This publication of the student newsletter for the University School of Law- covers events and activities that will take place throughout the fall semester months of September and October, 2011. The next issue will follow fall break in October. Welcome to Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis! We wish to welcome all new first-year students, transfer and visiting students, returning students, LL.M. (Master of Laws) students, S.J.D. (Doctor of Juridical Science) candidates, and all new and visiting faculty.

Calendar for Fall Semester 2011

Labor Day (no classes)………………...Mon., Sept. 5 Fall recess begins (no classes)………Mon., Oct. 10 Classes resume………………………….Mon., Oct. 17 The law school’s Admissions Office would like Thanksgiving recess begins………….Tues., Nov. 22 (no classes) to extend a warm welcome to the new incoming Classes resume………………………….Mon., Nov. 28 class and all returning law students! Should you Classes end……………………………...Sat., Dec. 3 need to speak with someone in the Admissions Exams begin……………………………..Mon., Dec. 5 Office for any reason, please call 317-274-2459 Exams end………………………………..Mon., Dec. 19 or stop by Room 121 during regular office hours: Mon.−Fri., 9:00 a.m.– 5:00 p.m.

Student Involvement Opportunity September & October 2011 Events & Meetings Are you a proud IU-Indianapolis law student? Would you like to promote our school? The Admissions Office is looking for dynamic individuals who would Please refer to the law school’s Events Calendar like to participate in student outreach and recruitment on the webpage www.indylaw.indiana.edu for activities. Students will assist in the School’s daily updates of all events, meetings and activities recruitment efforts by participating in both on-and-off scheduled at our law school. You may submit campus events, such as attending law school fairs, information for the Events Calendar by following sitting on student panels, and contacting prospective the procedures outlined in this newsletter. (See students. Help make the difference for a prospective page 12.) student! For more information, contact Amanda Gallaga at [email protected] or go to:

http://indylaw.indiana.edu/admissions/studentrecruit.

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Access to Inlow Hall during Evening Hours and Weekends

The following rules and procedures govern access to Inlow Hall from 6:30 p.m. to 1 hour before library opening:

1. Persons with Jagtags (students, faculty and staff) Parking on Campus may enter the building through doors governed by Park early! Park correctly! They do ticket! electronic card readers at any time before library closing. They may also enter through unlocked Valid parking permits are required to park on the doors at the New York Street entrance before IUPUI campus. Parking permits may be purchased 9:00 p.m. However, all such persons must online through Parking Services display their Jagtag to the ESG security person at www.parking.iupui.edu. Parking registration forms the reception desk upon entering the building. are also available at the Parking Transportation office Note: The NORTH entrance doors now lock at located in the southwest corner of the Vermont Street 6:30 p.m. to ensure that visitors sign in with Garage. All vehicles parked in a permit lot must ESG Security at the reception desk at the properly display a parking permit so that the letter SOUTH New York Street entrance. designation and expiration date are clearly visible from the front of the vehicle. Parking regulations are 2. Persons without Jagtags (members of the public, enforced 24/7 and citations will be issued to violators such as members of the bar) may enter the to ensure the safety and maximum efficiency of building for proper purposes before 9:00 p.m. limited parking spaces. through unlocked doors at the New York Street entrance. To enter and remain in the building, Parking is available in the open lots west and north such persons must sign in and display photo of the law school, #83 & #85. There are also 4 identification at the reception desk. enclosed parking garages convenient to the law school for “E” permit student parking: 2 on the corner of 3. Between 9:00 p.m. and library closing, all Michigan St. and Blackford St; 1 across from the manually operated exterior doors will be locked. Track & Field stadium at New York St. and Barnhill Only persons with Jagtags may enter the Dr.; 1 at the Sports Complex garage off New York St. building, again displaying their Jagtags at the on Blake St. Off-campus parking is also available at reception desk. Persons without Jagtags the and Bush Stadium lots. Free (members of the public) who have previously shuttle service operates Monday − Friday all year, entered the building may remain until library except during recognized holidays, and is closing. However, persons without Jagtags may complimentary of Parking & Transportation not enter the building after 9:00 p.m. Services. (Check out the Jags Express 2.0 GPS to easily locate your shuttle’s location. See their 4. At library closing, ALL persons, except those schedule within this newsletter on pg. 14.) Disability authorized 24-hour access, must exit the permits are also available upon written documentation building. (Faculty and staff are authoized from a physician. 24-hour access.) This will be enforced by ESG security personnel. Refer to the Parking Services website at www.parking.iupui.edu for all you parking needs. 5. ESG security personnel will also be present in the building on weekends. The rules stated in paragraph 1 and 2 apply during the period

between library opening and 9:00 p.m. The rules stated in paragraphs 3 and 4 above apply to the period between 9:00 p.m. and library closing.

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(Access to Inlow Hall cont.) Law School

6. Any incident of theft, violence or disruption should be immediately reported to the ESG security person, when present, or the campus police. Library patrons should be aware that we Three Women Faculty Retire: Three faculty have installed emergency phones on the second members have officially retired: Professor Mary Wolf and third floors of the library. These connect in January of this year, and Professors Susanah Mead directly to the campus police. and Eleanor Kinney following the spring semester.

7. These rules and procedures may be modified for Professor and former Interim Dean Susanah Mead, law school special events. Faculty, staff and graduated from our law school in 1976. After clerking students planning special events for evening for the Honrable Paul Buchanan, Jr. from 1976−1978, hours must contact the Building Administrator, she joined the law school faculty as a lecturer in the Susan Bushue-Russell, if persons WITHOUT legal writing program, which she directed from 1980− Jagtags are expected to attend. The person 1981. From 1997−2004, she served as Associate Dean planning a special event will be expected to of Academic Affairs, and in 2005 became the first provide ESG Security with necessary woman and graduate from this school to lead as instructions for accommodating the event where Interim Dean until 2007. Her articles on constitutional this is deemed necessary by the Building tort law and products liability law have appeared in Administrator. national law journals, and she was honored as

Outstanding Alumna of the Year by the the Alumnae 8. During certain public events in and around Network in 2007. Military Park, access to Inlow Hall may be

further limited. Professor Eleanor Kinney joined the faculty in 1984

and has guided the law school’s nationally recognized These stated measures will be in effect during periods Hall Center for Law and Health since she pioneered its of the year in which classes are in session or in which establishment in 1987. Professor Kinney has taught at final examinations are being administered. When our law school for 27 years in the areas of health law, classes are not in session and finals are not being administrative law, law and public health, comparative administered, the building will be closed to the public European and U.S. regulation of pharmaceuticals and during evening hours and access to the building medical technology, insurance law, torts, and law and during evening library hours will be by Jagtag ONLY. social science. As co-director of the Center for Law It is important that faculty, staff, and students ensure and Health and the Consortium for Health, Policy, that they have their Jagtags in their possession at all Law & Bioethics, she has created many opportunities times at which they seek entry to the building. As for students to work on cutting-edge health law issues, student access to the building is tied to library hours such as malpractice reform. She has also published in under these stated rules, students should also ensure many areas of health law, including medical that they are aware of these hours. Library hours are malpractice, administrative, health care for the posted on the law school’s website and at the library working poor, and basic human rights to health care. entrance doors.

Professor Mary Wolf started at the law school in 1984 as a visiting assistant professor in the newly-created Call the Law Library Info Line Civil Practice Clinic. She served as director of all clinical programs and externships from 1987 to her for library hours throughout the retirement in December of 2010. After earning her week and weekends and for J.D. degree, she was clerk to Judge Robert Downing of the Illinois Appellate Court, and then worked as an closings during holidays and attorney for the Flood Relief Center and for the adverse weather… Federal Disaster Assistance Administration. In 1979,

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(Law School News cont.) (Law School News cont.) she joined the Staff of Prairie State Legal Services, involved in all aspects of the application process. where she became the managing attorney. In addition Under the new status, faculty and students working to the clinic, her areas of expertise include teaching with the PIHRL will have more open access to U.N. law and poverty, interviewing and counseling. facilities, as well as the right to participate as a non- governmental organization in treaty negotiation Counter-Terrorism Simulation Documentary Wins sessions, Human Rights Council sessions, and other Emmy Award! A documentary made about the 2009 U.N. activities. anti-terrorism simulation exercise, hosted by IU School of Law-Indianapolis, won an Emmy® Award in the Active Summer for Joint Center for Asian Law category of Public/Current/Community Affairs on June Students. On June 5, the Joint Center sponsored the 18, 2011. The show entitled, “Tough Decisions: Second International Law Student Forum at the Defending the Homeland,” was produced and directed Renmin University of China Law School in Beijing. by WFYI TV 20, in conjunction with IU School of The Forum provided an opportunity for law students Law-Indianapolis and Public and Environmental from China, Japan, Korea and the U.S. to engage in Affairs (SPEA). “Tough Decisions,” which aired peer-to-peer discussion about the current state of legal several times in 2010, chronicles the minute-by-minute education in each country and offer insights from their response as Law and SPEA students role-play unique perspective as students and as consumers of government and civilian officials attempting to deal legal education. A panel of legal educators from each with sometimes faulty or incomplete information in an country offered responses. Following the Forum, the unfolding terrorist attack. The simulation was planned Joint Center sponsored a reunion of Chinese alumni by Associate Professor of Law Shawn Boyne, along from the IU School of Law-Indianapolis. Since 2003, with SPEA professors Jim White and William Foley. over 100 Chinese nationals have been awarded J.D., The Emmy®, the highest award given in television, is LL.M. or S.J.D. degrees from IU-Indy. On June 8-9, an international award that recognizes excellence in Joint Center Co-Directors Tom Wilson and Ding the industry. A second simulation, spearheaded by Xiangshun participated in a judicial training conference Professor Boyne, will take place at the law school in in Beijing. On June 11-12, the Joint Center sponsored October of this year. the Second Sino−U.S. Law Conference. Day one of the Conference, moderated by Professor Wilson, Law School Program to have Special Consultative featured presentations by leaading U.S. authorities on Status at the United Nations. The United Nations banking and real estate finance reform. Day two of recommended the Program in International Human the Conference, moderated by Professor Ding, Rights Law (PIHRL) at IU School of Law-Indianapolis featured presentations by Chinese authorities on real for UN “Special Consultative Status.” After a 5-year estate financing in China. (The Joint Center for Asian application process, the UN Committee on Non- Law Studies is a partnership of the IU School of Law- Governmental Organizations rendered its referral on Indianapolis and Renmin University of China Law May 18, 2011, during an open hearing at which School in Beijing.) PIHRL program manager Perfecto “Boyet” Caparas, LL.M., ’05, answered a series of questions by official Office of External Affairs Receives Another Award! governmental representatives of several countries. The The law school, through its Office of External Affairs, PIHRL is joining a select group of approximately has been awarded a “Silver Award” from The Higher 2,000 organizations from 200 countries that have this Education Marketing Association for the various status (an average of only 10 per country.) This new posters/ banners that are located throughout different permanent status cements the informal relationship the areas of the law school building. Congratulations to PIHRL has had with the UN since the program’s Jonna MacDougall, Assistant Dean for External founding in 1997 by Professor George Edwards and Affairs and Alumni Relations; Adjunct Professor of reflects the UN confidence in the PIHRL as an Law, and Liz Allington, Director of Communications organization that will provide reliable informatin to and Creative Services, for yet another honor reflecting the UN on a consultative basis. The accreditation their outstanding promotional talents and abilities! process was spearheaded by Mr. Caparas, who was

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(Law School News cont.)

New Joint Degree Program Launched. The Indiana Upcoming Events & University School of Law-Indianapolis and the Indiana Special Guest Speakers University School of Medicine recently launched the dual degree JD/MD program which will begin in 2012. Students interested in earning both a J.D. and M.D. Intellectual Property Center will now have the opportunity to do so with this newly Luncheon Speaker Series designed program that will allow them to complete both degrees within six years versus seven. There are Tuesday, August 30th only 24 other schools across the nation that offer this 12:45 — 1:30 p.m. type of program. IP Center on the Canal 350 Canal Walk, Suite B Inaugural Biomedical Health Law and Compliance Conference. The Hall Center for Law and Health will host its inaugural Biomedical Health Law and Compliance Conference on September 21, 2011 at our law school. The keynote speaker will be Joyce R. Branda, Director, Commercial Litigatin Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Deparatment of Justice, Washington, D.C. The IU School of Law-Indianapaolis and its Hall Center for Law and Health are launching a major Robert E. Lee, Jr. initiative in biomedical and health industry compliance Assistant General Patent Counsel law. The school has the requisite position to provide Patents, Trademarks & Copyright expert education to the growing group of health Eli Lilly & Company lawyers and professionals who are locating their careers in health care compliance law. This initiative Students with an interest in intellectual property law will offer expanded courses and clinical education are invited to the IP Center on the Canal August 30th offerings in the compliance field and develop a for an informative and entertaining presentation on an certificate program in health law with a specialy in IP topic of increasing importance in the global biomedical and health industry compliance law by economy. The Law School’s Center for Intellectual 2012. This specialty curriculum would be established Property Law and Innovation is proud to host a with the existing Health Law Curriculum and the presentation by Robert E. Lee, Jr., Assistant General existing track in the law school’s LL.M. for Health Patent Counsel, Patents, Trademarks and Copyright, Law, Policy and Bioethics. Eli Lilly & Company. Bob Lee, an alumnus of the IU School of Law-Indianapolis, has decades of (See the Hall Center website for full details and experience protecting and enforcing intellectual registration: http://indylaw.indiana.edu/centers/chl/.) property rights. He will be speaking about trademark practice in a multinational, regulated environment. LL.M. Roadmap Website. Professor George Contact: Kyle Galster, IP Center Coordinator, Edwards, Director for the Program in International [email protected] (317-274-1916) for additional Human Rights Law, is the author of the recent information. book, LL.M. Roadmap: An International Student’s Guide to U.S. Law School Programs, (Summer 2011 release, Aspen/Kluwer Law Publisher). Information currently on the website includes articles about LL.M. Call the Law School Hot Line for Roadmap that have appeared on institutional websites based in the UK, the Ukraine, Pakistan, and other daily updates on classes, countries. LL.M. Roadmap can be found posted on activities and events… www.LLMRoadMap.com. 317-274-8611

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The James P. White lecture The Legality of NATO’s Intervention in Libya On legal education with Nicholas Beadle, CMG Tuesday, September 13, 2011 United Kingdon National Security Council, Cabinet Office, London A Chief Judge’s After-Life: Reflections on Educating Lawyers Today Thursday, October 27th Lecture: 5:00 p.m. Wynne Courtroom Judith Kaye Reception: 6:00 p.m. Conour Atrium Former Chief Judge of the State of New York Nicholas Beadle is a former Senior Adviser to the Lecture: 5:00 p.m., Wynne Courtroom Prime Minister of the UK. He led the Cabinet Office’s Reception: 6:00 p.m., Conour Atrium Afghanistan/Pakistan Strategy teams and is currently working on Libya, Yemen and Syria. In 2007, Judith Kaye received her B.A. from Barnard College he was a Weatherhead Fellow at Harvard University, in 1958 and her LL.B. from New York University researching multilateralism and regional reconciliation. School of Law in 1962, graduating cum laude. He has been Private Secretary to successive Secretaries Following law school, she entered private commercial of State for Defence and advised on policy for practice at Sullivan & Cromwell in NYC, 1962-1964. operations. In 2004/05, he served in Baghdad as the From 1965 to 1969, she was part-time assistant to coalition’s Senior Adviser to the Iraqi Ministry of Dean Russell Niles of NYU School of Law. In 1969, Defense. He has also worked in NATO, European she joined Olwine, Connelly, Chase, O’Donnell & Union, and UN policy roles and attended the Royal Weyher as a Litigation Associate on a part-time basis College of Defence Studies in London. In 2006, while raising her three children, and then was later Beadle was made a Companion of St. Michael and named a Partner. In 1983, she was appointed by St. George for his contribution to Security. He read Governor Mario M. Cuomo to the high Court of the Law in the UK and a Masters at Heriot-Watt in State of New York, the Court of Appeals, becoming Scotland where he is now a Member of Court. the first women to occupy that post. In 1993, Governor Cuomo appointed her Chief Judge of the From Tight Ends and Trademarks to State of New York, the first woman to occupy that Scorecards and Social Media: post. As the only New York Chief Judge ever to The Importance of Branding in Contemporary Sports

complete a full 14-year term, she was re-appointed in Tuesday, September 27 2007 to a term that ended December 31, 2008, due to Panel Discussion: 5:00 p.m., Wynne the state’s mandatory retirement provisions. Today, Courtroom she is Of Counsel to the firm of Skadden, Arps, Alte, Reception: 6:30 p.m., Conour Atrium Meagher & Flom LLP in New York City. As Chief Judge, she led numerous projects to make the New Branding in the sports industry has never been more York court system more efficient and responsive to the important to the success of an athlete or sports needs of all residents. organization. Come join guests Amie Peele Carter, partner at Baker & Daniels and member of the firm’s Student Health Services trademark, copyright and e-commerce group of the intellectual property practice, and Ken Ungar, President and founder of U/S Sports Advisors, a sports IUPUI Health Services provides high business coaching enterprise geared to helping athletes quality, low cost routine and acute health care services for the student population find success off the playing field, to discuss sports and of the IUPUI campus. Appointments may and trademarks and how athletes and sports organiza- be made by calling 274-8214. For more tions can develop technology to leverage their brands. information regarding services, visit their website at (See the school’s website for more information.) http://health.iupui.edu. 6

Friday, October 28th October 28, 2011

A Status Report on Homeland Security Counter-terrorism Simulation Wynne Courtroom and Lee H. Hamilton Director of The Center on Congress Conour Atrium, Inlow Hall at Indiana University

Lecture: 12:00 noon, Wynne Courtroom Professor Shawn Boyne will reprise the counter- Room 100, Inlow Hall terrorism simulation concept in her Seminar in Comparative National Security Law with a new Lee H. Hamilton founded The Center on Congress at simulation scheduled for October 28th. Indiana University in 1999 when he retired from his U.S. congressional seat. He served as President and Recapping from the first simulation: At 9:00 a.m. Director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center on Friday, October 23, 2009, news reports for Scholars in Washington D.C. from January 1999 circulated throughout the law school that the to the end of 2010, and served 34 years in Congress Pakistani embassy in Washington, D.C. had been representing Indiana’s ninth district from 1965 to bombed. In the Wynne Courtroom, the President 1999. of the United States was just coming to terms with this situation when, moments later, it was reported Since leaving the House, Mr. Hamilton has served on st that a “dirty bomb” had exploded in downtown the U.S. Commission on National Security in the 21 Indianapolis. The governor and mayor immediately Century and was co-chair of -Hamilton attempted to obtain more information as they Commission to Investigate Certain Security Issues at jockeyed for position scheduling press conferences Los Alamos. He served as Vice-Chair of the in the press room in the Conour Atrium. In short, National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the it was not “business as usual” at Inlow Hall. United States (the 9/11 Commission), and as co-chair of the Iraq Study Group. Hamilton is also the author The news reports and the activities surrounding of several books, including A Creative Tension−The the aftermath of the simulated bombings were Foreign Policy Roles of the President and Congress. part of one of the most complex and ambitious For additional biography and publication information, experiential education exercises ever undertaken go to our website at www.indylaw.indiana.edu and at the law school. Students in Professor Boyne’s click on Upcoming Events. Seminar in Comparative National Security Law, along with students from the IU School of Public and Environmental Affairs, participated in a groundbreaking counter-terrorism simulation that NOTE: If you are ever having difficulty dealing placed them in the vortex of terrorist attacks. They with personal problems related to anxiety, had to develop coordinated and cohesive depression, stress, etc., please be advised that responses−in real time. there is help available through IUPUI

Counseling and Psychological Services – Watch the video documentary online at: CAPS. Please call…317-274-2548. wfyiproductions.org/videoPlayer.asp?vid= 73.

NOTE: For additional information on ALL events taking place at the law school, please go to our website at: www.indylaw.indiana.edu/news/events.

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Join the Indiana University Faculty, Students & Staff in School of Law-Indianapolis the Spotlight ! Running & Walking Club!

Professor Cynthia Adams was invited to present a series of lectures and workshops on negotiations and drafting international contracts in legal English by the Shanghai International Studies University at the Institute’s Law School, Songjian campus, April 18−29.

Mauricio Benavides, 3L and SBA Vice President, was

recently appointed to the American Bar Association We are a fun group of students, faculty, and alumni who leadership as a national Division Liaison to the run or walk 2 to 3 times a week. Our regular weekday Business Law Section. In his role, he will represent runs/walks are along the Downtown Canal and White the interests of 36,000+ members (attorneys and law River, and we often hold longer runs on Saturday mornings along either the Monon Trail or the Canal students) in the United States and provide leadership Towpath near the Art Museum. Activities during the and administrative support to 8 major business groups school year include: relay teams for area races, a (Business Organizations, Capital Markets, Financial scavenger hunt that includes area bars, theme runs Services, Litigation, Mergers & Acquisitions, (e.g., 1980’s costumes), movie nights, and free race training/advice from our more experienced runners like Specialty Practices, Professional Development, and Professor Max Huffman and our club’s advisor, Outreach) that encompass 62 active committees. Professor Peter Prescott. Additionally, he will attend 4 annual (domestic and

Paces vary widely─from 8 minutes/mile to 12 minutes/ international) ABA business meetings to assist in the mile, plus casual and up-tempo walking paces. If you development, execution, and marketing of substantive are faster than that, we can set you up─although our CLE programs; participate in Division Assembly focus is having fun and socializing while exercising. meetings; and lobby the Section on resolutions We will be there to keep you going when you need a break from studying/work (even when you are in presented to the ABA House of Delegates. Mauricio denial).  will report to the Section Director and Division Chair on membership outreach initiatives, and actively liaise For more information, check out the club’s Facebook between with all national and local bar associations. page or contact the club’s officers at [email protected]. He assumed his post at the ABA Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada in August. Congratulations!

Perfecto “Boyet” Caparas, LL.M., ’05, Program Director for the Program in International Human Rights Law, (PIHRL) was responsible for spearheading the 5 year application process efforts involved in receiving accreditation for “Special Consultative Status” within the United Nations. Boyet IUPUI Tobacco Policy states that tobacco use or sale, led the charge in preparing the application, which including but not limited to smoking, is prohibited on included gathering all the information submitted, University-owned, operated or leased property. To follow-up, tracking proceedings through the years, obtain information on the IUPUI tobacco policies or help overseeing replies to Committee queries, appearing at with cessation programs, go online to: http://tobaccofree.iupui. the Committee several times and lobbying behind the scenes. Most significantly, however, he appeared in Law students who choose to smoke must use the open session before the Committee in May of this year sidewalk south of the law school building on New York to expertly answer questions by official government Street and NOT at the main entrance doors or steps into representatives of several countries. the building.

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(Spotlight cont.) (Spotlight cont.)

On July 25, 2011, the United Nations Economic and Ibrahim Garba, LL.M. candidate, gave a presentation Social Council officially granted “Special Consultative of his work entitled “Personalized Medicine and Status” to the Program in International Human Rights Public Health: Can Human Rights Mediate a Perennial Law of IU School of Law-Indianapolis. Boyet also has Feud?” which is based on a paper he worked on with been officially accredited as the PIHRL “Main Eric Meslin at the IU Center for Bioethics as well as Representative” to United Nations World Headquarters research/work he did when he was a Program in in Vienna, Austria, and accredited to the UN in New International Human Rights Law intern at the CDC in York and the UN in Geneva as “Additional Atlanta. Representative” for the PIHRL. Professor Carrie Hagan presented a paper on Professor George Edwards, Director for the Program “Marginalizing Discrimination: How Social Justice, in International Human Rights Law, has authored a Advocacy and LGBT Awareness on a Clinical Level new book, LL.M. Roadmap: An International Can Make Equality More of a Reality,” at the 6th Student’s Guide to U.S. Law School Programs Global Alliance for Justice Education Worldwide (Aspen/Wolters Kluwer Law Publishers, 2011); Conference in Valencia, Spain, in July. The website www.LLMRoadMap.com. The book provides conference hosted approximately 285 delegates from information about law schools supporting their LL.M. 43 countries and provided an opportunity for law students in getting involved in UN and other teachers, law students, legal practitioners, jurists and experiential work that not only supplements the social activists to acquire new ideas, models, and students’ education, but also promotes human rights. skills for the use of education to promote social In May, Professor Edwards discussed his new book justice. when he was a presenter at the Global Legal Skills Conference VI, held at The John Marshall Law Todd Hassee, 2L, was selected to the inaugural class School in . He participated on a panel of Indiana Schwitzer Fellows and will spend a year Entitled “Can We Talk? Roundtable on Meeting the carrying out a service project that addresses the Needs of Foreign Students in Master of Laws (LL.M.) health needs of underserved individuals and Programs at U.S. Law Schools.” communities. Specifically, he will address the legal needs of low-income individuals by working to On June 3, Professor Edwards attended a ceremony establish a medical-legal partnership at the Indiana held in Vancouver, British Columbia, where IUPUI University Student Outreach Clinic, a free clinic that Chancellor Charles Bantz accepted the Simon Award operates weekly on Saturdays. Upon completion of for Comprehensive Internationalization presented to his initial year, Todd will become a “Schweitzer IUPUI Campus. The award, named for the late Fellow for Life” and join a vibrant network of over Senator Paul Simon (D-IL) who was known 2,000 individuals who are skilled in, and committed as a strong supporter of international education and to, addressing the health needs of underserved people foreign language learning, recognizes a campus throughout their careers as professionals. involved in outstanding and innovative efforts in internationalization. Professor Max Huffman presented his research on “Behavioral Exploitation and Antitrust” by invitation Professor Edwards was named a Fellow of the to a seminar at the Tilburg Law and Economics American Bar Foundation in July. He joins the rank Institute, Tilburg, Netherlands, in May. He also gave of distinguished research faculty who are selected to a lecture on the same topic to faculty and students of participate in activities that advance justice through the University of Heidelberg and the University of research and work to address changing needs of the Mannheim, in Heidelberg, Germany. system of justice and the legal profession. Also, Professor Edwards has been officially accredited as the Patricia Kinney has been honored with the new title Program in International Human Rights Law “Main of Assistant Dean for Admissions for her outstanding Representative” to the United Nation World work and dedication to the Admissions office as Headquarters in New York and the United Nations Director of Admissions. Patricia is a 2002 graduate European Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. of our law school. Congratulations! 9

(Spotlight cont.) (Spotlight cont.)

Professor Priscilla Keith served as a panelist for the Carol has handled the numerous responsibilities and CLE “The Business of Healthcare: The Development pressures of her duties with great skill, style and of State Based Health Care Exchanges” sponsored by grace. However, after 20 years of working on the the ABA’s Business Law Section’s Government IUPUI campus, 17 of those here at our law school, she Affairs Committee and Health Care Committee and is now looking forward to having more time to devote the ABA Health Law Section at the American Bar to her family, friends, pets, and many creative and Association’s Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada. A talented interests. Kathy Jensen, an administrative major component of The Patient Protection and assistant in the Dean’s office, will take over the duties Affordable Care Act was the creation of state-based as Administrative Assistant to the Dean upon Carol’s health care exchanges. The state-based health care retirement. We’ll miss you, Carol! exchanges would serve as the “store” for citizens to shop for health insurance. Professor Keith’s Andrew Myers has joined our law school Technology presentation explores the concept from the practicality Services Dept. and will be available to help provide of a state’s perspective. our law school faculty, staff and students with support in technology needs. Andrew is a recent graduate of Faith Long, faculty assistant and coordinator for the the School of Informatics in Bloomington and has Program on Law & State Government, along with worked for UITS as a student, providing him much Miriam Murphy, associate director, Ruth Lilly Law knowledge in the IU systems. Welcome Andrew! Library, became Certified Mediators on August 3rd after completing a course through Human Resources Cassandra Nielsen, 2L, Yetunde Okunade, 2L, and taught by Dan Griffith, Director of HR and 1990 Stephen Ramey, 2L, were selected by the Office of alumnus of our law school. The certification will the Indiana Secretary of State to serve in the office’s allow Faith and Miriam the opportunity to mediate summer fellowship and internship programs. campus (student/staff/faculty) affairs that do not Cassandra served as a summer fellow in the two- require a legal component. month fellowship program, and Yetunde and Stephen served as legal interns in the two-month internship Professor Maria Pabόn Lόpez accepted a position as program. They gained hands-on experience working dean of Loyola University College of Law in New for the state government by being matched with a Orleans and initiated her duties in the summer. Dean specific director according to their future career Lόpez joined our law school in the fall of 2002 as interests. an assistant professor and was promoted to associate professor in 2006, and then professor of law in 2008. Ven Ogbebor, Program in International Human Rights She is a native of Puerto Rico, an expert on Law (PIHRL) intern, participated in the 6th Global immigration law, and recognized as a prolific writer. Alliance for Justice Education Worldwide Conference During her tenure at our school, Dean Lόpez received in Valencia, Spain over the summer through his many outstanding awards. internship with the PIHRL. Ven was hosted by a law clinic in York, United Kingdom for his internship and Professor Gerard Magliocca was quoted in The was dispatched to Valencia, Spain to attend training Washington Post on July 6th in an article related to the sessions at the GAJE conference. The human rights constitutionality of the debt ceiling. The article quotes training sessions included training, preparation with a law professors, Democratic senators, and group for a plan, and presentation of the plan; Ven commentators on the possibility of citing the 14th also had the opportunity to head one of the sections at Amendment to argue that the debt ceiling is the Conference. unconstitutional. Professor, Doctor David Orentlicher has commented Carol Miller, Administrative Assistant to the Dean, at conferences and in print on a number of topical will step down from her duties to finally enjoy issues in health care. He spoke about the constitu- retirement the end of this August. Throughout the tionality of the individual mandate to purchase health years with being assigned to several law school deans, care insurance at the 34th Annual Health Law Professors Conference of the American Society of… 10

(Spotlight cont.) (Spotlight cont.)

Law, Medicine & Ethics in June, and his analysis of achievements in research and other accomplishments. the issue, “Can Congress Make You Buy Broccoli? As quoted by Chancellor Bantz, “Professor Roisman And Why It Really Doesn’t Matter,” was published at is a leading expert in research on homelessness, 84 S. Cal. L. Rev. Postscript 9 (2011). He discussed low-income housing, and housing discrimination. She the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Sorrell decision has made important contributions at IUPUI and beyond about the regulation of pharmaceutical company at the same time she been a leading scholar and a marketing activities at a TechFreedom program in creative and inspiring teacher. Her pursuit of July, and his article, “The Commercial Speech excellence in teaching, scholarship, and service has Doctrine in Health Regulation,” was published at 37 had a tremendous impact on the success of her American Journal of Law & Medicine 299 (2011). students, the university, the state of Indiana, and our Also, Professor Orentlicher considered health care cost nation.” (For additional comments, go to the law containment at the Journal of Corporation Law’s school website under News.) Symposium on “Regulation” in February, and his article, “Controlling Health Care Costs Through Professor Roisman spoke at the “Advancing Human Public, Transparent Processes,” will appear soon at Rights and Justice For All” Symposium Celebrating 36(4) Journal of Corporation Law (2011). Legal Aid’s 100th Anniversary. The event took place on April 28 in Baltimore and was jointly presented Program in International Human Rights Law by the University of Maryland School of Law and the Students Recognized for Efforts. J.D. and LL.M. University of Baltimore School of Law. On June 15, students’ call for the U.S. to stop its practice of jailing Professor Roisman gave two presentations at a juveniles for life without parole has been echoed by training event in Ann Arbor, Michigan for legal the working group of the United Nations Human services lawyers from Michigan, Ohio, and West Rights Council. Professor George Edwards, Carl M. Virginia. She presented a plenary session on “The Use Gray Professor of Law and PIHRL Founding Director, of Fair Housing and Other Human Rights Laws in recognized the following students for their report: Legal Services Practice,” as well as a plenary closing Evelyn Aero and Ntsika W. Fakudze, LL.M. session, “A Call to Advocacy.” The event was International Human Rights Law graduates; J.D. sponsored by the tri-state CORT – Committee on candidates: Ann Marie Judson-Patrick, Leontiy V. Regional Training. Korolev, Saira N. Latif, Bobby Y. Lydon-Lam, Kalli Dee McBride, Javaneh Nekoomaram, Professor Lahny Silva has joined our law school as Samantha K. Sleed, James R. Smerbeck and a new faculty member and will be teaching a class John L. Tao. The students were honored during the in Criminal Procedure: Adjudication in this fall’s annual awards and recognition reception organized by full-time day program. Professor Silva received her the pro bono and clinical programs of IU School of LL.M. from the University of Wisconsin Law School, Law-Indianapolis this past April. The UN Human Madison, 2011; J.D. from the University of Rights Council working group recently echoed calls Connecticut Law School, 2007; M.A. from Boston by these students for the U.S. to ban the practice of University, 2004; B.A. from Boston University, 2002. sentencing children to life imprisonment without Welcome to our school! parole. In their report, the council urged the U.S. to prohibit the practice and to provide the possibility of Professor Margaret Tarkington has joined our law parole to those serving life without parole sentences school as a new faculty member and will be teaching as well as “systematic resocialisation support.” For Professional Responsibility in the fall semester day- more details of these efforts, go the PIHRL website time program and Civil Procedure I in the evening at www.indylaw.indiana.edu/humanrights/. part-time program. Professor Tarkington received her J.D. from J. Reuben Clark Law School in Utah, Professor Florence Roisman was appointed a 2002, and B.A. from Brigham Young University, Chancellor’s Professor at the Chancellor’s Academic Utah, in 1999. Welcome to our school! Honors Convocation on April 29th in recognition for her academic excellence and outstanding…

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(Spotlight cont.) (Spotlight cont.)

Professor Tom Wilson led law students from IU with “Reform What,” framed the Conference agenda School of Law-Indianapolis and nine other schools in by placing reform measures in the context of the 2nd International Forum for Law Students, held assumptions about the causes of the foreclosure and on June 5th at the Renmin University of China Law credit crises and about policy. (For additional School in Beijing. The title of the Forum was Pro information, go to the law school website at: Bono, Experiential Learning & the Law School http://indylaw.indiana.edu/news. Curriculum. The Forum, initiated in 2010 by Professor Wilson and Renmin University law professor Ding Xiangshun, provides a platform for law students from China and the U.S. to express their ideas for improving legal education. Students select a topic,

prepare a paper, and present the paper to an audience Procedures for Scheduling of professors, graduate students and peers. A panel Law School Student Events/Meetings/ of experts comments on each presentation. The students’ papers will be published in China later this Table Requests year in a book edited by Professor Ding. Other law students participating were from: Albany, Arkansas, NOTE: If your student group is working with an Boston College, Loyola of Maryland, Notre Dame, “outside” group (i.e. bar association, not-for-profit, Southwestern, Tulane, Vanderbilt, and William & etc.), please check with the Office of External Affairs Mary. (Dean MacDougall), Rm. 355C, [email protected]. There may be special considerations depending on the

nature of the event. Also, students are not able to Professor Wilson also was an invited speaker at the schedule events in the Atrium or Courtroom. If you wish International Forum on Judicial Training, held on to reserve either of these areas for “student-only” events, June 8 & 9 in Beijing, China. The Forum was please contact Regina Bennett ([email protected]) in sponsored by the National Judges College of the the Student Affairs Office, Rm. 119. Peoples Republic of China, the United Nations Development Program−China, and the European These procedures must be followed for any room/table Union−China Project of Governance for Equitable requests by student organizations. Development. The Forum was convened to enable China to analyze its judicial training procedures and 1. Go to the Events Calendar to place a tentative hold for your meeting/event/table no later than five (5) business to learn about methods used in other nations to train days prior to your event, meeting, etc. judges and maintain judicial competence. Professor Wilson joined speakers from Australia, France, 2. Check the calendar for any conflicting activities already Germany, Japan, and Korea. His presentation focused scheduled. If you event conflicts with an already on both the informal and non-systematic path to the scheduled speaker or significant event, it can hurt bench in the U.S. and the formal systematic training attendance for both. mechanisms available after election or appointment. 3. Select the calendar for the room you want to use and Professor Wilson organized and directed the 2nd make sure it is available at the date and time you want. Sino−U.S. Law Conference on June 11th at the 4. Click the “Submit Event” button on the top right of the Renmin University of China Law School in Beijing, calendar and enter all the required information about China. The title of the Conference was The Changing your event. Be sure to select the room you want, if Face of the Real Estate Finance Marketplace: Two using a room in the law school for the event, and be Perspectives on Reform. The principal expression of sure to include your name and e-mail address. reform considered at the Conference was the Dodd- Frank bill, formally known as the Wall Street Reform 5. Fill out and submit an Event/Meeting/Table Request and Consumer Protection Act. Professor Wilson Form no later than five (5) business days prior to the recruited nationally-known authorities to join him as event/meeting. (Requests are not accepted until two presenters. His presentation, “What Reform begins… (2) weeks prior to the start of a semester.

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(Law School Procedures cont.) EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS

Please submit your Event/Meeting/Table Request Form the same day you place your event hold on the Events Indiana University has created a web page to provide Calendar. resources for you about emergency preparedness; information will be updated as needed. From the IU * If your request has been approved, the event will homepage, http://www.indiana.edu/, go to: About appear on the Events Calendar within five (5) IUPUI, Site Index, Emergency Preparedness. business days of your request. In the event of a building emergency for: * If your request is denied, your event will be deleted from the Events Calendar and the person who FIRE: Alarms will sound and evacuation is submitted the request will receive an e-mail from the mandatory. Use closest stairway for exits. DO NOT Student Affairs Office. USE ELEVATORS. Once outside, move to a safe

For additional information regarding budget, funding, place, if possible, to the parking lot west of the law catering, technology support, set-up, clean-up, etc. of your school. Remain outside until the “all clear” is given. event or meeting, etc., go to the law school website at: www.indylaw.indiana.edu; click on “Current Students” tab NOTE: If you have a physical condition which and scan down to More… ; go to left margin and click on prevents you from walking down the stairway, Planning Student Events. please go to one of the two designated “safe rooms” in the building: Rm. 267 or Rm. 387. Safe rooms will be checked by the fire department and persons located in these rooms will be carried to safety by fire department personnel in the event of an actual Financial Aid Hours fire.

TORNADO WATCH: The “campus siren” will sound but evacuation is NOT required.

Jennifer Vines, Assistant Director/Financial Aid liaison for the law school, is available for appointments at Inlow Hall to discuss financial aid. An appointment book is located in the Student Affairs office on the 1st floor, Rm. 119, and appointments are typically held on Monday and Tuesday afternoons on the 3rd floor in Rm. 387. If you need to drop off TORNADO WARNING: When a severe weather paperwork for Ms. Vines on a day she is not at Inlow Hall, warning is activated by: sirens, Jag Alert, campus you may drop it off in the Student Affairs office. emergency alert radios, or law school personnel, evacuation is necessary. Evacuate immediately to The main Financial Aid office is located in the Campus the designated areas of the building not exposed to Center, 420 University Blvd., on the 2nd floor in Rm. CE 250A. windows or other potential hazards from shattered When Ms. Vines is not available, you may stop by and meet glass. (Designated areas are posted at the north with a counselor or make a personal payment. Walk-in elevators on each floor of the law school building. advising hours are: Monday−Thursday, 8:00 a.m.− 6:00 p.m.; DO NOT use the underground parking garage as a Friday, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Additional contact information: shelter location.) (317) 274-4162; Fax 317-274-5930; E-mail: [email protected]. A drop box is available for your convenience in the north NOTE: Procedures are posted in all classrooms. hallway outside the Student Financial Services area to collect For additional information regarding emergency documents and/or payments. Make sure your name and preparedness, you can also go to: university ID number appears on every page of the forms. www.indylaw.indiana.edu/student. Under “Current

Students,” click on “More… ,” and then go to

“Emergency Preparedness Links:”

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SAFETY AT IUPUI IUPUI Shuttle Service – It’s a FREE ride!

Please call the IUPUI Public Safety Dispatch Center at The IUPUI shuttle system operates Monday through 274-7911 whenever you see anything that makes you Friday all year round, except during university feel uneasy or if you have discovered a crime. This recognized holidays. There are 3 shuttle routes: the number is a direct line and may be used to report ANY Campus Route, North Campus Route, and HITS emergency, problem or concern. Express, complimentary of Parking & Campus Police Escorts Transportation Services and available to anyone in the university community. IUPUI has improved the Police escorts are available to students and employees Jags Express shuttle routes to meet your campus 24 hours a day. Please call 274-SAFE or 274-7233 transportation needs. Additional parking is available between 6:00 p.m. and 2:00 a.m. if you are concerned just minutes from campus along Indiana Avenue and about your personal safety. on 16th St. at Bush Stadium. The Jags Express lots offer convenient parking and easy transportation to Emergency phones are available in parking garages campus. Buses leave every 10 minutes between the and in outside areas on campus. The outside campus phones are identified by yellow boxes and a distinctive hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., Monday – Friday. blue light above them. Emergency phones are also found in the hallways of some campus buildings. These Campus route information and operational hours provide free access for people on campus to request include: any type of assistance. All emergency phones are identified by the word EMERGENCY and connect to the (North Campus West) 6 am−10 pm IUPUI Safety Dispatch Center (911). (North Campus East) 6 am−10 pm

(Campus West) 7 am– 9:40 pm (Campus East) 7 am– 6 pm (HITS Route) 7 am−6 pm (Park Place) 7 am– 9:40 pm

Bike Theft Prevention Tips Please refer to the shuttle schedule on the IUPUI website under Parking Services Transportation for The increasing popularity of biking as a sport and as a means more detailed information: of transportation has made bicycles an easy target for thieves. www.parking.iupui.edu/shuttle. Theft prevention tips include:

NOTE: Persons with disabilities may purchase 1. Lock your bike to a bike rack ONLY and avoid locking items that can be easily cut, broken, or disabled parking permits by contacting Campus removed. (Bike racks are located in the law Parking Services via email or by calling 274-4232. school underground garage for extra security.) Jags Express 2.0 provides web-based GPS and free 2. Locking your bike on rails, trees, signs, etc., Wi-Fi. Locating your shuttle in real time is as simple can be a hazard to campus safety, campus as surfing the web or sending a text to 414-11 with property, and your personal property. Bikes iupui and the name of your shuttle stop: found to be a hazard will be removed by campus www.parking.iupui.edu/gps officials. 414-11: iupui campus center

3. Bikes not locked to anything may be removed by thieves. Buy a good lock and use it. Cable bike The IndyGo Student Pass (Spass) is now available locks that secure both frame and front and rear to all current IUPUI students and comes in the form wheels to a bike rack are best. of a 31-day bus pass and will be sold in the Jagtag Office for $10. Ride 27 IndyGo fixed routes at an NOTE: For personal safety, always wear a helmet! incredible price! (Visit S-Pass FAQ on the Jagtag website – www.jagtag.iupui.edu. 14

Office Hours: A Listing of Faculty Assistants:

Office of Professional Development & Pro Bono Mary Barron, - 278-9690, Rm. 203, Asst. to: Program: Room 115; Phone: 317-274-2484 Professor James White Mon., Wed., Th. – 9 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Tues., - 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Kristin Brockett, 278-9160, Rm. 206, Asst. to: Fri., - 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Professor Gerald Bepko Chasity Thompson, Assistant Dean; Sean Southern, Associate Director, LaWanda Ward, Director of Pro Bono & Public Interest Clinic Staff – 274-1911, Rm. 111, Asst. to: Professors Carrie Hagan, Novella Nedeff, Office of Student Affairs: Room 119; Joanne Orr, Fran Quigley, Frances Watson Phone: 317-278-5560 Mon. & Tues. – 8:00 a.m.−6:00 p.m. Michelle Davis, 274-1917, Rm. 211A, Asst. to: Wed. & Th., − 8:00 a.m.−5:30 p.m. Professors Karen Bravo, Jeff Cooper, Fri., − 8:00 a.m.−5:00 p.m. George Edwards, Antony Page Johnny Pryor, Assistant Dean; Carlota Toledo, Associate Director, Academic Advisor; Anthony Mary Deer – 274-1909, Rm. 399V, Asst. to: Masseria, Academic Advisor; Susie Agnew, Assistant Professors Robert Katz, Andrew Klein Director & Recorder James Nehf, Florence Roisman

LL.M. Office: Room 357E; Phone: 317-278-4701 Mel Yildiz, Assistant Director Kyle Galster – 274-1916, Rm. 399T, Asst. to: Professors Eric Dannenmeier, Ruth Lilly Law Library: Phone: 317-274-4028 Nicholas Georgakopoulos, John Schaibley Information Line: 317-274-4027 Mon. – Th., 8:00 a.m.−midnight Richard Griffin – 274-8008, Rm. 399D, Asst. to: Fri., 8:00 a.m. – 11:00 p.m. Professors Emily Morris, Peter Prescott, Sat., 9:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. Lloyd T. Wilson Sun., 10:00 a.m. – midnight (Closed on special holidays) Carsandra Knight – 274-1912, Rm. 136E, Asst. to: Professor Judith Anspach, Director; Rm. 131L Professors Ralph Hall, Eleanor Kinney, Phone: 317-274-3411 David Orentlicher

Faith Long – 274-1913, Rm. 325, Asst. to: E-Mail Addresses and Phone Number of Use: Professors Cynthia Baker, Shawn Boyne, Robert Brookins, R. George Wright Dean Roberts: [email protected] 274-2581 Dean Cox: [email protected] 274-1950 Brooke Merry – 278-7918, Rm. 399S, Asst. to: Dean Pryor: [email protected] 274-8113 Professors Mark Adams, Frank Emmert, Carlota Toledo: [email protected] 274-7662 Margaret Tarkington, Carlton Waterhouse Anthony Masseria: [email protected] 274-1488 Susie Agnew: [email protected] 274-2423 Sylvia Regalado – 274-1914, Rm. 211B, Asst. to: Dean Thompson: [email protected] 278-3001 Professors Jennifer Drobac, Linda Kelly Hill Sean Southern: [email protected] 278-2172 John Krauss, Gerard Magliocca LaWanda Ward: [email protected] 278-9241 Dean MacDougall: [email protected] 278-4789 Professor Anspach: [email protected] 274-3411 Mel Yildiz: [email protected] 278-4701

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(Faculty Assistants cont.)

Laurie Turner – 274-9428, Rm. 399C, Asst. to: John Hill, Max Huffman, Michael Pitts, IUPUI Mail Services Lahny Silva If you need to mail a package, have a letter Janice White – 274-1915, Rm. 210, Asst. to: weighed, or buy stamps, you may go to the Professors Cynthia Adams, Campus Post Office located at 536 Barnhill Drive. Kenneth Chestek, Susan deMaine, Hours are: Mon.−Fri., except major campus Jim Dimitri, Allison Martin, holidays, 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. All forms of Deborah McGregor, Jenny Perry, payment are accepted including: MC, Visa, Amex, Joan Ruhtenberg, Joel Schumm, Discover, and Jagtag. Ann Thrasher, Jon Warner If you only need to purchase stamps, you may go to the JagTag office located on the 2nd floor of the Campus Center. For more information, go to: http://mail.iupui.edu.

Please remember to donate… Visit “The Docket” Law School Café Any hotel samples of lotion, shampoo, Monday – Thursday conditioner, etc., you may accumulate 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. and give to Kyle Galster, faculty Friday assistant on the 3rd floor. Kyle will be 8:00 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. glad to take your donations any time Phone: 278-2245 throughout the year for the Indiana Women’s Prison Sister Heart Project. Thank you!

Call the Law School Hot Line for daily updates on class cancellations, events and other law school information…

317-274-8611

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