986, it most likely does not take advantage of your exemption. The IRS issued Proposed Regulations for generation-skipping trusts on December 24, 1992. If your estate plan was drafted prior to that date and made use of your exemption, it should be reviewed for compliance.
*]on Gallo, class ofI967, is apartner intheLosAngeleslawfirmof Grernberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman, & Machtinger. A Certified Specialist in Estate Planning, Probate and Trust Law, California Board ofLegal Specialization, Gallo serves as Chair ofthe annual UCLA-CEBEstatePlanning Institute, which draws approximately 300 experienced estateplannersto atwo-dayprogrameachyear.
For more information on the seminars and planned giving contact Joan Tyndallin theAlumni &Development Office (po)206-n2I.
AWonderful Momentum
MOST OF YOU HAVE HEARD about the Law Library Campaign. You already know about the Law Annual Fund. So what could be different now? What more can be said about the needs of the law school-the support our faculty must have in order to pursue their research and teaching in the finest of academic traditions or the aid we must offer our law students who are facing unprecedented fee increases in a period when the legal job market has been tightening? What is different has come from you: increased participation, serious concern for the school, and a strong financial vote of confidence.
A wonderful momentum has been building among alumni and friends of the law school and we want to give you some vivid examples of this phenomenon. The Law Annual Fund closed the 1994-95 fiscal year at $559,000 an increase of nearly 5% over the previous year. Even more importantly, participation was up in all classes and in all gift ranges bringing our alumni participation rates to over 21%. As we have written in various other communications, participation is one of the ways that magazines and organizations which rank graduate and professional schools gauge alumni satisfaction.
Late in the spring of this year it was clear to us that the California state legislature was not going to easily approve the bond measure that would release the promised $I3.1 million needed for the Law Library addition. Alumni and friends from all parts ofthe state engaged in an effort to convince legislators of the value of supporting this library project. A model for financing future public capital needs, the law library project has joined private donors with public dollars in � order to meet the demand for high quality, accessible legal education in our region. Thankfully, these efforts were successful and the funds for our project were included in the budget signed by Governor Wilson on August 3, 1995. Construction will begin in November!
Alumni and friends, foundations and corporations have come together in a most gratifying way to ensure the success of the Library Campaign. Each day, each week, the excitement builds as another joins the Alumni Campaign for the Law Library, another commits to a leadership gift. A newly convened Major Gifts Committee, focused on completing the Library Campaign, met on October 2 to discuss strategies for achieving both short-term and long-term goals. Chaired by Ralph Shapiro '58, the Committee together with the Alumni Campaign Committee is helping to secure the balance of funds needed to reach the Campaign goal of $I4 million-of which over $IO million has been pledged.
This year the Law Annual Fund Committee, led by Roberta Kass '79, has set a goal of $600,000. For the first time this fall, law students initiated a phonathon to begin thanking Annual Fund donors in a more personal way. They placed over 350 calls and enjoyed the conversations with alumni and friends immensely.
Thanking those of you who help the school in so many ways is something we need to do more of-especially during this busy period of increased activity. As you read through the names on the following pages, one fact stands out. The law school's success has been built person by person, gift by gift. A gift, no matter the size, helps and counts. It is only upon reflection that it seems like one swift thing when in reality it is many things joined together. Upon reflection, it is a wonderful momentum indeed.
•:•
Students on the second day of school this fall make quick use of the Law Library's temporary headquarters at the old Graduate School of Management building.
Major Gifts to the Law Library Campaign
The law school ispermanently indebted to theHugh and Hazel DarlingFoundationfor its extraordinary commitment of$5 million to support the law library.
LANDMARK GIFTS
($1 million or more)
The Ahmanson Foundation
Hugh and Hazel Darling Foundation
FOUNDING GIFTS
($500,000 or more)
David G. Price '60 and Dallas P. Price
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
John Stauffer Charitable Trust
LEADERSHIP GIFTS
($250,000 or more)
Bob and Marion Wilson
CORNERSTONE GIFTS
($rno,ooo or more)
John G. Branca '75 and Family
Jonathan F. Chait '75
David Kelton '62 and Lenny Kelton
Michael T. Masin '69 and Joanne Masin
Mark A. Resnik '72 and Shelley Resnik
Anonymous
Alumni Campaign
BENCHMARK GIFTS
($50,000 or more)
Stephen Claman '59 and Renee Claman
Richard V Sandler '73 and Ellen Sandler
Gary Scott Stiffelman '79 and Family
William W Vaughn '55 and Claire Vaughn
SUSTAINING GIFTS
($25,000 or more)
Richard L. Ackerman '71 and Barbara Ackerman
Phyllis Bernard In Memory of David Bernard '58
Randolph M. Blotky '73 and Teresa Blotky
Rinaldo '71 and Lalla Shanna Brutoco
Richard J. Burdge, Jr. '79 and Lee Smalley Edmon
A. Barry Cappello '65
Michael A. Dan '69 and Cecilia Dan
Philip D. Dapeer '72
Deborah A. David '75 and Norman A. Kurland
Lori Huff Dillman '83 and Kirk D. Dillman '83
B. D. Fischer '58 and Frances K. Fischer
David W Fleming '59
Jon J. Gallo '67 and Eileen Gallo
Gil Garcetti '67 and Sukey Garcetti
Sandra Kass Gilman '75 and Christopher Gilman '75
David R. Ginsburg '76 and Dena Ginsburg
Irwin D. Goldring '56 and Clarann J. Goldring
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Bernard A. Greenberg '58 and Lenore S. Greenberg
Richard W Havel '71
Robert L. Kahan '69 and Diane Kahan
David S. Karton '71 and Cheryl A. Karton
James H. Kindel, Jr.
Joseph K. Kornwasser '72 and Hana Kornwasser
Karin T. Krogius '82 and Scott Mason
Moses Lebovits '75 and DeDe Lebovits
In Celebration of the Lives of Allan and Beatrice Caplan
Margaret Levy '75
Ethan B. Lipsig '74
Frances E. Lossing '78
Thomas H. Mabie '79 and Rhonda Heth '80
Louis M. Meisinger '67 and Susan Meisinger
Richard G. Parker '74
Wilma Williams Pinder '76
In Honor of her mother, Jessie Williams Rhetta
Susm Prager '71 and Jim Prager '71
Sheldon W Presser '73 and Debora Presser
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld '76 and Morton M. Rosenfeld
Edward and Nancy Rubin
Thomas C. Sadler '82 and Eila C. Skinner
Mark A. Samuels '82 and Nancy B. Samuels '82
Marc M. Seltzer '72 and Christina A. Snyder
Lewis H. Silverberg '58
Stuart A. Simke '60
Arthur Soll '58 and Barbara Soll
Herbert J. Solomon '56 and Elene Solomon
Bruce H. Spector '67 and Robin Spector
Art Spence '69 and Anne Spence
William '77 and Joanne Sullivan
Barry W Tyerman '71
Diana L. Walker '69 and Robert F. Walker
Chancellor Charles E. Young and Sue K. Young
Major Gifts to the Law School
Including gifts, pledges and pledge payments
Foundations and Corporations
Joseph Drown Foundation
Foamex International Inc.
The Ford Foundation
J. W and Ida M. Jameson Foundation
W M. Keck Foundation
Milken Family Foundation
Roth 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. Fischer
Albert B. Glickman '60 and Judith Ellis Glickman
Arthur N. Greenberg '52 and Audrey Greenberg
Barry 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
Ralph '58 and Shirley Shapiro
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 1994-1995 (Fiscal Year July 1, 1994 toJune 30, 1995)
We are pleased to present chis year's Honor Roll ofDonors reflecting gifts received from alumni, friends and faculty, foundations, and corporations between July 1, 1994 and June 30, 1995. Alumni donors are listed under their year ofgraduation and in the category which refl�ccs rhe level and designation oftheir gifc/s.
Each year,The Law Annual Fund, with rhe help ofvolunteer class representatives, encourages financial support from alumni, friends and faculty, corporations, and foundations. The fund helps co ensure a most valuable source of unrestricted funding which goes directly coward academic programs with rhe greatest need. Giving levels are as follows:
FOUNDERS
A program established many years ago co encourage high level annual support in the form ofa ten year pledge. Those appearing in chis category are currencly completing their pledge.
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-s499
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Classes prior co 1992
$125-249
Classes of1992, 1993
$75-249
Class of1994
$25-$249
SUPPORTERS
sro-$124
* This Founder has made an additional contribution co the Law Annual Fund in 1994-95. t Deceased
1952
Class Representative:
John C. McCarthy
TotalGraduates: 35
Number ofDonors: 14
Participation: 40%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Arthur N. Greenberg
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Lester Ziffren
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Saul Grayson
J. Perry Langford
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Arthur Alef
Jean Bauer Fisler
Frederick E. Mueller
Joseph N. Tilem
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Maurice W Bralley
Sidney R. Kuperberg
Sallie T. Reynolds
Marcin J. Schnitzer
CLASS OF '52 GIFT
John McCarrhy
CURTIS B. DANNING SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Curtis B. Danning
1953
Class Representative: Jerome Goldberg
TotalGraduates: 40 Number ofDonors: 9
Participation: 23%
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Frank H. Mefferd
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Herbert A. Paskett
Jack M. Saccinger
Robert B. Steinberg
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Jerome H. Goldberg
John F. Parker
Willard M. Reisz
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Dororhy W Nelson
Martin B. Weinberg
1954
Class Representative: Donald Ruston
Total Graduates: 89
Number ofDonors: 13
Participation: 15%
FOUNDERS
Marvin Gross
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
IrwinD. Goldring
Herbert J. Solomon
Joan Dempsey Klein FOUNDERS
*Donald A. Ruston
Marvin David Rowen
JAMES H. CHADBOURN DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
FELLOWS
Carl Boronkay
*Sherwin L. Memel
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
John A. Arguelles
Harvey F. Grant
Jack Levine
Howard W. Rhodes
William Cohen
*Irwin D. Goldring
Paul Levinson
*Milton Louis Miller
Herbert J. Solomon
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard E. Cole
Harold J. Delevie
Lelia H. Jabin
DEAN'S COUNSEL H. Gilbert Jones
Bernard Lauer
Jerry Silverman
SUPPORTERS
Leonard H. Pomerantz
RICHARD C. MAXWELL
CHAIR
Roger C. Pettitt
Howard Lehman
Norman D. Rose
H. GeorgeTaylor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Burton M. Bentley
Jerry Edelman
HerschelT. Elkins
Mervin N. Glow
*Bernard L. Lewis
1955 SUPPORTERS
Class Representative: Donald L. Clark
Allan Ghitterman
Charles Gordon
Total Graduates: 73 JohnW Miner
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
B. D. Fischer
Bernard A. Greenberg
William A. Masterson
Ralph Shapiro
Lewis H. Silverberg
Arthur Soll
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Gerald S. Barton
*B.D. Fischer
Harold J. Hertzberg
*Lewis H. Silverberg
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
WarrenJ. Abbott
*Dennis E. Carpenter
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Terrill F. Cox
Norman L. Epstein
Hugh H. Evans, Jr.
Philip F. Lanzafame
*Arthur Mazirow
*John Grant Wigmore
Robert L. Wilson
Hunter Wilson, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Roland A. Childs
Arthur Karma
Bernard Lemlech
JohnW Maloney
New students enjoy a bite ro
eat and conversation with
Associate Dean Stephen Number ofDonors: 15
Harvey A. Sissk:ind
Nancy M. Watson Yeazell at the orientation barParticipation: 21% becue in August.
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
SamuelW Halper
WilliamW Vaughn
1957
Class Representative:
David R. Glickman
Total Graduates: 83
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE Number ofDonors: 16
*SamuelW Halper Participation: 19 °/o
DEAN'S ADVOCATES FOUNDERS
HerbertZ. Ehrmann
Raymond F. Moats, Jr.
Graham A. Ritchie
RichardSchauer
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Myrtle Dankers
John R. Engman
Earl H. Greenstein
ForrestLatiner
DavidW Slavitt
SUPPORTERS
Marvin H. Lewis
E. Allen Nebel
Paul M. Posner
Bruce I. Rauch
LEE B. WENZEL
MEMORIAL
Jean AnnHirschi
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Daniel F. Calabro
David R. Glickman
Seymour S. Goldberg
Ephraim J. Hirsch
Marvin Jabin
Roy A. Kates
Robert A. Knox
Irving Shimer
Gloria K. Shimer
Wells K. Wohlwend
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Richard D. Agay
Ernest R. Baldwin
Charles R. Currey
EverettWilliam Maguire
RichardT. Mudge
SUPPORTERS
KennethW Downey
Henry B. Niles II
Ronald L. Scheinman
CLASS OF '58 GIFT
Ralph Shapiro
MARSHALL COGAN
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ralph Shapiro
CLIFFORDA.
HEMMERLING
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ralph Shapiro
BENJAMIN E. KING
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Ralph Shapiro
FRANCES AND JERRY
LEIGH FAMILYFUND
Ralph Shapiro
LEVINSON, MILLER,
JACOBS & PHILLIPS
SCHOLARSHIP FUND FUND
William W. Vaughn
1956
1958
Ralph Shapiro
HOWARD P. MILLER
ClassRepresentative: MEMORIAL FUND
John G. Wigmore
Class Representative: Total Graduates: u6
Irwin D. Goldring
Number ofDonors: 26
Total Graduates: 69 Participation: 22%
Number ofDonors: 22
Participation: 32%
Ralph Shapiro
RALPH AND SHIRLEY
SHAPIRO STUDENT
LOAN FUND
Ralph Shapiro
LEE B. WENZEL
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Dale V. Cunningham
Ralph Shapiro FOUNDERS
ZIFFREN/BRITTENHAM
Alan L. Freedman
John H. Sharer
Rubin M. Turner
John K. Carmack SUPPORTERS
Gary S. Jacobs
Floyd R. Brown
Total Graduates: no
Number of Donors: 29
Participation: 26%
Martin G. Wehrli
Richard B. Wolfe
tWilliam L. Yerkes
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN DEAN'S COUNSEL
Lawrin S. Lewin
John R. Benson FUND
Ralph Shapiro
1959
Class Representative:
Richard N. Ellis
Leonard Kolod
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Hugo D. de Castro
*Stuart A. Simke
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Total Graduates: roo FELLOWS
Number of Donors: 27
Participation: 27%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
Stephen Claman
Leon A. Farley
DavidW. Fleming
Josiah L. Neeper
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
*John H. Roney
FOUNDERS
Richard N. Ellis
DavidW. Fleming
Milton B. Miller
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Stanton Paul Belland
Josiah L. Neeper
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Jerry A. Brody
EarlW. Kavanau
Anthony A. Spaulding
Roger J. Broderick
Milford A. Bunnage
Bruce H. Newman
Owen A. Silverman
Alan R. Watts
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
RobertW. D'Angelo
Victor E. Gleason
Seymour Louis Goldstein
Grant E. Propper
AmilW. Roth
Stephen C. Taylor
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kenneth A. Bryant
John H. Carroll, Jr. FOUNDERS
William J. McCourt
Donald C. McDaniel
William E. Dennis
Richard S. Diamond
Dennis Fredrickson
Jack C. Glantz
James A. Hutchens
JohnR. Liebman
Eric A. Nobles
Roger A. Peters
James H. Piatt
Donald J. Regan
Jed Scully
David G. Waller
1962
ClassRepresentative:
James Andrews
Total Graduates: ro3
Number of Donors: 24
Sherman Rogers Participation: 23%
Leland D. Starkey
Emmett A. Tompkins, Jr.
ALBERT AND JUDITH
GLICKMANFUND
Albert B. Glickman
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
David Kelton
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
David Kelton
MELVILLE B. NIMMER FOUNDERS
MEMORIAL FUND
Lyman S. Gronemeyer
DEAN'S ADVOCATES 1961
Stanley A. Black
*Sanford B. Bothman
Leon A. Farley
Eugene Leviton
LeslieW. Light
Class Representatives:
David Waller
David A. Leveton
Henley L. Salrzburg
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Daniel J. Jaffe
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Total Graduates: n4 FELLOWS
Number of Donors: 36
RobertW. Vidor Participation: 32%
DEAN'S COUNSEL FOUNDERS
George Vollmer Hall
Michael Harris
Stanley Rogers
Jason H. Ross
Urban J. Schreiner
Robert H. Stopher
Donald C. Wickham
SUPPORTERS
Raymond Ceragioli
Richard M. Levin
BernardS. Shapiro
Stanley R. Weinstein
1960
Total Graduates: ro4
Number of Donors: 23
Participation: 22%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
David G. Price
Stuart A. Simke
Leroy M. Gire
Marvin Gerald Goldman
Lawrin S. Lewin
LawrenceD. Williams
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Richard D. Aldrich
*Bernard Karzman
Leonard A. Hampel
WilliamA. Mayhew
Everett F. Meiners
Michael Miller
David J. O'Keefe
Aaron M. Peck
Leslie R. Pinchuk
RonaldTuller
JeremyV Wisot
Dean Stern SUPPORTERS
Melvin L. Jensen
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
*William D. Gould
Robert T. Hanger
LeoW. Kwan
Dennis A. Page
James Leslie Spitser
DEAN'S ADVOCATES 1965
Eli Blumenfeld
Richard S. De Bro
*LeeW. Cake
Frances P. Ehrmann
Stephen M. Fenster
Robert S. Goldberg
Ronald M. Kabrins
Class Representative:
Stanley R. Jones
Total Graduates: 167
Number of Donors: 40
Participation: 24%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
Stephen M. Lachs A. BarryCappello
Ken L. Maddy
AlbanI. Niles
RobertW. Rau
George R. Royce
Michael E. Schwartz
Norman J. White
DEAN'S COUNSEL
DEAN'S CABINET
*William M. Bitting
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
*Daniel Zipser
A. Michael Genelin FOUNDERS
Bennett I. Kerns A. Barry Cappello
Lawrence I. Kirk
Richard K. Quan
SUPPORTERS
Bernard Polston
Jerome S. Billet
Manley Freid
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
John A. Altschul
Sheldon G. Bardach
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ralph Cassady
Mitchell M. Geffen
*Alan N. Halkett
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Richard Earl Barnard
Arthur Brunwasser
HillelChodos
Gerald S. Davee
Mary L. Burrell-Fulron
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Richard H. Berger
James Lerman
Don B. Rolley
David A. Ziskrout
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Karl J. Aben
Donald J. Boss
Lee Colton
Erwin H. Diller
Stuart Mandel
Luke McK.issack
Harvey Reichard
Todd RussellReinstein
Lawrence M. Schulner
1964
ClassRepresentative:
Everett F. Meiners
Total Graduates: u6
Robert H. Goon
Martin Z. Katz
Fred Selan
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
HaroldW. Hofman, Jr.
*Stanley R. Jones
*Saul L. Lessler
Andrea S. Ordin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Louis P. Petrich
Number of Donors: 27 Martin
Richard A. Rosenberg Participation: 23%
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Roselyn S. Brassell
Hiroshi Fujisaki
Dudley M. Lang
John M. Maller
Paul L. Migdal
Kermit K. Purcell
Raymond J Sinecar
Mel Springer
SeymourWeisberg
SUPPORTERS
Vern G. Davidson
Philip C. Greenwald
Herbert Laskin
1963
Class Representative:
Lawrence Williams
DEAN'S CABINET
David J. Epstein
FOUNDERS
David J. MacKenzie
JeffreyT. Oberman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
James N. Ries
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
David Greenberg
Melvyn Jay Ross
LawrenceTeplin
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
RaymondT. Gail
Kim H. Pearman
George A. Smith
Stein
EarlW. Warren
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Peter R. Bregman
Stephen C. Drummy
George C. Eskin
Joseph E. Gerbac
JeroldV Goldstein
Walter G. Howald
Lawrence H. Nagler
Jack M. Newman
Robert H. Nida
John C. Nolan
Ezekiel P. Perlo
Carlos Rodriguez
Leonard R. Sager
Harold J. Stanton
DEAN'S COUNSEL
FrederickD. Booke
Kenneth M. Byrum
Sidney F. Croft
Jerome Diamond
V Gene McDonald
William J. Elfving
Marshall S. Freedman
Edward C. Kupers
Melvyn Mason
Martin Wolman
SUPPORTERS
Jack Goldman
H. Lee McGuire, Jr.
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
MEMORIALFUND
Andrea S. Ordin
ZIFFREN/BRITTENHAM
FUND
Kenneth Ziffren
1966
ELISA H. HALPERN
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Richard H. Cooper
Jerome P. Fleischman
LEE B. WENZEL
MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Daniel G. Zerfas
1967
Class Representatives:
Michael D. Marcus
Michael Waldorf
Total Graduates: 250
Number of Donors: 84
Participation: 34°/o
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
Harland W. Braun
Jon J. Gallo
Class Representative: Gil Garcetti
Stanley M. Price
Total Graduates: 200
Evan R. Medow
Louis M. Meisinger
Number of Donors: 39 Bruce H. Spector
Participation: 20%
FOUNDERS
Robert Bertram Burke
Stanley M. Price
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Barer C. Fink
Lawrence I. Schwart2
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Stephen W. Bershad
WilfordD. Godbold, Jr.
Irving H. Greines
Dennis D. Hill
GeorgeW. King
Joseph L. Shalanc
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Joseph A. Arroyo
AbrahamW. Baily
Gary Barnett
Peter W. Blackman
Philip M. Brown
Daniel M. Caine
DavidW. Condeff
Samuel P. Delug
Lawrence H. Fein
Stanley Genser
Lawrence Jacobson
W. Michael Johnson
David L. Kerrigan
Robert J. Levy
Paul J. Litz
Michael D. Marcus
Sheldon E. Miller
Jon P. Paradis
James B. Pollock
John R. Schilling
Dennis J. Seider
Hortense Kleitman Snower
Richard C. Solomon
Michael S. Ullman
Eric R. Van De Water
Steven A. Wawra
Robert A. Weeks
Jay C. Weitzler FOUNDERS
HarlandW Braun
Richard A. Lane
Martin F. Majestic
Evan R. Medow
Louis M. Meisinger
JeffreyT. Miller
ElliottD. Olson
Franklin Tom
Michael Waldorf
Robert J. Wynne
MelZiontz
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
David M. Horwitz
*Bruce H. Specror
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
DEAN'S ADVOCATES FELLOWS
Stephen A. Behrendt
RaymondW. Ferris
Monte C. Fligsten
Robert J. Higa
David A. Horowitz
Frederick Kuperberg
Richard H. Millard
Ronald I. Silverman
DEAN'S COUNSEL
David L. Barg
Barbara B. Burke
James H. Karp
ArnoldT. Lester
Susan W. Liebeler
Stephen K. Miller
William G. Morrissey
Stephen F. Peters
David I. Riemer
Stuart J. Rosen
Barry Russell
Ronald L. Sievers
Daniel J. Tobin
SUPPORTERS
Elaine G. Caney
Joseph D. Caney
William M. Egerman
Donald H. Glaser
Robert J. Sullivan
David R. Carmichael
Kenneth Schreiber
John C. Spence III
Gary D. Stabile
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Peter M. Appleton
Franklin R. Wurtzel
SUPPORTERS
James Banks
Alan G. Barry
Jeffrey R. Brodey
*John Gardner Hayes
Steven A. Helfend
Mark A. Ivener
Michael A. Levin
Paul M. Migdal
John R. Montgomery, Jr.
Howard R. Price
Howard D. Sacks
Arthur D. Schonfeld
Edward Van Gelder
Grover P. Walker
John M. Wilcox
1968
Class Representative:
Paul J. Glass
Total Graduates: 178
Number of Donors: 28
Arthur Avazian Participation: 16%
Michael D. Berk
Ralph L. Block
Kenneth R. Blumer
*Cary D. Cooper
Roger Jon Diamond
Eugene M. Genson
Lynard C. Hinojosa
FOUNDERS
J. Michael Crowe
Frank]. Lanak
Allan S. Morton
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Leonard D.Jacoby FELLOWS
Randolph K. Joyce
Richard N. Kipper
Jeffrey L. Linden
Stefan M. Mason
Sheldon Michaels
Milton J. Nenney
Steven Z. Perren
Jason C. Reed
Jon A. Shoenberger
Frank A. Ursomarso
Thomas E. Warriner
Robert C. Colton
David B. Geerdes
Ronald E. Neuhoff
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Steven A. Becker
Audrey S. Ezratey
Robert F. Harris
Stephen C. Jones
Joel R. Ohlgren
Gordon J. Rose
*Ronald P. Slates
Sanford R. Wilk
Evan G. Williams
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Barry A. Fisher
Earle G. Goodman
Lowell Graham
Jerold A. Krieger
James B. Merzon
Prentice L. O'Leary
Stuart L. Olster
Terry L. Rhodes
Robert Z. Walker
SUPPORTERS
Terry H. Breen
David B. Johnson
Charles J. Post III
Richard G. Wise
1969
Class Representatives:
MichaelA. K. Dan
Michael Shannon
Total Graduates: 182
Number ofDonors: 53
Participation: 29%
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
D. Marshall Nelson
William M. Pate, Jr.
Tom A. Robinson
William R. Schoen
Donald J. Stearns
James D. Vogt
GaryT. Walker
1971
Class Representatives:
David J. Burton
Richard Havel
Total Graduates: 267
Paul C. Nyquist
Laurence D. Rubin
Thomas M. Scheerer
Gary J. Siener
Allen H. Sochel
David C. Tunick
Number ofDonors: 70 Eric R. Young
Cameron R. Williams Participation: 26%
SUPPORTERS
Michael E. Alpert
Terry J. Amdur
Andrew D. Amerson
RichardW Bryson
Richard H. Caplan
Richard A. Curtis
Jock R. Davidson
David B. Epstein
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Richard L. Ackerman
Rinaldo S. Brutoco
Richard W. Havel
David S. Karton
James Martin Prager
Susan Westerberg Prager
Barry WinyettTyerman
Allan I. Kleinkopf FOUNDERS
Sally P. Pasette
1970
Class Representative:
Perry E. Maguire
Total Graduates: 176
Number ofDonors: 34
Michael A. K. Dan Participation: 19%
Robert L. Kahan
MichaelT. Masin FOUNDERS
Art Spence
Diana L. Walker
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
*John H. Weston
Stanley E. Maron
Lawrence E. May
Robert M. Popeney
Albert Z. Praw
CharlesW Schneider
Donald K. Steffen
Thomas C. Taylor, Jr.
RichardT. Vogel, Jr.
SUPPORTERS
Susan E. Amerson
Robert G. Blank
Arthur R. Boehm
Mary Jo Curwen
Millard M. Frohock, Jr.
JonathanC. Gord.on
Thomas B. Karp
Gary G. Neusradrer
Richard G. Ritchie
George L. Schraer
Rinaldo S. Brutoco
Richard D. Fybel
Thomas P. Lambert
J. Robert Nelson, Jr.
Barry W Tyerman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Richard L. Ackerman
Curtis A. Cole
RichardW Havel
Alan J. Silver
Earl M. Weitzman
Nicholas Budd
Scott J. Spolin
RichardJ. Stone
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
PUBLIC INTEREST
AWARDS
Richard D. Fybel
1972
Class Representatives:
Curtis 0. Barnes
Howard M. Knee
Total Graduates: 276
Number ofDonors: 59
JAMES H. CHADBOURN Participation: 21%
FELLOWS
Robert J. Adelman
*David J. Burton
Paul S. Meyer
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Philip D. Dapeer
Joseph K. Kornwasser
DEAN'S COUNSEL
EdwardW Abramowitz
Martin J. Brill
Lawrence J. Briskin
William C. Clifton
Mitchell A. Ebright
Lawrence N. Guzin
Stephen C. Klausen
Linda B. Riback
Dominick W Rubalcava
William D. Smith
SUPPORTERS
Peter A. Barbosa
W Daniel Clinton
John M. Collins
Bruce J. Croushore
Kenneth B. Dusick
Timi A. Hallem
Ivan Lawner
Dora R. Levin
Barbara De Mont Moore
Kenneth C. Salzberg
Frank Sinatra III
Penina Van Gelder
LawrenceW Hait
Elwood G. Lui
MichaelT. Masin
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Keenan Behrle
Ragna Olausen Henrichs
*Robert S. Shahin
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
David A. Buxbaum
Robert B. Fraser
Roger W. Pearson
MichaelT. Shannon
Lon Sobel
Richard B. Wolf
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Sara L. Adler
John A. McDermott II
William Finestone
Jan C. Gabrielson
Raymond H. Goldstone
Rowan K. Klein
Steven E. Moyer
Richard A. Neumeyer
Charles G. Rigg
Toby J. Rothschild
Andrea R. Schrote
James F. Stiven
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kenneth Drexler
Henry R. Fenton
Norman N. Flette
Robert Glasser
Arnold K. Graham
Robert E. Lewis
Kenneth Meyer
WilliamJ. Kelleher
Brian C. Leck
Marc J. Poster
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
William K. McCallister, Jr.
Linn K. Coombs
Richard J. Davis, Jr.
*Ellen B. Friedman
Laura L. Glickman
Jan Lawrence Handzlik
Linda S. Hume
John B. Jakie
Myron L. Jenkins
Herbert Jay Klein
Perry E. Maguire
RobertY. Nakagawa
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Kenyon F. Dobberteen
Michael M. Duffey
William Owen Fleischman
Max F. Gruenberg, Jr.
Bruce S. Herwig
Steven R. Hubert
Robert A. Schrage
Terry L. Tyler
SUPPORTERS
BarbaraT. Gamer
Richard C. Goodman
Allan J. Goodman
Mark A. Levin
Rodney 0. Lilyquist, Jr.
Robert M. Wright
ZIFFREN/BRITTENHAM
FUND
Skip Brittenham
Richard D. Norron
Michael A. Ozurovich
James J. Pagliuso
RichardT. Peters
Kent L. Richland
Bobby L. Smith
Robert H. Wyman
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Douglas A. Bagby
Jeffrey A. Berman
William G. Cort
Allan Cutrow
Judy Fonda
John J. Frankovich
Ronald R. Gastelum
Roger H. Howard
Ronald C. Lazof
tRobert P. Mandel
Paul Marcus
John D. McConaghy
William P. Moore
Richard J. Morgan
Kenneth K. Okel
Glenn K. Osajima
David B. Wilshin
Michael F. Yamamoto
StuartD. Zimring
Douglas B. Zubrin
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Frederick P. Aguirre
Shunji Asari
Cruger L. Bright
Jan E. Chatten-Brown
Wayne S. Canterbury
Terry L. Fisher
Gary L. Gilbert
Thomas E. Horn
Pauline G. Johnson
George D. Kew
John P. Meck
1973 FOUNDERS
Mark A. Resnik
Marc M. Seltzer
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Class Representative:
Bernard R. Gans
Total Graduates: 294
Number ofDonors: 72
Marc M. Seltzer Participation: 24%
FOUNDERS
Richard A. Blacker
Roy M. Brisbois
Philip D. Dapeer
Moises Luna
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Randolph M. Blocky
Sheldon W. Presser
RichardV. Sandler
WayneW Smith FOUNDERS
Donald P. Baker
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Roy S. Glickman
John P. Meck
Louis R. Miller III
PatriciaSturdevant
James R. Walther
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Christopher P. Bisgaard
Howard D. Krepack
Cary B. Lerman
Gordon R. McDowell, Jr.
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
*Curtis 0. Barnes
George J. Barron
Ronald M. Bayer
Rafael A. Cardenas
Peter Q. Ezzell
Deborah R. Gatzek
Donald A. Goldman
Gary L. Kaseff
James Kashian
Andrew E. Katz
Howard M. Knee
Bruce M. Kramer
Mario Camara
Bernard R. Gans
Nathalie Hoffman
Robert F. Marshall
Sheldon W. Presser
Richard V. Sandler
Jeffrey E. Sultan
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Martin E. Auerbach
Randolph M. Blotky
Abraham D. Lev
RonaldW. Rouse
StacyD. Shartin
*L. Kirk Wallace
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Lois G. Andrews
Henry S. Barbosa
Dennis S. Beck
Timothy R. Born
Michael L. Dillard
Kenneth P. Eggers
R. Roy Finkle
Peter M. Fonda
James L. Goldman
Gerald M. Gordon
Douglas B. Haynes
Charles l. Henderson
Joe W. Hilberman
Ronald J. Jacobson
Larry A. Kay
Randall H. Kennon
Lawrence P. Mortorff
David S. Sabih
Kathryne A. Stoltz
Michael J. Strumwasser
James F. Wilson III
Peter Andrew Wissner
Howard N. Wollitz
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Robert Berke
Mark A. Bookman
Anita S. Brenner
David T. Dibiase
Joshua Dressler
Natan Epstein
David A. Lehrer
Steven Edward Levy
Laura K. McAvoy
Douglas C. Neilsson
R. Thomas Peterson
Theresa J. Player
Patrick C. Quinlivan
Carl M. Shusterman
Alan P. Thomas
Leonard E. Torres
Robert A. Wooten, Jr.
SUPPORTERS
James A. Baker
Diane L. Becker
Arthur P. Berg
John M. Bransfield
Marc P. Bratman
Joel M. Bueler
Pauline M. Calkin
John E. David
Michael H. Fate
Robert W Fischer, Jr
Mark F. Grady
Arnold W Gross
Gregory M. Hansen
Michael G. Johnson
Cynthia C. Lebow
Joyce A. Orliss
William H. Travis
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Michael D. Marans
1974
Total Graduates: 295 Number ofDonors: 53 Participation: 18%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Ethan B. Lipsig
Richard G. Parker
Randolph C. Visser
FOUNDERS
William Harold Borthwick
Jack Fried
Dan Garcia
Ethan B. Lipsig
Ted Obrzut
Richard G. Parker
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Buddy Epstein
Andrew A. Kurz
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Susan B. Carnahan
Allan B. Cooper
William S. Davis
Marshall M. Taylor
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Peter C. Bronson
Silvia M. Diaz
James L. Foorman
Robert F. Hirano
Joseph J. Kaplon
Cornell J. Price
Michael S. Rubin
Betsy A. Strauss
Shan K. Thever
Marc J. Winthrop
DEAN'S COUNSEL
William L. Bardes
Kenneth A. Black
Walter Cochran-Bond
Lawrence Borys
Dennis A. Cohen
Ignacio S. Coca
R. Stephen Doan
Charles A. Goldwasser
Antonia Hernandez
Barbara Hindin
Jonathan M. Klar
Nancy M. Knight
David C. Larsen
Charles Margines
Mark Mitchell
Nancy A. Saggese
Jeriel C. Smith
Nancy Spero
Victoria Uherbelau
Steven D. Wiener
William L. Winslow
Richard P. Yang
SUPPORTERS
Gary A. Feess
Scott E. Grimes
J. Thomas Oldham
Steven L. Shahbazian
Michael J. Siegel
Donald P. Silver
Rodney B. Thatcher
David H. White
1975
Class Representatives:
Brenda Powers Barnes
Moses Lebovits
Julie J. Rider
Harvey Shapiro
Total Graduates: 307
Number ofDonors: 78 Participation: 25%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
John G. Branca
Jonathan F. Chait
Deborah A. David
Sandra Kass Gilman
Moses Lebovits
Margaret Levy
FOUNDERS
Brenda Powers Barnes
James D. C. Barrall
Pamela Brockie
Jonathan F. Chair
Donald S. Eisenberg
Karen D. Mack
Wayne A. Schrader
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
*Moses Lebovirs
Charles C. Read
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Brad N. Baker
Edward C. Clifton
Robert Alan Green
Michael J. Harrington
Alex Kozinski
Allen L. Michel
Grace N. Mitsuhata
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Deborah L. Arron
James R. Brueggeman
Michael J. Budzyn
Thomas W Cohen
Robert D. Cunningham
Phillip S. Dalton
Paul L. Gale
John B. Golper
Andrew J. Guilford
John W Hagey
Steven Hecht
Larry G. lvanjack
Hayward J. Kaiser
Romulo I. Lopez
Gary W Maeder
Norman A. Pedersen
Leland J. Reicher
Julia J. Rider
Harvey Shapiro
Virginia E. Sloan
Emily A. Stevens
Thomas C. Tankersley
Seth Tievsky
Glenn F. Wasserman
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Linda D. Anisman
Valerie L. Baker
Frederick B. Benson
Victoria L. Block
Bruce L. Dusenberry
Roberta Lee Franklin
Robert G. Garrett
Victor J. Gold
A. Thomas Golden
Susan T. House
Evelyn Balderman Hutt
Samuel D. Ingham III
Gail D. Kass
Robert L. Kaufman
Robert M. Kunstadt
Barbara M. Motz
Marsha J. Moutrie
Steven G. Pallios
Irwin B. Rothschild III
*Sharon F. Rubalcava
David R. Smith
Marc I. Steinberg
Lawrence Howard Thompson
James D. Vandever
Mark Waldman
Mark S. Windisch
New students char with Kristine Knaplund, senior lecturer in law, at law school orientation.
SUPPORTERS
Michael C. Baum
Jeffrey D. Gale
Brian E. Keefe
Calvin Lau
Gilberto A. Limon
Gary Quincy Michel
Bradford H. Miller
Thomas G. Ryan
Marjorie S. Steinberg
JOHN G. BRANCA FUND
John G. Branca
1976
James P. Donohue
Don M. Drysdale
Debra P. Granfield
Michael A. Hood
Cheryl A. Lutz
Douglas G. Mason
Duane C. Musfelt
Megumi D. Osumi
Robert A. Pallemon
Gordon M. Park
Michael D. Rich
Anne B. Roberts
*Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Michael A. Rubel
Harmon J. Sieff
Bonnie E. Thomson
Class Representative: Eugene Tillman
Richard K. Diamond
Total Graduates: 292
Number of Donors: 69
Participation: 24%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
David R. Ginsburg
Valerie J. Merritt
Wilma J. Pinder
Marguerite S. Rosenfeld
Dorothy Wolpert
FOUNDERS
Michael I. Adler
Fredric I. Bernstein
Maribeth Armstrong
James J. Tomkovicz
SUPPORTERS
Adrian S. Andrade
Stewart A. Baker
David S. Chaney
Nicholas S. Chrisos
Jonathan L. Daniel
Daniel A. Dobrin
Janice L. Feinstein
Carolyn J. Gill
*Paul Gordon Hoffman
Adrienne E. Larkin
Richard H. Levin
Beth L. Levine
Nancy J. Madsen
John W Stephens
Marcy J.K. Tiffany
Jonathan R. Yarowsky
Scott Z. Zimmermann
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Terry D. Avchen
Marilyn Barrett
Kathleen Houston Drummy
Edwin F. Feo
Gregg M. Gibbons
Roger A. Lu.ebs
Tomar T. Mason
Neil J. Rubenstein
Mark W Snauffer
Russell C. Swarrz
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Alan G. Benjamin
Dave B. Bowker
Robert Clasen
Bruce E. Cooperman
Dhiya El-Saden
Annette H. Keller
Martin C. Kristal
Deborah Kranze
Joseph Krurh
Lynda S. Mabry
Peter W Mason
Lana Freistat Melman
Gregory F. Millikan
Durham J. Monsma
Robert J. Moore
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Frances E. Lossing
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
James R. Asperger
Michael D. Briggs
Hilary Huebsch Cohen
Richard D. Freer
Miriam J. Golbert
John P. Howitt
M. Brian McMahon
Christopher J. Martin
Helen Whiteford Melman
J. Michael Norris
Barbara W. Ravitz
Marietta S. Robinson
Paul S. Rutter
Kathy T. Wales
Arlene F. Withers
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Nancy R. Alpert
Linda D. Bardsley
Sandra L. Buttitta
Carol A. Chase
David R. Deutsch
Lair C. Franklin
Wayne H. Gilbert
Karin Greenfield-Sanders
Robert J. Grossman
Kenneth L. Guernsey
Susan J. Hazard
Madison Farrand Grose
Karen Hancock
Kenneth A. Kramarz
Mark A. Kuller
Donald P. Paskewitz
Cynthia T. Podren
David Rosman
Elaine Stangland
Paul R. Tremblay
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Heather S. Georgakis
1979
Class Representatives:
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
Roberta Kass
Robin B. Lappen
Total Graduates: 273
Number of Donors: 70
Participation: 26%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
Thomas H. Mabie
Gary Scott Stiffelman
FOUNDERS
Richard J. Burdge, Jr.
Gail Ellen Lees
Rochelle M. Lindsey
Robert A. Spira
Jenny Fisher
David R. Ginsburg
Victor Berkey Moheno
Mark A. Neubauer
Richard Schneider
Anita Y. Wolman
Philip J. Wolman
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Bruce C. Stuart
Judith W. Wegner
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
David R. Ginsburg
1977
Arturo J. Morales
Catherine S. Norian
John E. Pope
Kim T. Schoknecht
William S. Small
Marsh Tanner
Cynthia Wicker
Class Representative: SUPPORTERS
Gregory E. Breen
Total Graduates: 313
Number of Donors: 68
Dorothy Wolpert Participation: 22%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Robert M. Angel
Paul A. Babwin
Peter B. Carlisle
Charles E. Curtis
Teresa Estrada-Mullaney
Martin A. Hannes
Daniel C. Hedigan
Sherrill L. Johnson
Dean J. Kitchens
Ann L. Kough
Linda M. Lasley
Marlo Rene Laws
Karen Magid
John Mayer
Mary C. Molidor
Henrietta E. Mosley
Lisa Greer Quateman
Michael A. Robbins
Kay E. Rustand
Harrison D. Taylor
Barry M. Weisz
Kim Mclane Wardlaw
Gary Scott Stiffelman Borthwick
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Mark R. Burrill
Timm Andrew Miller
Andrew Stuart Pauly
Sandra B. Stern
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Wayne D. Alvarez
Michael Barclay
Aviva M. Bergman
Linda Gach-Ray
Roberta Kass FELLOWS
William D. Claster
David Clarence Doyle
Marilyn S. Heise
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Lourdes G. Baird
Charles F. Barker
Linda C. Diamond
Richard K. Diamond
Kenneth L. Friedman
Bruce G. Iwasaki
Richard J. Katz
Diane L. Kimberlin
Valerie J. Merritt
David B. Parker
Karen Randall
Marc R. Stein
Roland G. Wrinkle
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Richard Avila
Bruce A. Barsook
Alice Cohen Bisno
Barbara A. Blanco
Peter J. McBreen
Elizabeth E. Bruton
Clyde T. Doheney
Herbert D. Meyers
Dhiya El-Saden
Marcia A. Forsyth
William Sullivan '77
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP
Stephen D. Greenberg
FOUNDERS
Carolyn Hopkins Carlburg
Howard E. King
Wendy Munger
Richard R. Purtich
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Carl C. Robinson
Gail M. Singer
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Andrea H. Bricker
Rochelle Browne
Amey E. DeSoto
Elisabeth Eisner
Paul E. B. Glad
Carl J. Klunder
David P. Leonard
Lawrence J. Poteet
Charles N. Shephard
Joseph M. Gensheimer
Catherine Grant
Sara R. Latz
Hall Randall Marston
Donald V. Morano
Edward I. Silverman
*William F. Sullivan
Vera A. Weisz
Clemon W. Williams
1978
Class Representatives:
Frances E. Lossing
Paul S. Rutter
Total Graduates: 303
Number of Donors: 82
Participation: 27%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Frances E. Lossing
Timothy Joseph White
FOUNDERS
Robert N. Block
Melanie Cook
Kenneth D'Alessandro
David F. Faustman
Christopher Kim
Gwen H. Whitson
Ralph Zamudio Ill
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Judith Bailey
Carol Platt Cagan
Douglas H. Collom
William H. Davis, Jr.
Michael D. Dozier
Michael D. Fernhoff
David J. Garibaldi III
Marlene Butcher Jones
Jeffrey G. Kelly
Linda K. Lefkowitz
Robert A. Levinson
Vernon T. Meador III
James J. Moak
Albert J. Moore
Robert M. Ozell
Marc E. Rohatiner
David I. Schulman
Douglas W. Stern
Anthony Wheeldin
SUPPORTERS
Steven H. Burkow
Barrington A. S. Daltrey
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr.
David G. Epstein
Robin B. Lappen
Jennifer L. Machlin
James A. Melman
David S. Neiger
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Lloyd A. Bookman
Alan F. Broidy
Benjamin R. Campos
Shirley E. Curfman
Cathy Deroy
D. Barclay Edmundson
Karin S. Feldman
Suzan R. Flamm
Spencer L. Karpf
Roger Lautzenhiser
Donna M. McClay
Arthur F. Radke
Bernard M. Resser
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Harmon Allan Brown
Allan E. Ceran
Suzette Clover
Linda K. Engel
James D. Friedman
Catherine B. Frink
Nicholas Goodhue
Cindy W Graff
Joel D. Kuperberg
Sandra L. Lackey
Lydia S.Levin
Sandra WeishartMarinelli
Gary A.Meyer
Robbie E.Monsma
Michael E.Ripley
MichaelW Schoenleber
Charles O. Strathman, Jr.
Martha A. Torgow
David 0.Wright
SUPPORTERS
Sydney M.Avent
John Louis Carlton
Thomas L.Flynn
Albert S.Glenn
OletaJ.Harden
George H.Hohnsbeen II
BaileyR.De Iongh
William D. Klibanow
Steven A.Micheli
Mary S.Newton
Jedd S. Palmer
Nicholas Politis
David A.Raynes
Gilbert Rodriguez, Jr.
Shelley Steuer
Henry S. Weinstock
Elizabeth N.Winthrop
Ellen Winthrop-Michel
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Marilyn R.Moriarty
Class Representatives:
Laurence M.Berman
John Cochrane
Total Graduates: 300 Number ofDonors: 90 Participation: 30%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
RhondaJ.Heth
FOUNDERS
David Ackert
Laurence M.Berman
Lonnie C.Blanchard
David H.Dolinko
Ruth E.Fisher
Feris M.Greenberger
Mary FlynnPalley
John G.Petrovich
Leslie Brooks Rosen
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ann O.Baskins
Doreen M.Curtis
Renee L.Campbell
Leslie A.Cohen
*RobertJames Finger
Paul A.Franz
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Thomas E. Gibbs
Joshua L.Green
Kathleen Hogaboom
Ida L. Levine
F. Sigmund Lurher
Lucina L.Moses
David S.Porter
Paul Schmidhauser
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Amy L. Applebaum
W. Jeffrey Austin
Andrew P. Bernstein
Neila R.Bernstein
Barbara Biles
JohnW Cochrane
Margaret R.Dollbaum
Ronald M.Dorfman
Gordon A.Goldsmith
Herbert B.Graham
Laurence L.Hummer
MarcW.June
William A.Lappen
Harriet Leva
BernardJ.Lurie
Charles D. Meyer
Jose A. Velasco
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Irene P. Ayala
Anne S.Berkovitz
Becky L.Burnham
Dawne Astride Casselle
Carol A.Clem
MartinJ.Evans
Alan H.Finkel
William D.De Grandis
Mark S.Green
Thomas W.Kellerman
Kathleen R.Koch-Weser
David A. Lash
Keith A.Levendosky
Linda A.Netzer
John H.Renninger
Daniel Rodrigues
Millicent N. Sanchez
John A. Seethoff
LindaJ.Sharpe
Richard B.Stagg
William R.Warhurst
Mark P. Weitzel
Gail Windisch
SUPPORTERS
Jane Aoyama-Martin
Istvan Benko
C.E.Blake
Allan H.Curler
William S. Dato
James R.Dwyer
Jeanne A.Flaherty
Wilbur Gin
EricJ.Hamermesh
Debra Hodgson
SusanJacoby-Stern
Peter R. Dion Kindem
Joann Learherby
RobertT.Lemen
Nancy L.McTaggart
Mary L.Muir
Rosendo Pena, Jr.
Craig G.Riemer
Daniel Rodrigues
Sylvia Lopez Rodrigues
Frances G.Smith
Laurel S.Terry
StevenJ. Untiedt
Craig E.Veals
Juana V Webman
MICHAEL PALLEY MEMORIAL FUND
Mary Flynn Palley
Carol Cavan Williams
Class Representatives:
Robert B.Orgel
John F. Runkel, Jr.
Total Graduates: 330 Number ofDonors: 84 Participation: 25%
FOUNDERS
EricJ.Emanuel
James I.Ham
John F. Runkel, Jr.
Marilee C.Unruh
JAMES H.CHADBOURN FELLOWS
JamesM.Ash
David Babbe
SusanJ.Bell
DirkW van de Bunt
AngelaJ. Campbell
Michael R.Harris
Jonathan M. Hoff
Martha B. Hogan
Marjorie E. Mikels
Rensselaer J. Smith IV
Jed E.Solomon
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Douglas B. Canfield
JohnW.Crittenden
Leianne S. Crittenden
Walter R.Dahl
Gregory S.Drake
Mark E. Ferrario
Jean G.Friedman
RichardW Kaiser
Karen L.Matteson
Julie S.Mebane
Creighton D. Mills
Marcy S.Morris
Robert B. Orgel
John S.Peterson
Martin E.Rosen
Karen Green Rosin
Dennis S.Roy
Reed M.Scuria
KennethJ. Stipanov
Steven M.Strauss
Charles R.Tremper
DEAN'S COUNSEL
MarkJ. Barnes
Jeffrey M. Berke
David F. Brown
*Elizabeth A.Cheadle
Cornell Chulay
Regina I.Covitt
DianeJ.Crumpacker
Julie A. Davies
Bradley D.Frazier
Julie M.Heldman
Samuel Israel
MichaelJ. Klein
Wesley Kumagai
Jonathan F. Light
Brent R. Liljesrrom
Margaret Mack Mason
Susan Fowler McNally
Jeffrey L. Oliphant
Jesus E. Quinonez
Silvia R. Argueta, ACLU Foundation ofSouthern California; Kenneth N. Green, Bureau Chief, LosAngeles County Public Defender's Office; and UCLA Law Professor Paul Bergman, Chair ofthe Public Interest Committee, speak during Public Interest Career Panel.
David B. Rechtman
Clark W. Rivera
Lin B. Saberski
Scott B. Samsky
Glenn P. Sapaden
William L. Twomey
Judith A. Uherbelau
Joan E. Vogel
Peter C. Walsh
Michael L. Wilhelm
Hoyt H. Zia
SUPPORTERS
John W. Belsher
Frank Christine III
Judith Kessen Crawford
Helen E. Cutler
Delavan J. Dickson
Patricia H. Feiner
Patricia M. Ito
Chris S. Jacobsen
Phyllis B. Johnston
Linda A. Kirios
William J. Kirsch
Edwin I. Lasman
David Melcer
Karen E. Perper
Denise Rose
Craig P. Sapin
Lynn Y. Wakatsuki
Lorence M. Zimtbaum
PUBLIC INTEREST
Jack G. Cairl, Jr.
Patrick W. Dennis
Jessica K. Frazier
Bryan D. Hull
John W. MacKay
Debra L. Kegel
Ira D. Kharasch
Gerald A. Klein
Cynthia L. Leppert
Leslie R. Mitchner
Michelle Patterson
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy Samuels
Eric B. Siegel
Jeffrey H. Silberman
Ilene EvansTrabolsi
Irma K. Zahid
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Marc H. Corman
John M. Dab
Jay J. Elliott
MarkJ. Fucile
James L. Jerue
David P. Lee
Kenneth A. Marryn
Daniel M. Mayeda
Bert S. Nishimura
Jack H. Rubens
Joseph A. Scherer
Vinay Sharma
Philip Starr
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Kirk D. Dillman
Lori HuffDillman
FOUNDERS
Howard A. Jacobs
H. Deane Wong
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
James H. Eisenberg
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
John S. Brandon
TimothyT. Coates
Lori HuffDillman
Kirk D. Dillman
Anne E. Morea
Robert B. Reeves
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Mary K. Barnes
Geoffrey A. Berkin
Renee P. Brook
PatrickJ. Evans
Scott A. Forsyth
Roger L. Funk
June G. Guinan
Jeffrey M. Ettinger
James G. Foster
Alan E. Garfield
Steven A. Heimberg
Kellye S. Hoffman
Matthew W. Kavanaugh
Jacquelyn S. Kiether
Barry Lambergman
Ronald E. Levinson
Jodi Levinson
Monique C. Lillard
Marilyn D. Martin-Culver
KimberlyS. Mitchell
Byongchae Pak
Nancy Baldwin Reimann
Robert B. Rocklin
Robert H. Steinberg
Chet L. Taylor
Carl R. Waldman
Anonymous
PUBLIC INTEREST
AWARDS
David A. Thompson
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
SUPPORTERS
Bennett A. Bigman
LauraJean Birkmeyer
Kent Brockelman
Kathleen Y. Coleman
Connie Coin Contes
Tippi Dobrofsky
John P. Fernandez
Susan L. Formaker
Brad I. Golstein
Guy N. Halgren
Laura W. Halgren
Lisa S. Hamilton
Michael D. Herbert
William E. Ireland
Sandra W. Lavigna
Elizabeth M. Matthias
Cynthia E. Maxwell
Daniel A. Olivas
KatherineT. Pratt
Barbara F. Riegelhaupt
Nancy Ware Shepard
Jean E. Tanaka
Leonard M. Tavera
Sura L. Weiss
John R. Wylie
Everett C. Hoffman LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI
Michael A. Helfant ASSOCIATION
DavidJ. Hirsch
Ede C. lbekwe
Ellis G. Joseph
EdwardJ. Szymanski, Jr. In-Young Lee
1984
Class Representative:
Kenneth B. Hertz AWARDS
David Babbe
Troy L. Tate
Walter W. Whelan III
Michael A. Yglecias
1982 SUPPORTERS
Class Representative:
David E. Van lderstine, Jr.
Total Graduates: 330
Number of Donors: 78
Participation: 24°/o
LIBRARYCAMPAIGN
KarinT. Kmgius
Mark A. Samuels
Nancy B. Samuels
FOUNDERS
Susan L. Claman
Steven C. Glickman
Richard J. Gruber
Donna R. Hecht
Gregory Soobong Paik
Jay F. Palchikoff
John R. Sommer
Adam Cavazos Vallejo
Reed S. Waddell
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Robert T. Clarkson
KarinT. Krogius
Elizabeth D. Mann
Dennis L. Perez
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Joan M. LeSage
Scott T. Maker
Thomas C. Sadler
Jocelyn Niebur Thompson
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Thomas A. Bliss
Mauryne Stephens Fennel
Nori Ann Gerardo
Barbara G. Gerber
Mireille F. Gotsis
Laura Landesman
Harry J. LeVine
Rodney R. Mills
Jerald L. Mosley
Larry Nathenson
Leslye E. Orloff
Kurt V. Ossenbaugh
Elizabeth A. Pollock
Darien E. Pope
Dennis A. Ragen
DavidW. Reimann
Belinda D. Rinker
ValdoJ. Smith
David A. Solitare
Brad T. Summers
*David E. Van lderstine, Jr.
Ellen Gorman Wacker
Danuta M. Zamda
DanielJ. McLoon
DeborahY. Monticue
David S. Reisman
Robert F. Torres
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Justin E. Budare
Lilianne G. Chaumont
Marion G. Crain
Andrew B. Downs
Clifford H. Fonstein
Kerry Gottlieb
BruceJ. Graham
Frank R. Jazzo
Roger L. Kohn
Glenn Lorin Krinsky
Kenneth L. Kutcher
Michael E. Langton
Eric G. Lardiere
Larry S. Lee
Wesley M. Lowe
Paul Maestas
Jeffrey D. Nagler
Terry P. McNiff
R. Wayne Olmsted
Marilyn S. Pecsok
Nora A. Quinn
Joann Ralphs
M. Christina Ramirez
SAMUEL N. AND Stephen M. Rice
LEAH S. FISCHER FUND
Samuel N. and Leah S.
Fischer
1983
Mark G. Schroeder
Susan Silver
Louie L. Vega
Clayton Vreeland
Lise Naomi Wilson
Michael Yaffa
Class Representatives: SUPPORTERS
Lori HuffDillman
Michael A. Helfant
Total Graduates: 348
Number of Donors: 82
Henry Ben-Zvi Participation: 24%
PatrickJ. Cain
John D. Bengtson
Michael F. Bmderick
Andrew W. Caine
Stephanie L. Choy
Pamela L. Coe
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Timothy F. Sylvester
Total Graduates: 300 1985
Number of Donors: 61 Class Representatives:
Participation: 20%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Paul R. Anderson
Kenneth B. Hertz
Timothy C. Shepard
Brian Appel
Lynne S. Goldstein
John M. Moscarino
Total Graduates: 293
Number of Donors: 65
Participation: 22%
Peter C. Thomas FOUNDERS
John M. Moscarino
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Bruce C. Catania
Pamela G. Chin
Alexis S. Chiu
Barbra Shield Davis
Jeffrey A. Galowich
Janet A. Kobrin
Linda W. Mazur
TeresaL. Remillard
Bruce D. Tobey
David C. Tseng
DEAN'S COUNSEL
John S. Bank
Alan S. Berman
LauraJ. Carroll
Jeffrey A. Dinkin
Dolly M. Gee
MichaelJ. Gibson
Robert G. Goldman
Philip S. Gutierrez
Joanne G. Janson
Miriam Aroni Krinsky
Leslie K. Lurie
Ann Catmn McMillan
Pamela A. Mohr
Mary Newcombe
Raymond Perez
Timothy L. Salazar
James M. Steinberger
Lee M. Straus
Edward C. Thoics
James S. Uyeda
Jo Ann Victor
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Robert F. Serio
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
FELLOWS
Martha Gage Rock
Alicia G. Rosenberg
Elizabeth Ash Strode
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Valerie B. Ackerman
Christopher B. Amandes
BrianJ. Appel
Lilia 0. Ballescems
Robert Barnes
Marc E. Bercoon
Sheri Bluebond
Carlos Cordova
Susan L. Coskey
David G. Coulter
Donald L. Feder
Sandra L. Hitt
Stacey G. Lassally
Mark Lincoln Lindon
Daniel Mario Mansueto
Stephen H. Mazur
Alan S. Polley
Susan Sakai
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Thomas M. Bondy
Bradley J. Craig
Lynne S. Goldstein
Pamela K. Hagenah
Sally C. Helppie
Les Jacobowitz
John M. Jameson
Mark Alan Koop
John Ossiff
Stanley F. Pierson
Carol A. Quinn
Jesse F. Rodriguez
Joseph A. Rogoff
Eugene J. Smith
Helene V. Smookler
Scott A. Solomon
Hilary M. Stone
Reba W Thomas
Judy Umeda
SUPPORTERS
Paul S. Delson
Melanie M. Fairchild
Barbara Ringness Gadbois
David R. Garcia
Michael P. Harrell
Margarita P. Hernandez
Barbara J. Katz
David M. Lester
Louise D. Lillard
Nancy E. Loncke
Mark A. Palley
George Ann Rice
Sarah M. Reynoso
Lynette B. Robe
Michael R. Schaffert
Judith R. Schaffert
Michael J. Shpizner
Anne Beytin Torkington
Stephen A.Tuggy
William B. Wong
Michael M. Youngdahl
Steven H. Zidell
CLINICAL SUPPORT FUND
Suzanne A. Luban
Class Representatives:
Mark D. Bauce
Carolyn Comparer Jordan
David Polinsky
Leslie E. Wallis
Total Graduates: 279
Number of Donors: 42 Participation: 15%
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Kevin A. Frankel
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Elizabeth A. Famy
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
April M. Evans
Ann E. Habernigg
David E. Isenberg
Shelley Handel Krall
Colleen McAndrews
Laurie J. Taylor
Thomas W Weidenbach
John F. Wester, Jr.
DEAN'S COUNSEL
J. Robert Arnett
Ed Carney
Chi Seung Choy
Frederick M. Entwistle
Joel H. Friedman
Scott M. Gillman
Louis G. Hering
Steven M. Kleiman
James W McSpiritt
William 0. Nutting
James Gaughan O'Callahan
David Polinsky
Anthony L. Press
John W Scruton
Leslie E.Wallis
SUPPORTERS
Susan Abraham
RichardW. Aldrich
Cesar A. Berraud
Glenn W. Calsada
Christine M. Cervenak
Douglas T. Gneiser
Andrew R. Hall
Lolita B. Inniss
Mark R. Israel
Harris J. Kane
Robin F. Kaufer
David S. Mclane
Timothy E. O'Leary
Steven A. Plotkin
David A. Schechet
Janet A.Winnick
MELVILLE B. NIMMER
MEMORIAL FUND
PatriciaV Mayer
PUBLIC INTEREST
AWARDS
Anthony L. Press
Class Representatives:
Robert C. Welsh
Suzanne Zaharoni
Total Graduates: 304
Number of Donors: 54
Participation: 18%
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
John W. Kern IV
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE
Ch-Wo J. Cheng
Alicia Minana De Lovelace
JAMES H. CHADBOURN FELLOWS
Andrea Levitt-Stein
Jeremy Temkin
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
James F. Blake
Shedrick O. Davis III
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Michael B. Africk
Alan D. Aronson
Katherine M. Basile
Lance S. Bocarsly
Lily Chow
Valerie A. Durbin
Alan J. Epstein
Professor John Shepard Wiley Jr., center, and students, seared, are fitted with microphones and prepared by producers for a live interview show conducted from the law school's Moot Courtroom in September.The show, which aired on the America's Talking network, addressed evidence issues in the O.J. Simpson murder trial.
Law Annual Fund
Victoria Goldfarb
Robert E. Feyder
Epsrein
Gary N. Frischling
Adrienne W. Goldstone
Melinda A. Hoyt
Leora D. Freedman
John H. Irons
Charles W Jenkins, Jr.
Corey E. Klein
Nancy E. Klotz
Marsha B. Liss
Keith E. Marlowe
MarkT. Roohk
Steven M. Schultz
Julie Furman Stodolka
Lauri C. Streeter
BonnieY. Wai
Arnold F. Williams
Beth MezoffWilson
Suzanne Zaharoni
SUPPORTERS
M. Margaret Rumph
Robert C. Bowman
BrianW. Copple
MichaelD. Donovan
Banas
Sharon R. Leib
Richard S. Moskowitz
Teresa De Castro McNamara
Steven Sinatra
SUPPORTERS
Shere' R. Bailey
Patrick E. Bingham
Jeffrey H. Cohen
Katherine S. Connor
Mark G. Crawford
David B. Felsenthal
Paul L. Freese, Jr.
Charles O. Geerharr
Sandra S. Ikuta
Gretchen E. Jacobs
Alice M. King
Sandra E. Lester
Louis E. Michelson
Mark D. Miller
Sanford M. Pooler, Jr.
MarkJ. Price
Janet R. Rich
Linda M. Rio
Michael J. Russo
Marc H. Edelson PUBLIC INTEREST
MarilynW Formaker AWARDS
John F. Gardner
HilaryJ. Greenberg
Lisa N. Emeney
Caroline S. Katz
Caroline Radparvar Kelly
Kevin M. Kelly
GregoryJ. Kopta
Lisa R. Singer
Geoffrey M. Sturr
Joseph N. Velasquez
Jan F. Wrede
Sonia M. Younglove
Susan K. Sullivan
Sallie A. Thieme
DeborahJ. Wilson
Eugene Y. Won
Barry Lurie CLINICAL SUPPORT
Guy A. Mason LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI FUND
Anna S. McLean ASSOCIATION
Rhonda H. Mehlman SCHOLARSHIP FUND
BrianJ. Mooney
Cathy Paul
Jorge Pineda
David A. Portnoy
Steven R. Ruth
Eric C. Sawyer
Beau Simon
Scot Stone
Phillip A. Talbert
John P. Lodise
RobertJ. Solis
Mabel! Y. Aguilar-Fabela LAW LIBRARYFUND
Charles F. Ahern
IDA AND LOUIS STEIN AgnesS. Chiu
MEMORIALFUND
Jeannine K. De Phillips
1991
Michael Dayen
Janet H. Dickson
Leeanna lzuel
Christine L. Luketic
Class Representatives: PUBLIC INTEREST
Eric S. Weinstein AWARDS
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Inez D. Hope
William Morley
1990
Class Representatives:
Nargis Choudhry
George Eshaghian
Total Graduates: 328
Andree S. Daly
Janet H. Dickson
Total Graduates: 322 PUBLIC INTEREST
Number ofDonors: 61 SUPPORT FUND
Participation: 19%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Number ofDonors: 46 FELLOWS
Participation: 14%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
Peter Edward Greenberg PUBLIC INTEREST FELLOWS
SungJ. Hwang
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
JeffreyW. Cowan
Maria C. Depew
Staci E. Elkins
Cynthia G. Gouw
Ilyse Levine
Shari R. Michels
Susan F. Kroll SUPPORT FUND 1992
PatriciaAnn Libby
Karole R. Morgan-Prager
Steven M. Siegel
Suzanne K. Metzger
Audrey L. Sokoloff
Holly R. Paul
PaulW Poareo
Class Representatives:
Daniel B. Buder
Alyce L. Raboy
David A. Ossentjuk 1989
Gary B. Rosenbaum
Linda Ledeen Schwartz
Joel A. Thvedt
Lynn E. Todd
Leslie L. Trucner
LAW LIBRARY FUND
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Michael G. Clateman
Class Representatives: George M. Eshaghian
Steven I. Katz
Caroline R. Kelly
Stuart M. Price
Total Graduates: 274
Number ofDonors: 44
John C. Chen Participation: 16%
JAMES H. CHADBOURN
LA RAZA LAWALUMNI
ASSOCIATION
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Alicia Minana de Lovelace
1988
FELLOWS
JonT. Yamamura
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Elizabeth E. Kim
Katherine W Pownell
Stuart M. Price
Class Representatives: Shelley R. Saxer
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
Paul Freese, Jr.
Louis E. Michelson
Andy Yamamoto
Total Graduates: 293
Number ofDonors: 37
Participation: 13%
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Stanley Blumenfeld, Jr.
Kimberly A. Caswell
Eric C. Jensen
Wendi G. Royal
AndrewJ. Yamamoto
DEAN'S COUNSEL
MartinJ. Barrack
Rachel M. Bin
James R. Felton
Andrew S. Gabriel
Nicholas P. Hansen
Robert B. Hutchins
Lawrence Kupers
Robert A. Villani
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Dwight L. Aarons
Susan S. A2ad
Kerry A. Bresnahan
SarahJ. Fels
Steven I. Katz
MichaelJ. Kiely
NathanielJ. Lipman
JohnJ. Manier
Peter A. Neumann
Patricia A. Penner
Vitonio F. SanJuan
Steven A. Schuman
BrianJ. Schwab
ToddJ. Schwarcz
SUPPORTERS
Erich D. Andersen
John P. Bains
ReginaldW Chun
Carol A. Cocek
Kirsten S. Ellis
MaryD. Manesis
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Farzad Barkhordari
LynneM. Brennan
Eric B. Gordon
Rupert G. Gram
David L. Hirshland
Mark D. Hurwitz
Kenneth A. Kirley
David M. Klariscenfeld
Frank M. Lima
Julie A. Ryan
Alexander B. Trueblood
SUPPORTERS
Margaret H. Bang
Diane E. Birnholz
Richard M. Birnholz
Judith Beth Burkow
Nargis Choudhry
Ruth A. Crandall
Christian K. Engels
Eric S. Hill
Keith A. Jacoby
FrancisJ. James
Allison M. Keller
Lloyd Lim
Julienne McCammon
Karla N. MacCary
WilliamT. MacCary III
Samuel D. Magavern
Tanya R. Meyers
Ann Mooney
MarkW Neustadt
Richard G. Novak
Melissa D. Obegi
MichaelJ. Perez
JonathanT. Rubens
DEAN'S COUNSEL
SaskiaT. Asamura
Kevin D. Caton
Elaine Mandel
Debra Profio
Donna Wells
CynthiaJ. Christian Total Graduates: 274
Carl 0. Graham Number ofDonors: 74
Inez D. Hope Participation�27%
Samantha F. Lamberg
Scott A. Silberstein
Edward L. Tabakin
Bennett L. Yee
Michelle S. Yee
SUPPORTERS
Sarah S. Ambrogi
Elizabeth A. Anthony
Elisabeth A. Basini
Terrance Bing-Parks
Mark E. Birnbaum
Lawrence P. Brennan
Jill 1. Brown
Ruben A. Castellon
Teresa Cho
Jill F. Cooper
Jose H. Diaz
David E. Falik
Jonathan M. Frenkel
Michael B. Garfinkel
Karin L. Gustafson
Richard L. Hasen
Nicole M. Healy
Debra M. Johnson
Rhonda S. Kaye
Anne E. Lederer
Shirley S. Lu
Edward F. Malone
Mariana Marin
WilliamJ. Morley
B. MarkNordman
Shirley D. Ramirez
Jane H. Root
Kirsten E. Rucnik
LauraJ. Schwartz
DEAN'S ADVOCATES
Leslye M. Fraser
Audrey Lin
Kaivan M. Shakib
Donna C. Wells
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Robert L. Dell Angelo
Virginia C. Bennett
Nicole C. Bershon
MelanieJ. Bingham
Smart I. Block
Timothy J. Carlson
David A. Carrasco
Bridget A. Clarke
Lisa Engels-Salas
Matthew K. Fawcett
GaryT. Gleb
Peter F. Del Greco
Lillis E. Grove
Barbara L. Hamilton
James C. Harrison
Stewart S. Harrison
Todd Hart
Lisa Kim
Stacey A. Kipnis
DavidJ. Korduner
AnhT. Lam
Steven M. Levy
Paul H. Luehr
Claudia P. Madrigal
Elaine W. Mandel
Daniel F. Ortega
Philip E. Rothschild
Parthiv R. Sangani
Bacbara Silberbusch
Eric B. Silberstein
John Staudinger
Eugene Volokh
Brian P. Waldman
Jack S. Weiss
SUPPORTERS
Gregory J. Adams
Kara M. Andersen
StacyJ. Barancik
David I. Bass
William D. Becker
Paul E. Blevins
Daniel B. Buder
Erik D. Buzzard
David M. Cohen
Carlos Escobedo
SUPPORTERS
PUBLIC INTEREST
Bryan D. Biesterfeld AWARDS
DonaldT. Deyo
Herbert Morris AT&T Foundation
Eugene Volokh Bankamerica Foundation
Charles S. Kaufman Bechtel Foundation
Matthew R. Fishier SUPPORTERS CBS Foundation Inc.
Howard C. Griboff
Alison A. Heartfield
Raquel E. Hecht
Tami A. Holsten
Stephen E. Holsten
Andrew D. Jaeger
Jonathan W. Jaffee
Douglas H. Riegelhuth
Katherine A. Rutemiller
Vicroria J. Shabanian
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Jaykant H. Bhatt
Christina A. Bull
Frank M. Candelaria
Karen R. Weinstein
Yolanda S. Wu
Stephanie A. Yee
Erika S. Chadbourn Champion International
Genevieve H. Clawson Corporation
Patrick Del Duca Chase Manhattan Foundation
Mark F. Grady CIT Group Foundation Inc.
Ramon H. Kilgrow Citicorp Foundation
Lex Kunau Eott Energy Corporation
Milton Lewis First Interstate Bank of
Angel Melikian California Foundation
Stephen Munzer & Cynthia First National Bank of
STUDENT ACTMTIES Transgrud Chicago Foundation
Helen D. Sunga SUPPORT FUND
Sarah R. Wauters
Daniel Y. Zohar
Michael E. Ross
Robert P. Wargo
Richard M. Neiter Ford Motor Company
John A. Schulman GTE Foundation
Leone M. Summerson Hamilton Bank Foundation
Jollee Faber William & Flora Hewlett
Laurie J. Falik
Gregory Fuentes
Simon M. Furie
B. Everett Hendrickson
Brendan J. McKeough
Lee J. Leslie
LAW LIBRARY FUND
Friends and Faculty CLINICAL SUPPORT Foundation
Jeffrey M. Freedman FUND
LIBRARY CAMPAIGN
Neil J. Squillante
Richard A. Ward
PUBLIC INTEREST
Suzanne M. Madison AWARDS
Thomas A. Monheim
Marc J. Nolan
John S. Patterson
Steven M. Haines
Hewlett-Packard Company
David & Melinda Binder Hormel Foods Corporation
Phyllis Bernard Mattel Foundation
James H. Kindel, Jr. ELISA H. HALPERN MCA Inc.
Susan Westerberg Prager MEMORIAL McDonnell Douglas
Chancellor Charles E. Young SCHOLARSHIP FUND Foundation
Joan & HaroldTyndall Northwestern Mutual Life
DEAN'S PARTNERSHIP Foundation
PUBLIC INTEREST John S. Wiley LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI Pacific Enterprises
Patricia C. Perez SUPPORT FUND Anonymous ASSOCIATION SCHOL- Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Debra A. Profio
Michael D. Rivard
Jeffrey S. Silvyn
EdwardJ. Slizewski
Blithe A. Smith
Jeffrey S. Galvin ARSHIP FUND Procter & Gamble Fund
Tom]. Gray FOUNDERS Cruz Reynoso Rockefeller Foundation
Lisa Payne
Kathleen M. Stewart 1994
Richard L. Villasenor
Thomas A. Waldman
Joseph C. Wendlberger
Lance E. Winters
LAWLIBRARY FUND
Lillis E. Grove
PUBLIC INTEREST
David H. Dolinko SONY Pictures
Monna Livingston Other Gifts Entertainment
Arthur I. Rosett Southern California Gas
William Warren Chaleff, English & Catalano Company
Class Representatives: Carole Goldberg-Ambrose Syntex USA Inc.
Kyle Arndt
Christina Bull
Hao-Nhien Vu
DEAN'S ROUNDTABLE Henry W. McGee Telesis Foundation
Peter Arenella Mitchell, Silberberg & Texaco Foundation
Lawrence N. Field Knupp 3-COM Corp.
William E. Forbach & Judith Jordan Wank Time Warner Inc.
Total Graduates: 295 G. Coffin Times Mirror Company
Number of Donors: 35
Participation: 12%
DEAN'S COUNSEL
Joel F. Handler
Firm Matching Gifts Transamerica Foundation
*Monte E. Livingston TRW Foundation
Budge & Brenda Offer Cox, Castle & Nicholson USL Capital AWARDS
Kyle B. Arndt
Elizabeth A. Deere
Kris Vyas
PUBLIC INTEREST
SUPPORT FUND
Elizabeth A. Hone
1993
*William A. Rutter Cravath, Swaine & Moore U.S. West Foundation
Stephen Yeazell Davis, Polk & Wardell UNOCAL Foundation
Class Representatives: Morrison & Foerster SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jeffrey A. Barker
Karen Marie Bray
Amy Kernes
Total Graduates: 295
Number of Donors: 36
SUPPORTERS
Anne E. Garrett
Steven W. Hawkins
CLINICAL SUPPORT
Participation: 12% FUND
Marion C. Ingersoll
DEAN'S ADVOCATES Musick, Peeler & Garrett
Michael Field
O'Melveny & Myers
Kristine Knaplund Pillsbury, Madison & Suero
Arthur Samuel Levine
Richard C. Maxwell
Arnold & Porter
BAKER & MCKENZIE
Sidley & Austin LAW STUDENT
Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett ASSISTANCE FUND
David Mellinkoff Corporation
Albert J. Moore
Skadden, Arps, Slate, DEAN'S COUNSEL
Jeffrey A. Barker LAW LIBRARY FUND
John F. Bazan
Karen M. Bray
Linda F. Callison
Christopher A. Cherry
Carol A. Foster
Judith E. Gordon
TomJ. Gray
Jon M. Greenbaum
Amy N. Kernes
Stuart Y. Kim
Michael E. Reisz
ToddM. Strine
Anne H. West
Kent J. Bullard
Linda A. Christian
Sally S. Costanzo
Melinda P. Goldstein
Rebecca S. Gudeman
Pamela Lew
Beth A. Macias
Ronald J. Thompson
Thomas L. Treffert
Daniel J. Villalpando
Karen R. Weinstein
Steven D. Winegar
Lester I. Yano
Craig N. Oren
John J. Power, Jr.
Gary A. Schonwald
Lawrence M. Stone
DEAN'S COUNSEL
*Elizabeth A. Cheadle
Alan Feld
Robert D. Goldstein &
Meagher & Flom
Baker & McKenzie
BEVERLY HILLS BAR
Sullivan & Cromwell ASSOCIATION
White & Case FOUNDATION FUND
Beverly Hills Bar Association
Corporate and
Foundation
Matching Gifts
Adobe Systems Inc.
JOHN G. BRANCA FUND
John G. Branca '75
MARSHALL COGAN
Wendy S. Schmelzer SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jonathan D. Goodwin
Werner Z. Hirsch
Elaine L. Kievman
Martin Lutin
American Express Foundation
American President
Ralph Shapiro '58 & Shirley
Companies Foundarion Shapiro
ARCO Foundation Inc.
Arthur Andersen and
Company Foundation
JOSEPHINE VAUGHN Bernard and Sylvia Silver
COOPER SCHOLARSHIP Thomas R. and Barbara B. FUND Swanston
In Memory ofJosephine Evelyn LouTopcik
Vaughn Cooper Joan and HaroldTyndall
Ronald B. Garver Weil and Company
John H. Hadley
Robert G. Zangwill
CURTIS B. DANNING KAREN HAUSER SCHOLARSHIP FUND MEMORIAL
In Memory ofZachary Seff's SCHOLARSHIP FUND
mother and Sam Kerzner Lawrence & Karen Boland and In Honor of Bruce I. Carolyn and KennethD. Hochman, Ralph and Brody Foundation
Alice Monkarsh, Barry Cynthia Schmidt Freedman Russell, Albert Serlin and Franees Verter Lea Serlin
Curtis Danning '52 & CLIFFORD A. Florence Danning HEMMERLING
MEMORIAL
DROWN PUBLIC SCHOLARSHIP FUND
SERVICE FELLOWSHIP Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley PROGRAM Shapiro
Joseph Drown Foundation
J.W AND IDA M.
SAMUEL N. AND LEAH S. JAMESON FUND FISCHER FUND J.W & Ida M. Jameson
Leah S. Fischer '82 Foundation
Samuel N. Fischer '82
BENJAMIN E. KING
ALBERT AND JUDITH MEMORIAL GLICKMAN FUND SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Albert Glickman '60 and Beatrice Halbern
Judith Glickman Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
MORRIS GREENSPAN
MEMORIAL PRIZE FUND LA RAZA LAW ALUMNI
Joseph & Ruth Bell ASSOCIATION
ELISA H. HALPERN
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Mabel! Y. Aguilar-Fabela
MEMORIAL Alicia Minana de Lovelace '87
SCHOLARSHIP FUND Cruz Reynoso
In Memory of Jane Halpern: Timothy F. Sylvester '84
Neil M. and Joanne M. Baizer THE LAW LIBRARY
Alex and Dayna Ballora CAMPAIGN
Seymour and Barbara Canter Harland W Braun '67
RichardCooper '66 and Dhiya El-Saden '77
Marilyn Cooper
Helen K. Edelman
Ethan Allen Inc.
Leon A. Farley '59
Marcia A. Forsyth '77
Samuel W Halper '55 and Jerome Fleischman '66 Ruth Halper and Vera Fleischman Suzanne Harris '77
David S. and Linda B. John W Kern IV '87 Fuchs Lawrin S. Lewin '63
Edward L. and Gail B. William A. Masterson '58 Gappell John P. Meck '72
Myra and Steve Gassman Evan R. Medow '67
Harry and Annette Geller
Valerie J. Merritt '76
Ruth and Jerry Goldberg Herbert D. Meyers '77
Goldfarb, Sturman, Averbach Josiah L. Neeper '59 and Rita & Sturman H. Neeper
William & Barbara Green Gloria Nimmer
Barry Halpern Randolph C. Visser '74
MollyBlum Halpern Timothy J.White '78 and Abe and Rose Jacobson Maria WongWhite
Annette F. Kaplan Dorothy Wolpert '76 and Wallace S.and Myra Kaplar Stanley Wolpert
Terry E.and Jennifer E. King
Lillian Littenberg LAW SCHOOL CLASS OF Ian C. Malatesta 1952 FUND
Marilyn Karlsberg Mandel John McCarthy '52
Elizabeth Messenger
Saul and Sandra Meyer FRANCES AND JERRY
Alfredo and Linda Orizondo LEIGH FAMILY FUND
Dennis and Dorolee Sakson Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley
Laurence O. and Sallie Seigler Shapiro
LEVINSON, MILLER, JACOBS & PHILLIPS FUND
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley
Shapiro
PAUIA C. LUBIC MEMORIAI SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Arthur M. Lubic
Carol Lubic Spitz
GEORGE L. MARINOFF MEMORTAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Elaine Marinoff Good
MILKEN FAMILY FOUNDAIION FUND
Milken Family Foundation
HOWARD P. MILLE,R MEMORIAL FUND
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley
Shapiro
MELVILLE B. NIMMER MEMORTAL FUND
\Tilliam P. Alford
Edward J. Chalfie
Lyman S. Gronemeyer'6o
Samuel \W. and Gerta B. Katz
Margaret R. Kiever
Kim J. Litsey
Patricia V Mayer'86
David Nimmer
Andrea S. Ordin '65
Lionel S. Sobel'69
Thomson 6c Thomson
M. Kelly Tillery
MELVILLE B. NIMMER SCHOLARSHIP FUND
David R. Ginsburg'76
Time \Tarner Inc.
MICHAEL PALLEY MEMORIAL FUND
Sidney and Susan Lindenbaum
l. Lewis Palley Charitable
Thust
Mary Flynn Palley '8o
JEROLD RUDELSON MEMORI-AL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jolyn Feinblum Rudelson
\NLLIAM A. RUTTER TEACHING A\TARD
\William A. Rutter
RAIPH & SHIRLEY SHAPIRO STUDENT LOAN FUND
Ralph Shapiro 't8 & Shirley Shapiro
SHEPPARD, MULLIN, RICHTER 6( HAMPTON SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
IDA AND LOUIS STEIN MEMORIAL FUND
Jeannine K. DePhillips '9o
UCLA SCHOOL OF IA\7
PUBLIC INTEREST
A\TARDS
David Babbe '8r
Andree S. Daly'9r
Elizabeth A. Deere'92
Janet H. Dickson '9r
Richard D. Fybel '7r
Steven M. Hain es'93
Leigh Herman
Charles S. Kaufm an'94
John P. Lodise'88
Morrison & Foerster Foundation
Anthony L. Press '86
David A. Thompson '83
Kris Vyas'92
FRANK G.'Sr-E,LLS ENVIRONMENTAL IA\T CLINIC FUND
Foamex International Inc.
LEE B. \TENZEL MEMORTAL
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Jerry Carlton
Ronald Garver
David Gordon
Jay Herron
Ralph Shapiro 'y8 and Shirley Shapiro \7illiam Vaughn '55
David'Weil
Mark D. \Tenzel
Daniel G. Zerfas'66
Family, Friends & Participants in the annual golf tournament
ZIFFREN/BRITTENHAM FUND
Skip Brittenham'70
Ralph Shapiro '58 and Shirley Shapiro
Kenneth Ziffren'65
If you are not a donor and are interested in joining UCLA Lawt growing family of supporters, please call (3ro) zo6rr23.
Every effort was made to ensure the accuracy of our Honor Roll. If there are any correctrons or omlsslons, please contact the School of Law Alumni & Development Office.
Reminder: You can now email us)'01tr classnotes: "alumnews@law.ucla.edu"
1950s
Charles Adams ' 56, a historian at the University ofToronto and author of For Good and Evil: The Impact ofTaxes on the Course of Civilization (1993) and Fight, Flight and Fraud· The Story o/Taxation (1983), recently spoke before the House Committee on Ways and Means in its hearings on tax reform. He also recently delivered a lecture at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
1960s
Albert I. Moon, Jr. '61 of the Los Angeles law firm of Hancock, Rathert & Bunshoft has been selected as a TrusreeEmeritus of the American Inns of Court Foundation. He writes that the first American Inn of Court, founded in 1980, is now the fastest growing legal organization in the UnitedStates. Dedicated to improving the skills, professionalism, civility, and ethics of the bench and bar, American Inns now total more than 250 Inns in 50 states, encompassing over 16,000 members. Organized on the local level, the Inns help lawyers improve their skills and sharpen their ethical awareness by enabling them to learn, side-by-side, with experienced judges and attorneys in their community
William C. McKinney '64 has formed a partnership withTimothy M. Smith.The Sacramento firm specializes in business & civil litigation, personal injury, product liability, public & constitutional law, and conciliation services.
Ronald W. Anteau '65, has formed a partnership with Stephen A. Kolodny and Harlee M. Gasmer under the firm name of Kolodny & Anteau.The firm has seven attorneys with offices in Westwood, concentrating on all aspects Family Law practice. Anteau and Kolodny are both certified Family Law Specialists, and Fellows in theAmerican and International Academies of Matrimonial Lawyers and Diplomates in the American College of Family Trial Lawyers.
Joseph Shalant '66, made headlines when he rook on the corporate law firm of former Secretary of State William Rogers in a hotly disputed case concerning the 1989 purchase of Land of Lincoln Savings & Loan by Household Bank and Household International. Mr. Shalam, an attorney specializing in personal
injury and medical malpractice, represented himself in the lawsuit and gained a jury victory worth more than $2 million.
Peter Blackman '67 recently was appointed AdministrativeVice Chancellor and Chief Financial Officer at UCLA.
Robert A. Weeks '67 was named as Chair of the 1996 Bar Leaders Conference, sponsored by the Executive Committee of the Conference of Delegates of the State Bar of California.The Conference will be held in San Jose March 1-3, 1996.
1970s
Kent L. Richland '71 was elected 1995- 1996 president of the California Academy of Appellate Lawyers at its annual Ojai Conference.The Academy, the only organizaton of its kind in the country, seeks to enhance the level of appellate practice and to advance just and efficient operation of appellate courts in California. Richland is a founding partner of Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland.
The Mayor of Sacramento has appointed John R. Castello '72 as a commissioner to the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Commission. As the Chief Administrative Law Judge of the California Department of Social Services, Mr. Castello has developed and implemented a welfare fraud administrative disqualification hearing process. Castello has also been appointed as adjunct professor at the UC Davis Graduate School of Management.
After serving in the Municipal Court for 15 years, Michael S. Fields '72 was elected ro the Superior Court of Monterey County in November of 1994. He is very grateful to former faculty and alumni of the UCLA School of I.aw, and especially members of the Class of 1972, for their generous contributions to his campaign.
Forrest S. Mosten '72, a family law specialist, is a partner in the newly formed parrnership of Mosten, Wasserstrom andTuffias. Mr. Masten is author of numerous publications and is a frequent lecturer and adjunct professor of law at Pepperdine University He isChair of the Beverly Hills Bar Association's alternative dispute resolurion section and is a recipient of the Bar's president award for his contributions in mediations.
Gregg Ziskind '72 and Bill Seaton '76 have begun an on-line legal recruiting service. "EMPLAWYERNET" provides search services for both sides of the job hunt for law firms, law schools, in-house legal departments, public interest entities and government agencies.The on-line service is a product of the Legal Recruitment Network Inc., a company founded in 1992 by Ziskind and Seaton.
Paul R. Katz '75 has joined the Firm of Hill, Wynne, Troop and Meisinger as Chair of its Intellectual Property andTechnology Group.
Allen Michel '75, a business litigation partner with Berger, Kahn, Shafran, Moss, Figler, Simon & Gladstone, has been elected Manager of the firm 's 32-attorney Marina Del Rey office. Berger, Kahn has 80 attorneys statewide. In addition to Marina Del Rey, the firm has offices in Irvine, San Diego and Marin County. Ocher UCLA School of Law graduates at che firm include Paul S. Berger '63, Anthony E. Shafton '66, Jon Moss '64, Alan H. Lazar '69, and G. Arthur Meneses '82.
Steven H. Sunshine '76 has joined the law firm of Bryan Cave as the Resident Managing Partner of che Orange County Office.
Caryl B. Welborn '76 recently opened her own law firm in San Francisco. She was a partner at Morrison & Foersrer for about 13 years. Ms. Welborn will continue her practice in the general real estate, patnership and limited liability company areas.
Norma Acland '77 has been happily living in London, working for the past three years as head of Business Affairs for BBC-TV Drama Group. Her son, Jack, is 4. Jack was born at Cedars-Sinai and is a U.S. citizen so he might make it to UCLA yet!
Lucinda A. Low, '77 a partner with the firm of Miller & Chevalier in Washington, D.C., was elected to chair the Section of International Law and Practice of the American Bar Association at the ABA Annual Meeting this year. She will be rhe first woman to serve in that position in the ABA. Her practice emphasizes international investment transactions, project finance, and U.S. international business regulation.
Hilary Huebsch Cohen '78 has opened the Law Offices of Hilary Huebsch Cohen in Torrance, California. Her practice focuses on representing physicians and other healthcare professionals in business transactions. She se�ves on the editorial board of RadiologyEconomic Strategies, and writes a regular column, "Hilary on Healthcare," for the Bulletin of the Radiology Business Management Association. In 1994, she received the RBM.Ns Calhoun Award for service to education.
Alex Johnson Jr. '78 has been named Provost for Faculty Recruitment and Retention at University ,ofVirginia. He is the Mary & Daniel Loughran Professor of Law at University ofVirginia Law School, and continues to teach and pursue his research interests there.
Norman H. Green '79, a partner with the Glendale law firm of lrsfeld, lrsfeld & Younger, has been appointed to chair the Arbitration Executive Committee of the Los Angeles County Bar Association. The Arbitration Committee conducts arbitration over fee disputes between attorneys and clients and annually handles approximately 800 cases, w1th average amounts in dispute being$15,000-$18,000.
Rebecca Mocciaro '79 has joined the Brentwood firm of Kehr, Crook, Tovmassian & Fox. She writes: Congrats to my fellow 1979 alum, Kim \'ifardlaw (and Kudos to Laurie Levenson on her O.J. work!)
1980s
In August 1995, Leslie A. Cohen '80 joined the law firm of Robinson, Diamant, Brill & Klausner as a partner where she continues to practice bankruptcy and insolvency law.
Marty Evans '80, a command judge advocate onboard aircraft carrier U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, is currently deployed to the Indian Ocean and Arabian Gulf. A,, a Navy judge advocate since 1984, he has served as defense counsel, trial counsel, and criminal procedure instructor at assignments in Newport, Rhode Island and Rota, Spain. In 1994, Evans received his LL.M. degree in military law/international law at the Army JAG Schol in Virginia. His wife, Bernadette, is a child psychologist in Oakland and also runs a halfway house for stray dogs and cars.
Susan Fowler McNally '81 and her husband, James McNally, welcomed the birth of their second son, Evan Joseph, on January 1 r, 1995. Susan specializes in real property transactions as a partner at Gilchrist & Rutter.
Gerald S. Papazian '81 is currently serving as President ( 1995-96) of USC's General Alumni Association and was recently elected ro USC's Board of Trustees. "Excellent choice of Liz Cheadle co be new Dean of Srudents," he writes.
Greg S. Bernstein '82 has joined the law firm of Rosenfeld, Meyer and Susman with extensive experience in the representation of rhe business side of the entertainment industry. His practice emphasizes motion picture distribution and finance, with a particular specialty in strategic alliances. He also serves as Chair of the Entertainment Industries Committee of the Century City Chamber of Commerce and is a frequent lecturer and author on the financing and distribution of independent motion pictures.
Thomas Bliss '82 has been named Chief Operating Officer of Beacon Communications Corp., which produces motion pictures and television. Bliss executive produced "The BabySitters Club" for Beacon, which was released by Columbia Pictures in August.
Jerrold B. Carrington '82 is a founding general partner of Inroads Capital Partners LP., a Chicago-based venture capital firm with $50 million under management. The firm specializes in the acquisition of investment in privately held middle-market companies.
Victoria Lewis Adams '83 has been a Deputy District Attorney for Los Angeles County since 1985. She was recently appointed Deputy-inCharge of the Juvenile Division in Compton. Her husband, Thomas Gregory Adams '83 has
been a Deputy City Attorney for the City of Los Angeles since 1985. He is currently assigned ro the Legal Division of the Department of Water and Power. The Adams are the proud parents of two daughters: Erin (5) and Cara (3).
Elizabeth Glazer Chilton '83 gave birth to twin girls, Katherine and Samantha, in April. She and her husband, Robert, also have a son, Gregory, 3. She continues to practice-as a partner in the litigation department of Greenberg, Glusker, Fields, Claman & Machtinger, specializing in appellate work and real estate litigation, including land-use matters.
John Y. Liu '83 continues as a partner with Pillsbury Madison & Sutro in Los Angeles, specializing in environmental, toxic tort, and insurance litigation.
Lise N. Wilson '83 and Steven M. Strauss '81 welcomed a son, Will, on May 27, 1995. They have a daughter, Naomi, who was born in December 199 1. Lise is a litigation partner at Post, Kirby, Noonan & Sweat in San Diego and Steven is a litigation partner at Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savirch in San Diego.
Lise Rehberg Deary '84 is currently consulting for Radio and Records, Inc. in Los Angeles. She also has a solo practice in Brentwood. She and her husband, Bryce, welcomed the birth of their son, Griffin, on September 8, 1994 at UCLA Medical Center. She is still good friends with Laurie Smilan '84 who is a partner at Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich and Rosati in Palo Alco. Laurie is married to Randy Baughman, Deary's cousin. The couple has a daughter named Katherine Elizabeth (Karie).
Michael D. Herbert '84 and his wife Kim are living at Tarn's Terra in Ross, California with their 9-month-old son, Justin. Michael is a partner in Arthur Andersen & Co., SC. In his specialty of State and Local Taxation he ofren sees the constitutional issues he first learned at UCLA Law.
The Alliance for Children's Rights, the brainchild of Pamela Mohr '84, was the front-page feature of Los Angeles Times' Life & Style section August 23. The headline and kicker read: "Allied Forces: In its fight for disadvantaged kids, the Alliance for Children's Rights has found there's nothing like a lawyer to get the attention of an unwieldy bureaucracy." Mohr founded the alliance three years ago, and it remains the only non-profit organization in Los Angeles County that devotes itself solely to providing legal services for disadvantaged children. She was featured months ago in an article in California Lawyer as well.
Sheri Bluebond '85, formerly a partner with Murphy, Weir and Buder, has joined the law firm of lrell and Manella as a partner resident in its downrown Los Angeles office. She will continue her practice in bankruptcy, business reorganizations and debtor-creditor relations.
Fred Cheever '86 has been teaching at University of Denver College of Law since 1993. Cheever, who teaches Environmental Law, Property, Hazardous Substance Law, National Forest Management Law and various environmental law seminars, practiced law in die Denver area prior to reaching. Additionally, he was a research fellow for the Natural Resources Law Center at the University of Colorado in 1990, and from 1987 to 1989, he worked for the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund's Rocky Mountain Office. Jay Touchton '90 is heading up the law school's Earth Law Environmental Law Clinic.
Rob Noriega '86 and his wife Lindy welcomed the arrival of their second son, Alex, who was born on July 14, 1995. Rob is a partner in the Bakersfield firm of Noriega & Alexander.
Steven Plotkin '86 has joined rhe law firm of Jeffer, Mangels, Buder and Marmaro. He specializes in intellectual property and his practice involves trademark, copyright, trade secret and unfair competition law, with secondary emphasis on general corporare/transacrional practice.
Marilyn Formaker '87 recently retired from her position as a senior judicial attorney with the Court of Appeal.
Mark E. McKccn '87 is a newly elected partner with the firm of Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison in its San Francisco office. He specializes in Business and Real Estate Litigation, with an emphasis in corporate, real property, banking and commercial transactions.
Afrer three years as a general commercial attorney at AT&T's Western Region Law Division in San Francisco, Noriko Ellen Okamoto '87 relocated to AT&T's Corporate Headquarters in New Jersey. She is now a senior attorney in the International Law Group supporting Submarine Systems, Inc., a business unit that installs and maintains undersea fiber optic cable systems. Okamoto's practice is focused on international corporate and maritime law.
David Ossentjuk '87 became a partner in the Los Angeles law firm of Hanna and Morton. His practice emphasizes environmental and commerciaJ litigation, natural resource matters and oil and gas.
Michael D. Schwartz '87 recently became president of the Barristers, a section of the Los Angeles County Bar for members 36 years old and younger, or who have been admitted to the practice of law for five years or less. He also serves as a County Bar delegate to the State Bar Conference of Delegates. Schwartz has been a guest teacher at Benjamin Franklin High School through the adopt-a-school project and El Camino Real High School through the Street Law Project. He has also provided more than 400 hours of pro bono representation for clients of Public Counsel.
Frank Benton '88 has opened an office in Mexico City, specializing in Larin American joint ventures, entertainment and of course, trade, in addition to his office in Phoenix, Arizona, where he practices commercial litigation and personal injury. Frank and his new wife, Patricia Lopez, are expecting their first child in mid-August.
Rachelle Marie Bin '88 is a senior legal counsel with Univision Television Group. She was recently engaged to Or. Pablo Lapuenta, Assistant Professor of Medicine at USC. The couple plan to be married in spring 1996.
Bill Black '88 and his wife, Debra Phillipes Black, announce the July 3 1, 1995 birch of their second son, Alec Chase Black. Their first son, William Christopher Black, is 20 months old.
David J. Feit '88 is named a partner in Kriss & Feit, P.C. in New York City. The firm specializes in commercial real estate transactions. Feit and his wife, Debra Meyer, live in New York City.
Joseph B. Heil '88 is a newly elected partner in the Philadelphia office of Dechert Price & Rhoads. The international law firm has nine offices. Joseph is a partner in rhe Real Estate, Securirization and Bankruptcy and Reorganization Practice Groups and has been with the firm since 1988. His primary area of concentration is real estate finance, with an emphasis on commercial mortgage securitizarion.
Lorne R. Polger '88 has become a shareholder in the law firm of Hillyer and Irwin, A.PC.. The San Diego-based firm specializes in business, real estate and intellectual property transactions.
Ronald 0. Sally '88 is General Counsel and Director ofBusiness Affairs for the Denver Nuggets (NBA) and the Colorado Avalanche (NHL).
George Paul Trejo, Jr. '89 was recenrly honored by rheWashingron State Bar Associarion as 1994- 1995's Ourstanding Young Lawyer of the Year. The award recognizes his professionalism and pro bono contributions. He is a partner with the law offices of Contreras-Trejo and Trejo, Inc. P.S. His practice focuses on individuals accused of felonies and seriously injured persons. In rhe past four years, Trejo has represented individuals in more than 13 different counties throughout the state ofWashingron.
1990s
Michael W. Petersen ' 9 0 has joined the firm of King, Purrich & Holmes in Century City. The firm specializes in the areas of music and entertainment lav..,) real estate and corporate finance, banking, and civil litigation in state and federal courts. Michael was most recently Director of Legal Affairs for Polygram Music Publishing Group.
Marina Sarmiento '9 0 is working as a Career Counselor at Hastings Law School, joining two other members from the class of'90 in this field, Rosemarie Benitez (at UCLA) and Steve Sosa (at Whittier)
Jay Touchton '9 0, along with Fred Cheever '86, is teaching at the University of Denver College of Law. Touchton is Clinic Direcror of school's new Earth Law Environmenral Law Clinic.
David S. Matheson '91 has joined rhe Porrland office of one of Portland's largest law firms, Perkins Coie, and is in the corporate finance and securities practice. Previous to joining Perkins Coie, he was an associate in the Los Angeles office of Shearman & Sterling.
Brian W. Jones '93 recently relocated with his wife to Washingron, D.C., where he assumed his responsibilities as President and CEO of the Center for New Black Leadership, a national public policy think tank. In June 1995, he testified on behalf of CNBL before the Senate Labor and Human Resources Commirree, and in September 1995 he was expecred to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee. While in Washingron, Brian is taking an indefinite leave of absence from the San Francisco office of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampron.
Helen Diem Sunga '93 is starting her own practice in Beverly Hills. Her practice emphasizes estate planning and family law.
Teri Reza Williams '93 is an associate with the law offices of Alexandra Leichter in Beverly Hills. The firm specializes in family law.
Grant E. Finkle '94 has joined the law firm of Alschuler, Grossman and Pines. Located in Los Angeles, the firm is known for vigorous and creative advocacy in complex business litigations.
Don Fishman '94 is an associate at the law firm of Latham & Watkins in the Washington, D.C. office, focusing mainly on corporate law.
Brette Simon '94 is practicing corporate law at O'Melveny and Myers in Los Angeles. As a winner of the Judge John R. Brown Award for Excellence in LegalWriting, her arricle, entirled "Environmental Coverage under the CGL [nsurance Policy: Does the Personal Injury Endorsement Cover CERCLA Liability'," will be published in the South Texas Law Review.
Lior Z. Zohar '94 has joined the law firm of Rosenfeld, Meyer and Susman as an associate. Since its founding in 1957, the law firm emphasizes in encerrainment law, but also has practice areas in labor and employment law, family law, employee benefits, real estate, insurance coverage and defenses, and trusts and estates. •:•
CONTRACT LAW AND THE WORLD
Tirelessly searching for a new audience with whom to share such wonders of the world of contract law as the rule in Hadley v Baxendale and "What is chicken?" Professor Arthur Rosett visited Tokyo for 10 weeks after the spring semester to teach American Contract law to graduate and undergraduate students at Aoyama Gakuin Faculty of Law. Christopher P. Wells,'79 (White and Case) held a welcome dinner at the American Club, Tokyo. Participants included Thomas Agoston '83 (IBM Japan), Patrick Harder '86 (Hazama Corp.), Mari Kano, LL.M. '89 (Mitsubishi Bank), Grant Newsham '83 (Commercial Attache, U.S. Embassy, Tokyo), Naoki Shimazaki '84 (Pillsbury Madison & Sutro), Shozo Takahashi, LL.M. '86 Qapan Fair Trade Commission), and Tomohiro Tohyama, LL.M. '84 (T MI Associates).
IN MEMORIAM
Sanford D. Schwartz
Stanley L. Smith
Roland R. Speers
James L. Sutherland
C.L. Vineyard
Charles 0. White
Become more involved in your law school
Show your interest by checking one or more of the involvement opportunities listed here.
I WANT TO SUPPORT THE LAW JOURNALS BY SUBSCRIBING:
DUCLA Law Review ($10)
DNational Black Law Journal ($18 individuals/$25 institutions)
DChicano-Latino Law Review ($15)
DUCLA Journal ofEnvironmental Law and Policy ($25)
DUCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal ($25)
DWomen's Law Journal ($15)
DAsian PacificAmerican Law Journal ($20)
DEntertainment Law Review ($20)
Subscription checks payable to Regents ofUC
I WANT TO PARTICIPATE IN:
DThe Law Alumni Association
DThe Moot Court Honors Program
DClinical Witness Volunteer Program
DPlacement seminars for students
DAlumni Advisory Program
DFund raising for the school
DOther interests:
Alumni Career Network: Interested in sharingyour real-life experiences as a speaker, or ingiving some practical experience to a student?The Office ofCareer Services is looking for alums interested in serving as guest speakers or panelists for educational development programs at the law school. Alumni who work as judges, practitioners in the private sector or public service or in other fields also are encouraged to consider UCLA School ofLaw students for part-time work, full-time summer positions or externships. Call Bill McGeary in the Career Services Office, (310) 206-m7 Name
Mailto: Alumni Office UCLA School of La\, 405 Hilgard Ave. Los Angeles, CA 9009--: -c -or email your information to "alumnews@law.ucla.edu
November 1995
Estate Planning S em inar featu ri ng J on Gallo 07 "Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Estate Pla nning But Were Afra id to Ask-I ncluding How Year- End C h aritable Giving Can Save You Both Estate and Income Taxes" (2 ho urs M C LE cre d it availab le)
Law Schoo l
Thursday, November 30, 1995
7 p.m.
December 1995
Bar Admissions Swearing-In Ceremony Schoenberg Audito ri um
Thursday, D ecember 7, 1995
7 p .m.
January 1995
A ssociation ofA merican L aw Scho ols Reception H ospitali ty Suite 3829 at Marri ott Ri ver Center
San Anto nio, Texas
Friday; January 5, 1996 8:30 p .m
Lecture feat u ring Professo r Peter A renella: "Exp laining the Un explainable: How Sh ould We I nterpret th e J u ry's Verdict?" (2 h ours M CLE credit avail a ble)
Law Sch o ol
Thursday, January 11 , 1996
7 p.m .
Ground-B reaki ng Ceremony
C elebra ting the Co m mencement of Co n struc tion to Exp and an d Ren ovat e the Law Library
Tuesday, January 23, 1996
T ime to b e announ ced
February 19 9 6
20th Annual UCLA Entertainment Symposium Scho enb erg Audi tori um February 9 , 1996
March 1996
A nnual D ea n 's Dinn er Wedn esday, March 13, 199 6 T ime and location to b e anno u nced
April 1996
M oo t Court Reception Friday, Ap ril 12, 19 95 Time and locat ion to be ann o u n ced
Even t D ates To Be Announ ced
Irv ing H . G re e n Mem o rial Lectu re Alumnus of t he Year Award Admissio n s/ Rec ruit m e nt Rece ption
UCLA Law Review Affirmative Action Symposium UCLA
Saturday, March 2 , 1996 9 a. m to 5: 30 p m.
Opening Address:
Th e H o norable Stephen Reinhardt, U.S . C ourt of Appeals 9th Circuit
Panelists:
Akhil Am ar, Pro fesso r, Yale Law Sch oo l; Ia n Ayres, Will iam K. Townsend Professo r of Law, Yal e Law School; Jim Ch en , As socia te Professor, U niversity o f M inn esota Law Sch ool; Ri chard H . Fallo n , Professor, Harvard U niversity Law School; C h r istop h er A. Fo rd , Asso ci a te, Was h in gton D. C., fo rm er clerk for U. S. Di stri c t Judge Alex Ko zinski.
Discuss io n Mod erator:
Kenne th L. Karst , D avi d G. Price and D allas P. Price Professor of Law, UCLA.
For m ore i nfo rmat ion regarding th e sympos ium
p lease contact Sue J. C h o i, Sym pos ium Edito r, UCLA Law Review a t (310) 825-49 29
University of California
School of Law
Office of the Dean
405 Hilgard Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90095
fnr-90-z: (or£)
6060-tz:006 V :) 'S~f~~UV S01
60-z:tz: xog ' OcI
UO!l~punod VT)fl ~l{l
Disclosures to Prospective Do....., s During Solicitation
Priv acy Notice
T h e 1977 C ali forn ia I n for m atio n Practices Act requ ires UCLA to infor m individuals asked to su pply information abo ut themselves of the fo ll owing: UCLA is requesting th is in fo rmation to update th e general resource files of its University Relations Department Furnishing the informat ion is strictly voluntary a nd will be maintain ed co n fidenti ally. The information m ay be used by other University d epart ments in the reg ular course of business b u t will no t be disseminated to oth ers except if required by law.
Yo u h ave the right to review yo ur own d ata fil e. Inquiries sh o uld b e forwa rded to the Assist ant Vice C h an cellor- Finance and Information Managem ent, U n iversity Relatio ns, 405 H ilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, Californ ia 90024.
Donor's Consent to Use Pers onal Information
T h e Univers ity is grateful for the support it receives from friends and a lumni. One of the ways our thanks is expressed is th roughlisting t h e n ames of d ono rs in various p ubli catio n s. Sho ul d yo u wish that your name not appear as a do n o r, please notify us if yo u h ave not already done so.
Fiduciary Responsibility of The U CLA Foundation
The UCLA Fo undation is a California n on-p rofi t ben efit corporatio n organized for the purpose of encouraging vol u n tary private gifts, trust s, and bequests for the b enefit of t h e U CLA campus. Responsibili ty for governance of T h e Foun dation, includ ing investments, is vested in its Board of Trustees .
Recovery of Operating Costs from Private G ifts
T h e Foun datio n's po licy is to invest on a sh ort- term basis all gifts u ntil five percent (5°/o) of the p ri ncipal is earned fo r the su pport of UCLA develop m en t and related program s, u nless gift in structions or ap propriate campus administrators elect to provide t h is amount immedi at ely. W ith the exception of gifts fo r endowme nt p urposes, additional investment in com e will also support these activities
Please complete:
The UCLA School of Law Annual Fund
PLEASE COUNT ME AS A SUPPORTER OF THE LAW ANNUAL FUND!
$5,000+ D Dean's Cabinet
$2,500-$4,999 D Dean's Partnership
$1,000-$2,499 D Dean's Roundtable
$500-$999 D Chadbourn Fellows
$250-$499 D Dean's Advocates
$125-$249 D Dean's Counsel-Classes prior to 1993
$75-$249 D Dean's Counsel-Classes of 1993, 1994
$25-$249 D Dean's Counsel-Class of 1995
Please make checks payable to The UCLA Foundation/Law.
0 My employer has a matching gift program and the matching gift form is enclosed. I prefer to make my gift via credit card: ' D Visa D Mastercard D American Express
Name: Card N°:
Address : Expiration Date: Fund 5126 wo5
Thank you for your tax-deductible gift to the UCLA School of Law!