Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 105 of 177

 

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 105 of 177
Page 105 of 177



Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 104
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Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 106
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Page 105 text:

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.

Page 104 text:

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



Page 106 text:

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.

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

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

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

1970

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 23

1969, pg 23

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 10

1969, pg 10

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 14

1969, pg 14

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 112

1969, pg 112


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