2021 CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Hall of Fame Program

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Hall of Fame. 2021


Hall of Fame. Our Sponsors Thank you to the following generous sponsors for your support of the CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Hall of Fame and for your contributions to C|M|LAW student scholarships!

Hall of Fame Champion The Xenophon Zapis Family

Dean’s Circle The Honorable Basil M. Russo Family

120 Society

Managing Partner

Scholarship Circle

Brett P. Barragate ’96 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Kemper D. Arnold ’80

Becker & Poliakoff

Louise P. Dempsey ’81 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Calfee, Halter & Griswold LLP

Flannery | Georgalis, LLC

Tim ’85 and Chris Collins Timothy Cosgrove ’87

Gallagher Sharp LLP

Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Dr. John F. Burke, Jr. and Judge Nancy A. Fuerst '88 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame Diane West Gibbons & Michael E. Gibbons ’82 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame Jones Day James A. Lowe ’72 Howard D. Mishkind ’80 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame David and Inez Myers Foundation

Italian Sons and Daughters of America

Georgia A. Froelich ’84

Dennis R. Lansdowne ’81 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

M. Colette Gibbons ’76 & Harlan Stone Hertz

R. Russell O’Rourke ’84

Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP

Park-Ohio

McCarthy, Lebit, Crystal & Liffman Co., LPA

Robert D. Vilsack ’87

McDonald Hopkins

Weltman, Weinberg & Reis Co., L.P.A.

Taft

Sonia M. Winner & Professor Kevin F. O’Neill

F. Scott Wilson ’81

Partner

Dean Linda L. Ammons

Friedman, Gilbert + Gerhardstein LLC

Professor Emerita Susan J. Becker ’83 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Friedman & Nemecek, LLC

Wilson Huhn

Holland & Knight

Linda A. Klein

Kastner Westman & Wilkins, LLC

Anne L. Meyers & Abby Stout 2L

Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis

Linda Jackson Sowell & Frank Sowell ’81

Kohrman, Jackson & Krantz LLP (KJ&K)

Reminger Co., LPA

Justice Melody J. Stewart '88

Steven W. Percy ’79 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Barbara K. Roman ’77

Thompson Hine LLP P. Kelly Tompkins ’81 Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame Tucker Ellis

Firm Founder

Frantz Ward

Friend Circle

Member, C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Walter | Haverfield

Mark ’84 and Wendy ’88 Termini in honor of the Zapis Family

Weston Hurd LLP

Sponsors listed as of 11/5/2021

Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP

Wickens Herzer Panza Margaret W. Wong & Associates LLC

To donate, visit csulaw.org/give


Hall of Fame. Induction Celebration

Friday, November 5, 2021 Cleveland-Marshall College of Law

2021 HONOREES: Ann-Marie Ahern, Class of 1998 Dean Linda L. Ammons Professor Emeritus Hyman Cohen Tim L. Collins, Class of 1985 Colleen M. Cotter Justice Michael P. Donnelly, Class of 1991 Georgia A. Froelich, Class of 1984 M. Colette Gibbons, Class of 1976 David H. Gunning, II, Class of 1994 Judge Leo A. Jackson, Class of 1950 Judge Nathaniel R. Jones Max I. Kohrman, Class of 1918 Brent W. Larkin, Class of 1986

Steven B. Lesser, Class of 1979 James A. Lowe, Class of 1972 Judge Richard M. Markus Alan Jay Rom, Class of 1972 Barbara K. Roman, Class of 1977 Honorable Basil M. Russo, Class of 1972 Judge Brendan J. Sheehan, Class of 1993 David C. Weiner F. Scott Wilson, Class of 1981 Sonia Winner Margaret W. Wong Xenophon “Xen” Zapis, Class of 1954

2021 Leader on the Rise Award Recipient: Kimberly Kendall Corral, Class of 2012


THANK YOU Cleveland Marshall College of Law The children and grandchildren of Xenophon Zapis would like to thank Cleveland Marshall College of Law for the great honor of inducting Xen to the CML Hall of Fame.

Xenophon Zapis 2


Our mission never has been more vital; our need for support never has been more important. The Hall of Fame Celebration gives us the opportunity not only to honor our distinguished inductees, but also to raise funds for student scholarships.

Dean’s Message This evening we have a special opportunity to celebrate our iconic past and invest in our exciting future. Our Hall of Fame is an outgrowth of our covenant with our students, faculty, staff, graduates, and community to hold true to our commitments and traditions, dedicated to diversity, opportunity, excellence, and civic responsibility.

The story of Cleveland-Marshall is an iconic story of justice, equality, and opportunity. We have a long, proud history dating back to 1897. Cleveland-Marshall College of Law was the first law school in Ohio to admit women and one of the first in the nation to admit minorities. It was our graduates who laid the foundation for the Cleveland legal profession and who led the fight for civil rights in Northeast Ohio. Our graduates are everywhere – in the public, private, nonprofit, and academic sectors – many at the highest levels. Every day we educate and train the future custodians of our democracy and guardians of justice. It’s a sacred trust that we take very seriously.

This evening is our single best opportunity to raise funds for much-needed student scholarships. Scholarships enable us to be the “brain-gain” law school – the most reliable legal talent pipeline for Cleveland and Northeast Ohio, where most of our graduates live, work, and thrive.

Many law schools can make you a great lawyer, but at C|M|LAW we also strive to make you a great leader. Our mission is to graduate students who are not only successful professionals, but also leaders, change makers, and advocates of justice…and maybe someday, a legend in our Hall of Fame. Thank you for your support.

Lee Fisher DEAN

Cleveland-Marshall College of Law | Cleveland State University Joseph C. Hostetler-BakerHostetler Chair in Law

CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY

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LEARN LAW. LIVE JUSTICE.

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How Honorees are Selected Who is eligible for the CSU C|M|LAW Hall of Fame?

The Hall of Fame honors individuals who have contributed to the past, present, and/or future success and reputation of CSU C|M|LAW. The inductees may include living and deceased alumni, community leaders, and former faculty, deans, and staff. Must an honoree be a CSU C|M|LAW graduate?

No. While the vast majority of our honorees are current and past alumni, we also honor current and past community leaders and past faculty, deans, and staff. Current full-time faculty and staff are not eligible. _________ deserves to be in the CSU C|M|Law Hall of Fame. Why wasn’t _________ chosen?

It is very important to note that many prominent individuals who clearly are worthy of inclusion were not named this year. The Hall of Fame Selection Committee tried to reach a consensus on each nominee, and, as a result, no Committee member had all their first choices selected. We are very fortunate that there is no shortage of worthy individuals, and we look forward to inducting many other extraordinary people next year and in future years. Who made the selections?

Each year, the Dean appoints individuals to serve on the Hall of Fame Committee consisting of alumni, faculty, and current and past staff. To protect them from any possible pre-selection lobbying and post-selection questions and/or concerns, the list of Committee members is confidential. New Committee members will be selected each year. What were the specific selection criteria?

While the selection process is admittedly subjective, there are general selection criteria. The criteria include, but are not limited to, the following: • Individual’s historic significance to the law school and/or the community • Individual’s professional success and reputation • Individual’s support of the law school (through time, talent, and/or “treasure”) The Committee tried to choose, when possible, honorees who fit at least two, and preferably all three criteria.

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Well Done Barb!

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C O N G R AT U L AT I O N S T O

THE 2021 CSU CLEVELAND-MARSHALL COLLEGE OF LAW HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

P . K E L LY T O M P K I N S C|M|LAW Class of 1981 Chair, Board of Visitors Leader-in-Residence Hall of Fame Class of 2017 Senior Advisor, Dix & Eaton

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Hall of Fame. 2021 Honorees The following inductees all graduated from and/or made significant contributions to the esteemed reputation of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law.

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Ann-Marie Ahern CLASS OF 1998 Principal, McCarthy, Lebit, Crystal & Liffman, Co. LPA MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Ann-Marie Ahern is a Board Member and the head of the employment law practice at McCarthy, Lebit. For more than 20 years, Ann-Marie has been an advocate for employees, successfully litigating hundreds of employment disputes and trying cases to juries involving issues of age discrimination, sex discrimination and harassment, race discrimination, disability discrimination/failure to accommodate, wrongful discharge, and illegal retaliation. Ann-Marie has obtained more than $75 million in settlements and verdicts on behalf of her clients. Best Lawyers named her the 2020 Plaintiff’s Employment “Lawyer of the Year” for Cleveland. Ann-Marie has also been honored by Super Lawyers® as one of the Top 100 lawyers in Ohio. Ann-Marie is a nationally-recognized authority on employment law, having been quoted in The Washington Post, Time.com, and USA Today. She has been at the forefront of the #MeToo and pay equity awareness movements. She is an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law and a Fellow in the Litigation Counsel of America. Ann-Marie loves her work with the law school, having been a member of the Board of Visitors at CSU C|M|LAW since 2015, and Co-Chair of the Career Planning and Placement Work Group for the last several years.

Linda L. Ammons

Dean Emeritus, Widener Law School Professor Emeritus, CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Linda L. Ammons is dean emeritus at Widener University. She served as counsel to the president of Widener for legal education, after retiring as associate provost and dean of the law school in 2014. She was the first woman and the first African American to lead the two-campus, two-state, Widener University School of Law, and was the senior African American female dean in the nation when she stepped down after serving eight years. Ammons came to Widener in 2006 from CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, where she was associate dean and professor of law. During her 15 years at Cleveland-Marshall, she chaired and served on a number of university committees and taught Administrative Law, Legislation, Mass Communications Law, and Women and the Law. Ammons served as executive assistant to former Ohio Governor Richard F. Celeste, from 1988 to 1991, advising him on legal and policy matters in the criminal justice, regulatory and administrative areas. In January 2010, Ammons was appointed by Governor Jack Markell of Delaware to be the special investigator in the case of the alleged child molestations by pediatrician Earl Bradley. Her work resulted in a package of twelve legislative reforms, nine of which were passed unanimously by the Delaware General Assembly. Her Board memberships include the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce serving as the chair of its ethics committee, WHYY TV and Radio of Philadelphia, Vegas PBS, and she is a Trustee of Christiana Hospital.

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Hyman Cohen

Professor Emeritus and Former Interim Dean, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Hyman Cohen was a long-time faculty member, and interim dean, at CSU ClevelandMarshall College of Law. Prof. Cohen began his career, after graduating from New York University School of Law with his JD and LLM, in private practice. He worked at the regional Housing and Urban Development office in New York City and taught Business Law at Pace College. Prof. Cohen joined the Cleveland-Marshall faculty in 1967, teaching torts, administrative law, labor law, labor law in the public sector, and labor arbitration. He served as interim dean for two years, when he encouraged the school’s “truly outstanding faculty” to persevere in the research, academic programs, and other activities in which they were engaged. Prof. Cohen was also a Labor Arbitrator and a decades-long member of the National Academy of Arbitrators. He was Chair of the Labor Law Section of Greater Cleveland Bar Association, Chair of the Labor Advisory Council of Cleveland American Arbitration Association, and served on Labor Arbitration Panels of Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service of the National Mediation Board. Prof. Cohen continued to serve as an Adjunct Professor for five years after retirement and remained a frequent lecturer on labor arbitration.

Tim L. Collins CLASS OF 1985 Principal, Thrasher, Dinsmore & Dolan

MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Tim Collins joined Thrasher, Dinsmore & Dolan as principal in 2019, having been actively engaged in litigation practice for more than 30 years in a variety of industries. He has acted as first chair in numerous jury trials to conclusion, bench trials, and arbitration proceedings in an array of commercial and business law cases. Tim has represented class representatives and opt-out plaintiffs in major federal antitrust class action cases in Ohio and California. He has served as receiver and counsel to a receiver in more than 50 state court cases in recent years, where he managed and sold and/or acted as counsel for a national wholesale lumber business, a regional airport fixed base operation, downtown Cleveland office towers, and storefronts, as well as dozens of commercial and residential structures. While a trial lawyer by trade, Tim enjoys blending his legal skills with business issues to achieve efficient solutions for clients, or for courts requiring a receiver or a liquidating trustee. He was recently honored as a member of the Irish Legal 100 of the Irish Voice Newspaper. In his spare time, Tim enjoys cheering on Cleveland sports, playing golf, and cycling as he trains for races like Velosano, which raises money for cancer research at the Cleveland Clinic.

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Colleen M. Cotter

Executive Director, The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Colleen Cotter has been Executive Director of The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland since 2005. Legal Aid is a nonprofit law firm serving the needs of people with low income, securing safety, shelter and economic security. Colleen serves on the C|M|LAW Board of Visitors. She is Chair of the Saint Luke’s Foundation Board and President of United Way of Greater Cleveland Council of Agency Executives. Colleen is a member of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association Board, United Way Board, the 50 Club of Cleveland, Cleveland Rape Crisis Center Sing Out! Chorale, Leadership Cleveland Class of 2011, and Adler Mission 2019. She previously served on the boards of the Center for Community Solutions, National Legal Aid and Defender Association and on the Legal Services Corporation Advisory Committees on the Justice Gap, Data, and Pro Bono. Her 2007 speech “Justice and Healthy Communities” was published in Vital Speeches of the Day. Colleen was named a 2017 Crain’s Woman of Note and received the 2017 CMBA President’s Award. Colleen previously worked as a legal aid consultant, at Indiana Legal Services, and as a Skadden Fellow at Pine Tree Legal Assistance. She received her JD from Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington, summa cum laude, and her BA from the University of Notre Dame cum laude.

Justice Michael P. Donnelly CLASS OF 1991 Justice, Supreme Court of Ohio

Justice Donnelly is the 160th justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio. Prior to joining the state Court, he served as a judge on the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, General Division from 2005 to 2018. Before serving as a member of the local judiciary, Justice Donnelly was an assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor from 1992 until 1997. He then went on to practice civil litigation for seven years, representing plaintiffs and injured workers in asbestos litigation, personal injury lawsuits, and workers’ compensation claims. He was appointed by the chief justice to the Ohio Supreme Court Death Penalty Task Force in 2013. In addition, from 2010 to 2017, he was one of five judges on Cuyahoga County’s Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Court, which oversees criminal cases involving defendants who suffer from schizophrenia, schizophrenic disorder, or a developmental disability. He is a proud recipient of the Honorable William K. Thomas Professionalism Award from the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association and also received the Ohio Association of Civil Trial Attorneys (OACTA) 2017 Public Service Award. Justice Donnelly serves on the board of the Cleveland Baseball Federation, which helps inner-city boys and girls play baseball and softball in the summer at no charge.

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Georgia A. Froelich CLASS OF 1984 Senior Vice President, Hawthorn, PNC (Retired) MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Georgia recently retired as Senior Vice President at Hawthorn, PNC, serving high-networth individuals in financial services. Prior to that, Georgia worked at Sterling Trust, a premium wealth management service company, a division of National City Corporation, as Vice President and Senior Fiduciary Officer. She has also served as Vice President and Trust Officer for National City’s Private Client Group and in similar positions at FirstMerit and Ameritrust. Georgia has been a long-time member of the C|M|LAW Board of Visitors and serves on its Advancement Work Group. She received the Cleveland State University George B. Davis Award for Service to the University for her strong support of both her alma maters, Cleveland State University and CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law.

M. Colette Gibbons CLASS OF 1976 Of Counsel, McDonald Hopkins

Colette’s practice has focused on insolvency work at the state and federal level: foreclosures, bankruptcies, receiverships and out of court workouts. She has served as a receiver, a Chapter 11 Trustee and was recently appointed by the Office of the U.S. Trustee as a Sub Chapter V Trustee for small businesses. Colette has also served as a board member the Cleveland Bar Association, the Foundation of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association, Seeds of Literacy, West Side Catholic Center, the CSU C|M|LAW Board of Visitors and the American College of Bankruptcy Foundation. She is volunteer lawyer for the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland. Other honors include Top 100 Ohio Super Lawyers, Chambers USA, America’s Leading Lawyers for Business Bankruptcy and Best Lawyers in America, Bankruptcy and Creditors Rights.

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David H. Gunning, II CLASS OF 1994 Partner, McDonald Hopkins

David H. Gunning, II served as Chair of the Cleveland State University (CSU) Board of Trustees and now serves on the Board of the CSU Foundation. David is co-chair of the national real estate practice at McDonald Hopkins. David’s experience spans the areas of real estate, commercial finance, construction, public finance, economic incentives, and general corporate law and includes real estate acquisition and dispositions, joint venture agreements, complex loan and finance documentation, negotiations/contracts, economic incentive transactions, and fund development. David has represented national lenders and other financial institutions; borrowers; national, regional and local developers; institutional and corporate owners; national retailers, and privately held businesses. David is the former president and chief executive officer of APM Management, LLC, one of the leading multifamily real estate acquisition and management companies in the Midwest.

Judge Leo A. Jackson CLASS OF 1950

Chief Judge, Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals (Deceased) Judge Leo A. Jackson (BA, Morehouse College; MBA, Atlanta University; World War II veteran) pursued his JD at Cleveland-Marshall while working full-time at the Veteran’s Administration, graduating as the top student in Trusts. He declined admittance to Harvard Law when he discovered he could not live on campus. When he applied to transfer to University of Georgia Law, they instead gave him a scholarship to study in Cleveland to avoid admitting him to the all-white school. Judge Jackson became Ward 24’s (Glenville) first Black City Council member (1957). He received extensive media attention due to his frequent condemnation of inadequate police response and poor city services in this ward. During his second term, Governor Michael DiSalle offered him appointment to Cleveland Municipal Court. His commitment to unresolved community issues led him to turn down the appointment, prompting a 1961 cover story in Ebony Magazine. He remained Councilman for 14 years. When Judge Jackson finally left Council and ran for the Eighth District Court of Appeals (1970), he was elected by a wide margin countywide, becoming the first African American to serve in this court. Throughout his years of public service, he was known as a passionate champion of equal justice under the law. Upon retirement in 1987, he was honored by the Norman Minor Bar Association and Ohio State Bar Association. Among his many lifetime honors was appointment by President Lyndon Johnson to membership on the Planning Committee for the White House Conference, “To Fulfill These Rights,”(1966). He also received an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from his alma mater, Morehouse College (1977). Judge Jackson’s professional papers are housed at the Western Reserve Historical Society. The life and legacy of Judge Jackson is also chronicled in the book, “American National Biography,” (Oxford University Press, 2008).

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Judge Nathaniel R. Jones

Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit (Deceased) Former Adjunct Professor, CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Judge Jones served with the United States Army Air Corps near the end of World War II. He used his GI Bill to enter Youngstown College where he received both is BA. He studied law at night while serving as Director, Fair Employment Practices Commission in Youngstown. With his Bachelor of Laws degree, he entered private practice. In 1962, after Attorney General Robert Kennedy appointed him, Judge Jones because the first AfricanAmerican Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio. Five years later, he was appointed as Assistant General Counsel to President Lyndon B. Johnson’s National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission). Judge Jones then served as the General Counsel to the NAACP, where he directed all NAACP litigation for nine years, arguing some of the most important civil rights cases in the United States. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter appointed Judge Jones to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. He served as a Judge until 1995, then as a Senior Judge until his retirement in 2002. During his tenure on the Sixth Circuit, he also taught at Harvard Law School and the University of Cincinnati College of Law. He was one of the observers of the first democratic elections in South Africa and participated in the drafting of the South African constitution. After retirement, he continued to practice law as senior counsel at Blank Rome LLP until 2018 and wrote his memoir, Answering the Call: An Autobiography of the Modern Struggle to End Racial Discrimination in America. The Federal Courthouse in Youngstown, Ohio is named in his honor.

Max I. Kohrman CLASS OF 1918

Founder, Kohrman & Kohrman (predecessor to KJ&K) (Deceased) Max I. Kohrman was a 1918 graduate of the Cleveland Law School of Baldwin-Wallace College, a predecessor to Cleveland-Marshall College of Law when the school merged with the John Marshall School of Law. Following graduation, Max partnered with his brother Joseph to establish Kohrman & Kohrman during the final months of World War I in 1918. Kohrman & Kohrman focused on serving the local small businesses of Cleveland’s Central neighborhood. Max Kohrman had immigrated from Russian-controlled Poland and his perspective on the tenuous concept of justice under Russian empire left him a major believer in the American system of justice. Max was a life-long supporter of socially responsible public institutions which relied heavily on the skill and devotion of lawyers and always attempted to support those who are integral to the American judicial system. In 2012, S. Lee Kohrman established the Max I. Kohrman Public Interest Fellowship at C|M|LAW in honor of his late father.

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Brent W. Larkin CLASS OF 1986 Editorial Director, The Plain Dealer (Retired)

When he retired as editorial page editor of The Plain Dealer in 2009, Cleveland Magazine wrote that Brent Larkin “will go down in history as Cleveland’s last big power-broker journalist, the last guy who single-handedly pens the town’s conventional wisdom.” Larkin is a lifelong Greater Cleveland resident. He graduated from Brush High School in 1965, and in 1969 received a degree in journalism from Ohio University. He attended ClevelandMarshall at night, while a columnist at the Plain Dealer. Larkin joined the Cleveland Press as a reporter in 1970. A year later he began covering Cleveland city government and in 1976 was named the newspaper’s politics editor. Larkin moved to the Plain Dealer in 1981, covering politics and later writing the column for the paper’s Metro section. In 1991, Larkin was named to head the Plain Dealer’s opinion pages. In 2002, he was inducted into the Cleveland Press Club Hall of Fame. Since retiring, Larkin has written a weekly column for Cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer. He and his wife, Mary Ann, live in Sagamore Hills. He has one son, Keven, a vice president of PNC Bank, and three grandchildren, William, Katherine and Emmett.

Steven B. Lesser CLASS OF 1979 Shareholder, Becker & Poliakoff

MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Steven B. Lesser is a Shareholder and Chair of Becker’s national Construction Law and Litigation Practice based in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. For over thirty years, he has dedicated his practice exclusively to construction law and litigation, representing a variety of clients in large-scale, high-profile commercial, multifamily, and specialty projects such as museums, country club communities, health care facilities, and sports complexes. Mr. Lesser is Board Certified in Construction Law by The Florida Bar and is a Fellow of the American College of Construction Lawyers. He is Past Chair of the American Bar Association’s Forum on Construction Law, the largest construction lawyer group in the world, and currently serves as Chair of The Florida Bar’s Board of Legal Specialization and Education. Highly accomplished in his field, he has received a number of distinguished awards. Among these include a Band 1 ranking by esteemed legal publication, Chambers USA, as well as the Cornerstone Award, the most prestigious honor presented by the Forum on Construction Law. He is the recipient of the Life Time Achievement Award from the Construction Law Committee of the Florida Bar Real Property and Trust Law Section. He serves on the Board of Visitors of C|M|LAW and is an honorary trustee of the Cleveland-Marshall Law Alumni Association.

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James A. Lowe CLASS OF 1972 Partner, Lowe Scott Fisher Co., LPA

James Lowe is a nationally-recognized trial lawyer in product liability, automobile product safety, and other complex cases. He is the author of multiple texts and treatises, and frequent national and international lecturer on products liability and motor vehicle defect cases. James has successfully tried cases in state and federal courts throughout the country, resulting in numerous million-dollar verdicts, and has recovered over $100 million in verdicts and settlements for his clients. With his great expertise and experience, he has helped educate students as an adjunct faculty member at both the Franklin Thomas Backus School of Law and Cleveland-Marshall. James has been honored by being listed in the Best Lawyers in America — every edition since 1993 — and has been honored as a Fellow of the International Society of Barristers, the International Academy of Trial Attorneys, and the American College of Trial Lawyers. He is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates, Master Bencher Emeritus, American Inns of Court, President’s Club, Association of Trial Lawyers of American Board Certified – Civil Trial Advocacy – National Board of Trial Advocacy. He was Past President, Cleveland Academy of Trial Attorneys and Past Chair, ATLA Products Liability Section.

Judge Richard M. Markus

Judge, Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals (Retired) Former Adjunct Professor, CSU Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Judge Markus served as an appellate attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice and as a litigation partner at three Cleveland law firms prior to his distinguished career as a judge. He served as a Judge in both the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas and Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals and a visiting judge for the Ohio Supreme Court, six Ohio appellate courts, and forty common pleas courts in Ohio. He authored over 1,000 appellate court opinions. Judge Markus also worked in academia; in addition to his twenty-plus years of service to C|M|LAW, he was a visiting or adjunct professor at Harvard, Case Western Reserve, and Akron law schools, an instructor and Director of Forensics at M.I.T., and faculty for the National Judicial College and Institute for Judicial Administration at New York University. He is the Co-Founder and Trustee of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy. Judge Markus was a leader in professional associations including National President of the American Trial Lawyer Association, President of the Ohio State Bar Association and Trustee of the Cleveland Bar Association and Cuyahoga County Bar Associations. He is the author of Ohio Trial Practice (including updates for 45 years) and more than fifty published articles in law reviews and professional journals. He created the Judge Richard M. Markus Adjunct Faculty Award to award outstanding CSU Cleveland-Marshall adjunct professors’ work.

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Alan Jay Rom CLASS OF 1972 Founder, Rom Law P.C.

MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Alan Jay Rom is a 1967 graduate of Ohio University, where he studied economics. He served in the Peace Corps in Bolivia as an economic advisor to a rural savings and loan cooperative. His legal career took him from representing migrant farm workers in Southern New Jersey and the Connecticut-Massachusetts “tobacco valley” for five years to becoming staff counsel to the Boston Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights for 18 years, where he specialized in voting rights, employment law, and education. He worked in a small law firm handling wage and overtime claims for seven years, became Executive Director of Massachusetts Appleseed Center for Law and Justice for six years, joined the Civil Rights Division of the Attorney General’s Office for three years, and then established his own law firm, Rom Law P.C. in 2011 and also serves as a volunteer attorney for Multicultural Education, Training and Advocacy (META). Alan is a member of the Ohio, New Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts Bars, the Bars of the Supreme Court, First and Second Circuit Courts of Appeal, and the Federal Districts of Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey. He is the author of the chapter on overtime law for Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education and has been an adjunct at Northeastern University School of Law and Tufts University. He has lectured at several Boston law schools and published two law review articles on public school finance and authored other articles. He has judged moot court competitions at Harvard Law School and Boston University Law School since 1980.

Barbara K. Roman CLASS OF 1977 Partner, Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis

Barbara K. Roman has been a partner in the law firm of Meyers Roman Friedberg & Lewis for the past 23 years serving as Chair of the Family Law Department. She is a Past President of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association (2011-2012) having served on the committee to unite the CMBA and the Cuyahoga County Bar Association. She serves on several Bar committees including the Professionalism Conciliation Panel. Barbara serves on the Board of The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland and chairs the Pro Bono Committee for Legal Aid. She also serves on the Ursuline College Advisory Board for Legal Studies. Barbara is a graduate of The Ohio State University with a B.A. in Social Sciences. Upon graduation from C|M|LAW, she served as an Ohio Assistant Attorney General and Assistant Section Chief in Consumer Protection and Managing Attorney for the UAW Legal Services Plan. Barbara has received numerous honors in her legal career including Crain’s 2011 Women of Note. She is a founding member of the Cleveland Academy of Collaborative Lawyers and has committed herself to mentoring young C|M|LAW students and graduates and has been a guest instructor at CSU C|M|LAW Mediation classes.

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Honorable Basil M. Russo CLASS OF 1972 Former Judge, Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals

Basil M. Russo was a founder, and served as managing partner of the law firm of Russo, Rosalina & Co., L.P.A. until his retirement in 2014. He has served as Judge of the Ohio Court of Appeals, Judge of the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas (for which he received an Excellent Judicial Service Award from the Ohio Supreme Court ), and Majority Leader of the Cleveland City Council. He currently serves as National President of the Italian Sons and Daughters of America, one of the largest Italian American Fraternal Associations in America, and serves on the executive committee of the National Italian American Foundation in Washington, D.C. He is President of the Justinian Forum Bar Association, and was the driving force behind the creation of the Bishop Anthony Pilla Italian American Studies Program at his alma mater John Carroll University. The numerous awards and recognitions he has received include induction into the Cleveland International Hall of Fame, the Freedom Award from the American Nationalities Movement, and the Columbian Award from the Federation of Italian American Societies.

Judge Brendan J. Sheehan CLASS OF 1993 Administrative and Presiding Judge, Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas

Judge Sheehan has served on the Cuyahoga Common Pleas Court since January 2008. He was elected to serve as the Administrative and Presiding Judge effective January 2020. Prior to assuming the bench, Judge Sheehan practiced as a civil and criminal litigator for 14 years. As a prosecutor in the Major Trial Division of the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office, he served as the Chairman of the Ohio Internet Crimes Against Children Taskforce and the Chairman of the Legal Committee for the National Internet Crimes Against Children Taskforce. He instructed law enforcement officials across the country on investigation and prosecution of internet crimes. He currently serves as a member of the Collaborative to End Human Trafficking, as a trustee of the Ohio Common Pleas Judges’ Association, as a Committee Chairperson for the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case Flow Committee, and as a member of the Ohio Jury Instructions Committee. Judge Sheehan has also received the Child Safety Award for protecting children from Moms for Ohio. Judge Sheehan is an active member of the Cleveland-Marshall Law Alumni Association.

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David C. Weiner Weiner Law, LLC

MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

After attending Georgetown University Law Center and clerking for Senior Circuit Judge E. Barrett Prettyman on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Dave came to Cleveland in 1969, joining Hahn, Loeser, Freedheim, Dean and Wellman, where he practiced large case litigation for over 30 years. Some of his cases were noteworthy and ground breaking. He served as the firm’s Manager Partner until joining Squire, Sanders & Dempsey in 2003, where he continued his litigation practice until retiring in 2010. Since then he was of-counsel to several firms, hanging up his active career in 2019. His professional activities have included chairing the ABA Young Lawyers Division and its Litigation Section, serving as a delegate to the ABA House of Delegates for over 30 years, and being the Sixth Circuit Representative on the Federal Judiciary Committee. He served as President of the Cleveland Legal Association and the Ohio Legal Assistance Foundation. For the past ten years, he has been an adjunct professor at Cleveland-Marshall, teaching trial advocacy. He is a board member of both the Hunger Network of Greater Cleveland and of Our Lady of the Wayside. Dave is an avid golfer, and he has sponsored and served on golf fund raisers for the American Cancer Society and the Hunger Network. Most proudly, he has three wonderful children who are excellent citizens and three adorable grandchildren. He feels blessed to have been a lawyer in this community and is proud of the profession.

F. Scott Wilson CLASS OF 1981 Principal, Uplands Consulting LLC

MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Scott Wilson’s career was devoted almost entirely to aviation, particularly aircraft finance, working in the corporate legal departments of British Aerospace and then Pratt & Whitney for 36 years before retiring in 2017 and founding his own consulting company. He was involved in several legal reform efforts, especially as an advisor to the US delegation in the development of the Cape Town Convention, which sought to standardize aircraft financing worldwide and which came into force in 2006. As a member of the International Registry Advisory Board, he was intimately involved in the creation of the International Registry, one of the earliest entirely electronic mortgage registries, based in Ireland. He also participated in the numerous post-9/11 US airline bankruptcies of the large US airlines, serving on creditors committees in the United and Delta bankruptcies, among others. Scott remains active in non-profit pro bono legal efforts, was a member of the CSU C|M|LAW Board of Visitors for many years, and has been a member of the Board of Governors of the ABA Air and Space Law Forum.

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Sonia Winner

President and CEO, The Cleveland Museum of Natural History VICE-CHAIR, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Sonia Winner became the tenth Director of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in July 2018. Prior to this appointment, Sonia served as Acting Director of the Museum beginning in December 2017 after serving as the Chief Development Officer. From 2011 until 2016, Sonia served as the VP for University Development at Columbia University. Sonia also served as Deputy VP for Professional Schools and Programs and Interim VP for University Development. She was part of the senior team that achieved $6.1 billion for the Columbia Campaign, which set an Ivy League record for largest funds raised in a single campaign. Sonia came to Columbia from Case Western Reserve University, where she spent more than a decade serving in key development leadership roles at the Weatherhead School of Management, as well as the Law School. She has worked with high-level philanthropists in East Asia, South Asia, Europe, and South America, as well as in the United States. Before entering the development field, Winner spent many years in law career services, becoming one of the first lawyers in the country to work in this capacity. She has served on the Board of Trustees of the Cleveland Bar Association. She is the past chair of the Young Lawyers’ Section and past president of the Law Placement Association of Cleveland. She also volunteered as guardian ad litem on behalf of abused and neglected children. She served on the state board of the American Civil Liberties Union, attending two national conventions regarding free speech and individual liberties. Sonia currently serves Vice-Chair of the Board of Visitors for Cleveland-Marshall.

Margaret W. Wong

Founder and Managing Partner, Margaret W. Wong & Assoc., LLC MEMBER, C|M|LAW BOARD OF VISITORS

Margaret W. Wong, an award-winning immigration attorney, came to America in 1969, with two suitcases and her sister, Cecilia. She worked in various jobs while pursuing her education. After graduating from law school, and being fired three or four times, she started her own law firm in 1977, with one desk and no secretary. In 40 years, she has built her immigration law practice into one of the top immigration law firms in the United States, with offices in Cleveland, Columbus, New York City, Nashville, Chicago, Memphis, Raleigh, Atlanta and Minneapolis. She is rated in US News Best Law Firms, is rated AV Preeminent, has three honorary Ph.D. degrees, is listed in Best Lawyers in US and Super Lawyers, and was an adjunct professor in Immigration Law.

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XENOPHON “XEN” ZAPIS CLASS OF 1954 Chairman and CEO, Zapis Capital Group (Deceased)

Xenophon (“Xen”) Zapis has lived the American dream. He was born in 1926 to Louis and Mary Hazapis, who had immigrated to Cleveland from Greece in the 1920s. Following high school, Xen was drafted into the Army and served until he received an honorable discharge in 1947. When he returned to Cleveland, Xen enrolled in Fenn College and soon after graduating, explored an opportunity to produce and host his own Greek Radio Program. As he continued to host and produce the Greek radio program, Xen attended night classes at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. Following graduation from ClevelandMarshall, Xen began to build his law practice and continued to co-host the Greek Radio Program on various stations in Cleveland. In 1963, Xen and three partners established WZAK as Cleveland’s second FM station. For the next 18 years, WZAK would serve as the radio voice of Cleveland’s many ethnic groups, with Xen and wife Lula hosting the Greek Radio Program from the 1960s through the early 1980s. Xen’s company, Zapis Communications, also owned and operated radio stations in Akron, Youngstown, Atlanta, and Boston. In addition to radio, Xen’s lifelong entrepreneurial spirit led to fulfilling business pursuits in real estate development and ownership and management of senior living communities in Rocky River. Throughout his life, Xen served on various boards, including the Ohio Association of Broadcasters, American Contemporary Music Center Development Corporation, Apartment and Home Owners Association, Exchange Club, Cleveland Chapter of the American Hellenic Education Progressive Association (AHEPA) and the Parish Council of St. Demetrios in Rocky River, Ohio and St. Katherine in Naples, Florida. Xen and Lula also established the Zapis Family Charitable Foundation in 1999 to support charitable organizations in Northeast Ohio.

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LEADER ON THE RISE AWARD clemency on behalf of Michigan resident Michael Alonzo Thompson, who has spent more than 25 years of his 60-year sentence for selling marijuana to an undercover informant. Celebrities and social justice advocates like Kim Kardashian, Snoop Dogg, Shaun King and Chelsea Handler and have joined the fight to free Michael Thompson. In June 2020, Kim won a new trial for a client sentenced to thirty years of incarceration, following a conviction obtained by way of unconstitutional trial procedure. Kim has been qualified by the Supreme Court as an attorney capable of handling Death Penalty cases in the State of Ohio.

Kimberly Kendall Corral CLASS OF 2012

Founder, Law Firm of Kimberly Kendall Corral

Kim is the founder of the Law Firm of Kimberly Kendall Corral. She represents clients in complex criminal matters, whether it’s a capital homicide trial or a wrongful conviction. From indictment and pretrial motions to trial, appeals, and post-conviction, Kim handles all levels of criminal justice advocacy. Kim has an exceptional track record of success protecting clients’ constitutional rights to help them avoid conviction and even free them from incarceration. As a freedom fighter, Kim helped Ru-El Sailor in March 2018 to get his 2013 murder conviction overturned after he was imprisoned for 15 years for a crime he didn’t commit. She helped secure a dismissal of murder charges against Charles Jackson in August 2019 after he spent 27 years in prison for a homicide he didn’t commit. In January 2020, Kim submitted a petition of

In addition to advocating for traditional clients, Kim is retained by the Fraternal Order of Police, Ohio Labor Counsel to represent law enforcement officers facing criminal charges and investigations. Kim has also partnered with the Ohio Innocence Project to exonerate wrongfully incarcerated Ohioans. As an adjunct professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Kim led a small group of law students advocating for a man who has spent 30 years wrongfully incarcerated. Kim received an invitation to the Oval Office to discuss a pardon on behalf of her client with the U.S. President Donald Trump and the White House Counsel—at the same time Kanye West visited and witnessed a viral moment. She was also invited to discuss criminal justice advocacy at the Cleveland Browns Social Justice Summit. Other notable accolades include being named a 2019 and 2020 Rising Star by Super Lawyers and collaborations with HBO star Michael K. Williams to take on juvenile justice issues in Ohio. Kim’s passion for her work is matched by the passion she puts into her personal life. Kim has two daughters, age two and four. She loves exploring the world with them and sharing in their curiosity. They love cooking together, making art, and traveling. 23


The Aviation Working Group, a leading group of aviation manufacturers, financiers, and lessors, congratulates Scott Wilson on his induction into the C|M|LAW Hall of Fame. Liceria & Co

We congratulate the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law

Mr. Wilson’s legal work, and legal-business leadership, played a major role in the development of the international legal framework for aviation and equipment financing over the last 25 years.

2021 Hall of Fame Inductees.

Among his many accomplishments in that area, Mr. Wilson drove the development of fundamental principles which led to this following:

Thank you for your outstanding contributions to the legal community.

Economic assessments as a core part of all international commercial law reform International recognition of separate property rights in aircraft engines International and electronic registration of property rights in mobile equipment The global system for international finance is much more sound and forward-looking as a result of Mr. Wilson’s work.

At Sutter O’Connell, we will find a path or make one.

LEADING THE WAY Congratulations to the 2021 Inductees into the C|M|Law Hall of Fame. Your leadership and commitment to the profession are examples to us all. At Hahn Loeser, we are proud of our Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Alumni and their contributions to our firm and the community. Thank you all for leading the way.

HAHN LOESER & PARKS LLP | HAHNLAW.COM | 216.621.0150 200 PUBLIC SQUARE | SUITE 2800 | CLEVELAND, OHIO 44114

24


IS PROUD TO SUPPORT

CLEVELAND-MARSHALL COLLEGE OF LAW

Steven B. Lesser

2021 Hall of Fame Honoree slesser@beckerlawyers.com Florida | New Jersey | New York | Washington, D.C.

beckerlawyers.com

Thank you, Cleveland-Marshall Law, for opening wide the doors of opportunity to a diverse population hungry for careers in the law. I am incredibly honored to be an inductee into the Hall of Fame and to be affiliated with a remarkable institution which has contributed so much to the Northeast Ohio legal community and beyond. Special thanks to Dean Fisher, the faculty and staff for their unwavering dedication!

meyers roman

Marion and Mimi Rich congratulate

F. Scott Wilson

on his induction into The C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

Meyers, Roman, Friedberg & Lewis

216.831.0042 • www.meyersroman.com Barbara K. Roman / 2021 Inductee

“A desk is a dangerous place from which to watch the world.” - John le Carré

25


Celebrating

Inspirational Leaders

Thompson Hine is pleased to support

Cleveland-Marshall College of Law’s Hall of Fame Celebration Congratulations to the 2021 inductees.

ThompsonHine.com

26


Congratulations TO MUSEUM P RESIDENT & CEO

Sonia Winner FOR HER INDUCTION INTO THE C|M|LAW HALL OF FAME!

Sonia Winner embodies the Cleveland Museum of Natural History’s vision for the future. Her strong leadership is driving the institution’s transformation project, which will pioneer a new era for museums around the world.

TO EXPLORE, ENGAGE, AND EMPOWER FOR A BETTER TOMORROW.

Lawyers who make a difference. Celebrating those committed to excellence, opportunity, social justice and leadership.

Taftlaw.com 27


friedman and nemecek ad.pdf 1 10/26/2021 3:04:15 PM

Congrats to the 2021 Award Winners

CONGRATULATIONS to the 2021 Honorees.

Your Vorys C|M|Law Alumni Robin P. Amicon

Matthew D. Fazekas

Ilya Batikov

James J. McMonagle

Charles F. Billington III

Michael F. O’Brien

Kari Balog Coniglio

Michal A. Petrecca

CM

Sara R. D’Amore

Michelle M. Smith

MY

David M. Edelstein

Robert E. Zulandt

C

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You make our law school and our profession proud.

CY

CMY

K

The IMG Center 1360 E. 9th Street, Suite 650 Cleveland, OH 44114 216.928.7700 www.FANLEGAL.com

Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease llp 200 Public Square | Suite 1400 Cleveland, Ohio 44114 216.479.6100 | vorys.com

Dedication to our

community

Congratulations to all C|M|Law Hall of Fame honorees for their outstanding contributions to the success and prestige of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. Tim L. Collins, we are proud to have you on our team and are humbled by your dedication to our community and the law.

Tim L. Collins PRINCIPAL

P: 216.255.5431 E: tcollins@tddlaw.com

For more information visit www.tddlaw.com

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Chardon | Cleveland


HONORING MAX KOHRMAN KJK is proud to recognize our late Partner Emeritus Max I. Kohrman on his induction into the C|M|LAW Hall of Fame and commends each of this year's distinguished honorees.

KJK.com | A LAW FIRM BUILT FOR BUSINESS.

Holland & Knight congratulates

F. Scott Wilson on his induction to the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Hall of Fame. We are proud of Scott’s contributions to the development of aviation finance law for more than 25 years.

www.hklaw.com

We salute this year’s Marshall Law Alumni Hall of Fame inductees. And we’re proud of our own alumni who share such prestigious company: Klevis Bakiaj ‘15

Daniel P. Hinkel ’10

Kelly C. Bokoch ‘10 Megan E. Bennett ‘16 Todd A. Broski ‘00 Alan B. Dailide ‘11 John P. Desimone ‘93 Ian H. Frank ‘96 Alanna C. Guy ‘18 Patrick F. Haggerty ‘84 Andrew M. Hanna ‘16 Thomas G. Haren ‘11

Kevin M. Hinkel ’80 Melissa A. Jones ‘02 Nora E. Loftus ‘05 Margaret M. Metzinger ‘95 Jenifer E. Novak ‘99 Michael C. Nunnari, Jr. ‘09 Kalynne N. Proctor ‘17 Allison Taller Reich ‘09 Dean M. Rooney ‘83 Mark J. Stockman ‘96

Copyright © 2021 Holland & Knight LLP All Rights Reserved

FrantzWard.com

29 FW118_HOF Ad_3.25x4.375_102721.indd 1

10/27/21 7:45 PM


CLEVELAND-MARSHALL COLLEGE OF LAW

Weltman is proud to

A robust legacy A vibrant presence A promising future

support and congratulate the 2021 C | M | Law Hall of Fame Honorees.

Thanks to the people who built its foundation. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

Business Services | Education Law | Public Law | Intellectual Property | Real Estate Hospitality & Liquor Control | Labor & Employment | Litigation Services | Tax & Wealth Management

Bankruptcy Recovery | Commercial Collections Consumer Collections | Probate Recovery | Real Estate Default

CLEVELAND 216.781.1212 | COLUMBUS 614.246.2150

walterhav.com

The Fedeli Group and the NOIA Foundation send our warmest congratulations to

Basil M. Russo

Justice Michael P. Donnelly David H. Gunning, II

Brent Larkin + Margaret W. Wong Wong on receiving the well-deserved honor of being inducted into The Cleveland-Marshall Law Hall of Fame. Thank you for your significant contributions and commitment to our wonderful community. “A tree is known by its fruit; a man by his deeds. A good deed is never lost; he who sows courtesy reaps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love.” St. Basil the Great, Bishop of Caesarea

30 PARTY

weltman.com


Hall of Fame. 2021 Honoree Reception OCTOBER 15, 2021

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We are proud to support the Max I. Kohrman Memorial Endowed Public Interest Fellowship Fund C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

and congratulate all the 2021 Hall of Fame honorees DAVID AND INEZ MYERS FOUNDATION

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Calfee, Halter & Griswold congratulates all of the 2021 C|M|Law Hall of Fame Inductees, and we are proud to have so many Cleveland-Marshall alumni at our firm. For nearly 120 years, Calfee attorneys have provided sound legal counsel to support business clients’ growth objectives while also supporting organizations committed to advancing the health, wellbeing, and opportunities in our local communities. Community support and service are an integral part of our history — and our future. CALFEE.COM | 888.CALFEE1 ©2021 Calfee, Halter & Griswold LLP. All Rights Reserved. 1405 E. Sixth Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44114. ADVERTISING MATERIAL.

Hall of Fame. Previous Honorees

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C|M|LAW Hall of Fame

34

CLASS OF 2017

Judge Ronald B. Adrine ’73

Russell T. Adrine ’54

Judge Ann Aldrich

Judge Francis M. Allegra ’81

Judge Joseph A. Artl ’22

Mary Ann Bagus ’82

Mayor Newton D. Baker

Magistrate Judge Joseph W. Bartunek III ’55

Alfred A. Benesch

Sheryl King Benford ’79

Robert T. Bennett ’67

Dean Charles S. Bentley

Judge Patricia A. Blackmon ’75

Elizabeth M. Boyer ’47

Professor J. Patrick Browne

Judge Lillian W. Burke ’51

Nona M. Burney, Ph.D. ’81

Judge Jean Murrell Capers ’45

Charles V. Carr ’26

Attorney General Anthony J. Celebrezze, Jr. ’73


Hall of Fame.

Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrezze, Jr. ’56

State Representative William H. Clifford ’02

Judge Genevieve Cline ’21

Chief Judge James C. Connell ’18

William J. Corrigan ’15

Frank T. Cullitan ’06

Louise P. Dempsey ’81

John Deaver Drinko

Abe H. Dudnik ’27

Charles R. Emrick, Jr. ’58

Judge Eleanor Farina ’25

José C. Feliciano, Sr. ’75

Professor James T. Flaherty

Judge Charles W. Fleming ’55

Hon. George L. Forbes ’62

Isadore Fred Freiberger ’04

Avery S. Friedman ’72

U.S. HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge ’83

Dr. Samuel R. Gerber ’49

Michael E. Gibbons ’82

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C|M|LAW Hall of Fame CLASS OF 2017 (cont)

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Karen L. Giffen ’89

Professor David B. Goshien

Bell Greve ’18

Judge Mary B. Grossman ’12

James L. Hardiman ’68

Deborah Lewis Hiller ’75

Joseph C. Hostetler

Jane Edna Hunter ’25

Mayor Frank G. Jackson ’83

Aaron Jacobson ’59

Professor Sidney B. Jacoby

Clarence L. James, Jr. ’62

Ferdinand Jirsa, ’21

C. Lyonel Jones ’63

Kerin Lyn Kaminski ’85

Michael V. Kelley ’81

Betty Klaric ’84

Congressman Steven C. LaTourette ’79

U.S. Senator Frank J. Lausche ’21

State Senator Margaret A. Mahoney ’29


Hall of Fame.

Judge John M. Manos ’50

Daniel R. McCarthy, Sr. ’54

Grace Doering McCord ’25

Judge Joseph F. McManamon ’50

Judge George J. McMonagle ’30

Dean David C. Meck, Sr. ’13

Dean David C. Meck, Jr.

Dr. Bernice G. Miller ’51

Norman S. Minor ’27

Congressman William Edwin Minshall, Jr. ’38

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor ’80

Dean Howard L. Oleck

Judge Solomon Oliver, Jr.

David M. Paris ’78

Lawrence O. Payne ’23

Reuben M. Payne ’53

Judge Benita Y. Pearson ’95

Steven W. Percy ’79

Judge Raymond L. Pianka ’77

Professor Emerita Jane M. Picker

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C|M|LAW Hall of Fame CLASS OF 2017 (cont)

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Leon M. Plevin ’57

Franklin A. Polk ’39

Judge Dan Aaron Polster

Steven Potash ’78

Louise Johnson Pridgeon ’18

Elizabeth Pugh ’78

Max Ratner ’29

Judy and Robert H. Rawson, Jr.

Edwin C. Reminger ’22

Timothy J. Russert ’76

Thomas J. Scanlon ’63

Edna C. Shalala ’52

Judge Samuel H. Silbert ’07

Associate Dean Carroll H. Sierk

Dean Lee E. Skeel ’12

J. Helen Slough ’29

Mark A. Smolik ’87

Stephen G. Sozio ’83

Dean Wilson G. Stapleton ’34

Carl L. Stern ’66


Hall of Fame.

Justice Leonard Stern ’26

Justice Melody J. Stewart ’88

Mayor Carl B. Stokes ’56

Congressman Louis Stokes ’53

Richard P. Stovsky ’83

Mary Strassmeyer ’81

Justice Francis E. Sweeney, Sr. ’63

Elsie Tarcai ’42 & Violet Tarcai ’43

Frances Tetlak ’21

Stanley E. Tolliver, Sr. ’53

P. Kelly Tompkins ’81

Dean Willis Vickery

Hazel Mountain Walker ’19

Maurice M. Weltman ’26

Judge Lillian M. Westropp ’15

Judge George W. White ’55

Elizabeth Williams ’08

Marie Remington Wing ’26

Bertram L. Wolstein ’53

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C|M|LAW Hall of Fame CLASS OF 2018

40

Teresa Metcalf Beasley ’92

Professor Emerita Susan J. Becker ’83

Michael L. Climaco ’72

Carol G. Emerling ’55

Anthony J. Garofoli ’61

Terry H. Gilbert ’73

Larry H. James ’77

Dennis R. Lansdowne ’81

Kenneth B. Liffman ’79

Howard D. Mishkind ’80

Dean Lizabeth A. Moody

Sandra M. Natran

Judge Donald C. Nugent ’74

Richard W. Pogue

Richard T. Reminger, Sr. ’57

Kenneth C. Ricci ’86


Hall of Fame.

Professor Emeritus Alan Miles Ruben

Judge John J. Russo ’92

Dean Emeritus Steven H. Steinglass

Judge Joan Synenberg ’87

Donna Zapis Thomas ’87

James A. Thomas ’63

Marilyn Tobocman ’83

Dean Frederic P. White, Jr.

Iris S. Wolstein

Leonard D. Young ’74

41


C|M|LAW Hall of Fame CLASS OF 2019

42

Brett P. Barragate ’96

Jason R. Bristol ’00

Judge Annette Garner Butler ’70

Chief Magistrate Gregory F. Clifford ’80

Judge C. Ellen Connally ’70

Joseph G. Corsaro ’82

Timothy J. Cosgrove ’87

Gordon S. Friedman

Ian N. Friedman ’97

Judge Nancy A. Fuerst ’88

Thomas O. Gorman ’73

Michael J. Haas ’94

Professor Emeritus Arthur R. Landever

Stacey L. McKinley ’97

Louise Mooney

Judge Michelle L. Paris ’84


Hall of Fame.

Patrick J. Perotti ’82

Jon J. Pinney ’00

Linn J. Raney ’68

Karen E. Rubin ’85

Judge Michelle J. Sheehan ’93

Carter E. Strang ’84

Legal Writing Professor Emerita Barbara J. Tyler ’89

Professor Emeritus Stephen J. Werber

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Congratulations

to this year’s Hall of Fame inductees!

Chicago | Cleveland | Columbus | Los Angeles | San Francisco | St. Louis | tuckerellis.com

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Hall of Fame.

Thank You! Our 4th Annual CSU C|M|LAW Hall of Fame Induction Celebration is a success due to the support of many people. Dean Lee Fisher and the Advancement Department, Ellen E. Grevey, Amy L. Miller, and Ashley M. Presutto, would like to extend a grateful thank you to the following alumni, students, faculty, and staff who helped make this event possible. We regret any inadvertent omissions.

Selection Committee

While membership is anonymous, we would like to thank each committee member for their hard work and dedication in selecting our outstanding 2021 Honorees. It was a difficult job!

Hall of Fame Volunteers Barbara Andelman Allison Bolt Julie DiBiasio

Jaime Gay Holli Goodman Jill Natran

Quan Nguyen David Sierk Lisa Sierk

Elaine Terman Rick Zhang

Davona Mason Bess Massad Ernest Oleksy Dalya Oprian Anastasia Sakairoun Abigail Stout

Maggie Sullivan Dorothy Swagler Allison Younger

Student Ambassadors Stephen Bond Kelly Brickman Maria-Cristina Coreno Brandy Davis Anna DeGarmo Lydia Fawzy

Lauren Gorze Rachel Harriman Nicolette Jordan Victoria Kekel Claire Kinnear Hannah Mahaffey

We are especially thankful to the following Ron Goldfarb and Tony Weber, and their crew from Goldfarb Weber Creative Media, for our 2021 Hall of Fame Video and the Virtual Ceremony production. Special thanks to our Board of Visitors and Cleveland-Marshall Law Alumni Association Board of Trustees for their continued support of the Hall of Fame.

48


NAMED A

TOP LAW SCHOOL FOR

HEALTH LAW BUSINESS LAW TAX LAW INTERNATIONAL LAW CRIMINAL LAW PreLaw Magazine US News & World Report

NATIONAL THURGOOD MARSHALL MOOT COURT CHAMPIONS

LAW SCHOOLS

1 1

& World Report

RANKINGS

ST RANKED PUBLIC

LAW SCHOOL IN NORTHERN OHIO

ST RANKED PART-TIME

LAW SCHOOL PROGRAM IN OHIO

Among the FIRST and STRONGEST in LEADERSHIP Education

The P. Kelly Tompkins Leadership and Law Program

NATIONALLY RANKED IN 12 LAW SPECIALTIES: BUSINESS/CORPORATE; CLINICAL TRAINING; CONSTITUTIONAL; CONTRACTS/COMMERCIAL; CRIMINAL; ENVIRONMENTAL; HEALTH CARE; INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY; INTERNATIONAL; LEGAL WRITING; TAXATION; TRIAL ADVOCACY.

83% Bar Passage

for first-time Bar Exam Takers July 2021

40%

INCREASE IN FIRST YEAR ENROLLMENT SINCE 2016

CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY

LEARN LAW. LIVE JUSTICE.


CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY


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