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The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory University of Georgia School of Law
Digital Commons @ Georgia Law Other Law School Publications Archives 7-1-1988 The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory University of Georgia School of Law Repository Citation University of Georgia School of Law, "The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory" (1988). Other Law School Publications. 98. https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/lectures_pre_arch_archives_other/98 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives at Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Other Law School Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Georgia Law. Please share how you have benefited from this access For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Georgia School of Law Classes of 1989 & 1990 The Georgia Advocate Placement Directory Summer 1988 Letter from the Dean 2 Law School Description and Academic Calendar 3 Placement Policies and Services 4 Faculty 7 Clinical Education Programs 9 Student Publications and Student Organizations 10 Employment Preference Index for the Class of 1989 13 Employment Preference Index for the Class of 1990 14 Directory of Third Year Students (Class of 1989) 15 Directory of Third Year Students Not Pictured 51 Directory of Second Year Students (Class of 1990) 56 Directory of Second Year Students Not Pictured 91 Employer Data Sheet (Job Posting Request Form) 95 Student Portrait Photography: Chuck Moore, Athens, Georgia Cover art © Warren L. Kirbo I I I The high quality of our students is one of the points of pride of The University of Georgia School of Law. The men and women who enter this school as first year students come to us with impressive academic credentials and a demonstrated capacity to excel. -
20 Years of the Shepherd Program
Winter/Spring 2018 20 Years of the Shepherd Program MAGAZINE.WLU.EDU 1 2 THE WASHINGTON AND LEE MAGAZINE - IN THIS ISSUE FEATURES 10 The Head and the Heart The Shepherd Program celebrates 20 years. 16 Into the Great Wide Open The A. Paul Knight Internship Program in Conservation. 20 Meaningful Investment The annual financial report. 24 On Their Honor The mission of the Owings Fellows. DEPARTMENTS 3 Columns 26 Office Hours Seth Michelson, Assistant Professor of Spanish 28 Lives of Consequence Greg Hunt ’97 Alison Krentel Wheatley-Price ’94 32 Alumni 48 Chronicles COMMUNITY MEMBERS AND W&L STUDENTS addressed childhood hunger in the Rockbridge area one soup sample at a time at the 6th Annual Souper Bowl, in Evans Dining Hall on Jan. 28. All proceeds supported the Campus Kitchen’s Backpack Program, which supplies over 700 children with a bag of non-perishable food items every weekend. Jenny Elmes ’91 (left), who owns Full Circle Catering, served Rebecca Morris ’18. PHOTOGRAPH BY KEVIN REMINGTON MAGAZINE.WLU.EDU 1 SPEAK FROM THE EDITOR Thank you to everyone who answered our call for memories about the Volume 95, Number 1 Vietnam era — John Rutherford ’66, who explored the stories of our Winter/Spring 2018 alumni who died in Vietnam; Robert Buxton ’69, a veteran himself, JAl,!£5 HOWMD MONROE who informed us that many class agents maintain lists of those who Julie A. Campbell served; Richard Coplan ’64 and Bruce Rider ’66, for thoughtful letters; Editor and Don McFall ’64, ’69L who wrote with pride of James Monroe ’66, Louise Uffelman who won the Medal of Honor and is memorialized with this plaque in Managing Editor Columns Lee Chapel. -
Daniel Clovis Moomaw
Daniel Clovis Moomaw September 10, 1886- October 5, 1918 The Descendants of 80th Division Veterans organized in 2003 to perpetuate the memories of the military personnel who sacrificed so much for our freedom, and to continue to honor these Veterans at a time when they can no longer pay personal tribute to their fellow comrades. On this Veterans ·Day 2005, we have come to Lee Chapel on the Campus of Washington and Lee University in Lexington , Virginia , to honor all Veterans, but in particular, one Veteran of the 80th Division, who gave his life in the woods of France in October 191 8. An alumnus of the University of Virginia as well as a graduate, Law Professor, and assistant coach at Washington and Lee, Daniel Clovis Moomaw had attended unofficial officers ' training courses, so that when he entered the Army, he was commissioned a second lieutenant. As a conscientious objector, he could have avoided service, but, not having a family to support, he felt it incumbent upon him to enter the Armed Services of his Country. In the affidavits which follow the program, you can read the testimony of his commanding officers that relate the bravery and dedication this man exhibited. These documents were the catalyst for the pursuit of the honors being paid to Lieutenant Moomaw, eighty-seven years after his fatal mission . Please note , too , that his military records indicate that he used the name Clovis, rather than Daniel. Copies of several other documents are included for your information. Clovis Moomaw was the second member of his family to lose his life during the Great War. -
ODK Taps Nineteen Leaders of Student Body
.. '1{ ated "All American" edited and Managed By Collegidte Pren t Entirely by Students Wuhington and Lee University Semi-Weekly VOL. XLIV LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, l940 NUMBER Zl ODK Taps Nineteen Leaders of Student Body 1 Athletic Program Varsity Show *Ten Seniors, Two Juniors, Rehearsal Set Seven Lawyers, Six Alumni To Be Discussed Bid by Leadership Society hlrtn, , ••, h" will not •• Four co:nmtttees, re:Jresentlng ",_ [For Tonight Omicron Delta Kappa this morning tapped 19 students the trustees. ai'. mnl, faculty and clded upon In Januar:.r. Dr. Gaines PAN to Meet Monday ten seniors, seven law students, and two junio r s~in recogn i· stud::: n: body, will mee~ together stated. !•ere Founder's Day . January 20, Despite a detinUe J:OIIcy In l tl3 9, To DiJcuJs Parade, tion of their leadership in University activities during the an · to dbcUES Washington and Lea's results !rom football were not en Show Participation nual ODK assembly in Doremus gymnasium, attended b y ap· athletic policy and make recom couraging. mendations for a lonB·rana:e pro- With a general demand for Preparations f o r Washington proximately 1,000 students and guests. Jonathan Daniels, edi gram. something either approaching "big and Lee's vanity show, "One tor tor of The Raleigh News and Observer, delivered the pri.n cipal Two years ago, a similar group time" or de-emphasis on the other the Money,'' to be staged Decem· address. of committees drew up a policy hand, the "middle ot the road" ber 13 , neared completion today whereby the University would join compromise which was attempted when sonny Heartwell, pres!dent Also tapped by the Alpha Chapter of the leade rship fra· the rank'! of the "professional col In 1939, will probably be aban of Sigma Delta Cht. -
Who Really Rule the World ? – Freemasons / Rothschilds !
11 Who Really Rule the World ?? – Freemasons / Rothschilds ! And Seecreet Sociieetitiees iin Unniiverrssiititiees iin USA Since I entered politics, I have chiefly had men’s views confided to me privately. Some of the biggest men in the United States, in the field of commerce and manufacture, are afraid of something. They know that there is a power somewhere so organised, so subtle, so watchful, so interlocked, so complete, so pervasive, that they better not speak above their breath when they speak in condemnation of it. – – Woodrow Wilson, 28th President of the United States (1856-1924) So you see, my dear Coningsby, that the world is governed by very different personages from what is imagined by those who are not behind the scenes. – – Benjamin Disraeli, British Prime Minister (1804-1881) The advent of the industrial revolution, the invention of a banking system based on usury, and scientific and technological advancements during the past three centuries have had three major consequences. These have made the incredible concentration of wealth in a few hands possible, have led to the construction of increasingly deadly weapons culminating in weapons of mass destruction, and have made it possible to mould the minds of vast populations by application of scientific techniques through the media and control of the educational system. The wealthiest families on planet earth call the shots in every major upheaval that they cause. Their sphere of activity extends over the entire globe, and even beyond, their ambition and greed for wealth and power knows no bounds, and for them, most of mankind is garbage – – ――human garbage.‖ It is also their target to depopulate the globe and maintain a much lower population compared to what we have now. -
Collegiate Secret Societies in North America 1 Collegiate Secret Societies in North America
Collegiate secret societies in North America 1 Collegiate secret societies in North America There are many collegiate secret societies in North America. They vary greatly in their levels of secrecy and independence from their universities. As the term is used in this article, a secret society is a collegiate society where significant effort is made to keep affairs, membership rolls, signs of recognition, initiation, or other aspects secret from the public. Some collegiate secret societies are referred to as 'class societies', which restrict membership to one class year. Most class societies are restricted to the senior class, and are therefore also called senior societies on many campuses. Categorization There is no strict rule on the categorization of secret societies. Secret societies can have ceremonial initiations, secret signs of recognition (gestures, handshakes, passwords), formal secrets, (the 'true' name of the society, a motto, or a society history); but, college fraternities or "social fraternities" have the same, and some of these elements can also be a part of literary societies, singing groups, editorial boards, and honorary and pre-professional groups. Some secret societies have kept their membership secret, for example Seven Society and Gridiron, and some have not, like Skull and Bones (the Yale societies had published their membership lists in the yearbooks and the Yale Daily News). One key concept in distinguishing secret societies from fraternities is that, on campuses that have both kind of organizations, one can be a member of both, (that is, membership is not mutually exclusive). Usually, being a member of more than one fraternity is not considered appropriate, because that member would have divided loyalties; however, typically, there is not an issue being a member of a secret society and a fraternity, because they are not considered similar organizations or competing organizations.[1] An especially difficult problem is the degree to which any one society is an actual society or is simply an honorary designation.