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Page 41 text:
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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.
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Page 40 text:
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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
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Page 42 text:
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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
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