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Page 43 text:
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Upon arriving at the Department of State in October l962, Thomas Ehrlich received his baptism of fire by being plunged into the midst of the Cuban missile crisis. In the remainder of his two years as special assistant to the Legal Adviser he worked on such diverse problems as helping to organize the United States, case for the Organization of American States com- mittee investigating the Panama dispute, pre- paring testimony for the Senate hearings on the Test-ban Treaty, and arbitrating a civil aviation question with France concerning land- ing rights in Iran and Turkey. For a year before coming to Stanford in 1965, Professor Ehrlich served as special assistant to Undersecretary of State George Ball-dealing principally with Vietnam. Born in Massachusetts in 1934, Professor Ehrlich received an A.B. in government H9565 and an LL.B. Cl959j from Harvard. He served as law clerk to Judge Learned Hand, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, before practicing law for two years with the firm of Foley, Sammond 81 Lardner in Milwau- kee. He was at the State Department from l962 until 1965. He is the United States contributor to the International Law Reports, at Stanford he is a member of the Committee on Interna- tional Studies. A tennis and camping enthusiast, Professor Ehrlich jointly owns a Windward sloop with Dean Manning. His wife, Ellen, is President of the Stanford Newcomers, Club and is active in the Parent-Teacher Association and the League of Women Voters. The Ehrlichs are the parents of a new baby, as well as two older children, David, 7, and Elizabeth, 4. THOMAS EHRLICH Associate Professor of Law
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Page 42 text:
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DALE S. COLLINSON Assistant Professor of Law This is Dale Co11inson's first year as a mem- ber of the Stanford law faculty, and thus far he has taught two courses in his fields of special in- terest: International Business Transactions and Federal Iurisdiction. Professor Collinson was born in Oklahoma in 1938. He ventured to Yale for undergraduate work in politics and economics, receiving an A.B. in 1960. That summer he got a first-hand look at the area of international business by taking a job with the Banque de l'Afrique Oc- cidentale in Paris. Returning from France he attended Columbia Law School where he was notes and comments editor of the Columbia Law Review. During his law school summers he had jobs in Los Angeles and New York. He received his LL.B. in 19635 during the following year he served aslaw clerk to Iudge Paul R. Hays, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. From there he went to Wash- ington to clerk for Mr. Iustice White of the United States Supreme Court from 1964 until he came to Stanford this year. It is apparent that Mr. Collinson is adapting quickly to the outdoor California life-he re- ports that his bridge playing is getting worse, and his tennis playing is getting better. He has a bachlor apartment in Sharon Heights.
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Page 44 text:
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MARC A. FRANKLIN Professor of Law Currently writing a book introducing undergraduates to the legal process, Marc A. Franklin is particularly interested in younger students since the birth of his first son, Ionathan, last August. Aside from his writing and teaching duties at the law school Professor Franklin is active in many university capacities including Chairman of the University Lecture Committee and a member of the larger Committee on Public Exercisesg this last year he was appointed to the Executive Committee of the Stanford Academic Council. During recent summers helhas lectured on Torts for the Bay Area Bar Review Course. Born and raised in New York, Professor Franklin received an A.B. in government H9535 and an LL.B. Cl958j from Cornell University, where he was editor-in-chief of the Cornell Law Quarterly. Following a year of legal practice in New York City, he served as law clerk to Iudge Carroll C. Hincks, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. During l958-59 he was law clerk to the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Iustice of the United States. Before coming to Stanford in l962, Professor Frank- lin taught for three years at Columbia Law School. He and his Wife, Ruth, formerly administrative assistant to the Committee on Inter- national Studies at Stanford, are especially interested in African and South Pacific art, which they have collected in European and American galleries. Limiting his or- ganized athletic endeavors to the annual Student-Faculty baseball game, Professor Franklin can occasionally be seen balancing on the chalk trays while posing an espe- cially difficult Torts problem to his students.
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