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Page 49 text:
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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
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Page 48 text:
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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.
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Page 50 text:
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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.
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