Spring 2017 Magazine

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Spring 2017 Magazine Maurer School of Law: Indiana University Digital Repository @ Maurer Law Ergo Law School Publications Spring 2017 Spring 2017 Magazine Follow this and additional works at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ergo Part of the Legal Education Commons, and the Legal Profession Commons Recommended Citation "Spring 2017 Magazine" (2017). Ergo. 35. https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ergo/35 This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Publications at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Ergo by an authorized administrator of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ERGO— MAURER SCHOOL OF LAW ARTICLES (in order of appearance) From the dean 2 175 years of Indiana Law 4 Bicentennial campaign 14 Coming events 15 Academy of Law Alumni Fellows named 16 Advisory board appointees 18 Happenings and events 22 Students and organizations recognized 25 Fariss retirement celebration 26 Journals and moot court competition 28 Hands-on experience in DC 32 Wintersession gives a head start 34 Burns gift endows professorship 36 Real clients, real problems 38 New global, domestic partnerships 40 Honor roll of donors 42 Partners in excellence 44 Giving by class 46 Friends, faculty, staff, and student gifts 56 Corporations, foundations, and law firm gifts 58 Endowed and special gifts 60 Class and law firm gifts 68 Volunteers 70 The Kimberling Society 74 Class notes 76 In memoriam 85 Ways to give 88 Volume: 175 Spring 2017 The law library in Maxwell Hall — 1940 Dean and James H. Rudy Professor of Law .............................Austen L. Parrish STAY IN TOUCH WITH INDIANA LAW Executive Associate Dean for Academic Affairs There are many ways to stay connected with the IU Maurer School and C. Ben Dutton Professor of Law.....................................Donna M. Nagy of Law. Add these networks to your contact lists: Assistant Dean for External Affairs and Alumni Relations ................Andrea C. Havill Web: law.indiana.edu Assistant Dean for Finance and Administration . Kenneth L. Turchi, ’83 LinkedIn: Indiana University Maurer School of Law Executive Director of Development..........................................Lisa Hosey Facebook: Indiana University –Maurer School of Law Director of Development, Major Gifts......................................Maarten Bout Director of Development, Major Gifts....................................Susan Yoon, ’96 Twitter: @IUMaurerLaw Director of Annual Giving ............................................Stephanie Coffey YouTube: IUMaurerLaw Director of Communications .............................................. James Boyd Instagram: IUMaurerLaw ergo is published in print in March and October, and electronically in February, April, August, September, and December, by the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. Arthur M. Lotz Office of Alumni and Development / Indiana University Maurer School of Law Baier Hall + 211 S. Indiana Ave. + Bloomington, IN 47405-7001 + (812) 855-9700 + (877) 286-0002 Copyright 2017 The Trustees of Indiana University photo: IU Archives (P0027473) ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 1 Law School Survey of Student Engagement, 95% of our first-year students rated their experience here as On December 5, 1842, Professor David McDonald gave his first lecture to the class of the new Law Department at Indiana University. McDonald was carrying out the Board good or excellent. of Trustees’ directive to create a school “inferior to none west of the Mountains.” Indicators of our graduates’ success are also very positive. Bar passage rates for the class of 2016 remained In this issue of ergo, we celebrate the Law School’s illustrious 175-year history by reflect- high, even though they plummeted in Indiana and across the country. Our July first-time pass rate of 89% ing on the important contributions of our alumni, faculty, and students to the legal was the highest of all Indiana law schools, compared with 61% for the state as a whole. Our pass rates in Ohio profession. It’s an impressive list: The IU Maurer School of Law has produced not only (100%) and Illinois (91%) were also outstanding. Placement rates are on the upswing, too. We increased the distinguished practitioners, but leaders in academia, in government, in the judiciary, number of graduates in judicial clerkships, and we expect to reach a five-year high in employment levels at the in business, and in nonprofit organizations worldwide. all-important 10-month mark. Your support of the school also helped reduce our students’ debt levels. The Law School remains one of the most affordable of the highly ranked schools, with more than 90% of our students receiving substantial scholarship support. Our school looks very different from how it did in 1842. Fifty-one percent of the incoming class in 2016 were women, and as you’ll read in this issue, the leaders of our three main law journals and the Moot Court Chief dear friends Justice are persons of color. Looking back just a few months — to 2016 — yields another great year for the Law School’s history books. Thanks to your support, our annual fund, the Fund for Sometimes we forget that a law school is more than just educating students. Last year, with our clinics, proj- Excellence, raised $1.2 million, $90,000 ahead of goal. We continued to make progress ects, and volunteer activities, the Law School again had a major impact in Indiana and beyond. Our Intellectu- in our $60 million capital campaign goal, with $41.1 million booked through December al Property Clinic received its first patent and reportedly did more than twice the amount of patent work than 31. Gifts to the campaign include more than $915,000 from faculty and staff. the average clinic nationwide. Our Veteran’s Disability Clinic was profiled in the media for its important work, as were our other clinics and projects. Separate from clinic work, our students volunteered more than 15,000 The capital campaign is so important because your generosity helps us create and offer hours in pro bono services, valued at over $350,000 (using $23.56 as the value for each law student pro bono the innovative courses and programs that prepare our students for legal careers. hour, a figure established by Independent Sector, a coalition of nonprofit organizations). As one example of our In January 2016, we began our new Wintersession program, which offers one week of students’ commitment, Jessica Ans received the Class of 2016 Lifetime Pro Bono Award, with 1,445 volunteer one-credit practical courses at no extra cost to our students. We repeated the program hours during her time at the Law School. this year, expanding the course offerings to nine and adding external speakers to supplement the in-class course work. For the spring semester, we added two tracks to As you’ll read in this issue, 2016 was also a great year for our alumni. Our energized Young Alumni Steering our Legal Profession course, which gives students the option of emphasizing government Committee moved into its third year, and we began the process of creating a Global Dean’s Advisory Board service or global practice in addition to the traditional general field of study. Our LLM to help support our international graduates and partnerships. Our Alumni Board advanced its innovative program began offering six specializations in areas ranging from intellectual property regional leads initiative. Our BLSA, Latino, and LGBT Alumni Advisory Boards continued to provide unparal- to financial regulation. This fall, we will begin offering a new master’s degree in leled support to our students and, for the first time, the presidents of our affinity boards held permanent seats cybersecurity in partnership with the Kelley School of Business and the School of on our Alumni Board. We held receptions all over the country, including a terrific reception at Chicago’s Field Informatics and Computing. Museum of Natural History and our first US Supreme Court swearing-in ceremony. Events like these will continue throughout the rest of the year. I hope you will join us as we visit cities near you across the country. But the changes in 2016 were more than just curricular-focused. We recently launched a fifth scholarly journal, the Indiana Journal of Constitutional Design. We established When Professor McDonald addressed the inaugural Law Department class 175 years ago, he said, “If you are partnership programs with the US Army JAG Corps, the Southern Poverty Law Center, willing to endure the labor of mastering this noble science. ; if you desire to be distinguished among your the Lumina Foundation, and Chapman & Cutler, and we continued to expand our col- fellow citizens and useful to our beloved country; here is a field worthy of your labor, a field in which you may, laborations with prestigious foreign universities. Last year, a record number of students at once, gratify a laudable ambition and promote the best interests of society.” Professor McDonald’s words were named Stewart Fellows, serving as externs in law firms, corporations, and non- are as true today as they were in 1842. As you read about the accomplishments of our students, faculty, and government organizations in eight countries. We have also received summer funding for alumni over the past 175 years, I think you’ll agree that he’d be justifiably proud. 20-25 students working in the public interest arena. Sincerely, Our faculty continue to do great things too, and I’m grateful for how committed and dedicated they are to the school. As superb instructors, caring role models, and interna- tionally recognized scholars, they are committed to being accessible, while challenging Austen L. Parrish, Dean and James H. Rudy Professor of Law students to meet the most rigorous academic standards. Perhaps because of this, the Law School reached a five-year high in student satisfaction. According to the national 2 ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 3 It was the fourth professor of law who finally said yes.
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