Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 268

 

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 268 of the 1969 volume:

4 4 '75 4-, IMI S f- Ls, F' -s .vii ,iff E, li xi V J R Hx Av sz -4 I. I ' V' ' ' ., I 4 5 , , 1 G 35: Ax J H I , W ' 4 5 Q ,, 345, ' ' ' 5 I y' 1 X N .N ry. f as Q QQ. r .f- ' F ZW X 1 E C9 H Ji ' 1 r 1 H WN' W6 iii 5 . E SA . 'f 52 5 1,1-.fp . 1'A'- L2 ' , x .A L 1 AA iq . w f Y ! f' mi., bi ffl f z .2', Q .AVV g , 4 ' 'NfI, YV ,, , 'n 'Mt V . 4 L 3 I, 5 Miki.. . ' -QS.. a , xxx .7 'Q' W f- 1, 1 -if WHEN A x N X4 P it-D gi x T X ,,.' X A Vg . I , ili .,., V N . 5, - S . i 5 F . g E? X J ' A 1 ' Y w ?, L Vt- 'I i. f E V' Q ,.,,'lw 'X Q 3 ,M -' xii 44-236, i i H 5 Q4 , . - ' G I X 1 HARVARD LAW SCHOGL YEARBOGK 1970 ll! , Contents 4 6 13 17 73 74 81 113 141 173 204 220 222 227 Dedication Austin Hall The Decade Gap, If Anyl' by John M. Ferren Faculty Students-Key to Activities Graduate Students Class of 1970- A Brief History by Guy M. Blynn Class of 1971 Class of 1972 Activities The Ames Competition: Past Present and Future by Bruce E. Clark C.L.A.O. Staff Patrons The Grade War of 1969 in 1970 Harvard Law School Yearbook Association Richard L. Farren, Editor James W, Colbert III, Associate Editor Richard H. Scheck, Business Manager James H. Batmasian, Associate Business Manager Max S. Oppenheimer, Photography Editor Roger D. Matthews, Photography Editor David M. Doret, Graphics Editor , . Dedication To the Memory of. . HENRY MELVIN HART, JR. Dane Professor of Law An era as rich in legal talent as our own views its inevitable casualties with regret but rarely with the sense that they have measurably weakened the resources of our culture for the understanding and development of law. It was, however, with precisely such a sense of an impoverishing loss that the schools and the best of the profession viewed the death of Professor Henry Melvin Hart. That perva- sive sentiment, no less than the devotion of the last among his students, surely finds expression in the dedication of this Yearbook to the memory of Henry Hart. I should speak first of the devotion of his students, legion as their number must have been in more than thirty teaching years. The simple fact is that the law has known no greater teacher and known very few who were his peers. First, and most importantly I think, he had unique capacity for grasping and developing whatever was important in his subject, marshalling and ordering a system of perceptions that transcended the materials before him, yielding insights of the kind that will survive. Secondly, he had a total empathy for the position of the student, to whose absorbtive powers his dogmatic exposition, softening concessions, searching and perhaps un- answerable questions seemed infallibly attuned. Thirdly, there was a morality in his approach to legal problems that was somehow made explicit in his teaching-the burden he assumed to think through matters where there was a tempting, easy answer, his disdain for lazy, shoddy work, however exalted the position of the worker, his devotion to principle in thought and action, his self-criticism and acknowledgment of error after sober second thought. Finally, there were the subtle graces of his personality-intense but never stiff, friendly but never intimate, respectful but demanding of respect, righteous but never smug, courageous in all things. These are, at least, the qualities that seemed to me on frequent visits to his classroom to explain his pedagogical achievement. Certain it is that the succeeding generations of his students quite revered him as a master. And since, unlike some pedagogues whom I have known, Hart had so much to teach about the vital things that give the law its meaning and its life, his spirit will live on in many other lives, 4 although his voice is still. What I have said about Professor Hart as a law teacher goes a long way towards describing his great impact on the schools and the profession. This is the more remarkable when one considers the relative paucity of his important publications: the course- book on Federal Courts on which we worked to- gether, the coursebook on Legal Process that he undertook with Professor Sacks, still in an avowedly temporary edition, though now used in many schools, his great essay on the work of the Supreme Court, his classic analysis of the aims of the Criminal Law, his revealing paper on the relations between state and federal law, the paper on the power of Congress to limit the jurisdiction of federal courts tprepared for our casebookjg a number of more fugitive con- tributions and the spoken but unpublished Holmes lectures of 1963. But what this summary conceals is the enormous point that everything he did bespoke a seminal, almost Olympian conception of the whole of the great legal process, a conception so original, constructive and revealing that a single paper, fully comprehended, gave the reader a unique and liber- ating sense of the full mission and potentialities of law. The most important work is, of course, the materials on Legal Process which has for its articulate objective just the kind of cosmic view I have at- tempted to describe. It does not depreciate Professor Sacks to say that the profession understands how much of the originality of that great book reflects the thought of Henry Hart. It is as if he had con- cluded that jurisprudence is too important to be left to jurisprudents and set out to teach its most im- portant aspects in the context of familiar legal problems. That he carried the profession on the point is very clear. I cannot speak of our collaborative work beyond saying that I think of those six years as the most rewarding of the many I have spent in law. The method of our work was very largely the exchange of what each thought of as an almost finished draft. The drafts Hart sent to me would, at the most, in- vite some marginal suggestions. There were not many that I sent to him that he would deal with in those terms. The case that I most vividly remember involved material on the power of Congress to limit the jurisdiction of federal courts. My first draft was a prosaic collection of the relevant materials. Hartls revision was the Exercise in Dialectici' published separately at my insistence. As always when he gave his mind to any problem, he illumined it as a giant search light sweeps away the darkness anywhere it casts its rays. I have had a large acquaintance in the law but no one I have known has more invited the appraisal that was made of Leonardo: nihil quad tetigit non ornavit. Henry Hart touched nothing that he failed to ornament, as those who worked with him throughout the years in many different fields will testify without reserve. Holmes somewhere said that men may be par- doned for the defects of their qualities if they have the qualities of their defects. Hartjs qualities had two signiticant defects: the first was his reluctance to participate in group endeavors to which he could make enormous contributions, as he did by his exceptional participation in the work of the American Law Institute as an Adviser in the drafting of the Model Penal Code and the Study of Division of Jurisdiction Between State and Federal Courts. The second was the incurable perfectionism that led him to withhold publication of highly accomplished and creative works that ought to have been shared with other minds, however much he might have added to their quality had nature been more generous in granting him the time. But that he had the quality of these defects cannot be doubted. His inner directed concentration on what he conceived to be his major Work and the punctilious standards he ap- plied in judging his own product cast an elevating influence that will endure. We may hope, nonethe- less, that now that he is gone the unpublished work on which he labored for so long, especially his Holmes lectures, will see the light of day. That plainly is a duty to the law. It is a sorry master whose work surpasses his judgmentg and that master tends toward the perfec- tion of art whose work is surpassed by his judgment. No less than the masters of the Renaissance, Hart's judgment surpassed his work, earning the gratitude of those he left behind. -Herbert Wechsler 5 I I Erectzed by : ' l ' ' ' l : in memory of bis . 1 I I I I I I l Edward Ausltln : I I I I brother Samuel I I I V, bl J Reading-Room I A I l l l l I l I u J I I I I I I E -- l De l T um l l P,EE3i0rs. ll r . 'TH 1 .- - QuH -- -h -,I h .- I - . f -'l1l-l..I-' F - ll: .1 Second Floor QQ' Qggfmmafe C?fW945O0 .fam meacfoar Qlayzc?Z'm4-f ---M - -- G 'msmk Ugfbcilflafzs ' I I H I ?G:?k?gCZ.Zmn'1oOoOo676j Maja rsflawfefaffafjlfz : : da. Hy- 100051615 iiiiififssafwf I Q Q I ' Q Q in cfrjor EYISA '- I, If-I sxQ 4,,:-hx I I ' 'I T - 1 U, .... I 11111 Hall Hall Hall - i ........... ........ ...,. , X1 Leclzure-Room E1 lyeelqmle-I E Leclzure -Room I -J ll ... Y l V L-1-: l Sl:uden'l:s'Room. ' Ss a ' nu ll il ............ l f H . Jil -- -2 ..f'J:l E li L6 ----- -l-i-I-i 1 WW x First Floor Austin Hall. Harvard Law School. Cambridge Mass. H.H.RICHARDSON. mcu Austin Hall A law school, particularly an institution as un- romantic as Harvard, is hardly the place one would expect to find examples of architectural genius. For the most part, the Law School's buildings will not disappoint this expectation, but Austin Hall provides the refreshing exception that proves the rule. In February of 1881, Harvard commissioned Henry Hobson Richardson to design a building for its rapidly expanding law school. Richardson was at that time already recognized as Arnericals premier architect and had earlier provided the college with Sever Hall, a building far more austere than Austin was to be but exhibiting a craftsmanship in execu- tion that was to become one of Richardson's trade- marks. But the style of Sever was, in its austerity, as atypical for Richardson as its craftsmanship was typical. Following his graduation from Harvard Col- lege, Richardson studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. During his stay in France, Richardson was exposed to the Romanesque and Neo-Romanesque architecture that would assert itself as the principal recurrent theme in his own work. Many of his buildings became as castles, massive and weighty in their expression with intricate stone detail and care- ful attention to the choice of stone itself. Austin Hall, unlike Sever, displays all those characteristics, and adds to them an elegance in ornamentation as rare then as now. Richardsonis first conceptualization for Austin Hall was far more complicated in its groupings of mass than the present structure. The front of this early plan was complicated with three turrets of varying height, and the triple arch of the main entrance is found as a triple porch with the gabled roof more characteristic of Neo-Gothic than Upper: Allegheny County Courthouse and Jail, Pittsburgh. This dark castle is perhaps Richardson's finest building. Lower: The library reading room in the nineteenth century-gas lamps and oak desks where the Ames Courtroom now stands. ' 1' U- , es: , - H 1 1 LV W p J.kL,!5i' , KW .ii uw G ' ffab' 'f 'Ip3'F?i'ff'?g'Q-I . i- 1 , . I V 1. I-'Xa' 1 M . ' ' 4 . i - ' 54' ' mmlz' mot ,, ' '-1 r ,, ,M F., , ,- QE! , lg, ,, will .. W , ,A 7 an if :ar -if -l - .pun .V , . V-we M 4 Q 'RN iii' N-fL'f is , N y Q . WUI w ifi: l 1 :Af , H ' if lt! get ,ll Fi 'Mi - 'XE'lj 3 if it ,Q T' fl 2 TF ' f ,, -. W 5 ' itrgrrnqg in f .V A .Y , 'U if , . . ' l -' , 8 Romanesque style. This early plan remains only in the asymmetrical stair tower that is the mark of Elsinore upon Austin Hall. The design that was finally executed was far simpler in its exterior articulation than Richardson's initial plang but it retains an interior of delicate complexity. The two smaller lecture halls are placed symmetrically on either side of the main mass of the building which houses the principal lecture room and the Ames courtroom Cthen the reading room of the libraryj. At the juncture of these three lecture rooms Richardson placed tiny rooms and spaces gathered in small groups like isolated volumes on some lost bookshelf But it 1S upstairs in the library reading room that Richardson creates his finest interior space This magnificently proportioned room is marred now by row after row of singularly ugly seats, but one must see it as Richardson planned it: an enormous room but as well lit as possible in the days of the gas lamp filled with tables of energetic students Csoon more filled than Richardson could have dreamed the school he designed for 250 students was to hold 716 before Langdell was builtj spanned overhead by wooden beams whose carved beasts eternally devour one another and warmed by a grand fireplace whose stone decoration may be the finest 3 7 9 9 . . 7 7 7 e .E 1 . fy 4 ft v ' Lower left: Crane Memorial Li- brary, Quincy. The similarities be- tween Austin Hall and this roughly contemporaneous structure are ob- vious. Upper left: Richardson's early sketch of a plan for Austin Hall. Note the asymmetry of the main mass of the building. Upper right: The front of Austin Hall as seen prior to the triumph of the automobile. Lower right: A nineteenth century view of the rear of Austin Hall taken when it was the law school's only building. A Rogue's gallery of Richardsorfs gremlins. , - ,- 5'!- ' ' 'r-1 ..,..- ' - .' ' N' f-. 1 .-, Qi A v ' .Q I J-1 5 -5 at, f 1 , U F-, an .LJ N tw ' Jin' 7 a :I .i ' . 'I ' . .W f W-.L -fix V .W .fi 3 f 4..a-any ' QM.-Kf'1- X' , ' , ,- N -. y. v ' , '--1 ' - . 1 fi. L F' if A-, , 'sv we .in '- , Hr! '-- ..- '- 'Su f- Q ' rn -OW ,. ' x,rV . .ga :J I ' s. --P - mi :. -y ,. 3, Jr '5 . Q ' X, . , 1 - :N . . , Wf , . - ,- 5- . 4 f-' 3 ' - - 's :K N X J- V -- 'ff' t I to be found in this country. Richardson was best known, however, for the exterior of his buildings, and, as well done as the interior of Austin is, it is the outside of the building that is the most striking. Austin Hall is a masonry building, that is, the whole weight of the building is borne by the stone and mortar of its walls without the aid of a supporting skeleton of steel or reinforced concrete. The walls of such a building are necessarily quite thick, and, in Austin Hall, Richardson re- emphasizes this massiveness in his exterior design. The walls are made of dark Longmeadow stone placed upon a sandstone base, and they are obviously stone. There is no attempt to hide their solid nature in the creation of abstract geometric plains, rather, Richardson creates a cliff face. This massiveness is reasserted in the triple arches of the main entrance, dark cave openings whose solid sides are, if any- thing, overly eloquent of the burden they carry. The rear of Austin Hall is simple, but carefully proportioned, the building was designed to be seen from all sides, an isolated jewel set upon what was then an open field. The rear and the front are punctuated with rectangular windows cut into the walls as though chisled by some giant hand. The two smaller lecture rooms are lighted by a row of windows set high in their walls at the front and rear of the building. The windows are evenly spaced and separated by mini-columns. Ther ribbon-like effect of these high windows was apparently one that Richardson was fond ofg he had used an almost identical design earlier for the Crane Memorial Library in Quincy. At the main entrance of Austin Hall, Richardson created on the capitals of the columns supporting the arches some of his most delightful ornamental sculpture. He must have taken a special pleasure in the thought of generations of intense, serious law students passing by wrapped in their own This coiled snake found on Auslin's L- rf ar ,. k is V - Q 1 .X . 1 ,+- b n f Q X xt ,A W f-P-53 is one of Iwo stair tower. A A Q I., -f ' sr Yi f his if W-4 r 7.1 ,fy 4,31 , I ft! 4, l ajax A '?7f'Q , A !:'frii'Q'Q ' g ... x fir-if terribly important thoughts, heedless of the pixies and gremlins who observed them with less than total awe from the pillars of their own building. Austin Hall is now but a small portion of the structures that make up the physical law school. It is approached primarily from the rear or from be- neath the earth. It no longer commands its site in splendid isolation. It remains, however, the schoo1's most magnificent structure-the heart although no longer the physical center-one of-the finest buildings of one of the Iinest American architects who ever lived. I2 The Decade Gap, if Any By John M. F erren As I write this I observe from my notes that exactly ten years ago I began the serious study of estates in land in first year Property, helped along by Professor Moynihanls trot. Because of the in- tricacy of springing and shifting uses this topic seemed to be a bit more what law school ought to be like than the preceding two weeks' worth of foxes, ducks, and doctrines about their possession. Any- way, I was an ,Eriglishjjhistory buff. andy, enjoyed puzzles fand the ltll ltliing eventually wciorinected up nicely with theyjstfldylof lapse tstatutes irifestatew planningl- WW' ilii i.i.,.t..ll.,fW I .. if ,, l cealed funtil a few divinity students started picketing Woo1worth's just before my class left Cambridgel. We became indignant over more personal incidents, such as the dayiProfessor MacLachlan slammed his casebook on the desk and yelled that no one could teach anything to students who had only lived under the New Deal! The only anxieties during our gen- erally placid three years were the Berlin crisis, which ,caused a p Jfew5litri,.,,,jurripwyprematurely into JAG, and the vnature of the classwork, demands for reform btit,by anl,laparttneri,tll,l1otslQiHf'l'Wine, and a living room Lim.ll.lfwll'j'g ll,.Milla.Wil''lln.'V 'i W. in lml., ,l'i l'ii ll'i', !' Mil ll 'N'li - WMlllwiiwWi ?'l l.l.lliiilulll.Jm'l'. 'l'lll Wf5lllll 'i ii lll'li W'llllJNlll'N'llllll'l' N' WlW il J tt' ,N lj i 'lint . ' jg' ' tu. H.. M W' ' nu. ' um.. iiii i'1 w , tp 1 'ir' 1 i ijwwjj,ji,i,j,.tj, ,iig.jj,,l.l,l,j.iiliiiijlllxlw Equally eenterta'n'ffhliiWillllllihWill'lilililillllmilffllnal'litlllllllllfllifffill.lflflfllWl'll'llliWtlllllllltlllll'lllllllllillll Law which, given itsililiilldjwlestate lllll' attllglitlftmitiineil llfiff was taught by a visiting ,, who diiifblt at length on marvelous stories Qaboutl medieval atrocities. I was not worried iaboutr the relevance of myi legal education to anything 3 ibut a lawyeris. license,, isp this wallowing in rhelbommoh law of crimes seemed unusual to me only in its possible irrelevance for the bar exam. I learned every argument for condemn- ing the rack and the screw, without being led to inquire whether present-day penology wasn't in some ways just as bad. As a standard liberal in those days my political concerns were manifested by the intercollegiate de- bate topics of the day-the union shop, nuclear testing, foreign aid-which to me had little directly to do with the Law School or a lawyer's Vocation. These issues were serious, one could even get emo- tional about them. But, generally speaking, organiza- lllllllllllllllflwdtifdjifhelltllaltdlllgtakllalizefriifithtlf, about the Law llllmlw ljxljjlnwjWh i,nWv,vjji tu vi W W r W. WWHMmij,,wi,5WM1, M,WhWNWWUWmxwiwjmjjjmwxhjmh - Sfhbol allfljlgilt?IlililflfllljtiglllljllllliflllliillllgflllflM2116S and early sixtiesrllfijfifitlfiii ifiljlpmfgmgcbliijlrnetitslil recent re- union ,, clasgedli otherj ,iiii confirm the 1- 'Nil i if l', wi iiii. ii L X ,.,, ,,ii 5 ll l lZ.'E, ..'E l ',.. 4 ','iii 'Qu ii' . ,,,,.'. Q Wi 'iMv'.jMwi:ii Plctllfelfll iiiii C Onfidence that we graduates iofg those years followed a pretty standard pattern after commencement day-the bar exam, the firm lilfrary, the 8:10 p.m. train home. Then came the step up, lunch with a client, days of gathering documents from his files, but eventually permission from ,the firm to send him letters of ad- vice. Pretty heady stuif, good professional growth, and then something happens. After a year or two the feedbackglets one know he can do the work- achievement of the Hrst, most important goal after three years QE Socratic badgering and Harvard Cold scalel C-p1usesijNow he mustlfind his satisfaction either in the n ture-of the work or at least in per- tions like SANE could not divert many of us from lpvm gwith the clients, i t the heinous crimes of another era. Law School, in heard it from Qthgfs who also every splendid detail, came first. I -work wagnft bad, There! was We were a straight-laced bunch, coat es fgtgmperamgm and a variety of t0 C1-QSS-and I0 exams- The first fW0 Y fff fhel' Wfil wii il litliiived On, putting mgsfhef 21 Curriculum, plus estate planning in the ll' l'Wf32ucl ell llitij fnisi-ifirevenr 1Qd2iyfl3i1t think were required, and why not? Weren't Hai' use sefvedfvoil and steel com- needed? We SimP1Y had faith that 'he trade associations, would turn US i11f0 1HWYe1'S by Translated that meant firms expected, Hfid Very few of ,US executive Vice President, abouttwofking for 3HY011e 9156- The iiii and build the pitch-and- vocational crisis appeared to be the selectioxijllofiijyfigwll firm by a diehard Californian married to anlleijilallyill intransigent New Yorker. i l it l We rarely were aroused from day to day by social injustices, which for the most part remained con- did not mean helping any- onei gem with an SBA loan, and it farelyllfheiintihelpifig iiii ian individual out of a real jam. I well ferneirilier a dinner party in Chicago five years ago when Qseyeral associates of large firms gig: 13 were virtually speechless when the secretary of one called for advice because her husband had been ar- rested for a Vietnam demonstration which tied up traffic at State and Madison. f'fWhat was the jerk doing that for? Call the desk sergeant and ask what to do. J A few things, however, began to register. Selma was especially important to me, not because I won- dered why I had not gone-that did not seriously suggest itself-but because quite obviously some people were willing to bear witness to and even give their lives for something that clearly had to be a top national priority, while I was a fungible mechanic whose direct efforts could best be justified by the need to sustain our great industrial economy. I do not at all belittle the need for lawyers to perform such functionsg oneis life is not cheapened simply by help- ing big industry and big government fight each other. But for me the thrill never came because my only re- ward, besides a bank account and friendly associates, was the awful, gloating smile of an appreciative Fat Ralph. His wishes seemed to be a terrible authority over my time as the Civil Rights Movement began to put our national and personal lives under judgment. So the unmortgaged among us, and even some of the rest, began to look for redemption and exhilara- tion in new employments, often in legal aid offices and hopefully on a leave-of-absence basis without salary cuts. After fewer than five years such hedging efforts now seem rather meager when compared with the substantial student interest today in legal aid careers and the far-reaching demands now heard from students and lawyers that law firms themselves must commit resources to lawyering in the public interest. Yet even more than lawyer delivery systems are called into question. Increasing numbers of law students are terribly concerned not merely about their vocational options as lawyers but about whether in good conscience they can take an oath of ad- mission to the bar-become an officer of the court in support of the legal system. I cannot spell out this sentiment further without either cheapening it for the students who feel it more deeply and re- sponsibly than I can express or romanticizing it for those who disparage such views. My job, rather, as the editors have charged me, is to lay bare some pres- ent-day reactions to the Law School by an alumnus whose classmates are just beginning to make partner in New York. I suppose that my principal reaction to life at the Law School these days is to note what to me has been a fast pace of change here during the past ten years-the addition of many young faculty members and of new and restructured courses and clinical 14 opportunities, the joint student-faculty quality of numerous endeavors, and the several changes in the grading system. But the pace of change, students say, is not fast enough. In this sense the Law School is a microcosm of what is going on almost everywhere in society-ferment toward a reshufliing of priorities. National or local issues, of course, are rarely easy to translate into onels personal priorities. Given my interests and abilities, a student asks, what is the business at hand for me today? How do I prepare to fit eventually into what? I offer three observations about how I see many students reacting to these questions in contrast, perhaps, to most of us who were educated in the years of Eisenhower. In the first place, unlike the students a decade ago, students today are obviously preoccupied with the need for radical changes in society. The move- ments- for civil rights, ending the war, and protecting consumers against industry-and the observable fact that an individual's efforts do make a difference in these respects-understandably dwarf the importance of spending one's time, one's vocation, on projects whose multiplier effect for the common good, if any, is hard to perceive. Little wonder that students join private law firms and industry with great reluctanceg they simply do not care to make Fat Ralph happy. This urge to join the most effective forces for change is exhilarating and makes it difficult for one to buckle down to day-to-day study of the technicalities of the law, even though effective law- yering requires considerable attention to doctrine and detail, whatever the cause. The emotional hurdle to becoming a legal craftsman was much less fre- quently before us a decade agog we were usually spared from the severity of a judgment that the times exempt no one from being careful and creative about his work product. Second, the urge today to participate in making big social changes is sometimes accompanied by an outlook which, in the extreme, can be distressing. I have heard some students and lawyers alike depre- cate the handling of divorces, consumer problems, or even evictions for the poor because each case only helps one person, or because the legal process is futile so why try. Note, for example, the following from a Tenant Union Guide prepared by The National Housing Law Project, Berkeley 09695, p. 8. . . . When a Legal Services lawyer is asked to assist an existing tenant union, how does he relate to the group? The basic principle underlying this relation- ship is that the primary goal is to sustain and strengthen the group. This principle subordi- nates test cases, legal victories, and even, on occasion, getting better housing or lower rents for certain individuals . . . . . . The attorney should not be anxious to file lawsuits against landlords. Where the tenant union isyoung and weak, filing an affirmative lawsuit is usually suicidal .... I do not mean to suggest that legal aid offices should not assist tenant unions, or that counseling a group of tenants will not on occasion preclude one from handling cases for individual tenants. Nor do I mean to imply that every lawyer should be willing to join a legal aid staff: save the clients from that. I mean simply to stress that when all the big causes are won and the master plans called for are put into opera- tion there will still be plenty of suffering which lawyers, acting for individuals through an imperfect legal process, can help amend. All of us have to be careful, I think, that our own commitment to help make a better life for large numbers of people, and our doubts about the efficacy of the legal process in achieving this end, do not comprise an intellectualized excuse for altogether opting out of involvement with persons whose own desperate sense of need is for an advocate now-change the system later. The most angry, aggressive, and effective legal aid lawyer I know is wont to muse that in five years we'll have accomplished this, and in ten years that, and it may take fifty years to gain still something else. When once asked by a frustrated student how in these days he could talk so calmly about victories so far off he replied very simply, with no piety whatsoever, that progress comes by relentlessly chipping away, and that chipping away for the poor was his life. We need more and more lawyers, I think, who can take defeat after defeat in little causes and keep going, with imagination and crafts- manship in each effort-perhaps, eventually, to win. I have a third concern. Wherever a lawyer may put himself along the line between serving the least of individual clients and planning for master changes affecting everybody, he is trained Cor should bel to devise remedies as well as state complaints. The most effective advocates usually do not file law suits without having a well conceived, reasonable decree virtually ready for submission to the court. By reasonable fa hateful lawyer's wordl I do not mean politically acceptable or even respectful of the attitudes of the adversaries. I mean, rather, a good faith effort to prescribe a solution, in the interest of one's client, that pays careful, attention to the consequences for all interests directly affected by the suit. CSuch elaboration of the remedy, as well as the complaint, was to me a most impressive feature of last yearfs student efforts for grade reform and other changes at the Law School.J For many in society, however, including law students, it is difficult to hold back an assertion of rights until they have a reasonable remedy to propose. The corrupt and oppressive quality of so many of our institutions is so obvious and so pervasive that it is far easier to root up and pull down than to plant and to build. So many prerogatives of so many decision-makers are usually involved before deliberations bring change that no wonder it often seems enough to challenge the status quo, leaving others to restructure and rebuild. Those who have .the temperament and courage for uncompromising efforts for change continually collide with those who have equally laudable qualities channeled into tireless efforts to help bring about the necessary compromise of differences for any true remedy. Whether one is a lawyer for those who wish to pull our institutions down or for those who wish to reform them with minimaldisruption, he will have an especially difficult task in keeping faith with his clients while trying to convince them about the im- portance of putting forth a well-conceived, reasona- ble remedy. But proposals for a remedy are inherent in the lawyer's role. To the extent that hostile emotions are stirred up by my concern for remedies as well as rights, or my conviction about the patience to chip away while the planners are mapping big changes, then this may be one measure of a decade gap. But fortunately for my own psyche I have heard the attitudes,I have expressed, and probably absorbed some of them myself, in many student gatherings here since I was privileged to return on the management side. In rereading what I have written I have asked myself in many instances whether I am being serious, cynical, judgmental, or indifferent. I donit honestly know, I am one who is haunted by the enormity and insolubility of problems and almost reverent with thanks for any progress that takes place. On one point, however, I am not ambivalent. I am terribly impressed by the law students I have come to know here during the past few years, and I share the anxiety students feel in trying to find a vocation which serves the right master. It would be nice if we could all be like Augustine-lead a profligate life for awhile yet eventually turn out to be a saint. But students have been given religion now in the sense of deep concern for all those whom society has neglected or overreached. For this concern the rest of society should be grateful and take heed, for I sense that after the students leave this place they will continue to keep faith with themselves and keep' calling upon the rest of us to render account, if only-and perhaps most importantly- in being honest with ourselves. I5 .5 Q-'mug hr 7 xg R I ufi.s:wzGf1 ' 3 ' XR, 3 .-, ' I 3 1 ng, ' N N v. ,, f' '.:fJ D 7 'x 45, 4,-,4 Sf-rp, , ,. V , a If .ef v 64 .if ' , . ,Jas fu I . 2 I I, I ff ff! s-wx -Sv gun? N lie... U. I: ' R Ya I r I If I W. Andrews ,.., . . . E. Appel ..... P. Areeda ,..,. M. Arnold ..,. P. Bator ..... R. Baxtor .,.. D. Bell ....., H. Berman .... S. Bernardi. . . W. Bevins. . . D. Bok ..,,.. R. Braucher. . . S. Breyer .... E. Brown .,.. W. Bruce .... C. Byse .,,... G. Calabresi.. M. Cappelletti. A. Casner ..... J. Chadbourn. . A. Chayes. , . I. Cohen ..,,.. P. Coogan ..., V. Countryman ...... A. Cox ....... W. Curran .... J. Dawson .... D. Degnan .... A. Dershowitz M. Eisenberg.. J. Facher .,... I. Ferren .... R. Field R. Fisher . . . P. Freund .... C. Fried .,.. L. Fuller .... C. Haar .... L. Hall ....... .... 2 2 T. Hervey .... D. Herwitz .... P. Heymann. . . R. Hills ..... J. Howe. . . L. Jaffe .... C. Jones ..... B. Kaplan ..... M. Katz ..... A. Kaufman .... R. Keeton ..... W. Leonard ...,..... M. Loper ..... L. Loss ...... J. Lynch ...... J. Mansfield ......... A. vonMehren ....... F. Michelman ....... R. Musgrave ........ S. Nahmod .... D. Nelson .... C. Nesson ..,. L. Ohlin ..... O. Oldman .... W. Reiser .... W. Rymer .... A. Sacks ..... J. St. Clair .... F. Sander ........... E. Sargeant ......... D. Shapiro .... R. Simpson. . . D. Smith .... L. Sohn ..... H. Stiener .... A. Stone ...... S. Surrey .,..,..,... A. Sutherland ....... S. Thorne ........... D. Trautman ........ L. Tribe ...... D. Turner ..... D. Vagts ....... I. Vorenberg ........ K. Wedderburn ...... L. Weinreb ...,,..... L. Weinstein. . . D. Westfall .......... A. Yarmolinsky ..... Faculty and administration are printed generally in cata- logue order. arulig NATHAN MARSH PUSEY President of Harvard University The past year has been a difficult one for Mr. Pusey. He has been villified by many elements of the student body as a reactionary, while other elements, particularly among alumni, have attacked him for being too permissive. Through it all, however, Mr. Pusey has kept his sights upon the central purpose of Harvard as an institution. An outspoken defendant of academic freedom, Mr. Pusey championed the cause against McCarthy- ism in the early fifties when it was still unpopular to do so. He now sees some of the same dangers in the student excesses of the past year. Once again Mr. Pusey appears to be championing an unpopular cause. President Pusey was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, in 1907. He earned his A.B. magna cum laude at Harvard in 1928, majoring in English and Comparative Literature. After a year in Europe and several years of teaching at the Riverdale Country Day School in New York, he returned to Harvard in 1932 to complete his M.A. He served as a part- time assistant in history until leaving to study in Greece as an Archibald Coolidge Fellow. In 1935, he accepted a position at Lawrence College in Wis- consin as a Sophomore Tutor in an experimental liberal arts program. He returned once more to Harvard in 1937 to complete work for his doctorate. From 1938 to 1944, Mr. Pusey taught at Scripps College in California and at Wesleyan University. He returned to Lawrence College in 1944, this time as President, where he remained until 1953, when he was elected President of Harvard. I8 eqntwfmm1.,Q DEREK CURTIS BOK Dean and Professor of Law The first year of Mr. Bok's tenure as dean of the Law School was marked by much unrest among students. The controversy over grades, the con- troversy over student participation in the decision- making process, and the more fundamental con- troversy relating to the manner in which the law school should order its teaching priorities have all brought much tension to the Law School commu- nity. It is a credit to Dean Bok that his administra- tion has been very responsive to student needs and complaints. A graduate of Stanford College, Dean Bok came to the Law School in 1951. As a student he served on the Board of Editors of the Law Review, receiving the LL.B. degree magna cum laude in 1954. He spent the following year in Paris as a Fulbright Scholar where he Wrote The First Three Years of the Schuman Plan. While serving in the General Counselis office of the Department of the Army, he studied for the M.A. degree in Eco- nomics, which George Washington University awarded him in 1958. Dean Bok's primary interest has always been labor and other fields of law involving interdiscipli- nary analysis. In addition to writing a number of articles on labor and antitrust law, he has been an arbitrator in labor disputes, acted as consultant to various government agencies, co-authored with the economist John Dunlop of Harvard a recent book, Labor and the American Community and co- authored Cases in Labor Law with Professor Archibald Cox. As chairman of the Continuing Committee on Legal Education, Dean Bok was instrumental in expanding the number of options open to second- year students. C5-4. 1 l , H43 ' i 5 H W--Ei ' 'ii 521' H es.. ALBERT M. SACKS Associate Dean and Professor of Law Born: New York, N.Y., l920g Education: B.B.A. CEco- nomicsl C.C.N.Y, 1940, LL.B. Harvard 1948, Subsequent Experience: 1948-9 Clerk to Judge A. N. Hand f2d Cir.J, 1949-50 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1950-2 Covington Bt Burlingg Married: 1945 to the former Sadelle Rader, two children, Joined the Faculty: 1952 as Asst. Professor, Pro- fessor in 1955g Subjects: Constitutional Law, The Legal Processg Publication: The Legal Process tco-authorl ttent. ed. 195835 Legal Activity: Reporter, Advisory Committee on Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: Extralegal Activities: Chairman of Boston Home Rule Commission, Chairman of Continuing Committee on Legal Education. 20 JOHN P. DAWSON Charles Stebbins Fairchild Professor of Law Born: Detroit, Michigan, 1902g Education: A.B. University of Michigan 1922, J.D. University of Michigan 1924, D.Phil. Oxford 19303 Subsequent Experience: 1927-57 Professor at the University of Michigan Law School, on leave 1942-6 as Chief Counsel in the Rent Section of the Office of Price Administration and Chief of the Middle East Di- vision of the Foreign Economic Administration, 1947-8 as Director of Foreign Trade Administration for the Greek Government: Married: 1927 to the former Emma McDonald, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1957g Subjects: Contracts, Restitution, De- velopment of Legal Institutionsg Publications: Unjust Enrichment: A Comparative Analysis f1951Q, A History of Lay Judges 119601, The Oracles of the Law 6196813 Legal Activity: ABA. ARTHUR E. SUTHERLAND Bussey Professor of Law Born: Rochester, N. Y., 1902g Education: A.B. fHistory and C1assics1 Wesleyan 1922, LLB. Harvard 1925, S.J.D. fHOIl.1 Suffolk 1960g Subsequent Experience: 1927-8 Clerk to Mr. Justice Holmes, 1928-41 Sutherland 84 Sutherland, Rochester, N. Y., 1941-5 U. S. Armyg Married: 1959 to the former Mary Kirk, 'four childreng Joined the Faculty: 1950g Subjects: Constitutional Law, Church and State under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, Commercial Transac- tionsg Publications: The Law at Harvard C19671, Apology for Uncomfortable Change, 1865-1965 C19651, Constitu- tionalism in America C19651, Commercial Transactions Cco-auth0r1 14th ed. 19681, Constitutional Law, Cases and Other Problems Cco-author1 C3d ed. 19671, The Path of the Law 119681, Crime and Confession 79 Harv. L. Rev. On leave 1969-70. UMCQCKQ. a nili '1- Ir , ,W A Uv. f Q u , 2 ,, -an -'-,- is agus, 4' 1 L' Q 2.5-k 1.r, , fi ng, V N ' w L,w...,-. -.1 .l ww ff' X ,D ul . 'xx' sy ' ':'r 'l im, 14 Rx S LON LUVOIS FULLER Carter Professor of General Jurisprudence Born: Hereford, Texas, 19025 Educa- tion: A.B. CEconomics1 Stanford 1924, I.D. Stanford 1926, LL.D. Boston U. 1969g Subsequent Experience: 1940-5 Ropes 8: Gray, Boston, arbitrator in numerous labor disputesg Joined the Faculty: 19399 Subjects: Jurisprudence, Law and Sociologyg Publications: The Law in Quest of Itself C1940, 19661, Basic Contract Law fco-editor1, The Morality of Law C19641, Legal Fictions KI9671, Anatomy of the Law 1196813 Extralegal activity: President of the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy C1961-21. LIVINGSTON HALL Roscoe Pound Professor of Law Born: Chicago, Illinois, 1903: Education: Ph.B. fPolitical Science1 University of Chicago 1923, LL.B. Harvard 1927, S.J.D. CHon.1 Suffolk Law School 1955g Subsequent Experience: 1927-31 Root, Clark, Buckner, Howland and Ballantine, New York, 1931-2 Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1941-3 Re- gional Price and Enforcement Attorney for the Office of the Price Administrator, Boston, 1943-5 Lt. Colonel, USAAF and Chief of Operations Analysis Sections of the Far East and Twentieth Air Forcesg Married: 1930 to the former Eliza- beth Blodgett, four childreng Joined the Faculty: 19325 Subjects: Criminal Law, Youth and Crime: Publications: Agency Cco-auth0r1 C 19561, Cases on Criminal Law Cco-author1 619581, Modern Criminal Procedure Ceo-author1 119691, Legal Activities: President of the Massachusetts Bar Association 11963-41, House of Delegates of the ABA, Judicial Council of Massachusetts, Board of Directors of the Cambridge Legal Services, Inc., Board of Trustees of the Voluntary Defenders Committee, Inc., Moderator of the Town of Con- cord 11957-671, Chairman of the Criminal Law Revision Commission of Massachusetts. I Q L fmt? Kittie A .ti A it qulnwuw-v LOUIS LEVENTHAL JAFFE Byrne Professor of Administrative Law Born: Seattle, Washington, l905g Education: A.B. CEco- nomicsj Johns Hopkins 1925, LL.B. Harvard 1928, S.J.D. Harvard 1932g Subsequent Experience: Clerk to Mr. Justice Brandeis, 1934-5 Attorney to the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, 1935-6 Attorney for the National Labor Relations Board, 1936-48 Professor at the University of Buffalo Law School, 1948-50 Dean of the University of Buffalo Law Schoolg Married: 1938 to the former Mildred Miles, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 19505 Subjects: Torts, Administrative Law, Administrative Law Seminarg Publications: Administrative Law: Cases and Materials Cco- authorl 13d ed. 19689, Judicial Control of Administrative Action 119651, Judicial Aspect of Foreign Relations 119331, Res Ipsa Vindicated 1 Buffalo L. Rev., Trial by Newspaper, 40 N.Y.U. L. Rev.: Legal Activity: ABAQ gxtralegal Activity: Board of Syndics of Harvard University ress. 24 RICHARD H. FIELD Story Professor of La-w Born: Phillips, Me., 19035 Education: A.B. CHistory and Literaturej Harvard 1926, LL.B. Harvard 19293 Subsequent Experience: 1929-42 Brown, Field 8t McCarthy, Boston 1942-3 Regional Attorney for Office of Price Administra- tiong 1943-6 General Counsel for Office of Price Admin- istrationg Married: 1968 to the former Laura Deane Shaw, three children by former marriage and six step-children: Joined the Faculty: 1946g Subjects: Civil Procedure, Trial Practiceg Publications: Casebook on Civil Procedure ico- authorl, Maine Civil Practice fco-authorlg Legal Activities: Reporter for the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules of Procedure of Maine, American Law Institute Reporter for the Study of the Division of Jurisdiction between State and Federal Courts, Member of the Council and the Grievance Committee of the Boston Bar Association, Extralegal Ac- tivities: Former member of Board of Selectmen of Weston, Former Town Moderator of Weston, Mass. 4 its - i?55f,2mT. 95 as H-it-,gfgagE,25,,,'W,,ga..m H' ,W . ,,X. . , JAMES H. CHADBOURN Fessenden Professor of Law Born: Spartanburg, South Carolina, 1905, Education: A.B. CEng1ishJ The Citadel 1926, J.D. University of North Carolina 1931, M.A. CHon.J Harvard 1963g Subsequent Experience: 1931-2 Southern Commission on Interracial Co-operation, 1931-6 Assistant Professor of Law at the University of North Carolina, 1936-9 Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania, 1939-40 Associate Professor of Law at the U. of P., 1940-50 Professor of Law at the U. of P., 1950-60 Connell Professor of Law at U.C.L.A.g Married: 1940, three children, two grandchildreng Joined the Faculty: 1961 as Visiting Professor, Professor in 1963g Subjects: Evidence, Civil Procedureg Publications: Lynching and the Law 119321, California Pleading fco-authorl, Federal' Courts, Cases and Materials fco-authorl, Cases on Civil Procedure f1961J, Bentham and the Hearsay Rule, 75 Harv. L. Rev. 1196213 Legal Activities: Research Consultant for the California Law Revision Commission, Order of the Coif, Juristic Society of Philadelphiag Extralegal Activity: Finding errors in Lord Kenyon's Opinions. ss'- . MILTON KATZ Professor of Law and Director of International Legal Studies Born: New York, New York, 1907, Education: A.B. 1Anthropology1 Harvard 1927, LL.B. Harvard 19313 Subsequent Experience: 1927-8 Anthropological expedition, Peabody Museum of Harvard, 1935-8 Executive Assistant, Chairman and Special Counsel, SEC, 1938-9 Special Assistant, U.S. Attorney General, 1941-3 Solicitor, War Production Board, 1943-6 Lieut. Commander, U.S.N.R., 1950-1 Chief of the Marshall Plan in Europe 1with rank Ambassador1, 1951-4 Associate Director, Ford Foundationg Married: 1933 to the former Vivian Greenberg, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1939, rejoined in 1954, Subjects: Torts, Legal Practice and Methods, Law and the Uses of the Oceang Publications: Cases and Materials in Administrative Law 119471, Government Under Law and the Individual 1editor and co-author1 119571, The Law of International Transactions: Cases and Materials 1co-author1 119601, The Things That Are Caesars 119661, The Relevance of International Adjudication 1196815 Legal Activities: ABA, Massachusetts Bar Association, Cambridge Bar Association, ALI, American Society of International Law, Extralegal Activities: Trustee of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, World Peace Foundation, Citizens, Research Foundation, International Legal Center, Interamerican University Foundation, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Member of the Corporation of the Boston Museum of Science, Research Associate of the Harvard Program in Technology and Society, Member of the Harvard Administrative Committee for International Studies, Member of the Committee for Middle Eastem Studies, Member of the Committee on Regional Studies, Chairman of the Committee on Life Sciences and Social Policy of the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, Member of the Technology Assessment Panel of the Na- tional Academy of Sciences. 26 1 J ERNEST JOSEPH BROWN Langdell Professor of Law Born: Lake Providence, Louisiana, 1906g Edu- cation: A.B. CHistoryJ Princeton 1927, LL.B. Har- vard 1931 g Subsequent Experience: 1931-42 Kene- pick, Cooke, Mitchell, Bass 8: Letchworth CBuf- falol, 1933 Legal Staff of Agricultural Adjust- ment Bureau, 1942 Legal Staff of War Production Board, 1942-5 U.S. Army, 1946 Hellings, Ulsh, Morey 8: Stewartg Joined the Faculty: 1946 as Visiting Professor, Professor in 1947g Subjects: Taxation, Taxation of Corporate Reorganizations, and Distributionsg Publications: Constitutional Law: Cases and Problems fco-editorj 13rd ed. 196753 Legal Activities.' ABA, Tax Section and Committees of Section. On leave 1969-70. SAMUEL E. THORNE Professor of Legal History Born: New York City, 1907g Education: B.A. C.C.N.Y. 1927, LL.B. Harvard 1930, Litt. D. Wesleyan 19575 Subsequent Experience: 1930-2 Asst. Librarian, Columbia Law School, 1933-42 Prof. at Northwestern U., 1942-5 U.S. Navy, 1945-8 Librarian at Yale Law School, 1948-56 Professor of Lawg Joined tlze Faculty: l956g Sub- jects: English Legal Historyg Publication: A Dis- course Upon the Exposition and Understanding of Statutes Ceditorj. Sli iii? e ,af-4sa1se Hsfismsszw - 'Meie- A. JAMES CASNER Weld Professor of Law Born.' Chicago, Illinois, 1907g Education: A.B. CPo1itical Science? U. of Illinois 1930, LL.B. U. of Illinois 1929, S.J.D. Columbia 19413 Subsequent Experience: 1942-5 C010- nel in U.S. Air Force, 1945-58 Partner in Ropes and Gray, Married: 1926 to the former Margaret Snell, two children, Subjects: Property, Estate Planningg Publications: The Internal Revenue Code for 1954: Estate Planning, 68 Harvard L. Rev., Estate Planning 11961, supp. 19663, Cases and Text on Property fco-authorj 12d ed, 19695, Estate Planning-Marital Deduction Provisions of Trusts, 64 Harvard L. Rev.g Legal Activities: ABA, ALI, Order of the Coif, Phi Delta Phi, Reporter for the Restatement of Property, Reporter for the ALI Estate and Gift Tax Project. ti L . PAUL A. FREUND Carl M. Loeb University Professor Born: St. Louis, Missouri, 19035 Education: A.B. tEng- lish1 Washington University 1928, LL.B. Harvard 1931, S.J.D. Harvard 1932g Subsequent E.x'perience: 1932-3 Clerk to Mr. Justice Brandeis. 1933-5 Attorney for the Treasury Department and the R.F.C., 1935-9 Office of the Solicitor Generalg Joined the Faculty: 1939, Subjects: Constitutional Law, Constitutional Litigationg Publications: Tlte Supreme Court of the United States 619611, On Law and Justice CI9671, Constitutional Law: Cases and Otlter Problems lco- editor1 C3d ed. 196719 Legal Activities: ABA CMember of the Commissions on Presidential Succession and Electoral College Reform1, ALI CAdvisor, Conflict of Laws Restate- l7'lCl1f1,' Extralegal Activities: Trustee of Washington Uni- versity, Member of the Council and Past President of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Member of the Board of Directors of the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies, Senior Fellow of the Harvard Society of Fellows, President of the American Friends of Cambridge University. On leave 1969-70. BENJAMIN KAPLAN Royall Professor of Law Born: New York, N.Y., 1911g Education: A.B. CEng1ish Literature1 C.C.N.Y. 1929, LL.B. Columbia 1933g Subse- quent Experience: 1933-42 and 1946 Greenbaum, Wolff and Ernstg Married: 1942 to the former Felicia Lamport, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1947g Subjects: Civil Pro- cedure, Copyright and Unfair Competition, Equitable Remediesg Publications: An Unlturried View of Copyright C19671, Materials for a Basic Course in Civil Procedure Cco-aut.hor1 12d ed. 19681, Cases on Copyright Cco-author1 619601, Legal Activities: Member, Advisory Committee on Civil Rules of the Judicial Conference of the United States. 29 tjolkf 30 STANLEY S. SURREY Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professor of Law Born: New York, N.Y., 1910, Education: B.S. fHistoryJ C.C.N.Y. 1929, LL.B. Columbia 1932, Subsequent Expe- rience: 1933-47 various positions in the U.S. Government, 1947-50 Professor at U. of California School of Law CBerke- leyj, 1950-61 Professor at Harvard, 1961-69 Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, U.S. Treasury Dept., Married: 1938 to the former Dorothy Moorlar, one childg Joined the Faculty: 1950, Subjects: Taxation Seminar, Federal Tax Aspects of Urban and Social Problems, International As- pects of U.S. Income Taxationg Publications: Casebooks in Federal Taxation and Legislation, Legal Activities: Chairman of the Panel on International Monetary Prob- lems, American Society of International Law, Member of Permanent Scientific Committee of the International Fiscal Association, Member of Board of Directors of Tax In- stitute of America. ARCHIBALD COX Samuel Williston Professor of Law Born: Plainfield, New Jersey, 1912: Education: A.B. CAmerican Historyb Harvard 1934, LL.B. Harvard 1937, LL.D. CHon.J Loyola CChicagoJ 1964, LL.D. CHon.J University of Cincinnati 1967g Subsequent Experience: 1937-8 Clerk to Judge Learned Hand, 1938-41 Ropes, Gray, Best, Coolidge 8a Rugg, Boston, 1941-3 Attorney in the Office of the Solicitor General of the U.S. Department of Justice, 1943-5 Associate Solicitor of the U.S. Department of Labor, 1951-2 Co-Chairman of the Construction Industry Stabilizing Committee, 1952 Chairman of the Wage Stabi- lizing Board, 1961-5 Solicitor General of the United States, 1962-5 Member of the Harvard Board of Overseersg Mar- ried: 1937 to the former Phyllis Ames, three children: Joined tlze Faculty: 1945 as Lecturer of Law, Professor 1946-61, rejoined in 1965, Subjects: Constitutional Law, Labor Law, Publications: Law and the National Labor Policy 119601, Civil Rights, the Constitution and the Courts Cco-authorl C1967J, Cases on Labor Law ico- authorj 119675, The Warren Court 1196813 Legal Activi- ties: ABA, ALI. K, . ww- Q - TL Wi ii?T Y-1 -.. .- 1 .w ' '-2'-'Ptfu---R -V JA. . V 5 , L I, -. .-nf , 1 Y 6 ,V','.-'-j.'7 n .g'g',,, 'f 5? ? f , N 'S.j,,,w Nik IEEE?-7 EQ5i EIWHEE ' at 4 oun- EIEIEE liilil 1-1: -zzqa H1,..,2f .' 2-lily: ,ig-,157 ' ...,....,, ' 4 Y Eiimm ' f-4+?- EQMww'- 1 ' Q 1 J ,-Q. AQ 1 A 7 1 'M .r P' I N ' MY 1. .Qu .N Q, X! f 5 I x f I K, 4- Q .1 5 x 2 .,L+L. '.-. , 3 1' Q if I 1 IRQ! J Y A 3 v AU- - -. ,ml Q -flu 152 . E' -Q LOUIS LOSS William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law Born: Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 1914g Education: B.S. CEconomicsJ Uni- versity of Pennsylvania 1934, LL.B. Yale 1937g Subsequent Experience: 1937-52 Securmes and Exchange Commission, 1948-52 Associate General Counsel, 1947-52 Visiting Lecturer in Law at Yale: Married: 1938 to the former Bernice Segaloff, two children, Joined the Faculty: 19525 Subjects: Corporatlons, Securities Regulationg Publications: Securities Regulation C2nd gg-c3f9g1,tSUPP- 12699, B?f6 S? Llgw f19g8gg Legal Activities: ABA CCoun- ec ton on orpora ion, an ing an ' L , S ' f P b' Teachers of Law, ALI. On leave Fall, 1969. usmess aw, oclety 0 u he CLARK BYSE Professor of Law Born: Oshkosh, Wis., 1912g Education: B.Ed. CHistoryJ Wisconsin State Teachers College 1935, LL.B. University of Wisconsin 1938, LL.M. University of Wisconsin 1939, S.J.D. Columbia 1952g Subsequent Experience: 1939-41 Asst. Professor of Law University of Iowa, 1941-3 Se- curities and Exchange Commission, Board of Economic Welfare, 1943-5 U.S. Navy, 1945-6 Department of Com- merce, 1946 Asst. Professor of Law University of Pennsyl- vania, 1948-57 Professor of Law U. of P.g Joined the Faculty: 1958 as Visiting Professor, Subjects: Contracts, Administrative Lawg Publications: Administrative Law Cases and Comments Cco-authorj 119601, Tenure in American Higher Education Cco-authorj 119591, Section 13-6-1 of the Mandamus and Venue Act of 1962 and 'Nonstatutory' Judicial Review of Federal Administrative Action, 81 Harv. L. Rev. 308 119679, The University and Due Process: A Somewhat Different View, 54 A.A. U.P. Bulletin 143 1196813 Legal Activities: Member of editorial board of Law Book Department of Little, Brown 8a Co., Chairman of Committee on Claims Adjudication, Administrative Conference of the U.S., Member of the Advisory Board of the Northwestern University Program in Law and Social Sciencesg Extralegal Activities: Member of the Executive Committee and of the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure of the American Associa- tion of University Professors, Member of Massachusetts Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. On leave 1969-70. 33 ROBERT BRAUCHER Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1916g Educa- tion: A.B. CEconomicsJ Haverford 1936, LL.B. Harvard 1939g Subsequent Experience: 1939-41 Hughes, Richards, Hubbard Xt Ewing, New York, 1941-6 fighter pilot and intelligence of- ficer with Army Air Forces, 1945 U.S. Stra- tegic Bombing Survey in the Pacificg Married: 1942 to the former Elizabeth King, four childreng Joined the Faculty: 1946 as Visiting Professor, Professor in 19493 Subjects: Con- tracts, Commercial Transactionsg Publications: Basic Contract Law Cco-editorj, Commercial Transactions Cco-editorj, Documents of Title 12nd ed., 19581 5 Legal Activities: Massachu- setts Commission on Uniform State Laws Cvice-president of National Conferenceb, Re- porter for the Restatement of Contracts, 2nd, Chief Reporter of the Committee to Review U.C.C. Article 9, ABA, Massachusetts Bar Association, ALI. 34 Mtteljxkww HAROLD JOSEPH BERMAN Professor of Law Born: Hartford, Connecticut, 1918g Education: A.B. Social Philosophyj Dartmouth 1938, London School of Economics CLegal Historyl 1939, M.A. tLegal Historyj Yale 1942, LL.B. Yale 1947g Subsequent Experience: 1942- 5 U.S. Army, 1947-8 Assistant Professor of Law at Stan- ford Law Schoolg Married: 1941 to the former Ruth Har- low, four childreng Joined the Faculty: 1948 as Visiting Professorg Subjects: Development of Law and Legal In- stitutions, Comparison of Soviet and American Law, Law of International Trade, Soviet, Chinese, and Western Approaches to International Lawg Publications: Justice in the USSR trev. ed. 19631, Soviet Criminal Law and Pro- cedure: The RSFSR Codes 119661, Nature and Functions of Law Cco-authorj Crev. ed. 19665, Disarmament Inspec- tion Under Soviet Law fco-authorl 119671, U.S. Export Controls-Past, Present, and Future, fco-authorj 67 Colum. L. Rev. 119673, Soviet Family Law in the Light of Russian History and Marxist Theory, 56 Yale L.J. C1946Jg Extralegal Activities: Research Associate with the Harvard Russian Research Center, Member of the Execu- tive Committee of the Russian Research Center, Member of the Newton School Committee, Chairman of the Com- mittee on International Relations of the Massachusetts Council of Churches. -A., ...av ,. I W, 2 , r as ft ,W ' H' HWY ze. inf ' . F f ,ai r ' , 3:5 ,t ' I ' it , 15 it it ' ' fi w Haiti' ,tif M , , W ,gg l 1 LOUIS B. SOHN Bemis Professor of International Law and John Harvey Gregory Lecturer on World Organization Born: Lwow, Poland, 19l4g Education: LL.B. John Casimir University 1935, M.Dip1.Sc. John Casimir University 1935, LL.M. Harvard 1940, S.J.D. Harvard 1958g Subsequent Experience: 1940-5 Assistant to Judge Hudson, 1945 attended San Francisco Conference on the United Nations, 1950-1 Legal Officer of the United Nations, 1946-51 Lecturer on Law at Harvardg Married: 1941- to the former Elizabeth Mayog Joined the Faculty: 1946 as Lecturer, Professor in 19513 Subjects: Problems of World Orderg Publica- tions: World Peace Through World Law fco-authorj C3rd ed., 19661, Cases on United Nations Law C1956, 19671, Cases on World Law C1950Jg Legal Activities: Rapporteur on the United Nations Charter of the International Law Association, Member of the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law, American Law Institute, American Bar Associationg Extralegal Activities: Consultant to the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Member of the Executive Committee of the Federation of American Scientists, Consultant to the U.N. Secretariat 1968-9, Program Chairman for World Assembly for Human Rights 1968 CMontrealJ, Chairman, Commission to Study the Organization of Peace. ff-lbw CHARLES M. HAAR Professor of Law Born: Antwerp, Belgium, 1920, Education: B.A. N.Y.U. 1940, M.A. Wisconsin 1941, LL.B. Harvard 1949: Subse- quent Experience: 1950-52 Lecturer at N.Y.U., 1966-69 Assistant Secretary for Metropolitan Development, De- partment of Housing and Urban Development, Married: to the former Natalie Zinn: Joined Faculty: 1953 as As- sistant Professor, 1955 appointed Professor, Subjects: Prop- erty, Land Use Planning, Publications: Land Planning Law in a Free Society 119501, Land Use Planning 119591 Federal Credit and Private Housing 119601, Law and Land 119641, Golden Age of American Law 1196513 Extralegul Activities: Chairman of the Presidents .Task Force on the Preservation of Natural Beauty, Chairman of the Joint Center for Urban Studies, MIT-Harvard. 36 L 61 VERN COUNTRYMAN Professor of Law Born: Roundup, Montana, 1917, Education: B.A. 1Politi- cal Science1 University of Washington 1939, LL.B. Uni- versity of Washington 1942g Subsequent Experience: 1942 Assistant Regional Attomey for the National Labor Rela- tions Board, 1946 Assistant Attorney General for the State of Washington, 1942-3 Clerk to Mr. Justice Douglas, 1943-6 U.S. Army Air Forces, 1946-7 Sterling Law Fellow at Yale, 1947-55 Yale Law Faculty, 1955-9 Shea, Greenman and Gardner, Washington, D.C., 1959-64 Dean of the University of New Mexico School of Law, Married: 1940 to the former Vera Pound, two children, Joined the Faculty: 1963 as Visiting Professor, Professor in 1964g Subjects: Commercial Transactions, Financial Planning, Creditors' Rights, Corporate Reorganization, Publications: Douglas at the Supreme Court 119591, Debtor and Creditor 119641, The Lawyer in Modern Society 1co-author1 119661, The States and Subversion 1co-author1 119521, Discrimination and the Law 119651, UnAmerican Activities in' the State of Washington 119511, Featherbedding and Technological Change 1co-author1 119651, Legal Activities: ABA, Wash- ington and Massachusetts Bar Associations, Reporter for the ALI-ABA Joint Committee on Continuing Legal Edu- cation, Legal Consultant to the Brookings Institute study of bankruptcy administration, Associate Reporter of U.S. Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Bankruptcy Rulesg Extralegal Activities: Fishing, Cabinet making. MAURO CAPPELLETTI Visiting Professor of Law Born: Trento, Italy, 1927g Education: Dottore in giuris- prudenza University of Florence 1952, Libero Docente University of Florence 1957g Subsequent Experience: 1957- 62 Professor at University of Macerata, since 1963 Pro- fessor of Law and Director of the Institute of Compara- tive Law, University of Florence, 1968 Visiting Professor at Stanford University School of Lawg Married: 1961 to the former Carla Pieraccini, one childg Subjects: The Civil Law System, Problems in Comparative Procedureg Publi- cations.' The Italian Legal System 1co-author1 119571, Civil Procedure in Italy 1co-author1 119651, Processo e ideologie 119691, La testimoninza della parte nel sistema dell'oralita 119621, El valor de las sentencias y de las normas extranjeras en el proceso civil 119681, El control judicial de la constitutionalidad de las leyes 119661 La jurisdiccion constitucional de Ia Iibcrtad 119611, Estadio del derecho y tirocinio profesional 119591g Legal Activities: Editor-in-chief, Volume XV 'KCivi1 Procedure of the International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law, Co-editor, Rivista di diritto processuale, member of various interna- tional academies and associations. 37 DONALD F. TURNER Professor of Law Born: Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, 1921, Edu- cation: B.A. CEconomicsJ Northwestern 1941, Ph.D. CEconomicsJ Harvard 1947, LL.B. Yale 1950g Subsequent Experience: 1950-1 Clerk to Justice Clark, 1951-4 Cox, Longford, Stoddard St Cutler, 1964-5 Visiting Professor at Stanford Law School, 1965-8 Assistant Attorney General in U.S. Department of Justiceg Married: 1955 to the former Joan Pearson, two children, Joined the Faculty: 1954 as Assistant Professor, Professor in 1957, Subjects: Economic Regulation, Anti- trust Law, Antitrust Policy Seminarg Publica- tions: Antitrust Policy Cco-authorj f1959Jg Legal Activity: Antitrust Section of ABA. 38 ,yi 1 , xt Eg? --L H , eq., gr'-'--S, F EW 4 ROBERT E. KEETON Professor of Law Born: Clarksville, Texas, 1919: Education: B.B,A. Uni- versity of Texas 1940, LL.B. University of Texas 1941, S.J.D. Harvard 1956g Subsequent Experience: 1941-2 and 1945-51 Baker, Botts, Andrews 8: Parrish, Houston, 1942-5 U.S. Navy Reserve, 1951-3 Associate Professor at Southern Methodist University, 1953-4 Ezra Ripley Thayer Teaching Fellow at Harvard: Married: 1941 to the former Betty Baker, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1954 as Assist- ant Professor, Professor in 1956g Subjects: Torts, Trial Practice, Insurance Law: Publications: Trial Tactics and Methods C1954J, Basic Protection for the Traffic Victim Cco-authorj C1965J, Venturing to do Justice C1969Jg Legal Activity: Adviser to the Reporter for the Restatement of Torts, Second: Extralegal Activity: Trustee of the College Retirement Equities Fund. LLOYD OHLIN Professor of Criminology Born: Belmont, Massachusetts, 1918, Education: A.B. CSociologyJ Brown 1940, M.A. CSociologyJ Indiana U. 1942, Ph.D. fSociologyJ University of Chicago 1954: Subsequent Experience: 1942-5 U.S. Army, 1947-53 Re- search Sociologist with the Illinois Parole and Pardon Board, 1953-6 Director of the Center for Education and Research in Corrections of the University of Chicago, 1956-67 Professor of Sociology and Director of Research Center of the Columbia University School of Social Work, 1961-2 Special Assistant on Delinquency to the Secretary, U.S. Department of Health, Education 8: Welfare, 1965- 7 Associate Director of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justiceg Married: 1946 to the former Helen Hunter, four childreng Joined the Faculty: 1967g Subjects: Crime and Society, Youth and Crime fwith Professor Hallj, Legal Institutions and Social Change, Issues in Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice Cwith Professor Vorenbergjg Publications: Selection for Parole f1951J, Sociology and the Field of Corrections Cl956J, Delinquency and Oppor- tunity: A Theory of Delinquent Gangs Cco-authorh C196OJg Legal Activity: 1955-7 Consultant to the American Bar Foundation's survey of the Administration of Criminal Justice in the United Statesg Extralegal Activities: American Sociological Society, American Society of Criminology, National Council on Crime and Delinquency, Interna- tional Society for Criminology, Advisory Board of Editors for Excerpta Criminologica, Research in Crime and De- linquency and Journal of Criminology, Criminal Law, and Police Science, Member of Visiting Board of School of Criminology of New York State University, Member of Board of Trustees of Institute on Crime and Delinquency at Sacramento, California. 39 vt 5 Q m Mil Q .' ggi-.:' OLIVER OLDMAN Professor of Law Director of the International Tax Program Born: New York, New York, 1920, Education: B.S. CEconomicsJ Harvard 1942, LL.B. Harvard 1953g Subse- quent Experience: 1943-6 U.S. Army Signal Corps, 1946- 50 Instructor in Economics at the University of Buffalo and residential construction business, 1953-5 Hodgson Russ Andrews Woods and Goodyear, Buffalo, Married: 1943 to the former Barbara Lublin, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1955 as the Director of Training for the In- ternational Tax Programg Subjects: Tax Reform in De- veloping Countries, Comparative Tax Policy, State and Local Taxg Publications: Financing Urban Development in Mexico City Cco-authorj 119671, Readings on Taxation in Developing Countries Cco-editorj trev. ed. 1967Jg Legal Activities: Member of the Tax Institute of America, Mem- ber of the National Tax Association, Member of the ABA State and Local Tax Committee, Tax Consultant to the governments of Argentina, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Ethiopia and Venezuela. 40 'fa,.V,,jj,, j,1f.,,1,.,,,1. RICHARD R. BAXTER Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1921g Education: A.B. 1Philosophy1 Brown 1942, LL.B. Harvard 1948, Diploma in International Law Cambridge 1951, LL.M. 1Interna- tional Law1 Georgetown 1952g Subsequent Experience: 1942-54 U.S. Army, 1954 Attorney in the Office of the General Counsel of the Department of Defense, 1966-67 Member of the Faculty of Law of the University of Cam- bridgeg Married: 1943 to the former Harriet Latson, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1954 as a Research Associateg Subjects: Law of War, Soviet, Chinese, and Western Ap- proaches to International Law, Law and Uses of the Oceang Publications: The Law of International Waterways 119641, The Panama Canal 1co-author1 119651, Conven- tion on the International Responsibility of States for Injuries to Aliens 1co-author1 119611, Documents on the St. Law- rence Seaway 119601, articles in various journals in the United States, Great Britain, Switzerland, Canada, United Arab Republicg Legal Activities: Vice-President of the American Branch of the International Law Association, Member of the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law, Vice-President, American Society of International Law, Member of the Advisory Committee, Institute of Air and Space Law, McGill University, Mem- ber, U.S. National Group, Permanent Court of Arbitra- tion: Extralegal Activities: Master of South House in Radcliffe College, Member of Massachusetts Commission on Ocean Management. ARTHUR TAYLOR von MEHREN Professor of Law Born: Albert Lee, Minnesota, 1922g Education: B.S. 1Government1 Harvard 1943, LL.B. Harvard 1945, Ph.D. 1Government1 Harvard 1946, University of Zurich 1Law1 1947, University of Paris 1Law1 1949g Subsequent Expe- rience: 1945-6 Clerk to Judge Magruder 11st Cir.1, 1947-8 Acting Chief of the Legislation Branch of the Legal Division of OMGUS, Berlin, 1956-7 Fulbright Research Professor at the University of Tokyo, 1962-3 Visiting Professor at the Indian Law Institute and Consultant on Legal Educa- tion for the Ford Foundation in New Delhi, 1959 and 1967 Visiting Professor at the summer session at the Uni- versity of Frankfurt, Germany, Married: 1947 to the former Ioan Moore, three children: Joined the Faculty: 1946: Sub- jects: Civil Law System, Selected Topics in Comparative Contract Law, Conflict of Lawsg Publications. The Civil Law System 119571, Twentieth Century Comparative and Conflicts Law 1co-editor1 119611, Law in Japan: The Legal Order in a Changing Society 1editor1 119631, The Law of Multistate Problems 1co-author1 119651, Legal Activities: Board of Editors of the American Journal of Comparative Law, Director and Vice-President of the American Association for the Comparative Study of Law, Member of the International Academy of Comparative Law, Advisor to the Reporter for the Restatement 12d1 Con- tracts. Member of Editorial Committee for International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law. 41 ABRAM CHAYES Professor of Law Born: Chicago, Ill., 1922g Education: A.B. CGovernmentJ Harvard 1943, LL.B. Harvard 1949g Subsequent Experience: 1949-50 Legal Adviser to Governor Chester Bowles of Connecti- cut, 1951 Associate General Counsel of President's Materials Policy Commission, 1951-2 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1952-5 Associate with Covington 8a Burling, 1955-8 Asst. Professor of Law at Harvard, 1958-61 Professor of Law at Harvard, 1961-4 Legal Adviser of U.S. Department of State, 1964-5 Counsel for Ginsberg 81 Feldmang Married: five childreng Joined the Faculty: 1955 as Asst. Professor, Professor in 1958, rejoined in 1965g Subjects: In- ternational Legal Process, Current Problems in International Law, International Business Or- ganizationsg Pulllications: International Legal Process Cco-authorl, Legal Institutions of the International Economy, Utah L. Rev. 119671, Rights and Duties of Foreign Investors Abroad in The Rights and Duties of Private Investors Abroad 119653, A Common Lawyer Looks at International Law, 78 Hurv. L. Rev. 119655, The Modern Corporation and the Rule of Law in The Corporation in Modern Society tlVlason editorl Il959Jg Legal Activities: American Society of International Law, Assn. of the Bar of the City of New York, American Law Institute, Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on Private International Law, Department of State's Advisory Panel on International Law, Consultant to the National Council on Marine Resources and Engineering Development, Extralegal Activity: Fellow. American Academy ofArts and Sciences. 42 it ta rg .Le it 2 1146 . -6 gift. :Sea tilfgaree is as uma I 1,1 it as ii JW ss trailer were .W X12 af Gram 1: i , ,gm ' W. , 'fn 4 4. . 5 5 it My H Y ROGER FISHER Professor of Law Born: Winnetka, Illinois, 1922g Education: A.B. CGov- ernmentj Harvard 1943, LL.B. Harvard l948g Subsequent Experience: 1942-6 U.S. Army Air Force, 1948-9 Assistant to the General Counsel of the Economic Cooperation Administration in Paris, 1950-6 Covington 8: Burling, 1956- 8 Assistant to the Solicitor General, 1965-6 Guggenheim Fellow in the International Relations Department of the London School of Economics: Married: 1948 to the former Caroline Speer, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1958 as Lecturer, Professor since 19603 Subjects: United Nations Law, Enforcing International Lawg Publications: Interna- tional Conflict for Beginners 119691, International Conflict and Behavioral Science-The Craigville Papers feditorJ 119642, Fractionating Conflict, Daedalus, C1964Jg Legal Activity: Executive Council of the American Society of International Lawg Extralegal Activities: Consultant to the Department of Defense and the RAND Corporation, Trust- ee of the Hudson Institute in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, Associate Editor of the Journal of Conflict Resolution, Member of the Commission to Study the Organization of Peace. 43 Q3 Ks ' ? , i sf f f 1' M :. Sx. l ADAM YARMOLINSKY Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1922g Education: A.B. fEconomicsJ Harvard 1943, LL.B. Yale 19489 Subse- quent Experience: 1943-6 U.S. Army Air Force, 1948-9 Clerk to Judge Charles E. Clark C2d Cir.J, 1950-1 Clerk to Mr. Justice Reed, 1949-50 Root, Ballantine, Bushby and Palmer, New York, 1951-5 Cleary, Gottlieb, Friendly and Ball, Washington, 1955-7 Secretary, Fund for the Republic, 1957-9 Public Affairs Editor, Doubleday and Co., 1959-61 consultant to philanthropic foundations, 1961-4 Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, 1964 Deputy Director of the President's Task Force on the War Against Poverty, 1965 Chief of the U.S. Emergency Relief Mission to the Dominican Republic, 1965-6 Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intemational Security Affairs, Married: to the former Harriet Rypins, four chil- dreng Joined the Faculty: 1966, Subjects: Urban Legal Studies, National Defense in American Societyg Pub- lications: Bureaucratic Structures and Political Outcomes, Journal of International Affairs 119697, Recog- nition of Excellence 119601, United States Military Power and Foreign Policy, University of Chicago Center for Policy Study 119673, Ideas Into Actions, The Public Interest 09663, Responsible Lawmaking in a Technically Specialized Society, Law in a Changing America C 19681, The Defense Establishment and the Domestic Economy, Vanderbilt L. Rev. C1965 J, Legal Activities: ALI, Trustee of the Vera Institute of Justice, Extralegal Activities: Council on Foreign Relations, Institute of Strategic Studies fLondonJ, Mem- ber of Board on Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, Member of Institute for Research on Pov- erty at Wisconsin University, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Mn KENNETH WILLIAM WEDDERBURN Visiting Professor of Law Born: London, 1927g Education: M.A. 1ClassicsJ Queen's College, Cambridge 1948, LL.B. Cambridge 1949, Subsequent Experience: 1952-64 Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge, 1953-64 Lecturer in Law at Cambridge University, since 1964 Cassel Professor of Commercial Law at London Universityg Married: 1969 to the former Frances Ann Knight, three chil- dren by previous marriageg Subjects: Corporations, Law and Labor Relations in Britain and the U.S.g Publications: The Worker and the Law 119651, Cases and Materials on Labour Law 119675, Modern Com- pany Law 1co-authorj 1196915 Legal activity: since 1954 Barrister-at-Law, Middle Templeg Extralegal Activities: Deputy Independent Chairman London Theatre Council, Member Civil Service Arbitration Tribunal. wt . ire-Z DAVID R. HERWITZ Professor of Law Born: Lynn, Mass., 1925: Education: B.S. 1Engineering and Business Administrationj M.I.T. 1946, LL.B. Harvard 19499 Subsequent Experience: Attorney with Tax Court 1949-50, Teaching Fellow at Harvard 1950-1, Practice in Boston 1951-4g Married: 1960 to the former Carla Barran, two childreng Faculty: joined in 1954 as Assistant Professor, Professor in 19573 Subjects: Accounting, Business Planning, Taxationg Publications: Cases and Materials on Accounting 1co-authorj, Business Planning. 45 smelt 9PvlMDcf 46 FRANK E. A. SANDER Professor of Law Born: Stuttgart, Germany, 19273 Education: A,B. 1MathematicsJ Harvard 1949, LL.B. Harvard 1952g Subsequent Experience: 1946-7 U.S. Army, 1952-3 Clerk to Judge Magruder 11st Cir.J, 1953-4 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1954-6 U.S. Department of Justice, 1956-9 Hill and Barlow, Boston, Married: 1958 to the former Emily Jones, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 19595 Subjects: Public Welfare Law, Family Law, Human Relations Problems in Legal Practice, Taxation, Tax Policy Seminarg Pub- lications: Cases and Materials in Family Law 1co- authorj 119661, Tax Aspects of Divorce and Separa- tion 1196713 Legal Activities: Chairman of Council on Legal Education Opportunity, Consultant to Treasury Department 119681, Labor Arbitrator. ,, its ew- it isis W 5' i VH f' ' :egg 'ii ' Kp YN H SQ! it 35 1 A up DAVID WESTFALL Professor of Law Born: Columbia, Missouri, 1927, Education: A.B. fEco- nomicsj University of Missouri 1947, LL.B. Harvard 1950, Subsequent Experience: 1950-5 Bell, Boyd, Marshall and Lloyd, Chicago, 1951-3 U.S. Army, Married: 1967 to the former Elizabeth Beatty, one child: Joined the Faculty: 1955 as Assistant Professor, Professor in 1958, Subjects: Taxation, Estate Planning, Property, Publications: Agri- W ,,, cultural Allotments as Property, 79 Harv. L. Rev., Trust Grantors and Section 674: Adventures in Income Tax Avoidance, 60 Colum. L. Rev.p Legal Activity: Assistant Reporter for the ALI Federal Estate and Gift Tax Project, ,, 1961-6. as Q it DONALD T. TRAUTMAN Professor of Law and Chairman of the Division of Graduate Studies , , 1223? PATH Eflfgi, , Born: Cleveland, Ohio, 1924g Education: A.B. CEco- nomicsj Harvard 1951, LL.B. Harvard 19513 Subsequent Experience: 1952-3 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurterg Mar- ried: 1954 to the former Susanah Bailie, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1953g Subjects: Conflict of Laws, Trusts, Accounting, Admiraltyg Publications: Materials on Accounting fco-authorj C1959J, The Law of Multistate Problems Cco-authorj 119651: Legal Activity: Adviser to the Reporter for the Restatement f2dJ Conflict of Laws. TTT , , ql'm i , EEE i ,i iw at W 1 M , gum im? gyzf DETLEV F. VAGTS Professor of Law Born: Washington, D.C., 1929, Education: A.B. CHistoryD Harvard 1948, LL.B. Harvard 1951, Subsequent Experience: 1951-3 and 1956-9 Cahill, Gordon, Reindel 8: Ohl, New York, 1953-6 U.S. Air Force, Married: 1954 to the former Dorothy Larkin, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1959 as Assistant Professor, Professor in 19625 Subjects: Account- ing, Corporationsg Publications: Transnational Legal Prob- lems Cco-authorj Cl968J, Reforming the 'Modern' Cor- poration: Perspectives from the German, 80 Harv. L. Rev., Freedom of Speech in the Armed Forces, 57 Colum. L. Rev.,' Legal Activities: American Society of International Law, American Foreign Law Association. PI-IILLIP AREEDA Professor of Law Born: Detroit, Mich., 1930g Education: A.B. tEconomicsJ Harvard 1951, LL.B. Harvard 1954g Subsequent Experi- ence: Sheldon Traveling Fellow, 1954-5g Assistant Special Counsel to the President, 1955-60g Executive Director, Cabinet Task Force on Oil Imports, 1969g Joined the Faculty: 1961g Subjects: Administrative Law, Economic Regulation, Anti-Trust, Legal Process, Publication: Anti- Trust Analysis C1967Jg Legal Activity: American Law Institute. JAMES VORENBERG Professor of Law Born: Boston, Massachusetts, 19283 Education: A.B. fHistoryJ Harvard 1948, LL.B. Harvard 1951, Subsequent Experience: 1951-3 Office of General Counsel of the Air Force, 1953-4 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1954-62 Ropes and Gray, 1965-7 Executive Director of the Presi- dent's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Admin- istration of Justiceg Joined the Faculty: 1962, rejoined in 1967g Subjects: Criminal Law, Corporations, Issues in Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justiceg Publica- tions: Arrest, Detention, Interrogation and the Right to Counsel, 66 Colum. L. Rev., Exclusiveness of the dissent- ing Stockholder's Appraisal Right, 77 Harv. L. Rev., Fed- eral Conflict of Interest Statutes, tco-authorl, 65 Harv. L. Rev.: Legal Activities: Reporter for the ALI Pre-Arraign- ment Code Project, Advisory Committee of the National Commission on Reform of Federal Criminal Lawsg Direc- tor, Center for Criminal .lustice. 9 'X 49 ea-ea 50 JEROME A. COHEN Professor of Law Born: Elizabeth, N. J., 1930g Education: B.A. Clnter- national Relations! Yale 1951, University of Lyon, France CI-Trench politics and culturej 1951-2, LL.B. Yale 1955g Subsequent Experience: 1955-6 Clerk to Chief Justice Warren, 1956-7 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1957-8 Covington 8: Burling, 1958-9 Assistant U.S. Attorney, Washington, D.C., 1959 Consultant U.S. Senate Com- mittee on Foreign Relations, 1959-64 Professor at Uni- versity of California fBerkeleyJ Law School: Married: 1954 to the former Ioan Lebold, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1964 as Visiting Professor, Professor in 1965g Subjects.' Modernization of Law in East Asia, Chinese Attitudes Toward International Law, Law and Society in Comparative Perspectiveg Publications: The Criminal Proc- ess in the People's Republic of China, 1949-1963: An Introduction C1968J, Contemporary Chinese Law: Research Problems and Perspectives 1197033 Legal Activities: Chair- man of the Subcommittee on Chinese Law of the Joint Committee on Contemporary China of the American Council of Learned Societies and Social Science Research Council, Chairman of the Panel on China and Inter- national Order of Review of the American Society of International Law, Member of Executive Committee and Chairman of the Committee on Research and Develop- ment of the Association of Asian Studies. PAUL M. BATOR Professor of Law Born: Budapest, Hungary, 1929, Education: A.B. CHistoryJ Princeton 1951, M.A. CHistoryJ Harvard 1953, LL.B. Harvard 19563 Subsequent Experience: 1956-7 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1957-9 Debevoise, Plimpton 8a McLean, New Yorkg Married: 1956 to the former Alice Hoag, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1959 as Assistant Professor, Professor in 1962: Subjects: Administrative Law, Civil Procedure: Legal Activity.' Reporter for the ALI Pre-Arraign- ment Project. CMM WL- Sain, if sk ANDREW L. KAUFMAN Professor of Law Born: Newark, New Jersey, 1931g Education: A.B. CHistoryJ Harvard 1951, LL.B. Harvard 1954g Subsequent Experience: 1955-7 Clerk to Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1957-65 Kaufman, Kaufman and Kaufman, Newark, Married: to the former Linda Sonnenschein, four children, Joined the Faculty: 1965 as Lecturer on Law, Professor in 1966g Subjects: Constitutional Law, Commercial Transactions, The Legal Professiong Publication: Justice Benjamin Cardozo, in Mr. Justice. WILLIAM D. ANDREWS Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1931g Education: A.B. fEnglishJ Amherst 1952, LL.B. Harvard 19555 Subsequent Experience: 1955-8 U.S. Navy, 1958-61 Ropes and Gray, Bostong Married: 1956 to the former Shirley Herrman, six childreng Joined the Faculty: 1961 as Lecturer on Law, Assistant Professor in 1963, Professor in 1965g Subject: Taxationg Publications: The Stockho1der's Right to Equal Opportunity in the Sale of Shares. 78 Harv. L. Rev., Out of its Earnings and Profitsg Some Reflections on the Taxation of Dividends, 69 Harv. L. Rev., The Acces- sions Tax Proposal in Federal Estate and Gift Taxation, American Law Institute 09691, Federal Income Taxation -Cases, Problems and Notes C1969Jg Legal Activity: As- sociate Reporter for the Accessions Tax Proposal in the ALI Estate and Gift Tax Project. 52 2 W lf , , ru ii if. .,: ,f til it My fl ll M HENRY JACOB STEINER Professor of Law Born: Mt. Vernon, New York, 1930g Education: B.A. fModern European History and Literaturel Harvard 1951, M.A. Clnternational Affairsj Harvard 1955, LL.B. Harvard 19553 Subsequent Experience: 1955-6 Sheldon Travelling Fellow, 1957-8 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1958-61 Sullivan and Cromwell, New York, 1962 Consultant to the Agency for International Development, 1966-present Consultant to the Ford Foundation on Latin Americag Joined the Faculty: 1962, Subjects: Transnational Legal Problems, Law and Development, Legal Method, Publica- tion: Transnational Legal Problems Cco-authorl C1968Jg Legal Activity: Consultant to the Ford Foundation on Latin America 1966-69, Visiting professor and researcher in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1968-69. . 1 fa-.Vw is K ei-Quia-LJ-Lea. it 4 it ,z 7 ': -,,' , . 6 1 wil, si-fggfr -1 . '1 ' Will. AKD ,I fn- .. 'till P f file... A if A ia: 1-'g sm' 'Sl'.Ca,tl,2Tfz cl'- tt tv .wt-1-f J -.,- 5 ,-ts4.,!t RODERICK M. HILLS Visiting Professor of Law Born: Seattle, Wash., 193lg Education: A.B. Stan- ford University 1952, LL.B. Stanford University School of Law 1955, Subsequent Experience: 1955- 57 Clerk to Mr. Justice Reed, 1957-62 Musick, Peeler 8: Garrett CLos Angelesb, since 1962 a partner in Munger, Tolles, Hills 8: Rickershauserg Married: 1958 to the former Carla Anderson, three childreng Subjects Collective Bargaining, Economicsg Publica- tion: A Close Look at Three Administration Policies C1964Jg Legal Activities: American Bar Foundation fResearch Committeej, Lecturer in Law at Stan- ford University, Executive Committee of Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights CLos Angelesjg Extra- legal Activities: Campaign Manager for Senator Thomas H. Kuchel, Los Angeles Campaign Man- ager for Huston I. Flournoy fController of State of Californial. 54 Z' GUIDO CALABRESI Visiting Professor of Law Born: Milan, Italy, 1932g Education: B.S. CAnalytica1 Eco- nomicsj Yale 1953, B.A. CPolitics, Philosophy and Econom- icsj Madgalen College, Oxford 1955, LL.B. Yale 1958, M.A. Oxford 1959, M.A. Yale 19623 Subsequent Experience: 1958- 59 Clerk to Mr. Justice Black, 1959-61 Assistant Professor at Yale, since 1962 Professor at Yale, 1969 Visiting Professor at U. of Florence, Italyg Married: 1961 to the former Anne Gordon Audubon Tyler, three childreng Subjects: Torts, Prob- lems in the Relation of Legal and Economic Reasoning, The Functions of Accident Lawg Publications: The Costs of Ac- cidents: A Legal and Economic Analysis C1970J, The Deci- sion for Accidents: An Approach to Non-fault Allocation of Costs , 78 Harv. L. Rev. 09653, Various other articles on tort lawg Legal Activities: Governor's Commission on Medico- legal Investigations CConn.J, Committee on Legal Issues in Health Care tDuke U. Law Schooll, Consultant to the Department of Transportation on Auto-Insurance, Extralegal Activities: Director of Dixwell Community House CNew Havenj, New Haven Civil Liberties Counsel, Board of Edu- cation in Woodbridge, Conn., Democratic Town Committee CWoodbridgeJ. F DAVID L. SHAPIRO Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1932g Education: A.B. CGovernmentJ Harvard 1954, LL.B. Harvard 1957: Sub- sequent Experience: 1957-62 Covington 8: Burling, Wash- ington, 1962-3 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlang Married: 1954 to the former Jane Bennett, one childg Joined the Faculty: 19633 Subjects: Civil Procedure, Administrative Law, Pub- lications: Some Thoughts on Intervention Before Courts, Agencies, and Arbitrators, 81 Harv. L. Rev., The Choice of Rulemaking or Adjudication in the Development of Administrative Policy. 78 Harv. L. Rev., Editor, The Evolution of a Judicial Philosophy: Selected Opinions and Papers of Justice Jolzn M. Harlan: Legal Activities: 1963- 5 Assistant Reporter for the ALI study on the Division of Jurisdiction Between State and Federal Courts, Re- porter for the ABA Advisory Committee on Fair Trial and Free Press 1965-8. We iffy- 55 l L' - AWA it FRANK I. MICHELMAN Professor of Law Born: New Rochelle, New York, 1936, Edu- cation: B.A. CHistoryJ Yale 1957, LL.B. Harvard 1960: Subsequent Experience: 1960-61 Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays 8: Handler, New York, 1961-2 Clerk to Mr. Justice Brennan, 1962-3 Special Assistant to the Assistant Attorney Gen- eral for the Tax Division of the U.S. Depart- ment of Justiceg Married: 1958 to the former Ellen Elting, three childreng Joined the Faculty: 1963g Subjects: Local Government Law, Prop- erty, Publications: Foreward: Protecting the Poor Through the Fourteenth Amendment, 83 Harv. L. Rev. 119693, Property, Utility and Fairness: Comments on the Ethical Foundations of 'Just Compensation Law,' 80 Harv. L. Rev., State Power to Govern Concerted Employee Activities, 74 Harv. L. Rev., Materials on Gov- -ernment in Urban Areas Cco-authorj 096933 Legal Activities: Member, Steering Committee, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Boston Urban Areas Projectg Extralegal Activities: Massachusetts Educational Development Com- mission, Committee for Community Educational Development, Lexington Commission on Subur- ban Responsibility. 56 ' 941.9-1 MELVIN ARON EISENBERG Visiting Professor of Law Born: New York, N.Y,, 1934, Education: A.B. fEnglishl Columbia 1956, LL.B. Harvard 1959: Subsequent Experi- ence: 1959-66 Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays 8z Handler, 1966-69 Acting Professor of Law at U. of California fBerkeleyJ, since 1969 Professor of Law at Berkeleyg Married: 1956 to the former Helen Garlitz, two children: Subjects: Contracts, Corporationsg Publication: The Legal Roles of Shareholders and Management in Modern Cor- porate Decisionmakingjl 57 California L. Rev. 1 6196915 Extralegal Activities: Assistant Counsel to the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, Various Mayor's Task Forces in New York City. U. .,, ,Wt in Wi as ee Hgh, . 5555 CHARLES FRIED Professor of Law Born: Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1935 g Education: A.B. CFrench and English Literaturej Princeton 1956, B.A. CLawJ Oxford 1958, LL.B. Columbia 1960, Subsequent Experience: 1960-1 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1961-2 Special Consultant to the Treasury Departmentg Married: 1959 to the former Anne Summerscale, two childreng Joined the Faculty: 1961 g Subjects: Torts, Jurisprudenceg Publications: Privacy, 77 Yale L. J., Reason and Action, 11 Natural Law Forum, Natural Law and the Concept of Justice, 74 Ethics, Moral Causationf' 77 Harv. L. Rev., Two Concepts of Interest-Reflections on the Supreme Court's Balancing Test, 76 Harv. L. Rev.: Legal Activity: Associate Reporter for the ALI Pre- Arraignment Code. On leave first semester 1969- 70. cuatuiw -A ...ai - 3 ' ,su v, se: . 1,1 Lgefsuf, , ' .,us1lf:aat,q i e 3-tl : ,ai-I 114, fdwmu STEPHEN GERALD BREYER Assistant Professor of Law Born: San Francisco, California, 1938g Education: A.B, fPhx1osophyJ Stanford 1959, B.A. CPhilosophy, Politics, Economicsj Oxford 1961, LL.B. Harvard 19645 Subsequent Experience: 1964-5 Clerk to Mr. Justice Goldberg, 1965-7 Special Assistant to the As- sistant Attorney General fantitrustjg Married: 1967 to the former Joanna Hare, Joined the Faculty: 19673 Subjects: Antitrust, Evidence. -UG LLOYD L. WEINREB Professor of Law Born: New York, New York, 1936g Education: A.B. fGovernmentJ Dartmouth 1957, A.B. CPhilosophyJ Oxford 1959, M.A. Oxford 1963, LL.B. Harvard 19625 Subsequent Experience: Clerk to Judge Lumbard 12d Cir.J, Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1964-5 Attorney with the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justiceg Married: 1963 to the former Ruth Plaut, one child, Joined the Faculty: 1965, Professor in 19685 Subjects: Criminal Law, Criminal Process, Law and Social Orderg Legal Activities: U.S. Commissioner for the District of Massachusetts. On leave 1969-70. me is -Q , .T , .V : we Www- , .,.., I-x 1 : 1 I -.VE -ar., r 'Sw'-W M .-Q , ' nn uw I I0 I1 ll IQ u' H A CHARLES R. NESSON Professor of Law Born: Boston, Mass., 1939g Education: A.B. CMathJ Harvard 1960, LL.B. Harvard 1963g Subsequent Experi- ence: 1964 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1965 Sheldon Traveling Fellow, 1966 Special Assistant to Civil Rights Division of Justice Departmentg Married: to the former Sally Cookg Joined the Faculty: 19665 Subjects: Property, DLI, Land Development, Race Relations Seminar, Pub- lication: Earnings and Profits Discontinuitiesj' 77 Harv. L. Rev. 60 S 1 as-ls LAURENCE H. TRIBE Assistant Professor of Law Born: Shanghai, China, 19415 Education: A.B. CMathe- maticsl Harvard 1962, CNSF Fellow and Woodrow Wilson Fellowj Harvard 1962-63, LL.B. Harvard 1966g Sub- sequent Experience: 1966-67 Clerk to Justice Tobriner of the Supreme Court of California, 1967-68 Clerk to Mr. Justice Stewart, 1968-69 Executive Director, Technology Assessment Panel, National Academy of Sciencesg Mar- ried: 1964 to the former Carolyn Ricarda Kreye, one childg Joined Faculty: 1968 as Assistant Professorg Sub- jects: Evidence, Seminar on Legal Process and Tech- nological Changeg Publications: Numerical Solution of Ill-Conditioned Linear Systems 119595, Technology: Processes of Assessment and Choice t1969Jg Legal Activities: Member of the Panel on International Law and Science, American Society for International Law, Lecturer in Constitutional Law and Criminal Procedure for the Illinois Barg Extralegal Activities: Member of the Society for Ethical and Legal Philosophy, Research As- sociate to the Harvard Program on Technology and Society. Yae- ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ Professor of Law Born: Brooklyn, New York, 1938, Education: B.A. CPolitical Sciencel Brooklyn College 1959, LL.B. Yale 19625 Subsequent Experience: 1962-3 Clerk to Chief Judge Bazelon CD.C. Cir.J, 1963- 4 Clerk to Mr. Justice Goldbergg Married: 1959 to the former Sue Barlach, two children, Joined the Faculty: 19643 Subjects: Criminal Law, Predic- tion and Prevention of Harmful Conduct, Psycho- analytic Theory and Legal Assumptions, Publica- tion: Psychoanalysis, Psychiatry and the Law fco- authorj C1967Jg Extralegal Activities: Consultant at the National Institue of Mental Health, Instructor at McLean Hospital, National Board of the ACLU. DERRICK A. BELL, JR. Lecturer on Law B0rn.' Pittsburgh, Pa., 1930, Education: A.B. fPolitical Sciencej Duquesne 1952, LL.B. U. of Pittsburgh June 1957, Subsequent Experience: 1957-59 Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Depart- ment of Justice, 1959-60 Executive Secretary of Pittsburgh Branch NAACP, 1960-66 Staff At- torney for NAACP Legal Defense and Educa- tional Fund, Inc., 1966-68 Deputy Special As- sistant to the Secretary for Civil Rights, Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare, 1968-69 Director of Western Center on Law 8: Poverty, Married: 1960 to the former Jewel A. Hairston, three children, Subject: Race, Racism 8a American aw. 62 'i'5I... PHILIP BENJAMIN HEYMANN Visiting Lecturer on Law Born: Pittsburgh, Pa., 1932, Education: B.A. fPhilos- ophyj Yale 1954, LL.B. Harvard 1960, Subsequent Expe- rience.' 1960 Clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan, 1961-1965 Solicitor General's Office, 1965-67 Acting Administrator of the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, Depart- ment of State, 1967-69 Executive Assistant to the Under Secretary of State, Married: 1964 to the former Ann Ross, one child, Subjects: Criminal Law, Decision Making. W if M, ALAN ABRAHAM STONE Lecturer on Law Born: Boston, 19295 Education: A.B. Harvard 1950, M.D. Yale 1955g Subsequent Experience: 1955-56 Pedi- atric Intern at Yale, 1956-58 Resident in Psychiatry at McLean Hospital, 1959-61 U.S. Army Medical Corps, 1961-62 Special NIMH Research Fellow at McLean Hos- pital, 1962-68 Director of Resident Education at McLean Hospitalg Married: 1952 to the former Sue Smart, three childreng Joined Faculty: 1968 as Visiting Lecturer in Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis, 1969 Lecturer on Lawg Subjects.' Human Relations Problems in Legal Practice, Psychoanalytic Theory and Legal Assumptions, Law in a Changing Societyg Publications: Longitudinal Studies of Child Personality fco-authorl 119593, The Abnormal Personality Through Literature Ceo-authorj f1966Jg Legal Activities: Chairman of the Committee on Pyschiatry and Law of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Member of the Advisory Board to Projects on Mentally Ill and the Law of the American Bar Foundation, Mem- ber of the Governor's Commission for the Revision of the Criminal Codeg Extralegal Activity: Boston Psycho- analytic Society and Institute. JOHN MAXWELL FERREN Lecturer on Law and Director of the Legal Services Program Born: Kansas City, Mo., 19375 Educa- tion: A.B. Harvard 1959, LL.B. Harvard 19625 Subsequent Experience: 1962-66 Kirk- land, Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetz St Masters lChicago1, 1966-68 Director of the Harvard Neighborhood Law Office Program: Mar- ried: 1961 to the former Ann Elizabeth Speidel, two childreng Joined Faculty: 1968 as Director of the Legal Service Program and Teaching Fellow: Subjects: The Pro- vision of Legal Services. Workshop in Ur- ban Problems, Issues in Clinical-Legal Edu- cation: Publications: several articles: Legal Activity: Chairman of the Committee on Legal Services to the Poor of the Massa- chusetts Bar Association: Evtralegal Ac- tivity: Chairman of the Graduate Program in Clinical-Legal Education. 63 PETER F. COOGAN Lecturer on Law Mr. Coogan is a partner in the Boston firm of Ropes and Gray. He has taught as lecturer here from 1957 to 1963 and from 1966 to the present. He is currently teaching along with Professor Countryman a course in ' ' Reorganizations. LL.M. Harvard 1942. WILLIAM J. CURRAN Lecturer in Legal Medicine Mr. Curran was appointed.in 1968 to the position of Professor of Legal Medicine at the Medical School of Public Health. He has been a lecturer in Legal Medicine at the Law School since 1957. He has written many articles in legal and medical journals as well as texts and other books. He is currently teaching a seminar on Medico-Legal Problems. Born: 1925, Boston. Mass. LL.B. Boston College 19503 LL.M. Harvard 1951, S.M. Hyg. Harvard 1958. JAMES PATRICK LYNCH, JR. Mr. Lynch is a partner in the Boston firm of Nutter, McClennen 8: Fish, specializing in trial practice. He is currently teaching a third- year section in Trial Practice. A.B. Holy Cross 1943: LL.B. Boston College 1949. 64 Born: 1904, Watertown, Wis. LL.B. Western Reserve l939g M.A. Boston U. 19413 JEROME PAUL FACHER Lecturer on Law Mr. Facher joined the firm of Hale and Dorr in 1959, where he became a partner in 1962, specializing in litigation. He is currently teaching two sections in Trial Practice. Born: 1925, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Pennsylvania State University l946g LL.B. Harvard 1 1. Lecturer on Law DAVID S NELSON Lecturer on Law JAMES D. ST. CLAIR Lecturer on Law Mr. St. Clair is well known as the lawyer who represented Dr. Spock in the Con- spiracy case of 1968. He is a partner with Hale 8: Dorr, and has been teaching a sec- tion in Trial Practice at the Law School since 1958. Born: 1920, Akron, Ohio B.A. U, of Illinoisg LL.B. Harvard 1944. I, LEWIS H. WEINSTEIN Lecturer on Law Mr. Weinstein has been a partner in the Boston firm of Foley, Hoag and Eliot since 1946. He has been very active in 'Iocal, state, and national bar associations, serving on many committees. He has been a Lec- turer on Law at Harvard since 1960 and currently teaches Trial Practice. . Mr. Nelson has been very active in community affairs despite the fact that he is a partner in the Boston firm of Crane, Inker 8: Oteri. He is currently teaching a course in Trial Practice. Born: 1933, Boston, Mass. B.S. Boston College 19575 J.D. Boston College 1960 1906. Born: 1905, Lithuania brought to USA A.B. Harvard 1927 LLB Harvard 1930 ERNEST J. SARGEANT Lecturer on Law Mr. Sargeant is a partner at the Boston firm of Ropes and Gray. He has been a lecturer at the Law School since 1962, when he taught the second half of Professor Surrey's Tax course. He is now teaching a seminar in Corporate Planning and Counseling. Born: 1918, Spokane, Wash. A.B. Harvard 1940, LL.B. Harvard 1947. Mr R mer is a artner in the Boston WILLIAM WAYNE RYMER Lecturer on Law - Y P firm of Fish, Richardson 8: Neave. He has been a lecturer at the Law School since 1967. He is currently teaching a course in Patents and Trademarks. Born: 1922, Benton, Tenn. B.S. U. of Tennessee 1943, LL.B. Harvard 1950. .Ez ril9i?5iffn'ii? ' , , ' ' 1, QW at SE x il ,fi 5 vi - ,N , ei is H 'inzr u esta Vl':' A '-Gigi 1 Z ' Administration 66 WILLIAM L. BRUCE Vice Dean of the Law School Mr. Bruce graduated from the Law School in 1951. Until January 1956 he was in private practice in Providence, Rhode Island, with the firm of Edwards and Angell. He is a member of the Rhode Island, Massachusetts and United States Supreme Court Bars and of the Boston and American Bar Associations. Mr. Bruce came to the Law School in 1956 as Assistant Dean. In addition to his duties as Assistant Dean he has served as alumni secre- tary of the Law School as the person generally in charge of the Placement Office. Mr. Bruce served as Secretary of the Law School from 1966-69. He is associate director of the con- tinuing legal education programs of the Law School and is in charge of student Financial Aid Programs. In 1969 he was appointed Vice Dean of the Law School. Born: 1924, Lowell, Massachusetts. A.B. 1946 6194833 LL.B. Harvard 1951. WESLEY E. BEVINS, JR. Assistant Dean and Director of the Harvard Law School Fund Mr. Bevins entered the Law School in 1946 after having served with the Third Army in Europe. After graduation in 1948 and admission to the Massachusetts Bar, he was named the Executive Director of the Har- vard Law School Fund for the Massachusetts area. In January of 1950, Mr. Bevins joined the Adminis- trative Staff as an Assistant Dean. In addition to his duties as Director of the Harvard Law School Fund, he is in charge of the offices and personnel responsible for alumni relations. Mr. Bevins is a Lt. Colonel in the Army Reserve and acts as adviser to students in regard to their military obligations. Born: 1918, Peabody, Massachusetts. B.S. Bowdoin 1941g LL.B. Harvard 1948. STEPHEN M. BERNARDI Assistant Dean and Secretary of the Law School Mr. Bernardi stepped up to his present po- sition this year after having served two years as the Associate Director of the Law School's Sesquicentennial Fund. Upon graduation from Harvard in 1955, he worked for eleven years for the firm of Squire Sanders 8: Dempsey in Cleveland, Ohio. He returned to the Law School in 1966 to become the Assistant Director of the Sesqui- centennial Fund. Born: 1931, Worcester, Mass. B.A. Harvard 1952, LL.B. Harvard 1955 EARL C. BORGESON Librarian Mr. Borgeson attended the University of Minnesota from 1940 to 1942, returning from the Navy in 1946 to complete his studies. Mr. Borgeson received his formal training in librarianship at the University of Washington, where he held the post of Assistant Law Librarian. From 1950 to 1952 he was the Assistant Reference Librarian of the Los Angeles County Law Library. In 1952, Mr. Borgeson was appointed Assistant Law Librarian at the Law School, and in 1954 he assumed his present post as Librarian. Born: 1922, Boyd, Minnesota. B.S.L. 1947, LL.B. 1949 Minnesotag A.B. in Law Librarian' ship U. of Washington 1950. 68 WALTER J. LEONARD Assistant Dean and Assistant Director of Admissions and Financial Aid A native of Alma, Georgia, Mr. Leonard is a product of the southern black educational system. He attended Savannah State College from 1947 to 1950, went into the real estate business during the 1950's, and then returned to school to earn his B.A. from Morehouse College in 1961. In 1965, Mr. Leonard gave up his successful business to become a student once more, this time at Howard Law School. He made the Law Review at Howard and upon graduation, he accepted the job of Assistant Dean as well as serving as a Lecturer in Law. Mr. Leonard comes to Harvard this year with high hopes to accomplish his first goal, which is to attract, recruit and develop black legal talent. Born: Alma, Georgia, 1929 B.A. Morehouse College 1961, J.D. Howard Law School 1968 RUSSELL A. SIMPSON Assistant Dean and Director of Admissions Mr. Simpson received his B.S. degree from the Uni- versity of Wyoming in 1957. After five years in the Air Force as a jet pilot and flying instructor, he came to Harvard Law School as a student. During the years 1963-5, Mr. Simpson worked part time and summers in the Admissions Office. Following a brief period of private law practice with the firm of Bonilla, dePena, Read 8: Bonilla in Corpus Christi, Texas, Mr. Simpson was Appointed Assistant Dean in January, 1966. On July 1, 1966, he became Director of Admissions. Mr. Simpson is currently serving on the Board of Trustees of the Law School Admissions Test Council and the American Association of Law Schools Com- mittee on Pre-Legal Education and Admission to Law School. Born: 1935, Greybull, Wyoming B.S. University of Wyoming 1957, LL.B. Harvard 1965. DAVID NATHAN SMITH Secretary of International Legal Studies Mr. Smith joined the Administrative Staff of the Law School in 1966 as Secretary of International Legal Studies, and Adviser to Foreign Students. For a year prior to his arrival here, he was an Assistant Attorney General in the Litigation and Claims Division of the New York State Attorney General's Office. In the period after his graduation from law school, Mr. Smith served as an Assistant Director of the In- stitute of Government, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where he published a book on The Law of Confessions and Scientific Evidence. He was awarded a Maxwell School Africa-Asia Public Service Fellowship in 1963, and was assigned to Northern Nigeria as an Inspector of Native Courts with the Min- istry of Justice, Government of North Nigeria. Born: 1936, Saranac Lake, New York. A.B. 1958, LL.B. 1961 Harvard. ELEANOR ROBERTS APPEL Placement Director Secretary for former Vice Dean Toepfer when he started the Placement Office, Miss Appel was so proficient that she was ultimately taken over by the job. In spite of occasional criticism from a sometimes preoccupied student body, Miss Appel continues to adjust and examine the placement process, trying to accommodate the needs and desires of administra- tion, students, and firms. In her spare time, Miss Appel is a member of the Cam- bridge Historical Society, the Cambridge Tennis Club, and the Cambridge Skating Club. A.B. Radcliffe College Teaching Fellows WALTER A. REISER, JR. Director of the Legal Method Program After graduating from the University of South Caro- lina Law School, Mr. Reiser practiced law for several years in Augusta, Georgia. He came to Harvard Law School as a Teaching Fellow in 1965, obtained his LL.M. here, and became Director of the Legal Methods Program in 1967. Aside from his formal duties with the group work, Mr. Reiser counsels law students about their Draft problems. Born: 1922, Augusta, Georgia. B.S. Georgia Tech 19433 LL.B. U of So. Carolina 19553 LL.M. Harvard 1967 SHELDON H. NAHMOD A.B. U. of Chicago '62 LL.B. Harvard '65 we g W H 66:2 ri.. lfgmf' rr MORRIS S. ARNOLD B.S. U. of Arkansas 65 LL.B. U. of Arkansas '68 JOSEPH D. HOWE B.A. U. of Arizona '60 LL.B. U. of Arizona '61 CHARLES H. JONES, JR. J.D. U. of Chxcago 65 DANIEL A. DEGNAN B.S. Georgetown '50 LL.B. Seton Hall '54 MERLE W. LOPER B.A. Northwestern '62 J.D. U. of Chicago '65 THOMAS G. HERVEY B.A. Wooster 65 55 LL.B. Harvard '68 Z. - - . ' . -. . I rg 7 V J. . , V- 1 Y tw' QB ,L N ,X ,,,- , --WL V M if P ,QM i --x Y L I-WI, -A Q-'A-Y, v 4 ' Yrfrv- Y v' Q- . , -,g,g- 1 5 - - M-, mv - rv ir in I- '- Y 1 Z A4 WL ,A 3. ,E 5 vf--W , ' Q u ' Y- , R ' A - R ' +V WL L . M- - - -Q,-,g L M -r 1 l - -. E A it I , Ai- H rv -on- M 'f-Q-. Y -ind- -..-, - T 1, , ,L L g 35 ...- aff - M-'Aw ,fwwwm ,A Q--Q... Y K f - ...rwwwlmmw ..,,, , Y I it A -,, Q - --.- A 1 I .WgWg::p.4gx W f '.-- V- if-0 dw: A ,W K I f Y- Y -Y f www f M-QM M w -ff -f:fff,f,:1vPt L4:..W:' W ,, ,A --1-5. I. H - --' 1 1 ap- ., . , -Y -- .v..,.,.wM,MW , Q Key to Activities B.8tB. ..,.......4........... Bull 84 Bear B.L.S.A. ..,, Black Law Students Association Camb.L.S.. .Cambridge Legal Service Project C.L.R.D. ..... Committee on Legal Research of the Draft Comp. Com.. . , ..... Computer Committee C.R.-L.R.. . . Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review C.R.-C.L. .,....., Civil Rights-Civil Liberties C.L.A.O. .i.,. . Dem. 4..,,. . Community Legal Assistance Project . ,..i...,. ,.... D emocrats Dorm. C. ,..,...,..,,.. Dormitory Council Drama Soc. ,.......,....... Drama Society Forum ..........,...,..,.... HLS Forum H.L.C.S. ...,.... Harvard Law Conservation Society I.L.C.. . I.L.J. ...,,. . Joint Com. , L.I. ..... . . . . .International Law Club . . . .International Law Journal . . . . . .Joint Committee on Law School Governance Lincoln'sJnn L.R. ,........,......... .,.... L aw Review Leg. Res.. . . . Legislative Research Bureau Legal Aid .,......,,.... Legal Aid Bureau ...,........., Philips Brooks House Prison L.A.P. .... ..Prison Legal Assistance Record . . Rep. .....,,, . Wtg. Prog. . . S. Bar .,... So. C. ..... . S. T. More. . . Stud. D. A... . U. Rel. Com. Vol. Def.. . . Yearbook . . . Project . . . .Harvard Law Record . . . . .... Republicans SecondYear Writing Program . . . . . Student Bar . . . . . .Southern Club . .,.. St. Thomas More . . . . . . . .Student District Attorney Project . .Committee on Relations with the University . . , .Voluntary Defenders Yearbook Students fi. ., 1. 7' ,X 8 . 'LQ'-rl' -'I' .3 it f' if 2 ' TQ I N 'is' , A -:EP ara' Left SYED AHMED, Dacca, Pakistan, Tax. Right GEORGE WITOLD ALEXANDROWICZ, U. of Toronto '64, Harvard '67, 131 Linden Ave., Scarborough, Ont., Can. VICTOR NARCISO ALIMURUNG, Ateneo U. CPhilippinesJ '64, '68, 16 Apo St., Quezon City, Philippines. Left MARY HOWARTH ARDEN, Girton Coll. QCam- bridgej '68, '69, Alvanley House, Farr Hall Dr., Cheshire L60, 4SF, U.K., Marshall. Right LELAND BADLER, N.Y.U. '48, Columbia '51, I I I Old Country Rd., Hicksville, N.Y. JOHN MICHAEL BAIGENT, Dalhousie Law School '69, PurcelI's Cove, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Can. Lek T. ALBERTO BALTODANO, U. of Nicaragua '64, Banco Central de Nicaragua, Managua D.N., Nicaragua. Right DOMINIQUE JACQUES BLANCO, U. of Paris, I72 Avenue du Maine, Paris, Fr. GERALD HENRY BLESSEY, U. of Mississippi '64, '66, 215 Holley St., Biloxi, Miss. Left ERNEST ARTHUR BRATT, St. Mary's Coll. '43, Universidad Central de Venezuela '69, Calle Paris, Edif. Orotava lo piso, Las Mercedes, Caracas, Venez. Right THIERRY BROCAS, U. of Paris '67, 8 Blvd. Richard Wallace, Nevilly, Fr. KEE-FONG CHEONG, U. of Singapore '68, 216 Jalan Pudu, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Left JOSEPH LACY CHURCHILL, U. of N. Carolina '66, Washington 8: Lee '69, 2626 Crystal Spring Ave., Roanoke, Va. Right DAN CIOBANU, U. of Bucharest '58, 9 Judetului, Bucharest, Romania. ANATOLIJ CORK, A.N.U. KCanberraJ '69, 5 Savery St., Garran, Canberra A.C.T., Austl. Left LUIS PABLO COSTAS, ELENA, Johns Hopkins '66, U. of Puerto Rico '69, P.O. Box 2004, Ponce, P.R., S.T. More, Rep., L.l. Right PIERRE DELISLE, College des Jesuites CQuebecJ '65, Universite de Laval '68, 3057, Laforest No. 13, Ste.-Foy, Quebec, Can. SAMUEL IGNACIO DEL VILLA R, Instituto Combres '62, Universidad Nal. Aut. de Mexico '68, Monte Elbruz 108, Mexico D.F., Mexico, I.L.C. , . l 'I Ia: . J '- i L15 ' 21- ' Eggs, ..: .1 .Qg.-'te-.... w .-432: I 23153.-Fa , R 'I W J ' .1 4 H. ,U ' . zrxzzizfffin A tt n 'et , mae. A l y I Ai - f'T ' ', L 'I 'iirfi' . A :ga S ii v' , 3' ,lf , 1 I 5 A1 fe awww- V V- . Left WINSTON RANDOLPH DEVONISH, Enter- prise-Guyana, South London Coll. fEnglandJ '64, 217 Lamaha St., Cummingsburg, Georgetown, Guyana. GARY VICTOR DUBIN, U.S.C. '60, N.Y.U. '63, 375 Harvard St., Apt. l8, Cambridge, Mass. Right LAURENCE EDWARD ECK, Montana State '66, U. of Montana '69, I0 W. Garfield, Bozeman. Mont. Left TATRASHI EJIVI, Tokyo U. '68, 3-2-3 Yawata Ichikawa, Chiba Pre., Japan. RICHARD HOLT ELLIS, U.S.A.F, Academy '64, S.M.U. '68, 24 Chester Ave., Aldan, Pa. Right JULIO FAUNDEZ B., Catholic U. tSantiagoD '68, Pontevedra 7056, Santiago, Chile., I.L.C. Lej7 DANIEL WILLIAM FESSLER, Georgetown '63, '66, 2828 Deming Blvd., Cheyenne, Wyo., S.T. More, Rep., L.l. EDWARD CARL FISCH, U. of Penn. '65, U. of Pittsburgh '68, 16 Walnut St., Arlington, Mass. Right LUCY SCHOW FORRESTER, Agnes Scott Coll. '62, Emory '66, 329 Sumpter Ave., Bowling Green, Ky. Left GABRIEL MAURICE FORTIN, Universite de Laval '59, U. de Montreal '62, '65, 378 St. Jerome Ave., Matane, Quebec, Can. DIETRICH EINHARD FRANKE, Bonn U. '68, 5A Poppelsdorfer-Allee, Bonn, Ger. Right HUGH JOHN GIBSON, Trinity Coll. IDublinJ '68, 4 Harberton Ave., Belfast, N. Ire., I.L.C. Lej? LORNE GIROUX, Universite de Laval '65, '68, 1870 Pelletier, Trois-Rivieres P.Q., Can. THOMAS RYAN GOODWIN, W. Virginia U. '66, '69, l565 Jackson St., Charleston, W.Va. Right MARTIN DAVID MINSKER, Cornell '64, Har- vard '69, 47 Irving St., Cambridge, Mass. Left EDWIN WEBSTER HECKER, JR., Oakland U. '66, Wayne Law School '69, 4640 Burnley Dr., Bloomfield Hills, Mich. GARY LEE HERFEL, 2221 Memorial Pkwy., Ft. Thomas, Ky. Right OTTO JOSEPH HETZEL, Penn. State '55, Yale '60, 24 Pudding Stone Lane, Newton, Mass. Graduate Students rftmtzziziv .3 im ii 1155.-M - si. . tstiziafritbi .Mil Wm QW il,-,Hgf , Niiix i at .,x'-.- it s I. 53 'ex I . f 1 - C., A , . 8 ' J ,, , -w,,..., -ww ,C amy.: , H Vp,-ff ::, r TW? 5 g If , li 1 .. l-N .. Y , N U, il 'A Sig W I . . 7 . f X 'ui 1 I IF' ' 3, 1? if if X s V' tm- 75 Left ELBERT C. HODGE, JR., Box 22567, Jackson, Miss. Right TIMOTHY JOSEPH HOFF, Tulane '63, 993 Gary St., Sarasota, Fla., I.L.C. PATRICIA ANN HOLLANDER, St. Louis U. '49, '52, 30 Foxcroft Lane, Williamsville, N.Y., Sp. Lei CARL ARTHUR ANDREW HOLM, 16 Dutch Village Rd., Halifax, Nova Scotia, Can. Right PETER DeWITT HYMAN, U. of So. Carolina '54, 904 Lorraine Dr., Florence, S.C. HIROYUKI ITO, Tokyo U. '60, 528 Takami-cho tikusa-ku, Nagoya, Japan. Tax Leh TOKUJI IZUMI, Kyoto U. '61, Nishitanaka, Asahi-cho Niu-gun, Fukui-ken, Japan. Right RICHARD BRINDLEY JONES, U. of Toronto '64, '67, ll King St. W., Toronto 1, Ontario, Canada. AARON JU RKEVITZ, Hebrew U. '66, Columbia '68, 26 Pumbadita St., Tel-Avi, Israel. Lek JOHN WINSTON KATENDE, U. of E. Africa '69, Box 195 Mukono, Uganda, I.L.C. Right MICHAEL MERVYN KATZ, U. of Witwa- tersrand '65, '67, 28 Judith Rd., Emmarentia, Johannesburg Transvaal, S. Afr., Marshall, I.L.C. MANFRED CHRISTIAN KLETTE, Utbremer Strasse I05, 28 Bremen, Ger., I.L.C. Left JAMES MARSHALL KRAMON, Carnegie Inst. of Tech. '66, George Washington '69, 40 E. 84th St., New York, N.Y. Right VOLKMAR LAUBER, B.E.A. Graz-Liebenau '62, U. of Vienna '68, Kaiser Josef Platz 47, Wels, Aus- tria. MIGUEL DEMETRIO LAUSELL, Villanova '66, U. of Puerto Rico '69, Calle Rome D-14, Ext. Villa Caparra, Bayamon, P.R. Left HELENE SUZANNE LE BEL, U. of Montreal '63, '66, Harvard '68, 40 Marsolais St., Apt. 3, Mon- treal, Quebec, Can., I.L.C. Right JEAN-PIERRE LEU, U. of Geneva '64, '68, 32, ch. des Buclines, 1253 Vandoeuvres, Switz. Tax. LYNN MICHAEL LOPUCKI, U. of Michigan '65, '67, 2874 Sorrento, Ann Arbor, Mich. in E22 ' ' J, lt i :,::-: I ' in , , Y. 7 N. . W i f ... T ,A 1 -' f -.. Q :::1 -' 6 9- v A was i ii -fee - r . ' l ' S as l l Q Left ANDREW MANQUNTE LUKELE, Witwa- tersrand U. '53, U. of S. Africa '56, P.O. Box 366, Mbabane, Swaziland. Right ROBERT ANDREW MCGECHAN, Victoria U. of Wellington '67, 19 Crawford rd., Wellington, N.Z., I.L.C. JAMES E. MANN, Rutgers '66, '69, 24 Peabody Terr. Apt. 613 Cambridge, Mass. Left JEAN-PIERRE MEAN, Ave. Davel 10, Lausanne, Vaud, Switz, I.L.C. Right NEIL JOSEPH MURPHY, Chester, Iowa. HOSHANG DHANJISHA NANAVATI, St. Xaviers Coll. CBombayJ '59, Govt. Law Coll. tBom- bayj '61, Avan Lodge , 3SA, Pali Hill, Bandra, Bombay, India. Lej? GETAHUN NEGASH, U. Coll. of Addis Ababa '60, Ministry of Finance, P.O. Box 1905, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Tax. Right AKINTUNDE OLUSEGUN OBILADE, U. of Lagos CNigeriaJ, Faculty of Law, U. of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria, Marshall, I.L.C. AGWU UKIWE OKALI, London School of Economics '68, Ndi Onukpunta, Ameke, Abiriba, Biafra., I.L.C. Left MOSES BAMIDELE OYEBAMIJ1, Ahmadu Bello U. '69, clo St. Andrew's Church, Edidi, Otun-Oro, Via llorin, Nigeria, I.L.C. Right ROBERTO L. PORTELLA, Andrews Coll. '62, Guanabara U. '67, Gen. Cristovao Barcelos, Apt. 25, Rio de Janeiro, Guanabara, Braz., I.L.C. PIERRE de RAVEL d'ESCLAPON, U. de Besangon '62, U. of Montreal '69, 30 Blvd. Pasteur, 25-Pontarlier, France, I.L.C., L.l., B.8LB. Left HERIBERT RAUSCH, Literargymnasium fZurichD '61, U. of Zurich '69, Germaniastrasse 81, Zurich, Switz., I.L.C. Right EDWIN RAY RENDER, W. Ky. State Coll. '58, Vanderbilt '62, 1612 Girard Dr., Louisville, Ky. MARCO A. RIGAU, U. of Puerto Rico '65, '69, 1309 Magdalena Ave., Apt. C-61, San Juan, P.R., L.I. Leg? DARRELL WAYNE ROBERTS, U. of British Columbia '60, '63, clo T. D. Dickinson, 6161 Tis- dall St., Vancouver, B.C., Canada, I.L.C. Right RODOLFO DIA ROBLES, San Beda Coll. '63, '67, 4 Park Rd., Forbes Park, Makati, Rizal, Philip- pines. RODRIGO LUIS RODRIGO, U. Catolica del Peru '47, U. de San Marcos '52, Lima Peru, Tax. ,L . -Q if il. ' iii ' n if Q . I ' i - 4123522512 -a .v, A 'KM gn. ,. l, 5 p .fag WX, ,J lf' I '-cv-. ,-ng, 5 'sf 75:-N' I, .A . If N is sl A A A 1,1-1 111 1 Lej? ERNESTO SANCHEZ-AGUILAR, Universidad de Nuevo Leon '67, Matamoros 42 Ote., Torreon Coahvila, Mex., I.L.C., L.R. ANDRE GABRIEL SASSOON, Victoria Coll. '54, Villanova '69, 413 Meadow Lane, Merion Stat. Pa., I.L.C., L.R. Right WILLIAM JAMES SCOTT, U. of Maryland, 4804 Barrymore Dr., Oxon Hill, Md. Left KRISHNA MOHAN SHARMA, U. of Rajasthan '59, M.A. '61, LL.B. '63, LL.M. '65, Harvard LL.M. '68, clo P.D. Sharma, Advocate, Sambhar Lake, Raj., India. WALLACE WALTER SHERWOOD, St. Vincent Coll. '66, National Law Center '69, 23-17 101st., E. Elmhurst, Long Island, N.Y., C.L.A.O. See p. 221. Right YVES G. SICARD, U. of Paris, 22 Rue de Beaune, Paris, France, I.L.C. Left BRUNO LUIZ RIBEIRO da SILVEIRA, Guanabara State Law School '64, Prudente de Moraes 814, Apt. 102, Rio de Janeiro, Guanabara, Brazil, I.L.C. PAUL M. SINGER, U. of Minnesota '65, U. of Pittsburgh '68, 255 S. Murtland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Right PHILLIP NOLAN SMITH, U. of Texas '66, Bay- lor '69, 330 Post Oak, Navasota, Tex. Left GARY L. SMITH, U. of Michigan '66, Wayne State U. '69, 24521 Oneida Blvd., Oak Park, Mich. THOMAS EVERETT SPARKS, JR., Washington 84 Lee '63, U. of Arkansas '68, 2618 Blackwood Rd., Little Rock, Ark. Right M. LESUEUR STEWART, Fisk '63, Indiana U. '64, 1803 E. Broad St., Gadsden, Ala., B.A.L.S.A. Left YOUNG CHUL SUH, Seoul, Korea, Tax. CHARLES WILLIAM SULLIVAN, Boston Coll. '64, '67, 5 Bay State Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Right J. ERIC FLIPPIN SWEET, U. of Cal. CBerkeIeyJ '66, Hastings Coll. of Law '69, 502 Georgina Ave., Santa Monica, Cal., I.L.C. Lej? PARARAJASINGHAM THAMBIPILLAI, 21l2 Hamers Ave., Colombo, Ceylon, Tax. NEELAKANDAN TIRUCHELVAM, U. of Ceylon '66, 48 Rosmead Pl., Colombo, Ceylon. Right RONALD IRWIN TISH, Brooklyn Coll. '66, George Washington '69, 165 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. N, va r iriw A ' tg ' wb' '-'k 4: 'Y' Lej MANAKKAMPAD SREEKUMAR UN- NINAYAR, Kannambra, Zenana Mission Rod, Trichur, Kerala State, India, Tax. Right ALBERTO LIRIO DO VALLE, U. of Guanabara '63, Rua Sao Rafael 22, Ap. 403, Rio, Guanabara, Brazil. MICH ELE C. VANWIJCK, U. of Liege '65, 3 rue du Palais, Verviers, Belgium. Left JOAO AUGUSTO MORAES DE VASCON- CELLOS, Candido Mendes Law School '64, U. of Brazil '66, Gago Coutinho, 94 Apto. 102, Rio de Janeiro, Guanabara, Brazil, I.L.C. Right ROBERT GENE VAUGHN, U. of Oklahoma '66, '69, Box 533, Chickasha, Okla. ANDERS VICTORIN, Szt Eriksgatan 54, Stockholm, Sweden, I.L.C. Left MASSIMO VILLONE, U. of Naples '66, Via Fran- cesco Blundo 54, Naples, Italy. Right RAUL EMILIO VINUESA, U. of Buenos Aires '65, '67, Fletcher School of Law and Dip. '68, Chile 260, San Isidro, Buenos Aires, Argen., I.L.C. CATHERINE ELIZABETH DEBORA WASSEY, Girton Coll. CCambridgeJ '69, I4 Lewes Crescent, Brighton, Sussex, Eng., I.L.C. Left GARETH EADIE WATFORD, U. of Sydney '58, '6I, I8 Billyard Ave., Elizabeth Bay, New South Wales, Austl. Right JAMES PATERSON WATT, U. of Edinburgh '63, '65, 27 Abercorn Crescent, Edinburgh, Scot., Marshall, I.L.C., Vol. Def. JACQUES HENRI WERNER, U. of Geneva, 2 Ave. Paul Chaix, Conches, Geneva, Switz. Left FRANK MOBLEY YOUNG, III, Washington 84 Lee '63, Cumberland' School of Law '69, 36 W. Montcrest Dr., Birmingham, Ala., L.I., So. C., S. Bar. Right EMMANUEL K. ASARE, Ghana U. '59, Central Revenue Dept. P.O. Box 2202, Accra, Ghana, Tax. KENSAKU FUJIKAKE, Meiji U. '60, Prefecture, Japan, Tax. Left JORGE O. GUARDIA, U. of Costa Rica '68, San Jose, Costa Rica, Tax. Riglzr WILLIAM ROSS HILL, JR., Tennessee A Sc I State '63, Howard '66, '69, 1605 Metropolitan Ave. Apt. I0 E, Bronx, N.Y. ELLIOT IRWIN KLAYMAN, U. of Cincinnati '66, '69, 6415 Stover Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio, I.L.C. ',-ae... Graduate Students , vm .. ,u vw K- -? f .t sae a.ta R ' - ' L t ,. :ziff Q. 79 Not Pictured ROBERT F. ABBANAT, Winchester, Mass., Spa. WILLIAM F. AIKMAN, Sp. JONATHAN L. ALPERT, John Hopkins '66, U. of Maryland '69, 1345 N. Venetian Way, Miami, Fla. RICHARD T. ANDREWS, Sp. CECIL GORDON BALE, McGill '58, London '64, 91 King St. E., Kingston, Ont., Can. MICHELE BERG E, Paris, France, Sp. WALKER BLAKEY, Harvard '62, Ohio State '67, 238 College, Wadsworth, Ohio. BERNARD JOSEPH BONN, III, Ohio State '66, U. of Cincin- nati '69, 36 N. Pleasant St., Fairborn, Ohio. CHARNG-V EN CH EN, Taipei, Taiwan. DAVID HERNDON COAR, Syracuse '64, Loyola '69, 1145 N. Center St., Birmingham, Ala. JANE M. COHEN, Lincoln, Mass., Sp. MAURICE deG RASSE FORD, Harvard '59, Harvard Law '62, Dunster D-32, Cambridge, Mass. STEVEN PHILIP FRANKINO, Catholic U. of America '59, '62, Northwestern U. '63, 20 Hubbard Ave., Cambridge, Mass. PETER GERMER, U. of Copenhagen '64, Harvard Law '69, Skelbaekvej 5, Risskov, Denmark, I.L.C. MARTIN JOSEPH GLASSER, W. Virginia U. '66, '69, 171 1 Quarter St., Charleston, W.Va. PATRICIA HASSETT, Elmira '62, Syracuse '66, 861 Hoffman St., Elmira, N.Y. HANS JOACHIN HERRMAN, U. of Hamburg '62, Magdalenen Str., Hamburg, Germany, Sp. THOMAS GREGORY HERVEY, Wooster '65, Harvard '68, 403 23rd. St., N.W., Canton, Ohio. JAMES LESLIE HILDEBRAND, Hamilton '66, Case Western Reserve '69, Four Winds Farm, 10809 Mitchells Mills Rd., Char- don, Ohio, I.L.C. 80 MAURICE J. HOLLAND, JR., Yale '58, Harvard '66, Old Orchard Lane, Boxboro, Mass. LYNN J. HUMMEL, U. of Minn. '61, 337 E. Willow St., De- troit Lakes, Minn. WILLIAM S. HUNTER, Chapman Coll. '66, Hastings Law '69, Rt. 3 Box 111, Chino, Cal. DANIELJ. ISENBERG, San Femando Vall. State '66, Hastings Law '69, 12243 Cantura St., Studio City, Cal. JOSEPH B. KATCHEN, McGill '66, U. of Toronto '69, 800 Prospect Ave., Calgary, Alberta, Can. BRUCE FRANCIS KENNEDY, U. ofCa1. CBerkeleyJ '61, Har- vard '64, Stanford '68, 1 14-E Escondido Village, Stanford, Cal. OTIS H. KING, Houston, Tex. MICHAEL J. LACK, 9 Chauncy St., Cambridge, Mass. RICHARD E. LASTER, Richmond, Va. DAVID JAY LEIBSON, Vanderbilt '66, U. of Louisvile '69, 3252 Lexington Rd., Louisville, Ky. CHARLES B. MOSS, New York, N.Y. NOEL A. NABION, Miami, Fla. ILHAN OZEV, Istanbul, Turkey, Tax. HENRY J. SAVELKOUL, St. Thomas '62, U. of Minnesota '65, 1 100 Cedar, Albert, Minn., Sp. MARSHALL JACOB SEIDMAN, U. of Penn. '47, Harvard '50, 1903 Lantern Lane, Oreland, Pa., C.L.A.O. ANSON H. SMITH, 123 Weir St., Hingham, Mass. Sp. RICHARD W. TILLSON, Sacramento, Cal., Sp. PHENG THENG TAN, U. of Singapore '67, 2 Kampong Lapan, Malacca, Malaysia, I.L.C. HANNO VON BARBY, Gymnasium Bad Ems '61, U. o Cologne '67, 39 Martinsfeld, Cologne, Germany. HAROLD R. WASHINGTON, Johnson C. Smith U. '61 N.Y.U. '67, 1330 Webster Ave., Bronx, N.Y., B.L.S.A. DOUGLAS H. YOUNG, Toronto, Ont., Can. 95655 1 Y F Class of 19 O :V -1 t , l . pin ge 'm - Class of 1970-A Brief History Think back. Think back to that dreary late winter day. There might even have been some snow on the ground. A letter lay in your mailbox. No, it wasn't postmarked New Haven Cthat would come later if at alll, it was from some guy named Simpson! Russell Simpson!! Dean of Admissions Russell Simpson!!! Wow!!!! It was suddenly sunny and warm outside and you were going to Harvard Law School. College was over. Your Spring weekends became spring weeks and you wrote Graduating Senior on all your finals. Diplomas came and you braced yourself for the barrage of booklets, memos and forms which inevitably would be sent to you. You even sent five dollars to some character named Eppenberger COh, my Godj so he could give you the real inside information. Remember turning right at the Lesley College sign at Memorial Drive and Boylston Street and getting your first look at Harvard Square, and standing in line on the steps of Langdell waiting to register? It was so hot and the line was so long. Remember writing your address and telephone num- ber at least forty times on various cards of different colors and picking up that much valued Selective Service Form? And, remember every possible organization grab- bing at you to buy, subscribe, join and sign up for everything but the Army. Even the sanctified Gan- nett House gang was there peddling its wares. Of course you remember all these things just as anyone who ever attended Harvard Law remem- bers. And youill no sooner forget them than you will forget Elsie's specials, Tony, C.L.A.O., Gains- burgers, Fenno, Mr. Green, the Old Mole, Mixers at Harkness, Lesley, Hemenway Gym, Saturday classes, the Hayes Bickford, Crimson Seenies, traf- fic C of all sortsj in Harvard Square, paying a nickle to get off the MTA, Cliffies, the Coop, Bob Risser, Bunky, the World Tree or Winnie-the-Pooh and the Erector Set. These are memories that we all have. Three years provide a lot to be recalled, five hundred separate and u11ique experiences multiply that lot enormously. Hopefully, the things recalled here will be some of the same things you want to remember. But, even more important, when the time comes to recall your days at Harvard Law with a bit more fondness than you might at the present, perhaps this will help you remember all the more. School began in September, 1967, just as it does year after year. You played football behind the Hark Cout-of-bounds were the bushes and the 82 fib- ff'-Y R World Tree, whatever that is supposed to bel. You learned that lawyers like to argue. The fellow down the hall already had all his textbooks bought. You joined the Coop. Dean Griswold told you about all the Phi Bets and Rhodes Scholars in the class fYou even had a beauty queen-where was she??D and the Hark served you a free meal Cwhich you have been paying for ever sincel. You first assignments were posted and your first class was to be Property with Casner fnot bad, he wrote the bookj. You noticed that upperclass- men were laughing and you wondered whyg then it was Monday and you found out. You bought abstract paper and began to work, but the glue tasted so bad that you had to stop both abstracting and working. You didn't sleep at night, but it wasn't because of the guy across the hall typing the had a very soft touchjg it was that damn pump at the bottom of the hole behind Hastings. After the first week of classes it was time for a short vacation to celebrate a birthday. A big J! . QQ . 9 if tan' I . H 'AJ '-, tl-,,1. .Ab 'shi' HY 'Sir-+ 'p-Fira' - , , , , t A 'E' . ' + nl ' . , -, j f 'tp 5, Jgig, p . J .-y ,X F - Jar 0 f ' X.. ' '15 . I 'vi party was planned for the Sesquicentennial of the Law School. The big names-Friendly, Brennan, Riesman, Parsons, Morris et al.--arrived to do things up in style. Warren, C.J., addressed the Sesquicentennial Banquet Cyou wore your tux and got drunkj and one wondered if the top judge could not have done better than he did. Dershowitz and Michelman and Bellow pointed the way for the second 150 years. The Celebration was over and the dignitaries gone. The Griz was off to Washington to become Solicitor General and an era ended. Students at HLS named Rockefeller the GOP favorite and you got bombed four nights in a row at the Ames Club smokers. All those stories about Dorm Council mixers proved true. A. James Casner was appointed Act- ing Dean and vowed to keep a firm hand on the reins Cwho would have expected lessl. You played your first intramural football game and found out that it was not just a game. z E fv, ' ' sk. 4 , .. W ic , c 21. 1 U. . 'Y f bt J w J W , 7, l fi' - ix - . V 1 Q xxx . 3 f - ' ' 4- X . l 5- f : 1 l i if? 1. ,tg H 1 3' 'F' EE ff' The Impossible Dream was an almost, but the Ames Competition unfortunately was for real. Law students marched in Washington to protest Vietnam while the walls in the new dorms were being washed and a head maid was being hired ibut Fast Eddie was still therej. Tom Atkins became the first black ever to win a place on the Boston City Council, but Louise Day Hicks did not become mayor. Attorney Gen- eral Ramsey Clark addressed the Forum and Judith Crist, Joshua Logan and Shirley Clark followed him by examining dirty movies. An anti-Vietnam War committee was formed at HLS. The Democratic Club dumped LBJ. Dorm resi- dents got more liberal parietal hours Cto aid study groups meeting late?J and the Record no-ted that Boston was the Hub of U.S. auto thefts Cno surprise to anyone who had met the man from Midnite Auto Supplyj. The Harvard Law Wives sponsored a Game Night? The Forum scored again with Richard Neustadt, 83 . Lou Cassels, Martin Hayden and Melvin Miller examining The Mass Media CMike Wallace was invited but could not make itg Maryland Governor Spiro T. Agnew was not invitedj. Alumni kicked in 317,000 to save Lincoln's Inn and Walter Reiser was appointed to advise students with draft problems that they had draft problems. Another survey revealed that students were dis- satisfied with the examination system and that the amount of studying done was declining Cbut 4'Z1 of our classmates claimed to be hitting the books over 50 hours a weekj. Professors Shapiro and Fried argued the Model Appeal and the Harvard Dems voted to support Gene McCarthy. Lincoln's Inn voted once again not to allow women to be- come members and Christmas Vacation finally came. The Practice Examination was taken and then it was off to the Forum to hear the Maharishi talk about Transcendental Meditation. The appointment of Derek Bok as the new Dean gave HLS secretaries heart throbs while the Law Review accepted the notion of a competition to select at least a part of its membership. A non-credit course on the Vietnam War began meeting one night a week as the much cliched witch settled over Cambridge and it really was as cold as that proverbial part of her anatomy. The Pueblo was taken and the Williston Compe- tition Cyou say you never heard of itb died. At a moment of doom for most students, President LBJ 84 made his infamous Fatal Friday address and suddenly the real reason for being in grad school was a reason no longer. Those good people at Cravath upped the going rate to 515,000 a year and we celebrated with wine, women and song at the annual Casner Birth- day Party. A reading period was approved for second and third year students while serious agitation began for a switch from the LL.B. to the J.D. The Cam- bridge Police began a serious crackdown on Avatar magazine. The New Hampshire Primary came into view and it was off to the Granite State for many in a soon- to-be-successful effort to K.O. LBJ. The Visiting Committee of the Board of Overseers visited and Professor Leach brought Justice Harlan in to ob- serve his Property class. Students swarmed to take Army, Navy and Air Force JAG examinations and rushed to get into Reserve Units, ROTC and the National Guard while Professor Clark Byse was explaining-in his usual gentle manner- The Case of the Hairy Handv to the Law Wives. In a lighter moment, residents of the new dorms chuckled at the futile attempts of Buildings and Grounds to maintain an ice skating rink on the swamp behind Harkness. Malcolm Muggeridge, Henry Morgan and Al Capp told everyone what they thought of the Mini- skirt Mentality while the Drama Society presented the Jealous Mistress , which told the real story . vt iw 51 l behind Dean Bok's rise to power. Plans were finalized and construction begun on a new classroom and administrative office building and then it was back to the Forum to hear Bishop James Pike discuss Death After Life. The world wasn't quite the same when we re- turned to Cambridge after Spring Vacation. Martin Luther King, Jr. was deadg and as Americans and lawyers and, most of all, human beings we were aghast at the manner of his dying. For Harvard, it was a time to stop and meditate-about the man, about the tragedy, and about a society in which one man with a gun could bring the rest of us to our knees in helplessness. The Joint Committee recommended drastic re- visions in Law School grading procedures and the faculty resolved that those who refused military in- duction might return to HLS when allowed their freedom by the civil authorities. Ralph Nader blasted the Law School and large corporations at a Ford Hall Forum speech. Johnson was outg McCarthy, Humphrey, Kennedy and Nixon were ing and Rocky was in and out and in. Candidates were running wild from one corner of the Nation to the other while FLEA Bailey stopped at the Law School long enough to give an inside view of the art of cross-examination. Classes ended and the reading period began and study groups finished their outlines and you discovered that the guy next door had a 251 page outline of DLI. -Ni ,nu- Students discovered Hilles Library and, more important, volleyball in the Radcliffe Quadg exams began and then it was the day of the California pri- mary. For the Democrats, the pundits said this day would be decisive. Unfortunately, they were all too right. It was another little man with a misshapen mind and a gung and again the nation was prostrate. Robert Kennedy was dead. Most of us had gone to bedfDLI could only be stomached, if at all, on a full night's sleep-but it didn't take long for the word to spread and tubes to go on all over Cam- bridge. There was little sleep that morning-the history of legal institutions was not too important if there was to be no future for them. DLI was cancelled by the faculty and students petitioned and demonstrated for cancellation of Property as well. Each of us, for his own reasons, found it impossible to concentrate on fee tails and covenants running with the land. With Casner out of town, it was a visibly shaken and trembling Dean- designate Derek Bok who made the announcement that the academic year was over. But, to one Pro- fessor we were self-indulgent little shits. In the midst of confusion and sorrow, we wan- dered away from Cambridge. The year had ended with a whimper and ahead lay the uncertainties of the draft. For many, law school in September was out of the questiong it was either Uncle Sam's green shirts or some haven from the wearin' o' that different kind of green. It was sad to know that 85 more than a few of our friends and classmates might never come back to Cambridge. The bell rang for the second of the three round preliminary to life. It was a battered class which struggled back to Cambridge. And many of us who made it back were unsure just how long we were to stay in town. With Sargentich leading the pack, some of us returned a bit early to join the Gannett House Gang. Some students entered a new competition designed to provide a part of the membership of the Law Review while others were joining a more secret organization, the Choate Club. In his opening re- marks, Dean Bok, in a crucial failure, failed to tell the new 1L's that even those who graduate from the bottom of the Harvard Law School still get good jobs. The Placement Office added geographical preference to name and address and telephone number at Registration. Radical Law Students organized while faculty and staff members were being poisoned by onion soup served in the staff dining room. Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey were the candidates but Visiting Professor Robert Mundheim stole the show with his true-to-life imitation of Joe Garagiola. Professor Jaffe showed up at the wrong classroom. Proposals for full student participation on faculty committees were heardg and, while Nixon may have been the onev around the nation, the Hump was the HLS favorite by almost 4-1. Tom Atkins, Joseph Alsop and Saul Alinsky discussed Organ- izing the Ghetto at the Forum. Meanwhile students led by an undergrad named Profit were battling for seats on the Board of Directors of the Coop Cin that fray, Profit argued for less profit and more loss while Loss argued in favor of more profit and profitted by Profit's lossb. Ralph Nader was back and again he had nothing nice to say about anybody. Law Students were polled as being overwhelming- ly in favor of the J .D. degree and construction be- gan on a new parking garage next to Wyeth Hall. Slowly, but surely, students began to drop out of school in order to take care of their draft problems. Those mysterious keys to success, the Law Review Outlines, were made public for the first time, and revisions were made to promote more interest in the slowly dying upper rounds of the Ames Compe- tition. Thomas Austern gave a series of lectures on Administrative Agencies, but blew it all when he failed to add correctly three simple fractions. f. 1,-L iovij,-3'f'g, 750 86 An historic and marathonic Joint Committee meeting, the first one ever completely open to all students, discussed participatory democracy versus representative democracy as it applied to the Law School. Pillsbury, Madison was in hot water over recruiting practice, students picketed Milbank, Tweed recruiters at the Placement Office and Paul M. Bator was toasted Cer, roastedj at the Lincoln's Inn Christmas Dinner. A fire ripped through the nearly complete new faculty office building but there was little damage. Yale dropped its traditional grading system and Santa Claus began his long journey southward from the pole as students began their long for shorty journies homeward for vacation. Christmas was over and, this time, there were final exams waiting. The Law School received S1 million to establish a Center for the Advancement of Criminal Justice and females charged law firms with discrimination. The editors of the Law Review, without so much as a single case citation, called the Vietnam War immoral and called for complete U.S. withdrawal. Then Joe Willie led his Jets to a stunning Super Bowl victory over the NFL's Colts. At least 100 lL's opted not to participate in spring Ames and the big blizzard of '69 hit Cam- bridge. A skeleton appeared in the closets of the Legal Aid Bureau, Law Review and Law Record as the story of the Lubells' encounter with Joe McCarthyism at Harvard was made public. Fenno's long nameless friend was dubbed Bunky. Radical Students tried to pack the Joint Com- mittee ballot box and details were worked out for a joint LL.B-M.B.A. degree program. A soon-to-be legendary proposal for a passffail grading system and other reforms, The Trouble with Gradesj' was distributed by 1Lis and, in response, the Keeton Faculty Committee was formed. Battle lines were being drawn. Another group of students demanded open fac- ulty meetings and, still behind closed doors, the faculty approved the switch to the Juris Doctor degree Know you could be both a doctor and a lawyerj. The Black Law Students Association began a series of speeches by leading blacks in the legal profession with Howard Moore. Applications for admission to the law school had increased by 100'Zn since 1963. The Record re- ported that the Law Review had ended publication, that firms had lifted their starting salaries to 525,000 per year and that Harris was a wine savant. The date was April 1, 1969. The Keeton Committee rejected passffail for the academic year ending in June and people began to brace for the storm of protest expected to hit Lang- dell Hall. Arthur Goldberg served as C.J. for the Ames final which considered Texas Gulf Sulfer and consistently mispronounced Professor Loss' name. Cln class, Loss would later severely criticize one of Goldberg's decisions.J The law sehool's thespians, with UCC1nan in the lead, took both Cambridge and New York by storm. Before hell could break loose at the Law School, it hit the College. With SDS in the lead, students and non-students alike liberated University Hall, but President Nathan Pusey called in the police, and, in a confusing and sometimes violent confron- tation, the demonstrators were removed. While law students, led by the Voluntary De- fenders, were providing a variety of legal services for those involved, protestors called a University strike tan excellent excuse for cutting all those classes you were already cuttingj which culminated in a mass meeting at Harvard Stadium. Ironically, during the second week of the strike, law school attendance was above normal in many classes. As the college was wrestling with the problems of ROTC and police on campus, things erupted to a lesser degree at the Law School. An attempted take-over of the library was foiled by the establish- ment of Derek's All-Night Eatery and Flop House. Numerous colloquia were held and, along with much valuable interaction, it was observed just how much lawyers love to hear themselves talk. Not quite back to normal, the Law School limped toward final exams. Rhody McCoy addressed the Harvard Black Law Students Association and Pills- bury, Madison was denied use of the Placement Office for 1969. And then, at the last possible moment, the faculty implemented a partial pass! fail grading reform for the then current first-year class. With confusion as the norm, final exams began and we worried whether our gaze would be as penetrating as Mr. Coogan's. Again it was time to depart from Cambridge, but this time even more of our classmates were heading for Indian Town Gap, Newport, or Parris Island. For others, the summer would be a time to see whether they could live on S250 a week and whether they liked doing the type of work they had trained to do for the last two years. After a summer of clerking Cand explaining what the hell was going on at Harvardvj, we returned to the beginning of the end. Man had been to the moon and we had been through everything that the Law School could throw at us. If the first year scared us to death and the second worked us to death, most of us were ready, willing and able to be bored to death in the third. Still more of our classmates were gone to the ranks of the Army, the Peace Corps, the Reserves, the National Guard, teaching, Vista or parts un- known, but some old faces returned after a year's absence. Almost half of the 2L's had chosen one of the new grading options Cone-third opted for pass failj while we still struggled to keep our Gentlemen's B. The Harvard Law detachment of Nader's Raiders advocated a law firm questionnaire while both the Board of Student Advisers and the Legal Aid Bureau began operations as non-honorariesf, Mr. Green was gone from Harkness and so was the much maligned Stouffer's Food Service, but Kelly, Joe and Agnes were still behind the grill and now there was beer on tap from four until mid- night. HEW Secretary Finch shared the Forum stage with a group of welfare mothers, another group of protestors threatened a dribble-in if hours in Hemenway Gym were not extended. While firms could not ask 2L's their grades, it was open season as usual on our class at the Placement Office. The Harkness newstand looked like a mini-Coop. Once again, Ralph Nader stormed onto campus, this time urging student investigations into just about everything while, at the same time, law co- eds were being told that they faced a tough job market. in Plans for full HLS participation on Moratorium Day went forward even though the school itself left it up to each Professor whether or not to cancel classes. Haynsworth was in trouble in Washington, but another judge was in even more trouble for his deprecating remarks about Mexican-Americans in California. In all, there were more petitions than ever before being cranked out of the Law School machine. Radical lawyers took over the Forum to hear William Kunstler and Leonard Boudin speak. Boston led the nation on October 15, the Weathermen were doing their thing all over Cam- bridge and Boston without ever consulting Dr. Frank Field. In New York, a team of once hapless ragamuffins won the World Series and thrilled all the nation Cexcept, of course, Baltimorej. The Ad Hoc Committee for a Public Law Firm was formed, but the Hoff left for Fort Polk and Fenno began dying a slow 'death. The Chicago Eight were on trial. Mrs. Hicks and Tom Atkins Cwhat a combinationj ran one-two in the Boston City Council race. New carpets, vene- tian blinds, and new shelving made the dorms more livable. Plans were finalized for what would prove to be the most massive of all the marches on Wash- ington-Moratorium II. Hey, Hey Ropes and Grey, How many lungs did you ruin today! was the cry at the Placement Office and Law School women organized their own liberation movement, girding themselves for a pos- sible march on Lincoln's Inn. Jake Javits discussed the 1969 elections at the Forum. Thurgood Marshall C..I.'ed the Ames Final. Midyear exams were proposed for lL,s and a little lottery down in Washington made everyone born on September 14 just a little bit sicker than they had been before. For the more fortunate, the going rate was rumored to be going up and up in New York and elsewhere. And so it goes . . . on and on. What kind of a three year period was it? Certainly, not a period like all periods. It was a period when most of America really woke up to the problems of living together with a few billion others in a limited world. It was a period when, in the vanguard of this awakening, we made seem ludicrous the complaints heard only a decade before that America's students were not involved enough. While America changed, the Law School was changing as well. Shaped and molded by students and faculty alike, it can be said that in 1970 HLS hardly resembles, either physically or intellectually, the school to which we all applied for admission. Yet some currents cut across all three years: some things will seemingly go on forever. Women law students feel discriminated against, Ralph Nader continues to find nothing good in anything. What the future holds for each of us is impossible to guess. Some will be in politics, while it is just as likely that others will be in the performing arts, journalism, or business. But one thing is for sure- while we may have left our collective images on the law school, in its own way it has left its own very special mark on us. -Guy M. Blynn 89 Lej? PAUL FREDERICK ABRAMS, Temple '66, 1838 N. 77th St., Philadelphia, Pa., Braucher, C.R.-C.L., Dem. Righi ROGER IAN ABRAMS, Cornell '67, 524 Olive Terr., Union, N.J., Story, Forum, Bd. St. Adv., Joint Com. BRUCE ALLAN ACKERMAN, Cornell '66, Co- lumbia M.B.A. '70, 140-55 Burden Crescent, Jamaica, N.Y., Blackstone, Rep., Dorm C., L.I. Ley? NELS JOHN ACKERSON, Purdue '67, R.R. No. l, Westfield, Indiana, Learned Hand, L.R. Right JOSEPH DENNIS ALVIANI, Darmouth '67, 255 Sip Ave., Jersey City, N.J., Drama, L.J., Dem. CARL JOHN ANDERSON, U. of Illinois '67, 539 N. Ave., Barrington, Ill., Bevins. Left JON TOBIAS ANDERSON, U. of Kansas '62, 320 Eighth St., Wakeeney, Kan., Marshall, Bd. St. Adv., L.I. Right GEORGE JOSEPH ANNAS, JR., Harvard '67, 749 Wash. Mem. Dr., St. Cloud, Minn., Marshall, B.8LB., S.T. More, Stud. D.A. J. GORDON ARKIN, Lehigh '67, 51 West- moreland Dr., Yonkers, N.Y., L.I. Left CLIFFORD O. ARNEBECK, JR., Wesleyan '67, 1503 Red Oak Dr., Silver Spring, Md., Choate, L.I., I.L.C. Right ROBERT JAY BACHMAN, U. of Illinois '67, 407 W. University Ave., Champaign, Ill., B.8tB. MORRIS JOSEPH BALLER, Harvard '66, Inst. d'Etudes Politiques '67, I 1 19 Las Lomas Ave., Pacific Palisades, Cal., Choate. Leh PETER JOSEPH BARACK, Princeton '65, Oxford '67, 588 Glencoe Rd., Glencoe, Ill., Griswold, L.R., C.L.A.O. Right JOSHUA BAR-LEV, U. of Michigan '67, 23821 Condon, Oak Park, Mich., Weinreb, I.L.C., C.R.- C.L. JOHN COTTER BARRETT, U. of Iowa '67, 81 Conwell Ave., Somerville, Mass., Warren, Vol. Def., C.R.-C.L. Left EDMUND CHARLES BARTON, Notre Dame '63, 59 Richbell Rd., White Plains, N.Y., Drama, LegalAid. Right JUSTIN EDWARD BEALS, George Washington '67, 816 Kayak Ave., Hillside, Md., Bevins, Dorm. C. LAWRENCE JAY BEASER, U. of Penn. '67, 2515 Ross Rd., Silver Spring, Md., Pound, Camb. L. S. bb 'fx 7 y gclql., .17 lf ' wits,-,'-it Q: , I ' li?+'Nu1f'F.a Lek FREDERICK MARTIN BELMORE, JR., Prince- ton '66, Oxford, 7275 N, River Rd., Milwaukee, Wis., Kaplan, L.I. CONRAD ROBERT BELT, Columbia '67, 2828 Bruce Spruce Lane, Wheaton, Md. Right STUART ALLAN BENJAMIN, U.S.C. '67, 4334 Lemp Ave., No. Hollywood, Cal., Dershowitz, C.R.-C.L. Left JOHN EDWARD BENNETT, U. of Pittsburgh '67, 29 Ridgedale Cir., Rochester, N.Y., Bruce, Rep., B.8cB. JAMES BRACKEN BENSON, Dartmouth '67, 37l3 Council Crest, Madison, Wis., Freund, l.L.C. Right RICHARD LUCIEN BERKMAN, Oberlin '67, 57 Devon Rd., Great Neck, N.Y., Bevins, C.L.A.O. Left STEVEN V. BERSON, Pomona '67, 31 I4 Corinth Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Sander, Forum, Vol. Def. JAMES NORMAN BIERMAN, Washington U. '67, 7l I7 Cornell Ave., St. Louis, Mo., Cardozo, Leg. Res., B.8LB., L.l. Right GERALD J. BILLOW, Dartmouth '67, 53 Winslow Rd., White Plains, N.Y., Keeton. Left NATALIE CHOATE BIRNBAUM, Radcliffe '67, 47 Irving St., Cambridge, Mass., Sacks. CAMILLE BURTON BISHOP, Furman U. '67, 50 Thowbridge St,, Cambridge, Mass., Holmes. Right ELBERT ROBERTS BISHOP, Morgan State '67, 3601 Wabash Ave. Baltimore Md. Holmes C.R.- , , , , V C.L., Forum, H.B.L.S.A. -'15 h Left PAUL DOUGLAS BISHOP, Harvard '66, 50 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass., Choate. VERN DAVID BJERUM, Harvard '67, 35 Chilton St., Cambridge, Mass., Howe. Right JAMES NEWELL BLAIR, Dartmouth '62, 2108 Foresthill Rd., Alexandria, Va., Sutherland. Leh ROBERT D. BLASIER, JR., Carnegie-Mellon '62, '63, 356 Old Clairton Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa., Black- stone, Vol. Def., B.8LB., P.B.H. GUY MARC BLYNN, U. of Penn. '67, 30 Range Dr., Merrick, N.Y., Pound, B.8LB., Vol. Def., Dorm C. Right JAMES EDWARD BOWERS, U. of So. Carolina '67, 560 Buckley St., Orageburg, S.C., Cardozo, Dem., B.8LB. Class of 1970 ff' Q '09 ,fs . , 1 gm -fa, ll I I 91 'l VU' 92 Lejq ULYSSES WHITTAKER BOYKIN, Hampton Inst. '67, 19180 Appoline, Detroit, Mich., Sacks, Forum, St. Bar. Right PIPP MARSHALL BOYLS, U. of Colorado '67, 345 Colorado Blvd., Denver, Colo., Bevins, B.8LB., Wtg. Prog. PATRICK FREDERICK BRADY, U. of Wiscon- sin '67, 610 W. Columbia, Chippewa Falls, Wis., Dershowitz, Vol. Def. Leh JAMES HARVEY BREAY, Albion '67, 2056 Paris Ave., S.E., Grand Rapids, Mich., Bevins, Leg.Res., S. Br. Right GEORGE McCALL BRITTS, U. of Virginia '67, 202 Hill Creek Rd., Richland, Va., Cardozo, Legal Aid, Forum, L.I. MARK WALTER BROWN, U. of Washington '67, E. Rattlesnake Gulch, Missoula, Mont., Pound. Left SCOTT M. BROWN, U. of Montana '63, 312 S. Strevell, Miles City, Mont., Holmes, B,8:,B., I.L.C. Right PETER ALAN BUCHSBAUM, Cornell '67, 3 Rosedale Rd., Valley Stream, N.Y., Casner, C.R.- C.L. ANTHONY ROGER BUONAGURO, Manhattan '67, 342 Grant Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., Root, C.R.- C.L., C.R.-L.R., C.L.A.O. Left ROBERT ALAN BURKA, Dartmouth '66, U. of London '67, 2901 Brandywine St., N.W., Washing- ton, D.C., Morgan-Brown, Bd. St. Adv., L.I., B.8LB. Right MICHAEL JAM ES BURKE, Brown '67, 3434 W. l02nd, Inglewood, Cal., Pound, Dem., C.L.A.O. PETER H. BURLING, Harvard '69, Throsher Rd., Plainfield, N.H., Pow Wow, Dem., L.I. Left CHARLES WAINMAN BURSON, U. of Michigan '66, Cambridge '68, 2228 Henry Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Right JUDITH DIEKOFF BURTON, Wellesley '61, P.O. Box 54, Glen Arbor, Mich. FRANCIS BRADEN BUTLER, Harvard '67, 704 S. Broad St., Mankato, Minn., Dershowitz, L.R. Left DUNCAN GRAHAM CALDER, III, Harvard '65, 204 Union St. N., Concord, N.C., Pow Wow, Drama, I.L.C., L.I. Right DENNIS MARK CALLAHAN, Western Reserve U. '67, 1601 Mapledale Rd., Wickliffe, Ohio, Vol. Def. DUNCAN ANGUS CAMPBELL, Yale '66, San Francisco, Cal., Harlan, C.L.A.O., L.I. G PM Tl i f l F iv if ' . HM Wav '15 1 L A,, .KN f 1+ .1 Y- .Ill ' nw, ' l l 1 fa 11 Lej SAMUEL DAVID CHAFETZ, U. of Michigan '67, 490 Colonial Rd., Memphis, Tenn., Pound, C.R.- C.L., Legal Aid. Right MARVA JEANNE CHARN, U. of Michigan '67, 951 Woolf Ct., Rochelle, Ill., C.L.A.O. BARRY OLIVER CHASE, Yale '67, 399 Broad- way Apt. 44, Cambridge, Mass., Griswold, Drama, Bd. St. Adv. Lejl WILLIAM CLINTON CHASE, Dartmouth '67, 25 Arlington St., Cambridge, Mass. Right MARK ALBERT CHERTOK, S.U.N.Y. CBuffaloJ '67, 479 Rosedale Ave., White Plains, N.Y., Pound, I.L.C. S.Bar, DAN SAMUEL CHILL, N.Y.U. '66, I7 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass., Steiner, B.8LB., Joint Com., Record. Ley? BRUCE EDWARD CLARK, Holy Cross '67, 405 E. 5lst, New York, N.Y., Sander, Bd. St. Adv., I.L.C., Wtg. Prog. Right ROBERT ECHOLS CLEM, Birmingham-Southern Coll. '67, 308 White Cir., S.E., Huntsville, Ala., Kaplan, C.L.A.O., I.L.C. THOMAS M. COFFIN, St. Benedict's '67, 641 N. Mosley, St. Louis, Mo., Vol. Def. Left KENNETH A. COHEN, Harvard '67, 6708 Brigadoon Dr., Bethesda, Md., L.R. Right DAVID S. COHN, U. of Penn. '63, 324 Oak Lane, Richmond, Va., Pound. JAMES HUBERT COIL, III, Duke '67, 65 Kings- way. Mobile, Ala., Story, C.L.A.O., Forum, L.I. Left JAMES WILLIAM COLBERT, III, Yale '67, 724 Willow Lake Rd., Charleston, S.C., Warren, L.R., Yearbook, Wtg. Prog. Right EM RIED D. COLE, JR., Emory '67, 7838 Alder- man Rd., Jacksonville, Fla., Howe, I.L.C., So. C. VIRGINIA FLOOD COLEMAN, Radcliffe '66, Cantitoe Rd., Bedford Hills, N.Y., Marshall, I.L.C., Bd. St. Adv. Left JAMES PHILMORE COLLINS, JR., Occidental '65, Johns Hopkins '67, 31 Hampden St., Wellesley, Mass., Morgan-Brown, Vol. Def. Right JUDITH ARNOLD COWIN, Wellesley '63, 85 Country Club Rd., Newton, Mass., Stud. D.A. DAVID G. CROCKETT, Wichita State '66, Lon- don School of Economics '67, 446 N. Vassar, Wichita, Kan., Marshall, C.L.A.O., Rep., Vol. Def. Class of 1970 Q1 P5 'll' , . I xl li' , ,,.. , , , 0 Q kid af ' NTT' 4, 1 T x j , X , . t iii- .IW- , tif 2 55457 93 1 V N41 E 1? f IC 'Q .... 'I 155 . . ZS'-lf I I ........ - 5552. -I ' . . H Ati 475' s ' I .. ' .f'yi3?5fTf' - is L. .mir I , -' N . -v 'U Left ALEXIS JACKSON CROWDER, U.C.L.A. '66, I52 Berkshire St. Apt. 5, Cambridge, Mass. JOHN MICHAEL CROWELL, U. of N. Carolina '67, 3925 Pinewood Dr., Jackson, Miss. Right THOMAS CURTISS, JR., Yale '63, I5 IO4 Hill Dr., Novelty, Ohio, Griswold, L.I. Leh GEORGE LITTLETON CUSHING, Harvard '65, 286 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Kent, B. St. Adv. HENRY JAMES DANE, Haverford '58, U. of Penn. '67, 99 Sudbury Rd., Concord, Mass., Learned Hand, L.l. Right BRUCE CHARLES DAVIDSON, Marist Coll. '66, Mill Rd., Hyde Park, N.Y., Bruce. Left JONATHAN DAVIS, Columbia '66, '68, 2l56 Cruger Ave., Bronx, N.Y., Dawson. RICHARD SANFORD DAVIS, U. of Cincinnati '67, 2197 Section Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio, Casner, C.R.-C.L., Vol. Def. Right BARTLEY CALLAHAN DEAM ER, Stanford '66, Free U. of Berlin '67, 3 Fifth Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Marshall, L.R. Lek TERENCE R. DELLECKER, Princeton '67, 6l4 Lincoln Ave., Dunellen, N.J. MICHAEL LOUIS DENGER, Northwestern '67, ll Peabody Terr. Apt. 601, Cambridge, Mass., Learned Hand, Legal Aid, S.T. More, Rep. Right DAN LEYLAND DENISON, West Point '62, 5l7 Mayrant Dr., Dallas, Tex., Dawson, S.Bar., I.L.C. Left JOSEPH NAPOLEON DE RAISMES, Yale '67, 704 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. DONALD FRANCIS DEVINE, U. of Iowa '67, 321 Second Ave., S.W. Dyersville, Iowa, Warren, Dem., I.L.C., Vol. Def. Right THOMAS PHILIP DEVI'I'I', Marquette '63, 80 Sherwood Rd., Elgin, Ill., Marshall, L.I. Left MARIO C. DIAZ-CRUZ, Ill, U. of Miami '67, 2804 S.W. 92nd Ct., Miami, Fla., Scott, L.l., Rep. DEAN JOSEPH DIETRICH, U. of Cal. fBerkeley7 '67, 2935 San Antonio Dr., Walnut Creek, Cal., Holmes, Legal Aid. Right CHARLIE BASCOM DONALDSON, JR., U. of Alabama '66, 401 Montgomery St., Andalusia, Ala., Cardozo, C.L.A.O., I.L.C., I.L.J., Record. . -1 1-1 -1- 'Iii I4 . A I- in i A I Jul g, l Y Q 1. 5 I-fl il lr' Left PABLO J. DROBNY, Johns Hopkins '67, 4701 Willard Ave. Apt. 804, Chevy Chase, Md., Weinreb, P.B.H. Right EUGENE Z. DUBOSE, JR., Cornell '67, I3-I5 Plaza Rd., Fairlawn, N.J., L.R. MARC FRED EFRON, Dartmouth '65, 3537 Ord- way St., N.W., Washington, D.C., Keeton, C.L.A.O., L.I. Lef? MICHAEL JON ELIASBERG, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyl '67, 157 E, 57th St., New York, N.Y., Bd. St. Adv. Right JOHN VINCENT ERICKSON, see p. 111. WILLIAM F. ERKELENZ, Columbia '67, 750 Cleveland Ave., Elizabeth, N.J., Magruder, Wtg. Prog. JOHN R. EVANS, Harvard '67, 4004 N. Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo., Magruder, C.R.-L.R. Left MARC P. FAIRMAN, U. of Cal. lBerkeleyJ '67, San Francisco, Cal., Holmes, Bd. St. Adv., Rep. Right JOHN G. FARIA, Brown '67, 1822 Read St., Somerset, Mass., Sacks, I.L.C. DAVID FEINTUCH, Earlham '67, 52 Marshall Rd., Yonkers, N.Y., Magruder. I-eh ROBERT C. FELLMETH, Stanford '67, 328 Ilimalia Loop, Kailua, Hawaii, Magruder, C.R.- L.R., C,R.-C.L. Right BRUCE STUART FENTON, Yale '67, Crawford Rd., Harrison, N.Y., Morgan-Brown. ROBERT ALAIN FESJIAN, Yale '67, 1200 Manor Cir., Pelham Manor, N.Y., Sutherland, Wtg. Prog., Stud. D.A., L.I. Left P. JAY FETNER, Yale '65, Cambridge '67, 9888 Old Warson Rd., St. Louis, Mo., Pow Wow, I.L.J. Riglzr LEWIS MARK FINKEL, C.C.N.Y. '67, 18 Deal Lane, Livingston, N.J., Braucher. MARK IRA FISHMAN, Harvard '67, 158 Torrey St., Brockton, Mass., C.L.A.O., L.I. Lef? SCOTT THOMAS FITZGIBBON, Antioch '67, 2l Locust Rd., Pleasantville, N.Y., Weinreb, L.R. Righr NANCY ALICE FLUHR, American U. '67, Willow Brook Rd., Holmdel, N.J., Sacks, Forum, Stud. D.A. JOSEPH MOODY FORD, U. of Miss. '67, Duval Plantation, Oak Ridge, La., Dawson, I.L.C., L.l. ll ll! . ,Q Class of 1970 gs f, 'if ' ' if iii.. rfirsriibf' , I . Hrs i, wif: ,, it ii, ., w . w N- 11 14.- 'LQ Q' qi..- Left BRIAN MICHAEL FREEMAN, Rutgers '67, 10 Hillside Rd., Elizabeth, N.J., Casner, Bd. St. Adv., L.I. DALE CHARLES FREEMAN, Yale '65, 3871 Kioka Ave., Columbus, Ohio, Harlan, C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O. Right THOMAS MCINNIS GACHET, Fla. Presbyterian Coll. '66, Vanderbilt '67, 320 N. Edison St., Arling- ton, Va., Blackstone. Left JOSEPH CORNELIUS GALLAGHER, Rutgers '67, 110 17th Ave., Paterson, N.J., Casner, C.L.A.O., I.L.C., B. 84 B. BETTE BA RDEEN GALLO, U. of Wisconsin '63, 216 Upland Rd., Cambridge, Mass., Keeton, Dem. Right NANCY F. GANS, U. of Rochester '65, 920 Chest- nut St., Waban, Mass. Left JEROME M. GARCHIK, Cooper Union '65, Yale '67, 1648 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Magruder. LAWRENCE JEFFREY GARTNER, U. of Cal. QBerkeleyJ '67, 1907 Garth Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Right GORDON DUVALL GEE, Williams '67, 2803 W. 66th Terr., Shawnee Mission, Kan., Howe, C.L.A.O. Left CAROL GIBBONS GEORGE, Hunter '67, 257 W. 122nd St., New York, N.Y., Learned Hand, Dem. GARRY G. GERLACH, U. of Iowa '64, Columbia '65, 7004 Windsor Lane, University Park, Md., l.L.J., C.L.A.O., L.I. Right JUDITH ARLENE GILBERT, U.C.L.A. '67, 1641 S. Veteran Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Sutherland, I.L.C., B. 84 B., Leg. Res. Leh STEVEN JEFFREY GILBERT, U. of Penn. '67, 80-35 192nd St., Jamaica Estates, N.Y., Warren, I.L.C., B. 8a B., L.I. MARY KATHLEEN GILLESPIE, U. of Detroit '66, 16920 Strathmoor Ave., Detroit, Mich., Gris- wold, C.L.A.O., I.L.C. Right DOROTHY J. GLANCY, Wellesley '67, 7120 Bax- tershire, Dallas, Tex., Learned Hand. Lej5' MARC JEROME GLASS, Harvard '67, 88 Bainbridge Rd., W. Hartford, Conn., Learned Hand, C.L.A.O., JointCom., Leg. Res. DANIEL J. GLEASON, Harvard '67, 10 S. Moun- tain Dr., New Britain, Conn., Warren, L.I., Cam. Leg. Serv. Right MARTIN E. GOLD, Cornell '67, 73-03 194th St., Flushing, N.Y., Dershowitz, C.L.A.O., I.L.J.-I.L.C. -II I 1 I 'W 1 t w Q. .. ... ,,.. i , V , I 'allfl u j:i?xf1Q 1 1 QA-:: 1' .,, wal 1 Q 'X- ' X 1 ggi .3 .5,f.X'-, NS 'ai ., FF- 7 -:F 3 Q' tl V . 55: -3 'P A f .5:::::: rieiiess- ' 5 I I I A z J 75 .. . .---I . - -:-::-- 5:m,-.- ,p:'.1,,-, gals: rex Class of 1970 Left IRVING JACOB GOLUB, Washington U. '67, 5127 Braesheather, Houston, Tex., Harlan. RICHARD PAUL GOODKIN, Princeton '67, 545 Adams St., Dorchester, Mass., Sander. Right ROBERT STEVEN GOODMAN, U. of Penn. '67, 114 Morris Ave., Malverne, N.Y., Casner, S. Bar, L.I. Leh GEORGE DAVID GOPEN, Brandeis '67, 15 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass., Cardozo. JAMES RUSSELL GORDLEY, U. of Chicago '67, 415 Sterling Rd., Kenilworth, Ill., Harlan, L. R. Right MARTIN GOTTLIEB, Brooklyn Coll. '67, 221 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N.Y., l.L.C. Left GEORGE 1. GOVERMAN, Harvard '65, Johns Hopkins '66, 27 Ellery St., Cambridge, Mass., Casner, Vol. Dei RICHARD DAVID GRADDIS, U. of Michigan '66, Old Glen Rd., Morrisoown, N.J., Legal Aid. Right EDWARD NORMAN GRAHAM, U. of N. Carolina '63, 345 Gwyn Ave., Elkin, N.C., Root, C.L.A.O. Left STUART W. GRAHAM, Harvard '67, 393 Highland Ave., Fitchburg, Mass., Sacks, C.L.A.O. MARK JOSEPH GREEN, Cornell '67, 180 S. Mid- dle Neck Rd., Great Neck, N.Y., Magruder, C.R.- C.L., C.L.A.O,, Dem. Right EURICH ZWINGLI GRIFFIN, Howard '67, 3217 15th Ave. S., St. Petersburgh, Fla., B.L.S.A. LQ? NOAH WEBSTER GRIFFIN, Fisk '67, 859 41st Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Drama, I.L,C. MCGEE GRIGSBY, Louisiana State '65, 1945 Pollard, Baton Rouge, La., Kaplan. Right STEPHEN EMIL HABERFELD, U.C,L.A. '65, Princeton '67, 12909 Hesby St., Sherman Oaks, Cal., Freund, Leg. Res., L.I., l,L.C. Left RAYMOND W. HADRICK, U. of Penn. '65, 41 Wendell St. Apt. 3, Cambridge, Mass. ROBERT MacPHERSON HAGER, Brown '66, 808 Nevada St., Northfield, Minn., Vol. Def., L.R., Joint Com. Right ROBERT LEIGHTON HAIG, Yale '67, 411 Tuttle Pkwy., Westfield, N.J. xl Q lr- 98 Left ALLAN SCOTT HALEY, Harvard 66, U. of Freiburg '67, 304 Nevada St., Nevada City, Cal., Cardozo, H.G.C. Right JOHN RUSSELL HAMILTON, Ohio U. '67, 801 King Ave., Marion, Ohio. RICK ALAN HARRINGTON, U. of Kansas '67, 220 Hamilton Ave., Terre Haute, Ind., Bruce, C.R.- C.L., Vol. Def. Left RICHARD EUGENE VASSAU HARRIS, Albion '67, 325 E. Highland Rd., Howell, Mich., Cardozo, Legal Aid, L.I., Forum. Right DONALD HARRISON, Harvard '67, 3077 Motor Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Blackstone, L.R. GREGG HARRISON, U. of Cal. IBerkeleyJ '67, 10501 Wilshire Blvd. Apt. 1706, Los Angeles, Cal. Ley? SANFORD WILLIAM HARVEY, JR., Norwich '67, 8 Walter St., Worcester, Mass., Casner, B.L.S.A., Forum, L.I. Right ROBERT JOSEPH HAUSER, U. of Illinois '67, 5345 W. Pensacola, Chicago, Ill., Magruder, B.8LB., I.L.C., Wtg. Prog. MICHAEL KENNETH HEANEY, Middlebury '65, Hardscrabble Rd., Basking Ridge, N.J., War- ren, I.L.C., Leg. Res., P.B.H. Left JEFFREY LUCAS HEIDT, Brown '67, 52 Margaret St., Arlington, Mass., Cardozo. Right MICHAEL S. HELFER, Claremont '67, 15726 High Knoll Rd., Encino, Cal., Freund, L.R. STAN M. HELFMAN, U. of Cal. CBerkeley7 '67, 915 S. LeDoux Rd., Los Angeles, Cal., Cardozo, Legal Aid, Forum, Dem. Lej9 DANIEL KRAFT HENNESSY, U.S. Naval Academy '63, 4 Manor Hill Rd., Summit, N.J., Car- dozo, L.R., Leg. Res., S.T. More. Right JOHN HUGHES HERMAN, Yale '67, 483 Park- side Dr., Akron, Ohio, Harlan, C.L.A.O., Forum. MICHAEL TERRY HERTZ, Pomona '67, 371 Verano Dr., Los Altos, Cal., Marshall, I.L.J., Vol. Def. Left DAVID LLOYD HERZER, Yale '67, 1508 N. Lakeview Blvd., Lorrain, Ohio, Story, B.8z,B., Rep., Vol. Def. Right JOHN HARVERY HILBERT, Boston Coll. '67, 44 Beech St., Maywood, N.J., Blackstone, Dorm. C., Wtg. Prog., B. 8L B. JAMES FREDERICK HINCHMAN, Harvard '63, 5500 Neosho Lane, Shawnee Mission, Kan., Kaplan, L.R. C. 1 'lllli l Uk g ' i 1 L A A 1-1 fr'- j lf? f ' SI. 4 '- . l ' ' 1 l V iff'-Q, . 'aff 7 rr, t is. K I ' I L -, 7 K ' ,-V. I, f- , as ..g t Sfx 5'--V I bf- 1.: ..-tri' Q W, si' ' Q 1 1- 52?.i, . 1 .wi ' Class of 1970 L69 JAMES MICHAEL HINES, U. of N. Carolina '67, 128 Fairway Acres, Lenois, N.C., Bevins, I.L.C. DOUGLAS WALTER HOFFMAN, Harvard '66, 7521 N. Bell Rd., Milwaukee, Wis., Story, L.l., I.L.C., Wtg. Prog. Right GARY ALBERT HOFFMAN, Duquesne '67, 3237 Bookman Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa., Bevins, C.L.A.O., Wtg. Prog., Dem. Left THOMAS C. HORNE, Harvard '67, 43 Stoneyside Dr., Larchmont, N.Y., Dershowitz, Legal Aid., B.8cB. ROBERT NEWTON HORNICK, Amherst '66, Visva Bharati tlndial '67, 23 Pennurst Rd., Pitts- burgh, Pa.. Bevins, Legal Aid, l.L.J. Right PENNY E. HOWE, U. of Cal. tBerkeleyJ '67, 23311 Newton Ave., Stratford, Cal., Howe, C.L.A.O. Left REGINALD HEBER HOWE, Harvard '62, John Hopkins '64, 49 Tyler Rd- Belmont, Mass., Howe, L.I., Vol. Def. JOHN DANIEL HUSHON, Brown '67, 11707 N. Shore Dr., Reston, Va., Sacks, Legal Aid. Right EDDIE ROY ISLAND, Fisk '67, 124 Union St., Hot Spring, Ark., Magruder, l,L.C. Lef7 RICHARD BENNETT HOFFMAN, Cornell '67, 600 Locust St., Mt. Vernon, N.Y., Cardozo, Rec- ord, Vol. Def., L.l. OLIVER JAMES JANN EY, Yale '67, 5 Kingwood Dr., Orangeburg, N.Y., Rep., LLC., L.l., C.L.A.O. Right LAURENCE F. JAY, Princeton '67, 330 E. 79th St., New York, N.Y., Sacks, l.L.J., I.L.C., L.l. Left BARNABAS D. JOHNSON, Case Western Reserve '67, Orchard Lodge, The Avenue, Shoreham, Sussex, England, Blackstone, I.L.C. LARRY D. JOHNSON, U. of Nebraska '67, 4216 Touzalin Ave., Lincoln, Neb., Morgan-Brown, L.l. Right RONALD STEVEN KADDEN, Yale '67, 9 But- tonball Trail, Norwalk, Conn., Marshall, I.L.C., Record. Left KEVIN PETER KANE, Providence Coll. '67, 27 Harvard Ave., Rockville Centre, N.Y., Howe, C.L.A.O., Dem., Record. ARTHUR MITCHELL KAPLAN, U. of Penn. '67, 5 Ramsey Rd., Great Neck, N.Y., C.R.-C.L., Dem. Right DONALD ALAN KAPLAN, Rutgers '67, 18 Llewellyn Pl., New Brunswick, N.J., Cardozo, C.L.A.O., Dem., Leg. Res. 9 -,.,,,,,,,,, 4? , hifi 'Sf' ,XJ sl Q ,-, A . E L i J ' ii ll ,F 33' l S 4, ii 2- , ig. LGF 'Q ALAN H. KAUFMAN, Amherst '67, 2540 Ohio Ave., Youngstown, Ohio, Marshall, L.I., I.L.C., C.L.A.O. Right CHRISTOPHER LEE KAUFMAN, Amherst '67, 844 Prospect Winnetka, Ill., Harlan, L. R. COLIN KELLY KAUFMAN, U. of Texas '67, P.O. Box 27, Lyford, Tex., Bruce, C.R.-L.R., Stud. D.A., L.l. Left JAMES PATRICK KELLY, U. of Delaware '67, 97 County St., Norwalk, Conn., Casner, C.L.A.O., Dem. Right LAWRENCE A. KELLY, St. Louis U. '67, 5701 Saloma Ave., St. Louis, Mo., Harlan, C.L.A.O., Dem. DON M. KENNEDY, Wooster '67, l05 Richmond Cir., Pittsburgh, Penn., Sacks, C.L.A.O. Left JAY STEWART KENOFF, U.C.L.A. '67, 4063 Farmdale Ave., No. Hollywood, Cal., Harlan-War- ren, Wtg. Prog., L.I., I.L.C. Right DAVID EARL KENTY, Wooster '67, I0 Ibbetson St., Somerville, Mass., Casner, C.L.A.O. JOHN ANDREW KIDWELL, U. of Iowa '67, Rock Crest Lodge, Custer, S.D., Dawson, Drama, Lib. Com., Legal Aid. Left YOUNG MOO KIM, Seoul National U. '64, '66, U. of Chicago '67, l 14-9 Unidong Chongro-Ku, Seoul, Korea, Bd. St. Adv. Right NEIL JAY KING, Harvard '66, 356 Grant Ave., Woodmere, N.Y., Choate, L.R., Wtg. Prog. JUDD KIRK, U. of Washington '67, 16736 Shore Dr., N.E., Seattle, Washington, Griswold, Bd. St. Adv. Left JOHN E. KIRKLIN, Dartmouth '67, 2564 Al- tadena Rd., Birmingham, Ala., Keeton. Right SUSAN FAYTH KLEIN, Cornell '67, 2907 Healy Ave., Far Rockaway, N.Y., Griswold, Vol. Def., I.L.C. MICHAEL LOUIS KLOWDEN, U. of Chicago '67, 6204 N. Richmond, Chicago, Ill., Sutherland, B.8LB., L.I., I.L.C. Left PAUL EVERETT KNAG, Queens Coll. '67, 3344 l67th St., Flushing, N.Y., Magruder, Rep., I.L.C. Right GLENN S. KOPPEL, C.C.N.Y. '67, 195 Bennett Ave., New York, N.Y,, Sacks. RICHARD S. KOPPEL, Northeastern '67, l70 Shore Dr., Winthrop, Mass., Sander, Cam. L.S., I.L.C., B.8cB. 15' rm Wir '. 1 Y aiark . it ii gg ll -1? if- ., . 1. Cv 551' Lcd? JOHN HAMILTON KORNS, II, Harvard '67, 3522 Chestnut St., New Orleans, La., Morgan- Brown, L.R. Right DONALD DAVID KOZUSKO, Villanova '67, 3302 Heresford Dr., Parma, Ohio, Leg. Res. STEVEN JAY KRAVITZ, U. of Miami '67, 250 N.E. 175 Terr., N. Miami Beach, Fla., Braucher, C.R.-C.L. Left CATHY STRICKLIN KRENDL, N. Texas State '67, 214 E. Ridgewood, Garland, Tex., Learned Hand, C.L.A.O. Right JAMES RIDER KRENDL, Harvard '63, R.R. No. 2, Spencerville, Ohio, Warren. HAROLD ELIOT KRENTS, Harvard '67, 21 E. 90th St., New York, N.Y., Pound, L,I. Left BERYL MARIE KUDER, Boston U. '67, Larch- mont Acres, Larchmont, N.Y. Right PAUL J. LAMBERT, Holy Cross '67, 403 Washington St., Westfield, N.J., Sander, Leg. Res. WILLIAM H. LAMPE, Yale '67, 1600 Newport Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. Lej7 JAMES H. LANDON, Vanderbilt '67, 1152 Oxford Rd., N.E., Atlanta, Ga., Marshall, Wtg. Prog., So. C., L.1. Right L. WILLIAM LAW, JR., Harvard '67, 9810 Fern- wood Rd., Bethesda, Md., Harlan. PHILIP NELSON LEE, U. of Southern Cal. '67, 1331 S. Pilgrim, Stockton, Cal., H.B.L.S.A. Ld? ROBERT ELLIOTT LEHRER, Yale '67, 9 Con- cord St., W. Hartford, Conn., Harlan, C.R.-C.L., Legal Aid. Right ROBERT KEITH LEM, Princeton '67, 85 Lyn- wood Ave., Toronto, Ontario, Can., Dawson. STEPHEN M. LEONARD, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '67, 750 Sanchez St., San Francisco, Cal., C.L.A.O. Left ALAN MICHAEL LEWIS, Bates '67, 82-37 212th St., Jamaica, N.Y., Magruder, B.8LB. Right MARVIN DEAN LINDER, U. of Wisconsin '63, '64, R.F.D. No. 4, Kirksville, Mo. Harlan. Class of 1970 z: .aiu L' l 5 1 1 1 : Sill- - iii: 1 5521: 1 57 YQ: 31 1 'f 11153 Y , 111 Mg, . 1 , - - - if ' th, nf. J, NIL, Y , J 1 1 N11 513,67 77338-7, D 5' ,fo .Z :Tum 1 2 1 ,1,u-- ,155 s , - 1 A .zrgrf 13,5 ,A 2- i if ,-,,. f G-2 1 .. -es --4 ... 1. - - I N: . ' . , . '11 lf. ....,. -f 4 11.5 1 1-'11 .fy 5-'-1 94. Q- 1 ' Pskyr' I' 1 1 .. W 1 f ' 1 1 Left REGINALD C. LINDSAY, Morehouse '67, 1108 Coosa St., Birmingham, Ala., Sutherland, C.R.- L.R., Dem. JOEL ALAN LINSIDER, Columbia '67, 1780 E. l3th St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Dershowitz, Dem., I.L.C. Righi MARTIN LIPSZYC, U.C.L.A. '67, 735 N. Sycamore Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Jaffe, C.L.A.O., Joint Com. L20 CARL LISMAN, U. of Vermont '67, 4 Deforest Rd., Burlington, Vt., Marshall, Legal Aid. CHARLES THOMAS LONG, Dartmouth '65, 7698 W. l0th Ave., Lakewood, Colo., Marshall, I.L.C., Vol. Def. Right JOHN C. LOVETT, Western Kentucky U. '67, Box l65, Benton, Ky., Sutherland, Dorm. C., Forum, So. C. Leh MICHAEL STEVEN LUREY, Northwestern '67, 3lI2 W. Sherwin Ave., Chicago, Ill., Dawson- Dershowitz, Record, S. Bar, Dem. CHARLES BERTRAND LYNCH, Boston Coll. '67, ll8 Dartmouth St., Rockville Centre, N.Y., Story, Rep., S. T. More. Right WILLIAM FRANCIS MCCARTHY, Holy Cross '67, I8 Church St., Greenfield, Mass., Sander, Bd. St. Adv., S.T. More. Left WILLIAM JOSEPH McGRATH, John Carroll '65, Loyola '67, 2988 Becket Rd., Cleveland, Ohio, Sacks. ROBERT MALCOLM MCINTOSH, Harvard '67, Elm Valley Rd., Alfred, N.Y., Warren, I.L.C. Riglzt M. SEAN MCMILLAN, U. of Munich '64, U.S.C., Marina Del Rey, Cal., Marshall, l.L.J., I.L.C., L.l. Left ROBERT C. MADDOX, Brown '66, 560 S. 70th St., Omaha, Neb., Pound, Dem., I.L.C. STEPHEN HOWARD MARCUS, M.l.T. '67, 22292 Bahl St., Cupertino, Cal., Warren, L.R. Righi JONATHAN J. MARGOLIS, Brandeis '67, l Vik- ing Ct., Arlington, Mass., Marshall. Lej? THOMAS HENRY MARTIN, Harvard '63, 25 Worcester St., Belmont, Mass., Story, I.L.C., Dem., L.l. ARTHUR DOUGLAS MELAMED, Yale '67, 2505 E. Lake of the Isles Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn., Learned Hand, L.R., L.l. Right MICHAEL ROBERT MERZ, Harvard '67, 5532 Joyceann Dr., Dayton, Ohio, Bruce, S.T. More, Rep. Ripon Soc. Left CHARLES RUTHERFORD MEYER, Purdue '67, 5303 N. Penn., Indianapolis, Ind., Learned Hand, B. 8L B., C.L.S., Ames. Right JOSEPH E. MEYER, III, Williams '67, 3767 E. Fair Pl., Littleton, Colo., Howe, C.L.A.O. WILLIAM RICHARD MEYER, Stanford '67, 10175 S.W., McDonald, Tigard, Ore., Kaplan, Drama, L.l. Left JAMES WILLIAM MEYERS, Bentley '64, 8 Leighton St., Natick, Mass., Vol. Def., Rep. Right MARVIN ELLIOT MILBAUER, Harvard '67, I9 Stuyvesant Oval, New York, N.Y., Choate, Wtg. Prog., I.L.C., L.I. THEODORE H. MILBY, Michigan State '67, R.R. No. 5, London, Ky., Weinreb, L.I., So. C., I.L.C. Lejq MARK JOHN MILLS, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '67, 966 Oakmont Dr., Los Angeles, Cal., Story, C.L.A.O., I.L.C., B. 8t B. Right WILLIAM DAVID MONE, Bowdoin '67, 38 Kenilworth Ave., Brockton, Mass., Pound, Dem. JAMES FRANK MONGIARDO, Johns Hopkins '67, Rifle Camp Rd., W. Paterson, N.J., Magruder, L.I., C.L.A.O. Leji MICHAEL ANTHONY MONJOY, Holy Cross '67, 840 Astor Ave., Bronx, N.Y., Bevins. Right PETER HILLS MONROE, Williams '65, Oxford '67, 344 Moross PI., Grosse Pointe, Mich., Gris- wold, I.L.C., L.I., B.8tB. BEVERLY COOPER MOORE, JR., U. of No. Carolina '67, 906 Country Club Dr., Greenboro, N.C., C.R.-C.L., S. Bar. Left ROBERT RALPH MORRIS, Harvard '62, 2205 W. Anna St., Grand Island, Neb., Bd. St. Adv., Legal Aid. Right STEPHEN JOHN MORSE, Tufts '66, 25 Rose Hill Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y., Root, Stud. D.A., L.I. DAVID MARTIN MUCHNICK, Dartmouth '66, U. of Essex CEnglandJ '67, 42 Lake Shore Ter., Brighton, Mass., Jaffe, C.R.-L.R., Dem. Lek EDWARD JAM ES MULLARKEY, Trinity '67, 54 Beacon St., Hartford, Conn., Sutherland, Dem. Right PAUL JOSEPH MUNDIE, Harvard '66, 2524 Pasadena Blvd., Wauwatosa, Wis., Learned Hand, L.R., I.L.C., B.8cB. DANIEL RICHARD MURRAY, Notre Dame '67, 2154 E. Ramsey Dr., Baton Rouge, La., Warren. Left FRANK A. MWINE, Dartmouth '67, Rutoma- Kashari, P.O. Box 102, Mbarara, Uganda, Story, I.L.C. JAMES A. NADEAU, Boston U. '67, 7 Oakdale Ave., Nashua, N.H., Learned Hand. Right JOHN S. NEWHOUSE, II, Knox Coll. '66, 625 Manor Rd., Independence, Mo., Blackstone. Left DENNIS R. NOLAN, Georgetown '67, 442 Chicago Ave., Savanna, Ill., Holmes, Vol. Def., Rep. THOMAS LOWREY O'BRIEN, Wesleyan '63, 1779 Baldwin St., Waterbury, Conn., Marshall, Vol. Def. Right HAROLD B. OBSTFELD, Brooklyn Coll. '67, 1206 Ave. L., Brooklyn, N.Y., Rep., Leg. Res., C.R.-L.R. Left PATRICK B. O'NEAL, U. of Virginia '66, 2403 Lincoln Ave., St. Albans, W. Va., Cardozo, Vol. Def., Dem. GERALD PADMORE, Yale '67, P.O. Box 166, Monrovia, Liberia, Dawson, B.L.S.A., I.L.C. Right RICHARD DAVIES PARKER, Swarthmore '67, 55 Hillside Rd., Wellesley, Mass., Freund, Dem. C.R.-C.L. Lejq COVERT EUGENE PARNELL, III, Birmingham- Southern Coll. '67, 1832 Beth St., Thomasville, Ala., Griswold, L.R., Joint Com., C.L.A.O. DONALD SHAW PASSMAN, U. of Texas '67, 10527 Sarah St., No. Hollywood, Cal., Harlan, Bd. St. Adv., Drama, Forum. Right JOHN M. PAYNE, Yale '63, 289 Waverley Ave., Watertown, Mass., Learned Hand, Legal Aid. Leh ROGER DALE PEARSON, Luther Coll. '64, 1439 Grantham St., St. Paul, Minn., Stud. D.A., I.L.C. STEPHEN BARNETI' PERLMAN, Brown '67, 34 Irving St., Cambridge, Mass., Sacks, Legal Aid. Right RICHARD I. PETERS, Holy Cross '67, 4559 W. 226th St., Cleveland, Ohio, Dem. Left JARED E. PETERSON, U. of Cal. tBerkeleyJ '66, 15650 Lorenzo Ave., San Lorenzo, Cal., Jaffe, I.L.C., C.L.A.O. RODERICK NORMAN PETREY, Yale '63, 212 Kingsway Dr., Temple Terr., Fla., Learned Hand, Joint Com., I.L.C., L.I. Right RUDOLPH F. PIERCE, Hampton Inst. '67, 180 Ruggles St., Roxbury, Mass. Class of 1970 Left ROBERT EDWARD POPKIN, Princeton '67, 534 Academy St., Maplewood, N.J., Braucher. PHILIP MICHAEL POULSON, Cornell '67, 234 Oak St., Bellmore, N.Y., Keeton, Student Bar, L.I., Dem. Right MICHAEL JOHN RADMER, Northwestern '67, I8 Centre St., Cambridge, Mass., Dawson, B.8cB., Dem. Ld? THOMAS CAMERON RAGAN, JR., Princeton '66, P.O. Box 750, Pinehurst, N.C., Casner, l.L.C., L.I. MARTIN HARRIS REDISH, U. of Penn., 230 Atlantic Ave., Lynbrook, N.Y., Cardozo, L.R., l.L.C. Right CHARLES ARTHUR REES, Ponland State '61, Johns Hopkins '64, 100 Main St., Fairview, Ore., Bevins, Dem., I.L.C., S.Bar. Lej JEAN MARGO REID, Wells '67, 1837 Coomer Rd., P.O. 187, Olcott, N.Y., Story, Drama. WILLIAM CECIL REIFF, Oklahoma City U. '67, 2505 N.W., 42nd, Oklahoma City, Okla., Learned Hand, B. 84 B., C.L.A.O., L.l. Right WILLIAM LEROY REYNOLDS, Dartmouth '67, 39 Leockerman Ave., Poughkeepsie, N.Y., C.R.- C.L., Legal Aid. Left THOMAS ARTHUR RICHARDSON, Michigan State '66, 339 Allendale Pl., Flint, Michigan, Bruce, C.L.A.O., S. Bar. STEPHEN ERIK RICHMAN, Amherst '67, 105 Longview Dr., Scarsdale, N.Y., Dawson, Rep. Right JAY H. RIEMER, Columbia '66, U. of Chicago '68, 2306 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., Weinreb, S. Bar., B. SL B. Lei? PETER ROLLEN RINE, U. of Wisconsin '66, '67, 5454 Lake Mendota Dr., Madison, Wis., Marshall, L.I., Rep. THOMAS M. RINGER, Morehouse '67, Rt. 3, Box 365-A, Nashville, N.C., Maguire, B.L.S.A. Right JUAN AGUSTIN RIVERO, U. of Puerto Rico '67, Miradero Rd., Km. 4.4, Mayaguez, P.R., Black- stone, I.L.C., S.T. More, Dem. Lej? RANDALL MAURICE ROBINSON, Virginia Union U. '67, 624 N. 39th St., Richmond, Va., B.L.S.A. JAMES OTIS RODNER, Universidad C. Andres Bello '67, Apartado 1953, Caracas, Venezuela, B.8LB., L.1., S.T. More. Righi RT. REV. MANUEL JUAN RODRIGUEZ, Gregorian U. iRomeJ '54, Catholic U. of America '59, P.O. Box 424, Espanola, N.M., Vol. Defi, L.I., S.Bar. ' 1 'U' 1 1 wo l 13:11 I +1 I-A 1 Q 1 -54, wif 'F' f-I? I05 a has I06 59.1 Left JAMES TULLY ROE, III, The Citadel '67, 32l Cooper Dr., Rome, Ga., Kaplan, B.8tB., Forum, L.l. Right ARTHUR HAMILTON ROGERS, III, Rice '67, 5309 Bordley, Houston, Tex., Blackstone, L.I. ROBERT JAY ROSENBERG, Columbia '67, 44 Intervale Rd., Cranston, R.I., Harlan, C.L.A.O., Dem. Left SANDRA ROSENBLITH, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '66, 164 Mason Terr., Brookline, Mass., Morgan- Brown, Dem. Right ALLYNE RONNA ROSS, 226 Heather St., Manchester, N.H., Wellesley '67, C.L.A.O. MITCHEL SHERMAN ROSS, Cornell '67, 26 Floral Dr., Monticello, N.Y., Casner, C.L.A.O., I.L.C. Left RONALD D. ROTUNDA, Harvard '67, 2222 Orchard St., Blue Island, Ill., Sutherland, L.R., S.T. More. Right THOMAS DUDLEY ROWE, JR., Yale '64, Ox- ford '67, I336 Glendaloch Cir., Ann Arbor, Mich., Pow Wow, L.R., L.l. RICHARD EUGENE ROY, Oregon State '61, Stanford '66, 4555 S. W. Laurelwood Dr., Portland, Ore., Learned Hand, C.L.A.O. Left PAUL DEAN RU BENSTEIN. U.C.L.A. '67, 7807 Ampere Ave., N. Hollywood, Cal., Morgan-Brown, Dorm. C., Stud. D.A. Right PETER JONATHAN RUBIN, Duke '67, 684 High St., Bath., Maine, Story, L.R. JOHN EDMUNDS RUNNELLS, Penn. State '67, 2042 W. Broad St., Scotch Plains, N.J., Maguire, L.l., S. Bar. Lew ALAN ARTHUR SACHS, Columbia '67, 702 44th St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Bruce, L.R., L.l. Right HENRY SANDERS, Talladega Coll., '67, Rt. I, Box 514, Bay Minette, Ala., Bruce, B.L.S.A. LEWIS D. SARGENTICH, Occidental '65, U. of Sussex '67, l2l N. Almansor St., Alhambra, Cal., Learned Hand, L.R., C.R.-C.L., Dem. Left HARRIS SAXON, Dartmouth '66, Stanford '67, I9 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass., Keeton, Legal Aid, L.l., Rep. Right DAVID JONATHAN SAYLOR, Williams '67, 1872 Minno Dr., Johnstown, Pa., L.R. CLAUDE MORELAND SCALES, Ill, U. of S. Florida '67, 3910 Wyoming Ave., Tampa, Fla., Pound, L.l., So. C., C.L.A.O. QA.-v ., il Uv' h -' fs ,W ,vw N 'J I X I z l in 'M gs , Q.-1 71 DW , Y,1....,,, V l :ja 1 5 1 ff-1 in-Lf - - fy? - 5.4 .:.:v ll ' 1 Q--Q Class of 1970 Left EDMUND STEPHEN SCHAFFER, U.C.L.A. '66, 1057 S. Alvira St., Los Angeles, Cal., Magruder, C.L.A.O., I.L.C. SYLVIA COX SCHAUMBURG, Radcliffe '67, 104 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass., Learned Hand, Rep. Right CAROL SCHLESINGER, Wellesley '67, 3173 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio, Maguire, Legal Aid. Left JAMES LAWRENCE SCHULTZ, Yale '67, l206 Woodside Pkwy., Silver Spring, Md., L.R. ROBERT G. SCHWEMM, Amherst '67, 245 Maple Rd., Barrington, Ill., Magruder, Legal Aid, Bd. St. Adv. Right RALPH KIRKLAND SCHWITZGEBEL, Ohio State '56, 5 Pelham Rd., Waltham, Mass., Pound, C.R.L.R. Left JAMES LEE SEAL, U. of Cincinnati '67, 9274 Sheehan Rd., Centerville, Ohio, Marshall, B.8cB., Drama, Leg. Res. DAVID JOSEPH SHAKOW, Harvard '67, 5520 I5th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., Dershowitz, Bd. St. Adv., C.R.-L.R. Right LAWRENCE HOWARD SI-IARF, Cornell '67, 137-18 75th Rd., Flushing, N.Y., Casner, L.R., I.L.C. Left HOWARD F. SHARFSTEIN, Dartmouth '67, 920 Park Ave., New York, N.Y., Keeton, C.L.A.O. DANIEL PETER SHEEHAN, Harvard '67, Alden Ave., Wanensburg, N.Y., Maguire, C.R.-L.R. Right SAMUEL A. SHERER, Oberlin '66, 14 Brighton Pl., Fairlawn, NJ., Learned Hand, H.J.L. Left JOHN THOMAS SHINKLE, Yale '67, 31 Sound Beach Ave., Old Greenwich, Conn., Sutherland, L.R. RICHARD ALAN SHORTZ, Indiana '67, Perrys- ville Rd., Crawfordsville, Ind., Maguire, B.8LB., Wtg. Prog., I.L.C. Right DANIEL REES SHULMAN, Harvard '65, Yale '67, 33 Chilton St., Cambridge, Mass., Howe, Drama, Legal Aid. Left MICHAEL H. SIEGLER, Hobart '67, 6939 Yellowstone Blvd., Forest Hills, N.Y., Griswold, L.I., I.L.C. ROBERT A.S. SILBERMAN, Yale '67, 2l3 E. High St., Lebanon, Pa., Warren, C.R.-C.L., I.L.C. Right ALAN HARVEY SIMKOWITZ, Rutgers '67, 23 Taranto Ct., Maplewood, N.J., Bd. St. Adv. ,::.,gw Y ' i at ii ii ii W an I.. at M921 ff 41 -nh-1 .54 .i q.,.u i Whi li Efhggagggiimii i. , i i wil 1 Q x f v I ION, KPN ' , i . 2.1533 J ii N X th if Left GEORGE Z. SINGAL, U. of Maine '67, 169 Han- cock St., Bangor, Me., Dawson. Right DAVID WALKER SLOAN, Princeton '63, Stan- ford '65, 584 W. Ave., Sewaren, N.J., Kaplan, I.L.C. CHARLES JAY SMILER, Harvard '67, I8 Fenno St., Cambridge, Mass., Bevins, C.L.A.O. Lej? ALFRED TOULON SMITH, Stanford '63, 2320 Presidio Dr., San Diego, Cal. Right DENNIS ROBERT SMITH, Wesleyan '67, 15 Camden Rd., Auburndale, Mass., Bruce, C.L.A.O., I.L.C., B.84B. MICHAEL EDWARD SMITH, Princeton '65, Ox- ford '67, 275 Hollow Tree Ridge Rd., Darien, Conn., Pow Wow, Bd. St. Adv., Vol. Def. Left STANFORD KEITH SMITH, Harvard '67, 56 Waterville Rd., Farmington, Conn., Marshall, I.L.C., Comp. Com., L.I. Right MICHAEL GERALD SMOOKE, U.C.L.A. '67, 701 N. Sierra Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., Marshall, Leg. Res., L.I., Dorm. C. DANIEL ALAN SOLTER, U. of Cal. KBerkeleyJ '67, 656 18th Ave., San Francisco, Cal., C.L.A.O., I.L.C. Lefi BROWNLOW M. SPEER, Haverford '60, Oxford '62, 21 Warren St., Waltham, Mass. Right JAMES STEVEN STANHAUS, Georgetown '66, 500 Coronet Rd., Glenview, Ill., L.R. THOMAS HENRY STANTON, U. of Cal. CDavisJ '65, Yale '67, 3524 Morrow St., Sacramento, Cal., Bevins, Legal Aid., C.R.-L.R. Lej? STUART GEOFFREY STEINGOLD, Princeton '66, Institut d'Etudes Politiques CParisJ '67, 6070 Newport Point, Norfolk, Va., Howe, So. C., L.I., Joint. Com. Right GORDON McKAY STEVENSON, JR., Williams '61, U.C.L.A. '63, I00 Canoe Brook Pkwy., Sum- mit, N.J., Kaplan. DAVID P. STONE, Columbia '67, l6A Forest St., Cambridge, Mass., Blackstone, I.L..I., I.L.C. Left ROBERT DAVIS STUART, U. of Washington '67, 1209 S. Grove, Spokane, Wash., Marshall. Right JERALD D. STUBBS, U. of Ga. '67, Savannah, Ga., Story, Bd. St. Adv., So. C. WILLIAM BEAUMONT SULLIVAN, U. of Vir- ginia '67, Box 7, Miami, Mo., Learned Hand, Wtg. Prog., S. Bar. ,, ' 'V ' - v us, . . ,. ,V l V f ,Mm 1. 1 8 C ,V . rf- -- K i QT Lej7 HOWARD ALAN SWEET, U. of Wisconsin '67, 1524 Jefferson St., Madison, Wis., Freund, C.L.A.O., Record, Drama. Right PETER JAMES SWIFT, Harvard '63, I9 Elston Rd., Upper Montclair, N.J., Howe, C.L.A.O., L.I. JEFFREY SWOPE, Harvard '67, 1700 Shadford, Ann Arbor, Mich., Marshall, L.R., Wtg. Prog. Leh ALAN L. TALESNICK, Harvard '67, 7200 Wash- ington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind., Sutherland, C.L.A.O. Right HARVEY WAYNE TAYLOR, Stanford '67, 1006 S. Alfred St., Los Angeles, Cal., Sacks, L.R. WILLIAM EMMETT TAYLOR, III, U. of Vir- ginia '67, 2221 Marsh Rd., Wilmington, Del., Learned Hand, Dem., S. Bar. Left JOHN TERAKEDIS, JR., Baldwin-Wallace '67, 211 High St., Dover, Ohio, Freund. Right SAMUEL VINCENT THOMAS, N. Carolina Coll. '67, 163 A Monroe St., Brooklyn, N.Y. MORRIS ASHCROFT THURSTON, Brigham Young '67, ll7l Via Arroyo, Ventura, Cal., Learned Hand. Left RICHARD WILLIAM TOMC, John Carroll '67, 16 Lancaster St., Cambridge, Mass., Learned Hand, S.T. More. Right DENNIS R. TOURSE, Bates '62, 222 S. Broad St., Ridgewood, N.J., Bevins, H.B.L.S.A. DAVID ALAN TRAVELSTEAD, Ohio State '67, 1217 W. Hendrickson, Marion, Ill., Maguire, I.L.C., C.L.A.O. Left DAVID C. TROTT, HARVARD '67, 88 Forbes Hill Rd., Wollaston, Mass., Warren, C.R.-L.R. Right JUNJIRO TSUBOTA, U. of Tokyo '65, U. of Chicago '67, ll-1112 Haramaya 650 Kamisakunobe, Kawasaki, Japan, I.L.C. BENNER CRESWILL TURNER, JR., Harvard '67, 68 Eustis St., Cambridge, Mass., Bevins, C.R.- C.L., Dem., S.Bar. Left RICHARD SPENCER TWISS, U. of Washington '67, 6820 48th N.E., Seattle, Wash., Cardozo. Right WILLIAM C. TYSON, Princeton '67, Mt. Hood, Silverton, N.J., Harlan, L.I., Dorm. C., I.L.C. MICHAEL FRANCIS VACCARO, Dartmouth '67, 9 Ashlawn Rd., Malvern, Pa., Dawson, Dorm. C. Class of 1970 52 35, . V ' 6 igg w u 2. - 1'-F64 , 1 5 li . T 2, - . wr 5' f i s -s-L '. .U 'Q i - 'i -7, ,X H . ' v g: ga, '- nz -':t:..,. 1 rin: V2-tx . v ga ' vm. 2 xg,-.5 . . :J-e.--as 1 ls- 'As . f . agar, 1 was 1 f ,ta . 1 ?f3KF'5'5i5I 'N ff. ,, L .,,....,,,,... .. . . ,. W W A, ., .,...,. , .5 . . ..... . .w I wel. ' -lvmii lx 1 ' :I N Q mn .W s 5 22g'11j33fg',. ' . H A H 1 1' ist , . ll gig I 1, JJ' Q' 3. ' ' 151151 'HS ma - -. v ' f I . ,, .... .... V V- . .D , . r . il 1 A ,E t 1 I in I I E, awww- 'Z-Q.-V-:...:, -f , 'AH .aw in-I at ii Q X . 8 ,I tr Xi 1 W I 1 9 f ' 1 ' , 1 Y ., is we 0 1 . I sg , YQ , , A... ,L . Y ig, V tr . :: lf1-M. x - '- -ii, .mga-f U 2... ., ' 1 N' tile 1 5. ,- 12e.- 1 my an-:ri ' .v , H ..,,. Q ,-1. 1 U I I1 1 ' E M V' 1 H It , .M .ga t ,t i ..,,,.gw-. - ' 5.-iigifiztftggill ,gt ,. J, V fag- R 1.12312 1 ' 1 11521355- 1 I r T' l '-In nal? ' . . at I is-it 1 33 U f Y . 'I t K'- Y Q' . -. '411'r,, af Ewa 3 109 Left JON WILLIAM VAN HORNE, Andrews U. '67, 5124 Creekmore Ct., Kettering, Ohio, C.R.-C.L., I.L.C., S.Bar. PHILIP GABINO VARGAS, U. of New Mexico '60, U. of Colorado '68, General Delivery, Taos, N.M. Right CONSTANCE MARIE VECELLIO, U. of N. Carolina '67, 235 Taylor Ave., Salem, Va., Harlan, Forum, I.L.C., So. C. Left M. GLENN VINSON, JR., Columbia '67, 531 E. Hillvale, Dallas, Tex., Blackstone, Legal Aid., L.I., I.L.C. GARY ARNOLD WALPERT, M.I.T. '64, 6601 Western Run Dr., Baltimore, Md., Learned Hand, S. Bar., B.8LB. Right DAVID GRAVES WALSH, U. of Wisconsin '65, 1029 Spaight St., Madison, Wis., Scott, Forum, L.I., Stud. D.A. , 1-ah STEPHEN ROBERT WATSON, Princeton '67, 1877 Rhodes Dr., Costa Mesa, Cal., Legal Aid. D. ROBERT WEBSTER, Indiana U. '67, Box 14, R.R. No. I, Nashville, Ind., Blackstone, Dem. I.L.C. Right DONALD LINCOLN WEINBERG, U. of Chicago '66, '67, 206 C Holden Green, Cambridge, Mass., Maguire, Legal Aid, I.L.C. Left ROBERT FREDERICK WEINI-IAGEN, JR., U. of Minnesota '67, 13 Duck Pass Rd., St. Paul, Minn., Warren, I.L.C., Rep. ALAN STUART WEITZ, U. of Penn. '67, 1603 Van Buren St., N.W., Washington, D.C., Story, L.R. Right WILLIAM FLOYD WELD, Harvard '66, Oxford '67, Boney Lane, Saint James, N.Y., Kent, Vol. Def., L.I., Drama. Left RAYMOND LOUIS WHEELER, JR., U. of Texas '67, 8 Forest St., Apt. 1, Cambridge, Mass., Bevins, L.R. GEORGE EDWARD WHITE, Amherst '63, Yale '64, '67, 11 Irving St., Somerville, Mass., Harlan. Right RICHARD THOMAS WHITE, Morehouse '68, 26 Waverly St., Apt. 203, Detroit, Mich., Marshall, H.B.L.S.A., C.R.-C.L. Left JOHN STEDMAN WHITMAN, Harvard '67, I6 Mellen St., Cambridge, Mass., Kent. ROBLIN JOHN WILLIAMSON, Princeton '66, U. Coll. London '67, clo Jones, 15500 Tustin Village Way, Tustin, Cal., Howe, B.8LB. Right HARRY LOUIS WITTE, Spring Hill '66, I7 Fern- wood Dr., Rockledge, Fla., Sutherland. gear . iigLi L-, -L,,.,., 6'- Qg. Hitt if 'YQ '17 4.2 f-jill . H .J jail' l VY Q Y it l mg ' - the ' A 1, l 1 nn: ,Q sv ff 2 i Jin? 2' ,Q Q QA I..-. ,ll sv Ir: -all F534 'lr Lej? ROBERT AARON WlTI'IE, U. of Michigan '67 7600 S. Oglesby Ave., Chicago, Ill., Marshall: C.L.A.O., L.l., I.L.C. Right DENNIS HAROLD WOOD, Oregon State '64, U. of Maryland '67, Rt. L, Box 362, Beavercreek, Ore., Griswold. MERLE WILLIAM WOOD, II, U. of Iowa '65, '66, Bevins, B. 8: B., Comp. Com., Dem. Left ALFRED M. de ZAYAS, Fordham '67, New York, N.Y., Sacks, I.L.C., Rep,, S.T. More. Right ROY ALLEN ZINK, Princeton '62, 94 Blos- somcrest Rd., Lexington, Mass., Kaplan. KENNETH ALLAN ZITTER, U. of 357 E. 201 St., Bronx, N.Y., Dershowitz. Penn. '67 Left M. DAVID ZURNDORFER, Penn. State '67, 192 Congress St., Milford, Mass., Pound, Bd. St. Adv., Dem. Right JOHN VINCENT ERICKSON, Stanford '66, '67, 345 Woodlawn, Grand Haven, Mich. Class of 1970 5 ,. J . , rv- .SM Txpmlii X gy- ' L- - X1 A' :mg ' ,,,- .- 'H Q any I- i ' : at I M ' ii-ms E -. ak 4 ' v 4 - 'oi A I K ' - ' 5 I .Arai 7 ' fe TV' 'I -.qw if . ' Q Q, Q , . ,tar W- -e WMM -lb at N 3 , - 5 , J It ' -7 i R '. 1 V' X J 0 .' i .F 'xnxx' N K: 4- ' ' f - ,D gf f K E, hx f .V v - ' - N . 41.5 I 'Y' Ax. D--S-L ,in lf 4, 4 ' .lr W' ' i t . .. V , :ahh ' Q 4 Q4 sr I . 'i':j' 5,1 . 1+ F. pl Not Picmred THADDAS LEE ALSTON, Harvard '67, 26l6 S. Calumet Ave., Chicago, Ill. WILLIAM BEKKER BERNARD, JR., U. of Florida '64, '66, 593 Kingfisher Lane, Sarasota, Fla. ROBERT R. BRUCE JAM ES J. FOSTER, M.l.T. '67, Grand Rapids, Mich., Learned Hand, I.L.C. ALAN NESS GRANGER, Harvard '67, 2689 Cummings, Berkeley, Mich. MICHAEL JOHN HAROZ, Princeton '67, 3301 Centenary Dr,, Dallas, Tex. HOWARD L. JOSEPH J. DOUGLAS KNOTT, Yale '66, 3000 Washington Rd., W. Palm Beach, Fla., Harlan. RICHARD PEARSON LARM, Harvard '67, 2956 S. St. Paul, Denver, Colo., Jaffe. JEFFREY A. LEWIS, Yale '66, 1075 Park Ave., Rochester, N.Y., Harlan, L.l. JOHN J. OSBORN, Harvard '67, Belvedere, Cal. ALAN M. RUBIN, U. of Wisconsin '67, 5 Crest Ln., Scarsdale, N.Y. HERBERT RIKE TAKAHASHI, U. of Wisconsin '67, 74 Malalika, Hilo, Hawaii, Braucher, C.R.-C.L. NEWBY TOMS, Princeton '65, Oxford '67, 4712 Charmian Rd., Richmond, Va,, Keeton, B.8rB., I.L.C. J. BAUR WHITTLESEY, Harvard '67, 3l0 Douglas Rd., Chappaqua, N.Y., Harlan. Ffgis . sgiiq . 'Z' 5 H ' -:TQ ' L N ' 4.1 1 . us .-,els-'-L iff., - N if X -. e ' gw:1ffe-gr: J N 'riffs z' .13 X ' Ni L ' ' Q5 A f 'wwf- ' 'f--4 ' -t N., , 4 .1 L- i 71 my if 'wif' .. . ' '5'4'i64ifg4.3i- X ' ' 5-,114 Wu g.. ,.. . 1'-..Q' ' . f. Class of 1971 ' lhgsiglllll .Wg --it To p ALLAN RAY ABRAVANEL, Yale '68, 43-10 Kissena Blvd., Flushing, N.Y., Casner, C.L.A.O., Dem. RICHARD JOEL ABT, Princeton '67, 454 Theresa Ave., W. Hempstead, N.Y., Warren, L.I., L.R., Dorm C. JEFFREY BRUCE ALBERT, U. of Penn. '68, 1132 McKinley St., Philadelphia, Pa., Cardozo, C.R.-C.L., C.R.-L.R. RICHARD CECIL ALLEN, Indiana '68, Box 92, Medaryville, Ind., Weinreb, L.I., Wtg. Prog., C.L.A.O. LAURENT ALPERT, Harvard '67, Ecole Nationale d'Ad- ministration '68, 12 Welwyn Rd., Great Neck, N.Y., Legal Aid JEFFREY ALEXANDER ALSDORF, Yale '68, 301 Woodley Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Middle PETER JOHN AMES, Harvard '67, S.A.I.A. CBolognaJ '68, 16 E. 98th St., New York, N.Y., Kent, I.L.C., L.I. NAJEEB ABRAHAM AMMAR, JR., W. Virginia '68, I06 Virginia St., Beckley, W.Va., Dawson, I.L.C., Rep., S. Bar. ERIC SEVERIN ANDERSON, St. Mary's '68, 7543 S. Sea, Apt. 255, San Antonio, Tex., Griswold. I 2 29213 , ,few-r I fa 'iii ti 2 in Hgh, 1 -i .- Q -.W P as ff ill EL.-A H .... ii J' M' fx ,qs-w I irq- THOMAS WILLIAM ANNINGER, Institut d'Etud Politiques '67, 20 Crescent St., Cambridge, Mass., Bruc C.L.A.O., I.L.C. DENNIS ARDI, Cornell '68, 169-40 24th Ave., Bayside, Ne York, N.Y., Griswold, C.L.A.O., Stud. D.A. HENRY P. BAER, Brown '56, 50 Lindbergh Ave., Rye, N.Y Kaplan, Forum, I.L.C. Bottom BRUCE MALCOLM BAKERMAN, Lehigh '68, Apartac Aereo 61000 Este, Caracas, Venez., Story, I.L.C., Rep. PHILIP JOHN BAKES, JR., Loyola tChicagoJ '68, 8825 Utica Ave., Evergreen Park, Ill., Braucher, L.R. KEITH EM ERSON BALLARD, Princeton '57, Yale '61, 2 Denny Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. I.L.C., C.R.-C.L. GARY BANKS, Yeshiva U. '68, 73 Francis St., Everett, Mas Dawson, I.L.C., Vol. Def., Leg. Res. NORMAN WILLIAM BARCLAY, C.C.N.Y. '68, 4 Pet Cooper Rd., New York, N.Y., Crater. JOHN R. BARMEYER, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '68, Patti Canyon, Missoula, Mont., Harlan. 114 f .Hs 'fab J -1 Z2 1 s.- ' 2 ,.f' H, - . 1, v ' I V, J Class of 1971 1 Tl Q. ' Q ' f 1 1 - - in f seas ' ' rt- garage., X - r 4 H ., . ,mis ef-sw.. 1 1-. aa A. ' . 2 1 ww si?2s21ts1g:':tQW X .W Wi. as 1 vt,-A. ' ' ,X Y H Jian ' ' V lwii A , rm. ,,., . , . .M t .. l i ' H K ' tl ,V , . , V of 42,921 v . . , ' 1, . ' - - ' 3. . , , i :T . , ,.. . 1 ..A, I 1 ' ' 1 x Kea, 'W . L, - - 1. . - I vs, -,, . r' -.-T' ' ' ' ie - - 4 ' J tg. . ' 252 - . . X 1 - aerial, - fl . ' ' f 1: .. :writ-11. 5 l Q5 H ..,,, -. ' 1 - . , ,-55162,-'Eiisgiefgjft pi 'L -1-vim - -' eff 1 A , I TZI,'..'.'wEQ 1' -f flgfui 1' A ig 5,5112 ' A biz Yimxffifeiziilf 1 . , 1 1, ft F 'r - 5 . , 4:- . f v 41 b 5 f.. Top ATRICIA THROWER BARMEYER, Hollins '68, Pattee anyon, Missoula, Mont., Story. NITA FISHER BARRETT, Washington U. '68, 37 Wendell t., Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland, C.L.A.O., C.R.-C.L., Dem. TEVEN LLOYD BARRETT, Colgate '68, 37 Wendell St., ambridge, Mass., Pound, C.L.A.O., C.R.-C.L. ONALD GENE BAUER, Queens Coll. '68, 153-30 78th ve., Flushing, N.Y. ILLIAM MICHAEL BAZZY, Brown '68, 52 Boylston St., ambridge, Mass. ENNETH R. BENBASSAT, U. of Cal. CBerke1eyJ '68, 4817 askell Ave., Encino, Cal. Middle ILLIAM JOHN BENNETT, Williams '65, U. of Texas '70, 33 S. Glebe Rd., Arlington, Va. ONALD EV ERETT BERENBEIM, Cornell '66, Oxford '68, 025 E. Ellsworth Ave., Denver, Colo. AMUEL RICHARD BERGER, Cornell '67, 15 Ware St., V 1, H 1 .-.e.., . ' E? . 7 , it , , - 4 , 7 2 : -r -.., XL. A 1 .. 1. 1 1. aiuilliiilliillu 5 X Us ra. 111 mum 1 ,-.. ff fm - s1?1ssassr,,,, :,,5,,.2wg,Qy 1553255235311 1 E . 'Ubi . Ni -, E -F X Cambridge, Mass. BENJAMIN I. BERMAN, Case Western Reserve '68, 166 Rockdale, Youngtown, Ohio, Crater. PAUL JEFFREY BERNSTEIN, William 84 Mary '66, Cambridge '68, 49 Harborview Ave., Milford, Conn. Vol. Def. JONATHAN KIMMEL BLANK, Hobart '66, 215 Ballard Dr., W. Hartford, Conn., Choate, Leg. Res. Bottom WILLIAM STUART BOGGS, Wittenberg '68, 720 E. Carisbrook Dr., Maumee, Ohio. JOHN MARSHALL BOOKSTON, U. of Michigan '68, 2404 Narbonne Way, Costa Mesa, Cal. HUGH MICHAEL BOSS, Dartmouth '68, 528 Nottingham Rd., Baltimore, Md., Story, L.l., Forum, I.L.C. JAMES HERBERT BOWNAS, Xavier '68, 1683 E. Cooke Rd., Columbus, Ohio, Bevins, Rep., Vol. Def. LOUIS ALLEN BRADBU RY, Northwestern '68, 4604 Willis, Independence, Mo., Harlan, Forum, Vol. Def. JONATHAN BRANT, Brandeis '68, 6101 Alhambra, Shawnee Mission, Kan., C.L.A.O. 1 'I A tg,-f 1' ii.: -7' 115 .lnr wul........1m V 1 E , www if I r- , m w it I 1 . w -all w i 6 . ':,. ii 1 ww' M25 A www my ' wn 4 If mi www rg wx .Y ww w W :viii ' ,iii 31:13- wju,i.e f.., , gugiggyi I '11 www ww www ww ':-.- ,ylffs A sea .gi .. w V - ll- M Top RICHARD CLOSE BRAUTIGAM, Michigan State '68, l0l I Sydenham St., Albion, Mich., L. Hand. JONATHAN BOWEN BREEN, Dartmouth '67, Australian National U. '68, I59 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. JOHN FRANCIS BREGLIO, Yale '68, 670 Sixth Pl., Garden City, N.Y., Scott, C.L.A.O., L.I. MICHAEL F. BREWER, Williams '65, Northwestern '66, 232 E. Walton Pl. Apt. 6E, Chicago, Ill., C.R.-C.L. DAVID H. BROCKWAY, Cornell '68, 63 Brevoort Rd., Chappaqua, N.Y. TERRY RICHARD BRODERICK, Ripon Coll. '68, 3227 Greenbriar Dr., Glenview, Ill., Crater, B. 8L B. Middle RICHARD EUGENE BRODSKY, Brown '68, 6 Ruthven St., Providence, R.I., Pound, Dem., C.R.-C.L., S. Bar. RICHARD LOUIS BRODSKY, Brandeis '68, 9 Eastern Rd., Hartsdale, N.Y., Scott. DAVID NOEL BROWN, Ohio State '68, 10980 Meadowbrook Dr., Cleveland, Ohio, Howe, C.L.R.D. LEXEQEEW A w w wi I N dwg ,fl 4' Lai! 1 i ms RONALD BROWN, Rutgers '67, l068 Elizabeth Ave., Elizabeth, N.J., Jatfe-Leach, B.L.S.A., C.R.-L.R. JAMES S. BRYAN, Allegheny '68, 5 N. Washington St., North East, Pa., Scott, Bd. St. Adv., Joint Com. JONATHAN BUMP, Amherst '66, 6 Linden St., Wellesley, Mass., Crater, I.L.J. Bottom MICHAEL L. BURAK, U. of Vermont '68, 23 Roland Ct., Winooski, Vt., Casner, C.L.A.O. ORDWAY PARTRIDGE BURDEN, Harvard '66, Harvard Business School '68, 820 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y., Kent B. 8: B., L.l., Rep. ALFRED FRANKLIN BURGESS, JR., Princeton '65, 308 W. Faris Rd., Greenville, S.C., Pow Wow. DAVID ALAN BURNS, U. of Oklahoma '68, 37 Hillcrest, Ponca City, Okla., Dawson, Rep. WILLIAM DAVID BUSSEY, Harvard '66, 801 MacArthur Ave., Ashland, Wis., Marshall, Dem. GREGORY WILLIAM BYRNE, U. of So. Carolina '68, 8 Poplar Rd., Cambridge, Mass. uaaggigggg . 4 Class of 1971 'UB Top DWARD JAMES BYRNES, Providence '65, 312 Malden St., edford, Mass., Root. ENRY HARRIS CADDELL, U. of Alabama '67, U. of aryland '68, 2200 Country Club Rd., Decatur, Ala., C.R.- .L. ICHAEL DONALD CAHN, Michigan State '68, 1287 ahlia Ln., Wantagh, N.Y., Legal Aid. USAN ALICE CAHOON, Emory '68, 2433 Segovia Ave., acksonville, Fla., L. Hand, Legal Aid. TEPHEN BRUCE CAMHI, Queens Coll. '68, 147-53 78th ve., Flushing, N.Y., Dawson, C.L.A.O., Drama Soc. ARTIN JAMES CAMPANELLA, U. of Illinois '68, 2s 160 vy Ln., Lombard, Ill. Middle AUGHN ALONZO CARNEY, Colgate '68, 6800 S. ichigan Ave., Chicago, Ill., Pound, B. 8a B., L.I. RAY CARPENTER, Kansas State '68, R.R. 3, Kan., L. Hand, Stud. D.A. Pendleton, Ore., Choate, C. L.A.O. DANIEL T. CASTILLO, U. of Texas '68, 3801 Betel, Corpus Christi, Tex., Sutherland, C.L.A.O., Dem. DONALD L. CHASEN, Lafayette '68, 47 Oval Rd., Millburn, N.J. HENRY ELBERT CHATHAM, JR., Millsaps '68, 1718 Pineview Cir., Meridian, Miss., Braucher, L.I. Bottom THOMAS VINCENT CHEMA, Notre Dame '68, 131 Thomp- son Ave., East Liverpool, Ohio, Harlan, Dem. ALAN BARRY CLAMAN, U.C.L.A. '64, 6900 Arizona Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Marshall. PATRICK EDWARD CLANCY, Holy Cross '68, 420 Ridge- way Blvd., Dc Pere, Wis. ROGER EARL CLARK, Rice '68, 6757 Manor Dr., Ft. Worth, Tex. KEVIN MICHAEL CLERMONT, Princeton '67, U. of Nancy CFranceJ '68, 87 Rowland Ave., Hackensack, N.J., Morgan- Brown, L.R., L.I. THOMAS VINCENT CLIFF, Amherst '68, 544 Cadieux Rd., DOUGLAS CARTER, Stanford '68, 903 N.W. l2th., 'li Grosse Pointe, Mich., Howe, L.I., S.T. More, B. 8L B. ll7 if H E I. t J Q., 5 li si I Top EDM UND STEPHEN COH EN, Dartmouth '68, 34 Irving St., Cambridge, Mass., Keeton, B. 8L B., Rep. HOWARD EARL COH EN, Washington U. '68, 4250 Marine Dr., Chicago, III. MARSHA NAN COHEN, Smith '68, 310 E. 32nd. St., Apt. IO, Paterson, N.J., Cardozo, C.L.A.O., Bd. St. Adv. JAMES OTIS COLE, Talladega '63, 50I E. 32nd St., Chicago, Ill., Blackstone, B.L.S.A. JONATHAN EDWARD COLE, Brown '68, I4l3 Chestnut St., Atlantic, Iowa, Scott, C.R.-C.L. BART JOSEPH COLLI, Fordham '68, 2l 6l Center Ave., Fort Lee, N.J., Dawson. Middle RICHARD DEAN CONLIN, U. of Illinois '67, R.R. No. 3, Belvidere, Ill. WINTHROP BROWN CONRAD, JR., Yale '67, London School of Economics '68, 27105 Scenic Highway, Franklin, Mich., Marshall, C.L.A.O., L.I. TERENCE M. CONSIDINE, Harvard '68, 4499 Hermosa Way, San Diego, Cal. 'I 'Ei Isl X N R, X 5, G 2 N , , 4-A I Q fn 118 f'?-ttf ' eg ' , ' ..-JH. f .1 fmt ,At z PHILIP CARTER COOK, Georgia Tech. '68, 981 Northcliff Dr., Atlanta, Ga., Story. ROBYN COOPER, Cornell '68, 403 Lavender Hill Dr., Cherry Hill, N.J., L. Hand, Legal Aid, S. Bar. MICHAEL RAY COPPOCK, Drury '68, 831 S. Delaware, Springfield, Mo., Blackstone, Rep. Bottom DANIEL ROBERT COQUILLETTE, Williams '66, Oxford '69, 37 Brookside Dr., Plandome, N.Y., C.R.-C.L., I.L.C., S. Bar. BRUCE ALAN CORDINGLEY, Purdue '68, 910 W. 126th Ave., Crown Point, Ind., L. Hand. JOHN COSGRAVE CORRIGAN, JR., Holy Cross '59, Bos- ton Coll. '60, U. of Louvain '68, 659 Pearce St., Fall River, Mass., I.L.C., S.T. More, Dem. DAVID MARK CORWIN, Williams '66, Harvard '68, 75 Henry St., Brooklyn, N.Y., C.L.A.O., Joint Com., I.L.C. DOLORES MARIE COULTER, Marygrove '68, 22320 Nona, Dearborn, Mich., Legal Aid. BENJAMIN GUILLE COX, M.I.T. '68, 914 S. Center St., Terre Haute, Ind. Dawson, Vol. Def., P.B.H. fi ff 11 ... ff --1, 1 -1 ,. . , Tai, 'fi vwt f g V '9Lff,Qgt,Z, 4 -' h 19, --FQ. ,,-,.--Y H' mfs v , , 1 if 5:-a 7- V-. I, ,Agn - 1, -V--, ,-t x 4 eg w If gi t ff? 'FP' l ' s , Ill. ,, ' , , of . , ' ,,,. z I I A ' Class of 1971 'N 'QW' Top ANIEL WILLIAM COYNE, Marquette '68, 3808 W. yrick St., Chicago, Ill., Cardozo, B. 8a B., Dem. AYNER PRUDEN CROWDER, Columbia '68, 72 Chappell d., S.W., Atlanta, Ga., Howe, B. SL B., L.I., I.L.C. HILIP KERRY CURTIS, Dartmouth '68, 2835 Wellesley r., Columbus, Ohio. ICHARD W. DAILY, Antioch '68, 707 14th St., Boulder, olo., Weinreb, I.L.C., Legal Aid. ICHARD LESLIE DASHEFSKY, Yale '68, I2 Eagle Rd., orwalk, Conn., Dorm. C. AVID STERLING DAVENPORT, Amherst '68, 485 Elder ane, Winnetka, Ill., Bevins, L.R., I.L.C., L.I. Middle ICHARD HANSEN DAVIES, Union '68, 46 S. Murray ve., Ridgewood, N.J. FN .IAMIN FRANKLIN DAVIS, JR., U. of No. Carolina 4929 Kaplan Dr., Raleigh, N.C., Dershowitz, Wtg. Prog. L. DEES, U. of Florida '68, 121 Maplewood Dr., Beach, Fla., Sacks. Z PETER T. de KOSZMOVSZKY, Matura flnnsbruck, Aus.J '61, Geneva U. '65, Yale '67, clo H.H. 84 R., One Wall Street, New York, N.Y., Marshall, Rep., I.L.C., I.L.J. CHARLES MARSHALL DELBAUM, Amherst '68, 285 Cedarhurst Ave., Cedarhurst, N.Y., C.R.-C.L. ROBERT EDWIN DENHAM, U. of Texas '66, Harvard '68, 2517 Elmwood Dr., Abilene, Tex., Harlan, L.R. Bottom MICHAEL HARLAN DIAMANT, Case Western Reserve '68, 3507 Northcliffe Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio, Warren, Forum, Stud. D.A., I.L.C. ROBERT JAMES DOMRESE, Harvard '66, Prinoeton '68, 744 Brownell, Glendale, Mo., Dawson, Forum, L.I. LEIGH-WAI DOO, Columbia '68, 1035 Kinau St., Honolulu, Hawaii, Choate, C.L.A.O., L.I. DAVID M. DORET, Yale '68, 3608 Lynn Lane, Wantagh, N.Y., Casner, Legal Aid, Yearbook. RAPHAEL DuBARD, JR., Syracuse '65, 41 Fordham Dr., Buffalo, N.Y., Magruder, B.L.S.A., Dem. ROBERT THOMAS DUFFY, Wright State '68, 419 Candace Dr., Springfield, Ohio, Blackstone, Dorm C., L.I. V 17149- 3 av '27 'R 119 1,111 mi mi .wifi , W...gg'.11 11.11 1. 11.11. ri .rm ii . 1 ' ' 'Qi 1 1 11 ' M .. NW 1 l Top RICHARD VAN DUIZEND, Harvard '68, 19521 N.E. 19th Ct., Miami, Fla., Choate, I.L.C. Vol. Def., Drama Soc. DANIEL MARK DUNSON, Ohio State '68, 1446 Friar Lane, Columbus, Ohio, B. 8c B. LESLIE MARC DURANT, Cornell '68, 37 Mirrielees Cir., Great Neck, N.Y., Dershowitz, I.L.J., C.R.-C.L., I.L.C. JOHN J. DURKAY, Fordham '68, 613 Blandford St., Rock- ville, Md. THOMAS LAMAR EARP, Brown '68, 1323 Irish St., S. Bos- ton, Va., Bevins, Legal Aid. ANDREW D. EGENDORF, M.l.T. '67, 506 Coventry House, Melrose Pk., Pa., C.R.-L.R., C.R.-C.L. Middle DAVID GOTTFRIED EISENSTEIN, U. of Wisconsin '67, 215 Adams St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Warren, C.R.-L.R., Dem. DAVID ROY ELLIS, M.l.T. '68, 10130 Sakura Dr., St. Louis, Mo., Drama Soc. GARY MARVIN EPSTEIN, Lehigh '68, 24 Peabody Terr. Apt. 1701, Cambridge, Mass., Vol. Def. 'Qi 1 I20 4 svfly 'E.51:MI551f . .. . ' 651, . . A 1 A .ap 1 . fl JOHN RANDALL FAITH, Occidental '68, 409 Hill St., Monrovia, Cal., Howe. WILLIAM ALEXANDER FALIK, Cornell '68, 718 B Cedarbrook Hill, Wyncote, Pa., Griswold, L.R. RICHARD L. FARREN, Yale '68, 156 Hoover Rd., Rochester, N.Y., Yearbook, Rep., Forum. Bottom LELAND HOWARD FAUST, U. of Cal. fBerkeIey1 '68, 435 El Camino Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., Warren, Stud. D.A. HENRY MICHAEL FEINSTEIN, see p. 121. JACK K. FEIRMAN, Brandeis '68, 12 Yates Ln., Jericho, N.Y., Harlan. LEWIS HAMILTON FERGUSON, III, Yale '66, Kings '68, 604 Plaza Dr., Joplin, Mo., Bruce, L.R., L.I. ROBERT P. FEYER, Princeton '68, 300 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y., Dershowitz, Legal Aid, I.L.C., L.I. WILLIAM O'l'I'O FIFIELD, Purdue '68, 1509 W. 124th PI., Crown Point, Ind., L. Hand. JERROLD E. FINK, U.C.L.A. '68, 4802 Highgrove Ave., Tor rance, Cal., Field, Rep., I.L.C. Wlll H wr V 5 55' 2' . :rm 5 I EI. A :.'-'aw' H 1 ' . ms- gilu 1' ml 6' . , 1 I gl ,+ 1 - e 1 f ' ,ii . li, zfwh, I :Hi Top RY MICHAEL FEINSTEIN, U. of Penn. '68, IOI3 W. olcrest Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Casner. ARK WINGATE FOSTER, Yale '65, 952 Old Post Rd., airfield, Conn., Kent, L.I., Vol Def. ULIAN J. FOWLES, N.Y.U. '67, I96-24 Hollis Ave., Hollis 2, New York, N.Y., Pound, B. dt B., Record, B.L.S.A. EPHEN MARK FOXMAN, U. of Penn. '68, 24750 Hilltop r., Beachwood, Ohio, Blackstone, C.L.A.O., Dem., I.L.C. ARY LOUISE FRAMPTON, Pembroke '67, London School f Economics and Pol. Science '67, 304 W. Michigan Ave., Ur- ana, III., L. Hand, C.R.-C.L., Vol. Def., C.R.-L.R. FTFR MALCOLM FRANK, Boston U. '65, Johns Hopkins I9 Park Ln., Staten Island, N.Y., Cardozo, I.L.C. Middle MARC FRIEDLANDER, U. of Penn. '68, Grasty Rd., Md., Griswold, Dorm. C. ANTHONY FUDACZ, Stanford '68, l4920 Ot- St., Sherman Oaks, Cal. CHRISTIAN FUNK, U.S.C. '66, 13027 La Vista Dr., Cal., Magruder, I.L.C., Forum. Fl Class of 1971 Ia gl I V ,N .. , 9 311-1 ii H FL I W I I Y .1 ...- if 5. ' ' 1 I f .fi . I. - A .1 gf. ffffr: BARRY RAY FURROW, Harvard '67, l9l0 S. Georgia, Mason City, Iowa, Jaffe. VICTOR F. GANZI, Fordham '68, I48 St. Paul's Rd. N., Hempstead, N.Y., Magruder, LI., Dem. JEROME M. GARCHIK, see p. 96. JOSE RAMON GARCIA-PEDROSA, Harvard '68, Miami, Fla., Marshall. Bottom ROBERT E. LEE GARNER, U. of Alabama '68, 3325 Misty Ln., Birmingham, Ala., Scott, Rep., So. C. GUILFORD WILLIAM GAYLORD, Stanford '68, 2135 Solari Dr., Reno, Nevada, I.L.C. JOSEPH DAVIS GEBHARDT, Cornell Coll. Clowaj '68, 792 W. Lincoln Ln., Des Plaines, III., I.L.C., Dem. KENNETH STEVEN GELLER, C.C.N.Y. '68, 64-l I 99th St., Rego Park, N.Y., Sacks, L.R. RUSSELL LLOYD GEORGE, Colorado State '68, Rt. I, Box 84D, Rifle, Colo., Dershowitz, Rep. FREDERICK JOHN GERHART, Drake '68, 2020 E. I4th St., Des Moines, Iowa, Harlan, B. 8a B., Dem. 121 ' fr '- gz' Top JOEL D. G EWIRTZ, N.Y.U. '67, 214 Stuart Dr., New Rochel- le, N.Y., Scott. MARTIN C. GIDEONSE, Swarthmore '60, Harvard '68, 40 Wildwood Ave., Arlington, Mass., C.R.-C.L. JULIE NOEL GILBERT, Newton Coll. '67, U. of Virginia '68, 540 Beach 131 St., Belle Harbor, N.Y., Marshall, Dem. WILLIAM JACOB GLASGOW, U. of Penn. '68, 12865 S.E. Stark St., Portland, Ore., Casner. EDWARD L. GLAZER, U. of Penn. '68, 17 Stevenson Rd., New Haven, Conn., Pound, L. R. CLIFFORD P. GODWIN, C.C.N.Y. '68, 1940 E. Tremont Ave., New York, N.Y., Sutherland, Vol. Def. Middle DANIEL LEE GOLDBERG, Trinity '68, 460 Harrison Ave., Glenside, Pa., C.L.A.O. DANIEL S. GOLDBERG, U. of Rochester '68, 23 Lincrest St., Syosset, N.Y., Warren, C.L.A.O. ARTHUR GOLDEN, U. of Penn. '68, 1220 East-West Hwy. Apt. 510, Silver Spring, Md., Cardozo, I.L.C. W N 75 , I V - hi N... 122 R es., .4 A ea- f. 'U 'j ur- -,K ...Au i Top EARY LEON GREESON, U. of Oklahoma '63, M.I.T. '65, 509 S.W. 64, Oklahoma City, Okla. ICHARD MICHELET GRIMSRUD, Ripon '65, 7l24 W. edar St., Wauwatosa, Wis., C.R.-C.L., Dem., I.L.C. LLEN NEIL GROSSMAN, Princeton '68, 4 Barnes St., altham, Mass., Stud. D.A. LFRED KIM GUGGENHEIM, Pomona Coll. '68, 725 N. oxbury Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., Marshall, I.L.C. HARON BURTON HABERFELD, U. of Cal. '66, 12909 esby St., Sherman Oaks., Cal., Learned Hand. AREN EMILY HAKEL, U. of Minnesota '66, l775 Maple n., St. Paul, Minn., Story. Middle AVID H. HALPERT, U. of Michigan '67, Stanford '68, 4740 alnut Lake Rd., Birmingham, Mich. OWARD M. HAMBURGER, Queens Coll. '68, I2 Welwyn ., Great Neck, N.Y. AROLD LOUIS HAMLETTE, Howard '68, 757 Jerusalem fu., 'ir 2- 'T W ' . if' - 'B' I ff. ar i 'ggi .il ess!-ig L mg, sa! Class of 1971 V, ,ma Q N Q.. Wig. l A T ' ' I 4' 3 V. N 'A t . ' ' Y - n 1 gl J J I. . K -w . . ., , ,x I K 1 I H if .fa 1: .B Rd., Scotch Plains, NJ., Pound, B.L.S.A. WILLIAM DAWSON HANEY, Rice '68, 7l4 Queens Rd., Pasadena, Tex., Weinreb, I.L.C., L.l. RICHARD SNYDER HA RMAN, Bridgewater Coll. CVir- ginial '64, U. of Virginia '69, Harman, W. Va., I.L.C. MICHAEL HENRY HARPER, JR., Harvard '63, Box l29, Kent, Conn., Morgan-Brown, Vol. Def. Bottom ROBERT W. HARTLAND, U. of Pittsburgh '68, 4426 Bowes Ave., West Mifflin, Pa., Sutherland. WILLIAM CHARLES HARVEY, Harvard '67, 935 E. 4th St., South Boston, Mass., Holmes, I.L.C., B. 8: B. SUZANNE S. HAVENS, U. of Kentucky '57, '64, U. of Edin- burgh '59, l5l Chenault Rd., Lexington, Ky., Warren. EDWARD JOSEPH HAYWARD, Stanford '65, P.O. Box 555, Sikeston, Mo. ROBERT GEORGE HEISS, Williams '68, 3418 Carpenter St., S.E., Washington, D.C., C.L.A.O., Leg. Res. WILLIAM ROY HERMAN, Yale '68, I0 Fairway Ave., West Orange, N..l., Warren, C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O., S. Bar. 'F 123 Top ROBERT ELDRIDGE HICKS, Stanford '68, 511 N. Front St., Marquette, Mich., I.L.C. RICHARD HIERSTEINER, Williams '68, 6142 Reinhardt Dr., Mission, Kan., Weinreb. CHARLES S. P. HODGE, Amherst '68, Granby Rd., Gran- ville, Mass., Dershowitz, L.l. LEO CHARLES HODGES, Purdue '68, 203 Parkview Ave., Indianapolis, Ind., Bevins, I.L.C., I.L.J. CHARLES ROWLAND HOLLEN, Wesleyan '67, U. of E. Africa '68, 309 Elmdale Ave., Akron, Ohio, Vol. Def., I.L.C. ROGER JAMES HOLT, U.C.L.A. '68, 511 N. Hillcrest Rd., Beverly Hills, Cal., Marshall, C.R.-C.L., L.I., P.B.H. DONALD JAY HOPKINS, See p. 130. Middle ANDRA RUTH HOTCHKISS, Oberlin '68, 4209 Cushman Rd., Rockford, Ill., Howe, C.R.-C.L. DON HOWARTH, Harvard '68, 605 Parkbrook St., Spring Valley, Cal., Kaplan, Bd. St. Adv. DAVID E. HUDSON, Mercer '68, 218 Atlanta St., Mc- '1 ur , Donough, Ga., Casner, C.L.A.O., So. C. W. NICHOLAS INGRAM, Miami COhioJ '66, 309 Allston St., Cambridge, Mass., Pow Wow. STUART GARY ISRAELSON, Princeton '67, London School of Economics '68, Valley Rd., Stevenson, Md., I.L.C., Dem. PETER ANDREW JASZI, Harvard '68, 4910 Cumberland Ave. Chevy Chase, Md., Choate. Bottom ARTHUR HONORE JEAN, Dartmouth '65, 49 Summer S1 Nashua, N.H., Keeton. HAROLD BURTON JENKINS, U. of Illinois '67, U.C.L.A. '68, 2518 W. Touhy Ave., Chicago, Ill., C.L.A.O. DONALD JOSEPH JERUC, U. of Wisconsin '64, 930 Ken- tucky Ave., Sheboygan, Wis., Dawson, Legal Aid, L.I. DAVID LEE JOHNSON, Ohio Wesleyan '68, Clifton Pik Yellow Springs, Ohio, Sacks, Vol. Def. GREGORY LOUIS JOHNSON, U. of Cal. fSanta Barban '68, 2906 Marilyn Rd., Colorado Springs, Colo., ackston Legal Aid. JIMMIE JOHNSON, U.C.L.A. '67, '68, 5414 Hillcrest, Lc Angeles, Calif., Sacks, B. 64 B., B.L.S.A., Forum. 124 Class of 1971 Top lOEL T. JOHNSON, Stanford '67, 163 E. 20th St., Idaho Falls, daho, Sutherland, Dem. DAUL B. JOHNSON, U. of Utah '67, U. of Birmingham Englandj '68, 24 Peabody Terr. Apt. 506, Cambridge, Mass., 'Bevins, C.L.A.O., Forum. AYMOND DEAN JONES, Colorado Coll. '67, 1405 Van uren, Pueblo, Colo., C.R.-L.R., I.L.C., B.L.S.A. AUL LEON JONJAK, U. of Wisconsin '63, R.R. No. 2, ayward, Wis., Bevins, C.L.A.O., H.L.C.S. RUCE STANFORD KAHN, U. of Michigan '68, 19185 War- ington, Detroit, Mich., Weinreb, C.L.A.O. AUREN SUE KAHN, U. of Connecticut '68, clo 597 S. acific St., Stamford, Conn., Forum, Dem. Middle ENIS ROY KANIN, Harvard '68, 25 Buckingham Rd., Nor- ood, Mass., Dem. I.L.C., S. Bar. C. KANTROW, Tulane '67, 2340 Olive St., Baton Rouge, Kaplan, L.I. AYNE S. KAPLAN. U. of Penn. '68, 8550 N. Christiana, -ff ,gigigq H H nn, 45 J 1-'- if Skokie, Ill., Pound. JEFFREY WARREN KAROL, Amherst '67, London School of Economics '68, 25 Old Farm Rd., Newton Centre, Mass., Marshall, I.L.C., L.I., C.L.A.O. CHARLES LAWRENCE KATZ, Hunter '68, 307c Holden Green, Cambridge, Mass., I.L.C., Rep. LAWRENCE E. KATZ, Queens Coll. '67, 67-64 Springfield Blvd., Bayside, N.Y. Bottom EDWARD LAWRENCE KATZENBACH, III, Princeton '66, 2222 48th St., N.W., Washington, D.C., Pow Wow. HENRY R. KAUFMAN, Hamilton '67, 274 S. Main Ave., A1- bany, N.Y., Bruce. DANIEL J. KELLIHER, Boston State '67, '68, Belmont, Mass., Bd. St. Adv., Leg. Res., Stud. D.A., I.L.C. LEON B. KELLNER, U. of Buffalo '67, 499 Ft. Washington Ave., New York, N.Y., Bruce, S. Bar, Rep. JOHN EDWARD KENNEDY, Harvard '68, 214 Castano Ave., San Antonio, Tex., Braucher, L.R. MARY CATHERINE KINGSLEY, Carnegie-Mellon '68, 102 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass., Vol. Def., Dem. I ' , , 1 1 ii wi, 555335 -5. 'M 1 .3m5.:,1':' ,im H 1 1, HM ala . . 6 1 U 5 If .1 - 1 - , 11' , 141.2 viii' ' .V u W it 3, . -. 'ix .1 1 , fl fiisi ,TF 125 G ii 'x ' 1 Vs 1 1 Q.-L' 1 Top JOEL KLAPERMAN, Columbia '67, '69, 64 Muriel Ave., Lawrence, N.Y., Comp. Com., I.L.C. CHARLES MYRON LEVENBERG, U. of Minnesota '68, 1999 Thure Ave., St. Paul, Minn., I.L.C., S. Bar, C.R.-C.L. LEONARD ELLIOT KLEIN, N.Y.U. '68, 330 Gregory Ave., Passaic, N.J., Dershowitz, Wtg. Prog. ROBERT LOUIS KLIVANS, U. of Michigan '68, 249 Gypsy Lane, Youngstown, Ohio. WILLIAM TYNDALE KNOX, JR., Wesleyan '65, 22 Doering Way, Cranford, N.J. WILLIAM JOSEPH KOLASKY, JR., Dartmouth '68, 216 Elm St., Springfield, Vt., Keeton, L.R. Middle CAROL WEISS KOTLER, N.Y.U. '68, 28 Whitman Rd., Waltham, Mass. Pound, I.L.C. VANCE R. KOVEN, Queens Coll. '68, 160-62 Willets Pt., Blvd., Whitestone, N.Y., Harlan, I.L.C., Drama, Rep. TERRANCE ANTHONY KOWALCHUK, U. of Alberta '68, 12006-87 Ave., Edmonton, Alberta, Can., Crater, Vol. Def. 126 FRANKLIN DAVID KRAMER, Yale '67, 87-30 166th St., Jamaica, N.Y., Griswold, L.R. ERIC S. KRAVETZ, Dickinson '68, 61 Kendall Ct., Dover, N.J., Sutherland. PETER MICHAEL KREINDLER, Harvard '67, 62 Dwyer Ave., Liberty, N.Y., Cardozo, L.R. Bottom GORDON EUGENE KRISCHER, U. of Illinois '68, 3009 W. Sherwin Ave., Chicago, Ill., Bruce, L.R. ELLEN LOUISE KROLL, U. of Michigan '68, ll Alcott Dr Livingston, N.J., Story, C.R.-C.L., B. 8: B., Wtg. Prog. STEPHEN ROBERT KROLL, Harvard '68, 3411 Woolsz Dr., Chevy Chase, Md., Marshall. JAYNE M. KURZMAN, Vassar '68, 2 Stuyvesant Oval, Ne York, N.Y. PHILIP LADER, Duke '66, U. of Michigan '67, Oxford '6 5680 Grove St. S., St. Petersburg, Fla., Story, C.L.A.O., L. Leg. Res. J. LANCE LALOR, Tulane '68, 8203 Dunlap, Houston, T C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O. -Nr-' b all 1 11 7 Q. A it :- ui., ' Class of 1971 ,W ..,.A E R HJ X 11:-2-ate, ri. silk- '11 2 -1 Top 'VIARVIN ROBERT LANGE, Queens Coll. '68, 220-29 73rd Ave., Bayside, N.Y., Bruce, L.R., Dem. OBERT ALLAN LAPPING, Cornell '68, Hillcrest Lane, yster Bay, N.Y., Casner, C.L.A.O. ICHAEL PHILLIP LAST, Lawrence '68, 2360 Woodpath d., Highland Park, Ill., Cardozo, I.L.C., Leg. Res., Forum. 'EAN HELEN LAWTON, U. of Wisconsin '68, 618 Bordner Dr., Madison, Wis., Root, Vol. Defi, Dem. OBERT JOHN LeCLAl R, Washington State '68, 2305 Olym- ai, Richland, Wash., Kaplan, C.L.A.O., I.L.C., S. Bar. ARRY DAVIS LEDBETTER, S.M.U. '68, 1233 Phoebe, arland, Tex., Harlan. Middle ERN L. LEICHER, Barnard '68, 90 Gateway, Rockville entre, N.Y. AVID LENG, U. of Virginia '68, Charlottesville, Virginia, S. Bar, I.L.C., Dem. YRON LEVENBERG, see p. 126. E. LEVINE, Colby '68, 76 Pleasant St., Water- ii W 1 . 2 gg W . W lags 'ill - -F QW ' ville, Me., Field. ALLEN B. LEVITHAN, Lafayette '64, 2175 Hudson Terr., Fort Lee, N.J., C.L.A.O. PATRICIA GIMBEL LEWIS, Wellesley '66, 15 Francis St., Brookline, Mass., Kaplan. ERIC MICHAEL LIEBERMAN, Dartmouth '68, Sunny Ridge Rd., Harrison, N.Y. Bottom DONALD STEPHEN LINKY, Dartmouth '68, 1503 Fourth Ave., Asbury Park, N.J. HARVEY J. LIPPMAN, C.C.N.Y. '68, 9 Stuyvesant Oval, New York, N.Y., Marshall, S. Bar, I.L.C., C.L.A.O. DAVID ROGER LIPSON, Stanford '67, 2971 Shasta Rd., Berkeley, Cal., Marshall, C.R.-C.L., Forum. THIERRY JOSEPH LIVERMAN, George Washington U. '68, Sundale Farm, Amissville, Va., Howe, B.8cB., Legal Aid, L.I. WILLIAM THOMSEN LOOMIS, Harvard '67, 800 Devon Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Kent, Legal Aid, I.L.C., L.I. KENNETH THADDEUS LOPATKA, St. Procopius Coll. '68, 109 Warren St., Apt. 6, Watertown, Mass. fr L- l nv' Y:-5-11 'Q Ailes fe I27 l . , B n X l I ir ll All ,. , ,,,,,, , . gl ,i5. 1-:gif ,WL ' ' l I ' I Mil' F Mimi ,gil 1' , Top WILLIAM V. LUNEBURG, Carleton '68, 2124 Brockman, Ann Arbor, Mich., Crater. ARNOLD PAUL LUTZKER, C.C.N.Y. '68, 3235 Grand Con- course, New York, N.Y., Magruder, C.L.A.O., l.L.C. JOHN JOSEPH LYNAGH, Fordham '63, 570 Morgan Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., Blackstone, Forum, l.L.C. RICHARD GRANT LYON, Haverford '68, l I0 Banbury Dr., Wilmington, Del., Howe, Dem. L.l. IRA ALEXANDER MCCOWN, JR., Columbia '68, ll River- side Dr., New York, N.Y., Howe, B.8LB,, B.L.S.A. HOWARD McDOWELL McCUE, Ill, Princeton '68, I2 Huntly Rd., Richmond, Va., Field, L.I., C.R.-C.L. Middle JOHN E. McDERMOTT, Ohio Wesleyan '68, 29 Rainbow Trail, Milford, Ohio, Howe. TIMOTHY I. McFEELEY, Princeton '68, 706 S. Market St., Johnstown, N.Y., Dershowitz. JAMES ROBERT McGlBBON, Princeton '67, 1209 Kenmore Ave., Kenmore, N.Y., L.R. ffl' 128 JOHN HUGH McGUCKIN, JR., Harvard '68, 27451 C gate, Lathrup Village, Mich. ANIL C. MADAN, Cornell '68, P.O. Box 944, Nan Kenya, Casner, l.L.C. ROGER JAMES MAGNUSON, Stanford '67, Gord: Divinity School '68, 5830 Fourth St., N.E., Minneapol Minn., Weinreb, Stud. D.A. Bottom JOHN FRANCIS MAJOR, Columbia '68, 47-20 40th St., Ne York, N.Y., Griswold, Vol. Def., B.8LB. GARY ALAN MALASKY, U. of Penn. '68, 10500 Rockvil Pike, Rockville, Md., Story, L.l. CLARENCE W. MALICK, M.I.T. '64, 37 Garner Rd Dorchester, Mass., Dawson, L.I., B.8LB., H.L.C.S. STANLEY MARCUS, Queens Coll. '67, 87-I9 204th S Hollis, N.Y., Bruce, C.R.-C.L., l.L.C. CONSTANCE BERKLEY MARGOLIN, Pembroke '68, l Peabody Terrace, Apt. 31, Cambridge, Mass., C.R.-C.L. LOWELL ADI MARGOLIN, Princeton '68, I8 Peabody Te race, Apt. 3 I, Cambridge, Mass., Bruce, l.L.C., l.L.J. 1 2 -261 1 Class of 1971 Top OEL MARTIN MARTEL, U. of Penn. '68, 9014 Cargill Ln., hiladelphia, Penn., Dershowitz, L. R. . MANUEL MARTIN, Boston Coll. '68, 52 Kings Ct., San- urce, P.R., Magruder, B.8LB., C.L.A.O. OGER DAVID MATTHEWS, Yale '68, 30 Ellison Rd., ewton Centre, Mass., L. Hand, Yearbook. OUGLAS RICHARD MAXWELL, Ohio Wesleyan '68, ocky Point Rd., Old Greenwich, Conn. OY KENNETH MEILMAN, Franklin 8L Marshall '68, 28 rving St., Cambridge, Mass., Bruce, Wtg. Prog., I.L.C. OBERT VICTOR MENDELSOHN, Georgetown '68, 43 ayette St., Cambridge, Mass., L.I., B. 8L B. Middle OEL MARC MERREN, Georgia Tech. '68, 1704 Whispering ines Rd,, Albany, Ga. ill iii 555, I.. 5- If .ir 1 1 -.'1.if:1-'pf 1 :Xi GREGORY BLANKINSHIP MILLARD, George Washington '68, 5428 Peacock, Houston, Tex., L. Hand, B.L.S.A. DONALD IRA MIRISCH, Brandeis '68, 723 N. Crescent Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., Magruder, Legal Aid. DONALD WAYNE MITCHELL, Harvard '68, 1 Chauncy St. Apt. 19, Cambridge, Mass., Warren, B.8LB., C.L.A.O., I.L.C. Bottom ROBERT EDWARD MITTENDORFF, U. of Virginia '68, 7106 Telegraph Rd., Alexandria, Va., Griswold, Forum, Leg. Res., Rep., So. C. JAMES VINCENT MONTGOMERY, Tennessee State '68, 1373 Edgewood Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. JAMES CLINTON MOORE, II, Princeton '68, 32 Villa Dr., Pueblo, Colo., Field, Vol. Def JOHN BRUCE MOORE, Texas Christian '58, Harvard '65, 506 Jeanette Ave., Gladewater, Tex. ROBERT MEYER, U. of Michigan '68, 1510 36th Menominee, Mich., Dawson, C.L.A.O. 1 MILGRAM, Brandeis '68, 788 Columbus Ave. 6-G, New York, N.Y., Harlan, Legal Aid, S. Bar. JEAN AVNET MORSE, Wellesley '68, 25 Rose Hill Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y., Scott, Legal Aid, S. Bar. MARK ROBERT MOSKOWITZ, Brandeis '68, 0-39 Pine Ave., Fair Lawn, N.J., Scott, L.R. rx' ,fx-. ie. 129 'i L 3' 'F-J 9 7' '. H535 7 r' 25.25. Q ,gg V , wi W , , Ei' a'- ' f 1 gf 1 f HW Y EE- r S l 4 - 19.- ,N ,g in. : . Top STANISLAUS STEVEN MROCZKOWSKI, Boston Coll. '67, 243-40 144th Ave., Rosedale, N.Y., C.R.-C.L., l.L.C., Vol. Dei RICHARD ALAN MUSGRAVE, Yale '68, 4791 Orchard Rd., Mentor, Ohio, Casner. RALPH CHANT MUSICANT, Northwestern '68, 6080 N. Whipple St., Chicago, Ill., Bruce, l.L.C. DONALD DEAN NASH, U. of Hawaii '68, 1534 Kanalui St., Honolulu, Hawaii, Bevins, l.L.C. KENNETH PAUL NEIMAN, Tufts '67, 31 Roger Dr., Port Washington, N.Y. SANFORD NEIMAN, Kenyon '68, 5723 Pocusset St., Pitts- burgh, Pa., Bevins, Legal Aid. Middle DONALD JAY HOPKINS, Stanford '68, 14617 Woods Val- ley Rd., Valley Center, Cal, Choate, C.L.A.O. JOHN AUGUSTINE NEWMAN, JR., Fordham '67, 23 Conyingham Ave., Staten Island, N.Y., Choate, l.L.C., Dem., L.1. GEORGE KENNETH NORRIE, U. of Florida '68. 1878 M0- ' l30 Tanglewood Rd., Milledgeville, Ga. EDWARD M. NORTON, JR., Washington gl Lee '64, bia '65, 19 Rutland St., Cambridge, Mass., Choate, Legal Aid. RONALD JERRY NUSSBAUM, C.C.N.Y. '68, 771 W. End Ave., New York, N.Y., Wtg. Prog., Record. . , I ROBERT D. OCONNELL, U.C.L.A. 68, ll Peabody Te Apt. 1402, Cambridge, Mass., Marshall, S. Bar. Bottom ROY OGBURN, U. of Maryland '68, R.D. No. 1, Boswell, P Rep., L.I. JOHN MITCHELL O'HARE, U. of Illinois '67, '69, 121 Park Ridge Blvd., Park Ridge, Ill., Scott, B.8LB., Forum. F. JOSEPH OWENS, JR., Denison '68, 2911 S. Park, Shak Heights, Ohio, Story, L.l. EDWARD CHARLES PACHNIAK, U. of Wisconsin '6 5869 W. Gunnison, Chicago, Ill., Bruce, Vol. Def., B. 84 I C.R.-C.L. ' RODNEY FRED PAGE, U. of Kentucky '68, 1003 Alta Lawton, Okla., Bruce, L.I. ARNOLD BARRY PANZER, N.Y.U. '68, 87 Executive Manhasset Hills, N.Y., Griswold, Wtg. Prog., Rep., C.R.-C.L. it 5' z QM ek' '? ,i Q V. xi H H. .Z H ..1. . . X . . X, IL, . f 5 W: I ' l I I? -Fi . .' --' L.-it ' - I l1lw1X -,X. Ht 4' Top BARRON PARKER, Haverford '62, U. of '68, 5l Highland Blvd., Kensington, Cal., L. Hand, Aid, I.L.C., L.I. BROWN PATTERSON, Southeast Missouri State l05 S. Fifth St., Charleston, Mo., Bruce, Vol. Def., L.I., T ELLMORE PATTERSON, Harvard '67, Hook Rd., N.Y., Kent. .-..-U BRUCE PATTERSON, Southeast Missouri State 68, 105 S. Fifth St., Charleston, Mo., Blackstone, Vol. Def., .I. REDI LYNN PEARLM UTTER, Pembroke '68, 460 Overhill cl., South Orange, N.J., Casner, C.L.A.O. ARIAN R. PENN, Cornell '68, 435 Twickenham Rd., Glen- ide, Pa., Field, C.R.-C.L., C.R.-L.R. Middle AMES DUNCAN PHYFE, Harvard '64, Princeton '67, l54 St., Englewood, N.J., Kent, Legal Aid., L.I. DE ANDREW PICKENS, Amherst '68, 548 E. 49th St., REGORY KENDRICH PILKINGTON, Harvard '67, Lon- e ' ,.. wary-Q---:gt Class of 1971 Ml I I 5 I wj- V -I A 'Lffx don School of Economics '68, 37 Mitchell St.. Saratoga Springs. N.Y., Kent. L.l., S.D.S. WILLIAM THOMAS PIZZI, Holy Cross '65, 32 Sunset Dr., Summit, N.J., Dawson, C.L.A.O. LEWIS MICHAEL POPPER, Harvard '68, American Em- bassy, Nicosia, Cyprus, Harlan, C.L.A.O. FRANK PAUL PORCELLI, Boston Coll. '68, 20 Dartmouth Rd., Wilmington, Del., Casner, l.L.C. Bottom PETER DAVID POST, Penn. State '68, 1133 Reading Blvd., Wyomissing, Pa., Sacks, Rep. STEPHEN BRUCE PRESSER, Harvard '68, 44 Langdon St., Cambridge, Mass., Dawson, L.I. LARRY L. PRESSLER, U. of So. Dakota '64, Oxford '66, R.F.D. No. I, Humboldt, S.D., Pow Wow, L.l., Vol. Def., Forum. JOHN CARTER QUALE, Harvard '68, 84 Tudor Pl., Kenil- worth, Ill., Bevins, C.L.A.O. RAPHAEL J. RABALAIS, Princeton '68, 406 Pleasure Ln., Thibodaux, La., Dawson. JOSEPH RAFALOWICZ, U. of Penn. '68, 1917 E. Seventh St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Cardozo, Legal Aid, Record. S. Bar. 131 V L. -wi Sita 8 Qfxt rfwffkgf ' W2 'Sr' Top ROBERT HEY RAWSON, Princeton '66, Oxford '68, 2956 Manchester Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio, Pow Wow, L.I., Vol. Def., Wtg. Prog. THOMAS MICHAEL REARDON, Alfred '68, 2457 Redgate Ln., Youngstown, Ohio, Blackstone. EDWIN BLAKE REDDING, Rice '68, 3702 Drake, Houston, Tex., Weinreb. MARC REDLICH, Queens Coll. '67, 383 Grand St., New York, N.Y. DOUGLAS L. REED, Indiana '58, Texas Technological Coll. '61, 154 Homestead Ave., Weymouth, Mass. GERALDINE REED, Fisk '68, 23l5 N. Slater, Compton, Cal., C.L.A.O., B.L.S.A., C.R.-L.R. Middle DAVID ADAMS REIF, Lafayette '68, 612 Driftwood Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa., Warren, Wtg. Prog. RENE HENRY REIXACH, JR., Yale '66, Harvard '68, 1648 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, Mass., C.R.-C.L. JAMES H. RICE, U. ofOklahoma '6l, U. of Michigan '62, 514 132 S. Flood, Norman, Okla., Cardozo, Legal Aid, Forum, Bd. St. Adv. DAVID ARMAND RICHARDS, Harvard '66, Oxford '68, l48 Clairmont Terr., Orange, N.J. DOUGLAS BENTLEY RICHARDSON, U. of Michigan '68, 1449 E. Goodrich Lane, Milwaukee, Wis., Warren, I.L.C. FRANK RIOFSKI, Wilkes '61, I340 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Harlan, B. 8L B., St. Bar. Bottom JAMES C. ROBERTS, Claremont '68, 440 S. Angeleno, Azusa, Cal., Sutherland, C.L.A.O., Wtg. Prog. S. Bar. LARRY JEROME ROBERTS, Wisconsin State '68, P.O. Box 372, Owen, Wis., Harlan, Stud. D.A., Dem. DAVID N. ROCKWELL, Shimer Coll. '68, 5638 Fremont Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn., S. Bar, Legal Aid, C.R.-C.L. MICHAEL LEE RODBURG, M.l.T. '68, 2064 Emerson Ave., Union, N.J., L.R. MARC l. ROHR, Columbia '68, 609 Dover Rd., Oceanside, N.Y., Casner, C.R.-C.L. JAMES ROOSEVELT, JR., Harvard '68, 27 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland, Dem., L.I., S.T. More. Class of 1971 X, 1 Au ! H Kill 7' . ,gf FI . ,fri - ,, Q U 'l .. L e ,gi g it F2 V .f-Q. , If 3 U .Ev ,M L . .I . . ' -st I' ir a.-a..c fi I 1 Top GERALD MARK ROSBERG, Harvard '68, 2l30 Corwin Ave., Niagara Falls, Ont., Can., Choate, L.R. IOHN THOMAS ROSE, Hunter '68, 202-I5 Linden Blvd., St. Albans, N.Y., Braucher, B.L.S.A., Dorm C. P.B.H. ENNIS CARY ROSEN, Brooklyn Coll. '68, 99 Corbin Pl., rooklyn, N.Y., Howe, Stud. D.A. HARLES BRUCE ROSENBERG, Antioch '68, 10815 Mar- ate Rd., Silver Spring, Md., Vol. Def. TEPHEN MICHAEL ROSENBERG, Cornell '68, 29 Mor- an PI., White Plains, N.Y. AVID BENJAMIN ROSSMAN, Dartmouth '68, 7815 Crespi lvd., Miami Beach, Fla., L.S.C.C.R.C. Middle NTONIO ROSSMANN, Harvard '63, 21015 Mulholland r., Woodland Hills, Cal., L. Hand, I.L.C., L.R. ANN ROTUNDA, Valparaiso '68, I9 Everett St., Mass., Sutherland. Y RICHARD RUBIN, Brandeis '68, 676 Boelsen Dr., N.Y., Griswold, Forum, I.L.C., C.L.A.O. 5' DON ALVA RUST, Eastern New Mexico '68, Rt. I, Box 245, Portales, N.M., Blackstone, Rep. MICHAEL DENNIS RYAN, U. of Washington '67, U. of Munich, lI30 Jefferson St., Wenatchee, Wash., Griswold, Forum, I.L.C. FRANCIS ANTHONY RYKOWSKI, Fordham '68, 68-I8 53rd Dr., Maspeth, N.Y., L. Hand, L.I., I.L.C. Bottom MAURICE REGAN SALADA, Norwich '68, Cadyville, N.Y. JAMES CHRISTIAN SAND, U.S. Naval Academy '62, 606 Stonegate Terr., Glencoe, Ill., I.L.C., I.L.J., Bd. St. Adv. EDWARD M. SANPEI, U. of Hawaii '66, 98-I40 Keanae St., Aiea, Hawaii, Magruder, I.L.C., B. 8L B. MICHAEL YOUNG SAUNDERS, Washington 81. Lee '67, Stanford '68, Box 367, Shelbyville, Ky., Sutherland, C.R.-C.L., I.L.C. JOSEPH SCHACHTER, C.C.N.Y. '68, 1406 Townsend Ave., New York, N.Y. THEODORE WAYNE SCHAFFNER, Ohio State '68, l866 Glenn Ave., Columbus, Ohio, Harlan, Leg. Res., Dorm. C. LE.. i ' if wg--if ' ual, . ,5 Q ,. 1 'mftgl tzl.'iiL1LlEfItgEii st., ri fi .M Wei? - .' 'ff4v':1i' it flight' ,anis -l , . ijlii' ,iw . ew w Y , ,. utilise , , , . l I ' L v Top FREDERICK FRANKLIN SCHAUER, Dartmouth '67, Amos Tuck '68, 130 Bowdoin St., Boston, Mass., Marshall. SUSAN HELENE SCHILDKRAUT, Radcliffe '68, 609 W. State St., Trenton, N.J., Warren. STEVEN SCHNEIDER, Queens Coll. '68, 67-58 l52nd St., Flushing, N.Y., Sutherland, S. Bar. RICHARD SCHOOLMAN, Harvard '68, 14 Dell Ln., Wan- tagh, N.Y., Dawson, Vol. Def. GARY ALAN SCHWARTZ, U. of Michigan '68, 6700 W. Farm Acres, Cincinnati, Ohio, C.L.A.O., Rugby. STEVEN JAY SCHWARTZ, Cornell '68, 350 Dwasline Rd., Clifton, N.J. Middle DONCOSTA EARLE DEPAUR SEAWELL, Norfolk State '68, 2 Ellsworth Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Dawson, B.L.A.P., B.L.S.A. EDMUND M. SEE, Wesleyan '65, 41 Sherwood Dr., West- port, Conn. KENNETH FELIX SEMINATORE, Case Western Reserve '68, 2009 Random Rd., Cleveland, Ohio. MARTIN E. SENECA, JR., Brigham Young '66, '69, P.O. Box 177, Versailles, N.Y., Bevins. MARTHA LEE SHAMES, Barnard '68, 2212 E. 66th St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Story, Legal Aid. ROBERT .IAY SHANSKY, U. of Wisconsin '68, 3176 N. 52nd St., Milwaukee, Wis. Bottom JOSEPH B. SHAPIRO, U. of Penn. '68, I2 Nassau Dr., Great Neck, N.Y., Griswold, S. Bar. ELLEN VICTORIA SHAW, U. of Michigan '68, 225 E. 74th St., New York, N.Y., Story, Drama. CAROL RITA SHERMAN, U. of Rochester '68, 228 Skillman Ave., Oceanside, N.Y., Pound. CARY HOWARD SHERMAN, Cornell '68, 144-60 27th Ave., Flushing, N.Y., Casner, Bd. St. Adv., C.L.A.O. BARBARA ANN SHORE, Radcliffe '68, 348 W. Kings Hwy., Haddonfield, N.J., Sutherland, C.L.A.O. JERRY LAWRENCE SHULMAN, Yale '68, 793 14th Ave., Paterson, N.J. Qs... f' , tw.-1 ,- , ,, .Alia- Ag , I ,4 Z :Hilti .- 4 gill' Q , .. W Ta., .,ef lay ',21'0ilQ'e I Qi. It ,gi X X .,a 134 Class of 1971 life' 1 ' .,E,.g:g-g:g: :.,MQSfifiiiiliiilv : A f.,3,,,,- g I ,X wi! X xii' XE? 1 . ., ,.. .ir A , rx ' 153 , , . , .fe 4 , ,.r - X as H V Q 15 - , .f 9 gf- t V A ' ' A .,f 'i . -T v v-- -f l .. Q 1' . . 5 f 1'?1 ' ,.::z:' JI 1 ,f ' .f?'5'g2', ,, , ff.Lf.1g-LA ii - ,rv v'9 il l '5ir:5?:: I - ' '-1'f' W A Ai 217 , fl f Top ONALD JAMES SIEGEL, U. of Wisconsin '67, 3510 16th t., Rock Island, Ill., Pound, Dem. Legal Aid. HARLES DANA SIMPSON, Dartmouth '65, 63 S. High St., ridgton, Me., L.I. BELINDA MARIE SMITH, Stanford '68, 345 N. Bristol Ave., -os Angeles, Cal. ICOLA E. SMITH, U. of Cal. KBerkeleyJ '68, 774 San Luis d., Berkeley, Cal. ICHARD CALDWELL SMITH, U. of Florida '68, 1948 3 lst Terr., Gainesville, Fla., Bruce, L.I., S. Bar, So. C. TEWART RUSSELL SMITH, Pomona '68, 2150 Lombardy d., San Marino, Cal., Marshall, I.L.C., L,I. Middle ALTER A. SMITH, JR., U. of Oklahoma '68, 5837 E. 58th ., Tulsa, Okla., Casner, C.L.A.O., Forum, I.L.C. 3401 Mansfield Lane, Modesto, Cal., Bruce, C.L.A.O. MICHAEL ROBERT SONBERG, Queens Coll. '68, 80-15 256th St., Floral Park, N.Y., Bruce, Dem, Leg. Res., Dorm. C. DAVID ALAN SONENBERG, Tufts '68, 367 Edward Ave., Woodmere, N.Y., Harlan, Drama, S. Bar, Forum. MARC JAY SONNENFELD, Swarthmore '68, 1244 Lindsay Ln., Rydal, Pa., Vol. Def., L.I., l.L.C, Bottom GREGGORY KEITH SPENCE, Fisk '68, 2815 Torbett St., Nashville, Tenn., Cordozo, B. gl B., So. C. MARK ALEXANDER SPIEGEL, Duke '68, 807 N. Elm Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., I.L.C. .IULIAN H. SPIRER, Princeton '69, 58-I3 150th St., Flushing, N.Y., I.L.C. LOGAN SCOTT STAFFORD, U. of Arkansas '68, 1111 E. Main St., Green Forest, Ark., Sacks, I.L.C. HY SOLOMON, Morris Brown '68, 1119 Old Field Perry, Ga. ARD BRUCE SOLOWAY, U. of Cal. KBerkeleyJ '68, KENNETH LEE STAHL, U. of Cal. iBerkeleyJ '68, 184-27 Henley Rd., Jamaica, N.Y. .IARED BENNETT STAMELL, U. of Michigan '68, 18235 Wildemere, Detroit, Mich. 5' ng.Jl' T1 M115 135 54' V u fi2: iasE2S?2 22? Top LINDA LOUISE STANDRIDGE, U.C.L.A. '68, 56 Wendell St., Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland, S. Bar, Drama, Forum. ROBERT F. STARZEL, Arizona State '63, 32 Rose Ave., Wa- tertown, Mass. WILLIAM C. STASZAK, Notre Dame '67, J.F.K. School of Government '68, 3616 S. Cuyler Ave., Berwyn, Ill., Marshall. Forum, L.I. DAVID G. STERN, Harvard '68, 709 E. Carlisle, Milwaukee, Wis., Sacks, L.l. MICHAEL LARNED STERN, Stanford '67, l7l llth Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Story, C.R.-L.R. CRAIG ELMER STEWART, Harvard '68, 285 Mass. Ave., Arlington, Mass., Sutherland, Leg. Res. Middle PERNILA JANE STIMLEY, U. of Penn. '67, 1120 Carver St., Jackson, Miss., Dershowitz, B.L.S.A., Bd. St. Adv. STUART CHASE STOCK, Purdue '68, 9 Elmcrest Acres, St. Louis, Mo. L. Hand, L.R. HARRY GREENLAW STODDARD, Harvard '64, Columbia '66, 209 Chapel St., Abington, Mass., Story, Legal Aid, Rep. 'i 1 .Mm 1,1 I36 - ROBERT A. STOLZBERG, Union '67, 31 Shawnee Ave., Rockaway, N.J. VICTOR DARREL LOUIS STONE, Cornell '68, London School of Economics '67, 53A Lee St., Cambridge, Mass., Casner, C.L.A.O., C.R.-C.L., Forum. STEVEN WARREN SWIBEL, M.l.T. '68, 3839 White Cloud Dr., Skokie, Ill., Magruder, B. gl B. Bottom JOHN DAVID TAURMAN, Duke '68, I5 Everett St. Apt. 6, Cambridge, Mass., Vol. Def., L.R. THOMAS EDWARD TAYLOR, U. of Penn. '68, l807 Ken- nedy Blvd., North Bergen, N.J. SCOTT J. TEPPER U C.L A. '67 '68 l0546 Selkirk Ln L , . . , , ., 1 Angeles, Cal., I.L.C., C.L.R.D. RICHARD CARL THEILING, Tulane '68, 6250 S.W. 40 St., Apt. B-IO, Miami, Fla., Blackstone. SAMUEL VINCENT THOMAS, see p. 109 JAMES ROBERT THOMPSON, Yale '68, 6477 Cherry T Ln., Atlanta, Ga., Bruce, C.L.A.O., Forum, L.I. JOHN CARLYLE THOMSON, Yale '68, l0l2 C Ave., Baldwin, N.Y., Choate, Forum. IT . -I ii V l 1 C525 I 5 3 'QS Rfb! Top CHRISTOPHER THORP, U. of Iowa '68, 65 Euclid ve., Ardsley, N.Y., I.L.C., S. Bar., Dem. ALVADOR TIO, U. of Puerto Rico '68, King's Ct. 52, San- urce, P.R., Magruder, C.L.A.O. AVID MICHAEL TREIMAN, U.C.L.A. '68, 2118 Glendon ve., Los Angeles, Cal., Cardozo, Forum, I.L.C., Stud. D.A. LBERT JOHN TURCO, Harvard '68, 5 Beebe Ln., akefield, Mass. LBERT HANAUER TURKUS, U. of Penn. '67, 6 Silver pring Rd., West Orange, N.J., Pound, Legal Aid, L.l. AVID PAUL TWEDT, U. of Wisconsin '66, 6 Porter Rd., ambridge, Mass., Blackstone, Forum, Vol. De.f Middle ' J A. VALDES, Florida State '68, 2341 S.W., 80Ct., Fla., Braucher, B.8cB., I.L.C., So.C. ISAAC VALENTINE, JR., U. of Florida '68, Box Newport, Tenn., Marshall, L.1. VALLONE, JR., Yale '66, '68, 50 Follen St., Mass., L. Hand. Class of 1971 School of Economics '68, 4523 Beacon Dr., Nashville, Tenn., L. Hand, C.R.-L.R., So. C. CEDRIC WAKELEE VOG EL, Yale '68, I0 Garden Pl., Cin- cinnati, Ohio, Marshall, Forum, L.I., B. 8a B., Wtg. Prog. HAROLD WADE, Amherst '68, 178-05 l33rd Ave., Spring- field Gardens, N.Y., Forum, L.I. Bottom RAYMOND CLARK WADLOW, Dartmouth '68, 6323 N. 22nd St., Arlington, Va., Dawson, I.L.C., I.L.J., L.I., Legal Aid. FREDERICK PAUL WAITE, Princeton '67, Australian Na- tional '68, 1916 Fifth Ave., Troy, N.Y., Sacks, I.L.C., Stud. D.A., So. C. ROBERT JAMES WALDMAN, Duke '68, 94 Emily Ave., El- mont, N.Y., Story, Bd. St. Adv. JOHN FRANCIS WALKER, JR., Notre Dame '63, U. of No. Carolina '64, 1561 Metropolitan Ave., Bronx, N.Y. KENDRICK TAYLOR WALLACE, California State CLong Beachj '69, 526 E. Sunset, Santa Maria, Cal., Sutherland. JOHN NELSON WALSH, III, Yale '67, 85 Highland Ave., ELTON VAN LOON, U. of No. Carolina '67, London 'r l Q -'V Buffalo, N.Y., Pow Wow, L.I., P.B.H. 137 ls - 'li ii 1 ' ' M , . .,,- L: , l L. 'T ' l YQ. -twig' ,J ' a b Y b I ' QA rj i 5 .... i s A 1 A Q I Fig -eiaiefslie A' . , i I ia?-5-il 1. J - . ill' 'ui VW 'il ri .l ii 'ii' li f Ji an i ' i 'ififiwzzssasiimze - . ii .L D ,L L f .,., . -, f XL apr... , ws., 1 ' , ,R . I ,.4 ,A , AP- . ,- x l fr- .gm I l: if:-iii: ' V t VJ lx Top SOLOMON B. WATSON, IV, Howard '66, 315 Bailey St., Woodstown, N.J., Warren, B.L.S.A., Forum. TOBIN NORMAN WATT, Davidson '68, 65 King St.. Charleston, S.C., Griswold, So. C. DAVID FARNSWORTH WEBB, U. of Texas '67, 37l l Fleet- wood Dr., Amarillo, Tex., Griswold, Dem., Comp. Com., L.I., Wtg. Prog. STUART ALLEN WEIN, U. ofCal. lBerkeleyJ '68, 220 N. In- dian Ave., Palm Springs, Cal., I.L.C. JAN MICHAEL WEINBERG, Temple '68, 208 Wickford Rd., Havertown, Pa., Marshall, Legal Aid. JOANNA KUDISCH WEINBERG, Brandeis '68, 206-C Hol- den Green, Cambridge, Mass., Bevins. Middle MARTIN GARY WEINBERG, U. of Wisconsin '64, 8 Brampton Ln., Great Neck, N.Y., Weinreb. SANFORD ALAN WEINER, U. of Texas '68, 2320 Bellefon- taine, Houston, Tex., Griswold. JACK M. WEISS, III, Yale '68, l3l6 Valence St., New '-Avg L 138 . 1 i . if V4 Nia ' .J s ' C! . f .. i ' A V 'A AAL Orleans, La., Kaplan, L.R., L.I. JOHN LAWRENCE WELCH, U. of Illinois '68, R.R. l, Box 3436, Punta Gorda, Fla., Griswold, Forum, Dem., S. Bar. CHARLES DONALD WELLS, Eastern Kentucky '68, R.R. No. l, Falmouth, Kentucky, Stud. D.A. -VERNON LEO WELLS, II, Auburn '67, 2203 Broad St., Selma, Ala., C.L.A.O., Forum, So. C. Botlom STEPHEN THOMAS WHELAN, Princeton '68, 401 Baird Rd., Merion, Pa, L. Hand, Forum, L.I. B. OWEN WILLIAMS, Harvard '67, 4710 Delafield Ave., New York, N.Y., Marshall, L.l. JOHN DAVID WILLIAMS, Michigan State '68, 409 S. Main, Lamar, Colo., Cardozo. SIDNEY LINN WILLIAMS, Princeton '68, 1612 Randel Rd., Oklahoma City, Okla. JOHN TWIGG WILLIS, Bucknell '68, 208 Greenvale Rd., Westminster, Md., Magruder, B. 8L B. MARK ALAN wiLLis, Yale '68, 167 Caleb st., Portland, Me., story, P.B.i-i. ..., ,DLEWTTL Ae. A 'Tb' 7 X Q it W , A fi gs.. . il giaiziibtt 4,5 1 ...Nh :U If 1 ,. W . A'J W . , ?3 I GJ Top ENNETH R. WING, U. of Cal. fSanta Cruzj '68, 1176 cKinley, Sunnyvale, Cal., Sutherland, Legal Aid. ARK LAWRENCE WOLF, Yale '68, 170 Elinor Rd., New- n, Mass., Kaplan, L.I. REGORY DAVID WOLFE, Harvard '68, Bernardsville Rd., endham, N.J., Cardozo, L.I. OBERT A. WOLFE, Columbia '68, 28 Jordan Rd., rookline, Mass., Dershowitz, Legal Aid. ILLIAM CHARLES WOLFORD, Iowa State '68, W. Center t Britt Iowa Weinreb ENNIS BAILEY WOLKOFF, U. of Minnesota '67, 60 Cres- nt St Cambridge Mass Pound. Middle FILLMORE WOOD JR., Cornell '68, 1833 Rangewood t Plainfield N J Marshall, Rep., Bd. St. Adv. DWIN VALENTINE WOODSOME, Holy Cross '68, I2 hisholm Rd Roslmdale Mass., Pound, B. 8c B., C.R.-C.L., NE DETRA WORRELL U. of Wisconsin '68, I5 Everett 45 l . I I ' , '9 7 '1 . . '9 1 .L A Y , c efcc -t' -' -r E f .-.1 ,.,, 4 V , Q ' ,- .1 V if ,La . ..-gil 6-lx .gf af 1. . , ...Q 1 St., Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland, Vol. Def., Wtg. Prog., Stud. D.A. THOMAS E. WORRELL, U. of Wisconsin '68, 222 N. Bassett, Madison, Wis., Kaplan, Dem., C.R.-C.L., C.R.-L.R. E. ROBERT WRIGHT, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '66, 3924 New- castle Rd., Concord, Cal., Vol. Def., I.L.C., Rep. JAMES ALLEN WYLY, U. of So. Dakota, R.R., Ft. Pierre, S. D. Bottom WENDY LOUISE WYSE, Wellesley '68, 3332 S. W. Fair- mount Ln., Portland, Ore. RONALD W. K. YEE, Williams '68, 2328 Nuuanu Ave. Honolulu, Hawaii, Howe. EDWARD JOSEPH YORIO, Columbia '68, 377 Collins Ave. Mt. Vernon, N.Y., Cardozo, Rep., I.L.C. JOHN CHRISTOPHER YORK, Vanderbilt '68, 221 W Logan, Shawneetown, III., Marshall, L.I., Record, Leg. Res. JOSEPH PAUL ZAMMIT, Fordham '68, 1523 Third Ave. New York, N.Y., Dawson, Dem., Vol. Def., S.T. More. DONALD PINCUS ZISQUIT, Yeshiva '67, 1315 Lenox Ave. Miami Beach, Fla. 139 Class of 1971 ..: ....s...g: ,-at . ,gf ii .. mimi , 1 -.:.:.:: -. me., 14' '-exe 'ewes ll I TF' Tm' .ix ' ' Left 1 . JEFFREY P. ZUCKER, Yale '68, 1501 Birch sr., Las vegas, Cm 2 1 at-5 ' Q' Nev.,Cardozo. 7 ' Right L 1 Q ALLEN R. SNYDER, George Washington '67, 8201 16th St. X 'Q ' Apt. 226, Silver Spring, Md., Choate, L.R. Dem. .1 I . ' 1 11,1 'Q Lk' a 1 ., .f . 4.4 5 lo' ' 'wil 1 . I4 1 H 1 -f!5ft, f'l, :' 2 fit? iff. -. ,,q,'fv':.5' .' No! Pictured HOWARD THOMAS ANDERSON, Dartmouth '68, Pickering Dam R.D. No. 2, Phoenixville, Pa., Keeton, Vol. Def. JONATHAN DANIEL ASHER, Harvard '68, 5021 S. Woodlawn, Chicago, Ill. MARSHALL HOWARD BEIL, Swarthmore '67, 853 Edwards Blvd., Valley Stream, N.Y., C.R.-C.L. RANDALL THERON BELL, William and Mary '63, Univer- sity College iOxonJ '69, 847 Statle Rd., Columbia, S.C., Marshall. H. NEIL BERKSON, Yale '68, 474 Putnam, Cambridge, Mass. GAIL F. BORDEN, Harvard '64 1 Pavilion Ln., Bellbrook, Ohio. RANDALL R. BOVBJ ERG, U. of Chicago '68, 1710 Ridge Rd., Iowa City, Iowa. JOEL E. BOXER, U.C.L.A. '67, 15418 Hamner Dr., Los Ange- les, Cal., Marshall. WYNNE FURTH BRENNES, Stanford '68, 4114 Canyon Rd., Lafayette, Cal., C.L.A.O. BARBARA BAKER CLURMAN, U. of Wisconsin '68, 4822 Sacramento, St. Louis, Mo. DAVID C. COLEMAN, Yale '68, Tucson, Ariz. KATHERINE 1. CROCKFORD, Randolph-Macon '68, Rich- mond, Va. DON CARANZA FIRENZE, Yale '64, 1017 Green St., San Francisco, Cal. PIERCE GERETY, Yale '62, Southport, Conn. MARTIN ALAN GLAZER, Bowdoin '68, 66 Kirkland St., Cambridge, Mass., Bevins. ROBERT W. GORDON, Harvard '66, 146 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. EDWARD BARTON GREENE, Rutgers '67, 9 Highland Rd., Montvale, N.J., Morgan-Brown. JOHN ALEX GRESHAM, Harvard 67, ll St. Paul St. Apt. 2, Cambridge, Mass., Casner. CLIFFORD J. GROEN, Dartmouth '68, San Francisco, Cal. STEPHEN JAMES HAUSMAN, Occidental '68, 7044 E. Hayne Pl., Tucson, Ariz. ROBERT CHARLES HOLMES, Cornell '67, 921 Inman Ave., Edison, N.J. JOHN MALCOLM KELSON, U. of Michigan '65, 1045 Har- vard Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich., Pound. ANIL KHOSLA, Harvard '68, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. JOEL IRWIN KLEIN, N.Y.U. '68, 330 Gregory Ave., Passaic, N.J., Dershowitz, Wtg. Prog. STANTON RICHARD KOPPEL, U. of Penn. '68, 4022 Brookridge Dr., Shawnee Mission, Kan. SCOTT HOWARD LANG, Harvard '68, 1525 W. Station, Kaukakee, Ill., Blackstone, C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O., S. Bar. 140 LAWRENCE DAVID LEVLEN, Williams '68, 155 E. 76th St. New York, N.Y. IRA C. LUPU, Cornell '68, 271 Tampa Ave., Albany, N.Y Warren, L.R. MICHAEL A. MCCARTHY, U. of Mass. '68, 94 Ryan Rd Florence, Mass. JAMES ALLEN MEDFORD, U. of N. Carolina '67, 30 Rolling Dr., Waynesville, N.C., Blackstone, C.L.A.O.. De 1.L.C. JEFFREY L. MELCZER, U. of Cal. tBerkeleyJ '68, 137 S. M Cadden Pl., Los Angeles, Cal. RICHARD I. METZGER, U. of Michigan '68, 336 Wellingto Chicago, Ill. MIRIAM J. MORSE, Smith '68, Nahant, Mass. ROBERT A. NAIDUS, U. of Chicago '68, 7 Warwick Terr Marblehead, Mass. BERNARD A. NEVAS, U. of Michigan '68, 17 Quarter Mil Rd., Westport, Conn. STEPHEN JOHN PAJCIC, Princeton '68, 2600 Orchard St Jacksonville, Fla. LEWIS J. PAPER, U. of Michigan '68, 9 Timber Hill Dr., Li ingston, N.J., Dershowitz, Leg. Res. JOHN H. RATNER, Northwestern '68, 1000 Lake Shore Dr Chicago, Ill., Warren. SUSAN ELIZABETH REESE, Oberlin '68, 16 Chambers Ave Greenville, Pa., Howe, Vol. Def., C.R.-C.L., Dem. ANTHONY P. SAGER, Amherst '68, 201 E. 66th St., Ne York, N.Y. LAWRENCE ROBERT SAMUELS, U. of Chicago '68, 96 Bluff Rd., Glencoe, Ill., Marshall. LOUIS MICHAEL SEIDMAN, U. of Chicago '68, 136 Pinebrook Dr., New Rochelle, N.Y., L.R. 1 HENRY WARREN SHAEFFER, U. of Penn '67, 1500 Ba Rd., Miami Beach, Fla., Scott. STEPHEN ANDREW SIEGEL, Columbia '67, 315 E. 72nd S New York, N.Y. LEONARD NEIL SOSNOV, Temple '67, 2226 Glenview S ' Philadelphia, Pa. RICHARD T. SPONZO, Holy Cross '68, 81 Hunter Dr., Hartford, Conn. SAMUEL STONEFIELD, Dartmouth '67, 4119 Cushman Rd Rockford, Ill., Keeton, C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O., P.B.H. TROMBLEY JOHN WAKEFIELD, Dartmouth '65, Londo School of Economics '68, Brannan Farm, Alto, Mich. TIMOTHY JOSEPH WILTON, Harvard '68, U. of Michiga 22 Ridgewood Rd., Wallingford, Conn., Vol. Def. MICHAEL YOURSHAW, JR., Harvard '63, 108 Oxford St Cambridge, Mass., Sacks, L.R. .ga WI, ,. KE , M I ,,. . - 14 im 7:8 as L Q if . 13 Top JEAN E. ABERLIN, U. of Michigan '69, 32 Edstone Dr., Sta- ten Island, N.Y., Sutherland. CHARLES FUZELL ABERNATHY, Harvard '69, 854 Allen Rd., Nashville, Tenn., Root, I.L.C., Forum. RICHARD MARSHALL ABRAMS, Bucknell '69, 2 Green Hill Lane, Philadelphia, Pa., Keeton, B. 8a B., Rep., L.I. ROGER JAY ACHEATEL, U.C.L.A. '68, 602 N. Elm Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal., Marshall, I.L.C. BRADLEY RUSSELL ADDISON, Harvard '69, 39 Upland Way, Cedar Grove, N.J., Marshall, B. 8: B., S. Bar. ROBERT LEWIS ADLER, Harvard '69, 3226 Santa Fe Ave., Long Beach, Cal., Marshall. Middle NATHANIEL HOWARD AKERMAN, U. of Mass. '69, 107 Gillette Ave., Springfield, Mass., Blackstone, ROBERT C. ALEXANDER, Yale '69, 7805 Brill Rd., Cincin- nati, Ohio, Pound. GWENDOLYN YVONNE ALEXIS, U.S.C. '69, II647 S. St. Andrews Pl., Los Angeles, Cal., Leighton. MICHAEL STEPHEN ALUSHIN, Oberlin '69, 7970 wood Lane, Northfield, Ohio, Warren. DAVID CHARLES ANDERSON, Yale '63, 822 Guadalul Ave., Coronado, Cal. LLOYD CRANE ANDERSON, U. of Michigan '69, 508 A dussi, Saginaw, Mich., I.L.C. Bottom WILLIAM ALBERT ANDERSON, ll, U. ofNo. Carolina 'f l309 Hempshire Ct., High Point, N.C., Marshall, I.L.C., B. B. WILLIAM GWYNN ANDERSON, U.S. Naval Academy '6 I I Gray Street, Cambridge, Mass., Root, H.L.C.S., C.R.-C.L. ARTHUR R. ANGEL, U. ofCal. fBerkeleyJ '69, 26 Swan F Arlington, Mass., C.L.R.D., C.R.-C.L. BARRY VINCENT ANTON, Cal. State lLos Angelesl '6 767 Verde Vista, Pomona, Cal. PETER LEE AREN ELLA, Wesleyan '69, 20 Larchmont A Newton, Mass., Sutherland. RUSSELL SCOTI' ARMSTRONG, Yale '69, IOO9 James C Wheaton, Ill., Dawson. f f v 'v ' -v2f::.f:,.---: -f ,- W- -zrjvfg 23,9 . ai' ' V - lQLef'i , f ' Hr again, . W -V V .l :I i -. ,- fra -1 M i: . ., ., . V . 1-1 - Y- 1 - ' ... wg,-Q. . f 1 ix inf ,. . 1 . ea' fa: I , ,w,,, -' - ., l i , ara I Iv'm. - ' - I , me ti' 7. Q 'Qi 1 A - -, ,I .ly H , . I I I I 142 E. 1, 15. ' .1 , p , iv Top OHN PHILIP AXELROD, Yale '68, Alden Rd., Andover, ass., Sacks. AMES VINCENT BABCOCK, Harvard '67, 5034 Third ve. So., Minneapolis, Minn. OBERT G. BADAL, U. of Penn. '69, 8415 Ardleigh St., hiladelphia, Pa., Kent. AMES NATHAN BAILEY, Harvard '69, 1621 Lotz Rd., lymouth, Mich. ICHARD LEWIS BALTIMORE, III, George Washington U. 9, 47 Stonelea Pl., New Rochelle, N.Y., Story, I.L.C. OHN STUART BANTA, Hiram Coll. '69, 1885 Spaulding .E., Grand Rapids, Mich., Griswold. Middle OBERT A. BARANDES, Union con. '69, ss Park Ave., mfhf-mf N.Y., Keeton. EVERETT BARKER, JR., U. of Rochester '69, Concord Dr., Cleveland, Ohio, Pound. BARRETT, U. of Delaware '64, Columbia '67, 33 Class of 1972 Q gig lfm ? T 'Q 'Wa X, EHHQBBQ Q- 4 1 11 B Ms 1 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y., Sacks. CARL MASON BASNETT, Howard '69, 282 Woodland Ave., Columbus, Ohio, Leighton, B.L.S.A. LAWRENCE I. BASS, U. of Penn. '69, 37 Arleigh Rd., Great Neck, N.Y. JAMES HARUTUN BATMASIAN, U. of No. Carolina '69, 2899 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Fla., Root, Yearbook. Bottom DEBORAH ANNE BATTS, RadclifTe '69, 433 W. Johnson St., Philadelphia, Pa., Leighton. RICHARD NORBERT BAUM, U. of Michigan '69, 6231 Del Norte, Dalla, Texas, Story, B. SL B. PETER L. BAUMBUSCH, Dartmouth '65, Oxford '66, 34 Euclid Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., Kaplan. JOSEPH PAUL BAZZOCCHI, Dartmouth '68, 282 Rockland St., Portsmouth, N.H., Sacks. MICHAEL LANCE BEATTY, U. ofCal. 1Berke1eyJ '69, 3834 Whittier, Abilene, Tex., Blackstone. EDWARD BEISSER, U.C.L.A. '69, 1 Colonial Village Dr. Apt. 2, Arlington, Mass., Pound, CR-C.L., S. Bar, Dem. 143 ll it Top DAVID E. BENOR, U.C.L.A. '69, 449 S. Le Doux Rd., Los Angeles, Cal., Dawson. GEORGE DARRELL BERGLUND, Yale '69, 7717 Geralayne Dr., Milwaukee, Wis., Scott. SAMUEL BERGMAN, C.C.N.Y. '69, 145-ll 19th Ave., Whitestone, N.Y., Sacks. EDWARD FREDERICK BERLIN, Tufts '68, Towers of Windsor Park, 4N Toledo, Cherry Hill, N.J., Leighton. MICHAEL PAUL BERMAN, Rice '69, 6040 Blvd. East, Apt. 26 E., West New York, N.J., Cardozo. NORMAN STEPHEN BESMAN, U. of Cal. fBerke1eyJ '69, 2557 Potomac St., Oakland, Cal., Scott, Record, C.R.-C.L. Middle THOMAS WILLIAM BETTLES, U.C.L.A. '69, 1490 Buckingham Dr., La Jolla, Cal., Scott. JACK R. BIERIG, Brandeis '68, 8205 S. Chappel, Chicago, Ill. WALTER GEORGE BIRKEL, U. of Virginia '69, 50 Bunkerhill Dr., Huntington, N.Y., Kaplan. I44 'ff I G If fe BRYAN EDWARDS BISHOP, U. of Texas fArlingtonJ '68, 124 E. 15th St., Irving, Tex., Harlan. WILLIAM GEORGE BJORK, Claremont '69, 6545 Wilbur Ave., Space 55, Reseda, Cal., Marshall. JOSEPH GILBERT BLOCK, U. of Michigan '69, 1538 She bourne Pl., Johnstown, Pa., Cardozo, C.I..R.D. Bottom JOEL ROBERT BLOOM, U. of Penn. '69, 48 Nason Rd., Swampscott, Mass., Warren. JOHN ANGUS BLUE, Carnegie-Mellon U. '65, 261 E. Main St., Romney, W. Va., Blackstone. ROBERT HOWARD BLUMENTHAL, Harvard '69, 754 Byron Pl., Clayton, Mo., Blackstone. MICHAEL J. BOHNEN, Harvard '68, 3 Chauncy S Cambridge, Mass., Blackstone. MICHAEL JEFFREY BONN, Yale '67, 1807 Plainfield RC Joliet, Ill., Pow Wow. ARTHUR H. BONNER, Brooklyn Coll. '69, 1175 Ossipc Rd., W. Hempstead, N.Y., Leighton. SJ N W . 4- Y. ' -s -1-'--:.:.:... .V ,. l :Ebay I suwl rw ' l ' E---1 all ag -gg! it -X.. 'Y ' , . V , Top ORMAN MELTON BONNER, JR., U. of Tex. QAustinJ '68, IZO Robert, Fort Worth, Tex., Leighton. IACK W. BORGEN, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '69, 4801 ameron Ranch Dr., Sacramento, Cal., Sacks. LAN ROBERT BORLACK, U. of Michigan '69, 24780 Sus- nx, Oak Park, Mich., Bruce, B.8LB. OBERT ALEXANDER BRANSFORD, JR., Vanderbilt '64, 0 E. Todd St., Union City, Tenn., Sacks. ERBERT L. BRAVERMAN, U. of Penn. '69, 34 N. Hamp- n Rd., Columbus, Ohio, Scott. ARION WELDON BREWER, JR., U. of Texas '67, U. of xas '68, Route l, Box 89, Lampasas, Tex., Dem., B. 84 B. Middle TER ROBERT BRONSON, U. of Arizona '69, 2816 E. th St., Tucson, Ariz., Keeton, Rep. MES BROOK, Harvard '68, 26586 Dundee Rd., Huntington oods. Mich., Howe. BROWN, Harvard '68, 770 Boylston St., Apt. 20-I, Mass., Field. BENJAMIN BRUSKIN, Williams '69, 1769 Class of 1972 Asylum Ave., W. Hartford, Conn. RICHARD GORDON BUCKINGHAM, McMaster '69, 2084 Gary Cr., Burlington, Ont., Can., Marshall, Forum, S. Bar, l.L.C. STEVEN B. BURBANK see p. l69. DAVID HOLLISTER BUNDY, Yale '69, 23 Elmer St., Cambridge, Mass., Marshall. Bottom ROBERT JAMES BURFORD, Texas A 8: M '69, 922 Fannin, Columbus, Tex., Leighton, B. BL B., B.L.S.A. DONALD ANDREW BURNS, West Point '62, 8611 Water- ford Rd., Alexandria, Va., Bruce, C.R.-C.L. GORDON RODNEY CALVERT, U. of Virginia '69, 6712 Michaels Dr., Bethesda, Md., Scott. WILLIAM ANTHONY CAMBRIA, Holy Cross '69, 60l Drake Ave., Roselle, N.J., Harlan. ROBERT EARLE CARR, U. of Cal. fRiversideJ '68, U.C.L.A. '69, 855 Victor St. Apt. 203, Inglewood, Cal., Blackstone, B. 8L B. DAVID CLAYTON CARRAD, Trinity Coll. '65, Columbia School of Journalism '66, 89 Larch Rd., Cambridge, Mass., Scott. - ,.,. EJ 145 . Fl1lBTRE ' Top DOUGLASS WATTS CASSEL, JR., Yale '69, 252 Chantry Rd., Timonium, Md., Sutherland, C.R.-L.R. BARBARA KIRK CAVANAGH, Wheaton '65, 23 Dryads Green, Northampton, Mass., Pound. JOSEPH MATTHEW CAVANAGH, St. John's '62, 224-10 Jamaica Ave., Queens Village, N.Y., Sacks, Forum. JAIME M. CERVANTES, U.C.L.A. '69, 1323 Bonita, La Verne, Cal., Cardozo. TIMOTHY ALOYSIUS CHORBA, Georgetown '68, U. of Heidelberg CGermanyJ '69, 2641 Creston Ave., Bronx, N.Y., Keeton, B. 8L B., I.L.C., S. Bar. ROBERT CHARLES CLARK, Maryknoll '66, Columbia '69, 4715 Laine Ave., New Orleans, La., Scott, B. 8: B. Middle WILLIAM JAMES CLEARY, Georgetown '69, I8 Avalon Rd., Great Neck, N.Y., Kaplan. LYNN LELAND COE, Wesleyan '69, R.R. No. 6, Springfield, Ill., Harlan. CHARLES LAWRENCE CONNOLLY, III, Notre Dame '69, Rt. 1, Box 118, Libertyville, Ill., Scott. SAMUEL COOPER, III, U. of Penn. '69, 97-11 Horace Hdng. Blvd., Flushing, N.Y., Leighton. JOHN HAROLD COSIER, U. of Nebraska '66, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '68, 2235 Lake Street, Lincoln, Neb., Blackstone. JUDITH VICTORIA COUGHLIN, Pembroke '68, 47 High St., Mt. Kisco, N.Y., Cardozo. Bottom HARVEY LEONARD COURT, Oklahoma State '65, 1216 N. Harvard, Oklahoma City, Okla. STEPHEN S. COWEN, Emory U. '69, 2686 Ridge Valley Rd. N.W., Atlanta, Ga., Sutherland. EDWARD FINCH COX, Princeton '68, Yale '69, 148 E. Er Ave., New York, N.Y., Pow Wow. MELVIN MON ROE COX, U. of Wyoming '69, Box 592, Tor- rington, Wyo., Bevins. PAUL ALBERT CRONE, JR., Case-Western Reserve '6 Wichita State '69, 4532 Beachworth Ct., Columbus, Obi Bruce. JAMES KENNETH CRONEY, Villanova '65, 206 Ave., J enkintown, Pa., Warren. 146 Top ROBERT WILLIAM CURRY, N.Y.U. '69, 320 E. Tall Trees Lane, Palatine, Ill., Sacks. REGORY DYER CURTIS, Dartmouth '69, 1986 Highland d., Sharon, Pa., Blackstone. OHN MARK CYTRON, Yale '69, 12 Granada Way, St. ouis, Mo., Keeton. AUL PATRICK DALEY, Boston Coll. '63, 40 Playstead Rd., ewton, Mass., Root, L.l. OBERT GEORGE DAMUS, Harvard '67, Cambridge '69, 525 Bonita Vista, San Bernardino, Cal., Pow Wow. OBERT HOYT DANIELS, Harvard '69, 195 S. Prospect St., urlington, Vt., Root. Middle ICHARD DURHAM DARBY, JR., Princeton '69, 1327 heridan, Bloomington, Ind., Scott. INDA KAY DAVIS, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '68, 757 Foxdale ve., Winnetka, lll. ARSHALL STEVEN DAVIS, Brandeis '69, 468 Norfolk St., Mass., Pound. 1 u lx 'iw i ' 1. 11 If A 3 11 , Af fi - uuv- -'r- H 7 if -rv MAXWELL SPURGEON DAVIS, Dartmouth '69, 6430 Augusta Blvd., Seminole, Fla., Root. PAUL CURTIS DAW, Amherst '68, 447 Chandler St., Worcester, Mass., Kaplan. PATRICIA ANN DEL TORO, Pembroke '69, 542 Metacom Ave., Bristol, R.I., Bruce. Botrom BRACKETT BADGER DENNISTON, llI, Kenyon Coll. '69, 652 Elm, Barrington, Ill., Griswold. ROBERT FRANK DERING, Yale '69, 10619 S. Fairfield Ave., Chicago, Ill., Cardozo. ROBERT JAMES DEUTSCH, U. of Michigan '69, 1200 Ard- moor, Birmingham, Mich., Dawson, Forum. NORVIN KENNEDY DICKERSON, III, U. of No. Carolina '69, 2001 Griffith Rd., Monroe, N.C., Scott. ELIOT GORDON DISNER, U. of Michigan '69, 1250 Oak St., Birmingham, Mich., Blackstone, Dorm. C., l.L.C., U. Rel. Com. DONALD EDWARD DORFMAN, U. of Michigan '69, 1731 S. 8th St., Fargo, N.D. in 1 3 W-- ' im ' vt 147 Class of 1972 im . r. 1 I ,Q 1 a M' f ' ' . r- A I . Top ALAN SANFORD DORIS, Miami '69, 2411 Brentwood Rd., Beachwood, Ohio, Cardozo. ROBERT JOSEPH DRAN, Stanford '69, 30 Trowbridge St., Apt. 3, Cambridge, Mass., Pow Wow. W. DONALD DRESSER, Cal. Tech. '69, 1572 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Marshall. HENRY H. DRUMMONDS, U. of Oregon '69, Elmira, Ore., Warren, C.R.-C.L. LOUIS JEAN DUVAL, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '69, 62 Omega St., Manchester, N.H., Scott. ROBERT JEFFREY DWYER, Amherst '69, 330 West Jersey St. Apt. 5F, Elizabeth, N.J., Bevins, B. 8: B., S.T. More. Middle HARVEY CARY DZODIN, Michigan State '67, 21901 Bever- ly, Oak Park, Mich., Bruce. JAM ES DAVID EARL, Pomona Coll. '69, 26 Crestwood Dr., Framingham, Mass., Kaplan. CARLETON CHESMORE EASTLAKE, U.C.L.A. '69, 320 1 l www Calle Mayor, Redondo Beach, Cal., Bevins, Dorm. C. LAWRENCE STEVEN EBNER, Dartmouth '69, 44 Sun- derland Rd., TenafIy, N.J., Story, Rep., L.I. ROBERT N. ECCLES, Harvard '69, 2 Roly Rd., Madison, Wis., Howe. GEORGE MITCHELL ECKEL, III, U.S.A.F. Academy '62, 26 Peabody Terr. Apt. 21, Cambridge, Mass., Casner. Bottom WILLARD LELAND ECKHARDT, JR., Duke '69, 206 Bingham Rd., Columbia, Mo., Learned Hand. DAVID HARRY EHRENWERTH, U. of Pittsburgh '69, 1013 Merchant St. Ambridge, Pa., Warren, Record. JOEL M. EICHENGRUN, Colgate '69, 54 Shore Dr., Oak- dale, N.Y., Keeton. RICHARD DENNIS ELLENBERG, Brown '69, 799 Park Ave., New York, N.Y., Pound. DWIGHT HOLMES ELLIS, III, Harvard '69, 56 Bailey Hill Rd., Groton, Conn., Kaplan. JAMES THOMAS ELLIS, Wayne State U. '65, 2 Holworthy Terr., Cambridge, Mass., Root. - .,, Z. Lr11,f'.x'- v. f'- . :V - 148 Class of 1972 ae iii? xp V is ' f L Top LARRY PAUL ELLSWORTH, Michigan State '69, 8006 illis Rd., Ypsilanti, M ich., Bruce, C.R.-L.R. ICHARD GEORGE FATHY, U. of Cal. CDavisJ '69, 508 lhambra Rd., San Mateo, Cal., Sacks. AVID LOUIS FEIGENBAUM, Yale '69, 147 Vernon Dr., ittsburgh, Pa., Pound, L.I., B. 8L B., I.L.C. RA M. FEINBERG, Rutgers '68, 21 Wyndmoor Ave., ewark, N.J., Warren. RNOLD LESTER FEINSTEIN, Tulane '69, 2106 28th Ave., eridian, Miss., Griswold. RADFORD LEE FERGUSON, Drake '69, I30 S. Ferry, Ot- umwa, Iowa, Cardozo. Middle AMES DAVID FERRUCCI, Williams '69, 53 Essex Ave., ontclair, N.J., Pound. VELORIES ANNE FIGURES, California State Coll. '68, 1939 84th Ave., Oakland, Cal., Leighton, B.L.S.A,, I.L.C., Forum. PAUL MATHEW FISH, Drake '69, l507 W. Acres, Joliet, Ill., Sutherland, B. SL B., L.I., Rep. DANIEL HARVEY FITZGIBBON, West Point '64, 2405 Sycamore St., Columbus, Ind., Root. Bottom EDWIN RANDOLPH FLEURIET, Vanderbilt '65, 2425 Bowie, Harlingen, Tex., Learned Hand. DAVID KENT FORD, St. Lawrence U. '67, 20 Rosewood Dr., Simsbury, Conn., Keeton. STUART T. FREELAND, U.S. Naval Academy '61, 55 Red- gate Rd., R.D. No. I, Boonton, N.J., Casner, I.L.C., Forum. HARVEY WILLIAM FREISHTAT, Princeton '68, 3 Englewood Ave., Brookline, Mass., Bruce. Ll FIEDLER, Radcliffe '69, I33 Hyslop Rd., Mass., Kent. YMOND CHARLES FIELDS, Central State Coll. COkla.J Box 55, Pawnee, Okla., Sacks, I.L.C., L.l. GREGORY A. FRIEDMAN, U. of Illinois '69, 674 Bluff Rd., Glencoe, Ill., Sacks. LISA KAY FRIEDMAN, Pembroke '69, 3849 Garrison St., N.W., Washington, D.C., Kaplan. I49 at-J 1' we Top ROBERT DAVID FRIEDMAN, U.C.L.A. '69, 13726 Chase St., Arleta, Cal., Scott. STUART IRWIN FUCHS, Harvard '68, 869 Linden Blvd., Brooklyn, N.Y., Cardozo. MICHAEL DAVID FULLWOOD, U. of Wisconsin '69, 3306 Blackhawk Dr., Madison, Wis., Learned Hand. GEORGE ARTHUR FURST, U.C.L.A. '67, Yale '69, 17785 Alonzo Pl., Encino, Cal, Scott. PETER JOSEPH GABEL, Harvard '68, 465 Park Ave., New York, N.Y., Kent. ROBERT WAYNE GARRETT, Dartmouth '69, 8 E. Ninth St., Frederick, Md., Blackstone. Middle KENNETH D. GASKINS, U. of Nebraska '68, l62l N. 62nd St., Lincoln, Nebraska, Sutherland. PAUL RICHARD GAURON, Bowdoin '69, 17 Carpenter St., Amesbury, Mass., Story. ERIC PETER GELLER, George Washington U. '69, 222 E. 32nd St., New York, N.Y. W ' ff ., ,Q , A tiff -. ll 11 lfellw. I ' J W l :keg L M 11 11 . -' 1 ,. . lg . A i5?' 1. 1. .- . - -11' -ell 'IJ-. , .. 7 vm. 1541 .rf -: ' :gg il, , V , 13 A --4, NATHANIEL LEWIS GERBER, Columbia '69, 64 Parkman St., Brookline, Mass., Harlan. STUART MARK GESCHWIND, U. of Rochester '69, 13-26 Fairclough PI., Fair Lawn, NJ., Griswold. MAUREEN ELIZABETH GEVLIN, Le Moyne Coll. '69, 24 Childs Ave., Floral Park, N.Y., Choate. Botrom ELLIOT GEWIRTZ, Colgate '69, 10 Shepard Apt. 3, Cambridge, Mass., I.L.C., C.R.-C.L. STEVEN HENDRIX GIBSON, Vanderbilt '69, 164 Noe Ave., Chatham, N.J., Cardozo. PRISCILLA ANN GIN, San Francisco State Coll. '67, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '69, 139 E. Romie Lane, Salinas, Cal., Howe, S. Bar, Forum. NEIL D. GOLD, U. of Rochester '69, 15 Lawson Lane, Great Neck, N.Y., Choate. STEVEN MARC GOLDBERG, U. of Michigan '69, 8927 S. Merrill Ave., Chicago, Ill. LEONARD HOWARD GOLDNER, U. of Wisconsin '69, 231 Everett Pl., Englewood, N.J., Griswold. 150 Class of 1972 as W 1 .Q . , ' E, 1 . IS 1 am l Top ARK ALLEN GOLDOWITZ, U. of Cal. fSanta Cruzl '69, 358 Lyric Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Kaplan. AUL JOHN GONTAREK, Villanova '69, 6335 Horrocks treet, Philadelphia, Pa., Scott. ARRY PAUL GOODE, Kenyon '69, 58-19 211 St., Bayside, .Y., Learned Hand. LAN F. GOOTF, George Washington U. '69, 10904 Oak- ood St., Silver Spring, Md., Root. AVID ELIOT GORDON, Harvard '69, 10801 Clarmon Pl., ulver City, Cal., Pound. EFFREY J. GORDON, Princeton '69, 5421 Cornell, Chicago, ll., Story. Middle OHN BENNETT GORDON, Princeton '69, 3131 Fleur Dr. pt. 707, Des Moines, Iowa, Bevins. EVIN E. GRADY, Vanderbilt '69, 1708 Childerlee Lane, tlanta, Ga., Marshall. ARC ALAN GRAINER, U. of Michigan '69, 20016 heyenne, Detroit, Mich., Nesson, H.L.C.S., Urban Corps. N ,gg , ,., , A P JOHN ALEXANDER GRANT, U.S. Naval Academy '64, 402 Illinois Ave., Mott, N.D., Marshall, Rep., I.L.C. MICHAEL A. GRAVES, Swarthmore '69, 526 W. 161st St., New York, N.Y., Leighton, B.L.S.A., Forum. JAMES CORNELIUS GRAY, Harvard '69, 2830 University Terr., N.W., Washington, D.C., Story. , Bottom JAN CHARLES GRAY, U. of Cal. iBerkeley1 '69, 17806 Ridgeway Rd., Granada Hills, Cal., Scott, B. 84 B., Yearbook. ERIC DAVID GREEN, Brown '68, 407 Edgeworth Lane, Sewickley, Pa., Warren. JOSEPH BENJAMIN GREEN, Yale '69, 8 E. 77th St., New York, N.Y., Sutherland. THOMAS ANDREW GREEN, Columbia '61, Harvard '70, 269 Huron Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Marshall. MARCUS GUDEMA, See p. 170. ROBERT BRADLEY HAAS, Yale '69, 151 Highland Ave. Apt. l, Somerville, Mass., Story. FRED THURMAN HAMLET, U. of No. Carolina '69, 413 W. Salisbury St., Pittsboro, N.C. 1.51911 fw- '151 A -se Top PAUL ROBERT HANNAH, Harvard '69, 1521 Robertson Ct., Grand Forks, N.D., Cardozo. ELMER WILLIAM HANAK, Ill see p. 169. DAVID CARTER HARDESTY, W. Virginia U. '67, Oxford '69, 1212 E. Ave., Shinnston, W. Va. CHARLES EDISON HARRIS, U. of Florida '69, 605 E. Miller St., Orlando, Fla., Scott. HOWARD FRANKLIN HART, Cornell '69, 4894 Northgate Dr.. Manlius. N.Y., Pound. L.l. HARRIS L HARTZ, Harvard '67, Princeton '68, 1808 Chilton Ct.. Farmington, N.M., Kent. TERRY JACK HARTZEL, Dartmouth '68, 72 Iron St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Middle FRED ELMORE HAYNES, Bowdoin '67, 1011 Langley Hill Dr., McLean, Va., Blackstone. ROBERT EDWARD HEBDA, Cornell '69, 2417 Evans Dr., Silver Spring, Md., Dawson. WILLIAM CHARLES HECK, Tufts '69, 297 Henry St., 1. 1 f W 1 Manchester, Conn., Bruce, S. Bar. KENNETH R. HEITZ, U.C.L.A. '69, 3477 Marvin, Santa Maria, Cal., Griswold. DOUGLAS LYLE HEMER, Dartmouth '69, 1610 E. 13th St., Des Moines, Iowa, Kaplan. ERIC LEWIS HENRIKSON, Yale '69, 12145 Hesby St., North Hollywood, Cal., Choate. Bottom OLIVER LOUIS HENRY, Columbia '69, 1405 Grey Ave., Evanston, III., Leighton. .IAN BARRY HENSON, U. of Kentucky '69, 653 Beth Lane, Lexington, Ky., Pound. PAUL DAVIS HERMANN, U. of Cal. fBerkeley7 '69, 17979 Beardsley St., Castro Valley, Cal., Scott. PETER GREGORY HERMES, Manhattan Coll. '69, 94-01 220th St., Queens Village, N.Y., Learned Hand. ROBERT LE ROUX HERNANDEZ, Princeton '69, 36 Oliver St., Toms River, NJ., Cardozo, Forum, I.L.C., S.T. More, Record. JOSEPH STEVEN HESSENTHALER, Trinity Coll. '69, 700 Jackson Ave., Ardsley, Pa., Scott. 'I52 s '14 1 ui Q X N! I Y i Top MALCOLM EUGENE HINDIN, Indiana '67, Harvard '69, 5349 Chickasaw Rd., Memphis, Tenn., Howe. STANFORD ANTHONY HINES, Michigan State '69, 711 W. 44th St., Savannah, Ga., Leighton, B.L.S.A., B. 8L B. PERRY LEE HIRSCH, U.C.L.A. '69, ll25 S. Westmoreland Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Griswold, B. 8c B. RICHARD ALAN HOEL, Hamline U. '69, 870 Hanson Dr., Hutchinson, Minn., Story. TIMOTHY K. HOELTER, U. of Wisconsin '68, 3226 N. Sum- mit Ave., Milwaukee, Wis., Pound. RICHARD CHARLES HOFFMAN, U. of Wisconsin '69, 250 Marine Dr., Chicago, Ill. Middle RUCE EDGAR HOLBEIN, Dartmouth '69, Marvelle Rd., ayetteville, N.Y., Blackstone. Class of 1972 Pierce Rd., Saratoga, Cal., Howe, I.L.C., C.L.A.O. NICHOLAS JAMES HONCHARIW, Harvard '69, 2l06 N.E. 17th Ave., Portland, Ore., Cardozo. STEPHEN DAVID HOUCK, Princeton '69, 34 N. Grand Parkway, Lewistown, Pa., Choate. JOHN JOSEPH HOULIHAN, JR., Holy Cross '69, ll0-45 Queens Blvd., Forest Hills, N.Y. Bottom GREGORY JOSEPH HOWE, Yale '64, 200 E. 12th St., The Dalles, Ore., C.R.-L.R. BRUCE A. HUBBARD, Rutgers, 2128 Delano Dr., Chat- tanooga, Tenn., B.L.S.A. HENRY ALLAN HUBSCH MAN, Rutgers '69, 238 William- son Ave., Hillside, N.J., Keeton. ROBERT LLOYD HUMBARGER, U. of Michigan '69, 53 Bryant St., Battle Creek, Mich., Keeton. St., Tallahassee, Fla., Leighton, B.L.S.A. CHARLES HOLMES, III, Stanford '69, 20095 .ICQ YN JOYCE HOLIFIELD, Swarthmore '69, ll0 Lin- DANIEL JAMES HURSON, Georgetown '69, 9623 W. Bexhill Dr., Kensington, Md., Bevins, L.l. EVERETT PALMER INGALLS, Ill, Brown '69, Foothills Lane, Turin, N.Y., Kent. 153 Top PAUL CHAPPLE IRWIN, Cornell '69, 21 Wendell St. Apt. l 1, Cambridge, Mass., Keeton. HARVEY STEPHEN ISRAELTON, U. of Penn. '69, 73-43 174 St., Flushing, N.Y., Pound. NANCY P. JACKLIN, Georgetown '69, 3816 N. 37th St., Arlington, Va., Marshall. RICHARD BROOKE JACKSON, Dartmouth '69, 516 W. Babcock, Bozeman, Mont., Pound. STEPHEN THOMAS JANIK, Harvard '69, 4006 E. Burnside, Portland, Ore., Root. N. RICHARD JANIS, U. of Wisconsin '68, 2500 Virginia Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C., Scott. Middle ROBERT JEFFERS, JR., Howard '69, 6130 Blair Rd., N.W., Washington, D.C., Leighton, B.L.S.A. WILLIAM JENNINGS JEFFERSON, Southern U. '69, Rte. 3, Box 26, Lake Providence, La., Leighton. JESSE J. JENNER, Cornell '69, 20 Wheeler Ave., Warwick, N.Y., Cardozo. ALLAN DAY JERGESEN, Harvard '69, 307 Richardson Dr., Mill Valley, Cal., Dawson. THOMAS ARTHUR JOHNSON, Bowdoin '69, 2716 Lincoln- wood Dr., Evanston, Ill., Keeton, I.L.C. LOGAN TRUAX JOHNSTON, III, Yale '69, 730 Woodland Ave., Hinsdale, Ill., Keeton, B. 8: B., Forum. Bottom FREDERICK DANIEL JONES, Bowie State Coll., 2626 Newton St., N.E., Washington, D.C., Leighton. HERBERT PENDLETON JORDAN, JR., Princeton '60, 26 Farrar St., Cambridge, Mass., Learned Hand. PETER ALAN JOSEPH, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ, 340 N. Mans- field, Los Angeles, Cal. ROBERT WILLIAM JUNGHANS, Winona State Coll. '69, 226 Jamaica Way, Apt. 6, Jamaica Plain, Mass., Bevins. HOFFER KABACK, Columbia '69, 2337 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N.Y., Story. KENNETH FRED KAHN, Cornell '69, 24 Highland Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Howe. 154 Top ITHOMAS GERARD KAPLAN see p. 169. YRA LEONORE KARSTADT, Queens Coll. '62, U. of Cal. Berkeleyl '65, 69, 48 Boylston St., Cambridge, Mass., Keeton. AMES WILLIAM KASAMEYER, Dartmouth '69, 44 roquois Dr., Warwick, R.I., Sutherland. ETER KATZ, Harvard '69, 6 Berkeley St., Cambridge, ass., Sutherland. OBERT JAMES KATZ, Cornell '69, 1125 Park Ave., New ork, N.Y., Blackstone. ONALD STANLEY KATZ, N.Y.U. '67, Oxford '69, III94 ueensway Dr., St. Louis, Mo., Pow Wow, I.L.C. AWRENCE PAUL KATZENSTEIN, Washington U. '69, 4 ryan Lane, Salem, Ill., Learned Hand. Middle OHN BRIAN KEANE, Brown '68, 60 Burley St., Danvers, ass.. Bruce. Class of 1972 McClatchey Cir., N.E., Atlanta, Ga., Blackstone. JUSTINE LEONARD KENT, Wellesley '69, 31 Barry Scarsdale, N.Y., Pound. LAWRENCE BERT KESSLER, U. of Michigan '68, Rd., 541 Queen Anne Rd., Teaneck, N.J., Bevins, C.R.-C.L., S. Bar. FREDDIE CHARLES KING, U. of W. Virginia '5l, clo G. W. King, Bergoo, W. Virginia, Harlan. Bottom ROBERT LEE KING, Indiana '68, 5665 N. Meridian St., In- dianapolis, Ind., Root. WAYNE CHARLES KING, U. of Wisconsin '67, 707 Rhode Island, Sturgeon Bay, Wis., Sacks. ARTHUR CHARLES KIRKLAND, JR., Wayne State, 4015 Sturtevant, Detroit, Mich., Leighton, B. 8L B., B.L.S.A., Forum. JOSEPH ALAN KLEIN, U. of Rochester '68, Buckingham Rd., Cedarhurst, N.Y. 405 RICHARD DANIEL KLEIN, U. of Wisconsin '64, Columbia School of International Affairs '68, 26 Metropolitan Oval, JEAN KEMBLE, Wellesley '69, 65 Holland Rd., Pitts- Pa., Kent. JAMES KENNEY, JR., Harvard '69, 4044 Bronx, N.Y., Harlan, I.L.C., C.R.-C.L., C.L.A.O. GEORGE ROBERT KNAP P, Colgate '69, 266 Forest D Short Hills, N.J., Howe. r., S., Hi 155 ,QE GM: li' i l ff Q.. . ,tsm.i-. 3 . 'H 5-l .'i,-fi? l -Ht2'..2f-.gf ' .. ,,::E1.. Z D . 4 A P2 7' 4. A g . 1 , . - in E : l I -2, ,S ,, 1 ,za f' ' i ' l .51 Y - Top WILL ROGER KNEDLIK, U. of Washington '67, '69, 6009 106th Ave. N.E., Kirkland, Wash., Keeton, Forum, I.L.C., l.L.J. MARGARET NOTTINGHAM KNIFFIN, Barnard '6I, 45 Manchester Rd., Eastchester, N.Y., Blackstone, H.L.C.S. WILLIAM DAVID KNOX, II, U. of Wisconsin '66, Oxford '69, 703 Robert St., Fort Atkinson, Wis., Pow Wow. DORIS NANCY KOBRIN, Syracuse '69, 140-16 68th Dr., Kew Gardens Hills, N.Y., Marshall. RICHARD THOMAS KORTRIGHT, Syracuse '69, E. Lake Rd., Skaneateles, N.Y., Cardozo, B. 84 B., C.R.-C.L., I.L.C. JEFFREY BRUCE KOVNER, Cornell '67, 6001 N. Bay Rd., Miami Beach, Fla., Story. Middle JASON HARRIS PAPERNO KRAVITT, Johns Hopkins '69, 1314 Forest Ave., Highland Park, Ill., Keeton. STEPHEN PAUL KREGSTEIN, U. of Wisconsin '69, 87 Cedar St., Malden, Mass., Blackstone, B. 8L B., I.L.C. ROBERT JOHN KRESSEL, Notre Dame '69, 60I7 Code Ave., Minneapolis, Minn., Sutherland. SCOTT AUGUST KRUSE, Princeton '69, 309 Gulfstream Dr., Delray Beach, Fla. PETER B KUTNER, Cornell '69, 36 Brookside Pl., New Rochelle, N.Y., Cardozo, B. 84 B., I.L.C. ARNOLD CARL LAKIND, Rutgers '69, 9-06 Ellis Ave., Fair Lawn, N.J. Bottom JAMES RICHARD LANDE, U. of Iowa '69, Buffalo Center, Iowa, Marshall. STEPHAN ARTHUR LANDSMAN, Kenyon '69, 266 Adams Rd., Hewlett, N.Y., Harlan. RICHARD PHILIP LE BLANC, Holy Cross '68, 33 Arlington St., Nashua, N.H., Pound. MARK LEEMON, U. of Michigan '69, 18945 Fairfield, De- troit, Mich., Choate. THOMAS FRANKLIN LEMONS, JR., V.M.I. '66, U. 1 Michigan '67, I2 Peabody Terr. Apt. ll, Cambridge, Mass., Story. CLIFTON ANDREW LEONHARDT, Cornell '69, 242 E. 52nd St., New York, N.Y., Kent. la ll . , -7 , , Q f l ll ' V u rv Q V 156 l i 1 , ,I , , ll ' ' , gf, 5 ea . 1 . li ii A H ,M it 1 1 ,,, Top LOYD ROSE LEVA, U. of Penn. '69, 7115 Bradley Blvd., ethesda, Md. OHN GERSON LEVI, U. of Rochester '69, 5855 S. Univer- 'ty Ave., Chicago, lll., Pound, B. 81. B. ENNETH STANLEY LEVINE, Cornell '69, 105 Laurel ve., Kane, Pa., Sacks. NDREW ANGRIST LEVY, Yale '68, 255-21 Upland Rd., reat Neck, N.Y., Keeton. ONI CAROL LICHSTEIN, Wellesley '69, 401 Sanhican Dr., renton, N.J., Kaplan. ICHARD ANTHONY LICHT, Harvard '68, 344 Taber ve., Providence, R.I., Pound, Dem. Middle HN PERRY LILLY, U. of Mississippi '69, 350 Main St., renada, Miss., Pound. DITH LORD LINDAHL, Cornell '69, 29 Woodcrest Dr., ., Melrose, Mass., Root. EORGE PETER LINDSAY, Columbia '69, 123 Grohmans ne, Bethpage, N.Y., B. 8a B. Class of 1972 STEPHEN MARK LOEWENBERG, Yale '69, 25 Lockwood Rd., West Newton, Mass., Pound. ROBERT HENRY LOUIS, U. of Penn. '69, 21 Summer Ave., Dover, N.J., Sutherland. ROBERT CASSEL LOWER, Harvard '69, 7 Line St., Cambridge, Mass., Root. Bottom LARRY ONEAL LYNCH, U. of No. Carolina '69, Rt. 2, Box 182, Enfield, N.C., Leighton. KATHY EILEEN MACHAN, U.C.L.A. '69, 201 Mas- sachusetts Ave., N.E., Washington, D.C., Sacks. MICHAEL JOSEPH MACHAN, Dartmouth '68, 2850 S. 74th St., West Allis, Wis., Howe. GARY ADAMS MacMlLLAN, Cornell '69, 70 Byram Ridge Rd., Armonk, N.Y., Howe. PHILIP M. MANDEL, U. of Wisconsin '65, 16 the Loch, Roslyn, N.Y., Howe, B. 8L B. CHARLYNN CAROL MANIATIS, Wellesley '69, 1515 Main St., Stratford, Conn., Root. rs? Il' WF 1.1 1 157 .' 4 i A 'Wk Y Y ,ma .1 .. .. .gg - I af' Tap THOMAS T. MANLEY, U. of No. Carolina '69, 159 New Haw Creek Rd., Asheville, N.C., Keeton. FREDERICK JAMES MANNING, U. of Penn. '69, 1020 Chestnut, Wilmette, Ill., Blackstone. MATTHEW THOMAS MARCELLO, III, Cornell '68, 33 Applegate Rd., Cranston, R.I., Sacks. LOUIS JAMES MARETT, Harvard '68, 6 Hazen St., Pelham, N.Y., Marshall. JONATHAN B. MARKS, Harvard '66, 1026 McClendon Dr., Tallahassee, Fla., Cardozo. FRANCIS JAMES MARTIN, Manhattan Coll. '69, Voorhis Point, South Nyack, N.Y., Warren. Middle RENWICK DUKE MARTIN, Stanford '69, 72 Jordan St., Skaneateles, N.Y., Keeton. LINDA MCVEIGH MATHEWS, Radcliffe '67, 310 Olympia Pl., Anaheim, Cal., Blackstone. JOHN HARTER MATHIAS, JR., Dartmouth '69, 721 S. Kenilworth, Oak Park, Ill., Pound. HOWARD BRUCE MATLOFF, Columbia '69, 4109 Dewmar Ct., Kensington, Md., Casner. LAURALEE ALICE MATTHEWS, Radcliffe '68, Brandeis '69, 428 Broadway, Cambridge, Mass., Marshall. DAROLD ELLIS MAXWELL, U. of Cal. tSanta Barbaral '69, 1208 Miller St., Antioch, Cal., Cardozo. Bottom TIMOTHY HARRISON MCCARTHY Stanford '67 390 E. B St., Dixon, Cal., Howe. JOHN JOSEPH MCFADDEN, Lehigh '65, U. of Rochester '68, 154 E. Fifth St., Bloomsburg, Pa., Sacks WILLIAM CLARK McFADDEN II Williams '68 3084 Markle Dr., Cuyaloga Falls, Ohio, Sutherland FREDERICK JAEGER MCGAVRAN, Kenyon '65, 3075 Leeds Rd., Columbus, Ohio, Sacks ROBERT EDWARD MCGAW JR. U. of No. Carolina '69 Charles Dr., Windsor, N.C., Cardozo WILLIAM BARRETT McGURN III Yale '65 90 Wall St Springfield, Vt., Pound. 'ik . I, if , , .,.i.,...m 1 A Him. ,5E5EEZEfF'.iQijfa t 158 , . .mi 1' H'-N : I Y ' 4 it ' 7 A - 3-1 ' if ' .QQ -tif . - '3' L ' ' ' sa Q ,D 1, I, . 1' I .ig Y H 'lil .1 I yt : if I ' . Q Class of 1972 1 Q I in , I e Mi -J is 555. 3 i M iJ31:'F in 1 Q 1 I I . Top Academy '64, 405 Price St., Calumet City, Ill., Scott. AVID CRAIG MCKEE, U. of Qklahoma '69, 414 N. 20th, EDWIN LEONARD MILLER. JR., Boston Coll. '69 Nonh- uncan, Okla., Kent. wood Apts. No. J4. N. Drive. North Plainfield, N.J., Keeton. ILLIAM JOHN MCSHERRY, Fordham '69, 1024 Rhine- GAIL GARINGER MILLER, Indiana '68, I3 Shepard St. ander Ave., Bronx, N.Y., Keeton. APL 3- Cambridge- Mass' Of '69, PFIIICCIIOTI '69, Wenwood DF., 723 24th Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Pound, Dem., S. Bar, Bf0Okv111e,N-Y-,Cf1SHef- orum. EORGE VANDERNETH MERRILL, Harvard '68, ll40 Bottom ifth Ave., New York, N.Y., Blackstone, L.I., B. 8a B., I.L.C. , . , DAVID NORMAN MINKIN, Cornell '69, I 122 Campbell St., EIECEFCEEEIEQFI BIZIUEIZRITT, Occidental 68, 1200 Ewell Williamsport, Pa., Field- , . JOHN ODLIN MIRICK, Amherst '68, U. of London '69, EN3lnI?glnHND?Vllit21ESKlN' U' of Perm' 68' 30 Skyvlew Mirick Rd., Princeton, Mass., Blackstone. TIMOTHY MARTIN MLSNA, MacMurray Coll. '69, 2400 S. 58th Ave., Cicero, III. Middle RICHARD JOHN MOEN, M.I.T. '69, 527 Quarry Lane, ICHARD J. MEYERS, Boston Coll., '69, 12870 Burt Rd., Neenah, Wis., Field, B. :SL B., S. Bar. etroit, Mich., Griswold. Q JAMES W. MOHR, JR., U. of Wisconsin '69, 4565 N. 144th ACK A. MEYERSON, Princeton '69, II4 Beechmont Rd., St., Brookfiedy Wis., Bevinsi ittsburgh, Pa. CYNTHIA WHITE MOLLENKOPF, Wellesley '67, 619 Lin- UDOLPH LEOPOLD MILASICH, JR., U.S. Naval wood Ave., Collingswood, N.J., Sacks. Y '4 i-'Se' H A 5 ' 'oft ' I' ' X . ' - d ii i I . . fi IIE -I ' I I - f f fl I L5 159 - ' ,aw 2. if 5 S 1 532 1 1 ' eh U' sir. .gi l 1 X Top CHARLES WILLIAM MOONEY, JR., U. of Oklahoma, 9617 Lyric Lane, Midwest City, Okla., Cardozo. KENNETH CAMERON MOORE, Hiram Coll. '69, 4568 Rhode Island Dr., Youngstown, Ohio, Harlan, Dorm. C. SCOTT CARSON MORIEARTY, Harvard '69, 304 Lincoln Ave., Lincoln, Ill., Marshall. DONNA MORROS, U. of Illinois '68, 300 N. State St. Apt. 5607, Chicago, Ill., Bruce. JOHN W. MOSCOW, U. of Chicago '69, 924 W. End Ave., New York, N.Y., Blackstone. GALE MUNSON, Wellesley '68, 1102 Parkway E., Utica, N.Y., Pound. Middle MARGARET ANN MURDICH, Radcliffe '69, 143 Madison Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y., Griswold. JAMES RONALD MURPHY, Howard '69, 427 S. 15th St., Harrisburg, Pa., Leighton. EDWARD W. NAJAM, JR., 1ndiana'69, 1301 Longwood Dr., mfr? if if ffil inf Y I ,xi :L-A W' 'Ti ui a YEL . .1 A a as ' st, 1 IM 1,3 Bloomington, Ind., Scott. STEPHEN EDWARD NEEL, Amherst '69, 2806 Woodmont Dr., Louisville, Ky., Field, B. 8a B. JOHN H. NEELY, Princeton '67, 2095 Newland St., Denver, Colo., Howe. ALAN TIMOTHY NELSON, Moorhead State '69, 417 Sixth St. S., Long Prairie, Minn., Kaplan. Bottom MADELINE F. NESSE, Barnard '69, ll5S Grant Ave., Bronx, N.Y., Marshall. JERROLD LEE NEUGARTEN, New College CFIoridaJ '68 5801 S. Dorchester, Chicago, Ill., Cardozo, C.R.-C.L. RICHARD MITCH ELLS NEUSTADT, Harvard '69 Traill St., Cambridge, Mass., Field. JOSEPH HYMAN NEWBERG, U. of Michigan '69, 251 Old Mill Rd., Middletown, Conn., Sacks. SCOTT DAVID NEWMAN, Yale '69, 6653 N. Hillside Dr., Phoenix, Ariz., Howe, C.R.-C.L., L.I. DEAN PAUL NICASTRO, Harvard '69, 45 Edison St., Quincy, Mass., Learned Hand. 'I60 Class of 1972 Top OY IRA NIEDERMAYER, Yale '69, 8312 Tahona Dr., ilver Spring, Md., Blackstone. DMOND FORREST NOEL, JR., Dartmouth '68, 2601 dams St., Denver, Colo., Leighton, B. 8L B., B.L.S.A. 'VILSON HILL NORTHCROSS, JR., Wayne State '69, 2706 -vIcDougalI, Detroit, Mich., Leighton. URTIS W. NYQUIST, North Park Coll. '69, Box 52, R.R.I., herry Valley, Ill., Bevins. ICHAEL STEWART OBERMAN, Columbia '69, 210 tlantic Ave., Lynbrook, N.Y., Sacks. ARK GRANT OHNSTAD, Concordia Coll. '69, 213 Fran- is St., West Fargo, N.D., Keeton, Forum. Middle ALE HUGH OLIVER, Michigan State '69, 1700 River Farm r., Alexandria, Va., Marshall. A RIF-TH ERESE OLIVER, Mount Holyoke '69, 130 Third Rankin, Pa., Marshall, B.L.S.A. WILLIAM OOSTERHUIS, Brown '69, 350 Loomis Fort Dodge, Iowa, Story. MAX STUL OPPENHEIMER, Princeton '69, 8308 Marcie Dr., Pikesville, Md., Harlan. KAREN J. ORLIN, U. of Penn. '69, 12811 Holdridge Rd., Wheaton, Md., Blackstone, Comp. Com., C.R.-C.L., Prison L.A.P. DENNIS THEODORE O'TOOLE, U. of No. Carolina 67, Baskerville, Va., Cardozo. Bottom GEORGE A. O'TOOLE, JR., Boston Coll. '69, 35 Academy Rd., Leominster, Mass., Choate. RICHARD EDMUND PARKER, Purdue '69, Rt. 9, Box 300, Lafayette, Ind., Sutherland. WILLIAM RICHARD PASCOE, U. of Cal. fSanta Barbaral '67, Oxford '69, 4173 Goodman St.. Riverside, Cal., Pow Wow, l.L.C.. l.L.J. STANLEY LOWELL PAULSON, U. of Minnesota '64, U. of Wisconsin '66, '68, 2294 Stanford Ct., St. Paul, Minn., Bevins. EUGENE CHARLES PAYNE, Georgetown '69, 231 I 16th Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Griswold. MARGARET ANNE PAYNE, U. of Cincinnati '69, 3936 N. Cliff Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio, Cardozo. H - 161 ,W l Pl'l I -Q, L.- J Qi , ' h .-. . lsdgxggli 'V' ' ' A I if f If Top ALLAN ROBERT PEARL, Oberlin '69, 37 Wimbleton Lane, Great Neck, N.Y., Dawson, L.I., I.L.C. JOEL SLONIM PECK, U. of Wisconsin '69, 1235 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. ARTHUR G. PEINADO, U. of Texas CEI Pasoj '69, 4200 N. Stanton, El Paso, Tex., Cardozo. STEVEN DAVID PENROD, Yale '69, 5822 Arlene Ave., Ft. Wayne, Ind., Field. LINDA ELLEN PERLE, U. of Penn. '69, I55 Morningside Rd., Verona, N.J., Keeton, C.R.-C.L. KENNETH STEPHEN PERLMAN, U. of Illinois '68, 330 Diversey, Chicago, Ill., Story. Middle ALAN WALTER PERRY, U. of Mississippi '69, 424 Pecan Ave., Philadelphia, Miss., Sacks. THOMAS ERIK PETERSON, Dartmouth '68, 260 Wildwood Rd., Ukiah, Cal., Sacks. RICHARD MICHAEL PETKUN, Harvard '69, 73 Bonad Rd., West Newton, Mass., Choate. :ik , .ami-. 5'- V - , . V... - ..... . liI5.5'ggfQ'I5Z in I .- I MM Msg, in me. imp , l . .6 5. . 4. ' LEWIS MICHAEL PETZOLD, U. of Penn. '69, 10 Province- town Lane Apt. 4, Orchard Park, N.Y., Field, L.I., Rep. MICHAEL ROSS POLLARD, U. of Michigan '69, 3138 Berkley St., Flint, Mich., Marshall. ROBERT ALLEN POND, U. of Michigan '69, l823 Oxford St., Saginaw, Mich., Sutherland, Dem. Boltom SIMON B. POSNER, Yeshiva '68, 976 E. 9th St., Brooklyn, N.Y., Field. JOHN J. M. PRAGER, Rutgers '69, Whispering Lane, Belle Mead, N.J., I.L.C. ALEXANDER H. PRATT, JR., Dartmouth '67, Yale '69, 3' Singletary Lane, Framingham Center, Mass., Pound, Dem. ROBERT VINCENT PRINK, Holy Cross '65, I46 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass., Harlan. MATTHEW FRANKLIN QUINT, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '69, 530 Levering Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Cardozo. JOSEPH ROBERT RACKMAN, Yeshiva '69, 30 E. 62nd S New York, N.Y. . . ,. I ii. Q ,l'Q'I-V. 'f .... L ig .. hi... l 162 .ml V, .- V wr.. , ei.. .' lk EDWARD JOHN RADLO, M.I.T. '67, 10 Edgemere Rd., Pawtucket, R.l., Learned Hand, C.R.-C.L. KIRK LEE RAMSAUER, Lafayette '69, 4 Dale Ave., Pomp- ton Plains, N.J., Griswold. JOHN ALOYSIUS RAYLL, Boston Coll. '69, 70-ll Nansen St., Forest Hills, N.Y., Story, B. 8L B., l.L.C., S. Bar. HOMAS WILSON REAVLEY, Stanford '69, 1312 Meriden Lane, Austin, Tex., Keeton. KENNETH ALAN REICH, Cornell '68, 8820 Burning Tree Rd., Bethesda, Md., Marshall. OSEPH ALEXANDER RIESER, JR., Princeton '69, 148 aylor Ave., Beaver, Pa., Casner. Middle IRGIL PATRICK ROBERTS, U.C.L.A. '68, '69, 1813 Ocean ve., Ventura, Cal., Leighton. HARLES ERNEST ROH, JR., Princeton '69, 27 Van Buren ve., West Hartford, Conn., Sutherland, l.L.C. ARRELL STUART ROSS, Yale '69, 164 Deerfield Rd., ranston, R.l., Choate. 9 Q Y' 4 . -Ji 4 ti me gi f no 1 is 1' ' 1 , fe. . , - 1 Ea- -1 1 at Yi D Class of 1972 flwisz, ' -v U Y Y - T - 7 2224511 1 ' , Z 1 ' , Y V Y . ,J KENNETH ALAN ROSS, U. of Iowa '69, 307 Park Ave., Muscatine, Iowa, Sacks. PHILIP RANDY ROTN ER, U. ofCa1. CBerkeleyJ '69, 272 N. Deere Park Dr., Highland Park, lll., Blackstone. WELDON J. ROUGEAU, Loyola KChicagoJ '67, 4212 Opelousas St., Lake Charles, La., Leighton, B.L.S.A., S. Bar. Bottom JOHN QUINN ROUNSAVILLE, U. of Texas '66, Columbia '69, 295 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass., Griswold. HORACE LEE ROUSSEL, U. of Penn. '69, 734 Willow Branch Ave., Jacksonville, Fla., Choate. STEVE HOWARD ROVAK, Washington U. '69, 12319 Con- way Rd., Creve Coeur, Mo., Cardozo. MARC ALAN ROWIN, Queens Coll. '69, 56-32 219th St., Bayside, N.Y., Story. JERRY ALLEN RUTHRUFF, U. of Washington, 1044 S.E. 212th, Kent, Wash., Sutherland. JOHN M. RYAN, Loyola tChicagoD '69, 5758 N. Talman, Chicago, lll., Warren. 51' 1' K 163 if I ly, 3 Q : - 7 ., is ' W U J M 5 Q L42-Sri'-E 'Q -12 A ,,,, 1 111' Top ROBERT J. SANER, II, Princeton '69, 26 Virginia Lane, Springfield, Ill., Choate. JOHN MICHAEL SANSONE, Harvard '68, U. of the West Indies '69, 2448 Riverside Dr., Santa Ana, Cal., Keeton. JOHN LESTER SARRATT, U. of No. Carolina '69, 1069 Spring Mill Lane, Atlanta, Ga., Warren. WILLIAM ROBERT SASSO, LaSalle '69, 1 1 1 Centennial Rd., Warminster, Pa., Pound. HOWARD ROBERT SAXNER, U. of Michigan '69, 2801 N. Sheridan, Chicago, Ill., Harlan. STEPHEN EDGAR SCHAFER, Ohio State '68, 1434 Wyan- dotte Rd., Columbus, Ohio, Dawson. Middle CAROL ANN SCHAPIRA, Hofstra '69, 191 Forest St., Oceanside, N.Y., Casner. ANDREW IKE SCHEPARD, C.C.N.Y. '68, Columbia '69, 11 Peabody Terr., Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland. JUNE E. SCHLESINGER, Cornell '68, 415 Cayuga Hts. Rd., Ithaca, N.Y., Bruce. rdf' , sf .fl Q . ,t 5 164 ALISON KAY SCHULER, Radcliffe '69, clo Elton Sancken, Saunemin, Ill., Sutherland, I.L.C. JAMES H. SCHUYLER, N.Y.U. '69, 1020 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N.Y., Story. MICHAEL SCI-IWARTZ, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '69, Los Ange- les, Cal., Griswold. Bottom MICHELLE PATRICIA SCOTT, Bryn Mawr '69, 167 Had- ley Ave., Clifton, N.J., Cardozo, Record. JOHN W. SEDWICK, Dartmouth '68, 1959 Loussac Dr. Anchorage, Alas., Sutherland. PAUL DARRYL SELVER, Harvard '69, 249 E. 48th St., New York, N.Y., Sacks. STUART WILLISTON SETTLE, JR., U.S. Naval Academy '63, 1735 Ashley Hall Rd., Charleston, S.C., Blackstone, B. 8: JAY CHRISTOPHER SHAFFER, Ohio State '69, 5749 Pandora, Cincinnati, Ohio, Sacks. STEPHEN GEORGE SHANK, U. of Iowa '65, Fletcher School CTuftsJ '66, 19 Brookfield Dr., Iowa City, Iowa., Pound. 2' -1... ,:.:.:.:i- ,J ' S f' , - ', f- Q -IEE . L L - Class of 1972 Top ROBERT DeFOREST SHATTUCK, Dartmouth '69, 3033 Chadbourne Rd., Shaker Hts., Ohio, Pow Wow. ALAN EDWARD SHERMAN, U. of Miami '69, 20 Island Ave., Apt. 518, Miami Beach, Fla., Story. EFFREY GUY SHERMAN, Harvard '68, 210 Atlantic Ave., Lynbrook, N.Y., Scott, C.R.-C.L. OHN F. SHERMAN, Ill, Dartmouth '68, 63 Windsor Rd., Waban, Mass., Kent. AN SCOTT SHERRILL, U. of N. Carolina '69, 302 Park r., Belmont, N.C., Scott. HEODORE ROOSEVELT SHERROD, Brown '69, 500 E. 3rd St., Chicago, Ill. Middle EE DURWARD SHIRK, Indiana U. CPa.D '67, 27 N. Union t., Arlington, Mass., Sacks. OHN DAVID SHIVELY, Harvard '69, 5625 Wycliffe Rd., dina, Minn., Keeton. EAN C. SHORT, II, U. of Arizona '69, 1800 Miracle Mile, fl dl' F i Chestnut Hill, Mass., Bruce. MARK I. SILBERBLATT, Harvard '69, 505 E. l4th St., New York, N.Y., Sacks. ELLEN BETH SILVERMAN, U. of Penn. '69, 130 Ash Dr., Roslyn, N.Y., Story. RANDOLPH B. SIM see p. 169. Bottom STEVEN JACK SIMMONS, Cornell '68, 315 W. 70th St., New York, N.Y., Marshall. GEORGE TEDESCHE SIMON, Trinity Coll. '69, 535 E. 86th St., New York, N.Y., Choate. JUSTIN D. SIMON, Brandeis '69, 3119 Wilmette Rd., Wil- mette, Ill., Casner. WILLIAM DAVID SIMS, JR., U. of Mississippi '69, l43l Meadowbrook Rd., Jackson, Miss., Marshall, L.I., B. :SL B., So. C. ROBERT DANIEL SLOAN, U. of Michigan '69, 5454 S. Shore Dr. Apt. 335, Chicago, Ill. GERALD TAYLOR SNOW, Stanford '69, ll0l Singingwood ucson, Ariz., Griswold, B. 84 B., I.L.C. J HARRIS SIEGEL, Harvard '69, 26 Forest St., Ct. Apt. 5, Walnut Creek, Cal., Learned Hand, Record, C. R.- C.L. 165 E555 55? 5 I i 356' i 'ee' I mfggi fi! . it I, U 5 .15 l Top BURTON HAROLD SNYDER, Lehigh '69, R.D. No. I, York, Pa., Field. RICHARD BRYANT SPOHN, Fordham '66, '67, 47 Tamalpais Terr., San Francisco, Cal., Dawson. RICHARD DEAN SPOOR, U. of Cincinnati '66, 515 Valley Dr., Duluth, Minn., Root, Forum, I.L.C. WILLIAM BRUCE SPRINGER, Harvard '69, 6620 El Monte, Shawnee Mission, Kan., Marshall. KENT R. SPUHLER, Ohio State '68, 4664 Marjorie Dr., Mur- rysville, Pa., Blackstone, WILLIAM HOWARD STADIEM, Columbia '69, 105 Wilson Ave., Kinston, N.C., Casner, I.L.C. Middle HAROLD STAHLER, Harvard '69. 29 Beresford Rd., Brookline, Mass., Warren. BARRY L.R. STAPLES, Simon Fraser U. '69, 618 Regina St. North, Creston, B.C. Canada, Forum, S. Bar. LAURA STEINBERG, Bryn Mawr '68, 5l9 Fairview Rd., I66 Narberth, Pa., Scott. JOHN-MARK STENSVAAG, Augsburg Coll. CMinneapoIisJ '69, 3329 14th Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn., Harlan. JAY B. STEPHENS, Harvard '68, Oxford '69, R.R. No. 3, Le Mars, Iowa, Story, Frosh. Proctor, I.L.C. JAMES PRICE STEPHENSON, West Point '65, R.R. No. I, Bingham Lake, Minn., Bruce. Bottom FRANK DURAND STIMLEY, Columbia '69, H20 Carver, Jackson, Miss., Leighton. ROBERT E. STOLLER, Yale '68, I27 Florence Rd., Lowell, Mass., Root, C.R.-C.L. CLYDE DONALD STOLTENBERG, U. of Iowa '69, R.R. No. I, Walcott, Iowa., Marshall. GARY LEON STONE, U. of Cal. fBerkeIeyJ '68, 4262 Central Ave., Fremont, Cal., Leighton, I.L.C., B. :YL B. RICHARD JAMES STRATTON, Harvard '68, U. of London, M.Sc. '69, R.R. No. I, Leland, Ill., Marshall, I.L.C. ANDREW D. STRUPP, Princeton '69, 870 Bluestone Lane, Somerville, N.J., Sutherland. Class of 1972 ae.. Ml? i ll A L Top HOWARD STUMPF, Harvard '69, President's House, t. Vernon, la. IP ROGER SULLIVAN, Pomona Coll. '69, l508 28th St., .W., Rochester, Minn., Sutherland. . JOEL SWANSON, U. of Texas '67, Harvard Business chool '68, 80l0 Arletta, Houston, Tex., Blackstone. OMA WEAVER THEUS, Muhlenberg '69, 33 Garden Pl., ew Shrewsbury, N.J., Root, B. :SL B. ICHARD MARTIN THOMAS, Washington 8L Lee '69, 1242 ampton Ridge, Bedford, Va. EGINALD CARY THOMPKINS, Columbia '69, 97 oolidge Ave., Amityville, N.Y., Leighton. Middle NNE RIGHTOR THORNTON, Radcliffe '69, Seminary Sta- on, Alexandria, Va. KENDALL TIMM, U. of Michigan '69, 2222 Bay City, Mich., Cardozo. L ETHAN TITELBAUM, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '68, W. l02nd St., Chicago, Ill. Rl W :ER .1 ll ii? 'Qin I KENNETH SVENDSEN TUNE, U. of Cal. fBerkeleyJ '66, 3061 Lawrence Rd., Redding, Cal., Learned Hand. LOWELL DAVID TU RNBULL, Harvard '69, 77 Summer St., Weston, Mass., Field. WILLARD LEE UMPHREY, U.S. Naval Academy '63, George Washington '67, 8 Shaler Lane, Cambridge, Mass., Sutherland, B. 8: B. Bottom G.C.O. PHILIPP vonTURK, Yale '69, I2 Dickel Rd., Scars- dale, N.Y., Marshall. ANDREW N. VORKINK, Yale '69, Sugan Rd., New Hope, Pa., Pow Wow, l.L.C. HARRIS WAGENSEIL, Dartmouth '67, Oxford '69, 844 Rin- con Lane, Palos Verdes Est., Cal., Pow Wow. DENNIS C. WALDON, U. of Chicago '69, 4838 W. 22nd Pl., Cicero, Ill., Sacks, B. :SL B., C.R.-C.L. JOHN KNOX WALKUP, Centre Coll. fKy.J '69, 3l S. Auburndale, Memphis, Tenn., Root. KENNETH L. WALLACH, Harvard '68, 5 Sherbrooke Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y. 167 Top ARNOLD ROY WALLENSTEIN, U. of Massachusetts '69, 26 Harmon St., Mattapan, Mass., Field. WILLIAM FRANCIS WALSH, U. of Michigan '69, I208 S. Hill Dr., Waterloo, Iowa, Scott. GREGORY HAMILTON WARD, U. of Cal. 4Santa Cruzb '69, 2820 Lakeview Dr., Santa Cruz, Cal., Story. PAUL L. WARNER, U. of Cal. fRiversideJ '69, 6455 Hayes Dr., Los Angeles, Cal., Story. STANLEY BOROUG HS WATSON, Wofford '69, 725 Hawthorne Lane, Rock Hill, S.C., Sutherland. PAUL LAURENCE WECKSTEIN, Haverford '69, I5 Wind- ing Rd., Rockville Centre, N.Y. ELIA WEINBACH see p. 169. Middle NATHANIEL ISRAEL WEINER, Cornell '69, II Hawthorn Ave., Winthrop, Mass., Casner. HOWARD MARK WEINMAN, Columbia '69, Cambridge, Mass., Casner, S. Bar. JUDITH ELAINE WEISS, U. of Penn. '69, 3120 W. School House Lane, Philadelphia, Pa., Harlan. GLEN ALAN WEISSENBERGER, U. of Cincinatti '69, 86 Valley Rd., Plandome, N.Y., Warren. GARY MORTON WELSH, Harvard '69, 8 Davenport St., Cambridge, Mass., Blackstone. ROBERT TIMOTHY WESTON, U. of Cal. tSanta Barbaxal '69, 1424 Camelia Dr., Alhambra, Cal., Griswold, Dem., S. Bar. Bottom CHARLES EVERETT WIGGIN, Harvard '68, I44 Forest St., Wellesley, Mass., Pow Wow, L.I., H.L.C.S., C.R.-C.L. JUDITH LYNN WILCOX, U. of Michigan '69, 4719 W. 210 St., Fairview Park, Ohio, Warren. NORMAN LESLIE WILKY, U.S.C. '68, Occidental '69, 4I27 Del Mar Ave., Long Beach, Cal., Field. HENRY CURTIS WILLENER, Oregon State '65, Rt. I, Box IOO, Warrenton, Ore., Pound, Forum. RICHARD HARVEY WILLIAMS, Colgate '69, 890 C. Ave Lake Oswego, Ore., Learned Hand. JAMES LEONARD WINSTON, U. of Penn. '69, 7052 Kedron St., Pittsburgh, Pa., Leighton. 168 Top ERIC DOUGLAS WITKIN, Columbia '69, 37 Lewis St., Perth Amboy, N.J., Casner. ELLEN SUSAN WOHL, U. of Michigan '69, 548 N. Clifton, Elgin, Ill. GARY LEE WOLFSTONE, Whitman Coll. '69, 10232 Waters Ave., S., Seattle, Wash., Kent., Leg. Res. JAY KELLY WRIGHT, Dartmouth '65, 5023 N. Washington Blvd., Arlington, Va., Sutherland. WILLIAM AUGUSTUS WRIGHT, U. of Virginia '69, 4658 Twin Oaks Dr., Macon, Ga., Keeton, Rep. ALLAN ALFRED WYATT, U. of Michigan '69, l625 W. l04th St., Chicago, Ill., Story, I.L.C. Middle MICHAEL KENDALL WYATT, Princeton '67, Oxford '69, 7 I4 Lafayette, Godfrey, Ill., Pow Wow, L.l. ISSA YOUAKIM, Amer. U. of Beirut, King Talal Amman, Jordan, Bevins. D. ZEGLIS, U. of Illinois '69, 305 Hill St., Momence, A Class of 1972 -I- ' T I. . - Eff i J 355, 1- f l ' ' - f 2, ' - ii-43'-Z arf- fir 1 32155425 ima , . 'N , .1 - ' n . , , ., 4, . 5,-'3,',.',.,f 58' .1 5 vit, 1,,, ', it I--if ii,- ' - I , 3 'L ifiim'. 5, ' '- ' ' I . ,I l i '. XJ- ' 1 Mgilyf I ii i H M yi!,1vifmii1,,f' it ,W , A w ,, . , ,Wi-ii iiwm , ,- Wil Un mn' im, , ,E ' 'il'-lk , ,- ,i I ,, ne 1 I X ' gp'- Z A 'l ,ni I , H , idly? h ' ,WW it , ,,lili, , . Ilaligil ' 'I s Ill., Choate. PETER MAX ZIMMERMAN, Swarthmore '69, 1049 Park Ave., New York, N.Y., Dawson. MARTIN S. ZOHN, Indiana '69, 6233 Washington Blvd., In- dianapolis, Ind., Harlan. NICHOLAS JAY ZOOGMAN, N.Y.U. '67, Harvard '69, 535 W. I I0th St., New York, N.Y., Story, I.L.C. Bottom STEVEN B. BURBANK, Harvard '68, Andover, Mass., Pow Wow. ELMER WILLIAM HANAK, Ill, U. of Texas '69, 3849 Drummond, Houston, Tex. THOMAS GERARD KAPLAN, Harvard '69, 91 Nottingham Terr., Buffalo, N.Y. RANDOLPH B. SIM, U. of Chicago '69, 2605 Edison Rd., South Bend, Ind., Field. ELIA WEINBACH, N.Y.U. '67, Oxford '69, 42 Werner Pk., Rochester, N.Y. JOHN M. MAZUR, Harvard '67, U. of Pittsburgh '68, ll60 Tranter Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Story. . 'Hg , l I69 J. LOUGHLIN CALLAHAN, Holy Cross '69, 661 Garden Rd., Dayton, Ohio. MARCUS GUDEMA, U. of Michigan '69, 1013 Oakmont Pl., Rockford, Ill., S. Bar, Warren Club. Not Pictured LOUIS E. ALFELD, Washington U. '63, M.l.T. '68, 171 Auburn St., Cambridge, Mass. NEIL WARNER AVERITT, Harvard '68, London School of Econ. '69, 130 S. Upham Ct., Lakewood, Colo. DAVID JACKSON BAILEY, Duke '69, 1051 Pine Valley Rd., Griffin, Ga., Sutherland. JOHN F. BEATTY, Harvard '68, 218 Park Dr., Bal Harbor, Fla., Dawson. JANET LEE BENSHOOF, U. of Minnesota '69, 321 Robert St., Detroit Lakes, Minn., Marshall. SUSAN E. CARLSON, U.C.L.A. '69, 59 Hillis Terr., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. PATRICK THOMAS CHRISTIANSEN, Notre Dame '69, 95 Morton Village Dr., Apt. 201, Mattapan, Mass., Dawson. CHARLES ELY CHROMOW, Harvard '68, 374 Briarcliffe Rd., Teaneck, N.J., Marshall. JOHN CIMKO, JR., American U. '69, 10 W. End Ave., Oneon- ta, N.Y., Kaplan. JOHN DONALD CODY, U. of Virginia '69, 561 Yardville Rd., Hamilton Square, N.J., Dem., S.T. More. SCOTT PORTER CONSIGNY, Harvard '69, 924 Oakwood, Oconomowoc, Wis. SHERMAN T. CROUCH, Princeton, Dover, Mass. MICHAEL DUDLEY CUSHING, Harvard '69, Page St., Gloucester, Mass., Marshall. WESTWELL RENE DANIELS, Fordham '68, 52 Trowbridge St., Apt. 7, Cambridge, Mass. STEVEN R. DANTZKER, Harvard '69, Bronx, N.Y. JOHN B. DAVIDSON, Harvard '69, Chicago, Ill. JAMES EDWARD DOYLE, U. of Wisconsin '67, 21 N. Prospect Ave., Madison, Wis., Harlan. 170 AVI DON EDEN, U. of Cincinnati '69, 1542 Kenova Ave., Cin- cinnati, Ohio. CHARLES N. ESTES, JR., Harvard '67, 1701 Georgia N.E., Albuquerque, N.M., Sutherland. RICHARD REX EURICH, American U. '69, 11521 N. Park- view Dr., 57 W., Mequon, Wis. BRUCE ELLIOTT FEIN, U. of Cal. CBerkeleyJ '69, 431 Fernel Ave., Palo Alto, Cal. ARTHUR W. FINCH, Antioch '61, Roxbury, Mass. BART STEVEN FISHER, Washington U. '63, John Hopkins '67, 36 Myrtle Ave., Cambridge, Mass. ANDREW J. FRIEDLAND, M.I.T. '68, 277 DeSoto Pl., E. Meadow, N.Y. MICHAEL PHILIP FROMAN, U. of Minnesota '64, M.1.T. '68, 24 Magazine St., Cambridge, Mass., Kaplan. RAY LEWIS FULLER, Colgate '69, Dry Brook Rd., Scio, N.Y. Dem. THOMAS R. GERETY, Yale '69, Southport, Conn. LLOYD GOLDENBERG, U. of Wisconsin '69, 7115 N Fairchild Cir., Fox Point, Wis. ROBERT LEE GRAHAM, U. of Michigan '69, 235 Moraine Highland Park, Ill. DOUGLAS PAUL HAFFER, U. of Wisconsin '69, 4711 MacArthur Blvd., N.W., Washington, D.C., Howe. WILLIAM R. HAMILTON, Princeton '69, Pittsburgh, Pa. PETER SCOTT HENDRIXSON, Northwestern '69, 10 Fores St., Cambridge, Mass. RICHARD BENNET HIRST, Harvard '69, 1210 Happy Dr. Boise, Idaho. BRADLEY M. HONOROFF, Harvard, Chicago, 111. GREGORY SCOTT COMBEST HU FFMAN, Stanford '69 2414 Harris Blvd., Austin, Tex., Harlan. LAVELL LAMONT JACKSON, U. of Cal. fBerke1eyJ '67, Har vard '69, 2665 67th Ave., Oakland, Cal., Casner. FRANK JOSEPH KAUFMAN, Hamilton '66, Yale '69, 25 E 86th St., New York, N.Y. JAMES J. KNICELY, George Washington U. '69, 1430 Newto- St., Sidney, Neb., Dawson, l.L.C., l.L.J. DENNIS CARL KOLENDA, U. of Michigan '69, 344 Baynto N.E., Grand Rapids, Mich. JOHN P. KRILL, Lawrence, Munhall, Pa. MARC BRUCE LASKY, U. of Penn. '69, 1114 Jeffrey St., A bury Park, N.J. DONALD STEPHEN LINKY, Dartmouth '68, 1503 Fourt Ave., Asbury Park, N.J. 1 J- NARREN H. LLEWELLYN, Columbia '69, 151 Melville Rd., Farmingdale, N.Y. l7VILLIAM R. LLOYD, Franklin 8: Marshall, Somerset, Pa. Il-IRISTOPHER SCOTT LYMAN, Oberlin '69, 59 Overlook ld., Caldwell, N.J. 'ETER S. MATORIN, Bowdoin, Riverdale, N.Y., Howe. LENNETH ALLEN McNERNY, Iowa State '68, 2114 17th St., lock Island, Ill., Kaplan. LAUER L. MEYER, Brown '69, 6701 Kerns Rd., Falls Church, la., Cardozo. MES MILLOCK, Harvard '68, 29 Prospect St., Great Neck, .Y., Kent. ATHERINE MINICUCCI, U.C.L.A. '69, 67 Nicholas Rd., o. 1, Framingham, Mass. 'HOMAS JOSEPH MITRANO, U. of Toronto '69, 256 Al- lemarle St., Rochester, N.Y., Sutherland. HOMAS E. MOSELY, Harvard '69, Box 57, Columbia, Mo.. awson, C.R.-C.L., C.L.R.D., Dem. MES MICHAEL MURPHY, Harvard '68, 11 Adams Terr., ambridge, Mass. RRY F. MUSKRAT, U. of Oklahoma, Tulsa, Okla. AYMOND S. NUNN, Yale '69, Bessemer, Ala. ERRY B. O'ROURKE, Claremont Coll. '69, 4807 Lantana r., San Diego, Cal. LENN ALAN PADNICK, Harvard '68, 15 Gail Pl., New- rgh, N.Y. OGER E. PODESTA, Columbia '69, 231 S. Little East Nk. d., Babylon, N.Y., Casner. MES FARMER PONSOLDT, Cornell '68, 211 Hillside Ave., ergenfield, N.J. RANKLIN A. REEVES, Harvard, Washington, D.C. AUL STUART REICHLER, Tufts '69, 39 Oakdale Rd., oslyn Heights, N.Y. ENNIS K. ROTHHAAR, Stanford '66, 957 N. Mariposa, Apt. Los Angeles, Cal., Field. RIC FRANKLIN SALTZMAN, Columbia '69, 1 Vista Dr., reat Neck, N.Y. ERARD LEWIS SANDERSEN, Ripon Coll. '69, Box 187, spen, Colo. ICHARD JAY SANDLER, Princeton '69, 50 Southberry ane, Levittown, N.Y., Casner. JOSEPH M. SANTANIELLO, Holy Cross, Watertown, Mass. MARK EDWARD SCHREIBER, U. of Michigan '69, 8014 Watkins Dr., Clayton, Mo. KEVIN CARL SCHULLER, Yale '69, 10940 W. Calumet Rd., Milwaukee, Wis. WALTER CHRISTIAN SCHUMANN, Harvard '69, 178 Power St., Providence, R.I., Field. ROBERT MARTIN SCOTT, U. of Michigan '68, 13855 Superior Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio. HARVEY SETH SHAPIRO, U. of Michigan '69, 1527 Dieman Lane, E. Meadow, N.Y. STEVEN JAY SIMONS, Harvard '69, 900 W. Market St., Akron, Ohio. PEGGY SLOAN, Berea Coll., '69, Shepherdsville, Ky. PAUL D. SLOCOMB, U. of Washington '67, 2751 56th, S.W., Seattle, Wash. STEVEN G. SMALL, Harvard, Northridge, Cal. STEPHEN JOHN SNYDER, U. of Minnesota '69, 3318 62nd. Ave. N., Minneapolis, Minn. JONATHAN Z. SOUWEINE, Columbia, Merrich, N.Y. ALAN EDWARD STEIER, U. of Cal. tBerke1eyj '69, 606 N. Whittier Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal. PETER DOE STERGIOS, Brown '64, Oak Hill Rd., Harvard, Mass. MARILYN LAUER STICKLOR, Barnard '69, 1 Gray St., Cambridge, Mass. RONALD HARVEY SURKIN, Case Western Reserve '69, 16 Marlene Dr., Syosset, N.Y. CHARLES BACKMAN TEMKIN, Columbia '69, 15 Harwich Rd., Providence, R.I., Sutherland. HENRY LEE THOMPSON, Colby '69, 11 Norvis St., Cambridge, Mass., B.L.S.A., Legal Aid, C.R.-C.L. MICHAEL G. TRACY, Columbia '68, 41 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Casner. BARRY K. TUNG, Harvard '68, Tokyo, Japan. MELVYN H. WALD, U. of Chicago '69, 38 Norton Rd., E. Brunswick, N.J., Story, L.l., Dorm. C., Yearbook. ROBERT GEORGE WATSON, U. of Minnesota '69, 5824 France Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. WILLIAM A. ZUCKER, Yale '68, 64 Pamela Lane, New Rochelle, N.Y. 171 WP, . ' 1 ' s .. In ' I 4 X , f 7 s. 1? ' 1 ra-1950 4 4. , , OP ' 6 U I -.X'.,vU-An. X yr. ,,,- I -f . .Q v..,4' ' Q cy, 1 mn. .,lI Y .' -.Ta A ,.', I '.:' gn' -. - -1 '. 4.1 ' - ' .Ax . ' 'x fr., - '- . --. ' . ' K W. I. I . .I I 'T' Hr- ,.,,I 5 . v. K QI Qu, II I -. u A' '31 ,Q . - N k 'N 3 ., ' 5. T '-f-:'f- '- ' , .- - Q I x . 1' . Q' ' -R5 , , - . --s. 'L I... , .-4 . 'z I 'vi' I .H , v A.: ' t U, 4 LM A .BK . ' 2' - ' ,. , -' I ' '..xI I I ' - 251. .- ' ' 4 I. I I 4, , fr . 1 , I f I, I r I 1 I .11-..I, ' ,f,g ,a M. I 1 A 5 -. I f-.,, gg. , H. I NI, I I.I I I I 3, sII ...I A ,I I ' I ' il-1 w --.- y Wx? P J' .. ' f . . I , IM, I I IA, I ' w 4 Y ' I II,wI' . 'fp . ' . ', -MII 'n 31, '-x 'W I v H- lr ' 's ' nd ' , 4 4' .. Jil gy ,- I I W' f ,I vrflw-.. A . . I , ' ,gf . I mfg ,. ' ,KI ,. I l .1 -I I . ,W . . LII., . wI IIAI 1,52 .IMI . Q ,,.I 1 mp III I . ut I ,. N lam -' L ' UV ' wf, ? Q I B I Reg '-1. 'li JN- ' ' I ' ' I II . I I IA' . ., ,Iv I , ' ' VK' , ' F' - ' .I f .f -.5 I' A 4.1 xfnn - I . 1.' . . - ' 'T .' ' .:s R ' X La' ,Ir I . . - N A : - pf . , . N. v I -1 Ik, - - . ...wffyg uhh- I :du I II I Q I IX Ixnj, gf ' I n I - 5 I I- X 4 . f 7' I 4 f' . ' U Y V . ' fu I I l Ls .29 . I .If x 4 V -1. '14 P wr I A Q 1 Bevins Club ...,.. ,. Blackstone Club ........ Board of Student Advisers The Bombers .....,,,.,, Botany Club Bruce Club , . A Bull 8a Bear .,.... Cardozo Club .......... Choate Club .,......... Civil Rights-Civil Libertie Civil Rights Law Review C.L.A.O. .,.,,,,.....,, . Conservation Society .. Dawson Club ,...... Democrats ....,. Drama Society .. Field Club . .. Forum ....,., Harlan Club ,.,.,..... s Research Committee Howe Club .............. International Law Club .. International Law Journal Journal on Legislation fStudent Legislative Research Bureauj ..,. Justus Black ......... .....,...,..,...... Kaplan Club ,. . Keeton Club .. . Kent Club .. . Law Review ..,.. Law Wives .,... . Legal Aid Bureau ..... Learned Hand Club , . Lincoln's Inn Society .. Marshall Club ...i... Noah's Lark .,..,., Pound Club .... Record ,...,. Republicans .. Root Club . . . Sacks Club ...,. Southern Club .,,.. Story Club ......,...... Student Bar Association , .,... , Student District Attorneys , ,...., . Superior Court of the Pow Wow .. Sutherland Club ........,...... Voluntary Defenders .. Warren Club ........ Yearbook .. 206 206 175 200 196 206 195 207 208 182 187 180 207 209 199 192 210 184 211 211 187 196 181 202 212 212 215 174 198 176 213 188 214 202 215 190 194 216 218 197 217 183 179 216 219 178 218 191 Quziiniiinzs U lk .., - Q., Q., ' 41-.44 5,5 ' Qs' First Row: G. DuBose, K. Cohen, R. Wheeler, T. Rowe, J. Kornsg Second Row: F. Kramer, M. Moskowitz, L. Sharf, D. Harrison, P. Kreindler, J. Hinchman, S. FitzGibbon, L. Schultz, B. Deamer, A. Rossmanng Third Row: P. Mundie, J. Colbert, S. Marcus, E. Glazer, J. Shulrnan, P. Barack, D. Hennessy, P. Rubin, C. Parnell, A. Weitz: Fourth Row: I. Lupu, J. Kennedy, P. Bakes, W. Kolasky, R. Donzrese, J. McGibbon, K. Clermont, J. Weiss, L. Seidman: Fifth Row: D. Davenport, M. Yourshaw, A. Snyder, W. Pizzi, J. Taurman, H. Shaeffer, R. Abt, W. Taylor, W. Falikg Sixth Row: S. Stock, G. Rosberg, M. Rodburg, J. Gordley, A.D. Melamed, D. Saylor, C. L. Kaufman, J. Stanhaus, J. Swope, I. Greenbergg Seventh Row: K. Geller, M. Helfer, A. Sachs, G. Krisclzer, R. Denham, N. King, M. Langeg Missing: L. Sargentich CPresident2. Harvard Law Review The legal profession is unique in that its major scholarly journals are managed, edited, and in large part written by students. The Review is both a chronicle of important legal developments and a journal of legal thought and criticism. Appearing eight times a year, from November through June, the Review publishes material covering, in addition to legal doctrine, such matters as legal history and biog- raphy, legal philosophy, comparative law, interdisci- plinary studies, statutory analysis, current public controversies, and foreign law. More than a publishing organ, the Review is also an educational institution which has traditionally strived, through intensive training in legal thought and writing, to instill a commitment to excellence. Like other student organizations at the Law School, it is in some respects a social institution, but it is primarily through joint participation in the arduous, time consuming, often monotonous, occasionally I74 exciting work of bringing out an authoritative legal periodical that an esprit de corps, one of the benefits of service on the Review, is formed. In its eighty-third year of publication, the Review has sought not only to maintain its tradition of ex- cellence but to seek topics for student work which would be challenging and interesting to the editors and relevant to current legal and social problems. Among the larger topics covered by two or more edi- tors was the summer project Note on Community Development Corporations. Again this year, the Review invited a number of editors from the second-year class not because of their high grades, but on the basis of a writing competition involving two kinds of work done by all editors of the Review: a comment on a recent court decision, and the edit and source check of a case comment done by another writer. Board of Student Advisers The Board of Student Advisers, founded early in this century, was originally a group of three men hired to sit at strategic spots in the library and help first year students in legal research. By 1910, this practice had hardened into the Ames Competition, which still comprises the Board's main responsibility. In addition, however, the Board now lectures in legal methods classes, aids more than twenty professors in formulating and evaluating written assignments, conducts a small tutorial pro- gram and organizes the upper-round competition. The members themselves are chosen differently now, too. The faculty selected members from the Class of 1971 on the bases of legal and teaching experi- ence, interviews and short essays as well as grades, which had been the sole criterion. It is clear that in response to the changing de- f mands of the law school, the traditional moot . court groupi' is moving more into a role of an ad- junct to the faculty. .4-N SIM First Row: J. Stubbs lFirst Year Chairmany, B. Lennox, W. McCarthy lCase Editorj, B. Clark CClzairman2, C. VanAlIen, M. Fairman fSecond Year Clzairmanjg Second Row: D. Passman, B, Chase, R. Magnuson, V. Coleman, M. Cohen, B. Freeman, R. Burka, C. Sherman, Third Row: K. Benbassat, P. Stimley, D. Kelliher, S. Presser, J. McGuckin, D. Howarth, J. Rice W. F. Wood, G. Cushingg Fourth Row: J. Roberts, D. Muir, J. Anderson, R. LeCIair, R. Morris, M. Stern, R. Waldman J. Sand. 175 1 x 1 Ll First Row: S. Helfman, S. Watson lSecretary2, T. Stanton lVice-Presidentl, J. Payne fPresidentJ, C. Lisman fTreasurerl, R. Hor- nick lResearch Directorj, D. Coulterg Second Row: W. Reynolds lAssocizzte Directorj, D. Lipson, D. Mirisch, M. Cahn, D. Rock- well, R. Cooper, D. Shulman lfissociate Direclorj, R. Parker: Third Row: R. Coplon, S. Williams, R. Feyer, C. Schlesinger, A. Turlcus, G. Johnson, M. Vinson lAssociate Direclorl: Fourth Row: D. Siegel, R. Wob'e, R. Daily, J. Rice, T. Earp: Missing: E. Barton I Executive Directorj. Harvard Legal Aid Bureau The Charter of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau authorizes it to render legal aid and assistance, gra- tuitously, to all persons or associations who by reason of financial embarrassment or social position, or for any other reason, appear worthy thereof. In fifty-five years of operation under this mandate, the Bureau has attempted to achieve two complementary purposes: service to the community and enrichment of the students' legal education. These purposes have been furthered by a number of innovations during the 1969-70 year. The most radical change came in the spring of 1969, when the Bureau completely abandoned reliance on the academic rank list as a method of selecting members. In thus reducing the number of honoraries , the Bureau culminated a shift towards broader-based membership that had been taking place over the last few years. Under the new by-laws, members are now chosen in one of three ways: by 176 satisfactory participation in the Bureau's eight-week summer program, by similar work in a summer legal services program elsewhere in the country, or by lot from amongst applications submitted at the close of first-year classes in the spring. To complement the new basis of membership, the Board of Directors also put into effect a revised system of third-year supervision, which emphasizes continuing review of casework and an educational dialogue between supervisor and counsel. These substantial changes are a response to, and a reflection of, the broader re-evaluations taking place throughout the law school. Particularly with the ex- pansion of the Bureau's practice into controversial topics in poverty law, many within the membership felt that it was no longer sound to exclude any student who had a genuine interest in the field, or to include those whose interest was minimal, and whose first motivation was to make an honorary. As a first encouraging sign that the change was salu- tory, 192 first-year students applied for the 35 mem- bership positions available, and a smooth assimila- tion of the new members was made. The Bureau also moved into new fields of practice during the year, continuing a spirit of innovation that has been the central theme of recent administra- tions. In cooperation with other student legal serv- ices in the Boston area, the first steps were taken towards an effective program for legal representation in welfare appeals. The Bureau also took part in a pilot program to provide civil legal assistance to in- mates of prisons, organized by the Center for the Advancement of Criminal Justice. Another group of members drew upon the Bureau's traditional experience in family law to draft a proposal for modernization of Massachusetts' divorce statute. While the legislative fate of this bill remains uncer- tain, it is hoped that the drafting effort and support- ing memoranda will provide a basis for future efforts to bring state law in this area into the twentieth cen- tury. In addition to these new efforts, the Bureau continued its successful affiliation with Fair Hous- ing, Inc., in Roxbury, its small but growing mental health project, and its through-the-door Gannett House service, all of which brought in approximately thirteen hundred clients with sixteen hundred separate legal problems. In spite of new programs and new administrative schemes, the heart of the Bureau experience nevertheless remains the individual lawyer-client relationship. Each case is the responsibility of a single Bureau member, who interviews the client when he first asks for help, determines indigency, gathers all necessary factual information, does research to learn applicable law and rules of prac- tice, advises the client, conducts negotiations, secures a settlement, drafts necessary documents, prepares and files pleadings, tries the case in court Cin about one-fourth of all casesj, or does whatever else may seem advisable. In bearing these responsibilities, the student coun- is sel has available, in addition to his third year super- visor, the advice and assistance of Arthur E. Schoepfer, Esquire, of the Boston Legal Aid Society, individual members of the law school faculty, and the invaluable practical wisdom of Mrs. Elizabeth Allebach, Secretary to the Bureau. However, since its fotmding in 1913 the Bureau has proceeded in the belief that both service to the client and educa- tion of the counsel are enhanced when first-line responsibility is relatively great, when the Bureau- client relationship is so individualized as to approach the normal attorney-client relationship, and when supervision is used principally as a safeguard. Therein lies the depth of the continuing challenge of serving the two purposes well. For each member must ensure that his treatment of each case is so thorough, intelligent, and ethical that, first, his client is well-represented, and second, his Legal Aid service becomes not a perfunctory exercise but a demanding educational experience. QQWRGT ii. in it my i.. in pi., 1. it HAH F K . ,Q X ., ,.... . E ', ,J 177 y i First Row: D. Nolan lV.P. for Research o'2 Appealsj, N. Toms lV.P. for Research cf: Appealsj, M. Smith lPresidentj, Professor Hall, J. Meyers lOperations Vice-Presidentj, P. O'Ner1I lTraining Vice-Presidentj, T. 0'Brien lV.P. for Research 6 Appealsj: Second Row: R. Davis, M. Kingsley, R. Scheck, C. T. Long, T. Wilton, G. Blynn, P. Brady: Third Row: J. Worrell, A. Nelson, G. Govesman, D. Devine, P. Bernstein, J. Taurman, J. Lawton, D. Herzer: Fourth Row: M. Gideonse, M. Gould, H. Anderson, B. Cox, S. Mroczkowski, R. Schoolman, E. Paclzniakg Fifth Row: C. Hollen, G. Epstein, J. Major, R. Wright, R. Rawson, J. Moore, C. Rosenberg, K. Benbassat, D. Callahan: Missing: R. Blaiser lMenta1 Health Vice-Presidentj. Harvard Vountary Defenders The Harvard Voluntary Defenders is an organiza- tion of 70 second and third-year students who pursue a shared interest in the criminal law through representation of persons without funds who are ac- cused or convicted of crime. Through the representa- tion of defendants on trial in Massachusetts and through the preparation of briefs for prisoners from all parts of the country, the Defenders gain practical experience as advocates. The primary goal of the Defenders, however, is to provide representation of the highest calibre to citizens, both guilty and in- nocent, who cannot otherwise obtain zealous ad- vocates to protect their rights and present their best defenses. During the last school year, third-year members made 171 court appearances on behalf of defendants tried in District Courts of the State. A third-year member is authorized by Rule 3:11 of the Supreme Judicial Court to prepare the defense and conduct of the trial, after appropriate consultation with an experienced member of the Massachusetts bar acting in a supervisory capacity. Second-year members become familiar with the role of trial counsel by as- sisting third year members investigate the facts, confer with police officers and witnesses, and research the relevant legal issues. Second-year members gain further courtroom experience by appearing on behalf of persons who have been incarcerated, sometimes for decades, as Defective Delinquentsng they have obtained for every client handled to date either outright release or 178 transfer to a mental hospital for treatment and even- tual release. Both second and third-year members appear before single justices of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and before the Federal District Court in Boston to urge new trials or other post- conviction relief on behalf of prison inmates. Every weekday, groups of second year members visit the jails and youth detention centers in the Bos- ton area. Almost all indigent defendants awaiting trial in these institutions during the school year are interviewed by the Defenders. The interviews are used either by third-year Defenders or by the attor- neys of the Massachusetts Defenders Committee in preparation for trial. Last year the Harvard Volun- tary Defenders conducted 738 such interviews cover- ing 1022 charges. Not all of the organization's activities involve court appearances or preparation for trial. Last year, the Voluntary Defenders handled 633 requests for post-conviction legal assistance from prisoners throughout the country. Seventy-tive of these requests led to major research projects under the guidance of our Faculty Advisor, Professor Hall. Eighteen culminated in the filing of briefs and peti- tions raising important questions of criminal and constitutional law. This year the Defenders, in con- junction with other legal-services organizations at the Law School, have undertaken to provide comprehensive legal services to inmates of a nearby state prison. It is anticipated that the project will lead to an increase in the number of important ap- pellate cases that the Defenders argue in Massachu- setts and Federal Courts. The Harvard Student District Attorney program has been in existence since 1966. Originally funded by grants from the Association of American Law Schools Council on Education in Professional Responsibility, and the Office of Law Enforcement Assistance, the program implements a 1966 amend- ment of Rule 3:11 of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts which permits qualified third-year law students to appear in the District Courts on behalf of the Commonwealth under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys. Initially directed by Professor Livingston Hall, the program became a new student organization in 1968, and at present is wholly run by an Executive Committee of three students. The objective of the program is to provide law students with practical experience in the investiga- tion, preparation and prosecution of criminal cases within the jurisdiction of the District Courts. Recog- nizing that experience is the best teacher for the trial lawyer, the program's emphasis is placed on early qualification and maximum courtroom participa- tion. The program not only provides valuable clinical training with excellent supervision but also provides the law student with a practical program of professional responsibililities of the prosecution. This year ten third-year law students are par- ticipating in the program. Students may qualify to appear on behalf of the Commonwealth to try non- jury cases by attending a series of lectures given by the Faculty Adviser, Professor Livingston Hall, followed by a period of court observation, or else through prior experience of actual trial of cases with the various other Harvard Law programs. After ob- taining trial experience in non-jury cases, qualified students are certified to prosecute six-man jury cases. The availability of various intern programs with the local District Attorneys' Offices and the oppor- tunity to assist on appellate briefs with the Attorney General's Office have enabled the program to admit second-year students. They are encourage to take both Evidence and Trial Practice in the second year as an aid in preparing to prosecute cases early in their third year. Each second-year member will have the opportunity to observe several student prosecu- tions and to attend various programs of information and interest. Harvard Student District Attorneys First Row: J. Cowin, C. Kaufman CExecu!ive Commit- teemanl, Prqfessor Hall, D. Walsh I Executive Commit- teemanj, D. Kelliher, Jr.: Second Row: J. Merren, L. Faust, D. Treiman, R. Magnuson, O. Burden: Third Row: I. Gor- don, T. Kowalchuk. 'l-may ff X 1 1 179 In the fall of 1966 the Law School opened the Community Legal Assistance OfficeCCLAOJ in one of the poorer neighborhoods of Cambridge. Financed by a grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity, the office is open 58 hours per week to handle both civil and criminal cases of clients unable to afford private attorneys. The Director of the program, five full-time Staff Attorneys, a VISTA volunteer and approximately 120 second- and third-year students who are selected on the basis of interest, without regard to grade average, carry out the work of the office. Students maintain regular office hours and interview clients, investigate facts, prepare complaints, answers, motions, interrogatories, depositions, and briefs, negotiate with opposing counsel or prin- cipals, and otherwise help prepare cases for trial. The broad Massachusetts authorization of students to appear in court permits CLAO students to handle every stage of litigation, including the trial itself. CLAO accepts both civil and criminal cases. The office also carries on a vigorous program of law reform, including test case litigation in the areas of military law, civil rights, welfare rights, and other areas in need of Constitutional pro- tection. A program of legislative reform is also carried out each fall. CLAO is supervised by a Faculty Committee, a student Steering Committee, and a Board made up of a majority of community residents. It has a four-fold purpose: to serve eligible clients, both individuals and groups, to educate the low income community about the law and the legal process, to educate the law students, lawyers in private practice, and other social service professionals about the legal process and legal problems as they especially affect the poor, and to conduct related research, both legal and sociological. Community Legal Assistance Office First Row: C. Wells, V. Wells, P. Newman, A. Van C Lanck 1011, L. Gans, J. Cratsley, M. Budnitz: Second Row: S. Tio, R. Wittie, C. Scales, K. Gillespie, J. Mongim-do, W. Conrad, H. Solowayg Third Row: F. Gerlzari, D. Castillo, A.F. Burgess P. Johnson, J. Thompson, D. Goldberg, M. Burak: Fourth Row: E. Eff L. Kahn, L. Sclzmeiser, B. Buell, M. Cohen, C. Shernmn: Fifth Row: B. Jamison, M. Waner, A. Abravanel, L. Briggs, R. Heiss, B. Smiih, R. Lapping, J. Ferren. 'IBO fm llll I .W Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Committee The Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Research Com- mittee provides students at the Law School with the opportunity to conduct research on the legal aspects of urgent social problems. We do this in the belief that legal education should make students aware of the potentialities of the law as an instrument of social change. At the same time, we consider it high- ly important to give people in need of legal research in the Civil Rights, Civil Liberties, and Poverty Law areas a source of free assistance. This year, the Committee has worked on over twenty-five projects dealing with subjects as diverse as housing and welfare reform, First Amendment rights, and abuses of the criminal law. While generally leaving Selective Service problems to the Committee for Legal Research on the Draft, we have worked on the appeal by Father Phil Berrigan against his conviction for throwing duck's blood on Selective Service files. Requests for assistance come to us from lawyers and organizations throughout the nation. We have worked for organizations such as the ACLU, CORE and the Lawyers' Constitutional Defense Com- mittee-as well as for individual attorneys such as Leonard Boudin and Ralph Nader. The projects un- dertaken at the request of organizations tend to be long-range studies of reform, while help for attor- neys is more likely to involve concrete cases. The Committee is the Harvard Law chapter of the Law Student's Civil Rights Research Council, a na- tional organization which places up to thirty Har- vard Law students in summer internships in the Civil Rights, Civil Liberties, and Poverty Law areas. Robert Fellmeth !Past Presidentj and Peter Buehsbaum lPresidentl preside over K1 meeting gathered to recruit interested students to the cause of Ralph Nader. The Civil Liberties Commitee sponsored many similar efforts throughout thefall. rr, I 1 1 --I Uidrg . ' V' sup' ,..,i1 - . . ' r iii? , ,, ,. . W Q . - V ' I iz,-, lttii.,jj,:f ft V - . 11A, .'?z N! .1 I M ,,,T '2'i-up 5 ,3 ,L 2 M ' -,f--f ytrz pqgf M PM-0R'llf Sling H ,l m -1, jf itkiilfl Y, H ,-L Y Y Y 'H J.. J- ,L wtgnnnuln ix , trumps? 'gp nun-li Cf' it I E s' First Row: D. Rockwell lPresidentj, R. Cooper lTreasurerJ, M. Gold: Second Row: R. Klein, S. Stonefielcl, J. Brant, M. Haroz, R. Morthole, K. Morthole: Third Row: B. Nevas, E. Saltzman, R. Klivuus, A. Kuplnn, R. D11Burcl, A. Kuplzm: Missing: J. Slmpiro lVlC'E-PI'C Slll6lIll. The Student Bar Association realizes the need for change in the structure of our legal, political and economic systems and seeks to alter the priorities of the law school so that it will more adequately prepare law students to meet the needs of the American people. Harvard Law School has tradi- tionally been oriented toward the production of Wall Street and corporate lawyers. The present curriculum legitimates the legal system and encourages the belief that law is neutral, that legal contests are decided by discovering an objective legal doctrine. The S.B.A. is working on projects which attempt to create a legal education more concerned with rectify- ing the injustices in our society and more responsive to the needs of law students for a broad examination of the role of law in America than is provided by the present myopic case-method approach. The S.B.A. is encouraging the Placement Office to subsidize, perhaps through donations by large law firms, recruitment visits by lawyers' communes, Student Bar Association public interest law firms, lawyers groups dedicated to the legal assistance of the Southern black and migrant workers, and movement law firms. The S.B.A. believes that the activities of all law firms should be made public, and is a sponsor of the Law Firm Questionnaire which was sent to all law firms recruiting at Harvard. The S.B.A. has presented a series of discussions on topics such as the Chicago Conspiracy Trial, the public interest lawyer, and the role of the woman lawyer in America. The S.B.A. also sponsors luncheon meetings with law school faculty, administrative staff and student members of the S.B.A. The Association provides opportunities for students to gain experience by assisting practic- ing attorneys in their research, writing of briefs and court appearances. The officers elected for the year 1969-1970 are: Rich Klein, President, Tom Crough, Vice-Presidentg Ann Thornton, Vice-President, and Mark Gol- dowitz, Secretary. IB3 First Row: J. Rice lTreasurer1, S. Whelan fV-P Programj, H. Baer fPresidentJ, M. Diamant IV-P Administrationj, V. Wells fV-P Promotionlg Second Row: J. Lovett lSecretaryj, D. Walsh lDirector1, J. Roe !Director1, L. Pressler fDirectorJg Third Row: J. Johnson, L. Kahn, C. Vogel, D. Treiman, J. 0'Hare, S. Cahoong Fourth Row: J. Thompson, J. Merrell, J. Bierig, R. Merenbach, R. Hernandez, D. Maxwell, L. Brad- bury !Direc'tarjg Fifth Row: R. Farren, M. Wyatt, W. Staszak, M. Grtztz, A. Lutzker. Harvard Law School Forum This year has been a banner year for the Forum. As it has done for many years, the Forum pursued both controversy and glamor. Mini-Forums were staged on such topics as the Moratorium and the corporate law firm in America today. Big names such as Jake Javits, HEW Secretary Robert Finch, Governor Claude Kirk, and William Kunstler ad- dressed capacity audiences. The success of the Forum was particularly heartening considering the disap- pointments of the year before. Now in its twenty-fourth year, the Forum, a non- political, non-partisan organization, is a vehicle for old politicians, deposed leaders, retired judges, frus- trated comics Cposing as law professorsj, great lawyers of old, and occasional notoriety. The invitees of the Forum have run the gamut from James Hoffa to John F. Kennedy, from Barry Goldwater to Martin Luther King, from Bishop Pike to the Maharishi, from Fidel Castro to Al Capp, from Dean Griswold to Dean Derek Bok. The Forum's fifty staff members and ten directors develop programs so as to educate, stimulate, and harass the University Community. Occasionally speaker suggestions come from outside sources or even from visiting dignitaries themselves CKhrushchev wanted to speak at Harvard, but the State Department was rather cool to the ideal. Most of the work, however, is a matter of writing letters and filing rejections. Incorporated in Massachusetts, the Forum is a non-profit Corporation which balances its receipts and expenses by declaring a dividend of cheese and crackers to its members at the end of the year. Oc- casionally a sour grape is thrown in. Photos by J: Gray Among the main attractions of tlze F0rum's fall program were William A. Kunstler, the radical lawyer topposite pagej, Senator Javits and Secretary Finch. Other guests of the Forum included Roy lnnis, John Kenneth Galbraith, and Hugh Calkins, a member of the Harvard Corporation and a cofounder of the Harvard Law Forum in 1948. 185 First Row: J. Lovett lVice-Presidentj, J. Hilbert lComptrollerj, P. Rubenstein lPresident1, R. Dlffv fSecretary1, R. Dashefsky lTreasurerj: Second Row: L. Kalzenstein, M. Coppock, J. Newberg, T. SCh!1ffl1L'l'f Third Row: C. Eastlake. E. Disner, A. Alnravanel, D. Ellis, M. Sonberg, N. Friedlmuler, S. Selmeider. Dormitory Council For another illustrious year the Dormitory Coun- cil has endeavored to achieve its goal of making life at the law school more enjoyable. In the pursuit of dormitory utopia, the capital accomplishment of the year was the installation of carpeting, shelves, and blinds in the Graduate Center dormitories. As a momento Cnot memorandumj to this feat, the Dormi- tory Council at one time considered producing a movie about dormitory living for the entering 1L's entitled: 1 am Curious-Motley. Another focal point of effort was the Harkness food service. In all probability the food service will provide the Council with a raison dletre for years to come. It also fur- 186 nished those students who were too jaundiced to read the Journal with a daily inflationary index. In the social sphere, by conducting the infamous mixers in the Hark, the Council has established the Harvard Law analogue to The Zoo Story. For those students who really craved the good life the Council sponsored floor parties every semester to reduce the percentage of blood in their alcohol sys- tems. Then there was the program for our hard-as-nails: in the Fall, four football and four basketball leagues and, in the Spring, baseball. And that's the way it was-1969-70. First Row: C. Kdllfillldll, J. Evans lCasenotes Ediiorl, A. Kaplan lArticles Editorl, R. Hicks lBusiness Managerl, W. Reynolds, W. Bernard fArticles Editorj, B. Moore lCasenotes Editorj, M. Green CEdit0r-in- Chien: Second Row: D. Sheehan, E. Van Loan, D. Trott, D. Eisensrein, H. McCue: Missing: B. Wasser- siein fMHIlUgiI1g Edilorl. Civil Rights Law Review International Law Club First Row: G. Alexis, E Klayrnan, R. Hernandez, D. Calder Mean: Third Row: J. Mann, D- Tfeimflll, M- Gold, G- 510116. lPresia'enr1, F. Mwine lTreas11rerl, A. Obilade: Second Row: M. Spiegel, R. Klein, E. Disnerg Fourth Row: T. Eyiri, D. W, Pascoe, M, Oyebamigi, T, Chorba, D, H0ffl17g1l1 fSgCre- Short, R. Wadlow: Missing: C. VecelliofVice-Presidentj. taryl, R. Baltimore, A. de Zayas, 0. Janney, N. Valdes, J.P. W53 T ' ,W--f im, l ,iiTMALm iSftk S5tlSF9l!? 4w '4w!if- .... . -1r1- - , ig. V .K il ill in wif . 1 I l 'H V251 . ' F: at ' l i Q-u1u ! 5- 1 ,we as 5 we Lincoln's Inn Society The Lincoln's Inn Society was founded in 1908 to provide its members with agreeable meals in pleasant company and elegant surroundings. The only club of its type still operating at the Law School, the Inn has been located in several houses in the Cambridge area. Its current clubhouse at 44 Pollen Street is frequently used by other Law School organizations for luncheons and cocktail parties. The Inn gives several informal dances, a formal dance in the spring and fall, and numerous cocktail parties during the year. Its annual Christmas Stag Dinner was the highlight of the c1ub's social season. The large group of faculty members in attendance were delighted by Professor Breyer's witty com- ments. They were less enthusiastic about the tradi- tionally libelous take-offs on his colleagues. Man Inn members participated in the club's squash ladder. Some of the better players manned teams active in the Boston Squash Leagues. BOARD OF GOVERNORS-First Row L. Pressler KVice-PresidenbSecretaryj, W. McFarland, P. Monroe fPresiden!I, T. a I Milby fTreasurerjg Second Row: P. Par nell, J. Rowe, J. Mongiardo, G. Silver, J. Owens, J. Valentine. 188 First Row: J. Mongiardo, P. Monroe, L. Pressler, C. Parnell, Second Row: V. Wells, R. Wittie, W. Stadiem, S. Whelan, C. Vogel, B. Ackerman, M. Smooke, J. Roosevelt, Jr., Third Row: M. Diaz-Cruz, A. Perry, R. Wadlow, P. Rubenstein, J.R. Thompson, W. Staszak, R. Ogburn, B. Freeman, C. Temking Fourth Row: R. Feyer, L. Costas, L. Ebner, R. Page, D. Cohn, M. Linder, J. York, W. Crowder, C. Malick: Fifth Row: R. Belt, R. Fesjian, M. Saranow, D. Walsh, M. Wyatt, D. Feigenbaurn, P. Krzag, 0. Janney, G. Malasky, H. Hart, A. Turkus. A ' L I 1 E if i 1 I l 23 Elf 1 L IVV: Y T N . li 2 y lin W V N H f ng i V 1 l oi, , . l , .a,,..g,ll-I V, l L HARVARD LAVVRECORD rm UW' . nn-- s new Sitting: R. Matthews: Middle Row: J. bertg Standing: J. Batmasian, R. tennae of the notorious Yearbook tube, preparing themselves for the strains of Tiny Tim's wedding. A busy day for sales at Registration: Where have all the students gone? Yearbook This has been a demanding year for the Yearbook staff. First, our Editor-designate was drafted, and he is now serving a tour of duty in Vietnam. Then half of our office was taken from us in order to ac- comodate the expanding needs of the Admissions Department. Next our Business Manager dropped - ' We crew' out of school for personal reasons. On the other hand, the Yearbook has acquired a photography staff for the first time in history. It is now planning to publish the 1971 directory, and it is seriously considering ways to expand the staff and dilute the heavy workload. Hail to the new decade! V -4- . 1 '-- Q, f-rbi.: , 4, air ,ig :kb t Tx ea , N Q!! .ada . if ,la,f' ZQr f ' I. ,A 2.11311 in - .. ll' X ' l, .-V 'H -A S, if Q ' 1 v 4 ',ffj. its f5'fili? g.-.7 A ,Mig :en , ' ',.-'L ' .' 'A' A: 'Ir .- 5 ' it 1 'x , . 'V ' ' ' ' 57 '2 V v 1 . I V -f ' in Our peripatetic photographer ' ' i' L-ji V focuses in on the Record and ' J L ' catches them doing what comes 1 ' in ' natural .... . ' - Colbert, D. Doret, R. Farren, J. Col- Scheclc: ln the background: the two an- AAA M LQAAA 'AAA anna A AAAAAA iAAAAAA AAAAAAA iaanngaa AAAAAAAA inanaaaan Anaansan wwuuuuwx innannnhh aaanmna p lh0AAAAx AAAAN5x saaah 0 nq:g5 A Mgphi uuuuu 'N A'.v.l A A A .- mlWfm rA,A. A':An'nn0A ,'Q A 0 'fn A 0 ','nAn1 LF A Q A 5 5 A 0 5 FA.,AA,.Al'l , 5 0 9 9 A 0' A 9 A fnn'n'p'n'0,','.'1'A ivan' ' ' A Lying: J. Alviani !Direc-tori: Keeping the Scl1eckfReSideI1I drop-outjg Backbenchers: G. Director in his place: V. Koven fPI'OdIlCL'l'lQ Selden fMllSiCOI Directorj, The Lone Justice Standing: B, Clmse fPresidentJ, M. Chase, R. Story, B. Rifkind, D. Ellis, J. Reid fSecremry1. Kadden: Casting spells on the Producer: R. Law School Drama Society All the world's a stage and all the men and women merely players, wrote a famous Cif non-legaD mind. While everyone at the Law School plays at being lawyers, the members of the Drama Society also play at being players. The Law School show, a student written and 192 directed production, is an outlet for all kinds of talent-frustrated and otherwise. Most of the males are from Mother Harvard herself, while most of the females are from anywhere but. The mingling of the sexes at various and numerous cast parties is only one of the delightful by-products of the production. Behind the scenes action is headed up this year by Barry Chase, Joe Alviani, Vance Koven, Jean Reid, George Selden and a cast of thousands. Writers Ron Kadden and Mike Hertz have also been busy trying to schedule their classes between frantic writing ses- sions. Auditions are held in December, rehearsals in January and February, and the performances are scheduled for the middle of March. Peabody School will again be the scene of some minor traumas, much major activity, and hopefully, a smashing produc- tion. Last yearls New York jaunt was so successful that we are planning a return performance. This year's show is going westernf' The scene is a corrupt western town which our Harvard hero, fresh from Law School and bubbling with legal idealism, is determined to clean up. Needless to say, this plan is not met with great enthusiasm by the Judge and the Sheriff who run the town with an iron hand and a network of legal contrivances. To quote a much less famous but far more frequent source than Shakespeare, If you want to know how it ends, see the showf' 1 LJ' 3 ,,. N i 6 ,455 ' . .Q 5 , 531 ,Q Q 5 5. N .. :ww an , V Fi ., f . K: W if Wi ..A,, 1 I., r .N VHRKJ M: VLA W Yi L Q 1 Q, V, I , . A is f P 'av 0 9 I ! 1 'V 4 I , , , 54 I ' 1 r 'B fl F N -:ff A1 S- a. 4 ': 19 i f2l 1v! .4 1 ZW: .11 -A . c First Row: A. Sherman, W. Sims, 1. McCown IVice-Presidentj, J. Rodner fPresident1, J. Johnson, R. Carr, D. Waldon, C. Vogelg Second Row: A. Perry, R. Abrams, S. Settle, N. Valdes, T. Chorba, B. Addison, L. Costasg Missing: O. Burden fVice-Presidentl, F. Gerharr fVice-Presidentj, G. Annas fTreasurerj, P. de Ravel d'Escaplon fVice-Chairmanj. This was a year of change for B. 84 B. Although the Club continued its regular seminars on invest- 81, Beal' ment and its annual contest, for the first time it undertook a placement program. The Club further hosted speakers on the urban environment, business, and other related subjects. Board: R. Carr, P. de Ravel d'Escaplon, G. Annas, 0. Burden, J. Rodner. f' .0 Hu -gg 1 First Row: E. Shaw, D. Passmang Second Row: M. Brown, D. Sonenberg. Botany Club International Law Journal R. Wadlow, A. Rossman, C. Scales, P.J. Fetner fEdit0r-in-Chiefj, S. Gates, V. Koven, R. Hornick, L. Margolin, J. McDermott, M. Spiegel. - . .msg Q. 5 A J - ' , -19:52-.Y Harvard Law Conservation Society ln 1969 a group of forty students formed the Harvard Law Conservation Society in order to begin their con- tribution to the defense of the natural environment. ln 3 its first year the Society has made significant contribu- . tions in the following areas: brief writing for Sierra Club lawsuits, legislative drafting for representatives in the Massachusetts General Court, Preparation and delivery of testimony in legislative and administrative hearings, and legal assistance to New England community groups such as the group for the preservation of the Boston Har- bor lslands. ln its work the Society has become asso- ciated with the Sierra Club, Conservation Law Founda- tion, Union of Concerned Scientists, and Massachusetts Audubon Society. Sitting: L. Coe, W. King lSecretz1ryJ, D. Ford, C. Malick, J. Bump: Standing: S. Lang lLibrarianl, A. Rossman lClmirmanj, J. Kramon fVice-Clmirmanj, M. Knijfin, R. Page, R. Fnllty, D. Salter. Southern Club: S. Sertle, A. Perry, N. Valdes, C. Scales, V. Wells !Vic'e-l?residenIl, J. Love!! lTrensurerl, S. Steingold lPresidentl, W. Sims. ' 'U ' . -2I1f lijhunm!'.l..'ii1FiiAlLll'! First Row: Mrs. F. Sander, Mrs. D. Turner, L. KelIiher!Pub1ic Relations Chairman, P. Rine fPub1ications Secretafyl, J. Shortz fH0spitality Chairmanjg Second Row: S. Krischer f0rientati0n Clzairmanl, C. Steingold fS0cial Chairmanj, R. Rossman lPr0gram Clzairlnanj, P. Glazer fPresidentl, J. Dietrich, P. Heidi, K. Taylor fTreasurerl, B. Rice fRecording Sccretaryj. The study of law is a demanding dis- ' cipline. Many hours of study are neces- Law Wlves sary for the student, thereby leaving his wife a veritable widow. Validity on this point can be witnessed by the visible success of the Harvard Law Wives, now The Christmas Parry. in its forty-second year. Intellectual stimulation for the law wives is provided through guest speakers and faculty seminars. Subjects this year ranged from Old New England present- ed by Poet David McCord, moon samples and slides from Apollo XI and Any- thing by the charming John K. Galbraith. Seminars ran the gamut from Professor Sander's on The Welfare Law to Estate Planning by Professor Casner. Exposure to many fields is ac- complished through our small groups of cooking, book review, creative workshop, bridge, Performing Arts and Interna- tional. This year we endeavored to expand our objectives with girls participating in volunteer work and the club as a whole contributing to the First Inc. of Roxbury. This organization is doing a great deal of work with drug addiction. Opportunities for husbands and wives to enjoy some time away from books, were the Beer Party, Coffee House Night and the Faculty Cocktail. We rar.. 1 . ll W L M . , ...M . . . w ,. . W i 4. E,f . . . , l:, . 1, l . N N W , gagigaz- gr. ' 1 l X ' M l lm. Qs. First Row: R. Licht IAdministrative Clll1fI'I7lClI1J,J. GeblmrdtfPresident1, D. Kanin !Vice-Presidenfj: Socond Row: T. Clzema, F. Martin, D. Castillo: Third Row: J. Aberlilz, R. Merenbacll, P. Kilmer, J. Rqfalowicz, R. Brodsky, J. Roosevelt, Jr.: Fourth Row: L. Turnbull. Democratic Club Admiralty Club rv ani -. gm M 1 i, pu 5.1 im .s Ria : i 1 4. W. 1 , , 1 CTRIC E .bf ..,.,..a. ff' .. 119 ., ,'5 INTRAMURAL FGOTBALL Line: M. Marcello, P. Zimmerman, D. Waldon, K. Ross: Quarterback: R. Surkin: Missing: T. Mlsna. The Bombers Pride of the C League 200 All 4' 5459.95 Lgigg A xi...-.w-..w-.- , ,.-JMP'-ou - - Q. q, ff' ' -::-. Jr ,,I5QM':: -. 37.-fav- - V. .. .. -.. 'l5 nA'---f.,,,,n V J -' ' -cf'-I' ,cf be-f LW I f---qw-f Tia. Y-.. r- ' my 1 'Afi,,31'f '-- ,: ,.1L A .,-,. 5 1 J- v. af f-52- W rg-aff EW? '-.,' -f v 'T , ,gi Eu. .F ' Q N A - - . -.:' f X . s. . Ns . , T5 , v Y .- A TX-T'FFJTfIE1,C nNM'K,EU5iXI.KLVI1151..vnfE.?EKY.xEE!'.mH . , Wi UIIMLEYIILKHJI 1 My ,A 11 Q , , l EVA? 44,3 'Pu-. First Row: J. Alvinni, N. Grffin, A. Clamzm: Second Row: R. Scheck, J. Runnells, G. Gee, G. Blynn. First Row: N. Bonner, B. Knoll, D. Seawell, S. Harvey, V. Roberts, Winston, T. Solomon, G. Harris, U. Boykin, S. Watson, H. Hamlette. F. Stimleyg Second Row: J. 202 Justus Black B League Champions Noah's Lark Law School Champions mms 1: i lil .ki K ,. :gm A.- K msmfm 1, The Ames Competition: Past, Present, and Future In 1910 Harvard Law School struck a blow for student employment by creating the Board of Student Advisers. The enrollment had grown to near- ly 800 and the moot court clubs were struggling with the organizational problems of a large-scale compe- tition, so the faculty chose three students to sit at strategic spots in the library and aid competitors with any problems they might have. The advisers were given a collective title and the informal ar- guments were gathered under the umbrella of a sin- gle competition, named the Ames Competition in memory of the dean who passed away that year. Although the Board itself has a fairly clear origin, the competition that it was organized to manage does not. At some unknown date early in the Law School's history, groups of students selected topics of law and briefed and argued them among themselves, thereby adapting to legal study the university's prac- tice of holding Hdisputesi' on current topics. The number of clubs increased to the point where par- ticipation in some form of argument was a practical- ly universal activity in 1910. When the competition began to procede on a more organized basis, it divided into two stages-the first-year and the upper-round competitions. Each stage developed separate purposes and institutions. The first-year competition was a mandatory exercise, deemed an essential feature in the basic legal curriculum. Each student briefed and argued a case against another member of his club three times during the year, a practice continued Lmtil the end of World War II, when the press of retuming veterans forced a cut- back to two arguments, the latter in pairs. In 19o9, the faculty and the Board decided to give an option of Ames participation or a written project to first- year students in the Spring, and when the promised optional projects failed to materialize, the faculty made the second round voluntary in 1970. - The upper round easily adapted itself to the basic eight-man club. Eliminations consisted of a qualify- ing round in the second-year fall, a quarter-final round that spring, and a semi-final the following semester, all of which led to the final argument before a Justice of the Supreme Court in thespring of the third year. Last year, the conflict with the required third-year paper and diminishing interest in the upper rounds led to the elimination of the quarter-final and a reduction in the size of the com- peting teams to six members. . The popularity of Ames in its early years was reinforced by the generally competitive attitude of the school. At that time, the Dean in his address to the first-year class usually hit upon the theme of 204 look to your left, look to your right, by the time this class graduates, one out of three of you won't be here. Under these conditions, the opporttuiity to conquer the people you were fighting with for your academic life was quite important. Although high at- trition rates vanished with the initiation of a selec- tive admissions policy in 1937, the competitiveness engendered by such high attrition rates lingered on right into the late l960's. Further, law students had few other avenues for employing their legal talents. The idea of mobilizing masses of law students to aid the poor and help rec- tify urban or consumer problems had not caught fire. In fact, the Ames Competition was practically the only extra-curricular activity in the school. Today, on the other hand, students of all persuasions place a premium on being involved in several outside ac- tivities and their talents are in increasing demand, whatever their status at law school. They are justifia- bly less interested in a competition that results in few practical, as opposed to academic, contributions to these social objectives. A more interesting question than past history pre- sents itself in considering the future of the Ames Competition on both levels. In the upper rounds, it is likely that there will be a certain quantum of law students who will always be interested in briefing and arguing more difficult questions of law before faculty and federal and state judges. As long as there exists a demand for an organized extracurricular ac- tivity as closely related to the traditional advocate's function as moot court is, the law school will most likely continue to offer the opportunity. On the first- year level, the apparent deterioration can further be attributed to the additional fact that today's entering students are certainly better trained and better qualified than their predecessors. The selectivity of admissions processes and the increased excellence of undergraduate preparation leave students more able, more convinced of their ability and, very apparently, more independent. Therefore, they question the strictures of any requirement, even those relating to courses, and a moot court competition is a vulnera- ble target. And yet a system of instruction in research, brief writing and oral advocacy unques- tionably should remain a part of any 1awyer's educa- tion, whatever his previous experience or career goals. The format for this aspect of the academic process should, however, be flexible. There is open to question, for instance, the necessity of placing this experience in an appellate jursidiction, rather than in that of an agency hearing, a draft appeal or a legislative session, and also the utility of the sink-or- Enthusiasm for participation in both divisions ofthe Ames Competition has declined in recent years, so much so that this piece was proposed by the Yearbook stajjfas an obit1mry. swim approach to basic research. Although these changes would be meaningful, they should not obscure the basic purpose of the original competition and its eventual successors, namely, the effective equipping of law students with the basic tools of their profession. Welfare lawyers must brief and argue at least as effectively as their corporate counterparts, and a law school that did not mandate some method or methods of acquiring those skills would be remiss. Whether or not the access to this instruction at Harvard will continue to be known as the Ames Competition is not nearly as important as the requirement itself. Bruce Clark The Winners of the Ames Competition 1912-Choate 191 3-Beale 1914-Kent 1915-Kent 19 16-Lowell 1 920-Choate 1921-Scott 1922-Kent 1923-Scott 1924-Scott 1925-Langdell-Marshall 1926-Parke-Warren 1927-Scott 1928-Sanford 1929-Edward Warren 1930-Edward Warren 193 1-Bryce 1932-Scott 19 3 3-H arlan 1934-Choate 1935-Wilson 193 6-Scott 1937-Root-Pitney 193 8-Powell 1939-Powell 1940-Edward Warren 1941-Scott 1942-James 1947-Thorpe 1948-Gardner 1948-Hughes 1948-Gardner 1949-Choate l 950-C ardozo 1951-Kent 1952-Marshall 1953-Casner 1954-Gardner 1955-J affe 195 6-Scott 1957-Kaplan 1958-Griswold 1959-Sacks 1960-Frankfurter 1961-Jaffe 1962-Casner 1963-Holmes 1964-Griswold 1965-Keeton 1966-Griswold 1967- 1968- Kaplan Learned Hand 1969-Bruce 1969-Learned Hand Bevins Club M. Cox, R. Scott, R. Junghans, C. Eastlake, R. Dwyer, D. Hurson: Missing: P. Boyls fPresidentl. Blackstone 206 Club K .p-4-F First Row: N. Akerman, J. Hilbert ISecretary-Treasurerj, A. Rogers IVice Presidenll, B. Ackernzmz !Presidentj, S. Kregstein, E. Disner, K. Orlin, M. Knyffin: Second Row: J. Medford, R. Dujfy, F. Manning, M. Bolznen, R. Niedermayer, B. Holbeing Third Row: R. BlllH1L'Hlllll1,J. Moscow, G. Welsh, R. Swanson, K. Geller. . ozfgxfl is. . First Row: M. Sonberg, D. Morros, P. DeIT0ro, B. Davidson fPresitlentJ, Vice-Dean W. Bruce, C. Kauj9nan !Program Clmirmanjg Second Row: B. Merritt, D. Siegel, H. Dzodirz, H. Soloway, L. Ellsworth, R, Page: Third Row: G. Krischer, D. Burns, P. Crane, R. Musicant, J. Stephenson. Culinary i f.-'i .-. , 4 -- Bruce Club Club -1.5 7 First Row: M. Cohen, D. Kaplan fPresia'entJ, Professor Calabresi, M. Redislz, M. Gratz:Second Row: A. Haley, J. Rice, J. Marks, M. Scott, R. McGaw, R. Deringg Third Row: D. Hennessy, S. Fuchs, T. 0'Toole, B. Ferguson, R. Hernandez: Fourth Row: D. Maxwell, C. Mooney, S. Rovak, R. Kortright, M. Berman: Fifth Row: J. Neugarten, M. Quint, S. Heb'man, R. Timm, P. Hannah, J. Jenner, P. Kutner, Sixth Row: T. Kaplan, J. Block: Missing: R. Harris I treasurerj. Cardozo Club Choate Club Sitting: C. Arnebeck fPresident1, S. Houck, L. Doo ITreasurerj: Standing: M. Leemon, J. Carter, H. Roussel, G. Simong Missing: W. Wyse fSocial Clmirmanj. V x 1 41- . Q' 4. ,F -Q 'SJ A ,n,,,x:'d V ' 45 . . Lnfb..-'Nh ,-ld' Q' ' 'ij-L::53i?5'T f , L 3 - . l QP ' 'a1QAT1':' p . ,L I Q -1 ,, ? s ' E Q - Q f h, X. 3 ' ' 4 :gif 4 3 ' '?' V E mgfg In X ,,., ,, ' w 1 1 V : WW- .. - l s I I l A 1 I j w R. Moen, F. Levine, L. Petzold, R. Sim, N. Wilky, S. Neel, S. Neel, S. Penrodg Missing: K. Wing fPresidentj. Field Club Griswold Club First Row: J. Rounsaville, T. Weston, B. Rubin, J. Bantag Second Row: D. Short, N. Friedlunder, G. Payne 210 First Row: J. Stensvaag, L. Bradbury, T. Schaffnerg Second Row: M. Oppenheimer, L. Coe, R. Kleing Third Row: J. Doyle, M. Zolzn, H. Saxnerg Missing: E. Milgram fSecretary-Treasurerj, G. Silver I Vice- Presidentj. Harlan Club Howe Club Offensive line: W. Helms, T. McCarthy, K. Kahn, M. Gould fPresident2, R. Faith fTreasurerj, S. Newman, J. Neely: Backfield: P. Gin, T. Cliff, M. Hindin, G. Knappg Coach: Professor Kaufman. w.-1 ' , ,w. -. r-. .v Y, - -- I ..,,1'..N- . ...I J, 5 .. '-. - ,ig f- .. , -.5 .14 .... T , 0. my-, .I . ...wa 'f- ' ' ..j,3:'.--- . ,X A ' - e-33.114 Lab.. . First Row: L. Leva, L. Friedman, Professor Kaplan, G. Stevenson fPresidentj,' Second Row: P. Baumbusch, D. Hemer, M. Goldowitz, J. Hinchman, W. Birkelg Third Row: P. Daw, A. Nelson, D. Ellis, D. Howarth fVice-Presidentj, J. Earl,- Missing: H. Baer fTreasurerj. Kaplan Club 212 5. Keeton Club First Row: T. Chorba, J. Kra- vitt, P. Bronson: Second Row: W. Wright, T. Johnson, R. Humbargerg Third Row: R. Ab- rams, L. Jolznston, T. Reavley, H. Hubschmang Missing: J Breen fPresidentI. We A Harvard Law graduate and a renowned lec- turer, Judge Hand set a record of fifty years service in the judiciary. During those fifty years he ren- dered nearly two thousand decisions. His opinions were notable for their stylistic excellence and for constituting, in the words of Justice Frankfurter, an enduring source of truth-seeking illumination. His outstanding cases included his decision in favor of freedom of speech for a periodical entitled The Masses, which had been denied mailing privileges during World War I, and the celebrated antitrust suit against the Aluminum Company of America in which he upheld government charges of monopoly. 'Flu-n First Row: J. Moore, E. VanLoon, M. Fullwood, R. Parker, D. Nicastro, L. Katzenstein: Second Row: R. Brautigam, R. Williams, A. Rossman- CVice-Presi- dentj, B. Goode, E. Fleuriet, C. Meyer, Professor Hallg Third Row: E. Radlo, T. Hanak, G. Snow, S. Snyderg Missing: G. Millard fPresidenitj. Learned Hand Club Winner of Ames Competition-1969 The fourth annual Learned Hand Lobster Orgy. W? Mm? A i , 4 1 in Tix ,,,,,., .A . . ,1 . f -at 1 ,J -f'?'f5+wi5fV '5 :Q-K ' XSS. -4 5' if ,ral 221 4 ug f 11 5 '52-5-QW fmfwf, ff f 4 ,M - . hy Jrfv 1 2 :-1+ 1-bf:',51 ' wr Q Q -ig :wr 5 1.4, 'Wi-'f ft J L ' .TH- ff ri . 3 Q ' . 'W ya WH 1 9- H A RM ' 5' -' A - 1 'iw' 'W i 1 1 if sly , - V 25 , -' U :L :J , ' 2 A- - - an V 1 A. ' WS: .- 1. 1 it F' AQ - wi ' 1- - 'His f -4-f 23.1 , l , ,.4- In gi A 'NJ - H 1 , 'r W. ',, . f 5 J 97' .5 ' EU X A W Q- Y? 'Q Egg: ,, ,pngmg t I f- A P6 H Lv A 7 , ,ig 1 Q. 1 1 'I' , 5 -'s '54 RM! v. 5 1 '-.4 gif LW, I J 'A' 1 5 r' Zi? k f' ' 1 5. -J is -A ,Ax ' x '49 vu Schauer is -, ,ll I First Row: G. Wolfstone, A. Thornton, J. Whitman fPresidentj, C. Leonhardt, J. Davidson, R. Kemblep Second Row: N. Toms, P. Gabel, M. Stumpf, J. Sherman, Third Row: W. Weld, G. Cushing, J. Bailey, D. McKee, H. Hartz. Kent Club Pound Club First Row: H. Willener, W. McGurn, III, D. Gordon, H. Israelton, J. Levi, T. Hoelter, S. Carlson, M. Davis, G. Blynn fSecretary-Treasurerj, C. Scales fPresident1,' Second Row: R. LeBlanc, J. Henson, D. Feigenbaum, H. Hart. i First Row: R. Shattuck, P. Burling, L. Pressler, P. J. Ferner S Burbank D Calder Second Row I Walsh W. Pascoe, R. Damus, M. Wyatt, M. Smiih, E. Cox,' Thlrd Row E Katzenbach D Hardesty R Kaiz H. Wagenseil, A. Vorkink, R. Drang Fourth Row: E. Weznbach D Knox M Bonn R Rawson Superior Court of the Pow Wow 216 Root Club Standing: M. Rowin, J. Lin- dahl, S. Simons, R. Theusf Up ladder: R. Hoffman, R. King,- Sitting: P. Daley, R. Lower, R. Stoller fPresidentJ. Story Club First Row: H. Kaback, R. Waldman, J Coil fPresiden'U, P. Rubin, Second Row: R. Hoel, V. Rayll, J. Stephens, R. Baum E. Silverman: Third Row: A. Wyatt, K. Perlman, R. Baltimore, A. Sherman, R. Thomas: Fourth Row: R. Haas, R. Sloan, P. Gauron, B. Warner, S. Bruskin. From first story to roof: L. Ebner, G. Malasky C. Lynch, D. Dunson, R. Farren. Edward Warren Club J First Row: G. Weissen- berger, J. Ry-un, J. Wilcox, J. Bloom, H. Drummondsf Second Row: E. Green, M. Gudema, J. Croney, M. Dia- mant fPresiden'!J. Sacks Club First Row: M. Oberman, A. Zayas fPresidentj, Professor Sacks, R. Fields, D. Waldon, J. Shaffer: Second Row: J McFadden, J. Bazzocchi, J. Axelrod, M. Borgen, K. Ross, W. King, C. Mollenkopf, R. Curry. 218 Professor Sutherland, letting his hair down a bit, sings the Ode lo Bat Guan0 . Club Seated: L. Standridge, B. Shore lSecretaryJ,' Standing: R. Pond, S. Cowen, J. Roosevelt, Jr., R. Rotunda lPresidentJ, Professor Suth- erland, D. Castillo, J. Mer- ren fS0cial Chairmanjg Clockwise around the tree: A. StruPP, J. Green, P. Arenella, J. Kasameyer, W. Umphrey. 219 CLAO Staff ' gn Y 1 A. Van C. Lanckton Paul Newman Director Chief Attorney A.B. Yale '64, LL.B. Harvard '67. A.B. Harvard '63, LL.B. Columbia '66 Q yi-M aj John C. Cratsley Staff Attorney A.B. Swarthmore '63, J.D. U. of Chicago '66, LL.M. Georgetown '68, Louise Gans Staff Attorney B.A. Bard '55, LL.B. N.Y.U. '59. Wallace W. Sherwood Staff Attorney B.A. St. Vincent '66, J.D. George Washington '69, Mark E. Budnitz Staff Attorney A.B. Dartmouth '66, J.D. Harvard '69 221 Patrons The following law firms and other organizations join in the dedication of the 1969 Harvard Law School Yearbook to the late Professor Henry Melvin Hart, Jr. Adinolti, Kelly 8: Spellacy Hartford, Connecticut Agnew, Miller, Carlson 8: Powers Los Angeles, California Alston, Miller 8: Gaines Atlanta, Georgia Altheimer, Gray, Naiburg, Strasburger 8: Lawton Chicago, Illinois Anderson 8: Rush Orlando, Florida Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin 8: Kahn Washington, D.C. Baker 8: Daniels Indianapolis, Indiana Baker 8: McKenzie Chicago, Illinois Baker, Hostetler 8: Patterson Cleveland, Ohio Barnes, Hickam, Pantzer 8: Boyd Indianapolis, Indiana Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad 8: Burns Chicago, Illinois Berkman, Ruslander, Pohl, Lieber 8: Engel Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Berlack, Israels 8: Liberman New York, New York Blank, Rome, Klaus 8: Comisky Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Bouck and Holloway Albany, New York 222 Breed, Abbott 8: Morgan New York, New York Brobeck, Phleger 8: Harrison San Francisco, California Buchanan, Ingersoll, Rodewald, Kyle 8: Buerger Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Burke 8: Burke New York, New York Butzel, Levin, Winston 8: Quint Detroit, Michigan Cahill, Gordon, Sonnett, Reindel 8: Ohl New York, New York Carrington, Coleman, Sloman, Johnson 8: Blumenthal Dallas, Texas Carter, Ledyard 8: Milburn New York, New York Casey, Lane 8: Mittendorf New York, New York Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside 8: Wolff New York, New York Chapman and Cutler Chicago, Illinois Choate, Hall 8: Stewart Boston, Massachusetts Codey, Crowley, Gaither, Godward, Castro 8: Huddleson San Francisco, California Cohen, Shapiro, Berger, Polisher 8: Cohen Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Covington 8: Burling Washington, D.C. Cravath, Swaine 8: Moore New York, New York Crowe, Dunlevy, Thweatt, Burdick Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Cummings 8: Lockwood Stamford, Connecticut Swinford, Johnson 8: Curtis, Mallet-Provost, Colt 8: Mosle New York, New York Coudert Brothers New York, New York Davis, Polk 8: Wardwell New York, New York Dechert, Price 8: Rhoads Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Devoe, Shadur, Plotkin, Krupp 8: Miller Chicago, Illinois Dewey, Ballantine, Bushby, Palmer 8: Wood New York, New York Doherty, Rtunble 8: Butler St. Paul, Minnesota Donovan, Leisure, Newton 8: Irvine New York, New York Dorfman, DeKoven 8: Cohen Chicago, Illinois Dorsey, Marquart, Windhorst, West 8: Halladay Minneapolis, Minnesota Duane, Morris 8: Heckscher Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Dykema, Wheat, Spencer, Goodnow 8: Trigg Detroit, Michigan Epstein, Salloway 8: Kaplan Boston, Massachusetts Faegre 8: Benson Minneapolis, Minnesota Patrons Finley, Kumble, Underberg, Persky 8: Roth New York, New York Fish, Richardson 8: Neave Boston, Massachusetts Fish, Richardson 8: Neave New York, New York Foley, Hoag and Eliot Boston, Massachusetts Foley, Sammond 8: Lardner Milwaukee, Wisconsin Ford Motor Company Dearborn, Michigan Friedman 8: Atherton Boston, Massachusetts Fuller, Seney, Henry 8: Hodge Toledo, Ohio Gaston, Snow, Motley 8: Holt Boston, Massachusetts Gibson, Dunn 8: Crutcher Los Angeles, California Godfrey 8: Kahn Milwaukee, Wisconsin Goodwin, Procter 8: Hoar Boston, Massachusetts Gordon, Feinblatt 8: Rothman Baltimore, Maryland Gottfried, Ginsberg, Guren 8: Merritt Cleveland, Ohio Graham 8: James San Francisco, California Hahn, Cazier, Thornton, Hoegh 8: Leff Los Angeles, California Hall, McNicol, Marett 8: Hamilton New York, New York 223 Patrons Heller, Ehrman, White SL McAuliffe San Francisco, California Hill and Barlow Boston, Massachusetts Hill Farrer 8: Burrill Los Angeles, California Hinman, Howard 8a Kattell Binghamton, New York Hodgson, Russ, Andrews, Woods 8a Goodyear Buffalo, New York Hogan 8a Hartson Washington, D.C. Holme, Roberts 8a 0wen Denver, Colorado Hopkins, Sutter, Owen, Mulroy, Wentz 84 Davis Chicago, Illinois Howard, Prim, Smith, Rice 8a Downs San Francisco, California Hughes, Hubbard SL Reed New York, New York Hunton, Williams, Gay, Powell 8a Gibson Richmond, Virginia International Business Machines Corporation Armonk, New York Javits, Trubin, Sillcocks 8L Edelman New York, New York Jenkins SL Perry San Diego, California Jenner SL Block Chicago, Illinois Kadison, Pfaelzer, Woodard 84 Quinn Los Angeles, California Kaler, Worsley, Daniel 8a Hollman Washington, D.C. 224 Kaplan, Livingston, Goodwin, Berkowitz 82 Selvin Beverly Hills, California Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays 8a Handler New York, New York Keatinge 8a Sterling Los Angeles, California Kelley and McCann Cleveland, Ohio Kilpatrick, Cody, Rogers, McClatchey 8: Regenstein Atlanta, Georgia Kindel XL Anderson Los Angeles, California King 8: Spalding Atlanta, Georgia Kirkland, Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetz 84 Masters Chicago, Illinois Kirkland, Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetz, Masters 8L Rowe Washington, D.C. Kirkpatrick, Lockhart, Johnson 81. Hutchison Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Kirlin, Campbell 8c Keating New York, New York Kramer, Marx, Greenlee 8a Backus New York, New York Kramer, Roche, Burch, Streich 84 Cracchiolo Phoenix, Arizona Latham 8L Watkins Los Angeles, California Leibman, Williams, Bennett, Baird 8a Minow Chicago, Illinois Lewis, Rice, Tucker, Allen 8a Chubb St. Louis, Missouri Lillick, McHose, Wheat, Adams 8L Charles Los Angeles, California Lord, Bissell 84 Brook Chicago, Illinois Mayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney, Brown 84 Platt Chicago, Illinois Mayer, Tingley 84 Hurd Columbus, Ohio McCarter 84 English Newark, New Jersey McCutchen, Doyle, Brown 84 Enersen San Francisco, California Milbank, Tweed, Hadley 84 McCloy New York, New York Miller, Canfield, Paddock 84 Stone Detroit, Michigan Miller, Groezinger, Pettit, Evers 84 Martin San Francisco, California Mintz, Levin, Cohn gl Glovsky Boston, Massachusetts Montgomery, McCracken, Waller 84 Rhoads Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Moorhead 84 Knox Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Morgan, Lewis 84 Bockius Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Clinton 84 Clark San Francisco, California Mudge, Rose, Guthrie 84 Alexander New York, New York Munger, Tolles, Hills 84 Rickershauser Los Angeles, California Musick, Peeler 84 Garrett Los Angeles, California New England Mutual Life Insurance Company Boston, Massachusetts Patrons Nossaman, Waters, Scott, Krueger 84 Riordan Los Angeles, California Olwine, Connelly, Chase, O'Donnell 84 Weyher New York, New York O'Melveny 84 Myers Los Angeles, California Orrick, Herrington, Rowley 84 Sutcliffe San Francisco, California Overton, Lyman 84 Prince Los Angeles, California Palmer 84 Dodge Boston, Massachusetts Parker, Chapin 84 Flattau New York, New York Parr, Doherty, Polk gl Sargent New York, New York Paul, Hastings, J anofsky 84 Walker Los Angeles, California Paul, Weiss, Goldberg, Rifkind, Wharton 84 Garrison New York, New York Perkins, Coie, Stone, Olsen 84 Williams Seattle, Washington Piper 84 Marbury Baltimore, Maryland Price, Cushman, Keck 84 Mahin Chicago, Illinois Proskauer, Rose, Goetz 84 Mendelsohn New York, New York Reed, Smith, Shaw 84 McClay Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Reid 84 Priest New York, New York Robinson, Robinson 84 Cole Hartford, Connecticut 225 Patrons Ropes 8: Gray Boston, Massachusetts Rosenfeld, Meyer 8: Susman Beverly Hills, California Rosenman, Colin, Kaye, Petschek, Freund 8: Emil New York, New York Royall, Koegle 8: Wells New York, New York Rubin, Wachtel, Baum 8: Levin New York, New York Saul, Ewing, Remick 8: Saul Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Schiff, Hardin, Waite, Dorschel 8: Britton Chicago, Illinois Schnader, Harrison, Segal 8: Lewis Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Semmes, Bowen 8: Semmes Baltimore, Maryland Seward 8: Kissel New York, New York Shearman 8: Sterling New York, New York Sheehan, Phinney, Bass 8: Green Manchester, New Hampshire Sheppard, Mullin, Richter 8: Hampton Los Angeles, California Simpson, Thacher 8: Bartlett New York, New York Spieth, Bell, McCurdy 8: Newell Cleveland, Ohio Steptoe 8: Johnson Washington, D.C. Stradley, Ronon, Stevens 8: Young Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 226 Strasser, Spiegelberg, Fried 8: Frank New York, New York Sutherland, Asbill 8: Brennan Washington, D.C. Szold, Brandwen, Meyers 8: Altman New York, New York Thacher, Proffitt, Prizer, Crawley 8: Wood New York, New York Thelen, Marrin, Johnson 8: Bridges San Francisco, California Thorp, Reed 8: Armstrong Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania First National Bank of Chicago Chicago, Illinois Townley, Updike, Carter 8: Rodgers New York, New York Tyre 8: Kamins Beverly Hills, California Ulmer, Berne, Laronge, Glickman 8: Curtis Cleveland, Ohio vomBaur, Coburn, Simmons 8: Turtle Washington, D.C. Webster, Sheffield, Fleischmann, Hitchcock 8: Brookfield New York, New York White 8: Case New York, New York Willkie, Farr 8: Gallagher New York, New York Winston, Strawn, Smith 8: Patterson Chicago, Illinois Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam 8: Roberts New York, New York Wolf, Block, Schorr 8: Solis-Cohen Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The Grade War-1969 The controversy over the meaning and value of grades in recent years reopened a question which had not been seriously considered here for almost a century. Prior to 1870, the law faculty resisted the Corporation's desire to formalize their evalua- tion of student performance on the ground that examinations test the memory of the student rather than aid him in applying what he has learned to actual practice. In lieu of formal examinations, the faculty preferred oral quizzes and daily inter- rogations. A growing concern that Harvard was doing a disservice to the legal profession by not examining its law students, however, led Christopher C. Langdell, the first dean of the Law School, to yield to the reinvigorated Corporation regulation that all graduates be recommended only upon thor- ough public examinationf' Exams have become more sophisticated and the grading system has undergone many changes since 1870, but none of those changes ever raised the fundamental issues which have been debated during the last two years. Although the roots of the present controversy are deep, its history only dates from late 1966, when Dean Griswold, acting upon a letter which appeared in the Record, set up the Joint Student-Faculty Committee to look into the frustrations engendered by the then current grading system. The Joint Stu- dent-Faculty Committee uncovered a Pandorals Box of discontent, the most common source being among students who had earned A's throughout their aca- demic career and yet now faced the embarrassment of going home with C's despite the fact that many were capable of doing A work at other law schools. The upshot of this investigation was a liberalization of the grading system such that the class average jumped from a C+ to a B. The problem, however, was more fundamental than the Joint Student-Faculty Committee had first imagined. To be sure, students were appreciative of the inflations of their averages to more respectable levels. But, at least for last year's lL class, this wasn't nearly enough. Many of the 1L's were simply tired of competing. It struck them as an anathema that Harvard should go out of its way to recruit the cream of America's students and then waste so much time attempting to discriminate between them instead of concen- trating its energies on developing its students to the fullest of their capabilities. A widespread notion that the utility of a meritocracy had reached the point of diminishing returnsl' surfaced to the apparent surprise of many faculty members. What was responsible for this rebellion? No one had any ready answers, although a good number of subtle psychological influences were indicated. For instance, a system which credited a classmate's success in landing a job to his money or social con- nections was much less harsh on the ego than one which credited that classmate's success to his su- perior intellect. Some blacks, in a desire to preserve their cultural identity, felt that grades were of no help to them mainly because grades reflected a meas- sure of values in large part alien to those of their own culture. They questioned for the first time the universality of the Felix Frankfurter value syste'm to which the Law School had committed itself. And no doubt more puerile factors came into play, not the least of which could be found in an underlying rebellion against the dictates of the Puritan work ethic. ' Whatever the hypothetical cause of the students' discontent, they voiced some very real concerns. First, students complained that the grading sys- tem seriously impaired the quality of the law stu- dent's life. They observed that students tended to work against one another instead of with one an- other. The consequent atmosphere of suspicion, iso- lation, and sometimes even outright hositility, they maintained, was both socially and educationally counter-productive. Second, students criticized grades as giving an incomplete and oftimes inaccurate picture of the student. Grades based on exams only measured certain abilities, namely issue spotting, organization, and composition, all quickly and under pressure. There were many skills-oral advocacy, research in depth, imagination in research-which they did not measure and to which there was no proven correla- tion. Further, grades provided only a rough measure of the student's ability. Where they are generalized, they tend to exaggerate sometimes imperceptible dif- ferences between students to a degree completely out of proportion to the students' relative perform- ances. Where they are very refined, they tend to differentiate students on the basis of distinctions which cannot in any way be validated, but which are given credence by the very fact that the grading system recognizes such distinctions. Third, students universally complained that too much emphasis was placed upon their performance during the first year. A legal education was theoreti- cally a three year process. The heavy reliance upon first year grades encouraged employers to make pre- mature and sometimes unwise judgments upon many students since some students develop at different rates from others. Further, for students who made it during the first year, there no longer remained the same incentive, since they need not do as well during the next two years. For those who fell into the middle or bottom of the class during the first year, the school offered little encouragement for development over the next two years. 227 Fourth, students contended that the grading sys- tem was degrading, that it gave rise to an unneces- sary psychology of failure among a significant pro- portion of students. Some students, aware of the possibility of failure, withdrew altogether from the competition and contented themselves with just getting by. Others, having competed and lost in their first year, resigned themselves to their fate and fell victim to the commonly noted phenomenon of second year apathy . As a result, classroom per- formance and intellectual creativity suffered. Fifth, students criticized the grading system for its lack of feedback. Students did not discover how they were doing in relation to their classmates until it was too late. An evaluation system should point out students' weaknesses in time for them to be overcome. Sixth, students complained that instead of ex- panding incentive, the grading system limited in- centive such that all that mattered was getting good grades. Thus many students could not justify allo- cating their time to activities such as the Ames Competition without feeling plagued by the nagging worry that their participation would not be ade- quately rewarded. Nor could many students justify further exploration of interesting questions presented in class if such further exploration was not likely to lead to a greater state of preparedness for the four hour dates with destiny in late May and early June. With the foregoing complaints in mind, a group of enterprising 1L's set out in the winter of 1969 to propose alternative ways to evaluate student per- formance. In late February they published and dis- tributed their findings to the law school community in a polemic entitled The Trouble With Grades. In essence, they conceded the necessity of some form 'Q ..,., reg: -,- ' V L i L .1-it 1 Iuwas,.. i li. t i. it a f-- iiiivf l ll ll 'l H ' W ' ' 228 of comparative evaluation for internal purposes but denied both the necessity and the utility of making such judgments known for external purposes. In- stead, they recommended that the Law School adopt a portfolio approach, that the student be judged by employers on the quality of the written work sub- mitted in the student's portfolio. To implement this approach, the 1L's suggested that the Law School adopt a curriculum which would require periodic evaluations of students' performances throughout the year, that professors communicate more com- pletely their evaluation of students' exams, and that only the words pass or fail appear on students' transcripts. The Trouble With Grades successfully articulated many of the contradictions and shortcomings of the Law School's grading system. It was hailed with enthusiasm by a majority of 1L's. Dean Bok, in a memorandum to the faculty, conceded that It is hard to disagree with the main thrust of these criti- cisms. By and large, the points are temperately made and not overblownf, The pass-fail movement gained momentum throughout the month of March. Eighty per cent of the 1L's signed a petition favoring institutional recognition of a pass-fail system. The controversy devoured valuable blocs of classroom time, and open hostility began to manifest itself between some students and faculty. This hostility reached an apex just before and after spring vacation, when students learned that the faculty committee on examinations Cknown as the Keeton committeel considered it unlikely that a pass-fail system in any form would be instituted during the current year. Some students regarded the Keeton committee report as a breach of faith, as an affront to their maturity and sincerity. .l is liiiti. Exams are taken under equal conditions, but it has been questioned whether they are graded under equal condi- tions. One apocryphal fas far as we can telll story has it that a professor graded ' two identical exams and gave one a mark six points higher than the other under the old system. The pass-fail movemenfs survival of the cathectic confusion of the Hollywood spectacular over at Univer- sity Hall fco-starring Nathan Pusey, the Cambridge cops, and the SDSJ conclusively demonstrated its remarkable strength and appeal. They accused the faculty of acting cavalierly, and in turn several professors began openly to question the students' sincerity. One professor, after calling on eight unprepared students in a row, launched into a bitter tirade against student claims of ma- turity and excellence. On top of this, rumors of an exam strike began to circulate. Despite a university-wide strike following the disorders at University Hall, a mass meeting of 1L's in the Ames courtroom attracted a significant num- ber of interested students. Shortly thereafter an overnight study-in in the library drew a great number of students and faculty, many of whom were anxious to delve more deeply into the source of the students' discontent. It was at this juncture that the talks between the Keeton committee and student representatives of the pass-fail movement began to move with more alacrity. After two months of continual discussion, exam- ination, and cross-examination of the issues, the Keeton committee finally succeeded in dispelling much of the confusion surrounding the students' suggestions by encouraging the students to choose between their desire for more feedback and their desire for pass-fail . Although it was agreed that the desire for more feedback was a legitimate one in itself, it was somewhat peripheral to the essential thrust of the pass-fail movement. First, it appeared from even a cursory appraisal that discursive evalu- ations would have little meaning to the student un- less they in some way reflected the comparative performance of the student to his peers. Second, an irreconcilable conflict was noted between the stu- dents' desire for more feedback and their desire for fewer constraints upon their participation in extra- curricular activities. In any event, the students be- lieved that if they could get pass-fail , an increase N0 2096.7 in the amount of discursive feedback would be forthcoming. The committee, on the basis of this clarification of the students' position, soon reached a consensus that the crux of the pass-fail movement consisted of the objections that C15 too much em- phasis was placed on the student's performance during the first year and that C21 student transcripts were reported in a manner detrimental to the inter- ests of many students. On other fronts, an in-depth re-examination of the meaning and value of grades was taking place. Whereas most students saw grades as an unneces- sary evil, most faculty members saw them as a neces- sary evil if not an outright good. Behind the argument for grades lay the assump- tions that grades spur competitiveness and com- petitiveness spurs excellence. The pursuit of ex- cellence is and always has been the primary goal of scholarship. Although not all students need grades to motivate them, this could not be true in all in- stances, and in fact many faculty members believed that the vast preponderance of their students were motivated primarily by the rewards and punish- ments of the grading system. Grades served a useful purpose in that they gave the student some notion of where he stood in relation to his classmates. If grades were eliminated, faculty members might very well feel less disposed to put the effort and time that they currently put into assessing the students' comparative performance. Finally, grades constituted the most democratic feature of the Law School, for they made it clear that the key to success in the legal profession was performance and not wealth or family background. For placement purposes, grades served several important functions. First, they tended to match the most talented students with the most demanding 229 jobs. Second, they provided a preliminary screening mechanism to enable law firms and other employers to avoid the undesirable effects of over-hiring. The victory of the proponents of grade reform would be Pyrrhic indeed if it succeeded only in substituting intensive and prolonged future competition within the firms for the present short duration competition within the Law School. Third, if grades were abol- ished, Harvard students might be discriminated against in the short run since firms would often take a student in the upper third of his class else- where than risk employing a Harvard student who was just as likely to be in the bottom third as the upper third. And if other schools soon followed Harvard's example, employers might feel compelled to resort to LSAT scores or to some other form of standardized testing. Thus the end result of a pass-fail system might very well be to dehumanize further what is an already dehumanized placement system. The honoraries reacted to the suggestion in The Trouble With Grades that they be eliminated by submitting memoranda generally resisting any fac- ulty-imposed change in their honorary status. Each cited the fear that their functions would be seriously impaired through the loss of valuable time and manpower necessary to administer a competition for selecting new members, although the Legal Aid Bureau recognized that in some instances its hon- orary status operated to its detriment in carrying out its functions. The Law Review further feared the loss of talent to other publications and a con- comitant loss of reputation. Information flowed into the Keeton committee from all sides, and each tidbit was carefully digested. After lengthy deliberation, the committee reached a 6-1 consensus that lL's be given the option of having their grades reported in one of three ways- pass-fail, a four-tiered schedule, or the standard nine-tiered schedule Csee chart belowj. It further decided to modify the honorary status of the Board of Student Advisers and to limit the number of students making Law Review by route of the lL grades to only fifteen. This total was raised to twenty by the faculty after an intensive lobbying effort by the officers of the Law Review. In a change of heart, the Legal Aid Bureau decided to adopt a random system of membership selection and thus effectively removed itself from the jurisdiction of the Keeton committee. Finally, the committee suggested that the Law School make it clear to employers using its placement facilities that they were not to solicit first year 'grades from second year students. The 'Lreformn was greeted with mixed feelings by the student body. As is usually the case with such matters, many thought that the faculty had not gone far enough, and many thought that the faculty had gone too far. No general consensus was reached, although it may be noted that of the 1L's, 33? selected the pass-fail option and 12'Z: selected the four-tiered option. Probably another 10'Z: might have gone along with the pass-fail option were it not for the fact that they lacked the initiative to drop in at the Registrar's Office in order to register their choice. According to all reports, the quality of exams last year was as good as ever. Of those selecting a pure pass-fail approach, at least two made the Review. The Law School has refused to release any data comparing the performances of those on pass- fail with those who chose to accept their grades. Speculation has it, however, that at best, those receiving their full grades did only marginally bet- ter than those on pass-fail. The Law Review handled its fall writing compe- tition with relative despatch and without great dis- ruption, although it had to struggle at times to make deadlines. The Board of Student Advisors, on the other hand, was caught with its pants down and found itself in a state of chaos, partially as a result of losing its honorary status and partially because of efforts to revamp the Ames Competition. Consequently, 1L's found themselves arguing their cases right up to the very day before Christmas vacation. The Legal Aid Bureau, despite its random Grade Equivalents Numerical 9 Tiered 4 Tiered PLISS Basis Schedule Schedule F Gil 80+ A+ High 77-79 A 74-76 A- 71-73 B-1- 68-70 B Satisfactory Pass 65-67 B- 60-64 C 55-59 D Low Below 55 F Fail Fail 230 I selection of new members, experienced little change if any in the quality of its service. However, the most important reaction to gauge, at least for most students, was the reaction of em- ployers using the facilities of the Placement Office. Students detected both brazen and subtle pressures to reveal their grades. The fact that students who did well would invariably broadcast their accomp- lishments to prospective employers did not render any comfort to their classmates who had selected the pass-fail option. Some firms viewed the changes with considerable apprehension. One firm, in a letter to the faculty placement committee, looked upon the faculty vote of last May 13 and 15 as a capitulation'l and refused even to interview Harvard Law graduates much less consider hiring them. Many hiring part- ners found themselves bewildered by the grading controversyg they didn't know quite what to make of it, and more than a small proportion of inter- views dwelt at some length on the issues which were raised by those students militating for pass- fail. To be sure, the Law School is not responsible to law firms and hiring partners in any way. But the experience of this year's 2L class tends to bear out the observation that the Law School is very much limited in what it can do by the dominant presence of the big city law firm in the American legal profession. This yearis class of 1L's has not reacted to the pass-fail proposal with the same degree of enthusiasm as did last year's lL class. Perhaps this is because the faculty has made a point of providing more feedback during the year. And perhaps this is because it has been demonstrated through the 2L experience with hiring partners that a voluntary pass-fail system is self-defeating. But insofar as the support for a mandatory pass-fail system is not expected to materialize to the extent necessary to convince the faculty that such a system is the only possible answer to the problems posed by the present grading system, further action in behalf of such a system appears unlikely to lead to the dramatic changes which were forced by last year's confrontation. Professor Hall talks with students at the overnight study-in held in the library during last year's confrontation , The ready re- sponsiveness displayed by many faculty members served to avert what otherwise could have been an ugly situation. .ww ni t MRF' Vietnam, The Draft, and The Law School Now guess whafs in my canteen?,' 232 Of the 539 who registered as 1L's in 1967, 2992: have withdrawn or had their legal education inter- rupted, of those who registered as 1L's in 1968, at least 2396 have suffered the same inconvenience. Despite an influx of 57 returnees and transferees, the class of '71 is down from 601 last year to 522 this year. The 3L class, at only 388, is the smallest since World War II. ROTC, the Reserves, VISTA, and the Peace Corps, not to mention the draft, have claimed the services of hundreds of law students. To sin is to miss the mark. Admissions Statistics ' i Number of Number fp-'F '. -. T145 Year Applicants Admitted gg-L ,r 15.43 . . t., , ,. ,, , . ,. f'.-.11-fag? 1967 3,247 843 FT .2 1s .' -. . if 1968 3,471 1954 if-5rl34iHf'Lt-51 ,, .. 1969 4,654 1,095 i1.f',Zf',.5Q,-Y tl QLl'4..1 5:iIf't?5T27?'i53:s5ii'i' I want to go to Vietnam. I want to kill some Vietcong. The class of 1970 was the last class admitted under the protection of the II-S deferment. Thus its rate of pre-registration withdrawal more nearly reflects the statistical norm. In only two years, this rate has jumped from 34'Z: to 4696. In both '68 and ,69, the Law School admitted enough students to fill 600 places. It is expected that manfy students who were called to arms the past two years will be returning as 2L's next fall. To compensate for the anticipated extra-large 2L class, the Law School will reduce the lL class to 535 next year, and with over 5000 applicants competing for these few places, the admissions crunch will become a shoot-down heard round the land. The decrease in the student body from a normal 1750 to 1650 this year, coupled with continuing inflation, has threatened to plunge the school into a financial nose dive. 11,3 t - -t fat- ,.,1....,.,., , . 5... --.---- a-if , . 'f uf-4 , 2--f - .. --Lisa-aft: . - , V, f-4 ' . , 233 BAR REVIEW COURSES AND LEGAL PUBLICATIONS MARYLAND TEXAS Ginsberg and Ginsberg Institute for Texas Bar Review 801 Aurora Federal Bldg. 220 So. Congress Baltimore, Maryland 21201 Austin, Texas 78704 See advertisement opp. page See advertisement opp. page Harvard Law Review Gannett House Harvard Law School Cambridge, Mass. 02138 See advertisement page 236 Where fo Stay When Visiting Harvard l 0 C9 0 Fully oriented to accommodate college students 0 Free parking facilities and Parents 0 Heated swimming pool Sauna bath facilities Room service 7 a.m. to ll p,m. 0 Car Rental service in lobby Modern facilities - T.V. in all rooms Free 3dVaI'lCC I'CSCI'V3.fl0I'lS o o Q o 0 24 hour switchboard service Innkeeper: J. F. lncorvati 1 35? 5, 1651 MAssAcHusms AVENUE CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02138 kk 1 ii PHONE: AC 617 491-1ooo f I Q M W Z x, ' ,,. 1 95 N .A V, - I ff 4' VBA. 1.1-u-u -i-if THE wonu: s If,- INNKEEPER9 C91- Z ,L :1 0-QACQDLX Svwx. of CAMBRIDGE 234 iT2i19f'15lMl , W is 5 .3 EI S as . are aa -X? 2 2 ff 1, 0 Mgt-T'?'fss1 ,Q 5 ' GINSBERG 81 GINSBERG Bar Review Courses at Baltimore and Silver Springs For Winter and Summer, Maryland Bar Examinations For Summer 1970 Bar Examination At Baltimore: 4 week dc 6 week courses start May 25, 1970 12 day course starts June 20, 1970 Thousands of Students From Maryland and Out of State Schools Have Attended With Success Write or phone: Ginsberg 84 Ginsberg 801 Aurora Federal Building- Charles 8: Saratoga Streets Baltimore, Maryland 21201 LExington 9-4750 INSTITUTE FOR TEXAS BAR REVIEW, INC. 220 So. Congress Austin, Texos 78704 The Institute conducts a comprehensive and pro- fessional Bar Review Course in Austin three times each year in preparation for the Texas Bar Exam- inations. The lecturers are distinguished professors of law from the Texas law schools. The Institute materials consist of detailed outlines with timely and periodic supplements, prepared by its Faculty mem- bers and furnished for the student's use. Each of the subjects covered on the Texas Bar Exam is treated in detail, topic by topic, with partic- ular lecture emphasis on the unique aspects of Texas law and on problem areas related to Texas practice and considered important by the Examiners. Willard C. Finkelstein, Director FIT :' , 235 START YOUR LIBRARY OFF RIGHT with the JOURNAL READ BY THE MOST LAWYERS I-IA RV A R D LAW REVIEW SPECIAL RATES FOR Write, call, or GRADUATING STUDENTS stop by Gannett House WZ il E72 EH El Ui Hi El 236 Masses throng into Harvard Square in rush to grab last remaining editions of the 1970 Harvard Law School Yearbook. Harvard's Leading Publication HARVARD LAW SCHOOL YEARBOOK If I could do inspirationally BABCOCK-DAVIS ASSOCIATES Incorporated Established 1909 474 DORCHESTER AVENUE BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Structural Metal Fabricators-Ornamental Iron Works Manufacturers of Steel and Aluminum Flagpoles Tilting Aluminum Flagpoles Easy Access Roof Hatches Floor 8z Sidewalk Hatches What I always do mechanically 268-2241 The girls would do spontaneously What they always do eventually CLU B H ENRY IV 96 Winthrop Street Harvard Square, Cambridge, Mass. Cuisine by Pierre, Chef-Manager Luncheon-12-2 through Saturday Dinner-6-9 Mon.-Thur., Fri. and Sat. ,til 10 Closed Sundays 354-83 88 Hotel Continental One of New England's Best Hotels Housekeeping suites furnished with full hotel services Special weekly and monthly rates. Garage in Building Piccadilly Inn-More for less money Function rooms accommodating from 7 to 700 persons- Call Mrs. McClay . ln our apartment houses fwithin one half blockl, attractive efficiency apartments weekly and monthly. Tel: KI 7-6100 Chauncey Depew Steele, Jr. President and General Manager sr SINCE 1834 Harvard Square 238 co Mics I.-THE WISH?-so-new At the Law School's Back Door Corner Mass. Ave. :YL Everett St. Prescriptions-Health and Beauty Aids ge, BENCE PHARMACY Brief Paper, Brief Covers, Abstract Paper, Stationery 876-2002 Apt Radio And Television Expert T.V., Radio di Hi-F i Service All Makes Corner of Kirkland and Beacon Streets, Somerville 776-0555 LAW BOOKS FOR HARVARD LAW SCHOOL BOSTON'S LARGEST SELECTION OF LAW OUTLINES HARVARD BOOK STORE X0 - ax 1248 MASS AVE CAMB University Typewriter Co., Inc. Sales-Rental Service-Repairs Only Modern Shop in Harvard Square 89-91 Mt. Auburn St. Harvard Square 547-2720-547-1298 Olivetti, Smith-Corona, Royal, Hermes Olympia, I.B.M., Remington Put yourself in our place. The dealer who puts service above conversation and volume ahead of profit. H.B. SCOTT MOTORS 97 Kirkland St. 547- 1000 INC. Chrysler-Plymouth 239 535519 omslwm mum s a I 14359955911 r3sUG'7V5sQ1S7 it .Marriott W , M ' N ggilpcil' Elk W WINDJAMMER M .llllllllil Mm-riottlnn 9' Ba JV Pantry House K mutll M010 lhlfv Ylll ll!! mv. 'Vas- M X , ,,.,,, ,mf-w.Cu. ,. new Jil! ., ,, Q..- N0 chapter 96 IS not the chapter 11 Inch describes Iascivious carriage. Here, you can see for yourseb' V-il? ' 1 . Ill, i 1 lg LAW scH00L tl + ltr xtll 'l ' Ox lv S ' O ' tb ' . M ' 00d W3, il till Q Q tilt g y 2 Q , Q .552fgg, . 'N ' A e r tt ll s Q H Ak If 5, HARVARD' CHAIR ARVARV med for quality craftsman- Eip, the Harvard chair has rned its place as a tradition, be treasured long after col- 1 ' ' ge d3yS. Made of selected : PLEASE SEND: LSYB 70 Zrggggnnyhaggmiggs avril I'?,lheT i Q Harvard Chair Express collect. 541. air has a handsome black E Q Harvard Cushion Express collect. 511. ish, decorated with gold and . , . e gold Crest. 341' Cushion I Q Law School Directors Chair S17.95. Totals red Duraleather. 511. . Q Navy Q Maroon Law School Tielsl Q7 S5. I 'E :nj -. DIRECTOFFS CHAIR he crimson and blue Law chool crest looks colorful on e heavy white duck. The urdy, toldable frame comes a natural varnish finish or lack finish. 517.95. fl LAW SCHOOL atm I 41 , . tg, A x ll .1 tl :L St- I i ' it l .AW INSIGNIA GLASSES ionor your bar with hand- ,lown quality glassware with llatinum rim and 3-color Har- hrd Law School crest. Avail- lble in Hi-Ball, Single Old lashioned and Double Old xashioned. 51.75 eag 521 doz. PERSONALIZED PLAQUES Cast bronze Harvard emblem is mounted on solid hand- rubbed walnut, shaped as a shield or rectangle iboth 8V2 x 11 l. Graduate's name and class are engraved on the brushed bronze nameplate. En- graving is filled with black in- lay. Excellent gift idea. 518.95 with nameplate. 514.95 without nameplate. LAW SCHOOL TIES The Law School shield is woven in a repeat pattern on a plain background of navy or maroon. Fine silk repp. 35. Q Law Insignia Hi-Ball Glasses E13 G27 521. doz. li Q Law Single Old Fashioned Q Q3 521. doz. 1 Q Law Double Old Fashioned 0 Q Law School Plaque without nameplate 51.75 ea. 1 QD 521. doz. 1 514.95 518.95 Q Law School Plaque with nameplate Graduates Name Class of GI QP HARVARD SQUARE 1400 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 02138 Address Zip Please ship to: Address Zip Coop it .-Tl Coop!Master Charge qi' Check . Coop!C.A.P. Credit Card if Approx. 30 days delivery from Gardner, Mass., express collect, for Harvard Chairs. Shipping and handling billed separately. Make checks payable to the Harvard Cooperative Society. Massachusetts residents: Please add TM, Mass. sales tax fOut of state residents: No tax except Master Charge when delivered in Mass.l Prices subject to change without notice. 51.75 ea. l 51.75 ea. i. 42 Wyre ,. 2 W: iiigrfgv af. I ' 2555. 1 5--H, gg ,K w, .,g,.,.. ,V ,L , , wry. , .1 - :IE f ' 1 ?:'a':'iEE2 -'12, 7:1 1, L mffgffww :.- W, M ., . V 1 -,. M, .,,:, : ,,,.,, . 3f,,.w . X H wx ssswwz swsa ,u',47xz5Q21su xx L A M E5 s w.g: m h A, 'eff Pg 51 Scenes From The Cambridge Common Q.. n '77 Ln NIU XXX. ,,. me 3. , J' ' - F , 3 ,,,, y Q, .f'f ' 4 I v ffl fr 1' 4-wa. rr r fx' 'f T' 2 U--- X f 'ich fe M., at ' ' ': 5- ' ' ' '. ' ' .+'?iJi. bl? wi . Q., 5 x ' Sergeant Pepper comes to the Cambridge Common once a week. Lonely hearts dissolve in Bacchic revelry, groping for identity and sanctity in the anonymity of conforming non-con- formity. Drums throb. An empty euphoria exudes transparent happiness. Grass turns to ash. The pagan gods reincarnate them- selves. An uneasy tranquility prevails, interrupted from time to time by an occasional tow truck hauling off illegally parked Volks- wagens and Yamahas. The photographer's camera is threatenedg then the photographer himself is threatened. The photographer is a dude. And thatis the way it is-Sunday afternoons, 1969. 243 When Low in Spirits Think of Nearest Package Liquor Store to Law School Full Line of Imported and Domestic Wines Liquors, Beer and Ale Free Delivery On Orders 84.00 Or More J. F. BLACK, Mgr.-62 Years Experience 1670 Massachusetts Ave., Near Shepard St. Klrkland 7-3900 Harvard Wine Company Snowhite Launderers cmd Cleaners Closest fo the Law School 1644 Massachusetts Avenue 354-6400 We wash, fluff dry, and fold your laundry. Colors and socks separated without extra charge. 8 lbs. 75c Includes soap. Same Day Service Harvard Coin Operated Laundry 1736 Massachusetts Avenue Linnean Street Save Money Save Time No Waiting Open Sun. 8-1 Open 6 a.m.-12 p.m. Coin Operated Dry Cleaning 8. Laundry Save time, save money No waiting HARVARD HIGHLANDER CENTER 30 Prospect St. Near Central Square 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sun. to 1 p.m. There once was a ferae naturae, Now for a selection from my latest masterpiece- From horses and hounds did he Hy, 244 COLLEGE GRILL, INC. Pizza Italian Foods Friday and Saturday nights open fo 1 A.M. Pizza served until l2:45 P.M, Ellis 81 Andrews Real Estate and Insurance 82 Years in Harvard Square 4 Braifle Street Cambridge, Massachuseits Telephone: 547-8586 LENNY'S GULF 1725 Mass. Ave., Cambridge Complele American and Foreign Car Service 354-9203 Road Service +. I IEIWEIEI S XA INC. E MOVERS ' N -.,' N ready to go K A : wherever you move V F I xjx' L- ! .. ls LOCAL a. INTERSTATE wasxw mrs 'ro new :naman srnss ' IEW YIIRK IEW JERSEY ,,',,m,,esh,,,,,,,,,, nnnruln rsunsuvun tnullrwnn-Am YIISIIIIIGTDI, Il. I. Ullllll Almuhrsunllnrn ' sul' FURNITURE STORAGE SPEGIILIZIIB ll CRATIIIG f PACKING Plllll IIWIIB SHIPPING MAIN orrxcs ST. S.::s':.':..z1 876-8390 He went, to his ire, Ffom the Pan I0 the fire, Now he's Post's, not Pierson's, pot pie. 24 Compliments of giwivq Mofron HOUSE HARVARD SQUARE CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Matthew F. Dooling, Jr., Innkeeper Phone UN 4-5200 24 DULICIOUS VARllLI'lIfS Topped With 20 Flavorful Italian Dishes and Sandwiches Here .... at the O RIGIN AL 1 ' ' - . ,I --.- 'O 1' ' , lr MMBRID A '77 A , I If I - D 1 X AIR CONDITIONED 3 xl la? s M .flli 'Q' 1728 MASSACHUSETTS AVE.. CAMBRIDGE , ir Lv . Ji K lBelwnn Harvard Sq uid Pnrter Sq! 9 Q ,E f f EAT IN il' TAKE OUT 'k DELIVERY SERVICE Weekdays 6-12 P.M.-Sun. and Holidays 4-11:30 P.M. !.50C Nominal Cllllfgf'-Wflllfll 2 milesj YOU RING ....... WE BRING!! 1- A Foxburgersfm Ulliversity 8-7000 Scavenor's Liquor Mart please G0 Away! For all of graduation's entertainment needs. EL W. A complete selection of line liquors mes and champagnes personally selected by SERVICE JOSEPH SAVENOR 439-1860 in his annual tour of the continent. An elegant selection of imported cheeses Specialized Tours Party accessories also available. Soviet U11i0U 100 Kirkland St. Just behind the Law School Special attention given to Alumni 246 Second thoughts, they say, are best. John Dryden C1631-17003 Perhaps your third thought will be the Cambridge Trust Company. Glam bridge Tilrusi Qlumpung Pulgnke Qlenier 133E jlllassarliuseiis Qsuenue Glam bridge, massachusetts 875-551311 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Professional Dry Cleaning And Shirt Laundry RITE-WAY . CLEANERS KI-7-S008 4 Hudson St., Cambridge foff 1672 Mass. Ave.J Coin-Operated Dry Cleaning POLY CLEAN Open 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1685 Mass. Ave. How would you like to join the Law Wives this year'7 247 O'Connel1 Co. sells lots of neat things ,.,. in t 'iff 504 ffm 1 ZUTKIIJTTZD 63-4 3 O'Connel1 Co. has lots of friends - h ' jx' 'M H5 Milf , L E 'Y N M i, :Q 5, ,, I t,,s . 2 X 4 Rt RfNG ,',.,I3 X X,- , . 3-5 ixxxx P' , X xx xx ti X- QU' K -fe! ...... C'Connel1 Co. has a few enemies WE ARE FIGHTING FOR OU Fl OWN IMAGE - WE WON'T BUYTHEIHS I womens liberation bread and roses 492 4130 O'Conne11 Co. has a new acquisition ' vi flfei 'I I ff ' i' 'liY?' lA.i?-?F ?vf V, Q QX? V Qui if I I-fr 1- faIQ ,.I,I. ev- ' .,Ii23'i!f1I I W?t':I:I I 1 A NfiXgfIvI--1ff-I I il: -V4- l - --:Ji Liga XXI? 1.51. -,V ,ig , 'I'f,, I1 I, f ',,e I- ' 2?L?1g,,':'7 I q QQ f-- 1 f iii? , if 5jII'a .- A -s as -, A -1 . - ' f n w., I Qiik. J' I.:4'Qf ' 5 42515 fi EET-1-' 'f'lf7'5i .W - 1 ,4.,f I .,, , If I, . - so --off- - '4I' Y 'I 'I '-31 -fini. 'n'-fa? M3 'Q V. , . I .- I. ,I f -VJ. . .A -.-I ,I -. '44 1: ' '14 . . - oz- M - P' A' A, '--Qs .:::' U3 'f' F f1-1 I, .Q :I A V . I-' '- I .ZA -, Y - , II, L W. ' III Q,,II.IakII-,..' I ' II ,I 'F .fir Bob bought it last night in . I - I-' ' 'I I'I F' ' S AVR' I II We'l1 all be hearing from Bob Next year around tuition time E555 wfPae3 1i .gi wi rf.-F if 53, E 15 :gy Lev 1. 322535 . l'- 555g5gg..l 'gg 1 V- 'ELT G. Harrold who? G. Harrold who? BRUDIE AUTO RENTALS .OO OVERNHE Volkswagens S 15.00 Week End Special A Few Blocks from the Law School 49 1-7600 Nafalie's lfulitln Resfdurani' Harvard Square, Cambridge Featuring Parmigiane - Lasagna - Cacciatore - Fine Wines 1672 Massachusetts Avenue 491-9602 Closest Dry Cleaning 10 Law School Open Every Day hour no extra cleaning charge CRIMSON DRY CLEANERS One Hour Cleaning Same Day Shirt Laundry Custom Tailoring and Alterations Summer Storage 1609 Mass. Ave., Cambridge Call 876-0268 50 ' AIR connmnnfn I. E Q5 gg cumin: uso Allman: 29 CHURCH STREET +2 y nlarnunnn' HARVARD SU.. CAMBRIDGE 9 , .. -LL' if 'ff gf, TEL. un 4-3018 sara!! hamlet. Take Home Service 2 PERRY V. WONG, MGR. Shepard Pharmacy, Inc. 1662 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, Massachusetts Phone TRowbridge 6-8840 if G. Harrold?-Whoooooooooooooooooo Gee, Harold who? Harvard Cafeteria, Inc. 1613 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE CAMBRIDGE, MASS. fAt corner of Everett Streetj Over 26 years of Quality and Service to Law School Students Don,t Lock Yourself Out Get Duplicate Keys at COMMONWEALTH LOCK COMPANY 1853 Mass. Ave. Most Complete Stock in Town Your shortest path . . . to person-to-person banking I fm 2 A Few Steps From The Law School Chez Jean Distinctive French Restaurant Finest Cuisines by Jean Imported Wines-Moderate Prices l Shepard St. Ccorner Massachusetts Ave.J Phone: ELiot 4-8980 Open 5:30-I0 P.M., Mon.-Sat. Ed. Chin's Laundry 1642 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. AT LANGDON ST. Complete Bachelor Service-Fluff Dry Work -Reliable Service- Dickson Bros. Co. Kitchen F urnishings-H ardware-Paint 26 BRATTLE ST. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 02138 876-6760 We deliver A sociologist is a person who needs a S50,000 grant to find a whorehouse. El.SIE'S Noted for the Best Sandwiches To Eat Or Take Out The famous roast beef special sandwich 71 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge Claudette and Phil Markell 491-2842 Compliments of RITY :.. PREME KTHE ONE FOR SAVINGS SUPERMARKETJ QQQQQQM fe Q wg QP CL ez Q I F9 CIS ESCARGOTS-COQ AU VIN-DOVER SOLE WHALE STEAK-CALVES LIVER -DUCKLING BUFFALO-BEAR-VENISON IN SEASON PRIME ROAST BEEF-FILET MIGNON N.Y. SIRLOIN-MAINE LOBSTER Every meal a pleasant memory CHOICE LIQUEURS-IMPORTED WINES 44 Church St., Cambridge-547-4311 Private banquet room available lil' Covenants running with the land, unlike covenmzts in gross, are binding on the .... Mustard Cup Restaurant 81 Delicatessen For best sandwiches 8a homemade cheese cake 1695 Mass. Ave. 354-8852 Open 7 days 254 INDEX TG ADVERTISERS Apt Radio and Television . . . Babcock-Davis Associates . . . Bence Pharmacy ........ Brodie Auto Rentals ....... Cambridge Savings Bank Cambridge Trust ......... Chez Dreyfus .......... Chez Jean ....... Club Henry IV ,...... ....,.. College Grill. Inc. ........... . Coloyan Travel Service .......... Commonwealth Lock Company .. . Crimson Dry Cleaners ......... Dickson Bros. Co. ..,....... . Ed. Chin's Laundry Ellis 84 Andrews ...,......... Elsie s ...,....,..................... . . . Ginsberg 8t Ginsberg Bar Review Course Harvard Book Store ...........,...... Harvard Cafeteria, Inc. ........... . Harvard Coin-Operated Laundry .... Harvard Cooperative Society . .. . . Harvard Highlander Center .... Harvard Law Review ...,, 239 238 239 250 238 247 254 253 238 245 246 251 250 253 253 245 253 235 239 251 244 24l 244 236 Harvard Trust Company .... Harvard Wine Company ...... Holiday Inn of Cambridge .... Hotel Continental ....,.,.. Lenny's Gulf .....,...... Marriott Hot Shoppe ....... Mustard Kup Rest. 8L Deli ..... NataIie's Italian Restaurant ..... Northeast Federal Savings Bank . O'ConnelI's Brokerage .......... Henry F. Owens, Inc. .,...... . Poly Clean ............,..... Purity Supreme Supermarkets .. Rite-way Cleaners ........... Savenor's Liquor Mart , , .. . H.B. Scott Motors ............. Shepard Pharmacy, Inc. ....... . Snowhite Launderers and Cleaners Texas Bar Review, Inc. ........ . Tower of Pizza ......... ..... . Treadway Motor House ........ University Typewriter Co., Inc. .. Young Yee Restaurant ........ 252 244 234 238 245 240 254 . ...250 254 248 245 247 253 247 246 . ...239 .. ...25l 244 235 ... 246 246 239 ... 251 255 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS fy, we W ,1- 'WW ig? 743753-nik M54 Q The Editors would like to thank: Richard Scheck for keeping the books in order, the bills paid, and money in the bank Jim Batmasian for his endless pursuit of local mer- chants in quest of their advertising support Roger Matthews, Max Oppenheimer, and Jan Gray for their time and photography work Dave Doret for his aesthetic lay-outs Jane Colbert and Ronnie Millman for their timely assistance Vicky Gutierrez for her breakneck typing under heavy pressure and her excellent results Mary Denger for her combined role as sales manager, secretary, and receptionist during the early going Dean Bruce for his support and assistance and pa- tience Miss Quinn for her uncomplaining help Miss Appel for the use of her interviewing rooms and her much abused cooperation Larry Gartner and The Record for the generous use of their darkroom facilities Doug Mitchell, representative of Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill, for his helpful suggestions and constant availability Richard L. Farren James W. Colbert III 1 fbi! ,- r 7 1 K fn i ' n , . MA as ,I , .47 B a . ' Y I I 2't A. p -Q 1 ni- iw - , 1' . , 1 ' xl Q-fi 4' O Q, Q-LA fiizf' :T - . QF way' A' K EN -:,, ,:.,: X, V L I f 1' '. . X 'i 'I ' I , N ' f 'fl A W 5? v -x, I . , X .,,h.' IV if fa I 4. 5 Q . , ,uw x 'x N: Y !N 'umm ' wi: i A I 1 f I Q l .fr-..,, -' 11' , , Q ' . 6 4 Y ,lg ' H if J k -' ' f L 4 .. .,.,:. Em :MM W X Y 'E E ,gs- N-A if , Q a r , 1 A . f83l me A v i. u, 3' -Q A 425 , 1 - if ' ' 1 ' 1 S f ' A , 5 :R if . H ' 'A N fJi ' Y . v ' We A ' X fg PQ? fd 5 UL SM we X, 5 X., sl J -X .' ' ' via: W.. X .A xx ' I! .-,4,.-,H NN J , ' 'ff - V K n X, A X. ' ' .ws - 1 L. 5 b , I 1 D Y X J .A m IQE: l I if .. ,. I 2 -Af A ' l A-,:1g........ 1 M-.-..


Suggestions in the Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) collection:

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Harvard Law School - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967


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