Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1967

Page 161 of 181

 

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 161 of 181
Page 161 of 181



Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 160
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Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 162
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Page 161 text:

LSCRR LSCRRC. Seated: E. Wright, I. Rosenberg, E. Steinman CChairmanj, L. An- derson. Standing: D. Brooks, P. Nicholson, I. Wilcox, E. Valentine, R. Kuhns, R. Fastov, L. Myers. The Law Students Civil Rights Research Council CLSCRRCJ is an independent, student-directed civil rights legal organization. Founded in l963 by law students who had worked throughout the country as legal assistants to attorneys participating in the civil rights movement, the Council serves a three-fold purpose: Qlj To bring social change within the law, C2j To develop a sense of responsibility for so- cial problems in law studentsg and CBJ To provide students with practical expe- rience in legal Work while still in law school. As one of over 40 law school branches affiliated with the Council, the Stan- ford Law School LSCRRC chapter during the past academic year provided its 20 members with legal research projects requested by the national office or by local attorneys. Most of these dealt with the constitutional questions involved in civil liberties and civil rights litigationg much of this student work was later used in court briefs and legislative materials. One of these research projects was a brief deal- ing with the constitutionality of the State of lVlississippi's refusal to permit out-of- state attorneys either to practice law or to participate in any legal affairs in the state. Again this year, the heart of the Stanford LSCRRC chapter's activities will cen- ter upon the Summer Internship Program. The chapter plans to place Stanford law students as legal interns in the North and the South, both to help solve the need for legal services in these areas and to acquire personal practical legal expe- rience. During its three years of operation, the Stanford chapter has sent more than 25 students into internship programs as legal clerks and assistants. Last summer, seven Stanford law students worked upon civil rights and the problems of the urban poor in such diverse projects as a community organization in a Chicago slum and an Office of Economic Opportunity COEOD sponsored program in a Zuni Indian reservation. The LSCRRC Summer Internship Program incorporates the goals of the organi- zation into its own aims by providing qualified technical legal assistance to over- burdened civil rights, civil liberties, and poverty attorneys. Furthermore, it exposed law students to the social and racial wrongs of society. By that exposure, it hopes to inspire continuing personal and professional commitment to a broader concep- tion of law in solution of these problems-eradication of discrimination and poverty. Over the past three summers, Stanford law students and hundreds of others throughout the country have occupied a myriad of roles. These positions in the South have included work as clerks to local attorneys and legal assistants to civil rights workers in the field. In the North, student legal work has been performed as clerks for cooperating attorneys of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Congress On Racial Equality, and other civil rights organi- zations. Other Northern positions have included clerking for the legal departments of those national civil rights organizations, and working as legal assistants to com- munity organization projects in Northern ghettos, Indian reservation projects, and OEO programs. This summer, Stanford Law students and other LSCRRC in- terns will inaugurate a new project under the Vista Associates Program. As Vista volunteers in OEO Neighborhood Legal Service Centers, the LSCRRC-placed stu- dents will use their skills to help organize and educate community groups by hold- ing workshops on consumer education, landlord-tenant problems, and constitutional protections, rather than involving themselves in research, writing, or litigation for individual clients. In other chapter activities, members attended a conference on The Practicing Lawyer and the Problems of the Poor in October in San Francisco. Sponsored by the San Francisco chapter of the National Lawyer's Guild, the conference attracted speakers from throughout the country. These experts on legal problems affecting the poor spoke on such topics as family law, welfare rights law, social agency serv- ices, wage attachments and exemptions, landlord-tenant problems, fair employ- ment practices, and social security procedures.

Page 160 text:

Law Forum Board. First Row: M. Hawk CVice-Presidentj, R. I-Iarray fPresidentj, C. Houser. Second Row: S. Sperry, R. Heesernan, K. Cologne, T. McBirnie, I, Dennin. Not Shown: D. Barr, A. Bernstein aspects of this controversy debated the topic and then fielded questions from the audience. The Forum used a series of small discussion sessions to continue its annual legal ethics pro- gram. Intended to acquaint Stanford lawyers with the responsibilities of their profession, this series included information on the state bar's procedures for disbarring attorneys and a dis- cussion of typical ethical problems confronting the beginning lawyer. Some attention was given this year to the problems of student military obligations and legal opportunities within the various services. A panel discussion on Selective Service require- ments and procedures was followed by a visit to the Law School by Chief Iudge Quinn of the U.S. Military Court of Appeals. In other programs throughout the year the Forum hosted such diverse speakers as Mr. R. Crawford Morris, Cleveland attorney, speaking on the educational tasks a lawyer must under- take to acquaint clients with their duties and liabilities in rapidly changing areas of the lawg Iudge George Brunn of Berkeley discussing con- sumer protectiong William Clark, Cabinet Secre- tary to Governor Ronald Reagan, and Senator George Deukmajian CR-Long Beachj, analyz- ing the current political scene in Sacramentog and Associate Iustice Stanley Mosk of the Cal- ifornia Supreme Court looking at the role of the judiciary in contemporary law enforcement. Throughout the year the Law Forum pre- sented series and individual programs with speakers who had first-hand knowledge of cur- rent issues in the hope of enriching the educa- tional experience of the Stanford law student. The 1965-66 Oxford Debate featured Roderick Hills and Arthur Connolly, Ir. discussing group legal services. Professor Friedenthal served as moderator.



Page 162 text:

LEGAL ID Criminal Branch. Seated I. Huhs, I. Klevens, P. Mitchell, E. Potter, W. Cottrell, I. Iennings, R. Fastov QPresidentj, M. Norek, I. Culpepper, W. Terheyden, G. Buffington, L. Aufmuth, C. Sainsbury, R. McAulay. Standing: G. Wright, I. I-Ioak, R. Shulman, L. Myers, G. Hoff, A. Mendel, A. Sherry, R. Terry, D. Brooks, R. Borass, R. Mulford, R. Emmett, I. Atwood,,B. Price, D. Blacker, P. Nicholson, D. Farmer. This year the Stanford Legal Aid Society significantly expanded its goals and the scope of its services under the supervision of Professor Iack Friedenthal. In addition to gaining meaningful practical experience by rendering daily legal assistance to the indigent and the semi-indigent, the members of the Society are experimenting with legal education programs, helping to develop effective indigenous institutions and organizations, and promoting legislative reform. Approximately 80 students participated in the activities of the Criminal Branch of the Society this year. The majority were active in the San Iose and Palo Alto Bail Bond Projects. Members of these projects interview prisoners to determine whether the prisoners have sufficient community ties to justify release on their own recognizance pending trial. The Palo Alto Project is in its second year of operation under the direction of Dan Brooks. The San Iose Project, chaired by Alan Mendel assisted by Louise Ginzburg, was an experiment to enable Santa Clara County judges to assess the feasibility of establishing a permanent project. In November the San Mateo Assistant Defenders commenced operation. This group, led by Bob Fastov, Bill Cottrell, and Larry Myers, renders assistance to lawyers appointed by the San Mateo courts to defend criminal indigent cases. The students work closely with the attorneys on all types of cases interviewing defendants and witnesses, researching problems of evidence, substance, procedure, and consti- tutional law, drafting motions and jury instructions, and assisting on court appear- ances and appellate argument. An interesting facet of this program is the practicing criminal law seminar, which is prepared and conducted solely by the Assistant De- fenders on a bi-weekly basis. Approximately 35 students participated in this yearfs Civil Branch activities. The most imaginative of the projects, the East Palo Alto Legal Services Committee, was made possible by a three year grant of funds from the American Association of Law Schools. Under the direction of Dick Kuhns and Read Ambler, the committee com- menced operation in October in the Neighborhood Legal Center in East Palo Alto. The student's daily activities are supervised by a Stanford Teaching Fellow, Roy Schmidt, who is a staff attorney in the office. In addition to interviewing clients, re- search, investigation, and drafting, it is hoped that students will shortly be making appearances before administrative boards. Bankruptcy, domestic relations, welfare, and debtor-creditor problems form the bulk of the caseload. Moreover, the members of this committee are preparing legal education and case materials which will be distributed to other law schools and, hopefully, lead to new legislation and a better understanding of the legal problems of the indigent. Most of these activities emanate from the committee's seminar on the Problems of the Poor, which allows the stu- dent to bring his practical experiences to bear upon analysis of the socio-economic foundations of poverty and the development of effective legal remedies. The prospects for continued expansion ing a record of competence and responsi- bility so that an effective case may be pre- sented for the student practice of law in indigent and semi-indigent cases. of Sta1f1fO1'd Legal Aid Society are good. It Civil Branch. Seated: R. Fastov, V. Popkin, M Sherwood R Kuhns A Mendel Standing will Continue to Seek means of establish- I. Hoak, W. Terheyden, F. Ohly, R. Farrow, R Emmett W Hoffman P Frey D Iensen E Wright, L. Anderson, W. Neukom, L. Meyers P Popovich

Suggestions in the Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) collection:

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 127

1967, pg 127

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 129

1967, pg 129

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 51

1967, pg 51

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 13

1967, pg 13


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