Number 1 - Ohio Northern University Claude W. Pettit College of Law
Transcription
Number 1 - Ohio Northern University Claude W. Pettit College of Law
Vol. 68 - No. I OhioNorthero Unirersity Claud" W p"tti low Reviewhosls... Consumer Sofefyond PrivqteProdusts Litigotion Symposium By Michael Kaliner On Friday, October 22, t976, the Ohio Nortlern University Law Review will sponsor its fifttf annual symposium. This year's topic of discussion is entitled "Consum€r Safety and Private Products Litigation." Products liability involves the broadening of the liability of manufacturers and producers for negligently-made products. The earlier requirement of a direct contractual relationship between the manufacturer and the injured party has been abandoned and tbe trend is toward the imposition of strict liability upon the manrdacturer. Furthermore, the products liability law is continually expanding to clover areas other than manufactured goods. firis is a rapidly dranging and NgNy litigated area of the law. The purpose of the symposium is to inform the legal community of the current developments in the law of products liability and to discuss practical aspects in litigating products liability cases. The symposium panel will consist of practitioners, experts, and manufacturer's representatives. It is geared to benefit botr plaintiff and defense oriented attorneys. Participants in the Symposium and their topic presentations includeMr. Marshall I. Nurenberg, Esq. Firm of Komito, Nurenberg, plevin, Jacobson, Heller, & McCarthy, Cleveland, Ohio; Fellow in the lnternational Academy of Ttial Lawyers; Former Section Chairman of the Railroad Secti,on of ATLA; Member, National Panel of Arbitrators, American Arbitration Aseoeiadon ; Former Editor'in'Chlef Michael Muller consutts wlth Executlve Edltor and Sympoclum Chairman George Sarap. Section Chairman of Negligence Section, Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers. Topic: "The Development and Present Status'of Products Uability in ONo." Mr. Mlchael J, Bonesteel,Esq. Firm of Haight, Lyon, Smith, & Dickson tos Angeles, California; National Products Liability Coordinator, E. R. Squibb & Sons, lnc.; Association of Southern California 'Defense Counsel. Topic: "Products Uability and Drugs." Mr. Willlem A. Donaher Professor of Law, Duquesne University; Former Assistant Attorney General, Department of Jr.rstice, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; Member, Study of Products Liability and the Interaction of Law and Technology sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Topic: "The Expert Witness." Mr. Alvln S. Weincteltr Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Public Affairs, Carnegie.Mellon University; Director, Study of Products Liability and the Interaction of Law and Technology sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Topic: "The Expert Witness." Mr. Jo,hn P. Rrielgh, Erq. Attorney-in<harge of the Products Liability Section of tlte General Motors tegal Staff ; conthued on page 4 EvonsAppointed Assistont Deon, Direcforof Adrnissions By Katherine Knurek Nationat members r+riting tor the petitioners include Wllliam Evenson, Nancy Borlo, and James Piampiano. Notionol Teom Attqcks Securiry Low Problem By Steplen Garee fire Fall National IVIooi Couri problem this year is being undertaken by two 3member teams from tlre Moot Cotrt Board of Advocates. One team consists of James Piampiano, Nancy Borkoand William Evenson, for the petitioner, while the otttet team is comprised of Angela Elacqua, _ Alfred Bennington, Jr., and Susan Hovey, for the respondent. These two teams, workirg independently, have each written Supreme Court qualityappellate briefs, and will argw the problem ler this fall in Detroit, Michigan. A total of thirteen school will participate in this Region vI pneliminary step to the National Competition, which runs from Thursday, November 4th, - through Saturday, November 6th. Currently, the teams must each meet a brief submission deadline of Thur-sday, October lrltfi. the problem this year is one where the petitioner has brought suit seeking bo0t injunctiveanddeclaratory rdief in the area of security law. Contending that the respondents have violated his conetitutional rights to due process and have also placed impermissable burdens on interstate commerce, the petitioner filed his suit in the Uniled States DistricJ Court. Tlre Court found for the reepondents and a wrtt of certiorari was granted by the Supreme Court to consider all guestions raised by the record. Prior to the November regional competition the teams will preaent tieir annual dress rehearsal performance before tlre .judgesof the 3rd Appellate Dietrict of Ohio on October 26, LnB in the Moot Court Room. The vacancy in Admissions created by the departure of Professor Haywood Reynolds to Capital's law school has been filled by Associate Professor William L. Evans who joined the faculty at the Pettit College of Law last year when he left his private practice in Kenton. In addition to serving as Director of Admissions, Evans has also baken over duties as Assistant Dean, that vacancy created when Professor Gregory Pease accepted a position at Washburn University. tn his doublefold capacity, Evans has found his responsibilities to encompass a wide range of areas within the law sctrool. Since Reynolds coordinated and carried through theSummer Qualifier program this past summer, Evans has spent most of his time on the dutig of Assistant Dean. Evans did, however, assist in the completion of the program by following through on letters, phone calls, and further interviews. The Admissions Committee, whidr also'consistg of Professors David Benson and Gene Nevius, and shrdents Joseph Weir and Ernest Fisco, Jr., will begin revieving files of applicants in the first part of lll| Lor selection to the Class of lS0. Readmission of shdents and ctudents on probation are just two of the tesks whldl border on both of Evans' ereas of lesponsibility. As Assistant Dean, Evanr performs an array of functioru which rerult, primarily, in being a liason with the law student. Some of these numeroue jobs on the daily agenda include reviewing graduation applications, scheduling, insuring that courses meet the requirements of various lVllllen L. Evenr State BaF, danging assistantehips, lillirg out questionnairea and reports for tlre ABA, the Edrrcationd Teeting Service and other preparing the organizations, and examination schedules. A few of the unerpected taslE Evans ha! for had to perform include aranging transportaHon for the lcelandic sttdents and furnishing lnformation to innumerable institutionc which conduct statistical shdies concerning las schools. Concerning his pniority of long-range plaru, Evans indicatcd that on the top of hie list was hir iniention tro apply for outri& funding for the law school. Since there have been relatively few attenipts in tbe past 0o secure suctr monies, he feelg thet anything done in this area would improve the law school's position. Such moni€s would include Foundation gifts, Federal funding, and perhapo State funding. THE WRIT October.1976 Fromfhe Edilor,.. /r"* t/rnbnoni bnol I WANTITIORT THANAJOB Illarief Peck Early this fall I was sitting in Tax class being informed that Norm Cummings would be "stopping by" to give us a little talk on placement services when someone blurted out that he had resigned to work on the Ford-Dole campaign. Subseguently, no one ev.er "stopped by." What is happening to law placement at Ohio Northern (if there ever really was a law placement . . ,)? In a news release of September 30th, the University announced the consolidation of the placement, counseling and testing departments into "Counseling and Career Development" under Dr. Jack Corle, the former director of counseling and testing. I can see where the emphasis is going to be placed now. At a time when Cummings was beginning to get an idea of law placement needs,we've been shifted to the back burner agaln. Granted, it is only October, but I am still worried about finding a job. I am not the only one. According to The 19?5-19?6 Study of Ohio Law School Placement Programs published by students at the University of Toledo Law School and presented to the League of Ohio Lbw Schools, over 30,000 new lawyers are expected to pop into lhe job market this year, with projected openings of only 15,0m per year until 19El' Being the positive thinker that I am, I know that at . least one of those 15,0fi)jobo is earmarked for me gnd, with a litile help, I'm going to find it. "Help!" Yes, that is what many of those 30,000 are crying just about now. The printers are making bundles on "professional"resumes,the pages of' Marare Learing, tlndeleHubbell wrinkling, wearing and law school placement services are undeistaffed, underinformed, and badly neglected. Ttre key to job success is, of coursd, 'llacement." Few would argue that adequate placement Fesources and personnel are not an integral service in the modern law school. From feviewinS the Study of Ohio Law School Placernent Programs I found tbat several law scbools in Ohio are making strides in the area of law placement. And then there is Ohio Nortlern. . . lhe more than forty students who are graduating t}is November have not had one opportuity for an on+empus interview as seniors. Not onc firm or feileral ageney has interviewed here since last winter quarter. As a matter of fact, the Securities and Exchange Commission didn't even want to interview heie, and thus, our students, after mating heated personal telephone calls, had to travel to Toledo. University of Toledo seniors, however, filled most of the interview times, leaving only four spots for ONU seniors, closing out several ONU applicants again. Does this experience with the SEC mean that ONU graduates are automatically rdegated to t}e waste basket before they apply? Moreover, it leaves the impression that graduating law students from Ohio Northern are tagged merely as "second class"-second class as compared to students graduating from similar schools, with the same grade popt averages, with the same practicd expdrience, having the same background of a quality legal education. What makes the difference? Active placement services. According to the Study, Ohio Northern ranked eitler seventh or eighth out of the nine ONo law schools in the quality of its placenient service, even before Cummings' rerlgnatlon. How inequitable ig it to have - had the highest percentage of students pass tlte 1Yt5 Ohio Bar, as Ohio Northern has done, and yet do so little to solicit job og portunities for its graduates? Ttis is not just another small law, school-the percentage of judges and practicing attorneys in Ohio who are alumni of Ohio Northern is ovelwhelming We supposedly had a placement director who spent $ percent of his time on law placement. According to the Study, in at least six other Ohio law schools the placement director spends between 5O , percent to lffi percent of his time on law placement. And, too, five of these placement officers have legal experience as J.D.'s. Several Ohio law school placement offices ' also have assistant directors (with Cummings gone, that may be all we've got) in addition to graduate student assistance. Even our percentage of placement secretarial assisLanceranks in the bottom third among Ohio law schools. Cbncerning solicitation and information on employment prospects, Northern has, on occasion, perfunctorily sent questinnaires to alumni and employers in selected goegraphical locations to find out if there , areany jobs available. However, they send . no brochures, make no personal visits to law firms or corporations. Our placement office, unfortunately, solicits neither the federal or state governments, nor the Ohiio and federal judiciary. Other ONU placement efforts are, likewise, unimpressrve. Five other Ohio law schoolshave advisory placement committees consisting of faculty andor students andor alumni. According to the Study, ONU has none, although I do know that two students from the Student Bar Association -are supposedly on a placement committee. And, too, members of Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity have wbrked with Norm Cummings to fiormulate a handbook law students cunently usel for resume and general placement information. Admittedly, students should bear a great deal of the burden of job hnnting. However, a student's opertise doer not Iie in the field of plaeement. The task of placement solicitations and information about ONU's law school has been relegated to a "self-help" proposition. But for the professionalism and excellence generated by Law Review publications and symposiums, the Moot Court nationals and Celebrezze program, and legal fraternity speaker programs---our law school and the caliber of our student body. goes unmentioned. The task of gerrcrating interest in ONU law graduates and actively communicating information atiout our school should not fall , on the student_s',any one student's or any group of students', shoulders alone. An active placement service should bear the burden of communicating our excellent reputation to those in the law and law hiring positions. Recognizing the extreme importance a placement office can play in a law school community, the Standing Committee on Professional Career Development of the Section of Lcgal Education and Admissions to the Bar, has submitted to the American 'Bar Association proposed standards relating to law school placement for incorporation in the Standards for the Accredi[ation of law Schools. The proposed standards, having been sent to every law sctrool dean, are as follows: Albert Boillis DistricL Court of Appeals of Ohio, : Other important projects ere being worked on. I would like to mention just some of them. The next issue of the l,aw Review will contain a seminal study on Mandatory Continuing L,egal Education. This issue of the law Review should play an important part in whatever direction mandatory legal education moves in Ohio. We have developed some specific plans for a modest legal clinic in our area. The plans have been reduced to writing, and we are presently in the process of seeking funding. Plans for the second year of the Celebrezze Moot Court Competition are well under way. We hope to have even more alumni returning to campus this year than last to participate. Much is taking place at our law school. Faculty and students alike are involved. I am pleased to rdport that all. the energy here that is so evident is energy facing in the right direction. Our law school is filled to capacity. We begin this year with 526 students, 195 of whom are freshmen. A burgeoning student body presents problems, but it elso creates opportunities to do things that could not otherwise be done. Some of the activities occurring this month are good examplee. On Fri<lay, October 22, our Law Review is sponsoring a symposium on Consumer Safety and Private Products Utigation. lt is of the same caliber as the one presented last year on Medical Malpractice and tlre Law. On Monday, October 25, we will conduct an experiment with the Moot Court teem from the University of Maryland. Our team and two of the judges will be in Lima, Ohio, and their team and two of the judges witl be in Maryland, and the arguments will be conducted by way of setellite. On October 26, our Fall National Moot Court Team will have a dress rehearsal by presenting oral 'to arguments the distinguished Third TIIE ohioNororernfor:t;*"t't WRIT Ada, Ohio 45810 EDITOR.IN.CHIEF Marie Mimi Peck PIIOTOGRAPHY EDITOR John Shryock _ PUBLI6 RELATI6NS James piampiano STAFF Nancy L. Borko, Clayton Chong, Stephen Garea, Daniel Gillen, Patricia .Hofstra, Michairl Kaliner, Katherine Knurek, Roger Kramer, Claire Kranz, Margaret Wenzke. ond qrs Oplnlonr .rptGt?Gd in IHE WRll ncl ngccrrorily thotc of lha Univ.,tity Lctl.rt in coc of ohd lhc conmcnlr o,. Colbgc of lov. vel(onad. 2l2The law school shall conduct an active program of placement for its students and graduates. 2l3Sufficient resources will be made available to employ a full-time placement officer with adequate sbaff assistance. It will be ttte duty of the placement officer and staff to attempt to locate suilable positions for students and graduates. The placement officer and staff will perform sucb ectivities as the preparation and dissemination of materials seeking potential employers to interview students or Sfaduates in regard to employment, the personal solicitation of potential employers to interview students or graduates and the making of arrangements for interviews. 2l4Adequate space will be made available by the law school for the conduct of placement activities including the interview process. If the school's own facilities are inadequate, arrangements will be made for use of other suitable facilities on the campus or in nearby buildings. Admittedly, these standards may be broad, but their recommendation is a first step in upgrading an alltoooften ne$ected law school placement service. It is the step that Ohio Nortiern must take. "Placement" is more than finding a job. There are plenty of jobs, bitt not all jobs mesh with career potential. Placement involves the specific expertise of weeding through all the "jobs" and welding a student's career polential with a compatible career opportunity. It is time to look beyond the present needs of law students as students. Investment in legal education will ripen only when there is an opportunity for a fulfilling career. To that end, the efforts and the philosophy of ilre legal placement services of Ohio Northern University, should be geared. lhorc or ol tha lhc Coil.gc Corrcrpondcncc (ont.ibutoG, vrileri, of o. .dlfo.lol rtofl !cy. rhould bc qddroucd lo lhr rdltot DEAN SEARCH UPDATE By Claire 11psn1 Due to a lack of agreement among the faculty, students and administration, I permanent dean was not selected last year. This year, in the hopes of avoiding similar problems, a new method of selection was deviied utilizing a "screening committe€." L,ast spring students interested in the Dean Search were invited to submit their name tro the Student Bar Association for consideration. Six names were then chosen and forwarded to President Meyer fqr him to select two students to represent the law student body. Students who were selected include Nancy Borko, third year student from Bayside, New York, and Alan Kap pers, a third year student who also did his undergraduate work at OhioNorthern, from Hamilton, Ohio. t Other membership on the committee consists of two law faculty members, Mark Rothstein and George Vaubel; two alumni, James Meredith and Elaine Mayhew; and two trustees, Dr. Erwin Clemens and Dr. Robin Obetz. These six people, in addition to the two student representatives, will examine and discuss all subniitted resumes. From the interested candidates. three finalists .rpill be chosen. Then, ultimately, President Meyer will select one of the finalists as the new Dean of l,aw. Further discussions at all meetings will remain confidential until officially authorized and released by President Meyer. Page 3 .t THE WRIT October, 1976 ThreeMythsAbout lnternational Law Mitor's Note: Tbis article is tbe frst in a seies of facally-unitten articles wbicb uill appeal as a regahr leature in futare WRITs. Spagheltl expertr for thc gab Blg Brother event included Annc J6nklns, March Wllllene, David Caplan, Ernie Fisco, and Frank lannucci. FRESHMEN BEGIN LAW STUDIES By Margaret Wenzke The class of 1979adds one hundred ninety' five new faces to the law school community. More than half of the new Freshman Class afe Ohioans, although a large number come from eastern states, and others from as far as Utah, Arizona, l.ouisiana and Canada. The class is a comparatively young one, with an average age of twenty-three' Almost nine percent are women, and more than a fourth are married. The Freshman were introduced to law school in a wellorganized program sponsored by the Orientation-Honor's Day Committee of the Student Bar Association under the direction of chairperson Marie E. Peck. The committee began working last spring when it began the assignment of Student Advisors to prospective Freshmen. Under the direction of committee member Claire E. Kranz, advisors were assigned to Freshmen on a geographical basis, and encouragd to correspond with their Ad' visees, hopefdlly providing any necessary moral support or advice. During the Summer, Quarter a miniorientation was organized to assist those participating in the Summer Qualifier Program. A welcoming picnic was held in addition to briefing sessions. The main thrust of the cbinniittee's activities was directed' at the Augttst pre quarter orientation program. The Freshmen were first introduced to representatives from the university administration and the placemert office, the dean of tlre law school, Albert A. Baillis, and Prof. David J. Benson and hof. Bruce A. Poanak of the law school faculty. Briefing sessions were conducted by committee vicec.hairman Russ Miller, and members of Moot Court presented their Celebreeze Competition arguments. At the end of the first week of classes, the committee and Law Wives co-sponsored a picnic in Ada Park attended by numerous law students. The committee also sponsored, with the SBA Film Committee, the movie "Paper Chase" on the same evening, which attracted orrer 500 viewers. The committee again sponsored the traditional Big Brother Dinner, where advisors and adviseeshad a ehanceto meet and compare law school experiences and impressions. This year, however, the gala beer blast and spaghetti dinner at the VFW featured over eight hundred meatballs prepared under the supervision of superchef'Frank lannucci, aided by Mark Aronson, Sal Bonagura, Dave Caplan, l,aurel Chessin,Ernie Fiseo, Jim Gutglass, ' Pat Hofstra, Anne Jenkins, Millie Picker, Janet Riether, Tom Skilken and Marcia Williams. Master of CeremoniesPhil Cala introduced representatives of various law school organizations who explained the purposes and activities of their organizations to the Freshrnen. The committee has not confined itself solely to providing activities for the Freshmen, but is reaching out to the entire law school community, and hopes to gontinue sponsoring activities throughout the year, for the philosophy of the Orientation-Honors Day Committee, holds, in the words of its chairperson,Ms. Peck, that, "law school in Ada needs a continuous orientation." Assistant holessor Bntce L. Rockuood k a gradute of tbe Unioersitlt ol Cbicago lzu hbool and uns admitted to tbe lllinois fur in October, 1974. A natiae of New Jersey, kofessor Rockuood did his undetgradute unrh in Hislory at Suartbmore College, graduling in 1968, and spent 2t^t yeors in tbe United StatesArml , 1969- 1971, He is ptesentl! Cbairman of lbe Sabcommittee on Trade and Monetary Reform of tbe ABA's Inlernalional lzu &ction, and teacbes courses in Eaidence, Public l-au, lzgislation and Internatiod lzu. By Bruce L. Rockwood There are a number of myths about international law cunently at this lawschool which are not atypical of myths held in many law schools today. Tte first is that international law is not relevant to those persons planning to go into private practicei the secondis that it is not necessary or helpful to people planning to take the bar exam; and the third is that it should not be among those courses which a majority of the students take before graduation. I would like to deal with each of these myths in turn. In the first place, international law is a generic term for the study of legal relationships- which cross national boundaries. This can involve state contacts, diplomatic relations and immigration matters, but it also can involve private contacts, sales abroad, commercial transactions of various kinds, enforcement of drug laws or the conducting of a divorce involving foreign documents. Mixed situations exist-for example, the sale by an American farmer of wheat to a state hading aSency of a foreigt country. Already I think you can see that in these situations there are possibilities for legal business to crop up that would come to the attention of the typical lawyer even in the small town as much as in a Wall Sheet or Washington legal office. For example, if you have a clicnt who is married to an alien, som@ne with relatives or property abroad, there may be questions of immigration problems or inheriiance tax that will need to be dealt with by your office. If you have a client that has an automobile accident abroad, as one of my studenta recently discussed with me in my office, then you may have to hire a foreign attorney and deal with the problem of differing ap proaches to the compensetion of attorneys. ln America we may be familiar with contingency fees, but in Germany lawyers may expect to be paid for work accomplished regardless of the outcome'of litigation. If you live in Cleveland or Toledo you mey have commercial dealings with the international ports on the Great Lakes, or torts involving foreign and American seamen. Whrin I attended a bar association course on private international trade this Bast March in Chicago, it was pointed out by Professor Bassiouni of DePaul. the moderator for the program, that "50 percent of all United States export sales come from a 200mile radius of Chicago, yet 2/3 ol the financial and letal business from the Chicago trade goes to New York. Local practitioners lack the interest, e:<pertise and awareness necessary to handle this business." I think this situation may hold for practitioners throughout the midwest and that we, in Ohio, and we in the midwest, in general, should do what we can to ke-ep some of this business closer to home. In addition, a good many of you may have Elecrion Senote Results By Patrlcla Hofstra Ulass representative elections were held during the week of September 20th with three representatives elected from each class. These nine students, irt addition to the present executive committee of the Student Bar Association, make up the law school senate. Fifst year representetives include: John Hazard, 23 yearold graduate of Vir$nia Technical Institute, Blacksburg, Virginia with a B.A. in lllstory, from Inrton, Vir$nia. Jack Beatley, 22 yearold Ohio State graduate with a B.A. in Political Science, from Russ€lls Point, Ohio. John Preiksat, 29 yearold Westenn from Kentucky College graduate Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. John has a previotts to law B.A. in Political Scienceand school he was a diesel engine distribution sales manager for six years. Second year representstives include: Anne Jenkins, 26 yearold Denison graduate with a B.A. in Hiptory, from New Iexington, Ohio. She attended gtaduate sdrool at the American Graduate School of lntbrnational Management and was a case worker for the Cincinnati Welfare Department before law school. Frank lannucci, 29 yearold Fairleigh Dickinson graduabe with a B.A. in Economics from Rochelle Park, New Jersey. In addition to serving with the Navy, he was a construction contractor before turning to law. This summer, he was employet in the New York District Attorney's Office. Steve Vasilaros, 25 year+ld graduate of the College of Steubenville with a degree in Business, from Steubenville, Ohio. He was a construction estimator prior to law school. 'l'hird year representatives include: Robert Bull, 23 yearold Elizabeth College graduate with a B.A. in Political Science from Nescopeck, Pennsylvania. He has been clerking for his father, who is an attorney, for the past two years. continueduh page4 clients in small or medium sized businesses, in small or medium sized communities, which are either presently engaged in export or could easily find an export market which would double or triple their sales abroad without significant changes or increases id tlpir capital outlay. You, as a lawyer, may not feel that it is your first duty to your client to help him to engage in and increase his sales, but rather to help him with whaiever legal problems he brings to your attention. But I think you would agfee tlat if someone would show you how, without much trouble, you could bring to your' client's attention a very simple procedure guaranteed against loss whereby he could improve his profit mar$n, your client would certainly be willing to give you some sort of a bonr.rs.And this is not at all a pipe dream. The Agency for Internatlonal Develcip ment or AID has a development assistance program designed to promote growth in agricultural and rural development and other progtams in qualified Third World countries. AID does this not by wriHng checks to Third World countries but by making'credits avirilable to Third World countries for specilic purchases of goods necessary to development, in particular of United States goods. Thw most A.I.D. activities involve, a buyer-seller contract betweenprivate pdrties in the United Slates and private parties or the state abroad. Such sales involve no risk whatsoever to the American supplier-he gets an irrevocable letter of credit".in United States cumency from the United States A.I.D. upon completion of the proper paperwork, and upon presentation of proper documentation showing shipment of the gooG to the foreign country. American producers of fertilizer, irrigation equipment, farming lmplements, etc., have all engaged in export under programs, including small A.I.D. manufacturers in Ohio. The office of public affairs of the Agency for International Development, the Cleveland office of the United States Department of Commerce, and the Office of the t.egd Advisor of the United States Department of State, all stand ready to as t0 how assist informed enquiriet American small enterprise may engage in export and improve international trade. This is something which can be of benefit to the profitability of the small businesses in question, to the United States balance of payments, and to the balancesheet of the lawyer clever enough to take advsntage of these opportunities. The second myth concerns alleged irrelevancy of international law materials to tlre bar exam. In fact, typical questions of international law raise typical legal questions such as standing to sue; -- jurisdiction; who are the parties to a legal action; what legal remedies to e tort or a contractual violation exist : the construction of statutes; the interpretation of legal documents; and the drafting of legal documents. lcgal problems on the international sphere can range from tort to contract to criminal law to violation of constitutional norms. The beauty and the virtue of a study of international law is that it enables you to put together elements from all of your courses in a context that shows you how they represent not parochial rules of thumb, but universal norms which can be applicable at all times and at all places where law exists. There is a unique op portunity to study and to consolidatelegal knowledge by putting it a[ together in a good international law course. International law would benefit anyone wbo wanted to take an intelligent approach to analysing the facts and writing the essays on his 'THE Page4 envisions her commitment to this goal as doing everything -reasonably within her power to help these students accomplish their ambitions of becoming attornevs. Experience and commitment are hir assets to the,faculty. l{ew Foculty MenbersMorked Another impressive addition tg the faculty is Richard R. Brown, a native of fiffin, Ohio. Brown received a E,A. from Heidelberg College in 1962and, in the seven years subsequent to his graduation, was an American Government teacher at Elyria High School while pursuing various graduate studies. He received his Master of Education in Businessfrom Bowling Green University and a Juris Doctor degree from Cleveland Marshall Law School. Since that time, Brown has been employed as an attorney for the Cleveland Trust Company, a real estate attorney, and senior analyst for Firestone Tire & Rubber Company. Most recently he was a trust officer for the BankOhio Corporation, during which time he has also been engaged in private practice. Brown's varied experiences in teaching and practice add a significant dimension to the teaching staff. By DepthAnd [rperience By Dan Gillen . Four attorneys and one non-attorney have joined the faculty and staff of the pettit College of Law this autumn. The new selections are marked by depth and experience, both in the practice of law and teaching, affording the law school a more seasoned faculty. The new members are Eugene N. Hanson, Laura F. Rothstein. Richard R. Brown, Robert T. Aegg, and Grace Hume. Professor Hanson, who has recenilv returned to Ada from McGeorge College of Law in Sacramento, California, embodies a continuity between the college of law and its tradition. The professor's return, in many wa1s, is a homecoming.It is a homecoming to the alumni who knew him as the dean for fifteen years and to the residents of Ada who knew him as a neighbor for twenty-eight years. Hanson has returned because of his Iong-standing affection for this institution. along with his belief that his contribution could be greater here. Among the changes t}re former dean has been most impressed with upon his return are the maturity of the law review and the growth of the clinical program. As the law school leaves its adolescense, professor Hanson should serve as an influence of stability and direction in the years ahead. laura F. Rothstein, wife of professor Mark Rothstein, brings to the faculty a dearth of experience in the antitrust field. She was previously a staff attorney for thq Department of Justice, Antitrust Division.' and, most recently, the Ohio Attorney General's Office, Antitrust Section. Ms. Rothstein considers herself a public interest attorney and hopes to pursue this end while teaching at the college of law. She intends to work closely with the minority students and t}te women. in particular. Ms. Rothstein Robert T. Begg is an Assistant professor, in addition to serving as Head Librarian of the Jay P. Taggart Law Library. Begg, previously an assistant law librarian at McDowell Law Center at the University of Akron, has already demonstrated agressiveness and poise in generating supplemental appropriations for the tighilybudgeted law library. Since Begg's arrival in August, he and Dean Baillis have been instrumental in secwing a new position in the library's technical processing division and supplemental funds of $i1.000 for equipment and $10,000for theaurchase of library materials. The new head librarian intends to continue work of alleviating the deficit in personnel, library equipment, and books. He anticipates an efficienily run library with sensible circulation proceedures, and is confident that a working rapport can be developed between the new library staff and the students at the law school. Assisting Mr. Begg as the Assistant L,aw Librarian is Grace Hume. Ms. Hume received her Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Miami at Oxford, Ohio. Later, she received her MSLS from Case Western Reserve in May of 1976. Eventually, Ms. Hume hopes to attain a law degree and direet a university law school library herself. SecondAnnuol Celebrezze F - - r.rt F LOmpeTtTtonLOmmences By StephenGarea Thiity-six second year students are "burning up" the library stacks in preparation for the second annual Anthony J. Celebrezze Moot Court Competition. Research for the briefs has begun, with the pr€s€ntation of the oral agruments to take place during the winter quarter. Tlris year's problem involves a university in the stale of South which, up untit the present, has been all black. To meet certain requirements to obtain additional funds they decided !o integratre. [n so integrating, they kept a young black student out of the univerrity. He has filed suit, contending that he was discriminated against by the univerriti. Gary Negle, Moot Court ExecuHve Boerd . Ohio Northern University College of l,aw Ada, Ohio {5810 member, heads the organizing Celebrezze Committee, which is aided by advisors Richard Bedford, John Belton, Barry Epstein, Robert Jaegers, Katherine Knurek, Philip Mayer, Jeffrey Stnw, Jack Wolfe, George Cosenza,and StephenGarea. The written briefs are due on November r5th, with the oral .arguments beginning with an elimination process on December 8th. The four finalists will compete on Moot Court ftight, February 5, 1977.The sc.oring in the competition is done on a to[al percentage basis of 100, \yiti fifty percent allocaled !o the written brief score and the remaining fifty percent to the oral soores. Tbe four finalists and two other contestants chosen by the Moot Court Board of Advocates will comprise next year's Fall National Team. WRIT Symposium Member of Subcommittee on Aviation Law and Sections_of Insurande Negligence and Compensation Law and Litigation, American Bar Association. Topic: "The 'State of Art' in product Uability: Some New paint for an Old Fence." Mr. Caryl L. picotte, Esq. Senior Attorney-Insuranie Departmen t, Office of the Gen'eral Counsel .nd l9..I9t"tyt Chrysler Corporation, Detroit, Michigan. Topic: "Design Defect." Mr. John J. Kennelly, Esq. Firm of John J. Kennelly & ASsociates, Chicago, Illinois; Former Chairman oi Negligence Committee, Chicago Bar Association; Former president oilllinois Trial Lawyers Association; Former Chairman of Aviation Committee. In_ ternational Academy of Trial Lawyers. Topic: "Liability of Manufactuiers of Aircraft and Ttreir Componentparts." Mr. Nat P. Ozmon, Esq, Firm of Horwitz, Anesi, Ozmon. & Associates,L.T.D., Chicago, Illinois; Former Chairman of Torts CounselSection. Illinois State Bar Association; Former Chairman of Committee on Civil practice, Chicago Bar Association; Forrner President of Illinois Trial Lawyers Association; ATLA, Board of Governors. Topic: "The Preparation of a.products Liability Case." October, 1926 (conr'd fromPogeU Moderator will be professor Jose E. Maldonado of Ohio Northern University, Pettit College of Law. Each lecture will be _ followed by a question and answer session. There is a $4S fee which includes registration, a luncheon, and a valuable handbook covering all aspects of products liability. A $5 late registration fee will be assessedfor payments after October 13. 1976. Registration and instructronal sessions will be held in the Moot Court Auditorium of the Law Building. The luncheonwill be held in the ballroom of Mclntosh Center. Sym_ posium parking will be in the reserved lot at the corner of Lehr and Gilbert Streets behind the law building. Overnight accomodationsare available in nearby Lima, Ohio. Incoming phone messageson the day of the Symposium will be handled througlr the university switchboard: (419) 694-9921. These messages will be posted on the board in the law building. The coordinating committee is headedby George M. Sarap, Michaet Muller, Gerald Heaton,Thomas Straus, Robert Blackstock. Ralph Bove,'and Robert Saltsman. The Symposium should prove to be immensely beheficial to every practitioner and all are invited to attend. For further information call (419)634-9921 ext. 456 (Law Review). fromPose3) Three Myths (cont'd exam. This is not to say that you need not take any course that is dealt with peripherally in international law but rather, that you would be better advised to take a course in international law after having a selection of law school courses from the range available, than to attempt to act upon the old wives tale that you can somehow cover everything in Iaw schoolthat you'll do on the exam, or that law schoolhas nothing to do with anything except what is on the exam. Finally, the third myth is that only a few 'people should take international law; or that it is something that most people don't need..-This brings us to the question of perspective courses. A good many law schools have a requirement that for gtaduation you must take a perspective ceurse, something along the lines of international law, comparative law, jurisprudence, or legal history. The reason for this requirement is in essensewhat I've already said about the virtues of international law: that such courses enable you to put,into perspective the totality of the work you've done-and to understand the law as something more than a caLalogueof welloutlined rules tlat you can memorize and regurgitate upon request for a fee. The law is a profession and no profession can susiain itself without a theory of what it is about. l.awyers must have an understanding of the roots and principles which underlie the profession and make the law what it is. Also, on all levels of society, lawyers are opinion makers, and have an ethical and social duty to make sure thCir o<pressed views on current issues (including international ones which affect each of our lives) have a rational basis in law and in fact. I think it is fair to say that we at Ohio Northern lean too hesvily in the direetion of reguired courses. I, mysell, would tavor the elimination of most specific requirements aftcr the freshman year. I would, however, recommend the adoption of some sort of curriculum reform whereby students in the secondand third years would be expected to indicate an area of emphasis in which they wish to concentrate, and to permit them to concentrate their electives in the courses Lhat would prepare them for that area of emphasis.For example, thene might be an area of emphasis in trial practice; criminal law; civil law; public law; or international law. ln any event, it would be the obligation of the law school to indicate what would be a reasonable mix for the average law student who is not certain of his career objectives and no one can be at this stage even if he's convinced that he will go to work for his father-inlaw or his brother and that they will not fail out or that he will not changehis goals in 5 or 10 years. Unless you can believe that you know exactly-what you're going tp do forever, I think you have to admit that you would probably want to take something from all of these areas to prepare you to go where the opportunities anse. Having said that you don't need to take, - and of course you cannot take, all the courses that most states list as bar cowses (and anyone who takes the trouble to inform himself as to the nature of bar exams would realize that you do not need a 3 hour course in every subject on the list of the bar examiners in order to pass a question of the sort asked on bar exams concerning tlrese topics), I would require a perspective course be among those taken in the last two years of your formal, full-time legal education, and I am prepared to defend this position at the appropriate time and place in discussion with students and faculty alike. Senotg "o'0"r", Stephen Garea, 24 yearold graduate of Youngstown Sta0e with an accounting degfbe, from Youngstown. He has spent the past two summers clerking in the Mahoney Couty Prosecutor's Office. Michael Marando, 25 yearold Ohio University graduate with a history degee, from Struthers, Ohio. He also, has been clerking for the past two summers. Petitions are currently being distributed for executive committee elections for the positions of President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, Parliamentarian, and Sergeant-at-Arms, which will be held on October 27th.