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WOMEN of STANFORD LAW Copyright C 197Sta~7:r~hJe of the Leland umorB?ardU.ofmversity.Trustees -.-::r-- .. .. ,.'; .~ ,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, United States 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 Haverford College 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.
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