THE MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF AT CHAPEL HILL SCHOOL OF LAW CAROLINA LAW Intellectual Property 2.0

VOLUME 36, ISSUE TWO FALL-WINTER 2012 UNC Law Alumni Association DEAN’S MESSAGE Board of Directors Dear Friends, Executive Officers The lead story in this issue features the work of our Robert A. Wicker ’69, president intellectual property faculty, along with other stories about Thomas F. Taft ’72, vice president talented faculty members like Melissa Jacoby, who makes Craig T. Lynch ’86, second vice president nationally significant contributions to public policy in the John Charles Boger ’74, secretary-treasurer area of bankruptcy reform, even as she works daily to train a R. Scott Tobin ’81, Law Foundation chair new generation of Carolina Law students. The pages of this Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64, past campaign chair magazine also bring to life stories of wonderful students who John B. McMillan ’67, past president (2006-07) are being challenged not only to learn and understand the STEVE EXUM law, but to begin to apply legal principles through our new David M. Moore II ’69, past president (2007-08) John Charles “Jack” Boger transition-to-practice courses that should give them clear John S. Willardson ’72, past president (2008-09) advantage as they begin their professional lives. Norma R. Houston ’89, past president (2009-10) Three other stories at first strike a different theme — great private gifts received by Ann Reed ’71, past president (2010-11) Carolina Law, one from the Kenan family in the 1960s, a second, in the summer of 2012, from the Kathrine R. Everett Charitable Trust, and the third, a $1 million October Committee Chairs 2012 gift from the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust. Advancement Committee, Walter D. Fisher Jr. ’86 It was fifty years ago, in 1962, that Carolina Law received what was then the most Long-Range Planning Committee, generous gift in its history — $150,000 to establish the Graham Kenan Fund and endow Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64, Robert A. Wicker ’69 a distinguished chair to support an outstanding legal scholar. Subsequent Kenan grants Alumni Engagement Committee, Kelly Podger Smith ’02 created law student scholarships and built the Graham Kenan Courtroom. Nearly fifty Nominations Committee, Stephen E. Lewis ’91 years later, the school received a $2.7 million gift from the Estate of Kathrine R. Everett, which will create new Everett Chancellors’ Scholarships and support a new program to enrich the experiences of all future Chancellors’ Scholars. The $1 million Kenan UNC Law Foundation Officers Charitable Trust gift will honor Bill Friday — iconic University of North Carolina R. Scott Tobin ’81, president and chair president and member of the UNC Law Class of 1948, who died on University Day, Edwin Jasper “Jack” Walker Jr. ’69, vice president Oct. 12, 2012, at the age of 92 — by supporting scholarships for future law students. John Charles Boger ’74, secretary-treasurer The relationship between these three examples of generous philanthropy and the Maria M. Lynch ’79, chair, audit committee present strength of our faculty and students is direct, even if sometimes unseen. Melissa Jacoby, about whom you’ll read in this issue, is a concrete example. She has succeeded former professors Daniel Pollitt, Paul Haskell and Joseph Kalo as the most recent UNC School of Law Office Graham Kenan Professor of Law. Programs funded through Kenan generosity have of Advancement enriched the professional experience of generations of Carolina Law students. The new Kris Jensen, associate dean for advancement Everett gifts will draw exceptional future Chancellors’ Scholar students to Carolina Law T. Brandon Wright, assistant dean for advancement and support unimagined contributions to campus life from our most talented entering Louise Harris, regional director of advancement students. The gift to honor Bill Friday will widen and deepen the access to Carolina Law Dana Dubis, director of annual giving for bright and promising students from every background. Susan McLean, director of alumni and donor relations Private gifts make a world of difference. Collectively, they allow this 167-year-old public law school to aspire to greatness, a mission we cherish. Toward that end, we are Kelly Mann, alumni and donor relations coordinator deeply grateful both to special donors and to all of you who, as Carolina Law alumni, Carolyn Brafford, office administrator help lift us up through your financial support, your ongoing counsel and your friendship. Thank you for all you do. UNC School of Law Office Sincerely, of Communications Allison Reid, assistant dean for communications Katherine Kershaw, communications manager

Student Bar Association JOHN CHARLES “JACK” BOGER’74 Nick Miller 3L, 2012-2013 president Dean and Wade Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law PUBLICATION Carolina Law is published twice per year by the Office of Communications at UNC School of Law. It is distributed to alumni and colleagues. Please update your information at www. CAROLINA LAW law.unc.edu/alumni. Co-Editors ALLISON REID, KATHERINE KERSHAW We continually seek content for publication. Please submit alumni class notes to [email protected]. Submit stories and Copyeditor CHRISTOPHER E. NELSON press releases to [email protected] or Carolina Law editor, Contributing Writers MICHELE LYNN, CHRISTOPHER E. NELSON, NANCY OATES, CRAIG SMITH, UNC School of Law, 160 Ridge Rd., CB #3380, Chapel Hill, ANGELA SPIVEY, MADELINE VANN NC 27599. For more information, call 919.962.5106. Designer SARAH CHESNUTT 12,500 copies of the magazine have been printed at a cost of BRIANA BROUGH, STEVE EXUM, TOPHER SIMON, JIM STRATFORD, DONN YOUNG $13,070. Photographers 2 FALL-WINTER 2012 Research Assistants ADAM LANIER, ILYASAH SHABAZZ, KRISTEN STONE VOLUME 36, ISSUE TWO FALL-WINTER 2012 CONTENTS

Cover Story 22 Intellectual Property 2.0 As the U.S. economy has shifted to focus on information as a commodity, the legal mechanisms used to protect information have become increasingly important.

HISTORY 14 FEATURE 26 The Kenan Legacy at Transition-to-Practice: Carolina Law New Upper-Level Courses Give Hands-On Experience

Departments SCHOOL NEWS 2 ALUMNI PROFILES 16 VOICES 44 8 Faculty & Research School Launches Alumni Working in Craig Smith: Helping Students 12 Center News Consumer Financial Intellectual Property Develop Professional Voices 18 Alumni News Transactions Clinic DONOR PROFILE 28 29 Honor Roll of Donors Kathrine R. Everett Trust 37 Class Notes Gives $2.7 Million 42 Faculty Books 43 Parting Shots

CAROLINA LAW

Cover illustration by Roy Scott. SCHOOL NEWS

School Launches Consumer Financial Transactions Clinic

THE STATE OF NORTH normally takes a full academic year, into a few months. He CAROLINA RECEIVED consulted with Legal Aid and brainstormed with Graham Kenan $338 MILLION from Professor of Law Melissa Jacoby, a national leader in consumer- the settlement of a related work, and Lissa Broome, Wells Fargo Professor of national robo-signing Banking Law and director of the Center for Banking and Finance, lawsuit against the to sketch out the proposal. five largest mortgage Kelley hired Laura Collins Britton to run the new clinic. Britton STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM Thomas Kelley Laura Collins Britton loan servicers in the grew up in Greensboro, N.C., and graduated from Mars Hill country. North Carolina College before completing law school at Northeastern University Attorney General authorized committing a portion in Boston. She has practiced consumer transaction law at Pisgah of the proceeds to fund a student-staffed legal clinic at UNC Legal Services in Asheville, N.C., for the past seven years and School of Law that helps low- and middle-income people facing taught at Mars Hill as an adjunct professor. Upon being hired, foreclosure or abusive practices related to credit cards, predatory Britton immediately began reaching out to potential referral loans or check-cashing services. sources that would handle the administrative aspects of vetting UNC School of Law’s new Consumer Financial Transactions clients and sending cases on to the CFT Clinic. Clinic opened in the fall 2012 semester, giving invaluable client “That collaboration benefits the clinic, the referring agencies experience to eight third-year law students interested in financial, and the community,” Britton says. “We are able to focus our business and transactional law. Thomas Kelley, director of clinical energies on doing the actual legal work, and the agencies get pro programs at the law school, believes the new clinic will benefit bono legal assistance for more of their applicants.” both students and consumers. Britton will train students on the life cycle of a case from start “Some of the settlement was earmarked for direct service to to finish, working with them at each step to develop their skills in people who had suffered as a result of the financial crisis and that area. robo-signing,” Kelley says. “Funding a clinic to train the next “Our goal is that the students start their legal careers knowing generation of lawyers about these consumer financial transac- best practices for every stage of representing a client on a tions is a good way to multiply the effect of direct service.” consumer issue,” she says. “Not just how to do things properly, The settlement was announced in February, and the attorney but why it matters.” general wanted consumers to benefit as quickly as possible. For example, knowing what the issues are and drafting a Gene Nichol — former dean of the law school and now the complaint well can avoid motions down the line that are time- Boyd Tinsley Distinguished Professor of Law and director of the consuming, expensive and potentially damaging to the client’s Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity — was involved in early case. The complaint sets the tone for the rest of the litigation, conversations with the Attorney General’s Office about the law she says. school’s plan for its share of the settlement proceeds. Kelley Students, heavily supervised, will take on a variety of consumer learned in March of the apportionment to the school and had to cases, from the simple to the complex, including court appearances. scramble to organize the clinic to be ready for the fall semester. Third-year law students can get special licensure from the State Bar Kelley compressed the approval and hiring process, which to argue cases, as long as their supervising attorney is with them.

LAW SCHOOL WELCOMES CLASS OF 2015 AND INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARS

Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 officially There are seven students in the LL.M. international visiting research scholars, from welcomed the newest students to the program, including five Chinese students, Germany, China, Japan and South Korea, are Carolina Law family on Thursday, Aug. 23. one Japanese student and one Libyan attending UNC School of Law. Seventy-three percent of the class of 2015 student. This year, 12 international exchange At the orientation, Boger welcomed the is from North Carolina. Students nationwide students, from France, Germany, Scotland, students and applauded their decisions to have also been drawn to Carolina Law, England and the Netherlands; and 29 pursue legal careers. arriving from 30 states and the District of “You’ve chosen well in embracing a legal Columbia. Members of the incoming class career, and you’ve arrived this morning at a hold degrees in 61 majors, earned at 86 particular place — the University of North undergraduate institutions. Nine percent Carolina — that can become a remarkable, of the new students already hold graduate bounteous starting point for your degrees. professional career.” BRIANA BROUGH

2 FALL-WINTER 2012 Money from the settlement will fund the operation of the Britton is grateful to the state attorney general for providing the Consumer Financial Transactions Clinic for four years and has funds for getting the CFT Clinic going. covered the cost of converting computer station space in the clinic “UNC School of Law has a very distinguished and successful into four small client consultation rooms. “We’re busting at the clinical legal education program,” she says. “The school is really seams in the clinic suite,” Kelley says. Yet for years, the demand pleased to add this to its clinical offerings. It’s an opportunity for from students for clinic spots has far outstripped availability. students to serve the community, while learning practical legal “Totally last minute, with no publicity, we filled the eight new skills. It’s money well-spent.” — Nancy Oates clinic spots immediately,” Kelley says.

Davis Society Welcomes Eight Members from the Class of 2012

EIGHT LAW STUDENTS from the Class of 2012 were selected to become members of one of the most prestigious societies at UNC School of Law. The James E. and Carolyn B. Davis Society recognizes eight third-year students possessing both academic and personal excellence and a willingness to serve the betterment of the School of Law and its faculty and students. In making its selections, the Davis Society selection committee considers the qualities of leadership ability, integrity, dedication, and character as exemplified by KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE extracurricular activities and The Class of 2012 members are: Crystal Boni, Jackie Azis, Lauren Cranford, Shonaka Ellison, Josh Lawson, Bethan Eynon, academic achievement. Lindsey Spain, and John Ward

FORMER BRITISH AMBASSADOR SIR CHRISTOPHER MEYER DISCUSSES INTERNATIONAL LAW

The UNC Center for Media Law and Policy, In his 36 years as a career diplomat, Meyer Power,” about the movers and shakers in six and UNC School of Law’s International occupied a number of key positions: British great cities of the world. Programs hosted a lecture by Sir Christopher Ambassador to Germany; press secretary to “With the global reach of the Internet, it is Meyer, former British ambassador to the Prime Minister John Major; press secretary to becoming increasingly important for media United States, at the law school last March. British Foreign Secretary Lord Geoffrey Howe; companies to be aware of how other countries Meyer, who previously chaired the Press speech writer to three foreign secretaries in deal with conflicts over privacy and free Complaints Commission in the United the 1970s; and head of the political section of speech,” says David Ardia, assistant professor Kingdom, spoke about the regulation of the British Embassy in Moscow. of law and co-director of the UNC Center for the news media, including the 2011 phone Meyer has published two books — “DC Media Law and Policy. “Sir Christopher’s many hacking scandal at News Corporation. He also Confidential,” about his time in Washington, years of experience on the Press Complaints discussed international law and his documen- D.C., and “Getting Our Way,” a history of British Commission, and his active involvement in tary, “Network of Power.” diplomacy. He is currently filming a six-part journalism issues around the world, made for documentary for Sky Atlantic, “Network of a fascinating evening.” CAROLINA LAW 3 SCHOOL NEWS

Students Land Summer Positions through Career Services’ Diversity Efforts

THE ULTRA-COMPETITIVE PROCESS of landing a summer associate “To be competitive in this tough economic climate, students have position at a large law firm can feel all the more intense for minority to be very well-prepared,” Boone says. “So we routinely assist students. Maria Mangano ’82, director of career services at UNC our students with resume and cover letter reviews, conduct mock School of Law, and Lynn Hudson Boone, a career counselor in the interviews and even provide advice on what to wear. We instill Career Services Office (CSO), have a firsthand understanding of the confidence in them. We share their joy in their successes.” stress from their own experiences practicing law. Combining their When Whitney Nebolisa 3L was offered expertise and energy, they’ve made it their mission to help talented a summer associate position with Sidley law students find the open doors at firms and other employers that Austin, a prestigious law firm in Wash- want to diversify. ington, D.C., she called Boone first, even “It’s very hard to get big-firm experience after that first year in law before she called her mom. school,” Mangano says. “For those who manage to get an offer from “I wouldn’t have gotten the offer without a firm, they’re on their way in their legal career.” Lynn,” Nebolisa says. “She helped me The vast majority of partners at the most successful law firms believe in myself.”

come from similar backgrounds. Yet, employers are increasingly Whitney Nebolisa Nebolisa interviewed with Sidley Austin recognizing that better through an off-campus diversity interview Because most large firms hire their solutions come from program. She also landed her 1L summer associate position entry-level associates directly from the collective ideas of through one of these programs, working at the Raleigh and their summer associate programs, a people with different Research Triangle Park, N.C., offices of K & L Gates. perspectives and life Because most large firms hire their entry-level associates student’s summer experience may experiences. Clients directly from their summer associate programs, a student’s be the start of an entire career. are increasingly letting summer experience may be the start of an entire career. Tina firms know that they Tanhehco ’12 wanted to launch her career in a firm that values want diversity among the attorneys who represent them. As a result, diversity, and therefore focused on firms that participate in many employers are reaching out to minorities as early as the summer diversity programs. first-year summer associate stage. “Diversity comes in different forms; it doesn’t mean only Carolina Law students — about one in four are students of minorities,” Tanhehco says. “I wanted to be able to be myself. It color — have enviable success in receiving offers from firms and was a comfort to work in a firm with a diverse group of people.” other employers that participate in or sponsor diversity programs to Tanhehco also took part in off-campus diversity interview hire summer associates or recruit at minority job fairs. This is due programs during her 1L and 2L summers, securing a permanent in part to the diligence of Mangano and Boone, who have identified position in the New York office of Fried Frank where she worked a wide variety of diversity programs, including off-campus interview during her 2L summer. programs and summer associate opportunities that include a Each spring, Mangano and Boone organize information scholarship component. Boone and Mangano, along with other CSO sessions on 1L and 2L diversity programs. These sessions counselors, apprise students of opportunities and deadlines, and include a panel of minority students who have been through support them every step of the way. diversity program interviews and the summer associate selection

ELECTION PROTECTION HOTLINE FIELDS 400+ CALLS IN SPRING ELECTION More than 60 law students and faculty at Voters anywhere in the state were able to “This program is committed to ensuring UNC, along with community volunteers, call during poll hours with questions about that every qualified voter gets a meaningful staffed the North Carolina Election their rights and the voting process. opportunity to exercise their basic civil right to Protection hotline, a toll-free, nonpartisan During the 2010 elections, the school’s cast a ballot on Election Day,” says Elizabeth resource to answer more than 400 voter Election Protection Hotline fielded almost Haddix ’98, senior attorney at the center. questions during the primary election on 300 calls. According to Haddix, Election Protection May 8. Election Protection is a nationwide The UNC Center for Civil Rights has is the nation’s most ambitious nonpartisan voter advocacy and education coalition of coordinated the North Carolina Election program for preventing voter disenfranchise- more than 100 local, state and national Protection hotline for several years. The ment. The coalition of state and national allies partners, and is coordinated by the Lawyers’ law school’s Pro Bono Program recruited seeks to ensure that every eligible voter casts Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. lawyers, law students and other volunteers a ballot that counts on Election Day. who were trained to answer questions Editor’s Note: While this publication was at from North Carolina voters and help them press, Carolina Law also staffed the North understand their voting rights. Carolina Election Protection hotline during the 4 FALL-WINTER 2012 November 2012 election. process. “The students we invite as panelists are so willing and Rebekah Scherr (Altria and Hunton & Williams, Richmond, Va.) enthusiastic and excited to share advice, tips and moral support, was placed through the Altria Group Inc. and Hunton & Williams and they offer to speak one-on-one with students in the audience,” LLP 1L Diversity Clerkship Opportunity. Mangano says. “The student panelists really make the information Alexandra Suarez (Johnston, Allison & Hord, Charlotte, N.C.) sessions a success.” was placed through a targeted resume collection for Carolina Law Tanhehco, who became a panelist during her 2L and 3L years, minority 1Ls. says her upper-class mentor insisted she attend the information Donald Huggins (North Carolina Coastal Land Trust, sessions her first year. “The panelists give very practical advice you Wilmington, N.C.) was placed through the 2012 Max Mukelabai wouldn’t think of unless you’ve gone through the process,” she says. Diversity Intern- Mangano and Boone make themselves available to give last ship Program, minute advice or to calm pre-interview nerves. The students also established by help one another, even when they’re competing for positions at the Conservation Trust same firms. of North Carolina. “They want each other to succeed,” Mangano says. “They —Nancy Oates become ambassadors for the program and pay it forward.” Boone agrees. “We’re the spark; they’re the flame.” Students who participated in programs for first-year law Roby Chatterji Donald Huggins students this past summer include: Erica Romain (Johnston, Allison & Hord), and Susan Park (Robinson Bradshaw and Duke Energy) were placed through the Charlotte Legal Diversity Clerkship Program, which matches eligible students with firms and corporations in the Charlotte, N.C., area. Roby Chatterji (Cranfill Sumner and Hartzog, Raleigh, N.C.) and Collier Johnson (Womble Caryle, Winston-Salem, N.C.) were placed through the N.C. Bar Association Minorities in Collier Johnson Brian Kim Gina LeBlanc the Profession Summer Associate Program. Brian Kim (Oppenheimer, Wolff, & Donnelley, Minneapolis, Minn.) was placed through the Twin Cities Diversity Program. Kim also spent part of the summer with a corporate client of the firm. Gina LeBlanc (Underberg and Kessler, Rochester, N.Y.) was placed through the Alexandra Suarez Rochester Legal Diversity Clerkship Program. Susan Park Erica Romain Rebekah Scherr

THIRTY-SIX STUDENTS HONORED WITH GRESSMAN AND POLLITT ORAL ADVOCACY AWARDS

UNC School of Law congratulated 36 Professor Ruth McKinney ’88 to establish first-year law students who received a the awards and to honor Daniel H. Pollitt, Eugene Gressman & Daniel H. Pollitt Graham Kenan Professor of Law Emeritus, Oral Advocacy Award on April 11. The and Eugene Gressman, William Rand annual awards recognize outstanding Kenan Jr. Professor of Law Emeritus, both oral advocacy in the first-year Research, of whom died in 2010. The awards also Reasoning, Writing, and Advocacy celebrate a collaborative partnership (RRWA) Program. In 1996, the Chief between Holderness students, the RRWA Justice of Holderness Moot Court Bench, Program, and practicing attorneys. Michael L. Wilson ’96, worked with

CAROLINA LAW 5 SCHOOL NEWS

Law Clinic Students Counsel Undergraduate Entrepreneurs in Social Innovation Incubator

In the fall, third-year law students in the Community Development Law Clinic loaned their expertise to the four startups chosen to make up the inaugural Social Innovation Incubator, which launched in January. The incubator provides up to $15,000 in seed funding to each startup and steers the student entrepreneurs to professor- and student-staffed clinics on campus and some experts off campus for free guidance. Richard Harrill ’98, director of the Campus Y, and Mathilde Verdier, who coordinates the incubator, worked to formalize the strategic partnerships that connect the student social entrepreneurs with the law school, the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Kenan-Flagler Business School, the School of Public Health and the computer and public policy departments. Kelley envisioned that the students staffing the law clinic would conduct presentations on topics useful to nonprofits and for-profits working on social innovations: a business

EMERSON RHUDY plan structure for nonprofits to avoid unrelated business Undergraduate Greg Sorg compiles bags of produce for the community. income tax; best practices for governance boards; the IRS’ unpredictable commerciality doctrine; and the pros and cons PLANTING A COMMUNITY GARDEN to feed the needy and ease the of nonprofits and for-profits. homeless back into the workforce sounded simple enough. But to “Giving presentations will be a powerful education experience for pull it off, the UNC undergraduates who came up with the idea for the law students,” Kelley says. “To be able to put on a meaningful Hope Gardens in Chapel Hill, N.C., needed to make decisions about presentation, they’ll have to know their stuff.” complex issues such as corporate structure, insurance and liability, In the future, the startups might become clients of the clinic, and and board development. As part of the Campus Y’s Social Innovation the 3Ls could help the startups draft bylaws, pull together a board Incubator, the Hope Gardens entrepreneurs had access to pro bono and negotiate and draft contracts. advice across campus. At the law school, Thomas Kelley, clinical Verdier, thinking innovatively, came up with another advantage the program director and faculty supervisor of the Community Develop- law school’s partnership with the Social Innovation Incubator holds ment Law Clinic, dug in to help. for law students. “It’s nice that the law school is finding ways to be involved with “Social enterprise is starting to boom,” Verdier says. innovation, which the chancellor and other University leaders have “Law students might want to look into this as a future career emphasized,” Kelley says. opportunity.” —Nancy Oates

PRO BONO PROGRAM ANNOUNCES PUBLICO AWARDS The Pro Bono Board awarded the 2012 Jacoby, Graham Kenan Professor of Law recipients of the Pro Bono Publico Awards at Alumnus of the Year - Martin Brinkley ’92 the annual Public Interest Celebration last Martin Brinkley ’92, was 2011-2012 April. This year’s award recipients included: president at Smith Anderson in Raleigh, Graduating Student of the Year - Erika Jones was 2011-2012 president of the 17,000- 3L Student of the Year - Lindsey Spain member North Carolina Bar Association 2L Student of the Year - D.J. Dore and was the co-chair of the NCBA’s first 1L Student of the Year - Charlotte Stewart large-scale pro bono project, 4ALL, in Group Pro Bono Project of the Year - which N.C. lawyers volunteer time to Community Legal Project (CLP) answer legal questions from the public. DONN YOUNG Faculty/Professor of the Year - Melissa From left, CLP co-president Kate Saleeby ’12, Jacoby, Stewart, Dore, Jones, CLP co-president Jessica Thaller 3L, Spain.

6 FALL-WINTER 2012 Student Report Key to Justice Department Finding That Faults N.C. Courts Over Interpreters

A COURT APPEARANCE CAN BE a The N.C. Justice Center followed up by filing a complaint with confusing, intimidating experience for the Justice Department, and in March of this year, the depart- anyone without a law degree. Imagine ment released its findings, determining that “the AOC’s policies what it’s like for litigants who don’t and practices discriminate on the basis of national origin, in speak English. violation of federal law.” Deborah Weissman, the Reef C. Ivey Weissman calls the students’ work “a tremendous success.” II Distinguished Professor of Law who The report came out of experiences law students had not only supervises the Immigration and Human in immigration cases but in the law school’s civil clinic, juvenile Rights Policy Clinic at UNC School of Law, justice clinic and domestic violence clinic. The Immigration DONN YOUNG says she has seen some unconventional and Human Rights Policy Clinic is a hybrid clinic of immigration Deborah Weissman ways of dealing with non-English-speaking casework and policy work. Students work to resolve individual litigants. Even in criminal cases, where the law requires an cases, but often realize that the problems their clients face require interpreter for non-English speakers, judges can too quickly assess structural changes. So the law students come up with policy a defendant’s ability to understand English, sometimes after proposals to ameliorate the impasse. exchanging only a few words or a perfunctory greeting. Most of the litigants in the UNC clinical programs are not “Non-English-speakers have a very difficult time making their way undocumented immigrants — though the law doesn’t make a through the courts,” Weissman says. “Even when it’s not our client, distinction between documented and undocumented residents to law students enrolled in the clinic who have a deep attachment in terms of their access to the courts. Often, the litigants are to fairness in the judicial system, it doesn’t feel right.” refugees whom the U.S. has accepted In the spring of 2010, three of Weissman’s third-year law into resettlement programs or are students, Emily Kirby, Sarah Long and Sonal Raja, studied the eligible for other immigration remedies. lack of interpreters in North Carolina courts. After observing Now that the Department of Justice proceedings in courts around the state and interviewing judges, has released its findings, Weissman public defenders, Legal Aid lawyers and private attorneys, the and her students hope that the AOC three women wrote a report that analyzed the problem and will negotiate some steps toward provided reasonable recommendations to make the state’s resolution and a schedule of implementation, one of the recom- courts more accessible to non-English-speakers. They presented mendations in the students’ report. If the AOC should fail to their 95-page report to the U.S. Department of Justice, at its cooperate, its federal funding could be at risk. request, as well as to other advocacy agencies, such as the N.C. “Some changes can be made sooner; some will take longer,” Justice Center, which had been trying — without success — to Weissman says. “But we are optimistic that the AOC will take get the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) to discuss action on this very basic issue about democracy and society.” some solutions. —Nancy Oates

NATIONAL JURIST NAMES UNC AMONG MOST INNOVATIVE AND BEST VALUE LAW SCHOOLS

UNC School of Law was named one of the Carnegie Foundation study 2012 issue, was calculated “America’s 20 Most Innovative Law Schools,” in 2008 that called for greater by looking at “the percent of by The National Jurists’ preLaw magazine. practical training and innovation graduates who pass the bar The ranking was released Aug. 23 in the at law schools. It also highlights exam (15 percent of study) and magazine’s “Back to School 2012” issue. the school’s new transition-to- the percent who get a job (35 In the article, preLaw profiles “the 20 law practice courses and revamped percent).” Those figures were schools at the cutting edge — those that legal writing program. then weighed “against tuition are trying new things in an effort to improve UNC School of Law was also (25 percent), cost of living (10 legal education.” ranked No. 9 in National Jurist percent) and average indebted- The article cites the work of Judith magazine’s list of the nation’s ness upon graduation (15 Wegner, former dean and now Burton Craige “Best Value Law Schools.” The ranking, percent),” the article says. Professor of Law at Carolina Law, who led published in the magazine’s September

CAROLINA LAW 7 FACULTY & RESEARCH

UNC Study Finds Racial Diversity of Students Beneficial in Higher Education

racially diverse law student body provides educational — had already been collecting data on the value of diversity in benefits for students, their institution and society, a recent education for eight years. Astudy found. The 10-year multidisciplinary research study “It’s so gratifying to see a study that is rigorously designed, was conducted by four professors, including Charles E. Daye, multidisciplinary and involving data from many sources to Henry Brandis Professor of Law at the UNC School of Law and address a critical issue in higher education today,” says study deputy director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights. co-author Abigail T. Panter, Bowman and Gordon Gray Professor of Psychology at UNC. “Collaborative groups like ours can produce data that are useful for people to evaluate, which is especially important in the current climate when the Supreme Court will be involved.” The research team was itself diverse, coming from the disci- plines of law (Daye), psychology (Panter), sociology (Walter R. Allen of the University of California, Los Angeles) and educational research methodology (Linda F. Wightman of UNC Greensboro). Over a decade, the researchers examined links between race (and other factors) and educational benefits, tracking law students from their enrollment in law school through graduation. The study used national data from more than 6,500 incoming

STEVE EXUM law students attending a random representative sample of 50 Charles E. Daye American Bar Association-approved law schools in the U.S. The researchers found that many racial differences observed An article about the study, “Does Race Matter in Educational among students contribute to learning because differences foster Diversity? A Legal and Empirical Analysis,” was published in the richer interactions and positive educational outcomes that benefit summer issue of Rutgers Race & the Law Review. The article is also students, institutions and society. In addition, when a law school’s posted on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN). racial diversity was significant and group interaction was high, The study’s release is particularly timely in light of the U.S. graduating law students perceived their law school as more open Supreme Court hearing this fall in Fisher v. University of Texas and respectful of diverse ideas. at Austin, a case involving the consideration of race in college This exposure to a diversity of viewpoints prepares students admissions. UNC is one of many universities that filed amicus to be better lawyers, making them more “culturally competent,” briefs in the case. the researchers found. “Unless you plan to practice law in a box, “The question of whether race may be considered in admis- you’re going to be dealing with all kinds of races when you sions of students to professional programs, as well as under- graduate, so you better have some of that respect or that appre- graduate schools, has been a subject of controversy at least since ciation that people can think differently,” says Aaron, a Northern 1978 when the U.S. Supreme Court, in the case of Regents of California student quoted in the article. the University of California v. Bakke, upheld limited use of race in “Our conclusion is that, because race matters and contributes admission decisions,” Daye says. “This is an important educational, to educational diversity, it would be a tragedy if educational political and societal question, and one that is still being raised.” institutions were told that the race of applicants could not be in When retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor any way considered,” Daye says. “There is no other factor that wrote in a 2010 essay that “further social science research is will adequately target the qualities needed in a student body in needed in order to refine our appreciation of diversity’s value,” which the students can interact and learn from each other and the researchers for this study — the Educational Diversity Project learn the ways that others see the world.” — Michele Lynn

8 FALL-WINTER 2012 North Carolina Law Review Honors Hazen AT THE NORTH CAROLINA LAW REVIEW BANQUET on April 4, Jacoby Speaks at Public faculty advisor Thomas Lee Hazen was surprised with Hearing on Chapter 11 a tribute to his 25 years of Bankruptcy Cases service to the Law Review. Thirteen former editors-in- BANKRUPTCY ATTORNEYS AND PROFESSORS gathered in June at

STEVE EXUM chief, dating from as far back the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., to testify on Thomas Lee Hazen as 1987, attended the 2012 the U.S. Trustee Program’s (USTP) proposed attorney fee guide- banquet — hosted annually lines in large Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases. Melissa B. Jacoby, by local law firm Brooks Pierce LLP — to honor Hazen, the Cary C. Graham Kenan Professor of Law at UNC School of Law, was one of Boshamer Distinguished Professor of Law at UNC School of Law. eight speakers who presented at the public hearing. “For 25 years, since 1987, longer than some of you have been The experts expressed widely differing views at the hearing, alive … there was Tom Hazen, already a tenured faculty member according to coverage of the testimony by Bloomberg BNA. here, willing to give many hours as advisor to the North Carolina Executive Office for U.S. Trustees Director Clifford J. White Law Review,” UNC School of Law Dean John Charles “Jack” III said all of the oral and 30 of the written comments would Boger ’74 said in his remarks. “Nearly every editor-in-chief has be considered before the USTP sought his advice and support, yet some years the staff is almost issues final guidelines. The final unaware of how instrumental he’s been in keeping the ship guidelines would most likely upright, above water, pointed in the right direction.” contain changes such as raising Editor-in-Chief Andrew Kasper ’12 announced that the execu- the monetary threshold for large tive board offices of theLaw Review suite were to be named Chapter 11 cases from $50 in Hazen’s honor. Kasper also presented Hazen with a plaque million, consideration of the use of acknowledging his 25 years of service. efficiency counsel, and the use of “It is [his] empathy for student editors, accompanied by, as streamlined forms. one former editor-in-chief put it, Professor Hazen’s ‘formidable Jacoby was the last speaker at publication experience’ — which I think I can confidently say is the hearing. In her statement to an understatement — that makes Professor Hazen an invaluable the USTP, Jacoby addressed the resource in bridging the occasional gap between student editors public’s perception of problems in and professional authors,” Kasper said during the evening’s Melissa Jacoby the bankruptcy process. “Greater presentation. transparency in fee applications would reduce concerns and In addition to his role with the Law Review, Hazen teaches Busi- address allegations that professionals are overly compensated ness Associations and Securities Regulation. Hazen is the author for unnecessary work and diverting value,” she explained. of a seven-volume treatise on the law of securities regulation; Jacoby’s suggested approach to the proposed guidelines was a four-volume treatise on corporate law; a two-volume treatise one that promoted moving ahead incrementally and conserva- on broker-dealer law; and a three-volume treatise on derivatives tively. “In its efforts to update the guidelines, I would respectfully regulation (formerly commodities regulation). encourage the USTP to focus first on procedural matters that Hazen’s scholarly publications are, according to Boger, would address these issues head on, the centerpiece of which “constant, prodigious, of exceptional quality. They command is submission of fee applications in searchable and sortable national respect from leading judges, scholars, and key federal formats,” she said. “This would enable efficient evaluation of enforcement officials.” Hazen is regularly invited to serve as an individual cases as well as apples-to-apples comparisons across expert witness in high profile corporate and securities cases in cases, and could substantially increase public confidence in the the Southern District of New York and elsewhere. bankruptcy system.” Hazen has served on drafting committees to revise the North Jacoby suggested that some components of the guidelines Carolina nonprofit and business corporation acts as well as the could be provided as changes to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy North Carolina Partnership Act. He was vice president and a Procedure or to data-enabled forms, and she further recom- member of the board of directors of the Center for Computer- mended that the USTP channel its suggestions through the Assisted Legal Instruction. He is a former officer of the Business Advisory Committee on Bankruptcy Rules of the Judicial Confer- Law Section of the North Carolina Bar Association. He has also ence of the United States. served on the board of the North Carolina Medical Foundation Jacoby is an elected member of the American Law Institute and and is currently a member of the board of visitors of the North the National Bankruptcy Conference, through which she remains Carolina Children’s Hospital, which he previously served as chair active in legislative and policy matters. She is currently working for two years. on a book about the bankruptcy courts.

CAROLINA LAW 9 FACULTY & RESEARCH

Carolina Law Welcomes Six New Faculty UNC School of Law welcomed six new faculty members effective July 1, 2012. “We are truly delighted to have hired such a talented group of new faculty at UNC School of Law this year,” John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74, dean and Wade Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law, says. “We’ll have a new faculty member teaching evidence, as well as two new clinical professors and a new group of full-time faculty in the Writing and Learning Resources Center, who will teach legal writing, oral advocacy and research. “The bedrock of an excellent legal education is a great faculty, and these new teachers will bring added distinction to Carolina Law.”

Laura Collins Britton, clinical Alexa Z. Chew, Robert J. Smith, assistant assistant professor of law, is a clinical assistant professor of law, was previously a graduate of Mars Hill professor of law, visiting assistant professor at DePaul University College of Law, where he taught criminal law College and Northeastern previously worked as an and criminal procedure. He University School of Law. In adjunct professor teaching served as the legal and policy addition to clerkships in legal research and writing at advisor to Harvard Law Boston, Argentina and KERSHAW KATHERINE in School’s Charles Hamilton Malaysia, Britton practiced Buies Creek, N.C. She also served as a law clerk Houston Institute and consumer law at Pisgah for the Honorable Richard A. Elmore at the

STEVE EXUM represented death row Legal Services in Asheville North Carolina Court of Appeals. Prior to that, inmates as a staff attorney at for seven years prior to joining the faculty at she was an associate at Bingham McCutchen

STEVE EXUM the Louisiana Capital Appeals UNC. She is a frequent presenter on issues LLP, an international practice focused on global Project. Smith earned his law pertaining to foreclosure defense, debt financial services firms and Fortune 100 degree from Harvard Law School and his collection and unfair business practices. She companies. Chew received her law degree from bachelor’s degree from the University of designed and supervises the new Consumer in 2005 and her bachelor’s California, Berkeley. He teaches criminal law this Financial Transactions Clinic. Britton lives in degree from Princeton University in 2001. She fall and evidence in the spring. Chapel Hill with her husband, son and teaches in the Research, Reasoning, Writing, menagerie of rescued pets. and Advocacy program. Erika K. Wilson, Suzanne M. Chester ’95, clinical Amanda S. assistant professor assistant professor of law, began “Mandy” of law, was previously a clinical law professor at the working at the Domestic Violence and Family Hitchcock ’07, Law Unit at the Raleigh Office of Legal Aid in University of Baltimore clinical assistant School of Law in Maryland 1998 where she and the staff attorneys she professor of law, supervised represented STEVE EXUM for three years, where she practiced in Washington, numerous victims of taught the Civil Advocacy

KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE D.C., both with Goodwin domestic violence in Law Clinic. Prior to that, she worked as an Procter LLP and as an assistant federal public high-conflict family law associate at Arnold and Porter LLP, where she defender. She also worked at two Washington cases. In addition, Chester litigated complex commercial cases involving law schools, first coordinating pro bono law had a general practice antitrust, copyright infringement and product services and then teaching writing as an adjunct. including housing law. She liability issues. Wilson also served as the George Hitchcock graduated with highest honors from N. Lindsay Fellow for the non-profit Lawyer’s STEVE EXUM taught trial advocacy skills at UNC School of Law in 2007 and received her the National Institute for Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, where undergraduate degree in Afro-American studies Trial Advocacy program. She currently serves she litigated school desegregation cases. She from UNC in 1998. Prior to law school, she on the board of The Child Advocate, a received her law degree from the University of worked as a policy associate at the Center for non-profit agency providing legal representa- California at Los Angeles in 2003 and her Teaching Quality in Carrboro, N.C., and spent tion for children. After graduating from UNC bachelor’s degree cum laude in public policy two years teaching 7th grade in Durham Public School of Law in 1995, Chester spent three from the University of Southern California in Schools. She teaches in the Research, years at North Carolina Prisoner Legal Services, 2000. She teaches civil lawyering process and Reasoning, Writing, and Advocacy program. focusing on post-conviction litigation and a civil legal clinic. class action lawsuit to improve medical care for women in prison. She supervises students in the civil litigation, immigration and juvenile justice clinics, and hopes to teach a family law/ children’s rights clinic in the future.

10 FALL-WINTER 2012 School Bestows Faculty Awards UNC School of Law presented awards to distinguished faculty on April 24 in a ceremony at the Paul J. Rizzo Conference Center.

’ DONN YOUNG

From left, Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74, Joseph John Kalo, S. Elizabeth Gibson ’76, Maxine Eichner, Charles Edward Daye, Richard S. Saver, Ruth Ann McKinney ’88.

The Robert G. Byrd Award for Excellence Law of leading texts on civil procedure, federal Center for Civil Rights. This award is conferred and Creativity in Teaching was awarded to courts and evidence. This award honors a faculty annually on the basis of service performed S. Elizabeth Gibson ’76, Burton Craige member’s distinguished law journal article. within the two years prior to the year in which Professor of Law. The Byrd Award is named for the award is given. A faculty member is honored Robert G. Byrd, an alumnus of the school who The Van Hecke-Wettach Award was awarded for exemplary public service, measured by the served as a member of the faculty from 1963 to Maxine Eichner, Reef C. Ivey II Professor time, effort and creativity devoted to service, as until 2004, and as dean from 1974-1979. of Law, for her book, “The Supportive State: well as the impact on the community. Families, Government, and America’s Political The James H. Chadbourn Award for Excellence Ideals,” published by Oxford University Press. Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ‘74 also recog- in Scholarship was awarded to Richard Every second year, the law school awards nized the service of faculty members Ruth S. Saver, Professor of Law, for his article, the Van Hecke-Wettach Award — named for Ann McKinney ’88, clinical professor of law “Health Care Reform’s Wild Card: The Uncertain Carolina Law deans of the 1930s and 1940s and former assistant dean for legal writing and Effectiveness of Comparative Effectiveness respectively, Maurice van Hecke and Robert academic success, who retired in January after Research,” published in the University of Wettach — for the completion of an outstanding 20 years at the law school; and Joseph John Pennsylvania Law Review. The Chadbourn Award book or monograph. Kalo, Graham Kenan Professor of Law, who has is named for James H. Chadbourn, editor-in-chief been at Carolina Law since 1972 and retired of the North Carolina Law Review from 1930- The Outstanding Service Award was awarded July 1 after 40 years of faculty service. 1931, a member of the Carolina Law faculty from to Charles Edward Daye, Henry Brandis 1931-1936, and later a co-author at Harvard Professor of Law and Deputy Director of the

CAROLINA LAW 11 CENTER NEWS

UNC Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity Concludes Truth and Hope Poverty Tour fter a journey of more than 2,000 miles through 27 communi- Aties across North Carolina, organizers of the Truth and Hope Poverty Tour convened a summit on Aug. 11 in Rocky Mount, N.C., to report on their conversations with thousands of North Carolinians from across the state. “The scourge of poverty is North Carolina’s greatest sin,” said Gene R. Nichol, director of the Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity, at the summit. “This tour has taught that our people are sick, literally, to death, of it. They’re ready to fight back.” The Truth and Hope Poverty Tour in North Carolina was a collaboration between the UNC Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity; the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP; the North Carolina Justice Center; AARP of North Carolina; and the Institute for Civic Engagement and Social Change at North Carolina Central University. According to Nichol, former dean Center director Gene R. Nichol with N.C. NAACP president William Barber. of UNC School of Law and now Boyd Tinsley Distinguished Professor of Law, the tour was organized to “put a face on the traveled to “Little” Washington, Roper, Elizabeth City, Winton, thousands of families and individuals in the state struggling to get Scotland Neck, Rocky Mount, Greenville, Goldsboro, Faison, by — to get beyond the statistics and hear first-person stories from Wilmington, Navassa, Royal Oaks, Red Springs, Fayetteville, North Carolinians directly affected by poverty and hardship.” Greensboro, Wentworth, Mount Airy, Salisbury, East Spencer, The tour ran from January through May and consisted of three Hickory, Hendersonville, Charlotte and Monroe. At every stop, legs: traveling first to northeastern North Carolina, then the tour participants reported, state residents told stories of loss, southeast, and finally covering portions of the western part of the resilience, struggle and pride. state. Tour participants met with residents, local officials and service The tour was covered widely by state media and garnered providers to listen to their points of view and experiences, connect national attention in the Los Angeles Times and on CBS and policy with real life, and spur frank discussion. CNBC, among other outlets. A documentary, “Truth and Hope: “The accounts of people out of work, homeless, with no health The Challenge to Address Poverty in Our Communities,” was care, and utility bills that were impossible to pay were numerous,” produced from footage of the tour. Nichol says. For more information about the tour, visit www.law.unc.edu/ Participants on the tour — including members from the centers/poverty. organizing partners, foundation leaders, activists and students —

High Poverty Counties in North Carolina

Source: Small Area Estimates of Income and Poverty, 2010, US Census Bureau

12 FALL-WINTER 2012 Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Rules in Favor of Pitt County, N.C., Coalition for Educating Black Children n May 7, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an This appeal challenged the school system’s 2011-2012 assignment Oopinion in Everett et al. v. Pitt County Board of Education plan, which assigned students based on school proximity, building affirming the efforts of African American parents and community capacity, academic proficiency and an impact area of 14 out of 36 members to stop Pitt County Schools in North Carolina from schools. Rejecting a plan that the coalition argued would yield the implementing a student reassignment plan that allegedly increases best diversity and academic proficiency, Pitt County Schools selected racial separation. The UNC Center for Civil Rights represented a plan that increased or ignored racial isolation in several schools, the Pitt Coalition for Educating Black Children and several parents and opened a brand new school, Lakeforest Elementary, as a high- of children attending Pitt County Schools. minority, low performing school. In April 2011, the plaintiffs filed a The court affirmed what decades of desegregation law, from motion to stop the reassignment, arguing it would violate the active Brown vs. Board of Education to the present, requires: that a school desegregation order and in fact resegregate students. In August 2011, district under a desegregation order has an affirmative duty to the district court refused to hold the district to its affirmative duty to eliminate the vestiges of racial discrimination, and until the court complete the integration of its schools and denied the motion. The rules that the district has fulfilled that duty, current racial disparities plaintiffs appealed to the Fourth Circuit. are presumed to be the result of the past unconstitutional conduct,” The Court of Appeals held that the district court “committed legal says Mark Dorosin ’94, managing attorney at the center. error by failing to apply, and requiring the school board to rebut, a In the 1960s, a federal district court found that Pitt County presumption that any racial disparities in the 2011-2012 assignment was operating a racially segregated school system in violation of plan resulted from the board’s prior unconstitutional conduct in students’ constitutional rights. The court approved desegregation operating a racially segregated school district before 1970.” The plans designed to “eliminate the racial identity” of the schools court affirmed that school board retained its affirmative duty to and administratively closed the case. In 2008, the case was “take whatever steps might be necessary to convert to a unitary reactivated when a group of white parents filed a complaint with system,” and emphasized that “in the decades following the issuance the Department of Justice, claiming that the school system’s use of Teel and Edwards [the original desegregation orders in the case], of race in its 2006-2007 student assignment policy discriminated the school board has yet to discharge this obligation and demonstrate against their children. The center then intervened on behalf of to the district court its attainment of unitary status.” The court also the coalition and African American parents. In 2009, the parties noted that the district court’s request for the parties to submit “a reached a settlement agreement approving the race-conscious report” is “not at all a clear indication that the district court will fully assignment policy. At that time, the district court found that and finally resolve the issue of unitary status in December 2012.” the district still had not remedied the residual effects of race The Court of Appeals vacated the district court’s August 2011 discrimination and ordered the parties to work together toward decision and remanded the case for “reconsideration and, if appro- “eliminating the vestiges of past discrimination to the extent priate, further development of the record,” with instruction that practicable.” The parties were also ordered to report back to the the burden is on the school board to establish that the 2011-2012 court in December 2012. assignment plan moves the district toward unitary status. CLEAR Participates in U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development in Brazil he Center for Law, Environment, Adaptation and Resources States. He recently published a related article in the Florida Law T(CLEAR) at UNC School of Law participated in the “civil Review entitled “Adapting Laws for a Changing World: A Systemic society” events at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Approach to Climate Change Adaptation.” Development (UNCSD) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, last June. CLEAR co-sponsored a half-day program in Rio on “Climate The Rio+20 conference marked the 20th anniversary of the Change Adaptation, Law and Sustainability,” in collaboration with United Nations Conference on Environment and Development. the Environmental Law Institute and the American Society of Thousands of participants, including world leaders, policy makers, International Law. The event addressed the importance of law and non-governmental organizations and other stakeholders, repre- legal systems for effective climate change adaptation. Flatt spoke senting more than 190 U.N. member nations, attended. at the program, along with Carl Bruch of the Environmental Law CLEAR director and Thomas F. and Elizabeth Taft Distinguished Institute and representatives from the United Nations Environment Professor in Environmental Law Victor B. Flatt spoke at the civil Programme. society side events during Rio+20. These events were not part The goal of Rio+20 was to secure an international commitment of the official negotiations; rather they provided a forum for the to sustainable development. The discussions centered on two main discussion and examination of critical issues surrounding the themes: a green economy in the context of sustainable develop- conference. ment and poverty eradication; and an institutional framework for Flatt discussed the role of law in climate change adaptation at the sustainable development. Rio+20 focused on seven priority issues: Worldwide Conference of Environmental Jurists. Flatt’s scholarship jobs, energy, cities, food, water, oceans and disasters. Participants at Carolina Law focuses on the legislative and regulatory mecha- reviewed past progress in these areas and considered examples of nisms needed to address climate change adaptation in the United successful sustainable development to fuel their discussions.

CAROLINA LAW 13 HISTORY

The Kenan Legacy at Carolina Law BY CHRISTOPHER E. NELSON

he family name “Kenan” is intertwined with the history of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Tfamily’s ties to the University and its philanthropic support date to the 18th century and stand iconically today as Kenan Memorial Stadium, Kenan Auditorium, the Kenan-Flagler Business School, and numerous professorships and scholarships funded by bequests of family members. The law school has also benefitted from the largesse of the Kenan family. As Dean John Charles Boger ’74 recently said, “No series of gifts ever proved more transformative than those made in the mid-1960s by Sarah Graham Kenan.” On Nov. 26, 1962, according to the North Carolina Law Review’s “The University of North Carolina School of Law: A Sesquicen- tennial History, 1845-1995,” the law school announced the “first installment of what would be a $150,000 gift (the largest in law school history at the time)” to endow the Graham Kenan Fund. This fund would provide income supplements to distinguished faculty Graham Kenan members, who would be designated Graham Kenan Professors of Images courtesy of UNC’s North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, Law. The largest gift the law school received prior to the Kenan gift Library Digital Projects and Southern Historical Collection. was a bequest of $10,000 from the estate of Thomas Ruffin. Gifts to Carolina from Sarah Graham Kenan (1876-1968), the The law school’s Graham Kenan Professors of Law have included widow of Carolina Law alumnus Graham Kenan, in addition to the late Daniel H. Pollitt; professors emeriti, Arnold Loewy and the law school’s Graham Kenan Professorships endowment, include Paul Haskell; and current professors Joseph Kalo and Melissa Jacoby. scholarships in her name in the law, medical and business schools; Loewy, Haskell, Kalo and Jacoby all attended the unveiling ceremony. the Graham Kenan Fellowship in Philosophy; and money to build the Graham Kenan Courtroom, which is familiar to most Carolina Graham Kenan: A Legacy Unknown Law alumni. Graham Kenan was born to James Graham Kenan and Annie In 1975, the members and directors of The Sarah Graham Elizabeth Hill Kenan of Kenansville in 1883. He married Sarah Kenan Foundation decided that the Foundation’s objectives Graham Kenan, who was his cousin, in December 1912; the could best be accomplished “by distributing the Foundation’s couple had no children. Sarah was a sister of William R. Kenan Jr. assets to qualified donees and dissolving the Foundation.” The (1872-1965), whose discovery of acetylene gas led to the creation UNC Law Foundation, along with a select group of other of Union Carbide. Another sister, Mary Lily Kenan (1867-1917), organizations, was selected to receive distributions. Subsequent married Henry Morrison Flagler, who co-founded the Standard distributions from the Foundation created The Sarah Graham Oil Co. with John D. Rockefeller. Flagler also founded what Kenan Fund, an endowed fund within the UNC Law Founda- eventually became known as the Flagler System Companies, made tion. Years of careful investing and prudent spending have allowed up of railroad, shipping, real estate, hotel and utility companies that the Fund to become the largest component of the UNC Law developed Florida’s east coast. Foundation. As of June 30, 2012, the market value of the Fund Graham Kenan had a distinguished career at Carolina. As an was more than $8 million. Since the initial distributions, more undergraduate, he belonged to the Phi Society and the Order of than 100 students have received scholarship support from the the Gimghouls. After graduating in 1904 he attended law school, Sarah Graham Kenan Fund. where he was president of his class. Boger detailed the legacy of these gifts last January during the Graham Kenan was 36 years old and about to take over as the reinstallation of the recently restored portrait of Graham Kenan, attorney for the Flagler System Companies in New York when he originally donated by Sarah Graham Kenan, in the courtroom died in 1920, taken by the final wave of the 1918-1919 influenza bearing his name. The courtroom hosts the law school’s trial epidemic. The epidemic claimed the lives of 13,644 North Caro- advocacy classes, moot court competitions, and visiting sessions of lina citizens, including UNC President Edward Kidder Graham, the North Carolina judicial branch and the U.S. Court of Appeals who had led the University since 1915. for the Fourth Circuit — “real cases, important cases, witnessed by Had he lived, it can easily be assumed that Graham Kenan our young law students,” Boger said. would have prospered along with the rest of his family and been

14 FALL-WINTER 2012 as generous to the school he loved. Thomas S. “Tom” Kenan III, the former chairman of the board of Kenan Transport who lives in Chapel Hill, recalled in a recent interview the fondness “Uncle Graham” had for Carolina philosophy professor Henry Horace Williams (1858-1940). He said their friendship led Sarah Graham Kenan to establish the Graham Kenan Fellowship in Philosophy with a $25,000 gift shortly after her husband’s death. Williams served as Kenan Professor of philosophy from 1921 to 1935. Building the Kenan Legacy In addition to that gift and the additional professorships she established toward the end of her life, Sarah Graham Kenan donated the funds that endowed the University’s Southern Historical Collection, which today holds more than 20 million manuscripts documenting 300 years of the American South. Tom Kenan recalled the family story of a 1929 visit to Sarah by Carolina history professor J.G. de Roulhac Hamilton, who was working to create a library for the University’s collection of letters, diaries and ALLISON REID plantation records from the South. Tom Kenan and Ruth Cox with the recently restored Much of Sarah Graham’s money came from her sister, Mary Lily portrait of Graham Kenan in the courtroom. Kenan Flagler Bingham, who died in 1917. In her will, Mary Lily left the University $2 million to establish the Kenan Foundation for to the Kenan-Flagler Business School, which was named for the Distinguished Professors to pay competitive salaries to outstanding benefactor families in 1991. professors. The gift, which was the largest ever made to the Univer- Tom Kenan, who later became a trustee of the William R. Kenan sity at the time, was made in honor of her father and two uncles, all Jr. Charitable Trust, said the trust now concentrates its efforts on University graduates. The foundation funds 31 professorships today. North Carolina (William R. Kenan’s Jr. birthplace), New York (his But the bulk of her estate was divided between sisters Sarah Graham summer residence and the place he died) and St. Augustine, Florida and Jessie Wise, and their brother, William R. Kenan Jr. William R. (his winter home, where the Flagler system general offices were went to work for his brother-in-law Henry Flagler as a vice president located), but that the trust was meant to be a national foundation of his Florida hotels and railroads, and became president of and is moving in that direction. The trust is set to broaden the Flagler’s business interests after his death in 1913. topical scope of its work, too, from a focus on education to William R. Kenan Jr., an 1894 Carolina graduate, gave the support for human services that work to alleviate poverty. University $300,000 in 1925 to build Kenan Memorial Funds will help “disadvantaged people in any capacity,” Stadium in honor of his parents. He gave an additional Kenan said, “their health, their lack of food, lack of $26,000 to build the Kenan field house. The former Caro- housing, lack of education.” lina football player also established the University’s first It was Tom Kenan who noticed that the courtroom athletic scholarships. Perhaps he is more widely known portrait of Graham Kenan by noted artist August Benziger for the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust, which was was in need of restoration and urged action. Ruth Cox, a formed with the bulk of his estate and funds more than restorer in Durham formerly associated with the Metropolitan 100 professorships at 56 colleges and universities across the Museum of Art in New York, was commissioned for the country, according to Tom Kenan, including 15 William R. work of restoring the painting and, through it, Graham Sarah Graham Kenan Kenan Jr. professorships at Carolina. The law school boasts Kenan’s lasting legacy to Carolina Law. three faculty members with William R. Kenan Jr. professorships: John V. “The benefactors who fortified this fine law school in the 1960s Orth, William P. Marshall and John M. Conley. can again see the symbolic emblem of their generous gift as they Frank Hawkins Kenan (1912-1996), William R. Kenan Jr.’s intended it,” Boger said at the portrait unveiling. “The gift of Sarah cousin and a 1935 Carolina graduate, was a trustee of the William Graham Kenan and the memory of her dear husband, Graham R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust and oversaw its donations to the Kenan, are reflected in this fine portrait, which has been restored University, including the first $5 million gift for the professorships and returned to its rightful place in the School of Law, overseeing that bear its name. During the Bicentennial Campaign (1989 this school’s continuing mission to prepare young lawyers to to 1995), in which the University raised $440 million, Frank become leaders and counselors of generations yet to come.” Hawkins Kenan, the Charitable Trust and other family members Boger lifted his glass in a salute joined by everyone gathered gave a total of almost $31 million to the University. During the around the Kenan portrait, “Cheers, Uncle Graham.” Carolina First Campaign, which concluded in 2007 and was the fifth-largest drive among completed campaigns in the history of U.S. higher education, the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust and related Kenan entities and family members were the drive’s Editor’s Note: Read about the latest gift from the William R. most generous donors, committing nearly $70 million toward the Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust to the law school in honor of the $2.38 billion raised. The Kenan family gifts included $21 million late William C. Friday ’48 on page 45.

CAROLINA LAW 15 ALUMNI PROFILES

SPOTLIGHT ON UNC Alumni Working in Intellectual Property

From Silicon Valley to Washington, D.C.; from high tech to the federal government, UNC School of Law’s alumni are leaders in the varied and growing field of intellectual property law.

His work at Kilpatrick Stockton Wilson White ’06 caught the attention of Google It’s a long way from the small, rural town executives, who recruited him last of Andrews, S.C., to Mountain View, Calif., year. “As an IP lawyer, and a patent in the heart of Silicon Valley. Wilson White lawyer in particular, when you have an ‘06 has traversed that path with a stop opportunity to work for Google, it’s along the way at UNC School of Law. something that you have to entertain,” White, who joined Google Inc. in White says. September 2011 as an associate litigation At Google, his primary job is counsel, says it was a childhood dream to managing the company’s patent litiga- be a lawyer. “Being the voice for others tion. He also advises the company’s has always been a drive of mine,” he says. business units on other intellectual White says that it “makes him smile” to property and litigation-related issues. see the robust intellectual property (IP) “It’s exciting to be in the epicenter program that has been developed at his of technology and technology alma mater. “There were two aspects of innovation,” White says. “Google is the curriculum and culture at Carolina an awesome place to work; you have Law that stood out to me,” he says. “The people from all over the world who curriculum really teaches students how to are really focused on innovating and be problem solvers: how to think through being at their creative peak.” tough problems and design solutions.” He says the environment at Google The culture of service at Carolina Law encourages fun and innovation. “This is also important to White. “Whether you is not common at law firms, but there are going to pursue a career in public TOPHER SIMON is a ping pong table in the lobby of my Wilson White ’06 interest or the private sector, the law building at Google,” White says. He school places a huge focus on serving says that “Googlers” enjoy a number of others,” he says. “It was instilled in me that you are obligated to perks, including cafeterias serving food from all over the world. do some good in the world with this law degree.” White says that it is an exciting time to be involved in patent law. To that end, Wilson was active doing pro bono work, serving in “In September 2011, the America Invents Act — the first major leadership roles with the Georgia State Bar and on the boards of two overhaul of patent law in 50 years — became law,” he says. “This nonprofit organizations, while spending four years in Atlanta as an will really change the landscape of patent law, and there are many associate in Kilpatrick Stockton’s IP practice. He joined the firm after issues that have to be worked out over the next 10 years or so.” spending his first year out of law school as a clerk for Judge Alexander “I encourage people to pursue this area of the law not only Williams Jr. on the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland. because it can be lucrative but because there is a need,” he says.

16 FALL-WINTER 2012 “I read recently that in terms of “I’m involved with examination of innovation in the STEM (science, trademark applications, maintenance technology, engineering, and math- of trademark registrations, budget ematics) disciplines, the U.S. is ranked planning and execution, and outreach,” No. 27 out of 29 developed countries. she says. “It’s exciting to work for the We have a major need for intellectual federal government because you can property lawyers to address policy change things that you think need to and legal issues that impact this, and be fixed.” to help create an environment for She encourages young lawyers to businesses and individual inventors to work for the government and is enthusi- thrive, bringing our country back to astic about the “hardworking, bright and preeminence in terms of innovation.” devoted” employees in her organization. Grateful to Carolina Law for putting “We’re still hiring, which is exciting him on the path to a career he loves, in this economy,” Denison says. “The Wilson gives back to his alma mater. salaries can’t compete (with private “I make myself available to mentor practice), but the reward is clearly there: prospective students, current law the work is fascinating, it’s possible to students and those who are earlier in improve the system, and you provide a their careers than I am,” he says. “I have valuable service to fellow citizens.” also committed to giving back to the Denison is glad that Carolina Law law school financially. I think that’s very encourages students to go into the important if we are going to continue public service sector. She says that her to have these robust programs and put Carolina Law education prepared her out the nation’s best lawyers.” Mary Boney Denison ’81 well for her career in both the public and private worlds. “The Socratic Mary Boney Denison ’81 method helped me learn to think on my feet,” she says. “I was on Mary Boney Denison ’81 has spent her career working in the North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial trademark law, so it didn’t surprise her that one of her daughter’s Regulation, which helped significantly with my writing. It also first words was “Visa.” “Trademarks, which are product identifiers, opened up my mind to international considerations in the law, play a very important role in everybody’s life,” Denison says. “We something that’s important in trademark law.” all recognize them; even children know trademarks by the time She stays involved with Carolina Law because of her apprecia- they are able to talk.” tion for her education. “UNC gave me the opportunity to earn Although she didn’t plan on a career in trademark law when she a good living and to have a fascinating career, and I want to give graduated from UNC School of Law, Denison became fascinated something back,” she says. She served on the Carolina Law Alumni by the field after working on trademark infringement counter- feiting cases during her time as an associate in a New York law firm. “Trademark decisions are rarely black and white, which makes “Trademark decisions are rarely black the work fun,” she says. “An added bonus is that trademark lawyers and white, which makes the work fun.” are known to be congenial and creative.” — MARY BONEY DENISON Denison went on to a 30-year career in private practice, including 15 years as a founding partner at the firm of Manelli Denison & Selter PLLC in Washington, D.C. “In my practice, I worked as an Association Board of Directors from 2006 to 2011, focusing advocate,” she says. “I was developing global trademark strategy, primarily on fundraising. She supports the school financially, hosts clearing trademarks, filing opposition and cancellation proceedings, events in D.C. for visiting alumni, and hired a summer intern from and providing strategic advice to clients,” which were primarily small Carolina Law this year. This past spring, she spoke at the law school and medium-sized businesses in a wide range of fields. about working at the USPTO. In June 2011, Denison left private practice to become the While Denison loved working in the private sector, she says that deputy commissioner for trademark operations at the U.S. it’s a privilege to be in public service. “I know that it may sound Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), where she is in charge hokey, but I think that every day USPTO employees are helping of operations, overseeing the work of more than 500 employees. people to build their American dream,” she says. —Michele Lynn

Editor’s Note: Are you working in the field of IP law? We’d like to hear from you! Email us at [email protected].

CAROLINA LAW 17 ALUMNI NEWS

N.C. Bar Association Conference, Awards and Elections 114th North Carolina Bar Association Annual Meeting held in Wilmington, June 21-24, 2012

Six lawyers, including three Carolina Law alumni, were inducted into the NCBA’s General Practice Hall of Fame. From left H. Houston Groome ’64 of Lenoir, Charles H. “Charlie” McGirt ’61 of Lexington, J. Harold Seagle ’77 of Asheville.

2012 Pro Bono Public Service Awards Citizen Tommy Holderness ’90 of Robinson Bradshaw & Lawyer Hinson of Charlotte received the William L. Thorp Awards Award, presented annually since 1984 by the NCBA. Dumont Clarke Pender McElroy The award recognizes the Pro Bono Attorney of the Year and was named in memory of Bill Thorp, a founder of Legal Services of North Carolina, in 2002. Holderness provides leadership within his firm for pro bono assistance to many needy families in the community.

The Younger Lawyer Pro Bono Service Mark Rudow Frank A. Whitney David Woodard Award, presented annually by the Young Lawyers Division, was presented to Sherry Everett ’08 Recipients of the NCBA 2012 Citizen Lawyer Award of Durham at the annual meeting of the Young include Dumont Clarke IV ’78 of Charlotte, Pender Lawyers Division. Everett has been recognized for McElroy ’68 of Charlotte, Marc Rudow ’79 of Asheville, her critical role establishing Judge Frank A. Whitney ’87 of Charlotte and David and overseeing the Butner Woodard ’76 of Wilson. The award recognizes lawyers who Federal Prison Reentry provide exemplary public service to their communities. Assistance Program, which assists federal inmates with the resolution of unre- solved pre-incarceration PHOTOS BY RUSSELL RAWLINGS, COURTESY OF THE charges in the state court system. NORTH CAROLINA BAR ASSOCIATION (NCBA)

18 FALL-WINTER 2012 the WILLIAM HORN BATTLE DINNER

he annual William Horn Battle Dinner was held in April Tat the Carolina Inn, honoring the 642 donors who contributed $1,000 and more during fiscal years 2011 and 2012. Dean Jack Boger ’74 welcomed and thanked the group of alumni and friends for their support of Carolina Law.

PHOTOS BY JIM STRATFORD

Dean Jack Boger ’74 and Jennifer Boger

LouAnn Vaughn, Norma Cowell and Marion Cowell ’64

Jerry Parnell ’73 and Cookie Parnell, Bob Wicker ’69 and Judy Wicker, Bill Spry ’72 and Penelope Spry Tom Steele ’87 and Kim Steele, Arty Bolick ’94 and Cheryl Bolick

UNC Clef Hangers serenade guests during the William Horn Battle Dinner Judge Rickye McKoy-Mitchell ’84 and Professor Lissa Broome

CAROLINA LAW 19 ALUMNI NEWS

with the Classes of ’62, ’67, ’72, ’77, ’82, ’87, ’92, ’97, ’02, ’07 and the Golden Tar Heels

PHOTOS BY JIM STRATFORD AND DONN YOUNG

Members of the Class of 1962 are inducted as members of the Golden Tar Heels. Professor Mandy Hitchcock ’07 with Bryson and Lareena Phillips ‘07 and From left, Calvin White Chesson, Vincent Paul Collura, Thomas Monroe Starnes, John M. Jennifer Garcia ’07. Rosenberg, Joe McLeod, H. Dolph Berry, Richard Chapman Pattisall, T. LaFontine Odom.

Golf tournament sponsor Johnston Allison & Hord team members Trey Lindley ’03, Marty White ’96, Darrell Shealy ’82, Joseph Shealy.

Members of the Class of 1992 celebrate their 20th reunion.

Kat Currin ’07 and Kobie Morris with Students and alumni gather at the class reunion celebrations. From left, Dean Boger ’74 with Rameses. Drew Slonne ’07 at Bluegrass and BBQ. Britney Peguese 1L, Taiyyaba Qureshi ’10, Leslie Puzo 1L, Larry Linney ’85, Dianna Houenou 1L. 20 FALL-WINTER 2012 UNC School of Law Honors Distinguished Alumni NASCAR on agreement to construct and operate the NASCAR Hall of Fame and negotiated the contract between the city and the Democratic National Committee for the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte.

VASILIKI ALIS “CELIA” PISTOLIS ’82 Celia Pistolis is the assistant director of advocacy and compliance with Legal Aid of North Carolina Inc. (LANC), a statewide nonprofit law firm providing free legal services to low income persons. Pistolis manages the overall legal advocacy of Legal Aid and coordinates its appellate advocacy with other senior attorneys. Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 with alumni award recipients James E. Delany ’73, Vasiliki Alis “Celia” Pistolis has planned and executed Pistolis ‘82, Wilson L. White ‘06 and DeWitt F. “Mac” McCarley ’77. statewide poverty law conferences that brought together legal aid and pro bono NC School of Law honored four exceptional alumni at the attorneys for training. Annually, she school’s annual Law Alumni Weekend Leadership and Awards oversees LANC’s Martin Luther King U Jr. Summer Internship Program. In her Dinner, Thursday, Sept. 27. administrative role, Pistolis addresses The Distinguished Alumni Award was presented to three alumni: compliance issues and develops policies and procedures to ensure that the LANC James E. Delany ’73, DeWitt F. “Mac” McCarley ’77 and Vasiliki Alis staff complies with various regulations “Celia” Pistolis ’82. The school also presented its Outstanding Recent and other funding requirements while Graduate Award to Wilson L. White ’06. still providing critical legal services to low income clients. “It is a singular honor to be nominated by one’s peers and then to be selected by the Law Alumni Association Executive Committee for these awards,” says John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74, dean and Wade Outstanding Recent Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law. “We have many distinguished alumni, and it is a delight to recognize some of our finest during Graduate Award Law Alumni Weekend.” WILSON WHITE ’06 Wilson White joined Google Inc. in September 2011 as an associate litigation Distinguished Alumni Award Recipients counsel. At Google, White’s primary job is to manage the company’s patent litigation. JAMES E. DELANY ’73 DEWITT F. “MAC” He also advises the company’s business James Delany is commissioner of the Big MCCARLEY ’77 units on other intellectual property and Ten Conference, the United States’ oldest Mac McCarley is a partner with Parker Poe litigation related issues. Previously, White Division I college athletic conference. The Big Adams & Bernstein and practices in the was an associate in Kilpatrick Stockton’s IP Ten’s fifth commissioner since its founding Government & Public Policy Group. Prior to practice in Atlanta. in 1896, Delany enters his 24th year in that joining Parker Poe, McCarley served as city While in Atlanta, White was heavily role. While at the Big Ten, Delany has guided attorney for Charlotte, N.C., for 17 years. Previ- involved in public service, as an active the conference through expansion twice, and ously, he served as city attorney for the City of board member with the Partnership Against the creation of the Big Ten Network, reaching Greenville, N.C., for 14 years and as assistant Domestic Violence, a mentor for high millions of homes. general counsel for the North Carolina League school students and an alumni leader in Upon graduation from UNC School of Law of Municipalities in Raleigh. his national fraternity. As a student UNC in 1973, Delany served as staff attorney with School of Law, White served as president In his role as Charlotte city attorney, the N.C. General Assembly and then joined of the Black Law Students Association, as McCarley negotiated the return of an NBA the staff at the N.C. Attorney General’s office. an editorial board member of the North franchise to Charlotte and the subsequent He began his career in intercollegiate athletics Carolina Law Review and as a member arena construction and operating agreements as an investigator for the NCAA enforcement of the Broun Trial Team. He was also an between the team and the City. He also department in 1975. In 1979 he was named inductee of the UNC School of Law James led the city negotiation team working with commissioner of the Ohio Valley Conference. E. and Carolyn B. Davis Society in 2006.

CAROLINA LAW 21 .www//001111 ©101101011110 00110011$0101 010 001111101 1010111100011Intellectual Subtitle here????0011010101011 1100011001101 Property 01010©001111 1011010111100 0110011010101

0 001111101101BY ANGELA SPIVEY 0111100011001ILLUSTRATION BY ROY SCOTT | FACULTY PHOTOS BY STEVE EXUM 1010101010101f you have ever posted or watched a video on YouTube, then videos. But it stopped short an amicus brief that Deborah Gerhardt, assistant professor of of requiring that sites like Ilaw at Carolina, co-wrote in April 2011 might affect you more YouTube police copyright 1110001100110than you think. violations. The case is still in The brief commented on the $1 billion suit that entertainment the courts. giant Viacom brought against YouTube for copyright infringement. The ongoing YouTube 101010 0011111YouTube had removed individual videos when Viacom notified case is one example of them that they violated copyright, but the suit contended that how intellectual property YouTube had a responsibility to police postings on its own. Scholars (IP) law has become 0110101111000had argued that if Viacom won, it would effectively shut down sites important to nearly like YouTube because the threat of future suits would be too great. everyone as technology In the brief, Gerhardt and a colleague argued on behalf of the and science have infiltrated 1100110101010Consumer Electronics Association that YouTube has many legal uses. our everyday lives. Have Deborah Gerhardt “Copyright law doesn’t clearly permit people to post recent clips you ever looked up your from Comedy Central, like your favorite bits from ‘The Daily Show.’ genealogy online or donated blood for use in a research study? 0011111011010But if the whole service is shut down, when my son has a violin Those activities are affected by IP law, too. As the U.S. economy has recital, I can’t put up the video for my mom to see,” Gerhardt says. shifted to focus on information as its main commodity, the legal 1111000110011“The question really was, ‘is YouTube like Napster?’ Is the whole mechanisms used to protect information — traditionally patents, concept illegal? My point was no, it’s not.” Gerhardt also noted copyrights and trademarks — have become increasingly important. in the brief that before YouTube, the entertainment industry had At many law schools around the country, IP law has moved from 01010101010predicted that the gramophone 00 and the VCR would kill its business the periphery toward the core of the curriculum. UNC School of model. But the opposite happened. The industry figured out how to Law’s IP faculty members work in areas as diverse as the field itself. profit in a big way from the new technology — and it’s likely to be The people they help certainly include inventors or artists who 1111101101011the same with YouTube, she argued. need to protect their latest creation, but they’re increasingly likely An appeals court in April 2012 overturned an earlier court’s to be students or other community members who never thought ruling that the case be thrown out, saying that a lower court should IP law would apply to them. 1100011001101review whether YouTube willfully ignored postings of copyrighted

010100011111022 FALL-WINTER 2012 1101011110001 :http_search_$ 2.0 As the U.S. economy has shifted to focus on information as its main commodity, the legal mechanisms used to protect information — traditionally patents, copyrights and trademarks — have become increasingly important.

COPYRIGHT IN THE DIGITAL AGE In the early 1990s, long before anyone dreamed of YouTube, Laura have the technology to scan a whole volume of something and put N. “Lolly” Gasaway was turning her skeptical colleagues on to it on a website. That’s when it became clear how big of an issue email. For years, Gasaway, Paul B. Eaton Distinguished Professor of this would become,” Gasaway says. Even small-town archives, such Law, was one of the few legal scholars writing about the ramifica- as historical societies, may encounter these questions when they tions of the Internet for libraries. Gasaway became fascinated want to post letters, diaries or photographs online. “That access is with copyright issues in 1972. She was a librarian just graduating great for people doing genealogy research, but it’s not clear under from law school, and the Supreme Court was hearing a case in copyright law how to post them online without infringing the which a medical journal publisher was suing the National Library rights of the copyright holder,” Gasaway says. of Medicine for photocopying journal articles and distributing Copyright laws are so complicated that even libraries and librar- single copies to scientists and researchers who requested them. “I ians have trouble understanding them and applying them, Gasaway thought, ‘oh, my gosh, this is a huge issue,’” Gasaway says. has noted. She co-chaired a study group reviewing copyright law The extent to which users of copyrighted material have the right for libraries in the digital age, and she has clarified these issues for to print copies for personal use has never been fully determined, librarians in columns she wrote for a library journal called Against the and the Internet has Grain. Those columns will be collected in a book to be published by only complicated things. Purdue University Press this fall. The Web enables both If users can’t make sense of copyright law, they will ignore it, libraries and average users Gasaway has written. “When the Copyright Act of 1976 was to distribute written created, no one really foresaw everything that was going to or recorded material at happen,” she says, noting that ultimately, the copyright statutes lightning speed, but that need to be modernized for the digital age. doesn’t mean they have the How that modernization will happen and how much users may legal right to do so. benefit is uncertain, says David Ardia, assistant professor of law. “At first we were putting “Historically, we have not seen changes to copyright law that have just the card catalog online; been to the benefit of the user,” he says. Large companies that there was no problem with benefit from expanded copyrights have well-established lobbying

that. But then we began to Laura N. “Lolly” Gasaway organizations and deep resources.

CAROLINA LAW 23 Intellectual Property 2.0

“One of the goals of into privacy law, as he studied how computer science is directly current copyright law is influencing privacy on the social media site Facebook. to provide an incentive for Chin collaborated with Anne Klinefelter, director of the law people to create and share library and associate professor of law, to examine how well Facebook their works of authorship, protects the privacy of users when reporting audience-reach data to and we assume that strong advertisers. The main reason that Facebook makes money is that it copyright protections will, repurposes information that users have shared with their friends so overall, promote the sharing that advertisers can target ads. Some legal scholars have feared that of information and benefit no amount of privacy protection is enough for such sites, because society,” Ardia says. But the even if data provided to advertisers were stripped of names and other Internet has caused more obvious identifying information, someone could combine that data people to question those with information from other online databases to identify individuals, David Ardia traditional assumptions. then engage in identify theft, harassment or other harmful activities. “There is a debate going on Chin and Klinefelter found that the picture may not be so bleak. all over the world about whether the current approach to copyright They visited Facebook’s advertising site, submitted requests to target is the best for society. I don’t have the answer, but the conversation is various groups with their ads (such as 16- to 25-year-olds who like an important one.” Lady Gaga), then analyzed the demographic data they received. They The UNC Center for Media Law and Policy, which Ardia found that Facebook has likely programmed its database system to co-directs, contributed to that conversation by hosting a public panel behave similarly regardless of whether any particular individual is in the spring of 2012 that brought together copyright and cyber represented in the database, effectively producing anonymity, Chin law experts to explore whether there is a way to address large-scale reported in an article published in the North Carolina Law Review. online copyright and trademark infringement while still protecting Specifically, when Facebook’s database reported the number of free speech and allowing for innovation on the Internet. The people in any given demographic in their target group, the numbers student organization Carolina Intellectual Property Law Association were rounded, included further inaccuracies, and occasionally co-hosted the event. varied. “They are adding in some statistical noise,” Chin says. “We found that Facebook appears to be giving advertisers rounded, noisy numbers that are close enough for commercial purposes, but >The main reason that Facebook still ensure some privacy against an attacker who might try to use this advertising interface to discern private information about a >makes money is that it particular person. So they’ve been quietly protecting >repurposes information that users in this way.” To gather the data, the team used >users have shared with their software written by third- >friends so that advertisers year UNC law student and research assistant Andrew >can target ads. Gregory. In addition to its 2012 publication in the www North Carolina Law Review, the article was presented at Another goal Ardia has for the Center for Media Law and Policy Carolina Law as part of the is to engage computer scientists and other professionals who may not 2011 North Carolina Law realize that their work has implications for privacy law. “Computer Andrew Chin Review symposium, “Social scientists are creating the virtual spaces in which we all increasingly Networks and the Law.” live,” Ardia says. As lines have blurred, privacy law is ever more considered part of IP law. IS YOUR DNA A TRADE SECRET? In addition to the information we share on the Internet, all of us PRIVACY PROTECTION ON FACEBOOK walk around with a set of unique data — our genetic code. John Andrew Chin, associate professor of law, has witnessed this Conley, William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor of Law, contends that blurring of lines firsthand. He is a computer scientist and your genetic information has value that you may want to protect, mathematician who has studied what makes software patentable, just as Coca-Cola guards its soft-drink recipe. and how computers changed the inner workings of the U.S. Conley worked with faculty at the Center for Genomics and Patent Office. But one of his most recent projects had him delving Society at the UNC School of Medicine to interview people who

24 FALL-WINTER 2012 >Rather than handing over had donated their DNA via blood sample, to be > permission, participants used in a genomic biobank, which stores DNA for later >would make their DNA available research. The researchers wanted to find out how >only under certain conditions, just well the participants understood the consent >as Coca-Cola provides its formula form they had signed. >only to bottlers that sign strict “In theory, the consent document informs the >confidentiality agreements. subject and provides John Conley information on the basis of which the subject gives consent,” Conley says. “But most people offered by the Department of Music, she met Joseph Terrell, a senior we talked to didn’t pay much attention to the document one way music studies and cultural studies major who makes up one-third or another, and they didn’t understand it. Often they specifically of a folk trio called Mipso. “She gave a great lecture, and she was misunderstood it.” The best example — money. Most research so cool, I felt comfortable raising my hand and asking a specific projects compensate participants with a small sum, such as $10 or question,” Terrell says. He had written a song that responds to and $20. But the Institutional Review Boards, which approve research references some verses from a famous song. But Terrell was unsure involving people, have very specific rules regarding how researchers about the copyright issues of releasing it. “Deborah Gerhardt was can talk about money. “You can’t tell subjects that it’s an induce- helpful and friendly. It wasn’t just her as a lawyer telling us what ment or a benefit. That is kind of silly, because the large majority to do; she was really interested in the question, and she helped us of people we interviewed said the money was the single biggest think it through and figure out the best decision for us,” Terrell reason for joining the study,” Conley says. In addition, many of says. “It was definitely a learning experience.” Mipso released its the participants believed the researchers would contact them if first full-length album in April. Gerhardt helps other budding something alarming was found in their DNA. entrepreneurs this way through NC LEAP (North Carolina Lawyers As they wrote in an April 2011 article published in the journal for Entrepreneurs Assistance Project), which provides free legal help Science, Conley and colleagues have created a vision for a new way of to low-wealth entrepreneurs to help them get started. obtaining informed consent from research participants — the “trade Another student received more traditional mentoring from secret” model. Rather than handing over blanket permission, partici- Gerhardt. Cassie Anderson, a 2011 UNC School of Law graduate pants would make their DNA available only under certain condi- who is an associate at Greenberg Traurig LLP in Atlanta, does tions, just as Coca-Cola provides its formula only to bottlers that sign entertainment transactional work, which she calls her dream job. strict confidentiality agreements. Maybe participants would grant To land the position, it took a lot of networking, as well as the skills permission for their DNA to be used only on a case-by-case basis, or she learned at UNC. “I know for a fact I would not be where I am only if they were notified of the research results. “Our model treats today without my experience at UNC specifically,” Anderson says. “I the subjects as autonomous agents who know what’s good for them, made a conscious decision to go to UNC over more entertainment and it eliminates this fiction about money,” Conley says. Conley’s and IP-focused schools out West, because I knew I could create collaborators on this work include Allison Dobson ’09, now a patent the same experience for myself at a school with a better overall lawyer in Winston-Salem, N.C., as well as Ryan Gladden ’12, and program,” she says. After graduation, Anderson accepted the first Arlene Davis, an adjunct professor at UNC School of Law. offer she received in Atlanta, where she had planned to move with As genetics advances start to infiltrate medicine, informed research her husband. The job was in defense litigation, not entertainment. consent is an issue that affects nearly everyone. ”Cancer therapy, “I felt I had to get that first position and take it from there,” she says. for example, is in many instances custom tailored to the patient’s “In my interview for my current job, I was able to draw on so many genetics,” Conley says. “How well medicine works as it moves in of my specific experiences from UNC, such as the project I worked that direction will depend on the quality of genetic research. Part of on as a research assistant for Deborah Gerhardt, the journal article ensuring quality is getting access to subjects in an ethical way that I wrote for JOLT [the North Carolina Journal of Law and Technology], minimizes harm.” and the drafting experience I got in my IP Strategies and Transac- tions course, to show that I knew the subject matter very well and was passionate about it,” Anderson says. “Deborah Gerhardt was a MENTORING STUDENTS AT UNC constant source of support, inspiration and advocacy for me. I would SCHOOL OF LAW AND BEYOND definitely recommend that every student find at least one faculty Since IP law touches so many fields, sometimes law faculty members or staff member and really get to know them. These people have influence students who have never set foot in a law classroom. For amazing experiences to draw from, are brilliant legal scholars, and instance, when Gerhardt spoke to a music entrepreneurship class are so eager to see their students succeed.”

CAROLINA LAW 25 BY NANCY OATES New Upper-Level Courses Give Hands-On Experience

Judith Welch Wegner, Burton Craige Professor of Law, and John Sarratt (right), from Harris, Winfield, Sarratt & Hodges, LLP in Raleigh, N.C., conduct the “Becoming a Professional: Exploring Skills and Transition into Practice” course by video- conferencing with the University of Cincinnati College of Law. The course is designed to give students experience in different types of professional environments to prepare them for their careers

DONN YOUNG as lawyers. ou don’t learn to The intensive courses require quite a bit of extra work for the swim by reading a faculty, so the law school set aside money for two types of planning Ybook. UNC School grants — a $5,000 grant to create a new course and teach it, and of Law professors and admin- a $2,000 grant to organize a course that an adjunct would teach. istrators apply that aphorism Each new course will be offered at least twice and won’t replace to preparing students to excel one of the core courses the faculty member teaches annually. in legal careers. Over the past John Conley, William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor of Law, created a year, the law school has added transition-to-practice course in biotechnology and life sciences law, six new transition-to-practice which he taught last spring. He covered issues for the prospective courses to the 16 already on patent lawyers in the class, then taught the business and financial

STEVE EXUM its roster, and has another five side necessary for biotech startup activity, and finished up with Robert Mosteller ready to go for the coming biomedical research and clinical ethics. He brought in practitioners year. This summer, the school offered planning grants to entice and other experts, including Arlene Davis of the medical school faculty to develop even more. faculty, who also is an adjunct at the law school, to provide basic Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Robert Mosteller, who also literacy in the subjects, then put together practical problems to is the J. Dickson Phillips Distinguished Professor of Law, pushed for work on. the innovative hands-on courses that give second- and third-year By semester’s end, students emerged with experience drafting law students an opportunity to work through the practical aspects and negotiating a term sheet, the first step in a venture capital of the legal concepts they’ve learned. investment; writing an opinion letter about the validity of a patent; “Each of these courses adds to the preparation our students and conducting an ethics consultation with doctors and hospital receive to become practicing lawyers,” Mosteller says. “The courses administrators, such as how to respond to parents divided over have to stay small — about 15 students in each — but with 25 whether to authorize a new treatment for their child. courses, we can serve hundreds of students. The scale and sophis- “In class, the students were constantly working like lawyers — tication of these courses, and bringing in so many of our finest researching, drafting documents, presenting findings to clients,” scholars and teachers, is what makes us unique.” Conley says. “The practical side is extremely complicated. Giving

26 FALL-WINTER 2012 STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM John Conley Melissa Jacoby Donald Hornstein

students a head start in translating their classroom knowledge into into two law firms and presented himself as the client, then “gave practical knowledge was a real advantage to them.” them very little guidance, just as in the real world.” His assign- Immediate feedback from the professor and outside experts ments dealt with the merger of Duke Energy and Progress Energy, sharpened students’ abilities, making them more attractive in the the dispute between Rex Hospital and WakeMed, and obtaining job market. permission for a clinic to acquire a kidney dialysis machine. “Employers are being a lot more demanding with respect to When he didn’t provide enough information, he told his students, students’ applied skills,” Conley says. “They want new graduates to “Sue me,” and the faux law firms worked collaboratively to file a be able to do paying work on complicated problems at a high level court complaint. right away. In a tight job market, the better case you can make that “It was typical of the way real-life lawyers are paid real-life you can do that, the better off you are.” dollars all the time,” Hornstein says. “The transition-to-practice “Employers … want new graduates to be able to do paying work on complicated problems at a high level right away.” — JOHN CONLEY

In Graham Kenan Professor of Law Melissa Jacoby’s business courses teach them skills that are transportable across fields, not just bankruptcy course last spring, students wrote substantive client in the area of their specialty.” letters and cash collateral motions, created a wiki of terms impor- Baird’s experience taught him to ask the right questions and tant for commercial and corporate reorganization lawyers, and choose the best arguments to advance first. generated materials for an hour’s worth of class discussion, among “Your job is to get the client where he wants to be as soon as other projects. Jacoby aimed to give her students feedback similar possible to reduce his cost and his time worrying about legal situa- to what they might receive in the professional world. tions,” Baird says. “In our legal and economic environment, clients “I’m hoping the advanced concepts will stick with them are much more interested in lawyers adding value than adding more because they had to take a higher level of responsibility for more legal layers. It’s that balancing act you don’t get on a normal absorbing them,” she says. law school exam.” In his first week in Aubrey L. Brooks Professor of Law Donald Traditionally, law schools rely on school law clinics and summer Hornstein’s Regulation and Deregulation class last spring, Andrew associate positions to give students practical experience. But clinics Baird, now a 3L, had to gather everything that a client would need don’t have room for every student, and the school has no control to obtain a license to start a taxi company in Chapel Hill. over what students learn in summer internships. “We had to work through and think of the logistical and “Medical schools don’t tell their students to work at hospitals practical realities as much as the pure legal theory,” Baird says. during the summer,” Hornstein says. “They organize rounds. “Knowing the rules is great; learning how to apply them is better.” Law firms are under pressure not to bill clients for on-the-job Throughout the class, Hornstein used situations from the news training of associates. Doing more of the training in law school that would require people to hire a lawyer. He divided his class is long overdue.”

CAROLINA LAW 27 Donor Profile

Kathrine R. Everett Charitable Trust gives $2.7 Million to UNC School of Law

n a transformational gift to UNC Carolina Law,” says UNC School of Law “These new funds will allow our Chan- School of Law, Greg Everett, a trustee Dean John Charles Boger ’74. “We are cellors’ Scholars to visit the law offices and Iof the Kathrine R. Everett Charitable deeply grateful to alumna Kathrine R. courtrooms where our alumni are doing Trust, delivered two checks totaling $2.7 Everett ’20, whose life as a pioneer in the interesting work,” says Richard Myers ’98, million to the law school on June 21. legal profession continues in her death associate dean for student affairs and George The first gift of $2.4 million will create through her generous philanthropy.” R. Ward Associate Professor of Law, who an endowment to fund at least six full- A second complementary gift of was also a Chancellors’ Scholar at Carolina tuition Everett Chancellors’ Scholarships $300,000 will establish the Everett Law. “We are excited about the prospect for highly promising law students from Enrichment Fund, which will provide of integrating our new scholars with our North Carolina. programmatic support of all students who alumni base. The value of this kind of real- “With this gift, the Everett family are recipients of Chancellors’ Scholarships world experience can’t be measured.” continues its remarkable generosity to at UNC School of Law. Everett was a respected North Carolina lawyer whose career spanned seven “I know how much her alma mater meant to my decades. She was one of the first women to graduate from UNC School of Law, where grandmother, and it is an honor to support student she ranked at the head of her class, and she scholarships in her name.” —GREG EVERETT earned the top score on the state bar exam in 1920. She was the first woman to argue and win a case before the N.C. Supreme Court. She practiced law until age 97, and at her death in 1992, she designated UNC School of Law and Duke Law – on whose faculty her son Judge Robinson O. Everett taught for 54 years – as beneficiaries of a major portion of her estate. “The Kathrine R. Everett Chari- table Testamentary Trust is proud to support UNC School of Law and its mission to serve the people of North Carolina,” Greg Everett said. “I know how much her alma mater meant to my grandmother, and it is an honor to support student schol- arships in her name. She would be thrilled to know her gifts will serve to attract the very best and brightest students from the state to UNC School of Law and will contribute to the education of the state’s future KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE lawyers and leaders.” Brandon Wright, assistant dean for advancement, with Greg Everett, grandson of Kathrine R. Everett, and Emma Claire Everett, great-granddaughter.

28 FALL-WINTER 2012 Honor Roll of Donors Each year, UNC School of Law publishes an Honor Roll of Donors to recognize and thank those who support our school. This past fiscal year, the school raised $11,688,537 in cash and commitments, with alumni participation at 22.5 percent. The Law Annual Fund raised a total of $736,665. If you have questions about the Honor Roll of Donors or about making your gift for fiscal year 2013, please contact the office of advancement at 919.445.0166.

LIFETIME WILLIAM HORN KATHRINE R. EVERETT SOCIETY BATTLE SOCIETY The Everett Society honors donors of documented Lifetime William Horn Battle Society members planned gifts to benefit the UNC School have contributed $100,000 or more to the school of Law Foundation, Inc. over the course of their lifetime.

Anonymous Hurdle H. Lea Jr. Anonymous David F. Kirby ’77 and William P. Aycock II ’70 Henry Clyde Lomax ’58 Evelyn D. Kirby William Brantley Aycock ’48 Tammy A. Bouchelle ’01 Robert N. Maitland II ’97 Dee Ann LeRoy Susan Fox Beischer H. Chalk Broughton Jr. ’88 William F. Maready ’58 Thomas Ashe Lockhart ’51 Ann Huidekoper Brown Virginia G. Carboy Patricia E. McDonald ’79 Brian Mark Clarkson ’87 Sallie Boyle Phillips Brian M. Clarkson ’87 David McDaniel Moore II ’69 Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64 and Jane Porter Laurence A. Cobb ’58 and W. Gary Ogburn ’82 Edna Faye Pugh Cobb Norma H. Cowell Anthony Eden Rand ’64 Anne Shea Ransdell ’58 Fred B. Davenport Jr. ’77 James Lee Davis ’71 Walter Rand III ’64 James D. Renger ’65 James L. Davis ’71 Arthur St. Clair DeBerry ’57 Frances Fulk Rufty Ernest C. Roessler Arthur St. Clair DeBerry ’57 Dan Donahue ’68 and Kay Donahue Basil L. Sherrill ’50 and Cathy M. Rudisill ’84 Virginia A. Sherrill Mr. and Mrs. William Edward John R. Edwards ’77 Elmore Jr. (Mr. Elmore ’48) Basil L. Sherrill ’50 and Sherwood H. Smith, Jr. ’60 and Virginia Ashcraft Sherrill Tom D. Efird ’64 and Anne W. Efird Lisa F. Garrison Eve H. Smith John E. Skvarla III ’73 A. Richard Golub ’67 Paul Hardin David Anderson Stockton ’82 Marianne K. Smythe ’74 and Wade H. Hargrove Jr. ’65 and William Edgar Graham Jr. ’56 Dr. Robert Barry Smythe Hon. Thomas Fleming Taft ’72 Sandra D. Hargrove Ambassador C. Boyden Gray ’68 William W. Staton Jr. Boyd C. Tinsley John R. Haworth ’50 Paul Burroughs Hall and Robin J. Stinson ’84 Louise Carden Hall Hon. Willis Padgett Whichard ’65 Charles Woodson Holderness Lindsay C. Warren Jr. ’51 Paul L. Whitfield ’62 H. Gray Hutchison Jr. ’73 William Archibald Johnson ’44 Richard N. Watson ’74 Florence Bagley Witt Richard E. Jenkins ’75 David F. Kirby ’77 Paul L. Whitfield ’62

1845 SOCIETY WILLIAM Mrs. Ted Johnson, DEAN’S CLUB Charles E. Elrod Jr. ’67 James Yancey Kerr II ’92 Brian Mark Clarkson ’87 BRANTLEY in memory of Anonymous Jason Doughton Evans ’01 and Robert Watkins King Jr. ’59 Edward “Ted” G. Johnson Mary Lindsay Weatherly Evans Paul Burroughs Hall and AYCOCK Mark Eldridge Anderson ’88 Clifton Brooks Knight Jr. ’74 Louise Carden Hall Hurshell Halton Keener ’53 and Mary Eileen Flanagan William Casto Evans ’65 Stephen Edwin Lewis ’91 and Dee Ann LeRoy SOCIETY Christopher Allen Kreiner ’94 and Anderson Todd Hammond Eveson ’00 and Mary Ellen Huckabee ’91 Virginia Michelle Garris Erin Dancy Eveson ’00 F. Lee Liebolt Jr. ’66 Viola Sherice Nivens Anonymous Thomas Wesley Anderson ’79 Henry Clyde Lomax ’58 and M. Ann Anderson ’81 Edward Smoot Finley Jr. ’74 and Craig Taylor Lynch ’86 and Hon. Richard Yates Stevens ’74 Michael Robert Abel ’70 Virginia Doughton Finley Mitzi Cline Lynch Jeffrey Alan Allred ’80 Harry Dickson Madonna ’67 Gail Constance Arneke ’75 Hon. Willis Padgett Whichard ’65 Walter D. Fisher Jr. ’86 and Gardner Howard Altman Jr. ’71 John Burchfield McMillan ’67 and Thomas Edward Austin Jr. ’88 Maria M. Lynch ’79 and Michele S. Fisher Jerome Rex Eatman Jr. ’82 E. William Bates II ’79 Angelyn Stokes McMillan E. Osborne Ayscue Jr. ’60 Benjamin Hugh Flowe Jr. ’81 Robert Nelson Maitland II ’97 VAN HECKE- Dean John Charles Boger ’74 and Christine Cecchetti Mumma ’98 Suzanne Rose Begnoche ’06 and Andrew Henderson Foster ’00 Jennifer Brackenbury Boger Robert Bryan Norris ’76 Pavan Reddy Franklin Edwin Martin ’67 WETTACH James Wright Galbraith ’76 Kent John McCready ’84 Tracy Schaefer Calder ’84 John Peter O’Hale ’75 and Judy Bolz Robert William Glatz ’91 SOCIETY Fred Blount Davenport Jr. ’77 Claudia Ward O’Hale J. Melvin Bowen ’72 Dan Johnson McLamb ’74 and Jack N. Goodman ’75 Barbara “Bonnie” Brandon Anonymous James Lee Davis ’71 Graydon O. Pleasants Jr. and Elizabeth Jean Bower ’01 Beth Robyn Fleishman ’77 and Hon. K. Edward Greene ’69 and Weyher ’77 Brett Matthew Berry ’94 Michael A. DeMayo ’90 Margaret B. Scales Richard Thell Boyette ’77 Joan Powell Greene J. Dickson McLean IV ’89 and Jeffrey Eugene Gray ’86 Robert Leon Edwards ’65 Elizabeth Leight Quick ’74, Doris Roach Bray ’66 Robbie Wall Hambright Nina Dooley McLean and Kathryn Oakes Edwards in memory of Wade Hampton Hargrove Jr. ’65 Irvin White Hankins III ’75 and Margaret Louise Milroy ’84 Richard Lee Farley ’87 and Robert L. Quick Stephen Cook Brissette ’82 and Sandra Dunaway Hargrove Barbara Brewer Hankins W. G. Champion Mitchell ’75 Cynthia Ryan Farley James Dietrich Renger ’65 LeAnn Nease Brown ’84 and William Dean Johnson ’82 and Thomas Drake Garlitz ’78 Charles Gordon Brown George V. Hanna III ’68 and David McDaniel Moore II ’69 Dr. Sally Cunningham Johnson Richard A. Simpson ’77 N. Jay Gould ’64 Leonor Ortiz Childers ’00 and Deb Hanna Miriam McIntire Nisbet ’77 Sherwood Hubbard Smith Jr. ’60 Karen Ann Popp ’85 Timothy Richard Graves ’85 Dr. Jeffrey William Childers ’03 Emmett Boney Haywood ’82 Henry Gary Pannell Gustavus Adolphus Puryear IV and Cathey Stricker and Eve Hargrave Smith Alfred Eugene Cleveland III ’59 J. Gill Holland Jr. ’91 and John Garrett Parker ’76 and ’93 and Jennifer Herndon Graves ’85 Rochelle Berman Stoddard Orville Dillard Coward Jr. ’79 and Augusta Brown Holland Dr. Helen Nethercutt Parker Puryear ’95 Cecil Webster Harrison Jr. ’73 Hon. Ben Fortune Tennille ’71 Carolyn Lloyd Coward ’99 Mary Elizabeth Holt ’04 Hon. Sarah Elizabeth Parker ’69 William Dennie Spry Jr. ’72 and Hon. Mary Price Taylor Harrison ’85 Scott Padgett Vaughn ’86 and G. Stephen Diab ’90 and Martin Luther Holton III ’82 Charles Roberts Phillips ’83 and Penelope Orr Spry Jerry Hartzell ’77 and Liz Hartzell LouAnn Compere Vaughn Margaret Gorman Diab Bruce Wayne Huggins Sr. ’70 and Diane C. Phillips Robert Edwin Thackston ’87 John Donald Hawkins ’80 and Richard J. C. Wilmot-Smith Ann Terrell Dorsett ’89 Jayne Brisson Huggins Hon. J. Dickson Phillips Jr. ’48 Sherron Hawkins William Kinsland Edwards ’88 M. Keith Kapp ’79 and and Jean Nunalee Phillips Sandra Leigh Johnson ’75 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Elmore Jr. Chancy McLean Kapp Sallie Boyle Phillips (Mr. Elmore ’48) Thomas S. Kenan III Kathy Laughlin Pilkington ’89

CAROLINA LAW 29 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

William Francis Potts Jr. ’78 Tyler Bartlett Dempsey ’99 James Egan Kaiser ’92 S. Reid Russell III ’80 Rebecca Jane Bosley ’77 Michael Everett Kelly ’74 L. Richardson Preyer Jr. and Mary Boney Denison ’81 and René A. Kathawala ’96 Joseph F. X. Savona ’69 Jean Winborne Boyles ’73 Vaiden Pearson Kendrick ’69 Marilyn Jacobs Preyer John R. Clark III David Fulghum Kirby ’77 and James Simpson Schenck IV ’82 F. Bryan Brice Jr. ’90 Fred Kieser Jr. ’66 Lawrence Eric Rifken ’88 and Christopher Wade Derrick ’89 Evelyn Debnam Kirby and Dr. Anna Pittman Schenck John Decker Bristow ’00 and Moses Kim ’04 and Sonja Janette Rifken ’89 Robert Lyman Dewey ’82 and James Webb Kiser ’59 and Elizabeth Davenport Scott ’86 Margaret Duncan Bristow Diana Sarju Kim ’07 Edgar Mayo Roach Jr. ’74 and Jean Harris Dewey Nancy Howard Kiser Peter William Sheil ’81 Christopher G. Browning Jr. ’86 Irene Patrice King ’04 Deborah Day Roach Alan Samuel Diamond ’92 and Mindy Roz Kornberg ’85 Raleigh Alexander Shoemaker ’70 Andrew William Broy ’01 Richard Charles Komson ’74 Larry Edward Robbins ’79 Laura Swanson Diamond Christopher Charles Kupec ’80 Reginald Tyrone Shuford ’91, Norman Deane Brunson ’73 Eric Alan Koontz ’99 Michael Lindsay Robinson ’80 Arnita Maria Dula ’01 H. Martin Lancaster ’67 in memory of Jonathan E. Buchan and Mark David Kotwick ’89 S. Leigh Rodenbough IV ’80 and Garth Kleber Dunklin ’88 Stephen Frederick Lapham ’95 Ms. Barbara Shuford Suzette Buchan Philip David Lambeth ’72 Melanie Hyatt Rodenbough ’80 William T. Dymond Jr. ’85 and S. Luke Largess ’90 John Reeves Sloan ’90 and Bruce Alan Buckley ’81 and Karen J. Lamp ’83 Jan Wall Romine Jennifer Davis Dymond Stephen Fredericks Later ’94 Louise Folger Sloan Sarah Alice Crowder ’81 Hon. David Andrew Leech ’78 Pres. Thomas Warren Ross Sr. ’75 Tom David Efird ’64 and Haynes Pell Lea ’82 and James Byron Snow III ’82 Hon. Frank William Bullock Jr. ’63 Stuart Samuel Lipton ’79 and Susan Donaldson Ross Anne Wrightson Efird and Frances Haywood Bullock Elizabeth Craig Lea Julian Raymond Sparrow Jr. ’81 George Lester Little Jr. ’67 John Daniel Shugrue ’87 Cynthia Weaver Eller ’82 and Mary Ireland Sparrow ’81 Anderson Drew Caperton ’97 and T. Bentley Leonard ’73 J. Lee Lloyd ’86 Dana Edward Simpson ’00 and Brian Preston Evans ’75 Hon. John Baker Lewis Jr. ’61 Lee Anthony Spinks ’80 Julie Circio Caperton Stephanie Mansur Simpson Stephen Allen Capps David William Long ’67 and Donna Jean Turner Eyster ’00 John Gray Lewis Jr. ’58 Horace Edney Stacy Jr. ’56 and Nina M. Long Marianne Koral Smythe ’74 and Joan Purser Stacy Barbara Ragland Christy ’83 James Graham Farris Jr. ’89 William Henry Lewis Jr. ’69 Ronald Scott Lovelace ’02 and Dr. Robert Barry Smythe C. Thomas Steele Jr. ’87 and Anthony Charles Ciriaco ’83 and Jami Jackson Farris ’99 Angela Marie Liu ’09 Jennifer Lovelace Robin Jayne Stinson ’84 Kimberly Hindman Steele Martha Hammonds Ciriaco Ray Simpson Farris Jr. ’67 and Gary Mitchell London ’79 Karen Lynn Luchka ’06 John Adam Stoker ’97 Garrett Allen Stone ’82 Hon. Giles Robertson Clark ’58 Cydne Wright Farris Sandra Goddard Malkin ’88 Robert Doughton Lyerly Jr. ’80 Thomas Sadler Stukes ’74 and Thomas Richard Suher ’74 and James Harry Clarke ’79 and William Porter Farthing Jr. ’74 and Barry Dean Mann ’82 and Laura Sutton Macken ’91 Martha Taylor Stukes, Linda Farthing Eileen A. Armenante Eleanore Ewbank Clarke Ashlie Downum Mann Richard Layne Magee ’83 in memory of Kyle James Fiet ’07 and John Martin Taladay ’89 Louise M. Clifford John Weatherly Mason ’73 Jan Allen Marks ’82 Robert L. Quick Rebeca Jones Fiet Barbara Tatge John Craig Cloninger ’81 Hon. Charles K. McCotter Jr. ’71 Edward Adger Marshall ’02 and Peter Charles Visceglia ’83 Michael Perkins Flanagan ’71 Gigliola Breda Tatge William T. Council ’69 William Henry McCullough ’59 Hadley Peer Marshall Edwin Jasper Walker Jr. ’69 Joel Lawrence Fleishman ’59 Arles Allen Taylor Jr. ’94 and Burton Craige ’80 and Robert Ambrose Wicker ’69 Bryan Andrew McGann ’01 and Heather Barkley Craige David Martin ’97 Katherine McArthur Floyd ’79 Joanna Davis McGann Dorothy Mae Taylor Richard McKenzie Wiggins ’58 William Harvey Dalton ’65 Neill Gregory McBryde ’69 and Hon. Franklin Edward W. Clay McGehee ’71 Diane Jackson Taylor, Debbie Kay Wright ’83 in memory of Roy Walton Davis Jr. ’55 Margaret McPherson McBryde, Freeman Jr. ’70 Hon. Rickye McKoy-Mitchell ’84 in memory of Robert Ellis Zaytoun ’75 Joseph Nicholas Froehlich ’96 Ferebee Taylor Arthur St Clair DeBerry ’57 and Rick Mitchell and in honor of Robert L. Quick Paul Roland Zurawski ’92 Lisa Frye Garrison ’94 and Daniel Lyndon Deuterman ’91 Robert Savage McLean ’90 and Louise Taylor, Randall Davis McClanahan ’92 Aaron Franklin Garrison Sinclair McLean and Dawne Talbert Deuterman Sarah T. Peterson and Louis Whittier Doherty ’90 Peter James McGrath Jr. ’86 and Prof. Laura N. Gasaway Michael Gerard McQueeney ’83 Martha G. Taylor Merrie Dorman McGrath ’86 WILLIAM Joseph Samuel Dowdy ’03 William Ward Gerrans ’82 Roy H. Michaux Jr. ’65 and Dr. Michael William Taylor ’78 John Victor McIntosh ’79 HORN BATTLE James Nathan Duggins Jr. ’68 Prof. Elizabeth Gibson ’76 and Beverly Bunn Michaux Richard McCrary Taylor Jr. ’72 Laura Daniel McKenna Joe Wesley Earnhardt ’04 SOCIETY Prof. Robert Paul Mosteller Gary Michael Miller ’95 Stephen Mason Thomas ’70 and Floyd Bixler McKissick ’07 Joseph Watkins Eason ’77 Patricia Lewandowski Gillen ’86 George John Miller ’53 Barbara Watry Thomas John Aycock McLendon Jr. ’87 Anonymous Elisha W. Erb ’64 Lisa Jeffrey Gilliland ’83 Hon. Burley Bayard Mitchell Jr. ’69, R. Scott Tobin ’81 and George Washington Miller Jr. ’57 J. Allen Adams ’54 W. Harrell Everett Jr. ’62 and Jay Michael Goffman ’83 in memory of Victoria Hensley Tobin ’81 and Eula Hux Miller Michelle Grace Adams ’99 Lila Smith Everett William Edgar Graham Jr. ’56 Robert L. Quick Emin Toro ’00 John Klauminzer Molen ’78 Hon. Lance M. Africk ’75 Thomas Fee Bernard Gray and Steven Montague Mitchell ’84 Brian Patrick Troutman ’09 Louis Angelo Monti ’00 and G. Irvin Aldridge ’59 Elizabeth Diane Ferrill ’06 Anne Howell Gray, James William Mizgala ’94 and Ed Turlington ’82 Karen Jacobs Monti ’00 David Neal Allen ’80 and in memory of Dawn M. Mizgala Sheldon Leslie Fogel ’65 Kimberly Pendley Allen William Matthew Uptegrove ’03 Joseph Kevin Moore ’98 Robert L. Quick Sunny May Montas ’00 Debra Lee Foster ’82 Evan Appel ’84 George Randolph Uzzell Jr. John Robert Morgan ’73 and Michael Donwell Gunter ’72, R. Donavon Munford Jr. ’79 P. Douglas Freedle ’65 Richard Lawrence Vanore Sr. ’73 Elizabeth McGregor Morgan E. Kent Auberry ’82, in memory of David Bruce Freedman ’82 John Hartman Murchison ’02 and and Sylvia Wallace Vanore John Robert Moyer ’90 in memory of Robert L. Quick Meredith Burdette Murchison Hon. Henry Ell Frye ’59 Debra J. Whited Ty Michael Votaw ’87 C. Eugene Murphy Jr. ’73 Frances Hunt Hall ’59 Hon. Margaret Hackett Murphy ’73 W. Scott Fuller ’92 and Henry Curtis Babb ’69 Dean Anthony Warren ’85 Romallus Olga Murphy* ’56 Robert D. Hancock ’01 and Hon. Jimmy Laird Myers ’91 Monica Witterholt Fuller Philip Augustine Baddour Jr. ’67 Warren William Wegner and Sara A. Needles ’10 Christian W. Hancock ’01 Prof. Richard Ernest Myers ’98 H. Haiko Geratz ’93 Jonathan Adams Barrett ’78 Prof. Judith W. Wegner David J. Neill ’04 and Nan E. Hannah Karen Nash-Goetz ’88 Michael Hannibal Godwin ’74 Hon. F. Gordon Battle ’58 James Patrick West ’91 Jamie Winslow Neill Richard Banner Hart ’59 Peyton Ring Neal Jr. ’65 Richard S. Gottlieb ’96 and Frank Mebane Bell Jr. ’63 Wilson Lamark White ’06 Prof. Gene R. Nichol Jr. Dan McCord Hartzog ’73 and Michael Nedzbala ’87 Jennifer Ely Gottlieb ’96 Marc David Bishop ’84 Christine Josine Wichers ’92 Christopher Michael Northrop ’89 Patricia Trojan Hartzog Susan Kelly Nichols ’81 Dr. Leslie Thomas Grab ’08 and H. Arthur Bolick II ’94 John Thornton Wilson ’99 Joshua David Grab Patricia Wiggins Nystrom ’82 James Taylor Hedrick Jr. and Thomas Craig Nord ’69 Tammy Alice Bouchelle ’01 Laura Hedrick Michael L. Wilson ’96 and James Nolan Greene III ’99 H. Patrick Oglesby ’77 and Thomas Lloyd Norris Jr. ’60 and Anna F. Schleunes ’98 Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby ’77 Anne Rea Bowden ’89 Richard Charles Henn Jr. ’98 Jane Snyder Norris Jonathan Allen Greene ’06 and Dr. S. Gregory Boyd ’04 Alison Bunch Hershewe ’94 Thad Floyd Woody ’01 Laura M. Greene Thomas Lawrence Owsley ’69 Charlotte Louise Offerdahl ’88 Kenneth Ray Wooten ’79 and Leslie Vial Owsley William Clarence Brewer Jr. ’56 Deborah Lowder and Grady W. Burgin Samuel Grist Grimes ’68 A. Cotten Wright ’01 Henry Newton Patterson Jr. ’66 Prof. Kenneth S. Broun and Hildebran-Bachofen ’84 Tashery Otway-Smithers Alison Ann Grounds ’01 O. Richard Wright Jr. ’71 and Jane Smith Patterson Marjorie Broun Ahren Christian Hoffman ’05 and Raymond Eugene Owens Jr. ’78 Judith Kratz Guibert ’92 James Matthew Yates Jr. ’79 Seldon Elijah Patty ’68 Ann Huidekoper Brown Chienlan Hsu Hoffman and Sara Wyche Higgins ’95 S. Revelle Gwyn ’77 and Marlena Severin Yates C. Jones Perry Jr. ’84 Charles Palmer Brown ’66 Michael Hollenbach ’82 E. Fitzgerald “Jerry” Parnell III ’73 Chad Dwight Hansen ’04 John Eugene Bugg ’70 C. Mark Holt ’87 C. Allen York ’04 and J. Stillman Hanson ’01 J. Dickson Phillips III ’79 Carl Norris Patterson Jr. ’76 Heather Poole York Charles Thelen Plambeck ’86 David James Burge ’85 Troy Clifton Homesley Jr. ’58 Hunter Andrew Payne ’95 and Debbie Weston Harden ’82, J. Matthew Calloway ’05 Maya Abeni Hoover, Ann Yaeger Young ’75 and in memory of Charles Francis Powers III ’66 Mary Thornton Payne ’95 Dr. Michael Harrill Young A. Britt Canady ’96 and in memory of Robert L. Quick Robert Francis Price ’74 Gary Vergil Perko ’90 and Kenneth Ray Youngblood ’55 Rebecca Cross Canady Jacquetta D. Johnson Ann Pickett Perko ’90 Hon. Jane Harper ’80 Alice Carmichael Richey ’86 Stacey Joseph Cardenas ’93 and James Wade Hovis ’80 and William Huntley Zimmern ’03 and S. Frank Harrell Jr. ’85 Spencer C. Robinson ’12 Kenneth Martin Perry ’93 and Angela Hardister Zimmern ’03 L. David Cardenas Rebecca Scarboro Hovis Dr. Tonya Blanks Perry Stephen G. Hartzell ’00 Albert McCall Salem ’63 Lisa Ross Carstarphen ’90 Scott H. Howarth and Benjamin Michael Pickett ’07 Hon. A Robinson “Robby” Donald Dean Sayers ’68 Hon. Robert Alvis Collier Jr. ’59 Melody M. Howarth Anna T. Pinedo PARTNERS Hassell ’86 and Eloise Hassell Richard Knight Schell ’85 and Barbara Stone Collier Hans Hongi Huang ’98 J. William Porter ’77 and LEVEL Anna Ragland Hayes ’88 Paul Howard Schwartz ’92 Robert Clarence Cone ’78 and G. Dudley Humphrey Jr. ’61 Susan G. Porter Lilo Alfreida Hester ’84 Donna Lynn Scott ’98 Sally Boyette Cone ’78 Ronald Forrest Hunt ’68 Nancy Prahofer ’84 and Anonymous J. Travis Hockaday ’03 and April Everette Shelton ’97 and Michael Shields Connor ’88 and Stephen Roy Hunting ’84 and Robert Max Kessler ’85 Hon. C. Walter Allen ’57 Alyssa Omwake Hockaday ’03 Mark Steven Shelton Dorothy Wellford Connor Mary Crawford Hunting ’83 Lauren Burnham Prevost ’91 Louis Carr Allen III ’80 Hon. Robert Carl Hunter ’69 James William Shindell ’79 Jimmy Dean Cooley ’73 Grady Isaac Ingle ’89 and Rose Cordero Prey ’04 William Joseph Austin Jr. ’78 and Eric Lloyd Iverson ’08 and Prof. Scott L. Silliman ’68 Barbara Bitler Coughlin ’78 and Kathe Ingle Donna Rhea Rascoe ’93 Gail R. Austin Emily Day Iverson ’08 John Mayer Silverstein ’71 and Dr. Paul William F Coughlin John Robert Ingle ’59 Charles E. Reece ’95 and O. Kenneth Bagwell Jr. ’79 A. Scott Jackson ’88 Leslie L. Silverstein Robert Wayne Cramer ’84 and H. Bryan Ives III ’80 and Dr. Laura Helms Reece Vance Barron Jr. ’73 and Arlie Jacobs ’77 L. D. Simmons and Marcia Ann Hollowell Cramer Gibbs Chadwick Ives Ann Reed ’71 and June T. Barron Tommy Willis Jarrett ’67 Imbrogno Simmons David Philip Culp ’79 Katherine Elizabeth Jean ’85 H. Glenn Dunn ’76 Anthony James Barwick ’01 and James Henry Jeffries IV ’88 Robert Wayne Simmons and Fred Alan Cunningham ’88 Patricia Cramer Jenkins ’89 Thomas Edward Reilly ’96 Amber Lueken Barwick ’01 Dr. Joseph McKendrie Jenkins ’90 Jennifer Marie Simmons John Sweetland Curry ’70 Kris Jensen Stephen William Riddell ’85 and Kevin Philip Belote ’08 and Amy Kathryn Johnson ’94 Daniel Robert Simon ’99 Larry J. Dagenhart and Dr. Stuart Hicks Johnson ’89 Karen Stahel Riddell ’86 Rachel Frazier Gage ’08 Daniel Henry Johnson ’04 and Linda Wright Simpson ’84, Sarah Dagenhart Valerie Alston Johnson ’94 and S. Graham Robinson ’93 and Dawn Gantt Benson ’82 Creecy Chandler Johnson ’04 in memory of Marjorie E. Daniel Dr. Samuel Henry Johnson Jr. Martha Cranford Robinson Ethan Ari Berghoff Joan Castle Johnson David Thomas Simpson Jr. Edward Bilbro Davis ’99 Vaibhav Prasanna Kadaba ’97 Richard Jephthah Rose ’72 Marvin Allen Bethune ’73 D. Michael Jones ’78 Shahe Sinanian ’79 Kearns Davis ’95 Robert William Kadlec Jr. and Julius Addison Rousseau III ’83 W. Mark Bielawski ’87 Richard Sloan Jones Jr. ’61 and James Hugh Slaughter ’89 Svend Hewitt Deal ’07 Teresa Bush Kadlec and Sharon Campbell Rousseau Charlotte Gail Blake ’85 Melissa Osborne Jones Harriett Jean Smalls ’99

30 FALL-WINTER 2012 David Davis Smyth ’00 and Patrick Martin Allen ’93 Bartley Lawrence Barefoot ’99 David R. Boaz ’12 Scott Newton Brown Jr. ’65 Hon. Samuel Allen Cathey ’73 Julie Jayoung Song ’01 William Reynold Allen III ’64 James Houston Barnes III ’07 Robert B. Boehner ’99 Susan Brown Hon. J. Gentry Caudill ’72 Hon. Keith Spurling Snyder ’58 Zeb D. Alley ’55 Katherine M. Barnes ’12 Terrence D. Bogard and Thomas Walter Brown ’89 Elizabeth Jane Caviness ’88 and Frances C. Snyder James Walter Allison ’69 Lynette Ann Barnes ’85 Ann L. Bogard, in memory of Troy Anderson Brown Jr. ’59 Alison Riopel Cayton ’91 Janice Grace Sokol ’91 and June Karen Allison ’81 William Thomas Barnett Jr. ’85 Robert L. Quick William Louis Brown ’79 and Martin Joseph Cerjan ’88 Darrin Sokol Michael Allen Almond ’75 and and Elizabeth Barwick Barnett Richard Joseph Boles ’66 Catherine Downard Brown Matthew John Cervi and Hon. W. Erwin Spainhour ’70 Helen Ruth Fleming Almond W. Doak Barnhardt ’84 Evan D. Bolick ’10 Kristan D. Bryant ’09 Kathryn McCrea Cervi Hon. Linda Stephens ’79 Hollis Joan Alpert ’78 Debra G. Barrett William Turner Bonds ’63 Hon. Robert Ward Bryant Jr. ’82 Kristin Louise Chach ’98 Hugh Stevens ’68, Adam Paul Altman ’98 James Anderson Barrett ’83 Hon. Richard Dale Boner ’75 and E. C. Bryson Jr. ’64 and Katharine Courtney Harris Chacos ’08 in memory of Melvyn Altman Margaret Bryant Barrett ’91 Margaret Robertson Boner Pickrell Bryson Gary Wayne Chadwick ’75 and Mr. Reef Ivey Michael Robertson Amend Paul Jehu Barringer III ’95 Crystal Boni ’12 Douglas Pratt Buckley ’74 Sharon Bryan Chadwick Michael Alan Stick ’81 and J. Michael Booe ’71 and Orla Marie Buckley ’12 Prof. Julius LeVonne Chambers Debra J. Braselton Pridgen Jeannette Amos ’05 Carl A. Barrington ’12 Rebecca Sofley Henderson ’85 Suzanne Buckley ’08 ’62 Ralph Nichols Strayhorn III ’81 Abrielle B. Anderson ’05 Lucy Katherine Barrios ’11 Anthony Boone Carrie Jane Buell ’07 Edward Thomas Chaney ’07 and M. Gray Styers Jr. ’89 Alice C. Anderson ’12 Nigle Bruce Barrow Jr. ’77 and Jenny Anderson Hon. Alice Carson Stubbs ’92 Donald Lee Boone ’61 and Craig Pennington Buie Amanda Suttle Hitchcock ’07 Geoffrey Patrick Suddreth Lavon Boone John H. Anderson ’02 and Dr. Patricia Tighe Bartis ’94 Madison Earl Bullard Jr. ’81 Benjamin Low Chapman ’67 ’96 and Heather Lovelace Jenna Niedringhaus Borders ’11 Johnny Lee Chapman Jr. and Suddreth Jennifer B. Anderson Nancy Ruth Lunsford Bartlett ’81 Bruce Robert Bullock ’92 Jon Edwin Anderson ’71 Dauna Leigh Bartley ’08 Christopher William Borras ’96 William Winborne Bunch III ’80 Tammy Gilliam Chapman William B. Sullivan and and Amy Shive Borras Marjorie A. Anderson William Thomas Barto ’90 and H. Ligon Bundy ’76 Kevin Wayne Chapman ’05 and Donna D. Sullivan, Conrad Karl Bortz Karen Harris Chapman ’05 in memory of Melissa Anderson ’98 Carol Ann Pearce ’90 E. Harry Bunting Jr. ’74 and Stella Anne Boswell ’95 Col. Hopkins Gardner Charles ’50 Robert L. Quick Michael Frank Anderson ’07 Susan Bartow Elizabeth Cochrane Bunting ’74 Joel King Bourne ’58 M. Alexander Charns ’82, James Moore Tatum Jr. ’74 Thomas Wesley Anderson ’79 June Lynn Basden ’86 Timothy Ryan Burch ’01 and in memory of and M. Ann Anderson ’81, Merlin Bass III ’93 Deborah Warren Bouton Lisa Burch Margaret Louise Terry ’70 Sylvia Gelblum in memory of Matthew L. Boyatt ’02 and Carl J. Burchette Bruce Vernon Thomas ’81 Adam Cole Bassing ’03 and Peter Chastain ’74 Robert L. Quick Rachel Bassing Katherine Boyatt Robert A. Burgoyne ’82 Henry Price Van Hoy II ’74 and Marvin E. Chavis and Gail Chavis, William Eugene Anderson ’69 Joyita Roy Basu ’04 R. Daniel Boyce ’84 Kimberly Marie Burke ’12 Eva Alexander Van Hoy, in memory of Russell Jordan Andrew ’07 William Glenn Boyd ’66 in memory of Caroline Leigh Batchelor ’10 Heather Elizabeth Burleson ’12 Robert L. Quick Robert L. Quick George Worth Boylan ’71 Alan Aron Andrews ’90 James Russell Batchelor Jr. ’80 Ebony J. Burns ’12 Laetitia L. Cheltenham Eric Albert Vernon ’79 Susan Holdsclaw Boyles ’94 Bruce W. Andrews Jr. ’12 Adam K. Batenhorst ’12 F. Kent Burns ’55 and Ann Burns Duke Chen ’08 Hamlin Landis Wade ’57 William Mark Boyum ’86 Deborah Bryant Andrews ’97 Kenneth R. Baumgartner ’63 Hon. Ronald Wayne Burris ’76 Kevin Davis Cheshire ’08 W. Kent Walker Jr. Christopher E. Aniedobe ’00 Douglas Wooley Baxley ’75 and Martin L. Brackett Jr. ’72 Sarah K. Burris Isaac John Bradley ’08 Edwin Paul Chester ’77 and Sidney Rogers Warner Jr. ’91 and Benjamin R. Ansbacher Dianne O’Quinn Baxley Vincent William Burskey ’04 Barbara Ann Vestal ’77 Joy Lynn Kennedy Warner Patrick Eugene Bradshaw ’89 Keith Peter Anthony ’02 and Dr. David Brian Bayard ’00 Henry McAden Burwell ’76 Cheryl H. Chew ’12 William Devin Webb II ’88 Penni Pearson Bradshaw ’80 Kelly Kosobucki Anthony Jack Bronson Bayliss Jr. ’79 and Jerome Francis Buting ’81 Kevin Lee Chignell ’95 and Thomas Harry Weidemeyer ’72 Charles Van Dyke Archie ’12 Catherine Beal Bayliss George Thomas Brady III ’98 and Richard Allen Bynum ’99 Jeannine Anne Chignell Tonya Yarbrough Brady Reich Lee Welborn ’71 Thomas Edward Archie ’68 Robert Gene Baynes ’64 Stephen Timothy Byrd ’84 Jana Allen Childress Hill Beverley Wellford Jr. ’67 Jeremy Daniel Arkin ’98 and C. Vance Beck ’86 and Stacey Ann Brady ’98 and Michael John Byrne ’96 Michael Brady Vincent Davis Childress Jr. ’83 Kathleen Mary Wells Marian Girard Fragola Emily Revelle Beck William Bernard Bystrynski ’94 Carolyn E. Brafford David Monadi Chilman ’92 and Richard G. Wheelahan III ’05 and J. Mitchell Armbruster ’99 Michael Richard Becker ’71 and Celia Marie Hartnett Holly M. Chilman John Ellison Branch III ’04 Ingrid Wheelahan Heyward Dubose Armstrong ’03 H Juanita Mitchell Beecher ’78 Michele Walton Cady ’94 and Laura Stephens Chipman ’09 Adam Portius Wheeler ’02 L. Lamar Armstrong Jr. ’81 Jeffrey S. Beelaert ’11 Hon. E. Maurice Braswell ’50 Darren Michael Cady and Kevin Michael Chipman Hon. John Lee Whitley ’61 Laurie G. Armstrong ’03 Linda Spellman Beerman, Elizabeth Barnes Braswell ’89 Mark Thomas Cain ’87 and Daniel Chun ’10 Jay McCullam Wilkerson ’92 and Derrick Kyle Arrowood ’10 in memory of Daniel Lee Brawley ’67 Leigh Hobgood Cain ’87 Jane Yumi Chun ’12 Katherine Britt Wilkerson ’92 Hon. John S. Arrowood ’82 Robert L. Quick Bradley Joseph Breece ’10 Michael S. Caines Kim Church ’82 Bradford Alan Williams ’99 and Michael Arrowood and Judith Goldstein Behar ’75 Edward Brett Breitschwerdt ’07 Anne Marie Peirce Caiola ’05 Christopher City ’01 and Dr. Christina Nelson Williams Sherry Arrowood Charles L. Behrend and John William Brent ’66 Myron Lawing Caldwell Elizabeth City T. Douglas Wilson Jr. ’73 Lisa Williford Arthur ’12 Patricia B. Behrend Edward Yates Brewer ’72 Larry Calhoun and Karen H. Charles Whitaker Clanton ’91 John Franklin Windham ’75 Robert Joseph Arundell ’80 Corrine L. Belt ’09 Joe Oliver Brewer ’62 and Calhoun Daniel William Clark ’88 and W. Samuel Woodard ’69 and Katherine Blass Asaro ’12 Celeste Anne Belville ’98 Lillie B. Brewer Robert Redmond Caliri ’73 Dr. Sandra Crovi Clark Judy Brown Woodard Stell Blake Askew Jr. ’62 Jay Robert Bender ’93 and Kelly Ann Brewer ’11 James R. Callister Dumont Clarke IV ’78 Rosalind Jane Woolbright ’91 Owen Boyd Asplundh ’05 and Dr. Dominique A. Linchet Elizabeth Sanders Brewington ’92 Ashley Huffstetler Campbell ’03 William Clarke ’82 Elizabeth Garland Wren ’80 Amy Keffler Asplundh, Jill Marie Benjamin ’94 Ben Oshel Bridgers ’70 and Russell Neil Campbell Katherine Justus Clayton ’04 Barbara Hellenschmidt Wright ’86 in memory of Robert Henry Bennink Jr. ’75 Ashley Morrison Briefel ’11 Christopher Zemp Campbell ’96 Sean Michael Clayton and Mary Katherine Walgate William Dewey Yarborough ’74 Robert L. Quick Jonathan Arthur Berkelhammer ’82 Nachael Lynn Bright ’01 Patrick J. Cleary ’09 and Emily C. Yarborough Jerry Austin Campbell ’57 Brian Thomas Atkinson ’92 Jay Bernardoni William Frazier Briley ’58 George Montgomery Keith Frederick Atkinson ’99 and Richmond Gilbert Bernhardt Jr. ’57 Kathryn Leigh Bringle ’81 John Wishart Campbell ’49 Cleland IV ’90 ASSOCIATES Tracey Vacca Atkinson Robin Andrea Bernstein ’81 Dixie Bloom Brink Mary Gill Campbell ’84 Chuck Cloninger ’82 Patrick McQuillan Aul ’09 and Michael Louis Berry ’00 and Barbara Brinkerhoff Susan Elizabeth Campbell ’98 Barry Sidney Cobb ’92 Linsy Wells Aul LEVEL Dr. Randi Strosberg Berry Martin Hal Brinkley ’92 and E. Bedford Cannon ’71 and Laurence Arthur Cobb ’58 and Anonymous Stephanie Hutchins Autry ’87 and Aiko Diane Bethea ’02 Carol Scovil Brinkley, Elizabeth McElwee Cannon Edna Faye Pugh Cobb George Bailey Autry ’91 James Vernon Abbott and Camden Charles Betz ’07 and in memory of Kathleen Weaver Cannon ’81 and Sophia Spivey Cody, Shirley J. Abbott C. Ronald Aycock ’66 Sara Bartholomees Betz Robert L. Quick James R. Cannon Jr. in memory of Jack W. Abel ’74 Tiana Gibson Ayotte ’90 and Kimberly Anderson Betz ’99 Erin L. Brinkman ’12 Thomas Roberts Cannon ’65 Robert L. Quick Shelley K. Abel ’05 and Matthew Philip Ayotte John Huddleston Beyer ’97 and Ryan Kenneth Brissette ’12 William Barker Cannon ’05 Kimberly J. Cogdell ’03 Michael J. Abel Jacqueline N. Azis ’12 Laura Turner Beyer ’98 Louise Anderson Bristol ’91 Kenneth D. Cantrell George William Coggin ’59 Hon. G. Wayne Abernathy ’75 Russell David Babb ’99 Lauren E. Biek ’06 and C. Robin Britt Jr. ’01 and Christopher Blair Capel ’85 Cornelius Wesley Coghill III ’78, Alexander Abramovich ’12 David Bryant Baddour ’02 and Aaron Benjamin Biek ’12 Sharron Belk Britt Steven P. Caplow ’90 in memory of Clark Steven Abrams ’83 Carey Askin Baddour Eric Hamilton Biesecker ’96 and Jill Starling Britt ’93 Jennifer Gelb Carbee ’00 Robert L. Quick Suzan April Abramson ’84 Hon. R. Allen Baddour Jr. ’97 Stephanie Shoaf Biesecker Walter Edgar Brock Jr. ’78 and Robert Winfield Carlton ’81 Jeffrey Lee Cohen ’78 Janis F. Ackerman Miriam Jane Baer ’84 Gary William Bigelow ’84 Lynne Beazlie Brock Danielle Marie Carman ’97 Renee Sanderlin Cohn ’88, Tatiana Acosta Fred Parker Baggett ’71 William Casey Biggerstaff ’12 Blackwell Markham Brogden Jr. ’77 John Hemstreet Carmichael ’93 in memory of Kara G. Acree ’00 Alton Deems Bain ’85 Terrell Billings and Glenda Billings Craig Alan Bromby ’75 Makayla E. Carmichael Betty Sockwell Sanderlin Franklin LeVerne Adams Jr. ’63 David Andrew Bain ’97 Richard Bircher II ’74 Carol Lee Brooke ’00 F. Robert Carothers Jr. Charles Fortunato Coira Jr. ’46 and Carolyn Ivey Adams Nicholas John Bakatsias ’05 Kevin John Bishop ’05 M. Guy Brooks III ’81 and Julie Moore Carpenter ’87 Brandon J. Cole ’12 Franklin Vernon Adams ’74 Anthony Vincent Baker ’81 Kimberly Christin Bishop ’04 Ann Bowers Brooks Justin Tyler Carpenter ’09 Beth Michelle Coleman ’91 A. Mark Adcock ’83 James Raleigh Baker ’08 W. Louis Bissette Jr. ’68 and Shelly L. Brooks Anne Carriel Charles Thomas Colgan ’69 Robert Spencer Adden Jr. ’82 Leslie R. Baker Sara Oliver Bissette Timothy Paul Brooks ’89 Mary Van Ostenberg Carrigan ’84 Timothy Robert Collins ’03 Elias Wondirad Admassu ’08 Paul Baldasare Jr. ’81 and Avis Elizabeth Black ’76 Sylvia Novinsky and April Rose Carson ’02 Wesley William Collins* ’68 Meredith Jo Alcoke ’97 Jane Roney Wettach ’81 Derek Wayne Black ’02 Graham Calib Brosnan Avery Emison Carson ’08 Vincent Paul Collura ’62 and Holly Harris Alderman ’89 and Ruth E. Baldwin ’10 Megan Pridgen Black ’10 David Popham Broughton ’97 B. David Carson ’88 Bunnie Collura Neil Goodwin Alderman James William Baley and Jeffrey Hart Blackwell ’86 and Dr. Charlotte Chandler George Carson II ’67 Andrea Grinbergs Comentale ’84 Broughton Lindsay Rae Aldridge ’12 Katherine Wilcox Baley Angela H. Blackwood Charles Samuel Carter ’74 and Kristen N. Comerford ’11 H. Chalk Broughton Jr. ’88 William Sidney Aldridge ’77 Laurie Grace Ballenger ’94 Ryan Lon Blaine ’02 Susan M. Carter Dwight Edward Compton ’78 Howard Chalk Broughton ’58 Archie Gray Allen Jr. and Hon. Vicki Ballou-Watts ’83 Louis Adams Bledsoe Jr. ’55 and George W. Carter ’12 Joseph Benjamin Connell ’10 and Mary Elizabeth Allen, Yoel H. Balter ’07 and Martha H. Bledsoe Kimberly J. Brow ’12 Michael Louis Carter and Jean Kristin L. Connell in memory of Jane McNeill Balter James Davis Blount Jr. ’52 and Nancy Carwile Brower ’89 Gordon Carter, Michael Collier Connell ’85 Robert L. Quick Jeffrey Alan Bandini ’97 Linda Gholson Blount J. Michael Brown ’71 in memory of Clinton Lee Conner ’03 Derek Jason Allen ’97 Ann Howard Banzet ’95 Thomas Daniel Blue Jr. ’97 James Gorman Brown ’70 Robert L. Quick Richard Horace Conner III ’02 Ernest Marvin Allen III ’76 Julius Edmond Banzet III ’62 Col. Robert Joel Blum ’59 Joyce C. Brown Hon. Gary Stephen Cash ’76 and Taylor Laumann Conner Katherine Martin Allen ’85 and Susan Strayhorn Barbour ’84 Rachel Marie Blunk ’11 Patricia Lou Brown ’86 Hon. Narley Lee Cashwell Sr. ’75 Jacqueline Kane Connors ’95 Dr. B. Richard Page Jr. ’86 Amos Whitney Barclay ’04 William Todd Boardman ’78 Sara Coughlin Brown ’09 Rodney Reed Cate ’92 Phillip Gordon Conrad ’83

CAROLINA LAW 31 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Hon. Richard Rodney Cooch ’73 Mark Allen Davis ’91 Prof. Maxine Natalie Eichner Lucy Vanderberry Fountain ’93 Arey Wilson Grady III ’98 J. Wade Harrison ’79 Karen Anne Cook R. Gene Davis Jr. ’97 L. Holmes Eleazer Jr. ’76 and David Burton Fountain ’94 Jacqueline Denise Grant ’95 Patricia Dowds Harrison ’95 Amanda Harmon Cooley ’03 Sara Helen Davis ’80 Alexander Elkan ’03 Reed Nicholas Fountain ’96 and William Edward Grantmyre ’70 R. Woody Harrison Jr. ’67 and Brien Martin Cooper ’05 Robert Allen Dawkins ’80 Linda Imboden Ellington ’89 and Susan Twiddy Fountain ’97 Hon. Daniel Ray Green Jr. ’79 Nancy Rogers Harrison Douglas Kenneth Cooper ’74 Zachary T. Dawson Dr. Kenneth Scott Ellington Richard Tillman Fountain Jr. ’56 Hon. Jennifer Miller Green ’88 Sean Hart Nathan Andrew Cooper ’10 Isabel Scott Day ’79 and G. Caroline McDonald Elliot ’08 and Katherine Blue Fountain Leonard Glen Green ’75 and Stephen E. Hart ’71 Attorney General Roy Asberry David Day Richard Gibbons Elliott Jr. ’66 Carlene M. Fowler, in memory of Carolyn Howard Carter Judylee Hartman Cooper III ’82 Rachel Lawrence Day ’95 and Hon. B. Craig Ellis ’70 Robert L. Quick Jennifer Cleland Green ’92 and Hon. Fletcher Lee Hartsell Jr. ’72 Veronica H. Cope ’01 William McKinley Hennis III Richard Whitlowe Ellis Sr. ’69 Christopher T. Fowler ’12 Stanley Boyd Green Jason Andrew Hartsough ’02 and Darl Leonard Fowler ’64 W. Andrew Copenhaver ’72, James Marvin Deal Jr. ’74 Belal Elrahal Hon. George Royster Greene ’57 Rebecca Suits Hartsough ’03 in memory of Laura Erb Dean ’09 Edward Lawrence Embree III ’72 Richard L. Fox ’61 Wendy Leigh Greene ’00 Dan McCord Hartzog Jr. ’06 Robert L. Quick John M. DeAngelis ’98 and Stuart Robinson Embree Russell Frackman, John Charles Greenhaugh ’73 Catherine O’Malley Hasbrouck Rhodes Thomas Corbett and W. Edward Deaton ’70 Elizabeth Wright Embrey ’04 in memory of Andrew A. Greenwood ’12 ’89 and Peter V. Hasbrouck Ellen McKellar Corbett Christine Marie Deaver ’12 Ashley Lillian Erickson ’09 Sylvia P. Gelblum Stefanie Mach Gregory ’12 Daniel Adam Hatley ’08 Stephen Field Franks ’55 Matthew Alan Cordell ’07 Arthur James DeBaugh ’88 and Christopher B. Erickson Gwyndolon Long Griffin Hada deVarona Haulsee ’81 and David Russell Frankstone ’75 Chelsea Jean Corey ’12 Michele Cash DeBaugh Ian Andrew Erickson ’01 Robert Gregory Griffin ’78 Ronald Haulsee, Jackie S. Frazier in memory of Susan E. Cornell Marcia Jane Decker ’95 Stephen A. Erickson W. Kimball Griffith ’74 and Robert L. Quick Timothy Walter Corrigan ’94 and Tonya Ronea Deem ’96 Hon. Samuel James Ervin IV James Donald Freeman ’90 Elizabeth Francis Griffith Michael David Hauser ’87 and Natalie Nichols Corrigan Lindsey Laine Deere ’06 John Robert Erwin ’83 Nancy Lorrin Freeman ’96 W. Mark Griffith ’96 and Elizabeth Hungarland Hauser Kimberly A. Costello ’02 Ernest Stanhope DeLaney III Jonathan A. Espinola ’11 Dr. Samuel R. Freeman ’77 Katherine Boyette Griffith Lisa R. Hayes ’88 Josh Jacob Costner ’07 and ’73 and Barbara Henderson Kenneth Franklin Essex ’70 and William Eric Freeman ’80 and Dr. Laura Milner Grimes Robert Ray Hayes ’60 and Carmen Elaine Costner DeLaney ’73 Dr. Faye Ellen Sultan Suzanne Burris Freeman Samuel Latham Grimes ’99 and Joyce C. Hayes Lorraine J. Cotton, Erin Elizabeth Della Barca ’04 Leonard Joseph Essig ’88 Blake Simpson Fricks ’07 Beth Yount Grimes ’99 Samantha L. Hayes ’11 in honor of Dr. James Gary Dellinger ’77 and Landon Sean Eustache ’08 Kerry Anthony Friedman ’80 Beth Connor Guest ’87 Richard David Haygood ’97 Brian Clarkson Cheryl J. Dellinger Gloria J. Evans Alfred A. Friedrich ’94 Durward Franklin Gunnells III ’74 Eric Harbrook Cottrell ’95 Hannah Rivkah DeLuca ’07 Sarah Lee Fuerst ’77 Wilson Hayman ’79 and H. Lee Evans Jr. ’84 and Rebecca Dorian H. Gunter Jennie Jarrell Hayman James Arthur Coulter ’12 Tracy Stewart DeMarco ’09 Lynn Evans Tristan Anne Fuierer ’03 Paul Bennett Guthery Jr. ’56 Margaret Campbell Haynes ’81 Robert Jackson Coulter John Andrew Demos ’03 and Joreen C. Evans W. Erwin Fuller Jr. and Isabel Guzmanuresty James William Hays ’86 Ronald Guy Coulter ’79 Christina Vlachos Demos Meisha Shantay Evans Nancy Scott Fuller Richard Lem Gwaltney ’68 Jeffrey Joseph Hayward ’05 Stephanie Carowan Courter ’08 Paul M. Dennis Jr. ’75 Michelle R. Evans ’02 Hon. James Roy Fullwood ’68 and Selene Ava Haedi E. Burke Haywood ’79 and Susan Marie Denny Mary Gray Teague Fullwood Emily Sarah Courtnage ’02 and Lewis Moore Everett ’08 and Alex John Hagan ’92 and Terri Starritt Haywood Dr. Andrew Robert Dyke Hon. Judson Davie DeRamus Jr. Sherry Honeycutt Everett ’08 Archie Wayland Futrell III ’78 and Kim Hostetter Hagan ’92 J. Patrick Haywood ’01 and ’68, in memory of William Eynon Jr. and Betty Hart Futrell William Hooper Coward ’87 and Georgia Sullivan Haggerty Cathy Haywood Sally Ivey DeRamus Susan Eynon Gaston Hemphill Gage ’58 Kimberly Ranch Coward ’88 William Laurance Haigh ’73 and Mary Lewis Haywood Dailey Jonathan Derr ’72 Nancy Fairchild Stacey Shepherd Gahagan ’12 Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64 and Mary Ann Wesson Haigh J. Richard Hazlett ’80 Norma Cowell John Christopher Derrick ’09 Scot Fairchild Edmund Louis Gaines ’71 Theodore E. Haigler Jr. ’49 Michael Dean Hearn ’76 David L. Cox ’02 Cort W. DeVoe Yates Wellington Faison III ’72 William Hunter Gammon* ’73 John Forrest Haire ’90 R. Harper Heckman ’91 and Theresa Spawn Dew ’00 Jeremy Michael Falcone ’06 and Jessica Gillespie Gammon Dr. John W. Cox ’03 Hon. R. Phillip Haire ’61 and Kimberly Kitchen Heckman Brandon V. Dhande ’09 Katherine Johnson Farley ’04 John Alexander Gardner III ’74 Melanie D. Cox ’01 Constance Mullinnix Haire Elizabeth Sims Hedrick ’08 Hector E. Diaz ’12 Hon. Robert L. Farmer ’60 and Darcy J. Garfinkel Henry M. Coxe ’12 Nancy Wentz Hale ’83 Nancy Snyder Heermans ’78 Karen Barbra Dietrich ’97 Martha L. Farmer Lt. Col. Edward Garner Jr. ’76 Kathleen Bernadette Coyle ’05 Brian Douglas Hall ’85 Sadanand Hegde Thomas Green Dill Sr. ’47 Joel David Farren ’82 Blannie Cheng Garrett ’10 and Wade Alan Wall J. Andre Hall ’90 and Hunter Dalton Heggie ’51 J. Scott Dillon ’83 and Charles Patrick Farris Jr. ’73 Robert R. Gelblum ’85 and Dr. Hillary Bridgers Crabtree ’99 Maureen Roncevich Hall ’90 H. Parks Helms ’61 and Camelyn Timberlake Dillon Edwin Glenn Farthing ’72 Mary Lou Gelblum Hon. John O’Neal Craig III ’82 Jennifer Mouchet Hall ’09 and Eleanor A. Helms John David Dillon ’94 Kristie Hedrick Farwell ’03 Seth D. Gelblum and Orren Paul Lennon Cranfill ’69 and Alperstein Kevin Daniel Hall Neal Gardner Helms ’63 Thomas Johnston Dimmock ’75 Sheila Hogan Fellerath ’79 Sarah Snow Cranfill Sylvia Perloff Gelblum* Roger Wilco Hall ’74 Emilie Ann Hendee ’07 and Boyd K. Dimmock Mary L. Fenton ’54 Lauren C. Cranford ’12 Stephen Paul Gennett II ’91 Roy Griffith Hall Jr. ’55 Andrew Ryan Henderson ’90 Angela Ward DiNoto ’08 Alan Earl Ferguson ’83 and Paul Lee Craven III ’02 and Sara Louise Hall ’95 Hon. Karen LeCraft Henderson Joseph Vincent Dipierro ’90 Nancy Short Ferguson ’83 Glenn S. Gentry ’84 Amanda A. Hayes ’02 William James Hall III ’69 and Dr. Hoke Frederick Julia Ellen Dixon ’01 H. Clarke Gentry ’70 C. Penry Craver Jr. ’66 C. Douglas Ferguson ’96 Oliver Grant Halle ’74 Henderson Jr. Phillip Ray Dixon Sr. ’74 and Joseph Samuel Gentry Jr. ’78 Thomas Rich Crawford ’72 Praveen David Fernandes ’98 W. Cory Haller ’09 Rex A. Henderson Candace Cicerone Dixon Fredric Joel George ’74 Thomas Claiborne Creasy Jr. ’58 John Paul Fernandez ’93 Linda Marie Hamel ’86 Linda B. Hensley James Curtis Dockery ’83 Jody Ellyn George ’86 C. David Creech ’88 Hon. Forrest Andrew Ferrell ’63 David Betts Hamilton ’77 Robert Gene Hensley ’02 Tim Ryan Dodge ’09 Leann A. Gerlach ’12 Col. Joseph Powell Creekmore Michael Ray Ferrell ’76 Hon. Joyce Amelia Hamilton ’75 Perry Cleveland Henson Jr. ’77 Chad Ray Donnahoo ’07 Karen Jacobs Ghinculov ’94 ’62 and Darrell Dutton Christopher Cary Fialko ’92 and Jamie Lynn Hamlett ’01 W. C. Turner Herbert ’04 Patrick Gerald Dooher ’76 Ann Loraine Hester ’92 Stephanie Jane Gibbs ’03 Creekmore Lawrence Townley Hammond Jr. ’63 Carla M. Hermida ’12 Joseph Edward Dornfried ’87 J. Michael Fields ’91 Ronald Lavonne Gibson ’78 Glenn Stevenson Crihfield ’63 and Alice Rowlette Hammond Vanesa Hernandez ’10 Stuart Battle Dorsett ’85 Julia Caudle Fields ’83 William Burns Gibson ’78 Vickey Powell Crim Robin Maurer Hammond ’83 Robert Jason Herndon ’05 David Ray Dorton ’79 Christopher M. Filiaci Dr. Bryan Albin Giemza ’99, David Godwin Crockett ’70 A. Vason Hamrick IV ’03 Daniel Herr and Kathleen Herr Hon. Randy Davis Doub ’80 Oriana A. Fillaci in honor of Mary Holsenbeck Crosby ’05 and Dean John Charles Boger Monica Handa ’10 Bruce Martin Herschlag ’81 Tosha Denise Downey ’04 Mark Anderson Finkelstein ’85 Phillip Crosby William H. Gifford Jr. ’80 and F. Borden Hanes Jr. and H. Clifton Hester ’81 Jeffrey Allen Doyle ’93 Michael Patrick Fischer ’11 and John McDonald Cross Jr. ’95 Jodi L. Turner Ann S. Hanes, in memory of Sheila Hunter Hester Dana Maria Dubis Ashley Cunningham Fischer Marc Cullen ’99 and Cassandra Foster Gil ’09 Robert L. Quick Jean Spitznagel Hetherington Matthew S. Duchesne ’99, Edgar Beauregarde Fisher III Emily Dearman Cullen Scott S. Hansen ’77 and Dr. Seth Vollmer in honor of ’98 and Louisa Crampton Benjamin Gilbert ’79 and Joan Maria Cunningham ’83 Edward Josephus Hanson Jr. ’59 Hetherington Prof. Marion Crain and Fisher ’98 Dr. Lynn Gail Dressler Dale Allen Curriden ’97 Mark J. Hanson ’09 Marcus Clifton Hewitt ’96 Prof. Donald Hornstein Lewis Robert Fisher ’74, John Edward Giles ’51 Walter Lee Currie ’68 Robert Edward Duggins ’90 in memory of Robert Starr Gillam ’73 Randall Alan Hanson ’85 and Jonathan P. Heyl ’98 and Katherine Dennis Currin ’07 Adam Taylor Duke ’09 Robert Lee Watt III J. Duane Gilliam ’57 Dr. Cynthia Brann Hanson Carrie Lyon Heyl Thomas Lee Currin ’76 and Alan W. Duncan and Macy B. Fisher ’12 Cody I. Gillians ’12 Joel C. Harbinson ’79 Fred Allen Hicks ’68 Grey Tharrington Currin Pam Duncan Edward C. Fiss Jr. and Kevin Berry Ginsberg ’00 Holmes Plexico Harden ’81 W. Daniel Hicks Jr. ’84 Michael Kent Curtis ’69 K. Scott Dwyer ’79 Cynthia G. Fiss Selena Martin Giovannelli ’96 Diane M. Hardin Thomas Dupree Higgins III ’71 Hilary Gail Dack ’05 Catherine Elizabeth Dyar ’98 Edward Matthew Fiss, David Alan Gitlin ’82 Robert G. Hardy ’69 and Eva Lister Higgins Matthew Kyle Daddysman James William Dymond ’00 in honor of Rebecca Fiss Richard Edward Glaze Jr. ’85 Susan Haney Hargrove ’81 William Hayden Higgins ’77 Joseph Garner Dail Jr. ’55 Farleigh Hailes Earhart ’91 Frederick Fiss Dorothy B. Godwin Elizabeth Averill Harkey Rebecca L. High ’00 Byron Daniels Annette K. Ebright ’07 Melissa Raye Fiss Glenn J. Goggins ’85 Henry A. Harkey Melissa Helen Hill ’87 William David Dannelly ’77 and Dorothy L. Eby Sabrina Gardner Fitze ’09 Jonathan Peter Goldberg ’05 Johanna Harkey Mitchel Adam Hill ’93 Pamela Kispert Dannelly William Jeofry Edgar ’84 Leslie Allen Fleisher ’68 John Gardner Golding ’53 Alan Arthur Harley ’78 Catherine Dwight Hinkle ’83 V. Alexandra Darrow ’89 Hon. Robert Holt Edmunds Jr. ’75 Rebecca Claire Fleishman ’10 Gregory Anthony Goldman ’12 Jo Ann Towery Harllee ’78 Jamison Hall Hinkle ’96 Eugene Francis Dauchert Jr. ’78 James Joyner Edmundson ’67 Randolph Micol Fletcher ’84 C. Frank Goldsmith Jr. ’70 Hon. Joseph J. Harper Jr. ’73 Hon. Robert Haywood Hobgood ’74 and Katherine Powe Dauchert Deborah Lucy Edney ’97 Robert A. Fleury Jr. ’03 James Whitmel Goldsmith ’75 Leslie Cooper Harrell ’01 and Lauren Nicole Hobson ’12 Leslee Karen Daugherty ’88 E. David Edquist ’88 Jack William Floyd ’61 Daniel John Golonka ’07 Andrea Dancy Harrell Sheila P. Hochhauser ’84 Edwin C. Davenport and Benjamin Rushing Edwards ’03 Louis Henry Fogleman Jr. ’64 Eileen Gonzalez Pamela L. Harrigan-Young ’07 Steven Alan Hockfield ’70 Diane M. Davenport and Alicia Marzullo Edwards ’03 Paul Joseph Foley ’04 and Amanda J. Goodman E. Jackson Harrington Jr. ’69 Robert Sawyer Hodgman ’72 Bradley John Daves ’98 H. Jack Edwards ’67 and Elizabeth Pate Foley ’05 Timothy James Goodson ’06 and Dean Murray Harris ’81 and Mason Thompson Hogan ’82 Eric M. David ’08 Betsy Burnette Edwards Robert E. Ford Ellinor Coder Goodson ’08 Deborah Mclaughlin Harris James R. Holland ’02 and Garber Alfred Davidson Jr. ’72 Phil Strowd Edwards ’64 Brian Collins Fork ’05 and Mary Ellen Goodwin ’91 Deborah Lynn Harris ’87 Brandi W. Holland and Sally Bushong Davidson Shelley Lucas Edwards ’94 Brooke Fork James Robert Gordon ’64 J. Gates Harris ’74 and L. Worth Holleman Jr. ’74 Beatrice Joan Davis ’90 Paul Haywood Efird III ’69 Lisa Byun Forman ’06 Marc Richard Gordon ’80 and Patricia Fraser Harris Russell Joseph Hollers ’63 Hon. Chester Chidlow Davis ’72 Joseph Scott Eggleston ’90 William Robert Forstner ’04 Gayle Gordon Jordan Thomas Harris James Edward Holloway ’83 Gilbert Thomas Davis Jr. ’71 Michael Craig Ehrlich ’75 and Dionne Loy Fortner ’95 Kristopher Michael Gould ’10 and Louise W. Harris Lanetta Holloway ’08 Leslie Hollowell Davis ’82 Judy Seto Ehrlich Geoffrey Allen Foster ’79 Sarah Bagot Gould Phillip A. Harris ’09 Teresa R. Holman

32 FALL-WINTER 2012 Edward Shelton Holmes ’58 Odessa Palmer Jackson ’88 Timothy Keegan Zee Buchanan Lamb ’86 Gary Lynn Locklear ’79 Dale E. Matthews Clyde Holt III ’72 Rick Jackson ’08 Hon. Elizabeth Keever ’75 David Marsh Lambert III ’12 Nicole Sabourin Loeffler ’00 and David George Matthews ’91 Selina Nomeir Honeycutt ’91 and Thomas Clark Jackson ’70 Kenneth Ralph Keller ’74 Carter Tate Lambeth ’71 Guy Loeffler Sarah N. Matthews John Thomas Honeycutt ’92 Marc Jacobs ’10 Philip Lee Kellogg ’67 and John Albert Lambremont ’99 Stephen Stuart Logue ’04 Clarence Vance Mattocks ’74 Sean C. Honeywill ’07 and Robert A. Jaffe ’78 Margaret Massie Kellogg Alison Miclate Lance A. Lee Lomax and Connie Lomax Isabel Worthy Mattox ’86 Sara Hobbs Honeywill ’07 Tonya Davis Jallow ’01 Anne Team Kelly ’87 Hon. Michael Kirk Lands ’84 and William Lord London ’82 Dieter Mauch ’89 Roger Alan Hood ’59 Dinita L. James ’90 and Johnie Dean Kelly Karen Barber Lands Donald Alfred Long ’77 Alexander Lyon Maultsby ’91 Roscoe Cecil Hood Jr. ’77 Roy Frederick Reed Patrick Eaton Kelly ’89 William Francis Lane ’97 Hon. James Monroe Long ’63 and F. Kevin Mauney ’75 Thomas Grant Hooper ’98 Paul Marshall James III ’85 Terrence Matthew Kelly ’73 and Frank Caldwell Laney ’82 Catherine Carden Long Katayoon Sadre May ’04, Kelli Goss Hopkins ’07 Kristen Rasmussen Janicek ’09 Barbara LaLance Kelly Hon. Russell Jarvis Lanier Jr. ’68 Karen Elizabeth Long ’79 and in memory of Jacquetta Johnson Robert Carl Hord Jr. ’65 Herbert F. Janick III ’84 and Amy Schutz Kelso ’95 and James Lanigan Dr. Arlon Keith Kemple J. David Mayberry ’85 Adam Michael Horn ’04 Kathleen O’Brien Janick ’85 John Gordon Kelso ’96 Susan B. Lanigan Robert Bobo Long Jr. ’65 Peter Nicholas Maydanis ’61 Dennis Lee Horn ’75 and William Peak Janvier ’92 Joseph Nicholas Kendall ’03 Joshua Davis Lanning ’00 Frank Alexander Longest Jr. Carolyn Anne Mayer ’12 Shirley Elizabeth Payne ’77 Virginia Allen Janzen William Dudley Kenerly ’73 and Elizabeth Cook Lanzen ’98 ’71 and Elizabeth Winstead Kim Mayer Longest Louis Phillip Hornthal Jr. ’63 and Douglas Marshall Jarrell ’94 Toni Cline Kenerly David E. LaPlant ’95 Mallam John Maynard ’83 and Michael Lottman and Harriett Lang Hornthal F. Fincher Jarrell ’71 J. Lionel Kennedy Stephen R. Lareau ’11 Robin Edwards Maynard Sylvia Lottman, Stephanie N. Horton ’10 Kathleen Tanner Kennedy ’01 and Susan Maynard Peter Jason ’67 Rachel Bierenbaum Larsen ’02 in memory of Sylvia Gelblum Arnold C. Hosbach and Robert Mills Kennedy Jr. ’07 William Robert Maynard ’77 John Carl Jaye ’98 Nancy Ilyse Lasher ’85 Allan Louden Elizabeth B. Hosbach Phillip Ballard Kennedy ’04 Douglas Allen Mays ’92 and Miller Abnee Jefferson ’10 William Harding Latham ’92 William Riley Loy ’64 Patricia Farmer Hosmer ’94 and Mary P. Kenyon ’12 Jennifer Eaton Bennett ’92 Gordon Womble Jenkins ’74 William Ray Lathan Jr. ’75 and Lacy Lee Lucas Jr. ’55 John Richard Hosmer Jr. Spencer Gray Key Jr. ’92 Mary Webb Lathan William Walter Maywhort ’72 Richard Erik Jenkins ’75 Taylor Higgins Ludlam ’04 C. Royce Hough, Drew Kyle Kifner ’09 Anthony Terrell Lathrop ’88 and Pamela Wachter McAfee ’94 Walter Ingram Jenkins III ’87 JoAnn Luehring ’82 in memory of Christopher Ray Kiger ’02 Sarah Parrott Lathrop Carolyn McAllaster ’76 Robert L. Quick Paul Andrew Jenny ’01 David Allen Luzum ’10 April Dawn Kight ’06 Kenneth Todd Lautenschlager ’96 Cynthia Edwina McCants, Norma R. Houston ’89 and Willa H. Jerman Nancy Griffin Kilby ’76 Dr. Alison Carol Lyke in honor of Donald Glenn John Houston James Allen Jernigan ’83 Harry Wayne Lawrence ’65 Leon Marcus Killian III ’69 and Dorothea R. Lyman Huggins Jr. John Lee Jernigan ’67 John Hamilton Lawrence ’12 Keith Lamar Pryor Howard, Dr. Donna Elaine Mack Richard Belfield Lyman DeWitt Frank McCarley ’77 Robert M. Jessup Jr. ’85 and Richard Norwood League ’63 in honor of Doris Pryor Thomas Chen Kilpatrick ’96 and Hillary Erin Lyon ’11 Valerie Lynn Bateman ’86, Charles Edward Leasure III ’88 Robert Weller McCarthy ’87 Robert Earl Howard ’70 and Samantha Boone Kilpatrick ’96 Jan Clayton Lyons ’90 in honor of Louise Harris and Joanne Lyons Leasure ’90 M. DeVondria McClure ’97 Janet Latham Howard Peter Sungtae Kim ’11 Scott Daniel Macdonald ’87 Jack Edward Jirak ’07 Tod M. Leaven ’10 Brenton Wood McConkey ’04 and Hon. Dennis Lee Howell ’76 HayounTina KimHo Andrew Carter Mace Frederick Elias John ’70 Charles Beauregard Lefler Jr. ’74 Amy Elizabeth McConkey Robert Jutzi Howell ’02 and Amy Hulsey Kincaid ’98 Derek Lee Mace ’97 Sarah Bates Howell Cyrus Murry Johnson Jr. ’82 Hon. Lori Ruth Lefstein ’83 Amily Katherine McCool ’08 Meredith Charlotte Kincaid John A. MacKethan III ’68 Jeffrey C. Howland and Daniel Louis Johnson Jr. ’85 and Helga Lura Leftwich ’93 Mark Lance McCord ’06 Hatcher Byrd Kincheloe Jr. ’75 Laurence Beckley Lynn S. Howland, Suzanne Houck Johnson Timothy Power Lehan ’82 and Sarah Bycott McCormack ’01 and and Linda Kincheloe Maddison Jr. ’68 in memory of Emily Perry Johnson ’78 Dr. Leigh Steele Lehan Kevin A. McCormack Christopher M. Kindel ’01 Jack Richard Magee ’12 Robert L. Quick Erik Daniel Johnson Elaine M. Leight, Hon. Edward Harrington Charles Bailey King Jr. ’05 Neil Christopher Magnuson ’09 McCormick ’64 and Ann Kenneth Richard Hoyle Sr. ’51 Harold Layton Johnson Jr. ’80 in memory of George Savage King Jr. ’72 and Kristina Raper Magnuson Brittain McCormick Isham Barney Hudson Jr. ’56 John Howard Johnson Jr. ’76 Robert L. Quick Malvern Francis King Jr. ’68 Bryan Leitenberger ’07 and Kymric Y. Mahnke ’92 Dennis Frederick McCoy ’61 Thomas Renwick Hudson ’81 Karen Michelle Johnson Vance Callahan Kinlaw ’77 Sara Leitenberger Wayne Kenneth Maiorano ’98 Gilbert Douglas McCrea Michael Patrick Huecker ’93 Kathryn E. Johnson ’10 David Ray Kinman ’05 Thomas A. Lemly ’73 Angelina Marie Maletto ’82 Marian R. McCrea Felicia G. Huff Michelle D. Johnson Allen Shawn Kinzer ’88 Jaime Schwartz Lemons ’02 E. Lynwood Mallard Jr. ’65 Andrew Martin McCullough ’04 David Ellis Huffine ’77 Rebecca Louise Key Johnson ’08 Robert William Kirby ’52 DeVere Craven Lentz Jr. ’54 Barrett Christian Mallos ’04 Janet L. McDavid M. Blake Huffman ’09 Robert Edward Johnson Jr. ’86 Byron Barnes Kirkland ’87 Scott Evan Leo ’97 Vernon Roderick Malone ’89 Joan M. McDermott Noah H. Huffstetler III ’76 Russell William Johnson ’04 Frank S. Kirschbaum ’96 Alan Carroll Leonard ’75 Leonard Howard Mandel ’67 Larry Stephen McDevitt ’68 Donald G. Huggins and Samuel Henry Johnson ’53 S. Chuck Kitchen ’80 Dana Moody Leonard ’01 Maria J. Mangano ’82 Davis McDonald ’86 and Regina Huggins Stephen Terence Johnson ’89 Amy Smith Klass ’87 and James Burgess Leonard ’86 Esther Elizabeth Manheimer ’98 Mary Ann Grotland McDonald Micah Eldridge Huggins ’06 Thomas Hatcher Johnson Jr. ’85 Todd Alexander Klass Judith Ellen Leonard ’80 Amanda Spillman Mann ’06 Melissa McDonald Dr. Molly Green Huggins ’03 Wallace R. Johnson III and Robert Onan Klepfer Jr. ’66 Richard David Lerner ’81 and Tiny Morrow Mann, Sally Wood McDonald Staples Stilwell Hughes ’80 Lisa T. Johnson, Katharine Alexandra Klos ’76 Dr. Melinda Jean Frederick in memory of J. Thomas Mann Robert Steven McDowell ’82 and Thomasin Elizabeth in memory of Hon. Howard Edwards Christopher Daniel McEachran ’12 Hughes ’82 Robert L. Quick Robert Charles Klose ’79 John William Leslie ’80 and Joanne H. Leslie Manning Jr. ’68 William Frederick Hulse ’68 H. Morrison Johnston Jr. ’62 Doris Knight Pender Roberts McElroy ’68 Miles Stuart Levine ’78 William Edward Manning Jr. ’91 Steven Hume McFarlane ’89 and Michael Luke Humiston ’90 J. Reed Johnston Jr. ’68 and Meghan Naomi Knight ’06 and James Alfred Mannino ’67 Susan Sawin McFarlane ’89 Hon. Stephani Wilson Sharon O’Donnell Johnston ’70 Jared Miller Dutton Michael Haim Levinson ’69 Peter Joseph Marino ’90 and Hon. Linda Mace McGee ’73 Humrickhouse ’80 and Scott Margaret Galli Johnston ’74 Dr. Christopher John Knors ’05 Amy Moss Levy ’90 Patty Marino Letitia Mason McGeough ’92 and Robinson Humrickhouse Thomas David Johnston ’57 Karl Edward Knudsen ’78 Benton John Levy ’67 Ladd W. Mark ’07 Michael James McGeough Ginger Bagley Hunsucker ’03 and Melody Jewell Jolly ’06 Ellen Hendrix Koch ’84 Melanie Warfield Levy ’98 Ryan Dale Hunsucker Jessica Mollie Marlies ’00 Karin Rebescher McGinnis ’92 Benner Jones III ’65 Jennifer Johnson Koenig ’97 Sean Won Lew ’98 George Edward Hunt ’74 Zachary B. Marquand ’12 and Michael McGinnis Camesha McAllister Jones ’04 Leigh E. Koman ’74, Lauren Vaughn Lewis ’07 Grady Lee Hunt ’89 in memory of Teresa Marquez Alan Dale McInnes ’94 Edwina Link Jones ’77 Claudia B. Liff Hon. James Baxter Hunt Jr. ’64 Robert L. Quick Jessica Marrone, Donna J. McKane Esther B. Jones Roddey Miller Ligon Jr. ’51 and Carolyn Leonard Hunt, Peter Paul Konolige ’85 Cowles Liipfert ’64 in memory of Jacquetta Johnson Michael Allan McKay in memory of Kenneth Lynn Jones ’85 and Nadia Alexandra James Chalmers Marrow Jr. ’72 Gerald Ray McKinney ’80 Elizabeth Cunningham Jones Matthew Lewis Liles ’08 Robert L. Quick Konstantinova ’05 William John Marsden Jr. ’83 Prof. Ruth Ann McKinney ’89 Michael Duane Jones ’01 Thomas Sergent Lilly ’68 Claire Alise Hunter ’10 Gayle Evans Koonce ’75 and Charles Foster Marshall III ’96 Tracy Clarkson McKinney Olivia Rider Jones ’73 Robert George Lindauer Jr. ’00 Malcolm Ray Hunter Jr. ’76 and Neil Wright Koonce and Kerry Michele Fraas and Fraley Connell Marshall Anna Pond McLamb ’02 Paul Lawrence Jones Wanda Moore Hunter Margaret Brantley Kopp ’12 Lindauer ’00 M. Lynn Marshbanks ’87 Daniel Francis McLawhorn ’74 Philemina McNeill Jones ’77 Hon. Robert Neal Hunter Jr. ’73 George Russell Kornegay Jr. ’63 John Coffman Lindley III ’03 Alan Braddy Martin ’94 Shawn Andrew McMillan ’02 R. Michael Jones ’71 Carol Hutchison Richard Alan Kort ’91 Trent Edward Lindsay ’04 Clay Oliver Martin ’11 William Hannon McMillan ’68 Robby W. Jones Elizabeth Bangston Hutto ’96 Susan Lynne Korytkowski ’81 and Mary Louise Lindsay-Barber Hon. D. Grier Martin III ’95 and Ann Elizabeth McMillin ’08 W. Hugh Jones Jr. ’80 Deborah Mae Huynh ’02 Richard Knapp Ling Ling ’97 Louise Martin Jane McNally Thomas Walls Jordan Jr. ’74 Rex J. Iacurci ’85 Phillip James Kotecki Kristen Gardner Lingo ’93 Douglas McCorkle Martin ’74 Richard Anthony McNeil ’06 Virginia Caroline Jordan ’06 Betty S. Injaychock Christopher Henry Kouri ’00 J. Jason Link ’98 and Harry Corpening Martin and Robert Burns McNeill ’85 Dr. Kathleen Marie Joyce ’09 Lisa Dianne Inman ’97 Alan Edward Kraus ’78 Elizabeth Goodrich Link Nancy Dallam Martin V. Clayton McQuiddy III ’68 Elizabeth J. Ireland Joseph Dock Joyner Jr. ’81 Joan Krause Prof. Ronald C. Link and Heather Renee Martin ’06 Brian Duncan Meacham ’03 David Alexander Irvin ’66 and Walton Kitchin Joyner ’60 Patricia I. Krebs ’82 Susan C. Link Hon. J. Matthew Martin ’85 and William P. Meade and Roberta Irvin, Philip Michael Juby ’05 William H. Kroll ’08 David Lintz and Muriel Lintz, Catherine Saunders Martin Joan Meade in memory of Craig Dixon Justus ’91 and Rebecca Deloria Kubin ’92 in memory of HGHH Mary S. Martin ’11 Taryn Gordon Mecia ’98 Robert L. Quick Suzannah Plemmons Justus T. Scott Kummer ’05 Heiman-Lintz Matthew Grady Martin ’04 and Michael David Meeker ’72 Jamie Gilbert Martin Howard Samuel Irvin ’65 Charles Roy Kabugo-Musoke ’12 Gregory Lippott Kunkleman ’80 Joseph Linus ’83 Charles Dietrich Meier ’85 and Mary Lynn Irvine ’11 Benjamin Arthur Kahn ’93 and Howard Mark Labiner ’83 and David John Lione ’08 W. Daniel Martin III ’73 Terri Lawrence Meier Henry H. Isaacson ’58 Karen Clawges Kahn Ellen Ivy Levine Marc Howard List ’91 Robert Anthony Mascari ’81 Luke Anthony Meisner ’03 and James Marx Iseman Jr. ’77 Matthew Robert Kain ’08 J. Chad LaBruyere ’02 and Mary Louise Little, James Lee Mason Jr. ’72 Toolsi Gowin Meisner ’05 William Clark Isenhour ’03 and Joseph John Kalo IV ’94 Alison Nelson LaBruyere ’04 in memory of Sylvia Gelblum Keith Boyd Mason ’82 Nancy Underwood Melton ’06 Elizabeth Wendorff Isenhour ’03 Margaret M. Kane ’06 Kimberly Laidlaw ’75 Carol Gan Liu ’05 Lorraine Hatcher Mason ’76 and Brent Alan Melton Elizabeth Ann Ising ’00 and Seth Lowell Kaplan ’94 Robert Richard Laidlaw ’50 John Charles Livingston ’06 Merrill McCall Mason ’86 Charles Edward Melvin Jr. ’56 Mary Kate Cullen Lewis James Karesh ’87 Jeffrey J. Lakin ’12 William Charles Livingston ’74 William F. W. Massengale ’84 H. David Mendelsohn ’75 and Edward Henderson Ivey ’09 Matthew Steven Karres ’84 Christopher Carlisle Lam ’02 and Luis Lluberas Clint Erwin Massengill ’93 Cynthia Gayle Shearin Hon. Barbara Ann Jackson ’90 Andrew Adams Kasper ’12 and Anne Dunton Lam ’02 Luis Manuel Lluberas ’08 and Christine Lupo Mast ’92 and J. Cory Stuart Menees ’07 George Stevens Jackson ’83 Elizabeth Walker Kasper Hoang Van Lam ’03 Meghan McClure Lluberas ’09 Timothy Mast ’93 Daniel Adam Merlin ’06 and Jeffrey Alan Jackson ’89 John B. Kasprzak ’05 Lanthia G. Lamarr Marco Patrick Locco ’00 Brian Scott Masterson ’01 Mary Elizabeth Holman

CAROLINA LAW 33 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Craig Thomas Merritt ’80 Tracy Cordell Myatt ’94 William Sloan Patterson ’73 Carlyn Grau Poole ’79 Dexter Anthony Richardson ’97 Rex Talcott Savery Jr. ’67 Laurie L. Mesibov ’84 and Lawrence Joseph Myers ’83 Hon. Richard Chapman Samuel Hawley Poole ’62 and Addie Katherine Silver Ries ’03 Paula Schaeffer Sawyer ’80 Gary B. Mesibov Theodore Thomas Myre Jr. ’80 Pattisall ’62 and Imogen Waldman Poole Elizabeth Willoughby Riley ’06 Margaret Wise Sayen ’69 Cynthia K. Messer-Carey ’80 Thomas Dean Myrick ’84 Mary Jane Howard Pattisall Samuel Hawley Poole Jr. ’86 J. Fred Riley ’67 Julia Lauder Sayles ’65 Seth Matthew Messner ’04 Ruth Henning Nagareda ’87 Cindy Marie Patton ’92 Brooks Turner Pope ’12 Wesley Jackson Rish ’91 Maria Curras Scanga ’91 W. Carleton Metcalf ’97 and Susan Nagel-Bloch ’87 Frank Caldwell Patton III ’87 C. H. Pope Jr. ’72 Laura Dickson Rixey ’12 James Ernest Scarbrough ’74 Lisa S. Metcalf Barry Nakell John James Pavey Jr. ’03 Jared Wade Poplin ’02 Chrystal Ruth Roach ’80 and Jean Annette Foster Scarbrough Lori Tebben Meulenberg ’90 and Jacqlene Angela Nance ’06 Louis Watters Payne Jr. ’71 and Thomas Oliver Porter II ’10 Brian Dudley Roark ’99 Scott Andrew Schaaf ’02 and Dr. Daniel Jack Meulenberg Andrew Hartley Nelson ’05 Diane Harvison Payne Kimberly Dean Potter ’97 Henry Haywood Robbins ’04 and Elizabeth Huie Schaaf Caroline Berndt Mew ’99 and Dr. Gordon Eugene Nelson ’84 Mary-Susan Parnell Payne ’82 Heather A. Powell ’11 Lindsay Speros Robbins Christian Mew A. Derek Roberson ’96 Walter Ralph Schafer Timothy Graham Nelson ’12 Robert Shepherd Payne ’74 Noel Dean Powell Jr. ’06 Jaye Powell Meyer ’90 Dr. D. Thomas Roberts Jr. and Jeffrey Scott Scharff ’82 William Winslett Nelson ’85 Sandra D. Payne Sidney Katherine Powell ’78 Thomas H. Meyer and Martha Tate Roberts E. S. Schlosser Jr. ’65 Edward McDowell Newsom ’82 Banks Ashby Peacock ’81 Stephanie Clavan Powell ’84 Lynne P. Meyer, in memory of Michael Anderson Roberts Sr. ’52 Trevor P. Schmidt ’06 and Dorinda Lea Peacock ’98 Sarah Libby Powenski ’03 Sylvia Gelblum Heather Newton ’89 Patricia Spraguer Roberts ’93 Anna M. Schmidt Joi Elizabeth Peake ’98 Brian Anthony Powers ’77 and Dr. Lori Abel Meyerhoffer ’07 Paul Robert Newton ’85 and Susan Elkins Roberts ’91 Arch Kerper Schoch IV ’64 Melanie Newton Herbert Howard Pearce ’78 Alice Leccese Powers Steven Dermont Michael ’75 Michelle Frances Robertson ’82 Frank Lodwick Schrimsher ’60 F. Timothy Nicholls ’67 Christopher Perry Pearson ’86 Kevin Adrian Prakke ’93 Therese Ann Michaels ’83 Sandra Margaret Robertson ’75 Linda Kummer Schroeder, Jennifer E. Nicholls ’10 Ernest Clifton Pearson ’75 Claire Bledsoe Pratt ’80 and in memory of Elizabeth Thomas Miller ’88 and Jacqueline Pechmann Stephen Hamilton Pratt Gordon Erin Robinson Jr. ’84 Dr. John Hedrick Miller Anthony Donovan Nicholson ’98 Kenneth George Robinson Jr. ’69 Robert L. Quick Hon. Stanley Peele ’59 and James Preiser Peter Gerald Schroeder Megan Elizabeth Miller ’05 Joan Marie Howe Nicholson ’93 Mark Alan Robinson Virginia Radford Niehaus ’12 Carolyn Ellis Peele Christopher Scott Prentice Charlotte Webb Schwartz ’92 Renee Kaminsky Miller ’05 Agata Anna Pelka Vernon Haskins Rochelle ’65 and Josie Nielendez Richard Freeman Prentis Jr. ’72 Judith Gail Rochelle Jamie Sittig Schwedler ’07 and Teena Murray Miller ’00 Mary Fletcher Pena ’09 John Calvin Nipp ’96 and Elizabeth Gregory Preston* Sabrina Presnell Rockoff ’02 Thomas J. Schwedler ’08 William Michael Miller ’07 Jeffrey Ray Pendergrass Tracy Boney Nipp ’96 James Young Preston ’61 Aldo Carlos Rodriguez Joseph S. Schwertz Jr. ’82 Anna Snoderly Mills ’97 and Hugh Herman Peoples ’74 Robert Ernest Price ’80 and Linda Gregory F. Schwitzgebel III ’92 William Amrose Mills III Hon. Jeffrey Evan Noecker ’92 Rafael Rodriguez and Zareda and Lisa Carter Noecker ’92 Linda S. Perlman ’82 Carol Jordan Price William Guin Scoggin ’89 E. Eric Mills ’01 Rodriguez Timothy Anders Nordgren ’94 Jeffrey M. Perloff, in memory of Wanda Kay Hannon Price ’82 Todd Stewart Roessler ’01 and Christopher L. Seawell ’71 Hon. F. Fetzer Mills ’61 and Sylvia Gelblum Amos Ulmer Priester IV ’82 Robin A. Seelbach ’12 Pennington Martin Mills Bart A. Norman ’02 Catharine Stone Roessler Katherine J. Perretta ’12 Edward Knox Proctor V ’87 Andrea Dee Seeney ’02 and Gary Samuel Mills ’79 James William Norment ’01 and Charles Ray Rogers Laura Underhill Norment Sean Francis Perrin ’95 Justin Mark Puleo ’11 Ronald Richards Rogers ’86 Erik Barry Seeney Alice Neece Mine ’85 Thomas George Noulles ’76 Barbara Stockton Perry ’50 Melissa Lynn Pulliam ’08 Timothy Jude Rohr ’94 and Thomas Hamilton Segars ’00 and Carolyn Whitney Minshall ’86 Nina Raba Segars ’00 Stephen Novack ’75 Daniel E. Perry ’58 Paul Jennings Puryear Jr. ’10 Lisa Hicks Rohr Kevin Scott Minton ’00 John Franklin Seiber and Jonathan Joseph Nugent ’96 James Stockton Perry ’80 and Esther F. Queen ’09 Phyllis Blackmon Rollins ’74 and Scott Alan Miskimon ’92 H. Marie Seiber R. Randall Nye ’77 Dr. Joan Templeton Perry Steven W. Quick ’12 M. Glynn Rollins Jr. ’81 Eddie Crawford Mitchell ’68 William James Seigler III ’75 Robert Waring Oast Jr. ’82 Donald Brian Personette ’82 and Kevin E. Quirk ’89 Louise Critz Root ’81 Frederick Dean Mitchell ’85 Barbara Hedberg Self J. Christopher Oates ’84 Deborah Ann DiGilio Vincent Frank Rabil ’84 Andrea Schrag Rose ’06 Memory Farmer Mitchell ’46 Craig Robert Senn ’95 Carrie Ann O’Brien ’02 Alexander McClure Peters ’86 Gwynn Gardiner Radeker ’72 Meredith K. Rose ’12 Michael Bowen Mitchell Jr. ’95 and Sarah Friday Peters Robert Edwin Sevila ’70 Sandra Tremper O’Brien ’90 and George A. Ragland, John M. Rosenberg ’62 Richard Meriwether Mitchell ’72 Arlene J. Peters Ronald Harlan Rosenberg ’75 Nick A. Sexton ’99 Edward John O’Brien IV in memory of Victoria Serl Shabo ’06 Matthew W. Modell ’09 Dr. Stephen Petersen ’96 and Robert L. Quick Theresa Joan Rosenberg ’99 Dave A. Obringer ’89 and Kerry Anne Shad ’91 Philip Hodgin Modlin ’50 Michelle Frazier ’96 Henry Hamilton Ralston ’83 Sherri Zann Rosenthal ’85 Lee Minzenmayer Obringer Jehan Shamsid-Deen Kathleen P. Monsen Ramona Cunningham O’Bryant ’85 Alan Howard Peterson ’77 Neal Andrew Ramee ’03 Richard James Rossitch ’96 Robert Carson Montgomery ’87 Hon. John Arvid Peterson Jr. Barry Nathan Roth Leanne Marie Shank ’85 Stephen G. O’Connor H. Vaughn Ramsey ’82 and Carlton Aldridge Shannon Jr. ’85 Fred Henry Moody Jr. ’72 ’81 and Bonnie Richman Margaret Parham Ramsey Dr. Bryan Leo Roth and Justine Samantha Peterson ’81 Elyssa Kathleen Sharp ’12 Brian Thomas Moore and O’Connor-Petts ’09 Sarah Helen Ramsey ’74 Judith Roth R. Glen Peterson ’81 Hannah Lourinda Sharpe Margaret Abbott Moore, Ralph Marshall Odenwald ’79 Hon. Ripley Eagles Rand ’95 David B. Roth Stephen James Petroski ’08 Robyn Melanie Roth ’05 Jessica Russak Sharpe ’03 in honor of David Oettinger Jr. ’77 John Jay Range ’80 Stephen Abbott Moore Kara Lynn Petteway ’05 Andrew Michael Rothstein ’76 Robert G. Sharpe Rudy L. Ogburn, in memory of Gisele Lunsford Rankin ’80 and Sheila M. Pettigrew Frederick Kingsley Sharpless ’84 Clifton Leonard Moore Jr. ’61 Robert L. Quick Lawson Allen Rankin Jr. David Mark Rouse ’66 and Rebecca Koonts Rouse K. Dean Shatley II ’03 and Dorothy Cheek Moore W. Gary Ogburn ’82 Joan Eileen Pettinelli ’90 Charles Raymond Raphun ’92 J. Edgar Moore ’62 and Todd Edward Pettys ’95 William Edward Rouse Jr. ’56 Jennifer Shatley Chiege Kalu Okwara ’94 Toler Ratledge ’88 Thomas Stone Shaver ’95 Peggie T. Moore Sonya Pfeiffer ’07 Hon. Julius Addison Rousseau Hon. Hubert Ethridge Olive Jr. ’53 Ronald David Raxter ’77 John Gilbert Shaw ’61 James Osborne Moore V ’04 Sean Michael Phelan ’92 Jr. ’56 and Gary Maxwell S. Theodore Oliver Jr. ’79 and Robert Glenn Ray ’68 Rousseau Robert Ward Shaw ’04 Luther Thomas Moore ’72 Rebecca Roll Phifer ’79 Regina Whittington Oliver Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Jenny Duncan Routh J. Darrell Shealy ’82 Robynn Elizabeth Moraites ’03 H. Hyman Philips Jr. ’46 C. Robert Omstead II Kenneth Ray Raynor ’82 Keith A. Rowland Lisa Richardson Shearin ’90 and E. Dannelly Morgan ’12 Andrea Clara Phillips ’97 John Thurston O’Neal ’96 Hon. J. Milton Read Jr. ’62 Kathryn E. Ruark J. Bryant Shearin Jr. John Franklin Morrow Jr., James Francis O’Neill ’74 Gabrielle DeRosa Phillips ’10 Toni J. Read ’04 Doris Tuttle Shelton in memory of Barbara Carol Ruby ’76 William Lewis O’Quinn Jr. ’94 John Claude Phillips ’03 Stuart Lee Shelton ’74 Robert L. Quick John Clark Reaves ’92 Cathy Marie Rudisill ’84 John William Ormand III ’87 Sarah Archer Leigh Phillips ’06 Lacy Hill Reaves ’72 and Marc Samuel Rudow ’79 William Radcliffe Shenton ’79 J. Bruce Morton ’55 and Melissa Perrell Phipps ’94 Sidney Newton Morton Jason Alexander Orndoff ’01 Carol Hammond Reaves Matthew C. Ruedy ’09 James Dale Shepherd ’63 K. Corinne Pickford ’95 James Henry Morton ’64 and Jonathan Bowen Orne ’71 Benjamin Michael Redding ’06 David Michael Ruff ’08 Desmond Graham Sheridan ’86 Cameron Scott Pierce ’90 Marcia McFarland Morton James William O’Rourke ’12 Charles Maurice Redfern III and Jennifer Vega Ruiz ’02 Colleen A. Sherin Charles Grainger Pierce Jr. ’99, W. Phillip Moseley ’73 and Dr. Lucky Theophilus Osho ’88 Gay Addington Redfern, Jeffrey William Runge and Basil Lamar Sherrill ’50 and in memory of Lynn Johnson Moseley Kevin Timothy O’Sullivan ’99 in memory of Virginia D. Runge Virginia Ashcraft Sherrill Mary Coggin Everett Robert L. Quick William Fuller Moss ’11 and Michael Shamus O’Sullivan ’02 A. Maxwell Ruppe ’52 and Andrew Philip Sherrod ’00 Kavita Rani Pillai ’12 Anne Redmond Chailee Mann-Stadt Moss Wendell Harrell Ott ’76 Ruth Ledford Ruppe Grady Lee Shields ’85 Rekha Pillai Christy Eve Reid ’76, William Howard Moss ’84 and Joshua James Otto ’07 John Charles Rush ’56 and James E. Shields Joel Arthur Pineles ’84 and in memory of Ruby S. Rush Patricia Pursell Shields ’85 Mary McGranahan Moss Bruce Edward Owen ’85 Victoria F. Pineles Robert L. Quick Stephen McDaniel Russell Jr. ’06 Morrison P. Shingler Marguerite Isabel Most ’75 William Kent Packard ’99 Jerrold Bernard Pinsker ’75 and Hon. Stephen Michael Reilly ’92 Jerry James Rutledge ’69 and Jeanne Louise Shingleton ’95 Benjamin Andrew Mount ’08 Leslie Calkins Packer ’86 Susan Lynn Pinsker and Larri Alexis Short ’92 Yvonne Merritt Rutledge Kathryn Bockley Shipe ’96 John Michael Moye ’06 Timothy J. Pagan Matthew Lawrence Pirnot ’99 Marion Reimer Lawrence Karl Rynning ’80 and Michelle O’Leary Shivers ’07 Brooke Allison Mulenex ’11 Travis G. Page ’09 T. Todd Pittenger ’88 Steven Ira Reinhard ’85 and Cynthia Lowe Rynning Stacey E. Shobe ’11 Kevin D. Mulet ’12 Winston LeGrande Page Jr. ’74 Geoffrey Alan Planer ’74 and Susan Parham Reinhard Arthur Safer Jonathan Burton Shoebotham ’79 Vincent Anthony Mulieri and Anne S. Worth Page Judith Aldrick Planer Christopher Brian Reinhardt Kathryn Bennett Saleeby ’12 Emily Louise Shoemaker ’07 Chip Muller ’07 Daniel Jeffrey Palmieri ’03 and Charles McElwee Plaxico Jr. ’71 ’03 and Rebecca Johnston Anne Stewart Salter ’12 Alivia Barbara Sholtz ’10 Robert G. Munro ’10 Elizabeth Massey Palmieri Cranford Oliver Plyler III ’82 and Reinhardt ’03 Stanley Mack Sams ’79 Amanda Kitchen Short ’01 Paul George Papadopoulos ’90 John Malcolm Murchison Jr. ’70 Pamela Lanning Plyler Julia Anderson Reinhart ’94 Michael Sanabria John Headley Shott ’75 and Thomas Edward Murdock ’57 and Peter George Pappas ’82 Kristin Eldridge Plyler ’91 Nancy Sherwin Rendleman ’77 Stephanie Lewis Sanders ’09 Katherine Baker Shott Virginia Murdock William George Pappas ’77 and M. Matthew Plyler ’96 Page Munroe Renger Alexander Paul Sands III ’70 Jeremy Stephen Shrader ’08 Cheryl Ann Murphy Debra P. Pappas William Webb Plyler ’82 and Joy Renjilian-Burgy Richard Joel Sandulli ’66 Michael James Shumaker ’07 Eileen C. Murphy ’87 Frederick Pope Parker III ’64 Sally Bussey Plyler Gina L. Reyman ’87 Danielle Sandy Marian Outland Siemering ’10 Frank Murphy, in memory of Sharon Lee Parker ’87 Stephen Douglas Poe ’76 and Vaughn Kenneth Reynolds ’05 Anita B. Sankknop Mallory B. Silberman ’09 Robert L. Quick O. Tracy Parks III ’68 Jane Spangler Poe Matthew Duvall Rhoad ’00 and Fareesh Sadrudin Sarangi ’06 Nancy Lucille Siler ’97 Joseph M. Murphy ’97 Felton Edward Parrish ’98 T. Scott Poindexter and Christine L. Rhoad Patrick Daly Sarsfield II ’93 Jennifer Claire Simmons ’02 Kara Marie Murphy ’12 W. Thomas Parrott III ’73 Susan Watts Poindexter Carice Gruenhagen Rice ’10 David Y. Sartorio ’10 Petranda A. Simmons, Paul Gilbert Murphy ’89 Gary Stephen Parsons ’77 Jeffrey Alan Poley ’96 Garry Stephen Rice ’86 Everett Benjamin Saslow Jr. ’76 in memory of Stephanie J. Murr ’12 Anand K. Patel ’12 Jewel Pollar Millard Roland Rich Jr. ’56 Jonathan Drew Sasser ’81 and Robert L. Quick Cecil Kyle Musgrove ’95 and Bailey Patrick Jr. ’60 and Robert Arnold Ponton Jr. ’79 and Nancy Bailey Rich* Hon. Debra Smith Sasser ’92 Bruce Merle Simpson ’78 Tammy Carol Winn Musgrove ’95 Rose Tarrant Patrick Janet Everett Ponton Ryan George Rich ’07 Paul Daniel Satterwhite ’01 Wilson Sims Hon. Michael Raymond Muth ’75 Jon Howard Patterson ’03 Evan Harris Pontz ’96 Anita Foye Richardson ’97 Margot Freeman Saunders ’78 Kevin Lamar Sink ’94

34 FALL-WINTER 2012 Mark Alan Sink Anna Harris Stein ’95 Joe Franklin Teague Jr. ’98 Richard von Biberstein Jr. ’60 and Gerson Fox Widoff CORPORATIONS Natalie Six David Stein, in honor of Thomas Eugene Terrell Jr. ’85 and Carolyn von Biberstein Barrie Little Wiggins ’85 AND Russell Sizemore Charlotte Stewart Gaither Moore Terrell Hon. Richard Lesley Voorhees ’68 Antoinette Ray Wike ’74 FOUNDATIONS Ann Gretchen Sjoerdsma ’81 Deborah Ann Stencel ’01 William Thaddeus Terrell ’92 James Albert Wade Jr. ’77 Leigh Martin Wilco ’82 and William Pailin Skinner Jr. ’56 Graham Currier Stephens ’08 Lynn Lee Terry Jamille Wade ’12 Carolyn Cordelia Wood ’83 Anonymous Alicia McClendon Slaughter ’09 Hon. Ronald Lane Stephens ’74 Isabelle Paine Thacker ’92 and Thomas Eugene Wagg III ’62 Dr. John K. Wiles ’95 A Remix Art Gallery William Frank Slawter ’73 Henry Louis Stephenson III ’82 Dr. Strom Cronan Thacker William Johnson Waggoner ’54 Timothy Reid Wilkerson ’78 and A Southern Season Anne Rosalind Slifkin ’76 and Linda Biddix Stephenson Molly Elizabeth Thebes ’12 John Charles Wainio ’72 Robinette Witt Wilkerson Abel & Zocolo Co LPA Cheryl Thornton Sloan ’84 Mark Andrew Sternlicht ’78 Laura Baity Theriot ’89 Ingrid Shore Wakefield ’01 Charles Putnam Wilkins ’69 Action for a Better Community Dr. Frederick Vernon Slocum III Andrea D. Steury Douglas Bradley Thie ’12 Nancy S. Wakeley Lisa deAngelis Wilkins ’01 Foundation John Steward Slosson ’01 David Boyette Stevens ’51 Douglas Owen Thigpen ’76 Ann Blannie Waldo ’95 Hon. Charles W. Wilkinson Jr. ’67 Adecco Group Services Matthew B. Slotkin ’94 G. Sefton Stevens ’76 and Hon. Richard Elton Thigpen Jr. ’56 Charlesena Elliott Walker ’93 and Emily Harris Wilkinson Africk Family Foundation Inc. Allen Coleman Smith ’92 Catherine Cline Stevens ’77 Kelly Susan Thomas ’83 Doretta LaShaun Walker ’93 Leigh Allred Wilkinson ’85 Alston & Bird LLP Allison Walsh Smith ’06 John Shorter Stevens ’61 Amelia A. Thompson ’12 E. Garrett Walker ’75 and John S. Willardson ’72 American Bar Endowment Clyde Smith Jr. ’58 Robert Stevens Peter Karl Kimble Thompson ’74 Jane Walker Christine Langsam Williams ’01 American Century Investments Cynthia Gail Smith ’90 Wyatt Shorter Stevens ’94 and Samuel Griffin Thompson ’68 Ann Bennett Wall ’78 James Walker Williams ’70 and Foundation Daniel F. Smith ’10 Kimberly Horstmann Stevens Sanford Webb Thompson Amy S. Wallace ’03 Sheryl Howell Williams ’80 Ayco Charitable Foundation David Clark Smith Jr., Denise Stewart IV ’80 and Carolyn Ann Waller ’98 JoAnn Kelly Williams ’73 Bacca Foundation in memory of Hayleigh Tasha Stewart ’12 Cynthia Clyburn Thompson Elizabeth Patton Walsh ’01 Mary McCrory Williams ’99 Bank of America - Providence Robert L. Quick Morgan Eugene Stewart ’12 Patricia Binder Throneburg ’82 Kristi Kessler Walters ’99 Mary McLendon Williams BB&T - Whiteville Gary Wade Smith ’98 Robert Ray Stewart Jr. Thad Albert Throneburg ’81 Robert James Walters ’85 and Hon. Rose Vaughn Williams ’89 Beery Elsner & Hammond LLP Rex R. Smith and Gayla E. Smith Thomas Leon Stewart ’75 Hon. Douglas Oscar Tice Jr. ’57 Sara Brentlinger Walters and Jonathan Stuart Berman Family Foundation Inc. Vinston Devon Walton Williams ’90 Gregory Stuart Smith ’85 Lisa Frances Stifler ’08 Nancy C. Tidwell Blue Sky Dining John B. Ward ’12 Tamia Williams J. Troy Smith Jr. ’67 Kyle Richard Still ’07 Craig Johnson Tillery ’76 and Boyd-Glenn Foundation Inc. Phyllis Cameron Johnson ’76 C. Todd Ware ’00 Hon. F. Lane Williamson ’78 James Franklin Smith ’58 and William Lloyd Stocks ’66 Bradley Arant Boult Cummings Linda Diane Tindall ’86 and Alex Warlick Jr. ’55 Judson Nye Williamson Jean McIntyre Smith Colin Rutherford Stockton ’00 Bread & Butter David Anderson Stockton ’82 Jeffrey Joel Johnson ’91 Lana Starnes Warlick ’76 John Samuel Williford Jr. ’76 and James Hiner Smith Jr. ’98 Brooks Pierce McLendon and Jayne Stockton G. Anthony Tingen ’84 A. Jackson Warmack Jr. ’76 Velda G. Williford Jeremy Clark Smith ’04 Humphrey & Leonard LLP Elizabeth Connolly Stone ’07 and David Knox Tinkler ’82 Annie Carlson Warren ’06 and A. Rexford Willis III ’80 Joseph E. Smith ’95 Brown Brown & Brown PLLC Michael Kent Stone Scott Kenan Tippett ’87 Robert Kent Warren ’07 Vachelle Denise Willis ’04 Joseph Francis Smith ’99 and Bryan Cave, LLP Hon. Richard Wayne Stone ’81 W. Lyndo Tippett and Barbara Dawkins Warren Caroline Thomson Wilson ’87 Lara Spencer Smith ’99 C. M. Herndon Foundation Kelly Podger Smith ’02 and Susan Best Stone Lou Perry Tippett Donna I. Warren J. Bradley Wilson Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft Lester V. Smith Jr. ’65 Sarah Motley Stone ’05 Walter Lyndo Tippett Jr. ’95 J. Donald Warren and James Michael Wilson ’90 Kim Abbott Warren Capital Community Foundation Lindsey Brooke Guice Smith ’08 Thomas Edgar Story III and Camille M. Tisdale Jeremy Miles Wilson ’11 John Crain Warren ’76 and Carolina Bank Philip J. Smith ’96 Janice Kulynych Story, Ken Tison Richard Wright Wilson ’74 in memory of Laura Forgeron Warren Carolina Hurricanes Foundation Inc. Robert Eugene Smith ’65 Kenneth Carr Titus ’76 Ryan Christopher Wilson ’05 Robert L. Quick Ernest L. Washington Carolina Panthers Ryan Michael Smith ’96 and Emily A. Tobias ’95 William Marvin Wilson III ’98 January Clifton Stramaglia ’10 Dianna C. Wasikowski Nancy Sara Smith ’98 Lauren Clapp Tobin ’91 J. Clinton Wimbish ’03 Carolina Trust Nicholas Street ’71 and Alexander Faris Watson ’01 and Vickie Smith Christopher Allen Todd and William Rudolph Winders Jr. ’84 Carruthers & Roth PA Angela Baxter Street Mayleng Streett Watson ’01 W. Britton Smith Jr. ’67 and Rena Chernotsky Todd Jonathan Charles Windham ’02 Caviness Law Firm PLLC Collin M. Strickland ’10 David Tutherly Watters ’92 Gwendolyn C. Smith Janet Delaine Todd Laura Elizabeth Windley ’08 Chapel Hill Sportswear Inc. Elizabeth Nina Strickland ’87 Charles Bruce Wayne ’76 and W. Ritchie Smith Jr. ’58 Victoria Street Tolbert ’04 Delane S. Winfree Christ United Methodist Church Jason Trent Strickland ’05 and Ellen Kabcenell Wayne ’78 Eric Alan Snider ’07 and Frederic Earl Toms ’70 and Brianne L. Wingate Commerce One BPO LLC Meredith Liehs Strickland Jennifer Lynn Wazenski ’91 Alison Elizabeth Snider Pamelia Senn Toms Edward Cyrus Winslow III ’74 Community Foundation of Melissa L. Strom Karen Culbreth Weatherly ’88 Holly Howell Snow ’05 and Wanda C. Townsend ’91 William Fountain Winslow ’83 Greater Greensboro Odes Lawrence Stroupe Jr. ’71 and William Kingsley Benjamin Snow Harrison M. Trammell ’09 H. Addison Winters III ’83 and Crescent State Bank Ann Hogue Stuart ’78 Weatherly III William Blount Snyder Jr. ’07 Frances Youngblood Trask ’83 Johnnie Denton Winters Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP Richard Unwin Stubbs Jr. ’90 David Arthur Weaver ’72 Brian A. Soja ’10 Marcus William Trathen ’90 and Michael Glenn Winters ’78 Donald & Elizabeth Cooke Anne Holloway Studholme ’92 Elizabeth Carlton Trathen ’90 Florence Stacy Weaver, Gerard Dominic Solis ’00 in memory of Paige Collier Wiseman Foundation Saul Allen Solomon ’81 E. Taylor Stukes ’07 and Kerry Link Traynum ’04 Robert John Wishart ’73 Dykema Gossett PLLC Mary Katherine Hackney Robert L. Quick Richard Scott Soroko ’78 Colleen Gale Treml ’91 Tita Wofford Stukes ’07 George Arthur Weaver ’64 E. A. Morris Charitable Wendy Chrismon Sotolongo ’87 Deborah Weimer Tress ’88 William Francis Wolcott III ’72 Foundation Joshua J. Styles ’12 Camden Robert Webb ’95 Samuel Ogburn Southern ’69 Paul David Trinkoff ’81 and Alison Lawrence Allen Wolfe III Erdman and Hockfield LLP Angeline Suarez Monica Eileen Webb ’06 and Mary Bernier Southern Miller Trinkoff Lisa Evans Wolfe Estate of E.K. Powe III Jeffrey Clay Sugg ’98 William Woodward Webb ’71 and Julia Bingham Southwick ’82 Dianne Marie Triplett ’04 Mary Grimes Webb James Dorsett Womble Jr. ’72 Brian Timothy Sullivan ’10 Estate of Evelyn P. Parker Lawrence B. Spain Donna Helen Triptow ’78 Bryant Deleron Webster ’94 and and Margaret McLean Womble Cameron David Sullivan ’12 Estate of Joseph Mordecai Kittner Carole Lewis Spainhour ’93 Laurie Susan Truesdell ’87 Janet Baldwin Webster David Wetherill Wood Jr. ’73 and John L. Sullivan Jr. ’69 Estate of Ruth H. Huskins Elizabeth Erwin Spainhour ’05 John Paul Tsahakis ’09 Keith Michael Weddington ’87 Marianne Stewart Wood Hon. Kirby Sullivan ’50 Federal Home Loan Bank of David Robert Spanjer ’94 Naya A. Tsang ’99 Richard Wei ’98 Gregory J. Wood ’02 Atlanta Timothy Patrick Sullivan ’83 Christiana Glenn Tugman ’08 Gerald Spaugh Felice Joy Weiner ’76 Judson B. Wood ’12 Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Martha Walker Surles ’82 Joseph Brian Tulman ’79 Robert W. Spearman and Matthew Patrick Weiner ’07 Keith Allen Wood ’91 and Fifth Third Bank, Kentucky, Inc. Mark Sustana ’86 Deepa Prashant Tungare ’05 Patricia H. Spearman Lisa Nicole Weissman-Ward ’06 Jody Burig Wood ’93 Floataway Inc. Susan Burger Sutherland ’98 Lee Ellen Belk Turnbull ’85 Stanley Eric Speckhard ’75 and Richard Paul Weitzman ’58 and William Zeno Wood Jr. ’72 and Gaeta & Eveson PA Mary Gardner Speckhard Faison Gibson Sutton ’03 Joel Kent Turner ’03 Nancy Schecter Weitzman Marilyn McLean Wood, Gigliola Breda Tatge Revocable Martha J. Svoboda ’12 Sonja Turner in memory of Richard Altland Speers ’74 Gary Joseph Welch ’94 Trust Kimberly Quarles Swintosky ’98 William David Turner III ’85 Robert L. Quick Dr. David Bower Spence ’84 Paul Brown Welch III ’80 Graywood & Company Scott David Syfert ’97 and Patricia Ann Tutone ’06 Brady Wallace Wells ’90 and Hon. E. Marshall Woodall ’63 Herman Spence III ’82 and Great Outdoor Provision Gail Syfert Hon. John M. Tyson Jenny Bradsher Wells M. Drew Wooldridge ’02 Marilyn L. Spence Company Paul Matthew Sykes ’98 Lawrence Joseph Tytla Jr. ’80 Johanna L. Werbach Laurna Sayers Worden ’89 Deborah Evans Sperati ’99 and Griffin Brunson & Perle LLP Matthew Philip Sperati Joseph L. Szymanski Starling Bernard Underwood III ’09 Jessica B. West ’11 Kristin Marie Wouk ’12 Harris Teeter # 120 Mack Sperling ’83 Kimberly Jean Tacy ’07 Lisa M. Valdez ’12 Margaret Rose Westbrook ’96 and Albert Victor Wray ’68 Holland & Knight LLP George Hicks Sperry ’68 Hon. Thomas Fleming Taft ’72 Eleanor James Vance, Philip Augustine Baddour III Daya Masada Wright ’98 Asher P. Spiller Susan M.W. Tahir in memory of Brian Weyhrich ’06 Melvin Forbes Wright Jr. Honeywell Hometown Solutions - PAC Joseph William Spransy ’73 and James Maynard Talley Jr. ’64 and Robert L. Quick Charles Monroe Whedbee ’64 R. Thompson Wright ’75 Horack Talley Pharr & Lowndes PA Drew Darden Spransy Claire Young Talley Susan Jenkins Van Der Weert ’02 Andrew J. Wheeler T. Brandon Wright and Kelly Hunton & Williams Robert Gilroy Spratt III ’73 Tina Y. Tanhehco ’12 Stacey Ames Vandiford ’08 Evelyn S. Wheeley Crummie Wright Jack Sprat Cafe Carol Spruill ’75 William Little Tankersley III ’74 Bradley Todd Van Hoy ’00 and Kira M. Whitacre Alan Edward Wrobel ’99 and Jeffrey and Jennifer Allred Family Sue Alice Stevens Sprunger ’97 Caroline Johnson Tanner ’92 Margaret McKibben Van Hoy George Graves Whitaker ’69 Laura Wright Wrobel Foundation Alexis Natasha Stackhouse ’99 John Mark Tapley* ’56 Peter Marshall Varney ’99 John Clarke Whitaker Jr., Erin McNeil Young ’99 Jewish Foundation of Greensboro Mark Andrew Stafford ’89 and Adam Patrick Tarleton ’07 Emily Elaine Vaughn ’05 in memory of Katherine D. Young ’09 Elizabeth Cass Stafford Pearry L. Tarwasokono ’12 Mark David Vaughn ’08 Robert L. Quick T. Carlton Younger Jr. ’75 Johnny T-Shirt Karen Jane Stam ’74 Andrew Joseph Taska ’03 Robert C. Vaughn Jr. ’55 and Diane Sheppard White ’85 Thomas Carlton Younger III ’04 Johnston Allison & Hord PA Diane Marie Standaert ’06 Hon. Samuel McDowell Tate ’53 Carolyn Hartford Vaughn Martin L. White ’96 Marshall V. Yount* ’40 Jones Walker Law Firm Darren William Stanhouse ’04 Jean Tatge John Daniel Veazey ’06 Ralph Alexander White Jr. ’64 Michael David Youth ’00 Julian Price Family Foundation Oscar Edwin Starnes Jr. ’50 and Pamela Tatge Lindsay Carol Verity ’03 Thomas Jackson White III ’66 Cynthia L. Zakary ’11 Justgive Lida Martin Starnes Cooper Ellis Taylor Jr. ’58 Melinda Lee Vervais ’06 William Robert Whitehurst Sr. ’82 Ellen D. Zasowski Kane Russell Coleman & William Michael Starr ’03 Harmony Whalen Taylor ’99 Joseph Patrick Viera Myra Virginia Whitener ’00 and Peter A. Zorn ’96 Logan PC Adam Michael Steadman ’08 Ian Taylor ’94 Theresa Eileen Viera ’12 Benjamin Whitener April Christian Zotecan ’03 Kathrine R. Everett Charitable Derek Bruce Steed ’97 Lindsey Handley Taylor ’86 Mary Coker Vilas ’88 Kimberly Huffman Whitley ’93 Brian Kent Zuercher ’89 and Testamentary Trust Cheryl Dean Steele ’87 Marvin Edward Taylor Jr. ’65 Richard Allen Vinroot ’66 Lee Michael Whitman ’93 Pamela Prince Zuercher Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP Kim Kirk Steffan ’86 Stacy Kirk Taylor ’00 and Spike Vires and MaryAnn Vires O. Hampton Whittington Jr. ’75 Frederick Ryan Zufelt ’08 KeySource Commercial Bank Paul Arnold Steffens ’96 and Richele Keel Taylor Sara Ruth Vizithum ’02 Joseph Bernard Widman ’01 and Erin Shaughnessy Zuiker ’08 Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Julia Steffens Hon. Susan Taylor ’81 Elizabeth Weddington Voltz ’98 Vanessa Silberman Wanda T. Zwiebel

CAROLINA LAW 35 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Kimberly Taylor Attorney at Yates McLamb & Weyher LLP John H. Lawrence Moore & Van Allen PLLC – Wyrick Robbins Yates & PARTICIPANT Law PLLC Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Kendra E. Leghart Research Triangle Park Ponton LLP Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP Kirby & Holt Xuan Li Nelson Mullins Riley & Yates McLamb & Weyher LLP – Charlotte, Huntsville, Jackson Klausie’s Jack R. Magee Scarborough LLP Gailor Wallis & Hunt PLLC Nexsen Pruet LLC KPMG Foundation FACULTY & Zachary B. Marquand GOLD (90-99%) Horack Talley Pharr & Lowndes PA Carolyn A. Mayer, Class Gift Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein Law Office of Lucky T. Osho STAFF Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett James McElroy & Diehl PA Ambassador LLP – Charlotte Mitchell & Jernigan LLP Lawyers Mutual Liability Prof. Kimberly Christin Bishop ’04 Christopher D. McEachran Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein King & Spalding LLP Insurance Company of North Dean John “Jack” Charles Elizabeth D. Morgan, Class Gift LLP – Raleigh McGuireWoods LLP Carolina SILVER (80-89%) Boger ’74 Ambassador Poyner Spruill LLP – Rocky Mount Ellis & Winters LLP Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA Legatus Foundation, in memory Conrad Karl Bortz Kevin D. Mulet, Class Gift Roberts & Stevens PA Poyner Spruill LLP – Raleigh of Robert L. Quick Hunton & Williams LLP– Charlotte Carolyn E. Brafford Ambassador Schell Bray PLLC Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA Local Yogurt Greenville LLC Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton – Dana M. Dubis Kara M. Murphy Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP – Winston-Salem Sidley Austin LLP Lomax Family Foundation Stephanie J. Murr Greensboro Prof. Maxine Natalie Eichner Nicholls & Crampton PA Skadden Arps Slate Meagher Lunsford Richardson Preyer Timothy G. Nelson Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP & Flom LLP Lewis Moore Everett ’08 Virginia R. Niehaus – Atlanta, Charlotte, Raleigh, Charitable BRONZE (70-79%) Tharrington Smith LLP Mayer Brown LLP Prof. Laura N. Gasaway James W. O’Rourke Wilmington Prof. Elizabeth Gibson ’76 Anand K. Patel The Van Winkle Law Firm Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog LLP Womble Carlyle Sandridge McGuire Woods Battle & Boothe & Rice LLP – Charlotte Louise W. Harris Narina Nana Pavlova Troutman Sanders LLP Hunton & Williams LLP – Raleigh, McGuireWoods LLP Richmond, Los Angeles, New Womble Carlyle Sandridge Amanda Suttle Hitchcock ’07 Katherine J. Perretta Ward and Smith PA McIntosh Law Firm PC York, Washington, D.C & Rice LLP – Raleigh Kris Jensen Kavita R. Pillai, Class Gift Officer Williams Mullen Medical Specialist Clinic PC Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP Womble Carlyle Sandridge John B. Kasprzak ’05 Brooks T. Pope, Class Gift Wishart Norris Henninger & Minor Foundation Manning Fulton & Skinner PA & Rice LLP – Winston-Salem Ambassador Pittman PA Moore & Van Allen PLLC Maria J. Mangano ’82 S. Will Quick Morrison & Foerster LLP Prof. Richard E. Myers ’98 Laura D. Rixey Muller Law LLC Prof. Robert Paul Mosteller Spencer C. Robinson 2012 FIRM CAMPAIGN REPRESENTATIVES Nelson Mullins Riley & Prof. Gene R. Nichol Jr. Aldo C. Rodriguez Meredith K. Rose Scarborough LLP Sylvia Novinsky Alston & Bird LLP, Charlotte, Kenyon & Kenyon LLP, Schell Bray PLLC, Maria T. Rutecki Network for Good Prof. Judith W. Wegner H. Bryan Ives III ’80 Rose Cordero Prey ’04 Doris Bray ‘66 New Century Bank T. Brandon Wright Kathryn B. Saleeby Sharvari Sane Bell Davis & Pitt PA, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton - Sidley Austin LLP, News & Observer Robin A. Seelbach Robin J. Stinson ’84 Atlanta, R. Charles Henn Jr. ‘98 Angela M. Xenakis ‘03 Nexsen Pruet LLC 3L CLASS GIFT Elyssa K. Sharp, Class Gift Officer Bradley Arant Boult Cummings Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton - Skadden Arps Slate North Carolina Bankers Stacey M. Shepherd LLP, Kenneth M. Perry ‘93 Raleigh, William F. Lane ’97 Meagher & Flom LLP, Association DONORS Anne F. Stewart Brooks Pierce McLendon Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Luke A. Meisner ‘03 Olde North State BBQ LLC Members of the Class of 2012 Hayleigh T. Stewart Humphrey & Leonard - Winston-Salem, Richard Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Owsley Brown Charitable that contributed to the 3L Class Morgan E. Stewart LLP - Greensboro, Gottlieb ’96 Mitchell & Jernigan, Foundation Inc. Gift benefiting the Class of 2012 Joshua J. Styles S. Leigh Rodenbough IV ’80 King & Spalding LLP, R. Donavon Munford ‘79, Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP Loan Assistance Repayment Mary Pat Sullivan Brooks Pierce McLendon E. William Bates II ’79 Brian Meacham ‘03, Patla Straus Robinson & Moore PA Fund, The Alexander Tatge Martha J. Svoboda Humphrey & Leonard LLP - Kirby & Holt LLP, David F. Kirby ’77 Katherine D. Young ‘09 Raleigh, Elizabeth Paul Hastings LLP Finamore Fund, Law Scholarships Tina Y. Tanhehco Lynch & Eatman LLP, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP - Pearry L. Tarwasokono Spainhour ‘05 Perry Bundy Plyler Long & Cox LP or a law fund of choice. Katherine B. Wilkerson ’92 Greensboro, David Moore II ‘69 Molly E. Thebes, Class Gift Brown & Bunch PLLC, Phi Alpha Delta Pre – Law Fraternity Manning Fulton & Skinner, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP - Ambassador LeAnn Nease Brown ’84 Alison R. Cayton ’91 Pie Pushers Alexander Abramovich Atlanta, Charlotte, Greenville, Lindsay R. Aldridge Douglas B. Thie Campbell Shatley PLLC, McGuire Wood & Bissette PA, Poole Foundation Inc. Raleigh, Wilmington, Min Ahn Amelia A. Thompson K. Dean Shatley ’03 Sabrina P. Rockoff ’02 David J. Neill ‘04 Poyner Spruill LLP Lisa M. Valdez Carruthers & Roth PA, Alice C. Anderson McGuireWoods LLP, Tharrington Smith LLP, Pulley Watson King & Lischer PA Bruce W. Andrews Jr. Theresa E. Viera J. Scott Dillon ’83 Jason D. Evans ’01 Jamille Wade Jill Jackson ‘99 and Raymond James & Associates, Inc. Charles Van Dyke Archie Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog LLP, Moore & Van Allen PLLC - Ernest L. Washington Neal A. Ramee ’03 RBC Dain Rauscher Lisa W. Arthur Dan M. Hartzog ’73 Charlotte, A. Mark Adcock ’83 Judson B. Wood The Van Winkle Law Firm, Renaissance Charitable Katherine B. Asaro Ellis & Winters LLP, and Benjamin Pickett ’07 Kristin M. Wouk Esther Manheimer ‘98 and Foundation Jackie N. Azis, Class Gift Officer Thomas H. Segars ’00 Moore & Van Allen PLLC - John Veazey ‘06 Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA Katherine M. Barnes Gailor Wallis & Hunt PLLC, Research Triangle Park, C. Adam Barrington Carrie J. Buell ’07 Troutman Sanders LLP, Ruth Z. Fleishman Foundation 2012 UNC Michael Byrne ’96 Thomas E. Reilly ‘96 Sallie B. Phillips Foundation Adam K. Batenhorst Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA, William C. Biggerstaff SCHOOL OF Ward and Smith PA, Salutations Garofalo LLP, Erin Jennings Regel Bobay ’09 David R. Boaz, Class Gift David N. Allen ’80 and Kenneth R. Wooten ‘79 Seagrove Pottery LAW FIRM Nexsen Pruet LLC, Ambassador Kristie H. Farwell ’03 Williams Mullen, Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett R. Harper Heckman ’91 Crystal Boni, Class Gift Officer CAMPAIGN Horack Talley Pharr & Lowndes Elizabeth D. Scott ‘86 Mitchell and Jernigan LLP Nelson Mullins Riley & Erin L. Brinkman UNC School of Law alumni from PA, Jonathan Windham ‘02 Wishart Norris Henninger Southern Community Bank and Scarborough LLP, Ryan K. Brissette the following firms are recognized Hunton & Williams LLP - Atlanta, & Pittman, Trust, in memory of William Gammon ’73 Kimberly J. Brow for their participation in the 2012 Raleigh, Richmond, New York, C. Thomas Steele Jr. ‘87 Robert L. Quick Nicholls & Crampton PA, Orla M. Buckley Firm Campaign. Every gift received Washington D.C., Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Sumrell Sugg Carmichael Hicks Emmett B. Haywood ’82 Kimberly M. Burke through the Firm Campaign helps to William Dannelly ’77 Rice LLP - Charlotte, & Hart PA Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein Heather E. Burleson further the mission of UNC School Hunton & Williams LLP - Sarah M. Stone ‘05 Templeton & Raynor PA Ebony J. Burns LLP - Charlotte, of Law and has a direct impact on Charlotte, Michael Jami Jackson Farris ’99 Womble Carlyle Sandridge The Clearing House Sarah K. Burris the future of legal education. Nedzbala ‘87 Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein & Rice LLP - Raleigh, The Salem Foundation Inc. George W. Carter James McElroy & Diehl PA, LLP - Raleigh, Owen B. Asplundh ‘05 The Stuart S. & Birdie Gould Andrew Casanueva John S. Arrowood ‘82 Cheryl H. Chew PLATINUM (100%) Amanda Hayes ’02 Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Foundation Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Jane Y. Chun Alston & Bird LLP – Charlotte Poyner Spruill LLP - Raleigh, Rice LLP - Winston-Salem, Triangle Community Foundation Daniel A. Merlin ‘06 Sean M. Clayton Bell Davis & Pitt PA Michael E. Slipsky ’04 Christopher A. Kreiner ‘94 Troutman Sanders LLP Brandon J. Cole Bradley Arant Boult Cummings K&L Gates LLP - Charlotte, Poyner Spruill LLP - Rocky Wyrick Robbins Yates & United Way of Forsyth County Inc. Chelsea J. Corey LLP – Birmingham Justin T. Carpenter ’09 Mount, Deborah E. Sperati ’99 Ponton LLP, U.S. Trust Bank of America James A. Coulter Brooks Pierce McLendon K&L Gates LLP - Raleigh, Roberts & Stevens PA, Joshua Otto ‘07 Private Wealth Management, Henry M. Coxe Humphrey & Leonard LLP – Margaret Westbrook ’96 John W. Mason ‘73 Yates McLamb & Weyher, in memory of Lauren C. Cranford Greensboro Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson Susan T. Fountain ‘97 Robert L. Quick Christine M. Deaver Brooks Pierce McLendon Richard L. Farley ’87 PA, Douglas Jarrell ‘94 The Van Winkle Law Firm Hector E. Diaz Humphrey & Leonard LLP – Vincent Properties Inc. Macy B. Fisher Raleigh Vorys Sater Seymour & Pease LLP Christopher T. Fowler Brown & Bunch PLLC W. Trent Ragland Jr. Foundation Leann A. Gerlach Campbell Shatley PLLC Ward and Smith PA Cody I. Gillians Carruthers & Roth PA Giving Levels Wells Fargo Bank, NA - Gregory A. Goldman Andrew A. Greenwood Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Minneapolis Garofalo LLP Donors have been included in the following giving levels for cash contributions Will & Pops Stefanie M. Gregory Selene A. Haedi Johnston Allison & Hord PA to UNC School of Law from July 1, 2011, to June 30, 2012. Williams Mullen William James Hall III K&L Gates LLP – Charlotte Williams Mullen Foundation Sanghyuck Josh Han K&L Gates LLP – Raleigh 1845 Society $25,000 or more Winston & Strawn LLP SeungHeon Andrew Han Kenyon & Kenyon LLP – New York Van Hecke-Wettach Society $10,000 to $24,999 Winston-Salem Foundation, Jeffrey Hannon Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton in memory of Carla Hermida – Atlanta William Brantley Aycock Society $5,000 to $9,999 Edward G. Johnson and Lauren N. Hobson Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Dean’s Club $2,000 to $4,999 Robert L. Quick Mary L. Irvine – Raleigh $1,000 to $1,999 Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Charles R. Kabugo-Musoke Kirby & Holt LLP William Horn Battle Society Rice LLP, Andrew A. Kasper Lynch & Eatman LLP Partners Level $500 to $999 in memory of Margaret B. Kopp McGuire Wood & Bissette PA Associates Level $1 to $499 Robert L. Quick Jeffrey J. Lakin Moore & Van Allen PLLC – Yarns, Etc. David M. Lambert III Charlotte

36 FALL-WINTER 2012 CLASS NOTES

1956 1967 1975 CHARLES E. MELVIN JR. JOHN LEE JERNIGAN of Smith Anderson in The Honorable ROBERT HOLT EDMUNDS JR. of Smith Moore Leather- Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Chambers of the Supreme Court of North Carolina wood LLP in Greensboro, USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business. received the 2012 James E. Cross Leadership N.C., earned recognition as Award from the North Carolina State Bar in GEORGE LESTER LITTLE part of Business North recognition of his leadership role in establishing JR. of Kilpatrick Townsend Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” the appellate practice specialty and his commit- & Stockton in Winston- in real estate law. ment to improving the quality of the appellate Salem, N.C., earned practice in North Carolina. Charles E. Melvin Jr. recognition as Business North Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” IRVIN WHITE HANKINS III of Parker Poe in antitrust. Adams & Bernstein LLP in Charlotte, N.C., was 1958 appointed to the Disciplinary Hearing George Lester Little Jr. HENRY H. ISAACSON of Isaacson Isaacson Commission of the North Carolina State Bar. Sheridan & Fountain in Greensboro, N.C., had E. GARRETT WALKER of an interview published in the Greensboro News 1971 Smith Moore Leatherwood & Record entitled “Corporate Law Makes Henry ROBERT EDWARD HARRINGTON of LLP in Greensboro, N.C., H. Isaacson Tick.” Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA in Charlotte, earned recognition as part N.C., became the 101st president of the of Business North Carolina’s Mecklenburg County Bar. 2012 “Legal Elite” in real 1959 estate law. ALFRED EUGENE CLEVELAND III of McCoy WILLIAM MACNIDER E. Garrett Walker Wiggins Cleveland & O’Connor in Fayetteville, TROTT of Young Moore & N.C., was recognized by Best Lawyers of America Henderson PA in Raleigh, in the area of banking for 14 consecutive years. N.C., was listed in the 2012 North Carolina Super 1976 Lawyers. NOAH H. HUFFSTETLER III 1961 of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP in ROBERT M. CLAY of Young William MacNider Trott Raleigh, N.C., was named Moore & Henderson PA in one of the “Triangle’s Most Raleigh, N.C., was listed in Influential Business Leaders” the 2012 North Carolina 1973 by the Triangle Business Super Lawyers. Journal. STEPHEN THEODORE Noah H. SMITH of McMillan & Huffstetler III Smith in Raleigh, N.C., was Robert M. Clay appointed by Gov. Beverly CARL NORRIS PATTERSON JR. of Smith Perdue to a second six-year Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for G. DUDLEY HUMPHREY term as chair of the North Business. JR. of Kilpatrick Townsend Carolina Environmental Management Commission. & Stockton in Winston- Stephen Theodore Salem, N.C., earned Smith 1977 recognition as Business North Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” WILLIAM PUGH DANIELL in Construction and was also 1974 of Young Moore & included in the publication’s Henderson PA was listed in G. Dudley STUART THOMAS 2012 North Carolina Super Humphrey Jr. Hall of Fame. WILLIAMS of Henson & Lawyers. Efron PA in Saint Louis 1962 Park, Minn., was named in the 2012 Minnesota Super VINCENT PAUL COLLURA of Fearrington Lawyers. William Pugh Daniell Village in Pittsboro, N.C., was honored at a 50-year member awards luncheon presented by 1978 the Florida Bar Association in Orlando, Fla. Stuart Thomas Williams WALTER EDGAR BROCK JR. of Young Moore & 1963 Henderson PA in Raleigh, N.C., was listed in the 2012 WILLIAM J. KELLAM JR. joined Hutchens North Carolina Super Senter Kellam & Pettit PA as a partner. Lawyers.

Walter Edgar Brock Jr.

CAROLINA LAW 37 CLASS NOTES

ROBERT CLARENCE CONE J. DICKSON PHILLIPS III DAVID LANE GORDON of Atlanta was elected to of Tuggle Duggins & of Robinson Bradshaw & the management committee of Jackson Lewis LLP. Meschan in Greensboro, Hinson PA’s Research ALAN MITCHELL WOLPER joined Ulmer & N.C., was awarded the 2011 Triangle office has been Berne’s Financial Services & Securities Centennial Award honoring reappointed by Gov. Beverly Litigation Practice Group as a partner in its extraordinary community Perdue to a second six-year Chicago office. service jointly by the North term on the North Carolina Carolina and Greensboro Robert Clarence J. Dickson Environmental Management Bar Associations. Cone Phillips III Commission. 1984 The Honorable RICKYE MCKOY-MITCHELL of EVELYN DOVE-COLEMAN was the keynote 1980 Charlotte, N.C., received the Julius Chambers speaker for the 20-year anniversary celebration Diversity Champion Award, celebrating those The Honorable PAUL of PathChoice Inc. & Mediation, a who have made a significant contribution to MARTIN NEWBY of the nonprofit corporation in Kinston, N.C. diversity and equal opportunity in the Meck- Supreme Court of North lenburg community. RONALD LAVONNE GIBSON of Charlotte, Carolina was honored as the N.C., was named to the Board of the Lawyer’s 2012 recipient of the John MARGARET LOUISE MILROY of Verizon in Mutal Liability Insurance Company of North McNeill Smith Jr. Constitu- Alexandria, Va., is the 2012 recipient of the Jean Carolina. tional Rights and Allard Glass Cutter Award from the American Responsibilities Section Bar Association Business Law Section. MICHAEL MACKAGER YORK of Reston, Va., Paul Martin Newby Award. was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame on April 11. York is in private 1985 practice in Virginia, and was recently named an 1981 at-large member of the Virginia State Bar’s CHRISTOPHER BLAIR CAPEL of Smith Judicial Nominations Committee. DIANE SCHAFER GOODSTEIN of the South Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Carolina Justice Department in Saint George, Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for S.C., was presented with the Pursuit of Justice Business. Award by the American Bar Association Tort 1979 ERIC JAY SPITLER of the Securities and Trial and Insurance Practice Section. Colonel FREDERIC LOUIS Exchange Commission was appointed director BORCH of the Judge of the office of legislative affairs by the Federal Advocate General’s Corps. 1982 Deposit Insurance Corporation. in Charlottesville, Va., was selected as one of two E. KENT AUBERRY of Fulbright Scholars for the Smith Moore Leatherwood 1987 LLP in Greensboro, N.C., Netherlands in 2012-2013. LISA JAMES DIXON joined the Raleigh, N.C., earned recognition as part of He will be a visiting office of Womble Carlyle as a corporate and Frederic Louis Borch Business North Carolina’s professor at the University of securities attorney. Leiden and will conduct research on Dutch 2012 “Legal Elite” in military commissions and teach international business law. CHARLES MATTHEW KEEN of Raleigh, N.C., was elected as a fellow into the College of humanitarian law, with a focus on terrorism and E. Kent Auberry counter-terrorism. Labor and Employment Lawyers. JONATHAN A. BERKELHAMMER of Smith BYRON BARNES KIRKLAND of Smith WILLIAM STANLEY MILLS of Glenn Mills Moore Leatherwood LLP in Greensboro, N.C., Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Fisher & Mahoney PA in Durham, N.C., will earned recognition as part of Business North Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for serve on the N.C. Advocates for Justice Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” in litigation. executive committee for 2012. Business. J. WADE HARRISON, managing partner of MICHAEL DARNELL PETTY joined the FDA Wishart Norris Henninger & Pittman in 1983 and life sciences practice of King & Spalding as Burlington, N.C., was elected North Carolina’s JAMES WALTER a pharmaceutical regulatory partner in its chapter delegate to the American Academy of CRAWFORD JR. of the Washington, D.C., office. Matrimonial Lawyers for a three-year term. United States Navy was appointed the deputy judge C. THOMAS STEELE JR. of HANAN M. ISAACS of Princeton, N.J., was advocate general (DJAG) of Wishart Norris Henninger named in the 2012 New Jersey Super Lawyers. the Navy, making him the & Pittman PA in Burlington, R. DONAVON MUNFORD JR. of Smith second-highest ranking JAG N.C., was inducted as an Anderson was elected to the board of the officer and lawyer in the honorary member by UNC- James Walter Asheville’s chapter of Beta North Carolina Center for Public Policy Crawford Jr. United States Navy. He will Research. also serve as commander, Gamma Sigma at the society’s annual banquet, Naval Legal Service Command. C. Thomas Steele Jr. where he served as the main speaker. Beta Gamma Sigma is the international honor society for collegiate schools of business.

38 FALL-WINTER 2012 ALAN DALE MCINNES of 1988 1991 Kilpatrick Townsend & DAVID RICHARDSON MICHAEL BARD BAYER of Image Entertain- Stockton in Raleigh, N.C., ATKINSON JR. of Gunster ment Inc. in Tarzana, Calif., was interviewed for earned recognition as one of Yoakley & Stewart in West an article entitled “Back to the Future” in the Business North Carolina’s Palm Beach, Fla., was named Los Angeles Daily Journal. 2012 “Legal Elite” in and listed among “Leaders in MICHELLE SMITH litigation. McInnes was also their Field” by Chambers selected as a 2012 North COFIELD of Raleigh, N.C., Alan Dale McInnes USA for his work in general was elected to serve on the Carolina Super Lawyer in commercial litigation. David Richardson Wake County and 10th business litigation. Atkinson Jr. Judicial District boards of SUSAN HUNT ZUROSKY of Dickie McCamey directors. DAVID JAMISON LAING joined Crowell & & Chilcote in Charlotte, N.C., was selected and Morning LLP in its Washington, D.C., office as listed as one of The Mecklenburg Times’ “50 a partner, where he will be a member of the Michelle Smith Cofield Influential Women of 2012.” antitrust group. ALEXANDER L. MAULTSBY of Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP in Greensboro, N.C., 1995 1989 earned recognition as part of Business North KEVIN LEE CHIGNELL was THOMAS WALTERS HENSON JR. of Henson Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” in labor and named managing partner at & Fuerst PA in Raleigh, N.C., contributed a employment law. Parker Poe’s Raleigh, N.C., office. chapter for the book “The Miracle Mind: MARK ROBERT MCGRATH of Chapel Hill, Sonya’s Story,” a book designed to help stroke N.C., formed McGrathLaw, a virtual law firm and traumatic brain injury patients, their families, and solo practice that will represent seriously and their caregivers. Henson also chaired the injured clients. American Diabetes Association’s North Carolina Kevin Lee Chignell Tour de Cure in Cary in June 2012. GLENNWOOD CARROLL RAYNOR of Young Moore & Henderson PA was listed 1996 1990 in the 2012 North Carolina Super Lawyers. RICHARD S. GOTTLIEB of THOMAS PEARSON Kilpatrick Townsend & HOLDERNESS of Robinson KERRY ANNE SHAD of Stockton in Winston-Salem, Bradshaw & Hinson PA in Smith Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., earned recognition as Charlotte, N.C., was Glennwood Carroll N.C., was recognized in one of Business North awarded the 2012 William L. Raynor Chambers USA: America’s Carolina’s 2012 “Legal Elite” Thorp Pro Bono Service Leading Lawyers for Business. in litigation. Gottlieb was Award by the North also selected as a 2012 North KRISTY WEATHERS of Altanta was named Richard S. Gottlieb Carolina Bar Association, Carolina Super Lawyer in Thomas Pearson professional development partner at Sutherland. Holderness recognizing him as the Pro business litigation. Bono Attorney of the Year. KEN CHRISTIAN JOSEPH was appointed to 1993 lead the investment adviser/investment Leutze ’90 Publishes ANDREW DEAN SHORE moved to Talcott company examination program in the Story of Fierce Franklin PC’s new North Carolina Office in Securities and Exchange Commission’s New Legal Struggle Davidson, N.C., as a senior lawyer. York regional office. A simple call from his DAWN SILER-NIXON, diversity and inclusion STEPHEN W. PETERSEN of Smith Moore neighbors launched JAY partner at FordHarrison LLP in Tampa, Fla., and Leatherwood LLP in Raleigh, N.C., earned LEUTZE ’90 into a fierce chair of the American Bar Association (ABA) recognition as one of Business North Carolina’s Jay Leutze legal battle with a mining AIDS Coordinating Committee, recently 2012 “Legal Elite” in criminal defense and company to save the mountain where he hosted the ABA’s HIV/AIDS Law and Practice litigation law. lived in Western North Carolina’s remote Conference in Washington, D.C. Appalachians. Leutze, a trustee for the MICHAEL LEE WILSON of Johnston Allison & Southern Appalachian Highlands Conser- Hord PA in Charlotte, N.C., was elected by the vancy, published a memoir about the fight 1994 board of governors to serve on the UNC- he took up along with a grassroots coalition Charlotte board of trustees. PAMELA WACHTER MCAFEE of Raleigh, of conservationists to save Belview N.C., was named partner at Nelson Mullins Mountain in Avery County. The book, “Stand Riley & Scarborough. Up That Mountain,” (Simon and Schuster 1997 2012) chronicles his five-year ordeal that WILLIAM FRANCIS LANE of Kilpatrick set groundbreaking legal precedent Townsend & Stockton in Raleigh, N.C., was concerning the revocation of mining selected as a 2012 North Carolina Super Lawyer permits. in Environmental Law.

CAROLINA LAW 39 CLASS NOTES

KIMBERLY D. EVANS Lieutenant Colonel ALISON CHRISTOPHER C. LAM joined Nexsen Pruet’s ROSS of Moffar Thomas MARTIN is currently serving Charlotte, N.C., office as a partner in the Barrett Rock & Fields in as the staff judge advocate of business litigation group. Shelley, Idaho, was recog- U.S. Army Special Forces SABRINA PRESNELL ROCKOFF joined the nized by the Idaho Business Command (Airborne) at employment and labor law team of McGuire Review as one of the 2012 Fort Bragg, N.C. As the Wood & Bissette PA in Asheville, N.C. Women of the Year. staff judge advocate, Lt. Col. JASON L. WILSON formed the law firm of Kimberly D. Evans Ross Alison Martin Martin supervises a team of 88 attorneys and paralegals Foley & Wilson PLLC in Greensboro, N.C. serving around the globe in support of the 1998 Special Forces mission. 2003 MELISSA DEWEY DANA EDWARD SIMPSON of Smith Anderson JEFFREY M. DAVIS accepted a position as BRUMBACK, partner at in Raleigh, N.C., was ranked first among 798 in-house counsel with Lincoln Financial Group Ragsdale Liggett PLLC in registered lobbyists in the biennial survey by the in Greensboro, N.C. Raleigh, N.C., was selected independent, nonpartisan NC Center for Public as a featured speaker on Policy Research. He is the youngest lobbyist JOSEPH SAMUEL DOWDY of Raleigh, N.C., faculty for Strafford ever to claim the top spot. was named partner at Nelson Mullins Riley & Publications Construction Scarborough. Law’s webinar “Drafting Melissa Dewey J. TRAVIS HOCKADAY was named partner at Construction Contracts: Key 2001 Brumback Smith Anderson in Raleigh, N.C. Provisions and Common ANTHONY JAMES BARWICK was named Pitfalls.” partner at K&L Gates in the Raleigh, N.C., office. GINGER BAGLEY HUNSUCKER has been named partner at Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog in JONATHAN P. HEYL of CINDY SINGER CAFARO became the Raleigh, N.C. Smith Moore Leatherwood departmental Freedom of Information Act LLP in Charlotte, N.C., officer at the Department of the Interior. BRIAN DUNCAN MEACHAM has been named earned recognition as one of partner at Smith Anderson in Raleigh, N.C. Business North Carolina’s KELLY THOMPSON COCHRAN was named WILLIAM MICHAEL STARR was named partner 2012 “Legal Elite” in acting assistant director for regulations at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in at Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough in anti-trust law, was included Charlotte, N.C. in the publication’s Hall of Washington, D.C. Jonathan P. Heyl Fame, and received WILLIAM RAY AMY S. WALLACE HOCKADAY was named exceptional recognition with the top honor in HAULBROOK of Boston partner at Smith Anderson in Raleigh, N.C. the antitrust category. joined Choate Hall & DORINDA LEA PEACOCK joined the Raleigh, Stewart LLP as partner in 2004 N.C., office of Womble Carlyle in mergers and its intellectual property acquisitions. group. PAUL JOSEPH FOLEY of Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton in Winston-Salem, N.C., was William Ray Haulbrook selected as a 2012 North Carolina Super Lawyer 1999 and a North Carolina Rising Star in securities and corporate finance. CARLOS ENRIQUE MAHONEY of Glenn Mills Fisher & Mahoney PA in Durham, N.C., will 2002 CHAD DWIGHT HANSEN serve on the N.C. Advocates for Justice of Kilpatrick Townsend & CHRISTOPHER JAMES AYERS of Poyner Stockton in Winston-Salem, executive committee for 2012. Spruill in Apex, N.C., was selected for the N.C., was selected as a 2012 Triangle Business Journal’s annual “40 Under BEVERLY CARRIGAN PEARMAN of Stoel North Carolina Super Lawyer 40” Awards. Rivers LLP in Portland, Ore., was elected and a North Carolina Rising president and chair of the board of directors for DAVID HILL BASHFORD was named managing Star in business litigation. Oregon Law Center. partner of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings’s Chad Dwight JON ROBERT PIERCE of Charlotte, N.C., office. DANIEL RAY RUA of Inflexion Partners in Hansen Kilpatrick Townsend & Gainesville, Fla., rejoined the IZEA Inc. board ERIC JOSEPH BRIGNAC is a research and Stockton in Winston-Salem, of directors. writing attorney with the federal public defender N.C., was selected as a 2012 North Carolina JOHN THORNTON WILSON was named senior for the Eastern District of North Carolina. Super Lawyer and a North Carolina Rising Star in vice president, general counsel and corporate intellectual property litigation. JONATHAN C. KRISKO of secretary of Quality Distribution Inc. in Atlanta. Robinson Bradshaw & HENRY HAYWOOD ROBBINS of Greenville, Hinson PA has been selected N.C., became assistant general counsel in the 2000 for the Charlotte Business legal department of Vidant Health, the hospital Journal’s 19th annual “40 system associated with East Carolina University. STEPHANIE SUMMERSON HALL was named Under 40,” an award CEO of Ruth’s House Event Rentals and Design. recognizing young profes- sionals in the Charlotte area JESSICA POTTS LAHEY of Crossroads Jonathan C. Krisko Academy in Lyme Center, N.H., was named in each year for outstanding “33 Educators We Admire” by The New York leadership, notable achievements and tireless Times as part of “Connected Educator Month.” contributions to the community.

40 FALL-WINTER 2012 2005 DANE R. SCALISE accepted a position with 2008 Chleborowicz & Theriault in Wilmington, N.C. ADRIENNE ALLISON joined SHERRY HONEYCUTT EVERETT of Everett & the UNC School of Law Everett in Durham, N.C., was awarded the 2012 MARCUS B. SMITH, formerly of the United Career Services Office as a Younger Lawyer Pro Bono Service award by States District Court in Las Vegas accepted a full-time public interest the Young Lawyers Division of the North position with Jackson Lewis in their Las Vegas career counselor. Carolina Bar Association. office. JAMES LLOYD WEST accepted a position with Heimberg Law Group LLP in Los Angeles, Adrienne Allison 2009 Calif., practicing medical malpractice. SARAH HELENA LORD BRENNAN joined the law firm of Harter Secrest & Emery LLP in 2006 Rochester, N.Y. 2011 KAREN LYNN LUCHKA of RACHEL MARIE BLUNK joined Wishart Norris Fisher & Phillips in MARTA PATRILOUS BROWN joined York Williams & Lewis in Charlotte, N.C., as an Henninger & Pittman PA as an associate in its Columbia, S.C., was selected Burlington, N.C., office. by The State newspaper for associate. He will focus his practice on civil its annual “20 under 40” list litigation. JONATHAN A. ESPINOLA joined as an associate of the area’s top young at Wishart Norris Henninger & Pittman PA in professionals. Luchka was Charlotte, N.C. also listed in Rising Stars. 2010 Karen Lynn Luchka MARY LYNN IRVINE joined the UNC School of HANNAH CAMENZIND joined UNC School of Law Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity. Law as the director of student services. PETER S. KIM joined the JOHN MICHAEL MOYE of Kilpatrick Townsend VANESA HERNANDEZ of & Stockton in Chapel Hill, N.C., was selected Philadelphia office of Klehr Maynard Cooper & Gale Harrison Harvey Branzburg as a 2012 North Carolina Super Lawyer and a PC in Birmingham, Ala., was North Carolina Rising Star in business litigation. as an associate in the Real selected as a regional Estate and Finance Depart- representative for the young ment. lawyers division of the 2007 Hispanic National Bar LAURA ROSS joined the TAYLOR STUKES joined the Charlotte, N.C., Association. Peter S. Kim firm of Robert Allen Law as Vanesa Hernandez office of Moore & Van Allen as an associate. an associate in Miami. JESSICA B. WEST of Raleigh, N.C., joined Smith Anderson as an associate.

Staff Profile:T. Brandon Wright POSITION: served as associate director of development their school, and they want Carolina Law to Assistant Dean until November 2010, at which time I was achieve new levels of success. It’s an honor for Advancement promoted to my current role as assistant dean. to help folks dream big, put a giving plan on HOMETOWN: WHAT DOES YOUR JOB ENTAIL? I paper, and then help implement those plans. Roanoke have the pleasure of working with donors I love seeing a donor’s face the first time they Rapids, N.C. across the South, mostly Carolina Law shake hands with the first recipient of their alumni, who want to ensure that Carolina namesake scholarship – helping others really EDUCATION: changes lives. B.S., Applied Law remains the nation’s best, truly public Communication, law school. In my role, I seek to find creative WHAT WAS YOUR FIRST JOB? I Appalachian ways to help donors achieve their philan- started mowing lawns as soon as I could push State University thropic goals. a mower. VOLUNTEER ACTIVITIES: President, WHAT DO YOU LIKE BEST ABOUT HOW DO YOU LIKE TO SPEND board of directors, LCI, Inc. (a non-profit WORKING IN ADVANCEMENT? YOUR FREE TIME? Gardening, running, that helps people with disabilities enjoy Seeing the difference philanthropy makes reading and taking care of our three dogs and more independent, productive and rewarding in the lives of both the donor and those three foster dogs with my wife, Kelly. lives); Secretary and past president, Sanford who benefit from their generosity. I also WHAT ARE YOU READING? I just Assembly Club (a social dinner club) appreciate Carolina’s strong emphasis on finishedDecision Points, and I’m re-reading building relationships with donors. I truly The Great Gatsby while on vacation. HOW LONG HAVE YOU WORKED believe that Carolina’s philosophy regarding AT THE LAW SCHOOL? Since giving is the best approach for both the WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE MOVIE September 2004. I served as deputy director donor and the University. Law graduates love OR TV SHOW? Mad Men of development until April 2007. Then, I

CAROLINA LAW 41 Faculty Books

Muller’s New Book Offers Insider’s View of Japanese Internment Camp

ERIC MULLER, DAN K. MOORE mented both the bleakness and beauty DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR of his surroundings, using Koda- OF LAW IN JURISPRUDENCE chrome film, a technology then just AND ETHICS, has been fascinated seven years old, to capture community by the history of the internment of celebrations and to record his family’s Japanese-Americans during World struggle to maintain a normal life War II for more than 20 years. His under the harsh conditions of racial interest began when he was teaching imprisonment. John M. Conley, with Jane constitutional law at the University of Muller collected the photos in his C. Moriarty Wyoming. He discovered one of the new book, “Colors of Confinement” internment camps in Wyoming at a (UNC Press, in association with the Scientific and Expert place called Heart Mountain, where Center for Documentary Studies Evidence (2nd edition) nearly 14,000 Japanese-American men, at Duke University), showcasing 65 women and children were confined during the war. color images from this rare collection. The photos Aspen Publishers, 2011. For years Muller, as an expert on the topic and as a are published along with three interpretive essays by 696 pages. member of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Founda- Muller and other leading scholars, and a personal ISBN-13: 9780735594463 tion Board of Directors, devoted much of his time to essay by a former Heart Mountain internee. Muller overseeing the content and design of the new Heart says each of the essays helps the reader look at the Mountain Interpretive Learning Center, which opened photographs from a different perspective. last year. It was during his work on the new center “We are accustomed to thinking of the internees’ Thomas Hazen, with that he discovered the rare color photos taken by Bill lives unfolding in black and white, but the vibrant co-author James D. Cox Manbo (1908-1992), who had been confined at Heart colors of these images remind us that these injustices Corporate Mountain with his family in 1942. took place in a world that looks very much like the Counsel Guides: “I knew immediately that these images had the one we see out our own windows,” Muller says. potential to reshape our visual understanding of this The book was published to early critical praise, Corporation Law chapter of American history,” Muller says. including feature stories by the New York Times American Bar Association, While in the internment camp, Manbo docu- and NPR. 2012. 450 pages. ISBN-13: 9781614385509 UNC Press, 2012. 136 pages. ISBN-13: 9780807835739 Ruth Ann McKinney Reading Like a Lawyer (2nd edition) Carolina Academic Press, 2012. 328 pages. ISBN-13: 9781611631104

42 FALL-WINTER 2012 Parting Shots KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE Constitution Day 2012 featured a panel discussion on affirmative action in higher education, highlighting­ the U.S. Supreme Court case Fisher v. University of Texas. Panelists included Members of UNC’s American Constitution Society (ACS) with Professors John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74, dean and Wade Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law; Bill Marshall and Gene Nichol at the ACS National Convention in June in Charles Edward Daye, Henry Brandis Professor of Law and deputy director of the UNC Center Washington, D.C. From left, Nichol, Nick Tosco 3L, Cameron Ellis 3L, for Civil Rights; Mark Dorosin ’94, senior managing attorney, and Elizabeth M. Haddix ’98, Anderson Chang 2L, Nina Holtsberry 3L, Marshall, Kira Whitacre 3L. staff attorney, both at the center; and Steve Farmer, UNC vice provost for admissions. ALLISON REID

Alumni and staff with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who spoke at Maria Savasta-Kennedy, clinical professor of law and director of the externship program, commencement in May. From left, Erin Edwards ’11; John Kasprzak ’05, coached the first moot court team from Northwest Law School this past year while on a assistant dean for student services; Hannah Camenzind ’10, director of student Fulbright Fellowship in Xi’an, China. The group, comprised of students Ivy, Adrian, Song and services; Holder; Michael States, assistant dean for admissions; Dorsey Joanna, won Best Defense Team and Best Oralist in the 2012 China Open Debate Tourna- Bachenheimer; Sylvia Novinsky, assistant dean for public service programs. ment Moot Court Division.

Law school staff members Fredia Banks- Marsh, Lindsay Knell, Adrienne Allison ’05, Jacqueline Carlock, Kala Glenn-Pruitt, Catherine Pierce, Conrad Bortz, Rushdee Omar, Jesse Ramos, Charles Story and Donna Nixon partici- pated in a staff service day at the food bank in Durham, N.C. BRIANA BROUGH

Dean’s Fellows at orientation in August. CAROLINA LAW 43 Voices

Helping Students Develop Professional Voices

BY CRAIG SMITH Clinical Professor of Law and Assistant Dean for Legal Writing and Academic Success STEVE EXUM

aw students learn early about the “body of law”: the rules, that every person has limits. It emphasizes, however, that we principles, and doctrines that collectively make up the have unknowably large potential to “change and grow through L law. At UNC’s Writing and Learning Resources Center application and experience.” A growth mindset — plus patience, (WLRC), students learn about the blood that keeps the law’s creativity, compassion, and dedication — have been familiar in body alive and growing: the words and texts that flow through the the WLRC for years, thanks to Ruth Ann McKinney ’88, who legal profession, carrying meaning and accomplishing tasks. How retired last winter. They also are hallmarks of the eight clinical lawyers make that blood circulate effectively is the passionate focus professors who, with me, are founding members of our now of the WLRC’s nine clinical professors. exclusively full-time WLRC faculty: Our mission is to help students understand, welcome, and meet • Before becoming Director of Academic Success, JON MCCLA- law school’s challenges, starting with researching and writing. Our NAHAN ’08 graduated first in his class from the UNC School first-year, six-credit Research, Reasoning, Writing, and Advocacy of Law, clerked at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth (RRWA) courses focus on professional communication and Circuit, and served in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps. cooperation. In RRWA, we help students develop a professional • KACI BISHOP ’04 clerked at the Court of Appeals of North voice and use it effectively. That requires a lot of roll-up-your Carolina, worked at the North Carolina Justice Center, and sleeves, practice-oriented work. We meet intensively with small taught in the School of Law’s Immigration and Human Rights groups and individuals. We coach students as they develop research Policy Clinic. strategies to find pertinent law in traditional and virtual libraries. • ALEXA CHEW, a graduate of Princeton and Duke, worked We motivate and challenge students to analyze and organize legal as an associate at a large firm and a longtime judicial clerk at the authorities and to craft arguments and counterarguments. We Court of Appeals of North Carolina. constructively critique their writing as they explore facts and • LUKE EVERETT ’08, a former high school teacher with a inferences, arrange paragraphs and point headings, prepare an oral Master’s in teaching, also gleaned wisdom and experience from argument, and write an analytical email, memos, a letter to clients, running a prestigious century-old law firm in Durham. a simple contract, a motion memo, and an appellate brief. • AARON HARMON ’07, who was among the first U.S. The WLRC’s other chief endeavor is our Academic Success attorneys to become a LEED® Accredited Professional, has Program. It inclusively offers all students opportunities to progress coached competitive debaters, founded and operated a business, toward academic excellence, bar-exam passage, and professional and taught law in Oregon. success. Our assistance starts before a student’s first-year orienta- • MANDY HITCHCOCK ’07, who graduated first in her class tion, with the optional Legal Education Advancement Program at the UNC School of Law, has taught middle school, practiced (LEAP). It prepares students for law study by giving them practice in Washington, D.C., coordinated pro bono law services at one in reading cases, synthesizing legal rules and principles, and Washington law school, and taught writing at another. applying those principles in the context of exam questions. We • KATIE ROSE GUEST PRYAL ’03 clerked at a U.S. District then teach and mentor students in courses and workshops, through Court, practiced at a firm, and earned a PhD in Rhetoric and individual consultations, and with gentle yoga and stress-manage- Composition, after which she taught in UNC’s Department of ment sessions led by our calming and capable assistant, Patty Frey. English and Comparative Literature. These offerings continue throughout a student’s legal education • O.J. SALINAS practiced with firms, earned a Master’s in and even reach beyond graduation to the bar exam through counseling, and taught law-related courses to undergraduates and materials, workshops, and small-group and individual bar coaching. to Master’s students while gaining special expertise in academic- Success, writes psychologist Carol Dweck, has much to do with success counseling. a “growth mindset”: a belief that a person’s abilities are remark- These professors have, in Parker Palmer’s words, both the ably fluid, rather than — as a self-defeating “fixed mindset” “courage to teach” and a “capacity for connectedness” with the presumes — “carved in stone.” A growth mindset recognizes people they teach. UNC’s students are in good hands.

44 FALL-WINTER 2012 IN MEMORIAM William C. Friday ’48 By John Charles Boger ’74, Dean and Wade Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law

illiam Clyde “Bill” Friday Fellow classmate John Jordan recalled was born in 1920 in how Friday took wise and courageous Wsouthern Virginia. His action on many fronts. He “rushed to family, profoundly shaped by the Great the General Assembly to protest the Depression, moved in his early child- surprise passage of the infamous 1963 hood from his birthplace to tiny Dallas, Speaker Ban bill, …courageously in Gaston County, N.C., where young discontinued the very popular Dixie Friday saw poverty and want first Class basketball tournament following hand. He never forgot those lessons a point-shaving scandal,” and spread the and would crusade against poverty already significant reach of the Univer- throughout his 60-year public career. sity into every corner of the state. For A strong high school student and an the next 30 years, he was the University outstanding baseball catcher, Friday system to most people of North entered Wake Forest University in 1937, Carolina and the nation, as he oversaw but transferred to North Carolina State the growth of the University system University to study textiles. He made friends easily, took early from five to 16 campuses. During this time, the Research leadership positions and, his senior year, was elected senior class Triangle, in whose expansion he played a major part, became a president and tapped for two senior honor societies. world-wide magnet to research and high-tech industry. The gathering clouds of World War II drew Friday, like most Bill Friday’s retirement in 1986 was one in name only. of his classmates, into military service shortly after graduation. He became for 12 years the founding executive director of In 1945, the war over, Friday left the U.S. Navy and moved the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust. He also served as with Ida, his dear wife and lifelong supporter, to Carolina Law, founding co-chair of the Knight Commission on Intercol- to join the storied Class of ’48. It was a remarkable year: his legiate Athletics. His UNC-TV program, “North Carolina small study group alone included Bill Aycock, John Jordan, People with William Friday,” brought his wise and generous Dickson Phillips and Bill Dees. Along with fellow classmate presence into the homes of millions of North Carolinians. Terry Sanford, they represented the flower of North Carolina’s Always faithful to his deepest principles, Friday helped estab- public leadership for decades to come. lish the National Family Literacy Center, supported numer- After graduation, still considering a textile career, his life ous anti-poverty efforts, championed low tuition and broad took a fateful turn when UNC Chancellor Robert House student access to higher education, and was an advisor and invited him to stay in Chapel Hill and become assistant dean of friend to presidents, governors, legislative leaders, and literally students. His talent quickly became evident to all; as one writer hundreds and hundreds of his fellow North Carolinians, all of has noted, he possessed “a congenial personality and consider- whom remember with fondness his unshakable integrity, his able steel under the velvet. . . .Modest but not timid, possessed personal warmth, and his unswerving devotion to the of a mellow sense of humor and cool judgment, firm but sym- University, the state and its people. pathetic to the other person’s point of view, and supremely gen- erous, Friday rapidly gained the trust and respect of his peers.” A Fitting Legacy In 1951, then-president of the consolidated University sys- On October 16th, the trustees of the William R. Kenan Jr. tem, Gordon Gray, selected young Bill Friday as his executive Charitable Trust announced a gift of $1 million to UNC assistant; Friday advanced to become secretary of the University School of Law in memory of Friday, who died Oct. 12, in 1955. When Gray resigned soon thereafter, the UNC Board University Day in Chapel Hill. The trustees designated the gift of Trustees named Friday, then only 36, as president of the for support of student scholarships. This generous gift in Bill University system. Friday took the helm at a time of profound Friday’s honor speaks directly to his deepest values. The $1 change in higher education – rapid expansion in university million fund will ensure that bright and promising students enrollment, the expansion of the consolidated University, the from every background will continue to be able to attend imperative of racial desegregation and the rise of big-time Carolina Law, where Bill Friday’s own future was decisively college athletics. shaped. It is a fitting legacy. Non-profit Organization CAROLINA LAW U.S. Postage Van Hecke-Wettach Hall PAID Chapel Hill, N.C. 160 Ridge Road, CB # 3380 PERMIT # 177 Chapel Hill, NC 27699-3380

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