Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1970

Page 1 of 196

 

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



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Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1970 volume:

GFMSWmmwwMMMM MMmmtEEwing,WMFPREREWSENWifi -W Iguwgggwmg3H?E Mm1 WWEMWWMOQimmamiwimm555 Egmmigiwz'kiwipnhlinmgigGMERSEmmgaixWimWrxwwinw-Wigan7 AH155jig4.-3ggaiidxgaiswaE -5595 k -A - I Tm A EH' 1 l V' AY W Wg-A b I U M Www H If V Au v' I I whim 1 b E U H l .X M P A nr MTA 1 VHA I? fm.-X F My .T V I nw I 'li Z K I U R in b W mm EP My E51 if V1 M A gn N up im MHA r HHS. l I Y' in E t I -IN my -TPM I W M Y: buh Q V nw --I-Av' H My I J .N WY. H u 'Y' E as H! A YH. STANFORD LAW SCHCOL 1970 Published By The Students Of The Stanford Law School Editor G William E. Westerbeke Zi TABLE OF CONTENTS PHOTO ESSAY FACULTY STUDENTS ORGANIZATIONS PATRONS Q - . 1 X 'Y 1 A ,, W4 s f v ' W- M 1 a N Y .' 1 NW . V - V1 3' N. ' ' ' ' ' -.:1 x ' ' - I' ' -7 ,, ' ' -gi-, .' ' .. as ,., 1 .W- 0 1' ' A . ,I ' 5 W .- Vf..', . , JM v .4 L , 'lr -A , ., Y xl ':-A 4 . -' - . .f , . I - ,.. .' A 1 ' ' A 521, 'I' 1 ' 1 ' ' . ., . yu W ' f V 'D 4' , - I . . .S ,p ., 1 . 1 ' Y I 1 'Q ' .' 1 v - .. 9. Time It Was, And What A Time It Was, A Time Of Innocence, A Time Of Confidences... Long Ago It Must Be, I Have A Photograph, Preserve Your Memories, They're All That's Left Of You Paul Simon Bookends Theme I 1 6 J X K Q 7 N It Is Well To Remember Nothing That Is Worth rom Time To Time That nowing Can Be Taught Oscar Wilde N 'S X 1 5 w x Y? N X NQQA x. S. 3 . , 4 X ' I 'L'f'Q'1 l!4f W5x' f KI-1. Y W.. M tr- , - Ll A xr N f . . f R v -',a A 1 I -ww J- g'l.QQ-if ,I b , -fag,-J,-1. I Q . ., '.Qf.lj2f:.'g.., . Q, . ',-,Q L . , . . .fp ,,.,,g Q Discussion: One of the most important things in the world, for it is almost our only arena of thinking. Without discussion intellectual experience is only an exercise in a private gymnasium. Randolph Bourne Leisure Is Man's One Opportuni To Satisfy Whateve He Happens To Have i PP P Mr p-pa, L- ' ' w 4 4--A r' g, v .-fl '-4 609. Ku 4 il 7' A v 4 ki! , .WN ' ww-,ng 'I ' nfg by H'-uk! t ' K. V,-V' .nv ' ..-V. 41 A., .,. - '.,.-2.415 Tia? fie'-fl . . .f . ,J -eh' mg' ' a -.J N, fu , I 1 7 Q21 P L. ,jlmjx A ' , A 7 , if :Z 1 ly ,-:4 y 'irg n ' , - .4 Q .,,,, . ff f a lr' Y ws V 1 7' P I ,,. P' ,T usd' N Q . ,A,, ? gQ Q L i - a P Qqkrzql ul ft 5 . ..:4.f:,,--V , X G '- , E, ' 4' WA- . Q-:sf M M .Wi N ,555 A NH W E nw , M: ,fb , . 1 . - ,,, 'fw ! ,fi 0 i E M ,l Ill If aw Sw 5 avi w asf' ' Jig!!-1' w 57111. gf-jf in 1 M 525 z 'lr' 1 l l Q4 5 It 44 In the spring sometimes it's hard to get a quorum in a lecture course fabovej, but the seminars are always quite lively . . . fbelowj. Y . i l lli ' get l in :E . - . . . . U until Mike asks another Code Jack concentrates on his hand .... Pleadmg question. K' 'WSJ r . Q jp , 1 ' , W m lfag4Fk , ' N t 6 'H 'X 4 I. ... . , , ,:L.,f. 657255 ' ' I H L, .-,315 -' , 2, '1 ' rf- Ln, msumi , LIFU, Jack, means last in, Fust up . . . ff 1 ia 3 , , 9?53S 1 'swf -N 155- .VA It's in my CEB handbook, I think do - , - '5- I ..- : ! 1z9-fd- Siren. Tiger John hits, pitches, and runs the bases, and, with the help of Gordon the Glove Scott, leads the faculty to a narrow victory. Meanwhile the Dean demonstrates your basic fungible swing . 'WTN Z -fit N- D V. L. ,,,. 4 , 7 W , ,W up-' l 'xl is ' li Paul Brest and Thelton Henderson prepare for class, while the Silver Fox runs through a time-honored routine Cbelowj. Now, Mr. Allen, does 51222 apply here? Well, don't answer that, Mr. Allen. I just throw it out for your consideration. But what I do want to know is whether it is a 5403 or S405 question, Mr. Allen? Mr. Allen, do you really think that . . . Well, it'l1 be a fine, frosty February morning before I become a textbook wired for sound! I don't give a tinker's damn about the case! You can carve the case on your tombstone, for all I care. Now, next case! And then the judge spins around and - presto - hels a chancellor in equity! In those days you said leg: loci delicti commissi and you had your opponent by the .... KENNETH S. PITZER President ofthe University ifmii.. . bra, ,guy V j..r ... . , -A F zffwlr q , ,i H ,iitz I X W. Il - X 'l f ' A I - is J sn- Y sf. . ' llln, we P n V :' 5 ,tr - Now in his second year as President of Stanford University, Kenneth Pitzer has already shown the ability to respond with that rare combination of firmness, tact and intelligence to the myriad of diverse problems that confront todayis university. Born and raised in California, he received his B.S. in 1935 from the California Institute of Technology and his Ph.D. from Berkeley in 1937. He also holds an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Wesleyan University 09621 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 on 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 Presidentof Rice University. During his presidency, Rice experienced remarkable growth in the size of the faculty, in undergraduate and graduate enrollment, in the number of Ph.D.'s conferred, and in the number of honors received by graduating students. At Rice, as already at Stanford, President Pitzer 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 on intergration was defeated by court order. At Stanford President Pitzer should be commended for, among other things, his handling of the complex and dangerous SRI and Encina crises. 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. 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 he 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 Il. After the war Dean Manning edited the Yale Lawfournal 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 Ball'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 'eneralistsn-part philosopher, part manager-who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. He is speaking of himself. BAYLESS A. MANNING Dean and Professor 0 f Law J. KEITH MANN Associate Dean and Professor of Law Associate Dean J. Keith Mann administers faculty decisions in academic affairs and also teaches a seminar in Labor Law, an area which he is well qualified, having served by presidential appointment as a mediator in many national labor disputes. After serving with the United States Naval Intelligence he received a B.S. degree in Far Eastern Studies f1948j. Following graduation from Law School At Indiana University he served as law clerk to Mr. Justice Rutledge and Mr. Justice Minton in 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. The following year he came to Stanford where he was named associate Dean of the Law School in 1961. He and his wife, Virginia, have tive children. Bruce Hasenkamp, a second year man on the Law School administration, was born in New York. He attended Dartmouth College fa small school somewhere in northern New Englandj where he received an A.B. in history in 1960. He then attended Stanford Law School, where he ran the mock trials for the Moot Court Board and received an LL.B. in 1963. He then practiced law in New York City for six months before Uncle Sam offered him an all-expense paid trip to Korea as a lieutenant. His military duties included Personnel Management Officer, Adjutant, Company Commander, and Legal Assistance Officer of the Sth U.S. Army Support Command. In December 1966 he returned to the practice of law in New York City, where he remained until May 1968. At Stanford, Bruce's duties include coordinating between the law school and the students, coordinating between the law school and the student organizations, Director of Placement, liaison with bar associations, assisting in the admissions program, and worrying about whether the editor of the Yearbook will publish any of the pictures taken at last year's Crothers Hall Christmas Party. Bruce's personal interests include travel, music, and art. He has traveled extensively in Europe and Russia and he makes frequent trips representing the Law School to Vassar, Smith, Wellesley, etc. He attends the opera in San Francisco regularly. And his Korean ceramics collection is one of the best private collections in the country. BRUCE H. HASENKAMP Assistant Dean THELTON E. HENDERSON Assistan t Dean 7 fi., ' 1 it it rr W , . 1, , lata. 1 lim'-rr' 1 at Q ,H , tm it ,, ,,W. 1 isa 5 M. it ru it it it it ester B'- Thelton Henderson is now in his second year as Assistant Dean at the Law School. 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 assistant and as a professional musician in order to earn the money for law school. In 1962 he received his J .D. from Boalt Hall School of Law at Berkeley. He then worked for one year in the Civil Rights Division of the United States Justice Department, practiced law for three years in Oakland, and in 1966 became the directing attorney of the East Bayshore Neighborhood Legal Center in Menlo Park. At Stanford, Dean Henderson Works primarily as Coordinator of the Legal Opportunities Program, as head of the minority recruitment program, and on the Civil Rights Research Council, in addition to the myriad of other duties that deans tend to have to cope with. He also assists in teaching the course in Trial Advocacy. Dean Henderson somehow is able to find time to devote to a number of outside activities, such as the 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 is also a consultant for the United States Commission on Civil Rights. And it is known that he plays a very good folk and blues guitar. Assistant Dean Robert A. Keller, a member of the California bar, practiced law from 1958 to 1965 in San Francisco before accepting the responsibility within the administration for the Law School's fiscal policy and alumni relations. Although kept busy with fund raising activities for the new law school Dean Keller finds time to be a member of the Palo Alto Human Relations Council, Board of Directors of the Northern California Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, and even for a little tennis and skiing on the side. After receiving a Bachelor of Business Administration in accounting from the University of Oklahoma, in his native state, HRAKM served with the Navy from 1951 to 1955. In 1958 he earned a J.D. from Stanford where he was a member of the board of editors of the Stanford Law Review. ROBERT A. KELLER Assistant Dean WILLIAM T. KEOGH A ssistant Dean Returning this year as Assistant Dean in charge of admissions is William T. Keogh, who has been in private practice for the past two years. Dean Keogh, who took a B.S. degree in chemical engineering in 1942 from Kansas State University and an LL.B. in 1952 from Stanford Law School, was born in New York in 1916. From 1941 until 1946 he served with the anti-aircraft artillery and the infantry in the United States Army. After a period as a member of the chemistry faculty at Kansas State, he received a commission in the regular United States Army, serving with the Philippine Scouts until 1949, when he entered Stanford Law School. After receiving his LL.B. in 1952, he served as a judge advocate until 1955, when he became Chief of International Law at Headquarters, United States Army, Europe, serving in that capacity until 1957. He was Judicial Officer, Ninth Judicial Circuit, United States Army, from 1959 until 1961. He was then appointed assistant dean at Stanford. During his years at Stanford, Dean Keogh served on the Educational Testing Service executive committee for the law school aptitude tests. Last year he assisted in the law school seminar on draft law problems and this year, in addition to his numerous administrative duties, he is assisting inthe teaching of the course in trial advocacy. w 1 S' Shi 5 Z 5, new ligggf' .' ' s wil ' i. Born in Ashland, Ohio in 1923, Joseph E. Leininger attended the University of Cali- fornia at Berkeley, where he received his A.B. in history and anthropology in 1951, and Harvard Law School, where he received his LL.B. in 1959. After having served with the Army OSS in China during World War II, he worked with the foreign service and the Central Intelligence Agency from 1946 until 1955, spending much of his time overseas in Korea and Austria. After his graduation from law school, he became a member of the Colorado Bar and practiced law in Denver from 1959 until 1962. He then returned to Harvard Law School to become Secretary of the International Legal Studies Program there, and in 1966 he became the Vice-Dean of the Harvard Law School. New to Stanford Law School this year, Dean Leininger will be assuming the numerous tasks that comprised former Dean Headrick's bailiwick, to include international legal programs and the computer and law program. Dean Leininger and his wife have two children. JOSEPH E. LEININGER A ssistant Dean ANTHONY G. AMSTERDAM Professor of Law 'fAlright, yous guys, it don't go that way. Now, here's the way things really are . . . And, with this Damon Runyonjailhouse jargon, Anthony Amsterdam proceeds to tell it the way it is. And normally cynical third-year students come out of the class as enthusiastic believers. Simply a new guru? Anthony Amsterdam has the unique ability to combine the abstract and the practical in such a manner as to make legal education relevant and the students are listening. Born in Philadelphia in 1935, Tony,' Amsterdam received his A.B. summa cum laude from Haverford College in 1957 and his LL.B. summa cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania in 1960, where he was Editor-in-Chief of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. His student Note is now reprinted in the AALS,s Selected Essays in Constitutional Law and is widely known as the Amsterdam Note on the vagueness doctrine. He clerked for Mr. Justice Frankfurter from 1960 to 1961 and worked as Assistant United States Attorney from 1961 to 1962. From 1962 until 1969 he was a member of the law faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. This past year he joined the law faculty at Stanford. Professor Amsterdam is no ivory tower type. In fact, it is his wide experience in litigation of criminal and constitutional cases that makes his teaching so effective. He has been a consultant and litigating attorney for NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fundg a consultant for the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and for numerous other civil rights organizations. He has been a consultant for the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, for the White House Conference To Fultill These Rights and for the Office of Economic Opportunity's Legal Services Program. He has been a member of the Fact-Finding Commission to Investigate the Disturbances at Columbia University and of the Police Practices and Criminal Justice Committee of the Philadelphia ACLU. The list is not merely one of honorary positionsg Professor Amsterdam enjoys a well-deserved reputation as one of the hardest working and most successful attorneys in the field of criminal and con- stitutional law. And both the work and the success continue. This is in part the reason why the students are listening when Tony tells them the way things really are . . . DOUGLAS R. AYER Associate Professor of Law Professor Ayer was born in Missouri in 1937. His undergraduate years were spent at Yale, where he took an A.B. in politics and economics in 1959. He entered Yale Law School the following year, receiving his LL.B. in 1962. While in law school he was an editor of the Yale Law Journal. After graduation, he served as law clerk to Judge Charles E. Clark of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. During 1963-64 he was a Fulbright scholar at the University of Stockholm. He returned to New York to practice law with the firm of Debevoise, Plimpton, Lyons 84 Gates where he remained until he came to Stanford. Professor Ayer joined the law faculty at Stanford in 1966. In the past he has taught Legal Process and Administrative Law. This year, he taught Civil Procedure, Labor Law, Legislation, Legal Education and Legal History of the New Deal. Next year, he plans to be on leave reading generally in American and British history and researching the legal ideology of the New Deal. His objective is to become a legal historian, which he plans to teach full-time upon his return. Professor Ayer's wife, Barbara, is again this year the co-sponsor of the Law Wives. The Ayers live in Palo Alto. 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. 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 firm of Covington and Burling for two years. In 1958 he left 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 re- sponsibility 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 contracts and taxation C'Famous Cases I have Lost j. At least he got to argue in front of the Supreme Court. The Barnetts have five children ranging from age 12 downward to age 6, and they live in a home on the campus. 1, 3535 ki 1: gm. it fw . . 1.-,:.., . . i ii. R 1' New to the Stanford Law School faculty this year is John Hays Barton, a native of Chicago, Illinois - class of 1936? After receiving his B.S. in physics and philosophy from Marquette University in 1958, he served in the U.S. Navy for three years C'I can't say much about that! j. He then worked as an operations researcher for Sylvania in Mountain View from 1961 to 1965. His work involved research on disarmament in- spection devices for contracts with the Arms Control Agency, a background which par- ticularly qualifies him to teach his seminar this year in Arms Control. Then in 1965 he left science research for the study of law at Stanford, where he was an editor of the Stanford Law Review in spite of the fact that he continued Working for Sylvania through- out his law school career. After graduation in 1968, Professor Barton joined the Washington, D.C., law firm of Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering. This year at Stanford he is teaching courses in Contracts, Arms Control, and International Business Transactions. He and his wife have five children JOHN HAYS BARTON A ssistan t Professor of Law WILLIAM F. BAXTER Professor of Law Professor Baxter is a native of New York City, but must be classified as a Californian by association. He took his A.B. at Stanford in 1951. For the study oflaw, he again chose Stanford, receiving his LL.B. in 1956 after serving as comments editor of the Stanford Law Review. He remained at the law school as an associate professor until 1958 when he took a position with Covington and Burling in Washington, D.C. He practiced in the Capitol for two years, returning to Stanford in 1960. During 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 courses in Administrative Law, Federal Jurisdiction, and Legal Process. He has been engaged as consultant by various corporations and government agencies. In 1967-68 he conducted a special study of ways to minimize the social cost of airplane noise for the Federal Aviation Agency. In 1968-69 he was a member of the President's Task Force on Antitrust Policy. The Baxters have three children - two boys, 16 and 12, and a girl, 14. Mrs. Baxter enjoys painting and politics, she also is active in 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. FIRST STUDENT: How's that new guy in Federal Jurisdiction? Is the course any good? SECOND STUDENT: Oh, he's pretty young, but very enthusiastic about the course. He prepares his lectures carefully and teaches a tine class, which makes taking notes easy. FIRST STUDENT: Probably a beginner. He'll learn. What's his background? SECOND STUDENT: Bom in Chicago in 1943 - A.B. in Economics from North- western in 1964 - LL.B. from Chicago in 1967 - Editor on the Law Review - all the standard stuff. He taught at Texas Law School for two years. FIRST STUDENT: Oh, great, he probably walks around during football season muttering Hook 'em I-Iornsv and all that stuff. And Ihad my money on Notre Dame! But how can he teach if he doesn't have any experience? SECOND STUDENT: Well, he worked one summer for O'melveny and Myer and one summer he worked for the ACLU in Atlanta writing briefs for Howard Levy and Julian Bond. FIRST STUDENT: One of those bleeding-heart liberals, huh? Probably has no grasp of the real world! SECOND STUDENT: Actually, he seems pretty realistic about most things. And he satisfied Barbara in class once and you know how she likes hard facts. FIRST STUDENT: So a materialist in the rough! So why doesn't he iron his shirts, cut his hair, and drive a big car? SECOND STUDENT: He says he likes the life style. He just prefers the life of a teacher and is interested in the students. All that other crap like money doesn't seem to be that important. FIRST STUDENT: Alright, I'm sold. I'll take his course next year even if it means that I'll have to start going to class again. SECOND STUDENT: Sorry about that, but the faculty let Michigan Law School steal him even before we got him. But don't lose any sleep over it-it's so much more com- fortable around here when we don't feel interested in going to class. Care to shoot a round of golf this afternoon? wx ' ia E - Qfr ' FL? ' r .V I I rr, tu W, H Z Q VINCENT A. BLASI Visiting Professor of Law PAUL A. BREST Assistant Professor of Law New to the Stanford faculty this year is Assistant Professor Paul Andrew Brest, a native of Jacksonville, Florida. He attended Swarthmore College, where in 1962 he received his A.B. in a combined program of English, Philosophy and Music. He then attended Harvard Law School, where he was the Supreme Court and Developments Note Editor of the Harvard Law Review, where by self-admission he was socially irresponsible, and where in 1965 he received his LL.B. In 1965-66 he clerked for Judge Bailey Aldrich of the First Circuit Court of Appeals. Then he worked for two years as an attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. in Jackson, Mississippi. In 1968-69 he clerked for Mr. Justice Harlan of the United States Supreme Court. He is a member of the New York Bar and the Fifth Circuit Bar. At Stanford he is teaching courses in Criminal Law, Constitutional Law, and Schools. Mr. Brestis principal hobby is flying, an anti-social activity which pollutes, congests, doesnit pay its own way, and ought to be abolished or severely restricted. 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 1'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. 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 Mr. Collinson has taught courses in International Business Transactions, Trusts and Estates, Estate Planning. Law and the Institutions of the European Communities, and Admiralty. This past year Mr. Collinson has been on leave and on honeymoon with his bride Susan. He has been working in Brussels, Belgium for Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen 8a Hamilton, largely in the area of international tax and antitrust. He is also doing research on the EEC Common Transport Policy. He reports that two cannot live quite as cheaply as one, but it is more fun. Now that's a tough line to follow . . . DALE S. COLLINSON Associate Professor of Law AARON DIRECTOR Scholar in Residence 1 :fi Q. be cv, 'i-53? 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.D. in economics from Yale in 1924. The principal subjects on which his work is focused are Competition and Monopoly, and Industrial Organization. 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 St-ate George Ball. Born in Massachusetts in 1934, Professor Ehrlich received an A.B. in government 09561 and an LL.B. 119595 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 is currently Vice-Chairman of the Senate of the Academic Council and was Chairman of the Study of Education at Stanford Committee on Study Abroad. In 1967-68 he worked on a study of curriculum revision at the School, which led to a number of the changes adopted last spring. Professor Ehrlich is co-author of a three-volume work in international law, International Legal Process, published last year. In addition to international law, he has been teaching and doing research in the field of international law and economic development with Professor Meier. A tennis and camping enthusiast, Professor Ehrlich also owns a sloop named uSabbatical, wich he owns jointly with Dean Manning. Ellen Ehrlich is active in the Parent-Teacher Association and other community activities. The Ehrliches are the parents of three children: David, 10g Elizabeth, 75 and Paul, 3. Bgarrtsa E . i,.- . 291 A 1 THOMAS EHRLICH Professor of Law MARC A. FRANKLIN Professor of Law The man is alive. The eyes glisten and the smile spreads white above the beard. Having split his class on the merits of an auto accident compensation scheme, Marc Franklin enjoys the argument. Born and brought up in New York, Professor Franklin was Ithaca-educated, receiving an A.B. in Government fl953j and an LL.B. H9561 from Comell University, where he was editor-in-chief of the Cornell Law Quarterbf. After a year of legal practice in New York City, he was law clerk to Judge Carroll C. Hinks of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. During 1958-59 he served as law clerk to the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States. In 1962, after three years of teaching at Columbia Law School, Professor Franklin came to Stanford. , The collage of his current doings shows two books, Dynamics of American Law and Biography of a Legal Dispute, published in 19683 membership on the Stanford Judicial Council, and a new torts Casebook to be published in 1971. He and his wife, Ruth, a dabbler in politics and free lance editorial work, have two children-Jonathan C31 and Alison Cljg and a common interest in African and South Pacific Art. The man is alive. 5. qg5 , ., -- ,V ' -.1 f 1 . g r Professor Friedenthal, better known as the 4'Pawnbroker since his outstanding performance as a witness in the mock trial last September, teaches primarily in the Helds of civil procedure, evidence, family law, and social welfare legislation. He received his B.A. from Stanford in 1953, and his LL.B, from Harvard in 1958, having served as developments editor of the Harvard Law Review. Professor Friedenthal 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 was instrumental in setting up the legal aid program which now involves so many Stanford law students in community service. He is also Chairman of Stanford's Judicial Council. The Friedenthals have three children, Ellen, 6, Amy, 5, and Mark, 3. Mrs. Friedenthal was a member of the Stanford Law School class of 1960. JACK H. FRIEDENTHAL Professor 0 f Law LAWRENCE M. FRIEDMAN Professor of Law A youthful-looking man with a wry smile and a subtle sense of humor, Lawrence Friedman is fast becoming one of Stanlaw's most popular faculty members. With the emphasis on empirical research as a means of testing the validity of long-accepted legalisms, his courses in Law and Social Science, Legal Process, and Trusts and Estates have been very successful. Students actually seem to like learning his erg theory! 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 here at Stanford in 1967 and last year he joined the Stanford Law School faculty. He brings with him a highly impressive list of writings. He has authored Contract Law in America: A Social and Economic Case Study 119651, Government and Slum Housing: a Century of Frustration 119681, and, in collaboration with Professor Stewart Macauley of the University of Wisconsin, Law and the Behavioral Sciences 119691. He has also published over thirty law review articles. This semester Professor Friedman, his wife, Leah, and their two children, Jane and Amy, are in Europe on Professor Friedman's sabbatical. The only member of the faculty to hold both a medical degree and a legal degree is Ralph Gampell. Born in England in 1916, Dr. Gampell received his education 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 to 1949, 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 practiced 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. Gampell was a member of the Governor's Committee on Abortions, and with Professor Packer prepared the definitive study of the state of theraputic abortions. As for the value of having degrees in both fields he feels it is of assistance in personal injury work and in teaching, but aside from those two specialized areas totally valuelessf' Dr. Gampe1l's wife, Margaret, graduated from the Stanford Law School in 1968. The Gampells and their six children live in Los Altos Hills. RALPH J OCELYN GAMPELL Lecturer in Law ROBERT A. GIRARD Professor of Law Robert Girard was born in Washington in 1931. He received his B.A. in 1953 from the University of Washington and his L.L.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 Held of torts, Professor Girard has taught courses in con- tracts, 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 Activity and Elections. Q On his sabbatical leave in 1965-66, Mr. Girard spent his time studying areas of European constitutional law and church-state relations in particular. He also serves as director of the Associated Regional Citizens, an Organization promoting conservation of natural resources. The Gerards have three children: two boys, 13 and 9, and a girl, 7. if if as M 5 i ZH 'l 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, where he served as an editor of the Harvard Law Review for two years. During 1949-51 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 Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from 1953 until 1954 and as law clerk to the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States, from 1954 to 1955. During the following year he practiced law in New York City with the firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Friendly Sr Hamilton. ln 1957 he joined the faculty of the Columbia Law School where he served as director of the Columbia Federal Courts History Project. In 1962 Professor Gunther came to Stanford and during 1962-63 he was a Guggenheim Fellow. During the 1966-67 academic year, he, his wife, Barbara, and their two children, Dan and Andy, were in London on leave. This year, he has been on sabbatical leave as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. 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 and Materials on Constitutional Law. Professor Gunther has also contributed regularly to legal periodicals. GERALD GUNTHER Professor of Law MOFFATT HANCOCK Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law Professor 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. Professor Hancock earned a B.A, from the University of Toronto in 1933, an LL.B from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1936 and an S.J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School in 1940. Before coming to Stanford in 1953, he taught at the University of Toronto, the Dalhousie Law School, where he was Viscount Bennett Professor of Law, and the University of Southern California. An expert in the fields of property, jurisprudence, legal history, and conflict of laws, Professor Hancock has contributed numerous articles to legal periodicals. He is the author of Torts in the Conflict of Laws f1942j. 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 Unzform Foreign Torts Act. A devoted family man, Professor Hancock takes great pride in seeing the development of his two children - Cathy, 18, a Stanford sophomore, and Graeme, 15, 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. What do you mean I'm not a lawyeri? I graduated from Harvard Law School, I'm a member of the New Jersey and Illinois Bars, I once wrote a will and a contract, I have a lawyer's suit, and some of my best friends are lawyers! Joel F. Handler thus with mock indignation set a friend straight over the telephone while the Yearbook Editor eaves- dropped. His point is, however, well taken. With his full beard and very infrequent use of his Hlawyeris suit, he might not look like a lawyer, but the fact is that he is one and a law professor as well, and a good one at that. Born in Newark, New Jersey in 1932, Professor Handler took his A.B. from Princeton in 1954 and then attended Harvard Law School, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review and a member of the Legal Aid Society. After graduation in 1957, he clerked for one year for Justice Nathan Jacobs of the New Jersey Supreme Court and then practiced for one year in Newark. In 1959-60 he was a teaching fellow at Harvard Law School, and then he worked for the Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure for the Federal District Courts. In 1961 he joined the faculty of the Vanderbuilt University School of Law and in 1962 he joined the law faculty at the University of Illinois. From 1964 until the present he has been a faculty member of the University of Wisconson Law School. Visiting ,at Stanford this year, Professor Handler has been teaching courses inWelfare Administration and Legal Process. His specialty in the law is welfare and poverty law, arid shortly his book, The 'Deservingn Poor: A Study of WeU'are Administration, willbe published. He has also published The Lawyer and his Community: The Practicing Bar in a Middle-Sized City as well as numerous articles in legal periodicals. JOEL F. HANDLER Visiting Professor of Law JOHN BIN GHAM HURLBUT Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law ML Hurlbut, I don't want to bother you with this, but imagine just for a moment the countless numbers of students that have been fascinated over the years by all those bishops, hairy hands, and unhappy Rose. You wouldn't. call that a common garden variety contracts class, would you? Of course you wouldn't, but you don't have to answer- that .... Over the last thirty-three years, John Bingham Hurlbut has brought thousands of hours of enjoyment into the lives of Stanford law students with lectures that Socrates would have done well to emulate. Professor Hurlbut eamed 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 Il. V Teaching law is not Professor Hurlbutls sole contribution to Stanford Education. He has served as the Stanford faculty athletic representative with the Pacific Coast Athletic Conference, and Vice President of the N.C.A.A. In his own right, he is an accomplished outdoorsman and angler. Professor Jacobstein is responsible for the development and administration of Stanford's law library and its staff. He also 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. Born in Michigan in 1920, Professor .Iacobstein spent his undergraduate years at Wayne State University, receiving a B.A. in history in 1946. In 1950, he took an M.S. in library science from Columbia University. He took his LL.B. from Chicago-Kent School of Law in 1953, where he was an editor of the Chicago-Kent Law Review. He was the assistant law librarian at the University of Illinois from 1953 until 1955, when he moved to take a similar position at Columbia University from 1955 until 1959. In 1960, he came West to become law librarian and professor of law at the University of Colorado, where he stayed until coming to Stanford in 1963. The .Iacobsteins have two children, a daughter, 18, and a son, 13, and they live in the Pine Hill area on campus. Professor Jacobstein is a member of the American Association of Law Librarians, the American Society for Information Sciences, and the American Society for International Law. J . MYRON JACOBSTEIN Law Librarian and Professor of Law SANFORD H. KADISH Visiting Professor of Law Visiting this semester at Stanford Law School is Professor Sanford H. Kadish, professor of law from Boalt Hall at Berkeley. Born in New york City in 1921, Mr. Kadish received his B.S.S. from City College of New York City in 1942, then had a tour of duty in World War II as a Japanese language officer for the United States Navy, and then received his LL.B. from Columbia Law School in 1948. After practicing law in New York City for three years, he commenced his teaching career. He taught first at the University of Utah Law .School f195l-6Oj, then at Harvard Law School as a visiting professor C1960-6lj, then at the University of Michigan Law School C1961-645, and since 1964 at Boalt Hall at Berkeley. In addition he has also been a visiting professor at the University of Texas Law School, a Fulbright lecturer at the University of Melboume Law School C1956j, and a lecturer for the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies at Freiburg University, Germany 09671. In 1968 he served as a Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Criminology at Cambridge University, England, and in 1968-69 he spent the academic year as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. Professor Kadish's major work has been in the area of Criminal Law. He is the co-author - with M. G. Paulsen - of a widely used casebook in Criminal Law, and he has written a variety of articles on the subject in the law review literature. Until its recent demise he was one of the Reporters for the Califomia Legislative Project to Revise the Penal Code. In 1966-67 he served as a special consultant to the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and -the Administration of Justice, in which capacity he wrote several chapters of the Crime Commission Report and directed a task force group in juvenile delinquency. During his year at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, he worked on a project which has taken form as the AddisoniRoach Lecture Series at the University of Indiana entitled The Legality of Lawlessnessf' At Berkeley, Mr. Kadish is particularly active in the area of academic freedom and his writings in this area are found in Gorovitz, ed., Freedom and Order in the University H9671 and in Metzger, Kadish et al, Dimensions 0 f Academic Freedom 09691. Professor John Kaplan is a man of many faces. Known as the Sandy Koufax' of the faculty softball team and as Tony the Tiger during the trick or treatv season, he is also a prolific writer, contributing frequently to legal journals and other periodicals. He authored The Trial of Jack Ruby, and in-depth analysis which has endeared him greatly to the Bay Area's own Mel Belli, and his Casebook on Evidence is one of the all-time bestsellers at Stanlaw. Many of his articles deal with the issue of school segregation. Born in New York, Professor Kaplan received an A.B. in physics from Harvard in 1951, and then realizing there was little future in science, entered Harvard Law School, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. After graduation in 1954, he clerked for Mr. Justice Clark of the United States Supreme Court and then spent one year working in criminology in Vienna, Austria. From 1956 to 1960 he worked for the Criminal Division ofthe Department of Justice, assigned first to Chicago as a special assistant to the Attorney General and then to San Francisco as Assistant United States Attorney. He then worked for one year as a research analyst at the Hudson Institute. Mr. Kaplan became Professor Kaplan in 1962 when he joined the faculty of North- western University Law School. He was a visiting professor at Boalt Hall, University of California, in 1964-65, and then in 1965 he joined the Stanford Law School faculty. His classroom theatrics in Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, and Evidence make those courses more than a mere learning experience for so many Stanford students. This year Professor Kaplan, his wife and three children are living in England, where he is doing intensive research on the problems of drug abuse. Query-will Londoners on some dark and gloomy night report seeing a man running around in a tiger suit? JOHN KAPLAN Professor of Law JOSEPH M. LIVERMORE Visiting Professor of Law Professor Joseph Livermore returned to Stanford Law School this fall as a Visiting Professor of Law. Born in Oregon in 1937, Professor Livermore received his A.B. from Dartmouth in 1958, and his LL.B. from Stanford in 1961. After serving in the Army from 1961 to 1963, he was in private practice in San Francisco for a year, and then joined the faculty of the Minnesota Law School in 1965. He became an Associate Professor of Law at Minnesota in 1967. Professor Livermore was delighted when he was invited to teach at Stanford, although teaching commitments at Minnesota forced him to limit his stay here to one semester. Professor Livermore has taught Copyright Law, Psychology and Law, Evidence, and Criminal Law at Minnesota, and will be returning there to start a new undergraduate course in Criminal Law, primarily for Liberal Arts students. While at Stanford he taught Criminal Law and Jurisprudence. He enjoys teaching courses when the students have strong feelings about the subject matter, and he encourages argument as a mode of learning. He feels the role of the professor is to provide a more sophisticated analysis of problems than the students would arrive at on their own, and that the role of the Law School should be to train competent lawyers, since most students plan to go into practice. Professor Livermore and his wife, Elaine., have been making the most of their time in California, making frequent trips to San Francisco to enjoy its gastronomic and cultural delights. His wife is thoroughly enjoying her first visit to California, when she is not busy keeping their infant son, Caleb, out of mischief. We are certainly grateful to have had Professor Livermore with us, even for this limited time. Born and raised in the Pacific Northwest, Professor John Black Jack McDonough attended the University of Washington and then Columbia Law School, where he received his LL.B. in 1946 and served as note editor of the Columbia Law Review. As an assistant professor at Stanford, he helped found the Stanford Law Review in 1948. After an interlude of law practice with the San Francisco firm of Brobeck, Phleger St Harrison, Professor McDonough returned to Stanford in 1952. From 1962 to 1964 he served as acting dean of the law school. In 1967-68 he took a leave of absence to serve as Assistant Deputy Attorney General of the United States. 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 . Professor McDonough has also been active in local politics, at one time serving as Co-Chairman of the Santa Clara County Committee to Re-elect Governor Brown. He has also served as President of the Palo Alto-Stanford Democratic Council. This year Professor McDonough, his wife and two children are living in Los Angeles, where he is practicing law with the Los Angeles law firm Of Keatinge 8a Sterling. JOHN R. McDONOUGH Professor of Law RICHARD MARKOVITS Assistant Professor of Law New to Stanford Law School and to California this year is Assistant Professor Richard Markovits. New but not a total stranger, however, since he was Professor Mike Wald's roommate at Cornell University and he and Mike were at Yale Law School together for two years. Born in Middletown, New York, in 1942, Professor Markovits received his A.B. in economics and political science from Cornell University in 1963. He then studied economics at the London School of Economics from 1963 until 1965, receiving his Ph.D. in 1966 while in his first year at the Yale Law School, where he was Note and Comment Editor of the Yale Law Journal and received his LL.B. in 1968. Last year he was a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow in economics at the London School of Economics. Although his position at Stanford is his first full-time teaching position, Professor Markovits is not new to teaching. He was a full teaching fellow at Cornell in 1962-63, a teacher of economics at the 1967 summer session at Cornell University, and a lecturer in the Department of Economics at Yale during his last two years of law school. This year at Stanford Law School, Professor Markovits is teaching courses in Microeconomic Regulation, Advanced Antitrust, and Constitutional Law. He is also interested in the field of psychology and the law. 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. In spring, 1969, he listened to Messrs. Happel, MacGregor, and Wilkinson present their immortal tariff preferences paper, complete with General Organization Necessary to Aid Development, and did not snicker once. 1 15' 1 'Qfl ' A W2 L szwrfwf.. 1 . 5ETi3E,55Er55fi1rEEiki,,'Q , . -rr551:?iv2iQE9'1ffZ?e'e :' -, , 7-hef-Q-1sg-fr:ffSga,,.i!E3-if-fffl 1 1 1 ' ' l 4- ' 1 I a 5 ' . P GERALD M. MEIER Cooperating Professor of In ternational Economics JOHN HENRY MERRYMAN Professor of Law 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 earned 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. Returning after a year at the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg, Germany, he has ambitious plans to publish several new books, as the students in his seminar courses quickly discovered. ' Professor Merryman specializes in the Italian Legal System, and along with a professor from the University of Florence and a professor from Fordham University, has published an introductory book on the subject. He is also directing a project for modernizing the Chilean system of legal education, and he has also been working on a study of the legal problems of Bolivia's international transportation system. Professor Merryman plays piano, retaining a fondness for jazz, in spite of being Hinton acid rock. He also serves on the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California. 552 While a professor at Columbia University Law School, Professor Charles Meyers recalls that he had occasion to be leading a class investigation into the subtleties of intestate succession. Suddenly whirling around and confronting the only female member of the class, Professor Meyers posed the question: Miss Smith, what about Bastards?'i After the proverbial pregnant pause, the lady replied: That, Professor, is a subject about which you are infinitely more knowledgeable than I. Since coming to Stanford, Professor Meyers has taught Property, Oil and Gas, Water Law, Real Estate Transactions, and Community Development Laboratory. Thus far, he has not yielded to the temptation of teaching Intestate Succession. Bom 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, both from Columbia. He served with the rank of 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, serving as visiting professor of law at Cornell, Michigan, Minnesota, and Utah. He spent 1968-69 teaching in Santiago, Chile, teaching under the auspices of the Ford Foundation. Married to the former Pamela Adams, he has two children: George, who is no longer 12, and who practices an electric guitar for which his father expresses less than a warm appreciation 3 and Katherine, who is no longer 10, having likewise aged in the interim. CHARLES J. MEYERS Professor of Law JOHN T. NOONAN, JR. Visiting Professor of Law Professor John T. Noonan, Jr., was bom in Boston in 1926. He received his B.A. from Harvard University, and he then pursued graduate work at Cambridge University and the Catholic University of America, from which he received an M.A. and Ph.D. in philosophy. He holds the LL.B. from Harvard Law School. After graduation from Harvard Law School, he became a member of the Massachusetts Bar and engaged in the practice of law in Boston for live years. He started his teaching career at Notre Dame Law School and then joined the law faculty of Boalt Hall, University of California at Berkeley in 1966. Professor Noonan's government service includes membership in the Special Staff of the National Security Council and the chairmanship of the Brookline fMass.j Redevelopment Authority. He is author of The Scholastic Analysis of Usury fHarvard University Press, 195 7j, and Contraception fHarvard University Press, 19655. He is presently engaged in the completion of a book tentatively entitled Marriage in the Courts of the Curia. He is editor of the Natural Law Forum and the author of various articles on governmental organization, foreign antitrust, legal education, canon law, and existential philosophy. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1965-1966. He served as special consultant on history to the Papal Commission on Problems of the Family, Population and Natality. At Boalt Hall, Professor Noonan teaches courses in Professional Responsibility, Family Law, Jurisprudence, and Canon Law, as well as teaching a graduate seminar in the history of sexual ethics in the History Department at Berkeley. This semester Professor Noonan is visiting at Stanford Law School, where he teaches a seminar in Jurisprudence. 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 Articles Editor of the Yale Law Journal. After serving as law 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 law faculty. From 1961 to 1963 Mr. Packer served on the Attorney General's Committee on Poverty and Federal Criminal Justice, and he served as a reporter for the revision of the California Penal Code from 1964 until 1969 fEd. note.' the committee was 'Yired in toto by a few irresponsible state legislators in 19159 who apparently feared that much needed reforms of the Penal Code would be accomplished. Being Tired under such circumstances can only be viewed as a tribute to Professor PackerjAs Chairman of the Law School Curriculum Committee he was largely responsible for the introduction of the semester system at the law school. ln November 1966 he was appointed Vice-Provost of the University for Academic Planning and Programs. This year he has returned to the law school to devote his time to teaching. Professor Packerls 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 three books: Ex-Communist Witness, The State of Research in Antitrust Law, and The Criminal Sanction. 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, 11, and George, 9. ,wi HERBERT L. PACKER Professor of Law YOSAL ROGAT Associate Professor of Law and Political Science 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 1957 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 Stanford 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 from the fact that he is particularly 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 an interpretation of Mr. Justice Holmesf' Professor Gordon Scott, a native of Massachusetts and an honorary citizen of Vernon, California, attended Harvard College, where he received his A.B. in government in 1938. Remaining at Harvard to study 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. in 1941-42, served in 1942 in the Office of 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, but then he left the faculty in 1948 to return to practice in Boston. In 1952 he returned to the Stanford faculty. He has taught a variety of courses, to include Income Taxation, Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, Corporations, Municipal Corporations, and Creditors Rights. Outside of the law, Professor Scott is said to play an excellent hand of bridge, and in years past he was seen scouting student bridge players in the law lounge. Baxter sent me down there to see if any of them were any goodf' He also enjoys a well-deserved reputation as a tennis player, although since being upset in the Law School Tennis Tournament last year by Doctor Torzsay-Biber, this reputation might seem to be blemished. There is, however, a rumor that there were some extenuating circumstances contributing to this upset . . . GORDON KENDALL SCOTT Professor of Law KENNETH E. SCOTT Professor of Law Professor Scott is a native of Illinois. He spent his undergraduate years at the College of William and Mary, where he took his B.A. in economics in 1949. As a Woodrow Wilson Fellow in political science, he received an M.A. in 1953 from Princeton. Mr. Scott entered Stanford Law School the following year. He served as articles editor for the Stanford Law Review , receiving his LL.B. 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. He was General Counsel to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board between 1963 and 1968. In 1968 Mr. Scott left Washington, D.C. to join the law faculty at Stanford. He is married to the former Viviane May of San Francisco, and they have two young sons - Clifton and Jeffrey - and a daughter, Linda. Byron D. Sher began his rise through academe by studying business at Washington University in his native state of Missouri. After receiving an LL.B. in 1952 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, he 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. Professor Sher continues to chair the Stanford Human Relations Commission, which examines complaints of racial discrimination at all levels of university activity and seeks to enhance minority employment opportunities at Stanford. Mr. Sher is particularly active in the area of consumer protectiong his draft legislation on door to door selling has recently been substantially adopted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws for inclusion in the Uniform Consumer Credit Code. The Code will be submitted to the various state legislatures for their approval. Mr. Sher is currently working with Dean Thelton Henderson and others to establish a Consumer Protection Office in East Palo Alto. Mr. Sher is currently serving as the American consultant to the LAWASIA Study of Development Finance. Next year Mr. Sher will be on sabbatical in Europe studying consumer organizations and government agencies dealing with consumer affairs. in BYRON D. SHER Professor of Law JOSEPH T. SNEED Professor of Law Joseph Sneed's background is closely associated with his home state of Texas. Bom there in 1920, he pursued his education at Southwestem University and the University of Texas Law School, where he received his LL.B. in 1947 and stayed on 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. In 1962 he moved westward and joined the Stanford Law School faculty. In additon 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 Configuralions of Gross Income, a textbook on basic income taxation. Professor Sneed was on leave from Stanford throughout 1969. During the spring he served as Visiting American Professor at the Institute for Advanced Legal Studies at the University of London. This past autumn he was Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Ghana. Professor Sneed has recently expanded his activities on the law reform front with his appointment to the California Law Revision Commission. 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 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 Director of the Center for Research in Inter- national Studies at Stanford. CARL BERNHARDT SPAETH William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law MARVIN T. TEPPERMAN Lecturer in Law A dynamic person who gives his students a healthy academic workout, Marvin Tepper- man is now in his ninth year as a lecturer in Income Tax Problems at Stanford. The majority of Mr. Tepperman's time is consumed by his duties as Vice President and General Counsel of Hyatt Corporation, an appointment which became effective on January 1, 1970. He is currently on a leave of absence from his regular corporate and tax law practice with the San Francisco firm of Steinhart, Goldberg, Feigenbaum 8a Ladar. He is a past president 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 in 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 Universily of Chicago Law Review. At the University of California in 1949-50, he was a research assistant to Professor Stanley Surrey, now Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy. At that time he also worked on the American Law Institute Tax Project. The Teppermans have two teenage children. 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 the jokingly claims that he took the Bar Exam only to stop his brother's accusations of his being a professional studentj. From 1945 to 1950 he was employed by the United States Military Government in Austria. Dr. 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. Biber always has 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. Last year Dr. Biber became somewhat of a hero around the law school. First, he defeated Professor Gordon Scott in dramatic style in the final match of the Law School Tennis Tournament. Second, he outlasted each and every one of his students at the party he gave for his Roman Law seminar fEa1 Note: I can personally testify to this factj. And finally, he was elected by the third-year class as Commencement Speaker at graduation. GEORGE TORZSAY-BIBER Lecturer in Law MICHAEL S. WALD Assistant Professor of Law Mike Wald, also known as Professor Wald, was born in New York City in 1941 and resided in the East until joining the law faculty at Stanford. He received his B.A. from Cornell in political science and then attended Yale, the Stanford of the East, receiving both an LL.B. and an M.A, in political science in 1967. His activities at Yale included being Projects and Topics Editor of the Yale Law Journal as well as other honors and activities. While at Yale he published an article in the Yale Lawlournal on the impact of the Miranda decision upon police interrogations based upon his own research and study of the New Haven police department. Since coming to Stanford Mr. Wald has taught Criminal Law and Family Law. He published an article in Stanford Today entitled The Police in the Ghetto. He has been an acitve member of the intellectual community, devoting time to campus issues and draft counseling. His immediate plans will include a leave of absence to practice law in the criminal field. Mr. Wald's wife, Johanna, is also a graduate of Yale Law School. The Wald's have two children, a daughter Jennifer, age 5, and a son Jonathan, less than a year old. l 74 Professor Howard R. Williams is the leading American scholar in the field of oil and gas law. Author, with Professor Meyers, of the seven volume treatise, Oil and Gas Law, he writes annual supplements to update the work. In addition, Professor Williams, in collaboration with Dean Maxwell and Professor 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 country. 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 has a wide-ranging knowledge of all aspects of property law, including 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 students to mark their texts heavily so as to lower their resale value - he has also published two other casebooks, Cases on Property and Cases on Decedents'Estates and Trusts, and a third on future interests is in preparation. Professor Williams and his wife, Virginia, spend their leisure time reading and gardening. Ut is reliably reported that Professor Williams prunes with an unrestrained vengeance that belies his poised classroom mannerj The Williams' son, Rick, is a junior at Yale. Professor Williams received an A.B. in political science from Washington University in 1937 and an LL.B. in 1940 from Columbia University, where he was an editor of the Columbia Law Review. From 1946 to 1951 he was a member of the faculty of the University of Texas Law School, and served as both Assistant Dean and Acting Dean. In 1951 he joined the Columbia Law School faculty where he became Dwight Professor of Law in 1959. Professor Williams came to Stanford in 1963, and since 1968 has been Lillick Professor of Law. HOWARD R. WILLIAMS Stella W. dt Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law WILLIAM F. YOUNG, JR. Visiting Professor of Law Professor William F. Young, Jr. is visiting Stanford Law School this semester from Columbia Law School. Born in Marshall, Texas in 1925, he attended the University of Texas, where he received his A.B. in 1947 and his LL.B. in 1949. Upon graduation he joined the faculty of the University of Texas Law School, and then he attended Harvard Law School in 1951-52 for a year of graduate study. After teaching for a year at Duke Law School U952-531, he returned to the law faculty at Texas, where he remained until 1956. In 1956 he joined the faculty of the Columbia Law School, where he has remained until the present with the exception of a year visitirig at Boalt Hall H961-623. He has also taught summer sessions at many places and although he looks much younger than his forty tive years, he claims the traveling about will cease after this semester at Stanford. I believe I have packed up the old car for the last time. Professor Young may be a stranger to Stanford Law School, but he is certainly no stranger to its faculty. He attended law school at Texas with Charlie Meyers, where his professors were none other than Joe Sneed and Howard Williams. At Columbia Law School Marc Franklin and Gerald Gunther in addition to Charlie Meyers and Howard Williams were members of the faculty. And one might well assume that at one time a young Dale Collinson was one of his students. So this semester might well be called more a reunion than a visit. Professor Young's primary field in the law is Commercial Law and at Stanford this semester he is teaching a course in Insurance Law. GRADUATE TEACHI FELLOWS LEE FI BENTON Teaching Fellow in Research and Writing B.A. Political Science Oberlin College 1966 LL.B. Universizy of Chicago 1969 i,:,g 6 , 9 of ' 5 '--1 K: ' A STEPHEN C CURLEY Teaching Fellow in Research and Writing A.B. History Haverford College 1966 LL.B. University of Chicago 1969 T S 3 ci,, 1' RE UBEN ALEX HASSON Teaching Fellow in Research and Writing B.A. Liberal Arts University of Cape Town 1958 LL.B. London School of Economics 1962 LL.M Yale University 1968 JEFFREY D. JENNIN GS Teaching Fellow in Legal Problems of the Poor B.A. History Yale University 1965 LL.B. Stanford University 1968 ROBERTM. STERN Teaching Fellow in Legal Problems of the Poor B.A. History and Government Pomona College 1966 .LD. Stanford University 1969 gg I i DOUGLAS K. THOMPSON JR. B.A. Economics Stanford University 1965 LD. Stanford University 1969 7 . 7 -. 1,2545 A' Reuben Hasson Cabovej works on an article, while Steve Curley Crightj discusses written work with a first year student. SANDRA D. WEIKSNER B.S. Psychology Stanford University 1966 JD. Stanford University 1969 ST DE TS My in fam F .Lk A if A Ek f M5551 - ' .h , . ,Y ,V 41, X A- fam f ,.:EE::- S ' . , if ' . 'WSW ' i W ' A ' - ffl,- mw My l.,,i:1,ff-9.6 :A 2-Ziff ZVQZQMQ u we , ,L.7.k,.,g+V 'sm L ..,M.,.k .-.- 1 , L ,, ,, , V .,, -.,, . L. Is- , ' ., ' ' fi' V if ff' ' 5, gli' f.:iQ.Eil'fi 13.4 4' ' WV - EEF.: , L. , - ' Y . ' A' 1 C J fL F ,,., :A 7 CHQ., V ff . nfl , -N ' J ' , 'I-. W cf: , ,551 I f' Sw LL Y- L 24 55,1 A ' f3Qq,'fj N: JMXQYQQS' L+ -fgeff ms . . ..,. f L it .,.', Mffff' 'Wm - Lf .,. L 4 - ' 551 ' ' A z ,ls ' 'wif F91 - ,Q 7' 'EA S- MH- ' V: .IJ I 'Je' V L V I M' ,, - ,Ar ,N ,Y 6 ,,.k guy .. LA.: ...f X I gg, , xjgv X I -X., V , f v 5 ,4 'fix' R F, , A f W W M ' f W7 w Q., Q 2, gig If V W m - W' V . 1: eff - f ' -Q, -A 1 f 1 , N ,sew - 1? ' I 75 if k. la ' ' ,LH L 1 LL. Q .,'zsfzj', miie: - ',, f lbw p -My 51 1 ' ff T: 'f L f L 1' ' . 75?-, L. Q: 'ii - -- ' ' ,531 - '- A 'Z' . ' -'-h . . ' - f N, Ni ,, ..,.. q Jiwigjgaf ng, ,.,.,.,., -4:69-P , ek wi? ., . QE, . ' 1 12 ' is r W A i T - 'fiizl -U sr . L K ' , Lf A ,, L 'L' 'L . 42 Y 6824 .?'g7LM -K ' 1 ' ' P - ' .L . , --.f mf g ' 1 , ' L at ,, L ik Q , W Y ew Ssqzwzyx. I - 3' ' . 'Lf , 5' . ,. Ng. LL Few, L K f. Ll, . ' L ' ' 1 ' ' , ' L M r w ,- 'i2T5,f1 5211 A -V. fig 7 ,L gb! 1 ,af 'Ha Nz. 1 1 if A. x Q., :vm L sean M 4 sfo L iz Y . Q -. -.1 , 7 - .1 fn 'ww-4 .mss, s fu' r 3' 'v2?', ,Q-' ' 5996 N35 ':-Q--ui? ' 3' swu- its Wane Ariel Q a ? ' .Q-Nifil: e ww? .KW 52?1f-'53 W' rn-1 ,.,,g, ,.., w - F -x X A fgfgqgfe ag! -nf-f if-1- ,gr br L s Z5 ew 5 3 A 'ir ,Q Q D Mfr? .Mu-mi -.dm , . --. It . ,, ,K 3 Q is if ,.g,:W-.. st5S1.,,5, ,-5. 0 KV I , A gg -fi! ' ' ii' in kg -Z . V 2,23 .Iggy-1: ,gimdji Hy.. fpkjigff, M A y - Q , i 4- - Lp'f Q 3 J' I -V.. Q W ,5,gr3i4..,wN .rf 'a ' S M.. ,f.,,,, k R2 M W' EXP sm 5 A Egg A Www Q ,g--Q 4 Ns, 3 YM , .N mwah 14-V, 1' 'af 5 .lm 0- ZS mf' ,. ,, -ii- .,..,.f 1-9 x , - - - g .V L ,, 4 33if,?ET,l ' , ,, wi'-A-.,1fi5fQ.2e-1,2255ji? L12- Eternal God, Lord of life and death, . . . we confess that we do not fully comprehendg. . . that as it seems to our human understanding, this life was absurdly foreshortened. But remembering Barbara now, we acknowledge thy great goodness in the given life .... We thank thee for the gift to us of her life, for our own hours and days which she touched and made brighter for us. For her whom thou has taken from us, . . . we give thanks .... Barbara, little Barbara, the Lord bless you and keep youg. . . the Lord lift up his countenance upon you, and give you peace. B. Davie Napier Service for Barbara Bisbee Mitchell November 7, 1969 RICHARD CLARK ABBOTT Richard C. C'Doc,'j Abbott died today of wounds received when an aerosol can of preheated shaving cream allegedly exploded in his face. Born in Mexico City, Dr. Abbott attended St. Grottlesex and Yale University, Where he was Phi Beta Kappa and a member of Skull and Bones. After two years in .England as a Rhodes Scholar, Dr. Abbott enrolled in Stanford's famous Law-Business-Animal Husbandry combined program. Drafted by the Baltimore Colts after a particularly impressive rugby season, Doc is credited with having singlehandedly returned the drop-kick to a position of prominence in the N.F.L. Upon an early retirement due to the revelation of his previous affiliation with the Crothers Pub, he joined the Wall Street investment banking firm of Crosby, Stills, Nash 85 Young, where he acquired inside information. A prolific writer during mating season, Dr. Abbott's classic work on Marsupial Reproduction is still in use in high schools throughout the nation. He is survived by his wife, the former Eleanor Rigby, a debatable number of children, and by most of North Dakota. JOSEPH J. ADAMS, JR. Born in New York, Joe did his undergraduate study at Brown University, where he received his A.B. in political science in 1967. On the strength of his college thesis on the Civil Aeronautics Board and of his general interest in society's transportation problems, Joe received a Bay Area Bridge Authority scholarship to Stanford Law School. Under this scholarship Joe has been required to make numerous trips across the San Mateo and Dumbarton Bridges to study their efficiency, this job being burdensome because the nearest place to make a convenient U-turn is at the Mills College turn-off on Interstate 580. Such duties have not bothered Joe greatly during three years at Stanford because this research fits in well with his major law school interests. Haight ww A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, A Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. ALAN C. ALHADEFF Originally planning a career serving as an officer in the U.S. Navy, Alan was rejected because of ill health. Coming then to Stanford Law School, he succeeded in maintaining his record of academic excellence. Contemning membership on the Law Review staff, Alan nontheless remained active by authoring numerous articles and comments under his nom de plume. During the summer he worked for the California Law Revision Commission and helped draft the well-known Preventive Detention Act overwhelmingly passed by the Lower House but narrowly defeated in the Senate. Next year Alan intends to act as legal advisor to United Nations Delegate Shirley T. Black and hopes to become involved in international affairs in the near future. RALPH W. BACHMAN, JR. Born and raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Ralph attended the University of Minnesota, where he graduated Summa cum Laude in 1966 with a B.A. in political Science. With the benefit of a Rhodes Scholarship, he then attended Ex fter College, Oxford University for two years, earning a B.A. in jurisprudence. At Stanford Ralph has participated in the Juvenile Defenders' Program of the Legal Aid Society and has worked as a third year student teaching fellow in the first year writing program. RICHARD MARK BAKER gif gag f770 Born in Gary, Indiana in 1945 within view of the picturesque plumes of red smoke from the steel mills CCough!j, he managed to pass through the Gary Public Schools and go on to the limestone halls of Indiana University a B.S. in accounting in 1967. Determined not to be a pencil pusher wearing a green eyeshade, he was drawn to the Golden West and Stanford Law School to bask in the year-round sun and learn to surf. Older and wiser he is now accustomed to fog and smog and plans to remain in the Bay Area. fMora1, there's no escaping air pollutionj Ziff! Ka., M70 JAMES R. BERRY Noting the absence of any valid empirical data on legal education, Professor Friedman began two years ago to conduct a laboratory social study of Stanford Law School. The goal of his study was to measure the effect on the human thought process. Realizing that the validity of the study would turn on his ability to minimize the variables influencing both the control and test groups, and that comparing one group from the real world with another group from the monastic confines of the law school was methodologically unsound, Professor Friedman hired Jim as a placebo. Jimis role for the past two years, unknown to his classmates, has been to cut through the supposed substance of Stanford Law School and follow blindly its underlying procedure. Uniquely qualified by his four years in the Marine Corps, Jim came rather to enjoy such things as blue cards, the lunchroom, checking the bulletin board and emptying his mailbox each day. Jim faithfully occupied his carrel and sat inconspicuously in class, though at no time was he allowed to study or listen. Preliminary results from the study seem to indicate that the probability is greater than .05 that differences between any two groups' ability to think like lawyers can occurb chance y ' 542 X56 .f ffya GILBERT C. BERKELEY A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectivesinboth speech and PETER A. BELL Peter lived in the East, where he had a criminal record by the age of five, and then came to California for law school. 'The horror of that momentf the King went on, fl shall never, never, forgetf 'You will, though,' the Queen said, 'if you don't make a memorandum of it.' He received his scholarship check and a sanity-saving sense of priorities from Dolores. 'What is the use of a book,' thought Alice, fwithout pictures or conversation?' He worked harder than he desired to, participated in some organizations, made some friends, who were important to him, and will graduate. O frabjous day! Callooh! Cal1ay! He will work where he feels that he is someway bettering his society and where there is joy and vibrancy. 'There is no duty we so much underrate as the duty of being happy. KQKAZQF A7762 ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, to legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. Luz dw M70 ROBERT L. BOUCHIER Bob received his B.A. in English in 1967 and his J.D. in 1970, both from Stanford. !?747 MICHAEL I. BEVIER I dropped out running free smack dab in the middle of ten thousand hogs and a million acres of corn, my life is devoted to fulfilling the inscrutable promise of my birth. Bibidie, bobidie boo, just like you, I wonder exactly who's in the zoo. Go far? If you can find me a fast car! MICHAEL L. BURACK Raoul Berger decided to become a lawyer when, at the age of 26, he realized he would never be among the very best violin virtuosig I decided to become a lawyer when, at the age of 25, Irealized I would not win a Nobel Prize in physics within 10 years. The realization was of course belated, even though in the meantime I had been a Summa graduate of Wesleyan University in physics, a Woodrow Wilson Fellow in physics at Caltech, a graduate student in applied physics at Stanford, and author of an article in the Journal of Physical Chemisbjv. But law has proven more fun and more rewarding than physics, and the horizons are broader ones. As for my intervening years in physics, a sufficiently puritanical ethic can make almost any kind of hard work tolerable, and my quantum of puritanism has not fallen short of suf- ficiency. Indeed, had it been any less than sufficient, I could never have endured a year as Managing Editor of the Law Review. Recent summers provided some variation: I studied Soviet foreign policy and Russian as well as law, and I worked for Covington 84 Burling in Washington, D.C. My long-run plans tend to focus on the international arena and include teaching and, perhaps, a short stint in the Government. The more immediate future encompasses a clerkship with Judge Ben Duniway of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco and work with a firm, probably in Washington - a wildly materialistic interlude before I settle down to a more scholarly existence. Ultimate ambitions are two: to be Secretary of State in the Cabinet on which James Atwood is Secretary of Defense, and to own a St. Bernard. C2fv6,5a..f 5759 HALSEY B. COLLINS Born in New York City and now a resident of Chevy Chase, Maryland, Halsey attended Amherst College in Massachusetts. At Amherst he majored in psychology, minored in classical literature, and rowed for the varsity crew. After a year at Columbia Law School, Halsey was drawn to Stanford by a certain young lady. Stanford hasn't been all that bad and she is now Mrs. Collins, so the move is generally looked upon with favor. At Stanford, Halsey's primary interests lie in income tax and estate planning. Last year he won the Stanford competition for the First National Bank of Chicago's Estate Planning Competition. And, by the way, is anybody out there interested in buying a Fuller Brush to help a young student work his way through school? ff: f,514' TRIGG T. DAVIS Mix one half gallon Tanqueray, three quarts quinine water, a few ounces of lime juice and forty ice cubes and we are ready to begin another evening in the life of the Bald Man from Burlingame. Much of Trigg's time at Law School was spent in folksy conversations generally devoted to his three passions: foreign sports cars, boxer dogs, apd a certain beautiful brunette from Tacoma, rarely seen sans potato cups. Trigg prepared himself for a few lively years in a cosmopolitan Fresno law practice by getting involved in water: first as a skierg later as a sewer inspectorg and finally under the tutelage of Charlie Meyers. Trigg has served for two years on the Journal of International Studies: first as an editor of the volume on Ocean Resources fwater, water everywherej and then as Articles Editor for the issue on 'Telecommunicationsf' cqafgafwffw Budapest, Hungary, 1938. caught up in the Big War as a child, and was on the wrong side when it ended. fdidn't then know what that meant - was to learn later, in 19562. grade and high school years followed, untainted by the anglo-saxon traditiong wondered instead about things like whether coca-cola had alcohol in it. that question settled in andau, austria on a cold november morning in '56, the quest began for other interesting aspects of the Land Across the Water where no national boundaries were to be found for miles. after some years, aided by fortuity, returned to academe where finally was overtaken by donne, locke, twain, f scott and mike wright's dad. and eventually by the secty of navy. having often ascertained the length and width fsans a continuum to terra firma thru a plankj of a destroyer, decided that even law school had to be better. indeed, there, reward came! john kaplan was coerced falbeit, at the usurious price of a- in crimproj into the pronouncing of the name that chilled the hearts and numbed the tongues of the temerarious. after that, all is anti-climatic. 4-ffnif X772 MARTIN EICHNER 4'McWatt turned again, dipped his wings once in salute, decided oh, well, what the hell and flew into a mountain. DOLORES A. DONOVAN Dede received an A.B. in History and French in 1967 and a J.D. in 1970, both from Stanford. NORMAN V. ELFSTROM Norm came into the world on March 27, 1945, otherwise noteworthy as the day on which Nazi Germany tired its last V-2 rocket. With typical German accuracy, the rocket, which had been aimed at London, landed in a pea field in southern Sweden, much to the surprise of local Scandinavians enjoying their noon coffee. With Norm on the scene, the powers-that-be ended the war in a summary manner. During his last year in college, Norm was never quite convinced that he wanted to become a lawyer, and he still isn't. He was admitted to Harvard and Stanford, a quick comparison of the mean winter temperatures at Cambridge and Palo Alto made the decision an easy one. Law school has been something less than exciting for Norm, particularly the case of Martin v. Hunter 's Lessee, which he hasn't understood to this day. Rumors that Norm had a crush on Suzanne Close were unfounded in fact. Dick McKinney has reported that Norm has spent more time in his second and third years interviewing than he has studying, a report which was met with an indignant denial. A summer's clerkship in Hawaii taught Norm that legal research ina law firm is no more exciting than legal research is in law school. Most of his time was spent on the beach in an assiduous effort to contract skin cancer. Contrary to stories spread by some sinister souls, Norm found that haoles are as welcome at Ewa Beach and Haleiwa as they fand their dollarsj are at Waikiki. Also, contrary to popular opinion, Norm proved that dieters can lose weight on mangoes and papaya. Plans for the future are not settled, but Norm would like to try his hand at practice, probably in a small firm on the West Coast. DAVID ELSON A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distingushed myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. f'ZK'694 ROBERT P. ETIENNE As the result of Bob's three years of legal aid activities and of his course in Legal Problems of the Poor, he has discovered that he is eligible for the following: welfare, indigent legal services, general assistance, social security, unemployment, and voluntary bankruptcy. In the next three years he hopes to qualify for the progressive income tax. fEd. note: his handwriting is impossible to read - he will make a good doctor at leastj. A small town product I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. gud., 'rv 3 i' GEORGE M. FELDAN Born in Newark, N.J., George traveled off to Hamilton College, where he was the director of the college film society and worked on the college newspaper. After receiving his B.A. in Philosophy in 1966, George spent a year at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, studying the work of Heidegger and partaking of the cultural joys of the heterogenous, intellectual colony of students there. Dissatisfied, however, George - with the help of a pinball machine scholarship from the Oasis Foundation - enrolled at Stanford Law School, where he has participated in LSCRRC and in the Legal Aid Society. Next year George may follow Alan to the U.N. to work as a Legal Advisor for Shirley Temple Black. And then again, he may not . . . PRENTICE A. FISH A native of New England, Bud seems to have abandoned the Yankees and settled down in California. At least, he has been here for seven years, receiving his A.B. in Political Science from Stanford in 1967, where he was in the Ski Club and worked on the Chaparral. At the law school, Bud has been in the Legal Aid Society and has taken a particular interest in tax law. gee fini, ALAN E. FRIEDMAN B.A. Amherst College, 1967 J.D. Stanford University, 1970 l Note Editor, Stanford Law Revzew ML!! me ANNETTE GALUSTIAN Annette has often been asked how the shifting sands of time and life brought her to the Stanford Law School to assume her much misunderstood, and yet important, role of being the school's token Armenian. Annette was a refugee from the East, more specifically, Teheran, New York City, and State College Chome of Pennsylvania State Universityj. The small town atmosphere of State College and the hills of the surrounding countryside unwarped the Annette that too many years in N.Y.C. produced. Stanford has taught Annette to be semi-articulate, coldly rational, socially aware and, failing those, to fall back on her natural asset. While at Stanford she has served as Second Year Class Representative and representative to the Graduate Student Association. Annette also participated in the Legal Aid Society as Chairman of the Consumer Protection Committee. The summer Annette worked for the Santa Clara County Legal Aid Society was as valuable as any semester spent in high powered intellectual discussion in that it brought her professional future into realistic perspective. Annette plans to practice law in an effort to contribute to something other than the Population Explosion 6' al cf 5 f 7 . g.,.,g 7 0 - CLIFFORD MICHAEL GANSCHOW Mr. Ganschow hails from Anaheim, California, famous for the Jungleride at Disneyland. He came north to Stanford for a seven year academic interlude, receiving a B.A. in Economics in 1967 and a J.D. in 1970. Following graduation, Mr. Ganschow admits looking forward to renewed associations with,Fred Duffy, Jim Thomas, Frank McNell, Trader Sam, and the rest of the guys. Poor Jim spent most of his early years rousting about the Pennsylvania woods. Like all good ferral children he divided his time expeditiously between stealing eggs and barking at the moon. Having resolved the crisis of lack of sufficient body hair in favor of a return to civilization our hero drifted off to Stimpson Observatory to share the academic spotlight with such notables as Wo, Lump, Shep, and Pete. Undaunted by his prep school days the young lad grew strong and straight tempered by travail in the mines and the Pittsburgh mills. Biding his time the merry mercenary tripped off to the banks of the Susquehanna where he spent four uneventful years in exclusive training as a member of America's great leisure elite. Unconcerned with the advances of crypto-reality the stalwart chum soon crossed the Great Divide, diploma in hand, academic cherry still intact, and descended unsuspectingly upon'the hallowed confines of Stanford Law School. And what a treat it was! Only momentarily taken aback, the fearless young crusader soon grasped the real kernel of the thing and devoted his talents to wine, song and sun. He spent his three years, if not wisely, at least well. And though time's test may someday rule against him, it was probably a bargain at twice the price. .Nl ff? 51 JOHN L. GENUNG John was born in Texas at an early age but soon gave this up for more productive labor. By way of Nebraska, Michigan State, and Glenwood, Iowa High School he came to Stan. Law bringing a new car, a young son, one wife and assorted debts. The debts are larger, the car is no longer new, and changes have likewise occurred in the aforesaid wife and child as John staggers away after putting in his time. All was not for naught, however, as he has acquired the magical ability to think like a lawyer. fFanfare.j Observers, however, have noted an increasing tendency to mumble, Telescope, microscope! -Friends and relatives are undecided as to whether he should be committed or recorded. KIRK A. GUSTAFSON Kirk was born in Philadelphia Pennysylvania on November 6, 1944. A precocious child, he reached the zenith of his career when in 1962 he was chosen most likely to succeed by his classmates at Franklin High School in Portland, Oregon. Despite the long decline that followed he was able to graduate from Whitman College in 1966 where he majored in political science. After a year at Stanford Law School Kirk opted for the good life-a Porsche, a stereo, Tahiti, and a beautiful girl who still recall his high school heroics. After many months of such shameful hedonism he returned for two more grueling years at Bay Manning's country club by the El Camino. Upon graduation Kirk wants to work for a public defenders office or to retire to Magic Beach. ZMQ, GERALD M. HALLIGAN ffm Jerry was born in 1945 in Oakland, California. Unable to exert his individuality he was taken a year later to Seattle, Washington. There for seventeen years he slogged through the rain to obtain an education. He finally acquired a B.A. in finance from the University of Washington, as an honors graduate to everyone's surprise. He also acquired diarrhea from community development work in Mexico, frostbite from several years as a professional ski instructorg a smooth line from much involvement in campus politics and Theta Chi fraternityg and a wife named Penny, or more appropriately Bug.', After coming to Stanford Jerry and Penny dried out and decided they like the sun. The Bug multiplied in May and their daughter Kelly was born opportunely in the middle of second year final exams. In the future they are likely to be found near the California coast, the Bug multiplying, and he performing as a trial attorney or skier Cbut in no event doing a rain dancej. HENRY H. HAPPEL Hap came to Stanford after four years in New Haven, primed for the law school scene and the West Coast action. I must confess a temptation to discuss his deeds in the larger arena, for Hap was in on many a rally, expedition, high-altitude assault, turkey-day soiree, hoedown, beach-out, move-in, and run-down. But you, dear reader, are no doubt less interested in the fun than in the facts. They are these. At the bell for the opening round Hap came out with his hands down and got beat around but good. He tired early and was finally put down by a vicious incorporeal hereditament willy. In the second round he began to show the moves he picked up in the titillating- Title-tax-triumvirate, and finished with a big right to the grading system. At last report he was stronger still in the third, pounding methodically away at international law. All indicators are that he will emerge battered but still standing, fit for all except the army. Hap's post-fight plans center on international law, economic development, and Latin America. He points out that people are starving down there. CQHOQZMV X770 WILLIAM C. HODGE Let the record show that while Bill was in law school, the United States fought a war in South East Asia .... Bill prepared his mind and body for Stanford Law School by lj assisting his parents with the care and feeding of 40 Holstein milch cows near Springfield, Ohio, 21 attending Harvard, and 33 soldiering with the American armed forces fthese three activities were pursued in the given order, and, roughly, are of equal significancej. , After a riotous first year at Crothers, Bill moved to the peaceful confines of Phi Delta Theta, but for the third year returned to Crothers as the R.A. He found the B. Bays era a tough act to follow. His primary legal experiences have included a summer with LSCRRC, a summer with a Portland, Oregon law firm, many courtroom battles on behalf of Phi Delts, and a thorough field study of ski torts. His biggest mistake in law school was once listening to a buffoon named John Carl Mundt. He hopes to be a high school track coach. I was born of German immigrant parents on June 3, 1945. I attended local public schools in an uptight upstate New York city, until I was caught outside the faculty women's toilette facility with a periscope. Military school was a drag but I was happy to fulfill my military obligation in this manner instead of in some clearly more onerous route. After graduating from Military school with a marksmanship medal, I obtained an appointment to West Point which I accepted. For a year and one half I compiled a distinctive record at the bend in the Hudson. Unfortunately I was implicated in a well-known scandal and dismissed from the Point, thereby thwarting my long range goal of a career in the Action Army. I was graduated with distinction from Parson's College a few years later. I received inquiries from Stanford, and after a suitable mull period graciously accepted their offer. I studied long and hard at the law school and remained remarkably untainted by the myriad of temptations around me. Only to this can I attribute my recent thought conversion, so that I may finally say with veracity and gratitude that Stanford has made me Think Like A Lawyer. Z X92 JOHN I . HUHS As an All-American economist at the University of Washington, John was recruited by all the major graduate schools but came to Stanford because of the strong intermural sports program. After all, you can make a living in law for a few years, but you have to have something to fall back on. And it is clear from John's success as a member of the Blackacre B softball team that he is more than just a paid student. Since John couldn't ride his motorcycle all the time, John found he had a few spare hours. He tried going to class, but that didn't work out, so he joined the Law Review. As a law-business student, he found himself working on the review in a year in which he took no law school classes - which is about how many you need. CHARLES GORDON JONES One of the original Cro-Bro of the class of '70, C, Gordon helped to contribute to the anti-intellectualism that made Cothers Hall habitable for two years. He did his part in improving social conditions by pub-tending in the bar - not only for the other students but fhicj for himself as well. The mecca of the Stanford Golf Course occupied many of his daylight hours, and it soon attracted in permanent fashion every new golf ball he hit. His nocturnal activities caused him to be excluded from the O'Connell-Abbott-Miller-Munch-Watson organization known as Eunuchs' Cornern - one of those Hippee-Radical-Communist-Pinko subversive outfits! Before being able to think like a lawyer, C. Gordon was commissioned as an officer through ROTC. And his Missouri draft board has apparently never recovered from the loss - late this year they were still trying to draft Lieutenant Jones. Peace. EDWARD M. KEECH My whole life has been devoted to a search for a humane way to slaughter cattle. From the time I was born on in 1944 through early years growing up on Long Island, through prep school in New England, and through my undergraduate days at Harvard, I have been disturbed by the fact that cattle are stunned by a blow with a hammer before they are killed. This seemed needlessly cruel. Two years as a teacher and counselor in the Job Corps led me no closer to a solution. During my first two years in law school, I finished second in the Kirkwood Moot Court Competition, but nothing helped find the solution to the cattle question. Then, in the Fall of my third year, I reached my goal, there is a humane way to numb cattle before slitting their throats! Take them to Business Associations for an hour and a quarter. That will numb them. The California Bar exam and two years in the Army will delay any attempts to introduce this solution into practice. Half gow 1970 ROBERT L. KEENEY, JR. The horseman serves the horse, The neatherd serves the neat, The merchant serves the purse, The eater serves his meat, 'T is the day of the chattel, Web to weave, and corn to grindg Things are in the saddle, And ride mankind. There are two laws discrete, Not reconciled- Law for man, and law for thing, The last builds town and fleet, But it runs wild, And doth the man unking. Let man serve law for man, Live for friendship, live for love, For truth's and harmony's behoofg The state may follow how it can, As Olympus follows J ove. Emerson ROGER W. KIRST Born midst Minnesota snows, In the Christmas season even, Time to grow and learn and then, MIT to engineer. Forth a ain to Stanford Law g - s Learn the mysteries found in cases, Law Reviewed and Moot Courted, While San Francisco long explored. Soon to serve the Navy's call, Defend a sailor, roam the world, Then to find what it's all been for, Anonymous, but plagiarized. ROBERT B. KIMBALL To be truthful, the most important educational experiences, and the really good things that happened to me over the last few years don't seem to fit into a yearbook biography. On the other hand, I'1n not sure that anyone will profit from learning that I graduated from Claremont Men's College in 1967 with a B.A. in history, was active on the Moot Court Board, sold fire insurance for the English Channel, or devised a formula for imputing income to the taxpayer for air breathed during the year, less a depreciation allowance. Instead, I'll just say that I'm thankful for good friends and occasional quiet afternoons. RICHARD M. KURTZMAN . . . Grown-ups love figures. When you tell them that you have made a new friend, they never ask you any questions about essential matters. They never say to you, 'What does his voice sound like? What games does he love best? Does he collect butterflies?' Instead, they demand: 'How old is he? How many brothers has he? How much does he weigh? How much money does his father make'?' Only from these figures do they think they have learned anything about him. If you were to say to the grown-ups: 'I saw a beautiful house made of rosy brick, with geraniums in the windows and doves on the roof,' they would not be able to get any idea of that house at all. You would have to say to them: 'I saw a house that cost S20,000.' Then they would exclaim: 'Oh, what a pretty house that isl' H They, as well as too many others, fail to understand 'fa very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly: what is CARL M. LONGLEY, JR. Carl was born in Pensacola, Florida, but moved to California to get away from the sun. He came to Stanford on a shuffleboard scholarship and, like all jocks, it took him eight years to get out. Now, three degrees and a Mustang richer, he is prepared to offer himself to the world - or maybe to spend a few more years in the frat house if the right offer doesn't come along. ggi .- 1 77 al ALAN D. LONGMAN essential is invisible to the eye. The Little Prince CQQKAN jj? 75 Antoine de Saint Exupery as ' li This Space For Rent Your ad can appear here in the Stanford Law School Yearbook! Enjoy the prestige which only a great Law School Yearbook can offer! Recent data compiled by the Law School Yearbook Research Council shows that the vast majority of Yearbook readers are young college graduates, and many of them will soon be earning as much as 315,000 per year. These affluent young consumers are an excellent market for many goods and services. Law firms might also consider the good will that can be generated through a Yearbook advertisement. And these ads may qualify as tax-deductible contributions. fWe're still working on that angle with the IRSJ Don't miss this opportunity to present your message to the law students of today and the leaders of tomorrow! For further information about placing an ad, write: Sell-Out Enterprises, clo Al Longman, Box 1970, Stanford, California. Don't delay, write today! fl , C Zi- f 770 JAMES HAMLIN McGEE J im grew up in Reno, Nevada, did his undergraduate work at Stanford and spent a year at the University of Madrid. He served four years in Army Intelligence, three of them in Germany, leaving as a Captain with the Army Commendation Medal. He is a graduate of the German course of the Army Language School and has done graduate work in international relations at the Monterey Institute of Foreign Studies and with Boston Universityis program in Berlin, Germany. In London one fall he met Valerie who introduced vivacity, humanity, watercress sandwiches, and egg and bacon pie into his life. Heather, now two, joined them shortly before they left the service to spend a year at the Willamette University College of Law. Transferring here, Jim worked on the Review, the placement committee, and joined Sergeants at Law. He will associate with OiMelveny 8a Myers in Los Angeles after graduation. ffafg-.f?7d ROBERT E. MCINTOSH, JR. He was born at an early age in Iowa on June 15, 1945. This fact in and of itself may not say much. However, had he been born a day sooner or a day later, the draft would now be the furthest thing from his mind. So much for the fate of birth. After two years at UCSB where he distinguished himself by being not only involved in but primarily responsible for four major bicycle accidents in one semester fa record which according to a recent check with the UCSB unicops still standsj, he transferred to UCLA where he played fourth string quarterback behind Gary Beban, Norm Dow, and Jennifer Prothro fthe coach's seventeen year old daughterj. Upon graduation from UCLA in business administration, he journeyed up to Palo Alto. Since his arrival at Stanford, his two most notable achievements are a much improved tennis backhand and an established reputation as one of the most fearless schussboomers in Northern California. His future plans call for making enough money to prevent Ray Sarna from destroying him with his great wealth and power. WILLIAM PAUL Mac GREGOR In a recent law lounge survey a number of people responded to the question, What do you think of Paul MacGregor : '6You mean Granny? A.S., Good hands. N.I., Not a great student. T.E., He never could do a tip roll. H.H.H., He actually broke his arm rounding first base! J.M., A lawyer's lawyer. W.R., Bad hands. P.B., A mind like a telescope. B.M., 4'He always handed his papers in late. K.S., Well gee .... J.K., He shouldnta shaved. D.E., A light in the dark. P.W., Groovey. L.L., Pass the matches. J .S., A real bummerfi M.C., He never came to class. J.H.M.,T.E., M.H., H.W., K.S., H1 wish he hadn't come to class. G.G., A real pussy. J.C.M., Top notch? W.H., Second rate. J.M., Where is he now? L.K.G., Outstanding in his field. R.M., A great bookf' S.M. I think he's working for a collection agency in Peoria. D.E., A turkey. E.C., He knew the tax code backwards. .I.S., He avoided cliches like the plague. V.A., He ouht to practice law in Poland? B.W. X770 DANIEL H. MacMEEKIN DALE L. MATSCHULLAT Born in Fort Sill, Oklahoma but now of 1Y status and unable to return, Dale pursued an academic career of remarkable stability, spending seven years not only at Stanford, but in the same corner of the Quad. As an undergraduate, Dale majored in history, minored in political science, and graduated with honors. At the law school, Dale has spent the bulk of his time with the law review and his spare time going to class. As Note Editor and Coordinator of the Note Department in his third year, Dale found time for that spare-time activity particularly scarce. To broaden his horizons beyond the Stanford campus, Dale and wife Went East during the summer of 1969 while Dale worked in New York with Davis, Polk and Wardell. Future plans: Assistant Secretary of State under J. Atwood. WILLIAM B. MEISSNER eventual career in work. l PAST: b.s. '62, m.b.a. '63 - penn stateg p.c.v. chile 64 66 PRESENT: exec. ed.-1.rev.g guild, sometime lscrrc, intl socy FUTURE: dinebeiina nahiilna be agaditahe, incorporated. faeffdff-ff7d Bill comes from Newton Center, Massachusetts. He graduated from Yale in 1966, after which he spent a year in Brazil getting married His . greatest achievements in law school include recovering a 1 Y classification and suing his landlord. He is known for having discredited first year courses, first year profs, the grading system, or himself or perhaps all four, but not necessarily in that order. He is also known for having credited second year courses, second year profs, the grading system, or himself, or perhaps all four, but again not necessarily in that order. He prefers Bill Russell to Wilt Chamberlain, Pope to Milton George C. Scott to John Wayne, Julia Child to Peg Bracken, and Juan Valdez to Mrs. Olsen. He appreciates Brahms, Goya, and Blue Mountain Jamaican coffee. When overextended in academia, he turns to serious pursuits such as jogging, playing the piano, cooking exotic desserts looking for squash courts, and composing cynical poems. Bill plans an JOHN B. MITCHELL A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for social sciences,I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through the lack of preparation, in legal 14' education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - part qi philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. lee i la X774 1 xl, DOUGLAS J. MORGAN Doug traces his heritage to Salem, Oregon. He there attended Baker Elementary School, a three-year one-room vocational institute where he met and married his teacher Pocahontas. She later left him in a quest to discover the Atlantic Ocean. Undaunted, Doug travelled overland to the basement of Hoover Tower, a location which inspired his harolded undergraduate treatise on erotocism C66 Stan. L. Rev. 8041. Department heads, fearing a slight to yet another Steinbeck, waived further graduation requirements. After a token appearance with the law school class of '69, Doug accepted a six-month sabbatical to master the art of pole climbing in the National Guard, an experience which, not unlike the study of law, gave him a deep perception of world problems. Looking back on his law school years, Doug claims as his greatest distinction his forbearance from all class discussion, save one involuntary coughing spasm which thwarted for a full ten minutes The Dean's well-prepared sermon on the Corporate Vacuum Cleaner. After graduation Doug plans to write keynotes for the Dicennial Digest. 4f'l0c ,5a,c ff70 1 RICHARD MORNINGSTAR I was born on March 20, 1945 in Newton, Massachusetts and grew up a few blocks away in Brookline. I traveled the grand distance of three miles to go to college at Harvard, where Imajored in Government, but then I took a gigantic three thousand mile step and came to law school at Stanford. On the way I stopped off in Portland, Oregon to pick up a wife. And since coming to Eden we have had a baby boy, known to most as Boom, and we are currently expecting another baby fboyj. CHRISTOPHER J. MUNCH and Congressmen, in part: mind and pride of spirit. MARTIN PP. O,CONNELL It was a laugh a minute. I don't care what anybody says. It was a second chance for guys who didn't get enough out of high school the first time around. I guess it'd be kind of disappointing if you had hopes of getting prepared for the real world, but after all, this is a school and there were a lot of strong points, too. The fussball machine at the Alley was always good for 8 balls and the price was right for popcorn at the Goose. And if you had to spend 4 years in South Bend you'd appreciate rain in the winter. Donit forget the inspiring extracurricular activities either. How about a Lone Mountain mixer to top off an intellectually exhausting week with a real cultural experience? Of course, it wasn't all roses fthanks to Ralstonj. I never could get a root beer float in the pub. The cushions on the Crothers pool table were no prize either. I hate to think how many hours .were wasted trying to make a U turn on El Camino. And just once I'd like to buy a hamburger without getting stuck with a bag of potato chips. Briefing and outlining were the biggest headaches, though. I still have problems with them. They hardly leave me enough time to read all the law review articles I'm interested in. But all this hard work has brought me to one conclusion about the law: If half the cases I've read haven't been rung up ona cash register, then the lunatics that write opinions are even farther gone that the clowns you run into around here. GARY S. OKABAYASHI Hawaii. On Feb. 8, 1966, Virgil Bozarth wrote to all United States Senators For the first time in my life of over 66 years I am ashamed of my country. America is tlouting the dream of its fomfathers Our honor is smirched abroad and the realization of our shame is dawning at home CPerhaps the truest patriots are the protesters J On Sept. 26, 1969, Elizabeth Hedger wrote to John Perrin who had ,y been convicted of willfully refusing induction in part 1 I p Having been on the jury who found you guilty according to the present antiquated, immoral law, I feel compelled to write to you There is a great respect in me for your motives and a great admiration. I do so hope that many have the same courage to use their intelligence and honest conviction to the good of humanity My best wishes are with you. God bless you Mr. Bozarth grew up in the Iowa farm country and is a 70 year old retired Jr. High School principal. Mrs Hedger emigrated to America after enduring Nazi Germany. These noble Americans deserve peace of The American Dream dictates that our government and its law again become their servant and not their oppressor Was born in Honolulu, Hawaii in 1945 Attended Ama Hama Elementary, Niu Valley Intermediate and Kalani High School QI pick schools with Hawaiian namesj Worked at a pineapple cannery Entered the University of Hawaii fCan you picture a football team named the Rainbows?j. Studied alongside sun bathers at Queen s Surf Beach in Waikiki. Was appointed undergraduate teaching assistant Was graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics in 1967 Worked at Pearl Harbor. Came to California and Stanford Law School Liked San Francisco but missed Queen's Surf Beach Researched for the Executive Committee, Constitutional Convention of Hawaii of 1968 fWas disappointed: the only amendment which was voted down by the voters would have lowered the voting age to eighteenj Clerked for a law firm in summer of 1969. fDid not observe Aloha Fridays jW1ll be associated with Jenks, Kidwell, Goodsill 8a Anderson Honolulu PAUL F. PERRET fEd, note: Because Paul's official autobiography read only B.S. Northwestern, 19673 J.D. Stanford, 1970, it was deemed appropriate to incorporate the followingj After distinguishing himself academically by winning the prestigious Hilmer Oehlmann, Jr., Prize for Outstanding Research and Legal Writing, young Perret devoted himself to more pragmatic and tangible pursuits:helping Blacks combat discrimination and economic repression, and working empirically to help effect changes .in the malconceived marijuana statutes. Additionally, during his latter two years, Perret busied himself by participating in more encounters and bioenergetics classes at the Free U. than attending the frequently pseudo-continental-slogan-oriented courses taught at the law school. His legal reasoning training was not for naught, however, indeed, it greatly enhanced his already effective techniques of seduction! On weekends Perret ronounced urr-ra and his hone E CP, p y J y could be found either backpacking Qusually to the Free Beach near Santa Cruzj or screaming his Porsche around the treacherous logging truck-filled curves of Skyline or La Honda Road. Perret intends either to specialize in Manifestations of Legal Fictions Law or to take a teaching fellowship in Latin at a maj or law school. ALAN B. PICK JOHN C. PERRIN John Clyde Perrin-born the second son of Robert Pain Perrin and Mary Alice Schullenberger the last year of WWlI in Bristol, Tennessee- raised in Southern Rural background-strong ties to the land, trees, horses, family in Granger County-discovered technology and change of asphalt roads, gasoline, hot smelling engines, and shiny metal with his father-and left home to learnof that science, math, and history he found printed stories of-New York, Universities, Tech, the military school, polished boots, drill, boot camp, Gentlemen Generals, student government, football games, fine' educated girls from across town-But Rolf Riberg a Swedish exchange student sent him on an exchange trip to workin England-agony of the war in Asia, memories of solid honest home people, farms, and poverty tatters, tin cans, dirt clods-against green fields ----- still searching with certificates of expertise, BS, Ms Aeronautics ---- here-What is law for? What is law? What is the law for the Blacks, the Vietnamese, Cubans, workers in the Bronx? How will we live tomorrow we ask to know how to live today? Whose ideology? Man's ideology we accept-the ideology of life! Blacks teach us the word brother -those niggers! jteygag it A M1111 Isn't it singular that no one ever goes to jail for waging wars, let alone advocating them? But jails are filled with those who want peace. Not to kill is to be a criminal. They put you right into jail if all you do is ask them to leave you alone. Exercising the right to live is a violation of law. It strikes me as quite singular? The Strawberry Statement. gee! 5422,-x970 l DUANE C. QUAINI Department. WILLIAM R. RAPSON Bill was born on November 20, 1944 in Portland, Oregon. He attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. Bill then went on to Occidental College in Los Angeles where he majored in English and minored in economics. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the local chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. After graduation in June 1967, Bill married Catherine Louise Economos. He is on the Editorial Board of the Stanford Law Review and spent the summer after his second year with the Honolulu law firm of Carlsmith, Carlsmith, Wichman and Case. Bill hopes to clerk or join a San Francisco firm after graduation. JAMES W. ROBERTSON philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at age twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generalists - art News Born in Nashville, Tennessee. Left as soon as I realized what happened. Received B.A. in Philosophy, University of Santa Clara 1967. Originally hoped for a position after graduation with a firm in Alabama, Georgia or Mississippi. Had no luck. fl canit imagine why'j Finally settled with a conservative New York firm which is providing me with a private office fglass on four sidesj, three white secretaries two white shoe-shine boys fone for each shoej, one white valet and 135 white bosses, give or take a few. WILLIAM R. ROBERTSON Here follows as good a description as any of that theatrical genre known as the student skit, the participation in which was, for many of us I fear, the zenith of our careers in legal education: An interesting institutional ceremony, often connected with the annual party and the Christmas celebration, is the institutional theatrical. Typically the players are inmates and the directors of the production are staff, but sometimes 'mixed' casts are found. The writers are usually members of the institution, whether staff or inmate, and hence the production can be full of local references, imparting through the private use of this public form a special sense of the reality of events internal to the institution. Very frequently the offering will consist of satirical skits that lampoon well-known members of the institution, especially high- placed staff members . . . Limits of licence are often tested, the humor being a little more broad than some members of the staff would like to see toleratedf' Erving Goffman, Asylurns: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. Mr. Goffman, what are you trying to tell us? Q QM! 17-W? THOMAS E. ROHLF Born: Oakland, California Home: Morage, California 1970, Stanford Law School Died: No Cgef,5L. JAMES P. ROWLES Now here I said the Red Queen j it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that! -Lewis Carroll Let youth practice filial dulyg let it practice fratemal dulyg let it earnestly give itself to being reliable. As it feels an affection for all, let it be particularly fond of Manhood-at-its-best. Any surplus energy may be used for book learning. -Confucius Law school is like a three-year Rorschach test. The experience is ineffable. Fortunately. Well, let us get on to more basic things. Questions: Who is Jim Rowles? Facts: Born, May 17, 19443 A.B. CI-Iistoryj Stanford, 1967g Future plans: Survival. Held: Remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Closing quote: He who is a good German can not be a nationalist. -Willy Brandt Degrees: A.B. in Political Science 1967 Stanford University J D O6 STEPHEN S. RUDD Unfortunately, attempted reform of legal pedagogy is frequently in the hands of the library-law teacher. With the best will in the world, such a teacher often finds it impossible to warp over the old so-called case-system so as to adapt it to the needs of the future practicing lawyer. So long as teachers who know little or nothing except what they learned from books under the case-system control the law school, the actualities of the lawyer's life are there likely to be considered peripheral and of secondary importance .... Many of the law schools are so staffed that they are best fitted, not to train lawyers, but to graduate man able to become book-law teachers who can educate still other students to become book-law teachers-and so aa' infinitum, world without end. Jerome Frank, Courts on Trial H9491 Amen BOB RYCHLIK - The legal profession became my main interest very early in life. It remained so throughout high school in the Chicagoland area, undergraduate life at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio as an accounting major and military service CUSMCD under three presidents. Finally the long awaited opportunity to study law. I am thankful for Stanford. Existentially we are persuaded that life is above all else people, their relationships and their pursuits of higher virtues. As with life so with theory-each providing its own peculiar measure of understanding and fulfillment. When individuals exercise free will their spheres of living coalesce. This ,is our professional raison d'etre Now what of our learning, experience and legal degree? I am reminded that the lack of a personal reference rpoint prompted manis first question in Genesis- Where are you? For the longest time I thought God really wanted to know. How absurd. God knew. Man didn't. Ergo .... RAYMOND L. SARNA It,s fame, fortune and adventure. It s the thrill of a life time and a long sea-voyagef' and it starts right after graduation! Closing twenty years of formal education, Mr. Sarna looks towards intensifying his pursuit of a career in the general area of business ventures? His emphasis will be on financial management and corporate merger, acquisition and securities problems. Capitalistic goals aside, Ray's concern for his natural environment-its exploration, enjoyment, and preservation- will attract him to some quiet town away from sterile cities. Success in his ventures should find him fulfilling his dream, conch counting in the Caribbean. Background: birth on New Fiscal Year's Day, July 1, 1945, growing up blissfully in Los Angeles, four years of intellectual excitement at USC, graduating with Phi Beta Kappa key and degree in economics plus zest for the Stock Market, and three final years of business education in law school. With all this preparation, Ray has been greeted with a business slowdown to give him time to prepare for the Bar Exam. Then, another re-creation retreat to the selvas of Central America or to those certain islands in the West Indies. If Ray returns, then he will embark on his forementioned career. If not . . . JAMES H. SAKODA A native of Hawaii, Jim traveled far to the East to attend Harvard University, where he majored in Government, minored in International Affairs, rowed on the lightweight crew, and received his B.A. in 1960. After a tive year stint in the Army Intelligence Corps fa term with built-in contradictionsj and a year at the Columbia University School of International Affairs, Jim enrolled at Stanford Law School. No longer eligible for the lightweight crew, he devoted his spare time to working on the Law Review and trying to get out of writing his Yearbook biography. Qafja .- H570 JEFFREY A-. SCHAFER Jeff was born May 19, 1945, in an obscure hamlet near Chicago. At the tender age of seven he escaped from what was later to become the Land of Mordor and lived for ten years in Chile, Mexico, and Spain. His career at Princeton University fthe only garden in the Sewer State j culminated in High Honors in Politics as a result of a thesis on obscenity law, field research for which included amassing a large collection of literature that ten years ago would have been unmailable. Having thus cultivated an interest in the majesty of the law, he moved westward in pursuit of his Muse, but she became an exotic dancer in The City, leaving him to fend for himself at Stanford. There he participated in a NLADA-funded project, spending one year with the good guys and the next with the bad guys learning how the criminal process really works. He also wrote his way onto the Law Review with a study of Selective Service prosecutions and came to the attention of The Great Chocolate Bar Himself as a successful plaintiff in one of what the S.S.L.R. calls the I-SCCJ cases. He hopes to practice law in the Bay Area after graduation, but the military-industrial complex may have other plans, as yet unrevealed. JAMES V. SELNA Jim was born in Santa Clara, California, on Washington's Birthday in 1945. He attended grammar school and high school in Southern California before returning to the peninsula in 1963 to enter Stanford University. As an undergraduate, he majored in history and attended the overseas campus at Tours, France. He spent much of his free time working for the Stanford DaiLv, and was elected editor-in-chief his senior year. During law school, he worked on the Stanford Law Review, serving as article and book review editor his third year. He is interested in international practice and politics, and hopes that someday February 22 will be known as Selna's Birthday. Eaffifc feed JOHN B. SHEPPARD, JR. Tired of the rigors of houseboat living, John, bestowee of his great grandfather's barn burning kit and a welcoming grimace from Stanford's minority admissions program CSoutherners, after all, given the hookworm cure and enlightened guidance, might become Americansj filled his pockets with soul grits and sidemeat and rafted west, where he became 119. 1 19 managed to maintain tenuous ties with the law school, warm rapport with the loan office, while fixing his attention firmly on the focal phenomenon of his California sojum, the bar. The back of ll9is neck is hopefully a shade paler after four years under the fog, which is to wish for effeteness, I guess. But what the hell. To the friends and friendesses who made it worthwhile, 119 wishes survival. And something more. And Tom, reliable word has it that though the Aunt Polly of the West had a four year shot at him, he ain't civilized yet. Hallelujah! DOUGLAS RICHARD SLAIN B.A., DePauw University, attended Der Goethe Institut in Germany and University College in England, received M.A. from the University of Chicago, will work for Pillsbury, Madison and Sutro in San Francisco. L7f.i,!d,- X77 J FRED CHRIS SMITH The use of d-lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate may produce nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, pharyngeal constriction, disturbance of the autonomic nervous system, periods of intense sweating, tingling and prickling of the skin with sensations of intense burning and freezing cold, mydriasis, insomnia, agitation, anguish, depression, dreamy or systematized delirium with hallucinations and self-accusation, as well as boundless energy, timelessness, preceptions of unbelievable beauty, increased creativity, expanded consciousness - the psychedelic experience. This experience should be distinguished from that of the legal education, which is known to produce only nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, pharyngeal constriction, disturbance of the autonomic nervous system, periods of intense sweating, tingling and prickling of the skin with sensations of intense burning and freezing cold, mydriasis, insomnia, agitation, anguish, depression, dreamy or systematized delirium with hallucinations and self-accusation. GEOFFREY RICHARD WAGNER SMITH Conceived in Texas in August 1944, Geoffrey's parents wisely returned to San Francisco that he might be born in the Wagner ancestral home, the family fortune having been made when Wolfgang Wagner cornered the market for imitation alligator gas mask covers in the Great War. At age two, he was taken to the Chicago suburbs, and he established his political position when he beat back the first recorded attempt to impeach the fourth grade president at the Ardmore school. His collaboration with Dr. Werner von Braun on the developing of an inexpensive homemade rocket fuel ended accidentally, forcing his parents to move to a downtown apartment. Despite a fine high school record, Geoffrey was refused admission to medical school, so he took a B.A. at Stanford instead. While working in Mississippi in 1964, he saw lawyers in action and decided upon law school. Thoroughly intimidated by his professors, his only act of rebellion in the first year was authoring the judicial council decision which led to Stanford's first major sit-in. The second year was devoted to a study of the enforcement of the marijuana laws. After graduation Geoffrey will retire to his Virginia farm to practice law and write his memoirs. PHILLIP K. SMITH, JR. Smith was born on draft priority day 153 of 1946 in Wichita, Kansas, which prairie paradise he soon left for the post-bellum prosperity of Southern California. Firmly entrenched in the Los Angeles subculture, he completed his public school career at U.C.L.A. where he was awarded a B.A. magna cum laude in International Relations, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and began playing the guitar. Three years at Stanford ensued, highlighted by the wondrous discovery in the summer following his second year that the practice of law is actually fun and rewarding. Spare time in law school was occupied by work in Legal Aid, exploration of the Bay Area, weekend visits to Los Angeles, and continued guitar playing. Association with the Beverly Hills firm of Greenberg 8: Glusker will follow graduation. Smith gratefully acknowledges help and encouragement from parents, fiancee Becky Hamilton, and numerous friends who have made his twenty-four years worth living. ,iw f?7c' DOUGLAS SORENSON For them that must obey authority That they do not respect in any degree, Who despise their jobs, their destinies, Speak jealously of them that are free, Do what they do just to be nothing more than something they invest inf' -Bob Dylan If you want to know the law and nothing else, you must look at it as a bad man, who cares only for the material consequences which such knowledge enables him to predict, not as a good one, 4, who finds his reasons for conduct, Whether inside the law or outside of it, in the vaguer sanctions of conscience. -Holmes,The Path of the Law, 10 HARV. L. REV. 457, 459 08975 ,jf if 0 ALBERT B. SPECTOR Determined to use my law school training to best advantage, I have managed to secure a position with Telescope Onanists, Inc., where I will research the recreational potential of interplanetary space travel for the culturally disadvantaged wiesel. Before I begin this conceptually de- manding and ego-rewarding career, I have been persuaded by my fellow hierophants to disclose the true nature of law school. Many students have mistakingly thought that law school was the most existential of the various practices of logotherapy, or else that it was an exercise in omphaloskepsis. Actually, the law school does not exist. The deans do not exist. The professors do not exist. Everything is done with mirrors emitting rays composed of American verities. The rays mold us so that we are unable to attach ourselves to reality. We become unctous, pendantic, and self-serving. The mirrors are controlled by that most lecherous of spirits, the quintessence of the legal mind-Colonel Sanders. But there is hope. I have been to the Mount and have seen the light. Far away, but closer than our minds, is a young androgynous Boy Scout named Cannabis Sativa. Uttering those magical Words, sameo, sameof' this young Scout will instruct King Kong and Tweety Bird to do a nasty on the White House lawn. The purity, cleanliness, and basic goodness of this act will break the mirrors and thus liberate us from this pernicious existence. W. STEVE STEVENS If you saw a man attacking a bear, would you help the bear? Would you try to contain a tire with gasoline? Or would you seek to quench the fire of ignorance with the water of knowledge and understanding? Give a man a goal worthy of his ambition and it will become the spur that will make him struggle with destiny. Attacking such social bears as bigotry, class distinction, economic and social suppression, is a task worthy of anone's attention. This task is even more difficult for a Black man, surrounded by a raging sea of discrimination, drenched in the mucky water of poverty and infected by the polluted air of an inherently inferior segregated education. If he stops trying, economic and social death is his reward. But his chance of winning defies mathematical calculations. He becomes intimate with frustrations, set- backs, unfulfilled desires, verbal and social abuses, false promises and an apathetic society. He must realize that deprived of useful and meaning- ful weapons, he must develop adequate survival technics. Few men are willing to undertake such an awesome task. Few men are willing to work full time while bathing in the cleansing stream of three colleges and two universities. But, then too, there are few men. KENT A. STORMER When the Yearbook editor asked some of Kent's classmates what should be written about Kent for his biography, a few themes seemed to repeat themselves quite frequently. Kent who? You mean that new kid who was in class the other day? Isn't he the one with all the junk in the back seat of his car? Yeah, and I see that car all the time on the San Mateo bridge! And on the Dumbarton Bridge too . . . Is he the one who makes all those trips to Mills? He's Joe Adam's roommate. ,few f770 RICHARD C. SUTTON, JR. Dick was born in 1945 in Honolulu, Hawaii. He spent a blissful childhood there, cavorting with the natives, until he was civilized at Punahou School. After graduating with honors, he headed East to become uptight at Princeton University. He majored in Politics and graduated with honors in 1967. Four harsh winters convinced him to return to the West, and he came to Stanford to pursue the sun and the study of law. His free time was occupied co-managing Alice's Restaurant for two years, dabbling in legal aid and alumni reunions, and generally indulging in the phenomena of the Bay Area. He intends to practice law in Hawaii after completing military service. Somebody spoke and I went into a dream. fffe LAWRENCE H. TITLE A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the Ugeneralistsl' - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. dafaiwffra A small town product, I prefer verbs to adjectives in both speech and ideas. I am brisk, lithe and effective, which explains, no doubt, why I am no longer in that small town. Born in Bristow, Oklahoma, I took an economics degree at Yale at the age of twenty. I translated Chinese for the Signal Corps during the quest for peace in Viet-nam. After serving the country I love so dearly, I enrolled at Stanford Law School intending to clerk for Justice Fortas upon my graduation. While in law school I distinguished myself. Expecting to enter private practice in Cleveland, I have not dismissed the possibility of receiving a telephone call from Yale or the State Department. A mover behind the newly formed Urban Institute, a Rand-like think tank for the social sciences, I seek to foster social change with the same drive I bring to experimentation, through lack of preparation, in legal education. I often speak of lawyers as the last of the generaIists - part philosopher, part manager - who shape institutions and programs to answer emerging needs. I am speaking of myself. 6afAiL-fare ERNEST NORTON TOOBY A carrot? I didn't get it. You know, she said brightly, the carrot .... If you want the goat to pull the cart, but he doesn't want to, you hold a carrot out in front of him. He tries to reach the carrot because he does want it. In doing so he pulls the cart,Ijf she said with a wink, if you've attached the carrot to the cart. I must have seemed a little stupid to her .... She tried to explain. Teaching these children is like training animals. For each task you want them to do, you must offer them a carrot. You mean, I finally said, you try to get the goat to pull the cart without his realizing it. That is, the goat actually does what you want him to do, but all the time he thinks he's just trying to get the carrot. He doesn't realize heis pulling the cart. Not only that, but pulling the cart isn't something that any goat, any normal goat, ever wants to do, but . . . I think you're trying to make it complicated again, she said, frowning. You mean, I tried again, to get the students to do the assignment because of some reward heis going to get, not because he realizes that the assignment is valuable or interesting to him. You mean, the assign- ment itself canit be the carrot . . . She felt happier. That's it, she said. J. HERNDON, The Way it Spozed To be 1 12 fBantam ed. 19691 . . . and then, there's the stick BETTY TUCKER Betty was born on V-E Day, May 7, 1945, in Fort Worth, Texas. She was graduated from big D's Thomas Jefferson High School in 1962, having been a pom-pom girl and cheerleader and participated in student government. At Duke University, which she attended through the generosity of her Uncle Arnold, she worked for the Rhine Institute, served on the class council, was a cheerleader, associated with Tri-Delt sorority, and achieved distinction in the business administration major, graduating cum laude. Having originally come to Stanford on a Judge Treisman scholarship and with intentions of raising eyebrows, she settled down to serious booking only after her marriage to Eric Tucker. Eventually she became President of the Law Review and worked on the Yearbook. After grad- uation she plans to associate with the Dallas firm of Bain, Taylor, Doud, Fine and Tucker. GERALD E. VARTY g Ffa fgavfv f f 70 Born in the great Mid-west, nurtured on the sun of Cahfornia in my youth, hardened by the bitter New England winters during my under- graduate days, and crowned by the glory of would-be stimulating legal education at the Harvard of the Westj' one would think some larger purpose would be mine upon emerging into the great outside known vaguely here and about as Hthe real world. What shall it be? Poverty law upon which so many are making a profit? Environmental law wherein may be our salvation from ourselves? Reforming the hiring practices of Wall Street? I think not. Instead, perhaps a return to muck- raking and enlist the aid of Ralph Nader to investigate the recruiting practices employed by USC in procuring its stable of jocks for football CStanford has to go to the Rose Bowl more often than once in twenty yearslj For a livelihood, a good start would be to buy a block of 40,000 seats for the 1970 Stanford-USC game in Palo Alto and scalp .them for twice their cost. VAUGHN R. WALKER The story of my birth, which is pretty good as a whodunit, is set in downstate Illinois where my family has operated a small still since the repeal of the Corn Laws. After a brief stab at economics at Michigan and Cal Qmy analysis was marginalD, I was initiated in law at the University of Chicago, where Professor Kalven taught us the best juries are intelligent, well-educated and just a little drunk. With that happy condition in mind, I came to Stanford. The stay here now seems too brief and with' the coming dignity of a Juris Doctor, I feel a little like the gambler on his way to the race track who said: HI certainly hope to split even today, I need the money. But there is no danger of my taking the degree seriously after having asked Professor Williams if he had read my last exam and he said: I hope so. GEORGE B. WEIKSNER, JR. George B. Weiksner, Jr., American capitalist, was born in Mystic, Connecticut, on Dec. 29, 1805. He worked as a carpenter in New York City for a time and then built canal-boats and locks for the Lehigh Coal SL Navigation Company, probably the first shippers to New York. Between 1852 and 1855 a railway line was built for the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, largely by Weiksner's personal credit, from Mauch Chunk to Easton. We built the extension of the line into the Susquehanna Valley and thence to connect with the Eire Railway. ln 1841 and 1842 he was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representativesg in 1843-1848 was county judge of Carbon Countyg in 1853-57 was a Democratic member of the national House of Representatives. In 1865 he gave money and land in South Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, for a technical schoolg Weiksner Hall, of Lehigh University, was completed in 1869g he erected a memorial library building in 1877, and the university, by his will, received nearly one third of his estate. He died in Philadelphia on May 17, 1879. CONFICTS OF LAWS FINAL EXAM: 1D Bill attended Bowdoin College and was born in Quincy, Mass., in that order QTD QFD. 2D Bill saluted left handed, couldn't make his bed properly, and faithfully polished his boots in the Army QTD QFD. 3D Bill's professors laughed when he got his M.A. in German QTD QFD. 4D Bill is continually lost on a dead-end street or in an alley QTD QFD. 5D Duane is Dougie's double QTD QFD. 6D Healy got a 4.3 on this exam last year QTD QFD. 7D Bill will write his Roman Law paper someday QTD QFD. 8D To be or not to be - now that is a typical law school question QTD QFD. 9D OlConnell nearly beat the draft QTD QFD. 10D D.J. committed suicide by jumping off the Dumbarton Bridge QTD QFD. 11D Bill drove down to the USC game without his ticket QTD QFD. 12D Vince satisfied Barbara's curiosity in class QTD QFD. 13D Al Pick has a pet goat QTD QFD. 14D Bill pulled both of his muscles playing football QTD QFD. 15D Caryn thinks thin QTD QFD. 16D Bill still doesn't have a Review topic QTD QFD. l7D lex loci delicti commissi is a pornographic short story which is banned in Boston QTD QFD. 18D Bill died recently of legal fiction poisoning - a disease that erodes the brain QTD QFD. 19D Bill's remains will be dedicated to research QTD QFD. 20D This Yearbook is a bad joke QTD QFD. I gang ffw H. PETE WILKINSON You- The meaning is in the wonder. is life ever changed. to protect the things I love. RICHARD S. WIRTZ Discovering at 27 that he did not enjoy administering the public any more than the public enjoyed it, Richard stopped. He came to Stanford with a wife he liked very much and high hopes. He departs with the same wife, whom he still likes very much, a daughter, and high hopes. Those who know him can understand about his wife and daughter but are puzzled by his state of mind. He appears to believe in neutral principles, institutional settlement, and the Good Fairy. Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconerg Things fall apartg the centre cannot holdg . . . anarchy is loosed upon the world, The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere The ceremony of innocence is drownedg The best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity. Surely some revelation is at handg Surely the Second Coming is at hand .... - Yeats R. MICHAEL WRIGHT Towns and seas and all poor devils everywhere. In no way Through acceptance of the mystery, peace. And only through peace can come acceptance of the mystery. We are not open. The glory cannot come in. How soon after our best things is the taste bitter again. As of this earth and what I am on this earth-I fiercely wish They fill my eyes with tears-the things I love. Suppose they are nothing-they are all I have. , f.. :fe I 'cThe snares of the world were its ways of sin. He would fall. He had not yet fallen but he would fall silently, in an instant. Not to fall too hard, too hard: and he felt the silent lapse of his soul, as it would be at some instant to come, falling, falling but not yet fallen, still unfallen but about to fall. James Joyce A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man 43.11 ia f fpd ON BEHALF OF TUE Auwsslous COMMITTEE I AM PLEASED To luFoRM QTHE class QF IQP 1'.vI. EA, o.a -1- gg, GPH um' ADLllocK! lNDERSONIBEDf0RD UBEECH BODKI N D M vwnm vw me sew I R-I ADHITTFD Tb 'll-IE CLASS oF l97OA1 -STAUNRD 4. C00 J.c. C- T- FALCONEQ EVANS W. 5. BJ.. F.A. NLS. . . . - 2.2.3. H ,Q GHMEO J L 5 D EADS DUDLEY Ugfgvskg uplmgg CLEGG CH BRIS FARMER 4 fb Tuomns vang x FELUHAUS W bf- WMLTERS E .,........ ......,. E C325 E E Q X FneLDs Fl N K Fnscu en FLSMMING FLYNN foTE NOS W- VJ Gumsey 121352 VIALL STREET rn s Au c em SKATES w GAUVIN W Gllcksiml GowsTsmI Couw Goams Q4 L Sl ov.T is moeau. CQ SER K TRIP WJ' DN QQ. as is 'rave H ir 4' flllk Q M QQJQ If ' N 5.3'. E, N M 1 PIERCE ORTIZ S? Q, Nevsauev. tkTes.soN mmol' OU 3- S. 9-036935 Cvnlhuueso Ponep' Hoskawiz x GIANT X XX U 5 I Fnsuo MORE sas nu FRANKFU Gs nPh4l AU-I GRE G M W KEESHAN C. KENN noveera II f Mx NT TIKWGUT 'TUE MOST M Sis-'.. II I IN? M Ill. 0 W0 Ig: vI5I.g QQLI IH X lf. , SS Pgggp W 'A 'N S l. .M I N, emu NM MN ...N Q' mm A- Domggv I'rAyA ISHYAMA Hn.AKos Heaseg A 'QI W P- 'www of C39 M065 Mm. ' - Elm HKTU' MAKKS MAQQIALL MII FOLD LyoNS lu KKUENEK Bwcugme LEACH LOWRY Lyons CHNHDFI RESERVE Fl 6MoNTH VHCBTION Paw T FTHFSHINIES FISH M' :J N7 'RF M- G... nv. H+-. . - . ' ' D ' ...ig ' ' d' 4.2. - D L - BIN. R.T BM. 4 r R-A. I E-R. . I Z Anne QFD:-0 Qc? 1 1 O -M Qi' 'QM ' .l 5 ' - A U ' 4.1: ' 3 To S QE . 1 fa 'T , ig 5 :': Q X Ibn lk D Y A575-E 'To ' Q .mu D. . 3.12. 2 - .a. , 4.c. 'A' . me 4 ' unfa- iz.a. ma. I uc, .c. L? 1 . I I I n ,N, ' M. - M X -I g Q i ' r 5 , - U I i -X I Ig t Uh on f . d ' , .1 l' ' A IS I I I .4 I I 3 . I ' - f 0' I Q . I .QI we E I - I I - I- 'r im 1 .:::::: gd - 1. ' Q WN Avg? Alb' V 5 Y f f K, If .... 2 ?,m 1 M.-'Y V ,V ft, I 5 . . 9 Q II A N Z 1 1 Qi A qu' , I P.-n - . - . .r.:. -1-H Q I - 3 4 fx. :E . . IIE Q- , , .I L- . - D' lf! . . 024. ' J, 3 Q ' ,I QA X 5 3.3. Ag 5' 5 Q2 gl I I . 5 O g A. M, i er : T 5 IS . 'F O Q 6 5 5 l 0 O 1 - R.:-1 V 0 5 ' FL' 4 wAS : 5 ' - css. ma' of 8 - 2 E Lg:-rv I nc. I ms. Iz.w. xg Z A oc o -. T ko 115 0 A 1 Y--- .Vw - '----- 'Wh y, L I O 01.15. ,U , ' M A Q? 'Ns G gi ' M f t- u 2 , Rm, I Q' w 15 , 4' al, 1.1: 2 1 I -W M asia, ,wwf Ai 1 ' 1 1 ! PA UL Fl ALBERT B.A. Mathematics University of Kansas 1968 San Francisco, Cal. RUSSELL G. ALLEN B.A. Mzthematics Grinnell College 1968 Ottumwa, Iowa R MICHAEL ANDERSON B.S. Public Administration US. Ci 1 966 Los Angeles, Cal. AMR Y ELIZABETH ASH A.B. English Literature Stanford University 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 HELEN C BA UMANN B.A. English USC 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. JOHN R. BA UIWINN B.A. Economics Harvard University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. ROBERT I BEA VER B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Rochester, Minn. ELISE B. BE CKET B A. Histo - W Stanford University 1964 Cambridge, Mass. DANIEL R. BEDFORD B.S. Mathematics Stanford University 1967 Arlington Heights, Ill. PETER D. BE WLE Y A.B. Politics Princeton University 1968 Haddonjield, NI ' 4 . V . .1 v CAR OLE L. BIONDA A.B. Political Science U of Cal. fBerkeleyj 1968 Petaluma, Cal. ROBERT E. BODKIN B.S.E. Engineering University of Michigan 1967 Wenonah, NL KAATRI R. BOIES B.A. Political Science Wellesley College 1967 Seymour, Conn. JOHN TI BOWEN A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Altadena, Cal. SCOTT W. BOWEN B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. WILLIAM S. BOYD A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1965 San Mateo, Cal. r - Q. I., ,,,,5'-' A-: CHARLES L. BRODY B.A. Sociologf Columbia University 1966 Long Island City, N K CHARLES R. BR U TON B.A. History Northwestern University 1968 Oklahoma City, Okla. KENNETH D. BUCK WAL TER A.B. Political Science Occidental College 1968 Los Angeles, Cal. STEPHEN T1 BUEHL A.B. American Studies Yale University 1968 Clayton, Mo. RALPH FI CASPERSON A.B. Physics Harvard University 1964 Minneapolis, Minn. CHARLES D. CHALMERS B.A. Social Science Cal. Pobf. College 1966 Los Angeles, Cal. JA CK G. CHARNEY B.A. History Vanderbuilt University 1968 Augusta, Ga. SAMUEL D. CHERIS B.S. Accounting Brookbfn College 1967 Brooklyn, N K 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 Universityf Ohio j 1963 Alexandria, Va. WILSON L. CONDON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1963 Stanford, Cal. RONALD J. COTE B.A. Political Science U ofFlorida 1963 Seattle, Wash. MICHAEL S. COURTNAGE B.A. Political Science U of Washington 1967 Anchorage, Alaska DOUGLAS M CROW B.S. General Science Oregon State U 1966 Portland, Ore. CHRISTINE C CURTIS B.A. English Vassar College 1968 New Haven, Conn. 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. FREDERICK C DIET Z B.A. Government Harvard University 1963 Lafayette, Cal. ROBERTR DISTAD A.B. English Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. , Leafs, 1: ezefefzvf' -- :K WV, , W 1 H Q?wfi1f:w 1- WH. .sm H' s.wfwi J ffgigyfqilw w Q'--X JANINE M. DOLEZEL B.A. Philosophy U ofSanta Clara 1968 Sacramento, Cal. HUGH C DOWNER B. S. Nav. Arch. and Marine E ngr. University of Michigan 1968 Kentheld, Cal. GRE GOR Y C DYER U CL.A. Carmel, Cal. WILLIAM E. EADS A.B. Political Science U ofMissouri 1967 Kansas City, Mo. ROBERTA. EPSEN A.B. Engineering Princeton University 1961 San Mateo, Cal. C TODD E VANS A.B. Pub. and Int. Affairs Princeton University I 96 7 Palo Alto, Cal. JAMES C FALCONER B.A. Economics Brown University 1 96 7 Birmingham, Mich. JOHN R. FIELDS B.A. Economics U ofMichigan 1967 Grosse Ile, Mich. RICHARD A. FINK A.B. English Stanford University 1963 Palo Alto, Cal. ERIC R. FISCHER B.A. History U of Pennsylvania I 96 7 New York, N Y. BARBARA A. FIX B.A. Anthropology Barnard College 1968 Dallas, Texas RICHARD B. FRANTZREB B.A. Russian Amherst College 1968 Scarsdale, N Y 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. RICHARD A. GARCIA B.A Govt andS eech . . p U ofArizona 1967 Tuscan, Ariz. HUGH C. GARDNER III B.A. English Literature San Jose State College Long Beach, Cal. WALTER W. GARNSEY B.A. Int. and Amer. Studies Yale University 1967 Denver, Colo. WILLIAM A. GA U VIN B.S. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1962 COLLEEN GERSHON A.B. Engineering Stanford University 1968 Long Beach, Cal. 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 YE GOLDSTONE B.A. Government Barnard College 1968 Beverly Hills, Cal. JIMMY K. GOODMAN B.A. Engineering U of Oklahoma 1968 Oklahoma City, Okla. MICHAEL A. GREENE A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Encino, Cal. LA URENCE K. GOULD B.A. History Yale University 1967 Pasadena, Cal. HOWARD E. GREENFIELD B.A. History College of the Holy Cross 1962 Shaker Heights, Ohio AL VIN D. GRESS B.S. Mathematics U 0fNebraska 1967 Palmer, Neb. JOCEL YN Il GROSS A.B. History Stanford University Santa Rosa, Cal. LOUIS M. GUERRIERI A.B. Social Science Stanford University 1958 San Carlos, Cal. JOHN 71 HEANEY B.A. Business Economics U of Cal.fSanta Barbaraj 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 Poly. Institute 1 964 Leominster, Mass. SIONAG M HENNER A.B. Art History Smith College 1965 Montclair, NJ PETER J. HERMAN B.A. Economics Brooklyn College 1968 Brookbrn, N Y. JOSEPH R HIEN TON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Phoenrbc, Ariz. PHILIP W. HOFFMAN B.A. History Hamilton College 1968 Utica, N Y1 JOHN C HOLBER TON A.B. Psychology Stanford University 1968 Santa Monica, Cal. CRAIG E. I VERSON B.S. Economics U ofOregon 1967 Portland, Ore. DA VID S. JA CKMAN III B.A. History Wichita State Uf 1968 Wichita, Kan. MAR YJ JACOBS B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 Rossford, Ohio CAL VIN P. JOHNSON B.A. History U of Santa Clara 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. OLIVER 71 JOHNSON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Carmichael, Cal. ANDIS KA ULINS A.B. English and Pol. Sci. IL of Nebraska 1968 Lincoln, Neb. DA VID O. KEHE B.A. Econ. and Pol. Sci. University of Iowa 1968 Waverly, Iowa CHARLES W KIRCHER A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Newport Beach, Cal. AN TON Cl KIR CHHOF B.A. Business Admin. Portland State U 1967 Lake Oswego, Ore. TIMOTHY R. JACOBS A.B. History Brown University 1963 Gladwyne, Pa. CAL VIN H. JOHNSON B.A. Philosophy Columbia University 1966 White Plains, N K ROBERTN KLEIN B.A. History Stanford University I 96 7 Fresno, Cal. BARR Y B. KL OPFER B.A. Psychology Sacramento State Col. 1967 Orinda, Cal. WILLIAM R KROENER III B.A. History Yale University 1967 Whittier, Cal. LOUISE A. LaMOTHE A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Pebble Beach, Cal. RONALD L. LANGSTAFF B.A. History Stanford University 1966 Kansas City, Mo. 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 Y. GREGOR YM LEONARD B.A. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. HELGA I. LE UKERT B.S. German Georgetown University 1965 Livingston, Nl LLOYD W LOWREY B.S. Business Management U of Cal.fDavisj 1968 Rumsey, Cal. BRENDAN D. L YNCH B. S. Physics Queens College 1963 Queens Village, N Y. WARREN R. L YONS B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 Rochester, N K MICHAEL D. McCRACKEN A.B. Political Science IL of Nebraska 1968 Gering, Neb. STEVE A. McKEON B.A. Liberal Arts University of Texas 1968 Austin, Texas MELODIE YZ MCLENNAN B.A. Philosophy USC 1968 Los Angeles, Cal. HUGH S. MCMULLEN A.B. Government Harvard University 1968 Boston, Mass. MICHAEL D. McS WEENE Y A.B. Economics IL of Cal. fDavisj 1968 Davis, Cal. THOMAS W. MAHER B.A. History Harbard University 1962 Hastings-on-Hudson, N K PETER K. MAIR B.A. English Il of Michigan 196 7 Ann Arbor, Mich. ANNIE G. MARLOW B.A. Political Science Pomona College 1960 Westmorland, Cal. GARR Y G. MA THIASON B.S. Pub. Address and Group Commun Northwestern University 1968 Minot, ND. BARBARA .L MIRACLE A.B. English Cornell University 1968 Rockville, Md. WILLIAIW L. MON TROSS B.A. Economics Rutgers University 1968 Union, Nl RICHARD D. NELSON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Stanford, Cal. ELIZABETH E. NICHOLSON B.A. History Stanford University 1968 Oconomowoc, Wis. BRIAN .L NUGEN T B.A. Political Science U of Cal. fBerkeley j 1968 PaloqAlto, Cal. PA TRICK K. O 7-IARE B.A. International Relations Brown University 1968 Peekskill, N Y. STANFORD OWEN B.Ai' Business Management University of Utah 1968 Salt Lake City, Utah -1 ,E PETER A. OZANNE B.A. Pol. Sci. and Econ. Il 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. FREDERI C C. PHILLIPS B.A. History Northwestern University 1968 Fremont, Iowa GAR TH E. PICKE TT B.A. Economics Brigham Young U 1968 St. George, Utah ROBERTPIKE A.B. Philosophy San Diego State U 1968 Ramona, Cal. -Q u-nv? JENIK R. RADON B.A. Economics Columbia University 196 7 Riverdale, N K ROBERT D ROGERS B.A. Political Science U of Wisconsin 1968 Sheldon, Wis. ELDEN M ROSENTHAL B.A. Speech U CLA. 1968 Bellflower, Cal. MARTIN 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 UMWONDS B.A. Political Science Stanford University 1968 Indio, Cal. AY -if Qi 2:2 pdf' K n X ' ye Q if? , , ff? 4 f bafAXxxxskiQ Wg iw. 1 .. Qi' 1 CHARLES C RYAN A.B. Economics Stanford University 1968 Portland, Ore MARGARET .L R YAN A.B. Philosophy Vassar College 1968 Braintree, Mass. MARK A. SCHIMBOR A.B. Economics U of Cal.fBerkeIeyj 1 96 7 Novato, Cal. .-.. STEVEN V SCHNIER B.A. Business Administration U C.L.A. 1 96 7 West Covina, Cal. WILLIAM A. SCH UL TE B.S. Accounting Drake University 1963 Fort Madison, Iowa SALL Y L. SCH UL TZ Stanford University Burbank, Cal. IR WIN H. SCH WAR TZ B.A. History Brookbfn College 1968 Brooklyn, N K JOHN A. SCH WAR TZ B.S.B.A. Finance University of Denver 1 96 7 Mountain View, Cal. KERRICK C SE CURDA B.A. Russian Linguistics Cornell University 1962 Lincoln Park, Pa. JOHN W SEMION B.A. Economics Stanford University 1968 San Francisco, Cal. THOMAS L. SHILLINGLA W B A Russian Cornell Collegef Iowa j I 96 7 Englewood, Colo. RANDAL B. SHOR T A.B. English U ofMissouri 1967 Sedalia Mo 'Q' JOSEPH E. TERRACIANO A.B. Economics Cornell University 1968 Harnden, Conn. ARNOLD I. SIE GEL A.B. History Cornell University 1967 Mount Vernon, N K DONALD W SMIEGIEL A.B. Political Science Princeton University 196 7 St. Louis, Mo. J ULIAN O. STANDEN B.S. English Columbia University 1967 New York, N. Y. STUAR T C STUPPI B.A. Economics U of Cal.f Santa Barbara! 1968 Hillsborough, Cal. JOHN .L S WEENE Y A.B. Economics Stanford University 1968 Pasadena, Cal. MASAHIKO TAKETOMO B.A. Russian Columbia Universigf 1968 New York, N K BR UCEA. TESTER B.S. E ngzneertng Iowa State University 1963 Ontario, Cal. ARCHIE C. THOMAS B.S. Engineering ML T 1962 Hays, Kansas CHARLES E. THOMAS B.S. Naval Science US. Naval Academy 1961 Van Nuys, Cal. GEOFFRE Y L. THOMAS B.A. History and Lit, Harvard University 1967 Fresno, Cal. RICHARD O. 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 THOMAS R. TOOTHAKER B.A. History Stanford University 1959 Los Altos, Cal. WILLIAM F1 I-L U REN B.A. History U of Cal.LBerkeleyj 1968 San Bruno, Cal. EUGENE H. VEENHUIS B.S. Accounting U ofMinnesota 1968 Glencoe, Minn. JOHN C. VERSTEEG A.B. Economics Harvard University 1968 Evanston, Ill. VINCENT M. VON DER AHE B.S. Business Administration UIS. C. 1968 Los Angeles, Cal. HELAINE N WACHS A.B. Journalistic Studies U of Cal.KBerkeleyl 1968 Lakewood, Cal. BR UCE N WARREN B.A. Political Science U ofKansas 1967 Emporia, Kan. HA THA WA Y WA TSo1v 111 BA. History Yale University 1968 Greenwich, Conn. ROY G. WEA THER UP A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1 968 Rolling Hills, Cal. ROBERTK. WEIR B.S. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1955 Santa Barbara, Cal. JOHN M. WEISNER B.S. International Affairs Georgetown University 1968 Monticello, Ind. WALTER R. WEST B.A. History U of Redlands 1964 Bacone, Okla. ROBERTH WESTINGHOUSE B.S.I.E. Engineering Ohio State University 1968 Worthington, Ohio SHEILA A. WHAR TON B.A. Economics Louisiana State U 1968 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, N..L JOHN A. WILLE TT A.B. Political Science Bucknell University 1968 Syosset, N K MICHAEL WISHKAEMPER 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. DA VID L. WORRELL B.S. Mech. Engineering Cornell University 1967 Clairton, Pa. ANDREW W. WRIGHT B.A. Political Science Claremont Men 'S College 1968 Palmdale, Cal. BRUCE M. WRIGHT B.A. Economics Stanford University 1967 San Diego, Cal. CARL L. ZERBE B.A. Econ. and Poli. Sci. DePauw University 1968 Carmel, Ind. ff' ,ass -.gi SS 5. ' I Sr ,,., Q1 4351 V ,se 1 W v, A ff- is! K Uk ' ,wr 61 , -. 1 , 3 , . 5 o 74 451. 11 R21 . ,ga 5.137 , , I, , 9-ww, Q P1 :- 'P - 1 V 1 QV 'f Y f A J Q, gg, A-,AL 1 ,EY 12-4 1 iw, p 59, ,f 12 . fgfwim' 1511 1 44115 1 '1' 2'-I I, 1 1 4.x 1 '51 51 Y 1 Jw 1-1 , .31 1 Q 1 Q , .Lx X M wifi' 2 . -A. ,- ' : ff- ' ,,,p 1 1 1 .21 11,6 min- v ,, 151 1 9. X, A 3 4- 1- .Mg gs., -Q ,X 2541 .Q . .. 21, .- 155155 'f 1 , 1 ,ff .fw , . 1 1 1 -r W I I r I CLAS . ,.-,Z ,S E Y .lg SQL . , 1-. -'mfr F. -Q nf L V L . K A . rv. 315 , ' '. jvifffif , ,, V, nf. yi '5.,?4.,. jim' 5 J I .f -if K.. THOMAS G. ABRAM B.A. Economics Carleton College 1969 Berwyn, Ill. ROBERT IL ABRAMS B.A. Philosophy U ofMichigan 1969 Chicago, III. THOMAS .L AHLF I A.B. Government Harvard University 1969 Muscatine, Iowa ROBERTL. ANCHONDO A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 El Paso, Texas ' toss: F ' ., .PFA 1. , We RICHARD If ANDERSEN E, gp A.B. Philosophy Stanford University 1969 Menlo Park, Cal. JAMES E. ANDERSON JR. A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Dallas, Texas ' ,C ra in - ' s . :az :Fi iff . M :if . V - iii ,A .-1 4? 1: L' - -f 1 H .5 I gfegla B v.l'tQw H -'fr :E , ws i- ,,. fI.-' '- ,bf -ff' 7 ..,. I 4, was L: . . . A QA DOUGLAS K. ASHBY B.A. Political Science Middlebury College 1969 Kentfield, Cal. HUGH C BARRETT A.B. Chemistry Harvard University 1965 Cambridge, Mass. THOMAS E BAR TMAN B.A. Government Pomona College 1966 Cro ton-on-Hudson, N Y. ANDREW .L BECK B.A. Economics Carleton College 1969 Arlington, Va. LEWIS M BECKER B.S.E. Sci, Engineering U of Michigan 1969 Plainview, N Y. STEPHEN BERLIN B.A. History U of Chicago 1968 Chicago, Ill. WILLIAM .L BILLI CK III B.A. History Harvard University 1965 Fresno, Cal. LARR Y B. BLA CK WOOD B.S. Ind. Engineering North Carolina State U 1968 Greensboro, N C PETER W. BORAK A.B. History Stanford University 1969 Palm Springs, Cal. DEAN R. BRETT B.A. Political Science Whitman College 1968 Wenatchee, Wash. STEPHEN R. BROWN B.A. Business Administration Washington State U 1969 Spokane, Wash. JEFFREY L. BR YSON B.A. Econ. and Psychology Claremont Men 's College 1 96 9 Palo Alto, Cal. , My KA THR YN M. CAREY .F LENORE B. COOPER BA History U of Rochester 1969 Arlington, Va. STEVEN H. COREY B.A. American Studies Yale University 1968 Pendleton, Ore. KENNETH G. COVENY B.C.E. Civ. Engineering Santa Clara U 1966 Marina, Cal. WILLIAM O. CREWS BA Psychology Roosevelt University 1968 Chicago, Ill. SHARON L. CRIS WELL A.B. Psychology San Diego State College 196 7 Manchester, Mo. ALEXANDER D. CROSS A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Arcadia, Cal. B.A. History Stanford University 1969 Palo Alto, Cal. PRESTON S. CA VES A.B. Economics Stanford University 1969 La Canada, Cal. ROBERTH. CLARK A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Long Beach, Cal. JAMES D. CLA YTOR B.A. Political Science Claremont Men 's College 1969 Moraga, Cal. TREVOR C CLEGG A.B. Government U ofCal.fSanta Cruzj 1969 Fresno, Cal. RUSSELL L. COOK, JR. B.A. Math. and Economics University of Texas 1968 La Marque, Texas .-x w, I , 1 ii, .H my-of .i- i' - 35 I S - fx H, .. f , 3 f 5? , J,- BARBARA G. DRA Y A.B. History Stanford University 1965 Palo Alto, Cal. JAMES E. DR UMM OND B.A. Finance U of Illinois 1969 Oak Lawn, Ill. WILLIAM A. DAHL B.A. History Yale University 1969 Wilmette, Ill. CHARLES D. DAL Y A.B. Philosophy Stanford University 1969 Ventura, Cal. LA WRENCE B. DA UGERT A.B. Government Cornell University 1968 Bellingham, Wash. JOHN W. DA VIES B.A. Economics U of Minnesota 1969 St. Paul, Minn. GAR Y T1 DA Y A.B. Psychology Dartmouth College 1969 Fairview Park, Ohio BR UCE R. DeBOL T A.B. History Princeton University 1969 Dover, Del. M W f ' miie 3' 'V V' I-P1 1 T 1 4 ff! ff. . - ,mf ,z l ng.-gm' UI' ... V1-I: . HEIDI B. DUERBECK A.B. German UCL.A. 1968 Long Beach, Cal. DA VID C DUXBURY A.B. History Stanford University 1969 Riverside, Conn. A , Q fi, . .. , , 1g,v,., ,, M, ,lyk .. U ,, , , 'ffleslig -- fm w., ivgfavwmwzzagz mm 1 1 , gs, X' Ming 1, v ww, ssss . rs-. H f 'M r ...Qi ww H ,M is QM w . gimme, . W CAR YN EDMUNDS Stanford University Pasadena, Cal. JEROME E. E GGERS B.S. Elec. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1964 Brabill, Ind. JOHN M EMERSON A.B. Business Administration Dartmouth College 1963 Groton, Conn. MARJORIE W. EVANS A.B. Chemistry U of Colorado 1942 Los Altos Hills, Cal. ER WIN F1 FREDERI CH B.S. Political Science U of Wisconsin 1969 Milwaukee, Wis. DANIEL P. FRIEDMAN B.S. Quan. Bus. Anal. Indiana University 1969 Lafayette, Ind. - 1,7 . mme.- ROBERT T FRIES A.B. Philosophy Stanford University 1969 Stanford, Cal. RONALD L. GINNS A.B. Politics Princeton University 1969 Garden City, N K PETER E GOLDSCHNEIDER A.B. Political Science U of Rochester 1969 Trenton, NJ KA THLEEN M. GRAHAM A.B. Political Science Marquette University 1969 Hopkins, Minn. JAMES E. GRIFFIN B.A. Marketing San Diego State College 1969 San Diego, Cal. ELIZABETH A. GRIFFITH B.A. History Wellesley College 1969 A Birmingham, Mich. WILLIAM .L GRINDE B.B.A. Accounting U of Wisconson 1969 DeForest, Wis. I MICHAEL HA TCH B.S. History Aga Brigham Young Uf 1964 Idaho Falls, Idaho WILLIAM B. HA WFIELD, JR. A.B. History cs IL of North .Carolina 1969 Charlotte, N C. ED WARD HA YES, JR. B.A. Government Wesleyan University 1969 Washington, D. C RICHARD J HAZLE WOOD B.A. Political Science U of San Francisco 1969 San Francisco, Cal. DENNIS K. HEIR B.S. Marketing U of Pennsylvania 1969 Englewood, Nl ALEXANDER T HENSON A.B. Psychology Stanford University 1969 Yuba City, Cal. PALMER F1 HINSDALE A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1963 Stanford, Cal. WILLIAM H. HIPPEE B.S. Economics Uf of Pennsylvania 1968 Des Moines, Iowa I 'I LINDA A. HO A.B. Phil. and Int. History Stanford University 1969 Hong Kong I JESSICA E. HOLLAND B.A. Art History Barnard College 1969 Neponsit, N Y. I TOM K. HOUSTON A.B. Politics Princeton University 1967 Creve Coeur, Mo. -4l L. FRANCIS H UCK A.B. Social Relations Harvard University 1969 Targvtown, N K HAROLD .L HUGHES A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Terrell, Texas WAL TER M H UNKELER A.B. Government Harvard University 1968 Independence, Mo. 14 .L PA UL JA COBSON B.A. American Studies Grinnell College 1969 Whitefsh Bay, Wis. LUIS C JARAMILLO B.A. Philosophy and Religion Immaculate Conception Seminary 1966 El Paso, Texas BETH .L JA Y B.A. Political Science Vassar College 1969 New York, IVI K LE ONADE D. JONES B.A. Business Administration Simmons College 1969 Washington, D.C KENNETH W. JUSTICE A.B. Sociology Cornell University 1969 Portland, Ore. KENNETH M KAPLAN A.B. Political Science Occidental College 1 96 9 Downey, Cal. DONALD G. KARI B.S. Ind. Engineering Stanford University I 96 7 White Salmon, Wash. ALLEN M. KA TZ B.A. History Brandeis University 1969 Saratoga, Cal. CHARLES M. KERR B.A. Pub. Int. Affairs Princeton University 1969 Towson, Md. JAMES C KITCH A.B. Government Harvard University 1969 Wichita, Kan. KENNETH M KLEIN B.A. Psychology U of Pennsylvania 1967 Minneapolis, Minn. LESLIE M. KRA TTER A.B. Speech and Drama Stanford University 1967 Carlsbad, Cal. HL- Sheff ANL ? ANDREW W. LaFRENZ A.B. Mathematics Dartmouth College 1969 San Rafael, Cal. ROGER M LA VERTY III A.B. Economics Stanford University 1969 Santa Monica, Cal. HAROLD S. LEWIS, JR. B.A. Government Columbia University 1969 Scarsdale, N K MICHAEL R McQUINN A.B. History Stanford Unzverszty 1969 San Jose Cal TERR YD McSHANE Stanford Unzverszty Belmont Cal KENNETH B MacKENZIE B S Engineering U S Naval Academy 1962 Fazrheld Conn if W WALTER .L MELENDRES B.A. Speech and History U ofNew Mexico 1969 Albuquerque, N.M. JAMES P. MER CHAN T B.A. Economics Kansas University 1968 Leawood, Kan. MICHAEL S. MILLIGAN A.B. English Stanford University 1966 Oxnard, Cal. STANLEY FI MIRES B.S. Mathematics Stanford University 1969 Prescott, Ariz. B. THOMAS M UELLER B.S. Accounting U2 of Pennsylvania 1 969 Joplin, Mo., CAROL .L M ULLEN A.B. History Stan ora' Universi 1954 f ly Berkeley, Cal. GE OFFRE Y NAAB B.A. History M Stanford University 1960 U Lakeville, Conn. RICHARD C. NEUHOFF B.A. Government Dartmouth College 1969 Durham, NH. f',y'.' ' LAUREL A. NICHOLS B.A. Economics '- Pomona College 1969 Villa Park, Cal. LUTHER K. ORTON B.S. Ind. Engineering Northwestern University 1969 Niles, Ill. THOMAS K. OXMAN A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Robson, British Columbia, Canada D. SCOTT PAL TER B.A. History Dartmouth College 1969 Cedarhurst, N Y. RALPH H PAL UMBO B.A. Political Science U of Washington 1969 Bellevue, Wash. ROBERTE. PATTERSON B.A. Physics UCLA. 1964 Studio City, Cal. JAMES M. PEAR CE B.A. English Tufts University 1969 Marquette, Mich. JAMES 71 PEARCE B.A. Economics U of Wisconsin 1968 Redwood City, Cal. JEFFREY R. PENDER GRAF T A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Palo Alto, Cal. RONALD .L PODRAZA A.B. Economics Stanford University 1969 San Jose, Cal. TED W. PRIM A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Los Altos, Cal. DONALD .L QUERIO A.B. Economics Stanford University 1969 Lafayette, Cal. VINCENTM RAFANELLI B.S. Elec. Engineering Stanford University 1968 Menlo Park, Cal. MAR Y LOU RANDOL B.A. Fine Arts Radcliffe College 1969 Cambridge, Mass. JOHN 11 RANK A.B. English Uf ofNotre Dame 1969 Glenview, III. RICHARD A. RAPAPORT A.B. History Columbia University 1969 Scarsdale, N K PA TRICK H. RE YMANN B.S.FZS. International Affairs Georgetown University 1969 Washington, D.C GE OR GE B. RICHARDSON A.B. History Princeton University 1969 Glen Gardner, Nl NEIL H. ROBBLEE B.A. Philosophy Yale University 1969 Seattle, Wash. DOUGLAS 71 ROBER TON B.A. History Yale University 1964 Stanford, Cal. lb- want PETER H. RODGERS B.A. Economics Yale University 1969 State College, Pa. RONALD L ROSEN B.A. Economics Temple University 1969 Philadelphia, Pa. SELIG D. SA CKS B.A. Political Science Northwestern University 1969 Chicago, Ill. DONALD E. SAIDMAN B.S. Naval Science US. Naval Academy 1963 Washington, D.C JOHNH. S71 JOHN ' A 'M B.A. Political Science U ofMinnes0ta 1969 ,A ,, S Minneapolis, Minn. 1 CRAIGF1 SCHINDLER . VV I vzi. aaii A.B. Political Science Q V'- L , Stanford University 1968 ' ' Riverside, Cal. l .,: 5 1 6 f 1 W I BRUCE C SMALHEER B.A. History of Music Yale University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. THEODORE G. SMITH B.A. English Wesleyan University 196 7 San Francisco, Cal. WILLIAM M. SCHINDLER B.A. Economics Oberlin College 1968 Milwaukee, Wis. DA VID A. SCHLISSEL B.S. A stronau tics ML 11 1 968 Long Beach, N K AR TH UR P. S CHNEID E A.B. Geography Dartmouth College 1969 Dallas, Texas THOMAS B. SCH ULHOF B.A. Government Colby College 1969 Great Neck, N Y. JOHN Ci SIEGESM UND A.B. History U of Rochester Birmingham, Mich. LARR Y L. SLEIZER B.S. Mathematics ll of Washington 1959 Palo Alto, Cal. 4, fl- . 7 Q. H U ,. 'f -'-x, , -5.5, Q' r t ! X . U N Lfr. Di -.ly y r' l' I CHRISTINA A. SN YDER B.A. History Pomona College 1969 Malibu, Cal. CHARLES H. TI SPRINGER B.S. Engineering US. Naval Academy 1962 Seattle, Wash. PETER STARN B.A. Political Science DePauw University 1965 Jacksonville, NC ISAAC STEIN B.A. Political Science Colgate University 1968 Palo Alto, Cal. SUSAN STOLL B.A. Humanities Michigan State U 1969 East Lansing, Mich. RICHARD W. STONE B.A. History University of Kansas 1969 Evansville, Ind. ED WARD N. STOW A.B. Philosophy Princeton University 1969 Washington, D.C KIMBROUGH STREET B A En lish . . g Vassar College 1969 Denver, Colo. PHILIP G. SUNDERLAND B.A. Economics Dartmouth College 1967 North Held, Ill. I SAMUEL R. SWIFT B.A. Economics Pomona College 1968 Greenville, Tenn. RUSSELL A. TAPLIN A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Modesto, Cal. LEONARD M TELLEEN Carleton College 1969 Cambridge, Ill. B.A. Government and Intl. Rel. M, I... . . fa m! if 7' wp, Y V :L , I 4.-fr 4 KATHLEEN A. THOMAS B.A. Economics Wellesley College 1969 Bethesda, Md. W ED WIN THOMAS llf it B.A. Economics Harvard University 1969 Akron, Ohio DANIEL M. THORNTON IV A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Wilmington, Del. STANLEY R. VOYLES A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Sunnyvale Cal JOHN W. WALL B.S. Elec. Engineering M111 1969 Bethesda, Md. W. JAMES WARE M B.A. Speech Calif Lutheran College 1969 East Palo Alto, Cal. ts, 1-3- n HARR Y E WAR TNICK B.A. Political Science Ohio State University 1969 St. Louis Park, Minn. ROBERTZ. WASSERMAN B.A. Government U of Cal.fSanta Cruzj 1969 Sherman Oaks, Cal. WALTK. WEISSMAN B.B.A. Finance U of Wisconsin 1969 Waterloo, Iowa ALAN S. WER THEIMER A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1969 Los Angeles, Cal. MARYBETHB. WEST A.B. Sociology U ofMichigan 1966 Palo Alto, Cal. ANNE W. WHITE A.B, .Political Science Duke University 1967 Raleigh, N.C LANCE B. WICKMAN A.B. Political Science U of Cal.fBerkeleyj 1964 Danville, Cal. CAR Y G. WILSON B.A. History U of Wisconson 1969 Beverbl Hills, Cal. KA THR YN L. WILSON A.B. Political Science Stanford University 1966 Palo Alto, Cal. MAR Y WINSLOW A.B. History Stanford University 1968 Spencer, Iowa FREDERICK M WOOSTER A.B. Government Harvard University 1969 Eagle Grove, Iowa LAWRENCE C1 WRIGHT B.A. English Brigham Young U 1969 Provo, Utah :Q wfw J 'fu Wgfizzgsfgi fi w 1 ,if W W, wx X , sam , is Ava-.ig-ani 'fx '.-- xmfsyg Am 'J vnfwx .KF-, W QA fx 3552235 2' w www 5 151 mx 51 ,, X ' X 4 vww, , Q 5 i ag. w it H , ffgsiga ,1 V w H www H :wi V l g ?l4 N U N' L a'i':sf if af, -Q 5 'g W mg? wu ,H w ,J .-9' ,y A , L ,f 2 gi- 4 + - , , 'W .E ,,. w aw N saw: NN A M. w - k J? JW, V 14, x M H ,, W, ,, vnu, l1QiQJ aY i I . - 3.-1 2 2 + V, Iv Am' Q Y ' , - mg I .nw ,f . X, Wg L f, i 'Y571:1,w 1- 4-45: :QE Wgff f-f , Y Y iff' ' ffl. -1 - F 551 'G - r,f,'a 1 .Lx 1---Vfw fy f 5 2 - . ' ? in ,, W M E, S W , if- rw ' 3 ,A ' -1-I 'f ' ,Xj 2 ' - v X: - , . 5: X. E. 5 ,mm JH X ,Xi M: mx, 1' - irq 12' ,, Xfyiegv Uv- 14' ,,:-:EjE:E5 'X, Y, -1-. 4 ' ,gin Wj H K, ' ,X f Y ' X xx-1 his Q 1 M N Mm, ,X G5 5 5 i-'55 K i f Qi-Heg.ff:a Ae ' 5 ma.. ge X M 555 '.- - - ' 1 , ,f 41- H. f ..- - . r L A 4: , ' ff i g-11421-. 4 la , E .S . FJ. ,,,. M , , , ,. ' 35 'v'g.l++ ,-fggntf.,-L--, '-'g. 'gig ,gig P' X . M , gf, ,355 il: le5E5L'a::g-35-1.L,.:,:: ygv un' M s-i'. 51. 'f I. -, W, N .' f-- -QQ: '2' 2 ' '3 'IM-A HU Xg :Es ,... : Hg. - gf, X1X - , X- ,--- M? Y - 'Q' V faf .rg XX!! 3 wg xx , gin ,. Z., AJ? 2 MDL Q, -4.5 1 I I 2,4 V XX - X . X X, AXr..X-XX X M ,XX X X , 'A 'J 4' 2 T: iq x '-1 Y' , . 'Q , Wififu 'lg Q' Lx3f3:4,, I fax, W ' 5333221111 ii,,w',, ugw' - E .54 , - J fl 5 ' . ' MWZ?!2 , Q T' QT v ,ESV 533551 ,, sw: .,, ,X l X- , xg Af - ,X 5 X . W , 4 X M312 W X38 'l. f ' lf5-f f -ati -W ingmiffgk if?-vw, ,' 1 -' K1 'S QQEEJQE ' 4291 3 f E ,Q ' VX XX ' qffgl iuf A -'M MQ 5. XXXX li I H W, 4f'X,f1ssw, 1-A - mfg, ..,., , ,W ' - I ' A fm W. , Q ,Q ' fi ' L- '-fT'f 'Egg I V ' - M Wt iw- W 'H !! V: 'W Hffxww 2, 'ff ' W , E' ' W '- -2' Q :Hifi .Wi , M A X 4, 5 f 'W ' i f 'L mgggfaiifgi' , , w ' -Q.: , 1 1 L , ' A H E W1 H, 'yiligi ,M Hg 5 xf '!' 11f1W5 :f3iifi3','1 m fm? A E QL? X6 X',, ., I ,HX V Y -sw' vw 'ww :gk ,F ,gipff HU - 'ff if I , 1v - ,M , -Q fi We ,, X . 1 XX W X wal? XXX JF X :rw ...,, XX XX ,XX X Xxx :X S-4 , Mm ,J--Syglu 5622 XM ,FJX gi, 1 WX c, , ' Hb X, , , XS-1 X ..XX gi, w ,,QuX.m-XXX ww., X XX ' gl XM nk i,, V ia , , X , ,J J 1. V A, iw Y mg,XXX:,, ummm XQX - S5514 N F gf- X X X 3 .j ,XX X, YHQXX.. w, XX XXX! '..X X Mm. .,5-if!! 3 X . 15- V rn-fig K 75- i iff 1' MQ, , gj 55 ' 2 :flak 1 A , - E '- ' 'lf c XXX XX JXXXXXN fig- W, M XX -X X vin XX XEXXXX XXXX XM X mi , -,,gX,G ig ' . - ' H mm ,, N M . , XXSXXXNE X QQNXX, XXXHXXXXSZ X XXXMXX X? A ', K , 55:7 L N 35, , g'w1,g, M 9915 ' me 'E 4 ' ' ' 'P' W W H sw, 'Wm H wgmu ' y , ' . W-Y S :S Mwfw H - H -' N P5555 1 :ggesfu,,,, ,wp - ' , , , gigs: X X , W wXXwXXgggj? M X N ,W ,M XX A 'A H .. ',,' ' - f ' Rf 5 'wwf-wpw ...W 1? ', i',.gff2 i-Iwmg 4 . A X fl X , Y , 'k ' 1 - w 'Iv' S --1 fm, 0 - gh' .1 - 4- , - .uv ,M fl, V ' wx ww M: H ' f went: V. K Q1 Y ,,,,.,.. ,, -. I ' M11 1 1 W' ' 'Ugg . fe gg Vi 2 fl: W EQQF1' x. if . ' . . 1 ml A , 1' ? 4 . af1'? ' N gifs, ,- E 'J C 1 :X 1 X 'ik 1 wi Wie' Q55 1? E., 3 ' Ee XXXX X - S , U5 Nw f f- f,gQ:m,LWHXkggi ' M .. ig? , ' A :Ez U H 3 1' .if 3 N 'H isa? f? .,2 1 : We X :X X ' - H+ XX' A 4,iE:wxxX,X,m if M 1 fe, , 3, Q W f f X X A ' 'V cr, N' 1 -'if' , wi' M W' Mlfy' ' , iii!-11 rw JJ 7 , X vw was Z ,, lx, g' 'A we XX ' . ge ug, i 'Lex A M Xin ,, , A ' KU 9,6 - ' M' N E Y N . H , 5 i Z! W W T ff ,, K ' ' H X XXX dfsiw Q 1 ,QQ is W K w T ,X X 'N 'Y ' , vs ' , M M., H W' x 51' ' 5 H 1 2 W 5 1 ' H122 X: L X w ' 1' XX Q jw , wx 5'2 ' W: 1 . ,J 1' S 9, XX X ,, .. , TNXX, X X , X X ' , wiiikil , WW x X KW.: XXQXXX XX M: Xsfggf, X X W fr H 'Qin-,Y as ggwwi XX The Stanford Law Review's twenty-second year was full of transition, experimentation, and hard work. After considerable discussion, in a flurry of participatory democracy, and despite faculty misgivings, last spring the membership almost unanimously rejected the age-old method of selecting members on the basis of Hrst-year grades. Dubious about other means of preselection as well, the Review adopted a pay-as-you-go plan: Anyone can join at the beginning of his second year, and continued membership depends on satisfactory performance of the rigorous writing and publication duties. The new policy takes far fuller account of the Reviews proper role L W RE IEW LAW REVIEW: ROW 1 - M. Wise, M. McLennan, LaMothe, J. Dolezel, M. Burack, -R. Rothmeyer, . 'Pl' 71 is 95 ' o mn ' 5 ' QE 915' v-.III - cn 'J W3 Ear' P5 mi ' N Qu 29 2:4 O0 57? P2 702+-Joppy WU Matschullat, D, MacMeekin, G. Smith, R. Allen, . Curtis, A. Hemingway. ROW 3 - G. Mathiason, Jacobs, W. Kroener, A. Friedman, J. McGee, Westerbeke, P. Bewley, C. Bruton, J. Goodman, Bates, B. Klopfer. ROW 4 - M. Anderson, P. Bell, Wirtz, S. Schultz, C. Ryan, R. Kirst, J. Selna, . Timbie, R. Distad, W. Boyd, W. Rapson, T. Johnson, W. Stevens, H. Baumann, E. Tooby, C. Brody. educational experience. Writing is the major focus of Review membership. Immediately upon joining, a new member 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 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 within the law school - as a source of of prosecutions for selective service offenses education in writing and analysis for all in the Northern District of Califomia. The students willing to work to obtain it. g Fund will undoubtedly enable the Review to The new policy avoids the unfairness of . rye, undertake similar projects in the future. offering a special brand of education to The educational experience afforded by an arbitrarily chosen few and the I qi the Review to its members encompasses divisive separation of Review members :i M Q, more than just writing. Its student editolrs, from the rest of the school. In Ei' 'i -rib-if-iiiti-.. '!1-'i' besides writing the notes that ill emphasizing self-selection, the Review LA approximately half the Review? pages, bear has taken a step toward placing control .L L., -MW-T.. responsibility for the substantive and formal over education where it belongs. C ,it ' accuracy of everything published in the At its ince tion, the Reviews new 4 4 Review. Every piece written by astudent or membership pglicy was unique in the 4 'ff' submitted by an author is citechecked: its country in several respects. Membership it ideas are challenged, the authority for each is open to any beginning second-year statement of fact is investigatedg every student without restriction. The policy paragraph is edited for clarity and form. does not constitute a competition, for 3 . During this process the student has a chance there is no limit on the number of f' to match wits with recognized authorities,as members. Instead of being treated as ' ' 'f f-wg , well as with other students, in many areas of candidates, new members become full Q-I A .W the law. This match results not only in the participants in the Review from the 4 4 7 improvement of the Review, but also an beginning. Finally, the policy change Z, ,r 4 ,ai increased student understanding of various became effective before it was necessitated by the school's adoption of the credit! no credit grading option. fMore than seven leading law reviews are currently considering adoption of an open-access membership policy similar to the Review's, at least partly under the stimulus of the speed of passffail grading which may deprive them of their primary membership criterion The structural changes, however, have not diluted the Reviews Q .-N faffva, areas of the law and different modes of thinking. Al th o u gh the Review operates independently of faculty supervision, as witness the membership policy change, faculty members are often consulted about problems within their particular areas of expertise. In add.ition, many notes result from faculty suggestions for topics. The Review is collectively grateful for the faculty's generous assistance in these respects. E. Norton Tooby . f 3, . I M . 'gr ,i,,:-..-23,71 . E 1 Q ' Viq litl u-Z ? I : 'H ,xv ' .gg I P: -e-U 1111 W 15 GOV LAW REVIEW BOARD OF EDITORS-SEATED: M. Burack CManaging Ed.j, N. Tooby fPres.J, D. MacMeekin fExec. Edj. STANDING: J. Selna fArt. 8: Bk. Rev. Ed.J, R. Kirst fArt. 84 Bk. Rev. Ed.J, R. Wirtz CNote Ed.J, D. Matschullat fNote Ed.J, A. Friedman. MISSING: W. Eads fNote Ed.J, D. Quaini CNote Ed.j, T. Todd CNote Ed.J, P. Angelo fArt. 8L Bk. Rev. Ed.J lm 3 LEG L AID LEGAL AID: RQW l - E. Leavy, H. Duerbeck, E. Climpson, L. Jones,W. Stevens, C. Curtis, A. Bialson, R. Etienne fPres.J, A. Marlow, R. Allen, G. Clark, H. Chickering, P. O'Hare. ROW 2 - G. Leonard, K. Graham, H. Happel, H. Watson, J. Shafer, N. Clainos, D. Sorenson, A. Pick, M. Eichner, G. Berkeley, T. Houston, M. McCracken, S. Rudd. ROW 3 - K. Gustafson, J. Tobak, G. Monsoon, S. Goerfinkel, J. Bowen, A. Alhadeff, A. von Dioszeghy, L. Guerrieri, W. U'Ren, G. Pickett, A. Katz, J. Charney, A. Wright, S. Owen. ROW 4 - P. Bell, R. Hoffman, R. Baker, C. Johnson, J. Baumann, W. Kircher, P. Hoffman, P. Mair, R. Abrams, T. Johnson, C. Stuppi, R. Thomas, R. Casperson, I. Schwartz. The Legal Aid Society, despite the growth of Law Review and the Environmental Law Society, has continued its almost run-away expansion. The Summer Program, initiated in 1968 with three students and a budget of less than 5400, grew to twenty-six members and a combined budget of almost 514,000 fthe bulk of the funds coming in the form of HEW Work-Study grantsj. Fourteen students were employed full time with the San Mateo County Legal Aid Office, the Santa Clara County Legal Aid Office, the Santa Clara County Public Defender's Office, the San Mateo County Bar Associationls Private Defender System, the San Mateo County District Attorney's Office, and Raven Enterprises Ca nonfprofit sponsor of low income housingi. In addition, a large number of volunteers worked in the East Palo Alto O.E.O. office and with the Private Defender program. Legal Aid also employed a full time program director and secretary. New programs for the year included: flj the Legislative Assistance Program Cunder the direction of teaching fellow Bob Stemj, where, with the approval of the faculty, Legal Aid obtained over fifty relevant writing topics from State Legislators and interest groups seeking research for the development of new bills, C21 the Consumer Protection program fAnnette Bialson and Marshall Goldbergj is assisting Professor Sher, Dean Henderson, and Leroy Bobbitt fReggie Fellow and recent gradj in establishing a Consumer Protection Office in East Palo Alto along the lines of the E.P.A. legal services ofhce. The office opened for business in March, 1970, C35 the Fair Hearings Program fElaine Climpsonj has students representing welfare clients in hearings that determine the rights to receive continued aid under various govemmental programs, Q41 the Domestic Relations unit fTom Johnson and Elaine Climpsonj which designed and operates a divorce milli, for the San Mateo County Legal Aid Office, Q51 the Assistant D.A. program fGene Veehuisj, where students work in the San Mateo District Attorney's Office assisting the deputies and getting a first hand view of the prosecutorial process. Existing programs - San Mateo Assistant Defenders fchaired by Pete Mairjg East Palo Alto Civil CWoody Garnseyig Santa Clara County Civil fGrenny Clarkjg Redwood City Civil fTom Johnson and Elaine Climpsonjg Business fRon Rosenjg Housing fGarthe Pickettjg Santa Clara Criminal fPeter Belljg Juvenile fMartin Eichnerjg Criminal Appeals Uohn Bowenjg and Student Practice fDick Williamsi - continue to prosper. Most of the students in the civil programs deal with Hintakei' or street cases: bankruptcies, debtor-creditor relations, landlord-tenant relations, domestic relations and wage attachment procedures. The principal exceptions are: the Housing Committee, which works with several community organizations providing expertise in matters relating to F.H.A. procedures and requirements and antidiscrimination lawg the Fair Hearings Committeeg and the Business Committee, which assists minority owned and operated small businesses in the community. The bulk of the criminal work consists of assisting attorneys in the Public and Private Defenders' offices with investigation, interviews, research, and the drafting of motions. The Student Practice Committee, under the extremely able direction of Dick Williams, finally reached its goal. In February of this year the California State Bar Association's Board of Governors announced the promulgation of a rule Governing the Practical Training of Law Students. Under this rule, students from accredited schools with one-half of their education completed, may, with the approval of the Dean of their law school, appear on behalf of a client in any public trial or hearing or proceeding pertaining thereto in a court, or tribunal, or before any public agency. referee, commissioner or hearing officer, state or federal, to the extent approved by such court, public agency, referee, commissionor or hearing officer fwhen under the direction of a supervising attorneyj. Stanford Law School can feel especially proud of this rule, as it represents work done primarily by students in the Legal Aid program. In particular: Jeff Jennings, Bill Cottrell, and Read Ambler 09681, Clyde Christofferson 09695, Dick Williams f197lJ, and Steve Rudd and Bob Etienne f1970J, and Michael Thorsnes CU. San Diego Law School, 19685. This breakthru will bring about major changes in the scope of Legal Aid activities. Anticipating those changes, Legal Aid has moved from its one room office in the law school basement to three offices in Crothers Basement, where there is room for additional expansion as new programs develop. The President for 1969-70 was Bob Etienne, who appreciates the quantity and quality of student assistance which has made the past year so successful. Bob Etienne H, r.--. qs.-4,1 Fred Smith handles a problem over the phone in the old office faboveb, while Bob Etienne opens up the new offices in Crothers Hall fbelowy Q V 2221? Betsy Leavy fabovej is one of the hardest working Legal Aiders and Bill Lanam Cbelowl of the Public Defender's Office works closely with law students. The East Palo Alto Office blends into its environment. pt. 4 ff Mrs. Andrea Bobbitt and Irwin Schwartz working in the East Palo Alto Office. Q .1 'wwf Fresh UP-- g 1 , . -JW' ' ' 1,-c,-.-Sqn. .1 amz i. .f 5r,:' E? ' i M 'f-Stihl . -v. LAW ASSOCIATION: BOTTOMS - W. P. MacGregor fsocial chmn.D, W. Weissman fist year rep.J, G. Berkeley fpresj, W. Robertson Csec.J. MIDDLES - A. Siegal Csocial chmn.J, H. Happel, L. K. Gould 12nd year rep.J. TOPS - C. Rudy Claw ass'n fan clubl. LAW ASSOCIATIO The Law Association spent the year waging a friendly race with the faculty to see how rapidly and significantly legal education at Stanford could be improved. The faculty won, once again proving that the race is not always to the swift. Among our multitude of accomplislunents this year we must specially note: the addition of music to the Christmas Party Skitg the addition of free beer to the post-mortems of each home football gameg the slightly improved quantity of cards for the Law Lounge Bridge Associationg the infinitely improved illumination in the women's lounge fmuggings are down fifty percent over last yearjg and the mutual identification to each other of Larry Gould and his second-year constituency. Anonymous 'O ali vf ,110 XA f' 2x X Hassle ' w - ' M wv.. 15'-mlbii nJ as K K O 0 E li 'Y' 3 D 9 iw ' X .ff J, 'f . ,, jr 1 Q' I .' -' I 4 .f 45? I Y I 492' f W 4,1 , ., p A K K- 'if Y X ,V fm, Q- , - 14140 ff' , . , Dick Sutton imitating the Dean's piercing rhetoric in the Christmas skit My Fair Law Student alias The Pigs v. Malion. And here we have the spacious suite of Law Association offices adjacent to that exclusive gourmet's delight, Alice's Restaurant. , If fu, ,. gfg Q ::: -. K- ak .L And again in the Christmas skit it's - you guessed it folks - the incomparable Chuck Bruton playing the incomparable Chuck Bruton. ,,4m,,::,, W- Let me make one thing perfectly clear. There is no empirical data substantiating the rumor that the Law Association is the largest distributor of junk mail in the law school. , , H r552lES5'i5'sIlf ,,, ,. fg lt 231' me N e Sf ec: 51, 1 gf 1 .K,,.t. 163 Y 1 ,, lm: 16 4 SERGEANTS AT LAW: IN ORDER - Monsoon, Al, Rick, Willie, Rich, Irwin, Gil, Jim, Dave, Chris, Peter, Al, Granny, John and Mary. mP'H'J .LW9 7305 M'- wgmw TQ '4 4mmm '7 U 'U W gl: CQ-HH 'ko 00365551 '--QQg'lwglg'5, :3JiLnfFs'vD '.fE f2wga:,5f:mgnaiwiagnfswgfg w-fD:1,.,05:,'5'C O: Q mmm-aE,E:-.bg-'4fv H fr-Q'fwHf-M gl'- 'fv:-af.2'Q-SSH-'Dr- 1O::5' O55 N-f 73 OE of-vw ,.-.o 5 :SN ,.,..... -Q'-vu 3 'ES'7 :E45 E:25iS'mUsfTS55?3U232'- ggi 2 -1 , va -I .. 52223099 :2w2'e21ls55qsE.gTma 5.35:-ff uQ:rOg',:.woo,,ggzE2o-'10-..f'm.f+ :s:,Q:'Hm:vOL- f-- mo 13 ,-. C1 Om 52239-55 :'+C:-C5230 'UQ-Qmo-5 'O5w?1'n 'WO g 'mE'wE':E3- :-Digag E'-Hggswmuof-+2 ': '--V' '-'73 8 fD '.: no C Em f-+m::SC1- J - - ',, n v-1 Q'o D2,,-io. F0655-2'-'w5g33'mmo.ww:'3gw O-159mg g HQQQMUQD, ,:n:E+:,'Q.zumt3mN5-0 :f2r2a5 f-Jim.f+5'2D2D':lDQ-U29-Mf'2L,E5E. ... O -'S.,,E-mrgimw-.Qqfigig9-f'3,3Sf+:.f,,5:gUQC5- q3':S:,-c'g::,.-og '5'....g,,...,:-r 'T-1... E000 35,53 J Uf,:'f,2c:'01g'4:2o 'S.3HE uQg5+,f5E,?'29,'UUQ-Qgrvwmm SPO zngfmaqag :P-1 ,Ci'E'lmO EQEEH Q E',-OE TQWIH-gig! UQQQUPUQ '2g. 'E'25o:1-+0m'f'SU2 we EMO-'H' svwgsaa-'-QQWQWES 5. figs-z.,2's?, Qs:-Emowogmsggmn ,Roi No' QW' --cnO..U,... :3,:,...cn4:5' ocm .'1C?gE':wK4E' 55,5 g,'3?T.-.9.SQ, '4g3.o. c5Pv'wt gaqngmg- .: 35 ,2-.c:og'f.:.ro'cDS5mgS.'4g ,,,w'F.-403 K4 O 4: ,:,, gwxwnoj-. SO 55493-O IES '03 5 v'TU--So.-'Uofbv :5'crgS'2 ' ..a H'JO 'PU ,., 0 gpm 'Og-V',v0v-1 V10 O,'Q.O 'mf.. G XD- rn Q E'-mmm'-1--'Of-S: 1-+ 4-QQJVIOOQIEE 5'-H 3gx 'UOwI3'-1O': -OR' noi' H --0 mo.. o.. '- .-P .--s: -4: ORS, ,- Q-r 1:50:11-ramO:m,l3 fjOn-g :Epo :zz .4 ,.,2,.D'2:1-,ogue .i-20's wqqggfl. OH 'ESO m '-'YQ 0.25- nw F, 5:1-+ '1 ,, f:gVJuf-10 ,U --Q,::Q-.IT mv C! -E+.: -.tr :p OC Ecru rvggn, Ummm '-ro mfnfmiw -Q :sf-s o UNDNDE-was o U-.W HE Q: cr '--s.o 'o. fb .-f 2'E'fgg2a': Sr. EHNQCSZQDQE gi'-iff O-flu, Cl-cu'-vu yi Uff- ' 74 1x mcng, NC-'l4 ' UQ.-,.f'D5 g3 Q'- '4e-9-OmOQ O 'Q-Winn. 3- rv , . ,tr :so U' N ... Om U,-E.2'Tf2..:a'a Psa' Smiiaatfssfgmoiew R mx C 'Ni -im Q, ' '-I F Cb 2 SERJEANTS ' All ' 1 1 il v 3: if X I Bailiff A1 swears in Don, playing the lecherous old judge. ' -FA 4 1 ,. Peter argues an objection while Shep is thinking, the bigger they are, the harder they fall? gm Now, Betty, you are under oathg what are you doing after the trial tonight? Shep argues that the testimony is outrageous. Non-law students make excellent witnesses fleftj as well as the juries that have to listen to Willie pray for a favorable verdict Cbelowj. Moor COURT W.. 'Qi G ' . '51 ' 5, sa a as X 334- ' K' - Ai e 55.1 'gl' A il! l - i x fill lift L .N X .X xxx if iv if 5 li 1' tif: MOOT COURT BOARD: SEATED f R. Kimball, L. Title CPres.J, R. :I gloiqnipgstar. STANDING - J. Beery, R. Rychlik, R. Kirst, T. Keech, G. er e ey. jg! The Stanford Moot Court program is designed to improve the students' skills of brief writing and oral advocacy. The program grew significantly larger for the second year in succession. The resurgence of the Moot Court Board can be seen in terms of the number of students participating as well as the number of programs in which they participated. Moot Court has again become a valuable educational experience for that group of second and third year students who aspire to leam those aspects of advocacy that can be taught. Appellate Practice Seminars, an innovation during the previous year, were the major activity of the fall semester. Participation in these seminars increased over fifty percent from the previous year. Training in the Appellate Practice Seminars centered around preparation of written briefs under the close scrutiny of practicing attorneys and third year Board members. Attention was focused on analysing the lower court record, organizing the main issues on appeal and drafting a brief using a variety of different sources to support the arguments presented. Students benefitted not only from the unique opportunity of getting a close-up view of the entire appellate process but from the personal supervision and criticism that the attorneys provided. The Board initiated an Oral Advocacy Program in the fall with the intention of enabling those who wanted to develop their oral advocacy skills to argue from briefs prepared by others. Thus, for example, students were given the actual briefs submitted by counsel in a recent search and seizure case decided by the California Supreme Court, and by developing their oral arguments from these materials they gained valuable experience in oral advocacy without having to spend large amounts of time preparing a brief. This program together with the Appellate Practice Seminars provided excellent preparation for the Kirkwood Competition. The annual Marion Rice Kirkwood Competition is the culmination of the Moot Court programs. While participation in the Appellate Practice Seminars and the Oral Advocacy Program is of great advantage to the students who have that additional training, entry in the Kirkwood Competition is open to all second and third year students. Participation in this year's Kirkwood increased more than seventy-tive percent from the previous year, which meant that many fine advocates were eliminated before the eight semi-Hnalists were selected. Only four ofthe original entrants remained when the finals were held in Dinkelspiel Auditorium before a distinguished panel consisting of the Hon. Walter J. Cummings, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuitg the Hon. Ernest W. McFarland, Justice of the Arizona Supreme Courtg and Professor Paul Freund of the Harvard Law School. A large audience heard the four tinalists test their advocacy skills while arguing whether the Constitution will permit the incarceration of a juvenile on a lesser showing of proof than required to convict an adult of a similar offense. During both the first and semi-final rounds of the Kirkwood Competition every competitor's brief was read and criticized not only by each member of the three judge panel which heard his particular argument but also by at least three Moot Court Board members. Their arguments having been repeatedly challenged and refined, the finalists rewrote their briefs before the last round. This aspect of the Competition is of great educational benefit to Board members as well as participants. Members of the Board and candidates for membership almost unanimously regard time spent on the Moot Court program as time well spent. The candidates' experience is one of great practical value beyond providing the academic discipline of careful analysis and clear, concise writing. The third year Board members devoted considerable time and effort to restructuring the Boardis programs in an effort to maximize the value of the experience to all concerned. With the introduction of student practice in Califomia courts next year, new alterations will undoubtedly be required to maintain the dynamic quality that has become associated with the Moot Court Board. Larljy Title L. K. Gould argues in the preliminary round of the 1970 Marion Rice Kirkwood Competition while Steve Stevens prepares his rebuttal. all Roger Kirst, winner of the 1969 Marion Rice Kirkwood Competition, drives home a point, picking up quite a few in the process. Ted Keech ponders a point in the 1969 Kirkwood Competition finals. ' 2 I I 1 Dr. Max Rafferty, the Honorable Tom Clark, and the Honorable Skelley-Wright listen attentively to the final round arguments in the 1969 Marion Rice Kirkwood Competition. JOURNAL or I TER ATIO The Stanford Journal of International Studies was organized in 1966 as an interdisciplinary publication devoted to the scholarly in-depth analysis of contemporary problems of international scope. Each issue focuses on a particular problem and contains articles by professors and students from a variety of disciplines. Each of these articles deals with a facet of the major problem under consideration. Past issues have studied the following problems: Vol. 1 - East-West Tradeg Vol. 2 - Development of International Law and Economicsg Vol. 3 - Foreign Intervention in Civil Strifeg Vol. 4 - Ocean Resourcesg and Vol. 5 - International Telecommunications. The Journal is edited and published by students who work closely with a faculty Board of Advisors. The editing process is designed to encourage students to develop their ideas in depth and to articulate those ideas in a systematic, understandable manner. Interaction between law students and those outside the School is stressed. The Journal attempts to serve three primary purposes: first, to educate the student participants, second, to contribute to the fund of knowledge in selected international fieldsg and third, to encourage an interdisciplinary approach as a means of solving contemporary international problems. Student members' skill of analysis and research are sharpened and polished. A premium is placed upon the development of clarity and precision in writing. Moreover, AL STUDIE Pr it greg K j .liar sy fiifg,-:xg E li X c I' JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES: SEATED - J. Weisner, J. Radon fStudent Work Ed.J, E. Fischer fEd.-in-Chiefj, R. Ginns. STANDING - P. W. Munch, W. Lyons, D. Saidman, J. Bradley fBus. Mgr.J, C. Chalmers, W. P. MacGregor CStudent Work Ed.J, S. Cheris. MISSING - M. BeVier CExec. Ed.J, R. Williams fAsso. Ed.j, T. Adlhock CArt. Ed.J, C. Longley CArt. Ed.J, H. Wilkinson CArt. Ed.J, T. Davis CStudent Work Ed.J, J. Willett fStudent Work Edj. each member masters problems of organizing material and measuring manuscripts against the highest standards of substantive and formal accuracy. The Journal also provides substantial training in administrative and editorial facets of publication to those students elected officers. The Journal attempts to contribute to the fund of knowledge and aid in the resolution of contemporary international problems by 'treating subjects of importance to society. We are not directed toward any particular discipline and we attempt to choose dissimilar topics of study for successive issues. The Journal encourages an interdisciplinary approach to intemational problems in four major ways. fed. note: Eric, isn't this rather repetitive?j First, we ask students from all graduate departments at Stanford to work together during the editing process and to submit articles of their own. Second, the Journal solicits professional articles from experts in government, business, legal practice as well as in all branches of academia. fBill, I think you are right. Eric. j Third, we solicit subscriptions and send out announcements of each published volume to individuals and organizations in many different disciplines. Fourth, the Journal co-sponsors with the Stanford Law School lntemational Society by annual interdisciplinary symposium on a topic currently being prepared by the Journal. Eric Fischer. I ., ay A ll V , .5 X A lr 253-Seiji no nf X' V 0 r 1 l if X ' Ts G r 7 'If everybody minded their own businessf said the Duchess in a hoarse growl, 'the world would go round a deal faster than it does. ' Lewis Carroll I wish I loved the Human Raceg I wish I loved its silly faceg I wish I liked the way it walksg I wish I liked the way it talksg And when I'm introduced to one I wish I thought What Jolly Fun! Sir Walter A. Raleigh, 1923 It is beginning to be hinted that we are a nation of amateurs. Earl 0fR0seber1y, 1900 But the privilege and pleasure That we treasure without measure Is to run on little errands for the Ministers of State. William Gilbert from the Gondoliers The world is a fine place and worth fighting for. Ernest Hemingway - from For Whom the Bell Tolls 6'Dost thou not know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed? Count Oxenstierna, 1648 My patience is now at an end. A. Hitler, 1938 X ' i 2310- ' INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY: FRONT - E. Hayes, H. Duerbeck, M. Djilas, M. deStael, J. Radon. MIDDLE - M. Wise, W. Hunkeler, R. Bates, L. Lowry, A. Kirchhof, S. Stevens, R. Ginns, D. Donovan, A. Alhadeff, C. Chalmers. BACK - M. Taketomo, E. Fischer, J. Charney, P. O'Hare, B. Orr, J. Weisner, J. Terraciano, M. Burack, W. Kunstler. CO-CHAIRMEN: Elise Beeket, Jenik Radon, Thomas Shillinglaw. I TER ATIO AL SOCIETY L'We are not amused. Queen Victoria, 1900 1222 rr. rx F- .,' S O. 1 LAW FORU .- 1 ' 'J nailz: .Kihei UN J..4. is 1029 The Honorable Shirley Hufstedler speaks to students in the Lang Room Cabovej while Ralph Nader discusses American legal education fbelowj. la. P J iff 'P LAW FORUM: SEATED - J. Goodman, J. Chamey, C. Bruton CPres.J, S. Sacks. STANDING - J. Paul, A. Kaulins, D. Heir, P. M. Anderson. The Law Forum is one of the Law School's oldest student organizations, and it exists to enhance legal education by offering a series of able and relevant speakers. Although the Forum has no clearly defined role in the activities of the School, during 1969-70 it attempted to improve the intellectual environment by broadening its relationships with and assistance to other student organizations and seeking quality rather than quantity in its programs. Basing its approach on the belief that the School of Law, for various reasons, has traditionally been a less than stimulating place to spend leisure time, the Forum committed its efforts to changing Stanford from a commuter law school to one more like what applicants for admission believe it to be. The first major program of the year w'as a discussion of the problems of American law and the weaknesses of American legal education by Ralph Nader. Nader spoke to an overflow audience and proved himself to be an able and reasonable advocate of positive change. Judge Shirley Hufstedler of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit retumed to Stanford to present her views on the appellate process. Demonstrating the legal expertise and personal charm that has enabled her to become only the second woman to sit on a United States Circuit Court, Judge Hufstedler explained what can be termed the agonizing existential responsibility bome by one chosen to decide between conflicting human interests. Professors Meyers and Ehrlich spoke with typical perceptiveness on the difficult question of what personal decision was most appropriate for the economically ration law student rnrder the Law School's new grading system. The Forum was able to organize the nation's first debate between official representatives of the gun control movement and its opponents early in the second semester. David Steinberg, Executive Director of the National Council for a Responsible Firearms Policy, and Herbert Kohlwes, chairman of the board of a local gun club affiliated with the National Rifle Association, debated their views in a program sponsored jointly by the Forum and the Political Union of the ASSU. Professor Paul Freturd of Harvard Law School took time from his work as editor-in-chief of The History ofthe US. Supreme Court to speak at the Law School during the spring. The Forum's experience during 1969-70 demonstrates that there is a pressing need in the School of Law for greater communication. If Stanford is to be more than a stopping place where one is certified as the hope of the future, it is essential that students and faculty increase their interaction beyond the classroom and that serious attention be given to the ideas of enlightened persons in govemment and law. Legal education can exist in a vacuum, but it probably suffers for such limitation. The Law Forum is committed to changing that pattern of existence at Stanford. Chuck Bruton F ENVIRONMENTAL LAW SOCIETY: L. to R. - L. Lee, C. Chalmers, T. Springer, J. Rummonds fCo-Chmn.J, J. Heimbigner, W. Condon, D. Jackman CCo-Chmn.J. NVIRO E TAL L W SOCIETY The Environmental Law Society was formed to give respectably radical, but frustrated law students an opportunity to pitch a few snowballs at the avalanche of pollution and similar horrors which have attended Americais most recent gifts to human progress. Noting that it is usually lawyers who are writing and passing the legislation which determines how our land and resources will be used, and that it is always the lawyers who finally drag the polluters into courtg the need for a group of partisan volunteers seemed obvious. Our first major effort was directed at Stanfordls own back yard. With ELS assistance, local citizens groups working with attorneys who were donating their time temporarily halted industrial development in the Coyote Hill region of Stanford lands. President Pitzer was furious, so it seemed like we had it made as a student I Kp at organization. Some of this fair weather enthusiasm waned when requests started to come in for research assistance on the logging suit in San Mateo County, beach access problems, open space legislation, water for Pyramid Lake, and the enforcement of Bay Area pollution controls. The work was accomplished largely by the dedicated few. A willingness to align ourselves against real estate developers, industrial polluters, unresponsive govemment agencies, and politicians preaching the glories of growth and anexpanding tax base practically guarantees our members freedom from the pressure of usual establishment demands for our legal services upon graduation. One of the more successful public relations coups pulled off by the fledgling ELS involved the establishment of the National Environmental Law Society during a conference held at Stanford during the fall. Since the Environmental Law Society was formed at Stanford last sunnner over twenty other law schools have established similar groups. Perhaps a high water mark in the West's capture of professional leadership from the East occurred when Harvard Law School's Conservation Group changed its name to the Harvard Environmental Law Society, thus following the pattern established at Stanford. In addition to the more routine work of assisting attorneys involved in environmental litigation and aiding lobbying groups in studying proposed environmental legislation, several more ambitious projects are being developed. A Nader's Raiders style summer task force is being put together to investigate some lucky state agency, and a summer institute in environmental law is being proposed. Having successfully ousted the Legal Aid Society from its fashionable office at the crossroads of the law school, the ELS is stoically awaiting the change of intellectual fashion which will someday transform this vital and practical organization into another time-honored, traditionencrusted law school student group. BLACK LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: SEATED - W. S. Stevens CPres.J, J. Griffin, H. McMullen, L. Jones. STANDING - W. J. Ware, C. P. Johnson, W. Crews. BLACK LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATIO The Black Law Students' Association was formed to meet the needs of not just Black Law Students attending Stanford University, but the needs of all Black Americans. The members of the Black Law Students, Association are dedicated to Eghting the old tradition of Black students receiving degrees and tuming their backs on. the Black community. The members recognize that their first responsilility is to return to the Black community and end the legal exploitation that lies at the very foundation of ghetto unrest. The Black Law Students' Association is dedicated to ending racial discrimination practice by Law Firms and other Govemmental institutions. The Association is dedicated to finding ways and means of bringing into balance the educational scales of the law school. The history of Stanford University shows a catagorical exclusion of Black students from the educational process and the law school. This exclusion has been justified by imposing admission standards which reflect white middle-class intelligence and background. It is the goal of the Association to break this vicious cycle which tends to be self-perpetuating. The Black students have shown that if given the opportunity they are capable of performing as well as other students in the Law School. The first Black student at Stanford Law school was on the Law Review. fSallye Peyton '68J The second student was president of the Law Review. Waughn Williams ,691 The fourth and fifth Black student in the history of Stanford Law school distinguish themselves in moot court fWillard Stevens and James Robinson '70j The third student was instrumental in getting Stanford to recognize the needs of Black America by initiating a recruitment program. This student also worked closely with the Black community during his studies at the law school and remained there after graduation. fLeroy Bobbit '69j The major function of the Black Law Students' Association is to ensure that Black law students are admitted to Stanford Law School, are given all possible assistance in achieving academic excellence, and most importantly, use their education for the benefit of the Black community. fPresently, less than 275 of the Law School is Blackj With the efforts of Assistant Dean Henderson fthe only Black member of the administrationj the Black Law Students hope to increase the number of Black students, who qualify under acceptable academic standards, enrolled in the. Law School. With an increased number of Black professionals, Black problems can be solved by Black leaders, with Black prospectives, but operating within the legal framework of a society that is responsive to the needs of all its people. It is the aim of the Association to fill the power vacuum in the Alglack communities and lead our people out of the land of legal slavery. W. Steve tevens ii rw-at l H E iii awe l 2 ' at fig . ... V ir..-fa .sm :aw .sw W- 'SWL S55 t V firme- wais 53' Me fit.. 'fra --we W, ...c .Perla ,f.r.fe:f..'f.. .ei '11 . far iiisifltf . j T, Except for American Indians, Chicanos are the most disadvantaged and discriminated against minoiity in Califomia and the Southwest. While the Chicano population in California is only 1276, fully 33.3722 of the inmates at San Quentin are Chicano. California Youth Authority commitments are largely Chicano. Our city and county jails house large numbers of Chicanos for such violations as failure to appear on traffic citations, driving with suspended licenses, and failure to support their children. While such a high percentage of those affected by the judicial system are Chicano and many of them do not speak English, there are very few Chicano or even Spanish speaking lawyers, judges, probation officers, etc. Law schools have only recently begun to actively recruit Chicano students. National programs for disadvantaged minorities still do not affect many Chicano law students. Last year, of the 250 National Reginald Heber Smith Fellows, only one was Chicano. Of the eleven CLEO programs offered across the United States, only three were in the Southwest and in these three programs only 50 of the 120 students enrolled were Chicano. Of the 464 students currently enrolled at Stanford Law School, only six are Chicano. In order to increase the number of Chicano law students and to help create opportunity and bring about needed social change, the Chicano law students at Stanford were instrumental in organizing the Califomia Chicano Law Students' Association and the National Association of Chicano Law Students. In addition to state and national activities, projects at the Stanford Law School have included: an attempt to increase the number of Chicano students CHICAN LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATIO CHICANO LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: SEATED - A. Marlow,W. Melendres. STANDING - R. Anchondo. MISSING - R. Cancino, R. .Garcia, L. Jaramillo. which Stanford will commit itself to admit under slightly more relaxed standards fresults have been singularly unsuccessfuljg aiding in recruitment, providing feedback which has improved the minority programg and participation in a juvenile delinquency prevention program in the San Jose barrio. In addition, a course is being developed which will permit Stanford students to systematically research the treatment of Chicanos in specific areas such as criminal justice, civil cases, juvenile courts, etc. Particular locations for empirical studies will be chosen, beginning with Palo Alto and San Jose. It is hoped that the data can be published and that small conferences can be held which will bring together the judges, police, prosecutors, probation officers, social workers, and others involved to discuss the data and reevaluate the judicial process. Hopefully they will gain some insight into the problems faced by Chicanos who are confronted with the Anglo legal system. Eventually CLSA will provide a speakers' bureau made up of law students who have assimilated the data and who can be called upon to speak about the Chicano in the legal process to bar associations, judicial conferences, and community meetings. CLSA is also establishing contacts in the Mountain View bariio for a program of community education where law students will serve as resource persons to adult education groups on such topics as the court system and the rights of the individual, the use of the Small Claims Court, debtors' protection against gamishments and attachments, leases and landlord-tenant relationships, insurance, and consumer fraud. Annie G. Marlowe bns ZIIBOIIZA 'azenil U !d1IiiI 'ebu3iI0Z !ri00IoM 4 VXOYY RUTYZJ . g . !ZSiIfI'IB ni gniddoa 21408 !a1sII0b eldsnisidonu nam bIO !2YBW1iBTZ srli 1ebnu gnimsmoz r1a1bIiriD !z:I1sq srl! ni gniqeew sd! d00I0M !riooIOM 'io e1sm1dgiVI !rIO0IoM !rIo0I0M lnem To wgbui YVBSH erli rIo0IOM !zaeIevoI bns eauorilisi zzelluoa snodaaow adj ri00IOM SIB zgnibliud ezodw rlaoIOM !awo110z lo zasngnoil !1sw '10 enola iasv erlj fl00IoM linemgbui lzinemnwvog bsnnuia arh rl00IOM rIooI0M !dmo3 gniplomz s ai 130 'ezoriw ri00IOM Iuoa ezorlw ri0oIoM !ysr1omgninnu1 ai boold ezoriw !ZPII'lBd bns 151101130913 ai no Sw0X-Y' mofy 311311551 315621110 nsmx - -H03 03001113 om Xxx Xmmz zzsmkw sxh Xsgnkxy bsxhisxizimo MSW XSSNY Kqamiqz rmmXXoH zukX uk sgbnk Xxx gmt rxioq vm 4- .eff--I 4 5 1. ' fi g -1-111117 - jfm5N,,,,,,,p3 . .. - LSCRRC LSCRRC: FRONT - R. Wasserman, E. Hayes, C Chalmers, N. Tooby. MIDDLE - Peg, D. MacMeekin, D Donovan, G. Feldan, S. Swift, T. Smith and Concy BACK - D. Schlissel, S. Henner, D. Sorenson, E Becket, A. Alhadeff, M. Eichner. VXOYYD XG ART VXU3 ,sm 01 awe 'IUOY nsqo ,nsdi IISW Yisrh ai 1srlW ?aIsIZ .zalqosq 'io disab srl! Juods uoy 01 Jlsaqz Ilsrlz I won 101 .zwiznom bloo IIs 10 Jasbloo erli To emsrx erii ai S1512 ,I :rhuom 23110 Iuo zlwmo eil zirli bns g001 zail ii 1glbI0D .E-IJIOEICI EIHT ms ,eisiz srl! SMZQKXSVX dohbshi - TI .1ew0q ni zi oriw no zbnsqeb DSOTOTIIS 103 zwsl rl0iriW 01 bengiaab awsl emoins Yefli ,wwoq ni 91s zizilsiiqso srl! s evsrl xgsrlT .9111 10 ysw 1ierl1 ,meiayz 1isrI1 105-z:lo1q . . . . 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Tooby,C. Chalmers, E. Hayes, R. Wasserman. MIDDLE - Concy :md T. Smith, S. Swift, G. Feldan, D. Donovan, D. MacMeekin, Peg. BACK - M. Eichner, A. Alhadeff, E. Becket, D. Sorenson, S. Henner, D. Schlissel. CON TRADI CTI ON State? What is that? Well then, open your ears to me, for now I shall speak to you about the death of peoples. State is the name of the coldest of all cold monsters. Coldly it lies toog and this lie crawls out ofits mouth: I, the state, am THE PEOPLE. - Friedrich Neitzsche Which laws get enforced depends on who is in power. If the capitalists are in power, they enforce laws designed to protect their system, their way of life. They have a particular abhorrence for crimes against property .... If Communists are in power, they enforce laws designed to protect their system, their way of life. To them, the horror of horrors is the speculator, that man of magic who has mastered the art of getting something with nothing and who in America would be a member in good standing ofhis local Chamber of Commerce. THE PEOPLE, however, are nowhere consulted, although everywhere everything is done always in their name and ostensibly for their betterment, while their real-life problems go unsolved. - Eldridge Cleaver RESOL UTI ON This country with its institutions belongs to THE PEOPLE who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary ofthe existing government they can exercise their constitutional rights of amending it or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it. W Abraham Lincoln The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure. - Thomas Jefferson ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE! SITUA TI ON V Moloch! Solitude! Filth! Ugliness! Ashcans and unobtainable dollars! Boys sobbing in armies! Children screaming under the stairways! Old men weeping in the parks! Moloch! Moloch! Nightmare of Moloch! Moloch the lovelessl Moloch the heavy judger of men! Moloch the crossbone soulless jailhouse and Congress of sorrows! Moloch whose buildings are judgment! Moloch the vast stone of war! Moloch the stunned governments! Moloch whose' ear is a smoking tomb! Moloch whose blood is running money! Moloch whose soul is electricity and banks! H Allen Ginsberg reciting from 'H0wl 0n the witness stand at the Chicago Con- spiracy Trial with outstretched Hnger pointing at Judge Julius Hoffman If I Li? F A F i 'if' Q . 1 if ! T - - 1 RIHICIIKLURIGIT PLACEME T COMMITTEE Spurred on by the individual dynamism of its five full-year members, the Placement Committee quickly exhausted its limited energies during the first semester by organizing itself and providing moral support for Suzanne Close, who is in charge of the Placement Office and who did nearly all the work as usual. A burst of energy in September set up Bill Westerbeke and John Genung in charge of placement with firms, Dede Donovan in charge of vocations for social change, and Jim McGee as liaison with the faculty placement committee. Peter Bell attempted to coordinate these areas and to watch over other aspects of placement. . The first term's work was limited to smoothing over the mechanics of an extensive interviewing season already set up by the Placement Office. Dede Donovan conducted a massive letter-writing campaign which resulted in filling up two bulletin boards with news of employers such as the NAACP legal Defense Fund, Inc. 'nd other socially oriented organizations. The basic work of the Committee commenced during the second term and included formulation and distribution of a questionnaire designed to discover what sort of public interest work and minority employment practices were engaged in by the firms which interview at Stanford Law School. Efforts were made to set up a special program to deal with the problems of employment for first-year stu- dents and to encourage more law iirms and more varied employers to visit the law school. Some people got jobs, which is more than they deserved, but the Placement Committee's effectiveness must be questioned - I'm the chairman and I don,t have a job. Peter Bell PLACEMENT COMMITTEE: J. McGee, Wm. Westerbeke, G. Berkeley, P. Bell CChmn.J, D. Donovan. -K 0 X Ny, s A 2. . J .ff , 1 t ai ' l fu! X K .1 r Q , it . oi' Fester Malion interviews the Los Angeles firm of Crosby, Stills. Nash Sc Young at the annual Christmas skit. Skin. is lihllllrl YEARBOCK YEARBOOK STAFF-SEATED: Wm. Westerbeke CEditorJ. STANDING: W. S. Stevens CBus. Mgr.7, J. Siegesmund CPhotographyJ, M. O'Connell CICILBPJ. E gk sag The 1970 Yearbook staff has attempted to depict life at the Stanford Law School. The picture is of necessity incomplete because, on the one hand, it is limited by the staffs perspective of what such life is even though most assuredly no one perspective will ever be sufficient to tell the whole story, and, on the other hand, no perspective - however sophisticated M could be depicted in still-life photographs when the real essence of the law school is the vitality and motion of all its component parts. We hope, how- ever, that our efforts have been successful enough to leave the participants with a few memories and those persons outside the law school a better understanding of the meaning of the Stanford Law School. At this juncture, a few words of explanation are in order. A number of the Comments in this yearbook -in the student bio- graphics, in the faculty biographies, and in the general copy and pictures throughout the book - could possibly be misinterpreted as being negative, criticial, or in bad taste. It has been the continual desire of the editor to avoid any such effects. However, I recognize that words or pictures that may be simply humorous to most may possibly be offensive to others. If such has been the case, then I apologize to those concerned. I simply repeat that our desire has been to make the yearbook comprehensive, readable, humorous and relevant. This year's product has truly been a group effort. A particular word of appreciation must go to John Siegesmund, whose photo- graphic efforts are so largely responsible for the success of the book, and to Steve Stephens, who undertook the financial pro- blems and handled them magnificently. And as usual Mike Wrightis art work truly makes the Yearbook. A special compliment must be given Professor Moffatt Hancock, whose artistic photography is reproduced on pages 2 and 3. Others who contributed their time and efforts are Pete Wilkinson, Marty O'Connell, Bart Kimball, Bobbi Miracle , Bo Abrams, Willie Robertson, Laura Palmer, Valerie McCrindle, Frank Evans, Dale Matschullat, Norm Elfstrom, Carol Rudy, Sam Cheris, Trig Davis, and Pat Reymann. The cooperation of innumerable others also deserves credit. Therefore, this year- book truly reflects the whole of the law school and I personally want to thank all those who helped. And with that I will happily terminate my career as a yearbook editor. Bill Westerbeke POURRI alias THE GRASS MENAGERIE 5,21- HS.. f st ? l sg sn s Really, Momma, is that nice? S4 Q - 6 Q - Wim is ' . 1 s , 11 s' f 5 Q5 ef vm' Greetings: Draft Board, Local 119, wishes you well and would like the following information .... ff . -1 ' i 5' ,55 , n W . .n . . In bil '.,' 5? ,, ,em ,msn A X, Ci-:':f.. ,- -2 - , ' ' 1.180 . wig' -'S .U , 4 Q Y We're number one - Fire Ralston! Yessir, live in Crothers and be a swinger! This, Granny, is a wire wheel! The land taboo! qv giaitw TQ ' A A ' 'B fiw . F43 WFGSQW' Jfllkv If this course was supposed to be so easy, so how come I don't know what the hell he's asking? 19, That's how to play your hand, C. Gordon! was You and your goddam camera again! 2 ' W an John, even your best friend won,t tell you . . . Nowl whip out my magic pen and . . . f -'V' 1' 'ire ff 'Vafwif' , sis? u efu- ' iiiif Q ' ' f Hey, stud, you come to Stanlaw and we'll make a fungible lawyer out of you. Standard equipment, Granny . . . TRO The students of the Stanford Law School wish to express their gratitude to the following patrons for their support in the publication of Q book. P TRONS Belcher, Henzie 8L Biegenzahn Los Angeles, California Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside Sr Wolff New York, New York Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen 8a Hamilton New York, New York Gibson, Dunn 8: Crutcher Los Angeles, California Lillick, McHose, Wheat, Adams 8z. Charles San Francisco, California Munger, Tolles, Hills 84 Rickershauser Los Angeles, California Rutan 8L Tucker Santa Ana, California SUPP Arthur Anderson 84 Co. San Francisco, California Bodle, Fogel, Julber Sc Reinhardt Los Angeles, California Donovan, Leisure, Newto New York, New York Heller, Ehrman, White 8L San Francisco, California McAuliffe I-loberg, Finger, Brown 8a Abramson San Francisco, California Kaplan, Livingston, Goodwin, Berkowitz 8a Selvin Beverly Hills, California Keatinge 8L Sterling Los Angeles, California Long 8L Levit San Francisco, California Mautz, Souther, Spaulding, Kinsey 84 Williamson Portland, Oregon ORTI G MEMBERS MacDonald, Halsted 8a Laybourne Los Angeles, California McCutchen, Doyle-, Brown 8a Enersen San Francisco, California H 31 IfVif1S Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Clinton 8r Clark San Francisco, California Nossaman, Waters, Scott, Krueger Sc Riordan Los Angeles, California Paul, Hastings, J anofsky Cgl, Walker Los Angeles, California Southern Pacific Transportation Co. San Francisco, California Strasser, Spiegelberg, Fried 8r Frank New York, New York Touche, Ross 8a Co., San Francisco, California MEMBERS Carlsmith, Carlsmith, Wichman 8a Case Hilo, Hawaii Carter, Ledyard, 8L Milburn New York, New York Covington 8L Burling Washington, D.C. Davis, Polk 8: Wardwell New York, New York Hanna 8t Morton Los Angeles, California Hanson, Bridgett, Marcus 8L Jenkins San Francisco, California Mr. John A. Morrow, Jr. El Centro, California Lawler, Felix 8L Hall Los Angeles, California Paul, Weiss, Goldberg, Ri New York, New York fkind, Wharton 8i Garrison Poindexter 8a Lynch Los Angeles, California Mitchell, Silberberg 8L Knupp Los Angeles, California Richards, Watson 8a Hemmerling Los Angeles, California Rosenfeld, Meyer Cgl. Susman Beverly Hills, California Severson, Werson, Berke 8r Bull San Francisco, California Sheppard, Mullin, Richter 8a Hampton Los Angeles, California Simpson Thacher 8a Bartlett New York, New York Wilson, Jones, Morton Sc Lynch San Mateo, California Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam 8a Roberts New York, New York - I' ! CC T' ,u,,.1-'JL' ' 'W , J N 4 Q 1 gb ig 5 . I wi' V7 'V , F Jw fi' in 2F 1 ii' , SJ? Q E. ' M T50 k 12 if ', , , Q 'JV J A 1 x X Q? rg X , q msibf ST pq KYSWQK ' 15 QR 4 Q .' 1 I I - 3 X-K. , , xx ,X T3 ,Q x XE I K--' QUU H W ' N X Q' - X WJ , ,A - ' ' . ul w X Q Q M . XY , 4 , X . :,' 1 Y w Xie? ftsfxlifx YI, I f g'i' . ln.1'Y,Q 3 I Q WXX W 5 . f l . 'lvl 3- QW ' O f ff. , A 'I x g , 'Q Q W mx, QM . ff .,.. 1 QA f 'J N M Q -3 M WMM f 'ff X Q Z L ', 5 ,W . 0 44 7' Q if L W H c' .-v -W rc 4 . Qi Vg, gwv Q Lglxcf i iff?-:YS ff' ggi? ' Fw Q X O X 1 'FL ,,:M,I.Ufgf,1 ff -fi i, f - x,,Jvl X f--Z . f f ff X f Y' , ff Q xx + 'f Q 5311 W' f 3 f A iMMfNlff'Jw' N 1 xi- v W L54 D' 4 W 4 1 , , js NS xxx llr l 1311 fb ', X' wks' w WM-W Flbr f xxx! XX. M I X S .Ao T113 S Q 1 'KA , 7 ,MW ff wxm U 1 V Q ig W ' ,X 1 ' ' - 'M' 41' N l JJ I N fb- 0 4 4 If Q K, M My - X GJ 'Q I W MM 0 eg 'f , 5 ' v -14 V 9 ' L: IJ' if H w Mg g w,gsgf,e:I:,:1Es'.45::,2f'o2w?5D.,M. ITWRS 'rue Ae-:ice fgovljXf5H::S5. WT V95 THE Q W 4 X I E 'R - Q 9 .,-i EES ?rEgigEbulH'y, IT wAs1ue.5sHsoN S K 'S' 5 oF Lxeur, IT was THE season oF DHPKNE55, 5615 3, I OF fa -1 IT H S me Q HOTPIQSI?-V515 -me WINTER oF DESPAIIZ, TS we udp eveRyTl-Ima europa us, , V 5 nscscews I wel-mn No-rume Barone us... CMM X 2 wncnAa1. waglcvl-IT K SEPTEMBER 1967 June o FISCHEL YEARBDUKS INC. 5. -.M I -f','f 5n.9:LKi-,:i 1'II - ' ' ' ,gf-W --w. 1, M ,.,-,.:,L,,..,-t,,.n,',. Q-N., V L,-.g.a3i.m fa.-34.1 ..Q':g-hiffw A ,Y-, , X


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, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 71

1970, pg 71

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 187

1970, pg 187

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 153

1970, pg 153

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 98

1970, pg 98


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