Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1970

Page 105 of 196

 

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 105 of 196
Page 105 of 196



Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 104
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Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 106
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Page 105 text:

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

Page 104 text:

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



Page 106 text:

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.

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 47

1970, pg 47

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 181

1970, pg 181

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 89

1970, pg 89

Stanford Law School - Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 160

1970, pg 160


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