Class Participation

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Class Participation Class Participation 1934 WILLIAM MINOR LILE ADDITIONAL DONORS 1951 Carolyn F Olive *** (W) ASSOCIATE Robert C Alsop * Alumni: 11 $2,500 to $4,999 Charlotte Craney Chamberlain * (W) Donors: 5 John B Huffaker F o Robert L Corwin s (D) Participation: 45% Stanley Schoenbaum * Total Gifts: $15,675 1936 ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Frank Warren Swacker *** (D) ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE ASSOCIATE George A Van Pelt F JOHN BARBEE MINOR FELLOW ASSOCIATE $1,000 to $2,499 $10,000 to $19,999 $1,000 to $2,499 Harry E McCoy s James E Coleman, Jr s o Lee S Cochran (W) LAW SCHOOL PATRONS 1950 ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE $500 to $749 Alumni: 14 ASSOCIATES Robert C Nusbaum s Donors: 9 $1,000 to $2,499 1940 Leonard L Rivkin F Participation: 64% Dianne Carter ** (W) THOMAS JEFFERSON LAW Total Gifts: $13,352 Philip M Drake s o FELLOW ADDITIONAL DONORS $20,000 or more Alan S Boyd ELIZABETH N. TOMPKINS ’23 SUSTAINING BENEFACTOR Mortimer M Caplin s o Louis Brenner ** ASSOCIATE $750 to $999 Henry W Brockenbrough s $5,000 to $9,999 J Warren Stephens s ADDITIONAL DONOR Morgan C Fowler ** H A Street * m Hugh S Meredith s Joshua L Robinson F (D) Charles S Russell ** ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Toy D Savage, Jr *** ASSOCIATES Sally C Scott (W) $1,000 to $2,499 1947 Donald C Wells ** Herbert K Bangel s Betty Hartnett *** (W) Marc A White s Albert V Bryan, Jr s LEGEND Anne Buford (W) Years of Consecutive Giving s Barton P Jenks III (D) * 5–9 years s Albert I Kassabian ** 10–14 years s 1948 1949 James E McDonald *** 15–19 years s Class Manager: Alumni: 14 Robert B Thomas (D) **** 20–24 years John B Huffaker Donors: 4 F 25–29 years Alumni: 28 Participation: 29% ADDITIONAL DONORS s 30 or more years Donors: 11 Total Gifts: $4,073 Richard J Collins, Jr * Participation: 39% Atley A Kitchings, Jr s o Dean’s Council, Life Member Dean’s Council, Associate Member Total Gifts: $6,950 ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Elizabeth G Poole **** o m ASSOCIATE Mayer A Sarfan *** G Class Agent $1,000 to $2,499 Peter B Turney ** ; 100% Class Agent Participation David J Wood, Jr (D) Deceased (W) Widow 2016–2017 ANNUAL REPORT 35 LAW SCHOOL PATRON 1953 1954 ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE $500 to $749 Class Manager: Class Manager: ASSOCIATES Sherwood S Cadwell s Douglas D Drysdale Walter Shapero $1,000 to $2,499 Alumni: 32 Alumni: 20 Harry Lee Addison III ** ADDITIONAL DONORS Donors: 18 Donors: 8 Thomas C Phillips, Jr **** Edward S MacKey, Jr *** Participation: 56% Participation: 40% James W Riddell s Total Gifts: $22,000 Total Gifts: $8,000 LAW SCHOOL PATRONS Patricia Connolly Ryan (W) $500 to $749 JOHN BARBEE MINOR FELLOW WILLIAM MINOR LILE Hewitt H Covington s $10,000 to $19,999 ASSOCIATE J Samuel Glasscock ** Douglas D Drysdale s o $2,500 to $4,999 Louis J Richman, Jr s 1952 Nancy Myers Frazier *** (W) George R Silvernell ** Alumni: 23 ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE R Allan Wimbish s Donors: 12 ASSOCIATES ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Participation: 52% $1,000 to $2,499 ASSOCIATES ADDITIONAL DONORS Total Gifts: $14,975 Robert G Doumar, Sr **** $1,000 to $2,499 Waverley L Berkley III * Alvin A Gordon * Julius P Fouts s m David L Good ELIZABETH N. TOMPKINS ’23 William C Lickle ** o Daniel Rosenbloom **** o Donald K Graham s ASSOCIATE Walter Shapero * o Allen Kilik **** $5,000 to $9,999 LAW SCHOOL PATRONS Paul H Kirwin * Albert W Driver, Jr *** $500 to $749 ADDITIONAL DONORS William L Littlejohn * F Richards Ford III ** Robert A Cox, Jr **** J Newton Nash ** WILLIAM MINOR LILE George W Martin ** Morris H Fine * John F Novatney, Jr ASSOCIATE John H Mitchell, Jr s George Chilton Gaines ** Robert V Schnabel ** $2,500 to $4,999 James P Groton s William D Weeks s Robert B Bottomley **** ADDITIONAL DONORS Guylene W Kelley (W) Christopher B Acker s Thomas Bog Slade III **** ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE S Beryl Adler **** ASSOCIATES E A Grosvenor Blair *** 1956 $1,000 to $2,499 George Blow s Alumni: 35 Robert E L deButts s Jane M Eliades (W) 1955 Donors: 24 John L Ray ** o Stanley S Harris *** Alumni: 32 Participation: 69% Leverett M Hubbard, Jr * Donors: 21 Total Gifts: $11,482 SUSTAINING BENEFACTOR Nat Kurtz **** Participation: 66% $750 to $999 Jay A Lipe * Total Gifts: $106,448 ELIZABETH N. TOMPKINS ’23 Harry L McNeal, Jr *** R Taylor McLean * ASSOCIATE John Mowbray O’Mara THOMAS JEFFERSON LAW $5,000 to $9,999 LAW SCHOOL PATRONS Henry M Schwan FELLOW John R Turbyfill s o $500 to $749 R Richard Schweitzer s $20,000 or more Leonard Braman ** C Pfeiffer Trowbridge *** (D) Blaine T Phillips *** o ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Carroll C Johnson, Jr s ASSOCIATES Frank N Perkinson, Jr * (D) JOHN BARBEE MINOR $1,000 to $2,499 FELLOWS Patricia Ackiss Caton (W) ADDITIONAL DONORS $10,000 to $19,999 Jackson B Gilbert s Edward G Cortright, Jr ** John D Fowler **** o Daniel C Lickle **** Eleanor S Craig (W) John S Shannon s o Patrick C Derrico s LAW SCHOOL PATRONS John Goode s WILLIAM MINOR LILE $500 to $749 J Lyndal Hagemeyer ASSOCIATE Marion S Boyd, Jr F Warren I Titus, Jr * $2,500 to $4,999 Thomas J Michie, Jr F James L Miller s 36 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF LAW ADDITIONAL DONORS B Francis Saul II s o 1958 Leonard B Sachs Joseph L Baldwin * Charles D Sheldon Alumni: 58 John W Sause, Jr Mark H Berliant F Donors: 33 Robert Sellers Smith ** John Blatchford * SUSTAINING BENEFACTOR Participation: 57% Karl H Velde, Jr *** George L Cohen s $750 to $999 Total Gifts: $77,059 George G Coughlin, Jr F Albert S Kemper III s Thomas B Evans, Jr ** ELIZABETH N. TOMPKINS ’23 W Glover Garner, Jr * LAW SCHOOL PATRONS ASSOCIATES 1959 Philip Manning Goodwin $500 to $749 $5,000 to $9,999 Class Manager: J Ellsworth Hall III ** A Hugo Blankingship, Jr s William L Bunting, Jr *** m William C Stott, Jr William P Kline *** Carter B S Furr s Thomas Otis *** o Alumni: 68 Frederick H Klostermeyer ** (D) John M O’Hara F Benjamin K Phipps ** Donors: 29 William J Linkous, Jr **** Arthur G Taylor * Participation: 43% James D McClister ** Fletcher B Watson IV s ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Total Gifts: $72,849 Marianne Fagel McCulloch * (W) J M H Willis, Jr s ASSOCIATES Dwight B Moore s $1,000 to $2,499 THOMAS JEFFERSON LAW Richard L Nunley *** ADDITIONAL DONORS Alan A Diamonstein *** FELLOWS Richard W Roberts **** Warren T Braham **** Philip H Elliott, Jr *** $20,000 or more Frank M Steadman, Jr **** Dermott M Breen s Michael L B Kaplan ** Judith C P Lilley * m (W) Thomas A Sully, Jr ** J Michael Burry **** Haven A Knight **** John R Purcell **** o James R Trimm s Edward W Chapin F E Bradford Miller s Roland C Woodward s Richard Cocke F Henry W Williams, Jr s ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE John D Corse s W Swan Yerger *** ASSOCIATES Janet R Dugan *** $1,000 to $2,499 William H Foulk, Jr *** SUSTAINING BENEFACTOR Evans B Brasfield s 1957 Mark P Friedlander, Jr $750 to $999 William R Bruce s Class Manager: Herbert S Glickman **** Frederick Goldstein s Lauriston Castleman, Jr s Janet Lauck Blakeman George W Gowen II s Herbert Davis ** Alumni: 54 Leo E Gribbin, Jr s LAW SCHOOL PATRONS James H Ford ** Donors: 39 V Rock Grundman, Jr F $500 to $749 George L Freeman, Jr * Participation: 72% Robert M Hughes III s Barbara A Coppeto s (D) Richard G Freeman * Total Gifts: $26,750 Edward F Killeen **** (D) Terry H Davis, Jr s Waller H Horsley s o (D) S Lee Miller s (D) Fred S Landess ** Thomas O Lawson **** ELIZABETH N. TOMPKINS ’23 William W Miner s (D) Douglass S Mackall III F Phillips S Peter **** ASSOCIATE William D Moore C Lawson Willard III **** $5,000 to $9,999 Daniel W Myers II F ADDITIONAL DONORS Arnold H Leon F o Franklin B Olmsted * James B Atkin *** SUSTAINING BENEFACTOR Lawrence M Philips F Stuart Brunet F $750 to $999 WILLIAM MINOR LILE Myron J Poliner s David H Carter ** John V Tunney ** ASSOCIATE John W Shroyer s Randolph B Chichester **** $2,500 to $4,999 David T Styles s Stanley Pitkin Christopher F LAW SCHOOL PATRONS Janet Lauck Blakeman s Roger M Thomas s John E Clarkson * $500 to $749 William F Thomas, Jr **** John L Daly s Katherine S Prokop * ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE Eric E Wohlforth F Robert K Dorsey s Edwin J Rafal s ASSOCIATES J Lawrence Grim, Jr s Charles H Sedberry s $1,000 to $2,499 Joseph Hilton Malcolm S Underwood, Jr Earle S Bates, Jr s Gordon M Hobbs ** Jay M Weinberg * Harold C Buckingham, Jr s Marc Jacobson *** Noel C Crowley F Allan R Johnson ** ADDITIONAL DONORS George F Darden, Jr s Hobart A McWhorter, Jr *** Robert L Bohannon * Jeremy C McCamic F John F Merchant John C Dew Leigh B Middleditch, Jr s K William O’Connor ** E Terry Durant *** (D) Deceased (W) Widow 2016–2017 ANNUAL REPORT 37 Funding Common Grounds About 60 ideologically diverse students participated in a new organization called Common Law Grounds. The students worked through hypothetical scenarios in small groups as professors of differing political stripes sat in to moderate. One hypothetical focused on the national debt, while another was about a couple debating a geographic move. Issues of race, gender, economics, power, and pride cropped up—with all of the discussions centered on the topic of compromise.
Recommended publications
  • September 11 & 12 . 2008
    n e w y o r k c i t y s e p t e m b e r 11 & 12 . 2008 ServiceNation is a campaign for a new America; an America where citizens come together and take responsibility for the nation’s future. ServiceNation unites leaders from every sector of American society with hundreds of thousands of citizens in a national effort to call on the next President and Congress, leaders from all sectors, and our fellow Americans to create a new era of service and civic engagement in America, an era in which all Americans work together to try and solve our greatest and most persistent societal challenges. The ServiceNation Summit brings together 600 leaders of all ages and from every sector of American life—from universities and foundations, to businesses and government—to celebrate the power and potential of service, and to lay out a bold agenda for addressing society’s challenges through expanded opportunities for community and national service. 11:00-2:00 pm 9/11 DAY OF SERVICE Organized by myGoodDeed l o c a t i o n PS 124, 40 Division Street SEPTEMBER 11.2008 4:00-6:00 pm REGIstRATION l o c a t i o n Columbia University 9/11 DAY OF SERVICE 6:00-7:00 pm OUR ROLE, OUR VOICE, OUR SERVICE PRESIDENTIAL FORUM& 101 Young Leaders Building a Nation of Service l o c a t i o n Columbia University Usher Raymond, IV • RECORDING ARTIST, suMMIT YOUTH CHAIR 7:00-8:00 pm PRESIDEntIAL FORUM ON SERVICE Opening Program l o c a t i o n Columbia University Bill Novelli • CEO, AARP Laysha Ward • PRESIDENT, COMMUNITY RELATIONS AND TARGET FOUNDATION Lee Bollinger • PRESIDENT, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Governor David A.
    [Show full text]
  • Class of 2003 Finals Program
    School of Law One Hundred and Seventy-Fourth FINAL EXERCISES The Lawn May 18, 2003 1 Distinction 2 High Distinction 3 Highest Distinction 4 Honors 5 High Honors 6 Highest Honors 7 Distinguished Majors Program School of Law Finals Speaker Mortimer M. Caplin Former Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service Mortimer Caplin was born in New York in 1916. He came to Charlottesville in 1933, graduating from the College in 1937 and the Law School in 1940. During the Normandy invasion, he served as U.S. Navy beachmaster and was cited as a member of the initial landing force on Omaha Beach. He continued his federal service as Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service under President Kennedy from 1961 to 1964. When he entered U.Va. at age 17, Mr. Caplin committed himself to all aspects of University life. From 1933-37, he was a star athlete in the University’s leading sport—boxing—achieving an undefeated record for three years in the mid-1930s and winning the NCAA middleweight title in spite of suffering a broken hand. He also served as coach of the boxing team and was president of the University Players drama group. At the School of Law, he was editor-in-chief of the Virginia Law Review and graduated as the top student in his class. In addition to his deep commitment to public service, he is well known for his devotion to teaching and to the educational process and to advancing tax law. Mr. Caplin taught tax law at U.Va. from 1950-61, while serving as president of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
    [Show full text]
  • Miller Center University of Virginia Cabinet Report 2016–2017
    UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA MILLER CENTER STANDARD PRESORT P.O. Box 400406 US POSTAGE Charlottesville, VA 22904-4406 PAID millercenter.org CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA PERMIT No. 164 REVEALINGCABINET REPORT 2016–2017 MILLER CENTER UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA DEMOCRACY CONTENTS FROM THE DIRECTORS ……………………………………… 3 EVENT LISTINGS FIRST YEAR …………………………………………………… 4 GREAT ISSUES ……………………………………………… 6 HISTORICAL PRESIDENCY ……………………………… 6 OTHER EVENTS ……………………………………………… 7 AMERICAN FORUM ………………………………………… 8 IN THE MEDIA ………………………………………………… 12 FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES AND ASSETS ……………… 14 PHILANTHROPIC SUPPORT ……………………………… 16 SCHOLARS AND STAFF …………………………………… 21 GOVERNING COUNCIL …………………………………… 22 ON THE COVER – BACKGROUND IMAGE MILLER CENTER FOUNDATION BOARD …………… 22 Ramón de Elorriaga. General Washington Delivering His THE HOLTON SOCIETY ……………………………………… 22 Inaugural Address to New York, April 30, 1789. 1899. Oil MILLER CENTER, BY THE NUMBERS………………… 23 on canvas. Federal Hall National Memorial, New York City. FROM THE DIRECTORS Dear Friend of the Miller Center: In this era of bitter partisanship, our work studying the American presidency has never been more important. We mine the lessons of history to provide a nonpartisan foundation on which public policy can be built—bringing our discoveries to the media, scholars, and key presidential infl uencers on both sides of the political aisle. And we bring our insights directly to interested citizens, through our website, electronic newsletters, public events, and social media. Our commitment to high-quality presidential research
    [Show full text]
  • Speaker's Corner
    APRIL 2001 SPEAKER’S CORNER April 11, 2001 April 24, 2001 Washington, DC Washington, DC Planned Giving Study Group CBIT Seminar Luncheon Rebecca Rosenberg will be Marcus Owens will be the speaking on “Section 904 FUTURE SEMINARS luncheon speaker discussing Regulations and Foreign Tax “Charitable Giving Issues.” Credits” to commercial bankers of multinational commercial banks at 05/03-4 National Association of Bond this seminar. Lawyers Conference April 12, 2001 Speakers: Christopher Rizek Charlottesville, VA Lloyd Mayer University of Virginia’s Annual Founder’s Day April 25, 2001 05/11 ABA Taxation Section, Celebration Houston, TX Administrative Practice Mortimer Caplin will receive the American Petroleum Committee Meeting 25th Annual Thomas Jefferson Institute’s 67th Annual Tax Moderator: Christopher Rizek Medal in Law at the University of Forum Virginia and will give a public Christopher Rizek is speaking on 05/11 ABA Taxation Section, Tax lecture on “The State of a panel on “Ethics Issues” which Exempt Organization Committee Meeting Lawyering.” will include discussion on the Panel Speaker: Catherine Circular 230 Update. Livingston April 18-20, 2001 San Diego, CA 05/18 The Urban Institute 29th Annual Salk Institute April 26-27, 2001 Speaker: Milton Cerny Seminar Chapel Hill, NC Thomas Troyer will be giving a 2001 University of North speech on April 18th on “Foundation Carolina School of Law – J. Grantmaking Policies, Practices th th Nelson Young 20 Annual Tax and Problems” and on April 19 on Institute “Penalties, Abatement and Cono Namorato and Scott Michel Correction for Foundation will be speaking on “Strategic and Violations: What to do if You Slip Ethical Considerations in Up.” Marcus Owens will be th Representing a Client Before and speaking on April 20 on the “IRS During a Criminal Tax Fraud and Private Foundations in the Investigation.” New Millennium.” April 26, 2001 Washington, DC For more information, please contact Georgetown University Law Brooke Gadwell at 202-862-7803 or at [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Saving Private
    FROM THE PUBLISHER (C) Tax Analysts 2013. All rights reserved. does not claim copyright in any public domain or third party content. tax notes™ Saving Private IRS priators in the House have proposed drastically slashing the IRS budget, which would result in By Christopher Bergin further bleeding for an already injured tax admin- istration system. There is nothing positive to be said about any of Christopher Bergin is the this. And for those experiencing schadenfreude, president and publisher of you need to get a life, or at least go rent a Three Tax Analysts and a former Stooges flick. editor of Tax Notes. But something else happened this summer. Not Bergin uses Mortimer Ca- something disagreeable, but something nice. Mor- plin’s 97th birthday as an timer Caplin turned 97. occasion to highlight the for- Mortimer Caplin was IRS commissioner in the mer IRS commissioner as an example of the hardworking 1960s under President Kennedy. I consider Mort a friend of mine. I also consider him a legend. He is a Christopher Bergin and dedicated people who work at the nation’s tax col- fascinating man who has seen a lot and is very wise. lection agency, and he calls on congressional critics He is a shining example of the kind of person who of the IRS to take a more reasonable approach to works at the IRS. But he is not an exception. To funding and supporting tax administration. illustrate my metaphor, I could have chosen any number of former IRS commissioners or employees Summer in Washington doesn’t agree with every- who exemplify the best in civil service — none, one, but it usually agrees with me.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Handle a Federal Income Tax Audit Mortimer Caplin
    Washington and Lee Law Review Volume 28 | Issue 2 Article 4 Fall 9-1-1971 How To Handle A Federal Income Tax Audit Mortimer Caplin Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/wlulr Part of the Accounting Law Commons, and the Taxation-Federal Commons Recommended Citation Mortimer Caplin, How To Handle A Federal Income Tax Audit, 28 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 331 (1971), https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/wlulr/vol28/iss2/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Washington and Lee Law Review at Washington & Lee University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Washington and Lee Law Review by an authorized editor of Washington & Lee University School of Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HOW TO HANDLE A FEDERAL INCOME TAX AUDIT* MORTIMER CAPLINt The United States tax system is recognized as the most effective and efficient in the world. Its chief characteristic is the unusually high level of taxpayer compliance which is reflected in the self-assessment of taxes on income tax returns,' in withholding of taxes by employers, 2 and in the 3 advance payment of estimated taxes. About ninety-seven percent of the gross collections of the Internal Revenue Service comes from these self-reporting procedures. Some three percent-$6 billion out of $196 billion for fiscal 1970-results from IRS enforcement activities and from collection of delinquent taxes. Despite these raw statistics, however, a vigorous and balanced enforcement program-with the emphasis on extensive and professional audits of tax returns-is regarded by the IRS as the keystone to accurate tax reporting and prompt tax collection.' As an essential tool for fulfilling these various responsibilities, Internal Revenue leans heavily on a computer processing system, which not only performs important verification functions but also identifies reporting discrepancies and tax returns which require further examination.
    [Show full text]
  • CONGRESSIONAL RECORD—SENATE July 16, 2001
    July 16, 2001 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD—SENATE 13305 for 61⁄2 decades honorably served his Mort Caplin returned from the war to New This simply opened a new phase in his aston- Nation, his community, and our be- York, but not many years later heard the ishing career of service and dedication to loved University of Virginia, amassing University’s call and answered, joining the this University and to the profession. Still to an exemplary record of accomplish- Law faculty in 1950. For over a decade he come was a five-year term on the Univer- sity’s Board of Visitors and exemplary serv- ment of the highest order. I ask unani- taught federal taxation and constitutional law. During this time he produced important ice to the Law School as chair of the execu- mous consent that the following re- scholarship and excelled in the classroom. tive committee of our recently concluded marks made by Robert E. Scott, Dean Perhaps equally important was the leader- capital campaign. When we began the Law of the University of Virginia Law ship role Mortimer Caplin played at the Uni- School campaign in July 1992, the first per- School, be printed in the RECORD. versity and in the Charlottesville commu- son I went to see was Mortimer Caplin. When These remarks are part of a speech nity. In 1950 Mort led the Law faculty in its I asked whether he would lead what would Dean Scott made during the presen- unanimous decision to admit Gregory Swan- become an eight-year fundraising effort. tation to Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Speaker's Corner
    FEBRUARY 2002 SPEAKER’S CORNER February 26, 2002 UPCOMING EVENTS Symposium on Election Reform Location: Washington, DC Speaker: Trevor Potter Trevor Potter will serve on a panel entitled “Legal Issues FEBRUARY and Implications of Election Reform” at this symposium being sponsored by the Georgetown Journal on Poverty February 11-12, 2002 Law and Policy. Mealey’s Asbestos 101 Conference Location: The Ritz Carlton, Pentagon City, VA February 28, 2002 Speaker: Peter Lockwood Tax Executives Institute’s Currency and Financial On February 12th, Peter Lockwood will serve on a panel Products Seminars entitled “Current Litigation Environment and the Future of Location: Houston, TX the Litigation.” Speaker: Rebecca Rosenberg February 12, 2002 MARCH Greater Washington Society of CPAs Location: Washington, D.C. March 4, 2002 Speaker: Lloyd Mayer Briefing for Newly Enriched 9/11 Funders Lloyd Mayer will speak to the Not-for-profit Committee on Location: Davis, Polk and Wardell, New York, NY “Lobbying, Political Activity, and the Internet.” Speaker: Catherine Livingston This briefing is being co-sponsored by the Alliance for February 13, 2002 Nonprofit Governance, the Philanthropic Advisory Service The Diane Rehm Show – WAMU-FM 88.5 of the Better Business Bureau, Lawyers Alliance for New Location: American University York, and the New York Regional Association of Guest: Trevor Potter Grantmakers. Catherine Livingston will be a panelist on Trevor Potter will be a guest on this hour-long radio show “September 11 Disaster Relief Grantmaking: A Legal and and will discuss campaign finance reform. Operational Guide.” To listen to the program, see: For more information, see: http://www.wamu.org/dr/ http://www.angonline.org/events.asp February 19, 2002 March 11-12, 2002 The Annual Virginia Nonprofit Conference 26th Annual Tax Law Conference Location: University of Richmond Jepson Alumni Center, Location: Washington, Marriott, Washington, DC Richmond, VA Speaker: Christopher Rizek Speaker: Marcus Owens Radford University is sponsoring the conference.
    [Show full text]
  • JCT Investigation of Nixon's Tax Returns
    JCT Investigation of Nixon’s Tax Returns Joseph J. Thorndike Tax History Project, Tax Analysts and Northwestern University, Pritzker School of Law February 2016 Draft prepared for the United States Capitol Historical Society’s program on The History and Role of the Joint Committee: the Joint Committee and Tax History Comments welcome. 1 JCT Investigation of Nixon’s Tax Returns Joseph J. Thorndike DRAFT: NOT FOR QUOTATION OR DISTRIBUTION WITHOUT AUTHOR’S PERMISSION “Make sure you pay your taxes,” Richard Nixon remarked to journalist David Frost during one of their famous interviews. “Otherwise you can get in a lot of trouble.”1 Nixon had reason to know. Three years earlier, he had been forced from office by his role in the Watergate break-in and its subsequent cover-up. But Nixon had tax troubles, too – serious enough to prompt talk of resignation even before Watergate doomed his presidency. In the summer and fall of 1973, Nixon was engulfed by a controversy over his personal taxes. An outsize charitable donation was the proximate cause, but the scandal expanded to include numerous issues with the returns Nixon had filed between 1968 and 1972. The returns were private, of course, but a series of leaks, combined with informed speculation, gave critics plenty of ammunition. Nixon, it seemed, had played fast and loose with the revenue laws, exploiting his position to minimize taxes and avoid scrutiny from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Nixon’s tax scandal actually prompted one of his most famous public statements, generally thought to refer to Wartergate. "People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook,” he told reporters in November 1973.
    [Show full text]
  • Making Law Work: Robert F. Kennedy and the American Lawyer As an Agent of Reform
    Making Law Work: Robert F. Kennedy and the American Lawyer as an Agent of Reform Emma Diamond Hall Framingham, Massachusetts BA, Colby College, 2010 JD, University of Virginia School of Law, 2013 A Thesis presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History University of Virginia August, 2013 Making Law Work: Robert F. Kennedy and the American Lawyer as An Agent of Reform Emma D. Hall Introduction: Robert F. Kennedy, Esq. In the prologue of Kennedy Justice, Victor Navasky first defines his subject, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, not by his official role as the most powerful lawyer in the country, but by his former political status as “the President’s campaign manager.”1 This fundamental characterization tracks Navasky’s preoccupation with “the tension between law and politics,” which he treated as the organizing principle for his account of the Kennedy Justice Department. From the outset of his study, Navasky made clear that, in his view, Kennedy resided firmly on the political end of the spectrum. He contrasted Kennedy, the President’s brother and an appointment made “in the political tradition” with the “elite corps of lawyer’s lawyers” that he chose to staff the Department, appointments that Navasky asserts were made “in the legal tradition.”2 This stark contrast between Kennedy-the-politician and the “lawyer’s lawyers” who worked for him runs throughout Navasky’s account, which focused primarily on the political and personality clashes that defined the
    [Show full text]
  • With Charity for All
    The Yale Law Journal Volume 93, Number 8, July 1984 With Charity for All Oliver A. Houckt TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1419 I. TOWARDS AN UNDERSTANDING OF CHARITABLE ORGA- NIZATIONS UNDER THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE 1421 A. An Historical Perspective 1422 B. Public Charities and the Internal Revenue Code 1425 1. Income Tax Exemptions 1426 2. Contributions and Deductions 1428 3. Fringe Benefits and White Hats 1429 C. Civic Leagues and Business Leagues 1430 1. Civic Leagues and Social Welfare Organizations 1430 2. Business Leagues and Chambers of Commerce 1432 t Associate Professor, Tulane Law School. This study was begun in August 1981 and proceeded through December 1983. No sponsorship or funding was received from any source; if its methods or conclusions are faulty, they are at least those of the author and of no other influence. Tribute should be paid here, however, to the work of several law students who assisted in this research, with small reward, and without whom the assembly of information and law could not have been accomplished: Karen A. Adams, Michael G. Dwyer, John D. Edgcomb, Noel T. Johnson, Frank S. Jones, Barry R. Scott, Susan B. Snyder and Michael A. Stroud. The assistance of the Internal Revenue Service in providing public records is also acknowledged with thanks. 1415 The Yale Law Journal Vol. 93: 1415, 1984 D. The Requirements for Public Charities in Practice: The "Organizational" and "Operational" Tests 1434 II. TOWARDS A DEFINITION OF PUBLIC INTEREST LAW 1438 A. The Roots of Public Interest Law 1439 B. The Internal Revenue Service Response to Public In- terest Law: The 1970 Guidelines 1443 C.
    [Show full text]
  • Tax Protestors and Penalties: Ensuring Perceived Fairness and Mitigating Systemic Costs Danshera Cords
    BYU Law Review Volume 2005 | Issue 6 Article 2 12-18-2005 Tax Protestors and Penalties: Ensuring Perceived Fairness and Mitigating Systemic Costs Danshera Cords Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/lawreview Part of the Taxation-Federal Commons, and the Tax Law Commons Recommended Citation Danshera Cords, Tax Protestors and Penalties: Ensuring Perceived Fairness and Mitigating Systemic Costs, 2005 BYU L. Rev. 1515 (2005). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/lawreview/vol2005/iss6/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Brigham Young University Law Review at BYU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in BYU Law Review by an authorized editor of BYU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 2CORDS.FIN.DOC 3/14/2006 5:16:09 PM Tax Protestors and Penalties: Ensuring Perceived Fairness and Mitigating Systemic Costs Danshera Cords ∗ “For voluntary self-assessment to be both meaningful and productive of revenues, the citizens must not only have confidence in the fairness of the tax laws, but also in the uniform and vigorous enforcement of these laws.”1 I. INTRODUCTION Each year hundreds of thousands of taxpayers use abusive schemes to avoid paying some or all of their federal income taxes.2 Tax avoidance schemes include abusive tax shelters, fraudulent transactions, and ∗ Associate Professor of Law, Academic Director of Graduate Law Programs, Capital University Law School; LL.M. in Taxation 2000, New York University School of Law; J.D. 1998, Seattle University School of Law; B.A.
    [Show full text]