LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO SCHOOL OF LAW SPRING 2013 LOYOLA LAW

A whole new world Loyola updates international studies in response to global changes

IN THIS ISSUE

Loyolans thrive as in-house counsel

New scholarship fund honors the RAM

Summer alumni events contents Spring 2013

Loyola Law FEATURES DEPARTMENTS

School of Law Administration Learning in a changing world David Yellen, Dean Loyola’s evolving international studies ...... 6 Legal Briefs...... 2 James Faught, Associate Dean for Administration Faculty News...... 24 Michael Kaufman, Associate Dean Inside view for Academic Affairs Alums embrace in-house counsel work ...... 15 Cynthia Ho, Associate Dean student competitions...... 34 for Faculty Research STUDENT PROFILE: 2L Mary Kennelly ...... Julia Wentz, Associate Dean and Director of Combining law with public health ...... 18 Hearsay 36 the Law Library Pamela Bloomquist, Assistant Dean of In Memoriam...... 38 Turning back the tide Admission and Financial Assistance Fellowships arm Loyolans for change ...... 20 Marianne Deagle, Assistant Dean GIFTS...... 40 for Career Services Jean Gaspardo, Assistant Dean of Students FACULTY RESEARCH: Anita Weinberg Alumni Update...... 42 Annina Fabbioli, Assistant Dean Ending lead poisoning through education ...... 22 for Advancement University News...... 44 Dora Jacks, Registrar ALUMNI RESEARCH: Marci Rolnik Giselle Santibanez-Bania, Associate Director of Student Affairs Why artists need lawyers on their side ...... 32 Save the Date...... Inside back cover

Director of Communications and Editor Elisabeth Brookover

Design Taylor Bruce Design Partnership Chicago Message from the Dean Contributors Writers: G.M. Filisko (JD ’98), Gail Mansfield, Zak Stambor Dear Graduates and Friends, and current students who are providing critical Proofreader: Kathleen Kopitke legal services to underserved communities through Photographers: Mark Beane, Zachary n Chicago and abroad, the School of Law’s Equal Justice Works Fellowships. Our student profile Hunsinger, George Pfoertner, Brad Snyder, curriculum continually expands and evolves to highlights an exceptional second-year student, Mary Charlie Westerman, Elizabeth Youakim (2L) respond to developing areas of international Kennelly, who is seeking a joint degree in law and professional interest. Our cover story explores public health. Cover photo: the law school’s diverse slate of international This issue’s spotlight on faculty research is by This image of Asia and Australia at night is Professor Anita Weinberg, a leader in addressing a composite assembled from data acquired Iopportunities—including shorter field studies and by the Suomi NPP satellite in 2012. The student competitions, as well as the induction of lead poisoning issues in Illinois. Alum Marci Rolnik new data was mapped over existing Loyola’s new Wing-Tat Lee Chair in International Law, (JD ’00) explains why legal advice is indispensable to Blue Marble imagery of Earth to provide James Gathii. the artistic community. Our Alumni Update section a realistic view of the planet. (Photo recognizes graduates who lend their time and talents compliments of National Aeronautics and This story also provides an update on the Space Administration.) recently established LLM in Rule of Law Development to the law school—and offers opportunities for you degree program (PROLAW®). The University has just to get involved. RIGHT: established a PROLAW Endowment Fund with a With summer arriving, I invite you to put Early summer blooms at the capital goal of $12 million. The University provided reconnecting with Loyola among your warm-weather Philip H. Corboy Law Center. the first contribution of $1 million, which has been plans. We hope to see you at the F. Emmett Loyola Law is published twice a year for generously enhanced by longtime law school Morrissey Golf Outing, Founders’ Dinner, or Loyola alumni and friends of Loyola University Day at the Cubs. Chicago School of Law. supporter Barry McCabe, a University trustee. Veterans of Professor Dick Michael’s Civil Procedure class are joining to endow a scholarship Correspondence: fund honoring this Loyola legend. In our story, Elisabeth Brookover Loyola Law alumni discuss the profound effect the RAM’s superb 25 East Pearson Street teaching had on their education and careers. Chicago, IL 60611 You’ll also read about some of our many alumni 312.915.7854 who have expanded their careers with rewarding David Yellen [email protected] work as in-house counsel, and meet recent graduates Dean and Professor OF LAW

spring 2013 1 Legal briefs

Loyola University Chicago School of Law continues to lead with innovative curricula and programming. Here’s a sampling of what’s new and notable at the law school.

» DEPARTMENT UPDATE and local attorneys. Loyola annually HIGH-ACHIEVING ALUMS partners tend to be attracted to a cohosts the Patent Law Interview particular school. Or perhaps the program, the largest single-practice school’s admission practices favor job fair in the country, which includes Loyola alums outperform elite law such students. It may be that, because IP program layers personalized studies students from more than 100 law school grads in making partner of the culture of the school, graduates schools and 200 legal employers from who accept associate positions do so across the United States. seriously, with the intention of really over a solid foundation of core courses Graduates of the IP program have trying to make partner, not just to ‘get achieved significant career success in some experience’ before moving on. (left) and Brenda McKinney the public and private sector. Recent “It may even be that some oyola’s intellectual examples include Amy Fuetterer schools actually provide superior property (IP) program Greywitt (JD ’10), who has clerked preparation for big-firm practice— FELLOWSHIPS provides a student- with Hon. Richard Linn, U.S. Court that some schools teach law and/or centered approach of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, practice skills more effectively than to learning that the highest court to hear exclusively others,” Seto continues. “Whatever the Loyola’s Loffers not only core intellectual patent cases in 2011-12; Jenna M. reason, 25 years of data is probably property courses, but also an Smith (JD ’12), now clerking with Hon. enough to capture real differences, Fulbright individualized approach to choosing John Love, U.S. District Court, Eastern even if we cannot explain them.” complementary electives capitalizing District of Texas, which hears many In a March 8, 2012, post called Scholars on the strengths and goals of each patent cases; Janet M. Garetto Cantelo “Too Good for Big Law,” The Careerist, wo Loyola law students, student. Complementary classes (JD ’97), immediate past president a lawjobs.com blog published by Jessica Sanchez and include options that span the of the Intellectual Property Lawyers ALM, excerpted research by William T Brenda McKinney (both JD ’13), curriculum, including corporate Association of Chicago, the oldest bar Henderson, a law professor at the recently received fellowships law, advocacy, health law, or even association focused on IP; and Linda University of Indiana. Using NLJ job from the Fulbright U.S. Student classes in other departments, such A. Kuczma (JD ’81), an administrative data, Henderson looked at the ratio Program. The program provides as graduate-level biology courses. trademark judge at the U.S. Patent of first-year associates who make study and research grants to “I always tell prospective and Trademark Office since 2011. partner at a big firm. The author Recent studies show Loyola graduates excel at making partner at NLJ 100 firms. students or young professionals students that we’re a small but very Ho teaches and writes in the area found that Loyola Chicago law grads to undertake advanced rich program that offers them a of patent law, with a special focus on are more likely than graduates of all research and international strong academic background plus a issues that intersect patent and health but one other law school to make wo national studies have a Report ranking by a notable 42 places. graduate study overseas. lot of personal attention,” says Cynthia care policy. Other full-time professors partner and are six times more likely powerful message for legal “What do these numbers mean?” Sanchez was awarded a Ho, professor and program director. include Matthew Sag, who teaches T than University of Chicago law alumni employers: hiring graduates of Loyola Seto asks. “First, they tell us that not Fulbright-García Robles Grant. “I can easily get to know all the Cynthia Ho leads Loyola’s IP program. and writes about copyright law to make the cut. Henderson told The University Chicago School of Law is a all schools produce national law firm She will work with a Mexican students interested in IP—so, when and the broader area of intellectual Careerist’s Vivia Chen, "The strivers great decision. Loyola graduates have partners at rates consistent with their Supreme Court justice and an alum calls and asks for a student have knowledge of related areas such options include an IP course. An property; Ann-Marie Rhodes, who tend to be more concentrated in the a significantly higher partnership U.S. News rank, even controlling for human rights attorneys in with a particular strength, I can make as labor law and sales. “We find our advanced research class that focuses teaches and writes in the area of art regional law schools.” success rate in National Law Journal size. Some produce more; some less. Mexico to investigate and the connection.” personalized approach works better; solely on IP also fine tunes law; and Spencer Weber Waller, whose Of course, far more University (NLJ) 100 law firms than graduates The data do not tell us why. It may be document how Mexico’s Ho and her colleagues have for instance, an employer may really legal skills, like giving an oral report teaching and research interests in of Chicago (and other elite school) from other elite law schools. that, for whatever reason, students judicial system implements thus far consciously decided against need an electrical engineer more to a partner. antitrust often dovetail with IP. graduates are hired by large firms, In “Where Do Partners Come interested in becoming big-firm new legal safeguards for human offering an IP certificate, having than they need someone who took IP Other academic and cocurricular “We’re also blessed with a great but this is powerful evidence of the From?,” an August 2011 article in the rights. McKinney will travel to learned from close connections with litigation,” Ho explains. offerings include a growing number adjunct faculty teaching all our success of Loyola alumni. Journal of Legal Education, Loyola Los New Zealand to explore that the IP community that employers are Unusual among law schools, of externship options, plus two moot writing classes and many specialized These studies focus on large- Angeles’s Theodore P. Seto placed country’s approach to restorative not necessarily looking for students Loyola offers a first-year writing court teams that focus exclusively courses. For example, Nanette firm hiring, probably because that is Loyola Chicago 29th on the list of juvenile justice, specifically with the maximum number of IP course and other first-year electives on IP issues. 2012 marked the 10th Norton, previously a trademark where the most complete statistics the nation’s top 50 “partner feeder through observing its use of classes. Rather, employers sometimes focusing on IP, allowing students year Loyola has cohosted the Chicago partner at the IP boutique Brinks are maintained. Only around 15 schools.” The rankings refer to the Family Group Conferences seek students with specific technical interested in IP careers to build IP Colloquium, bringing national & Hofer, is a fabulous resource for percent of law school graduates go number of partners each school has (FGCs). New Zealand has been a backgrounds, or expect a student writing samples and coursework early scholars to Chicago to discuss their trademark law,” says Ho. ■ to work for large firms, but these firms in U.S. offices of the NLJ 100. Those leader in restorative justice and without a technical background to on. Second-year appellate advocacy current research with Loyola students have very broad influence within included in the study received their conferencing, which adopts a LOYOLA LAW ALUMS ARE SIX TIMES MORE the legal profession. So, too, do JDs in 1986 or thereafter. Loyola 6x LIKELY THAN U OF CHICAGO GRADS TO non-punitive, family-focused Loyola’s graduates. ■ For more information on the IP program, visit LUC.edu/law/centers/intellectual/index.html. outperformed its U.S. News & World MAKE PARTNER AT LARGE FIRMS approach to juvenile offenders. ■

2 Loyola Law spring 2013 3 Legal Briefs

ALUMNI AUTHORS NEW GRADS

Commencement Loyola lawyers turn their talents to writing recap ecause he’s worked characters interesting or engaging. ino L. DiVito (BA ’59, JD ’63) as a prosecutor And a lawyer’s skills at listening and served as speaker and was and public defender knowing which questions to ask have G presented with an honorary for more than three been useful as I conduct research for degree at the School of Law’s decades, Colin Nelson my books.” May 18 commencement at Loyola’s (JD ’76) understands both sides of Now working on her 15th book, B Lake Shore Campus. DiVito is criminal litigation—and he puts that a romantic comedy (release date: May widely regarded as one of Illinois’ deep knowledge to work in Fallout 2014), Laura Caldwell (JD ’92) has the most respected and influential (North Star Press, 2012) and Reprisal writing process down pat. Early in her voices in the law. In 2001, after a (North Star Press, 2010). Nelson’s law practice, “which was intellectually long and distinguished career as a thrillers feature Minneapolis lawyer challenging, but not creative,” she prosecutor, trial judge, and justice Zehra Hassan, who takes on cases says, Caldwell decided she needed of the Illinois appellate court, he involving hot-button issues including an artistic pursuit and started cofounded the Chicago law firm Deconstructing the mortgage settlement terrorism, human trafficking, and writing fiction. Tabet DiVito & Rothstein LLC, where ey players in the $1.5 billion National Mortgage Settlement Conference gathered at Loyola in February religious tolerance. Once she sold her first novel, he currently serves. for a conference to discuss the housing market collapse, the path to the settlement, and the independent Nelson began writing fiction about a Loyola law graduate who K In May, the law school conferred monitor established to oversee the terms of the agreement. Pictured are the U.S. Department of Housing and in the 1980s, but never tried to get takes a trip to Rome and Greece, 287 JD degrees, one SJD degree, 92 Urban Development’s Damon Smith (left), Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan (JD ’94), and former U.S. Associate his work published. After he wrote her publisher demanded more… LLM degrees, and 109 MJ degrees. ■ Attorney General Tom Perrelli. When Can I Tell My Boss, “I Quit!” Seven and more. For years, she produced Lessons for Financial and Personal a work of fiction—either a romance Rebirth in Retirement (iUniverse Inc., or a mystery, including the critically 2006), his publisher asked for fiction, acclaimed Izzy McNeil mystery “so I dusted off those early novels and series—every six months. brought them up to date,” he says. She also directs Life After With the third Zehra Hassan book, Innocence, a Loyola-housed program Flashpoint, due out in spring 2014, that helps people exonerated Where are Nelson is gearing up for a favorite of crimes reenter society and part of the authoring process: touring. reclaim their rights as citizens after they now? “Writing’s a solitary, lonely process, imprisonment. and getting out to talk to people The project grew out of the Fern Trevino (BA ’69, MSW ’78, about my books is fun,” he says— case of Jovan Mosley, a Chicagoan JD ’83, left), Patricia Giannis McKay especially when his audiences ask for charged with murder and jailed for (JD ’84, MA ’86), Associate Dean real-life trial stories. six years with no trial date. After James J. Faught, and Professor “My books are fiction, but the discovering his case while researching James P. Carey enjoy a day on the courtroom scenes are based on a novel, Caldwell joined efforts with court at Loyola’s Alumni Golf and reality,” says Nelson, who constantly criminal defense attorney Catharine Tennis Outing in August 1985. inserts real-life experiences and A SAMPLING OF OTHER RECENT O’Daniel to prove Mosley’s innocence. Trevino started her own law firm in characters, like a judge who used BOOKS BY LOYOLA LAW GRADS: Those experiences were turned into 1992, specializing in employment hand puppets on the bench, into Caldwell’s first nonfiction book, Long law and representing executives his novels. Joanne Gazarek Bloom (JD ’76), Desiree Furman Moore (JD ’05), Way Home: A Young Man Lost in the and employees in claims involving “Legal training is invaluable for Bridgeport (Arcadia Publishing, 2012) Thrive: A New Lawyer’s Guide to Law System and the Two Women Who Found discrimination, sexual harassment, many things besides the practice of Firm Practice (American Bar Him (Free Press, 2010). Hege Elisabeth Kjos (JD ’00), Association, 2012) retaliation, retaliatory discharge, law,” he says. “A lawyer is presented Applicable Law in Investor-State Although she used her mystery- and the Family and Medical Leave with a jumble of information, and has Arbitration (Oxford University Theda Snyder (JD ’77), Women writing skills to construct Long Way Act. McKay lives in Illinois and has Press, 2013) Rainmakers’ Best Marketing Tips to organize those facts into a concise, (American Bar Association, 3d Home as an unfolding nail-biter, “it was practiced law at the Chicago firm clear, persuasive case. Virginia Kendall (JD ’92) and T. ed., 2011) the hardest writing I’ve ever done,” Lord, Bissell, and Brook. Faught Markus Funk, Child Exploitation “That’s similar to the writing and Trafficking: Examining the Global Caldwell says. “These were real people continues his work at the School process, in which I have to fashion Challenges and U.S. Responses with complicated personal stories, not of Law as associate dean of information to make a plot, present (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2011) characters I made up. I felt a serious administration. Carey retired last it in a suspenseful way, and make my responsibility to get it right.” ■ May after a 32-year run at Loyola.

4 Loyola Law spring 2013 5 international education Loyola’s School of Law has stayed ahead of the curve in offering meaningful international perspectives and experiences.

Learning in a changing world

lobal learning is increasingly important for Study-abroad programs The School of Law’s summer program at the Today, the law school’s Roman connections are Loyola updates John Felice Rome Center—the school’s first study- long-standing and unique. Every year, for instance, a well-rounded and forward-looking legal expand, evolve abroad program, created by Professors Thomas Loyola students get a deluxe tour of the office of education, and Loyola’s School of Law has Haney and Anne-Marie Rhodes—will be offered for the avvocato generale (attorney general) of Italy. In international A significant portion of Loyola law students, the 31st time this summer. The past two decades a 15th-century fresco-decorated palazzo, six senior stayed ahead of the curve in offering approximately 20 percent, have been exposed of the program have been directed and expanded staff attorneys speak about their work and take to international law through Loyola’s programs by Assistant Dean of Students Jean Gaspardo. At questions, then bring the assembled Loyolans to a studies in response meaningfulG international perspectives and experiences. abroad. The 31 years of summer offerings have been the Rome Center and in other summer programs rooftop deck for a private reception overlooking the As the world changes—facing new economic Loyola’s anchor in international law. she has directed, Gaspardo has traveled abroad Pantheon and all of ancient Rome. As the economy and job market dictate, for more than 20 summers, helping to give an Besides opening access to key thinkers to global shifts challenges, transnational conflicts, and shifting political slightly fewer students today are able to take astounding 1,700 students a firsthand experience in within the Italian legal system, the program’s advantage of the Loyola Summer Abroad Law international legal systems. location in Rome makes it attractive to high-profile regimes—Loyola’s international program changes with programs, often opting instead to take on summer The longevity of the Rome program has guest speakers from the United States. Students it, adapting international offerings to meet evolving jobs. Students who are able to participate in resulted in significant relationships between in two recent summer Rome programs were four-, six-, or 10-week summer programs find Loyolans and representatives of Rome’s legal fortunate to have U.S. Supreme Court Justices student needs. The School of Law continues to make the experience well worth the cost. The School community. From the program’s earliest days, the Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia as guest international education and experiences available of Law works hard not only to ensure that study- late John Felice, first director of the center, brought lecturers and faculty. abroad participants have a top-quality classroom his wide web of contacts to bear. “He introduced us About half of Rome program attendees go to students through our top-notch study-abroad grounding in international and comparative law, to influential Italian attorneys who would come in on for an optional week-long field study on the but also to open as many doors as possible to high- to lecture or take our students out for tours of legal courts of Europe. In Strasbourg, they visit the programs, field studies, international competitions, and profile legal leaders and judicial venues. As a result, institutions,” says Haney. “That opened a lot of doors European Court of Human Rights and the European globally focused faculty, all targeted to ready students students have firsthand experience and face time and made the program much more meaningful Parliament of the European Union (EU). Side trips to with legal heavyweights they’d never be able to than just classroom learning about these people Luxembourg and The Hague allow students to also for practice in tomorrow’s international legal arena. meet in Chicago or traveling on their own. and organizations would be.” (continued on page 8)

6 Loyola Law spring 2013 7 Learning in a changing world

(continued from page 7)

court. “I watched him defend a rather deranged Elizabeth Youakim and other students in Professor arsonist and really wanted my students to see Gathii inducted as Wing-Tat Lee Diane Geraghty’s Global Law Seminar in Bangkok, him, because he was so good,” Faught recalls. Lovell-Pank and Judge Anthony Leonard, who Thailand, spent a morning at a school assisting Chair in International Law underprivileged children as part of the course’s was recently called to the bench after a service learning component. distinguished career as a queen’s counsel, “have become the godfather and guardian angel of the rofessor of Law James T. Gathii human rights violations in Africa. Gathii program,” Faught says. “We’ve grown up together was inducted as the School has published more than 60 articles and I’ve seen their careers blossom. They’ve been of Law’s Wing-Tat Lee Chair in and book chapters, and two books, enormously loyal, speaking to our students, P International Law at a March ceremony African Regional Trade Agreements As inviting us to their homes, and taking us to court at the Philip H. Corboy Law Center. Legal Regimes (Cambridge University to watch them in action.” At the ceremony, Gathii delivered Press, 2011) and War, Commerce, and A course taught every spring, Comparative the 2013 Wing-Tat Lee Lecture in International Law (Oxford University Law Seminar: Chile, includes an immersion International Law, “Judicial Activism in Press, 2010). He holds an LLB degree component at the Jesuit Universidad Alberto Africa’s International Trade Courts.” from the University of Nairobi, Kenya; Hurtado in Santiago, Chile, over spring break. In Other speakers included international an SJD degree from Harvard Law addition to hearing guest lectures from a variety law scholars Penelope Andrews, School; and a diploma in the practice of Chilean legal experts, students visit the central president and dean of Albany Law of law (admitted as an advocate of criminal court and hear from Judge Jorge Saez; School, and Makau Mutua, dean, SUNY the High Court of Kenya) from Kenya tour an appellate court with Judge Manuel Distinguished Professor, and Floyd H. School of Law. Antonio Valderrama providing commentary; and Hilda L. Hurst Faculty Scholar at As the Wing-Tat Lee Chair, he will check out the supreme court; and visit the Carey SUNY Buffalo Law School. pursue teaching and scholarship, and Law Firm, Chile’s largest, where senior partner Gathii most recently served bring to the School of Law international Guillermo Carey or another partner speaks to the as associate dean for research and conferences, lectures, and exchange group. Through their research projects, students scholarship and Governor George programs for students and faculty. also meet Chileans in business, government, and E. Pataki Professor of International social welfare. Commercial Law at Albany Law School. “That’s real access—up close and personal He has worked throughout his career to with judges, lawyers, and other professionals who establish legal and economic structures know our program and are delighted to speak designed to prevent and remedy with our students each year,” says Haney. “Our students get a wonderful introduction to another legal system in just a few days.” visit the Court of Justice of the EU, the International Commercial Arbitration, and International and South Africa, and Turkey, Youakim was able to visit Loyola’s American law students aren’t Court of Justice (ICJ), and the International Criminal Comparative Employment Law. a variety of educational, religious, service, and ›› the only ones who gain from exposure to Court (ICC). Although slightly fewer students are currently other organizations as part of her research on child international legal professionals, institutions, James T. Gathii discussed “In Luxembourg, we’ll be visiting this summer participating in summer study-abroad programs, sex trafficking in Thailand. and methods. Both the new LLM Program for judicial activism in Africa’s with Eleanor Sharpson, the English-speaking shorter international experiences are growing in “It was a great experience to be able International Lawyers and the LLM in Rule of international trade courts advocate general of the Court of Justice of popularity. Spring break field studies and a London to talk to people in Thailand’s legal and non-profit Law for Development attract attorneys from all in his inaugural Wing-Tat the EU,” says Gaspardo. “Our students get to program tucked between Christmas and spring communities and see for ourselves how over the globe. Lee Lecture. meet with some of the most distinguished semester offer students immersive experiences in they’re handling these worldwide issues,” says The LLM Program for International Lawyers lawyers who form the judiciary of Europe. No law other legal cultures without breaking the bank or Youakim, whose course research paper, written brings international attorneys to Chicago for student can have access to these institutions and requiring weeks off work. In these briefer programs with fellow students Annie Park and Chlece Neal, highly personalized and flexible study. Directed people on his or her own; this is a real advantage as well as their longer summer counterparts, takes a trauma-focused, victim-centered approach by Insa Blanke, the program offers two options. achieved through our three decades of successful students get unparalleled access to key legal to protecting survivors of child sex trafficking. Immersion in U.S. Law for Foreign Lawyers is program development.” figures and institutions not ordinarily available to Associate Dean for Administration James designed for foreign lawyers who plan to sit As Asia’s role in the global economy expands, law students. Faught has been leading the two-week London for the New York bar exam or stay in the U.S. to the China program founded by Gaspardo in Professor Diane Geraghty, whose contacts Comparative Advocacy program over winter break practice. International Law with a Focus Option 2008 has become one of the most popular of the within the ICJ and ICC will open extra doors to for 24 years—long enough that he has his own key gives students the ability to design their own summer law offerings. Hosted at The Beijing Center, Loyola students in The Hague this summer, also to the Middle Temple Inn of Court, ground zero curricula. In addition to required classes on U.S. a Jesuit-operated enterprise on the campus of the teaches an annual global law seminar focusing on for the development of our common law and a and international law, students may elect to focus Beijing University of International Business and a different country each year. The course includes 700-year-old training ground for lawyers. He enjoys on arbitration, mediation, and negotiation, or on Economics, the law program exposes students to a spring break research and service component in a solid friendship with Colin Davidson, the Middle areas of law including business and tax, child and international business trends by focusing largely that country. Temple’s on-site director of development. family, competition, health, intellectual property, on commercial and business law. This summer, Second-year student Elizabeth Youakim Faught met Dorian Lovell-Pank, now or international trade. for instance, courses include Introduction to traveled to Thailand as part of this year’s seminar. queen’s counsel, on a long-ago solo visit to the

Chinese Law and the Legal System, International Like students in previous trips to Tanzania, India, Old Bailey, the world’s most famous criminal (continued on page 10) Visit LUC.edu/LOYOLALAW to read GATHII’S profile in the fall 2012 ISSUE OF Loyola Law.

8 Loyola Law spring 2013 9 Learning in a changing world

(continued from page 9)

Ammar Jasim, Iraq (PROLAW 2, left); Vakhtang Janezashvili, Georgia (PROLAW Class of 2012); Chukwunonso Igboeli, Educated internationally “The curriculum was Nigeria (PROLAW 2); and Program Director William Loris pose designed to include the at PROLAW’s orientation in September. Students rang the bell to create change at home in the garden at Loyola’s John Felice Rome Center two times knowledge and skills to inaugurate the program’s second class of students. A South African activist working to secure students will need to be the rights of indigenous peoples in Namibia, a Cambodian lawyer seeking to curb human able to meet the learning trafficking, a Mexican lawyer helping to retrain outcomes...every aspect prosecutors following major legal reform, an Iraqi is designed to prepare judge helping with justice sector reforms after the war, an Ugandan lawyer striving to eliminate students for rule of the practice of female genital mutilation…with law practice.” all their differences, these legal professionals have --P ROLAW Director William Loris something in common. They’re determined to help make the rule of law the rule in the countries where they live and work, so they’ve enrolled in Loyola’s LLM in Rule of Law for Development (PROLAW®) program. PROLAW is an especially timely response as many countries are recovering from war, experiencing civil uprising, and reforming their legal systems for transparency and protection of human rights. The program focuses on practical, practice-oriented education for lawyers committed to building rule of law in their own countries. Housed at Loyola’s John Felice Rome Center in Italy, the one-year curriculum builds high-level legal advisory skills in its graduates, who can then help their countries drive and sustain legal reforms from within, without the need to resort to foreign experts. “Our curriculum began taking shape through an analysis of what rule of law advisors actually do,” says William Loris, PROLAW director. “The curriculum was designed to include the knowledge and skills students will need to be able to meet the learning outcomes. This approach has resulted in a program whose every aspect is designed to prepare students for rule of law practice.” Practice-oriented courses range from Theory and Practice of Needs Assessment in Rule of Law Advising, to Legal Writing and Research for Rule of Law, to Project Management, to Design of Rule of Law Programs and Proposal Preparation. While the learning outcomes of all courses are aimed at enabling graduates to perform tasks which rule of law work entails, each subject is approached through case studies examining a range of substantive areas of change. Topics such as judicial reform, achievement of gender equality, civil and penal law reform, commercial law reform, legal empowerment of the poor, aid for trade, climate change preparedness, human rights, and financing of justice reform contextualize the curriculum, address students’ individual areas of

(continued on page 12)

10 Loyola Law spring 2013 11 Learning in a changing world

(continued from page 10) ›› COMPETING ABROAD

interest, and provide focal points for the program’s Institute, which later became the International Chicago Board of Trustees and a longtime School required thesis. Development Law Organization (IDLO) by of Law supporter, made a $250,000 gift, and a Loyola has international presence in student competitions Like Loyola’s study-abroad programs, PROLAW international convention. IDLO is now pledge of up to $750,000 more in matching funds, offers its students access to numerous experts a key international institution in the promotion to establish an endowed PROLAW fund. Income tudent competitions are Frisbie coaches Loyola’s teams in in their field. Representatives of the United of the rule of law in countries that are developing, from the fund will support scholarships and another way for students the competitions. Loyola’s 2012 team Nations, international financial institutions, major in economic transition, or recovering from stipends for PROLAW students, as well as other to gain international took second place for mediation skills nongovernmental organizations, and individual violent conflict. programmatic needs. experience without and the 2013 team that competed at development experts and practitioners take part in The PROLAW curriculum reflects Loris’s “We’re extremely thankful for Mr. McCabe’s Scommitting to long periods abroad— the Law Society of Ireland in Dublin a visiting lecture program, which allows students conviction, formed through years of pioneering the generous gift, which will help us build the so Loyola’s making an appearance placed fifth for mediation skills and to dialogue with leading rule of law practitioners field, that “sustainable progress toward the rule of endowment we need to succeed in the long term,” in a lot of international student ninth for advocacy skills, and netted about their institutions and work. law, better governance, and democracy depends says Loris. “In the meantime, we welcome support competitions. The School of Law has a second-place award for individual Loris, who was tapped to found PROLAW by significantly upon the quality and appropriateness for individual scholarships to enable bright and recently sent arbitration, mediation, mediation skills. The competition will Loyola President and CEO Michael Garanzini, S.J., of the advice and guidance that national and committed students to participate in PROLAW.” negotiation, and moot court teams to return to Loyola in 2014 with teams has come full circle at the Rome Center, which he international legal experts bring to the reform One of those dedicated students, David compete abroad. expected from several continents attended in 1966-67 as a student at Santa Clara agenda,” he explains. Hofisi of Zimbabwe, says, “I think there’s an “Our teams are strong in all these including—for the first time—Africa. University. “I absolutely started my international Because most of the students targeted obligation on lawyers to try to use the law for Professor Margaret Moses (center) and Vis Moot team coaches Bill Davis (left, Vienna) and areas,” says Teresa Frisbie, director John Calhoun (right, Hong Kong) meet with student teams for competition practice. life by attending the Rome Center at the age of for enrollment are unable to finance their own the greater good. It was my view that the rule Negotiation: Loyola was one of of the Dispute Resolution Program. 19,” says Loris, who went on to a groundbreaking attendance in the program, financial support from of law is the key variable to ensure that there just two U.S. law schools selected for “These competitions allow us to career in international and rule of law development. the outside has been critical. The Bill and Melinda is a recovery and transformation trajectory in the Warsaw Negotiation Round 2012. showcase our Center for Advocacy After serving with the U.S. Agency for International Gates Foundation generously provided $1.8 million Zimbabwe. Once I came to Rome, I learned a Loyola’s team, coached by Ethan and Dispute Resolution Program, Development in the Ivory Coast and Egypt, he in initial funding for PROLAW. Most recently, different way of viewing the rule of law: a global, Zelizer and Jamie Michel, traveled to and give students a wonderful cofounded the International Development Law Barry McCabe, a member of the Loyola University almost cosmic perspective.” ■ Poland last April to compete against opportunity to interact with law teams from Asia, Africa, Europe, and students and practicing attorneys, South America at the Warsaw School mediators, and arbitrators from ›› Learn more about the program—and watch videos of other students discussing their work—at LUC.edu/prolaw. of Economics. Loyola’s selection around the world.” among 37 U.S. law schools was based Arbitration: When Professor in large part upon performance in the THE WORLD’S Margaret Moses, director of Loyola’s ABA Negotiation Competition over International Law and Practice the past several years. OUR CLASSROOM Program, began attending the Willem Loyola’s International Association for Dispute Resolution mediation team members Sabrina Moot court: Loyola’s Jessup Learning abroad exposes students C. Vis International Commercial Moot Shafer, Giorie Mahn, and Tanya Woods (at center, from left) celebrated with Loyola coach International Moot Court Team, to different legal systems and in Vienna 18 years ago, only 17 or 18 and Director of the Dispute Resolution Program Teresa Frisbie (second from left) and board coached by a group of Jessup cultures. Here are the international teams competed. Now, close to 300 members Dick Calkins, Case Ellis, and Tom Valenti (back row, from left) at the INADR awards dinner in Dublin, Ireland, in March. The team placed fifth for mediation skills and ninth for veterans including several Loyola cities Loyola law students have teams from 67 countries vie in the Vis, advocacy skills. Woods received a Second Place award for individual mediation skills. alums, took an impressive second recently visited as part of a program Dublin held for the 20th time this year. place at the Jessup Midwest Super or team competition (cities visited in London “Students have gotten much Regional this spring. For only the 2012-13 are in maroon): more skillful—the bar is getting third time, Loyola advanced to the Strasbourg higher,” says Moses, who teaches garnered an Honorable Mention Best some countries, holding questions Jessup International Championship Bangkok London international commercial arbitration Oralist Award. until the end is the norm.” Beijing Luxembourg Vienna in Washington, DC, in March. Rome and, along with alumni volunteers 3L Katie Smeenk, editor-in-chief “Putting ‘Vis Moot Fellow’ on Belgrade New Delhi Known for its tough writing and adjunct professors, coaches of the Loyola University Chicago their resumes gives students a real Brussels Oxford component, the Jessup International Budapest Paris the teams for both the Vienna Vis International Law Review, participated advantage,” says Moses. “I see them Competition requires students to Cape Town Pretoria and its sister competition in Hong with her 2013 Hong Kong Vis become both more capable and more Dar es Salaam Rome learn new methods of research Beijing Kong. “This year, the Vienna students teammates in a premoot in Shanghai confident, important steps toward Dublin Santiago and oral argument—“because, in The Hague Shanghai attended three premoots and the and made the first round of playoffs. being successful lawyers.” an international arena, there’s no Hanoi Strasbourg Hong Kong students two.” Loyola At the larger official competition, singular rule with which to decide Ho Chi Minh City Vienna also sponsors an annual premoot Loyola was up against teams from Mediation: Every other year, Hong Kong Warsaw these cases,” says Megan Canty, attended by a number of American Denmark, India, China, and Mexico. Loyola’s Dispute Resolution Program Istanbul Xi’an cosponsors the International assistant director of the Dan K. Webb Johannesburg Zagreb and international teams. “It’s useful to see the different legal hong kong Center for Advocacy. The Loyola team advanced backgrounds of competitors— Academy of Dispute Resolution “The competition really opens twice in the Vienna Vis this year, common law vs. civil law—and the international law school mediation up students’ perspective beyond how making it to the round of 64 after various ways both competitors and competition. The 2012 competition things are done in the U.S,” she adds. the four general rounds, then on arbitrators frame the issues,” Smeenk at Loyola drew nearly 200 students bangkok “They get to interact with people to the round of 32 after besting says. “For example, we’re used to an and coaches from India, Germany, 47 England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, from all over the world, and that students will attend a Study Oxford in the first elimination round. adversarial style, being interrupted experience is exceptional.” ■ Law Abroad program with Team member David Yoshimura throughout our arguments, but in Canada, and the U.S. Loyola this summer.

12 Loyola Law spring 2013 13 CAREER PATHS reviews advertising and marketing materials for the company’s brands—including Reddi-wip, Orville Redenbacher, and Pam—which means looking at everything from the copy for TV commercials to reviewing community managers’ replies to customers’ social media posts. She also works to ensure the brands are in compliance with the state and federal regulatory requirements and negotiates commercial contracts like advertising Inside view and licensing agreements, while also seeking to resolve advertising and contract disputes prior to Loyola alumni who work as in-house counsel wear litigation—and, if litigation can’t be avoided, assists lots of hats. For many, that’s the best part. litigation counsel with fact discovery and trial preparations. The job isn’t easy. In fact, Catanzaro says it is “the most challenging and the most satisfying job I’ve ever had.” orking as an in-house Catanzaro is hardly alone in finding that in- counsel wasn’t the house counsel offers a rewarding career path, albeit plan for Suzanne one that many fail to consider when graduating Catanzaro (JD ’95) from law school. That’s despite the fact that the Wide-ranging expertise after she graduated starting salaries for in-house counsel jobs outpace from the School of many other areas of the law, according to the Part of the challenge of being an in-house Law. Frankly, the idea had never crossed her mind. National Association of Law Placement Inc. For counsel is that it requires a wide-ranging WInstead, Catanzaro spent the first 10 years of instance, the average starting salary for a business knowledge of topics, as well as a solid grounding in her career working as a litigator, just like a number job for which a JD is required—a category that ethics and compliance, says Deb Golden (MBA ’81, of her classmates. But for Catanzaro the role wasn’t encompasses in-house counsel—was $72,824 for JD ’84), who is executive vice president, general a good fit. those who graduated from law school in 2011, counsel, and secretary at railcar leasing company “I was miserable,” she says. “Litigation and more than positions in law firms with 11 to 25 GATX Corp. “You must have a deep enough my personality were at complete odds with each attorneys ($67,712), firms with two to 10 attorneys understanding of various areas of the law to spot other. I think I’m very good with the thinking and ($53,525), government ($54,742), academia potential problems so that you can say, ‘This could strategizing behind the scenes. But the actual ($52,704), judicial clerkships ($51,761), and public be an issue’ or ‘We should retain outside expertise litigation wasn’t my forte.” interest ($45,573). for this.’” While she has a number of specific A decade into her career, Catanzaro needed a “Whether as part of a plan or through fortuity, responsibilities, ultimately Golden sees her job change. Several months into what she anticipated many lawyers find incredible satisfaction working as strategic advisor and problem solver. “You being a yearlong sabbatical, she found an in-house in house,” says Dean David Yellen. “This career have to bring good judgment to the job because job at the Tribune Co. There, she leveraged the choice lets them use their skills as a lawyer while a million issues come up and you have to react wide-ranging legal background she received at being an important part of an enterprise in a quickly,” she says. Loyola to represent the media conglomerate in different way than they would at a law firm. We Like Catanzaro, Golden didn’t set out to commercial and TV program contract negotiations, try to expose our students to in-house counsel as become an in-house counsel. After graduation, advised the company’s various promotions a possible career path, even though most people she worked at Schiff, Hardin & Waite, where she departments, and held a host of other roles. who wind up in house don’t necessarily start out handled corporate law and commercial litigation. The job’s focus—helping the company drive its that way.” But after having her second child, the weight of business—was a welcome change. her job’s near-constant travel began to get to her. Working as an in-house counsel requires an When a former colleague who left the firm to work attorney to wear many hats. And that’s a role that Broad portfolio as in-house counsel for telecommunications giant Catanzaro, who has worked as senior counsel at Ameritech Corp. (now AT&T) told her the company ConAgra Foods Inc. since 2008, embraces. In her was looking for a commercial litigator to handle To Catanzaro, one of the most appealing previous jobs as outside counsel, “I wasn’t privy class-action suits, she took the plunge and left the aspects of working as an in-house counsel is to how a piece of litigation might figure into their firm. “Frankly, I’ve never looked back,” she says. that her portfolio is wide-ranging. Working in business priorities, in their bottom lines, or whether After leaving Ameritech, Golden worked as ConAgra’s Naperville, Illinois, office, she serves as it actually affected them,” she says. “But as in-house in-house counsel for a short time in the Illinois lead counsel for the company’s global marketing counsel I’m involved in business decisions. And governor’s office, then for energy company division, as well as the grocery and snacks units that makes me very invested in the company—I Midwest Generation, before she began working within the company’s consumer foods business have relationships with the people in the company; Suzanne Catanzaro traded litigation for in-house (the company’s 18 other in-house attorneys work they’re my coworkers and my friends.” counsel work. At ConAgra Foods Inc., she’s deeply out of its Omaha headquarters). In that role, she (continued on page 16) involved in business decisions—"and that makes me very invested in the company," she says.

14 Loyola Law spring 2013 15 Inside view

(continued from page 15)

Deb Golden Cliff Berman John Bulfin went from a firm to in-house knew he wanted to be a parlayed two decades of counsel positions at several pharmacy lawyer and followed trial experience into an companies, most recently a specialized education and in-house counsel job at GATX Corp. She likes the career path to his current The GEO Group Inc., where challenge of learning the ins position as general counsel at overseeing litigation is only and outs of different industries. Catamaran Corp. one of his roles.

at GATX. Each time she’s entered a new industry, drug product liability suits. Four years later, he increased 3,400%—and its revenue is projected as its corporate compliance officer and chief But after 20 years as a trial lawyer, he was there’s been a learning curve. “You get into an decided he’d prefer the broader array of work at more than $14 billion this year. Part of that privacy officer. ready for something else. Part of his job involves “I have to industry and it’s hard to understand what people as an in-house counsel at Baxter Healthcare, growth has come from the eight different mergers overseeing the company’s litigation, but from a are talking about—everything is an acronym,” which later spun off into Caremark Inc. He spent and acquisitions during his tenure, including supervisory capacity in which he oversees what understand Golden says. It takes about 10 months of going to nine years there, four years at Allscripts Inc. the company absorbing formulary management No typical day trial lawyers are doing and helps make decisions meetings, listening, and asking questions more and five years at Abbott Laboratories, before business Zynchros and specialty pharmacy services on whether to take a case to trial, settle, or pursue the operations seasoned employees might not ask, she says, before landing at SXC Health Solutions (now known as company MedfusionRx Inc. After merging with That type of inside perspective ensures that another tack. He also deals with a host of other she feels like she really understands both how the Catamaran Corp.), a company focused on Catalyst Health Solutions, the company changed its an in-house counsel understands the company’s issues: most notably, as secretary of the corporation, aspect of our business works and how to help it achieve its goals. pharmacy benefit management. name to Catamaran. workings, says John Bulfin (JD ’78), senior vice he works with CEO George Zoley on the agendas Each stop was distinct. For instance, Abbott The rapid growth has required Berman to president, general counsel, and corporate for quarterly board meetings, provides information business to be had more than 100 specialized attorneys working build up the company’s in-house staff—it now secretary for correctional services company The for the board, and compiles the minutes and Industry specialist in house, which meant it was essentially a small has eight attorneys on staff—as well as work with GEO Group Inc. “You have to deal with different resolutions for the meetings. able to prevent firm with specialized lawyers handling specific outside counsel on mergers and acquisitions and aspects of the business,” he says. “I have to There’s no typical day as an in-house counsel, types of issues. Because SXC, which at the time regulatory issues. Those issues involve everything understand the operations part of our business Bulfin says, as he spends a lot of time interacting Understanding a complex industry was less issues that had less than $100 million in revenue, didn’t have from how to structure a deal to ensuring that senior to be able to prevent issues that might involve with different members of senior management in of an issue for Cliff Berman (JD ’85), who as a a single in-house attorney, Berman was able to management fully understands the potential risks the company in a lawsuit. I also work with risk the corporation’s 250-person Boca Raton, Florida, pharmacy major at the University of Michigan knew might involve have a broad practice. and rewards involved in a deal. management to help with safety issues. Part of my headquarters. “I may be in three or four different he wanted to be a pharmacy lawyer. He worked “It’s more interesting to address a number of “Those are the types of things that an in-house job is knowing how we can avoid situations that meetings, each dealing with different issues facing as a pharmacist at the same time he was enrolled the company in different areas—intellectual property, securities, counsel knows best because an outside counsel, could cause trouble later on.” the company, in a given day.” at the School of Law. At Loyola, he took a diverse mergers and acquisitions, employment law, no matter how good, doesn’t understand the Bulfin, like many others, didn’t leave the Working as an in-house counsel means juggling courseload to ensure he was prepared for wherever a lawsuit.” litigation, contracts, and regulatory issues,” he says. business as well as someone on the inside,” says School of Law seeking in-house work. “Most of my a number of different roles, but ultimately it’s quite his career took him. —John Bulfin (JD ’78), senior vice president, Berman landed at SXC while it was in the midst Berman, who is Catamaran’s senior vice president, classmates became trial lawyers,” he says. “I never simple, says ConAgra’s Catanzaro. “It’s to add value After he graduated, Berman worked as a general counsel, and corporate secretary, The of dramatic growth—between 2005-10, its revenue general counsel, and corporate secretary, as well really thought about the corporate world.” ■ GEO Group Inc. litigator at Rooks, Pitts & Poust, where he handled to what the company is doing.”

16 Loyola Law spring 2013 17 ›› STUDENT PROFILE

ow many law students take a leave of absence during law school to get another graduate degree? Mary Kennelly is taking an unusual path: she’s currently working on a joint degree from Loyola’s law H school and the public health program of the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Champion of At the age of 22, Kennelly served as campaign manager on Sharyn Elman’s bid for a seat in the Illinois House of Representatives. “We didn’t win, but we gave an 18-year incumbent a good run for his money,” explains the second-year health-law student. Between her undergraduate years and law school, she volunteered for the Peace Corps in Paraguay. As her packed record of achievement attests, Kennelly is cowed by few—if any—challenges. challenges Here she explains how she’ll apply that determination and openness to new experiences in her legal career.

2L Mary Kennelly merges Tell us about your family and the was going on outside wasn’t something I wanted to law with public health—and neighborhood you grew up in. be doing for the next couple of years. I’d spent a semester abroad in Chile, where We’re definitely a South Side Irish family. I’m the plenty more interests my Spanish had come a long way. It hadn’t come oldest of four kids born and raised in Beverly and easily to me, but I loved it and wanted to use it attended St. Barnabas Parish. At the holidays, my as part of my work. I’d also wanted to do more dad would put on a Tommy Makem or The Clancy volunteerism in college but got swept up in Brothers record, and all the little kids would do their Georgetown’s crew team. The Peace Corps was a best Irish dancing imitations. My cousin is Mary Pat way for me to make that commitment to community Kelly, author of Galway Bay. We have strong Irish service. I worked with Paraguayan subsistence cultural ties. farmers as a health educator. Growing up, I was a jock, spending most afternoons at Ridge Park’s pool. I was a swimmer and played soccer and water polo. I spent my teenage Where would you like your career to take you? years lifeguarding at Calumet Beach, and East Side is If we as a nation are ever going to rein in health very dear to me. I’ve been a lifelong Chicagoan, and care spending, we need to consider how we can that’s something that always comes through when help people stay healthy. Lawyers have an important you talk to me. role to play in identifying how the law can be used as a tool to promote public health. I want to be a What brought you to Loyola? champion for health equity, changing the conditions in which people live and their quality and access to I’ve always been very interested in doing good medical services. I see myself working in and around in the world and working toward greater social government so we can create legal solutions to justice. I decided to go to law school because I reduce health disparities. wanted to work on health and health care policy issues, and I wanted to pair my law degree with a master’s degree in public health. Loyola was ready to What do you do for fun? work with me toward that goal. I’m a newlywed, and my husband, Mike I entered Loyola in fall 2010. After I finished my Askew, and I like to walk our dog, Miles Davis. In first-year classes, Loyola granted me leave, and in the summer, we swim in the lake and go sailing. July 2011, I moved to Baltimore to start the Johns Swimming for me is really a source of calm and a Hopkins master’s program. That’s complete, and way to be centered. when I finish law school, I’ll be awarded my public “If we as a nation health and law degrees. Loyola has been incredibly supportive. Faculty members are genuinely What would people be surprised are ever going to interested in each student individually and willing to learn about you? to work with you on your own goals. rein in health care I’m quite skilled with a machete. That always catches people off guard! I used it to cut grass and spending, we need How did you become a Peace Corps volunteer? clear land for my garden in Paraguay. I also love to blow off steam by dancing and singing—whether to consider how I can remember the day I decided I was going it’s in the kitchen belting out Irish folk , singing to pursue the Peace Corps seriously. I’d graduated we can help people along to the radio, or celebrating New Year’s Eve Mary Kennelly and her husband, from Georgetown University and was working in an with the Polkaholics. Nothing’s more fun than Mike Askew, take pooch Miles office. It had been raining, and I had no idea of this. stay healthy.” singing and dancing with friends. ■ Davis for a lakefront stroll. Sitting in an office where I didn’t even know what —2L Mary Kennelly

18 Loyola Law spring 2013 19 QUEST FOR EQUALITY

“I’m making things better for an individual…if I do that for 10 years or 50 years, I’ll have made a dent.” —Daniel Hochbaum (JD ’12)

Turning back the tide With Equal Justice Works Fellowships, Loyola alums provide legal assistance to previously unaddressed populations

“We’re dealing with complex and systemic problems, and I don’t have any illusion that I go to work every day and ,” says Daniel Hochbaum (JD ’12), an advocate for students with learning disabilities in the Chicago Public Schools (CPS). “But I’m making things better for an individual. I can turn back the tide for one person, and if I do that for 10 years or 50 years, I’ll have made a dent.”

Hochbaum is one of four Loyola lawyers to to parents asking the schools for more specialized CGLA partners with several social-service agencies, recently receive an Equal Justice Works Fellowship, assistance for their kids. As much as time allows, addresses a specific goal of the Chicago Alliance to a two-year grant for qualified, passionate attorneys Hochbaum also represents students seeking End Homelessness’s long-term strategic plan. who’ve developed innovative projects that serve increased services, sometimes suing the CPS when The process of sealing or expunging is communities in significant need of legal assistance. those negotiations fail. expensive, and not everyone qualifies, putting a Sponsored by law firms or corporations, Equal His interest in learning disabilities is personal— strain on the budgets of already strapped agencies. Justice Works Fellows receive competitive salaries, he has one himself, and finds that discussing his In Cornelius’s project, funded by the Albert and generous loan repayment assistance, training, own history helps inspire his clients. “But I grew up Anne Mansfield Family Foundation, law students and additional support during their fellowships. in a middle-class household and my parents had acting as a “Criminal Records Corps” prescreen Because fellows often obtain additional funding the resources to get me help outside the school,” he clients’ eligibility for these remedies, then convey to continue their projects after the two-year grant says. “My clients can’t afford to get private tutoring their findings to agency case managers and their and counseling services. They face additional period, the fellowships can kick-start new areas of clients. Clients choose the form of relief they want Daniel Hochbaum (JD ’12) and Beth Karpiak (JD ’13) both have Equal Justice Works Fellowship projects at Equip for Equality. public-interest law—as well as the service-focused challenges I never faced, and they shouldn’t have to pursue after discussing employment options careers of the fellows. to face another one.” with their case managers, then Criminal Records In his fellowship project at Equip for Equality, Corps members proceed with the legal process for funded by the law firm McDermott Will and Emery, clearing or mitigating records. Hochbaum is addressing a critical need. More ‘Cloning herself’ to When successful, the mitigation of a and direct advocacy services to these individuals will begin work next fall with the Law Project of highest level of services, and represent clients than half of all students with disabilities in the CPS criminal record has a powerful effect on a client’s through outreach efforts at health care facilities the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless to expand on appeals for denied coverage. population have learning disabilities. Nearly 90 extend her reach confidence and sense of empowerment. A client serving individuals with TBI, including VA facilities Medicaid access for youth ages 19-25 who are Bowman says his eyes were opened percent of students with learning disabilities are whose record had been partially sealed “seemed and sports rehabilitation facilities. homeless. This population is becoming Medicaid- through Loyola’s Health Justice Project to “the African American and Latino, many from low- As a law student volunteering with Cabrini to be standing a foot taller,” Cornelius recounts. “He “There’s no shortage of medical research eligible for the first time under the Affordable Care connection between health care and the law, income families without resources for obtaining Green Legal Aid (CGLA), Cynthia Cornelius (JD ’12) has a much more optimistic outlook, and is on his on what seems to be a TBI crisis sweeping our Act (ACA). and the difficulties people face in navigating the help outside the public schools. was overwhelmed with the volume of requests way to getting housed.” nation,” Karpiak says. “The system of care and “The mortality rate among the homeless system.” He plans a career advocating for health Hochbaum’s project encompasses community she received. “I wished I could clone myself,” she In addition to current fellows Hochbaum and community support is not prepared to handle the skyrockets when people reach their 30s,” Bowman care for low-income individuals. outreach, self-advocacy assistance, and direct says. With her Equal Justice Works Fellowship Cornelius, two Loyola 3Ls have been accepted to demands and meet the needs of these rapidly says. “We hope to assist people in this age group “With the passage of the ACA, we’re at a representation. Working with parent groups, after- project at CGLA, she’s doing just that, enlisting the program beginning next year. Beth Karpiak, emerging populations.” Her fellowship at Equip in getting into health services to head off these significant point in American history,” he adds. school tutoring programs, and local hospitals, he law students across Chicago to conduct research who’s currently an intern at Equip for Equality, has for Equality is being sponsored by Walgreens and outcomes.” In his project, he’ll educate service “We’re taking major steps toward addressing the obtains referrals and educates parents about the helping homeless Chicagoans or expunge designed a project to address abuse and neglect Greenberg Traurig. providers about the new Medicaid eligibility of problems in our health care system. I want to be a legal rights of children with learning disabilities. their criminal records to improve their chances of among veterans and athletes with traumatic brain In a project funded by Pfizer Pharmaceuticals this population, help steer homeless youth toward part of that, and this fellowship is the first step.” ■ He also provides informal guidance and materials employment—and housing. The project, in which injury (TBI). The project will provide education and the law firm Jackson Lewis, Graham Bowman enrollment criteria that can garner them the

20 Loyola Law spring 2013 21 ›› FACULTY RESEARCH

By Professor Anita Weinberg definition for lead poisoning was lowered to 10 micrograms per deciliter. In 2012, the Centers n 1999, more than 1 million children for Disease Control (CDC) proclaimed that no level nationwide were identified as lead of lead is safe. poisoned. Today, using similar So, in some respects, the greatest challenges measurements, fewer than 500,000 today to tackling the problem are that we are children are identified as lead poisoned. addressing a moving target—and that the public and It’s a seeming success story. Then why policymakers assume the problem has been solved. is lead still considered one of the more It’s critical we succeed. harmful environmental hazards facing Economist Richard Rothstein argues that while children in the United States? school reform efforts—school improvement—have IWe now know that the brains of children an important role to play, schools “cannot shoulder are damaged at much lower levels of lead than the entire burden, or even most of it,” alone. once thought. In fact, research indicates there is Rothstein refers to lead and asthma as low-hanging Taking the lead no safe level of lead in the body. An estimated fruit necessary to address the achievement 1 million children nationwide are harmed by lead gap—lead directly depresses cognitive ability today; Illinois still has the highest percentage of and can affect attentiveness and learning, and lead-poisoned children in the nation. Once harmed, asthma causes absenteeism. Researchers on the Chicago school study concluded that preventing the damage to a child’s developing brain is done Professor Anita Weinberg in ending lead and the focus must shift to addressing problems lead poisoning in early childhood is a highly caused by the poisoning and to avoiding further practical way to improve the school success of all Education is the key accumulation of lead in the child’s body. In the and disclosure of known lead hazards in homes students, and resources should be redirected to to eradicating the meantime, the lead can irreversibly affect the built before 1978. achieve this goal. Other national studies support continuing problem. child’s ability to think, learn, and behave. similar findings. In addition, as communities try to poisoning A recent study of almost 50,000 children address crime, it is worth considering that lead also enrolled in the third grade in Chicago Public A continuing challenge has been linked to juvenile delinquency and later Schools between 2003-06 found that low-level criminal activity. So why is lead still a problem? Three reasons The CDC describes lead poisoning as a lead exposure lowers standardized test stand out: performance and increases the risk of school potentially devastating, but entirely preventable, failure. The study controlled for other factors ›› 1) Lead is a heavy metal used in many materials disease caused primarily by exposure to dust from associated with school performance including and products, and it does not break down in the deteriorated paint on old housing. poverty, birth weight, maternal education, and environment. Once dispersed and redeposited So what can we do? The problem of lead race/ethnicity. Studies in other parts of the in the environment, it will remain to poison poisoning has rested primarily with public country have found similar results. generations of children unless it is contained or health departments. While public-private coalitions In 1972, Chicago was the first city to enact removed. Although lead paint has been banned and advocacy movements have been built to an ordinance to limit the lead content in paint. in the U.S. since 1978, approximately 2 million tackle the problem, we need to bring in new The federal government began responding to the housing units in Illinois have lead-based paint. players critical to the conversation and to creative problem around the same time. Lead in residential thinking. A range of ideas is worthy of exploration. ›› 2) Because of concerted legislative and paint was phased out and completely banned These include: expanding early intervention regulatory reform efforts over the last four by the Consumer Product Safety Commission in programs to provide enrichment for children at decades, fewer children have high concentrations 1978. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency increased developmental risk; banks requiring of lead and fewer suffer from lead’s more visible (EPA) phased out leaded gasoline between 1973- lead removal before approving mortgages, and effects. In addition, most of these laws are only 96, and also placed strict limits on the amount insisting on disclosure of known lead hazards at enforced after a child is poisoned; we have not of lead in drinking water. The U.S. Food and foreclosure sales; local governments requiring focused on prevention. Drug Administration (FDA) assisted in virtually proof of lead-safe work practices when issuing eliminating the use of lead solder in domestically ›› 3) Undue lead exposure is defined by blood permits; and federal and local government health canned food and beverages. The FDA also has lead level, the amount of lead concentration in and housing agencies strengthening enforcement established strict standards concerning the amount the blood. In 1971, children were considered of existing laws. of lead that can leach from U.S.-manufactured lead poisoned only if the blood lead level was 60 Finally, all of us can play a greater role ceramic ware into beverages and food. Federal laws micrograms per deciliter or higher; in 1975, that in connecting the dots between children’s also have been passed requiring the use of lead- level was 30 micrograms per deciliter; in 1985, success and environmental hazards and safe work practices in federally subsidized work, 25 micrograms per deciliter. In 1991, the official advocating for change. ■

Anita Weinberg is a clinical professor of law and director of Loyola’s ChildLaw Policy Institute, housed within the Civitas ChildLaw Center. The policy institute seeks to improve the lives of children and families in Illinois by developing and promoting child-centered laws, policies, and practices, and building coalitions and partnerships to improve the functioning of the legal, social welfare, juvenile justice, health care, and other systems that impact underrepresented children and families. The Lead Safe Housing Initiative, which launched in 1999, has brought Illinois closer to a prevention focus, and advocates for policy reform, promotes public awareness, and fosters collaborations. Loyola law students are actively involved in all policy institute projects headed by Weinberg.

22 Loyola Law spring 2013 23 Faculty News

Loyola law faculty members are active authors, speakers, consultants, and mentors. Through their writing and public speaking, School of Law faculty members advance the state of human knowledge. Here are some of their recent contributions.

Richard Michael, Civil Procedure Alexander Tsesis, For Liberty and of International Organizations in Before Trial (2d ed., West, 2011). Equality: The Life and Times of the the 21st Century” in In Memory of Declaration of Independence (Oxford Sir Ian Brownlie,” general editor, Margaret Moses, Principles and University Press, 2012). Maurizio Ragazzi; “Responsibility Practice of International Commercial of Conscience: The Responsibility Arbitration (2d ed., Cambridge Spencer Waller, Antitrust and to Exercise and the Responsible University Press, 2012). American Business Abroad (Thomson/ Exercise” in Verantiwortung in Einer BOOKS West, 2009, 2010, 2011). Komplexen Gesellschaft (Responsibility: Charles Murdock, Illinois Business Recognition, and Limits) (Berlin, James Gathii, Wing-Tat Lee Chair in Organizations (2d ed., West, 2012). Michael Zimmer, Cases and Materials Duncker, and Humblot, 2012); International Law, African Regional on Employment Discrimination (8th “Our Debt to DeVitoria: A Catholic Trade Agreements as Legal Regimes, Nanette Norton, Trademark Practice ed., Aspen, 2013) (with Sullivan Foundation of Human Rights,” 10 Ave (Cambridge University Press, 2011). Throughout the World (rev. ed., and White); The Global Workplace: Maria Law Review 313 (2012); “The Thomson Reuters Westlaw, 2012). International and Comparative Holy See: International Person and Cynthia Ho, Clifford E. Vickrey Employment Law (2d ed., Aspen, 2012) Sovereign,” 1 Ave Maria International Research Professor and Associate John Nowak, Raymond and Mary (with Blanpain, Bisom-Rapp, Corbett, Law Journal 1 (2011); “Foreign Dean of Faculty Research, Civil Simon Chair in Constitutional and Josephs). Sovereign Immunity and the Holy Procedure: An Interactive Guide Law, Treatise on Constitutional Law: See,” 1 Ave Maria International Law (Carolina Press, under contract) Substance and Procedure (5th ed. Journal 67 (2011); “The Second (with Angela Upchurch and Susan vols. 1, 2 & 3 & supps. to vols. 4, 5 & 6, John Courtney Murray Lecture: Gilles); Access to Medicine in the Global 2012); (5th ed. vols. 4, 5 & 6 & supps. John Courtney Murray: A Model of Economy: International Agreements to vols. 1, 2 & 3, forthcoming 2013) Engagement,” 43 Loyola University on Patents and Related Rights (Oxford (with Ronald Rotunda) (available at Chicago Law Journal i (2011). University Press, 2011). Westlaw, as updated through June Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Michael Kaufman continues to frequently publish and speak on securities law. 2012, as “CONLAW” database). Emily Benfer, “Law for the Michael Kaufman, Associate Dean Millennium: Educating New of Academic Affairs, Learning Civil Steven Ramirez, Lawless Capitalism: Generations of Law Students,” Clinical Procedure (West, 2013); Education ARTICLES AND The Subprime Crisis and the Case Law Review (forthcoming 2013) Law, Policy, and Practice (3d ed., for an Economic Rule of Law (NYU BOOK REVIEWS (with Colleen Shanahan); “Adaptive Aspen, forthcoming 2013); Securities Press, 2012). Clinical Teaching,” Clinical Law Review Litigation Damages, Volumes 26 Robert John Araujo, S.J., John (2013) (with Colleen Shanahan); and 26A (Thomson Reuters, 2012); Courtney Murray, S.J., University “Interdisciplinary Collaboration Alan Raphael, Criminal Procedure: (with Allyson Gold and April E. John Blum, “Medicaid Governance Relative Adoptions and Subsidized Middle of the Twentieth Century,” 51 Depositions: Law, Strategy, and Professor, “Are Christians Fit between Graduate Schools and Host From Bail to Jail (Tower Publishing Schweitzer); “Health Justice Project: in the Wake of National Federation Guardianships,” Judges’ Page (joint American Journal of Legal History 554 Technique (West, 2012); Illinois Civil to Be Parents and Guardians— Communities” in Town and Gown: Company, 2012). A Collaborative Commitment to of Independent Business v. Sebelius: publication of the National CASA (2011) (with Lee Strang); “Religion Trial Practice (West, 2012); Expert The Case of Johns v. Derby City Effective Legal Strategies Promoting Solving Real World Problems,” 9 Finding Federalism’s Middle Pathway, Association and the National Council and the Purification of Reason: Why Witnesses: Securities Cases (Thomson Council,” 4 International Journal Cooperation between Institutions Anne-Marie Rhodes, Art Law & Indiana Health Law Review 521 from Administrative Law to State of Juvenile and Family Court Judges) the Liberal State Requires More Than Reuters, 2012). of the Jurisprudence of the Family of Higher Education and Their Transactions: Teacher’s Manual (2012); “Advancing Health Law Compacts,” 45 John Marshall Law (November 2011); “Advocating for Simple Tolerance,” 33 Campbell Law (forthcoming 2013); “The Roman Host Municipalities (American Bar (Carolina Academic Press, 2012); & Social Justice in the Clinic, the Review 601 (2012). Children in Care in a Climate of Review 505 (2011). Jeffrey Kwall, Kathleen and Bernard Catholic Perspective on the Use Association, 2013); “Theory & Praxis in Art Law & Transactions (Carolina Classroom, and the Community,” Economic Recession: The Relationship Beazley Research Professor, of Force” in Religious Perspectives Reducing Women’s Poverty,” American Academic Press, 2011). 21 Annals of Health Law 237 (2012) Bruce Boyer, “Neglected, Abused, and between Poverty and Child John Bronsteen, “Well-Being Analysis The Federal Income Taxation of in Just War Theory (Cambridge University Journal of Gender, Social (with John Ammann, Lisa Bliss, Sylvia Dependent Children—Dispositions Maltreatment,” 6 Northwestern Journal vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis,” 62 Duke Corporations, Partnerships, Limited University Press, forthcoming Policy, & Law (2012) (with Annette Allen Shoenberger, New Illinois Caley, Elizabeth Tobin Tyler, Robert and Permanency,” Illinois Juvenile of Law and Social Policy 301 (2011). Law Journal (forthcoming 2013) (with Liability Companies, and Their Owners 2013); “The Meaning of Equality Appel, Davida Finger); “The Health Rules of Evidence (Illinois State Bar Pettignano); “May All Creatures Be Law and Practice (2012) (with Anita Christopher Buccafusco & Jonathan (4th ed., Foundation Press, 2012); and Same Sex Marriage,” 26 Justice Project: Interdisciplinary Association, 2011). at Peace,” Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, Weinberg); “Achieving Permanence John Breen, “The Road Not Taken: Fundamentals of Modern Property Journal of Civil Rights and Economic Advocacy to Overcome Social September 11, 2011. for Children in Relative Foster Care: Catholic Legal Education at the Law (6th ed., Foundation Press, 2011) Development (forthcoming 2013); Determinants of Health,” 1 Canadian (continued on page 26) (coauthored). “The International Responsibility Journal of Poverty Law 164 (2012)

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by Stephen Marks) (2012);“Curtailing 2013); “Beyond Patents: Concerns 2013); “Reasoned Decisions in Arbitra- Whether He Was in Custody During Ecosystem Exportation: Ecosystem for Developing Countries” in tor Challenges,” International Yearbook an Interrogation?” 2010-11 Preview Services As a Basis to Reconsider the Globalization of Health Care (Oxford of Arbitration (forthcoming 2013); of United States Supreme Court Cases Merits of Export-Driven Agriculture University Press, 2013); “Global “Beyond Judicial Activism: When the 232; “Does Crawford v. Washington in Economies Highly Dependent Access to Medicine: The Influence of Supreme Court Is No Longer a Court,” Bar Police Testimony of a Shooting on Agricultural Exports,” 30 Virginia Competing Patent Perspectives,” 35 14 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Victim’s Statement Identifying His Environmental Law Journal 1 (2012) Fordham International Law Journal 1 Constitutional Law 161 (2011). Attacker?” 2010-11 Preview of United (with Keith Hirokawa); “Irregular (2011); “Patent Breaking or Balancing: States Supreme Court Cases 4; “Does Forces and Self-Defense Under Separating Strands of Fact from Charles Murdock, “Thinking, Fast the First Amendment Allow the Fa- the UN-Charter” in What is War? Fiction Under TRIPS,” 34 North Carolina and Slow—A Lawyer’s Perspective,” ther of a Dead Soldier to Receive Tort An Investigation in the Wake of Journal of International Law and Loyola University Chicago Law Journal Damages from Picketers at His Son’s 9/11(edited by Mary O’Connell) Commercial Regulation 371 (2009), (forthcoming 2013) (with Barry Funeral?” 2010-11 Preview of United (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2012); excerpts reprinted in Human Rights Sullivan); “Credit Default Swaps: States Supreme Court Cases 8. “Food Sovereignty for Poor Countries and Intellectual Property: Mapping Dubious Instruments,” Harvard in the Global Trading System,” 57 the Global Interface (edited by Business Law Review Online (2013); Anne-Marie Rhodes, “Valuing Art Loyola Law Review 509 (2011); Laurence Helfer and Graeme Austin) “Redoing the Statutory Scheme by in an Estate: New Concerns,” 31 “The Neo-Liberal Turn in Regional (Cambridge University Press, 2011) Rule-Making,” 40 Securities Regulation Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Trade Agreements,” 86 Washington and Daniel Chow & Edward Lee, Law Journal 251 (2012); “The Big Journal 45 (2012). University Law Review 421 (2011); International Intellectual Property Banks: Background, Deregulation, “Failing Failed States: A Response to (West, 2012). Financial Innovation, and ‘Too Big to Hank Rose, “The Due Process Rights John Yoo,” 2 California Law Review Fail,’” Denver University Law Review of Residential Tenants in Mortgage Circuit 40 (2011); “Introduction: GATS Michael Kaufman, “Summary Pre- (forthcoming 2013); “The Dodd-Frank Foreclosure Cases,” 41 New Mexico Law and Human Rights,” Proceedings of the judgment: The Supreme Court’s Wall Street Reform and Consumer Review 407 (2011). 104th Annual Meeting of the American Profound, Pervasive, and Problematic Protection Act: What Caused the Society of International Law 127 Presumption about Human Behav- Financial Crisis and Will Dodd-Frank Matthew Sag, “Orphan Works As (2011); “Kenya’s Long Anti-Corruption ior,” 43 Loyola University Chicago Law Succeed in Preventing Future Crises?” Grist for the Data Mill,” 27 Berkeley Agenda: 1952-2010: Prospects and Review 593 (2012); “Messy Mental 64 SMU Law Review 1243 (2011). Technology Law Journal (forthcoming Challenges of the Ethics and Anti- Markers: Inferring Scienter from Core 2013); “League Structure & Stadium Corruption Commission Under the Operations in Securities Fraud Litiga- Juan Perea, “On Race and Constitu- Rent Seeking—the Antitrust Role 2010 Constitution,” 4 The Law and tion,” 73 Ohio State Law Journal 507 tional Law: Recognizing the Proslav- Reconsidered,” Florida Law Review Development Review 182 (2011); (2012); “The Judicial Access Barriers ery Constitution,” 110 Michigan Law (forthcoming 2013) (with David “TWAIL: A Brief History of Its Origins, to Remedies for Securities Fraud,” 75 Review 1123 (2012) (book review of Haddock and Tonja Jacobi); “An Its Decentralized Network, and a Law and Contemporary Problems 55 George Van Cleve, A Slaveholder’s Information-Gathering Approach to Assistant Dean of Students Jean Gaspardo has directed the law school’s study-abroad programs for two decades. Tentative Bibliography,” 3 (1) Trade Law (2012); “Fraud Created the Market,” Union); “The Echoes of Slavery: Rec- Copyright Policy,” 34 Cardozo Law and Development Journal 26 (2011); 63 Alabama Law Review 275 (2012); ognizing the Racist Origins of the Review 173 (2012) (with Peter DiCola); “Mapping African International Law,” “Section 16(b) and Its Limitations Agricultural and Domestic Worker “Digital Archives: Don’t Let Copyright book review essay of Mapping New Period: The Case for Equitable Tolling,” Exclusion from the National Labor Block Data Mining,” 490 Nature 29-30 Boundaries in African International Law 39 Securities Regulation Law Journal Relations Act,” 72 Ohio State Law (October 4, 2012) (with Matthew Jock- by Jeremy Levitt, 2 (3) Transnational 169 (2011); “Toward a Just Measure of Journal 95 (2011). ers and Jason Schultz); “Predicting Legal Theory 439-441(2011). Repose: The Statute of Limitations for Fair Use,” 73 Ohio State Law Journal 47 Securities Fraud,” 52 William and Mary Steven Ramirez, “In Defense of the (2012); “The Pre-History of Fair Use,” 76 Masur); 52 American Journal of Legal Corporations, and Unrelated Debt- American University Journal of Gender, James Gathii, “The Status of African Diane Geraghty, A. Kathleen Law Review 1547 (2011). GSES,” 35 Hamline Law Review 461 Brooklyn Law Review 1371 (2011). History 240 (2012) (peer reviewed) Financed Income,” 106 Northwestern Social Policy, & the Law 3 (2012); “The Regional Trade Agreements,” 4 Beazley Chair in ChildLaw, “Child (2012); “Dodd-Frank As Maginot (solicited book review of Wholesale Law Review 225 (2012); “Grown-up AAML Child Custody Evaluation European Yearbook of International Friendly Legal Aid in Africa” (with Jeffrey Kwall, “When Should Asset Line,” 14 Chapman Law Review 109 Justice by Martin Redish). Income Shifting: Yesterday’s Kiddie Standards: Bridging Two Worlds, Economic Law (forthcoming 2013); Nadia Sawicki, “A New Life for Wrong- Thomas Geraghty) (concept paper Appreciation Be Taxed?: The Case for (2011); “Taking Economic Human Tax Is Not Enough,” 59 Kansas Law Child Custody Evaluation Standards,” “Africa” in The Oxford Handbook of the ful Living,” New York Law School Law adopted by UNICEF, United Nations a Disposition Standard of Realization,” Rights Seriously After the Debt Crisis,” Samuel Brunson, “Taxing Polygamy,” Review 457 (2011); “Reigning in American Academy of Matrimonial History of International Law (edited Review (forthcoming 2013); “Patient Development Programme, and United 86 Indiana (Bloomington) Law Journal 42 Loyola University Chicago Law Re- Washington University Law Review Charities: Using an Intermediate Lawyers (2011). by Bardo Fassbender, Anne Peters, Protection and Decision Aid Quality: Nations Office on Drugs and Crime as 77 (2011); “The Repeal of Graduated view 713 (2011). Penalty to Enforce the Campaigning Simone Peter, and Daniel Hogger) Regulatory and Tort Law Approaches,” (forthcoming 2013); “Watching the the official paper on the topic) (2011). Corporate Tax Rates,” 131 Tax Notes Watchers: Preventing I.R.S. Abuse of Prohibition,” 8 Pittsburgh Tax Review Teresa Frisbie, “Ten Tips for a (Oxford University Press, 2012); “The 54 Arizona Law Review 621 (2012); 1395 (2011). Alan Raphael, “When Are Miranda the Tax System,” Florida Tax Review 125 (peer reviewed) (2011). Successful Mediation,” Women’s Cotonou Agreement and Economic “The Hollow Promise of Freedom of Cynthia Ho, “A New Approach to the Warnings Required for Questioning of (forthcoming 2013); “How to Tax Bar Association of Illinois Journal Partnership Agreements” in The Conscience,” 33 Cardozo Law Review Compulsory License Conundrum,” Margaret Moses, “Ethics in Inter- a Prisoner?” 2011-12 Preview of United Mitt Romney,” 135 Tax Notes 1137 Sacha Coupet, “Beyond ‘Eros:’ (August 2012). Right to Development in Theory and 1389 (2012); “Informed Consent Be- in Global Perspectives on Patent Law national Arbitration: Traps for the States Supreme Court Cases 11; “Does (2012); “Repatriating Tax-Exempt Relative Caregiving, ‘Agape’ Parentage, Practice: Studies for the Twenty-Fifth yond the Physician-Patient Encounter: (Margo Bagley & Ruth Okediji, eds.) Unwary,” Loyola University Chicago Miranda Allow a Court to Consider the Investments: Tax Havens, Blocker and the Best Interests of Children,” 20 Anniversary of the Declaration (edited (Oxford University Press, forthcoming International Law Review (forthcoming Age of a Juvenile When Determining (continued on page 28)

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Tort Law Implications of Extra-Clinical 13 European Journal of Law Reform in Its First Age of Terror, 29 Law and ment Data: The ABA’s New Standard through Policy and Legislative Clinics” University Chicago Law Journal Arbitration Act” as part of an ISBA the University of Indiana McKinney Decision Support Tools,” 20 Annals 4 (2011); “The Executive’s Authority History Review 319 (2011). 509,” The Bar Examiner, December at an AALS Clinical Legal Education conference “The Future of Class webinar. Frisbie was recently School of Law in December 2012. of Health Law 1 (2012); “The Abor- Over Enemy Combatants: Due Process 2012; BLOGS: “The Downsizing of Association Annual Conference in Action and Its Alternatives.” named to the National Academy of During the spring 2013 semester, tion Informed Consent Debate: More and Its Limits,” 2011 Criminal Law and Spencer Waller, “Antitrust’s Legal Education,” The Faculty Lounge Puerto Rico; and “Professional Self- Distinguished Neutrals. she gave several presentations. Light, Less Heat,” 21 Cornell Journal of Procedure Review 94 (with Megan Democracy Deficit,” 81 Fordham Law (Feb. 1, 2013), “The Dean’s Office: An Care and Social Justice Lawyering” at Samuel Brunson presented his paper In January 2013, she presented a Law & Public Policy 1 (2011); “Judging Canty); “Formal and Informal Aggran- Review 2543 (2013); (with Harry Introduction” Above the Law (Feb. 7, the Norman Amaker Public Interest “Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes? James Gathii was inducted as working paper entitled “The Romance Physicians: The Person and the Profes- dizement of Executive Power,” 2 (12) First); “The Next Generation of Global 2013); “The Changing Law School Law and Social Justice Retreat. Last Protecting the Tax System from I.R.S. Loyola’s Wing-Tat Lee Chair in of Pharmaceutical Innovation,” at the sional,” 13 Virtual Mentor: American Societas/ Communitas 44 (2011); “The Competition Law,” 1 William E. Kovacic, Learning Experience,” The Faculty year she presented “Supervising Abuse” at the Chicago Junior Faculty International Law at a special Conference of Asian Pacific American Medical Association Journal of Humanity of Advocacy,” 42 Loyola An Antitrust Tribute 95 (2013); “Use Lounge (Feb. 8, 2013); “Loosening Law Students and Fellows” at the Workshop this fall. ceremony at the law school on Law Faculty held at UC Hastings Ethics 718 (2011); “Peculiar Institution: University Chicago Law Journal xxiii of Dominance, Unlawful Conduct the ABA’s Grip on Law Schools,” The Public Interest Law Initiative in March 14. Following the induction Law School. In April, she presented America’s Death Penalty in an Age of (2010) (Cooney & Conway Inaugural and Causation under Section 36 of Faculty Lounge (Feb. 21, 2013); “Three Chicago; “Theory and Praxis for the Sacha Coupet presented “Reforming ceremony, Gathii delivered the 2013 “Cognitive Biases Surrounding Abolition,” 18 Ethical Perspectives 702 Chair Lecture); “There’s More to the New Zealand’s Commerce Act: A Questions About Legal Education” Development of a Public Health Courts to Meet the Needs of Abused Wing-Tat Lee Lecture in International Pharmaceutical Innovation and (2011) (book review). Law Than ‘Practice-Ready,’” Chronicle United States Perspective,” 18 New Above the Law (Feb. 21, 2013); “Why Policy Clinic” at Johns Hopkins School and Neglected Children” at the 20th Law “Judicial Activism in Africa’s Patent Policy” at PatCon and of Higher Education (October 23, 2011) Zealand Business Law Quarterly the ABA Is Resistant to Change,” Above of Public Health; and “Mind the Gap: Annual Colloquium of the American International Trade Courts.” He served as a moderator for the Law Lea Krivinskas Shepard, “Toward (with Alfred S. Konefsky). 333 (2012) (with Jeffery M. Cross, the Law (March 7, 2013). (Re)Designing Clinical Teaching to Professional Society on the Abuse of presented “Strength in IP Protection Journal Symposium on Patents and a Stronger Financial History Antidis- J. Douglas Richards, Maurice E. Serve Cross-Generational Student Children where she participated as an and FDI Flows in LDCs” at the Innovation. She also presented a crimination Norm,” 53 Boston College Alexander Tsesis, “The New Privacy Stucke); “Thurman Arnold,” Oxford Michael Zimmer, “Is the and Community Needs” at the Clinical invited panelist. She was an invited University of Georgia Law School work in progress at the University of Law Review 1695 (2012); “Creditors’ on the Internet,” 48 Wake Forest Law Encyclopedia of American Business, Antidiscrimination Project Being Legal Education Association Annual copanelist at the annual conference International Law Colloquium San Diego International Intellectual Contempt,” 2011 Brigham Young Uni- Review (forthcoming 2014); “Foot- Labor, and Economic History (2012); Ended?” 1 Indiana Journal of Conference held in Los Angeles. of the Council on Contemporary in February, and at the Cornell Property Scholars Roundtable. versity Law Review 1509. holds of Constitutional Interpretation,” “Social Networking and Competition Law & Social Equality (forthcoming Families where she presented International Law and International 92 Texas Law Review (forthcoming Policy,” 90 North Carolina Law Review 2013); “Inequality, Individualized Risk, Bruce Boyer recently gave a “Changing Families and Children’s Relations Colloquium this past Margaret Moses was appointed Allen Shoenberger, “Loyola Law 2013); “Maxim Constitutionalism,” 92 1771 (2012); “Access and Information & Insecurity,” 2013 Wisconsin Law presentation for the Cook County Rights: How Shifting Paradigms fall. He also presented “Mission sole arbitrator in two international School, State Secrets, the American Texas Law Review (forthcoming 2013) Remedies in High-Tech Antitrust,” Review 1; “North American Border Domestic Relations Court, “Handling Can Impact Child Protection.” She Creep or a Search for Relevance: arbitrations under the auspices of Revolution, the War of 1812: The (lead article); “Inflammatory Speech: 8 Journal of Competition Law and Wars: The Role of Canadian and International Child Abduction Cases.” also presented her work on “Gender The East African Court of Justice’s ICDR. She was recently selected as Maritime Connections of the Middle Outrage versus Intimidation,” 97 Economics 575 (2012); “Corporate American Scholarship in U.S. Labor He also presented in two separate Identity Rights for Transgender and Human Rights Strategy” to the coarbitrator for a panel to draft an Temple,” 43 Journal of Maritime Law Minnesota Law Review 1145 (2013) Governance and Competition Law Reform Debates,” 30 Hofstra sessions for the Annual Conference of Gender Non-Conforming Children” International Organizations/ award in one of the Vis Moot and Commerce 293 (2012); “Loyola (lead article); “Gender Subordination Policy,” 18 George Mason Law Review Labor & Employment Journal 1 (2012) the National Association of Counsel at the University of Miami Law International Law Working Group, Problems. The award will constitute Maintains a Connection to the Middle and the Thirteenth Amendment,” 112 833 (2011). (with Susan Bisom-Rapp); “Wal-Mart for Children in Chicago on “Recent School where she was invited Buffet Center, Northwestern a book chapter in a book to be Temple Inn of Court,” Chicago Daily Columbia Law Review 1641 (2012); v. Dukes: Taking the Protection Out Developments in Dependency Law” to participate in a legal theory University, in November. published in March 2013 to honor Law Bulletin (February 13, 2012). “Into the Light of Day: Relevance of Anita Weinberg, “Neglected, of Protected Classes,” 16 Lewis & Clark and on “Analyzing and Preparing workshop. She presented her work Eric Bergsten, who is retiring after the Thirteenth Amendment to Con- Abused, and Dependent Children— Law Review 409 (2012); “Unions & the Cases Involving Medically Based on kinship caregiving families at both Zelda Harris recently participated running the Vis Moot for 20 years. Barry Sullivan, Cooney and temporary Law,” 112 Columbia Law Dispositions and Permanency,” Illinois Great Recession: Is Transnationalism Allegations of Child Abuse.” Loyola’s School of Law and School of as a faculty member at the Cardozo Moses serves as a board member of Conway Chair in Advocacy, “Think- Review 1447 (2012); “Self-Government Juvenile Law and Practice (2012) (with the Answer?” 15 Employee Rights and Social Work. Intensive Trial Advocacy Program at the Vis Moot East Foundation. Last ing, Fast and Slow—A Lawyer’s Per- and the Declaration of Indepen- Bruce Boyer). Employment Policy Journal 123 (2011). John Bronsteen’s paper “Well-Being Benjamin Cardozo School of Law. fall she spoke on Ethics in Internal spective,” Loyola University Chicago dence,” 97 Cornell Law Review 693 Analysis vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis” Teresa Frisbie recently presented This spring she also participated in an Arbitration to a committee of the Law Journal (forthcoming 2013) (2012) (lead article); “Congressional Neil Williams, “Taking and Perfect- was the subject of the Duke Law “Practical Applications of online training module sponsored by Chicago Bar Association. (with Charles Murdock); “Law and Authority to Interpret the Thirteenth ing Security Interests in Collateral Journal’s annual symposium, where Neuroscience in Mediation and the National Center for State Courts Discretion in the Supreme Court: A Amendment,” 71 Maryland Law Review Subject to Specialized Rules: Deposit it was commented upon by several Negotiation” at an American Bar at the American Judges Association John Nowak is a member of the Rules Response to Professor Lubet,” Val- 40 (2012); “Due Process in Civil Com- Accounts, Commercial Tort Claims, leaders in the field of administrative Association meeting, and also and Futures Without Violence; Committee for the United States paraiso Law Review (forthcoming mitments,” 68 Washington and Lee Intellectual Property,” 10 DePaul Busi- law. Bronsteen also presented made presentations on this topic served as a team leader for both the District Court for the Northern District 2013); “FOIA and the First Amend- Law Review 253 (2011). Solicited book ness & Commercial Law Journal 515 that paper at the American Law for the Circuit Court of Cook County NITA Midwest Regional program at of Illinois. ment: Representative Democracy reviews: Erik Bleich, The Freedom to (2012); “Two Men and Twenty Years & Economics Association Annual MCLE series in December and the Loyola University Chicago School and the People’s Elusive ‘Right to Be Racist?: How the United States and of Meetings: Norman Amaker, Derrick Meeting at Stanford Law School, at Association for Conflict Resolution in of Law, and at the Trial Techniques Stacey Platt recently presented Know,’” 72 Maryland Law Review 1 Europe Struggle to Preserve Freedom Bell, and the Midwestern People of the Law & Society Association Annual April. She participates on a working Program at Emory School of Law; “Zealous Advocacy and Best Interests: (2012); “‘Death Is Different’ No Longer: and Combat Racism, 127 Political Sci- Color Legal Scholarship Conference PRESENTATIONS, Meeting in Honolulu, and at a faculty committee for the Circuit Court of and participated as an invited faculty Ethical Dilemmas in Family Law” at the Graham v. Florida and the Future of ence Quarterly 511 (2012); G. Edward from 1990- 2010,” 42 Loyola University AWARDS, AND workshop at Loyola. He presented his Cook County that is preparing a new member for the National Council Association of Family and Conciliation Eighth Amendment Challenges to White, 1 Law in American History, Chicago Law Journal i (2011). HONORS paper “Retribution and the Experience mediation program and recently of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Courts National Conference in Noncapital Sentences,” 2011 Supreme Tulsa Law Review (forthcoming 2013); of Punishment” at the Southeastern provided training for the Association Conference titled “Enhancing Chicago. She also participated as a Court Review 327 (with Alison Siegler); Peggy Pascoe, What Comes Naturally: David Yellen, “The Impact of Rank- Emily Benfer recently presented Association of Law Schools Annual of Attorney Mediators. This spring Judicial Skills in Domestic Violence” lecturer this spring at the National “Methods and Materials in Constitu- Miscegenation Law and the Making of ings and Rules on Legal Education “Health Justice Project: A Model for Meeting in Amelia Island, Florida. she presented on panels on “Teaching in San Francisco. Institute for Trial Advocacy, Litigation tional Law: Some Thoughts on Race in America, American Historical Reform,” Connecticut Law Review Law School Medical-Legal Partnership He also gave a panel presentation Mediation Advocacy Skills Inside Training for Advocates Representing Access to Government Information Review (2011); Brian McGinty, John (forthcoming 2013); “Current Crisis Clinics” at Southern Illinois University on “Teaching Emerging Areas of the and Outside the Classroom” at the Cynthia Ho was an invited Survivors of Domestic Violence in As a Problem for Constitutional Brown’s Trial, Journal of Southern His- Reshapes Legal Education,” Chicago Health Policy Institute; “Advancing Law” at the aforementioned Law & ABA Section of Dispute Resolution commentator at a Workshop on Boulder, Colorado. Theory and Socio-Legal Studies,” tory (2011); Beverly Gage, The Day Lawyer (September 2012); “Advancing Social Justice and Clinical Teaching Society conference. He was a panel Legal Educator’s Colloquium, and Intellectual Property Issues in the Wall Street Exploded: A Story of America Transparency in Law School Employ- moderator last spring at the Loyola “Arbitration Under the Federal Pharmaceutical Industry held at (continued on page 30)

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of Law’s Orphan Works & Mass History Discrimination” at a faculty Influences” at the National Archives, presented a workshop on Steps in Digitization Conference; “League exchange at Loyola University New Washington, DC. Advocacy to the Grand Families Structure and Stadium Rent Orleans College of Law. She co- Program of Chicago. Weinberg Seeking—The Role of Antitrust organized with Cynthia Ho a Chicago Spencer Waller recently participated served as a panelist on the webinar Revisited” at the Cardozo School of Junior Faculty Workshop for junior on the panel “Antitrust and Social “Examining the Impact of Lead Laws Law IP Speaker Series; “Copyright faculty to present working papers in a Networking” at the Mayer Brown on Housing Quality and Children’s and the Future of the Entertainment supportive, collaborative setting. She Annual Social Media Conference. Health” sponsored by the American Industry” at the Northwestern Journal served as moderator at the workshop. He served as moderator for the Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics, and of Technology & Intellectual Property She also served as moderator on the panel “The Rise of the Subprime the Public Health Law Association. Annual Symposium; and “Sports, panel “Implementing the Settlement: Loans and the Housing Collapse” She also spoke in a concurrent Economics, and Politics—League the Role of the Monitor and Legal at Loyola’s National Mortgage session at the AALS Clinical Teacher’s Structure and Rent Seeking through Oversight” at Loyola’s National Settlement held at the School of Conference “Teaching Policy and Stadiums” at the Marquette Mortgage Settlement Conference Law in February. He also moderated Legislative Advocacy,” and was co- University School of Law Intellectual held in February. the panel “Recent Developments in leader of an AALS working group Property Colloquium. Antitrust Class Actions” at the 2nd on policy and legislative advocacy. Barry Sullivan was the inaugural Annual Comprehensive Seminar on Weinberg served as a panelist at Nadia Sawicki was recently selected Arthur Cox Visiting Research Fellow at Litigating Class Actions, Gleacher the Urban Issues Summit on Health as a participant in the highly selective Trinity College, University of Dublin, Center, in Chicago. Last fall he Disparities held at Loyola University Wake Forest Junior Scholars in where he taught during the spring presented his forthcoming paper Chicago. In February, Weinberg was Bioethics Workshop. This past fall semester 2013. While in Dublin, he “Antitrust’s Democracy Deficit” at an invited participant at the National she served as a visiting fellow at gave a talk titled “Recusals in the George Washington University Dialogue and Strategy for Action to the American Bar Foundation. She Supreme Court of the United States: Law School; co-organized and Address Childhood Lead Poisoning in recently presented her research It Didn’t Start With Scalia” at the moderated the Loyola conference Washington, DC. on the constitutionality and ethics international law firm Arthur Cox. “Brands, Competition, and the Law”; of emotionally persuasive health He also chaired a panel on Law and commented on “Media Diversity and Julia Wentz was invited to join the campaigns at Albany Law School, Terrorism at the Fifth Annual Trinity Market Structure” at Northwestern Academic Law Library Advisory Board Valparaiso University Law School, and College Law Student Colloquium. University Law School; and presented of Wolters Kluwer, a major provider of the American Society for Bioethics The panel included papers presented “Fostering Internet Competition” texts and research materials for the and the Humanities. She also served by law and graduate students at The Brooking Institution, in law school and attorney markets. The as a panelist at a New York Law from Trinity College, Oxford, and Washington, DC. first meeting was held in New York School symposium on end-of-life Cambridge. Last fall he presented last fall. Wentz will retire as associate medical care. She participated as "Law and Discretion in the Supreme Anita Weinberg recently gave a dean and director of the Law Library a guest blogger on Lawrence B. Court: A Response to Professor Lubet" presentation to the Illinois Juvenile in July after 14 years of dedicated Professor Anne-Marie Rhodes recently presented papers on art and estate law at several major conferences. Solum’s Legal Theory Blog, and the at Valparaiso University’s Tabor Justice Commission on youth who are service to Loyola. Petrie-Flom Blog, a Harvard University Institute on Legal Ethics. adjudicated for sexually offending. center dedicated to interdisciplinary She discussed recommendations for Michael Zimmer recently served research and debate of cutting- Alexander Tsesis presented “Hate reforming Illinois law and policy to as a senior commentator at issues in health law policy, Speech in a Changing World” at the conform with evidence-informed Seton Hall Scholars Forum on biotechnology, and bioethics. University of Connecticut School research. Students enrolled in Loyola’s Labor & Employment Law where of Law in April, and “Constitutional ChildLaw Legislation and Policy Clinic papers presented by junior labor Lea Krivinskas Shepard’s article, Limits” at DePaul Law School’s worked with Weinberg on the study. and employment law scholars Steven Ramirez presented Planning Committee of the Chicago Series. He gave the keynote address Intellectual Property Law Speaker “Toward a Stronger Financial History faculty colloquium in March. He Last fall, Weinberg and her students are critiqued by more experienced “Affirmative Action at the Crossroads: Bar Association Young Lawyers at the Australian Digital Alliance Series at University of San Diego Antidiscrimination Norm,” which co-organized and presented at the from Loyola’s ChildLaw Policy and faculty. He also presented a paper The Uncertain Future of Race- Section in February; “Art Law: A 2013 Annual Copyright Forum in School of Law; and “Orphan Works was published in 53 Boston College Texas Law Review’s 2013 Symposium Legislation Clinic participated in a on women, income, and Conscious College Admissions,” Natural from Trusts & Estates” at the Canberra, Australia. Last fall he and Mass Digitization” at the In Re Law Review 1695 (2012), won the “Constitutional Foundations” and bill-signing ceremony with Governor achievements at the Florida Dorothy L. Thompson Civil Rights Legal Education Committee of the attended the Second Annual Global Books Conference at New York Law American College of Consumer “Plurality of Constitutional Theories” Patrick Quinn. The new law, PA International University Law Review Lecture Series, Kansas State University American College of Trust and Estate Congress on Intellectual Property and School. He also attended the Global Financial Services Lawyers’ 2012 held at the University of Texas School 97-1076, which was drafted with Symposium titled “Minding the in September; and “Enterprise Risk Counsel Annual Meeting in Maui in the Public Interest in Rio De Janeiro Research Network on Copyright writing competition, which of Law in February. This past fall, Tsesis the assistance of Loyola’s student Gap.” This spring he served as a Management After the Financial March; and “Art Authenticity: Legal as a participating expert with the Flexibilities in National Legal Reform recognizes contributions to the field presented “Due Process and Civil clinicians, will help preserve sibling visiting scholar at Western Ontario Crisis,” University of Washington Aspects” at the International Society Copyright Limitations and Exceptions Experts Meeting at American of consumer financial services law. Commitments” at Loyola University relationships for children in foster care School of Law, where he taught a School of Law, Managing Risk in a of Appraisers Annual Meeting in Working Group. He presented a University Washington College of Law. She recently presented this paper Chicago School of Law’s Annual who have been adopted through the course on issues related to United Complex World in October. Chicago in April. comment on “Standards of Proof in Sag presented “Orphan Works As Grist at the American Association of Law Constitutional Law Colloquium; child welfare system. Weinberg, with States labor and employment law. ■ Patent Litigation” at the Conference for the Data Mill” at the Intellectual Schools Annual Meeting in New “Antisemitism in Comparative colleague Mary Burns, community on Empirical Legal Studies at Stanford Property Scholars Conference at Anne-Marie Rhodes presented Matthew Sag recently presented Orleans, and her forthcoming article Perspective” at Fordham University; programs director for Loyola’s Lead University School of Law; “Copyright Stanford University School of Law, “Art in Estate Planning: Magnifying “Predicting Fair Use” at the Melbourne “Seeking Solutions to Financial and “The Declaration’s Historical Poisoning Prevention Initiative, Valuation Issues” at the Estate Law School Faculty Research Seminar Policy and Information” at the and at the U.C. Berkeley School

30 Loyola Law spring 2013 31 ›› ALUMNI RESEARCH

upon individuals and organizations a commitment to record seven in the arts to generate written copy, long-playing albums may not be create unique logos and catchy realistic in one lifetime. The artist graphic design, provide live music may also not realize that Illinois performance or permission to use law requires a written agreement recorded music, film promotional between an artist and art dealer and campaigns, contribute photographic that the artist can and should limit service, and/or donate fine or photographic reproductions of the contemporary artwork to auction. artwork consigned to the dealer. Artists are often quick to Lawyers’ natural risk-adverse answer the call and readily instincts help to clarify the volunteer; however, they often do obligations between the parties— not realize that even these simple whether an artist is permitting interactions call for a written a digital image to be used for a agreement to clarify the scope of fundraiser or an artistic director any implied license to use the visual, is hiring an illustrator to create a literary, or performance works of art collection of artwork on a work- they create. made-for-hire basis. Advising in The need for legal counsel is property transactions without a full artists, or do not use contracts at all, these areas requires attention to not obvious to either involved party, understanding of material terms of or substitute a written invoice with copyright law and an interest in the and lack of counsel can lead to these agreements. For the public, a sentence or two regarding the various steps required to create, disputes made difficult by the lack this can mean scrolling through obligations between the parties. deliver, or distribute any particular of virtually any understanding of without reading software licenses Artists are at a natural form of creative content. who owns what—something that and checking a box. For artists, disadvantage when it comes to It generally takes an artist may be assumed to be an essential however, this can mean giving negotiating agreements. They sit on to understand the magnitude of part of the deal. Compensation may up substantial property rights or a very low rung of the bargaining creative energy, sacrifice of time also be assumed to be part of the fighting to clarify the scope of pyramid, because they need the and resources, personal dedication transaction, but the public at large permitted use for their work. Once contacts or large marketing budgets to excellence, and myriad steps, often expects artistic content to be content is available online, it is of bigger players in order to develop performed repeatedly as necessary, free or inexpensive. When content often exceedingly challenging and a broader consumer base. The flip to produce and perfect any single comes with a price, there is often sometimes impossible to stop the side is that art dealers, artistic work. It takes a lawyer Artists aren’t always aware of the need a misunderstanding that payment flow of unauthorized distribution. executives, venue talent buyers, to extrapolate risk, identify all for written agreements to clarify the includes full usage rights. The rapid spread of online traditional and self-publishers, protectable elements, and carefully scope of licensing for their work, says So this is the rub: We live in an content creates unique, often magazine editors, film producers, navigate intellectual property Marci A. Rolnik (JD ’00). ever-evolving digital society that jurisdictional, challenges for and studio heads can view transfers within any seemingly relies upon and is driven by easy attorneys trying to enforce individual artists as dispensable and ordinary business transaction. The access to information and creative intellectual property rights, and replaceable. Artists, aware of this good news for the legal community content and yet most of the public, artists often need experienced view, may work under conditions is that the need for counsel applies including artists, has little access counsel they cannot afford. Whereas the average person would not not only to artists, but also to any to legal information on how to lawyers may expect artists to tolerate and be more willing not to business clients who create or By Marci A. Rolnik (JD ’00) structure contractual provisions budget for legal work like any other raise legal issues for fear of being acquire creative work. ■ that permit these exchanges. Parties business expense, unfortunately, blackballed in the industry. ometimes need is plain to often don’t know, for example, that many working artists live hand An attorney can significantly ›› Resources see. We take note when the United States Copyright Act to mouth depending on when level the playing field, simply by Copyright laws of the U.S.: copyright.gov/title17 people are hungry, homeless, requires a writing to transfer all they receive income from selling, reviewing and explaining terms U.S. copyright circulars: S copyright.gov/circs or injured and especially when rights, enter into a work-made-for- performing, or exhibiting their work of an agreement to an artist, who U.S. Patent and Trademark Office: disaster strikes—and we respond. uspto.gov Answering the hire arrangement, or exclusively or when they collect licensing or may not appreciate the effect of an ABA Intellectual Property Section: We campaign, draft petitions, license copyright interests. other royalty fees. Rather than seek election to renew a contract solely americanbar.org/groups/ intellectual_property_law.html create banners, host dinners, solicit The unfortunate result is that out an attorney, artists habitually at a personal manager’s discretion, LCA primers on legal issues in visual art, music, and film: sponsors, plan concerts, walk miles, parties enter into intellectual borrow contract samples from other or who may not understand that http://law-arts.org/information.html auction prizes, and otherwise donate our time and material resources in order to effect positive change. Marci A. Rolnik (JD ’00) is legal director of Lawyers for the Creative Arts, a tax-exempt corporation that provides legal assistance to individuals and business entities in all areas of the arts. She has worked creative call as a commercial photographer and producer of independent film projects, and has served as chair of the Chicago Bar Association's Media and Entertainment Committee. She is currently vice chair of the Our efforts to do good can and Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts Division of the ABA Forum on the Entertainment and Sports Industries, and teaches a legal and business affairs course on film production at Columbia College Chicago and Legal guidance is indispensable to artists seeking to protect intellectual property rights often inevitably do lead us to call DePaul University.

32 Loyola Law spring 2013 33 student competitions

eflecting Loyola’s highly regarded advocacy program—supported 2013 National Moot Court 2013 Thurgood Marshall by the mentorship of alumni as well as of faculty and staff—law Competition in Child Mock Trial Competition students continue to boast a winning record in local, state, and Welfare and Adoption Law R Regional Finalists, advanced to national competitions in mock trial, moot court, and dispute resolution. Best Brief, Best Advocate, national rounds Here’s an overview of our successes this year: National Semifinalists

2013 National Tax Moot 2013 National Trial Competition Court Competition

2012 National Health Law Moot 2012-13 National Moot Regional Champions, National Second Place Brief, National Court Competition Court Competition Runners-up Quarterfinalists National Champions, Best Brief, Regional Champions, Regional Best Advocate Best Advocate, Regional Best Brief, 2013 Jessup International 2013 Giles Sutherland Rich National Quarterfinalists Moot Court Competition Moot Court Competition

2012 Appellate Lawyers Regional Finalists, advanced to Regional Semifinalists Association Moot Court 2013 Vis Moot International international rounds Competition Arbitration Competition 2012 Chicago Bar Association National Champions, Best Brief, Top 32 teams out of 300 teams 2013 ABA Client Moot Court Competition Third Place Advocate worldwide, Honorable Mention Counseling Competition for Oral Advocate 3rd Place Brief Regional Finalists 2012 William W. Daniel National Mock Trial Competition 2013 American Association for 2013 Saul Lefkowitz Moot 2013 ABA National Appellate Court Competition Justice Mock Trial Competition Loyola’s 2012-13 Corboy Fellows won the William W. Daniel National Mock Trial Competition, the National Criminal Justice Trial Competition, and the American Association for Justice Mock Trial National Champions Advocacy Competition Regional Quarterfinalists, Regional Competition, and took second place at the National Trial Competition. Pictured are Mike Ditore (left), Daina Staisiunas, Samantha Lemke, Director of the Corboy Fellowship Program Regional Champions, advanced to Judge Thomas Donnelly (JD ’86), Kristen Zeman, Stephen Kienzle, Kyle Flynn, Matt Anderson, David Rivelli, Kaitlin Sheehan, Professor and Director of the Dan K. Webb Center for Advocacy Zelda Regional Finalists, Second Place Brief, Fourth Place Brief national rounds Harris, and Catherine Merrill. 2013 J. Braxton Craven Moot Third Place Advocate Court Competition National Champions

2013 Health Law Regulatory & Compliance Competition National Champions

2013 ABA National Criminal Justice Trial Competition National Champions

2012 International Law School Mediation Tournament International Semifinalists, Second Place Individual Mediator

2012 Thomas Tang Moot Court Competition Regional Champions, Regional Best Brief, Regional Best Advocate, National Quarterfinalists, National Second Place Brief, National Third Place Advocate Eli Litoff and James Levin are the national champions of the J. Braxton Craven Moot Court Competition. Carrie Gilbert and James D’Angelo won the National Health Law Moot Court Competition.

34 Loyola Law spring 2013 35 hearsay

oyola’s law alumni are leaders in local and national firms, courtrooms, public interest organizations, classrooms, profiles top undergraduate professors Kevin M. O’Reilly (BA ’83, JD ’88) Alice O. Martin (JD ’89) was Institute of CPAs. The award is given Eryk J. Spytek (JD ’94) is vice and other venues. Here’s an update of what your classmates have been doing. Share your own news by contacting in the U.S. Janiga was the 2011 is the director of Mexican affairs recognized as a 2013 Illinois Super to women in the CPA profession who president and associate general L Elisabeth Brookover at [email protected], 312.915.6911 (fax), or Loyola University Chicago School of Law, Philip H. recipient of Loyola’s Quinlan School at the U.S. Department of State. Lawyer in the intellectual property have made significant contributions counsel and assistant secretary Corboy Law Center, 25 East Pearson Street, Chicago, IL 60611. Be sure to include your full name, class year, and contact of Business Outstanding Teacher of A member of the Foreign Service and intellectual property litigation to the accounting profession, their at Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. in information. We’re looking forward to hearing from you! the Year Award at the undergraduate since 1987, he returned to the U.S. practice areas. Super Lawyers, a organizations, and the development Glenview, Illinois. level. He received the Illinois CPA in August 2012 after a year-long Thomson Reuters publication, is a of women as leaders. Society’s Outstanding Educator assignment as director for police rating service of outstanding Maria T. Cenzon (JD ’96) is a Award for Four-Year Institutions. training, anti-corruption, and judicial lawyers from more than 70 practice Association Alumni Awards Dinner shareholder in the firm’s labor and Daniel M. Kotin (JD ’91) is a partner judge for the Superior Court of Articles he coauthored (with Louis reform programs at the U.S. Embassy areas who have attained a high in April. The award is presented to employment practice area. at the new Chicago law firm Tomasik Guam. Prior to her appointment Harrison), “Gimme Shelter—Gifting in Baghdad, during a period which degree of peer recognition and an individual who has achieved the Kotin Kasserman LLC, which opened to the bench, Cenzon worked as in 2011 While Retaining Strings” and included the withdrawal of U.S. professional achievement. its doors in April. Prior to joining the chief legal counsel to Governor of 1960s ideals and the model established by Jay R. Orlowski (BBA ’83, JD ’87) “Life Insurance Held in Trusts: Traps military forces from Iraq. new firm, he was a partner at Corboy Guam Eddie Baza Calvo. For 12 Professor Amaker. was elected to partnership at the law for the Unwary,” were published in & Demetrio. years before joining government firm Lindsay, Rappaport & Postel LLC, Gino L. DiVito (BA ’59, JD ’63), a the Journal of Passthrough Entities. His Jean M. Cocozza (JD ’89) was sworn service, she worked in private Reynold E. Becker (JD ’78) leads where he specializes in defending partner at Tabet, DiVito, & Rothstein article “Do the Passive Activity Loss in as a Cook County circuit court practice, concentrating on government relations for Combined construction injury, fire loss, product William A. Powel III (LLM ’91) has LLC, was presented with an honorary Rules Impact the Choice of a Family judge in February. commercial transactions, insurance Insurance in Glenview, Illinois, a liability, medical negligence, 1990s served the past 15 years as system doctor of laws degree from Loyola Limited Partnership Versus a Family defense, real estate transactions, subsidiary of ACE Group. premises liability, Wrongful Death vice president, general counsel, and University Chicago School of Law for Limited Liability Company for Estate Leslie A. Hairston (JD ’89) was secretary for Summa Health System, administrative law and procedures, Act, and auto liability cases, as well as Christine R. Downs (JD ’91) has his lasting impact on the Chicago Planning Discount Purposes?” was honored with the 2013 Donald L. an integrated delivery system based and complex civil litigation. Prior uninsured/underinsured claims and been appointed associate judge of legal community and the Illinois published in Trusts and Estates. Janiga Hollowell Distinguished Service in Akron, Ohio. He was recently to her appointment as a judge, bad-faith claims. Illinois’ 16th Judicial Circuit Court. justice system. The degree was practices taxation, estate planning, Award at Loyola’s Black Law Students appointed chancellor in the Episcopal Cenzon served on the board presented at the School of Law’s and business law at the Chicago law Association Alumni Dinner in April. Diocese of Ohio, where he serves of governors of the Guam Bar John M. Janiga (BBA ’79, MBA ’82, Kathryn H. Garlow (BBA ’87, JD ’91), May commencement ceremony, 1980s firm Spagnolo & Hoeksema LLC. She is alderman of the 5th Ward of as legal advisor to the bishop. He Association, and as president of the JD ’88) was one of five professors a partner with the law firm Shepard where he served as this year’s the City of Chicago. was listed in the 2013 edition of Best Guam Legal Services Corporation. from Loyola University Chicago Schwartz & Harris, has been named commencement speaker (also see Shellie Karno (JD ’88) was recently Lawyers in America. Nicholas Anaclerio (JD ’84) featured in The Princeton Review’s new a 2012 Woman to Watch by the page 5). He was also honored with the named general counsel at Norwegian Shehnaz I. Mansuri (JD ’98) has recently joined Vedder Price PC as a book, The Best 300 Professors, which Illinois CPA Society and the American Harold Sullivan Award in December American Hospital in Chicago. been named manager of the Pro at a luncheon of the Midyear Meeting Service Initiative of the Public Service of the Illinois Judges Association and and Public Interest Law Program at Illinois State Bar Association. the University of Chicago Law School. She joined the University of Chicago Office of Career Advancement in 2011 after practicing law at Gregory E. Kulis and Associates. 1970s James P. Moorhead (JD ’99) recently formed the Moorhead Law Group Charles P. Amato (JD ’75) was LLC, a Chicago-based law firm with a recently inducted into the Athletic national practice in commercial real Hall of Fame at St. Paul High School estate, conservation, and sports law. in Norwalk, Ohio. He resides in Chicago with his wife and two children. Michael A. Harring (JD ’75) has been elected to the American Law Institute, the leading independent organization in the U.S. producing scholarly work to clarify, modernize, and otherwise improve the law. 2000s Harring is vice president and deputy general counsel, North America, with Jeffrey L. Terry (JD ’00) joined Deere & Company. the Perkins Coie LLP firm as a senior counsel in the firm’s private Nathaniel R. Howse Jr. (BA ’73, equity practice. JD ’76) was honored with the 2013 Night of networking Norman Amaker Award of Excellence Remembering trial advocacy giant Phil Corboy at Loyola’s Black Law Students Dan Kotin (JD ’91) gave the 2013 Corboy Lecture, “The Life and Legacy of Phil Corboy,” to a packed crowd in January. Katherine Palmitier (left), David Bernhardy, and Lauren Sarkesian (all JD ’12) joined other young alumni at the Fall Networking Night. (continued on page 38)

36 Loyola Law spring 2013 37 hearsay

(continued from page 37)

Jennifer L. Steinmetz (JD ’01, LLM Norah L. Jones (JD ’06) was named Natalie A. Momoh (JD ’08) has Janet S. Soave (JD ’12) has joined » In Memoriam : Loyal alumna ’02) has joined Tucker Ellis as counsel a 2013 Rising Star by Illinois Super joined the Chicago law firm Schiller, Honigman Miller Schwartz and in the firm’s Cleveland office, where Lawyers magazine. She is an associate DuCanto & Fleck LLP as an associate. Cohn LLP in the firm’s Detroit office. she practices in the areas of medical in the tax-exempt organizations She was a 2011 Honigman summer and pharmaceutical liability. group at Quarles & Brady LLP. Kelley L. Menzano (JD ’09) has associate. She will focus her practice joined Hangley Aronchick Segal on insurance law. ■ 1930 Brian A. Audette (JD ’02) was Givonna L. Long (JD ’06) was Pudlin & Schiller as an associate in Mary Ann McMorrow elected to partnership at Perkins named a 2013 Illinois Rising Star. the family law practice of the firm’s Coie. He is a member of the financial She is an associate at the Chicago Norristown, Pennsylvania, office. First female Illinois Supreme Court justice and friend of Loyola transactions & restructuring practice law firm Ulmer & Berne, where Menzano has extensive experience 2013 in the firm’s Chicago office. she concentrates her practice in in both litigation and negotiation in In memoriam commercial litigation. domestic relations issues. She focuses John J. Kennelly (JD ’38) Beata K. Krakus (JD ’03) has been her practice on matters involving ary Ann McMorrow law review. After law school, Justice Theodore E. Cornell Jr. (BA ’42, JD ’51) elected an officer at the St. Louis- Susan A. Stoddard (JD ’06) has prenuptial agreements, divorce, (JD ’53), former chief McMorrow spent a short time in Mary Ann G. McMorrow (JD ’53) based law firm Greensfelder, Hemker rejoined the Chicago law firm Latimer, domestic violence, and paternity. justice of the Illinois private practice, then became the first & Gale PC. She is an attorney in the J. Timothy Kelley (BS ’55, JD ’58) MSupreme Court and distinguished female Cook County assistant state’s LeVay, Fyock LLC as an associate. firm’s corporate group and franchising Edward H. Fiedler Jr. (JD ’60) jurist in residence at the School of Law, attorney to prosecute major felony and distribution practice group. Donald M. Mulligan (BS ’57, JD ’64) died Feb. 23 after a brief illness. cases. But, because of her gender, a Daniel S. Rubin (JD ’07), an Frank W. Petro (JD ’64) The first woman to head any supervisor refused to let her argue a associate in the Chicago office William R. Brandstrader (BBA ’62, JD ’65) branch of Illinois government, Justice case before the state Supreme Court Keri-Ann C. Baker (JD ’04) has been of the law firm Howard & Howard, elected to the board of directors of 2010s McMorrow was chief justice from bench she later occupied. was listed among the 2013 Illinois Robert E. Chew (JD ’68) the Marine Industries Association 2002-05 and retired from the court in McMorrow was the first woman Rising Stars, which is based on a Lee J. Radek (JD ’71) of Palm Beach County Inc. This not- 2006. She wrote 225 majority opinions elected Cook County circuit court selection process that included Lindsay R. Kessler (JD ’12) has Thomas Zabor (JD ’73) for-profit organization was created and an additional 85 separate judge in 1976, joined the Illinois peer evaluation and independent joined Polsinelli Shughart PC as Edward L. Schuller (JD ’76) to promote and protect the sound concurring and dissenting opinions. Appellate Court in 1985, and was research. Rubin practices in the an associate in the firm’s Chicago Theodore S. Ashbell (JD ’79) growth of the marine industry in Justice McMorrow wrote the elected to the state Supreme Court firm’s banking department. office. She will focus her practice George E. Goodridge (BS ’66, MA ’71, JD ’79) Palm Beach County for the benefit majority opinion in Best v. Taylor in 1992. She was the recipient of on health care. E. Lester Munson (JD ’91) and education of its members, the Machine Works, which held that numerous awards and honors, community, and the environment. tort reform legislation to put a cap including the Loyola Law Alumni Baker is an attorney at Lewis, on non-economic damages for Association Medal of Excellence, Longman & Walker in West Palm people injured through negligence inclusion in Crain’s Chicago Business’s Beach, Florida. was unconstitutional because it "Chicago’s 100 Most Influential discriminated against the most Women,” the Illinois Bar Association’s Gia F. Colunga (JD ’04) has been seriously injured plaintiffs. Fellows Award for Distinguished elected to partnership at Freeborn She also wrote the opinion in Service to Law and Society, and the & Peters LLP, where she focuses her People v. Blue, which overturned the National Advocates Society’s Woman practice on complex commercial conviction and death penalty of a of the Year award. disputes and employment litigation. defendant accused of killing a police A longtime friend of the law She was named a Rising Star for 2013 officer. The opinion cited an abuse school, Justice McMorrow was a and 2012 by Illinois Super Lawyers. by prosecutors in an inflammatory loyal Dean’s Circle donor and was She lives in Chicago’s Wicker Park closing argument. generous with her time and neighborhood with her husband, While she was chief justice, expertise, participating in a number Isaac, and daughter, Maria. the court raised attorneys’ licensing of Loyola-hosted programs for fees to provide funds for legal aid students and the Chicago legal Kimberly H. Petrina (JD ’05) was organizations. community. She also donated her elected to partnership at the Chicago “Through her courage, persever- papers to the School of Law. law firm Traub Lieberman Straus & ance, wisdom, and character, she “Justice McMorrow was a Shrewsberry LLP, where she focuses was a role model for all lawyers trailblazer,” says Dean David Yellen. her practice in the areas of insurance regardless of gender,” Illinois Supreme “It’s hard for many of us to imagine coverage and direct defense. Court Chief Justice Thomas L. Kilbride what it must have been like to be said in a statement. the only woman sitting in a class or Melissa A. Howitt (JD ’06) is Encouraged to attend law joining a bench, but she helped an associate at the Franklin, school by her mother, who noted her pave the way for generations of Massachusetts, firm Doherty, daughter’s aptitude for debate, Justice women to follow. She did it all with Ciechanowski, Dugan, and Cannon Connecting at a conference McMorrow was the sole woman in intelligence, grace, and humility, and PC, where she specializes in domestic Hon. Neil Hartigan (JD ’62, center) talks with U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan and Illinois her Loyola law class—as well as class she is greatly missed.” ■ relations and probate law. Attorney General Lisa Madigan (JD ’94) at Loyola’s National Mortgage Settlement Conference in February. president and associate editor of the Mary Ann McMorrow

38 Loyola Law spring 2013 39 GIFTS

Jesuit, Catholic tradition of making quality law education open to bright New endowed scholarship to honor a and hardworking students regardless of Ruminations on the RAM their background or socioeconomic status. That accessibility is especially critical “Over the years Dick Michael has taught and mentored thousands of students. What typified his dedication for me cornerstone of the Loyola law faculty now that average tuition debt has was his reaction to students who did not do well in his Civil Procedure class; he would call them to his office, and ballooned due to the rising costs of volunteer to work closely with them the next semester to ensure they would be successful. Without any fanfare or providing higher education. Encyclopedic in his knowledge, rigorous in his expectations, wicked in his wit, and unstinting in his encouragement, public recognition, he did this for most of his teaching career. Dick is truly a beloved and highly respected teacher, “When I graduated 30 years ago, I had mentor, and colleague.” Professor Richard A. Michael—known to generations as “the RAM”—is a complete original and a Loyola law legend. $20,000 in tuition debt. Today, students —Dean Emerita Nina Appel often have $100,000 or $150,000,” Hartman says. “Now more than ever, it’s important to This spring, he celebrates his give back for others, just as the alums who 80th birthday and nearly 50 years “It is difficult to imagine Loyola’s law school without Professor Richard A. Michael. His lectures in Civil Procedure came before us gave for us.” of teaching at the School of Law. were clear and interesting. His attention to detail and his command of the law were legendary. In addition, he had Adds Rafter, “Coming out of seven To mark these milestones, and as a wonderful sense of humor. Today, attorneys at my firm cite his book, Civil Procedure Before Trial, in arguments and years of school loaded with debt constricts part of the University-wide Access briefs. I owe Professor Michael a great deal, and I’m happy to assist in endowing a scholarship in his name.” new graduates’ initial employment choices. to Excellence: The Campaign for They may want to serve in government or —Kevin J. Conway (JD ’76) Scholarships, law alumni and friends public interest law, and the value of those are joining to create a new endowed experiences is immeasurable. But today, scholarship in the RAM’s honor. if you’re lucky enough to have a choice “When I go out on interviews with Loyola law graduates, they all ask, ‘Oh, did you have the RAM for Civ Pro? Doesn’t Contributions of $500 or more to the of employment, it’s driven by how much he scare you? But you learn so much from him!’ It’s such a connection with other Loyola alums. The contributions he’s Richard A. Michael Scholarship Fund you need to pay back in student loans.” made to the Illinois legal community, and the respect he commands, are amazing.” will be matched by Loyola President Scholarships ensure talented, service- —Alan Velasco (JD ’13), 2012-13 SBA president and CEO Michael J. Garanzini, S.J. oriented students can make career choices “Dick is an institution here at on a basis other than salary, Rafter says. the School of Law, educating literally Michael identifies several honors as “I once made a quip in the RAM’s class. He turned, glared at me, and said, ‘I tell the jokes in here.’ Even with the jokes, thousands of our graduates,” says among his proudest: receiving the Catholic he imparts the idea that this is serious business and that within a few years, you’re going to call the shots on people’s Dean David Yellen. “We thought the Lawyer of the Year award from the Catholic lives and property. He also emphasizes the language lawyers use—not just thinking like a lawyer, but talking like one. scholarship would be a great tribute Lawyers Guild of Chicago, being elected to I went into criminal law, nothing to do with civil procedure, and yet I learned the most from him that first year about to him and provide just the kind the American Law Institute, and receiving how to conduct myself in criminal court.” of assistance to students for which the St. Thomas More Award for outstanding he’s renowned. Everybody knows —Francis Wolfe (JD ’98) service to Loyola’s School of Law. he has kind of a tough exterior, The RAM’s favorite non-academic but underneath the surface is an professional experiences include arguing extremely caring teacher.” “It’s very humbling to be around someone as smart as the RAM. In 2001, after having practiced criminal law, I had cases in the United States Supreme The initial impetus for the one of my first civil cases. It was a specific, archaic issue of civil procedure, and I was stumped. I called the RAM and Court and 30 cases in the Illinois Supreme scholarship came from three-time asked if I could stop by to pick his brain. When I gave him the fact pattern, he literally reached up, grabbed the book, Court during his tenure in the Illinois Loyola grad and University trustee thumbed through it, and set it in front of me, saying, ‘There’s your answer.’” attorney general’s office, as well as clerking Jack Hartman (BBA ’80, MBA ’82, JD —Jay Rock (JD ’96) for former Illinois Supreme Court Justice ’85), who says he wanted to honor a Daniel Ward. teacher who changed his own life. Because the cost of tuition has made “Professor Michael was a “If you only took one class and dropped out, you’d want it to be the RAM’s Civil Procedure course; it taught you With Hartman’s enthusiastic for them…but those teachers don’t clearly communicate the essence a law education relatively more expensive transformative teacher for me,” to think like a lawyer. I didn’t fully appreciate what a spectacular teacher he was until I was studying for the final. leadership, many alums are happily always find that out,” Rafter says. “I of the matter. than when he attended Loyola, Michael says Hartman. “He made me want Reviewing my notes, everything we’d studied suddenly came together clearly and I realized, ‘Wow, I really understand coming aboard to help establish the wasn’t the most able student the RAM “He’s beloved for all those says he’s honored to have a scholarship to prepare for and be at my best in this.’ I got an A on the test, which stunned him, since I was the one he picked on in our class!” scholarship. Tom Rafter (JD ’71) says ever had, but I want him to know how reasons, but also for being a good named for him. class—I studied twice as hard for him his participation is a way to shine the much ordinary students benefited person who truly cares about other “In my day, tuition wasn’t much, —John Cullerton (JD ’74) as for anyone else. The debate he light on a man who impressed him from his teaching, too. He has a very, people. Even his cutting jokes are but there also weren’t many scholarships, encouraged, both in the classroom both professionally and personally. very perceptive mind, is always in never malicious.” as we have now,” he says. “I’m glad that and at after-hour gatherings at “With the passage of time, total command of his material, and As with other School of Law people think I made a contribution to the “Only a handful of great people have left as lasting a mark on this place as the RAM. Everyone has a great RAM story. Flapjaws across the street, was open, students tend to better appreciate knows how to organize his thoughts scholarships, the Richard A. Michael school over the years, and pleased that They are all true, but we will probably never hear some of the best: stories about the quiet support and inspiration lively, and challenging.” what really good teachers did and use the Socratic method to Scholarship Fund fulfills Loyola’s this scholarship will give students the he has provided to his students. We will probably never know about all the times he went out of his way to meet opportunity to attend law school when with those who were discouraged and down; how he offered his good counsel and changed a student’s life. I know they might not have been able to. Some some of these folks, and I also know there are many, many others who would not be lawyers today without his may make great contributions to the state encouragement. Among the many reasons to thank the RAM, let’s not forget his quiet contributions.” ›› To make a contribution to the Richard A. Michael Scholarship Fund, contact the alumni office at 312.915.7366. of justice in Illinois and the country.” ■ —James Faught (JD ’76), associate dean for administration

40 Loyola Law spring 2013 41 ALUMNI UPDATE

ALUMNI LEADERS Introducing the new law alumni HELPING STUDENTS Open call The School of Law is grateful to the many law alumni who generously donated Become an alumni leader as a their time and talents this year to assist our students. member of these two volunteer website and online directory councils. To see a list of the current members, visit the law alumni website at LUC.edu/law/alumni he School of Law’s alumni homepage and click the “Get Involved” tab. LUC.edu/law/alumni looks better than T ever! We recently launched a new alumni Dean’s website and online directory. Here are a few highlights of what the site can do for you: Diversity Council Virginia Kendall • Easily update your contact and employment Who: Open to all law alumni. The group meets once each fall and spring information and manage your communication Damen award semester with representatives of student preferences in one spot organizations and the dean. Purpose: Assist the dean in continuing • Search for alumni by class year, location, Virginia to foster diversity within the law school. or practice area Current Focus: Mentoring, attracting Kendall diverse students, 3L curriculum reform. • Sign up for events and programs sponsored by the School of Law honored "It's great to hear firsthand • Submit and search alumni class notes about concrete ways he Honorable Virginia Loyola is supporting • Stay up to date on what’s happening at the T M. Kendall (JD ’92) diverse students, and will be honored with the how alumni can come School of Law and at the University together to help." School of Law’s Damen —Jorge Cazares (JD ’90), Award at Loyola University Eric Lifvendahl (JD ’92) attended Speed Networking Night for 1L students. member of the Dean’s Chicago’s Founders’ Dinner The event provides students with an opportunity to meet and talk with alumni who Diversity Council specialize in various areas of practice. on Saturday, June 8. Kendall was appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in 2006. Young Through her work in child Alumni Events exploitation cases, she saw Committee children’s suffering, and the world’s indifference to them, Who: Open to all law alumni of last 10 years. firsthand, and sought to give them a voice. Purpose: To assist the Alumni Get started today! Relations Office with young alumni Kendall is the coauthor programming and engaging classmates Visit LUC.edu/law/alumni and click the option to “Login.” If you are of Child Exploitation and to attend alumni events. Trafficking: Examining the Current Focus: Networking logging in for the first time, please use the 10-digit access code found Global Challenges and U.S. opportunities for younger alumni and law students. on your magazine mailing label (please include all zeroes). Once you Responses and is a frequent speaker on this topic. confirm your information, you’ll be ready to select a username and Kendall is a member of "Volunteering continues to enrich my connection to the adjunct law faculty at password that will allow you to search the Law Alumni Directory. my classmates and school. Loyola, Northwestern, and I encourage all alumni to University of Chicago. She connect in whatever ways they can. I look forward serves as cochair of the law to seeing you at the next school’s Circle of Advocates. Young Alumni event." For more information and to —Kevin Lichtenberg (JD ’10, MA ’11), member register for Founders’ Dinner, Ashley Orler (JD ’08) joined fellow alumni at the kick-off dinner for the 1L Mentoring of the Young Alumni visit LUC.edu/founders. ■ Program that launched in January. Events Committee

›› Questions? Contact School of Law Alumni Relations at [email protected] or 312.915.6187.

42 Loyola Law spring 2013 43 University News Save the date

Beyond the School of Law’s recent accomplishments, there’s lots more happening at Loyola University Chicago. Following is a snapshot of the latest Loyola news. Mark your calendar for the following School of Law events.

Loyola Day at the Cubs Sunday, June 23 Are you up to the challenge? Join fellow Loyola University Chicago alumni for rooftop seats AreAre you you up up to to the the challenge? challenge? to watch the Cubs take on the Houston Astros. 59th F. EMMEtt MoRRiSSEy GoLF outinG 5959thth F. F. E MMEEMMEtttt Mo MoRRRRiSSEiSSEy yGo GoLFLF o outinutinGG Friday, June 28 • 8:30 AM Friday,Friday, June June 28 28 • •8:30 8:30 AM AM Location RSVP online Questions DeerfieldLocationLocation Golf Club byRSVP Friday,RSVP online June online 21 AlumniQuestionsQuestions Relations? 1201DeerfieldDeerfield Saunders Golf Golf RoadClub Club byLUC.edu/law/golfby Friday, Friday, June June 21 21 Alumni312.915.6187Alumni Relations Relations 12011201Riverwoods, Saunders Saunders Road IL Road LUC.edu/law/golfLUC.edu/law/golf [email protected] Riverwoods,Riverwoods, ILIllinois IL [email protected]@LUC.edu

New date SEPT. ReReunionunion

Reunion2013 2013 is just around the corner for the Classes of 2008, 2003, 1993, 1988, 1983, 1978, 1973, 1963, and our Emeritus alumni. Alumni Relations is currently 28 putting together class committees and Loyola University Chicago Phonathon students celebrate their first million-dollar year. needs your help! If you are interested in helping boost attendance at Reunion University thanks the loyal alumni and friends who made this record year 2013, contact Alumni Relations at [email protected] or 312.915.6187. Million-dollar milestone possible. Keep your ears open for a phone call from a student—and please For more information and to register, visit LUC.edu/alumni/cubs. The Loyola University Chicago Phonathon hit its first $1 million in annual show your support with a gift before June 30, the end of Loyola’s fiscal year, contributions last summer, and is on target to repeat the feat this year. The at LUC.edu/giving. ■

Honoring the Mississippi law that prohibited in NCAA Tournament history by Top workplace competition against integrated teams. ESPN.com. Founders’ Dinner ‘game of change’ Loyola Head Coach George Ireland This past December, Loyola three-peat was starting four African-American and MSU faced one another at Saturday, June 8 In 1963 (the year Loyola became the Ramblers. Despite the prospect of Gentile Arena for the first time since For three years, the Chicago only Illinois school ever to win the losing their jobs, MSU’s head coach that historic game 50 years ago. Tribune has published a list Join Loyola University Chicago for this annual dinner to honor an alumnus NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball and president challenged the system Several members of the 1963 Loyola of Chicago’s Top 100 Workplaces, or alumna of each of Loyola’s colleges and schools. For more information Championship), Loyola was to play and allowed the team to face Loyola and MSU teams gathered in Chicago and for the third consecutive and to register, visit LUC.edu/founders. Mississippi State University (MSU) at Jenison Field House, in a game won for the event. Loyola’s entire ’63 year, Loyola has been recognized in the regional semifinals. However, by the Ramblers, 61-51. The game basketball team is being inducted in the large-company category. the all-white MSU squad was changed college basketball and was into the National Collegiate Basketball This year, the University is frequently denied participation in a milestone for civil rights. It was Hall of Fame, the only team to achieve ranked 21st. ■ the postseason due to an unwritten recently named the No. 12 moment that honor. ■

44 Loyola Law ›› Visit LUC.edu/law for event details.’ Nonprofit Org. US Postage PAID Chicago, IL Permit No. 5539

SCHOOL of LAW

Philip H. Corboy Law Center 25 East Pearson Street Chicago, IL 60611 LUC.edu/law

Honoring the RAM’s nearly 50 years of teaching at the School of Law, alumni and friends have joined to create the Richard A. Michael Endowed Scholarship Fund. As part of the University- wide Access to Excellence: The Campaign for Scholarships, gifts of $500 or more to endowed scholarships are matched 1:1, and gifts of any amount are welcome!

To read more about how you can honor the RAM, see the full article inside.

Make your gift online at LUC.edu/law/give

YOUR SCHOLARSHIP. THEIR OPPORTUNITY. OUR FUTURE.