THE MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF AT CHAPEL HILL SCHOOL OF LAW CAROLINA LAW

Making a Difference at Home page 24

VOLUME 37, ISSUE TWO FALL-WINTER 2013 UNC Law Alumni Association Board of Directors DEAN’S MESSAGE Executive Officers Thomas F. Taft ’72, president Craig T. Lynch ’86, vice president Dear Friends: Leslie C. Packer ’86, second vice president We spend much time at Carolina Law pondering pedagogy and John Charles Boger ’74, secretary-treasurer the future of the law, asking what we can do as educators — through Harriett J. Smalls ’99, Law Foundation chair classes, clinics, externships and extracurricular offerings — to Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64, past campaign chair strengthen lawyers-in-training and mold them into outstanding members of the legal profession. In this issue of Carolina Law, David M. Moore II ’69, past president (2007-08) we set down the theme of future proficiency to focus on present John S. Willardson ’72, past president (2008-09) service — examining what our promising students, our energetic Norma R. Houston ’89, past president (2009-10) faculty, and our 10,000 living alumni, are doing right now to serve Ann Reed ’71, past president (2010-11) the people and institutions of the State of North Carolina. It’s a remarkable picture. In scores of ways, Carolina Law

Robert A. Wicker ‘69, past president (2011-12) EXUM STEVE students reach out every day, fall, spring and summer, to assist John Charles “Jack” Boger families and individuals who have desperate, unmet legal needs. In our six law school clinics, students respond directly — even as they learn how to become Committee Chairs outstanding lawyers — by investigating consumer fraud that may have jeopardized a family’s home Advancement Committee, Walter D. Fisher Jr. ’86 and principal asset, by combating abysmal rental conditions that can strip a renter of full enjoy- Long-Range Planning Committee, ment of a leasehold, by assuring that wages duly earned are paid to hard working breadwinners, by Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64 defending young teenagers against pending juvenile charges that might forever alter the prospects Alumni Engagement Committee, Kelly Podger Smith ’02 of their lives and futures, and by taking on a host of similar challenges. Beyond assisting individuals, clinic students advise nonprofit corporations that need legal assistance to build housing units for Nominations Committee, Stephen E. Lewis ’91 the elderly or to develop promising work opportunities for former substance abusers looking to reclaim a responsible work life and future. Our students’ service to North Carolina’s people moves daily beyond the classroom settings. Law UNC Law Foundation Officers students organize dozens of volunteer organizations that provide much-needed assistance – to cancer Harriett J. Smalls ’99, president and chair patients who need help preparing legal documents, to elderly citizens faced with bewildering tax Edwin Jasper “Jack” Walker Jr. ’69, vice president forms, or to wrongly convicted inmates seeking to prove their innocence. Our student-run Pro and chair, audit committee Bono Program, supervised by Dean Sylvia Novinsky, places hundreds of students with practicing John Charles Boger ’74, secretary-treasurer lawyers who call the law school for assistance with their own public interest matters. Our centers likewise extend themselves daily to assist North Carolina residents — whether recently appointed local bank directors who need legal training about their new obligations, or coastal towns and UNC School of Law Office commissions that seek guidance on reasonable land use policies, or underserved minority communi- ties, hoping for equal municipal services or promised educational opportunities for their children. of Advancement In reaching out to the state, our students are following the leadership of Carolina Law faculty, Kris Jensen, associate dean for advancement who have long participated in the tradition of service — on key state administrative boards, T. Brandon Wright, assistant dean for advancement through amicus curiae briefs filed in important legal cases, by reports drafted for state and federal Louise Harris, regional director of advancement regulatory committees, and in their testimony sought by state and federal legislative bodies on the nation’s most vexing legal and policy problems. Dana Dubis, director of annual giving It is doubly gratifying, though no surprise, to discover how widely and prominently Carolina Susan McLean, director of alumni and donor relations Law alumni stand out in every corner of this state as community servants and public citizens. Kelly Mann, alumni and donor relations coordinator Often leading key local boards and commissions, serving in state legislative and executive posi- Rory Moore, executive assistant tions, and frequently working as the local Atticus Finches of countless towns and hamlets, Carolina Law alumni continue this school’s deeply rooted tradition of giving back to the people of the Old North State. I’m proud to be their dean and to read about their collective work in this issue of UNC School of Law Office Carolina Law. I hope you will be too. of Communications Sincerely, Allison Reid, assistant dean for communications Katherine Kershaw, communications manager

Student Bar Association J.M. Durnovich, 2013-2014 president JOHN CHARLES “JACK” BOGER’74 Dean and Wade Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law

PUBLICATION Carolina Law is published twice per year by the Office of CAROLINA LAW Communications at UNC School of Law. It is distributed to alumni and colleagues. Please update your information at www. Co-Editors ALLISON REID, KATHERINE KERSHAW law.unc.edu/alumni. Copyeditor CHRIS NELSON We continually seek content for publication. Please submit Contributing Writers JESSICA CLARKE, MICHELE LYNN, NANCY OATES AND MARK TOSCZAK alumni class notes to [email protected]. Submit stories and press releases to [email protected] or Carolina Law editor, Designer SARAH CHESNUTT UNC School of Law, 160 Ridge Rd., CB #3380, Chapel Hill, Photographers BRIANA BROUGH, STEVE EXUM, DONN YOUNG NC 27599. For more information, call 919.962.5106. Research Assistant KERRY BOEHM 12,500 copies of the magazine have been printed at a cost of $13,325. 2 SPRING-SUMMER 2013 CAROLINA LAW CONTENTS

VOLUME 37, ISSUE TWO FALL-WINTER 2013

School News 2

Faculty & Research 8

Center News 14

Donor Profile 17

Alumni News 20 COVER STORY MAKING A DIFFERENCE AT HOME 24 Carolina Law faculty, students and alumni share a commitment Class Notes 40 to give back to North Carolina.

On the cover: CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT, ANITA BROWN-GRAHAM ‘91, GARDNER ALTMAN ‘71, J. TROY SMITH JR. ’67, DANA SIMPSON ‘00 Parting Shots 44 Cover photos by Donn Young

DO TRADEMARK LAWYERS MATTER? 10 Faculty Books 46 Faculty members Deborah Gerhardt and Jon P. McClanahan publish research that shows the value of having a trademark lawyer.

LOOKING BACK 18 An excerpt from a new book about Henry Frye ’59, N.C.’s first African American Chief Justice

VOICES 48 Banks in Commodities: Let’s Focus on Issues, not Rhetoric, by Saule T. Omarova Mark your Alumni Weekend will be held HONOR ROLL OF DONORS 32 APRIL 10-12, 2014. Recognizing those who supported Carolina Law this year. calendar! Details on page 20. SCHOOL NEWS

What I Did This Summer: Rising 2Ls Work In New ’Crim Lab’ THE RISING Henry focused on digital forensics for My Gideon, a project 2L STUDENTS named after Gideon v. Wainwright, the famous U.S. Supreme sitting at Court case that ensured all indigent defendants facing a felony computers in charge the access to counsel appointed and paid for by the state. the seminar Students, mentored by expert public defenders in cities around the room at country, collected data on legal factual issues that would be of use UNC School to a public defender arguing a death penalty case. of Law last The students each took a topic under forensic science, such summer were as fingerprints or DNA. They found out everything there is to gratified that know about their topic and distilled it down to a précis on a Wiki the detailed, page. They included relevant cases, trial motions, appellate STEVE EXUM STEVE technical work briefs, scholarly research, checklists and training manuals. They Robert J. Smith they were sent their draft to the lawyer assigned as their mentor, who may doing in the Criminal Justice Reform Project helped create tools have drawn in knowledgeable peers to incorporate more details. that will affect the legal system as a whole and change the lives Eventually, they will have created an online resource for use by of individuals. Robert J. Smith, the UNC assistant professor of public defenders who don’t have the personnel or resources to law who oversaw the students, admits that the students’ peers compile the information. who had taken summer internships with corporate law firms or Smith organized My Gideon while earning his law degree at nonprofit agencies might have had more fun, but the nine students Harvard. To fund the Criminal Justice Reform Project, he used who opted to work for Smith under public interest grants made a a $25,000 grant from the Vital Projects Fund, and UNC School meaningful contribution to their chosen profession. of Law matched $15,000 of it. He received more funding from “This research can be incredibly tedious,” Smith says, “but the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at those bigger, life-changing claims can’t be made unless this Harvard to cover students’ work on My Gideon. time-consuming, dry work is done. These students have to be able The Vital Projects Fund has awarded Smith an additional grant to to see the relationship between the forest and the trees and be fund the death penalty data collection during the academic year. able to work at both levels.” Gabriel Kussin, whose My Gideon topic was DNA – everything The Criminal Justice Reform Project consists of three segments: from explaining mitochondrial DNA and its collection to what collecting information to create a research database on death motions can be filed — interspersed his forensic science research penalty cases; working on the My Gideon online resource for with pulling together information on the past 100 death penalty public defenders; and forming a “temp” pool that understaffed cases around the country. He tracked everything from legal nonprofits and government agencies can draw from for immediate theories used at every level of the case to post-conviction and help on time-sensitive cases. Some students contributed to an habeas, and the demography of the victims and those involved in amicus brief pertaining to the Racial Justice Act in North Carolina. the prosecution and defense of the case. He and his colleagues One student spent the entire summer working on constitutional combined that with information from a 50-state survey on political challenges to the Arizona model jury instructions in the Arizona and judicial data and district attorneys and other community capital consulting office. members invested in death penalty decisions. The remaining students borrowed furniture from around the law “It’s fascinating to see where judicial and political trends of the school, brought in a coffee maker and snacks from home, and death penalty are going,” Kussin says. “It’s sobering, because so taped a sign to the door: “Crim Lab. Do Not Lock.” They kept many people are involved in each case, and there are hundreds their own hours, which has both advantages and disadvantages, of these cases going on across the country, and it’s important to says Stella Kreilkamp, who wants to practice criminal law once be fair to both sides. And it’s heartbreaking, because they all deal she graduates. with someone’s death.” “I’ve never worked in a job with this much freedom before,” Having other students around to bounce ideas off of has helped Kreilkamp says. “You need to be self-motivated to get the work break the gloom of delving into the darkest side of criminal law. “The done without constant supervision. It’s taught me how to manage diversity of opinion makes for a better environment,” Kussin says. my time effectively.” Smith lauded the students for how much they accomplished in Smith broke up each week with Skype or in-person visits from just 10 weeks. well-known lawyers around the country who talked about their work “These students are doing things that public defender offices and various legal issues. That shaped the career goals of at least and capital offices desperately need done but they don’t have time one of the students. Matt W. Henry entered law school with the to do because they are glued to their individual cases,” he says. idea he would “do some kind of government advocacy, something “The work they’re doing seems less glamorous, but everything policy-wonkish up in ” when he graduated. “Now I feel they’re doing has a direct impact on the legal system and I’m on track to go the public defender route,” he says. people’s lives.” —Nancy Oates

2 FALL-WINTER 2013 Student-Run Environmental Law Project Wins ABA Award

THE AREAS OF ENERGY LAW AND ENVIRONMENTAL LAW are becoming more intertwined, prodded by climate change. By increasing awareness of related issues among attorneys and policymakers, UNC School of Law’s Environmental Law Project (ELP) is at the forefront of law student organizations. A signature program of the ELP is the annual Environmental Law Symposium, which has just received the American Bar Association’s Law Student Environment, Energy and Resources Program of the Year award for 2012. The symposium was selected by the ABA’s Section of Environment, Energy and Resources (SEER), and the Holly Bannerman 3L and Victor Flatt award was presented at the annual ABA meeting in San Francisco in August. “We have worked hard to develop these opportunities for the Each year, student papers for the symposium are published on students, but also for the greater environmental community. We CLEAR’s website. ELP and CLEAR host a luncheon after the sympo- are able to contribute to the environmental community now, while sium so practitioners and students can discuss issues. also working to develop future environmental lawyers.” The symposium, “Energy Law and Environmental Law: Growing The ABA award recognizes the far-reaching impact that research Connections Between Two Sides of the Same Coin,” was held in on the local and state level can have. February 2012, as part of UNC School of Law’s Festival of Legal “For a topic to become nationally and globally important, it has Learning. The ELP event featured sessions on hydraulic fracturing, to be demonstrably important to all types of attorneys,” Catherine global warming and energy issues after catastrophes. Papers about Clodfelter 3L says. “The ELP has succeeded in combining current issues in environmental law and policy — written, edited and environmental law issues with other fields. Environmental law reviewed by students — were published for symposium presenta- issues certainly arise nationally and internationally.” Clodfelter tions and distributed to attendees. wrote a paper for the 2012 symposium on contract law issues that “The recognition of the 2012 symposium shows that the ELP emerge during hydraulic fracturing, and was articles editor for the is a model for how other environmental law student organizations 2013 event. could use their expertise to disseminate information and educate “We emphasize the importance of environmental law by showing attorneys and policymakers nationwide on environmental legal how critical it is to have an understanding of environmental law in issues,” says Victor Flatt, Tom & Elizabeth Taft Distinguished practically all other legal fields,” Clodfelter says. Professor in Environmental Law and director of UNC’s Center for Law, The growing need for both energy law and environmental law Environment, Adaptation and Resources (CLEAR). underscores the significance of the ELP’s work. The ELP offers invaluable opportunities to students, including Holly “Climate change is significantly affected by from the use of Bannerman 3L, who wrote a paper, “Atmospheric Litigation: The certain kinds of energy, and jurisdictions like North Carolina Public Trust Approach to Climate Change,” for the 2012 symposium have used energy policy to assist in protecting the environment. and was ELP president for the 2012-2013 academic year. We need a national policy that simultaneously looks at energy, “Students can get published, do real legal work, and be part of a environment, climate and economic development, since they are student organization, all at the same time,” Bannerman says. all important and related,” Flatt says. —Jessica Clark

U.S. News Names UNC Among Most Efficient and Best Return on Investment UNC School of Law was named one of the whose students leave with the least amount Efficiently.” The list was created to illustrate “10 Law Degrees With the Biggest Return on of debt relative to their first-year salaries in “which law schools are able to produce the Investment,” according to U.S. News & World the private sector.” highest educational quality, as determined by Report magazine in an Aug. 13, 2013, article. UNC was also ranked No. 7 in U.S. News their place in our Best Law Schools rankings, UNC School of Law was ranked No. 2 after & World Report magazine’s list of “Highly but spend relatively less money to achieve that University of among “the 10 schools Ranked Law Schools [That] Operate Most quality,” according to the May 2013 article.

CAROLINA LAW 3 SCHOOL NEWS

Grants Help Students Gain Essential Experience at Unpaid Internships

EVERY TIME SOMEONE WALKS IN THE DOOR at Pisgah Legal At Pisgah Legal Services, Williams has gone to clients’ homes Services, Samuel Williams 2L knows something terrible has to document habitability issues, drafted responses to complaints happened. An unexpected job loss, an unwanted diagnosis, and and crafted counter-complaints, and researched legal issues. life for those on the brink of poverty begins to spiral into crisis “Everything we do is so important,” he says, “because everyone mode with a foreclosure notice or an eviction order. During his needs help right now. I get to fight bad guys every day.” summer as an intern at the free civil legal aid law firm in Asheville, For 2L Kathleen Lockwood, working in City for the N.C., Williams has learned, “All anyone ever wants is a fair shot, organization Advocates for Justice goes beyond experiencing what and you can’t get one without an attorney.” it’s like to work as a lawyer every day, drafting complaints and Williams is one of 85 first- and second-year law students petitions and doing legal research. at UNC to receive between $1,000 and $3,000 through UNC The internship has provided network- School of Law’s Public Interest Summer Grant program. The ing opportunities and affirmed her grants offset expenses for students interning at government desire to work in New York after she agencies or nonprofits. While many law schools have grant pro- graduates. grams to help students who choose internships in public service “The internship has enabled me over paid summer associate positions at private law firms, UNC to think seriously about that option is unique in the total amount it contributes, which is about five and given me the courage to follow to 10 times the amount of its peer schools, according to Sylvia through with it, too,” she says. Novinsky, the assistant dean for public service programs. Justin Reimer, a 3L who interned Novinsky says funding comes from a combination of funds at the Wake County District students raise through their organizations’ fundraising events Attorney’s office, was able to appear Kathleen Lockwood 2L (the largest being held by the Carolina Public Interest Law in court on misdemeanor cases Organization), donations from alumni and, most significantly, under the supervision of an experienced attorney. funds earmarked by UNC School of Law Dean Jack Boger ’74 for “You’re getting immediate feedback from a judge and attor- student supplemental learning. neys,” Reimer says. “It is invaluable.” Prior to the economic meltdown of 2008, UNC gave out about He grew up in Raleigh but has a close-up view of a side of life 25 grants per summer. But the legal field changed after 2008, he didn’t have much connection with before. With a court docket Novinsky says. Private firms cut back on summer hiring, yet of nearly 100 cases each morning, Reimer saw the gamut of students still needed hands-on practice of marketable, transfer- humanity, both victims and defendants, from the repentant to the able legal skills they could use in permanent employment. In entitled. He has learned a more nuanced perspective than just response, Boger ratcheted up the school’s contribution to the good guys and bad guys. grants, more than tripling the number of students who could “You hear that prosecutors care only about the numbers, participate. As the economy slowly recovers, the law school is wanting to win as many cases as they can,” he says. “That hasn’t maintaining enough grant funding to open very different worlds been my observation in Wake County at all. A lot of consideration for dozens of students. goes into each case. You see firsthand how people are affected Public interest work “gets students out of the law school by their own choices and the decisions of others and the laws of bubble,” Novinsky says. “It’s valuable for students to see the our state. It has given me compassion. need, hear people’s problems and understand what the law can “At the end of the day, everyone deserves a day in court.” do to help.” —Nancy Oates

Two Students Win University Awards for Public Service The University of North Carolina honored Awards in recognition of their exemplary public Veterans Legal Resource Network and the Meriwether Evans ’13 and Charlotte Stewart 3L service efforts. Evans was recognized for her ACLU Voting Rights Education Project. during a March 2013 awards ceremony hosted by work with the Pro Bono Program, ensuring that “The breadth and depth of the efforts the Carolina Center for Public Service. Seventeen people without economic or political means of these students, faculty, staff and individuals and organizations received honors. could pursue legal claims and rights. Stewart University units exemplify UNC’s commit- Evans and Stewart were two of the five people was recognized for her work to help found the ment to public service and engagement,” who received Robert E. Bryan Public Service Orange County Homeless Court, a statewide said Lynn Blanchard, center director.

4 FALL-WINTER 2013 The Class of 2016 This August, UNC School of Law welcomed the Class of 2016. This year’s entering J.D. class is comprised of 238 students from 28 states, the District of and China, with 70 percent coming from North Carolina. Members of the Class of 2016 hold degrees in 62 majors, earned at 82 undergraduate institutions. There are nine students in this year’s LL.M. Program, including seven from mainland China, one from Taiwan and one from South Korea. Students at orientation, from left,

Breanne Hataway, Jesse Ramos and KATHERINE KERSHAW Phillip Waters.

Former U.S. Solicitor General Forty-Five Honored with Gressman and Pollitt Seth Waxman Delivers Oral Advocacy Awards Commencement Address KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE

UNC SCHOOL OF LAW awarded 45 first-year law students the Eugene Gressman & Daniel H. Pollitt Oral Advocacy Award in April 2013. The annual awards, given by faculty of the Writing and Learning Resources Center, recognize outstanding oral advocacy in the first-year Research, Reasoning, Writing, and Advocacy (RRWA) Program. The awards’ sponsor is the Charlotte firm of Johnston, Allison & Hord. The GRADIMAGES firm’s partners include Michael L. Wilson ’96, who as Chief Justice of the Holderness Waxman encouraged students to commit to public Moot Court Bench worked with Professor Emeritus Ruth McKinney to establish service throughout their legal careers. “Use the tools that your professors have given you to become great the awards in 1995. The awards honor Eugene Gressman, William Rand Kenan Jr. lawyers,” Waxman said. “Use the values that you Professor of Law Emeritus, and Daniel H. Pollitt, Graham Kenan Professor of Law already have in you to become great citizens.” Emeritus, both of whom died in 2010.

Deyneka 2L Wins International Internship Award Natalia Deyneka 2L received for the organization included conducting research and self-designed projects during an International Internship intake interviews with potential asylum the summer of 2013. These awards, funded Award from UNC’s Center clients, providing interpretation services, by private gifts to the UNC Global Education for Global Initiatives, extensive legal research and other tasks Fund and the University, gave students the which enabled her to intern as needed. opportunity for deep engagement with a

ROBERT CAMPELL ROBERT with Human Rights First’s The Center for Global Initiatives awarded global community through work, experiential Natalia Deyneka 2L Refugee Protection Program $134,927 in financial support to 36 students education, teaching or research. in . Her work to complete global internships, independent CAROLINA LAW 5 SCHOOL NEWS

Muller and Brown ‘13 Participate in Auschwitz Fellowship Program

AMONG THE MOST MEMORABLE IMAGES Andrew Brown ’13 recalls experience now, and explores how they can avoid unethical from his recent fellowship is the Grunewald Track 17 memorial in practices. In addition to Berlin, students tour Krakow, the Berlin, a Nazi deportation site with dates and destinations for each Auschwitz I and Birkenau camps, and Nuremberg. person who left from there. For some students, the experience challenges pre-conceived “I was shocked by the sheer breadth and exacting precision of beliefs. “They’re surprised to learn how pervasive the involve- the documentation. Considering the scale of destruction in WWII, ment was of law and lawyers in the Nazi repression and the fact that we still know information to this detail today is a extermination of Jews. They’re surprised to learn about people profound testament to the massive logistical effort facilitated by who defied the regime, resigned their positions, or otherwise thousands of government employees, many of them lawyers,” says refused to collaborate with repression without themselves being Brown, a participant in the Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study killed or punished. I think they’re prompted to feel, in a unique of Professional Ethics (FASPE) program. way, the power that lawyers have, and they develop a much Perhaps no other experience could have underscored more the more acute ethical sensitivity than they get in a law school importance of legal ethics for Brown, who participated this past classroom,” Muller says. summer in the program, run by the Museum of Jewish Heritage Making the trip three times has moved Muller to some conclusions. in New York. Eric Muller, Dan K. Moore Distinguished Professor in “We focus too much in American legal education on comforting Jurisprudence and Ethics at UNC School of Law, is an instructor stories about good lawyers fighting injustice, and not enough in the law track of FASPE, which includes graduate students in on the uncomfortable stories about lawyers who’ve gone astray, several disciplines from different schools. or have used their professional energies to support or defend “Studying the role that government lawyers and low-level bureau- injustice,” he says. “Some law students crave an educational crats played in perpetrating the Holocaust reaffirms the immense experience that pushes beyond the development of skill at importance of always thinking about ethics, especially in the making arguments and encourages examination of how to form a mundane and seemingly small day-to-day matters,” Brown says. professional identity.” The law curriculum examines why Nazi judges and lawyers were Brown is such a student. involved, presents hypothetical ethical issues that attorneys might “The critical takeaway for me is the importance of connecting minimum standards of professional conduct and ethics to larger normative considerations of justice, goodness and truth,” he says. “The modern approach to American legal ethics often seems to outsource ethical considerations to the drafters of the Model Rules. As a result, legal ethics begins to resemble statutory interpretation, wherein lawyers can push the envelope and then rely on their ability to advocate around the edges of the rules if called to account. FASPE’s primary lesson for me was the importance of placing greater emphasis on the aspirational questions of ‘ought.’” Aside from legal ethics, Muller has a powerful personal connec- tion to the program. His father was a refugee from the Holocaust, and his great-uncle died in a camp. “I believe my uncle would be proud to know I am commemorating his life and death by helping new generations of lawyers reflect on Muller, left, and Brown at the memorial at Track 17 of the Grunewald train their own moral formation,” Muller says. —Jessica Clarke station in Berlin.

Davis Society Welcomes Eight Members from the Class of 2013 Eight law students from the Class of 2013 were and its faculty and students. In making its selections, the selected to become members of one of the most Davis Society selection committee considers leadership prestigious societies at UNC School of Law. The ability, integrity, dedication and character as exemplified James E. and Carolyn B. Davis Society is intended to by extracurricular activities and academic achievement. recognize eight third-year students possessing both This year’s inductees were: Andrew Brown, Annie Bryan, academic and personal excellence and a willingness Meriwether Evans, Yolanda Fair, Yasir Latifi, Nick Miller, to serve for the betterment of the School of Law Adam Parker and Laura Sloan.

6 FALL-WINTER 2013 ‘A Tale of Two Law Schools’ Honors History Between UNC and NCCU deputy director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights; and Mark Dorosin ’94, adjunct professor of law and manag- ing attorney at the UNC Center for Civil Rights. “The highlight of the panel was hearing about Professor Daye’s experience as dean at NCCU,” says Safa Sajadi 2L, who serves as co-chair of the Multicultural and Diversity Committee at Carolina Law. “At times the discussion was brutally honest in terms of the past and the reasons why NCCU was formed. Other times the discussion was more hopeful because both schools represent the best of public education in North Carolina.” From left, Charles Daye, Mark Dorosin, Gene Nichol and Irving Joyner Dorosin and Nichol spoke about pivotal cases that fostered the development of NCCU. Nichol also spoke about his experiences working with NCCU students, ON FEBRUARY 27, 2013, students and professors from UNC School faculty and deans. Joyner candidly urged students to pursue of Law and North Carolina Central University (NCCU) School of Law public service and to consider going back to their communities presented a panel discussion honoring the shared history between and doing the work that needs to be done. the two schools. “The Tale of Two Law Schools event provided fascinating, The event was held in the Great Hall at NCCU School of Law, and unexpected insights into the shared history between our two included distinguished panelists Irving Joyner, professor of law schools,” says Will Dickey 2L. at NCCU School of Law; Gene Nichol, Boyd Tinsley Distinguished The event was a collaborative effort between students at Professor of Law and director of the UNC Center on Poverty, Work NCCU School of Law and Carolina Law’s Multicultural and & Opportunity; Charles Daye, Henry Brandis Professor of Law and Diversity Committee. Students Work with Legal Aid to Draft Wills for Low-Income, Rural Residents over Spring Break STUDENTS FROM UNC SCHOOL OF LAW spent three days of their land that has been passed down informally for generations spring break donating their time and expertise to help with the because they lack the appropriate legal documentation to legal needs of low income residents in eastern North Carolina. establish ownership. Students worked with attorneys from Legal Aid of North Carolina “Having your legal affairs in order is critical to ensuring that to prepare end-of-life legal documents — wills, living wills, powers land and other family wealth stays in the right hands,” says Sylvia of attorney and health care powers of attorney — for low-income Novinsky, assistant dean for public service programs at UNC and elderly residents of Greene, Halifax and Pitt counties during a School of Law. “These clinics are a great opportunity for families series of free legal clinics in March. to receive free legal help so they can protect what is theirs.” The clinics are sponsored by the UNC School of Law Wills At the clinics, law students working under the supervision of Project, a partnership of the UNC School of Law Pro Bono licensed legal aid attorneys conducted interviews and drafted legal Program, the UNC Center for Civil Rights and Legal Aid of North documents, which were fully executed and notarized at the end Carolina. The partners launched the project in 2008 in response of the clinic. In addition to helping families, this project gives law to the growing problem of land loss among African-American students real-life experience serving clients and exposes them to families in eastern North Carolina. Families can lose long-held public service and the legal needs of low-income communities.

Pro Bono Program Included in 2013 President’s Community Service Honor Roll with Distinction

The Pro Bono Program at UNC School of Law Distinction by the Corporation for National and Participants work throughout the year with played an instrumental part in helping the Community Service. community partners, legal aid offices, law school University earn recognition as an institution with The Pro Bono Program connects Carolina Law student groups, professors, alumni, private a strong commitment to community service. students with hundreds of pro bono projects attorneys, and fellow students to facilitate UNC-Chapel Hill has been named to the 2013 under the supervision of practicing attorneys individual pro bono projects, special clinics, and President’s Community Service Honor Roll with in both public interest and private practice. group trips.

CAROLINA LAW 7 CAROLINA LAW 7 FACULTY & RESEARCH

Omarova Article Puts Questionable Banking Practices in National Spotlight

t may be banks involved in trading companies regarding their metals physical commodities, a topic that has warehousing activities. And Icome to national prominence largely the Department of Justice has due to UNC School of Law George R. indicated interest in potential Ward Associate Professor of Law Saule antitrust issues. Omarova’s seminal research and congres- Starting a national debate was sional testimony. Omarova’s aim. Omarova’s new article, “The Merchants “I hope Goldman Sachs, of Wall Street: Banking, Commerce and JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley Commodities,” (Minnesota Law Review, will have to explain what exactly forthcoming 2013) contends that regula- they own and do in this vast tions permitting U.S. financial holding space and prove they should be companies’ involvement in commodities allowed to continue their activities potentially undermine the fundamental for the benefit of the American principle of separation of banking and economy. I also hope that the commerce. That separation aims to ensure Federal Reserve takes a serious a sound banking system and smooth credit look at its own failure to under- flow, and to prevent too much economic stand the systemic implications power in any one financial institution. The DONN YOUNG of allowing big banks to morph Saule T. Omarova regulatory structure to monitor banking into commodity merchants. ... organizations’ dealings in global energy and commodity markets is And it would be great to see Congress take a hard look at the insufficient, according to the article. relevant provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act, added by “The need to prevent potentially excessive accumulations of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, which effectively allowed both risk exposure and market power in the hands of a few large the recent expansion of banks into physical commodities without FHCs (financial holding companies) is paramount in this respect. imposing any meaningful limitations,” Omarova says. When the same banking organizations that control access to Her research has drawn interest from , Finan- money and credit also control access to such universal produc- cial Times, Reuters, Wall Street Journal, National Public Radio, Bloomberg tion inputs as raw materials and energy, they are in a position to BusinessWeek, The Huffington Post, ,Salon.com, exercise disproportionate control over the entire economic — and, “The Daily Show” and others. by extension, political — system,” the article states. Supporters of banks’ involvement in commodities contend that Omarova highlights Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and banks can “provide cheaper financing for commercial companies JPMorgan Chase & Co. that produce or consume such commodities,” Omarova says. The key point of her article and her testimony July 23 before “The real policy question is whether the efficiencies accruing to the Senate Banking Committee’s Subcommittee on Financial private parties in any specific transaction are fundamentally rooted Institutions and Consumer Protection is that, to address potentially in the public subsidy we, as taxpayers, provide to big banks,” she crucial public policy issues, regulators and the public must know says. “Is it really a socially efficient solution to allow this indirect the extent and implications of holding companies’ dealings in gas, spread of the public subsidy to benefit individual companies’ oil, metals and other commodities. purely commercial activities that were never meant to be publicly Omarova’s article has moved federal regulatory agencies and subsidized? It may well be that our society decides that’s the best Congress in that direction. She notes that shortly before the option. But that decision must be based on a full analysis of the July 23 hearing, the Federal Reserve said it was reviewing its pros and cons of allowing big banks to act as oil, gas, power and 2003 decision that for this first time allowed a financial holding metals merchants.” —Jessica Clarke company to trade physical commodities. After the hearing, JPMorgan announced its intention to potentially divest at least EDITOR’S NOTE: For more insight from Omarova into the some of its commodities holdings. The Commodity Futures issue of banks trading in commodities, read her essay in the Trading Commission has subpoenaed Goldman Sachs and other Voices feature on p. 48.

8 FALL-WINTER 2013 Hornstein Delivers Popular Course to

Thousands Online EXUM STEVE Donald T. Hornstein

t the end of the day, when Donald T. Hornstein, Aubrey get feedback on how well the class understands a particular point. L. Brooks Professor of Law at UNC School of Law, packs Students work at their own pace and can participate in an online A up his work to bring home, it includes his laundry. His discussion forum. Hornstein has hired some UNC students who office in Van Hecke-Wettach Hall doubles as a video recording have taken his for-credit course to monitor the forums to correct studio where he tapes his lectures for a massive open online course inaccurate contributions and flag teachable moments where — MOOC — he is preparing to teach on environmental law. Light- Hornstein should weigh in. He also holds office hours via Skype. A reflecting umbrellas loiter in the corner, PowerPoint slide printouts group of students in Hong Kong, for instance, can gather around a are taped to the wall above and behind his computer monitor, and computer during their lunch hour, and he’ll Skype with them from a week’s worth of shirts and ties, including a tux and bow tie, hang home at midnight. from hangers on a hook on the back of his office door. During an August morning recording session, pumped “I might record a few lectures in one session,” he says, “but I have up from the football team’s practice and through his closed windows, to put on a different shirt for each lecture so the students don’t think and doors slammed in a nearby stairwell, more points on the I slept in my clothes.” MOOC learning curve. Hornstein has taken to recording from 5 to And when he wants to splice in new material to a lecture he’s 8 in the morning, when the building is generally quiet. already recorded, he first must change into the shirt and tie he wore “I can always get up earlier than football players,” he says. when he originally recorded it. Coursera owns the platform and is authorized to repeat the It’s all part of the learning curve as UNC enters the world of MOOC for an “initial period” — still the subject of contract MOOCs. An abbreviated version of Hornstein’s very successful negotiations. But Hornstein owns the intellectual property rights to “Introduction to Environmental Law and Policy” course for under- the content he creates, so it can’t be edited without the professor’s graduates is one of five MOOCs UNC has contracted to deliver to approval, and if the material goes out of date, he can pull it. Coursera, one of the largest online education providers. The courses “I can’t teach something that is no longer true,” Hornstein says. are free and provide supplemental content only; students will receive “My reputation depends on the content being correct.” no course credit for taking them. Hornstein does not see MOOCs as replacing education at a In February, a Provost’s Task Force selected the UNC professors residential school. But in teaching his MOOC, he is learning who will teach the MOOCs. Of the hundreds of professors already instructional techniques to make his in-person teaching better. He teaching MOOCs elsewhere, Hornstein is only the second American has taken MOOCs from renowned professors himself because he law professor to date. always is interested in learning something new. “Online education has its strengths and weaknesses,” Hornstein More than two dozen universities have partnered with Coursera says, “but UNC wants to stay ahead of the curve.” since the platform launched in 2012. Hornstein’s six-week MOOC began airing Sept. 16, offering four “Partnering with Coursera represents one more way we can 10-minute lectures (he calls them “chunkettes”) per week. Almost make Carolina and the high-quality teaching of our faculty acces- 17,000 students, many from outside the U.S., signed up. He includes sible to online learners,” Thorp said at the time UNC announced multiple-choice quizzes so students can test their mastery of the its participation. “This is the next logical step to expanding our material, and he can poll students at any time during the lecture to online presence.” —Nancy Oates

CAROLINA LAW 9 FACULTY & RESEARCH

Do Trademark Lawyers Matter? ‘Emphatically, Yes,’ Says a New Paper by Professors D. Gerhardt and McClanahan STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM STEVE Deborah R. Gerhardt Jon P. McClanahan

ew research by two UNC School of Law professors, An inexperienced applicant might not make it clear that the appli- Deborah R. Gerhardt and Jon P. McClanahan, shows cation is not claiming exclusive right to use the word “brewery” Nthat, although the trademark registration process is fairly and might not know to include a disclaimer that the trademark is straightforward, when the going gets tough, the tough do best for the use of “brewery” only in connection with the rest of the with a trademark lawyer. business name. “Our data supported that having a lawyer made a difference in “In doing this research, I learned how common office actions are,” every scenario we looked at,” says Gerhardt, an assistant professor Gerhardt says. “Understanding how to respond to them is something of law. we need to focus on when training young lawyers.” Gerhardt and McClanahan, a clinical associate professor of Another obstacle comes after the trademark is approved. The law, reported their findings in “Do Trademark Lawyers Matter?” USPTO publishes each new trademark in the Official Gazette. published in the Spring 2013 issue of Stanford Technology Law Review. Anyone with a similar brand will have a set period of time after In business, a brand represents a company’s reputation. Every publication to petition that the application be canceled. Gerhardt business, nonprofit, school or service provider has a trademark for and McClanahan found that brand owners who hired an experi- the name of its organization and probably more marks for each enced lawyer had a 50 percent greater likelihood of success than service or product it offers. Registering a business name or logo inexperienced applicants applying on their own. as a trademark through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office The USPTO has been collecting data on brand applications since (USPTO) provides a great deterrent against others choosing the 1884 and released a wealth of that data in 2012. To conduct their same brand. Registration also offers broad national protection, study, Gerhardt and McClanahan mined information from more giving an owner the right to stop others from using a brand in than 5.8 million trademark applications filed since 1984, a year that ways that might confuse or capitalize on the success of a brand to marked the beginning of more complete information on each file. draw away sales. According to McClanahan, each record contained 1,500 possible “Businesses have to think defensively about brands,” Gerhardt data points. says. “When budgets are tight, businesses question whether it’s “Literally hundreds of variables for millions of applications,” worth hiring a lawyer for something they might be able to do McClanahan says. “Prior to the release of that data, neither themselves. Trademark registration is one place where it does make trademark attorneys nor applicants knew much about the landscape sense to hire an expert who really knows what he or she is doing.” of trademark applications or the likelihood that a proposed mark The USPTO, as a government agency that makes money, treats would proceed to registration. It allows researchers to better applicants like the paying customers they are. The agency has made understand and quantify how legal systems function. Before the it easier to file a trademark application online, and its website has a availability of this data, such an understanding was anecdotal and helpful section of answers to frequently asked questions that guide intuitive at best.” an inexperienced lay person through the application process. Once Gerhardt and McClanahan have gone back into the data to the application is filed, the USPTO assigns an examiner to the case. examine the success of lawyers in international trademark applica- If the examiner finds a problem, an “office action” is issued and the tions. They presented their findings to an international conference of registration process halts until the problem is solved. law professors over the summer at the Intellectual Property Scholars “That’s when it matters hugely to have a trademark lawyer,” Conference in New York. Gerhardt says. “Because I train trademark lawyers, I wanted to know: Does it Fully two-thirds of trademark applicants face an obstacle that matter that I’m putting all these trademark lawyers out into the results in an office action. It might be something as simple as a world?” Gerhardt says. “It was a gratifying project to see what a restaurant name that includes a common word, such as “brewery.” difference having a lawyer made.” —Nancy Oates

10 FALL-WINTER 2013 Read the full brief at http://bit.ly/16ei0M8. STEVE EXUM STEVE Barbara Fedders

Fedders Submits Brief to N.C. Center for Safer Schools UNC SCHOOL OF LAW clinical assistant professor Barbara A. says they drafted the response out of concern that the school Fedders co-authored an issue brief submitted May 7 to the North safety debate that has emerged after the tragedy in Newtown, Carolina Center for Safer Schools, a state program created in March Conn., is too narrowly focused on physical security. To better 2013 that is currently seeking public comment on school safety inform the debate, Fedders says the brief provides important and issues. The brief, endorsed by 56 organizations in North Carolina often-overlooked facts about school safety, recommendations and across the country, provides a comprehensive, research-based for proven methods of ensuring student well-being, examples of approach to the issue of school safety, according to Fedders. reforms from other cities and states, and an extensive bibliog- Fedders developed the brief with attorneys from Legal Aid of raphy of literature on the issue. North Carolina’s Advocates for Children’s Services project. She

IN MEMORIAM

Harry E. Groves, Henry L. Brandis Professor of Law Emeritus HARRY E. GROVES, Henry L. Brandis Professor of Minnesota, and . In 1991, the National Bar of Law Emeritus, died Aug. 24 at the age of 91. Association inducted him into its Hall of Fame. He was an active member of the UNC School of The University of North Carolina has received and catalogued Law faculty who built a remarkably varied and 2,500 items of Groves’ papers in its collection, including papers distinguished legal career in law practice, legal related to his ongoing interest in the constitutional development of Malaysia, as well as his concern for affirmative action and the education, governmental service, and academic future of African American institutions. administration, serving not only as a chaired professor at Carolina “Harry was a man of warmth and grace, who easily bore the Law, but as Dean of North Carolina Central School of Law and leader sophistication and erudition he had gained as a citizen of the of two other law schools and a university. world,” UNC School of Law Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 In 1986, the year of his formal retirement at 65, the North Carolina Bar said in a message to the law school. “He nonetheless manifested Association awarded him its prestigious Judge John L. Parker Award. His great and continuing interest in Carolina Law and its future. He was formal retirement brought no rest; instead, Groves served as a visiting a wonderful member of our faculty, and those who knew him will professor at the law schools of Memphis State University, the University miss him greatly.” PHOTO COURTESY OF THE UNC SOUTHERN HISTORICAL COLLECTION HISTORICAL OF THE UNC SOUTHERN COURTESY PHOTO

CAROLINA LAW 11 FACULTY & RESEARCH FACULTY & RESEARCH

School Welcomes Three New Faculty Members UNC School of Law welcomed three new faculty members for the fall 2013 semester

Beth S. Dana Kathleen Posner ’97 Remus DeLaney Beth S. Posner Dana Remus Thomas formally joins the formally joins the Kathleen DeLaney faculty this year as faculty after visiting Thomas earned her clinical assistant here last spring and J.D. from NYU professor of law. After after teaching at the School of Law in two years as the University of New 2005 and an LL.M. in

STEVE EXUM STEVE statewide coordinator EXUM STEVE Hampshire School of EXUM STEVE taxation from NYU of domestic violence Law and Drexel in 2010. She practiced tax law at Cooley LLP initiatives for Legal Services of North Carolina, University’s Earle Mack School of Law. She from 2007-2011 and Simpson Thacher & she served first in the Office of the State earned her J.D. from in 2002. Bartlett LLP from 2005-2007, then was acting Appellate Defender, then as staff attorney and Following law school, she clerked on the U.S. assistant professor of tax law at NYU School managing attorney in Legal Aid’s Hillsborough Supreme Court for Associate Justice Samuel of Law from 2011-2013. She writes primarily and Pittsboro offices. Since 2003, she has been Alito and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the on tax law and behavioral economics. Her fall a visiting or adjunct clinical professor in various Third Circuit for Judge Anthony Scirica, and course is Contracts and she will teach Income clinical programs at UNC School of Law. served as an associate at Cravath, Swaine & Taxation in the spring. Posner has also been an advisor for the Moore LLP. Her research interests center on Domestic Violence Advocacy 50B Project and legal and judicial ethics and the regulation of further coordinates and supervises the Pro the legal profession. She is teaching Judicial Bono Divorce Project, in which volunteer law Clerkship Writings this fall, and in the spring students represent low-income clients in simple will teach Professional Responsibility: Ethical divorces. Posner is teaching the Immigration Lawyering in Context and Property. Clinic in both the fall and spring semesters. School Announces Endowed Professorships STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM STEVE EXUM STEVE DONN YOUNG Richard Saver Richard E. Myers II Jeffrey Michael Hirsch W. Mark C. Weidemaier Thomas A. Kelley III Saule T. Omarova SIX FACULTY MEMBERS were awarded endowed professorships this After consulting with faculty and staff, Boger submitted nomina- fall, as announced by Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 in July. tions to the provost, which were approved at a July meeting of “Our faculty is full of colleagues who are making outstanding the UNC Board of Trustees. contributions in scholarship, teaching and service,” Boger says. Those awarded professorships include: Richard Saver, Arch T. “One traditional means to celebrate such high achievement is Allen Distinguished Professorship; Richard E. Myers II ’98, Henry the bestowal of endowed professorships. Thanks to the efforts of Brandis Professorship; Jeffrey Michael Hirsch, Geneva Yeargan former deans and our talented advancement staff, and especially Rand Distinguished Professorship; W. Mark C. Weidemaier, Ralph thanks to the generosity of alumni and friends, we are blessed M. Stockton Jr. Distinguished Scholar of Law; Thomas A. Kelley with an unusual number of endowed professorships within the III, Paul B. Eaton Distinguished Professorship; and Saule T. School of Law.” Omarova, George R. Ward Professorship.

12 SPRING-SUMMERFALL-WINTER 2013 2013 School Announces Faculty Awards UNC School of Law presented three awards to distinguished faculty in May. DONN YOUNG From left, Joseph E. Kennedy, W. Mark C. Weidemaier, Laura N. Gasaway, Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ‘74, and Robert P. Mosteller.

THE ROBERT G. BYRD AWARD for Excellence and Creativity in The Outstanding Service Award was awarded to Laura N. Teaching was awarded to Joseph E. Kennedy, professor of law. The Gasaway, Paul B. Eaton Distinguished Professor of Law. This Byrd Award is named for Robert G. Byrd, an alumnus of the school award is conferred annually on the basis of service performed who served as a member of the faculty from 1963 until 2004, and within the two years prior to the year it is given. A faculty member as dean from 1974-1979. is honored for exemplary public service, measured by the time, effort and creativity devoted to service, as well as the impact on The James H. Chadbourn Award for Excellence in Scholarship the community. was presented to W. Mark C. Weidemaier, Ralph M. Stockton Jr. Distinguished Scholar of Law and associate professor of law, for Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 also recognized the service his article “Judging Lite: How Arbitrators Make and Use Precedent” of Robert P. Mosteller, J. Dickson Phillips Distinguished Professor in the North Carolina Law Review. The Chadbourn Award is named of Law, who stepped down as associate dean for academic affairs for James H. Chadbourn, editor-in-chief of the North Carolina Law in June after three years in the position. Review in 1930-1931, a member of the UNC Law faculty from The retirement of two faculty members was also celebrated at 1931-1936 (who later joined the Harvard law school faculty), and the event. Gasaway retired at the end of June after serving as a co-author of leading texts in civil procedure, federal court and director of the law library from 1985-2006 and associate dean evidence. In 1933, while at UNC, Chadbourn bravely authored a for academic affairs from 2006 to 2010; and Caroline N. Brown, controversial work titled “Lynching and the Law.” This award honors professor of law, who has been at UNC School of Law since 1979, a faculty member’s distinguished law journal article. is entering phased retirement over the next three years.

CAROLINA LAW 13 CENTER NEWS

UNC Center for Civil Rights Highlights Plight of ‘Excluded’ Communities in North Carolina

orth Carolina’s racially segregated 2013 REPORT environmental justice, education and African American and Latino housing. The chances that residents of these Nneighborhoods are more likely to The State of predominately non-white neighborhoods suffer from inequality in living conditions Exclusion lived within one mile of an environmental related to housing, environmental justice and An Empirical Analysis of the hazard, such as a landfill or incinerator, or equal access to education, according to a new Legacy of Segregated that their closest school was failing or high- Communities in North Carolina report by the UNC Center for Civil Rights. poverty, were almost double that of the state The report, “The State of Exclusion: An averages, according to Gilbert. Empirical Analysis of the Legacy of Segre- In addition to the report, the project’s gated Communities in North Carolina,” was website, www.uncinclusionproject.org, prompted by the center’s work representing features an interactive map that illustrates what the center staff refers to as “excluded” the impacts of segregation in communities communities in the state. across North Carolina. Peter Gilbert, the author of the study, The paper and interactive map are the which was funded by a grant from the first phase of what the center has named the Norflet Progress Fund and by Equal Justice Inclusion Project, according to Gilbert. The Works, and other staff of the UNC Center second phase, launched this June, examines for Civil Rights studied data from the 2010 examined the clusters and measuredwww.uncinclusionproject.org and 20 North Carolina counties in greater U.S. Census to identify potentially excluded mapped the potential for inequality in five detail. In the third and final phase, the communities, beginning with every census areas: environmental justice, voting rights, center will research individual communities block that was at least 75 percent non- housing, municipal services and education. in the 20 counties, including conducting white, and then clustered those communi- Of the five areas examined, dramatic site visits and interviews, and documenting ties that were contiguous. The study then disparate impacts were found in three: histories from the community perspective.

UNC Center for Civil Rights Argues Pitt County School Desegregation Case in Federal Court

After more than five years representing a group of African- American parents and the Pitt County Coalition for Educating Black Children, and an important victory at the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2012, the Center for Civil Rights’ school desegregation case, Everett et al v. Pitt County Schools, went to trial in U.S. District Court in Greenville, N.C. The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and Dechert LLP co-counseled on the case. Visit www. law.unc.edu/centers/civilrights for case updates.

14 FALL-WINTER 2013 “To Make Real the Promises of Democracy” DONN YOUNG The Center for Civil Rights hosted a panel discussion on the 2012 Supreme Court term (post-Fisher and Shelby County) From left, Theodore Shaw, Professor of Professional Practice in Law at Columbia Law School and former LDF Director; Anita Earls, Southern Coalition for Social Justice; Damon Hewitt, NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund; and Mark Dorosin, UNC Center for Civil Rights.

Media Law Center Hosts Discussions on Corruption in Politics and FCC Rules

n March 2013, the UNC Center for Media Law and Policy hosted Lawrence ILessig, Roy L. Furman Professor of Law and Leadership at Harvard Law School and director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at , who spoke to a standing-room-only crowd in the law school’s rotunda about corrup- tion in politics and the media’s complicity and complacency. Lessig also spoke at a roundtable discussion with faculty and students, where he answered questions on topics ranging from copyright reform to political movements. In February, the center organized a public discussion on “The FCC, Media Ownership and the State.” The event focused on the Federal Communica- tion Commission’s media ownership rules and their impact on the media’s ability to meet the information needs of North Carolina communities. The panel discussion was moderated by Teresa Artis, former vice president and general counsel with Capitol Broadcasting Company, and included the following panelists: Michael Copps, former FCC chair; Penny Abernathy, Knight Professor of Digital Media Economics at the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication; Jim Goodmon, presi- dent and CEO, Capitol Broadcasting Company; Jane Mago, executive vice president and general counsel, National Association of Broadcasters; Bob Phillips, executive director, Common Cause North Carolina; and Orage Quarles III, president and publisher, The News & Observer. JULIA WALL Lawrence Lessig

CAROLINA LAW 15 CENTER NEWS

Poverty Center Presents High School Curriculum on Study of Poverty

he UNC Center on Poverty, Work Tand Opportunity is working with a Durham, N.C., teacher to disseminate a curriculum on the study of poverty for high school students. In partnership with the center, Brian McDonald, a teacher at Jordan High School, devel- oped the six-unit course that aims to inform a new generation of Americans about the history, causes and effects of domestic poverty as well as the dimen- sion of poverty in society today. “Learning about economic inequality is the first step to creating both an honest dialogue about poverty in this country and also finding legitimate solutions to the inequities that exist between the wealthy and the poor,” McDonald says. “A tions and measuring poverty. Each unit Gene Nichol, Boyd Tinsley Distinguished curriculum like this allows for that conversa- is designed to be easily included in a Professor of Law and director of the tion and, ideally, creates a new generation variety of classes like social studies, history, center. “That’s why I’m delighted with the of responsible citizens willing to address the economics and political systems, or teachers development of this powerful high school differences that exist.” can use all six units as a basis for an entire poverty curriculum. And it’s an honor to The course examines the American class on the study of poverty. work with an astonishing teacher like Brian Dream, the war on poverty, the Great “One of the greatest challenges of North McDonald. We love him almost as much as Depression, financial literacy, popula- Carolina poverty is its invisibility,” says his students do.”

Central Bank of Nigeria Visits UNC he UNC Center for Banking and companies because universal banks in Broome, Wells Fargo Professor of Banking TFinance hosted nine bankers from Nigeria have been directed by the Nigerian Law; Saule T. Omarova, George R. Ward the Central Bank of Nigeria in May. The government to sell their nonbanking Associate Professor of Law; and Kenneth representatives came to the to units or adopt a holding company model. Spong, assistant vice president and economist learn about the regulation of bank holding Bankers met with center Director Lissa from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. The group also visited BB&T in Winston-Salem, N.C., to learn about compliance, risk management, funding, liquidity, intercompany transactions and insurance.

16 FALL-WINTER 2013 DONORDonor PROFILE Profile

Class of 2013 Gift Honors N.C. Chief Justice Henry Frye ’59 with Commissioned Portrait for Law School BY MICHELE LYNN

for a new scholarship “I hope that when people see this portrait fund, were considered, they remember me as someone who cared the Class of 2013 wanted about the community and who tried to to give something make a positive difference in the world, tangible. The 3L Class particularly in North Carolina,” he says. Gift committee leaders Collins accompanied Justice Frye to the — Collins, Charlie Hiser initial sitting with noted portrait painter John and Judson Williamson Seibels Walker. — polled classmates who “I enjoyed watching and listening to the ultimately decided on the conversation between the Chief Justice and portrait of Justice Frye. the young and talented law student just a In April, the week away from his graduation,” Walker committee organized says. “It was easy to see and reflect on how a class gift kickoff phenomenal Chief Justice Frye’s life and celebration at Top of accomplishments have been. His relevance the Hill Restaurant in and his inspiration are clearly still changing downtown Chapel Hill. lives, and that moment watching the young The first bill Frye wrote and introduced in the 1969 General Assembly “This gift represents so student with the senior judge punctuated, called for an amendment to the state constitution to remove the literacy many of the good and for me, the special significance of why this requirement for voting. It passed both houses but was not approved by the voters when put on the ballot in 1970 (courtesy Frye family). right aspects that UNC portrait will have such enduring relevance and School of Law is known importance in the law school’s collection.” .hanks to the vision and generosity for: public service, diversity, leadership and The class raised the funds to commission of the Class of 2013, UNC School giving back to the state of North Carolina,” the painting in partnership with the UNC Tof Law will soon be graced by a Hiser said during his talk to the 60 classmates School of Law Office of Advancement, which portrait of Chief Justice Henry Frye ’59, in attendance at the kickoff. “Justice Frye’s reached out to alumni and other friends of an elected official and judge who was the professional career tracks and celebrates the law school while student leaders solicited first African-American Chief Justice of the many of the same ideas that Carolina Law their classmates for gifts. Together, they raised North Carolina Supreme Court. promotes and encourages in its students. That nearly $17,000 from 109 donors, including “Our class wanted to pick a gift that was is why we are so pleased that we have the 68 students. The portrait will be unveiled at a thoughtful and not only brought the class opportunity to be the class that recognizes ceremony in the spring. together but also honored an important this great alumnus and helps immortalize his “It’s nothing short of inspiring when legacy at the law school that would inspire legacy within the halls of Carolina Law.” a generous group of graduating students, future generations,” says Jeremy Collins, 2013 Frye says he was honored to be chosen law alumni and friends come together in class president. “I feel like we accomplished and that he would be pleased if the portrait support of such a worthy gift,” says Dana all of those things with this gift.” and his story inspire others to attend law Dubis, director of annual giving for UNC While other gift ideas, including support school and work to better the community. School of Law. “Through this student-led philanthropic effort, a community of ”Justice Frye’s professional career tracks and supporters helped transform the idea of a portrait into a tangible reality. For years to celebrates many of the same ideas that Carolina come, the portrait of Chief Justice Frye will Law promotes and encourages in its students.” stand as a fine work of art with an important and inspirational message to share with those — JEREMY COLLINS ’13 who cross its path.”

CAROLINA LAW 17 LOOKING BACK

Henry Frye ’59: North Carolina’s First African American Chief Justice

AN EXCERPT FROM THE NEW BOOK BY HOWARD E. COVINGTON JR.

probably no more so than when he was on active duty in Japan or Korea. He reminded himself that he was in law school to make good grades, not fast friends. Manning Hall sits in the heart of the campus at the east end of a quadrangle just off Polk Place, the long sloping lawn between South Building, which was the university’s administrative center, and the impressive hulk of the campus library. It had been the home of the law school since the building opened in 1923. When Frye arrived, the school’s faculty was composed of men, most of whom had been teaching in Chapel Hill since the 1920s and 1930s. Some of them had helped North Carolina’s attorney general prepare his argu- ments in favor of separate-but-equal schools before the U.S. Supreme Court. It would be another year before a “young man,” Daniel H. Pollitt, a former marine and left-leaning lawyer in his mid-30s, would join the faculty and fill the vacancy created when Professor Henry Frye was sworn in as an associate justice of the N.C. Supreme Court in February 1983 with his wife, Shirley, holding three Bibles (courtesy Frye family). William Aycock was named chancellor of the university. Pollitt would add some spice to Frye’s studies during his last two years. enry E. Frye walked up the steps of Manning Hall on the campus of the University of North Carolina in September aaa H1956 and became the first African American to enter the university’s law school as a first-year student. This footnote in When Frye arrived in Chapel Hill, three years had passed since history was far less important to Frye than his desire to convince his he had seen the inside of a college classroom. Still, he believed mother he had made the right decision. The son that Pearl Frye had he was ready. He was confident he could make the grade in law, hoped to see in a clerical robe was set on becoming a lawyer. Frye despite his background in science, and his experience in the Air was determined to overcome her belief that a man of the law could Force had only reinforced his confidence that he could compete never be as honorable as a man of the cloth. with whites. Nonetheless, what lay ahead of him in law school Frye was one of 13 among the nearly 7,000 would be different; cultural biases did not inhabit the pure sciences white students on the campus, and he was the only one of his race that had been the foundation of his undergraduate degree. That among the 105 first-year students in the law school. His arrival was not always the case with history, economics and the law. on campus was unremarkable, especially for the law school, where Much like his white peers, Frye discovered he was more classes had been racially integrated since the fall of 1951. He wasn’t comfortable in some courses than he was in others. He easily alone. George Green of Raleigh, a transfer to the law school, was grasped the concepts of criminal law, for example. Professor beginning his third year. Nonetheless, Frye was isolated, but Albert Coates carried his students through the particulars, probing

18 FALL-WINTER 2013 each point of an offense for its foundation. Consider the crime and eight or nine cases in a short period of time and it was pretty of breaking and entering, Coates would say. If the defendant had confusing. I suggested he do blacks and Railway Labor Act. He did one foot inside a house, and went no farther, was that entering? If that and did a very good job. It was pretty important, especially to the door was cracked open, and someone entered uninvited, did the readers of the Law Review.” that amount to a breaking? Frye could visualize the criminal law Frye’s research took him to cases in a variety of state courts, and its application. At the same time, the scholar in him rose to as well as the record in the appeals court that had denied the the challenges in his legal methods course where students learned workers membership in a union that, by law, was responsible for how to mine the law found in court decisions from across the land. representing their interests. Frye buried himself in the law library The courses he found most difficult were those that simply had as he approached his deadline. When he planned to work late he no connection with his personal experience. He knew nothing called [his wife] Shirley to let her know his plans. At the time, the about business, and was totally unfamiliar with corporations and two were living in Chapel Hill and sharing a house with a medical how they were organized. “The things that my contracts teacher student and his wife. Shirley had joined him in the spring of 1959 thought were simple, I thought were complicated,” Frye said. after she was forced into a leave of absence by school rules that “The ones he thought were complicated, I thought were simple. prohibited expectant mothers from working in classrooms. The I was glad to get out of contracts.” The study of future interests in two were excited about their prospects for a family. Henry had property was founded in English common law and precepts that once told Shirley he wanted 12 children. She wanted a number less had developed over centuries of settling contests of feudal estates than that. They were expecting the birth of their first child just a sent him to the history books. “Sometimes,” he said, “the articles few weeks after Henry’s graduation in May. [assigned to be read] or the professor would talk about king this of Henry became so absorbed in his work at the library that he was England. That was difficult. I had to spend a lot of time trying to still there well past the time that Shirley expected him to be home. understand the English feudal system.” There was no way for her to contact him as the hours wore on, so she was left to wonder about his whereabouts. He finally arrived aaa about dawn, with his work completed. After sorting out the cases, Frye concluded that the appeals court was lagging behind cases Not long after the start of his third year, Frye approached Pollitt resolved in other states. His final sentence was not the language for advice on an appropriate case or cases to use as a subject for to launch a public protest. Again, he was a lawyer-to-be, his words his next Review commentary. Pollitt responded bluntly: “Henry, uncluttered by emotion. “In denying relief in the principal case,” you are the only black man in this law class. You have written he wrote, “the court has failed to forge the missing link in the two articles. Get you a good racial discrimination case.” When he chain of judicial remedies necessitated by the problems of racial returned for approval on his choice, Pollitt was delighted. Frye had discrimination in union membership.” looked into a federal appeals court decision that had denied relief Henry Frye received the law school’s juris doctor degree at grad- for black railway workers who were losing their jobs as a result of uation ceremonies in May 1959. At the time, it was only awarded discriminatory action by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen to those students who graduated with honors. None of his family and Enginemen. The legal issues involved were tied up in a tangle was on hand to witness his success as the first African American of cases that begged for description and analysis. Pollitt knew to complete his entire law education at the University. Henry had the issue well. He and [Joseph] Rauh had represented A. Philip advised his parents against coming, telling them it was too much of Randolph, the founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters a struggle to get onto the campus and get seated among the crowd. and an outspoken advocate for equal rights. It was only after he discovered Shirley had invited her relatives that “[The unions] were trying to protect the jobs of the black he realized his mistake. His parents would not miss any other event firemen in the southeastern United States when they were confirming their son’s achievements as long as they were alive.”

“The things that my contracts teacher thought were simple, I thought were complicated....I was glad to get out of contracts.”

changing from coal to diesel,” Pollitt recalled. “It had been a An excerpt from Henry Frye: North Carolina’s First African black job when they shoveled coal and it became a white man’s Chief Justice © 2013 Howard E. Covington Jr. by permission of job when they turned a knob. They were trying to get rid of the McFarland & Company, Inc., Box 611, Jefferson NC 28640. blacks; we were trying to save them. There was lots of litigation www.mcfarlandpub.com.

CAROLINA LAW 19 ALUMNI NEWS

The Office of Advancement is pleased to announce that Mark your calendar! beginning in 2014, Law Alumni Weekend will be held in the spring. This April 10-12, Carolina Law is celebrating the classes of ‘64, ‘69, ‘74, ‘79, ‘84, ‘89, ‘94, ‘99, ‘04, ‘09 and the Golden Tar Heels. Moving class reunions to the spring provides additional programing opportunities and entertainment and allows for the ability to schedule several years in advance. The Bluegrass and BBQ alumni tailgate and football game, which remains a popular alumni gathering, will continue as a APRIL 10-12 free-standing event each fall. Please join us!

Alumni Inducted into N.C. General Practice Hall of Fame Three of six lawyers inducted into the General Practice Hall of Fame at the NCBA 115th Annual Meeting in June 2013 are Carolina Law alumni. The Hall of Fame, sponsored by the NCBA’s Solo, Small Firm & General Practice Section, was established in 1989 to recognize lifetime service and high ethical and professional standards of lawyers. To be eligible, lawyers must have practiced for at least 25 years, with a significant portion of that time devoted to the general practice of law, and be members in good standing of the N.C. State Bar.

JOHN S. “JACK” STEVENS ’61 ALLEN GEORGE THOMAS ’61 THOMAS HOLMES WELLMAN ’76 Stevens began his Thomas was born Wellman was born law practice in 1961 and reared in Wilson, in Clinton, N.C., in Asheville, N.C., with N.C. His family, of and moved to Anthony Redmond. Lebanese descent, Weldon, N.C., when Stevens served as a was very closely he was 9 years general practitioner knit and supportive. old. He graduated who represented Encouraged by from Weldon High clients in real estate his mother to School in 1969 matters, trust and attend Georgetown and received his estate planning, University in bachelor’s degree corporate and Washington, D.C., with Phi Beta Kappa commercial matters, he struggled the honors from the in civil trials in District and Superior Court, and first semester and considered going home, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in in the United States District Court. In 1986, but made Dean’s List by the end of the 1973. A 1976 graduate of UNC School of the firm, then known as Redmond, Stevens, second semester. After his second year at Law, he practiced law in Weldon in a small Loftin & Currie, merged with Roberts, Cogburn, Georgetown, he returned to North Carolina firm with John A. James, until James’ death Williams to become Roberts & Stevens. In to attend UNC-Chapel Hill. He finished his in 1988. Wellman continued to practice law his early career, Stevens served four terms undergraduate degree and in 1961 obtained in Halifax County and is currently a partner in the General Assembly (1969-1975) and his law degree from UNC School of Law. with William O. White Jr. and Holly N. Wilson was chairman of the House Rules Committee Thomas joined the Wilson law firm of his in the firm of Wellman, White & Wilson PLLC during the 1975 session. Over the years, uncle, Robert A. Farris, a highly respected in Roanoke Rapids, N.C. He has served as he has continued to be active in the NCBA, attorney. After working with his uncle for 22 secretary/treasurer of the 6A Judicial District serving as president in 1995-1996. He years from 1961-1983, he formed Thomas Bar for more than 10 years and has provided received the NCBA Award in 2008 and Farris with his cousin, Charles P. Farris many years of service to the NCBA, serving for outstanding service that benefits his Jr. The firm thrives to this day as Thomas on the Board of Governors from 2004-2007 local community. His firm created the John S. completes his 52nd year of practicing law. and as chair of the Solo, Small Firm & General Stevens Justice Fund at the NCBA Foundation Practice Section in 2003-2004. in his honor.

20 FALL-WINTER 2013 N.C. Bar Association Conference, Awards and Elections

115TH NORTH CAROLINA BAR ASSOCIATION The Robinson O. Everett ANNUAL MEETING IN ASHEVILLE, JUNE 20-23, 2013 Professionalism Award, presented annually by the Young Lawyers Division, Judge Jan H. Samet ’73 was elected to was presented to Danny Merlin ’06 of a one-year term as a vice president of the Charlotte. Merlin is a partner with Johnston NCBA Board of Governors. Samet, of Allison & Hord in Charlotte, where his High Point, is a graduate of High Point principal areas of practice are commercial College, UNC Greensboro and the UNC real estate, lender representation, general School of Law. He was a founding partner corporate and construction law. He is of Keziah, Gates & Samet, where he an associate member of the graduate faculty at the University of practiced for more than 30 years before his North Carolina at Charlotte and extremely active within the North appointment to the District Court bench Carolina Bar Association (NCBA), serving as co-chair of the 4ALL for the 18th Judicial District (Guilford County) in 2009. Samet is Statewide Service Day Committee in 2011-2012 and as co-chair of a past president of the High Point Bar Association and the 18th the Charlotte call center from 2009-2011. He has also served on the Judicial District Bar. Lawyers for an Educated Work Force Task Force.

Images courtesy of Russell Rawlings, NCBA Four of 2013 Citizen Lawyer Award Honorees are UNC School of Law Alumni The North Carolina Bar Association, in conjunction with the Citizen Lawyer Committee, honored four Carolina Law alumni out of 13 recipients of the 2013 Citizen Lawyer Award. The award was established in 2007 to recognize lawyers who provide exemplary public service to their communities. Carolina Law alumni recipients this year are:

JUDGE ROBERT C. “BOB” HUNTER ’73, GRAY STYERS ’89, N.C. COURT OF APPEALS, MARION STYERS & KEMERAIT, RALEIGH Judge Robert C. Hunter is a graduate of Gray Styers is a graduate of Wake Forest the University of North Carolina at Chapel University and the UNC School of Law, and Hill and the UNC School of Law. Hunter is also holds an MBA from UNC-Chapel Hill. a past president of the McDowell County Styers is president-elect of the Wake County Bar Association and the 29A District Bar, Bar Association and 10th Judicial District Bar, and previously served on the NCBA Board and a former member of the NCBA Board of of Governors and chaired the Bench/Bar Governors. He has served as chair and member Liaison Committee. He is a former chair of of the board of trustees of the Raleigh Moravian the Southern Legislative Conference, the Church; provided leadership service for the Council of State Governments and the N.C. Moravian Church in , Southern Province; Courts Commission, former treasurer of the served on the board of directors of Big Brothers N.C. Healthy Start Foundation, and board member of the Maxwell M. Big Sisters of the Triangle; and chaired the Wake County Industrial Corpening Jr. Memorial Center, Friends of Lake James State Park and Facilities and Pollution Control Financing Authority. Styers serves on the Southmountain Children and Family Services. UNC Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.

CRAIG T. LYNCH ’86, PARKER POE LEIGH A. WILKINSON ’85, & BERNSTEIN, CHARLOTTE WARD & SMITH, NEW BERN Craig T. Lynch is a graduate of Florida State Leigh A. Wilkinson is a graduate of North University and the UNC School of Law. Lynch Carolina State University and the UNC School of is a member of the board of directors of the Law. Wilkinson has served Civitan International National Multiple Sclerosis Society, where he at the local, district and international level. She has served as secretary, area vice chairman is also a past board chair for the New Bern Area and as a member of the executive committee. Chamber of Commerce, charter president of He has also provided leadership to Providence the NCSU College of Physical and Mathematical United Methodist Church, where he has chaired Sciences Alumni and Friends Society, second the Local Missions Committee and coordinated president of the Coastal Women’s forum and Habitat for Humanity projects, and the leader- former board member for Bear Town Bears, Big ship teams of Olde Providence Elementary Brothers Big Sisters, Craven CARES and Twin School and South Charlotte Middle School. Lynch is the incoming Rivers YMCA. president of the UNC Law Alumni Association Board of Directors. CAROLINA LAW 21 ALUMNI NEWS

IN MEMORIAM

Former Governor James E. Holshouser ’60 ROBERT WILLETT ROBERT James E. Holshouser

ames Eubert “Jim” Holshouser Jr. ’60, governor of North Holshouser was elected to the General Assembly, where he Carolina from 1973-1977, died Monday, June 17, 2013 served for four terms, and later elected to House majority leader Jin Pinehurst, N.C. Holshouser was the first Republican and then state Republican Party chair. governor to be elected in the 20th century, and was widely known After his tenure as governor, Holshouser spent many for his support of education, environmental legislation, access to years in private practice and legal counsel. Most recently, he health care and his role in North Carolina’s transition to a strong practiced with Nexsen Pruet’s financial services and economic two-party state. development group, and co-chaired the firm’s public policy Holshouser, who was 78, developed his interest in politics as and government affairs practice in North Carolina. Holshouser a law student at Chapel Hill. Born in Boone, N.C., he attended remained active in North Carolina higher education, and was a Davidson College before enrolling at UNC School of Law, where member emeritus of the board of governors of the University of he was also class president. In 1962, two years after law school, North Carolina.

22 FALL-WINTER 2013 School Mourns the Loss of Civil Rights Leader Julius Chambers ’62

ulius Chambers ’62, civil rights leader, educator and interpreting Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which founding director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights, governs employment discrimination. Jdied Friday, Aug. 2, 2013, after a decline in health over the In 1984, Chambers became Director-Counsel of the LDF. In past several months. He was 76. 1993, Chambers returned to North Carolina to become chancellor “It is with great sadness that I share the news that Julius of his alma mater, North Carolina Central University. Chambers LeVonne Chambers, one of the greatest American civil rights retired from his position as chancellor on June 30, 2001, and lawyers of the 20th century, died late this afternoon,” UNC resumed private law practice with the firm he started in 1967. School of Law Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74 said in a That same year, he accepted the invitation of then-Dean of message to law school faculty and staff. UNC School of Law, Gene Nichol, to become the inaugural “To the end, Julius remained the thoroughly decent, devoted, director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights. Chambers conceived modest but relentlessly principled champion of those who most of a University-based center that would carry out three missions desperately needed his services — African-American families, simultaneously: to train a new generation of law graduates who communities and institutions, poor people of every background would be committed to civil rights advocacy in the 21st century; and heritage, women who had been oppressed by social to provide a place where sophisticated social scientific and other constraints. They don’t make lawyers, or human beings, any finer research would be commissioned, examined and shaped to address than the Mount Gilead-native this state and nation lost to death issues of racial and economic injustice and inequality; and to this evening.” provide strategic legal counsel and services to lower-income and In 1959, Chambers was admitted to UNC School of Law, non-white communities in North Carolina and the Southeast. He which had only recently begun admitting African-American built a civil rights “law firm” at UNC School of Law that engaged students. Chambers was elected editor-in-chief of the North in advocacy at state, regional and national levels. Carolina Law Review in his third year, becoming the first African- During his nearly 10 years as director, Chambers received American to hold this title at any historically white law school dozens of national and state awards for his lifetime of service. in the South. He graduated in 1962, ranking first in his class When he announced his retirement as Center director in 2010, he of 100 students. Thereafter, he studied and taught at Columbia was honored at a celebration at the Carolina Inn, where featured University Law School while earning an LL.M. degree. speakers included Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, In 1963, Chambers was tapped as the first intern in a new then-Governor Beverly Perdue of North Carolina, and President program of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund , who offered a video tribute to Chambers’ life Inc. (LDF), designed to provide promising African-American and work. law graduates with 12 months of training in civil rights litigation. In June 1964, Chambers moved to Charlotte to open a law practice that would eventually become the first integrated law firm in North Carolina history. Chambers and his founding partners, James E. Ferguson II and Adam Stein, worked with lawyers at LDF to litigate a vast range of civil rights cases that changed the face of the nation. Chambers and his partners were involved in scores of legal challenges related to school desegregation, employment discrimination, voting rights, health care litigation and related matters. Chambers is known for his victories in such high profile cases as the famous Charlotte busing decision Swann v. Charlotte Mecklenburg Board of Education (1971), and Griggs v. Duke Power Co. (1971) and Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody (1974), two of the DONN YOUNG Supreme Court’s most significant cases Julius Chambers

CAROLINA LAW 23 The State’s L aw School ast May, Laura Collins Britton, clinical assistant professor of law at UNC School of Law, testified before the N.C. House Banking Committee about the harm caused by consumer finance loans. The N.C. General Assembly was considering a consumer Clinic faculty, from left: Kathryn Sabbeth, Civil Legal Assistance Clinic; Tom Kelley, finance bill that would increase the allowable interest rate and fees, and she had been Community Development Law Clinic; Lasked to educate legislators on how consumers can get trapped trying to pay back the small Tamar Birckhead, Juvenile Justice Clinic; amount they have borrowed because it spirals into a much larger amount due to exorbitant Beth Posner, Immigration Clinic; Barbara fees and expensive insurance products. Fedders, Juvenile Justice Clinic; Laura Collins Britton, Consumer Financial Transactions She spoke quickly, not only because a brisk presentation would hold the attention of the Clinic; and Erika Wilson, Civil Legal legislators, but she needed to finish her speech before her next contraction. She had gone Assistance Clinic. STEVE EXUM BY NANCY E. OATES Making a Difference at Home into labor the day she was called to testify, and what she had to say the coast, especially involving catastrophic damage by wind. In 2008, he was too important to let having a baby get in the way. was appointed to the General Assembly’s legislative study commission “These are vulnerable consumers whom our laws are intended to redesigning the statutory contours of the Wind Pool. protect,” says Britton, who heads the Consumer Financial Transac- Judith Wegner, Burton Craige Professor of Law, has worked tions Clinic at Carolina Law. “When our state legislators are deciding with the state on issues of local zoning law and annexation by whether to change consumer protection laws, it is important that we municipalities. And in a state with a strong presence in the banking provide information about any negative impact that would have on industry, Lissa Broome, Wells Fargo Professor of Banking Law and their constituents.” director of the Center for Banking and Finance, has worked closely While Britton’s story is perhaps more dramatic than most, it is with the N.C. Commissioner of Banks preparing bank directors to emblematic of the real difference UNC School of Law’s faculty and lead and strengthening their sophistication to make good banking students are making — through pro bono work, through research that policy choices. shapes policy, through service on local committees and boards, and Another faculty member, David Ardia, co-directs the Center for through one-on-one clinical outreach — for the people and the state Media Law and Policy and has helped media companies throughout of North Carolina. the state by bringing the views of North Carolina broadcasters and cable companies into the conversation about the Federal Communica- “Giving Back Is Part of What It tions Commission’s regulatory policies. Means to Be a Lawyer” “Year-in and year-out, beyond the classroom, dozens of the school’s Historically, when very few law schools existed in the state, faculty share their expertise in ways that strengthen the state and assist legislators looked to the faculty from the law school at the state’s its people,” Boger says. “This is above and beyond the excellent and flagship university for legal expertise on issues that came before important work that our centers, such as the Center for Civil Rights the governing body. UNC School of Law faculty have long been and the Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity, to name just two, appointed to legislative committees and testified before the state are out there in the state doing every day.” House and Senate, says Dean John Charles “Jack” Boger ’74, Wade To recognize faculty contributions to their communities and to Edwards Distinguished Professor of Law. And a great deal of research the state, the school began giving an annual service award in 2009, a by faculty members has practical applications that make a real cash prize to faculty selected by their colleagues for their community difference in the lives of North Carolinians. service work. Students also select a faculty member for a separate “Our faculty regularly help shape state law and policy in positive annual pro bono award. ways,” Boger says. He can cite many examples of such off the top of “The law school has promoted the idea that giving to one’s commu- his head. nity is part of what it means to be a lawyer,” Boger says. “This is central For years, a Carolina Law faculty member has served on the General to our mission as a public law school in the state of North Carolina.” Statutes Commission, which suggests to the legislature changes in the statutes to reduce obsolescence or ambiguity. Mark Weisburd, Reef C. “Whenever You’re Ready, We’re Here” Ivey Distinguished Professor of Law, currently sits on the commission. Each year at orientation, Carolina Law’s newest students take a Alfred Brophy, Judge John J. Parker Distinguished Professor of Law, pledge called the Carolina Commitment, which affirms their serves on the N.C. Legislature’s Trusts and Estates Drafting Committee. responsibility to live up to the professional responsibilities inherent Donald Hornstein, Aubrey L. Brooks Professor of Law, is in his to being a lawyer. And each year, the orientation speakers reinforce fourth term as a public member of the N.C. Wind Pool’s board of the idea that one element of a lawyer’s responsibilities is to give back directors, where he specializes in reinsurance, bond financing and to their community, wherever that may be. This is a message that administration. The Wind Pool focuses on property insurance risks at UNC students embrace wholeheartedly. In 2013, a full 85 percent of

CAROLINA LAW 25 BRIANA BROUGH BRIANA BROUGH Catherine Bruce 3L, a student in the Consumer Financial Transactions Clinic, and Ana Spitzley 2L, a research assistant with the Immigration Clinic, meet with Tamar Birckhead, interim director of the Clinical Program. Right: Alicia Banks 2L is a research assistant in the Immigration Clinic.

students from the graduating class had done pro bono work, and the legal theory they learned in classes to solve real problems for real people. school noted that contribution on their diplomas. Local, state and federal agencies and nonprofits refer clients to the Third-year law student Catherine Bruce, who entered law school clinics. Most of the clinics accept from eight to 24 students per year specifically to pursue a career in public interest law, says the school’s (depending on whether one or two faculty members can supervise emphasis on community service was one reason she chose Carolina and whether the students sign up for one or two semesters), and the Law. The other was its relatively moderate tuition. number of cases each student takes on depends on the complexity of “My lower debt load at graduation means I will be able to practice each case and how long they take to resolve. public interest law right away,” she says. “I won’t have to first take a Cases in the Immigration Clinic generally take the longest — job where I make enough to pay off huge loans.” sometimes five years or more before a client is eligible for a green card The law school reserves hundreds of thousands of dollars each year — and the clinic represents them until the case is resolved, helping for grants to aid students who want to do public interest work over secure the status and documentation to allow the client to work the summer, far more than its peer schools. To ensure that all students lawfully during the wait. Students work with undocumented immi- have the opportunity to do pro bono work, Carolina Law funds an grants who are victims of a crime, primarily domestic violence and assistant dean for public service programs, a position held by Sylvia sexual assault. A federal law passed in 2000, the Victims of Trafficking Novinsky. She instituted a unique model that sets Carolina Law apart and Violence Prevention Act, part of the Violence Against Women Act, from other law schools: she and a 12-student board run the program. created a pathway to citizenship, because law enforcement needed Each student manages one aspect of the program, a structure that lets the cooperation of certain communities, yet undocumented residents students develop their own leadership skills and innovate a piece of feared deportation if they reported crimes to authorities. the program every year. Last spring Novinsky launched a cutting-edge Clinical assistant professor Beth Posner, a domestic violence expert, collaboration among the law schools and cancer centers at UNC and began teaching the Immigration Clinic this year after a decade of Duke hospitals to offer free legal services to local cancer patients. teaching the Civil Legal Assistance and the Domestic Violence clinics. Student board members recruit their peers to work on the many On the faculty of the American Bar Association Commission on pro bono projects. The school partners with nonprofit, government or Domestic and Sexual Violence, she continues to train other lawyers in private attorneys to offer a range of pro bono opportunities. Novinsky North Carolina and throughout the country. leads trips during the spring and winter breaks to underserved areas of With her students in the clinic, she covers cross-cultural the state, extending the geographic reach of the law school’s commu- lawyering, being cognizant of differences and similarities between nity service. And she has pro bono projects for about 100 students to the lawyer and client, and the client and the legal system, and work on in or near their hometown over summer break. working with an interpreter. “Our message is: Whenever you’re ready, we’re here,” she says. “The skills we teach our students can translate to any area of law they practice after graduation,” Posner says. “We turn out lawyers who are Clinical Program Opens Doors for Faculty ethical, professional, caring and involved in their communities.” and Student Outreach Second-year student Ana Spitzley, an immigrant herself, works in the One way the law school supports community outreach for faculty clinic and was shocked to learn how many people in North Carolina and students is through the clinical program. were eligible for the U-visas offered to crime victims who cooperate The clinics — Civil Legal Assistance, Community Development, with law enforcement. Since enrolling at Carolina Law, she has Consumer Financial Transactions, Immigration, Juvenile Justice and dedicated herself to working on immigration issues. Over the summer, Domestic Violence — give students practical experience in using the she worked 30 hours a week as a research assistant for Posner. This

26 FALL-WINTER 2013 academic year, she is working 10 hours a week in the Immigration Clinic and an additional 75 hours of pro bono work over the semester Carolina L aw with a private law firm in Raleigh. Alumni By Alicia Banks, a second-year student and research assistant in the the Numbers immigration clinic, derives personal satisfaction from the work she does. “I grew up in a single-parent family; we never had much money,” Banks says. “Without the help of other people, my mom would not Carolina Law alumni live have been able to raise my sister and me. I feel it’s my responsibility 8904 and work in North Carolina to give back, because I wouldn’t be here without the help of other people in my life.” The Community Development Law Clinic, taught by Thomas A. Kelley III, Paul B. Eaton Distinguished Professor of Law, was of Carolina launched just over 10 years ago to address the unmet legal needs of 80% small, community-based nonprofits in North Carolina. Kelley and Law graduates stay in North Carolina around eight students spend two semesters each year working on a variety of projects, from charitable start-ups launched out of the of all practicing attorneys UNC Social Innovation Incubator to existing organizations like churches and a local farmers market. in North Carolina are Carolina Law graduates “We assist organizations with a broad range of legal matters, from 40% helping them form new corporations and apply for 501(c)(3) status, to contractual issues, to liability reduction strategies and beyond,” Kelley says. “These groups are doing important work in their The students assisted the tenant in filing a complaint with the communities and can’t afford lawyers.” county inspections department, which made sure the landlord Some of the most rewarding cases are those of nonprofit organiza- fixed the problem. The students were also able to obtain a sizable tions the clinic helped launch, Kelley says, and that are now so rent abatement for their client. successful that the clinic is helping them navigate more complicated This year, the students have begun to represent public school legal issues. One example of that is PORCH, a grass-roots hunger children who have disabilities and need a special education plan relief organization whose mission is to collect and distribute food for or children who have been suspended or expelled. Research families going hungry in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. that Wilson recently published in the UCLA Law Review, about One of Kelley’s favorite examples of help it provides is the Durham- a regional tax-base-sharing plan to fund public education, has based TROSA, a residential substance abuse recovery program. The sparked much thought and discussion. clinic assisted TROSA with an increasing number of complex legal Wilson says the clinic fills an unmet need because “pro bono issues related to many of the business ventures it undertook, but “due legal service providers can’t possibly meet all the legal needs of to their innovative and successful model, they have turned into a low-income people in North Carolina.” She is troubled by recent multimillion-dollar charity that has grown beyond us,” Kelley says. changes in North Carolina law that raise the threshold amounts for Kelley wrote several papers resulting from his extensive work with small claims court and district court. “I expect we’ll see a heavier TROSA; “Law and Choice of Entity on the Social Enterprise Fron- caseload in those courts, a backlog of cases that will slow down the tier” (Tulane Law Review, 2009) has been his most widely downloaded justice process for low-income clients,” she says. article and is referenced often in work related to social enterprise. Courts have had their budgets cut, too, says associate professor Kelley says that the influence of the clinic’s work spreads beyond Tamar Birckhead, interim director of the clinical program. The just the direct impact it has on its clients. “We now have a cadre of state has reduced its hourly rate for appointed counsel to indigent lawyers — working not just in nonprofit but in law firms, corpora- defendants, so fewer lawyers want to take those cases on. That tions, you name it — who are spread throughout the state, and who makes help from UNC’s clinics all the more vital. are all intimately familiar with nonprofits and the legal issues that Birckhead and clinical assistant professor Barbara Fedders teach are singular to them. And these alumni are now serving on boards or the Juvenile Justice Clinic. Each student in the clinic takes on two working on pro bono or reduced-fee projects for nonprofits that are to four cases, filing motions and legal memoranda on issues most having an impact on communities across North Carolina.” lawyers wouldn’t have the time or inclination to work on. The Civil Legal Assistance Clinic, “We take extra time on cases because we’re co-taught by assistant professors Erika training our students by modeling the most Wilson and Kathryn Sabbeth, takes on Read More! rigorous representation possible,” Birckhead says. cases having to do with housing, employ- “Grants Help Students Gain “Ultimately, it raises the level of practice by all ment and education. The 16 students who the defense attorneys in the courtroom.” Essential Experience at enroll each year generally take on two cases Juvenile court handles cases for children as Unpaid Internships,” p. 4 apiece. The students have achieved many young as age 6, though most children in court successes. Last year, spring rains infested And there’s more pro bono are between 12 and 15. The law students go to a rental house with mold, and by fall the news at: www.law.unc.edu/ the child’s home, school and scene of the alleged landlord had yet to begin the cleanup, publicservice/ offense to talk with various parties and to see the ignoring the tenant’s efforts to negotiate. environment that composes the child’s world.

CAROLINA LAW 27 J. Troy Smith Jr. ’67 Ward and Smith P.A. DONN YOUNG New Bern, N.C. Students learn quickly that Carolina Law the case can be only one “I think good people, whether Alumni Embody they’re lawyers or not, are small part of a child’s very complicated life. going to give back to the A Legacy of Service Birckhead has testified extent they can.” before the Governor’s to North Carolina Commission on the treatment BY MARK TOSCZAK of juveniles in the court When alumni leave UNC School of Law to begin their legal careers, system and advised the commission on the age at which teens they take with them more than just knowledge of the law. They also should be treated as adults. Her research — directly inspired by the leave with a deep sense that public service and contributing to their work she does in the clinic — not only advocates for raising the communities is vital. age at which teens must be adjudicated as adults but delves into the Many Carolina Law alumni are, and have been, deeply involved in pressure some child advocates feel to have children adjudicated as government, from the governor’s office to local elected officials – a juvenile delinquents to make them eligible for some social services, reflection of UNC’s commitment to educate a leadership cadre for the even though any kind of juvenile court involvement raises the rate state. But just as important is the large number of alumni who are of recidivism. giving back to their communities every day, often outside work hours “My scholarship, and the scholarship of all the clinic faculty, is and out of the limelight. informed by my clinical work,” says Birckhead, who also regularly “I’m constantly delighted by stories of alumni all over this state who writes commentary for media outlets. “And often our scholarship is have been involved at the less visible levels,” says Dean John Charles then applied directly to policy discussions statewide. We are essen- “Jack” Boger ’74. tially trying to make a difference at the personal, one-on-one level Those efforts include serving on a variety of local volunteer boards, with our clients, and at a larger level, in terms of policy.” leading local economic development initiatives, lobbying on behalf of Likewise, the benefit of the clinic students’ work is both imme- education and the arts, and finding common ground among policy- diate and long term, Britton says. makers to solve some of the state’s toughest problems. “In class our students learn how to think; in clinic they learn how “There really is a sense here at Carolina that there is a requirement to do,” Britton says. “We are training the next generation of lawyers or obligation to give back to the community,” says Kristine Jensen, to spread out across the state and country. We help them launch their associate dean for advancement, who meets regularly with alumni. careers with an additional commitment to community service. We “You’ve got these talents and capabilities and you should be using them teach them not just how to do good work but how to do good with to strengthen, support and sustain the community you’re in.” their work.” That commitment to serve the state is a part of the school’s DNA, according to Boger.

28 FALL-WINTER 2013 “I think it’s an ideal that stretches far back into our collective past,” Boger says. “I was a student here in the 1970s and felt it then.” He wasn’t the only one. Four alumni share their stories about why giving back is an essential part of their personal and professional lives. CAROLINA LAW ALUMNI ARE: “You Just Did It” J. TROY SMITH JR. ’67 WARD AND SMITH P.A., NEW BERN, N.C. When J. Troy Smith Jr. graduated from UNC School of Law in 1967, 211 he says no one talked about how lawyers should give back in their current partners communities or how many nonbillable, pro bono hours they should in the top 10 law firms be putting in. They simply did it. 41 In the late ’60s, an older attorney in Craven County, N.C., where in North Carolina of the past Smith started his career, kept a list of local lawyers who were willing presidents of the to help clients who otherwise would not have been able to afford legal North Carolina representation. Needy individuals were dispersed to the lawyers on that list, with attorneys across the county sharing the burden. Bar Association It worked similarly in the criminal courts; there were no public defenders then. “If we got called by a Superior Court judge [to 33 of the past presidents represent a poor defendant], you just did it,” Smith says. of the North Carolina “Nobody looked for credit and nobody looked to get on some State Bar 36 kind of list to get accolades,” says Smith, a founding partner at New of the state’s Bern-based Ward and Smith P.A. Since then, he notes, times have changed. Financial pressures on supreme lawyers, especially young lawyers, have increased. Now there are formal court justices public defender systems in place at every level of the court system; law schools run clinics to help those who need legal assistance but can’t 10 afford to hire their own lawyers; and pro bono work and other forms of the state’s governors of community service are a widely accepted part of professional life. “I think good people, whether they’re lawyers or not, are going to give back to the extent they can,” Smith says. However, he noted, by being a lawyer “you may get more opportunity.” Smith has certainly seized that opportunity in the course of his professional life. His resumé lists dozens of board positions, from local county groups to statewide agencies to a variety of posts. Gardner Altman ’71 He’s also served on Carolina Law’s Gardner H. Altman Jr. Alumni Association board. P.A., Fayetteville, N.C. Smith says he favors organizations that help the needy with a minimum “The whole philosophy of the of administrative overhead, such as The law school was service.” Salvation Army and the Boys and Girls Club. But he also thinks organizations that help promote community economic development can have a broad impact. “I would submit to you that the off-the-books time that lawyers put in in various communities to improve the economic development of their community, while they’re different from the traditional view of ‘pro bono,’ is more valuable to more people,” he says. “We did a strategic planning initiative down here 22 years ago, and we had 400 people in the community that participated,” he says, adding that it helped promote the revitalization of downtown New Bern, among other things. “It produced a benefit for the community.” DONN YOUNG

CAROLINA LAW 29 Anita Brown-Graham ’91 Practicing law, at its core, is a service, Altman Institute for Emerging says. “It’s helping people do something they Issues, N.C. State can’t do for themselves.” University, Raleigh, N.C. When you think that way, you can’t just turn off the urge to help people during your “... I realized how insanely lucky nonbillable hours. we were at Carolina to have “My experience has been with my colleagues the access to professors that of 40-plus years that attorneys help tremen- we had.” dously in their communities,” Altman says. “They are a facilitator for many good things in a community.” Though Altman works less (a little less) than he used to, he’s still using his legal talents and relationships to help others. He serves pro bono as general counsel (and a founding board member) for the N.C. Church Loan Fund, a non-profit corporation that lends money to churches, Even his business ventures aim to make a positive difference. He’s involved in a busi- ness his son helped organize that’s creating an economic model so forestland owners in the Southeast can let their trees stand, rather than harvesting the timber or clear-cutting

DONN YOUNG for alternative uses. The landowners can earn money by selling credits that are bought by companies that emit greenhouse gasses under the California mandatory cap-and- trade program or emitters who voluntarily “Helping People” desire to offset their emissions. GARDNER ALTMAN ’71 “That’s something I feel very good about,” Altman says. GARDNER H. ALTMAN JR. P.A., FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. “Following My Heart” When Gardner Altman attended UNC School of Law more than 40 ANITA BROWN-GRAHAM ’91 years ago “the whole philosophy of the law school was service,” he says. INSTITUTE FOR EMERGING ISSUES, From the professors, who gave up higher paying legal work to N.C. STATE UNIVERSITY, RALEIGH, N.C. serve by teaching, to the idea that law is the cornerstone of a stable society, Altman says service was a fundamental lesson of Carolina Twenty-three years after graduating from UNC School of Law, Law. A lesson that stuck. Anita R. Brown-Graham is not practicing law. Over the course of four decades he’s served as a board member But she credits her Carolina Law education with allowing her for at least nine different organizations, including three terms on the to create a great career that merges her professional life with Carolina Law Alumni Association board. He’s devoted countless hours personal passions. to organizations such as the American Cancer Society, Campbell In her case, that means finding ways to bring people together University and the Institute of Political Leadership, among others. to improve the economy in North Carolina. Brown-Graham is He also hosts an annual breakfast on his farm that brings together director of the Institute for Emerging Issues, a center based at political leaders from Columbus, Bladen and Cumberland counties N.C. State University that aims to tackle the big issues that affect to discuss common issues in a bipartisan forum. North Carolina’s future growth and prosperity. The institute hosts After hearing people complain that they could never reach their a widely attended annual conference, the Emerging Issues Forum, Congressional representatives, he organized an annual meeting through which brings together the most innovative thinkers on topics that collaboration with Fayetteville Technical Community College, Meth- are of increasing importance to the state. Most recently topics have odist University and Fayetteville State University that brings together included manufacturing, Generation Z and health care. the three U.S. House members that represent the region to town and For her work, Brown-Graham was named a White House provides an open mic forum so citizens can ask questions. Champion of Change this summer. She is also a William C. Friday And then there’s Hogs and Rags, a nonprofit he created eight Fellow, an American Marshall Fellow and an Eisenhower Fellow. years ago to raise money for the Shriners Hospitals for Children and “The skills and perspective I gained in law school prepared me for the American Cancer Society. The group organizes an annual ride of a wide range of opportunities,” she says. hundreds of motorcycles (the “hogs”) and convertibles (the “rags”) The first thing she did with those skills was not that unusual for a to raise money. So far, they’ve raised more than $125,000. law school grad: She clerked for a judge, in her case a federal district

30 FALL-WINTER 2013 court judge in California. It was there that she first began to get a sense is an important asset to this state that needs to be retained going of how exceptional her Carolina Law experience had been. forward,” Simpson says. “Understanding the budget process certainly “It wasn’t until I got to California, and would sit around with my helped us make the case for the school. Thankfully, the legislative fellow law clerks who graduated from other law schools across the leadership listened and agreed to restore funding.” country, that I realized how insanely lucky we were at Carolina to have Simpson has advocated for other organizations, including UNC- the access to professors that we had,” she says. When she started law Chapel Hill. He has just finished a four-year term on Carolina’s Board school, Brown-Graham threw herself into not only the classes, but also of Visitors, where he chaired the External Affairs Committee. And he extracurricular activities. The faculty at Carolina Law was always there just joined the UNC General Alumni Association’s board of directors. to encourage her efforts. “We have a duty to educate the many new legislators in Raleigh “One of the things you learn in the classroom at law school is how about the importance of maintaining the state’s 200-year commitment important it is for you to use your tools to create access opportunities for to having a world-class higher education system,” Simpson says. others,” she says. “The law school gave me the opportunities to do that.” Simpson’s experience at Carolina Law strengthened his focus on She mentored youth in the Chapel Hill community while at law public service. school and was coordinator of Minority Law Day her third year. Law “My experience at Carolina, both undergraduate and law school, school, she says, gave her a chance “to learn how to follow my passions.” opened my eyes to the importance of public service,” he says. After the clerkship and two years in private practice, she found she was “Giving back to the community and engaging in public policy issues more inspired by the community development and volunteer work she was encouraged at the law school.” was doing in her spare time than her legal work. It was time to come As co-chair for recruiting at Smith Anderson, Simpson is looking back to Carolina and figure out a way to turn that passion into a career. for young lawyers who share those values. A call to the law school quickly turned up a faculty opportunity at “When we recruit to the law firm, we seek individuals who are the nearby School of Government. She spent 13 years there, focused great people and great lawyers,” he says. “We want well-rounded mostly on rural communities struggling to revitalize their economies, lawyers who are going to be active in the community.” and in 2007, moved to the Institute for Emerging Issues. “I tell students to follow their heart, not the career path they’ve laid out for the next 10 years. It has been my experience that unimaginable opportunities will come your way and disrupt the pathway you thought you’d created,” she says. “For me, taking the risk, stepping sideways and following my heart have always been the right things to do.” “Duty to Educate” DANA SIMPSON ’00 SMITH ANDERSON, RALEIGH, N.C.

Dana Simpson doesn’t hold public office, but he knows a lot of people who do. Simpson, a health care and government affairs attorney at Smith Anderson in Raleigh, spends a lot of time working as a lobbyist in the state legislature. He’s pretty good at it, too. In the 2011-2012 legislative session, Simpson was ranked the most effective lobbyist in the state by the nonpartisan Dana Simpson ’00 N.C. Center for Public Policy Research. The policy group’s Smith Anderson, frequently cited ranking is a result of a survey of state legislators, Raleigh, N.C. other lobbyists, and journalists to determine the most influential lobbyists among the hundreds registered with the state. “We have a duty to educate Simpson’s influence and knowledge of the legislative process the many new legislators in enables him to help organizations and causes close to his heart. Raleigh about the importance of “In addition to working on specific issues for our law firm’s maintaining the state’s 200-year clients, I am fortunate to be able to work on other public commitment to having a world- policy issues that are important for our state or our commu- class higher education system.” nity,” he says. In 2011, for example, the legislature cut state funding to the Governor’s School, a summer residential program for gifted N.C. high school students begun in the early 1960s. Simpson and other Carolina Law alumni are among those who attended the school. Alumni raised enough private funds to keep the school open that summer. But a lobbying effort by Simpson and other alumni the next year persuaded lawmakers to restore funding to the program in 2012. “We were able to explain to legislators that the Governor’s School DONN YOUNG

CAROLINA LAW 31 Each year, UNC School of Law publishes an Honor Roll of Donors to recognize and thank those who support our school. This past fiscal year, the school raised $4,242,953 in cash Honor Roll and commitments from 3,188 donors. Alumni participation in giving reached 21.2 percent. The Law Annual Fund raised a total of $767,146. If you have questions about the Honor Roll of Donors of Donors or for assistance making your gift in fiscal year 2014, please contact the office of advancement at 919.445.0166.

LIFETIME WILLIAM HORN KATHRINE R. EVERETT SOCIETY BATTLE SOCIETY The Everett Society honors donors of documented planned gifts to benefit the UNC School Lifetime William Horn Battle Society members of Law Foundation Inc. have contributed $100,000 or more to the school over the course of their lifetime. Anonymous Mr. David F. Kirby ’77 Mr. William Preston Aycock II ’70 Mr. Hurdle H. Lea Jr. Anonymous Mr. Norman Edward Block ’78 Mr. Henry Clyde Lomax ’58 Mr. William Brantley Aycock ’48 Ms. Lori Ireland and Mr. Gregg Ireland Ms. Tammy Alice Bouchelle ’01 Mr. Robert N. Maitland II ’97 Mr. William F. Maready ’58 Ms. Susan Fox Beischer Mr. David F. Kirby ’77 and Mr. H. Chalk Broughton Jr. ’88 Ms. Godwin Carboy Ms. Patricia E. McDonald ’79 Ms. Ann Huidekoper Brown Ms. Evelyn D. Kirby Mr. Brian Mark Clarkson ’87 Mr. David McDaniel Moore II ’69 Mr. Brian Mark Clarkson ’87 Mr. Thomas Ashe Lockhart ’51 Mr. Laurence Arthur Cobb ’58 and Mr. W. Gary Ogburn ’82 Ms. Sallie Boyle Phillips Mr. Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64 Ms. Edna Faye Pugh Cobb Ms. Anne Shea Ransdell ’58 and Ms. Norma H. Cowell Hon. Anthony Eden Rand ’64 Mr. Fred B. Davenport Jr. ’77 Mr. James D. Renger ’65 Mr. James Lee Davis ’71 Mr. Walter Rand III ’64 Mr. James Lee Davis ’71 Mr. Ernest C. Roessler Mr. Daniel W. Donahue ’68 and Ms. Frances Fulk Rufty Mr. Arthur St. Clair DeBerry ’57 Ms. Cathy M. Rudisill ’84 Ms. Bonnie K. Donahue Mr. Basil L. Sherrill ’50 and Ms. Ann Terrell Dorsett ’89 Mr. Basil L. Sherrill ’50 and Mr. John R. Edwards ’77 Ms. Virginia A. Sherrill Mr. and Mrs. William Edward Elmore Jr. Ms. Virginia A. Sherrill Mr. Tom D. Efird ’64 and Mr. Sherwood H. Smith, Jr. ’60 and (Mr. Elmore ’48) Mr. John E. Skvarla III ’73 Ms. Anne W. Efird Ms. Eve H. Smith Ms. Lisa F. Garrison ’94 Mr. Robert Harvey Smith ’81 Mr. A. Richard Golub ’67 Mr. David Anderson Stockton ’82 Mr. James Robert Gordon ’64 Ms. Marianne Koral Smythe ’74 Mr. Paul Hardin and Dr. Robert Barry Smythe Mr. William Edgar Graham Jr. ’56 Hon. Thomas Fleming Taft ’72 Mr. William Wayne Staton Jr. Ambassador C. Boyden Gray ’68 Mr. Wade H. Hargrove Jr. ’65 Mr. Boyd C. Tinsley and Ms. Sandra D. Hargrove Ms. Robin J. Stinson ’84 Mr. Paul Burroughs Hall and Ms. Phyllis Phelps Ward Mr. John R. Haworth ’50 Mr. George Randolph Uzzell Jr. Ms. Louise Carden Hall Mr. Paul L. Whitfield’ 62 Mr. Charles Woodson Holderness Mr. Lindsay C. Warren Jr. ’51 Mr. Wade H. Hargrove Jr. ’65 and Mr. H. Gray Hutchison Jr. ’73 Mr. Richard Neill Watson ’74 Ms. Sandra D. Hargrove Ms. Bagley Witt Mr. Richard E. Jenkins ’75 Mr. Paul L. Whitfield ’62

1845 SOCIETY Ms. Suzanne Rose Begnoche ’06 Mr. S. Leigh Rodenbough IV ’80 Mr. Walter D. Fisher Jr. ’86 and Ms. Anne-Tristram Holt Lomax Ms. Robin Jayne Stinson ’84 ($25,000 AND HIGHER) and Mr. Pavan Reddy and Ms. Melanie Hyatt Michele S. Fisher Mr. Gary Mitchell London ’79 Mr. Thomas Sadler Stukes ’74 Mr. E. Osborne Ayscue Jr. ’60 Dean John Charles Boger ’74 Rodenbough ’80 Hon. Franklin Edward Mr. Craig Taylor Lynch ’86 and and Ms. Martha Taylor Stukes and Ms. Emily Urquhart Ayscue and Ms. Jennifer Mr. Richard A. Simpson ’77 Freeman Jr. ’70 Ms. Mitzi Cline Lynch Ms. Barbara Tatge Mr. Brian Mark Clarkson ’87 Brackenbury Boger Ms. Rochelle Berman Stoddard Mr. James Wright Galbraith ’76 Mr. Robert Nelson Maitland II ’97 Mr. Peter Charles Visceglia ’83 Mr. Wade Hampton Hargrove Jr. ’65 Ms. Elizabeth Jean Bower ’01 Mr. John Adam Stoker ’97 Prof. Laura N. Gasaway Mr. Kent John McCready ’84 Mr. Edwin Jasper Walker Jr. ’69 and Ms. Sandra D. Hargrove Mr. Fred Blount Davenport Jr. ’77 Mr. Scott Padgett Vaughn ’86 Mr. H. Haiko Geratz ’93 Mr. Dan Johnson McLamb ’74 Mr. Wilson Lamark White ’06 Ms. Emmett Boney Haywood ’82 Mr. James Lee Davis ’71 and Ms. LouAnn Mr. Robert William Glatz ’91 and Ms. Barbara Mr. Robert Ambrose Wicker ’69 and Dr. Hubert Benbury Mr. James Edward Delany ’73 Compere Vaughn Mr. Jack N. Goodman ’75 Brandon Weyher ’77 Haywood III Mr. Richard McKenzie Wiggins ’58 and Ms. Catherine Mr. William Edgar Graham Jr. ’56 Ms. Margaret Louise Milroy ’84 Mr. Gregg Ireland and Fisher Delany Ms. Debbie Kay Wright ’83 Hon. K. Edward Greene ’69 and Mr. David McDaniel Moore II ’69 Ms. Lori Ireland Mr. Michael A. DeMayo ’90 DEAN’S CLUB Ms. Ann Yaeger Young ’75 and ( – ) Ms. Joan Powell Greene Ms. Miriam McIntire Nisbet ’77 Dr. Michael Harrill Young Mr. James Alvin Morgan ’62 Mr. Robert Leon Edwards ’65 and $2,000 $4,999 Ms. Robbie Wall Hambright Mr. Thomas Craig Nord ’69 Ms. Phyllis Phelps Ward Ms. Kathryn Oakes Edwards Mr. Michael Robert Abel ’70 Mr. Robert Ellis Zaytoun ’75 Mr. Irvin White Hankins III ’75 and Mr. Thomas Lloyd Norris Jr. ’60 and Mr. Richard Lee Farley ’87 and and Ms. Clare Ruch Abel Mr. Paul Roland Zurawski ’92 Ms. Barbara Brewer Hankins Ms. Jane Snyder Norris Ms. Cynthia Ryan Farley Mr. Mark Eldridge Anderson ’88 Mr. George V. Hanna III ’68 and VAN HECKE- Mr. Thomas Edward Austin Jr. ’88 Mr. Eli C. Northrup Mr. Thomas Drake Garlitz ’78 Ms. Deborah Hanna Mr. J. Melvin Bowen ’72 in memory of WILLIAM HORN WETTACH SOCIETY Mr. N. Jay Gould ’64 and Mr. Alan Arthur Harley ’78 Alexander T. Finamore ( – ) Ms. Luetta Gould Mr. Richard Thell Boyette ’77 and BATTLE SOCIETY $10,000 $24,999 Mr. Cecil Webster Harrison Jr. ’73 Mr. John Garrett Parker ’76 and ( – ) Ms. Beth Robyn Fleishman ’77 $1,000 $1,999 Anonymous Mr. Timothy Richard Graves ’85 and and Ms. Amelia Dr. Helen Nethercutt Parker Ms. Cathey Stricker Graves ’85 Ms. Doris Roach Bray ’66 Anonymous Mr. Brett Matthew Berry ’94 Hooks Harrison Hon. Sarah Elizabeth Parker ’69 Mr. Jeffrey Eugene Gray ’86 Ms. LeAnn Nease Brown ’84 and Mr. J. Allen Adams ’54 Ms. Tracy Schaefer Calder ’84 Mr. Fred Hathaway and Mr. Charles Roberts Phillips ’83 Hon. Mary Price Taylor Harrison ’85 Mr. Charles Gordon Brown Ms. Michelle Grace Adams ’99 Mr. Jay Michael Goffman ’83 Ms. Lee Broadfoot Hathaway and Ms. Diane C. Phillips Mr. Dan McCord Hartzog ’73 Mr. Jerry Hartzell ’77 Mr. Alfred Eugene III ’59 Mr. John Richardson Haworth ’50 Mr. David Neal Allen ’80 and and Ms. Liz Hartzell Hon. J. Dickson Phillips Jr. ’48 Ms. Kimberly Pendley Allen and Ms. Patricia T. Hartzog Mr. Orville Dillard Coward Jr. ’79 Mr. Michael Hollenbach ’82 and Ms. Jean Nunalee Phillips Ms. Sandra Leigh Johnson ’75 and Ms. Carolyn Lloyd Coward ’99 Mr. Thomas Wesley Anderson ’79 Mr. William Dean Johnson ’82 Mr. Martin Luther Holton III ’82 Ms. Sallie Boyle Phillips Mrs. Ted Johnson and Ms. M. Ann Anderson ’81 and Dr. Sally Ms. M. Ann Cox ’85 Mr. Jay Patrick Huber ’94 and Mr. L. Richardson Preyer Jr. Mr. E. Kent Auberry ’82, Cunningham Johnson in memory of Mr. John Sweetland Curry ’70 Ms. Tanya Accone Ted Johnson Mr. Lawrence Eric Rifken ’88 and in memory of Mr. Gustavus Adolphus Puryear IV Mr. Jerome Rex Eatman Jr. ’82 and Mr. Bruce Wayne Huggins Sr. ’70 Ms. Sonja Janette Rifken ’89 Ms. Valeria N. Johnson Ms. Maria M. Lynch ’79 Debra J. Whited ’93 and Ms. Jennifer and Ms. Jayne Brisson Huggins Mr. Edgar Mayo Roach Jr. ’74 and Mr. Christopher Allen Kreiner ’94 Mr. William Joseph Austin Jr. ’78 Herndon Puryear ’95 Mr. William Kinsland Edwards ’88 Mr. Grady Isaac Ingle ’89 Ms. Deborah Day Roach and Ms. Virginia Michelle Garris Mr. Philip Augustine Baddour Jr. ’67 Mr. James Dietrich Renger ’65 Mr. and Mrs. William Edward and Ms. Kathe Ingle Mr. Larry Edward Robbins ’79 Mr. William Dennie Spry Jr. ’72 Mr. Richard Layne Magee ’83 and Elmore Jr. (Mr. Elmore ’48) and Ms. Margaret Mr. John Robert Ingle ’59 Mr. Michael Lindsay Robinson ’80 Boothe Baddour Ms. Saundra Hoffner Magee Mr. Charles E. Elrod Jr. ’67 Mr. James Yancey Kerr II ’92 and and Ms. Wynn Tanner Mr. O. Kenneth Bagwell Jr. ’79 Mr. William Richard Mordan ’96 Mr. Jason Doughton Evans ’01 Ms. Frances King Kerr Ms. Jan Wall Romine Mr. Hugh Bangasser WILLIAM BRANTLEY Ms. Christine Cecchetti Mumma ’98 and Ms. Mary Lindsay Mr. Robert Watkins King Jr. ’59 Pres. Thomas Warren Ross Sr. ’75 Mr. Jonathan Adams Barrett ’78 AYCOCK SOCIETY Mr. Robert Bryan Norris ’76 Weatherly Evans Ms. Mindy Roz Kornberg ’85 and Ms. Susan Donaldson Ross ($5,000 – $9,999) and Ms. Kay Allison Norris Mr. Todd Hammond Eveson ’00 Hon. F. Gordon Battle ’58 Mr. Haynes Pell Lea ’82 and Ms. Mr. Julius Addison Rousseau III Mr. Frank Mebane Bell Jr. ’63 Anonymous Mr. John Peter O’Hale ’75 and Ms. Erin Dancy Eveson ’00 Elizabeth Craig Lea ’83 and Ms. Sharon Campbell Mr. Marc David Bishop ’84 Mr. Jeffrey Alan Allred ’80 and Ms. Claudia Ward O’Hale Mr. Edward Smoot Finley Jr. ’74 and Mr. Stephen Edwin Lewis ’91 and Rousseau Mr. Gardner Howard Altman Jr. ’71 Ms. Karen Ann Popp ’85 Ms. Virginia Ms. Mary Ellen Huckabee ’91 Mr. Horace Edney Stacy Jr. ’56 Mr. H. Arthur Bolick II ’94 Mr. E. William Bates II ’79 Ms. Elizabeth Leight Quick ’74 Doughton Finley Mr. Henry Clyde Lomax ’58 and and Ms. Joan Purser Stacy Ms. Anne Rea Bowden ’89

32 FALL-WINTER 2013 Dr. S. Gregory Boyd ’04 Mr. R. Harper Heckman ’91 Ms. Anna Snoderly Mills ’97 Mr. Garrett Allen Stone ’82 Ms. Mary Gill Campbell ’84 Mr. George Lester Little Jr. ’67 Mr. George Thomas Brady III ’98 Mr. Richard Charles Henn Jr. ’98 Ms. Alice Neece Mine ’85 Mr. M. Gray Styers Jr. ’89 Mr. Gordon Malone Carver III ’83 Mr. J. Lee Lloyd ’86 and Ms. Tonya Yarbrough Brady Ms. Alison Bunch Hershewe ’94 Hon. Burley Bayard Mitchell Jr. ’69 Mr. Thomas Richard Suher ’74 Mr. David Monadi Chilman ’92 Mr. Ronald Scott Lovelace ’02 and Mr. William Clarence Brewer Jr. ’56 Ms. Deborah Lowder Mr. Steven Montague Mitchell ’84 and Ms. Eileen A. Armenante Mr. James Harry Clarke ’79 and Ms. Jennifer Lovelace Mr. F. Bryan Brice Jr. ’90 Hildebran-Bachofen ’84 Mr. W. G. Champion Mitchell ’75 Mr. John Martin Taladay ’89 Ms. Eleanore Ewbank Clarke Ms. Karen Lynn Luchka ’06 Mr. John Decker Bristow ’00 and Mr. J. Gill Holland Jr. ’91 and Mr. James William Mizgala ’94 Mr. Arles Allen Taylor Jr. ’94 and Ms. Louise M. Clifford Mr. Robert Doughton Lyerly Jr. ’80 Ms. Margaret Duncan Bristow Ms. Augusta Brown Holland and Ms. Dawn M. Mizgala Ms. Dorothy Mae Taylor Mr. Matthew Parks Cochrane ’08 Mr. Randall Davis McClanahan ’92 Prof. Lissa Lamkin Broome and Mr. C. Mark Holt ’87 Mr. David Theodore Modi ’79 Mrs. Diane Jackson Taylor, and Ms. Margaret Mr. Joshua Carmichael McIntyre ’10 Mr. Adam H. Broome Ms. Mary Elizabeth Holt ’04 Mr. John Klauminzer Molen ’78 in memory of Ferebee Taylor Lenderman Cochrane ’09 Mr. Floyd Bixler McKissick ’07 Prof. Kenneth S. Broun and Mr. Troy Clifton Homesley Jr. ’58 Mr. John Robert Morgan ’73 and and in honor of Mr. Edward Grant Connette III ’77 Mr. John Aycock McLendon Jr. ’87 Louise F. Taylor Arnold, Ms. Marjorie Broun Mr. David Wallace Hood ’91 Ms. Elizabeth and Hon. Jane Harper ’80 Mr. Duncan Archibald McMillan ’77 Ms. Candice Wooten Brown ’01 McGregor Morgan Sarah Taylor Peterson Ms. Barbara Bitler Coughlin ’78 Ms. E. B. Hoover, and Martha Taylor Mr. Luke Anthony Meisner ’03 and and Mr. Ivey Lee Brown Jr. ’06 in honor of Mr. R. Donavon Munford Jr. ’79 and Dr. Paul William F Coughlin Dr. Michael William Taylor ’78 Ms. Toolsi Gowin Meisner ’05 Mr. Andrew William Broy ’01 Shawn L. Fraley Mr. John Hartman Murchison ’02 Mr. Roy Walton Davis Jr. ’55 Mr. Richard McCrary Taylor Jr. ’72 Ms. Julia Wesley Merricks ’84 Mr. John Eugene Bugg ’70 Mr. Justin D. Howard ’03 and and Ms. Meredith Mr. Svend Hewitt Deal ’07 Ms. Therese Ann Michaels ’83 Mr. David James Burge ’85 Ms. Margaret E. Howard Burdette Murchison Mr. R. Scott Tobin ’81 and Ms. Mr. Daniel Lyndon Deuterman ’91 Victoria Hensley Tobin ’81 Mr. George Washington Miller Jr. ’57 Mr. J. Matthew Calloway ’05 Mr. Joel Johnson Hughey ’87 Hon. Margaret Hackett and Ms. Dawne Mr. Emin Toro ’00 and Ms. Eula Hux Miller Mr. A. Britt Canady ’96 and Hon. James Baxter Hunt Jr. ’64 and Murphy ’73 Talbert Deuterman Mr. Frederick Dean Mitchell ’85 and Rebecca Cross Canady Ms. Carolyn Leonard Hunt Prof. Richard Ernest Myers ’98 Mr. Paul David Trinkoff ’81 and Ms. Jennifer Ann Dominguez ’02 Ms. Alison Miller Trinkoff Ms. Lynndolyn T. Mitchell Ms. Lisa Ross Carstarphen ’90 Mr. Ronald Forrest Hunt ’68 Mr. Barry Nakell Mr. Joseph Watkins Eason ’77 Mr. Ed Turlington ’82 Mr. Louis Angelo Monti ’00 and Ms. Pamela Brewington Cashwell Mr. Stephen Roy Hunting ’84 and Ms. Karen Nash-Goetz ’88 Mr. Elisha W. Erb ’64 Ms. Karen Jacobs Monti ’00 Mr. George Randolph Uzzell Jr. ’92 and Mr. David Leon Cashwell Ms. Mary Crawford Hunting ’83 Mr. Michael Nedzbala ’87 Mr. Lex Moser Erwin ’00 Mr. Joseph Kevin Moore ’98 Ms. Barbara Ragland Christy ’83 Mr. H. Bryan Ives III ’80 and Mr. Robert C. Vaughn Jr. ’55 and Mr. W. Harrell Everett Jr. ’62 and Mr. Scott Fredrik Norberg ’86 Ms. Carolyn Hartford Vaughn Mr. John Robert Moyer ’90 Mr. Anthony Charles Ciriaco ’83 Ms. Gibbs Chadwick Ives Ms. Lila Smith Everett Mr. Thomas LaFontaine Odom Jr. Mr. Ty Michael Votaw ’87 Mr. C. Eugene Murphy Jr. ’73 and Ms. Martha Ms. Patricia Cramer Jenkins ’89 Ms. Charlotte Louise Offerdahl Mr. Jeremy Michael Falcone ’06 Ms. Eileen C. Murphy ’87 Hammonds Ciriaco Ms. Kris Jensen Mr. Hamlin Landis Wade ’57 and Ms. Ashley Louise Bizzell ’88 and Mr. Grady W. Burgin and Ms. Julia K. Wade Hon. Jimmy Laird Myers ’91 Hon. Giles Robertson Clark ’58 Ms. Amy Kathryn Johnson ’94 Mr. Joel David Farren ’82 Mr. Lucky Theophilus Osho ’88 Mr. Sidney Rogers Warner Jr. ’91 and Ms. Sara A. Needles ’10 Ms. Katherine Meyers Cohen ’85 Dr. Stuart Hicks Johnson ’89 Ms. Elizabeth Diane Ferrill ’06 Mr. Raymond Eugene Ms. Joy Lynn Prof. Gene R. Nichol Jr. Hon. Robert Alvis Collier Jr. ’59 and Mr. Vaibhav Prasanna Kadaba ’97 Owens Jr. ’78 and Kennedy Warner Ms. Pamela Weaver Foster ’94 Mr. Charles Edward Nichols Jr. ’82 Ms. Barbara Stone Collier Mr. Robert William Kadlec Jr. and Ms. Sara Wyche Higgins ’95 Prof. Judith W. Wegner and Hon. Carl Raynard Fox ’78 and Ms. Susan Kelly Nichols ’81 Mr. Robert Clarence Cone ’78 Ms. Teresa Bush Kadlec Ms. Leslie Calkins Packer ’86 Mr. Warren William Wegner Mr. P. Douglas Freedle ’65 Ms. Lara Simmons Nichols ’93 and Ms. Sally Boyette Cone ’78 Mr. James Egan Kaiser ’92 Mr. E. Fitzgerald Parnell III ’73 Mr. Thomas Harry Weidemeyer ’72 Hon. Henry Ell Frye ’59 Ms. Meredith Sien Nicholson ’99 Mr. Jimmy Dean Cooley ’73 Mr. M. Keith Kapp ’79 and Mr. Carl Norris Patterson Jr. ’76 Mr. James Patrick West ’91 Mr. John L. W. Garrou ’67 Mr. Christopher Michael Mr. Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64 and Ms. Chancy McLean Kapp Mr. Henry Newton Patterson Jr. ’66 Mr. Adam Portius Wheeler ’02 Ms. Patricia Lewandowski Gillen ’86 Northrop ’89 and Ms. Norma H. Cowell Mr. René A. Kathawala ’96 and Ms. Jane Smith Patterson Mr. Martin L. White ’96 Ms. Lisa Jeffrey Gilliland ’83 Ms. Sylvia Novinsky and Mr. Burton Craige ’80 and Mr. Robert Max Kessler ’85 and Mr. Hunter Andrew Payne ’95 and Ms. Christine Josine Wichers ’92 Mr. Michael Hannibal Godwin ’74 Mr. Graham Calib Brosnan Ms. Heather Barkley Craige Ms. Nancy Prahofer ’84 Ms. Mary Thornton Payne ’95 Ms. Elizabeth Poppe Williams ’03 Mr. Timothy James Goodson ’06 Mr. W. Gary Ogburn ’82 Mr. David Philip Culp ’79 Mr. David Fulghum Kirby ’77 and Mr. Gary Vergil Perko ’90 and Mr. John Thornton Wilson ’99 and Ms. Ellinor Coder Mr. H. Patrick Oglesby ’77 and Mr. Fred Alan Cunningham ’88 Ms. Evelyn Debnam Kirby Ms. Ann Pickett Perko ’90 Mr. Michael L. Wilson ’96 and Goodson ’08 Ms. Mary Norris Mr. Garber Alfred Davidson Jr. ’72 Mr. James Webb Kiser ’59 and Mr. Kenneth Martin Perry ’93 and Ms. Anna F. Schleunes ’98 Mr. James Nolan Greene III ’99 Preyer Oglesby ’77 and Ms. Sally Bushong Davidson Ms. Nancy Howard Kiser Dr. Tonya Blanks Perry Mr. Thad Floyd Woody ’01 and Ms. Sarah Greene Mr. Jason Alexander Orndoff ’01 Mr. Edward B. Davis ’99 Prof. P. Anne Klinefelter Mr. Benjamin Michael Pickett ’07 Mr. Kenneth Ray Wooten ’79 Ms. Judith Kratz Guibert ’92 and Mr. Matthew Nelson Ott Jr. ’65 and Mr. Kearns Davis ’95 Mr. Clifton Brooks Knight Jr. ’74 Ms. Kathy Laughlin Pilkington ’89 Mr. John Clare-Norris Guibert III Ms. Elizabeth Garland Wren ’80 Ms. Edith Sheppard Ott Mr. Tyler Bartlett Dempsey ’99 Mr. Eric Alan Koontz ’99 Mr. Charles Thelen Plambeck ’86 Ms. A. Cotten Wright ’01 Mr. Chad Dwight Hansen ’04 Mr. Thomas Lawrence Owsley ’69 Ms. Mary Boney Denison ’81 Mr. Stephen Frederick Lapham ’95 Mr. Laurance Davidson Pless ’80 and Ms. Leslie Vial Owsley Ms. Angela Marie Xenakis ’03 Ms. Debbie Weston Harden ’82 Mr. Christopher Wade Derrick ’89, Mr. S. Luke Largess ’90 and Ms. Dana Hollis Halberg and Mr. Mark Michael Harden, Mr. Frank Caldwell Patton III ’87 in memory of Mr. Stephen Fredericks Later ’94 Mr. J. William Porter ’77 and Mr. James Matthew Yates Jr. ’79 in memory of and Ms. Marlena Severin Yates, Mr. Seldon Elijah Patty ’68 Sarah Camlin Mr. T. Bentley Leonard ’73 Ms. Susan G. Porter Robert L. Quick Mr. C. Jones Perry Jr. ’84 Mr. Robert Lyman Dewey ’82 in memory of Mr. John Gray Lewis Jr. ’58 Mr. William Francis Potts Jr. ’78 William A. Johnson Mr. S. Frank Harrell Jr. ’85 Ms. Kara Lynn Petteway ’05 Mr. Louis Whittier Doherty ’90 and Mr. William Henry Lewis Jr. ’69 Ms. Rose Cordero Prey ’04 Mr. J. Wade Harrison ’79 Mr. J. Dickson Phillips III ’79 Ms. Carolyn Jarvis Doherty Mr. C. Allen York ’04 and Mr. F. Lee Liebolt Jr. ’66 Ms. Donna Rhea Rascoe ’93 Ms. Heather Poole York Hon. Robby Hassell ’86 and Mr. Charles Francis Powers III ’66 Mr. Howard J. Duff ’83 Mr. David William Long ’67 and Mr. Charles E. Reece ’95 and Ms. Eloise Hassell Mr. Robert Francis Price ’74 Mr. Garth Kleber Dunklin ’88 Ms. Nina Monroe Long, Dr. Laura Helms Reece Ms. Anna Ragland Hayes ’88 Mr. Paul Edgar Raby ’72 Mr. William T. Dymond Jr. ’85 and in memory of Ms. Ann Reed ’71 and PARTNERS LEVEL Mr. Wilson Hayman ’79 Mr. Spencer C. Robinson ’12 Ms. Jennifer Davis Dymond William A. Johnson Mr. H. Glenn Dunn ’76 ($500 – $999) Mr. James Taylor Hedrick Jr. and Mr. John Spotswood Russell Mr. Joe Wesley Earnhardt ’04 Ms. Sandra Goddard Malkin ’88 Mr. Thomas Edward Reilly ’96 Ms. Laura Hedrick Anonymous Mr. Donald Dean Sayers ’68 Mr. Tom David Efird ’64 and Mr. Barry Dean Mann ’82 and Ms. Alice Carmichael Richey ’86 Mr. J. Travis Hockaday ’03 Mr. John Thomas Albers ’08 Ms. Donna Lynn Scott ’98 Ms. Anne Wrightson Efird Ms. Ashlie Downum Mann Mr. Stephen William Riddell ’85 Mr. G. Irvin Aldridge ’59 and Ms. Alyssa Omwake Ms. Cynthia Weaver Eller ’82 Mr. Jan Allen Marks ’82 Hockaday ’03 Mr. Kieran Joseph Shanahan ’82 Mr. S. Graham Robinson ’93 Mr. Louis Carr Allen III ’80 and Ms. Christina Ms. Diane Floca Epstein ’74 and Mr. Franklin Edwin Martin ’67 Mr. James Wade Hovis ’80 Mr. Richard Jephthah Rose ’72 Mr. William Reynold Allen III ’64 Alvarado Shanahan Mr. David G. Epstein Mr. John Weatherly Mason ’73 Mr. Samuel Reid Russell III ’80 and Ms. Margaret P. Allen Hon. Robert Carl Hunter ’69 Mr. Brian Preston Evans ’75 Ms. April Everette Shelton ’97 and Mr. Merrill McCall Mason ’86 Mr. Albert McCall Salem ’63 Prof. Ann Meislohn Anderson ’01 Mr. Arlie Jacobs ’77 Mr. Mark Steven Shelton Mr. James Graham Farris Jr. ’89 Mr. Brian Scott Masterson ’01 Mr. Richard Knight Schell ’85 and Mr. Deverick John Anderson Mr. Tommy Willis Jarrett ’67 Mr. Carl Meredith Short Jr. ’76 Ms. Jami Jackson Farris ’99 Mr. James Wendell May ’04 and Mr. James Simpson Mr. John H. Anderson ’02 and Mr. James Henry Jeffries IV ’88 Prof. Scott L. Silliman ’68 Mr. Ray Simpson Farris Jr. ’67 Ms. Katayoon Sadre May ’04, Dr. Jennifer B. Anderson Schenck IV ’82 Dr. Joseph McKendrie Mr. John Mayer Silverstein ’71 Mr. William Porter Farthing Jr. ’74 in memory of and Dr. Anna Pittman Schenck Ms. A. Carter Arey ’03 Jenkins ’90 and Ms. Leslie L. Silverstein and Ms. Linda Farthing Idrienne E. Heyman Ms. Elizabeth Davenport Scott ’86 Mr. Henry Curtis Babb ’69 Mr. Daniel Louis Johnson Jr. ’85 Mr. L. D. Simmons and Mr. Douglas Allen Mays ’92 and Ms. Elizabeth Upchurch Fee ’84 Mr. J. Darrell Shealy ’82 Ms. Leslie R. Baker and Ms. Suzanne Ms. Marcia Imbrogno Simmons and Mr. Thomas Fee Ms. Jennifer Eaton Bennett ’92 Mr. Peter William Sheil ’81 Ms. Cynthia Whitley Baldwin ’08 Houck Johnson Mr. Shahe Sinanian ’79 Mr. Kyle James Fiet ’07 and Mr. Neill Gregory McBryde ’69 and Mr. Raleigh Alexander Ms. Evelyn Rebecca Ballard ’07 Mr. Robert White Johnson ’66 and Mr. Kevin Lamar Sink ’94 Ms. Rebeca Jones Fiet Ms. Margaret Ms. Christianna Shoemaker ’70 and Mr. John R. Means Mr. James Hugh Slaughter ’89 and Mr. Michael Perkins Flanagan ’71 McPherson McBryde Land Johnson Mr. Steven Howard Sholk ’81 Mr. Sherrod Banks ’88 Ms. Tamara Vincent Slaughter Mr. Joel Lawrence Fleishman ’59 Hon. Charles K. McCotter Jr. ’71, Mr. D. Michael Jones ’78 Mr. Reginald Tyrone Shuford ’91 Mr. Vance Barron Jr. ’73 and Ms. Harriett Jean Smalls ’99 Mr. Benjamin Hugh Flowe Jr. ’81 in memory of Mr. Harrison Joseph Kaplan ’85 Mr. Dana Edward Simpson ’00 Ms. June T. Barron Mr. David Davis Smyth ’00 and Gladys L. Dimmick, and Ms. Dona Lineberry Kaplan Ms. Katherine McArthur Floyd ’79 and Ms. Stephanie Mr. Nigle Bruce Barrow Jr. ’77 and Ms. Julie Jayoung Song ’01 William C. Friday and Mr. C. Matthew Keen ’87 and Mr. Sheldon Leslie Fogel ’65 Mansur Simpson Hon. Alice Carson Stubbs ’92 Mr. James Byron Snow III ’82 William A. Johnson Ms. Ruth McGaw Keen Mr. Andrew Henderson Foster ’00 Mr. William Henry McCullough ’59 Mr. Jeffrey Thomas Skinner ’96 Mr. Anthony James Barwick ’01 Ms. Janice Grace Sokol ’91 and Mr. Michael Everett Kelly ’74 Mr. Joseph Nicholas Froehlich ’96 and Ms. Jeanette G. McCullough and Ms. Elizabeth Skinner and Ms. Amber Lueken Mr. Darrin Sokol Barwick ’01 Mr. Patrick Eaton Kelly ’89 Ms. Lisa Frye Garrison ’94 and Mr. Bryan Andrew McGann ’01 and Mr. John Reeves Sloan ’90 and Hon. W. Erwin Spainhour ’70 Mr. Kevin Philip Belote ’08 and Mr. Vaiden Pearson Kendrick ’69 Mr. Aaron Franklin Garrison Ms. Joanna Davis McGann Ms. Louise Folger Sloan Mr. Mack Sperling ’83 Ms. Rachel Frazier Gage ’08 Mr. Steven R. Koch ’10 Mr. William Ward Gerrans ’82 and Mr. Matthew Patrick McGuire ’93 Mr. Wade Marvin Smith ’63 Mr. Geoffrey Patrick Suddreth ’96 Ms. Donna Elaine Bennick ’84 Ms. Trentity H. Gerrans and Ms. Christine McGuire Ms. Marianne Koral Smythe 74 Mr. Richard Charles Komson ’74 and Ms. Heather and Mr. Joel Hasen Prof. Elizabeth Gibson ’76 and Ms. Laura Daniel McKenna and Dr. Robert Barry Smythe Mr. George Russell Lovelace Suddreth Mr. W. Mark Bielawski ’87 Prof. Robert Paul Mosteller Hon. Rickye McKoy-Mitchell ’84 Mr. Julian Raymond Sparrow Jr. Kornegay Jr. ’63 Mr. Sanford Webb Thompson IV ’80 Ms. Alison Ann Grounds ’01 and Mr. Rick Mitchell ’81 and Ms. Mary Mr. Derek Wayne Black ’02 Mr. Mark David Kotwick ’89 and Ms. Cynthia Ms. Frances Hunt Hall ’59 Mr. Joe McLeod ’62 Ireland Sparrow ’81 Ms. Charlotte Gail Blake ’85 Mr. Philip David Lambeth ’72 Clyburn Thompson Mr. Robert D. Hancock ’01 and Mr. John Burchfield McMillan ’67 Mr. Joseph Henry Stallings ’75 Mr. J. Michael Booe ’71 Ms. Karen J. Lamp ’83 Ms. Lee Ellen Belk Turnbull ’85 Ms. Christian W. Hancock ’01 and Ms. Angelyn Mr. C. Thomas Steele Jr. ’87 and Ms. Rebecca Jane Bosley ’77 Mr. R. Bruce Laney ’73 Mr. Richard Lawrence Vanore Sr. ’73 Mr. Richard Banner Hart ’59 and Stokes McMillan Ms. Kimberly Hindman Steele Ms. Jean Winborne Boyles ’73 Mr. Anthony Terrell Lathrop ’88 and and Ms. Sylvia Wallace Vanore Ms. Jean Shinn Hart Mr. Roy H. Michaux Jr. ’65 and Ms. Mr. Sidney Joseph Stern III Mr. Bradley Joseph Breece ’10 Ms. Sarah Parrott Lathrop Mr. Richard von Biberstein Jr. ’60 Mr. Stephen G. Hartzell ’00 Beverly Bunn Michaux Hon. Richard Yates Stevens ’74 Mr. Christopher G. Browning Jr. ’86 Mr. Kenneth W. Lewis and and Ms. Carolyn von Biberstein Mr. John Donald Hawkins ’80 Mr. George John Miller ’53 Mr. David Anderson Stockton ’82 Mr. Norman Deane Brunson ’73 Ms. Holly Ewell Lewis Mr. W. Kent Walker Jr.

CAROLINA LAW 33 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Mr. Robert James Walters ’85 Hon. John S. Arrowood ’82 Ms. Mary C. Bellanti Ms. Daya M. Breckinridge Mr. Stephen Timothy Byrd ’84 and Mr. Thomas Matthew Clare ’82 and and Ms. Sara Ms. Lisa Williford Arthur ’12 Ms. Corrine L. Belt ’09 Mr. John William Brent ’66 Ms. Sandra Sain Byrd ’84 Ms. Jacqueline Riley Clare ’82 Brentlinger Walters Mr. Robert Joseph Arundell ’80 Ms. Jill Marie Benjamin ’94 Mr. Edward Yates Brewer ’72 Mr. William Bernard Ms. Brooke Locklear Clark ’04 Mr. Alexander Faris Watson ’01 Ms. Katherine Blass Asaro ’12 Mr. Robert Henry Bennink Jr. ’75 Mr. J. Clark Brewer ’67 and Bystrynski ’94 Mr. Daniel William Clark ’88 and Dr. and Ms. Mayleng Streett and Mr. Andrew Vito Asaro Ms. Dawn Gantt Benson ’82 Ms. Sara H. Brewer Ms. Michele Walton Cady ’94 and Sandra Crovi Clark Watson ’01 Ms. Denise Porterfield Ashworth Mr. Jonathan Arthur Mr. Joe Oliver Brewer ’62 and Mr. Darren Michael Cady Mr. Dumont Clarke IV ’78 and Mr. Reich Lee Welborn ’71 ’85 and Mr. Paul Berkelhammer ’82 and Ms. Ms. Lillie B. Brewer Ms. Rebecca Lynn Cage ’10 Ms. Shirley J. Linn and Ms. Martha Saunders Ashworth Kathryn Breeze Berkelhammer Ms. Kelly Ann Brewer ’11 Mr. Mark Thomas Cain ’87 Mr. William Clarke ’82 Huffstetler Welborn Mr. Stell Blake Askew Jr. ’62 and Mr. Jay Bernardoni Ms. Elizabeth Sanders Mr. Michael S. Caines Ms. Judith Clarkson Mr. Hill Beverley Wellford Jr. ’67 Dr. Anne Preston Askew Mr. Richmond Gilbert Brewington ’92 Mr. Larry Calhoun and Ms. Katherine Justus Clayton ’04 Ms. Kathleen Mary Wells Mr. Owen Boyd Asplundh ’05 and Bernhardt Jr. ’57 Mr. L. Michael Bridges ’75 Ms. Karen H. Calhoun Mr. Patrick J. Cleary ’09, Mr. Richard G. Wheelahan III ’05 Ms. Amy Keffler Asplundh Mr. Steven Alan Bernholz ’66 Ms. Ashley Morrison Briefel ’11 Mr. Robert Redmond Caliri ’73 in honor of and Ms. Ingrid Wheelahan Mr. Keith Frederick Atkinson ’99 Ms. Lori Merrill Bernstein ’89 Ms. Nachael Lynn Bright ’01 Ms. Hannah L. Camenzind ’10 Dr. Saule Omarova Hon. John Lee Whitley ’61 and Ms. Tracey Vacca Atkinson Ms. Robin Andrea Bernstein ’81 Mr. Eric Joseph Brignac ’02 Ms. Ashley Huffstetler Campbell Mr. John Michael Clerici ’95 Ms. Jane Hoffman Atmatzidis ’12 Mr. Jay McCullam Wilkerson ’92 Mr. Michael Louis Berry ’00 and Ms. Dixie Bloom Brink ’03 and Mr. Russell and Ms. Karen Smith Clerici and Ms. Katherine Mr. George Bailey Autry ’91 and Dr. Randi Strosberg Berry Mr. Martin Hal Brinkley ’92 and Neil Campbell Mr. Chuck Cloninger ’82 Britt Wilkerson ’92 Ms. Stephanie Ms. Aiko Diane Bethea ’02 Ms. Carol Scovil Brinkley Mr. Christopher Zemp Ms. Crandall Frances Close ’09 Hutchins Autry ’87 Mr. Camden Charles Betz ’07 and Mr. Stephen Cook Brissette ’82 Campbell ’96 Ms. Christin Brooke Coan ’01 Mr. Bradford Alan Williams ’99 Mr. C. Ronald Aycock ’66 and Dr. Christina Ms. Sara Bartholomees Betz Ms. Louise Anderson Bristol ’91 Mr. John Wishart Campbell ’49 Mr. Christopher Coates ’72 and Mr. Frank Bayard Aycock III ’65 Nelson Williams Mr. John Huddleston Beyer ’97 Mr. C. Robin Britt Jr. ’01 and Ms. Susan Elizabeth Campbell ’98 Ms. Judith Ann Curris Ms. Tiana Gibson Ayotte ’90 and and Ms. Laura Turner Beyer ’98 Ms. Sharron Belk Britt Mr. Damian Anthony Cannon ’13 Mr. Raymond L. Coats and Mr. John Williams and Mr. Matthew Philip Ayotte Ms. Judith Williams Mr. Aaron Benjamin Biek ’12 and Ms. Jill Starling Britt ’93 Ms. Kathleen Weaver Cannon ’81 Ms. Cheryl B. Coats, Hon. R. Allen Baddour Jr. ’97 and Ms. Lauren E. Biek ’06 and Mr. James R. Cannon Jr. in memory of Mr. T. Douglas Wilson Jr. ’73 Ms. Holly Baddour Mr. Walter Edgar Brock Jr. ’78 and Mr. Gary William Bigelow ’84 and Ms. Lynne Beazlie Brock Mr. Thomas Roberts Cannon ’65 William A. Johnson Mr. W. Samuel Woodard ’69 and Mr. David Russell Badger ’72 Ms. Donna R. Bigelow Ms. Leah Michelle Broker ’92 Mr. William Barker Cannon ’05 Ms. Emily Thompson Cobb Ms. Judy Brown Woodard Ms. Miriam Jane Baer ’84 Mr. William P. Biggers ’11 Ms. Carol Lee Brooke ’00 Mr. Kenneth D. Cantrell Mr. Laurence Arthur Cobb ’58 and Ms. Rosalind Jane Woolbright ’91 Mr. David Wesley Bailey Jr. ’82 Ms. Edna Faye Mr. Terrell Billings and Mr. Dan Brooks Mr. Christopher Blair Capel ’85 Ms. Kimberly Easter Zirkle ’06 Mr. Alton Deems Bain ’85 Ms. Glenda Billings Pugh Cobb, Mr. David Victor Brooks ’77 Ms. Anita Louise Capoferri ’88 Mr. Edgar R. Bain, Mr. Kevin John Bishop ’05 in memory of Mr. Eugene Clyde Brooks IV ’82 Mr. Donald Neil Capparella ’84 in memory of Ms. Kimberly Christin Bishop ’04 William A. Johnson ASSOCIATES LEVEL Mr. M. Guy Brooks III ’81 and Ms. Jennifer Gelb Carbee ’00 William A. Johnson Mr. W. Louis Bissette Jr. ’68 and Ms. Kimberly J. Cogdell ’03 Ms. Ann Bowers Brooks ($1 – $499) Ms. Marilyn Ann Bair ’88 Ms. Sara Oliver Bissette Hon. J. Phillips Carlton ’63 and Mr. George William Coggin ’59 and Mr. Timothy Paul Brooks ’89 Ms. Dean Dunn Carlton Anonymous Mr. Nicholas John Bakatsias ’05 Ms. Avis Elizabeth Black ’76 Ms. Carol Jones Coggin Mr. Alfred Brophy Mr. Robert Winfield Carlton ’81 Mr. David P. Abel ’13 Mr. Anthony Vincent Baker ’81 Ms. Megan Pridgen Black ’10 Ms. Mirtis B. Coggins Mr. David Popham Broughton ’97 Ms. Danielle Marie Carman ’97 Ms. Shelley K. Abel ’05 and Mr. Mr. James Raleigh Baker ’08 Mr. Jeffrey Hart Blackwell ’86 Mr. Edward Bates Cole ’02 and Dr. Charlotte Michael J. Abel, Ms. Katharine Amanda Baker ’13 Mr. John Hemstreet Carmichael ’93 Ms. Kimberly Letecia Cole ’04 Mr. Daniel Micah Blau ’07 Chandler Broughton in memory of Mr. Ronald Graham Baker ’75 Mr. Charles Francis Carpenter ’82 Mr. Charles Thomas Colgan ’69 Dr. Joan Michelle Blazich ’13 and Mr. H. Chalk Broughton Jr. ’88 Mary R. Schell Mr. Paul Baldasare Jr. ’81 and Mr. Brian Kelly Flatley Mr. Jennings Bradford Carpenter ’13 Mr. Jeremy J. Collins ’13 Mr. Howard Chalk Broughton ’58 Hon. G. Wayne Abernathy ’75 Ms. Jane Roney Wettach ’81 Mr. Louis Adams Bledsoe Jr. ’55 Mr. Justin Tyler Carpenter ’09 Mr. Timothy Robert Collins ’03 Mr. Clark Steven Abrams ’83 and Ms. Penelope Mr. Eugene Morrison Carr III ’85 Mr. Michael Angelo Balducci ’76 and Ms. Martha H. Bledsoe Dana Broughton Mr. Vincent Paul Collura ’62 Ms. Cybil Range Abrao ’06 Ms. Ruth H. Carr, Ms. Ruth E. Baldwin ’10 Mr. James Davis Blount Jr. ’52 Ms. Joal Hall Broun Mr. Clyde Colwell, Ms. Jean C. Abreu ’13 in memory of Mr. James William Baley and Mr. Thomas Daniel Blue Jr. ’97 and Ms. Kimberly J. Brow ’12 in honor of Ms. Kara G. Acree ’00 Ms. Katherine Wilcox Baley Ms. Teresa R. Blue Gigliola B. Tatge Sarah H. Colwell Mr. Chester Henry Brown Jr., Mr. Franklin LeVerne Adams Jr. ’63 Mr. William F. Blue, Ms. Mary Van Ostenberg Ms. Laurie Grace Ballenger ’94 in memory of Mr. J. Benjamin Connell ’10 and Ms. Carolyn Ivey Adams Carrigan ’84 Hon. Vicki Ballou-Watts ’83 in memory of Mary R. Schell and Ms. Kristin L. Connell Mr. Thomas Jonathan Adams ’95 Elizabeth Gant Bennett Ms. April Rose Carson ’02 Mr. Yoel H. Balter ’07 and Mr. Douglas Ray Brown ’88 Mr. Clinton Lee Conner ’03 Mr. A. Mark Adcock ’83 Col. Robert Joel Blum ’59 Mr. B. David Carson ’88 and Ms. Christine J. Conner Ms. Jane McNeill Balter Hon. Frank R. Brown ’61 Mr. Robert Spencer Adden Jr. ’82 Ms. Rachel Marie Blunk ’11 Mr. George Carson II ’67 Mr. Michael Shields Connor ’88 and Mr. Jeffrey Alan Bandini ’97 Mr. J. Michael Brown ’71 Ms. Brooke Nicole Albert ’07 Mr. William Todd Boardman ’78 Mr. Charles Samuel Carter ’74 Ms. Dorothy Wellford Connor Ms. Ann Howard Banzet ’95 Mr. James Gorman Brown ’70 Mr. David R. Boaz ’12 Mr. George W. Carter ’12 Ms. Diane Connors Ms. Holly Harris Alderman ’89 Mr. Julius Edmond Banzet III ’62 Ms. Sara Coughlin Brown ’09 and Mr. Neil Ms. Kimberly Kizziah Bocell ’03 Hon. Gary Stephen Cash ’76 Ms. Jacqueline Kane Connors ’95 Mr. Amos Whitney Barclay ’04 Mr. Scott Newton Brown Jr. ’65 Goodwin Alderman Mr. Richard Joseph Boles ’66 Hon. Samuel Allen Cathey ’73 Mr. Phillip Gordon Conrad ’83 Mr. Bartley Lawrence Barefoot ’99 Mr. Thomas Walter Brown ’89 Mr. William Sidney Aldridge ’77 Mr. Evan D. Bolick ’10 Hon. J. Gentry Caudill ’72 Hon. Richard Rodney Cooch ’73 Mr. Dan Taylor Barker Jr. ’87 and Prof. Caroline Ms. Elizabeth Jane Caviness ’88 Mr. Arch Turner Allen III ’65 Mr. James Houston Barnes III ’07 Mr. William Turner Bonds ’63 Nicholson Brown Mr. English Darwin Cook Jr. Ms. Stephanie Marie Ceccato ’05 Hon. C. Walter Allen ’57 Mr. William Thomas Barnett Jr. ’85 Hon. Richard Dale Boner ’75 and Ms. Tiffany R. Brown ’12 Ms. Terri Lynn Cook ’86 Ms. Margaret Robertson Boner Ms. Courtney Harris Chacos ’08 Mr. Derek Jason Allen ’97 and Ms. Elizabeth Mr. Troy Anderson Brown Jr. ’59 Mr. Douglas Kenneth Cooper ’74 Barwick Barnett Mr. Donald Lee Boone ’61 and Mr. Gary Wayne Chadwick ’75 Mr. Ernest Marvin Allen III ’76 Ms. Noelle Stevens Browne ’85 Mr. Nathan Andrew Cooper ’10 Ms. Lavon Boone and Ms. Sharon Bryan Chadwick Ms. Martha Allen Godin ’96 and Mr. W. Doak Barnhardt ’84 and Mr. H. Howard Browne III Atty Gen Roy Asberry Mr. George H. Booth II Prof. Julius LeVonne Mr. Thomas A. Godin Ms. Brandy Barrett ’13 Ms. Jane Brumbeloe Cooper III ’82 Mr. George Henry Booth Chambers ’62* Mr. Patrick Martin Allen ’93 Ms. Debra G. Barrett Ms. Tiffany Hawkins Brunson ’97 Ms. Susan Hager Cooper ’93 Ms. Martha Owens Booth Mr. Edward Thomas Chaney Mr. Wade Hampton Alley Jr. ’68 Mr. James Anderson Barrett ’83 Ms. Ann A. Bryan ’13 Hon. James William Copeland Jr. ’77 Mr. Zeb D. Alley ’55 Mr. Fitz Edward Barringer ’11 Ms. Agnes S. Bordeaux, ’07 and Ms. Amanda Suttle Mr. Rhodes Thomas Corbett and Ms. Kristan D. Bryant ’09 Hitchcock ’07 Mr. James Walter Allison ’69 Mr. Paul Jehu Barringer III ’95 in memory of Ms. Ellen McKellar Corbett Hon. Robert Ward Bryant Jr. ’82 Mr. Benjamin Low Chapman ’67 Ms. June Karen Allison ’81 Ms. Lucy Katherine Barrios ’11 William A. Johnson Mr. William Rhodes Corbett ’03 Ms. Jenna Niedringhaus Mr. E. C. Bryson Jr. ’64 and Mr. Kevin Wayne Chapman ’05 Mr. Michael Allen Almond ’75 Ms. Patricia Tighe Bartis ’94 Mr. Matthew Alan Cordell ’07 Borders ’11 Ms. Katharine Pickrell Bryson and Ms. Karen Harris and Ms. Helen Ruth Ms. Nancy Ruth Lunsford Ms. Susan E. Cornell Mr. Conrad Karl Bortz Mr. Bruce Alan Buckley ’81 and Chapman ’05 Fleming Almond Bartlett ’81 Prof. Michael L. Corrado Ms. Stella Anne Boswell ’95 and Ms. Sarah Alice Crowder ’81 Mr. Ronald A. Charlot ’09 Mr. Adam Paul Altman ’98 Ms. Dauna Leigh Bartley ’08 Mr. Craig Stephen Heinly Ms. Carrie Jane Buell ’07 Mr. M. Alexander Charns ’82 and Mr. Timothy Walter Corrigan ’94 Mr. Melvyn Altman and Mr. William Thomas Barto ’90 and Mr. Joel King Bourne ’58* Ms. Claire Abernathy Buie ’90 and Ms. Diane Tucker Charns ’89 Mr. Josh Jacob Costner ’07 and Ms. Toby Altman Ms. Carol Ann Pearce ’90 Ms. Carmen Elaine Costner Ms. Lori Bunting Boutwell ’94 and Mr. Craig Pennington Buie Ms. Katherine Chase, Hon. James Floyd Ms. June Lynn Basden ’86 Mr. Madison Earl Bullard Jr. ’81 Mr. Philip L. Cotey ’13 Ammons Jr. ’80 Mr. Everett Cleveland Boutwell in memory of Mr. Merlin Bass III ’93 Hon. Frank William Bullock Jr. ’63 Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Eric Harbrook Cottrell ’95 Ms. Abrielle B. Anderson ’05 Mr. J. Mac Boxley ’67 and Ms. Joyita Roy Basu ’04 Ms. Mary Roper Boxley and Ms. Frances Ms. Laetitia L. Cheltenham ’13 Ms. Sara Couch ’13 Ms. Carol Zielinski Anderson Mr. Douglas Wooley Baxley ’75 Mr. William Glenn Boyd ’66 Haywood Bullock Mr. Duke Chen ’08 Mr. Ronald Guy Coulter ’79 Mr. Charles Noel and Ms. Dianne Dr. Jefferson Chelcy Boyer II Mr. William Winborne Bunch III ’80 Mr. Christian Peter Cherry ’05 and Ms. Elizabeth Anderson Jr. ’86 O’Quinn Baxley Mr. George Worth Boylan ’71 Mr. H. Ligon Bundy ’76 Dr. William Grimes Cherry III and Johnston Coulter Mr. Jon Edwin Anderson ’71 Mr. David Brian Bayard ’00 Ms. Susan S. Boylston Mr. E. Harry Bunting Jr. ’74 and Ms. Ms. Agnes Cherry, Ms. Stephanie Carowan Courter ’08 and Ms. Patricia Anderson Mr. Jack Bronson Bayliss Jr. ’79 Mr. Martin L. Brackett Jr. ’72 Elizabeth Cochrane Bunting ’74 in memory of Mr. Matthew Abraham Coury ’09 Ms. Margaret J. Anderson Mr. Robert Gene Baynes ’64 and Ms. Carolyn Elizabeth Mr. Gregory C. Braden Mr. Timothy Ryan Burch ’01 and William A. Johnson Ms. Melissa Anderson ’98 Mr. Neil Douglas Beach ’67 and Ms. Lisa Burch Mr. Edwin Paul Chester ’77 and Waldrep ’10 Mr. Philip Scott Anderson ’94 Ms. Jo Townsend Beach Mr. Jeffery Braden and Ms. Alice Sylvester Cox, Ms. Jill Braden Mr. Robert A. Burgoyne ’82 Ms. Barbara Ann Vestal ’77 Mr. Russell Jordan Andrew ’07 Ms. Lois H. Beaudet in memory of Ms. Rachel F. Braden ’13 Mr. Bernard Alan Burk and Mr. Kevin Lee Chignell ’95 and Ms. Ms. Deborah Bryant Andrews ’97 Mr. Jackson C. Bebber ’13 Ms. Amy Kaufman Burk Jeannine Anne Chignell William A. Johnson Mr. Ross McCoy Bradford ’03 Ms. Beth T. Angrick Mr. C. Vance Beck ’86 and Ms. Lee Sink Burkhart Dr. Jeffrey William Childers ’03 Mr. David L. Cox ’02 Mr. Isaac John Bradley ’08 Mr. Benjamin R. Ansbacher Ms. Emily Revelle Beck Mr. Vincent William Burskey ’04 Mr. John F. Coyle Ms. Lauren Hobson Bradley ’12 Mr. Vincent Davis Childress Jr. ’83 Mr. Keith Peter Anthony ’02 and Mr. Kenneth A. Becker ’83 Mr. Henry McAden Burwell ’76 Ms. Hillary Bridgers Crabtree ’99 Ms. Kathleen D. Bradshaw ’13 Mr. Delmer Lowell Chilton Dr. Kelly Kosobucki Anthony Mr. Michael Richard Becker ’71 Mr. Algernon Lee Butler III ’94 Ms. Angela Farag Craddock ’04 Ms. Penni Pearson Bradshaw ’80 Ms. Laura Stephens Chipman ’09 Mr. Charles Van Dyke Archie ’12 Mr. Elwood Becton ’79 Mr. Randy James Bye and Mr. Robert Wayne Cramer ’84 Ms. Stacey Ann Brady ’98 Mr. Daniell L. Church, Mr. Thomas Edward Archie ’68 Mr. Jeffrey S. Beelaert ’11 Dr. Margaret Gorely Bye in honor of Mr. Paul Lennon Cranfill ’69 and Ms. Carolyn E. Brafford Mr. J. Mitchell Armbruster ’99 Ms. Judith Goldstein Behar ’75 Ms. Karen M. Byrd, Jared Knight Ms. Sarah Snow Cranfill Mr. Heyward Dubose Mr. Charles L. Behrend and Hon. Anthony Mason Brannon ’62 in memory of Ms. Kim Church ’82 Ms. Lauren C. Cranford ’12 Armstrong ’03 Ms. Patricia B. Behrend and Ms. Joan William A. Johnson Mr. Paul Lee Craven III ’02 and Goren Brannon ’71 Mr. Charles Whitaker Clanton ’91 Mr. Andrew Philip Arnold ’13 Mr. Daniel J. Behrend ’11 Mr. Ricky Byrd and Ms. Amanda A. Hayes ’02 Hon. E. Maurice Braswell ’50 Ms. Christine C. Clapp, and Ms. Sarah Elaine Arnold Mr. Victor Eros Bell III and Ms. Donna H. Byrd in honor of Mr. C. Penry Craver Jr. ’66 Mr. Daniel Lee Brawley ’67 Mr. Robert L. Arrington ’75 Ms. Mary Grady Koonce Bell Nate Creger Mr. Thomas Rich Crawford ’72

34 FALL-WINTER 2013 * deceased Mr. C. David Creech ’88 Ms. Tracy Stewart DeMarco ’09 Mr. Kevin Morgan Elwell ’95 Mr. Geoffrey Allen Foster ’79 Mr. Kerry B. Goodwin ’98 Hon. Joseph J. Harper Jr. ’73 Col. Joseph Powell Creekmore ’62 Mr. John Andrew Demos ’03 and Mr. Edward Lawrence Embree III ’72 Mr. David Burton Fountain ’94 Mr. James Robert Gordon ’64 Mr. E. Jackson Harrington Jr. ’69 and Ms. Darrell Ms. Christina Vlachos Demos and Ms. Stuart and Ms. Lucy Vanderberry Mr. Marc Richard Gordon ’80 and Mr. Dean Murray Harris ’81 and Dutton Creekmore Mr. Paul M. Dennis Jr. ’75 Robinson Embree Fountain ’93 Ms. Gayle Gordon Ms. Deborah Mclaughlin Harris Ms. Kim G. Creger Hon. Judson Davie DeRamus Jr. ’68 Ms. Meghan Dawson Engle ’12 Mr. Reed Nicholas Fountain Mr. Michael R. Gordon ’11 Mr. J. Gates Harris ’74 and ’96 and Ms. Susan Twiddy Ms. Helen Russell Crews, Mr. Dailey Jonathan Derr ’72 and Ms. Ashley Lillian Erickson ’09 Mr. Robert Ryan Gorman ’10 Ms. Patricia Fraser Harris in memory of Fountain ’97 Ms. Bonnie Boyer Derr Mr. John Robert Erwin ’83 Mr. Richard S. Gottlieb ’96 and Ms. Louise W. Harris William A. Johnson Mr. John Christopher Derrick ’09 Mr. Jonathan A. Espinola ’11 Mr. Richard Tillman Fountain Jr. ’56 Ms. Jennifer Ely Gottlieb ’96 Mr. Phillip A. Harris ’09 Mr. David Godwin Crockett ’70 Mr. Ravi Rajnikant Desai ’10 Mr. Kenneth Franklin Essex ’70 and and Ms. Katherine Mr. Kristopher Michael Gould ’10 Blue Fountain Mr. B. Powell Harrison, III and Ms. Mary Holsenbeck Crosby ’05 Hon. Laura Ann Devan ’94 Dr. Faye Ellen Sultan and Ms. Sarah Bagot Gould Mr. Richard L. Fox ’61 Ms. Anne Smith Harrison, and Mr. Phillip Crosby Hon. M. Patricia DeVine ’83 Mr. Leonard Joseph Essig ’88 Mr. Steven Gould and in memory of Mr. John McDonald Cross Jr. ’95 Mr. Dennis Estok ’13 Mr. Stephen Field Franks ’55 Ms. Eleanor Gould Mr. Cort W. DeVoe and Clifton C. Bennett Jr. Ms. Caitlyn R. Culbertson ’13 Ms. Christine L. DeVoe Mr. Landon Sean Eustache ’08 Mr. David Russell Frankstone ’75 Ms. Laura Gurnee Graban ’86, Mr. George B. Harrison and Mr. Marc Cullen ’99 and Ms. Theresa Spawn Dew ’00 Mr. Charles Douglas Evans ’72 Ms. Emily Crowder Frazelle ’01 in honor of Ms. Emily Dearman Cullen and Mr. David Kathleen Lockwood Ms. Jean S. Harrison Mr. Brandon V. Dhande ’09 Mr. H. Lee Evans Jr. ’84 and Jennings Frazelle Ms. Mary Kate Cullen Ms. Rebecca Lynn Evans Mr. Arey Wilson Grady III ’98 Ms. Patricia Dowds Harrison ’95 Ms. Karen Barbra Dietrich ’97 Mr. James Donald Freeman ’90 Mr. Matthew Lawrence Cummings Ms. Karen Dye Evans ’90 Ms. Jacqueline Denise Grant ’95 Mr. R. Woody Harrison Jr. ’67 and Mr. Thomas Green Dill Sr. ’47 and Mr. Mason E. Freeman ’11 ’99 and Ms. Angela Byrd Ms. Ann Fountain Dill Ms. Meriwether Tull Evans ’13 Mr. James Charles Gray ’68 Ms. Nancy Rogers Harrison Dr. Samuel R. Freeman ’77 Cummings ’99 Mr. J. Scott Dillon ’83 and Ms. Michelle R. Evans ’02 Hon. Daniel Ray Green Jr. ’79 Hon. Fletcher Lee Hartsell Jr. ’72 Mr. Dale Allen Curriden ’97 and Ms. Camelyn Timberlake Dillon Mr. William Eric Freeman ’80 and Ms. Jennifer Cleland Green ’92 Mr. Daniel Adam Hatley ’08 Mr. Lewis Moore Everett ’08 Ms. Suzanne Burris Freeman Ms. Kristen Elizabeth Curriden Mr. John David Dillon ’94 and Ms. Sherry and Mr. Stanley Boyd Green Mr. Lucas Victor Haugh ’05 Mr. Walter Lee Currie ’68 Mr. Kerry Anthony Friedman ’80 Mr. Thomas Johnston Honeycutt Everett ’08 Mr. Leonard Glen Green ’75 and Ms. Hada deVarona Haulsee ’81 Ms. Katherine Dennis Currin ’07 Mr. Alfred A. Friedrich ’94 Ms. Carolyn Howard Carter Dimmock ’75 Mr. Douglas W. Ey Jr. and Ms. Jane Richardson Hauser ’13 Mr. Thomas Lee Currin ’76 and Mr. Kurt Blaine Fryar ’02 Mr. Jonathan Allen Greene ’06 Ms. Angela Ward DiNoto ’08 Ms. Tere Y. Ey Mr. Michael David Hauser ’87 and Ms. Grey Tharrington Currin Ms. Joan S. Dinsmore ’06 Ms. Yolanda R. Fair ’13 Ms. Tristan Anne Fuierer ’03 and Ms. Laura M. Greene Prof. Michael Kent Curtis ’69 Mr. W. Erwin Fuller Jr. Ms. Kristen Smith Greene ’10 Ms. Elizabeth Ms. Julia Ellen Dixon ’01 Mr. Yates Wellington Faison III ’72 Hungarland Hauser Ms. Hilary Gail Dack ’05 Mr. Phillip Ray Dixon Sr. ’74 and Ms. Katherine Johnson Farley ’04 Mr. W. Scott Fuller ’92 and Mr. John Charles Greenhaugh ’73 Ms. Monica Witterholt Fuller Mr. Daniel Ziv Havivi ’11 Mr. Alexander T. Dadok ’13 Ms. Candace Cicerone Dixon Hon. Robert L. Farmer ’60 and Mr. George Greenslade and Ms. Lisa R. Hayes ’88 Mr. Joseph Garner Dail Jr. ’55 Col. Richard D S Dixon Jr. ’65 Ms. Martha L. Farmer Ms. L. Lynnette Fuller-Andrews ’91 Ms. Marie Greenslade, Mr. Robert Ray Hayes ’60 Mr. Michael Dale, Ms. Pamela Dobson Ms. Margaret Farnsworth, Hon. James Roy Fullwood ’68 and in honor of Reine Duffy in memory of in memory of Ms. Mary Gray Mr. Andrew A. Greenwood ’12 and Ms. Joyce C. Hayes Mr. George Donavant and Teague Fullwood William A. Johnson Ms. Mildred M. Donavant, Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Austin Greer Ms. Samantha L. Hayes ’11 Lt. Gov. Walter Harvey Dalton ’75 in memory of Mr. Charles Patrick Farris Jr. ’73 Mr. James Elisha Furr IV ’01 and Mr. Robert Gregory Griffin ’78 Mr. Richard David Haygood ’97 Ms. Kelly Dixson Furr ’01 and Ms. Lucille Elaine William A. Johnson Mr. Edwin Glenn Farthing ’72 Mr. Thomas Battle Griffin ’49 Ms. Margaret Campbell Hodge Dalton Mr. Chad Ray Donnahoo ’07 Mr. Archie Wayland Futrell III ’78 Mr. W. Kimball Griffith ’74 and Haynes ’81 Ms. Kristie Hedrick Farwell ’03 and Ms. Betty Hart Futrell Mr. William Harvey Dalton ’65 Mr. Patrick Gerald Dooher ’76 Ms. Elizabeth Francis Griffith Mr. Jeffrey R. Favitta ’16 Mr. Gaston Hemphill Gage ’58 Mr. James William Hays ’86 Mr. Clinton R. Daly and Mr. Daniel Jordan Dore ’13 Mr. Phillip Hampton Feagan ’12 Mr. Samuel Grist Grimes ’68 Mr. Jeffrey Joseph Hayward ’05 Ms. Diana W. Daly, Ms. Anne Gant, Mr. Joseph Edward Dornfried ’87 Ms. Barbara Fedders Mr. Samuel Latham Grimes ’99 in memory of in memory of Mr. E. Burke Haywood ’79 Mr. Stuart Battle Dorsett ’85 Ms. Sheila Hogan Fellerath ’79 and Ms. Beth and Ms. Terri Starritt Haywood Elizabeth Gant Bennett Elizabeth Gant Bennett Yount Grimes ’99 Mr. David Ray Dorton ’79 Mr. L. Holt Felmet Jr. and Mr. T. G. Daniel Jr. and Mr. Edmund Ravenel Gant, Mr. W. Clay Grubb ’93 Mr. J. Patrick Haywood ’01 Ms. Anne R. Daniel, Mr. W Woods Doster ’76 and Ms. Diane C. Felmet, in memory of and Ms. Cathy Haywood Ms. Kathryn Jones Doster Mr. David Thomas Grudberg ’85 in memory of in memory of Elizabeth Gant Bennett Mr. J. Richard Hazlett ’80 Hon. Randy Davis Doub ’80 William A. Johnson Mr. Michael Donwell Gunter ’72 Mary R. Schell Ms. Elizabeth Gant Mr. Christopher J. Heaney ’13 Mr. Joseph Samuel Dowdy ’03 Ms. Mary L. Fenton ’54 Ms. Mary Martin Gant Mr. Paul Bennett Guthery Jr. ’56 Mr. William David Dannelly ’77 and Ms. Nancy Allen Guthery Mr. Michael Dean Hearn ’76 and Ms. Pamela Kispert Ms. Tosha Denise Downey ’04 Mr. Alan Earl Ferguson ’83 and Mr. Ronald Hill Garber ’77 Ms. Nina Magsino Gworek ’88 Ms. Elizabeth Sims Hedrick ’08 Dannelly Mr. Jeffrey Allen Doyle ’93 Ms. Nancy Short Ferguson ’83 Mr. Matthew T. Gay ’13 Ms. Magdeline McAllister Drozd ’08 Mr. C. Douglas Ferguson ’96 and Mr. Matthew Ms. Nancy Snyder Heermans ’78 Ms. Alexandra Victoria Mr. Robert R. Gelblum ’85 and Thomas Gworek Darrow ’89 Mr. John Arthur Duberstein ’07 Mr. David Frank Ferguson Mr. Hunter Dalton Heggie ’51 Dr. Mary Lou Gelblum Ms. Susan King Hackney ’03 and Ms. Dana M. Dubis Mr. Praveen David Fernandes ’98 Mr. H. Parks Helms ’61 and Mr. Eugene Francis Dauchert Jr. Mr. Seth D. Gelblum and Mr. Thomas Bridgers Hackney ’78 and Ms. Katherine Mr. Matthew S. Duchesne ’99 Ms. Patricia Ivelisse Fernandez ’13 Ms. Orren Alperstein Ms. Eleanor A. Helms Powe Dauchert Mr. Alex John Hagan ’92 and Mr. Robert Edward Duggins ’90 Hon. Forrest Andrew Ferrell ’63 Ms. Carole G. Gelfeld, Ms. Kim Hostetter Hagan ’92 Mr. Neal Gardner Helms ’63 Ms. Leslee Karen Daugherty ’88 Mr. Adam Taylor Duke ’09 Mr. Michael Ferrell and in memory of Mr. Henry Guy Hagan and Mr. Gary Stephen Hemric ’74 Ms. Yolanda B. Davenport, Ms. Arnita Maria Dula ’01 Ms. Catherine Ferrell Gigliola B. Tatge Ms. Sims Hagan, Ms. Emilie Ann Hendee ’07 in memory of Mr. Alan W. Duncan and Mr. Michael Ray Ferrell ’76 Mr. Stephen Paul Gennett II ’91 in memory of Mr. Andrew Ryan Henderson ’90 Gigliola B. Tatge Ms. Pamela D. Duncan Mr. Christopher Cary Fialko ’92 Mr. Glenn S. Gentry ’84 Elizabeth Gant Bennett Hon. Karen LeCraft Henderson ’69 Mr. Bradley John Daves ’98 Ms. Christy Holleman Dupriest ’08 and Ms. Ann Loraine Mr. Fredric Joel George ’74 Mr. Richard B. Hager, Mr. George Ward Hendon ’67 Mr. Eric M. David ’08 Mr. James David DuPuy ’99 Hester ’92 Ms. Jody Ellyn George ’86 in memory of Ms. Robyn Henningsen, Dr. Alan Davidson III, Mr. Jennings Fuqua Durand ’05 Mr. J. Michael Fields ’91 Ms. Stephanie Jane Gibbs ’03 William A. Johnson in memory of in memory of Mr. K. Scott Dwyer ’79 Ms. Julia Caudle Fields ’83 Ms. Lisa Marie Gibson ’06 Ms. Dania L. Haider ’13 William Dale Talbert William A. Johnson Ms. Catherine Elizabeth Dyar ’98 Mr. Robert Paul Finch ’78 and Mr. Edward N. Gideon Jr. and Mr. William Laurance Haigh ’73 Mr. David Scott Henson ’98 Ms. Beatrice Joan Davis ’90 Ms. Kendra Lynnette Eades ’01 Ms. Kathleen McLaughlin Finch Mrs. Marilyn S. Gideon, and Ms. and Ms. Carmaletta Mr. Benjamin Franklin Davis Jr. Mr. Joshua G. Eagle Ms. Carole Schwartz Fine, in memory of Wesson Haigh and Ms. Carol Malcolm Davis Locklear Henson ’99 Mr. Kenneth Lee Eagle ’74 in honor of Mary R. Schell Mr. Theodore E. Haigler Jr. ’49 Ms. Betty Anne Davis, Michael H. Godwin Mr. Perry Cleveland Henson Jr. ’77 Ms. Farleigh Hailes Earhart ’91 Dr. Bryan Albin Giemza ’99 Mr. John Forrest Haire ’90 in honor of Mr. Mark Anderson Finkelstein ’85 Ms. Carla M. Hermida Mr. Justin I. Eason ’07 Mr. William H. Gifford Jr. ’80 Hon. R. Phillip Haire ’61 Jared Knight Mr. John C. Fischer ’03 and Ms. and Ms. Jodi L. Turner and Ms. Constance Clements ’12 Hon. Chester Chidlow Davis ’72 Ms. Carmel P. Ebb, Karen Twardowski Fischer ’03 in memory of Ms. Cassandra Foster Gil ’09 Mullinnix Haire, Ms. Carmen Hernandez Mr. Gilbert Thomas Davis Jr. ’71 Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Michael Patrick Fischer ’11 Mr. Benjamin Gilbert ’79 and in memory of Mr. Robert Jason Herndon ’05 Mr. Mark Allen Davis ’91 Ms. Mary Rogan Eberly ’83 Mr. Edgar Beauregarde Fisher III ’98 Dr. Lynn Gail Dressler William A. Johnson Mr. Bruce Martin Herschlag ’81 and Ms. Louisa Mr. W. Timothy Haithcock ’69 Mr. Matthew Brewton Davis ’04 Ms. Annette K. Ebright ’07 Mr. John Edward Giles ’51 Mr. H. Clifton Hester ’81 Ms. Sara Helen Davis ’80 Crampton Fisher ’98 Ms. Nancy Wentz Hale ’83 Ms. Dorothy L. Eby Mr. Robert Starr Gillam ’73 Ms. Sheila Hunter Hester Mr. Robert Allen Dawkins ’80 Ms. Macy B. Fisher ’12 Mr. J. Duane Gilliam ’57 Mr. Brian Douglas Hall ’85 Mr. Jeffrey Dale Eckard ’94 Ms. Belle Lee Fite Mr. Marcus Clifton Hewitt ’96 Dr. Raymond Howard Dawson, Mr. William Jeofry Edgar ’84 Mr. Jesse W. Gilstrap and Ms. Jennifer Mouchet Hall ’09 and Ms. Sabrina Gardner Fitze ’09 Mr. Kevin Daniel Hall Mr. Jonathan P. Heyl ’98 and in memory of Hon. Robert Holt Edmunds Jr. ’75 Ms. Verna Wentz William A. Johnson Dr. David J. Fitzhugh Mr. Roger Wilco Hall ’74 Ms. Carrie Lyon Heyl Mr. James Joyner Edmundson ’67 Mr. Kevin Berry Ginsberg ’00 and Mr. Zack Thomas Dawson ’13 Mr. Leslie Allen Fleisher ’68 and Ms. Andrea Ginsberg Mr. Oliver Grant Halle ’74 Mr. Dennis Heyob and Ms. Deborah Lucy Edney ’97 Ms. Isabel Scott Day ’79 and Ms. Jill Fleisher Mr. Richard Edmond Giroux ’76 Mr. W. Cory Haller ’09 Ms. Karen Heyob Mr. E. David Edquist ’88 Mr. G. David Day Ms. Rebecca Claire Fleishman ’10 Mr. David Alan Gitlin ’82 Mr. David Betts Hamilton ’77 Mr. A. C. Hicks and Ms. Joan Hicks, Mr. Benjamin Rushing Edwards ’03 Mr. James Marvin Deal Jr. ’74 Mr. Randolph Micol Fletcher ’84 Mr. L. Jack Glasgow, Hon. Joyce Amelia Hamilton ’75 in memory of and Ms. Alicia Elizabeth Gant Bennett Mr. Daniel Blue Dean ’75 Marzullo Edwards ’03 Dr. Joseph Martin Flora in honor of Ms. Jamie Lynn Hamlett ’01 Logan Liles Mr. Benjamin David Hicks ’10 Ms. Erika Lynnette Dean ’10 Mr. H. Jack Edwards ’67 and Mr. Eric Phillip Florenz Mr. Lawrence Townley Hammond Ms. Laura Erb Dean ’09 Ms. Betsy Burnette Edwards Mr. Jack William Floyd ’61 Ms. Alice Shepherd Glover, Jr. ’63 and Ms. Alice Ms. Donna McLean Hicks Mr. John M. DeAngelis ’98 Mr. Phil Strowd Edwards ’64 Mr. Louis Henry Fogleman Jr. ’64 in memory of Rowlette Hammond Mr. Fred Allen Hicks ’68 William A. Johnson Mr. W. Edward Deaton ’70 Mr. Scott L. Edwards and Mr. Paul Joseph Foley ’04 and Ms. Robin Maurer Hammond ’83 Mr. Robert Adam Hicks ’04 Ms. Lindsey T. Goehring ’11 Mr. Arthur James DeBaugh ’88 Ms. Amy K. Edwards Ms. Elizabeth Pate Foley ’05 Mr. A. Vason Hamrick IV ’03 Ms. Sylvia Foster Hicks Mr. Glenn J. Goggins ’85 and Ms. Michele Cash DeBaugh Ms. Shelley Lucas Edwards ’94 Ms. Lynn Fontana ’87 Mr. Edward Josephus Mr. W. Daniel Hicks Jr. ’84 Mr. J. Keaton Fonvielle ’77 and Mr. Jonathan Peter Goldberg ’05 Hanson Jr. ’59* Mr. Arthur St Clair DeBerry ’57 and Mr. Jeffrey Reid Edwards Mr. Thomas Dupree Higgins III ’71 Ms. Betsy Huddle Fonvielle Mr. John Gardner Golding ’53 Ms. Ellen Warme Hanson ’75 and Ms. Mignon R. DeBerry Mr. Paul Haywood Efird III ’69 and Ms. Eva Lister Higgins Ms. Marcia Jane Decker ’95 Mr. Al Forbes and Mr. C. Frank Goldsmith Jr. ’70 Mr. Mark J. Hanson ’09 Mr. L. Holmes Eleazer Jr. ’76 Mr. William Hayden Higgins ’77 Ms. Tonya Ronea Deem ’96 Mr. Alexander Elkan ’03 Ms. Mae Forbes Mr. James Whitmel Goldsmith ’75 Mr. Randall Alan Hanson ’85 and Ms. Rebecca L. High ’00 Ms. Lindsey Laine Deere ’06 Mr. Henry Glasgow Elkins Jr. Ms. Evelyn Booth Forbes Mr. Steven I. Goldstein ’67 Dr. Cynthia Brann Hanson Mr. Sam Hightower Mr. Ernest Stanhope DeLaney III Ms. Linda Imboden Ellington ’89 Ms. Julia M. Forbes Mr. Daniel John Golonka ’07 Mr. Joel C. Harbinson ’79 ’73 and Ms. Barbara and Dr. Kenneth Scott Ellington Mr. Brian Collins Fork ’05 Ms. Bianca Margaret Gomez ’08 Mr. Holmes Plexico Harden ’81 Mr. Asher Deva Hildebrand Henderson DeLaney ’73 Mr. Richard Whitlowe Ellis Sr. ’69 Mr. Matthew James Forstadt ’70 Dr. Peng Gong Mr. Robert G. Hardy ’69 Mr. Jamison Hall Hinkle ’96 Ms. Erin Elizabeth Della Barca ’04 and Ms. Evelyn Morris Ellis Ms. Dionne Loy Fortner ’95 Ms. Julia A. Gonzales ’13 Ms. Susan Haney Hargrove ’81 Mr. Charles Henry Hiser IV ’13

* deceased CAROLINA LAW 35 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Hon. Robert Haywood Hobgood ’74 Ms. Tonya Davis Jallow ’01 Mr. Joseph Nicholas Kendall ’03 Hon. Russell Jarvis Lanier Jr. ’68 Hon. Patricia Stanford Love ’78 Mr. Andrew McClary Ms. Sheila P. Hochhauser ’84 Ms. Dinita L. James ’90 and Mr. William Dudley Kenerly ’73 Mr. Joshua Davis Lanning ’00 Ms. Janet Dawson Lowder ’04 Ms. M. DeVondria McClure ’97 Mr. Robert Sawyer Hodgman ’72 Mr. Roy Frederick Reed and Ms. Toni Cline Kenerly Ms. Maria Elena Lapetina ’10 Ms. Constance Gergen Lowe ’07 Mr. Brenton Wood McConkey ’04 Ms. Emma Jane Hodson ’10 Mr. J. David James ’71 Mr. J. Lionel Kennedy Mr. Stephen R. Lareau ’11 Mr. Michael Scott Loy ’99 and Ms. Ms. Amily Katherine McCool ’08 Mr. Michael Andrew Hoffman ’06 Mr. Jeffrey Edward James ’13 Mr. Max M. Kennedy, Ms. Rachel Bierenbaum Nilufer Dalal Loy ’99 Mr. Mark Lance McCord ’06 Mr. Phillip Dixon Hoffman Mr. Paul Marshall James III ’85 in honor of Larsen ’02 Mr. William Riley Loy ’64 Ms. Sarah Bycott McCormack ’01 Mr. Mason Thompson Hogan ’82 Mr. Matthew Lyndon Jamison ’05 Veronika Sykorova Ms. Nancy Ilyse Lasher ’85 Ms. Taylor Higgins Ludlam ’04 and Mr. Kevin A. McCormack Mr. James R. Holland ’02 and and Ms. Alyson Mr. Phillip Ballard Kennedy ’04 Mr. William Harding Latham ’92 Mr. James Manly Lupton ’92 Hon. Edward Harrington Ms. Brandi W. Holland Bobbitt Jamison Mr. Thomas Preston Kennedy and Mr. William Ray Lathan Jr. ’75 Mr. David George Lyke and McCormick ’64 and Mr. L. Worth Holleman Jr. ’74 Ms. Kristen Rasmussen Ms. Deborah Scott Kennedy Mr. S. Yasir Latifi ’13 Ms. Carol Lyke Ms. Ann Brittain McCormick Mr. Russell Joseph Hollers ’63 Janicek ’09 Mr. Drew Kyle Kifner ’09 Mr. Kenneth Todd Ms. Jan Clayton Lyons ’90 Mr. Richard Trent McCotter ’11 Mr. James Edward Holloway ’83 Mr. William Peak Janvier ’92 Mr. Christopher Ray Kiger ’02 Lautenschlager ’96 Mr. Scott Daniel Macdonald ’87 Mr. Dennis Frederick McCoy ’61 Ms. Ashley Peyton Holmes ’11 Mr. F. Fincher Jarrell ’71 Ms. April Dawn Kight ’06 Ms. Joan Stacy Layne Mr. Andrew Carter Mace ’11 Mr. Jerry McCoy and Mr. Edward Shelton Holmes ’58 Mr. Peter Jason ’67 Ms. Nancy Griffin Kilby ’76 Mr. Richard Norwood League ’63 Ms. Laura Sutton Macken ’91 Ms. Alexandra Armstrong, in memory of Mr. W. Howard Holsenbeck Mr. John Carl Jaye ’98 Mr. Leon Marcus Killian III ’69 and Hon. David Andrew Leech ’78 Mr. John A. MacKethan III ’68 and Dr. Donna Elaine Mack Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Clyde Holt III ’72 Mr. Gordon Womble Jenkins ’74 Mr. Charles Beauregard Dr. Lucinda H. MacKethan Mr. Walter Ingram Jenkins III ’87 Mr. Thomas Chen Kilpatrick ’96 Lefler Jr. ’74 Mr. Andrew Martin Ms. Nina L. Holtsberry ’13 Ms. Amy Langston Mackin ’09 McCullough ’04 Mr. Paul Andrew Jenny ’01 and Ms. Samantha Boone Hon. Lori Ruth Lefstein ’83 and Dr. William Anthony Mr. John Thomas Honeycutt ’92 Kilpatrick ’96 Mr. Larry Stephen McDevitt ’68 Mr. James Allen Jernigan ’83 Ms. Helga Lura Leftwich ’93 Mackin Mr. Sean C. Honeywill ’07 and Mr. William Lee Kimmey Jr. ’09 Mr. Daniel Edwin McDonald Jr. ’69 Ms. Sara Hobbs Honeywill ’07 Mr. John Lee Jernigan ’67 Mr. James Foxworth Legette and Mr. Christopher Scott Macneil Ms. Amy Hulsey Kincaid ’98 Ms. Sally Wood McDonald Mr. Roger Alan Hood ’59 Ms. Rachel Umstead Jernigan ’13 Ms. Joan C. Legette, Mr. Laurence Beckley Ms. Meredith Charlotte Kincaid Mr. Robert Steven McDowell ’82 Ms. Sara G. Hood, and Mr. Edward Jernigan in memory of Maddison Jr. ’68 Mr. Robert Henry Jessup IV ’11 Mr. Hatcher Byrd Kincheloe Jr. ’75 Mary R. Schell Mr. Jack Richard Magee ’12 Ms. Molly Manville McDuffie ’91 in memory of and Ms. Linda Kincheloe William A. Johnson Mr. Jack Edward Jirak ’07 Mr. Timothy Power Lehan ’82 Mr. Neil Christopher Mr. Christopher Daniel Mr. Christopher M. Kindel ’01 McEachran ’12 Mr. Thomas Grant Hooper ’98 Mr. Frederick Elias John ’70 Mr. Bryan Leitenberger ’07 and Magnuson ’09 Mr. C. Bailey King Jr. ’05 Ms. Barbara N. McFadyen Mr. Grover Prevatte Hopkins ’71 Mr. Cyrus Murry Johnson Jr. ’82 Ms. Sara Leitenberger Mr. Kymric Y. Mahnke ’92 and Mr. George Savage King Jr. ’72 Hon. Linda Mace McGee ’73 Ms. Kelli Goss Hopkins ’07 Mr. James McDaniel Johnson ’57 Dr. Shawna Cannon Lemon ’01 Ms. Susan Semones Mahnke Ms. Irene Patrice King ’04 Ms. Karin Rebescher Mr. Robert Carl Hord Jr. ’65 Mr. Jeffrey Joel Johnson ’91 and Ms. Jaime Schwartz Lemons ’02 Mr. Carlos Enrique Mahoney ’99 Mr. Malvern Francis King Jr. ’68 and Ms. Jennifer Evans McGinnis ’92 Ms. Anne Teru Horiuchi ’98 Ms. Linda Diane Tindall ’86 Mr. DeVere Craven Lentz Jr. ’54 Mr. Vance Callahan Kinlaw ’77 Mahoney Mr. E. Graham McGoogan Jr. ’74 Mr. Dennis Lee Horn ’75 and Mr. John Howard Johnson Jr. ’76 Mr. Scott Evan Leo ’97 and Mr. David Ray Kinman ’05 Ms. Stephanie Wyatt Leo Mr. Wayne Kenneth Maiorano ’98 and Ms. Grace Ms. Shirley Elizabeth Payne ’77 Ms. Kathryn E. Johnson ’10 Johnson McGoogan Mr. Allen Shawn Kinzer ’88 Mr. Alan Carroll Leonard ’75 Ms. Angelina Marie Maletto ’82 Mr. Jerome G. Hornowski Mr. Mark R. Johnson Jr. ’11 and Mr. Peter James McGrath Jr. Dr. Carol Ann Kirby Ms. Ayesha Malik Mr. Louis Phillip Hornthal Jr. ’63 Ms. Rachel N. Johnson Mr. James Burgess Leonard ’86 ’86 and Ms. Merrie Dorman Mr. E. Lynwood Mallard Jr. ’65 and Ms. Harriett Lang Hornthal Ms. Rebecca Louise Mr. Robert William Kirby ’52 Ms. Judith Ellen Leonard ’80 McGrath ’86 Mr. Barrett Christian Mallos ’04 Mr. Andrew Ray House ’97 and Key Johnson ’08 Mr. Byron Barnes Kirkland ’87 and Mr. Michael Herman LeRoy ’86 and Mr. Peter Michael McHugh ’74 Ms. Virginia Linville Kirkland Mr. Vernon Roderick Malone ’89 Ms. Christine Johnson House Mr. Robert Edward Johnson Jr. ’86 Ms. Janet B. LeRoy Mr. Alan Dale McInnes ’94 Ms. Amy Smith Klass ’87 and Mr. Ian A. Mance ’13 Ms. Erin Heather House ’03 Mr. Russell William Johnson ’04 Mr. John William Leslie ’80 and Mr. John Victor McIntosh ’79 and Mr. Todd Alexander Klass Mr. Robert Jutzi Howell ’02 and Ms. Karen Ms. Joanne H. Leslie Mr. Leonard Howard Mandel ’67 Ms. Ann H. McIntosh Michelle Johnson Mr. Robert Onan Klepfer Jr. ’66 Mr. Kenneth Richard Hoyle Sr. ’51 Mr. Michael Haim Levinson ’69 Ms. Esther Elizabeth Mr. Michael Allan McKay Mr. Stephen Terence Johnson ’89 Ms. Katharine Alexandra Klos ’76 Mr. Eric Jason Huang ’08 Mr. Sean Won Lew ’98 Manheimer ’98 Mr. R. Malloy McKeithen ’66 Mr. Thomas Hatcher Mr. Robert Charles Klose ’79 Mr. Isham Barney Hudson Jr. ’56 Mr. David M. Lewis and Ms. Amanda Spillman Mann ’06 Prof. Ruth Ann McKinney ’89 Johnson Jr. ’85 Ms. Lisa Scandale Lewis Mr. John Randolph Hudson Jr. ’58 Mr. Barney L. Knight Jr., Ms. Kelly M. Mann Mr. Roy Bowman McKnight Jr. ’53 Ms. Tiffany Marie Johnson in honor of Mr. E. Hardy Lewis ’91 Mr. Marcus Hudson ’65 Ms. Shelby H. Mann and Ms. Mary Jane Mr. H. Morrison Johnston Jr. ’62 Jared Knight Ms. Katherine Margaret Lewis ’06 Mr. Thomas Renwick Hudson ’81 Ms. Melody J. Manning ’08 Wessman McKnight Mr. J. Reed Johnston Jr. ’68 Mr. James B. Knight, Ms. Lauren Vaughn Lewis ’07 Mr. Peter Joseph Marino ’90 Ms. Anna Pond McLamb ’02 Mr. Michael Patrick Huecker ’93 in honor of and Ms. Sharon Mr. Richard Mullington Ms. Sierra Marino Mr. Daniel Francis McLawhorn ’74, Mr. David Ellis Huffine ’77 and O’Donnell Johnston ’70 Jared Knight Lewis Jr. ’63 Ms. Susan Stern Huffine Mr. Ladd W. Mark ’07 in memory of Ms. Margaret Galli Johnston ’74 Mr. Jared A. Knight ’14 Ms. Caren Pollack Libby ’87 Mr. M. Blake Huffman ’09 Mr. Benjamin Sanford Marks Jr. ’58 William Dale Talbert Mr. Thomas David Johnston ’57 Ms. Linda J. Knight, Ms. Claudia B. Liff Mr. Noah H. Huffstetler III ’76 Ms. Jessica Mollie Marlies ’00 Ms. Caroline Batchelor Ms. Camesha McAllister Jones ’04 in honor of Ms. Elizabeth P. Ligon ’13 McLean ’10 Mr. F. Jefferson Hughes ’83 Jared Knight Mr. Matthew Thomas Marriott ’11 Ms. Edwina Link Jones ’77 Mr. Roddey Miller Ligon Jr. ’51 Ms. Mary Susan McLean Mr. John K. Hughes Ms. Meghan Naomi Knight ’06 Mr. James Chalmers Mr. Kenneth Lynn Jones ’85 Mr. Lewis Oliver Liles, Marrow Jr. ’72 Ms. Carrie V. Mcmillan ’13 Mr. Staples Stilwell Hughes ’80 and Ms. Elizabeth and Mr. Jared Miller Dutton in honor of Mr. William John Marsden Jr. ’83 Mr. William Hannon McMillan ’68 and Ms. Thomasin Elizabeth Cunningham Jones Dr. Christopher John Knors ’05 Logan Liles Ms. Jennifer Watson Marsh ’09 Ms. Ann Elizabeth McMillin ’08 Hughes ’82 Mr. Michael Duane Jones ’01 Mr. Matthew Frederick Knouff ’04 Mr. Matthew Lewis Liles ’08 Mr. Charles Foster Marshall III ’96 Ms. Dawn Dixon McPherson, Hon. Stephani Wilson Ms. Philemina McNeill Jones ’77 Mr. Karl Edward Knudsen ’78 Humrickhouse ’80 and Mr. Scott Mr. Thomas Sergent Lilly ’68 Ms. M. Lynn Marshbanks ’87 in memory of Mr. Richard Sloan Jones Jr. ’61 and Ms. Ellen Hendrix Koch ’84 Robinson Humrickhouse Mr. Robert George Lindauer Jr. ’00 Mr. Alan Braddy Martin ’94 William D. Talbert Ms. Melissa Osborne Jones Ms. Jennifer Johnson Koenig ’97 and Ms. Kerry Michele Fraas Ms. Kathryn Davenport Ms. Ginger Bagley Hunsucker ’03 Ms. Alison Catherine Martin ’00 Mr. W. Hugh Jones Jr. ’80 Ms. Leigh E. Koman ’74 Lindauer ’00 McPherson and Mr. Ryan Dale Hunsucker Mr. Clay Oliver Martin ’11 Mr. Thomas Walls Jordan Jr. ’74 Mr. Peter Paul Konolige ’85 Mr. John Coffman Lindley III ’03 Mr. Edward Joseph McPhillips ’91 Mr. Grady Lee Hunt ’89 Hon. D. Grier Martin III ’95 and Ms. Virginia Caroline Jordan ’06 Ms. Gayle Evans Koonce ’75 and Mr. Trent Edward Lindsay ’04 Mr. V. Clayton McQuiddy III ’68 Ms. Claire Alise Hunter ’10 Ms. Louise Martin Dr. Kathleen Marie Joyce ’09 Mr. Neil Wright Koonce Ms. Ling Ling ’97 Mr. Brian Duncan Meacham ’03 Mr. Harold Robert Hunter Jr. ’00 Hon. J. Matthew Martin ’85 and Mr. Joseph Dock Joyner Jr. ’81 Mr. Brian Eugene Koontz ’07 Mr. J. Jason Link ’98 and and Ms. Sarah Hon. Robert Neal Hunter Jr. ’73 Ms. Catherine Ms. Susan Lynne Korytkowski ’81 Ms. Elizabeth Goodrich Link Brown Meacham Ms. Teri L. Hutchens ’10 Mr. Philip Michael Juby ’05 Saunders Martin and Mr. Richard Knapp Prof. Ronald C. Link and Mr. Michael David Meeker ’72 Mr. H. Gray Hutchison Jr. ’73 Ms. Audrey B. Jung Mr. W. Daniel Martin III ’73 Mr. Jeffrey Scott Koweek ’06 Ms. Susan C. Link Mr. Charles Dietrich Meier ’85 Mr. Andrew Hutson Mr. Craig Dixon Justus ’91 and Mr. Michael L. Martinez ’09 Ms. Suzannah Plemmons Justus Mr. Alan Edward Kraus ’78 Mr. Marc Howard List ’91 Mr. David Scott Melin ’00 Mr. Robert Martin Huttar ’58 Mr. Robert Anthony Mascari ’81 Mr. Charles Roy Mr. Jonathan Mr. Brian J. Litwak ’13 Mr. Charles Edward Melvin Jr. ’56 Ms. Elizabeth Bangston Hutto ’96 Mr. James Lee Mason Jr. ’72 Kabugo-Musoke ’12 Christopher Krisko ’02 Mr. John Charles Livingston ’06 Mr. Cory Stuart Menees ’07 and Mr. Larry Kenneth Mason Ms. Melissa M. 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Johnson Ms. Catherine in memory of Ms. Sandra Fincher Meyer ’96 Ms. Odessa Palmer Jackson ’88 Mr. Kenneth Ralph Keller ’74 Ms. Alison Miclate Lance Carden Long William A. Johnson Dr. Lori Abel Meyerhoffer ’07 Mr. Phillip Theodore Jackson ’94 Mr. Philip Lee Kellogg ’67 and Mr. William Francis Lane ’97 Ms. Karen Elizabeth Long ’79 and Mr. DeWitt Frank McCarley ’77 Mr. Steven Dermont Michael ’75 Mr. Thomas Clark Jackson ’70 Ms. Margaret Massie Kellogg Mr. Frank Caldwell Laney ’82 Dr. Arlon Keith Kemple Mr. Robert Weller McCarthy ’87 Ms. Melissa Julia Michaud ’09 Mr. Marc Jacobs ’10 Mr. Michael P. Kelly Ms. Carolyn Fitzmorris Lang ’91 Mr. Robert Bobo Long Jr. ’65 Mr. Jon Paul McClanahan ’08 Dr. Brian James Miller Mr. Robert A. Jaffe ’78 Mr. John Gordon Kelso ’96 and Mr. Max Vernon Langenkamp ’02 Mr. R. Dennis Lorance ’78 and Mr. Robert Davis McClanahan ’78 Ms. Elizabeth Thomas Miller ’88 Mr. Amol Jain ’08 and Ms. Amy Schutz Kelso ’95 Mr. C. 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36 FALL-WINTER 2013 Mr. Nick J. Miller ’13 Mr. Charles W. Ogletree ’65 Ms. Tanner Smith Pilcher ’03 Ms. Tram Ngoc Rattanavong ’09 Ms. Ann Roth, Mr. William Harry Shaia Jr. ’77 and Ms. Renee Kaminsky Miller ’05 Ms. Paige O’Hale ’11 Mr. Joel Arthur Pineles ’84 and Mr. Ronald David Raxter ’77 in honor of Ms. Rose Marie and Mr. Jonathan Lee Miller Ms. Orla Buckley O’Hannaidh ’12 Ms. Victoria F. Pineles Mr. Charles Arthur Ray Jr. ’78 Sarah H. Colwell Raad Shaia Mr. W. Brandon Miller ’00 and Mr. Dara O. O’Hannaidh Mr. Jerrold Bernard Pinsker ’75 Mr. Robert Glenn Ray ’68 Mr. Barry Nathan Roth Ms. Leanne Marie Shank ’85 Mr. William Michael Miller ’07 Hon. Hubert Ethridge Olive Jr. ’53 and Ms. Susan Lynn Pinsker Ms. Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Mr. David B. Roth, Mr. Carlton Aldridge Shannon Jr. in memory of ’85 and Dr. Karen Mr. Francis Needham Millett Jr. ’62 Ms. Wendy J. Olson Mr. Gabart Piquant and Mr. Daniel F. 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Quick Ms. Ellen Kabcenell Wayne ’78 Banister Financial Inc Mr. Herman Spence III ’82 Ms. Vachelle Denise Willis ’04 Ms. Kimberly Quarles Ms. Laurie Susan Truesdell ’87 Ms. Jennifer Lynn Wazenski ’91 – Providence Ms. Deborah Evans Sperati ’99 Ms. Elizabeth Nickens Swintosky ’98 Mr. John Paul Tsahakis ’09 Mr. George Arthur Weaver ’64 Willoughby ’06 Mr. George Hicks Sperry ’68 Bay Investment Company Mr. Scott David Syfert ’97 Ms. Naya A. Tsang ’99 Mr. Camden Robert Webb ’95 Ms. Caroline Thomson Wilson ’87 Mr. Marvin Mitchel Spivey Jr. ’83 BB&T - Whiteville Ms. Johana Sykorova, Mr. Hans N. Tuch and Ms. Monica Eileen Webb ’06 Mr. Jeremy Miles Wilson ’11 and Ms. Ruth L. Tuch, Benjamin Vineyards Ms. Susan Mary Spraul ’90 in honor of Mr. Bryant Deleron Webster ’94 Ms. Sarah Marles Wilson in memory of Ms. Carol Spruill ’75 Veronika Sykorova and Ms. Janet Berman Family Foundation Inc. Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Larry James Wilson ’89 Ms. Alexis Natasha Mr. Joseph L. Szymanski, Baldwin Webster Estate of Joel King Bourne Mr. Donald Hugh Tucker Jr. ’84 Mr. Richard Wright Wilson ’74 Stackhouse ’99 in honor of Mr. Keith Michael Weddington ’87 Bradley Arant Boult Cummings and Mr. Ramon D. McMillan Ms. Jean Walker Tucker ’86 and Mr. Robert White Wilson Jr. ’63 Gabriell Vires Mr. Harry Walker Weede Jr. Mr. Ryan Christopher Wilson ’05 Brixx Chapel Hill Mr. Mark Andrew Stafford ’89 Ms. Kimberly Jean Tacy ’07 Mr. J. Allan Tucker Ms. Christiana Glenn Tugman ’08 Ms. Mary Martin Weeks ’11 Mr. William Marvin Wilson III ’98 Brooks Pierce McLendon and Ms. Elizabeth Hon. Thomas Fleming Taft ’72 Cass Stafford Mr. Thomas Mitchell Tull Jr. ’61 Ms. Felice Joy Weiner ’76 Mr. John Franklin Windham ’75 Humphrey & Leonard LLP Ms. Julia Ann Talbutt ’76 Ms. Diane Marie Standaert ’06 Mr. Joseph Brian Tulman ’79 Mr. Matthew Patrick Weiner ’07 Mr. Jonathan Charles Broyhill Family Foundation Inc Mr. James Maynard Talley Jr. ’64 Ms. Shelley Goldstein Weiss ’82 Mr. Raymond Albert Starling ’02 Ms. Deepa Prashant Tungare ’05 Windham ’02 Bryan Cave LLP and Ms. Claire Young Talley Mr. Edward H. Welbourn III, Ms. Brianne L. Wingate ’13 and Ms. Tina Starling Mr. Joel Kent Turner ’03 C M Herndon Foundation Mr. William Little Tankersley III ’74 in memory of Mr. Edward Cyrus Winslow III ’74 Mr. Sampson A. Starling II and and Ms. Melissa Tankersley Mr. Joseph Spoor Turner III ’87 Ms. Mary Ellis Starling Elizabeth Gant Bennett and Ms. Sally Patton Winslow C. E. Hutchison & Company Ms. Caroline Johnson Tanner ’92 Ms. Dorothy L. Tyson, Mr. Oscar Edwin Starnes Jr. ’50 Mr. Gary Joseph Welch ’94 Ms. Helen Littell Winslow ’77 Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft Ms. Priscilla Moore Tapley, in honor of and Ms. Lida Martin Starnes Sam Williams Mr. Paul Brown Welch III ’80 and Mr. Jonathan D. Jaffe Capital Community Foundation Mr. Thomas Monroe Starnes ’62 in memory of Mr. Brady Wallace Wells ’90 and Mr. William Fountain Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Lawrence Joseph Tytla Jr. ’80 Carolina Ballet Mr. Wesley Eugene Starnes ’88 Ms. Jenny Bradsher Wells Winslow ’83 Ms. Lauren Elizabeth Tapson ’13 Mr. Henry Whitehead Underhill Jr. Carolina Bank Mr. William Michael Starr ’03 ’65 and Ms. Mary Mr. Jason Michael Wenker ’01 Mr. Michael Glenn Winters ’78 Mr. Adam Patrick Tarleton ’07 Carolina Mudcats Mr. Michael J. States Battle Underhill Dr. Jesse Lyle West IV and Mr. Robert John Wishart ’73 Mr. Andrew Joseph Taska ’03 Mrs. Emily Hamrick West Carolina Pride Sportswear Ms. Connie Stavros, Mr. William Emmett Underwood Mr. William Francis in honor of Reine Duffy Mr. E. George Tatge, Jr. ’64 and Ms. Judith Ms. Jessica B. West ’11 Wolcott III ’72 Carrboro Music in memory of Jackson Underwood Ms. Margaret Rose Westbrook ’96 Mr. James Dorsett Caviness Law Firm PLLC Ms. Kim Kirk Steffan ’86 Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Robert Charles Ms. Andrea Westerfield Wever ’05 Womble Jr. ’72 Chapel Hill Restaurant Mr. Paul Arnold Steffens ’96 and Ms. Jean Tatge, Ms. Julia Steffens Van Arnam ’02 Mr. Brian Weyhrich ’06 and Ms. Margaret Management Group in memory of McLean Womble Mr. Clarence Howard Steiner ’84 Mr. Bradley Todd Van Hoy ’00 and Mr. Charles Monroe Whedbee ’64 Chapel Hill Wine & Design Gigliola B. Tatge Ms. Margaret and Ms. India L. Whedbee Mr. Justin T. Wong ’10 Mr. Graham Currier Ms. Pamela Tatge, Cloer Family Vineyards Stephens ’08 McKibben Van Hoy Mr. Andrew J. Wheeler Ms. Rebecca Wong in memory of Clothing Warehouse Hon. Ronald Lane Stephens ’74 Mr. Henry Price Van Hoy II ’74 Mr. David Jordan Whichard II and Mr. David Wetherill Wood Jr. ’73 Gigliola B. Tatge Mr. Matthew A. Van Hoy Ms. Judith K. Whichard, and Ms. Marianne Community Foundation of Mr. Henry Louis Mr. James Moore Tatum Jr. ’74 Stewart Wood Stephenson III ’82 Ms. Kathryn Hagler Van Wie ’13 in memory of Greater Greensboro Mr. Cooper Ellis Taylor Jr. ’58 William A. Johnson Mr. Keith Allen Wood ’91 and Mr. Mark Andrew Sternlicht ’78 and Mr. Doug Van Wie Community Foundation of Western Ms. Harmony Whalen Taylor ’99 Ms. Stacey Ames Vandiford ’08 Hon. Willis Padgett Whichard ’65 Ms. Jody Burig Wood ’93 North Carolina Mr. David Boyette Stevens ’51 Mr. Ian Taylor ’94 and Ms. Leona Hon. E. Marshall Woodall ’63, Mr. G. Sefton Stevens ’76 and Mr. David G. Varner Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP Mr. Lindsey Handley Taylor ’86 Ms. Peggy B. Varner Paschal Whichard in memory of Hon. Catherine William A. Johnson Dot Sturgill Tree Farm Mr. Marvin Edward Taylor Jr. ’65 Ms. Emily Elaine Vaughn ’05 Mr. David Charles Whilden and Cline Stevens ’77 Hon. Jane Kirby Whilden, Mr. Alan Dale Woodlief Jr. and Dykema Gossett PLLC Ms. Pamela Taylor Mr. Mark David Vaughn ’08 Mr. John Shorter Stevens ’61 in honor of Blakely Whilden Ms. Wendy Burns Woodlief, E. A. Morris Charitable Foundation and Ms. Imogene Stevens Mr. Stacy Kirk Taylor ’00 and Mr. John Daniel Veazey ’06 Ms. Richele Keel Taylor Ms. Kira M. Whitacre ’13 in honor of Ella Ann L & Frank B Mr. Wyatt Shorter Stevens ’94 Mr. David William Venable Mr. George Graves Whitaker ’69 Henry Frye and Ms. Kimberly Mr. Thomas Wilbur Taylor ’69 and ’96 and Ms. Jennifer Bolick Holding Foundation Ms. Diane Sheppard White ’85 Mr. M. Drew Wooldridge ’02 Horstmann Stevens Ms. Susan Belk Taylor Venable ’96 Equal Justice Works Mr. William Robert Ms. Laurna Sayers Worden ’89 Mr. Robert Ray Stewart Jr. Ms. Sonya Renee Tennell ’88 Mr. Eric Albert Vernon ’79 Federal Home Loan Whitehurst Sr. ’82 Mr. David Crenshaw Mr. Thomas Leon Stewart ’75 Mr. Thomas Eugene Terrell Jr. ’85 Ms. Melinda Lee Vervais ’06 Worth Jr. ’68 Bank of Atlanta Mr. William Thaddeus Terrell ’92 Ms. Myra Virginia Whitener ’00 Mr. Michael Alan Stick ’81 and Mr. Richard Allen Vinroot ’66 and Mr. Benjamin Whitener Ms. Betty Blaine Fifth Third Bank – Kentucky Ms. Debra J. Braselton Ms. Margaret Louise Terry ’70 Ms. Gabriell A. Vires ’13 Mr. Lee Michael Whitman ’93 Worthington ’78 First Citizens Bank – Raleigh Mr. Christopher M. Theriault ’06 Ms. Lisa Frances Stifler ’08 Mr. Spike Vires and Mr. O. Hampton Whittington Jr. ’75 Mr. Albert Victor Wray ’68 First Presbyterian Church – Ms. Margaret Kane Thies ’06 Ms. MaryAnn Vires Mr. Kyle Richard Still ’07 Mr. Joseph Bernard Widman ’01 Mr. Brandon Wright and Roanoke Rapids Ms. Sara Ruth Vizithum ’02 Mr. William Lloyd Stocks ’66 Mr. Richard Elton Thigpen Jr. ’56 and Ms. Vanessa Silberman Ms. Kelly Crummie Wright Flat Rock Playhouse Ms. Elizabeth Connolly Stone ’07 Ms. Kelly Susan Thomas ’83 Ms. Shelia H. Vogler Mr. Frank P. Wright, Mr. Gerson Fox Widoff Fox and Hound Pub and Grill Hon. Richard Wayne Stone ’81 Mr. Baxter L. Thompson ’09 Hon. Richard Lesley Voorhees ’68 Ms. Barrie Little Wiggins ’85 in memory of Elizabeth Gant Bennett Framemakers Ms. Sarah Motley Stone ’05 Mr. Brett A. Thompson ’11 Mr. James Albert Wade Jr. ’77 Ms. Antoinette Ray Wike ’74 Mr. R. Thompson Wright ’75 Frog Hollow Outdoors Mr. Carl James Strang III ’82 Mr. Peter Karl Kimble Thompson ’74 Mr. Thomas Eugene Wagg III ’62 Dr. John K. Wiles ’95 Ms. Laura Lee Yaeger ’77 Mr. Nicholas Street ’71 and Mr. Samuel Griffin Thompson ’68 Mr. William Johnson Mr. Timothy Reid Wilkerson Griffin Brunson & Perle LLP Ms. Angela Baxter Street Mr. Samuel Griffin Thompson Jr. Waggoner ’54 ’78 and Ms. Robinette Witt Ms. Michal Ellen Yarborough ’09 Hampton Inn & Suites SouthPark Ms. Collin M. Strickland ’10 Hon. Lacy Herman Thornburg ’54 Mr. John Charles Wainio ’72 Wilkerson Mr. William Dewey Holderness Investments Company Ms. Ingrid Shore Wakefield ’01 Yarborough ’74 Ms. Elizabeth Nina and Ms. Dorothy Mr. Charles Putnam Wilkins ’69 Honeywell Hometown Mr. James A. Yates III and Strickland ’87 Todd Thornburg Ms. Ann Blannie Waldo ’95 Ms. Lisa deAngelis Wilkins ’01 Solutions – PAC Mr. Jason Trent Strickland ’05 Mr. Charles Allen Thurmond Jr. Ms. Charlesena Elliott Walker ’93 Ms. Mary Preston Yates Ms. Louise McGee Wilkins, Hunton & Williams LLP Mr. Joseph Oliver Stroud Jr. ’76 Hon. Douglas Oscar Tice Jr. ’57 Ms. Doretta LaShaun Walker ’93 in memory of Ms. Erin McNeil Young ’99 Hyler & Lopez PA Mr. Odes Lawrence Ms. Ann M. Tierney, Mr. E. Garrett Walker ’75 and William A. Johnson Mr. Gary Francis Young ’79 Stroupe Jr. ’71 in memory of Ms. Jane Walker Hon. Charles W. Wilkinson Jr. ’67 Ms. Katherine D. Young ’09 InSight Fund Ms. Ann Hogue Stuart ’78 Gigliola B. Tatge Ms. Ann Bennett Wall ’78 and Ms. Emily Harris Wilkinson Mr. T. Carlton Younger Jr. ’75 Ireland Family Foundation

38 FALL-WINTER 2013 Jeffrey and Jennifer Allred Sumrell Sugg Carmichael 3L CLASS GIFT 2013 UNC SCHOOL OF LAW Family Foundation Hicks & Hart PA DONORS Jewish Foundation of Greensboro Sweeps Members of the Class of 2013 who FIRM CAMPAIGN Johnston Allison & Hord Estate of Sarah Lindsay Tate contributed to the 3L Class Gift UNC School of Law alumni from the following firms are recognized for their participation in the 2012 Firm Campaign. Every Jones Walker Law Firm The Banks Law Firm PA benefiting the commissioning of a gift received through the Firm Campaign helps to further the mission of UNC School of Law and has a direct impact on the Julian Price Family Foundation The Clearing House portrait of Chief Justice Henry Frye future of legal education. Justgive The Royal Bank of Scotland or a law fund of choice. Parker Poe Adams & K & L Gates LLP The Salem Foundation Inc Anonymous PLATINUM (100%) SILVER (80-89%) Alston & Bird LLP Bernstein LLP – Charlotte Kane Russell Coleman & Logan PC The Stuart S & Birdie Gould Mr. David P. Abel ’13 Sidley Austin LLP Foundation Bell Davis & Pitt PA Parker Poe Adams & Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Ms. Jean C. Abreu ’13 Hunton & Williams LLP – This & That Gift Gallery Brooks Pierce McLendon Bernstein LLP – Raleigh Kirby & Holt Mr. Andrew Philip Arnold ’13 Charlotte Thomson Reuters Humphrey & Leonard Poyner Spruill LLP – Rocky Mount Estate of Joseph Ms. Katharine Amanda Baker ’13 LLP – Greensboro Roberts & Stevens PA Mordecai Kittner Townsend Bertram & Co PARTICIPANT Ms. Brandy Barrett ’13 Brooks Pierce McLendon Schell Bray PLLC KPMG Foundation Triangle Community Foundation Bradley Arant Boult Mr. Jackson C. Bebber ’13 Humphrey & Leonard LLP Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Matching Gifts Troutman Sanders – Raleigh Cummings LLP Dr. Joan Michelle Blazich ’13 Flom LLP Law Office of Lucky T. Osho Tutti Frutti Brown & Bunch PLLC Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog LLP Ms. Rachel F. Braden ’13 Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Lawyers Mutual Liability UNC Student Activities Campbell Shatley PLLC Mitchell & Jernigan Gailor Hunt Jenkins Davis & Ms. Kathleen D. Bradshaw ’13 Ins Co of NC Fund Office Carruthers & Roth PA Smith Moore Leatherwood Taylor PLLC Lickity Split Underground Printing Ms. Ann A. Bryan ’13 Ellis & Winters LLP LLP – Greensboro Horack Talley Pharr & Lowndes PA Linda’s Bar & Grill Unique Plant Inc Ms. Sarah K. Burris ’13 Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & The Van Winkle Law Firm James McElroy & Diehl PA Lunsford Richardson United Way of the Greater Triangle Mr. Damian Anthony Cannon ’13 Garofalo LLP Troutman Sanders LLP Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton – Preyer Charitable Vanguard Charitable Mr. Jennings Bradford Johnston Allison & Hord PA Ward and Smith PA – Asheville Winston-Salem Endowment Program Carpenter ’13 K&L Gates LLP – Charlotte Mangum Trust Ward and Smith PA – Greenville King & Spalding LLP Mayer Brown LLP VantageSouth Bank Ms. Laetitia L. Cheltenham ’13 K&L Gates LLP – Raleigh Ward and Smith PA – New Bern Manning Fulton & Skinner McGuireWoods Victor E. Bell Jr & Jane M. Bell Mr. Sean Michael Clayton ’13 Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP Ward and Smith PA – Raleigh McGuireWoods LLP Minor Foundation Family Foundation Mr. Philip L. Cotey ’13 Kenyon & Kenyon LLP Ward and Smith PA – Wilmington Kilpatrick Townsend & Nexsen Pruet Missouri Association for Victoria Park Florist Ms. Sara Couch ’13 Williams Mullen Stockton – Atlanta Poyner Spruill LLP – Raleigh Community Action Vita Pizzeria Ms. Caitlyn R. Culbertson ’13 Wishart Norris Henninger Kirby & Holt LLP & Pittman Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA Moore & Johnson Agency Inc Vital Projects Fund, Inc. Mr. Alexander T. Dadok ’13 Lynch & Eatman LLP Wyrick Robbins Yates & Moore & Van Allen PLLC Vorys Sater Seymour & Pease LLP Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP – Mr. Zack Thomas Dawson ’13 Moore & Van Allen Ponton LLP W. Trent Ragland Jr. Foundation Atlanta, Charlotte, Greenville, Morrison & Foerster LLP Mr. Rohit Deedwania ’13 PLLC – Charlotte Yates McLamb & Weyher Raleigh, Wilmington Nantahala Outdoor Center Ward and Smith PA Ms. Lisa Marie Doolittle ’13 Moore & Van Allen PLLC – Wells Fargo Bank – Minneapolis Tharrington Smith LLP National Notary Foundation Mr. Daniel Jordan Dore ’13 Research Triangle Park GOLD (90-99%) Wentworth & Leggett Book Shop Nelson Mullins Riley & Mr. Dennis Estok ’13 Nelson Mullins Riley & Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton West Chapel Hill Restaurants Inc Scarborough LLP – Raleigh Scarborough Ms. Meisha Shantay Evans ’13 Network for Good Wiggen Law Group Ms. Meriwether Tull Evans ’13 New Century Bank William A. Stern Foundation Ms. Yolanda R. Fair ’13 North Carolina Bar Association William R. Kenan Jr. Ms. Patricia Ivelisse Fernandez ’13 2013 FIRM CAMPAIGN REPRESENTATIVES North Carolina Community Charitable Trust Mr. Matthew T. Gay ’13 Alston & Bird LLP, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Foundation Williams Mullen Ms. Julia A. Gonzales ’13 Charlotte, H. Bryan Ives III ’80 - Raleigh, William F. Lane ’97 Flom LLP, Luke A. Meisner ’03 North Carolina Housing Williams Mullen Foundation Ms. Dania L. Haider ’13 Bell Davis & Pitt PA, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Finance Agency Wineman Charitable Foundation Robin J. Stinson ’84 Mitchell & Jernigan, William Ms. Jane Richardson Hauser ’13 - Winston-Salem, North Carolina Museum of Art Winston & Strawn LLP Bradley Arant Boult Cummings Jeffrey T. Skinner ’96 H. Moss ‘84, Brian Meacham Mr. Christopher J. Heaney ’13 O2 Fitness Winston-Salem Foundation LLP, Kenneth M. Perry ’93 King & Spalding LLP, ‘03, Katherine D. Young ’09 Orange County Bar Association Wishart Norris Henninger Mr. Charles Henry Hiser IV ’13 Brooks Pierce McLendon E. William Bates II ’79 Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP - Humphrey & Leonard Greensboro, David Paparazzi Ristorante Italiano & Pittman Ms. Nina L. Holtsberry ’13 Lynch & Eatman LLP, LLP - Greensboro, Moore II ’69 Parker Poe Adams & Womble Carlyle Sandridge Ms. Melissa M. Hyland ’13 Katherine B. Wilkerson ’92 & Rice LLP S. Leigh Rodenbough IV ’80 Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP - Bernstein LLP Ms. Elizabeth J. Ireland ’13 Manning Fulton & Skinner, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton Brooks Pierce McLendon Atlanta, Charlotte, Greenville, Paul Hastings Law Firm Mr. Jeffrey Edward James ’13 Humphrey & Leonard Alison R. Cayton ’91 Raleigh, Wilmington, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Perry Bundy Plyler Long & Cox LP Ms. Rachel Umstead Jernigan ’13 LLP - Raleigh, Elizabeth McGuireWoods LLP, Scott David J. Neill ’04 Zaytoun Orthodontics Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law Fraternity Ms. Uttara Kale ’13 Spainhour ’05 Vaughn ‘86, Jason D. Evans Tharrington Smith LLP, Plow and Hearth Zoe’s Kitchen Mr. C. Adam Lanier ’13 Brown & Bunch PLLC, ‘01, Justin D. Howard ’03 Jill S. Jackson ’99 LeAnn Nease Brown ’84 Poole Foundation Inc Mr. S. Yasir Latifi ’13 Moore & Van Allen PLLC - The Van Winkle Law Firm, Campbell Shatley PLLC, Charlotte, A. Mark Adcock ’83 Poyner Spruill LLP – Charlotte FACULTY & STAFF Ms. Elizabeth P. Ligon ’13 John Veazey ’06, Esther E. K. Dean Shatley ’03 and Benjamin Pickett ’07 Manheimer ’98 Pulley Watson King & Lischer PA Prof. Kimberly Christin Bishop ’04 Mr. Brian J. Litwak ’13 Carruthers & Roth PA, Moore & Van Allen PLLC - Troutman Sanders LLP, R & R Grill Dean John Charles Boger ’74 Mr. Ian A. Mance ’13 J. Scott Dillon ’83 Mr. Conrad Karl Bortz Research Triangle Park, Bradley J. Breece ’10 R. David Sprinkle Living Trust Mr. Jonathan W. Massell ’13 Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog LLP, Joseph D. Joyner ’81 Prof. Lissa Lamkin Broome Ward and Smith PA - Asheville, RagApple Lassie Ms. Carrie V. Mcmillan ’13 Dan M. Hartzog ’73 Prof. Alfred Brophy Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA, Derek J. Allen ’97 Rappl’s Electric Service Co. Ms. Tabitha Lee Messick ’13 Ellis & Winters LLP, Erin Jennings Regel Bobay ’09 Ward and Smith PA - Greenville, Prof. Caroline Nicholson Brown Diane H. Rupprecht ’00 Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA Mr. Nick J. Miller ’13 Nelson Mullins Riley & J. Michael Fields ’91 Prof. Bernard Alan Burk Gailor Hunt Jenkins Davis & Raymond James & Ms. Hannah L. Camenzind ’10 Ms. Whitney Chioma Nebolisa ’13 Scarborough LLP, Ward and Smith PA - New Bern, Taylor PLLC, Cathy M. Rudisil ’84 Associates Inc Prof. Michael L. Corrado Mr. Matthew E. Nigriny ’13 Carrie B. Tortora ’07 Matthew A. Cordell ’07 Raymond James Charitable Ms. Dana M. Dubis Mr. R. Bryan Norris ’13 Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Nexsen Pruet, Ward and Smith PA - Raleigh, Endowment Fund R. Harper Heckman ’91 Kyle R. Still ’07 Prof. Lewis Moore Everett ’08 Mr. Adam Chase Parker ’13 Garofalo LLP, David N. Allen Red Hot & Blue Nicholls & Crampton PA, Ward and Smith PA - Ms. Louise W. Harris Ms. Agata Anna Pelka ’13 ‘80 and Kristie H. Farwell ’03 Red Robin Prof. Amanda Suttle Hitchcock ’07 Horack Talley Pharr & Lowndes Emmett B. Haywood ’82 Wilmington, Ms. Margaret J. Pishko ’13 Jeremy M. Wilson ’11 Renaissance Charitable Foundation Ms. Mary Lynn Irvine ’11 PA, Jonathan Windham ’02 Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein Ms. Virginia Scales Pleasants ’13 Williams Mullen, Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA Ms. Kris Jensen Hunton & Williams LLP - LLP - Charlotte, Elizabeth D. Scott ’86 Mr. John B. Kasprzak ’05 Ms. Caroline Marie Richardson ’13 Charlotte, Jami Jackson Farris ’99 Ruth Z. Fleishman Foundation Wishart Norris Henninger Ms. Maria J. Mangano ’82 Mr. Andrew Leigh Rodenbough ’13 Michael Nedzbala ’87 Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein Sallie B. Phillips Foundation & Pittman, Ms. Kelly M. Mann Mr. Juan Carlos Rojas ’13 James McElroy & Diehl PA, LLP - Raleigh, Salutations Fine Stationery John Paul Tsahaksis ’09 C. Thomas Steele Jr. ’87 Ms. Jennifer Watson Marsh ’09 Mr. M. Pierce Sandwith ’13 George T. Brady III ’98 and Gifts Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Prof. William P. Marshall Mr. Nathan Thomas Poyner Spruill LLP - Raleigh, Sandler O. Neill & Partners LP Daniel A. Merlin ’06 Rice LLP - Charlotte, Prof. Jon Paul McClanahan ’08 Schaal Wilson ’13 Stephanie L. Sanders ’09 Savory Spice K&L Gates LLP - Charlotte, Sarah M. Stone ’05 Ms. Mary Susan McLean Ms. Ruth Ann Sheehan ’13 Poyner Spruill LLP - Rocky Mount, Schwab Fund for Justin T. Carpenter ’09 Womble Carlyle Sandridge Ms. Rosemary Moore Deborah E. Sperati ’99 Charitable Giving Ms. Katherine Alice Slager ’13 K&L Gates LLP - Raleigh, & Rice LLP - Raleigh, Prof. Robert Paul Mosteller Roberts & Stevens PA, Owen B. Asplundh ’05 Shanahan Law Group PLLC Ms. Holly C. Smith ’13 Margaret Westbrook ’96 Prof. Richard Ernest Myers ’98 John W. Mason ’73 Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Ski Ober Gatlinburg Mr. Asher P. Spiller ’13 Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, Prof. Gene R. Nichol Jr. Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson Rice LLP - Winston-Salem, Ms. Lauren Elizabeth Tapson ’13 Richard L. Farley ’87 Smith Anderson Ms. Sylvia Novinsky PA, Douglas Jarrell ’94 Christopher A. Kreiner ’94 Mr. Nicolas E. Tosco ’13 Kenyon & Kenyon LLP - Southeastern Camera Ms. Beth Sheba Posner ’97 Rose Cordero Prey ’04 Schell Bray PLLC, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton and Supply Ms. Kathryn Hagler Van Wie ’13 Dr. Katie Rose Guest Pryal ’03 Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton Doris R. Bray ’66 LLP, Joshua J. Otto ’07 Southern States LLC Prof. Judith W. Wegner Ms. Gabriell A. Vires ’13 - Atlanta, R. Charles Sidley Austin LLP, Yates McLamb & Weyher, Starrlight Mead Mr. Brandon Wright Mr. Vinston Devon Walton ’13 Henn Jr. ’98 Angela M. Xenakis ’03 Susan T. Fountain ’97

CAROLINA LAW 39 CLASS NOTES

1956 1969 1974

CHARLES E. MELVIN JR. of Smith Moore THE HONORABLE ROBERT C. “BOB” JAMES C. GULICK, a retired senior deputy Leatherwood in Greensboro, N.C., earned HUNTER, a judge on the N.C. Court of Appeals attorney general in charge of the environmental recognition in the 2013 edition of Chambers from Marion, N.C., was named a recipient of division at the North Carolina Attorney USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business in the Citizen Lawyer Award by the North General’s office, was named to the board of the area of real estate zoning and land use. Carolina Bar Association. directors of the North Carolina Opera. 1959 1971 KENNETH R. KELLER of Carruthers & Roth, P.A. in Greensboro, N.C., was ALFRED E. CLEVELAND, senior partner with WOODY WEBB SR. of The Edmisten Webb selected for inclusion in McCoy, Wiggins, Cleveland & O’Conner & Hawes Law Firm in Raleigh, N.C., was The Best Lawyers in America PLLC of Fayetteville, N.C., received an elected to the American Law Institute. Webb 2014 for the practice areas honorary doctor of humane letters degree has practiced law in Raleigh for 40 years of commercial litigation, from Methodist University in Fayetteville for starting in the North Carolina Department litigation – construction, his philanthropic and community efforts to of Justice before moving to the United States Kenneth R. Keller litigation – ERISA, and the university over two decades. Attorney’s Office and then private practice. litigation – labor & 1961 LACY REAVES of Smith Anderson in Raleigh, employment. N.C., received the highest ranking (Band One) DAN MCLAMB of Yates, McLamb & Weyher by Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for JOHN S. “JACK” STEVENS of Roberts and LLP in Raleigh, N.C., received Band One Business for real estate zoning and land use law. Stevens in Asheville, N.C., was inducted into recognition in the litigation: healthcare and the North Carolina Bar Association’s General 1972 medical malpractice category for North Practice Hall of Fame. Carolina by Chambers USA: America’s ALLEN GEORGE THOMAS of Thomas and ANDY COPENHAVER of Womble Carlyle Leading Lawyers for Business for 2013. Farris in Wilson, N.C., was inducted into the Sandridge & Rice in Winston-Salem, N.C., was 1975 North Carolina Bar Association’s General recognized by Chambers USA: America’s Leading Practice Hall of Fame. Lawyers for Business in the areas of antitrust law IRVIN WHITE (HANK) and commercial litigation. 1962 HANKINS III of Parker 1973 Poe Adams & Bernstein, JOHN ROSENBERG of Prestonsburg, Ky., LLP in Charlotte, N.C., was received the 2013 Distinguished Attorney award NOEL ALLEN of Raleigh. N.C., was elected to appointed as trustee from the . the board of directors for the N.C. Center for emeritus for Queens University of Charlotte. 1963 Public Policy Research. Allen, a founding partner of Allen, Pinnix & Nichols, P.A. was Irvin White “Hank” E. GARRETT WALKER of also recognized by the Antitrust and Trade Hankins III Smith Moore Leatherwood FRANK M. BELL JR. of Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A. Regulation Section of the North Carolina LLP in Greensboro, N.C., in Winston-Salem, N.C., was selected to be Bar Association as the third recipient of its earned recognition as part of Business North included in the 2014 edition of Best Lawyers Distinguished Service Award. Carolina’s 2013 “Legal Elite” in real estate law. in America in the area of real estate law. JIM COOLEY of Womble Carlyle in Charlotte, 1976 1966 N.C., was recognized by Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business in the H. GLENN DUNN, area of commercial litigation. FRANK R. LIGGETT III of Ragsdale Liggett in a partner in Poyner Spruill Raleigh, N.C., was selected for inclusion in the RICHARD L. VANORE of LLP’s environmental law 2013 Best Lawyers in America in the area of Carruthers & Roth, P.A. in practice group, is ranked by insurance law. Greensboro, N.C., was Chambers USA: America’s selected for inclusion in Leading Lawyers for Businessin 1967 Best Lawyers in America environmental law for North 2014 in the practice areas Carolina in 2013. He JOHN LEE JERNIGAN of Smith Anderson in of commercial litigation; H. Glenn Dunn practices in the firm’s Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Chambers medical malpractice law Raleigh office. USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business. Richard L. Vanore – defendants; personal NOAH H. HUFFSTETLER III, managing partner He was also bestowed the highest ranking for injury litigation – defendants; and professional of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP corporate/mergers and acquisitions law. malpractice law – defendants. in Raleigh, N.C., was named the ninth DAVID W. LONG of Poyner Spruill, LLP in recipient of the health law section of the Raleigh, N.C., was recognized by the Wake North Carolina Bar Association Distinguished County Bar Association as the recipient of the Service Award. Huffstetler was also named one Justice Joseph Branch Professionalism Award. of the “Triangle’s Most Influential Business Leaders” by the Triangle Business Journal.

40 FALL-WINTER 2013 CARL N. PATTERSON, managing partner at of the U.S. military and with the N.C. Troopers LAURA E. STEVENSON was appointed Chief Smith Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was selected Association with their “National Legislator of Judge of the Municipal Court for the city of for the 2013 Best Lawyers in America by his peers the Year” award. Brookhaven, Ga. She will also continue her for litigation – securities. He was also private practice, which focuses on commercial recognized in the 2013 Chambers USA: America’s 1982 litigation and employment law. Leading Lawyers for Business for litigation: general commercial law. E. KENT AUBERRY of Smith Moore 1984 Leatherwood in Greensboro, N.C., earned STEPHEN D. POE of Bell Davis & Pitt, P.A. recognition in the 2013 Chambers USA: Leading SUSAN STRAYHORN in Winston Salem, N.C., was selected to be Lawyers for Business in the area of corporate BARBOUR with McGuire, included in the 2014 edition of Best Lawyers in mergers and acquisitions and was named one of Wood & Bissette, P.A. America in the areas of banking and finance law, Business North Carolina’s “Legal Elite.” in Asheville, N.C., was corporate law, financial services regulation law honored with the 28th and banking and finance litigation. JONATHAN A. BERKELHAMMER, a partner in Smith Moore Leatherwood’s office in Judicial District Bar THOMAS HOLMES WELLMAN of Wellman Greensboro, N.C., earned recognition as part of Professionalism Award. White and Wilson PLLC in Roanoke Rapids, Business North Carolina’s 2013 “Legal Elite” in N.C., was inducted into the North Carolina Bar Susan Strayhorn Barbour litigation. He was also elected the 36th president Association’s General Practice Hall of Fame. of the North Carolina Association of Defense 1977 Attorneys (NCADA). ROBIN J. STINSON was elected chair of the board STEWART W. FISHER of of directors at the WILLIAM P. DANIELL of Young Moore and Glenn, Mills, Fisher & Children’s Law Center of Henderson, P.A. in Raleigh, N.C., was selected Mahoney, PA of Durham, Central North Carolina. A for inclusion in the 2013 Best Lawyers in America N.C., has been recognized family law attorney with Business Edition. as one of the Top 100 North with Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A. 1978 Carolina Super Lawyers for in Winston-Salem, N.C., 2013 and is listed in the Robin J. Stinson Stinson was selected to be current edition of Best included in the 2014 WALTER E. BROCK JR. of Young Moore & Stewart W. Fisher Lawyers in America in the edition of Best Lawyers in America in the areas Henderson, P.A. in Raleigh, N.C., was selected field of labor and of family law and family law mediation and for inclusion in the 2013 Best Lawyers in America employment law. was selected as Lawyer of the Year for 2014 for Business Edition. MARTHA W. SURLES of family law mediation. 1979 Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Garofalo LLP, was selected 1985 M. KEITH KAPP, partner at Williams Mullen as the Best Lawyers’ 2014 CHRISTOPHER BLAIR CAPEL of Smith in Raleigh, N.C., and president of the North Charlotte Workers’ Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in Carolina State Bar, was recognized as a fellow Compensation Law Chambers USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for of the American Bar Foundation. Employers “Lawyer of the Year.” Business. He was also recognized in the 2013 WILLIAM “BILL” S. MILLS Martha W. Surles Chambers USA for corporate/mergers and of Glenn, Mills, Fisher & acquisitions law. Mahoney, PA in Durham, RAMONA CUNNINGHAM O’BRYANT N.C., was selected for 1983 of Smith Moore Leatherwood in Greensboro, inclusion in the 20th N.C., earned recognition in the 2013 Chambers Edition of The Best Lawyers ANTHONY CIRIACO, a partner in the USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business in in America in the practice Columbus, Ohio, office of Vorys, Sater, Seymour the area of environmental law. She was also area of personal injury and Pease, was recognized among the leading appointed chair of the North Carolina Bar William “Bill” litigation – plaintiffs. practitioners in the country in the 2013 edition Association’s Environment, Energy and S. Mills of Chambers USA: Leading Lawyers for Business. Natural Resources Law Section for the J. SCOTT DILLON of 2013-2014 bar year. 1980 Carruthers & Roth, P.A. in STUART B. DORSETT, attorney with Ward Greensboro, N.C., was & Smith’s Raleigh, N.C., office and current THE HONORABLE JAMES AMMONS JR. selected for inclusion in NCBA Board of Governors member, was was named the Senior Resident Superior Best Lawyers in America appointed chair of the North Carolina Court Judge for the 12th Judicial District. He 2014 for employee benefits Community Foundation Board of Directors has been a judge since 1988 and on the (ERISA) law. Dillon was Superior Court bench since 1998. also honored with the 2013 THOMPSON M. MAYES, deputy general 1981 J. Scott Dillon Distinguished Service counsel, National Trust for Historic Preservation Award from the Business in Washington, D.C., was awarded the 2013- Law Section of the North Carolina 2014 American Academy in Rome award DAVID GANTT of Asheville, N.C., was elected as Bar Association. for historic preservation and conservation. chair of the Buncombe County Commission. Recipients are provided with a fellowship that LAWRENCE J. MYERS of Smith Moore Gantt has served on the commission since 1996. includes a stipend, a study or studio, and room Leatherwood in Atlanta, Ga., earned recognition and board for a period of six months to two THE HONORABLE D. CARMICHAEL in the 2013 edition of Chambers USA: Leading years in Rome, Italy. MCINTYRE II, U.S. Congressman for the 7th Lawyers for Business in the area of health care law. District of North Carolina, was recognized with a Distinguished Public Servant Award from the . He was also recognized for his work to help the Special Operations Forces

CAROLINA LAW 41 CLASS NOTES

THOMAS E. TERRELL JR. of Smith Moore president in 2014. Steele was also honored by M. GRAY STYERS JR. of Styers, Kemerait & Leatherwood LLP in Greensboro, N.C., earned UNC Asheville as its 2013 Roy A. Taylor Mitchell in Raleigh, N.C., was named a recognition as part of Business North Carolina’s Distinguished Alumnus of the Year and recipient of the 2013 Citizen Lawyer Award by 2013 “Legal Elite” in real estate law. inducted as an honorary member by the the North Carolina Bar Association. LEIGH A. WILKINSON of Ward and Smith, school’s chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma. BETTY TEMPLE of Womble Carlyle in P.A. in New Bern, N.C., was named a recipient Greenville, S.C., was recognized by Chambers of the 2013 Citizen Lawyer Award by the 1988 USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business North Carolina Bar Association. in the areas of corporate law and mergers MICHAEL G. CARTER of Milwaukee, Wis., was and acquisitions. 1986 promoted to executive vice president of Northwestern Mutual. 1990 JUNE L. BASDEN of FRED CUNNINGHAM of Slawson Cunningham Carruthers & Roth, P.A. Whalen & Gaspari in Palm Beach Gardens, DINITA L. JAMES joined in Greensboro, NC, was Fla., ended his term as president of the Florida the Phoenix, Ariz., office of selected for inclusion in Justice Association, comprising 3,500 plaintiff’s Gonzalez Saggio & The Best Lawyers in America attorneys in the state of Florida. He was selected Harlan LLP. 2014 for the two practice by Super Lawyers Magazine as one of the Top areas of banking and finance 100 lawyers in the state of Florida and for law and bankruptcy and inclusion in Best Lawyers in America in the June L. Basden creditor debtor rights/ fields of personal injury and insurance law. Dinita L. James insolvency and ARTHUR J. DEBAUGH of CHARLES M. MEDLIN reorganization law. Basden was also named 2014 Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A. in became a named partner Greensboro Banking and Finance Law “Lawyer Winston-Salem, N.C., at the Atlanta-based firm of the Year” by Best Lawyers in America 2014. was selected to be included of Bovis, Kyle, Burch & CHRISTOPHER BROWNING of Williams in the 2014 edition of Medlin, LLC in recognition Mullen in Raleigh, N.C., was included in the Best Lawyers in America in of his significant Triangle Business Journal’s “50 to Watch in the areas of copyright contributions to the firm Business” as a legal professional expected law, intellectual property and its growth in family play an important role in shaping the Arthur J. DeBaugh litigation and trademark law. Charles M. Medlin law practice. community’s future. ALLEN KINZER, a partner WALTER N. RAK, senior counsel at Lowe’s CRAIG T. LYNCH, a partner and member of in the Columbus office of Companies, Inc. in Mooresville, N.C., was Parker Poe’s board of directors, was named a Vorys, Sater, Seymour and named one of North Carolina’s “Legal Elite” recipient of the 2013 Citizen Lawyer Award by Pease LLP, was included in in the corporate counsel category by Business the North Carolina Bar Association. the 2014 edition of Best North Carolina magazine. Lawyers in America in the LESLIE C. PACKER was DEBORAH ROSS, general counsel for areas of employment law named managing partner Triangle Transit in Raleigh, N.C., was included management, labor law of Ellis & Winters in in the Triangle Business Journal’s “50 to Watch in Allen Kinzer management and labor Raleigh, N.C. Packer leads Business” as a legal professional expected and employment litigation. the firm’s litigation practice play an important role in shaping the and focuses her practice on THE HONORABLE MARK MARTIN, North community’s future. products liability, medical Carolina Supreme Court Senior Associate malpractice and commercial Justice, was named chair of the American 1991 Leslie C. Packer litigation. Bar Association’s Judicial Division. THE HONORABLE STEVEN C. FRUCCI was 1987 1989 appointed to the Virginia Beach Circuit Court of the Virginia 2nd Judicial Circuit in August of Henson BYRON BARNES KIRKLAND of Smith THOMAS WALTERS HENSON JR. 2013 by Governor Bob McDonnell. & Fuerst PA in Raleigh, N.C., contributed a Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in KERRY ANNE SHAD of Smith Anderson in chapter for the book “The Miracle Mind: the 2013 edition of Best Lawyers in America for Raleigh, N.C., was recognized in the 2013 Sonya’s Story,” a book designed to help stroke mergers and acquisitions in Raleigh. He was edition of Chambers USA: America’s Leading and traumatic brain injury patients, their also recognized in the 2013 edition of Chambers Lawyers for Business in the area of labor and families, and their caregivers. USA: Leading Lawyers for Business for corporate/ employment law. She was also included in the mergers and acquisitions law. JAYNE HUNTER joined Nexsen Pruet’s 2014 edition of Best Lawyers in America for Charlotte, N.C., office as part of its intellectual RICHARD RAINEY of Womble Carlyle in employment law – management, and litigation Charlotte, N.C., was recognized by Chambers property group. – labor and employment. USA: America’s Leading Lawyers for Business in ANSON BRADLEY IVES of Raleigh N.C., KEITH A. WOOD, of the area of labor and employment law. joined the North Carolina Department of Carruthers & Roth, P.A. Environment & Natural Resources as the C. THOMAS STEELE JR. of Wishart Norris in Greensboro, N.C., was Henninger & Pittman, P.A. in Burlington, assistant secretary for natural resources. selected for inclusion in N.C., was re-elected to the board of the Real His responsibilities include state parks, the 2014 edition of Best Estate Lawyers Association of North Carolina zoo, aquariums, museum of natural Lawyers in America for tax (RELANC) and elected vice president of sciences, marine fisheries and a number of law. He earned RELANC. He will serve as the association’s energy and military matters. recognition Keith A. Wood

42 FALL-WINTER 2013 as one of Business North Carolina’s “Legal Elite” JENNIFER SMITH SCOTT received a Graduate ALYSON GRINE was for 2013 in the practice areas of business and Banking Degree/Executive Leadership named the UNC School tax/estate planning and was selected for Certificate from the ABA Stonier School at of Government’s Albert and inclusion in the North Carolina Super Lawyers Wharton School of Business in , Pa., Gladys Hall Coates Term list for estate planning and probate law. on June 13, 2013. Distinguished Lecturer for 1992 1997 Teaching Excellence.

DAVID LEONARD BROWN was named a JARVIS T. HARRIS of Alyson Grine shareholder at Nelson Levine in Greensboro, N.C. R. Steve Bowden and JOSH HOWARD, a partner at the law firm of WAYNE GOODWIN received the 2013 Associates in Greensboro, N.C., was named chair of Gammon, Howard & Zeszotarski, PLLC in Defender of Justice Award from the N.C. Justice Raleigh, N.C., was appointed by Governor Pat Center for his consumer protection efforts. the Guilford Technical Community College Board McCrory to the North Carolina State Board of 1993 of Trustees. Harris is both Elections for a four-year term. Howard was the youngest board chair in elected chair of the board May 1. Jarvis T. Harris GTCC’s history at the age MEGAN E. JONES, partner at Hausfeld LLP BENJAMIN A. KAHN was appointed to the of 41 and the first African-American to hold in Washington, D.C., was selected for position of U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the the position. recognition by Global Competition Review, Middle District of North Carolina in an international publication, which profiled Greensboro, N.C. CHRIS HUMPHREY of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice in Raleigh, N.C., was 100 successful women in the field of CHARLES R. ULLMAN, a lawyer specializing in recognized in Chambers USA: America’s Leading competition law in its fourth edition of family law cases in Raleigh and surrounding Lawyers for Business in the area of intellectual “Women in Antitrust.” areas in Wake County, N.C., shared his extensive property law. ALEXIS STACKHOUSE is the principal knowledge of child custody issues in a recent attorney at the Litigation Practice of Alexandria WAB P. KADABA of National Business Institute continuing legal in , a boutique criminal and education seminar. Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP in Atlanta, veterans law firm. In addition to her new 1995 Ga., received the position, she earned her LL.M. in litigation Cornerstone Award at from Georgetown University School of Law. the 2013 North American STEVEN BARENTZEN South Asian Bar Association 2000 accepted a position as the Convention. head of the Washington, Wab P. Kadaba TODD EVESON was named as the practice D.C., office of PCT Law group leader for banking and financial Group. Barentzen also 1998 institutions at Wyrick Robbins Yates & published an article in the Ponton in Raleigh, N.C. April 2013 edition of MATTHEW HOYT, a partner at Peifer Hanson & THE HONORABLE TYYAWDI M. HANDS Steven Barentzen Corporate Counsel titled “How to Protect Against Mullins PA in Albuquerque, N.M., received an of Mecklenburg County District Court in Outside Counsel Overbilling.” AV rating from Martindale-Hubbell. Charlotte, N.C., received the North Carolina W. THOMAS MCCUISTON, managing partner Lawyers Weekly Women of Justice Public GINA CAMMARANO of Farah & Cammarano, of McCuiston Law Offices in Cary, N.C., was Official Award. P.A., was named in Best Lawyers in America 2014 re-certified as an estate planning law specialist JESSICA POTTS LAHEY of Cross Roads as the Raleigh “Lawyer of the Year” in the area by the North Carolina State Bar Board of Academy in Lyme Center, N.H., was named in of workers compensation law – claimants. Legal Specialization. “33 Educators We Admire” by The New York Times as part of “Connected Educator Month.” MELANIE BLACK DUBIS, 1999 She also appeared on the “Today Show” to a partner at Parker Poe discuss education for children. Adams and Bernstein LLP RUSSELL D. BABB was named partner at in Raleigh, N.C., was JOSHUA D. LANNING, litigation attorney with Tharrington Smith, LLP in Raleigh, N.C. re-elected as board chair Moore & Van Allen in Charlotte, N.C., has been to the Carolina Ballet. EDWARD B. DAVIS of Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A. selected for the 2013 class of Leadership in Charlotte, N.C., was selected to be Council on Legal Diversity Fellows, a program included in the 2014 edition of Best Lawyers in helping the next generation of legal leaders. Melanie Black Dubis America in the areas of appellate practice and GEORGE MASON OLIVER of Oliver Friesen commercial litigation. Cheek PLLC in New Bern, N.C., was named 1996 J.D. DUPUY of Ruff, Bond, Cobb, Wade & as the “Young Gun (Best Under 40)” winner in Bethune LLP in Charlotte, N.C., co-published Business Law Carolina’s 2013 “Legal Elite.” TONYA BUNN POWELL of “Poetic Justice - Legal Humor In Verse,” a MATT RHOAD, a partner at Smith Anderson Raleigh, N.C., was named book containing more than 70 vignettes from in Raleigh, N.C., received the Triangle Business partner at Shanahan Law life in the practice of law rendered as wryly Journal’s 2013 “40 Under 40” Leadership Award. Group, PLLC. humorous poems. CHRIS LEE GILBERT was named a partner at Munck Wilson Mandala, LLP in , Texas and will concentrate his practice on complex litigation and appeals, technology Tonya Bunn Powell and business law.

CAROLINA LAW 43 CLASS NOTES CHARMIN SHIELY, a 2003 JASON HERNDON with shareholder in the Portland Parker Poe’s Raleigh, N.C., Ore., office of the Pacific office, was named to the of Raleigh, N.C., Northwest regional law JOSEPH SAMUEL DOWDY board of directors of the was named partner at Nelson Mullins Riley & firm Schwabe Williamson Lupus Foundation of Scarborough. & Wyatt, was appointed America, North Carolina to serve on the board of KATE DEITER-MARADEI of Raleigh, N.C., Chapter (LFANC). the YMCA of transitioned from Teague Campbell Dennis & Charmin Shiely Columbia-Willamette. Gorham, LLP, where she was a partner, to Jason Herndon launch Deiter Mediation. KIRK G. SAUNOOKE 2001 MICHAEL FRIEDBERG of Washington, D.C., was elected as the chair of the ABA’s Tribal accepted the position of staff director for the Courts Council. ALISON GROUNDS of Troutman Sanders U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee JACK WIGGEN of the Wiggen Law Group LLP in Atlanta Ga., was honored among the on railroads, pipelines and hazardous materials. PLLC in Durham, N.C., was recognized by International Legal Technology Association 2004 Business North Carolina magazine as “Legal Elite” distinguished peer award recipients as the 2013 in the field of family law for 2013. technology advocacy professional of the year. W.C. TURNER HERBERT joined Bank of 2006 J. PATRICK HAYWOOD America in Charlotte, N.C., as director of of Carruthers & Roth, P.A. anti-corruption and anti-bribery, global in Greensboro, N.C., earned financial crimes compliance. JOAN SHREFFLER DINSMORE joined the recognition as one of Business Raleigh, N.C., office of McGuireWoods. North Carolina’s “Legal Elite” DAVID J. NEILL of Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP in Raleigh, N.C., earned recognition as KAREN L. LUCHKA of Fisher & Phillips LLP for 2013 in the area of in Columbia, S.C., was selected by The State Construction Law. part of Business North Carolina’s 2013 “Legal Elite” in real estate law. newspaper for its annual “20 under 40” list of J. Patrick Haywood the area’s top young professionals. Luchka was TONI J. READ of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & also listed in “Rising Stars.” Smith LLP was elected to the firm partnership. 2002 Read works in the firm’s Atlanta, Ga., office in DANIEL MERLIN, partner at Johnston, Allison the labor and employment group. & Hord, PA in Charlotte, N.C., received the North Carolina Bar Association’s Robinson O. CHRISTOPHER AYERS executive director DORI WIGGEN, of the Wiggen Law Group Everett Professionalism Award. of the Public Staff of the N.C. Utilities PLLC in Durham, N.C., was named to the WILSON WHITE is the public policy manager Commission, was included in the Triangle Super Lawyers 2013 List of “Rising Stars” in for Glass, Google’s new wearable computing Business’s Journal’s “50 to Watch in Business” North Carolina. device. In this new role, at the cutting edge of as a legal professional expected play an important C. ALLEN YORK joined the intersection between public policy and role in shaping the community’s future. Smith Anderson’s real estate technological innovation, he is responsible APRIL CARSON accepted the position development practice in for managing all aspects of public policy of counsel for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Raleigh, N.C. and government relations that pertain to Committee. this product. ROBERT J. HOWELL joined the Raleigh office MARCUS WILSON joined the University of of Poyner & Spruill, where he focuses on in College Park, Md., as the senior business law. C. Allen York associate athletics director for compliance. JONATHAN D. KEELER joined Wyatt Early KIMBERLY ZIRKLE of Moore & Van Allen in Harris Wheeler in High Point, N.C., as an 2005 Charlotte, N.C., received the firm’s hallmark attorney practicing in the area of litigation. 2013 Sally & Bill Van Allen Public Service CHRISTOPHER C. LAM, who joined Nexen NICHOLAS J. BAKATSIAS Award for her commitment to public service Pruet’s Charlotte, N.C., office as a partner in of Carruthers & Roth, P.A. in 2012. the business litigation group, has been named in Greensboro, N.C., was 2007 by the Charlotte Business Journal as a member selected for inclusion in the of this year’s class of “Forty Under 40.” “Rising Stars” edition by ERIC ASHLEY HAIRSTON, associate professor SABRINA PRESNELL ROCKOFF of McGuire, North Carolina Super Lawyers for 2013 in the area of English and of law and humanities at Elon Wood & Bissette PA in Asheville, N.C., was University, published the book, “The Ebony the presenting speaker at Western Carolina of tax law. Nicholas J. Column: Classics, Civilization and the Industries’ workshop “New FMLA Rules Bakatsias WILLIAM B. CANNON was African American Reclamation of the and Advanced FMLA Applications.” elected as partner at Parker West” and made contributions to “The SCOTT ANDREW SCHAAF was named partner Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP’s Raleigh, N.C., Social History of Crime and Punishment at Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice LLP in office. Cannon is a member of the firm’s in America.” His academic panel, “Literature, Winston-Salem, N.C. business law department and practices in the Law, and the Possibility of Justice” will bring intellectual property group. RAY STARLING, general counsel for N.C. House together scholars in law and literature at the Speaker , was included in the Triangle REBECCA FLANAGAN was named University 2014 Modern Language Association Business Journal’s “50 to Watch in Business” as a of Connecticut Honors Teacher of the Year at Convention in Chicago. legal professional expected play an important the UConn medals ceremony in May. At the ERIC SNIDER of Smith Moore Leatherwood role in shaping the community’s future. end of the semester, Flanagan left UConn to LLP in Raleigh, N.C., was selected to join the join the faculty at University of Massachusetts Leadership Raleigh class of 2013-2014, a School of Law. program of the Greater Raleigh Chamber.

44 FALL-WINTER 2013 2008 2010 PAIGE O’HALE accepted a position as a law clerk for The Honorable Jacques L. Wiener Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth STEPHANIE CAROWAN COURTER accepted CHRISTIAN H. BRILL and his father Howard Circuit in . O’Hale previously the position of assistant U.S. attorney with the W. Brill presented their law review article served as a law clerk for The Honorable United States Attorney’s Office for the District “Take Me Out to the Hearing: Major League Lance Africk ‘75 and for The Honorable Susie of Alaska in Anchorage. Baseball Players Before Congress” during the Morgan, U.S. District Judges for Eastern District 25th Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and JASON IDILBI joined of . American Culture at the Baseball Hall of Fame Moore & Van Allen’s in Cooperstown, N.Y. The paper was Charlotte, N.C., office 2012 previously published in the Albany litigation team. Government Law Review. AARON B. BIEK joined the Charlotte, MARTY ROSENBLUTH accepted a new N.C., office of Moore & Van Allen where he of Hillsborough, N.C., JOANNA HOLGUIN FIORELLI position with the United States Patent and represents investors, developers, landlords and was named one of the Trademark office in Alexandria, VA. tenants as part of the real estate team. 2013 Citizens of the Year by Jason Idilbi IndyWeek Magazine for his CHRISTOPHER “CHRIS” T. FOWLER joined work for immigrant rights 2011 the Charlotte, N.C., office of Moore & Van and justice. Allen where he represents banks and other KATHLEEN OPPENHEIMER financial institutions in connection with the 2009 BERKEY of Pavese Law structuring and documentation of syndicated Firm in Fort Myers, Fla., credit facilities. UTTAM G. DUBAL joined was elected to the Connect ELIZABETH DANNELLY MORGAN is the the intellectual property Florida Board of Governors. coordinator for university priorities for the litigation group of Kasowitz, Harvard University Development Office. Benson, Torres & Friedman In her new position, Morgan is responsible for LLP in Silicon Valley. Kathleen Oppenheimer Berkey developing and managing processes, projects, ANDREW LINCOLN joined meetings and work flow to support the Ford Harrison LLP as a JONATHAN D. JONES was named director of Harvard Campaign. senior associate in the firm’s Uttam G. Dubal the North Carolina Open Government CHARLES KABUGO-MUSOKE joined Smith Tampa, Fla., office. Coalition and Sunshine Center in Elon, N.C. Anderson in Raleigh, N.C., as an associate. He also will teach courses in Elon University’s School of Communications. C. GRACE SALZER of Raleigh, N.C., joined Kurtz & Blum, PLLC as an associate attorney.

Staff Profile: Charles Story

POSITION: Classroom Media Specialist to see and be with on a daily basis. I’m also blown away by the HOMETOWN: Drexel, N.C. incredible things our students and alumni are doing. Whenever I see our students in action in the community, I feel proud to be able to EDUCATION: B.F.A. from support them. UNC-Greensboro HOW DO YOU LIKE TO SPEND YOUR FREE TIME? I like to go HOW LONG HAVE YOU WORKED AT on walks and spend time outdoors with my wife, Jen, and our dog, THE LAW SCHOOL? I started working at UNC School of Law as a temp in Rosie. We recently bought a house, so home renovations have taken June 2000. I was helping deliver the mail up the majority of my free time. I’m also really into collecting old and support audio/visual requests. In chrome postcards from the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s. I took a class at the 2000, that basically amounted to a TV/ Center for Documentary Studies, and I had to choose something VCR that we pushed around on a cart, to present as a documentary subject. I’ve always been fascinated by a transparency overhead projector or old motels and hotels, so I chose a few in North Carolina that I had a slide projector. There were very few postcards from and photographed them in their current condition. computers in the classroom, and almost none of our students You can see the work at motorlodge.blogspot.com. had laptops. WHAT ARE YOU READING? I really love biographies and am WHAT DOES YOUR JOB ENTAIL? Maintaining the equipment in fascinated by the choices people make in their lives, and what the classroom, video- and audio-recording classes and special events, motivates them. Right now I’m reading “Waging Heavy Peace,” creating video content for our website, helping our faculty and by Neil Young. students with any type of multimedia issues or ideas they might have. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE MOVIE OR TV SHOW? Being a kid in Remaining calm in a panic-worthy situation. the late ’70s and ’80s, I have to say that my favorite movie is prob- WHAT DO YOU LIKE BEST ABOUT WORKING AT UNC SCHOOL ably “Ghostbusters.” I specifically remember thinking that seemed OF LAW? I really feel like we are a family. I’ve worked with a lot of like a pretty good job when I was 10. Some days I feel like I am the same people for a long time now, and it is a wonderful group doing just that when dealing with computer issues.

CAROLINA LAW 45

FACULTY BOOKS

What the Best Law Teachers Do

MICHAEL HUNTER SCHWARTZ Harvard University Press, 2013. 368 pages. ISBN-13: 9780674049147

A new book names Donald Thomas Hornstein, Aubrey L. Brooks Professor of Law, one of only 26 “best law MICHAEL L. CORRADO teachers” in the United States. The book, “What the Best Law Teachers Do” (Harvard Presumed Dangerous: Punishment, University Press, 2013), is the culmination Responsibility, and Preventive Detention of a four-year study that sought to identify in American Jurisprudence extraordinary law teachers. The study details the attributes and practices of professors Carolina Academic Press, 2013, 148 pages. who have a significant, positive and long-term effect on their students. ISBN-13: 9781611634457 “The book describes how 26 amazingly dedicated and dazzlingly effective law teachers do their work,” says Michael Hunter Schwartz, dean and professor of law at the UALR William H. Bowen School of Law, who co-authored the book along with Gerry MICHAEL L. CORRADO Hess of Gonzaga University School of Law and Sophie Sparrow of the University of AND MICHELE CAIANIELLO School of Law. Preventing Danger: New Paradigms Each chapter in “What the Best Law Teachers Do” focuses on a theme common to all in Criminal Justice of these outstanding law teachers: what personal qualities they share, how they relate to their students, what they expect of their students, how they prepare for class, how they Carolina Academic Press, 2013. 308 pages. teach, and how they provide feedback to their students and assess their students’ learning. ISBN-13: 9781611631876 “All of the teachers we studied are regarded as being among the most rigorous professors at their law schools, who have high expectations of every student, yet they also are known for their kindness to their students,” Hess says. “They foster self-confidence in their students and inspire in them a belief that they are capable of great things. They get to know their students as people and manifest caring and respect for their students. These teachers model hard work, creativity and humility.”

BOOK AWARDS

Eric L. Muller, Dan K. Moore Distinguished Professor of Law, was honored by the Western History Association as the 2013 Joan Patterson Kerr Award recipient for his book “Colors of Confinement: Rare Kodachrome Photographs of Japanese American Incarceration in World War II” (UNC Press, 2012). The CHARLES E. DAYE Joan Patterson Kerr Award is given AND MARK W. MORRIS biennially for the best illustrated book North Carolina Law of Torts (3rd Edition) on the American West. LexisNexis, 2012. 1,400 pages. ISBN-13: 9780327049357

46 FALL-WINTER 2013

PARTING SHOTS SUSAN MCLEAN SUSAN Jeremy Freifeld ’13, Annie Nienaber, Nick Tosco ’13, Stephanie McCoy, Cameron Ellis ’13 and Joseph Nienaber ’13 catch up at the Durham Bulls baseball game in May.

Admissions counselor Ben Spain prepares to pitch during the 2013 Orientation Kickball Tournament. 1L students compete against faculty and staff in this annual orientation tradition. DONN YOUNG Former dean Judge J. Dickson Phillips Jr. ’48 with portrait artist Linda Noah Dierks at a reception honoring Phillips for his contributions to Carolina Law and the Fourth Circuit in September. The portrait will hang at the Fourth Circuit building in Richmond, Va.

Allen Buansi 2L and Whitley Carpenter 2L, president and treasurer BRIANA BROUGH of the Black Law Students Association, provide information to Cassandra Capote 2L and incoming students during the Student Activities Fair. KATHERINE KERSHAW KATHERINE

Jeffrey Trousdale ’13, pictured with Professor Laura Collins Britton, received the first Clinical Legal Education Association (CLEA) Outstanding Student Award to a UNC student in April for his exceptional work in the Consumer Financial Transactions Clinic. The MCLEAN SUSAN CLEA award honors one law student at each law school who has Molly Thebes, ‘12, Ashley Dean ’12, Bill Gingher and Cody Gillians ’12 at the Washington, excelled in a clinical course. D.C., Carolina Law alumni and student gathering in August.

CAROLINA LAW 47 VOICES

Banks in Commodities: Let’s Focus on Issues, not Rhetoric SAULE T. OMAROVA GEORGE R. WARD ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF LAW

hanks to Goldman a subsidiary of Goldman Sachs, which also trades in aluminum and Sachs and this aluminum-linked derivatives, sacrificing rental income to influence DONN YOUNG Tnation’s love of aluminum prices may be a rational group-wide business strategy. beer, big banks’ involvement in physical commodities markets recently Combining operations across several markets allows a single large became the subject of a long-overdue national debate. However, when player to change the “natural” dynamics in each individual market publicity potentially threatens a powerful private industry’s profits, the by pursuing more complex, integrated trading strategies. This industry’s defense is to subvert and confuse the debate, often under structural market power may breed more subtle forms of market the cloak of objectivity and expertise. It is, therefore, important to manipulation than we are used to seeing. To prevent this from examine the principal arguments in defense of big banks’ running happening, we need to understand the linkages among multiple physical commodity businesses – and to separate the real issues worthy business activities of a financial conglomerate like Goldman Sachs. of further discussion from mere pro-industry rhetoric. The second line of the industry’s defense is that banks’ participa- The concern with banks’ recent expansion into producing, storing tion in the commodities supply chain is merely a modern, more and distributing physical crude, gas, heating oil, industrial metals and efficient form of financial risk management they have always electricity is that we simply don’t know what exactly they do in each provided to commercial clients. In other words, it’s just another of these markets, how significant their holdings and operations are, example of banks “doing God’s work.” and what consequences this combination of finance with commerce Besides implicating the legal doctrine of separation of banking may have for both finance and commerce. There are serious reasons and commerce, this argument is unsound because it relies on to worry about such potential consequences – and to seek further intentionally over-broad concepts of “financial risk management” information from the banks and their regulators before deciding and “financial intermediation.” Today, any commercial risk can be whether any of these worries is fully justified. transferred or replicated through a financial transaction. Part of Denying the need for greater transparency would not generate the inquiry into banks’ commodities activities involves rethinking sympathy for the banks. A more effective strategy is to reframe the the principled boundaries between sophisticated financial services, issue and recast the skeptics as political hot-heads advocating an on the one hand, and plain old commercial ones, on the other. immediate and complete ban on banks’ commodities activities. Banks’ An economist’s concept of financial intermediation as a device apologists can then attack this straw man by arguing that (1) there is for “allocating risk and resources over time” may be plausible as a no specific evidence of wrongdoing by banks to justify the ban; (2) high-level theoretical abstraction. But it is meaningless as a guide banks are “doing God’s work” by trading physical commodities; and to deciding which of banks’ many commodity-related activities (3) a complete ban on banks’ physical commodities business would properly belong to the realm of pure trade intermediation, in make the world a darker, less safe place. which banks are not indispensable participants. Each of these three arguments is likely to be a recurring feature Undoubtedly, commercial companies often benefit from banks’ in the debate and thus merits a brief examination. commodity trading. Thus, through “supply-and-offtake” arrangements, The first line of the industry’s defense is that there is no proof of banks pre-finance oil refineries’ and power plants’ inventories and banks’ manipulating commodity markets, and that microeconomic guarantee a purchase price for their output. However, what might incentives in these markets render any such manipulation unlikely. be efficient for the individual parties in a transaction might not be Thus, one could argue that it doesn’t make economic sense for socially efficient, if a significant reason for such micro-efficiency is the a metals warehousing company to try to monopolize aluminum existence of implicit public subsidies to large financial institutions. We supplies by paying producers higher incentive fees for storing metal need to understand and evaluate this critical link before concluding in its facilities, because such incentive payments would ultimately that banks are, in fact, the most efficient providers of financing and cut into its rental profits. liquidity in commodity markets. This may be true of a company whose principal source of The third line of the industry’s defense is that banning banks income is rental receipts. However, if the warehousing company is from commodities will backfire by (a) raising costs for commodity

48 FALL-WINTER 2013 users, (b) making banks less diversified and riskier, and (c) leaving Connect with Carolina Law! commodity markets to less transparent, unregulated entities. The first point reintroduces the question of to what extent Carolina Law is now on Instagram! private efficiencies brought by bank involvement in the commodi- @unc_law #unclaw ties trade are attributable to the public subsidy enjoyed by the banks. We simply will not know whether potential loss of these private efficiencies amounts to a public loss rather than a public Follow us on Twitter! gain until we have enough information to address that fundamental Career Development Office @UNCLAWCDO question. Center for Banking and Finance @UNCbanking The point about making banks riskier rests on unquestioned Center for Civil Rights @UNCCivilRights assumptions that the commodities business is counter-cyclical to, Center for Law, Environment, Adaption and Resources and uncorrelated with, banks’ core financial business. These assump- (CLEAR) @UNCCLEAR tions need to be tested and verified. Moreover, bank expansion into Center for Media Law and Policy @uncmedialaw commodities also expands potential sources of institutional and systemic risk. Whether alleged diversification benefits outweigh all Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity @UNCPovertyCtr relevant risks requires more empirical data and analysis. Merging JPMorgan with Exxon-Mobil, Microsoft and General Motors may Information Technology @unclawinfotech create the most effectively diversified banking institution. But is it a Office of Public Service Programs @UNCLawPubSrvs good idea? Student Services Office @UNCLawStdntSrvc The final claim is simply a non sequitur. That commodity markets UNC Director Diversity Initiative @UNCdirectordiv are opaque and dysfunctional is not an argument for allowing banks UNC Law CLE @UNCLawCLE to participate in those markets but an argument for bringing greater UNC School of Law @unc_law transparency and oversight to commodity markets. Bank regulation is not designed to cure commodity markets’ dysfunctions. Whether banks should trade physical commodities is a compli- Find us on ! cated question that evades easy answers. Let’s discuss it fully and Facebook.com/UNCSchoolofLaw intelligently, leaving unhelpful rhetoric out of the conversation.

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