University of Law School Forum ARGOYL Volume XX Number 1. Summer 1989

Focus on Students 2 Asst. Dean Joan Rundle Reflections on Time Spent in Distant Places 4 Prof Charles Irish Law School Addresses Crisis in Sports Representation 6 Prof Frank Remington

1988 Fund Drive Report 7 David G. Utley, UW Foundation Update: Lawyer-Legislators 14 Yvonne E. Vegas David Deininger {'7S} Gregory Huber {'Sl} Mary Hubler {'SO} Peggy Lautenschlager {'SO} William Te Winkle ('79} Faculty Notes 18 Alumni Notes 19 Editor's Note 22 Mystery Picture 22 1989190 Board of Directors and Board of Visitors, Wisconsin Law Alumni Association 24

Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin Postmaster's note: Please send form Cover Photo: Law School, published quarterly. 3579 to "Gargoyle," University of Wis- Summer on Bascom Hill consin Law School, Madison, WI 53706. Edward J. Reisner, Editor Earl J. Madden, Design ISSN 0148-9623 USPS 768-300

Publication office, Law School, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI. 2

Focus on Students Assistant Dean Joan Rundle Dean Cliff Thompson

n the fall, 1987 Gargoyle, four students of the class of 1989 contributed to an article on Profiles of Diversity, sharing their experiences prior to law school. They are now on the brink of their new careers, and three of the four now share with us a glimpse of their law school years and their hopes for the future. I think you will be delighted to read their reports.

KEITH BORDERS is a graduate of the University of Okla- homa, where he was the recipient of numerous awards for his leadership and commitment to student govern- ment, including Chairman of the Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government. Keith writes: As I await the May 20, 1989 commencement and the swearing-in ceremonies in June, my reflections bring me to these thoughts. The past three years have been filled with challenges and encumbrances which have tested and strengthened my ability to analyze, reason and solve. These experiences have reinforced my awareness of the need for diversity and cultural awareness in our legal notions on equal protection, due process and civil rights system. while enhancing my ability to distinguish between the My legal education has been a journey leading to a most effective approach for expanding and utilizing thes. more concise understanding of our legal system's influ- legal doctrines. I also want to take this opportunity to ence on and control over our lives. In many ways I find thank my fellow BLSA colleagues for their endless sup- myself caught in a crossfire between a system that once port which is a crucial link in surviving law school. intentionally excluded blacks, yet ideally is built on prin- The University of Wisconsin Law School provides a ciples for fostering diversity. great opportunity to educate oneself in law and life. It I have been able to benefit from some of the societal has been a long, exciting, and very cold journey for this changes which have gradually surfaced because of the native Oklahoman. The past, hopefully, will complemen justice system. Those benefits include exposures to civil my future challenges as I move on to Washington, D.C., rights litigation through work with the NAACP Legal to work in the Civil Rights Division of the US Depart- Defense Fund and Julian, Olson and Lasker, a small Mad- ment of Justice. The Division is responsible for enforcing ison firm. I have also participated in private commercial federal statutes prohibiting discrimination on the basis 0 litigation in Chicago. None of these internships and clerk- race, sex, handicap, religion and national origin. ships came easily. Competition is fierce, but at the same With this opportunity I realize a portion of my drean time I felt encouraged knowing this Law School had to dissipate discrimination. That makes me feel good par given me a solid foundation. ticularly when civil rights issues have been placed on thr I have been fortunate in that I was exposed to back burner and "individualism" has been promoted to another aspect of legal education which I believe is the detriment of social equality. I can only strive to posi- unique-the opportunity to research and work closely tively infiltrate our way of justice with the diversity that with visiting Professor Kimberle Crenshaw, former I bring. The University of Wisconsin Law School has Hastie Fellow from this Law School, whose research assisted in preparation toward this endeavor. deals with race and gender struggles for guaranteed rights, and Professor James E. Jones, Jr., in the area of AARON BRANSKY Aaron came to the law school "after affirmative action. four years of working as an ice cream and frozen foods

I want to express my sincere appreciation to Profes- route salesman .... t s He decided to change his career "to sors Jim Jones, Vicki Schultz, Martha Fineman, June an indoor job with no heavy lifting." He reports: Weisberger, Joe Thome, David Trubek, Ann Althouse and My wife, Barb and I always get a laugh out of the Gordon Baldwin. Through their advice and course work monthly newsletter we get from a local fraternal organi- I have been able to challenge and assess my preconceived zation. Why? Because the bowling columnist (a Mr. 3

Tucker) begins every single column, every single month, Illinois, only 90 miles from Peoria (I still don't want to with the exact same lead, something like: "Already it is say anything unkind about Peoria). Barb will find a nurs- May. Where did the time go?" It's become a long-running ing position at a Champaign-Urbana hospital, and I'll joke with us, and I've wondered: "Why can't that guy clerk one year in Danville, Illinois for the Honorable come up with a better lead to his column?" Harold Baker, Chief Judge of the Central District of Illi- Now I'm in Mr. Tucker s shoes. I've been asked to nois. After that, Barb and I go to Duluth, Minnesota, look back over a period of time and report what hap- where I'll clerk two years for the Honorable Gerald pened. And as I consider what has happened over my Heaney, a Senior Judge on the 8th Circuit. I'm very much three years at the Law School, the main thing that comes looking forward to the experience with these two fine to mind is Mr. Tucker's cliche: "Already it is May. Where judges. did the time go?" Maybe I ought to give Mr. Tucker a lit- So those are my career plans through September tle more credit than I have in the past! 1992. After that the crystal ball gets hazy. I like to think . To begin: like most of my classmates, I survived my that by then I will have a line on a specific place to work, first year of classes. I then enrolled in the Legal Assis- but if I don't, I can always send out resumes indicating tance to Institutionalized Persons Program (LAIP), an my interest in an indoor job with no heavy lifting. excellent clinical program in which students gain experi- ence while attempting to resolve legal problems of indi- gent clients. I very much enjoyed working under the KIM ELLEN PATTERSON is a native of Milwaukee and supervision of Clinical Associate Professor David Cook. graduate of the University of Wisconain-Milwaukee, in While Dave and I could not help all of the prisoners who elementary education and music. She worked for nine wanted our assistance, we did provide useful service in a years prior to law school as a private investigator in the number of cases. For example, it was gratifying to help criminal defense field, and later as a key account sales secure the release of a Mariel Cuban who had been representative for L'eggs hosiery. As graduation detained in the Oxford, Wisconsin prison by the Immi- approaches, Kim states: gration and Naturalization Service. In addition, we had Time flies when you're having fun-and when you're some success in a few family law cases. These cases going to law school. Not that law school hasn't been fun. inspired me to write an article on child support, and I'm It has been because of the people I have met, what I have told the article will be published in the Wisconsin Law learned about law, and what I have learned about myself. Review quite soon. I was fortunate enough to have a varied law school times: trying to write an article, doing work at LAIP, lin- experience. I took classes, of course, had a clinical experi- ing up interviews for clerkships, and attempting to keep ence with LAIP which lasted all of my second year as up with classes. Still, things fell into place well. I did line well as the initial summer, and participated in Law up a clerkship and a summer job. I did pass all of my School organizations such as the Equal Opportunity courses, and I even found myself enjoying subjets I Advocates and the Wisconsin Law Review. thought would be terrible snoozers, such as Trusts and My work experience included a research assistant- Estates. Amazing! ship with Professor Walter Dickey and a summer clerk- Barb and I enjoyed a relaxed summer between my ship with a Milwaukee firm which continued on a part- second and third years. We both were glad to have time basis through all of my third year. Through these worked the summer days in nice, cool offices. although experiences I saw some of the differences between aca- a room air conditioner at home would have been nice demic pursuits and private law practice. I also found that during the drought. I'm afraid I'm getting soft. I was comfortable with both. I must like clinical programs, because I have enrolled My "permanent" future is not yet determined. Next in the Legal Defense Project (LDP) for my last year at law year I will do a one-year judicial clerkshp with the Hon- school. LDP exposes students to the challenges and orable Terence Evans, Federal District Court Judge, in rewards of criminal trial practice (it also exposes students Milwaukee. Through that experience I hope to improve to a near-constant stream of bad jokes from Ben Kern- my writing and learn from observing the attorneys who pinen, the Acting Program Director!) LDP students work practice there. After that, who knows? I hope my career under the supervision of experienced and dedicated attor- will include public service, as well as private practice. neys, and represent indigent clients who have been I do know, though, that I would not trade my law charged with criminal misdemeanors. I have a number of school experience, the social side, or the academic side, cases that are set for trial this semester: maybe I should for anything. I clearly made the right decision both com- have tossed my cane over the goalpost last fall after all. ing to law school and coming to the University of Wis- So, if all goes well, I will graduate in May. I still consin Law School. remain pleasantly surprised at the generally high quality of Law School instruction and at the decency of most of LINDA BENNETT, one of the original "four" featured in my classmates. I do regret, however, that there just hasn't the Fall, 1987 Gargoyle graduated from Rutgers Univer- been enough time to see friends and acquaintances (both sity with a major in communications. After graduation, in and out of law school) as often as I would have liked. she worked in the publications field for three years, and Ah well. for two of those years she was on the staff of Ms. Maga- After graduation, Barb and I will travel about the zine. Linda reports that she will be working for the country, enjoy a few train rides, and have a good time not Department of Labor in Washington D.C. in the Civil doing work. In July we move to beautiful East Central Rights Division. 4

Reflections on Time Spent in Distant Places by Charles R. Irish Volkman-Bascom Professor of Law

The members of the University of Wis- discourage foreign investment nor be consin Law School faculty have remark- excessively generous toward the foreign ably extensive experience in working in investors, and the bulk of my work has foreign environments. In the last couple involved trying to help the governments of years, for example, Larry Church has strike a balance between the bite of taxes lectured in Australia, Germany and Tai- and the lure of fiscal incentives. wan and, as you read this, he may be lec- In the course of my work, a few les- turing in Russia; Gordon Baldwin has sons have emerged (sometimes, to my been a visiting professor in Germany and chagrin, the emergence has been delayed Japan; Marc Galanter has given lectures by the cranial density of the receptor). in Canada, Germany, Israel, India, Wales, England and Australia; Jim Jones gave a Listen long before speaking. paper in England; Margo Melli delivered When we conjure up the image of an a paper in Belgium; Gerry Thain deliv- American consultant in a foreign place, ered an address in England; Joe Thome we tend to think about people who tell has taught and consulted in Brazil, Pan- others how to structure or restructure ama, Haiti and Colombia; and Zig Zile their activities in a different (and possi- has been lecturer and/or commentator bly, but not necessarily, better) fashion. in Germany, Sweden and Italy. Even the One of the surprising things I learned Dean, Cliff Thompson, has found time in fairly early on in this work is that foreign his crowded schedule for professional consulting involves much more listening travel to Israel, the Sudan, Germany and than speaking. In this respect, foreign Things may not be as they appear. England. consulting is really no different from A while back, I was in Dominica Further, Professors Baldwin, Church, domestic lawyering-in both instances, working on rewriting the country's tax Dickey, Therkheimer, Whitford, Dean the person to whom advice is being laws applicable to capital expenditures. Thompson, and I all have spent a fair directed oftentimes will have given a As you might imagine, this is a topic mos amount of time working in Africa, and great deal of thought about the problems, of the business people in Dominica had Professors Zile, Macaulay, Trubek and possibly even more thought than the hot given a great deal of thought to and so, a Thome have devoted considerable parts shot advisor. an early stage in the project, the Prime of their lives to teaching or advising in Several years ago, I was asked to draft Minister of Dominica, Eugenia Charles, Latin America. Professor Dick Bilder, a sales tax for Zambia. I devoted the bet- arranged a day long discussion with the however, is the only faculty member ter part of 6 weeks to the project, at the leaders of the business community. At the discussion, I was seated next to the I know of who has been to Antarctica end of which I introduced the draft to the (although several of us are always looking Attorney General and the Minister of Prime Minister at a large table with an oversized tablecloth that hung down ove: for reasons to go there). Finance. I had structured the sales tax so the table. As the meeting droned on So, what is a law professor doing on that it applied at the wholesale level, through the morning and into the after- foreign working trips? The answer rather than at the more traditional retail noon and the themes grew more and undoubtedly is as varied as there are law level. As I was explaining how the sales more repetitious, I became fidgety, and professors on foreign working trips. In tax would work at the wholesale level, my case, the majority of my overseas the frown on the Attorney General's face when I become fidgety I also become travel has involved working with foreign became deeper and deeper. In the end, kind of itchy. Being itchy, I sought some governments either directly or through he threw the entire draft out because he quiet solace by rubbing my leg against the solid object just to my right, which I the intermediation of international or was adamantly opposed to a sales tax at assumed to be the leg of the table. But regional agencies, such as the UN Centre the wholesale level. Active listening thus on Transnational Corporations or the is indispensable in defining the parame- when the solid object moved and the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States. ters of the problems on which advice is Prime Minister directed a withering look In most cases, the focus of my work has sought and in identifying the more subtle in my direction, I realized the error in m been on international tax issues affecting pitfalls in the project (such as the quiet, assumption. foreign investment in less developed or but strong opposition of a high ranking newly industrialized countries. A peren- official to one plan or another). nial concern of the governments in these countries is that their tax systems neither 5

What flies in Peoria may crash in take into account, for example, the eco- Ouagadougou. nomic and educational dislocations One of the more difficult tasks facing caused by North Yemen's long standing Successful resolution of the prob- a foreign advisor is to set aside the pre- hostilities with South Yemen. I also have lems put before a foreign advisor conceptions the advisor inevitably brings had the experience (an even more painful from his or her home environment. Suc- experience, I might add) of seriously usually depends in large part on cessful resolution of the problems put underestimating the level of an audi- the advisor's ability to fashion the before a foreign advisor usually depends ence-the most notable instance in recent in large part on the advisor's ability to memory being when I gave a talk on resolution to fit the context in fashion the resolution to fit the context in state taxation of multinational corpora- which it arises, not the social, which it arises, not the social, economic tions to an economic study group under or political setting out of which the advi- the sponsorship of Kenriden in Tokyo. economic or political setting out sor springs. Thus, it really is important to gain some of which the advisor springs. A couple of years ago, I was invited to understanding of the milieu in which lecture on international tax issues affect- advice is to be given. ing capital importing countries in the Sometimes even simple things Middle East. The lecture was in Khar- would be today, tomorrow or yesterday are hard. toum, the Sudan, and was attended by when she arrived in Fiji. senior tax administrators from many of A while back, I gave a series of lec- tures on tax treaties and fiscal incen- the countries in the Middle East. The lec- With remarkably few exceptions, tives to attract foreign investment in ture was scheduled for 6 or 7 hours and people around the world are friendly, Nuku'alofa. Tonga. The audience con- I used all of my allotted time in what I generous and curious. sisted of tax and finance people from the considered to be a rather clear and possi- Apart from the people overcome with governments of many of the small coun- bly even erudite discourse on the topic. religious fanaticism or facing desperate tries in the South Pacific. To get to (My wife Anne has told me that anybody poverty, it is remarkable how friendly Nuku'alofa, I first flew to Honolulu who expects somebody else to listen to and warm people are-whether in Egypt where I took a left turn and flew south him or her for 6 or 7 hours has a severe or Ghana, Taiwan or Indonesia, Kenya or for about 2000 miles to Apia, Western ego problem-and, somewhat grudgingly, Denmark. Not surprising, a healthy curi- Samoa. About noon on a Sunday, I I suspect she is correct.) osity about foreigners also seems almost boarded an old propeller driven plane After the lecture, the Sudanese hosts universal and in my experience the curi- and then flew for about 3 hours south to put on a delightful banquet at an old osity has almost been the undoing of a Nuku'alofa. On the flight from Apia to hotel on the banks of the Nile. At the couple of the unsuspecting locals on Nuku'alofa, we never changed time banquet, I was seated next to the Com- whom I have imposed my presence. zones, but we crossed the international missioner of Taxes from North Yemen. A short while ago I was walking out dateline, so that we arrived in Nuku'alofa During the early stages of the banquet, the front door of a hotel in the Pesca- about 3:00 on Monday afternoon (which we chatted about various topics quite dares, a group of islands in the Taiwan was fortunate because Tonga is a king- removed from international taxation; but Strait. Not many occidentals get to the dom of devout Christians who honor the about midway through the meal, he Pescadores and as I walked out the hotel Sabbath to such an extent that planes do looked at me and said: "Professor. I am door, a middle-aged man passing by on a not fly on Sunday). certain that what you said today was bicycle was so intent on looking me over After the lectures, I went to a place I accurate and very important. Unfortu- that he crashed into the rear of a parked dimly recollect was named "Harry's Bar" nately, I understood not a word." It car. There was no serious physical dam- where I met up with several chiefs and turned out that he had about eight years age to body or machine, but his friends their associates from Pago Pago who hap- of formal education and was largely self- and neighbors were rather merciless in pened to be visiting Nuku'alofa at the taught. teasing him about his crash. same time. I had met the chiefs on the At least as to that listener and proba- In another instance, I was at a public flight from Apia and they were very nice bly others, I had missed the boat, in part bath at a resort north of Osaka, Japan. and generous in spite of my apparent low because I had applied a Western stereo- The bath was two tiered, with the wom- social standing-in that part of the world, type as to the level of education of senior en's bath on a slightly higher level than social standing is heavily influenced by level tax administrators. I had failed to the :-~n's. Visual separation was one's height and girth, two attributes it achieved with the placement of various was clear I lacked. After a while in Har- plants on the women's bath where it ry's Bar, several of us were sitting on the looked out over the men's bath. Since I floor discussing our upcoming travels out In this respect, foreign consulting was the only non-Japanese in the bath, of Nuku'alofa. It turned out that one of there was considerable curiosity about us was leaving the next day for Fiji. is really no different from domestic my presence: Was this bald-headed To get to Fiji, which is about 400 miles bearded occidental anatomically cO;'rect? lawyering-in both instances, the northwest of Nuku'alofa, she had to fly person to whom advice is being The curiosity extended to the women's first to Apia, Western Samoa, where she b~th ,:"here an old women was caught directed oftentimes will have given would spend the night and then leave the climbing through foliage to get a glimpse next morning for Fiji. We figured out that at the strange sight below her. Again, a great deal of thought about the when she left Nuku'alofa tomorrow, she there was no serious damage, except problems, possibly even more would arrive in Apia today. But after possibly to my ego since my presence spending the night in Apia and then fly- seemed to generate more chuckles than thought than the hot shot advisor. ing back across the international dateline sighs of awe. to Fiji, we were stumped as to whether it 6

w School Addresses Crisis in Sports Representation Prof Frank Remington Ed Garvey

The University of Wisconsin Law School, in conjunction with Sports Seminars, Inc. will host the first national Institute for the Representation of Athletes (IFRA) from August 11-17 in Madison. The Institute is the culmination of a three-year joint effort by Ed Garvey and Frank Remington to address the crisis in sports representation. Garvey, a lecturer in sports law at the Law School, is the former Executive Director of the Players Association, as well as a past Deputy Attorney General for the State of Wisconsin. Remington, Jackson Professor of Law, is the immedi- ate past chair of the NCAA Infractions fied to participate in subsequent ele- and Assistant Attorney General for the Committee and a former faculty repre- ments of the program. State of Minnesota spoke to the athletes sentative to the Big Ten Conference. "Our plan is simple," says Frank on NCAA regulations, professional The primary goal of the Institute is to Remington. "We have developed a three- sports, and the process of selecting an train a pool of competent professionals phase program which involves the major agent. who will provide qualified, ethical, and actors in sports representation: prospec- Statistics reveal that the odds against reasonably priced representation to ath- tive agents, student athletes, and officials a professional sports career are over- letes. The Institute will address the from intercollegiate athletics. whelming-even for outstanding ath- increasingly prevalent problem of "First," Remington continues, "the letes-yet surveys indicate that the major- unscrupulous, incompetent representa- Institute will focus on training a group ity of student athletes still believe it is tion, a problem exemplified by the stories of ethically aware, qualified representa- attainable. "The seminar program is valu- eminating from the federal trial of sports tives. Participants will receive instruction able to them, even if a pro career is not agents Norby Walters and Lloyd Bloom in the law and economics of sports, the in their future, because they learn how on racketeering and fraud in Chicago. regulation of intercollegiate athletics, the to effectively choose a professional repre- The University of Wisconsin Law role of the contract representative, and a sentative, "maintains Coach Morton. School has supported the planning of the practicum in contract negotiation. The "The program will not work without Institute program with a $10,000 grant last two days of the Institute will be the cooperation of coaches like Don Mor- from the Bruce Thomas Legal Ethics targeted at collegiate athletic officials, to ton," Garvey adds. "We must reach and Fund. "Because so many sports represen- familiarize them with the techniques to educate the athlete before he retains his tatives are attorneys, the problems in the be used in securing responsible represen- first representative. With the average sports world ultimately impact upon pro- tation and to create a campus resource professional career approximately four fessional ethics," says Frank Remington. for the athletes to consult. Second, years, the first contract they sign might "The grant is both logical and timely." through a series of on-campus seminars, very well be their last." The focus of the Institute may be we will educate the student athlete in the "We are confident we have created summarized in three words: prevention realities of entering professional sports a comprehensive program which will through education. Through a dual and selecting a sports representative. directly address the recurring scandals in emphasis on training a corps of compe- Third, we will develop a 'day-on-campus' sports representation," Garvey empha- tent sports representatives and educating program, to facilitate an open forum sizes. "The faculty of the Institute will be the student athletes, the Institute will through which the student athlete may comprised of experts from professional seek to eliminate the sports agency prob- meet and interview prospective agents." sports, intercollegiate athletics, sports lem at its source, thus preventing the ath- The second phase of the comprehen- representation, economics, and labor law. letes and academic institutions from suf- sive program-the student athlete semi- The curriculum will provide the partici- fering future harm. nar-was successfully tested through a pant with the information and skills nec- Those who attend the Institute in presentation to the Wisconsin football essary to successfully represent athletes. August will face an intensive four day team in April, 1988. Through the cooper- Finally, we will promote the creation of presentation of the material relevant to ation of coach Don Morton and the UW an open atmosphere in which a student the prospective sports representative. At Athletic Department, Garvey, Remington, athlete may select his representative." the end of the four days, an examination Clarence Underwood, Deputy Commis- "All we need to make this work," con- will be administered; only those who suc- sioner of the Big Ten, and Alan Page, cludes Garvey, "is enough people with cessfully complete the exam will be certi- member of the pro football Hall of Fame the desire and commitment to become qualified, ethical sports representatives." 7

University of isconsin Law School 1988 Annual Fund Report David G. Utley, Vice President University of Wisconsin Foundation

Voluntary support, long a major factor in Alumni giving to the Law School in enabling leading private law schools to 1988 showed mildly encouraging results. achieve a measure of excellence, has in During the year ending December 31, recent years become increasingly impor- 2,145 donors contributed a total of tant to the strengthening of legal educa- $699,907 in support of the School's edu- tion at the University of Wisconsin. cation, research and public service pro- While public funding of the Law School grams. This compares with 2,200 donors is generous for a state of Wisconsin's size who contributed $838,806 during the and wealth, it will not, by itself, enable previous year. While one never likes to the School to reach the level of excellence see a decline in the total level of volun- in teaching, scholarship and public ser- tary support, it should be noted that the vice that the state and the legal profes- 1987 total was made possible by a gener- sion deserve. For the Law School to ous bequest of $400,000 received that achieve such standards, additional year. During 1988, the largest single gift sources of support are required; to pro- received, again a bequest, was for just vide financial assistance to deserving under $130,000. If one adjusts for these students, to support clinical programs two bequests, alumni giving showed a and the hard pressed library, to enable significant increase last year. faculty to undertake programs of The apparent modest decline in the research and public service, and for number of donors, from 2,200 to 2,145, many other purposes. And to what more is attributable to a policy, introduced in natural or appropriate source of support 1988, of counting only those year-end can the Law School turn than its own gifts actually in hand on December 31, fund for the teaching of ethics in law; alumni, those who have benefited most rather than those postmarked in Decem- and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Soref from a Wisconsin legal education? ber but received in January. As a result (LL.B. '26) of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Happily, law alumni have in recent of this policy, 141 donors whose checks whose contribution of $50,000 in 1988 years responded with increasing generos- were in the mail on New Year's Eve was the first payment on a $150,000 ity to the needs and opportunities facing (honest!) were not counted in 1988, but pledge, $130,000 of which will establish their School. A successful endowment- will instead be included in the 1989 an unrestricted endowment in the Law raising effort in the mid-1980s raised totals. Had they been included last year, School. And, finally, special recognition nearly $7,000,000 for the support of the number of alumni contributors would is due Joseph Fishelson (LL.B. '361 of scholarships, endowed professorships have risen by 4%. Shreve, Ohio, whose exceptional support and other programs. Since then, atten- Several very generous gifts received of the Law School in recent years was tion has been devoted to increasing the during the past year deserve special attested to once again by his additional annual fund, a less glamorous form of mention. Notable among these were a generous gift of $25,000 in 1988. fund-raising than a "campaign" but one bequest of $127,840 from the estate of To these friends, and to the more than equally vital to the School's health. Here Mrs. Maud Smalley of Racine, who 2,000 other law alumni who have demon- too progress has been significant as the established a scholarship fund in mem- strated their concern for the Law School percentage of law alumni contributing ory of her late husband, Gwynette Smal- by contributing to its programs, we at the to the School has grown from about 10% ley (LL.B. '221; a gift of $50,000 from Law School and the University of Wis- at the beginning of the decade to 26% Bruce Thomas (LL.B. '51) of Paradise consin Foundation express our deep in 1988. Valley, Arizona, who has established a appreciation.

Gifts to UW Foundation By Class

Class Number Average Median Total Non-alumni 235 $1,392.13 $100.00 $327,149.90 Non-college alumni 78 $325.05 $25.00 $25,354.00 1923 2 $75.00 $75.00 $150.00 1925 2 $25,012.50 $25,012.50 $50,025.00 1926 3 $3,358.33 $50.00 $10,075.00 1928 2 $4,500.00 $4,500.00 $9,000.00 8

Gifts to UW Foundation By Class

Class Number Average Median Total

1929 6 $100.00 $100.00 $600.00 1930 6 $58.33 $50.00 $350.00 1931 7 $92.50 $35.00 $647.50 1932 10 $118.50 $37.50 $1,185.00 1933 16 $236.25 $150.00 $3,780.00 1934 5 $90.00 $100.00 $450.00 1935 9 $204.49 $35.00 $1,840.00 1936 14 $87.50 $25.00 $700.00 1937 6 $208.33 $100.00 $1,250.00 1938 14 $106.79 $100.00 $1,495.00 1939 14 $221.07 $100.00 $3,095.00 1940 16 $128.08 $59.64 $2,049.29 1941 22 $144.55 $75.00 $3,180.00 1942 12 $82.08 $100.00 $985.00 1943 2 $62.50 $62.50 $125.00 1944 1 $50.00 $50.00 $50.00 1945 3 $13.33 $10.00 $40.00 1946 8 $63.13 $50.00 $505.00 1947 19 $145.00 $50.00 $2,755.00 1948 15 $187.33 $100.00 $2,810.00 1949 21 $155.24 $50.00 $3,259.99 1950 24 $108.75 $100.00 $2,610.00 1951 31 $1,637.13 $50.00 $1,470.00 1952 21 $70.00 $50.00 $1,470.00 1953 14 $114.64 $37.50 $1,605.00 1954 16 $75.63 $75.00 $1,210.00 1955 14 $65.36 $50.00 $915.00 1956 23 $137.39 $90.00 $3,160.00 1957 20 $55.07 $50.00 $1,101.50 1958 22 $62.09 $50.00 $1,384.24 1959 18 $155.00 $100.00 $2,790.00 1960 13 $105.77 $50.00 $1,375.00 1961 22 $56.59 $50.00 $1,245.00 1962 23 $95.98 $50.00 $2,207.50 1963 16 $130.94 $50.00 $2,095.00 1964 19 $96.05 $100.00 $1,825.00 1965 15 $155.00 $100.00 $2,325.00 1966 34 $108.82 $50.00 $3,700.00 1967 36 $165.17 $50.00 $5,946.00 1968 29 $117.93 $60.00 $3,420.00 1969 29 $158.62 $50.00 $4,600.00 1970 28 $87.68 $50.00 $2,455.00 1971 25 $183.60 $100.00 $4,590.00 1972 48 $69.43 $50.00 $3,332.50 1973 57 $83.73 $50.00 $4,772.50 1974 69 $75.81 $50.00 $5,231.00 1975 58 $68.02 $50.00 $3,945.00 1976 39 $66.47 $50.00 $2,592.50 1977 56 $55.45 $50.00 $3,550.00 1978 59 $60.17 $50.00 $3,550.00 1979 44 $54.03 $35.00 $5,337.50 1980 47 $61.02 $50.00 $2,868.00 1981 53 $55.28 $25.00 $2,930.00 1982 50 $54.10 $35.00 $2,705.00 1983 54 $46.39 $50.00 $2,505.00 1984 51 $45.78 $35.00 $2,335.00 1985 44 $47.43 $35.00 $2,087.10 1986 39 $34.74 $30.00 $1,355.00 1987 30 $33.33 $25.00 $1,000.00 1988 7 $49.29 $35.00 $345.00 1989 3 $12.50 $15.00 $37.50

Gifts made directly to the Law School or to the Wisconsin Law Alumni Association are not included in this summary. 9

Law School Honor Roll 1989

Abbott laboratories Fund Barr, Ann Lee Bliss, Richard Jon Burlington Northern Fdtn Cohen, Stanley Jay Dillof, Henry Harry Abbott, William Anthony Barr, Stephen James Bloch, Gerald Joseph Burroughs, Charles Edward Coletta, Michael Anthony Di Motto, John Joseph Jr Abraham, Herbert Leo Barrett, Patricia Ann Block, Jerome Harold Burstein, Mark Howard Collins, Daniel John Dobberfuhl, Mark 0 Abts, Dennis James Bartel, Thomas Anthony Bloedorn, Philip Edward Busby, Thomas Lynn Collins, Robert Edward Dodge, Emily Pomeroy Adelman, Stanley Joseph Bartell, Angela B Bloodgood, Patricia Agnes Busot, Aldo Jorge Collins, William Finn Doersch, Richard Charles Affeldt, David Arthur Bartell, Jeffrey Bruce Blumenfield, Charles Steven Byers, Susan Stevenson Comsat Corporation Dohse, Joyce C Affeldt, Lester Herbert Bartman, Eugene Allen Board Of Attorneys Prof Cady, Dean Sanders Condon, Timothy Joseph Sr Domina, William Joseph Agnew, Ernest Paul Bartolone, Donna Comptn Cady, Lois Ann Conell, Kenneth Harris Domsky, Ronald Zadoc Aid Association For Basf Corporation Bochert, Linda Hughes Callahan, John Kevin Congdon, James Edward Donahue, John Edward Lutherans Bassin, Jeffrey Louis Boedecker, Katrina Use Callow, William Grant Conger, Kenneth William Donnelley R R And Sons Aiken, James Ellsworth Bates, Richard Alan Boetticher, Helene Ruth Cameron, Roderick Angus Conlon, Harry Bennett Jr Company Albrecht, Rose Marie Bauch, Thomas Jay Bohl, Charlene Ruth Campbell, Charles William Consigny, Robert Harry Doucette, Daniel Robert Albue, Bryan Arthur Baumann, Richard Gordon Bohl, Charles Henry Campbell, George Rodney Continental Can Company Dow Chemical Company Allied-Signal Foundation Inc Baumann, Roy Charles Bonney, George William Jr Canellos, Angela Evelyn Inc Fdtn Alverson, William Hale Baumgartner, Margaret Mary Bookey, Harry Capen, Richard G Jr Continental Illinois Fdtn Dowling, R Oak American Standard Inc Baxter, Ann Elizabeth Borchardt, Bryan John Carey, Jack Conway, John Ed ward Downing, Dale Burdette Arnr-American Airlines Bazos, Peter Christian Borden, George Atwood Carey, Sandra Cook, Leonard James Doyle, Timothy Mark Anderson, Dorothy Bell Bechler, lawrence Edgar Bornemann, Douglas Joseph Carlino Joseph F Foundation Coppins, Donald R Drager, Edmund H Jr Anderson, Eric Scott Becker, Edgar Edward Bowers, Michael Wayne Carlson, James Lynn Coppins, Margaret W Drayna, Deborah Karen Anderson, Greg Curtis Becker, John Alan Boynton, Richard Jerome Carlson, John Charles Corncille, Barrett J Drecktrah, Louis Irvine Anderson, Karl Martin Becker, Paul Steven Bp America Carmichael, Jay Sligar Costello, Daniel Lee Drobka, Mary Elizabeth Anderson, Philip George Beermann, Arthur Harold Bradbury, Philip John Carnes, Clark Frank Cotter, Cathleen Anne Droegkarnp, Donald Henry Anderson, Robert John Behling, Eugene Everett Braden Olson And Olm Carroll, Robert Alan Coulter, Donald Bruce Drought, Thomas James Anderson, Thomas Magistad Behling, Mary Helen Bradley, Mark James Carson, Cindra R Crabb, Barbara Jean Druck, Thomas Willard Andraski, Kenneth John Beierle, Edward Romes Brady, Charles Edward Caruso, Phillip Sam Craig, Sandra Noel Duffey, Sean Nicholas Andrews, Barbara Mahler Beighton, Robert Franklin Brady, Wallace A Caskey, David Henry Crawford, Gary Boyd Duncan, Egerton Wright Andrews, Pamela Marie Beilfuss Bruce Memorial Brand, Franz Rickaby Castillo, Martha Croake, Paul Allen Duncombe, Virginia C Andringa, Cornelius George Fund Brand, Franz Walter Caterpillar Foundation Cromartie, Thomas Dunlavy, Patrick J Andringa, Patricia Collins Beilfuss, Mark Brann, Lester William Jr Cattanach, Robert Edward Jr McKnight Dunlavy, Patrick J Mrs Anken-Dyer, Debra Ann Beld, David Richard Brauer, Mary Alice Chandler, Stephen Marshall Crosetto, John Joseph Durkin, Marianne Eileen Antoniewicz, Gary Lee Bell, Frances Lewis Brehm, Philip R Chapman, George William Crossot, Eugene Alvin Duvall, Charles Thomas Appelquist, Jeffrey Carl Bell Glen H Memorial Fund Breitenfield, Victor Henry Charne, David Lewis Crowley, Marilyn L Dykman, Charles Piper Arco Foundation Bell, Hugh Hollway Brennaman, Patrick Allen Charne, Irvin Ben Croy, Louis Lubo Dykstra, Daniel James Armour, Julia Henry Bell, Joyce Brezinski, Steven Anthony Charney, Jonathan Isa Cunningham, Glen Easton, David Williams Armstrong, Bradley Dean Bell Metzner And Brimmer, Forrest Francis Charron, Harold Frederick Curry, I Gregg IV Eastwood, Mary Otelia Arnold, Barbara Ellen Gierhart Sc Brinton, Demaris Lee Cheever, Roger William Czajkowski, James Patrick Eaton, Robert Edward Arnold, E Clarke Bell, W Dan Brkich, Samuel T Chereskin, James Allen Czajkowski, Ned J Eau Claire County Bar Assoc Arnold, Randal Neil Bellile, Kenneth William Broadman, Howard Richard Cherney, Melissa Ann Dadd, Margaret Ebersberger, Judith Ann Arnot, Robert James II Bender, Linda Lou Brodhead, David Crawmer Cherniak, George Abraham Dahlson, Richard Frank Edelstein, Steven Joseph Arrons, Lehman C Bender, Robert Jacob Brodhead, Nancie Chida, Junaid Hasan Daily, Frank J Edgarton, Allan Lewis Arthur Andersen And Bendix, Gary Louis Christensen Childs, Kenneth Perrott Damon, Christopher Andrew Edson, Dorothy Janet Company Benkert, Arthur Churchill Brodhead-Griffith, Leslie Ching, Walter D H Damon, Matthew Evan Edwards, Paul B Asmus, Clarence Floyd Benson, George William Broll, William Frederick Christiansen, Eric Robert Dancey, David Lloyd Effa, John Edward At And T Foundation Berg, Robert Martin Brookhouse, Eugene Joseph Christianson, Peter Coe Danielson, Steven Gilbert Effa, Rebecca Auen, Michael Henry Berge, Robert Leonard Brooks, Terrence Joseph Christopher, Michael Ronald Dannenberg, James Harry Eggert, Nancy Jean Axe, Kenneth Brian Berigan, Patrick Tierney Brost, Kenneth Edward Chudnow, Deborah Ann Davis, Gerald Allen Ehlke, Richard Charles Axelrod, Jonathan Paul Berkanovic, Edward Thomas Brouwer, Mary L Church, William lawrence Davis Wright And Jones Eide, Bert Melvin Axley, Ralph E Mrs Berndt, Catherine Flaten Brown, Betty Ruth Clapp, Analoyce Davy, Michael B Eidemanis, Lori Ann Axley, Ralph Emerson Berndt, Michael John Brown County Bar Clare, Patrick Michael Dawes, George William Einersen, Roger Dean Ayling, Corey John Bernstein, Jonathan Alex Association Clark, Barnes Albert Dean, Jill Weber Eisemann, Karen Ayling, Teresa Jane Bernstein, Joseph M Brown, Daniel Alan Clarke, Marilee Miller Dean, Kathy E Eisinger, Erica M Azen, Ruth Ann Bertocchi, Joel D Brown, Jeffry Paul Clemons, Lester Stanley De Boer, Henry Eisinger, Peter Babbitt, James Donald Bertschy, Nicholas James Brown, Kevin Patrick Clifford, Keith R De Boer, Lucille A Elkin, Judith Babbitt, Michael Ross Berz, Ellen Kay Brown, Martha Glaman Clifford, Linda Margaret De Bord, Michael Keith Elwell, Michael Sumner Baer, Theodore Roosevelt Best, John Stevens Brown, Stephen Douglas Cline, Grace Ellen Deda, David Bernard Engbretson. Sandra Lea Bailey, Dennis Clinton Beyerlein, Gordon Robert Browne, Robert Edward Clinton, Richard M Derouin, Judy Ann Engler, William Dean Jr Baird, James Bidlingmaier, Robert Lee Bruhn, Walter John Coates, Dolores Milburn Derounian, Steven B Enright, James Phillip Bakken, Gordon Morris Bilka, Keary Wyn Buchen, John Gustave Coates, Glenn Richard Dershowitz, Michael Epstein, Geraldine Ellen Baldikoski, Thomas Henry Bills, Michael John Bugg, Christopher Coaty, Michael Paul Desmond, John Philip Epstein, Ira Stephen Baldwin, Gordon Black, Fred Earl Bula, Michael Stanley Cofar, lawrence Jay De Vine, George Julian Epstein, Maurice Leonard Bane One Wisconsin Blaine, Jack Harold Buratti, Dennis Peter Coffey William M Memorial Devine, Thomas Martin Equitable Life Assurance Soc Fdtn-Milw Blake, Phoebe C Burgess, John Steven Fund Dew, Mathew John Erickson, Randall John Banczak, Peggy J Blalock, Willard Dando Burke, James Jerome Cohen, Adrian Nathaniel Dewey, Robert Vanderveer Jr Erickson, Susan Joan Bank One-Elkhorn Na Blanding, Howard Durand Burkholder, Paul Charles Cohen, Arthur William Dewind, Margaret Susan Eschweiler, Mary Bardwell, Richard Woleben Blank, Alan John Burley, John lawrence Cohen, Barbara Ellen Dickinson, Lloyd James Eustice, Francis Joseph Barland, Thomas Howard Bleckwenn, Alfred Theodore Burley, M Selma Wise Cohen, Rebecca Suzanne Diercks, David George Evenson, James 10

Evjue Foundation Inc Fry, Kristi L Granger, Lorna Jane Hastings, Richard Homer Howman, Sherry Lee Juneau, Patrick James Ewald, William John Fuhrman, Charles Andrew Grant, James Hastings, W H Mrs Huber, Kristin L Palmer Kaftan, Georgia Jane Ex, Charles Elliot Fuller, Dale Floyd Grant, Kathleen Elaine Hatch, Timothy John Hue, William Felice Kahn, Bert L Exxon Education Foundation Gage, Louis Dryden Jr Grant, Richard Ray Hausmann, Charles Joseph Huff, Jay Scott Kaiser, Amanda Jane Fadness, Andrew C Gaines, Peter Mathew Grant, Thomas Frederick Haxton, David Hughes, Barbara Suzanne Kaiser, Jonathon Gary Fahey, Jane Clare Galganski, Paul John Grant Thornton-Appleton Haydock, Kenneth Laird Huibregtse, Bruce Donald Kalish, Lisa Kay Stark Fahey, William Kelly Gallagher, Dennis James Grant Thornton-Madison Hayman, David Michael Humphrey, Sheri Lea Kapanke, Susan Jo Fahl, Peggy Lee Galloway, Norval Grau, Gregory Edward Hazeltine, Earl Henry Huser, Henry Lawrence Karch, Gary Charles Fairchild, Thomas Edward Blackburn III Graupner, Charles Paul Heath, Stratton R Jr Hutchison, Bert Karch, James William Falk, Gerald Robert Gardner, H Daniel Graves, Tia Baker Hefty, Thomas Roger Hutchison, Henry G Karlsson, Gail Victoria Falk, Victor Sofus III Garms, Margaret Eleanor Graylow, Richard Vernon Heikenen, Chris Charles Hyson, Frank E Kassel, Jeffrey Jan Farnsley, Douglass Charles Garrett, Peter Greenberg, Judith G Heim, Paul John Hyson, Frank E Mrs Keeler, Kevin Lee Fassler, Charles Garrison, Thomas Gregory Greenhill, Arnold Romaine Heiser, David Edward Hyson, Robert F Keidatz, Thomas Lynn Fechner, William Kraft Garske, Robert Allen Gremban, Steve Wayne Heiser, Marlene Ids Financial Services Inc Kelley, Daniel John Feingold, Sylvia Binstock Gartzke, Dan Denker Grill, Leo Joseph Heitzman, David Klay Interlake Foundation Kelley, John Warren Feldman, Howard Joel Gay, Roy La Barton Grimm, Peter Laney Helstad, Charlotte A Iverson, Dale Ann Kelley, N F Feldman, Irwin Miles Gebhart, Neil Rudolf Grizzard, Vernon Townes Helstad, Orrin L Jackson, James Richard Kelly, Diane E Felker, Frederic Paul Gee, Robert Homer Gronseth Directory Service Hendee, Kirby Jacobs, Jack Thomas Kelly, Patrick W Felsenthal, Steven A Gehl, Michael Andrew Cor Hendrickson, Eric Daniel Jacobs, Michael Arthur Kennedy, David Harold Fenik. Martin Lewis Gehl, William Daniel Gruel, Steven Francis Hendrix, Steven Edward Jacobs, Ronald Stuart Kenney, Ann Elizabeth Fergal, James Mark Gehrz, Robert Gustave Gruender, Daniel Freeman Henkle, Robert Fenton Jr Jacobson, Erica Kenney, Patricia Jean Fetek, Arlene Ruth Geilfuss, C Frederick Gruetzmacher, Vance Hennessy, Teresa Arlene Jacobson, Thomas Reed Kepler, Mary Elizabeth Fetek, James Joseph Geisler, James Charles Stephen Henze, Lawrence Carroll [ankowitz, Harry Elliott Kepler, Michael Eugene Fidelity Bank-Philadelphia General Electric Fdtn- Grunow, Julius Otto Henze, Mary Beth Jansen, James Roy Keppel, William James Field, Arthur Gallagher Matching Grust, Jack Victor Herlache, Thomas Lloyd Janssen, Diana Lynn Keppler, Mark James Fieldman, Leon Georges, Alexander Guerin, Ralph Jackson Herrick, Scott Nash Janssen, Thomas John Kerkman, Jerome Robert Finesmith, Barbara Kaden Geraghty, Timothy James Guiles, Jon Roger Hertel, Betty J Jarvis, David Edward Keyes, Audrey Jean Finney, Cheryl Joy Geraldson, Raymond Irving Gulbrandsen, Ole Gerhardt Hertel, William E Jasper, Lavona M Keyes, Jack E First Bank System Inc Gerdes, Dale Patrick Gundersen, Harry Francis Hess, Adriana Jasper, Thomas W Kilby, Carroll D Fish, Guy Keith Gerhard, Wynn Abigail Gust, Gerald Norman Hess, William Charles Jasper, William B Kilby, Martina S Fishelson, Joseph Eli Germano, Carmen Francesca Guyette, James Alex Heuser, Peter Elliott Jeffers, Jerome L Kilmer, Kenton Eugene Fisher, Catherine Mary Germer, Charles Richard Haase, Robert Allen Hewitt, Paul Buck Jendrzejek, David Paul King, Patricia Diane Flaherty, Daniel Thomas Gerold, Carl Ernst Haberstroh, James Howard Heykes. Nancy N Jenkins, Robert Curtis King, Robert Arthur Flatt, Carol Conners Gibb, Mary H Hafner, Roger William Hieda, George Isao Jennings, Scott William Kingston, Timothy Kevin Fletcher, Robert Wesley Gibb, William Travis III Hagerup, Elizabeth Stephens Higgason, Craig Alan Jensen, Abby Fisher Kinney, Maureen Louise Forbes, James Lindsay G ibea ult, Patty Mary Hagerup, Eric Higgs, Norman C Jensen, Jerard John Kinney, Sandra Maria Ford Motor Company Fund Gibson Dunn And Crutcher Hahn, Clayton Rust Hildebrand, Christa Jentz, Gaylord Adair Kirk, Ann Brummund Forman, Joseph Ben Giese, William Richard Hahn, Frederick James Hildebrand, Daniel Walter Johansen, Beverly Jeanne Kirkland And Ellis Forsythe, Reno Harp Jr Gilbert, Richard Allen Haight, James Theron Hill, Frances J Mc Donald Johnson And Higgins- Foundation Fortney, Thomas Roger Gillen, Penny Erhardt HaJigas, Steven Richard Hill, Harry Victor California Kissinger, Ronald Earl Fortune, Richard Anthony Gilpin, Jean Ellen Hall, H Lowell Hillemann, Penelope Johnson Controls Foundation Kittelson, Rodney Olin Foust, C William Ginsberg, William Michael Halloran, Thomas G Dinneen Johnson, Ervin Willard Klabunde, Karl Arthur Fowell, George Nelson Ginsburg, Roy Steven Halsey, William Roger Himes, Jay Leslie Johnson, Herbert Trachsel Klancnik, Thomas Evans Fowell, Karen Sue Giovinazzi, Cosmo Adam III Halverson, James Gary Himes, Thomas Allen Johnson, Mark Kenneth Klaus, Gail L Fowler, Robert Vernon Glick, Steven Paul Hambleton, Lila Mae Himley, Newman Edward Johnson, Mary Katharine Klaus, Richard J Fox, Henry Jackson Glover, Guy Ronald Hammerstrom, Richard Hinners, Charles Carson Johnson, Nancy Jean Klein, James Michael Frank, M P Glynn, Stephen Michael Bruce Hintzman, Steven Allen Johnson, Richard Gray Klein, Roberta Ann Frank, Mark Walter Godshall, Karen Lynn Hammond, George Charles Hobbins, Nancy M Johnson Robert Wood Kleinmaier, Stephen William Frank, Matthew Joseph Goelzer, Daniel Lee Hammond, Phil B Hochstatter, Thomas Curtis Foundation Klenk, James Andrew Franz, Steven James Goldberg, Alfred Gerald Hanaway, Charles Taft Hodynsky, Walter Johnson, Thomas Wilbert Kliebard, Diane Jane Franzini, John Daniel Goldberg, Daniel Eugene Hankin, Bernard Jacob Hoecker, James John Johnson, Vincent Robert Klos, Jerome John Frautschi, Timothy Clark Goldner, Justin L Hanks, Deborah Christine Hoefs, William Frank Johnson Wax Kluge, James Arthur Frautschi, Walter Albert Goldsmith, Robert Wayne Hannan, Edward Anthony Hoff, John Hayden Johnston, Charles F Jr Knight, Edward R Frazier, Lyman Reid Goldstein, Bernard Hannon, Ann Louise Hoffman, Donald Alfred Johnston, Keith I Knight Ridder Inc Frazier, Terry William Gonring, Andrew Thomas Hansen, Laurence Arthur Hoffner, Thomas Alan Jones, Allan Edward Knoblock, Alice D Freed, Robert Coombs Goodkind, Conrad George Hansen, Stephen Frederick Holm, Richard Vernon Jones, James Edward Jr Knowles, Stephen Lawrenz Frenchick, Grady James Goodman, Jill Stacey Hanson, Charles Even Holman, Joseph P Jones, John Evan Knowles, Warren Perley Frey, Barbara Anne Gorchels, Robert Arthur Hanson, David James Holy, Richard Frank Jones, Mary E Kobza, Lawrie Jean Fribance, Caroline Eleanor Gordon, Brian Anthony Hanson, Martin Iver Hornak, Joann Marie Jones, Thomas Rumsey Koeck, Rick Matthew Fricker, Lisa P Gorichan, Bonnie Sue Hanson, Mary Margaret Horowitz, Gedale Bob Jordan, Harold Elton Koepcke, F Kristen Fricker, Robert Earl Gottfredsen, James Edward Harada, Kenneth Wasato Hostak, Kenneth Francis Joseph, Allan Jay Konkol, Robert F Friebert, Robert Howard Grace Foundation Inc Hardy, George A Hough, James Edward Jost, Lawrence J Konrad, John F Friederichs, Gerald Alfons Gracie, Elizabeth Lee Harrick, Gilbert Louis Hove, Julie Journey, Drexel Dahlke Konz, Gerald Keith Froehlke, Robert Frederick Grady, Pamela Ann Harris, Edward Jerome Howard, Robert Lester Judicial Commission- Koppa, Patricia Ann Fromm, Leonard D Grady, Robert John Harris, Paul A Howe, Donald Joseph Wisconsin Koppel, Erwin Frudden, Grace Matthews Gramling, Mitzi Tousman Harvey, Richard Guille Jr Howell, Kathryn Love Jume, Eugene Koprowski, Donald Joseph 11

Kord us, Arthur Charles Levi Strauss Foundation Malawsky, Donald Nathan Meyer, Edward Sumner Musolf, Mark Edward Osborne, Ralph E Korn, Martin Niles Levin, Laurie Jean Mallatt, James Charles Meyer, John Alan Myers, Howard N Osimitz, Dennis Victor Kornstedt, Calvin William Levine, Bruce Steven Manasse, Herbert Herman Meyer, Kent Charles Mygatt, Ann B Osimitz, Mary C Kostritsky, Juliet Pendleton Levine, Herbert Mandell, David Lester Meyer, Martin William Nagel, Karen Dale Otjen, Carl Neprud Kotenberg, Kenneth Clark Levine, Robert Allen Manning, Susan Irene Meyer, Winona Johnston Nagle, Ann K Owen, Jack Fleet Kovich, Ann E Levine, Steven Alan Manthei, Gayl Marie Meyeroff, Robert Neil Nagle, James L Pacher, Eugen E Krabbe, Lynn Levy, Marvin Jay Maranger, Mark Timothy Meythaler, Fredrick Andrew Nagy, Larry Stevens Packard, Lisa Marie Wood Kramer, John Nicholson Lewis, Calvin George Mardian Development Michels, Margaret Mary Nakian, Paul St John Packard, Rick Lance Kramer, John Nicholson Jr Lewis, Earle S Mrs Company Michler, John Fitch Nametz, Michael Alan Pad way, M Nicol Kraus, Kenneth Emanuel Lewis, Gloria E Margolis, Marvin Allen Miller, Charles David Nash, Lawrence Ritchay Pappas, Peter Gus Kravat, Jeffrey Laurence Lewis, James W Markson, John Miller, Gary Allen Nash, Randall Leigh Parker, Wiley Phillips Kreitier, John Edward Lichtsinn Haensel Bastian Markson, John Wright Jr Miller, Harry Oscar Nashban, Ned Roger Parlin, Eugene Kriva, James John Etal Martin, Elmer Dean III Miller, Jane Ann Nathan, Fred Jack Pasch, Robert Allen Krizenesky, F David Liden, Gerald Leonard Martin Marietta Corporation Miller, Robert Anthony Nathenson, William Allen Pasell, Dale Ted Kroos, Arthur G III Lieb, Donald Mark Martin, Renee M Miller, Thomas Raymond Natkins, Burt Philip Paterick. Barbara Block Krostue, Sigurd Winfield Lieder, Dennis Craig Martin, William Ernest Milligan, Daniel Lester Natkins, Marsha Patronsky, Mark Charles Krostue, virginia 0 Lieder, Kathleen Allyson Martineau, James Anthony Mills, Connie I Naugler, James Stephen Patterson, C Duane Kruger, David Wayne Liess, Jerome Massey, James L Mills, William Daniel Naze, Peter Joseph Patterson, Robert Harry Kubly, Harold Edward Lilledahl, Linda Louise Maupins, William Marvin Milwaukee Foundation Nebel, James Barton Paulson, Clark Gordon Kubly, Theodora H Lillesand, John Walter Mayer Brown And Platt Minnesota Mining And Neese, Judith S Paulson, Loren Robert Kucirek, Joseph Charles Lindfors, Pertti J Columbus Mayer, Lois K Manufctrg Nelson, Arthur Lowell Pavlick, Elizabeth Vaell Kuehl. Frank William Linstroth, Tod Brian Mayer, Oscar G Miran, Claudia Berry Nelson, David Keith Pease, James Kenneth Jr Kuehn, Robert Franklin Lipscomb, William Joseph Mayer, Rosalie H Mirr, Joseph Ralph Netbum, Mitchell Peckarsky, Charles W Kuelthau, Paul Stauffer Lister, Thomas Edward Mc Intosh Foundation Inc Mitchell, Elean Francis Neuman, Phillip Jerome Peckarsky, Lee Kuesel, Jeffery Thomas Litscher, Patrick Peter Mc Clintock, Keith E Jr Mitchell, John Donald Neuses, Thomas Peter Peckarsky. Lori H Kummer, Lee Harold Little, John J Mc Clurg, David Albert Mleziva, Dennis John Newberry, Stanley Allen Jr Pelkofer, Peter Kundert, D Camille Lloyd, Timothy Albert Mc Cormick, John Brian Moberly, Robert Blakley Newby, Jane Margaret Penn ow, Mark Alan Kundert, David J Loeb, Fred Howard Mc Cracken, Robert Lee Mohr, Jeffrey T Newell, Charles L Peoples Energy Corporation Kvalheim, Norman Loeb, Leonard L Mc Creary, Lynn Marie Mohr, Robert Henry Newman, Anne Davies Peplau, Karl Francis La Fave, Ruth Griswold Loebel, Kenneth Roger Mc Daniel, Karen Diane Mollet, Chris John Newman, Glenn Douglas Peppard, Terry Foster La Fave, Thomas Lloyd Logan, Elizabeth Anne Mc Daniel, Mary Louise Moore, John Martin Nicastro, Gregory Scott Perchem, Costa Lafave, Wayne Robert Logan, Mary Kathleen Mc Dermott, J Thomas Moore, Renee Jeanne Reese Nichols, Barbara Jakubowski Perez, Gerardo Lahey, William Francis Long, J Richard Mc Donald, Timothy Charles Moore, William Garrison Nielsen, Janice M Perlos, Alexander Charles Laird, Melvin Robert Jr Loofboro, Gary Lee McGalloway, William Moran, James Thomas Nielsen, Lawrence I Perlson, Beverly Joy La [one, Lynne M Loomis, Robert Brian Donovan Moran, Kathleen M Niemer, Margaret Quinn Perlstein, Jerold Irving Lambert, Earle Lore, Irving Allan Mc Gann, Nola G Morey, Dane Francis Nikolay, Frank Lawrence Perrine, George Robert Landis, Deborah Ellen Lorenz, Carol Marie Mc Gee, Jack Brian Morgan, James Robert Nixon, Jay Krans Petak, Ronald Laurence Landry, Robert Watson Loring, Bruce Daniel Mc Glamery, Keith Wayne Morgan Stanley And Noll, Sarah George Peterman, James Elly Lang, Donald Thomas Lotty, Robert Wayne Mc Glamery, Sammy Company Inc Nordeng, Richard Keith Petershack, Richard Eugene Lange, David Leroy Loughlin, John Terrence Kathryn Morris, Lauri D Northwestern Mutual Peterson, H Dale Lange, John Edward Lowerre, Robert Thomas Mc Intyre, Angus Robert Morris, William Woodson Life Insur Peterson, John Reuben Langenfeld, Mark Lowell Luce, Charles Franklin McIntyre, Donald James Mortensen, Carl Marius Northwestern Wisc Peterson, Reuben William Jr Langer, Christina M Lucke, James Thomas Me Joynt, Thomas John Motorola Foundation Electric Co Pettibone, Craig Bradley Langer, Edward Gregory Ludke, Lynn Anne Mc Kay, Isabel Dixon Motz, Anton Noyes, Anne Louise Peyton, James John Lapp, Richard Burk Luebke, Michael John Mc Kenzie, James Donald Mouw, Edward Wayne o Melveny And Myers Pfeiler, Thomas Adams Larsen, Robert Merritt Luedtke, John Peter Mc Kinney-Lins, Patricia Muchin, Arden Archie Oas, Julia Anne Phibro-Salomon Inc Latin, Oscar B Lund, Margaret T Basche Mc Kown, Kathleen Diane Mueller, Egon Waller Oberly, Kathryn Anne Philip Morris Incorporated Laudon, Dennis William Lund, Michael John Mead, Margaret H Mueller, Herbert John Oemichen, Mary Anne Phillips Petroleum Laudon, Mary B Lundgren, Victor August Jr Mead, Terrance Charles Mueller, Russ Ronald Oemichen, William Lee Foundation Lauerman, Marc Steven Lutz, Robert William Medtronic Foundation Muldowney, Timothy James Ohm, Brian Willard Pieper, Thomas John Lautz, Fredrick George Lynch, Dennis Raymond Meier, James Reilly Mullen, Patrick Conway Ohm, Judith Mills Pieroni, Stephen Law, Robert Dale Lynn, Darrell Lee Meinel, Frederick Max Muller-Peterson, Jane K Olbrich, Richard James Pietz, Colin Duane Lawton, Michael James M And I Bank Of Madison Meissner, Carl Lentz Mullin, Warren Oliner, Joyce L Pike, Robert Prescott Lawyers Co-Operative Maasch, Mark A Meissner, Eric Carl Mullins, Brian William o Lochlayne, D Sean Pillote, Vernon Joseph Publng Co Mac Arthur, Malcolm Melli, Marygold Shire Mullins, Pamela Olsen, David Allen Platt David Sherwood Lazar, Ralph Norman Douglas Mellor, Merwin Everett Munger, Earle Augustus Jr Olson, Dean L Platt, William Lawrence Lebowitz, Philip Henry Macaulay, Jacqueline Menard, Stephen James Munts, Mary Lou Olson, Diana Carol Ploetz, Charles John Ledebur, Joan B Ramsey Menn, John Benjamin Muraski, John Andrew Olson, Jack Franklin Plunkett, Maureen Ann Lefkow, Joan Humphrey Macdonald, James Bogue Mercer, Karen Ann Murphy, Alphonsus C Olson, Joseph Robert Pocock, Sherri Louise Lehman, Bruce Arthur Mac Farlane, Dudley W Merg, Dona Jane Murphy, Gordon Olson, Richard John Podell, Richard Jay Leitsch, William Waldo Mac Farlane, John G II Merriman, John Cecil Murphy, J Kevin Olson, Thomas 0 Polansky, Burton Boyd Lcnchek, Stanley Leonard Mack, James Harrison Meschievitz, Catherine S Murphy, James Joseph o Neill, William Edmund Jr Pollack, Howard Allan Lenicheck, Timothy Faber Mackinson, Thomas Robert Messmann, Douglas James Murphy, Jo Opelt, Lyn C Pommerening, Edwin Leonard, Mariellen M Mahoney, Dennis Charles Metropolitan Life Foundation Murphy, Mary Alice Oppeneer, Peter Anthony Carlton Le Roy, Erik John Maihofer, Glenn T Mett, William Douglas Murphy, Paul Michael Orth, Charles Adam Jr Poppy, Donald Arthur Lev, Phillip Morton Malamud, Sherwood Meyer, Alvin Robert Murphy, Pierre Eric Orth. Felicia Lenore Porter, Raymond Edwin Jr 12

Porter, Stephen William Risser, Patricia Zeeh Schacht, Maryann Shea, Ann Davies Starobin, Aaron S Thompson, Anna H Pessin, Paula R Ristow, Philip Charles Schaefer, Charles Shea, Jeremy Charles Staskunas, Anthony Joseph Thompson, Carl William Post, Alan Richard Rjr Nabisco Inc Schafer Forest H Foundation Shebiel, Kathryn Kay Staskunas, Elizabeth Anne Thompson, Cliff F Potter, John Melvin Robbins, David W Schairer, John Everett Sheeran, Susan Christine State Mutual Life Thompson, Frederick John Prance, Norman Randolph Roberts, Dale John Schauf, Susan Marie Sher, Michael David Assurance Co Thompson, Scott Allen Prange, Roy Leonard Jr Roberts, Lon Edward Scheels, John Marvin Sherman, Diane Cynthia Stauffacher, Chester Clifton Thornton, John Patrick Prestegard, Orlan Lem Roberts, Richard Guy Schernecker, Elyn Short, John Hervey Stearns, Charles R Thrasher, Joe Presti, Michael Anthony Roberts, Susan Jane Schernecker, James George Shovers, Morris Stearns, John W Thums, Raymond Francis Presti, Nina Beth Robertson, Susan Ruth Schirm eyer, Theodore Sidley And Austin Steckelis, Michael J Thurman, Kay Ellen Price, Michael George Robinson, Richard Russell George Siefert, Jerry Robert Stecker, Everett Arnold Tierney, Timothy Allen Priebe, John Henry Robinson, Steven Donald Schiro, Anthony William Siegel, David Lee Steele, Ilene Ulmer Tillisch, Michael Ravn J r Prieve, Charles Edward Rodd, Forest Willard Schlienger, Kent lawrence Sieger, Edward Dean Steiner, Joel H Tinglum, Sverre Olav Primuth, Richard Allen Roder, Raymond Mathew Schmid, John Henry Jr Sieger, larry Alan Steinglass, Dianne Eugenia Todd, Ronald Wayne Probasco, Lewis William Roe, Peter Farrar Schmidt, Jay Edward Silver, Margaret B Steinhause, Darryl lance Tokairin, Bert Shiro Pullen, Paul Pike II Roesler, Karen Ann Schmidt, Leon Stanley Silver, Marvin Q Steinhilber, Jack Daniel Tolkan, Howard Bruce Quale, Norman Hughes Roessler, Ronald J Schmidt, Patrick William Silverman, Eldon Elisha Steinmetz, Christian George Tolkan, James Lawrence Quandt, Eric Felix Roethe, James N Schmidt, Paul Wickham Silverstein, Robert Stellmacher, Duane Robert Toilers, Jeffery Barnet Quandt, Karen Sue Roethe, Jeffrey Towne Schmitt, Leonard Frank Simmons, Robert Michael Stephan, Robert Michael Toman, William J Quigley, lawrence Murray Rogers, Thomas Temple Schmitz, Michael 0 Simonis, Thomas Albert Stern, Douglas Rice Tonjes, John Cornelius Quinn, Michael Joseph Roggensack, Patience Drake Schneider, Allan William Sinykin, Gordon Stern, Gregory Paul Tonkin, Simon Pediel Rabin, Edwin Hugh Rood, Anthony Morris Jr Schneider, Cynthia Grace Sivanich, Lisa Hancy Stern, Terri Boxer Torkildson, Patricia Agnes Rabin, Joel Joseph Rood, Joann Ruth Schneider, James Harris Sklarsky, Charles Stevens, John William Torosian, Herman Race, John Roger Root, Allen Faust Schneider, Steven Paul Slade, Verne Freeman Stevens, Marguerite Baines Trachtenberg, Ronald Raftery, John Edmond Root, Paul Edwin Schneiderman, Edward Slania, Michael Andrew Stevens, Myron Ray Marshall Ragatz, Ronald Robert Rose, Jacques F David Slechta, Jerome Mathew Stewart, Richard W Tradewell, John Edward Ralston, Krista Maria Rosen, Norman Nye Schnurrer, Rudolph Gotthard Smalley, Maud Stewart, Richard W Mrs Tradewell, Rebecca Cross Randall, Gerald Jean Rosenbaum, William Jr Schober, Donna Jean Smith, Brent Philip Stichter, Don Mason Travers, Thomas Gene Rapaport, Mark Samuel Rosenberg, Charles Schoenfeld, Howard Bernard Smith, Clark Robinson Stilling, Kathleen Byrne Trecker, Dorothy G Rapkin, Sheldon Rosenberg, Gary A Schoenwald, Carolyn Paulette Smith, Daniel James Stingl, Denis John Ireland, Linda R Rasche, William Grether Rossmiller, Daniel Mark Scholz, Wesley Stephen Smith, Gregory Allan Stocking, John Abel Therkheimer, Barbara Rasmus, Ingolf E Roth, Mitchell Eugene Schowalter, Thomas A Smith, Gregory Vincent Storm, Robert Harold Thrley, Paul W Rasmussen, Bruce Ralph Rotter, Merton Ned Schroeder, Debra Betty Smith, Mark W Stout, Michael Ward 'Iwesme, Albert laverne Rasmussen, Carl John Rattier, Catherine Marie Schroeder, Victoria Jaeckle Smith, Melissa Uelk Straub, Clarence Donald 'Iyroler, William John Ray, Donald E Rottier, Nancy Mary Schroepfer, Laurence James Smith, Michael Steven Strauss Barbara & Thomas Uehling, Robert Oscar Readers Digest Foundation Roznowski, Thomas William Schubert, Frank A Smith, Randi Sue Fund Ulmer, Frances Ann Red Head Brass Inc Rubbert, William Robert Schultz, Joseph Edmund Smith, Ronald Strouse, Daniel Stanton Leasing Corp Redmond, George Foote Rubenstein, Michael Jon Schulz, John Gordon Smith, Thomas Edward Suhr, Frederick Carl Urban Telephone Reel, Frederick Ullman Rudolph, Edward Peter Schulz, Mary Katherine Snodgrass, George Mitchell Sullivan, Dennis Michael Corporation Reich, Douglas Joseph Rudoy, Martin Stuart Schulz, William John Snow, David Howard Sullivan, Joseph Aloysius Us West Foundation Reich, Timothy Michael Ruf, H William Jr Schuster, William Vernon Snyder, Daniel Francis Sullivan, Philip Matthew Valentyn, Tim Robert Reigel, Susan J Ruhly, Sharon Kay Schwarz, David Herman Sobel, Sylvan Asa Sumara, B Michele Van Metre Hanson And Reihsen, Gerald John III Rumpf, Donald Edward Schwei, Jacob Allen Solie, Allen Randolph Superior Water Light Meyer Reinke, Colleen Rumpf, Donald Frederick Schwenn, Willard Charles Solochek, Albert & Power Van Bogaert, Cynthia Ann Remington, Frank John Runde, John Patrick Schweppe, Steven Henry Solochek, Marc Roger Swarsensky, Gerald David Vande Castle, William Joseph Remington, Michael John Rushevics, Maris Schwerbel, Jeannette Ellen Solsrud, George A Sweet, Barbara Ann Vander Loop, Robert James Remington, Sue Russell, Pamela Jane Scorgie, John Gregory Soman, James W Sweet, Stephen Joseph Vande Zande, Clarence Glen Rentz, Frank Albert Russo, Rachelle Marie Scott, Brian David Soref, Bernard Swichkow, Morton Charles Van Dort, Jan Reuman, Alice Ryan, Donald Michael Scott Paper Company Soref, Samuel Meyer Sylke, C Thomas Vanevenhoven, Vicki Reuter, Allen Dean Ryan, Frances Sells Foundation Sorensen, Clarence Bernard Taitelman, Donald Sherman Van Every, Peter J Reynolds, Benoni 0 IV Ryan, Jennifer Dawn Seager, Elizabeth Sostarich, Mark Edward Tallman, Gene Hall Van Hoof, Gerard Henry Rezazadeh, Reza Ryan, Patrice Margaret Seder, Robert Tad Southerland, Harold P Tanaka, Yoshito Van Valkenburg, Patricia Rbodeen, Penn Ryberg, James Drew Seering, James Robert Spector, Mitchell M Iaube, Donna Gail Anne Rice, Gerald Joseph Ryberg, John Jeffrey Segal, Diana Rich Speight, Kent Wells Thussig, Stuart K Van Valkenburg, Paul Rice, John David Jr Sachse, William Richard Jr Seibel, Amy R Sperling, Ellen Louise Taylor, Peter Vernon Van Wagenen, Gerritt Jon Rice, Maurice Gregory Jr Safer, Shelley Jan Seibert, Robert Merrill Sperling, Keith B Teetaert, John Robert Varone, Vincent Anthony Rice, Zelotes Sylvester II Saffro, Samuel David Seidl, Mark Allen Spielman, Ronald M Tektronix Venci, Ronald Anthony Richards, Grant Samuel Sagan, John Robinson Seifert, Stephen A Spielmann, Daniel J Temkin, Victor Vergeront, John George Richards, Isabel F Salinsky, Michael Harry Selby, Dennis Marvin Spoehr, Milton E Tenneco Incorporated Vessey, James Burton Richie, David Edward Sals, Richard Mark Setterholm, Jean Stuart Square D Foundation Teper, James Martin Vinopal, Michael Joseph Richter, Stuart Sanderson, Robert Lloyd Setzler, Edward Allan St Croix Valley Natural Teplinsky, Scott Alan Vobornik, Donna J Richter, Ward Irvin Sandgren, Gilbert Richard Seward, Victoria Lynn Gas Co Terwilliger, Herbert Lee Voegeli, James Frederick Rider, Donald Verne Jr Sanford, Daniel Louis Sewell, Stephen F Staffin, Elliot Bruce Thalacker, Arbie Otto Von Rohr, John Paul Riesen, Philippe Yoland Sannes, Brenda Kay Shampo, Jeffrey James Stafford, Richard Harold Theesfeld, Harold Lee Vosper, Julie E Rikkers, Edward Hayes Sasso, Phillip David Sharpe, Gary Richard Stanchik, Robert Duane Theodore, Anthony Joseph Wade, Frederick Briggs Rikkers, Jane Charlotte Schaalman, Michael H Sharpe, Ralph Ernest Stangel, John Woodrow Thomas, Bruce Waggoner, Paul Henry Ripp. Marla Marie Schacht, H David Shaw, Catherine Louise Stanton, Marie Ann Thomas, William Joseph Wagner, Burton Allan 13

Wahl, Victor Theodore Wiley, Maxwell Theat Zoesch, Thomas Jay Waisbren, Benjamin Wilk, Martin L Zubrensky, Leonard Simon Walcher, Tanya Kins Wilkie, Harold Washington Zuehlke, Gus Walder man, William Jens Wilkie, Harold Washington Jr Zuehlke, Helen Waldinger, Michele Lisa Will born, Steven Lester Zulkoski, Walter Peter Walkenhorst, Walter III Williams, Charles Ellis Zum Brunnen, Robert Wall, Jennifer Mary Williams, Claire H Arthur Wallace, Marian E Williams, David Charles Zwakman, John Clarence Wallack, Barry Zachary Williams, Gordon Elliot Zwickey, June Arlean Wallig, Paul William Williams, Jane Carol Zwicky, Stephen Edward Walsh, Kathleen Williams, Thomas F Wanasek, Brian Robert Williams, Thomas M Wang, Leonard Wei Willink, Donald Dean Warzyn, Gerald Thomas Willis, Patrick Lee Washington, Christophe A Wilson, Andrew Bruce Wasielewski, Francis Thomas Wilson, Jon M Wasielewski, Mary Alice Wilson, Pamela Jane Waterman, Diana Lynn Wilson, Wayne W Jr Watson, Rexford Sylvester Winner, John Dennett Wausau Insurance Winter, Richard Tesch Companies Winz, Kathryn A Weber, Stephen James Wis Indepndnt Webster, John Michael Telecomnctns Sys Wege, Robert William Wisconsin Bell Weigel, Carrol Julius Wisconsin Southern Gas Weigel, Ruth Lorine Company Weil, Elissa Ann Wise, David Matthew Weil, Peter Michael Wise, Jane Meredith Weinberg, Edward Hirsch Wise, John E Jr Weinke, Steven Wells Wiviott, Fred Weinstein, Jerome Alison Wiviott, Melvin Weinstein, Laurence Alan Wolf, Kevin Earl Weisfeld, Neil E Woodworth, Frank Dana Weisman, Michael Jon Worth, Harry F Jr Welch, Caroline S Wright, Robert Ross Welles, David Brian Wrolstad, Jeffrey Carroll Wells Fargo Foundation Wszalek, Larry John Welter, John Wallace Wysocki, Paul Richard Welytok, Daniel Steven Yanikowski, James Jerome Wendorff, Arvilla Myrna Yee, Paul Yuen Po Wendorff, Mark Peter Yeschek, William Frank Jr Wendorff, Mary Elizabeth Yopes, Jennifer Lee Wendorff, Roland John York, Robert Thomas Weninger, Robert Alexander Young, Charles Loren Werner, Barry Steven Young, Rebecca Conrad Westerlund, William John Youngerman, James Nickoll Wettersten, Nancy Carla Zaborske, Mark Anthony Whaley, Patricia Mengler Zabrowski, Patrick Michael Wheeler, Nancy Eleanor Zadra, Nolan Harold Wheelock, Richard Milnes Zaidins, Earle Warren Whelan, John Veale Zakem, Robert Michael Whitcomb, David Charles Zaleski, Michael Louis White, Charles Edgar Zalewski, Richard Wallace Wiatt, Robert E Zawadsky, John Hartman Wiatt, Robert E Mrs Zebell, Katherine Louise Widder, Theodore Carl III Zedler, Adele Louise Widener, Julia Jasper Zeeh, Peter William Wienke, Robert Otto Zegarowicz, Eugene Edward Wight, William N Zerwick, Otto Smythe Wight, William N Mrs Zile, Zigurds Laimons Wilcox, Christopher James Zillman, Donald Norman Wilcox, Michael W Zillman, Linda G Wild, Nelson Hopkins Zimmer, Michael J Wildman, Thomas R Zimmermann, Patricia Wildstein, Barry Steven Jeanne Wileman, Fred Allen Zinnen, Robert Oliver 14

Lawyer Legislators, Part IV

In 1987 we ran a series of articles on UW After graduating in 1978, Deininger Law School graduates engaged in law mak- returned to Monroe to practice law and ing as elected officials. Since that time five was also hired as corporation counsel for more of our grads have joined the ranks of Green County. Throughout this time he the Wisconsin Legislature. If our readers became active in local party politics. He can offer more names, we would be happy was elected chairman of the local Repub- to continue these features. lican party and was also elected to the school board. In 1986 Deininger won David Deininger ('78) election for the state legislative seat and is now in his second term. Like many law students today, Represen- "At this point, I'm assuming that I will tative David Deininger delayed his law seek re-election in 1990, but I'm not school studies to gain experience in really looking beyond '92 because 1990 is another area of life. After earning his a census year and we will be re-drawing undergraduate degree in 1969 from the all the legislative district boundaries. As U.S. Naval Academy, Deininger spent the far as future planning goes, I haven't next six years on active duty as a line looked beyond 1992." officer in the Navy. In 1975, Deininger enrolled as a first year law student at the University of Chicago. Gregory Huber ('81) "One of the reasons that I had chosen Thirty-three year old Democratic Repre- to go to law school after I had decided sentative Gregory Huber spent five years that I did not want to make the Navy a as a Marathon County Assistant District twenty or thirty year career was that I Attorney before being elected to the felt law school and law practice would Assembly last November. Huber points allow some flexibility in the future to be out that his career path is unusual in that involved in politics or other types of it is rare for an ADA to run for legislative things. I saw it as a way to achieve a kind "I saw it as a way to achieve a office. of independence. I saw the practice of kind of independence. I saw the "I've always been interested in crirni- law as a last bastion of being independent nallaw and planned on working in a dis- and being your own boss." practice of law as a last bastion of trict attorney's office when I graduated Deininger and his family settled in being independent and being your from law school. While I found politics Monroe where he commuted to Chicago fascinating, I really didn't think I would on a weekly basis. At the end of his first own boss:' ever run for the Legislature," Huber said. year, he had even made arrangements to Although Huber never ran for political move his family down to Chicago before office prior to winning the seat he now deciding to transfer to the UW. holds, he did volunteer his time to work "By this time, we had lived back in the greater emphasis was placed on the on other campaigns. He worked on Monroe for over a year and decided that practical impact of the law on the rest of Wausau Mayor John Robinson's cam- we liked it. We made the decision to stay the world, whereas the Chicago approach paigns when he was in the Assembly, in Wisconsin after I graduated. Then it was perhaps a bit more ivory-towered." Mike Hoover's judicial campaign, and made much more sense to be attending Deininger believes that the student Ed Garvey's 1986 U.S. Senate race. school at Madison." body at UW-Madison was a very positive After receiving his political science Deininger found his legal education aspect of his legal education. degree from UW-Madison, Greg at- to be an excellent preparation for his "At Madison it was a much more tended law school. As for his reasons for legislative career. relaxed atmosphere. Ninety-nine percent choosing law school, Greg says, "I liked "The coursework in law school is of my fellow freshmen at Chicago were the flexibility that a law degree offered. probably as good a preparation for legis- convinced they were going to be And it was great preparation for working lative work as it is for private practice, Supreme Court Justices some day. It was in the Legislature. It gave me a lot of because you tend to deal with the theory a very competitive atmosphere, whereas tools for analyzing policy, reading and of the law and how the law impacts on at UW Law School I found a lot less of interpreting statutes and understanding society. The law school preparation, theo- those types of pressures between stu- how the big picture fits together." . retical as it is and must be, is a good dents. Students were genuinely more Huber found some of his more bene- preparation for a public-policy type interested in what was happening outside ficiallaw courses to be legislation, tax, career. Having been at both the Chicago the building. You tended to get quite a property, real estate and criminal law. law school and UW Law School, one cross section of very interesting and com- However he feels it is best to be a gener- thing I did appreciate at the UW was that mitted people at the UW Law School." alist when choosing law courses. "Get a 15

Representatives here with almost every point of view. This can be difficult when I'm trying to push through a bill on an issue that I am particularly concerned about. But everyone seems to understand that sometimes we have to be willing to put our partisan differences aside and work together," Huber said. All in all, Greg is not quick to suggest wholesale changes in the way our state is governed. "As far as I can tell it's working."

Mary Hubler ('80) Democratic Representative Mary Hubler, now in her third term, never had any intention of pursuing a political career. "I would never have guessed that 1 would be in politics today. If you ask my friends from high school, though, they probably wouldn't be surprised." A former school teacher from Rice "Get a broad-based liberal educa- Lake, Hubler first became interested in politics after moving to Madison to "Some people thrive on making tion because you don't know what attend the UW Law School. She worked major policy changes. I think I type of law you'll be practicing full-time at the Capitol while attending school full time. When the incumbent for thrive on just making people hap- five or ten years down the road. whom she worked decided not to run for pier with state government:' It's also possible that you'll find re-election in 1984, it seemed natural for Hubler to run for the legislative seat. yourself in the Legislature:' "1 just thrive on being where the action is. You're at the heartbeat of what It shouldn't have to work that way. I'm is going on in Wisconsin. It's exciting. just a taxpayer like everybody else." broad-based liberal education because It's different everyday." Although Hubler does not think that you don't know what type of law you'll Hubler is currently a member of the being a lawyer makes one a better or be practicing five or ten years down the Joint Finance Committee and previously worse legislator, she believes that her road. It's also possible that you'll find worked on such committees as Agricul- legal education has helped her in terms yourself in the Legislature!' ture, Tourism, Gambling, and Judiciary. of her career. Rep. Huber is currently serving on a Although policy-making interests Hubler, "A law degree gives you an insight number of legislative committees. He is she particularly enjoys working directly into problems with legislation." [At the vice-chair of the Assembly Committee on with her constituents. Law School] we did a lot more theory Criminal Justice and Public Safety. He "There are some people who think than practice. It gives you an opportunity also serves on the Health Committee, the that the most gratifying thing would be to expand the way you think and look at Highway Committee and the Ways and passing bills and changing the law. That's different legal problems. I think the Law Means Committee, which deals with fine, but where 1 come from people see School did a good job of that. If I had to taxation issues. me more as an advocate for them. The do it all over again, 1 would pick Wiscon- Huber says that the most rewarding nicest thing is helping people find their sin again and again and again." aspect of working in the Assembly is the way through the mess of state govern- Hubler says that she enjoyed many of ability to make a difference on a wide ment. Some people thrive on making her professors such as Stewart Macaulay, major policy changes. 1 think 1 thrive range of issues. "There is great flexibility Neil Komesar, and Walter Dickey. on just making people happier with slate in the Legislature. You can take your con- "One of my favorites was at 7:45 in cerns on specific issues and work on government!' the morning. 1 took tax from Professor them, knowing you have the ability to Hubler believes that the bureaucracy Irish. He was good. 1 enjoyed that. And change things. You can make an impact of state government should be more to say that I enjoyed a class at 7:45 says a on the law through any of the commit- responsive to the people of Wisconsin. whole lot about the prof. What could be tees you are on. "To the state you're just a number. more boring than taxes at 7:45 in the One of the biggest challenges of They don't care. But when 1 call someone morning?" Greg's new job is having to deal with a in the State bureaucracy, they snap to it. lot of different personalities. "There are 16

Hubler does not have any particular Lautenschlager believes that as a legis long-term political goals at this time. She lator it's good to have experienced being says it is a matter of being at the right in the middle because you can under- place at the right time. stand the frustration that individuals feel "I may not run for anything else. 1 when they have to deal with laws that may get out of the Assembly in two years the Legislature passes. You discover that and practice law. Right now I'rn just real what looks good in print isn't subject to happy doing this. I may run for some easy implementation. other elected office. I never say never For Lautenschlager the most challeng- anymore." ing aspect of her job is the demand that she become very well informed on a Peggy Lautenschlager ('80) diversity of issues. Yet this is the aspect of the legislative process that she likes Thirty-three year old Democratic Repre- most. Lautenschlager is attracted by the sentative Peggy Lautenschlager saw law challenge of having too many irons in the school as a stepping stone to her political fire. "1 have a difficult time focusing on career. Prior to law school she had been only one or two topics of interest. As a very politically active, and although she legislator, I enjoy the opportunity to go didn't know what type of law she wanted from one issue to another at a quick to practice, she still felt that law school pace. In a day's work 1 can go from dis- would provide a marketable degree and cussing ground water contamination to offer options in allowing her to continue the implementation of a headstart pro- with her political interests. gram. I never get bored." After obtaining a degree in history and Yet, the legislator recognizes that you math at Wake Forest College, she went Assembly in 1988, she believes her law cannot be an expert on all issues. So most on to receive her J.D. at Madison. During background definitely has assisted her: members specialize in one or two areas her undergraduate years she worked as a "Law School prepares you for the Legis- of primary importance to them. For staff person and volunteer on a number lature in that it helps you to be familiar Lautenschlager, one of the difficult tasks of political campaigns, including the 1976 with statutory language, with what law she faces is to determine her niche in the Carter for President Campaign. She has can and cannot do, and with the budget- legislative scheme of things. remained active with the Democratic ing process and the passing of legislation. One of her strong interests is educa- Party since 1980. Prior to joining the Legislature, tion. She worked as a teacher's aide Although Lautenschlager did not run Lautenschlager was appointed in 1985, while in undergraduate school and for any political office during law school, by Governor , as the District both of her parents are school teachers. she did work for the Senate Democratic Attorney for Winnebago County. She She also has two children, Joshua and Caucus and The Democratic Party of won the election for the position in 1986 Ryan, who attend public schools in Wisconsin. In 1984 she ran for the State and remained there until the end of 1988. Fond du Lac. Senate and although she lost that election Lautenschlager states that although Lautenschlager is also interested in she felt that her background in law most District Attorneys eventually run criminal justice, drug and alcohol abuse, helped her to be more familiar with the for judicial office or go into private prac- and environmental issues. She is cur- entire process. Since being elected to the tice as litigators, quite a few legislators rently Vice-Chair of both environmental now in office have been former district committees: Natural Resources, and attorneys. Environmental Resources and Utilities. For Lautenschlager it was more of She also serves on the Aging, Education, "coming back to the Legislature:" She and Judiciary Committees. states "Being in the Legislature is very A large part of her legislative day is liAs a legislator, I enjoy the oppor- different from the D.A.'s office where spent helping constituents. Making sure tunity to go from one issue to you are dealing with human tragedy on a she is accessible to people in her district daily basis. As a prosecutor you can feel is especially important. another at a quick pace. In a day's that you are stuck in the system as a mid- Although Lautenschlager feels the leg- work I can go from discussing dleman within the entire operation. The islative process in Wisconsin is a good cases you take on are there because of one, she thinks the Legislative Branch in ground water contamination to the laws the Legislature makes and options Wisconsin is relatively weak as compared implementation of a headstart pro- which law enforcement people take to the Executive Branch. when it comes to arresting. As a legisla- "The Governor has incredible line gram. I never get bored:' tor, you can have more of a long-term veto power and this, along with the diffi- effect on how the system works." 17

culty in getting final agreement in the complicated legislative process, makes the Governor a very powerful player. III think it's good when the legisla- We have moved away from the Constitu- tional ideal of three co-equal branches of ture does have some people who government and structurally that's bad." by profession are lawyers, because She goes on to state, "The legislative branch as an institution is only as good I think we do bring something to as the sum of its parts, but the entire the process by way of our back- body of the Legislature is very represen- tative of the people of Wisconsin as it ground and training. But so do should be. The Legislature as a whole electricians and so do farmers:' has a lot to offer." When asked if Lautenschlager had aspirations to attain higher office, she responded, "One thing you learn quickly when you seek elected office is that if occupations. 1 think that the emphasis on you start thinking about long-term plan- how law affects society and not just on ning you get the cart before the horse and the black letter rules is important. It cer- forget about who elected you and why. tainly was helpful to me:' You hold the position because of the good Te Winkle notes that Professor Sam will of the constituents who elected you. Mermin and Professor Zile were most You are subject to the will of the vote. memorable to him. Right now I'm just happy being in the "1 had Professor Zile for a Soviet law Assembly. A two-year term is a long has a unique background that they bring course. He was able to make a subject enough look into the future:' to the legislative process. 1 wouldn't want come alive. By studying another system to see the legislature dominated by law- of law it gives a much deeper under- standing about our American system. William Te Winkle ('79) yers at all, but 1 think the current mix is pretty good." That class was a good experience." Even before his election to the Wisconsin Te Winkle believes that his legal edu- Te Winkle now chairs a new commit- State Senate in 1986, William Te Winkle cation and experiences at the Law School tee which he had requested to be created, participated actively in politics. After have been useful to him and his political the Committee on Science, Technology, graduating from the UW Law School in career. Communications and Energy. This 1979, Te Winkle returned to Sheboygan "The diverse nature of the student project tries to take advantage of the to practice law and was elected Chairper- body was helpful because just sitting wealth of research resources at Wiscon- son of the Sheboygan County Democratic through class discussions you would be sin colleges and universities. Party. After losing in a recount election challenged that your thinking was not "We will try to have a better transfer for the State Assembly seat in 1984, he necessarily the only way the world ought of technology from the laboratory to the was elected Senator two years later. to run. It gave you an understanding of marketplace. We as a state are signifi- cantly behind other states in terms of Although he says that hi; legal education the broad range of public opinion on a lot developing new technologies for the mar- has aided him in many ways, Te Winkle of different issues:' ket place. 1 think that this is an area for does not believe that a law degree is a Te Winkle stresses the importance of continued job creation and economic necessary prerequisite to be in politics. the relationship between the law and growth, given our abundant resources for "1 think that it is essential that the society and credits the Law School for development and commercialization of Legislature have a cross section of the emphasizing this theory. new technologies." state as its membership. The Legislature "The professors were able to convey a Te Winkle admits that although he has should not have too many lawyers. 1 sense of how the law fits into society, and no firm plans, he will probably seek re- think it's good when the legislature does it wasn't just an abstract study. 1 think election next year. have some people who by profession are that is a real important part of a legal "Beyond that, anything is possible:' lawyers, because 1 think we do bring education, especially today, because law- something to the process by way of our yers continue to go into so many different background and training. But so do elec- tricians and so do farmers. Everybody 18

Faculty Notes

Prof. Stephen Herzberg has received the University, however, Gullickson will consultant to Wise-Ware, a software the Richard S. Jacobson Award from the be a guest lecturer at Chuo University in licensing program of the University. Roscoe Pound Foundation in recognition Japan this summer. Prof. Gordon Baldwin was recently of outstanding curriculum and instruc- Prof. James E. Jones, j r., has com- elected to membership in the American tion in trial and clinical advocacy. He also pleted his service on the Athletic Board Law Institute. He is also serving on the participated in a Graduate Studies Collo- of the University, a position he has held Search Committee for the new Vice- quium on "Television in the Courtroom" since 1972. Local press, commenting on Chancellor for Legal Affairs. at Northern Illinois University. his departure, noted that he would be Clinical Prof. David Cook is Prof. Margo Melli has been ap- missed not only for his quotable remarks, involved with the Restorative Justice pointed by the Chancellor to a Commis- but for his insight into the relationship of Project. The Project seeks to repair the sion on the Future of Fraternities and athletics and education. harm caused by a criminal offense by Sororities on the Madison Campus, and Prof. Leonard Kaplan is co-chairing arranging for supervised face-to-face by the Dean of the Graduate School to a the meeting of the International Academy encounters between victims and offend- Committee on the Future of Research of Law and Mental Health this June in ers. The Project is the subject of an arti- and Graduate Training in Aging. She also Jerusalem. cle entitled "Restorative Justice Behind serves on a technical advisory subcom- Prof. Blair Kauffman presented a the Walls: Case Studies in Victim mittee to the Wisconsin Legislative lecture on "The Future Role of Laserdiscs Offender Mediation at the Incarcera- Council Committe on Marital Property in Law Libraries" at the midwinter meet- tion State," presented by Prof. Cook at Implementation. ing of the Association of American Law the North American Conference on Prof. Herman Goldstein has Libraries in Dallas. His article on laser- Peacemake and Conflict Resolution received the Bruce Smith, Sr., Award for disc technology was published by that in Montreal. 1989. This award is given from the Acad- Association last year. emy of Criminal Justice Sciences for his Prof. Lynn LoPucki will present his important and significant contributions article, "The Demographics of Bank- to criminal justice, particularly his classic ruptcy Practice," at the Law & Society book, Policing A Free Society. meeting this summer. Prof. James MacDonald has co- Prof. Gary Milholfin was recently authored a new edition of his book on featured on CBS's "60 Minutes." Milhol- Wisconsin Real Estate Law. lin has become an internationally recog- Prof. Richard Bilder recently co- nized investigator into the illegal spread authored an article for NASA entitled of nuclear weapons. "Legal Regimes for the Mining of Prof. Peter Carstensen, continuing Helium-3 from the Moon," an extension his concentration in antitrust law, has of his interest in international law. Bilder several law review articles due out soon, will appear on a panel at the ABA meet- including "Airline Deregulation: An ing in Honolulu on the subject of "Alter- Assessment," in Washington & Lee Law native Dispute Resolution of Interna- Review and "Public Policy Toward Inter- tional Disputes." state Bank Mergers: The Case for Con- Prof. Howard Erlanger was chosen cern" in the Ohio State Law Journal. by recent Law School graduates to Profs. Kenneth Davis and Arlen receive the 1989 Wisconsin Law Alumni Christenson will be lecturing at Justus- Association Teacher-of-the-Year Award. Leibig University in Giessen, Germany The award recognizes excellence in class- this summer as part of the UW-Giessen room teaching. Additionally, Erlanger has exchange program. edited a book entitled "Making It and Prof. Richard Delgado is serving on Breaking It: The Fate of Public Interest the Executive Committee of the Society Commitment During Law School." of American Law Teachers. Prof. Stuart Gullickson was Prof. Hcndrik Hartog's book "Public appointed by the Chancellor as interim Property and Private Power: the Corpora- Vice Chancellor for Legal Affairs. He will tion of the City of New York in American serve in this post until a successor is cho- Law, 1730 to 1870" has now been pub- sen, and then retire from the Law School lished in a paperback edition by the Cor- where he has taught since 1968. Prof. nell University Press. Gullickson is internationally recognized Prof. John Kidwell is currently serv- for his inovations in teaching legal prac- ing on the Wisconsin Supreme Court tice skills and for many years ran our Board of Attorneys Professional Compe- General Practice Course. Before leaving tence. He is also the legal adviser and 19

Alumni Notes Kathryn Winz \,77), an associate profes- agent in charge of the FBI investigations Applying Theory to a Practice." Kozak sor of criminal justice at UW-Platteville, into the deaths of three civil rights work- also made presentations to the Wisconsin was recently featured in The Wisconsin ers in 1963. Those killings were the basis Intellectual Property Law Assocaition Idea, a University publication. She was of the movie, a movie that Sullivan thinks and the State Bar of Wisconsin Annual last year's Teaching Excellence Award was good entertainment but far from Meeting on the Berne Convention Imple- winner, and has received a grant from factual. mentation Act of 1988. the Scholarly Activities Improvement Thomas T. Chan ('79) has left Fund for 1989-90. In addition to teach- Ashton-Tate, where he was deputy legal ing, Winz has also served a term as counsel, and has set up his own firm spe- municipal judge in Ridgeway. cializing in international and computer Peggy Niemer ('82) has been law. He has also been appointed by the appointed counsel, manufacturing and US Department of Commerce and the US relations, for GE Medical Systems in Trade Representative to serve as their Waukesha. Since graduating, Niemer Trade Advisor in computer matters. has practiced corporate law at Michael, Ann B. Mygatt ('79) has formed a Best & Friedrich. new firm in Boulder, Colorado. A former Ronald F. Ochsner ('67) has retired deputy district attorney, Mygatt is Presi- from the US Navy. Comander Ochsner dent-elect of the Boulder County Bar served since 1967 in a variety of duty Association. Her practice will be con- assignments concluding with his assign- centrated in criminal litigation and ment as military judge at the Naval Sub- family law. marine Base in New London, Connecti- Barbara Frey ('82), Executive Direc- cut. Following retirement, Ochsner was tor, Minnesota Lawyers' Committee on admitted to the Connecticut bar and has International Human Rights, is taking a affiliated with the Hartford firm of Pepe dynamic role around the world. After & Hazard. Law School. Frey conducted human Andrew J. Zafis ('50) has been pro- rights research in Chile, then practiced moted to Senior Vice-President and Liti- law with Dorsey & Whitney. Since 1985 gation Counsel of the Hotel del Coronado she has guided the Committee's 800 Corporation in Coronado, California. members and has traveled to Argentina Zafis, who formerly practiced in Ocono- and Uruguay in her official capacity. mowoc, Wisconsin, has been with the Brian Pierson ('83), with the Mil- Hotel since 1981. waukee firm of Charne, Glassner, Tehan, Prof. Marlin M. Volz ('40, '45), an Clancy & Taitelman, has recieved the emeritus professor at the University of 1988 Gene and Ruth Posner Foundation Louisville School of Law, recently Pro Bono Award for rendering outstand- received the Whitney North Seymour ing free legal services. The award cites Medal from the American Arbitration his representation of two state prision Association. The award is given for dis- inmates who each won rare civil rights tinction in the labor arbitration field. cases against correctional officials. Pier- Loretta R. Webster ('88) has been son also has represented individuals appointed associate vice chancellor for accused of being illegal aliens. These the advancement of cultural diversity at cases were taken with the understanding the University of Wisconsin-Stevens that neither he nor his firm would be Point. Before coming to Law School, paid for his work. Webster worked in the social ser- Robert ]. Caflisch ('81) has opened VIces area. his own office in Madison. He will con- Kecnen Peck ('88) has completed centrate in business, corporate, estate his clerkship with U.S. District Judge planning and real estate law. Terence Evans in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Alan R. Post ('72) moderated a panel and has joined U.S. Senator 's discussion on "Special Problems: The staff as counsel to the Senate Judiciary General Practitioner and Public Utility Committee. Law" at the Illinois State Bar Association Joseph A. Sullivan ('41) viewed the Annual Meeting. recent movie "Mississippi Burning" with Ellen M. Kozak ('69) spoke to the a more critical eye than most. Retired Law School's Intellectual Property Law from the FBI in 1971, Sullivan was the Society in April on "Copyright Law: 22

Editor's Note In the last issue we carried Prof. Walter would have followed through since the Gullickson, who is finishing his service Raushenbush's recollection on Richard Probate Code was rewritten by the legis- to the University as Vice-Chancellor for Effland, who passed away last December. lature in the early 1970's. The new Code Legal Affairs; G. William Foster, who is That caused Durke Thompson ('67) to was based on the Uniform Probate Code, in the middle of his "phased" retirement write with his personal thoughts on Prof. drafted, in part, by Prof. Effland. James MacDonald, who will continue to Effland: It has been a busy spring for alumni teach half-time for the next several years; "When I was a student at the UW Law activities. Alumni receptions in Minneap- and Orrin L. Helstad, who has one year School, I faced the prospect of laboring olis, New York and Washington, DC; left directing the General Practice Course through a dry topic known as 'Trusts and three Appreciation Dinners around Wis- before closing his books. Estates.' I soon learned that I was a consin; and the 46th Annual Spring Pro- I write this as the first day of exams delighted beneficiary of the wit and wis- gram filled our calendars. The receptions has begun. After one-half inch of snow dom of Prof. Effland. He made the hours were done with the great assistance of last Saturday (5/6/891. it has warmed spent on the course a joy, filling the time these alumni: John E. Thomas ('681. Min- enough for the University to shut off the with pearls of wisdom built around the neapolis; Edward L. Levine ('521. New hot water heat and begin running cold very human nature of the subject that he York; and Daniel E. Goelzer ('731. Wash- water for air conditioning. Within two taught. ington, DC. hours of the changeover, one room of stu "I remember vividly on one particular At the Spring Program, Jeffrey B. Bar- dents taking exams were screaming abou day in class, we were examining a Wis- tell, Madison, became the 46th President the cold. My blood always ran cold dur- consin probate statute. After a thorough of the Association (or 45th if Patrick Cot- ing exams. review, Prof. Effland noted his dismay at ter's two terms, 1958 and 1971, are No one has provided any names to go the legislature refusing to change the lan- counted together). The 47th President with the last mystery picture. It showed guage of statute. To emphasize his point, will be our first woman president, Kirby a large group of students at an Honors he indicated that he would provide a O. Bouthilet, Green Bay. Also, special Convocation in the late 1970's. I recog- stimulant to the legislature to act. He said thanks to the Class of 1949, and to Bob nize several faces, but I'll never tell. it was his design to leave a significant Landry and Irv Charne of that Class, for In this issue, the mystery picture bequest in his Will to the University of their spirited attendance. The Class is shows Prof. Abner Brodie in either Room Wisconsin if it would overturn or change soliciting gifts for a "4ger Fund" to 250 or 260. Again, I recognize several the particular offending statutory provi- memorialize their 40th reunion. members of the Class of 1971. Who are sions!" At the Benchers Dinner, four retiring all those handsome young people? We will never know if Prof. Effland faculty members were honored. Stuart 20

Recent Law School Activities Alumni Reception, Washington, DC

SECChairman David Ruder ('56) speaks Guests gather in SEC Hearing Room to alumni and friends Convocation

Law School Honors Convocation 21

Wisconsin Multi-Cultural Law Journal University of Wisconsin law School 975 Bascom Mall Madison, WI 53706

CALL FOR ARTICLES

The purpose of the Wisconsin Multi-Cultural Law Journal The Wisconsin Multi-Cultural Law Journal will be pub- is to highlight America's rich cultural diversity by creat- lishing its first edition in March, 1990. We are currently ing a national legal forum to discuss the issues affecting soliciting manuscripts for publication in our first issue. cultural minorities in all aspects of their lives. The Jour- Manuscripts submitted by 31 October 1989 will be con- nal will focus on minority and cultural issues that are of sidered for the Spring 1990 issue. Later submissions will importance to practitioners, scholars, professors, stu- be considered for publication in Spring 1991. Please sub- dents, legislators, administrators and minority and cul- mit manuscripts to the above address, typed triple-spaced tural organizations. The Journal will also encourage (ifpossible) and have generous margins. All manuscripts research and legal analysis in vital areas of the law that will be reviewed by an Editorial Committee and the have been historically neglected by traditional law author notified as soon as possible. reviews. The establishment of the Journal rests on the conviction that the inherent inequities of socieyt will be substantially corrected by challenging the legal system's treatment of minorities.

Please complete and return if interested in any of the following: o Yes, I am interested in submitting an article for the first publiction of the Journal. The topic will be:

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1 Now you can impress your clients as you drink your coffee or tea! This heavy white ceramic mug with red lettering and Gargoyle design can now be yours.

Please send me __ mugs @ $8.00 each including postage and tax. Make checks payable to "WLAN.' and return to: Wisconsin Law Alumni Association Name: University of Wisconsin Law School Madison, WI 53706 Address: _ 22

Editor's Note In the last issue we carried Prof. Walter would have followed through since the Gullickson, who is finishing his service Raushenbush's recollection on Richard Probate Code was rewritten by the legis- to the University as Vice-Chancellor for Effland, who passed away last December. lature in the early 1970's. The new Code Legal Affairs; G. William Foster, who is That caused Durke Thompson ('67) to was based on the Uniform Probate Code, in the middle of his "phased" retirement write with his personal thoughts on Prof. drafted, in part, by Prof. Effland. James MacDonald, who will continue to Effland: It has been a busy spring for alumni teach half-time for the next several years; "When I was a student at the UW Law activities. Alumni receptions in Minneap- and Orrin L. Helstad, who has one year School, I faced the prospect of laboring olis, New York and Washington, DC; left directing the General Practice Course through a dry topic known as 'Trusts and three Appreciation Dinners around Wis- before closing his books. Estates.' I soon learned that I was a consin; and the 46th Annual Spring Pro- I write this as the first day of exams delighted beneficiary of the wit and wis- gram filled our calendars. The receptions has begun. After one-half inch of snow dom of Prof. Effland. He made the hours were done with the great assistance of last Saturday (5/6/891. it has warmed spent on the course a joy, filling the time these alumni: John E. Thomas ('681. Min- enough for the University to shut off the with pearls of wisdom built around the neapolis; Edward L. Levine ('521. New hot water heat and begin running cold very human nature of the subject that he York; and Daniel E. Goelzer ('731. Wash- water for air conditioning. Within two taught. ington, DC. hours of the changeover, one room of stu "I remember vividly on one particular At the Spring Program, Jeffrey B. Bar- dents taking exams were screaming abou day in class, we were examining a Wis- tell, Madison, became the 46th President the cold. My blood always ran cold dur- consin probate statute. After a thorough of the Association (or 45th if Patrick Cot- ing exams. review, Prof. Effland noted his dismay at ter's two terms, 1958 and 1971, are No one has provided any names to go the legislature refusing to change the lan- counted together). The 47th President with the last mystery picture. It showed guage of statute. To emphasize his point, will be our first woman president, Kirby a large group of students at an Honors he indicated that he would provide a O. Bouthilet, Green Bay. Also, special Convocation in the late 1970's. I recog- stimulant to the legislature to act. He said thanks to the Class of 1949, and to Bob nize several faces, but I'll never tell. it was his design to leave a significant Landry and Irv Charne of that Class, for In this issue, the mystery picture bequest in his Will to the University of their spirited attendance. The Class is shows Prof. Abner Brodie in either Room Wisconsin if it would overturn or change soliciting gifts for a "4ger Fund" to 250 or 260. Again, I recognize several the particular offending statutory provi- memorialize their 40th reunion. members of the Class of 1971. Who are sions!" At the Benchers Dinner, four retiring all those handsome young people? We will never know if Prof. Effland faculty members were honored. Stuart