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Page 94 text:
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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
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Page 93 text:
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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'
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Page 95 text:
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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
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