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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW

Inside: A Decade of Service Law School Dean to Step Down Footprints in the Alumni Winemakers 25 Years of Hope Immigration Law Clinic Celebrates Anniversary Debt Relief for Graduates College Cost & Reduction Act Signed into Law Ten years feels like a long time to be Dean. While much the Internet is the modern source of knowledge. has remained the same during my tenure, much has Memoranda and newsletters are electronic; and changed. Over the years, I have written to you about “phoning home” is as simple as reaching in your our exceptional faculty, staff, and students; how we pocket and a few buttons. Hallways joining have expanded and enhanced our academic programs; faculty and staff offices are often deserted as people our rich tradition of public service and the difficulty our communicate electronically, never leaving their chairs. students face in today’s world of ever-increasing fees; Technology has a way of reminding us that much does the Law School’s response to this new environment change in a short time, including the Dean. I have with increased financial aid and loan repayment announced that I am stepping down as Dean of the UC assistance programs; and about our many alumni and Davis School of Law in June 2008. I am pleased with friends who have been instrumental in developing all that has been accomplished during my tenure. The philanthropic giving to the School. School weathered some difficult times only to come I write to you today not to focus on the challenges out stronger and well positioned for the next 10 years. and triumphs over the past 10 years, but instead to When I walk the hallways of King Hall in the future, I’m reminisce on a very visible change that most of us take sure I will be struck by changes I cannot even imagine for granted in our day-to-day lives – technology. today. But that is in the future, I still have one more year I know it is unusual for a law school dean, at least one as Dean, and have much to accomplish. I hope you will of my age, to write about technology, but as I walk the join me in making this year the most memorable of all. hallways of King Hall, I feel these past 10 years have gone by quickly, and then I see the computer lab or Sincerely, students on cell phones and am reminded of how much time has truly passed.

I remember when students scribbled quickly in their notebooks, and using the telephone required a quarter Rex R. Perschbacher and knowing where the pay phones were located. Dean Communication was face to face, and books were the source of knowledge. Instead of a computer lab, we had copy centers. Written memoranda and letters were the standard form of business communication. Getting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s, assassination on April 4, 1968, had an immediate impact on UC Davis School of Law students and a group together or scheduling a meeting, required faculty, who were actively involved in the legal, political, and social de- multiple telephone calls. bates of the late sixties. When construction of the Law School building was completed in the fall of 1968, a committee of students and faculty Today, our lecture halls have been retrofitted for audio began working to name the building for Dr. King. The building was officially dedicated after Dr. King on April 12, 1969. Today, King and video broadcasting, laptop computers line the Hall stands as a tribute to Dr. King’s efforts to achieve social and desks, notes are passed through instant messaging, political justice by lawful and orderly means. and meetings are scheduled automatically through Photograph of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,: Corbis. calendar systems or by e-mail. LCD screens in On the cover: Dean Rex R. Perschbacher; founding Dean Edward L. Barrett, Jr.; UC Davis Larry N. Vanderhoef the lobby and library announce daily activities, and Credit: Karin Higgins King Hall Counselor

Managing Editor Judith P. Cook

Writer & Editor Charlene Logan Burnett

Designer Sam Sellers

Photography by UC Davis School of Law

Offices of Contents External Relations Alumni Relations, 2 News & Notes Development, & Marketing Director, Marketing and Public Relations 8 A Decade of Service Judith P. Cook Law School Dean to Step Down Senior Editor, News & Publications Charlene Logan Burnett 10 Footprints in the Vineyard Events Coordinator Alumni Winemakers Deb Matsumoto Graphic Designer & Photographer 14 25 Years of Hope Sam Sellers Immigration Law Clinic Celebrates Anniversary Director, Giving Programs Jean Korinke 16 Laying the Foundation Development and Marketing Assistant King Hall Expansion & Renovation Faye Gonzales Ceremonial Groundbreaking

UC Davis School of Law 18 Debt Relief for Graduates 400 Mrak Hall Drive College Cost and Reduction Access Act Davis, CA 95616 530-754-5328 530-754-5327 (fax) 20 Donor Rolls [email protected] www.law.ucdavis.edu 30 Photo Gallery

CounselorCounselor • Spring• Fall 20072007 11 39th Commencement Focuses on Courage UC Davis Ranked with Top 25 recommended expanding immigration Law Schools for Scholarly opportunities and reducing visa backlogs. UC Davis School of Law awarded Hing, the author of 196 Juris Doctor degrees and 20 Impact Deporting Our Souls—Values, Morality, and Immigration Master of Laws degrees at the School’s Policy and Defining America Through commencement ceremony held on May Immigration Policy, is a legal scholar on 19, 2007, in the ARC Pavilion on the UC immigration policy and race relations. Davis campus.

Barack Obama Interviewed on ImmigrationProf Blog The latest law school rankings by ImmigrationProf Blog, edited by UC Professor Brian Leiter of the University of Davis School of Law Professors Jennifer Texas School of Law (and soon to be at the Chacón, Bill Ong Hing, and Kevin University of Chicago), placed UC Davis Johnson, posted an exclusive interview School of Law in the top 25 law schools with Presidential candidate and Senator for scholarly impact in 2007. Leiter’s study Barack Obama (D-Ill) on September 25, looked at citations for all 2007 - 2008 2007. tenure-stream members of the academic Editors prepared a list of questions faculty from 2000 to the present. UC for Senator Obama on a range of difficult Davis tied for number 24 among U.S. law immigration issues, including immigration schools. reform, undocumented immigration, Leiter’s law school rankings site is family immigration, deportation designed for prospective, current, and and immigration raids, local (anti-) former law students; law school faculty immigration ordinances, integration of and administrators; and practicing lawyers immigrants into U.S. society, the deaths in law firms, government, and public along the U.S./Mexico border, and his interest organizations. About the study, vote in favor of the Secure Fence Act. Leiter said, “I am confident that one will ImmigrationProf Blog is actively Associate Dean of Academic Affairs learn more about faculty quality at leading seeking other 2008 Presidential Kevin R. Johnson presided over the 2007 American law schools from the scholarly candidates to answer the same commencement. He delivered welcoming impact study...than from U.S. News.” immigration questions that were posed to remarks and presented the School of Senator Obama. Law Medal to Nathan B. Sabri ’07. Other Hing Testifies before House A full transcript of the interview is speakers included Student Speaker available in the September 2007 News Judiciary Subcommittee on Tarik Naber ’07 and Faculty Speaker Archives on the UC Davis School of Law and Professor of Law Carlton Larson. Immigration Web site: www.law.ucdavis.edu/news/ Alumnus and best-sellng author Gus Lee Bill Ong Hing, professor of law and archives/ ’76 delivered the commencement address Asian American calling for students to be courageous in Studies at UC Davis, their personal and private lives. testified before the “I’m passionate about integrity and House Judiciary courage,” Lee said, “act for the right, Subcommittee regardless of risk to self interest, and on Immigration, respectfully correct wrongs.” Citizenship, Highlights for the Class of 2007 Refugees, Border Security, and included its great success in regional International Law on May 8, 2007. His and national moot court and writing testimony during the hearing was on Visit ImmigrationProf Blog at http://lawprofessors.typepad/immigration competitions. In addition, students the role of family-based immigration were active in community service and in the U.S. immigration system. He organized a number of legal symposiums and lectures, featuring renowned panelists and speakers, at the School of Law.

2 Counselor • Fall 2007 Legal Assistance.” The UC Davis Medal honors Judge Awards UC Davis individuals of rare accomplishment. Law Clinics Attorney Fees Past recipients include President Bill United States District Judge Ronald , astronaut and alumnus Stephen M. Whyte ordered payment of $16,145 Robinson, and philanthropists Robert in attorney’s fees for work performed and Margrit Mondavi. Reynoso is the by the UC Davis Civil Rights and first professor to receive the award. Immigration Law Clinics in 2005 and The medal was presented at a 2006. celebration of Reynoso’s lifetime The UC Davis Immigration Law achievements at the UC Davis Mondavi Clinic, in the case of Juan Carlos Center for the Performing Arts on Valadez-Lopez v. Michael Chertoff, et September 15, 2007. Carol Livingston al., had filed a federal petition for the ’80 was the master of ceremonies. release from immigration detention for The ceremony was attended by a client who had been diagnosed with key figures in California’s labor and schizophrenia. The Clinic alleged that legal communities, including Dolores its client was denied medication by A People’s Attorney Huerta, co-founder of United Farm officials from Immigration and Customs Workers, José Padilla, executive director Enforcement and employees of Professor Cruz Reynoso of California Rural Legal Assistance Sacramento County Jail, with whom the Receives UC Davis Medal (CRLA), and John Trasvina, president and general counsel of the Mexican federal government contracts to detain Cruz Reynoso, a farmworker’s son American Legal Defense Fund. immigrants. The Clinic also alleged who rose from an Orange County barrio Associate Justice Coleman A. Blease that government officials refused to to become the first Latino to serve on of the Third Appellate District Court of transport the client to hearings in the California Supreme Court, received Appeal also spoke at the event, and a neighboring Yolo County, where the the UC Davis Medal, the highest tribute number of justices attended. client sought to withdraw a no contest bestowed by the campus. “As a farmworker on a dirt path, plea in a criminal matter. A civil rights champion, Reynoso knocking doors as a community The Clinic eventually negotiated served three California governors and organizer, a people’s attorney in a settlement to the lawsuit, which two U.S. presidents. He was a founding California Rural Legal Assistance, Cruz’s required that the client be given his board member and executive director path for justice led him to the state’s medication and be transported to his of California Rural Legal Assistance highest bench, the Supreme Court of hearings in Yolo County. Subsequently, (CRLA). In 2000, President Clinton California, where his gavel demanded the client was able to withdraw his plea awarded him the Presidential Medal fairness and equality,” Huerta said. and was released from custody by the of Freedom, the nation’s highest Padilla credited Reynoso for building Immigration Court. civilian honor, in recognition of his the CRLA into a premiere legal aid Students from the Civil Rights “compassion and work on behalf of organization for the poor, and for setting Clinic then filed a motion for attorney’s the downtrodden.” Reynoso has been a a personal example for generations of fees under the federal Equal Access to member of the UC Davis School of Law Latinos. “Cruz Reynoso was in the first Justice Act. Judge Whyte granted the faculty since 2001, when he joined the generation of Latinos in this country motion, awarding more than $7,000 campus as the first person to hold the to go off to a university,” Padilla said. for the work of UC Davis law students Boochever and Bird Chair for the Study “He was a trailblazer, who showed us Jonathan Elson ’06, Sarah Farnsworth and Teaching of Freedom and Equality. we could be attorneys in the service of ’07, and Sean Strauss ’06, and over “Cruz Reynoso is one of the great communities. He showed us we could $8,000 for the work of their supervising civil rights leaders of the second lead, that we could strive to sit on the attorneys. half of the 20th century,” said Rex bench of the highest courts in the land.” In awarding fees, Judge Whyte said, Perschbacher, dean of the UC Davis Reynoso stepped down in December “because the government has failed School of Law. “Never forgetting the as the Boochever and Bird Chair at the to provide adequate explanations for law’s obligation to serve both the School of Law. As a professor emeritus, the failure to provide medication to rich and the poor, regardless of race, he will continue to teach classes and to petitioner during his detention and the ethnicity or religion, he tirelessly worked write and comment on civil liberties, denial of transportation for petitioner to on behalf of California’s farmworkers fair treatment for immigrants, and issues his hearing, the government’s position and rural poor, both in private practice affecting Latinos, especially Mexican is not substantially justified.” in the Imperial Valley and through his Americans. dynamic leadership of California Rural

Counselor • Fall 2007 3 Alumni Association Awards Scholarships Elmendorf Previews Key Interest Election Case before U.S. Law), which During the Class of 2007 Celebration, held April 26, 2007, in the King Hall Supreme Court was founded in 1986 by Courtyard, a number Recently tenured, Professor of Law law students of graduating students Christopher S. Elmendorf previews dedicated were honored with N.Y. State Board of Elections v. Torres, an to working scholarships and important case before the U.S. Supreme for equal awards. Court this term, in the October 2007 issue justice on Dean Rex of Election Law Journal. Elmendorf sees behalf of underserved communities and Perschbacher welcomed the case as significant beyond , causes. Today, Equal Justice Works is the the students to the national leader in creating summer and celebration barbecue, postgraduate public interest opportunities which was hosted by for law students and lawyers, as well as in the Law School and urging more public interest programming the School of Law at law schools. Alumni Association. “My years in civil rights have taught “I hope you will me that the struggle for justice is take this time, and unending, and we must be in the fight sometime this summer, for the long haul,” Igasaki said. “Nothing to acknowledge the is more important than developing new achievement that is leadership to carry the fight forward.” about to be conferred The UC Davis School of Law Public upon you. Receiving Service Law Program is an academic a J.D. degree is an certification program developed for students exceptional accomplishment,” he said. “I calling it “a case whose legal ramifications seeking public service careers. This year, a know each and every one of you will be could prove as far reaching as its facts are total of 88 UC Davis law students received great lawyers—lawyers with conscience, peculiar.” certificates. In addition, 20 students drive, and the educational backing to Elmendorf’s varied teaching and were recognized as award nominees for make a difference in both your public and research interests include election law, the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Service private endeavors. Congratulations to you administrative law, constitutional law, Award, which honors a graduating student all!” and property and natural resources law. who exemplifies Dr. King’s vision and Each year, the School of Law Alumni His recent writings have focused on (1) commitment to public service. Association honors a student with an the roles that ongoing advisory bodies Those nominated for the award alumni association scholarship. This year, can play in fostering governmental represent the best the legal education has due to the outstanding achievements of accountability and sustaining the to offer: a combination of competent legal all 16 applicants and additional funds foundational commitments of liberal representation and a commitment to the from the King Hall Annual Fund, the democracy, and (2) judicial formulation underrepresented and disenfranchised. award committee was able to honor and administration of doctrines to This year, Katherine Ruhl ’07, who three recipients with scholarships. The implement the fundamental right to vote. worked with the UC Davis Immigration award was recently named The Margaret Law Clinic and the Center for Gender and Frank Johns Alumni Association Igasaki ’79 Public Service and Refugee Studies, was awarded the Scholarship Award. Graduation Speaker prestigious Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Steve Boutin ’72, president-elect of the Service Award. Ruhl was one of several Alumni Association and chairman of the Paul Igasaki ’79 spoke at the Public law students who visited the Mariposa student outreach committee, and Laura Service Law Program graduation on April port of entry, at Nogales, Arizona, over her Warner ’06, last year’s scholarship winner, 26, 2007. Spring Break and observed life along the introduced this year’s recipients: Megan Igasaki is the deputy chief executive border. Lane, Nick Lieberknecht, and Austin officer of Equal Justice Works (formerly Quinn-Davidson. the National Association for Public

4 Counselor • Fall 2007 Writing Prize and KHOP Students Honored Environmental Law at Banquet Certificates Awarded The King Hall Outreach Program Clinton Curry ’07, Nathan Jacobsen (KHOP) celebrated the graduation ’07, and Timothy McRae ’07 were honored of 28 participants who committed to at a special ceremony held on May 19, the intensive two-year Law School 2007, for students who received the UC preparation program during their Davis Environmental Law Certificate. undergraduate junior and senior years. During the ceremony, The Richard M. An awards banquet took place at the UC Frank Environmental Law Writing Prize Davis Mondavi Center, Studio Theatre, was awarded to Nathan Jacobsen. on August 10, 2007, and featured The To qualify for the certificate, Honorable Tani Gorre Cantil-Sakauye students completed Environmental Law, ’84 of the Third District Court of Environmental Practice, Administrative Appeal, as the keynote speaker. Law, and eight units of environmental Justice Cantil-Sakauye is a second- generation Asian American. Raised by or natural resources law electives with Professor West a GPA of at least 3.0. They also wrote a parents who were farm workers, she Marks Retirement by substantial paper on an environmental entered law school at UC Davis in 1980 or natural resources law topic. This is and quickly became involved in issues Establishing a Social the second year the School of Law has facing minorities, including celebrations Justice Scholarship of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Day. awarded certificates in Environmental Professor of Law Emeriti Marty West Justice Cantil-Sakauye said that through Law. marked her retirement by endowing her parents’ struggles, she became The Richard M. Frank Environmental a scholarship fund for future UC keenly aware of discrimination. Law Writing Prize honors Richard M. Davis law students dedicated to social The KHOP program is a core Frank ’74, who continues to enjoy a justice issues. Mark Askanas ’85, Linda element in UC Davis School of Law’s distinguished career in public service McAtee ’85, Wayne Bartholomew ’71, mission to provide genuine equal environmental law. Frank spent 30 years Angela E. Oh ’86, Gage Dungy ’03, Joan access to law school from the broadest at the California Attorney General’s Haratani ’84, Felicia Reid ’91, Carolyn cross section of the state’s public. To office, rising to the position of Chief Langenkamp ’79, Darrell Steinberg ’84, date, KHOP has successfully mentored Deputy Attorney General. Last summer, and Jason Rabinowitz ’96 aided West in students who have gone on to law he stepped down to become the first this endeavor. school at UC Davis, UC Berkeley, UCLA, Executive Director of the California West’s decision to set up a Seton Hall, and Golden Gate University. Center for Environmental Law and scholarship fund was one way to express KHOP seeks participants that are Policy at UC Berkeley School of Law. her appreciation for the many law from economically disadvantaged His knowledge, integrity, and devotion students who have inspired her over the backgrounds, first-generation college to public service provide an outstanding years. She also expressed concern about students, or with a demonstrated role model for current UC Davis School the increases in tuition and fees over the commitment to underserved of Law students, as do his dedication to past four years, doubling from $12,000 communities. They attend special the School and record of giving back as an per year in 2002-03 to $24,500 in 2006- classes during the academic year and alumnus. 07, “Such high costs discourage students participate in four-week workshops interested in social justice from seeking during the summer. They prepare for a UC Davis legal education.” law school by taking LSAT preparation, The goal of $100,000 has been logical reasoning, and writing skills met for the Martha West Social Justice classes and meet with current law Scholarship Fund. The organizers students and professors and participate hope the community will continue to in application workshops and a contribute to support this cause. mentorship program.

Counselor • Fall 2007 5 Randisi ’08 Receives NACC Writing Award Korean and Japanese and general legal counsel to the district Andrea Randisi ’08 won the 2007 Law Judicial Scholars come to in construction, business, and real estate Student Essay Competition sponsored by the UC Davis Law School matters. Parzen works at Luce Forward National Association of Counsel for Children Soosaeng Moon, a judge in the and teaches employment law for (NACC). Her winning essay, “Prevention Incheon District Court of Korea, is a SDSU’s College of Extended Studies. and Rehabilitation of Youth Who Commit visiting scholar at UC Davis School of Law His volunteer position as president of Sexual Offenses: The Importance of an this year through the one-year visiting ElderHelp’s board of directors overlaps Inter-Agency Approach,” will be published scholar program with the Korean Supreme with the work of his wife, Marguerite, in the 2008 Children’s Law Manual. Randisi Court. In addition, Rieko Tabata, a judge who owns and runs a geriatric care will also receive $1,000, a one-year NACC of the Utsunomiya District Court in Japan, management business. He also provides membership, and a scholarship to the 2008 is visiting as part of the Japanese Judicial employment counseling pro bono to conference in Savannah, Georgia. Scholar Program. various nonprofit organizations. Essays were evaluated on the importance Judge Moon received a Bachelor of of the topic to advancing the legal interests Laws and a Master of Laws from Seoul Shelton ’93 elected V.P. of of children, originality, persuasiveness, and National University. He completed the quality of research and writing. Essay a two-year program at the Judicial National Bar Association topics of national importance were given Research and Training Institute of the Demetrius Shelton ’93 has been preference. Supreme Court of Korea. His research elected vice president of the National NACC is a non-profit child advocacy interests are in environmental issues and Bar Association (NBA), an organization and professional membership association environmental law, such as the function of that represents more than 44,000 dedicated to representation and protection the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) predominately African-American of children in the legal system. in legal proceedings and civil law suits. He attorneys, judges, legal scholars, and law is also interested in studying existing legal students worldwide. Sarmiento ’07 Receives cases related to the National Environment Shelton works as a deputy city Community Service Award Policy Act (NEPA). attorney with the City of Oakland in Judge Tabata is a graduate of the the litigation division. He has also Salvador Gregorio Sarmiento Torres Faculty of Law of the University of Tokyo. served as special counsel to the Oakland ’07 was named Outstanding Graduate She was a legal apprentice at the Legal Police Department and lead counsel Student by UC Davis for his commitment to Training and Research Institute of the and policy advisor to a number of serving minority and poor communities by Japanese Supreme Court. In October departments and agencies, including the addressing legal and human rights issues. 2004, she was appointed a judge and city’s Code Enforcement Division, the While at UC Davis School of Law, assigned to the Utsunomiya District Life Enrichment Agency, the Oakland Sarmiento Torres served as the Pacific Court. Her research interests are in civil Public Library and the Oakland Ice region director of the National Latino/a Law and criminal law. Center. Shelton has also served as chief Student Association, political chairman of advisor to the Oakland City Council’s Life the La Raza Law Student Association, and served more than 1,000 hours with the Chong ’99 and Enrichment Committee and on matters pertaining to Business Improvement Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights. Parzen ’02 Recognized Districts and Measure Y – the Violence He said that as a law student he saw “both as Young Leaders Prevention and Public Safety Act of 2004. the low numbers of poor and minority Sandra Chong ’99 and Micah Parzen Shelton is the recipient of numerous representation, and the immense wealth and ’02 were recognized by San Diego awards and recognitions. He was the privilege in our society.” Metropolitan Magazine in the annual “40 recipient of the Charles Houston Bar The award was one of 107 student Under 40” special section of the magazine, Association’s 2006 “Clinton White community service awards at UC Davis in which recognizes the region’s exceptional Advocacy Award” and in 2007 named one recognition of a commitment and dedication young business and civic leaders. of the “101+ Men Making a Difference to volunteer work. Chong is assistant general counsel for in Our Community” by Black Expo. Ltd. In addition, the UC Davis La Raza Law the San Diego Unified School District, In the 50th Anniversary Issue of Ebony Students Association honored Sarmiento the second largest school district in magazine he was recognized as one of Torres with the Lorenzo Patiño Service California. She considers it her greatest the “Thirty Leaders of the Future” for his Award for Outstanding Leadership to accomplishment to provide day-to-day many contributions to the community. acknowledge his contributions to the Latino community.

6 Counselor • Fall 2007 The King Hall Legal to rent office space for a civil rights and continues today with every dollar raised Foundation (KHLF) turns 30 public interest litigation project. going directly toward grants for UC Joel Diringer ’80, incorporating Davis law students. In 2007, the Board In the spring of 1978, the UC Davis director and first president of KHLF, says awarded a record 15 Public Interest School of Law graduating class pledged the foundation captured the enthusiasm Summer Grants. more than $5,000 to form KHLF, a in the late 70s of law students and recent Nushin Sarkarati ’09 served at the public interest law foundation that is graduates to support public interest United Nations International Criminal member controlled and operated and law. Diringer, who has worked for more Tribunal for Rwanda. She visited sites independent of the Law School. than 30 years in the nonprofit, health, of the Rwandan genocide and talked to The founding members’ purpose—to government, and philanthropic sectors people in the process of recovering. “It promote and support public interest law says, “Creating KHLF was also one of turned the countless hours of reading and provide public interest programming the more sustainable achievements of my witness testimony into something real,” at the Law School through outside legal career in public interest law.” she says. speakers, films, and discussions—was In the beginning, the KHLF Board Deborah Gettleman ’09, who worked quickly realized. was comprised of alumni, public interest at Justice Now, a prison abolitionist That first summer, KHLF awarded attorneys, community members, faculty, organization, says the grant allowed two grants that significantly impacted and law students. Over the years, the her to pursue her passion by funding the community: $4,000 to Asian Legal Board evolved to become entirely King what would have been unpaid summer Services Outreach, Inc. to conduct Hall students. work. “This summer made me remember community housing forums and print Grant applications during the first why I chose to come to law school, and a tri-lingual handbook on public and few years were accepted from and how the law has perhaps the greatest subsidized housing in the Sacramento awarded to outside agencies and alumni. capacity to achieve social change of any area and $225 to alum Rufino Diaz ’77 The bylaws were amended in 1979 to profession.” of ACLU San Bernardino Legal Project provide grants only to students, which

Welcome UC Davis Law excellence with a diversity of backgrounds Reserve University School of Law, Santa Class of 2010! and interests. Thirteen students have Clara University School of Law, Seattle advanced degrees, and women represent University School of Law, Penn State The UC Davis School of Law faculty, 57 percent of the class. Students of color Dickinson School of Law, and University alumni board members, staff, and current represent 42 percent, and ages range from of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law. students convened on the banks of Putah 19-46, with the average age of 24. In a letter to incoming students, Dean Creek on August 19, 2007, to welcome Twenty-three percent of the incoming Perschbacher wrote, “Law remains a incoming students at a barbecue picnic J.D. students hail from out of state, wonderful gateway to opportunity for you hosted by the Office of Admissions. Dean including a number of East Coast states. and your classmates. When you join our Rex Perschbacher, Director of Admissions Five students are from other countries community of faculty, staff, students, and Sharon Pinkney, and Law Student including Iran, Fiji, Singapore, and the alumni, you will find it friendly, caring, Association President Sarah Asplin ’08 Republic of South Korea. and committed to the highest ethical and delivered welcoming remarks. Sixteen law students transferred intellectual standards in the study and This year’s incoming class showcases in from other prominent law schools practice of law.” the School of Law’s strong tradition of from across the country, including UC accepting students displaying academic Hastings College of the Law, Case Western

Counselor • Fall 2007 7

Wise commentators on law school administration have suggested that even under the best circumstances deans should not serve more than 10 years. Although there is no ideal time for a transition in leadership, such transitions are inevitable, and I believe new leadership will enrich the guiding vision of the Law School and more effectively advance the School’s goals on the Davis campus and within the University of California system.

-Dean Rex R. Perschbacher

When Rex R. Perschbacher, Throughout his tenure, he remained Perschbacher said, “Wise commentators dean of the UC Davis School of Law, a quiet, determined man, noted for on law school administration have announced that he would step down his keen intellect and quick wit. Most suggested that, even under the best from his post on June 30, 2008, there notably, is his concern for students and circumstances, deans should not serve was an audible intake of breath among those he works with, his colleagues more than 10 years.” He added. “Although faculty, staff, alumni, and students. and the School’s faculty and staff. He there is no ideal time for a transition in Although the announcement was not a authorized a number of new faculty leadership, such transitions are inevitable, complete surprise, the news was jolting. positions, including 11 women and and I believe new leadership will enrich Perschbacher has served nine—going on 13 faculty of color. He expanded the the guiding vision of the Law School and 10 years—as Dean, longer than anyone in student-run clinical law programs, started more effectively advance the School’s goals the history of the UC Davis School of Law. a master’s degree program in international on the UC Davis campus and within the Perschbacher guided the School commercial law, and established an University of California system.” through the past decade of drastic cuts outreach program for underserved college Perschbacher received his bachelor’s in public funding for higher education students—many of whom have gone on degree in philosophy from Stanford and calls by some public law schools for to law school. University and his law degree from UC privatization. He worked tirelessly for the To help offset the rising fees, he Berkeley School of Law, Boalt Hall. good of the School. He championed its expanded the loan repayment assistant When Perschbacher joined the UC mission as a public law school: to provide program, increased financial aid and Davis faculty in 1981 as acting professor genuine equal access, to prepare students scholarships, and supported Congressman of law, he also took on the role of directing for leadership, to engage with public Miller ’72 and the College Cost Reduction clinical education. Before becoming dean, needs, and to be accountable. and Access Act. he served for five years as associate dean He stood before the UC Regents Perschbacher is also credited for academic affairs. His honors include and challenged them—Could they with increasing private giving to the the Law School’s distinguished teaching guarantee that steep fee increases would Law School. During his tenure, the award in 1992. not discourage the next generation School added five endowed chairs and Perschbacher, an expert in civil of Californians considering law as a professorships, bringing the total number procedure and legal ethics and the author profession? of seats to six. The Annual Fund increased or co-author of 11 books and 12 articles, Although fee increases did come, 80 percent giving more money directly will return to full-time teaching and Perschbacher stayed hopeful. “We will to students, student organizations, research at UC Davis after a well-deserved continue to advance our efforts to build technology, and facilities. The School year’s sabbatical. a great law school, a truly public law broke ground this fall on a $30-million Perschbacher never demanded the school, a place of personal promise for expansion and renovation project, the first spot light, but was willing to be the focal all our students, one that welcomes major building improvement since the point, in good and challenging times, everyone based on their intelligence and School’s inception. To date, $3 million in when he was needed. The Law School, ability, and that carries out its mission of private donations have been raised toward now on firm footing, will transition to its teaching, scholarship, and service to the an $8-million goal, including the largest new leadership when a national search for community, the state, the nation, and the gift in the history of the Law School. his replacement is completed. world.” On his decision to step down,

Counselor • Fall 2007 9

Early autumn is the time to tour Northern California . Since retiring, they both are focused primarily on The weather has cooled. As the days shorten, the leaves in the . turn a tawny gold and earthy burgundy. Lush, heavy “Being involved in agriculture is kind of like being involved in clusters of droop off the vines, and soon the smell of litigation, Bob says. “You never know what will hit you next. The crush— and fermenting grapes—will permeate the air. unexpected is always waiting around the next bend, and you have While most people associate UC Davis with graduating the to respond effectively.” state’s premier vintners, they might be surprised to learn that a This year it was the early heavy rains. number of UC Davis School of Law alumni are producing gold But it is worth it. Chateau Leidigh won a gold medal for their medal , too. Estate Claret at THE INDY International Wine Competition, where over 2,500 commercial wines were entered in what is Bob ’71 and Barbara Leidigh ’76 billed as the largest international wine competition held in the Ch a t e a u Le i d i g h United States. They’ve earned many other accolades in other Sierra Foothill prestigious wine competitions, including double gold medals for Bob and Barbara’s journey into the world of wine making their Petit Sirah and their Bordeaux (Claret) blend. began in 1980 on a trip to Idaho to visit then-Dean Daniel They have good friends who come by regularly and share the Dykstra and his wife, Lily, at their cabin near Payette Lake. Bob work in the vineyard and, later, a bottle of wine on the deck of and Barbara stopped along the way to visit a classmate, Ed Conry their home, overlooking their vineyard. ’71, and shared a bottle of Ed’s homemade raisin wine. “I figured “This time of the year we see the sunset kissing the tops of the if Ed could make drinkable wine from re-constituted raisins, I vines as it sets in the west,” Barbara says, “While overhead a large ought to be able to do as well or better with fresh grapes off our flock of Sandhill Cranes may be circling, climbing to reach their backyard vines,” Bob says. cruising altitude for their annual journey south.” They went home and made Concord wine, and they were hooked. Tom Cooper ’73 Seven years later, they bought land in the rugged foothill Ho ll y’s Hi ll Vi n e y a r d s soil of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, and with the help of El Dorado Appellation friends, planted vines that now number close to 800. In 2003, Holly’s Hill Vineyards is a small family . Tom and his after 23 of homemade wines, Chateau Leidigh was wife, Holly, own the vineyards. His daughter, Carrie, and son-in- bonded as a commercial winery. In 2007, they produced 150 law, Josh, are the winemakers. And their granddaughter, Marin, cases of estate red wines, sold online, and served at exclusive rides the forklift with her dad as they attend to chores at the restaurants. winery. Everything is hands on at Chateau Leidigh. Barbara and Bob The hill is named after Tom’s wife and overlooks the plant, trellis, prune, and de-stem the grapes harvested from their Consumnes River canyons that cut through El Dorado County. vines. The vineyard is solar powered, which drives the pump The Cooper’s home, at 2,700 feet, is surrounded by acres of for irrigation and powers the winery equipment. Fermenting rolling terraced vineyards. A short distance away, The Tasting red wines are hand pressed, and after fermentation is complete, Room, perched on a steep slope, gives visitors a bird’s eye view gravity flow is used to move the wine from tank to barrel, and into the expansive Sacramento Valley. On a warm fall day, Holly’s then on through to the final processing. Friends, many King Hall Hill is bustling with visitors, tasting exquisite wine, soaking up alums, return year after year to help Bob and Barbara during the the sun on the deck, and picnicking amongst the rustling leaves. crush season and later to bottle. The view alone is worth the visit. In October 2006, Sunset Working the vineyard and being in touch with nature is a magazine featured Holly’s Hill as a Gold Country winery to visit. stress reliever for both Bob and Barbara, who recently retired Tom defines success as, “Making a product that is well from demanding jobs. Bob was a deputy attorney general in the accepted by us, the general public, as well as industry California Attorney General’s Office. Barbara retired in June 2007 professionals, while doing so as a family living in a beautiful and from the California Water Resources Control Board, where she pastoral setting.” specialized in water rights.

Counselor • Fall 2007 11 Tom has accomplished that. Holly’s Hill wines have won school to buy land in the Valley when she could afford it. numerous awards. The family focuses on producing Rhone In 1990, she bought 17 acres with her husband Todd Pickens. wines, including Viognier, Roussanne, , Then in 1995 they purchased 89 acres, which followed with Mourvedre, , and Counoise. The Cooper’s enthusiasm for plantings of Syrah, , Viognier and Nebbiolo. Marilyn says, Rhone varieties started when Tom and Holly shared their first “When you live in such a wonderful place, and your neighbors bottle of Chateauneuf du Pape on their honeymoon. “It’s been a are vintners, you get the bug, and you can’t get rid of it.” In 2007, love affair ever since,” they say. they hope to produce 6,000 cases. They sell 60 percent of their grapes to other wineries, mainly in Napa. Marilyn is the fifth generation in her family to farm. “It is a great feeling to plant dormant vines, which are only foot long sticks and watch them grow,” she says. She loves the smell of diesel and dirt. “I often drive the tractors. Every bin of grapes that is picked, I personally go through and pull leaves and debris to assure quality.” Later, Marilyn and Todd obtained an adjacent property where the winery and tasting facilities now exist. The winery is named Karmère” (pronounced car-mare) after Marilyn’s mother, Karma Hoopes, who Marilyn wanted to honor. Their first vineyard, 15 acres of Syrah, was planted in 1998, All of the vineyards at Karmère are named after the women in and the first crop was harvested in October of 2000. A second Marilyn’s family—her daughter, granddaughters, and daughters- vineyard was planted in 2000 on the adjacent hill. In 2007, they in-law. In the case of the granddaughters, the vineyards were produced about 4,500 cases. planted on the week they were born. Before turning his attention to Holly’s Hill, Tom was a Marilyn continues to practice law part time. She’s been a partner at Downey Brand Attorneys LLP, where he specialized contract administrative law judge since 1996, doing mental health in construction litigation and eminent domain. He’s retired now, hearings regarding prisoners in the Department of Corrections. but still handles some legal issues associated with the winery. She also does a fair amount of pro bono work for local hospices And although he no longer goes in to work at the office, he does and boards, and legal work for the winery and other farming from time to time drive down the hill to Sacramento to see his aspects at Karmère. colleagues, chat, and drop off their latest shipment of club-release She says both the law and running a farm can be very wine selections. stressful, but in different ways. “In the law, you have the whims of a judge and a jury, and the ugliness of competing factions,” she Marilyn Hoopes ’86 says. With farming and wine, so much of it is the weather—rain, Ka r m è r e Vi n e y a r d s & Wi n e r y high temperatures. “There isn’t as much consistency as one would Shenandoah Valley Appellation like.” While Marilyn attended law school, she lived in Jackson near But every is different, and that is the fun part of the Shenandoah Valley of California. She’d grown up on a potato blending wines, Marilyn says. “Different clones, different farm on the Teton River in Idaho, and she fell in love with the microclimates, different yeast, different barrels.” Shenandoah Valley’s sweeping rural landscape. She decided in law Craig Sterling ’92 Es t e r l i n a Vi n e y a r d s & Wi n e r y , LLC Winemaking and the Law Russian River, , As an intellectual property professor, the area of wine raises many Anderson Valley, Alexander Valley, Cole Ranch, and Dry significant issues. Probably the most significant are building and Creek Valley maintaining consumer goodwill in a firm’s trademarks and brands. Also, the law regarding geographic indicators of origin of a product Craig is the vice president of operations and general is in flux as local wine producers find themselves faced with the counsel for Esterlina Vineyards and Winery, LLC. The question of how to protect their marks in global markets. In the US, family-owned company has two wineries and five vineyards designates a type of , in Europe; it indicates in Sonoma and Mendocino Counties. They also own a sparkling wine produced in a specific region of . The legal exclusively America’s smallest appellation— Cole Ranch, a and commercial significance of terms like “Napa Valley,” “Kona Coffee” quarter square mile perched at 1,400 to 1,600 feet elevation (which may only contain a small amount of coffee actually grown in Mendocino County. in Hawaii), “Havana Rum” (distilled in the US, not Cuba) and even Craig is one of four brothers involved in the winery “Tillamook Cheese” (now made in Wisconsin, not Tillamook, Oregon) business. His father is head of operations. raise important trademark law issues that are very much in flux. The family’s first crush was in 1998, and they produced The wine industry also raises issues of the legal protection of trade about 125 cases. “A notoriously bad vintage,” Craig says. secrets and know-how in the “art” of wine production that give one This year, they will make 20,000 cases of hand-crafted, firm a commercial edge in the market. Familiarity with these types award-winning wines. of intellectual property law issues equip King Hall students with the “There is something very satisfying about the process of legal knowledge to do a great job of protecting the interests of their growing something and, eventually, bottling it and marketing businesses or clients in the wine industry. it,” Craig says. “I feel very lucky to do this for a living.” Professor of Law Keith Aoki Craig is a winery businessman first and an attorney second. He provides legal counsel for minor issues related Conflict of laws is the area of law that deals with transactions to the winery, but for larger transactions, such as intellectual or disputes that affect more than one jurisdiction. Any California property or litigation, the family retains outside counsel. winemaker seeking to sell her product abroad ought to know whether According to The Wine Institute, wine consumption in she is subjecting herself to the jurisdiction of a foreign court by America has reached new heights. For 13 consecutive years, introducing her product into that country’s market. She further needs wine sales in the U.S have increased, and California wines to know what laws or regulations might reasonably regulate the sale account for two-thirds of that growth. of wine in the country to which she is selling. For example, different Wine law is a complex field. Craig says that students countries protect the use of appellations, such as Champagne, whereas interested in the wine business should look to work at others do not. Should a California winemaker be subject to these firms that specialize in serving clients in the wine industry, restrictions, and if so, when? Conflicts rules, while complex, help to rather than just concentrating on a narrow focus. “Wineries sort out the answers to these problems. face a broad range of legal issues, including corporate law, Professor of Law Andrea Bjorklund intellectual property, land use, labor and employment, and trust and estate work.” The 21st Amendment, which repealed Prohibition, nonetheless There are perks to working in the wine industry. “I see guaranteed to states extensive control over the importation of the vineyards and wineries every day, but it never gets old,” “intoxicating liquors.” States repeatedly rely on this Amendment says Craig. We are currently in the middle of crush, late to justify restrictions on the importation and distribution of wine. August through late October for our properties, and it is Although the Supreme Court has recently held that the Amendment even more gorgeous. Leaves are changing, you get to smell does not trump otherwise applicable dormant commerce clause the fermenting grapes and juice, and enjoy the fall weather. principles, the Amendment still guarantees significant state regulatory And one of our wineries, Esterlina Vineyards, in Philo, CA, authority. Understanding the interaction between the Amendment is one of the most naturally beautiful wineries in California, and various state laws is therefore an important skill for any attorney with panoramic views of the Anderson Valley’s vineyards representing a winery. changing colors, from green to red and gold.” Professor of Law Carlton F. W. Larson

Counselor • Fall 2007 13 On any given day, UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic students There are thousands more cases that the Clinic has successfully may sit down with clients and listen to their stories. This was handled since its inception in 1981, and thousands more to be fought the case for a great grandfather born in Mexico who’s lived since and, hopefully, won. infancy in the United States; a juvenile from Mongolia whose Each case is unique and poses new challenges to students. Every parents abandoned him; a woman from Eritrea seeking asylum client has a different story that needs to be told. The telling of those based on female genital cutting; a man from the Republic of stories is the heart—and the legacy—of the Immigration Law Clinic. Congo whose entire family was executed for political beliefs; and This year, the Immigration Law Clinic is celebrating 25 years of a Brazilian man persecuted by his family and community for his helping immigrants gain legal status through the bewildering U.S. sexual orientation. immigration legal process.

14 Counselor • Fall 2007 The Next 25 Years—A Crossroad Representing clients has become Smith, reflecting on his 25 years more complicated over the past decades as director of the Clinic, says his most with an array of immigration laws and Helping Immigrants enduring feeling is gratitude for the propositions enacted since the 1980s. The Clinic is the brainchild of James positive human interaction he’s enjoyed California’s Proposition 187, although F. Smith, founding director of the Clinic with his fellow clinical supervisors, the later declared unconstitutional, prohibited from 1981-2007. Smith, a specialist in students, and clients. public services to undocumented workers. immigration law, Latin American law, and The Illegal Immigration Reform and human rights, foresaw the explosion of Training Students by Helping Others Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRAIRA) immigration to California from Central The majority of the Clinic’s cases of 1996, expanded the definition of an and South America and Asia. today involve advising and representing aggravated felony to include misdemeanor Many of the Clinic’s early cases detained immigrants before the crimes, such as shoplifting, and called for involved Guatemalan refugees filing for immigration court and challenging their the immediate deportation of immigrants political asylum. The Clinic compiled detention and removal proceedings. To do convicted of an aggravated felony with no a report, “The Genocide of the Mayan this, the Clinic functions as a small law relief. Indians of the Villages of Western office and is staffed by Director Amagda Since September 11, the country Guatemala,” that was widely distributed Pérez, Associate Director Holly Cooper, has focused even more attention on to other agencies assisting refugees. Staff Attorney Raha Jorjani, and a number the immigrant community and illegal The Clinic also provided legal of law students who receive academic immigration. Volunteers with the assistance in a civil action suit against credit for their participation. Minuteman Project monitor the border for General Hector Gramajo, who conducted Students interview and counsel illegal entry, and fence barriers are going a brutal campaign against the Guatemalan clients, research and develop legal up along the U.S. and Mexico border. people in the 1980s. Due to the Clinic’s arguments, prepare legal briefs, coach Meanwhile, workers with No More Deaths involvement, Gramajo was served clients and witnesses for trial, and provide food, water, and medical aid to a summons in 1991 at his Harvard represent clients in court. The training is migrants crossing the desert, and people University graduation ceremony where invaluable. are taking to the streets to march for he’d just received his master’s degree in Smith says, “The clinical experience Immigrant Rights. public administration. offers law students the opportunity to Everyone on both sides of the issue Over the past 25 years, the Clinic apply legal theory to the struggle for social agree that immigration reform is critical, has worked on hundreds of asylum cases justice, which should always be of the yet nothing gets done. In 2007, Congress based on race, nationality, religion, political highest priority to the legal profession.” failed to pass Immigration Reform. opinion, and membership of a particular Pérez, the Clinic’s director, says, The Immigration Law Clinic, one of social group. Students, working directly “Clinic students consistently get favorable the few free legal clinics in the state, is not with immigrant clients from all over feedback from the Immigration Court waiting for others to act. the world—Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, regarding the high quality of their work. On any given day, law students Central America, Mexico, and Eastern As one Immigration Judge told the listen to their client’s stories, research Europe—gained critical insight into the students after granting political asylum to immigration laws, and strategize creative social, economic, and political needs of their client, a victim of domestic violence solutions for their clients despite people migrating to the United States. and torture, ‘Today you have saved a life.’” insurmountable odds. They visit their clients in detention. They represent them in court. In short, they act.

Counselor • Fall 2007 15 From left: Thomas Hacker, architect; Dean Rex R. Perschbacher; Sarah Asplin ’08; Stephen F. Boutin ’72; founding Dean Edward L. Barrett, Jr.; Chancellor Larry N. Vanderhoef; past Dean Bruce Wolk; The Honorable Lois Wolk; The Honorable Dario Frommer ’92; Yeoryios Apallas ’72; Ron Malone; Joe Bernstein ’74; Meg and Tom ’75 Stallard. Anyone driving by the UC Davis challenge and creation of knowledge that Thomas Hacker, the architect of School of Law on September 29, is the product of faculty members and our the building, called the project an knew something momentous was students.” affirmation of the future. “Today we are taking place. A large white tent with Perschbacher recognized the people laying the foundations for expanded seating for 300 people filled the who were indispensable in making the opportunities into the future for lower east lawn. Banners and flags, building project happen through a joint students and faculty to discover the commemorating both the past and the public-private partnership, including fundamental beauty and power of the future of the School of Law, rippled in Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef, The law in the service of democracy and in the warm breeze. Dignitaries, such as Honorable Lois Wolk, The Honorable the developing and continuing of our the Chancellor, Dean, former deans, Dario Frommer ’92, and the many private nation.” members of the State Assembly, and donors. He also acknowledged founding Perschbacher, who worked tirelessly prominent alumni, walked about with Dean Edward L. Barrett, Jr., whose vision on making this project a reality, said golden shovels. and guidance during the early years laid that the design, which will literally It was, as Dean Rex Perschbacher the foundation for creating one of today’s appear transparent in parts, physically noted, “A glorious morning and a best public law schools in the nation. represents an open, inviting space bright day for King Hall.” Vanderhoef spoke and credited the for the study of the law. The building Perschbacher opened the King Hall School’s well-known law faculty, who will be exposed to the light, he said, Expansion and Renovation Project are not only leading scholars but fine “as law and lawmaking should be in a Groundbreaking Ceremony. “This is teachers, for the School’s reputation. democratic government.” one of the nation’s leading law schools, Frommer spoke of the incredible number After the speeches, and armed an incubator of legal innovation, the of alumni who have gone on to use their with golden shovels, Perschbacher and educator of the finest ethical, socially skills to benefit society. Wolk, quite Vanderhoef were joined by current responsible lawyers in the United familiar with the Law School as the spouse and former state lawmakers, lawyers, States, committed to excellence in every of former dean and professor of law Bruce professors, former deans, alumni, way.” Wolk, called the Law School a jewel. prominent donors, faculty, students, He pointed out that the Law School Speaker after speaker stood at the staff, and the architect to break ground is more than the sum of the brick, podium and spoke to the School’s on the $30-million expansion and steel, and concrete that form it. What excellence and the spirit that prevails renovation project. ultimately matters, he said, is what goes within its halls and within the students Spirits were high as a new era of on inside the building, “the educational who study there. light was ushered in at King Hall.

From left: Thomas Hacker, architect; Dean Rex R. Perschbacher; Sarah Asplin ’08; Stephen F. Boutin ’72; founding Dean Edward L. Barrett, Jr.; Chancellor Larry N. Vanderhoef; past Dean Bruce Wolk; The Honorable Lois Wolk; The Honorable Dario Frommer ’92; Yeoryios Apallas ’72; Ron Malone; Joe Bernstein ’74; Meg and Tom ’75 Stallard. The College Today is a momentous day the School’s Cost Reduction overall and Access Act for students and families campaign to (CCRAA), the struggling to pay for college. encourage more single largest students to increase in This bill will help ensure pursue a legal college aid since that no qualified student education and the GI bill, was public service. signed into law is prevented from going to “Our Law on September college because of the cost. School has been 27, 2007. The - U.S. Rep. George Miller ’72 in the lead in Act provides California in debt relief for encouraging graduates who students to are repaying federal student loans, and “This is good news for students and pursue careers in public interest and includes two major provisions that will alumni of UC Davis School of Law, where public service,” says Perschbacher. impact law students and graduates. our graduates go into public service law at Indeed, in 1990, the Law School was Alumnus and U.S. Representative a higher rate than most other law schools the first public law school in California George Miller ’72, chairman of the in the state,” says Dean Rex Perschbacher. to establish a loan-repayment program House Education and Labor Committee, Under Section 203 of the Act, School for those employed in public service sponsored the bill. He said on its signing of Law graduates who work in low-pay careers and is one of the longest running by President George W. Bush, “Today is a legal specialties will be able to make programs of its kind in the nation. momentous day for students and families smaller loan payments and stretch those The King Hall Loan Repayment struggling to pay for college. This bill will payments over a longer period of time. Assistance Program (LRAP) provides help ensure that no qualified student is After 25 years, any remaining principal is relief through interest-free loans to offset prevented from going to college because forgiven. student loan payments, and a portion of the cost.” Section 401 accelerates the debt of the LRAP loan may be cancelled Two provisions of the bill—Sections forgiveness for those working in public after three years. After five years in the 203 and 401—are of great importance to service jobs down to 10 years, instead of program, all money received from LRAP law graduates who have high debts and 25. In addition, the definition of a public effectively becomes a grant and repayment low incomes, and particularly to those service job is quite broad, and includes is waived. who desire to become public interest such fields as law enforcement, public This year the program was expanded lawyers. (See side bar for information on education, and public library services. to provide more support to a larger these provisions) The CCRAA is an important step in number of students. The qualifying salary

18 Counselor • Fall 2007 Credit: Getty Images

Income-Based follows: a full-time job in emergency cap was raised from $40,000 to $53,000, Repayment management, government, military and eligible public service positions now Section 203, which goes into effect service, public safety, law enforcement, include those in government agencies. on July 1, 2009, guarantees that all public health, public education In addition, the Law School is one of a borrowers’ loan payments will be limited (including early childhood education), handful of schools that give aid to offset to 15 percent of their discretionary social work in a public child or family all student loan debt—undergraduate and income, where discretionary income is service agency, public interest law law school. defined as adjusted gross income minus services (including prosecution or Graduates of the Law School who 150 percent of the poverty level for the public defense or legal advocacy in dream of pursuing public service careers borrower’s family size. Unpaid interest low-income communities at a nonprofit will now have more options with the and principal are capitalized and any organization), public child care, public CCRAA and the LRAP. outstanding loan balance is forgiven after service for individuals with disabilities, 25 years of repayment. public service for the elderly, public George Miller ’72 Other provisions include: any library sciences, school-based library Congressman George Miller is interest due and not covered by the sciences and other school-based services, a leading advocate in Congress on borrower shall be paid for up to three or at an organization that is described education, labor, the economy, and the years except for periods that a borrower in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal environment. He has represented the 7th is in deferment due to economic Revenue Code of 1986 and exempt from District of California in the East Bay of hardship; principal due and not paid taxation under section 501(a) of such San Francisco since 1975. under income-base repayment shall Code; or Teaching as a full-time faculty Miller serves in a number of be deferred; borrowers may remain in member at a Tribal College or University important positions in Congress. He is income-based repayment more than 10 as defined in section 316(b) and other faculty teaching in high-needs areas, as part of the Democratic Leadership, having years; and borrowers currently repaying determined. been appointed to serve as chairman of loans according to income-contingent repayment or income-sensitive To qualify for public service loan the House Democratic Policy Committee, repayment plans will have the choice to forgiveness, a borrower must: make a position he has held since 2003. In continue in their current plans or may 120 monthly payments on the eligible that role, he is responsible for helping participate in the program created by Federal Direct Loan on or after Oct. 1, Democrats develop and articulate a this bill. 2007; be employed in a public service wide range of policies of benefit to all job as defined in the CCRAA during Americans. Loan Forgiveness the time he or she makes the qualifying Miller was elected by his colleagues Section 401 is of particular interest monthly payments; be employed in in January to serve as Chairman of the to graduates working in a broad category a public service job as defined in the House Education and Labor Committee, a of public service jobs. CCRAA at the time the Secretary forgives Public service jobs are defined as panel he has served on since first coming the loan; and make qualifying payments. to Congress and on which he served as The information above is a brief summary of these two provisions and is not intended to represent them as the Senior Democrat since 2001. fact. More detailed information on CCRAA can be found at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) summary of the Act: http://www.nasfaa.org/publications/2007/G2669Summary091007.html UC Davis School of Law Chairs & Albert J. Lee and Mae Lee Scholarship is proud to recognize the Professorships William & Inez Mabie Family Foundation Scholarship Fund extraordinary contributions that Professor Edward L. Barrett, Jr., Professorship Harry M. “Hank” Marsh Memorial Scholarship friends, alumni, faculty, and Homer G. Angelo and Ann Berryhill staff have made to support Angelo Professorship and Fund for Edward Peña Scholarship International Legal Communication Cruz and Jeannene Reynoso Scholarship endowments and scholarships Studies for Legal Access and other privately raised funds Boochever and Bird Chair for the Study Maggie Schelen Public Service Scholarship established for the benefit and Teaching of Freedom and Equality The Martha West Social Justice Scholarship Daniel J. Dykstra Chair of the Law School. Each of Fund Fair Business Practices and Investor The Honorable Philip C. Wilkins Memorial these dedicated funds provide Advocacy Chair Scholarship invaluable support and is critical Mabie-Apallas Public Interest Chair Bruce Wolk Scholarship to the future of King Hall. John D. Ayer Bankruptcy Chair (Not yet Elizabeth P. Wood Scholarship formally endowed) Thank you to everyone who Scholarships Other Funds and contributed so generously to Awards make these supporting funds a Alumni Association Founders Club Scholarship Building Initiative for the Expansion and reality. Each of them continue to Renovation of King Hall Edward L. Barrett, Jr., Scholarship grow, and more will be created Class of ’69 Endowment Fund Stephanie J. Blank Memorial Scholarship as UC Davis School of Law Thomas W. Corn Memorial Endowment Brieger-Krevans Scholarship Fund continues to build its private Steven D. Cannata Memorial Scholarship Davis Law Students Medalist Prize support for students, faculty, and John F. Cheadle Memorial Scholarship Daniel J. Dykstra Faculty Excellence Fund academic and public service Joseph Lake & Jan Cutter Lake Scholarship Environmental Law Endowment Fund programs. Downey Brand LLP Environmental Law Richard M. Frank Environmental Writing Scholarship Prize Christine M. Doyle Scholarship Patrick J. Hopkins Memorial Fund LECTURES Ellison, Schneider & Harris Environmental King Hall Annual Fund Law Scholarship Dean Edward L. Barrett, Jr., Lectureship on King Hall Legal Foundation (an Constitutional Law Samuel S. Foulk Memorial Scholarship independent 501 (c) (3)) Professor Brigitte M. Bodenheimer Lecture Deborah J. Frick Memorial Scholarship Moses Lasky Anti-Trust Prize on Family Law Imwinkelried-Clark Scholarship Theodore M. Pritikin Memorial Fund Jackson Lewis Employee Law Scholarship Public Interest Law Fund Russell D. Jura Scholarship William A. & Sally Rutter Distinguished Thelma and Hiroshi Kido Scholarship Teaching Award Martin Luther King, Jr., Scholarship Trial and Appellate Advocacy Fund King Hall Academic Excellence Scholarship UC Davis Law Review Endowment Fund King Hall Alumni Association Scholarship 20 Counselor • Fall 2007 Lifetime Giving BENEFACTOR Carol L. ’80 & Gene G. Livingston ($50,000-$99,999) Steven N. ’74 & Susan Machtinger The following lifetime giving Mae Lee Estate Professor Emeritus Homer G. Angelo & societies represent individuals Ann Berryhill Angelo Joseph S. Melchione ’74 and organizations that have Marc A. ’83 & Christine A. Beilinson Mary Beth Rehman Dittu chosen to support the School in Stephen F. ’72 & Linda T. Boutin Paul C. ’75 & Carla P. Rosenthal significant ways. William N. Brieger ’85 & Sarah Krevans Scaife Family Foundation Patrick W. ’74 & Allison Emery Anne J. Schneider ’76 PLATINUM SOCIETY Dr. Maximilian & Martha Koessler Estate Kelly Shea ’05 & Trevor Foster ($1,000,000 & ABOVE) Kronick Moskovitz Tiedemann & Girard Joan H. Story ’77 & Robert F. Kidd ’77 William and Inez Mabie Family Foundation Scott H. McNutt ’82 & Lee Manus McNutt Professor Emerita Martha S. West Carmen P. O’Rielly Estate James R. ’72 & Linda Woods GOLD LEGACY SOCIETY Dean Rex R. Perschbacher Bruce R. ’74 & Anne T. Worthington ($500,000 - $999,000) Thom R. ’73 & Ginger Schuttish Professor Emeritus Richard C. Wydick & Ms. Judith J. Wydick Philip G. ’75 & Jennifer A. Satre PAtRON 21st Century club CENTURY CLUB ($25,000 - $49,999) The following donors have (100,000-$499,999) American Law Institute Robert D. Bacon ’76 provided for the UC Davis Joseph E. Bernstein ’74 Professor Emeritus Edward L. Barrett, Jr. School of Law through bequests Charles A. ’73 & Charlotte S. Bird Professor Emeritus Florian Bartosic & Professor James P. Chandler ’70 & and other planned gifts. Ms. Alberta Chew Ms. Elizabeth Chandler Wayne A. ’71 & Jacque A. Bartholomew Boutin Dentino Gibson Di Giusto Hodell Inc. Nancy S. Coan Torres ’86 & David M. Blackman ’72 Michael A. Torres The Honorable Trena H. Burger-Plavan ’78 & Mr. Frank P. Plavan ’72 Gina E. Dronet ’79 Dr. Julita A. Fong Ellison Schneider & Harris LLP Ronald P. Erickson ’74 Ford Foundation Eileen M. Feild Stephen T. ’70 & Joy W. Frank Russell D. Jura ’74 Diane E. Flanagan Zipperstein ’83 & David K. Hicks ’72 Kalmanovitz Charitable Foundation Steven E. Zipperstein ’83 The Honorable Joan K. Irion ’79 & Law School Admission Council Anna E. Foulk Mr. Jon M. Seitman Mark Perry ’80 & Melanie Peña Margaret M. Foulk Professor Margaret Z. Johns ’76 William A. & Sally Rutter Samuel S. Foulk ’80 Professor Lisa R. Pruitt Tom W. ’75 & Meg S. Stallard Thelma H. & Hiroshi Kido William A. & Sally Rutter Professor David A. Traill Rachel Krevans ’84 Judith Strum Schuler ’73 Sue R. Wilkins Sally Lu Lake ’77 & William R. Crawford Tom W. ’75 & Meg S. Stallard

Pledge and gift totals are as of October 15, 2007 Dean’s leadership circle Young Alumni club The Dean’s Leadership Circle recognizes donors who make Alums who give $300 or more within the first five years following graduation are members of leadership-level gifts of $2,500 or more to the Law School the Young Alumni Club. Multiple year pledges, donations, and graduation class gifts all count on an annual basis. Pledge and gift totals are for fiscal year toward the $300 goal. 2006 - 2007. Anonymous Carolyn B. Langenkamp ’79 CLASS OF 2003 CLASS OF 2006 CLASS OF 2007 Mark S. ’85 & Aynah V. Askanas Luce Forward Hamilton & Scripps LLP Megan M. Chung ’03 Sarah M. Cox ’06 Stephen Abreu ’07 Robert D. Bacon ’76 Noah C. Cuttler ’03 Jonathan R. Elson ’06 Michael Berens ’07 Marc A. ’83 & Steven N. ’74 & Susan Machtinger Christine A. Beilinson Steven C. ’86 & Rhonda D. Malvey Gage C. Dungy ’03 Todd J. Feinberg ’06 Kristin Bohm ’07 Joseph E. Bernstein ’74 John A. ’79 & Mary L. Micheaels Megan M. Elder ’03 & Jennifer M. Field ’06 Jennifer Carbuccia ’07 Eric W. Bergstrom Jeffrey A. Finucane ’06 Amanda Chavez ’07 Charles A. ’73 & Charlotte S. Bird Lynn A. Miyamoto ‘86 & Melanie L. Proctor ’03 Boutin Dentino Gibson Di Giusto Kevin B. Krocker ‘86 Kari E. Fisher ’06 Sarah Fenn ’07 Hodell Inc. Brad Nelson ’79 Sara J. Romano ’03 Crystal M. Gaudette ’06 Marc Fernandez ’07 Stephen F. ’72 & Linda T. Boutin Occidental Petroleum Charitable Danielle L. Thiry-Zaragoza ’03 Chante A. Gordon ’06 Erik Fuehrer ’07 Arthur ’70 & Katheryn Chinski Foundation Ella K. Gower ’06 Amy Geiser ’07 Nancy S. Coan Torres ’86 & Katy I. ’98 & David Orr Samantha L. Grant ’06 Lila Hollman ’07 Michael A. Torres The Honorable Elizabeth L. CLASS OF 2004 Kristine T. Hernandez ’06 Phoebe Hyun ’07 DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary Perris ’75 Jonathan B. Kaplan ’06 Raymond Y. Kim ’07 Veronica Ann O. Benigno ’04 Professor Holly D. Doremus & Mark L. Perry ’80 & Amy K. Lee ’06 Ruby Marquez ’07 Melanie P. Peña Kira L. Klatchko ’04 Mr. Gordon E. Anthon Kou Lor ’06 Jack McKenna ’07 Dean Rex R. Perschbacher Sally H. Schwettmann ’04 Patrick W. ’74 & Allison Emery Rosita Martinez ’06 Fabiola Murillo ’07 Paul C. ’75 & Carla P. Rosenthal Christopher T. Yamada ’04 Gregg M. Ficks ’90 Eric May ’06 David Richardson ’07 Diane E. Flanagan Zipperstein ’83 William A. & Sally Rutter & Steven E. Zipperstein ’83 Philip G. ’75 & Jennifer A. Satre Michael B. Mellema ’06 Jason Rosenberg ’07 The Fletcher Jones Foundation Kelly Shea ’05 & Trevor Foster Yoonjin Park ’06 Nina Sachdev ’07 Daniel C. ’84 & Ann O. Girard Joan H. Story ’77 & CLASS OF 2005 David Parnall ’06 Melissa Schutz ’07 Bruce J. Hagel ’74 & Debra L. Robert F. Kidd ’77 Graham B. Brownstein ’05 Sharon Phosaly ’06 Stephen Siptroth ’07 Price Jim & Susan Tipton Claire C. Eustace ’05 Hans Riegels ’06 Jeffrey Spivak ’07 David L. Hyman ’80 & Michael A. Van Horne ’75 Peter C. Leung ’05 Adam R. ’06 & Jami R. Rosenthal Edward Vieira-Ducey ’07 Farah Jimenez Verizon Foundation Kelly Shea ’05 & Trevor Foster Ché Salinas ’06 Michael Wanser ’07 Jackson Lewis LLP Professor Emerita Martha S. West Raquel M. Silva ’05 & Suzanne H. Stevens ’06 Kelly Welchans ’07 Margaret Z. Johns ’76 Sue R. Wilkins Andrew Riffel Stephanie A. Tyson ’06 John Whittaker ’07 Russell D. Jura ’74 Sharon R. Wilson MD & Joanna F. Silverman ’05 Yvonne F. van Leiden-Thrasher ’06 Pauline Woodman ’07 Kalmanovitz Charitable Marci Hoze Jan L. Westfall ’05 Laura C. ’06 & Dylan S. Warner Christine Young ’07 Foundation James R. ’72 & Linda Woods Rachel A. Zellner ’06 Suzanne Zalev ’07 Dr. Maximilian & Bruce R. ’74 & Sarra L. Ziari ’06 Martha Koessler Estate Anne T. Worthington Hyong S. ’89 & Jean K. Koh Andrew H. Wu ’89 Rachel Krevans ’84 Leslie A. Kurtz

These Donor Rolls represent those Your name may be You made a gift after You made a gift to the UC We omitted your name in who made gifts in the 2006-2007 under a different the fiscal year ended on Davis Foundation, but your error. If we have made a fiscal year. If you made a gift and category. Please June 30, 2007. Please be donation was not designated mistake, we would like to your name has not been included check all of the assured that your gift will for the Law School. Your hear from you so we may in this listing, there may be giving societies in be included in the 2007- name will appear in the correct our error. Please call several reasons why: your class. 2008 Donor Rolls. Foundation Donor Rolls. us at 530.754.5328.

22 Counselor • Fall 2007 Gail Osherenko ’75 & Associate Duane W. ’72 & Pamela Phillips Class of 1975 Oran Young Steven P. ’70 & Lynn Belzer Robert C. ’72 & Nancy C. Yoonjin Park ’06 Redding Class Participation: 21% Daniel C. ’70 & Marlene G. Doyle Total Gifts: $37,630 The Honorable Elizabeth Perris ’75 Robert P. ’70 & Susan K. Mallory The Honorable Jon E. Stuebbe ’72 & Ms. Kala Stuebbe Number of Alumni Donors: 33 P. Kurt Peterson ’75 Richard D. ’70 & Anita J. Owen 5-9 years consecutive giving David W. ’71 & Susan V. Post Craig M. Wilson ’72 & Eva G. King Hall Society Nathaniel ’70 & Marcia Sterling Geszler Mary Beth Rehman Dittu Philip G. ’75 & Jennifer Satre Nicholas R. Van Male ’70 & Lewis P. ’72 & Karen Zollinger 10-14 years consecutive giving Denise M. Rocha ’80 Susan Wilkinson Mr. Ronald C. Stock ’75 & The Honorable Nancy Wieben Paul C. ’75 & Carla P. Rosenthal Donor Stock ’76 15-19 years consecutive giving John C. ’72 & Katherine Schick The Honorable Louis F. Bissig ’70 Elizabeth Semel ’75 & Ms. Susan J. Bissig Class of 1973 Barrett Society Gary D. Solis ’71 The Honorable Elizabeth L. 20-24 years consecutive giving Stephen T. ’70 & Joy W. Frank Class Participation: 16% Perris ’75 Scott M. Stanton ’93 Theodore R. ’70 & Olive Lakey Total Gifts: $57,385 Paul C. ’75 & Carla P. Rosenthal The Honorable Nancy Wieben The Honorable Richard K. Park ’70 Number of Alumni Donors: 20 25+ years consecutive giving Stock ’76 & Mr. Ronald C. & Ms. Michelle C. Park Michael A. Van Horne ’75 King Hall Society Stock ’75 Gregory W. ’70 & Senior Partner Charles A. ’73 & Charlotte S. Bird Event Sponsors & Alumni Kevin Takei ’06 Madeline D. ’70 Sager Clement J. ’75 & Melinda Kong Amy Tirre ’94 Theodore N. ’70 & Senior Partner Reception Hosts Anne Lukingbeal ’75 & Roldan R. Trujillo ’75 Kathleen A. Terlecky Thom ’73 & Georgia Schuttish Nelson E. Roth ’75 William Tunick ’06 Elaine C. Watson ’70 Robert C. ’73 & Carla R. Webster P. Kurt ’75 & Janet Peterson Deceased Michael A. Van Horne ’75 George G. ’73 & Kathleen A. Wolf William J. ’75 & Judith M. Seiler George G. ’73 & Kathleen A. Wolf The Honorable Elisabeth A. Tobias Barrington Wolff Partner Semel ’75 Class of 1971 Marc A. Levinson ’73 & James R. Woods ’72 Class Participation: 17% Mary Jane Large Partner Rachel Zellner ’06 Total Gifts: $8,425 Douglas S. ’73 & Susan Norman E. Brand ’75 & King hall Nancy E. Spero Number of Alumni Donors: 14 MacKinnon building The Honorable Jane A. Restani ’73 Bryce A. Kranzthor ’75 & expansion & Senior Partner & Mr. Ira Bloom Nancy Griffin annual capitol Wayne A. ’71 & Jacque A. Jeffrey J. ’73 & Elisa M. Rummel Bruce P. ’75 & Linda R. Loper Renovation tour & reception Bartholomew Michael G. ’73 & Susan Woods Robert B. McCray ’75 & Project Donors D. Steven ’71 & Linda W. Blake Janet D. Robinson sponsors Gary D. Solis ’71 Associate Merle C. Meyers ’75 Gifts and Pledges to the Building R. F. Butler ’73 Project only as of October 15, Gold Partner Tom W. ’75 & Meg S. Stallard 2007 Bullivant Houser Bailey PC - ’06 Ronald K. ’71 & Kathy Clausen Donor Roldan C. ’75 & Sylvia Trujillo Building Platinum Society - Greenberg Traurig LLP - ’06 & ’07 David W. ’71 & Susan L. Post Bert V. Anthony ’73 Associate ($1,000,000 & Above) Stoel Rives LLP - ’07 M. M. ’71 & Barbara G. William S. ’73 & Linda G. Frank L. ’75 & Irene Orozco William & Inez Mabie Family Bernheim Silver Steinheimer Kenneth R. Stone ’75 & Foundation Robert C. ’71 & Sandra L. Turner Jeffrey A. Dennis-Strathmeyer ’73 Lisa Del Pero California Business Properties David J. Ernst ’73 Building Century Club - Association / Rex Hime - ’06 Keith C. ’75 & Cher O. Zajic Associate Thomas ’73 & Christine B. Greene ($100,000 - $499,999) & ’07 G. R. Brown ’71 & Iris P. Yang ’82 Donor Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP Tamila C. Jensen ’73 & Joseph E. Bernstein ’74 Robert E. ’71 & Barbara J. ’76 Michael Shanklin The Honorable Charles H. Hollis ’75 Nancy S. Coan Torres ’86 & ’06 & ’07 Leidigh & Ms. Rebecca Hollis Michael Torres Porter Scott, A Professional Kenneth G. ’73 & Maureen G. Corporation - ’06 & ’07 Daniel L. ’71 & Charlene L. Johnson Zaidun Jawdat ’75 Kalmanovitz Charitable Simmons Marcia C. Levine ’75 Foundation Keith W. ’73 & Kathleen E. Bronze Mc Bride Wilfred Y. Lim ’75 Mark Perry ’80 & Melanie Peña Donor Boutin Dentino Gibson Di Giusto Louis ’73 & Susan C. Samonsky Ernest H. ’75 & Mila P. Llorente Philip G. ’75 & Jennifer A. Satre Hodell Inc. - ’06 & ’07 Dennis M. ’71 & Nancy Y. Campos Judith S. ’73 & Robert L. Schuler Albert C. ’75 & Carlene J. Locher Tom W. ’75 & Meg S. Stallard Diepenbrock Harrison - ’06 & ’07 Thomas W. Harris ’71 Peter J. ’75 & Carol L. Lucey Sue R. Wilkins Ellison, Schneider & Harris L.L.P. ’06 & ’07 Linda O. ’71 & Dave Palley Gregory M. O’Leary ’75 Building Benefactor - Hefner, Stark & Marois, LLP - ’06 Betty H. Wolfe ’71 Class of 1974 The Honorable Frank J. Ochoa ’75 ($50,000 – $99,999) & ’07 & Ms. Paula L. Ochoa Charles ’73 & Charlotte Bird McDonough Holland & Allen PC Class Participation: 17% Charles S. ’75 & Penny J. Poulos Patrick W. ’74 & Allison Emery ’06 & ’07 Total Gifts: $387,186 Brett L. Price ’75 Russell Jura ’74 Olson Hagel & Fishburn LLP - ’06 Class of 1972 Number of Alumni Donors: 24 Rusty ’75 & Susan Selix Dean Rex R. Perschbacher Remy, Thomas, Moose and Class Participation: 21% King Hall Society Thom ’73 & Georgia Schuttish Manley LLP - ’07 Total Gifts: $32,296 Joseph E. Bernstein ’74 Wilke, Fleury, Hoffelt, Gould & Number of Alumni Donors: 32 Patrick W. ’74 & Allison Emery Building Patron - Birney, LLP - ’06 & ’07 Class of 1976 ($25,000 – $49,999) King Hall Society Russell D. Jura ’74 Stephen F. ’72 & Linda T. Boutin Steven N. ’74 & Susan Machtinger Class Participation: 19% Steven N. ’74 & Total Gifts: $41,375 Susan Jackson Machtinger James R. ’72 & Linda Woods Bruce R. ’74 & Anne T. annual giving Worthington Number of Alumni Donors: 30 Senior Partner Building Supporters - King Hall Society (Up to $24,999) by class Yeoryios C. ’72 & Nancy K. Barrett Society Robert D. Bacon ’76 Anonymous ’86 Apallas Bruce J. Hagel ’74 & Debra L. Price Margaret Z. Johns ’76 May Alquidsi ’06 Rex S. ’72 & Gwyn B. Hime The Honorable Nancy Wieben Robert D. Bacon ’76 Partner Senior Partner Stock ’76 & Mr. Ronald C. Alberto Balingit ’75 & Class of 1969 James P. ’72 & Carol U. Barnes The Honorable Steve W. White ’74 Stock ’75 Jacquie Duerr Class Participation: 10% & Ms. Laurel D. White Karen D. Zizmor ’72 & Senior Partner Wayne A. ’71 & Jacque A. Total Gifts: $1,575 Bruce F. Rinaldi ’72 Partner Bartholomew Robert S. Chapman ’76 & Number of Alumni Donors: 6 Associate Philip ’74 & Donna L. Harris Candace E. Carlo ’78 D. Steven ’71 & Linda W. Blake Michael E. ’74 & Patricia M. Rue Stephen F. ’72 & Linda T. Boutin Partner Richard B. ’72 & Rebecca I. Ms. Joan D. ’76 & George H. ’69 & Barbara L. Gnoss Koskoff Professor James G. Durham ’76 David A. ’01 & Catherine C. Associate William A. ’69 & Karen L. Plourde John C. ’72 & Katherine N. Thomas R. Goin ’76 Diepenbrock Schick Dean B. ’74 & Lynne V. Gordon Joel L. Diringer ’80 Daniel L. ’74 & Robin C. Dale L. ’76 & Deborah J. Ikeda Donor Laurence B. Wohl ’72 Augustus S. Lee ’76 & The Fletcher Jones Foundation Joseph D. ’69 & Pamela A. Abkin Greenberg Donor Diane Elliott-Lee Robin Day Glenn ’75 & Prof. Jay C. Carlisle ’69 & Donor Anne J. Schneider ’76 Forrest Beeson Ms. Janessa C. Nisley The Honorable Gordon S. Baranco ’72 & Ms. Barbara N. Gee John H. ’74 & Anita M. Bell Thomas H. Steele ’76 & Kristine Hernandez ’06 The Honorable John R. David I. Brown ’74 Katayoon Zandvakli Couzens ’69 Alan B. ’72 & Patricia N. Carlson Yoshinori Himel ’75 John L. Bukey ’74 & David L. Hyman ’80 & Richard J. ’69 & Charles J. ’72 & Mary A. Conway Melinda A. Stephens-Bukey Partner Melanie P. Wickersham Farah Jimenez The Honorable John P. Davis ’72 The Honorable Michael T. Garcia ’74 Barbara S. de Oddone ’76 & Zaidun Jawdat ’75 Scott L. ’72 & Ledith E. Gassaway & Ms. Kathleen E. Gnekow- Piermaria J. Oddone Jonathan Ben Kaplan ’06 Jesus ’72 & Pamela Genera Garcia ’77 Fredrick I. ’76 & Robin S. Miller Charity Kenyon ’77 & Class of 1970 Richard T. Guarino ’72 Frederick D. ’74 & Patricia B. Michael Eaton Dennis R. ’72 & E. C. Hays Holden Associate Thelma & Hiroshi Kido Class Participation: 30% The Honorable C. A. Holmer ’72 Steven A. ’74 & Judith A. Lewis David J. ’76 & Miriam F. Hodge Steven M. Kwong ’75 & Total Gifts: $6,596 & Ms. Laurel D. Holmer John W. ’74 & C. L. McCarthy Robert F. ’76 & Marla J. Kane Chan Wah Ho Number of Alumni Donors: 18 Raymond Huerta ’72 Richard H. Moss ’74 & Sonia S. Barbara J. ’76 & Robert E. ’71 David Lorie ’96 & Society Robert L. ’72 & Madelyn M. Jones Balonos Leidigh Kena D. Hudson Robert Nicolas ’74 Arthur ’70 & Katheryn Chinski Beatrice J. ’72 & Starling E. Kay Donor Peter J. ’75 & Carol L. Lucey Tracy S. Rich ’74 Senior Partner Michael J. ’72 & Elisabeth K. Jane R. Conard ’76 & Melinda M. Luthin ’07 & Kersten The Honorable David Rosenberg ’74 Richard Maneval John A. Lyddon Anonymous & Ms. Lea E. Rosenberg The Honorable Katherine K. Barbara Devinney ’76 John Ly ’06 Mader ’72 & Mr. Norman S. Thomas G. ’74 & Karen K. Partner Sanford The Honorable Edwin A. Hendrix ’76 Rosita Martinez ’06 Robert T. ’70 & Dorothy Coats Kulla ’72 & Ms. Kathleen M. Hendrix Douglas B. ’74 & Marcia L. Weill Merle C. Meyers ’75 Michael J. ’70 & Linda Duckor William J. ’72 & Carol L. Owen Arnold L. Lum ’76 & June Gregory M. O’Leary ’75 The Honorable Michael J. Harrigan Kenneth A. Olmsted ’80 Petherick ’72 & Ms. Barbara Petherick Marian E. Moe ’76

Counselor • Fall 2007 23 Barbara L. Malchick ’81 & Nancy B. Mc Gann ’83 Randall Jacobs William R. Moore ’83 Stanley K. ’81 & Yuka Okawachi Thomas F. ’83 & Terri Morse Alesa R. Schachter ’81 & Teresa L. ’83 & James Stanislaw Bruce R. Madewell Claudette G. ’83 & Ladson W. Marc M. Schneier ’81 & Wilson Antonella Grassi Rima H. Singh ’81 The Honorable Victor D. Ryerson ’76 Associate Class of 1980 & Ms. Margaret S. Ryerson Stuart A. ’78 & Ellen A. Comis Class of 1984 Class Participation: 20% Melecio M. ’76 & Mary S. Santos Carol L. ’78 & Philip B. Laird Class Participation: 18% Earl T. ’76 & Susan T. Sato ’76 Total Gifts: $175,695 Class of 1982 Anthony E. ’78 & Nancy M. Number of Alumni Donors: 30 Total Gifts: $17,911 Patricia S. ’76 & Mark A. Marsh Class Participation: 14% Number of Alumni Donors: 33 Schimbor George M. ’78 & Mary A. Reyes King Hall Society Total Gifts: $6,590 King Hall Society Madeleine E. Sloane ’76 & Jan E. Schori ’78 David L. Hyman ’80 & Number of Alumni Donors: 23 Michael L. Ingerman Rachel Krevans ’84 Jeffery A. Tatum ’78 Farah Jimenez Senior Partner Mary W. ’76 & W. H. Snyder Wayne H. Thomas ’78 & Mark Perry ’80 & Olivia C. Or ’82 Barrett Society Stephen A. Weldon ’76 Melanie Peña Carole L. Brown Eric S. ’82 & Thelma N. Waxman Daniel C. ’84 & Ann O. Girard The Honorable Lesley L. Wilbur ’76 Senior Partner Donor Pamela K. Webster ’82 Senior Partner Marsha A. Bedwell ’80 & Professor Charles R. Calleros ’78 Partner Alan S. ’84 & Yoko Fujimoto & Ms. Deborah E. Calleros ’79 Lawrence W. Miles ’80 William D. ’80 & Carolyn S. Richard S. ’82 & Gale Price The Honorable Judy H. Hersher ’84 Michael W. Cooper ’78 Kopper & Mr. Michael E. Hersher Associate Class of 1977 Randee G. Fenner ’78 Carol L. ’80 & Gene G. Livingston David S. ’84 & Betty T. Lee Class Participation: 22% Janet A. Flaccus ’78 & Andrew B. ’82 & Richelle G. Anne Stausboll ’84 & Bassetti Total Gifts: $14,000 Bruce L. Dixon Partner John D. Adkisson ’84 Randall H. ’78 & Jill M. George Laurie K. ’80 & John F. Hartigan The Honorable Jerilyn L. Borack ’82 David M. ’84 & Kelley J. Traversi Number of Alumni Donors: 35 & Mr. Eugene Borack Elliott J. ’78 & Deborah B. Gilberg David R. ’80 & Katrina L. Jenkins Joseph A. Wender ’84 Barrett Society Sabina D. ’78 & Mark W. Gilbert Steven B. ’80 & Luanne Sacks Iris P. Yang ’82 & G. R. Brown ’71 Joan H. Story ’77 & Robert F. Partner The Honorable Jane E. Westbrook ’80 Alejandro P. Gutierrez ’82 Kidd ’77 Gilberto F. ’78 & Flor Gutierrez Lucy Lofrumento ’84 Candice B. Hall ’78 & The Honorable Rebecca A. Walter R. ’82 & Nancy Sadler Senior Partner David J. Eschliman Wiseman ’80 & Gabrielle Wirth ’82 & Associate Luke A. Torres ’82 Ronald M. Boldt ’77 Michelle C. Imata ’78 Mr. Kenneth C. Wiseman Elizabeth L. Allen ’84 & Linda S. Gross ’77 Craig H. Kronman ’78 Associate Donor Robert D. Mullaney ’84 Schelly K. Jensen ’77 Alexander O. Lichtner ’78 Richard E. Archibald ’80 & Bradley A. ’82 & Billiana Bening John W. Truxaw ’84 Charity Kenyon ’77 & Keith ’78 & Donna M. Loken Rachel Weinreb Walter M. Burton ’82 Joan M. Haratani ’84 Michael R. Eaton Thomas E. ’78 & Mary M. Olson Raymond ’80 & Betsy King Michael B. Endicott ’82 & Penny G. Westfall ’84 & Don Howson Donna S. Selnick ’77 Anne M. Russell ’78 & Michael E. Smith ’80 & Laura J. Esserman Partner Joseph W. Diehl ’78 Sharon E. Powers Perry R. ’82 & Jane H. Fredgant Donor Jessica F. Arner ’77 & Eli Abbe Susan B. ’78 & Mark A. ’78 Denise M. Rocha ’80 David H. ’82 & Diane S. Hochner Richard M. Adler ’84 Schynert The Honorable Leslie A. Swain ’80 Steven A. Jung ’82 & Lois Barnes Gale H. ’84 & Peter G. Borden James R. ’77 & Tish N. Busselle & Mr. Bert Deixler Ronald K. Sufrin ’78 Michael E. ’82 & Kevan M. Lyon Maureen B. ’84 & Jake ’83 Dear Garrett C. Dailey ’77 Paul R. Zappettini ’80 & Kristine S. Knaplund ’77 & Marlene A. ’82 & Kim R. Felicita S. ’84 & Richard G. Fields P. Erin Dealey Maerowitz Ron Edelstein Barbara J. Zipperman ’80 Lynn E. Hutchins ’84 & Sally Lu Lake ’77 & Class of 1979 Bruce D. ’82 & Kathleen Parker Jon Ishibashi William R. Crawford Donor George A. ’82 & Teresa L. Pisano Virginia A. Johnson ’84 Class Participation: 17% Associate Anonymous Ms. Jane H. Rabin ’82 & Hollis R. Kim ’84 & Total Gifts: $21,325 Professor Edward H. Rabin Harry F. Bowles David L. Ach ’77 & Joan B. ’80 & David S. ’79 Brown Number of Alumni Donors: 26 Joel L. Diringer ’80 Denise K. Russell ’82 & V. T. Langford ’84 Diane E. Appleton Robert Doak Carol L. ’77 & Adam E. Chase King Hall Society Jonathan M. Fil ’80 Helen F. Leskovac ’84 Maurice A. ’77 & Carolyn B. Langenkamp ’79 Gregory R. Gullstrand ’80 & Eric A. Mitnick ’84 Michele D. Deaver John A. ’79 & Mary L. Micheaels Janice Zhang Kathleen R. ’84 & Mary L. Dowell ’77 & Brad Nelson ’79 Jill A. Herman ’80 Class of 1983 Jonathan M. Ranstrom Jaime T. Hernandez ’77 Bruce S. ’80 & Michelle R. Klafter Adam L. ’84 & Deborah J. Rosen Class Participation: 20% Robert ’77 & Carole Fontenrose Senior Partner Cheryl J. Lew Moreland ’80 Andrea G. Rosen ’84 Karen L. ’79 & John V. Total Gifts: $18,795 Diana G. ’77 & Jeffrey S. ’77 Diepenbrock Douglas E. Mirell ’80 & Terrence T. Snook ’84 & Gordon Laurie L. Levenson Number of Alumni Donors: 34 Trish Fontana David I. ’77 & Linda R. Katzen Partner Bradley J. Norris ’80 King Hall Society Babak Sotoodeh ’84 Robert H. ’77 & Carla Kennis Robert A. ’79 & Virginia A. Kenneth A. Olmsted ’80 Marc A. ’83 & Christine A. Ellen Sward ’84 Arthur T. Kuwamoto ’77 Christopher Thomas E. ’80 & Patricia A. Ross Beilinson Cheryl W. Tokunaga ’84 John V. Willoughby ’77 Steven E. Hopkinson ’79 Diane E. Flanagan Zipperstein ’83 James R. ’84 & Nancy C. Wright Lary A. Rappaport ’79 & & Steven E. Zipperstein ’83 Donor Ellen L. Isaacs Senior Partner The Honorable Otis C. Benning ’77 Associate Class of 1981 Daniel J. Ichinaga ’83 & Ms. Willa J. Benning Class of 1985 Donald J. Duprey ’77 Jerome N. Budin ’79 & Class Participation: 15% Partner Suzanne L. Meyer Total Gifts: $66,215 Ms. Kathleen E. Gnekow-Garcia ’77 Molly J. Baier ’83 Class Participation: 18% & The Honorable Michael T. The Honorable Joseph P. Florendo ’79 Number of Alumni Donors: 23 Total Gifts: $13,030 & Ms. Eleanor Nuribitani Alan F. Ciamporcero ’83 & Garcia ’74 Senior Partner Carolyn F. Sachs Number of Alumni Donors: 25 Pamela R. Grove ’77 & Robert C. ’79 & Denise R. Gerald Nelson Fracchia John C. Chasuk ’81 Associate Barrett Society Mark S. ’85 & Aynah V. Askanas Ms. Helen L. Halpert ’77 & Jeffrey M. ’79 & Leslie B. David J. Simon ’81 Maureen E. Burns ’83 Hamerling Alan Zarky Partner Marci Coglianese ’83 Senior Partner Tara Harvey ’77 & Geza Kadar Adam A. Lewis ’79 & Phyllis D. Pottish-Lewis The Honorable M. K. Butz ’81 & Roy I. ’83 & Kipp J. Delbyck William N. Brieger ’85 & Dianna J. ’77 & Mack Lyons Mr. Leonard Berardi Sarah Krevans Donald A. Newman ’79 Richard S. Ekimoto ’83 Sharon F. Mah ’77 & Virginia A. ’81 & Thomas A. Michael A. ’83 & Charles S. Farman ’85 Christopher J. Wei ’77 Donor Cahill Armelle V. Futterman Catherine A. Leacox Farman ’85 Jana L. Tuton ’77 & David S. ’79 & Joan B. ’80 Brown Dennis C. ’81 & Jeannette Michael J. Jimerson ’83 Steven H. ’85 & Julianne L. Haney Reinholtsen Will A. Benware Bari R. Burke ’79 & Debra S. Margolis ’83 & Michael B. ’85 & Dorothea J. Carol C. Weisner ’77 & Thomas P. Huff Marc M. Schneier ’81 & Craig Labadie ’81 Wishek Antonella Grassi Keith E. Gorlen Ms. Deborah E. Calleros ’79 & Phyllis K. Morris ’83 Professor Charles R. Calleros ’78 Partner Associate Nancy J. Newman ’83 & David E. ’85 & Beth Cranston Roberta N. Dempster ’79 Dale C. ’81 & Donna Campbell Mark Walstrom Stephen M. ’85 & Marla M. John H. Dresslar ’79 & Julie A. Gilbert ’81 Richard W. ’83 & Sarah B. ’92 Orr Class of 1978 Erika Wodinsky Papernick Kathryn E. Landreth ’81 Lee A. Tait ’83 & Jon L. Hilton Class Participation: 24% Eileen P. Farley ’79 & Harold J. Light ’85 & Laurel S. ’81 & Francey Liefert Rita J. ’83 & Fredric A. ’81 Susan Stolovy Total Gifts: $8,849.78 George A. Finkle Worrell Number of Alumni Donors: 32 Russell S. Kato ’79 Craig Labadie ’81 & Linda K. McAtee ’85 & Debra S. Margolis ’83 Donor Steven R. Sphar Senior Partner Jeffery M. Ogata ’79 & Joanne Lowe ’81 Kenneth W. Turner ’81 John L. Adams ’83 & Gene S. Woo ’85 Candace E. Carlo ’78 & Virginia McCormack-Healy ’79 Frederic A. ’81 & Rita J. ’83 Catherine A. Jewett Associate Robert S. Chapman ’76 Worrell The Honorable Robert S. Nancy L. ’78 & Lawrence J. Michael M. ’79 & Cathy P. Pollak Susan B. ’85 & Richard C. Carlsen Donor Brody ’83 Ludgus Julienne L. Rynda ’79 & Donna R. Budar-Turner ’83 & Kathryn E. Doi ’85 David G. Ayers Jonathan M. Turner ’81 & Jill C. Peterson ’85 Partner Donna R. Budar-Turner ’83 Jonathan M. Turner ’81 Dian E. ’79 & Mark Stechbart Peter P. ’83 & Ann W. Chen Troy K. ’85 & Josephine G. Taira James L. ’78 & Kathleen M. Marcia C. Todhunter ’79 & The Honorable Diane L. Dillon ’81 Deeringer Simeon Tauber & Mr. William J. Moseley Jake ’83 & Maureen B. ’94 Dear Donor Barbara D. ’78 & Robert S. James F. Fitch ’81 & Don O. Del Rio ’83 Diane A. ’85 & Todd H. Baker Gallagher Genever E. Fox David W. Frye ’83 Vicky L. Barker ’85 Frank L. ’78 & Deborah H. A. Benjamin ’81 & Jeannette Janet Gaard ’83 & Ed Arias David P. Eng ’85 Rugani Getchell James P. Griffith ’83 Susan H. Freeman ’85 The Honorable Patricia H. Wong ’78 Joanne Lowe ’81 & & Mr. Thomas A. Craven Jeffery M. Ogata ’79 Gerald L. Hobrecht ’83 Caroline C. ’85 & Mark Galanty Richard B. ’83 & Jennifer Jones

24 Counselor • Fall 2007 Martha H. Lennihan ’85 & Class of 1988 Partner Class of 1993 Christine L. ’93 & Bradley E. Paul Thayer Esther J. Rogers ’90 & Lofgren Gary T. Nagasawa ’85 & Class Participation: 15% Robert DeBare Class Participation: 12% Susan R. Nelsen ’93 & Judie L. Lew Total Gifts: $5,050 Total Gifts: $3,995 Alberto S. Roldan ’92 Michael W. Schnake ’85 Number of Alumni Donors: 22 Associate Number of Alumni Donors: 18 Mary P. ’93 & James R. Wagoner Sandra A. Spelliscy ’85 & Steven T. Polikalas ’90 Senior Partner Mark R. Warnke ’90 Partner Gregory S. Weber Jeffrey G. ’88 & Ginger Leacox Scott W. Blek ’93 Jeffrey Spitz ’85 & Donor Donald M. ’93 & Lindsay R. Davis Christina Jacobs Spitz Partner Joseph M. ’90 & Laura W. Baria Class of 1994 Robert W. ’88 & Perla E. Brownlie Margaret M. Grayden ’93 & Daniel A. ’90 & Sarah Boone David R. Aladjem Class Participation: 11% Jeffrey T. ’88 & Kimberley S. Total Gifts: $2,600 Green Kristin N. Casey ’90 The Honorable Francine J. Kelley Evans ’90 & Lipman ’93 & Mr. James Number of Alumni Donors: 16 Class of 1986 Beth D. ’88 & John R. Shuman Williamson Kim S. Schroeder-Evans Associate Class Participation: 11% Peggy Twedt ’88 Glyn S. ’93 & Sonia A. ’92 Lister John F. Gianola ’90 & Stephen E. ’94 & Karen T. Adams Total Gifts: $116,380 Associate Carin N. Crain ’91 Number of Alumni Donors: 19 Associate Nader Bitar ’94 Matthew K. ’88 & Robin L. Hoa T. ’90 & Colin R. Glassey Trisha M. ’93 & Ronald D. Keltie Jones ’94 & Joy King Hall Society Bogoshian Martin R. Gran ’90 Connors Galloway-Jones Nancy S. Coan Torres ’86 & Stephen T. Hicklin ’88 Alison A. ’90 & Timothy J. Green Donor Ming-Yuen ’94 & Michael A. Torres David J. ’88 & Andrea Ozeran Susan T. Itelson ’90 & Tobie S. Meyer-Fong Steven C. ’86 & Richard J. Maddock Lisa Duarte Barrow ’93 Donor Erin R. ’94 & Andrew B. ’92 Sabey Rhonda D. Malvey Robert A. ’90 & Gwen Nakamae Judith J. Citko ’93 Kevin C. Almeter ’88 Winnie Tsien ’94 Lynn A. Miyamoto ‘86 & Susan B. ’90 & Alison S. ’93 & Paul A. Cocotis Kevin B. Krocker ‘86 Diane ’88 & Terry Colborn Jonathan H. Sandoval Maurice K. Danbara ’93 Donor Senior Partner Helene Friedman ’88 Anna C. Silva ’90 Michelle A. Des Jardins ’93 & Allison R. ’94 & Steven F. Hayward Robert P. Coronado ’86 Harriet H. ’88 & David S. Christian A. Speck ’90 Robert W. Hicks ’93 Hamilton William H. Kysella ’94 Ron ’86 & Linda B. Maroko Irene S. Tresser ’90 & Donald J. Dudley ’93 & Lori T. Okun ’88 & Christopher C. Brown Teresa L. Dillinger Russell ’94 & Laurie Loving Angela E. Oh ’86 & Matthew J. Gauger ’88 John A. Koulbanis Lara N. Gilman ’93 & Anna M. ’94 & Scott K. Persky Marc P. Picker ’88 & James A. Kleinmann Gerald J. ’94 & Andrea V. Ramiza Donna J. Parkinson ’86 Larri A. Lightner Emily M. Haliday ’93 Victoria A. Wooster ’86 & Daniel R. Saxon ’88 Kirk E. Trost ’86 Class of 1991 Lynn Shapiro ’88 & Mark E. Ellis Associate Class Participation: 12% Mark A. ’88 & Francene M. Total Gifts: $4,155 Linda Somers Smith ’86 & Steinberg Scott A. Smith Josie N. Tullos ’88 Number of Alumni Donors: 19 Donor Davil R. ’88 & Susan Vasquez Partner Anonymous Ruth G. Watson ’88 & Mortimer H. ’91 & Jenifer Gary P. Giller Hartwell Michael L. Bledsoe ’86 & Matthew T. Yuen ’88 Marc G. Reich ’91 & Jennifer F. Jennings Marianne Gibbons Joseph O. ’86 & Elizabeth S. Click Felicia R. Reid ’91 Arthur F. ’86 & Laura B. Coon David A. ’91 & Laurie F. Renas William E. ’86 & Sarah C. Degen Class of 1989 Julie A. Miller ’86 Associate Class Participation: 18% Nancee M. Murray ’86 Diane M. Allen ’91 Total Gifts: $19,010 Stephen M. Hankins ’91 Patricia A. Tsubokawa-Reeves ’86 Number of Alumni Donors: 28 to thank my 2007 1L students Andrew J. ’91 & Janice Henderson King Hall Society Leslie G. Miessner ’91 Hyong S. ’89 & Jean K. Koh Donor Andrew H. Wu ’89 Class of 1987 Tamara B. Abrams ’91 Senior Partner Class Participation: 14% Diane M. Allen ’91 Donald E. ’89 & Toni Bradley Total Gifts: $7,419.87 Kent V. Anderson ’91 Number of Alumni Donors: 25 Partner Carin N. Crain ’91 & John F. Gianola ’90 Anonymous Senior Partner Joseph R. Deulloa ’91 Mark A. Easter ’89 Suzanne S. ’87 & Scott Graeser Denise A. Gamble ’91 Mr. Scott E. Alumbaugh ’89 & MarK Perry ’80 and Melanie Peña Linda Schilling ’87 & Eileen S. Gillis ’91 William J. Rosoff Professor Lisa C. Ikemoto ’87 “My time at King Hall provided me with a high-quality legal education Beverly M. ’89 & Jerry L. Tobey Mark V. ’91 & Jennifer L. Isola Partner Jeffrey A. ’91 & Wendy L. Krieger that has prepared me well for my career in law, as well as business,” says Associate James J. ’87 & Cindi Eischen Rachel J. Shigekane ’91 & Mark Perry ’80, president and CEO of Aerovance Inc, a biotechnology Heather C. McLaughlin ’87 & Keith M. ’89 & Steven M. Kraft Kim L. Allen-Niesen Jon M. Westmoreland Steven W. Siefert ’91 company in Berkeley, focused on the development of therapies to treat Anthony W. ’87 & Marie C. Joanne M. Harris-Bloom ’89 & respiratory and allergic diseases. John Bloom Pierotti Mark and his wife, Melanie Peña, married in 1975, recently named Professor Lisa C. Ikemoto ’87 & Stacy D. Lifton ’89 Mr. Scott E. Alumbaugh ’89 Kevin R. ’89 & Andrea L. Lussier Class of 1992 the Career Services Offices through a generous gift to the King Hall Building Associate Arlen R. Orchard ’89 Class Participation: 12% Expansion and Renovation Project. Gary Bresee ’87 Janis H. Webster ’89 Total Gifts: $3,175 “Melanie and I believe that the renovation and expansion program will Angela M. Brown ’87 Donor Number of Alumni Donors: 19 ultimately enable the School to educate more students, in a more effective Deborah L. Alexander ’89 Kathleen Faubion ’87 & Partner way, with improved facilities. We chose to name the Career Services Offices Brian J. Zamora Lawrence F. ’89 & Kelly L. Borelli ’92 & Stacy Jo L. Inman ’87 & Sharon M. Brown Robert J. Parreira in connection with our contribution because of the help I received from Career Michael J. Gagner Cynthia E. ’89 & Sonia A. ’92 & Glyn S. ’93 Lister Services during my time at King Hall, and its importance to the success of Steven P. Malloch ’87 & William T. ’89 Chisum Deborah B. Jensen Cynthia M. Convey ’89 Associate future students.” Donor Angela M. Dawson-Milton ’89 & Sarah B. ’92 & Richard W. ’83 Orr Melanie is a licensed clinical social worker who specializes in the Helga M. Carson ’87 Quincy N. Milton Andrew B. ’92 & Erin R. ’94 Sabey treatment of adolescents and severely mentally disabled clients. She was Raymond T. Domingo ’89 Gary M. Connaughton ’87 & Donor a therapist with Family Service Agency of Marin, McAuley’s Children’s Carol S. Golden Kaia Eakin ’89 Jana L. Allen ’92 & Harriet E. Cummings ’87 & Nancy E. Hart ’89 & Michael Pittman Psychiatric Unit, and Cordilleras Mental Health Center. Currently, she serves Timothy Rowe Martin H. Wiener Dawn Andrews McIntosh ’92 & on the Community Advisory Board for the Family Service Agency of Marin. J. Daniel Holsenback ’89 Douglas McIntosh Victoria E. Davis ’87 Prior to joining Aerovance Inc., Mark was the senior business advisor Sandra A. Dewey ’87 Wayne T. Kasai ’89 & David A. ’92 & Tracy Darrin Max Jerry ’87 & Elyse Garcia Gretchen Schildwachter Elizabeth D. Friedman ’92 for Gilead Sciences, Inc., reporting to the CEO. He was an executive officer Melanie G. Gover ’87 Roger L. ’89 & Sallie L. McLean Aaron R. Gary ’92 of Gilead from 1994 to 2004, serving in a variety of capacities, including Linda B. Ross-Jones ’89 & Keith A. ’87 & Deborah R. Laufer Scott D. Jones Amy R. Levine ’92 General Counsel, Chief Financial Officer and, most recently, Executive Vice Brendan R. ’87 & Mary F. Elizabeth A. ’89 & David T. Millers ’92 President of Operations, responsible for worldwide sales & marketing, legal, McDonnell Richard A. Werhel Janet L. Mueller ’92 & Jeremy A. Meier ’87 Lei-Chala I. Wilson ’89 Esther P. Leeflang manufacturing, and facilities. From 1981 to 1994, Mark was with the law firm Leslie M. Proll ’87 James B. Racobs ’92 & Cooley Godward Kronish LLP. Yukiko Hayashi Mary J. Scoonover ’87 He says about his time in Law School, “I made many new friends Gail Stassinos ’87 Alberto S. Roldan ’92 & Susan R. Nelsen ’93 Bella T. Wong ’87 & Steve Brand Class of 1990 and opened my mind to new ideas and opportunities I would have never Daniel M. ’92 & Ana Schiavetta Class Participation: 12% considered otherwise. I do not think I would have had such a diverse and Matthew J. Smith ’92 & Total Gifts: $6,425 Katherine A. Codekas positive experience at any other law school, and I attribute that to the unique Number of Alumni Donors: 19 Darryl A. ’92 & faculty and student body at King Hall.” Karen F. Stallworth Barrett Society He added, “I believe it is critical for each of us to support the School in Gregg M. Ficks ’90 Craig A. ’92 & Colleen Sterling Jason B. ’92 & Linda Wacha any way we can so King Hall can continue to educate future generations of Senior Partner lawyers with a diversity of backgrounds.” Philip D. Sokol ’90

Counselor • Fall 2007 25 Class of 2003 Marissa L. ’06 & Adam W. Dragoo Laura M. Eddy ’06 Class Participation: 11% Total Gifts: $4,185.06 Andrea C. Fazel ’06 Number of Alumni Donors: 19 Jeffrey A. Finucane ’06 Huey-Ru Geng ’06 Senior Partner Crisanne Hazen ’06 Danielle L. Thiry-Zaragoza ’03 Anthony P. Jones ’06 Paula S. Salcido ’94 & Donor Class of 2000 Partner Amy K. Lee ’06 Dennis M. Burke ’94 David A. ’97 & Elizabeth A. Bell Melanie L. Proctor ’03 Kou Lor ’06 Class Participation: 9% Elizabeth Spurlock ’94 Matthew J. ’97 & Jill S. Brigham Sara J. Romano ’03 Allison G. Marrazzo ’06 Amy N. Tirre ’94 Total Gifts: $3,395 Sydney A. Paterno ’06 Amy H. ’97 & James D. ’98 Fulmer Number of Alumni Donors: 16 Associate Stacie R. ’94 & Thomas G. Ward Marcie L. ’97 & Megan M. Elder ’03 & Katherine A. Robb ’06 Gregory C. Gardner Senior Partner Eric W. Bergstrom Stefan R. Spich ’06 Rhonda A. Hughes ’97 Kara K. Ueda ’00 & Lisa S. Tang ’03 Ryan ’06 & Rebekah Stephensen Scott M. Lay ’00 Class of 1995 Adam F. Keats ’97 Donor William Tunick ’06 Paul B. Littlepage ’97 Associate Desiree C. Velasco ’06 Class Participation: 11% Joshua D. Boxer ’03 Lynn Loschin ’97 Vanessa C. Mandel ’00 Noah C. Cuttler ’03 Total Gifts: $2,025 John A. Maier ’97 & Lisa Tracy Lena K. Sims ’00 & Mark Bennett Number of Alumni Donors: 17 Gage C. Dungy ’03 Cynthia A. Megowan Olds ’97 Donor Thomas M. Dyer ’03 Class of 2007 Associate Seth M. Merewitz ’97 Andrea L. ’00 & Charles Bacchi Rebecca A. Gardner ’03 Karen J. Heald ’95 Class Participation: 59% Jeremy D. ’97 & Julie D. Milbrodt Constantine C. Baranoff ’00 James L. Gwinup ’03 Peter C. Meier ’95 Total Gifts: $14,450 Mr. Joel L. Stern ’97 & Cheri L. ’00 & Christopher Bjork Anna C. Hartford ’03 & Alison E. Wright ’95 Professor Holly S. Cooper ’98 Number of Alumni Donors: 107 Thomas I. Johnston ’00 & Christian A. Bauer Peter L. Vladimir ’97 Senior Partner Donor Erika C. Eichler ’98 Dana Y. Kim ’03 Michael Wanser ’07 Suzanne B. Brown ’95 Valerie L. Feldman ’00 & Maggy R. Krell ’03 & Vanessa L. Garrett ’95 William J. Wisham Cary C. Huxsoll ’04 Partner Antoinette P. ’95 & Paul D. Hewitt Class of 1998 Tracy S. Fleischman ’00 Elizabeth A. Linton ’03 Michael Berens ’07 Julia Lingys ’95 Pamela M. Griggs ’00 Jacqueline L. McDonald ’03 Ruby Marquez ’07 Class Participation: 12% Monika S. Kalra ’00 Richard C. Ng ’03 Brian J. ’95 & Kristen L. Manion Total Gifts: $4,580 David Richardson ’07 Eric A. Ringsmuth ’00 Erin V. Peth ’03 Colleen E. Monahan ’95 Number of Alumni Donors: 18 Edward Vieira-Ducey ’07 Christian C. ’00 & Angela R. Leon V. Roubinian ’03 Peter A. Nyquist ’95 & Associate Taz E. Varkey Barrett Society Scheuring Stephen Abreu ’07 Charla J. ’95 & Bill Ota Katy I. ’98 & David Orr Preet K. ’00 & Gopala K. Tummala Kristin Bohm ’07 Joy A. Ramos ’95 & Associate Patrice R. Zabell ’00 Class of 2004 Jennifer Carbuccia ’07 Carl T. Wallace Amie Peters ’98 & Tara Rufo ’95 & Vincent Caruso ’98 Class Participation: 8% Amanda Chavez ’07 Jason M. Heath ’95 Mark M. Malovos ’98 Class of 2001 Total Gifts: $2,835.02 Linette K. Davis ’07 Elaine Talley ’95 & Jeff Roy Jesmin Alam ’98 & Number of Alumni Donors: 15 Sarah Fenn ’07 Mary M. Waltermire ’95 Eugene P. Olivo ’97 Class Participation: 13% Associate Marc Fernandez ’07 Total Gifts: $3,830.01 Kathleen Winter ’95 Veronica Ann O. Benigno ’04 Erik Fuehrer ’07 Donor Number of Alumni Donors: 23 Tina R. ’98 & Patrick J. Cannon Kira L. Klatchko ’04 Amy Geiser ’07 Tony L. Cheng ’98 Partner Wendy Motooka ’04 & Lila Hollman ’07 Class of 1996 Erika C. Eichler ’98 & Teri R. Richardson-Bleeker ’01 & Margaret Berry Phoebe S. ’07 & Samuel Hyun Thomas I. Johnston ’00 Gerrit W. Bleeker Sally H. Schwettmann ’04 Raymond Y. Kim ’07 Class Participation: 9% Greg Fisher ’98 & Melissa Jones ’99 Neil Swartzberg ’01 William J. Wenner ’04 Jack McKenna ’07 Total Gifts: $2,510 James D. ’98 & Amy H. ’97 Fulmer Associate Christopher T. Yamada ’04 Fabiola Murillo ’07 Number of Alumni Donors: 14 Haeji Hong ’98 Doris Derelian ’01 Donor Jason Rosenberg ’07 Senior Partner Danielle M. Houck ’98 & David A. ’01 & Christopher R. Apallas ’04 Nina Sachdev ’07 Joshua M. Horowitz ’96 & Nathaniel H. Cooke Catherine A. Diepenbrock Andrew D. ’04 & Alexa Bluth Melissa Schutz ’07 Patricia J. Baggett Sally L. Kinoshita ’98 Teresa L. Hu ’01 Cathy A. Hongola ’04 Stephen Siptroth ’07 Partner Galin Luk ’98 & Jinny Kim ’99 Blair Marlowe Christensen ’01 & Jeffrey Spivak ’07 C S. Christensen Frank Huerta ’04 David A. Lorie ’96 & Victor P. Montoya ’98 Kerianne Steele ’07(King Hall Timothy Naylor ’01 Cary C. Huxsoll ’04 & Kena D. Hudson Seth A. Rafkin ’98 & Abigail Maggy R. Krell ’03 Labor & Employment Law Ackroyd Rebekah W. Young ’01 Committee) Donor Melinda Leong ’04 Professor Holly S. Cooper ’98 & Kelly Welchans ’07 Anonymous Donor Elijah R. ’04 & Jenna L. Makus Mr. Joel L. Stern ’97 John Whittaker ’07 Barbara Y. Chun ’96 & Amy Alley ’01 Adrienne M. Meredith ’04 Erik O. Valderhaug ’98 Pauline Woodman ’07 Richard Amiya Sarah A. Boxer ’01 Heather M. Rowan ’04 Jennifer Grange Ermoian ’96 Candice L. Chung ’01 Christine Young ’07 Kevin T. ’96 & Heather Fan ’01 Suzanne Zalev ’07 Georgeann H. Ikuma Class of 1999 Gaspar R. Garcia ’01 Donor Frederick L. Jones ’96 Class of 2005 Class Participation: 13% Peggy J. Gibson ’01 James Aburto ’07 Jori K. Mandelman ’96 Total Gifts: $3,070 Fumiaki Ishii ’01 Class Participation: 5% Farah Anthony ’07 Christel H. Pauli ’96 Number of Alumni Donors: 22 David G. Kiene ’01 Total Gifts: $6,547.15 Erica Ballinger ’07 Jason E. Rabinowitz ’96 & Number of Alumni Donors: 10 Etan Basseri ’07 Pilar Barton Partner Michael A. Korshin ’01 Carissa Beecham ’07 Katherine P. ’96 & Richard E. Pascal Benyamini ’99 Megan O’Carroll ’01 King Hall Society Ragusa Megan M. La Belle ’99 Elio ’01 & Helen Palacios Kelly Shea ’05 & Trevor Foster Sameena S. Beguwala ’07 Robert Berlet ’07 Stacey N. Sheston ’96 Jason H. Powers ’01 Associate Associate Aric Bright ’07 Bijal V. Vakil ’96 Len R. ’01 & Kymberli E. Peter C. Leung ’05 Craig A. Gerson ’99 Reid-Reynoso Liza Bunker ’07 Timothy J. ’96 & Susan Walton Raquel M. Silva ’05 & Kimberly A. McFarlin Niemeyer ’99 Lee Seale ’01 Brianne Byrne ’07 & Ryan E. Niemeyer Andrew Riffel Timothy Watson ’01 Jan L. Westfall ’05 Bethany Cabal ’07 Donor Sean Carney ’07 Class of 1997 Sandra T. Chong ’99 Donor Amanda Cary ’07 Charone Frankel ’05 Class Participation: 15% Angela D. Da Silva ’99 Class of 2002 David Chase ’07 Total Gifts: $11,085 Aimee Dudovitz ’99 & Lee S. Gobuty ’05 Sung Ji Choi ’07 David W. Kesselman ’99 Class Participation: 7% Number of Alumni Donors: 25 Kristy Kunisaki ’05 Caryn Crosthwait ’07 Melissa A. Jones ’99 & Total Gifts: $1,985 Jennifer LaGrange ’05 King Hall Society Kevin Davis ’07 Gregory J. Fisher ’98 Number of Alumni Donors: 13 Masamichi ’05 & Eri Saito Anonymous Amber Dodge ’07 Erin P. ’99 & Darren Gonzalez Partner Joanna F. Silverman ’05 Senior Partner Jessica A. Hartnett ’99 Nira Feeley ’07 Shelley G. ’02 & Sharon A. Bryant Fernando Flores ’07 Suzanne H. Blau ’97 & Monique Y. Ho ’99 Brett Davis Collins ’02 Michael R. Williams ’97 Kristin L. Jacobson ’99 Keren Gesund ’07 Laurence V. Mathews ’97 Steven S. Levine ’99 Associate Class of 2006 Eleanor Gladstone ’07 Jinny Kim ’99 & Galin Luk ’98 Dawn M. Belcher-Neufeld ’02 & Class Participation: 12% Elana Goldstein ’07 Partner Ryan Neufeld Graham M. Lyons ’99 & Total Gifts: $2,793.33 Lauren Goshen ’07 Richard J. Stearns ’97 & Brandon J. Lu ’02 Margaret Durkin Mindy Wolfe Number of Alumni Donors: 23 Chad Greeson ’07 Chui-kiu T. Wong ’02 Aleshandra Griffith-Reed ’07 William D. Strickland ’97 Rachael E. Salcido ’99 Associate Martin Zackor ’02 Jane Harrington ’07 Nu Usaha ’97 & Larry Furst Michael J. Scimeca ’99 Crystal M. Gaudette ’06 Robert B. ’99 & Kellee C. ’99 Donor Elizabeth Harris ’07 Associate Samantha L. Grant ’06 Westbrook Anonymous Christopher Hughes ’07 Michael N. Mills ’97 Jonathan B. Kaplan ’06 Wesley J. ’99 & Linda H. Wong Christina Q. Cross ’02 Nathan Jacobsen ’07 Eugene P. Olivo ’97 & Yoonjin Park ’06 Jesmin Alam ’98 Anonymous Amount Given Robert E. Krebs ’02 Kimberly Jensen ’07 Donor Marien Sorensen ’97 & Courtenay K. McKeon ’99 Amar A. Lapsi ’02 Kris Kaiser ’07 Michael Mc Clain Courtney T. Nguyen ’02 Corrine Bielejeski ’06 Jong O. Kim ’07 Ira A. ’97 & Denise Weinreb Laura ’02 & Rahim Shad Alica Del Valle ’06 Tara Kim ’07 Treb H. ’02 & Julie Winegar Gurdeep K. Dhaliwal ’06

26 Counselor • Fall 2007 Juliana Kresse ’07 Senior Partner Mary Blecher-Smeltzer & Chuck Esther S. Lee Gifts from Butterfield Alexis Krieg ’07 Bullivant Houser Bailey Kristin N. Link Faculty & Staff Changyong Ku ’07 Richard Cogswell Julia Bruckner Kari E. Lokke Ayse Kuzucuoglu ’07 Carolyn S. & Gordon K. Davidson Bernheim Gutierrez & McCready Yvonne L. Marsh Total Gifts: $35,502 Megan Lane ’07 Dr. Julita A. Fong Ray & Verena Borton Beverley D. & David K. Maul King Hall Society Erik Lawrence ’07 Bill Julian Barbara J. & William J. Braker Karen A. & Steve W. McDonald Dean Rex R. Perschbacher Nicholas Lieberknecht ’07 Thelma & Hiroshi Kido Lisa A. Brodkey Kathleen C. McEleheney Professor Emerita Martha S. West Chris Luis ’07 Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP Rhoda Bunnell Adrian McGilly Pat Cain & Jean Love Barrett Society Huy Luong ’07 Reed Smith LLP Jack McKenna Professor Holly D. Doremus & John Macaulay ’07 George C. Webster Mark E. & Stana T. Capron Erinn Melby Mr. Gordon E. Anthon Chad Mahalich ’07 Robert & Wendy Chason Heather M. Melton Partner Anita & Parminder Chawla Senior Partner Ruby Marquez ’07 California Business Properties Regina Merson Professor Emeritus Edward L. Tim McRae ’07 Association Grace C. & Lee Chen John Meyer Barrett, Jr. Sammar Miqbel ’07 Clausen Law Group Manjeet & Lata M. Chinnan James W. Michel Professor Floyd F. Feeney Damien Morrison ’07 Jeffrey H. & Patricia L. Dasteel Susan D. Christian Karen J. Moore & John A. Meyer Professor Madhavi Sunder & Lauren Navarro ’07 DeBare & Rogers/Schwab Char Cristina González & Richard A. Eldridge & Judith Moores Professor Anupam Chander Cohen Cuong Nguyen ’07 Diepenbrock Harrison Linda A. Morris Professor Emeritus Richard C. Colleen Connolly Caroline Patton ’07 Duckor Spradling & Metzger Virginia S. & Paul F. Mueller Wydick & Ms. Judith J. Wydick Elizabeth K. & Norman D. Coontz Stan Powell ’07 Eischen & Associates Jagir S. & Amarjit K. Multani Partner Ann & Fred Costello Austin A. Quinn-Davidson ’07 Christopher Ellison New York Times Corporation Professor John D. Ayer & Jim Cramer & Helen Roland Carrie Rasmussen ’07 Ellison Schneider & Harris LLP Foundation Ms. Maryanne Bertram Alison J. Cubre Bridget Roberts ’07 INDATA Corp Terry A. O’Neill Professor James E. Hogan & DDMK Global Services Inc. Ms. Janice A. Hogan Sharon Rose ’07 Dr. & Mrs. Richard Katzberg Gozie Onyema Jerry DeCamp & Diane Phaff- Professor Lisa C. Ikemoto ’87 & Kathryn Rowe ’07 Morrison & Foerster Foundation Kyaw T. Paw U & Ruth Adele DeCamp Bartlett Mr. Scott E. Alumbaugh ’89 Nathan Sabri ’07 Marcelo Moscogliato Eric D. Dye Jeanne M. Payne Sharon L. Pinkney Nina Sachdev ’07 Roberta A. & David J. Murphy Julie P. Eun Alice M. & Michael R. Peterson Dave & Donarae Reynolds Salvador Sarmiento Torres ’07 Olson, Hagel, Waters & Fishburn, Karen E. Froyland Donna Petre & Dennis M. Styne Professor James F. Smith & Latika Sharma ’07 LLP Ms. Julia C. Newcomb Joy L. Galloway Steven B. Pfeiffer Casey Shepard ’07 Jeffrey and Elisa Rummel Living Pam Gill-Fisher & Ron Fisher Joann & Charles F. Plenge Associate Allan Shuldine ’07 Trust School of Law Agency Account Tzipi & Dan Goldkorn Rebecca A. Pope Professor Alan E. Brownstein & Jennifer R. Smith ’07 & Kris Rhonda J. & Tony Gruska Ms. Elizabeth L. Brownstein Kaiser Shartsis Friese LLP Deanna E. & William R. Pritchard Robin L. Hansen, MD Professor Emerita Carol S. Bruch Erick Soderlund ’07 Silicon Valley Law Group Lucy Puls Harris Sanford & Hamman Professor Jennifer M. Chacón & Erica Sorosky ’07 Kathryn Radke Associate Lynette A. & Benjamin L. Hart Mr. Jonathan Glater Minna Suh ’07 Lori Raineri Archibald Weinreb Family Trust Sally H. Harvey Judy & Doug Cook Michael Tener ’07 Arnold & Porter LLP Lynn M. & C. T. Recknagel Professor Christopher S. Cathy Haskell (in memory of Neal Clarine N. Riddle Ann Tran ’07 Carlsen Thomas, LLP King, Jr.) Elmendorf Laurie & Brian Rivers Carina Uraiqat ’07 Beverly L. & Bertie Chawla Pat & Mike Hayes Professor Emeritus George S. Lauri I. & Steve L. Rivetti Grossman & Ms. Susanna H. Daniel Vecchio ’07 Mike & Judy Davis Joanna Heiple & Byron Chin Grossman Lorri S. Rosen Thomas Vigdal ’07 Mary A. Grivna Susan Hildreth Professor Edward J. Imwinkelried M. F. & Leonard J. Rosen Jenica Wilkins ’07 Ann & Charles Halsted Charity B. & Morris W. Hirsch & Ms. Cindy Clark Aimee & M. Craig Ross Matt Wroblewski ’07 Myriam Hu Timothy Hohmann Professor Elizabeth Joh Kimberly Ross Sharon Wu ’07 Hathaway Perrett & Gutierrez H’kon Hope & Sally P. Springer Associate Dean Kevin R. Johnson Berge Roubinian Suzanne M. Zalev ’07 Kenneth W. Turner Law Offices Steve & Debby Horowitz & Ms. Virginia Salazar John Zollo ’07 King & Associates Donine Sabra Hedrick Professor Thomas W. Joo & Barbara A. Horwitz & John M. Ms. Irene Joo Langenkamp & Curtis LLP Horowitz Daljit & Kultar S. Sachdev Jean & Steve Korinke Leigh & Irwin Segel Jerry & Fay Hulbert Donna L. Sachs Professor Evelyn A. Lewis Sat & Padma Mahajan Mary G. Inman Madurai Sadasivam Gifts From Professor Albert C. Lin & Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP Irene Janis Ingrid Salim Friends Joan & Tom Sallee Ms. Linh C. Thai Vicki Smith & Steve McMahon Genevieve & Luc Janssens Professor John B. Oakley & Total Gifts: $576,991 Don & Merna Villarejo Carole Joffe & Fred Block Melissa Schutz Ms. Fredericka B. Oakley Johnson Schachter & Lewis Casey L. Shepard King Hall Society Donor Professor Emeritus Cruz A. Carl C. Jorgensen Rebecca L. Shuman Reynoso & Ms. Jeannene The Fletcher Jones Foundation Aggie Enterprises Suad Joseph Raman Singh Reynoso Marci Hoze & Sharon R. Wilson MD Sowmya Akula Gwendolyn Kaltoft Mary F. Singleton Sally H. Schwettmann ’04 Jackson Lewis LLP Laura Alber Amy Kapatkin DVM Claire B. & Darell G. Slotton Professor Bruce A. Wolk & Kalmanovitz Charitable Cynthia H. Anders The Honorable Lois G. Wolk Foundation Marcia & Henry Kaplan Mary B. Smeltzer Anonymous (x2) Dr. Maximilian & Martha Koessler Herma Hill Kay Debbie M. Smith Donor Ruth U. Asmundson Estate Nancy C. Kays Jackie Speier Professor Diane M. Amann Robert Bahar Luce Forward Hamilton & Mary F. & Roger N. Kehew Carolyn & Arthur Spengler Professor Keith Aoki & Scripps LLP Dinesh & Asha D. Bajaj Ms. Mona T. Aoki Teri A. Kezirian Yasmin C. Spiegel William A. & Sally Rutter Mona Bakshi Professor Andrea K. Bjorklund & Kathy Krause Patricia L. & Richard K. Stahl Sue R. Wilkins Beverly & H.C. Ballard Ms. Sean C. Duggan Catherine J. Kudlick Maureen L. Stanton Bechtel Foundation James & Trisha Butler Barrett Society Cecilia Kwan Assistant Chancellor Maril Revette Judith Berling & Rhoda Bunnell Stratton Professor Holly S. Cooper ’98 & DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary Lydia Landeros Mr. Joel L. Stern ’97 Lindsay Beck Harold Swenson Leslie A. Kurtz Melody A. Law Ewey & David Professor Joel C. Dobris & Jim & Susan Tipton M. Ewey Joyce N. Takahashi Ms. Linda S. Dobris Tashima Family Living Trust Professor Arturo Gandara & Eugene & Helen Tashima Ms. Patricia C. Gandara Thales Teixeira Cristina M. Gapasin Tether Enterprise Inc. Professor Robert W. Hillman & Virginia Thigpen Ms. Oympia Hillman Helen & Cap Thomson Professor Bill O. Hing & Ms. Lenora Fung Toyota Motor Sales, USA, Inc. Professor Carlton F. Larson Mary A. & William S. Van Slyck Professor Peter Lee Bill Vasey Peter S. Lust VSC Consulting Service Inc. Professor Robert Mikos & Carolyn F. Wall Ms. Cindy Kam The Weinberg Foundation Julie A. Montgomery Robert A. Weinberg Professor Lisa R. Pruitt Elizabeth G. Weinberg Tracy L. Schuster Weintraub Genshlea Chediak Professor Donna Shestowsky Law Corp Jennifer West & Adrian McGilly Barbara E. West Karina H. & Robert E. Woolley Lynne & Randy Yackzan John & Nan Yates Yellow Barn Farm

Counselor • Fall 2007 27 Please support King Hall students by giving to the King Hall Annual Fund

Gifts to the Annual Fund provide support Gifts also enhance the lives of current for competitive scholarships, and preserve students and allow us to invest in our student’s freedom of career choice through student academic groups and journals. meaningful Loan Repayment Assistance. Three ways to make a gift: Visit our secure online giving form at https://www.law.ucdavis.edu/giving/ Complete and return the Annual Fund form included in this issue of the King Hall Counselor. Call us at 530-754-5328 Board Members W. George Wailes ’81 The Honorable Tony Agbayani ’81 Pamela Kohlman Webster ’82 Yeoryios C. Apallas ’72 Matthew T. Yuen ’88 Pascal Benyamini ’99 Kelly Borelli ’92 William N. Brieger ’85 alumni reception Gage C. Dungy ’03 hosts Krista Hart Eric J. Smith ’91 The Honorable Judy Hersher ’84 class gift Each year, King Hall alumni Michael Hersher Kenneth N. Sokoler ’92 Charity Kenyon ’77 committees: Jeff Leacox ’88 host receptions in their homes The Honorable Judy Hersher ’84 Marien Sorensen ’97 and businesses for their fellow Class of 1975 Russell Hildreth ’93 Janet M. Stroman ’00 Carol Livingston ’80 alums. The following alums and firms graciously hosted UC Philip G. Satre ’75 Yoshinori Himel ’75 Beth E. Terrell ’95 Mark Malovos ’98 Tom W. Stallard ’75 Davis School of Law Alumni Michael Hirst Amy N. Tirre ’94 Ron Maroko ’86 Receptions in 2006-2007. Alberto Y. Balingit ’75 John C. Schick ’72 Laurie Hodges Winnie Tsien ’94 Los Angeles Fred A. Silva ’86 Class of 1976 Jason Holder Kara K. Ueda ’00 October, 2006 William Strickland ’97 Lester S. Rosen ’76 Darcie Houck ’98 Wankanok Usaha ’97 Robert S. Chapman ’76 Jean Jordan Erik O. Valderhaug ’98 John H. Story ’77 Class of 1980 Greenberg Glusker Joshua Kaizuka Timothy Walton ’96 Amy N. Tirre ’94 Mark L. Perry ’80 Suzanne Kennedy Timothy J. Watson ’01 Kara K. Ueda ’00 San Diego Class of 1981 Jennifer Kibbe Day Paula A. Weikel ’97 Micahel A. Van Horne ’75 October, 2006 Virginia A. Cahill ’81 Catherine Kilduff Chip White ’03 Michael R. Williams ’97 Charles A. Bird ’73 Diane L. Dillon ’81 Steve Kimball Michael R. Williams ’97 Luce Forward Hamilton & Scripps Sean King ’02 M. Bradley Wishek ’85 Class of 1986 San Francisco Tiffany King ’02 Martin Zackor ’02 Nancy S. Coan-Torres ’86 Public service October, 2006 Ron Maroko ’86 Janice Lai graduation James P. Woods ’72 Fred A. Silva ’86 Roberta Larson keynote speaker LeBoeuf Lamb Greene & Pat Lenzi King Hall C.A.R.E.S. MacRae LLP Class of 2001 Russell Loving ’94 The Public Service Law Program Blair Christensen ’01 Program is an academic certification Chad Mahalich ’07 program developed for students Washington, DC Whit Manley King Hall C.A.R.E.S. volunteers seeking public service careers. January, 2007 James Maynard help recruit applicants and This year’s keynote address was Paul Rosenthal ’75 admitted students to the Law given by: Gifts from Sean McCarthy ’70 School. These volunteers meet Kelley Drye & Warren LLP Sean McCoy prospective students in large Paul M. Igasaki ’79 current groups, small groups, and one- San Francisco The Honorable John Mendez on-one settings to share personal Students Richard Miadich ’02 April, 2007 perspectives on King Hall. John Cook ’96 Total amount of gifts: $140 Michael Mills Susan Kim ’01 2007 George Wolf ’73 Sarah W. Asplin ’08 Jim Moose Jeffrey G. Leacox ’88 Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP Monica Ashiku ’08 Daniel Neal ’05 commencement David A. Lorie ’96 Sarah S. Christian ’08 Patti Nelson speaker Marlene A. Maerowitz ’82 Sacramento Chang Yong Ku ’09 Cynthia Nop March, 2007 Mark M. Malovos ’98 Gus Lee ’76 Sarah Martinez ’08 Sophea Nop Maggy Krell ’03 Linda K. McAtee ’85 Jeff Ogata ’79 Brian Smiley Marvin E. Mizell ’96 Thomas Parker The California Department of Nicolas Pullin Robert D. Mullaney ’84 annual capitol Justice, Office of the Attorney Matching Gifts Patricia Tsubokawa Reeves ’86 Jennifer F. Novak ’96 tour & reception General Joy Rosenquist Damon M. Ott ’01 Archer-Johnson Foundation speakers April, 2007 Wanda Rouzan Marc Picker ’88 Marc Levinson ’73 General Electric Foundation Lawrence G. Brown ’89 Jordan Sanders Aneke M. Plimier ’97 Linda Partmann Lockheed Martin Foundation Kara K. Ueda ’00 Dina Santos David A. Prahl ’04 Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe National Semiconductor Chris Schearing Jaime V. Raba ’03 Occidental Petroleum Char Fdtn Damien Schiff Hans Peder Riegels ’06 Seattle Verizon Foundation Lee Seale ’01 Heather M. Rowan ’04 May, 2007 Wells Fargo Community Support Class agents Ann Siprelle Tara Rufo ’95 Daniel Ichinaga ’83 Wells Fargo Foundation Class agents chose to help Camil Skipper ’94 Julienne L. Rynda ’79 the Alumni Relations office by Ellis, Li & McKinstry PLLC Terrence Snook ’84 Sandra J. Sands ’84 encouraging their classmates to John C. Schick ’72 give to the King Hall Annual Fund Thomas B. Spalding and collected information for the volunteer Aimee Steele ’02 Sally H. Schwettmann ’04 “Class Notes” 2006 Reunion Alex Shvartsman ’06 donor rolls Cliff Stevens Committee Dan Stone ’76 Fred A. Silva ’86 Alberto Y. Balingit ’75 Dan Stouder ’03 Stefan Read Spich ’06 Melissa A. Borrelli ’05 members B.J. Susich ’06 Tom W. Stallard ’75 Sarah A. Boxer ’01 Class of 1971 Moot Court Kelli Taylor William D. Strickland ’97 Duncan W. Crabtree-Ireland ’98 Ronald K. Clausen ’71 Jeffery Anne Tatum ’78 John Davidson ’71 Volunteers Michael Tener ’07 Class of 1976 Amy N. Tirre ’94 Frederic M. Douglas, Jr. ’99 Annie Amaral Jill Thomas Barbara Saarni de Oddone ’76 Irene S. Tresser ’90 James M. Duarte ’84 Jeff Aran W. Scott Thorpe ’72 L. Burda Gilbert ’76 Kara K. Ueda ’00 Gage C. Dungy ’03 Paul Beard Kristi Tugesvik The Honorable Victor D. Ryerson ’76 Carissa Beecham ’07 William Tunick ’06 Anna Valiente ’06 Stephen T. Frank ’70 Thadd Blizzard Kara Ueda ’00 Michael A. Van Horne ’75 Andreas O. Garza ’96 Class of 1981 Greg Broderick Richard Uno Desiree Cristina Velasco ’06 Rina Maria Gonzales ’02 W. George Wailes ’81 Suzanne Brown Carol Ventura The Honorable Nancy Wieben Antoinette P. Hewitt ’95 Stock ’76 Class of 1986 Mia S. Brown Rose Weckermann Gerald L. Hobrecht ’83 Tracy L. Winsor ’96 Ron Maroko ’86 Jim Cahalan William Westerfield John M. Hochhausler ’89 Iris P. Yang ’82 Fred Silva ’86 Russell Carlberg John Whitefleet Tamila C. Jensen ’73 Kenrick W. Young ’04 Elizabeth Chandler Howard F. Wilkins III ’99 Melissa A. Jones ’99 Class of 1991 Kelli M. Kennaday ’91 Catherine Chatman Tiffany Wright Jennifer L. Kennedy ’92 Steven T. Mattas ’91 John Chu Roger Yang Michelle L. Landry ’97 Steve Churchwell Iris Yang ’82 Alumni Stella Levy ’80 Class of 1996 Frederick Cohen ’89 Richard M. Loew ’90 Chad W. Carlock ’96 Association David A. Lorie ’96 Vita Cooper ’05 Board of Tracy L. Edwards ’96 Kristina Door king hall coach Ron Maroko ’86 Dana E. Forst ’96 Directors April D. Maynard ’77 Harold Eisenberg program Jeffrey S. Kravitz ’96 Shana Faber 2006 - 2007 Noreen B. Mazelis ’72 David A. Lorie ’96 The Coaching Program helps Andrea Fazel ’06 David H. McCray ’93 Lori A. Mazzella ’96 students make a personal contact President Greg Fisher ’98 Jennifer F. Novak ’96 Julia L. Montgomery ’96 with a King Hall Alum who Tom W. Stallard ’75 Adam Friedman can provide career advice and Mary E. Olden ’83 Jennifer F. Novak ’96 perhaps network opportunities. President-Elect Anthony W. Pierotti ’87 Rebecca Gardner ’03 Class of 2001 Mark Grajski Stephen F. Boutin ’72 Kathryn L. Probasco ’94 John P. O’Malley ’98 Blair Christensen ’01 Sonya Grant Zindel The Honorable Victor D. Ryerson ’76 Micah D. Parzen ’02 Past President Candice L. Chung ’01 Richard S. Gray Sally H. Schwettmann ’04 Serena F. Patitucci Torvik ’97 Philip G. Satre ’75 Doris Derelian ’01 Janet Guard Matthew J. Smith ’92 Aleem U. Raja ’97 Nathaniel Sterling ’70 Jason Nelson ’01 Judy Guo Teri R. Richardson ’01 Bruce Hagel ’74 Kara K. Ueda ’00 Steven B. Sacks ’80 John W. Vineyard ’89 Note: 2007 Reunion Volunteers David Hall Alexandra M. Sepulveda ’04 will be listed in the 2007-2008 Volunteer Rolls.

Counselor • Fall 2007 29 2007

Doing well for yourself, while Commencement doing something good for others is the essence of “planned giving.” Planned Gifts are used to reach a variety of personal, financial, and charitable goals. Options we explore with donors interested in supporting UC Davis School of Law include:

Current gifts for immediate use by the School or to estab- CURRENT lish perpetual endowments help UC Davis School of Law GIFTS maintain its margin of excellence for years to come.

Two ways in which to make current gifts are through appreciated securities and real estate, or an IRA charitable rollover.

Donors remembering UC Davis School of Law in their DEFERRED estate plans have a significant and lasting impact. GIFTS These time-tested approaches give donors:

• Control and enjoyment of assets while living; • Flexibility in deciding who gets what, when, and for what purpose; • Potential estate tax savings

Optional ways to make a deferred gift include – Designating UC Davis School of Law as a beneficiary of an estate (in a will or trust), life insurance policy, or individual retirement account (IRA).

DEFERRED GIFTS Options for donors interested in retaining WITH BENEFITS benefits from their gifts include:

Retained Life Estate – Donors can gain sizable current income tax deductions by donating their personal residences, vacation properties, or farms to UC Davis School of Law now, while still retaining full use and enjoyment of the properties during their lifetime.

Income for Self or Loved One – Charitable Gift Annuities and Charitable Remainder Trusts can generate significant immediate charitable income tax deductions for the donor and allow donors to avoid the capital gains tax on the sale of highly appreciated assets.

For full explanations of each of these planned giving options, including details on potential tax savings, go to http://www.law.ucdavis.edu/plannedgiving.shtml

RECOGNITION

21st Century Club and Shields Society – The 21st Century Club recognizes donors who have provided for the UC Davis School of Law through bequests and other planned gifts. We encourage alumni, friends, and others to inform us of any bequests and planned gifts that have been made so we may recognize their generosity to the Law School. Additionally, members of the Law School’s 21st Century Club are eligible for the UC Davis Campus Peter J. and Carolee W. Shields Society. As they say, membership has its benefits and for our Shields Society members that includes an invitation to our annual fall luncheon, your name listed in perpetuity on the official Shields Society registry (if you wish) and a unique Shields Society pin and certificate.

UC Davis School of Law staff are available for consultation and donors are encouraged to seek the counsel of their tax and legal advisors before implementing any gift plans. Immigration marty west Law Clinic retirement celebration 25th anniversary & reunion

Counselor • Fall 2007 31 celebrating a lifetime of achievements 2007 cruz reynoso capitol reception

32 Counselor • Fall 2007 2007 2007 alumni reunions bodenheimer Classes of ’72, ’77, ’82, ’87, ’92, ’97, ’02 lecture

Counselor • Fall 2007 33 Alumni Association April 22, Tuesday March 7, Friday Board Meetings “Law in the Information Age: Owning Ideas Law Review Symposium in the Age of Google” “First Amendment Rights in America’s February 2, Saturday Siva Vaidhyanathan, Associate Professor Public Schools,” Featuring Erwin of Media Studies and Law, University of Chemerinsky and Kenneth Starr May 3, Saturday Virginia March 16, Sunday April 24, Thursday Prison Law Symposium Alumni & admitted 2008 Public Service Graduation Ceremony “Behind the Walls” student Receptions April 24, Thursday April 19, Saturday April 11, Friday Class of 2008 Celebration BBQ Irving L. Neumiller Memorial Sacramento Moot Court Competition May 16, Friday April 17, Thursday Environmental Law Certificate and Richard Los Angeles M. Frank Environmental Law Writing Prize Student Organization Award Event Weeks April 23, Wednesday San Francisco May 17, Saturday January 22-25, Tuesday - Friday Commencement Ceremony Additional Alumni Receptions are to be Martin Luther King, Jr., Commemoration Week Scheduled in the Spring. Please refer to www.law.ucdavis.edu/alumni for a listing of Symposia & Competitions upcoming events. February 4-7, Monday - Thursday January 26, Saturday Jewish Law Students Association Asylum and Refugee Law National Moot Culture Week Ceremonies & Events Court Competition January 27, Sunday March 3-7, Monday - Friday February 11-14, Monday - Thursday International Women’s Week Dr. Ives Basketball Tournament Business Law Journal Symposium Week February 22, Friday February 29, Friday March 10-14, Monday - Friday KHLF Auction Environmental Law and Journal of Asian/Pacific Islander Week International Law & Policy Symposium April 4, Friday “Beyond Kyoto” March 17-21, Monday - Friday 29th Annual Recognition & Distinguished Christian Legal Society Week Teaching Award Celebration March 31-April 3, Monday - Thursday Cesar Chavez Week

April 7-11, Monday - Friday Advocates for the Rights of Children Week

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