UW Law Fall 2015

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F A L L 2 015

VOLUME

69

uwlaw LEADERS FOR THE GLOBAL COMMON GOOD

AN ERA O F

EXCELLENCE WITH DEAN TESTY


uw law

FALL 2015

MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN

LAW SCHOOL NEWS 2 Celebration of Distinction

Fall quarter is well underway and I am delighted

We strive to make UW Law a place that inspires

Law School Part of Groundbreaking Partnership with Tsinghua University

with the direction our law school is headed.

our students with a sense of limitless possibility,

Our incoming class of 170 J.D. and 200 graduate

combined with a deep appreciation for the

students includes students from 48 different

responsibility that comes with their education.

countries — a shining example of our mission

My hope is that each student at UW Law finds,

to be leaders for the global common good in

with our support, the right pathway for their

all areas of law, business and public policy. Our

professional life, one that is integrated with their

graduates who took the Washington bar exam

personal values so that the alignment of “head

over the summer had a passage rate of 91%, 15%

and heart” means they do both good and well in

above the state average. The UW was just named

whatever field they choose. At the core, we strive

the 4th most innovative university in the world,

to teach our students to be creative and ethical

and we are heavily engaged in advancing law’s role

problem solvers, a role so desperately needed in a

in fostering innovation in many fields. Every day

world with ever changing and evolving challenges.

UW Law Welcomes Senator Murkowski and Key Stakeholders at Arctic Encounter Symposium

A LAW DEGREE IN ACTION

Sarah Bird ‘05

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BOOKS & BEYOND

38

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

FEATURES

40

RECENT FACULTY NEWS

TECH TIES 10 How UW Law Alumni and Startup Hall are Shaping Seattle’s Tech Scene

CLASS NOTES IN MEMORIAM

AN ER A OF EXCELLENCE 18 Dean Kellye Y. Testy

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I hear of some new success by our faculty, staff,

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REPORT TO DONORS

students and alumni, and each time I am filled 71

with pride for the role the UW Law community is playing in the world. Our reach is tremendous and

GATES PUBLIC SERVICE LAW PROGR AM 26 Marks 10 Years

growing in all the right directions.

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34 UW LAW VOLUME 69 FALL 2015

EDITORIAL OFFICE AND SUBSCRIPTION CHANGES

Dean Kellye Y. Testy

UW Law, William H. Gates Hall, Room 383 University of Washington School of Law Box 353020, Seattle, WA 98195-3020 Email: uwlaw@u.washington.edu

Editor Alison Jones Copyright 2015 University of Washington School of Law. All rights reserved. UW Law is published once a year by the University of Washington School of Law. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Dani Bell, Sharon Ernst, Alison Jones, Jennifer Langston and Martha Wharton

Our mission and accomplishments recently inspired Toni Rembe ’60 and her husband, Arthur Rock, to create a permanent endowed deanship at UW Law. It is one of the true honors of my lifetime to be the first dean to hold the title of “Toni

As we all know, law truly is at the “center of the

Rembe Dean and Professor of Law.” The reach of

universe,” in that there is no area of society that

this gift will be felt for generations to come. Their

law does not touch. A strength of our law school

commitments to law and justice and to helping us

is the wide range of areas in which our alumni

reach even greater heights should be an immense

work and make a positive difference. In these

source of pride for all of us at the law school. UW

pages, you will read about several of our alumni

Law is more than just what takes place within

who exemplify the ways in which law is connected

William H. Gates Hall every day, impressive as

to so many other disciplines. From business, to

that may be. UW Law is all of us who cross paths

technology, to philanthropy, to global health,

here and seek to tilt the world toward peace,

to public policy and beyond — our alumni are

justice and prosperity with whatever leverage

shaping the fields in which they work and serving

we can gain. And for that, I say thank you. It is my

as shining examples of the interdisciplinary nature

immense privilege to be your dean.

of this profession.

Kellye Y. Testy Toni Rembe Dean & Professor of Law

F A L L 2 0 12

Law School Students Achieve Legislative Victories

DEPARTMENTS

uw law

R2-D2 to Driverless Cars: Conference at UW Law Explored Gray Areas in Robotics Law

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS: Kerry Dahlen, Matt Hagen, Alison Jones, Devon Kelley, Greg Olsen, Jack Storms and Team Photogenic DESIGN: Jo-Ann Sire

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news LAW SCHOOL

MARY BOIES

ADAM BROTMAN

DIANA CAREY

GREG GORDER

CELEBRATION of

DISTINCTION WILLIAM H. GATES SR.

WILLIAM H. GATES SR. ’49, ’50, MARY BOIES ’75, ADAM BROTMAN ’95, DIANA CAREY ’66, ’69, ’86 AND GREG GORDER ’85 TO BE HONORED AT CELEBRATION OF DISTINCTION On October 16, 2015, five distinguished alumni of

and strategic direction of the Bill & Melinda

Mary Boies is counsel to Boies, Schiller & Flexner

founding Boies & McInnis LLP and working as

the University of Washington School of Law will

Gates Foundation, where he first answered his

LLP where she specializes in antitrust and corporate

the assistant director of the domestic policy

be honored at the school’s annual Celebration of

son’s request for help in using his resources to

commercial litigation. She is a member of the Board

staff at the White House.

Distinction. This year’s award recipients include

improve reproductive and child health in the

of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations

internationally-admired leaders in technology,

developing world. UW Law’s Public Service Law

and chairs its Committee on Nominations and

public service and legal practice, all of whom will be

Program, created in 2005 with a gift from the

Governance, and is Vice Chairman of Business

recognized for their exceptional contributions to the

Gates Foundation, is named after Gates Sr. and

Executives for National Security, a private sector

law school and beyond.

was established by his family in honor of his

group that connects best business practices to

80th birthday.

government agencies in the national security

Mary Boies ’75, Adam Brotman ’95, Diana

Public Service Award. Following three years of

Carey ’66, ’69, ’86 and Greg Gorder ’85 will

service in the U.S. Army during World War II, Gates

each receive the law school’s Distinguished

Sr. became a founding partner at Preston Gates &

Alumni Award, which is awarded to a select

Ellis, and served as president of both the Seattle/

group of alumni who demonstrate a record of

King County Bar Association and the Washington

civic, professional and community service.

State Bar Association. He currently guides the vision

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Dean’s Council of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and the Board of Directors of the International Rescue Committee. She also served on the committee established by President Dwight Eisenhower to conduct non-partisan, professional peer review of federal judicial nominees, as well as

of Starbucks’ senior leadership team. Brotman leads Starbucks’ core digital businesses, including mobile and mobile payments, web, card, loyalty, e-commerce, Wi-Fi and the Starbucks Digital Network. He previously served as senior vice president and general manager of Digital Ventures, where he led the enterprise digital platform strategy, roadmap and delivery for core web and mobile offerings. Prior to joining Starbucks, Brotman held several leadership positions at leading digital

FALL 2015

school’s Henry M. Jackson Distinguished Alumni

space. She is on the Executive Committee and

Starbucks Coffee Company and a key member

uw law

William H. Gates Sr. ’49, ’50 will receive the law

Adam Brotman is chief digital officer for

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media companies, and most recently was CEO of Barefoot Yoga Company. He served as senior vice president at the digital image licensing and

L AW SCHOOL PART OF

e-commerce company Corbis, and founded PlayNetwork, Inc., a leading provider of in-store

GROUNDBREAKING PARTNERSHIP WITH TSINGHUA UNIVERSIT Y

digital media and entertainment services for businesses worldwide. Diana Carey currently chairs the Creditors’ Rights and Insolvency Practice Group at Karr Tuttle Campbell. She has an extensive background in bankruptcy and creditors’ rights, representing landlords and creditors in contested bankruptcy matters. She has received several awards, including the 2015 Seattle Bankruptcy & Creditor

American College of Bankruptcy where she serves on the pro bono committee; she also serves on the national Super Lawyers Advisory Board, the Executive Board of the T.T. Glover Mediation Program and Friends of the University of Washington Libraries. She is the former president of the King County Bar Foundation and CENTS, a nonprofit that provides financial education to clients in the Puget Sound. She served for nine years on UW Law’s Foundation Board. Greg Gorder is a founder and vice-chairman of Intellectual Ventures, which he helped found in 2000. Throughout his years with Intellectual Ventures, Gorder has served in various capacities, including COO, CFO and general counsel, prior to leading the company’s efforts to recruit and

SOME OF THE BIGGEST GLOBAL CHALLENGES, TWO OF THE WORLD’S

With $40 million in foundational support from Microsoft,

companies and nonprofits in a holistic, project-based

GIX will bring together students, faculty, professionals

environment that will prepare students to help solve a

and entrepreneurs from around the world to collaborate

range of global challenges, from the drive for sustainable

on real-world technology and design projects. Based in

development to the need for mobile health solutions.

a new facility in the Seattle area, this is the first time a

LEADING RESEARCH UNIVERSITIES,

Chinese research university has established a physical

THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

in the fall of 2016 with an inaugural master’s degree in

AND TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, ARE

presence in the United States. GIX will open its doors technology innovation, and will grow with additional degree and certificate programs and fields of study over

response to the launch of the new initiative. “Given our state’s close economic ties to China and our history of Sound region is the perfect place for leading minds from

are critical focus areas for our future,” noted Dean

around the world to collaborate on scientific and technical

AN INSTITUTE DEDICATED TO

Testy. “This exciting project will provide an additional

solutions to global challenges. GIX is a groundbreaking and

and innovative platform for advancing our work in this

unprecedented idea that will create new opportunities for

area, as well as for continuing our now 50-plus years of

the people of Washington, China and beyond.”

EDUCATING THE NEXT GENERATION OF INNOVATORS.

fostering innovative, forward-looking industries, the Puget

leadership in Asian Law.”

company in areas including operations, investor

opportunities for collaboration that the launch of GIX

relations, finance, legal, corporate development,

brings. Initially, law school faculty will teach courses as

licensing, human resources and marketing. Before

part of the core curriculum for GIX students, and faculty

joining Intellectual Ventures, Gorder was partner

and students from the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic will

at Perkins Coie LLP, where he specialized in high-

advise GIX student teams.

technology, corporate and securities law, and

GIX will pioneer new models of global teaching and

news

China,” said Washington state Governor Jay Inslee in

INNOVATION EXCHANGE (GIX),

University and looks forward to the increasing

LAW SCHOOL

cutting-edge education and business relationships with

“The intersections of law, business and technology

provide ongoing guidance and counsel across the

chair of the UW Law Advancement Committee.

of our ongoing efforts to strengthen our unique and

the next decade.

UW Law has a longstanding relationship with Tsinghua

technology companies. He currently serves as the

“This is outstanding news for Washington and a result

PARTNERING TO CREATE THE GLOBAL

hire the current executive team. He continues to

provided business and legal counsel to early stage

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IN PURSUIT OF SOLUTIONS TO

learning by directly connecting students and faculty through equal collaborations with research-led

FALL 2015

award. In 2014, she was inducted into the

uw law

Debtor Rights/Insolvency Lawyer of the Year

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R2-D2 TO DRIVERLESS CARS: CONFERENCE AT UW LAW EXPLORED GRAY AREAS IN ROBOTICS LAW

DRIVERLESS CARS AND PERSONAL DRONES ARE — OR WILL SOON BE — AVAILABLE TO CONSUMERS. BUT WHAT

We Robot 2015, a conference held April 10

“This is a moment in time when we’re starting to

and 11 at UW Law, explored these multiplying

figure out the right legal and policy frameworks

gray areas in robotics law, policy and ethics

to guide this innovative and transformative

and how emerging technologies are disrupting

technology,” said We Robot co-founder Ryan Calo,

existing regimes.

UW assistant law professor and co-director of

The fourth annual national conference featured presentations from leading academic

PROTECTIONS GUARANTEE THEY WON’T

researchers, discussions with industry experts

SPY ON US OR SURREPTITIOUSLY SELL US THINGS? COULD A ROBOT BE USED TO VERIFY AN ALIBI IN A CRIMINAL COURT CASE? WHO IS LIABLE IF A DRIVERLESS CAR CRASHES INTO A PERSON?

The event convened engineers, roboticists, communications researchers, philosophers and

R2-D2 for Star Wars, oversaw special effects for

ethicists, as well as legal experts in fields ranging

The Empire Strikes Back and builds robots for the

from cyberlaw to medical malpractice to labor

world’s largest electronics companies — delivered

law. Discussion topics included regulation of

the keynote lecture.

technologies such as personal drones, driverless

and autonomous decision-making capabilities of robots and their widespread deployment in homes, hospitals, public spaces and battlefields requires rethinking existing legal and policy structures.

cars and surgical robotics; consumer protection regulations for household robots that perform domestic tasks or help stroke patients exercise; how robots in the workplace complicate existing labor laws; and how cloud robotics might be stymied by international trade law.

uw law

ENGINEERING

they’re afraid of or that they fear has no limits.”

laboratories. Tony Dyson — the man who built

that explores how the increasing sophistication

AND PROFESSOR HOWARD CHIZECK, UW PROFESSOR OF ELECTRICAL

because people will not adopt technology that

and robotics demonstrations from UW research

We Robot 2015 built on existing scholarship

UW LAW PROFESSOR RYAN CALO WITH R2-D2 BUILDER TONY DYSON

the UW Tech Policy Lab. “We have to get this right

FALL 2015

ROBOTS SUCH AS HOUSEHOLD HELPERS,

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LAW SCHOOL

news

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LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS ACHIEVE

UW LAW WELCOMES

LEGISL ATIVE VIC TORIES

SENATOR MURKOWSKI AND

ARCTIC ENCOUNTER SYMPOSIUM

challenge you to consider the shared interests and concerns of the United States and the global community.” In her discussion of the ways UW Law seeks to engage in interdisciplinary research and collaboration to address society’s most pressing problems, Dean Testy mentioned the school’s

Thanks to their hard work and involvement,

The YEAR Act abolishes most of the millions of

students working with UW Law’s Clinical Law

dollars of court costs, fees and fines levied against

Program saw two bills signed into law for

juveniles in Washington state, and was co-authored

Washington state this past spring. The first bill,

by five students, Manmeet Dhami ’16, Michael

signed on May 11, 2015 by Washington Governor

Huggins ’16, Thomas O’Ban ’15, Daniel O’Brien ’16,

pollution prevention and response, safety of

Jay Inslee, requires that DNA products secured

and Margaret Sholian ’16, working with UW Law’s

navigation, and conservation and management of

in connection with a felony violent or sex offense

Children and Youth Legislative Advocacy Clinic

natural resources for the assurance of a healthy

be preserved after conviction. The second bill,

(CAYLAC). This clinic works to advance pro-children

the Youth Equality and Reintegration (YEAR) Act,

legislation in Washington through research,

became law on May 14, 2015 and enacts a major

community engagement and legislative advocacy.

experts from around the world to the second

UW Law will again host the Arctic Encounter

annual Arctic Encounter Symposium, designed

Symposium this coming January, as well as sponsor

Both laws passed the Washington state House and

to explore the shared interests of the United

the Arctic Encounter in Paris, which is happening in

States and the global community in the Arctic.

conjunction with the United Nations Convention on

Participants included key industry leaders,

Climate Change.

Senate with nearly unanimous support.

The DNA bill was championed by four students, Stephanie Brown ’15, Karen Fossum ’15, Sheana Kleist ’15 and Brandon Skyles ‘15, working with the law school’s Innocence Project Northwest Legislative Advocacy Clinic, which trains students for work in legislative and public policy advocacy. Prior to the law’s passage, no state law prevented the destruction of crime scene DNA evidence. As a result, Innocence Project Northwest was forced to close many cases after discovering that critical DNA evidence, often the only evidence capable of exonerating an innocent person, had been destroyed without having been subjected to

IPNW LEGISLATIVE ADVOCACY CLINIC STUDENTS AND CAYLAC STUDENTS WITH WASHINGTON GOVERNOR JAY INSLEE AT THEIR RESPECTIVE BILL SIGNINGS

maritime and energy. The event, organized by Rachel Kallander ‘15 with strong support from the school’s Washington Journal of Environmental Law & Policy, focused on the role of the United States as an arctic nation and the challenges it will confront in its upcoming chairmanship of the Arctic Council, such as climate change, natural resources, investment

about a range of issues in the Arctic, including

significant discrepancies in access to justice for those who could not afford to pay these fees.

LAW SCHOOL

news

and sustainable future for Arctic peoples.

relevant sectors, including science, technology,

Prior to the YEAR Act, youth who committed non-

if they had paid all court fines and fees. This created

related to Arctic marine science, governance,

from Alaska, and regional stakeholders from all

opportunities and international relations.

their juvenile record when they turned 18, but only

objective analysis of selected law and policy issues

policymakers including Senator Lisa Murkowski

scientific analysis.

violent, non-sexual offenses were permitted to seal

led by Professor Craig Allen. The institute provides

“Thank you for joining us for this timely discussion ongoing and emerging challenges, policy reform,

FALL 2015

juvenile offenders.

On January 30 and 31, 2015, UW Law welcomed

recently created Arctic Law and Policy Institute,

groundbreaking technologies, and culture and human values,” said Dean Kellye Y. Testy at the symposium’s opening panel. “In keeping with our mission to serve as leaders for the global common

SENATOR MURKOWSKI ADDRESSING SYMPOSIUM ATTENDEES

uw law

change to the way the legal system treats former

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KEY STAKEHOLDERS AT

good, and this year’s conference theme, we

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Tech Ties: HOW UW LAW ALUMNI AND STARTUP HALL ARE SHAPING SEATTLE’S TECH SCENE

AS A RESULT, SEVERAL UW LAW ALUMNI HAVE POSITIONS AT NOTEWORTHY

ENTREPRENEURIAL LAW, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY,

SEATTLE STARTUPS, DEMONSTRATING THE VALUE—AND ADAPTABILITY—OF THE

THE UW SCHOOL OF LAW IS FORWARD-THINKING AND TECH-ORIENTED, AS ARE

EDUCATION THEY RECEIVED. THESE ALUMNI HAVE EACH TAKEN A DIFFERENT PATH

THE GRADUATES IT PRODUCES. THE LEGAL EDUCATION OFFERED AT UW LAW

FROM LAW SCHOOL TO TECH VENTURE, YET EACH WITH A SIMILAR PASSION FOR

TEACHES THE KIND OF INNOVATIVE THINKING AND PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS

THE CHALLENGE OF WORKING IN A STARTUP ENVIRONMENT—A CHALLENGE THEIR

THAT ENABLE GRADUATES TO TACKLE A WIDE RANGE OF CHALLENGES—AND

UW LAW EDUCATION PREPARED THEM FOR.

POSITIONS—UPON EARNING THEIR DEGREES.

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uw law

AS A LAW SCHOOL THAT OFFERS EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES IN

FALL 2015

By Sharon Ernst

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ASHER BEARMAN

ANTHONY KAPPUS

General Counsel, Trupanion

Vice President of Legal, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Redfin

Trupanion is a tech-driven provider of pet

Bearman likes the fast-paced environment of a

Redfin is now a household name across the

“The big difference for me is that I love having a

insurance, and Asher Bearman ’01 is the company’s

startup and the on-the-job training he gets as

nation, but just 10 years ago, it was a fledgling

dedicated client and getting to know the business

first in-house legal counsel. Bearman joined

Trupanion’s in-house legal counsel. He has friends

startup looking to revolutionize real estate through

much better than I ever can outside,” says Kappus.

Trupanion in 2013 after serving as the startup’s

from law school who went to work for more

technology. Anthony Kappus ’08 is vice president

“And I love the breadth. I love fielding a wide variety

outside legal counsel for five years.

established companies like Amazon, but he likes

of legal, general counsel and corporate secretary

of questions, and it’s just really fun to have all kinds

the startup environment. “I like rapid change and

at Redfin. Before joining the company in 2014,

of different colleagues.” Working with a range of

innovation,” he says. “We’re changing constantly.

Anthony was a corporate and securities attorney in

people, like data scientists and marketers, pushes

It’s dynamic and that can be off-putting, but it’s

the Seattle office of DLA Piper. But he had his eye

and challenges you and helps you grow, he says.

also kind of exciting.”

on startups all along.

the opportunity to switch to in-house lawyer came

It’s also different, he says, because of the need

“I went to law school with the goal of representing

helps you solve some challenges in a startup,”

along when Trupanion, Bearman’s former client,

to make sure everyone is working towards the

startup and technology companies in a

says Kappus. And working at a startup has helped

offered him a job. However, Bearman discovered a

same vision. “There’s a lot more face-to-face

transactional and corporate setting,” says Kappus.

Kappus grow as a lawyer. “One of the things about

dramatic difference between being on the outside

interaction, a lot more meetings to make sure

“I definitely wanted to develop a skill set that I could

working at a technology company is seeing how

as a lawyer versus being in the thick of things at a

everybody understands what the goals are, and

use to help new companies grow.”

engineers approach a problem and how data

startup—a difference he enjoys.

that everyone is on the same page about how we

gave him the opportunity to do so, as he served a variety of tech ventures as outside counsel. Then

“When you’re outside, you sort of come and go and

think we’re going to get there,” he explains.

Kappus wasn’t necessarily looking to leave his law firm. He enjoyed his work at DLA Piper, but

“Law school gives you a phenomenal toolkit, and

people approach a problem. I think that definitely causes me to stretch and be challenged and is a tremendous add-on to my core legal skills,”

you don’t get the full picture,” explains Bearman.

the opportunity to move to Redfin came up and

“You’re trying to do your best to understand

the timing seemed right to make the switch to

what the business needs are when you’re giving

inside counsel. He had been watching Redfin from

Kappus believes that working as inside counsel

them legal advice. But you’re always going off of

afar already and was intrigued by the marriage

also gives him the opportunity to work in a wide

limited information.” Now that he’s involved in

of technology to “helping people go through this

variety of legal areas. It also gives him a broader

management at Trupanion, he has a better feel for

emotional process of buying or selling a house.” He

perspective on business and the interests of a

how to manage legal risk against business needs.

had a prior interest in tech companies as well as

variety of stakeholders.

a passion for Redfin’s mission, so the move made sense. And, like Bearman at Trupanion, he learned it’s quite different being on the inside.

he explains.

As much as he enjoys the diversity of his work, however, Kappus’ favorite part about working for Redfin is his passion for the product. “I love what we do,” he says. “I love having a mission-driven approach to helping change real estate for the benefit of consumers. I love being able to go tackle that challenge every day.”

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FALL 2015

with startups, and 10 years working at DLA Piper

uw law

Bearman went to law school with a desire to work

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DANAN MARGASON

Director of Legal Affairs, TUNE

General Counsel, TUNE

Compared to a powerhouse like Redfin, TUNE

“That meeting went a lot differently than I

Margason took a different path, starting his law

Margason was the first general counsel at TUNE.

is definitely still in the startup stage, as a tech

expected,” laughs Golden.

career at a small firm. But that choice turned into

“I learned very early on that it was important to be

a straight shot into the startup world, which is

part of the business team as well as the legal team,”

exactly where he wanted to go.

he says. “I learned a lot about business in the first

company offering a unified mobile marketing console that brings together paid, organic and owned marketing channels into one dashboard. It is the fastest growing company in Washington state, and boasts not one but two UW Law alumni: Ben Golden ’11 and Danan Margason ’10. Golden is the director of legal affairs at TUNE.

Not that the change in direction was totally unexpected. While working with startups at

Margason is the general counsel at TUNE and

entrepreneurs, says Golden, “you get the itch to

a member of the executive team. He joined the

Margason also found his entrepreneurial fit. “I knew

see what it’s like on the other side.”

company, which now has over 300 employees,

there was a lot more opportunity to work with

early on as its 40th team member.

[TUNE] and define for them how I could help, rather

Now that he’s on the inside of a startup, Golden enjoys the diversity. “You wear a lot of hats. It’s

Being at TUNE is a perfect fit for Margason, who

more than just being a lawyer,” he says. “We

has always been entrepreneurial, starting his first

do a lot of operations work. The responsibility

business in middle school and continuing through

level is high, and the opportunity is huge. We

college as he attempted to fund his education with

are a growing company and we have really big

a painting company. That passion for startups

Upon graduating, he went to work for Perkins

ambitions. Instead of being a specialist and doing

stayed with him as he started at UW Law.

Coie in its startup group, because he was drawn

one thing over and over again, I do 10 or 15

to the passion of entrepreneurs and their efforts

different things in a day and think about the big

to make something from nothing. “Those were

picture.”

His path to TUNE’s legal team was not a direct one, as he started out his career in public policy. However, he later chose law school as the next step in his career.

the folks I wanted to work with,” he says.

six months to a year, more so than law.”

Perkins Coie and witnessing the passion of

“When I went to law school, I wanted to end up in the entrepreneurial world again,” says Margason. Upon graduating, he first went to work at a small

Despite how much he enjoys his work at the

firm that utilized his skills in estate planning and

He had met fellow student Margason in law

fast-paced TUNE, Golden is grateful for his law

public interest work. Soon after, however, the firm

school. Margason had started at HasOffers

firm experience at Perkins Coie. “I don’t know

realized the opportunity for a technology practice.

(now TUNE), and Golden tried to get him to

that I would be the lawyer that I am without that

“And that was my path in,” he says. “I met the

hire Perkins Coie as outside counsel. Instead,

experience,” he says.

people at TUNE when the company was very, very

Margason convinced his former classmate to

small. I tried to recruit them as a client. They didn’t

join him at TUNE.

want to change firms, but I stayed in touch with them and when they were ready to hire a lawyer,

for a long time and has a very set process in place,” says Margason. As an early stage company, TUNE didn’t know or care about the traditional legal path, and that suited Margason just fine. In the fast-paced startup world, alumni rely on the innovative thinking and problem-solving skills nurtured at UW Law. And the Seattle startups served by these lawyers are better positioned to thrive when UW Law alumni make up part of their agile teams.

uw law

they called me.”

than going into a company that has been around

FALL 2015

BEN GOLDEN

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NEW STARTUP HALL: DEEPENING UW LAW’S CONNECTION TO THE ENTREPRENEURIAL COMMUNITY

When you think “Seattle startups,” you might not

The future of Startup Hall shines like Husky gold.

Ben Golden ‘11, now director of legal affairs at TUNE,

Golden later returned to the clinic as a mentor,

picture Seattle’s University District. In the past,

Already several businesses that nurture Seattle’s

volunteered with the clinic as a student. He helped

supervising students. He calls the clinic’s

tech startups have launched from the city’s historic

startups have moved into the building:

nonprofits incorporate and apply for tax exempt

connection with Startup Hall a “natural fit,”

brick buildings downtown or, more recently,

TechStars, Founder’s Co-op and UP Global

status with the IRS; social enterprises to incorporate

and an impactful opportunity for students

the South Lake Union neighborhood. Today,

were initial tenants.

and outline operating structures that ensured they

and clients both.

University of Washington and with strong ties to the UW School of Law. The law school connection comes in part thanks to the new life buzzing through Condon Hall. Just west of campus, in the building that housed the law school until 2003, entrepreneurship is taking root as the startup community’s movers and shakers create a place to nurture early-stage innovation. Ultimately, they aim to transform this section of the University District into a thriving startup hub. Although the movement is starting inside the walls of Condon—now renamed Startup Hall—the plan is to attract other entrepreneurial businesses to the neighborhood.

The building’s history is only part of the deepening connection between the law school and the entrepreneurial arena. UW Law also has a tangible

startups to identify the most appropriate type of legal entity and then incorporate.

With Condon Hall now reborn as Startup Hall, and the law school playing an increasing role in the nurturing of these kinds of early-stage

presence within the walls of Startup Hall, thanks to

This direct experience gave Golden a solid

ventures, one can expect to see only more

the school’s Entrepreneurial Law Clinic.

foundation for working with startups upon earning

success stories coming out of Seattle’s startup

his law degree. “The clinic experience—particularly

community, and even more alumni guiding these

the direct client interaction—gave me confidence

startups along the way.

The Entrepreneurial Law Clinic serves entrepreneurs throughout the Northwest by teaming law and business students with pro bono attorneys and advisors to provide the kind of early stage legal and business counseling that’s vital to their success. The lawyers involved specialize in the fields that matter most to startups, including intellectual property, corporate and securities

that I’d enjoy working with startups at a firm,” says Golden. “It was also great to collaborate with other students with different areas of focus as we assisted the same client; this issue-spotting practice proved to be helpful in advising early-stage clients in the future.”

FALL 2015

in the University District, in partnership with the

would stay true to their founding ideals; and tech

law, and tax. And the innovative model of the clinic enables significant interaction between students and clients, giving emerging businesses a competitive edge and law school students invaluable firsthand experience.

18

OLD CONDON HALL

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however, entrepreneurship is finding a foothold

19


AN ERA OF EXCELLENCE

UW L AW IS TH R IVI NG UNDER

DEAN KELLYE Y. TESTY’S L E A DE R SH I P. WITH PA S SION AND OPTIMISM, SHE SETS HER

20

uw law

By Dani Bell

FALL 2015

EYE S T OWA R D TH E FU TUR E .

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up to challenges is inspiring the faculty and staff of the School of Law,” Cauce says. “Her strength

step up to challenges is

and community leaders has enhanced the reputation and visibility of the law school in the greater community.”

inspiring the faculty and

As she begins her seventh year, a number more

staff of the School of Law.

than double the average tenure of a law school

Her strength in developing

dean, Dean Testy is proud of the school’s history

strong relationships with

and optimistic about its future. “We have the intellectual and institutional capacity to make a

alumni and community

difference in the world,” Dean Testy says of the

leaders has enhanced the

school. “Ultimately, we have both the passion and

reputation and visibility of the law school in the greater community.” Ana Mari Cauce, UW Interim President

the muscle, which can be rare to find in one place.”

deans. In January 2016, she will become the President of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). To top it all off, Dean Testy recently was appointed the inaugural Toni Rembe Dean of Law, thanks to a generous gift from Toni Rembe ‘60 and Arthur Rock to establish a permanently

Entering Dean Kellye Testy’s office, one instantly understands the driving force behind her ambition. A poster reading “Passion Never Rests” is displayed prominently in the entryway. Battling through a seemingly perfect storm of financial adversity, Dean Testy can safely say the law school has come out the other side undaunted. And UW Law is not stopping there. “Onward and

endowed deanship at UW Law. The gift was made in honor of Dean Testy, her leadership, and her commitment to excellence, social justice and diversity. This is the first endowed law deanship in the world named solely after a woman. An endowed deanship is something of a watershed moment for

transformative power for Dean Testy and future

teaching in the areas of business and commercial

law deans. It catalyzes the law school’s ability to

law for many years and later serving as Seattle

recruit and retain top leadership and strengthens

University’s dean of law for five years. She was

its reputation. She and her successors will have

recruited to become dean at the UW School of

the funding they need to bring visionary ideas to

Law in 2009.

life — from seeding new programs to elevating the school’s ability to make legal education more accessible and affordable for all. Dean Testy notes, “I am honored to be the inaugural holder of the Toni Rembe Deanship in Law. It’s one of the proudest moments of my professional career”.

As the school’s first female dean and a member of the LGBT community, Dean Testy has a strong commitment to diversity and equality. “One of the big questions for me has always been, when you have power, how do you use it? If you’ve been on the receiving side of the abuse of power, you

the law school, providing the necessary resources

Dean Testy herself is a product of modest means,

think about it differently than if you haven’t,” she

to create immediate impact and long-lasting

a background she credits with inspiring her

explains. She also has a keen understanding of

commitment to law and justice. She was the first

emerging trends in the legal industry and the ways

in her family to graduate from college, where she

that law can partner with all disciplines to address

majored in journalism and business. Her interest in

society’s pressing issues. Two programs that have

law was ignited while reading about the famed libel

especially thrived are the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic

case, NY Times Co. v. Sullivan in a communications

and the Tech Policy Lab. Dean Testy enjoys helping

course. Without the funds to attend law school

the faculty and students achieve their goals, and

immediately, she worked in marketing for five years

is not afraid to break barriers in the way of their

before entering law school at Indiana University in

accomplishments. Fortunately, her ambitious

Bloomington. She graduated at the top of her class

agenda is met with an equally ambitious outlook. “I

and clerked on the United States Court of Appeals

believe we have to take risks if we’re going to make

for the Seventh Circuit before entering academia.

a difference. If we’re too safe we’ll never make any

She joined the faculty of the University of Puget

change,” she explains.

upward!” as she often says. Indeed, relentless energy and determination fuel the law school’s triumphs just as much as its vision for the future. Even amid an era of declining nationwide enrollments and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, the law school has made remarkable progress. Under Dean Testy’s leadership, the school has advanced in national rankings, scholarly impact and the quality of the student experience. UW Interim President Ana Mari Cauce commends

Sound School of Law (now Seattle University),

Dean Testy’s ability to galvanize change and ignite passion amongst her colleagues. “Dean Testy’s positive outlook and willingness to step

DEAN TESTY WITH ATTENDEES OF THE 2013 DIVERSITY IN LAW SCHOOL LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE, AN EVENT SHE FOUNDED EIGHT YEARS AGO

Dean Testy is one of the nation’s most respected

U.S. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE SONIA SOTOMAYOR WITH DEAN TESTY

FALL 2015

outlook and willingness to

in developing strong relationships with alumni

uw law

“ Dean Testy’s positive

DURING JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR’S VISIT TO UW LAW

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Dean Testy’s capacity to intuitively understand and

“ Our feet may be

navigate the complexities of power and inequality has served her well at the university, where she is

in Washington,

known for her extraordinary level of commitment to cultivating a real sense of community and

but our reach goes

inclusion. She seeks to create an inclusive and intellectually rigorous community.

around the world.”

“I never think that ambition and fairness have to be opposed to each other,” says Dean Testy of

Dean Kellye Y. Testy

her leadership style. “I believe in having a very fair, humane and kind approach to solving problems.” Unsurprisingly, her vision and drive are very much matched by an exceptional faculty. Dean Testy committed to revitalizing the faculty six years

DEAN TESTY WITH UW LAW PROFESSORS KATHRYN WATTS AND

ago by recruiting the next generation of faculty

PETER NICOLAS AT THE 2013 INSTALLATION OF PROFESSOR WATTS AS THE GARVEY SCHUBERT BARER PROFESSOR OF LAW

and productivity of the school. The shift in culture has resulted in the school’s best years in terms of faculty scholarly productivity and placements in top law journals and publications. In short, part of Dean Testy’s leadership strategy involves hiring other

together and with me for the overall welfare of

but equally or perhaps more important — Dean

Despite her love for Seattle, Dean Testy recognizes

the school and the profession,” noted Dean Testy.

Testy has a vision for the school that is more than

the continued need for an expanded global

“That culture is a precious asset. Rowing the boat

rankings, fundraising or other measurable numeric

outreach. The law school established the Asian

together is so important. If you don’t, you spin in

achievements. She is trying to create a meaningful

Law Center more than 50 years ago, an area of

circles and never get anywhere.”

role for the school in the greater community and in

excellence for which the school is known nationally

the world, through scholarship, publications and the

and internationally. “We’re broadening our reach to

training given to new lawyers who then go out and

include more countries. We’re looking toward Latin

try to change the world,” says Rosenwald.

America and Europe,” she says. “Our feet may be in

leaders. A strong faculty has had a ripple effect on

Students at UW Law thus enjoy a collegial and

the students as well. “In addition to the faculty’s

inspiring environment. They have the resources

scholarly accomplishments, they care deeply for

they need — the support in and outside of the

their students’ development and also work well

classroom — to truly thrive. “We have a good

The UW School of Law is extraordinary not

balance in that students are definitely challenged

just because of the people. Indeed, Dean Testy

It is that same desire for broad outreach that has

academically, but they are also supported in their

credits its location for providing students with

helped the law school move the dial on the issue of

development. Our law school graduates healthy,

unprecedented access to resources and business

inclusion and equality. Last year, the school began

successful people who inspire others. This cycle is

leaders. “Seattle is a big, small town. You can have

a very ambitious diversity plan that was adopted

great for institutional growth,” remarks Dean Testy.

influence more easily than you would in a Boston or

unanimously by the faculty. One of its many goals

a DC. It helps us accomplish things,” she says

was to address a frustrating statistic: the school

DEAN TESTY AND LONNIE ROSENWALD AT THE LAW SCHOOL’S ANNUAL GIVING SOCIETY DINNER

Lonnie Rosenwald ’94, Vice President and Chief Counsel, Technology Creation and

Seattle has also proved to be a prime location for

Commercialization at Intellectual Ventures, reflected

the school’s thriving Tech Policy Lab. This unique,

on the way in which Dean Testy’s results-oriented

interdisciplinary collaboration unites the School of

approach has enacted dramatic change for the law

Law, Information School and Computer Science &

school. “Her experience has enabled her to identify

Engineering, allowing policy and technology to work

key areas for improvement in ways that brought

more closely together during the upfront stages

immediate impact to faculty recruitment, student

of the development process. “I love to find things

applications and fundraising, all of which will be

where we have strength, our region has strength

translated into higher rankings for the school. Then

and where there is a problem that our world needs

there is a quality that is more difficult to describe,

help with,” she says. “I want to be answering the pressing issues of the day.”

24

Washington, but our reach goes around the world.”

admits far more underrepresented students than the number who actually enroll. This realization provoked the Gregoire Fellows Program, a partnership between the UW School of Law and 15 of the leading law firms and companies in Seattle. The collaboration will help the school better recruit students as diverse as our society, placing them in paid summer internships with participating law firms after their first year of study and providing bar exam support and mentorship along the way.

FALL 2015

their experienced colleagues to increase the energy

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leaders. Those new professors have joined with

25


DEAN TESTY WITH GUESTS AT THE MINORITY BAR ASSOCIATION RECEPTION, HOSTED AT UW LAW IN 2011.

DEAN TESTY AT THE 2015 AALS ANNUAL MEETING WITH INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON PROVOST LAUREN ROBEL AND NORTHWESTERN LAW SCHOOL DEAN DANIEL RODRIGUEZ

Dean Testy’s commitment and reputation have

Dean Testy’s term as president begins in January

bringing in fresh ideas and talent. She will also have

made her highly visible and influential among her

of 2016. She’ll be succeeding good friend and

the chance to exert some leadership at a time when

colleagues nationwide. In early 2015, she was voted

current dean of George Washington School of Law,

President-Elect of the Association of American Law

Blake Morant, who believes Dean Testy is a great

Schools. An active member of the organization

fit for the role. “Dean Kellye Testy remains one of

for several years, she served a three-year term on

the stalwarts and leading lights of American legal

the Committee on Recruitment and Retention of

education. I have had the privilege of knowing

Minority Law Teachers and Students. Most recently,

and working with her for more than ten years

she served as co-chair of the AALS Section for

and continually find her insights, wisdom

those who have it

the Law School Dean and is a current member of

and magnanimity both gratifying and inspiring,” Morant says.

is getting wider all

mission to enact change.”

the AALS Committee on Audit and Association

the time. We have to

When asked for advice for future lawyers, Dean

put a spotlight on the accomplishments of the UW

stay on our mission

Shakespeare, ‘the first thing we do, let’s kill all the

School of Law. “It gives us an amazing national and

to enact change.”

lawyers.’ Most people interpret that as meaning

Dean Kellye Y. Testy

that if you’re trying to overthrow a society, you have

AALS, commends Dean Testy’s leadership and engagement with the organization. “She has extraordinary leadership skills as well as broad and deep knowledge of legal education,” says Areen. “There is no better spokesperson on behalf of legal education in the nation. We are extraordinarily fortunate to have her wise counsel at this time of challenge for legal education.”

international visibility platform. The national view of law schools is really East Coast biased. We don’t

people who need access to justice and

time for law schools and I want to try and provide some leadership around remaining committed to our mission of legal education,” says Dean Testy. “The gap in the world between the people who need access to justice and those who have it is getting wider all the time. We have to stay on our

Testy paused for a moment. “There’s that line in

lawyers are disliked. But the actual context of it is

always get the credit for all we do because we’re

to get rid of the lawyers first, because they’re the

just less visible. I’m excited about having a platform

ones who are going to stand for liberty and justice.

for the year to shout from the rooftops how great

If you get rid of them, the rest is easy. And I think

UW is, while providing national leadership at a

that’s right. We should feel good about being the

critical time for higher education,” says Dean Testy.

guardians of democracy and liberty. Even though

As president, she will help appoint new leaders,

we sometimes have to speak out in ways that are unpopular, that’s our role.”

26

FALL 2015

Committee. Judith Areen, Executive Director of

The upcoming presidency is an excellent chance to

world between the

legal education is evolving. “It’s not been an easy

uw law

Investment Policy, and the AALS Executive

“ The gap in the

27


GATES PUBLIC SERVICE WHO BELIEVES THE GREATEST GIFT WE

PROGRAM

GIVE THE WORLD IS “SHOWING UP.”

MARKS

TODAY, THE SCHOLARS OF THE

10

YEARS

LAW PROGRAM ARE DOING EXACTLY THAT IN ARENAS ACROSS THE COUNTRY AND AROUND THE WORLD, LIVING OUT THEIR COMMITMENT TO PUBLIC SERVICE LAW.

uw law

By Martha Wharton

WILLIAM H. GATES PUBLIC SERVICE

FALL 2015

LAW

IT BEGAN IN HOMAGE TO A MAN

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29


“It’s had tremendous meaning for him,” Carter

funded by a $33 million endowment from the

said. “He wanted to do everything he could to

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in honor of its

make sure it was the most impactful program

remarkable Co-Chair, William H. Gates Sr. ’49,

for the students and for UW Law. He wanted to

’50. The program awards five scholarships on

make sure the support they receive is right-sized.”

an annual basis to first year students entering

Gates Sr., ever-magnanimous and inclusive, also

the UW School of Law J.D. program. Each Gates

wanted to ensure that students outside of the

program scholarship award covers tuition, books

five scholarship recipients would benefit as well,

and living expenses. Acceptance of a Gates

by providing support for all students to attend

program scholarship represents a commitment

lecture series and receive mentoring with the

on the part of each Gates scholar to work in

goal of raising the importance of public service

public service for five years following graduation.

law throughout the school and with all students.

According to Amy Carter, Deputy Director at the

The result has been to raise the visibility and

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates Sr. took

importance of public service law across the board.

a hands-on role in crafting the program after his family surprised him by announcing the gift. Not coincidentally, the Gates program is designed for an 80-year time span, mirroring its timing in honor of his 80th birthday. The foundation and the Gates family wanted to honor Gates Sr.’s deep commitment to public service by creating a scholarship at his alma mater.

VANESSA HERNANDEZ

MIKE PETERS

Michele Storms, Assistant Dean for Public Service

As the program marks its tenth anniversary, the

racial and economic justice,” she recalls. “I always

Law and Executive Director of the Gates program,

ripple effect is well underway. Three of the four

thought that sometime down the line, if I was

is especially pleased to see the program enhance

members of the first cohort of Gates scholars,

ready to transition to a different field, the tools of

the law school’s overall commitment to public

those who entered the program in 2006, have

the law would be a way to effect that change.”

service law. “Our goal is to benefit the whole

completed their five-year commitment to public

school. The impact of this program is like dropping

service law — the fourth will finish soon. Each

a very large pebble into a very large body of water.”

is, as Gates advocated in his 2010 book, Showing

said Storms. “As the graduates go into the world

Up for Life: Thoughts on the Gifts of a Lifetime,

and do great work for justice, there’s no telling

“showing up.”

how wide the ripples will spread.”

“At the beginning of law school, I wouldn’t have anticipated that I’d be working on reentry,” said Hernandez. ”One of the amazing things about going to law school and doing internships is that you get a really good sense for how things often fit

The four scholars from the original group are

together. What I’m doing now is part of a broader

now fully engaged in public service law; the fifth

continuum to achieve racial and economic justice.

member of the 2006 class had to withdraw. We

Education is the very front end. You could say that

spoke to each of the four who completed to find

I now work on the back end, with people whom

out where the Gates program, and public service

the system has failed. I love the work I’m doing

law, have taken them.

now. I feel incredibly privileged to do this.”

Vanessa Hernandez, ’09, works diligently

At his own five-year mark, fellow Gates scholar

on behalf of American Civil Liberties Union of

Mike S. Peters, ’09, sees himself in an equally

Washington state’s Second Chances program,

privileged opportunity to serve. He recently

where she is an advocate for the rights of

moved with his wife and young children to Bonn,

individuals who want to reduce the barriers posed

Germany, where he is Chief of Staff for the

AS THE GRADUATES GO INTO THE WORLD AND DO GREAT WORK FOR JUSTICE,

by criminal records, many of whom are juveniles.

International Paralympic Committee (IPC).

THERE’S NO TELLING HOW WIDE THE RIPPLES WILL SPREAD.”

Hernandez was a dedicated teacher when she and

Peters came to UW Law after he too had

her young family moved to Seattle, shortly before

established a career in teaching, working as

the Gates program was announced. “I came to

assistant professor of communications at the

teaching because I wanted to work for social,

University of Washington and doing research on

“ OUR GOAL IS TO BENEFIT THE WHOLE SCHOOL. THE IMPACT OF THIS PROGRAM IS LIKE DROPPING A VERY LARGE PEBBLE INTO A VERY LARGE BODY OF WATER.

Michele Storms, Assistant Dean for Public Service Law

uw law

and Executive Director of the Gates Program

FALL 2015

The groundbreaking program began in 2005,

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“ WE KNEW THAT THE BEST POSSIBLE GIFT FOR HIM WOULD BE ONE THAT SUPPORTS AND CONTINUES HIS LONG TRADITION OF SERVICE BY OPENING THE DOOR OF OPPORTUNITY TO OTHERS. THIS PROGRAM WILL HAVE AN IMPACT NOT JUST ON THE LIVES OF [THE] SCHOLARS, BUT ON ALL OF THE PEOPLE THEY SERVE.” Bill Gates 2005

EMILY ALVARADO

COLLEEN MELODY

how couples and families adapt to the onset of

In each role Peters learned vital skills he uses

“I wasn’t always interested in law,” said

Colleen Melody, ’09, was struck by the power

chronic illness or disability. At the same time, he

on a global stage through his work with the IPC.

Alvarado. “I was interested in policy, in urban

of law in an incident in northern Idaho near her

was involved in the paralympic movement, having

Peters calls himself fortunate to be working for

politics, in how cities function and how they

home. “A very famous group of white supremacists

been a captain of the U.S. Paralympic National

the international organization that provides

can foster equity or inequity. As I got closer

lived in Hayden Lake. They promoted and engaged

Soccer Team and having served with the U.S.

opportunities for athletes with impairment

to law school, I wanted the tools of the law to

in race-based violence that was harmful to

Olympic Committee. When the Gates program

to realize their goal of achieving competitive

help bring more credibility and power to my

our community.“ In September 2000, an Idaho

invited applicants, Peters stepped forward.

excellence on the biggest stage of all, the

voice in advocacy work.” She believes the law

jury rendered a $6.3 million verdict against the

Paralympic Games. “In my new role,” he said,

gave her a different lens through which to view

group, the outcome of a civil suit brought by the

“I’m very happily in the nexus of what the Gates

the challenges of inequity. Alvarado echoes

Southern Poverty Law Center that eventually led

program hopes to achieve.”

her benefactor, Gates Sr., when she says, “The

to the group’s bankruptcy. “It was stunning to

law is a tool.” She is currently using that tool to

me to see that lawyers could effect that kind of

address Seattle’s much publicized affordable

change. Before that, I hadn’t thought that lawyers

housing crisis. “The issue certainly has public

could do so much good.”

Like Hernandez, Peters was interested only in public service law from the outset. The Gates program provided an opportunity to pursue what he had already resolved to do. Immediately

Emily Alvarado, ’09, has taken a very focused

following graduation, Peters worked in immigration

path since her law school graduation, setting

law as an Equal Justice Works Fellow at Northwest

her sights on the issue of affordable housing. “I

Immigrant Rights Project in Seattle. “I fell in love

chose a non-traditional career,” she explained.

with immigration law,” he said, “especially the

“The Gates program gave me access to a

opportunity to help kids who have no special

network, the confidence and the financial ability

protections in immigration law proceedings.”

to choose a path that was different.” That path

But when lack of funding ended his time there,

led directly to the City of Seattle’s Office of

Peters moved to the City of Seattle’s Office of

Housing, where she is now Manager of Policy

Intergovernmental Relations where he drafted and

and Equitable Development. In her role with the

January of this year, Melody was named chief of

worked to approve policies that support the city’s

City of Seattle, Alvarado lives out her passion,

the newly created Civil Rights Unit in the Office of

diplomatic efforts.

developing and implementing broad strategic

attention right now because so many people are feeling the effects of rising rents. But low income people are struggling merely to get by in Seattle. Given our city’s tremendous wealth, everyone should have their basic needs met, and that includes housing.”

Following a post-law school year of clerking for The Honorable Ronald M. Gould on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Melody joined the United States Department of Justice in Washington, DC as a trial lawyer in the Civil Rights Division, Housing & Civil Enforcement Section. In

policy that makes affordable housing for Seattle

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issues on a daily basis.

FALL 2015

residents, as well as addressing specific housing

32

33


the Washington state Attorney General. Under her

and as an engaged citizen.” Results so far have

leadership, the new unit will investigate and litigate

already shown “an impressive, dedicated group of

violations of the laws of Washington, including

people who represent all the best of Bill’s values,

discrimination on the basis of race, gender, sexual

and he is extremely proud of the students and

orientation, religion, disability and veteran status.

what they have already accomplished.”

By 2086, when, according to the terms of the

The Gates scholars of 2006 are unanimous on

endowment, the program as it exists now will end,

one other point — their deeply felt gratitude.

nearly 400 aspiring attorneys will have discovered,

Peters articulated sentiment expressed by all

as Melody puts it, “how to use lawyering” to

four original scholars. “The gratitude,” he said,

change the world.

“the thankfulness for the opportunities continues

Although each is pursuing a different goal, the four original Gates scholars are unanimous on two points. When asked if they intended to change the focus of their careers now that their formal commitment to public service law has been fulfilled, all four gave the same answer: “I can’t imagine doing anything else.” And when asked, “What do you see happening in the future with this program,” they again agreed: “It will never end.” They are confident the Gates program will create an ever-widening web of impact, a vast network of passionate people who believe, as they do, that people who care enough can indeed change the world, a network of people who will continue to

2012

put their hearts and souls into it. We’re all very

CLASS OF

2011

happy to see the program grow and become so widely diverse.”

10

CLASS PHOTOS (L TO R) opposite CLASS OF 2009: VANESSA HERNANDEZ, MIKE PETERS, EMILY ALVARADO, COLLEEN MELODY CLASS OF 2010: SALMUN KAZEROUNIAN, MEENA JAGANNATH, NETSANET TESFAY, JENNIFER KRENCICKI-BARCELOS, MICHAEL GEOGHEGAN CLASS OF 2011; LILLIAN HEWKO, NICK MARRITZ, REBECCA WATSON, MIRANDA STRONG, WYATT GOLDING CLASS OF 2012: HILARY HAMMELL, JOAN ALTMAN, MIRANDA STRONG, KATHERINE KIRKLIN, ARIANA FLORES, MIKE FELTON

From the Gates Foundation’s point of view, Carter

he is and has contributed — both as an attorney

CLASS OF

staff and to those UW Law faculty members who

CLASS OF 2014: ASHLEY PAINTNER, ANDREA WOODS, STEPHEN COGER, SHELLEY HALSTEAD, SHON HOPWOOD

life and for others in the spirit of Bill Sr. and all that

2009

not only to the Gates family, but to the program

CLASS OF 2013: JOHANNA GUSMAN, SARAH LIPPEK, YURIJ RUDENSKY, LEO FLOR, MICHAEL WINDLE

of citizens who are out in the world showing up for

2010

beyond the five years. I think we’re all very grateful,

show up.

said they expect year 81 to reveal “a huge cohort

CLASS OF CLASS OF

CLASS OF

2013

YEARS

CLASS OF 2015: VICTORIA CLARK, NIKKITA OLIVER, JESSICA KNOWLES, LAUREN CONNER, MEGAN CRENSHAW CLASS OF 2016: MICHAEL HUGGINS, SARAH CHAPLIN, SHIZUKO HASHIMOTO, THOMAS MILLER, MICHAEL JETER CLASS OF 2017: DANI MEYERING, FRANCISCO CARRIEDO, BRUNA ESTRADA, CAMILLE MCDORMAN, MARTINA KARTMAN

CLASS OF

2015 CLASS OF

2014

“ WE’RE DELIGHTED TO HONOR BILL SENIOR IN THIS WAY. HE HAS BEEN AN INCREDIBLE EXAMPLE TO BILL AND MYSELF, AND WE WANTED TO EXPRESS OUR

FALL 2015

ADMIRATION AND APPRECIATION WITH A GIFT THAT CONNECTS HIM TO FUTURE GENERATIONS OF COMMITTED, CIVIC-MINDED STUDENTS, AND THE ONGOING WORK OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON.” CLASS OF

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Melinda French Gates, 2005

2016 CLASS OF

2017 34

35


SAR AH BIRD ’05

TAKING RISKS AND TAKING CHARGE:

A LAW DEGREE IN ACTION By Sharon Ernst

Sarah Bird CEO at Moz In tech-oriented Seattle, one can’t always predict where a law degree will lead. One might land at a desk at an international law firm, or earn the title of Chief Digital Officer for a major brand, or even be named CEO of a fast-moving Seattle startup. Anything is possible when you start at the UW School of Law.

Just ask Sarah Bird ’05, CEO of Moz, a software

addition to UW Law, her studies have taken her

company helping online marketers measure and

to Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British

improve search, social and content marketing.

Columbia; Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey;

Bird was employee number eight when she joined

and East China University School of Law and

Moz in 2007 as its in-house lawyer. Within six

Politics in Shanghai, China. No matter the field of

months, she was appointed COO. And now, just

study or the geography, Bird is a creative thinker,

a few years later, she heads up the company as

communicator and problem solver, traits that

CEO. This might not have been on her radar when

make her adaptable and successful as a lawyer

she graduated from UW Law 10 years ago, but law

and as an entrepreneur.

BEYOND BILLABLE HOURS

as an associate attorney at a small firm in Auburn, Washington, where she worked doing general practice and family law. After a few

Bird majored in philosophy and literature,

years, she knew it was time for a change, but

fields of study that are hardly the harbingers

wasn’t sure what that change would be, or where

of a tech career, but she has always been up

it would lead.

for a challenge—and a change of scenery. In

36

After finishing law school, Bird took a position

FALL 2015

world nonetheless.

uw law

school helped prepare her for the entrepreneurial

37


billable hours and how little control I had over my

was responsible for overseeing the fundraising,

schedule,” she explains. “Plus, I was feeling very

facilities, board meetings, finance, HR, recruiting,

tied down to a geography. I quit my job at the

marketing, product development and legal

firm before I knew what I was going to do next. It

advising. In 2009, in recognition of her critical

was 2007 and the economy was booming. I had

role at Moz, Bird was named one of the top

no kids, no mortgage, no ties. So I was in a good

100 women in Seattle tech by the Puget Sound

position to take risks.”

Business Journal.

A risk presented itself in the form of an offer from

In 2013, Bird added president to her title, and the

her good friend Rand Fishkin, who suggested she

following year she took over as CEO, making her

join his newly funded company Moz. “Neither of

one of the top women executives at a Seattle-

us had any idea what we were getting into, but we

area technology company. Bird now guides the

decided to work together,” says Bird. “I told myself

company’s future growth by setting strategy and

I would give it one year.”

driving execution. She also manages an annual budget of $48 million and 160 employees, in

As for the transition from lawyer to COO to CEO

Her involvement with the Diversity Action

at Moz, Bird loves the challenge of constantly

Committee is due in part to the challenges she

evolving. “I’m always learning on the job,” she

faces as a CEO who must recruit and retain

says. “If I wasn’t learning, I would probably switch

technology employees. The shortage of tech talent

jobs. I am absolutely addicted to learning and

is something she hopes to overcome by breaking

Bird has overseen the growth of Moz from a few

problem solving.”

down barriers and encouraging more diversity

FROM SMALL FIRM

hundred to over 30,000 passionate customers all

TO GROWING STARTUP

over the world. Moz also hosts the world’s largest

The world of startups is a good fit for a self-starter

One year turned into eight—and counting. “It ended up being one of the best decisions of my life,” says Bird. “I got the opportunity to do all

addition to recruiting the top talent needed to make it all possible.

kinds of things nobody in their right mind would

As for Moz, the company has grown by leaps and

have paid me to do.”

bounds. During her eight years at the company,

Moz began in the early 1980s. Fishkin joined the company in the late 1990s, and by 2007, he had

community of online marketers, with over 2 million visits to the Moz blog each month.

You’re encouraged to continually reinvent the

LAW SCHOOL AS PREPARATION

the tech pipeline and make sure everyone has a chance to succeed in technology, regardless of gender, race or socioeconomic background. In recognition of her accomplishments in and out of the office, Bird was recently named one of the

FOR STARTUP LIFE

A DRIVING FORCE IN

“Top 40 Under 40” by the Puget Sound Business

an in-house lawyer is not usually one of the first

The road from law school to CEO is perhaps not an

THE ENTREPRENEURIAL COMMUNITY

Journal for 2015, an award that spotlights top

hires made by a startup. Bird’s legal education

obvious one, but there are certainly shared skills

Bird not only took a job at a startup. She immersed

business leaders under the age of 40 who excel

and training, plus her passion for problem solving,

needed and nurtured in both the legal field and

herself in the startup community, and she regularly

made her well-suited to a role at a fledgling tech

the entrepreneurial arena. One must learn quickly,

speaks at related events and strives to support

company.

be creative and courageous, spot opportunities,

other entrepreneurs. She is also on the board

and be able to communicate a vision in such a way

of Sitrion—another Seattle startup—and the

that persuades others to see it too, whether that’s

Washington Technology Industry Association, where

a judge or an investor. In addition, Bird says, “The

she is part of the Diversity Action Committee.

come on board at Moz, neither one realizing that

From that point on, Fishkin and Bird worked side-by-side to build the company into the major—and growing—brand that it is today. Six months after coming on board, Bird was made Chief Operating Officer (COO), a position that gave her ample opportunity to take initiative, tackle

38

experimental,” she says. “It’s more fun and casual. world, your company and yourself.”

transformed Moz into a technology company seeking venture capital. Fishkin suggested Bird

like Bird. “Startup culture worships the new and

in the technology field. Bird is driven to increase

firm taught me about juggling multiple priorities and getting up to speed on technical subjects quickly. All of these skills have served me extremely well in the startup world.”

in their industry and show dynamic leadership. After she finished law school in 2005, Bird was not concerned with pursuing accolades. Yet her time at UW Law and her early experiences at a small firm helped to prepare her for this role, and for whatever adventure comes next. FALL 2015

problems, and think on her feet. As COO, she

uw law

“I wanted a change from firm life. I didn’t like

39


Books

& Beyond

By Penny Hazelton, Professor of Law

RUMINATIONS ON A L AW LIBR ARY

and law faculty actually read all new cases from the

materials carefully and craft our arguments and advice

paper advance sheets to keep up in their fields. The

accordingly. We still write copiously — briefs, complaints,

gray BNA loose leaf service, United States Law Week,

motions, client letters, memos, opinions, statutes, rules

was mandatory reading for practitioners and scholars

and regulations. Students still need a place to study and

Gallagher (Mrs. G) and left Seattle to seek my fortune as a newly minted law librarian.

of the U.S. Supreme Court.

learn. Faculty members still need to produce scholarship

My professional career took me first to the University of Maine and then to the library

The law library staff still published the Current Index

of the U.S. Supreme Court, before coming back to the UW and Seattle 30 years ago.

to Legal Periodicals every week, collating the weekly

So, what about the next 30 years at the Gallagher

paper copies (upwards of 1,500!) to distribute to our

Law Library?

to this, I had last been in Condon Hall in 1975 when I took my final class from Mrs.

Here, I inherited a law library that was well run and

email, no internet, no electronic calendars, no cloud

had a great staff. How was I to get to know it? Little

computing, no tablets or laptops, no Google or Bing.

by little, with the help of everyone in the law school and its library, I came to learn the central role the law library played in the region and in the lives of our students, the faculty, the University, the legal profession and the public.

used a print digest, annotated code or secondary source to locate citations. Then you had to move to another part of the library to find the volumes of the correct reporters in order to read these cases. When

Students came to the library to study (the reading

you found cases to use, you verified the authority

room on the 2nd floor of Condon Hall was the best

of those cases by Shepardizing and using endless

space in the whole building and could hold 120

newsprint pamphlets to update the bound volumes of

students), to meet others in the group study rooms, to

Shepards Citations (remember those confusing, tiny

check out books from our reserve collection, to read

columns of numbers and letters?). No red stop signs

cases and other printed legal materials, to do legal

or yellow caution symbols to make your interpretation

research, to ask research and reference questions,

of case authority easy. No immediate access to the

to be seen and sometimes, to sleep. Faculty came to

cases that interpret your case; you’d have to locate

the law library to find books in the collection using

and read those cases, too, and draw your own

a card catalog and then a microfiche, to browse the

conclusions.

collection and ask questions.

40 40

If you wanted cases on a particular issue of law, you

The law library duplicated most primary legal

You may remember — 1985 was a time when you had

materials because of the heavy demand by students

to come to the physical law library to read anything

and other users. There were three sets of U.S.

about the law or to do legal research. No computers

Reports and 20 sets of Washington Reports, as well as

(except a dedicated terminal for Westlaw and Lexis), no

innumerable copies of Washington statutes. Lawyers

faculty mailboxes and to mail to every law school in the country. A few legal research guides were printed for students and attorneys interested in legislative history, administrative law research and other basic topics. Fast forward 30 years to 2015. We now have 24/7 access to hundreds of thousands of digital legal publications in commercial databases and free on the Internet; a law library website with over 100 legal research guides available; blogs that offer the newest news and analysis on nearly every legal topic. The current generation of law students and new

and master subjects they teach.

Will the physical law library still exist, with its generous space for library users, and its collection of contemporary Native American art? Of course. Students will still need comfortable, quiet surroundings as well as different types of places to learn and study law. Will library staff using their expertise be even more valuable as creators and curators of legal information tools, trainers of the next generation of legal professionals and scholarship partners with faculty? No doubt in my mind.

faculty grew up using computers, and few of them

Will the law library continue to select resources

have ever opened a print volume of a case reporter

to be available and accessible to all of its many

and wouldn’t recognize a digest if you put it in their

users? Absolutely. Guiding users to the best legal

hands. Legal research now takes place at 3 a.m. while

materials available will be essential in supporting

scholars, students and lawyers are in their pajamas.

the educational enterprise.

But even in this revolutionized world of law libraries,

The future of the law library at UW is bright! It is full

some things bring us back down to earth quickly.

of change and excitement, led by innovative and

Some legal materials are not in electronic form and

imaginative librarians who understand legal information

are still only available in print. Some electronic reports

systems and the people who need access to the best

and documents disappear from the web, never to be

legal information to solve the world’s problems.

located again. Information is ubiquitous, but not all

FF AA LL LL 22 00 1152

Law Library and Professor of Law at the University of Washington School of Law. Prior

u w ll aa w w

I arrived wide-eyed and excited in 1985 to be the director of the Marian Gould Gallagher

of it is reliable or authentic. We still need to read legal 41 41


ALUMNI TAILGATE SEPTEMBER 27, 2014 The annual alumni tailgate rallied Law Dawgs and friends to cheer on the Huskies as they took on the Stanford Cardinal.

3 ASSOCIATE DEAN MARY HOTCHKISS, JOE BROTHERTON ’82, MAUREEN BROTHERTON, JOE E. BROTHERTON ’14 & FRIEND 4 JOE BROTHERTON ’82, FRIEND, EMMA GORDER, GREG GORDER ’85 & JOEL BENOLIEL ’71

1 GUY TOWLE ’77, BRIAN MORRISON ’77 & BRUCE ROBERTSON ‘77 2 JUDGE KEN SCHUBERT III ’97, OMAR CONTRERAS ’17 & BEN ROBBINS ‘17

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in the SPOTLIGHT “MAGGIE’S BUMBLEBEES” REUNION OCTOBER 9, 2014 UW Law hosted a reunion event and panel presentation for a group of alumni, affectionately called “Maggie’s Bumblebees,” who worked for Senator Warren Magnuson. Alumni panelists addressed students and spoke about their experiences working for Senator Magnuson and how those experiences impacted their lives and career paths. 1

2

1 “MAGGIE’S BUMBLEBEES” ALUMNI GROUP WITH DEAN TESTY

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FALL 2015

2 STAN BARER ’65 WITH 2014-2015 BARER FELLOWS: MOSES WANYONYI WANJALA (KENYA), JONATHAN MUWAGANY (UGANDA) & HEZRON KROP KANGEREP (KENYA)

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CELEBRATION OF DISTINCTION OCTOBER 10, 2014 This evening honored our alumni award recipients and celebrated our reunion classes from 1964, 1974, 1984, 1994 and 2004. Also recognized were new members in the Washington Chapter of the Order of the Coif from the Class of 2014. 1 AWARD RECIPIENTS: ABIGAIL DAQUIZ ’04, JUDGE GARY BASS ’65, C. KENT CARLSON ’67, JOEL BENOLIEL ’71 & DEAN TESTY

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2 CLASS OF 1964 & DAN RITTER ’63 3. CLASS OF 1994 4 BERRIE MARTINIS ’94, NORMA LINDA UREÑA ’94 & RHE ZINNECKER ’94 5 JAMES BABCOCK, ABIGAIL DAQUIZ ’04, DONNA MUSTARD BOND ’04, JAMES BOND, CRISTINA JORGENSON ’04 & ANNIKA POLLOCK ‘04 6 CLASS OF 2004

in the SPOTLIGHT 3

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FORMER PRESIDENT MICHAEL YOUNG SAYS GOODBYE TO UW

UW LAW CELEBRATES BLUE THURSDAY

JANUARY 27, 2015

JANUARY 29, 2015

Prior to his departure from the University of Washington for Texas A&M University, Michael Young, the UW’s now former president, visited the Gallagher Law Library and donated a collection of books to the law school.

In advance of the Seattle Seahawks’ trip to Super Bowl XLIX, Dean Testy, staff and students got into the 12th Man spirit and celebrated at William H. Gates Hall.

in the SPOTLIGHT PILA AUCTION FEBRUARY 20, 2015 This year the Public Interest Law Association (PILA) celebrated its 20th anniversary by “Rolling out the Red Carpet” for its alumni, friends and members of the community. The annual auction raises money to fund student grants that send students around the state and around the world to work on public interest projects and serve communities in need.

1

2

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2 2014 — 2015 PILA BOARD OF DIRECTORS INCLUDING: BACK ROW: WYATT GJULLIN, HARLEY HUNNER, KEVIN DUFFY-GREAVES, MAX BURKE, MICHAEL CAULFIELD, JOHN STEINNES. FRONT ROW: SOPHIE POSNOCK, MARIAH HANLEY, ANNA RAE GOETHE, VICTORIA AINSWORTH, ALYSSA FAIRBANKS, COURTNEY SCHIRR, JOCELYN WHITLEY

FALL 2015

1 ASSISTANT DEAN MICHELE STORMS & ALEXANDRA REVELAS ’15

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LAW DAWGS IN THE DESERT MARCH 18, 2015 The eighth annual UW Law Dawgs Dinner gathered alumni & friends in La Quinta, CA as part of a series of programs hosted by the UW Alumni Association in the area. 1 BILL KINZEL ’60 & MIKE JEFFERS ’64 2 JULIE LAWRENCE & JOE LAWRENCE ’73 3 POLLY DODD & ELIZABETH INSLEE 4 SHARON WEINBERG, STEVE WEINBERG ’78 & DEAN TESTY 5 J. SHAN MULLIN ’56 & LEE MULLIN

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MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. PHOTO EXHIBIT FEBRUARY 26, 2015 Photographer Bernard Kleina unveiled a set of photographs of Martin Luther King Jr., which were taken as part of King’s efforts to bring integration to Chicago area housing. The photography exhibit was just one part of this year’s annual Diversity Week.

in the SPOTLIGHT 3

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FALL 2015

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GIVING SOCIETY DINNER JUNE 5, 2015 The fourth annual Giving Society Dinner recognized members of UW Law’s three giving societies: The John T. Condon Society, The Marian Gould Gallagher Society and the Henry M. Suzzallo Society. Faculty joined alumni and committee members to thank them for their support and to celebrate another successful academic year.

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1 JIM FLETCHER ’71 & MARLENE FLETCHER 2 MEGAN KRUSE & BOB MUCKELSTONE ‘54 3 DEAN EMERITUS ROLAND HJORTH & MARY HJORTH 4 DEAN TESTY, DAN SATTERBERG ’85 & JOE BROTHERTON ’82 5 ELIZABETH LANE, DEAN TESTY & DENNIS LANE ’67 6 AUBRI MARGASON ’11, DANAN MARGASON ’11, SARAH REYNEVELD ’11, JOEL MERKEL & GARRETT HALL 7 GUY TOWLE ’77, JACKIE TOWLE, LIDIA ROBERTSON, BRUCE ROBERTSON ’77, CAROL HOERSTER & JOHN HOERSTER ’69

in the SPOTLIGHT 6

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COMMENCEMENT JUNE 7, 2015 Faculty, staff, graduates and guests celebrated the 2015 UW School of Law Commencement. 1 JUSTINE OLIMENE, SMRITI SHUKLA, MAHLET BAHITA 2 JIWOOK CHUNG AND CHILD WITH DEAN TESTY 3 MAUREEN JOHNSTON, NIKKITA OLIVER, TAYLOR RICHMAN 4 LAUREN JACOBS, MEGAN CRENSHAW, CHRISTAL HARRISON 5 JOCELYN WHITLEY, MICHAEL CAULFIELD, PATRICK MALLOY, VICTORIA AINSWORTH, TAYLOR CLARK 6 STEPHANIE BROWN AND FAMILY.

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in the SPOTLIGHT 3

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FA C U LT Y & A LU M NI

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R E C E N T FA C U LT Y

News PRESENTATIONS

The Surveillance Paradox, University of Chicago Law School, Law Review Symposium—National Security: The Impact of Technology on Separation of Powers, Jun. 19, 2015 (Chicago, IL)

PUBLICATIONS

Frenemies of the Court: The Many Faces of Amicus Curiae, 49 U. RICH. L. REV. 361-416 (2014).

Listening Machines, Microsoft Research and New York Times R&D Lab Summit, Jun. 11, 2015 (New York, NY)

ROBERT ANDERSON PUBLICATIONS

ROBERT T. ANDERSON, BETHANY BERGER, SARAH KRAKOFF & PHILIP P. FRICKEY, AMERICAN INDIAN L AW: CASES AND COMMENTARY (3d ed. West 2015) (American Casebook Series) 945 pages.

CR AIG ALLEN PUBLICATIONS

Law of the Sea Tribunal Adopts “Due Diligence” Standard for Flag State Responsibility for IUU Fishing, OPINIO JURIS (Apr. 4, 2015, 1:53 AM). US Establishes Fund for Abandoned Seafarers, SEAWAYS: J. NAUTICAL INST., Feb. 2015, at 14. 113th Congress Addresses Arctic Maritime Transportation Needs, PAC. MAR., Feb. 2015, at 36-37. PRESENTATIONS

Speaker and moderator, Marine Transportation and the Polar Code, 6th Symposium on Impact of an Ice-Diminishing Arctic on Naval and Maritime Operations, Jul. 14, 2015 (Washington, DC) Panel Chair, Current Legislative and Regulatory Climate for Arctic Operations, Promise of the Arctic Conference, Jun. 16, 2015 (Seattle, WA) The Preservation of Living Marine Resources and the Environment, U.S. Pacific Command, 28th Annual International Military and Operational Law Conference, May 18, 2015 (Auckland, New Zealand)

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KIMBERLY AMBROSE PUBLICATIONS

Kimberly D. Ambrose et al., CrossBorder Teaching and Collaboration, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 148-61 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). PRESENTATIONS

Ethical Considerations for Legal Clinic Volunteers, QLaw Foundation, Legal Clinic Training, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Ethical Issues for Juvenile Lawyers, Washington State Bar Association Juvenile Law Section, Youth Law Symposium and Annual Meeting, Nov. 14, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Current Issues in Juvenile Law, 2014 Washington State Office of Public Defense Joint Contractor CLE, Oct. 24, 2014 (Wenatchee, WA)

WILLIAM BAILEY PUBLICATIONS

RONALD H. CLARK, GEORGE R. DEKLE, SR. & WILLIAM S. BAILEY, CROSS EXAMINATION HANDBOOK: PERSUASION, STRATEGIES, AND TECHNIQUES (2d ed. Wolters Kluwer 2015). (Aspen Coursebook Series) 362 pages. WILLIAM S. BAILEY & TERENCE J. MCADAM, L AW, SCIENCE AND EXPERTS: CIVIL AND CRIMINAL FORENSICS (Carolina Academic Press, 2014). 336 pages & CD-ROM.

STEVE CAL ANDRILLO PUBLICATIONS

Dark Winter Evenings Pose a Double Risk, PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, Nov. 11, 2014, at A17.

Privacy and Markets: A Love Story, 8th Annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Berkeley, CA)

Robotics and the Lessons of Cyberlaw, 103 CALIF. L. REV. 513-63 (2015). Privacy Harm Exceptionalism, 12 COLO. TECH. L. J. 361-64 (2014) (invited).

The Case for a Federal Robotics Commission, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION (Sept. 2014). 17 pages.

The Business of Treaties, Northwest Junior Faculty Forum, Mar. 2015 (Seattle, WA) Commentator, Socializing Students: Law Schools as International Compliance Agents, Junior International Law Scholars Association, Annual Meeting, Feb. 2015 (Miami, FL)

The Business of Treaties, American Society of International Law, International Organizations Interest Group Workshop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY)

PUBLICATIONS

Digital Market Manipulation, 82 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 995-1051 (2014).

PRESENTATIONS

The Business of Treaties, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

The Business of Treaties, Junior International Law Scholars Association, Annual Meeting, Jan. 2015 (Miami, FL)

RYAN CALO

Franziska Roesner et al., Augmented Reality: Hard Problems of Law and Policy, PROC. UBICOMP ’14 (Sept. 2014). 6 pages.

MELISSA DURKEE

ANGÉLICA CHÁZARO PRESENTATIONS

Panelist, Antiviolence Movements in the Shadow of the Carceral State, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 31, 2015 (Seattle, WA) DWIGHT DR AKE PUBLICATIONS

Business and Financial Literacy, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 407-12 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).

Commentator, Domestic Legal Culture and Treaty Action Behavior: A Look at Human Rights Treaties, American Society of International Law, International Organizations Interest Group Workshop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY) Organizations Interest Group Workshop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY)

FALL 2015

HELEN ANDERSON

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Moderator, Semper Paratus: Military Presence in the High North, Arctic Encounter Symposium, Jan. 31, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

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RECENT FACULTY NEWS

PUBLICATIONS

PUBLICATIONS

Institutionalizing the USPTO Law School Clinic Certification Program for Transactional Law Clinics, 19 LEWIS & CLARK L. REV. 327-59 (2015).

‘Saiban’in seido to keiji shihō ni taisuru hitobito no ishiki’ ni tsuite – kenkyū no igi to sono go no kadai –” [Regarding ‘[The Survey of] People’s Consciousness with respect to the Lay Judge System and Criminal Justice’: Significance of the Research and Future Tasks], in NIHONJIN KARA MITA SAIBAN’IN SEIDO [THE L AY JUDGE SYSTEM AS SEEN BY THE JAPANESE PEOPLE] 231-43 (Matsumura Yoshiyuki, Ōta Shōzō & Kinoshita Manako eds., Keiso Shobo, 2015). (in Japanese)

PRESENTATIONS

The Role of IP in the Innovation Ecosystem, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property, IP Management Track, Jul. 27, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Creatively Embracing Change by Using an Eco-System Model, 38th Annual Conference on Clinical Education, May 5, 2015 (Rancho Mirage, CA) Nuts and Bolts Teaching Plenary, 14th Annual Transactional Clinical Conference, Apr. 24, 2015 (Kansas City, MO) Educating the Next Generation of Intellectual Property Lawyers, Lewis & Clark School of Law Business Law Forum, Oct. 3, 2014 (Portland, OR) Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Tsinghua University, Sept. 10, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Pro Bono Opportunities, Perkins Coie, Aug. 13, 2014 (Seattle, WA) IP Entrepreneurship, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property, IP Management Track, Jul. 28, 2014 (Seattle, WA) UW Entrepreneurial Law Clinic Pro Bono Training, Amazon.com, Inc., Jul. 9, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

MARY D. FAN PUBLICATIONS

Legalization Conflicts and Reliance Defenses, 92 WASH. U. L. REV. 907-58 (2015). The Supply-Side Attack on Lethal Injection and the Rise of Execution Secrecy, 95 BOSTON UNIV. L. REV. 42760 (2015). Disarming the Dangerous: Preventing Extraordinary and Ordinary Violence, 90 IND. L.J. 151-78 (2015). A. Rowhani-Rahbar, D. Zatzick, J. Wang, B. Mills, J. Simonetti, M.D. Fan, F.P. Rivara, Firearm-Related Hospitalization and Risk for Subsequent Violent Injury, Death, or Crime Perpetration: A Cohort Study, 162 ANNALS INTERNAL MED. 492-500 (2015).

Daniel H. Foote, Book Review, 41 J. JAPANESE STUD. 190-94 (2015) (reviewing DARRYL E. FLAHERTY, PUBLIC L AW, PRIVATE PRACTICE: POLITICS, PROFIT, AND THE LEGAL PROFESSION IN NINETEENTHCENTURY JAPAN (2013)). PRESENTATIONS

PRESENTATIONS

Prosecutorial Dissonance, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Presidential Plenary, Western Society of Criminology, Feb. 20, 2015 (Tucson, AZ) Private Data, Public Safety, New York University School of Law, Institute for International Law and Justice, Measurement and Data in the Governance of Illicit Activities, Nov. 2014 (New York, NY) Combatting Counterfeit Drugs: Addressing Data Dissemination Challenges in the Domain of Private Enforcement, New York University School of Law, Institute for International Law and Justice, Conference on Global Institutions and Technologies in the Governance of Illicit Activity, Nov. 17, 2014 (New York, NY)

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Hōritsuka no yakuwari: Gasshūkoku to no hikaku o chūshin ni [The Roles of Jurists: Centered on Comparisons with the United States], in Hō no Hendō no ninaite [tHe Bearers of LegaL CHANGE] 27-61 (Atsushi Omura ed., Iwanami Shoten 2015). (Gendaihō no dōtai [Trends in Current Law], vol. 5) (in Japanese)

Discussant, ADR Viewed from Users: Findings from a Questionnaire Survey of ADR Users in Japan, East Asian Law and Society Conference, Waseda University, Aug. 5, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan) Discussant, Assessing Citizen Participation in Criminal Trials in East Asian Countries, East Asian Law and Society Conference, Waseda University, Aug. 5, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan) Session chair, Human Rights in Asia, East Asian Law and Society Conference, Waseda University, Aug. 4, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan) Panelist, Round Table on International Educational Exchange, American Association of State Colleges and Universities, Japan Studies Institute, American Center Japan, Jul. 7, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)

Panelist, UCLA Global Forum, Jun. 24, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)

ROBERT GOMULKIEWICZ

Criminal Justice Reforms in Japan: A Changing Dynamic for Prosecutors?, Law & Society Association Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

In the Stewardship of Business Model Innovation, 67 FLA. L. REV. FORUM 3537 (2015).

Discussant, Civil Justice System and Legal Policy, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Chair and discussant, Civil Justice System and Legal Policy, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Lessons from Fifteen Years of a Transpacific Course Taught via Videoconference, International Legal Education Abroad Conference, Washington College of Law, American University, Apr. 14, 2015 (via Skype) Chair and discussant, What Is Globalization for Law and Legal Studies?, Keio University Law School, International Symposium on Global Legal Education: How Should Law be Taught in the Globalizing World? Japanese and Asian Perspectives on Global Legal Education, Dec. 16, 2014 (Tokyo, Japan)

PUBLICATIONS

XUAN-THAO N. NGUYEN, ROBERT W. GOMULKIEWICZ & DANIELLE M. CONWAY, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, SOFTWARE, AND INFORMATION LICENSING: L AW AND PRACTICE (Cum. Supp. 2014 Bloomberg BNA). 1 vol. PRESENTATIONS

IP in the Cloud: The Use of the Cloud by Universities, National Association of College & University Attorneys, Jul. 1, 2015 (Washington, DC) The Business of Innovation, Indiana University, McKinney School of Law, Center for Intellectual Property and Innovation, Nov. 18, 2014 (Indianapolis, IN)

JONATHAN FR ANKLIN PUBLICATIONS

Law Libraries and Legal Education, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 140-47 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).

PUBLICATIONS

Searching for the Borders, 20 LEGAL WRITING J. 17-20 (2015). Ruth Bird, Penny A. Hazelton & Kyle Brown, CTC and International Research and Information Systems, 3 CAPE TOWN CONVENTION J. 69-80 (2015). Library Director as Mentor, in ACADEMIC L AW LIBRARY DIRECTOR PERSPECTIVES 97-110 (Michelle Wu ed., Wm. S. Hein & Co. 2015). PRESENTATIONS

Legal Research and Writing, Washington State Bar Association, Readmission Workshop, Mar. 19, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

Japan’s New “Jury” System: A FiveYear Progress Report, University of Washington, Griffith and Patricia Way Lecture, Dec. 3, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Fifteen Years of Justice System Reform in Japan, University of Washington School of Law, Asian Law Lecture Series, Oct. 21, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

PENNY HAZELTON

JEFFREY K ADET PUBLICATIONS

MICHAEL HATFIELD PUBLICATIONS

ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Washington Gallagher Law Library, 2015). 556 pages. Taxation and Surveillance: An Agenda (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 2014-34). Committee Opinions and Treasury Regulation: Tax Lawyer Ethics, 1965-1985, 15 FLA. TAX REV. 675-735 (2014), reprinted in ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK 5-65 (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Washington Gallagher Law Library, 2015).

Expansion of the Profit-Split Method: The Wave of the Future, 77 TAX NOTES INT ’L 1183-88 (2015), reprinted in 2015 WORLDWIDE TAX DAILY 61-118 (Mar. 31, 2015). Fair Approaches for Taxing Previously Untaxed Foreign Income, 146 TAX NOTES 1385-88 (2015). SAR AH K ALTSOUNIS PUBLICATIONS

Recent Skirmishes Between Washington’s Legislature and Supreme Court in the Battle over K-12 Public School Funding, 1 WASH. J. EDUC. L. & POL’Y 67-69 (2015).

FALL 2015

DANIEL FOOTE

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JENNIFER FAN

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LISA MANHEIM

PUBLICATIONS

PUBLICATIONS

Investing and Pretending, 100 IOWA L. REV. 1559-1618 (2015).

Elizabeth Porter & Lisa Manheim, Book Review, 64 J. LEGAL EDUC. 511-14 (2015) (reviewing SONIA SOTOMAYOR, MY BELOVED WORLD (2013)).

Downstream Securities Regulation, 94 B.U. L. REV. 1589-1650 (2014). PRESENTATIONS

Investing and Pretending, 2015 Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, Jun. 17, 2015 (Cambridge, MA) Uncertain Futures in Evolving Financial Markets, 2015 National Business Law Scholars Conference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Newark, NJ) Panelist, Corporate Law Roundtable: Shareholders, Stewardship & Accountability, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 28, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Uncertain Futures in Evolving Financial Markets, University of Colorado School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Jan. 30, 2015 (Boulder, CO) Guest presenter, University of Colorado School of Law, Business Law Colloquium, Jan. 29, 2015 (Boulder, CO) Moderator, M&A from the CEO’s Perspective, Pacific Rim M&A Institute, Dec. 11, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Investing and Pretending, Midwestern Law and Economics Association, Annual Meeting, Oct. 11, 2014 (Indianapolis, IN)

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PRESENTATIONS

Severability Analysis and the Roberts Court, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

Lisa Radtke Bliss & Deborah A. Maranville, A Conscious Institutional Strategy for Expanding Experiential Education, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 427-31 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). ANNA MASTROIANNI

PUBLICATIONS

Revisiting Claim and Issue Preclusion in Washington, 90 WASH. L. REV. 75-145 (2015). PETER NICOL AS PUBLICATIONS

Straddling the Columbia: A Constitutional Law Professor’s Musings on Circumventing Washington State’s Criminal Prohibition on Compensated Surrogacy, 89 WASH. L. REV. 12351309 (2014). CHERYL NYBERG PUBLICATIONS

SUBJECT COMPILATIONS OF STATE L AWS 2013-2014: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY (Boast/Nyberg, 2015). 321 pages.

PUBLICATIONS

DEBOR AH MAR ANVILLE PUBLICATIONS

BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). 479 pages. Deborah A. Maranville et al., Incorporating Experiential Education Throughout the Curriculum, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 162-87 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). Deborah Maranville with Cynthia Batt, Pathways, Integration, and Sequencing the Curriculum, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 52-58 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). 479 pages. Ensuring Effective Education in Alternative Clinical Models, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 245-51 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).

Jessica A. Cohen, Anna C. Mastroianni & Ruth Macklin, Ethical Issues for Late-State Trials of Multipurpose Prevention Technologies for HIV and Pregnancy, 127 INT ’L J. GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS 221-24 (2014). PRESENTATIONS

Country Report: United States, Nagoya University, International Symposium: Justice and Challenges in Clinical Research, Mar. 13, 2015 (Nagoya, Japan) SHANNON MCCORMACK PRESENTATIONS

Uncle Sam and the Child Care Squeeze: (Over-)Taxing the Working Family, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

A Statutory Digital First Sale Proposal, Innovation in the Creation and Distribution of Content, Mar. 2015 (Boulder, CO)

PRESENTATIONS

Effective Research Strategies: Conducting 50-State Legal Research, National Conference of State Legislatures, Legislative Summit, Aug. 5, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Finding 50-State Information, National Conference of State Legislatures, Legal Services Section and Research and Committee Staff Section, Joint Professional Development Seminar, Oct. 6, 2014 (Richmond, VA)

SEAN O’CONNOR PUBLICATIONS

Creators, Innovators, and Appropriation Mechanisms, 22 GEO. MASON L. REV. 973-1000 (2015). PRESENTATIONS

Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, 2015 Asia Pacific IP Forum, Jun. 2015 (Taipei, Taiwan) Distinguished lecturer, Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Jun. 2015 (Shanghai, China) Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, Jhejiang University, Jun. 2015 (Hangzhou, China) Discussant, Intellectual Property Theory 3, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Speaker, Cannabis and Real Estate in Washington CLE Seminar, May 2015 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, with Judge Randall Rader (ret.), The Future of Fostering and Protecting Innovation, May 2015 (Seattle, WA) Senior commentator, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Studies and Research on Intellectual Property, China IP Scholars Works in Progress, May 2015 (Seattle, WA) Ganjapreneurship in Washington State: Creating a Regulated Innovation Industry Without the Feds, Gruter Institute, Annual Conference, May 2015 (Olympic Valley, CA)

Fourth Annual IP Teaching Workshop, Feb. 2015 (New Delhi, India) Medical Marijuana in Washington, Tribal Marijuana Conference, Feb. 2015 (Tulalip, WA) Featured speaker, Crowdfunding and IP, Beijing Intellectual Property Association, Jan. 2015 (Beijing, China) The Overlooked French Influence on the IP Clause, Temple University School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Dec. 2014 (Philadelphia, PA) University Technology Transfer in Practice, Licensing Executive Society Deutschland, Annual Meeting, Nov. 2014 (Leipzig, Germany) Creators, Innovators, and Appropriators, George Mason University Law School, Center for Protection of IP, Common Ground: How IP Unites Creators and Innovators, Oct. 2014 (Arlington, VA) Preserving Innovative Business Models in Digital First Sale Debates, Asia Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Oct. 2014 (Seoul, Korea) Moderator, The Contribution of Copyright to a Free and Democratic Society, Copyright’s Republic: The Contribution of Copyright to Culture, Freedom, and Human Flourishing, Oct. 2014 (Nashville, TN)

FALL 2015

ANITA KRUG

Transfer of Learning, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 90-93 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).

Featured speaker, IP Licensing Case Law Year in Review, Washington State Bar Association, Intellectual Property Law Section, Annual Licensing Seminar, May 2015 (Seattle, WA)

K ATHLEEN MCGINNIS

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Deborah Maranville, Ruth Anne Robbins & Kristen K. Tiscione, Faculty Status and Institutional Effectiveness, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 432-43 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).

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RECENT FACULTY NEWS

Scandal Rocks Washington’s Supreme Court, NW L AW., Apr.-May 2015, at 48-50 (Hugh Spitzer ed.). Adam Sherman & Hugh Spitzer, Washington State’s Mandate: The Constitutional Obligation to Fund Post-Secondary Education, 89 WASH. L. REV. ONLINE 15-46 (2014).

DANA R AIGRODSKI PUBLICATIONS

ELIZABETH PORTER PUBLICATIONS

The Socratic Method, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 101-10 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). Taking Images Seriously, 114 COLUM. L. REV. 1687-1782 (2014). Elizabeth Porter & Lisa Manheim, Book Review, 64 J. LEGAL EDUC. 51114 (2015) (reviewing SONIA SOTOMAYOR, MY BELOVED WORLD (2013)). TERRY PRICE PRESENTATIONS

Panelist, Washington Law Review, Compensated Surrogacy Panel, Jan. 13, 2015 (Seattle, WA) As Families Evolve, Courts Lurch to Keep Up, National Association of Appellate Court Attorneys, Jul. 17, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Family Law Introduction, QLaw (LGBT) Foundation, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Consumer Rights or Human Rights?: A Conversation about the Arleen’s Flowers Case, University of Washington School of Law, Feb. 26, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Introduction to Washington State Legislative Process, University of Washington School of Social Work and Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Jan. 2015 (Seattle, WA)

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Kimberly D. Ambrose, William H.D. Fernholz, Catherine F. Klein, Dana Raigrodski, Stephen A. Rosenbaum & Leah Wortham, Cross-Border Teaching and Collaboration, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 148-61 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). PRESENTATIONS

Creative Capitalism and Human Trafficking: The Business Case for Eliminating Forced Labor and Human Trafficking from Global Supply Chains, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA) ANITA R AMASASTRY PUBLICATIONS

Should Apps Map Illness Like We Map the Weather?, VERDICT (Jul. 1, 2015). Personalized Pricing in the Air? Why Consumers Should Be Wary of a New Airline Pricing Proposal, VERDICT (May 13, 2015). WILLIAM RODGERS

ZAHR SAID

SCOTT SCHUMACHER

PUBLICATIONS

PUBLICATIONS

Foreword: Fair Use in the Digital Age, and Campbell v. Acuff-Rose at 21, 90 WASH. L. REV. 579-96 (2015).

JOHN A. TOWNSEND, L ARRY A. CAMPAGNA, STEVE JOHNSON & SCOTT SCHUMACHER, TAX CRIMES (2d ed. LexisNexis 2015). 678 pages & apps.

Defending Deference: A Reply to Professor Sylvain’s Disruption and Deference, 74 MD. L. REV. 777-84 (2015). Reforming Copyright Interpretation, 28 HARV. J. L. & TECH. 469-524 (2015).

ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Washington Gallagher Law Library, 2015). 556 pages. PRESENTATIONS

ERIC SCHNAPPER PUBLICATIONS

Brief for Respondent. United States v. Wong, No. 13-1074 (U.S. Nov. 4, 2014), 2014 WL 5804278. Oral argument, Dec. 10, 2014. Reply Brief for Appellants. Alabama Legislative Black Caucus v. Alabama, No. 13-895 (U.S. Oct. 27, 2014), 2014 WL 5475026. Oral argument, Nov. 12, 2014.

Criminal Tax: Prosecution Policies and Voluntary Disclosures, Washington State Bar Association, Tax Section Seminar, Dec. 15, 2014 (Seattle, WA) Representing Taxpayers in IRS Disputes, 2014 Annual LowIncome Taxpayer Clinics Grantee Conference, Dec. 9, 2014 (Washington, DC) Investigations and Compliance: When Things Go Wrong, Washington State Bar Association, Corporate Counsel Ethics Seminar, Nov. 14, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

PUBLICATIONS

ENVIRONMENTAL L AW (Thomson/West 2006 & Supps. 2015). 4 vols.

HUGH SPITZER

ENVIRONMENTAL L AW (Thomson/West Supp. Dec. 2014). 4 vols.

Ethics Issues in Representing Intergovernmental Entities, in PROCEEDINGS OF THE WASHINGTON STATE A SSOCIATION OF MUNICIPAL ATTORNEYS, SPRING CONFERENCE 5-1 (2014).

PUBLICATIONS

Revisiting the Client Conundrum: Whom Does Lawyer for a Government Represent, and Who Gives Direction to That Governmental Lawyer? (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 25-10).

ALICE STOKKE PRESENTATIONS

Discussant, Situating Legal Education Reform Efforts in Rule of Law Promotion, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA) TOSHIKO TAKENAK A PUBLICATIONS

Toshiko Takenaka & Linda Falcon, Human Rights and Intellectual Property in the United States: The Role of US Courts in Striking a Fine Balance Between Competing Policies, in RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 253 (Christophe Geiger ed., Edward Elgar 2015). PRESENTATIONS

Japan’s IP High Court as a Best Practice for IP Specialized Courts: Lessons from U.S. & Japanese Experiences, Czech Republic Industrial Property Office, Uniform Patent and Unified Patent Court Seminar, Jun. 26, 2015 Keynote speaker, Determination of Patent Protection Scope under U.S. and German Patent Acts, Technical University Dresden, 2015 IP Colloquium, Jun. 22, 2015 (Dresden, Germany) Legality of On-line News Aggregation, University of Prague, Charles Law School, Jun. 15, 2015 (Prague, Czech Republic) Japan’s IP High Court as a Best Practice for IP Specialized Courts: Lessons from U.S. & E.U. Experiences, 2015 Asia-Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Jun. 8, 2015 (Taipei City, Taiwan)

Panelist, New Trend of International IP Laws: Initiatives and Judicial Practice, 2015 Asia-Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Jun. 8, 2015 (Taipei City, Taiwan) Employee Inventions: Ownerships and Compensations: Comparative Law Perspective, Osaka University and AIPPI Japan, French-Japan IP Academic Conference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Osaka, Japan) Trade Dress Protection under U.S. Trademark System, Japan Patent Attorneys Association, Advanced Foreign IP Seminar Series, Jun. 2, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan) Comparative Study of Employee Invention Systems: U.S., U.K. and Japan, CASRIP-TMI Joint Seminar, Jun. 1, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan) Legality of Online News Aggregation, East China University of Political Science and Law, Conference on Competition Law Regulating Inappropriate Online Behaviors, May 29, 2015 (Shanghai, China) Limits on IP Exclusive Right, East China University of Political Science and Law, CASRIP, Supreme People’s Court of China Judicial Conference, May 28, 2015 (Shanghai, China) Chair, JiaoTong University Law School, IP Teaching Workshop: Emerging IP Issues from Comparative Law Perspective, May 27, 2015 (Shanghai, China) Employee Invention System in U.S. and Japan, KIPA, Annual CASRIP Conference, May 26, 2015 (Seoul, South Korea) Discussant, Patent Session, University of Washington School of Law, IP Work-in Progress Colloquium for Chinese Junior IP Scholars, May 7, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, India’s IP and Innovation Policies, University of Washington School of Law, NBR-CASRIP Joint Workshop on Innovative in India: Global Perspectives on the Continuing Evolution of India’s IP Policy, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA)

FALL 2015

“Home Rule” vs. “Dillon’s Rule” for Washington Cities, 38 SEATTLE U. L. REV. 809-60 (2015).

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Limited License Legal Technicians: Lessons from Washington State’s Access to Justice Initiative, University of Washington School of Law, Washington’s New Limited License Legal Technician Program, Dec. 12, 2014 (Anchorage, AK)

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RECENT FACULTY NEWS

Keynote, Determination of Patent Protection Scope under U.S. and German Patent Acts, 2015 Dusseldorf Patentrechtstage Conference, Mar. 19, 2015 (Dusseldorf, Germany) Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank, Hokkaido University School of Law, Jan. 22, 2015 (Japan) Standard Essential Patents: U.S., E.U. and Japan, Indian Society of International Law, Intellectual Property Policy Seminar, Jan. 16, 2015 (New Delhi, India) U.S. Case Law Developments: Influence of Patent Assertion Entities, Japan Intellectual Property Association, JIPA Seminar, Dec. 19, 2014 (Osaka, Japan) U.S. Case Law Developments: Influence of Patent Assertion Entities, Japan Intellectual Property Association, JIPA Seminar, Dec. 15, 2014 (Tokyo, Japan) Patent and Innovations, World Intellectual Property Organization, Intellectual Property Education and Policy, Dec. 10, 2014 (Beijing, China) IP Protection in Free Trade Zone: Best Practice, 11th Shanghai International Intellectual Property Forum, Dec. 8, 2014 (Shanghai, China) Patent Assertion Entities and Software Patents, Bardehle IP Academy, Nov. 19, 2014 (Munich, Germany) Patent Assertion Entities: Plagues Unique to U.S. Patent System?, Munich Technical University, Nov. 5, 2014 (Munich, Germany)

K ATHRYN WATTS

PUBLICATIONS

PUBLICATIONS

Foreword: Compensated Surrogacy in the Age of Windsor, 89 WASH. L. REV. 1069-76 (2014).

Rulemaking as Legislating, 103 GEO. L. J. 1003-60 (2015). PRESENTATIONS

PRESENTATIONS

Panelist, Legal Education in Transition, Washington State Bar Association, 125th Anniversary: Past, Present, and Future, Jun. 26, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Panelist, Family Law’s Response to Changing Families, Association of American Law Schools, Workshop on Next Generation Issues of Sex, Gender, and the Law, Jun. 24, 2015 (Orlando, FL) Leadership During Crisis, Washington Leadership Institute, Jan. 24, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Co-moderator, The Opportunities of Law School Leadership: Nurturing the Diverse Leaders Our Schools Need for the 21st Century, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 4, 2015 (Washington, DC)

Rulemaking as Legislating, Northwestern University School of Law, Public Law Colloquium, Oct. 14, 2014 (Chicago, IL) MARY WHISNER PUBLICATIONS

Race and the Reference Librarian, 106 L AW LIB. J. 625-32 (2015). STEVEN M. BARKAN, BARBARA A. BINTLIFF & MARY WHISNER, FUNDAMENTALS OF LEGAL RESEARCH (10th ed. Foundation Press, 2015). 774 pages (University Treatise Series) Getting to Know Fastcase, 106 L AW LIBR. J. 473-81 (2014).

Perspectives on International E-Commerce Law, Zhejiang University Guanghua Law School, Jun. 15, 2015 (Hangzhou, China) National Resistance to Global Private Regulation: China UnionPay and India’s RuPay Networks, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA) Smart Governance: Intellectual Property and Self-Regulation, University of Strasbourg, Centre d’Etudes Internationales de la Propriété Intellectuelle, May 24, 2015 (Strasbourg, France) Recent Developments in Electronic Payments Law, NACHA Pay-ments 2015, Apr. 20, 2015 (New Orleans, LA)

LOUIS WOLCHER PRESENTATIONS

Commentator, University of London, Professor Adam Gearey Inaugural Lecture: Lives That Slide Out of View: Jurisprudence and Poverty, Jun. 17, 2015 (London, England) ALENA WOLOTIR A PUBLICATIONS

Googling the Law: Apprising Students of the Benefits and Flaws of Google as a Legal Research Tool, 21 PERSPECTIVES 33-37 (2012). Sherry L. Leysen & Alena L. Wolotira, Innovative Displays in Law Libraries, AALL SPECTRUM, Jul. 2013, at 17-19.

The Secession of the Successful, University of Arizona School of Law, Jean Braucher Festschrift, Apr. 17, 2015 (Tucson, AZ) The Role of Contractarian Ideology in the Construction of Global Markets, University of Nevada, William S. Boyd School of Law, 10th International Conference on Contracts, Feb. 28, 2015 (Las Vegas, NV)

Roundtable, Thriving as a Dean in Today’s World, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 3, 2015 (Washington, DC) Moderator, William D. Ruckelshaus Center and the Slade Gorton International Policy Center, Stateswomanship & Public Policy: Reflections on Leadership & Collaboration, Dec. 12, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

PRESENTATIONS

Move Slow and Make Things: Regulating Innovative Solidarity, European Law & Economics Association, Sep. 18, 2015 (Vienna, Austria)

JANE WINN PUBLICATIONS

JANE WINN & BENJAMIN WRIGHT, THE L AW OF ELECTRONIC COMMERCE (4th ed. Aspen 2015 no. 2). Innovation Governance Competition: Payment Modernization Strategies in India and China (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 2015-01).

Payment Modernization Strategies in India and China, National Law University-Odesha, Feb. 19, 2015 (Cuttack, India) Llewellyn Has Left the Building: The Growing Irrelevance of the UCC to 21st Century Sales Law, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Contracts Section Meeting, Jan. 4, 2015 (Washington, DC) The Decline and Fall of the Documentary Letter of Credit in the 21st Century, ELTE Law School, 6th Transnational Commercial Law Conference, Oct. 17, 2014 (Budapest, Hungary)

DAVID ZIFF PRESENTATIONS

Panelist, What Is the Law, and on Which Side Is the IRS?, Cato Institute, Pruitt, Halbig, King & Indiana: Is ObamaCare Once Again Headed to the Supreme Court?, Oct. 30, 2014 (Washington, DC)

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Extent of Patent Protection: U.S., Japan and Germany, Seoul National University Law School, 2d Asia Pacific Forum, Oct. 1, 2014 (Seoul, South Korea)

KELLYE TEST Y

FALL 2015

Panelist, Latest Developments in Patent Litigation in Europe and U.S.-Perspective from the Judiciary, Patent Litigation Conference and Mock Trials, University of Strasbourg, Mar. 27, 2015 (Strasbourg, France)

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CL ASS

Notes 00’s

CAMERON MONTI ’02 has joined Howard & Howard in the firm’s Chicago office, concentrating on taxation, business law and employment law.

JOHN G. AMAYA ’05 was sworn in as a Counselor to the Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, a component of the Department of Homeland Security. AMY EDWARDS ’01 received the Oregon Area Jewish Committee’s Community Leadership Award.

V. RAFAEL STONE ’73 was recently selected a member of The National Black Lawyers – Top 100, an invitation-only professional honorary association including the top 100 black lawyers from each state.

80’s DAVID COOK ’88, a partner at Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, has been included on the 2015 Best Lawyers in America list as Best Lawyer for Immigration Law. JUDGE DAVID CHRISTEL ’85 was selected as the new full-time magistrate judge in Tacoma, WA. JEAN HILDE-FULGHUM ’89 has retired from her law practice and is working as a professional voice actor.

90’s JUDGE VERONICA ALICEAGALVÁN ’94 became a judge of the King County Superior Court at the Kent Regional Justice Center.

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ELIZABETH DONOVAN ’90 was recently appointed Ave Maria School of Law’s first Director of Experiential Education, where she will direct the school’s clinical and externship programs. GRACIELA GOMEZ COWGER ’97, partner at Stolowitz Ford Cowger LLP, was honored by the Oregon Hispanic Bar Association with the 2015 Paul J. De Muniz Professionalism Award. KATHLEEN HOPKINS ’91 has taken office as the 2014-2015 Chair of The Fellows of the American Bar Foundation.

STEVEN GILLESPIE ’07 was recently promoted to partner at Foster Pepper PLLC, where he is a member of the firm’s Land Use practice. HEATHER BOWMAN ’07 became a partner with the civil defense law firm Bodyfelt Mount, focusing on employment litigation, professional malpractice defense and insurance coverage. KIERAN CURLEY ’01 was named by the Portland Business Journal as co-CEO of the Year for his work at Miller Nash Graham & Dunn.

ISHBEL DICKENS ’02 was honored by the Washington State Housing Finance Commission with its lifetime achievement award for her work on behalf of manufactured home communities.

MATTHEW RECHTIEN ’07 was admitted as a member of the Detroit-based firm Bodman PLC.

10’s

JUDGE ANDREA HOWARDGEORGE ’05 recently joined the judiciary as an Associate Judge at the Colville Tribal Court.

JAMES BARKER ’14, BERT BOUQUET ’14 and STEPHANIE MARTINEZ ’14 have all joined Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton as intellectual property attorneys in the firm’s Seattle office. YIN CHEUNG ’11 joined the firm as an associate on the Software Electrical Engineering Team. RACHEL SAIMONS ’13 also joined the firm as an associate in the Native American Practice Group.

MEENA JAGANNATH ’10 was awarded a 2015 Echoing Green fellowship for launching the social justice legal organization Community Justice Project, Inc. BRENDAN MCNAMARA ’09 has joined Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck as an associate in the firm’s Denver, CO office.

JUDGE RAQUEL MONTOYA-LEWIS ’95 was appointed by Washington Governor Jay Inslee to the Whatcom Superior Court. ROBERT SAPERSTEIN ’93 joined the board of directors for the Channel Islands YMCA and will assist in providing strategic direction for the organization and help it oversee community activities.

ANDREA HARRIS ’04 was recently elected to the Washington State Board of Governors for District 8.

DYLAN ORR ’09 was selected as a 2015-2016 Marshall Memorial Fellow, the German Marshall Fund of the United States’ flagship leadership development program.

WILLIAM MINER ’04, partner-incharge at the Portland, OR office of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, has been named to the Portland Business Journal’s 2015 Forty Under 40 list.

JOSEPHINE L. ENNIS ’13, SARAH S. WASHBURN ‘11 and ANDREW R. ZELLERS ’12 joined the Pacifica Law Group as associates in its Seattle office.

IAN WARNER ’11 became Mayoral Counsel to Seattle’s mayor, Ed Murray. Warner will report directly to the Mayor, advising on a broad array of legal matters affecting city policy through a legal lens.

FALL 2015

DENISE ASHBAUGH ’98 has become a partner at Yarmuth Wilsdon.

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70’s

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IN

Memoriam C L A S S O F 19 47

Merle Cohn passed away on August 16, 2014. He practiced law in Seattle for over 50 years and was involved with the B’nai B’rith, the Stroum Jewish Community Center and served on the national board of the Anti-Defamation League. During World War II, Merle flew in the Air Force.

Elmen Robert “Bob” Fristoe passed away on March 3, 2015. He served in active duty in the South Pacific during World War II. In 1949 he joined the law firm of Brodie, Brodie and Fristoe and later became senior partner of Fristoe, Taylor and Schultz. Bob practiced law for 64 years and retired from Owens, Davies, Fristoe, Taylor and Schultz in 2012. He received the award for Thurston County Bar Association attorney of the year in 2003 and was a member of Elks, Kiwanis and Rotary organizations.

C L A S S O F 19 5 0 C L A S S O F 19 49

The Honorable Warren Chan passed away on June 15, 2015. Prior to attending law school, Judge Chan enlisted in the army during the early months of World War II and was trained as a radio operator and served in the Pacific. He was the first Chinese American graduate of UW Law, Seattle’s first Chinese American attorney and the first Chinese American judge in America, when in 1956 he was appointed judge protempore on the Seattle Municipal Court. He later won a seat on the King County Superior Court, and chaired the National Conference of State Trial Judges. Judge Chan cofounded the Wing Luke Museum and the Chinese Community Service Organization and was the Museum’s first president.

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James Dubuar passed away on July 4, 2014. He was active in the Boy Scouts, Mountaineers and various maritime organizations and served as a captain in the US Naval Reserve, serving in both WWII and the Korean War. Jim practiced law for over 60 years. Robert “Bob” Snyder passed away on June 11, 2014. Bob served in the US Navy during WWII. Afterward, he received his law degree from UW Law before being called back to active duty during the Korean War. Bob practiced law in West Seattle for 35 years and was active in the West Seattle Kiwanis and the Chamber of Commerce, serving as president of both.

C L A S S O F 19 51

Donald Fleck passed away on June 29, 2014. After graduating from high school, Donald joined the Army and served during World War II. He practiced law for more than 50 years with a focus on organizing new businesses, business development, aviation law, real estate and estate planning. During that time he took a nine year break from law to start a company that pioneered the development of wheelchair lifts for transit buses. Donald also performed as a guest soloist with many major symphony orchestras in the U.S. and Canada, and sang on stage at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. The Honorable Robert “Bob” Jacques passed away on November 26, 2012. During WWII, Judge Jacques served with the Navy Air Corps on both Atlantic and Pacific Coast patrols. After law school, Judge Jacques entered into public service as a Pierce County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney, a position he left to help build the law firm Binns, Jacques, and Petrich. He was later appointed to the Pierce County Superior Court Bench. He was also involved in local chapters of the Elks Club, the Knights of Columbus and the Democratic Party.

C L A S S O F 19 5 4

Frank William Draper passed away on May 26, 2014. He was a member of the US Army’s Counter Intelligence Corps and after his service, moved back to Seattle and became an attorney for the Corporation Counsel of the City of Seattle. He later joined the firm of Lane Powell, specializing in marine law, and went on to form the law firm Detels, Draper and Marinkovich. In 1975, he was made a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers.

The Honorable William “Bill” M. Hamilton passed away on January 29, 2014. After high school, he became a paratrooper in the Army and later worked as a smokejumper fighting forest fires during his summer breaks from law school. He began his legal practice in East Wenatchee and formed Hamilton, Lynch & Kuntz. He also served as Municipal Court Judge in East Wenatchee for 15 years. Judge Hamilton was a member of the East Wenatchee Baptist Church, the American Trial Lawyers Association, the Heritage Society and a charter member of East Wenatchee Rotary Club. Donald Thoreson passed away on January 16, 2015. After graduation from law school, he spent two years in the Army with the military police, stationed at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Returning to Seattle, he joined a firm that would later become Thoreson, Yost, Berry & Matthews. Donald then joined Betts Patterson & Mines, where he practiced until his retirement in 2013. He was active in the King County Bar Association and served as president of the Seattle Executives Association, the Norwegian American Chamber of Commerce and also the Nordic Heritage Museum. The Honorable Robert F. Utter passed away on October 15, 2014. Justice Utter was a former chief justice of the Washington Supreme Court, from which he resigned in 1995 to protest the death penalty and to dedicate himself to mentoring judges in emerging democracies around the world. As a young King County Juvenile Court commissioner, he co-founded the state’s first Big Brother chapter. The YMCA Youth in Government program in 1997 named its top award for citizenship in his honor. Justice Utter was an active trustee of the Seattle-based Rural Development Institute, now Landesa.

FALL 2015

John MacDougall Davis passed away on April 17, 2015. While attending UW Law, John served on the school’s Law Review and was president of the student body. He founded his solo law practice in 1944, a venture that would evolve into the Seattle law firm Davis Wright Tremaine. He was involved in many areas of public service, including work with the Pacific Science Center, founding the Mountaineers Foundation and serving on the board of Virginia Mason Medical Center.

William “Bill” Donley passed away on October 16, 2014. During World War II he served in both the Pacific and Atlantic and remained active in the Naval Reserve for many years after the war, retiring as a Captain. After law school, he joined Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane and retired as a Vice President in 1985. Bill was the leader of The Old Salts, a social organization of veterans that graduated from the UW NROTC and served in WWII.

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C L A S S O F 19 4 0

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IN MEMORIAM

C L A S S O F 19 5 7

The Honorable James “Jim” Dore, Sr. passed away on May 11, 2013. Judge Dore practiced law with his brother at the firm Dore, Dubuar and Cummins for five years before being elected a Seattle District Justice Court Judge. He served 28 years as a judge, six in the Seattle District Justice Court and 22 in King County Superior Court. After retiring from the bench, he practiced law with his son. Judge Dore was on the board of the Seadrunar drug treatment program and was active in the Elks, Toastmasters, YMCA Businessman’s Club and Loyal Order of the Moose serving as National Supreme Governor of that organization from 1996-97. Upon his retirement, he earned a horticultural degree from the University of Washington and became a master gardener.

Arthur “Art” Lane passed away on August 24, 2014. After college, he served two years as a U.S. Marine officer in the Western Pacific. Art worked for 30 years for the City of Seattle Law Department as director of the Utilities Division, representing the city’s utilities and City Light. In 1978, he received the Outstanding Public Employee award from the Municipal League of Seattle and King County. Upon retirement, he did consulting work for Seattle City Light. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus, a founding member of the Highland Poetry Society and past president of the Seattle Metropolitan Credit Union.

John Gose passed away on January 2, 2015. After graduating college, John joined the Marines and fought in the Korean War. After law school, John joined the Preston firm, focusing on real estate law. He was chair of the ABA Real Property, Probate & Trust Law Section and founder and president of the American College of Real Estate Lawyers. He served on the Bankruptcy Reform Task Force, which substantially revised the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and was an acting Special Assistant to the Washington state Attorney General in reviewing and restructuring the AG’s Civil Litigation Department.

Joseph “Joe” Holmes, Jr. passed away on December 1, 2013. After serving in the US Air Force, Joe started his career as an attorney for the Internal Revenue Service in San Francisco. He then returned to Seattle and spent his career practicing tax and real estate law at Karr Tuttle Campbell, where he was a partner until retiring in 1997.

The Honorable Richard “Dick” Gustafson passed away April 22, 2015. He joined the Navy after high school and went on to practice law for more than 40 years in Tacoma as a personal injury attorney. He was a member of the American and Pierce County Bar Associations and a member of the Pierce County Arbitration Board. He served as Municipal Court Judge in Fircrest, WA and was also a member of the city’s Planning Commission. Judge Gustafson was a charter member of the Kiwanis Club of Tacoma Mall and recipient of the club’s Hickman Award. Charles “Chuck” Mullavey passed away on February 23, 2015. Chuck practiced law for 60 years in Ballard and was very active in sports throughout his life.

C L A S S O F 19 5 6

C L A S S O F 19 5 9

James “Jim” Finlay passed away on November 1, 2013. After graduating from law school, Jim and a colleague opened two law offices in Raymond, WA and Long Beach, WA. He also served in Korea with a United States Marine Corps aviation unit. Richard Foreman passed away on August 13, 2014. After his first year of law school, Richard was drafted for the Korean War. He served in the United States Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps for two years. Upon return, he completed his law degree and after serving as deputy prosecuting attorney for the City of Seattle, went into private practice. Richard served 12 years on the Bellevue City Council and went on to serve three terms as mayor of Bellevue, WA. For the past two decades, he was helping to build Columbia West Properties and Pineapple Hospitality. He also enjoyed donating his time and service to legal aid.

William “Bill” Roetcisoender passed away on October 7, 2013. He practiced law for 37 years in the Seattle neighborhood of Lake City.

C L A S S O F 19 6 6

Ivan Fisk passed away on September 20, 2014. Prior to obtaining his law degree, Ivan worked as a geologist for the Atomic Energy Commission in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico during the 1950s uranium boom. He worked in private practice after graduating from UW Law.

C L A S S O F 19 6 7

Hugh Graham Gaiser passed away on February 24, 2013. Alan Rasmussen passed away on June 21, 2014.

C L A S S O F 19 6 9

Anthony Schwab passed away on January 31, 2014. C L A S S O F 19 6 0

Charles Peter “Pete” Curran passed away on May 11, 2014. Following a stint in the Army, Pete graduated from UW Law and began practicing with his brother in Kent. He and his wife were devoted to the civic development of Kent and were active philanthropists in many charitable and arts organizations. Pete spearheaded the construction of Valley General Hospital and worked as an advance man on Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign in 1968.

C L A S S O F 19 6 2

Arthur “Art” Allsworth passed away on August 18, 2014. He moved to Phoenix and practiced law in Arizona for over 50 years as a tax law specialist. Art was active in the Arizona State Bar, the Phoenix Art Museum and Arcosanti. He was a founder of the University Club and former council member of the Boy Scouts of America.

C L A S S O F 19 6 5

Frank Frisk, Jr. passed away on May 19, 2015. After law school, Frank moved to the Washington, DC area, where he worked for the American Public Power Association and later as an attorney in private practice. William “Bill” Long, Jr. passed away on July 15, 2014.

C L A S S O F 197 1

Steven Chestnut passed away on December 16, 2013. Upon earning his law degree, Steven became deeply involved in the field of Indian Law, winning in front of the United States Supreme Court and writing federal and tribal legislation on behalf of numerous tribes.

C L A S S O F 197 5

Scott Dunham passed away October 26, 2014. After law school, Scott began practicing law at O’Melveny & Myers in Los Angeles. He spent his entire career at the firm, where he was a partner for 30 years before retiring in 2010. Scott was a fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers, as well as a former co-chair of the American Bar Association’s Labor and Employment Law Section Occupational Safety and Health Law Committee.

C L A S S O F 1978

Betty Schall passed away on January 9, 2015. She was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and spent her legal career in the field of title insurance, including serving as Northwest Regional Counsel for Chicago Title Insurance Company.

uw law

Peter Walton passed away on May 24, 2014.

C L A S S O F 19 5 8

The Honorable Mark Fortier passed away on April 7, 2015. He served in the Air Force on active duty during the Korean War prior to attending law school. Mark worked as a deputy prosecuting attorney at the Yakima County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office and was later elected Justice of the Peace, serving as Municipal Judge for the City of Yakima. He then went into private practice until his retirement. Judge Fortier also served as a member of the Yakima County Planning Commission and was a member of the Kiwanis Club. He served on the Washington State Bar Association Disciplinary Committee and the Judicial Qualifications Committee, and was president of the Yakima County Bar.

FALL 2015

C L A S S O F 19 5 5

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IN MEMORIAM

C L A S S O F 19 8 1

FRIENDS

Linda Navarro passed away on August 12, 2014. Linda clerked for Judge Charles Z. Smith and practiced as a public defense attorney for the Associated Counsel for the Accused in Seattle. She joined King County Superior Court Judge Michael J. Fox as his bailiff until her retirement in 2010.

Katherine “Katie” Campbell passed away on November 20, 2014. Wife of Bob Campbell, she graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in history and went on to teach at Lakeridge Elementary School. She was involved with the Greater Seattle Service League and Junior League, among other philanthropic endeavors.

C L A S S O F 19 9 3

Deborah Emory passed away on August 4, 2014. Married to George Emory for over 50 years, she graduated from Smith College with degrees in American literature and history and a Master’s degree in economic geography from the University of California Davis. She pursued doctorate studies in music history at the University of Washington and was an active writer and prolific researcher.

Ronald Beard passed away on November 18, 2014. Ronald spent 21 years at Lane Powell as an attorney specializing in maritime and banking law, where he ultimately became a partner. He was the 2014 recipient of the Loren Miller Bar Association’s “Excellence in the Legal Profession Award” and the 2014 recipient of the “Distinguished Alumni Award” from Highline Community College. Kenneth Hershey passed away on November 13, 2014. He practiced mediation law in Auburn, WA and had a criminal defense practice in Burien, WA.

CL A S S OF 2001

Donors 20 1 4-15

Note: The University of Washington School of Law is deeply grateful to our many alumni and friends whose annual gifts, large and small, help create boundless opportunities for our students, promote faculty scholarship and support justice throughout the world. Every effort is made to ensure the accurate listing of donors, and we sincerely apologize for misspelling or inadvertently omitting the names of any donors. We appreciate the opportunity to correct our records, so please advise us of errors by using the enclosed envelope or call the Advancement Office at 206.685.9115. 70

uw law

FALL 2015

Susan Hepburn passed away on February 2, 2015. She spent her career in corporate finance and legal positions, including advocacy work for the disabled and elderly. Susan was appointed to the Governor’s Committee on Disability Issues in Washington State and was awarded the 1999 Civil and Legal Rights Appreciation Certificate.

REPORT TO

71


SCHOOL OF L AW ANNUAL SUMMARY OF

INCOME AND EXPENDITURES FROM GIFTS

GIVING COUNT BY YEAR

JULY 1, 2014 - JUNE 30, 2015

CLASS YEARS THAT HAD AT LEAST ONE LIVING ALUMNUS WHO GAVE IN FISCAL YEAR 2014-15

GIFTS RECEIVED

YEAR

Contributions by Purpose

22%

FACULT Y SUPPORT

$5,340,702

58%

PROGRAM SUPPORT

$2,049,116

22%

$898,981

10%

STUDENT SUPPORT UNRESTRICTED

$792,674

8%

GRANTS

$104,991

1%

CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS TOTAL

$83,517

10% 58%

8%

1% 1%

$9,269,981

3% 3%

Contributions by Group L AW ALUMNI

$6,136,114

66%

ORGANIZATION

$1,051,806

11%

CORPORATION

$831,955

9%

FOUNDATION*

$709,790

8%

OTHER UW ALUMNI

$275,853

3%

$264,463

3%

FRIEND** TOTAL

8%

11%

9%

66%

$9,269,981

* Includes: all types of foundations and trusts ** Includes: non law alumni (faculty, former faculty, former staff, friends, parents, retired staff, current staff, students and visiting scholars/faculty)

1%

DONORS

AMOUNT

YEAR

DONORS

AMOUNT

YEAR

DONORS

AMOUNT

1926-49

8

$9,625

1975

17

$40,050

1996

15

$6,300

1950-55

23

$362,590

1976

25

$42,600

1997

16

$14,100

1956

6

$5,350

1977

18

$17,526

1998

10

$1,225

1957

6

$1,275

1978

26

$13,075

1999

17

$3,830

1958

11

$8,945

1979

13

$6,080

2000

11

$9,410

1959

7

$2,350

1980

17

$4,598

2001

8

$7,095

1960

9

$5,241,300

1981

18

$6,188

2002

9

$1,636

1961

12

$413,466

1982

30

$32,839

2003

12

$1,975

1962

3

$454

1983

22

$4,925

2004

15

$1,718

1963

10

$16,125

1984

24

$9,045

2005

17

$2,652

1964

8

$1,275

1985

16

$80,572

2006

21

$3,380

1965

8

$3,075

1986

12

$54,075

2007

21

$4,391

1966

8

$6,870

1987

11

$2,780

2008

15

$2,300

1967

16

$31,100

1988

19

$14,622

2009

14

$2,548

1968

13

$10,200

1989

12

$6,075

2010

9

$360

1969

16

$16,225

1990

11

$12,340

2011

19

$1,585

1970

22

$11,860

1991

14

$5,845

2012

26

$6,265

1971

14

$10,220

1992

8

$690

2013

23

$3,070

20

$2,200

31

$6,197

1972

19

$6,810

1993

10

$2,475

2014

1973

14

$24,215

1994

14

$5,975

2015

1974

20

$12,108

1995

11

$28,500

E XPENDITUR ES BY PUR POSE Expenditures by Purpose 43%

STUDENT SUPPORT

$3,149,040

41%

FACULTY SUPPORT

$ 1,213,762

16%

TOTAL

$7,685,535

41% FALL 2015

$3,322,733

43%

16%

72

uw law

PROGRAM SUPPORT

73


REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR

CLASSES OF 1926 – 1949

CLASS OF 1956

CLASS OF 1959

CLASS OF 1962

CLASS OF 1965

Jeff Morris

CLASS OF 1970

CLASS OF 1972

Number Living: 106 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $9,625

Number Living: 44 Number Giving: 6 Percentage Giving: 14% Total Contributions: $5,350

Number Living: 46 Number Giving: 7 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $2,350

Number Living: 53 Number Giving: 3 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $454

Number Living: 78 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 10% Total Contributions: $3,075

Theodore Schultz

Number Living: 97 Number Giving: 22 Percentage Giving: 23% Total Contributions: $11,860

Number Living: 121 Number Giving: 19 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $6,810

Arnold Barer

Henry Haas

John Carlson

Philip Faris

Craig Campbell

James Hilton

John Iverson

Stanley Carlson

E. Robert Fristoe

John Costello

Michael Holmes

Milbert Price

Gary Cunningham

William Gates Sr.

Robert Crees

Donald Marinkovich

C. Henry Heckendorn

Dominick Driano

Jack McMurchie

Wayne Prim

Shannon Stafford

The Honorable John Rutter Jr.

CLASS OF 1963

Robert Schillberg

Number Living: 71 Number Giving: 10 Percentage Giving: 14% Total Contributions: $16,125

The Honorable Waldo Stone Charles Warner

CLASSES OF 1950 – 1955 Number Living: 181 Number Giving: 23 Percentage Giving: 13% Total Contributions: $362,590 The Honorable James Cook The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick The Honorable Roderick Dimoff David Dorsey

CLASS OF 1957 Number Living: 35 Number Giving: 6 Percentage Giving: 17% Total Contributions: $1,275

Mark Litchman Charles Magnuson James McAteer Rodman Miller Robert Mucklestone James Nelson Dudley Panchot

The Honorable Mary Brucker The Honorable Robert Bryan

Professor Emerita Marjorie Rombauer Michel Stern

CLASS OF 1961 Number Living: 43 Number Giving: 12 Percentage Giving: 28% Total Contributions: $413,466

Robert Carter George Dowd The Honorable Joseph Farris David Gossard Jr. The Honorable Robert Harris

Clarence Rabideau

Richard Holt

Grant Silvernale Jr.

The Honorable Ernest Kubota Jack Mullin The Honorable Norman Quinn

Jorgen Bader Stanley Barer The Honorable Bruce Cohoe Diane Engle Howard Engle Jr. Gerald Hahn The Honorable Frederick Hayes James Ladley Theodore Olson Howard Reser The Honorable Robert Stead David Williams

74

CLASS OF 1964 Number Living: 60 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 13% Total Contributions: $1,275 The Honorable Gerry Alexander John Binns Jr. Kenneth Bloch Gary Cronk Ralph Hawkins Jr. Robert Keolker The Honorable Ted Kolbaba Neal Shulman

Thomas Gayton Dennis Helmick Martin Lybecker

Stephen Fredrickson Michael Hall Kinne Hawes Robert Jaffe Keith Kessler John Magee Jr.

William Nelson

Robert Nostrand

Janet Olejar

J. Ronald Sim

David Shelton

Robert Parlette

Sheldon Sutcliffe

Gerald Smith

Fredric Reed

The Honorable Frederick Van Sickle

Terry Snow

Geoffrey Revelle

The Honorable Thomas Wynne

John Steel

Paul Roesch Jr.

Quentin Steinberg

Karl Tegland

Craig Sternberg

Lewis Wilson

Michael Emmons

The Honorable Anthony Wartnik

P. Wickstrand Dufford

Mike Cathcart

Jerry McNaul

The Honorable William Nielsen

Charles Roe Jr.

Richard Dodd

The Honorable Philip Brandt

G. Rick Morry

Morton Herman

Daniel Ritter

John DeWeerdt

John McGary

J. Richard Crockett

Toni Rembe

The Honorable Daniel Berschauer

John Cooper

Number Living: 83 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 10% Total Contributions: $6,870

James Lindsey Jr.

Rex Walker

Mark Honeywell

Marsha Beck

Gerald Coe

The Honorable Richard Miller

James Feeley Donald Lehne

Darrell Hallett

Jerry Bassett

Charles Clark

Donald Mallett

Keith Baldwin

Robert Redman

Laurence Finegold

John Aramburu

CLASS OF 1966

Alan Kane

Frank Payne

Thomas Collins

Larry Levy

Donald Dahlgren

Robert Peterson

Paul Thonn

Donald Hale

Patrick Turner

The Honorable Charles Johnson

Number Living: 50 Number Giving: 11 Percentage Giving: 22% Total Contributions: $8,945

The Honorable Roger Lewis

William Deasy

Jack Strother

Bertil Johnson

CLASS OF 1958

Constance Jarvis

David Broom

Charles Kimbrough

Timothy Clifford

Herbert Fuller

Professor John Huston

Alexander Brindle Sr.

Camden Hall

Malcolm Edwards

The Honorable Carol Fuller

John Hay

Number Living: 45 Number Giving: 9 Percentage Giving: 20% Total Contributions: $5,241,300

Julian Dewell

John Ellis

Warren Gilbert Jr.

CLASS OF 1960

Frederick Frederickson

Number Living: 88 Number Giving: 13 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $10,200

Earl Lasher III Eugene Lee Leslie Ogg Hubert Travaille The Honorable Thomas Warren

CLASS OF 1967 Number Living: 104 Number Giving: 16 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $31,100

Rodney Waldbaum CLASS OF 1969 Number Living: 108 Number Giving: 16 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $16,225 Clemens Barnes Charles Blumenfeld William Britton John Cary

Maureen Dightman Professor Dwight Drake

Earle Hereford Jr.

Ronald Franz

Helen Johansen

Professor John Haley

Barbara Johnston

Gwendolyn Howard

Stanley Kehl

David Huang

Gerald Kovach

David King

B. Michael Schestopol

Brian Kremen

Paul Street

Kazuaki Sono

Larry Leonardson

Paul Van Wagenen

Keith Tichenor

Earl McGimpsey

John Watts

Julie Weston

James Varnell

Phillip Winberry

The Honorable Jay White

Stephen Camden

Tasuku Matsuo

C. Kent Carlson

Jan Peterson

Frank Falk Jr.

E. Charles Routh

W. J. Thomas Ferguson

The Honorable Richard Sanders

Ronald Kinsey Jr.

Robert Campbell

Arley Harrel Jr.

James Marston

Edward Irwin

Number Living: 95 Number Giving: 14 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $10,220

Number Living: 151 Number Giving: 14 Percentage Giving: 9% Total Contributions: $24,215

Charles Ekberg

Jeffrey Brotman

Mark Hutcheson

CLASS OF 1971

CLASS OF 1973

Gordon Ferguson

Robert Kaplan

Stephen Good

Robert Welden

Richard Cohen

William Creech

Thomas Anderson

Paul Goldberg

James Walsh

Joel Benoliel

John Hoerster

Susan French

Tovah LaDier

Judy Young

FALL 2015

Charles Bohlke

CLASS OF 1968

uw law

Nona Cox

Richard Settle

Dennis Lane 75


REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR

CLASS OF 1977

Eugene Pinkelmann Jr.

Stephen Strong

Number Living: 165 Number Giving: 18 Percentage Giving: 11% Total Contributions: $17,526

Glenn Sakuda

Daniel Syrdal D. Michael Young

CLASS OF 1976 The Honorable Sharon Armstrong Ellen Bachman Lawrence Baker Charles Caldart

Number Living: 154 Number Giving: 25 Percentage Giving: 16% Total Contributions: $42,600

Clydia Cuykendall Richard Elliott

J. Patrick Aylward

Gary Fluhrer

The Honorable Bobbe Bridge

Andrew Gauen

Jonathan Bridge

Robert Giles

Anne Counts

Richard Hansen

The Honorable Ronald Culpepper

Donald Harrison Mary Klockars Robin Lindley Jeffrey Pewe Judith Runstad William Severson Nancy Sorensen Professor Hugh Spitzer JoAnn Yukimura John Ziegler Jr.

CLASS OF 1975 Number Living: 144 Number Giving: 17 Percentage Giving: 12% Total Contributions: $40,050

Janis Cunningham Richard Du Bey Linda Ebberson Constance Ellingson Timothy Hogan Richard Hopp Ross Jacobson Rodney Kawakami

The Honorable Joan Allison Timothy Austin Judith Bendich William Collins Mark Davidson Scott Dunham Rudy Englund The Honorable Stephen Hillman Christopher Hirst Michael Hoge John Mooring Scott Osborne

Thomas Bingham Stephen Cole Gary Duvall John Garner

The Honorable J. Robert Leach Alan Macpherson The Honorable Larry McKeeman Sharon Nelson

The Honorable Philip Talmadge Raymond Walters Cynthia Whitaker Richard Wilson

G. William Shaw Sidney Snyder Jr. Evelyn Sroufe Michael Stanley Richard Titus Jr. Arthur Tsien Steven Weinberg

CLASS OF 1979

George Holzapfel

Number Living: 142 Number Giving: 13 Percentage Giving: 9% Total Contributions: $6,080

Mary Kinerk Richard Kitto Jr. F. Wayne Lieb Vivian Luna Harry McLachlin

Carol Moody James Nelson Christopher Noe Patrick Paulich Jeffrey Riedinger James Rohrback Laurence Severance Lois Trickey Karen Watts

Rexanne Gibson

CLASS OF 1984

Susan Shyne

Jeffrey Gonzales

Number Living: 166 Number Giving: 24 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $9,045

Leslea Smith

Gail Gorud Richard Johannsen Craig Kinzer John Knox Richard Linville Robert MacAulay Deane Minor Professor Donna Moniz Betty Ngan Patrick Oughlin

Karen Hoewing

CLASS OF 1981 Number Living: 157 Number Giving: 18 Percentage Giving: 11% Total Contributions: $6,188

Teresa Pottmeyer Gregory Provenzano Fred Rapaport Shannon Skinner John Smith Katherine Steele Thomas Tanaka

Anonymous

Philip Thompson

Yosuke Aoyagi

Darryl Vhugen

John Bennett

Marc Wilhelm

Allan Baris

Bruce Borrus

Professor Yeong Chyan Wu

Mark Beatty

T. Ryan Durkan

Richard Cleva

William Ferron Jr.

Chloethiel DeWeese

Diane Kero

Susan Egnor

Marie Kirk

CLASS OF 1978

The Honorable Laura Inveen

Michael Kuntz

Number Living: 174 Number Giving: 26 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $13, 075

Sylvester Jaime

Meredith Lehr

Michael Ricketts

Edwin Rauzi

Maxine Stansell

Alan Rubens

Holly Towle

Heidi Sachs

The Honorable Michael Trickey

Suzanne Sarason

Brian Morrison Thomas Nast The Honorable Jean Rietschel Bruce Robertson Guy Towle

Alan Peizer David Sonn

Stephanie Searing

Philip Grennan

Dan Kilpatric

Diane Stokke Takeo Akiyama

Gregory Adams

Betty Schall

The Honorable Ricardo Martinez

Arthur Abel The Honorable Marlin Appelwick

Randall Barnard Feliciana Burke

Martin Smith

Don Dascenzo

CLASS OF 1980

The Honorable William Downing

Number Living: 143 Number Giving: 17 Percentage Giving: 12% Total Contributions: $4,598

Douglas Green John Hammar Allen Israel William Jaquette III Larry Johnson Thomas Keane The Honorable David Kurtz The Honorable Karen Lansing Gregory Lawless John Leary Jr. Martha Noerr

Stephen Shuman

The Honorable Stephen Brown Daniel Gibson James Howe Lynn Hvalsoe Mark Johnsen Roberta Katz Ronnie Lopez

Carol Warner Joseph Weinstein

Number Living: 151 Number Giving: 22 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $4,925

Number Living: 161 Number Giving: 30 Percentage Giving: 19% Total Contributions: $32,839

Number Living: 149 Number Giving: 12 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $54,075

Harold Brown Beth Clark Carolyn Cliff Michael Cummings Leonor Fuller Howard Goodfriend James Grant Rita Griffith Robert Heller Anthony Medina Laurie Minsk Pamela Nordquist Thomas Read Martin Rollins Cynthia Shaw The Honorable Mariane Spearman Margaret Sundberg

Scott Borth Professor Karen Boxx Robert Carmichael Kevin Doyle

Jayanne Hino William Hochberg Lori Irwin W. Temple Jorden Timothy Lovain

The Honorable Mary Becker

Ross Macfarlane

Joseph Brotherton

Patricia Novotny

Hugh Cain

Timothy Redford

Bruce Dick

David Robbins

The Honorable Ellen Fair

Judith Shoshana

Karl Forsgaard

Richard Ullstrom

Mary Forsgaard

Scott Warner

Norman Best Jeffrey Capeloto Diana Carey Brent Carson Lawrence Enomoto Linda Gallagher Claire Grace Jon Hongladarom Jeffrey Koontz Arlene Ragozin Michael Rogers

CLASS OF 1987

James Torgerson

Number Living: 160 Number Giving: 11 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $6,075

Ronald Wagenaar

CLASS OF 1985 Number Living: 158 Number Giving: 16 Percentage Giving: 10% Total Contributions: $80,572

Daniel Hendrickson Deborah Hilsman

Karen Andersen

Cynthia Thomas

Bruce Winchell

John Gadon CLASS OF 1982

CLASS OF 1986

Lee Brillhart III

Lesley Allan Teresa Aronson

Ronald Weston

Professor Helen Anderson

The Honorable Lori Smith CLASS OF 1983

Bruce Turcott

James Cissell Caroline Crenna Virginia Faller Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz Mark Lansing

The Honorable Susan Cook Jose-Angel Correa Robroy Crow Crissa Cugini Kimberly Ellwanger Camille Gearhart Robert Gellatly Gregory Gorder Frank Michiels Pitman Potter Linda Roubik Richard Shattuck

Brendan Mangan Mary Moseley Robert Nylander Barbara Selberg Catherine Shaw Carole Souvenir

FALL 2015

David Schnapf

Number Living: 137 Number Giving: 20 Percentage Giving: 15% Total Contributions: $12,108

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CLASS OF 1974

David West 76

77


REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR

CLASS OF 1988

CLASS OF 1990

CLASS OF 1992

Gary Swearingen

CLASS OF 1997

CLASS OF 1999

CLASS OF 2001

CLASS OF 2004

Number Living: 192 Number Giving: 19 Percentage Giving: 10% Total Contributions: $14,622

Number Living: 178 Number Giving: 11 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $12,340

Number Living: 173 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 5% Total Contributions: $690

Thanh Tran

Number Living: 251 Number Giving: 16 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $14,100

Number Living: 248 Number Giving: 17 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $3,830

Number Living: 265 Number Giving: 8 Percentage Giving: 3% Total Contributions: $7,095

Number Living: 267 Number Giving: 15 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $1,718

Michael Bayley

Steven Forrest

Shauna Ehlert

Lovie Bernardi

Mark Gary

Wendy Goffe

John Clynch

Jeanette Heard

Hana Kern

David Cook

Karen Kruse

David Merchant

Patrick Crumb

Kris Lee

Michael Rodden

Daniel Finney

Janet May

Andrew Shogren

Griffith Flaherty

Jessica Mindlin

Virginia Shogren

Bradley Fresia

William Montgomery

Richard Gans

Amy Sommers

Lisa Gillin

Professor Toshiko Takenaka

Jeanette Henderson Henry Josefsberg Andrea Lairson

CLASS OF 1991

Jeffrey Letts

Number Living: 177 Number Giving: 14 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $5,845

Douglas Love Pamela McClaran Professor Bradley Shannon John Stansell

CLASS OF 1989 Number Living: 169 Number Giving: 12 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $6,075

Rhe Zinnecker

CLASS OF 1995

Anonymous

Steven Arterberry

Norimitsu Arai

Kirsten Ambach

Number Living: 187 Number Giving: 11 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $28,500

William Bailey

Colonel Betz Jr.

Julie Lanz

Carly Chan

Tarik Burney

Joshua Colangelo-Bryan

Scott Matheson

Paige Crick

Wei-Fu Hsu

Danielle Githens

Lisa McGimpsey

Abigail Daquiz

Robert Leinbach

Joseph Haberzetle

Kristen Mitchell

Molly Eckman

Matthew LeMaster

Lisa Hayes

Mary Peterson

Lara Fowler

Paula Littlewood

Brent Jones

Phillip Singer

Andrew Greene

Chauncey MacLean

Andreas Kaltsounis

Dawn Sugihara

Cristina Jorgenson

Aurora Martin

Dustin Klinger

Hugh Matsubayashi

Ada Ko

Carol McCoog

Drew Markham

CLASS OF 2002

James McCullagh

Julia Markley

Scott Morris

Ellen McCurdy

Glen Pascual

Orland Seballos

Dwight Wheaton II

Heather Straub

Lien Yu

Akane Suzuki

Number Living: 252 Number Giving: 9 Percentage Giving: 4% Total Contributions: $1,636

Kristin Anger Scott Dinwiddie Sally Feldman

CLASS OF 1993

Jason Froggatt

Number Living: 184 Number Giving: 10 Percentage Giving: 5% Total Contributions: $2,475

Ed Kim

Stephen Bishop Ward Buringrud

Patra Liu Kevin McClure Andrea Menaker Wright Noel Shannon Phillips

Breean Beggs

Jeffrey Johnson

CLASS OF 1996

Scott Edwards

Lori Nomura

Kristen Fraser

Hossein Nowbar

Everett Fruehling

Bridget Rodden

Steven Gustafson

Joseph Sakay

Lynn Hall

Scott Samuelson

Number Living: 215 Number Giving: 15 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $6,300

Stanley Kanarowski

Michael Trevino

Mark Bailey Lisa Christoffersen

Professor Craig Allen

Chun Ng

Kimberly Ambrose

Laurie Powers

CLASS OF 1994

Dennis de Guzman

Laurel Beeler

William Taylor

Kevin Diaz

Thomas Brookes

Michael Tierney

Marco de Sa e Silva

James Weisfield

Bruce Duff

Craig Wright

Number Living: 183 Number Giving: 14 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $5,975

Deborah Dwyer Janine Lawless Wesley Morrison Jr. Kelly Noonan Douglas Ogden Nita Rinehart

Robert Allnutt Eric Anderson Riza De Jesus Marc Greenough Derek Loeser Berrie Martinis Ruby Pediangco

Robert Flennaugh II Klara Hicks Jeffrey Kusumi Jo McLaughlin Flannery Roland Mitchell Kirk Muzzy Joanna Otero Alan Souders Gerald Swanson II Michael Wampold John Wechkin

Number Living: 233 Number Giving: 10 Percentage Giving: 4% Total Contributions: $1,225

Andrew Bryant Ishbel Dickens

CLASS OF 1998

Michael Gotham

Kirsten Morrison

Pamela Tonglao

Linda Sferra

Shane Moloney

CLASS OF 2000 Number Living: 202 Number Giving: 11 Percentage Giving: 5% Total Contributions: $9,410

Anonymous

Rebecca Glasgow Brent Hyer Megan Kirk Toby Marshall

Grzegorz Plichta Glenn Ramel Christopher Sweeney David Whedbee

CLASS OF 2005 Number Living: 241 Number Giving: 17 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $2,652

Evan Shapiro

Jessica Bran

Sabina Shapiro

James Brown

Roger Brodniak

William Davis

Charles Harer

Ramon Gupta

Yi Jiang

CLASS OF 2003

Jule Northup

Jennifer Mahalingappa

Shelley Pellegrino

Steven Miller

Silvia Saucedo

Maureen Mitchell

Robert Thiel

Esther Park

D. Douglas Titus

Gavin Parr

Number Living: 252 Number Giving: 12 Percentage Giving: 5% Total Contributions: $1,975

Clay Wilson

Sheila Phillips Amy Tucker

Juli Pierce

Aaron Perrine

Yao Bailey

Alan Ross

Michael Pedhirney

John Crosetto

Rebecca Andrews Lieutenant Joshua Berger Laura Gerber Brice Howard Professor Sarah Kaltsounis Cari Laufenberg Nicholas Mathews Carol Mortensen

Lonnie Rosenwald

Steven Seward

Elizabeth Ryan

Aimee Sutton Yung-Hern Tan

Emily Deckman Joshua Gaul Colette Kostelec Suzanne Love Jonathan Meyers Shintaro Miyazaki Rebecca Povarchuk Valentin Povarchuk Elizabeth Schubert Robert Spielman Douglas Steding Karl Tjerandsen Holly Vance Erika Yuen

FALL 2015

Carmela Conroy

Kenneth Baronsky

Renee Willette

uw law

Mark Anderson

Emily Warden

Valerie Villacin 78

79


REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR

CLASS OF 2006

Milton Reimers III

CLASS OF 2010

CLASS OF 2012

Bruce Johnson

CLASS OF 2015

Number Living: 269 Number Giving: 21 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $3,380

Christina Richmond

Number Living: 289 Number Giving: 9 Percentage Giving: 3% Total Contributions: $360

Number Living: 277 Number Giving: 26 Percentage Giving: 9% Total Contributions: $6,265

Ethan Jones

Number Living: 267 Number Giving: 31 Percentage Giving: 12% Total Contributions: $6,197

Heather Van Nuys Motohiro Yamane

Valerie Balukas

Mallory Allen

Tony Quang Tony Ramsey Sammuel Shaddox Samuel Strauss

Lydia Ansari

Alison Blair

CLASS OF 2008

Tobias Damm-Luhr

Joan Altman

Rebecca Bowen Jamil

Number Living: 256 Number Giving: 15 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $2,300

Holly Golden

Nathan Barnes

Katherine Herche

Matthew Berry

Noah Jaffe

Nadia Bugaighis

Mindy Longanecker

Gregory Chiarella

Lauren Sancken

Kay Duza

Jovita Wang

Adam Engst

CLASS OF 2014

Katherine Crabtree

Todd Williams

Aydin Firuz

Number Living: 300 Number Giving: 20 Percentage Giving: 7% Total Contributions: $2,200

Sarah Demaree

Amanda Carr Michael Douglas Courtney Garcia Rachel Gold Demetrios Heliotis Tyson Kade Terrance Keenan Kirsten Lundell Koester Karen Nashiwa Jessica Nguyen Lawrence Rozsnyai Lila Silverstein Tammy Sittnick Shara Svendsen Connie Wan John Whalen Wei-Mou Yu Lizhu Zheng

Karen Bloom Ragnar Bloom

Gaurab Bansal Jared Barrett Kelly Canary Jeffrey Christensen Katherine Chung Jay Farrell Steven Gillespie Katy Hatfield Robert Hatfield Jamila Johnson Llewellyn Lawson Megan Lim Daniel Manson Ian Mensher John Peterson

Janet Gwilym

Jennifer Chiang

CLASS OF 2011

Benjamin Harris

Jerry Chiang

Number Living: 294 Number Giving: 19 Percentage Giving: 6% Total Contributions: $1,585

Aurora Janke

Carrie Gage Chris Henderson Lisa Kremer Jonathan Leptich Clark Lin Peter Moreno Matthew Rudow Julie Schaffer Megan Vogel

CLASS OF 2007 Number Living: 264 Number Giving: 21 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $4,391

Heather Griffith

Cecilia Boudreau

Ya-Ling Wu

80

Brianna Chung

Kerra Melvin

Emily Brice Katherine Clark Kendra Comeau Derek Crick Jessica Dales Laura Eshbach Josias Flynn

CLASS OF 2009

Benjamin Golden

Number Living: 273 Number Giving: 14 Percentage Giving: 5% Total Contributions: $2,548

Fen Gui

Emily Alvarado Adam Andrews Kelsey Beckner Rike Connelly Aimee Decker Timothy Defors

Lee Marchisio Rachel Mathisen Ryan McRobert Mike Meredith David Myers Katherine O’Brien Chris Olah Katherine Richard Luke Rona Leonard Sanchez David Stearns Joseph Stockton Jingxin Zhan

Yang-Hsien Hsu Caitlin Imaki David Klein Eric Laliberte Michael Licata Nicholas Marritz Shane Ratigan

Joanna Sylwester Lori Tonnes-Priddy James Wendell Ryan Yoke

Todd Bloom Jonathan Collins Heather Cook Jonah Crollard Dessa Dal Porto Peter Dolan Cody Fenton-Robertson Evan Fuller Nick Hathaway Erin Hebert Brooke Howlett Laurel Jones Wesley Kovarik

CLASS OF 2013

Stephanie Liu

Number Living: 284 Number Giving: 23 Percentage Giving: 8% Total Contributions: $3,070

Niki Morrison

Ian Warner

Jessica Belle

Lindsey Weidenbach

Briana Coyle

Daniel Cairns Derek Chen Devra Cohen Lauren Conner Irvine Corbett

Jenna Lieske

Jordan Talge

Eddie Burns

Tony Ramsey Rachel Ryon

Andrew Durland Michael Ellis Jessica Erickson Christopher Ferrell Karen Fossum Andrea Frey Meghan Gavin Sonja Gerrard Mallory Gitt Charles Hausberg Courtney Hood Christopher Jordan Blake Koerner Carolyn Krol Kirsten Nelsen Christopher Reed Laurie Rosini Robert Sykes Ross Tanaka Ryan Thomas Jocelyn Whiteley Qiuwen Xu

Jenna Smith Lisa Tamaki Shira Zucker

Shawna Deane

Michelle Delappe

Josephine Ennis

Roxanne Eberle

Brian Ferrasci-Olley

Alicia Feichtmeir

Elizabeth Findley

Vanessa Hernandez

Miriam Gordon

Jeff Lane

Kathleen Grohman

Nicole Lindquist

Heather Hightower

Colleen Melody

Kenneth Hong

Chelsea Peters

Tor Jernudd

FALL 2015

Shan Sivalingam

Stephanie Lakinski

uw law

Martha Sandoval

81


REPORT TO DONORS

INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS

Members have lifetime giving totaling $25,000 or more.

Condon Society Benefactors

The Ford Foundation

Donald P. Lehne ‘60

Condon Society

Foster Pepper PLLC

Sam Levinson ‘25 (D)

Lifetime giving totaling $100,000 to $999,999 to the School of Law.

Marion Garrison (D) (FM)

Gordon Livengood ‘52 (D)

Garvey Schubert Barer (FM)

Willaim ‘38 (D) & Virginia Lowry

Lifetime giving totaling $25,000 to $99,999 to the School of Law.

Mary Gates (D)

Bruce ‘49 & Jean Maines (D)

Anonymous (9)

William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr. (FM)

Charlotte Malone (D)

Sophie & Wilbur Albright (D)

Acknowledgment of the John T. Condon Society Founding Members, Laureates and Benefactors can also be found on our donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.

Condon Society Laureates Lifetime giving totaling $1,000,000 or more to the School of Law. Anonymous Greg Amadon (FM) Stan ‘63 & Alta Barer (FM) Steve & Kathy Berman (FM) Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman (FM)

American Bar Association William & Katherine Andersen Jr. (FM) Alice & Edna Athearn (D) (FM) Aviation Working Group Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich (FM)

Judith Bigelow ‘86 (FM)

Douglas Hendel ‘56 (FM)

The Boeing Company

Professor Dan Henderson (D)

The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jon ‘76 Bridge (FM)

The Henry M. Jackson Foundation (FM)

The Bullitt Foundation

Herbert B. Jones Foundation

Clarence ‘30 & Vivian Campbell (D)

Dean & Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth (FM)

Cloud L. Cray Foundation

Duward & Susan Huckabay Foundation

Costco Wholesale Corporation

William & Sally Neukom (FM) Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock (FM) Linden Rhoads ‘11 (FM) The Seattle Foundation The Tulalip Tribes United Way of King County

Susan Huckabay

Richard Cray (D)

John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Carol A. Davidson Colonel Josef ‘31 & Muriel Diamond (D) Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd (FM) Marie Donohoe ‘63 (D) The Dorsey & Whitney Foundation

Japan Foundation

Jean Johnson ‘82 & Peter Miller ‘83 (FM) Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation K & L Gates Michael Kates Trust Katherine Kellogg Smith Trust Nanci Kertson Ed Kim ‘95

Preston Gates & Ellis LLP (FM)

Michael Cason

Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams

Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation

Foley Family Charitable Foundation

Helen Adams (D) Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama (FM) Thomas Allison ‘72 (D) & Kimberlee Brackett American College of Trial Lawyers Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84 Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman

Bardehle Pagenberg Dost

Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr. (FM) The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan Spencer Short ‘24 (D) W. Hunter (D) & Dorothy Simpson (FM) James & Janet Sinegal Virginia Smith ‘46 (D) Society of Counsel Representing Accused Persons

John ‘40 & Ruth Davis (D) Mabry Debuys ‘79 (D)

Beijing Lawyers Association

Deloitte & Touche Foundation

Jack (D) and Becky Benaroya (FM)

Denny Miller Associates, Inc.

Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong, P.C.

The Honorable Carolyn ‘53 & Cyrus (D) Dimmick Dorsey & Whitney, LLP

William Bennett ‘95 & Michele Borovac (FM)

Lloyd DuCommun ‘34 (D)

Family of Homer Bergren ‘35 (D) (FM)

Duty Free Shoppers Ltd.

Robert ‘61 & Judith Duggan

Betts, Patterson & Mines, P.S.

Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson

Max ‘52 & Ruth Soriano (D) (FM)

Boehmert & Boehmert

Richard ‘74 & Mary ‘75 Ekman

Squaxin Island Tribe

Bogle & Gates Law Offices

James Ellis ‘49 (FM)

Mary ‘75 & David Boies (FM)

John ‘53 & Doris Ellis

F. Ross Boundy ‘71

Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons

Alexander ‘63 & Cornelia (D) Brindle Sr.

Sylvia Epstein (D)

Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton

Fenwick & West LLP

SSA Marine, Inc.

Stuart Foundation Paul Van Wagenen ‘73

C. Calvert Knudsen ‘50 (D) (FM)

Washington Research Foundation

James ‘35 & Jane Bryson (D)

The Korea Foundation

Washington State Bar Association

M. John ‘69 & Mattie Bundy (FM)

Donald Fleming ‘51 (D)

Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation

Dana Corporation Foundation

King County Bar Institute

Theodore & Pamela Kummert (FM)

Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison (FM)

Comdisco, Inc.

Barbara Barbee-Pelzel

King County Bar Foundation

Dean Judson ‘19 & Dorothy Falknor (D)

Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

The Honorable William ‘52 (D) & Vasiliki Dwyer (FM)

Kreielsheimer Foundation (FM)

Yasuhiro Fujita ‘68 (D)

Clydia Cuykendall ‘74

King County Bar Association

Ernest Falk ‘28 (D)

Coleman Foundation, Inc.

Lawrence & Mary Ann Bailey

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80

Philip Weiss ‘23 (D) Carrie Welch (D)

Charles Stimson Bullitt ‘49 (D)

John ‘61 (D) & Sybil Burgess Robert ‘73 & Katherine (D) Campbell

Carl Franklin (D) Dennis Franklin ‘78 & Melinda Yee

Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr. (FM) Katie Sako ‘87 & Kendall Flint (FM)

William ‘74 & Carol Foley II (FM)

Charles ‘61 & Donna Cole (D) (FM)

Martin ‘65 (D) & Diane Crowder (FM)

Scott Dunham ‘75 (D) & Barbara Eliades (FM)

Evergreen Legal Services

Christensen O’Connor Johnson Kindness

James ‘39 (D) & Kathleen Arneil

Riverstyx Foundation

Inslee, Best, Doezie, & Ryder, PS

Anonymous (15)

John Applegate ‘41 (D)

Quil Ceda Village

James ‘71 & Marlene Fletcher Floyd & Pflueger, P. S.

Theiline Cramer & Stephen Romein

Puyallup Tribe of Indians

Thelma Hutchinson (D)

Casey Family Foundation

David Stobaugh ‘75 & Lynn Prunhuber ‘79

Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger (FM)

C. Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson (FM)

The Honorable Betty ‘56 & Professor Emeritus Robert Fletcher (D) (FM)

Barney Ebsworth

Equal Justice Works W. J. Thomas Ferguson ‘67 Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP Leslie Fishel Jr. (D) Daniel ‘88 & Frances Fisher (FM)

William & Carrie Garrison (D) Jennifer Gavin Timothy Gavin ‘91 (FM) General Service Foundation Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles (FM) Peter & Sally (D) Glase The Glenhome Foundation Glenhome Trust Stanley Golub ‘36 (D) Gordon Derr, LLP Laura Grace Graduate Program in Taxation (FM) Greater Kansas City Community Foundation Greenwood Shopping Center Camden Hall ‘65 John ‘78 & Patty Hammar Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc.

Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin

James & Nancy Irwin Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe Janet Wright Ketcham Foundation Japanese American Society Japan/U.S. Friendship Commission Eric & Ingrid Jarvis The Honorable Peter ‘62 & Sally Jarvis Jeffers, Danielson, Sonn & Aylward (FM) Michael B. Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle Professor Ralph (D) & Anne Johnson (FM) Marjorie Jones (D) James & Diana Judson Kao Corporation Day ‘29 & Susan Karr (D) Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, LLP Richard ‘77 & Christine Kitto W.H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask (FM) Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear, LLP Carl Koch ‘40 (D)

Charles Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01

Henry Kotkins Sr. ‘35 (D)

Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)

Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane (FM)

Heller Ehrman LLP James Hilton ‘59 (FM) Akimitsu LL.M. ‘95 & Kaoru Hirai John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster (FM) The Honorable Alfred ‘48 & C. Lillian Holte (D)

The Lane Family Foundation Lane Powell, PC Linda Larson ‘78 & B. Gerald Johnson (FM) Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee Ronald ‘71 & Toshiko Lee

The Honorable Charles Horowitz ‘27 (D)

Legal Environmental Assistance

Professor Mary Hotchkiss

James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.

Gary ‘75 & Chris Huff

Byron & Alice Lockwood Foundation

James ‘39 & Rose Hunter (D) (FM)

uw law

University of Washington School of Law Foundation

John A. Huckabay

Kenneth ‘40 (D) & Nona ‘42 Cox (FM)

Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

Elisabeth Miller (D)

Pacific Coast Banking School

Progeny 3, Inc.

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Microsoft Corporation

James ‘53 & Patsy Nelson

Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen (FM)

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis

Jack MacDonald ‘40 (D) (FM)

Greenwall Foundation

Muckleshoot Indian Tribe

Frederick Betts ‘33 (D) (FM)

Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel (FM)

Michael ‘64 & Lynn Garvey (FM)

Landesa Rural Development Institute

Greater Everett Community Foundation

Larry ‘63 & Judith Mounger Jr. (FM)

Perkins Coie LLP (FM)

Gordon Culp ‘52 (D) (FM)

D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger (FM)

Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder

Veida Morrow ‘24 (D)

Gerald & Carolyn Grinstein (FM)

Evelyn S. Egtvedt (D)

Bill & Melinda Gates (FM)

Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88 (FM)

Robert McMillen (D) (FM)

Diana ‘86 & Charles (D) Carey Jr.

FALL 2015

JOHN T. CONDON SOCIETY

82

( D) D EC E A SED

( F M ) F O U N D I N G M EM B ER

NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY

83


REPORT TO DONORS

Charles H. ‘37 & Anne Galbrath Todd (D)

Ruth Lothrop (D)

ROC/US Technology Cooperation

Edith Tollefson (D)

Peter ‘65 & Marian Lucas Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr. John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr. Norman ‘66 (D) & Judith Maleng Brad & Susan Marten Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69 Frank McAbee (D) The McIntosh Foundation McNaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren PLLC Polly ‘87 & David McNeill (FM) Merchant & Gould Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels

The Rock Foundation Professor William Rodgers Jr. Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer Ropes & Gray Ryan Investments LLC Mary Ryan (D) Safeco Insurance Company Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D) Thomas ‘73 (D) & Greta Sedlock (FM) Seed I.P. Law Group, PLLC

Denny & Sandra Miller (FM)

Shidler McBroom Gates & Lucas (FM)

Hugh Miracle ‘34 (D)

Beryl Simpson ‘85

Mitsubishi Research Institute

Skokomish Tribal Nation

Frank (D) & Ella Moquin

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Thelma Moriarty (D)

Catherine Smith ‘79

Morrison & Foerster, LLP

Eugene Smith ‘56 (D)

Jonathan ‘80 & Lynn Mott (FM)

Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith

Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse

Smith Goodfriend, P.S.

Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin (FM) MultiCare Health System Sharon Nelson ‘76 The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen (FM) The Norcliffe Foundation Dan ‘66 & Diane O’Neal (FM) P&E C Miller Charitable Foundation Arthur Paulsen ‘46 (D) (FM) Earl Phillips ‘34 (D) Pierce County Walter Pitts ‘52 (D) (FM) Pogo Producing Co. Cheryl Pope William Pope ‘79 (FM) Wayne L. Prim Foundation Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim

Sonderhoff & Einsel Law & Patent Southwest Center for Law and Policy Evelyn ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe Jr. (FM) Carlyn ‘81 & George (D) Steiner (FM) William & Augusta Steinert (D)

testamentary or

TRACE International, Inc.

giving totaling $15,000

other planned gifts

Irwin (D) ‘57 & Betty Lou Treiger (FM)

or more to the

to the School of Law.

Robert & Kathleen Trimble (FM)

Law Library at the

U.S. Charitable Gift Trust

School of Law.

United States-Japan Foundation

Acknowledgment of the

United Way of Snohomish County

Society can also be found

Marian Gould Gallagher

Nancy & Fred Utter

on the law library

Val A. Browning Charitable Foundation

donor wall in William H.

Van Ness Feldman GordonDerr

Gates Hall.

Tani & Abe

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis Vasiliki Dwyer Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott

Gail Gordon ‘77

Washington State Bar Foundation

Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich

Douglas Hendel ‘56

Professor Charles & Betty Corker (D) & Family

William Hochberg ‘83

Griffith ‘49 & Patricia Way Paul Webber ‘62 (FM)

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis

Michael Jeffers ‘64

Werner Erhard Foundation

Lloyd A. DuCommun ‘34 (D)

Alan ‘65 & Cheryl Kane

Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison

W. J. Thomas ‘67 & Kristin Ferguson

Nanci Kertson

Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)

William G. McGowan Charitable Fund

Keith ‘72 & Lynn Kessler

Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton

W.H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask

William Randolph Hearst Foundation

Professor Mary Hotchkiss & Mary Whisner

Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher III

Partners of Levinson, Friedman, Vhugen, Duggan, Bland & Horowitz

Thomas Loftus ‘57

David ‘61 & Mary Williams Professor Jane & Peter Winn

The Honorable Eugene ‘37 (D) & Esther Wright D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young Yuasa and Hara

Daniel (D) ‘55 & Susan Sullivan

Karl ‘79 & Lianne Quackenbush

Edward Chandler ‘78 & Laura Phillips

Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison

The Family of Lawrence Hickman ‘36

The Macfarlane Foundation

Charles & Barbara Wright

Lyn Tangen ‘74 & Richard Barbieri (FM)

Edna Alvarez ‘67

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80

Professor Emeritus William ‘59 (D) & Mary Stoebuck (FM)

Carl Stork (FM)

Patricia Allendoerfer

W.A. Franke

Polly ‘87 & David McNeill

Eleanor Stokke (D)

Anonymous (4)

James Ellis ‘49

Verizon Communications Inc.

Bagley & Virginia Wright Foundation

Stoel Rives LLP

HENRY SUZZ ALLO SOCIET Y

Marian Gould Gallagher

R. Jack. ‘64 & Sandra Ann Stephenson (FM)

Public Interest Law Association

Helen Reardon Agnew (D)

Members have lifetime

Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.

Constance ‘78 & Rodney Proctor

Dale ‘39 & Evelyn Read ‘40 (D)

Members have made

Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle

Woodcock Washburn

Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka

Josef Rawert ‘09

Tousley Brain

MAR IAN GOULD GALL AGHER SOCIET Y

Texas Instruments Incorporated Donald ‘54 (D) & Kay Thoreson (FM)

Eric & Heather Redman (FM)

NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY

The Meid and MacFarlane Foundation

Garfield & Cynthia Jeffers

Donald Lehne ‘60 Wallace & Barbara Loh Judith Maleng Polly ‘87 & David McNeill James ‘53 & Patsy Nelson William Nelson ‘68

Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot

Ralph ‘62 & Bonnie Olson

Dean Richard & Joanne Roddis (D) & Family

Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot John ‘52 & Jacqueline Riley

Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D)

The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan

Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle

William Snyder ‘89/LL.M. ‘06

Professor Jane & Peter Winn

Diane ‘76 & Larry Stokke Paul Van Wagenen ‘73 Professors Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobel III Paul ‘67 & Kathryn Whelan

FALL 2015

Bruce ‘77 and Alida Robertson (FM)

uw law

Barbara & Professor Wallace Loh (FM)

85


REPORT TO DONORS

Gifts reported here are

Anonymous (3)

Anonymous (3)

those received this

Sophie Albright (D)

AMPACC Law Group, PLLC

fiscal year and do not

Alice & Edna Athearn (D)*

Norimitsu Arai LL.M. ‘01

Bagley and Virginia Wright Foundation

Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel

include pledges or other unrealized contributions or bequests.

Beijing Lawyers Association

Bernard J. Kleina Photography

Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich*

Boehmert & Boehmert**

Diana Carey ‘86 Theiline Cramer & Stephen Romein Gif ts of $1,000,000 OR MORE Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock

Gif ts of $100,000 TO $999,999 Stanley ‘63 & Alta Barer Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation* D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger*** King County Bar Foundation Donald Lehne ‘60 Microsoft Corporation*** Muckleshoot Indian Tribe James ‘53 & Patsy Nelson Pacific Bankers Management Institute Quil Ceda Village The Seattle Foundation*** Society of Counsel Representing Accused Persons United Way of King County

Gif ts of $5,000 TO $9,999

The Honorable Robert Bryan ‘58* Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson**

Equal Justice Works

Catholic Health Initiatives

Greg ‘85 & Val Gorder*

Connelly Law Offices

Ed Kim ‘95

Jack & Angela Connelly

Landesa*

Patrick ‘88 & Karen Crumb

RiverStyx Foundation

Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd**

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

Dorsey & Whitney, LLP*

Southwest Center for Law and Policy

Scott Dunham ‘75 (D) & Barbara Eliades**

The Tulalip Tribes

Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson*

Keith ‘72 & Lynn Kessler

The Honorable Frederick ‘68 & Jane Van Sickle*

Colleen Kinerk ‘77 & Dan Kilpatric ‘76

Margaret & Douglas Walker

Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher III

President Michael & Marti Young

Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee**

Yuasa and Hara

James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.***

Gif ts of $2 ,000 TO $4,999

Beth Loveless Martin ‘70 & Andrea Lybecker***

Anonymous (3)

Professor Deborah Maranville**

AIP Patent & Law Offices

McKinley Irvin, PLLC

Alena Suazo Foundation

Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels

American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers

Miller Nash Graham & Dunn

Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman Kenneth ‘88 & Lisa Baronsky

Miller Nash LLP Laurie Minsk ‘84 & Jerry Dunietz

Gif ts of $1,000 TO $1,999 Anonymous (3) Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams**

Barbri Oregon Bar Review, Inc.

Randi Hedin

Arnold ‘59 & Carol Barer*

Klara ‘96 & Professor Gregory Hicks

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80* Clemens ‘69 & Lisa Anderson Mark Beatty ‘79 Ben Bridge Jewelers Bennett, Bigelow & Leedom

Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin

Annette Clark

Franciscan Health Systems

Raven Conrad

John Frank & Delia Jampel

John ‘56 & Mary Costello

William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr.

Nona Cox ‘42

Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc

Clydia Cuykendall ‘74***

Peterson Wampold Rosato Luna Knopp

DaVita, Inc.

Dana Pigott

John ‘70 & Zona DeWeerdt

Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94*

Bruce Dick ‘82 & Rexanne Gibson ‘82

Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane*

The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53

Littler Mendelson Foundation, Inc.

DIRECTV Sports Networks, LLC

Costco Wholesale Corporation

Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.

John ‘53 & Doris Ellis**

Brad & Susan Marten

Barney Ebsworth

Adam Engst ‘12/LL.M. ‘15

North Pacific Seafoods, Inc.

Professor Mary Hotchkiss**

Foster Pepper PLLC

Sonderhoff & Einsel Law and Patent office

Pendleton and Elisabeth Miller Charitable Foundation*

Bradley Fresia ‘88

Winifred & Clifton Stratton III

Frommer Lawrence & Haug LLP

Tacoma Pierce County Bar Association

John Garner ‘77*** Garvey, Schubert & Barer

Gif ts of $10,000 TO $24,999 Anonymous (4) The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jonathan ‘76 Bridge*** Alexander ‘63 & Madeleine Brindle Sr. Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton* Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69 Perkins Coie LLP* Ropes and Gray LLP Paul Van Wagenen ‘73 Charles & Barbara Wright III Charles and Barbara Wright Foundation

Ken Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01 & Grace Seidel Kinzer Real Estate Services Craig ‘82 & Danna Kinzer

Lynn Hall ‘91 Bill & Cydney Hamett

Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins***

Panagiotu Pension Advisors, Inc.

Steven ‘91 & Amy Gustafson

Darrell ‘68 & Nina Hallett

W. J. Thomas ‘67 & Kristin Ferguson

The News Tribune

Roxanne Reese

William & Sylvia Bailey

Richard Caulfield

Yakama Nation

Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim

Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88

Eric Anderson ‘94 & Stephen Tollafield

Ben Byers

Washington State Bar Association*

Wayne L. Prim Foundation

Jay & Gerri Gass

Camden Hall ‘65

Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse

Thomas Bingham ‘77 & Patricia Char

Mark ‘90 & Diane Gary

Professor Craig ‘89 & Joyce Allen

Buckley & Associates, PS, Inc.

Charles & Diana Judson

Chevron Humankind Richard Cleva ‘79* William ‘75 & Kathleen Collins**

Ann Hemmens*

Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin Inland Northwest Community Foundation Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe K & L Gates Kent Dawson Company, Inc. Charles ‘65 & Nancy Kimbrough Brian ‘71 & Marilyn Kremen Julie Lanz ‘01 & Max Ochoa Latina/o Bar Association of Washington

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Gregory Chiarella ‘12

Susan ‘79 & Terry Egnor**

Robert Schillberg ‘59

Michel ‘60 & Roberta Stern

Professors Walter Walsh & Anita Ramasastry

Kamal & Sara Alavi

William Purdue

Wendy Ehringer

Tony Quang ‘13

David ‘75 & Julie Schnapf

Joseph ‘12 & Leena Stockton

Connie Wan ‘06

Altria Group, Inc.

Brianna Chung ‘10

Timothy Quigley

Theodore Schultz ‘67***

James Cissell ‘87 & Linda Johnson

Constance Ellingson ‘76 & Roger Cohen

Quinault Beach Resort and Casino

Professor Scott & Moira Schumacher

The Honorable Waldo ‘49 & Norma Stone*

Carol Warner ‘81

Emily Alvarado ‘09

Charles Clark ‘70

Michael Ellis ‘15

Paul Street ‘73**

Katherine Clark ‘11

Emerald Downs

Clarence Rabideau ‘55

Miriam Schwartz

Scott LL.M. ‘83 & Mimi Warner

Richard ‘71 & Jane Cohen**

Jessica Erickson ‘15

Arlene Ragozin ‘86

Seafair

Stephen ‘77 & Laurie Cole

Laura Eshbach LL.M. ‘11

Lauren Collins

Bruna Estrada

Community Fitness

Wendy Ewbank

Rike Connelly ‘09

David Fairbanks

Lauren Conner ‘15

The Honorable Mary Fairhurst

Teresa Pottmeyer ‘82 & Geoffrey Trowbridge

Stephen Strong ‘75 & Lorri Falterman Jack ‘65 & Peggy Strother

Hollis-Anthony Ramsey ‘13/LL.M. ‘14

Stephanie Searing ‘78 & Randall Barnard ‘78

Fred Rapaport ‘82 & Christine Sutton*

Seattle City Attorney’s Office

Margaret Sundberg ‘84***

Seattle Mariners

Sheldon Sutcliffe ‘68

Seattle Men’s Chorus

Akane Suzuki ‘99 & Alexander Rea

Shane LL.M. ‘11 & Kerri-Ann Ratigan Edwin Rauzi ‘81 & Shana Chung*** Barbara Read RealNetworks Foundation Timothy Redford ‘83** Anne Redman Fredric ‘72 & Tana Reed** Katy Reed Report Shoes Geoffrey ‘72 & Teresa Revelle* Katherine Richard ‘12 Michael Ricketts ‘79 Jeffrey ‘80 & Beverly Riedinger Ristorante Picolinos Daniel Ritter ‘63 Robin Robbins (D) DECEASED

Seattle Shakespeare Company Orland Seballos ‘99 Barbara Selberg ‘87* Ann Selland The Honorable Susan & Peter Serko William Severson ‘74 & Meredith Lehr ‘81 Linda Sferra ‘95 & Forrest Miller Sammuel Shaddox ‘13 Professor Bradley ‘88 & Ann Shannon*** Richard Shattuck ‘85 Cynthia Shaw ‘84 David Shelton ‘70 & Frauke Rynd James & Deborah Shields

Student Bar Association

Christopher Sweeney ‘04 & Brandon Loo

Ian Warner ‘11 The Honorable Anthony ‘63 & Lynn Wartnik John ‘73 & Mary Watts* John Wechkin ‘96 Karen Weiland Steven ‘78 & Sharon Weinberg Robert Welden ‘70 James Wendell ‘13 Angela West

Joanna Sylwester ‘13

Brenden & Irina West

Keith Talbot

Ronald Weston ‘85

The Honorable Philip ‘76 & Darlene Talmadge

Dwight Wheaton II ‘97

Faye Tao

Laurelle Whiteley

Shelly Tatistcheff

Willamette Valley Vineyards

William ‘91 & Susan Taylor* Teatro ZinZanni

Renee Willette ‘94 & James Schwartz

Karl Tegland ‘72*

Nancy Williams

Consuelo Templeton

Sandra Willoughby

Robert Thiel LL.M. ‘98

Wilmer Cutler & Pickering

Thirsty Hop

Karen Wilson

Paul Thonn ‘55

Bruce ‘84 & Janet Winchell

Lara Thurman & B. Michelle Johnson

Bruce Witenberg & Nancy Carel

David Whedbee ‘04

Lema Woldegiorgis

* 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING

Laurie Anderson Jessica Andrade Lydia Ansari ‘15 John Aramburu ‘70 Diane Armstrong Jan Asbjornsen Aveeda Babeland Mark Bailey ‘96

Catlin Gibson

Alafair Burke

Joseph Sakay ‘93 & Lisa Lee

James ‘71 & Rebecca Varnell

Laura Gerber ‘03 & Michael Denlinger

Burke Museum

Professor Zahr Said

Pitman ‘85 & Victoria Potter*

Gif ts of $1 TO $99

Meghan Gavin

Michelle Delappe ‘09/ LL.M. ‘10 & Avilio Moreno Villamediana

Nadia Bugaighis ‘12

Shannon ‘56 & Donna Stafford**

Portland Trailblazers

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Alan Ross ‘00 & Peggy Keene

Skin Logic

Cesar Torres

Robert ‘58 & Sue Carter Holley Cassell

Kay D’Souza ‘12 Richard ‘76 & Lynn Du Bey Andrew Durland ‘15 Elena Dzhalazova

BAKED custom cakes

Heather Cook ‘14 & John De Turk

Ballard Annex

Adam Copley

Valerie Balukas LL.M. ‘06

Professor Jennifer Fan

Irvine Corbett ‘15

Nathan Barnes ‘12

Philip ‘49 & Lindy Faris

Corretto Trattoria and Bar

James Baxter

Tyler Farmer

Briana Coyle ‘13

Kelsey Beckner ‘09

Jay Farrell LL.M. ‘07

Katherine Crabtree ‘15

Stephanie Beers Jessica Belle ‘13

Paige LL.M. ‘04 & Derek LL.M. ‘11 Crick

Mary Lou Fenili & Karen Hansen

Shandra Benito

Jonah Crollard ‘14

Christopher Ferrell ‘15

Lovie Bernardi ‘88 & Griffith Flaherty ‘88

Gary Cronk ‘64

Aydin Firuz ‘12/LL.M. ‘15

Robroy Crow ‘85

Matthew Berry ‘12

Josias Flynn ‘11

Daining Cui

Norman Best ‘86 & Susan Taylor

Michael ‘84 & Jean Cummings

Steven ‘90 & Louise Forrest*

Ragnar ‘08 & Karen ‘08 Bloom

Janis ‘76 & John Cunningham

Charles ‘56 & Barbara Bohlke

Howard Franklin

Dessa Dal Porto ‘14

Rebecca Bowen Jamil ‘06 & Mustafa Jamil

Jay Free

Jessica Dales ‘11

Carolann & Gene Freedman

Tobias Damm-Luhr ‘10

Andrea Frey ‘15

Virginia Faller ‘87

Cody Fenton-Robertson ‘14

Laura Fox & Rodrick Merrell

Lisa Gillin ‘88 Mallory Gitt ‘15

Paul Goldberg ‘67* Holly ‘10 & Benjamin ‘11 Golden Jeffrey ‘82* & Loida Gonzales Jessica Gonzalez Good Bar Gail Gorud ‘82 David ‘58 & Carolyn Gossard Jr. Robert Greaves Jason Greene Heather ‘12 & G. Mark Griffith Kathleen Grohman ‘13 Fen Gui ‘11 Kylie Gursky Joseph Haberzetle ‘99/LL.M. ‘00 & Katherine Gardner Kellen Hade & Ralph Feriani Donald ‘65 & Mary Hale Professor John ‘71 & Karin Haley Mariah Hanley Fred Harrington & Najmi Voss Benjamin Harris ‘12 Katy ‘07 & Robert ‘07 Hatfield Nicholas Hathaway ‘14 Charles Hausberg ‘15 Heavy Restaurant Group Demetrios Heliotis ‘06 Robert Heller ‘84 Chris Henderson ‘08 & Megan Hirsh Vanessa ‘09 & Luis Hernandez The Honorable Stephen Hillman ‘75 Richard ‘58 & Gerene Holt* Courtney Hood Mike Horri

FALL 2015

Aaron Perrine ‘02

Roger Brodniak ‘00

uw law

Professor Deborah Perluss & Mark Diamond

Lee Brillhart III ‘84

Hothouse Spa and Sauna 93


REPORT TO DONORS

Brooke Howlett ‘14

Mark Lansing ‘87

Lauren Hruska

L’Ecole No. 41

Yang-Hsien Hsu ‘11

Cary Lee

David Huang ‘71/Ph.D. ‘75

The Honorable Roger Lewis ‘54*

Douglas Huber Brent Hyer ‘02 Icicle Brewing Company Intel Corporation John ‘62 & Marli Iverson*** Professor Cynthia Jacobs Robert Jacoby Noah Jaffe ‘10 Tor Jernudd ‘13 & Julia Ryan Jet City Improv Sophie Jin Bruce Johnson ‘13 Barbara ‘73 & Craig Johnston Alison Jones Ethan Jones ‘13 Laurel Jones ‘14 & Kris Simonsen Christopher Jordan ‘15 Tyson ‘06 & Joan Kade*

Jenna Lieske ‘14 Megan ‘07 & Jeremy Lim Robin ‘74 & Elizabeth Lindley

Katherine ‘12 & Colin O’Brien Lisa & Norman Odom Chris Olah ‘12 Julie Orr Other Coast Cafe Harrison Owens Pacific Science Center Robert ‘72 & Senator Linda Parlette

Stephanie Liu ‘14

Glen ‘97 & Madelyn Pascual**

Mindy Longanecker ‘10

Pedal Bike Tours

Timothy Lovain ‘83

Alan ‘76 & Elaine Peizer

Lucca Great Finds

Peso’s Kitchen and Lounge

Kirsten Lundell Koester ‘06

Chelsea ‘09 & Matthew Peters

Macklemore LLC Chauncey MacLean LL.M. ‘97 Eric Madsen Majestic Bay Theatres Mama Stortini’s

Pete’s Wine Shop Blythe Phillips & Laura Shepherd Piatti Ristorante and Bar

Lee Marchisio ‘12

Eugene Pinkelmann Jr. LL.M. ‘78

Janet ‘90 & Tim May

Portage Bay Cafe

Pamela McClaran ‘88

Elisa Pupko-Pope & Michael Pope

Professor Joyce McCrayPearson

R. M. Holt, Inc. P.S.

James McCullagh ‘97

Glenn Ramel LL.M. ‘04

Ellen ‘99 & Michael McCurdy

Rat City Rollergirls

Francoise McMurtrie

Robert ‘57 & Harriet Redman

Melissa Kane

Anthony ‘84 & Jane Medina

Christopher Reed ‘15

Terrance Keenan ‘06

Debbie & John Mercer

Milton ‘07 & Tara Reimers III

Stanley Kehl ‘73 & Karen Fie

Mike Meredith ‘12

Duffy Romnor

Jack Kelly

Mexico Cantina Y Cocina

Luke Rona ‘12

Hana Kenny

Middleton Brewing

Andrew Russell

Ronald Kinsey Jr. ‘67

James Miller II

Scott Samuelson ‘93

Kirkland Chiropractic and Massage

Kendra Miller

Leonard Sanchez ‘12

Daniel Kamkar Stanley Kanarowski ‘91/ LL.M. ‘92

Kiss Cafe Kitchen n’ Things Dustin ‘99/LL.M. ‘99 & Mary Klinger Jessica Knowles Ada Ko LL.M. ‘99 Blake Koerner ‘15 Judith Kovarik Wesley Kovarik ‘14 & Heather Hightower ‘13

Mark & Susan Miller

Beverly Sanders

Deane ‘82 & Leslie Minor

Sarducci’s

Kristen Mitchell ‘01

Satay Malaysian Restaurant

Shane ‘04 & Andrea Moloney

Julie Schaffer ‘08

Carol Mortensen ‘03

Judith Shoshana ‘83 Shultzy’s Sausage Inc. Stephen Shuman ‘81 Jenna Smith ‘14 Leslea Smith ‘85 Snapdragon Lace Sidney Snyder Jr. ‘78 & Robin Powell David ‘76 & Ann Sonn Robert Spielman ‘05 Elizabeth St. Clair Starbucks Coffee Company Douglas ‘05 & LeeAnn Steding Katherine ‘82 & Steven Steele Quentin ‘70 & Sherry Steinberg*

Unexpected Productions University Book Store Urban Coffee Lounge Veraci Pizza Melissa Verrilli Darryl ‘82 & Jann Vhugen Ronald Wagenaar ‘84** Nicole Wagner Rodney ‘70 & Nina Waldbaum** Lon-Marie Walton & Professor Alan Kirtley

GIFTS IN HONOR AND IN MEMORY OF FAMILY AND FRIENDS During the 2014-15 Fiscal Year the School of Law received gifts in honor of and in memory of the following individuals and groups

Don Wang Jovita Wang ‘10 Emily Warden ‘94*

In honor of Bill Andersen In honor of Joel Benoliel ‘71

Washington Trust Bank

In honor of William T. Burke

Stryder & Lauren Wegener

In honor of Carey Lillevik, PLLC

Lindsey Weidenbach LL.M. ‘11

In honor of Charles K. Carlson ‘67

John Wheaton

In honor of Dawn English

In honor of the Class of 1963

Craig ‘70 & Sheila Sternberg

Jocelyn Whiteley ‘15

In honor of Margaret J. Fester

Heather Straub ‘99

Todd ‘10 & Emily Williams

In honor of Garvey, Schubert & Barer

Samuel Strauss ‘13 & Eddie Curran

Sarah & Ray Willis

In honor of Associate Dean Penny Hazelton

Sub Pop Records

Elliot Wilson Lewis Wilson ‘72**

In honor of the great work of the IPNW clinical students and staff

Dawn Sugihara ‘01 & Colin Beard Sarah Sumadi Aimee Sutton ‘03 & Evan Fein Shara Svendsen ‘06 & Alejandro Cumplido* Katie Swartz Robert Sykes ‘15 Jordan Talge ‘11 Lisa Tamaki ‘14

William Woodruff Jr. World Affairs Council Patsy Wosepka & Shashi Karan Qiuwen Xu ‘15 Ryan Yoke ‘13 & Leah Hampson-Yoke Judy Young ‘71 John Ziegler Jr. ‘74 Shira Zucker ‘14

In honor of Professor Lisa Kelly In honor of Mark Litchman Sr. and Mark Litchman Jr. ‘51 In honor of Keith Loveless In honor of Professor Jacqueline McMurtrie In honor of Steven Neuman In honor of Guy Towle ‘77 In honor of The Honorable Robert F. Utter ‘54 In memory of Kalief Browder In memory of Professor William T. Burke In memory of The Honorable Tom Chambers ‘69 In memory of Professor Charles E. Corker

Ross Tanaka ‘15

In memory of Pete ‘60 and Pat Curran ‘48

Jordan Taren

In memory of John M. Davis ‘40

Cristina Teodorescu

In memory of Deborah Emory

The Barrel Thief

In memory of Robert Fetty ‘58

Ryan Thomas ‘15 Eric & K. Terry Thorsos

In memory of Professor Joan Fitzpatrick In memory of Professor Robert Fletcher and The Horable Betty Fletcher ‘56

Michael & Jane Schwab

Museum of Flight

Seattle Bouldering Project

John Tirpak

Amy Muth

Seattle International Film Festival

Lori Tonnes-Priddy ‘13 Town Hall Seattle

In memory of Wayne Gittinger ‘57

Seattle ReCreative

Terrye Townley

In memory of Mr. Carl Hansen

Seattle Seahawks Charitable Foundation

Tractor Tavern

In memory of Donald L. Thoreson ‘54

Trader Joe’s Company

In memory of Robert Allen Purdue ‘42

Michael ‘93 & Lori Trevino

In memory of Richard Quinn ‘55

Tully’s Coffee

In memory of Pinckney M. Rohrback ‘48

David Myers LL.M. ‘12

Inge Krippaehne Carolyn Krol ‘15

Hanh Nguyen

Margarida Kuwan

Christopher Noe ‘80

Kathleen Kyle

Pamela Nordquist ‘84

James Ladley ‘61

Jule ‘98 & Frederick Northup Sr.

Jeff Lane ‘09

Schilling Cider

Virginia ‘92 & Andrew ‘92 Shogren

Uneeda Burger

James Mullins

Kirsten Nelsen ‘15

Landmark Theatre Corporation

Lauren Sancken ‘10

Thomas Miller

Steven LL.M. ‘03 & Margaret Seward

Northwest Outdoor Center, Inc. Patricia Novotny ‘83

Seattle Tilth Jack Seeley Seven Hills Winery Laurence Severance ‘80 Katherine Seward

Bruce Turcott ‘85 Reba Turnquist Tutta Bella

In memory of Richard Max Foreman ‘59 In memory of Jay S. Gass

In memory of Stanley M. Samuels ‘56 In memory of Alena Suazo ‘10 In memory of Catherine H. Sutcliffe

FALL 2015

The Honorable Karen Lansing ‘78

uw law

James Howe ‘80 & Janet Gros Jacques**

In memory of Yoseleh the Holy Miser In memory of Norman Zevin

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U W S C H O O L O F L AW L E A D E R S H I P C O U N C I L The UW School of Law Leadership Council is an organization that advances the mission of the University of Washington School of Law by building the institution through leadership, serving as a bridge between the UW School of Law and the community, inspiring alumni and community involvement with the school, and securing the financial future of the School of Law.

What will your legacy be?

E XECUTIVE COMMIT TEE President

Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94 Intellectual Ventures Vice President

Judy Bendich ‘75 Attorney at Law Executive Director

Dean Kellye Testy UW School of Law Chair, Advancement Committee

Greg Gorder ‘85 Intellectual Ventures

Vice Chair, Advancement Committee

Ad-hoc member

Ad-hoc member

Chair, Stewardship Committee President, Law School Foundation

Joel Benoliel ‘71 Retired, Costco Wholesale Corporation

Linda Ebberson ‘76 Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson Chair, Engagement Committee

Gerald Swanson ‘96 KOM Consulting PLLC

Vice Chair, Engagement Committee

Rebecca Glasgow ‘02 State Attorney General’s Office

Paula Littlewood ‘97 Washington State Bar Association

Robert Giles ‘74 Perkins Coie

Vice Chair, Stewardship Committee VP, Law School Foundation

Craig Wright ‘91 Gordon Thomas Honeywell Ad-hoc member

Kimberly Eckstein UW School of Law

In 2013, Jack MacDonald ’40, a humble yet remarkable alumnus, bequeathed $56 million to the UW School of Law. Jack’s gift made history as the largest ever in the law school’s 115 year history, and the largest ever estate gift to the UW. Jack’s transformative gift, in the form of a trust, will reach every corner of the law school. The annual income from Jack’s trust will support student scholarships, faculty excellence and investment in innovative programs that will enhance students’ education and professional opportunities. What inspired Jack to give so generously to the University of Washington School of Law? The legacy Jack created stemmed from a profound gratitude for his legal education and a desire

MEMBERS The Honorable Gerry Alexander ‘64 Bean Gentry Wheeler Peternell Stan Barer ‘63 Saltchuk Resources Inc. Nathan Barnes ‘12 CBRE The Honorable Bobbe Bridge ‘76 Center for Children & Youth Justice David Broom ‘63 Paine Hamblen LLP Joseph Brotherton ‘82 The Brotherton Companies Darren Carnell ‘95 King County Prosecutor’s Office Kendra Comeau ‘11 Patterson Buchanan The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53 United States Courthouse Jack Ding ‘11 Desh International Law Rick Dodd ‘70 K & L Gates Dwight Drake ‘73

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to help others realize the dream of obtaining a law degree. Less than 4% of UW Law’s funding Professor, UW School of Law

Seattle City Attorney’s Office

Daniel Finney ‘88 Witherspoon Kelley

Suzanne Love ‘05 King County Prosecutor’s Office

Robert Flennaugh ‘96 Robert Flennaugh II PLLC

Scott Morris ‘97 Inland Construction

grateful to every donor who invests in the future of UW Law.

Leonor Fuller ‘84 Fuller & Fuller

Christina Richmond ‘07 King County Prosecutor’s Office

Jack’s transformative generosity leaves a legacy that will be felt at the UW School of Law

Arley Harrel ‘73 Williams Kastner & Gibbs

Bruce Robertson ‘77 Garvey Schubert Barer

John Huckabay ChemAlum

Skylee Robinson ‘09 Nellermoe Wrenn, PLLC

Learn more about the options for giving by contacting

Colleen Kinerk ‘77 Cable, Langenbach, Kinerk, & Bauer, LLP

Judith Runstad ‘74 Foster Pepper

at 206.543.2964 or kimmyj@uw.edu.

Craig Kinzer ‘82 Kingzer Real Estate Services & Denny Hill Capital, LP Earl Lasher ‘66 Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson Eugene Lee ‘66, LL.M. ‘68 Blakemore Foundation Elizabeth Leedom ‘84 Bennett Bigelow & Leedom Mindy Longanecker ‘10

Deep Sengupta ‘01 Fed Ex Trade Networks Sabina Shapiro ‘02 Foster Pepper David Tang K & L Gates James Torgerson ‘84 Stoel Rives Michael Wampold ‘96 Peterson Wampold Rosata Luna Knopp The Honorable Ron Whitener ‘94 Tulalip Tribal Court

comes from the state. Therefore every gift, irrespective of size, is crucial to the school’s success. As we continue our work of educating leaders for the global common good, we are profoundly

for generations to come.

Asstistant Dean Kimberly Eckstein in Advancement


Nonprofit Org US Postage PAID Seattle, WA Permit No. 62

BOX 353020 SEAT TLE, WA 98195-3020

C E L E B R AT I O N

of

D I S T I N C T I O N CO N G R AT U L AT I O N S TO O U R 2 015 A LU M N I AWA R D R E C I P I E N T S

HENRY M. JACKSON DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD

W ILLIA M H. GATES SR. ’49, ’50 DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD

MARY BOIES ’75

DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD

ADA M BROTMAN ’95 DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD

DIANA CAREY ’66, ’69, ’86 DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD

GREG GOR DER ’85

THIS YE AR ’ S E VENT WILL HONOR OUR REUNION CL A SSES OF 19 6 5 , 19 7 5 , 19 8 5 , 19 9 5 A N D 2 0 0 5 . For more information on our alumni events, visit www.law.washington.edu/alumni

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