E R G O — M A U R E R
S C H O O L
O F
L A W
ARTICLES (in order of appearance)
Volume: 175
From the dean
2
175 years of Indiana Law
4
Bicentennial campaign
14
Coming events
15
Academy of Law Alumni Fellows named
16
Advisory board appointees
18
Happenings and events
22
Students and organizations recognized
25
Fariss retirement celebration
26
Journals and moot court competition
28
Hands-on experience in DC
32
Wintersession gives a head start
34
Burns gift endows professorship
36
Real clients, real problems
38
New global, domestic partnerships
40
Honor roll of donors
42
Partners in excellence
44
Giving by class
46
Friends, faculty, staff, and student gifts
56
Corporations, foundations, and law firm gifts
58
Endowed and special gifts
60
Class and law firm gifts
68
Volunteers
70
74
The Kimberling Society
Class notes
76
In memoriam
85
Ways to give
88
Spring 2017
The law library in Maxwell Hall — 1940
Dean and James H. Rudy Professor of Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Austen L. Parrish
STAY IN TOUCH WITH INDIANA LAW
Executive Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and C. Ben Dutton Professor of Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Donna M. Nagy
There are many ways to stay connected with the IU Maurer School of Law. Add these networks to your contact lists:
Assistant Dean for External Affairs and Alumni Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrea C. Havill
Web: law.indiana.edu
Assistant Dean for Finance and Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kenneth L. Turchi, ’83 Executive Director of Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lisa Hosey Director of Development, Major Gifts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maarten Bout
LinkedIn: Indiana University Maurer School of Law Facebook:
Indiana University– Maurer School of Law
Director of Development, Major Gifts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Susan Yoon, ’96
Twitter: @IUMaurerLaw
Director of Annual Giving . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stephanie Coffey
YouTube: IUMaurerLaw
Director of Communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James Boyd
Instagram: IUMaurerLaw
ergo is published in print in March and October, and electronically in February, April, August, September, and December, by the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. Arthur M. Lotz Office of Alumni and Development / Indiana University Maurer School of Law Baier Hall + 211 S. Indiana Ave. + Bloomington, IN 47405-7001 + (812) 855-9700 + (877) 286-0002 Copyright 2017 The Trustees of Indiana University photo: IU Archives (P0027473)
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 1
On December 5, 1842, Professor David McDonald gave his first lecture to the class of the new Law Department at Indiana University. McDonald was carrying out the Board of Trustees’ directive to create a school “inferior to none west of the Mountains.”
Law School Survey of Student Engagement, 95% of our first-year students rated their experience here as good or excellent. Indicators of our graduates’ success are also very positive. Bar passage rates for the class of 2016 remained
In this issue of ergo, we celebrate the Law School’s illustrious 175-year history by reflect-
high, even though they plummeted in Indiana and across the country. Our July first-time pass rate of 89%
ing on the important contributions of our alumni, faculty, and students to the legal
was the highest of all Indiana law schools, compared with 61% for the state as a whole. Our pass rates in Ohio
profession. It’s an impressive list: The IU Maurer School of Law has produced not only
(100%) and Illinois (91%) were also outstanding. Placement rates are on the upswing, too. We increased the
distinguished practitioners, but leaders in academia, in government, in the judiciary,
number of graduates in judicial clerkships, and we expect to reach a five-year high in employment levels at the
in business, and in nonprofit organizations worldwide.
all-important 10-month mark. Your support of the school also helped reduce our students’ debt levels. The Law
dear friends
Looking back just a few months — to 2016 — yields another great year for the Law
School remains one of the most affordable of the highly ranked schools, with more than 90% of our students receiving substantial scholarship support. Our school looks very different from how it did in 1842. Fifty-one percent of the incoming class in 2016 were women, and as you’ll read in this issue, the leaders of our three main law journals and the Moot Court Chief Justice are persons of color.
School’s history books. Thanks to your support, our annual fund, the Fund for
Sometimes we forget that a law school is more than just educating students. Last year, with our clinics, proj-
Excellence, raised $1.2 million, $90,000 ahead of goal. We continued to make progress
ects, and volunteer activities, the Law School again had a major impact in Indiana and beyond. Our Intellectu-
in our $60 million capital campaign goal, with $41.1 million booked through December
al Property Clinic received its first patent and reportedly did more than twice the amount of patent work than
31. Gifts to the campaign include more than $915,000 from faculty and staff.
the average clinic nationwide. Our Veteran’s Disability Clinic was profiled in the media for its important work,
The capital campaign is so important because your generosity helps us create and offer the innovative courses and programs that prepare our students for legal careers. In January 2016, we began our new Wintersession program, which offers one week of one-credit practical courses at no extra cost to our students. We repeated the program this year, expanding the course offerings to nine and adding external speakers to
as were our other clinics and projects. Separate from clinic work, our students volunteered more than 15,000 hours in pro bono services, valued at over $350,000 (using $23.56 as the value for each law student pro bono hour, a figure established by Independent Sector, a coalition of nonprofit organizations). As one example of our students’ commitment, Jessica Ans received the Class of 2016 Lifetime Pro Bono Award, with 1,445 volunteer hours during her time at the Law School.
supplement the in-class course work. For the spring semester, we added two tracks to
As you’ll read in this issue, 2016 was also a great year for our alumni. Our energized Young Alumni Steering
our Legal Profession course, which gives students the option of emphasizing government
Committee moved into its third year, and we began the process of creating a Global Dean’s Advisory Board
service or global practice in addition to the traditional general field of study. Our LLM
to help support our international graduates and partnerships. Our Alumni Board advanced its innovative
program began offering six specializations in areas ranging from intellectual property
regional leads initiative. Our BLSA, Latino, and LGBT Alumni Advisory Boards continued to provide unparal-
to financial regulation. This fall, we will begin offering a new master’s degree in
leled support to our students and, for the first time, the presidents of our affinity boards held permanent seats
cybersecurity in partnership with the Kelley School of Business and the School of
on our Alumni Board. We held receptions all over the country, including a terrific reception at Chicago’s Field
Informatics and Computing.
Museum of Natural History and our first US Supreme Court swearing-in ceremony. Events like these will
But the changes in 2016 were more than just curricular-focused. We recently launched
continue throughout the rest of the year. I hope you will join us as we visit cities near you across the country.
a fifth scholarly journal, the Indiana Journal of Constitutional Design. We established
When Professor McDonald addressed the inaugural Law Department class 175 years ago, he said, “If you are
partnership programs with the US Army JAG Corps, the Southern Poverty Law Center,
willing to endure the labor of mastering this noble science. . . ; if you desire to be distinguished among your
the Lumina Foundation, and Chapman & Cutler, and we continued to expand our col-
fellow citizens and useful to our beloved country; here is a field worthy of your labor, a field in which you may,
laborations with prestigious foreign universities. Last year, a record number of students
at once, gratify a laudable ambition and promote the best interests of society.” Professor McDonald’s words
were named Stewart Fellows, serving as externs in law firms, corporations, and non-
are as true today as they were in 1842. As you read about the accomplishments of our students, faculty, and
government organizations in eight countries. We have also received summer funding for
alumni over the past 175 years, I think you’ll agree that he’d be justifiably proud.
20-25 students working in the public interest arena.
Sincerely,
Our faculty continue to do great things too, and I’m grateful for how committed and dedicated they are to the school. As superb instructors, caring role models, and internationally recognized scholars, they are committed to being accessible, while challenging students to meet the most rigorous academic standards. Perhaps because of this, the
Austen L. Parrish, Dean and James H. Rudy Professor of Law
Law School reached a five-year high in student satisfaction. According to the national 2
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 3
It was the fourth professor of law who finally said yes. The Indiana University administration had already asked three before David McDonald took the job in the summer of 1842. After a bit of negotiation — McDonald wanted the academic term to be three months so he could remain a circuit judge — McDonald became the first leader of the Maurer School of Law. The school has grown immensely since then, in both size and stature. From the very first lecture in University Chapel to the dedication of Lowell E. Baier Hall, the Law School has been educating future lawyers, senators, judges, civil servants, entrepreneurs, and teachers for 175 years. We look back at the events that have shaped the Law School for nearly two centuries.
1835
IU first conceives of a Law Department.
1842
David McDonald hired as school’s first faculty member, gives first
lecture on Dec. 5. No record of how many students were in initial class.
On announcing the new Law Department in 1842, IU said the school
“shall be inferior to none west of the mountains; one in which the
student will be so trained, that he shall never, in the attorney, forget
the scholar, and the gentleman.”
1842
University Chapel, site of the first Law Department lecture.
1844
Five become Law School’s first graduates.
1846
IU experiences financial difficulties, and discontinues McDonald’s
salary as a result. The university asks him to remain on, paying him in
student fees, a room, and “adequate firewood.”
An early moot court competition.
4
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 5
6
1861
One week after Fort Sumter was fired on, Prof. James Ray McCorkle
1905
Masuji Miyakawa becomes the school’s first Asian-American graduate
Bryant leaves the school to join the Union Army. Records indicate at
and the first Japanese-American to be admitted to the bar in the
least 22 Indiana Law graduates joined the Civil War, most taking
United States.
up arms for the Union. Only one alumnus — Francis Neff, ’53 — was
killed in battle. Joseph and Jesse Cox, brothers and alumni of the
1906
Enoch Hogate appointed dean. He launches the school’s first joint
school, both fought in the war, but on different sides. Jesse joined the
arts-law degree, allowing students to earn both AB and LLB degrees
Union, while Joseph enlisted with the Confederacy. Their differences
in a five-year period.
were apparently settled, though. They returned home to Paoli after the
war to practice law together.
1908
After significant expansion, Maxwell Hall again becomes home to the
Law School.
1871
Following the war, enrollment soars. A record 32 students graduate in
1871, more than half of the total graduates of IU.
1909
Samuel S. Dargan becomes the school’s first African-American
1877
The Indiana General Assembly reduces appropriations significantly.
Prof. Baskin Rhodes resigns, and the university’s trustees shutter the
law school.
1885
IU President David Starr Jordan reports to the Board of Trustees,
advocating the reinstatement of the school. With an uncertain
financial picture looming ahead, the board waits four more years.
1889
Law School reopens. David D. Banta, president of the Board of
Trustees, elected dean. Applicants aren’t bound by the requirements
for admission to the university. Prospective students must “be at least
18 years of age, and must pass an examination that shall test the
applicant’s ability to write and speak good English and his possession
of a fair knowledge of the Common School branches.” The cost of
attending is $12.50 per term. Diplomas are an additional $5.
1889
Initially called the Law Department, the name is formally changed to
the Indiana University School of Law. Classes are held on the second
floor of Library Hall (which would be renamed Maxwell Hall).
1890
Tamar Althouse, only 17 years old, is the first woman admitted to the
graduate. 1915
Sherman Minton graduates. He would go on to serve as the school’s first
US Supreme Court Justice.
Sherman Minton (center)
1916
Juan T. Santos becomes the school’s first Hispanic graduate.
1917
The JD degree is established.
Law School despite not meeting the age requirement. She becomes the
1918
Charles McGuffey Hepburn, one of the founders of the American Law
school’s first woman graduate in 1892.
Institute, becomes dean.
1900
The Association of American Law Schools (AALS) is formed; Indiana
1919
Indiana Law begins offering the LLM degree.
Law becomes one of the 25 charter members. 1925
Hepburn negotiates with the Indiana State Bar Association to take
1901
The school’s curriculum expands from two to three years, and the
over its bar association publication. The Indiana Law Journal is born.
school itself moves to the third floor of Wylie Hall.
The Law Library has more than 13,000 volumes in it, and Rowena
Compton, the school’s first full-time librarian, begins the cumbersome
task of cataloging it.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 7
8
1926
Paul V. McNutt, at age 35, becomes the youngest dean in the Law
1952
Leon H. Wallace takes over the deanship.
School’s history. Legendary musician Hoagy Carmichael (left) would
graduate that spring. McNutt successfully ran for governor of Indiana
1955
Construction begins on the $1.6 million building designed specifically
just a few years later, and was inaugurated in 1933. IU President
for the Law School. It opens for classes in 1956 and its dedication is
William Lowe Bryan assumes the deanship until a permanent
led by Chief Justice Earl Warren.
successor — Dean Bernard Gavit — takes over.
1936
The Law School establishes itself as a global institution with the
arrival of JD students from China. More than 30 would graduate from
the school by 1951.
1937
IU’s administration moves to the newly constructed Bryan Hall, freeing
up valuable space for the Law School in Maxwell Hall.
1940
Preparations for a prestigious centennial celebration begin. Wendell
Willkie, Paul McNutt, and Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes are all
invited to speak at the 1942 gala. But the attack on Pearl Harbor forced
the postponement of the gala. With a focus on wartime efforts and a
drastic reduction in the student population (a mere 23 students were
enrolled in 1943-44), plans for the historic event eventually fall
through. A small ceremony is held in 1944 to commemorate the school’s
first 100 years. Dean Gavit takes a leave of absence to serve on the
Federal War Manpower Commission; Hugh Willis serves as acting dean
in his absence.
1948
Betty LeBus (far left) is appointed head of the burgeoning Law Library
and becomes the first tenured woman faculty member at the school.
1948
Juanita Kidd Stout graduates from the Law School. She goes on to
become the first African American woman elected to a state judgeship
and the first to serve on the supreme court of any state.
Maxwell Hall — 1944
From left: Dean Leon Wallace, Hon. Wilbur Pell, Jr., and Dean W. Burnett Harvey
1956
From left: IU President Herman B Wells, Hon. Sherman Minton, US Chief Justice Earl Warren, Hon. John S. Hastings, Dean Leon Wallace at Law School dedication
1966
Wallace returns to teaching; W. Burnett Harvey is appointed dean.
Harvey, the first dean not chosen from within the Law School
community, makes admissions criteria more selective and expands the
school’s faculty to include top credentialed teachers from across the
country. He expands the school’s administrative staff, adding deans of
student affairs and administration and alumni affairs.
1968
The JD becomes Indiana Law’s standard law degree. LLB holders are
permitted to convert theirs to a JD. That same year, the Law School’s
evening division in Indianapolis becomes an autonomous school, now
the IU McKinney School of Law.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 9
1969
The Black Student Lawyers Association (now Black Law Students
1987
Bryant G. Garth, who’d served as acting dean in the wake of Arnold’s
Association) is formed, followed by the Women’s Law Caucus in 1970.
departure, is appointed dean. Recognizing the school couldn’t continue
surviving on state funding and tuition revenue alone, Garth takes an
active role in building the school’s fundraising apparatus, establishing
a $500,000 endowment. That same year, the school launches the Law
and Society Center and the Community Legal Clinic.
1989
The Protective Order Project is established to enhance student
clinical opportunities.
1989
BLSA holds its first Barristers’ Ball, the school’s signature social event.
In 2009, it was renamed in memory of Rapheal H. Prevot, Jr., ’84.
1991
Alfred C. Aman, Jr., appointed dean.
1992
Dean Aman establishes The Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies,
which publishes its first issue.
IU Law students — 1930
Law students rally before the Law-Medical Game — 1951
10
1973
Douglass G. Boshkoff is appointed dean. Boshkoff works tirelessly to
rebuild relations with the university administration, which had reduced
2003
Lauren K. Robel, ’83, is named dean; Indiana University launches the
funding to the school dramatically in 1971, leading to the resignation
Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research.
of Harvey. Boshkoff utilizes a strong and engaged alumni base as a
funding source.
2007
Lilly Endowment, Inc., donates $25 million to the school for faculty
retention and development.
1974
Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard M. Givan advocates
moving the Bloomington school to Indianapolis. The controversial idea
2008
Michael S. “Mickey,” ’67, and Janie Maurer announce a $35 million
had been floated as early as 1962, and the university formed a blue-
gift to the school, which is renamed the Indiana University Maurer
ribbon committee to examine the organizational relationship between
School of Law.
the two schools in 1975. Late that year, the committee recommended
keeping the two schools separate.
1976
Boshkoff resigns to return to teaching. Val Nolan and Harry Pratter
fill in consecutively as acting deans during the 18-month search for a
new dean. Sheldon Jay Plager would fill the role permanently in 1977.
1982
Funds are allocated to plan for a major addition and renovation to the
Law Building. The $12.6 million project would be dedicated in 1986 and
includes the completion of the Law Library.
1985
Morris Sheppard Arnold returns to IU to lead the school, but is quickly
tapped to fill a federal judgeship in the Western District of Arkansas.
During his brief tenure, however, Arnold launched the computing age in
the building. Personal computers were installed in faculty offices, at
2009
The Center on the Global Legal Profession is launched by founding
secretarial stations, and in administrative offices. Arnold also procured
director William D. Henderson.
a computer center for “student word processing.”
2010
The school launches the Center for Intellectual Property Research.
US Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, with former Indiana Supreme Court Justice Frank E. Sullivan, ’82, during a 2004 visit.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 11
2010
The first class of Stewart Fellows is selected for global externships.
By 2017, more than 100 students will have participated in the program.
2012
Lauren Robel is appointed provost of IU Bloomington; Hannah
Buxbaum serves as interim dean.
2014
Austen L. Parrish is appointed dean and James H. Rudy Professor
of Law.
2014
The Law School launches a nonprofit law clinic.
2014
A $2 million dollar gift from Glenn Scolnik, ’78, and his wife, Donna,
establishes a chair in clinical law, the first such chair in the school’s
history, to be held by W. William Weeks III, ’79.
2015
Lowell E. Baier, LLB’64 (below), announces a $20 million gift for
enhancements to facilities. The Law Building is named Baier Hall in
his honor, and the library becomes the Jerome Hall Law Library, in
honor of Baier’s favorite professor.
Jerome Hall
2015
Intellectual property law clinic is launched, one of only 18 certified
by the USPTO in both patent and trademark matters.
2016
Milt and Judi Stewart announce a $7.7 million gift to endow the Center
on the Global Legal Profession, which is named in their honor.
top: Kenneth McFarland Smith and John F. (Jack) Kimberling — 1950 middle: Law football team —1932 bottom: The Law School faculty — 1915
The editor gratefully acknowledges the late Colleen Pauwels, ’86, the longtime director of the Law Library, for providing most of the research that made this list of highlights possible. For more information, read Pauwels’ fascinating article, “Inferior to None,” repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub/255.
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ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 13
faculty, staff contribute generously to bicentennial campaign
coming events
The law school is well on its way toward meeting its $60 million portion of the university’s $2 billion
Watch your e-mail for details and updates.
Please plan to join your friends and colleagues this spring and summer at receptions throughout the country.
bicentennial campaign. As of the end of December, we have raised $41.1 million, or 67% of our goal, with three years left in the campaign. This goal is being met in no small way through the generosity of the law school’s faculty and staff, whose
march 22 new york city
gifts to the campaign exceed $915,000 so far. Thirteen members of the faculty and staff have pledged at
Dean’s Alumni Reception; Kirkland & Ellis LLP, 601 Lexington Avenue
least $25,000 to the campaign, which makes their gift eligible for the university’s matching contribution.
april 7 bloomington
They are (starting at top left): Fred Aman, Amy Applegate, John Applegate, Fred Cate, Dan Conkle, Joe Hoffmann, Julia Lamber, Austen Parrish, Lauren Robel, Jackie Simmons, Ken Turchi, David Williams, and Susan Williams.
Academy of Law Alumni Fellows Dinner and Ceremony
april 12 dallas
Dean’s Alumni Reception; 5:30-7:30; Winstead PC; 500 Winstead Building, 2728 N. Harwood Street
april 27 philadelphia
Dean’s Alumni Reception; 5:30-7:30; Hotel Palomar, 117 S. 17th Street
may 19 fort wayne
Dean’s Alumni Luncheon; Time and place to be announced.
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD NOMINATIONS OPEN The Law School welcomes nominations for the Distinguished Service Award. The award was established in 1997 to recognize graduates who have distinguished themselves in service to their communities and the school in ways far exceeding traditional business, professional, and civic duties. Through their hard work, passion, and accomplishments, these alumni define Indiana Law’s ideals for community service and serve as role models for our Law School and the greater community. Nominations will be accepted through June 1, 2017. To view a list of past honorees, to submit a nomination, or for more information, visit law.indiana.edu/alumni/advisory-boards.
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ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 15
five named to 2017 academy of law alumni fellows Five distinguished alumni will be inducted into the Law School’s Academy of Law Alumni Fellows at a ceremony in the Indiana Memorial Union Tudor Room on Friday, April 7.
Mackey is a partner at Barnes & Thornburg LLP in Indianapolis, where he has led the growth of the firm’s nationwide white collar and investigations practice group since 1998. Previously, he was a federal criminal prosecutor whose service included the investigation and prosecution of crimes arising from the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City and the deaths of 168 persons. After a total of six months of courtroom proceedings, he won separate jury trial convictions against the two charged bombing conspirators. For his service, Mackey received the highest achievement awards from the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Rush is chief justice of the State of Indiana, the first woman to hold that position, and only the second woman to have been named to the state’s highest court. Governor Mitch Daniels appointed her to the court in September 2012, and she became chief justice in August 2014. Prior to her appointment, she was elected Tippecanoe Superior Court 3 judge and served for 14 years. As juvenile court judge, she assisted with the creation of the county’s Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) program. Prior to that, Rush spent 15 years in general legal practice and became a partner at a Lafayette, Ind., firm.
Rodolfo Chapa, Jr., ’85
Ver Beek is of counsel to Varnum, the Grand Rapids, Mich.-based law firm, which
Julia Lamber, ’72
he joined in 1962 as its 12th lawyer. The firm has now grown to 170 lawyers.
Larry A. Mackey, ’76
Throughout his distinguished career, he has represented employers for collective
Hon. Loretta H. Rush, ’83
bargaining and arbitration in manufacturing, healthcare, religious organizations,
Carl E. Ver Beek, ’62
and higher education, while serving as a committed civic leader. His professional and civic leadership roles include governance within the American Bar Association
Chapa is a record-setting high school and college distance runner who combined his
and the Michigan State Bar Association; the Grand Rapids and Michigan Chambers
athletic skill with his legal and business background, becoming global director and
of Commerce; and chairmanship of numerous public service, educational, and
vice president of sports marketing at Nike, Inc. He left Nike in 1999 and pursued his
religious organizations in western Michigan, many of which have recognized him
own entrepreneurial vision, which culminated in the founding of SPARQ (Speed, Power,
with awards for his distinguished service.
Agility, Reaction, Quickness), a sports equipment and media company.
—
Lamber is a professor emerita of law at the Maurer School of Law, where she pioneered
The Academy of Law Alumni Fellows was established in 1985 to recognize alumni
courses in Employment Discrimination, Women and the Law, and Civil Rights Statutes.
whose careers are defined by exceptional personal achievement and dedication to
She also served as affirmative action officer for the Bloomington campus, dean for
the highest standards of the profession. To be named an Academy of Law Alumni
women’s affairs, and interim director of the University Office of Affirmative Action.
Fellow is to receive the very highest honor the Maurer School of Law can bestow.
She was the Maurer School of Law’s first associate dean for clinical education, first
Academy Fellows are part of an elite group that includes US senators, federal judges,
director of the Center for the Study of Law and Society, and most recently served as
successful business leaders, and distinguished practitioners.
executive associate dean.
16
A complete listing of Academy Fellows can be found at law.indiana.edu/academy.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 17
new members appointed to dean’s advisory boards Fourteen prominent alumni have been named to the Law School’s Board of Visitors, Alumni Board, BLSA Alumni Advisory Board, and Young Alumni Steering Committee. These alumni continue the tradition of excellent service to the school their past and current colleagues have given.
BOARD OF VISITORS Hon. Gonzalo P. Curiel, ’79, is a United States district judge for the Southern District of California. He was appointed by President Barack Obama on October 1, 2012. He previously served as a San Diego Superior Court judge from 2006 through 2012 and was assigned to its family, civil, and criminal law departments. From 1979 to 1986, Curiel worked in private practice at James, James & Manning in Dyer, Ind., and handled civil and criminal cases in state and federal courts. From 1989 to 2002, he worked as an assistant United States attorney in the San Diego and Los Angeles offices. As an assistant United States attorney, he received a number of performance awards, including the director’s award for superior performance for his work in leading efforts against Mexican drug cartels, international maritime drug traffickers, and corrupt US border inspectors. In 2014 Curiel served as the Law School’s commencement ceremony speaker. He was inducted into the school’s Academy of Law Alumni Fellows in 2016. Betsy K. Greene, ’82, is a partner at Greene & Schultz in Bloomington, Ind. Greene joined Nunn & Kelley Law Office in 1988 and was a partner from 1990 until leaving to start her own firm in February 2005. Since June 1, 2005, Greene has been a partner in the law firm of Greene & Schultz Trial Lawyers, representing persons injured or killed by negligence. Greene has personally tried over 100 jury trials in her career. Greene has been a member of the Indiana Trial Lawyers Association since 1989 and a director since 1992. She is a past president of the Indiana Trial Lawyers Association
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(2007-2008) and the Monroe County Bar Association (2005). She has been inducted into the ITLA College of Fellows and is an emeritus director of the ITLA board of directors. Greene has been a member of the American Association for Justice since 1990. She currently serves as an Indiana representative to the AAJ Board of Governors. Greene graduated from Gerry Spence’s Trial Lawyers College in 2005 and has been on the faculty since 2010. She teaches trial skills across the country, and is a frequent lecturer in Indiana. Greene serves on the Monroe County Public Defender Board by appointment of the Board of Judges. Steven M. Post, ’77, is the retired senior vice president, general counsel, and corporate secretary of L-3 Communications, a New York-based company that provides a broad range of communication and electronic systems, with over $10 billion in annual sales. At L-3 and predecessor companies, he held several positions with increasing responsibility, first serving as an associate counsel and later vice president, legal before being promoted to senior vice president, contracts and general counsel of the Integrated Systems Group. Before joining L-3, Post had a long and distinguished legal and military career, including with the Office of the Judge Advocate General and as an instructor at the Judge Advocate General’s School. Post has been a generous supporter of the school’s Stewart Fellows program, which provides global summer externships. Laurie N. Robinson Haden, ’98, is senior vice president and assistant general counsel at CBS Corporation in New York. Before joining CBS in 2002, Robinson Haden worked at Seyfarth Shaw LLP and Epstein, Becker and Green, PC in New York, where she represented management in labor and employment matters. In addition to her role at CBS Corporation, she is the founder and CEO of Corporate Counsel Women of Color, a nonprofit professional organization, which she created in 2004 to advance women-of-color attorneys and to foster diversity in the legal profession. Robinson Haden has been recognized with the Law School’s Distinguished Service Award. She has also been honored by the National Bar Association’s Women Lawyers Division as the recipient of the first M. Ashley Dickerson Award; listed as one of the 25 Most Influential Black Women in Business; and named as one of the 2015 Top Influential African American Lawyers in America. Among many other awards, she has been recognized as one of the 10 Up-and-Coming African American Lawyers to Watch by Diversity & the Bar magazine, and was listed as a “Power Broker” by Inside Counsel in its GC 50 list of the most influential in-house counsel in North America. Randolph Seger, ’72, is a partner at Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP in Indianapolis. He has practiced for over 40 years before the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission and other state, local and federal courts, boards, and regulatory and governing agencies. Throughout his law career, he has advised utilities and other entities with regard to mergers, acquisitions, rates, financing, and certifications and approvals related to the telecommunications, sewer and water, and energy industries. In addition, he has advised various municipalities, investor-owned utilities, and developers on utility matters, including expansion and extension of utilities for economic development. He has also advised agribusiness interests in organization, expansion, contractual, utility, and environmental issues. In law school, he was elected to Beta Gamma Sigma and Order of the Coif and served on the Indiana Law Journal. He is past president and chair of the Indiana State Bar Association Utility Law Section and a member of the board of directors of the Indiana University Foundation.
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ALUMNI BOARD
and attorneys during patent prosecution to explain rules and procedures and ways to improve the application
Proloy K. Das, ’00, is counsel at Murtha Cullina LLP in Hartford, Conn., where he chairs the firm’s Appellate Practice Group. In addition to appeals, he handles special litigation matters such as injunctions and declaratory judgment actions.
in cases of rejection. He is also the designated EEO representative with the Patent Examination Office, counseling and representing the complainant, and he serves as the mechanical representative in the Patent Office Professional Association.
Das has briefed and argued over 50 appeals in the Connecticut Appellate and Supreme Courts. He has been named as one of the Connecticut Law Tribune’s
BLSA ALUMNI ADVISORY BOARD
New Leaders of the Law (2005); the Hartford Business Journal’s “40 under Forty”
Tasha Reed Outlaw, ’02, is managing attorney and owner at the T.R.O. Law Group in South Bend, Ind.,
(2007), and the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association’s Best under 40
where she practices in the areas of bankruptcy, immigration, personal injury, litigation, and small business
(2011). He was listed in New England Super Lawyers® in the area of appellate law
law. Reed Outlaw is also an adjunct professor at Bethel College in Mishawaka, Ind. and previously was
from 2013–2015 and as a Connecticut Super Lawyers Rising Star in the area of
employed by the City of South Bend Legal Department as assistant city attorney. While in law school, she
appellate law from 2008–2012.
was active in BLSA, the Entertainment Law Society, and the Community Legal Clinic.
Shannon S. Frank, ’90, is a partner at Kahn Dees Donovan & Kahn LLP in
Terrance Stroud, ’03, is director of the Continued Occupancy Unit for the Department of Housing Preserva-
Evansville, Ind. She focuses her practice on estate and wealth transfer planning,
tion and Development of the City of New York. He is responsible for the day-to-day operations of a team of more
and probate and trust administration. In addition, she represents many closely
than 100 people who administer the Housing Choice Voucher Program. It is the fifth largest program in the
held companies in a variety of matters, including buy-and-sell transactions,
nation, serving approximately 34,000 participants and 9,000 landlords. Named one of City and State’s Top 40
business organization, contracts, sale and leasing of real estate, and employment
under 40 and the Home Reporter News Star of Brooklyn, Stroud has been honored by city, state, and federal
issues. She also assists Evansville-area builders, developers, subcontractors, and
elected officials for his work in government and his contributions to the community. He serves on the Brooklyn
suppliers in the construction industry.
College Alumni Board and used that opportunity to create a strategic partnership between both organizations
Jason L. Kennedy, ’96, is a partner at Segal McCambridge Singer & Mahoney
called the Indiana-Brooklyn College Bridge Program.
®
in Chicago, where he serves on the firm’s executive committee and as chairman of the firm’s Toxic Tort Litigation Practice Group. He practices in the area of tort defense litigation with an emphasis in complex mass tort litigation, involving both products liability and premises liability claims. Kennedy also represents clients in professional liability matters specific to architects and engineers, as well as construction and environmental litigation matters.
Julie Laemmle, ’14, is an associate at Quintairos, Prieto, Wood & Boyer, P.A. in Louisville, Ky., the largest minority- and women-owned law firm in the country. Her practice focuses on the defense of long-term healthcare, premises liability, professional liability, and product liability. While in law school, Laemmle was senior managing editor of the Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality, co-chair of the Women’s Law Caucus
David C. Milne, ’94, is senior vice president, chief administrative and compli-
auction, and chair of the 3L class gift campaign. She is currently co-chair of the young alumnae committee at
ance officer, and general counsel at Symmetry Surgical, Inc., in Fort Wayne, Ind.
Saint Mary’s College, a member of the Junior League of Louisville, and a mentor with Louisville’s Community
Symmetry Surgical is a RoundTable Platform company that serves the medical
Catholic Center.
device surgical instrument market. It is based in Nashville, Tenn., and maintains a tax-advantaged global supply chain center in Schaffhausen, Switzerland; a procurement facility in Tuttlingen, Germany; and R&D and light manufacturing in Raleigh, NC, and Louisville, Ky., respectively.
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YOUNG ALUMNI STEERING COMMITTEE
Emily O’Connor, ’10, is an attorney with Mansour Gavin LPA in Cleveland, Ohio, where she practices real estate law and general civil litigation. Prior to law school, Emily worked as a paralegal in the restructuring group at Kirkland & Ellis in Chicago. In law school, she successfully competed in both the Sherman Minton Moot Court Competition, where she finished as a quarterfinalist with both brief writing and oral advocacy
Maurice L. Williams, ’06, is a patent examiner for the US Patent and Trademark
honors, and the National Appellate Advocacy Competition. She was elected to the Order of Barristers, partici-
Office in Alexandria, Va. His primary responsibilities include reviewing patents
pated in Outreach for Legal Literacy, and was an admissions fellow. She is a member of the Junior League
to ensure compliance with patent rules, including communicating with applicants
of Cleveland and the Cleveland Chapter of Commercial Real Estate Women.
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law school organizes first-ever swearing-in ceremony at US Supreme Court
alumni gather at receptions in cincinnati, louisville
Twelve Indiana Law alumni were admitted to the bar of the United States Supreme Court on November 2, 2016.
alumni and friends of the Law School.
Dean Parrish traveled to Cincinnati and Louisville on February 28 to meet with
All the associate justices were present, and Chief Justice John Roberts led the swearing-in process. The applicants were sponsored by J. Adam Bain, ’86, senior trial counsel at the US Department of Justice. Family members of the alumni attended the ceremony along with Dean Parrish and Andrea Havill, assistant dean for external affairs and alumni relations, and all were treated to a tour of the Supreme Court after the ceremony.
Seated: Matt Martin, ’08, Jennifer Hesch, ’08, Morgan Rehrig, ’08, Adam Bain, ’86, Dean Parrish, Denise Walker, ’06, Christina Clark, ’11, Scott Kumis, ’03, Onika Williams, ’10. Standing: Luke Fields, ’12, John Allread, ’10, Michael Heintz, ’03, Graham Rehrig, ’12, Scott Allen, ’12
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class of 1966 celebrates 50th reunion The class of 1966 celebrated its 50th reunion in Bloomington on September 30 and October 1.
students and student organizations garner top awards
Special thanks go to the reunion leaders, who spread the word and helped make the weekend a big success.
1. 3Ls James Abney, Sunrita Sen, and George Cressy took top honors at the National Transactional LawMeet regional
Reunion leaders (top), seated: Steve Moberly, Tom (Rid) Lemon, Tom McCully, Steve Ferguson. Standing: Bob Garelick, Elliott Levin. Attendees (bottom), seated: Larry Pazol, Sandy Furtick O’Connor, Nancy Litzenberger, Tom McCully, Steve Ferguson. Standing: Steve Moberly, Dick Schultheis, Tom (Rid) Lemon, Dennis Dewey, Ron Warrum, Elliott Levin, Bob Garelick, Chuck Roth, Hon. Tom Milligan, Jerry Robinson, Tracy Little.
competition at Drexel University on February 24. LawMeet is the premier moot court experience for students interested in
a transactional practice. The team advanced to the national competition on March 31.
2. Marie Forney, ’17, won first place in the ABA Antitrust 2017 Writing Competition. 3. 2Ls Brad Schlotter and Alyson St. Pierre advanced to the octofinals of the National Cultural Heritage Moot Court competition
in Chicago in February.
4. The Maurer School of Law chapter of the Black Law Students Association was recently named Midwest Region Chapter of
the Year, besting 52 other chapters. This was the fifth time in sixth years the Law School’s chapter received the award.
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fariss retirement celebration recognizes 40 years of service to law library The Indiana Law community gathered on January 27 to congratulate
Fariss’ guiding principle as a librarian and Law School faculty member has always been a profound service orientation, which has directly led to so many remarkable contributions. She has been responsible for expansion of the library’s teaching mission, including greater involvement in the first-year Legal Research and Writing program, as well as paving the way for the introduction of the Advanced Legal Research class. She has tirelessly sought to ensure the library remains at the cutting edge of technology, including one of her crowning achievements: the library’s digital repository, which provides open access to the Law School’s scholarship, publications, and history. In addition to the lasting contribution Fariss has made to the Jerome Hall Law Library, her legacy is further cemented by her role in educating and mentoring new law librarians. Continuing the course first established by Pauwels, Fariss and associate director Keith Buckley, ’89, have taught the Legal Bibliography class offered by the Department of Information and Library Science to dozens of aspiring law librarians since 1985. The vast majority of their students have gone on to successful careers in law librarianship, many of them at some of the nation’s finest law libraries. At the annual meeting of the American Association of Law Libraries, an Indiana University reception hosts former students who return year after year, eager to share their success stories and to acknowledge Fariss’ role in helping guide their careers.
Linda Fariss, ’88, on her retirement as director of the Jerome Hall Law Library. Fariss dedicated her entire professional career to the library, which she helped establish as one of the finest and most service-oriented law libraries in the country. In her progression from head of public services to associate director and finally to director of the Law Library and senior lecturer in law, she spearheaded dramatic growth in the Law Library’s physical facilities, staff, collections, and, most critically, services to Law School faculty, students, and alumni, as well as the entire Indiana University community and beyond. After completing an education degree at IU and working the night shift at the Main (now Wells) Library, Fariss applied for the newly created position of circulation supervisor at the Law Library in 1976. She transformed a haphazard operation run by students who stuffed circulation records in a drawer into a model of organization and efficiency. Upon completion of her Master of Library Science degree from IU in 1980, Fariss was appointed public services librarian. It quickly became apparent that in addition to her skills as a reference librarian, she had an aptitude for administration, and she was named the library’s first associate director in 1983. While working full-time, she earned her JD magna cum laude in 1988 and was inducted into the Order of the Coif. Fariss credits her colleagues who encouraged her along the way, in particular her mentor, the late Colleen Pauwels, ’86, who served as library director from 1983 until her retirement in 2011. Following Pauwels’ retirement, Fariss served briefly as interim director before being named permanent director of the library in 2012.
Fariss with George P. Smith, II, ’64
Fariss is looking forward to traveling with her husband, Jim, and daughter, Katie (an IU nursing student) in the upcoming months. She may even take up one of those hobbies she’s heard so much about but has never had the time to pursue. “Linda’s retirement brings with it the end of an era for the Jerome Hall Law Library,” said Dean Parrish. “Fortunately, her longtime protégé Keith Buckley has been appointed interim director, and will ensure that her many contributions will endure. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to have worked with Linda wish her much happiness in her retirement.” — Keith Buckley
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journals thrive under three distinct leaders They toil away early in the morning and leave long after most of their colleagues have gone home. For Indiana
INDIANA JOURNAL OF LAW AND SOCIAL EQUALITY When Katherine Fay, ’14, introduced Logan to the Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality at Admitted Students Day in 2014, she “knew it was the journal I wanted to be involved in.” “I’ve always been interested in issues of social equality,” Logan said. “I was able to get on the journal and had the fortune of meeting the executive team and leaders like Jazzmin Lewis, ’16. To see how invested they were in the journal was amazing.”
Law’s journal editors, the business of putting out volume after volume becomes a time-consuming endeavor
Logan, who came to the Law School after graduating from Brown University and
that takes incredible dedication and cooperation from and among its staff members. While each volume
serving as a paralegal and working for a public charter school, had a family connec-
becomes a record in history, the names and faces of those behind the articles fade with every graduating class.
tion that brought her to Bloomington. Her grandparents are from Indiana, but had
But that won’t be the case with three 2017 journal editors. For the first time in the Law School’s history, all three major journal leaders are students of color. The roads they took to get here, and to the helms of the Indiana Law Journal, the Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, and the Indiana Journal of Law and
to move to Ohio due to anti-miscegenation laws at the time. Her grandfather, William Bagby, wrote for the Indiana Daily Student, “but couldn’t get a haircut in town,” Logan said.
Social Equality, all vary. But Annie Xie, Brandon Dawson, and Melissa Logan along with Moot Court Chief
Now his granddaughter leads one of the Law School’s most progressive journals at
Justice Andrea Douglas, are taking the journals in the same direction: forward.
an important point in history. “With so much going on in the world surrounding racial equality and social justice issues, we share a responsibility to be successful,” she said. The journal is just one
INDIANA JOURNAL OF GLOBAL LEGAL STUDIES Dawson came to Bloomington from Texas A+M. It was during a law school fair that he met former Admissions
outlet for Logan; she is also actively involved with the school’s Black Law Students Association and the Public Interest Law Foundation.
Dean Frank Motley. The two connected, and a visit to campus convinced Dawson he had found his home. “Indiana Law just made sense,” he said, after discovering the school’s program on environmental law and the potential for a joint degree. “Professors like Jim Barnes, Fred Aman, and Bill Weeks have done everything they could’ve done to mold me into the best environmental lawyer I could be.” Dawson will have an opportunity to further hone those skills when he goes to work for the US Department of Justice’s Environmental Resource Division later this year. Leading the IJGLS is something Dawson is particularly proud of. The journal is celebrating its 25th birthday in 2017. So is Dawson. “That means something to me,” he said. “I’m the first African American editor-in-chief of the IJGLS. The first year they published was the year I was born. That’s special.” To commemorate the journal’s 25th anniversary, a global symposium was held in Bloomington on March 23-24, featuring some of the nation’s premier authorities on global legal studies. Rather than look back at the past 25 years, the symposium focused on the next quarter-century.
Annie Xie, Andrea Douglas, Melissa Logan, and Brandon Dawson
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“The community here made me feel like I could succeed,” she said. “Professor Victor Quintanilla, Dean Catherine Matthews, Luis Fuentes-Rohwer, and Kevin Brown have all helped me become more integrated in the community and become a leader.”
moot court, trial competitions hone writing, oral advocacy skills
The journal hosted its annual spring symposium in February, focusing on access to justice issues (see related
At the end, after the decision had been announced and the winners crowned, Austin Andreas extended a
story on p. 38).
hand to Alex Spindler, congratulating him after a challenging final round of the Sherman Minton Moot Court Competition. Spindler and Benjamin Shoptaw were named the 2016 champions, in what the judges called an incredibly close competition. Shoptaw edged out fellow 2L Stephanie Goldkopf, while Spindler
INDIANA LAW JOURNAL “My 1L Peer Group Advisor drove home the point to me, and everyone in our group, that if you were after the best opportunities as a law student, there was no better place than a journal or moot court experience,” said Xie. “Professor Pamela Foohey said it was the best way to read great scholarship and emphasized I’d be exposed to research I might not have otherwise read.” So after her 1L year, Xie was invited to join the Indiana Law Journal. She came to Indiana Law after earning an undergraduate degree at Brigham Young University, wanting to be closer to family in Cincinnati. Working on the journal has been an eye-opening experience into the world of production schedules, organizational management, and leadership.
defeated Andreas. Nearly 75 percent of the 2L class — 118 competitors in all — participated in this year’s competition, which focused on the balance between public safety and the right to speak freely. Competitors were tasked with determining whether a high school soccer player should have been suspended over a rap song that contained hostile language seemingly directed at the coach and school boosters. The case drew on Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District and Jaffee v. Redmond. A distinguished panel of judges presided over the final round: Hon. Philip P. Simon, Chief Judge, US District Court for the Northern District of Indiana; Judith E. Levy, US District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan; Hon. Jorge Luis Alonso, US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois; Dean Austen Parrish; and Professor Ryan Scott.
“What I’ve found particularly rewarding is the ability to make decisions while still getting input from my peers,” she said. “Balancing leadership with being open to others’ ideas is a critical skill I’ll use in my career.” Xie will join Ice Miller’s Indianapolis office after she graduates this spring, and is looking forward to staying connected with the Law School. Until then, there’s a major constitutional law symposium the ILJ is co-hosting with the Law School’s American Constitution Society chapter on April 14-15. Together with Prof. Dawn Johnsen, Xie and her colleagues will play host to some of the nation’s preeminent constitutional law scholars. As for the fact that she’s a part of history, Xie said she’s happy to be a part of something as special as the Indiana Law Journal. But even more so, she’s proud to be part of a bigger community that has welcomed her and others so warmly. “I never once thought I’d be part of a diverse milestone,” she said. “But I look back and see this is where our school is today and what people can achieve here — and what they’re expected to achieve here — it’s just a reflection of what this community is really like.”
Simon told the finalists they all did a magnificent job, making the judges’ decision extraordinarily difficult. “It’s just terrific to see the level of competence from you folks,” he said after the competition. “Five years from now, or a year from now, you’re going to be out there representing someone and it’s going to matter. Care about what you do, and do it like you did today, and your clients are going to come back to you.” Dean Parrish echoed those sentiments. “I thought you all did a wonderful job and it’s always so impressive to see these arguments,” he said. “I’m incredibly proud that you represent the school so well.”
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Washington, DC program combines study with hands-on experience Indiana Law has a record of success in producing practice-ready lawyers, with the right balance of classroom training, professional development, and hands-on learning. One case in point: the school’s Semester Public Interest Program, which gives students the opportunity to work in Washington, DC while earning course credit and building their network. Sarah Thompson, ’17, was one of nine third-year students who participated in this year’s program. Following acceptance into the program, she secured a job in the office of Senator
Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.), where she worked for his legal counsel, assisting with legislative matters and attending Judiciary Committee hearings. “I wanted to work on Capitol Hill, and I wanted a job with Indiana ties, so I was grateful to be accepted to work for Senator Donnelly,” Thompson explained. “He was great to work for — just as personable and honest with all of his staff as he is with his constituents.” She added that it was “surreal” to go to the office every day and work on issues she’d just heard about on the morning news. “Being in DC is its own experience. The institutional knowledge there is something you can’t explain,” she said. Thompson praised the Law School’s alumni for helping her make connections. “Washington is all about networking, and it turned out to be a lot easier than I’d thought,” she said. “Our alumni were so eager to help and easy to talk to. It’s part of the lawyer culture to help others, and that made networking fun.” She singled out Greg Castanias, ’90, and her mentors, Bruce Artim, ’82, and Ryan Weiss, ’14, as being especially helpful. Thompson and her classmates earned four hours’ credit during the semester, including a class called Lawyering in the Public Interest. Taught by Prof. Sarah Jane Hughes and Associate Librarian Jennifer Morgan, the course covered practical topics such as FOIA requests, legislative research, and other issues relevant to public service. “Professor Hughes seems to know everyone in Washington,” Thompson said. “I casually mentioned that I was interested in appellate advocacy, and she immediately put me in touch with George Patton.” Thompson found her time in Washington affirming and uplifting. “People told me that a semester in Washington would make me more cynical, but in fact I came away from it less cynical,” she said. “There’s more to legislation than meets the public eye, and Senator Donnelly takes his constituents seriously. It was encouraging to see mail, e-mails, and phone calls be given high priority.” A 2016 Sherman Minton Moot Court Competition finalist, Thompson will start work this summer in the Carmel, Ind., law firm of Densborn Blachly LLP. Although she has no immediate plans to get into politics, she is sure that public service will figure in her future, thanks to the DC program. “My experience in Washington taught me that no matter what I do in the long term, I will be forever involved in policy,” she concluded.
Sarah Thompson, a 2015 Sherman Minton Moot Court Competition finalist, spent the fall of her 3L semester in Washington, DC
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Students get a head start on spring semester with Wintersession
Steve Burns and Bill Hunt enjoying the dialogue during Wintersession
Though only in its second year, the Law School’s Wintersession program has proven to be an incredible success, with record participation by students and faculty. The four-day, intensive curriculum allowed students to choose from 10 courses focusing on practical skills. Students returned to Bloomington a week prior to the start of the spring semester to take the one-credit courses, provided at no cost. For the first time, a Wintersession course was offered specifically for our graduate students, who had the opportunity to study Islamic law and human rights with Trinity College (Dublin) Professor Neville Cox. Many alumni returned to serve as faculty members. Steve Burns, ’68, and Bill Hunt, ‘69, returned to teach The Lawyer as Business Executive, one of last year’s most popular courses. This year they brought in Michael S. Maurer, ’67, Glenn Scolnik, ’78, and Dave Greene, ’74, to speak to the class. Greta Cowart and Mike Asensio, both ’85, teamed up to teach Transactional Drafting: Anatomy of a Deal. They brought in James (Jim) Carlino, ’85, who taught a real estate and environmental component to the course, and John Seddelmeyer, ’74, who helped prepared course materials to enhance the class. Doris Pryor, ’03, led a course on Pre-Trial Litigation, and Jeff Thinnes, ’84, brought several prominent guests in via Skype for his course on ethics and compliance. The Hon. Nancy Vaidik and Hon. Elaine Brown, ’82, both of the Indiana Court of Appeals, immersed students in the world of depositions, utilizing role-play to help students enhance their communication skills. The Law School will host Wintersession again next January.
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inspired by a school’s innovative work, steve burns makes a gift When he was chief executive officer of Wheaton Van Lines, Steve Burns, ’68, learned that it wasn’t a business degree, a law degree, or decades of experience that made a good leader. No, it was whether or not the person was trustworthy. “When I went into business, I met a lot of good leaders. And I met some who were, shall we say, a bit unscrupulous,” Burns said. “Ethics seemed to be a void. And in talking with others, it wasn’t necessarily how smart they were, it was whether or not you could trust them.” Inspired by the work of Prof. Bill Henderson and Indiana Law’s Legal Profession
“It is very rewarding to be a part of a gift process where a lawyer can identify a key theme of their success and happiness and help translate it into part of forward-looking law school curriculum,” Henderson said. “In the case of Steve Burns, the theme is ethics and integrity. This endowed professorship funding will enable us to build upon a foundation that Steve Burns helped us lay starting nearly a decade ago. I am very grateful for his friendship and support.” The Legal Profession course, which Henderson helped launch in 2009, teaches 1Ls the law of lawyering in context, by examining practice settings, law firm norms, and nondoctrinal skills that all successful lawyers need, such as judgment, project management, client relations, and teamwork. Students in the course work in teams on real-life, practice-related problems, which helps develop the important skill of working alongside colleagues. “That’s where I began hearing about what Bill was doing, and after sitting down with him, it was clear his passion for students and for the profession is unique,” Burns said. “Teaching ethics and professionalism is difficult to do in many respects, and I think that’s the reason so many other schools have shied away from it. I’m pleased to see my school taking a lead here.” The course is bolstered by the Career Choices series, where practitioners from a wide array of practice areas visit the school to discuss their career paths and life as an attorney. Beyond the 1L year, advanced students are able to participate in the Law School’s Wintersession program, a four-day intensive course taught by practitioners. Burns and Bill Hunt, ’69, have taught a business-related course for the past two years (see story on p. 34). “It’s such a unique course and the students love it,” Burns said. “They want to hear war stories, which Bill and I are happy to share. They show up on time, they participate, and when you get their evaluations at the end and see how much they learned, it’s a very rewarding experience.”
and Wintersession courses, Burns has given $1 million to the Law School to help support the teaching of critical skills such as ethics and professionalism.
In 2015, Burns contributed $100,000 to the Lauren K. Robel Scholarship, which will support high-achieving Indiana Law students.
The gift establishes the Stephen F. Burns Professorship on the Legal Profession, to be held by Henderson. “He’s the reason for this gift,” Burns said. “When I was in law school, we hardly had any courses like the Legal Professions course or Wintersession. Bill has the same passion I do — that there needs to be a greater curricular experience in terms of ethics and professional responsibilities.” Henderson said knowing that people — especially alumni — recognize the importance of ethical and professional training is heartening.
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Service projects “a breath of fresh air” to 1L CivPro students Civil procedure has always been a staple of the first-year curriculum. But while most law students sit in a classroom and learn the ins and outs of pleadings and processes, Professor Victor Quintanilla’s CivPro students have begun an innovative component that puts them out into the real world, assisting real clients with real problems.
“The symposium was one of the most rewarding parts for the students,” Quintanilla said. “Having worldclass access-to-justice researchers and community partners gathered for the students who presented their outstanding proposals was magnificent.” Quintanilla credited the symposium’s breakout sessions with spurring even more ideas to help the five teams further their ambitions, which will continue through the fall as part of a project management course and within the Center for Law, Society, and Culture. Students have found the service learning projects to be a welcome respite from countless hours of theory. One said the project has been “a breath of fresh air, because we’re getting to do something that matters.” Jessica Beheydt, ’19, agreed. “This project was really helpful in getting first-year law students connected with the community and to get them into volunteering,” she said. “This was impactful for me personally, and I’m so excited to continue working with my group.” Subject to securing funding for their execution, these five projects are being developed:
Prof. Quintanilla
1. Creating an online form bank for unrepresented litigants in family law cases, integrating them with
easy-to-use software, and making instructional videos for their use;
“Having previously taught the class, Victor found that students had difficulty seeing the big picture of how
2. Collaborating with the US District Court for the Southern District of Indiana’s pro bono office to create
the rules combine into a system and how ordinary members encounter the civil justice system,” said Joan
a web-based software platform for counsel recruited to represent indigent prisoners with meritorious
Middendorf, a staff member in the IU Center for Innovative Teaching and Learning who helped co-design the
medical malpractice claims;
new program. “Students had said the course was hard because they struggled to see the viewpoint of the
3. Working with IU’s Title IX office to design a restorative justice program for resolving campus
people in the civil justice system.”
Enter the concept of service learning projects.
sexual assaults;
4. Partnering with the Neighborhood Christian Legal Clinic to extend its Project GRACE expungement
help desk to Bloomington; and
Quintanilla’s 187 1L students were split into 28 teams, and charged with finding a community partner that
5. Launching a new student organization, Street Law, that will advise and counsel Bloomington residents
had a problem. The students’ job through the course of the year? Find and develop a solution.
on debt collection and debt management, and provide problem-based outreach for low-income high school
students in southern Indiana.
“It has been really tremendous seeing what the 1L students have accomplished and how much they grew not only as individuals, but as team players, as lawyers, and as future members of the legal profession,” said
Quintanilla said any alumnus or community partners interested in pursuing a collaborative effort should
Madeleine Schnittker, ’17, an A2J team coach.
contact him at vdq@indiana.edu.
From the creation of technology, to distributing easy-to-understand legal documents, to the development of a new restorative program centered on Title IX reforms at the Indiana University campus, the students pursued solutions to problems facing underserved members of local communities. After teams presented their proposals at the end of the fall semester, five projects were chosen for review by a distinguished panel of scholars at the Accessing Justice Symposium, hosted by the Law School in late February. The teams received feedback, and will continue working to develop their projects into sustainable solutions that could end up living beyond their time as Indiana Law students.
38
39
Indiana Law announces new global, domestic partnerships providing externships and scholarship support The Law School has formed partnerships with several global and domestic
FGV Direito Rio, or São Paulo; the Chinese University of Political Science and Law (Beijing); the Peking School of
partners to provide scholarship and externship opportunities to students as they
Transnational Law (Shenzhen); or the University of Hong Kong. The fellows will also have the opportunity to work
plan their careers.
as global interns with a law firm, nongovernment organization, or multinational company after their first year and
The Julian Bond Law Scholars Program will provide one Indiana Law student with a scholarship equal to a minimum of 50 percent up to a maximum of 100 percent of tuition. The scholarship could reduce the cost of tuition over three years
will serve as research assistants to Indiana Law faculty once they return to Bloomington. The Global Fellows Program is offered under the school’s Milt and Judi Stewart Center on the Global Legal Profession, directed by Prof. Jayanth Krishnan.
by as much as $140,000 for Indiana residents and $235,000 for non-residents.
All of these programs will be available to incoming students in the fall of 2017. Interested students and their
The Julian Bond Scholar will also have access to a formal mentoring program at
advisors may contact the Office of Admissions for more information at (812) 855-4765.
the Law School led by members of its Alumni Board, and its BLSA, Latino, and LGBT Alumni Advisory Boards. In addition, the Julian Bond Law Scholar will be offered a for-credit, tuition-paid externship upon completion of their first year of law school, with a $4,000 stipend to cover living expenses, and a research assis-
Clockwise from top left: Julian Bond, H. Timothy Lovelace, Holiday Hart McKiernan, ’83, Jayanth Krishnan
tantship during their second and third years with Professor H. Timothy Lovelace, an expert on legal history, civil rights, and race and the law. The program is a partnership between the Law School and the Southern Poverty Law Center and is named for the iconic civil rights leader Julian Bond, founder of the SPLC. The Lumina Law Scholars Program will offer one student a scholarship and formal mentoring program similar to the one offered to the Julian Bond Scholars. Upon completion of their first year of law school, the Lumina Law Scholar will be offered a paid summer clerkship at the Indianapolis-based Lumina Foundation. Students will work with Holiday Hart McKiernan, ’83, Lumina’s chief operating officer, executive vice president, and general counsel, on a variety of legal, governance, and policy issues related to nonprofit organizations and higher-education institutions. Lumina Law Scholars will also have the opportunity to earn a minor in education policy from IU’s highly ranked School of Education. Another program with Chapman and Cutler LLP gives students hands-on experience in the firm, followed by admission to the Law School and consideration for a full-time position. Students interested in careers in the global legal profession will be able to apply to the school’s Global Fellows Program in Brazil, China, and India. Each fellowship offers a scholarship of 50 percent to 100 percent of tuition and a $12,000 summer stipend, along with a semester at O.P. Jindal Global University, Delhi;
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ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 41
ABOUT THE HONOR ROLLS Your gifts to the Indiana University Maurer School of Law build and sustain resources that support faculty chairs and professorships, scholarships, law journals, trial advocacy programs, the Jerome Hall Law Library, faculty development, and many other initiatives. The Law School’s giving societies are: $10,000 and above: Dean’s Circle Visionaries
2016 honor roll of donors
$5,000 to $9,999: Dean’s Circle Benefactors $1,000 to $4,999: Dean’s Circle Directors $250 to $999: Partners $249 and under: Associates The 2016 Honor Roll of Donors reflects gifts from January 1 – December 31, 2016. An asterisk indicates the donor is deceased. Every effort has been made to avoid errors. Please accept our apology if you have been listed incorrectly or omitted. Please report corrections to: Lisa G. Hosey, Executive Director of Development Arthur M. Lotz Office of Alumni and Development 211 South Indiana Avenue — Bloomington, IN 47405 (812) 855-9953 — (877) 286-0002 lawalum@indiana.edu
42
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 43
partners in excellence
Partners in Excellence enable the Maurer School of Law to plan for the future of mission-critical programs by pledging their sustained support to the school in the amount of at least $2,500 per year over a period of five years. The support of our Partners in Excellence makes possible the services and programs that distinguish the Maurer School of Law from its peers. The Law School deeply appreciates the investment of this elite group of donors.
44
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.
Eric A. Frey, ’67
Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak
Gary J. Anderson, M.D.
Philip C. Genetos, ’77
Amy G. Applegate
Bonnie K. Gibson, ’78
Austen Parrish
John S. Applegate
Steven E. Goode, ’93
George T. Patton, Jr., ’87
Bruce J. Artim, ’82
Harry L. Gonso, ’73
Stephen H. Paul, ’72
Lowell E. Baier, ’64
David E. Greene, ’74
Jeffrey P. Petrich, ’84
David O. Barrett, ’95
Kathleen Harrold
Steven M. Post, ’77
M. Scott Bassett, ’86
Andrew W. Hull, ’86
Lisa A. Powell, ’84
Wayne D. Boberg, ’78
V. William Hunt, ’69
Stephen M. Proctor, ’82
Ellen E. Boshkoff, ’90
R. Neil Irwin, ’71
John F. Richardson, ’77
William J. Brody, ’76
David H. Jacobs
James G. Richmond, ’69
Thomas E. Burchfield, ’61
Ian G. John, ’95
Randall R. Riggs, ’77
Stephen F. Burns, ’68
David F. Johnson, ’81
Timothy J. Riffle, ’83
Donald W. Buttrey, ’61
Gregory J. Jordan, ’84
Lauren K. Robel, ’83
Amy D. Brody, ’00
Randal J. Kaltenmark,’96
Thomas F. Schnellenberger, Jr., ’79
Willard Z. Carr, ’50
Robert P. Kassing, ’64
Glenn Scolnik, ’78
Gregory A. Castanias, ’90
James Koday, ’76
John E. Seddelmeyer, ’74
Michael R. Conner, ’75
Susan M. Kornfield, ’82
Randolph L. Seger, ’72
Catherine A. Conway, ’78
Julia C. Lamber, ’72
Julian L. Shepard, ’83
James L. Cooper, ’91
William C. Lawrence, ’79
Jacqueline A. Simmons, ’79
Greta Cowart, ’85
Stephen W. Lee, ’77
Marshall S. Sinick, ’68
Jeffrey S. Davidson, ’73
Millard D. Lesch, ’67
Milton R. Stewart, ’71
Richard A. Dean, ’73
Elliott D. Levin, ’66
Kathleen O. St. Louis, ’84
John H. de Boisblanc, ’66
Elliot R. Lewis, ’87
James A. Strain, ’69
Alecia A. DeCoudreaux, ’78
John L. Lisher, ’75
James P. Strenski, ’94
Ann M. DeLaney, ’77
Mary K. Lisher, ’75
Elizabeth Stuart John, ’95
Kathleen A. DeLaney, ’95
Robert G. Lord, ’73
Charles P. Sutphin, ’85
Anne N. DePrez, ’81
Susan C. Lynch, ’93
Tommy F. Thompson, ’75
Debra Dermody, ’82
Larry A. Mackey, ’76
Courtney R. Tobin, ’92
Francis J. Dermody, ’82
Scott Y. MacTaggart, ’76
Malcolm J. Tuesley, ’99
Donald P. Dorfman, ’57
Michael S. Maurer, ’67
Kenneth L. Turchi, ’83
Robert P. Duvin, ’61
Thomas R. McCully, ’66
Inge M. Van der Cruysse, ’04
William B. Edge, ’98
Lisa C. McKinney, ’92
Ted A. Waggoner, ’78
DG Elmore, Jr., ’84
R. Bruce McLean, ’71
Judith A. Waltz, ’81
Sidney D. Eskenazi, ’53
Leslie S. Mead, ’84
Brian P. Williams, ’81
Faegre Baker Daniels Foundation
Edward L. Michael, ’81
David C. Williams
Faegre Baker Daniels LLP
David C. Milne, ’94
Susan H. Williams
Richard L. Fanyo, ’76
Megan (McAuley) Milne, ’94
Mark S. Wojciechowski, ’81
Thomas M. Fisher, ’94
Michael T. McLoughlin, ’72
Frank E. Wrenick, ‘65
Scott N. Flanders, ’82
Janet Min Beach, ’95
Mark E. Wright, ’89
Michael E. Flannery, ’83
Burke J. Montgomery, ’99
Kenneth R. Yahne, ’68
Brenda (Osborne) Freije, ’94
Robert E. Neiman, ’66
James P. Zeller, ’76
Richard T. Freije, Jr. ’84
Novus Law LLC
& Stewart, P.C.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 45
giving by class
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1947
Hon. William I. Garrard
Jerry Moss
James V. McGlone
Nancy J. Litzenberger
Gerald A. Griffin
ASSOCIATE
William B. Heubel
Stanley H. Matheny
Carl E. Ver Beek
Walter G. Meyer
Hon. Thomas K. Milligan
Alan H. Hedegard
William F. McNagny
Ellwood W. Lewis, Jr.
William McCrae
ASSOCIATES
James J. Nagy
Stephen C. Moberly
James W. Holland
Roger T. Stelle
Philip C. Potts
Rafe H. Cloe
Ronald P. Nelson
Mamoru Muraoka
Robert E. Kabisch
Alan C. Witte
Thomas A. Keith
PARTNERS
Joseph S. King
Samuel R. Born II
Frank G. Kramer
Ronald B. Brodey
Charles D. Little
Richard W. Davis, Jr.
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Robert L. Meinzer, Jr.
Robert D. Epstein
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Michael S. Maurer
Anthony W. Mommer
Hon. T. Todd Hodgdon
Vorris J. Blankenship
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
E. Kent Moore
Robert T. Johnson
Hon. Ezra H. Friedlander
Millard D. Lesch
William C. Reynolds
Thomas O. Magan
Arthur M. Lotz
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Alexander L. Rogers
William J. Maher
D. Reed Scism
Eric A. Frey
Daniel B. Seitz
John W. Mead David A. Rose ASSOCIATES
1948
1955
Thomas A. Dailey
Robert E. Peterson
Darrel K. Peckinpaugh
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
PARTNER
ASSOCIATES
John J. Lorber
Marshall D. Ruchman
Peter B. Stewart
Jeanne S. Miller
Duane W. Beckhorn
John E. Chevigny
Hugo E. Martz
George P. Smith, II
PARTNER
ASSOCIATE
Kenneth P. Fedder
Milford M. Miller, Jr.
John L. Carroll
Alexander Jokay
Daniel D. Fetterley
Oscar C. Ventanilla, Jr.
John H. Sweeney
Joseph A. Hays
David S. Wedding
Robert N. Meiser
Albert T. Willardo
1949
1956
ASSOCIATE
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Samuel L. Reed
Frederick A. Beckman
Russell H. Hart, Jr.
William Theodoros
PARTNER
Anne Paramenko Weeks
1950
1963 DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
1965
1967
Gary L. Gerling
Frank E. Wrenick
Jeffrey J. Kennedy
Frederick F. Thornburg
Roger L. Pardieck
PARTNERS
James C. Nelson
William H. Van Deest
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
William R. Riggs
James E. Bourne
Richard E. Woosnam
Clarence H. Doninger
PARTNERS
Stephen W. Crider
PARTNERS
Joseph G. Roberts
Lloyd H. Milliken, Jr.
David L. Brewer
Justin P. Patterson
Elliott Abrutyn
Charles R. Tiede
PARTNERS
George E. Buckingham
John W. Whiteleather, Jr.
Hon. George N. Beamer
Joseph A. Franklin
ASSOCIATES
Hon. Shirley S. Abrahamson
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
ASSOCIATES
Willard Z. Carr, Jr.
Edwin G. Charle, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
William W. Peach
Donald R. Smith* Stanley Talesnick
1960
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Paul E. Black
1969
Richard T. Dawson
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
David A. Dodge
Malcolm C. Mallette
V. William Hunt
Penelope S. Farthing
David H. Nicholls
James A. Strain
Robert G. Fishman
1951
1957
Richard L. Brown
ASSOCIATES
Vincent J. Backs
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Jack H. Frisch
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Hon. Hugo C. “Chad” Songer
Larry C. Amos
Hon. Thomas G. Fisher
Stephen W. Adair
James G. Richmond
J. P. Glynn
Harry F. Smiddy, Jr.
Donald P. Dorfman
ASSOCIATES
Donald D. Doxsee
Frank T. Lewis
Jon C. Baxter
PARTNERS
Harvey M. Kagan
Hon. William D. Stephens
PARTNERS
Jerry E. Hyland
Lewis R. Katz
Brian M. McCormick
Charles J. Collet
Gregory A. Hartzler
Hon. James B. Long
Marvin S. Crell
Richard D. Wagner
Sherman J. Keller
Arthur C. Nordhoff, Jr.
Frank R. Hanning, Jr.
Robert W. Loser II
Gary D. Spivey
Hon. Stanley A. Levine
David S. Poston
Robert V. Kixmiller
Lon D. Showley
Gregory W. Sturm
Thomas L. Seifert
Jon H. Moll
Joseph S. Van Bokkelen
Edward L. Volk
George L. Stubbs, Jr.
William H. Robbins III
ASSOCIATES
William E. Weikert
Hon. William C. Whitman
William F. Thompson
Thomas H. Bryan
Hon. Charles C. Wicks
David O. Tittle
Richard L. Darst
John F. Tweedle
Patrick E. Donoghue
Philip D. Waller, Jr.
James E. Freeman, Jr.
1952
Ralph L. Jewell
1961
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Donald C. Lehman
Ellis B. Anderson
Cliff K. Travis
ASSOCIATES
Edwin Fitch Walmer
Thomas E. Burchfield
Horace A. Foncannon, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
Donald W. Buttrey
Lowell E. Baier
James R. Grossman
Theodore W. Hirsh
Hon. V. Sue Shields
Robert P. Kassing
Howard R. Henderson
Robert C. Riddell
PARTNERS
Sydney L Steele
William G. Bruns
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Thomas R. McCully
William J. Wood
1958
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
1964 DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
1966 DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
Robert L. Fonner
Gregory D. Buckley
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Eugene J. McGarvey, Jr.
Charles O. Ziemer
William D. Chambers
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
David G. Elmore
ASSOCIATES
PARTNERS
Sidney D. Eskenazi
ASSOCIATES
Joseph T. Bumbleburg
Thomas A. Coyne
PARTNER
Herbert K. Douglas
John S. Jackson
Andrew C. Emerson
William A. Freihofer
ASSOCIATES
Joseph T. Ives, Jr.
Charles E. Fritz
Richard C. Quaintance, Sr.
Richard S. Rhodes
Thomas L. Ryan
1953
48
1970
ASSOCIATES
1968
1971 DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Gerald F. George
Milton R. Stewart
Thomas M. Hamilton, Jr.
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
John A. Hargis
R. Neil Irwin
John H. de Boisblanc
Stephen F. Burns
Edwin A. Harper
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Robert A. Jefferies, Jr.
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
David M. Haskett
David C. Evans
William C. Ervin
Elliott D. Levin
Kenneth R. Yahne
Hon. Carl A. Heldt III
John M. Segal
John A. Jeffries
David B. Hughes
Tracy E. Little
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Frank C. Hider
PARTNERS
H. Theodore Noell
Ellis K. Locher, Jr.
Robert E. Neiman
Carl L. Baker
Robert S. Hulett
Hon. John G. Baker
John T. Scott
Gerald H. McGlone
PARTNERS
PARTNERS
James R. Kuehl
Richard E. Boston
P. M. Mitchell
Charles A. Cohen
Larry R. Fisher
Brian J. May
Ronald L. Chapman
Gene E. Robbins
Dennis J. Dewey
John K. Graham
Daniel A. Medrea
Linda L. Chezem
1962
1954
1959
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Robert P. Tinnin, Jr.
Robert A. Garelick
Walter W. Rauch
Hon. William R. Pietz
Terry K. Hiestand
PARTNERS
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Vernon J. Owens
Robert A. Wagner
Denis L. Koehlinger
Marshall S. Sinick
John L. Pogue
Stanley M. Levco
Dale E. Armstrong*
Marvin L. Hackman
PARTNERS
ASSOCIATES
Hon. Frank J. Otte
ASSOCIATES
Robert B. Relph
Larry R. Linhart
Ray G. Miller
PARTNERS
David C. Dale
Gerald K. Ah Mai
ASSOCIATES
Ronald B. Bremen
John F. Suhre
Robert A. Long
Virgil L. Beeler
Martin J. Flynn
Joe D. Black
Stephen L. Ferguson
Richard J. Darko
Douglas W. Nutt
James F. Fitzpatrick
Sidney Mishkin
Edward C. King
William J. Hein
Hon. Ernest D. Daugherty
William H. Replogle II ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 49
Richard E. Stahl
Dorothy J. Frapwell
PARTNERS
Marcia W. Sullivan
Randall R. Riggs
Renee Mawhinney
Joseph E. Trester
Judith A. Waltz
Jack L. Walkey
Harry L. Gonso
Michael E. Armey
W. Charles Thomson III
Nancy E. Weissman
McDermott
Barbara Wand
PARTNERS
ASSOCIATES
Marilyn B. Resch
Robert D. Bray
Hon. John D. Tinder
Craig M. White
Joseph D. O’Connor
Sabra A. Weliever
Alan W. Becker
Thomas R. Ensor
Hon. Ellen K. Thomas
James E. Carlberg
Sharon A. Wildey
PARTNERS
Jeffrey K. Riffer
James D. Kemper
S. Lee Woodward
Mary E. Ham
Robert E. Wrenn
Hon. Stephen R. Bowers
Patricia S. Roberts
R. Bruce McLean
PARTNERS
Charles A. Hessler
Patricia A. Daly
John W. Rowings
Michael D. O’Connor
Michael R. Fruehwald
Jane T. Hessler
Richard K. Reider, Jr.
John F. Fuzak
Dan M. Kirwan
Hon. John P. Stelle
Laurence A. McHugh
Gerald E. Surface, Jr. Stephen M. Trattner
1980
Michael A. Pechette
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Jack S. Troeger
Elizabeth A. Frederick
Linda M. Rowings
Michael J. Hinchion
Myra L. Willis
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Brenda E. Knowles
Reed E. Schaper
Debbi M. Johnstone
ASSOCIATES
Ward W. Miller
Gary L. Birnbaum*
Fred J. Logan, Jr.
Ted A. Waggoner
Miranda Mandel
Ruth M. Acheson
Terry A. Mumford
Robert W. Sikkel
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
Hon. Thomas E. Nelson
Margaret A. Williford
PARTNERS
Philip K. Cone
Carolyn S. Price
Robert O. Smith
James P. Zeller
William M. Pope
ASSOCIATES
Phillip L. Bayt
Maria Luz Corona
William D. Roessler
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Jeff Richardson
William E. Adams, Jr.
R. P. Carey
J. A. Crawford
J. Eric Smithburn
Charlie P. Andrus
Donald E. Hinkle
Thomas C. Scherer
Michael E. Brown
Hon. Susan L. Macey
Clifford W. Garstang
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
C. D. Yates
Thomas J. Breed
James Koday
ASSOCIATES
James R. DeMotte
Meredith L. McIntyre
Edward W. Gerecke
Michael T. McLoughlin
ASSOCIATES
Sally A. Lied
Donald R. Lundberg
Robert J. Black
Scott E. Fore
David B. McKinney
Anthony P. Gillman
Randolph L. Seger
Scott H. Anderson
Hon. Basil H. Lorch III
Scott Y. MacTaggart
Francina A. Dlouhy
Alicia J. Irr
Hon. Vicki J. Moore
James S. Legg
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Robert D. Budesa, Sr.
David F. Morado, Jr.
PARTNERS
Myrna E. Friedman
Debra K. Luke
Jean M. Pechette
Julia E. Merkt
Julia C. Lamber
James D. Collier
Joseph S. Northrop
James L. Petersen
Jeffrey L. Gage
John P. Martin
Stephen J. Peters
Kathryn A. Molewyk
Stephen H. Paul
Alice M. Craft
John W. Purcell
Paul A. Hass
Philip L. McCool
Thomas A. Pyrz
Richard M. Quinlan
1972
1975
Michele E. Suttle
Doyal E. McLemore, Jr.
George E. Reed, Jr.
Christopher G. Scanlon
John R. Schaibley III
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Ned M. Suttle
John L. Milam
Hugh A. Sanders
Carole B. Silver
Michael E. Sum
W. Stephen Hamlin, Jr.
Michael R. Conner
Barbara S. Woodall
James D. Moore
Emily C. Tobias
Ernest C. Summers III
Alan Whaley
Dale E. Hunt
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
Darell Eugene Zink, Jr.
Byron L. Myers
Daniel D. Trachtman
David J. Theising
PARTNERS
Alan L. Johns
Tommy F. Thompson
ASSOCIATES
Ann L. Nowak
Ann R. Vaughan
ASSOCIATES
John S. Chappell
Jeffrey S. Marlin
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Ann K. Bailey
Mark J. Roberts
Brenda Wheeler Zody
Michael A. Aspy
Thomas C. Cornwell
Thomas L. Pytynia
Christopher A. Bloom
Dianne Blocker Braun
Michael J. Schneider
C. Thomas Fennimore
Theodore H. Randall, Jr.
Hon. James M. Carr
Mary B. Brody
Sue A. Shadley*
Hon. Anthony J. Metz III
Charles R. Rubright
John L. Lisher
William J. Brody
James A. Shanahan*
ASSOCIATES
Stuart Senescu
Mary K. Lisher
J. Carol Brooks
John J. Stieff
Gregory S. Carter
Willoughby G. Sheane, Jr.
Aline M. Mohr
Sarah A. Carter
Edward Chosnek
Arthur M. Small
James L. Mohr
Emily Copeland Cato
Richard L. Halpert
Arthur G. Surguine, Jr.
PARTNERS
James F. Gillespie
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Hon. W. Michael Horton
Hon. Robert W. Thacker
Thomas L. Davis
Michael P. Gray
Catherine A. Conway
Michael J. Huston
James N. Videbeck
Terry M. Dworkin
Alan K. Hofer
Stephen R. Place
Thomas E. Wilson
Roy R. Johnson
Joe A. Rowe
Philip L. Zorn, Jr.
Scott T. Kragie
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Leroy E. Cummings
Kathleen C. Gillmore
Michael R. Fisher
John F. Sturm William K. Thomas
1979
1982 DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Sue A. Beesley
Bruce J. Artim
Kathryn A. Brogan
Scott N. Flanders
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Jane A. Hamblin
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
William C. Lawrence
Hon. Frances M. Hill
Joseph M. Ambrose
Thomas F.
Hon. Christina K.
Jay Jaffe
Kalavritinos
Lisa Donk Lewis
Jacqueline A. Simmons
Dennis A. Kokinda
Kevin C. Miller
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Alice A. Kuzemka
Stephen M. Proctor
Glenn Scolnik
Jeffrey A. Burger
Mary N. Larimore
Carol M. Seaman
Steven C. Jackson
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Agnes S. Peters
Ernesto S. Medina
Hon. Frank E. Sullivan, Jr.
Barbara J. Lembo
Alecia A. DeCoudreaux
William Weeks
Edward F. Schrager
PARTNERS
Larry J. McClatchey
Christina M. McKee
Bonnie K. Gibson
PARTNERS
Sharon Zoretich Terry
Karen E. Arland
K. Stephen Royce
Roy T. Ogawa
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Jane Alshuler
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Fred O. Towe, Jr.
Stephen R. Pennell
Wayne D. Boberg
Hon. Gonzalo P. Curiel
Andrew R. Thompson
David E. Greene
John D. Walda
Michael H. Sahn
John McGee
Bruce A. Hugon
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Alan A. Levin
Kipling N. White
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
ASSOCIATES
David L. Steiner
Mark S. Niblick
Frederick B. Kruger
Edward L. Michael
Cathy S. Moore
Robert T. Wildman
John E. Seddelmeyer
Kenneth W. Dodge
Vincent O. Wagner
Michael L. Pate
Brooke M. Roberts
Brian P. Williams
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Paul S. Elkin
Michael L. Wills
PARTNERS
ASSOCIATES
Mark S. Wojciechowski
Robert G. Andree, Jr.
Sanford M. Brook
William R. Fatout
Anne E. Aikman-Scalese
Hon. Donald E. Baier
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Peter G. Bakas
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Dana I. Green
Kenneth E. Gordon
Jeffrey S. Davidson
Timothy M. Morrison
Douglas C. Lehman
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Clarine Nardi Riddle
George N. Bewley, Jr.
Hon. Sarah M. Singleton
Thomas A. Clancy
Martha S. West
Thomas L. Shriner, Jr. David S. Sidor Joseph C. Swift
1973
Richard A. Dean 50
1976
Ted R. Brown
1974
1977
1978
Schnellenberger, Jr.
Roger W. Bennett
1981
Edward D. Feigenbaum
Howard R. Cohen
Elizabeth Domsic Baier
Anne N. DePrez
Jeffrey A. Boyll
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Aladean M. De Rose-
Michelle Link Bernstein
David L. Ferguson
Hon. Elaine B. Brown
Mark E. Neff
Steven M. Post
Smithburn
Hon. Michael J. Botkin
David F. Johnson
Michael S. Callahan
Daniel A. Nicolini
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Mitchell A. Kline
Daniel C. Emerson
Bruce F. Lewis
Ellen S. Gabovitch
Kirk A. Pinkerton
Ann M. DeLaney
James S. Kowalik
Mark E. GiaQuinta
Richard A. Rosenthal
Collin D. Higginbotham
Don E. Prosser
Philip C. Genetos
Janett L. Lowes
John M. Kyle III
Robert K. Stanley
October S. Kniess
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 51
Alicia J. McClean
1984
PARTNERS
Hon. Geoffrey G. Slaughter
Tracy A. Pappas
Debra L. Schroeder
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Karl M. Koons III
Jennifer J. Abrell
PARTNERS
Mary E. Tuuk
David A. Starkweather
Amanda O. Blackketter
Kathryn Knue Przywara
DG Elmore, Jr.
David M. Kraus
Frank E. Berrodin
Thomas E. Baltz
Theodore Washienko, Jr.
Mark J. Wassink
J. Carlos Ferrucho
Christopher S. Roberge
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Bernard Landman III
Samuel E. Eversman
Kevin E. Brown
Hon. Martha M. Wentworth
Elizabeth Shuman-Moore
Leslie S. Mead
Michael J. Lewinski
Bryan H. Hall
Andrew B. Buroker
Madonna K. Starr
Jeffrey P. Petrich
Richard J. McConnell
Kim M. Laurin
Barry T. Lieber
Peter A. Teholiz
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Maria V. Pangonis Senior
V. Samuel Laurin III
Bryan A. Richards
Patrick J. Turner
Richard T. Freije, Jr.
Erick D. Ponader
Joseph H. Marxer
Peter Villarreal
Stephen J. Hackman
Shelia C. Riddick
Thomas M. Maxwell
Les B. Morris
1983
1991
Sarah K. Funke
1993
Michael T. Hylland
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
David J. Jurkiewicz
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Steven E. Goode
Benjamin T. Lo
Julia E. Cassidy
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Alice M. Morical
ASSOCIATES
Sylvia Y. Chou
Susan C. Lynch
Gregory J. Morical
Thomas R. Newby
William W. Barrett
James L. Cooper, Ph.D.
PARTNERS
Sean S. Steele
Robert S. O’Dell
Steven L. Carson
Stephan E. Kyle
Kevin G. Baer
Tracy L. Troyer
George T. Patton, Jr.
Larry L. Chubb
PARTNERS
Patrick S. Cross
ASSOCIATES
Michael D. Dobosz
Natalie A. Mason
Carl A. Greci
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Michael K. Davis
Terry L. Harrell
Amy L. Nefouse
Nestor F. Ho
Gregory J. Jordan
Richard C. Starkey
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Lisa A. Powell
Hon. Robert J. Tornatta
Michael E. Flannery
Kathleen M. St. Louis
Timothy J. Riffle
PARTNERS
Lauren K. Robel
Rebecca A. Craft
Zeff A. Weiss*
Mark C. Eriks
Arend J. Abel
Robert G. Devetski
Richard W. Head
Marianne Mitten Owen
Clayton C. Miller
David O. Barrett
Zoe L. Weiss
Donald D. Levenhagen
M. Scott Bassett
Robert J. Lahaie
Amy B. Krallman
Julia C. Weissman
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
Gilbert R. Perez
Eric E. Boyd
Patrice A. Ocken
Laurie L. Schmidt
ASSOCIATES
Julie M. Conrad
Elizabeth Stuart John
Kenneth L. Turchi
Brian J. Shapiro
PARTNERS
Brian L. Porto
David R. Steiner
John D. Bessler
Mark A. Drewes
Ian G. John
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Jeffrey A. Thinnes
John Fedors, Jr.
Stanley H. Rorick
Brad E. Burnett
Nancy J. Guyott
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Samuel R. Ardery
James J. Weber
James A. Gesmer
Susan H. Vrahoretis
Nicholas C. Pappas
Mario N. Joven
Kathleen A. DeLaney
Candance A. Grass
ASSOCIATES
Hon. John M. Hamilton
Thomas E. Wheeler II
MaryAnn Schlegel Ruegger
Gary D. Levenson
Matthew T. Furton
Bruce C. Haas
Lee R. Berry, Jr.
David J. Hensel
Matthew M. Price
Janet Min Beach
Mark C. Krcmaric
Tim J. Boeglin*
Andrew W. Hull
Mary B. Schultheis-Burger
Bret D. Raper
Holiday H. McKiernan
John P. Lahaie
Louis K. Nigg
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Kevin E. Steele
PARTNERS
Philip B. McKiernan
Frank R. Martinez III
Susan Blankenbaker Noyes
Cindy J. Reichard
Douglas D. Small
Carol Nolan Skinner
Keith E. White
1986
1988
1990 DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
Ellen E. Boshkoff DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
1992
1995 DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Gregory A. Castanias
Peter M. Racher
Allan T. Slagel
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Lisa C. McKinney
Eric A. Todd
Carla D. Boddy
Kathryn J. Roudebush
PARTNERS
Benjamin P. Beringer
Courtney R. Tobin
Michael D. Zima
Jeffrey L. Carmichael
Earl R. Singleton
Hon. David R. Bolk
Bonnie L. Foster
PARTNERS
Rebecca C. Zima
Shannon L. Clark
Maryanne Pelic Thickstun
Julia F. Dierker
David A. Foster
Kathleen M. Anderson
Timothy L. Tyler
John D. Inwood
Shannon S. Frank
Greg A. Bouwer
Hank H. Kim
Joseph H. Yeager, Jr.
1985
PARTNERS
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARY
ASSOCIATES
Bruce W. Longbottom
Kelly A. Johnson
John T. Cooper
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Jill T. Powlick
Arthur A. Lopez
Greta E. Cowart
J. Adam Bain
Sonia D. Overholser
PARTNERS
Hon. Darrin M. Dolehanty
David C. Milne
ASSOCIATES
Jeffrey B. Rubenstein
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Hon. Andrew L. Cameron
Kevin C. Schiferl
William M. Braman
Dawn C. Wrona Eby
Meagan K. Milne
Robert A. Dubault
Camie J. Swanson-Hull
Augustavia J. Haydel
Elisabeth M. Dagorrette
David J. Shannon
Mark A. Dittrich
John R. Fernandez
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Douglas W. Hyman
Richard J. Thrapp
Michael D. Huber
Kevin D. Gibson
Scott E. Tarter
Mark B. Gramelspacher
John R. Gastineau
Craig C. Burke
James P. Leahey
Rebecca L. Wilkinson
Karen B. Jordan-Boyd
Thomas B. Parent
ASSOCIATES
William C. Hermann
Kevin A. Halloran
Thomas M. Fisher
David A. Locke
Kenneth J. Yerkes
Peter C. McCabe III
Bernard O. Paul
Scott B. Ainsworth
Christian J. Morrison
Scott R. Hansen
Brenda H. Freije
David H. Schwartz
ASSOCIATES
PARTNERS
Wendy W. Ponader
Kerry C. Connor
Michael E. Schrader
Matthew J. Miller
Jeffrey S. Goldenberg
Waldemar Wyszynski
Deborah L. Darter
James F. Bleeke
Theresa A. Riess
Sherry A. Fabina-Abney
Theodore C. Stamatakos
Timothy E. Ochs
John T. Keith
John M. Yarger
Becky J. Frederick
Joan M. Heinz
Steven J. Riggs
Edward A. Gohmann
ASSOCIATES
Diane E. Smith
Angela F. Parker
Peter C. Kelty
Charles C. Kelly II
Charles B. Sauers
Christopher A. Nichols
John E. Broden
Alyssa D. Stamatakos
James P. Strenski
Yvette Gaff Kleven
John A. Larson
David T. Schaefer
Kevin D. Nicoson
David A. Brown
Alan S. Townsend
1996
PARTNERS
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Gina Skelton Koons
Alan R. Loudermilk
Ann C. Varnon
Michael D. Scott
Sheila M. Carson
Brantley H. Wright
Edward G. Bielski
Jack A. Bobo
Mark J. Moryl
Anne E. Norris
Mark R. Waterfill
Tammy K. Haney
ASSOCIATES
Rebecca L. Collins
Randal J. Kaltenmark
Paul B. Overhauser
David W. Quist
Margaret M. Wrynn
Michael D. Hardy
Ronald Bush II
Thomas E. Deer
Elissa J. Preheim
Susan E. Reed
Sally J. Vander Ploeg
Lance D. Like
Juliet M. Casper
Daniel P. Fowler
Susan J. Yoon
Donald J. Vogel
Mark E. Wright
Scott J. Luedke
Robert W. Eherenman
Karen S. Howe-Fernandez
PARTNERS
Julie P. Verheye
1987
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTOR
Jeffrey L. Rensberger
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Michael J. MacLean
James T. Flanigan
Michael B. Langford
Robert “Ted” F. Barron II
Elizabeth M. Warren
Gary S. Batke
David A. Daspin
Deborah J. Allen-Slagel
Joanne C. Mages
Anne M. Frye
Joanne C. McAnlis
Rhonda Hospedales
Hon. Barbara L. Brugnaux
Elliot R. Lewis
Steven C. Bruess
Julia McClellan-Leavitt
Scott E. Herbst
Jeanne M. Picht
Jason L. Kennedy
Mark D. Janis
Marcia A. McNagny
James M. Hinshaw
Todd J. Stearn
Stephen E. Scheele
Timothy M. Conway 52
Marion P. Herrington
1989
1994
Charles J. Meyer
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 53
Christine M. Soneral
ASSOCIATES
Michael E. Heintz
Kevin R. Mason-Smith
ASSOCIATES
PARTNER
Susan M. Shook
Gerald B. Zelenock, Jr.
David M. Allen
Jennifer L. Shea
Joel R. Meyer
Michael J. Blinn
Jeremy S. Votaw
Kevin Tessier
ASSOCIATES
James E. Fisher
John D. Sweeney
Kimberly Richardson
Laura J. Durfee
ASSOCIATES
ASSOCIATES
Erin A. Clancy
Pamela S. Meyer
ASSOCIATES
Shana C. Stump
Tyler D. Helmond
Christopher M. Chamness
David W. Barrett
Sean T. Devenney
Sandra Perry
Nicole D. Conrad
Maurice L. Williams
Nathan L. Hutchings
Russell C. Chaplain
ASSOCIATES
Jill M. Denman
Angela Smith Fisher
Jennifer M. Herrmann
ASSOCIATES
Michala P. Irons
William R. Lafleur II
Stephen L. Briles
Tony Ling
Travis N. Jensen
Sandip H. Patel
Andrew S. Paine
Jamison S. Prime
2001
PARTNER
Gretchen L. Parrish
Joshlene A. Pollock
Michelle T. Cosby
Benjamin J. Keele
Michael C. Mattingly
Francesca M. Cardillo
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Jaime L. Turley-Perz
Catherine L. Matthews
Marguerite C. Snyder
Leticia C. Mayberry Wright
Steven E. Clark
Ryan M. Poor
Matthew D. Kellam
Jennifer L. Weber
Jessica L. Merkel
David E. Okun
Martin H. Cozzola
Frederick W. Schultz
Michael M. Pratt
PARTNERS
Jennifer K. Schultz
Marc T. Quigley
Jasna B. Dolgov
Ketaki Sircar
Germaine W. Willett
Daniel P. King
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Bryan B. Woodruff
Marc F. Malooley
Nicole F. Cammarota
ASSOCIATES
Shane D. Deaton
1997
1999
2004
Laura J. Boeckman
Inge M. Van der Cruysse
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Eliza R. Gordner
Daniel J. Wagner
Dominic W. Glover
Julie M. Florida
Michael J. Hulka
John M. Mueller
Jason D. Kimpel
Woon-Bae Kim
PARTNERS
Damon R. Leichty
John P. Fischer, Jr. Heidi G. Goebel
Dustin L. Plummer
2010
Megan M. Okun
Alicia R. Edwards
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Matthew A. Pfaff
Anah H. Gouty
Douglas P. Skelley
Eric A. Rey
Caleb P. Phillips
Philip H. Gretter, Jr.
Daniel Tounsel III
ASSOCIATES
Joyana Progar
Caitlin F. Judge
B. Anthony Blair
Keith P. Rahman
Thomas B. Kierner
Adam C. Shields
2007
J. James Boyajian
Evan T. Sarosi
Chelsey A. McCory
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
C.R. Davis
Patrick C. Thomas
Angela D. Moore
PARTNERS
Jason Liao
Robert Henson
Ian T. Watterson
Nicholas S. Netland
Jason L. Fulk
PARTNERS
Rachel Leahey
Jacob P. Wood
Kimberly M. Ray
Brian J. Lally
Paula Konfal Motzel
Elizabeth L. Baney
Edward B. Mulligan V
Burke J. Montgomery
Kevin R. Martin
Michael N. Red
Nathan D. Baney
Nancy C. Rachlis
Kathy L. Osborn
Peter S. Nemeth
Jacob P. Sheehan
Casey M. Holsapple
Patrick A. Ziepolt
Allen J. Guon
Malcolm J. Tuesley
Emily A. Springston
ASSOCIATES
Aaron B. Niskode-Dossett
W. James Hamilton
PARTNERS
Ian Stewart
Matthew K. Beardsley
James S. Park
Wendy M. Hamilton
Bryan H. Babb
Susan Hutz Worth
Kelly M. Clum-Matthysse
Joshua D. Poelstra
Steven S. Hoar
Aaron N. Goldberger Brian D. Yeley
Snider Page
Thaddeus R. Ailes
2002
Thao T. Nguyen
ASSOCIATES
ASSOCIATES
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Gina C. Ashley
Mark R. Anderson
Mindy A. Finnigan
Denise Y. Barkdull
Rose E. Gallagher
Robert W. Burt, Jr. James K. Cleland, Jr.
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Troy D. Farmer
Peter B. Robbins
2014
Emily A. Storm-Smith
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Adesuwa Ighile
2016
ASSOCIATES
ASSOCIATES
ASSOCIATES
Noeline Asiimwe
Ashley C. Eklund
Jacob B. Schtevie
Aaron B. Aft
Jordan K. Baker
Riley H. Floyd
ASSOCIATES
Caridad Austin
Elizabeth Millis Bolka
Michael A. Ruderman
Kristine L. Seufert
Dustin R. DeNeal
Christian M. Habegger
William H. Brainard
Freedom S. Smith
Stewart M. Johnston
Misty L. Mercer
Joe T. Carley
Kenneth G. Kubes
Nathaniel M. Uhl
Laura J. Koenig
Gregory C. Touney
Janelle R. Duyck
Karen L. Hsu
Tom Lunsford
John R. Worth
John H. Kedeshian
PARTNERS
Kelly Collier Cleland
Heather J. Kidwell
Thomas R. Failor
2008
2012
Eric M. Douthit
Lonene C. Maynard
Marisol Sanchez
Sarah E. Freeman
Carleton P. Palmer IV
David H. Iskowich Lisa Jordan Jankowski
2005
2011
Jason B. Feder Christopher A. Fyall
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Michaelene E. Hanley
PARTNERS
David A. Meek II
Sarah C. Kessler
Zachary S. Heck
Rafael A. Sanchez
Amy F. Cohen Klaesener
PARTNERS
Paul E. Vaglica
Jonathon E. Hitz
Daniel R. Roy
Angela M. Yoon
Renea E. Hooper
Nicholas R. Blesch Clark
ASSOCIATES
Joshua A. Kurtzman
David L. Theyssen
Hongsun Yoon
ASSOCIATES
Christina L. Clark
Scott A. Allen
Taryn E. Lewis
Raoul K. Maitra
Julie P. Wilson
ASSOCIATES
Rachael N. Clark
Amy M. Foust
Ivo Austin
Jennifer A. Rulon
Johanna J. Maple
Lawrence Wu
Matthew E. Conrad
David L. Francisco
ASSOCIATES
Kasie M. Brill
Jay D. Rumbach
Justin V. Czubaroff
Liane C. Hulka
Erin E. Bauer
Eric C. Cook
Leah L. Seigel
Daleta D. Mitchell Raeanna S. Moore
2000
Heather N. Forry
Katherine A. Miltner
Maria E. Bennett
Daniel A. Dixon
Charles D. Shaw, Jr.
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Steven D. Forry
Kevin J. Rapp
Jennifer M. Hesch
Lucas M. Fields
Sarah M. Studzinski
Jeffrey E. Stratman
Amy D. Brody
Mary K. Glazner
Anne M. Tucker
James F. Olds
Blake R. Hartz
David M. Stupich
Konrad M. Urberg
Erin R. Schrantz
Kaarin M. Lueck
Shalina A. Schaefer
Joseph T. Hynes
Jonathan B. Turpin
Jered J. Wilson
PARTNERS
Dominique K. O’Neill
Mark J. Plantan
Stephen M. Tye
Lasca M. Alekseevna
Peter P. Ten Eyck
Ozair M. Shariff
Erica C. Viar
Jessica E. Barth
Jason M. Torres
Manish S. Sampat
1998
54
2015
Melinda J. Schwer
PARTNERS
Theresa L. Hill
Cynthia L. Bauerly
Angela R. Karras Neboyskey
Norman J. Hedges
David A. Neboyskey
Kendall H. Millard
Laura Thomas
2006 DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Christina M. Finn
2009 DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
PARTNERS
Laura M. Walda
Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh
Amanda R. Whiffing
PARTNERS
Kellie M. Barr
PARTNER
Kathryn E. Gordon
Matthew B. Barr
Teryl L. Yoder
2003
2013
John M. Westercamp Juliana Yanez
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTOR
Cedric A. Gordon ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 55
The Law School extends a special thanks to these non-alumni donors whose support reflects their close ties to the school.
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Emily F. Van Tassel
ASSOCIATES
Mary J. Koran
Gary J. Anderson, M.D.
Harry L. Wallace
Deborah Atlas
Zhihao Li
Kathy Z. Anderson
Carwina Weng
Donald Ayer
Margaret Maes
Amy G. Applegate
John C. Whistler
Kenneth R. Barker
Denise A. Malayeri
Hon. Sarah Evans Barker
John R. Maley
PARTNERS
Michael E. Bauer
Vivian T. Maley
Kathleen Harrold
Julia L. Armstrong
Wilma L. Bauer
Pilar McKay
Joseph L. Hoffmann
Jeannine Bell
Elizabeth A. Beck
Ajay K. Mehrotra
Mary Hoffmann
Maarten Bout
John D. Beck
Donald M. Meyer
David H. Jacobs
Barbara J. Briggs
Thomas F. Beck
D. K. Meyer
Brian J. Broughman
Richard P. Benson
Jeanne C. Meyer
Dianne Brown
Elizabeth R. Birch
Jennifer L. Morgan
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.
Kevin D. Brown
Cecile A. Blau
Ann F. Morine
Carol J. Greenhouse
Gayla Darrah
Teresa Brown
Harry D. Morine
Herbert T. Lovelace, Jr.
John H. Ferguson
John S. Burnham
Eric E. Muceus
Gary W. McFarron
Karen W. Ferguson
Myra J. Burnham
Barbara Muceus
Austen Parrish
Gina-Gail G. Fletcher
Matthew R. Christ
Matthew Murphy
David C. Williams
Jennifer L. Froehle
Christopher G. Coffey
Elizabeth J. O’Donnell
Catherine A. Fuentes-
Stephanie J. Coffey
MaryAlice Parks
Rohwer
Bradley H. Cohen
Joseph C. Pettygrove
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Luis E. Fuentes-Rohwer
Tina L. Cohen
Jose M. Pienknagura
Cyan Banister
Douglas Goldstein
Lee T. Comer
Victor D. Quintanilla
Scott Banister
Kenneth E. Hardman
Mary L. Comer
Janis L. Randall
Ruth O. Boshkoff
Hon. Valeri Haughton
Stephen A. Conrad
Janet S. Robertson
Patricia L. Brotherson
Andrea C. Havill
Megan Conway
Dianne Ruderman
Constance A. Carter
Allison J. Hess
Cynthia O. Cook
Elizabeth Ruderman
Beth E. Cate
Aaron L. Hosey
Steven C. Cook
Karen R. Shaulson
Fred H. Cate
Lisa G. Hosey
Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt
Sam S. Shaulson
Daniel O. Conkle
Rachel J. Keith
Lesley E. Davis
Byungki So
Deborah W. Conkle
Leandra Lederman
Catherine E. Dyar
Alyssa Specht
Robert L. Fischman
Sarah E. Luse
Jessica M. Eaglin
Jacalyn S. Tejcek
Charles G. Geyh
W. K. Luse
Mary K. Emison
Jack E. Tejcek
Roberta M. Gumbel
Timothy E. Lynch
Jane L. Eslick
Flora M. Valentine
David Haden
Frank Motley
Sophia C. Goodman
Kenneth B. Valentine
Andrew D. Hendry
John T. Neighbours
Abby E. Goreham
Martha M. VanStone
Mary Hendry
Sharon S. Neighbours
Janet K. Guest
Frank R. Vaughan
Dawn E. Johnsen
Christiana Ochoa
D. D. Hager
Robert G. Waddle
Jackie Juliano
Aviva A. Orenstein
Michael A. Hart
Gregory W. Wagner
Mark Juliano
Donald J. Polden
Yamini Hingorani
Karen S. Wagner
Betty B. Lofton
Susan Polden
Michael J. Jeffirs
Mary M. Weakley
Drew Madden
Jennifer Prusak
Gerald E. Jehle
Patti Madden
Annette F. Rush
Patricia L. Jehle
Edward W. Najam, Jr.
Robert L. Rush, Sr.
Carol S. Johnson
Prema R. Popkin
Susan J. Voelkel
Judith A. Kanne
William D. Popkin
Deborah A. Widiss
Sue F. Kennedy
John S. Applegate Denise B. Birnbaum
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Susan H. Williams
friends, faculty, staff, and students
Michael D. Shumate
56
James E. Koran
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 57
Gifts from the special friends of the Law School support its many programs. The following organizations made a direct gift or matched contributions from alumni and friends of the school.
DEAN’S CIRCLE VISIONARIES
Greater Kansas City Community
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Conservation Law Center, Inc
Foundation
The U.S. Charitable Gift Trust
Davidson Family Trust
Indiana Continuing Legal Education
Voya Foundation
Eli Lilly & Company
Forum
Wabash Valley Community
Eugene & Marilyn Glick Foundation
Jewish Federation of Greater
Corporation
Wells Fargo & Co. Foundation
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Jordan, Kowal & Apostol, LLC
John W. Anderson Foundation
Land O’Lakes, Inc.
ASSOCIATES
Maurice B. Miller Memorial
Lilly Endowment Inc.
Aetna Foundation
Lincoln Financial Foundation, Inc.
Bank of America Corp. Foundation
Lumina Foundation for Education, Inc.
Malu Limited
Bernstein Law Office
National Philanthropic Trust
Maurer Family Foundation, Inc
Bose McKinney & Evans LLP
Schwab Charitable Fund
McKinney Family Foundation
Burke Warren MacKay & Serritella PC
The Gerberding Fackler Family
Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak
Burnham Rentals
IBM Corp Foundation
Scholarship Trust
Foundation Inc
DEAN’S CIRCLE BENEFACTORS
Cook Alex McFarron Manzo
corporations, foundations, and law firms
Cummings & Mehler, Ltd
ExxonMobil Foundation Faegre Baker Daniels Foundation KPMG Foundation Novus Law LLC Saltsburg Fund Charitable Trust The U.S. Russia Foundation The William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program
Indianapolis, Inc.
& Stewart, P.C.
Foundation Inc
OneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc.
Johnson Jensen LLP
Rhys Corporation
Kalamazoo Community Foundation
Skadden Arps Slate Meagher
Kirkland & Ellis Foundation
LexisNexis
& Flom LLP
The Chicago Community Foundation
Madison County Community
The Chicago Community Trust
Foundation
Unitarian Universalist Association
MotivAction
Patnaude & Videbeck
of Congregations
PG&E Corporation Foundation PARTNERS
Raytheon Company
ACE INA Foundation
Rosenberg Paschall Johnson LLP
Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP
United Way of Bergen County
Brown County Community Foundation
United Way Silicon Valley
Caterpillar Charity Trust Chevron Corporation
DEAN’S CIRCLE DIRECTORS
Agriculture For Life, Inc Akzo Nobel, Inc Amarchand & Mangadas &
Suresh A. Shroff & Co.
American Association of Law Libraries Aon Foundation Benevity Social Ventures, Inc Caterpillar Foundation Central Indiana Community Foundation Demarest & Almeida Donors Trust, Inc. E.R. Lewis and Company Ernst & Young Foundation Gary and Paula Gerling
Foundation Inc
General Electric Foundation 58
Coridan Law Office LLC Duke Energy Foundation Fitzpatrick Charitable Foundation Frost Brown Todd LLC Global Atlantic Financial Company Hoover Hull Turner LLP JJC Charitable Trust K&L Gates LLP Kahn, Dees, Donovan & Kahn LLP Leeman Law Office Loudermilk And Associates Marshall, Gerstein & Borun LLP Network for Good North Carolina State University O’Dell & Associates PC ONEOK, Inc. Foundation Premier Healthcare Solutions, Inc Sempra Energy ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 59
We gratefully acknowledge the donors who honor loved ones, friends, and colleagues with gifts to endowed funds. We also thank donors who have made memorial and honorary gifts.
ANTONIO CURIEL MEMORIAL
Kathy E. Anderson
CHARLES WHISTLER FACULTY
SCHOLARSHIP
Jack A. Bobo, ’96
FELLOWSHIP
Hon. Gonzalo P. Curiel, ’79 Maria Luz Corona, ’81 Donald J. Polden Susan Polden
James F. Fitzpatrick, ’59 Sandra J. Fitzpatrick Harry L. Gonso, ’73 Lucy O. Gonso Hon. David F. Hamilton
APPLEGATE PUBLIC INTEREST FELLOWSHIP FUND
Amy G. Applegate John C. Applegate ARNOLD H. GERBERDING INDIANA LAW JOURNAL FUND
Gifts made in memory of
Miles C. Gerberding, ’56
Greta Cowart, ’85 T. David Cowart Gerberding/Fackler Family Foundation
endowed and special gifts
Gerald E. Jehle Patricia Jehle ARTHUR P. KALLERES MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Phillip L. Bayt, ’80 Craig C. Burke, ’94 Erin A. Clancy, ’98 Sarah K. Funke, ’94 Philip C. Genetos, ’77 Ryan M. Poor, ’98 David O. Tittle, ’67 Nathaniel M. Uhl, ’04 Germaine W. Willett, ’98 BERNARD HARROLD SCHOLARSHIP
Kathleen Harrold BURCHFIELD BRIDGE-TO-PRACTICE FUND
Thomas E. Burchfield, ’61 C. BEN AND JANE S. DUTTON CHAIR
D. K. Meyer Donald M. Meyer CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY
Gary J. Anderson, M.D. 60
John C. Whistler
Sarah C. Kessler, ’12 Sarah E. Luse W. K. Luse Clarine Nardi Riddle, ’74 Inge M. Van der Cruysse, ’04 Anne Paramenko Weeks, ’59 David C. Williams Susan H. Williams CENTER FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RESEARCH
CHARLES WILSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Roberta M. Gumbel Augustavia J. Haydel, ’85 Elizabeth Shuman-Moore, ’82 James J. Weber, ’84 CHILD ADVOCACY PROGRAM
Karen L. Hsu, ’99 Jeffrey B. Rubenstein, ’83 Rebecca L. Wilkinson, ’83 CLASS OF 1979 SCHOLARSHIP FUND
John M. Kyle III, ’79
Anne E. Aikman-Scalese, ’78 Scott A. Allen, ’12 Bruce J. Artim, ’82 Roger W. Bennett, ’82 Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP
CLASS OF 1997 SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Eric M. Douthit, ’97 Troy D. Farmer, ’97 Johanna J. Maple, ‘97
J. James Boyajian, ’10 Steven C. Bruess, ’89 Julia Dierker, ’88 Daniel D. Fetterley, ’59 Christina M. Finn, ’06 John F. Fuzak, ’73 Bruce C. Haas, ’83 Scott R. Hansen, ’92 —
in honor of Mark Need and
the Class of 1992
Blake R. Hartz, ’12 Norman J. Hedges, ’98 Howard R. Henderson, ’52 Allison J. Hess Mark D. Janis, ’89 Stewart M. Johnston, ’07 K & L Gates LLP Brian J. Lally, ’01 Marshall, Gerstein & Borun LLP Sandip H. Patel, ’96 Kimberly M. Ray, ’15 Vincent O. Wagner, ‘76 Angela Yoon, ’02 Hongsun Yoon, ’02
COLLEEN KRISTL PAUWELS MEMORIAL FUND
Juliet M. Casper, ‘92 Michelle T. Cosby, ’06 James E. Koran Mary J. Koran Margaret Maes Jennifer L. Morgan Carol M. Seaman, ’82 George P. Smith, II, ’64 Joseph E. Trester, ’79 Frank R. Vaughan Margaret M. Wrynn, ‘86 COMMUNITY LEGAL CLINIC FUND
Amy F. Cohen Klaesener, ’05 CRAIG M. BRADLEY CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE FUND
Donald Ayer Stephen A. Conrad Joseph L. Hoffmann Mary Hoffmann
James P. Zeller, ‘76 ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 61
DAVID E. GREENE AND BARBARA J. BEALER SCHOLARSHIP
Barbara J. Bealer David E. Greene, ’74 DONALD P. DORFMAN SCHOLARSHIP
Donald P. Dorfman, ’57 DOUGLASS G. BOSHKOFF MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Gerald K. Ah Mai, ’65 Joann Alexander Karen J. Bennett Susan N. Berry-Buckley Hon. David R. Bolk, ’88 Luann E. Bolk Ellen E. Boshkoff, ’90 Ruth O. Boshkoff James E. Bourne, ’65 Linda K. Bourne Marsha R. Bradford, ’80 David L. Brewer, ’63 Susan S. Brewer Gregory D. Buckley, ’64 Stuart R. Buttrick Jay Calhoun Paula Calhoun Angela M. Carr Hon. James M. Carr, ’75 Beth E. Cate Fred H. Cate Charles A. Cohen, ’66 Karen J. Cohen Daniel O. Conkle Deborah W. Conkle Karen S. Conway Megan Conway Timothy M. Conway, ’85 Karen B. Cutright Phillips Cutright Carol Dale Gregory N. Dale Harold A. Dumes Faegre Baker Daniels Foundation Connie J. Ferguson Stephen L. Ferguson, ’66 Kathleen Field, ’09 Jennifer L. Froehle Thomas C. Froehle, Jr. Alexander P. Genetos Constance C. Glen James C. Glen 62
David S. Poston, ’65
FRANK MOTLEY ADMISSIONS
JEROME HALL LAW LIBRARY FUND
John D. Bessler, ’91
Wendy M. Hamilton, ’97
Susan Poston
SUPPORT FUND
Samuel R. Born II, ’70
David W. Quist, ’85
Ronald Bush II, ’92
Eric E. Boyd, ’86
Winthrop J. Hamilton, ’97
Wayne D. Boberg, ’78
Augustavia J. Haydel, ’85
Michael E. Brown, ’78
Juliet M. Casper, ’92
Jeffery A. Burger, ’79
Kathleen C. Gillmore, ‘72
Donald W. Buttrey, ’61
FRIEDLANDER FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP
Rachel Leahey, ’10
Elliott D. Levin, ’66 — in honor
Larry L. Chubb, ’89
Renee M. McDermott, ‘78
Michael R. Conner, ’75
James C. Nelson, ’67
John A. Crawford, ’81
Rhys Corporation
Richard J. Darko, ’68
GARY AND DENISE BIRNBAUM
Ann R. Vaughan, ’78
SCHOLARSHIP
Jeffrey S. Davidson, ’73
James H. Vaughan, Jr.
Robert A. Dubault, ’95
Candance A. Grass, ’83
Hon. Valeri Haughton
Timothy J. Riffle, ’83
Betty Hawes
Jay D. Rumbach, ’14
Tyler D. Helmond, ’09
Leah L. Seigel, ’14
Andrew D. Hendry
Karen R. Shaulson
Mary Hendry
Sam S. Shaulson
Liane C. Hulka, ’05
Amanda L. Shelby
Michael J. Hulka, ’01
Blake Shelby
Jay Jaffe, ’82
Carol A. Skinner, ’84
Judy and Michael Harrington
Joel D. Skinner, Jr.
George Stohner
Family Foundation
Jackie Juliano
Timothy A. Tilton
Mark Juliano
Hon. Robert J. Tornatta, ’85
Robert P. Kassing, ’64
Sharon L. Tornatta
Troy I. Kassing
Marlene L. Vass
of Hon. Ezra H. Friedlander, ’65
Denise B. Birnbaum Gary L. Birnbaum,* ’76 Dianne Ruderman — in memory
of Gary Birnbaum
Elizabeth Ruderman Michael A. Ruderman, ’16
Barton L. Kaufman, ’65
Ann R. Vaughan, ’78
Judy Kaufman
James H. Vaughan, Jr.
Edward C. King, ’64
David Weinstein
Joan A. King
Linda Weinstein
James T. Larimore
Amanda R. Whiffing, ’09
Mary M. Larimore, ’80
John W. Whiteleather, Jr., ’65
Joan B. Lauer
Judith A. Whiteleather
Diana-Marie Laventure, ’13
Jane Dall Wilson
Elliot R. Lewis, ’87
Tracey L. Wise, ’83
Arthur M. Lotz, ’65
Elaine V. Wrenick
Drew Madden
Frank E. Wrenick, ’65
Bonnie K. Gibson, ’78
Patti Madden
Joseph H. Yeager, Jr., ’83
Jeffery W. Winkler
Hugo E. Martz, ’62
Kenneth J. Yerkes, ’83
Mary M. Martz
Wendy V. Yerkes
GLENN AND DONNA SCOLNIK
Sarah M. McConnell
Charles O. Ziemer, ’64
CLINICAL CHAIR
Brian M. McCormick, ’65
David G. Elmore, ’58 JOHN F. KIMBERLING SCHOLARSHIP
Margaret D. Flores, ‘11
Estate of John F. Kimberling, ’50
William A. Freihofer, ‘58
Troy D. Farmer, ’97
Philip C. Genetos, ’77 Gerald F. George, ’69
JUSTICE JUANITA KIDD STOUT
Michael P. Gray, ‘76
PROFESSORSHIP
Christian M. Habegger, ’11
GARY W. MCFARRON INTELLECTUAL
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.
PROPERTY SCHOLARSHIP
Kenneth R. Barker
Gary W. McFarron
Hon. Sarah Evans Barker Dianne Brown
GEORGE N. LEWIS, M.D., MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Elliot R. Lewis, ’87 GIBSON-WELLS SCHOLARSHIP FOR EXCELLENCE
Conservation Law Center, Inc.
Rebecca S. McCormick
ELMORE ENTREPRENEURSHIP LAW CLINIC
Donna H. Scolnik
Frank Motley
Michael E. Flannery, ’83
Glenn Scolnik, ’78
Sharon S. Neighbours
ELMORE FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP
G.S. ESLICK SCHOLARSHIP
Kathy Nesbitt
DG Elmore, Jr., ’84
Jane L. Eslick — in memory
Aaron B. Niskode-Dossett, ’07
David G. Elmore, ’58
Kathy L. Osborn, ’99
EUGENE AND JANE FLETCHALL
HARRY PRATTER PROFESSORSHIP
Deborah L. Paul
SCHOLARSHIP
IN LAW
Stephen H. Paul, ’72
Ann F. Morine
Philip C. Potts, ’59
Paula Peters
Harry D. Morine
Kevin D. Brown Robert L. Fischman Catherine A. Fuentes-Rohwer Luis E. Fuentes-Rohwer Charles G. Geyh Carol J. Greenhouse Hon. John M. Hamilton, ’86 Dawn E. Johnsen Julia C. Lamber, ’72 Leandra Lederman Austen Parrish Lauren K. Robel, ’83 Emily F. Van Tassel
John T. Neighbours, ’74
Stephen J. Peters, ’80
of Gordon S. Eslick, ’63
KATHLEEN A. BUCK LOAN REPAYMENT ASSISTANCE FUND
Richard A. Dean, ’73 KENNETH AND LOUISE YAHNE SCHOLARSHIP
Kenneth R. Yahne, ’68 Louise A. Yahne
HARRY T. ICE MEMORIAL FUND
Joseph C. Pettygrove, ’05
FAEGRE BAKER DANIELS LLP
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Diane L. Pfeiffer
PRO BONO FELLOWSHIP
William R. Riggs, ’63
Faegre Baker Daniels Foundation
Steven F. Pockrass
JACKSON LEWIS LABOR AND
Prema R. Popkin
EMPLOYMENT LAW SCHOLARSHIP
William D. Popkin
Andrew Hull, ’86 Travis N. Jensen, ’98 Karen B. Jordan-Boyd, ’85 Hon. Christina K. Kalavritinos, ’80 Robert P. Kassing, ’64 Kirkland & Ellis Foundation Tracy T. Larsen, ’84 David A. Locke, ’95 Joseph H. Marxer, ’87 Doyal E. McLemore, Jr., ’77 Milford M. Miller, Jr., ’62 James D. Moore, ’77 David Okun, ’13 Megan McMahon Okun, ’13 Stephen H. Paul, ’72 Debra L. Schroeder, ’92 John E. Seddelmeyer, ’74
Arthur C. Nordhoff, ’65
Hudnall A. Pfeiffer
Marvin L. Hackman, ’59
Jackson Lewis LLP
LAW JOURNAL SUSTAINING FUND
Elliott Abrutyn, ’67 Cyan Banister Scott Banister Bryan H. Babb, ’99
Carole B. Silver, ’80 Hon. Sarah M. Singleton, ’74 Hon. Geoffrey G. Slaughter, ’89 Frederick F. Thornburg, ’68 Charles R. Tiede, ’56 Edward L. Volk, ’70 Richard D. Wagner, ’60 Edwin F. Walmer, ’57 Kent H. Westley, ’68 Sally Westley, ’67 John R. Worth, ‘04 Susan L. Worth, ‘01 Charles O. Ziemer, ‘64
David O. Barrett, ’95 Roger W. Bennett, ’82 ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 63
LAWRENCE BRIDGE-TO-PRACTICE FUND
Sylvia Y. Chou, ’91
Arthur A. Lopez, ’83
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PATRICK L. BAUDE SCHOLARSHIP
Grace M. Lawrence
Rachael N. Clark, ’05
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Julie E. Conrad, ’93
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Manish S. Sampat, ’97
Eric C. Cook, ’12
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Stephen E. Scheele, ’96
LEON H. WALLACE TEACHING AWARD
LEN FROMM EMERGENCY
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Laurie L. Schmidt, ’89
Dale E. Armstrong*, ’54
SCHOLARSHIP FUND
D. Albert Daspin, ’87
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PUBLIC INTEREST LAW FELLOWSHIP
Jeffrey Davidson, ’73
Thomas P. McNulty, ’83
Michael E. Schrader, ’90
Harry L. Wallace
Alfred C. Aman, Jr.
Michael K. Davis, ’87
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David H. Schwartz, ’95
Robert G. Devetski, ’87
Misty L. Mercer, ’11
Michael D. Scott, ’88
M.A.L. FUND
John S. Applegate
Jasna Dolgov, ’01
Jessica L. Merkel, ’06
Carol M. Seaman, ’82
Betty B. Lofton
Deborah Atlas
Mark A. Drewes, ’93
Julia E. Merkt, ’81
Leah L. Seigel, ’14
Janelle R. Duyck, ’14
Kendall H. Millard, ’98
Charles D. Shaw, Jr., ’14
MARILYN WHEELER PENDERGAST
Jeannine Bell
Robert W. Eherenman, ’92
David C. Milne, ’94
Jacob P. Sheehan, ’04
SCHOLARSHIP
Richard P. Benson, ’17
Wabash Valley Community Foundation
Laura J. Boeckman, ’01
Patricia L. Brotherson Russell C. Chaplain, ’13 Adesuwa Ighile, ’14 William R. Lafleur II ’13 Michael C. Mattingly, ’13 Leticia C. Mayberry Wright, ’13 Caleb P. Phillips, ’13 Keith P. Rahman, ’13 Evan T. Sarosi, ’13 LEONARD D. FROMM MEMORIAL FUND
Anonymous Arend J. Abel, ’86 David M. Allen, ’00 Mark R. Anderson, ’99 Robert G. Andree, ’82 Bruce J. Artim, ’82 Regina C. Ashley, ’97 Caridad Austin, ’11 Bryan H. Babb, ’99 Robyn N. Baggetta, ’05 Peter G. Bakas, ’82 Jordan K. Baker, ’14 Elizabeth L. Baney, ’07 Nathan D. Baney, ’07 Gary S. Batke, ’85 Cynthia L. Bauerly, ’98 Matthew K. Beardsley, ’04 Maria E. Bennett, ’08 Roger W. Bennett, ’82 Benjamin P. Beringer, ’90 Amanda O. Blackketter, ’94 James F. Bleeke, ’85 Carla D. Boddy, ’95 Elizabeth M. Bolka, ’14 Maarten Bout J. James Boyajian, ’10 William H. Brainard, ’14 Amy D. Brody, ’00 Robert W. Burt, ’97 Ronald D. Bush II, ’92 Jeffrey L. Carmichael, ’95 Julia E. Cassidy, ’91 Beth E. Cate Fred H. Cate Christopher M. Chamness, ’13 64
Christina M. Finn, ’06
Megan K. Milne, ’94
Donald P. Shively, ’81
Michael E. Flannery, ’83
Janet Min Beach, ’95
Jacqueline A. Simmons, ’79
Rose E. Gallagher, ’99
Hon. Vicki J. Moore, ’80
Mary K. Glazner, ’02
Alice A. Morical, ’94
Fred H. Cate Brenda E. Knowles, ’77
Amy G. Applegate
Kevin G. Baer, ’93
Brian J. Broughman
Ketaki Sircar, ’96
MCLOUGHLIN FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP
John S. Burnham
Douglas P. Skelley, ’06
Michael T. McLoughlin, ’72
Myra J. Burnham
Susie McLoughlin
Beth A. Burrous
Dominic W. Glover, ’97
Gregory J. Morical, ’94
Douglas D. Small, ’83
Aaron N. Goldberger, ’99
Christian J. Morrison, ’90
Freedom S. Smith, ’04
Jeffrey S. Goldenberg, ’94
Paula M. Motzel, ’04
Daniel O. Conkle
Richard C. Starkey, ’85
MICHAEL K. GUEST MEMORIAL
Martin H. Cozzola, ’15
SCHOLARSHIP
Jessica M. Eaglin
Janet K. Guest
Ashley Eklund, ’16
Allen J. Guon, ’97
John M. Mueller, ’97
Sean S. Steele, ’94
David Haden
Edward B. Mulligan V, ’10
Jeffrey E. Stratman, ’97
Bryan H. Hall, ’87
Angela Karras Neboyskey, ’00
Sarah M. Studzinski, ’14
Gina G. Fletcher MICHAEL S. AND JANIE MAURER
Charles G. Geyh
SCHOLARSHIPS
Douglas Goldstein
Kevin A. Halloran, ’92
David A. Neboyskey, ’00
Kevin Tessier, ’96
Michaelene E. Hanley, ’14
Amy L. Nefouse, ’91
Jeffrey A. Thinnes, ’84
Andrea C. Havill
Thomas R. Newby, ’87
Patrick C. Thomas, ’13
Zachary S. Heck, ’14
Christopher A. Nichols, ’88
Eric A. Todd, ’93
Scott E. Herbst, ’86
Patrice A. Ocken, ’87
Jason M. Torres, ’02
William C. Hermann, ’90
Dominique K. O’Neill, ’02
Gregory C. Touney, ’11
Marion P. Herrington, ’85
Sonia D. Overholser, ’88
Daniel Tounsel, ’05
Jennifer M. Hesch, ’08
Marianne Mitten Owen, ’91
Alan S. Townsend, ’92
Johnathon E. Hitz, ’14
Andrew S. Paine, ’98
Tracy L. Troyer, ’94
Amarchand Mangaldas &
Nestor F. Ho, ’93
Carleton P. Palmer, ’99
Malcolm J. Tuesley, ’99
Michael D. Huber, ’85
Maria V. Pangonis Senior, ’85
Jonathan B. Turpin, ’14
Demarest & Almeida
Douglas W. Hyman, ’95
Angela J. Parker, ’94
Stephen M. Tye, ’14
Edward L. Michael, ’81
Lisa Jordan Jankowski, ’97
Bernard O. Paul, ’86
Sally J. Vander Ploeg, ’85
Mark S. Niblick, ’78
Elizabeth Stuart John, ’95
Gilberto R. Perez, ’85
Erica C. Viar, ’14
Novus Law LLC
Ian G. John, ’95
Jeffrey P. Petrich, ’84
Donald J. Vogel, ’85
Steven M. Post, ’77
Stewart M. Johnston, ’07
Matthew A. Pfaff, ’13
Jeremy S. Votaw, ’13
Ursula M. Post
Mario N. Joven, ’93
Mark J. Plantan, ’12
Daniel J. Wagner, ’04
Carole B. Silver, ’80
Matthew D. Kellam, ’01
Joshua D. Poelstra, ’07
Elizabeth M. Warren, ’83
Judi A. Stewart
Joshua A. Kurtzman, ’14
Joshlene A. Pollock, ’03
Mark J. Wassink, ’92
Milton R. Stewart, ’71
Stephan E. Kyle, ’91
Jill T. Powlick, ’95
Ian T. Watterson, ’13
Unitarian Universalist Holdeen
Michael B. Langford, ’94
Jamison S. Prime, ’96
Jennifer L. Weber, ’03
Kim M. Laurin, ’87
Joyana Progar, ’13
Martha M. Wentworth, ’90
V. Samuel Laurin III, ’87
Kathryn Knue Przywara, ’82
John M. Westercamp, ’14
OGLETREE, DEAKINS, NASH, SMOAK
James P. Leahey, ’95
Kevin J. Rapp, ’05
Amanda R. Whiffing, ’09
& STEWART FELLOWSHIP IN LABOR AND
David C. Williams
Damon R. Leichty, ’99
Timothy J. Riffle, ’83
Rebecca L. Wilkinson, ’83
EMPLOYMENT LAW
Susan H. Williams
Michael J. Lewinski, ’85
Steven J. Riggs, ’86
Brian P. Williams, ’81
Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak
Taryn E. Lewis, ’14
Laurie Robinson Haden, ’98
Maurice L. Williams, ’06
Tony Ling, ’96
Jeffrey B. Rubenstein, ’83
Julie P. Wilson, ’99
Janie K. Maurer Michael S. Maurer, ’67
Abby E. Goreham Hon. David F. Hamilton Terry L. Harrell, ’89
MILT AND JUDI STEWART CENTER ON THE GLOBAL LEGAL PROFESSION INTERNATIONAL SUMMER INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Suresh A. Shroff & Co.
India Program
Caitlin F. Judge, ’15 Daniel M. Kirwan, ’74 LexisNexis Rewards Denise A. Malayeri Catherine L. Matthews, ’06 Christian J. Morrison, ’90 Barbara Muceus Eric E. Muceus Aviva A. Orenstein Austen Parrish Victor D. Quintanilla Earl R. Singleton, ’86 Alyssa Specht Carol M. Seaman, ’82 Hon. Ellen K. Thomas, ’73 Inge M. Van der Cruysse, ’04 Carwina Weng Deborah A. Widiss
& Stewart, P.C.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 65
RAPHEAL M. PREVOT, JR.,
STEPHEN H. PAUL SCHOLARSHIP
WILLARD AND MARGARET CARR
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Deborah L. Paul
PROFESSORSHIP IN LABOR AND
Carla D. Boddy, ’95
Stephen H. Paul, ’72
EMPLOYMENT LAW
Augustavia J. Haydel, ’85 Roberta M. Gumbel
STEPHEN JEFFIRS MEMORIAL
Jamie Holman-Williams
SCHOLARSHIP
Shelia C. Riddick, ’85
Michael J. Jeffirs STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS FUND
RICHARDSON/TINDER/LOGAN
Lasca M. Alekseevna, ’00
SCHOLARSHIP PUBLIC AND COMMUNITY
Nicholas R. Blesch Clark, ’08
SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP
Christina L. Clark, ’08
John F. “Jeff” Richardson, ’77
Willard Z. Carr, ’50 WILLIAM R. STEWART FUND
John H. Ferguson
Maurice L. Williams, ’06
Fred J. Logan, Jr., ’77
Margaret Carr
Karen W. Ferguson *Deceased
John P. Fischer, ’97 — for Williams
Moot Court Competition
Robert Henson, ’10 — for Williams R. NEIL AND MICHELE IRWIN SCHOLARSHIP
Michele K. Irwin R. Neil Irwin, ’71 ROBERT A. JEFFERIES SCHOLARSHIP
Robert A. Jefferies, Jr., ’66 Sylvia M. Jefferies
Moot Court Competition
Jeffrey B. Rubenstein, ’83 Michael D. Shumate — for Williams
Moot Court Competition
Laura Thomas, ’00 Rebecca L. Wilkinson, ’83 SYDNEY L AND PAMELA STEELE SCHOLARSHIP
ROBERT AND DARLENE DUVIN SCHOLARSHIP
Darlene Duvin Robert P. Duvin, ’61 S. HUGH AND SAMUEL DILLIN SCHOLARSHIP
Barbara J. Briggs Joyce E. Mallette Malcolm C. Mallette, ’67 MaryAlice Parks Jill T. Powlick, ’95 Philip J. Powlick Robert G. Waddle
Sydney L Steele, ’64 V. SUE SHIELDS ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
Cecile A. Blau Lee T. Comer Mary L. Comer Sue F. Kennedy, ’81 Bryan A. Richards, ’89 Kristine L. Seufert, ’04 Hon. V. Sue Shields, ’61 William E. Shields* VAL NOLAN ENDOWED CHAIR
Ellwood W. Lewis, ’54
SIDNEY D. ESKENAZI SCHOLARSHIP
Sidney D. Eskenazi, ’53 SIG BECK AWARD
Elizabeth A. Beck — in memory
of Sigmund J. Beck
John D. Beck Thomas F. Beck
VIOLA J. TALIAFERRO FAMILY AND CHILDREN MEDIATION LAW CLINIC
Sarah A. Carter Mary M. Weakley, M.D. V. WILLIAM HUNT SCHOLARSHIP
Nancy Hunt V. William Hunt, ’69
SIMMONS-SCHNELLENBERGER SCHOLARSHIP
Thomas F. Schnellenberger, Jr., ’79 Jacqueline A. Simmons, ’79
66
photo: IU Archives (P0052539)
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 67
2016 annual fund top ten classes
2016 annual fund law firm challenge
January 1 – December 31, 2016
January 1 – December 31, 2016
TOP 10 CLASSES BY DOLLARS RAISED
TOP LAW FIRMS BY DOLLARS RAISED
CLASS YEAR
CLASS AGENT(S)
TOTAL
FIRM SOLICITOR(S)
TOTAL
1981
Dave Ferguson and Bill Jonas
$54,766
Taft Stettinius & Hollister
Honorable Geoffrey Slaughter
$39,200
1978
Jim Kowalik and Ted Waggoner
$53,092
Barnes & Thornburg
Randy Kaltenmark and Tim Riffle
$29,150
1969
Tom Hamilton and John Pogue
$42,228
Eli Lilly & Company
Alonzo Weems
$17,100
1950 Vacant
$40,100
Faegre Baker Daniels
Pat Cross and Mark Wright
$13,271
1983
$38,875
Bingham Greenebaum Doll
Meg Christensen
$12,200
1975 Vacant
$36,167
Bose McKinney & Evans
Bryan Babb, Bob Kassing and Lisa McKinney
$11,365
1982
$33,053
Ice Miller
Phil Genetos
$10,843
1974 Vacant
$32,859
Stuart & Branigin
Tom McCully
$7,875
1985
Alan Loudermilk and Don Vogel
$30,510
Jones Day
Greg Castanias
$6,900
1995
Shannon Clark and Matt Furton
$29,725
Arnold & Porter
James Cooper
$5,700
Frost Brown Todd
Randy Riggs
$5,360
Keith White
John Van Laere
TOP 10 CLASSES BY PARTICIPATION
68
CLASS AGENT(S)
1959
Jim Fitzpatrick
40%
1964
Bob Kassing
39%
Bose McKinney & Evans
Bryan Babb, Bob Kassing and Lisa McKinney
1953
Dick Rhodes
34%
Stuart & Branigin
Tom McCully and Marianne Mitten Owen
90%
1957
Don Dorfman
34%
Cohen Garelick & Glazier
Bob Garelick
75%
1952 Vacant
27%
Hackman Hulett
Marvin Hackman
75%
1970
26%
Hoover Hull Turner
Andy Hull
75%
1962 Vacant
25%
DeLaney & DeLaney
Kathleen DeLaney
70%
1978
25%
Alan Witte
Jim Kowalik and Ted Waggoner
PARTICIPATION
TOP LAW FIRMS BY PARTICIPATION
CLASS YEAR
1956 Vacant
24%
1961
22%
Joe Bumbleburg
FIRM SOLICITOR(S) PARTICIPATION 100%
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 69
In 2016, more than 950 alumni and friends volunteered their time in support of the Law School’s initiatives. We are honored to recognize them.
volunteers
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Marc O. Abplanalp, ’03 Hon. Shirley (Schlanger) Abrahamson, ’56 Magdalena A. Acevedo, ’00 James Acklin Kenneth J. Adams, ’00 Skip Adams Asheesh Agarwal Ashley Ahlbrand Samira Ahmed, ’13 Karun Ahuja, ’13 Anne E. Aikman-Scalese, ’78 Amir R. Ali, ’11 Sherri L. Allen, ’84 Hon. Jorge Alonso Holly L. Amaya, ’08 Drew C. Ambrose, ’16 Erica Andersen Gary J. Anderson, M.D. Michelle Anderson Barbara T. Andraka-Christou, ’13 Jamie Andree Haroon Anwar, ’09 Amy Applegate John Applegate Samuel R. Ardery, ’83 Jonathan Armiger, ’11 Helen D. Arnold, ’13 David A. Arthur, ’75 Bruce J. Artim, ’82 Stephanie A. Artnak, ’07 Tavonna Harris Askew, ’01 Joshua P. Astin, ’12 Bryan H. Babb, ’99 Hon. Mark Bailey Rebecca L. Bailey Jacobsen, ’06 Lowell E. Baier, ’64 J. Adam Bain, ’86 Hon. John G. Baker, ’71 Jordan K. Baker, ’14 Hon. Tim Baker Kapil U. Banakar, ’15 Elizabeth L. Baney, ’07 Rammy G. Barbari, ’14 Denise Y. Barkdull, ’97 Hon. Sarah Evans Barker David S. Barnhill, ’10 Frances Barrow Mary C. Barton, ’68 M. Scott Bassett, ’86 Jennifer A. Bauer, ’91 Sarah E. Bauer, ’16 Caleb J. Bean, ’14 Stephen W. Beard, Jr., ’98 Robert H. Beatson, ’13 Kate Beatty Jeff Beck Alan W. Becker, ’81 Frederick A. Beckman, ’49 James K. Bemis, ’85 Anne A. Bennett, ’91 Maria E. Bennett, ’08 Spiro Bereveskos, ’81 Michael Bergmann Nancy Berry April Besl John D. Bessler, ’91 Kimberly Y. Best, ’94 Megan E. Binder, ’16 Bianca V. Black, ’15 Robert J. Black, ’77 K. Steven Blake, ’90 Nicholas R. Blesch Clark, ’08 Alexandra J. Block, ’13 Christopher A. Bloom, ’75 Jack A. Bobo, ’96
Timothy J. Boeglin, ’84* Mindy L. Boehr, ’08 Megan B. Boelstler, ’14 Aleasha Boiling Brent Borg Kristin Borrelli Ellen E. Boshkoff, ’90 Brian Bouggy Dino A. Bovell, ’14 Mary Boxer A. James Boyajian, ’10 Seamus Boyce Stephanie K. Boys, ’01 Jenai Brackett Hon. Cale Bradford Heidi Bradish Geoffrey J. Bradley, ’94 Jake Bradley Robert C. Brandt, Jr., ’02 John P. Breen, ’93 Scott R. Breen, ’15 Elizabeth Brier Betsy Broder Mary Beth (Kleiser) Brody, ’76 William J. Brody, ’76 Tanner L. Brooks, ’16 Melanie Broome, ’16 Alan Brown Dianne Brown Hon. Elaine B. Brown, ’82 Kevin D. Brown Lisa Brown Scott A. Brown, ’85 Joseph L. Brownlee, ’72 Steven C. Bruess, ’89 Matthew D. Bruno, ’07 Daniel Buba George E. Buckingham, ’63 Lauren P. Buford, ’07 Peter W. Bullard, ’73 Joseph T. Bumbleburg, ’61 Wendy Burford Matthew E. Burkhart, ’14 Stephen F. Burns, ’68 Andrew B. Buroker, ’89 Sarah E. Burrows, ’08 Charles E. Bush, ’82 John P. Bushemi, ’73 Jacob T. Butz, ’13 Eleanor P. Cabrere, ’93 Chay P. Cain, ’13 Brandon T. Callahan, ’14 Thomas D. Cameron, ’11 Nicole F. Cammarota, ’04 Francesca M. Cardillo, ’15 Hon. James M. Carr, ’75 Willard Z. Carr, ’50 Philip L. Carson, ’67 Devin Carter Ralph Caruso Kyle A. Cassidy, ’11 Stephanie Cassman Gregory A. Castanias, ’90 Nicholas A. Catania, ’14 Christopher M. Chamness, ’13 Abhishek Chaudhary, ’09 Cindy Jane Cho, ’08 Jinwoo L. Choi, ’16 Maria Choi Margaret “Meg” M. Christensen, ’07 Joshua L. Christie, ’06 Abigail A. Clapp, ’99 Christina A. Clark, ’11 Christina L. Clark, ’08 David W. Clark, ’05
Rachael N. Clark, ’05 Rachel E. Clark, ’07 Shannon L. Clark, ’95 Kathleen Claussen Michael Clemente Catherine A. Clements, ’09 Sean Clerget Brian P. Clifford, ’06 Christal J. Coakley, ’08 James A. Coles Rachel E. Collins, ’15 Kiamesha Colom Daniel O. Conkle Amanda M. Conner, ’99 Kerry C. Connor, ’88 Catherine A. Conway, ’78 Timothy M. Conway, ’85 Jessie A. Cook, ’79 James L. Cooper, ’91 Jason P. Cooper, ’92 John T. Cooper, ’92 Marcelo Copat David E. Corbitt, ’97 Braden K. Core, ’06 Dennis Corkery Thomas C. Cornwell, ’72 Jason W. Cottrell, ’04 Amanda C. Couture, ’04 Greta E. Cowart, ’85 Gregory B. Coy, ’95 Lynn H. Coyne, ’72 Darren A. Craig, ’04 Hon. Terry Crone Stanley W. Crosley, ’94 Patrick S. Cross, ’93 Sean M. Crotty, ’11 Kathleen B. Cullum, ’16 Patricia D. Cummings, ’02 Hon. Gonzalo P. Curiel, ’79 James W. Curtis, Jr., ’71 Terry Cushing Daniel M. Cyr, ’15 Jacob T. Dale, ’14 John P. Darmody, ’16 Proloy K. Das, ’00 Rachel A. Davakis, ’14 Kristen J. Davee, ’14 Carla D. Davis, ’82 Jacob R. Davis, ’14 Jamie L. Davis, ’15 Ewa C. Dawson, ’12 Imara V. Dawson, ’98 Paul A. Dean, ’98 Shane D. Deaton, ’04 Lisa K. Decker, ’85 Alecia A. DeCoudreaux, ’78 Daniel J. Deeb, ’96 Thomas E. Deer, ’94 Hunter G. DeKoninck, ’15 Ann M. DeLaney, ’77 Kathleen A. DeLaney, ’95 John Dement Alex Derkson Erica L. De Santis, ’96 Chris M. Devlin, ’10 Daniel K. DeWitt, ’94 William S. Dickenson, ’90 V. James Dickson, ’77 Michael W. Diehl, ’16 Hon. Mary Ellen Diekhoff, ’86 Hannah M. Dill, ’16 Lauren E. Dimmitt, ’11 Hon. Mark Dinsmore Daniel A. Dixon, ’12 Melissa Doell Lucy Dollens
Sarah V. Domin, ’14 Donald P. Dorfman, ’57 Robert E. Downey, ’06 Jesse R. Drum, ’13 Erin Drummy Jason Du Mont Robert A. Dubault, ’95 Shakeba DuBose, ’04 Joseph C. Dugan, ’15 Kaitlin Duran Laura Jane Durfee, ’09 Peter H. Dykstra, ’97 Jessica M. Eaglin Derek K. Early, ’08 Michelle Ebben Ross D. Eberly, ’09 W. Brian Edge, ’98 Nancy Edmonds Aubrey Edwards-Luce Tammy Egglesfield Jarred L. Eib, ’12 Michelle F. Eisele, ’85 Hon. Kurt Eisgruber Ashley C. Eklund, ’16 Amanda R. Elizondo, ’11 Hon. Sara Ellis DG Elmore, Jr., ’84 Dana M. Emery, ’94 Michael D. Engber, ’67 J. Scott Enright, ’90 Robert D. Epstein, ’70 Philip C. Eschels, ’83 Lauren N. Falk, ’15 P. Stephen Fardy, ’94 Troy D. Farmer, ’97 Penelope S. Farthing, ’70 Katherine T. Fay, ’14 Michael Fazio Jason Feder, ’14 Jodi Feldman Hon. Paul A. Felix, ’95 David L. Ferguson, ’81 John T. Ferguson, Jr., ’93 Stephen L. Ferguson, ’66 Jeremy Fetty Kyle D. Fields, ’13 Lucas M. Fields, ’12 Courtney Figg Christina M. Finn, ’06 Mindy A. Finnigan, ’02 John P. Fischer, ’97 Robert L. Fischman Anne M. Fishbeck, ’13 Larry R. Fisher, ’68 Thomas M. Fisher, ’94 James F. Fitzpatrick, ’59 Matthew A. Flaherty, ’10 Scott N. Flanders, ’82 Michael E. Flannery, ’83 John S. Fleming, ’12 Gina-Gail S. Fletcher Kyle C. Fletcher, ’15 Hector L. Flores, ’83 Timothy C. Flowers, ’11 Riley H. Floyd, ’16 Robert Foos Marisa J. Ford, ’85 Steven D. Forry, ’02 Amy M. Foust, ’08 Daniel P. Fowler, ’95 Lisa C. Francisco, ’07 Shannon S. Frank, ’90 Dorothy J. Frapwell, ’73 David A. Frazee, ’14 Eric A. Frey, ’67 Thomas M. Frohman, ’83
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 71
David J. Froiland, ’97 Seth R. Frotman, ’04 Luis Fuentes-Rohwer Matthew T. Furton, ’95 Joseph R. Fuschetto, ’13 Kenneth A. Gandy Thomas P. Gannon Richard W. Gardner, ’12 Robert A. Garelick, ’66 George Gasper Jessica Gastineau Shirley A. Gauvin, ’89 Julia Gelinas Philip C. Genetos, ’77 Gerald F. George, ’69 Dipayan Ghosh Bonnie K. Gibson, ’78 Brett B. Gibson, ’97 Samuel C. Giesting, ’10 Donald H. Gjerdingen Caryn Glawe Margaret Gloyeske Heidi G. Goebel, ’97 Jeffrey S. Goldenberg, ’94 Rainier Gonzalez, ’98 Steven E. Goode, ’93 Sophia Goodman Gabrielle Goodwin Kasie M. Gorosh Brill, ’12 Anah H. Gouty, ’15 Mark B. Gramelspacher, ’90 Conor D. Granahan, ’05 Donald I. Grande, ’66 E. Lynn Grayson, ’86 Carl A. Greci, ’93 Melissa Green Marshall Greenberg, ’16 Beth K. Greene, ’82 David E. Greene, ’74 Amanda Griffin Kevin P. Griffith, ’90 Jonathan Groff Abbie M. Gruwell, ’15 Alex E. Gude, ’09 Philippa M. Guthrie, ’91 Matthew R. Gutwein, ’88 Francisco Guzman, ’14 Bruce C. Haas, ’83 Christine N. Habeeb, ’08 Marvin L. Hackman, ’59 Stephen J. Hackman, ’84 Mark A. Hagedorn, ’98 Matthew K. Hagenbush, ’08 Joshua D. Hague, ’98 Catherine C. Hall, ’09 Summer Hallaj Meaghan E. Haller, ’10 Hon. David F. Hamilton Hon. John M. Hamilton, ’86 Thomas M. Hamilton, Jr., ’69 Hon. Kelsey B. Hanlon, ’12 Scott R. Hansen, ’92 Stephen M. Harper, ’11 Hon. Teresa Harper Herbert D. Hart III, ’77 Lakshmi Devi Hasanadka, ’03 Nina R. Hatfield, ’73 Tyler J. Hawkins, ’12 Augustavia (Johnson) Haydel, ’85 Hon. Shelli Hayes, ’82 Julie Head Zachary S. Heck, ’14 Norman J. Hedges, ’98 Holly J. Heerdink, ’16 Michael E. Heintz, ’03 Tyler D. Helmond, ’09 Jane A. Henegar, ’88 Robert Henson, ’10 William C. Hermann, ’90 Lauren E. Hernandez, ’13 Chris Herndon Melissa Hertko
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Jennifer M. Hesch, ’08 Elizabeth N. Hewell, ’16 Kandi Hidde Timothy J. Hightower, ’01 Michael J. Hinchion, ’80 Shel Hirschtritt Jonathon E. Hitz, ’14 Joseph Hoage James H. Hoeksema, Jr., ’89 Katie Hoekstra Hon. E. Michael Hoff, Jr., ’75 Kristin Hoffman Samuel E. Hofmeier, ’16 Paul R. Hogan, ’09 Katherine A. Holley, ’13 Benjamin R. Holt, ’16 Catherine L. Homolka, ’10 Julie D. Honor, ’08 Darrick J. Hooker, ’00 Renea E. Hooper, ’05 Andrew Howk Kelleah A. Hubler, ’05 Logan C. Hughes, ’04 Andrew W. Hull, ’86 V. William Hunt, ’69 Ryan M. Hurley, ’03 Matthew A. Hutchens, ’14 David E. Hutchinson, ’09 Jeffrey B. Hyman, ’03 Kathryn A. Imburgia, ’13 Leigh-Erin Irons, ’03 Michala P. Irons, ’09 R. Neil Irwin, ’71 David. H. Iskowich, ’97 Karoline E. Jackson, ’98 Jesse J. James, ’11 Robert A. Jefferies, Jr., ’66 David E. Jefferies, ’98 Manotti L. Jenkins, ’96 Charles C. Jiang, ’08 Corey A. Johanningmeier, ’07 Cara M. Johnson, ’13 Christine Johnson Danielle K. Johnson, ’13 Gail Johnson Kelly A. Johnson, ’90 Kira Johnson Leif K. Johnson, ’12 Ronald L. Johnson, Jr., ’10 R. William Jonas, Jr., ’81 Eric B. Jones, ’16 Jennifer C. Jontz, ’92 Gregory J. Jordan, ’84 Thomas K. Juffernbruch, ’95 Randal J. Kaltenmark, ’96 Hon. Michael S. Kanne, ’68 Laura Kanter Ben Kaplan Rachel Kaplan Robert P. Kassing, ’64 James L. Katz, ’98 Brett P. Kaufman, ’09 Jennifer Keating Susan W. Keener, ’84 Ryan W. Keevan, ’03 Jeffrey A. Kehr, ’97 Matthew D. Kellam, ’01 Hon. Marc Kellams, ’78 Barbara J. Kelley, ’73 Matthew J. Kelley, ’08 Katherine G. Kelsey, ’09 Heidi A. Kendall-Sage, ’94 Jason L. Kennedy, ’96 Melina (Maniatis) Kennedy, ’95 Allison Kerndt Sarah C. Kessler, ’12 Zachary S. Kester, ’09 Kendra Keyes Rajat Khanna, ’14 Janelle Kilies Jason D. Kimpel, ’99 Ryan J. Kinch, ’09
Cynthia A. King, ’91 Daniel P. King, ’01 Matthew R. King, ’03 Daniel M. Kirwan, ’74 Susan Kline Donald E. Knebel Thaya Knight Robert Kodrea Laura J. Koenig, ’07 Jeffrey Kosc Christopher S. Koves, ’08 James S. Kowalik, ’78 Steven Kruzel John M. Kyle III, ’79 David J. Labhart, ’04 Julie A. Laemmle, ’14 Katherine Labeau Tamari J. Lagvilava Seth Lahn Douglas W. Langdon, ’89 Katie Langlois Julie Lappas Tracy T. Larsen, ’84 V. Samuel Laurin III, ’87 Hon. William Lawrence Karen Laymance Rory R. Layne, ’10 David J. Lazerwitz, ’95 Leandra Lederman Jason Lee Stephen W. Lee, ’77 Kevin Leffel Andrew D. LeMar, ’03 Tricia Leminger Thomas R. Lemon, ’66 Timothy Lemper Tonya L. Lengar, ’03 Millard D. Lesch, ’67 Stanley M. Levco, ’71 Nicholas W. Levi, ’03 Alan A. Levin, ’82 Elliott D. Levin, ’66 Jonathan M. Levy, ’13 Hon. Judith Levy Branch R. Lew, ’82 Jazzmin L. Lewis, ’16 Jason Liao, ’07 Troy D. Liggett, ’09 Winston Lin, ’11 Lance M. Lindeen, ’11 Shou Yeh Tony Ling, ’96 Michael S. Linn, ’16 Laura A. Linneball, ’91 Karen A. Lloyd, ’83 Timothy Lohrstorfer Stephanie London Bill Long Daniel M. Long, ’96 Robert A. Long, ’71 Arthur A. Lopez, ’83 Hon. Basil H. Lorch III, ’74 Alan R. Loudermilk, ’85 Caroline M. Lovett, ’14 Kaarin M. Lueck, ’02 Thomas C. Lunsford, ’02 Rodan Luo, ’11 Dallin D. Lykins, ’10 Susan C. Lynch, ’93 Carrie Lynn Duncan A. MacDonald, ’69 Daniel E. J. Mackin, ’84 Hon. Jane Magnus-Stinson R. Patrick Magrath, ’06 David M. Main, ’75 Norman Main Simon I. Malinowski, ’12 Andrew C. Mallor, ’74 Sean T. Maloney, ’86 Hon. Elizabeth (Noyes) Mann, ’76 Alphonso Manns, ’72 Duane Marks Ryan Marques
Sara Marr Katie Marschke Joseph H. Marxer, ’87 Hon. Mark Massa Katy A. Mathews, ’09 Hon. Paul D. Mathias, ’79 Catherine L. Matthews, ’06 Brad R. Maurer, ’99 Michael S. Maurer, ’67 Hon. Melissa May Taylor A. Mayer, ’13 Erin E. McAdams, ’11 Jane McAvoy Peter C. McCabe III, ’85 Kristen McCannon William A. McCarthy, ’16 Toby McClamroch Chelsey McCory, ’15 Dawanna McCray Thomas R. McCully, ’66 Renee (Mawhinney) McDermott, ’78 Jenny McGinnis Patrick J. McGowan, ’04 Laurence A. McHugh, ’73 Lisa C. McKinney, ’92 R. Bruce McLean, ’71 Jonathan D. McPike, ’11 Chad McTighe Daniel A. Medrea, ’69 David A. Meek, ’08 Steven P. Mehr, ’12 Robert S. Meitus, ’00 Misty L. Mercer, ’11 Jessica L. Merkel, ’06 Ashley L. Michael, ’11 Suzanne Michel Michael Michmerhuizen Clayton C. Miller, ’93 Justin Miller Sonia L. Miller-Van Oort, ’97 Lloyd H. Milliken, Jr., ’60 David C. Milne, ’94 Dana L. Miroballi, ’95 P. Michael Mitchell, ’64 Hon. Robyn Moberly Stephen C. Moberly, ’66 Yoni D. Moise, ’11 Mariangela Monteiro Martin Montes, ’95 Burke J. Montgomery, ’99 Ronald J. Moore, ’95 Stephanie Moore Robin Morlock Marsha K. Morris, ’91 Timothy M. Morrison, ’74 Kevin Morrissey Melissa M. Mortimer, ’05 Trenton B. Morton, ’12 Aminta J. Moses, ’14 Jerry Moss, ’62 Adam C. Mueller, ’05 Andrew J. Mueller, ’09 Stephanie J. Mullaney, ’13 Megan A. Mullett, ’11 Edward B. “Ned” Mulligan, ’10 Kellen T. Myers, ’09 Hon. Edward W. Najam, Jr. Clarine Nardi Riddle, ’74 Daniel T. Nau, ’14 Robin D. Neace, ’15 Angela K. Neboyskey, ’00 David A. Neboyskey, ’00 Amy L. Nefouse, ’91 Andrea (Isaacs) Need, ’93 Mark E. Need, ’92 Greg Neibarger Kyle B. Nelson, ’12 Thomas R. Newby, ’87 Jane Ann Noblitt, ’86 Mary Nold Larimore, ’80 John Norris Henry S. Noyes, ’94
Rory O’Bryan, ’72 Christiana Ochoa Emily S. O’Connor, ’15 Joseph D. O’Connor, ’78 Robert S. O’Dell, ’87 Aimee N. Oestreich, ’12 Michael J. Ogershok, ’14 M. Davis O’Guinn Megan E. Okun, ’13 James F. Olds, ’08 James R. Oliver, ’92 Kate Olivier Justin R. Olson, ’13 Shiv O’Neill, ’01 Sylvia Orenstein Melissa M. Orizondo, ’16 Andrew D. Otis, ’90 Paul B. Overhauser, ’83 Marianne M. Owen, ’91 Alexandra S. Oxyer, ’15 William E. Padgett, ’95 Andrew Palmison Nicholas C. Pappas, ’91 Angela (Foster) Parker, ’94 James G. Parker, ’12 Justin C. Parker, ’10 Kenneth L. Parker, ’97 Nicholas R. Parker, ’16 Gretchen L. Parrish, ’15 Sandip H. Patel, ’96 Bruce Paul Stephen H. Paul, ’72 Tara E. Paul, ’14 Timothy B. Paul, ’04 Celia M. Pauli, ’16 Amy Payne Jonathan Payne Jean R. Pechette, ’80 Emily M. Pence, ’13 Gilberto R. Perez, ’84 David A. Pesel, ’86 Jinny Peterson Jeffrey P. Petrich, ’84 Matthew A. Pfaff, ’13 Mark J. Phillipoff, ’80 Scott Phillips Jeanne M. Picht, ’94 Christopher A. Pierce, ’12 Noah B. Pinegar, ’10 Kristin M. Pinkston, ’08 Jessica L. Pixler, ’13 Casey J. Plant, ’10 Alexander J. Platte, ’11 Dustin L. Plummer, ’06 John L. Pogue, ’69 Christie Popp Cindy L. Porter, ’85 Steven M. Post, ’77 Gregory W. Pottorff, ’11 Lisa A. Powell, ’84 Jill T. Powlick, ’95 R. Anthony Prather, ’83 Jennifer L. Pratt, ’87 Elissa J. Preheim, ’96 Emily Prifogle Leslie B. Prill, ’11 Jamison S. Prime, ’96 Katherine A. Province, ’13 Seth T. Pruden, ’84 Jennifer Prusak Johnny D. Pryor, ’02 Philip M. Purcell, ’85 George Purdy Rubin Pusha, ’12 Hon. Rudolph R. Pyle III, ’00 Elizabeth A. Quill, ’13 Hon. Lori Quillen Romeo Quinto Peter M. Racher, ’86 Barath Raman Patrick W. Rasche, ’93 Angie Raymond
Ali Razzaghi Michael N. Red, ’04 Alexis Reed James L. Reed, Jr., ’92 Jason R. Reese, ’97 Morgan E. Rehrig, ’08 Deanna Reichel Owen D. Reilly, ’14 Rodney Retzner Nicholas Reuhs Eric A. Rey, ’10 Stephen E. Reynolds, ’08 Richard S. Rhodes, ’53 Teresa Ribbe James G. Richmond, ’69 Jeffrey K. Riffer, ’78 Timothy J. Riffle, ’83 Randall R. Riggs, ’77 William R. Riggs, ’63 James B. Robinson, ’99 Laurie N. Robinson Haden, ’98 Jeff Rocker Justin D. Roddye, ’11 Hon. Jose M. Rodriguez, Jr., ’80 Michael A. Rogers, ’08 Spenser K. Rohler, ’15 Jeffrey M. Rollings, ’88 J.P. Roman-Lagunas Ezequiel J. Romero, ’13 Hon. Flerida P. Romero, ’55 Landyn W. Rookard, ’16 Melissa Root Michael Rosiello Daniel R. Roy, ’99 Jennifer A. Rulon, ’14 Hon. Loretta H. Rush, ’83 Mark A. Ryan, ’03 Noberto Salinas Taylor M. Sample, ’15 Marisol Sanchez, ’02 Rafael A. Sanchez, ’02 Eric Sanders Steve Sanders Christopher Saporita, ’03 Tamar Satterwhite Naike Savain Matt Schantz William J. Schenck, ’94 Thomas C. Scherer, ’77 April R. Schilling, ’98 Jon Schmaltz Jessica Schnelker Thomas F. Schnellenberger, Jr., ’79 Marjorie G. Schrader, ’05 Natalie Schrader Erin R. Schrantz, ’00 Jacob B. Schtevie, ’07 Matthew Schultz Michael D. Schwartz, ’98 Glenn Scolnik, ’78 Ryan Scott Zaldwaynaka L. Scott, ’83 Frank Seales, Jr., ’74 John E. Seddelmeyer, ’74 John M. Segal, ’71 Erica L. Seger, ’03 Randolph L. Seger, ’72 Leah L. Seigel, ’14 Christopher C. Seigle, ’13 Andrea Sellers Hon. Bruce M. Selya Todd M. Sermersheim, ’04 Sikander Shah, ’16 Peter J. Shakula II, ’89 Abrahim J. Shanehsaz, ’14 Ozair M. Shariff, ’12 Rebecca M. Sharon, ’16 Charles D. Shaw, Jr., ’14 Jennifer L. Shea, ’03 Kamia U. Shenoy, ’16 Rob Sherman Gina Shields
David Shircliff Thomas L. Shriner, Jr., ’72 Michael D. Shumate Darin A. Siders, ’01 Beth R. Silberstein, ’91 Matthew Silverman, ’03 Jacqueline A. Simmons, ’79 Hon. Philip Simon Drew T. Simshaw, ’12 Paul Sinclair Earl R.C. Singleton, ’86 George Sistevaris, ’87 Scott A. Skiles, ’15 Allan T. Slagel, ’88 Hon. Geoffrey G. Slaughter, ’89 Eric P. Smith, ’10 Freedom Smith, ’04 George P. Smith, II, ’64 Steven P. Smith, ’00 Jean Soh Hon. Hugo C. Songer, ’60 Justin O. Sorrell, ’12 Lauren C. Sorrell, ’12 Julie A. Spain, ’14 James A. Spangler, Jr., ’14 Myra (Podvoll) Spicker, ’73 Torrey D. Spink, ’12 Kathleen St. Louis, ’84 Matthew R. St. Louis, ’04 Catherine B. Stafford Theodore C. Stamatakos, ’90 Julie K. Stapel, ’96 Sydney L. Steele, ’64 David R. Steiner, ’89 Karl S. Steinmanis, ’73 Roger T. Stelle, ’70 Simone L. Sterling, ’01 Milton R. Stewart, ’71 Megan H. Stifel, ’04 Emily A. Storm-Smith, ’15 Terrance Stroud, ’03 Daniel B. Strunk, ’04 Hon. Frank E. Sullivan, Jr., ’82 Jonathan Sundheimer Ann Sutton Valerie M. Tachtiris, ’03 Andrew J. Tan, ’11 J. Alexander Tanford Christian C. Taylor, ’94 Thomas R. TerMaat, ’94 Kevin Tessier, ’96 Laura A. Thomas, ’00 Patrick C. Thomas, ’13 Milton O. Thompson, ’79 Andrew D. Thomson, ’16 Wm. Charles Thomson III, ’75 Robert B. Thornburg, ’96 Jared C. Tidemann, ’13 David O. Tittle, ’67 Scott B. Tittle, ’01 Courtney R. Tobin, ’92 Hon. Kenneth G. Todd, ’70 Joel Tragesser Mario Treto, Jr., ’12 Thomas J. Treutler, ’01 Peter Tschanz Lee Tumminello Jonathan B. Turpin, ’14 Mary E. Tuuk, ’90 Benjamin M. Urban, ’13 Thor Y. Urness, ’88 David P. Vallas, ’00 Inge M. Van der Cruysse, ’04 John W. Van Laere,’82 Jessica L. Van Dalen, ’10 Ryan H. Vann, ’06 Hon. Salvador Vasquez, ’91 Hon. Albert J. Velasquez, ’73 Daniela Vidal Hon. Jesse M. Villalpando, ’84 Joseph M. Villanueva, ’00 Adria Villar, ’08
Peter D.P. Vint, ’74 Nabeela Virjee Donald J. Vogel, ’85 Amy L. VonDielingen, ’05 Jason P. Wagenmaker, ’06 Ted A. Waggoner, ’78 Philip A. Wagler, ’10 Stephen M. Wagner, ’94 Laura M. Walda, ’08 Carolyn Waldron Mallori Waliszewski Trevor W. Waliszewski, ’15 Denise A. Walker, ’06 Diane J. Walker, ’91 Laura Walker Shana Wallace Kate Walling Mary Walsh Hon. Tanya Walton Pratt Judith A. Waltz, ’81 Robert Matthew Warner, ’07 Rochelle A. Warren Gordon, ’10 Alison R. Waske Sutter, ’06 Lisa Watson Sylvia Watson Alonzo Weems, ’95 W. William Weeks, ’79 Brian R. Weir-Harden, ’07 Ryan R. Weiss, ’14 Brent Welke, ’72 Judith V. Welling, ’06 Carwina Weng Nathan B. Wenk, ’12 Hon. Martha B. Wentworth, ’90 Brittany L. West, ’13 Charlotte F. Westerhaus Renfrow, ’92 Allison E. Weyand, ’12 Alexander S. Whang, ’12 Thomas E. Wheeler, ’87 James L. Whelan, ’15 Keith E. White, ’83 James L. Whitlatch, ’84 Lora M. Whitticker, ’02 Michael D. Wiese, ’13 Camille Wiggins Brian P. Williams, ’81 Gerry L. Williams, ’95 Kimberli A. Williams, ’15 Maurice L. Williams, ’06 Noah T. Williams, ’11 Shannon Williams Stacee E. Williams, ’96 Gordon T. Wilson, ’13 Heather L. Wilson, ’97 Julie P. Wilson, ’99 Andrew H. Winetroub, ’13 Alan C. Witte, ’70 Mark S. Wojciechowski, ’81 Hon. Diane P. Wood Kathryn Wood S. Lee Woodward, ’73 Nancy S. Woodworth, ’05 Jon Wright Mark E. Wright, ’89 Erik B. Wulff, ’76 Cathleen D. Wyatt, ’15 Robert S. Wynne, ’85 Juliana Yanez, ’14 Jonathan F. Yates, ’01 Ryan J. Yates, ’10 Brian Yeley, ’99 Holly L. Yoakum, ’06 Pete R. Yonkman, ’98 Hongsun Yoon, ’02 Hon. Richard L. Young James P. Zeller, ’76 Susan M. Zoeller, ’95 Jeffrey J. Zuber, ’99
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 73
We are pleased to recognize and thank the members of the Kimberling Society:
the kimberling society
The Kimberling Society honors the late John F. (Jack) Kimberling, JD ’50, for his generosity and vision. The Society consists of a special group of donors who have made arrangements to support the Law School in their estate planning. Membership in the Kimberling Society is open to all who make or have made a planned or deferred gift
Frank* and Donna R. Gilkison
Byron and Margaret Myers
John J. Adams
Harry and Lucy Gonso
Hon. Edward W. Najam, Jr.
Alfred C. Aman, Jr. and
David E. Greene and
Rory and Pamela O’Bryan
Peter L. and Sandra S. Obremskey
Carol Greenhouse
Barbara J. Bealer
Lowell E. and Bonnie F. Baier
Bernard* and Kathleen Harrold
Stephen H. and Deborah L. Paul
J. Adam Bain
William C. Hermann
James and Helen Petersen
Frederick A. Beckman
Hon. Elwood (Bud) and
Jeffrey Petrich and Leslie Mead
Virgil Beeler
Kirk A. and Melinda K. Pinkerton
Samuel R. (Chic) Born II and
Sarah Jane Hughes and
Bruce and Linda Owen Polizotto
Timothy J. Riffle and
Brenda Born
Carol L. Hillis A. James Barnes
F. Wesley Bowers
V. William and Nancy Hunt
Mary B. (Kleiser) Brody
R. Neil and Michele Irwin
Richard S. and
William J. Brody and
Harvey M. Kagan
Arthur P.* and Sue A. Kalleres
William R. and Gloria A. Riggs
Charles E. and Jean Bruess
Robert P. and Troy Kassing
Hugh A. and Debra A. Sanders
Thomas E. Burchfield
Barton and Judy Kaufman
Glenn and Donna H. Scolnik
Hon. James and Angela Carr
James and Diana Kemper
Randolph L. and Mary E. Seger
Willard and Margaret Carr
Robert and E. Carol Kixmiller
James A.* and
Fred H. and Beth Cate
John Kyle III and Marcia
Charles and Karen Cohen
Dunne-Kyle
Brian J. and Sarah R. Shapiro
Richard J. and Betty J. Darko
Mary N. and James T. Larimore
Gene R. and Marguerite R. Shreve
Richard and Mary Davis
Douglas and Minda Lehman
Robert J. and Gayle A. Shula
Alecia A. DeCoudreaux and
Millard D. Lesch
George P. Smith, II
Michael J. and
Richard E. and Carol L. Stahl
Ann and Edward DeLaney
Milton R. and Judi Stewart
Francina A. and Stephen R. Dlouhy
Larry and Sherry Linhart
Hon. Frank Sullivan, Jr. and
Clarence and Judith Doninger
Robert A. and Susan J. Long
Donald P. Dorfman
Hon. Susan L. Macey and
Hon. John D. Tinder and
Robert P. and Darlene Duvin
Mrs. Gordon S. Eslick
Michael S. “Mickey” and
David O. and Susie D. Tittle
Sherry A. Fabina-Abney and
Kenneth L. Turchi
R. Bruce McLean and
Leslie E. Vidra and Jerry L. Ulrich
Scott N. and Linda A. Flanders
Sharon A. Wildey
Dorothy J. Frapwell
Thomas R. and Susan C. McCully
Elizabeth A. Frederick
Thomas M. and
Hon. Ezra H. and
Robert H. and Shelley McKinney
Bronwen L. Cound
Jose Andrade
Douglas S. Abney
Linda H. Friedlander
Michaeleen Lewinski
Matthew G. Parsell Janie Maurer Rachel A. Adams
Susan M. McGlasson
commitment to the Law School. This is accomplished by naming the IU Maurer School of Law as a beneficiary
Robert and Susan Garelick
Clayton C. Miller
through a bequest in a will, charitable remainder uni-trust or annuity trust, pooled income fund, charitable gift
Philip and Dorothea Genetos
Jeanne S. Miller
Bonnie K. Gibson and
P. Michael Mitchell
Jerry and Anne Moss
annuity, life insurance, retirement plan, or other life-income arrangements. Members in the Kimberling Society are automatically included in the IU Foundation’s planned giving society, the Arbutus Society.
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Anonymous (5)
Jeffery W. Winkler
Sarah M. McConnell Judith Mayer Rhodes
Rebecca L. Shanahan
Cheryl Sullivan Jan M. Carroll
Kenneth and Louise Yahne *Deceased
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 75
Before 1960 Sidney D. Eskenazi, ’53, along with his wife Lois, donated $15 million and 100 works on paper to the Indiana University Art Museum, the largest gift the university museum has received since its founding in 1941. The Eskenazis’ generosity is helping the museum undergo essential renovations and maintenance work. Additionally, the works on paper have found a new home at the museum — now known as the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art.
ELMORE NAMED KING OF BASEBALL Minor League Baseball has named David G. Elmore, ’58, owner and founder of Elmore Sports Group, the 2016 King of Baseball. The King of Baseball is a long-standing tradition in which Minor League Baseball recognizes a veteran of professional baseball for longtime dedication and service. Elmore founded the Elmore Sports Group in 1969, which now consists of six Minor League Baseball teams, including the Colorado Springs Sky Sox, San Antonio Missions, Inland Empire 66ers, Lynchburg Hillcats, Idaho Fall Chukars, and Eugene Emeralds. The company also owns hockey and soccer teams,
class notes
along with facility management, travel, hospitality, special events, and concession companies.
1960s On September 17, 2016, Stephen C. Moberly, ’66, received the John P. McMeel Distinguished Service Award from the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame at a luncheon in Indianapolis, “for his work to keep the flow of vital government and political news transparent” by his successful authoring or sponsoring laws guaranteeing the public access to government meetings and records. Moberly represented the Shelbyville area in the Indiana General Assembly during his service there from 1972-1990. Moberly is only the second person in the history of the IJHF to receive the award. David O. Tittle, ’67, a partner in Bingham Greenebaum Doll in Indianapolis, has been selected for the 23rd edition of The Best Lawyers in America in the practice areas of commercial litigation, legal malpractice law–defense, banking and finance litigation, product liability defense, bet-the-company litigation, and mediation.
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1970s
Los Angeles, and Singapore. He later worked for Harvard Law School as a
C. Daniel Yates, ’73, has been elected to the board of directors of the
senior counsel for East Asia at the World Bank in Washington, DC, where his
Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.
work focused on China, Vietnam, Korea, and Indonesia.
1980s Keith P. Huffman, ’80, of Bluffton, Ind., is the winner of the 2016 Powley Elder Law Award. This prestigious award is presented annually to a member of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys who is recognized in his or her community as a leader in promoting a greater understanding of the rights and needs of the elderly and people with special needs, and of how elder law attorneys advocate those rights. Stephen J. Peters, ’80, was selected for inclusion in the 2017 Best Lawyers list. Peters is a partner at Plunkett Cooney in their Indianapolis office and focuses his practice on appellate practice, commercial litigation, insurance law, and construction litigation. Thomas A. Pyrz, ’80, plans to retire at the end of 2017 after leading the Indiana State Bar Association since November 22, 1992. His nearly 25-year tenure has included hiring additional staff, launching new programs, and increasing the value of membership to counter attorneys’ shifting view of the association. Edward F. Schrager, ’80, a partner with the Indianapolis law firm Cohen Garelick & Glazier, has earned the coveted 2017 Best Lawyer designation in the practice area of criminal defense. He represents clients at both the state and federal level, from high profile cases to ones involving investigations by law enforcement where his clients are cleared in a completely discrete and
legal reform consultant in Almaty, Kazakhstan. From 1996-2001, he was
On behalf of then-Governor Mike Pence, Deputy Secretary of State Brandon Clifton presented Ice Miller partner Richard J. Thrapp, ’83, with the Sagamore of the Wabash for his service as chair of the Indiana Business Law Survey Commission. The award is a personal tribute bestowed on those who have rendered distinguished service to the state. Matthew E. Wilkins, ’83, gave the annual Jordan H. and Joan R. Leibman Forum on the Legal and Business Environment of Art lecture at the IU Robert McKinney School of Law. He spoke on “How the Detroit Institute of Arts Survived the City’s Bankruptcy.” Wilkins, of Brooks Wilkins Sharkey & Turco in Birmingham, Mich,, was one of a team of attorneys who represented retirees of Detroit owed billions of dollars in pension payments by the city. He provided a behind-the-scenes look at how the historic compromise was reached to save the museum’s collection from liquidation. Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs, LLP is pleased to announce that William H. Hollander, ’84, has been recognized as a leader in intellectual property in the 2017 edition of Chambers and Partners USA. Chambers USA ranks the leading firms and lawyers in an extensive range of practice areas throughout the United States. The qualities on which rankings are assessed include technical legal ability, professional conduct, client service, commercial astuteness, diligence, commitment, and other qualities most valued by the client.
ALUMNI BOARD MEMBER LARSEN WILL LEAD NEW GRAND RAPIDS LAW OFFICE
private manner. Schrager also handles complex business litigations matters,
Tracy T. Larsen, ’84, has joined Honigman Miller Schwartz & Cohn LLP
including trade secrets, non-compete agreements, and breach of contract. He
as co-chair of the mergers and acquisitions practice of the firm’s corporate
has substantial experience with cases that involve forensic investigation and
department. He will be based in, and the managing partner of, the firm’s
complex electronic discovery.
Grand Rapids office, the firm’s first office in the city. Having one of the most active corporate practices in the midwest, Larsen represents clients in a wide
Clifford W. Garstang, ’81, is the editor of Everywhere Stories: Short Fiction
array of matters, including M&A, joint ventures, takeover defense, corporate
from a Small Planet, Volume II, published in September by Press 53. The
finance transactions and restructurings, corporate governance, and federal
book is an anthology of stories set in 20 countries. Garstang is the author of
securities law issues. He has steered hundreds of transactions on both
What the Zhang Boys Know, winner of the 2013 Library of Virginia
a domestic and international level involving tens of billions in trade value.
Literary Award for Fiction, and the prize-winning linked story collection,
Larsen is a member of the Law School’s Alumni Board.
In an Uncharted Country. Garstang has taught English as a Peace Corps volunteer in South Korea and practiced international law in Chicago,
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ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 79
1990s
nonpartisan forum that brings together diverse viewpoints to provide information to resolve complex agricultural law problems.
Scott R. Hansen, ’92, recently served as president of the Los Angeles Intellectual Property Law Association, the leading IP organization of its type
Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP is pleased to announce that Russell C.
in the US. As an officer, he initiated a thriving Women in IP group,
Menyhart, ’03, has been named partner in the firm’s Indianapolis office.
significantly opened doors in the organization for Asian-American and
Menyhart focuses his practice on social enterprise, crisis management,
entertainment law attorneys, expanded the diversity fellowship program,
international law, FCPA and international anti-corruption, litigation,
and instituted a prestigious public service award.
corporate compliance and white collar criminal defense, and immigration and citizenship.
WASHINGTON SUPERIOR COURT ELECTS HON. NICOLE GAINES PHELPS Hon. Nicole Gaines Phelps, ’96, has been elected to King County Superior
Carlota P. Zimmerman, ’07, was featured in an article in New York magazine titled “So You Chose the Wrong Career: Eight Women on Their Second Acts.”
Court, making her the first African American woman elected to an open
Zimmerman has been a featured speaker at Pennsylvania Conference for
seat in any superior court bench in Washington State. Phelps won with a
Women, BlogHer2015, and Social Media Week NYC 2015. She has taught
definitive 79% of the vote in Washington’s most populous county.
professional and social media workshops at New York Public Library, CUNY, SUNY, and Queens Council of the Arts. She has been cited by US News and
Then-Governor Mike Pence named Sarah E. Freeman, ’97, as a commissioner
World Report as a social media expert and is a writer for the Huffington Post,
of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission. Freeman filled the vacancy
Thought Catalog, and Elite Daily, while also being published on MSNBC
created by the departure of Commissioner Carolene Mays-Medley, who
and Above the Law.
was appointed executive director of the White River State Park Development Commission. Freeman is serving the remainder of Mays-Medley’s term, which expires December 31, 2017.
TWO INDIANA LAW ALUMNI RECOGNIZED ON IBJ FORTY UNDER 40 Laurel Judkins, ’08, and Stephen Reynolds, ’08, were named to the
Goldberg Segalla is pleased to announce the addition of Jennifer B. Santoro,
Indianapolis Business Journal’s Forty under 40 Class of 2017. Forty under 40
’97, to its workers compensation practice group in Chicago. Along with
honors upwardly mobile young professionals in the Indianapolis area.
a colleague, Santoro will lead the firm’s workers’ compensation team in
This year’s class represents the 25th year for the program. Judkins is
the state.
director of executive communications for Cummins Inc., and Reynolds is a partner at Ice Miller LLP, both in Indianapolis. Reynolds is a member of
2000s Laura Boeckman, ’01, was awarded the 2017 Pro Bono Service Award for the 4th Judicial Circuit by the Florida Bar. She has given hundreds of hours helping low-income Floridians, and over the years has volunteered to help victims of predatory lending, along with people facing foreclosures and garnishment of their wages. Justin T. Schneider, ’01, director of state government relations for Indiana Farm Bureau, assumed the role of American Agricultural Law Association president during AALA’s 37th annual agricultural law symposium in Oklahoma City. AALA is a national, professional membership association of agricultural law professionals from across the United States focusing on the legal needs of the agricultural community. It offers an independent,
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the Law School’s BLSA Alumni Advisory Board. Quarles & Brady LLP is pleased to announce the promotion of Michael A. Rogers ,’08, to partner. Rogers is a member of the firm’s commercial litigation practice group and represents clients in all aspects of business litigation, including defending and prosecuting lawsuits on behalf of large and small companies. His practice focuses primarily on competition law and unfair trade practices.
Photos courtesy Indianapolis Business Journal / Eric Learned
Jennifer L. Schuster, ’08, has joined the Indianapolis office of Frost Brown Todd. She works in the firm’s tort and insurance defense and product liability litigation practice groups. She has experience in a wide variety of civil litigation matters in state and federal courts, including products liability and personal injury defense, intellectual property and patent litigation, and general commercial litigation. Schuster has an educational background
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 81
in science, including a bachelor’s degree in molecular biology and a master’s
Zachary C. Raibley, ’11, has joined the Indianapolis office of Frost Brown
degree in genetics.
Todd as an attorney in the firm’s tort and insurance defense practice group, working mainly on insurance defense litigation. He previously worked in the
Wooden McLaughlin LLP is pleased to announce that Travis R. Smith, ’08,
areas of construction law and medical device litigation. Raibley clerked for
has been named partner in the firm’s Indianapolis office. Smith practices in
Hon. Martha Blood Wentworth, ’90, of the Indiana Tax Court in 2012-2013.
the areas of catastrophic injury defense, environmental insurance coverage and defense, general litigation and dispute resolution, insurance coverage,
Seth L. Williams, ’11, was a co-author of an article that was published in the
and toxic tort defense.
George Washington Law Federal Communications Law Journal. The article, “Confusion, Uncertainty, and Fear: How the FCC’s Increased Reliance on
Anna Obergfell Kirkman, ’09, was named to the Indianapolis Business
Adjudication is Harming Carriers, Competition, Consumers, and Investment,”
Journal’s Forty under 40 Class of 2017. Forty under 40 honors upwardly
was included in volume 68, issue 2 in July 2016.
mobile young professionals in the Indianapolis area. This year’s class represents the 25th year for the program. Obergfell Kirkman is associate
In September, Louisville Business First named Ozair M. Shariff, ’12, to its
counsel and medical-legal partnership director at Eskenazi Health.
2016 Forty Under 40 list. The list honors exceptional young professionals who are making significant contributions in the local community through their
TaKeena M. Thompson, ’09, has been named partner at Cohen & Malad,
charitable efforts and leadership. Shariff is an attorney based in the
LLP. She focuses her practice on pharmaceutical and medical device litiga-
Louisville, Ky., office of Stites & Harbison. As a member of the law firm’s
tion, medical malpractice, and personal injury in Indianapolis.
healthcare service group, his practice is devoted to a wide range of issues affecting healthcare providers. In November, he was elected to serve
2000s Joseph R. Dages, ’11, was elected to become a director of Middleton
He previously served on the museum’s board of governors.
Reutlinger in Louisville, Ky. Dages assists companies and individuals in
Hesham Mohamed Sabry Genidy, SJD’13, has published his dissertation,
protecting their brands domestically and internationally, and helps artists,
Everything New is Old Again: The Impact of Egypt’s Political Culture on the
authors, and entrepreneurs safeguard and leverage the value of their creative
Rule of Law and Democracy. He also contributed a chapter to a book, Egypt
works. He concentrates his practice in the areas of trademark, copyright,
beyond Tahrir Square by Bessma Momani and Eid Mohamed.
and internet law. He has experience in prosecution as well as in monitoring and enforcement of trademarks, copyrights, and domain names. Dages also
Anthony K. Glenn, ’13, was hired as an associate at Barnes & Thornburg
handles legal matters involving advertising, software and technology, privacy,
LLP in Indianapolis. He is a member of the labor and employment law
and licensing, and helps clients resolve disputes involving their intellectual
department.
property assets.
MICHIGAN GOVERNOR APPOINTS SIMPSON TO BOARD OF REGENTS Gov. Rick Snyder has announced the appointment of Alexander Simpson, ’11,
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on the board of trustees of the Speed Art Museum for a three-year term.
HECK TAKES POST TEACHING CYBERSECURITY COURSE AT WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY Zachary S. Heck, ’14, a cybersecurity and privacy attorney at Faruki, Ireland, Cox, Rhinehart & Dusing in Dayton, Ohio, will begin teaching as
to the Eastern Michigan University Board of Regents. Simpson is legal
an adjunct professor for Wright State University’s cybersecurity program
counsel for HIS, Inc., and was previously an associate for Bodman PLC.
in the Computer Science and Engineering Department. Heck designed
He is the president-elect of the Wolverine Bar Association, Wolverine
the new course for the cybersecurity program, called Legal Aspects of
Bar Foundation, and recently served on the Michigan State Housing Develop-
Cybersecurity, which will prepare students for many of the challenges facing
ment Authority.
security professionals.
ergo: spring 2017, volume 175 — www.law.indiana.edu 83
Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP is pleased to announce that Kimberly S.
Hon. Roger O. de Bruler, ’60, age 82, of Indianapolis, Ind., died on February
Lewis, ’15, has joined the firm as an associate in the Indianapolis office. She
13, 2017, with his family at his side. He was born in Evansville on August 5,
is in the firm’s litigation and environmental groups.
1934, to Owen and Mary Lucille de Bruler. Justice de Bruler proudly served
Kathleen K. Meehan, ’15, has joined the National Conference of Legislatures as a policy research analyst. NCSL is a non-profit organization that provides support, primarily to state legislatures and staff members, on relevant policy
his country in the United States Army Intelligence Corps during the Cold War. He was a dedicated public servant for the State of Indiana for 33 years. He was appointed Steuben County Circuit Court judge by Governor Roger
issues, ranging from environmental to health to education. Meehan works in
Branigin, and later served for 28 years as a justice on the Indiana Supreme
the environment, energy, and transportation department, and her role focuses
Court. He was a member of Christ Church Cathedral on Monument Circle
on coordinating tribal working groups related to nuclear energy issues.
in Indianapolis. While seated on the Supreme Court, Roger and his wife, Karen, decided the area surrounding the James Whitcomb Riley Home
Kahn, Dees, Donovan & Kahn, LLP is pleased to announce the hiring of Holly J. Anspaugh, ’16, as an associate attorney. Anspaugh primarily practices real estate, business, estate planning, and debt collection law.
was where they wanted to build a new home and raise their family of four children. Neighbors in what is now known as Lockerbie Square agree their bold move as the first new construction in the area launched a turnaround
GORDON JOINS KRIEG DEVAULT, CONCENTRATES ON EMPLOYMENT LAW
in that neighborhood and served as a beacon for further development of
Tiaundra M. Gordon,’ 16, has been hired as an associate at Krieg DeVault
Karen (Steenerson) de Bruler of Angola, Indiana, and by his children, Roger
downtown living. De Bruler is survived by his beloved wife of 56 years,
LLP in their Carmel, Ind., office. Gordon will work on civil litigation matters,
O. de Bruler, Jr. (Teresa) of Englewood, Fla.; Lemuel Quincy de Bruler
but will concentrate her practice in areas of employment law for a variety
(Sharon) of Greenville, SC; and Lily Marie de Bruler (Bill), an attorney in
of clients.
Martinsville, Ind.; ten grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his son, Joseph de Bruler of Faramans, France; his
Faegre Baker Daniels LLP is pleased to announce the addition of Sarah K. Noack, ’16, as an associate to the firm’s Fort Wayne office. Noack works with the labor and employment team.
in memoriam
parents Owen and Mary Lucille de Bruler; his brother, Stephen de Bruler; and his sister, Lucille (de Bruler) Noble. —
Barley Snyder LLP is pleased to announce it has welcomed Reilly S. Noetzel, ’16, as its newest attorney, hiring him as an associate in the firm’s
Gary L. Birnbaum, ’76, age 64, was born April 29, 1952, in the Bronx, NY,
real estate practice group.
to Sylvia and Sidney Birnbaum. He graduated from Martin Van Buren High School in Queens, NY. He continued his education at Harpur College, part of
Faegre Baker Daniels LLP is pleased to announce the addition of Melissa M. Orizondo, ’16, as an associate to the firm’s downtown Indianapolis office. Orizondo practices with the business litigation team. Celia M. Pauli, ’16, has joined Lewis Wagner LLP as an associate.
SUNY Binghamton, where he met his wife, Denise Frank, in the chemistry lab. Birnbaum graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1973, the same year he and Denise got married in Rye, NY. They began their journey west to Bloomington, where he became articles editor of the Indiana
She concentrates her practice in employment law, product liability defense,
Law Journal. He graduated from the Law School magna cum laude and was
insurance defense, and commercial litigation in Indianapolis.
a member of Order of the Coif. They moved to Phoenix for Gary to work at Streich Lang Law Firm in 1976. He moved on to work at Mariscal, Weeks,
Faegre Baker Daniels LLP is pleased to announce the addition of Ashley
McIntyre, and Friedlander where he built a nine-person law firm into a
(Nikki) N. Wethington, ’16, as an associate to the firm’s 96th Street,
60-person firm. Recently, Birnbaum managed their merger with the national
Indianapolis office. Wethington advises clients on a variety of corporate matters, including corporate and commercial transactions, reorganizations, and corporate governance.
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law firm Dickinson Wright of Detroit. He also took great joy in teaching upand-coming lawyers at Arizona State University Law School. He mentored
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and taught there for the last 15 years and was currently teaching a class on
Holly Liana Yoakum, ’06, was born June 11, 1976, and died February 13,
private property rights. Birnbaum received legal accolades too numerous to
2017. She was preceded in death by her father, Carl Fricks. She is survived
mention, including Lawyer of the Year and Best Lawyer to Bet Your Firm
by her husband, Jason; mother, Aldene Fricks; brother, Dennis Fricks
On. He leaves behind his wife of 43 years, Denise; his brother, Rick Birn-
(Michelle); relatives, many friends, and the most adorable dog in the world,
baum (Lisa) of Calabasas, Calif.; and his mother, Sylvia Nemiroff of West
Max Yoakum.
Hill, Calif. He was very close to his nephews Brian, Kevin, Jared, and Shaun (Cianna) and a spoiled cat named Newton. He will be greatly missed by his family, friends, and the Phoenix legal community.
At the time of her death, she was a managing attorney at Legal Services of Eastern Missouri. While in law school, she was a member of the Sherman Minton Moot Court board and active in the Protective Order Project.
— Surrounded by the love of family and close friends, Maryrose Pratter, wife of former longtime faculty member Harry Pratter, passed away peacefully on January 29, 2017, at Bloomington Hospital, just short of her 96th birthday. Maryrose Lavin Pratter was born February 13, 1921, in Buffalo, NY to
The Class of 2006 has established the Holly Yoakum Memorial Scholarship Fund, which will award a scholarship to a student interested in public interest work with a focus on domestic violence, women’s rights, or child advocacy. To contribute, go to law.myiuorg/give-now, and click on the “make a gift” tab. Indicate that your gift is in memory of Holly Yoakum.
Benjamin Lavin and Bessie Fox Lavin. Toward the end of the Great Depression, Maryrose enrolled in Ithaca College in Ithaca, NY, and graduated with a degree in physical education. When the United States entered World War II, Maryrose went to work as a Rosie the Riveter, bucking rivets in the
in memoriam
Curtiss-Wright aircraft factory in Buffalo. Around that time, Maryrose met her future husband, Harry Pratter. They were married February 7, 1943, just
in memoriam
before Harry shipped out for the Pacific. Maryrose came to Bloomington in 1950 when Harry took up his post as a professor in the Indiana University School of Law. While raising three sons, Maryrose was a substitute gym teacher for the Monroe County Public Schools, the co-owner of the Windfall Shop, and the co-owner of The Gallery art. Later, she volunteered as a docent at the Indiana University Museum of Art. Maryrose had master’s degrees in both physical education and accounting from Indiana University, where she also did graduate-level study in English literature. She will be remembered fondly as a creative and innovative cook and a master gardener. Maryrose Pratter was a great woman, wife, mother, and friend from the Greatest Generation. It is impossible to capture everything Maryrose meant to so many people, friends as well as family. Maryrose is survived by her sons Jonathan of Austin, Tex., and Daniel of Bloomington; her daughter-in-law, Lillette Wood, M.D.; and grandchildren, Sarah of Los Angeles, Rachel of Fort Worth, and David of San Antonio. She was preceded in death by Harry Pratter, her husband of 58 years, and her son, Benjamin. 86
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There are many ways to support the Law School’s annual fund — the Fund for Excellence. For further information, please contact Stephanie J. Coffey, annual fund director, at (812) 856-2793 or (877) 286-0002.
GIFTS BY CHECK Send your check, payable to the IU Foundation/IU Maurer School of Law, to: Indiana University Maurer School of Law Indiana University Foundation P.O. Box 6460 Indianapolis, IN 46206-6460
GIFTS BY CREDIT CARD To charge your gift using Visa, MasterCard, American Express, or Discover, call the IU Foundation at (800) 558-8311. Or visit our website, law.indiana.edu/ways-to-give, which will direct you to our secure giving page.
GIFTS BY ELECTRONIC TRANSFER Your gift to the Law School can be deducted automatically each month from your checking account or credit card. For more information, call the IU Foundation at (800) 558-8311 or visit their website at myiu.org/give-now
GIFTS OF SECURITIES The Law School welcomes gifts of securities and appreciated stock. To arrange your gift, call the IU Foundation at (800) 558-8311.
LAW FIRM AND CORPORATE MATCHING GIFTS Matching gifts can double or triple your investment. Please contact your Human Resources department to request the necessary forms. To find out whether your organization has a matching program, go to matchinggifts.com/IUF
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Baier Hall 211 S. Indiana Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405-7001