Copyright C 197Sta~7:r~hJe of the Leland umorB?ardU.ofmversity.Trustees -.-::r--

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.. ,.'; .~ ,T ~ ,~: .. ; ~l ' Stanford Law School Family Album 1972 Peter W. Borak, Editor Billy McCall, Photographer Don Saidman, BusinessManager 2

...~....:." . '..:.~" .. ' Dean and Professor of Law Thomas Ehrlich was born in Massachusetts in 1934. He received an A.B. in government (1956) and an LL.B. from Harvard, where he was an article editor of the Harvard Law Review. He was law clerk to Judge Learned Hand, Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; he then practiced law for two years in Milwaukee. Mr. Ehrlich worked in the Department of State from 1962 until 1965, first as special assistant to the Legal Adviser and then as special assistant to the Under Secretary of State. He came to Stanford in 1965 and began his deanship in 1971. He is a member of the Wisconsin bar. His principal subjects are: International Law; Law and Development; Contracts; Legal Process.

THOMAS EHRLICH

3

·j,'.=",",""",""--. . 1- - ,. ~". J.KEITHMANN WILliAM T. KEOGH

Professor of Law and Associate Dean J. Keith Mann, born in Illinois in Associate Dean William T. Keogh was born in New York in 1916. He 1924, received a B.S. degree in Far Eastern Studies (1948) and an LL.B. took a B.S. in chemical engineering from Kansas State University in 1942 (1949) from Indiana University, where he was article and book review and a J.D. from Stanford in 1952. After serving with the Regular Army edit!>r of the Indiana Law Journal. After graduation from law school, he from 1946 to 1961, he became associate dean at Stanford Law School. A served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Rutledge and Mr. Justice Minton of the member of the California bar, Mr. Keogh practiced law in Palo Alto from Supreme Court of the United States. He practiced law in Washington, 1967 to 1969, when he returned to the Law School. D.C. in 1950 and served as special assistant to the chairman of the Wage Stabilization Board in 1951. In 1952, after a year on the law faculty of the University of Wisconsin, he came to Stanford. Since 1961 he has been associate dean of the Law School. A visiting professor at the University of Chicago in 1953 and a Sunderland Fellow at the University of Michigan in 1959-60, he has served as chairman and member of presidential boards and commissions in labor disputes. He is a member of the bars of Indiana and the District of Columbia. His principal subjects are: Labor Law; Labor-Management Relations, and Harry Bridges.

4 JOSEPH E. LEININGER BRUCE HASENKAMP

Associate Dean Joseph -E. Leininger was born in Ohio in 1923. He Assistant Dean Bruce H. Hasenkamp was born in New York City in received an A.B. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1938. He received an A. B. in history from Dartmouth in 1960 and a 1951, with concentration in anthropology and Far Eastern studies, Stanford J.D. in 1963. After service on the Congressional staff of William and an LL.B. from Harvard in 1959. A member of the bar of B. Widnall of Ne~ Jersey in 1961 and 1962, he served with the Army in Colorado, he practiced law in Denver from 1960 to 1962. Mr. Korea from 1964 to 1966. A member of the California and New York bars, Leininger was secretary of International Legal Studies (1962-1966) he practiced law in New York City in 1963-64 and 1966-68, during which and vice dean (1966-1969) of Harvard Law School before coming to time he founded the Stanford Law Society of New York and served as its Stanford. first president. He became assistant dean of the Law School in 1968.

5

,:'''.~ .. - ··.·- .. 7. THELTON E. HENDERSON

Assistant Dean Thelton E. Henderson was born in Louisiana in 1933. He earned a B.A.. in political science (1956) and a J.D. (1962) from the University of California, Berkeley. From 1962 to 1964 he was an attorney in the civil rights division of the United States Department of Justice. A member of the California bar, he practiced law in Oakland from 1964 until 1966. He was director of the East Palo Alto Legal Aid Office from 1966 to 1968, w hen he came to the Law School.

6 7 Professor Anthony G. Amsterdam was born in Pennsylvania in 1935. He holds an A. B. in French literature, taken in 1957 from and an LL. B., taken in 1960 from the University of Pennsylvania, where he was editor-in-chief of the University 0/ Pennsylvania Law Review. In 1960-61 he served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter of the Supreme Court of the U nited States and in 1961-62 he was Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Columbia. Mr. Amsterdam was a member of the law faculty of the University of Pennsylvania from 1962 until 1969, when he came to Stanford. He is a member of the bar of the District of Columbia. His principal subjects are: Criminal Law; Criminal Procedure; Law and Psychiatry; Evidence. His principal success, to date, was to persuade the California Supreme Court to abolish the State's death penalty, arguing that it was cruel or unusual punishment as forbidden by the State constitution.

ANTHONYG. AMSTERDAM

8

• 0. r \ :v~

• 1...... ~.' JOHN HURLBUT DOUGLAS AYER

John Bingham Hurlbut, Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law emeritus, Associate Professor Douglas R. Ayer, born in Missouri in 1937, received was born in Wisconsin in 1906 and received an A. B. in political science an A.B. in politics and economics (1959) and an LL.B. (1962) from Yale, from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1928. He earned an where he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal. In 1962-63 he served as M.A. in political science (1929) and an LL. B. (1934) from Stanford. He law clerk to Judge Charles E. Clark, United States Court of Appeals for practiced law in Los Angeles from 1934 to 1937, when he joined the the Second Circuit; in 1963-64 he was a·Fulbright Scholar at the Stanford law faculty. From 1942 until 1945 he was on leave for service in University of Stockholm. Mr. Ayer practiced in New York City from 1964 the United States Navy; in 1960-61 he was Fulbright lecturer in law at until 1966, when he came to Stanford. He is a member of the bars of the University of Tokyo and at the Japanese Supreme Court's Legal Connecticut and New York. During 1970-71, while on leave from Training Research Institute. Mr. Hurlbut has served as Stanford's faculty Stanford, Mr. Ayer was a Charles Warren Fellow in American Legal athletic representative with the Pacific Coast Athletic Conference and as History at Harvard Law School. His subjects are: Civil Procedure, vice-president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. He is a Political Trials and Social Conflict: An Historical Perspective; Legal member of the California bar and the American Law Institute. His History of the New Deal. principal subjects are: Evidence; Contracts.

9

r-. ~ •• ,; • ..

WAYNE BARNETT JOHN BARTON

Professor Wayne G. Barnett was born in Colorado in 1928. He received an Assistant Professor John Hays Barton was born in Illinois in 1936. He A.B. in economics (1950) and an LL.B. (1953) from Harvard, where he took a B.S. in philosophy and physics from Marquette University in 1958 was article editor of the Harvard Law Review. In 1955-56 he served as and a J.D. from Stanford in 1968. He was a member of the editorial board law clerk for Mr. Justice Harlan of the Supreme Court of the United of the Stanford Law Review. He practiced law in Washington, D.C. States, and from 1956 until 1958 he practiced in Washington, D.C. Mr. before coming to Stanford's law faculty in 1969. His principal subjects Barnett served as assistant to the Solicitor General, United States are: Arms control and Disarmament; International Business Department of Justice, from 1958 until 1965 and as first assistant, Office Transactions; Labor Law. of Legal Counsel, Department of Justice, during 1965-66. He came to Stanford in 1966. He is a member of the bar of the District of Columbia. His principal subject is Federal Income Taxation.

10

"'1". - .' .", ~ . ... ~ ~. ' PAUL BATOR WILLIAM BAXTER

Visiting Professor Paul M. Bator of the Harvard Law School was born in Professor William F. Baxter was born in New York in 1929. After 1929. He holds an A.B. (1951) and an M.A. (1953) from Princeton receiving an A.B. (1951) and a ].0. (1956) from Stanford, where he was University and an LL.B. from Harvard Law School where he was on the comment editor of the Stanford Law Review, he served as assistant Harvard Law Review. He was admitted to the New York bar in 1958. He professor of law at Stanford to two years. From 1958 until 1960 he was an was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at Harvard in 1951-52 and a law clerk to associate with a Washington, D.C. law firm. He returned to Stanford in Mr. Justice Harlan of the Supreme Court in 1956-57. He was in private 1960. In 1964-65 he was visiting professor of law at Yale. He is a member practice in New York City from 1957 until he joined the Harvard faculty of the California bar. His principal subjects are: Administrative Law; in 1959. His principal subjects are: Administrative Law, Civil Procedure FederaIJurisdiction; Legal Process; Antitrust; Regulated Industries. and Criminal Law.

11

------~-.~.~ .> PAUL BREST WILLIAM COHEN

Assistant Professor Paul Andrew Brest, born in Florida in 1940, received Professor William Cohen was born in Pennsylvania in 1933. He holds a an A.B. in English literature in 1962 from and an B.A. (1953) and an LL.B. (1956) from the University of California at Los LL. B. in 1965 from Harvard, where he was Supreme Court and Angeles, where he was editor in chief of the University of California at Developments Note editor of the Harvard Law Review. He served as law Los Angeles Law Review. He served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Douglas clerk to Chief Judge Bailey Aldrich, First Circuit Court of Appeals, in of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1956-57. While on the 1965-66. He was an NAACP Legal Defense Fund attorney in Mississippi faculty at the University of Minnesota from 1957 to 1960, he spent 1959­ from 1966 to 1968. He served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan of the 60 as visiting professor of law at the University of California at Los Supreme Court of the United States in 1968-69. His principal subjects are: Angeles. He then joined the law faculty of the University of California at Criminal Law; Constitutional Law. Los Angeles in 1960 and remained there until 1970, when he came to Stanford. He was a visiting professor of law at Stanford in the fall of 1968. His principal subjects are: Torts; Federal Jurisdiction; Constitutional Law.

12

• or-,,~;"O • .. :..' DALE COLLINSON AARONDIRECTOR

Associate Professor Dale S. Collinson, who was born in Oklahoma in Aaron Director, who has been Scholar-in-Residence at Stanford Law 1938, received an A. B. in politics and economics from Yale in 1960 and an School since 1965, is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago LL.B. from Columbia, where he was a notes and comments editor of the School of Law. He obtained a Ph.B. in economics from Yale in 1924. His Columbia Law Review, in 1963. He served as law clerk to Judge Paul R. principal subjects are: Competition and Monopoly; Industrial Hays, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in 1963-64. Organization. He served as law clerk to Mr. Justice White of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1964 to 1966, when he came to Stanford. He is a member of the bar of New York. His principal subjects are: Laws and Institutions of the European Communities; Trusts and Estates.

13

.. ~ -.. ~.. MARC FRANKLIN JACK FRIEDENTHAL

Professor Marc A. Franklin was born in New York in 1932. He received Professor Jack H. Friedenthal, born in Colorado in 1931, received an A.B. an A. B. in government (1953) and an LL.B. (1956) from Cornell, where he in economics from Stanford in 1953 and an LL. B. from Harvard, where he was editor-in-chief of the Cornell Law Quarterly. Mr. Franklin practiced was developments editor of the Harvard Law Review, in 1958. He has in New York City in 1956-57. During 1957-58 he served as law clerk to taught at Stanford since 1958. In 1965 he was visiting associate professor Judge Carroll C. Hincks, United States Court of Appeals for the Second of law at Michigan Law School. He is a member of the bar of California. Circuit; during 1958-59 he was law clerk to Mr. Chief Justice Warren of His principal subjects are: Civil Procedure; Evidence; Family Law; the Supreme Court of the United States. He taught at Columbia Law Social Welfare Legislation. School from 1959 to 1962 and has been at Stanford since then. He is a member of the New York bar. During 1968-69 he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. His principal subjects are: Torts; Mass Media.

14

·.·~···rj~~...... : LAWRENCE FRIEDMAN ROBERT GIRARD

Professor Lawrence M. Friedman, born in Illinois in 1930, received an Professor Robert Girard, born in Washington in 1931, received a B.A. in A.B. (1948) a J.D. (1951) and an LL.M. (1953) from the University of 1953 from the University of Washington and an LL. B. from Harvard, Chicago, where he was an associate editor of The University of Chicago where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review, in 1956. He served as Law Review. He served in the United States Army from 1953 until 1955 law clerk to Mr. Justice Black of the Supreme Court of the United States and was an associate with a Chicago law firm from 1955 to 1957. He in the 1956 and 1957 terms. He has taught at Stanford since 1958, except taught at St. Louis University from 1957 to 1961 and at the University of in 1963-64, when he was a visiting professor of law at Harvard. Mr. Wisconsin from 1961 to 1967. Mr. Friedman came to Stanford in 1968. Girard has taught courses in Contracts, Unjust Enrichment, He is a member of the Illinois bar. His principal subjects are: Law and Constitutional Law and Civil Rights. His principal subject is Torts. Society; Social Legislation; Trusts and Estates; American Legal History; Contracts.

15

. "-.. .;.-.. THOMAS GREY GERALD GUNTHER

Assistant Professor Thomas C. Grey was born in 1941. He received his Professor Gerald Gunther was born in Germany in 1927. He took an A. B. A.B. in 1963 from and LL.B. from Yale University in in political science from Brooklyn College in 1949, an M.A. in public law 1968, where he was note and comment editor of the Yale Law Review. and government from Columbia in 1950 and an LL. B. from Harvard, From 1963 to 1965 he was a Marshall Scholar at Oxford. He was a law where he was note editor of the Harvard Law Review, in 1953. Prior to clerk to Hon. J. Skelly Wright, U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington D.C. law school and in 1951 he taught political science at Brooklyn College of in 1968-69, and to Justice Thurgood Marshall of the U.S. Supreme Court New York. He served as law clerk to Judge Learned Hand, United States in 1969-70. He' was also an associate in 1970-71 of the Washington Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in 1953-54 and to Chief Justice Research Project. Warren of the Supreme Court of the United States during 1954-55. After practicing law in New York City, he joined the faculty of Columbia Law School in 1956 and remained there until coming to Stanford in 1962. In 1962 Mr. Gunther was a Guggenheim Fellow and in 1969-70 he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. He is currently one of eight Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Scholars preparing a multi-volume history of the Supreme Court of the United States. He has also been designated as the biographer of Judge Learned Hand. His casebooks are used as the teaching materials in most American law school courses on Constitutional Law. Mr. Gunther is a member of the New York bar. His principal subject is Constitutional Law.

16

.. :" ~ ' .. ,.';:.' - ~ .' • ~.. L \ MOFFATT HANCOCK I. MICHAEL HEYMAN

Moffatt Hancock, Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law, was born in Visiting Professor Michael I. Heyman, born in 1930, received his B.A. Canada in 1912 and received a B.A. in law in 1933 from the Univeristy of (951) from Dartmouth College and LL.B. (1956) from Yale University Toronto. In 1936 he was graduated from Osgoode Hall Law School in where he was editor of the Yale Law Journal He was admitted to the Toronto and in 1940 received an S.j.D. from Michigan. He was a member New York bar in 1956 and the California bar in 1962. In 1956 and 1957 he of the law faculty of the University of Toronto from 1937 to 1945 and was an associate of Carter, Ledyard & Milburn of New York. He was law taught at Dalhousie University from 1945 until 1949 and at the clerk to Chief Judge Charles E. Clark, 1957-58 and to Chief Justice Earl University of Southern California from 1949 to 1953. Since 1953 he has Warren, 1958-59. He was Acting Associate Professor at the University of been a professor of law at Stanford. He is also President of the Stanford California, Berkeley in 1959-61; a Professor since 1961; and Professor of Chapter of the Order of the Coif. In 1965-66 he was a Guggenheim Law and City Planning since 1967. Fellow. His principal subjects are: Conflict of Laws; Property; Jurisprudence; Legal History.

• 17

--! ...\;,~.... ', J. MYRONJACOBSTEIN JOHNKAPLAN

Professor of Law and Law Librarian J. Myron J acobstein was born in Professor John Kaplan, born in New York in 1929, received an A. B. in Michigan in 1920 and took a B.A. in history from Wayne State University physics in 1951 and an LL.B. in 1954 from Harvard University, where he in 1946, an M.S. in library science from in 1950 and was on the Law Review. He was a law clerk to Mr. Justice Clark of the a J.D. from Chicago-Kent School of Law, where he was a case editor of Supreme Court during 1954-55 and then went to the University of Vienna the Chicago-Kent Law Review, in 1953. He served as assistant law for a year's study in criminology. In 1957 he was a Special Attorney for the librarian of the U niveristy of Illinois from 1953 to 1955, was assistant law United States Department of Justice. Between 1958 and 1961 he served as librarian at Columbia University from 1955 to 1959 and was professor of Assistant United States Attorney in the Northern District of California law and law librarian at the University of Colorado from 1960 to 1963, concentrating primarily on civil and criminal fraud work. He spent 1961 at when he came to Stanford. He is a member of the Illinois bar. Mr. the Hudson Institute as a research analyst in the problems of nuclear J acobstein is responsible for the development and administration of the warfare and civil defense. Before coming to Stanford he was an associate law library and its staff; he teaches Legal Bibliography. professor of law at Northwestern University from 1962 until 1965 and visiting professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley in 1%4-65. Professor Kaplan spent the year 1969-70 at the Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence in London. He is a member of the bars of California, New York and the District of Columbia. His principal subjects are: Evidence; Criminal Law; Criminal Procedure.

18

.:,~".~,,~".l~.!'~~ . ",. ". VICrORLI HENRYG. MANNE

Associate Professor Victor A. Li was born in 1941. He received his B.A. Visiting Professor Henry G. Manne, born in 1928, received his B.A. (1%1) and his J.D. (1964) from Columbia University and his LL.M. (1950) from Vanderbilt University; his]' D. (1952) from the University of (1965) and S.].D. (1971) from Harvard University. He was a National Chicago; his LL.M. and ].S.D. (1966) from Yale University. He had a Defense Language Fellow, 1964-65 and 1966-67; a Fulbright-Hays corporate law practice in Chicago in 1953-54 and was Assistant Staff Fellow, 1965-66; a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Michigan Law Judge Advocate in the U.S. Air Force from 1954 to 1956. He was an School, 1967-69; and an Assistant Professor of Law Uoint appointment Assistant and Associate Professor at the St. Louis Law School, 1956-57 between the Law School and the Department of Political Science) at and 1959-62; a Visiting Assistant Professor (1962-64) and Professor (1964­ Columbia University since 1969. 68) at George Washington University Law School. He has been Kenan Professor of Law, Department of Political Science, University of Rochester, since 1969.

19 RICHARD MARK0 VITS GERALD M. MEIER

Assistant Professor Richard Markovits, born in New York in 1942, Professor Gerald M. Meier, of the. faculty of the Stanford Graduate received an A.B. in economics from Cornell in 1963, a Ph.D. from the School of Business and named by the Law School as Cooperating Professor London School of Economics in 1966 and an LL. B. from Yale, w here he of International Economics, was born in Washington in 1923 and earned a was note and comment editor of the Yale Law Journa4 in 1968. From B.A. in social science from Reed College in 1947. A Rhodes Scholar from 1966 to 1968 he was a lecturer in the Department of Economics at Yale 1948 until 1950 and again in 1951-52, he received a B. Litt. from Oxford University an~ in 1968-69 a National Science Foundation postdoctoral in 1952 and a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1953. He fellow in economics at the London School of Economics. His principal taught at Williams College from 1952 until 1954, then joined the subjects are: Economic Welfare and Microeconomic Regulation; economics faculty at Wesleyan University. From 1955 until 1961, while at Antitrust; Constitutional Law; Domestic Relations. Wesleyan, Mr. Meier served as a visiting member of the Yale economics faculty; in 1957-58 he was a Guggenheim Fellow and in 1961-62 was a Brookings National Research Professor of Economics. He came to Stanford as professor of international economics in 1963.

20 JOHN H. MERRYMAN CHARLESJ.MEYERS

John Henry Merryman, Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Charles J. Meyers, Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, was born in Professor of Law, was born in Oregon in 1920. He received a B.S. in Texas in 1925. He received a B. A. in F:ngl ish literature from Rice chemistry and mathematics in 1943 from the University of Portland, an Institute in 1949; that same year he earned an LL. B. from the University M.S. in chemistry (1944) and a J.D. (1947) from Notre Dame, and an of Texas, where he was comment editor of the Texas Law Review. He LL.M. (1951) and a J.S.D. (1955) from New York University. At Notre took an LL.M. (1953) and a J,S.D. (1964) from Columbia. He practiced Dame, Mr. Merryman was editor-in-chief of the Notre Dame Lawyer. law in Austin, Texas in 195 I-52. A teaching fellow in the Department of Mr. Merryman was a member of the law faculty at the University of Santa English at the University of Texas while in law school, he was a member Clara from 1948 until 1953, when he came to Stanford. He was visiting of the law faculty of the University of Texas from 1951 until 1954 and of professor at the Institute of Comparative Law, University of Rome, in the law faculty of Columbia University from 1954 until 1962. He has been I%3-64, visiting research professor at the Center of Economic Research in professor of law at Stanford since 1962 and has been a visiting professor at Athens in 1964 and Fulbright Research Professor at the Max Planck Cornell, Michigan, Minnesota and Utah. He is a member of the Texas bar Institute in Hamburg in 1968-69. His principal subjects are: Civil Law; and the American Law Institute. His principle subjects are: Property; Oil Comparative Law; Land Use Controls; Property. and Gas; Water Law; Real Estate Transactions.

21 HERBERT PACKER ROBERT RABIN

Herbert L. Packer, Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law, born in New Associate Professor Robert L. Rabin was born in Illinois in 1939. He Jersey in 1925, received a B.A. in government and international relations received a B.S. (1960), a J.D. (1963) and a Ph.D. (1967) from (\ 944) and an LL. B. (\ 949) from Yale, w here he was article editor of the Northwestern University and was article editor for the Northwestern Yale Law Journal. After serving in 1949-50 as law clerk to Judge Thomas University Law Review. He was an Assistant Professor, 1966 to 1969, W. Swa!l, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, he was and an Associate Professor, 1969 to 1971, at the University of Wisconsin. an associate in a Washington D.C. law firm from 1950 until 1955. In 1956 His principal subjects are: Torts, Administrative Law and Constitutional he joined the Stanford faculty. Mr. Packer served from 1961 to 1963 on Law. the Attorney General's Committee on Poverty and Federal Criminal Justice, from 1964 to 1969 as a reporter for the revision of the California Penal Code and from 1967 to 1969 as Vice Provost of Stanford University. He is a member of the New York bar. His principal subjects are: Criminal Law; Antitrust Law; Legal Process.

22 YOSALROGAT KENNETH SCOTT

Associate Professor Yosal Rogat was born in California in 1928. He Associate Professor Kenneth E. Scott was born in Illinois in 1928. He took received a B.A (1947) from the University of California at Los Angeles, a an AB. in economics from William and Mary College in 1949, an M.A. in Ph.D. (1956) from the University of California at Berkeley, both in political science-international affairs in 1953 from Princeton and an LL.B. political science, and a B.A (1957) and M.A (1961) from Oxford in in 1956 from Stanford University, where he was article editor of the jurisprudence. From 1957 until 1960 he was on the faculty of political Stonford Law Review. He practiced law in New York City from 1956 science at the University of California at Berkeley; from 1960 until 1962 until 1959 and in Los Angeles from 1959 until 1961. From 1961 until he was a staff member at the Center for the Study of Democratic 1963, he served as chief deputy savings and loan commissioner of Institutions in Santa Barbara, California, and from 1962 until 1964 was California and from 1963 until 1968 he was general counsel of the Federal associate professor of political science at the University of Chicago. A Home Loan Bank Board. He is a member of the California, New York fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, and Washington, D.C. bars. His principal subjects are: Administrative which is adjacent to Stanford, in 1964-65, he was in 1965-66 visiting Law; Business Associations; Financial Institutions. lecturer in jurisprudence at Stanford Law School. In 1966 he received a joint appointment from the Stanford Political Science Department and the Law School as associate professor. His principal subjects are: Jurisprudence; History of Legal Institutions.

23

r------···.T· ~~'" .. : ,.:.;~: , .' GORDONK. SCOTT BYRONSHER

Professor Gordon K. Scott was born in Massachusetts in 1917 and holds Professor Byron D. Sher was born in Missouri in 1928. He received a an A.B. in government (1938) and an LL.B. (1941) from Harvard, where B.S. B.A. in commerce and finance in 1949 from Washington University. he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. He practiced law in He took his LL.B. in 1952' from Harvard, where he was an editor of the Washington, D.C. from 1941 until 1942, served in 1942 in the Office of Harvard Law Review. He then practiced law in Boston for two years. He the Coordinator for InterAmerican Affairs in the Department of State and was a teaching fellow at Harvard Law School in 1954-55 and a member of was in the United States Army from 1942 until 1946. After teaching at the the law faculty of Southern Methodist University from 1955 until 1957, Stanford Law School from 1946 to 1948, he practiced law in Boston until when he came to Stanford. A visiting faculty member at the University of 1952, when he returned to the Stanford law faculty. Mr. Scott is a member Southern California Law School during the summer of 1956, he was a of the District of Columbia and Massachusetts bars. His principal subjects Fulbright Scholar at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand in are: Corporations; Municipal Law; Taxation. 1964. He is a member of the Massachusetts bar. His principal subjects are: Contracts; Sales and Sales Financing; Consumer Protection; Creditors' Rights.

24

... ~... .:-...... < - . • ..·11 \ CARL SPAETH MICHAEL WALD

Carl Bernhardt Spaeth, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, was Associate Professor Michael S. Wald was born in New York in 1941. He born in Ohio in 1907. He received an A. B. in political science from took an A.B. in political science (1963) from Cornell and an LL.B. (1967) Dartmouth in 1929. As a Rhodes Scholar, he received a B.A. in and an M.A. in political science (1967) from Yale, where he was projects jurisprudence (1931) and a B.C.L. (1932) from Oxford. In 1932-33 he was editor of the Yale Law Journal. His principal subject is Criminal Law. a Sterling Fellow at Yale Law School; he taught at Temple University in 1933-34, at Northwestern University from 1934 until 1939, at Yale in 1939-40 and at the Foreign Service Educational Foundation from 1944 until 1946. He was assistant coordinator and general counsel for the office of InterAmencan Affairs from 1940 until 1942; United States member, Political Defense Committee. Montevideo, Uruguay, from 1942 until 1944; special assistant in the Department of State from 1944 until 1946. In 1946 he came to Stanford Law School as dean and professor of law and served as dean until 1962. On leave from the school in 1952-53, he was director of the Division of Overseas Activities, Ford Foundation. Mr. Spaeth was consultant to the India Law Institute, New Delhi, in 1959-60. He is currently chairman of the Stanford University Committee on International Studies and Director of the Stanford Center for Research in International Studies. His principal subjects are: Legal Aspects of United States Foreign Relations; Interriational Law and Organization.

We thank you, Mr. Spaeth, for your many coritributions to the School. 25 HRVE YE AN HOWARD WILliAMS INHERITAN E? Howard R. Williams, Stella W. and Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law, was born in Indiana in 1915. He received an A. B. in political science in 1937 from Washington University and an LL.B. in 1940 from Columbia, where he was an editor of the Columbia Law Review. He practiced law in New York City in 1940-41, and served in the Field Artillery from 1941 until 1946. From 1946 until 1951 he was a member of the law faculty at the University of Texas; during part of this time he served as assistant dean and as acting dean of that law school. In 1951, he joined the Columbia law faculty and in 1959 became Dwight Professor of Law at Columbia. He came to Stanford in 1962. He is a member of the New York bar and has served as special government consultant on oil and gas. His principal subjects are: Trusts and Estates; Property; Oil and Gas; Legal Profession.

26 DAVID ROSENHAN LEONARD DU BOFF

Professor of Law and Psychology David Rosenhan, born in 1929, received Teaching Fellow Leonard D. DuBoff received his A.B. from Hofstra his A.B. (1951) from Yeshiva College and his M.A. (1953) and Ph.D. University in 1968 and his LL. B. from Brooklyn Law School in 1971. (1958) from Columbia University. He was a Psychologist for the Counselling Center at Stevens Institute of. Technology, 1954-56, and a Trainee at the New York Veterans Administration, 1956-58. He was a Lecturer, Hunter College and Director of Research, Department of Psychiatry, City Hospital at Elmhurst, 1958-60. He was an Assistant Professor for the Departments of Psychology and Sociology at Haverford College, 1960-1962; a Lecturer for the Departments of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, 1961-1964; a Lecturer (rank of Associate Professor) for the Department of PsychQlogy at , 1964-1968; a Research Psychologist at Educational Testing Service in Princeton, N.J., 1962-68; and, since 1968, Professor, Department of Psychology and Education at Swarthmore College.

27

.' ROBERTFORSTER ROBERTPATTERSON

Teaching Fellow Robert G. Forster received his A. B. and LL.B. (1969) Teaching Fellow Robert K. Paterson received his LL.B. from Victoria from Sydney University. University of Wellington in 1968 and his LL.M. from the same University in 1970.

28

. . - ..... ~. ."',. ;7"1F£, . . -," -:'.: MARK FISCHER RALPHJ. GAMPELL

Lecturer and Law and Computer Fellow Mark J. F. Fischer was born in Lecturer Ralph Jocelyn Gampell, born in England in 1916, received his 1945 in Washington, D.C. He received his RA. from Yale University in education in medicine at the University of Manchester, taking an M.R, 1966 and his J.D. (1969) from Harvard University where he was editor for CH.R in 1940; he has practiced medicine in England and the United the Harvard Law Review. He was a law clerk in 1969-70 to Hon. J. States. From 1957, when he received his J.D. from Stanford, until 1965, Joseph Smith, U.S. Court of Appeals (2nd circuit) and has been a Law and he maintained both a medical practice and a law practice. He has since Computer Fellow at Stanford Law School since 1970. confined his professional activities to the law. Mr. Gampell has been a part­ time lecturer at the Law School since 1958. He is a member of the California bar. His subject is: Medical-Legal Problems.

29 MARVIN TEPPERMAN GEORGE TORZAY-BIBER

Lecturer Marvin T. Tepperman was born in New York in 1925. After Lecturer and Reference Librarian George Torzsay-Biber was born in 1909 serving in the United States Navy from 1943 until 1946, he received a J.D. in Hungary. He was graduated from the University of Budapest in 1932, from the University of Chicago Law School in 1948, where he was an did graduate work at the University of Berlin, and received a doctorate in associate editor of the University of Chicago Law Review. A research law from the University of Budapest in 1934. He was a member of the assistant in tax law at the University of California School of Law at Hungarian bar from 1934 until 1945. From 1946 until 1950 he was Berkeley in 1949-50 with the American Law Institute Income Tax employed by the United States Military Government in Austria. In 1950­ Project, he has practiced tax law in San Francisco since 1950. Mr. 51 he served as secretary to Chief Justice Arnold of the Supreme Court of Tepperman has been a visiting lecturer at the School of Law at Berkeley Oklahoma and was a special lecturer in international law and and a lecturer in the California State Bar's Continuing Education of the jurisprudence at the University of Oklahoma. From 1952 until 1959 he Bar program; he has taught business law at San Francisco State Colllege was a legal analyst with the Library of Congress. Mr. Torzsay-Biber has and at the University of California Extension Division. He is a member of been reference librarian and lecturer since 1960. His principal subjects are: the California bar. Since 1960 he has been a lecturer in taxation at Roman Law; Legal Bibliography. Stanford Law Schoo\;

30

.... '" . -:.; ~: ' 72

31 ROBERTFRIES

RANDMCQUINN

32

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33

.' KATHY THOMAS

34

..•~.. ":;;:' r-; ARTSCHNEIDER

G. WILLIAM VETTER

35

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WILLIAM A. DAHL

36

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37

:".'.;'J, RONROSEN

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JOHNHOLBERTON

39 LUTHER ORTON

JIM ANDERSON

40

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RICH HAZELWOOD

41

.'"\ '. ;0.". SELIG D. SACKS ED THOMAS

42

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48

.:.:. l-~ \ MACK THORNTON DICK NEUHOFF

49

-,;. -;- . . ..._..•. :....", LEONADE JONES

50

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51 BRUCE TESTER

KENKAPLAN

52 • • "," ROYG. WEATHERUP

53 LEE FOREMAN

54 HAL LEWIS

55

".:.::- ." R.t..W' MARY LOURANDOL

56

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;- ",';.' . ~ _.toW' LARRYBLACKWOOD

CHIP GREENING

58

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BOB CLARK

59

----~ ~" ","7. .. .. -<:;.~. \ JOHN WILLETT

DOUG R OBERTON

60 KATHLEEN GRAHAM

61

· . .' ~ MARY J. CATTERMOLE

62

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63 ..

MLLIAM SCHINDLER

BARBARA DRAY

64

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JEFF BRYSON

65

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MILES SCHLOSBERG

66

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67 BRUCE SMALHEER

DAVID WILliAMS

68

'.:~ .' KIP OXMAN

69

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JOHNDAVIES

70 ZACK WASSERMAN

PHIL SUNDERLAND

71 72

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LARRYSLEIZER

73 LENTELLEEN

MARTINROSENTHAL

74

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CARYNEDMUNDS

76 GARYDAY

STANLEY MIRES

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JIM PEARCE

78 FRITZ WOOSTER

MIKE EMERSON

79 ..

JEFF SYDNEY

STEPHENR. BROWN

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81

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KAY WILSON

82 LARRYMAISEL

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83 ED STOW

84 85 DAVID DUXBURY HAL HUGHES

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CHRIS SNYDER

WALLYMELENDRES

88 RALPHPALUMBO

LARRY WRIGHT

89

":." ,( , MIKE MILLIGAN

JOHN WALL

90 PETER STARN

H1LLIAM GLUECK

91 ..

KERRICK SECURDA

LENORE GARON

92 LANCE WICKMAN

TOM SPRINGER

93 WILLIAM BILliCK ROBERT GRANT

94

'~'{"~~~'" - ...... BILLHIPPEE

ALEX CROSS

95

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DONKARl

96 i--~--- ., .... '. RUSS COOK

LAURIE NICHOLS

97 JOHNST. JOHN

98 ALAN WERTHEIMER

99

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FREDERICH DIETZ RICHARD FRANTZREB

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•••~.. •••...::! •'.. ~.' ~ "..'.:' J ' FRANK HUCK MIKE HATCH

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TOM SHILLINGLAW

102 STEVE FELDHAUS PETER RODGERS

103

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PATREYMANN

104 TERRYMCSHANE HEIDI DUERBECK

105 •

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ALLENKATZ

106 FRED FREDRICH

RUSS TAPLIN

107

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JEFF PENDERGRAFT GEOFFNAAB

108

'.: ,:1 TOM BARTMAN

DANIEL SCOTTPALTER

109 LINDAHO

PAUL JACOBSON

110

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RONPODRAZA

111

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113

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DONBROWN BETHJAY

114 DICK WILLIAMS

MARY BETH WEST

115 ..

WARRENLYONS

LYNNOCHBERG

116 SHERI CRISWELL

117

. ." ~'.; ~ , 118 LARRYDAUGERT

119 ,

PETER BORAK

120

-. ,. ~ . . - ..... l>l' SANJOSE DRAFT BOARD -1971

121

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123 ..

124 125 ..

126 127 128 The Trial

The Sentence

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134 MOFFATT HANCOCK

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152 153 154

".. ':." MR. FRlEDENTHAL'S CIVIL PROCEDURE I-B

155

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MR. RABIN'S TORTS I-D

156

...... :.;' :..... MR. AYER'S CIVIL PROCEDURE I-B

157

. . ;:.:~:, MR.GREY~CONTRACTS~B

158

- ..... ':';ii:' .. ' .., .... 1- \ MR. COHEN'S TORTS I-B

159 MR. GIRARD'S TORTS I-C

160

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162 163 ..

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166 167 168 169 170

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; .... - LAWFORUM

STANFORD LAWJOURNAL

176 FILM SOCIETY

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

177

.,- ~ LEGAL AID SOCIETY

CHICANO LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION

178

.. . ';~. , STANFORD LAW REVIEW

179

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ATHLETES

180

'.' .:".; t~ . WOMEN of STANFORD LAW

181

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Peter Borak, Mary 10 Borak, Billy McCan Carol McCan Gabrielle Disario, and Don Saidman, pictured, wish to embrace Leo Holub, Robert Parker, Gladys Smith and amErika Kaltenbach as co-conspirators in this 182 venture.

... ~ .,; ...~. ~~ . 183 PATRONS Belcher, Henzie & Biegenzahn Los Angeles, California

Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton New York, New York

Kadison, pfaelzer, Woodard & Quinn Los Angeles, California

Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro San Francisco, California

Rutan & Tucker Santa Ana, California Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett New York, New York SUSTAINING MEMBERS

Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson New York, New York

Long & Levit San Francisco and Los Angeles, California

184 SUPPORTING MEMBERS

Adams, Duque & Hazeltine Lewis & Roca Paul, Hastings, J anofsky & Walker Los Angeles, California Phoenix, Arizona Los Angeles, California

Arthur Andersen & Company Lillick, McHose, Wheat, Adams & Charles Reavis & McGrath San Francisco, California San Francisco, California New York, New York

Davis, Polk & Wardwell McCutchen, Doyle, Brown & Enersen Southern Pacific Transportation .Company New York, New York San Francisco, California San Francisco, California

Hanson, Bridgett, Marcus & Jenkins Miller, Groezinger, Pettit & Evers Touche Ross & Company San Francisco, California San Francisco, California San Francisco, California

Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Clinton & Clark Wilson, Jones, Morton & Lynch San Francisco, California San Francisco, California San Mateo,California

Hoberg, Finger, Brown & Abramson Pacht, Ross,'Warne, Bernhard & Sears San Francisco, California Los Angeles, California MEMBERS

Bullivant, Wright, Johnson, Pendergrass & Hoffman Friedman, Collard & Kauffman Orrick, Herrington, Rowley & Sutcliffe Portland, Oregon Sacramento, California San Francisco, California

Carlsmith, Carlsmith, Wichman & Case Greenberg & Glusker Quittner, Stutman, Treister & Glatt Hilo, Hawaii Los Angeles, California Los Angeles, California

Carter, Ledyard & Milburn Hanna & Morton Rosenfeld, Meyer & Susman New York, New York Los Angeles, California Beverly Hills, California

Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside & Wolff Kaplan, Livingston, Goodwin, Berkowitz & Selvin Royall, Koegel & Wells New York, New York Beverly H ills, California New York, New York

Curtis Darling Kindel & Anderson Severson, Werson, Berke & Melchior Bakersfield, California Los Angeles, California San Francisco, California

Dunne, Phelps & Mills Lawler, Felix & Hall Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton San Francisco, California Los Angeles, California Los Angeles, California

Farella, Braun & Martel Minnick, Hahner & Hubbard Stark, Stewart, Simon & Sparrowe San Francisco, California Walla WalIa, Washington Oakland, California

Flint & MacKay Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp Titchell, Maltzman & Mark Los Angeles, California Los Angeles, ·California San Francisco, California

185

--~---~--'-:.::.7,.~..""'.,'7"--~ Cover picture by Moffatt Hancock Fredrich, Erwin-l07 Milligan, Michael S.-9O Tester, Bruce A.-52 Class of'72 Friedman, Daniel P.-87 Mires, Stanley F.-77 Thomas, Kathleen A.-34 Class of'73 Fries, Robert T.-32 Naab, Geoffrey-l08 Thomas, Richard O.-N.P. Abram, Thomas-N.P. Gamble, William-N.P. Neuhoff, Richard C.-49 Thomas, Walter E.-N.P. Andrews, Robert H.-N.P. Adlhock, Terrance-N.P. Ganschow, Clifford M.-N.P. Nichols, Laurel A.-97 Thornton, Daniel M.-49 Arreola, Ralph A.-N.P. Ahlf, Thomas-96 Ginns, Ronald L.-51 O'Fallon,James M.-47 Tobak, James W.-N.P. Bacon, Steven W.-N.P. Andersen, Richard-N.P. Glueck, William J.-91 Orton, Luther K-40 Vetter, G. William-35 Barba, Francisco ].-N.P. Anderson, J ames-40 Goldscheider, Peter F.-N.P. Oxman, Thomas K-69 Voyles, Stanley R.-N.P. Barrett, Patrick J .-124 Ashby, Douglas-41 Gorham, William C.-N.P. Palter, Daniel S.-109 Walters, Stephen S.-N.P. Bauman, Lawrence S.-124 Barrett, Hugh-43 Graham, Kathleen M.-61 Palumbo, RalphH.-89 Ware, Susan S.-83 Beal, Thaddeus R Jr.-N.P. Bartman, Tom-109 Grant, Robert N.-94 Petterson, Robert £.-87 Ware, WillieJ.-83 Bemis, Bradford S.-124 Beaver, Robert-N.P. Greene, Michael A.-N.P. Pearce, James M.-78 Wartnick, Harry F.-36 Bennett, Wilfred D.-124 Beck, Andrew-N.P. Greening, Robert M. Jr.-58 Pendergraft, Jeffrey R-108 Wasserman, Robert 2.-71 Berg, Lawrence M.-N.P. Becker, Lewis-37 Haddock, Robert M.-....:N.P. Podraza, Ronald ].-111 Weatherup, Roy G.-53 Bernson, Henry B.-I24 Berlin, Stephen-N.P. Hara, Glenn S.-N.P. Prag, Jeffrey E.-N.P. Wertheimer, Alan S.-99 Bethel, Jesse M.-N.P. Billick, William-94 Hartog, Jack P.-44 Prim, Ted-45 West, Mary B.-liS Blank, Owen D.-N.P. Blackwood, Larry-58 Hatch, James M.-lOl Querio, Donald ].-N.P. White, Anne W.-N.P. Blue, Jon C.-124 Borak, Peter-121 Hawfield, William B. J r.-46 Rank, John T.-33 Wickman, Lance B.-93 Blumberg, Richard P.-N.P. Bowen, Scott-N.P. Hayes, Edward J r.-78 Reymann, Patrick H.-104 Willett, John A.-60 Boatti, Stepehn ].-125 Brett, Deno-122 Hazlewood, Richard J .-41 Richardson, George B.-70 Williams, David-68 Bolger, William A.-125 Brown, Donald-l 14 Heir, Dennis K-75 Robblee, Neil H.-N.P. Williams, Richard T.-45 Bolton, Walter L. Jr.-N.P. Brown, Stephen-80 Heiser, Stephen J.-N.P. Roberton, Douglas T.-60 Wilson, Kathryn L.-82 Bonino, John M.-125 Bryson, J effrey-65 Henson, Alexander T.-81 Rodgers, Peter H.-IOJ Winslow, Mary-=----65 Brown, Baird A.-125 Carey, Kathryn-N.P. Hienton, Joseph P.-N.P. Rogers, Robert D.-N.P. Wooster, Fritz-79 Burke, Thomas].-N.P. Cattermole, Mary J .-62 Hinsdale, Palmer F.-N.P. Rosen, Ronald 1.-38 Wright, Lawrence C.-89 Burmeister, Edward J r.-125 Clark, Robert-59 Hippee, William H. Jr.-95 Rosenthal, Elden M.-N.P. Thomas, Ed-42 Cameron, Sarah T.-125 Claytor, J ames-N.P. Ho, Linda A.-I 10 Rosenthal, Martin R.-74 Telleen, Len-Z4 Ching, James F.-N.P. Cook, Russell-97 Holberton, John C.-39 Saidman, Donald E.-67 Wall,John-9O Clasgens, Joseph H.-126 Corey, Steven-39 Houston, Tom K-73 St. John, John H.Jr.-98 Clegg, Trevor C.-N.P. Cote, Ronald-N.P. Huck, Lewis F.-lOl Schindler, Criag F.-Il3 Colman, Jeffrey D.-N.P. Coveney, Kenneth-N.P. Hughes, Harold ].-86 Schindler, William M.-64 Colwell, Robert'C.-126 Criswell, Sharon-II 7 Hunkeler, Walter M.-51 Schlosberg, Miles S.-66 Cook, Tony M.-126 Cross, Alexander-95 Ishiyama, Nelson M.-N.P. Schulhof, Thomas B.-N.P. Cooper, Susan L.-N.P. Crow, Douglas-N.P. Jacobson, John P.-rt 0 Schwartz, John A.-N.P. Cornell, William G.-126 Dahl, William-36 Jay, Beth ].-114 Securda, Kerrick C.-92 SPECIAL STUDENTS Cronander, Bruce L.-126 Daly, Charles-N.P. Kaplan, Kenneth M.-52 Shillinglaw, Thomas-I02 Danid, John E.-N.P. Daugert, Lawrence-I 19 Kari, Donald G.-96 Siegesmund, John C.-76 Davis, Linda K-N.P. David, Marianne-N.P. Davies, J ohn-70 Katz, Allen M.-106 Sieizer, Larry-73 Mahoney, Nancy-N.P. DeBolt, Bruce R-106 Day, Gary-77 Kitch, J ames-33 Smalheer, Bruce C.-68 Ochberg, Lynn ].-116 Deming, Robert L.-N.P. DeMond, Gorton-N.P. Kratter, Leslie M.-66 Smith, Fred C.-N.P. De Yoe, David P.-N.P. Dietz, Frederick-IOO Lafrenz, Andrew W.-N.P. Smith, Theodore G.-N.P. Dibble, Jonathan A.-126 Dray, Barbara-64 Laverty, Roger M.-53 Snyder, Christina A.-88 Dorsey, Steven L.-127 Drummond, James-59 Lewis, Harold S. Jr.-55 Springer, Charles H.T.-93 Dreher, Nicholas C.-127 Duerbeck, Heidi-lOS Lyons, Warren R-116 Starn, Peter-91 Drobak, John N.-127 Duxbury, David-86 McQuinn, Michael R-32 Stein, Isaac-82 GRADUATE STUDENTS Dudrey, John R.-N.P. Edmunds, Caryn-76 McShane, Terry D.-lOS Schneider, Art-35 Dushman, Mark R,-127 Eggers, J erome-63 Mackenzie, Kenneth B.-N.P. Sacks, Selig-42 DuBoff, Leonard D.-27 Firestone, Edward A.-127 Emerson, M ike-79 Maisel, Lawrence C.-83 Rummonds, Jim-48 Edwards, G. Kip-N.P. Fletcher, James Anthony-N.P. Evans, Marjorie-N.P. Mann, David M.-N.P. Randol, Mary Lou-56 Fletcher, Sian S.-N.P. Fox, Priscilla B.-I27 Feldhaus, Stephen-103 Marshall, Jeffrey A.-N.P. Street, Kim-48 Fischer, Mark ].-29 Friedman, Linda M.-128 Foreman, Lee-54 Jones, Leonade-50 Stow, Edward N.-84 Forster, Robert G.-28 Frost, Jonathan M.-128 Frantzreb, Richard-IOO Mayne, Wiley E. Jr.-112 Sunderland, Philip-71 Heijmans, Albertus M.-N.P. Fujikawa, Ronald K-128 -Baumann, John-N.P. Meeker, Theodore G.-Ill Sweeney, John ].-N.P. Panzer, Arnold-N.P. Ganzfried, Jerrold ].-N.P. DeBolt, Bruce-106 Melendres, WalterJ.-88 Sydney, Jeffrey M.-80 Paterson, Robert K-28 Gesmer, Gabriel M.-N.P. Garon, Lenore Cooper-92 Merchant, James P.-N.P. Taplin, Russell A.-t07 Tedeschi, Linda-N.P. Gilfix, Michael-128

186

.?-;..~!~:;...--.--;, -...... -.; .' ... ~ ..:. ,. :' , ,. , Gittler, Gregg-128 Peterson, Dale R.-N.P. Fink, Richard-1S3 Nicholas, Carter-N.P. Golden, CorneliusJ.-N.P. Peterson, Jerod H.-N.P. Class of'74 Ford, Timothy-N.P. Nicholson, AM. Jr.-165 Goldman, David-128 Philpot, Kenneth J .-137 Franco, Glorene-N.P. Noonan, James-N.P. Goldstein, Michael P.-131 Porter, John R.-N.P. Acle, Luis-N.P. Franklin, Benjamin-N.P. aderman, J effrey-165 Golubock, Carol R.-131 Printemps, Edwin E.-N.P. Allen, Robert M.-146 Fulham, J ohn-154 Ohearn, Paul-N.P. Gottschall, Joan 8.-131 Radez, Patricia S.-138 Andelson, Bruce-146 Goffe, Robert-N.P. O'Neal, M ike-l 66 Green, Louis B.-131 Rafanelli, Vincent M.-N.P. Anderson, Edgar-146 Graham, Thomas-N.P. Otis, William-l66 Gregorian, Edmond C.-N.P. Rand, Robert C.-N.P. Andrews, Robert-146 Grey, Richard-l54 Owen, Thomas-166 Handel, Thomas F.-131 Randol, Mary L.-N.P. Aronson, Martin-146 Gross, Mary-147 Oxford, Gregory-l66 Hanken, Garrett L.-131 Rapaport, Richard A.-138 Auerbach, Bethami-147 Grubman, Ronald-154 Paurick, Charles-166 Hanson, Jay D.-132 Regan, Ann W.-138 Austin, Alan-147 Hafferty, William-l54 Paul, Arnold-l66 Hazlett, mark A.-N.P. Regan, Timothy W.-N.P. Ayers, Jay-147 Haffner, Frederick-l 54 Peters, Geoffrey-N.P. Hearne, John Q.-N.P. Roster, Michael-N.P. Balter, Diane-N.P. Haines, J ohn-168 Peterson, Charles-167 Hinsdale, J ane-132 Sackl, Darrel L.-N.P. Baron, Frederick-147 Harbach, Christopher-N.P. Phillips, Bernard-N.P. Hodgson, Morgan D.-132 Schaaf, Karl C.-138 Baron, William-147 Hartmann, George-N.P. Pickard, Todd-167 Huffman, Robert K-N.P. Schlicher, John W.-138 Bartkowski, David-148 Hazzard, Ladoris-154 Proctor, Alan-167 I1lston, Susan Y.-N.P. Schlissel, David A-N.P. Bates, William-148 Hendryx,Steven-161 Rabban, David-167 John, Eugene A Jr.-132 Schnack, Jerrald J.-N.P. Beam, Loudin-148 Holland, William-l 61 Ramsay, Barbara-N.P. Johnson, Clinton-N.P. Schneider, Arthur P. J r.-35 Bell, Charles-148 Holt, Linwood T.-N.P. Reback, Gary-167 Johnston, Robert P.-132 Schneider, Robert C.-138 Bellardo, Brian-148 Hoptowit, Dennis-N.P. Rhea, Gordon-167 Kahn Michael A-N.P. Smith, Nancy E.-N.P. Bernstein, Larry-148 Hume, George-N.P. Roodhouse, Alan-169 Kell, Edward D.-132 Spanner, Robert A.-140 Biber, Michael-John-149 Insinga, Judith-161 Rosenbaum, Lois-169 Kelley, Donald E. Jr.-133 Stegall, David C.-140 Biegenzahn, Stephen-N.P. Jensen, J on-161 Rubin, Andrew-N.P. Kelly, William D. Jr.-N.P. Stone, Richard-N.P. Bladh, Wayne-149 Johnson, Craig-161 Rubio, Hilario-169 Kennedy, Melvin L.-N.P. Stuart, William H.III-140 Brant, Robert-149 Klein, Patrick-N.P. Scharf, Stephen-l69 Kenny, David C.-N.P. Sunderland, Louise A.-140 Bush, Robert-149 Kociol, Stephen-N.P. Schein, Leonard-169 Kidd, Eugene B.-N.P. Swanson, James A.-N.P. Cavanaugh, J ames-N. P. Kuhnmuench, Helen-161 Schenker, Carl J r.-169 King, John L.-133 Swift, Samuel R.-N.P. Chang, Sau J ohn-149 Kwasnick, Raymond-l62 Seltzer, Leon-N.P. Kirk, Michael C.-133 Tanick, Marshall H.-l40 Clock, Edwin-149 Lane, Barbara-N.P. Shackelford, Charles-l 70 Kitzes, Julie A-133 Taylor, Andrew E. Jr.-140 Coats, Robert Jr.-150 Lawson,Johnny-162 Shapiro, J oseph-170 Knapp, Rosalind A.-133 Telleen, Leonard M.-N.P. Cochran, Robert-l 50 Laybourn, Ross-N.P. Sherer, Dunham-l 70 Koss, Deborah H.-133 Thiessen, Michael R.-N.P. Cohen, Bruce-l50 Leas, Philip-162 Singer, Richard S.-170 Kwoka, Ronald ].-N.P. Thornton, Anne R.-N.P. Cohen, Sarah-l50 Lee, J ohn-162 Speckels, Carole-l 70 LaBrucherie, Roger A-N.P. Tuel, Houston N. Jr.-141 Collis, Conway Harris-l50 Levine, Norman-l62 Spurlark, Susan-l 70 LaBrucherie, Timothy J.-136 Vandamm, Michael].-141 Cooperman, Joshua G.-150 Linker, Helene-162 Stiver, CharlesJr.-171 Laffey, Thomas P.-N.P. Vanderet, Robert C.-141 Cox, Allen Paul-N.P. Lipps, Andrew-163 Stuen, Thomas-N.P. Lane, Robert C.-N.P. Vilaplana, Victor A-l41 Cuddy, Christine Sarah-151 McCaugherty, L1oyd-163 Sullivan, J ames-l 71 Levin, Helen T.-N.P. Wadsworth, Brent M.-141 Cummings, Walter ].III-151 McClain, Maureen-l63 Swenson, Carol-l 71 Levin, John P.-N.P. Walker, Stuart C.-l41 Dauchy, Craig Edward-l 51 McLaughlin, Marie-1M Tompkins, Christopher-l 71 Levinson, Sanford V.-N.P. Wall, John W.-N.P. Davidson, Gordon Kirby-151 McNair, Robert Jr.-1M T opinka, J ames-N. P. Lindemann, Gordon I.Jr.-136 Warble, L1oyd-142 Davis, Robert Loran-151 Madera, Aileen-163 Treadgold, Stephen-171 McCulloh, Robert W.-136 Watkins, Susan-142 Davis, Susan Eleanor-151 Mahler, J ames-l63 Tune, James-l 71 Mackall, John Rowe-136 Weisgall, Jonathan M.-142 Dawson, William Louis-152 Maira-L, Octovio-163 Urbanczyk,Stephen-172 Masur, Robert E.-136 Weissman, Walt K-N.P. DeAnda, Ricardo Efrain-146 Miller, Douglas-168 Wade, Booker-l 72 Melchor, Gregory L.-N.P. White, Andrew M.-142 Deitch, Douglas Albert-N.P. Miller,]. Sanford-1M Waitzkin, Michael-l 72 Mickelson, Lon M.-N.P. Wildman, Stephanie M.-N.P. deLeon, Dennis Lawrence-l 52 Miller, Margaret-N.P. Ward, M ichael-l 72 Moskowitz, Steven D.-136 Williams, Leslie A.-N.P. Dick, James Vernon-N.P. Miller, Robert-1M Wasser, Lyneil-l72 Muther, Paul-N.P. Williams, Thomas K-142 Donohue, Joseph Kenneth-l 52 Mirengoff, Paul-N.P. Watson, Arthur-l 72 Myer, Kenneth L.-N.P. Wilson, Cary G.-N.P. Dudley, Jay Jeffrey-l 52 Monroe, Richard-1M Watson, Jeffrey L.-173 Neal, Stephen C.-N.P. Wilson, Robert G .-142 Durham, David French-152 Moore, Shawn-1M Weed, Robert Jr.-173 Neubauer, Nicholas ].-137 Wood. ThomasG.-N.P. Eagan, Michael Quinn-152 Morones, Eugene, Jr.-165 Weiner, Richard-l 73 Nys, John N.-N.P. Wroe, Edward F.-I44 Easter, Scott B.-153 Morrissey, James-165 Williams, Les-173 O'Hare, Mary V.-137 Yablon, Jeffery L.-144 Elliot, John W.-153 Morse, Gary-165 Wilson, Marilyn Sue-173 Ordal, Robert E.-137 Yingling, Edward L.-144 Faber, Andrew-153 Naon, Robert-168 Yancey, David~ 173 Oster, Ronald M.-N.P. Young, Richard R.-I44 Fellows, Thomas-153 Navarro, Ralph-165 Young, Bryant-168 PauL Richard A.-137 Zignego, John S.-I44 Ferguson, Richard-153 Pearce, James T.-137

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