THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

College of Law Alumni Association • Fall/Winter 1998

O.S.U. at Oxford: Gaining New

Honor Roll of Donors Contents

1 From the Dean Lawyers are leaders in education government and the community.

2 Nicklaus and Memorial Ties Are Forever Young The low-key man who found the land for Village remains out of the limelight but a true friend of the course’s creator.

5 Faculty News Faculty lead the profession through legal scholarship and community service.

7 Staff News College of Law students in merry old England. Meet the most recent additions to the college staff. See page 8. 8 Gaining New Perspective College of Law Administration Oxford Program Provides Opportunity to Study Comparative Law Gregory H. Williams Dean 12 Student News College of Law Alumni Association Officers Elizabeth j. Watters ’90 President 13 Honor Roll of Donors We express our gratitude to alumni and friends who have given more than Jeffrey Sutton ’90 President-Elect $15 million to support the College of Law National Council Officers David A. Ward ’58 23 Alumni News Chair Learn the latest news of your classmates. Carla D. Moore ’77 Vice-Chair 23 Passion for Law is a Family Legacy Pamela H. Lombardi Sheldon Mike Young ’51 carries on a tradition bom in Russia. Secretary Send address changes and alumni news to: 24 Former Ohio State Dean Retires From Florida State The Law Record L. Orin Slagle ’57 is headed for retirement in Maine. OSU College of Law John Deaver Drinko Hall 55 West 12th Avenue 2 9 In Memoriam Columbus, OH 43210-1391 We pay homage to law school friends and express our sympathy to their Phone: (614) 292-2631 FAX: (614) 292-1383 relatives and loved ones. e-mail: [email protected] The Law Record is published bi-annually 31 The Ohio State University College of Law 1999 Alumni for the alumni and friends Awards of The Ohio State University College of Law Here’s your chance to recognize an outstanding classmate. Editor: Liz Cutler Gates Design: Jane Hoffelt/Pageworks ©1998, College of Law, The Ohio State University

Grads honored during annual alumni return. See inside back cover. From the Dean.

Dear Graduates and Friends, In January, I will assume the presidency of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). On a professional level, it is an opportunity to lead an organization committed to improving the legal profession through legal education. AALS is devoted to enhancing the quality of legal education throughout the nation. In the 105-year history of the association, past presidents have included such legal giants as Karl Llewellyn, Roscoe Pound and Harlan Fiske Stone. I will be the fourth Ohio State dean to serve as president. On a personal level, it is a chance to shape the organization. No one, of course, can move an organization of AALS’s size and complexity too far in any single direction, and certainly not in a single'year. One can, however, use this platform to focus legal education’s attention on a topic worthy of consideration. In my year at the helm, I hope to advance the importance of lawyers as leaders. It is not enough to prepare our students for lawyering. Attorneys rise to the top of their respective fields, and law schools need to train students in the craft of leadership. Dean Gregory Williams, center, greets members of the Class of 1948 Our alumni continually demonstrate the inevitability of during their reunion weekend. lawyers as leaders. Nineteen alumni are managing partners of national firms. Another 19 serve as federal judges, and three are Michaels’s upcoming article in the Harvard Law Review won the Ohio Supreme Court justices. At this writing, we count a Association for American Law School’s award for best writing by governor, two congressmen, a former senator, a former U.S. a new professor. (For more information, see page 6 .) Attorney General, and a former Chairman of the FDIC among As Dean, I am working to raise student consciousness about our alumni leaders in government. Law alumni are captains leadership. I have initiated a regular breakfast that brings of industry; American Express and Weyerhaeuser were led by students into direct contact with distinguished graduates in our graduates. small group settings. I have also begun meeting with presidents Lawyers as leaders are not restricted to the traditional paths of student organizations; we talk informally about the issues they of law and government service. The 1998 Arts Administrator of face as student leaders. Students also serve on all the major law the Year is a College of Law graduate, as is the President of the school committees. Through these committees, students observe Society for Asian Art in . We have among our and participate in all facets of law school governance. alumni a chief investigative reporter for the CBS News program Leadership is a process taught by example and experience. 48 Hours and the current Chairman of the Board of the In the year ahead, I hope to set an example by inviting legal Consumer Federation of America. Our current students are every educators to consider their role in cultivating tomorrow’s leaders. bit as talented as their predecessors and deserving of the The experiences they provide their students will improve both leadership training we are providing. the profession and the society that will increasingly depend on Faculty are guiding the way as role models. Nancy Rogers is lawyers as leaders. an undisputed national leader in the field of dispute resolution; Tim Jost, just home from a Fulbright year in Germany, is equally recognized internationally for his work in health law. Deborah Merritt organized Bakke: 20 years Later, one of the premier academic conferences in the country last year and co-taught a summer course with Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Young faculty Gregory H. Williams are demonstrating a commitment to leadership as well. Alan Dean and Carter C. Kissell Professor of Law

1 KTICKLAUS 1N MEMORIAL TIES ARE FOREVER YOUNG

The low-key man he weighty issue of Ivor Young’s destiny was determined at an early age. “I remember being in the sixth grade,” Young begins, recalling how his life Tas a golfer — and as a confidant of the greatest golfer of all — developed. who found “A buddy of mine and I went out for the school football team, but the coaches said anybody who weighed less than 70 pounds had to play with the fifth-grade team. Well, we wanted to play with our friends, so that ended my football career. “It was,” he adds, arching his eyebrows and grinning, “one of the more fortuitous the land for events in my life.” Indeed, had Young not been a wispy, club-shaft thin boy (who grew to become a rail-thin man), he might never have taken up the game of golf. Neither would he Muitfield Village have met and become close friends with the Golfer of the Century, , nor become an integral part of one of the most respected tournaments in the world, the Memorial Tournament at Golf Club in Dublin Ohio. remains out This is not to suggest that Young — a one-time aspiring sportswriter — wouldn’t have aced on his own, whatever pursuit he chose. The Upper Arlington native always has had a knack for overcoming any challenge, from gaining his law degree at Ohio State (Class of 1958) to winning the heart of a certain former Bexley, Ohio, of the limelight homecoming queen, with whom his first date was what they both call “a disaster.” But certainly life tends to be a little more interesting when you have the chance to watch the making of a legend in progress. Some guys have all the luck, but precious but a true friend few are cognizant of such fortunes. “What a lucky thing it was,” Young says with wonder, “for me to know Jack and to be a part of Muirfield Village from the ground up.” of the From the ground up is the literal truth. “Ivor is a very bright guy, a quiet guy, a great guy to be around,” says Pandel Savic, General Chairman of the Memorial Tournament, who has known Young for years. The two men, along with Nicklaus and club president Bob Hoag, formed the foursome course’s creator that played the first unofficial round at Muirfield Village, on October 1, 1973. “He’s what I like to call a ‘leveler,’ the kind of person who, in a meeting, always puts things in perspective,” Savic adds. “Maybe his role has not been as out in the open as others, but Ivor has been vital to our success with the club and the tournament.” Nicklaus, for one, understood the importance of Young’s input, even before the club was little more than wishful thinking. And, as vital roles go, Young’s was perhaps the most crucial of all. It was in 1966, in Augusta, , that Nicklaus asked Young, a savvy real estate developer and investor, to locate property in Columbus for a world-class golf club. The two men had drifted off alone together in the house Jack and Barbara had rented during the Masters that year, and the after-dinner discussion had turned to the untapped sporting potential of their hometown. “We started talking about what a great thing it would be to bring a golf

2 tournament to Columbus,” Young, 64, recalls. “Jack was very excited about it, and he asked me if I would hunt for appropriate sites. It was the best assignment I ever got in my life.” “He was the perfect person for the job,” says Nicklaus. “I think time has proven that.” In truth, Young took very little time to prove it. He scouted out about a dozen potential sites later that spring, utilizing courthouse records, topographical maps, and even surveying the land from an airplane. In June, Nicklaus came to inspect the properties. He was accompanied by renowned architect Pete Dye, an Urbana, Ohio, native who had enlisted Jack’s consultation on the creation of The Golf Club in New Albany, Ohio, and then Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island, S.C. The men first visited a tract of land north of Worthington Hills along the Olentangy River Valley. Next, they traipsed over a 180-acre tract that became the progenitor for Muirfield Village. “I remember Pete Dye saying to Jack, ‘Curly’ — that’s what he always called Jack — ‘this is the best site you’re ever going to find without mountains or an ocean. You better go get it.’ ” Young says, “Jack said right there, ‘This is it. We don’t need to look any further.’ ” It would be six more years before the money was in place to turn the Nicklaus dream into reality. By then, the project had metamorphosed into a real estate development encompassing nearly 1,600 acres. Young played a key role in seeing it through to completion, but he shrugs off any credit. “It took a long time and a lot of effort to get it done,” he says. “The only guy who didn’t blink was Jack. He never has.” Young is more proud of his direct input into the design of Muirfield Village. So what if it’s only one small portion of one hole, the 513-yard, -5 fifth? He suggested that the creek run down the middle of the fairway, which is exactly what Jack did. “I can say I helped with the design,” Young says with a coy grin. “I loved going out there with Jack from the beginning. It was fun to see him banging through the brush and overgrowth and sticker bushes,” he adds. “What amazes me is how young he was when he designed the , and it’s held up so beautifully. It’s one of the best in the world.” Young had no illusions about his future as a professional golfer. His assessment of his own abilities was skewed by the promise of a boy seven years younger than he. Young’s parents moved across from the second hole at Scioto Country Club when he was seven years old, but he didn’t begin playing until junior high school, after that fateful football tryout. He learned the game from Cy Foster, the pro who proceeded at Scioto. Young was a straight-hitter who learned from Foster to lead the downswing with the left hand, which kept the club on plane. “I thought I was pretty good,” says Young, who in his it off because he can say anything he wants around me, and I prime carried a two and still sports a seven. “All of can say anything to him,” Young relates. “I believe that’s one of us who played together thought we were good ... until Jack the reasons he’s so close to his Columbus friends. He can be just blew right by us. But, you know, that’s himself around us.” kind of a recurring theme in Nicklaus’s “ Ivor’s just been Naturally, Young has been privileged to career.” a great friend, have spent some memorable times with Neither Nicklaus nor Young remember Nicklaus. Among his most treasured exactly the day they met. Nicklaus recalls someone who memories is walking the front nine with seeing Young play on the Upper Arlington always has Jack at Muirfield, Scotland, on the eve of High School golf team. “He was a good the 1972 British Open, after he had won player and a good player to play with,” been easy the first two legs of the Grand Slam. “What Jack says. to talk to,” a wonderful gesture that was to let me tag Young was proficient enough to receive a along,” Young marvels. scholarship offer from Ohio University — Nicklaus says. Their relationship hasn’t changed much tour pro Dow Finsterwald, an O.U. graduate, over the years. In addition to being a even wrote him a letter — but he opted to attend Ohio State. member of the board and a former captain at Muirfield Village, It was there that he met, via a blind date, Carol Newhouse. as well as a vice-chairman of the tournament, Young still Mutual friends mistakenly thought they would enjoy each works for Nicklaus as a consultant on golf course other’s company. They were drawn to each other the way a communities. He and Carol, who has run the tournament golfer is drawn to a water hazard. press room for all but one year, are prominent members of the “It was a disaster,” he says of their initial date, smiling as he Memorial support team. does so. “Carol actually does a lot of work. I just kind of walk “A disaster, definitely,” she agrees, also smiling. around a lot, shaking hands,” Young admits, unable to hold There was no second date, at least not for some three years. back a little more self-deprecating humor. In the meantime, Carol would occasionally catch a glimpse of “Ivor is the person who brings a calm to any situation,” Ivor walking around campus. “I’d see him and think, ‘Oh, gee, asserts Jim Wisler, tournament director. “From my standpoint, there’s that Ivor guy again,’ ” Carol says. “If his name had been he’s as valuable as anyone we have here. He’s got a great love Bill or Joe, I could have for the game and a real forgotten about him.” dedication to this tournament. They became reacquainted at You know that, when an issue a wedding, of all places, married comes up, his goal is to find a and raised a successful family of solution that’s best for the club.” three daughters — Anne, Jane For Young, it’s all a matter of and Sarah — who’ve produced doing what’s right for a friend. six grandchildren. “The type of people Jack After their rather rocky and Barbara are, they’ve been romantic start, Ivor managed to wonderful to Carol and me over win Carol over with the same the years,” Young says. “I can’t straightforward manner that think of a more loyal and true made him an effective golfer. friend than Jack Nicklaus, and I The same manner, too, that just want to be as good a friend has made him a valued friend to to him. Nicklaus. “People will always talk about “Ivor’s just been a great what a great golfer he is — but, friend, someone who always has really, he’s great in a lot of ways.” been easy to talk to,” Nicklaus Coming from a friend, that says. “I don’t know what it is carries a lot of weight. about him, really. He’s the type David S. Shedloski is a freelance of guy you like to have around, writer living in Springfield, Ohio. a very smart person.” Reprinted with permission “I think Jack and I have hit Ivor and his wife Carol are longtime Nicklaus friends from Memorial magazine. and Memorial volunteers. Faculty News

Professor Doug Berman was quoted in the lawyers. Rather, the determination results also featured her empirical work on August 10 issue of Legal Times in an from structural changes in our society. enforcement of the employment article about a District of Columbia The recent Ohio Supreme Court decision provisions of the ADA in a broadcast in Circuit decision which might significantly in Sharon Village was his “jumping off early November. expand the authority of judges to depart point,” and his paper will be published in On October 15, from the federal sentencing guidelines an upcoming edition of the Connecticut Professor Kate Federle based on a defendant’s cooperation with Law Review. and Supervising Attorney authorities. Professor Berman commented Professor Jim Brudney delivered a Anita DiPasquale on the likely reactions of U.S. Attorneys lecture at Dartmouth College in May on were presenters at the Children’s Law Institute to this decision. the Supreme Court from a law clerk’s Program: “Students’ He also presented his work in perspective. Brudney, who clerked for Rights: Where Do They progress, “Can We Get Along? The Justice Harry Blackmun in 1980-81, Begin and End?” sponsored Supreme Court’s Failure in Koon v. emphasized that clerks are agents of by the Ohio State Bar Association Ohio to Refocus Departure the justices, and dismissed suggestions CLE Institute. Jurisprudence and Fix (Much of) What made in a recent “tell-all” book (written Professor Federle Ails the Federal Sentencing Guidelines,” by an ex-Blackmun clerk) that Supreme discussed the 4th, 5th at a workshop for the law school faculty Court clerks and their biases often and 6 th amendment at Indiana University, Indianapolis on influence the opinions of the justices rights of children in October 15. they serve. In a separate seminar schools. She focused on Professor Michael Braunstein spoke with political science faculty, Brudney federal constitutional at the University of Connecticut on the discussed his ongoing research regarding issues pertaining to subject of the unauthorized practice of judicial behavior on labor cases in Staff Attorney searches and seizures law. The invitation is a result of earlier the federal courts of appeals. In early November, Professor Brudney presented Anita conducted by school empirical work on inter-professional DiPasquale rr. . , , f two papers at the University of Texas n officials and contessions competition (mainly between lawyers School of Law. He reviewed a book elicited by those officials. Professor and real estate agents) in the context authored by a Texas faculty member Federle also considered the implications of residential real estate transactions. that addressed a major labor strike in of such actions under the applicable His thesis is that the characterization of a the late 1980s. He also presented a state provisions, in light of the Supreme particular service as either legal (requiring work in progress, co-authored with Court’s 4th, 5th and 6th amendment a licensed attorney) or non-legal does not a Ph.D. candidate in political science jurisprudence. depend on the claims or desires of at Ohio State, entitled “Judicial Hostility Ms. DiPasquale discussed school Toward Labor Unions: An Empirical liability for sexual harassment. In Perspective on a Celebrated Concern” particular she examined the holdings of at a workshop of law and political Gebser v. Lago Vista Independent School science faculty. District, the Supreme Court’s recent Professor Sarah Rudolph Cole gave decision defining the contours of school a speech entitled “Recent Developments liability in teacher/student sexual in Arbitration” at the Federal Civil harassment cases, and Davis v. Monroe Litigation in Ohio CLE in Columbus on County Board of Education, an 11th October 30. Other speakers included Circuit case holding that school officials Judge Thomas D. Lambros, Judge Algenon cannot be held liable under Title IX for Marbley, Judge Edmund Sargus and student-on-student sexual harassment. ' Judge James Thomas. The Supreme Court has agreed to hear “The Americans with Disabilities Act: the Davis case appeal. A Windfall for Defendants,” written by Works by Professor Edward B. (Ned) Professor Ruth Colker, was been accepted Foley were recently published in several law journals, including: Professor Alan Michaels (center) makes a for publication by the Harvard Civil point during a forum on September 17 in Rights/Civil Liberties Law Review and will • “Rodriguez Revisited: Constitutional which College of Law professors discussed appear in the February 1999 issue. Theory and School Finance,” Georgia the relevance of the Starr Report to the The USX Foundation has also awarded Law Review, Vol. 32, No. 2, Winter, 1998. impeachment process. Participants included Professor Colker a major grant to support • “Public Debate and Campaign Finance,” (from left) Professors Jim Brudney Connecticut Law Review, Vol. 30, No. 3, (moderator), Ned Foley, Michaels, Sharon her research in the area of disability Davies, and Ruth Colker. discrimination. National Public Radio Spring, 1998. 5 Faculty News

• “The Elusive Quest for Global Justice,” harassment against President Clinton He was also recently elected President- Fordham Law Review, Vol. 6 6 , No. 2, in light of four Supreme Court decisions Elect on the Ohio State University November 1997. last term. Faculty Club. • “Jurisprudence and Theology,” part On October 19, Professor Jacobs filed Professor Deborah Merritt recently of a symposium on The Relevance an amicus curiae brief in the Supreme co-authored an article with Justice Ruth of Religion to a Lawyer’s Work, Fordham Court of Ohio on behalf of seven Bader Ginsburg. The article, “Affirmative Law Review, Volume 6 6 , No. 4, employees and civil rights organizations. Action: An International Human Rights March 1998. The question presented is whether a tort of Dialogue,” will be published both in the Professor Thomas P. Gallanis is wrongful discharge in violation of public Record of the Bar Association of the City of currently a visitor at the University of policy may be predicated on the Ohio New York and in a book. Professor Merritt Michigan Law School, where he is Constitution when the employer is a has also completed the first in a series of teaching courses in trusts and estates. In private actor. A plastic surgeon allegedly articles studying the tort system in October, he organized and chaired a panel disciplined and constructively discharged Franklin County. That article, “Is the Tort on “Substance and Procedure in the an employee who refused to drop a lawsuit System in Crisis? New Empirical Premodem English Trial” at the annual against the surgeon’s business associate, a Evidence,” will appear in volume 60 of meeting of the American Society for Legal manufacturer of breast implants. the Ohio State Law Journal. An article History. Professor Gallanis has also had Professor Timothy Jost spoke at a analyzing congressional power to regulate two articles accepted for publication. The conference sponsored by intrastate social problems just appeared as fruits of his Ph.D. research on the law of the University of Michigan part of a Symposium on Textualism in the evidence in the eighteenth and nineteenth Journal of Law Reform. George Washington Law Review, and an centuries will appear in the Iowa Law He discussed the lessons article analyzing “The Future of Bakke: Review. His proposal for a fundamental of comparative law for Will Social Science Matter?” has been reform in the law of living wills and American health published as part of the Ohio State Law powers of attorney will appear in the insurance regulation. Journal’s Symposium on the Law and Connecticut Law Review. He is also the lead He also recently had an Social Science of Affirmative Action in author of a casebook in progress, Elder article on administrative Higher Education. Law: Readings and Materials, to be law issues affecting Professor Merritt has also been published in 1999 by Anderson Medicare accepted for publication by the selected as one of two University Publishing. ABAs Administrative Law Review and Distinguished Lecturers for the 1998-99 Professor Sheldon Halpem has another on the policies of public programs academic year. She will present a lecture completed the manuscript for “The for paying for pain management accepted to the university community during the Intellectual Property Laws of the United by the Journal of Law Medicine and Ethics. spring of 1999. States,” to be published by Kluwer Professor James Meeks served on a In January, Professor Merritt concludes International as part of its International panel which discussed “Transition from her term as chair of the Curriculum and Encyclopaedia of Intellectual Property, Regulation to Competition in the Electric Research Committee of the Association of a series in its International Encyclopaedia Power Industry” at a seminar for state and American Law Schools. She has agreed to of Law. This material will also be local government officials. The seminar serve as that Association’s representative to published in the United States as a was co-sponsored by the University the Consortium of Social Science stand-alone book to be sold to law School of Public Policy Associations, and also to serve on a new schools, libraries, and practicing lawyers. and Management and the committee studying the emergence of The 1997-98 term in the United States law firm of Squire, electronic publishing in the law field. Supreme Court was the subject of a day­ Sanders, and Dempsey. Professor Alan Michaels’ paper, long seminar taught by Professor Louis A. On October 27, “Constitutional Innocence,” has won the Jacobs and Capital University Law School Professor Meeks gave a prestigious Association for American Law Professor Susan M. Gilles to appellate and basic overview of the Schools Scholarly Papers Competition for trial judges and magistrates on September antitrust laws to a CLE young professors. The award is presented 18 in Columbus. The seminar, sponsored Professor James p r 0g r a m sponsored by the annually following a blind competition. ' by the Ohio Judicial College, an arm of Ohio Public Utilities Anyone in their first six years of teaching the Supreme Court of Ohio, was also Commission. On the 18th of November, in an American law school is eligible to offered in Strongsville on September 25. he spoke about the Microsoft antitrust enter the contest. He also gave a presentation on October case to a University faculty group. Professor Michaels will present the 15 at Boyd College of Law, University of Professor Meeks continues to serve on paper during the annual AALS conference Nevada, Las Vegas, on whether Monica the membership committee of the in New Orleans in January. (College of Lewinsky had a cause of action for sexual Association of American Law Schools. Law Dean Gregory H. Williams will also 6 Faculty News be installed as president In addition, Professor Samansky was a In connection with the book’s release, of the national speaker on “The Money Panel” of the Professor Swire spoke at a variety of organization at the seminar, What You Need To Know About events, including Brookings, the Cato January meeting.) Flying Solo, sponsored by the Ohio CLE Institute, and Internet World. He has The paper, which Institute on November 11. done radio interviews with National identifies the On June 23, Professor Peter Swire Public Radio and the British Broadcasting constitutional limits on moderated a panel at the U.S. Corporation, appeared in print in USA the use of strict liability Government “Privacy Summit” in Today, the Washington Post, the Boston in the criminal law, has Washington, D.C. The panel discussed Globe, the Associated Press, and a number been accepted for “Elements of Effective Self Regulation.” of specialized publications, and been publication by the Harvard Law Review. Swire also met with Secretary of quoted on-line by the New York Times, Professor John Quigley has had the Commerce Richard Daley to discuss Fox Broadcasting, Wired Magazine, and following articles published: privacy law and policy. other sites. • “The Israel-PL.O. Interim Agreements: On October 16, the Brookings Professor Greg Travalio gave a Are They Treaties?,” Cornell International Institution Press published his new book presentation in September on “Recent Law Journal, Vol. 30, No. 3 (1998). (co-authored with Robert E. Litan), None Developments in Ohio Contract Law” • “Jerusalem: The Illegality of Israel’s of Your Business: World Data Flows, Electronic to attorneys and real estate brokers in Encroachment,” Palestine Yearbook of Commerce, and the European Privacy Directive. Union County, Ohio. International Law, Vol. 9 (1996—97) • “Human Rights Defenses in U.S. Courts,” Human Rights Quarterly, Vol. 20, No. 3 (1998). Staff News • “Execution of Foreign Nationals in the United States: Pressure from Foreign New Staff Assist with Day-To-Day Activities Governments Against the Death Penalty,” International Law Students Administrative and support staff play a key role in the day-to-day operation of the Association Journal of International and College of Law. During the last few months, several individuals have joined the Comparative Law,” Vol. 4, No. 2 (1998). College of Law family. Governor George Voinovich ’61 has Gayle Glanville has joined the staff of the College as Assistant appointed Professor Nancy Rogers to the Director of Development. She will be working with annual fund State Board of Uniform State Law for a leadership, stewardship and volunteer coordinating. term ending June 5, 1999, making her The Cuyahoga Falls native holds an undergraduate degree part of the Ohio delegation to the from the College of Wooster, and a master’s degree in public National Conference of Commissioners of administration from the University of Akron. Uniform State Law. She replaces the late Kristin Braun is the new voice of the College of Law. As an Thomas E. Cavendish ’53. Professor office associate, she serves as a receptionist, and handles fiscal Rogers also received the Ohio State Bar duties, key, room and locker assignments. A Columbus native and Foundation’s Ritter Award for Outstanding 1996 graduate of Miami University, she was previously employed in management Contributions to Administrative Justice at at Cord Camera.* the Bar’s Annual Meeting on October 30. Nancy Darling joined the College of Law on October 5. An office associate in the David Ward ’58 made the presentation. Socio-Legal Center, she moved to Columbus this fall from Hawaii, where her With Professors Stulberg and Cole, husband, John, was stationed at Scofield Barracks. A 14-year Army enlistee herself, Professor Rogers has written an article on Nancy most recently worked in a real estate office in Chester, Virginia. the development of the College’s new Akron native Debbie Quartel is the new office associate in the College of Law dispute resolution development office. She comes to the College from London, England, where she curriculum, which will be worked as a health and fitness instructor in a bank following her 1996 graduation published this winter in from Otterbein College. the Florida Law Review. Michelle Jones joined the library staff as acquisitions assistant. A graduate of Professor Allan Ohio State, she has been working in the University Registrar’s Office and prior to Samansky’s article, “Child that, was a member of the staff of the O.S.U. Newark campus library. Care Expenses and the Mary Mulroy, who has served as College of Law receptionist since May 1997, Income Tax” will be has joined the staff of the law alumni office as an office associate. published in Volume 50 of the Florida Law Review. Samansky 7 Gaining New Perspective Oxford Program Provides Opportunity to Study Comparative Law tudying abroad comes with all the mystique that one while an Oxford administrator works with the O.S.U. faculty would expect from traveling in a country other than member who is assigned to oversee the program from the ^ ^ r n e ’s own. But for many O.S.U. law students, the Buckeye State. opportunity to study in the hallowed halls of Oxford “This shared responsibility creates a more integrated University in England provides a perspective they won’t get learning experience — for faculty as well as students,” at the comer of 12th and High in Columbus. says Bmdney. “Our program introduces students to a range of Course options in 1988 included Comparative Legal comparative law issues,” says Professor James Bmdney, the Profession, Comparative Legislation, Comparative Criminal College of Law faculty member who led the program during Justice, European Union Law, and Comparative Pre-Trial the summer of 1998. “It helps them understand how another Litigation. Students praised the classes for their depth and culture approaches legal and public policy problems. interest level. “The professors, the subjects I studied, the Students leam there is an exciting and challenging world of whole experience was well worth it,” says Clarence Mingo, law beyond our own domestic priorities,” he adds. a third-year student from Canton, Ohio. The Oxford Program at the College of Law dates back Brandy Monk, a second-year student from Lake Worth, nearly 13 years. And while other law schools offer a Florida, found the courses challenging, but the class curriculum at Oxford, Ohio State’s is unique in its atmosphere was more relaxed than what she experienced relationship to the English university. “Our program is jointly in Columbus. “I had had Professor Bmdney before,” taught and jointly administered,” explains Bmdney. Regular she admits, “and I was absolutely afraid of him.” Five Oxford faculty teach three of the five Ohio State courses, weeks in his class at Oxford quickly dispelled the fear. culture, at the same time they have immersed themselves intellectually in a comparative law perspective.” The program attracts 50 to 60 students who are usually between their first and second-years of law school. Most are Ohio State students,, but some come from other law schools. “I looked into Oxford programs offered by different U.S. schools,” recalls Patricia L. Barrie, a second-year law student at the University of Miami who had previously visited Oxford. “I decided on Ohio’s because of O.S.U.’s reputation, convenience of dates, and the fact that O.S.U.’s program included faculty from Oxford.” T. Scott Beck, a South Carolina legislator and third-year student at the Participants in the O.S.U. program at Oxford University paused for a group photo before digging University of South Carolina School of into classes. Law, looked at other programs, but settled on Ohio State after talking with Professor “Everyone was having fun,” she says. hear outstanding lecturers talking about Brudney. “I realized quickly that Ohio “You could tell.” ‘hot button’ subjects in British and State was going to have the superior An added benefit for many of the European law.” program,” he says. “In particular, I was students was that the number of hours He also pointed to the opportunity for interested in the Comparative Legislation earned in Oxford allowed them to take a students to participate in a variety of class that was being offered. As a sitting lighter load for the fall semester. “Because cultural activities — from attending Legislator in the South Carolina House of my summer classes, I’m able to work Shakespeare plays and taking in London’s of Representatives, I had an immense this year,” stresses Jennifer Freimuth, a museums, to punting on the rivers that interest in how other countries handle second-year student from Kettering, Ohio, meander through Oxford. “By the end of legislative matters.” and a legal intern for the Ohio the five weeks, we hope the students have Also along on the 1998 trip were law Department of Education. really had a chance to enjoy another students from Drake University, Chicago- Others find that the lighter load they are now able to take in the regular school year is more conducive to studying. “It makes for a better environment,” says Monk. Oxford Pre-Law Summer Program Ohio State administration of the Oxford Program changes each year, The Ohio State University/ Summer Pre-Law Program is held allowing more faculty the opportunity to ' concurrently with the College of Law program at St. Annes College. Professor participate. In addition, a second Ohio Stanley K. Laughlin, a College of Law faculty member, serves as director and State professor makes the trip to teach in teaches one part of the course work, entitled “The Foundations of American Law: the program. In 1998, it was Anne Doyle, The Anglo-American Legal System.” Another part of the course will be taught by a an adjunct professor and staff attorney in group of scholars from the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, of the University of the College’s Law clinic. Doyle, who is Oxford. The Socio-Legal Centre is the premier institution in Great Britain for the married to Brudney, taught the course in application of scientific methodologies to the study of law. Comparative Pre-Trial Litigation. Ohio State University awards nine quarter hours or six semester hours of Brudney, an Oxford graduate himself, graded credit, with an Ohio State transcript available to students from other is understandably excited about the universities and colleges, for successful completion of the program. In the past, program. “We offer a combination of most institutions have awarded comparable transfer credit. some fairly intense courses,” he says. For more information, contact Professor Laughlin at 614-292-2448. “In a five-week period, a student can earn five or six credits from the regular British and American faculty and also 10 Kent College of Law in Chicago, Texas Southern University, and Capital University in Columbus. “Most O.S.U. students were warm and O.S.U. Law at Oxford gracious,” says Barrie, a former flight The University of Oxford-Ohio State University Summer Law Program will be attendant, in-flight supervisor, and base conducted at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England from July 4 until August 7, administrator for Eastern Airlines. 1999. The Program is jointly conducted by the Oxford University Department for “Professors Brudney and Doyle especially Continuing Education and The Ohio State University. It is fully accredited by the made me feel welcomed.” With a new American Bar Association, and students may receive up to six semester hours of law year of classes well underway, she school credit. Acceptance of credit is at the discretion of the student’s home school, continues to keep in touch via e-mail with but most ABA-accredited law schools accept credit from the Program. All students the friends she made on the trip. who have completed at least one year at an ABA-accredited law school are eligible In fact, the opportunity to develop to apply. Admission is on a first-come first-served basis. friendships was an added benefit of Courses are taught by faculty from both The Ohio State University and Oxford studying abroad. “Getting to know other University. The following five courses will be offered in the 1999 summer program: people in your class on a different level Comparative Legal Professions, Comparative Cyberlaw, Social Policy and Income was tremendous,” says Freimuth, who Distribution, European Union Law, and Comparative Criminal Justice. The total spent one long weekend during the cost is $4,000 for residents of Ohio and $4,100 for nonresidents. This amount program with 14 other classmates in includes tuition, room, and three meals a day seven days a week. It also includes Ireland. rlacc; materials, receptions, a farewell dinner, and a number of exciting trips. “The friends I made through the Transportation between! Oxford and the United States, passport fees, and personal experience I’m sure will be life-long expenses are, however, not included in this fee. friends,” notes Clarence Mingo, who will Brochures and applications will be available in early December. To receive a graduate in December. brochure or for more information, contact Professor Allan Samansky Freimuth feels the trip also gave her a ([email protected]), 614-292-2019. Information is also available on the World new perspective on her chosen profession. Wide Web at http://www.osu.edu/units/law/oxlaw99.htm. “I learned where the law comes from,” she says, recalling trips to the Middle Temple, Old Bailey and the Houses of Parliament. “For me, it was a high point of my law Friday,” notes Brudney. “You don’t have to school experience.” including its celebrated “pub” life — was “The classwork was demanding,” an added plus for the students. Evening eat meals in the college dining hall on the weekend,” he adds. “But from the point of recalls Craig Bryson, a second-year speakers provided throughout the view of the student, particularly late in the student from Toledo, “but there was program gave insights into life in Great program when many have run low on still plenty of time to see Oxford.” Britain. “It was an opportunity to relax money, it’s extremely nice to know you He particularly appreciated how and learn about English society in an can be in Oxford, take a day trip, and supplemental trips were featured as a informal way,” notes Mingo, who was come back and have dinner.” regular part of the program, including making his first trip to England. Would they do it again or recommend it ventures to Stratford to tour Shakespeare’s Many opted to go early or stay beyond to others? The answer is a resounding, ‘Yes!” birthplace and see a production of the the program to visit other countries. Five “I’ve taken two classes this fall in Royal Shakespeare Company, and to women backpacked around Europe for five which I’ve been able to relate experiences London to see where barristers train and weeks before heading for Oxford. Bryson from this past summer to benefit my work at the Inns of Court. and his wife, Ann, delayed the honeymoon classmates and professors,” notes Beck, a When not participating in classes and following their May wedding to spend five former police officer who enrolled in law other program activities, the students days in Paris prior to the program. (Ann, an school prior to being elected to the South scattered across the British Isles to take in English teacher at Wellington School Carolina House four years ago. the sights. In addition to visiting Ireland, in Columbus, also accompanied him “The program offers more than an many traveled to Stonehenge, Salisbury, to Oxford.) opportunity to study at Oxford,” stresses and Bath, and some journeyed north to The Ohio State program offers room Mingo. “There is time to explore English Yorkshire and Scotland. It was common and board seven days a week while in and European culture,” he says. for students to take the hour-long train England, which might be a boon to “I don’t think you can go wrong,” adds ride into London for an evening at the students who overextend themselves Freimuth. “I would go back if I could theatre or to visit a museum. financially. “Other programs tend to afford it.” Learning about English culture — provide meals only Monday through 11 Student News

Death Penalty Work Provides On-the-job Legal Education It was an intense week of legal education. From writing briefs in a matter of minutes to dealing with clerks of the U.S. Supreme Court, Priya Lakhi, an Ohio State 3L, was an eager student. But her classroom wasn’t in Drinko Hall, it was in a courtroom and a prison in Arizona where she helped federal public defender Dale Baich argue a stay of execution for death row inmate Michael Poland. Poland came within two hours of lethal O.S.U. President William E. Kirwan talks with law students J.R. Hall, Amy Larson, John Carney, Priya Lakhi injection on Arizona’s death and Mike Vollmer. President Kirwan visited the College on September 8. He became the 12th row on October 20 when a federal judge in president of the University on July I. Hawaii granted a stay of execution. Samuel P. The Clinic had been appointed by King ruled that stress on death row left the For Priya the experience was life- District Judge Edmund Sargus to represent defendant incompetent to be executed. changing. “I always knew I wanted to go an inmate who alleged he was beaten by “I don’t think I’ve ever worked so hard into public interest law,” she says, “but now some guards. After a five-hour deliberation, in my life,” Priya recalls. After working with I know I want to do death penalty work.” the jury returned a verdict for the Baich in the Federal Public Defender’s office defendant guards. Following the trial, the in Phoenix last summer, she called him a Students Gain Courtroom jurors and the judge all complimented the few days before the law school’s fall break. Experience in Legal Clinic legal interns and for a job well done. Knowing he had the Poland case pending, Practical experience is the name of the Students also have been working on she offered to do research from Ohio over game for the College of Law Legal Clinic. two petitions for certiorari being filed in the break. Instead, he asked her to fly to Students have been involved in a variety Phoenix to assist with the case. of cases that allow them to apply what the United States Supreme Court. “It was really, really intense,” she says. they have learned in the classroom. One is being filed on behalf of Federal During her 10 days in Arizona, she wrote In early November, staff attorney Anne District Judge Ann Aldrich (Northern briefs, helped with litigation in three Doyle supervised legal interns Bill Harter District of Ohio), who was the subject of a different time zones, and helped Poland and Joel Lodge, both third-year students, mandamus order by the Sixth Circuit. The dictate his final letters to family members. in a jury trial in federal district court. . order compelled her to defer to an Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction policy forbidding inmates from attending depositions of prison officials in their civil rights cases, even when the district judge determined that their presence to assist their attorneys was likely to expedite the depositions and serve in the interest of fairness. The District Judge is a clinic client. The other case raised a conflict of interest issue in a federal habeas corpus proceeding. During the original criminal trial, the defense attorney was also representing another client who had provided police with information leading Michelle Ravn, 3L, and Lynda Jacobsen ’98, center, are the winners of the 1998 Nathan Burkan to the clinic client’s arrest. The other client Memorial Writing Competition at the College of Law. The writing competition is sponsored by the was charged with related offenses. College American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP), and submissions must be an original of Law clinic students and student paper on any aspect of copyright law. The winner’s work has become part of a national competition. research assistants have been working on Michelle’s paper will also be published in the Ohio State Law Journal. Also pictured are Professor Sheldon Halpem, left, who teaches copyright law, and College of Law Dean Gregory H. Williams. the case in the state and federal courts. 12 A lumni and Friends Give M ore Than $15 M illion to Campaign

In the fall of 1986, the colleagues to lend their support. Fund, $2,000,000 for student For more information about College of Law, under the guid­ More than 4,500 gifts from scholarship endowment, and the campaign, please contact ance of a group of alumni and alumni, friends, law firms, $5,000,000 for faculty the College’s Director of friends, embarked on the corporations, and others had endowment. Development, Tom Hoffman, Centennial Campaign. It was been made to the Campaign Through October, 1998, the at 614-688-8232. For infor­ an effort primarily designed to through September, 1998. University Campaign has mation regarding supporting secure resources for a massive Of the total secured, more secured gifts and pledges the Law Annual Fund, please expansion of the College’s home. than $1,500,000 has been ear­ totaling $823,153,283. The contact the College’s Assistant By the campaign’s completion marked for library endowment, Campaign will be completed Director of Development, Gayle in 1991, almost $15 million in $1,800,000 for the Law Annual December 31, 2000. Glanville, at 614-688-8232. gifts and commitments had been raised, one of the largest campaign successes for any public law school. The annual Honor Roll of the College of Law reflects all gifts received by the College Ten years after the launch of during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1997 and ending on June 30, 1998. During the Centennial Campaign, the the past year, the College received gifts totalling $2,731,612. It was the third straight College embarked on The Affirm year that contributions eclipsed the $1 million mark and the fourth time in the last Thy Friendship Campaign, joining five years. The Ohio State University’s effort Of the total received, $2,289,113 were for endowment purposes and $442,499for to raise what is now a $1 billion operating purposes. Alumni contributions accounted for approximately 88 percent of total goal. Just over three years into contributions received. The number of donors to the College decreased slightly from 1,405 its campaign, the College has to 1,352. already exceeded the total raised This report includes all gifts to the Law Annual Fund and to established or during the Centennial Campaign newly-created endowments. It may not include gifts made directly to academic or and has secured gifts and com­ student programs. mitments totaling $15,366,960. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this report. If you find The tremendous success so far an error or omission, please contact the Office of Development, College of Law, is a result of the generosity of 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio, 43210-1391, phone 614-688-8232. thousands of alumni and friends and the efforts of alumni to encourage classmates and

Law Campaign Progress Report

Septem ber 30, 1998 60% 100% Component Goal Raised 0% 20% 40% 60%

Preparing Tomorrow’s Leaders $ 5,750,000 $4,137,529 ------172%

Faculty Leadership and Excellence $ 4,500,000 $ 5,057,840 ■ÉSËfe© 1112%

Academic Leadership and Excellence $ 2,000,000 $483,714 ■ H — 124%

Commitment to Service $ 1,750,000 $ 108,982 0 6 % ■life A111WW. Building for Tomorrow $ 4,000,000 $4,419,973 — - .... -

TOTAL $ 18,000,000 $ 15,366,960 105%

Note: Commitments totalling $ 1 ,1 5 8 ,9 2 2 are undesignated.

13 Leadership D onors by G i f Levels

(July 1,1997-June 30, 1998) Dorothy Penska Mills* Richard A. Wead* William Edward Knepper John Thomas Mills* Thomas Peter Wellman* Daniel Halter Lease $100,000 and Higher Elinor Porter Swiger* Hugh Richard Whiting* Douglas Hayes Marshall Frank Ellis Bazler* Robert W Werth* Sara Gérhart Wieland* George Carlton Virginia Hutchison Bazler* Douglas Leonard Williams, II* McConnaughey* John Deaver Drinko* $2,000-$4,999 Benjamin L. Zox* Robert Myers McGreevey Grace Heck Faust*+ Stanford Apseloff* William Stanley Morton* Carter Coslet Kissell* David S. Bloomfield* $1,000-$ 1,999 David A. Nelson Sally Ward Bloomfield* Howard William Adkins Thomas B. Ridgley $25,000-$99,000 Michael Hiram Carpenter* Gerald Otis Allen* Niki Zola Schwartz* Michael E Colley* JohnJ. Chester, Sr.* Gerald Lee Baker Christopher C. Skambis, Jr. Marshall Cox* William M. Connelly* Robert Quincy Baker, III J. MacAlpine Smith William Michael Isaac* Gregory Scott DeWolfe* David Harold Braff John Stuart Steinhauer* Doris Messer London+ Willis Riley Deming James Kenneth Brooker Todd Shawn Swatsler Jean MacAlpine Smith* Robert Pickering Fite* Thomas Edgar Cavendish*+ Lee Irwin Turner* Arthur Isaiah Vorys* William Kagay Friend* Robert Peterson Chalfant Stephen Francis Vogel Robert J. Watkins* JohnJ. Heron* Gloria M. Cochran* Elizabeth Jean Watters Reginald Sherman Jackson, Jr.* Richard K. Cochran* John W Weaner $10,000-$24,999 William Irwin Kohn* Raymond Paul Cunningham, Jr.* Karl H. Weaner* James D. Oglevee* John G. Lancione* Joseph Couture D’Arrigo Ithamar Dryden Weed Carl Craddock Tucker* Larry Russell Langdon* Bernard V Fultz Gregory Howard Williams James Kaufman Lawrence* Michael Proctor Graney Janice Elizabeth Wolfe $5,000-$9,999 Daniel P. McQuade Thomas Robert Hillhouse* Joseph H. Yearling, Jr. Paul Angelo Bemardini* Frank Jerome Neff* William David Jamieson Anita Esbenshade Chapman* Terry Lee Overbey* Steven Wash Jemison * President’s Club Robert Charles Coplan* Harold L. Talisman* James Jay Johnson* +Deceased George W Hairston William Kemahan Thomas* Jerome John Joondeph, Sr. John P. McMahon* Anthony Tuccillo* James Armand King*

D onors by C lass Y ear

Donors by Class Year Class of 1929 Class of 1934 Class of 1937 (July 1, 1997-June 30, 1998) Participation: 25% Participation: 29% Participation: 5% Joseph Egan Ryan, Sr. Howard William Adkins Harold Earl Gottlieb Class of 1925 Clyde C. Beery Participation: 14% Class of 1930 Jack Griffith Evans Class of 1938 Noel L. Greenlee+ Participation: 17% Carl Craddock Tucker* Participation: 17% Grace Heck Faust*+ Willis Riley Deming Class of 1926 Class of 1935 Richard M. Dore Participation: 43% Participation: 11% Richard G. Hemdon Class of 1931 Myron A. Rosentreter Harry Palmer Jeffrey, Sr.*+ Participation: 40% Doris Messer London+ Joseph S. Kreinberg William Kemahan Thomas* Theodore Luther Horst Thomas E Patton* Irene Fuchs Lawner Class of 1936 Class of 1939 LeRoy Marceau Participation: 13% Participation: 8% Class of 1927 Karl H. Weaner* Henry Matthias Thullen Participation: 20% Edwin R. Teple Ithamar Dryden Weed Carter Coslet Kissell* Maurice Alan Young 14 D onors by C lass Y ear

Morton Sedley Frankel George William Stuhldreher Robert J. Watkins* Class of 1940 Elinor Porter Swiger* Participation: 25% Earl Leeper Hamilton Kenneth Richard Harkins John E. Zimmerman John W Lehrer Class of 1954 Participation: 19% William Stanley Miller John Oral Harper William E. Herron George J. Aman Arthur N. Mindling Class of 1952 George W Rooney, Sr. Rodney Alan Baker John L. Woodard Participation: 17% John D. Schwenker James Newton Ebright Warren Grant Blue John Joseph Spittler, Sr. George Vance Fisher Kenneth R. Callahan Class of 1941 D. Swygert Eugene C. Fresch Wilbur L. Collins Participation: 17% Robert Davies Hays* Russell Dominic Finneran Jean Gordon Peltier William Hudson Hillyer Sally Reardon Heid Frank A. Robison Class of 1949 Blaine Brycen Hunkins, Sr. Charles Frederick Johnston, Jr. Judson C. Schuler Participation: 14% Charles William Davidson, Jr. Martin P. Joyce Robert L. Keyes David A. Wible Max Harley Charles John Kerester Joseph A. Marchese Webster S. Lyman, Jr. William A. Lavelle Harold Carl Meier Class of 1942 John Butcher Mantonya Thomas Donald McDonald Richard C. Pickett Participation: 38% Malcolm Lee Miller Charles Daniel Minor* William J. Reidenbach Gerald Otis Allen* Robert J. Swadey William W Mosholder Gerald E. Schlafman* Robert Charles Coplan* Arthur Isaiah Vorys* James Evan Nelson Thomas L. Startzman Louis Gray John Clybum Wagner Robert Raitze Reed John Willis Van Dervoort, Sr.* Henry W Houston+ William H. Saltsman Class of 1955 John P. McMahon* Charles D. Shook Jack T. Van Keuls Class of 1950 Participation: 12% Participation: 28% Thomas L. Tribbie David Robert Alban Theodore Emil Bieber Robert M. Edwards Class of 1943 Philip Raymond Bradley Class of 1953 Participation: 20% Edwin M. Ellman Raymond Paul Cunningham, Jr.* Participation: 16% Bernard V Fultz Louis B. Conkle Lee O. Fitch Frank Ellis Bazler* William Brooks Johnson William Luke Stewart David William Hart Thomas Edgar CavendisJi*+ Charles Russell Leech, Jr. Sanders David Heller Ernest John Danco James William Miller Class of 1944 William Lewis Johncox James Q. Gossett Robert W Siegel Participation: 50% Nils Paul Johnson Duane L- Isham* John Deaver Drinko* Daniel Halter Lease Richard G. Ison* Class of 1956 Melvin L. Robins Wayne M. Leatherman James D. Oglevee* Participation: 13% Earl N. Merwin Harold L. Talisman* William B. Balyeat Class of 1945 Albert Donovan Miller John Martin Tobin Donald Wayne Bennett Participation: 20% Julian O. Northcraft Robert Earl Horowitz Paul Edward Paulson Robert W Phillips Class of 1946 Thomas Richard Spellerberg Participation: 25% Theodore Raymond Treffinger William Ammer Thomas I. Webb, Sr. Bateman Richard Karl Wilson William Howard Fort Class of 1951 Class of 1947 Participation: 18% Participation: 22% Allen H. Bechtel Robert Pickering Fite* Robert A. Clair James A. Lantz James Franklin Cox Francis Scott McDaniel RoyJ. Gilliland James P. Natoli Edward Stephen Havasy William N. Postlewaite William C. Kuhn John L. Roof Mary C. Lord George Carlton Class of 1948 McConnaughey* Participation: 18% Carl B. Mellman Thomas L. Corroto, Jr. Donald J. Nicolls William B. Devaney, Jr. Samuel B. Randall Frank ’53 and Ginny Bazler, Troy, were awarded the Gerlach Award this fall James R. Dupler William Ernest Rathman by The Ohio State University for more than 40 years of Volunteer service. Vincent Leroy Fox Marvin Ritzenberg Also pictured is law school friend, Bob Watkins ’53, who presented the award. 15 D onors by C lass Y ear

Joseph B Buchanan William Bennett Shimp, Jr. William B. Gore Class of 1966 Robert J. Fairless Stuart A. Summit David L. Hobson Participation: 20% James R. Hinton John Yeatman Taggart Robert J. Holland Ross Edwin Austin Charles D. Parke Anthony Tuccillo* Helena Everett Jackson John Harper Bain Bonford Reed Talbert, Jr. Thomas Peter Wellman* Ronald H. Katila Paul Angelo Bemardini* T. Bryan Underwood, Jr. Wesley J. Mac Adam Fielding G. Braffett Paul R. Walsh Class of 1960 Sidney Nudelman Thomas A. Brennan Joseph H. Yearling, Jr. Participation: 21% Paul H. Roskoph Martin Adolphus Coyle* David L. Zeigler Karl Richard Aughenbaugh James W Taggart Lawrence Robert Elleman Class of 1957 Fred J. Bentoff Sarah Smith Tintor David Lee Grayson Participation: 24% Thomas Charles Clark Frank John Uvena. Jerry Grier James George Annos Fred A. Culver John W Weaner Charles H. Hire John F Atkinson Louis Ira Hoffman John A. Humbach Charles A. Balzer Philip R. Joelson Class of 1964 Victor Russell Marsh, Jr. Floyd Alan Banker Robert C. Kiger Participation: 25% Edward Vaughn Miller Marc Gertner Charles Russell Petree, II George Raymond Barry Thomas J. Short Paul E Gutmann Richard E Rice Roger E. Bennington John Gordon Slauson John Allen Hoskins Jerome J. Robison Robert W Coffman J. MacAlpine Smith Joan Miday Krauskopf Robert J. Rodefer Nancy Ralston Cupps* Beatrice Kronick Sowald Donald Lloyd Lane John K. Skomp William M. Connelly* William Glen Stewart Richard Lyle Loveland W Lynn Swinger Theresa Doss John E Wingard Edmund G. Peper David C. Faulkner Michael C. Scanlon Class of 1961 Elliot M. Kaufman Class of 1967 William E. Shirk Participation: 18% David C. Kelley Participation: 14% Larry L. Thomas James R. Barton Charles B. Lang Ralph D. Amiet Joan E. Zuber James D. Booker William R. McDavid Harold Hunter Davis Charles Donald Byron Niki Zola Schwartz* David Le Roy Day Class of 1958 Michael E Colley* Participation: 12% John H. Siegenthaler Stephen L. Hebenstreit Howard J. Haddow Albert Leo Bell Albert S. Tabor, Jr. Thomas Robert Hillhoüse* David K. Holiiiquist Bernard C. Boggio Charles J. Tyburski Jerome John Joondeph, Sr. Shelby V Hutchins John Thomas Brown John C. Wasserman Richard L. Kolb Larry Russell Längdon* James Donald Cairns Donald R. Wheeler Franklin A. Martens Gavin R. Larrimer* Robert H. Coldren Janice Elizabeth Wolfe Daniel E McQuade Robert Joseph Perry Rollyn Cliffton Gibbs Velta Anita Melnbrencis Daniel Miller Phillips Robert Lloyd Hammond, Jr. Class of 1965 Jack C. Rubenstein William A. Reale Ronald G. Logan Participation: 25% Craig M. Stewart Robert N. Wistner William W Moland Paul John Borowitz John E. Stine Harry R. Paulino Robert Peterson Chalfant Paul Robert Valente John E Van Abel Class of 1962 David S. Cupps* Participation: 18% Christopher Edward Veidt Richard S. Wagner Thomas L. Gire Richard A. Wead* Alexander Andreoff JohnJ. Heron* William Dallas Woodall Class of 1959 Josiah Hillerman Blackmore, II David W Holman Participation: 25% James Kenneth Brooker* Francis Gillen Knipe Joseph E. Andres John D. Judge Class of 1968 Thomas G. Knoll Paul G. Bertram, Jr. Alan Smith Kerxton Participation: 18% Charles J. Kurtz Naren Biswas Anne Margaret Knisely Gerald Lee Baker James Kaufman Lawrence* John Goldsberry Blair, Sr. Richard Eugene Meredith Phillip H. Barrett James H. Ledman Charles Ensign Brant Lawrence Clark Sherman Donald Lawrence Bleich Thomas H. Lindsey Marshall Cox* Gary L. Stansbery James Russell Burkhard Robert H. Me Naghten, Jr. James J. Cullers C. Arthur Wilson, Jr. Donald Edwin Ely George William Moore, III Louis J. Disantis Benjamin L. Zox* John E DiFalco Albert W Eoff, II Stanley Kay Purdy Thomas James Gordon Richard J. Fraas Class of 1963 William Karl Rice Michael Proctor Graney Frank M. Hays Patrick Jerome Smith George W Hairston Participation: 28% G. Bradley Hummel Charles A. Stupsker Mark John Hariket John G. Lancione* Thomas William Archibald Rex D. Throckmorton John William Kenesey Ronald P. Lankenau John T. Brook Robert W Werth* James Wallace Luse Robert E Linton Edward Geoffrey Clapham Robert Craig Wiesenmayer Frederick Martin Mann* Frank Jerome Neff* Jacob Erastus Davis, II* Dale Edward Williams John Douglas Martin

1 6

political science. Endowed Lectures Her book, Color Conscious: The Political Morality semina^ m esgf o f Race, received the American Political Eran StTong schol, the:fs: eac* o7thed°Wed^ciur, ^dJscu. ■ 5> eaifers Science Associations We 1ssion i Law Ft'omni tveico. Ralph J. Bunche ^ S î hoîe®°üB Award “for the best WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10 scholarly work in 4:00 p.m. Auditorium political science On Racial “Passing” speakersÄsSftsS^SS!! ÏSe c £ ? f ®» **W ¡¡R. 3210 that explores the phenomenon of ethnic Randall sponsored by è ? ®®as 0/ S ^ j^ T 0fl fl&pute Kennedy and cultural pluralism.” Professor of Law, It also received the Harvard Law North American Society School M A , for Social Philosophy Oxford 'teges Book Award and the University, 1 of law Gustavus Myers Center J.D., Yale Law School for the Study of Human A noted scholar, Professor Rights Award for the Kennedy is a professor “outstanding book on the at Harvard Law School M l i f i r f subject of human rights area where he teaches m a Oderai in America.” contracts, freedom of mon noted Professor Gutmann has expression, and the 300Product been a visiting professor regulation of race StatesSupreZerSJyS0Tithea at Harvard University and Cowt ji relations. A prolific Ostices, at the Institute for Advanced writer, he has written C T * " 300 ^ ¡ 5 2 5 * ^ Study, Princeton. numerous articles for toi°in us for scholarly journals, The Schwartz Lecture on such as the Kde Law Dispute Resolution was established u ®Ss©g prnfc in 1992 as a result o f the generosity Journal and the r°fessor of ¿atv Harvard Law Review, and more o f the late Stanley Schwartz, Jr. ’47 than a hundred articles for general interest and the Schwartz family. Each lecture publications. He is a contributing editor of is published in the interdisciplinary IntellectualCapital.com, and serves on the editorial boards of several Ohio State Journal on Dispute magazines. His book, Race, Crime, and the Law, won the 18 th Resolution in Annual Robert E Kennedy Book Award Grand Prize. keeping with Mr. Schwartz’ interest in the promotion o f scholarly publication in the area o fdispute resolution. Professor Kennedy began his legal career as a clerk for Judge J. Skelly Wright of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and for Justice Thurgood Marshall of the United States Supreme Court. T L B earn s Lecture The Frank R Strong Law Forum was the College o fLaws first endowed lecture series. It was made possible through a giftfrom Isador ’27 and TUESDAY, APRIL 6 Ida Topper. It was named to honor Frank R Strong, Dean o f the 4:00p.m. Auditorium College o f Law from 1952 to 1965. - The Federal Courts in a Federal System The Honorable Guido Calabresi United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit LL.B., Yale Law School • M A , Oxford University ikwartz Lecture Awarded the 1998 Fellows of the American Bar Foundation for Outstanding Research in Law and on esolution Government, Judge Calabresi is a noted scholar in the area of torts. He is the author of four books and more than MONDAY, APRIL 12 80 articles on law and related subjects. Prior to his appointment 4:00 p.m. Auditorium as United States Circuit Judge in 1994, he was Dean and Sterling How Not to Resolve Moral Conflicts Professor at Yale Law School, where he began teaching in 1959. Amy Gutmann He is presently Sterling Professor of Law Emeritus and Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor, Princeton Professorial Lecturer. University • M.Sc., London School of Economics PhD., Harvard University The founding director of the University Center All lectures are held at John Deaver Drinko Hall, 55 West 12th for Human Values at Princeton University, Amy Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. If you plan to attend, please call Gutmann is widely recognized in the area of dispute resolution and 614-292-2937 or 614-292-0388. MONDAY, MARCH 29 “The Very Stereotype the Law Condemns:” Constitutional Sex Discrimination Law as a Quest for Perfect Proxies Mary Anne Case Professor, University of Virginia • J.D , Harvard Law School M ary Anne Ruth Colker David Jacobs Peter P. Swire Bonnie Charles E. Case TUESDAY, APRIL 6 Poitras Wilson U.S. to the Rescue: The President’s Authority Tucker to Order “Protective Interventions” Abroad Social Context and Sentence Length: Facultui WjrLskc «ríes Peter Raven-Hansen Towards a Political Model of Contextual The Faculty Workshop Series promotes Glen Earl Weston Research Professor of Law, and Individual Influences George Washington University Law School scholarly research and intellectual discussion David Jacobs J.D , Harvard Law School Professor, The Ohio State University on current legal issues. All workshops are M.A, Ph.D , Vanderbilt University held at 12:00 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge Other workshops include: of John Deaver Drinko Hall. If you plan to Blind in One Eye, Can’t See Out of the Splitting-the-Diflerence as a Remedy* attend any of these workshops, please call Other: The Symbiotic Silence of Law and Charles E Wilson 614-292-0388. History — The Case of Lynching Associate Professor of Law, The Ohio State University Emma Coleman Jordan College of Law J.D , New York University MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 Professor of Law, Georgetown University *Co-sponsored by The Ohio State University The Americans With Disabilities Acts: J.D., Howard University College of Law Socio-Legal Center A Windfall for Defendants* Ruth Colker Grace Fern Heck Faust Memorial Chair in FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4 io Legal Misitiistorg Jemmar Constitutional Law, The Ohio State University Parliamentary Sovereignty College o f Law • J.D., Harvard Law School The Ohio Legal History Seminar is a work­ and Constitutional Change THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 shop in all areas of legal history. It brings in the United Kingdom Financial Privacy in the Digital Age scholars from Ohio and around the nation Vivien M. Hart Peter P. Swire to discuss work that is either in progress or Professor o f American Studies, Professor of Law, The Ohio State University College about to be published. The Seminar is joindy University of Sussex of Law • J.D , Yale Law School funded by the College of Law, the College A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10 of Humanities, and the Department of FRIDAY, JANUARY 22 Deaf Culture, Cochlear Implants History. It is coordinated by Professors Wager of Law and the Ius Commune and Elective Disability M. Les Benedict (History) and T.E Gallanis R.H. Helmholz Bonnie Poitras Tucker (Law). Presentations take place in the Faculty Ruth Wyatt Rosenson Professor of Law. Professor of Law, Arizona State University College Lounge of the College of Law, beginning at University of Chicago Law School of Law • J.D , University of Colorado 2:30 p.m. and continuing until 4:30 p.m. LL.B., Harvard University; M.A., Ph.D., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23 An informal luncheon at the Ohio State University o f at Berkley Bi-Polar Sovereignty? The Judiciary University Faculty Club regularly precedes FRIDAY, MARCH 5 and Constitutional Change in the U.K.* each presentation. Studying and Teaching Ohio Legal Vivien Hart FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9 History: A Discussion About the Future Professor of American Studies, University of Sussex The Bird), Maturation, and Endurance of John Winkler A .M , Ph.D., Harvard University Progressive legalism in New York, 1920-1980 Partner, Christensen, Shoemaker and Winkler M.A., McGill University; A.M., Harvard University; MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1 William E. Nelson J.D., The Ohio State University Legal Theory and the Law of Contracts Joel S, and Anne B. Ehrenkranz Professor of Law, Jody S. Kraus New York University School of Law FRIDAY, APRIL 9 Professor of Law, University of Virginia LL.B., New York University; Ph.D., Harvard University M .A, Ph.D , University of Arizona; J.D , Yale University FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6 Prussian Judges as Parliamentary Deputies, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Every Man His Own Lawyer: 184S-1914 Uniform Mediation Law: Where’s the Gain* The Self-Help Law Book in America Kenneth F. Ledford Nancy H. Rogers Ann Fidler Associate Professor of History and Law, Case Western Reserve University Joseph S. Platt-Porter Wright Morris and Arthur Assistant Professor of History, Ohio University Professor of Law, The Ohio State University College J.D., University of California at Berkeley School of Law Ph.D, M.A, The Johns Hopkins University; of Law • J.D , Yale Law School Ph.D., University of California at Berkley J.D , University of North Carolina

Jody S. Kraus Peter Raven- Nancy Rogers Ann Fidler Vivian M. R.H. Kenneth F. William E. John Winkler Hansen H art Helmbolz Ledford Nelson Time Implications o" 1^ 1'are Re orm "or CliilJren

A Symposium Co-sponsored by the College of Law’s Thomas Gais, Ph.D. Justice for Children Project, Socio-Legal Center Professor, Rockefeller Institute of Government and and the Ohio State Law Journal Director, Federalism Research Group State University of New York at Albany The symposium will provide an important opportunity for exchange among those who are working on issues Susan V. Mangold, J.D. pertaining to children and welfare reform and should Professor, School of Law provide direction for future judicial and legislative reform. State University of New York at Buffalo The symposium is being organized under the auspices Leroy Pelton, Ph.D. of the new Justice for Children Project, an educational Professor and Director, School of Social Work, Greenspun and interdisciplinary research initiative that creates College of Urban Affairs, University of Nevada, Las Vegas opportunities for faculty and students in the field of law affecting children and their families. M ark Real, J.D. Director, Children’s Defense Fund, Ohio Call 614-292-6829for registration information Sara Rosenbaum, J.D. Harold and Jane Hirsch Professor of Health Law and Policy, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 12 AND 13 School of Public Health and Health Sciences, Charles F. Adams, Jr., Ph.D. George Washington University Medical Center Professor, School of Public Policy and Management Catherine Ross, Ph.D., J.D. The Ohio State University Professor, George Washington University Law School Naomi Cahn, J.D., LL.M. Ira M. Schwartz, M.S. W. Professor, George Washington University Law School Dean, School of Social Work and Mary Corcoran, Ph.D. Director, Center for the Study of Youth Policy, Professor, School of Public Policy University of Pennsylvania University of Michigan Gregory H. Williams, MJL, J.D., M. Phil, Ph.D. Peter Edelman, LL.B. Dean and Carter C. Kissell Professor of Law, Professor, Georgetown University Law Center The Ohio State University College of Law Katherine Hunt Federle, J.D., LL.M. Miriam S. Wilson, M.L.H.R. Professor and Director, Justice for Children Project Visiting Professor, School of Public Policy and Management, The Ohio State University College of Law Ohio University

Non Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID College of Law Columbus, Ohio 55 West Twelfth Avenue Permit No. 711 Columbus, Ohio 43210 D onors by C lass Y ear

Richard Stretton Michaels Thomas Joseph Shumard William James Hutchins, III Curtis Alan Loveland William Richard Montgomery John Stuart Steinhauer* Reginald Sherman Jackson, Jr. * Timothy Craig Me Cann Dennis Ryan Newman Thomas Michael Tarpy Victor R Kademenos James Elder Michael, Jr. Norman John Ogilvie, Jr. John Harold Thrush William Neal Keadey, Jr. John Thomas Mills* Clark Poston Pritchett, Jr. Lee Irwin Turner* Thomas Edward Roberts Charles Joseph Pruitt Charles Nelson Ricketts Thomas Eldon Workman* Randolph Lee Snow Frederick Richard Reed Jon Michael Schorr Dennis Albert Valot James Lee Rench Terry Smith Shilling Class of 1970 George Willard Rooney, Jr. Daniel Ray Shirey Participation: 19% Class of 1972 Mark Wayne Sinkhom Robert M. Strapp Lawrence Darrell Adelman Participation: 15% David Jay Sternberg Frank Milton Wells James Wilder Bennett John P Beavers William Joseph Strapp James Wilson Wheeler* Joseph Lee Cain Clair M. Carlin Douglas Milbum Toot Karen Holcomb Cloherty David Michael Cohen Allan Joseph Weiner Class of 1969 Samuel R. Cook James Reynolds Cooper Nancy Ashbrook Willis Participation: 19% Joseph John Cox John Frederick Copes William Hunt Woods Mark Rogers Abel Joseph Lawrence Emmrich Joseph Couture D’Arrigo Mary Ellen Wynn Mark Shelton Anderson Charlotte Coleman Eufinger Miles Cutler Durfey David Regis Bamhizer John Marshall Eufinger Charles Frederick Freiburger, IV* David S. Bloomfield* Mary Ellen Fairfield* Class of 1974 Gary Paul Gormin Sally Ward Bloomfield* William Kagay Friend* Participation: 15% Thomas Adrian Carpenter William Walter Johnston Charles Fredrick Geidner Charles Franklin Andrews John Robert Ettenhofer Keith Howard Jung Michael Henry Haney Gary Marc Blumenthal Theodore Paul Frericks, IV Mark K. Merkle Robert Joseph Hopperton, Jr. Nancy Gutfeld Brown Willard W Hoyt James Arthur Moore, Jr.* James Edward Hughes John Albert Coppeler Richard Maurice Huhn Donald Garry Paynter James Jay Johnson* John Arlie Dicke William Michael Isaac* James August Readey Michael Patrick Mahoney Pamela Brown Dizikes William David Jamieson Kenneth Marvin Royalty William James McGraw, III John James Flynn William Wilson Kenneweg Alan Michael Schwarzwalder Robert Monroe Parsons Michael Francis Haverkamp Robert Kolter Leonard Klaus Michael Ziermaier John James Powers, III David S. Hay Michael Gary Long* Alan Toby Radnor Larry Allan Kams Francis Johnston McGavran, II Class of 1971 Ronald Lee Rowland* Louis Harvey Khourey, Jr. Laurence Lynn Miller Participation: 10% Kurt Lee Schultz William Boyd Logan, Jr. Milton Ames Puckett Norman Everett Brague Suzan Barnes Thomas William Stanley Morton* John B. Rohyans Susan Ellen Brown* Adam Joseph Wagenbach D. Brent Mulgrew Daniel Robert Rupp David Douglas Buvinger Michael Edward Yurosko James Lee Nichelson William E Schenck William Robert Coboum* John Wolcott Zeiger Timothy A. Oliver Lyle Richard Saylor Class of 1973 Charles Howard Schottenstein Participation: 18% James Robert Shenk David Newell Abruzzo Michael Spurlock Howard David Bader John Paul Steines, Jr. Marilyn Enroth Bird Ira Bennett Sully Philip M. Collins Leslie Vamado, Jr. Edward Charles Czopur Hugh Richard Whiting* William John Davis John Fredrick Zimmerman, Jr. Gregory Scott DeWolfe* Gregory Brian Denny Marc Richard Friedman Class of 1975 William Allan Grim Participation: 15% Rodney D. Hanson Barbara Avery Ronald Roy Henderson Robert Quincy Baker, III Simon Barry Karas Walter Kerfoot Chess, Jr. Bernard Le Roy Karr Rose Blau Dabek Roger William Kienzle, Jr. Deborah Lynn Edwards Alan Eliot Lebon Robert Henry Hoover Gary Allan Lickfelt John D. Hvizdos Shannon Patton ’98 makes a point during a Moot Court demonstration Dennis Daryl Liston Curtiss Lee Isler last year. Joseph Litvin William Francis Jankun 17 D o n o r s b y C l a s s Y ear

Steven Wash Jemison Class of 1977 Timothy John Bechtold Paula Terese Cotter Robert Arnold Ellison Terrence Patrick Kessler Participation: 23% Robert Edward Bums John Ira Cadwallader Tyler Bishop Ellrodt Linda S. MacKay Carol Lee Barnum Susan Shiffler Enlow William Travis McIntyre Marvin William Bohm Edward Kefgen Cheffy John Watson Cook, III Cathy Myers Finley David Andrew Orlins Dale Thomas Brinkman Robert Michael Curry William Robert Finnegan Terry Lee Overbey* Karen Jean Bunning David Leslie Johnson Michael Hiram Carpenter* Steven Lynn Dauterman R. L. Richards Kenneth Hobson Koch Alden Brett Chevlen David William De Vita Richard Keller Rohde, Jr. Randy Scott Kurek John Patrick Coady Francis Xavier Frantz Bernard Joseph Schaeff Ellen Matthys MacFarlane Nanci Leeanne Danison K. Stuart Goldberg Douglas McDonald Sheffield Michael Jeffry Marsh Joel Kim Dayton John Patrick Gordon Chris Meade Streifender Timothy Charles McCarthy Richard Stephen Dodson, Jr. James David Gradel David Wenrich Stuckey Christopher John Minnillo Jeff Douglas Drushal Stephen John Habash* Thomas Phillip Webster Brent Bentley Nicholson Gregg Michael Emrick Kenneth Joseph Kallberg James Roy Williams Robert Francis O’Connor Beatrice Margaret Friedlander Susan Mary Kuzma Kevin Ralph Reichley Donald Randall Garlit Gary James Leppla Joseph Ritzert Class of 1976 Patrick Joseph Goebel Susan Elaine McNally Participation: 21% Sylvia Beckman Robbins- Scott E. Grimes Robert Andrew Meyer, Jr. Penniman Gary William Auman Neil Warren Gurney David Paul Miraldi Sam Oscar Simmerman Robert Lewis Bays David M. Huddleston Leslee Wilkins Miraldi Scott Donald Solsman Jeffrey Lewis Benson Thomas Dean Lammers Randall Edwin Moore Kevin Lee Sykes John Franklin Berry Julia Marie Metzger Willie Ray Persons David Michael Whittaker Christen Ralph Blair Carla Denise Moore Jeffrey Dean Quayle Cheryl Foster Wolff Peggy Lynn Bryant Jon Ray Philbrick Joseph Peter Schmitz Don William Bulson Louis G. Recher Carol Sheehan John Jeffrey Chemoski Kristine Agnes Roth Christopher C. Skambis, Jr. Class of 1980 Stanley John Dobrowski Martin Stanley Seltzer Ramsay Hill Slugg* Participation: 22% James Burton Farmer Richard Kaoru Shimabukuro Eleanor Louise Speelman Steven Robert Bartram Roland Humphreys Bauer Jerome Lewis Fine Dale Phillip Shrallow Stephen Francis Vogel Marc Jay Bernstein Dennis Michael Fitzgerald Carol Zelizer Stoff Philip Higbee Wolf Donna Marian Brower Blair Robert Edward Fletcher Russell Gary Tisman Russell Thomas Woodson Herman Andrew Carson James Matthew Giffin Edward Philip Walker Ronna Friedman Young David Keith Conrad William Richey Graf, Jr. Charles Herbert Waterman, III Daniel William Costello Michele Marie Gutman John Kerry Weston Class of 1979 Douglas Alan Daley John Stuart Jones Participation: 14% Irving Harold Berliner Karen Sue Darby William J. Kelly Class of 1978 Richard Howard Brody Douglas Allen Dimond Steven R. Kerber Participation: 17% David Warren Alexander Daniel Oliver Conkle James Joseph Frasca William Irwin Kohn* Rachel Elon Ramsey Geiersbach David Lee Landefeld Clay Powelson Graham ' Gregory Gordon Lockhart Robert Jeffrey Harris James Murphy Long Douglas G. Haynam Thomas Leslie Long Laurene Helen Horiszny Susan Gabori Lorton Richard Emory Jacobs Margaret Mullany Martinsen Michael Duane Juhola Ronald Jay McCracken Glenn Scott Krassen Robert Myers McGreevey Carol Perritt Lindstrom Jonathan Michael Norman Richard Scott MacMillan Robert Emmet Olwell Denise Adele Herman McColley Dennis Marc Papp Carolyn Shaffer Melvin Paul Edward Peltier, Jr. Joseph William Merry Paul Elmer Perry Michael Patrick Moloney Thelma Thomas Price Vera Callahan Neinast Allen Jeffrey Reis Joseph William Pappalardo Howard Andrew Silverman Dale K. Perdue Richard Harvey Underwood Samuel John Petroff Craig James Van Horsten Robert Me Call Pfeiffer Joseph Charles Winner Third-year student Liza Merida listens closely in class. Stephen Edward Pigott 18 D onors by C lass Y ear

Brent Allen Rowland Charles Sumner Plumb, III Class of 1985 Susan Levitt House Frederick Carter Schoch Stephen David Plymale Participation: 13% Lowell Bennett Howard, Jr. Carl De Mouy Smallwood Robert James Reynolds Joseph Orwin Bull* John Mark Kantner Thomas Edward Trempe Paul Anthony Rose Lorie Ann Chaiten Steven Robert Kirschner Anne Daley Wattman Michael Matthew Schmidt Ernest Eugene Cottrell, Jr. Kathleen Rummel LaTour Lucile Gray Weingartner Marcia Katz Slotnick Thomas S. Counts Randall Duane LaTour Douglas Leonard Williams, II* Gregory William Stype Douglas Parker Currier Risa Dinitz Lazaroff Janice Wilz Wise Thomas Edmund Szykowny Charles Michael Gegenheimer, Jr. Jeffrey Wiley Linstrom Myron Daniel Wolf, III Bruce Robert Thompson Gary Alan Gillett Sara Elizabeth Lioi David Arthur Wormser Mark Samuel Toledo Gary Lee Grubler Bonnie Irvin O’Neil Michael Carl Zellers Steven Marc Walk Susan Allene Kovach Cheryl Lyn Roberto John Joseph Laffey Belinda Henderson Simile Class of 1981 Class of 1983 Jeffrey Allen Merklin Matthew Sherman Smith Participation: 12% Participation: 10% Cathleen Cover Payne Timothy Farrell Sweeney Leozino Agozzino Melanie Clemmons Becker Douglas Mark Radman Jennifer Murchake Todd Rod Courtney Borden Gary Dean Begeman Ivan Lenwood Redinger, Jr. Winnifred Norah Weeks Elaine Sayers Buck Bradley Wayne Bittinger Sara Ellen Robbins Gregory Allen Williams Jo Lindseth Busser Matjorie H. Brant Martin Sanford Rosenthal Catherine Cobum Costello James Joseph Freedman James Gregory Ryan Class of 1988 James Craig Ellis Jeffrey Donald Horst John Leis Staley Participation: 12% Janet Diann Gibson Judith Joy Hritz Edwin John Turanchik Alan Dawson Alford James Anthony Giles Catherine Elaine Huston Elizabeth Flynn Vorys John Todd Arkebauer Frederick Hunker Susan Marie Lebold Webb Isaiah Vorys John Joseph Brennan Stephanie Baker Jarrett Lillian Susan Lehrburger David Cooper Comstock, Jr. Thomas John Keable William August Leuby, III Class of 1986 Lisa Weekley Coulter Gregory Alan Markko Jetta Lynn Mencer Participation: 12% Bernadette Bollas Genetin Douglas Hayes Marshall Michael Scott Messenger Stanford Apseloff* Lewis Howard Goldfarb William Anders McKee Jennifer Thomas Mills Perry Michael Chappano Nancy Novack Idzkowski Brett Lyne Miller Raul Antonio E Pedrozo Curt Douglas Cooper James Armand King* Susan Wittemeier O’Neil Randall William Rummell John Roger Davis Peter Christopher Kratcoski William Donald Rohrer Michael James Segal Teresa Ball Earley Thomas Neil Littman Joseph Richard Rosenbaum* Martha George Sweterlitsch David Louis Fish Charles Edward Ohlin Belinda Jayne Scrimenti Michael Francis Wagner Brendan Allen Ford Brian Vincent Pero Stephen Rocco Serraino Kim William Zerby* Kathleen Strange Gross Glen Ray Pritchard David Lynn Suter Ronald Lee House Kenneth Michael Richards Todd Shawn Swatsler Class of 1984 James Michael Jones Kirk William Roessler Gregory Kent Waters Participation: 12% Amy Elizabeth Kellogg Christopher Coe Russell Lisa Palmer Wilcox David Harold Braff Scott Allen King Julie Grosjean Skattum Karen Riestenberg Brinkman Nancy Prytel Klingshim Betsy Ann Swift Class of 1982 Catherine Telles Dunlay Neil Edward Klingshim William Andrew Thorman, III Participation: 14% John Jeffrey Finocharo Alan Jack Lazaroff 'Franklin Henry Top, III Eliot W Abarbanel Barbara Lynn Freedy Jennifer Brown Mailly Mark Francis Ahlers Guy Robert Humphrey Craig Richard Reynolds Class of 1989 Pamela Addison Barker Mark Ira Jacobs Mary Schneider Rua Participation: 17% Catherine Elaine Blackburn Allen Jonathan Koslovsky Zachary Thompson Space Denis Jay Bowshier James Patrick Botti Leslie Beth Kramerich Kimberly Ann Marie Stewart Julia Petrik Cain Wanda Lees Carter Matthew Christopher Lawry Keith Carlyle Wamock Margaret R. Carmany Barbara Fultz Florez Evette Diana Lutman Carrie Carnahan Young Peggy Ward Com Benita Ann Kahn John Vance Magee Lawrence John DeBrincat Beth Frailey Krishtalka Robert Bruce McPherson Class of 1987 Michael Dubetz Donald Byron Leach, Jr. Michael Stratton Miller Participation: 12% Richard Paul Emich, II William Joseph Leibold Steven Worthington Miller Jane Stempel Arata Carrie Elizabeth Glaeden William Lyle Loveland Alexander Mitrovich Joseph Paul Boeckman Jodi Ann Govern James Michael Lyons, Jr. Judith Ann Northrup Smith Rufus Brittingham, IV Dodd Joseph Gray Gregory Louis McCann, Jr. Pierre Warren Priestley J. Scott Clark John Paul Gruber Robert Morse McNitt Karen Krisher Rosenberg Jessica Mussman Ditullio Douglas Richard Jennings Paul Frederick Moke Kenneth Merle Roth William Adam Herzberger Heidi Johnson-Wright Diane Williams Moore Robert John Winston Laura Marie Hillenbrand John Lewis Landolfi 19 D onors by C lass Y ear

■ Marc David Matlock Theodore Pete Mattis Seema Hiralal Patel Dean Frederick Pacific Deborah Elaine Mayer Madeline Ann Rambo Rafael A. Perez-Mendez Paul Halsted Robinson Lawrence Walter Mitchell Steven Howard Sneiderman Joanne Sue Peters Jennifer Irene Rudinger Boyd Kenneth Moehring Jennifer Sostaric John Allen Wells Michele Marie Schoeppe Carol Hiromi Morita Tina Maria Tabacchi Ronald Scott Wollett David Todd Scott Jeffrey Alan Moyer Erich Helmut Weiss Elizabeth M. Sherowski Lawrence David Pollack Robert Alan Zimmerman Class of 1995 Brian Edward Shinn Gregory Allen Price Participation: 9% Sabrina Wood Shumsky Charles Eugene Ringer Class of 1992 Scyld Douglas Anderson Denise Lynn Skingle Charles Gregory Rowan Participation: 5% Katherine Ann Augustine Susan E. Small Rachelle Cohen Singer Cynthia Barker Albrecht Elaine Aten Brown Arlus Jeremiah Stephens Thomas George St. Pierre Robert Rockower Goldstein Robert Brannon Bumgarner Jean M. Suh Richard Edward Surkamp, Jr. Jill Ringel Hart Scott Allen Campbell Mark David Van DerLaan Andrew Glenn Sykes Christine Steigerwald Julian Jennifer Lynn Duvall Christopher Emory Wasson Kristin Lynn Watt Christopher Alan Murray Catherine Edwards Heigel Amy Jean Waterfield Marcia Elizabeth Williams Lisa Jane Sutton Kevin Conwell Hughes Andrew Paul Wecker Laura Curtis Warren Stephen Randall Kleinman Merlyn Gail Williams Class of 1990 Ted L. Wills Yale Robert Levy Participation: 14% William Pailet Zox Elizabeth Welch Lykins Class of 1997 David Smith Bence Michael Norman Manly Participation: 15% Brenda Kay Bowers Class of 1993 Eric Douglas Martineau Daniel Harry Binegar Lori Ann Burlington Participation: 10% Amy Elizabeth Matuza David Solomon Bloomfield, Jr. Neil Patrick Calvin Timothy Raymond Bricker Colleen Christa Mumane Marc Stephen Blubaugh Daniel Lewis Clark, Jr. Carol Lynne Day Shalini Nangia Brian Edward Bums Marilyn Kuhl Day Brian Timothy Deas Nimesh Mahesh Patel Rudra Choudhury Timothy Robert DeWitt Gavin Christian Jangard Rena Guamieri Sauer Kelly Estes Collinsworth Melissa Zox Feldman Elizabeth Power Kessler Samantha Ann Shuler Alison Marie Day Catherine Cordial Geyer Mark David Klimek Kari Koenig Walter Shawn Richard Dominy Thomas Edward Geyer Brian Ross Landy Jennifer Lynn Fate Brigid Ellen Heid Susan Munroe Milne Class of 1996 Lee Joshua Freedman Laurie Nizinski Jacques Dennis Bernard Pollard Participation: 20% Randall Kerry Gibson Frank Joseph Janik, III David Elliott Pritchard Rebecca Berry Anaya Deborah Jeannette Glasgow John Andrew Kastelic Gretchen Marie Ratcliff Erica Lee Armbrust Kurt Powell Helfrich Dean Matthew Lenzotti Rebecca Spencer Ruppert Gail Lynn Bakaitis De Wolf Daniel Patrick Herd Carolyn Matheson Loeffler Todd Lesley Sarver Trina Lynn Blakemore Robert Jerome Johnson Daniel Yukio Mekaru Michael George Seidel Adam K. Brandt Kevin John Kessinger Katrina Dee Miller English Kimberly M. Skaggs Julie Elizabeth Brigner Brett Harry Lieberman Anna Rouhana Seidensticker John Gregory Smith Shannon Todd Browne James Anthony Marx Monte Glen Smith Robert Martin Spiegel Lori Ann Clary Richard Jude Mattera Julie Ellen Squire John Kenneth Stipancich Tanya Marie Conrath Ryan Patrick McBride Joseph William Stadnicar Jonathan Andrew Woodman Kelly Leann Culshaw Matthew Michael Mendoza Jeffrey Stuart Sutton A’lis Anne Devoe Allen Garreth Nederveld Terre Lynne Vandervoort Class of 1994 Julia L. Dorrian Edward Daniel Papp - Elizabeth Jean Watters Participation: 9% Kimberley Ann Doucher Kristopher Lamar Richardson Lisa Marie Ashbrook Terri Lynn Enns Saundra Kohl Schuster Class of 1991 Jennifer Renee Belmont Shawna L. Erb Andrea R. Shemberg Participation: 9% Matthew Rickey Copp Stephen David Estelle Jacqueline Kirian Shultz Douglas Lee Anderson Marsha Elizabeth Curley Karen Elizabeth Frees Erin Mahoney Sutton Elizabeth Laughlin Anstaett Wendy Friedman Dulman Katherine Doggett Goldsmith Mark Duane Wagoner, Jr. Ryan Neal Armstrong Loyal Arthur Eldridge, III Jennifer Cale Goldson Robert Lewis Weise, Jr. John Brooks Cameron Elizabeth A. Esarove Marylynn Graf-Caswell Matthew Bruce Zisk Jeffrey C. Clark William Taylor Fischbein Bill Ray Hedrick Rhonda J. Foster Dane Arthur Gaschen Katherine Lynn Joseph Class of 1998 Deborah Bonarrigo Gray Tatia Christine Gibbons James Clifford Joslin Participation: 2% Stephen Christopher Gray Joan Aletha Harris-Graves Michael M. Kowsari Kathleen Eileen Lyon Debbie Watts Johnson Christine Kessler Lamb Rodd B. Lape Eric Andre Reeves William C. Johnson, Jr. Dana Anderson Mondon Scott Thomas Lindsey Matthew John Tyack John Francis Kreber David A. Oppenheimer Sarah L. Me Farlane Robert Anthony Wells

20 Fr ie n d s, Faculty and S taff

We acknowledge the support Ernestine R. Dilorenzo Ray H. Kocher Jane Brazik Perry of faculty, staff, and friends John E Dilorenzo, Jr. Charles J. Krauskopf Judith Johnson Peterson with grateful appreciation. Rosella K. Doherty Olive Kuhfeld Richard A. Peterson These gifts were made Jonathan M. Dulmah Mary Campbell Lewis Anne E. Portwood between July 1, 1997 and Eleanor Hodges Durfey Thomas Alfred Lindstrom Ira W Price June 30, 1998. Victoria L. Eastus Paula Jewett Lockhart Margaret H. Price Margaret A. Esarove Pamela H. Lombardi Helen Rives Pruitt Cynthia Baker Robert H. Essenhigh Scott A. Manifold Nancy Barbara Rapoport Norman Baker Thomas Jude Eyerman* Laura W Marx Linda Gold Readey Virginia Hutchison Bazler* Howard E Fink Daniel John Massey Thomas B. Ridgley Mary Beth Beazley William Form* Irma Mattem Nancy Houser Riester Carole Louise Beerbower Donald J. Genetin Randall Maurice Mattem Marilyn H. Rodefer Pamela Harrison Benedict James Merrill Goldson Karen W McCann Nancy Hardin Rogers Joyce B. Blackmore Patrick Howard Gorman Janet Conrad McCutcheon Susan M. Rooney Lewis R. Blackson Marcia Rudmose Gradel Jean S. McNamara Barbara Baird Rowland Mary A. Blackson Claudia Davis Grayson James E. Meeks Allan Jay Samansky Evelyn Brandeberry Arthur Franklin Greenbaum Priscilla L. Meeks Paula Samansky Keith R. Brandeberry Suzanne Groszek Halm Andrew L. Merritt Kathryn King Shoots Helen Lewis Brody Elizabeth Bennett Hamilton* Deborah J. Merritt Donald K. Sidle Linda Raye Brown Robert Sherman Hamilton* John Richard Meyer Frank James Smith Grace Lucille Burk Eloise Edwards Hays Judith Driehorst Meyer Jean MacAlpine Smith* Christine Haley Buvinger Richard Earl Heffelfinger Alan Michaels Margery Howe Smith Anthony R Carr Constance M. Henderson Grace D. Michaels Barbara Rook Snyder Teresa McConnell Carson John Porter Henderson Patricia J. Miller John Steigerwald Joanna Lawyer Cavendish* Patricia Herlihy Dorothy Penska Mills* Sonya H. Stenulson Kathleen Ann Chase Lawrence Herman Virginia J. Mott Peter E Swire Anita Esbenshade Chapman* Neil Wallace Higgins Agatha E. Murphy Joyce G. Tisman John J. Chester, Sr. Margaret Hopkins Hines Betty Southard Murphy Gregory Michael Travalio Albert L. Clovis Thomas G. Hoffman II Earl Finbar Murphy* Nadene N. Vanaman Gloria M. Cochran* Deborah Jo, House-Cohen David A. Nelson Ralph I. Vanaman Richard K. Cochran* Joan N. Huber* James Francis Nicklaus Fatti Gasperini VandeWerken Ruth Colker Frances C. Huck Nancy Nicklaus Jane L. Wame Bonnie Richardson Cooper John B. Huck Betty Parr Nogle George West Brian K. Cooperider Kathleen Mosier Humphreys Ardith Knapheide Nolte Sara Gerhart Wieland* Mary Jane Brown Cox John Stephen Jacobef Byron Henry Nolte Gregory Howard Williams Kathleen L. Daley Esther Mally Johncox Kathy N. Northern Cheryl Evans Zeiger Harriet W Dana Lucy Adamowicz Johnson Mary Power Olinger Famela S. Ziermaier Sharon L. Davies William Edward Knepper+ Max Brown Olinger Betty Ann Denniston CarolJ. Kocher Carol Grant Opferman *President’s Club Pauline E. Dickey Kevin C. Kocher Constance K. Peebles-Wolfson + Deceased

Henry Folsom Page S ociety

Founding during the Law Thomas E.+ and Joanna Cavendish John O. Henry+ Richard Shenk Centennial Campaign, the George H. Chamblin+ John A. Jenkins Sol A-..+ and Florence Shenk Henry Folsom Page Society Marshall Cox Carter C. Kissell William A. Shenk recognizes individuals who Eleanor Middleton Davis William E. Knepper Norman W Shibley+ make major gifts to the Jacob E. Davis, II Melodee S. Komacker Sarah M. Stanley+ College of Law. Craig Denmead J. Faul+ and Mary McNamara Stuart A. Summit Charles W + and Florence W Thomas E Fatton L. Jack VanFosseh ' Rodney B. Baldwin Ebersold J. Gilbert and Louella H. Reese David A. and Ann M. Ward JohnJ. Barone Grace Heck Faust+ Melvin L. Schottenstein+ Paul E and Anita W ard1 Frank E. and Virginia H. Bazler Noel E. George+ Stanley Schwartz, Jr. + Robert J. and Helen Watkins: John M. Bowsher Tomar Green Charles H. and Joyce Shenk Benjamin L. Zox

21 C orporations and Foundations

The following firms, Columbia Energy Group M. A. Young Foundation Shell Oil Company foundations, and corporations Columbus Chapter American Marathon Oil Company Foundation made gifts to the College of Corporate Counsel Martin E White Company LPA Shumaker, Loop and Kendrick Law between July 1, 1997 Association Mastercard International Inc. Standard Products Foundation and June 30, 1998. The list The Columbus Foundation— Mead Corporation Foundation State Farm Companies includes corporations which Robert K. and Irenez Mellen Foundation Foundation matched contributions from McNamara Fund Nationsbank The Wilfred Goodwin and alumni and friends. Coopers and Lybrand Nationwide Insurance J. Jean Goodwin Trust Deloitte and Touche Foundation Thomas F Peterson Foundation Abbott Laboratories Foundation Ohio Bar Review and Writing Thomas J. And Mary E. Alexander and Baldwin Inc. Dresser Foundation Seminar Inc. Eyerman Foundation American Bar Association Eaton Charitable Fund PMBR-Multistate Specialist USX Corporation Foundation •Fund for Justice Eric L. Weeden Company LPA Multistate Legal Studios Inc. Union Camp Charitable Trust and Education Exxon Education Foundation Porter, Wright, Morris and Voltolini and Voltolini American Electric Power First Chicago NBD Arthur Law Firm Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Company Corporation Preformed Line Products Pease American Express Foundation Foundation for the American . Company Xerox Foundation American Inns of Court Board of Trial Advocates Procter and Gamble Fund Yanceys Custom Sportswear Foundation—Law School General Electric Fund Project Gould Inc. Foundation Ameritech Foundation Harris Foundation Amgen Inc. Hewlett-Packard Company Amoco Foundation Inc. Hubert A. and Gladys C. Arco Foundation Estabrook Charitable Trust Arline and Thomas Patton IBM International Foundation Foundation Jerome D. Catanzaro Arthur Andersen LLP Company LPA Foundation Jewish Community Federation Autoliv Asp Inc. of Cleveland—Robert M. B P America Inc. and Lucille Rl Levin Fund Bell Atlantic Corporation Kauffman and Coxon Borden Foundation Inc. Kerr-Mc Gee Corporation Borg-Warner Foundation Key Bank—Cleveland Bricker and Eckler Kimberly-Clark Corporation Bunge Corporation Foundation CSX Corporation Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation Foundation Student activities, such as Moot Court, are beneficiaries of the gifts Chrysler Corporation Fund of our faculty and friends. These students are part of the Moot Court Cleveland Cliffs Inc. Leo Yassenoff Foundation Inc. governing board. Foundation Lutz and Oxley Attorneys

G ift C o m m itm en ts Through Life Insurance

The following individuals have Philip M. Collins William W Jenkins R. L. Richards made a deferred gift to the Samuel R. Cook Victor R Kademenos John B. Rohyans College of Law through the Jacob Erastus Davis* William J. Kelly William E Schenck purchase of an insurance policy. John P DiFalco Randall A. Kugler Donald A. Sibbring Edwin M. Ellman Charles J. Kurtz William E. Sloan Ralph D. Amiet Jean E. Gall James Kaufman Lawrence* Stephen A. Soler Phillip H. Barrett David S. Hay Linda S. MacKay Craig M. Stewart John P. Beavers Richard J. Hobbs Mark K. Merkle Robert M. Strapp Paul Angelo Bernardini* Willard W Hoyt Timothy A. Oliver Stuart A. Summit Clair M. Carlin John D. Hvizdos Dale K. Perdue Edward L. Tails Michael E Colley* William Michael Isaac* William J. Rteidenbach Anne K. Tsitouris 22 Alumni News

What happened to Sarah, who sat next to you in Torts? Is Bill, who was with you on the Moot Court team, still practicing? Here’s the place to find out. Learn the latest news about what is going on with your classmates. You can let us know the. latest news in your life, as well. Send it to: Liz Cutler Gates, The Law Record, The Ohio State University College of Law, 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43210-1391. Photos are welcome but will not be returned. You may also fax your news to (614) 292-1383 or send it via e-mail to: [email protected]. A form is included on page 30 for your convenience.

Class of 1953 — 45 Year Reunion: Row 1, Joseph W Goldman, Harold L. Talisman, Thomas J. Finneran, Gordon K. Bolon; Row 2, Don E. Fuller, Hope Joseph Balint, Peter T. Vatsures, John M. Tobin; Row 3, William E. Arthur, Caywood J. Borror, Hudson Hillyer; Row 4, Richard A. Schreck, Frank E. Bazler, Samuel H. Porter.

1940s married to Marge for 49 years. They have Joseph Horwitz ’40 is still practicing with two sons, David and James, and three his son, Martin S. Horwitz, in Beachwood, grandchildren. The Lees live in Apple Valley Ohio, where he resides with his wife, near Howard, Ohio. Cecilia. “I love to read about the old Robert Walter Minor ’48 was in private timers,” he writes. “O.S.U. was great. practice with Vorys, Sater, Seymour, and My law school days were fantastic.” Pease, Columbus from 1971 to 1989. He is now of counsel with the firm. Donald Richard Brenner ’48 is still active at American University where he served as Class of 1948 — 50 Year Reunion: Row 1, 1950s a professor of business law and real estate Thomas L. Corogin ’53, Port Clinton, John A. Robenalt, John O. Harper, Roger F. law. He also has a small private practice. Redmond; Row 2, Thomas W Connor, John L. Ohio, recently returned from his Schwahe, Robert Walter Minor, William B. William J. Lee ’48 was named to Who’s eighth transatlantic sailing trip. For the Saxbe, Walter Marion Lawson Jr., William Who in the World in 1998. He has been past 2 1 years, he has operated a marina J. Lee. Passion for Law is a Family Legacy A passion for law was the beginning of a legacy for one Cleveland law school most attorneys in his family had family. Sheldon Mike Young ’51 says it all began with his attended. One reason, he noted, was that the tuition was great-grandfather in Russia. His great-grandfather, Shia much cheaper at O.S.U. Melsky, was perhaps not considered a lawyer, but did read His experience at the College of Law has led him to write the law on his own. a book as a memorial to men in his law school class. Resume/ Melsky was prohibited from being admitted to the Resume asks his former classmates,“Where were you in World Russian bar because of a quota imposed on Jewish lawyers. War II and what have you done as a lawyer since returning?" According to family tradition, that quota did not stop him He has also written a seven-volume treatise on pension law. from attending trials with his Ukrainian business partner, Young has used his law degree to advocate maintaining who was an attorney. Years later, after the family immigrated social security and he has taught pension law courses at Case to America, 15 of Melsky’s descendants or their spouses Western Reserve School of Law. He has also practiced pension became lawyers. law for more than 40 years, carrying on a legacy that was There was one family tradition Young didn’t follow. bom in Russia. — Jennifer Wright He opted to study law at Ohio State, rather than the 23 Alumni News

Former Ohio State Law Dean Retires From Florida State

Editor’s Note: L. Orin Slagle, 1957 graduate, long-time professor, to legal practice, joining a and former College of Law dean, retired late last year from the small Columbus firm. “I faculty of the Florida State University College of Law. During his had some doubts about my tenure at Ohio State, the South Charleston, Ohio native gained ‘real world’ preparation for wide respect in the University and the Columbus communities. teaching law,” he says. But Upon his retirement from Florida State, we reprint excepts (with in 1971, satisfied that his permission) from an article that appeared in the Summer, 1998 experience as a litigator FSU Law magazine. and legislative lobbyist Orin Slagle, a key player in the development of the provided a sound Florida State University College of Law, has retired from the foundation for teaching, faculty. The law school’s third dean, serving from 1980 to he returned to the Ohio 1984, Slagle presided over a period of significant growth and State law school. capital investment for the young institution. In the estimation He was named dean in of many, the improvements of the early- and mid-1980s were 1974, and in 1977 was L ° rin sla8le ’57 a turning point for the law school, helping bring FSU to elected president of the Law School Admission Council. parity with the University of Florida College of Law, the state’s A year after returning to full-time teaching in 1978, Slagle other public law school. Slagle also oversaw construction of was persuaded by friend and then-FSU law professor Mildred the law library. Ravenell to apply for the law deanship in Tallahassee. Already At 1957 graduate of The Ohio State University College under consideration for the same position at the University of of Law, Slagle worked briefly for the Wall Street firm of Florida College of Law, he withdrew, and accepted the FSU Mudge, Stem, Baldwin, and Todd before joining the offer, assuming his duties in July 1980. Air Force in 1961. While in military service, he taught a In December, Slagle ended his academic career with a business law course in a University of Maryland overseas flourish, treating fellow faculty and staff to a slide show at a extension program. The assignment reinforced an earlier luncheon held in his honor. His program mixed an illustrated interest in teaching and headed him in the direction of an overview of law school life and politics with images of the academic career. wildlife of rural Maine, where he and his wife, Lois, have Out of the Air Force, Slagle accepted a position of retired. When he waved a final goodbye to friends and assistant dean and assistant professor at Ohio State. By 1968, colleagues, he headed for his car, waiting at curbside, already after promotions to associate dean and professor, he returned packed for the trip north. full time, except for when he is sailing the ocean. Otto Meletzke ’59 retired as Senior Counsel, Corporate Matters after 27 years with the American Council of Life Insurance in Washington, D.C. He currently resides in Annandale, Virginia with his' wife, June, and daughters, Kimber (18) and Kristan (11). 1960s Charles Richard Gregg ’63 was director of taxes and insurance at Pharmacia, Inc., headquarters in Dublin, Ohio, before his retirement on January 1, 1998. He and his wife, Pam, have two children. Howard R. Besser ’6 6 is an adjunct professor of law at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. He has worked as a trial Class of 1958— 40 Year Reunion: Row 1, David A. Ward, Ronald Roger Calhoun, Lee C. attorney for the U.S. Employment Mittman, Robert H. Coldren, Lawrence H. Stotter; Row 2, Ed Kimmel, William Wentworth Opportunity Commission. He received Moland, Lodge L. Hanlon, John T. Brown, Don J. Rapp, Richard S. Wagner, Ronald Logan, thè Cuyahoga County Bar Association’s Raymond A. Bichimer, Bernard Fineman, IvofYoung. 24 Alumni News

Frank A. Ray ’67 has been re-elected to another two-year term on the Board of Governors of the Columbus Bar Association. He is a partner with Ray and Alton. Ron Perey ’68 has been listed again in Best Lawyers in America in the area of medical malpractice, plaintiffs. He was also listed among one of Seattle’s “Super Lawyers” in the area of personal injury litigation in the August, 1998 issue of Washington Law and Politics. He and his wife, Janice, recently moved to a home overlooking Puget Sound and Shilshole Bay. H. Marcus Price, III ’68 writes,“All of my career has been international in one form or another, including service as International Counsel to Gulf Oil in Zurich and Tokyo and later as International Counsel to Class of 1963—35 Year Reunion: Row l,Jim Hopple, John D. Liber, Michael Bemerd Hendler, Chevron in Singapore. I recently served as Sarah Smith Tinton, Jacob E. Davis, Gerald A. Mollica; Row 2, Charles Richard Gregg, Phillip M. General Council of the Caltex Group of Walther, Jim Miller, S. Michael Miller, John Weaner, William H. MacBeth, George P. Tsamas, Frank Companies in Singapore.” E. Steel, E. Geoffrey Clapham. Price took an early retirement in 1997 to start a small management consulting President Award in July ’98 where he is The company is a holding company for firm, Applied Science Consulting, where secretary of the association. In April ’98, he three hospitals — Ohio Valley Medical he serves as President and CEO. “We received the U.S. EEOC’s Volunteerism Award. Center and Peterson Hospital in apply scientific theory and methodology Keith A. Sommer ’66 is the first individual Wheeling, and East Ohio Regional to resolution of management problems,” from Ohio to be elected Chairman of the Hospital in Martins Ferry, Ohio. He and he explains. Board of Ohio Valley Health Services and his wife, Carolyn A. Sommer, reside in He also teaches graduate courses in Applied Education Corp., Wheeling, West Virginia. Martins Ferry. Anthropology and Legal Anthropology at the University of -Columbia and serves on anthropology graduate students’ dissertation committees. (He’s held a Ph.D. in cultural anthropology since 1989.) Married to the former Julie Jones since 1993, he and his wife own and live on a working registered Aberdeen Angus farm. “We run about 40 head plus calves,” he says. Daniel D. Connor ’68 has joined with Robert Behai ’77 to form the firm of Connor and Behai in Columbus, Ohio. For the past 25 years, he has been engaged in the private practice of law. His practice consists of criminal defense litigation, workers’ compensation, professional licensing and administrative cases, and injury litigation. 19 7 0s Recognized for outstanding service and Class of 1968—30 Year Reunion: Row 1, Dennis R. Newman, J. Stephen Van Heyde, Leland Dean leadership to the Ohio Association of Civil Cole, Patrick Martin McGrath, James E. Anderson, Dan Igoe, George W Hairston, Bruce W. Neckers; Row 2, Pete Rukuy, Mike Herr, Dennis A. Schulze, Bo Barker, Susan Case, Jack H. Cook, Trial Attorneys was Charles C. Warner ’70 Geoffrey Stem, John William Hoppers, Jerome John Joondeph; Row 3, George Michael Hauswirth, He was recently presented the 1998 Frank Richard L. Boylan, Donald E Kelch Jr., Jerome R. Schindler, John Patrick DiFalco, Bert R. Nester, S. Hurd “Member of the Year” Award by Mark D. Keller, C. Nicholas Fry, Dan Connor, Jim Russell Burkhard, Charles J. Kegler, Robert M. the OACTA. The award is named for NcNair, William Leahy, Norman J. Ogilvie, Clark P. Pritchett Jr., Robert M. Shapiro. OACTA’s first president. During his career, 25 Alumni News

Gary J. Leppla ’75 is a partner in the firm Leppla, Ambrose, and Moore, Ltd. in Dayton, Ohio. He completed his 1997-98 term as president of the Dayton Bar Association in Dayton. He was elected to the Board of Governors of the Florida Bar Association in 1998. Steven R. Kerber ’76 has been designated as a Life Trustee by Catholic Social Services, Inc. The Life Trustee designation is an honorary award given in recognition of extraordinary, long-term service to the agency. He is a partner of the law firm of Bricker and Eckler L.L.P, Columbus. Robert J. Behai ’77 has formed a firm with Daniel Connor ’68. The firm, Connor and Behai, is be located in Columbus. He has practiced law privately in Columbus since 1977. Behai’s practice consists of business planning, litigation and transactional work; Class of 1973—25 Year Reunion: Row 1, unknown, Nick Vincent Cavalieri, Richard A. Frye, domestic relation litigation; probate and Professor Lawrence Herman, Phil L. Dombey, William A. Spiatley, Joseph Thomas Dattilo; Row 2, estate planning; and injury litigation. Harold P. Paddock, Frank A. Ray, William H. Woods, Bernard L. Karr, Joseph Litvin, Michael E. Flowers ’79, a partner of the Terry Lee Kilgore, Thomas I. Hausman, Ronald R. Henderson, Alan Gaefield Anderson. law firm of Bricker and Eckler L.L.P, was elected chair-elect of the Business Law Warner has concentrated his practice in to Houston, Texas, as a result of my Section of the American Bar Association the areas of employment and labor law and transfer from USX Corporation to during its annual business meeting in civil litigation. Marathon Oil Company where I will be Toronto. During his tenure he will be Stephen J. Smith ’71 has joined the law senior vice president, finance and responsible for identifying and appointing firm of Schottenstein, Zox, and Dunn as a administration. The couple previously vacant committee chair positions to be filled partner. He will be practicing in the area of lived in Wexford, Pennsylvania. during his year as Chair of the section. public law, with a focus on municipal and government law. He has worked as safety director of Grove City from 1972-76 and as a City Attorney in Dublin since 1978. Roger McClure ’72 co-authored text on the Virginia Elder Law for the National Institute of Business. He has also presented papers on real estate and estate planning for the Bostom Collegium and on Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation for the Tucson Collegium of the National Network of Estate Planning Attorneys. He co-authored an article on Ascertainable Standards and one on Family Limited Partnerships for the first and second editions of Conspectus Current. He will complete a three-year post­ doctorate program as a Fellow of the Esperti Peterson Institute this fall. He resides in Centreville, Virginia. Allan Resnick ’72 has been appointed as Class of 1978—20 Year Reunion: Row 1, Michael Grove, James Sheatsley, Fred Ballam, Robert F. Divisional Vice President, Law at the Smith, Randall Mitchell Walters, John I. Cadwallader; Row 2, Peg Polanski, Leslee Wilkins Walgreen Company in Deerfield, Illinois. Miraldi, Jane Ballenger Socoloff, Jane Spring Martin, Joan Grant, Carol Ann Sheenan, Jill Metcalf He and his wife, Nancy, live in Northbrook, Orizondo, Catherine Adams, Karen Shoupe, Susan Mary Kuzma; Row 3, Dennis George Schwallie, Illinois. William J. Corzine, Edwin Romero, Richard T. Taps, David C. Olson, James Balthaser, Gordon K. Harris, Robert Joseph Gilker, David Alexander, Steven H. Noll; Row 4, Dale Phillip Shrallow, John Thomas Mills ’73 writes, “Dorothy Steven L. Dauterman, John W. Cook, Christopher C. Skambis, John Fergus, W. Ray Persons, David and I are in the process of moving Paul Miraldi, Stephen Francis Vogel, Thom Bhmes, David William Devita. 26 Alumni News

of products including electronics and appliances. David Ballard ’87 has a short story appearing in the anthology, Best American Mystery Stories 1998, published by Houghton Mifflin. Daniel K. Weiss His story,“Child Support,” was selected as one of the best of the year, along with stories by Joyce Carol Oates, Lawrence Block, Mary Higgins Clark, and Walter Mosley. Ballard lives in South Bend, Indiana, with his wife, Jeanne, and his son, Jack, where he practices law with Hardig, Lee and Groves and writes —15 Year Reunion: Row 1, Sonja Maria Haller, Pamela Vest Border, Larry R. part-time. He is working Border, Deborah L. Kenney, Laura Coen Barnard; Row 2, Tony Mollica, Lynda G. Loomis, Diane on his first novel. Reichwein, Ann Snyder, Gayle Elizabeth Parkhill, Marjorie Hasselback Brant, Ellen Beth Leidner, Toki M. Clark ’87 Richard Goldberg. David Ballard completed Gerry Spence’s ° 7 month-long Trial Lawyer’s Thomas D. Sykes ’79 recently joined as a Laurel Israel Chapman ’85 is an associate College at the Spence partner the firm of Scribner, Hall and council at Red Roof Inns Inc., in Dublin, horse ranch near Jackson, Thompson, L.L.P in Washington D.C. Ohio. She recently married Steven R Sturm Wyoming in August, The firm practice is limited to federal tax and received an M.B.A. degree. 1998. Forty-eight matters, in which it mainly represents large Daniel K. Weiss ’85 has been elected to the attorneys from around corporate groups in the financial services board of directors of the Association of the country are annually and insurance industries. For 14 years Progressive Rental Organizations (APRO). selected to attend the before joining the firm, Sykes was an Weiss, from Worthington, Ohio, is owner program. She is a partner attorney with the tax division of the U.S. of seven home furnishing stores known as at McNeal and Clark Department of Justice. More recently, he Toki M. Clark Weissbrothers, which lease and sell a variety in Columbus. ’87 served as an Assistant Chief of the Division’s Court of Federal Claims Section.

The Columbus Bar Association has elected Carl D. Smallwood ’80 as secretary-treasurer of the for the 1998-1999 term. Smallwood has been an active member of CBA since 1980, and Carl D. served on the Board of Smallwood ’80 Governors for four years. He is currently a partner with Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease. Percy Squire ’81, a partner with the firm of Brickler and Eckler, Columbus, was recently elected for a two-year term to the Board of Directors of the American Judicature Society, a national organization that promotes excellence in the courts. Class oj iy«8—w Year Reunion: Joania Walker Vori, Lisa Weekley Coulter, Nancy A. Novack, Michael M. Schmidt ’82 and his wife, Jill B. Karen D. Wheel, Jacqueline M. Orlando, Sharon A. Hicks, Susan Hering Howard, unknown, Maggi Schmidt, welcomed their first child, Megan Sitko; Row 2, Alan D. Alford, Robert Solomon, Douglas Sladoje, Philip E Downey, Michael H. Marie Schmidt, on July 22, 1998. Walsh, Patrick E. Sweeney, Gregory A. Gehlmann, George Lovett, unknown Jeff Snell 27 Alumni News

Bonnie O’Neil ’87 has been elected a Regina M. Ford ’92 was recently appointed as attorney at Western Michigan University, partner in the Columbus office of manager of the Court of Appeals Division of the where he worked in a variety of legal areas. Thompson, Hine, and Flory L.L.E She is a Clerk’s office in the Franklin County Courts in Last October, he began a 10-month-long member of the firm’s labor and employment September, 1998. She has been a staff attorney legal fellowship sponsored by the German practice area, focusing on labor management for the Franklin County Public Defender, where government. He currently resides in relations in both private and public sectors, she represented indigent defendants in the Frankfurt, Germany. employment litigation, administrative Franklin County Municipal Court. proceedings, arbitration, employment At the law firm of Bricker arid Eckler L.L.E, Keith R. Haupt ’92 and his wife, Mary discrimination law and civil services. She Bobbie S. Sprader ’94 joined the firm as an Wynn Haupt, welcomed triplets, Megan also has extensive practice experience in associate with the workers’ compensation Rebecca, Bradley Raymond, and Rachel commercial law and litigation, as well as practice group. She was previously with landlord/tenant law. Marie, into their lives on April 10, 1998. Jacobson, Maynard and Tuschman, Co., “The babies and parents are doing great!” he L.EA., where she prepared medical writes. He is associated with Wood, Herron, negligence cases for trial. The Class of 1988 Reunion directory and Evans in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Haupts Amy Mass ’95 has joined the law firm incorrectly reported Katherine R. live in Loveland, Ohio. Shanabook is deceased. We are happy of Schottenstein, Zox, and Dunn. She will to report that she is alive and well and Kendal M. Coes ’93 was an Assistant be practicing in the Bankruptcy and living in Arlington, Virginia. The source City Prosecutor for the City of Cincinnati Litigation Departments. for four years after receiving his J.D. degree. of the error was a report from the Keith Hartzell ’96 recently became an University’s Alumni and Development In May, 1998, he was appointed to serve as a Magistrate in the Hamilton County Court associate in the law office of Taft, Stettinius Information System. The College of Law and Hollister L.L.E Alumni Relations Office regrets the of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Bridget H. Kahle ’96 has joined the firm of reporting of this error and apologizes for Division, where he currently serves. He and Bricker and Eckler, LL.E as an attorney in any inconvenience this may have caused. his wife, Diana, live in Cincinnati. Jami Honaker Oliver ’93 was recently the firm’s education law department. Carol H. Morita ’89 has assumed the elected president-elect of the Ohio Women’s Jennifer C. Goldsmith ’96 is currently position of senior corporate counsel at the Bar Association. She is an attorney at the a staff attorney forjudge Dana S. Preisse Headquarters of Underwriters Laboratories firm, Robert D. Emey and Associates in in Columbus. She is married to James Inc. in Northbrook, Illinois. She previously Columbus. She and her husband, Kent Goldson and, on January 28, 1998, worked with Masuda, Funai, Eifert and Oliver, live in Hilliard, Ohio. she gave birth to a baby boy, Micah Mitchell, Ltd. in Chicago for more than nine Timothy Amata ’94 is an associate attorney Farell Goldson. years. She and her husband, Eldon Kakuda, in the New York City office of O’Melveny Melanye K. Johnson ’96 has joined the an attorney at Masuda, Funai, and their and Myers L.L.E firm of Howard and Howard Attorneys, EC. children, Miya (4) and Quentin (9 months) She specializes in commercial litigation reside in the Chicago area. Joining the corporate/mergers and acquisitions department of Frankfurt, and labor and employment law in their Dean Scheidler ’89 and his wife, Julie, Germany office of Clifford Chance Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, office. welcomed boy and girl twins, Connor and Rechtsanwaelte and Solicitors is Brian Jeff Wilson ’96 recently joined the firm Lauren, into their lives on January 26,1998. Kurzmann ’94. He previously was a staff of Finkel, Whitefield, Selik, Raymond, Dean is a special agent with the FBI in Ferrara and Feldman, Farmington Hills, Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is a sniper on Michigan, as a labor and employment the FBI swat team and works on a drug and litigation associate. organized crime squad. Shawn R. Dominy ’97 formed a partnership 1 990s of Scott and Dominy Co, L.EA. in Susan Peltier Tortorice ’90 was just named Columbus. Shawn and his wife, Lara, general counsel of Special Data Processing live in Fowell. Corp., one of the country’s largest teleservice Lee Freedman ’97 joined the Department companies. She and her husband, Rusty, live in St. Petersburg, Florida. of Justice, Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch in Washington, D.C. in Lorain native Edward D. Murray ’91 was October 1998. recently elected to the position of director at the firm of Krugliak, Wilkins, Griffiths and Deborah Glasgow ’97 just completed a year Dougherty Co., L.PA. in Canton. He focuses with the AmeriCorps Domestic Violence his practice in the area of general corporate Law alumni returned to the College to share tips Froject with Southeastern Ohio Legal for out of state job searches on September 11. Services. She has accepted a position as an and commercial law with an emphasis on From left, Todd Freed ’97, New York; Jill Metcalf counseling employers on their workers’ attorney with the Western Reserve Legal Orizondo ’78, Detroit, Mich.; and Steve Vogel ’78, Services in Akron. compensation programs. He and his wife, London, England, discuss how students could find Tamara, reside in Massillon with their three employment outside Ohio. Professor Jim Brudnev, Victoria K. Hazemey ’97 has joined the children, Cicily, Edward Liam, and Casey. right, served as moderator. Columbus office of Squire, Sanders and 28 Alumni News

Dempsey L.L.P She is an Jennifer G. Gilbert ’98 has joined Cleveland. She and Steven Jeffrey Elleman associate in the litigation Price Waterhouse Coopers, Chicago, as ’96 were married on May 23, 1998. practice group. a tax consultant. John Lowe IV ’98 has joined the firm of Kurt P. Helfrich ’97 Jennifer Nicholson Elleman ’98 has joined Kegler, Brown, Hill and Ritter, Columbus as has joined the firm of the firm of Calfee, Halter and Griswold in an associate. Thompson, Hine and Flory L.L.P as an associate Kurt P. Helfrich in the firm’s corporate and ’97 securities practice area. Andrea R. Shemberg ’97 has joined the Columbus law office of Squire, Sanders In Memoriam and Dempsey, L.L.P, as an associate in the Labor Practice Group. Prior to j o in i n g the The College of Law has received word of the deaths of these alumni. We express our firm, she was statewide director of S.S.I. sympathy to relatives and loved ones. Kids Disability Project for the Ohio Legal Assistance Foundation in Columbus. Noel L. Greenlee ’25 died September 5, 1998 in Worthington, Ohio. He was 96. A retired attorney with 54 years active practice in Columbus, he is survived by his Lisa Fields Thompson ’97 has joined son, Bruce R. Greenlee, Richmond, California; six grandchildren; and four great­ the staff of the Ohio House of grandchildren. Representatives as a legislative aide for Representative David Hartley (D) of Horace D. Riegle ’25 died January 31, 1989. He was 87 and had resided in Ormond Springfield. She was also appointed to Beach, Florida. A Florida resident since 1927, he was a retired circuit judge, municipal a one-year term on the Women’s Council judge for Daytona Beach, and former attorney for Daytona Beach and Holly Hill. at Flintridge Baptist Church. She and William Page“Salty” Lewis ’37 died June 12, 1998 in Columbus. He was 83. He was her husband, Alfred Thompson, reside a familiar statehouse figure and former director of what is now the Legislative Service in Columbus. Commission. He is survived by his wife, Mary Ann; a sister, Marie Williams; and three Laura L. Wilson ’97 has sons, William Page III, Jeffrey Michael ’81, and Peter Andrew. been appointed as Assistant Prosecuting George Rudyard Russ ’42, a retired corporate attorney, died February 4, 1998 in Attorney of Montgomery Denver, Colorado at the age of 81. A resident of Aurora, Colorado, he is survived by County, Ohio. She is a son, Richard, of Parker, Colorado; two daughters, Sandra, Arlington, Virginia, and assigned to the Support Linda Barnard, Upper Arlington, Ohio; two grandchildren; and two sisters, Phyllis and Enforcement/Paternity 7 , Gretchen Russ, Portsmouth, Ohio. _. . r , 1 Laura L. Wilson Division ot the Prosecutor’s >97 James A. Pearson ’53, a judge in Franklin County Municipal Court for 24 years, Office, where she is died August 17, 1998. He was 73. He is survived by his wife of 49 years, Julia Carter responsible for initiating court action Pearson; four children, Cynthia G. Bryant, James C., Gregory C., and Steven W; and to establish paternity, establish child seven grandchildren. support amounts, and compel parents to pay child support through filings of Howard J. “Jim” Gallant ’56 died February 10, 1998 in Columbus at the age of 68. contempt of court. A native of Perry County, Ohio, he is survived by two sons, Douglas J. and Robert W, and a daughter, Traci J., all of Columbus; two brothers, Robert Gallant, Michigan, and Jason J. Camp ’98 has joined the Patent William Gallant, Virginia; and a sister, Doris Margaret Page, Columbus. Division of the Procter & Gamble Company in Cincinnati. Thomas V. Martin ’63 died June 23, 1998 at the age of 62 in Columbus. A Franklin Salvador A. Cicero Dominguez ’98 County Municipal Court judge since 1987, he had served as a judge in the Franklin received a Silver Key from the chair of the County Court of Common Pleas from 1985 to 1987. Law Students Division of the American Bar Former adjunct professor, William Edward Knepper, died June 6 , 1998 in Columbus. Association for his role in encouraging the He was 8 8 . He received his undergraduate degree from The Ohio State University, professional development of law students. then went on to the College of Law and Columbus College of Law. Admitted to the He served as a division delegate for the Law Bar in 1933, he was senior partner in the law firm of Arter and Hadden and taught School Division last year. He has returned to at the College of Law from 1972 to 1993. He is survived by daughters, Mary L. Daum, Mexico City to practice law. Shoreham, N.Y. and Bonne L. Knepper, Woodinville, Wash.; sons, Richard Scott Cynthia Lynn Dawson ’98 has joined Knepper, Carson City, Nev., James W Lichtenberg, Lawrence, Kan., and John M. Squires, Sanders and Dempsey L.L.P as Lichtenberg, Grand Rapids, Mich.; and eight grandchildren. an associate in the Labor Practice Group. 29 Effect are ■ormi irem

Welfare reform and how children are impacted will be the topic of a symposium at The Ohio State University College of Law on March 12 and 13, 1999. “The Implications of Welfare Reform for Children” is sponsored by the College of Law, along with the College’s Center for Socio-Legal Studies and the Ohio State Law Journal. The symposium will focus attention on those most directly affected by welfare reform but often excluded from the larger political debate—children, according to Professor Katherine Hunt Federle, director of the Justice for Children Project at the College of Law Conference speakers from different disciplines, including law, health policy, social work, and public policy, will discuss their recent research and raise questions about the consequences of welfare reform for the nation’s children. “By creating an opportunity for exchange on these issues, the symposium should provide direction for future judicial and legislative action,” says Professor Federle. Call 614-292-6829 for registration information.

ALUMNI RESPONSE FORM Send us your news! We want to help you keep in touch with your classmates through the Law Record. Send us information about your recent achievements, awards, promotions, etc. and we will include it in an upcoming Alumni News section. Please complete the form below and mail it to Liz Cutler Gates, Editor, The Law Record, 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1391, or fax your news to (614) 292-1383. You may also e-mail news to: [email protected] Name ______:______Law School Graduation Year Employer Name _ Your Title Business Address Business Phone _ Business Fax Business E-Mail Home Address__ Home Phone___ Home Fax Home E-Mail Spouse Name___ _Is spouse and alumna/us?_ Preferred Mailing Address Home Business My most recent professional and/or personal news is _

(Use separate sheet if needed. Photographs are welcome, but will not be returned. All submissions are edited for style and brevity.)

30 The Ohio State University COLLEGE OF LAW 1999 ALUMNI AWARDS Call for Nominations

Nominator Information:

Name: “The Ohio State University College Address: of Law is one of the City:___ State: Zip:. best kept secrets Phone :( )_ . Fax:( )_ E-mail: in American legal Nominating statements should include supporting documents, such as a biographical sketch, curriculum vitae, or resume (typewritten and single-spaced on not more that education. Our alumni two S'/a" x 1 1 " pages), may be attached. Nominators should take great care to address know firsthand the the specific award guidelines when writing the nomination. All forms must be postmarked, or faxed, no later than January 25, 1999. If you need more forms for quality of our additional nominations, please call 614-292-293/!' Mail to: Office of Alumni Affairs, College of Law, 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1391 program, students, Alumni Medalist Award for national or international career achievement and faculty. This single award, the highest honor accorded by The Ohio State University Alumni I can think of no Association, Inc. is presented to alumni who have gained distinction as outstanding exponents of a chosen field or profession and have brought extraordinary credit to the more effective way University and significant benefit to humankind. The medalist may be selected from of informing others among nominees in this or any other award category. than by telling the Nominee:______stories of our Professional Achievement Award for career achievement The Professional Achievement Award is presented to alumni who have superb records graduates and their of distinguished career accomplishments and who have made outstanding contributions accomplishments.” to their professions. Nominee: Gregory H. Williams Dean and Carter C. Kissell Outstanding Alumna/us Award for graduates whose accomplishments merit special recognition. Given annually to a College of Law graduate for Professor of Law exceptional achievement or outstanding service to the College or community.

Nominee: 31 COLLEGE OF LAW 1999 ALUMNI AWARDS Call for Nominations

Ralph Davenport Mershon Award for service to Ohio State Ralph Davenport Mershon 1890, was largely responsible for the Alumni Association’s early beginnings as an organized force for the University. The award is presented to alumni who have demonstrated exceptional leadership and service to The Ohio State University.

Nominee: ______—------———

William Oxley Thompson Award for early career achievement Named for the beloved fifth president of Ohio State, this award is presented to young alumni who have demonstrated distinctive achievement in a career, civic involvement, or both. Nominees must not reach their 36th birthday during the year in which the award is to be given.

Nominee:______— ------—------

Recent Alumna/us Award for graduates whose early accomplishments merit special recognition Granted to an individual who has graduated from the College of Law within die past ten years whose accomplishments exemplify outstanding professionalism or loyalty to the College community. /?'

Nominee:______j \ \ KT—144— If / j \ \ \ ------

Alumni Citizenship Award for community; fernce' § 1 Initiated in 1958, the Alumni Citizenship Award isthe oldest give{4 py the Asso^ation.JThe award is presented to alumni who have distinguished themselves in service to humanity and who have hesfSemplified the University’s motto, “Training for Citizenship, by having performed significant voluntary service to their community beyond the call of business or professional duty.

Nominee:______1 ¿A- — , j W — | — ------

Dan L. Heinlen Award for University advocacy This award is presented to those who have realized in advocating the interests of the University with one or more of its important publics. It recognizes ac h ie v e m ^ h n -a ^ v itie s^ g n g from students and faculty recruitment to advocacy with elected officials and opinion leaders on behalf of The Ohio State University.

Nominee: ______— > ------

Outstanding Faculty Award for a current law professor Given annually to a current law faculty member for outstanding teaching, research, or community service.

Nominee:.______------*■------

Josephine Sitterle Failer Award for volunteer service to students This award is presented to those whose voluntary personal involvement has enhanced the quality of student life at the University. Created in 1988, it honors those who exemplify the spirit of selfless caring for Ohio State students.

Nominee:. Annual Alumni Return

Its name is simple and straight-forward. But it’s a title that is a shadow of the event that it is. This year’s Annual Alumni Return, on September 11 and 12 was jam-packed with class reunions (see alumni news for photos), alumni awards, Buckeye football, and many trips down memory lane.

Julia Dorrian ’96 was honored as the Recent Outstanding Alumna. She was joined by her family at the awards ceremony.

Professor John Quigley was named Outstanding Faculty Member by the Law Alumni Society. His mother, The Dean’s Reception provided Ruth Quigley, of St. Louis, and his plenty of opportunity for alumni wife, Adele Shank ’80, joined him and their guests to mingle. for the awards ceremony.

Members of the Class of 1978 get re-acquainted at their reunion dinner in the College of Law library.

Reviving a tradition of pitching pennies on the steps of Page Hall is Lawrence Stotter ’58. Looking on is Ann Ward, wife of David Ward ’58. Upcoming Events FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18 FEBRUARY 10 Reception for Fall JDR Candidates Frank R. Strong Law Forum Lecture 5:00 p.m., Faculty Lounge 4:00 p.m., Auditorium Randall Kennedy MONDAY, JANUARY 11 Professor of Law, Harvard Law School First Day of Classes FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 MONDAY, JANUARY 18 Faculty Workshop Martin Luther King Day, No Classes 2:30 p.m., Faculty Lounge Uniform Mediation Law: Where’s the Gain Nancy H. Rogers • Joseph S. Platt- FRIDAY, JANUARY 22 Porter, Wright, Morris and Arthur Professor of Law Legal History Workshop The Ohio State University College of Law 2:30 p.m., Faculty Lounge Wager of Law and the Ius Commune R.H. Helmholz FRIDAY, MARCH 5 Ruth Wyatt Rosenson Professor of Law Legal History Workshop University of Chicago Law School 2:30 p.m., Faculty Lounge Studying and Teaching Ohio Legal History: A Discussion About the Future MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1 John Winkler Faculty Workshop Partner, Christensen, Shoemaker and Winkler 2:30 p.m., Faculty Lounge Legal Theory and the Law of Contracts FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 12 AND 13 Jody S. Kraus The Implications of Welfare Reform for Children Professor of Law, A Symposium Co-sponsored by the College of Law’s University of Virginia Justice for Children Project, Socio-Legal Center and the Ohio State Law Journal