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Page 37 text:
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STEWART E. STERK Professor of Law. B.A., 1973, J.D., 1976, Columbia University. Professor Sterk joined the faculty in 1979 after serving for two years as law clerk to Chiefjudge Charles D. Breitel of the New York Court of Appeals. While in law school, Professor Sterk was manag- ing editor of the Columbia Law Review. His primary areas of inter- est are conflict of laws, land use, and trusts and estates. ,ffl K THERI E VAN WEZEL STO E Associate Professor of Law. B.A., 1970, Radcliffe Collegeg J.D., 1979, Harvard University. Professor Stone has worked, lectured, and written extensively in the area of labor law. She was a legislative assistant for the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers International Union, Washington, D.C. C1970-725, labor analyst for Urban Planning Aid, Cambridge, Mass. C1973-741, and served as director of the Unemployment Compensation Clinic, Sommerville, Mass. U974-761. She has taught courses in labor relations at Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Wellesley College, and Brandeis University C1972-771. Her most recent publications include The Structure of Postwart Labor Relations, 1 1 Review of Law and Social Change 125 C1982-831, and The Postwar Paradigm in American Labor Law, 90 Yale Law Journal 1509 fJune, 19813. She is currently associated with the firm of Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky 8a Lieberman, P.C., New York City. SUZANN E LAST STO E Assistant Professor of Law. B.A., 1974, Princeton University, J.D., 1978, Columbia University. Professor Stone graduated from Princeton summa cum laude. Before entering law school, she did graduate work and was a Dan- forth Fellow in Jewish history and classical religions at Yale Univer- sity. While in law school, Professor Stone was writing and research editor of the Columbia Law Review and a Stone Scholar. She was law clerk to Judge John Minor Wisdom of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in 1978-79 and was associated with the firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton 8L Garrison, New York City, from 1979 to 1983. She is a member of the New York City Bar Association Committee on Professional and Judicial Ethics. Her primary scholarly interests are in the areas of procedure, federal courts, and conflict of laws.
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Page 36 text:
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AU M. SHUPACK Professor of Law. B.A., 1961, Columbia University, J.D., 1970, University of Chicago. , Professor Shupack graduated from college summa cum laude and cum laude from Chicago. Before entering law school, he did gradu- ate work and was a teaching fellow in government at Harvard Uni- versity. While in law school, he was a member of the Chicago Law Review and a teaching assistant to Prof. Soia Mentschikoff in a course in jurisprudence. In 1979 he was a visiting professor at Uni- versity of Chicago Law School. While an associate at Cleary, Gott- lieb, Steen 81. Hamilton, New York City, he taught commercial law as an adjunct professor at University of Connecticut Law School. He is a member of the American Law Institute, and has served as a member of the Committee on Bankruptcy and Corporate Reorgani- zation of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. RICHARD G. SINGER Professor of Law. B.A., 1963, Amherst College, J.D., 1966, University of Chicago, LL.M., 1971, J.S.D., 1977, Columbia University. Professor Singer has served most recently as Distinguished Professor of Law at Rutgers University School of Law. Upon graduating from Chicago, he clerked for Judge Harrison Winter, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. His varied professional experience includes service on the law faculties of the University of Cincinnati and the University of Alabama, as well as on the adjunct law faculty. George Washington University. Professor Singer served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney, reporter for the American Bar Association, Standards Relating to the Legal Status of Prisoners, reporter for the Uniform Corrections Act, National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, and director, ABA Resource Center on Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, and director, ABA Resource Center on Correctional Law and Legal Services. He is the author of Just Deserts: Sentencing Based on Equality and Desert, and co-author of Rights of the Imprisoned: Cases, Materials, and Directions. His area of primary teaching interest include crimi- nal law, corrections law, and torts. He is an authority in the area of prisoner's rights, in which he has published extensively. JONATHAN L.F. SILVER Professor of Law. B.A., 1969, Yale University, J.D., 1973, Universi- ty of Pennsylvania. Professor Silver received his law degree cum laude, was a member of the Order of the Coif, and received the Jefferson B. Fordham Award. He was chairman of the Prison Research Council, a student group aiding indigent prisoners. Following graduation, Professor Silver was law clerk to Judge William H. Hastie of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit C1973-743. He was an asso- ciate in law at Columbia University C1974-755, served with the Of- fice of the General Counsel, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 119755, and has done consulting work for the National Academy of Sciences. Professor Silver joined Cardozo's original faculty in 1976.
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Page 38 text:
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AWRENCE . OGELMAN Assistant Director, Criminal Law Clinic. B.A., 1970, Brooklyn Col- lege, J.D., 1973, Brooklyn Law School Professor Vogelman was a member of the Brooklyn Law Review and editor of the Moot Court Honor Society. He worked for four years 11973-771 as a staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society Criminal Defense Division and from 1977 to 1979 as associate appellate coun- sel with the Society's Appeals Bureau. He is a member of the faculty of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, Tom C. Clark Institute 'A W , J of Trial Advocacy, Hofstra Universityg Emory University Trial Ad- vocacy Program, and has been a frequent lecturer on various aspects of the criminal justice system, particularly plea bargaining, sentence reform, and the recodification of the Federal Criminal Code. ,1- ' ? J'.. TELFORD T YLOR Dr. Herman George and Kate Kaiser Professor of Consitutional Law. B.A., 1928, M.A., 1932, LL.D., 1949, Williams College, LL.B., 1932, Harvard University. Professor Taylor's career in public service has been a long and distinguished one, beginninig in 1933 when he served as assistant solicitor, U.S. Department of the Interior 11933-341, senior attorney, U.S. Department of Agriculture 11934-351, asso- ciate counsel, Senate Interstate Commerce Commission 11935-3915 special assistant to the Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice 11939-401, general counsel, Federal Communications Commission 11940-4215 and administrator, Small Defense Plants Administration 11951-521. He achieved international renown as chief U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials 11946-491. As general counsel for the Joint Committee on Educational TV 11952-621, he was instrumental in advocating the interests of educational television. Professor Taylor has argued 16 cases before the United States Supreme Court. After many years in private practice in New York, he joined the faculty of Columbia Law School, where he is currently Nash Professor Emeritus. Among Professor Taylor's extensive writings on legal, political, and mili- tary subjects are his books Grand Inquest: The Story of Congressional Investigations 119551, Courts of Terror 119761, and his recently acclaimed Munich: The Price of Peace 119791. A major legal figure of our era, he is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Professor Taylor is on leave, Fall Semester 1984, working on a book on the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials. A AN . EISBARD Assistant Professor of Law. B.A., 1972, Harvard Universityg J .D., 1977, Yale University. Professor Weisbard joined the faculty in 1982 following service 11980-821 as assistant director for legal studies with the President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research. Previously he was a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellow in Economics at Harvard 11972-741, law clerk to Judge Irving L. Goldberg of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 11977-781, and a practi- tioner of nuclear energy law with the Washington law firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts 8: Trowbridge 11978-801. Since coming to Cardozo, Professor Weisbard has participated in scholarly projects and collo- quia with Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Med- ical Centerg Hastings Center-Institute of Society, Ethics, and the Life Sciences, New York Academy of Medicine, and numerous other groups.
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