STANF D SCHOGE. OF LAW 1969 Published By The Students Of The Stanford School Of Law Co-editors Charles E. Koob William E. Westerbeke fx ,. -I X44 ,aff , ,-.Q 8 ix 'E hw' .-L A I J G I , 4. 5 A LA . I 1 X Ji' W. -3 . :E , x - Q. -.m C: s' , . Q? 51 Six 51335 Q5 143. 1 if 'ii f 'IS , . TABLE GE CONTENTS PHOTO ESSAY T FACULTY 18 STUDENTS 76 ORGANIZATIONS 154 PATRQNS 174 A 3 I Am Young, I Will Live, I Am 13 :. V V I I 1 5 , fy Z 2 I ' if 1 , i ' .,,,.-.---fu , -- fn- trong, I Can G1ve You The Strange Seed Of Day. Know The Way. :rv-1 4 .-fszg' ifyzqiewfg -, e.,., am. 21.144 ,,.f '- M: -1043535 1-: in -:ai ,- Q ,-.-vw. -.,Q,.,.,.4,,. ,. N, a .- ,eQfs,,,.q1.e1 :J-yy, Y' zeovzixf- azz :c : v-ff -ay, , - J, ,. . .- 'uv -.fzmag f 4 .mm f , Q ' Ea? - ' . N-.N ,1 1' C. Q , . 1 , 4 4 V ,2 V V Q as f X R ,A e-fe-ff. -,. jizfa,-.4 5-, ,:,:, M: I . .v gwagzt , iv, lea , . f. Q X 7 , .,.,.,.,,. e Z . -- K 4.5 , 5,2 W2 N r W r f ,Q f L 4 2 7 f f a? if fit 1 ' -- ' 4: ' - M. 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I 3 'P 'N -x 0 4 E w iht mu 2 Lb 0 Qi .1' 1 IW! fn Y Z C L E U 5 N E 9' 3 3 No'n-me To GETO I THINK 'S 'N My TREE' ,K I Mem 'T Z E 0 Z U ABOUT- K SVP-AWBERRY Faews FoP.eveI2.w.-1: 2 cw-se ' lm some -ro -me S1-n,a,wBefzny Fcews. we No'r'+-uric as asm., 23 KENNETH S. PITZER President of ,the University Stanford welcomes Kenneth S. Pitzer as the new President of the University. Mr. Pitzer is not new to California, however, for he was born, raised and educated here, receiving his B.S. from California Institute of Technology in 1935 and his Ph.D. from Berkeley in 1937. He also holds an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Wesleyan University H9621 and an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Berkeley Cl963j. He taught at Berkeley from 1937 until 1961 where he served on the influential Faculty Committee on Committees and the Budget Committee. He was assistant dean of letters and science during 1947-48 and dean of the College of Chemistry from 1951 until 1960. In 1961 he became the President of Rice University. During his presidency Rice experienced remarkable growth in the size of the faculty, in undergraduate enrollment, in graduate enrolhnent, in the number of Ph.D.'s conferred, and in the number of honors received by graduating students. Mr. Pitzer also has made a name for himself as a man who understands students and social needs. During his presidency new programs were introduced at Rice to create greater involvement between the University and the community, and in 1964 a long-standing ban oniintegration was defeated by court order. Thus President Pitzer comes to Stanford well equipped to handle the needs of the modern university. President Pitzer's list of memberships is long and prestigous and in part includes membership in the American Chemical Society, the Faraday Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Philosophical Society. He is a trustee of Pitzer College and the Rand Corporation, and he is a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. President Pitzer and his wife, Jean, have three children: a daughter and two sons The students of the Stanford Law School welcome President Pitzer and offer theif support and cooperation, Robert Glaser is a member of that class of unsung heroes in the field of educational administration whose titles are prefixed with that onerous six-letter word acting None of the fanfare accompanying a departing or incoming university president is given to the man who bears the burdens of the 'flnterregnumf' yet the mere brevity of tenure does not in any manner lessen the responsibilities and magnitude of the problems. However, the smooth-functioning of the educational machine fondly known as Stanford University during the period between the departure of former President Wallace Sterling and the arrival of President Kenneth Pitzer should be held to be a tribute to Robert Glaser, Dean of the Stanford. University School of Medicine. Raised in Missouri, Dr. Glaser received his S.B. in 1940 and M.D. magna cum laude in 1943 from Harvard University. After serving his internship and residency at the Barnes Hospital and the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, he taught at Washington University in St. Louis, where he served as associate dean of the Medical School from 1955 until 1957. He then went to the University of Colorado as dean of the School of Medicine, but 1963 he returned to Boston to become president of the Affiliated Hospital Center and to serve as professor of social medicine at Harvard. In 1965 Dr. Glaser came to Stanford and the progress of the School of Medicine since then has been a matter of public record of which the entire university should be proud. Dr. Glaser is President of the Association of American Medical Colleges, an appointee to the National Advisory Committee on Higher Education, and a member of the 21-man Board of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. The proverbial woman behind the great man in this instance is his wife, Helen, also a medical doctorq The Glasers have three children - Sally, Joseph and Robert. ROBERT J. GLASER Acting President of the University September 1968 - December 1968 BAYLESS A. MANNING Dean and Professor of Law A small town product, Dean Bayless Manning prefers verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. He is brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why is no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, Dean Manning took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. He translated Japanese for the Signal Corps during World War II. After the war. Dean Manning edited the Yale Law Journal and then clerked for Mr. Justice Reed. As a result of a telephone call, he says, Dean Manning left a six year Cleveland law practice in 1956 to teach at Yale Law School where he could get involved in municipal problems. After a stint as George Bal1's assistant at the State Department, he took on the Deanship at Stanford in 1964. Before that Dean Manning had only glimpsed California. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, Dean Manning seeks to foster social change with the same drive he brings to experimentation in legal education. Dean Manning often speaks of lawyers as the last of the generalists --part philosopher, part manager--who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. He is speakingof himself. As Associate Dean of the law school, Keith Mann has primary responsibility for implementing faculty decisions in the area of academic affairs. Besides his administrative duties, Dean Mann teaches a seminar in labor-management relations, a subject in which he has had extensive practical experience, having served by presidential appointment as a mediator in numerous national labor disputes. Dean Mann was born in Illinois in 1924. After serving with the United States Naval Intelligence, he received a B.S. in Far Eastern Studies in 1948 and an LL.B. in 1949 from Indiana University, where he was a member of the board of editors of the Indiana Law Journal Following graduation he served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Rutledge and Mr. Justice Minton of the United States Supreme Court. He practiced law in Washington, D.C. and served as Special Assistant to the Chairman of the Wage Stabilization Board in 1951. In 1952, after a year of the law faculty of the University of Wisconsin, he came to Stanford. He has been associate dean since 1961. He served as visiting professor at Chicago in 1953, and as Sunderland Fellow at Michigan in 1959-60. He and his wife, Virginia, have five children ranging in age from four to seventeen. J. KEITH MANN Associate Dean and Professor of Law THOMAS E. HEADRICK A ssistant Dean As special assistant to Dean Manning for a whole range of projects - one of which is the advance planning for the new law school - Thomas Headrick characterizes his duties as anything once, nothing twice. Hidden away in a tiny office in the old business school so that nothing of the routine and ordinary will interrupt his concentration on special projects, Dean Headrick qualifies easily as Stanford's candidate for the Mission Impossible team, and this conclusion seems to be well substantiated by his background. Valedictorian of the class of 1955 at Franklin and Marshall Colle ,-5EMir1Headrick majored in government and was an All-American nominee in soccer. He spent two years at Oxford as a Fulbright Scholar, receiving a B.Litt. in 1958. He returned to Yale where he earned an LL.B. in 1960. While at Yale he spent a summer as research assistant to then-Professor Bayless Manning. He was clerk to Judge Foster of the Supreme Court of Washington from 1960 until 1961, and then he practiced law with the San Francisco firm of Pillsbury, Madison and Sutro from 1961 until 1964. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 1966, Dean Headrick spent two years in London as a management consultant. He is the author of The Town Clerk in English Local Government, and co-author of The Legal Key to International Trade and Investigation. He and his wife, Maggie, have two children: Trevor, 8, and Todd, 6. Assistant Dean Robert Keller has responsibility within the administration for alumni relations and the fiscal affairs of the law school. In this role he is in charge of both fund raising and disbursement, as well as relations between the school and alumni societies throughout the United States. In 1951 Dean Keller received a Bachelor of Business Administration in accounting from the University of Oklahoma in his native state. After serving with the United States Navy from 1951 until 1955, the last two years with the Navy Hydrographic Office in Washington, D.G., he came to Stanford and earned his LL. B. in 1958. While in law school he was a member of the board of editors of the Stanford Law Review He practiced law from 1958 until 1965 with the San Francisco firm of Orrick, Herrington, Rowley Sc Sutcliffe, concentrating on antitrust and public utilities law and general corporate litigation. He became assistant dean in 1965. ROBERT A. KELLER A ssistant Dean THOMAS E. ROBINSON Assistant Dean Thomas Robinson was born in Nebraska in 1933. He attended Yale University and received his B.A. in politics and economics in 1957 and his LL.B. in 1961. He fulfilled his military obligation as an officer in the United States Coast Guard from 1959 to 1960, assigned to sea duty in the North Atlantic. After practicing law in Washington, D.C. from 1961 to 1963, he left private practice to become a legislative assistant to the Subcommittee on Improvements in Judicial Machinery of the Senate Judiciary Committee. In 1964 he came to Stanford as assistant to the dean, and he became Assistant Dean in January, 1967. As Assistant Dean, Mr. Robinson directs the law school admission program and also administers financial aids. He and his wife, Alice, live in Sharon Heights. Thelton Henderson is new this year to Stanford. Born in Shreveport, Louisiana in 1933, he grew up in Los Angeles and received his B.A. in political science from Berkeley in 1956. He then spent two years in the army as a clinical psychology technician and one year working as a research scientist and as a professional musician in order to earn the money to go to law school. In 1962 he received his J .D. from Boalt Hall School of Law at Berkeley. After one year of working in the Civil Rights Division of the United States Justice Department, he practiced law in Oakland, and then in 1966 he became the directing attorney of the East Bayshore Neighborhood Legal Center in Menlo Park. Dean Henderson spends half of his time working for the law school as the Coordinator of Legal Opportunities Program, the minority recruitment program, the Stanford Legal Aid Program, and the Civil Rights Research Council, among others. He also assists in teaching the course in trial advocacy. The other half of his day is devoted to the East Palo Alto Neighborhood Center. The scope and responsibilities of his duties give Dean Henderson, in effect, two full time positions rather than the official part timew positions. Dean Henderson somehow is able to find time to devote to a number of outside activities, such as Herbert Hoover Boys' Club of Menlo Park, the Volunteer Bureau of Alameda County, the Berkeley and Menlo Park branches of the NAACP, and the Green Power Foundation, Inc. He also is a consultant for the United States Commission on Civil Rights. Rumor has it that he also plays a very good folk and blues guitar. THELTON E. HENDERSON A ssistant Dean BRUCE H. HASENKAMP A ssistant Dean Bruce Hasenkamp, one of the two recent additions to the administration of the law school, comes to Stanford this year from New York, where he was practicing law. Born in New York, he received an A.B. in history in 1960 from Dartmouth and an LL.B. in 1963 from Stanford, where he ran the mock trials for the Moot Court Board. After law school he practiced law in New York for six months before going into the army as an officer. He was stationed primarily in Korea, where he worked as a Personnel Management Officer, Adjutant, Company Commander, and Legal Assistance Officer of the 8th U.S. Army Support Command. In December 1966 he returned to New York to practice law until May 1968, when he came to Stanford. At Stanford Dean Hasenkamp's duties include coordinating between the law school and the students, Director of Placement, liaison with bar associations, and assisting in the admissions program. His deep involvement in the many aspects of student life at the law school enables better communicationfbetweene students and the administration and faculty. Dean Hasenkampis personal interests include travel, music, and art. Upon completion of his military service he traveled extensively in Europe and Russia. He finds Stanford close enough to San Francisco to enable his attending the opera regularly. His Korean ceramics collection is said to be one of the two or three best private collections in the country. Two factors indicate a long stay for Dean Hasenkamp at Stanford. First, he has recently purchased a beautiful home in the hills behind Stanford, and, second, it is rumored that Marjorie Manning is designing a beard for him. Although the beard may simply serve to make him even more acceptable to the students, one cannot rule out the possibility that the beard will have an adverse affect on the number of new job offers made to Dean Hasenkamp. Born in Missouri in 1937, Professor Ayer received his A.B. in politics and economics in 1959 and his LL.B. ir1 1962 from Yale University. While in law school he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal. The following year he served as law clerk to Judge Charles E. Clark of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. In 1963-64 he was a Fulbright scholar at the University of Stockholm and then returned to New York to practice law with the law firm of Debevoise, Plimpton, Lyons 8L Gates, where he remained until he came to Stanford. Professor Ayer joined the law faculty at Stanford in 1966. He has taught Legal Process, Civil Procedure, Administrative Law, Labor Law, and Legislation. In addition, he is engaged in a study of condemnation procedure as a part of a comprehensive survey of eminent domain law by the California Law Revision Commission. Professor Ayer's wife, Barbara, has been an active member of the Stanford community, and again this year she is co-sponsor of the Law Wives. The Ayers live in Menlo Park. DOUGLAS R. AYER Associate Professor of Law WAYNE G. BARNETT Professor of Law Wayne Barnett joined the Stanford law faculty in 1966 after having spent a number of years in both private practice and government service. After receiving an A.B. in economics in 1950 from Harvard College, he stayed on in Cambridge to study law, serving as articles editor of the Harvard Law Review and receiving an LL.B. in 1953. Professor Barnett was law clerk to Mr. Justice Harlan of the United States Supreme Court in 1955-56, and then he practiced with the Washington fimi of Covington and Burljng for two years. In 1958 he left private practice to become an Assistant to the Solicitor General of the United States. In this capacity Mr. Barnett and his eight colleagues in the office had the responsibility for arguing cases before the Supreme Court on behalf of the United States, and also for authorizing appeals in cases lost by the government in a lower court or agency. Mr. Barnett left the Solicitor General's office in 1965 to become the First Assistant in the Office of the Legal Counsel for the Department of Justice. In 1966 he yielded to the temptation to try his hand at teaching and joined the Stanford law faculty. He teaches primarily in the area of contracts and taxation. He is well qualified to lead his students down the Socratic path of case analysisg he argued many of the cases himself before the United States Supreme Court. The Barnetts have five children ranging from age 11 downward to age 5, and they live in a home on the campus. William Baxter is a native of New York City, but must be classified as a Californian by association. He was a Stanford undergraduate and received an A.B. in 1951. When it came to the study of law, he again chose Stanford, earning an LL.B. in 1956 after serving as comments editor of the Stanford Law Review. He stayed on at the law school as an associate professor until 1958 when he took a position with Covington and Burling in Washington, D.C. He remained in the Capitol for two years, returning to Stanford in 1960. In 1964-65 he was a visiting professor of law at Yale. No student who has encountered him need be reminded of Professor Baxter's keen mind and his thorough knowledge of the intricacies of Regulated Industries and Antitrust Law. In addition to these areas of special interest, he teaches with an equal degree of competence in administrative law, federal jurisdiction, and legal process. He acts as a legal consultant to various companies both in California and in other states and to the Federal Aviation Agency - for whom he has been conducting a special study of ways to minimize the social cost of airplane noise. The Baxters have three children - two boys, 15 and ll, and a girl, 13. Mrs. Baxter busies herself with painting and politicsg she also gives considerable time to promotional efforts on behalf of the Stanford Repertory Theater. Professor Baxter admits to only two hobbies: Good bridge and mediocre golf. There are few reports about the latter, but interested observers report that his bridge is very good. WILLIAM F. BAXTER Professor of Law MAURO CAPPELLETT I Visiting Professor of Law A visiting member of the faculty during the Fall Term of this year, Mauro Cappelletti is a noted scholar, having written several volumes and a number of articles. Along with John Merryman and Joseph Perillo, he co-authored The Italian Legal System, the standard text used in the Civil Law class at Stanford. Muchfofhiiwork has been translated into several languages, and some of his articles have appeared in various American law reviews. Professor Cappelletti was born at Folgaria, Italy, in 1927. While a student, he studied philosophy and the humanities, graduating in law from the University of Florence in 1951. He practiced law in fltaly until 1955. From 1955 to 1957, he did research on a fellowship at the University of Freiburg in Germany. He first taught civil procedure and evidence at the University of Macerata until 1963, when he assumed his duties as a professor of law and as director of the Institute of Comparative Law at the University of Florence. Professor Cappelletti has a wife, Carla, who has charmed the members of his Civil law class this year, and a very alert daughter, Matelda, who is 7. Like most Italians, he likes wine, women and song. When asked what he liked best about Stanford, he replied, The girls in my class. For recreation, he heads for the mountains to ski and hike. When William Cohen was a child, he convinced his parents that all the action was in Southern California. They accommodated him by moving to Los Angeles area, Where, except for brief excursions outside the megagopolis, he has lived there ever since. Mr. Cohen has been a visiting professor of torts and federal jurisdiction during the autumn semester. Professor Cohen is an alumnus of the University of California at Los Angeles, where he received his A.B. and his LL.B. He was Editor-in-Chief of the UCLA. Law Review in 1955. From 1955 to 1957 he served as a lw clerk for Justice William O. Douglas of the United States Supreme Court. Of this experience, I wouldn't have missed it for anythingg I wouldn't do it again for the worldf' He then taught for three years at the University of Minnesota Law School, and in 1960 he returned to U.C.L.A. to join the law faculty and has been there ever since. His principal subjects are torts, constitutional law, and federal jurisdiction. Professor Cohen currently is one of the six reporters for the California Joint Legislative Committee for the Revision of the Penal Code. He is also Chairman of the Committee on Supreme Court Decisions of the Association of American Law Schools, a position which requires that he write a memorandum on every pending case. The Cohens and their three children returned to Los Angeles in December, 1968. Stanford students found Professor Cohen to be an entertaining and provocative person, both in and out of class. WILLIAM COHEN Visiting Professor of Law DALE S. COLLINSON Associate Professor of Law Dale Collinson was born in Oklahoma in 1938. He went 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 Occidentale 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, and he received his LL.B. in 1963. During the following year he served as law clerk to Judge Paul R. Hays of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. From there he went to Washington to clerk for Mr. Justice White of the United States Supreme Court from 1964 until he came to Stanford in 1966. At Stanford Professor Collinson has taught courses in international business transactions, trusts and estates, estate planning, law and the institutions of the European communities, and admiralty. Next year Mr. Collinson plans to do researchgin Brussels, Belgium. Perhaps his research will be on the international implications of the adage that two can live as cheaply as onevg Mr. Collinson is getting married in June. Aaron Director has been Scholar-in-Residence at the Stanford Law School since 1965. He is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago School of Law. Mr. Director obtained a Ph.B. in economics from Yale in 1924. The principal subjects on which his work is focused are Competition and Monopoly, and Industrial Organization. AARON DIRECTOR Scholar in Residence THOMAS EHRLICH Professor of Law Thomas Ehrlich joined the State Department as Special Assistant to the Legal Advisor during the Kennedy Administration in October 1962. He there worked on such diverse problems as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Panama dispute, the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty, and arbitration of a civil-aviation question with France. The year prior to Professor Ehrlich's coming to Stanford in 1965, he served as Special Assistant to Under Secretary of State George Ball. i Born in Massachusetts in 1934, Professor Ehrlich received an ATBfl..T1 government f1956j and an LL.B. H9591 from Harvard. He served as law clerk to Judge Learned Hand, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and practiced law for two years in Milwaukee. He was the United States contributor to the International Law Reports and is the Chairman of the Study of Education at Stanford Subcommittee on Study Abroad. Professor Ehrlich and his wife, Ellen, spent a month last summer in Latin America in connection with the Law School's program for Chilean law professors. He is co-author of a three-volume work in international law, International Legal Process, published last fall. A tennis and camping enthusiast. Professor Ehrlich also sails a sloop named Sabbatical,,' which he owns jointly with Dean Manning. Mrs. Ehrlich is active in the Parent-Teacher Association and other community activities. The Ehrliches are the parents of three children: David, 9, Elizabeth, 6, and Paul, 2. Currently sporting a beard which which is the envy of all except possibly Professor Sher, Marc Franklin is particularly interested in younger students. He is working on a book introducing undergraduates to the legal process. Professor Franklin is active in many university activities including the Executive Committee of the Stanford Academic Council and the Committee of Fifteen. During recent summers he has lectured on Torts for the Bay Area Review Course. Born and raised in New York, Professor Franklin received an A.B. in government in 1953 and an LL.B. in 1956 from Cornell University, Where he was editor-in-chief of the Cornell Law Quarterbl. Following a year of legal practice in New York City, he served as law clerk to Judge Carroll C. Hincks of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. During 1958-59 he was law clerk to the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States. Before coming to Stanford in 1962, Professor Franklin taught for three years at Columbia Law School. He and his wife, Ruth, formerly administrative assistant to the Committee of International Studies at Stanford, are especially interested in African and South Pacific art. Limiting his athletic endeavors to the annual Student-Faculty baseball game, Professor Franklin can occasionally be seen balancing on the chalk tray While posing an especially difficult problem to his students. MARC A. FRANKLIN Professor of Law JACK H. F RIEDENTHAL Professor of Law The Priedenthals and their three children, Ellen, 5, Amy, 4, and Mark,2, returned from London last summer after a six month stay. During this time Professor Friedenthal studied the manner in which several western European countries have attempted to solve the housing problems of their low-income citizens. The knowledge gained through this study will be incorporated into the Stanford program concerning the legal problems of the poor. Professor Friedenthal and his wife can both claim Stanford as their alma mater. He earned a B.A. in economics in 1953 and his wife was a member of the law school class of 1960. Professor Friedenthal earned his LL.B. from Harvard in 1958, where he served as developments editor of the Harvard Law Review. He returned to Stanford as a member of the law faculty in 1958 and has 'taught here since that time, In 1965 he was visiting associate professor at the Michigan Law School. Professor Friedenthal teaches primarily in the fields of civil procedure, evidence, family law, and social welfare legislation. He has just completed a casebook and supplement in civil procedure. Although he modestly declines to take credit for it, he was instrumental in setting up the legal aid program which now involves so many Stanford law students in community service. A youthful-looking man with a subtle sense of humor, Lawrence Friedman joins the Stanford law faculty this year as a professor of law. He brings with him a highly impressive list of writings. In addition to authoring Contract Law in America: A Social and Economic Case Study H9651 and Government and Slum Housing: A Century of Frustration 09681, Professor Friedman has published thirty-six law review articles. One look at his office will show that the list of publications will continue to grow, and he is currently working in collaboration with Professor Stewart Macauley of the University of Wisconsin on a source book, Law and the Behavioral Sciences. Professor Friedman was born in Chicago in 1930 and received an A.B. in 1948, a J.D. in 1951, and an M.LL. in 1957 from the University of Chicago. From 1957 until 1961 he taught at St. Louis University Law School, and from 1961 until 1968 he was a member of the law faculty at the University of Wisconsin Law school. He was a visiting professor of law at Stanford two years ago. At Stanford he will be teaching primarily in the area of law and social science and social legislation. Professor Friedman and his wife, Leah, have two children - Jane, 10, and Amy, 7. LAWRENCE M. FRIEDMAN Professor of Law RALPH J OCELYN GAMPELL Lecturer in Law The only member of the faculty to hold both a medical and a legal degree is Ralph Gampell. Born in England in 1916, Dr. Gampell received hiseducation in medicine at the University of Manchester, taking an M.B., Ch.B. in 1940. For five years thereafter he was a medical officer with the Royal Air Force in China, Burma, and India. He practiced general medicine in England from 1946 toX1949, and in the United States beginning in 1949. He received an LL.B. from Stanford in 1957, and then maintained both a medical and legal practice until 1965. Since 1965 he has practice only law, specializing in personal injury litigation. At Stanford he has been a part time lecturer on Medical-Legal Problems since 1958. A frequent contributor to medical journals until 1965, Dr. Garnpell was a member of the Governor's 'Committee on Abortions, and with Professor Packer prepared the definitive study of the state of therapeutic abortions. As for the value of having degrees in both fields he ,feelsit is of assistance in personal injury work and in teaching, but aside from those two specialized areas totally valuelessf' Dr. Gampellis wife, Margaret, graduated from thhe Stanford Law School in January 1968. The Gampells and their six children live in Los Altos Hills. Robert Girard was born in Washington in 1931. He received his B.A. in 1953 from the University of Washington and his LL.B. from Harvard in 1956, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. Before coming to Stanford in 1958 he clerked for Mr. Justice Hugo Black of the United States Supreme Court. He was a visiting professor at the Harvard Law School in 1963-64. In addition to his principal field of torts, Professor Girard has taught courses in contracts, constitutional law, civil rights, land use controls, and law and the political process. In addition to publications with the Buffalo Law Review and the Stanford Law Review his current research includes areas such as Federal Constitutional Questions in Bay Area Regional Government, and Financing of Political Campaigns, and Revision of California Constitutional Provisions Relating to Political Campaigns, and Revision of California Constitutional Provisions Relating to Political Activity and Elections. On his sabbatical leave in 1965-66, Mr. Girard spent his time studying areas of European constitutional law and church-state relationships in particular. He also serves as director of the Associated Regional Citizens, an Organization promoting conservation of natural resources. The Girards have three children: two boys, 12 and 8, and a girl, 6. ROBERT A. GIRARD Professor of Law GERALD GUNTHER Professor of Law Professor Gunther is the author of many distinguished works in history and law. He has been designated the biographer of Judge Learned Hand. As one of the eight Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Scholars, he is currently writing a volume on the Marshall Court for the multi-volume history of the United States Supreme Court. He is co-editor of Selected Essays on Constitutional Law, and he is currently preparing the eighth edition of Dowling and Gunther, Cases ana' Materials on Constitutional Law. Professor Gunther has also contributed regularly to legal periodicals. Professor Gunther was born in Germany in 1927. He took an A.B. in political science from Brooklyn College in 1949, an M.A. in public law and government from Columbia in 1950, and an LL.B. from Harvard in 1953. At Harvard he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review for two years. In 1949, 1950 and 1951 he taught political science at Brooklyn College and at City College of New York. He served as a law clerk to Judge Learned Hand of the United States Supreme Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from 1953 to 1954 and as law clerk to the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1954 to 1955. During the following year he practiced law in New York City with the firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Friendly 8a Hamilton, and then he joined the law faculty of Columbia Laww School, where from 1957 until 1959 he served as director of the Columbia Federal Courts History Project. In 1962 Professor Gunther came to Stanford and in 1962-63 he was a Guggenheim Fellow. Professor Gunther, his wife, Barbara, and their two children, Dan and Andy, spent the 1966-67 academic year on leave in London, where Mr. Gunther worked on a comparative study of the constitutional law of selected European countries. Moffatt Hancock is the only law school professor to have held two named professorships at Stanford: since 1962 he has been Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Lawg before that he was elected Red Hot Prof of 1961. An expert in the fields of property, jurisprudence, legal history, and conflict of laws, he is the author of Torts in the Conflict of Laws 09421. He spent the academic year of 1965-66 on leave under a Guggenheim Fellowship writing a series of law review articles in the field of conflict of laws and revising his contributions to the Encyclopedia Brittanica. He has recently been working on two articles for Canadian law reviews supporting a draft Unjorm Foreign Torts Act. Professor Hancock is the holder of a B.A. from the University of Toronto 09335, an LL.B. from Osgoode Hall Law School 09365, and an S.J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School 09401. He has taught at the University of Toronto, the Dalhousie Law School, where he was Viscount Bennett Professor of Law, and the University of Southern California, He came to Stanford in 1953. A devoted family man, Professor Hancock takes great pride in seeing the development of his two children - Cathy, 17, and Graeme,14. His wife, Eileen, keeps herself very active as Director of the Volunteer Bureau, while Professor Hancock pursues his hobby of taking prize-winning photographs of the Stanford campus, some of which grace the Vrooman Room and the pages of the Law School yearbooks. MOFFATT HANCOCK Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law JOHN BINGHAM HURLBUT Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law Giddy,l' says Professor John Bingham Hurlburt, is the way I feel when I think of all the students I've worked with over the years. f'Giddy is what he says, but there is deep pride in this devoted teacher's eyes as he recalls the now countless students he has helped fashion in the law. Professor Hurlbut earned an A.B. in political science in 1928 from the University of Southern California, an M.A. in political science in 1929 from Stanford, and an LL.B. in 1934 from Stanford. He and Professor Vernier were the co-authors of American Family Law, Volume IIL He practiced law in Los Angeles from 1934 until 1937 and then he returned to Stanford. In 1960-61 he was Fulbright Lecturer in Law at the University of Tokyo and at the Japanese Supreme Court's Legal Training and Research Institute. His teaching career was interrupted for three years by the United States Navy during World War II. Active as the faculty's representative to the Pacific Conference, Mr. Hurlbut has also served as Vice President of the N.C.A.A. A rugged sportsman himself, Mr. Hurlbut has fished the game waters of California, Alaska and British Columbia many times. It seems only natural, then, that this man of action looks for something more in his students than technical competence. He notes that a capacity for human insight is as important as any other quality for a practicing lawyer who is called upon to sort out the confusion of people's affairs. Next year's Stanford class will, like so many in the past, be enriched by Professor Hurlbut's teaching craft. But first, says John Bingham Hurlbut, Fd like to take that shee fish up in the Alaskan Arctic. No doubt, he will. As Stanford's law librarian, Professor Jacobstein is responsible for the develop- ment and administration of the law library and its staff. In addition to this sizable task, he serves as editor of the Index to Periodical Articles Related to Law and has recently completed and published a Water Law Bibliography for which he will continue to publish an annual supplement. Professor Jacobstein was born in Michigan in 1920 and received his B.A. in history from Wayne State University in 1946, his M.S. in library science from Columbia University in 1950, and his LL.B. from Chicago-Kent School of Law in 1953, where he was an editor of the Chicago-Kent Law Review, He served as assistant law librarian at the University of Illinois from 1953 until 1955, as assistant law librarian at Columbia University from 1955 until 1959, and as law librarian and professor of law at the University of Colorado from 1960 until 1963. In 1963 he came to Stanford as law librarian and professor of law. The Jacobsteins have two children, a daughter, 17, and a son, 12, and their home is in the Pine Hill area on the campus. Professor Jacobstein is a member of the American Association of Law Librarians, the American Documentation Institute, and the American Society for International Law. J .MYRON JACOBSTEIN Law Librarian and Professor of Law JOHN KAPLAN Professor of Law John Kaplan was born in New York flong agoj. After graduating in 1951 from Harvard with an A.B. in physics, but realizing that there was little future in science, he found a job as editor of the Harvard Law Review and received an LL.B. in 1954. Since then he has served as clerk to Mr. Justice Clark of the United States Supreme Court, studied criminology in Vienna, Austria, and worked with the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, first as a Special Assistant to the Attorney General assigned to Chicago and later as an Assistant United States Attorney in San Francisco. In 1961 he went to the Hudson Institute as a research analyst, and then he spent two years as a member of the law faculty at Northwestern University Law School. Before joining the law faculty at Stanford in 1965, he was visiting professor of law at Boalt Hall. Currently he is one of six California Penal Code Reporters. Next year he will be on sabbatical leave at the Institute for Study of Drug Dependence in England. Professor Kaplan has been a frequent contributor to legal periodicals, especially in the area of school desegregation. He is the author of The Trz21l of Jack Ruby and a co-author of a recent casebook on Evidence. He plans to publish a study of the problems of drug abuse. The Kaplans have three children. Reliable reports indicate that Mr. Kaplanls son took him trick or treating this past fall. John wore a Tiger suit. Professor Leon Lipson comes to Stanford this year from the Yale Law School. Born in Massachusetts in 1921, he earned his A.B. from Harvard in 1941, his M.A. from Harvard in 1943, his LL.B. from Harvard in 1949, and his second M.A. from Yale in 1960. He has worked as a news editor for a Boston radio station, as an analyst for the Foreign Economics Administration, as a policy and liaison officer for the Economic Division of the Office of Military Government in Berlin, Germany, and, after becoming a member of both the New York and Washington, D.C. bars, as an associate in a New York law firm. In 1957 he joined the faculty of the Yale Law School. In 1959 he became an advisor to the United States Mission to the United Nations, and in 1965 he became the Assistant Provost of Yale University. An authority ir1 international law and a linguist fluent in numerous languages, Professor Lipson was the chairman of the American Bar Association Committee on Soviet Law from 1957 to 1959, a member reporter for the Committee on the Law of Outer Space from 1958 to 1960, and chairman of the International Law Association Air and Space Law Committee from 1961 to 1965. He is also a member of the American Society of International Law. In 1961 he and Nicholas Katzenbach published a book entitled Report on the Law of Outer Space, and he has been a prolific contributor to books and legal publications. At Stanford Professor Lipson has been teaching courses on international law and Soviet law as well as being active in the Stanford International Society. We sincerely wish Professor Lipson, his wife Dorothy, and his three children James, Abigail, and Michael a pleasant year at Stanford. LEON S. LIPSON Visiting Professor of Law JAMES K. LOGAN Visiting Professor of Law Born in Quenomo, Kansas in 1929, James K. Logan received an A.B. in economics in 1952 from the University of Kansas. After turning down a Rhodes Scholarship, he attended Harvard Law School, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. After receiving his LL.B. in 1955, he worked as a law clerk to Judge Walter A. Huxrnan of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals during 1955-56, and he practiced law with Gibson, Dunn 8: Crutcher in Los Angeles during 1956-57. From 1957 until 1961 he was Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Kansas Law School, and in 1961 he became Dean and Professor of Law at the University of Kansas Law School. In 1961-62 he was the Ezra Ripley Thayer Teaching Fellow at Harvard Law School, and in 1964 he was a visiting professor of law at the University of Texas Law School. During the Spring semester this year he is a visiting professor here at Stanford, teaching Property and Advanced Estate Planning. In addition to having published more than thirty law review articles, Professor Logan has co-authored with Professor Leach of Harvard the casebook Future Interests and Estate Planning, which is used in approximately fifty law schools. He has also edited Kansas Estate Adrninistration for the Kansas Bar. He is currently working on a supplement to his casebook, anarticle on estate planning, and a book on Kansas corporate practice for the Kansas Bar. Professor Logan lists his hobbies as politics, coin collecting, writing, and golf. In June 1968, after the assassination of the late Senator Kennedy, he resigned his position at the University of Kansas Law School to enter the Democratic primary for Senator of the United States from Kansas and, despite only seven weeks of campaigning, he was only narrowly defeated. After this semester at Stanford, Professor Logan will return to Kansas to practice law with the Olatha firm of Payne and J ones. Professor J ohn. McDonough returned from a leave from the law school in January 1969, after serving as Assistant Deputy Attorney General of the United States, a post which he held from the summer of 1967 until December 1968. Professor McDonough has always taken a vital interest in improving the law and the administration of justice. Working toward this end, he has served as a member of the California Law Revision Commission, the American Law Institute, and the Judicial Conference of the Ninth Circuit. First as Executive Secretary, then as a member, and finally as Chairman, he worked on the seven-year task of revamping the California Evidence Code, enacted by the Legislature in 1965. Before departing for Washington, D.C., Mr. McDonough was active in local politics, serving as Co-Chairman of the Santa Clara County Committee to Re-elect Governor Brown. In January 1967 he was elected President of the Palo Alto-Stanford Democratic Council. Born and raised in the Northwest,Professor McDonough attended the University of Washington and received an LL.B. from Columbia University in 1946, after serving as note editor of the Columbia Law Review. At Stanford as an assistant professor, he helped found the Stanford Law Review in 1948. After practicing with the San Francisco firm of Brobeck, Phleger 8L Harrison, Professor McDonough returned to Stanford in 1952. From 1962 until 1964 he served as acting dean of the law school. He and his wife, Margaret, have two children-Jana, 12, and John, 8. JOHN R. McDONOUGH Professor of Law GERALD M. MEIER Cooperating Professor of International Economics Gerald Meier is a member of the faculty of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and serves in the Law School in the capacity of Cooperating Professor of International Economics. In addition to his duties at the Business School, Mr. Meier conducts joint teaching and research with members of the law faculty in the field of international economics, trade, and development. Professor Meier was born in Washington in 1923 and earned a B.A. in social science from Reed College in 1947. A Rhodes Scholar from 1948 until 1950 and again in 1950-51, he received a B.Litt. from Oxford in 1952 and a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1953. He taught at Williams College from 1952 until 1954, before joining the economics faculty at Wesleyan University. From 1955 until 1961, while at Wesleyan, Mr. Meier served as a visiting member of the Yale economics faculty, in 1957-58 he was a Guggenheim Fellow, and in 1961-62 he was a Brookings National Research Professor of Economics. He came to the Stanford Graduate School of Business as professor of international economics in 1963. Professor John Henry Merryman, a native of Oregon, earned a B.S. from the University of Portland in 1943, an M.S. from Notre Dame in 1944, and a J.D. from Notre Dame in 1947, where he graduated first in his class and served as editor-in-chief of the Notre Dame Lawyer. After being a member of the law faculty of the University of Santa Clara for several years, he eamed a J .S .D. from New York University. Mr. Merryman came to Stanford in 1953. He was a visiting professor at the University of Rome in 1963-64, at the Center of Planning and Economic Research in Athens in 1964, and at the Faculty of Law of the University of Naples in 1967. This year he is on leave to do research at the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg, Germany. Although Professor Merryman long concentrated on the area of property law, he introduced to Stanford the study of foreign legal systems. Diverging from the traditional approach of using French and German backgrounds, he has specialized in the Italian system. Along with a professor from the University of Florence and a professor from Fordham University, he has published an introductory book on the Italian legal system. He is also directing a project for modernizing the Chilean system of legal education, and he has also been working of a study of the legal problems of Bolivia's international transportation system. Professor Merryman reports that he has a tolerant wife, three stepsons, two dogs, and an unsound golf swingf' He plays the piano, is an only partially reformed Jazz musician, and digs acid rock. He also serves on the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California. JOHN HENRY MERRYMAN Professor of Law CHARLES J. MEYERS Professor of Law In 1946, while a first-year law student at the University of Texas, Charles Meyers wandered by mistake into a senior class taught by Professor Howard Williams. Williams was tougher then, Meyers reports. Nevertheless, he continued on to become an expert in oil and gas law, to co-author with his mentor Oil and Gas Law, Manual of Oil and Gas Annotated, and Cases on Oil and Gas Law, and to serve with Professor Williams on the law faculties of Columbia and Stanford. An active supporter of fair housing, he serves as legal consultant to the Midpeninsula Citizens for Fair Housing. As a teacher, he feels his chief goal is the indication of tolerance, a willingness to understand the opposite side whether you agree or not - a very unpopular idea these days. Born in Texas in 1925, Professor Meyers received a B.A. in English literature from Rice Institute in 1949, the same year receiving an LL.B. from the University of Texas, where he was comments editor of the University of Texas Law Review. He earned an LL.M. in 1953 and a J.S.D. in 1964 from Columbia. He served as an Ensign in the United States Navy from 1945 to 1946. He practiced law in Austin, Texas, in 1951-52. A teaching fellow in English at Texas while in law school, he was a member of that school's law faculty from 1951 until 1954, and of the law faculty at Columbia from 1954 until 1962. He has been professor of law at Stanford since 1962 and has served as visiting professor at Cornell, Michigan, Minnesota, and Utah. He was Stanford's Red Hot Prof in 1963 - nthe best position because bought - strictly cash. Professor Meyers is on leave this year, teaching in Santiago, Chile under the auspices of the Ford Foundation. He is married to the former Pamela Adams and has two children: George, 12, and Katherine, 10. Professor Packer was born in New Jersey in 1925 and received a B.A. in government and international relations in 1944 and an LL.B. in 1949 from Yale, where he was article editor of the Yale Law Journal. After serving as la.W clerk to Judge Thomas W. Swan of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in 1949-50, he practiced law with the Washington, D.C. firm now known as Wilmer, Cutler 8a Pickering. In 1956 he joined the Stanford faculty. From 1961 to 1963 Mr. Packer served on the Attorney General's Committee on Poverty and Federal Criminal Justice, and since 1964 he has been a reporter for the revision of the California Penal Code. As Chairman of the Law School Curriculum Committee he was largely responsible for the introduction of the semester system at the law school in 1965. In November 1966 he was appointed Vice-Provost of the University for Academic Planning and Programs. Despite this demanding position, he manages to teach a colloquium in the law school. Professor Packer's interests run the gambit from literature, good food, and fine wines to a game of golf self-described as being of somewhat lesser quality than the average. He has authored Ex-Communist Witness and The State of Research in Antitrust Law, and he hopes to publish a new book, Criminal Sanction in spite of his time-consuming administrative duties. Mrs. Packer can claim her share of talent as well. She is the E.H. Jones Lecturer in Creative Writing at Stanford and has been published frequently in The Yale Review, Harpers, The Kenyon Review, and The Reporter. She has also been politically active in local elections. The Packers have two children - Annie, 10, and George, 8. HERBERT L. PACKER Professor of Law and Vice Provost of the University RICHARD A. POSNER Associate Professor of Law Richard A. Posner joins the Stanford law faculty this year as an associate professor of law. Mr. Posner was born in New York City in 1939 and did his undergraduate study at Yale University, receiving an A.B. in English in 1959. A move from New Haven to Cambridge then followed, and in 1962 he received an LL.B. from Harvard, where he was the President of the Harvard Law Review. From 1962 until 1963 he was a law clerk to Mr. Justice William J. Brennan of the United States Supreme Court, and from 1963 until 1965 he was an assistant to Commissioner Philip Elman of the Federal Trade Commission. In 19651he became an assistant to the Solicitor General of the United States, a position which gave Mr. Posner frequent opportunities to argue cases before the United States Supreme Court. In 1967 he became General Counsel of the Presidentls Task Force on Communications Policy. At Stanford Professor Posner will be teaching courses in water resources and conservation, advanced antitrust, telecommunications, and distributive justice. In February 1969 his article National Monopoly and its Regulation will appear in the Stanford Law Review. Yosal Rogat was born in California in 1928. He received a B.A. from UCLA in 1947, a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1956, both in political science, and a B.A. from Oxford in 1957 in jurisprudence. In that year he joined the political science faculty at Berkeley, where he remained until 1960. Returning to southern California, he was a staff member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Santa Barbara for two years. The next two years were spent as a member of the political science faculty at the University of Chicago, from which he returned to the Bay Area as a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. In 1965-66 Professor Rogat was a visiting lecturer at the Law School, and the following year he received a unique joint appointment from the Law School and from Stanford's political science department. This follows logically from the fact that he is currently interested in studying the relationship between law and politics. Some of the subjects taught by Professor Rogat are legal theory, legal history, civil liberties, and psychiatry and the law. In addition to contributions to the University of Chicago Law Review, the Stanford Law Review, the New York Review of Books, and the Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Mr. Rogat has published The Eichmann Trial and the Rule of Law and is presently writing what he describes as Han interpretation of Mr. Justice Holmes. YOSAL ROGAT Associate Professor of Law and Political Science GORDON KEN DALL SCOTT Professor of Law Professor Gordon Scott, a native of Massachusetts, attended Harvard College and received an A.B. in government in 1938. Remaining at Harvard for graduate study in law, he served as an editor of the Harvard Law Review and received his LL.B. in 1941. He practiced law in Washington, D.C. from 1941 until 1942, served in 1942 in the Office of the Coordinator for Inter-American Affairs in the Department of State, and then embarked upon four years of service with the United States Army. Professor Scott came to Stanford in 1946 and stayed as a member of the faculty until 1948. In that year he returned to Boston to practice law for four years and in 1952 he rejoined the law faculty at Stanford. He has taught at Stanford since that time, with his primary areas of interest being corporations, municipal law and taxation. Outside of the area of law, Professor Scott enjoys a widespread and well-deserved reputation as an outstanding tennis player. He is also said to play an excellent game of bridge, although he claims that there are no really good student bridge players around. He has been seen from time to time in the student lounge doing research on this theory. Professor Kenneth Scott was born in Illinois. He received his B.A. in economics in 1949 from the College of William and Mary. As a Woodrow Wilson Fellow in political science, he received an M.A. in 1953 from Princeton. Mr. Scott then came to Stanford Law School, where he served as articles editor for the Stanford Law Review before graduating in 1956. From 1956 to 1961 he practiced law in New York and Los Angeles, specializing in corporate and securities law and international financing. From 1961 to 1963 he had major regulatory authority with respect to the California savings and loan industry as Chief Deputy Savings and Loan Commissioner and head of the Los Angeles office of the state savings and loan supervisory agency. In 1963 Mr. Scott left Washington, D.C. to join the law faculty at Stanford. Mr. Scott is married to the former Viviane May of San Francisco, and the Scotts have two young sons - Clifton and Jeffery - and a daughter, Linda. KENNETH E. SCOTT Associate Professor of Law BYRON D. SHER Professor of Law Whiskers now hide part of Professor Byron D. Sher,s somehow cherubic face. But they cannot hide his twinkling wit. A native of Missouri, Mr. Sher studied business at St. Louis' Washington University. After receiving a 1952 LL.B. from Harvard, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review, Mr. Sher practiced in Boston for two years. Accepting a teaching fellowship at Harvard in 1954, Mr. Sher returned to academic life and taught at Southern Methodist University for three years before coming to Stanford in 1957. A 1964 sabbatical took Mr. Sher to England and New Zealand as a Fulbright Scholar. During the past year, Professor Sher chaired the important Stanford Human Relations Council which examines complaints of racial discrimination at all levels of University activity and seeks to enhance minority employment opportunities at Stanford. As chairman of the Law School,s Appointments Committee, Mr. Sher plays an active role in recruiting new faculty. A recognized expert on consumer protection, Mr. Sher's draft legislation on door to door selling has recently been adopted by the Uniform Commercial Code's governing board and will be submitted to the various state legislatures for their approval. Until recently, Mr. Sher served on the Palo Alto City Council, cast in the ironic role of a commercial law teacher trying to contain the city's creeping commercialismv in order to maintain Palo Alto as a residential community. But itis also a deep sense of irony that sparks Professor Sher's classroom humor, quickly establishing, as one student wag put it, instant rapport in this age of the Generation Gap. Joseph Sneed,s background is closely associated with his home state of Texas. Born there in 1920, he pursued his education at Southwestern University and the University of Texas Law School, where he received his LL.B. in 1947 and stayed on as a faculty member until 1954. He practiced law in Austin from 1955 to 1957, and then he finally left Texas to join the law faculty of Cornell University. He received his J.S.D. from Harvard in 1958 and in 1960 was a visiting professor at Yale. His rise to the top climaxed in 1962, when he joined the law faculty at Stanford. Professor Sneed's family displays a wide range of talents. His wife, Madelon, paints and plays tennis. His eldest daughter, Clara, has a flair for writing, his daughter Cara plays piano, and the youngest member of the family, Joseph T. Sneed IV is active in all sports. Professor Sneed still enjoys horseback riding, an interest stemming from his earlier years in Texas when he spent his vacations working the Texas range as a cowboy. In addition to his responsibilities within the law school, Professor Sneed has recently served as the President of the Association of American Law Schools and he is a member of the American Law Institute, consulting with the Estate and Gift Tax Project. He has recently published The Configurations of Gross Income, a textbook on basic income taxation. Professor Sneed will be on leave during the 1969 calendar year. During the spring semester he will be a visiting professor at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies at the University of London, and during the autumn semester he will be a visiting professor at the University of Ghana. JOSEPH T. SNEED Professor of Law CARL BERNHARDT SPAETH William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law Born in Ohio in 1907, Carl Bernhardt Spaeth, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Stanford, received a B.A. in political science from Dartmouth College in 1929. As a Rhodes Scholar, he received a B.A. in jurisprudence in 1931 and a B.C.L. in 1932 from Oxford University. In 1932-33 he was a Sterling Fellow at the Yale Law School, he taught at Temple in 1933-34, at Northwestern from 1934 until 1939, at Yale in 1939-40, and at the Foreign Service Educational Foundation from 1944 to 1946. He was Vice President and General Counsel for the of the Venezuela Development Corporation, Caracas, Venezuela in 1940-41. Professor Spaeth served as assistant coordinator and general counsel for the Office of Inter-American Affairs in 1941-42, as United States member, Political Defense Committee, Montevideo, Uruguay, from 1942 to 1944, and as special assistant in the Department of State from 1944 until 1946. In 1946 he came to Stanford as dean of the Law School and served as dean until 1962. On leave from the Law School in 1952-53, he was director of the Division of Overseas Activities of the Ford Foundation. Mr. Spaeth was consultant to the India Law Institute, New Delhi, in 1959-60 and is currently Chairman of the Stanford Committee on International Studies. Two years ago he spent a leave working with the Ford Foundation administering an international studies grant for the University. In his eighth year as a lecturer in Income Tax Problems at Stanford, Marvin Tepperman devotes most of his time to the practice of corporate and tax law with the San Francisco firm of Steinhart, Goldberg, Feigenbaum 84 Ladar. He is a past president of the Bay Area Section on Taxation and of the San Francisco Tax Club, and a past member of the State Bar Committee on Taxation. He is presently a member of the American Bar Association Section on Taxation, and a lecturer on tax matters for the California State Bar's Continuing Education of the Bar program. He is a visiting lecturer at Boalt Hall and has taught Business Law at San Francisco State College and at the University of California Extension Division in San Francisco. Mr. Tepperman was born in New York in 1925. After serving the United States Navy from 1943 until 1946, he attended the University of Chicago, where he earned a J.D. in 1948 and served as an associate editor of the University of Chicago Law Review. He was a research assistant to Professor Stanley Surrey, now Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy, at the University of California in 1949-50. At that time he worked on the American Law Institute Tax Project. His wife is currently working on a Ph.D. in political science at Stanford. The Teppermans have two teenage children. MARVIN T. TEPPERMAN Lecturer in Law GEORGE TORZSAY-BIBER Lecturer in Law In his role as lecturer and reference librarian, Dr. Torzsay-Biber adds a distinctly European flavor to the faculty potpourri. Dr. Biber - his name has taken this shortened form among the members of the law school community - was born in 1909 in Hungary. He graduated from the University of Budapest in 1932, did graduate work at the University of Berlin, and received a doctorate in law from the University of Budapest in 1934. He was a member of the Hungarian bar from 1934 to 1945. For the next five years he was employed by the United States Military Government in Austria. Dr. Torzsay-Biber came to the United States in 1950 and served for a year as Secretary to Chief Justice Arnold of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. At the same time he was a special lecturer in international law and jurisprudence at the University of Oklahoma. From 1952 until he came to Stanford in 1960, he was a legal analyst with the Library of Congress. Despite the demands of his job, Dr. Torzsay-Biber always seems to have time to help a student find a lost case or an elusive law review article. In addition to instructing first-year students in the art of legal research, he teaches a seminar in his favorite subject, Roman Law. Born in California in 1934, William W. Van Alstyne received a B.A. magna cum laude in philosophy from the University of Southern California in 1955, and an LL.B. from Stanford in 1958, where he was Articles and Book Review Editor of the Stanford Law Review and elected to the Order of the Coif. After working as a Deputy Attorney General in the California Department of Justice during the summer of 1958, he worked in the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice in 1958-59, concentrating in voting rights litigation. He has since then donated his services in several federal court cases involving constitutional issues. He has been a consultant to the United States Senate Subcommittee on Separation of Powers. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the North California Civil Liberties Union and General Counsel for the American Association of University Professors. Mr. Van Alstyne became Assistant Dean and Assistant Professor of Law at Ohio State University Law School in 1959. In 1965 he became Professor of Law at Duke University Law School. He was Visiting Associate Professor of Law at U.C.L.A. Law School in 1964, Senior Fellow at Yale Law School in 1964-65, Visiting Professor at Princeton University during the summer of 1967, and Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Mississippi Law School during the summer of 1968. This semester he is Visiting Professor of Law here at Stanford, where he is teaching Constitutional Law and Contracts. Professor Van Alstyne has published approximately twenty articles in various periodicals, including among others, the Supreme Court Review, the Stanford Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review,and - Oh, yes - the Harvard Law Review. grlofessor Van Alstyne and his wife, Carol, have three children: Marshall, 6, Allyn, 5, an isa, 3. WILLIAM W. VAN ALSTYNE Visiting Professor of Law MICHAEL S. WALD Assistant Professor of Law Michael Wald was born in New York City in 1941 and continued to reside in the East until his decision to join the law faculty at Stanford in 1967. He did his undergraduate work at Cornell, receiving an A.B. in political science in 1963. He then went to Yale, where in 1967 he received both an M.A. in political science and an LL.B. As projects editor of the Yale Law Journal, Mr. Wald conducted an empirical study of the impact of the Miranda decision on the New Haven police department. The results of this study were published by the Yale Law Journal in an article entitled ulnterrogations in New Haven: Impact of Miranda. Largely as a result of this intensive study, Mr. Wald has become involved in the problems of criminal law, but he is equally interested in the legal aspects of community development and in family law. Professor Wald's wife, Johanna, is a graduate of the Yale Law School also, and has done research for Professors Gunther and Packer. The Walds have a daughter, Jennifer, age 4. Professor Howard Williams is the leading American Scholar in the field of oil and gas law. Author, with Professor Meyers, of the definitive seven volume treatise, Oil and Gas Law, he writes annual supplements to update the work. In addition, Professor Williams, in collaboration with Professors Maxwell and Meyers, has written the casebook, Cases on Oil and Gas, now in its second edition and currently the standard course book for law schools throughout the United States. Prodigious as is his knowledge of oil and gas law, Professor Williams is by no means limited to the specialty. Students quickly discover that he also has an encyclopedic knowledge of property, trusts and estates, and future interests. Because Howard Williams is rarely content to teach a course unless he has written the textbook for it - he jokingly admonishes his students to mark up their texts well so as to lower the resale value - he has also published two other casebooks: Cases on Property and Cases on Decedents' Estates and Trusts. A casebook on future interests is scheduled to go to the printer in January 1970. Professor Williams and his wife, Virginia, are very active in Stanford and Palo Alto community affairs. He has held what he terms the usual collection of offices in his church, the Palo Alto First Baptist, while Mrs. Williams currently serves on Palo Altols Ecumenical Board of Religious Education. Professor Williams' chief hobby, as one might suspect, is reading. He and his wife regularly consume tive newspapers per day. The Williams, son, Frederick, is a sophomore at Yale. Born in Indiana in 1915, Professor Williams received an A.B. in political science from Washington University in 1937 and an LL.B. in 1940 from Columbia University Law School, where he was an editor of the Columbia Law Review. He practiced law in New York and then served in the field artillery from 1941 to 1946. From 1946 until 1951 he was a member of the faculty of the University of Texas Law School. During this time he served both as Assistant Dean and Acting Dean of the law school. In 1951 he joined the Columbia law faculty, where he became Dwight Professor of Law in 1959. Professor Williams came to Stanford in 1963, and since last year he has been Lillick Professor of Law. HOWARD R. WILLIAMS Stella W. dt Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law EDWIN M. ZIMMERMAN Professor of Law Born in New York City in 1924, Professor Zimmerman received his A.B. in electronic physics in 1944 and his LL.B. in 1949 from Columbia University, where he was articles editor of the Columbzlz Law Review. Between 1944 and 1946 he was in the United States Signal Corps sewing in the Philippines and Japan. In 1948 he became a staff member of the Hoover Commission of Governmental Reorganization. After serving in 1949-50 as a law clerk to Judge Simon H. Rifkind of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, he became a law clerk to Mr. Justice Reed of the United States Supreme Court in 1950-51. He then practiced law with the New York firm of Sullivan 8a Cromwell from 1951 until 1959 when he joined the Stanford law faculty. Professor Zimmerman was on leave from July 1965 until December 1968 , working first as Director of Policy Planning for the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., then as first assistant in the Antitrust Division, and recently as head of the Antitrust Division. Needless to say, Professor Zimmerman will teach courses on antitrust law, among others. GRADUATE A RESEARCH ASSISTANTS JUDD A. EPSTEIN A.B. Political Science Syracuse Universily 1964 LL.B. Stanford 1967 Vestal, New York ALBERTO PIERGROSSI Dotfore in Giurispradenza University ofMilan 1963 ML. Harvard 1967 Milano, Italy TEACHING FELLOWS ROBERT RODNEY RICKETT Senior Teaching Fellow B.S. Engineering Stanford University 1964 LL.B. Stanford University 1967 BRUCE F. KENNEDY A.B. Economics USC 1961 R MA. Economics Harvard University 1964 LL.B. Stanford University 1968 ROBERT J. GELHAUS A.B. Economics Harvard University 1963 LL.B. Stanford University 1968 GERALD MOORE B.A. Law Cambridge University I Eng j 1962 LL M University of Cal. fBerkeleyj 1964 NICHOLAS C. VOGEL A.B. Political Science Lawrence University 1965 University of Chicago 1968 DORON WEINBERG BA. English Cornell University 1965 JD. University of Chicago 1968 SE If . IMI F V I - M . .mv--' Q , QC' U- em Hem 'sf'v'W X AC 2-fri J ' 3 N X Q3 Wd I 'K 1 I SPEHK Q jcf PHNIEI-H o C1-OD, ITHLIHN To Vlot-AEN, FRENCI-l Q Max-1, mm cfelar-mu Ta Qmperor Clfmdrbesy FW QT QR X f Q f iw fi ff C, l.sTMaTeLL5f3u him: :T wuli. '7 Thelzels I Fon you I9 foaz MF. F g j ' X N Xcause. his The..'lhxMAN YEHH IM ThE.'l7lxMAN 7 5 ShcZuL 57, appeazz To SMALL fi Ba Thank-Ful. I c5on r faked all 5 A Ncause. PM 'tha TFIXNIANS YEHH VM 'the Tnxwmmi 57 W LZ,-gr Y .5 ' ' V Q I xgbii Q, , , . . - , 5 , , '-2-Xa:-fi,fE.5:A1ZfUf'' ' - ' 1-n:f::.:fe:'II':X'fffii-2 f?9Tf. :.-:ff'.e. as if-iff F, f5- Q ' 2. 1 1,4:,g.,X,gg,-51-, 7, ,gi-1,-EX ,- . - 5 I-'v . ' '. - xff?ffThf'ffI?f:f2:Q'1.iiii?'' V W4 ' ' ', 1 ,V -msn '1-121:22 .vu - 15 3: 5.Q..:'Nz:f f ,:,..,,,1.ffxmqi,1gQs.g,f,, ., .I , , , ,.,, N... - :Q-v-M. .-if., ,.,.,:, ,-LZ-I. .., I . '-2 '5 M251 ' :YU :. 'I-2. 122:-W R 9- 2 3 2-,A X . ,:1,25:?g:.: . A, 1 SSA ,xi K lx 3' ? f :iff 3 f 1 sf X I in ? al , W . -5-. ., , QV .412-' ' Q N.-W, w. 6 Q 1 fx w . - xgggl., . M .eswgggz A J' 'K X 'M : ,T ., W s .x , ,. wgiggc X ,f , K. XM - ' . nf 5 W.. ,- n ' A 'ifgfgf , Y mv' wx, 1 7 , . . -:zfwv1f::?1ff.:z- A F52-Mg -V svvfiglgb X- xgf??2?Sm',wak , f ' Q - - - .:g-1, f if f ,rx '- sw X -E4 f 3 ' s ,- . 1 fd' N ' ' f Q.-W ef 9+ f N Z YZ- fiffsfw ,, ,, , 54+ fi- , 39,2 aff A, 'Q gqffg, , ,, A f Y , cfX?3 9',,'i'4s Mg, W fi? 'I , ianfffl ,,.,........,,,..,., na .1 1 f 0? LAW , if gghfggfs -, .QL , . S . , +234 Us I gi f Jvsx ' s ww, I VFW.: 21 Y! ma -Har fa ffm, EDGAR D. ACKERMAN Monte was born in Montclair, N. J. on February 6, 1943. After graduation from Mt. Hermon School, Mt. Hermon, Mass., he attended Yale University, from which he received a B. A. in Latin American Studies in 1966. JOHN G. ABBOTT John was born on December 25, 1944, in Houston, Texas, and graduated from Spring Branch high school in Houston. At Yale University, he majored in history, was a resident of Berkeley College, and graduated in the class of 1966. During law school summers, John worked with the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency as a planner and clerked for the San Joaquin County Counsel's office in Stockton. Immediate plans are for a legal job in state or local government, preferably on the West Coast. Forwarding address: 9353 Greensward Rd., Houston, Texas 77055. W. ROBERT ALLISON A native of Massachusetts, Bob graduated from Wellesley High School in 1962, and from Harvard College in 1966, Magna Cum Laude in Social Studies. At Harvard he met a perspicacious freshman named Martin Vidgoff, and thus witnessed the early political years of the President. On August 31, 1966, Bob was married to Cheryl Dunston. He clerked in Boston during the summer of 1968, and will become associated with the firm of Warner 84 Stackpole. In Dean Keller's records, he will be the fourth Stanford lawyer in Boston. RICHARD A. ANDERMAN Dick Anderman was born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1944. It was in that conservative desert spa that he first tasted the upward mobile, deferred 1 gratification life style. High school years were marked by honors in I academics, several political offices and a brief career as a swimmer. The . California sun lured Dick to Stanford, and while here, he attended the I campus in Florence, Italy, worked for a United States Senate Subcommittee, was active in student government in the pre-sit in days, A and graduated With Distinction and Special Honors in History. 2 Attracted by shiny fish, Dick enrolled at the Stanford Law School. The I first year was undescribable. As a retreat from that experience, Dick I went to Japan as a volunteer English teacher. The second year of law proved less demanding, so Dick manufactured his own albatross by founding and serving as the first Editor-in-Chief of the Stanford Journal of International Studies. He has accepted a job with Reavis 84 McGrath in New York City. I I I I I 1 I STEPHEN C. ANDERSON A.B. Stanford University 1962. JEROME W. ANDERSON Born and reared in Goldwater country, Jerry attended Tucson High School. As an undergraduate at Stanford, he abandoned the parochial views of his youth and, in the halcyon days of David Harris, joined the Old New Left. Among his more memorable achievements in college were the wooing and wedding of his wife Patty, and the writing of an honors history thesis. The living death of his first year in law school was relieved only by the arrival of a son, Jason, who has since turned into a red-haired tiger. While in law school, Jerry parleyed his less than stellar g.p.a. into summer jobs with VISTA in New York and a Honolulu law firm. After his graduation in June, when Patty will receive her B.A. in English, the threesome will depart for a year in Paris, thanks to Jer1y's skill in the subtle art of grantsmanship and the French governmentls largesse. Upon the sad day of their return, Jerry will deliver body and soul to Sullivan 8a Cromwell in New York. Beyond that, he has vague ambitions of pursuing his interest in international law. RICHARD C. ART JAMES R. ATWOOD . Jim was raised on the East Coast, primarily Scarsdale, New York, and Salisbury, Connecticut. He graduated from Yale College in 1966, where he majored in Politics and Economics and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Extraccuricular activities were limited to dabblings in some 18 sports and to developing a taste for fine films.. Dissuaded by his draft board from taking a Fulbright in India, Jim tackled law school. First year was spent exploring Northern California, participating in the San Jose Bail Bond project, and learning the intricacies of Crothers Hall. The last two years were comsumed mostly by the Law Review, including a term as Article Editor-which was, incidently, fun. Summers were spent clerking for the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission in Washington and for a New York law firm. Next year Jim will clerk in Los Angeles for Judge Shirley M. Hufstedler of the United States Court of Appeals. Eventual career goal: Secretary of Defense. LAWRENCE A. AUFMUTH B.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1966 Lawrencel Andrew2 Aufmuth3 greeted4 the war-ravaged world in 1944. He prepared at Gilmour Academy5 and was educated6 at Brown University.7 His grade point8 varied inversely with the snow depth. He moved west to ski and to enroll9 in law school. During law school he Bail Bonded,lO Legal Aided,l1 Married,12 Kirkwooded,l3 Skied, Moot Courted,l4 and Law Reviewed.l5 Grade pointl6 again varied with snow depth. He voluntarily 17 fathered a child who also greetedl8 a war-ravaged world.l9 Lawrence will associate with a San Francisco law firm.20 1. Latin meaning 'fthe laurelf' or victorious 2. Greek meaning manly. 3. Teutonic meaning of courage. 4. Censored! 5. Excellent prep school in Gates Mills, Ohio. 6. Different from 'flaw schooled. 7. Smallest and best Ivy league. 8. GPA's are numbers sought after by weenies who either canit achieve, or if they can, they aren't helped by gpa's anyway. 9. Different from attending law school. 10. This was a futile attempt to thwart the bail bondsmen. 11. Euphemism for playing lawyer. 12. Marcia has brought joy to his life since high school. 13. He won the 1968 Marion Rice Kirkwood Moot Court Competition. 14. He chairmanned this most worthwhile and educational program. 15. Review is a meaningful experience. Contra, Review is as Meaningful as an Annotated Autobiographyf' Stan. L. Sch. Yrby. 119691. 16. Lawrence, Lawprofessors, and Lawfirms never agreed on the import of gpa's. 17. Legalese emanating from certain members of the L. Sch. Fin. Aid Comm. 18. Censored! 19. Different war but same kind of Death. 20. Yes, there is a dynamic, youthful, free-thinking, expanding, unstructured, reasonable-paying, well-ofiiced law frm in S.F. RONALD S. BARLIANT I must admit at the outset that Iwas born in Chicago on August 25, 1945. I stayed there long enough to be higher educated at Roosevelt University fB.A. History, 19661 and, for one year, at Northwestern School of Law. I emigrated to Stanford to complete my legal education in the autumn of 1967. At Stanford I have worked on the Journal of International Studies and the Law Review, while concentrating my studies in the area of international law, which I would like to practice some day. My plans for the immediate future, however, include, in their entirety, staying out of the military. ROBERT D. BARTELS Pretty soon Bob will have finished grade school, junior high school, high school, college, and law school. What he will finish after that nobody knows. Bobls main accomplishment at the law school has been the mastering of Dick Tracy. The worst thing he has ever written is his yearbook biography. ALBERT B BAYS Mr. Bays was born in San Dimas, California, formerly nestled in orange groves, now nestled in smog. He attended San Dimas Elementary and Bonita High where he played sports when not ineligible because of unsatisfactory citizenship. He then attended USC where he began playing rugby. After graduation without many honors, he came to Stanford Law School. Aside from being asked to resign from the Law Review, his most outstanding achievement was a 2.0 in Moffat's dreaded Conflicts final after a near complete lack of , class attendance and studying. Mr. Healy can tell you what happened to those whoattended class and studied. As for extra-curricular activities, Mr. Bays played rugby and served many a drink in his capacity as R.A. in Crothers. Reports that he dealt in pornography were unfounded in fact. As for his future plans, Mr. Bays has taken a job with the fast growing Honolulu firm of Padgett, Greeley, Marumoto 8: Akinaka. He also plans to join a Marine reserve unit to serve his country ffor seven monthsj. JAY S. BERLINSKY B.A. Northwestern University 1966. ANN W. BENDER B.A. University of Tulsa 1966 J. DAVID BLACK A.B. in English, Princeton University, 1963g M.A. in English, Rice University, 1965. RICHARD W. BLEWETT A.B. Stanford University 1963. LEROY BOBBITT programs. Married with one child RUSSELL L. BORAAS I was born in Florida during World War II. The good guys having beaten the bad guys, my father left the army and we returned to Minnesota. Before coming to Stanford,I defrauded St. Olaf College of a B.A. in history. Though over half the student bodies were beautiful Scandinavian-type females, I emerged unfettered by matrimonial bonds - largely due to the fact that cars were banned and the school was isolated on the coldest, most windswept hill known to man. Magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, and all that good stuff. I now leave law school without academic glory, having learned that flj classrooms need windows and good lighting C21 thinking like a lawyer warps your mind, and C31 the case method is the most boring and inefficient method for learning ever devised. The next two years shall be spent with the U.S. Army making the world safe for American business. After that I hope to live in happy obscurity, practicing law, raising horses, hunting, and tilting with my favorite windmills, our exploding population and deteriorating environment. Born November 1, 1943, Jackson Mississippi Attended Buchanan High School in Buchanan, Michigan B A Michigan State University Majored in Arts and Letters. Worked for the Office of Econoiruc Opportunity for the past two summers as an inspector of OEO DAVID S. BRADSHAW 'vczif FREDERICK N. BRADSTREET - Rick first appeared in Arizona in 1944, but he soon plunged west to make his fortune in Tarzana, California. Determined to civilize the barbarian East, Rick entered Princeton University in 1962. After four years exposure to Rickis missionary efforts, Princeton still retained its innocent indifference to the Western Enlightenment. Meanwhile, Rick had graduated with honors in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs, had lettered in Fencing, had presided over numerous political groups . . . and otherwise been co-opted. To the delight of astrologers, Rick appeared again in 1966 at Stanford Law School, where he gracefully submitted to the soporiiic ritual of the Bachelor of Laws Degree. During his senior year he was Chairman of the Judicial Council and Bledgeheart Emeritus. He could also be found teaching courses in Politics and legal Education, and otherwise acted as spiritual leaderv in the coed dorm, Serra House. Rick plans to study in South America following graduation. KENNETH E. BRITTON academic beaurocracy works. A.B. Princeton University 1966 Subject arrived at Law School Subject intended to become educated. Succeeded, in that he learned he lacked the intelligence to accomplish this. Whereupon subject decided to go into trial work hoping that a defective brain did not imply a defective tongue To this end subject joined the Serjeants at Law and thereby learned how an Subject is informed that his first case upon being admitted to the bar will be a class action on behalf of all law student s wives filed by his wife, seeking to have marriage to a law student declared cruel and unusual punishment and in violation of the eighth amendment Subject wishes to thank any professor andfor dean who has succeeded in teaching him anything LEROY A. BROUN IV A.B. Stanford University 1955. LL.B. Stanford University, January 1969. BEVERLY M. BUDIN B.A. University of Pennsylvania 1965. K GEORGE ALBERT BROWN, JR. The best thing is itts 3 yrs. doing what you donlt want to do-learning to spend a lifetime at it. Can you really: ajthink like a lawyer? bjquestion the good Dean's Chicago speech? cjquote Ginsberg's Howl in your freshman lease? djsee law as an archaic, anal-incestuous method of social control? Now really your ajwives will see little of your hubbies for the rest of their lives riow that they've made Review, bjare only a student-so you'd better quietly slip your great idea into a footnoted criticism of a professor's work, cjshould stay in law-there's plenty of good yarns for writing there? Are you really: ajliving in SF? bjnot buying textbooks? cjmarried to a belly dancer? djwearing a coat and tie for no reason? ej wearing your hair long for the firm this summer? fjfrom Bakersfield? God knows, it must be a great time to be young-what with the Negro and all? So they shepherd a divorce to feel worthwhile Hwith the absolure heart of the poem of life butchered out of their own bodies good to eat a thousand years. GILBERT S. BUF FINGTON Steve was born in Upland, California on March 17, 1944. He grew up in San Diego and, at the age of 18, migrated to Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota where he spent the next four years freezing in the winters and making up for lost time in the springs. Stanford Law School followed and after spending two single,frustrating and hungry years, he returned to Northfield in the summer of 1968 and married Erica Rollefson. After the bar, the Marine Corps JAG has a three-year lease, and then plans are for practicing law in Minnesota. l Don was born January 7 1945 in the thriving metropolis of Wichita, Kansas. He remained there long enough to finish high school and then escaped to Minnesota, where he attended Carleton College. While trying to study history there, he met and married Karen Lippert. After suffering through four Minnesota Winters, they decided to seek the warmer climate of Palo Alto. At Stanford, Don spent one summer lying in the sun and the other working for the California Department of Water Resources in Sacramento. When law school is over, the Buxtons expect to settle somewhere in Northern California, assuming Tricky Dick really can work miracles. LAWRENCE CALOF Tiring of the party school atmosphere and the sunny eastern weather Larry left M.I.T. and came to Stanford. At law school Larry spent his first year in Crothers Hall, enthralled by the luxurious dorm style of living. Life in Crothers was made more bearable for Larry and his roommate Bob by frequent appearances of Larryls girlfriend Susy bearing cookies and good cheer and by the visits of her loquacious Siamese cat, Moby. At Crothers Larry became one of the founding fathers of the infamous Crothers Brothers. The hallmark of their fame, the destructive punch will long be remembered in the heads and hearts of those who tried it. Having mastered his first year, Larry settled down into the rigorous academic atmosphere of Delta Tau Delta as the R.A. but his heart was elsewhere and in June he married Susy. In his third year he divided the time he spent on Law Review between the traditional tasks of Writing and citechecking and his special job as reproduction editor. He plans to clerk for Judge William Gray in the federal district court and then work for Gibson, Dunn 8: Crutcher. DON CASTO III A.B. Stanford University 1966. OZRO W. CHILDS A.B. Stanford University 1966. ROBERT P. CHARROW B.S. Harvey Mudd College 1966 RENE A. CHOUTREAU A.B. Stanford University 1966. LL.B. Stanford University, January 1969 CLYDE R. CHRISTOFFERSON U Born: 11 October 1943 at Portsmouth, Virginia. Permanent address: i953 Thorndell Drive, St. Louis 17, Missouri. Academics: National Merit Scholarship, 1961, completed require- ments for degrees in physics and history at Stanford University, graduated from Stanford with B.S. in Physics in 1966. Law School Activities: Legal Aid Society - San Mateo Assistant Defenders fChairman, April 1968 - November 19681, NLADA Prosecutor-Defender Project in Santa Clara County fChairman, September 1968 - June 1968 - June 19695, Student Practice Statute Committee fmemberj. Work Experience: McDonnell Aircraft Corp, during summers of 1963, 1964 and 1966, Philco Ford Corp. from June 1967 to September 1968. Notable Achievements: classified l-A despite his commission in the Marine Corps g victorious two consecutive years at the roulette wheels in Reno fNote: under the cool tutelage of Ralph Jacobson he blew it all on the crap tables at Tahoej. DAVID S. CLARK A.S. Stanford University 1966. ROBERT T. CLARK B.A. Oberlin College 1960. ' Ura: r 4 .f ,, ,cava ., fy an - ai' ,.u3?.cws2' ,f W' '4 42':'3'if'f 1, ' 4.5.21 ,z 4f5 .:a?Z5'2'22i'6f w' uf. ,, W? ...,ip..,, , 3 5:7 4. P -f, Q I I -'L ' 1 0 ' QT' 2 for I P--as mf. r-4.-:P f. . 9-.-sr 1' '- f-dv? 444, f, ' '11 '1f'3Zb:EH 1-'I:f5: '-4'-I+:-2, J.-ffl we-.:: 4: i v?22ifz2 2'-is zz- 1 .. M. f cfs W2 ' W5f'i' . . -.Mya sp 11 4, 1. M3333 23 ,wx w -4 . j ,L .,,,,,wp,QZ 1. is .f..,.. V., ,V . 5?52L5Wze' - ' a , a:y,pf,w.-'jg' , 1 za .ami A .-W fgyxf Yi, :.!. .v.. '2 ,. ii? ' 4:21522 Lflxg . 'firsjxiz-ay. lags - 2 fwg- ' Viz -fn-e'11gKga 1--1, H. s 'ws-1 a ::'5i ,Hrn'f-f--'--'-+1964-s!ear:':::sy .' ,'4!,f,z'wf:c. frgavaa 4 , 'mu fl aa:g1:f,r-.1,,fg1p-f 1, -.,w:,g7.-,gf, 1',A .e .-1, fwfr.. 'Sarah 145,..s,w,...g,:g-r-.s:. 1fpuf,f.:..r:,!-4 g ' 2 59: 3 r 'ruwgq . -. 2 -'I-1-ff. -U.--,ww-. :fi-Ms .231 'I Mft: V , .wfziaa ,2w524!af:...: . JOHN D. COLLINS John has been a life-long resident of the San Francisco bay area. Having spent his high school days and first two years of college At St. Josephis College in Mountain View, the local Catholic seminary, he came to Stanford as a junior in 1964. He joined Theta Xi Fraternity and participated in most sports, including one year of varsity baseball. Coming to the Law School with a double major in English and Classics, John again spent some of his free time with the Law School intramural teams and Palo Alto Industrial League basketball. He worked with the Legal Aid Society, and during his third year picked up some experience working with a local law firm. Johnis wife, Kathy served her time as a law wife as a San Mateo County social worker, having graduatedfrom College of Notre Dame in Belmont with a major in social welfare. John has accepted a position with a San Diego law firm and will begin the move south soon after the bar examination. DENNIS W. COOPER Born February 3, 1944, Dennis moved around extensively, ending up in Camas, Washington, where he progressed through the school system, played football, was active in student government and graduated as salutatorian. At Western Washington State College he obtained a degree in Political Science and a wife, the former Kathyrn Kennedy. Both have proved essential to the furtherance of his legal education at Stanford. Once there he learned to think as only a lawyer can and spent three years in Room 1611 searching many cases for hidden pearls. What he found is a secret. He hopes to pursue a legislative-legal career. 1224. .. ' if-2210 'Mist f Liiiiai? iiixgga . 'germs-1 ' 5119452 saw. iv! . , saw... . M H4 1 2 WILLIAM H. COZAD B.A. Hamilton College 1965. RICHARD B. CROCKETT , After growing up and going to twelve years of school in the small farming community of Langdon, North Dakota, Dick accepted a scholarship and an offer to join an Honors Program at the University of North Dakota. There he majored in political and social science, formed many good friendships, and waged a successful campaign for the student body presidency. His senior year was marked by an election to Phi Beta Kappa and a romance with a girl named Suzie. Dick and Suzie came to Stanford after their marriage the next summer, she to begin an internship in diatetics, and he to start law school. Of the activities there, Legal Aid seemed most to his liking, so he worked for one year in the Mountain View OEO office, acted as co-chairman for the Santa Clara County civil program the next year, and helped two new businesses in East Palo Alto as part of the business aids program. He also started an enterprise of 'his own, the Attorneys' Aid Service, doing research and other work for various Palo Alto attorneys. ROBERT E. DEAN rtiliii f I was born in 1941 in Tulsa Oklahoma I lived there and attended ,, school there until my enrollment in Princeton University My major was 46 , 'Ns is 4 3 .-,.g',,.a 4 65 , 1. f 1' 6 - - new A A Cfffnll -vb: tentatively thought of working. X . , W V V s is A f y so, ,QW ,wwf 0 fix y e . r ff , 23, QA Q 1 .. K aff, f 9 get I f If A' Y A 9 f 5 5 9 ,, ,:s:gq,,: ,',::,.-gr ef, agar . sg: ,lr fa-. -- iw , tin, ,F , Q V er-' , .1eWs+ef,:ff . 1. f,f2m-f.aw:1 r,r-1rv' .-2:-5:4115 za- .y-M ss-Q'-1:9-ry w,--,,ff,':-fo' 4 .,:g:rf-:few-v'..,.fg Ffa ,wr 5' - 'warp--1. . r . f' --':,,vf.1'fQq,,'1.f.-WEmma -fs.,-,f 4.9:- Lf,-1, 155 4,5432-avg - 1.1 f fer...-:..2..:-y::.s, .u.f1:v,-1,.sf4-lf, ,ncfw-asa., pax I , . . .. 3 at ' A.. ,: ',4-:tv - gr- V-1-,-f,:a,v:.vr,5+v.sw- s' ,z.-u1.-:':4r-'Jw-fir-:w' rrflsw.-:'::r?., A ,, dw-4K1Qf' , , 1' ' 4.4 writ: '3:i2,3'is4gf. - - '-1Je'+12i:1Z'4fl-.','5:fff'- ' vac A -vf :5.1+.'-.V -' -vs-was-V 'YW-Q ' ,11C.-TIQ' F', f '- ,3 .5-:f'.3 21':'!f ' wbh-' ,D r f':5,fl-.fi.-. ' ' ' , ', if .rE ze',...'f!fi:.:Q-..j.gv5'v'.-, -QAM, V ' , - . j- -zjzrgff 5, 13333-rj. , , -'vgg-.31 .1:,',:Qta:: p'7,-132554 ,qt-150:42 if :1gwfi:'.2 Z'-'1.'1'V1z:'Q I., -'Dwi A 1 in economics. After graduation I entered the law school wih the class of ,P ,Vl , ,vp A upuxp In ,p,A,V,A,, p 1967. After my second year and in response to a letter from the 'upi President of the United States, I was allowed to observe the operations s:ff .fsrt . of the Army from the inside. After a tour in Vietnam I returned to Join the class of 1969. My plans for the future are uncertain although I have TERRY GRANT DeSLYVIA Date and place of birth-April 5, 1943, Rexburg, Idaho. High School-David Douglas H.S., Portland, Oregon. Graduated 1961. College, undergraduate-University of Oregon, 1961-63, Stanford University 1964-66. Graduated, A.B. Stanford, 1966. Activities: Var. Football, Oregon, 1962, Var. Football, Stanford, 1964-5, AAWU Scholastic All Conference, Football, 1965, NCAA Scholastic All American, College, graduate-Stanford University School of Law, 1966-69. Activities: Assistant Football Coach, Stanford, 1966-69. Family-Married 1967, wife, Sherrie, daughter, Dawn Anne, born 113169. GILE R. DOWNES Aeschylus wrote inAgamemm0n that 'fZeus, whose will has marked for man! The sole way where Wisdom lies ,I Ordered one eternal plan: I Man must suffer to be wise. Although Gile recognizes that Aeschylus is not binding authority for this proposition, he feels confident that Holmes, Cardozo, Frankfurter, L. Hand and B. Manning have all paraphrased the remark at some time. Gile says he has found that suffering does not cause wisdom, but that it is a condition precedent, and he is only sure, he says, that he has suffered. Gile was born in Fairbanks, Alaska. He completed high school there and attended Seattle University where he graduated magna cum laude in political science. His principal college activities were Friday afternoon laundry, writing inflammatory letters to the editor of the student newspaper, and courting his wife Melinda. After a year in graduate school at the University of Colorado at Boulder he came to Stanford Law School, where he avoided bridge and other vices unnamed. DONALD G. DRESSLER Born on a Kansas wheat farm, Don has been trying to get off ever since. The path leading to Kansas State University, he majored in campus politics, with a minor in Political Science. Then he came to warm and sunny California, which turned out to be neither warm nor very sunny. Making a short trip back to the Sunflower state after his first year, he brought back a Wife. Currently, he plans to stay in the Golden state. ROBERT E. EDMONDSON A.B. Stanford University 1965. DONALD A. FARMER . Born: Wichita, Kansas, April 3, 1944. Primary and secondary education, Pratt, Kansas. A.B. in history, Stanford University, 1966. Married Jane V. Moran in June, 1967. Law school activities: resident assistant, Hulme House, Legal Aid Society own recognizance project, International Society, Stanford Journal of International Legal Studies, directed research project with California Rural Legal Assistance. MARK FRANICH A.B. Stanford University 1966 M.A. Stanford University 1966. GARY W. GRANT c'Happiness is a warm law school, Gary was told in the sixth grade, so off he went in search of the Good. He ran his high school, played with his undergrad schools fCal and Brigham Youngj, struggled with Northwestern's business school, and succumbed to his law school. He found the Good, but it didn't want him. The death rattle was heard following the first year, the second was spent clutching for relevance, the third, clutching for somebody's fanybody'sj notes. He managed to stay off the streets, however, by fathering two daughters, managing an apartment building funclogging toilets barehanded and evicting deserted mothers who couldn't pay the rentj, committing himself indis- criminately to the International Journal, Legal Aid, and Moot Court Board fstudiously avoiding the commitments thereafterj, peddling outlines to neurotic colleagues, and observing with sadistic enjoyment the radical vacillations of Larry Aufmuth. At last word, he was retreating into the faceless masses of Los Angeles to find greater obscurity. MARK GREENSPAN Legend has it that the Mystical One was conceived of the union of a mortal and a larger avian. Cf. Leda v. Swan, 1 Hellenic Rptr. 69 H500 B.C.j. He, however, had expressed a preference for a story both more delicate and immaculate. Cf. Mary v. Dove. 1 Judean Rptr. 666 C4 B.C.j. In neither case can the truth be substantiated, since with but one exception all records of his early life have been lost. That particular episode relates how he, at yet a tender and young age, left the bosom of his family and was found in the temple of War. He there disabused the false priests of the god Lifer, and convinced them of the true doctrines of ETS and FTA. His story then picks up at a much later age fwhether spiritually or chronologically is not knownj wherein he had decided to go forth on the mission of the word. To prepare himself, he endured the travail of the desert, variously known as Kalif, Sea Finger, or Stanlaw ...... MICHAEL J. HARBERS In June of 1940 Mike joined the world. After moving to Pasadena, he 'eventuall attended Elintrid e Pre where he was an active member of Y 8 P his 25 man class, winning such disparate awards as a football letter and academic honors. Tired of this glory, he moved to the quieter Midwest to attend Minnesota's Carleton College. There his printable achievements included being photography editor of the Yearbook and finding a young but nubile girl, Peggy Ellefson. In 1962 with a B.A. in English, Mike left Carleton to attend Navy OCS after which he returned temporarily to marry nubile Peggy. Eight months later he was assigned hazaradous duty as Exchange Officer in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Three years later Mike departed Hawaii to attend Stanford. He allowed Peggy to support him by teaching while he pursued his studies CU, Law Review, termis and skiing. During the summer following his second year, Mike worked in New York and Peggy brought forth a girl, Katrina Lenelle. After graduation, Mike will practice law in Los Angeles with the firm of O'Melveny 8: Myers. THOMAS HART HAWLEY Born to the law four and twenty years ago, Thomas Hart Hawley commenced his education at Wesleyan, eventually carrying his virtues to Stanford where he received his B.A. Having entered first upon literary pursuits, he gradually gravitated toward rather than chose law. His education, during the course of which with dogged pernacity he has plodded at his work, has failed to make either a prig or a great scholar of him. He is an honest lad, neither supple nor flashy and never looking to the right or to the left 3 he has generally won for himself a reputation for thorough judgment, not prejudicially affected by the suspicion of showy or brilliant qualities. As an unruffled fellow, he is too modest to be ever contemptuous, yet is full of the most polite and gentle sarcasm. In all, a rightminded, honest soul, only once accused in ribald verse of an amorous adventure, yet good natured and as yet unmarried. He owes his success to his painstaking industry and early rising. Thomas entered this world as an infant on December 27, 1944, just beating the post-war rush-possibly the last time he was ahead of the game. He pursued his education in the neighborhood school system of Rochester, New York and at the Aquinas Institute, a coincidence whose significance will not be lost on the subject's more than casual acquaintances. Then just before his eighteenth birthday he inexplicably forsook his home state's enlightened social drinking policy for four years of near-temperance at Boston College. Yet unarticulated motives led him to the San Andreas fault and Americais only junior university where he culminated his second distinguished decade of participation in the scholastic processes. His suggested love affair with the law was frustrated quite early in his law school career by observation of the respective fates of the Widow Grimstad and Charles Rizzo. At Stanford his activities have been concentrated in the areas of nourishing the ball-eating trees of Stanford Golf Course and going to hell his own way with Moffatt Hancock. RICHARD R. HERZOG A.B. Stanford University 1966 JAMES M. HOAK, .T R. Born and bred in the N,ation's Breadbasket ffamiiy still there, call it Nation's Heartland, as do those who love, of which there are few judging from the size of Long Beachj, then to the East for a Yale education for was it degreeffj, then to the West seeking a trade school, came upon Stanford, entered thinkingthe golf course looked good, then to places unknown. Enjoyed the frst three semesters at Stanford, got married fenjoyablej, sold his soul to the law review fless enjoyablej, wrote an article which no one will for shouldj ever read, but with a nice title and long footnotes, took much directed research, did little research, got even less direction, enjoyed tax courses fsince Sputnik, has learned to communicate better with numbers than wordsj, did a little legal aid work, but no one wanted their estate planned. Would eventually like to save the world from itself, but doesnit know how to, and is afraid it's too late to learn. WILLIAM PARKER HOFFMAN, JR. Pre-Holocaust IBM cards locate W. Hoffman at Boothill College freceiving the Jr. degreej and then the Cur Multiversal Schul. A reference from the Song of Beoman the Dane indicates that he later became an Engineer. The Song of Beoman frequently alludes to 'flevers of society and The Infinite Fan fthe latter may also be a religious referencej. Beoman was apparently Schuldane to a type of social orgasm that produced Engineers and voracious tiger-suited Preverts. The Preverts instructed Engineers on how to become Pillsberries. To become a Prime Pillsberry, an Engineer had to learn the Seven Positions - most importantly, the Corporate Position, the Gross Tax Configuration Position, and the Supine Position. Some who did not become Pillsberries became Constitutionalanarchists and did the usit-in fapparently a form of sexual activityj. An indistinct inscription on an old wall indicates that Hoffman was last seen singing Alice's Restaurantn at the Knoland Reduction Center, arm-in-arm with five MP's. PAUL S. HOLDORF The Gateway to 'tA Little Bit io Heaven. This gate, made out of hundreds of thousands of different pieces of stone gathered in this country, polished in Germany and -assembled under the personal supervision of B.J., is a wondrous piece of beauty but cannot be compared with the incomparable wonders to be found in 'CA Little Bit 'o Heaven itself. -Q: QC' STEVEN H. HUGHES Finding himself torn between his true loves of Egyptology and Mesoamerican archaeology, Steve opted out with Stanford School of Law. fActually he discovered that most archaeologists, are quietly starvingj. A native of Hillsboro, Oregon, Steve spent his undergraduate years skiing in the Oregon Cascades. Fortunately CO this did not prevent his graduation, cum laude, from Lewis 84 Clark College in 1965. After graduation he resumed skiing and became licensed as a Certified Public Accountant by the State of Oregon. Steve's most noteworthy achievement while at Stanford was his December 21, 1968 marriage to Alice Ann Steed. As a true native Oregonian Steve plans to return to said state, wife permitting, Where he will join the Committee to Save Oregon from California. EMORY E. IRELAND . Emory was born in San Diego, California on October 15, 1944. He grew up in Wellesley, Massachusetts and attended Wellesley High School. Four years at Yale led to a B.A. in English and marriage to the former Barbara Pomeroy in August of 1966. Emory worked fwith payj for Professor John Kaplan and for the Constitution Revision Commission while at Stanford. He also labored fwithout payj for the Journal of International Studies. He hopes to practice law in Milwaukee, if Uncle Sam does not assert a prior claim. RALPH L. JACOBSON l To appreciate insanity one must experience it. Since everything is nothing and nothing is everything, therefore everything is everything. Thus we can see the overwhehning importance of a sound legal education to prepare the lawyer for a productive role in society. Production is crucial, distribution is of secondary importance. And happiness is a hobgoblin. Remember that commencement is not the end-it is the beginning. For those of us under 26 it may be the end. But all good things come to an end. Or do they? As Country Joe says: Things done before me have no ending. Therefore, things done afterwards have no beginning. Goodbye. MERRILL E. JENKINS A.B. Stanford University 1950. CHARLES J. JUDSON .lim was born in Oregon City, Oregon, and after sampling life in most of the cities in the Northwest, finally settled with family in the dubious metropolis of Kennewick, Washington, there to graduate from high school. Sunny California drew him south for college, although after seven years at Stanford, he professes doubt as to the existance of the sun at any useful time. He has been frighteningly willing to maintain a uniform Law School pallor. While at Stanford, our dedicated empjricist did substantial and original research into the effects of wind and hair on the circular motion of water going down a bathtub drain, and assisted in the preparation of an experiment on the effects of dancing feet on black metal surfaces. Following graduation, he will return to the land of liquid sunshine to enter the practice of law. DARRELL RAY JOHNSON Darrell was born in San Diego, California, but soon moved north to Manhattan Beach. When not playing baseball, Darrell attended Mira Costa High School, and upon graduation enrolled at the University of Southern California. While at U.S.C., Darrell majored in political science and was active in student government and his fraternity, Phi Delta Theta. The highlight of his undergraduate experience, however, was a trip to Europe and study at Cambridge University. Having escaped the Law Schoolis First Year Inquisition with slight damage, Darrell left Crothers Hall for good when he married the former Barbara Riggle. His last years at Stanford were generally enjoyable, marred only by his law school friends but without whose combined insanity law school would have been impossible. After graduation Darrell will practice corporate, tax, or labor law with the Los Angeles law firm of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky, and Walker. DAN RAY KEILY B.A. University of Colorado 1966. LL.B. Stanford University, January 1969. KENNETH R. KAYE Reared in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Ken moved to Kansas City, Missouri, for the senior year of high school and found himself one of two Democrats in the senior class. He spent the next four years in Philadelphia at the Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania, majoring in both accounting and finance. Kenis reaction to the Stanford campus was like that of a man with claustrophibia getting off a crowded elevator, and the feeling carried over in his reactions to first year law school. The enthusiasm was killed second year, but revived the third year. He aspires to the role of occasional gadfly and has used his three years in law school developing the art. Future plans include two years in the Army, then practicing law somewhere west of the Continental Divide. Motto: There are only two things that matter in life: work and love. And only the love should show. 7 JOEL N. KLEVENS Joel was born in Lexington, Kentucky on December 28, 1944, but had the foresight and good fortune to move to southern California at the age of nine months. He attended North Hollywood High School and attained what he considered significant athletic prowess on the tennis team. He spent an enjoyable four years at the University of California at Berkeley, where, in addition to academic pursuits in the field of American history, he was active in the FSM and CORE. Liberalism and social conscience behind him, he enrolled at Stanford Law School, serving as a Note Editor of Volume 21 of the Law Review in his last year. Joel married the lovely and charming Susan Beth Richards on December 22, 1968, and the happy couple intend to remain in the Bay Area next year while Joel is serving as a law clerk for Justice Stanley Mosk of the California Supreme Court. DAVID V. KOLOVAT The facts? January 13, 1945. Rock Island, Illinois. University of Iowa, London School of Economics, Political Science. Single. And of course law school, the acid test. Now to get down to the business of restoring meaningful monologue to the Stanford community. The one thing that may be said regarding those years is that they certainly were. The interrupted journey: somebody spoke and I went into a dream, suddenly confronting the edge at the center, within me and without me. It couldn't be too much, only all that was there. The future? To be, in the vast, essential oneness of the universe. Free. The message? You'll know it when you see it: stay as you are. EDWARD A. KOPLOWITZ Here lies Ed Koplowitz, done, drained and dead, Known to his friends as redoubtable Ed, Born at a young age in wondrous San Fran, He spent his whole boyhood devising a plan, He would go to a high school, one Lick-Wilmerding, Wherein he could gambol and do his own thing, Thence to the East and to Brandeis to stay, To learn and to talk and mayhaps to play, To graduate well, even magna cum laude, Better,oh better, than Boston clam chowder, And on, on to Stanford, the school of the law, A frightful experience, right down to the maw, Of rights, wrongs and maybes, of contracts and torts, Of rights, writs and wrotes and even moot courts, To emerge from the cave with his brainstuff uncurled, But wait! He lives yet! It be just a new world! CHARLES E. KOOB Wheels have been set in motion, and they have their own pace to which we are condemned. Each move is dictated by the previous one-that is the meaning of order. If we start being arbitrary it'l1 just be a shambles: at least, let us hope so. Because if we happened, just happened to discover, or even suspect, that our spontaneity was part of their order, we'd know that we were lost. from Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead by Tom Stoppard I dreamed once that my future and my being really did belong to me. Foolish! And yet even since that dream I have at least suspected that I really could fly and somehow the order of jesuit education, the LSAT, and Stanford Law School has been shambled meaningfully. ge' ,,,,L:nw' CHARLES P. KUNTZ A.B. Stanford University 1966. STEPHEN F. KUNKEL B.A. Yale University 1966. MICHAEL C. LITT David was born in 1892 in a small Alaskan mining town. When he was very young his parents moved to Oregon where David grew up. He rose to the rank of captain in the American Expeditionary Force During World War I, serving with distinction. He later worked as a waiter, taxicab driver, and, despite little formal education, as a museum tour guide. He spent much of his spare time working on improvements on steam engines, with the goal in mind of making their widespread use for automobiles again practical. While on a trip to Chicago to get backing for his invention he was severly injured by a streetcar, on January 27th, 1926. He died of injuries received in the accident on January 30th, 1926. PAUL TERRY LUBECK A native Utahn, Terry majored in mechanical engineering at the University of Utah where he was a member of Pi Tau Sigma and Tau Beta Pi honorary engineering fraternities. He graduated cum laude in 1963. Shortly thereafter he moved to the Southwest where he worked two years for Sandia Corporation and earned an M.S. in mechanical engineering from the University of New Mexico in 1965. These serious pursuits were briefly interrupted by marriage to a fellow Utahn, the former Janet Elkins, and a honeymoon trip to San Francisco. A certain fascination with the Bay Area eventually brought Terry to Stanford for his legal training, where he has been an avid participant in intramural sports. In his third year, he served as Vice President of the Stanford Law Association. Between frequent backpacking trips in the High Sierras, Terry spent the summer months working as an engineer and a patent law trainee. After graduation, Terry plans to enjoy another summer of High Sierra backpacking interspersed with Bar Review classes. RAY E. McDEVlTT A.B. Stanford University 1966. RODERICK NEIL MCAULAY Rod was first noticed in Sacramento, California in 1944. After ten years of investigating backyards and railroad tracks he was whisked off to San Francisco to complete his education. Four years at Occidental College in Los Angeles added some political experience to his baggage. For the past three years he has been struggling to preserve his integrity from the groping hands of the well-greased law professors at Stanford. Except for a summer in Fairbanks, Alaska where he tallied wine bottles floating down the Chena River and clerked in a law office, he has spent his spare time investigating all the angles and contours of California. The law professors may gloat mildly in that Rod will probably spend some portion of the remainder of his life wrestling with the legal processes - perhaps, even as a lawyer. l if JAMES L. MCINTOSH Born April 2, 1945, Erie, Pa.g William H. Hall High School, West Hartford, Conn. 3 Yale University, B.A. Cum Laude fEnglish literaturejg Married Sarah Hoffman, June 18, 1966, Stanford Legal Aid Society, Assistant to Reporter, Criminal Law Revision Project, State of Hawaii Committee on Law Revision, 1969-70, Co-author of note on death penalty administration in California fin 21 Stanford Law Reviewjg Clerk to Justice Winslow Christian, California Court of Appeal, San Francisco, 1969-71 . RICHARD C. MALLORY . Born in the South Dakota Badlands, Rick spent his formative years in the industrial bowels of Southern California, where, fighting to forget his environment, he studied feverishly at South Torrance High. Then, like an academic maschocist, Rick subjected himself to the scholastic pressures that confront business majors at U.S.C., living the life of a monk in the dank confines to the Phi Delt house. Fearing that good times might pass him by altogether, Rick came to Stanford Law School where he attended a couple of parties at Crothers, hosted one or two at the Whiskey Hill Manor, and even tried bar-tending at the Pub with the ill-fated Gansinger Regime, all in a futile effort to break out of his shell. Having let Law Review virtually slip through his fingers, he became forlorn and reverted to a monastic existance, spending his third year as a fraternity R.A. With hopes for a brighter future, Rick will either accept an offer from the Juarez law firm of Calof, Sheppard, 8.: Minkowski, or become a pipe-fitter in Tampa. JEFFREY LYNN MASON Jeff was born in Philadelphia fa Philadelphia lawyer?j, grew up in Los Angeles fno commentj, and has attended Stanford for the last seven 'years fthatls riicej. As an undergraduate, Jeff majored in Political Science fwas James T. Watkins, IV his adviser?j, was active in the Institute of International Relations fbipartisan and moderate, but still worthwhilej, and was an active member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fsome of my best friends are SAE'sJ. While in law school, Jeff acquired an Oehlmann Award in the first year C'for excellencenj, a wife before the second year fthey met on a blind date - on April Fool's Day, 19661 a first place in the Kirkwood Moot Court Competition during the second year fthat's nice, tooj, and the presidency of the Law Forum in the third year fhe also gets frequent headachesj. He's looking forward to graduating and trying his wings in the real world fhut, two, three, fourlj or clerking in the District Court of Apeals foyez, oyez, oyez!j. PHILIP J. MELDMAN WANTED: DEAD or ALIVE - for crimes of HERESY and SUBVERSION against the Law School and the Legal Profession. NAME: Philip James Meldman, alias The Philzer, alias Fox Point Phil, alias Milwaukee Melds, alias Clarence Pums, alias Maria Fedumas. GENERAL DESCRIPTION: A peerless, reverenced, irreproachable savant, genteel in nature and gallant in thought. IDENTIFIABLE SCARS: Atrophied cerebral cortex as a result of Indoctrina Legalitis. KNOWN OCCUPATIONS: Student, pretender to the Spanish throne, week-end proctologist. SPECIFIC CRIMES: lj Suspect does not want to be a a lawyer. Zj Suspect frequently quotes Shaw's Those who can do, those who cannot teach. 35 Suspect said that the Stanford Law School Alumni Association is a bunch of phony peduncles which won't get acent from him. 41 Suspect wrote a revolutionary's handbook for pedophiles entitled Turn On With Brownies. ...Anyone having information regarding the whereabouts of this villainous varmit please notify the Dean, your nearest Stanford Law alumnus, or call C4155 555-1212 and ask for Violet Krepler. BENJAMIN F. MILLER Ben came to Stanford from a chicken town and out of the bastard child of the University of California. He came with great expectations which were partially realized in the first week when he found the golf course. The next two and one-half years were filled with ups and downs with highs of ninety and lows of seventy-two. Finally on January 15, 1969, he found what he was looking for and for a day the world was perfect. With a personal course record of sixty-nine he can leave to conquer new worlds. Stanford has no further challenges for him to meet. LEROY L. MILLER LeRoy Miller was born in Myrtle Point, Oregon, On July 5, 1943. He moved to California at the age of thirteen, where he has since resided. Currently he is living in Crescent City, California. LeRoy attended Stanford University as an undergraduate, obtaining an A.B. in German in 1966. He spent the winter and spring quarters of his sophomore year at the Stanford campus in Germany. Choosing to remain at Stanford for his legal education, LeRoy enrolled in law school following graduation in 1966. While there, he participated in the activities of the Legal Aid Society, including the San Jose Bail Bond Project and the San Mateo Assistant Defenders. After his second year of law school, he took part in the San Joaquin Valley Legal-Medical Project, doing community organizing among the farm laborers of Californials central valley. During his third year, he participated in the Law and Psychiatry program. LeRoy hopes to enter some phase of criminal law or poverty law as a career. PATRICK H. MITCHELL B.A. Willamette University 1963. SAUL A. MILLER B.A. Lehigh University 1966. JAMES R. MOSS Jim was born April 23, 1942 in Salt Lake City, Utah. After his freshman year at college, he spent two years in England as a missionary for the Mormon Church. He received his undergraduate degree in political science from the University of Utah, Where he was student body president. Following his graduation, he worked for Congressman Sherman P. Lloyd of Utah. At Stanford, Jim has used his spare time to teach classes at the Palo Alto Institute of Religion, and spent his summers working on a master's degree in the history of religion at the Brigham Young University. During his second year of law school, he took an unofficial leave of absence to work as a field director in George Romney's short-lived presidential campaign. Future plans include more teaching, more schooling, more politics and a well-deserved rest for wife LaVe1le, who has earned all those Stanford tuition checks. BEATRICE ANN MOULTON B.A. Pomona College 1961. PATRICK R. MOYA A.B. Princeton University 1966 CHARLES MATTHEW MURPHY Born February 17, 1944, in the wilds of Winnemucca, Nevada, Chuck soon persuaded his family to move to the Biggest Little City in the world: Reno. He was educated in the public schools of Reno, where he then entered the University of Nevada. While there, he served the student body as Vice-President and Senator. Before being graduated in 1966, he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Blue Key, and Phi Kappa Phi. Since entering Stanford Law School, Chuck has achieved a small measure of fame through his insane bridge playing, if not always with his scholastic attainments. He is a member of Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity. He once joined Mal Wheeler in putting on a mockery of a trial for the Mock Trial program. He has worked two summers as the administrative assistant of the National College of State Trial Judges. Following graduation, Chuck plans to return to Nevada to enter a lucrative divorce practice there. JOHN W. NELSON B.S. Portland State College 1966. THOMAS K. NASH Wow-another crisis! Another crossroad! The biggest yet, no doubt, this transition from observer to participant. Portland, Oregon to Nortwestern University to Stanford Law School. . . We last left Tom near the end of this eventful and enjoyable, if sometimes too-comfortable, progression. Now we return to find him ready to emerge, to enter life's struggles in earnest, though our newly-armed combatant isn't entirely certain yet of his battle plan. Labeled a finished product as he wanders out of the educational system, he stops for a moment to get his bearings, to reorient his perspectives, before going forward to validate by performance. But helll pause only briefly, because the question for him is no longer whether or not, but rather how to accept the challenge. It's going to be a grand, exciting adventure. Accompanied by Barbara, his lovely wife, Tom will soon encounter the awesome responsibilities of Career and Family, and all indications are that things are going to get even better for them in the episodes to follow. ROBERT M. NEWELL I have accomplished two things in life: lj In 1960, I discovered zucchini fltalian squash to the uninitiated and, obviously, unhealthyjg Zj On February 1, 1969, I enticed my tnie love, sweet and lovely Judith Ann Reynolds fStanford, '66j, into holy matrimony. I salute my loyal family for supporting me in comfort and style for the past quarter century and now eagerly assign that formidible task to my bride.My one regret is that an illustrious 7 year career in Stanford Intramurals, only occasionally besmirched by victory, now draws to a thunderous close. Go Blackacrel EDWARD W. NEWMAN A.B. Cornell University 1966. JGHN T. NIMMONS B.A. Oberlin College 1966. PHILIP TAYLOR NICHOLSON Of goals accomplished you shall not read For I am here like a nodding reed Flows bent by the brook, without a care Of where t'would lean were nothing there. From Kansas, Ellis, middletown grad To Princeton bound because a fad For rounded men prevailed that year. Remembered now as fond near Past-philosophy and weekend girls In kitchen dreams dishwater swirls The time away. Then choose again, The streamlet sang, and slipped I main Bound current keen for law lest otherwise I face a choice to grow a size Too much too soon. I am not what I know I am Caulfield in the ryepatch, Holden so Long as need there be, then letting go. LUIS G. NOGALES MARILYN DOLORES NOREK . Marilyn was born on February 18 fwe will leave the year unnamedj, the second of eventually five tries for a SON. Despite intense concentration at Loyola of Chicago on cheerleading, sorority activities, Variety Show dancing, sports, and running for Miss Loyola, she received an honors degree in psychology and her departmental key. The rigors of legal training, however, altered her frivolous nature. When not studying, dating, playing tennis, or throwing darts, she formulates sarcastic replies to the questions that plague all women law students: 'fBut WHY did you choose law? and Are you REALLY going to practice?,' But, if pushed, she will admit that the Legal Aid Society, the Stanford Journal of International Studies, gazing with rapture at her American Jurisprudence Award, and serious though unrewarding husband-hunting have gotten their share of attention. STEPHEN D. NUTT Cravath, Swaine 8a Moore. A.B. San Diego State College 1966 Steve was born in San Francisco in 1940 and lived in various parts of California for the following eighteen years Upon graduation from Santa Barbara High School, he indulged his curiosity about The East by attending Dartmouth College, where he was active on the Sophomore Orientation Council and as a member of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity Having been impressed with The East at 380 F Steve bundled up his frostbitten curiosity and journeyed to Stanford for his last two years of college. At Stanford, he developed an intense interest in the Middle East and in his future wife, Anne In late summer 1962 an A B in International Relations, a commission in the Navy and a wife were acquired in rapid succession. His four years in the Navy involved domestic travels to Norfolk, Va and to San Diego California as well as pleasure cruises to the Persian and Tonkm Gulfs After three enervating years of Rest and Recreation at the law school Steve with family fnow including Elizabeth age twoj will trek to New York to Join RICHARD S. ODOM In addition to Texas, Where he was born, Rich spent his precollege years in Colorado, Japan, Austria, Alabama, and Germany. His friends insist that this diversity in childhood helped develop Rich's liberal outlook on life, especially his concern with our country's international intermeddling. As a math undergraduate at Stanford, Rich tried to further the cause of nonviolence and peace by being a member of the wrestling team. At law school he continued his humanitarian efforts: As Managing Editor of the Law Review he was instrumental in liberalizing what had earlier been a hated elitist organization, he also tried to help the needy by serving gratuitously as Father at an apartment in Escondido Village. Because of his multifarious unorthodox activities, Rich lost his I-KID deferrment and was forced to accept a postgraduation, 2-year contract as an Army Intelligence officer. JAMES A. OLIVER A.B. Stanford University 1965 JACK B. OWENS For the benefit of fans, future employers, FBI agents, et al.: A Rhodes Scholar, an All-American habfback, a born leader . . . Yes, that would have been nice, but at least I did manage to take first runnerup in the Duncan yo-yo contest in the seventh grade. I was the only guy who could go left in the mandatory walking the dog trick. Other accomplishments of equal magnitude during seven years at Stanford include: A.B. Magna Cmn Laude in history and political science, Phi Beta Kappa, Note Editor, Law Review, Hilmer Oehlman, Ir. Award for first year legal writing, Legal Aid Cfirst yearj. My future plans are to retire and write my autobiolgraphy. My wife has done such a marvelous job of supporting me in the last few years that I feel she has earned the right to keep up the good work. FREDERICKA PAFF Attended University High School in Iowa City, Iowa. Was graduated magna cum laude in Linguistics and Slavic Languages and Literatures from Radcliffe College in 1965. Studied linguistics and German language at University College in London and at the Goethe Institute in Blaubeuren, Germany, in 1965-66. Was an article editor on the Law Review. Will clerk for Judge Ben C. Duniway on the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco next year. Jan was born in Tampa, Florida, on May 22, 1944 tall birthday gifts always received graciouslyj but has lived most of his life in Seattle, Washington, where he attended Shoreline High School and the University of Washington, from which he graduated in June, 1966 in English. He then acquired a Wife fKathyj, a child fPolly Ellenj, a draft deferment flll-Aj, two cats fBayless and Cinderj, and an infinite fan of legal wisdom. While at Stanford his principal activity was Legal Aid and he served as the president of the Legal Aid Society for a year. After graduation he plans to return to the rainey Northland, much to the relief of the glacially slow secretarial staff with which he has been feuding all year. HARRY CUSHING PIPER, III Born February 14, 1944. Married Valerie Seyfert on November 16, 1968. Went wee wee wee all the way home, and am now growing mustache. Fie on it, tie, 'tis an unweeded garden. Younger than springtime am I, angel and lover. Morgen wird hell und klar, Baby you can drive my car. JEFFREY BRUCE PLATT Jeff was born on July 30, 1945, in Brooklyn, New York. He attended P.S. 235, Walt Whitman Junior High School, Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn College and other educational institutions in New York. None of them has influenced Jeffs life as much as Stanford Law School. He will remember his years at Stanford. PERRY D. POPOVICH A.B. Stanford University 1966 CHARLES F. PREUSS . i Born in Santa Barbara, California, in 1941, Santa Barbara High School, 1958 g Dartmough College, 1962, U.S. Marine Corps, 1966. .noi THOMAS W. PULLIAM September, 1949, Roselle Avenue School, Pleasantville, New York: commenced formal education with youthful enthusiasm, thirsty for knowledge. June, 1969, Stanford Law School, Stanford, California: formal education brought to a grinding halt . . . thirst quenched. ALAN RADER - Lawyers are all right, I guess - but it doesn't appeal to me. Imean they're all right if they go around saving innocent guys' lives all the time, and like that, but you don't do that kind of stuff if youire a lawyer. All you do is make a lot of dough and play golf and play bridge and buy cars and drink Martinis and look like a hot-shot. And besides. Even if you did go around saving guys' lives and all, how would you know if you did it because you really wanted to save guys' lives, or because you did it because what you realbf wanted to do was to be a terrific lawyer, with everyone slapping you on the back and congratulating you in court when the goddam trial was over, the reporters and everybody, the way it is in the dirty movies? How would you know you weren't being a phony? The trouble is, you wouldn 't. H.C. RICHARD A. RAGSDALE Dick was born in Vancouver, Washmgton, February 22, 1943, and grew up in Medford, Oregon. He entered Stanford in 1961 where he played football and rugby for three years. He participated in the Volunteers In Asia summer work project in Hong Kong, and was a freshman sponsor in Wilbur Hall. After receiving a B.A. in history, Dick studied for a year at Hong Kong University on a Rotary Scholarship. While in law school he has continued to play rugby for the Big Red Machine and was an assistant freshman football coach for one year. His legal interests include the Santa Clara County Public Defenders program. Dick plans to practice law in Portland, Oregon. The U.S. Army will occupy the next two years, however. ALEXANDER B. REISMAN A.B. University of Michigan 1966. RONALD F. ROMINES Well, then what shall I . . .What can I say? why it seems like only JAMES C. ROBERTSON Jim was born on February 26, 1940 in Owatonna, Minnesota. He was raised primarily in the Washington, D.C. area, but his father's position as a Foreign Service officer necessitated periodic changes of scenery, and Jim spent two of his junior-high school years in Warsaw, Poland. After graduating in 1957 from Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School in Bethesda, Maryland, Jim attended Yale University, where he graduated in 1961 with a B.A. in Politics and Economics. He subsequently spent four years as an infantry officer in the Marine Corps, during which time he saw duty in Southern California, the Caribbean, and the F ar East, and attained the rank of Captain. While at Stanford Jim was a Resident Assistant in Phi Gamma Delta and a member of the Law Review. After graduation he will practice with Pillsbury, Madison 84 Sutro in San Francisco. yesterday that we were welcomed, sat wide-eyed and wondering in the first-floor circus rnaximus, we the Christians being intimidated by he the lion of legal education exhorting us to laser-intense glacier-paced pursuit of greater heights for Stanford Law! or didn't we know? and now here we are a short shrift interminable time later, most of us long since Henry-Harted into submission, well almost most of us, unwillingly eager to join the minions of militant middleclassdom, unconfidently convinced that we are the soon-to-be indispensible architects of order preservers of the social weal, generally generalists and specifically wondering when we get contingent feeid costs awarded and second highest professionally paid . . . been questioned, cross-examined, tested graded, sorted, categorized, labeled and put forth on platter: here we are, the 1969 Stanford model, Socratically succored, masters of lawyer- think, sui juris and zz fortiori ready for immediate delivery. groovy. ALLEN J. RUBY GEORGE A. RUSSILL . A native of Portland, Oregon, George was born in 1938, was graduated from Williams College in 1960, spent a pleasant year as a graduate student in history and political science at the University of Oregon, then, in the fall of 1961, entered law school here. In June, 1962, he left, having decided the military was perferable. Before entering the Army, he worked until May, 1963 as a campaign aide and research assistant for former Senator Wayne L. Morse of Oregon. After three years of the Army, which included a tour in Vietnam with an airborne brigade, he concluded law school was preferable and returned to the U.S. in May, 1966. To meet increased tuition, he worked tirst as a political campaign coordinator and then as a newspaper reporter before returning to Stanford in the fall of 1967. He intends to practice law in Portland with the firm of McCol1och, Dezendorf and Spears. BRUCE W. SATTLER A.B. Stanford University 1966 B.A. Michigan State University 1965 PETER F. SCHILLA A.B. Stanford University 1965. RANDLET T SCHUBACH A.B. Stanford University 1966. GLEN W. SCHOFIELD A.B. Stanford University 1966 SANDRA D. SMILEY A.B. Stanford University 1966. RAND N. SHULMAN B.S. Stanford University 1965. M.S. Stanford University 1966. MELVIN R. STEINER Mel was born on March 29, 1945, in Hoisington, Kansas fwhich for some of the less well-traveled is a thriving metropolis of 4500 situated on the bleak plains of western Kansasj. Having survived rural life and a small-town education, he proceeded on to the University of Kansas. Tiring of undergraduate life, he foolishly left that institution after three years with degree in hand, and migrated west to California and to Stanford Law School. His performance there has been notable for its mediocrity and its obscurity. He now faces graduation and uncertainty as to future employment. Like all Midwesterners. he has fallen in love with sunny California, and hopes to remain here making enough money to pay off the sizeable National Defense Loan debt that he has managed to pile up while at Stanford. This debt might well be his most lasting reminder of the time he spent vlearnin, the lawf' ROBERT M. STERN My three years in law school has seen a series of highs and lows: from the excitement of first year fparticularly Moot Court, to the boredom of second year freaching its nadir in Torts ID, to the rare enjoyment of third year. My work on the McCarthy campaign in the Spring and then for local, liberal candidates in the Fall helped restore my sanity while struggling through the basic courses. Members of my class discovered that there were many more important subjects than the usual Corporations-Taxation routine. Poverty law courses and legal aid work-study projects started to blossom, and one-quarter of the third year students applied for a Reginald Heber Smith Fellowship in Poverty Law. Next year I will join Jeff Jennings in the East Palo Alto Legal Aid Office and will help teach the Legal Problems of the Poor class. BRUCE D. STRATHEARN WILLIAM RICHARD SUCH Born in Lausanne in 1950, Richard, heir to the vast Such fortunes, divided his earliest years between Park Avenue and the Cote D'Azur. Educated at various private schools on the continent, his musical and mathematical accomplishments caused him to be recognized as a considerable prodigy. His early development was influenced greatly by his copains, Sartre and Camus. Considering Oxford to be too restrictive, he matriculated at Harvard at the age of 12 and was graduated surnma cum laude at 14. He was president of his class and earned many letters. After the Olympics and two years on the Gran Prix circuit fin the meantime serving as spiritual adviser to John XXIID, he entered the law school in 1966. Elected president of the law review in his first semester, he is the author of numerous articles, as well as notes, comments and book reviews. His hobbies include international banking and espionage. He is married to the former Miss Universe, Jane Clements. Upon graduation, he hopes to become a leading Revolutionary figure. B.S. University of Wisconsin 1966 STEPHEN G. SUSSMAN B.A. Pomona College 1966. DOUGLAS G. THOMPSON, JR. I am the Lizard King, I can do anything I can make the earth stop in its tracks I made the blue cars go away For seven years I dwelt In the loose palace of exile, Playing strange games With the girls of the island. Now I have come again To the land of the fair, 8a the strong, 84 the wise. e Brothers 8a sisters of the pale forest O children of Night Who among you will run with the hunt? Now Night arrives with her purple legion. Retire now to your tents 8: to your dreams. Tomorrow we enter the town of my birth. I want to be ready. The Celebration of the Lizard Jim Morrison ERIC L. TREISMAN Eric was born on V-E Day, May 7, 1945, in Fort Worth, Texas. He was graduated from Big D's Thomas Jefferson High School in 1962, . having played golf and basketball and participated in student government. At Duke University, which he attended through the generosity of his Uncle Arnold, he worked for the Rhine Institute, served on the class council and the hoops squad, associated with DKE fraternity, and achieved distinction in the business administration major, graduating cum laude. Having originally come to Stanford with intentions of causing trouble and raising eyebrows, he settled down to serious booking only after his marriage to the former JoAnn Doud. Eventually he became note editor of the review and worked on the yearbook. After graduation he plans to associate with the Dallas firm of Bain, Taylor, Doud, and Fine. MARTIN B. VIDGOFF Born in Portland, Oregon in 1943, Ihad a normal childhood, except for never catching the mumps. Then I went to Harvard, where I caught the mumps. But I say I was in the war. At Harvard I was an active and alert student, majoring in govermnent. After Richard Neustadt denoted my undergraduate thesis as an unadulterated piece of claptrapf I advanced to the Stanford School of Law. Here I have been dutiful, scrupulous, and colorful. In my second year, I became a reform candidate for President of the Law Association, and won. The candidates to succeed me also promise reform, so I have reaped the rewards of the pathfinder. When I grow up, I hope to save the world. Sic transit gloria munde. Remember me this way. ROGER A. VREE B.A. in History, Wheaton College, 1965, M.A. Stanford University, 1966. PAUL S. VINNICOF As an undergraduate, Paul fP.V., or Vines, depending on the readerj studied chemistry at Pomona and Stanford. He then went on to medical school, where he instantly became a devout hypochondriac. In an effort to regain his health, Paul left medical school and went to work in the real world. Finding this experience even more debilitating, he enrolled in law school. Except for a six hour poker marathon, Paul's first year in law school was uneventful. Things picked up in the second year, however, when he moved in with the dynamic duo, Ralph Uakej Jacobson and Bruce Strathearn. From Bruce, he learned another use for the Berlin Wall, and from Ralph he learned the fine art of bargain hunting. At this time, Paul,s future plans are very indefinite. MALCOLM E. WHEELER After many successful years in athletic competition, Malcolm finally reached the pinnacle of his career by being named player coach of the Blackacre gridmen. Largely through his efforts, this brilliant group of football stars failed to win the all-University championship three years in a row. JONATHON W. WILCOX - Jon entered Stanford as an undergraduate, thinking he might be a historian or writer or a politician or maybe a lawyer. He wasnlt really sure what lawyers did, but a lot of bright young boys think they might end up as lawyers. Four years later he hadn't made up his mind, so he went to Law School - good generalist education, 'fthe degree can't hurt youf' a lot of opportunities, etc. He still didn't know what lawyers did. His first day in Franklin's tort class showed him what lawyers did and pretty well convinced him he didnit want to be a lawyer. He thought the profession should probably start over from scratch, back to 1215 or Justinian or whenever it was. But he had no strength to his convictions andlor the draft served as a disincentive to any more individualistic courses of action. At least three years of law school have showed htm a lot of things he doesn't want to do with his life. GREGORY O. WILHELM A.B. Stanford University 1966 VAUGHN C. WILLIAMS Born March 2, 1945, in Los Angeles, California. Attended Harvard University, receiving an A.B. in 1966 in the field of American History and Literature. Thereafter attended Stanford Law School, and served as President of the Stanford Law Review 'for Volume 21. Will serve as law clerk to Judge Carl McGowan of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit during the 1969-1970 Term. DONALD K. O. WONG Born and raised in Hawaii, Donald attended Northwestern University and received a degree in Civil Engineering in 1966. After graduating from law school, Donald and his Wife Suzanne plan to return to Honolulu to Work and enjoy the benefits of its endless summer. They hope to see their friends who decide to visit Hawaii in the future and to show them what paradise is really like. GERALD A. WRIGHT No decision by this Court can forestall revolution whenever the existing government fails to command respect and loyalty of the people and sufficient distress and discontent is allowed to grow up among the masses .... Corruption, ineptitude, inflation, oppressive taxation, militarization, injustice, and loss of leadership capable of intellectual initiative in domestic or foreign affairs are allies on which the Communists count to bring opportunity knocking to their door. Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494, 578-79 C1951j fconcurring opinion by Jackson, JJ. Knock, knock, knock. 'f'There's no sort of use in knockingf said the Footman, 'and that for two reasons. First, because I'm on the same side of the door as you are: secondly, because theyire making such a noise inside, no one could possibly hear youfv L. Carroll, Alicels Adventures in Wonderland. MICHAEL W. YOUNG B.A. University of California at Riverside 1966. ROBIN M. YEAMANS A.B. University of Southern California 1966. RICHARD G. ZIMMERMAN Dick's Indianaroots have nurtured stability and organization in a life punctuated with happiness and a leitmotiv. The former Lafayette Jefferson High School Key Club Treasurer co-authored the new constitution for the Student Council. Subsequently, he became treasurer of both the Indiana District Key Club and Junior Achievement. He decided to attend Indiana University to major in accounting and to become treasurer of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. As a Student Senator, Dick had access to many organizations to see which needed his services. After affrliating with Beta Gamma Sigma, he became treasurer of Beta Alpha Psi. Having passed the CPA examination, he hastened west to become treasurer of Crothers Club at Stanford. In his second year, the Law Association elected him treasurer. In the middle of his third year, Dick remembered a girl he had met in a bowling alley seven years earlier. He promptly returned to Indiana and dramatically, before witnesses, married her. Already the couple has one hamster, Katana. CL S 0 U FY ,f gf. . QQ 5 Q 45 2? .O 9 R fWiffJ4mf A V H , wi ? 0 O ww - f , w .. .., ' 4 Cz, ' c X -W Y 1? Af? W C s QM P m, Cf gn A nliffg? - Y' 'L -,im 1 v ' QS 5 Q N ' 5392 M lil' N 5 f YN - ' 5' KW W F N4 it xm -ffzlff -- I w LIJW- Q r fffilt., 1-' V w -P Q W 443 L ff l , . 11.A wi Q J 7' -f 5. l , 3 X99 U QL XT? 1 f Q44 x xl, 1 A ,rw 0 fx W fb ' ' 0 f . W! OEZLLEX.. sm Jo R ay JS N ',-' ii LQ 7' ' L me , , , 9 'ff f 5 W1 1 if- 'i-A HQ , X ..,.., x f NW yi , 2 v Q gg NJ 'J .W 14, C of X, Qffifrf Lg ' E va OCLXJNJJ C9 Q O O o MDM 'Q a Y ,E ' ,, Q , .5 .ig M-9 S-ha f :gif l C4 'ER' GIVE ME Youz2'liRED,56ul? Ron. ' Wann L-Iuvoleu Masses yfnremucfb BQEEIHE Feta A O HE wnifcueo mzehse QFybvnTeex4mc, sklozze Yj Q - 5woTuzse,meHMLEs:,Twpfe7f-Ton -ro Me, A I Emma Lazarus Y 9 RICHARD C. ABBOTT B.A. Economics Yale University 1966 Stowe, Vt. JOSEPH I ADAMS A.B. Political Science Brown University 1 96 7 Forest Hills, N Y. TERRANCE M. ADLHOCK B.A. History Wesleyan University 1967 Utica, N Y. ALAN C. ALHADEFF B.A. Accounting Uf of Washington 1967 Seattle, Wash. FRANCIS A. ANDERSON A.B. Business Administration Dartmouth College 1966 Dixon, Cal. RALPH W. BACHMAN B.A. Political Science U ofMinnesota 1966 Minneapolis, Minn. B. S. 2 9 .2 . , sw V ,f if . RICHARD M BAKER Accounting Indiana U 196 7 Gary, Ind. DANIEL R. BEDFORD B. S. Mathematics Stanford University 196 7 Arlington Heights, Ill. JAMES R. BEER Y A.B. Physical Science Harvard University 1963 A therton, Cal. PETER A. BELL B.A. Government Wesleyan University 1 96 7 Syracuse, NY Y GILBERT C BERKELE Y B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 Fresno, Cal. MICHAEL .L Be VIER B.A. Government Carleton College 196 6 Bluffton, Ind. - ,f..,.wf.::: if sg '::: .5 ' 51' -' :KN ROBERTL. BOUCHIER B.A. English Stanford University 1 96 7 South Laguna, Cal. If L 6 5 ' W Q Q 1 X' fe ' f 7 ,iw Y, 4, I 12 f 4 vb 9? QW? ,Q X 14 'Q 1 xv 4 ' s H lf ,iff . 'iv 1 2 +V ' 1 S2413 gt 1 ,Q Psi I fd' 3,33 M2521 'Q 1 1 v ' ' s sy 7' 4 new 1+ 64 Q Kgs as 1 S-2 53 , xv J 3. 1 , we , MICHAEL L. BURACK B.A. Physics Wesleyan Unzyersity 1964 Mountain View, Cal. SAMUEL D. CHERIS B.S. Accounting Brookbfn College 196 7 Brooklyn, N K JAMES L. CLEGG A.B. Politics Princeton University I 96 7 Pittsburgh, Pa. ADAM G. von DIOSZEGH Y A.B. English Stanford University 1964 Palo Alto, Cal. DOLORES A. DONO VAN A.B. History and French Stanford University I 96 7 LaJ0lla, Cal. WILLIAM E EADS A.B. Political Science U ofMissour'i 1967 Kansas City, Mo. NORMAN V ELFSTROM B.A. Poli, Sci and History West. Wash. State College 1967 Mount Vernon, Wash. 1722 AA fig. 'uf W s new RICHARD A. FINK A.B. English Stanford University 1963 Palo Alto, Cal. DA VID ELSON B.A. Economics Occidental College 1 96 7 Los Angeles, Cal. ROBERT P E TIENNE B.A. Social Science San Jose State College 1 96 7 Los Altos Hills, Cal CHRISTOPHER II EVANS A.B. Pub. and Int. Affairs Princeton University 1 96 7 Palo Alto, Cal FRANK E EVANS B.A. History Tulane University 1968 ' Winnetka, Ill. DA VID A. FARMER B.A. Political Science Arizona State U 1 96 7 Odessa, Texas JOHN R. FIELDS B.A. Economics U of Michigan 196 7 Grosse Ile, Mich. ERIC R. FISCHER B.A. History U of Pennsylvania 1967 New York, N K Homer Himself Hath Been Oberv'd To Nod ...HORACE PRENTICE A. FISH A.B. Political Science Stanford University 196 7 Gill, Mass. JAMES T FLYNN A.B. French Dartmouth College 1 96 7 Omaha, Neb. JAMES E FOTENOS A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Daly City, Cal ALAN E. FRIEDMAN B.A. American Studies Amherst College 196 7 Denver, Colo. Annette Galustian B.S. Marketing Penn. State U 1967 Studio City, Cal. C MICHAEL GANSCHOW B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 Anaheim, Cal JAMES M GANSINGER A.B. English and History Bucknell University 1 96 7 Murrysville, Pa. WILLIAM A. GA U VIN B.S. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1962 St. Louis, Mo. JOHN L. GEN UNG B.S. Business U of Nebraska 1966 Glenwood, Iowa -r ..v, : Q:-gy: -- 5' X544 s if if ,, , fl f i ' Atvv ' A , 7 V 1 , , 1, , W, f . , DENNIS B. GOLDSTEIN B.A. Anglo-A merican Studies Brown University 1 96 7 Cranston, Rl KIRK A. GUSTAFSON B.A. Political Science Whitman College 1966 Gresham, Ore. GERALD M HALLIGAN B.A. Finance U of Washington 1967 Seattle, Wash. HENR YH HAPPEL B.A. Economics Yale University 1967 Houston, Texas STEPHEN .L HEISER B.A. Philosophy and Politics Dartmouth College 1967 Columbus, Neb. WILLIAM C HODGE B.A. History Harvard University 1963 Springfield, Ohio R OBER T B. HOFFMAN B.A. History Yale University 196 7 East Rochesterg N K JOHN L H UHS B.A. Economics U of Washington 1966 Seattle, Wash. NELSON M ISHIYAJMA B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 Palo Alto, Cal. C GORDON JONES A.B. Political Science Washington University 1967 Seattle, Wash. ED WARD M KEE CH RICHARD M K UR TZMAN B.A. PoliticalxScience U ofMichigan 1967 Detroit, Mich. ROGER A. LaBR UCHERIE B.A. Economics Stanford University 1 96 7 El Centro, Cal. PA UL C LEACH A.B. Economics Dartmouth College 1 96 7 Sandusky, Ohio CARL M LON GLE Y A.B. Philosophy Stanford University 1966 Lakeside, Cal WARREN R. L YONS B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 Rochester, N K JAMES H McGEE A.B. History Stanford University 1963 Reno, Nev. ROGER W KIRST B.S. Economics MI TI 196 7 St. Paulj Minn. Yale University I 96 7 Whittier, Cal. B.A. American History Harvard University 1965 Redwood City, Cal. ROBER TL. KEENEY B.A. American Studies Amherst College 196 7 Palo Alto, Cal. ROBERT B. KIMBALL B.A. History Claremont Men 's College 1 96 7 San Marino, Cal. ROBER TN KLEIN B.A. History Stanford University 1967 Fresno, Cal. WILLIAM FI KROENER, III B.A. History .f V. f.kv,. .4t,- ff - , ' t st r .Lfggj 6, N , wr x -N 3 1 ', . if I ' 1 'Il f 2 I , ff K, ft' We 1 76562, A? , H , 1,543 xr 1 1 'Q fr ,4 1 Q 7 fiwfipin 1 f .gf?4,Q14,, . , ff MM, f ! 4 'cf '4' R OBER T E. M cIN TOSH B. S. Business Administration U C L.A. I 96 7 La Crescen ta, Cal. WM. PA UL MacGREGOR B.A. International Relations US. C 1965 Los Angeles, Cal DANIEL H MacMEEKIN B.S. Business Administration Penn State U I 962 Flourtown, Pa. ROBERT F MANIFOLD B. S. Indstrial Mgt. Purdue University I 96 7 Indianapolis, Ind. JEFFREY A. MARSHALL B.A. Government Wesleyan University I 96 7 Lock Haven, Pa. DALE L. MA TSCHULLA T B.A. History Stanford University I 96 7 Mountain View, Cal. WILLIAM B. MEISSNER B.A. Latin Amer. Studies Yale University 1966 Newton, Mass. FREDERICK N MERKIN B.A. Political Science Claremont Men 's College I 96 7 Burbank, Cal. A :f9 f4'- it, :Aff f 3 JOHN B. MITCHELL B.A. Philosophy Uf of Wisconsin 1967 y Highland Park, Ill DOUGLAS .L MORGAN A.B. History Stanford University 1966 Salern, Ore. RICHARD L. MORNINGS TAR B.A. Government Harvard University 1 96 7 Brookline, Mass. STE VEN D. MOSKO WI TZ B.A. Political Science Queens College 1 96 7 Bayside, N X CHRISTOPHER J M UN CH A.B. Economics Cornell University 1 96 7 Denver, Colo. JOHN C M UNDT B.A. History Stanford University 196 7 Scarsdale, N K MAR TIN P O 'CONNELL B.S. Elec. Engineering Uf ofNotre Darne 1966 Chicage, Ill. GAR Y S. OKABA YASHI B.A. Economics U ofHawaii 1967 Honolulu, Hawaii PA UL E PERRET B.S. Accounting Northwestern University 196 7 Iowa City, Iowa JOHN PERRIN B.S. Engineering Va. Pohztechnic Inst. 1966 Roanoke, Va. 7? X ' 1 l H215 1-if 'ZMZ7 ALAN B. PICK B.A. Political Science U of Washington 1966 Seattle, Wash. JEFFREY E. PRA G B.A. History Carleton College I 96 7 Chicago, Ill WILLIAM R. RAPSON B.A. History Occzkien tal College 1 96 7 Tucson, Ariz. JAMES W ROBERTSON B.A. Philosophy U ofSanta Clara 1967 San Jose, Cal. WILLIAM R. ROBERTSON B.A. Economics Yale University 1966 West Pittston, Pa. MICHAEL ROSTER B.A. Political Science Stanford University 196 7 Libertyville, Ill JAMES P. RO WLES A.B. History Stanford University 1967 Houston, Texas STEPHEN S. R UDD B.A. Political Science Claremont Men is College 1 96 7 Los Angeles, Cal ROBERT W RYCHLIK B.S. Accounting Miami University f0hioj 1956 Riverside, Cal. JAMES H SAKODA B.A. Government Harvard University 1961 Honolulu, Hawaii RA YMOND L. SARNA B.A. Economics US. C 1 96 7 Los Angeles, Cal JEFFREY A. SCHAFER B.A. Politics Princeton University 196 7 San Jose, Cal. GEOFFREYR. W. SMITH A.B. History Stanford University I 96 7 Chicago, Ill MARK A. SCHIMBOR A.B. Economics U of Cal.fBerkeleyj 1967 Novato, Cal. STEVEN Ii SCHNIER B.S. Business Administration U CLA. 1 96 7 West Covina, Cal JAMES IZ SELNA B.A. History Stanford University 1967 Santa Monica, CAI. JOHN B. SHEPPARD B.A. History Louisiana State U 1966 Baton Rouge, La. DONALD W SMIEGIEL A.B. Political Science Princeton University 1967 St. Louis, Mo. FRED C SMITH B.A. Philosophy U of Michigan 1967 Owosso, Mich. PHILLIP K. SMITH B.A. International Relations U CL.A. I 96 7 Inglewood, Cal. The Issue Is Which Hand Has The M8LM's? JULIAN O. STANDEN B. S. English Columbia University 1967 New York, N K RICHARD C SUTTON A.B. Politics Princeton University 1967 Honolulu, Hawaii GEOFERE Y L. THOMAS B.A. History and Lit Harvard University 196 7 Fresno, Cal. LA WRENCE H TITLE B.A. History Stanford University 1 96 7 Beverbr Hills, Cal TIMOTHY G. TODD A.B. Diplomacy and World A ff Occidental College 1 96 7 Manhattan Beach, Cal E. NORTON TOOBY B.A. Engineering Harvard University 1967 San Marino, Cal. 4-' 9, . , W -. . :L'f' .- ', F37 lir Zli , - 5r Q ,V 4 ' 1 5 '52, 'X f W . 1 N14 405' 1 x 11 Qs, f 2 'ij-,fffs ,,,, 5 .NWS X? 14 9529 fm' V 'Q A f 1115153-'Zag-WIS s ,jg ' rfvfmvv 1 , , nf v.,' :G L-4Mwzf,s'iq'.: f' 42 ,-fm 1 ff- ru-',eqs4yMS,yf 1 v f is , trwfbv if xtwfldfwe 43,9 X? N J ffgifyfisffb J, 1 ,1 f mx .f , x xr W 4 Ax A 1 Mm A , 5. fart Vitffsg 4 sg.: v 1 , f awk f, si: as iff If , at f if ff, S1129 fv, sy fe- '12 Nlf '1 cg' 1 +6 32 1 I-y,g.,f:iR1-' -wg--:fzffrgv THOMAS R. TOOTHAKER B.A. History Stanford University 1959 Los Altos, Cal. GERALD E. VAR TY A.B. History Dartmouth College 1963 Los Altos Hills, Cal. G. WILLIAM VETTER B.A. Humanities Wesleyan University 1967 Orinda, Cal. VA UGHN R. WALKER A.B. Economics U of Michigan 1966 Watseka, Ill. gtgffg-fgjmy . ev, 'ff ' 19 ,JYMT EV - ii 7?,,i' 'IIFZ '?1'. Kiwi? 'Xfvef ' ' 'ff ' .V gffyi , X ,Z Q I Z X 4 1 ' .M f if 1 45248 1 gqkkf Aww 3 X 'aj 1 z'.,, W- 9 .f N. . 'kt I.. ' . QZFJQ Q 354. '-v slim- Wavmnfff I 4f'7: .., W: Q 3 ' 'Lf ,Ui il: BR UCE N1 WARREN B.A. Political Science U, of Kansas 1967 Emporia, Kan. GEORGE B. WEIKSNER B.S.E. Aero. Engr. and Chemistry Princeton University 1 96 6 Jim Thorpe, Pa. Zi ' ' Nik, ' .,.9 ,, .. ,. 2 .. , V , ' w if fi It fi fff I ' .wwf .,,. 1, ' , . A .iiff ffafv S , nf, - .1,.w'.f2'aej X,-V . ' ,::' ,. , I TW7?? f'-'f'sf', .9-vb',C'I:,v -' 1' 4: ' , , if .f:y,ggg,, f ',1wh'.,ff--fu , . 5 ,4,N ., . X. , . WILLIAM E. WESTERBEKE B.A. History Bowdoin College 1964 Quincy, Mass. RICHARD 11 WILLIAMS B.A. History Stanford University 1967 Glen Ellyn, Ill. RICHARD S. WIR TZ B.A. American Studies Amherst College 1961 Washington, D. C DA VID L. WORRELL B.S. Mech. Engineering Cornell University 1967 Clairton, Pa. BR UCE M WRIGHT B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 San Diego. Cal R. MICHAEL WRIGHT A.B. History and Architecture Stanford University 1966 Stanford, Cal l v 4 l.4,. ,,. ,Q PA UL FZ ALBERT B.A. Mathematics University of Kansas 1968 San Francisco, Cal RUSSELL G. ALLEN B.A. Mathematics Grinnell College Ottumwa, Iowa P MICHAEL ANDERSON I B.S. Public Administration US. C 1966 Los Angeles, Cali, ,. .if-. N s E N 2 are few X A E? X XE? s Efajz 'sQYviEd1rf?33 . S'ffI3,,. :a - :I: Q AMR Y ELIZABETH ASH A.B. English Literature Stanford University 1 959 Palo Alto, Cal. FREDERICK N BAILARD B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Carpinteria, Cal. R0 Y E. BA TES B.B.A. Business University of Texas 1968 Fort Worth, Texas ROBERT I BEA VER B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Rochester, Mich. ELISE B. BE CKE T B.A. History Stanford University 1964 Cambrlklge, Mass. JESSE M BETHEL B.A. Political Science U of Cal.lBerkeleyj 1968 Vallejo, Cal. PETER D. BE WLE Y A.B. Politics Princeton University 1968 Haddonfield, Nl CAR OLE L. BI ONDA A.B. Political Science U of Cal fBerkeleyj 1968 Petaluma, Cal. KAA TRI R. BOIES B.A. Political Science Wellesley College 1967 Seymour, Conn. 80 I-F.,-1' JOHN T BOWEN A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Altadena, Cal. SCOTT W BOWEN B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal WILLIAJW S. BOYD A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1965 San Mateo, Cal. x HELEN Cf BRENNAN B.A. English USC 1968 Long Beach, Cal. 1 CHARLES L. BRODY B.A. Sociology Columbia University 1966 Long Island City, N K CHARLES R. BR UTON B.A. History Northwestern University 1968 Oklahoma City, Okla. KENNETH D. BUCK WAL TER A.B. Political Science Occidental Colle e 1968 Z Los Angeles, Cal. 'W am 'galpuuwyf -rf-cz: 31:3 figs,-f1:,sxf,.sg,fg:21f 71: 22 -1 -fb A4'2if5LUT111Z315- 2111 -:gf -:ff-r ,.--1. r--... .,...,.. 54 A ly 1-, Qt QW2::i:Lm'rM.223'f.. STEPHEN T BUEHL A.B. American Studies Yale University 1968 Clayton, Mo. RUDOLFO F CANCINO B.A. Spanish Cal. State fFullert0nj 1965 Anaheim, Cal RALPH Fl CASPERSEN A.B. Physics Harvard University 1964 Minneapolis, Minn. :rr . ,,0' ,V W ff? S fe if it . , , Q , .5 sf! ' F , , , 5 X ,ey Q rg, it Q5 N 5 153 ..,-,Ei Q Q N :rf 11:1-2. I 413 .:m.f.,a,-.- ,,,- -- :w,,.,, ANN H CASTO B.A. History Stanford University 1968 Columbus, Ohio CHARLES D. CHALMERS B.S. Social Science Cal Pohl. College 1966 Los Angeles, Cal JACK G. CHARNEY B.A. History Vanderbilt University 1968 Augusta, GA. HOWARD A. CHICKERING B.S. Finance U of Pennsylvania 1966 Woodside, Cal. NICHOLAS R CLAINOS A.B. Politics Princeton University 1968 San Francisco, Cal GRENVILLE CLARK III A.B. History Harvard University 1968 Manchester, Mass. ELAINE D. CLIMPSON B.A. Political Science Miami University K Ohio j 1963 Alexandria, Va. WILSON L. CONDON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1963 Stanford, Cal. RONALD .L COTE B.A. Political Science U of Florida 1963 Seattle, Wash. DOUGLASM CROW B.S. General Science Oregon State U 1966 Portland, Ore. CHRISTINE C CURTIS B.A. English Vassar College 1968 New Haven, Conn. JANINE M DOLEZEL B.A. Philosophy U ofSanta Clara 1968 Sacramento, Cal. HUGH C DO WNER B. S. Nav. Arch. and Marine Engr. U of Michigan 1968 Kentfield, Cal GRE GOR Y C DYER U C L.A. Los Angeles, Cal. ROBER TA. EPSEN A.B. Engineering Princeton Unzversity 1961 San Mateo, Cal. BARBARA A. FIX B.A. Anthropology Barnard College 1968 Dallas, Texas LEED. FOREMAN A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Tacoma, Wash. PATRICIA A. CUTLER B.A. Government Smith College 1968 Downey, Cal. JAMES I DeLONG B.S. Naval Science US. Naval Academy 1963 Lafayette, Ind. GOR TON M DeMOND B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Pasadena, Cal. DA VID H De WEESE A.B. Anthropology Stanford University 1963 Portland, Ore. FREDERICK C DIE TZ B.A. Government Harvard University 1963 Lafayette, Cal. R OBER T R. DIS TAD A.B. English Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal RICHARD B. FRANTZREB B.A. Russian Amherst College Scarsdale, N K STEPHEN H FREE B.A. Government Indiana University 1968 Greenfield, Ind. WILLIAM L. GAMBLE B.S. Elec. Engineering S. Dakota State College 1968 Brookings, S.D. Whatever Also They Discuss When Sober, Is Always A Second Time Examined After They Have Been Drinking . . . HERODOTUS RICHARD A. GARCIA B.A. Govt. and Speech U ofAriz0na 1967 Tuscon, Ariz. HUGH C1 GARDNER III B.A. English Literature San Jose State College Long Beach, Cal. COLLEEN GERSHON A.B. Engineering Stanford University 1968 Long Beach, Cal. 'E ff iff! mffxf' gf J! VN X A WILLIAM .L GL UE CK B.A. Economics Ohio State University 1964 Cincinnati, Ohio MARSHALL M GOLDBERG A.B. Economics Harvard University 1968 Pittsburgh, Pa. HILAR Y F GOLDS TONE B.A. Government Bamard College 1968 Beverbf Hills, Cal JIMM Y K GOODMAN B.A. Engineering U of Oklahoma 1968 Oklahoma City, Okla. MICHAEL A. GREENE A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Encino, Cal HOWARD E. GREENFIELD B.S. History College ofthe Hobf Cross 1962 Shaker Heights, Ohio LOUIS M GUERRIERI A.B. Social Science Stanford University 1958 San Carlos, Cal ROBER TM HADDOCK B.A. Engineering Fordham College 1967 Scranton, Pa. Well, First I Telescope In On The Problem, Thinking All The Time Like A Lawyer . . . 4995 -' tar, '26 ,X ...Q Y. , .. iq. A b.f. 4 F .5 GLENN S. IL4RA B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Hilo, Hawaii JA CK R HARTOG B.A. Govemrnent Cornell University 1968 New York, N K JOHN I HEANEY B.A. Business Economics U of CalISanta Barbara! 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. JOAN E. HEIMBIGNER B.A. German and Comp. Lit. U of Washington 1968 Odessa, Wash. ALFRED H HEMING WA Y B. S. Chem. Engineering Worchester Pobz. Institute 1964 Leominster, Mass. PETER .L HERMAN B.A. Economics Brooklvn College 1968 Brookbm, N Yi JOSEPH R HIEN TON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Phoenix, Ariz. PHILIP W HOFFMAN B.A. History Hamilton College 1968 Utica, N K JOHN C HOLBER TON A.B. Psychology Stanford University 1968 Santa Monica, Cal LANA L. HOLSTEIN B.A. Psychology Stanford University 1968 Escondido, Cal CRAIG E I VERSON B.S. Economics U of Oregon Portland, Ore. DA VID S. JA CKMAN III B.A. History Wichita State U 1968 Wichita, Kan. fi, 4,7-1,1 ' ' iaijzz, 1Lf:i- 2123? if J J ,G Wy A 6 1 we-V ' -ea 1 K 4 4 f r v - A ' ifm iii' Z. '-ii' . -14. 1- . ,- '- f f 1:- vv' 11 may is wg! ed W E: F I If- Y f . 1 54 -.A.,Zi:. f 5 I ffl f . ,- ,, we-. 'V '-gsiiigw rpg ,f as pm : ,ff f . .M 24 .JA 5 4 F 'E 1 fly'-f 7 1 41 'S-ea. J-Z5-? f'12Z?w5E' ' Y . MARYJ JACOBS , B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Rossford, Ohio - TIMOTHY R. JACOBS A.B. History Brown University 1963 Gladwyne, Pa. CAL VIN H JOHNSON B.A. Philosophy Columbia University 1966 White Plains, N If CAL VIN R JOHNSON B.A. History U of Santa Clara 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. OLIVER I1 JOHNSON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Carmichael, Cal DA VID O. KEHE B.A. Econ and Poli. Sci. University of Iowa 1968 Waverbr, Iowa HENR Y W. KILLEEN III B.A. Engineering Harvard University 1968 Buffalo, N K AN TON C KIRCHHOF B.A. Business Admin. Portland State U 196 7 Lake Oswego, Ore. BARR Y B. KL OPFER B.A. Psychology Sacramento State Col. I 96 7 Orinda, Cal ALLEN I-L KORANDA B.A. History gg Northwestern University 1968 2- Hinsdale, Ill , ' ,M A LOUISE A. LaMOTHE i A.B. History ig 35 i Pebble Beach, Cat. 1': 1 49 z sq ' Stanford University 1968 1 -i1- f' p RONALD L. LANGSTAFF 2t 1 ' B.A. History A ' Q Stanford University 1966 1 Kansas City, Mo. ,,..,:0-,f,x.f . L K HRW ann ei' '5'ffil':: :.. f.Q53a 1.' TY 7 - . ' ' 411.341, . - -.::- 4, .Ag A-11:5 V 4, -:f.+':5r' -' - - . ' :fi-4-. zz f . A - ' x it ' ' :ff .V 'X fl ELIZABETH G. LEA VY A.B. History Vassar College 1963 Cambridge, Mass. L UCINDA LEE B.A. Political Science Vassar College 1968 Arcadia, Cal ED WARD M LEONARD B.A. Philosophy Yale University 1963 New York, N K GREGOR YM LEONARD B.A. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. HELGA I LEUKERT B.S. German Georgetown University 1965 Livingston, Nl LLOYD W LOWRE Y B. S. Business Management U ofCalfDavisj 1968 Rumsey, Cal BRENDAND. L YNCH B. S. Physics Queens College 1963 Beaufort, S.C MICHAEL D. McCRA CKEN A.B. Political Science U of Nebraska 1968 Gering, Neb. MELODIE K McLENNAN B.A. Philosophy USC 1968 Los Angeles, Cal HUGHS. McMULLEN A.-B. Govemment Harvard University 1968 Boston, Mass. MICHAEL D. McS WEENE Y A.B. Economics U ofCal.fDavisj 1968 Davis, Cal. THOMAS W MAHER B.A. History Harvard University 1962 Hastings-on-Hudson, N YY WW- PETER K. MAIR B.A. English U ofMichigan 1967 Ann Arbor Mich ELIZABETH E. MARKHAM B.A. History Stanford University 1968 Oconomowoc, Wis. ANNIE G. MARLOW B.A. Political Science Pomona College 1960 Westmorland, Cal. GARR Y G. MA THIAS ON B. S. Pub. Address and Group Commun. Northwestern University 1968 Minot, ND. BARBARA .L MIRACLE A.B. English Cornell University 1968 Rockville, Md. WILLIAM L. M ON T R OSS B.A. Economics Rutgers University 1968 Union, Nl MIRIAM MORSE B.A. English Smith College 1963 Mountain View, Cal. RICHARD D. NELSON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Stanford, Cal. BRIAN I N UGEN T B.A. Political Science U of Cal.fBerkeleyj 1968 Stanford, Cal. R OBER T M O DONNELL A.B. Spanish Columbia University I 96 7 Allston, Mass. PA TRICK K. OHARE B.A. International Relations Brown University 1968 Peekskill, N Y STANFORD OWEN B. S. Business Management University of Utah 1968 Salt Lake City, Utah PETER A. OZANNE B.A. Poli. Sci. and Econ. Uf of Washington 1967 Seattle, Wash. LA URA L. PALMER B.A. Philosophy Pomona College 1968 San Diego, Cal. JAMES T1 PA UL III A.B. Diplomacy and World Affairs Occidental College 1965 Carmichael, Cal. NORMAN D. PEEL B.S. Accounting Brigham Young U 1968 Los Angeles, Cal VIRGINIA BETH PHELPS B.A. English Rice University 1968 Terra Haute, Ind. FREDERI C C PHILLIPS B.A. History Northwestern University 1968 Fremont, Iowa GARTHE E PICKET T B.A. Economics Brigham Young U 1968 St. George, Utah ROBERT W PIKE A.B. Philosophy San Diego State U 1968 Ramona, Cal JENIK R. RADON B.A. Economics Columbia University 196 7 Riverdale, N K ROBERTD. ROGERS B.A. Political Science U of Wisconson 1968 Sheldon, Wis. ELDENM ROSENTHAL B.A. Speech UCLA. 1968 Bellflower, Cal MAR TIN R. ROSENTHAL A.B. Social Relations Harvard University 1968 Brookline, Mass. RUTH A. ROTHMEYER B.A. Political Science Vassar College 1968 Hillsborough, Cal. JAMES S. R UMMONDS B.A. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Indio, Cal. MAR GARETI R YAN A.B. Philosophy Vassar College 1968 Brain tree, Mass. FRANK SAIZ B.A. Spanish U CL.A. 1 968 Los Angeles, Cal LA WRENCE R. SAM UELS B.A. Political Science University of Chicago 1968 Glencoe, Ill MILES S. SCHLOSBERG B.A. Economics Dartmouth College 1968 Matamoras, Pa. WILLIAM A. SCH UL TE B.S. Accounting Drake University 1963 Fort Madison, Iowa SALL YL. SCHUL TZ Stanford University Burbank, Cal. IR WIN H SCH WAR TZ B.A. History Brooklvn College 1968 Brookbvn, N K JOHN A. SCH WAR TZ B.S.B.A. Finance University of Denver 196 7 Mountain Wew, Cal. KERRICK C SECURDA B.A. Russian Linguistics Cornell University 1962 Lincoln Park, Pa. JOHN W SEMION B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 San Francisco, Cal. THOMAS L. SCHILLINGLA W B.A. Russian Cornell Collegeflowaj 1967 Englewood, Colo. W STE VE STEVENS A.B. History g Cal. State! Los A ngelesj Inglewood, Cal STUAR T Cl STUPPI B.A. Economics Uf of CalfSanta Barbara! 1968 Hillsborough, Cal. JOHN J S WEENE Y A.B. Economics Stanford University 1968 Pasadena, Cal MASAHIKO TAKE TOMO B.A. Russian Columbia University 1968 New York, N Yi JOSEPH E. TERRA CIANO A.B. Economics Cornell University 1968 Hamden, Conn. BR UCEA. TESTER B.S. Engineering Iowa State University 1963 Ontario, Cal. 1 . Q A A,,, ., :,.g,:.:, I, 5 4 ,.,: f 4 , 1, fs 1 I , If 7.3 xx A, ff ziggy 9 I f 75 X Agri- sq R :fic M, Zwg i, f QQ Q' li . ' L, f J 1 ,egfffxz . fe,-ref, , uf I fr ff I 5: W x 54' ,Milf '::r , . 2 CHARLES E THOAMS B. S. Naval Science US. Naval Academy 1961 Van Nuys, Cal RICHARD 0. THOMAS A.B. Political Science Occidental College 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. RICHARD E. TIMBIE B. S. Physics Stanford University 1968 Hamilton, Mass. JAMES W TOBAK B.A. American Studies Lehigh University 1968 Newport, Rhode Island WILLIAM E H U REN B.A. History U of CalfBerkeleyj 1968 San Bruno, Cal EUGENE H VEENHUIS B.S. Accounting U ofMinnesota 1968 Glencoe, Minn. - 1.Vti' JOHNC VER STEEG f' . V , AB- Economics I 4 , Ewmsfoff, Ill 1 ' f I '. 5. VINCENTM VUNDER AHE I L I A H B.S. Business Administration . -I e,i,i c 9 A is sccac Qgj'fj,,j,jgf Ca, rec - .. : f - 8 'i 'le I . ifi I VV I f... A . A fig - .I , ft 1 ,.V'i I V v r A.B. Journalzstzc Studies 1 g A -.b 1 U of Cal.fBerkeleyj 1968 1 1 jf If , i'.,i.t'e, A Lakewood, Cal t -wa 'Mc' w - ...ev -.-, . . ,. , ,f..y.... ..-, . HA THA WA Y WA TSON III B.A. History Yale University 1968 Greenwich, Conn. R0 Y G. WEA THER UP A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Rolling Hills, Cal R OBER T K. WEIR B.S. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1955 Santa Barbara, Cal JOHN M WEISNER B. S. International Affairs Georgetown University 1968 Mon ticello, Ind. WALTER R. WEST B.A. History U of Redlands 1965 Bacone, Okla. ROBERTH WESTINGHOUSE B.S.IE. Engineering Ohio State University Worthington, Ohio SHEILA A. WHARTON B.A. Economics Louisiana State U Shreveport, La. DA VID B. WHITEHEAD A.B. History Stanford University 1968 San Francisco, Cal DEBORAH A. WILLARD B.A. Political Science Vassar College 1968 Verona, Nl JOHN A. WILLE TT A.B. Political Science Bucknell University 1968 Syosset, N K MICHAEL WISCHKAEMPER B.A. Government Pomona College 1968 Lakewood, Cal MICHAEL B. WISE B.A. History Yale University 1968 Wilmington, Del. DENNIS E. WOLLAN A.B. Economics Harvard University 1964 Springfield, Ill. ANDREW W WRIGHT B.A. Political Science Claremont Men is College 1968 Palmdale, Cal CARL L. ZERBE B.A. Econ. and Poli, Sci. DePauw University 1968 Carmel, Ind. - -' f...f,..,::'x 1..'-Z? reef? . if fl 1 X4 C ff N ,xv w ,f 4 . -fm. - we my 14, , ,ga '-ff, 1 fiffi '- - f an .r.3:zf-,rw V -'-f 2 f 'Mil J 'Y , f YM Z h , y V five, J' V . ' - P at 'iff LA'::f,Qk6X fm QQ ' if ig N' Au K i W' ,f Q-2 If A Z5 f is ff' ?ff'gyf,j ' 2 i 59 Tl N ,fluffy 4 1 2 'wi '9 Po? , f M i Z-,Q X x , , , - ln- ... . 4 Y W 1' ml 1. In - is, ' ' 15 f it g jf? '17 f.. f .Q Q Q Af. . -I . . A ':'i '. .wxfw GANIZATIGNS n n I r n N g3w. gm,,Ym,.,g i- -- --- - -V V -- V - -2- LEGAL AID LEGAL AID SOCIETY. HORIZONTAL: C. Hoover. ,FIRST ROW: K. Kaye, S. Sussman, P. Popovich, C. Christofferson, J. Pauw. ROW 2: J. Platt, D. Clark, R. Morningstar, G. Buffington, G. Halligan, J. Mclntosh. ROW 3: P. Nicholson, R. Baker, R. Jacobson, R. Williams, J. Hoak, L. Bobbitt, J. Rowles, R. McAulay. ROW 4: R. LaBrucherie, R. Etienne, D. DeWeese, P. Schilla, G Russill. Steve Sussman, Bob Etienne, Jan Pauw and Al Pick work at a leisurely pace in the main office. Chris Hoover types a memo. In the past year the Legal Aid Society has greatly expanded the scope of its activities to provide a broad spectrum of services to the community and an interesting selection of opportunities for students. Programs initiated this year include: CD the Santa Clara County Defender-Prosecutor program, financed for two years by the National Legal Aid and Defender Association and the County of Santa Clara, in which students work with senior staff attorneys in the District Attorney and Public Defender offices who have been relieved of their normal duties to enable them to supervise and guide the students, QD the San Mateo County Juvenile program in which one group of students interviews juveniles being held at the Hillcrest detention center, obtains their version of the facts and names of possible witnesses, reviews available police and probation reports, and prepares a file for the attorney outlining the facts, the law, and suggested strategies, and in which another group is making an intensive study of disposition alternatives and results, Q31 a Ghetto Criminal Law project involving study and recommendations for reform in criminal law administration, particularly the possibility of neighborhood courts, minority area police autonomy, increased use of release on own recognizance, and non-detentional juvenile sentencing, Q41 the Business Assistance Committee, providing non-legal advice and counseling to small businessmen, particularly minority businessmen, and research and other assistance for their attorneys on matters which constitute f'practicinglaw , CSD the Housing Committee which does research on various aspects of housing law and finance, especially federally subsidized programs, and works with several community organizations in housing law and projects, and C61 the Law Reform group which provides research on test cases, major litigation, and statutory and regulatory proposals for the law reform divisions of the two county legal aid organizations. Existing programs were continued, except for the bail bond frelease on own recognizancej program which was taken over by VISTA, and improved where possible. These inclued: flj general civil offices in East Palo Alto, Redwood City, Sunnyvale, and San Jose, in which students work on bankruptcy, welfare, debtor-creditor, landlord-tenant, domestic relations, and miscellaneous civil cases, usually following the cases from start to Hnish, drafting pleadings, negotiating settlements, etc. under the supervision of an attorney, C25 the San Mateo Assistant Defender program in which students assist court-appointed attorneys in adult criminal cases in several courts in San Mateo County, doing investigation, research, and drafting motions and other documents, C35 the Criminal Appeals program in which students answer letters and do legal research for inmates of state and federal prisons throughout the United States, f4j the Community Education and Community Relations Project involved in Black and Mexican-American problems both at Stanford, as either students or employees, and in the community, and CSD the Student Practice Statute Committee which continued its campaign for a statutory change to allow students to represent indigents in court and in negotiations under the supervision of an attorney, and has been so successful that the statute should be enacted within a year. The Legal Aid Society has encouraged and supported other student activities and projects not formally within the organization, including a LSCCRC-CLRA study of the possible use of para-legal personnel in poverty law offices and student support of the United Farm Workers' grape boycott. The wide variety of interesting, educational, meaningful opportunities has attracted an increasing number of students, about one-fourth of the law students participated actively in one or more of the programs. The high levels of dedication and competance have earned the respect and admiration of the community and the Stanford Legal Aid Society has become known in many parts of the nation as a leader in its field, bringing prestige to the members and to the school. The functioning of each of the programs depends primarily on the dedicated leadership of the program chairmen: Clyde Christofferson, Santa Clara County Defender-Prosecutor and Ghetto Criminal Law, Perry Popovich, j Juvenile, Ken Kaye, Business Assistance, J an Pauw, Housing, Bob Stern and Steve Sussman, East Palo Alto, Rand Shulman, Redwood City, Dick Crockett, Santa Clara County Civil offices, Roger La Brucherie and Dave DeWeese, San Mateo Assistant Defenders, George Russill, Criminal Appeals, Leroy Bobbitt and Luis Nogales, Community Education and Community Relations, and Dick Williams, Student Practice Statute. There are more than one hundred others who gave their time and talent, and only lack of space requires that, as too often happens, those who did the real work remain anonymous. The president was J an Pauw. Dave DeWeese verifies the facts of a case As part of the Business Assistance Program, Ken Kaye discusses problems with an East Palo Alto businessman. Pat Cutler and Bobbi Miracle find the law a seamy web of paperwork. Jeff Jennings interviews a client while Ann Castro looks on. LAW REVIEW BOARD OF EDITORS. FIRST ROW: V. Birch CBus. Mgr.J, B. Hoffman, J. Atwood, F. Paff, V. Williams, J. Owens, B. Bartels, J. Klevens, R. Odom, J. Huhs, J. Judson. ROW 2: R. Wirtz, O. Childs, M. Wheeler, J. Hoak, B. Moulton, D. Bradshaw, M. Harbers, J. Roberton, D. Matschallat, J. Selna. ROW 3: L. Aufmuth, D. Johnson, L. Calof, J. Adams, T. Todd, R. Yeamans, D. MacMeekin, S. Walters. ROW 4: M. Burack, R. Barliant, R. Kirst, J. Black, N. Tooby, J. Pandell. LAW REVIEW Twenty-one years ago the Stanford Law Review was founded with a dual goal: Hto publish a journal of worth to lawyers and to provide an educational experience of value to students. In the ensuing years the Review has developed to rank as one of the outstanding legal journals in the country. The goals of the editors of Volume 1 have been met, but the challenge to meet them in the future persists. To these ends the Review continues to work daily. The range of topics in Volume 21 attests to the diverse interests of its contributors. Chief Justice Marshall's Friend of the Constitution letters, recently discovered by Professor Gunther and -reprinted in the Review, provide the basis for further historical review of the McCulloch v. Malyland controversy as well as for additional debate upon the proper decision making role of Supreme Court Justices. In contrast, current legislative policies are discussed in Professor Baxter's article on compensation for the sonic boom damage caused by supersonic flight and in Professor Posneris article on the deregulation of natural monopoly markets. The student work in Volume 21 covers an equally broad range of subjects including an economic analysis of nuisance law, public-teacher strikes in California, jury deliberations in capital punishment cases in California, and American investment in Eastern Europe. The educational experience afforded by the Review to its members encompasses more than just writing. Its student editors, besides Writing the notes and comments that fll approximately half the Review 's pages, bear responsibility for the substantive and formal accuracy of everything published in the Review. Every piece written by a student or submitted by an author is citechecked: its ideas are challenged, the authority for each statement of fact is investigated, every paragraph is edited for clarity and form. During this process the student has a chance to match wits with recognized authorities as well as with other students, in many areas of the law., This match results not only in the improvement of the Review, but also in increased student understanding of various areas of the law and different modes of thinking. Writing, however, is the major focus of Review membership. Immediately upon becoming a member of the Board of Editors, a new reviewer begins the process of selecting a topic on which to write. His ideas and research are subjected to as much intense critical analysis as his reviser, his editors, and his citechecker can bring to bear. Through a process of continual and mutual criticism and evaluation, Review members greatly improve their writing and analytical abilities. Students are encouraged to engage in field and empirical research in the preparation of their written work. The income of the Justin Miller Fund, established by Judge Miller for use by the Review in such research, made possible research for a study of the effectiveness of Califomia child-abuse laws and a study of the small-claims-courts system throughout California. The Fund will undoubtedly facilitate similar projects in the future. Although the Review operates independently of faculty supervision, faculty members are often consulted about problems within their particular areas of expertise. In addition, many comments and notes result from faculty suggestions for topics. The Review has greatly benefited from this generous assistance from the faculty. LAW REVIEW STAFF. SEATED: J. Atwood fArticle Ed.J, R. Odom fManaging Ed.J, V. Williams QP1'esidentJ, F. Paff fArticle Ed.J, J. Judson CExecutive Ed.J. STANDING: J. Huhs fStudent Work Ed.J, G. Wright fStudent Work Ed.J, R. Bartles iBook Review Ed.J, J. Owens lStudent Work EdJ, J. Klevens fStudent Work EdJ, W. Hoffman fStudent Work Ed.J. LAW ASSOCIATIO LAW ASSOCIATION: D. Crow Clst Year Rep.J, A. Galustian C2nd Year Rep.J, M. Vidgoff fPresidentj, R. Zimmerman CTreasurerJ, T. Lubeck CVice-Presidentl, T. Hawley QSecretaryJ. The Law Association's activities this year were too extensive for summary. Moreover, they have already been summarized in publications and memoranda issued by the Association itself. However, since there is no alternative use for this space, it is seemly to summarize the Law Association's activities for the year once again. Traditionally, reports on what the Law Association has done in a particular year, appearing in yearbooks and other media, are divided into several categories, e.g., social, academic, idiopathic, etc. But it has also been the case in most years that the Law Association has been relevant only in the area of social things. The reason for noting the other categories in annual summaries has been to make people 'aware that the Law Association is a sleeping giant that can be loosed on dozens of fronts. But none of this really applies to the year now under consideration. That is to say that the Law Association this year was loosed on fronts and did many things that weren't social at all, things which could not, indeed, be done in polite society. So this annual summary will be dedicated exclusively to the Associationas social activities. There were five major incidents, to wit, the spaghetti feed, the Halloween party, the Christmas party, the spring dance, and the softball and beer game. There will be still another - the third-year graduation party. All of these events have or will come off well. Inclement weather, intemperance, and foul humor did not- diminish their radiance, although there was much of each. But the morning after every party, the merry makers awoke to tind a world as grim as the one they had put aside to merrymake the previous evening. It was on such mornings that the Law Association was most active this year. Professor and Mrs. Cappelletti talk with first year students at the Law Association's Annual Beer and Spaghetti Feed. A1ice's Restaurant in the Law Lounge serves students and Law Association alike The Law Association's Christmas Party offers good spirits and entertainment S s MF SERJEANTS AT LAW. HORIZONTAL: K. Ptakovich. SEATED: S. Stevens, B. Miller, L. Broun, R. McAulay, P. Vinnicof, K. Britton CPresiden0. STANDING: K. Kaye, R. Rogers, M. Greene, G. Buftington, B. Lynch. Witness Britton starts to go topless and the Judge' warily observes the proceedings SERJEANTS AT LAW Under the sterling guidance of ex-cattle rancher Ken Britton the cause of the courtroom lawyer surged ahead this year at Stanford. The Serjcants was established several years ago to give law students some jury trial experience by conducting mock trials. The Seijeants have also campaigned to raise the status of the trial lawyer at Stanford. The organization was successful in adding to the curriculum a course in Trial Advocacy which starred Professor John Kaplan, Professor Thelton Henderson, and advocate Bill Keogh. President Britton along with retired politician and ex-motorcycle racer Rod McAulay and Paul Vinnicof, vice president for jury recruitment, attended a course in autopsy analysis and forensic medicine given by Melvin Belli. This year the Serjeants were extended credit at L'Omelette French Restaurant, gained the active support of the local bench and bar, had their typewriter refurbished and doubled the number of mock trials. Part of the glorious success for the year was due to the passionate participation of ex-jet navigator Roy Broun, vice president for judicial relations, and fearless Ben Miller, chief trial advisor. The real peanut butter between the slabs of bread, however, was none other than the beaautiful Karen Ptak whose long eyelashes and ability to write and act gave the organization a continuity which was the envy of the school. Witness Schlosberg is sworn in fleftj and then the tacticsfchaos begin fnightl Mike Greene fleftj and Pat Moya frightj examine their witnesses Clarence Chanow Cleftj and Perry Mason frightj summarize the case for the jury jouaivat o Nrr NATIONAL STUDIE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES. SEATED Adlhock, G. Jones, M. Wright STANDING: J. Anderson Rowles, E. Fischer. The Stanford Journal of International Studies is a student-edited, interdisciplinary publication centered at the School of Law. It is designed to offer students the experiences and training derived from a rigorous writing and editing process. In addition, the Journal is designed to contribute to a broad based approach to international problems by facilitating communication and cumulative interaction among specialists throughout the academic and professional community. Institutionally, the Journal supersedes the annual Proceedings, published for two years by the School's International Society. The Proceedings contained symposia dealing with East-West trade and economic development, and though oriented toward the legal pro- cess, the Proceedings was successful in bringing together economists, political scientists, and businessmen in addition to lawyers. In early 1968, the members of the International Society thought that the Proceedings ought to be expanded into a regular publication which would offer students increased opportunities to write and publish and to work with graduate students in other disciplines. The result was the Journal which appeared for the first time in June, 1968 and contained a symposium on foreign interventionin civil strife. Each issue of the Journal has focused on a single theme, such as ocean resources, thereby presenting the reader a substantial body of scholarship providing an in-depth and interrelated treatment of international problems. This line of development is based on the growing recognition that academic divisions are, in large part, mechanical and that such divisions obscure the real nature of the issues. Any thorough analysis of the problems requires the collaborative efforts of men with varied perspectives, each contributing his expertise toward a sharper delineation of issues and the ultimate pursuit of solutions. This year's issue on ocean resources brings together articles by lawyers, scientists, oceanographers, and engineers, as well as articles by students. Editorial responsibility is vested in a staff composed of students from the law school and other graduate schools, and the staff is responsible for the preparation of student articles and for a careful editing and cite-check of all articles prior to publication. All professional and graduate students are eligible to participate on the staff. While the staff remains independent of the faculty, the editors have found that the advice of professors is invaluable. -ul gs P. P' E 5 Q 3 E. 'E O P1 LT CD 5' :1 gn. F 8 l o rs 'P Ackerman, M. beVier, M. Norek, R. Williams, R. Kleinl HIT! TE ATIONAL SGCIET' The activities of the Society have, roughly speaking, assumed a three-fold orientation. Most of its programs have focused on problems of current political interest in the international arena. Secondly, a continuing effort has been made to survey international career opportunities relevant to the student who is considering a profession in these related areas. Finally, some attention has been directed toward a consideration of how and whether students can guide their professional lives to coincide with their political and transnational interests. The Society inaugurated its formal activities early in November with its Fall Banquet where the featured speaker was Dr. Milorad Drachkovitch. A distinguished Kremlinologist, Dr. Drachkovitch spoke on the invasion of Czechoslovakia and the implications for relations within the Soviet bloc. This program was followed by a talk by Professor Leon Lipson, visiting professor from Yale Law School. Mr. Lipson, an authority of Soviet and international law, offered his own analysis of the Czech situations. Later in the fall, Professor Mauro Cappelletti, Director of the Institute of Camparative Law of the University of Florence, led a very interesting discussion of legal aid as it exists under the European system, contrasting it with current American practices. Early in 1969 a coffee hour was held with Professor of political science Richard Fagen who led a discussion of future United States relations with Cuba. Talk focused on a paper written by Mr. Fagen under the auspices of the Center for Inter-American Relations which directed proposals to the new Nixon Administration for revamping United States posture concerning Cuba. Later in February the Society sponsored a visit by former Peruvian president Fernando Belaunde Terry, who was deposed by a military coup d'etat late in 1968. Mr. Belaunde contrasted the constitutional and military traditions in Peru and in South America in general, and he offered his own speculations on evolving United States-Peruvian relations. Jointly with the Law Students Civil Rights Research Council the Society invited Mr. Justice Nii Amaa Ollennu, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana, to the law school to speak with students regarding their involvement in civil rights and poverty-related work. During the same period Mr. Jared Carter of the State Department spoke with interested students on the intemational development of ocean resources. Late in February the Society joined with another student group, the Stanford hitemational Association, in bringing to Stanford German law student Karl Dietrich Wolff who talked about the German and international student movements. At the time of writing, the Society looks forward to a number of further programs, including a discussion of the Middle East crisis to be presided over by Professor of law Richard Falk of the Woodrow Wilson School of International Relations for the American Red Cross and an experienced intemational negotiator is slated to speak to students on the Biafran situation in April. INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY. FIRST ROW: E. Ackerman, G. Dyer, F Oliver, M. Norek, N. Elfstrom. ROW 2: D. Clark, E. Becket, J. Rowles R. Romines QPresidentJ, H. Piper, D. DeWeese. ROW 3: R. Williams, E Fischer, W. Lyons, T. Schillinglaw, R. Klein, J. Perrin, D. MacMeekin The Intemational Society maintains a tradition of sponsoring the Stanford Law School participation in the nationwide Philip Jessup Moot Court competition, in which students who successfully argue a problem in international law at their home schools participate first in a regional final, and then ir1 the national finals in Washington. This year the Society is sending a five man team to the regional competition at San Diego and has hopes of repeating its success of 1968 by going on to the finals to be held at the American Society of Intemational law convention. This year the Society conducted a survey of over two hundred law firms, government agencies, and international agencies to determine specific employment opportunities available. Our quest for career information was also furthered by a general discussion offered by professors Carl Spaeth, Thomas Ehrlich and Dale Collinson. LSCRRC Non-conforrnity, Holy Disobedience, becomes a virtue and indeed a necessary and indispensable measure of spiritual self-preservation, in a day when the impulse to conform, to acquiesce, to go along, is the instrument which is used to subject men to totalitarian rule and involve them in permanent war. A.J . Muste , The Individual Conscience The living expression of the nation is the moving consciousness of the whole of the people, it is the coherent, enlightened action of men and Women. The collective building up of a destiny is the assumption of responsibility on the historical scale. Otherwise there is anarchy, repression and the resurgence of tribal parties and federalism. The national government, if it wants to be national, ought to govern by the people for the people, for the outcasts and by the outcasts. No leader however valuable he may be can substitute himself for the popular willg and the national government, before concerning itself about intemational prestige, ought first to give back their dignity to all citizens, fill their minds and feast their eyes with human things, and create a prospect that is human because conscious and sovereign men dwell therein. Frantz F anon, The Wretched ofthe Earth The Judge does not make the Law. It is the People that make the Law. Therefore if a Law is unjust, and if the Judge judges according to the Law, that is justice, even if it is not just. It is the duty of a Judge to do justice, but it is only the People that can be just. Therefore if justice be not just, that is not to be laid at the door of the Judge, but at the door of the People, which means at the door of the White People, for it is the White People that make the Law. Alan Paton, Cry, the Beloved Counlvy To talk about going down fighting like heroes in face of certain defeat is not really heroic at all, but a failure to face up to the future. The ultimate question the man of responsibility asks is not, How can I extricate myself heroically from the affair? but, How is the coming generation to live? It is only in this way that fruitful solutions can arise, even if for the time being they are humiliating. In short, it is easier by far to act on abstract principle than from concrete responsibility. The rising generation will always instinctively discern which of the two we are acting upon. For it is their future which is at stake. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison Defenceless under the night Our world in stupor lies, Yet, dotted everywhere, Ironic points of light Flash out wherever the Just Exchange of their messages: May I, composed like them Of Eros and of dust, Beleaguered by the same Negation and despair, Show an affirming flame. W.H. Auden, September l, 1939 LSCRRC. SEATED: J. Perrin, O. Childs, B. Moulton fChmnJ, E. Leavy, D. Donovan, E. Becket, P. Schilla. STANDING: E. Treisman, A. Brenner, W. Hoffman, J. Atwood, P. Nicholson, R. Romines, L. Bobbitt, C. Johnson, D. MacMeekin, D. Sorensen, N. Tooby. MUST' CQURT The Stanford Moot Court program is designed to improve the students' skills of brief Writing and oral advocacy. The program is voluntary and open to all interested second that third year students. This past year has been one of rebuilding and innovation for the Moot Court Board. The Board's innovative energies were initially directed at developing the Appellate Practice Seminars. These seminars were an effort to perfect the brief writing skills in the most realistic and beneficial contest possible. Numerous practicing attorneys Worked with small groups of second year Moot Court Board Candidates preparing briefs for cases which the attorney was then appealing. The candidates had the benefit of a complete record and the skill and criticisms of the attorneys. The Appellate Practice Seminars provided a unique opportunity never before available at Stanford: a practical workshop in which students received personal supervision and criticism of his research and brief writing from a practicing attorney while Working on an actual case. The Board brought new appeal to the annual Marion Rice Kirkwood Moot Court Competition. The Kirkwood problem questioned whether white teachers could be fired solely on the basis of their race and black teachers hired in their stead. Participation in the Kirkwood increased twenty-nine percent from the previous yearg a first and a semi-final round pared the field down to four finalists. In order to make the Moot Court competition relevant to the interests of the community and to bring non-legal expertise to bear on the problem, this year's panel of judges for the final argument was selected not only on the basis of knowledge, intelligence and interest, but also expertise, ideology and personality. The final panel consisted of the Hon. Tom Clark, Justice of the United States Supreme Court, Ret.g the Hon. J. Skelly Wright, Judge of the Court of Appeals, D.C. Cir.g and Dr. Max Rafferty, Superintendent of Public Schools and Director of Public Instruction, State of California. Aufmuth ICO-chaimienj, G. Grant, T. Pulliam. The Moot Court assumed its more traditional role within the law school by working with teaching assistants formulating problems for first year moot court competitions and helping judge first year arguments. There is little doubt that this yearas Board took a major step in providing an alternative to the Review. It is up to succeeding Boards to follow the direction established by this years activities, it is up to the faculty to begin to realize that Moot Court is both viable and an altemativeg and it is up to the employers to begin to recognize the quality of the product resulting from the Moot Court experience. Oral argument in preliminary round of 1969 Marion Rice Kirkwood Moot Court Competition , . L.- ' MOOT COURT BOARD: J. Mason, E. Koplowiiz and L. The Law Forum has taken on itself the task of supplementing the curriculum provided by the School, and although its program this year has been modest, it has been quite successful. ' Working closely with the Office of Law Placement, the Forum continued its World of Lawn series, which brought to the School this year a number of law-trained individuals who have followed varying career paths. Programs included f'Law in an Agri-Business Communityf' f'Opportunities in Accounting for Lawyersj' and Lawyers in VISTAI' The main part of the Forum program, however, was a somewhat random series of hopefully relevant speakers. Democrat Alan Cranston ended his campaign for the United States Senate in a speech at Stanford co-sponsored by the Committee for a New Democratic Politics and the Forum. The candidate urged peace in Vietnam and justice at home as the key to election-year cries for ulaw and order. After his talk he met with a small faculty group, including law professors Packer, Sneed, and Girard, to discuss some of the needs of higher education. Candidate Cranston is now Senator Cranston. In answer to an undergraduate panic after several arrests on campus, for violations of marijuana laws, Professor John Kaplan addressed all interested students about Police on Campus: Your Rights and Theirs? For two hours Mr. Kaplan discussed the law of arrest and search and seizure, and he answered questions which finally led him to comment, HI canit believe the colossal naivete of the Stanford student body. Kaplan's class in Criminal Procedure seemed to agree. . Dr. Glenn S. Dumke, Chancellor of the Califomia State College System, spoke on the strike at San Francisco State C'The Turbulent Campusvj urging law students especially to support established channels for effecting change and maintaining that academic freedom is now in great danger from the State Legislature because the universities are abandoning their traditional ivory tower, uninvolved, search for Truth. Dr. Dumke found that Stanford law students, perhaps unwilling to support violence, are equally unwilling to accept, unchallenged, the status quo. Students especially questioned the due process of law which Dumke claimed had been accorded at S.F. State. To say the least, both Chancellor and students got the dialogue they came for. LA FORU LAW FORUM. SEATED: T. Adlhock and J. Mason. MISSING: M. McLennan, C. Bruton, annd R. Mallory. Mr. James Conway, Chief Postal Inspector in San Francisco and a handwriting expert, spoke on Documentary Evidence and the Expert. His entertaining and elightening talk included a forgery demonstrationn which left more than 150 in attendance in awe. Parliamentary Advisor to the Police Federation of Britain and Wales, Mr. Eldon Griffiths, M.P., educated students on British Police Practicesf, He emphasized the close and amiable relationship between the Bobbies and the citizens they police, and he noted how no British citizen would be offended at not being able to obtain a handgun for protectioni' - only the Queen has the right to cannon? He also noted that murders and armed robberies in Britain are far less frequent than is the United States. A new series for the Forum this year was the Legal Educationi' series, presented in conjunction with the Committee on Academic Affairs. Various law professors were given an opportunity to present their views on legal education and then were placed on the hot seat to answer student questions and justify their views in the face of any criticisms. The resulting dialogue will hopefully lead to constructive changes in the School and badly needed progress in the area of legal education. At press time, the Forum was looking forward to a full schedule in the last two months of the year, including Guest-in-Residence John W. Macy fformer Chairman of the U.S. Civil Service Commission and now President of Public Broadcast Laboratoryj and the Honorable J. Skelly Wright fof the U.S. Court of Appeals, Washington, D.C.j. In addition, the Forum had scheduled a visit from a group of White House Fellows including former Law Forum President David Lelewer, was planning for the return of the traditional Oxford Debate Con Black Autonomy in U.S. Citiesnj, and was working toward a meeting with N.Y. Mayor John Lindsay prior to his commencement address. The overall success of Law Forum programs this year surpassed the greatest expectations of even the most optimistic member, as student interest in the presentations grew continuously through- out the year. ACADEMIC AFFAIRS CO M TT E The Academic Affairs Committee, now in its second year, has concemed itself with three major goals. First, the Committee, in conjunction with the Law Forum, in an effort to create an atmosphere in which students, faculty, and administrators can meet and discuss the changing course of legal education at Stanford, has organized a series of panel discussions on a variety of academic topics. Second, on a somewhat informal basis, the Committee has sought to establish better lines of communication between the students and the administration by working directly with various members of the administration toward the solution of a variety of academic problems. Third, the Committee has overseen and coordinated the work of the various parallel committees established by the current Law Association administration. ACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEE: B. Fix Clst Year Rep.J, M. Vidgoff fPep. ex officioj, R. Rychlick 12nd Year Rep.j, T. Hawley CChmnJ. PLACEMENT COMMITTEE The Placement Committee has been primarily active in assisting the Placement Office in planning employer interviewing policies and procedures and in serving as a liaison between students and the Placement Office. The Placement Committee attempts to help students find summer and permanent employment by encouraging employers to come to Stanford, by providing students with written material regarding job possibilities, and by working individually with students who have unusual interests or desires. Efforts have been made to make job opportunities known both by area fas in San Francisco, Denver, New Yorkj and type of practice flarge firm corporate practice, legal aid, etc.j. The Placement Committee maintains files on past correspondence with possible employers and lists of those law firms which have interviewed at Stanford in the past few years. This past year, in an effort to insure more meaningful interview opportunities for all students, several new features were added to the interviewing program: lj Employers were encouraged to interview all interested applicants, whether or not such applicants has academic standing sufficiently high in the interviewer's mind, 21 To accommodate the large numbers of students who wish to interview with the larger or more popular law firms, such firms were encouraged to interview on more than one day, and informal lunch time get-togethers were arranged between the employers and interested studentsg 33 Students were given the results of a compilation made by the Placement Committee as to where last year,s graduates were and what they were doing, and students were also given all available information on what this year's graduating class would be doing next year. The Placement Committee helps assist, and in addition has been well assisted by, the Placement Office and particularly by Suzanne Close and Cindy Swaim. In addition, Dean Hasenkamp has worked closely with the Placement Committee in formulating new interviewing policy. Finally, many students have helped the Placement Committee by providing specific information as to job opportunities or by making known suggestions with which the Committee can better operate next year. PLACEMENT COMMITTEE Co chairmen E Koplowitz and P Popovlch WIVES Membership in the Law Wives Association is open to wives of Stanford law students. Regular monthly meetings give the members an opportunity to discuss a variety of subjects with guest speakers. The topics run the gambit from religion to drugs, from social issues to medicine. Also, special interest groups are formed during the year, varying from tours to the very successful bridge group. After all, if the husbands can go to the Dutch Goose and the Oasis, the wives should be allowed to have their fun too. Other Law Wives activities included a charity project at Christmas, social events throughout the year for married couples, and service to the Law School by participation in events such as the Law Alumni Weekend. YEARBOOK STAFF. SEATED: L. Calof tPhotog1-aphy Ed.J, C. Koob fCo-editorj, W. Westerbeke fCo-editor and Business Managerj. STANDING: L. Aufmuth CPhotography Ed.J. MISSING: M. Wright CArt Ed.J, C. Bruton, M. Harbers, H. Killeen. YE RBCOK Life at the Stanford Law School consists not only of attending class, reading cases, and taking exams, but also of participating in many student organizations, becoming involved in various issues of the day, such as the grape boycott, the Presidio trials, and the national elections, and socializing in the law school, in Crothers Pub, and elsewhere. The 1969 Yearbook seeks to depict such an overview of life at Stanford Law School, The editors have to admit, however, that such an effort is always doomed to failure at the outset because the essence and vitality of the law school cannot accurately be shown in a limited number of still-life photographs explained by very Hlimitedi' captionsg the essence and vitality is in large measure motion, and it can be captured only by being a part of it. The editors would like to express their appreciation to all those whose efforts made this 'ffailurei' possible. Gene Smith took the student pictures and the organizational picturesg Larry Aufmuth, Larry Calof, Chuch Bruton, Mike Harbers, Henry Killeen, and Bill Westerbeke took the candidsg Mike Wright did the art workg many other students assisted in writing copy and preparing biographies of the professorsg and Deans Keller and Hasenkamp are still working out a way to absorb the deficit. We would like to express a particular note of gratitude to the many law firms who have contributed generously, for without their help publication of such a Yearbook would not be possible. init PCTPOURRI Even your best friend won't tell you that that cigar smells like Hell The Midnight Skulker plots another raid on the girls' wing in Crothers Happiness is a straight shot on a hanger f-ef So it's the Irish marathon team, but since when is Koplowitz Irish? It's perfectly all rightg we're both married! Far from the madding crowd... Nice car, Granny, but no wire wheels? Wy' ' We 111, PA TRUNS The students of the Stanford Law School wish to express their gratitude to the following patrons for their support in the publication of this hook. K SUSTAINING PATRO S Belcher, Henzie Sc Biegenzahn McCutchen, Doyle, Brown 8a Enersen Los Angeles, California San Francisco, California Donovan, Leisure, Newton 85 Irvine MacKay, McGregor 8a Bennion New York, New York Los Angeles, California Gibson, Dunn 8a Crutcher Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Clinton 85 Clark Los Angeles, California San Francisco, California Hoberg, Finger, Brown 8a Abramson O'Melveny Sc Myers San Francisco, California Los Angeles, California Kadison, Pfaelzer, Woodard 8a Quinn Paul, Hastings, Janofsky gg Walker LOS Angeles, C?1Uf0f1'1i3 Los Angeles, California Keatinge 8a Sterling Los Angeles, California Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen 8a Hamilton Strasser, Spiegelberg, Fried 8a Frank New York, New York New York, New York Cooley, Crowley, Gaither, Godward, Castro 81, Huddleson Touche, Ross, Bailey 8a Smart San Francisco, California San Francisco, California Covington 8a Burling Washington, D.C. P TRONS Arthur Anderson, 8: Co. San Francisco, California Bodle, Fogel, Julber 8: Reinhardt Los Angeles California Cadwalader, Wickersham 8: Taft New York, New York Carlsmith, Carlsmith, Wichman 8: Case Hilo, Hawaii Carter, Ledyard 8: Milburn New York, New York Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside 8: Wolff New York, New York Cushing, Cullinan, Hancock 8: Rothert San Francisco, California Danaher, Fletcher 8: Gunn Palo, Alto, California Eisner, Titchell, Maltzman, Mark 8: Della Volle San Francisco, California Fendler and Warner Beverly Hills, California Foley, Saler 8: Doutt Albany, California Gendel, Raskoff, Shapiro 8: Quittner Los Angeles, California Graham 8: James San Francisco, California Hanna and Morton Los Angeles, California Kaplan, Livingston, Goodwin, Berkowitz 8: Selvin Beverly Hills, California Kramer, Roche, Burch, Streich 8: Cracchiolo Phoenix, Arizona Lawler, Felix 8: Hall Los Angeles, California Lewis, Roca, Beauchamp 8: Linton Phoenix, Arizona Long 8: Levit San Francisco, California Macdonald 8: Halsted Los Angeles, California Mr. John A. Morrow, Jr. El Centro, California Munger, Tolles, Hills 8: Rickershauser Los Angeles, California Musick, Peeler 8: Garrett Los Angeles, California Nossaman, Waters, Scott, Kruger 8: Riordan Los Angeles, California Paul, Weiss, Goldberg, Rifkind, Wharton 8: Garrison New York, New York Poindexter 8: Barger Los Angeles, California Rosenfeld, Meyer 8: Susman Beverly Hills, California Severson, Werson, Berke 8: Bull San Francisco, California Simpson, Thacher 8: Bartlett New York, New York Wilson, Jones, Morton 8: Lynch San Mateo, California Wise, Kilpatrick 8: Clayton Long Beach, California
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