aggi Alumni Return, Reunion Highlights Reunion Return, Alumni The Gift Th&t Keeps On Giving On Keeps Th&t Gift The Honor Roll Honor ODU record LAW ved e iv Library n o 01 13 97 -9 Contents

1 From the Dean... Looking ahead to the 21st Century

2 The Gift That Keeps On Giving Returning the favor so others may benefit

7 College News The Honorable Harry T. Edwards to come to the College

8 Student News Moot Court team places nationally 10 Faculty News ' The activities, scholastic and otherwise, of our faculty

14 Development $18 million goal set for Law’s “Affirm Thy Friendship” Campaign

18 Honor Roll of Donors An expression of gratitude for those who give so others may learn

29 Alumni News Reunion photos and news of your classmates

38 In Memoriam Our sympathy goes to family and friends

40 National Council Three new members elected

College and Alumni Officers

College of Law Officers National Council Officers Gregory H. Williams, Dean Benjamin Zox ‘62, Chair Nancy H. Rogers, Associate Dean Jolynn Berry Butler ‘76, Vice-Chair Nancy B. Rapoport, Associate Dean Pamela H. Lombardi, Secretary Robert L. Solomon II ‘88, Assistant Dean Pamela H. Lombardi, Assistant Dean Send address changes and alumni news to: Bruce S. Johnson, Law Library Director The Law Record David B. Goldberger, Clinical Program Director OSU College of Law • 55 West 12th Avenue Barbara R. Snyder, Socio-Legal Center Director Columbus, OH 43210-1391 • FAX (614) 292-1383 Thomas G. Hoffmann II, Development Director The Law Record published for the alumni and friends Lisa J. Cook ‘88, Placement Director of The Ohio State University College of Law Liz Cutler Gates, Editor © 1996, College of Law, The Ohio State University College of Law Alumni Association Officers Charles C. Warner ‘70, President Cover Photo: Sue Hoeffel uses her law education working with homeless individuals in Columbus. Carl D. Smallwod ‘80, President-Elect Photo by Kevin Fitzsimons, University Photographic Services. From the Dean...

Dear Graduates and Friends,

This fall, the College of Law hosted reunions for alumni from eight classes. They ranged in size and temperament from the graduates of 1936, who are shining examples of lives well lived, to the Class of 1991, still filled with anticipation. As I visited these gatherings large and small, I shared news of the College and our hopes for the future. The outlook is bright. Our challenge in the days ahead is to advance the College into the 21st Century and increase our national prominence as one of the top 20 law schools in the nation. Our task will not be easy. It will mean attracting the brightest and best students, retaining our already outstanding faculty, and recruiting additional high quality teachers. It will involve enhancing programs for students, such as trial competitions and placement services, and continual review of our curriculum to be careers in law. The remaining dollars will our first African American woman certain it keeps pace with a constantly help create the opportunities that graduate the skills to forge a successful changing profession. ultimately cultivate an environment in family business, or the law school While there is much to do, it is not an which students can flourish. Quite simply, friendships that supported another as he impossible assignment. It will take time students are the centerpiece of this successfully battled leukemia, their lives and the involvement of many people, campaign, and your contributions will were forever altered by the education, the including you, as alumni. make a difference in their lives. training, and the friendships developed One important way you can help is by At the Class of 1975 reunion, one here at the College of Law. supporting The Affirm Thy Friendship alumna asked, “What difference will my Making a difference is the theme you Campaign. The campaign seeks to raise gift make?” It was a question I’m sure will see throughout this issue of the Law $18 million—an amount that will provide you’ve asked, too, and the answer can be Record. Whether dispensing justice in a the financial foundation to increase our found in the lives of our students, our federal courtroom in Miami, advocating national standings. Gifts will help attract faculty, and our alumni and friends. Your for families in a homeless shelter in and reward exceptional teachers, support contributions to the College make a Columbus, or guiding a corporation in a their research, and create public service difference in what happens in our Pittsburgh board room, the graduates of opportunities that ultimately encourage classrooms, our community, and our the College of Law have made their mark. the personal and professional growth of world. Rankings have their importance, It is a legacy that was forged at Twelfth and our students. Young men and women will but a truly great institution is measured by High, and we must be certain that our be provided a competitive edge in a tight the mark it makes in the lives of its students today are prepared to build on job market through scholarships, financial graduates and the impact they have in that inheritance. aid, and technological opportunities. Skills their workplaces and communities. training, such as moot court, and the legal As I visited with each reunion class, it clinic and writing programs, will be became increasingly evident that one of enhanced through funds from the the College’s most important legacies is the campaign. difference made in the lives of our In fact, the largest share of funds raised graduates. Be it the intellectual foundation Gregory H. Williams is committed to supporting students that allowed one to become chief counsel Dean through funding their education and for the Army’s Space and Strategic Defense providing practical training toward their Command, the affordable tuition that gave COVER STORY

• •

erhaps it is something inherent in the to the college as volunteers and as donors, P practice of law — a profession of people they provide pro bono work in their communi­ helping people — that encourages giving so In essence, those gifts have continued to give. ties, serve on philanthropic boards, and give others may have the same benefits. It is Much like the Energizer™ bunny who keeps leadership to activities that benefit their certainly deeply rooted in the history of The on going and going, gifts to the College of Law world. Some have followed traditional career Ohio State University College of Law. have provided a base that encourages paths, often to financial success. Others have altruism. Affordable classes enable students to taken the narrow road to positions that The college could not have been founded receive a quality education. Scholarships provide more personal satisfaction than without the generosity of a few friends. provide the means for needy young men and monetary reward. Whether following a route Former President Rutherford B. Hayes women to obtain an education in law, to private practice, corporate headquarters, or contributed funds to help keep its doors open. something they might not have been able to do public service, each received a gift at the Henry Folsom Page earmarked his estate to otherwise. College of Law and many have chosen to pass provided the college with its first home — it on to others. Meet four alumni who in their Page Hall. Early faculty members often taught The alumni of the College of Law are, on the own way are returning the gift that keeps on unselfishly without compensation. whole, a giving group. Not only do they return giving.

Sue Hoeffel ‘92 Following her summer experience, she received Coordinator of Shelter Plus Care one of three Outstanding Grant Recipient awards Faith Housing, Inc. given by the National Association for Public Columbus, Ohio Interest Law (NAPIL). (It was the first of several times she would be recognized. Upon graduation, Sue Hoeffel entered the College of Law she was given the John J. Adams Memorial Award knowing there were some things she didn’t for Leadership and Contribution to the Law want to do. “I didn’t want to be in a big firm. I School and a President’s Leadership Citation, both didn’t want to do any kind of business law. My for her work with the Student Funded Fellowship interest was really in helping people directly,” and the Homeless Project.) recalls the Cleveland native. At graduation, she looked for ways to “be involved Her focus was narrowed even more by a grant with homelessness and make an impact.” Initially, from the Student Funded Fellowship (now she helped provide legal services to clients at a known as the Public Interest Law Foundation) west side shelter. For the past year, she has to work with the Columbus Bar Association Homeless Project worked as Coordinator of Shelter Plus Care for Faith Housing, following her first year of law school. The grant provided a salary Inc., which is affiliated with Faith Mission in downtown Colum­ during a summer internship. bus. The program she directs provides housing for homeless individuals who are severely mentally ill. “That was my first real experience working with homeless people directly,” she recalls. The project involved scheduling volunteer “My heart is called to helping people who are in need,” she says. attorneys who visited area shelters to assist the homeless with And while she admittedly is no longer practicing law, she finds legal issues. Students from both Ohio State and Capital Law her legal education being used almost every day. School assisted attorneys with the meetings.

2 “I think differently than I did before I went to law school,” she notes. “I analyze problems or situations differently. It doesn’t always translate one-to-one into what I’m working on at a given moment. When you’re working with Dean Joanne Wharton Murphy homelessness, you deal not only with the individual who is in and other faculty members. your office right now, but with the entire issue of homelessness.” “I felt very comfortable at Ohio “It really helps in the big picture, public policy discussions,” adds State, and I felt it would be a Hoeffel. Her involvement as chair of the Columbus Coalition for good place to go to school,” he the Homeless gives her a bird’s eye view of the situation in central recalls. Ohio. “I think we’re in a unique position in Columbus to over­ come homelessness,” she says. “It’s not so big a problem that we The fact that he was offered a can’t eliminate it,” she adds. financial package to assist with expenses was also a plus. “I Hoeffel recognizes her career path isn’t the one followed by most wouldn’t have been able to go Donald L. Graham law graduates, but she has no regrets. “I feel uniquely blessed to without financial assistance,” be able to use my abilities to help people who haven’t had the says the North Carolina native. same chances I’ve had,” she says. Scholarships and grants not only paid for his education, but provided living expenses as well. She is also grateful for the opportunity provided by the Student Funded Fellowship grant. “Students and faculty at the law school In Columbus he pursued his goal of being a trial lawyer. “Ohio pledge an amount of money to fund that scholarship each State gave me a great education,” he says. “It was very challeng­ summer,” she says. “It is because of that money that I was able to ing. The professors were outstanding. The clinical programs were work with the Homeless Project. If I hadn’t had that experience, I excellent.” probably wouldn’t be where I am now.” He was recognized as the Moot Court Best Oralist, served on the Honor Council, and received the Judge Harter Memorial Hooding Award as Outstanding Trial Practice Student. The Honorable Donald L. Graham ‘74 District Judge “It gave me the skills necessary to be a trial lawyer. That’s what I Southern District of wanted from law school and that’s what I got,” he stresses. Miami, Florida With that foundation, he stepped into a role with the Judge Attending law school had been a life-long dream for Donald Advocate General’s Corps, serving in Germany and ending his Graham. Growing up in the segregated south, it seemed only tour of duty at Homestead Air Base in south Florida. “I got here natural for him to look to the north when it came to choosing a and liked it and stayed,” he says. Leaving the JAG Corps in 1984, place to obtain an advanced degree. Minority students were not he entered into private practice, focusing on criminal and civil encouraged to go to law schools within his state, so Big Ten trial cases and appellate practice in state and federal courts. schools, including The Ohio State University, often received these young men and women with open arms. The sense of camaraderie found at law school has continued through his career. “The mere fact I was welcomed at Ohio State He was welcomed on his first visit. A third-year student from caused me to feel that I owed something to a community,” says Cleveland showed him around the campus. It set the pace for Graham, who has served as United State District Judge for the positive impressions of the school, as did meetings with Assistant Southern District of Florida since 1991. He has continued to

3 encourage young people, particularly those from “I give out of gratitude for the help that I got and disadvantaged backgrounds. He speaks at schools knowing that there have to be other similarly-situated and participates in the 500 Role Models program. law students who could use a hand,” says Sandman. “That’s the best way for me to direct my contribution to the Ohio Close to his heart are minority law students. He tries to keep State College of Law,” he adds. “It goes into the Nicklaus scholar­ several minority interns on his staff at all times. “Judge Graham, ship program to help replenish and grow those funds.” as a federal judge, can hire anyone he wants to hire,” says Daron S. Fitch ‘92, a Columbus native who clerked for the judge from Sandman received his undergraduate degree from Ohio State as the 1992-1994. “If there’s an African American candidate he an Evans Scholar, a program maintained by the Western Golf thinks can handle the job, he will definitely try to reach out to Association in honor of Chick Evans, a golfer in the 1920s and help that person and give them an opportunity.” 1930s who gave his winnings to financially needy caddies who aspired to attend college. Scholarships are awarded to outstand­ Graham’s experience at Ohio State has marked his professional ing young men and women who have caddied at a golf club. In career, and returning the favor to the College of Law something Sandman’s case, he carried golf bags at Kenwood Country Club in he encourages others to consider. “Ohio State helped me at a time Cincinnati. when I needed help,” he says. “It’s appropriate that other indi­ viduals be challenged and helped in the same way, too.” Golf ability has nothing to do with it, because I’m certainly not much of a golfer,” laughs Sandman. Receiving the Barton Scholar­ ship made the decision to attend law school easier, and he applauds Nicklaus for providing the opportunity Dan D. Sandman ‘73 General Counsel, Secretary He encourages others to return similar favors. “I think people get and Senior Vice President of more out of it by way of satisfaction and pride, than they ever get Human Resources putting into it,” he says. “It’s a reminder of how much they have USX Corporation received from Ohio State, and I think the desire to give some­ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania thing back is almost instinctive.”

Golf may be a favorite past time His giving back extends beyond financial gifts to the university for many law school grads, but He serves on the National Council, providing help and direction for Dan Sandman it provided a for the College of Law. He also is on the Board of Trustees for the means to attend The Ohio State Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and previously volunteered with University College of Law. He is United Way of Houston, the Houston Grand Opera, the Big one of dozens of recipients of Brothers organization, and the Hancock County Mental Health the Barton Scholarship, a Dan D. Sandman Society. That’s something else that was instilled by the faculty of memorial established by —------Ohio State — a sense of obligation to the community as a professional golfer Jack W member of the bar, both in pro bono work as well as service on Nicklaus in memory of Robert K. Barton ‘61, who enjoyed the boards of philanthropic agencies, according to Sandman. game of golf during his lifetime. He is grateful for the foundation laid at the comer of Twelfth and Recently Sandman made a commitment of $50,000 to be given High. “Ohio State College of Law gave me as good a preparation over a five-year period to the College of Law. Half that amount is for the kind of law I practice as I could have obtained anywhere earmarked for the Barton Scholarship. in the country,” he says. Joanne 'm /ia asked to join the staff of the College of Law as Wharton Assistant Dean. Except for two years as Associate Murphy ‘58 Dean and Associate Professor of Law at Case Western Adjunct Professor of Law and Reserve University Law School in Cleveland, she has served The Assistant Dean Emeritus Ohio State University community. As University Ombudsman in The Ohio State University the mid-70s, she helped resolve conflicts for faculty, staff, and College of Law students. She later was appointed chair of the Commission on Columbus, Ohio Women and Minorities. All the while, she served as adjunct professor, teaching banking law. She returned to the college as She might have been a physical Assistant Dean for Alumni and External Relations in 1980. education teacher. Instead, Joanne Wharton Murphy The education and experience she gained at Ohio State she Joanne Wharton Murphy chose to pursue law, coaching returned to hundreds of young men and women, often working students in law school survival long hours beyond what was expected. Her favorite times were rather physical fitness. It’s a when she worked one-on-one with students, decision she doesn’t look back on, and after 30 years in legal education she is pleased with the path she followed. “Law students are going through an important time of their lives and they need help over some of the rough spots,” she relates. “Life is serendipitous, so too the path to law school,” says She became a role model and advocate for women and minori­ Murphy, who retired in 1995 from administrative responsibilities ties. In 1995, the Ohio State Bar Association honored her lifetime with The Ohio State University College of Law. “Without support of professional achievement and commitment to opening doors from my parents and others, I would hot be a lawyer,” she recalls. of opportunity to women with the Nettie Cronise Lutes Award. After three years at Miami University, she enrolled in the then- available combined undergraduate-law program, receiving Giving back to the College of Law has been important to the ultimately a B.A. degree and a J.D. former administrator. “I believe in payback to help others,” she says. “I also see money and service to the law school as a personal “There was no student aid when I came to Ohio State, but the investment. It enhances the quality of the school and the quality affordability of classes made it all possible to attend law school,” of our J.D.” she says. The advantage of foregoing her senior year in college was also financially attractive. Her experience as a student, administrator and professor pro­ vides her a unique perspective of the College of Law. “The college “At the time, I could come to Ohio State for $105 a quarter. I today is far from the school I graduated from in 1958,” she figured my whole living expenses were $1,000 to $1,100 a year,” stresses. “Prior to the 1960s, the college had meager private she says. With summer earnings, she was able to handle the funding. I have lived and shared the difference alumni support budget gap. “No one seemed to have money in those days,” she can make.” reflected. Murphy is modest about the role she had in the lives of students The years following graduation developed into a life of service. and the overall life of the college. “I was bom with good genes," She worked as a trust officer in a Chicago bank, then returned to she says with a smile. “It was a good combination of my person­ Ohio to serve as an Assistant Attorney General. In 1965, she was ality with the task and roles of my job.”

5 Payment in Full Checks in Ohio: THE NEW RULES By Douglas J. Whaley James W Shocknessy Professor of Law

he sending of a check marked “payment in full” has long check under protest. Instead, the payee can avoid the accord and I been a favorite device for attorneys anxious to settle a dis­ satisfaction in the following ways only. The first (and smartest) is pute. Under the common law, the payee who cashed such to return the check without cashing it (this was what the common a check when a good faith dispute is underway worked an law mandated). The problem with this is that many business “accord and satisfaction” (a modification and settlement of the payees are such bureaucracies that no responsible human being matter), even if the payee did not understand what was going on knows about the check with its payment in full language until and even if he/she crossed out the payment in full language. The after the check has been cashed. Section 3-311 deals with this courts said that the payee could not take the check free of the problem in two ways. First of all section 3-311(c) allows (but does condition under which it was tendered. not require) organizations to alert their customers that disputed Section 1-207 of the Uniform Commercial Code permits a payments must be sent to a particular office. If the customer does party to a dispute to perform “under protest” or “reserving all not do this, the payment in full check will not work an accord and rights” and to avoid thereby any waiver of the rights reserved. satisfaction; instead the dispute will continue, with the check Most jurisdictions held that section 1-207, as its legislative being treated as nothing more than partial payment on the debt. history clearly shows, was not meant to apply to If the payee has not instructed the check drawer payment in full checks, and thus would not change to send it to a particular dispute office, then the the common law result described in the last payee in all cases (whether the payee is an paragraph. However, Ohio took the opposite organization or an individual), may also avoid the tack, and in the infamous case of AFC Interiors accord and satisfaction by repaying the amount of v. DiCello, 46 Ohio St. 3d 1, 544 N.E.2d 869, 9 the check to the sender within 90 days. U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d 1181 (1989), the Ohio However, subsection (d) trumps all of the above Supreme Court allowed this section to be used rules. It states: by a payee of a payment in full check to strike (d) A claim is discharged if the person against whom the payment in full language, mark the check the claim is asserted proves that within a reasonable “cashed under protest—all rights reserved,” and time before collection of the instrument was preserve the amount of the dispute for later resolution. The case initiated, the claimant, or an agent of the claimant having direct was much criticized both for its misreading of the meaning of responsibility with respect to the disputed obligation, knew that section 1-207 and because it deprived those making payment of a the instrument was tendered in full satisfaction of the claim. valuable method of settling disputes. What this means is that if a responsible person representing Effective August 19,1994, the State of Ohio adopted the the payee actually received the check, then it doesn’t matter that revised versions of Articles 3 and 4 of the Uniform Commercial the sender failed to follow an instruction to send disputed checks Code, and the law of payment in full checks changed once again, to a particular office, nor would the payee be able to avoid the this time by virtue of a statute that specifically addresses the accord and satisfaction by retendering the money within 90 days. issue. It is new section 3-311 [O.R.C. section 1301.13], The Suppose, for example, that a consumer has failed to pay a bill entire section is reprinted at the end of this article, but here is a from a creditor because of a quality dispute about the product precis of its meaning. sold, and finally the creditor turns the matter over to collection As under the common law, the sender of the check must have agency. If the consumer gives the payment in full check to the an ongoing good faith unliquidated dispute in order to trigger the collection agency, and the check is thereafter cashed, an accord mechanism of the section (you can’t just pay all your creditors and satisfaction has occurred and the dispute is now over. half their debts and have a good month as you send out a flurry The final thing that the revision of the Code accomplished is of payment in full checks). The payment in full check must that section 1-207 was also amended to specifically provide that conspicuously state that it is being so tendered. Official Comment its rules allowing performance “under protest—all rights reserved” 4 suggests putting the payment in full language on the back of does not apply to an accord and satisfaction by payment in full the check in the space where the payee will necessarily see it checks. Thus the case of AFC Interiors v. DiCello, allowing the when indorsing the check, but a conspicuous statement in an payee to scratch off the payment in full language and cash the accompanying letter would also do the trick. check under protest, has been overruled by the new statute, and Reversing the rule of AEC Interiors v. DiCello, section 3-311 the above statutory procedure substitutes for it. provides that a payee may not avoid an accord and satisfaction (continued on page 7) merely by striking the payment in full language and cashing the

6 College News

Edwards Leads Forum as School in 1965. He was graduated from law school with Part of Lecture Series distinction and was a member of the Michigan Law Review and the Order of the Coif; he also received American Juris­ Harry T. Edwards, chief judge of prudence Awards for outstanding scholarship in labor law the United States Court of and administrative law. He has been admitted to practice in Appeals, District of Columbia Illinois, Michigan, and the District of Columbia. Circuit, will conduct a public forum as part of the Schwartz Active in many public service forums, Judge Edwards has been Lecture series on March 13, 1997 recognized for outstanding contributions to teaching and at the College of Law. The lecture public service. He has also co-authored four books dealing will be held at 4:30 p.m. in the with labor relations, published scores of articles and booklets, college auditorium. and presented countless papers and commentaries dealing with labor law, equal employment opportunity, labor Judge Edwards was appointed to the Court of Appeals by arbitration, higher education law, alternative dispute President Carter in 1980. He was appointed Chief Judge in resolution, federalism, judicial process, legal ethics, judicial 1994. administration, and professionalism. Following his appoint­ Before joining the bench, he was a tenured professor of law at ment to the United States Court of Appeals, he has continued the University of Michigan (1970 to 1975 and 1977 to 1980) to teach law on a part-time basis at Duke, Georgetown, and at Harvard Law School (1975 to 1977). He practiced law Harvard, Pennsylvania, Michigan and, most recently, New in Chicago with Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather, and Geraldson York University law schools. from 1965 to 1970. He is married to the Honorable Mildred M. Edwards, judge of A graduate of Cornell University (B.S. 1961), Judge Edwards the District of Columbia Superior Court. The couple has four received a J.D. degree from the University of Michigan Law children.

Appendix (continuedfrom page 6) Sec. 3-311: Accord and Satisfaction by Use of Instrument. asserted that communications concerning disputed debts, (a) If a person against whom a claim is asserted proves that (i) including an instrument tendered as full satisfaction of a debt, are that person in good faith tendered an instrument to the claimant to be sent to a designated person, office, or place, and (ii) the as full satisfaction of the claim, (ii) the amount of the claim was instrument or accompanying communication was not received by unliquidated or subject to a bona fide dispute, and (iii) the that designated person, office, or place. claimant obtained payment of the instrument, the following (2) The claimant, whether or not an organization, proves that subsections apply. within 90 days after payment of the instrument, the claimant (b) Unless subsection (c) applies, the claim is discharged if the tendered repayment of the amount of the instrument to the person against whom the claim is asserted proves that the person against whom the claim is asserted. This paragraph does instrument or an accompanying written communication not apply if the claimant is an organization that sent a statement contained a conspicuous statement to the effect that the complying with paragraph (l)(i). instrument was tendered as full satisfaction of the claim. (d) A claim is discharged if the person against whom the claim is (c) Subject to subsection (d), a claim is not discharged under asserted proves that within a reasonable time before collection of subsection (b) if either of the following applies: the instrument was initiated, the claimant, or an agent of the (1) The claimant, if an organization, proves that (i) within a claimant having direct responsibility with respect to the disputed reasonable time before the tender, the claimant sent a obligation, knew that the instrument was tendered in full conspicuous statement to the person against whom the claim is satisfaction of the claim.

7 New Staff join College Moot Court Teams Place Nationally By Danielle Smith, 3L Vicki Eastus has joined the administrative Two moot court teams from The Ohio staff as Assistant to the Dean. She replaces State University School of Law competed Rob Solomon ‘87, who assumed the in the finals of the 20th Annual National position of Assistant Dean of Admissions Appellate Advocacy Competition in New and Financial Aid. He is also an adjunct Orleans in August. professor in the College. The team of Darius Kandawala ‘96 and Vicki Eastus Liz Cutler Gates In addition to administrative responsibili­ Heather Robinson ‘96 placed third in the ties, Vicki’s tasks include supervising nation, after bowing to the eventual judicial extents, public service fellows, communications, in the Alumni and national runner-up. Their brief was judged and student pro bono programs. Development Office. She serves as editor third best in the nation. of the Law Record and will oversee produc­ She comes to the College of Law after tion of other communication pieces. She Ohio State’s other team, consisting of serving as adjunct professor at Dickinson will also play an important role in alumni Rebecca Anaya ‘96 and Heather Guthrie College of Law. She has also taught legal and development activities. ‘96, swept the preliminary rounds before writing at Capital University and practiced being eliminated in the quarterfinals by law in Dallas and Washington, D.C. She Liz brings to the office a wide range of the eventual national champion team. received a B.A. cum laude from Harvard communications experience. She is a University. She was one of two Presidential graduate of Grace College and Ball State Rebecca Anaya earned individual honors Scholars from Texas and is a graduate of University and has worked as a newspaper as the eighth best oral advocate in the the University of Texas Law School. reporter covering the courts, in nonprofit nation. public relations and fundraising, and as a The National Appellate Advocacy Compe­ Liz Cutler Gates is the new staff assistant, freelance writer, editor and desktop publisher. tition is the second largest moot court competition in the United States. It is sponsored by the Law Student Division of Children’s Rights is Focus of New Program the American Bar Association in conjunc­ By Barbara Snyder tion with the ABAS Section of Litigation Director, Center for Socio-Legal Studies and the Appellate Judges Conference of the ABA. T ) uilding on the success of the Justice meet a rising • • • JD for Children Project initiated in demand from 1994, the Center for Socio-Legal students for Studies and the Clinical Programs at the more skills College of Law are working to establish training and a Justice for Children Practicum. The at the same University has selected this project for time help to an academic enrichment grant which meet some of the legal needs of will enable us to hire a tenure-track children in our community. We expect faculty member and a staff attorney. that the Practicum will provide case The faculty member will teach and do studies to enrich the research efforts research in the area of children’s rights, of faculty working in the children’s and will work with the staff attorney rights area. on the clinical course. Dean Williams has asked the In full English court regalia, Mark Wagoner, The Justice for Children Practicum Appointments Committee, led by Professor James Brudney, to begin the left, and David Bloomfield discuss the merits will have an interdisciplinary focus, of English law during Professor Jim Brudney’s search for the tenure-track faculty because the practice of law related to Comparative Law class. Both are third-year children involves collaboration with member, and Professor David law students. psychologists, social workers, and other Goldberger, Director of Clinical professionals. The Practicum will also Programs, will head the search for the expand the ability of the College to staff attorney. Student News

The Class of 1995 Judicial Clerkships Goes To Work Graduates of The Ohio State University College of Law are serving A s of April, 1996, 88 percent of clerkships for the following judges: x \ those responding to a Class of 1995 employment survey had secured Judge Mark Abel, U.S. Magistrate Judge, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio positions, while another ten percent Judge Anthony Alaimo, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Georgia were still seeking employment. In a Judge William Clark, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Ohio report released by the Placement Judge Beverly Cutler, Superior Court, 3rd District, Alaska Office, 178 graduates had obtained Judge Susan Dlott, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio jobs, two were in graduate school, two Judge David Ellwood, Court of Common Pleas, Guernsey County, Ohio were not seeking employment and 21 Judge Richard C. Erwin, U.S. District Court, Middle District of North Carolina were still in the job market. State of Ohio Court of Claims Fifty seven percent of the respondents Judge Reynaldo Garza, U.S. Appellate Court, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals remained in Ohio for their first job. Judge Robert E. Grant, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Indiana The remainder of the class is employed Judge Joseph Kinneary, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio in 23 other states and in the District Judge Katherine Lias, Domestic Judge, Court of Common Pleas, Franklin County, Ohio of Columbia, including Arizona, 1; Judge Yvette McGee Brown, Domestic Judge, Court of Common Pleas, Franklin County, Ohio California, 6; Colorado, 1; Florida, 3; Judge Thomas Meskill, U.S. Appellate Court, 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals Georgia, 2; Idaho, 1; Illinois, 7; Judge Karen Nelson Moore, U.S. Appellate Court, 6th Circuit Court of Appeals Indiana, 3; Kentucky, 1; Louisiana, 1; Judge Solomon Oliver, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio Michigan, 5; Missouri, 1; New Hamp­ Judge James Rosenbaum, U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota shire, 1; , 2; Nevada, 1; Judge Marilyn Shea-Stonum, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Ohio North Carolina, 3; Pennsylvania, 4; South Carolina, 1; Texas, 2; Utah, 1; Virginia, 1; Washington, 3; West Left: Legal Clinic Director David Virginia, 2; and Washington, D.C., 6. Goldberger (left) takes a rest from grilling (hot dogs, not students) at the The average starting salary for those cookout in August for new students. employed in the public sector was $35,100. The average starting salary for those employed in the private sector was $48,000. Overall, the Below: The dust flies as first year law average starting salary for 1995 students engage in a softball tourna­ graduates, based on the 101 who ment early in September. Organized by Professor Peter Swire, the tourna­ reported income, was $44,000. ment offered an opportunity for new students to get acquainted. Total Number of Respondents 203

Types of Employment______Total Private Law Practice 93 Accounting Firms 9 Local Government 16 State Government 11 Federal Government 4 Military 5 Federal Judicial Clerkships 8 State Judicial Clerkships 10 Local Judicial Clerkships 0 Corporations 15 Other Business and Industry 4 Non-Profit — Public Interest 0 Academic 3 Total Employed 178

9 Faculty News

Visiting Faculty Three visiting professors are teaching in the College this In July, Mary Beth Beazley was a moderating panel member at year. Robert Berry, who is teaching contracts and sports the annual meeting of the Association of Legal Writing Directors and entertainment law, and Edward in Seattle, Washington. She also was a presenter at a session, (Ted) Janger, who is teaching contracts “Teaching Students How to Revise Using Guided Self-Critique,” and antitrust, commercial papers and and sang in the talent show (all in fun) at the bi-annual confer­ legal writing, are here for the entire year. ence of the Legal Writing Institute, also in Seattle. In August, she Samuel Oddi is a visiting professor for taught a CLE course, “The Cynic’s Guide to Legal Writing,” in the fall semester only. Muncie, Indiana, for the Delaware County Bar Association. She Berry is in Columbus from Boston has also been working with the Report Committee of the Ohio College School of Law, where he has been Supreme Court Domestic Violence Task Force. a professor of law since 1972. A Harvard Law graduate, he is considered a founder Francis X. Beytagh recently completed a short article on federal­ of the academic field of entertainment ism and the contemporary Court to be published in the Capital law. He also has written a two-volume University Law Review. He conducted a seminar for the Ohio CLE treatise and several other books on sports Institute titled Overview of and Update on the U.S. Supreme Court. law. He is also serving on the selection committee for the Fulbright Commission. (See article on page 11 about his new position at Janger was graduated from the University the Florida Coastal School of Law.) of Chicago Law School, where he was a senior editor of the University of Chicago Jim Brudney, who teaches employment law, labor law and Law Forum. He clerked forjudge Irving legislation, was promoted to associate professor. Goldberg of the United States Court of On July 12, Sharon Davies presented a Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and prac­ workshop for the Ohio Municipal Law Institute ticed with Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering in Worthington, Ohio concerning “Recent for six years. He has taught commercial Developments in Criminal Procedures.” She law courses at both Dickinson and Samuel Oddi _ Capital Law Schools. and Timothy Jost have drafted an article forthcoming in a symposium edition of the A faculty member at Northern Illinois School of Law, Oddi University of Georgia Law Review on-“The is teaching law and medicine and unfair trade practices. He Continuing Presence of Fraud and Abuse in was graduated from George Washington University Law Sharon Davies Managed Care;. School and has extensive practice and teaching experience in intellectual property and health law. Despite rumors to the contrary, Arthur F. Greenbaum’s book, The Lawyer’s Guide to the Ohio Code of Professional Responsibility, has not yet been published. It is in the final stages of completion and will be printed by Banks-Baldwin Publishing Company in late 1996 or deal with “Psychological and Honesty Testing” and “AIDS early 1997. Greenbaum is also preparing his portion of the 1997 Testing.” The 1996 Cumulative Supplement to her treatise is due supplement for the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure — With Commen­ out this fall. tary, a work co-authored with Howard P Fink and Charles Hébert is serving as Chair of the College of Law Long-Range Wilson, published by the Michie Company. Outside the college, Planning Committee. The committee is charged with preparing a Greenbaum’s most significant avocation remains rooting for the self-study report in anticipation of the re-accreditation process of Cleveland Indians. In 1996 he and his family attended Indians the American Bar Association, which will take place during games in Winter Haven, Florida; Baltimore, Maryland; and academic year 1997-98. Detroit, Michigan, as well as at Jacobs Field. At the Seventh Annual Convention of the National Employment Sheldon W. Halpern completed the 1996-97 cumulative update Lawyers Association in San Diego, Hébert spoke on “Selected (five years) to his Copyright casebook. The book is distributed by Issues in Employment Torts ; Defamation and Privacy. She spoke the West Publishing Company. He has also contracted with on “Employment Discrimination Law Update: Recent Develop­ Kluwer Publishing to write a book on the United States law of ments in Sexual Harassment and Age Discrimination,” to the intellectual property. It will be published as a volume of The Federal Judicial Center Workshop forjudges of the Sixth and International Encyclopedia of Intellectual Property. Eighth Circuits in Traverse City, Michigan. In October, she L. Camille Hébert was promoted to professor. She revised two presented a paper, “Analogizing Race and Sex in Workplace chapters to her treatise on Employee Privacy Law. The chapters Harassment Claims” at a faculty workshop at the College of Law.

10 Visting Professor Ted Janger presented a paper, “Federalism and Practice 615, September/October 1996 and “Seeing the Forest and the Externalities of Secured Credit,” at a faculty workshop at the The Trees: The Proper Role of the Bankruptcy Attorney,” Indiana College of Law on November 7. He will also present a paper Law Journal 783, 1995. At the International Visitors Council, Inc. entitled “The Trustee’s Avoidance Power After Seminole Tribe: in July 1996, she led a discussion with visiting Brazilian judges Bankruptcy and the Supreme Court’s New Federalism,” at the and lawyers. She will serve as a panelist to discuss “Ethics: Is AALS Annual Meeting in January, at a joint meeting sponsored by Disinterestedness Still a Viable Concept?” at the American the AALS Sections on Federal Courts, Antitrust and Bankruptcy. Bankruptcy Institute’s Winter Leadership Conference in December 1996. On October 13, she married Jeffrey D. Van Niel, Joan M. Krauskopf is completing her final year of the presidency of the National Order of the Coif. She is naming the committee which will select the next winner of the $10,000 Triennial Book In June, Associate Dean Nancy H. Rogers Award. Let her know about significant legal books you think served on the faculty of a Fordham Law should be considered. Contact her at the College of Law or via School Workshop on Conflict Resolution for e-mail, [email protected]. Protestant and Catholic community leaders from Ulster, Northern Ireland. With her co­ Jim Meeks delivered a paper on “Antitrust Issues in Public Utility author, Craig McEwen, she completed the Regulation” for the 10 th Biennial Regulatory Information Confer­ manuscript for the 1996 Supplement to their ence in Columbus on September 12. The conference was spon­ I Nancy H. Rogers two-volume treatise, Mediation: Law, Policy, sored by The National Regulatory Research Institute. ______Practice.

An essay analyzing Bennis v. Michigan (one of the Supreme Rogers is one of ten law faculty and deans who are members of Court’s recent forfeiture decisions) by Deborah Jones Merritt the Association of American Law Schools Resource Corps. The was published in the Legal Times’ annual review of the court’s term. The essay was reprinted in regional legal newspapers.

In August, Merritt lectured on the Supreme Court’s federalism Beytagh Named President of New Law School jurisprudence to a conference of federal judges from the Sixth and Francis X. Beytagh, former dean of the Eighth Circuits. She made a similar presentation to a conference College of Law, has accepted the of Eleventh Circuit judges in September. Merritt also spoke on position of President of the new Florida “New Directions in Federalism” as part of a symposium celebrat­ Coastal School of Law in Jacksonville, ing the dedication of a new building at Columbia University’s FL. The move allows him and his wife, School of Law. Diane, to retire to warmer climes while remaining active in legal education. His John Quigley spoke on “Academic Excellence and Social Respon­ appointment is effective July 1, 1997. sibility” at an Honor Society convocation at Wright State University. He has also spoken on Beytagh served as dean from 1985 to a Variety of international issues at the OSU 1993, when he returned to the law faculty full-time. During Center for African Studies, for the American his years as dean, he oversaw the College of Law’s Centen­ Committee on Jerusalem in Washington, D.C., nial Campaign, which raised approximately $15 million and and for the Jerusalem Day Symposium in resulted in a major addition to and renovation of Ohio Amman, Jordan. He has written chapters in two State’s law building. He was instrumental in the develop­ books on the Middle East: The Occupied ment of the Center for Socio-Legal Studies, which operates Territories: Human Rights Protection and Political in conjunction with a similar organization at Oxford Change, published by Kluwer Law Interna­ University in England. tional; and Jerusalem Today: What Future for the The Beytaghs expect to move to the Jacksonville area in the Peace Process?, published by Ithaca Press. summer of 1997. He will be serving as visiting professor at Nancy B. Rapoport was named Associate Dean Southern Methodist University during the spring semester. for Student Affairs. She replaces Karen The new free-standing school opened about a year ago and Cutright, who left the position in July to is focusing on skills training and professionalism. It has relocate to North Carolina. Rapoport had two about 160 students enrolled in bottrday and evening articles published: “Avoiding Judicial Wrath: divisions, with a capacity for 500 students. Situated on a The Ten Commandments for Bankruptcy two-building campus in southeast Jacksonville, it currently Practitioners,” Journal of Bankruptcy Law and has eight full-time faculty.

11 meeting of the National Association of group assists law schools in collegial promoting equal opportunity at the College and University Attorneys in deliberations and planning. University. (See related story on page 13.) The two-volume treatise she co-authored Indianapolis. She was elected as vice chair She has joined the Center for Public with Paul Giannelli at Case Western of the Athletic Council of the University. Resources Ethics Commission, a group Reserve University, Ohio Evidence (Banks- Peter Swire was quoted about intellectual discussing possible changes in ethics Baldwin/West Publishing Co.), has been property in the October 3 issue of Slate provisions as these relate to lawyer- cited by the Ohio Supreme Court. She Magazine, the Microsoft magazine on the mediators. She also serves as vice chair of spoke in June at the Child Welfare World Wide Web. To see the article, titled the Board of Directors of the Legal Services Mediation Workshop sponsored by the “Dead Head,” by Robert Wright, go to Corporation, the organization administer­ Ohio Supreme Court and the State Justice www.slate.com. The article is archived in ing federal funding for legal services for Institute. Her topic was “Legal Tools to the “compost” file. Select “composted” the poor. Preserve the Confidentiality of Mediation articles, then select the article in the in Ohio.” On October 22, she spoke on On May 21, Barbara Snyder was awarded compost file. Swire is quoted in a sidebar “Achieving Compliance with Title IX the University Distinguished Affirmative (“other reasons”). (Without Litigation)” at the annual Action Award for her leadership in

Dean Williams Recognized by Alma Mater College of Law Dean Gregory H. Williams received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Ball State University. He is a 1966 graduate of the school, which is located in Muncie, Indiana. The award is given to alumni who have distinguished themselves in their professions, their respective communities, or in their service to Ball State.

Also, the Dean: • was the featured speaker at the 90th Anniversary of the Yakima, Washington, YMCA. . spoke to more than 500 people at Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana, as part of the University Speaker Series. Gil McKean, president of the Ball State University Alumni A ssocia­ tion, presents Dean Gregory H. Williams with the Distinguished • talked to 900 seventh and eighth graders in Yakima, Wash­ Alumni Award. The Dean is a 1966 graduate of the university. The ington, about overcoming adversity. presentation was made at the Alumni Association Awards Dinner • met the 14th Dali Lama at a special meeting hosted by movie in Muncie, Indiana, during Ball State’s Homecoming Weekend. actor Steven Seagal and OSU law grad, Donald Wheeler 64. Photo courtesy of Ball State University • spoke to the 600-member incoming freshman class at Albion College, Albion, Michigan. • spoke at an all-university forum at John Carroll University. The Dean will speak at the following events. These engagements may be open to the public. Check local • spoke at the Wooster Forum Series at the College of Wooster. listings for details. The event was also broadcast on C-Span. • was quoted in the October issue of George, the political January 4 Association of American Law Schools, magazine founded by John E Kennedy, Jr. In an article by Washington, D.C. James Neff, “Is Justice Blind?,” the dean addressed the Wittenberg University, Springfield, Ohio potential of racial bias when a prosecutor pursues an allega­ January 20 tion of criminality against black public officials. Neff, an OSU January 23 Wisconsin Bar Association, Madison, professor of journalism, investigated whether black elected Wisconsin officials are more vigorously investigated than their white Edgewood College, Madison, Wisconsin counterparts. June 6 • was interviewed on a Texas radio station.

12 David Williams II Professor Snyder Receives University Affirmative Action Award organized The Ohio State University trip to South Africa, which On April 10, Professor Barbara R. Snyder included the university was awarded the University’s Distin­ president, deans, guished Affirmative Action Award. faculty and the men’s Richard Sisson, Provost of the University, basketball team. It was made the award during an otherwise David. Williams II the first trip to routine faculty meeting, and along with combine athletic and the citation, brought a basket of fruit — academic endeavors and participants his answer to President Gee’s symbolic explored how the university could enlarge apple for other faculty awards. their relationship with universities and “1 met Barbara on one of my first government agencies in South Africa. He interview trips to the University and also serves as a peer reviewer for the remember our meeting well,” Sisson Barbara R. Snyder NCAA on Athletic Certification and for the said. “We talked about gender equity ABA in Law School Accreditation. and minority issues, the very things that College in 1988 and teaches primarily bring me here today.” Evidence and Constitutional Law. Her The award was a surprise for Snyder, service in the arena of affirmative action who seemed especially impressed that has included work on many committees, Dean Gregory H, Williams would call a including the Title IX/Gender Equity short break in the faculty meeting to Subcommittee of the NCAA Certification Below: mark the occasion. Project for the OSU Athletic Department, As the jury and workshop attendees look on, Faculty Salary Equity Review Committtee, Kelly Collinsworth (3L) testifies during a Established in 1982, the award honors and the Planning Committee for the trial demonstration presented at the Masters alumni, faculty, staff, students, and Conference on Gender Issues in the In Trial Seminar in September. More thcpi particular OSU units or departments Professions, sponsored by the Center for 250 people attended the day-long program that demonstrate a significant commit­ Professional Education. Snyder has also at the College of Law. The workshop was ment to affirmative action. presented by The Foundation of the American addressed many university, professional, Board of Trial Advocates - Ohio Chapter. Snyder, who received her law degree at and local government groups on educa­ Proceeds benefit the college’s Lawyering the University of Chicago, joined the tion and affirmative action issues. Skills Competition Program.

Adjunct Recognized Adjunct professor Lisa Eschleman was recognized by Business First as one of Forty Under 40, a list of individuals in Lisa Eschleman the Columbus area under the age of 40 who have demonstrated notable success and have made significant voluntary efforts for the betterment of the community. She is a partner in the litigation department of Porter, Wright, Morris and Arthur and teaches trial practice in the College of Law. Development

fter more than a year of extensive preparation, the College • A goal of $5,750,000 has been established to support students. of Law has joined The Affirm Thy Friendship Campaign Of that goal, $2,000,000 is earmarked for scholarships to help A and has established a goal of $18 million. The Campaign, recruit some of the nation’s best and brightest men and women launched by the University in September of 1995, has an overall and to help keep the institution accessible for all qualified goal to raise $850 million by the year 2000. The focus for the students. Campaign support will also increase opportunities for College’s comprehensive fund-raising effort is to provide financial our students to develop legal writing skills and courtroom and resources to strengthen the College’s national reputation. advocacy skills, provide our students with access to the most current technologies, and ensure the continued growth of library “We seek to secure our place among the finest law schools in the services. Almost 32 percent of the Campaign goal is designated to country. We seek to become one of the nation’s 20 best recruit and help prepare the leaders of tomorrow. institutions and The Affirm Thy Friendship Campaign will provide the resources to ensure our success,” said • A goal of $4,500,000 is slated to increase the number Dean Gregory H. Williams during his campaign kick-off of endowed faculty chairs and professorships and to address to the College’s National Alumni Council in OHIO provide faculty support funds to reward and recognize excellence and leadership in teaching and legal September. SIATE UNIVERSITY research. Ensuring the College’s ability to recruit and retain the best possible faculty is paramount The Centennial Campaign completed more than CAMPAIGN five years ago, provided the physical foundation to its future and an important objective of the for the future—-John Deaver Drinko Hall. The AFF THY FRIENDSHIP Campaign. building, with its state-of-the art addition, provides an excellent learning environment. The Affirm Thy ' A goal of $2,000,000 has been established to support the Friendship Campaign will support the advancement of the College’s growing Socio-Legal Studies Center. The College has academic enterprise—the people and the programs that will make always been responsive to the changing needs of the legal the College one of the nation’s best. Toward that end, the College’s community and of society throughout its history. Socio-Legal Campaign focuses on four cornerstones for the future—our Studies—the examination of law and its effects on society—is a students, our faculty, our academic programs, and our commit­ growing field for interdisciplinary academic exploration and Campaign support will ensure our national leadership. Campaign ment to service:

The Affirm Thy Friendship Campaign

„ . _ , . , $5,750,000 Preparing Tomorrows Leaders...... Endowed and operating resources for student financial aid, lawyering skills development, and learning environment.

Promoting Faculty Leadership and Excellence...... $4,500,000 Endowed resources for faculty support, research funds, and teaching awards.

Supporting Academic Leadership and Excellence...... $2,000,000 Endowed resources for Socio-Legal Studies program development, including funds for faculty and research support.

Ensuring A Commitment To Service...... * ,750,000 Endowed resources for student public service awards and for Legal Clinic support.

Building„ .... For c Tomorrow _ ...... *...... $4,000,000 Endowed and current resources for annual operation and venture capital. _ • $18,000,000 Goal For Campaign......

Cash Gifts...... $15,000,000

Deferred Gifts...... $3’000’000 funds will be used to support student-faculty research, faculty a faculty chair; pledges totalling almost $300,000 from College development, and partnership development between the alumni working at Procter and Gamble in Cincinnati to create a College’s faculty and other faculty across campus and around the faculty excellence award; a commitment of $250,000 to establish a globe. trial advocacy student competition program from Michael E Colley ‘61; an estate gift from Gwen R. Kagey of $174,000 to establish an • A goal of $1,750,000 is slated to ensure the College’s commit­ endowed scholarship in memory of her husband, Barton C. Kagey, ment to community service. The College’s Legal Clinic and its a gift of $100,000 from Carter C. Kissell ‘27 for an endowed programs have long-served the dual role of providing experien­ scholarship in memory of Professor Alonzo H. Tuttle, and a gift of tial learning for students and legal resources for government $103,000 from Sara G. Wieland to create an endowed scholarship agencies and indigent clients. To ensure ample opportunities for in memory of her husband, Robert R. Wieland 60. students and meet the growing need for legal resources, the Campaign will provide endowment support for the Clinic and its “These gifts are tremendous affirmations of the friendships our programs. The Campaign will also secure endowed financial aid alumni and friends have with the College and The Ohio State resources to encourage students to pursue traditionally low- University,” says Dean Williams. “During the next four years, I paying public service positions. hope that all of our alumni and friends will step forward and affirm their belief that the College of Law is a truly great institution. Additionally, $4,000,000 of the Campaign goal will be used to support the College’s daily operations. Gifts during the Campaign Dean Williams and members of the National Campaign Committee to the Law Annual Fund and the Cornerstone Fund will ensure the will be visiting with alumni and friends around the country to College’s fiscal integrity and provide the financial base for future promote the College’s future and secure support for the Campaign. growth. For information on how you can become a donor or a volunteer, please contact the College’s Director of Development, Thomas G. Already more than 40 percent of the overall $18 million goal — Hoffman II at (614) 292-0601. $7,289,481—has been received in gifts and commitments. The College has secured 27 leadership gifts and pledges of $25,000 or more totalling $6,411,524. Among those leadership commitments is an estate gift of $2,765,000 from Grace Heck Faust ‘30 to create

Law Campaign — Progress Report (as of 10/15/96)

40% 60% 80% 100% Component Goal Raised 0 20%

Preparing Tomorrow’s Leaders $5,750,000 $1,289,500

Faculty Leadership and Excellence 4,500,000 3,060,254

Academic Leadership and Excellence 2,000,000 295,817

Commitment to Service 1,750,000 -----

Building for Tomorrow 4,000,000 1,733,919 . a. ___ ~ -

Total 18,000,000 7,289,481

Note: Four commitments totalling $910,000 are undesignated. National Campaign Executive Committee

Dan D. Sandman ‘73 Frank E. Bazler ‘53 Mary Ellen Fairfield ‘73 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Troy, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Stuart A. Summit Thomas E. Cavendish ‘53 George W. Hairston ‘68 New York, New York Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ohio David A. Ward ‘58 Michael E Colley ‘61 R. Steven Kestner ‘79 Toledo, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Robert J. Watkins ‘53 Edwin M. Cooperman ‘67 Erin E Moriarty ‘77 Cincinnati, Ohio New York, New York New York, New York Benjamin L. Zox ‘62 Judge Robert M, Duncan ‘52 Terry L. Overbey ‘75 Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio

em bers of the National Campaign Committee gathered to mark the kick-off of The Affirm Thy tnenasnip impaignfor the College of Law. Attending the event were, seated, left to right, G. Williams, G. Hairston Cooperman, B. Zox. Standing, left to right, are C. Tyburski, P. Eikenberry, R. Werth, R. Watkins, J. Tuschman, Braff, D. Zendell, F. Bazler. ______Having Your Cake: Taking Advantage of Today’s Stock Market

For example, suppose you hold 1,000 shares of stock that were purchased at least a year ago. When you bought the stocks they By Joe Bull ‘85 were worth $10 per share ($10,000 total), and today they are Director of Planned Giving worth $30 per share ($30,000 total). If you make a gift of these The Ohio State University securities outright to the College of Law, you immediately receive a $30,000 income tax deduction for the charitable contribution How many times over the past and avoid all capital gains taxes. At a capital gains tax rate of 28 eighteen months have you seen a version of this headline: Dow Closes at percent, the tax saved on a gain of $20,000 is $5,600. Record High? This bull market has been Life Income Gifts great for many investors, but it has Joe Bull 85 Another way to make a gift of appreciated securities is through a come with a burden as well. What life income gift such as a charitable remainder trust or a charitable does an investor do with all the capital gains? gift annuity. When you establish a life income gift, you (and a spouse or other loved one, if you wish) receive income each year For most investors, selling stock to take advantage of its apprecia­ for your lifetime(s). This income could be a fixed amount or tion and paying 28 percent of that appreciation in a capital gams based on the earnings of the fund. In addition to the income, you tax is not an appealing prospect. There are alternatives. also receive an income tax charitable deduction and avoid capital A gift of appreciated securities to The .Ohio State University gains taxes. The value of the life income gift will be removed from College of Law offers significant tax benefits to a donor: an your taxable estate in most cases. income tax deduction for the charitable contribution, and Stock Loss elimination of the capital gains tax. Another alternative is to If you have experienced a loss because of a drop in the value of establish a life income gift with appreciated securities. This your stock, it is unwise to give the stock directly to the College of approach provides an income which is usually higher than Law. It is far better to sell your stock, take the loss on your tax average stock dividends. It, too, generates the twin tax benefits of return, and then donate the proceeds to the College. You thus an income tax deduction for the charitable contribution, and obtain an income tax charitable deduction for your gift and claim elimination of the capital gains tax. a capital loss. Outright Gifts of Appreciated Securities For further information on gifts of appreciated securities, please Long-term appreciated securities are stocks or bonds that have contact Joe Bull at (614) 292-2183, (800) 654-5103 (Ohio only), been owned for at least a year and have increased in value. The or 1 (800) 327-7907 (nationally) or by e-mail at: [email protected]. donor’s income tax deduction for the charitable contribution is You may also contact Tom Hoffman in the College of Law at the full fair market value of the securities. The donor also avoids (614) 292-0601 or by e-mail at: [email protected]. the capital gains tax, which is a percentage of the difference between the cost basis of the stock and its current fair market value HONOR ROLL

uring the 1995-96 year, the June 30. The report includes gifts to the HENRY FOLSOM PAGE Annual Fund and to established or newly College received gifts totaling SOCIETY $4,211,631 from 1,361 created endowments. It may not include Founded during the Law Centennial Campaign, the Henry Folsom Page donors.D Of that total, $618,032 were gifts made directly to academic or student Society recognizes individuals who received for current operating needs and programs. make major gifts to the College of Law.

$3,593,599 were contributed for endow­ Rodney B. Baldwin ment funds. Alumni contributions Every effort has been made to ensure the JohnJ. Barone accuracy of this report. If you find an Frank E. and Virginia H. Bazler accounted for approximately 87 percent of John M. Bowsher the total funds received. error or omission of if your gift does not Thomas E. and Joanna Cavendish reflect matching funds, please contact the George H. Chamblin* Marshall Cox This report reflects all gifts received by the Office of Development, College of Law, 55 Eleanor Middleton Davis West 12th Street, Columbus, Ohio 43210- Jacob E. Davis II College of Law during the 1995-1996 Craig Denmead fiscal year beginning July 1 and ending 1391, phone (614) 292-2937. Charles W and Florence W Ebersold Grace Heck Faust* Noel E. George* Tomar Green John O. Henry* John A. Jenkins Carter C. Kissell William E. Knepper Melodee S. Kornacker Mary and J. Paul* McNamara Thomas F. Patton J. Gilbert and Louella H. Reese Melvin L. Schottenstein* Stanley Schwartz Jr. * Charles H. and Joyce Shenk Richard Shenk Sol A.* and Florence Shenk William A. Shenk Norman W Shibley* Members of the low firm Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman and Kalur and the P*I*E Sarah M. Stanley* Mutual Insurance Company honored one of their founders, Aaron Jacobson, with a gift Stuart A. Summit to the College of Law during the Centennial Campaign. Recently a group gathered to L. Jack Van Fossen unveil a plaque to be placed outside the classroom which now bears Jacobson’s name. David A. and Ann M. Ward Pictured are, left to right, Gayle Arnold, managing partner, Columbus office, and Paul F. and Anita Ward assistant managing director of Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman and Kalur, Robert Maynard, managing director, Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman and Kalur; Jacobson; Helen and Robert J. Watkins Larry Rogers, president and chief executive officer of the P»I»E Mutual Insurance Benjamin L. Zox Company; James Tuschman ‘66, managing partner, Toledo office, and chairman of the * Deceased Member operations committee, Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman and Kalur. LEADERSHIP DONORS BY GIFT LEVEL (July 1 ,1995-June 30,1996)

David Harold Braff $100,000 and Higher $2,000-4,999 Mark Barry Cohn Raymond P. Cunningham Jr. Joseph Donnally Blickle Stanford Apseloff John M. Curphey Michael F. Colley Michael Hiram Carpenter Joseph Couture D’Arrigo John Deaver Drinko JohnJ. Chester Sr. Michael L. Finn Grace Heck Faust Sidney M. Cornrich Robert P. Fite Gwen Hammat Kagey Gregory Scott DeWolfe JohnJ. Heron Carter C. Kissell Craig Denmead Thomas R. Hillhouse Fritzie Kessler Sterling Mary Evans Eyerman Thomas Jude Eyerman Duane L. Isham William Kagay Friend Titus Jackman William David Jamieson $50,000-99,999 Steven Dwight Gardner Louis Gray J erome J ohn J oondeph Sr. James Armand King Edwin M. Cooperman George Watt Hairston Melodee S. Komacker Walter J. Siemer James Richard Hamilton Nelson Lancione Sara Gerhart Wieland Reginald Sherman Jackson Jr. Kenneth Jack Kies Larry Russell Langdon John P. McMahon James Kaufman Lawrence George Carlton McConnaughey $10,000-49,999 John Thomas Mills Carl Joseph Munson Jr. Daniel P. McQuade William Stanley Morton Paul Angelo Bernardini Frank Jerome Neff Thomas Rodney Owen Anita Esbenshade Chapman Terry Lee Overbey William A. Reale Doris Messer London Thomas E Patton George W. Rooney Alice Elizabeth Rasor Martin ' John Gilbert Reese Robert M. Rosenblum James D. Oglevee Michael D. Saad Kristine Agnes Roth Robert J. Watkins William Kemahan Thomas Niki Zola Schwartz Dr. Frank Chester Woodside III Anthony Tuccillo Carl Craddock Tucker Paul Allen Scott Richard A. Wead Thomas J. Short J. MacAlpine Smith $5,000-9,999 Thomas Peter Wellman Robert W. Werth John Stuart Steinhauer Todd Shawn Swatsler John J. Chester Sr. Hugh Richard Whiting Elinor Porter Swiger Marshall Cox Benjamin L. Zox Stephen Francis Vogel William Michael Isaac John W. Weaner Dean G. Reinhard Ithamar Dryden Weed Howard M. Rossen $1,000-$ 1,999 Dale Edward Williams Daniel J. Swillinger Gregory H. Williams Harold L. Talisman Howard William Adkins Janice Elizabeth Wolfe Donald R. Wheeler Gerald Otis Allen Kim William Zerby Lois G. Williams Robert Quincy Baker III Frank E. and Virginia Bazler David S. Bloomfield DONORS BY CLASS YEAR (July 1, 1995-June 30, 1996)

Class of 1936 Class of 1946 Lee O. Fitch Class of 1925 Willis H. Frazeejr. Participation: 10% Participation: 15% Participation: 23% Wilfred Goodwin Noel L. Greenlee Judson Carnes Kistler William Ammer Edwin R. Teple William James Bateman David William Hart Maurice Alan Young+ James Lester Black Sanders David Heller Class of 1926 Nils Paul Johnson Participation: 7% Joan Krauskopf Thomas E Patton*+ Class of 1938 Class of 1947 Participation: 19% Participation: 23% Daniel Halter Lease Willis Riley Deming Ralph E. Boyer Albert Donovan Miller Class of 1927 Julian O. Northcraft Participation: 16% Richard M. Dore Edward G. Bruck Thomas Link Paffenbarger Carter C. Kissell*+ Richard G. Herndon Stuart D. Eagleson Doris Messer London* Robert P Fite*+ Robert W Phillips Francis Scott McDaniel John W Schuler Class of 1928 Joseph Robert Swartz James E Natoli Walter J. Siemer*+ Participation: 33% Thomas Richard Spellerberg Class of 1939 William N. Postlewaite Louis T. Shulman Theodore Raymond Treffinger Fritzie Kessler Sterling*+ Participation: 6% John L. Roof Robert O. Read Thomas I. Webb Sr. James E. Weger Class of 1930 Ithamar Dryden Weed* Class of 1948 Participation: 14% Participation: 19% Class of 1951 Grace Heck Faust*+ Class of 1940 Thomas W Connor Participation: 27% Thomas L. Corroto Jr. Participation: 16% William B. Devaney Jr. Allen H. Bechtel Class of 1931 Zenda Lieberman Arkin John W Lehrer H. Richard Dunipace Basil J. Boritzki Participation: 8% Richard Maurice Christiansen Le Roy Marceau John James Lynch James R. Dupler Arthur N. Mindling Earl Leeper Hamilton Sidney M.. Comrich*+ John Robert Young Kenneth Richard Harkins James Franklin Cox Class of 1932 RoyJ. Gilliland Participation: 5% John Oral Harper Howard H. Harcha Jr. Harry J. Dworkin Class of 1941 William E. Herron Participation: 15% William Johnson Lee Jr. Edward Stephen Havasy Robert Walter Minor+ Frank E. Kane Class of 1933 Robert M. Levin Jean Gordon Peltier John Alton Robenalt Mary C. Lord Participation: 5% George Carlton McConnaughey Murray Friedman Frank A. Robison George W Rooney* David A. Wible Gordon H. Savage+ Carl B. Mellman William B. Saxbe William Ernest Rathman Class of 1934 George William Stuhldreher Participation: 40% Class of 1942 Homer D. Swygert Elinor Porter Swiger* Howard William Adkins* Participation: 22% Sheldon Mike Young Clyde C. Beery Gerald Otis Allen*+ Class of 1949 Jack Griffith Evans Louis Gray*+ Participation: 11% Charles William Davidson Jr. Class of 1952 Harry C. Fink John P. McMahon*+ Jack T. VanKeuls J. Robert Donnelly Participation: 11% Dean Atlee Snyder Robert A. Booth Carl Craddock Tucker*+ Max Harley James Newton Ebright Class of 1943 Charles Freeman Knapp Participation: 10% Russell Leach+ George Vance Fisher Class of 1935 John Workman Henderson Nelson Lancione*+ Thomas Gough Roderick Jr. Participation: 18% William Hudson Hillyer Myron A. Rosentreter Robert J. Swadey Chester H. Hummell Charles Merrel Ross Class of 1944 John Clybum Wagner Participation: 50% Blaine BrycenHunkins Sr. Julius Schlezinger Martin P Joyce Hon. William Kemahan Thomas* John Deaver Drinko*+ Class of 1950 Melvin L. Robins Participation: 29% John Main Kelley Theodore Emil Bieber Charles John Kerester William W Mosholder Class of 1945 James M. Breithaupt * Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more Participation: 2% Richard L. Canter Samuel Hamilton Porter+ + Indicates President’s Club Member, Robert Earl Horowitz Raymond P. Cunningham Jr.* + Robert Raitze Reed The Ohio State University. 2i Former U.S. Senator Howard M etzenbaum ‘41 visited the College o f Law on O ctober 7. John Thomas Brown Howard J. Haddow He reminisced about Robert H. Coldren Shelby V. Hutchins his law school years Larry Russell Langdon* and experiences in Marshall Cox*+ Ralph C. French Edward W Lincoln Jr. politics while visiting John Cooper Me Donald with students, includ­ R. Cliffton Gibbs William E. O’Connor ing these student Robert Lloyd Hammond Jr. leaders who joined John R. Koverman Jr. William A. Reale* Metzenbaumfor Ronald G. Logan James Charles Thompson lunch. Joanne Wharton Murphy Robert N. Wistner Daniel Martin Snyder John P. Van Abel Class of 1962 Participation: 29% Bernard V Fultz Richard S. Wagner John Gilbert Reese*+ Alexander Andreoff William Brooks Johnson Charles D. Shook James Kenneth Brooker+ Edwin Charles Johnston Class of 1959 John E. Wissler Steven E. Cichon Charles Russell Leech Jr. Participation: 17% Joseph E. Andres Sandra Hicks Cox Class of 1953 James William Miller Naren Biswas James Lowell Graham Participation: 16% Robert W Siegel Charles Ensign Brant Alan Smith Kerxton Frank E. Bazler*+ Richard E Swope Albert W Eoff II Anne Jan Tausch Knisely Thomas Edgar Cavendish+ Frank M. Hays Michael R. McKinley John M. Curphey*+ Class of 1956 Richard Eugene Meredith Participation: 10% G Bradley Hummel Ernest John Danco Robert James Moore Joseph P. Buchanan Fred M. Izenson Duane L. Isham*+ James L. Pazol Robert J. Fairless John G. Lancione+ Richard G. lson+ Jerry L. Riseling James Richard Hamilton*+ Ronald P Lankenau Keith Me Namara Jacob A. Schlosser Paul Daniel Ritter Jr. Frank Jerome Neff*+ James D. Oglevee*+ James Richard Scott Paul Allen Scott*+ William Bennett Shimp Jr. Harold L. Talisman*+ Lawrence Clark Sherman T. Bryan Underwood Jr. John Yeatman Taggart John Martin Tobin C. Arthur Wilson Jr. Paul R. Walsh Anthony Tuccillo*+ Robert J. Watkins*+ Daniel T. Wilson Joseph H. Yearling Jr. Thomas Peter Wellman*+ Benjamin L. Zox*+ Class of 1954 David L. Zeigler Class of 1960 Participation: 18% Participation: 23% Class of 1963 George J. Aman Class of 1957 Participation: 21% Participation: 21% Karl Richard Aughenbaugh James J. Ashbum+ Thomas William Archibald James G. Annos Larry Raymond Brown Rodney Alan Baker John T. Brook Charles A. Balzer Thomas Charles Clark Warren Grant Blue William B. Gore Floyd Alan Banker William Lewis Clark Kenneth R. Callahan Eiden James Hopple Kenneth Edward DeShetler Louis Ira Hoffman Fred Evans Eastman Helena Everett Jackson John Lloyd Evans Jr. Charles Henry Huston Russell Dominic Finneran John D. Liber Marc Gertner Philip R. Joelson Sally Reardon Heid James P Miller John Allen Hoskins Stanley K. Laughlin Jr. Robert Henry Huffer+ Gerald A. Mollica Joseph David Karam Charles Russell Petree II Titus Jackman* Sidney Nudelman David Allan Katz+ Richard E Rice Charles Frederick Johnston Jr. Marvin Robert Pliskin Charles E Kurfess Jerome J. Robison Maurice Lewitt Sarah Smith Tintor Richard Lyle Loveland Robert J. Rodefer Joseph A. Marchese George P Tsamas Thomas Edward Ray John K. Skomp Harold Carl Meier Frank John Uvena William E. Shirk W Lynn Swinger Richard C. Pickett John W Weaner* Irving A. Portman Joan E. Zuber Class of 1961 Joel Renner Williams Thor G. Ronemus Class of 1958 Participation: 18% Gerald E. Schlafman+ Class of 1964 Participation: 14% David Frank Allen Participation: 29% Raymond K. Arthur James R. Barton Class of 1955 Charles Donald Byron George Raymond Barry Participation: 11% Albert Leo Bell Michael E Colley*+ Roger E. Bennington David Robert Alban Bernard C. Boggio Robert Myron Shapiro William T. Bodoh Richard Albert Yoss George W Brehmer Jr. John Ledgerwood Zinkand Theresa Doss David C. Faulkner Class of 1969 Robert Irwin Friedman Participation: 22% JohnJ. Heron*+ Mark Rogers Abel David Lyle Johnson David S. Bloomfield*+ Elliot M. Kaufman Sally Ward Bloomfield+ David P. Kuenzli Rodman Reynolds Ensminger William R. McDavid John Robert Ettenhofer Thomas J. Moyer Theodore Paul Frericks IV Niki Zola Schwartz*+ Dean Gregory H. Williams greets the Dali Lama during a special gathering in Bloomington, Indiana. The Dean was William Henry Gosline John H. Siegenthaler invited to the event, held in conjunction with the dedication of James D. Henson Albert S. Tabor Jr. the Buddhist Temple, by Don Wheeler ‘64. Hon. William Michael Isaac*+ Charles J. Tyburski Photo ©Garrett Ewald 1996 William Gregory Jacobs Warren Lezar Udisky David Edgar Jones John C. Wasserman William Wilson Kenneweg Donald R. Wheeler* Charles H. Hire Jack C. Rubenstein Marvin James Kinstlinger Janice Elizabeth Wolfe* John A. Humbach Thomas D. Shackleford Robert Kolter Leonard Edward Vaughn Miller John E. Stine Michael Gary Long+ Class of 1965 John Walter Noecker Daniel J. Swillinger* David Paul Martin Participation: 19% Michael D. Saad*+ Christopher Edward Veidt Francis Johnston McGavran II Thomas L. Gire ThomasJ. Short* Richard A. Wead*+ Nicholas Joe Milanich Jr. Joseph A. Gormley J. MacAlpine Smith* William Dallas Woodall Charles R. Naylor Jr. David W Holman Keith Alan Sommer Thomas Rodney Owen* Francis Gillen Knipe Beatrice Kronick Sowald Class of 1968 Harold Clark Phillips Thomas G. Knoll William Glen Stewart Participation: 20% Jerome Phillips Charles J. Kurtz III + John R Tarlano Donald Lawrence Bleich Jack Richard Pigman+ James Kaufman Lawrence *+ James Marshall Tuschman Walter Charles Boyuk+ Milton Ames Puckett James H. Ledman John P Wingard • Ted Raymond Brown John Baker Rohyans+ Thomas H. Lindsey James Russell Burkhard Daniel Robert Rupp Robert H. Me Naghten Jr. Class of 1967 John Patrick DiFalco+ Thomas Joseph Shumard George William Moore III Participation: 23% Michael Proctor Graney John Stuart Steinhauer*+ Dean G. Reinhard*+ James Wilson Bamhouse George Watt Hairston*+ Lee Irwin Tumer+ Warren W Ruggles James B. Blumenstiel Mark John Hanket Dr. Frank Chester Woodside III Patrick Jerome Smith Kenneth Allan Bravo Douglas Bruce Harper Thomas Eldon Workman+ Robert W Werth*+ Daniel Donovan Connor John William Hoppers Robert Craig Wiesenmayer Edwin M. Cooperman*+ William David Jamieson* Class of 1970 Dale Edward Williams* Harold Hunter Davis John William Kenesey Participation: 13% Michael L. Finn*+ Jake Arthur Larimer John Edward Brady Class of 1966 Gary Frederic Frye William Bierce Leahy Karen Holcomb Cloherty Participation: 22% Wayne T. Gill Steven Michael Mayer Joseph Couture DArrigo* Ross Edwin Austin James Robert Goslee III Robert Malcolm McNair Miles Cutler Durfey Robert Park Banta Jr. Philip Kent Hargesheimer Richard Stretton Michaels Michael William Grossberg Paul Angelo Bemardini*+ Stephen L. Hebenstreit David Timothy Milligan Bruce Myron Gunn Fielding G. Braffett Thomas R. Hillhouse* William Richard Montgomery John Charles Nemeth Thomas A. Brennan Jerome John Joondeph Sr. * Elbert R. Nester Donald Garry Paynter John A. Connor II Richard L. Kolb Ronald Joseph Perey James August Readey Lawrence Robert Elleman Daniel P McQuade* Clark Poston Pritchett Jr. Kenneth Marvin Royalty David Lee Grayson Velta Anita Melnbrencis Charles Nelson Ricketts Alan Michael Schwarzwalder

* Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more Stanley Lee Myers Jerome Ralph Schindler Charles Collins Warner + Indicates President’s Club Member, Raymond Joseph Posgay Jon Michael Schorr Donald Leson Wiley The Ohio State University. Richard William Cross James Russell Blake james Lee Nichelson Class of 1971 Michael Dicker Mark Barry Cohn* Frederick Langdon Ransier III Participation: 9% Stanley John Dobrowski John Alan Cumming Kathleen Hayes Ransier Susan Ellen Brown+ Douglas Edward Ebert William John Davis Suzanne Kay Richards William Robert Coboum+ James Burton Farmer Gregory Scott DeWolfe*+ Lyle Richard Saylor Kenneth Andrew Gamble Jerome Lewis Fine Gregory Brian Denny Stephen Robert Schmidt Nathan Gordon Robert Edward Fletcher Reginald Sherman Jackson Jr.* + Thomas Arden Dillon Charles Howard Schottenstein Michele Marie Gutman Philip Louis Dombey John Paul Steines Jr. William Neal Keadeyjr. Howard Sidney Harris Stanley Bruce Dritz Frank Henry Stieg III Charles William Kettlewell Douglas Neil Husak William George Fischer Leslie Vamado Jr. John Howard Lahey+ Gerald Lamont Jones John James Moffett William Allan Grim Hugh Richard Whiting*+ Ronald Roy Henderson Lois G. Williams* Steven R. Kerber Richard Edward Plymale William Irwin Kohn Simon Barry Karas John Fredrick Zimmerman Jr. Randolph Lee Snow David Lee Landefeld Roger William Kienzle Jr. Michael Wayne Ward James Murphy Long Alan Eliot Lebon Class of 1975 Thomas Leslie Long Gary Allan Lickfelt Participation: 17% Class of 1972 Robert William Malone Joseph Litvin Robert Quincy Baker III* Participation: 17% Alan John Matavich Curtis Alan Loveland Walter Kerfoot Chess Jr. Linden Joe Beck Ronald Jay McCracken James Elder Michael Jr. Deborah Lynn Edwards James Marion Broadstone Adele Ellen O’Conner John Thomas Mills*+ Roger William Fones David Michael Cohen Dennis Marc Papp James Reynolds Cooper Frederic Andrew Portman Edward Steven Ginsburg Curtiss Lee Isler Paul Elmer Perry Craig Denmead*+ Lawrence Dwight Pratt William Francis Jankun Thelma Thomas Price Joseph Lawrence Emmrich Frederick Richard Reed Steven Wash Jemison Teddy Louis Ramirez William Kagay Friend*+ James Lee Rench Terrence Patrick Kessler Allen Jeffrey Reis Jeffrey Allan Halm James Darryl Sillery Mark Wayne Sinkhom Stanley Kiszkiel Ben Gilbert Rooke Michael Henry Haney Aaron Philip Rosenfeld David Jay Sternberg William Travis Me Intyre Raymond Edwin Hofmeister John William Rudduck Douglas Milbum Toot Terry Morrow Miller Robert Joseph Hopperton Jr. Kurt George Sarringhaus James Edward Hughes Gerrit John Tysse Michael Roger Neds Steven Sibley Nelson Linda Westmoreland Schenke William Lawrence Kovacs Charles Allen Whetstone David Andrew Orlins Richard Kaoru Shimabukuro | Thomas Frank Luken William Hunt Woods Terry Lee Overbey*+ Howard Andrew Silverman Michael Patrick Mahoney John Patrick Quinn Jr. Steven Edward Smathers James William McCarthy Class of 1974 Richard Keller Rohde Jr. Fred Thomas Jr. William James McGraw III Participation: 17% Bernard Joseph Schaeff Robert Lee Trierweiler Brian Young Miller Charles Franklin Andrews James J. Scheer Richard Harvey Underwood Donald Bruce Nevard Gary Marc Blumenthal William Curtis Sevems Craig James Van Horsten Robert Monroe Parsons Anthony Boone Chris Meade Streifender Linda Fletcher West Charles Joseph Pruitt Nancy Gutfeld Brown Thomas Phillip Webster Robert David Rinfret Ronald Edmund Cabaniss James Craig Carpenter James Roy Williams Class of 1977 Thomas Dudley Rooney Participation: 28% David Allen Clemens Thomas D. Wright Ronald Lee Rowland Mark Bandy Barnes Nancy Elise Shurtz Pamela Brown Dizikes Class of 1976 Carol Lee Bamum Steven Lee Smith William Joseph Fleck Jr. Participation: 25% Marvin William Bohm Adam Joseph Wagenbach John James Flynn Gary William Auman Dale Thomas Brinkman Robert John Walter Ronald Harvey Greenblatt Robert Lewis Bays James Duane Brubaker Joel David Worshtil Larry Allan Kams Louis Harvey Khourey Jr. Jeffrey Lewis Benson David Mason Buchman Michael Edward Yurosko Michael Hiram Carpenter*+ Edwin Lee Kirby Jr. John Franklin Berry John Wolcott Zeiger Jerome David Catanzaro Stephen Lewis Karen Jeanne Blackwell Christen Ralph Blair Alden Brett Chevlen Class of 1973 Rodger Allen Marting Peggy Lynn Bryant John Patrick Coady Participation: 17% Robert Ewell Miles John Jeffrey Chemoski Nanci Leeanne Danison Alan Garfield Anderson William Stanley Morton*+ Steve Alan Craig Joel Kim Dayton Howard David Bader D. Brent Mulgrew Richard Stephen Dodson Jr. Deborah Ruth Pitluk Ecker Jeff Douglas Drushal Eileen Sue Goodin+ Gregg Michael Emrick Clay Powelson Graham Francis Ambrose Fregiato Fordham Eric Huffman Beatrice Margaret Friedlander Richard Emory Jacobs Donald Randall Garlit Michael Duane Juhola Patrick Joseph Goebel Mary Josephine Kilroy Scott E. Grimes Glenn Scott Krassen Georganne Reid Higgins Former Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul Brown ‘39 Carol Perritt Lindstrom David M. Huddleston (left) was honored on September 11 as his portrait Denise Adele Herman McColley Michael John Johrendt w as accepted by Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer ‘64 Carolyn Shaffer Melvin Kenneth Jack Kies* (right) on behalf of the court. The ceremony and the Vera Callahan Neinast Thomas Dean Lammers portrait commemorated Justice Brown’s 14 years of Joseph William Pappalardo Julia Marie Metzger service on the Court. Traditionally, portraiture is ac­ Robert McCall Pfeiffer Christopher Richard Meyer cepted after a judge’s death. Due to a recent rule Stephen Edward Pigott change, Justice Brown is the first person to see the Carla Denise Moore Michael James Ranallo presentation of his portrait. Jon Ray Philbrick Frederick Carter Schoch Louis G. Recher Donald Charles Slowik Lynn Kent Riethmiller Carl DeMouy Smallwood Kristine Agnes Roth* Stephen John Habash+ Joan Smith Klitch William Joseph Sparer James Albert Rutledge Kenneth Joseph Kallberg Kenneth Hobson Koch Christopher John Swift Martin Stanley Seltzer Robert Krivoshey Melodee S. Komacker*+ Thomas Edward Trempe Dale Phillip Shrallow Michael Jeffry Marsh David Galen Le Grand Anne Daley Wattman Eugene Robert Shultz Susan Elaine McNally Timothy Charles McCarthy Lucile Gray Weingartner Russell Gary Tisman Robert Andrew Meyer Jr. David Martin McDorman Martin Jay Witherell Robert Ward Trafford Michael Reid Miles Henry Partloe Montgomery IV Myron Daniel Wolf III Virginia Marie Trethewey David Paul Miraldi Brent Bentley Nicholson David Arthur Wormser Edward Philip Walker Leslee Wilkins Miraldi Robert Francis O’Connor Michael Carl Zellers Charles Herbert Waterman III Philip Patrick Ryser Nancy Higgins O’Malley Martin Fred White Louis James Sandor Kevin Ralph Reichley Class of 1981 Dennis Patrick Witherell Joseph Peter Schmitz Joseph Ritzert Participation: 15% Richard John Wood Ramsay Hill Slugg+ Sylvia Beckman Robbins-Penniman Leozino Agozzino Carol Sheehan Smithberger Howard Grant Stephenson Stephen Randall Brenneman Class of 1978 Timothy Nicholas Tye Kevin Lee Sykes Elaine Sayers Buck Participation: 16% Stephen Francis Vogel* Giancarlo Variola Jo Lindseth Busser David Warren Alexander Randall Mitchell Walters David Michael Whittaker Jason Harris Calhoun Daniel Allen Bailey Philip Higbee Wolf Klaus Heinz Wiesmann Catherine Cobum Costello Roger Craig Blocher Russell Thomas Woodson Cheryl Foster Wolff Frederick Walker Dressel Robert Edward Bums Stephen Joseph Yurasek Jacquelin Davis Drucker Jane Yeager Cheffy Class of 1979 James Craig Ellis William Jenkins Corzine III Participation: 17% Class of 1980 James Anthony Giles Michael Sellers Crane+ Gerry Wayne Beyer Participation: 21% Stephen M. Hammersmith Richard Carlton Daley William Ernest Blackie III Roberto Antonio Arias Sandra Marie Hylant Steven Lynn Dauterman Richard Stephen Carey Steven Robert Bartram Renee Teichner Kauffman David William DeVita Marcia Lee Clegg Roland Humphreys Bauer Douglas Hayes Marshall Patricia Anne Folkerth Daniel Oliver Conkle Marc Jay Bernstein Brett Lyne Miller Francis Xavier Frantz Paula Terese Cotter Donna Marian Brower Blair Daniel John Minor+ John Joseph Gideon Robert Arnold Ellison Herman Andrew Carson Neil Steven Morrisroe John Patrick Gordon Alan Roark Faulkner Frederick John Caspar Carl Joseph Munson Jr.* Paula Lynn Friedman David Keith Conrad George Steven Pommert * Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more William Reed Groves Daniel William Costello Guy Lester Reece II + 'Indicates President’s Qub Member, Edward Alan Hurtuk Douglas Alan Daley William Donald Rohrer The Ohio State University. Robert Steven Kestner Douglas Allen Dimond Joseph Richard Rosenbaum Belinda Jayne Scrimenti James Walter Dilz John Joseph Laffey Anne Light Hoke Stephen Bradley Seiple John Curtis Dowling Sherri Blank Lazear Susan Levitt House Suzanne Irene Seubert+ Cheryl Ann Eifert William Dwayne Maynard Lowell Bennett Howard Jr. John Stanley Shaffer Canice Joseph Fogarty Jr. Krista Ann McGowan Donna Joyce Jennewine Todd Shawn Swatsler* James Joseph Freedman Elizabeth Chichester Morrogh John Mark Kantner Hayes Taylor Robert Carl Goldie David I. Pomerantz Kathleen Rummel LaTour Yolanda Vargas Vorys Judith Joy Hritz Ivan Lenwood Redinger Jr. Randall Duane LaTour Gregory Kent Waters Jeffrey Lee Huntley Sara Ellen Robbins Risa Dinitz Lazaroff Kay Woods Catherine Elaine Huston Anne Marie Sierra Jeffrey Wiley Linstrom William August Leuby III Elizabeth Flynn Vorys Herman Marable Jr. Class of 1982 John Philip Melick Webb Isaiah Vorys Deborah Morales Maynard Participation: 17% Jetta Lynn Mencer Raechel Tigner Wright Anastasia Markakis Nye Eliot W Abarbanel Jennifer Thomas Mills Bonnie Irvin O’Neil Mark Francis Ahlers Raul Antonio E Pedrozo Class of 1986 Jenifer Bernard Rasor John Bernard Albers II Randall William Rummell Participation: 14% Pamela Joyce Reiner Catherine Elaine Blackburn Steven Rodger Russi Stanford Apseloff*+ Cheryl Lyn Roberto James Patrick Botti David Irwin Schiff Perry Michael Chappano Pamela Jean Ruschau Wanda Lees Carter Barbara Ann Sentz Curt Douglas Cooper Belinda Henderson Simile Mary Waterman Christensen William C. Strangfeld Jr. John Roger Davis Matthew Sherman Smith Steven Michael Emmert Steven W Thornton Teresa Ball Earley Nan Buck Still Barbara Fultz Florez Darla Jean Wilkinson David Louis Fish Timothy Farrell Sweeney Lynn Bart Griffith III Kim William Zerby* Brendan Allen Ford Jennifer Murchake Todd Benita Ann Kahn Denise Smith Golonka Mark Edward Vannatta David William Keller Class of 1984 Kenneth Anthony Golonka Jr. Eric Lee Weeden Donald Byron Leach Jr. Participation: 7% Kathleen Strange Gross Gregory Allen Williams William Joseph Leibold David Harold Braff* Christie Annette Hill David John Linesch Joseph Michael Diangelo Ronald Lee House Class of 1988 James Michael Lyons Jr. Barbara Lynn Freedy David John Isaac Participation: 15% Richard William Mancino Guy Robert Humphrey James Michael Jones Alan Dawson Alford Shelley Ann McBride Mark Ira Jacobs Amy Elizabeth Kellogg Geoffrey Randall Ayers Robert Morse McNitt Jerry Kenji Kasai Scott Allen King David Cooper Comstock Jr. Paul Frederick Moke Allen Jonathan Koslovsky Nancy Prytel Klingshim Lisa Weekley Coulter Diane Williams Moore Bruce Charles Lazear+ Neil Edward Klingshim David Alan Eide Phyllis Stillpass Nedelman John Vance Magee Alan Jack Lazaroff Ann Eileen Fallon Brenda Bom Noftz John Francis Martin Daniel Ross Loveland Judith Lynne French-Berry Charles Sumner Plumb III Alexander Mitrovich Jennifer Brown Mailly Bernadette Bollas Genetin John Joseph Pomidor Jeffrey Lee Nischwitz Craig Richard Reynolds Seth Robert Halpem Robert James Reynolds Judith Ann Northrup Mary Schneider Rua Gregory Allen Hickman Paul Anthony Rose James O’Rourke Payne Jr. Zachary Thompson Space Nancy Novack Idzkowski Michael Matthew Schmidt Karen Krisher Rosenberg Keith Carlyle Wamock Elisabeth Anne Keller Marcia Katz Slotnick Anne Kozelek Williams James Armand King* Ronald Joseph Snyder Class of 1985 Thomas Neil Littman Scott Forsbrey Sturges Participation: 12% Class of 1987 Charles Edward Ohlin Thomas Edmund Szykowny Joseph Orwin Bull+ Participation: 17% Brian Vincent Pero Mark Samuel Toledo Lorie Ann Chaiten Linda L. Ammons Kenneth Michael Richards Steven Marc Walk Thomas S. Counts Gayle Ann Arlen Kirk William Roessler Douglas Parker Currier Joseph Paul Boeckman Christopher Coe Russell Class of 1983 Timothy Edward Eagle J. Scott Clark William Leo Sennett III Participation: 14% Marcia Ann Egbert David James Coyle Ronda Anderson Shamansky Clark Edward Battista Clair March Forrest Jr. Jayne Ellen Demaras Betsy Ann Swift Melanie Clemmons Becker Charles Michael Gegenheimer Jr. Joan Irwin Fishel William Andrew Thorman III Larry Richard Border Gary Alan Gillett Marc Allen Fishel Franklin Henry Top III Pamela Vest Border Susan Allene Kovach William Adam Herzberger Lee Freedman (left) accepts his copy of the deluxe edition of Black’s Law Dictionary from Ernest Karam, the Chief Mag­ istrate of the Hamilton County Class of 1989 Julie Ellen Squire Court of Domestic Relations. Participation: 20% Joseph William Stadnicar Mr. Karam presented a copy of Margaret R. Carmany Melissa Karen Stull the book to the outstanding Peggy Ward Com Terre Lynne Vandervoort students of the Classes of‘97 Michael Dubetz Elizabeth Jean Watters and ‘98, based on their first Sylvia Lynn Gillis year grades. Thirty students received the dictionaries. Carrie Elizabeth Glaeden Class of 1991 Dodd Joseph Gray Participation: 13% John Paul Gruber Deborah Ann Bonarrigo Douglas Richard Jennings Gwen Silverberg Callender Class of 1993 liana Eidelberg Heidi J ohnson-Wright John Brooks Cameron Participation: 17% Loyal Arthur Eldridge III Marc David Matlock Jeffrey C. Clark Charles Wayne Ash William Taylor Fischbein Deborah Elaine Mayer Paul Cornell Eckel Brian Anthony Billett Joan Tromski Fotta Margaret Apel Miller Robert William Homer III Barbara Harris Combs Dane Arthur Gaschen Boyd Kenneth Moehring Debbie Watts Johnson Christopher Brant Cook Denise DePalma Hanson Carol Hiromi Morita William C. Johnson Jr. Carol Lynne Day Philecia Lea Harris Stephen Ashley Mortinger Daniel Richard Karon Jose Antonio Figueroa-Lugo Erika Lynn Haupt Patrick Jarrett Mulligan Jeffrey Thomas Knoll Drew Alan Gardner Robert D. Icsman Deborah Beth Newman John Francis Kreber Mark Adrian Godsey Elizabeth Ann Ilgen Christopher Evan Parker Andrea Marie Kuntzman Gregory Alan Gorospe Christine Elizabeth Kessler Lawrence David Pollack Theodore Pete Mattis Kelley Marie Griesmer William Dexter Kirsner Susan Gabriel Sheridan Brian Keith Moll Anne Eckhart Hadden Christopher S. Koczwara Rachelle Cohen Singer Ronald Henry Noble Josephine Wargo Hayes Brian Karl Kurzmann Richard Edward Surkamp Jr. Madeline Ann Rambo Daniel Michael Haymond Lara Natalie Malloy Marc Alan Tenenbaum Judith Inglis Scheiderer Barron Keith Henley David A. Oppenheimer Kristin Lynn Watt Elizabeth Smith Schmitz Gavin Christian Jangard Diane Thelma Fox Paul Marcia Elizabeth Williams Denise Simmons Shirley Erin Kotzmanjoe Rafael A. Perez-Mendez Dominick George Yacono Jr. Steven Howard Sneiderman Jeffrey Leland Kapp Brett David Pynnonen Jennifer Sostaric Elizabeth Power Kessler Laurie Ann Rinehart Class of 1990 Tina Maria Tabacchi Susan Munroe Milne Jill Rice Robinson Participation: 13% Nicholas Michael Varveris Laura Jeane Mobley Eric Stoodt Rohm Harry-Todd Astrov Magda Pabla Vazquez Sean Thomas Moorhead Keith Alan Rummer Randal Scott Baringer James Vincent Wulf Dennis Bernard Pollard Yvonne S. Schlosberg David Smith Bence Robert Alan Zimmerman Jeffery Mark Poth Lynne Sims-Taylor Brenda Kay Bowers David Elliott Pritchard Dina Aspy Tantra Valerie Holmes Carlson Class of 1992 Gretchen Marie Ratcliff Robert Randall Tracht Robert J. Creamer Participation: 8% Kimberly Ann Rhoads David Eric Weisblatt Marilyn Kuhl Day Elisa Marie Branham James Edward Rook Ronald Scott Wollett Rhonda J. Foster Jeffrey Lyle Coxon Lisa Anne Rothstein Natalie Wright Brigid Ellen Heid Steven Dwight Gardner*+ Todd Lesley Sarver Lisa Hebenstreit Zarlenga Daniel Eric Izenson Jill Ringel Hart Michael George Seidel Julia Suzanne Kennedy Patricia Yvonne Hernandez Jeffrey Paul Squire Class of 1995 Dean Matthew Lenzotti Laura Ayn Holleman John Kenneth Stipancich Participation: 19% Richard Charles Merrin Christine Steigerwald Julian David Michael Ward Scyld Douglas Anderson Randall William Mikes Jeffrey Steven Kahana Michael Nathaniel Beekhuizen Katrina Dee Miller English Angela Kay Plummer Class of 1994 Adam Joseph Biehl William Hurst Oldach III Nancy Fuller Reynolds Participation: 16% Laura A. Brady Elizabeth Shoman Phillips Lisa Jane Sutton Lisa Marie Ashbrook Christine Ann Bricker Michael Wayne Rice Terese Marie Tiburzio Jennifer Renee Belmont Elaine Aten Brown Ted L. Wills Roy Eldridge Brown Shalu Tandon Buckley William Pailet Zox Matthew Rickey Copp Michael Alan Burton * Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more Floyd Dickens III Scott Allen Campbell + Indicates President’s Club Member, Tera Lynn Doak Naima R. Clarke The Ohio State University. Ü fiM * Jennifer Lynn Duvall Alexandra Maria Gauthier Charles W Ehlers Pariss Michael Coleman II Rhonda Lou Forshey Kirsten Kathleen Davis Art Gerardo Hernandez Elizabeth Lynn Hendershot Catherine Edwards Heigel Amy Litkovitz Koncelik Kevin Conwell Hughes Cheryl Risley Hughes Amy Elizabeth Matuza Stephen Randall Kleinman David Edward Kauffman Christopher Broering Jacobs Trisha Dorothy Martin Stephanie N.Kroon Colleen Christa Mumane Anita Chapman Esbenshade *+ SanfordCaust-Ellenbogen N. enr oehDvso IIBernard Davisson Joseph TeresaMcConnell Carson Jennifer White Comstock Jennifer White G. Courtney Chapman Chapman G.Courtney *+ Carole Louise Beerbower Hon. Andrew G.Douglas Faculty and friends of the College who demonstrate their support through gifts are acknowledged with grateful appreciation. grateful with arethrough acknowledged support gifts their College the of demonstrate and who Faculty friends Joanna L. Joanna Cavendish+ John Chester Sr.John J. + ClydeChalfant, Esq. Glenn E.Billington Francis X.Beytagh GraceLucille Burk Mary Beth Beazley Linda RayeBrown Helen EChirakos Anthony P Carr Anthony P James Brudney Albert L.Clovis Linda BerryJ. Sharon Davies Anne Doyle * Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more. or $1,000 of gift a Indicates ...... Joshua PhilipRosenberg efe ereRpr Dawn Ford Jeffrey George Rupert iehMhs ae Megan Devoe Nimesh Mahesh Patel tne .Rma Terri Enns Stanley E.Ramsay Joe Audi eaGair ae Andy Gardner Rena Guamieri Sauer William Scott Zerkle Julie Brigner aiKei atrHeather Guthrie Nicholas Earle Wilkes Kari Koenig Walter Michael Lee Stokes Christine Marie Schutte Samantha Ann Shuler Participation:10% rn lkmr Chuncai Meng Trina Blakemore Class of 1996 of Class oyBeseBruce Myers Tony Bledsoe Kristen Brown ..... Richard DennisGolberg Gwen Kagey*+Hammat Claudia DavisGrayson ThomasG. Hoffman II Dr. P. John Henderson BarbaraGrady Frazee Neil WallaceHiggins Dr. Huber+ N.Joan Dr.William Form+ AnnetteK. Ebright LeslieE. Gomstein LawrenceHerman Michael KindredJ. James C.Lewis III DavidGoldberger Beverly Ann Heid RobertG. Jacques BruceS. Johnson Karen Ann Kelly ArtGreenbaum Charles S.Hyatt FACULTY AND FRIENDS AND FACULTY Timothy S. Jost David Dvorin Mary Hill ...... Jl ,1995-June 30,1996) (July1 + Indicates President’s Club Member, The Ohio State University. State Ohio The Member, President’s Club Indicates Julie Kaplan Jen Jen Jung Aaron Granger David Faure KateGoldsmith DavidGroshoff Brian Hendrickson Bill Hedrick Brandon Horn Kathy Joseph Darrell Pierre Chipo Nyambuya AliceElizabeth Rasor Martin* Betty Murphy,Southard Esq. Karen Ruegg Montgomery Richard L.McLaughlin Carole K.McLaughlin Hon. DavidHon. A.Nelson Betty Hewson O’Neill Pamela LombardiH. Earl Finbar Murphy Dora M.Richardson Jean S.Jean McNamara Kathleen R.Mosier Nancy B.Rapoport Deborah Merritt J. Anne E.Portwood Gladys A.Mapes Robert PolingH. James E.Meeks James EMeyer John R.MeyerJohn Alan Michaels Marlene Reiser CarolPeirano Ira W Price Ira W Jennifer Rudinger James Tanner Jon Jon Wentz Brian Shinn Melissa Romig Ben Romans Tammy Stewart Michael Snavely Denise Skingle Amy Waterfield Howard Strain Chris Smith Craig H.Smith Scott Unger Constance Thompson Chrysanthe Vassiles Kim Zianno Ardath KleinhansArdath Saxbe Helen Weiner Zelkowitz Sara Gerhart Wieland*+ Robert M.Rosenblum* Clara Alpers Van Keuls Dr.Rosemary Roberts Nancy Hardin NancyRogers Hardin William GlenStewart Gregory H.Williams* Gregory M.Travalio Dorothy SheaDorothy Tracy Allan SamanskyJ. BarbaraR. Snyder Walter Siemer*J. Charles E.Wilson Shirley A.Rogers Gayle T.Shibano Bradford Roesch Shirley Romans Glenn A.Smith Vincine Verdun Doug Whaley Chris Wasson CORPORATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS The following firms, foundations and corporations made gifts to the College of Law between July 1,1995 and June 30,1996. The list includes corporations which matched contributions from alumni and friends.

AMP Inc. Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation Foundation Abbott Laboratories Fund Luper, Sheriff, and Neidenthal Alexander and Baldwin Inc. M. A. Young Foundation American Express Foundation Mallinckrodt Inc. Foundation American Institute for Paralegal Studies Inc. Marathon Oil Company American Electric Power Company Robert K. and Irene Z. Me Namara Fund Ameritech Foundation of the Columbus Foundation Amgen Inc. Me Quades Company LPA Arthur Andersen and Company Foundation Mead Corporation Foundation Animal Clinic of Cambridge Mellen Foundaton Arco Foundation Michael and Paige Crane Fund of the Columbus Foundation B. P America Inc. Nationsbank Baker and Hostetler Founders Trust National City Bank of Cleveland Battista and Battista Company LPA Nationwide Insurance Foundation Borden Foundation Inc. Northern Trust Company Borg-Warner Foundation John Nuveen and Company Inc. CSX Corporation Ohio Bar Review and Writing Seminar Incorporated Capital Cities/ABC Inc. Ohio Hospital Insurance Company Jerome D. Catanzaro Company LPA Ohio State Alumni Club of Cleveland Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. Foundation Outdoor Power Equipment Institute Inc. Cloppert, Portman, Sauter, Latanick, and Foley Thomas E Peterson Foundation Michael E Colley Company, L.PA. Porter, Wright, Morris and Arthur Law Firm Columbus Jewish Foundation - Joyce and Charles Shenk Preformed Line Products Company Philanathropic Fund Thomas E. Ray Company LPA Columbia Gas System Inc. Rice Law Offices The Columbus Foundation - Gardner Family Fund Robison, Curphey, and O’Connell Coopers and Lybrand Foundation Ronald and Renee Kauffman Philanthropic Fund Elizabeth G. and John D. Drinko Charitable Foundation of the Columbus Jewish Foundation The Harry J. and Claire S. Dworkin Foundation Ronemus and Heath Company Ernst and Young Foundation Shell Oil Company Foundation Ethyl Corporation Shumaker, Loop, and Kendrick Exxon Education Foundation Society National Bank - Cleveland Foundation of the American Board of Trial Advocates Spangenberg, Shibley, and Liber First National Bank of SW Ohio Standard Products Foundation Ford Motor Company Fund Stanford University General Motors Foundation State Farm Companies Foundation The Wilfred Goodwin and J. Jean Goodwin Trust Sullivan and Cromwell Hewlett-Packard Company Sun Company Incorporated Hutchins Law Office Thomas J. and Mary E. Eyerman Fund Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman, and Kalur Co., LPA USX Corporation Foundation John P Di Falco and Associates PC M. Varveris Agency David W Keller Trust White Consolidated Industries Foundation Kimberly-Clark Corporation Foundation Leo Yassenoff Foundation Inc. Law Office of Ron Perey 75 Investment Company Law Office of Paul A. Bernardini Lawrence C. and Lois H. Sherman Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland

* Indicates a gift of $1,000 or more. + Indicates President’s Q ub Member, The Ohio State University. Let us know what is happening in your life, personally, and profession­ ally. Submit news items to: Liz Cutler Gates, The Law Record, The Alumni News Ohio State University College of Law, 55 West 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1391 or fax them to (614) 292-1383. A card is provided at the back of the magazine for your convenience. You may also e-mail news to: [email protected]. Photos are welcome but will not be re­ (from 45th reunion responses) tion case in turned. Deadline for submissions for the next issue is May 15,1997. 1955. His Donald E. Calhoun, Jr. is U.S. most humor­ Bankruptcy Judge, Southern District of ous or Ohio, a position he has held since 1985. In embarrassing moment was having it General, Butler County prosecutor, his reunion message to classmates, he wrote: reversed in 1956. Middletown law director, and acting judge “I am absolutely convinced that the legal in the Middletown Municipal Court. education prepares you to think in a process Daniel H. Lease is chairman of the board of that applies invaluably in every aspect of life. Wahl Refractories, Inc. He lives in Fremont. Thomas R. Spellerberg has served as judge It is the reason lawyers rise to the top in any in the Seneca County Common Pleas Court activity in which they participate.” Mary C. Lord has served as city commis­ since 1987. Prior to that he was Seneca sioner, trustee at Miami University, and County prosecutor from 1961 to 1984, and Will Frazee has worked as general trustee at Otterbein Homes. She practices judge in the Tiffin Municipal Court. counsel of a patent holding company, in Middletown. executive vice president of a construction George Stuhldreher has been with the company, executive director of a home Since 1959, Earl N. Merwin has practiced same Cleveland law firm since 1951. It is builders association and served 20 years in law in Columbus. He says that the most now known as Gallagher, Sharp, Fulton, private practice as a divorce lawyer. He exciting moment of his career was when and Norman. resides in Dayton. his two daughters joined him as attorneys in his law office. Elinor Porter Swiger is an attorney with James D. Hapner has worked as a Robbins, Schwartz, Nicholas, Lifton, and practicing lawyer, state representative, and William (Bill) E. Ranee has been in Taylor, Ltd. in Chicago, a firm that part-time municipal judge. He recalls the private practice in Columbus since 1960. represents schools and colleges. She has most exciting moment in his profession as also authored six books, including four winning the first Ohio school desegrega- At the age of 70, William Ernest (Bill) which are law-related. She lives in Rathman Glenview, Illinois. recently became of counsel with John N. Teeple has been associated with his firm, Geiger, Teeple, Smith, and Hahn since Rathman, 1953. He lives in Alliance. Combs, Schaefer, and Kaup. Richard J. Thomas practices law in Marietta. During his career, he also Harold E. Wonnell is in private practice served part-time in Columbus. He has also served as a as special special agent for the FBI, as a trial lawyer, counsel to the and as a judge. Ohio Attorney C lass of 1936 60th Reunion Sheldon Mike Young is associated with Walter and Haverfield in Columbus. He has also taught at Case Western University Law School and authored a book on pension and profit sharing plans.

Edwin M. Ellman has been named to the board of overseers of the Jewish Theological Seminary’s undergraduate school, the Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies, in New York City. Ellman is president of Ellman Financial and Service Corp. and Class of 1951 45th Reunion Photo by You See Photography, Inc. E.M. Ellman and Associates in Columbus. William L. and Barbara Clark and Robert C. Kiger enjoy a moment at the Class o f‘60 reunion. The class m et fo r d in n er a t the Faculty Club on August 24.

The Class o f‘61 held their 35th reunion at the Governor’s Residence. Planning the event were Governor and Mrs. George Voinovich (center), Michael Colley (right), and Ed Whipps (back). They are pictured with Dean Gregory H. Williams. Class of 1956 40th Reunion Photo by You See Photography, Inc.

Alphonse E Cincione has been Howard R. Besser is adjunct professor of Michael H. Gertner is a partner in appointed Chairman of the Ohio law at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. Gertner and Gertner in Columbus. Elections Commission. He has He is also a trial attorney for the U.S. Equal been a member of the Commission since Employment Opportunity Commission. Since 1971, John Humbach has taught 1991 and previously served as Vice Chair. He lives in Shaker Heights. law. His current position at Pace University Cincione is a member of the Columbus School of Law, White Plains, New York, law firm of Butler, Cincione, Dicuccio, Jim Bowers works in the legal department finds him teaching property, land use, Dritz, and Bamhardt. of International Paper Co., Purchase, contracts, antitrust, corporations, and law New York. and economics. He lives in White Plains.

John D. Liber Robert Briggs is president of Buckingham, James W Jordan practices law in has been elected Doolittle, and Burroughs in Akron. Westerville. managing partner of Spangenberg, Frank H. Foster, III, is a partner with Richard L. Lancione is a partner in the Shibley, and Liber, a 10- Kremblas, Foster, Millard, and Pollick. firm of Lancione, Davis, and Lloyd. His member Cleveland civil He says that the most exciting moment in daughter, Tracey Lloyd, and her husband, trial firm specializing in his profession was having his son become a Scott, are also part of the firm. Lancione selective wrongful injury, j 0hn D. Liber ‘63 patent attorney and joining his firm. also has an interest in four Burger King professional negligence, ------and commercial litiga­ tion. The firm had previously been run by an executive committee. The change coincides with the commemoration of the firm’s 50th anniversary. Liber and his wife, Nancy, live in Bratenahl. They have three children and six grandchildren.

(from 30th reunion responses)

Robert P Banta, Jr. is vice president and trust officer for the Santa Monica Bank in California. He lives in Woodland Hills, California.

Class of 1966 30th Reunion Photo by You See Photography, In

30 News

restaurants. He and his wife, Joyce, reside in Bellaire.

Victor Marsh is a partner in Black, McCuskey, Souers, and Arbaugh in Canton. Sally W. Bloomfield ‘69 Jerome Phillips ‘69 Edward J. Korte 71 David A. Turano ‘71 Edward L. Clark 7 3 For the past 21 years, George W. Moore III has been a solo He was recently selected to serve on the David A. Turano has joined the Colum­ practitioner in tax and probate and estate OSU College of Law’s executive committee bus office of Harris, Carter, Mahota, and planning. He lives in Bloomfield Hills, for the Affirm Thy Friendship Campaign. Mazza as a partner. The firm name has Michigan. been changed to Harris, Carter, Mahota, Charles Waterfield is senior partner with Turano, and Mazza. Formerly a partner Paul E. Pfeifer is an Ohio Supreme Court Flynn, Py, and Kruse L.P.A. in Sandusky. with Baker and Hostetler, Turano will Justice. continue to focus his practice on represen­ Serving as common pleas judge in tation of the transporation industry in Donald E. Rose practices in Dublin. He Lawrence County is never dull for W. various areas, including regulatory has also served as solicitor for the city of Richard (Dick) Walton. He has tried compliance, general business, commercial Dublin, member of the Mid-Ohio Regional motorcycle gang members on murder and civil litigation, environmental law, and Planning Commission, and on the State charges and the defendants in the employment law. Underground Parking Commission. Lucasville prison riots. He is currently hearing the cases of the Scottown fire­ Susan E. Brown has been elected to the Thomas J. Short serves the Common Pleas works store explosion. board of directors of The Ohio State Courts of Henry and Williams counties. University Alumni Association. She is an Sally W. Bloomfield received attorney and partner with Vorys, Sater, J. Mac Alpine (Mac) Smith is an attorney the Alumni Citizenship Award Seymour, and Pease. with Smith, Smith, and Montgomery, from the Ohio State University Bellefontaine. during a special celebration on November Edward L. Clark, a partner with 1 at the Hyatt on Capital Square, Colum­ the Columbus law firm of Clark Martins Ferry attorney Keith A. Sommer bus. The award is for exceptional commu­ Perdue, Roberts, and Scott, has is active in his community. He has served nity service beyond the call of business or been appointed chair of the Association of as trustee and board chairman for the East professional duty. Trial Lawyers of America (ATLA) Insurance Ohio Regional Hospital; trustee of Ohio Law Section. He limits his practice to Valley Health Services and Education Jerome Phillips is serving a one-year term significant personal injury and wrongful Corp.; director, Peoples Savings Bank, and as president of the Toledo Bar Association. death cases. director, Belmont National Bank. He is associated with Wittenberg and Phillips in Toledo. Larry Pratt and Jeff Sutton ‘90 received Beatrice K. Sowald is a partner in the Best Brief Award at the National Sowald, Sowald, and Clouse, where one of Edward J. Korte has attained the Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) her daughters is also a partner. She has highest level of federal career civil Summer Conference in St. Louis. They also served as a judge for the Franklin service in the Senior Executive were part of a team that worked on a case County Court of Common Pleas, Domes­ Services ranks. He is the Command entitled Shaper v. Tracy. The brief focused tic Relations, and Franklin County Counsel with the U.S. Army Materiel on whether Ohio violated the Commerce Municipal Court. Command Headquarters, Alexandria, Clause provision of the constitution by Virginia. Siich promotions, called ES-6 pay providing a tax exemption for interest William G. Stewart is vice president of level increases, are awarded by the earned on in-state municipal bonds but Union Camp Corp., Wayne, New Jersey. Secretary of the Army to superior career not on out-of-state municipal bonds. After performers. Korte is one of six other senior reviewing the brief last fall, the Supreme James M. Tuschman is principal, execu­ Army civilian personnel to be awarded pay Court upheld Ohio’s taxation policy. Pratt tive vice president and chairman of the level increases this year. He and his wife, is assistant attorney general in the Health operations committee of Jacobson, Linda, and their three sons, Daniel, Brian, and Human Services Section. Maynard, Tuschman, and Kalur in Toledo. and Michael, reside in Vienna, Virginia.

31 David S. Hay has joined the Tom Brown is mortgage banking practice of the director of regula­ 74 Minnesota-based law firm Briggs tory matters for and Stratton. His practice will be national Columbia Gas of in scope and concentrated in regulatory Ohio. He and his compliance, mortgage banking transac­ wife, Paula, live in tions, and litigation. Columbus.

Robert E. Hickley, Jr. and his wife, John Budde has Loralynn, are the proud parents of a boy, operated his own Conor Robert, born April 4, 1996. The business, Hayward Hickleys live in Dublin. Distributing Com­ pany, for the past six Frederick L. Ransier is one of the six new years. He and his trustees appointed by Governor George V wife, Louise, have

Voinovich ‘61 to the board of Central State three children and Class of 1975 21st Reunion Photo by You See Photography, Inc. University. Ransier is a long-time law live in Columbus. director for the Village of Urbancrest. He is a Chapter 7 Panel Bankruptcy Trustee, Jim Carpenter is associated with Carlile, John D. Hvizdos is a partner in Harris, Southern District of Ohio, and a member Patchen, and Murphy in Columbus. He McClellan, Binau, and Cox, a general of the Trustee Advisory Committee, as well and his wife, Mary Jane, live in Columbus business practice with emphasis in as a member of the Board of Commission­ and have three daughters. He counts computer and intellectual property law. He ers on the Unauthorized Practice of Law, mountain climbing among his many and his wife, Cynthia, live in Columbus. Supreme Court of Ohio. interests and recently scaled Mt. Ranier with classmate Brent Mulgrew. Steve Jemison works with Procter and Gamble in Cincinnati. He and his wife, (from 21st reunion responses) Walter Chess, Jr. has been in private Phyllis McCallum, have two children. practice in Zanesville since 1975. 75 Robert Quincy Baker, III is Lee J. Johnson is the Director of Risk associated with the firm of Frase, Weir, After 20 years as an in-house corporate Management for a national medical Baker, and McCullough Co, LPA in lawyer, Debbie Edwards returned to malpractice insurance company He lives Coshocton. He also serves as village school full-time in 1995. She is scheduled in Bedford Hills, New York. solicitor for West Lafayette, Plainfield, and to receive a master’s degree in information Nellie, all located in Coshocton County. science from the University of Pittsburgh Since 1984, Bob Joseph has managed his in December and anticipates becoming a company, Law Resources, Inc. in Washing­ Bob Bartunek is associated with Beckett, computer systems analyst specializing in ton, D.C., a litigation support and staffing Lolli, and Bartunek in Kansas City, law office technology. business that provides paralegals, law Missouri, where his practice primarily clerks, and legal secretaries to the major consists of corporate, tax, and estate Robert P Ellis, Jr. is a shareholder with law firms in Washington and in Chicago. planning. Wickens Herzer and Panza Co. LPA in He and his wife, Diane, have two sons. Lorain. He is also a trustee of the Lorain John Bentine is partner and member of the Public Library System. Terrence E Kessler is a partner in Black, executive committee at Chester, Willcox, McCuskey, Souers, and Arbaugh, a and Saxbe. He and his wife, Lori, raise, Ray A. Farris is a partner at Fuller and business/transactional practice in Canton. show, and field train Labrador retrievers. Henry EL.L. in Toledo, a firm he joined He and his wife, Joyce, have three children. The Bentines have four children. upon graduation from law school. He has two children. Andrew J. Love is associate general Marjorie Crowder Briggs has been with counsel for AFSCME Ohio Council 8 in the litigation department of Porter, Wright, Bill Hopper works in the Ohio Attorney Worthington. He and his wife, Rebecca, Morris, and Arthur in Columbus for 21 General’s office as chief of revenue recov­ have two children. years. She and her husband, Ronald, have ery. He and his wife, Sharon, live in Canal two children. Winchester with their two children. Clint Miller is general counsel with United Transporation Union in Cleveland. He and his wife, Betts, have three daughters. 32 Thomas W. Mitchell, Jr. served as a US He and his wife, Bonnie, live in Robert J. Behai has been elected Navy JAGC attorney until 1989, when he Centerville. chairman of the Board of Trustees went into private practice in New Port ’78 and the Executive Committee of Richey, Florida. He and his wife, Jody, have Terry and Lynette Overbey live in the Central Ohio Breathing Association, one son. Cincinnati, where Terry is Corporate formerly known as the Central Ohio Lung Secretary and Associate General Counsel/ Association. Karen Mueller Moore chairs the trust and Securities for Procter and Gamble. Lynette estates department at Bricker and Eckler in worked as a corporate attorney at Blue Columbus. She has also taught as an Cross for five years, then resigned to be at James H. Balthaser has joined adjunct professor at the OSU College of home with the couple’s three daughters. the firm of Thompson, Hine, and Law. She and her husband, Ed, have two ’79 Flory PL.L as a partner. His children. R.L. Richards is employed with RDT practice includes transactional tax plan­ Limited, a partnership with R. David ning, succession planning, other tax and Kevin P. Mulrane works as a public Thomas. He and his wife, Barbara, live in non-tax legal services for publicly-traded defender in Franklin County and is Dublin. and closely-held businesses, multi- supervisor of the Common Pleas Unit generational families, and corporate (felony). He and his wife, Gloria Eyerly Charles R. Saxbe is associated with executives. ‘76, have one daughter. Chester, Willcox, and Saxbe in Columbus. He and his wife, Susan, have two children. Terry Miller’s practice with Vorys, Sater, Seymour, and Pease focuses on commercial Jim Scheer serves as municipal court litigation, administrative law and Chapter judge in Celina, where he and his wife, 11 bankruptcy. He and his wife, Martha, Karen, reside, have one son and live in Columbus. James R. Shenk is affiliated as shareholder Brent Mulgrew started working with the in Faulkner, Garmhausen, Keister, and Ohio State Medical Association before Shenk, a legal professional association in graduation and never left. He and his wife, Sidney. He and his wife, Shirley, have four Robert J. Behai ‘78 James H. Balthaser ‘79 Susan, have two children and live in children. Columbus. Stephen J. Stanford is with Fuller and Michael D. and Denise Howes Juhola are the parents of a girl, Currently chief counsel for the U.S. Army Henry P.L.L., Toledo. He and his wife, ’80 Emily Jane, bom February 16, Space and Strategic Defense Command, Linda, have three children. 1996. The Juholas live in Columbus. Roger Neds has been on active duty since graduation. He and his wife, Barbara, have After law school, Frank Stieg graduated two sons and live in Huntsville, Alabama. from medical school. He is a plastic surgeon in private practice in Orlando, Nancy Alecusan Lipski is an attorney in private practice in David A. Orlins is a partner in Rudd, Florida. He and his wife, Sharon, live in ’81 Lexington, South Carolina. She and Silverberg, Zaharieff, and Orlins in Xenia. Winter Park, Florida. her husband, David A. Lipski, live in Thomas P. Webster is a partner with Columbia, South Carolina. McCauley, Webster, Emrick, and Garrison David S. Jump has been appointed a Black Law Alumni Society in Belpre. He and his wife, Margaret, have two children. magistrate in the Franklin County Municipal Elects Officers Court. He and his wife, C. Eileen Pruett, Carl Smallwood ‘80, Columbus, has Alec Wightman is legal services partner live in Columbus. been elected as president of the Black with Baker and Hostetler in Columbus. He (from 15th reunion responses) Law Alumni Society. Also serving as and his wife, Kathy, have two daughters. officers are Toki M. Clark ‘87, Columbus, James Roy Williams has been in private Bob Aukerman is a tax attorney for The vice president; James Adair ‘73, Colum­ practice in Cincinnati since 1982. He and Dow Chemical Company, Midland, his wife, Sandra, have two children and bus; and Karen Wheel ‘88, Columbus. live in Florence, Kentucky. Alumni News

witnesses to a murder in a strip joint. The witnesses were dancers at the club who came to the interviews in costume.

Kay Woods is associate general counsel with LTV Steel Company, Inc. in Cleve­ land. She lives in Solon.

John D. Burley has joined the Columbus office of Squire, Sanders, and Dempsey as an associate in the Class of 1981 15th Reunion Photo by You See Photography, Inc. corporate practice group. Prior to John D. Burley ‘83 Michigan. He works on financial transac­ A resident of Pepper Pike, Ohio, joining the firm, he tions, international, excise, and state Stephanie Baker Jarrett works as tax had been a foreign service officer with the income taxes. He recalls that the most counsel for GE Lighting in Cleveland. Department of State in Washington, D.C., exciting moment in his profession so far London, and Warsaw. Previously, he was a was uncovering in excess of $35 million in Jeffrey M. Lewis is director of Swedlow, senior attorney with Bank One, Columbus, tax deductions and convincing the 1RS of Butler, Inman, Levine, and Lewis in providing legal counsel on real estate and their deductibility. Columbus. banking matters.

Sam Ciatu is senior vice president of ILX After graduating from Ohio State, Douglas Inc., a report development company in H. Marshall received an MBA from The Anthony O. Mancuso is the host Phoenix, Arizona. He resides in Scottsdale. Wharton School of the University of of a radio call-in show, Lay It On Pennsylvania. Currently, he is senior ’86 the Line, airing on 1230 AM Peter Danis traded in his law books for counsel, finance, for Xerox Corporation in WCOL in Columbus. The program cookbooks and opened a gourmet pizza/ Stamford, . addresses topics in the areas of law, pasta restaurant in Columbus. He and his government, politics, news, and sports. wife, Laurie Wayt Danis ‘82, own Figlio Denise McColley is a partner in Lankenau, Wood-Fired Pizza in Grandview. They Wesche, and McColley in Napoleon, Ohio. recently opened a second restaurant in Gregory A. Gehlmann has Upper Arlington. Jay Meena’s solo practice is limited to real become a partner in the firm estate. He lives in Columbus. ’88 Malizia, Spidi, Sloane, and Fisch, Marc D. Dietz is an attorney with Adams, PC., Washington, D.C. He concentrates on Brooking, Stepner, Woltermann, and Stephan L. Oliver works with the C. the regulatory and securities activities of Dusing in Covington, Kentucky. He resides Clayton Johnson Co. L.RA. in Portsmouth. financial institutions and their holding in Cincinnati. companies. Jeffery Waite is a partner in Monnie-, James C. Ellis is a partner in Bogin, Waite, and O’Connor in Cincinnati. Patterson and Bohman in Dayton. He says Julia “Rita” McNeil Benton has his most embarrassing moment in his Since 1985, Donna Wise has been senior joined the Ohio Attorney profession was when he went to an arraign­ deputy prosecuting attorney for the King ’89 General’s office as chief of the . ment on behalf of a relative and upon County Prosecutor’s Office in Seattle, civil rights section. Her duties will include ■ arriving at court, discovered the relative had Washington. She says her most humorous representing the Ohio Civil Rights used his name when he was arrested. moment occurred while interviewing Commission in cases involving discrimina­ tion based on race, color, religion, national

34 origin, ancestry, sex, age, or handicap. She and her husband, Fred, reside in Berwick.

Drew H. Campbell contributed a chapter on motions during trial to volume II of the Lawyers Cooperative Federal Practice Guide: Federal Civil Procedure and Evidence during Trial — 6th Circuit. Campbell is an attoney with the Columbus law firm of Bricker and Eckler.

Jeff Sutton and Larry Pratt 73 received the Best Brief Award at the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) Summer Conference in St. Louis. They were part of a team that worked on a case entitled Shaper v. Tracy. The brief focused on whether Ohio violated the Commerce Clause provision of the constitution by providing a tax exemption for interest earned on in-state municipal bonds but not on out-of-state municipal bonds. Class of 1991 5th Reunion Photo by You See Photography, Inc. After reviewing the brief last fall, the Supreme Court upheld Ohio’s taxation Elise Porter, assistant attorney general in practice focuses on the litigation of all policy. Sutton is state solicitor for Ohio. the Health and Human Services Section of aspects of business disputes, including the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, is one torts, breaches of contract, products of five attorneys nationwide to win the Ray liability, securities fraud, and DTPA. John Blaufuss was honored at Marvin Award for extraordinary service. the 1996 Urban All-American The award was given at the National (from 5th reunion responses) banquet of the Central City Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) Ministries of Toledo. The award recog­ Summer Conference in St. Louis. Porter Heather M.L. Cockley is in private nizes graduates of inner city Catholic served as a Supreme Court Fellow at practice in Mansfield. She is the mother of schools who have NAAG for the period of September three children. excelled academi­ through December 1995. The program cally, professionally, provides state lawyers an opportunity to Brady Douthett has worked as an associ­ and in positively obtain direct Supreme Court advocacy ate with Roetzel and Andress and as law impacting the experience in Washington, D.C., by clerk for the Honorable Sam Bell, U.S. community. John observing argument at the court and District Court, Northern District, Ohio. continues to live in participating in moot courts, as well as the central city with writing a state amicus brief. When her Holly Fischer is an associate with William his wife and term was up as Supreme Court Fellow, she A. Morse, L.P.A- in Worthington. daughter, where he g ,gi was asked to act as NAAG’s Supreme Court has been active m ______Counsel, which she did for two months. Jennifer Lynn Gearheart is managing community director for Smith Hanley Associates, Inc.. development and other social justice and Patrick J. Schmitz is a staff attorney with She lives in New York, New York. political endeavors. He practices con­ Bricker and Eckler in Columbus. sumer law with Dixon and Dixon in Nob Goad is an associate with Porter, Toledo, and appears frequently on local Lisa K. Vaughn has joined the firm of Wright, Morris, and Arthur in Dayton. television news as a consumer advocate Jackson and Walker, L.L.P, Dallas, Texas, as and consumer law expert. an associated in the litigation section. Her

35 Priscilla Hapner is an associate at Porter, Wright, Morris, and Arthur in Columbus.

Jean Forquer Hyslop is a partner in the law firm Hyslop and Hyslop Co., L.EA.

Ellen Maglicic Kramer is an associate with Kohrman, Jackson, and Krantz, Cleveland. Thomas J. Grever ‘92 Robert F. Gage ‘93 Ben Swift ‘95 Jon T. Davis ‘96 Kimberly Hite Mayhew has worked as staff attorney for Franklin County Com­ Ohio in the Environmental Enforcement Cynthia Butler married Paul mon Pleas Court, assistant city attorney Section, representing the Ohio Environ­ Carson on June 24, 1995. The (civil division) for the city of Columbus, mental Protection Agency and the Ohio ’94 couple lives in Hilliard. She is an and as city solicitor for the city of Xenia. Department of Natural Resources. attorney with Koffel and Jump in Columbus. She currently lives in Xenia.

Kathy McCabe is employee relations Jonathan Andrew Woodman Corey A. Ditslear won the manager for Pepsi-Cola General Bottlers in married Cheryl Marie Duda on March primary election to be the Rolling Meadows, Illinois. ’93 March 16,1996. He is an ’95 Democratic candidate for a seat attorney in private practice in Columbus. in the Ohio House of Representatives Katy Mooney is project director at Retail The couple lives in Hilliard. representing the 26th District. He was Planning Associates. She lives in Columbus. defeated in the November election by Robert F. Gage has joined the Columbus Republican incumbent Pat Tiberi. Corey Lee Ross has worked as an associate for a office of Squire, Sanders, and Dempsey as and his wife, Samantha K. Stalnaker, live small, general practice firm in Westerville, an associate in the corporate practice in Columbus. director of a national bar review company, group. Previously, he practiced litigation, college instructor, consultant to an securities, and corporate law in Columbus Arturo Gerardo Hernandez is an attorney alternative, sentencing firm, and mediator with Davis, Graham, and Stubbs in at University of California at Irvine Affirmative Action Office. She lives in Glendora, California. G. Harold Martin ‘23 paid a Jaimie Schwartz is an associate attorney visit to the College of Law at Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer, and Nelson in earlier this year. He toured Portland, Maine. the law library with Bruce Johnson, library director, Rob Zimmerman has worked as assistant right, and Dean Gregory H. Ohio attorney general, an associate with Williams, left. Martin Arter and Hadden, and as campaign worked in the library while manager for Tim McCormack, candidate a student. He shared many for Cuyahoga County Commissioner. He stories about what has changed (and not changed) lives in Beachwood. in the 70 years since he helped shelve books. Martin lives in Ft. Lauderdale, Thomas J. Grever has joined the Florida, where he founded ’92 Columbus office of Squire, Every Child a Swimmer, Sanders, and Dempsey as an Inc., a program designed to associate in the environmental practice teach swimming skills to group. He previously worked as an elementary-aged children. assistant attorney general for the state of

36 Colorado. He and his wife, Karen Sands Hernandez, live in Westminster, Colorado. ACLIJ Recognizes Alumni Ben Swift has been appointed as an Three alumni of the College of Law are partners in a firm that has been recog­ Assistant Prosecuting Attorney in the nized by the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio. The Columbus law firm of Montgomery County Prosecutor’s Office. Spater, Gittes, Schulte and Kolman was honored for 25 years of extraordinary pro bono service to civil rights and civil liberties, including its support of the Ohio Civil Rights Coalition, anti-racist activities, litigation, and organizing. The Jon T. Davis has joined the firm honor came at the Civil Liberties Awards Dinner in Columbus on November 16. of Squire, Sanders, and Dempsey, Columbus, as an associate in the Among the named partners of the firm are Alexander Spater ‘73, Frederick M. corporate practice group. Gittes ‘75, and Kathleen Beth Schulte ‘82.

Chuncai Meng is teaching in the Depart­ ment of Law, City University of Hong Kong.

V ictor K adem enos ‘71 makes a selection from the buffet table at the Annual Return on September 7.

Above left: Lisa Hyre, 1L, hands Ray Cunningham ‘50 his tickets for the tailgate cookout and the football game at the Annual Return. She was one of several students who assisted with the event.

Left: Mike Saad and other members of the Class of 1966 get re-acquainted during the Annual Return tailgate party.

37 The College of Law regrets the passing of these alumni In Memoriam and expresses its sympathy to relatives and loved ones.

Herbert S. Beane ‘24 died September 8, George E. Young ‘39 died May 26, 1996, November 11, 1995. He was retired from 1996, at the age of 94. He was a city at the age of 81. The president of his class, Bemis Co., Inc. as vice president general attorney in Dayton for nearly 40 years. He Young practiced law until his retirement in counsel. He is survived by his wife, Joyce; is survived by his wife, Mary Love Beane; a 1991. He is survived by his wife, Ellen, two daughters, Elizabeth and Susan, both daughter, Lois, of Dayton; and a son, whom he married in 1986, a son, G. of St. Paul, Minnesota, and a son, James, of Darrell, of Carmel, Indiana. David, and a daughter, Ellen, both of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Columbus; a granddaughter; three step­ Thomas B. Stahl ‘27 died May 6, 1995. sons, Edwin M. Louer, Circleville; Roger B. Armond Arnson ‘51 died July 15, 1996, Surviving are sons John T. ‘63 and James Louer, St. Helena, California; and Albert at his home in Lyndhurst. He had cancer. P., both of Fremont. O. Louer, Williamsburg, Virginia; several He was a key figure in the Cleveland area step-grandchildren and two step-great- professional sports arena and, as legal Joseph Provenza ‘28 died April 3, 1995, grandchildren. counsel for the Rouse Company, played a in Lorain. prominent role in the development of the James M. Gorman ‘39 died January 8, Beachwood Place mall. He is survived by James L. Knapp ‘28 died August 1,1995, 1994, in New Carlisle. his daughters, Karen Tarlofsky, Manhattan, in California. New York; Marcia Gentile and Amy Cahn, Edwin R. Oglesby ‘40 died March 28, Pepper Pike; Lisa, Richmond Heights; and Charles E. Moul ‘29 died May 31, 1996, 1994. Susan Kahan, Beachwood; seven grand­ at the age of 91. He was retired senior vice' children; and a brother. His wife, Jeanne, president of claims for the Westfield Kline R. Roberts ‘40 died May 25, 1995. died last year. Insurance Companies. He is survived by He is survived by his wife, Toy, and three his wife of 61 years, Lillian, and his sons, sons, Kline L., Ill; Doug; and Scott ‘79; Marvin Pliskin ‘63 died in July, 1996,. in William ‘64 and John ‘69. and several grandchildren and great Columbus. He is survived by his wife, Sue; grandchildren. two sons, Dan, of Owings-Mills, Maryland; Willard Levin ‘31 died January 14, 1995. Larry, of Columbus; and one granddaughter. Kenneth M. Robbins ‘40 died October 6, Rafael A. Gonzales ‘32 died May 15, 1988. Worthington Mayor Lawrence H. Braun 1996, at the age of 93. He was a retired ‘65 died June 26, 1996, after a short fight attorney and former city judge of San Juan, Pauline Wardlow Lynn ‘48 died May 8, with cancer. He was 62. In addition to Puerto Rico. 1995. She is survived by her husband, serving as mayor of the central Ohio Arthur, and daughters Pamela, Acton, community, he was director of legal Martin L. Hanna ‘34 died in 1994. Massachusetts; Constance and Deborah, services for Columbus Public Schools. He both of Columbus; and Patricia, is survived by his wife, Sharon; a.son, Eric; Abraham Gertner ‘35 died June 2,1996 Collingswood, New Jersey. a daughter, Kristin; and his parents, Henry in Columbus at the age of 87. He practiced and June Braun, Cleveland. law in the capital city for 55 years and A driving force behind the development of served as a federal administrative law the Marion campus of The Ohio State Daniel J. Swillinger ‘67 died May 20,1995, judge. He is survived by his wife, Edythe, University, Ralph W. Howard ‘49 died July in Washington, D.C. He is survived by his and a son, Michael. 11, 1996. He was 74. He was president of wife, Lois Williams, and a son, Patrick. Frericks and Howard, L.P.A. when he died. Guy J. Mauro ‘36 died in February, 1995 Mike Radabaugh ‘76 died October 12, in Sarasota, Florida. He was 83. Survivors James W. Phillips ‘49 died August 3, 1995, in Ashland. He is survived by his include a son, James, of Columbus; two 1996. at his home in Upper Arlington. He wife, Connie, and two children. daughters, Eileen Mauro, Columbus, and was 73. He was former general counsel for Mary Caye Bixler, Salem; and five grand­ the Galbreath Company and former James “Kevin” Sarver ‘90 died April 17 children. president of the Ohio State University in Indianapolis. He was a legal clerk with Alumni Association board of directors. Rowe and Hamilton Law Firm. He is Richard L. Vaughn ‘37 died November survived by his father, William L. Sarver, 16, 1994, in San Diego, California. George William Andrews ‘51 was killed sister, Velitia A. David; brother, William A. instantly while riding his bicycle near his Sarver; and grandmother, Louise Anderson. home in Fountain Hills, Arizona on

38 College of Law 1997 Alumni Awards Call for Nominations

Two alumni and a faculty member will be honored at College of Law Annual Alumni Return festivities in September 1997. Submissions will be judged by representatives of the Member­ ship and Alumni Recognition subcommittee of the Alumni Association’s National Council. Nominations, including a resume or curriculum vitae are due January 10,1997. Law School Graduate Killed By Claimant Outstanding Alumna/us Award Given annually to a College of Law graduate for exceptional On September 19, Kennie L. professional achievement or outstanding service to the College or community. Edwards ‘85, a workers’ compen- Kennie Edwards ‘85 ------sation defense lawyer, was killed Recent Alumna/us Award Granted annually to an individual who has graduated within by Terry Hogan, a disgruntled claimant. the past ten years whose accomplishments exemplify outstand­ ing professionalism or loyalty to the College or community. Hogan forcefully entered the West Palm Beach law firm, Faculty Award Danielson, Clarke, Pumpian and Ford, PA., armed with a Given annually to a current faculty member for outstanding revolver and a shotgun. Hogan ultimately kept two teaching, research, or community service. hostages, Edwards and Art Pumpian, a partner of the law firm. Hogan fired two shotgun blasts that killed Kennie and Sponsor’s Name:______wounded Art in the right arm. Hogan then fatally shot Phone:______himself. Pumpian is presently recovering at home. Candidate’s Name:______Address: ______Edwards is survived by his wife, Joan Edwards; a five-year- City: ______State:______Zip:------old son, Christopher, and a second son who will never Current Position:______know his father. Chase Wayne Edwards was bom on September 30, eleven days after his father’s murder. Also Award Category (Check One):___Outstanding Alumni Award surviving are his parents, Wayne and Viola Edwards, Stow; Recent Alumni Award a brother, Dwayne, Akron; and a sister, Deborah Crowe, Faculty Award Ravenna. I nominate the candidate because______Danielson, Clarke, Pumpian and Ford, PA. has established a memorial fund for Edwards’ wife and sons. Checks should be made payable to Kennie L. Edwards Family Memorial Fund and sent to any First Union Bank branch or to Danielson, Clark, Pumpian and Ford, PA., P.O. Box 6158, West Palm Beach, FL 33405.

For additional information, contact Teresita A. Vivo at Continue on a separate sheet if necessary; include resume or curriculum vitae and any supporting documentation you deem (561) 547-7000. appropriate.

Mail or fax by January 10, 1997 to: Assistant Dean Pamela H. Lombardi, OSU College of Law, 55 W. 12th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210-1391. Fax: (614) 292-1383 Inquiries: (614) 292-8809 National Council

Ohio State in 1971. Conroy began practice with the Cleveland firm of Weston, Hurd, Fallon, Paisley, and Howley and in 1983 moved to Porter, Wright, Morris, and Arthur, where by 1996, he was partner-in-charge of the Cleveland office. In February, he joined the Cleveland firm of Walter and Haverfield and serves on the firm’s five-person Administration Committee. He also serves on the board of directors of Bonne Bell, Inc., and is a former trustee and national general counsel to Ducks Unlimited, an international conservation organization. He and his wife, Bonne, Yvette McGee Brown James P. Conroy Virginia M.Trethewey have three sons and reside in Bay Village, Ohio. Their oldest son, Jim Jr., is a freshman at Ohio State. National Council Elects New Members Virginia M. Trethewey ‘77. As vice-president for legal affairs and general counsel at OSU, Trethewey plays a major role in the The National Council elected three new members at its spring senior management of the University. She earned her B.A. at the meeting in March. Each will serve a five-year term ending in University of Washington. After law school, she joined Vorys, 2001. The Council is a 75-member standing committee of the Sater, Seymour, and Pease, where her practice grew to include Alumni Association. Its purpose is to advise and support the general business and commercial representation for profit and College of Law in its plans and programs. The new members are: nonprofit entities, cooperatives, and individuals. In February, The Honorable Yvette McGee Brown ‘85. A native of Columbus, 1995, she moved to Ohio State, where she is responsible for the Judge McGee Brown earned her B.A. in 1982 from Ohio State. coordination of all legal matters for the University and manage­ She is the first African-American and only the second woman to ment of the Office of Legal Affairs. Trethewey is also a former • be elected to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, where president of the Columbus Speech and Hearing Center Board. she serves on the Domestic Relations and Juvenile Branch. Among Currently she serves on boards for the Wellington School and for her many awards for public service are: the Public Official of the the Ohioana Library Association. She is married to Leon M. Year Award from the National Association of Social Workers; the McCorkle Jr., a partner with Vorys, Sater, Seymour, and Pease. 1995 William Oxley Thompson Alumni Award from The Ohio They have two sons. State University for achievement before the age of 35; and the New Council officers for 1996-1997 were also elected at the 1995 YWCA Woman of Achievement Award. She is married to spring meeting. Re-elected for a third term were chairman Gahanna Public School teacher Anthony Brown, and they have Benjamin L. Zox of the Columbus firm of Schottenstein, Zox, and two daughters. Dunn, and vice-chairperson Jolynn Barry Butler, a commissioner James P Conroy ‘74. Conroy is president of the Greater Cleve­ with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. Pamela H. land Chapter of The Ohio State Alumni Association and co-chair Lombardi, assistant dean for alumni relations, was elected to her of the Cleveland Region’s component of the University’s $850 first full term as secretary. Lombardi filled the unexpired term of million Capital Campaign. He received his B.A. cum laude from Joanne Wharton Murphy ‘58, who retired in June, 1995.

National Council members include: seated, left to right, G. Williams, F. BazJer, C. Warner, B. Zox (chair), C. Smallwood, J. Heron. Standing, left to right, D. Nelson, J. Lawrence, R. Werth,J. McDonald, R. Watkins, C. Moore, C. Glander, J. Tuschman, D. Williams, P. Eikenberry, E. Cooperman, S. Bloomfield, P. Ward, J. Conroy, K. Bravo, P. Lombardi, J. Weaner, L. A m m ons, W Bodah, H. Harcha,J. Evans, D. Braff, E. Swiger, G. Hairston. On Stairs, left to right, D. Katz, D. Zendell, V. Trethewey, R. Cunningham, K. Trott, P. Bryant, C. Tyburski, E. Watters, N. Sponseller Upcoming Events

December 21-January 8 — Winter Vacation, No Classes March 24-28 — Spring Break, No Classes, Offices Open

anuary 1 — Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California April 11 — National Council, Spring Meeting

anuary 3-7 — Association of American Law Schools (AALS) April 17-18 — The Ohio State University Fellows in Criminal Conference, Washington, D.C. Justice Seminar, Death Investigations, Crime Scene Preserva­ tion and Expert Testimony, at Marion Campus, 1465 Mt. January 6 — The Ohio State University-Association of American Vernon Avenue, Marion. Call (614) 389-6786, ext. 6312 for Law Schools breakfast for alumni in law teaching, Caucus Room, more information. Washington Hilton and Towers, 1919 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C., 7:30 a.m. Call (614) 292-2937 for more April 25 — Last Day of Classes information. May 11 — Hooding January 7 — Alumni Breakfast at the Rayburn Office Building, Washington, D.C., Capturing the Spotlight While Avoiding the May 16 — 15th Annual Creative Pension and Benefits Glare: Media Relations for Lawyers, Erin Moriarity '77, speaker. Seminar at Fawcett Center, 2400 Olentangy River Road, Columbus. Cost is $195. Call Jean Morris, (614) 292-8571, Call (614) 292-2937 for more information. for more information. January 9 — First Day of Classes, Second Semester June 3-6 — Ohio State Bar Association Annual Convention, January 20 — Martin Luther King Day Celebrated, No Classes, Columbus, Ohio Offices Closed June 5 — Ohio State Bar Association-The Ohio State Univer­

February 20 — The Ohio State University Fellows in Criminal sity Alumni Breakfast, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Columbus, Ohio. Justice Seminar, Computer and Electronic Methods of Crime, at Further details to be announced. Marion Campus, 1465 Mt. Vernon Avenue, Marion. Call (614) June 5 — The Ohio State University Fellows in Criminal 389-6786, ext. 6312 for more information. Justice Seminar, Street Gangs: National and Local, at Marion vlarch 13 — Schwartz Lecture, Hon. Harry T. Edwards, Chief Campus, 1465 Mt. Vernon Avenue, Marion. Call (614) 389- Judge, United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia 6786, ext. 6312 for more information. Circuit, 4:00 p.m. in the Law School Auditorium. September 13 — Alumni Return, Class Reunions, Football:

larch 15 — Family Day (tentative) Bowling Green State University at The Ohio State University. Details to be announced. The Ohio State University

Arizona State University

Call (614) 292-2937 for more information.

Non Profit'Org. T • H • E U.S. Postage OHIO PAID L I A I |h College of Law Columbus, Ohio O i / v l -L' 55 West Twelfth Avenue Permit No.. 711 UNIVERSITY Coiumbus, Ohio 43210