CUALawyer - The Columbus School of Law
Transcription
CUALawyer - The Columbus School of Law
cualawyer The Catholic University Of America • Columbus School of Law Promises to Keep Alumni New and Old Strengthen Commitment to CUA Law Spring/Summer 2006 FROM THE Dear CUA Law School Community: I have completed my first academic year as dean of the law school, and I can say without question that it has been one of the most fascinating, educational and fulfilling experiences of my professional career. All that I have learned about the law school this year fills me with great hope and excitement for the future. I hope that you find this issue of CUA Lawyer to be informative and inspiring. As you may recall from our fall 2005 issue, we focused on the anniversary celebrations of our special institutes and programs of excellence. In the spring semester, many of these programs sponsored outstanding symposia and lectures about topical matters facing our world and legal systems. This issue of CUA Lawyer will give you a look into some of these fascinating programs, which included topics on the important and complex issue of access to high-speed broadband technology throughout our nation’s remote and rural communities; analysis of Medicare’s expansion to cover prescription drugs; procedural reforms to immigration law; the U.S. trade imbalance with China; as well as a lecture by Sen. Lisa Murkowski on how global warming is affecting Alaska. This spring, the law school faculty completed a review and redesign of our Dean’s Desk LL.M. degree program that will provide future domestic and foreign degree candidates with the opportunity to concentrate their studies in areas of specialization including Commercial Law, Communications Law, Securities Law, Estates and Trusts Law, Comparative and International Law or Jurisprudence. These offerings will enable applicants to take advantage of program areas that the law school has always enjoyed as strongholds in the curriculum. We would also like to introduce you to our newest full-time faculty members, Professor Suzette Malveaux, who comes to us from The University of Alabama, and Professor Elizabeth Winston, who comes to us from Whittier Law School in California. We are also looking forward to getting to know two visiting faculty members next year. Professor Steve Smith of the University of Virginia will visit at the law school during the spring of 2007, and Professor Mary Leary with the National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse will be with us for the entire 2006-07 academic year. Of course in introducing new faculty, we must also say goodbye and a heartfelt thanks to retiring faculty members Professor Leroy Clark and Dean Bill Fox, as well as one of our most devoted adjunct faculty members, Judge “Sparky” Gierke. Our students demonstrated advocacy skills and determination in several moot court competitions that brought the law school distinction. We are very proud to share news of these activities including our first international competition in the Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot, held in Vienna, Austria; our first appearance in the Hispanic Bar Association’s Constitutional Law Moot Competition in Seattle; and our appearance in the finals of the 2006 Sutherland Cup Moot Court Competition held here at the law school. During the year, I made it a priority to travel around the country to visit with as many alumni as possible, to not only let you know about recent developments at the law school and to share my vision for the future, but also to enlist your support as we move forward. It is my intention to continue this outreach and to visit with more alumni throughout the country this coming academic year. Studying at the Columbus School of Law has always been, and remains to this day, an invaluable investment of time and energy. Its intangibles are immeasurable. Our students benefit from a super faculty, a richly diverse academic program, a topnotch library and insider access to Washington, D.C., the nation’s legal epicenter. Yet, one of the richest resources of all is you, the 10,000 alumni who have gone before. Many of you have loyally and generously given back to the law school. Whether it be through your time and talent serving as mentors, career counselors, judging moot court competitions, sharing your knowledge and experiences in a legal specialty, or writing a check, every investment that you make back to the law school has a ripple effect, smoothing the path ahead for today’s students and positively affecting their lives in ways both seen and unseen. Someday in turn, they will remember your example and do the same for the next generation. To all of those who have supported the law school, or will in the future, this issue of CUA Lawyer is a heart-felt thank you for the difference you have made. Veryl V. Miles Dean and Professor of Law cualawyer The Catholic University Of America • Columbus School of Law Volume XXV • Number 1 • Spring/Summer 2006 Features DISTINGUISHED PRACTITIONERS 10 Two Prominent Alumni Return to Teach at CUA Law COMMENCEMENT 2006 12 Remember the “Twin Daughters of Hope” 12 20 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY 14 The Inheritance: A Tradition of Giving 24 Sustains CUA Law Departments A LEADER BIDS FAREWELL F r o m t h e D e a n ’s D e s k inside cover 24 Eyewitness to History “All that I have learned about the law school this year fills me with great hope and excitement for the future.” IDIMW (I DO IT MY WAY) W h a t ’s N e w 3 26 A Confluence of Two Charming Traditions F a c u l t y N e w s 37 A FINAL SALUTE 26 28 Most Honorable Discharge Publications Professional Activities Conferences & Symposia Community Service Recent Media IN REMEMBRANCE To m o r r o w ’s A l u m n i 36 30 A Master Professor of Civility and Grace A l u m n i N e w s 43 Highlights 30 14 4 6 9 Edel-Vis Blooms 32 34 Transitions In Memoriam, 52 All in the Family, 53 Cross Country, 54 C a l e n d a r o f E v e n t s inside back cover Welcome to the Legal Profession CCLS Professors: A Significant Presence at the 2006 CLE Conference Remarkable Events Cover photography by Hilary Schwab Office of Legal Career Services Fall 2006 Program Calendar THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA Columbus School of Law The Office of Legal Career Services needs your help! If you are interested in participating in mock interviews, being a mentor or serving on a panel, please e-mail Jessica Heywood at jobs@law.edu. cualawyer S p r i n g / S u m m e r 2 0 0 6 • Vo l . 2 5 , N o . 1 Fall Recruiting Q & A Session Monday, July 24 4 p.m. OCI Interviewing Tips Monday, Aug. 14 4 p.m. FALL MOCK INTERVIEW (LCS is looking for alumni volunteers. Interviews take place at the offices of the alumni.) Thursday, Aug. 17 All Day Thomas M. Haederle Associate Creative Director Publications Manager Design/Art Direction Veryl V. Miles Dean and Professor of Law William J. Wagner OCI: On-Campus Interview begins Tuesday, Aug. 22 All Day Federal Government Honors Program Wednesday, Aug. 30 4 p.m. DOJ Honors Program and Summer Intern Program Thursday, Aug. 31 Boston Interview Program (Interviews take place in Boston.) Friday, Sept. 1 PUBLIC INTEREST WEEK Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Mara Duffy Associate Dean for External and Student Affairs Michael R. Kanne Associate Dean for Administration and Finance Margaret A. King Associate Dean for Institutional Advancement 4 p.m. All Day Editor in Chief Mara Duffy Gina Moorhead VC Graphics UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS Very Rev. David M. O’Connell, C.M. President John J. Convey Week of Sept. 4, 2006 Equal Justice Works Fellowships Public Interest Networking Reception Tuesday, Sept. 5 Wednesday, Sept. 6 Thursday, Sept. 7 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. Congressional Research Service Tuesday, Sept. 12 All Day Boston Lawyer’s Group Job Fair Wednesday, Sept. 13 4 p.m. Frank G. Persico Presidential Management Fellows Thursday, Sept. 21 4 p.m. Robert M. Sullivan State Law Clerk Monday, Oct. 16 4 p.m. Beyond OCI: Plan B for 2nd, 3rd and 4th Years Wednesday, Oct. 25 4 p.m. George E. Garvey C. Joseph Nuesse Julie Englund Susan D. Pervi W. Michael Hendricks Craig W. Parker Victor Nakas Provost Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies Provost Emeritus Vice President for Finance and Administration, Treasurer Vice President for Student Life Vice President for University Relations Vice President for University Development Vice President for Enrollment Management Associate Vice President and General Counsel Associate Vice President for Public Affairs Alumni are encouraged to send news about themselves and other alumni. Please send these items, as well as letters to the editor, comments, requests and address changes to: Editor, CUA Lawyer, Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064 Discover excellence. Experience success. 2 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 E-mail: haederle@law.edu Phone: 202-319-5438 Fax: 202-319-4004 www.law.edu W H AT ’ S New CUA Law to Expand LL.M. Program S ix new LL.M. programs will be available during the 2006-2007 academic year in: Commercial Law, Communications Law, Securities Law, Estates and Trusts Law, Comparative and International Law, and Jurisprudence. The LL.M. degree at The Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law offers an advanced program of study in law that seeks to inculcate a general maturity and depth of knowledge at a level surpassing that of graduates with the J.D. degree. At the same time, it also aims to ensure consolidation of significant strength by each student enrolled, within a curricular area of particular interest. Through its more advanced level of preparation, The Catholic University of America’s LL.M. degree equips the student to be better prepared for the practice of law, but also to be ready to contribute to the resolution of society’s problems. In all of its concentrations, the LL.M. program seeks to provide students with tools to represent clients effectively, but also to advance social justice. The LL.M. program consciously aims at attracting outstanding students from abroad for the sake of promoting transnational cooperation in a time of rapid globalization, as well as for the greater enrichment and diversity of its own academic environment. For more information, including concentration descriptions and requirements, and to receive application information for the LL.M. program at The Catholic University of America, please e-mail Sarah E. Rewerts, director of admissions, at rewerts@law.edu. WE NEED YOU! Legal Career Services is Looking for Volunteers Be an interviewer during LCS’ Fall Mock Interview Program on Thursday, Aug. 17, 2006 The Mock Interview Program is one of LCS’ most popular programs, with 80 students typically participating. Interviewers do not have to travel to CUA to participate — the students come to you! All interviews take place in the office of the participating alumni. LCS is looking for up to two hours of your time to conduct four interviews The Mock Interview Program is an easy, rewarding way to get involved. If you are able to participate, please contact us at jobs@law.edu. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 3 A DEBUT Abroad Edel-Vis Bloomsat CUA Law T international commercial arbitrahe hills were alive with the tion moot in Europe. sound of mooting in Vienna, That didn’t make sense to Austria, during the week of Professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge. April 6–14. For the first time in Having practiced for several the 13-year history of the annual years in Vienna early in his Willem C. Vis International career, Rutledge was well Commercial Arbitration Moot, the aware of the prestige conferred accomplished voices of students Confident first-timers, the CUA moot court team turned upon a law school that profrom The Catholic University of duced a successful showing in America Columbus School of heads in Austria. Back: Paul Alvarez, Nate Bruner, Carolyn the Vis Moot Court. Law joined in the ringing interna- Manning, Professor Bo Rutledge, Derek Burrows. “Having attended this as a tional legal choir. Front: Malou Rodgers, Jane Kim, Raeka Safai, judge, I saw the networking Astride a world stage, com- Jennifer Hill-Wilson. benefits for students and the peting in the largest multinational promotional opportunities for the law that gathered in the picturesque capimoot court competition of any kind, school,” says Rutledge. “It’s a unique tal to showcase their skills. Facing stuthe CUA squad placed in the top third opportunity to think outside of the dent moot court teams not only from tier among 154 teams from 60 nations box, culturally, because students other countries, but grounded in very argue against students from another different legal traditions, the five-man, legal culture.” three-woman Catholic team more The popular professor got to work than held its own. organizing CUA’s inaugural team. He “We impressed them. They solicited and reviewed more than 30 may not have thought much of us applications, eventually selecting eight going into the competition, but they students to represent the law school. thought a lot of us coming out of Most students had some relevant the competition,” said rising thirdbackground through their participation year team member and captain in the school’s summer program in Raeka Safai. Krakow, Poland. The goal of the Vis Arbitral Moot Beginning in September 2005, is to foster the study of international team members burned the midnight commercial law and arbitration for oil, writing 35-page briefs to very resolution of international business complex legal questions. Not only did disputes through its application to a they receive no class credit for their concrete problem of a client. It furlabors, they received no guarantees ther aims to train tomorrow’s leaders that the trip would even be possible, in methods of alternative dispute resgiven the high costs associated with olution. Although the Columbus traveling to Vienna. School of Law has an enviable track “I told them when they signed on, record of success among the various the money was not in the bank,” moot court competitions in which it recalls Coach Rutledge. “They spent all competes each year, it had not paid fall writing briefs in the hope that the any particular attention to the huge money would be there.” The timeless beauty of Vienna beckoned, While team members were but the disciplined CUA squad saved its stretching their minds, the professor was busy stretching budgets. Donors sightseeing until after the competition. ©iStockphoto.com/Loic Bernard The hills were alive with the sound of mooting 4 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Burning the midnight oil. Team members spent evenings “mooting” each other and preparing for the The members of the 2005-2006 Catholic University Vis Arbitral Moot Court team wish to thank the following individuals and organizations for their sponsorship: next day’s arguments. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld David Donohoe, 1962 J. Conor Gallagher, 2005 were found from in and out of the law school, and fund raising jumped significantly when the first student briefs were completed and shown. Like raising capital for a new business venture, the wallets opened wider after investors were shown a concrete product. Within the space of a month, enough money came in to cover the plane tickets. By the end, $13,600 was raised, which was enough to get the job done. On March 30, the team jetted to the fabled city of Mozart. They felt they had done all they could to ready themselves for their first turn on this big new stage. Students spent the year practicing intensively and mastering the fine distinctions between civil law and common law, an understanding essential to success in the Vis Arbitral Moot. Many of Professor Rutledge’s faculty colleagues pitched in to help, “mooting” the team by serving as judges in the practice rounds. When the weeklong arguments finally began, the CUA team faced law students from China, Belgium and Germany. Malou Rodgers, 2006, said its debut performance clearly put CUA law on the map. “This competition was great for Catholic,” says Rodgers. “We represented the law school very well. We were very polished, both in and out of the courtroom. We put ourselves in a group that alumni can be proud of.” The team’s performance was all the more impressive because it chose to ignore the popular strategy of sending only the most gifted speakers into Stanley and Linda Glod Good Will Publishers, Inc. Gorman & Williams P.C. oral argument competition. “This allows [other teams] to enhance their chances at advancing, but it really excludes some team members,” Rutledge says. “We opted to give all eight of our team members a chance to participate in the oral arguments because the moot is not only a competition—it’s also an educational experience. All our team members had the skills to succeed in the oral arguments, and I wanted them to learn what it really takes to prepare for one.” Despite the deliberate decision to favor inclusion over winning at all costs, the CUA squad still came within a whisker of qualifying for the elimination rounds, falling short of advancing by fewer than two points. Forsaking Vienna’s glittering nightlife, the team stayed in at night, coaching each other and helping teammates ready themselves for the following day’s arguments. “It’s the most collegial experience I’ve had in law school,” reflects Safai. “It’s like watching your kid, you’re so proud of your team members.” Other U.S. law schools that fielded teams to the Vis Arbitral Moot included Georgetown, Columbia, George Washington and Harvard. Catholic University’s poise and preparation made an indelible impression on them, Safai believes. The Columbus School of Law moot court team did not make it to the Margaret A. King, Associate Dean for Institutional Advancement McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP N. Marshall Meyers Very Rev. David M. O’Connell, C.M., President, The Catholic University of America Alyson Oswald, 2005 Joseph R. Profizer Dr. Frank Riel Armstrong Robinson, 2004 Sodexho, Inc. Craig Trainor, 2005 William Wagner, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP Wilson-Epes Printing Company final 32 teams its first time out, but team members and Professor Rutledge are very encouraged by its terrific showing overall. Sounding rather like a wellknown Austrian bodybuilder-actorpolitician, Raeka Safai says simply, “I’ll be back.” Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 5 The State of the Law A N A LY S I S : Welcome to the Legal Profession Circuit Judge Richard C. Tallman U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit I The last weekend in March was a good one for Catholic University’s law school. Its Sutherland Cup moot court team, competing in the nation’s oldest national moot court competition, finished as a finalist in the field, close behind eventual winner The Ohio State University. The CUA team showed the right stuff before an impressive panel of jurists, including final round judges Hon. David Sentelle, U. S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, United States Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas and Hon. Richard C. Tallman, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. April 1st also happened to be Admitted Students Day at CUA law. The law school was brimming with young men and women who were close to making a final matriculation decision. Impressed by the performance of CUA’s Sutherland Cup squad, their sense of the school was further enhanced by the high esteem in which it is held by Judge Tallman. His remarks to the admitted students, condensed here and reprinted with his permission, offer a window into one accomplished jurist’s thoughts about the legal profession, the court he serves on, and The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law. 6 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 When you graduate from law school, you will receive more than a parchment that will hang in a place of honor on your office wall. You will be welcomed into membership in a sacred and honorable profession that protects the freedom of the individual and places his rights on a higher pedestal than the interests of the State. It is a profession founded in the JudeoChristian traditions of respect for the dignity of the person and the love of one’s fellow man. It is a system of laws, and not of men; a system that holds as its cardinal principle that no man is above the law. In this country, the rule of law embraces the paradigm that the Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land and that our government is subject to various checks and balances, and ultimately beholden to the consent of the governed for its legitimacy and our nation’s very existence. Senator J. William Fulbright once complained that “the law is by its very nature a buttress of the status quo.” But it has been used by men and women of great vision to disrupt an unjust status quo, and to prevent a just, yet unpopular, status quo from being adulterated. These great men and women have employed the law so that many of you can be here today to join what was once a very exclusive male fraternity, Rex Bohn - Images.com want to thank The Catholic University of America and its Columbus School of Law for inviting me to speak to you this afternoon. It is a special opportunity to address a group of students who are about to take the first steps of their legal careers, so I tread with great care and some trepidation in the hope of not dissuading you from your interest in the law. As you make your final decision on where you wish to attend law school, I want to share with you today my own devotion to the rule of law; a calling about which I am unabashedly passionate. open only to those of privilege and wealth. Indeed, as if responding directly to Senator Fulbright, the late Judge William Bryant, the first black chief judge of a U.S. federal district court and one of the first black assistant U.S. attorneys, said that if not for lawyers, “I’d still be three-fifths of a man.” This piece of paper will arm you with a very powerful arrow in your quiver: one that will enable you to do well and do good. Many distinguished alumni from the Columbus School of Law have used their education to do well and do good. Alice Fisher, with whom I labor on the Criminal Rules Advisory Committee of the U.S. Judicial Conference, is a 1992 graduate, and currently serves as the assistant attorney general in charge of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. Shireen Fisher, a 1976 grad, was appointed to serve as one of two U.S. judges to the international War Crimes Chamber of the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo. Brian Moran, a 1988 grad, was reelected in November 2005 as the delegate from the 46th Legislative District of Virginia. Tom Catliota, a 1983 grad, was appointed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit as a U.S. bankruptcy judge for the District of Maryland. Cathy Catterson, who obtained her undergraduate degree here at Catholic University, serves as the clerk of my court, and is nationally recognized for her expertise in court administration. Rafael Prohias, a 1994 grad, is no doubt the envy of his fellow alums as the senior corporate counsel of Barcardi-Martini, Inc., based in Coral Gables, Fla., and New York City. Many other alumni of the Columbus School of Law hold partnership and associate positions at prestigious law firms across the country. And, most important to me, Emily Saylor, a member of the Class of 2006, will be clerking in my chambers starting in the fall of 2007 after she spends a year working with the Washington, D.C., firm of Hogan & Hartson. The breadth and diversity of these and other successful Columbus School of Law alumni demonstrate the professional flexibility of a law degree. Indeed, the contributions that have been made by graduates of this fine institution can be seen internationally and domestically, in the federal government, in Congress, the state and federal judiciaries, state legislatures, corporate boardrooms, private and public law firms, state and national bar associations, as well as in the bars and restaurants that serve Barcardi Rum. You have chosen a particularly opportune time to join the legal profession. We stand at the cusp of breathtaking advances in science and technology that will have a profound impact on the development of the law and our relationship to one another: Internet privacy issues, worldwide personal jurisdiction in cyberspace, human cloning, bioethics, and the human genome mapping project with its attendant question of access to DNA profiles by insurance underwriters, are but a few of the legal challenges we must address. As the law struggles to keep pace with emerging science and technology, you will have a unique opportunity to put your hand on the tiller and influence the course of the law, whether that direction comes from policy, advocacy, or adjudication. This work has already started. This term, the Supreme Court has decided to hear five patent cases, the highest number since 1966. As technology attracts more vendors and consumers to the marketplace of ideas, lawmakers take a more active role in establishing the rules that govern the transactions, lawyers become more involved in executing the transactions, and courts become more involved in adjudicating the disputes. We also stand at the cusp of a monumental period in our nation’s history: an era of profound impact on the development of the law, and a time that empowers lawyers with the tools and ability to influence that development. The war on terror has raised important civil rights, national security, and detention issues. These concerns have also flooded into the immigration arena. As I’m sure you have heard from the media over the past few weeks, proposed changes in the law have sparked a nationwide debate about the most effective and humane immigration policy, and which courts should be responsible for adjudicating the legal disputes that arise in the complex web of immigration law. Moreover, technology has brought with it an increase in international business transactions, as well as an increase in transnational crime. A growing role in the global community Judge Richard C. Tallman was confirmed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in May 2000. “Many distinguished alumni from the Columbus School of Law have used their education to do well and do good.” Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 7 has brought with it an interest and need for experts in international and foreign law. The Columbus School of Law offers the unique opportunity to participate in the Krakow summer program in Poland, where Pope John Paul II served as archbishop; and at the Comparative and International Law Institute, where you can study subjects including comparative constitutional law, human rights and international intellectual property. The school offers you a dizzying array of tools to take full advantage of the professional flexibility of a law degree. For those interested in clinical programs, you will have several opportunities to hone your advocacy skills, both as a courtroom and appellate lawyer, and as a mediator and problem solver for real clients. Students at Catholic University also have the unique opportunity to study the law here in Washington, D.C., the epicenter of government and justice. This is where the law is created, enforced and interpreted, sometimes to its death and sometimes to its immortality. Here, you can study the law in the shadow of Congress, the White House, and the Supreme Court. You will have ready access to esteemed jurists like Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who will later this afternoon preside over the final round of the Sutherland Cup Moot Court Competition. You will also have the fortuitous opportunity to be in Washington, D.C., for the next presidential election, which impacts this community like no other hamlet in the nation. Those of us who hail from the “other Washington” sometimes wonder whether there is an invisible force field in addition to the three time zones and nearly 3,000 miles which separate us. Perhaps that may explain why my court, the 9th Circuit, sometimes steps to the beat of a different 8 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 “The school offers you a dizzying array of tools to take full advantage of the professional flexibility of a law degree.” drummer. Speaking of the 9th Circuit, you may also have an opportunity during the next three years to witness an historic event. Much media attention has been focused lately on congressional efforts to split the 9th Circuit, carving out a new 12th Circuit that would include Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Arizona and Alaska. The 9th Circuit currently has over 17,000 cases on its docket (28 percent of the entire national appellate caseload), almost twice the number of cases as the next largest circuit, and we cover 40 percent of our nation’s land and serve almost 60 million people. We have 47 judges on our court of appeals, more than twice as many as the next largest circuit, and far more than the 1st Circuit, which has only seven judges. This large roster prevents our court from holding a full en banc panel. As a law student at this institution, you will be able to witness Congress struggle with the perplexing question of “how big is too big?” as it debates ways to increase the efficiency of administering justice by splitting the 9th Circuit. Opponents of the split try to characterize the effort as nothing more than a partisan assault on the independence of the federal judiciary; an overreaction to unfavorable rulings like the Pledge of Allegiance case. But there is nothing inherently liberal or conservative about the 9th Circuit; it depends on which judges are drawn for a particular panel. And partisan arguments have no room in this debate. Indeed, those of us who think it is a court in need of reorganization to better serve our growing populace try to focus the debate on issues like internal conflicts among three-judge panel decisions; the lack of full court representation in limited en banc rehearings; the increasing delays in processing appeals; and the absurdity of allowing a court to grow so large that its judges lose the collegiality and frequent sittings with one another so vital to appellate decision-making that only a smaller court can offer. In conclusion, I repeat my theme that attending law school is an important step in your professional endeavors no matter where you may ultimately end up. Although you will spend the next three years mastering the technical rules that govern the adjudication of substantive disputes, do not lose sight of the fact that these technical rules are the foundation on which justice is built. And do not forget that these rules must be applied fairly and consistently to have any force. Unlike the legislative or executive branches, the judicial branch does not control the purse or the military. We are the man behind the curtain in Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz, and our legitimacy depends on the quality of our opinions and the reasonableness of our decisions. For ultimately, it is the ability to maintain the respect of the people for the quality of reasoned decisions that ensures the survival of the “least dangerous branch” of our government. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak with you this afternoon. It is an honor to be here, and I wish you every success in your future endeavors. PEER Assessment CCLS Professors: A Significant Presence at the 2006 Conference on Clinical Legal Education T he professors of Columbus Community Legal Services, the legal clinic of The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law, were among the key presenters, participants and honorees at the 2006 Conference on Clinical Legal Education, held April 30–May 3 in New York City. Sponsored by the Association of American Law Schools, this year’s clinical conference was the largest ever, with more than 500 registrants. Among the highlights for CUA’s clinical faculty: • Professor Margaret Barry received the Outstanding Advocate Award from the Clinical Legal Education Association. Professor Barry is a former president of CLEA, and the honor recognized her outstanding work and advocacy for the concerns of clinical education and teachers within the ABA and AALS. In presenting the prestigious award to Barry, Professor Kimberly O’Leary of the Thomas M. Cooley Law School in Lansing, Mich., said “Margaret’s name was suggested by so many different people it was almost as if her nomination sprung from a consensus that she was the only and obvious choice.” Professor Barry also co-led a session on collaboration in teaching. She and her co-presenters focused on ways that clinical teachers can encourage students to work together effectively. • Professors Leah Wortham and Catherine Klein were two of the four speakers at the opening plenary session on “Making International Cooperation a Two-Way Exchange: Learning with Our Partners.” Their presentation traced the 10-year history of collaboration between the Columbus School of Law and the Jagiellonian and Koêminski Law Schools in Poland. Professor Leah Wortham Instructor Faith Mullen Professor Catherine Klein Professor Margaret Barry • Instructor Faith Mullen was selected as a working group co-facilitator for a civil law group at the conference. These smaller topical sessions are an important component of the annual conference, and it’s a recognized professional honor to be chosen to lead one. In collaboration with a colleague from Penn State, Mullen also prepared and presented a poster session highlighting the values of storytelling and narrative. The presentation was titled “Work Stories, Stories Work: Storytelling for Meaning-Making and Pedagogical Improvement in Clinical Legal Education.” • Professors Klein, Wortham and Barry contributed significantly to organizing a regional conference, “International Collaboration in Teaching, Learning, Lawyering, and Scholarship,” held on May 3–4, 2006. The event was sponsored by the Organization of the Global Alliance for Justice Conference and held in conjunction with the AALS clinical conference. The CUA team set the sche ule, reviewed speaker proposals, organized panels and identified moderators. Professors Klein and Barry each served as moderators for one of the sessions. More than 80 people registered for the tremendously successful conference, which included discussions from law professors about the state of legal education in countries such as China, El Salvador, Great Britain, Moldova, Israel, Peru and Mexico. • At a clinical scholarship workshop at New York University on April 29, professors Klein and Wortham joined with colleagues from the Jagiellonian University to discuss an article regarding their collaboration on the comparative simulation, which also was the subject of the plenary. Professor Barry made a presentation on her work-inprogress on mediation and family court. Professor Wortham presented her work on analysis of the environment for legal education reform. All in all, it was a busy weekend for the clinical faculty that surely made an impression on their peers from law schools across the country. Said Professor Wortham, “We clinical folks at the conference in New York City are very proud of how well CUA has shown itself here.” They have every right to be proud, and the Columbus School of Law is proud of them as well. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 9 D I S T I N G U I S H E D P R A C T I T I O N E R S Two Prominent Alumni Return to Teach at CUA Law Edward J. Damich Edward J. Damich, 1976, chief judge, U.S. Court of Federal Claims, has joined the Columbus School of Law as a distinguished lecturer in intellectual property law. Judge Damich will teach an advanced copyright seminar during the spring 2007 term. Judge Damich was appointed to the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in 1998 by President Bill Clinton, and four years later was designated chief judge by President George W. Bush. During the mid-1990s, Judge Damich served as chief intellectual property counsel for the Senate Judiciary Committee, where he assisted the chairman, Sen. Orrin Hatch, with the passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the most significant change in copyright law since the Copyright Act of 1976. He also worked on the Omnibus Patent Act and was a member of the U.S. delegation at the World Intellectual Property Organization diplomatic conference. In 1992, Judge Damich was appointed to be a commissioner of the Copyright Royalty Tribunal. Judge Damich has been a professor of law at George Mason University and at the Delaware Law School of Widener University. He has taught intellectual property subjects, such as copyright law, unfair trade practices and international protection of intellectual property. In addition, he has also taught contracts, property, trusts and estates, jurisprudence and legislation. Judge Damich is the author of numerous articles, mostly on copyright law, but also on jurisprudence, land use planning and criminal law. Judge Damich was appointed to the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in 1998 by President Bill Clinton, and four years later was designated chief judge by President George W. Bush. 10 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Kathleen Q. Abernathy Nominated by President George W. Bush and confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate to a four-year term in 2001, Abernathy served as a commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission. Kathleen Q. Abernathy, 1983, will become Distinguished Practitioner-in-Residence at the Columbus School of Law beginning the 2006-2007 academic year. Working closely with the Institute for Communications Law Studies, the former FCC commissioner will act as a faculty adviser to its various programs and initiatives, including the National Telecom Moot Court Team, CommLaw Conspectus: Journal of Communications Law and Policy, and activities of the institute itself. Abernathy will also chair a new advisory and steering committee created on behalf of the institute. Currently a partner at the Washington, D.C., law firm of Akin Gump, Abernathy advises clients on a wide variety of policy and regulatory issues related to the telecommunications and media fields. Immediately prior to joining Akin Gump, Abernathy served as a commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission. Nominated by President George W. Bush and confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate to a fouryear term in 2001, she was responsible for representing the public interest in each of the policy areas under the FCC’s jurisdiction, including wireless; domestic and international telecommunications; satellite; broadcast; cable; communications equipment manufacturers; and broadband, IP and other advanced communications technologies. She was intimately involved in developing and implementing domestic policy in each of these fields. Before joining the FCC as a commissioner, Abernathy served as vice president of public policy at BroadBand Office Communications, as vice president of regulatory affairs at US West, and as vice president of federal regulatory at AirTouch Communications (a predecessor company to Cingular Wireless). Pictured are members of the 2006 Graduation Class Gift Leadership Committee. Their efforts resulted in a record-breaking class gift in both participation and dollars raised. Congratulations and Many Thanks to the 2006 Graduating Class of The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law! We extend our heartfelt thanks to the members of the Class of 2006 who participated in the Graduation Class Gift. As of May 19, 2006, more than 40 percent of the class participated in this special law school initiative, committing $63,000 in gifts and pledges to the Law School Annual Fund, LRAP and other programs! Listed below are the individuals who have made a special commitment to the law school in celebration of their commencement day. Many of these gifts were made in memory of classmate Marcus Page. On behalf of the entire law school community, we thank you and wish you success and happiness in the months and years to come! Nada Abdelaal Alex DuFour Behnaz Lavian Marie-Louise M. Rodgers Diane Adams-Strickland Christine Dulla Kelly Loud Timothy D. Rogers Dave Allred Saiza Elayda Michael Magidson Emily Saylor Paul Alvarez Judy Faubert Rachel Mangas John Schlageter Michael Anderson Kayleen M. Fitzgerald Carolyn Manning Rebecca N. Schwartz *Amanda Axeen *Matthew C. Ford Daniel J. Marcinak Emily Scruggs *J. Israel Balderas Jori Frahler Cecilia McGregor Denise Senese Stockton D. Banfield Andrew Glover Susan McMaster Meredith Skowonski Lauren Baum Michael Gorfinkle Stacey Mescall Andrew Smith Nathaniel Borreli *Katie Grassini Heather Meyers Christopher Spevak Sara Bromberg Lori Grazio Johanna Mihok Alexander H. Spiegler Craig W. Bruney Dean E. Griffith Patrick Morand Casey Symington Derek Burrows Liana Grossman Melissa Morgan Evan Taylor Paul Calvo Robert P. Hagan James F. Morgan Julie Thomas Chris Canter Mia G. Hayes Claire Morisset *Erica Tritta *Kaethe Carl Justin Heminger *Bridget Mullaney Jennifer Vaughan Nicola Castel Laura Henderson Kristen Mullen Tresa Vidayathil Kerri Castellini *Doug Herrema Cathleen Reilly Myers Desmarie Waterhouse Jason Cheek Jennifer Hill-Wilson Diana Norris James Weiss *Margaret Cholis Phu Huynh Margaret O'Neil Laura Weston Candice Cleere David Illingworth Laurie K. Parks Ron Whitworth *Kathleen Connolly Betsy L. Johnson Meredith C. Petravick Jennifer Whitworth Adam W. Cook Kimberly Johnson James Petrungaro M. Lee Wood Laurie Crawford Alison Keller-Micheli Stephen Prest Rachael Wood *James Daniels Brian P. Knestout *Anna Priddy Jeane Yoo Tracy M. DeJesus *Kendra L. Kosko Jessica Purcell Stefanie Zalewski Jessica Zarrella Adrienne Y. Denysyk Timothy Kotsis Rajir J. Raj Tamara Droubi Elizabeth Latwin Robert C. Riegle * 2006 Graduation Class Gift Leadership Committee (This list includes gifts and pledges made on or before May 19, 2006. All class gift participants will be acknowledged in our fall 2006 Annual Report of Donors. Additional gifts and pledges can be made through August 2006 to be included in the Annual Report.) Spring 2003 / C U A L A W Y E R 11 H O O D E D A N D H O P E F U L : C O M M E N C E M E N T 2 0 0 6 2006 Law School Graduates Urged to Remember “The Twin Daughters of Hope” “My friends, you are the best and brightest of America, and we need you now more than ever.” 12 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 R emember always to serve others, a refrain familiar to the Columbus School of Law’s Class of 2006 throughout their three years of law school, was sounded with passion and conviction one final time during the commencement address delivered by Rep. Rick Renzi (R-Ariz). A 2002 alumnus of the law school’s evening program, Renzi graduated with a certificate earned from its well-known Law and Public Policy Program. It was evident from his commencement remarks that the program’s mission, focus and goals are still very much a part of his public spirit, four years after graduation. The second-term congressman urged the approximately 300 new law school graduates to bear in mind through their lives and future careers what St. Augustine referred to as the “Two lovely daughters of hope: that of anger and that of courage. The anger to see that which should never be, and the courage to fight against it.” H O O D E D A N D H O P E F U L : C O M M E N C E M E N T 2 0 0 6 The 117th annual commencement of The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law was held on Saturday, May 27, 2006, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. The warm and sunny afternoon was brushed with a light breeze that provided the perfect weather counterpoint to the students’ mood of joy and exultation. “My friends, you are the best and brightest of America, and we need you now more than ever. We need you to fall deeply in love with your country. We need you to step forward as patriots and serve the greater good, to help the downtrodden, the underprivileged and the least among us. We need men and women of your caliber to be filled with anger and courage and great hope for this country to help change the remaining areas of need in our own backyard,” said Renzi. Elected to congress barely six months after earning his law degree, Renzi represents the largest Native American population in the nation. His call to public service, he said, was fired largely by the poverty, alcoholism and hopelessness that is still rampant across many tribal reservations in his district. The reminder to serve the greater good echoed from many speakers Above: Another class successfully launched as Dean Veryl V. Miles presents paper proof of three years of hard work. Left: Four years after his own graduation from CUA’s law school, Rep. Rick Renzi returns to deliver its commencement address. throughout the afternoon. Chosen to deliver the official address on behalf of his classmates, Israel Balderas praised the long history of volunteerism and social action that is typical of CUA law students. “We’re indispensable not just because we say ‘Is there a need?’ but also because we say ‘I’ll do it,’” noted Balderas. Law school Dean Veryl V. Miles praised the “wonderful compassion” demonstrated by the law school community last fall by the way it accepted and embraced fellow law students who enrolled at CUA on an emergency basis, displaced from their Bright smiles, high spirits and a possible recruit for the Class of 2026 marked a beautiful and joyous day. own classrooms in New Orleans by the fury of Hurricane Katrina. “You welcomed them here to heal with your friendship,” she said. The dean also made special mention of the inestimable contributions to the law school from professors Leroy Clark, Harvey Zuckman and William F. Fox Jr. The retirements of the three long-tenured faculty members officially took effect at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year. In an unusual move, the university awarded The P r e s i d e n t ’s Medal, the highest award it can bestow, to two recipients this year. The first was presented to retiring Adjunct Professor H.F. “Sparky” Gierke, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. The second was awarded to Congressman Renzi. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 13 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY The Inheritance B y To m H a e d e r l e For young men and women on the verge of launching a career in law, alumni are the mirror reflecting into their futures—the successful attorneys they anticipate they will someday become. 14 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY A Tradition of Giving Sustains CUA Law We think of “commencement” as that joyous ceremony that emphatically stamps the final period on the end of a law school career. After all, the word itself connotes a beginning, the inauguration of a fresh new start. Luckily for the Columbus School of Law, many of its graduates over the years, along with launching their outstanding legal careers, have also chosen to commence a new relationship with it. They quickly transform from focused, hardworking students to generous and supportive alumni. Some offer financial help, others volunteer their knowledge, guidance and professional expertise. All of these incredible gifts come from the heart and every one of them touches the life of a current or future student. Giving something back to society, thinking of others, extending a helping hand: these principles have always been the hallmark of a legal education at The Catholic University of America. Perhaps mindful of the wise old proverb that ‘charity begins at home,’ many CUA law alumni have chosen to put service to others into practice in a place where it will ultimately do a world of good. Right in their own backyard, in the classrooms and hallways of their very own law school, looking out for the students who have followed in their path. Recruitment Alumni play an invaluable role in helping potential students form their first impressions of the Columbus School of Law. This initial contact often comes at regional receptions held for newly admitted students from all over the country. It can be a deciding factor in a student’s decision about where to matriculate. For young men and women on the verge of launching a career in law, alumni are the mirror reflecting into their futures—the successful attorneys they anticipate they will someday become. Each spring for the past several years, newly admitted CUA law students from the New York City area have been treated to a breathtaking view of the Big Apple’s skyline while having the opportunity to meet and chat with alumni spanning three generations. The hosts of this highly successful event are Doug Wigdor and Scott Gilley, both of the Class of 1993. As two of the three founding partners of Thompson Wigdor & Gilly LLP, the attorneys are aware that their firm’s location on the 57th floor of the Empire State building and its quite visible success leave powerful impressions on blossoming law students. “We reflect back to when we were law students and the valuable guidance we received from alumni who were in touch with the student body,” Gilly recalls. “We believe it’s important to share that same dedication to the school by giving them the same opportunities we had to build relationships with practicing lawyers.” Their annual reception clearly achieves its intended goals. In 2005, for example, it provided a 100 percent yield for students from the New York City area. Each and every student who attended the event at Thompson, Wigdor & Gilly enrolled at Catholic University’s law school for the fall 2005 entering class. As part of the law school’s national recruitment effort, receptions like the one in New York were hosted in five other Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 15 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY Doug Wigdor (left) and Scott Gilley (right) have played a significant role in recruiting students from the New York City area. of all the choices and experiential learning opportunities available to them. It’s a win-win situation, says Joe Morra, 1992, an attorney with the Securities Exchange Commission who has helped place a number of younger CUA law students into valuable externships. “Interns can be very helpful, working alongside attorneys, shouldering responsibilities and completing assignments, and providing a fresh perspective on the issues at hand. It would be less time consuming to write a check, but not as personally rewarding. Obviously, both are very, very important to the future of the Columbus School of Law,” says Morra. Externships provide an opportunity for a student and employer to try each other on for size. For many students, the externship is their first real experience in a legal practice. Through it, they better understand the scope and nature of the practice of law and learn which areas of law appeal to them and which do not. For their part, externship providers benefit from the diligent work of motivated students and receive the chance to “audition” potential future hires. The system worked well for Mia Zur, for example. The 2002 graduate earned course credit for her externship at the SEC. Four years later, she earns her salary there as a staff attorney. In addition to the practical and professional experience, CUA law students learn equally important lessons about solidarity, pride in one’s law school, and seeking to help others. major markets during 2005-2006: Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Los Angeles (ably organized for many years by board of visitors member Dean F. Pace) and Washington, D.C. These receptions help to expand the school’s national presence and provide the matriculation of a more geographically diverse student body. Sarah Rewerts, director of the Office of Admissions, considers this outreach effort to new “admits” to be an essential and exceptionally persuasive recruiting tool. “As many prospective law students fully intend to return home upon graduation, they frequently ask about the ‘geographic reach’ of the law school,” she says. “When they meet with Catholic alumni in major legal markets, their The Lawyering Skills Program confidence in the institution is crystallized. They see how a Catholic University legal eduOne area in particular in which alumni make a phenomenal difcation will assist them in building a bridge to a rewarding legal career.” ference is through their steadfast support of the Lawyering Skills Mentoring and Teaching The Columbus School of Law has the largest and most well established legal externship program in the D.C. area. Each year, nearly 250 students earn course credits by working in law firms; federal, state and local agencies; the Congress; judicial chambers of the federal, state, and District of Columbia courts; public interest organizations; trade associations; and corporations. Often, the doors to some of the most coveted externships are personally opened by CUA law alumni. Working with the law school’s Office of Clinical Programs, the graduates make sure that current students are aware 16 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Program. To hone their oral advocacy skills, every first-year student participates in a mock appellate oral argument, offering their persuasions before two-judge panels. The student then receives both a verbal and written critique on his or her performance. Evaluating the budding courtroom skills of 300 or so students is a lot of work, requiring many judges who are willing to give up hours of their time, often on a weekend. The LSP program sends out 5,000 solicitations every year, hoping to attract enough judges to do the job. Of the 160 or so who say yes, approximately 80 percent are CUA law alumni. “They’re people who want to see CUA students do their best,” says Bev Jennison, co-director of the Lawyering Skills Program. “Without their help, that part of the [LSP] program would just fall away.” ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY Jim Dolan, 1996, works within the insider trading section of the National Association of Securities Dealers and has happily helped steer many CUA law students toward his organization’s externship opportunities. He does not seek their gratitude, but he does expect them to remember the boost they received. “One day they’ll be sitting in my chair, and they’ll be in a position to help others get the same opportunity that they are getting,” remarks Dolan. “I ask that when their turn comes five or 10 years down the road, they’ll lend a hand to another smart, hard-working CUA law student looking for an opportunity.” Career Guidance There is a big difference between studying an area of law and coming to understand it from the perspective of an insider. Law students do the former, of course, but thanks to the willingness of many CUA law alumni to share what their years of practice have taught them, current students are fortunate to have the chance to do the latter as well. Consider a recent example from March 2006. One spring morning, more than a dozen CUA law students were the honored guests at a special breakfast in the Washington, D.C., offices of Holland and Knight. Employing nearly 1,200 lawyers, with offices around the globe, Holland and Knight is among the 15 top largest law firms in the world. Hosted by five CUA law alumni, the purpose of the event was to expose the students to the rewards, challenges and intricacies of real estate law and to get them thinking about the field as a potential area of practice in their future careers. The Office of Legal Career Services partnered with the Office of Institutional Advancement to organize and publicize the breakfast. The result: Students were treated to a sweeping overview of a fascinating area of law, one they had modest exposure to in the classroom. The impressive panel of speakers included Charles ‘Chad’ Tiedemann, 1981, who spoke about “Overview of the Practice of Real Estate Law”; Christopher H. Collins, 1978, on “Land Use and Historic Preservation”; Alan P. Vollmann, 1980, on “Purchase/Sale and Financing”; Sharon Nelson Craig, 1987, on “Condominiums and Leasing”; and Colleen Leonard, 2003, who discussed “Life As A Real Estate Associate.” “Until I was shown other options, I only thought of giving money and participating in activities such as judging Moot Court competitions as ways to contribute to the law school,” says Tiedemann. “Dean Miles and the alumni and development staff have opened my eyes to other opportunities. This [breakfast] program gave us the opportunity to showcase many types of specialty practices that can be pursued by real estate lawyers in private practice.” “We reflect back to when we were law students and the valuable guidance we received from alumni who were in touch with the student body.” — Scott Gilley, 1993 Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 17 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY Adds Chris Collins, “I think it’s also important to let them know that we are taking an interest in their success as law students, so that when they are successful lawyers several years out of school, they will do the same.” Collins is also helping to organize the brand new CUA Law Firm Challenge, an effort to increase giving from firms that employ five or more alumni. Events that allow students and alumni to begin building professional connections have proven enormously popular for both sides. A similar panel is anticipated in coming months at Venable, hosted by Tom Madden, 1968. “These panels represent the creative ways we try to engage our alumni in mentoring,” says Jessica Heywood, director of the law school’s Office of Legal Career Services. “It’s an opportunity for our students to learn more about specific practice areas, as well as to introduce our best and brightest students to potential employers.” These career panels can also lead students, quite literally, in new directions. Former board of visitors member and 1977 alumnus Judge Marcus D. Williams, Fairfax Circuit Court, 19th Judicial Circuit of Virginia, recalled attending a career program that featured two alumni who practiced in Fairfax County, which was a sleepy and largely overlooked Washington suburb in the mid-1970s. The alumni saw changes coming and encouraged the students to branch out to a county that was soon to become the largest jurisdiction in the Washington, D.C., area. “That program and those law graduates were one of the main reasons that I looked for opportunities in Fairfax to begin my legal career,” remembers Williams. For those who choose to share their knowledge, time and expertise, there are any number of avenues that benefit the school and it’s lawyers-in-training. They include participating on career panels to give students the flavor of a particular legal specialty; conducting mock job interviews to help prep students for the pressure of the real thing; heading up reunion and alumni association committees, or volunteering as a moot court judge or coach. SEC attorney Kathy England, an active alumna from the Class of 1981, puts it succinctly, “Time is the most valuable asset we have to share.” Career Coaching Over Lunch “One day they’ll be sitting in my chair, and they’ll be in a position to help others get the same opportunity that they are getting.” — Jim Dolan, 1996 18 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Brian Stolarz, 1998, is a familiar face to the staff of the law school’s Legal Career Services office. Eight years since his own student days (during which he met his wife at CUA), Stolarz is still a regular participant in the mock interview program and other law school related activities. He has much experience to share. Stolarz has worked at small, mid-size and large law firms. He has specialized in white-collar criminal defense and toiled as a public defender. Currently, he is with Kirkpatrick and Lockhart Nicholson Graham in Washington, D.C., where his practice areas include securities enforcement and white-collar criminal defense. Stolarz has extended an offer to treat any ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY CUA law student to lunch in order to discuss his or her career. “I don’t look at what I do as far as any personal gain,” he says. “I do it to help out students and to continue the CUA traditions. I remember when I was in school that to get an alumnus to respond to an e-mail or a call or a letter was like gold. So, I want to make the process easy for current students (hence my lunch offer).” Philanthropy Historically, the Columbus School of Law has been very tuition-dependent. Positioned as it is in one of the most competitive markets in the country, the challenge of continuing to enroll gifted and diverse student bodies, both from the region and nationally, grows more difficult unless the school becomes less Nell Hennessey, 1978, is the current chair of the Annual Fund. Having donated, in aggregate, well over $200,000 of her own money to various scholarships and funds, Hennessey isn’t asking her fellow alumni to do anything for the school that she hasn’t done many times herself. Her affection for the Columbus School of Law has translated into a willingness to donate considerable time and money to it, and it results from the very positive experience she had as a law student. “CUA law established for me that law was a collegial profession rather than a cutthroat, competitive one,” Hennessey recalls. James F. McKeown, 1970, is a former member of the law school’s board of visitors, an influential steering and advisory group. A partner at the Washington, D.C.-based firm of Crowell & Moring and an expert in American intellectual property law, McKeown has been one of the law school’s most reliable contributors for more than three decades. He has donated to both the Annual Fund and the Dean’s Scholarship Fund, and was also active in the capital campaign that raised money for the current law school building, which opened in 1994. “Great reliant on tuition dollars as the primary source of funding. A single semester’s tuition for the Columbus School of Law for the 2005-2006 academic year is $15,115, or slightly more than $30,000 for one year of law school, not including books, meals, rent or associated living expenses. That figure is more or less on par with most other private law schools in the nation. Yet that same amount of tuition money applied to the 1974-1975 academic year, for example, would have paid for nearly 12 students to pursue their legal studies at CUA. If you began law school at Catholic just over 30 years ago, you were billed $2,600 in tuition for the entire academic year. While nobody is shocked to learn that the cost of living has jumped dramatically over the past three decades, the price of higher education, including law school, has actually outpaced the rest of the economy. Nevertheless, CUA law alumni continue to do what they can to help defray the cost of law school for as many students as possible. institutions have become great because their alumni did not forget them,” says McKeown. “The time and money contributions from generations of alums have been handsomely repaid to the Harvards and Yales in terms of the prestige gained from their association with these great institutions. We who can should make no less effort for the Columbus School of Law.” Luis and Linda Perez, 1983, have been among the more creative supporters of the law school and have even opened their home to benefit it. Each year, the family hosts a brunch and Mass in their Coral Gables residence for the Florida chapter of the law school alumni association. “It provides a terrific opportunity for alumni in the area to experience again the goodwill and friendship fostered by those earlier [law school] masses and perhaps motivates them to show their appreciation to the law school by supporting the school financially and otherwise,” says the couple. The annual brunch and Mass hosted by Luis and Linda Perez has become a treasured tradition for Florida alumni. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 19 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY 193 students, received scholarship money during their time in law school. Amounts ranged from more than $70,000 awarded to a couple of academic superstars, to much more modest amounts of a few thousand dollars. No matter what the level, however, every subsidy represented money that the student did not have to pay up front, or would not owe upon graduaJean Marc Favreau tion. Every scholarship dollar lightened the load of debt created by tuition “Not only did that has crept up to more than $30,000 they accept per year. me, but they For many law students at Catholic University, scholarship money can awarded me mean the difference between obtaining a the Dean’s legal degree or not. At the very least, the Scholarship amount of postgraduate debt reduced by scholarships broadens the realistic range as well.” of career choices available later on. Nicole Hogan, 2003, an attorney with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, always knew that she wanted to work for the government. During her second year of law school she was awarded a coveted scholarship that was endowed by the late Judge Kathryn J. DuFour. The $25,000 scholarship nearly erased Hogan’s tuition that year. “The DuFour scholarship certainly assisted in making [government practice] a reality by significantly reducing the amount Doing Something of debt I had when I graduated from law school,” explains “I just hate it. The cost of education is both reprehensible and repugnant,” says Robert Hogan. “Government agencies A. Warren, 1968. More than 35 years removed from his days as a law student, the and other public sector Sante Fe, N.M., retired lawyer has been a steadfast friend to his alma mater for many employers look for applicants years. “The cost is cheating a generation of students who deserve better, indeed who already have established a deserve what my generation got, a quality education at an entirely manageable price.” commitment to some form of Literally putting his money where his mouth is, Warren is doing what he can to help public service. Judge DuFour’s defray the price tag of a J.D. degree from Catholic University. Warren and his wife, generous scholarship was an indication to them that I had Carol, devote time each year to donating a significant portion of their income to the shown a commitment to serveducational funds and scholarships of four different schools to which they feel a perice and set me apart from other sonal link. In the case of CUA, the Warrens’ generosity has resulted in a $50,000 applicants in that regard.” donation in 1998 to the Leahy Scholarship, which covers a significant portion of A student’s ability to gradtuition with preference for a Native American student or a student from the southwest uate free of a career-narrowing in general. Warren is well aware that not every alumnus is in a position to write the debt load affects the rest of kinds of checks that he can. But everyone, he believes, can do something. He sums society as well. The law it up like this: “I passionately value and believe in our youth. Depending upon how we school’s exceptional and highly treat them, educate them, nurture them—or ignore, abuse or disdain them—they will ranked legal clinic has whetted be the source of our greatest pride or deepest shame. Either way, they are, inevitably, the appetite of many students our future.” for continuing public service and pro bono work beyond The level of generosity shown by these alumni and many others makes a profound difference. For example, Jean Marc Favreau, 2003, was accepted to CUA law and awarded ample financial help for the pursuit of his interest in union-side labor law and its applications as a tool for social justice. “The decisionmakers at CUA were forewarned that I was not going to graduate with a six-figure salary and the ability to make large financial donations,” remembers Favreau. “Yet, not only did they accept me, but they awarded me the Dean’s Scholarship as well.” Selected among hundreds of applicants for a one-year legal fellowship within the general counsel’s office of the AFL-CIO, Favreau was immersed in the major labor issues of our times, such as employees’ rights to organize unions free of employer threats or their right to distribute leaflets in public places. He was also involved in drafting comments that opposed the Labor Department’s proposed overtime regulations. Favreau graduated about as well prepared as a law student can be, thanks directly to the largess of alumni whose giving made his education possible. Today, he practices union side labor law with Peer & Gan, LLP. He has also made a point of staying engaged with CUA law, keeping the cycle alive and contributing in numerous ways to today’s student body. Favreau returns regularly to his alma mater to speak about public interest law, as well as offers his support each February to the school’s annual fundraising auction for Students for Public Interest Law. Favreau is hardly alone in benefiting from alumni-supported scholarship dollars. Two-thirds of the Class of 2006, or 20 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY their law school days. Aly Oswald, 2005, continues to perform life-changing pro bono work through her position as an associate at Jones Day. Recently, she was able to restore vital Social Security disability benefits to a 53-year-old woman with crippling osteoarthritis to whom they had been denied. Representing the woman on appeal, Oswald spent numerous hours researching the applicable SSA regulations and drafting her brief. Two firm partners contributed their time by editing the brief, and Jones Day paid for the client’s transportation to and from the hearing. “The best part was the look on her face when the judge announced his favorable decision—relief, excitement and joy, all at the same time,” says Oswald. It is unfortunate, she believes, that the legal skills and invaluable help that so many CUA law students would like to extend to others runs smack into the wall of financial reality upon graduation. “More of my classmates would have been drawn to public service or pro bono work if not for the heavy debt load after law school,” Oswald concludes. Money not only speaks loudly in the rarified air of graduate school education, it sometimes has the last word. During the last year or so, applications to law schools nationwide have dropped by nearly 10 percent. The reasons for this are muddy; some chalk it up to a resilient economy and steady job creation. Applications to the Columbus School of Law, on the other hand, have dipped less than that—in large part because the school is able to offer approximately one-quarter of incoming students a persuasive financial aid package through various scholarships, sturdily propped up by the backbone of the Annual Fund. “I think it’s also important to let them know that we are taking an interest in their success as law students, so that when they are successful lawyers several years out of school, they will do the same.” — Christopher H. Collins, 1978 Several days of silent bidding always begins the annual SPIL auction. The popular fund raiser is a perfect example of students helping themselves. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 21 ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY For alumni who are inclined to donate financially in any amount, the law school’s Annual Fund is by far the most helpful destination for their dollars. At some schools, “annual fund” is a cover term for its general operating budget and used to pay for everything from building maintenance to office supplies. But the Columbus School of Law’s Annual Fund is mission-directed money, a pool of unrestricted funds Kim Soen Morris used only to address its most critical needs. “Currently, all gifts to the “Through her Annual Fund are used to fund annual generosity, I scholarships to attract and retain top undoubtedly students,” according to Margaret A. King, the law school’s associate dean had a much for institutional advancement. “These more enriching gifts have the most immediate impact law school on the law school and on addressing experience.” our current challenges.” Some alumni chose to establish and endow named scholarships—ensuring that the memory of their family, as well as their generosity, lives on within the walls of the Columbus School of Law. The DuFour name will certainly never be forgotten by Kim Soen Morris, 2004. Now a practicing attorney in the New York City office of Winston & Strawn, Morris was also a beneficiary of the Judge Kathryn J. DuFour Scholarship. She is acutely aware of the positive difference that one person made in her life, a woman whom she never had the chance to meet. “Through her generosity, I undoubtedly had a much more enriching law school experience. The scholarship allowed me to concentrate more on my studies and become more involved with extracurricular activities without worrying about working long hours to cover my expenses during school,” says Morris. “I don’t look at what I do as far as any personal gain,” he says. “I do it to help out students and to continue the CUA traditions.” — Brian Stolarz, 1998 22 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Steering Their Own Futures While today’s students benefit in irreplaceable ways from strong alumni support, they also work actively on their own behalf. Anyone who has graduated within the past 15 years, for instance, surely recalls the annual fund-raiser for Students for Public Interest Law. The February event auctions off everything from beach vacations, to knitting lessons, to facultycooked dinners, to autographed baseball bats. The money raised provides summer stipends that allow CUA students to pursue low-paid public interest work. Many of the biddable ALUMNI PASS ON THE GIFT OF OPPORTUNITY Restaurant gift certificates, bottles of wine, television and stereo equipment and even a pair of round-trip, first-class tickets to London were among the items generously donated by supporters of CUA law to the most recent SPIL auction. For additional information: items are donated by alumni, but students personally organize the highly successful auction. In 2006, the SPIL event raised almost $30,000, an amount that was nearly doubled by the $25,000 chipped in from the law school. The funds permitted more than a dozen CUA law students to perform important public service and pro bono work that would otherwise be unfeasible financially. In another example of motivated entrepreneurship, students organized a drive to resell used textbooks to raise money for the law school’s new Loan Repayment Assistance Program, designed to alleviate educational debt burdens for graduates who commit to a certain period of public interest work. Finding A Way American author and historian Henry Adams said “A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence stops.” That is equally true of giving, whether it’s of time, talent or treasure. No contribution is ever wasted, and every investment made now into the Columbus School of Law will pay off in a thousand ways for years to come. There are so many valuable avenues open to any alumnus of the law school who wants to get involved and help. Why a graduate should do that is a question each person must answer for himself or herself. Robert Warren, endower of the Leahy Scholarship, intends to bequeath the school with more money from his estate in the future. His reasons are simple and deeply felt. “CUA law was very good to me, it provided me with a quality legal education and a good deal more besides that, so I want to reciprocate and be good to it,” says Warren. “You can’t take it with you. All you can do is plant the seed and provide it with a bit of moisture and fertilizer in hopes that it grows and reseeds itself.” To make a financial gift Office of Institutional Advancement The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law 3600 John McCormack Road N.E., Suite 339 Washington, DC 20064 Phone: 202-319-4637 Fax: 202-319-4051 E-mail: cualawalumni@law.edu To volunteer for moot court judging, career mentoring, or the sharing of professional knowledge and expertise Office of Legal Career Services The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law 3600 John McCormack Road N.E., Suite 163 Washington, DC 20064 Phone: 202-319-5132 E-mail: jobs@law.edu To host admitted student receptions or alumni chapter meetings Office of Admissions The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law 3600 John McCormack Road N.E., Suite 340 Washington, DC 20064 Phone: 202-319-5151 E-mail: admissions@law.edu Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 23 A L E A D E R B I D S F A R E W E L L Eyewitness to History B y To m H a e d e r l e Flip Schulke/CORBIS F As civil rights awareness grew during the 1960s, the law necessarily became a crowbar, prying open the doors of opportunity and equality that had been slammed shut to minorities. 24 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 or 25 years, his classes in criminal law, criminal procedure and fair employment law have made generations of CUA law students sit up, listen closely and learn. Perhaps it’s because they realized that when Professor Leroy Clark is speaking, they’re hearing from a man who not only knows those bodies of law, but who helped to shape them as well. Professor Clark—teacher, book author, civil Professor Leroy rights attorney, arbitrator and consultant—joined Clark the faculty of the Columbus School of Law in 1981 and has decided to retire at the end of the 2005–2006 academic year. His departure from the classroom leaves an immense void within the law school. In addition to his great technical mastery of the subjects he taught, Professor Clark also takes with him that rare sense of participant, of having both watched and played a significant role in some of the most important changes in the nation’s history. Although the term “The Greatest Generation” is often used to refer to the Americans who fought and won World War II, the handle could equally well apply to people like Professor Clark, members of a courageous legal vanguard who respected the potential of their country too much to allow it to renege on its promise of equality to all citizens. His experiences as a young assistant counsel to the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc. during the tumultuous 1960s are the stuff of History Channel documentaries today, but were nonetheless typical for the times. Professor Clark spent a great deal of time defending black men sentenced to death for crimes such as rape. In one memorable instance, his legal maneuverings bought his client just enough time to have his death sentence vacated, after a conscience-stricken sheriff unexpectedly came forward and admitted that the damning evidence had been planted. “This event was my most memorable experience of the civil rights movement, because we literally got a bunch of people off death row that would have been killed,” said Clark. At other periods, he worked with leaders like Jesse Jackson and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to implement the Poor People’s Campaign, an effort to focus the country’s A L E A D E R B I D S F A R E W E L L “You can imagine how gratifying it was for me to learn how the Church embraced many of the moral and ethical principles that I think guided the [civil rights] movement.” attention on its obligation to lift people out of poverty by giving them access to decent food, shelter and schooling. Professor Clark’s work did not go unnoticed. At one point, he was threatened with death by the Florida Ku Klux Klan. Leroy D. Clark grew up in New York City’s Harlem, during the 1940s and 1950s a much more integrated community with a distinct middle class. While the neighborhood certainly had its problems, it also gave him an early sense of what was possible when people chose to live peacefully together. After obtaining his LL.B. from Columbia University’s School of Law in 1961, he commenced his legal career as staff counsel within the civil rights division of New York State’s Office of the Attorney General. Then came his six years with the NAACP, followed in turn by his first dip into the classroom at NYU’s law school from 1968-1979. Along the way he burnished his legal skills in other areas as well, serving as an arbitrator In his farewell letter to the law school, Professor Clark wrote “It was gratifying to learn gradually that there was no need for me to implore or campaign for expanding the minority presence on the faculty because I saw, in actual practice, that this was also an implicit goal of my colleagues.” with the Federal Mediation & Conciliation Service and as general counsel for two years to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Over the years, Professor Clark has also devoted a great deal of his time to pro bono causes. He has served on the board of directors of the ACLU and the Fair Employment Council, as a consultant to New York State’s Judicial Commission on Minorities, and as a member of the Personnel Appeals Board of the General Accounting Office. His longest running membership, however, has been that of faculty professor at The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law. When Professor Clark joined the school in 1981, it seemed a natural fit because the views of the Catholic Church on many important social issues dovetailed neatly with his own. “You can imagine how gratifying it was for me to learn how the Church embraced many of the moral and ethical principles that I think guided the [civil rights] movement,” he wrote in a farewell letProfessor Clark is delighted with the presence of his sons, surprise guests at the BLSA awards ceremony in April. ter to his faculty colleagues. Married to Jeanette Jackson Clark, a 1970 Trinity College graduate and an associate justice on the D.C. Superior Court, Professor Clark has had the immense satisfaction of watching his sons grow up in a world markedly improved from the one he knew at their age. His youngest son is a patent attorney and partner in a prestigious law firm that, as Clark noted, “wouldn’t even have given me an interview.” On April 5, 2006, the law school’s Black Law Students Association held its annual Alumni Achievement Award Ceremony. The students also used the occasion to pay special tribute to the life and career of Professor Clark. As he prepares to leave the classroom and move into the next phase of his life, he can look back on a career devoted to the struggle for justice and equality for all. Most of all, he can retire knowing that he made a difference. Through his efforts and those of an entire generation of socially committed lawyers, many of the barriers that used to block the progress of minority citizens have been demolished forever. Professor Clark said it himself during his remarks at the BLSA ceremony: “America is moving along at a rapidly beautiful pace.” Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 25 I D I M W ( I D O I T M Y W A Y ) A CONFLUENCE OF TWO CHARMING TRADITIONS (A self-congratulatory illustrated essay) 1. Abbrvns Every professor develops a style, a set of idiosyncrasies. One of mine, which has become something of a tradition among my students, is a lengthy set of abbreviations that I have developed in each of the courses I teach. They have become so numerous that I include a list of them with the exam instructions in each course. The abbreviations my students tend to remember the longest — alumni sometimes approach me at reunion events 20 years after graduation and tell me, “I still remember KIHOP BOBAP”— are the ones I use to teach the law of provocation. This doctrine provides that, although as a general rule an intentional, unlawful killing is murder, if the defendant killed when confronted with particularly provoking circumstances, a jury may find the defendant not guilty of murder and guilty only of manslaughter. Naturally, all sorts of restrictions and qualifications complicate this concept. by Professor Clifford S. Fishman 26 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 I D I M W ( I D O To summarize this body of law, I write on the blackboard: KIHOP BOBAP WACOP MFARPPOV I explain: a defendant is entitled to assert the partial defense of provocation, where the evidence makes out the following: KIHOP — killing in the heat of passion BOBAP — brought on by adequate provocation WACOP — without a cooling-off period, all of which is MFARPPOV — measured from a reasonable person’s point of view. *Note these well, because there will be a quiz at the end of this essay. So that’s the first tradition: my manic abbreviations. 2. The Rock I was a visiting professor at the University of Tennessee College of Law in Knoxville during the fall of 2005. The main street on campus is Volunteer Avenue. About half a mile along this road, off fraternity row and near the athletic fields, you’ll find an otherwise nondescript parking lot with one conspicuous feature: The Rock, an outcropping of limestone which protrudes from the ground between the lot and the sidewalk. It measures roughly 6 feet high and 12 feet long. The Rock serves as a sort of student bulletin board. Whenever students feel strongly enough about a subject, they paint The Rock accordingly. (I’m told that both Sports Illustrated and Playboy prominently mention The Rock as a significant campus sight on their Web pages about UT.) Tradition dictates that The Rock may be painted only under cover of darkness. One I T M Y W A Y ) group’s message remains thereon until another group is motivated to paint it over and present its own message. (It is sometimes said that The Rock began as a mere pebble and has grown to its present proportions because of the countless layers of paint that have been applied to it.) 3. Confluence As I entered the room for my last Criminal Law class at UT, on the teacher’s podium I found an 11-by-14 print of the photograph that is attached to this essay. Yes, this is The Rock, after my criminal law students had taken it upon themselves to paint it. Note, first, the color pattern and the circle on the right: They painted it to look like a fish. Note, second, what is written on the center of The Rock: MFARPPOV FISHMAN ROCKS! TYPCF MFARPPOV, you undoubtedly recall (aren’t you glad you studied?), is my final “provocation” abbreviation. Those who can decode that abbreviation therefore understand that The Rock dramatically proclaims: MEASURED FROM A REASONABLE PERSON’S POINT OF VIEW, FISHMAN ROCKS! TYPCF TYPCF? That’s not one of my abbreviations; my students coined it, to mean: “Thank you, Professor Cliff Fishman.” From faculty and staff reaction, I gather that it is quite unusual for students to paint The Rock to honor a professor. So I guess I can say that I left my mark at UT—at least until someone paints it over! Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 27 A F I N A L S A L U T E Most Honorable Discharge: A Beloved Professor Bids Farewell M ost sports stars vow to quit “while I’m still at the top of my game,” although the promise is rarely kept. One CUA law teaching star, however, is leaving while still at the peak of his classroom prowess. Not because his skills or motivation have eroded, but simply because the time is right. On Sept. 30, 2006, the Hon. H.F. “Sparky” Gierke, chief judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, will complete his term, bringing to a close a 23-year career on the bench. For the past decade or so, he has shared his vast knowledge of trial practice and comparative military law with fortunate law students at both Catholic University and George Washington University. With the impending end of his judicial service, however, Judge Gierke has decided to relocate permanently to Florida, where his wife Jeanine is the human resources director at the Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando. (He has already accepted the position of Distinguished Jurist-in-Residence and coordinator of lawyering skills and values at Andreas School of Law in Orlando, where he will begin in October 2006.) Continuing his service in the academic community, Judge Gierke will continue to support Columbus School of Law’s program, people and alumni. Judge “Sparky” Gierke was presented with the President’s Medal, which quoted a former student and read in part: “He has given of himself much more to this law school community than we could ever repay him in words or gestures.” 28 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring-Summer 2006 Anywhere he lectures, students hold him in the highest esteem. In 2002 and 2004, the Student Bar Association at CUA honored him with the Outstanding Adjunct Professor Award. Their peers at G.W.’s law school did the same, conferring the Distinguished Adjunct Service Award on Judge Gierke in 2002. “I don’t claim I’m a better instructor than anyone else,” he says. “But, I do connect well with students. I’m accessible, and I make a substantial effort to accommodate their needs.” “He has given of himself much more to this law school community than we could ever repay him in words or gestures,” says Christopher D’Antonio, 1999. “For those of us lucky enough to have been in his classroom or in his chambers, we will not forget the contributions that Judge Gierke has made —and continues to make—to our academic careers and our professional lives. He will be missed at Catholic.” The admiration is mutual. “The students, faculty and alumni here have been just wonderful,” says the former justice of the North Dakota Supreme Court, noting that the several faculty members who have served as associate dean for Academic Affairs during his time have all offered their unwavering support. The judge’s regard for his CUA students extends to his court, where he typically employs two externs each semester. In recent years, most of them have come “For those of us lucky enough from the Columbus to have been in his classroom School of Law. “A colleague and good or in his chambers, we will not friend of mine has an expression: ‘If you forget the contributions that want to be a better Judge Gierke has made.” lawyer, start with being a better person.’ The students here have got a head start on being better people,” says the judge. “They’re a pleasure to teach. One hallmark of the Columbus School of Law community is that the students become lawyers that you’d like to practice law with.” Judge Gierke taught his normal courses during the spring semester of 2006. As the end of the semester loomed, his thoughts increasingly turned to his rich and rewarding years at CUA law. “It’ll be a tough walk down the hall and out of the building that last week,” he reflected. For its part, the university tried to acknowledge Judge Gierke’s vast contributions to the law school with the most significant gesture in its arsenal. On May 27, at the law school’s commencement ceremony, Judge Gierke was presented with the President’s Medal—the highest honor bestowed by The Catholic University of America. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R I N R E M E M B R A N C E A Master Professor of Civility and Grace B y To m H a e d e r l e M As accomplished as Urban Lester was in the courtroom and in the classroom, he is best remembered for his “gentle and courtly way which he combined so winningly with his keen skills as a lawyer.” ost professors of law teach their subjects with skill and dedication. Much smaller, however, is that pool of legal educators whose imprint upon their students transcends their classroom entirely. Such professors are a treasure. They impart lifelong lessons not just in the minutiae of the law, but also in civility, graciousness, personal comportment and what it means to live one’s life as a successful human being. Urban A. Lester was such a man. When the retired Columbus School of Law professor died of atrial fibrillation May 22, 2006, in Washington, D.C., at age 76, his former faculty colleagues, students and countless other people whose lives he had touched over the years had an instinctive response: We will not see his like again. “Urban Lester was a true gentleman and scholar, whose teaching and counsel has left an indelible imprint on my career,” said Professor Robert Destro, who recalled the help and advice he received from Lester when, as a brand new faculty member in 1982, he felt the jitters when faced for the first time with how to properly curve his grades. Professor Lester left that impression with everyone. For a number of years he served as faculty adviser to the CUA chapter of the Black Law Students Association. Some people might have expected that role to fall to Professor Leroy Clark, at the time the only black member of the law faculty. But Clark’s time was already overcommitted. Professor Lester was more than happy to step up. “I know from conversations with some of the black students during Urban’s service that they really appreciated having a white person come forward and volunteer. He was, from my perspective, a very thoughtful, sensitive and caring person,” said Clark. A third-generation lawyer, Urban Alexander Lester was born in Knoxville, Tenn., and moved to the District in 1949 to attend Catholic University, thus beginning a relationship with the university that was to last more than a half-century until his retirement in 2003. He received a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, graduating cum m 30 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring-Summer 2006 I N R E M E M B R A N C E Clockwise from top: In the cockpit in Korea; With his beloved wife Julie on their 25th wedding anniversary in 1993; With faculty colleagues at his retirement dinner in 2003; Professor Lester was the recipient of the Mirror of Justice Award in 1991. laude in 1954. After graduation he served as a B-25 pilot in Korea, leaving the Air Force with the rank of captain. Lester then returned to Catholic, where he earned his law degree in 1959. After working as a federal court clerk in Pittsburgh, he returned to Washington, where he was affiliated with several law firms, specializing in litigation and commercial law. Professor Lester was a special litigation counsel in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations and in the early 1970s acted as a counsel to an attorney for the Watergate burglars who was forced by Judge John J. Sirica to reveal the names of his clients. In the early 1970s, Mr. Lester began teaching courses in agency and partnership law at Catholic as well as in federal practice and procedure. In 1978, he became an associate professor while retaining an of-counsel position at the D.C. law firm of Alvord & Alvord. At Catholic, he taught courses on civil procedures, corporations, federal practice and procedure, litigation and professional responsibilities. (Two phrases that his students will remember, according to his good friend, Professor Michael Noone, are “don’t put a pen to paper” and “trap for the unwary.”) Lester also served as chairman of Catholic’s Academic Senate. Professor Lester was associated for more than 20 years with the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, serving as a senior lecturer in programs at Harvard, Emory and Georgetown universities and elsewhere. He was also a founding member of the Thurgood Marshall American Inn of Court at Catholic University. The inns, which include more than 20,000 b members, are dedicated to improving the skills and professionalism of judges, lawyers and students. As accomplished as Urban Lester was in the courtroom and in the classroom, he is best remembered for his “gentle and courtly way—which he combined so winningly with his keen skills as a lawyer,” in the words of Professor Leah Wortham. Indeed, Professor Lester’s respect for the law, and the proper teaching of the law, shone bright in everything he did. His relations with faculty colleagues were exceptionally cordial. “He was always positive and upbeat. And he didn’t play favorites; Urban had the same uplifting and encouraging manner with the entire law school community,” recalled Professor William Kaplin. Urban Lester was devoted to Juliette, his wife of 37 years, personally flying her to New York City to begin their honeymoon in 1968. They always faced life together and had planned for a comfortable retirement in Scottsdale, Ariz, before he took ill. With his passing goes his unique gift for relating to others. Friend, colleague or student, anyone who passed through his orbit felt respected, valued and significant. Writing about his dear friend in 1998, former law school dean Ralph Rohner said “This is quintessential Urban Lester, serving always as a mirror, reflecting light on others so that they might see and become the best of themselves.” The Catholic University law school community bade farewell to its beloved member on June 7, 2006, with a Mass of Christian Burial at the Crypt Church of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, overlooking the campus that for most of his life, Urban Lester called home. Spring-Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 31 A N E V O LV I N G Faculty Transitions By Eileen M. Flanagan S ummer is a time of transition in any educational institution, and the Columbus School of Law is no exception. Students welcome a reprieve from the demanding schedule of the academic year. New graduates join the ever-growing community of alumni and prepare for the next phase of their professional lives. This summer, our faculty is undergoing transition as well. As discussed in this issue of CUA Lawyer, Professor Leroy Clark and Adjunct Professor H.F. “Sparky” Gierke are leaving full-time teaching after many years of invaluable contributions to the law school. Joining them is a 30-year veteran of faculty service, professor and former dean William F. Fox Jr. With the retirement of these three distinguished professors, students are losing more than 60 collective years of experience at the front of the law school’s classrooms. Professor William F. Fox Jr. began teaching at the Columbus School of Law in 1975 after receiving his J.D. from the CUA school of law in 1972 and an LL.M. degree from Harvard Law School in 1974. As an alumnus, faculty member and law school administrator (Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, 1975-1978 and 2001-2003; and Dean, 2003-2005), Professor and former Dean Fox has been a part of the law school community for almost 35 years. His significant and recent service to the law school enhances a list of impressive teaching and scholarly accomplishments in the areas of civil procedure, 32 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 administrative law and international business law. An admired professor and administrator, he is also the author of several journal articles and books including Understanding Administrative Law, International Commercial Agreements, and The Law of Veterans Benefits: Judicial Interpretation. His research interests facilitated his international teaching in Scotland, Indonesia and most recently in the American Law Program in Krakow, Poland, during the fall 2005 semester. While Dean Fox and Professors Clark and Gierke can never really be replaced in the hearts and minds of the thousands of students who have benefited from their superb instruction over the years, the Columbus School of Law is pleased to announce the arrival of four new faculty members, all of whom will teach during the 2006-2007 academic year: Professor Suzette Malveaux, Professor Elizabeth Winston, and Visiting Professors Mary Leary and Stephen Smith. Professor of law and former dean William F. Fox Jr. University of Alabama School of Law, where she is an assistant professor. Prior to teaching, Malveaux practiced law in Washington, D.C., for eight years. Her research interests include arbitration, class actions and civil rights. She has experience teaching civil procedure, complex litigation, With the retirement of these three distinguished professors, its students are losing more than 60 collective years of experience at the front of the law school’s classrooms. These regular and visiting faculty members bring impressive credentials and ample teaching experience. Malveaux, a graduate of Harvard University and New York University Law School, comes to CUA from the public international law and employment discrimination. Joining her as a regular faculty member is Professor Elizabeth Winston, who is currently an assistant professor at Whittier Law School and the director of its Center for Intellectual Property Law. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Virginia School of Law, Winston clerked for two federal judges, practiced law at Covington & Burling, and taught as a visitor at Tulane Law School. Her scholarly interests include The Columbus School of Law looks forward to the contributions its newest faculty members will make to students and to the greater law school community. Professors Mary Leary and Stephen Smith. Leary, a graduate of and adjunct professor at the Georgetown University Law Center, is currently the Joining Us at CUA Law attorneys and as an assistant United States attorney. In January 2007, Professor Leary will be joined by Professor Stephen Smith, who currently teaches at the University of Virginia School of Law. A graduate of UVA School of Law and Dartmouth College, Smith is a former clerk to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas (a distinction he will share with one of his spring semester colleagues, CUA professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge). Professor Smith is the author of several law review articles, and his research and teaching interests include criminal law, criminal procedure and federal criminal law. The Columbus School of Law looks forward to the contributions its newest faculty members will make to students and to the greater law school community. To Professor Clark, Dean Fox and Judge Gierke, we express our deepest gratitude and best wishes. We hope that these unforgettable educators will continue to maintain their connections with the community of which they are so much a part. Clockwise from top right: Professor Elizabeth Winston, Professor Suzette Malveaux and Professor Stephen Smith. copyright, patent and trademark law, and she has experience teaching contracts and copyright law. To accommodate the remaining academic needs, the Columbus School of Law welcomes Visiting director for both the National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse, and the American Prosecutors Research Institute in Alexandria, Va. She brings a wealth of professional experience from work in offices of two district Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 33 REMARKABLE Events Remarkable Events Inspiring Tomorrow’s Leaders at The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law Equipped with a J.D. degree, today’s attorneys enjoy nearly limitless choices among legal specialties and practice areas, many of them nonexistent just 30 years ago. Practitioners can choose to develop expertise in health care law, immigration issues, high-tech communications regulations, international trade and environmental law, among many other sub-fields. Catholic University’s law students were exceptionally fortunate during the spring semester of 2006. They were able to learn first-hand about the hottest issues in some of the most exciting practice fields in law today, from the experts that know them best. Searching for Fairness and Accountability from Government January — With record numbers of people pressing for permanent entry into the United States, do non-citizens receive fair hearings before the immigration courts and the Board of Immigration Appeals? That was among the key questions discussed at a day-long symposium sponsored by the Catholic University Law Review on Jan. 30, 2006. The “Immigration Appeals and Judicial Review” invited leading immigration experts from government, the judiciary, academia and advocacy groups to analyze the implications of important procedural changes made by the Department of Justice several years ago to the way immigration cases are handled by the United States. Warning of the Danger of Complacency February — Citing “almost universal acceptance that our planet is warm- ing,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) told an audience at Catholic University’s law school that the smartest path to controlling climate change lies in a combination of new technologies to reduce greenhouse gases, helping developing countries adopt new and cleaner energy sources and bringing economic development to countries facing extreme poverty. A member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Murkowski’s Brendan Brown Lecture represented the senator’s most detailed statement so far on the issue of planetary warming. “Climate change is real and something we’ll be dealing with throughout our lifetimes,” she said. Mining Great American Literature for Significant Cultural Commentary Spring Semester — Call it admirable independence or rogue behavior, but America has a history of asserting for itself a standing exemption from general rules. This theme courses through some of the nation’s finest literature, from Huckleberry Finn to Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man to many other works. Four eminent American scholars were invited to mine the great works within the American canon as a means of exploring “Exceptionalist Themes in American Literature,” a four-lecture series in law and literature sponsored by the law school’s Center for Law, Philosophy and Culture and the School of Arts and Sciences. 34 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 Assessing Changes to America’s Social Safety Net March — Critics decry the cost, but the administration’s decision to expand Medicare coverage to include most prescription drugs was the right move at the right time, said Columbus School of Law alumnus James G. Scott, 1988. A senior legislative adviser for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Scott said the historic law has so far provided more than 25 million Americans with expanded health insurance, making the three-year-old program one of the most successful federally subsidized programs in the nation’s history. Scott was among the speakers at a symposium titled “Medicare: The Business of Modern Medicine.” Sponsored by The Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy and the Health Law Society, the symposium examined recent developments in health care law and the impact of the Medicare Modernization Act upon the health care system in general. Balancing the Picture with an Important Trading Partner March — China is often depicted in today’s media as America’s biggest long-term economic rival, but there is more to the picture, said experts. While the trade imbalance is real, Americans forget that China is also the world’s fourth largest market for American-made goods. The economic relationship between the two powers was closely examined during a twohour panel discussion, “U.S.–China Trade Relations: Current Developments.” Sponsored by the law school’s Comparative and International Law Institute and the International Law Student Association, the panel of experts was moderated by CUA adjunct instructor Patrick A. Mulloy, a commissioner on the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. Urging Expanded Access to the Benefits of High-Speed Internet March — Blazing fast Internet speeds are a wonderful perk that many people take for granted, so it’s worth recalling that millions of Americans, most residing in rural and underserved areas, are still shut out from the intellectual and economic benefits of access to broadband technology. How to spread its wealth was the subject of a day-long conference, “Bringing America up to Speed: Delivering on Our Broadband Future Without Sacrificing Local Identity,” sponsored by The Catholic University of America’s CommLaw Conspectus: Journal of Communications Law and Policy and the Institute for Communications Law Studies. Dozens of viewpoints were expressed, but more agreed with the panelist who stated, “We don’t want to become a nation of haves and have nots.” Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 35 T O M O R R O W ’S Alumni What’s New with CUA Law Students Moot Court Results Catholic University’s Students for Public Interest Law (SPIL) raised approximately $29,800 from their annual fundraising auction, held in February. The law school provided a matching gift of $25,000. The money underwrites summer stipends for up to 18 CUA law students, allowing them to perform public service and pro bono work that would otherwise be financially unfeasible. Rising 2Ds James Flanagan, Tyler Van Voorhees and Kristin Johnston (pictured above, with Professor Michael F. Noone Jr.) were the high bidders on a weekend getaway to the Middleburg, Va., Hunt Races. The April excursion into the heart of Virginia horse country was personally donated by Professor Noone. Rising 2Ds Nancy Conneely, Adam Hall and Elizabeth Pugliese have been selected as the 2006 St. Ives Summer Honors Interns in legislative affairs by The Center for Law, Philosophy and Culture. The students will spend an intensive six-week internship at the Catholic Charities national legislative affairs office in Alexandria, Va. Rising 3D Michael Mitchell was selected to serve on The Federalist Society’s 2006 National Student Symposium Editorial Board of the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy. The board consists of law students nationwide chosen by The Federalist Society to edit the papers that were presented at the 2006 National Student Symposium. The topic of the 36 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 The three-member Catholic University 2006 Sutherland Cup team was a finalist in the eight-team field, placing just behind eventual winner Ohio State University. Rising 3Ds Adam Bitter, Denise Giraudo and rising 4E Christina Heide competed during the weekend of March 31–April 1 in the appellate advocacy competition focusing on constitutional law. The panel of final-round judges was comprised of the Hon. David Sentelle, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit; U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas; and the Hon. Richard C. Tallman, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. Carol Cahill, 2006, was awarded third-place Best Oralist accolades, besting more than 45 competitors at the 2006 National Jessup Cup Moot Court Competition. The Jessup Cup Competition is an appellate advocacy competition focused exclusively on international law. 2006 symposium was international law. Student board members will edit the papers over the summer for publication in the journal this fall. Rising 1D Daniel Kruger applied and was accepted into the U.S. Army’s Judge Advocate General Internship Program for the summer of 2006. Rising 3D Erik Viera was chosen to participate in the Legal Services Summer Fellowships sponsored by the Florida Bar Association. He will be working for Legal Aid Services of Greater Miami. Catholic University’s Securities Moot Court Team bested 15 of 18 competitors to make its way into the semifinals of the 31st Annual Irving R. Kaufman Memorial Securities Law Moot Court Competition, held in March in New York City. The Columbus School of Law was represented by Elizabeth Getman, Jonathan Jachym and Elliott Smith, all rising 3Ds. In its first-ever entry in the Hispanic National Bar Association's Constitutional Law Moot Court Competition, CUA's team placed fourth in the 32 team field. Israel Balderas, 2006, received secondplace honors in the Best Advocate category. Mary Kiwanuka, 2006, won Best Advocate in the Thurgood Marshall Mock Trial Competition, conducted during the mid-Atlantic regional conference of the National Black Law Students Assocation. Viera’s stipend of $5,500 will allow him to work on issues ranging from representing homeless immigrants at administrative hearings for supplemental security income, to developing an educational curriculum for fifth graders on financial literacy and predatory lending. F A C U LT Y News Publications Professor Helen Alvaré published an article in the University of St. Thomas Law Review, “The Consistent Ethic of Life: A Proposal to Extend its Legislative Grasp.” Professor Clifford Fishman’s article, “Defense Witness as ‘Accomplice,’ Should the Trial Judge Give a ‘Care and Caution’ Instruction?” was published by the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. When an accomplice testifies for the state pursuant to a plea bargain, many jurisdictions require the judge to instruct the jury to consider his testimony with particular “care and caution.” This article addresses the reverse situation: suppose a witness, whom the prosecutor considers to be the defendant’s accomplice, testifies willingly for the defense. Should the judge give a “care and caution” instruction then? Several courts have endorsed the idea. Professor Fishman disagrees, arguing that such an instruction is inappropriate, unfair and gives the impression that the judge has endorsed the prosecutor’s theory of the case. Along the way, Professor Fishman explained how peat moss and pancake mix influenced his career; took the 5th Circuit to the woodshed for deliberately misconstruing a passage from a Supreme Court decision in a way that no CUA graduate would ever do; devoted four full pages to what the citational signal “cf” means, without (he claims) putting himself to sleep (“Well, I did nod off once or twice”); and persuaded the editors to let him make a point without citing any cases as authority (see footnote 79). Adjunct faculty member Stephen H. Klitzman co-authored the second edition of An Interpretive Guide to the Government in the Sunshine Act, published by the American Bar Association, Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice. A definitive update of this leading commentary on the federal open meeting law, cited by the Supreme Court in FCC v. ITT World Communications, Inc., 466 U.S. 463, 471 (1984), this new edition analyzes agency and judicial experience under the law since its enactment in 1977. It also explains how federal agencies post-9/11 are reconciling new security requirements with their open meeting obligations, and recommends reforms to the agencies and the Congress. Dean and Professor Veryl V. Miles published "A Legal Career for All Seasons: Remember St. Thomas More's Vocation," 20 Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy, 419-431 (2006). Research Ordinary Professor Michael F. Jr. published “El Ejercito Republicano Irlandes: Soldados Ilegitimos” in the January/February 2006 HispanoAmerican edition of the Military Review, pages 57-63. Professor Noone also published two articles during the winter of 2006. The first, “Unprivileged Belligerency: The IRA” appeared in Military Affairs, the journal of the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center. Professor Noone’s second work, “The U.S. Approach to Combating Trafficking in Women: Prosecuting Military Customers. Could it be Exported?” was published in Connections, the quarterly journal of the Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes at the George C. Marshall Center. Noone Professor J.P. “Sandy” Ogilvy published “Clinical Legal Education: An Annotated Bibliography” (third edition) in Clinical Law Review, Special Issue No. 2, Fall 2005 (412pp). Professor Antonio F. Perez published “The Impact of Economic Integration on Choice of Law Doctrine—Lessons from the Interaction of U.S. Federalism and Choice of Law for the Evolution of Private International Law within the Context of EU Integration,” Direito Comparado Perspectivas Luso-Americanas, Vol. 1, 263-74 (Dário Moura Vicente, ed. 2006). He is also author of the recently published “Traditional Paradigms for the Causes of War Applied to the International Trading System: NationState Institutions in a World of MarketStates in Trade as the Guarantor of Peace, Liberty and Security?” Critical, Historical and Empirical Perspectives 178-91 American Society of International Law Press, Studies in Transnational Legal Policy: A Series of Books) (Padideh Alai, Tomer Broude & Colin B. Picker, eds. 2006). Professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge is coauthor of the next edition of International Civil Litigation in the United States (with Gary Born). He also published a paper in the Pace Law Review that was based on remarks Rutledge delivered at its symposium on securities arbitration. Professor Heidi M. Schooner is the author of “Consuming Debt: Structuring the Federal Response to Abuses in Consumer Credit,” published in Loyola Consumer Law Review (2006), as well as “Bank Insolvency Regimes in the United States and the United Kingdom,” 18 The Transnational Lawyer 385 (2005). Professor George P. Smith published a monograph titled, “Of Panjandrums, PoohBahs, Parvenus and Prophets: Law, Religion, and Medical Science,” Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia; as well as an article titled “Human Rights and Bioethics: Formulating a Universal Right to Health, Health Care or Health Protection?” 38 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 1295 (2006). Professor Geoff Watson published “The ‘Wall’ Decisions in Legal and Political Context,” 99 American J. Int’l L. 6 (2005), as well as “Review Essay: Treatises and Study Aids for American Students of International Law,” 99 American J. Int’l L. 932 (2005). Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 37 F A C U LT Y News Professional Activities Professor Helen Alvaré moderated and spoke at Advocates for Life program on abortion law on Jan. 20, 2006. Two weeks later, she testified before the Constitution Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee on the family law ramifications of the abortion privacy right. Later in March, Professor Alvaré delivered the Governor Robert Casey Lecture for the Archdiocese of Denver on Catholic Social Teaching and Public Service; and on March 28, she spoke at St. Bartholomew’s parish in Bethesda, Md., for its Lenten series on Marriage, Family and the Community of Disciples. Professor Helen Alvaré spoke at a Thomas More Society dinner in Wilmington, Del., on May 21. The event was held in honor of CUA law alumnus Norman Griffiths, 1983. In midJune, she addressed the “Legatus,” a professional society made up of Catholic CEOs, on the topic of family law and Catholic social teaching. Professor Alvaré spoke on the subject again in July, this time before the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine conference held at The Catholic University of America. Professor Sarah H. Duggin will become co-director of the law school’s highly regarded Law and Public Policy Program, effective fall 2006. She will share leadership duties with current director and LPP founder Professor Lisa Lerman. Professor Clifford Fishman has been reappointed as co-chair of the Committee on Rules of Evidence and Criminal Procedure of the Criminal Justice Section of the American Bar Association. Professor and Vice Provost George E. Garvey was interviewed by Ave Maria Radio on Jan. 26, 2006, about “The Intersection of Catholic Social Teaching and the Auto Industry in America.” Professor Garvey has also been elected to 38 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 the board of directors of the Thomas More Society and to the “scientific” Committee of Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice, a Vatican Foundation created by Pope John Paul II. Professor David Irwin addressed the Rural Iowa Telephone Association in Des Moines, Iowa, as its keynote speaker on March 8, 2006. Before an audience of several hundred people, Irwin made the case that the communications industry is being “Googleized.” Professor Irwin believes that the massive search engine’s pervasive database of general knowledge and information, personal information about individuals, images, locations, mapping and financial matters, when coupled with Google’s moves to become a carrier and conduit of its own and other information, may have profound effects on legacy telecommunications companies small and large. Professor Lisa Lerman will become coordinator of Clinical Programs for the law school, effective fall 2006. She succeeds Professor J.P. “Sandy” Ogilvy, who has served in that capacity for 10 years. Professor David A Lipton, director of the Securities Law Program, was appointed recently as a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers committee on market regulation. Dean and Professor Veryl V. Miles was sworn to the bar of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces on March 21, 2006. Professor Michael Noone made the motion to admit her. As part of its 20-year-old Project Outreach program, the court heard a real-life appellate case, U.S. v. Finch, in the law school’s Walter A. Slowinski Courtroom. The court’s practice of hearing some cases in other venues such as law schools is designed to enhance public understanding of the system of military justice. Dean Veryl V. Miles delivered an address titled “The Catholic Lawyer’s Obligations to the Poor and to Promote Racial Justice” at the Red Mass Luncheon in Bridgeport, Conn., on April 30, 2006. Dean Miles was admitted to a new bar in 2006. Research Ordinary Professor Michael F. Noone Jr. chaired a panel and spoke about human rights of military personnel at the Geneva Center for Democratic Control of Armed Forces in early May. Later in the month, he traveled to Scheveningen, Netherlands, to participate in a program on “The Rule of Law in Peace Operations,” sponsored by the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War. Professor Noone also has been elected to the board of directors of the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War, headquartered in Brussels, Belgium. The Rev. Raymond O’Brien plans to teach family law at Georgetown University Law Center during the summer of 2006. In January, he traveled to Miami to celebrate Mass and attend a local gathering of law school graduates and their families. And, at his Rockville, Md., parish, he baptized the first son of Michael and Dawn Lovelace; Michael is a graduate of CUA law. During the first half of 2006, O’Brien introduced his new casebook to his students at CUA and Georgetown. The text is titled Decedents’ Estates: Cases and Materials and is co-authored with former CUA F A C U LT Y News Professional Activities student Michael Flannery. He also signed contracts with Foundation Press to write new editions of the three family law books he co-authored with Walter Wadlington. The books, Family Law in Perspective; Family Law Statutes, International Conventions and Uniform Laws; and Domestic Relations: Cases and Materials, will be available in 2007. Professor J.P. “Sandy” Ogilvy will oversee the establishment and implementation of a new voluntary pro bono service program within the Columbus School of Law. Scheduled to begin by the fall 2006 semester, the newly created Legal Service Society will provide expanded civil legal service to low-income Americans. Society membership is open to any student, faculty member or alumnus who pledges a minimum of 30 hours of volunteer service over a three-year period. Professor Antonio F. Perez attended the meeting of the Inter-American Juridical Committee in Washington, D.C., at OAS headquarters from March 20 to 31, which included meetings with the secretarygeneral of the OAS, the permanent Council of the OAS, and the Permanent Council’s Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs. He was also a presenter to the U.S. Consulate in Guadalajara, Mexico, concerning America’s system for the protection of human rights. In March of 2006, Professor Perez presented “Mechanisms of Defense of Democracy in the Inter-American System” to the Joint American Society of International Law and Inter-American Juridical Committee Workshop on Democracy, in Washington, D.C. Adjunct instructor Shelby R. Quast has taken a semester’s break from teaching at CUA law to serve as a visiting Fulbright Professor at the Indian Institute of Management in Lucknow, India. There, she teaches International Business Transactions and is also lecturing at several law schools throughout India. In August 2005, Quast was rapporteur for a meeting in Stockholm, Sweden, on “Building Partnerships for Promoting Gender Justice in Post-Conflict Societies.” The subsequent report on the effort was presented to the United Nations. Professor Lucia Silecchia was invited to become a member of the executive board of the newly created Religiously-Affiliated Law Schools Association, and she accepted the position. Founded in April 2006 during a conference on Baylor Law School in Texas, the new association represents 28 religiously-affiliated law schools nationwide. Professor Karla Simon was an organizer and a moderator at a daylong conference on reforms to the United Nations, held at the Columbus School of Law on April 3, 2006. The two major topics of discussion were the newly established Human Rights Council and the U.N. Peace-Building Commission. Speakers included senior United Nations and human rights officials, leading academics and representatives from the State Department. Sponsors of the event included the Center for International Social Development of The Catholic University of America, of which Professor Simon is co-director. During the third week of May, Professor Simon taught Comparative Civil Society Law at the University of Bologna, Italy. The course is part of the program for a master’s degree in International Studies in Philanthropy. The George Washington University Institute for Spirituality and Health at the Medical Center; The Centre for the Study of Religion and Politics, University of St. Andrews, Scotland; The Rothermere American Institute, Oxford University, Trinity Term; The Institute of Ethics, American Medical Association, Chicago; and the Hastings Center for Bioethics Research, Garrison, New York. Professor Smith was honored by being chosen for inclusion in Marquis’ Who’s Who in American Education and Who’s Who in Law. Judge-in-Residence Fred Ugast addressed the annual convention of the Bar Association of the District of Columbia from April 30 to May 7, 2006. Judge Ugast spoke about the procedures and issues involved in the disposition of cases involving defendants found not guilty of a crime by reason of insanity, and who later seek some type of release back into the community. Professor Geoff Watson participated in the December 2005 and March 2006 public and closed sessions of the State Department’s Historical Advisory Committee. He and the other eight members of the committee are working on a variety of issues relating to declassification of historical diplomatic documentation. Also in March, Professor Watson delivered a presentation to the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law on the recent activities of the Historical Advisory Committee. Professor George P. Smith was on sabbatical for the spring semester researching and writing his new book, Distributive Justice and the New Medicine. He also held academic affiliations as Visiting Fellow at Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 39 F A C U LT Y News Conferences and Symposia Professor Helen Alvaré delivered a law review symposia paper on April 1, 2006, at Loyola University’s School of Law in Chicago on the gap between the moral reasoning of the Abrahamic faiths and that used in the argument on behalf of samesex marriage. Professor Steve Margeton co-planned and was a panelist at the ABA’s seventh triennial Bricks & Bytes and Continuous Renovation conference, held March 22–25, 2006, in Seattle at the University of Washington Law School and the Seattle University Law School. Joan Vorrasi, director of Student Life and Special Events, was also a presenter at the conference, which focused on law school facilities design. Dean Veryl V. Miles presented a lecture, “The Last Word: Race and Rights in the 21st Century,” at the Mid-Atlantic Region People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference at American University, Washington, D.C., on Jan. 27-28, 2006. The following month, Dean Miles attended an ABA Dean’s Conference in Chicago and spoke to her colleagues about “The Future of the Decanal Profession: Modeling Professionalism and Integrity as Institutional Leaders.” Research Ordinary Professor Michael F. Noone Jr. presented a paper titled “Rebus sic stanibus and the American Way of War” at the U.S. Army War College’s Seventeenth Annual Strategy Conference in Carlisle Barracks, Pa., on April 13, 2006. Professor Noone also presented a paper, “Ethical Relations with Congressional Intelligence Oversight Committees,” before the Joint [Military] Service Committee on Professional Ethics conference, held in January in Springfield, Va. The following month, he attended the 40 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 regional European conference of the International Association of Prosecutors at The Hague in the Netherlands, and chaired a discussion group on “A Model Prosecution Service.” Upon his return, Professor Noone traveled to the University of Michigan Law School to speak about “Legal Restraints on Use of the Military in Natural Disasters and Civil Disorders.” Community Service Professor Helen Alvaré spoke April 1, 2006, at the Metro Achievement Center in Chicago. The center is dedicated to the advancement of at-risk adolescent girls. Professor Alvaré’s remarks were titled “The Family as the School of Love in Catholic Social Teaching.” Professor Alvaré was the commencement speaker on June 3, 2006, for Devon Prep, a Jesuit high school near Philadelphia. Professor Clifford Fishman gave “An Introduction to the Fourth Amendment” to a group of 80 high school students from across the country who were brought to Washington, D.C., in March by a civic educational organization called the Close Up Foundation. (Less important reasons for their trip to Washington included attending a session of Congress, touring the Supreme Court building and the National Archives, meeting government officials and partying.) Professor Fishman is happy to report that both he and the Fourth Amendment survived the experience. Professor J.P. “Sandy” Ogilvy will offer a new externship course to CUA law students during the 2006-2007 academic year. To develop claims of innocence, students in the CUA Innocence Project Seminar will have the opportunity to work for course credit under the direction of Professor Ogilvy. He will coordinate and direct students in the evaluation of case histories, including review of trial transcripts, appellate briefs, medical reports and other documents. Under Professor Ogilvy’s supervision, students also may interview prisoners, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and expert and lay witnesses during their investigations. If the investigations undertaken in the course reveal a viable claim of innocence, the matter will be referred to an outside cooperating attorney who will undertake representation of the inmate to prosecute the claim of innocence. Whenever possible, students from the CUA Innocence Project Seminar will be assigned to work with the cooperating attorney in prosecution of the inmate’s claim. The new for-credit externship is offered in cooperation with the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, which works on behalf of inmates who have been convicted of serious crimes and who claim actual innocence to overturn their convictions or to obtain clemency. Professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge was reappointed chairman of the Alexandria Community Criminal Justice Board by the mayor and city council of Alexandria, Va. He also prepared several lawyers for Supreme Court oral arguments at Georgetown Law School’s Supreme Court Institute. Professor Lucia Silecchia served as faculty coach for CUA’s first-ever team to compete in the national Animal Rights Moot Court Competition, held this year at Harvard University. She also assisted the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in evaluating its responses to current ecological matters. F A C U LT Y News Conferences and Symposia Professor J.P. “Sandy” Ogilvy presented “Learning from Experience: CUA’s National Leadership,” a review of the law school’s nationally recognized externship program, to the law school’s board of visitors on Feb. 2, 2006. During the weekend of March 24–25 in Los Angeles, Professor Ogilvy delivered an address titled “Where Have We Been and Where Are We Going” at Externships3: Learning from Practice, a national legal externship conference jointly hosted by Loyola Law School and Southwestern Law School, in association with the Columbus School of Law. Catholic University’s law school hosted the conference in 1998 and 2003. Professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge spoke to the judicial council of the Washington Bar Association on the legal doctrine of originalism. He was also a featured speaker at the judicial conference of the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, addressing the famous Miranda ruling. Professor Rutledge has also shared his analysis and interpretation of some of the key legal issues of the day directly with CUA law school alumni. At an alumni brown bag luncheon in Washington hosted by Will O’Brien and McKenna Long, Professor Rutledge discussed the enforcement of foreign judgments in the United States. Along with his colleague, Professor Heather Elliott, Rutledge offered an assessment of the first years of the two newest members of the United States Supreme Court, Justice John Roberts and Justice Sam Alito, to the alumni from the New York City area. journeyed to Fordham Law School to attend a conference on “Catholic Social Thought and the Law Summer Institute.” Professor Heidi M. Schooner presented “Structural Comparison of Consumer Protection Regimes” at a Texas Tech University School of Law conference titled Federal Preemption in the Financial Institutions Arena on April 20, 2006. The previous month, Professor Schooner spoke at Syracuse University’s College of Law and discussed “Gringotts: The Role of Banks in the Wizarding World” as part of a panel on The Law and Harry Potter at the Annual Meeting of the Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities. Professor Karla Simon presented a paper titled “NPO Governance — Recent Developments in Countries Around the World: Experiences with the American Law Institute Project on NPO Governance, Regulatory Reform in Japan and the Ongoing Debate in China,” on May 30 at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany. Professor Lucia Silecchia spoke at a University of Maryland law school conference on April 11, 2006. The subject was “God’s Law in the People’s Law: A Discussion of Contemporary Issues Arising from Religion and the Law.” Her remarks were titled “Religion in the Public Square.” In February, Professor Silecchia was a respondent to remarks delivered by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who spoke to CUA law about the latest evidence of global climate change. Silecchia attended a conference on law and morality at William & Mary School of Law in March, as well as the ALI-ABA Conference Criminal Enforcement of Environmental Laws held May 18–19. In June, Professor Silecchia Professor George P. Smith presented three papers, “Finding a Point of Equilibrium — Law, Religion, and Medical Technology,” at the American Medical Association, March 23, 2006; “In God We Trust: Continuities and Discontinuities in Law, Science, and Medicine,” at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, April 2006; and “Normative Standards and Health Care Resource Management,” at Oxford University, May 2006. Judge-in-Residence Fred Ugast attended the judicial and management training conference of the D.C. Superior Court at Rocky Gap, Md., from March 10 to 12, 2006. The theme of the conference was “Understanding our Colleagues, Ourselves and the Communities We Serve.” ATTENTION ALUMNI: If your firm is interested in filling a position, we encourage you to utilize Legal Career Services’ online jobs database. Employers may post openings for part-time law clerks, internships, entry-level attorney and lateral positions. Call Legal Career Services at 202-319-5132 for assistance in writing a position description or simply e-mail your posting to jobs@law.edu. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 41 F A C U LT Y News Recent Media Professor Helen Alvaré taped a threehour C-SPAN interview detailing the contents and scope of the Supreme Court’s abortion jurisprudence in preparation for the Senate confirmation hearings of Judge Samuel Alito. Her televised discussion reviewed and analyzed the oral arguments from the four most prominent abortion cases since the original Roe v Wade decision of 1973. Professor Alvaré serves as an occasional adviser to ABC news regarding coverage of religious issues in the news. Recently, she worked with Nightline in connection with the upcoming coverage of The DaVinci Code and the place of women in the Catholic Church. Professor Sarah Duggin was interviewed in March 2006 for an article in Compliance Week. The story dealt with efforts to counter the “culture of waiver,” in which the SEC and Department of Justice demand that companies being investigated for corporate fraud waive the attorneyclient privilege. Professor Clifford S. Fishman was quoted in the Dec. 10, 2005, edition of The New York Times for an article on the government’s use of cell phones to track their owners. Cellular company computers automatically “know,” within about 300 yards, the location of a subscriber phone whenever the phone is turned on — even if the phone is not being used. This information can be very useful to law enforcement officials. Professor Fishman was interviewed about the same subject four days later on National Public Radio’s Talk of the Nation. In January 2006, Professor Fishman spoke to Congressional Quarterly about his 2002 testimony before Congress on a bill regarding the question of “reasonable basis” vs. “probable cause” in NSA eavesdropping. He also spoke with the ABA Journal in January about a 42 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 plea bargaining case, Van Patten v Deppisch. Professor Fishman was also quoted in The Wall Street Journal on April 4, 2006, in a story about the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Professor Fishman was quoted in the May 8, 2006, online publication wired.com in an article about the use of cell phone tracking technology by law enforcement officials. Professor Lisa Lerman was quoted in the March 10, 2006, edition of the online ABA Journal & Report for a story about the questionable practice of rounding up billable hours. The case involved a Kansas attorney who admitted to routinely billing for an hour when only 45 minutes of time were spent on behalf of a client. “Fiddling around with time is a major source of mistrust between lawyers and clients,” Lerman was quoted as saying. “I think the legal profession would benefit by abandoning that because most of it is done to rationalize charging clients more, and clients know that.” Dean and Professor Veryl V. Miles was featured in the Fairfield County Catholic, a newspaper serving the diocese of Bridgeport, Conn., for her April 30 speech at the Brooklawn Country Club to members of the county’s legal profession. Lecturer Patrick Mulloy was quoted in the Feb. 23, 2006, edition of The Washington Post about the planned takeover of operations at six U.S. seaports by a United Arab Emirates-owned company. Mulloy is a commissioner on the United States-China Security Review Commission. Research Ordinary Professor Michael F. Noone Jr. was interviewed on April 28 by the Ventura, Calif., County Star about a local resident, a graduate of both West Point and law school, who sued the United States seeking release from his military commission after having served eight years. In January, Professor Noone was quoted in the National Journal on U.S. policy for detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Professor Peter “Bo” Rutledge was quoted by The Los Angeles Daily Journal on Georgia v Randolph, a case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court that examined the question of whether police may search a home when a cohabitant consents and the other cohabitant is present and does not consent. Professor Lucia Silecchia was quoted in the Jan. 18, 2006, edition of Science and Theology News on efforts by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences to highlight the need for global access to clean drinking water. “When it comes to environmental issues, Pope Benedict will not write on a blank slate,” said Silecchia. “It is highly likely that all of the ecological teachings of Pope Benedict will arise directly from his creation theology. Throughout his writings, he makes clear that physical creation is the concrete way in which the splendor, power and goodness of the creator is manifested in this world.” ALUMNI News What’s New with Your Fellow Alumni 1963 Rev. George Wilkinson Jr. has been named by the Archdiocese of Washington to be pastor of the Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in College Park, Md. 1970 Frank Dunham Jr. was the subject of a front-page article in the Jan. 30, 2006, edition of Legal Times that discussed his professional career and retirement from the federal public defender’s office in Northern Virginia. During his long years of service in the law, Dunham has been both a prosecutor and defense counsel. Over the past 25 years, his office has handled the defense of many high-profile cases, including that of confessed 9/11 terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui. Dunham was the first evening student in the history of CUA law to graduate first in the class. Hannah Sistare has been named vice president for academy affairs for The National Academy of Public Administration. A veteran of Capitol Hill, Sistare has served as staff director and counsel of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, and before that, as chief of staff to Sen. Charles H. Percy and legislative director for Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott. Following her Senate service, she was executive director of the National Commission on the Public Service. Sistare began her public service career as an economist at the U.S. Department of Labor and later served as special counsel to the secretary of Health and Human Services. She was elected an Academy Fellow in 2001.The academy is led by its elected membership of 600 distinguished fellows who provide trusted advice on governance and public management issues to government leaders in every branch and at every level. 1971 Col. Dayton Michael Cramer retired from the Army in 2000 after more than 28 years of active duty at the rank of colonel. He was subsequently appointed deputy general counsel for Florida State University in November 2000, where he continues to serve. Cramer was also appointed chair of the education law committee for the Florida bar in July 2005. The committee is seeking certification of education law as a specialty approved by the Florida Supreme Court. Maureen Logue McGill was appointed Feb. 1, 2006, to serve as general magistrate in the 1st Judicial Circuit of Florida. She resides in Pensacola, Fla. 1973 Joseph M. Quirk was the recipient of the 2005 John Carroll Society Pro Bono Legal Service Award for outstanding contributions to the Archdiocesan Legal Network of Catholic Charities, a pro bono program serving the legal needs of the poor and homeless. The award was presented at the reception following the annual Red Mass, celebrated at St. Matthew’s Cathedral in Washington, D.C., which marks the commencement of the current Supreme Court session. Quirk is a solo practitioner in Rockville, Md. 1974 Ron Merolli was appointed by Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) as a delegate to the third joint White House and congressionally sponsored National Summit on Retirement Savings (the “Saver Summit”), held March 1–2, 2006, in Washington, D.C. Merolli’s appointment came at the urging of Sen. Jim Jeffords (I-Vt.). The Saver Summit Act of 1997 authorized the creation of three national summits to develop strategies for Americans to better save for their futures. Merolli is director of advanced sales at National Life Insurance Company in Montpelier, Vt. He resides in Northfield Falls. 1976 Shireen Avis Fisher has been appointed as one of two U.S. international judges to the War Crimes Chamber of the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo. Her two-year term began in November 2005. 1977 Peter Mitchell has been named as managing general counsel of the legal department of the Communications Workers of America in Washington, D.C. Mitchell previously served as general counsel for the International Union of Electronic Workers since 1997. 1978 Nell Hennessy published “Follow the Money: ERISA Plan Investments in Mutual Funds and Insurance,” in 38 John Marshall Law Review, No. 3, Spring 2005. 1980 Marvin E. Johnson, a mediator and arbitrator with JAMS, The Resolution Experts, was appointed by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to a two-year term on the Foreign Service Grievance Board. The Grievance Board is an independent body that adjudicates grievances filed by members of the Foreign Service who work all over the world. The grievances heard by the board are appeals from agency decisions that involve a wide range of employment issues including termination, disciplinary actions, denial of financial benefits and prejudicial information in personnel records. A nationally recognized mediator and arbitrator with nearly 30 years of experience in resolving public and private disputes, Johnson has mediated and arbitrated more than 2,000 cases in the fields of employment, labor management, business, community and public policy. Ronald B. Rubin has been appointed to Montgomery County Circuit Court by Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. Rubin was among three appointees to the court announced by the governor’s office in November 2005. Rubin has been a shareholder with Rubin & Rubin, Chartered, in Rockville since 1997. Previously, he was a partner in Brand, Lowell & Ryan, PC, as well as Camhy, Karlinsky, Stein, Razzano & Rubin, Spring-Summer 2005 / C U A L A W Y E R 43 ALUMNI LLP, from 1996 to 1997 and 1994 to 1996, respectively. Prior to his elevation to the bench, Rubin served as national defense counsel for several companies in mass tort litigation and as special counsel for a variety of nonprofit and charitable institutions in the Washington metropolitan area. Rubin will serve until the general election in November 2006. He and his wife reside in North Potomac with their two daughters. 1981 Jose Arrieta has joined The Arrieta Law Firm, P.C., and now practices with his brother, Manuel I. Arrieta. Based in Las Cruces, N.M., the firm specializes in personal injury law. 1982 James F. Moriarty has joined Locke Liddell & Sapp’s Washington, D.C., office as a partner. Moriarty represents a broad spectrum of clients on energy regulatory issues before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the appellate courts. Moriarty has practiced law in Washington, D.C., his entire career, most recently as head of the energy group at Fleischman and Walsh. Moriarty has counseled industry leaders on rate, tariff, contract, certificate, commercial, compliance and enforcement matters. He has advised interstate gas pipelines, LNG terminal operators, local distribution companies, end-users and financial institutions. Thomas H. Suddath Jr. has joined the Philadelphia office of Reed Smith, LLP, effective May 1, 2006. Suddath is a partner and will practice in the firm’s regulatory litigation group. He comes to Reed Smith from Montgomery, McCracken, Walker & Rhoads, LLP of Philadelphia, where he was a partner in the litigation department and chair of its government investigations and white collar crime practice. He has been lead counsel in more than 20 jury trials and has handled numerous appeals, including arguments in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit and the Delaware Supreme 44 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 News Court. While a student, Suddath was editor-in-chief of the Catholic University Law Review. 1983 Kathleen Q. Abernathy has been appointed to the board of directors of Citizens Communications Company, one of the largest local exchange telephone companies in the country. A former FCC commissioner, Abernathy is now a partner in the communications and information technology practice in the Washington, D.C., office of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. She advises clients on a wide variety of policy and regulatory issues related to the telecommunications and media fields and represents clients at both the federal and state levels as well as before various international and foreign regulatory agencies. Abernathy received the Forerunner Accolade in 2002 from Women in Cable and Telecommunications for her commitment to encouraging, developing and promoting women in the industry, and the Milestone Award in 2001 from Catholic University’s Columbus School of Law for her exemplary service to the law school and outstanding achievement in the field of communications law. In addition, she was named one of the most powerful women in television by Electronic Media magazine. A graduate of the law school’s evening program, Abernathy served as commencement speaker for the law school’s Class of 2005. Tom Catliota has been appointed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit as a United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Maryland. Catliota had been a partner with the Washington, D.C.-based law firm of Shaw Pittman, where he put in more than 21 years of service. First in his class at CUA law (evening program), Catliota has been recognized by The Washington Post for his work in representing the District of Columbia in keeping open the bankrupt Greater Southeast Hospital, the only full-service medical facility in the impoverished southeast section of Washington. His appointment was the result of an extended selection process, managed by the chief judges of the U.S. District Court and the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland and the president of the Maryland State Bar, which considered a very large pool of senior lawyers for the position. Jay B. Gould has joined the corporate and securities practice of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw as a partner. He will be based in the firm’s San Francisco office. During his career, Gould has been chief counsel to E*Trade Global Asset Management, Inc; vice president of TransAmerica Life Companies; senior counsel to Bank of America; and an attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission from 1984 to 1987. He is active in the Bay Area Hedge Fund Professionals and is a member of the Northwest Hedge Fund Society. He also serves on the board of directors of the San Francisco Chapter of the Association for Corporate Growth and belongs to the Financial Institutions Committee of the California State Bar. He is on the advisory board of the financial services publication, Wall Street Lawyer, and is a frequent speaker at conferences and industry events. Rosemary Robinson Pall became director of the annual fund at the Widener University School of Law in June 2005. She and husband Leo are the parents of Rachel, Daniel and Kathryn and reside in Havertown, Pa. 1984 D. Michael Reilly has been selected to serve on the board of regents for Gonzaga University. The governor of the state of Washington also recently appointed Reilly to the state’s Economic Development Commission. The commission is charged with developing state-wide strategies to enhance business and economic development. Reilly also continues his practice as director of the labor and employee benefits practice group at Lane Powell in Seattle. Reilly was recently identified by Washington ALUMNI CEO Magazine as one of Washington State’s “Most Amazing” Lawyers for his management side practice in labor and employment law at Lane Powell in Seattle. Recently, the governor of the State of Washington nominated Reilly to serve as a commissioner on the State of Washington’s Economic Development Commission. He also serves on the board of regents for Gonzaga University. Robert C. Sexton recently left 20 years of private international law practice in Washington, D.C., London, Paris and Moscow and has been appointed vice president and general counsel for international commercial operations at Amgen, the world's largest biotechnology company, in Zug, Switzerland. 1985 H. Ward Classen has published his most recent book, A Practical Guide to Software Licensing for Licensees and Licensors: Analyses and Model Forms (ABA Business Law Section, January 2006). Classen is associate deputy general counsel of Computer Sciences Corporation with responsibility for CSC’s consulting, healthcare and financial services business units. He is author of the three-volume set Classen’s Commercial Forms as well as Classen’s Merger and Acquisition Forms. Classen has been widely published in legal journals and has spoken extensively before professional groups both domestically and internationally. John J. Matteo was recently elected to sit on the executive committee at Jackson & Campbell, PC, a century-old law firm based in Washington, D.C. He is currently chair of the business law practice group and concentrates his practice on business and commercial legal matters. Susan J. Mertes has joined the Aerospace Industries Association as its director of Aviation Infrastructure, a new position focusing on improvements to the civil air transportation system. Her appointment with the Arlington, Va.-based association was announced in December 2005. Mertes is an attorney with a telecommunications law degree and extensive aviation expertise attained while working for federal agencies, local government and associations, and while working on Capitol Hill. In her new position, she monitors and identifies emerging issues and trends related to aviation infrastructure and federally funded advanced systems research and development. 1986 Richard C. DesLauriers was promoted to the position of special agent-incharge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's New York City field office. He will reside in the area of Norwalk, Conn. Mary A. Lopatto has been elected partner in the insurance and reinsurance practice group of the Washington, D.C., office of New York-based Chadbourne & Parke LLP. Lopatto is chairman of the AIDA U.S. Reinsurance and Insurance Arbitration Society, the leading U.S. association serving the insurance and reinsurance arbitration community. Prior to joining Chadbourne, she was a partner at LeBoeuf, Lamb, Green & MacRae LLP. Lopatto lectures and publishes frequently on reinsurance and dispute resolution. She has represented clients in litigation in state and federal courts. She has also advised clients with respect to contract drafting and coverage issues. Lopatto has been recognized by the International Who’s Who of Business Lawyers (2005), Who’s Who Legal (September 2004) and Guide to the Euromoney’s World’s Leading Insurance and Reinsurance Lawyers (November 2002). While at CUA law, Lopatto served as associate editor of Catholic University Law Review. 1987 Kim McDaniel has been selected as the first director of Equal Employment Opportunity, for the Office of the Attorney General in Washington, D.C. Her responsibilities include leading EEO investigations, advising the attorney News general on EEO and diversity matters, negotiating and resolving matters related to EEO issues and building diversity programs. Prior to that, McDaniel was the director of diversity for Harris Teeter at its corporate headquarters in Charlotte, N.C. Her previous federal government experience includes 11 years as an attorney with the National Labor Relations Board. Andrew F. Palmieri has been named partner in the Alexandria, Va., office of Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, headquartered in Columbus, Ohio. His promotion was effective Jan. 1, 2006. Palmieri practices in complex commercial, corporate and real estate transactions and represents national and international business enterprises in such matters as purchase, sale and financing of real estate; choice and formation of business entities; state and regulatory corporate compliance; business acquisitions; employee relations; and other general business considerations. He also has extensive experience in the formation and management of community associations. 1988 Mark Holden has been named senior vice president and general counsel of Koch Industries Inc. Holden has been with Koch since 1995, most recently as co-general counsel. Kevin W. Lynch has joined Philadelphia-based Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel LLP as an associate, where he will practice in the litigation department. He concentrates his practice in the areas of asbestos and commercial litigation, medical malpractice litigation and insurance coverage litigation. Prior to joining Obermayer, Lynch worked as a litigator at a regional insurance defense firm. He has prepared and tried more than 60 jury and non-jury cases to verdict in both Pennsylvania and Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 45 ALUMNI New Jersey. A 1981 graduate of the U.S. Naval War College, Lynch is also a certified SCUBA instructor. Michele A. Masiowski will be getting married Aug. 5, 2006. She is a practicing attorney in Santa Fe, N.M. Anna Manville has joined Washington, D.C.-based Arnold & Porter’s intellectual property practice. She came to the firm from an intellectual property law firm in Minneapolis, where her practice encompassed all aspects of U.S. and international trademark law. Brian J. Moran was re-elected in November 2005 as delegate for the 46th Legislative District of Virginia. Delegate Moran has served in the House of Delegates since 1996 and has been chairman of the House Democratic Caucus since 2001. Paul E. Pompeo has been elected partner with Washington, D.C.-based Holland & Knight, LLP. A member of the firm’s litigation section, Pompeo practices in the area of government contracts law. He counsels on the full spectrum of government contracts law, with a focus on the areas of cost allowability and the Cost Accounting Standards. Robert A. Spar was named to the board of directors of the Greater Baltimore Technology Council. The nonprofit organization helps grow the region’s tech community through innovative programs and forums where organizations can meet, learn and do business. The board is a group of dedicated individuals representing a wide range of technology industries, universities and professional service businesses. Spar is a partner in the business department and a member of the two other practice groups with Saul Ewing LLP. His practice concentrates on venture capital, mergers and acquisitions, strategic alliances and other business and transactional matters. 46 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 News 1989 Jim Nugent was named to the board of directors of the Gerry Spence Trial Lawyers College. He practices in Connecticut with his father, James A. Nugent, 1967, and his wife, Julie Maloney Nugent, 1990. 1990 Ann M. Cannoni has been promoted to the position of shareholder with The Webb Law Firm, a legal practice concentrating exclusively in intellectual property such as patents, trademarks and copyrights. Her appointment was effective in February 2006. Based in Pittsburgh, Cannoni is a patent attorney with experience in chemical and mechanical fields and a concentration in pharmaceutical, polymer and organic chemistry. Before joining The Webb Law Firm, she was in charge of all organic chemistry patent activities for Schering-Plough Pharmaceutical Corporation. 1992 The Rev. Thomas B. Curran, O.S.F.S., has been appointed the 14th president of Rockhurst University, in Kansas City, Mo. He takes office in June. Curran was formerly associate vice president for university relations and assistant to the president at Regis University in Denver. He is an ordained Roman Catholic priest and a member of the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales, dedicated to education, the missions and parish work. Rockhurst is a Jesuit institution and is governed by a board composed mostly of laypersons. Curran will be the university’s first non-Jesuit president. In announcing his selection, the university’s board of trustees noted that Curran’s “experience in educational administration and fund raising, joined with his ease at connecting with people, make him an excellent choice for this position.” Earlier in his career, Curran served as founder and executive director of Nativity Preparatory School in Wilmington, Del.; as president of Salesianum School in Wilmington; and as president of Northeast Catholic High School for Boys in Philadelphia. Alice S. Fisher was the subject of a news profile in the Jan. 5, 2006, edition of The Wall Street Journal. The article focused on the range and scope of cases Fisher has handled since she was appointed last year to oversee the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Division. Among many other public corruption cases, her office is prosecuting wrongdoing by Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff and others, the widest-ranging congressional corruption investigation in more than two decades. A recess appointment by President Bush, Fisher’s term will expire when the 109th Congress does so at the end of 2006. Michael G. Geffroy, formerly chief counsel for oversight and investigations for the House Committee on Homeland Security, has joined the Department of Justice as counselor to the assistant attorney general, Criminal Division. Geffroy has worked for Congress since 2001. Joseph L. Pellis II was named a shareholder in the Pittsburgh-based firm of Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir, P.C. He was previously of counsel to the firm. Pellis focuses his practice on providing clients with alternative risk management solutions, including a new initiative targeted at developing liability and risk transfer vehicles for clients with environmentally impaired assets. 1993 Francis E. Bemis proudly announces the opening of Bemis & Rossignol, LLC, in Presque Isle, Maine. The general practice law firm provides a full range of services including civil litigation, personal injury, real estate, family, ALUMNI probate and business law services. Bemis and his wife, Ellen, reside in Presque Isle with their two daughters, ages 4 and 2. They are expecting a third child in May 2006. H. Bryan Brewer III has been elected to partnership at the Washington, D.C.-based firm of Nixon Peabody LLP. A member of the firm’s business group, Brewer focuses on a wide range of areas including private equity transactions, public securities matters, intellectual property counseling, licensing and mergers and acquisitions. He actively advises privately held companies on financing matters, and has counseled and represented nonprofit organizations in obtaining federal and state tax-exempt status. William E. Fitzpatrick has been appointed the new deputy U.S. attorney for the southern vicinages of the district of New Jersey. He assumed his new job on Jan. 9, 2006. Fitzpatrick will oversee all criminal prosecutions and federal civil matters handled in the Trenton and Camden offices of the U.S. Attorney’s Office. He has served as a U.S. attorney since 1999, first assigned to the eastern district of Virginia. Fitzpatrick’s career as a federal prosecutor has included many high-profile drug and gun trafficking cases, as well as prosecuting organized crime. He lives in Drexel Hill, Pa., with his wife and three children. Douglas Wigdor, a partner in the New York City-based firm of Wigdor Gilley, was interviewed Jan. 18, 2006, by ABC television’s Good Morning America and Nightline about his role as counsel representing six female employees at the Wall Street bank Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein Securities LLC. The plaintiffs have filed a $1.4 billion sex discrimination lawsuit against their employer. 1994 Alexandra Dapolito Dunn was recently named to a threeyear term serving on the council of the American Bar Association’s section of Environment, Energy and Resources, after serving in various leadership positions throughout the past decade. She is currently general counsel of the National Association of Clean Water Agencies, representing the interests of municipal clean water utilities in Washington, D.C., and in courts across the country. She and her husband, Chris, live in Potomac Falls, Va., with their two children, Caroline (6) and Sean (2). Joseph O. Haggerty was recently named a partner in the Scranton, Pa., firm of Haggerty McDonnell O’Brien & Hinton, LLC. Haggerty has been associated with the firm since 1996 and practices in the areas of corporate transactions, municipal finance, banking and estate planning. Edward ‘Ted’ Hammerman and his wife, Sherri, announce the birth of their son, Dean Marcus, born Nov. 21, 2005. Hammerman serves as assistant general counsel of The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and continues to run Hammerman PLLC, devoted to copyright royalty, media and transactional work. John M. Kneuer will be nominated by President George W. Bush to be assistant secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, it was announced in May. Kneuer currently serves as deputy assistant secretary for Communications and Information at the Department of Commerce. He also currently serves as deputy administrator for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. Earlier in his career, he served as a senior associate at DLA Piper Rudnick, LLP. Kneuer was also the keynote speaker at the News March 28, 2006, CommLaw Conspectus Symposium: “Bringing America Up to Speed—Delivering on Our Broadband Future Without Sacrificing Local Identity,” held at the Columbus School of Law. D. Michael Lyles was re-elected last November as District 4 representative to the Bowie, Maryland, City Council. Councilman Lyles, an associate county attorney for Prince George’s County, was initially elected in a special election in March 2004. Rafael G. Prohias has been appointed senior corporate counsel of BacardiMartini Inc., based in Coral Gables, Fla., and New York City. Prohias previously held the position of counsel with Hunton & Williams LLP in Miami, specializing in mergers and acquisitions and securities law. Jeannine Rustad is pursuing a master’s degree in urban and regional planning at Portland State University in Portland, Ore. She married Rahul Ravel in July 2005. The couple resides in Portland. Donald W. Schroeder has been promoted to partner status at the law firm of Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. He practices in the Employment, Labor and Benefits Section of the firm’s Boston office. Schroeder advises clients on a daily basis on a wide variety of day-to-day personnel matters, including terminations, employment contracts and policies, internal investigations and reductionsin-force. He has substantial experience in trade secrets litigation including temporary and permanent injunctions. He received his B.A. from the College of the Holy Cross (1991) and his J.D. from the Columbus School of Law, where he was a member of the Catholic University Law Review. Schroeder is a frequent lecturer and author on a variety of employment law issues involving the Americans with Disabilities Act, Family and Medical Leave Act, and workplace privacy issues. He resides in Needham, Mass. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 47 ALUMNI 1995 Brian L. Baker was appointed director of the law library and professor of law at the San Joaquin College of Law in Clovis, Calif., effective Aug. 1, 2006. Married for 17 years, Baker has a daughter, Veronica, age 8, and a son, John, age 5. Carolyn Kelly Bogart was named a shareholder of the Philadelphia-based defense litigation firm Marshall, Dennehey, Warner, Coleman & Goggin. The announcement was made at the annual shareholders’ meeting held Dec. 6, 2005. Bogart is a member of the casualty department and works in the firm’s Cherry Hill, N.J., office. Charles M. Clapton has been hired as the policy adviser for healthcare and social security issues for U.S. House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert (R-Ill). Previously, Clapton served as the chief health policy counsel for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, where he was involved in the drafting and negotiations that led to the Medicaid and Medicare provisions included in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Kathleen Greenan Ramsey has been elected partner at the law firm of Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP, as announced in November 2005. With more than 10 years of experience in telecommunications regulation, Ramsey will continue to defend companies in regulatory enforcement actions before the Federal Communications Commission, advocate regulatory policies before the FCC and state regulatory commissions, and counsel clients on a full range of communications and competition issues, including mergers and acquisitions. She is based in Sonnenschein’s Washington, D.C., office. Ramsey is active in providing pro bono legal representation to the Children’s Law Center in Washington, D.C. She represents foster parents who wish to adopt abused and neglected children in the care of Children and Family Service Agency. She has also provided 48 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 News pro bono legal representation to the Legal Counsel for the Elderly. Andrew D. Rivas has been named executive director of the Texas Catholic Conference, the association of the 15 Catholic dioceses of Texas. Rivas served as policy adviser for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for more than four years, concentrating on federal legislation affecting criminal justice, agriculture and environmental issues. Prior to his position at the USCCB, he worked for Catholic Charities USA and for the Senate Commerce Committee. Karyn M. Taylor was promoted to shareholder at Littler Mendelson of Reno, Nev., in January 2006. The following month, she married Robert Craig MacRae. The couple resides in Reno. 1996 Donna Ann Gallagher Browne has relocated to San Ramon, Calif., with her husband, Greg, and sons, Daniel (5) and Justin (3). She is doing volunteer work and preparing for the California Bar Exam. Beverly J. Russell is counsel to the administrative judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York. She resides in Brooklyn. Brian P. Wyatt was named partner at the Baltimore, Md.–based firm of Anderson, Coe & King, LLP, effective in January. Wyatt has been with the firm since 1998 and specializes in professional malpractice defense. Brian and his wife, Rebecca, 1996, are the proud parents of Bartley Rose, born Jan. 12, 2006. She joins her big brother, Seamus O’Neill, who was born in October 2003. The Wyatts traveled to the San Francisco area in October 2005 for the marriage of CUA law classmate Jerome Galli to his wife, Diane. Also in attendance was classmate Marcus Spatafore, who was accompanied by his wife. 1997 Scott N. Flesch has accepted a position as a trial attorney with the U.S. Army Contract Appeals Division in Arlington, Va. A former army JAG officer, Flesch recently left active duty to join the civilian ranks. In his new practice, Flesch represents the army in contract litigation before the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, the Government Accountability Office, the United States Court of Federal Claims and the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. He has also published articles in the June and October 2005 issues of The Army Lawyer. Flesch continues to teach as an adjunct lecturer at CUA law. He resides in Vienna, Va., with his wife, Amy, and their two sons. David R. Keene joined Tallman Hudders & Sorrentio PC in May 2005, where he continues to practice labor and employment law representing management. The firm is headquartered in Allentown, Pa. Major Eugene (“Gene”) Kim and his wife, Jeannie, became the proud parents of their first child, Deborah Saemee Kim, on Sept. 2, 2005. Gene is in his eighth year of service with the U.S. Army’s Judge Advocate General’s Corps and is currently assigned to the U.S. Army Legal Services Agency in Arlington, Va. Gene is a trial attorney in USALSA’s Contract Appeals Division, where he works with Scott Flesch, 1997, and Capt. Sean Connolly, 1999. Jennifer E. Mandell opened a new law office in January 2005, where she continues her solo practice in family law. The firm is located in the City of Fairfax, Va. Nancy M. Palermo has joined Garrison & Sisson, an attorney search and legal recruitment consulting firm which has been serving the Washington, D.C., ALUMNI legal community since 1987. Palermo recently became a principal of the firm and will serve as its president. Palermo and her husband, Nicholas, are the proud parents of their second child, Liza Jane, born May 5, 2005. She joins Charlie, who is now 3. Jonathan Pavony has been promoted to partner in the Washington, D.C., office of Patton Boggs. Pavony advises clients on corporate and securities matters, including public offerings, stock and asset purchase transactions and corporate governance practices. Lee G. Petro was named a partner at Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth, PLC, where he specializes in telecommunications law. Lee also serves on the board of trustees for the Federal Communications Bar Association Foundation. Lee lives with his wife, Na-Rae Ohm Petro, and his two daughters, Emily Rose (6) and Sarah Jane (3), in Alexandria, Va. Susan Goss Taylor has been named partner at the San Diego, Calif.-based law firm of Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP. Her practice focuses on securities fraud and consumer fraud litigation. 1998 Anthony F. Archeval and his wife, Kristina, are the proud parents of their first child. Luke Fernando was born July 29, 2005. Archeval is a trial attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Housing and Civil Enforcement Section. The family resides in Kensington, Md. James I. McAuley IV has returned to his hometown of Franklinville, N.Y., and is a partner in the law firm of Moriarty & Swanz. McAuley is the attorney for six townships, three fire districts and his local school district. He practices primarily in the area of real estate and municipal issues. He and his wife, Susan, have a daughter. Jeneba Jallah Ghatt and Fatima Fofana (2000) were selected as the 2006 News Alumni Achievement Awardees by Catholic University’s chapter of the Black Law Students Association. Ghatt and Fofana are two of the three partners of The Ghatt Law Group LLC, the nation’s first communications law firm owned and operated by AfricanAmerican women. Bill Winter is running for a seat in Congress during the November 2006 election. He is challenging Republican incumbent Tom Tancredo for the right to represent Colorado’s 6th Congressional District. Brian M. McDermott has joined the Tyson’s Corner, Va., office of Williams Mullen as a lateral partner in its communications group. McDermott assists in international telecommunications and broadband clients with local, state, federal and international regulatory and transactional issues. His experience includes mergers, acquisitions and securities issuances; the transfer and purchase of public utility facilities; and the negotiation of interconnections agreements. Christy Wallner Goodman has joined with two partners to form the law offices of Goodman, Sheridan & Roff, LLP. The San Diego, Calif.-based firm specializes in business litigation, FDCPA and FCRA litigation, consumer litigation and estate planning. 1999 Sarah Weitzel Carson was recognized by Atlanta Magazine as one of Georgia's Super Lawyer Rising Stars. Christopher J. Cloud reports that his company, CJC Consulting, has recently signed Audissey Guides as a new client. The Boston-based company has made waves in the media and tourism industry by using MP3 players to provide audio commentary about historic sites to tourists. CJC Consulting is based in Roslindale, Mass. Charles R. Nold has left the University of California and started his own intellectual property practice in California, specializing in the patenting and licensing of high-tech inventions. His Web site is NoldLaw.com. Audrey J. Todd recently joined SES AMERICOM, Inc. in Princeton, N.J., as regulatory counsel. Todd resides in Ocean Grove, N.J. 2000 Erica R. Jacobson completed an LL.M. in corporate law from Columbia University in February 2006. Since 2003, Erica has served as in-house counsel with Lehman Brothers Inc. at its offices in New York and New Jersey. She resides in New York City. Cecelia A. TaBois was featured in the December 2005 issue of the ABA Journal in an article about her system for organizing her office space. Featuring a photograph of her, the article was titled “Dead Letter Office: A Paper-Saver Must Learn to Let Go Before She Can Organize Her Space.” TaBois also spoke at the ABA Real Property Probate and Trust Law Section’s Spring 2006 Washington D.C. Community Outreach Program: An Introduction to Trusts and Estates Practice. The eight-week course was for new and prospective members of the probate and trust bar. TaBois is a solo practitioner in McLean, Va., and is a board member of the Asian Pacific American Bar Association of Greater Washington D.C., where she edits its newsletter. 2001 Karen LeVan Bergman married Leif Bergman on Oct. 22, 2005. The couple resides in Medford, Mass. Gina Cain-Tate married William L. Tate in February 2003. The couple has two children, Alexandria and Aidyn, and resides in Durham, N.C. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 49 ALUMNI Patrick A. Hope and his wife, Kristen, became the proud parents of a baby girl, Emma Grace, on Jan. 31, 2006. The family resides in Arlington, Va. Maura Jeffords and her husband, Leonard, welcomed their first child, Patton Henry Jeffords, on May 23, 2005. The family resides in Washington, D.C. Josef D. Leary has retired after nearly 20 years as a member of the U.S. Foreign Service. His final assignment with the State Department was working on legal and policy issues as a special assistant to the executive director of the Bureau of Diplomatic Security. Leary is now in private practice. In addition, through his role as a member of the ABA’s Homeland Security Committee, Leary recently provided substantive comments regarding a resolution concerning the constitutionality of the domestic surveillance program. The resolution was later considered by the ABA House of Delegates. Shane Orr and his wife, Liza, 2000, have departed the Washington, D.C., area to move back to his hometown of Denver. Formerly with Arnold and Porter, Shane is now an attorney with the Denver-headquartered Jacobs Chase Frick Kleinkopf & Kelley LLC. Liza previously served in the Division of Market Regulation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Dana J. Thompson married Shera Higgs of Houston on Dec. 17, 2005. The wedding was held in Houston. Thompson is deputy chief of staff in the office of U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas). 2002 Sarah Glennon Pietragallo was married to William Pietragallo III in January 2006. The following month, she left Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll LLP to continue real estate finance practice as in-house counsel at CapitalSource Inc. 50 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 News Jennifer Rasile is happy to announce her marriage to Terence Everitt, 2001, on Nov. 19, 2005. The wedding ceremony was performed at Blessed Sacrament Church in Alexandria, Va., followed by a dinner reception at the Westin Grand in Washington, D.C. The couple currently resides in Alexandria. Hon. John H. Bayly Jr. in D.C. Superior Court in 2001 and as a health policy intern from 1998 to 1999 for the Hon. Garnet F. Coleman, Texas House of Representatives. She served in the HIV /AIDS Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as a health policy intern in 1998. 2003 2004 Timothy Bauersachs has joined the law division of the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, working to protect the state’s children from child abuse and neglect. He has also completed the cross-country journey of a lifetime, driving from New Jersey to San Diego in his convertible, visiting 15 major U.S. cities and exploring 12 national parks. Liza Terry Craig completed a one-year clerkship with Judge James Baker of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces in September 2005. Since then she has joined the law firm of Shaffer, Bock & Antonoplos PLLC as an associate in its commercial real estate practice group. In April 2005, she married Peter David Craig of Huntington, Ind. Along with daughter Eryn, the couple resides in Upper Marlboro, Md. Michael D. Freeman has accepted a position with the law firm of Griffith, Sadler & Sharpe in Beaufort, S.C. Andrew P. Lannon completed a clerkship for Florida Supreme Court Justice Peggy A. Quince in July 2005, and has joined the Orlando, Fla., offices of Holland & Knight LLP. Lannon, his wife, Corazon, and children, Peter and Abigail, reside in Winter Park, Fla. Monica Santelices Monroe recently moved to Tallahassee, Fla., where she is employed by the Florida Department of Revenue. Monroe serves in the Office of General Counsel as a specialist in communications services tax. Heidi Singleton recently joined Michaels & Ward, LLP in Boston, where she practices securities litigation. Chiarra-May Stratton has joined the health law practice in the Washington, D.C., office of OberKaler. Before joining the firm, she practiced in the health care group of Reed Smith. Stratton served as a judicial intern for the John T. Davis and his wife, Megan, are the proud parents of Caitlin Maureen Davis, born June 30, 2005. The family resides in North Carolina, where Davis is employed by the Guilford County Public Defender’s Office in Greensboro. Morgan J. Milner and his wife, Jennifer, proudly announce the birth of their son, Benedict William Milner, who was born Jan. 26, 2006. Morgan is an associate with Chittenden, Murday & Novotny LLC in Chicago. AnnaLisa Schmidt has joined the Washington, D.C., office of Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, where she is an associate in the litigation group. Schmidt focuses her practice on commercial litigation, with an emphasis on professional liability defense and coverage matters, including lawyers, stockbrokers and other professionals. She has been a volunteer attorney for Whitman-Walker Clinic and the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights Coalition, both located in ALUMNI Washington, D.C. While in law school, Schmidt was elected to the Student Bar Association and served as an editor on the Catholic University Law Review. Brenna C. Steinert will wed Emil P. Lenchak Jr., on Aug., 5, 2006, at Reynolds Plantation in Georgia. 2005 Jessica Aspinwall Baldassari married George Springsteen on April 12, 2006. They await a new baby on June 23, 2006. Peter C. Cole is an investigator for the New Jersey Bureau of Securities, under the Office of the Attorney General. He resides in Glen Ridge, N.J. Nicole D. DeCostello joined the New Jersey Senate Republican Office in October 2005. She serves on the staff of the Senate Committee on Economic Growth and Committee on Community and Urban Affairs, where she concentrates on drafting legislation for Republican senators. Jared S. Greenstein is an associate at Washington, D.C.-based Greenstein Delorme & Luchs, P.C., a mid-sized general practice law firm specializing in commercial law, specifically commercial real estate transactions. His practice is focused on commercial leasing, as well as certain aspects of real estate finance, development and acquisition. William F. Lynch has accepted a judicial clerkship with the Hon. Joan Zeldon, presiding judge of the Civil Division, D.C. Superior Court, to commence in September 2006. Lynch’s clerkship follows a previous one with the 23rd Judicial Circuit of Virginia. Todd W. Monroe has joined the Washington, D.C., office of Greenberg Traurig LLP as an associate in its litigation practice. News Colleen S. Walsh currently works as an assistant district attorney in Manhattan. Curtis L. Zeager is counsel and associate director of the Project for International Religious Liberty, Project for Civil Justice Reform, the Hudson Institute. Zeager concentrates on various tort reform initiatives and international human rights problems, such as human trafficking and prison conditions. Send news to: Editor, CUA Lawyer, Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064 Craig Trainor was admitted to the New York State Bar in March 2006. Upon completion of his judicial clerkship with the Hon. Frederick J. Scullin Jr., United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Trainor joined the Manhattan law firm De Feis O’Connell & Rose, P.C., as an associate attorney. The firm specializes in white-collar criminal defense work, including securities fraud, political corruption, money laundering, tax evasion, RICO, and civil and criminal antitrust violations. A MILLION DOLLAR YEAR! The law school extends a special thank you to all those alumni, faculty, staff, students and friends who assisted us in making this a banner year in our fundraising efforts! More than $1.1 million was raised in fiscal year 2006 in support of our student and programmatic needs, a 50 percent increase from fiscal year 2005. More than $560,000 was gifted to our Annual Fund, which supports student scholarships, enabling the school to attract and retain the best and brightest aspiring legal practitioners and scholars. On behalf of all the students who will benefit from your generosity to CUA law, we thank you! To make a gift to the Law School Annual Fund please contact Sara Goldberg, annual fund coordinator, at 202-310-4637 goldberg@law.edu. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 51 ALUMNI News In Memoriam 1936 Felix T. Haynes died on Oct. 17, 2005, in Tampa, Fla., at the age of 91. 1937 Helen M. Curtin passed away March 11, 2006. A resident of Bethesda, Md., Mrs. Curtin is survived by two children and several nieces and nephews. 1946 Joseph A. Sommer died on Feb. 22, 2006. A resident of Santa Fe, N.M., since 1953, Sommer practiced law for 59 years. As an assistant U.S. Attorney, he worked for the Department of Justice from 1948 to 1951. He then became special assistant to the U. S. Attorney in the Tax Division, Civil Trial Section from 1951 to 1953. During those years he traveled throughout the United States trying tax cases, developing his skills as a trial lawyer and as a tax lawyer. In 1953, Sommer co-founded McKenna & Sommer, now known as Sommer, Udall, Hardwick, Ahern & Hyatt. One of New Mexico’s first tax attorneys and one of the state’s premier trial attorneys, Sommer was recognized by his colleagues in 1991, when he received the President’s Award for Exceptional Service from the Bar Association of the First Judicial District. One of the highlights of his early professional career was his oral argument before the United States Supreme Court in Rea v. U.S., in which he and his client prevailed against the government. During the last years of his career, Sommer was especially active in the Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE), a nonprofit association dedicated to the formation, growth and success of small businesses nationwide. As a member of SCORE, he gave countless hours providing legal advice to many small-business owners in Santa Fe. Joseph Sommer is survived by his 52 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 life partner of 24 years, Ricky Hardy, five children and eight grandchildren. 1949 Gerard B. Giguere passed away Nov. 2, 2005. 1959 The Hon. Donald L. Fratino died of a cerebral aneurysm on Dec. 11, 2005, in Annapolis, Md. He was 74. Born June 6, 1931, in Norwalk, Conn., Judge Fratino served in the Army from 1954 to 1956 and was stationed in Germany. Upon retirement from the Internal Revenue Service, where he specialized in international tax law, Judge Fratino was in private practice of law before becoming an administrative law judge for the state of Maryland. Among his many memberships, Judge Fratino belonged to the alumni association of the Columbus School of Law, which honored him as a 45-year alumnus during its annual Auld Lang Syne luncheon in 2004. Judge Fratino enjoyed tennis, cycling, travel and boating. He is survived by his wife, Mary Monica Fratino, three daughters and 11 grandchildren. 1961 William P. Roche died on Friday, Nov. 18, 2005. A resident of Bethesda for many years, Mr. Roche resided in Silver Spring at the time of his death. He is survived by his wife, Jean Travis Roche, four children and 17 grandchildren. 1964 Edwin C. Barrett died on Dec. 14, 2005, in Harwichport, Mass., at the age of 72. 1974 Richard “Dick” Rivers died from acute leukemia on April 30, 2006. He was 63. The former head of the international law practice section of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Rivers retired in 1996. He went on to earn a master's degree in creative writing from Johns Hopkins University in 2003. Rivers began his career as press secretary to Rep. Hale Boggs (D-La.) in the office of the House majority whip (1968-70) and in the office of the House majority leader (1970-72). He later served as a staff member of the Senate Finance Committee chaired by Russell B. Long (D-La.), where he drafted the legislation that was known as "fast track." Rivers moved to general counsel of the Office of the Special Trade Representative during the Carter administration, where he assisted in negotiations for the so-called "Tokyo Round" trade agreement with the member countries of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. A memorial service was held May 22, 2006, at the Metropolitan Club Washington, D.C. 1979 Anthony Bergin died suddenly on Oct. 22, 2005, at his home in Waterbury, Conn. He was an attorney with Zehnder & Zehnder of Naugatuck, Conn. Bergin is survived by his wife, Maureen, and six children ranging in age from 8 to 17. 1981 Beth Kanehl Steele died on May 4, 2005, at the Hospice of the North Shore, in Skokie, Ill., at the age of 59. Ms. Steele was employed as a legal editor. 1984 John E. Smathers, a captain in the United States Army Reserve, died on Feb. 5, 2006. A resident of Laurel, Md, Capt. Smathers had been serving as the command judge advocate for the 352nd Civil Affairs Command in Riverdale, Md. A member of the judge advocate general corps since 1995, Capt. Smathers’ previous military assignments included deployment to Iraq from January 2003 to ALUMNI February 2004, where he was awarded two Purple Hearts and the Combat Action Badge. Capt. Smathers’ bravery under fire was the subject of a short article in the summer 2004 issue of CUA Lawyer, titled “When Johnny Came Marching Home.” News All in the Family Graduation Class of 2006 1982 Susan Duh Heffron, 48, passed away on March 30, 2006, at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C. A lawyer and litigation coordinator who had worked with the Washington law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld in recent years, Heffron was a native of Allentown, Pa. Early in her career, she worked for several area law firms including Piper & Marbury. There, she helped with pre-trial work for the defense in the massive Love Canal environmental waste case in upstate New York. More recently, she focused on lawsuits related to insurance matters. A classical piano enthusiast, Ms. Heffron is survived by her husband of 20 years, William J. Heffron. 1991 Sylvia M. Brennan died on Jan. 28, 2006, after a courageous battle with cancer. Brennan ran the Washington, D.C., office of the nonprofit National Housing Law Project for two years prior to taking leave to battle her disease. She is survived by her husband of 16 years, Stephen C. Brennan; her parents; a sister and a brother; and five nieces and nephews. Alexandra M. Abboud, 2003 sister of Khalil J. Abboud Nicholas Manfreda, 1937* grandfather of Brendan Manfreda Raymond A. Dufour, 1936* grandfather of R. Alex Dufour, II Michael R. McCarthy, 1991 father of Maureen McCarthy G. Michael Dufour, 1989 cousin of R. Alex Dufour, II Linda C. McCreary, 1999 mother of Melissa K. McCreary Michael R. Sachs, 2005 cousin of Janine P. Gannon James F. Morgan, Jr., 1978 father of James F. Morgan, III Lawrence P. Grassini, 1970 father of Kathleen M. Grassini William W. Murck, 1972 father of Patrick A. Murck Bronia Walsh, 1957* grandmother of Krista A. Kaczensky Alice P. Schwartz, 1977 mother of Rebecca N. Schwartz Roger J. Lucas, 1981 father of Jennifer A. Lucas Thomas W. Keech, 1975 uncle of Soon Ei Sweeney Joseph Broderick, 1937* grandfather of Brendan Manfreda James J. Vaughan, 1966 father of Jennifer Vaughan Mark N. Manfreda, 2005 cousin of Brendan Manfreda Jeanette Gerber Vaughan, 1968 mother of Jennifer Vaughan Mary E. Manfreda, 2002 cousin of Brendan Manfreda Margaret A. King cousin of Cathleen Reilly Myers (Associate Dean for Institutional Advancement) *deceased Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 53 ALUMNI News Cross Country Alumni gatherings nationwide Scranton Alumni Chapter In March, Dean Veryl V. Miles, 1980, was warmly met by many of our alumni in Scranton, Pa., at the Lackawanna Station Hotel. It was a wonderful opportunity to share stories and reconnect with classmates and peers. Washington, D.C. Sixth Annual St. Patrick’s Day Celebration More than 65 of our D.C. alumni joined D.C. chapter chairperson Edward J. McAndrew, 1995, center, for a pint at the D.C. Pub Party in honor of St. Patrick’s Day. Ed caught up with Paul M. Higgins, 1995, and John Kitlas, 1997, during the festivities. New Mexico Alumni Luncheon The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in sunny Albuquerque, N.M., was the site of a New Mexico chapter luncheon in November, hosted by board of visitor member Robert N. Singer, 1968. Rhode Island Alumni Chapter Members of the Rhode Island Alumni Chapter greeted Dean Veryl V. Miles with a luncheon at the beautiful University Club. The Honorable Alice B. Gibney, 1972, hosted the event with help from Richard Pacia, 1978, and Melissa Darigan, 1992. 54 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 ALUMNI News New York City Alumni Chapter Our NYC alumni took in exceptional views of New York at the historical Beekman Tower Hotel. Among the many in attendance were, left to right, Daphne Tchao, 1993; Dean Miles; Jacob R. Zissu, 2004; Megan Annitto, 2001; Mary O'Flynn, 1999; and board of visitors member William Sondericker, 1952. New Jersey Alumni Chapter New Jersey alumni welcomed Dean Miles at the Park Avenue Club in Florham Park, N.J. Melissa ‘Missy’ Elias, 1980; Christine and Robert Contillo, 1980; Hugh DeFazio, 1968; Seton Hall Professor John B. Wefing, 1967; and John Elias, 1980, take a moment to smile for the camera. Special thanks to hosts Melissa and John Elias for a spectacular event. Boston Alumni Chapter CUA law shareholders at Greenberg Traurig, LLP hosted Dean Miles for an intimate dinner at their office. Breathtaking views of downtown Boston were enjoyed by all, especially Karen LeVan Bergman, 2001; Theodore ‘Ted’ Grannatt, 2001; Dean Miles; Juan Marcelino, 1981; board of visitors member John Carberry, 1973; and John Sten, 1995. 1897 Society Gathering Members of the 1897 Society and special guests shared a magical evening with Dean Miles at the Kennedy Center for a performance of Wicked: The Untold Story of the Witches of Oz, one of the hottest tickets in town. Spring–Summer 2006 / C U A L A W Y E R 55 ALUMNI News Cross Country Alumni gatherings nationwide Third Annual Miami Family Mass and Brunch Linda and Luis Perez, both members of the Class of 1983, along with their daughter, Elizabeth, hosted more than 30 of our Miami alumni at their home in sun-drenched Coral Gables, Fla., this past February. Rev. Raymond O’Brien was on hand to preside over the special Mass. New York City Alumni Chapter CUA law Professor Clifford S. Fishman, far right, lectured to our NYC alumni in April at Milberg, Weiss, Bershad & Schulman, LLP. A special thanks to the firm for hosting us as well as Joseph Guglielmo, 1995, and Shannon McKenna, 2003, for making the lecture a great success. Washington, D.C.Young Alumni Chapter In March, the first Student and Alumni Breakfast was held at Holland & Knight. The program included team members from the firm’s real estate division. Pictured here are Charles ‘Chad’ Tiedemann, 1981; Sharon Nelson Craig, 1987; Colleen Leonard, 2003; Christopher H. Collins, 1978; and Alan P. Vollmann, 1980. Auld Lang Syne Luncheon Holiday festivities kicked off with the annual Auld Lang Syne Luncheon held at the law school on Dec. 2, 2005. Pictured here are our most senior alumni dressed in their holiday best. Seated front and center are recipients of special acknowledgement: Natalie Y. St. Denis, 1955, who celebrated her 50th graduation anniversary, and Richard W. Galiher Sr., 1935, who celebrated his 70th. 56 C U A L A W Y E R / Spring–Summer 2006 CALENDAR OF Events Alumni Events Calendar August 8/12/06 Washington, D.C. Alumni Chapter Baseball Game Washington Nationals vs. New York Mets RFK Stadium 8/15/06 NYC Alumni Chapter Baseball Game New York Yankees vs. Baltimore Orioles Yankee Stadium TBD Hawaii Alumni and Faculty Reception (in conjunction with the ABA Annual Meeting) Honolulu, Hawaii September 9/10/06 Washington, D.C. and Baltimore Alumni Chapter Baseball Game Baltimore Orioles vs. New York Yankees Camden Yards Baltimore, Md. 9/15/06-9/17/06 REUNION 2006 Columbus School of Law Washington, D.C. Classes of 1966, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996 and 2001 TBD Washington, DC Young Alumni Chapter Pub Party Welcoming the Class of 2006 Washington, D.C. October 10/30/06 Virginia Bar Swearing In Alumni Breakfast Richmond Marriott Richmond, Va. TBD Homecoming Reception Columbus School of Law Washington, D.C. November TBD Washington, DC Young Alumni Chapter Student & Young Alumni Breakfast Topic: Careers in Government Contracts Venable, LLP Washington, D.C. CUA law school is always looking for volunteers to help us plan and execute new events across the country. If you would like to be a part of your regional alumni chapter committee, please contact Jodie Sperico, director of alumni relations, at sperico@law.edu. For additional information regarding these and other alumni activities, please call 202-319-5670 or 1-877-7CUALAW or e-mail:cualawalumni@law.edu THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA Columbus School of Law Washington, DC 20064 Address Service Requested NON PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT 382 DULLES VA