THE STATE UNIVERSITY LAW RECORD College of Law Alumni Society • Fall 2001

Michael Moritz ’6i, the Man Behind Ohio State’s Largest Single Gift

Nancy Hardin Rogers Named Dean, page 6 Honor Roll of Donors, page 16 CONTENTS

College of Law Administration Nancy Hardin Rogers Dean

Alan C. Michaels Associate Dean for Faculty Gregory M. Travalio Associate Dean for Professional Relations Kathy S. Northern Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs

Bruce S. Johnson Associate Dean for Information Services Pamela H. Lombardi Assistant Dean for Gregory H. Williams, former dean of the law school, thanks Moritz for his generosity. Alumni Relations

Sheila Kapur '88 Cover Assistant Dean for Student 1 10 16 Michael E. Moritz '61 gave Affairs and Public Programs From the Dean Faculty News Honor Roll of $30 million to see the College of Law advance. Catch up on the Donors Amee McKim '94 Inset Photo: Gregory H. Williams, Director of Placement 2 latest activities of Recognizing the former dean of the law school, our professors generosity of our Dean Nancy Hardin Rogers, and M oritz Gift Helps Michael E. Moritz following the Thomas G. Hoffman II alumni and friends announcement of the gift Director of Development Faculty, Students $30 million is 12 Cover photos by Al Zanyk Liz Cutler Gates university’s largest ADA: A Decade of Director of Communications 25 Enforcement College News College of Law Alumni Professor Colker is Introducing Society Officers 4 Million Dollar tapped to present the newest Jeffrey S. Sutton '90 distinguished lecture administrative staff President Man: Meet the Donor Behind Send address changes and alumni news to: Keith Shumate ’91 the Gift 15 26 Law Record President-Elect Moritz College of Law Renowned In Memoriam at The Ohio State University National Council Officers Criminal Law Farewell to our John Deaver Drinko Hall 6 55 West 12th Ave. Carla D. Moore '77 Respecting, Scholar among friends Columbus, OH 43210-1391 Chair Listening, Thinking Faculty Hires Phone: (614) 292-2937 Fax: (614) 247-7079 Nancy Hardin Joshua Dressier is Charles C. Warner '70 The Law Record is published Rogers follows a among the top five 27 Vice Chair Alumni News for the alumni and friends of family tradition U.S. criminal law the Mortiz College of Law Spanning more Pamela H. Lombardi scholars Liz Cutler Gates Secretary than 60 years Managing Editor University Marketing of graduates Communications Design ©2001, Moritz College of Law, The Ohio State University FROM THE DEAN

A Measure of Excellence

begin my tenure as dean when we have an bring a stream of a half unprecedented opportunity to enhance the col­ million dollars into the Ilege’s excellence. You, the college’s alumni, college annually. helped to create the fine law school that made these Further from next steps possible. Alumni also will be partners in Columbus, U.S. News the efforts to make the most of the momentum cre­ & World Report mea­ ated by increased resources. During my tenure as sures us in relation to dean, I want to give you, as partners, reports on other law schools. The measurable improvements. ranking is important It is not easy to determine what should be mea­ for its ability to inform sured. How do you measure what makes a law prospective students school great? The answers give us a sense of what and employers about we value, where we are, and, perhaps most impor­ the strength of our tantly, where we need to be going. If we agree on school, but we fail in the key measurements, we can focus our efforts for achieving real distinc­ future progress. tion if we rely on its Michael E. Moritz ’61 is the latest in a long line formula as our sole of donors who have measured the college and basis for measuring found it worthy of investment. Mike’s story reflects greatness. In addition our shared values. Like many of us, he did not come to those measurements from a family of attorneys. He did not have the used by U.S. News means to finance a legal education. When a scholar­ & World Report, ship gave him the opportunity, he threw himself we should examine into his education, graduating first in his class. He and weigh the quality had character and competence, and his clients trust­ of our teaching; our ed him for his wise counsel and integrity. The col­ success in encouraging lege invested in Mike Moritz and when he could professionalism, public invest in the college’s future, he did so with unprec­ service, and diversity; edented generosity. The Moritz gift, with its 30 full the cost to the students in-state tuition-plus-assistance merit scholarships; of our program, and Dean Nancy Hardin Rogers four faculty chairs; leadership awards; and special many other factors. program funding, creates a unique opportunity for I have been meeting with alumni this summer in us to become one of the nation’s best law schools. small groups. We have discussed what makes a law Mike is not alone in his assessment of the Col­ school extraordinary and what values define lege of Law’s bright future. The Ohio State Univer­ the Moritz College of Law. Respecting the value sity went through a thoughtful assessment of its 100 of collaborative thinking, I plan to continue the academic units and selected thirteen for special conversation with as many of you as I can in the funding on the basis of their ability to bring nation­ months ahead. Please send me your suggestions al prominence to the university. Under the fine for improving the college. In return, I will keep leadership of Dean Gregory H. Williams, the Col­ you informed about measurable indications of the lege of Law was successful in securing a highly- growing excellence and reputation of the college. competitive selective investment award that will COVER STORY

Building on a Strong Foundation: Moritz's Gift Will Support College's

Faculty and Gathering after the announcement of Michael E. Moritz s gift are Professor Emeritus Robert J. 49 Mary Margaret Lynn; Michael E. ’61 and Lou Ann Moritz; John Deaver ’44 and Elizabeth Drinko; and former dean Gregory H. and Sara Williams. Moritz’s gift established faculty chairs in the name of Lynn, Students Moritz, and Williams.

n June, Columbus attorney Michael E. Moritz both national rankings and fundraising. He became "This gift will allow us donated $30 million to the College of Law to the 11th president of the City College of the City to attract top students Iprovide student scholarships, enhance the col­ University of New York (CUNY) in August. Former lege’s support for faculty programs, and support its Ohio State University vice provost Nancy Hardin while recruiting and efforts to become one of the nation’s top 10 public Rogers was named dean of the College of Law effec­ retaining some of the law schools. It is the largest single gift ever made to tive August 1. (See related story on page 6.) “The school gave me a very solid foundation nation's leading law The Ohio State University and is believed to be among the largest ever cash gifts to a U.S. law many years ago, for which I’m grateful,” Moritz said. professors. We are school. “I feel fortunate to be able to give back some of grateful for his support of Moritz, of Dublin, Ohio, is a partner in the what I built on that foundation.” Columbus law firm Baker & Hostetler and a former In recognition of Moritz’s distinguished career as our educational efforts." director of Cardinal Health, Inc. He also is a dual an attorney, his longtime support of Ohio State, and —former dean Ohio State graduate: B.S., business administration, his ongoing advocacy for the College of Law, the Gregory H. Williams 1958; J.D., 1961, graduating at the top of his law school will be named the Michael E. Moritz College class. of Law. “By funding programs to “We are enormously grateful to Mike. Gifts of enhance faculty chairs, this scope and magnitude are rare anywhere in scholarships, and the Dean’s higher education,” said Ohio State President Wil­ Fund, we will continue the liam E. “Brit” Kirwan. “Ohio State’s College of Law legacy that Dean Williams is is already highly ranked and is poised to enter the leaving to Ohio State,” Mori­ very top tier of law schools nationwide: Mike’s truly tz said. “Ohio State has the exceptional generosity at this crucial point will have potential to become a top-10 a profound impact on the college that will bear his law school, public or private. name, and it will significantly advance the top-tier With targeted resources that aspirations of the entire university.” help to attract true leaders The gift creates the Michael E. Moritz Merit in both faculty and students, Scholars Program, which provides full in-state we can make a good school tuition and additional aid to 30 Ohio State law stu­ a great one.” dents each year, and finances leadership awards to Williams, who led the law three students each year. In addition, the gift estab­ school from 1993 until lishes four endowed faculty chairs: Partners at Baker and Hostetler, John Deaver Drinko recently, has directed its • The Gregory H. Williams Chair in Civil Rights ’44 greets Michael E. Moritz ’61. The building housing impressive movement in and Civil Liberties, named in recognition of the College of Law was named for Drinko in 1995. COVER STORY

Moritz’s high regard for Williams. AT-A-G LANCE • The Michael E. Moritz Chair in Alternative Dispute Resolution. Reception Honoring Michael E. Moritz • The Frank R. Strong Chair in Law. Strong, of and Celebrating the Naming of the Prairie Village, Kansas, was dean of the college Michael E. Moritz College of Law from 1952 to 1965. 4:30 p.m. Friday, October 26,2001 • The Robert J. Lynn Chair in Law. Lynn, of (rescheduled from September 14) Columbus, earned his J.D. degree from Ohio John Deaver Drinko Hall State in 1949 and was a faculty member at the 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus college from 1951 to 1989. If you plan to attend, call (614) 688-8232 or e-mail In addition, the gift creates the Gregory H. Wil­ [email protected]. liams Dean’s Fund for Excellence. The annual inter­ est income from this endowed fund will enable the college to capitalize upon emerging trends, oppor­ Top: Faculty, staff, tunities, and priorities. students, alumni, and Williams believes Moritz’s donation will trans­ friends of the College form the law school. “Through his gift, Mike Moritz of Law gathered in joins us in laying the foundation for an incredible the Moritz Law Library on June 29 future,” he said. “This gift will allow us to attract top for an exciting students while recruiting and retaining some of the announcement: the nation’s leading law professors. We are grateful for receipt of a $30 his support of our educational efforts.” million gift from The Honorable Robert M. Duncan, a member of graduate and local attorney/ the university’s board of trustees and a 1952 law businessman, Michael school graduate, is a longtime friend of Moritz’s. “It E. Moritz ’61. is a complete joy to know that this gift comes from a person who stands for quality and excellence— Center: Former dean Gregory H. Williams just as the college does,” Duncan said. “He was not outlined how Moritz’ only an outstanding student, but also has reached gift will be used by the top of his profession.” the college. Moritz’s long and generous history of giving to Ohio State includes support of the Fisher College of Bottom: Among those in attendence for the Business (including creation of the Moritz Family announcement were MBA Scholarship), the Wexner Center for the Arts, university trustees, left the Department of Athletics, and WOSU Stations. to right, Dimon R. This most recent gift is part of ongoing fund­ McPherson, Daniel raising efforts in support of The Ohio State Uni­ M. Slane ’67, Robert M. Duncan ’52, James versity Academic Plan, following the success of the F. Patterson (vice university’s $1.23 billion “Affirm Thy Friendship” chair), Michael E. campaign. As was true for 99 percent of the private Moritz ’61, David L. gifts received during that campaign, Moritz’s gift Brennan (chair), was designated, by its donor, to support specific former dean Gregory projects and is not available for other purposes. H. Williams, President William E. “Brit” Kirwan. Million Dollar Man

M eet the D onor

B ehind the G i f t

Michael E. ’61 and Lou Ann Moritz

ichael E. Moritz didn’t plan to set a For Mike, a graduate of Columbus’ North High "I am grateful for the record with his $30 million gift to Ohio School, it made sense to stay in the city for his col­ quality education I MState and the College of Law. He had one lege education. With a combination of living at simple goal: to see his alma mater among the top 10 home, part time jobs, and a two-year stint in the received and that is law schools in the country. It was a dream he shared Navy, he was financially able to complete his under­ what motivates me to with former dean Gregory H. Williams and he graduate education at Ohio State in 1958. believed he had the financial resources to help carry Having first considered careers in medicine and help the law school out that vision. accounting, he decided to attend law school and succeed." It is also a vision rooted in a working class took the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT). —Michael E. Moritz '61 neighborhood on the north side of Columbus and When he got the results, he says he nearly fell off nurtured with a $5,000 scholarship to a young law his chair. He had scored 680, which was in the 98th student. It has borne fruit with a successful law percentile. practice and a desire to return the initial $5,000 In addition to Ohio State, he applied to attend investment more than 6,000 times. Harvard Law School and the University of Michi­ Moritz was born in Marion, Ohio. His mother, gan. “I wanted to make sure I went to a good law the daughter of a Marion doctor, had traveled there school,” he says. “Harvard offered me some financial from her home in Portsmouth so her father could assistance. So did Michigan. Ohio State hadn’t said deliver her baby. Early in Mike’s growing-up years, anything, but they did admit me,” he recalls. the Moritz family moved to the north side of He made an appointment to see then assistant Columbus. “My parents were not particularly well- dean Robert Nordstrom, who oversaw admissions. off,” he recalls. “But we scraped through.” “We talked about what it was like to go to the Ohio His father, Charles, was a wholesale appliance State law school,” he says. salesman. And what Charles and his wife, Elisabeth, Moritz recalls telling Dean Nordstrom the lacked in financial resources, they made up by importance of the financial aid the other schools encouraging their four sons to work hard and to had offered. “I explained my financial background obtain their education. It must have worked, to him,” he says. “I said that if I was to attend Ohio because all four are successful in their fields. Older State, I would have to work more to pay my way.” brother Roger is a physician near Dayton. A young­ Nordstrom listened carefully to the young man’s er brother, Timothy, served as director of mental story and then asked some pointed questions. Final­ health for Ohio under Governor James A. Rhodes ly, the admissions dean told him the faculty pre­ and now is a psychiatrist in Las Vegas. The third ferred that students not work during the school year brother, Jeff, is an electrical engineer in Santa and there might be a way to help. With that, he Rosa, California. offered him a $5,000 a year Mershon Scholarship,

4 which not only paid for his tuition, but also gave worked as a dental hygienist while he finished law him some funds for living expenses. school. “It was really exciting,” says Moritz. He deter­ The young couple put off having a family until mined to make the most of the opportunity. “I may Mike was gainfully employed. Within a year of pass­ be the only guy who didn’t have ing the bar exam in 1961, any money going into law school their first child, Ann, was and banked money during law born. In quick succession school,” he admits. He was deter­ came three more, a son, Jef­ mined to focus on getting his frey, born in 1964, then degree, even forgoing a favorite twins, Molly and Catharine, Saturday afternoon activity— who arrived in 1966. Ohio State football—to study in Today their children are the library. grown. Ann Airey and her He readily admits that the husband Philip live in Chi­ scholarship was a deciding factor cago. Jeffrey and his wife in his decision to attend Ohio Pam live in Cleveland. Molly State. It also didn’t hurt that he Tyger and her husband knew he’d “get a fine education at Doug reside in Cincinnati, the College of Law.” while her twin, Catharine The scholarship allowed him Presper and husband Dave, to focus on his studies. By the live in Columbus. Though time he graduated, he had been scattered throughout the consistently ranked at the top of Midwest, they have given his class for each of the three Mike and Lou Ann eleven years. When he took the Ohio Bar active grandchildren, who exam, he received the second- often come to Mama Lou highest score of the 359 men and and Grandad’s to visit. women who took the exam that Moritz continues to be summer. involved in the central Ohio In 1972, he formed his own community. He serves on law firm with David McClure ’64. the board of directors of Eight years later, the firm, by then a 12-lawyer The Ohio State University Foundation and has group, merged with the Cleveland firm of Baker served as a director of various corporations, includ­ and Hostetler. Among his clients was a growing ing Cardinal Health, Inc., Pharmacy Systems, Inc., partnership now known as Cardinal Health. and the Pickett Hotel Company. He has served as Wise investments and a successful law practice president of the Capital City Young Republican provided Moritz with the resources to endow the Club, trustee of the Kenyon Festival Theater, and College of Law with the generous gift. “I have been commissioner of the Ohio Elections Commission. a great supporter of Dean Williams,” he says, “and I “Ohio State and the College of Law have want to see the law school advance.” been foundational to my success,” says Moritz. His 42-year partnership with his wife, Lou Ann, “I am grateful for the quality education I received, began when friends introduced them at a fraternity and that is what motivates me to help the law party in 1957. They married in 1959 and she school succeed.” Respecting, Listening, Thinking: Nancy Hardin Rogers Takes the Helm of the Moritz College of Law By Pat Snyder

(Editor’s Note: In the June 29 meeting of The Ohio State University board of trustees, Nancy Hardin Rogers was appointed the 15th dean of the Moritz College of Law. The first woman to hold the office, she was also named the Michael E. Moritz Chair in Alternative Dispute Resolu­ tion at the same meeting. Here is a glimpse into the life of Dean Rogers, who first taught at the college in the mid-1970s.)

rom the time she was five until she announced his departure to become presi­ weeks after it received Michael Moritz’s was 20, Nancy Hardin Rogers saw a dent of the City College of the City Uni­ “institution-changing gift,” as she calls it. Fsuccession of writers, statesmen, and versity of New York, the Ohio State Board With this gift and a selective investment even a Nobel laureate pass through her of Trustees, acting on recommendations of program already underway to increase fac­ family home, the chancellor’s residence at the Ohio State law faculty, provost, and ulty size and strengthen key academic pro­ the University of Nebraska. president, unanimously named her to grams, Ohio State hopes to move the law However, what really impressed her was replace him, without a national search. school, now ranked 17th nationally among the way her father interacted with the stu­ A Yale Law School graduate, Rogers has public law schools, into the top rankings. dents and faculty who also came to the served Ohio State since 1999 as the uni­ With all eyes on her and expectations house. She remembers the respect her versity’s vice provost for academic admin­ father showed them—his willingness to istration and from 1995 to 2001 as the listen, to search for consensus, and, at Joseph S. Platt-Porter, Wright, Morris, and times, to test conventional wisdom. Arthur Professor of Law. “I remember how he responded when A nationally recognized scholar in the someone said ‘that’s the way it’s usually field of dispute resolution, she also brings a done,’ she recalls. “He would pause, and strong personal affection for the law school, then very respectfully say, ‘I understand where she has taught classes since 1975. She that’s the way it’s usually done and there has also served as associate dean for aca­ must be a good reason for that. What do demic affairs at the College of Law as well you think the reason is? And do you think as faculty coordinator of the dispute reso­ it always needs to be done that way?’” lution program, which she led to national It is these lessons from Clifford Hardin prominence and which is consistently that Rogers remembers as she takes over as ranked among the top four programs in the dean of the Moritz College of Law. country. She does not say that these are the She’s quick to praise public universities qualities that she also possesses. But then, for involvement in broader community Dean Rogers would not. By all accounts, issues, and the Moritz College of Law in she is a modest woman, not given to self­ particular as one which is “energetic and promotion. diverse and ripe for the changes that can The best illustration of the respect her lead it to even higher levels of excellence.” colleagues feel for her may be the speed Her appointment could not come at a more opportune time for those changes. and enthusiasm of the appointment itself. Rogers has been teaching at the Moritz College When former dean Gregory H. Williams She took the reins of the law school just of Law since 1975.

6 high, Nancy Hardin Rogers appears “I’ve been in a calm—almost serene—and clearly up to number of situations,” the task. he says, “where some­ Already applauded as a strategic, big- one objects to her picture thinker on the national dispute drafting without [that resolution scene, she quickly spotted the person] having read opportunities and challenges of the new the commentary first. gift and began to think through the issues She had a very subtle that came with it. way of suggesting that “There will be opportunities to lower the answer is in the the student-faculty ratio,” she says, “and commentary. No one there will be questions. To what extent was ever offended.” should we modify the curriculum? How The chief justice do we encourage more scholarship? How predicts that those should we handle admissions as more same quietly effective scholarship funds become available? How ways will bring her can we effectively choose applicants who success as law school will best contribute as law graduates to a dean at this critical better society? And what sort of decision­ time. “When she meets making framework should we use to with people who have address these questions?” different perspectives, One observer who’s confident she’ll what they will get from help the school find the right answers is her is that she is a very Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice good listener, someone Thomas J. Moyer ’64. who can take all that “No one is better skilled at turning this information and form wonderful opportunity into a glorious day a consensus in the best for the law school,” he says. “There’s no interest of the institu­ one to whom I’d entrust that kind of tion, not in the best money more than Nancy.” interest of her person­ Their association began in 1987, when ally.” he was first elected to the Ohio Supreme His comments echo Rogers received a presidential appointment in 1995 to serve on the board Court and she enlisted his support for dis­ Rogers’ own philoso­ of the Legal Services Corporation and was sworn in by the Honorable pute resolution programs she was involved phy about conflict Abner Mikva, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. in on a national level. management. and two of them, Dispute Resolution: His confidence in her honesty, tact, and “As you mediate,” Rogers says, “you rec­ Negotiation, Mediation and Other Process­ ability to deal with people of diverse inter­ ognize that conflict is a natural thing to es, co-authored with Frank E.A. Sander ests stems especially from their work occur, not something you need to avoid. and Stephen B. Goldberg, and Mediation: together on the Uniform Mediation Proj­ There are techniques to deal with it. One is Law, Policy, Practice, co-authored with ect, a national committee jointly spon­ to make a decision. Another is to use a Craig A. McEwen and Sarah R. Cole, are sored by the American Bar Association consensus-building approach. Often a seminal works, regularly updated for use (ABA) and the National Conference of shared decision is one that is more power­ by students and practitioners around the Commissioners of Uniform State Laws ful, more successful, than one that is made country. (NiECUSL). The project was successful in by a sole decision maker.” Also lengthy is her list of professional producing uniform legislation that was Besides her work on the Uniform Medi­ awards. Most recently she received the approved by NCCUSL in August. ation Project, Rogers brings to the dean’s 1998 Ritter Award from the Ohio State Bar As reporter for the committee, Rogers office an impressive national reputation as Foundation for Outstanding Contribu­ had the challenge of absorbing the diverse a researcher, writer, speaker, and teacher in tions to the Administration of Justice, the and sometimes strong opinions of the the field of dispute resolution and a dem­ 1996 Outstanding Professor award from highly-talented group. She then drafted a onstrated national commitment to provid­ the Ohio State University College of Law rule and related commentary that ing the disadvantaged with access to legal Alumni Society, and the 1996 Service Rec­ explained the background and rationale services. ognition Award from the Legal Aid Society for the rule. Her drafts were persuasive The list of books and articles she has of Columbus. and her manner subtle. co-authored on dispute resolution is long, Last spring, her scholarship in the field of dispute resolution took her to Harvard ed the Ohio Commission on Dispute Res­ don’t think very well. It’s important to Law School, as a visiting professor. olution and now co-directs the Policy think before you respond.” And her national reputation has won Consensus Initiative in Santa Fe, New Rogers is clearly amused at the notion bipartisan support for political appoint­ Mexico, remembers rooming with Rogers that she is completely unflappable, but ments to key national leadership positions at an ABA meeting and discovering that jokingly declines to disclose what might in the areas of dispute resolution and legal Nancy intended to work each morning make her lose her cool. She does, though, access. from 5 to 8 on a mediation book she was provide a peek into the personal life and In 1993, then president Bill Clinton writing. Carlson was impressed, she says, values that seem to center her. nominated her, and the U.S. Senate con­ “by her clarity of vision and understand­ On her desk is a half-eaten lunch, the firmed her, as a board member of the ing of how to introduce new ideas.” only hint of a hectic day. She loves to walk, Legal Services Corporation, a private, non­ Likewise, the man who hired her for she explains, and confesses that she some­ profit corporation established by Congress her first position out of law school, now- times sneaks out mid-day in old clothes to disseminate funding nationally to pro­ retired U.S. District Court Judge Thomas and jogging shoes to hike through the vide civil legal assistance to those who oth­ D. Lambros, affectionately recalls the days campus. erwise would not be able to afford it. he debated civil rights cases with the Walking is also a family tradition. The In 1998, then Ohio Governor George Northern District’s first woman law clerk. walls of her office are lined with stunning Voinovich ’61, appointed her as a com­ “She was a superstar,” he says, “with color photos of tall white birches and nuz­ missioner to the National Conference of such scholarly talents and energy, but a zling elephants—the work, she explains, of Commissioners of Uniform State Laws, very calm demeanor. Some people who her husband Doug, a partner in the and last year, Governor of Ohio don’t know her may underestimate her, Columbus law firm of Vorys, Sater, Sey­ reappointed her. but they’ll soon be awakened and take mour and Pease LLP, and her partner for Those who have worked with her rave notice!” 31 years. He takes them during family about her work ethic, her intellectual bril­ The comment is echoed by John Erlen- walking excursions around the block at liance, her vision, and her calm demeanor. born, former Illinois congressman and home in Upper Arlington, throughout the Chief Justice Moyer recalls many an president of the Legal Services Corpora­ country, and even in Costa Rica, Tanzania, evening she’d forego dinner with the rest tion, who believes law students would do and Kenya, where their youngest daughter of the ABA-NCCUSL committee and, well to note Rogers’ style. Kim was teaching last year. uncomplaining, duck back to her hotel “She’s extremely intelligent, and I can’t With a little coaxing, she shares the room to draff a document for the next imagine her losing her cool,” he says. story of how she and Doug met. When she day’s review. “There’s something young lawyers can was finishing college at the University of And Christine Carlson, who first head­ learn from this. When you get angry, you Kansas, her father was tapped by President Nixon to become secretary of agriculture. She traveled to Washington for the swear­ ing-in ceremony, as did Doug, the son of William Rogers, who was being sworn in as secretary of state. “As we were leaving the ceremony, our parents were talking and introduced us. Doug was a first-year law student at Yale, and I told him I was going to the law school at University of Virginia. He said, ‘You should consider coming to Yale.’” The attraction was strong, and though she started at Virginia and attended classes there a few months, they were soon mar­ ried and became classmates at Yale. After 31 years of watching her profes­ sional success, Doug describes her as a woman “who is not so concerned about personal advancement.” He explains, “She calmly sticks to the things she’s interested in and committed Rogers carries her load at the 1997 Student Bar Association Work-A-Day at the to. She’s not a self-promoter.” Mid-Ohio Food Bank. Perhaps that’s the influence of Martha Hardin at work. Rogers’ mother, who was woman do it effectively trained as a math and physics teacher, to be convinced.” urged all five of the Hardin children to On a day she’ll contribute both to their families and to always remember, she their professions. watched the lawyer Nancy, the fourth of five, can still interview her client and remember her words: “Though the family make some hard choices comes first, one can arrange things so that about how the case it is possible to do both.” would be handled in The others apparently listened, too. court. Her sister, Cynthia Milligan, also a lawyer, “She made them is dean of the Business School at the Uni­ responsibly and with versity of Nebraska. Another sister, Sue concern about what was Wood, is a retired CPA living in Lincoln, best for the child and Nebraska. Her brother, Cliff, is a minister the justice system,” Rog­ in Hawaii, and her brother, Jim, with a ers says. dual law degree and MBA, is a bank exec­ In a characteristic utive in St. Louis, where their parents now show of ethics, to this live. day she won’t reveal Rogers, mother to three grown daugh­ more. “It was a condi­ The Rogers family: front, Dean Nancy and Doug Rogers; back, Jill Rogers, Lynne and Kevin Robbins, Kim Rogers. ters, still praises Ohio State for its flex­ tion of the shadowing, ibility in allowing her to take off several not to tell,” she says. “It years from teaching when her second was a promise.” the same passion that had attracted her child was born and to work part-time Although Judge Lambros had noticed professor to the law. during her children’s pre-school years. her demeanor even earlier in her career, it “I came to law school to help people These days, each of them is building was her next career stop, a one-year stint solve their problems,” the student wrote, her own resume and becoming a profes­ at the Cleveland Legal Aid Society, that “And this was a time I felt I really had.” sional in her own right. Lynne Rogers Rogers credits with teaching her how to Inspired by the student that she had Robbins, 25, has just graduated from law remain calm. inspired, Rogers embarked on a course of school and recently joined the Boston law “When you have to juggle 120 cases at a writing, teaching, and developing national firm of Sullivan and Worcester. Jill, 23, is time, you learn to stay calm,” she recalls, models to address legal issues in dispute pursuing both a J.D. and graduate degree with obvious affection for the time she resolution. Colleague Christine Carlson in teaching, and Kim, 20, is a college counseled low income persons and helped has described her as “visionary” in that junior with an interest in English. give them access to the justice system. work, an absolute master at artful persua­ When she reflects on her own career, Nearly 30 years later, she recalls specific sion. Rogers dismisses the notion that her suc­ scenarios that came through her door. A Is there something she hopes will be cess has been the result of some carefully woman who needed a guardianship draft­ said of her in the end, as dean of the law concocted strategic plan. As she talks ed so she could receive assistance for two school? about what engrosses her, it’s apparent abandoned children. A couple who had The answer is vintage Nancy Hardin that what Doug Rogers says is true. The been evicted and came to her with little Rogers: “I’m not so interested in what they vitality grows naturally from interests and trust in the system. (When she ultimately might say about me. I care what they say commitment. won the case, at first they could not about the Moritz College of Law.” As a young woman thinking about believe it.) what she might contribute, she knew she “It was wonderful to watch people who had a passion for helping people resolve felt that life was always going to be unfair their problems, but wasn’t sure it would realize that access to equal justice was pos­ be through a career in law. She felt com­ sible.” pelled to investigate. Not surprisingly, it was also listening to “I was interested, but had never seen a a very human response that prompted her woman lawyer,” she recalls. “My parents to develop her first full course on dispute introduced me to a woman who was a resolution and ultimately to focus on it as lawyer, a juvenile court prosecutor, and let a field of scholarship. me shadow her for a day. It was my A law student, evaluating an early unit request. Somehow I needed to see a Rogers helped teach on mediation, echoed FACULTY NEWS

Timotliy Jost, a faculty oritz College of Law faculty members tion between election advocacy and issue advocacy member at Ohio State for have traveled all over the world to speak under Buckley v. Valeo. He used his findings for sev­ the past 20 years, has Mat conferences, serve as expert witnesses, eral pro bono projects, including representing the accepted a position at or provide pro bono counsel. Here’s a look at some Alliance for Democracy and Common Cause/Ohio, Washington and Lee of their activities, scholarly and otherwise. in pending litigation concerning campaign advertis­ University School of Law In April, Professor Sarah Rudolph Cole spoke on ing in Ohio. He has also drafted memorandum and in Lexington, Va. Jost, who the topic of good faith participation in mediation at petitions concerning First Amendment issues raised was the Newton D. Baker- the Northwest Alternative Dispute Resolution Con­ by the Ohio Chamber of Commerce ads in last Baker and Hostetler Chair November’s Ohio Supreme Court elections. He also in Law, is widely published ference in Seattle and at the ABA Dispute Resolu­ in the areas of health care tion Section Conference in Washington, D.C. In drafted an amicus brief in a Mississippi case pending regulation, remedies, and early June, she discussed the Uniform Mediation before the U.S. Supreme Court, which raises the property law. Act at the Ohio Mediation Association. same First Amendment question as the Ohio case. Papers from the spring 2000 symposium, “Facing Professor Foley has also studied commercial the Challenges of the Americans with Disabilities speech and the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence under Barbara R. Snyder has Act: The First Ten Years and Beyond,” have been the First Amendment concerning state regulation of been named vice provost published in the Ohio State Law Journal. An article commercial advertising. He advised the Massachu­ for academic policy and by Ruth Colker, the Heck-Faust Chair in Consti­ setts Attorney General’s Office on their pending human resources in the tutional Law, is included. Her contribution is “Win­ Supreme Court case against the tobacco industry. Office of Academic Affairs ning and Losing Under the ADA,” 62 Ohio State After a year at the Institute for Advanced Study at The Ohio State in Princeton, New Jersey, Professor Thomas P. Gal- University. A faculty Law Journal 239 (2001). member at the College of Professor Sharon Davies served as the chairper­ lanis has returned to campus. Law since 1988, she is the son of the Columbus Bar Association’s Task Force While in Princeton, he exam­ Joanne Wharton Murphy/ on Racial Profiling. The group’s report, released in ined the role of counsel in Class of 1965 Professor February, recommended five policy changes for 18th century England. During of Law and most recently Columbus police, including tracking racial data for the year, he presented his find­ served as associate dean. all traffic stops and installing video cameras in all ings at the University of Penn­ police cruisers by 2003. sylvania Law School and the Anita A. DiPasquale was British Legal History Confer­ elected secretary of the Central ence. He also spoke on “Aging Ohio Association of Juvenile and the Nontraditional Fam- p Gallanis Lawyers after having served on ily” at the Association of their board of directors for American Law Schools (AALS) conference defining two years. She is the supervis­ the family in the millennium. He has been named ing attorney in the Justice for chair-elect of the AALS Section on Aging and the Children Practicum. Law, and elected to the nominating committee of An article by Professor the American Society for Legal History. The 2000 edition of the Guide to Ohio Rules of {Catherine Hunt Federle, “The Anita A. DiPasquale Institutionalization of Female Civil Procedure, co-authored by Professor Emeritus Delinquency,” was published in a symposium issue Howard Fink and current Professors Arthur Green- of the Buffalo Law Review. baum and Charles Wilson, has been published. During the last year, Pro­ They are now working on the 2001 edition. fessor Edward B. (Ned) Foley Professor Greenbaum is co-author, with attorneys had a wide range of research from the law firm of Jones, Day, Reavis, and Pogue, and scholarly activities. In of the Ohio section of the American Legal Ethics February, he spoke at the Library. A work in progress, completed portions can Franklin Inns of Court on be found at www.law.cornell.edu/ethics. He gave a Simmons-Harris v. Zelman, continuing legal education presentation on the duty the Cleveland school voucher of lawyers to report professional misconduct and case. He spoke on judicial spent his sabbatical last year doing more research in independence to a law school Edward B. Foley this area. He has also has been appointed as a mem­ alumni group in April and ber of the Ohio Supreme Court Commission on moderated an informal lunch discussion during Certification of Attorneys as Specialists. March’s Capital Punishment Symposium. Two articles authored by Professor Deborah Professor Foley has been researching the distinc­ Jones Merritt appeared during the first half of FACULTY NEWS

2001. “Stalkingthe Bakke Secret rule. Law: Both reports are available through What Predicts Publication in the Ohio State University website, www.osu.edu/ the Courts of index.php. Appeals?” co-authored with Professor Emeritus Earl Finbar Murphy attend­ Professor James Brudney, ed a special session of the United Nations General appeared in the Vanderbilt Assembly in New York City in early June. The ses­ Law Review. The article sion, to review the implementation of the Habitat addresses the system of Agenda, was attended by UN recognized non-gov­ unpublished opinions in the ernmental organizations (NGOs) with interests in Deborah Jones Merritt federal courts of appeals, a the subject area. Professor Murphy served as an hotly contested issue among observer-representative for the World Society for judges on those courts; Merritt and Brudney con­ Ekistics and attended open sessions on housing, tribute new empirical insights to the debate. The land tenure, and planning against the development other article by Merritt, “Are Women Stuck on the of slum formation. (Habitat is a UN agency head­ Academic Ladder: An Empirical Perspective,” quartered in Nairobi, Kenya, concerned with direct­ appeared in the UCLA Women’s Law Journal. ing urban growth, the provision of housing for the In March, Professor Merritt was the featured poor, urban municipal management, planning for speaker at a dinner for representatives of Ohio public health, judging the adequacy of urban infra­ schools engaged in service-learning. Merritt structure, and related urban problems, especially in described the work of the National Commission on the developing world.) Service-Learning, co-sponsored by Ohio State’s On March 1, Professor Mary Ellen O’Connell Institute and the Kellogg Foundation. spoke at the Willamette Uni­ Merritt also discussed ways in which the university versity College of Law. Her can interact with elementary and secondary school topic was “Border Disputes: teachers to improve the teaching of civics issues. Case Studies in International On June 8, Professor Merritt delivered a dinner Conflict and Conflict Resolu­ keynote address at a national conference of bar tion.” In April, she presented a examiners and academic support personnel spon­ paper, “Elihu Root and Crisis sored by the Capital University Law School. Merritt Prevention,” at the 95th annu­ described her research, co-authored with sociolo­ al meeting of the American gists Lowell Hargens and Barbara Reskin, critiquing Mary Ellen O’Connell Society of International Law. methods used recently by several states to raise The following month, she scores required to pass the bar exam. Her article, spoke on sanctions and the operation of humanitar­ which has influenced at least two states to reject rec­ ian exceptions at a symposium on “The Impact of ommendations to raise the passing score, will International Law of a Decade of Measures against appear in the University of Cincinnati Law Review Iraq” in Florence, Italy. Also in May, she participated and is available on the web through www.ssrn.com. in Konflikt der Rechtskulturen? (American and Ger­ Professor Merritt, who sits on the board of direc­ man Legal Cultures: Contrast, Conflict, Conver­ tors for the Consortium of Social Science Associa­ gence?) in Munich, Germany, where she spoke on tions, authored a brief overview of the ways in “Enforcing International Law in National Courts: which legal and social science research have con­ The German and American Experiences.” tributed to social and economic fairness during the During spring break, Professor John Quigley last 50 years. Her overview also identified research conducted an inquiry on unexploded land mines in that remains to be done in these areas. The report the areas of recent military conflict in the southern will appear as part of a book celebrating COSSA’s part of Lebanon. “Efforts to clear the mines are pro­ 20th anniversary. ceeding slowly,” he reports. “Civilians are periodi­ In April, Professor Merritt completed service as cally killed or injured by stepping on mines.” He chair of Ohio State’s university-wide Committee on plans to submit a report to an appropriate inter­ Affirmative Action. The committee authored two national agency. extensive reports, one identifying initiatives that the In late April, Professor Quigley co-authored an university could undertake immediately to enhance amicus curiae brief for the Government of Mexico diversity and the other analyzing approaches that in support of a petition to grant certiorari in a capi­ the University could take to undergraduate admis­ tal murder case from the State of Illinois. The con­ sions if the Sixth Circuit or Supreme Court reject victed person was a native of Poland, and Mexico FACULTY NEWS

argued that the man should have been accorded Law School for this academic year. rights of access to a Polish consul under the Vienna Household International has named Professor Convention on Consular Relations. The request in Vincene Verdun to a special board that will advise U.S. Supreme Court Case 00-1375 was subsequently the company on its lending and business principles, denied and may be viewed at www4.law.cornell.edu/ business and legislative initiatives, as well as com­ php/orderinquiry.php3. munity relations and philanthropic activities. Assistant Professor Marc Spindelman’s article, Professor Douglas Whaley spoke on bankruptcy “Reorienting Bowers v. Hardwick,” which revisits and checking accounts at the Columbus Bar Asso­ the Supreme Court’s decision in the case, appeared ciation Bankruptcy Conference in May. He was also in the North Carolina Law Review last spring. He voted the Outstanding Professor by the Class of also consulted with counsel at the House of Ruth in 2001, the fourth time he has received this award Baltimore, Maryland, about a brief the organization from a graduating class. Previous classes to honor filed on behalf of one of its clients with the Mary­ Professor Whaley with this award were 1976,1988, land Court of Appeals concerning (among other and 1995. things) the legal standard for granting and review­ Stonewall Columbus honored Professor Whaley ing protective orders in cases of domestic violence. on June 23 during the 20th Gay Pride Parade. He During the summer, he served on the faculty of the was one of the founding members of the Columbus Summer Institute of the Department of Health Pol­ gay rights organization, then called Stonewall icy and Management, The Johns Hopkins University Union. Bloomberg School of Public Health, where he Departing dean Gregory H. Williams has been taught a class on ethical issues in public health. elected as the American Bar Association representa­ Professor Peter Swire spoke at the National Con­ tive to the Council on Legal Education Opportunity. sumers Summit on Health Privacy on February 5 in His term began at the conclusion of the ABA 2001 Washington, D.C. Professor Swire is serving as a annual meeting. visiting professor at George Washington University

Colker Addresses Americans with- Disabilities Act in Upcoming University Distinguished Lecture “Good language, bad enforce­ Decade of Enforcement,” Pro­ lege to be tapped for the Uni­ ment” typifies the Americans fessor Colker says that each versity Distinguished Lecturer with Disabilities Act, according area has suffered from systemic honor in the last three years. In to Moritz College of Law Pro­ problems of underenforce­ May 1999, Professor Deborah fessor Ruth Colker. She will ment. She will also explore Jones Merritt was selected to examine the three titles of the some of the challenges faced in present the lecture. ADA—employment, public the State of Ohio in achieving The University Distin­ entities, and public accom­ better enforcement of disabil­ guished Lecture Series was modations—during the Uni­ ity discrimination law as inaugurated in 1996 as one of enforcement responsibility is the University’s highest honors Ruth Colker versity Distinguished Lecture October 17 at the Wexner Cen­ moved from the federal gov­ for a senior faculty member. ter for the Arts in Columbus. ernment to the states. The lectureship is awarded in In “The Americans with The lecture will be broad­ recognition of outstanding aca­ Disabilities Act: The First cast internationally on the demic achievement, particu­ Web. For more information, larly, but not exclusively, in research, scholarship, or cre­ AT-A-GLANCE visit www.osu.edu/lecture or call Molly Davis at (614) ative activity. The President’s ADA: A Decade of Enforcement 292-5881. and Provost’s Advisory Com­ 4 p.m. EST, Wednesday, Oct. 17,2001 Professor Colker, the Heck- mittee reviews nominations Wexner Center for the Arts Faust Memorial Chair in Con­ and recommends candidates to 1871 North High Street, Columbus stitutional Law, is the second the President and Provost for Webcast live at www.osu.edu/lecture/html faculty member from the col­ final selection.

12 FACULTY NEWS

Dateline: Moritz College of Law

ights. Camera. Action. College of Law Systems regarding the monitoring of employee faculty members are increasingly finding e-mail. She said that employers are wrong to Ethemselves in the spotlight as reporters surreptitiously and randomly monitor e-mail. seek them out for expert comment on today’s Professor Louis Jacobs was quoted in an headlines. The topics range as widely as the article in the May 23 Cleveland Plain Dealer death penalty and artificial insemination and regarding school funding in Ohio. He said that are just as varied as the locations of the pub­ court-ordered depositions in such cases are lications or news oudets, from the Short North unusual, but so is the case that prompted them. in Columbus to Singapore. Here is a sample of Professor Deborah Jones Merritt was quot­ some of the media interviews granted by our ed in an article in the New York Times Magazine faculty during the past year. on June 3. Merritt, who clerked for Justice San­ Professor Douglas Berman was interviewed dra Day O’Connor during her first term on the on WSYX-TV ABC 6 (Columbus) on April 10 U.S. Supreme Court, described O’Connor’s regarding the denial of clemency for J.D. Scott, decision-making style. who was on Death Row in Ohio. Merritt was also quoted in an article about Professor Ruth Colker was quoted in the minority law faculty members published during January 19 edition of the Detroit News on the March in the Texas Lawyer. In that article, Mer­ topic of artificial insemination techniques. ritt described her empirical work on faculty She was also quoted in the February 8 issue hiring; the magazine also referred to Merritt’s of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram regarding a 1997 Columbia Law Review article, co-authored case of a former police officer in the Fort Worth with Professor Barbara Reskin of Harvard Uni­ area who was disabled following a car accident. versity. The officer contended that the police depart­ In December 2000, the Dallas Morning News ment did not do all it could to accommodate quoted Merritt, along with Supreme Court his disabilities. Professor Colker said he might scholars from around the country, on the have trouble getting his job back because courts impact of the Supreme Court’s decision in Bush tend to give police departments leeway with the v. Gore. Disabilities Act because of the life-and-death In early May, Merritt appeared on Ohio decisions officers must make. News Network’s “On the Square,” describing the In June, Professor Colker was quoted in the work of the Ohio State’s John Glenn Institute, Columbus Dispatch in a feature story regarding which she directs. how people discuss the death penalty with their Professor Peter Swire was quoted in the New children. Professor Colker related how she and York Times, the Chattanooga Times and Free her nine-year-old daughter, Cara Colker-Eybel, Press, and the Washington Post on April 13 talked about the issue during a drive to Canton. regarding adoption of the medical privacy Professor Katherine Hunt Federle was quot­ rules. The rules, issued by President Bill Clin­ ed in the Toledo Blade on February 11 regard­ ton, were allowed to go into effect on April 14. ing pending cases against any Ohio foster care Professor Swire, who served as Clinton’s chief agencies. She also was interviewed in New privacy officer, noted that the decision sent a Orleans’s Gambit Weekly about the request for a clear signal to industry that it’s time to get to jury trial for two juveniles charged in a school work protecting privacy. shooting in New Orleans. Associate Dean Kathy Northern was quoted L. Camille Hébert, Carter C. Kissell Profes­ in the February 2 issue of the Columbus Dis­ sor of Law and director of the Center for Law, patch in a story about women lawyers who bal­ Policy, and Social Science, was quoted in the ance career with personal obligations. She June 2001 issue of Managing HR Information stated that more young women are seeing the (continued page 14) FACULTY NEWS

Dateline: Moritz College of Law (continued)

practice of law as a viable option as female role During April, he was also interviewed about models gain prominence in Ohio and nation­ capital punishment on Ohio News Network’s wide. “Ohio’s Talking” regarding the pending execu­ Professor John Quigley was interviewed on tion of Ohio death row inmate, J.D. Scott. In February 6 by a reporter from WBNS-TV July, he was quoted in an Associated Press story Channel 10 (Columbus) regarding the Israeli regarding foreign nationals on death row in the election. In the April 5 edition of the London U.S. Daily Telegraph, Professor Quigley was quoted A Columbus reading program founded by regarding the U.S. military plane that was Professor Vincene Verdun was featured in the detained in China in April 2001. He said that February 1 issue of Columbus Alive. Read military planes in international airspace, like Columbus Read is a library and reading center warships in international waters, have sovereign for the children of the Greenbriar housing immunity. In the April 5 issue of The Straits project on the far east side. You can also read Times (Singapore), he commented that the U.S. the story at www.alivewired.com/2001/ administration is correct in demanding that 20010201/secretcity.html. U.S. consul have contact with the air personnel. Ohio State’s Student Housing Clinic and its Professor Quigley was also interviewed on director, Kathy Wise ’97, were featured in the radio stations in New York City and Los Ange­ Columbus Dispatch on July 15. The clinic, les, and talked with reporters from the Japanese which operates under the auspices of the Mori­ Shimbun News Agency and Reuters regarding tz College of Law, employs 12 law students who the Chinese situation. He also spoke with a advise students about their rights when leasing reporter from ABC News regarding the extradi­ in the campus area. They can also represent tion of an American in France who is wanted students in court—with a lawyer’s supervi­ in the U.S. for the alleged killing of a doctor sion—in disputes about security deposits, who performed abortions. repairs, property damage, and evictions.

Faculty Members Named to Chairs, Professorships, Receive Promotions

Three faculty members have and Lee College of Law. The chair established in 1979 with gifts At their June 29 meeting, been appointed to chairs or was established in 1974 with gifts from the friends of the late Chief the university board of trustees professorships. In addition, three from John Deaver Drinko '44 and Justice O'Neill '42. approved the recommendation of others have received promotions. members and friends of the law L. Camille Hébert has been the College of Law, Dean Gregory James J. Brudney, a faculty firm of Baker and Hostetler. named to the Carter C. Kissell H. Williams and Provost Ed Ray member since 1994, has been Sheldon W. Halpern has been Professorship in Law. Currently to promote Douglas Berman and named the Newton D. Baker- appointed to the C. William O'Neill director of the College of Law's Thomas P. Gallanis to the rank Baker and Hostetler Chair in Law. Professorship in Law and Judicial Center for Law, Policy, and Social of associate professor with tenure It had previously been held by Administration. A faculty member Science, she has taught at Ohio and Mary Ellen O'Connell to Professor Timothy Jost, who left since 1984, Professor Halpern State since 1988. The Kissell professor with tenure. Ohio at the end of last academic teaches in the area of intellectual Professorship was created in 1998 year to teach at the Washington property. The professorship was with a gift from Carter C. Kissell '27. FACULTY NEWS

Renowned Criminal Law Scholar Among Faculty Hires at Ohio State

oted criminal law scholar Joshua Dressier Law. He is an associate editor of Criminal Justice and two promising entry-level scholars Ethics and a consulting editor for the Journal of N have joined the faculty at the Moritz Col­ Homosexuality. He also serves on advisory boards lege of Law. Dressier, along with Marc S. Spindel- for The Green Bag, Criminal Law and Procedure man, who focuses in the areas of health law and Abstracts, and the Journal of Criminal Law and bioethics, and Donald B. Tobin, a former tax lawyer Criminology. with the U.S. Justice Department, began teaching this fall. Spindelman is a graduate of the Uni­ “The appointment of these three individuals will versity of Michigan Law School and enhance our academic program,” said former law Johns Hopkins University. Most recent­ dean Gregory H. Williams. “Professor Dressier is ly, he has been a Greenwall Fellow in well regarded by both faculty and students at the Bioethics and Health Policy at the institutions where he has taught. His presence at Georgetown University Law Center and Ohio State strengthens an already outstanding Johns Hopkins University. Before that, group of professors who teach in the area of crimi­ he was the Reginald F. Lewis Fellow for nal law. Professors Spindelman and Tobin are Law Teaching at Harvard Law School, both beginning academic careers, but come to the worked as an associate at Cadwalader, Moritz College of Law with solid scholarly back­ Wickersham & Taft in New York City, grounds.” and served as a law clerk for the Honor­ able Alice M. Batchelder, U.S. Court of Dressier, the Edwin Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. He has Marc S. Spindelman M. Cooperman Des­ taught at the University of Michigan Law School, ignated Professor of the Georgetown University Law Center, and the Law, is consistently Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. ranked among the top five criminal law schol­ Tobin is a magna ars in the U.S. He comes cum laude graduate of to Ohio State from the the Georgetown Uni­ McGeorge School of versity Law Center and Law at the University of received a B.A. degree the Pacific in Sacramen­ from Duke University. to, California, where he Since 1997, he has been had been a faculty an attorney on the Joshua Dressier member since 1993. He appellate staff of the tax is the author of a widely used casebook on criminal division of the U.S. law, “Cases and Materials on Criminal Law,” and a Department of Justice, popular treatise, “Understanding Criminal Law.” He where he won the Out­ is the editor-in-chief of the “Encyclopedia of Crime standing Attorney and Justice” (four volumes published by Macmillan Award in 1999. He has Donald B. Tobin Reference USA, revised, 2001) and the co-author, also taught at American University’s Washington with George C. Thomas III, of “Criminal Procedure: College of Law and served as a clerk for the Honor­ Principles, Policies, and Perspectives” (West: 1998). able Francis D. Murnaghan, Jr., of the U.S. Court of Dressier graduated second in his class from the Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. at Los Angeles School of

15 College of Law HONOR ROLL o f D o n o r s

The annual Honor Roll of Donors of the Moritz College of Law reflects all gifts received by the college during the fiscal year beginning July 1,2000 and ending June 30,2001. This report may not include gifts made directly to the academic or student programs. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this report. If you find an error or omission, please contact the Office of Development, Moritz College of Law, 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, (614) 688-8232.

For more information about giving to the Moritz College of Law, please contact the college’s director of development, Tom Hoffman, at (614) 292-0601.

Leadership Donors by Gift Levels These gifts were made between July 1,2000 and June 30, 2001

$1,000,000 and higher Robert J. Watkins Christopher C. Skambis, Jr. Duane L. Isham Michael E. Moritz Robert W. Werth Harold L. Talisman Titus Jackman James Frederick White, Jr. Louis Ernest Tosi James Jay Johnson $100,000 to $999,999 Hugh Richard Whiting Anthony Tuccillo Nils Paul Johnson Howard William Adkins Carl Craddock Tucker Jerome John Joondeph, Sr. Edwin M. Cooperman $2,500 - $4,999 Stephen Francis Vogel Joni Roberta Kerr June Purcell Guild+ Basil J. Boritzki Elizabeth Jean Watters Robert Steven Kestner Frank Bork Richard A. Wead Carter Coslet Kissell $50,0000-$99,999 Michael Hiram Carpenter John W. Weaner Thomas C. B. Letson Ival Smith Adkins+ Joanna Lawyer Cavendish Sara Gerhart Wieland Douglas Hayes Marshall William M. Connelly Douglas Leonard Williams II Timothy Charles McCarthy $25,000 - $49,999 Raymond Paul R. Douglas Wrightsel George Carlton Carol Judge Cunningham, Jr. McConnaughey Dan David Sandman Gregory Scott DeWolfe $1,000-$2,499 Robert Myers McGreevey Arthur Isaiah Vorys John Deaver Drinko Gerald Otis Allen Daniel P. McQuade Robert Morton Duncan John Harper Bain Karen Mueller Moore $10,000-$24,999 William Kagay Friend Thomas Edward Barnes Erin Frances Moriarty John W. Creighton, Jr. Bernard V. Fultz George Hayward Bennett, Jr. William Stanley Morton John Richard Eastman Marc Gertner Sally Ward Bloomfield William Ernest Rathman John G. Lancione Eileen Sue Goodin Michael Marshall Briley Frank Allen Ray John Thomas Mills Eloise Edwards Hays James Hall Callard David John Rectenwald James D. Oglevee Reginald Sherman Jackson, Jr. Joseph Couture D’Arrigo Thomas B. Ridgley Charles Edward Welch William David Jamieson William George Fischer George Willard Rooney, Sr. Steven Wash Jemison Francis Xavier Frantz Charles Rockwell Saxbe $5,000-$9,999 Ernest Karam Gregory Aloysius Gehlmann Mark Wayne Sinkhorn Edward Allen Bacome David Allan Katz Charles F. Glander John Stuart Steinhauer Susan Ellen Brown Kenneth Jack Kies Gary Paul Gormin Todd Shawn Swatsler John J. Chester, Sr. Larry Russell Langdon Clay Powelson Graham Thomas L. Tribbie Laura J. Dean James Kaufman Lawrence O. Allan Gulker Charles J. Tyburski Richard Sterling Donahey, Jr. Carl Joseph Munson, Jr. Clifford Edward Haines Randall Mitchell Walters George Watt Hairston Frank Jerome Neff Kenneth Richard Harkins Ithamar Dryden Weed William Irwin Kohn Terry Lee Overbey Douglas G. Haynam Gregory Howard Williams Craig Edward Larrimer Frederick Richard Reed John J. Heron Dennis Patrick Witherell Jane W. Reed Joseph Richard Rosenbaum Robert William Horner III Janice Elizabeth Wolfe Elinor Porter Swiger Michael D. Saad Fordham Eric Huffman William Kernahan Thomas+ Kurt Lee Schultz William Michael Isaac Thomas Leo Twyford

+ D e c e a s e d *The Presidents Club Henry Folsom Page Society

Founded during the Law Centennial Campaign, the Henry Folsom Page Society recognizes individuals who make major gifts to the Mortiz College of Law. Frank E. Bazler ’53 of Troy served as honorary president of the society in 2000-2001. For more information about becoming a Page Society member, contact Development Director Tom Hoffman at (614) 292-8232.

John Marshall Adams ’54 - Columbus Melodee S. Kornacker ’79 - Columbus1 Rodney B. Baldwin ’22 + - Columbus1 J. Paul ’32+ and Mary McNamara - Columbus1 John J. ’36 + and Rose M. Barone - Toledo1 John T. ’72 and Dorothy P. Mills - Houston, Texas Frank E. ’53 and Virginia H. Bazler - Troy1 Michael E. Moritz ’61 - Dublin Paul A. ’66 and Carole Bernardini - Earl Finbar Murphy - Columbus Ormond Beach, Florida James D. Oglevee ’53, McLean, Virginia1 John M. ’41+ and Celeanor Laughlin Bowsher - Terry L. ’75 and Lynnette R. ’75 Overbey - Columbus1 Terrace Park John F. Casey ’65 - Columbus Thomas F. Patton ’27 + - Shaker Heights1 Karen S. Casey ’91 - Columbus J. Gilbert ’52 and Louella H. Reese - Newark1 . Thomas E. ’53 + and Joanna Cavendish - Columbus1 Dan ’73 and Bonnie Sandman - George H. ’32 + and Geneieve S. Chamblin - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Columbus1 William B. Saxbe ’48 - Delray Beach, Florida Mrs. James E. Chapman - Shaker Heights Melvin L. Schottenstein ’58+ — Columbus1 Michael ’61 and Nancy Colley - Columbus Stanley Schwartz, Jr. ’47+ — Columbus1 Edwin M. Cooperman ’67 — Boca Raton, Florida Charles H. and Joyce Shenk - Columbus1 Marshall ’58 and Nathalie Cox - New York, New York Richard Shenk - Cincinnati1 Martin A. Coyle ’66 - Bemus Point, New York Sol A. ’37+ and Florence Shenk - Miami, Florida1 Eleanor Middleton Davis+- Cincinnati1 William A. Shenk ’68 - Del Mar, California1 Jacob E. Davis, II ’63 - Dublin1 Norman W. ’48 + and Jeanne H. Shibley - Craig Denmead ’72 - New Albany1 St. Petersburg, Florida1 Charles W. ’38+ and Florence W. Ebersold - Walter J. Siemer ’50 + - Columbus Wilmette, Illinois1 Daniel M. Siane ’66 - Westerville Maxine Erskine - Columbus Sarah M. Stanley - Columbus1 Mary Ellen Fairfield ’73 - Columbus Stuart A. Summit ’50 - New York, New York1 Grace Heck Faust ’30+ - Urbana1 Harold L. Talisman ’53 - Washington, D.C. Dwight L. Fullerton ’53 - Worthington Estate of Ida Topper Bernard V. Fultz ’55 - Pomeroy Carl C. Tucker ’34 - Hudson Noel F. George ’32+ — Columbus1 James M. Tuschman ’66 - Toledo1 Tornar Green+ - Youngstown1 L. Jack VanFossen ’63 - Powell1 George W. ’68 and Elaine H. Hairston, Pataskala Arthur ’49 and Ann Vorys - Gahanna James G. Hensal ’71 — Archbold David A. ’58 and Ann Ward - Toledo1 John O.+ and Barbara Burnett Henry - Paul F. ’39 and Anita Ward - Columbus1 Bar Harbor, Maine1 Robert J. ’53 and Helen Watkins - Cincinnati1 Betty W. Hite - Sabina Robert W. Werth ’65 - Columbus William M. ’69 and Dr. Christine Issac, Sara Gerhart Wieland - Dayton Long Boat Key, Florida Frank C. Woodside III ’69 - Wyoming John A. Jenkins ’53 - Scottsdale, Arizona1 Kenneth A. ’61 and Paula D. Zeisler - Cleveland Carol Judge - Norton Mr. David J. ’66 and Mrs. Zendell - Carter C. Kissell ’27 - Chagrin Falls1 Wayne, New Jersey William E. Knepper+ - Columbus1 Benjamin L. Zox ’62 — Columbus1

+Deceased bounding member HONOR ROLL of Donors

Donors by Class Year These gifts were made between July 1,2000 and June 30,2001. Percentage of participation is based on the number of living members of each class. Sally Reardon Heid 1910 1944 William Lewis Johncox John Main Kelley Titus Jackman June Purcell Guild+ Participation: 25% Nils Paul Johnson Charles John Kerester Charles Frederick Johnston, Jr. John Deaver Drinko* Daniel Halter Lease* William A. Lavelle Maurice Lewitt 1926 Wayne M. Leatherman Thomas C. B. Letson* Harold Carl Meier Participation: 10% Julian O. Northcraft Lewis Lee Marquart, Jr. 1945 Joseph Raymond Prohaska Joseph S. Kreinberg Participation: 50% Robert W. Phillips Thomas Donald McDonald William J. Reidenbach Robert Earl Horowitz Thomas Richard Spellerberg Charles Daniel Minor* Thor G. Ronemus 1927 Theodore Raymond Treffinger William W. Mosholder Stanley B. Schneiderman Participation: 20% James Evan Nelson 1946 Thomas L. Startzman Carter Coslet KisselP Participation: 15% 1951 Robert Raitze Reed John Willis Van Dervoort, Sr.* Participation: 21% William H. Saltsman William Ammer Frederick D. Waldock Michael Blischak Charles D. Shook 1931 William James Bateman David Robert Alban Participation: 12% Basil J. Boritzki Thomas L. Tribbie LeRoy Marceau 1947 Roy J. Gilliland 1955 Participation: 15% Howard H. Harcha, Jr. 1953 Participation: 19% 1934 Francis Scott McDaniel Edward Stephen Havasy Participation: 24% Harald Franklin Craig, Jr. Participation: 57% William C. Kuhn Caywood J. Borror James P. Natoli Edwin M. Ellman Howard William Adkins+ John L. Roof Mary C. Lord Richard Randolph Fowler Norman Fagin Clyde C. Beery Jack Supman George Carlton O. Allan Gulker* James C. Fitch Jack Griffith Evans McConnaughey* William Droxler Henry Bernard V. Fultz* Carl Craddock Tucker* Carl B. Mellman Duane L. Isham* 1948 William Brooks Johnson Earl N. Merwin Richard G. Ison* Participation: 24% Charles Russell Leech, Jr. 1935 Harold Reed Black Samuel B. Randall Thomas E. Jenks James William Miller Participation: 14% William Ernest Rathman Duane J. Kelleher Paul Arden Burson Robert W. Siegel Myron A. Rosentreter Robert K Shoecraft Thomas More McGarry Thomas W. Connor Steven Timonere William Kernahan Thomas*+ Thomas L. Corroto George William Stuhldreher Keith McNamara Elmer B. Wähl, Jr. William B. Devaney, Jr. Elinor Porter Swiger* Charles Richard O’Neil Donald Williams Wiper, Jr. 1938 Howard Richard Dunipace Herman J. Weber James D. Oglevee* Participation: 19% James R. Dupler Charles Edward Welch* Harold L. Talisman* 1956 William A. Calhoun Morton Sedley Frankel Sheldon Mike Young John Martin Tobin Robert J. Watkins* Participation: 11% Jack Grant Day Kenneth Richard Harkins Joseph P. Buchanan Richard G. Herndon 1952 William E. Herron Gordon A. Ginsburg Gilbert D. Siegel Walter Marion Lawson, Jr. Participation: 23% 1954 James R. Hinton William Johnson Lee, Jr. Robert L. Balyeat Participation: 22% Charles D. Parke Robert John Lynn Robert Morton Duncan* George J. Aman 1939 Michael J. Petrucci Participation: 14% Thomas Wesley Mitchell James Newton Ebright Stephen Edward Auch* Paul Daniel Ritter, Jr. Robert O. Read Roger Franklin Redmond George Vance Fisher Rodney Alan Baker John Workman Henderson Warren Grant Blue Theodore Schneiderman Henry Matthias Thullen George Willard Rooney, Sr. Bonford Reed Talbert, Jr. Ithamar Dryden Weed John D. Schwenker William Hudson Hillyer Fred Evans Eastman Walter J. Wolske, Jr. William M. Sillins Martin P. Joyce Russell Dominic Finneran David L. Zeigler 1940 Participation: 21% 1949 John W. Lehrer Participation: 21% William Stanley Miller Harold E. Christman John L. Woodard Charles William Davidson, Jr. J. Robert Donnelly 1941 Max Harley Participation: 28% Danny Dale Johnson John Richard Eastman+ Charles Freeman Knapp Jean Gordon Peltier Webster S. Lyman, Jr. Frank A. Robison John Butcher Mantonya Judson C. Schuler L. Dennis Marlowe David A. Wible Arthur Isaiah Vorys* John Clyburn Wagner 1942 Jerold Zwelling Participation: 14% Gerald Otis Allen* 1950 Louis Gray Participation: 23% Philip Raymond Bradley 1943 Raymond Paul Moritz College of Law graduates who are employed at Procter & Gamble gathered recently Participation: 27% Cunningham, Jr.,* to recognize two recipients of the Procter & Gamble Faculty Excellence Award. Left to Louis B. Conkle Lee O. Fitch William Luke Stewart David William Hart right: Jason Camp ’98, Steve Jemison ’75, Steve Miller ’84, Dave Grayson ’66, Professor James Burnside Stubbins Sanders David Heller Al Clovis, former dean Gregory H. Williams, Professor Douglas Whaley, Terry Overby 75, Richard Stephen Hunter James Johnson ’72, and Bob Watkins ‘53.

+Deceased *The Presidents Club HONOR ROLL of Donors

1957 Jerome J. Robison 1965 1968 1970 Participation: 21% Robert J. Rodefer Participation: 17% Participation: 23% Participation: 20% James George Annos James Hall Callard* Frederick J. Badger, Jr. John Edward Brady Floyd Alan Banker 1961 Conrad D. Carnes Phillip H. Barrett Joseph Lee Cain John W. Creighton, Jr.* Participation: 17% Thomas Lynn Gire Kenneth Robert Boiarsky Joseph John Cox Marc Gertner* David Frank Allen David W. Holman Richard Lee Boylan Samuel R. Cook John Allen Hoskins James R. Barton Francis Gillen Knipe James Russell Burkhard Joseph Couture D’Arrigo Richard Lee Jackson James D. Booker Charles J. Kurtz Jay Elliot Eckhaus Miles Cutler Durfey Joseph David Karam Charles Donald Byron James Kaufman Lawrence* Donald Edwin Ely Timothy Dean Gerrity David Allan Katz* Michale F. Colley James H. Ledman John Edward Erb Gary Paul Gormin Joan Miday Krauskopf Howard J. Haddow George William Moore III Clifton Lucien Fenton Michael William Grossberg Richard Lyle Loveland Larry Russell Langdon* William Karl Rice John P. DiFalco Bruce Myron Gunn Edmund G. Peper Gavin R. Larrimer* Patrick Jerome Smith Thomas James Gordon Steven Benton Hayes* Edward R. Reichek Robert B. Miscavich Ronald J. Stauber George Watt Hairston* William Walter Johnston William E. Shirk Michael E. Moritz* Alan Craig Travis Mark John Hanket Keith Howard Jung Joan E. Zuber William A. Reale Robert W. Werth* Douglas Bruce Harper Mark K. Merkle Garry L. Wharton James Frederick White, Jr.* John William Kenesey Freda Bein Muldoon 1958 Robert N. Wistner Dale Edward Williams James Wallace Luse Donald Garry Paynter Participation: 19% Frederick Martin Mann* James August Readey Albert Leo Bell 1962 1966 James Douglas McWilliams Kenneth Marvin Royalty Bernard C. Boggio Participation: 15% Participation: 20% William Richard Montgomery Brian Gregory Thomas John Thomas Brown Alexander Andreoff John Harper Bain Dennis Ryan Newman Charles Collins Warner* James Donald Cairns James Lowell Graham Paul Angelo Bemardini* Norman John Ogilvie, Jr. Donald Leson Wiley Robert H. Coldren Alan Smith Kerxton Fielding G. Braffett Ronald Elton Plymale Marshall Cox* Richard Eugene Meredith Thomas A. Brennan Clark Poston Pritchett, Jr. 1971 Ralph C. French James L. Pazol Robert William Briggs Charles Nelson Ricketts Participation: 17% Rollyn Cliffton Gibbs Jerry L. Riseling Lawrence Robert Elleman Jerome Ralph Schindler Susan Ellen Brown* Robert Lloyd Hammond, Jr. Gary L. Stansbery David Lee Grayson Jon Michael Schorr David Douglas Buvinger William D. Kloss, Sr. Clarence Buford Taylor Charles H. Hire David Mark Selcer* Howard Stephen Chapman Ronald G. Logan C. Arthur Wilson, Jr. Richard Lee Lancione Terry Smith Shilling William Robert Cobourn* William W. Moland . Victor Russell Marsh, Jr. Daniel Ray Shirey Kenneth Andrew Gamble Daniel Martin Snyder 1963 Ted Ward Rice Robert French Sprague Clifford Edward Haines Lawrence Henry Stotter Participation: 22% Michael D. Saad* Robert M. Strapp Bruce Viel Heine John P. Van Abel Langdon David Bell John Gordon Slauson Stephen Roy Thompkins William James Hutchins III Richard S. Wagner John T. Brook J. Mac Alpine Smith Richard Beiden Waugh, Jr. Reginald Sherman David A. Ward* Edward Geoffrey Clapham Keith Alan Sommer Richard Albert Yoss Jackson, Jr.* Thomas Joseph Zuber Jacob Erastus Davis* Beatrice Kronick Sowald John Ledgerwood Zinkand Victor P. Kademenos Peter G. Eikenberry Hugh James Stevenson William Neal Keadey, Jr. 1959 William B. Gore John P. Tarlano 1969 John Michael McDermott Participation: 22% Robert J. Holland James Marshall Tuschman Participation: 19% William Frick Morris Joseph E. Andres Elden James Hopple John P. Wingard Mark Rogers Abel Thomas Edward Roberts Charles Ensign Brant Helena Everett Jackson Richard James Ashby, Jr. Louise Malbin Roselle John G. Broadbent Franklin Charles Lewis 1967 Edward Allen Bacome* Allan Edward Roth James J. Cullers James P. Miller Participation: 23% David Regis Bamhizer Donald Clayton Seelman* Louis J. Disantis Sidney Nudelman Martin David Altmaier Sally Ward Bloomfield* Mark Donald Senff* Albert W.Eoff II Frank E. Steel, Jr. Ralph D. Amiet Michael Marshall Briley Martin Leonard Steinberg Charles F. Glander* Sarah Smith Tintor James Wilson Barnhouse John Raymond Butz Dennis Albert Valot Arthur Francis Graham John W. Weaner* William G. Batcheider III Thomas Adrian Carpenter Barry Howard Wolinetz* G. Bradley Hummel Kenneth Allan Bravo James Frederick Fell John G. Lancione* 1964 Edward Virgil Clark Theodore Paul Frericks IV 1972 Ronald P. Lankenau Participation: 23% Edwin M. Cooperman* Willard W. Hoyt Participation: 15% Robert F. Linton George Raymond Barry Harold Hunter Davis Richard Maurice Huhn John P. Beavers James W. McGuire Kenneth D. Beck David LeRoy Day William Michael Isaac* John Jeffrey Bogniard Frank Jerome Neff* William T. Bodoh Richard Sterling Donahey, Jr.* William Gregory Jacobs Clair M. Carlin Richard V. Patchen William M. Connelly* Gary Frederic Frye William David Jamieson James Reynolds Cooper William Bennett Shimp, Jr. Theresa Doss Nancy Drake Hammond William Wilson Kenneweg Joseph Lawrence Emmrich Stuart A. Summit Robert Irwin Friedman Richard Hale Hammond Roger Edwin Kephart Charlotte Coleman Eufinger John Yeatman Taggart John J. Heron* Robert Lowell Hammond Robert Kolter Leonard John Marshall Eufinger Anthony Tuccillo* Elliot M. Kaufman Stephen L. Hebenstreit Michael Gary Long* William Kagay Friend* David C. Kelley Thomas Robert Hillhouse* Timothy John McGrath Jeffrey Allan Halm 1960 William R. McDavid Jerome John Joondeph, Sr. Nicholas Joe Milanich, Jr. Michael Henry Haney Participation: 17% Niki Zola Schwartz* Ralph F. Keister Charles R. Naylor, Jr. Robert Joseph Hopperton, Jr. Fred J. Bentoff John H. Siegenthaler Richard L. Kolb Mark Stanton O’Connor James Jay Johnson* Larry Raymond Brown Albert S. Tabor, Jr. Franklin A. Martens Thomas Rodney Owen William Lawrence Kovacs Thomas Charles Clark Thomas Leo Twyford Daniel P. McQuade Jerome Phillips Thomas Harry Lagos Charles Douglas George Charles J. Tyburski Velta Anita Melnbrencis John B. Rohyans William Sheldon Lazarow Philip R. Joelson John C. Wasserman Jack C. Rubenstein William F. Schenck Thomas Frank Luken Stefan Charles Levy Janice Elizabeth Wolfe Craig Myers Stewart* John Stuart Steinhauer* Michael Patrick Mahoney Charles Russell Petree II Paul Robert Valente John Harold Thrush Robert Monroe Parsons Robert G. Reed, Jr.* Leslie Kermit Wagner, Jr. Dennis Michael Perlberg Richard F. Rice Richard A. Wead* Richard Coy Pfeiffer, Jr. David John Wolfe William Dallas Woodall +Deceased *The Presidents Club 19 HONOR ROLL of Donors

Thomas Phillip Webster Gregory Duval Rankin Alec Wightman* Louis G. Recher James Roy Williams James Carlos Rendeiro III Thomas D. Wright Kristine Agnes Roth Michael E. Zatezalo Martin Stanley Seltzer Carol Zelizer Stoff 1976 Edward Philip Walker Participation: 19% John Kerry Weston Gary William Auman William Stephen Wirt Robert Lewis Bays Dennis Patrick Witherell Jeffrey Lewis Benson James Edward Workman, Jr. John Franklin Berry Xr Peggy Lynn Bryant 1978 Don William Bulson Participation: 16% John Jeffrey Chernoski David Warren Alexander Michael Dicker Thomas Edward Barnes Stanley John Dobrowski George Hayward Bennett, Jr. James Burton Farmer Roger Craig Blocher Jerome Lewis Fine Glenn Eugene Bost II Thomas John Fischer John Ira Cadwallader Robert Edward Fletcher John Watson Cook III James Matthew Giffin Steven Lynn Dauterman Michele Marie Gutman David William DeVita at an Ohio State baseball game. Alan Jeffry Harlan Jon Alan Doughty Ralph Michael Hursey Daniel William Dreyfuss Douglas Neil Husak Francis Xavier Frantz Gerald Lamont Jones John Patrick Gordon William Joseph Kelly, Jr.* James David Gradel William Irwin Kohn* Stephen John Habash* John James Powers III William Joseph Strapp Leslie Varnado, Jr. Gregory Gordon Lockhart Kenneth Joseph Kallberg Ronald Lee Rowland Douglas Milburn Toot Robert Warren, Jr.* James Murphy Long Susan Mary Kuzma Kurt Lee Schultz* Allan Joseph Weiner Hugh Richard Whiting* Thomas Leslie Long Thomas Neal Ledvina Joseph Eugene Scuro, Jr.* William Hunt Woods John Fredrick Zimmerman, Jr. Robert Myers McGreevey* Susan Elaine McNally Steven Lee Smith Eric Scott Miller Robert Andrew Meyer, Jr. Suzan Barnes Thomas 1974 1975 Jonathan Michael Norman David Paul Miraldi Adam Joseph Wagenbach Participation: 21% Participation: 24% Adele Ellen O’Conner Leslee Wilkins Miraldi Michael Edward Yurosko Charles Franklin Andrews John Whitt Bentine Dennis Marc Papp Randall Edwin Moore Jeffrey Edward Zink Gary Marc Blumenthal Walter Kerfoot Chess, Jr. Paul Elmer Perry Willie Ray Persons Nancy Gutfeld Brown David Walter Cox Thelma Thomas Price Jeffrey Dean Quayle 1973 John Hamrick Burtch Rose Blau Dabek Teddy Louis Ramirez Philip Patrick Ryser Participation: 16% Kenneth Warren Christman Diana Stedman Donaldson Allen Jeffrey Reis Joseph Peter Schmitz Howard David Bader John Albert Coppeler Deborah Lynn Edwards Aaron Philip Rosenfeld Carol Sheehan Kit Robin Becker Randy David Deering Thomas Earl Fennell Steven Edward Smathers Christopher C. Skambis, Jr. Philip M. Collins James Lewis Fineffock* Thomas Joseph Fiscus Andrew Justin Sonderman Ramsay Hill Slugg* William John Davis Richard Alan Fisher Roger William Fones Robert Lee Trierweiler Stephen Francis Vogel Gregory Scott DeWolfe* William Joseph Fleck, Jr. Edward Steven Ginsburg Richard Harvey Underwood Randall Mitchell Walters* Gregory Brian Denny John James Flynn Michael Dean Greenberg Craig James Van Horsten Philip Higbee Wolf Stanley Bruce Dritz John W. Garland Kathryn Haller William George Fischer James Hale Gordon John D. Hvizdos 1977 1979 Stephen Charles Fitch Michael Francis Haverkamp Curtiss Lee Isler Participation: 16% Participation: 18% Richard Arthur Frye David S. Hay William Francis Jankun Carol Lee Barnum James Ronald Bacha Mary Jane Goldthwaite* Charles Israel Kampinski Steven Wash Jemison Dale Thomas Brinkman James Humphrey Becht William Allan Grim Louis Harvey Khourey, Jr. Robert George Joseph Michael Hiram Carpenter* Samuel Wayne Benedict Wayne Paul Hohenberger Daniel Vaughn Thomas Wade Kahle Stephen Eric Chappelear Irving Harold Berliner Bernard Le Roy Karr Koppenhafer, Jr. David Keith Kelley, Jr. Alden Brett Chevlen Gerry Wayne Beyer Michael Morris Katz Howard Penn Krisher II Stanley Kiszkiel Richard Stephen Dodson, Jr. Jordan Lewis Bleznick Alan Eliot Lebon Donald Michael Miller William Travis McIntyre Nan Teitelbaum Ellis Daniel Oliver Conkle Gary Allan Lickfelt William Stanley Morton* Robert Allen Minor* Gregg Michael Emrick Paula Terese Cotter Dennis Daryl Liston D. Brent Mulgrew Thomas Wesley Mitchell, Jr. Francis Ambrose Fregiato Robert Christopher Doyle Joseph Litvin Jan Stuart Neiman Karen Mueller Moore* David Lawrence Fuhry Robert Arnold Ellison Curtis Alan Loveland Timothy A. Oliver Kathleen Marie O’Brien Patrick Joseph Goebel Susan Shiffler Enlow John Thomas Mills* Lyle Richard Saylor David Andrew Orlins Scott E. Grimes Thomas Conner Fenton David Allan Monroe Michael Nelson Schaeffer Terry Lee Overbey* Georganne Reid Higgins William Robert Finnegan David Alvin Penrod Charles Howard Schbttenstein Clement Wayne Pyles David M. Huddleston Michael Edward Flowers Hubert Joseph Pries Glenn Joshua Schwartz John Patrick Quinn Kenneth Jack Kies* Shirley Chalfant Hansgen Charles Joseph Pruitt Michael Alan Shapiro R.L. Richards Thomas Dean Lammers Jeffrey Tom Hodge* Frank Allen Ray* James Robert Shenk Patricia Gilchrist Roberts Julia Marie Metzger Edward Alan Hurtuk Frederick Richard Reed* Michael Spurlock Richard Keller Rohde, Jr. Christopher Richard Meyer* David Leslie Johnson Dan David Sandman* Ronald Criss Stansbury Karen Jones Sarjeant Carla Denise Moore Joni Roberta Kerr Mark Canon Sholander Louis Ernest Tosi* Charles Rockwell Saxbe Erin Frances Moriarty Robert Steven Kestner Mark Wayne Sinkhorn George Gary Tyack Bernard Joseph Schaeff Jon Ray Philbrick Carol Johnson King David Jay Sternberg Jerry Vande Werken Willis Otto Serr II*

+Deceased *The Presidents Club 20 HONOR ROLL of.Donors

1988 Ronald Sinclair Kopp Elaine Sayers Buck Steven Marc Walk Gary Alan Gillett Timothy Charles McCarthy Chester Clive Christie Patricia Anne Woods Kristin Hay Ives Participation: 14% John Joseph Brennan David Martin McDorman Janet Sue Collins-Cutter Vicki Lynn Jenkins Robert Frederic Brown Christopher John Minnillo Catherine Coburn Costello Susan Allene Kovach 1983 Theodore Franklin Claypoole Henry Partloe Frederick Walker Dressel Participation: 15% John Joseph Laffey David Cooper Comstock, Jr. Montgomery IV Susan Carole Durham Marjorie H. Brant Sherri Blank Lazear Philip Francis Downey Brent Bentley Nicholson James Craig Ellis Susan Marie Bruder Krista Ann McGowan Kevin Francis Eichner Robert Francis O’Connor Bruce Richard Freedman Harry Panter Carter William Joseph O’Neill Ann Eileen Fallon Nancy Higgins O’Malley Frederick Hunker Elaine Ann Chotlos Douglas Mark Radman Mark Francis Fischer Stephanie Baker Jarrett Douglas Howard Cook Sara Ellen Robbins Joseph Ritzert Gregory Aloysius Gehlmann Sylvia Beckman Thomas John Keable Cheryl Ann Eifert Martin Sanford Rosenthal Michael Jay Goldberg Robbins-Penniman Mark James Lucas Thomas Joseph Goedde James Gregory Ryan Amy B. Haynes Howard Grant Stephenson Douglas Hayes Marshall Robert Carl Goldie Edwin John Turanchik Sharon Anne Hicks Kevin Lee Sykes Denise Adele Herman Mark John Hale Sheila Irene Kapur Klaus Heinz Wiesmann McColley John Edgar Hoffman, Jr. 1986 Gary John Kocher Stephen Miles Wilson Jeffrey Kyle Milbauer Participation: 11% Judith Joy Hritz Stephanie Hager Langkamp Cheryl Foster Wolff Neil Steven Morrisroe Catherine Elaine Huston Clare Cass Armbruster Thomas Neil Littman Stephen Joseph Yurasek Carl Joseph Munson, Jr. Teresa Dorow Kaylor John Roger Davis James Allan Loeb Mark Anthony Ziccarelli Susan Wittemeier O’Neil Deborah Louise Kenney Mark Scott Edelman Paul William McCartney William Donald Rohrer Eugene Roberts King David Louis Fish Brian Vincent Pero Joseph Richard Rosenbaum* Lillian Susan Lehrburger Judith Marie Fisher 1980 William James Pohlman Participation: 22% Richard Donovan Schuster Lynda Gay Loomis Brendan Allen Ford Claire J. Prechtel-Klusken Steven Robert Bartram Stephen Bradley Seiple Steven Alan Mathless Kathleen Strange Gross Christopher Coe Russell Roland Humphreys Bauer Suzanne Irene Seubert* Steven James McCready Donnell Roy Grubbs William Leo Sennett III Marc Jay Bernstein John Stanley Shaffer Jennifer Thomas Mills Ronald Lee House Ronda Anderson Shamansky Herman Andrew Carson Daniel Jerome Sponseller Alexander Mitrovich Amy Elizabeth Kellogg Julie Grosjean Skattum Michael Manuel Castro David Lynn Suter Anthony Clair Mollica Scott Allen King Brian Scott Strayer aniel William Costello Todd Shawn Swatsler Randall Scott Rabe Nelson J. Larkins D Franklin Henry Top III Stephen Paul Dailey Richard Michael Wallar David Irwin Schiff Alan Jack Lazaroff Douglas Alan Daley Gregory Kent Waters Barbara Ann Sentz Jennifer Brown Mailly 1989 Douglas Allen Dimond Katherine Laraine Watts Shelby Martijn Steger Eileen Noon Miller Participation: 11% Deborah Ruth Pitluk Ecker Lisa Palmer Wilcox William C. Strangfeld, Jr. Elizabeth Berner Moore Denis Jay Bowshier Rachel Elon Ramsey Kay Woods Andrew Ian Sutter David John Rectenwald Julia Petrik Cain Barbara Friedman Yaksic Martha George Sweterlitsch Bruce Thomas Rosenbaum Geiersbach Philomena Mary Dane Michael Yaksic Kris Herman Treu Mary Schneider Rua Eileen Sue Goodin* Richard Paul Emich II Clay Powelson Graham Nancy Jepson Treu Mark David Tucker Carrie Elizabeth Glaeden Douglas G. Haynam 1982 Darla Jean Wilkinson Dawn Watson Jodi Ann Govern Laurene Helen Horiszny Participation: 16% Kim William Zerby* David Elliot Weiss Gruber Fordham Eric Huffman Eliot W. Abarbanel . Carrie Carnahan Young Judith Clausing Gruenbaum Richard Emory Jacobs Mark Francis Ahlers 1984 Richard James Helmreich Michael Duane Juhola John Thomas H. Batchelder Participation: 10% 1987 Douglas Richard Jennings John Morrill Lichtenberg Catherine Elaine Blackburn Karen Riestenberg Brinkman Participation: 14% Janis Washington Johnson Richard Scott MacMillan James Patrick Botti Catherine Telles Dunlay Linda L. Ammons John Lewis Landolfi Wanda Lees Carter John Gillespie Thomas Edward Berry, Jr. John Patrick Mahaffey Barbara Kahane Levy Stephen Chu-Ling Chong Guy Robert Humphrey Joseph Paul Boeckman Frederick Meister Rex Allen Littrell Carolyn Shaffer Melvin Frederick Marvin Russ H. Kendig Smith Rufus Brittingham IV Marc David Matlock Greenwood III Allen Jonathan Koslovsky David James Coyle Michael Patrick Moloney Boyd Kenneth Moehring Donald Wayne Gregory Matthew Christopher Lawry Jayne Ellen Demaras Bradley Allan Myers Stephen Ashley Mortinger Vera Callahan Neinast Benita Ann Kahn Evette Diana Lutman Amy Jo Meyer Girvin Patrick Jarrett Mulligan James Charles Le May John Vance Magee Calvin Pasquale Griffith Thomas Glenn Opferman John Bolling Sheppard Donald Byron Leach, Jr. Robert Bruce McPherson William Adam Herzberger Samuel John Petroff Rachelle Cohen Singer William Joseph Leibold Michael Stratton Miller Anne Light Hoke Stephen Edward Pigott Richard Edward Surkamp, Jr. Gary Richard Martz Steven Worthington Miller* Susan Levitt House Dale K. Perdue David Stuart Watson Robert Anthony Ranallo Gregory Louis McCann, Jr. Jeffrey Lee Nischwitz Donna Joyce Jennewine Kristin Lynn Watt Anthony Thomas Rosta Robert Morse McNitt Pierre Warren Priestley John Mark Kantner Fritz Schoch Denise Dembinski Mirman Kenneth Merle Roth Steven Robert Kirschner 1990 Carl DeMouy Smallwood Paul Frederick Moke Christiane Ward Schmenk Donald Alan Lane Participation: 14% Diane Williams Moore Michael Francis Urse Risa Dinitz Lazaroff William Joseph Sparer David Smith Bence Douglas Scott Morgan Robert John Winston Jeffrey Wiley Linstrom Thomas Edward Trempe Brenda Kay Bowers Barbara Thompson Moser Dale Richard Yurovich Herman Marable, Jr. Anne Daley Wattman Robert J. Creamer Lucile Gray Weingartner Phyllis Stillpass Nedelman Douglas Robert Matthews Marilyn Kuhl Day Andrew O. Whiteman Charles Sumner Plumb III 1985 Jenifer Bernard Rasor Robert James Reynolds Kevin Arthur Rings Christopher Michael DeVito Douglas Leonard Williams II* Participation: 10% Timothy Robert DeWitt Paul Anthony Rose Yvette McGee Brown Cheryl Lyn Roberto Michael Carl Zellers William Mitchell Gantz Lee Scott Rosenthal Ernest Eugene Cottrell, Jr. Thomas Marlow Schneider Brigid Ellen Heid Danny Shaban Thomas S. Counts Suzanne Marie Stasiewicz 1981 Robert Eldon Henke Marcia Katz Slotnick Kathleen Ann Cullen Daniel Nathan Steiger Participation: 16% Diane Boniface Hopper Gregory William Stype James Alexander Demetry Jennifer Murchake Todd Leozino Agozzino John William Hopper II Thomas Edmund Szykowny Timothy Edward Eagle Elizabeth McKinley Watkins Stephen Robert Beckham Laurie Nizinski Jacques Bruce Robert Thompson Charles Michael Winnifred Norah Weeks Rod Courtney Borden Frank Joseph Janik III Mark Samuel Toledo Gegenheimer, Jr.

+Deceased *The Presidents Club 21 HONOR ROLL of Donors

Keith Michael Olivia Brett Aaron McComb-Wall Nimesh Mahesh Patel Joshua Jeremiah Morrow Stanley Edward Ramsay Margaret Anne Nero Joshua Philip Rosenberg Justin Koslan Schwartz Cassandra Ann Soltis Stephen Aaron Silver Thomas Eugene Sinclair 1996 Aaron Peter Sloan Participation: 11% Nancy Anne Valentine Rebecca Berry Anaya Peter William VanEuwen III Gail Lynn Bakaitis DeWolf Dana Ellen Benjamin 1999 Daniel Patrick Bibler Participation: 7% Rebecca Joann Bishop Jason Todd Baker Merlyn Williams Britt Frederick Louis Block Julia L. Dorrian Stuart Ethan Casillas Steven Jeffrey Elleman Paul David Ellis Terri Lynn Enns Brian Michael Gianangeli Shawna L. Erb Susan Catherine Guerrier Marylynn Theresa Michael Benjamin Kass Graf-Caswell Isaac Anthony Molnar William Ray Hedrick Cassandra G. Mott where he was honored. The May 10 event was held at the Ohio State Bar Association Katherine Lynn Joseph Wayne Douglas Roberts Convention in Dayton. James Clifford Joslin Lisa Michelle Slotnick Matthew Alan La Buhn Sean William Vollman Rodd B. Lape Michael Wayne Vollmer Scott Thomas Lindsey David William Walulik Jeanette M. Moll Anthony David Weis K. Ellen Toth Matthew Rickey Copp Sabrina Wood Shumsky John Andrew Kastelic 2000 Dean Matthew Lenzotti Kara Jean Trott* Daniel Douglas Ernst* Susan E. Small Participation: 5% Randall William Mikes Robert Alan Zimmerman Joan Tromski Fotta Erika Danielle Smith Dane Arthur Gaschen Arlus Jeremiah Stephens Vincent Norman Buttaci William Hurst Oldach III Candace Christine Crouse 1992 Tatia Christine Gibbons Mark David VanDerLaan Todd Franklin Palmer Warren Colburn Gifford III Elizabeth Shoman Phillips Participation: 896 Mary Pelini Grillo Amy Jean Waterfield Cynthia Barker Albrecht Robert D. Icsman Jolie Noele Havens Lisa Beth Riedesel Sabrina Jane Hudson Anna Rouhana Seidensticker Joan Elizabeth Brady Lisa Sue Kalson 1997 Melanie Leigh Kushnir John William Seidensticker Anthony John DeGirolamo Karen Wojchiechows Knavel Participation: 11% James Michael Doerfler Randolph Lawrence Knavel Jill Sutton Aebker Jeremy Richard Mason Monte Glen Smith Walter Wilhelm Noss Julie Ellen Squire Carolyn Diane Eselgroth Brian Karl Kurzmann David Solomon Kyra Marie Fleming Janice Rawlings Lanier Bloomfield, Jr. Bradley Alan Salmon Jef&ey Stuart Sutton Christopher Arnold Snyder Suzanne Peltier Tortorice Steven Dwight Gardner Amee Rebecca McKim Sara Reich Bruce Elizabeth Jean Watters* Timothy Conrad Hall, Jr. Margaret Elizabeth H. Miller Kelly Estes Collinsworth Jill Ringel Hart Joseph Francis Murray Laura Williams Dawson 2001 Kenneth Eugene Webb, Jr. Participation: 5% Tracy Ruddle Webb Timothy J. Horner Patrick David Pauken Alison Marie Day Christine Steigerwald Julian Sandra Humphries Riviears Lee Joshua Freedman Juliane E. Barone Angela Kay Plummer Lori Megan Snyder Loriann Elizabeth Führer Karla C. Chou 1991 Matthew Stephen Cooper Participation: 13% Laura Curtis Warren Ronald Scott Wollett Randall Kerry Gibson Ted L. Wills Daniel Jay Guttman Tracy Marie Greuel Douglas Lee Anderson Rebecca Blank Guzman Elizabeth Laughlin Anstaett William Pailet Zox 1995 Stephen Kingsley Hall Participation: 13%, Kurt Powell Helfrich Johanna Marie Haas Lawrence Christopher Barton Harold Hacker 1993 Elaine Aten Brown Norma Jeanne Hill Bobbitt Jessica Medley Harmon Mary Devitt Boyer Participation: 7% Courtney Wiesenmayer Craig Edward Larrimer* Carol Lynne Day Burton Matthew Michael Mendoza Yan Fang Marilyn Li James Jay Brose Stacey Ann Wojciechowski Michael A. Diener Josephine Wargo Hayes* Michael Alan Burton Joe Mudry Allen Garreth Nederveld Robert Lee Eblin Daniel Michael Haymond Scott Allen Campbell Rhonda J. Foster Gavin Christian Jangard Kirsten Kathleen Davis Richard Law Orloski Deborah Bonarrigo Gray Erin Kotzman Joe Jennifer Lynn Duvall Angela Gugle Parsons Stephen Christopher Gray Jeffrey Leland Kapp Trisha Martin Earls Jacqueline Kirian Shultz Suzanne Kaye Hanselman Elizabeth Power Kessler* Janet Epp-Rosenthal Steven Charles Waterfield Robert William Homer III Susan Munroe Milne Audrey Lewis Ernst Charles Walter Zepp Debbie Watts Johnson Dennis Bernard Pollard Richard W. Erwine Ralph Erhard Carl Knull David Elliott Pritchard Floyd Drexel Feeling 1998 Ellen Maglicic Kramer Joel David Rhoades* James Eugene Grimes, Jr. Participation: 8% John Francis Kreber Kimberly M. Skaggs Elizabeth Lynn Hendershot Tracey Louise Ballard Theodore Pete Mattis Robert Martin Spiegel Art Gerardo Hernandez Maureen Jane Bonace-McMahon Kimberly Hite Mayhew John Kenneth Stipancich Cheryl Risley Hughes Brian Keith Moll Susan Moeller Zerull Kevin Conwell Hughes Adam Arthur Chandler Elise White Porter Christopher Broering-Jacobs Richard Paul Cusick Tanya Jane Poteet 1994 Diana Lee Kenworthy Jennifer Nicholson Elleman James Taylor Reist Participation: 10% Elizabeth Welch Lykins Geoffrey Stuart Goss Keith Shumate Carolyn Marie Gary Paul Martin David Timothy Graham Steven Howard Sneiderman Broering-Jacobs Eric Douglas Martineau Kathleen Eileen Lyon Jason Andrew Macke Jennifer Sostaric Jordan Lee Cahalan Ame Elizabeth Matuza +Deceased *The Presidents Club 22 HONOR ROLL of■ Donors

Corporations and Foundations

Resource One Computer The following firms, founda­ Bricker and Eckler DiFalco Corporation Marathon Ashland Bunge Corporation Dykema Gossett Petroleum LLC Systems tions, and corporations have Schottenstein, Zox, and Dunn CSX Corporation Eaton Charitable Fund Marsh and Marsh made gifts to the Moritz Col­ Scripps Howard Foundation Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe Elliot M. Kaufman Martin F. White lege of Law between July 1, Shumaker, Loop, and Cleary Gottlieb Steen and Company LPA Company LPA 2000 and June 30,2001. The Kendrick Hamilton Enron Foundation Mastercard International, Inc. list includes corporations that Spangenberg, Shibley, and Cleveland Cliffs, Inc. Ernst and Young Foundation McDonalds Corporation matched contributions from Liber alumni and friends. Foundation Exxon Mobil Foundation McGarry Family Trust Cloppert, Portman, Sauter, Fidelity Investment Charitable McQuades Company LPA Sprint Foundation State Farm Companies Latanick, and Foley Gift Fund, Dale and Phyllis Mead Corporation Aon Foundation Foundation Columbia Energy Group Perdue Family Foundation Abbott Laboratories Fund The Dow Chemical Columbus Foundation, Fifth Third Bancorp Mellen Foündaton Abraham Law Offices Foundation Robert K. and Irene Z. Ford Motor Company Fund Mettler-Toledo Inc. Accenture Foundation The Ohio State University Am South Bancorporation McNamara Fund Fox and Associates LPA National City Bank of Columbus Foundation, General Motors Foundation Cleveland Alumni Association Inc. Foundation The Troy Foundation, Bill and Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe HRD Trust of Bowling Green, Nationwide Foundation American Board of Trial Donna McGraw Fund LLB Fund Ohio Northern Trust Company Advocates, Ohio Chapter Thomas E. Ray Company LPA American Electric Power Columbus Foundation, Micah Harris Foundation Nurenberg, Plevin, Heller, and McCarthy Company LPA US Bancorp Company Fund Helen and Joseph Skilken Ohio National Foundation USX Corporation Foundation American Express Foundation Columbus Foundation, Ralph Foundation K. Frasier and Jeannine M. Hubert A. and Gladys C. Omega Healthcare United Way of Central Arline and Thomas Patton New Mexico Foundation Quick-Frasier Fund Estabrook Charitable Trust Investors, Inc. PPG Industries Foundation Verizon Foundation Arthur Andersen LLP Columbus Foundation, Jewish Community Federation Pillsbury Winthrop LLP Vorys, Sater, Seymour, arid Foundation Resource One Fund of Cleveland, Lawrence C. Columbus Jewish Federation, and Lois H. Sherman Fund Porter, Wright, Morris, and Pease Ashland Inc. Foundation Walter M. Lawson, Jr. Law Ayco Charitable Foundation Gordon and Carol Zacks Jewish Community Federation Arthur Law Firm Preformed Line Products Offices BP Amoco Philanthropic Fund of Cleveland, Robert M. Company Wolfe Associates Inc. Baker and Hostetler Committee for Ron O’Brien and Lucille R. Levin Fund PriceWaterhouseCoopers Xerox Foundation Bank America Foundation Culp, Parsons, and Murray Kauffman and Coxon Foundation Bank One Columbus Dayton Foundation LandAmerica Foundation Procter and Gamble Fund Bell Atlantic Corporation Depository, Schaeffer Leo Yassenoff Foundation, Inc. Borden Foundation, Inc. Charitable Giving Fund M. A. Young Foundation Ransier and Ransier Borg-Warner Foundation Deloitte & Touche Foundation

Gift Commitments Through Life Insurance The following individuals have made a deferred gift to the Moritz College of Law through the purchase of an insurance policy.

Ralph D. Amiet Richard J. Hobbs William J. Reidenbach Phillip H. Barrett Willard W. Hoyt R. L. Richards John P. Beavers John D. Hvizdos John B. Rohyans Paul Angelo Bernardini* William Michael Isaac* William F. Schenck Clair M. Carlin William W. Jenkins Donald A. Sibbring Michael F. Colley* Victor P. Kademenos William E. Sloan Philip M. Collins William J. Kelly Stephen A. Soler Samuel R. Cook Randall A. Kugler Craig M. Stewart Edwin M. Cooperman Charles J. Kurtz Robert M. Strapp Jacob Erastus Davis* James Kaufman Lawrence* Stuart A. Summit John P. DiFalco Linda S. MacKay Edward L. Taris Edwin M. Ellman Mark K. Merkle Anne K. Tsitouris Jean E. Gall Timothy A. Oliver David S. Hay Dale K. Perdue *The Presidents Club HONOR ROLL of Donors

Faculty, Staff, and Friends We acknowledge the support of faculty, staff, and friends with grateful appreciation. These gifts were made between July 1, 2000 and June 30, 2001

Andrea J. Sperling Ival Smith Adkins+ Flope Canfield Hacker Alan C. Michaels Robert Y. Sperling Anonymous Donor John E. Hankison Mary Klinker Minor Peter A. Spitalieri Marjorie Bach Mary B. Harvey Alberta Gamble Morehead Rachel Lyn Stansbury Mary Beth Beazley Eloise Edwards Hays David A. Nelson William F. Steiner Nancy Chiles Beckham Robert C. Heid Mary D. Nelson Joseph B. Stulberg Laura Michota Bence George William Henderson, Jr. Solomon Oliver, Jr. Merry Elizabeth Texter Lynn Samad Bonnes John Porter Henderson Linda K. Peotter Wendy Smock Thompson Frank Bork* Lawrence Herman John W. Phillips* Bernard M. Tortorice Suzette Kerr Borror Neil Wallace Higgins Anne E. Portwood Gregory Michael Travalio Carol M. Bradley Thomas Gene Hoffman II Lee D. Powar Gerald D. Unger Edward R. Brown Mary Kleven Hohenberger Susan L. Powar Mary Keiser Unger Michael James Bruce John D. Holschuh Paulette Schmidt Prohaska John J. Ursu James J. Brudney Bruce S. Johnson Patricia Bradshaw Ramsay Mary W. Ursu Jeanne Chapman Burson Grant Lloyd Jones* Nancy Barbara Rapoport Cynthia Harris Valente Leonard Lee Bussard Randall S. Joselit James Arthur Ravan, Jr. Pieter Vanderwerf Anthony P. Carr Carol Judge* Sharon D. Ravan Shari Vanderwerf Joanna Lawyer Cavendish* Ernest Karam* Jane W. Reed* Julie Walulik John J. Chester, Sr. * Joan Siegel Katz Christopher Ryan Reich Mary Chase Warnick Albert L. Clovis Cornelia G. Kennedy Martha C. H. Rendeiro David C. Weiner Avern Cohn Charles J. Krauskopf Carol B. Renner Nicole J. Weis Brian Scott Cunningham Mary Campbell Lewis Wanda M. Ricketts Sharon Clark Wheeler* Susan Darvin J. Steve Lindsey Thomas B. Ridgley Sara Gerhart Wieland* Laura J. Dean* Roberta Lewise Lindsey Marilyn Hunter Rodefer Dorothy M. Williams Virginia Josephine Denman Christine Bobbey Lippe Douglas L. Rogers Gregory Howard Williams Terence M. Donnelly Paula Jewett Lockhart Nancy Hardin Rogers W. Leroy Williams Lori E. Dubetz Pamela Huttig Lombardi Barbara Baird Rowland Eleanor Welton Woodford Michael Efffon Diana Louise Lowry-Wicks Allan Jay Samansky R. Douglas Wrightsel* Lisa Everett Christine Marie Lucas Elizabeth Hyman Schaeffer Jeanne E. Zeigler James Gallas Carol Perlmuter Luper Barbara Hornstein Schwartz* William L. Ziegler Karen Scott Gardner Paul R. Maria Norman Allan Schwartz Bernadette Gibson James L. McCrystal, Jr. Patricia A. Schwenker James Merrill Goldson Patricia M. McCutcheon Adele Sharf Diana Cook Gordon Marguerite H. McGrath Rodney M. Shultz Claudia Davis Grayson James E. Meeks Marvin A. Sicherman Arthur Franklin Greenbaum Minnie Merker Carol E. Smith +Deceased Victoria L. Grimes Deborah J. Merritt Barbara Rook Snyder *The Presidents Club COLLEGE NEWS

N ew A dm inistrative Staff M em bers

Help Keep the Law School Running

T he administrative staff at the Moritz College of Law are key players in the daily operation of the school. During the last several months, the following individuals have joined the team. Alice F. Bell joins the full-time staff of the Moritz Law Library after working in a temporary reference librarian position since November. Now the audio-visual services/circulation librarian, she has worked at Lexis, at the Jacob Burns Law Library of George Washington University, and in the libraries of several District of Columbia law firms. Ann Brace is the office associate for the journals. She has a background in communications, including public relations and marketing. Laurel Draudt is the office associate in the admissions office. She comes to Ohio State from Riverside Nephrology Associates, Inc. Lisa Everett is the new assistant director of development. She Laurel Draudt works in the areas of major gifts, the Law Annual Fund, steward­ ship, and volunteer coordination. She was previously employed at ■ United Cerebral Palsy of Central Ohio. Sarbeth Fleming has joined the staff as the admissions officer. She is a graduate of Winston-Salem State University and received a J.D. from the Moritz College of Law in 2000. Katherine Hall is the new electronic services/reference librar­ ian in the Moritz Law Library. She comes to Ohio State from the University of California, Santa Clara. aa Sarbeth Fleming Nnenna Ofobike is the office associate in the placement office. Nnenna is a recent graduate of The Ohio State University with a degree in political science. Stephan Schulte is the circulation evening and weekend supervisor at the Moritz Law Library. He is a recent graduate of The Ohio State University. Merida Weinstein has joined the fiscal staff in the administra­ tive offices. She processes supply requests and assists with book­ keeping duties. Kenzie Young comes from Kenyon College where he worked with the admissions department. He is a graduate assistant in the placement office and is pursuing a master’s degree in higher edu­ cation.

Merida Weinstein I N MEMORIAM

Hobert Howe Bush ’38 died July 12,2001 at grandchildren; and brothers Paul, Roger, and Thomas. The Moritz College home in Worthington. He was 94. A retired attorney from State Auto Insurance Co., he is survived by his of Law has received wife Marilee Lowery Bush; step-sons Frank Lowery John F. Ramser ’56 died January 10,2001 at the word of the deaths of Dublin and Ralph Lowery of Stow; five grand­ age of 68. Formerly of Shadyside, Ohio, he was a children; and two great-grandchildren. resident of Allison Park, Pennsylvania. of these alumni. We express our Richard Dunham Meek ’49 died June 25,2001 at Richard Hugh Ferrell ’58 of Columbus died his home in Greensboro, North Carolina. He was June 13,2001. He was 71. A retired judge in the sympathy to 79. A native of Connecticut, he had served as the F ra n k lin County Municipal Court, he was serving . relatives and executive vice president of the Connecticut Auto­ as magistrate in both the Upper Arlington and Bex­ ley Mayor’s Courts. He is survived by his wife of 48 loved ones. mobile Trades Association for 25 years. He is sur­ vived by his wife Peggy; three children, Richard of years, Shirley; daughters Anne Gorman and Cynthia Greensboro, Sherry Munro of Summerfield, North Ferrell Clemens; five grandchildren; and brothers Carolina, and William of Salisbury, North Carolina; Lewis and William Ferrell. and eight grandchildren. Edward S. “Ned” Ormond ’64 died of cancer on George H. Strickland Jr. ’51 died February 26, January 17,2001 at his home in Zanesville. He was 2001 at his home in Hilton Head Island, South Car­ 62. He was a past president of the Muskingum olina, at the age of 76. He was retired from the Day­ County Bar Association and was involved in numer­ ton law firm of Young, Pryor, Lynn, Stickland, and ous organizations in his community. He is survived Falke and had created the trust department at the by two sons, John Edward of Zanesville, and Brian Bank of Beaufort in Hilton Head. He is survived by Douglas of Newark; a brother, Alfred Curtis “Curt” his wife of 52 years, Margery Wood; daughter, Ann of Colorado Springs, Colorado; and a niece and Robinson; son, George H. (Hank); and two grand­ nephews. children. Thomas J. Short ’66, a Napoleon, Ohio, lawyer Orville Loyd Mogensen ’51 died March 21,2001 and businessman, died March 11,2000 at his home. in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He was 80. He was He was 58. He had served as magistrate of the Com­ retired from Bethlehem Steel Corp., where he began mon Pleas Court for Henry and Williams counties his career in 1957 as a tax accountant. Prior to retir­ for 13 years. ing in 1986, he was a manager of employee benefits and a senior consultant. He is survived by his broth­ John Thomas Lloyd ’72 died July 11,2000 from ers, John of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and Raymond of heart failure caused by the complications of dia­ Appleton, Wisconsin; companion, Doris S. Bader; betes. He was 55 and had resided in Southern Cali­ and nieces and nephews. fornia.

Stan Taylor ’51 died July 17,2001 in Chester- Edward W. Hastie, Jr. ’79 died July 13,2001 in ville. He was 76. Fie practiced law in Columbus and Columbus following an extended illness. He was 51. Sunbury until 1998. He is survived by his wife of 31 He is survived by his sons, Edward W. Hastie III, years, Helen Hartley Taylor; sons Stephen M. Taylor Alexander H. Hastie, and Brock Edward Hastie; a of Columbus and Thomas Taylor of Lakewood; sister, Eileen Cowell; nieces and nephews; and step-daughter Sandra Kay Johnson of Westerville; devoted friend, Nancy Mily. four grandchildren; and an aunt, Ruth Vorce of Mansfield. Ahmed Y. Dabarran ’98, an assistant district attorney in Fulton County, Georgia., was found Robert A. Butler ’56 died in July 2001 in Colum­ dead in his home on May 9,2001 after an apparent bus at the age of 69. A life-long resident of Colum­ homicide. He was 32. He is survived by his wife bus, he was a founding member of the law firm of Amina Ahmed, and brother Fasil Dabaranni. (A Butler, Cincione, DiCuccio, and Barnhart. He is sur­ Lithonia, Georgia, man, Rodriguez Rashad Reed, 18, vived by his children Beth Ann Jerskey, Debra Zaha- has been charged with murder in Dabarran’s death, ra, Michael Butler, and Dorothy Brundige; three according to the Atlanta Journal and Constitution.)

26 ALUMNI NEWS

m it is senior partner at 1950s Keep us in the loop! Jack R. Alton ’50 Phillips, Nizer, Ben­ jamin, Krim, and Ballon received the Profession­ Network with your LLP in New York City alism Award at the classmates and friends and is an active trial Columbus Bar Asso­ by letting us know what lawyer. ciation’s annual meet­ is happening in your life, ing. A senior partner in 1960s personally and professionally. We'll Lane, Alton, and Horst, William T. Bodoh ’64 include it in a future issue he has been active on a has been appointed of the Law Record. number of committees Chief Judge of the and is responsible for Bankruptcy Court, Submit news items to Liz the creation and imple­ Northern District of Cutler Gates, Law Record mentation of the visita­ Ohio. Also, he has been Editor, the Michael E. tion program for calling elected to the executive Moritz College of Law at on hospitalized or committee of the board The Ohio State University, infirm attorneys, letting of directors of the 55 West 12th Avenue, them know they are not American Bankruptcy Columbus, OH 43210, or forgotten by the CBA. Institute. On October via fax (614)247-7079. 23, he will deliver the Photös are welcome, but will not be returned. You Forrest B. Weinberg Howard H. Harcha ’51 may also e-mail news to: Memorial Lecture at is the recipient of the [email protected]. 2000 Pro Bono Service Cleveland-Marshall Award presented by the College of Law at Cleve­ In June, Walter L. Gordon, Jr. ’32 received the Career Because of the volume of Portsmouth office of land State University. Achievement Award from the Los Angeles County Bar class notes received, we the Southeastern Ohio Association Criminal Justice Section. A California native, regret we cannot confirm Legal Services (SEOLS). Robert W. Briggs ’66 he has continously practiced law for the last 64 years. all information. If an item is He was recognized for has been elected to a printed incorrectly, please his contribution of time second term as chair­ contact the Alumni Office and skill to meeting the man of the board of and we will correct the error in the next issue. legal needs of poor and Buckingham, Doolittle, tices and techniques County Fire Depart­ low-income people liv­ and Burroughs LLP. He with federal managers. ment Ladder Team. All ing in the 29 southeast­ resides in Akron with He is corporate vice units are 100 percent ern Ohio counties that his wife, Joanne Briggs, president and CFO of volunteer. Also an SEOLS serves. M.D. Northrop Gruman Cor­ instructor with the poration. South Carolina Fire Stuart A. Summit ’59 is Richard Waugh ’68 has Academy, Moorhead counsel to the Com­ been elected chairman William H. Moorhead has been a shareholder mission of Judicial of the Private Sector ’69 is serving his second in the law firm of Jones, Nomination, a New Council in Washington, term as captain and Spitz, Moorhead, Baird, York constitutional D.C. As chairman, he is training officer in the and Albergotti, PA since body charged with responsible for ensuring Broadway Fire Depart­ 1983. His practice in the nominating up to seven advancement of the ment. Active in forming Anderson, South Caro­ candidates for the state’s council’s mission to the Anderson County lina, firm focuses on highest court, the New improve the efficiency Emergency Rescue estate planning and York Court of Appeals. and management of the Team, he serves with the probate law. He has served in this federal government Anderson County Haz­ capacity since its forma­ through the sharing of ardous Materials Team tion 22 years ago. Sum­ modern busines prac­ and the Anderson

27 ALUMNI NEWS

1970s rior Court by California with the 2001 Ohio outstanding service and Westerville, as general Governor Gray Davis. Financial Services leadership to the federa­ counsel. Robin E. Phelan ’70 has An employment law Advocate of the Year tion and to the field of been listed by D Maga­ litigator and former Los Award. medical licensure and Karen M. Moore ’75 has zine in its first annual Angeles deputy city discipline. Bumgarner been “Best Lawyers in Dallas” attorney, Henry is a Edward L. Clark ’73, an served on the federa­ elected as one of the top 140 former member of the attorney tion’s board of directors treasurer lawyers in the city. Phel­ Judicial Nominees with twice and was a mem­ of the an, a partner with Evaluation Commis­ Clark, ber of several commit­ Ohio Haynes and Boone, spe­ sion. She resides in Perdue, tees, including the State Bar cializes in bankruptcy w Associ­ Santa Monica. Roberts, committee instrumental Karen M. and workout. He and and Scott in developing guidelines Moore ’75 ation’s wife Melinda welcomed to help medical boards Estate David E. Long ’72 lent Edward L. Co. LPA, daughter Taezja Monet Planning, Trust, and his voice as commenta­ Clark ’73 was noted prepare for the impact to the world on Novem­ tor on the PBS series in Ohio and implications of the Probate Law Section’s ber 7,2000. Abraham and Mary Lin­ Lawyers Weekly in a list­ Americans with Dis­ Board of Governors. coln: A House Divided, ing of the top ten ver­ abilities Act of 1990. She began a two-year Charles C. Warner ’70, which aired in February. dicts in Ohio for 2000. Bumgarner is the for­ term on July 1. She is a a partner An associate professor The second highest mer executive director partner at Bricker and at Porter, at East Carolina Uni­ award was the case of of the State Medical Eckler LLP, Columbus. Wright, versity in Greenville, Brookover v. Flexmag Board of Ohio. He Morris, North Carolina, Long Industries, Inc. Clark now owns Sandpiper Robert J. Morje ’75 has and teaches history, special­ and two other attorneys Consulting in Bradenton, joined the law firm of Arthur izing in the Civil War. represented the plain­ Florida. Decker, Vonau, Sybert, LLP, was Charles C. tiff. Lackey, and Viets in named Warner ’70 Michael P. Mahoney ’72 Diana S. Donaldson ’75 Groveport, Ohio, as of manage­ was hon­ Richard A. Frye ’73 has has been appointed counsel. He practices in ment co-chair of the ored with been re-appointed to Philadelphia office the areas of real estate Equal Employment the Bar serve on the board of managing partner for and commercial col­ Opportunity Commit­ Service directors for the Legal the firm of Schnader, lections. tee of the American Bar Medal at Aid Society of Colum­ Harrison, Segal, and Association. the bus. Frye is a partner Lewis. Ronald J. McCracken Columbus with Chester, Willcox, ’76 was Jeffrey A. Halm ’72 has Michael P. Bar Asso­ and Saxbe LLP in Frederick M Gittes ’75 elected to been re-elected to the Mahoney ’72 ciation’s Columbus. This is his has been chairman board of managers of annual meeting. second term on the named of the Buckingham, Doolittle, board of Mahoney, who is m an­ board. president and Burroughs LLP. He the Envi- aging partner of Arter of the will also continue to and Hadden, Colum­ Richard M. Kerger ’74 National Ronaldl. ‘ ronmental serve as shareholder- bus, follows in the foot­ has been selected as Employ­ McCracken ’76 Research in-charge of the Can­ and Edu­ steps of his late father, chairman of the Life Frederick M. ment ton, Ohio, office. He Eugene, a 1939 graduate Members Committee of Gittes ’75 Lawyers cation Foundation practices in the areas of of the College of Law, the U.S. Sixth Circuit Associa- (EREF) based in Wash­ trusts and estates and who received the award Court of Appeals in tion (NELA) . Gittes is ington, D.C. EREF is a business law. He and his non-profit organization in 1983. Cincinnati. with the law firm of wife Suzanne reside in Slater, Gittesi, Schulte, that funds the develop­ Massillon. The U.S. Small Business Ray Q. Bumgarner ’75 and Kolman in Colum- ment of environmental Administration pre­ is recipient of the Fed­ bus. solutions through Margaret S. Henry ’72 sented Ronald L. Row­ eration of State Medical research and education. is one of five new land ’72, partner with Boards 2001 Distin­ Richard J. Levine ’75 McCracken is president judges named to the Los Vorys, Sater, Seymour, guished Service Award. has joined National of Bes-Pac, Inc., Easley, Angeles County Supe­ and Pease, Columbus, The award recognizes Auto Care Corporation, South Carolina. ALUMNI NEWS

Cheryl Blackwell state, who participated ference and Luncheon Donald B. Leach, Jr. ’82 organizations, and legal Bryson ’77 was pre­ in panel discussions. for his diligent efforts to has been re-elected issues related to chari­ sented the “25 Influ­ promote the cause of shareholder-in-charge table solicitation and ential Black Women in Jerome E. Friedman ’77 equality for all central at the Columbus office fund-raising activities. Business” award by The has been named an Ohio residents. In of Buckingham, Doo­ Network Journal in New assistant vice president March, he was also rec­ little, and Burroughs Mark Jacobs ’84 is fea­ York City on March 22. at The Ohio State Uni­ ognized for his signifi­ LLP. He also is the vice tured on “Ask the Attor­ A partner in the law versity Health Sciences cant contributions to president/assistant trea­ ney,” a new program on firm of Duane, Morris, Center. He serves as the the community at the surer of the firm’s board 1370 AM radio, Toledo. and Heckscher of Chi- . health policy adviser 2001 Carl D. White of managers. Leach The program airs live cago, Bryson serves on and director of govern­ Scholarship Reception. practices in the areas of from 6 p.m.-8 p.m. on the office’s executive ment relations in the Smallwood was presi­ real estate and com­ Thursdays. committee and chairs its office of the senior vice dent of the Columbus mercial law. He resides employment and labor president for Health Bar Association last year in Upper Arlington with Jeffrey L. Nischwitz ’84 practice group. She has Services. and is a partner in the his wife, Jane, and two has formed On Track been appointed by the law firm of Vorys, Sater, daughters. Coaching LLC, which is Governor of Illinois and Peter J. Rue ’78, who Seymour, and Pease. A part of the Action Inter­ the Mayor of the City of was senior corporate veteran trial lawyer who Bruce S. Rutsky ’82 has national network of Chicago to serve on the counsel for U.S. Ban­ handles medically com­ become a business coaches and Pullman Factory Task corp of Minneapolis, plex employment inju­ partner consultants. Located in Force. She also serves on Minnesota, has joined ry, product liability and in the Cleveland, he provides the Economic Develop­ the law firm of Briggs medical negligence firm of one-on-one business ment Advisory Com­ and Morgan in Min­ cases, Smallwood was Petronzio, coaching and mentor­ mittee. This past year, neapolis. the CBA’s first African- Schneier, ing services to owners Bryson was chairwoman American president. Bruce S. Rutsky and Willis of small and medium­ for the Black Creativity Gary Wright ’78 has ’82 Co. LPA, sized businesses and law 2001 Advisory Com­ been inducted into the Eileen Pruett ’81 has Cleveland. firms. He was formerly mittee and coordinated Fairborn, Ohio, City been elected to a second He practices in the areas chairman of Nischwitz, the exhibits for the Schools Hall of Honor. term on the board of of personal injury and Pembridge, and Chriszt Museum of Science and He is an attorney in directors of AFCC, an civil litigation. Co. Industry’s celebration of Fairborn and has served association of family, Black History Month. on the Fairborn board court, and community Martha J. Sweterlitsch Elizabeth T. Smith ’84, of education for nine professionals. She serves a partner with Vorys, Janet R. Burnside ’77 of years. as co-chair of the orga­ Sater, Seymour, and the Cuyahoga County nization’s Professional Pease, Columbus, was (Ohio) Court of Com­ Jeffrey T. Hodge ’79 is Development and elected to a two-year mon Pleas was invited vice president and assis­ Technical Assistance term as president of the by the Roscoe Pound tant general counsel at Committee and as board of ARC Indus­ Institute in Washington, Enron North America coordinator of its Medi­ Martha J. Coplan, tries, a not-for-profit D.C. to attend the Ninth Corp. He and his wife, ation Interest Group. Sweterlitsch ’83 and corporation that pro­ Educational Forum for Vicki, reside in Spring, Pruett is the coordina­ Aronoff vides vocational train­ State Court Judges sem­ Texas. tor of the Dispute Reso­ LLP, Cleveland, as coun­ ing and supported inar in Montreal in July. lution Programs of the sel to its Health Care employment oppor­ Judge Burnside was 1980s Ohio Supreme Court. Practice Group. She tunities for those with focuses her practice on mental and physical among 130 judges, Carl D. Smallwood ’80 health care, Medicaid disabilities. including justices of the was honored in May Donald W. Gregory ’82 and the law firm of eligibility, creation of Supreme Court, presid­ with the Award of Kegler, Brown, Hill, and and continuing counsel Lorie A. Chaiten ’85 ing judges of the inter­ Excellence at the Ritter, Columbus, are for not-for-profit cor­ has been named direc­ mediate appellate courts Columbus Urban the general counsels to porations, state and fed­ tor for the reproductive and some judges of League’s Annual Equal eral tax and tax rights project at the other courts of each Opportunity Day Con­ The American Subcon­ tractors Association. exemption for nonprofit American Civil Liberties ALUMNI NEWS

Anne E. Eckhart ’93 has Union of Illinois. She and corporate law. He Tod T. Morrow ’89 is a Dempsey to the firm’s joined the firm of previously was a part­ and his wife, Debbie, shareholder in the branch in Palo Alto, where he will pursue Thompson, Hine, and ner with the Chicago reside in Stow with their Akron law firm of Flory as an associate in law firm of Sonnen- two children. Buckingham, Doolittle, international oppor­ the real estate practice schein, Nath, and and Burroughs. He and tunities and expand his technology practice. group. Rosenthal. Anthony J. Giulani ’88 his wife Joni live in spoke at North Canton with Scott L. Marrah ’93 has Philip Lon Allen ’86 10th their family. Mary Margaret Devitt and husband, been named a partner has formed a law part­ Annual Boyer ’91 Kenneth, of Okemos, at King and Spalding in nership in Columbus Business 1990s Michigan, welcomed Atlanta. with Thomas N. Taneff. and Geoffrey W. Arthur ’90 Julia Elizabeth into their Industry’s has family on August 10, Mary Leslie Robins ’93 Smith Brittingham ’87 Environ­ joined the Anthony J. 2000. has joined the law firm joined Finnegan, Hen­ mental Colum­ Guilani ’88 of Murray, Murphy, derson, Farabow, Gar­ Sympo­ bus office Robert A. Zimmerman Moul, + Basil as an rett, and Dunner LLP, sium in March, 2001 on of Arter ’91 is one of the 38 associate. Her practice an intellectual property the topic “One Person and Had­ iillf n Jk i young leaders in the focuses on tax planning, law firm in Washington EHS Departments: den LLP. Geoffrey W. inaugural class of Cleve­ corporate counseling, D.C. He had worked as Working Smarter and He is Arthur ’90 land Bridge Builders. and civil litigation. senior investigative Harder.” Giulani, a part­ focusing Zimmerman is an asso­ attorney with the Office ner in the Columbus his practice on general ciate in the Cleveland Robert Martin Spiegel of Unfair Import law offices of Vorys, corporate and securities firm Kahn, Kleinman, ’93 and Mira Tamir Investigations, U.S. Sater, Seymour, and law, as well as oil and Yanowitz, and Arnson. Spiegel of Needham, International Trade Pease LLP, practices in gas, real estate, and Massachusetts, were Commission. the environmental e-commerce law. married on March 11, group where he focuses Michael L. Williams ’92 was elect­ 2000. M. H. (Bart) Sauer ’87 on the Clean Air Act Brenda K. Bowers ’90 is ed share­ has joined the Cleve­ and Clean Water Act a law clerk for the Hon­ holder in Greg R. Grabovac ’94 is land offices of Baker enforcement cases and orable Donald E. Cal­ Buck­ vice president and gen­ and Hostetler in its CERCLA matters. houn Jr. ’51 in the U.S. ingham, eral counsel for the national business group. Bankruptcy Court, Doolittle, Fishel Company in He focuses his practice Carrie Glaeden ’89 was Southern District of Ü* and Bur­ Columbus. on mergers and acquisi­ elected chair of the Ohio. Michael L. roughs’ tions, , board of trustees for Williams ’92 workers’ John P. Maxwell ’94 has lending and finance, Maryhaven in Colum­ Katrina Miller English compensation practice been named a principal and securities offerings. bus. Maryhaven is a ’90 and her husband, group. He joined the and shareholder at the health care facility serv­ Thomas, welcomed a firm as an associate firm of Hardin and Michael S. Urban ’87 ing people with alcohol son, Matthew, into the attorney in 1995. Schaffner, New Phila­ has been and other drug depen- world on December 17, delphia, Ohio. He and named a cies or patterns of 2000. The couple has Daniel M. Betzel ’93, his wife, Vicki, live in share­ abuse. Glaeden is chief two other children, Picker- New Philadelphia with holder in legal counsel for Ohio Madeline, 6, and Evan, ington, their two children. the law Governor Bob Taft. 4. Katrina is assistant has firm of general counsel for expanded Joanne S. Peters ’94 was Amer Jeffrey S. Routh ’89 is OhioHealth in Colum­ Michael S. his prac­ recognized with the Urban ’87 Cunning associated with the law bus. tice into Columbus Bar Asso­ ham Co. firm of Mason, Slovin, the area ciation’s 2001 Com­ LPA in Akron. His prac and Schilling in Cincin­ Jerome Joondeph, Jr. Daniel M. Betzel ’93 of IRS tax munity Service Award tice focuses on the area nati. He concentrates in ’90 has moved from the resolution. at the annual Law Day of employment and the areas of commercial Columbus office of He is a principal in the luncheon in May. An labor law, business law, litigation and creditors’ Squire, Sanders, and rights. law firm of Betzel and Kauffman Co. LPA. ALUMNI NEWS

attorney with Issac, Stanley E. Ramsay ’95 ciate counsel in Sep­ Lorie Stobbs Foster ’98 Carrie L. Carothers ’99 Brant, Ledman, and has joined the Houston tember, 2000. has joined married James Kempin- Teetor, she focuses her office of Weil, Gotshal, Ross ers on September 30, practice on commercial and Manges LLP as an Scott I. Unger ’96 was Products 2000 in Hyde Park,- litigation, intellectual associate in their tax married to Dana J. Rod­ Division Ohio. property, and insurance department. He special­ ney on April 28,2001. of Abbott defense. izes in the taxation of Unger is currently a Labo- Brian Gianangeli ’99 mergers and acquisi­ corporate litigation Lorie Stobbs ratories, has joined the firm of Jon Christopher tions, attorney with Stark and Foster ’98 Colum­ Zeiger and Carpenter in Walden ’94 is senior investments, and finan­ Stark in Princeton, New bus, as Columbus. He resides in contracts manager for cial instruments. He Jersey. counsel, U.S. legal oper­ Dublin. the Ohio School Facili­ resides in Houston with ations. She previously ties Commission in his wife, Patricia. Brian Burns ’97 mar­ worked as an associate Wayne D. Roberts ’99 Columbus ried Kelli L. Robinson in the business and has joined the South­ Michael J. Delaney ’96 of Sydney, Australia on finance section of Mor­ field, Michican, law firm Catherine Edwards received a Master’s of August 4,2001 in a gan, Lewis, and Bockius of Raymond and Pro­ Heigel ’95 has been pro­ Business Administration small ceremony in LLP, in Pittsburgh. kop, PC. He practices in moted to senior counsel degree in finance from Columbus, and simul­ its corporate area of fed­ for Duke Energy Cor­ Georgia State University taneously became father Gabriel L. Goddard ’98 eral and state tax laws, poration in Charlotte, in December. He is with to Kelli’s 6-year-old married Margaret including planning and North Carolina. Heigel the law firm of Powell, daughter. Brian and Elizabeth Kerrigan on tax controversy. and husband, Jonathan, Goldstein, Frazer, and Kelli live in the New October 21,2000 in also welcomed daugh­ Murphy LLP in Atlanta, York City area where he Youngstown, Ohio. Matthew L. Stout ’99 ter, Adelaide Elizabeth, where his practice is a corporate associate Goddard is an attorney was pro­ on April 4. She joins focuses on corporate with Cleary, Gottlieb, at Pfau, Pfau, and moted to Olivia Anne, 2. finance, securities, and Steen, and Hamilton. Marando, Youngstown. attorney mergers and acquisi­ Brian has been an The couple resides in in the law Daniel M. Betzel ’93 tions. adjunct professor at the Poland, Ohio. firm of and David E. Kauffman Moritz College of Law Bricker ’95 of the Jennifer Goldsmith during the 2000-2001 Margaret A. Nero ’98 Matthew L. and Eckler firm of Goldson ’96 and hus­ academic year and will has joined the litigation Stout ’99* LLP. He Betzel band, James, welcomed teach a one-week course group of Vorys, Sater, previously and their daughter, Sari next March on mergers Seymour, and Pease LLP worked in the firm as a Kauffman Elayna, on November and acquisitions. in Cincinnati. Prior to senior bond specialist in Co. LPA 14,2000. joining Vorys, she was a the areas of public Dawn M. Dunker ’97 law clerk to the Honor­ finance and public law, David E. have Kauffman ’95 formed Melanye K. Johnson ’96 has joined Ferron and able Susan J. Dlott, focusing on school and the Betzel has joined Arent, Fox, Associates, Columbus, United States District local government law. and Kauffman Founda­ Kintner, Plotkin, and as an associate. She will Court, Southern tion. The foundation Kahn PLLC in Wash­ be focusing her practice District of Ohio. was created as a tangible ington, D.C. as an asso­ in the area of labor and vehicle for giving back ciate attorney in the employment law. Aaron M. Shank ’98 has to the community and firm’s intellectual prop­ joined the litigation will be funded largely erty group. Matthew J. Markling department of Porter, through gifts from the ’97 has joined the law Wright, Morris, and firm and its advisors Michele M. Schoeppe firm of Britton, Arthur. His practice and clients. ’96 joined the UMWA McGown, Smith, Peters, focuses on federal, state, Health and Retirement and Kalail Co. LPA in and municipal taxation, Funds Office of General Cleveland as an associ­ corporate transactions, Counsel as senior asso- ate. and health care and Medicare/Medicaid fraud and abuse.

31 ALUMNI NEWS

2000s an associate in its liti­ Control Over Filing Peter S. Nealis ’00 has the Honorable Juan gation department. Substantial Assistance joined the Cleveland Vasquez of the U.S. Tax James S. Gray ’00 has Motions and a Proposal law firm of Kahn, Court in Washington, joined the for a Substantial Assis­ Kleinman, Yanowitz, D.C. law firm Leslie M. Kerns ’00, Ross J. Kirchick ’00, tance Pre-sentence and Arnson. of Bricker and Hearing,” was published Nicole S. Randall ’00 and Eck- Andrew R. Kruppa ’00 have joined the in the Spring 2001 edi­ Chan Wol Park ’00, has ler LLP, Cleveland law firm of tion of the Notre Dame Blake A. Rigel ’00, and joined Colum­ Benesch, Friedlander, Journal of Litigation. Ami S. Wei ’00 gradu­ Porter, bus, as an Coplan, and Aronoff as ated from New York Wright, associate. associates. Jeremy R. Mason ’00 University with LL.M. Morris, He has has joined the firm of degrees in taxation in and experience m real estate Ann K. Leistner ’00 Mason, Slovin, and May 2001. Former Col­ law, construction, and NicoleS. Arthur has joined the land Schilling in Cincinnati. lege of Law assistant Randall ’00 LLP, litigation. management practice His practice will con­ dean Vicki Eastus was where she area of Havens Willis centrate in the areas of on hand to assist with is practicing in its litiga­ Mark E. Hawkins ’00 commercial collection the academic hooding. tion department as an has joined in Columbus. law, banking law, and Rigel has joined Kram­ associate. Porter, bankruptcy law on er, Levin, Naftalis, and Wright, An article by Maria Limbert ’00, “The behalf of credit grantors. Frankel in Manhattan, Morris, Problems Associated while Wei has accepted and with Prosecutorial a judicial clerkship with Arthur as Mark E. Hawkins ’00

Best Lawyers In America

We know that Ohio State law the country's top lawyers Robert A. Butler '55, Butler, Cincione, DeCuccio, and Barnhart, Columbus graduates are the best lawyers confidentially evaluate their Marc Gertner '57, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo in America. We also like it when professional peers. Alphonse P. Cincione '61, Butler, Cincione, DiCussio, and Barnhart, others recognize that fact. The If you have been recognized in Columbus following graduates have notified this listing, or any other listing, Lawrence C. Sherman '62, Kahn, Kleinman, Yanowitz, and Arnson, the Moritz College of Law of their please let us know by sending Cleveland inclusion in the 2000-2001 edition the information to Liz Cutler Gates, John D. Liber '63, Spangenberg, Shibley, and Liber LLP, Cleveland of The Best Lawyers in America. Law Record Editor, Moritz College James F. White Jr. '65, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo The book is a widely used referral of Law at The Ohio State N. Gerald DiCuccio '66, Butler, Cicione, DiCuccio, and Barnhart, guide to the legal profession in the University, 55 W est 12th Ave., Columbus U.S. and lists lawyers representing Columbus, OH 43210, or via fax Robin E. Phelan '70, Haynes and Boone, Dallas 27 specialties in all 50 states and (614) 247-7079. Photos are John W. Hilbert, II '71, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo Washington, D.C. The lists are welcome but will not be returned. Stephen C. Fitch '73, Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe LLP, Columbus compiled through a peer-review You may also e-mail news to: Richard A. Frye '73, Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe LLP, Columbus survey in which thousands of [email protected]. Louis E. Tosi '74, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo John W. Bentine '75, Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe LLP, Columbus Charles R. Saxbe '75, Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe LLP, Columbus Robert W. Malone '76, Buckingham, Doolittle, and Burroughs, Akron Dennis P. Witherell '77, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo Timothy G. McCarthy '79, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo Douglas G. Haynam '80, Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick LLP, Toledo Stephen M. Hammersmith '81, Buckingham, Doolittle, and Burroughs, Akron 32 The terrorist attacks in New York and Washington D.C. on September 11,2001 shocked and saddened the Moritz College of Law family. We have made an effort to contact Moritz College of Law graduates in New York and are happy to report that those we have contacted are safe. For up-to-date information about the law school's reaction to the tragedy, see our web Upcoming Events site at: http://www.osu.edu/units/law/.

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October 17,4 p.m. November 8, Noon January 11, Noon University Distinguished Lecture Faculty Workshop Legal History Workshop “The Americans with Disabilities Act: “Placing the Adoptive Self” “Paradigms Lost, Paradigms Found: A New The First Decade of Enforcement” Carol Sanger, Professor of Law, Model for Second Amendment Scholarship” Ruth Colker, Heck-Faust Memorial Columbia University Saul Cornell, Associate Professor of History, Chair in Constitutional Law, The Ohio The Ohio State University November 8 State University Symposium January 15, Noon October 22,4 p.m. “Twenty-Five Years After Pound: Faculty Workshop Constitutionalism in Comparative Where Mediation Has Been and Where “Dissing States?” Perspective Seminar It Is Going” Ruth Colker, Heck-Faust Memorial Chair Sponsored by the Journal on Dispute “The Invisible Constitution” in Constitutional Law, The Ohio State Resolution. For registration information, Vicki C. Jackson, Professor o f Law and University contact symposium editor Amanda Associate Dean for Research, Georgetown Stallard, (614) 292-7170 or via e-mail University Law Center February 5,4 p.m. at [email protected]. Center for Law, Policy, and Social Science October 26, Noon Workshop November 9 and 10 “Term Limits and Campaign Finance Legal History Workshop Annual Alumni Return and Class Reform” “Arbitration in the Eighteenth Century” See magazine insert on page 16 Reunions. Steven F. Huefher, Assistant Professor of James C. Oldham, St. Thomas More for details. Professor of Law and Legal History, Law and Director, Legislation Clinic, The Georgetown University November 12,4 p.m. Ohio State University Center for Law, Policy, and Social Science October 26,4:30 p.m. Workshop February 8, Noon Naming Celebration (rescheduled “Gender, Law, and Social Movement Legal History Workshop from September 14) at Drinko Hall Formation: The Case of Union Feminism” “England on Edge: A View from the Quarter Please call (614) 688-8232 or e-mail Mary Margaret Fonow, Assistant Professor, Sessions, 1640-1642” [email protected] if you plan Women’s Studies Department, The Ohio David A. Cressy, Professor o f History, to attend. State University The Ohio State University

October 27,8:30 a.m. November 29, Noon February 21 Parents and Partners Day at Legal History Workshop Symposium Moritz College of Law “Gender and the Asymmetries of “Early Returns on Legislative Term Limits” Call (614) 292-8809 if you plan to attend. Citizenship: Tuan Anh Nguyen v. For additional information, contact Immigration and Naturalization Professor Steven Huefher at (614) 292-1763 October 29,4 p.m. Service, 2001” or via e-mail, [email protected]. Visit Center for Law, Policy, and Social Linda K. Kerber, May Brodbeck Professor www.law.ohio-state.edu/legisclinic/ Science Workshop in the Liberal Arts, Professor of History, conference.htmat for more details and a “Juvenile Offenders as Victims: and Adjunct Professor o f Law, University downloadable registration form. A Study of Domestic Violence Cases o f Iowa in Juvenile Court” December 5, Noon Katherine Hunt Federle, Associate Faculty Workshop Professor of Law, The Ohio State University “The Lawyer’s Duty to Report Professional Misconduct” Arthur F. Greenbaum, Professor o f Law, The Ohio State University Non Profit Org. Moritz College of Law U.S. Postage OHIO 55 West 12th Ave. PAID SIATE C olu m b u s, UNIVERSITY Columbus, OH 43210-1391 O hio Permit No. 711 23113.305399.61804.02LR

Ground was broken for the new law building on October 6,1990. Anita S. Ward, Ohio Board I of Regents vice chair, takes her turn with the shovel. Looking on are (from left to right) Deanl Francis X. Beytagh; Ohio State Board of Trustees Chair Shirley Dunlap Bowers; President Stanley J. Aronoff; Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee; and College of Law Professor Howard P. Fink. a 1 H lllilll I | I H M I m 1