uwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68 - University of Washington

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University of Washington School of Law UW Law Digital Commons Alumni Magazines Law School History and Publications 10-2014 uwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68 Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/alum Part of the Legal Education Commons is Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School History and Publications at UW Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni Magazines by an authorized administrator of UW Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation uwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68, (2014). Available at: hps://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/alum/6

Transcript of uwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68 - University of Washington

University of Washington School of LawUW Law Digital Commons

Alumni Magazines Law School History and Publications

10-2014

uwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/alum

Part of the Legal Education Commons

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School History and Publications at UW Law Digital Commons. It has been acceptedfor inclusion in Alumni Magazines by an authorized administrator of UW Law Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected].

Recommended Citationuwlaw, Fall 2014, Vol. 68, (2014).Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/alum/6

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L E A D E R S F O R T H E G L O B A L C O M M O N G O O D

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Fall has arrived on campus and with it our newest

students. As we welcome them, it is hard for me

to believe that this is already my sixth autumn as

the dean of UW Law. In many ways, I feel like I’m

still just getting started, but when I review what

we’ve accomplished together over the last five

years, I am both gratified and optimistic about

what is still to come.

There was much to celebrate this past year as we

saw an increase in our rankings, a double-digit

increase in applications for the incoming J.D.

class and incredible placement of our faculty’s

scholarship in prestigious law journals. In these

pages, you’ll read about the next generation of

excellent scholars and teachers who have joined

the ranks of our faculty in the last five years, and

the impressive work they are doing in diverse and

important areas of the law. You’ll also read about

new programs being offered at the law school, as

we work to lead the way in the evolving world of

legal education.

Over the last year, I’ve also continued to talk

with alumni all across the country and world, and

learn what their education meant to them and

the impact it had on the trajectory of their lives.

I am again and again reminded of the global

reputation for excellence this law school enjoys. It

truly is a tremendous privilege to be a part of the

UW Law community and to serve as your dean.

Entering this new term, I am more dedicated

than ever to fulfilling our school’s mission to

educate leaders for the global common good

and to working side-by-side with my colleagues

M E S S A G E F R O M T H E D E A N

Kellye Y. TestyDean, UW School of LawJames W. Mifflin University Professor

here to provide our students with the education

and opportunities to thrive in whatever field

they choose. As we know, our graduates go on

to serve society not only as attorneys, but in all

areas of law, business, government, nonprofits,

the military, healthcare, public policy and public

service. You will read about some of these success

stories in this issue.

As I look forward to the coming year, I know that

every success this school has experienced is a

testament to the dedication, talent and hard work

of our faculty, staff, students, alumni and friends.

It is this community that will propel us into the

future, reaching even greater heights, and allow

us to continue to serve our students, our school,

our university, our profession and our world with

compassion and distinction.

Thank you all for your support of UW Law. I look

forward to seeing you soon at an upcoming event

or program.

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uwlawF A L L 2 0 1 4

A L AW DEGREE IN AC TION

Judy Runstad, ‘74 32

Charles Duan, ‘90 38

BOOKS & BE YOND 42

IN THE SPOTLIGHT 44

RECENT FACULT Y NE WS 54

CL ASS NOTES 61

IN MEMORIAM 63

REPORT TO DONORS 65

Law School News 2

UW Law Offers New J.D./M.B.A. and Masters of Jurisprudence Degree Options

UW Law Hosts 2014 Patent and Intellectual Property Law Summer Institute

LLLT Program’s First Successful Year

UW Law Sponsors New Conference on Global Health

Features

Adam Brotman, ‘95 8Leading The Digital Drive

The Next Generation 14of Excellence at UW Law

Departments

UW Law Volume 68 Fall 2014

Dean Kellye Y. Testy Editor Alison Jones

Copyright 2014 University of Washington School of Law. All rights reserved. UW Law is published once a year by the University of Washington School of Law.

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jessica Dickinson, Anna Endter, Sharon Ernst, Alison Jones, Hana Kenny, Barbara Lechtanski and Annica Mattus

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Kerry Dahlen, Matt Hagen, Raphaela Hunter, Alison Jones, Devon Kelley, Mary Levin, Hoang Nguyen and Jack Storms

DESIGN UW Creative Communications

EDITORIAL OFFICE AND SUBSCRIPTION CHANGES UW Law, William H. Gates Hall, Room 383 University of Washington School of Law Box 353020, Seattle, WA 98195-3020 Email: [email protected]

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newsLAW SCHOOL

The University of Washington School of Law introduced two new

programs that will expand its current roster of degree offerings

and provide additional flexibility and options for students.

The first, beginning in January 2015, is an accelerated J.D./M.B.A. program that enables

students to earn a J.D. from the UW School of Law and an M.B.A. from the UW Foster School of

Business in a total of four years. The second, which will begin in the fall of 2015, is the Masters

of Jurisprudence (M.J.), a one-year program intended for non-lawyers who wish to advance

their careers with a year of legal studies and training.

UW LAW OFFERS NEW

J.D. / M.B.A.

MASTERS of JURISPRUDENCE&DEGREE OPTIONS

“UW Law is committed to keeping pace with the

changing world of legal education and remains

unwavering in its commitment to providing

students with the curriculum and instruction

necessary to be successful,” said Dean Kellye

Testy. “Our society is increasingly in need of

professionals with legal training, whether it be

in business, government, healthcare or public

service, and these new programs will help our

students meet critical gaps.”

In the new joint J.D./M.B.A. program, students will

be encouraged to start the M.B.A. core courses

during their first year under the program and

start their J.D. curriculum in their second year. In

the third and fourth years of instruction, students

will complement their studies with additional

required courses and elective offerings in areas

of international business, finance and tax law.

Though most students will complete their joint

J.D./M.B.A. degree in four years, students may

accelerate their studies by pursuing summer

coursework. This allows students to prepare for

the February bar examination offered in most

jurisdictions. Most appealing is that applicants

may opt to use the GMAT as the standardized test

in lieu of the LSAT for admission purposes under

this program, and the application process has

been streamlined to make it simpler for applicants.

The M.J. degree program is designed for

those who possess a bachelor’s degree and

have a demonstrated interest in the study

of law. Students seeking the M.J. degree fit

several different profiles: undergraduates near

graduation seeking to improve their career

credentials; students in other graduate

programs who might seek or benefit from

a concurrent degree opportunity; early to

mid-level professionals working in targeted

industries in which legal issues frequently arise;

professionals seeking a change in their career

trajectory; and finally, those seeking life-long

learning opportunities.

The program is designed to be completed in

one nine-month academic year, but provides

students with the capacity to stretch their studies

over a longer period if their work and family life is

more suited to a part-time educational program.

The M.J. curriculum requires 45 quarter credits

for completion. It includes four foundational

courses: Introduction to American Law, Legal

Research, Comparative and International

Legal Traditions and a Legal Studies Writing

Seminar. Students will work with a law advisor

to design a program that best fits their career

and professional aspirations. For example, a

student working in human resources would tailor

their curriculum around employment and labor

law issues while a recent graduate seeking to

work on environmental issues might improve

their credentials by obtaining a foundation in

environmental and natural resources law.

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newsLAW SCHOOL 6

The University of Washington School of Law’s

Center for Advanced Study and Research on

Intellectual Property (CASRIP) held the annual

Patent and Intellectual Property Law Summer

Institute from July 17 to August 1, 2014,

welcoming distinguished faculty and experts

from around the world.

The CASRIP Summer Institute, widely regarded

as the benchmark for intellectual property

summer programs in the United States, teaches

the fundamentals of patent prosecution,

patent litigation and technology licensing

and management from a comparative law

perspective. Faculty included distinguished

visiting professors, UW Law faculty members,

officials from the United States Patent and

Trademark Office and litigators from Seattle,

Silicon Valley and Washington, D.C. Close to 90

patent professionals from across Asia and Europe,

including patent court judges, patent office

examiners, in-house counsel of major high tech

companies and practicing attorneys, attended this

year’s Summer Institute.

The Summer Institute included a two-day High

Technology Protection Summit, where nearly 250

attendees heard experts from around the world

discuss cutting-edge legal issues in intellectual

property law and innovation. The Honorable

UW Law Hosts 2014 Patent and Intellectual Property Law Summer Institute

7

Randall Rader, former Chief Judge of the United

States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit,

delivered the summit’s keynote address. Former

Chief Judge Rader also joined the UW Law faculty

this fall and is teaching a course on intellectual

property. The topics of this year’s summit included

“Software and Biotech Patents and International

Competitiveness,” “Patent Enforcement Strategy,”

“Ownership of Inventions Made by Employees

and University Researchers” and “Ethical Issues in

Patent Licensing.”

The Summer Institute was first offered in 1994

and is CASRIP’s hallmark program. CASRIP aims

to improve discussion and encourage dialogue

between professionals from around the world,

particularly from those countries that have major

and mature intellectual property systems, such as

Japan, European nations and the United States.

CASRIP fosters discussion of differences in the

intellectual property regimes of various countries

and studies the impact of those differences on

technological innovation and international trade.

In addition to the Summer Institute, CASRIP holds

conferences and lectures throughout the year, as

well as sponsoring visits of intellectual property

legal scholars to various countries.

20142014 Patent and Intellectual Property Law Summer Institute

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newsLAW SCHOOL 6

The University of Washington School of Law

is collaborating with the Washington State

Bar Association (WSBA) to offer paralegal

professionals the opportunity to upgrade

their credentials and become the first Limited

License Legal Technicians (LLLT) in the United

States. Washington is a national leader in

creating this new class of legal providers and

UW Law has been integrally involved in creating

and administering the first LLLT educational

program. On June 15, 2012, Washington

became the first state to adopt a LLLT Rule,

which authorizes non-attorneys who meet

certain educational requirements to advise and

assist clients in approved practice areas of law.

The purpose of this new rule, which was

adopted by the Washington Supreme Court

and went into effect on September 1, 2012, is

to create a new class of professionals who can

improve access to legal services, especially for

clients who, by reason of location or economics,

are often unrepresented in legal matters. Those

who are trained in the new program will be able

to provide independent, technical help to the

public on civil cases.

The LLLT program is designed to focus on

specific types of legal services, including

selecting and completing court forms, informing

clients of applicable procedures, reviewing

and explaining pleadings and identifying

additional documents that may be needed in

a court proceeding. The first LLLT program

focuses on family law, the first identified high-

demand practice area, and requires 15 credits

of specialty-oriented education. The program is

taught exclusively using distance learning and

has attracted students from all over Washington

state, especially from some of its most rural

areas.

The first cohort of students began the program

in January 2014 and will finish in mid-December

of this year. UW Law faculty members William

Covington, Terry Price, Tom Andrews, Lisa Kelly

and Patricia Kuszler, as well as Gail Hammer

with Gonzaga Law School and Justin Sedell with

the firm Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson,

have worked with the WSBA to create the

curriculum and teach the first iteration of the

training program. A second cohort began this

September and will finish in June 2015. UW Law

faculty members are currently working with the

WSBA and family law practitioners to create the

first licensing examination, which will take place

in March of next year.

LLLTPROGR AM’S FIRST SUCCESSFUL YEAR AT UW L AW

Limited License Legal Technicians

7

UW Law Sponsors New Conference on

Global Health

From July 14 to July 18, the University of

Washington School of Law hosted some of the

world’s leading global health experts at William

H. Gates Hall as part of the first-ever Global

Health Law Summer Institute, entitled “The

Access Challenge.”

The five day institute brought together

representatives from academia, national

governments, foundations, NGOs and the

private sector to discuss the role of law and

legal solutions in enhancing the global health

delivery infrastructure. Participants heard from

leading experts in law, science, intellectual

property, environmental policy and sustainable

development about overcoming access barriers

to health services, products and scientific

innovations.

Dr. Allyn Taylor of Georgetown University and

Bruce Plotkin, International Health Regulations

Secretariat Team Lead of the World Health

Organization, launched the Institute by addressing

the role of international law in improving access

to health care. The second day featured Juan

Carlos Botero, the Executive Director of the

World Justice Project, and Thomas J. Bollyky, the

Senior Fellow for Global Health, Economics, and

Development at the Council on Foreign Relations.

On the third day, Richard Wilder of the Bill and

Melinda Gates Foundation and Professor Margaret

Chon of Seattle University addressed intellectual

property issues that arise when new technology is

introduced into developing countries.

Professor Kristie Ebi, an expert on the effects

of, and adaptation to, climate change, food

borne safety and vector borne diseases, and Jeff

Riedinger ‘80, Vice Provost of Global Affairs at

the University of Washington, were the keynote

speakers on the fourth day of the Institute, which

addressed how environmental law affects global

health. The General Counsel of PATH, Dan

Laster, launched the final day, which focused on

how global health interventions can be created,

developed and delivered in a way that reduces

global health disparities and enhances access and

justice.

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Starbucks Executive

Adam Brotmanis Leading the Digital Drive

and Staying True to

his Entrepreneurial Roots

By Sharon Ernst

He’s a UW School of Law alumnus,

past editor of the Washington Law

Review and a former attorney at

Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe.

But Adam Brotman ‘95 is famous

for reasons that have little to do

with his legal background. Search

for his name on the Internet and

you’ll find a page full of links to

articles on Brotman’s role as the

Chief Digital Officer at Starbucks,

enhancing customer experiences

in coffeehouses and on screens

around the world.

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Brotman is a key member of the executive team

at Starbucks, where he leads the company’s

digital innovations. His career path has taken a

few sharp turns since law school, as he switched

from corporate attorney to entrepreneur to Chief

Digital Officer, but these were all part of his plan

to get him where he wanted to be.

Following in his family’s footsteps

Attending law school was Brotman’s way into a

career that was almost predestined for him. In fact,

Adam Brotman’s entrepreneurial bent is practically

genetic. To be a Brotman is to be an entrepreneur.

His grandfather, Bernie Brotman, was a famous

retailer in the Northwest. He first opened a men’s

clothing store with his brothers, then started his

own store, Bernie’s Men’s Wear, in Tacoma in 1950.

Soon after, he was opening stores in Seattle. By

the 1970s, he had 18 stores in the Northwest.

Adam’s father, Michael Brotman, has been

described as a serial entrepreneur. Michael is

the founder of the retail stores Simply Seattle,

founded in 1989, and the Chocolate Box, founded

in 2007, and he has taught business classes for

undergraduates at the University of Washington.

Another standout among Adam Brotman’s

entrepreneurial family is his uncle Jeffrey Brotman,

who co-founded Costco in 1983. Jeffrey is also an

alumnus of the UW School of Law, graduating in

1967.

Adam came of age amid all of this entrepreneurial

activity and at a time when the Northwest was in

the early stages of becoming a region renowned

for startups.

“At an early age, I watched my dad and

grandfather start a number of retail concepts,”

says Brotman. “I watched my uncle Jeff found

Costco. I watched as Howard Schultz founded

Il Giornale and then bought Starbucks. I saw

Microsoft get started. All of that happened right

around me when I was in elementary school

and high school, and I was as interested in that

as I was the Seahawks and my schoolwork.

I was determined to do something similarly

entrepreneurial. I related to the idea of building

something. I guess I always thought of myself as

an entrepreneur based on how much those role

models fired me up and how much I could relate

to that fire inside.”

Law school as a stepping stone

At the UW School of Law, Brotman was a

distinguished student. He served as co-Editor-

in-Chief of the Washington Law Review, and

immediately found a position with a well-known

firm after graduation. By all accounts, Brotman

promised to be a successful lawyer, but that

was not his plan. His law degree was only the

stepping stone to what he really wanted to do:

something entrepreneurial.

“I went to law school because at 21 years old I

thought it was the best way to get into corporate

law, which I felt was the best way to get into the

boardroom,” Brotman explains. “I watched how

my uncle Jeff had done the same thing in the ‘70s.

Most people going to law school were learning

how to be litigators. I wanted to learn how to be a

great business lawyer, knowing that I would jump

into the business world at my first chance.”

After earning his J.D. in 1995, Brotman was hired

as a corporate attorney at the Seattle office of

Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe. He worked

in corporate finance, assisting with IPOs as well

as intellectual property matters and helping

startups with incorporations. This gave him the

kind of experience he was seeking as a lawyer,

and his much-anticipated chance to jump into the

business world appeared the following year.

“I didn’t know it would happen so quickly,”

he says. “But when I saw the opportunity to

do something disruptive in the digital space, I

couldn’t help myself.”

From attorney to entrepreneur

In the fall of 1996, Brotman founded a digital

music startup called PlayNetwork. While starting

a new business is always a risky endeavor,

launching PlayNetwork was a particularly bold

move, as it predated the tech startup frenzy that

later hit Seattle. By comparison, Google was still

just a research project at Stanford. And Brotman

was only 27 years old.

When asked how he went from attorney to

entrepreneur, Brotman says he just did it. “I just

dove into the deep end, head first,” he says.

“There isn’t a ‘playbook’ for how you do that,

especially as a first time entrepreneur. I’m lucky

that my dad, mom, uncle and grandparents were

all entrepreneurs. I had a sense of the hard work,

determination and sense of purpose and passion

required, from growing up around it. And I leaned

on other entrepreneurs for peer-to-peer advice

and read every business biography and business

book I could get my hands on.”

PlayNetwork provided custom, in-store music

for businesses. This was a niche market in retail,

and a far cry from corporate law. Heading up

PlayNetwork required that Brotman manage every

aspect of a brand new business, from raising $10

million in venture capital to strategic planning

to marketing, not to mention recruiting talent

and negotiating licenses. It also meant a daily

immersion in digital media and a focus on the

customer experience, two areas vastly outside of

his legal experience and entrepreneurial vision,

but which would come into play in his role at

Starbucks.

“ I watched my uncle Jeff found Costco. I watched as Howard Schultz

founded Il Giornale and then bought Starbucks. I saw Microsoft

get started. All of that happened right around me when I was in

elementary school and high school, and I was as interested in that

as I was the Seahawks and my schoolwork.”

ADAM BROTMAN

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In 2001, Brotman was named one of the “40

under 40” by the Puget Sound Business Journal

in recognition of his leadership. By the time he

left PlayNetwork in 2006, the company was doing

over $30 million in annual sales.

Next, Brotman joined the executive team at

the digital image licensing company Corbis as

a senior vice president, where he once again

took on many roles as he managed the in-house

startup snapvillage.com, now veer.com.

The drive toward digital

After two years at Corbis and a brief stint as CEO

at Barefoot Yoga Company, Brotman arrived

at Starbucks. He was hired to be the senior

vice president and general manager of Digital

Ventures, and was soon named Chief Digital

Officer. In that position, he has led the strategy,

roadmap and delivery of the digital platform

across Starbucks. He is also a key member of

Starbucks’ senior leadership.

He continues to be entrepreneurial even in

this new role. At the helm of all things digital

at Starbucks, Brotman has led initiatives for

payments by mobile devices, the launch of the

Starbucks Digital Network, free Wi-Fi in Starbucks

stores, a more robust e-commerce platform

and apps for both the iPhone and Android. In

addition, Brotman has been involved with building

a platform for social media engagement and

building the Starbucks card and loyalty programs.

Brotman’s use of technology might be delivered

via smart phones and laptops, but the intention

behind this digital media is to provide an

enhanced customer experience that builds

brand loyalty and engagement. To that end,

Brotman oversaw the use of social media to

attract customers and keep them engaged with

the brand. With over 68 million global fans on

Facebook, over 6 million followers on Twitter and

almost 3 million followers on Instagram, the world’s

largest coffee shop chain is using social media to

attract real world fans and customers.

Brotman wants to flex that social media muscle for

more than just sales, however, and use it for the

good of the community as well. Brotman was a

champion for Starbucks’ Create Jobs for USA, an

initiative launched in 2011 in partnership with the

Opportunity Finance Network that uses capital

grants to fund loans to community businesses in

order to create new jobs and sustain existing ones.

Brotman’s efforts have won praise, as well as

results. In 2012, Fast Company recognized

Brotman as the third most creative person of the

year for his work initiating mobile payments at

Starbucks stores by combining existing technology

instead of developing new systems. While it hasn’t

always been easy for Brotman, he is unabashed

in his determination to take Starbucks as far as

he can into the digital arena, utilizing technology

wherever it makes sense to complement the

ultimate coffeehouse customer experience.

Brotman might be entrepreneurial and energetic

in his professional life, tackling cutting-edge

technology and pushing innovation in pursuit of

brand loyalty, but when it comes to the caffeine

that jumpstarts his busy days, he’s not ordering

anything complicated. He’s all business, and he’ll

take a simple tall drip coffee, saving his creative

inspiration for the office.

In 2012, Fast Company recognized

Brotman as the third most creative

person of the year.

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the

of Excellence at uw lawMembers of our faculty are leaders in their fields, distinguished scholars,

respected practitioners and dedicated educators. They bring their

scholarship and research to bear on the critical legal issues of our time

and provide our students with the skills and instruction that will shape their

futures and our society.

Over the last five years, the ranks of our renowned faculty have grown to

include a new group of professors who are carrying on this tradition of

excellence and expanding UW Law’s reputation for diverse scholarship and

cutting-edge research. Some of the sharpest legal minds in the country are

hard at work in the offices and classrooms of William H. Gates Hall, and the

school’s tradition of faculty excellence carries on, alive and well in their hands.

Next CYBERLAW

ENTREPRENEURSHIP

LAND REFORM

ELECTIONS CIVIL LITIGATION

CHILD ADVOCACY

CRIMINAL LAW

INTERNATIONAL

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

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The University of Washington School of Law has a long and

storied tradition of faculty excellence throughout its

115-year history. We have faculty who have won Supreme

Court cases, pioneered areas of uncharted legal theory

and practice, founded innovative non-profits and brought

together cohorts of interdisciplinary colleagues to solve

cross-cutting challenges.

Generat ion

1918

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Professor Mary Fan’s research and teaching are

informed by her experiences as a former federal

prosecutor and as an Associate Legal Officer at

the first international criminal tribunal since the

World War II era. She has authored numerous

publications about criminal justice and harm

prevention. She also collaborates on injury and

violence prevention research as a core faculty

member at Harborview Medical Center’s Injury

Prevention & Research Center.

Professor Fan is an elected member of the

American Law Institute (ALI) and an elected fellow

of the American Bar Association, as well as an

advisor to the ALI’s Model Penal Code: Sexual

Assault and Related Crimes Project. She is also

a two-time recipient of the Dean’s Medal for

excellence in teaching, research and service.

After graduating from Yale Law School in 2003,

Professor Fan clerked for the Hon. John T.

Noonan, Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the

Ninth Circuit and studied as a Gates Cambridge

Scholar. She worked at the U.S. Attorney’s Office

in the Southern District of California and at the

International Criminal Tribunal for the Former

Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague.

CRIMINAL LAW Ò GUN VIOLENCE Ò

IMMIGRATION Ò

Professor Fan is frequently interviewed by the

media on criminal law and procedure matters,

and her research has been featured in popular

venues. Most recently, her forthcoming article

“Disarming the Dangerous: Preventing Ordinary

and Extraordinary Violence” was highlighted in the

Wall Street Journal and the ABA Journal.

In addition to her forthcoming article on gun

violence, which focuses on who the dangerous

individuals committing most firearms homicides

are and why the law’s current screens miss them,

other examples of her most recent works include

“Extending Executioner Confidentiality to Lethal

Injection Drug Suppliers,” forthcoming in the

Boston University Law Review, “Legalization

Conflicts and Reliance Defenses,” forthcoming

in the Washington University Law Review,

“Adversarial Justice’s Casualties,” in the Boston

College Law Review and “Post-Racial Proxy

Battles,” published in the book Strange Neighbors

by NYU Press.

MARY

FAN

18

If you read about Amazon’s plans to launch a

fleet of delivery drones, saw a headline about

Facebook’s emotional manipulation study, or

heard about Google’s work to get self-driving

cars on the road, then there’s a good chance

Professor Ryan Calo’s name came up in the article

or conversation.

Named by Business Insider as one of the “Most

Important People Working in Robotics,” Professor

Calo has focused his scholarship on some of the

most cutting edge, and controversial, issues facing

society today, ranging from the legal and policy

implications of robots to the promise and perils

of big data. His presentation at this summer’s

Aspen Ideas Festival about the need to create a

federal agency to help integrate robotics sparked

significant interest among lawyers, academics

and lawmakers, and led to a white paper with

the Brookings Institute and an op-ed in Scientific

American.

In addition to teaching torts, as well as robotics,

law and policy at UW Law, Professor Calo also

spent last year serving as the inaugural director

of UW’s new Tech Policy Lab, an interdisciplinary

Ñ ROBOTICS Ñ CYBERLAW Ñ DRONES

RYAN

CALO

collaboration between the UW School of Law,

Information School and Computer Science and

Engineering that serves as both an intellectual

hub and resource center for policymakers and

technologists. Students and faculty in the Lab

identify, test and examine new technologies

in order to provide policymakers with a

rigorous research base and evidence-based

recommendations for decision-making.

Before coming to UW Law, Professor Calo

served as a director at the Stanford Law School

Center for Internet and Society (CIS) where he

remains an Affiliate Scholar. He also worked as

an associate in the Washington, D.C. office of

Covington & Burling LLP and clerked for the

Honorable R. Guy Cole on the U.S. Court of

Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.

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Professor Melissa J. Durkee joined UW Law’s

faculty in 2013 after leaving private practice at a

leading international law firm in New York. Her

teaching and research focuses on the intersection

between business and international law, with an

emphasis on global governance, business roles

in transnational regulation and treaties. Professor

Durkee co-chairs the Junior International Law

Scholars Association and serves on a committee of

the American Society of International Law.

Her most recent publication, “Persuasion Treaties,”

published in the Virginia Law Review, identifies

a fundamental difference between two kinds of

treaty promise. Professor Durkee argues that when

nation-states sign and ratify “persuasion” treaties,

they commit to changing the behavior of non-state

actors through domestic regulation or some other

means. Professor Durkee argues that persuasion

treaties merit systematic study because many

critical global problems cannot be addressed

without them. An article she authored in the

Columbia Human Rights Law Review, “Beyond the

Guantánamo Bind: Pragmatic Multilateralism in

Refugee Resettlement,” proposes a multilateral

approach to resettlement of refugee-detainees

INTERNATIONAL LAW Ò

TREATIES Ò

BUSINESS ROLES IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Ò

MELISSA

DURKEE

at the U.S. naval station in Guantánamo Bay,

Cuba, and other situations in which nation-states

are pressured to skirt international law to avoid

responsibility for politically delicate refugee

problems.

After graduating from Yale Law School in 2004,

Professor Durkee clerked for the Honorable Kim

McLane Wardlaw of the U.S. Court of Appeals

for the Ninth Circuit, followed by a clerkship with

the Honorable Sidney H. Stein on the U.S. District

Court for the Southern District of New York. Prior

to entering academia, Professor Durkee practiced

international litigation and arbitration in the New

York office of Clearly Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton

LLP. While there, she litigated a diverse array of

cases on behalf of multinational corporations,

financial institutions and foreign sovereigns, as

well as successfully represented a Guantánamo

detainee who was released and acquitted of all

charges in Algeria. Before joining the UW Law

faculty, Professor Durkee served as an Associate-

in-Law at Columbia Law School.

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Ñ COPYRIGHT Ñ PATENT LAW

Ñ INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

ZAHR

SAID

Professor Zahr Said spent two weeks this past

summer in New York City with 14 other professors

from around the country participating in the

Advertising Educational Foundation’s Visiting

Professor Program. She was the only legal

professor selected for the prestigious fellowship,

designed for professors of advertising, marketing,

communications and the liberal arts to learn about

the day-to-day operations of advertising agencies

and media companies.

This experience was right in Professor Said’s

wheelhouse, given her teaching and research

interests. Professor Said teaches torts, as well as

the copyright section of UW Law’s intellectual

property curriculum. She also teaches advertising,

IP innovations and an IP seminar for Ph.D.

students. In 2013, she published two articles on

intellectual property and copyright law, in the

Washington Law Review and the Cardozo Law

Review, respectively. Professor Said’s most recent

article, “Reforming Copyright Interpretation,” is

forthcoming in the Harvard Journal of Law and

Technology in the spring of 2015. Professor Said

also currently serves as Chair-Elect of the AALS

section on Intellectual Property.

She joined the faculty at UW Law in 2011 after

teaching at the University of Virginia School of

Law for three years. Professor Said earned her

B.A. from U.C. Berkeley; her J.D. from Columbia,

where she served as Articles Editor for the

Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts and was a

Kent Scholar; and a Ph.D. in comparative literature

from Harvard University.

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Professor Sanne Knudsen joined the UW Law

faculty in 2011, tasked with helping to grow

the school’s long tradition of excellence and

leadership in environmental law, and she has

been hard at work for the last three years doing

just that.

Last summer, Professor Knudsen’s article “The

Long Term Tort: In Search of New Causal

Paradigm for Natural Resource Damages,” which

was published in the Northwestern University

Law Review, was one of only 18 papers selected

for presentation at the prestigious 2013 Junior

Faculty Forum, sponsored by the Yale, Harvard

and Stanford law schools. The article examines

the challenge of recovering natural resource

damages for harms that do not manifest until

years after an oil spill. She also co-authored an

amicus brief that was cited in two separate U.S.

Supreme Court opinions in Decker v. NEDC, for

its incites to Seminole Rock deference to agency

interpretations, and filed an additional amicus

brief in U.S. EPA v. EME Homer City Generation,

NATURAL RESOURCES Ò CONSERVATION Ò

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW Ò

which focused on interstate air pollution and the

air quality of states that are downwind of smog-

generating states. Her latest article, “Adversarial

Science,” which examines the influence of

litigation on science, is forthcoming in the Iowa

Law Review. In addition to all this, Professor

Knudsen teaches courses in natural resources law,

civil procedure and administrative law.

Professor Knudsen received a B.S. in

Environmental Engineering from Northwestern

University, an M.S. in Environmental Engineering

from the University of Michigan, and a J.D. from

the University of Michigan. After graduating

from law school, she clerked for the Honorable

Ronald M. Gould on the U.S. Court of Appeals for

the Ninth Circuit and went on to practice law in

the area of environmental litigation at Faegre &

Benson in Minneapolis, and Sidley, Austin Brown

& Wood in Chicago. While at Faegre, Professor

Knudsen represented numerous environmental

public interest organizations on a pro bono basis.

Her clients included Defenders of Wildlife, the

Humane Society of the United States, Sierra Club,

Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness and

Northeastern Minnesotans for Wilderness.

SANNE

KNUDSEN

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Ñ ENTREPRENEURSHIP Ñ PRO BONO

Ñ INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

When Projected Talent, a company connecting

undergraduate students to businesses looking for

skilled workers, was selected as the grand prize

winner at the UW Business Plan Competition,

it came as no surprise that it was a client of UW

Law’s Entrepreneurial Law Clinic (ELC). Since the

ELC’s inception in 2006, it has represented nearly

every grand prize winner of the competition.

Professor Jennifer Fan, who began her fifth year

with the UW School of Law this fall, serves as the

managing director of the ELC, an innovative clinic

that serves entrepreneurs throughout the Pacific

Northwest by pairing law and business students

with pro bono attorneys and business advisors

to provide critical early stage legal and business

counseling. She has significantly expanded

the clinic’s work on a number of fronts. Under

Professor Fan’s leadership, the clinic served 33

ventures in 2013-2014. It currently has over 50

attorneys participating in the program, including

from companies such as Amazon, Boeing and

Starbucks, and students and attorneys provided

more than 5,000 hours in pro bono services in

the 2013-2014 school year. During Professor

Fan’s tenure, the ELC was selected to be a part

of the United States Patent and Trademark

Office’s law school clinic certification pilot

program for trademarks and patents. She also

expanded the ELC’s collaboration with the UW

Center for Commercialization, which provides

commercialization support for faculty.

In addition to managing the clinic, Professor Fan

also teaches a course on venture capital deals,

and is actively involved with UW Law’s Center

for Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual

Property (CASRIP). She created an intellectual

property management track for this year’s CASRIP

Summer Institute in which nearly 50 people

participated. Before joining the faculty at UW

Law, Professor Fan was a senior associate in the

corporate securities group at Wilson Sonsini

Goodrich & Rosati, and was also the inaugural

director of the Pro Bono Program of the John and

Terry Levin Center for Public Service and Public

Interest Law at Stanford Law School. Professor

Fan conducts research on startups, the innovation

ecosystem and clinical education.

JENNIFER

FAN

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WEALTH Ò ESTATE PLANNING Ò

PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY Ò

Professor Hatfield’s primary research interest

is in taxation, especially legal ethics for tax

lawyers. He has also written on legal ethics

more generally, as well as trusts, estates and law

and religion. His articles have been published

in the Florida Tax Review, Tax Notes, the

Northwestern Law Review Colloquy, the NYU

Annual Survey of American Law, the Journal

of Law and Religion, the Lewis and Clark Law

Review, the Baylor Law Review and the Texas

Tech Law Review. He wrote the e-Langdell

e-casebook on legal ethics for tax lawyers,

co-edited an anthology on legal ethics for tax

lawyers published by the UW Gallagher Library

and wrote an essay for an anthology on torture

published by the Johns Hopkins University

Press.

MICHAEL

HATFIELD

Professor Michael Hatfield joined the faculty in

2014, after serving as a visiting professor since

2012. Previously, Professor Hatfield taught at Texas

Tech University, where he served as the associate

dean for faculty development and research.

Prior to joining that faculty in 2005, he was a

shareholder at Schoenbaum, Curphy & Scanlan,

P.C., in San Antonio, Texas where his practice was

devoted to taxation and estate planning. He was

previously an associate in the tax department of

Debevoise & Plimpton and the estate planning

department of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. He is

a 1996 graduate of New York University School of

Law. He teaches courses in taxation, legal ethics,

and trusts and estates.

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Ñ TAXATION Ñ TAX ABUSE

Ñ FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

SHANNON

MCCORMACK

Professor Shannon McCormack joined UW Law’s

faculty in 2012, bringing with her a wealth of

knowledge in the laws of taxation acquired from

both her scholarship and practice.

After graduating from Harvard Law School in

2003, Professor McCormack practiced as a tax

associate at Davis Polk and Wardwell’s New York

office from 2003 to 2004, where she focused

primarily in the area of financial products,

analyzing the tax consequences of complicated

hybrid instruments. She then clerked for the

Honorable Joseph H. Gale at the United States

Tax Court in Washington, D.C. until 2005. Before

returning to Harvard as a Climenko Fellow, a

program for promising legal scholars with high

academic achievements and a strong interest in

teaching, in the summer of 2006, she received her

LL.M. in taxation from Georgetown University.

Professor McCormack’s legal and scholarship

interests are generally in the area of federal

taxation, and more specifically in the areas

of tax abuse, tax shelters and international

taxation. She published an article in the

Florida Law Review last year, titled “Tax Abuse

According To Whom?” in which she writes

about U.S. Treasury Department’s ability to

prevent aggressive tax behavior through

retroactive tax regulation and ambiguities in

federal law related to tax abuse.

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SECURITIES REGULATION Ò MERGERS Ò

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Ò

securities regulation, corporate governance and

business acquisitions. She was recently appointed

to the role of Associate Dean for Research

and Faculty Development and also recently

received UW Law’s Faculty Scholarship Award

for Excellence in Law Review Articles. Professor

Krug’s scholarly focus is primarily in securities

regulation, particularly relating to the regulation

of investment advisers, public and private

investment funds and other financial institutions,

such as broker-dealers and banks.

Prior to joining UW Law in 2010, she was a

practitioner-in-residence and adjunct professor

at the University of California Hastings College

of the Law and lecturer at the University of

California Berkeley School of Law, where she was

also a research fellow at the Berkeley Center for

Law, Business and the Economy. Her extensive

private sector experience as an equity partner

with Howard Rice (now Arnold & Porter) in

San Francisco, where her securities practice

revolved around advising investment advisory

firms and representing institutional investors in

connection with their investments in private funds,

established her as a leading expert in the field.

ANITA

KRUG

Professor Anita Krug, UW Law’s resident expert

on mergers and acquisitions (M&A), recently

helped found an innovative new institute devoted

to creating best practices and interdisciplinary

knowledge sharing in the M&A community. The

Pacific Rim M&A Institute, based in Seattle, is a

collaborative effort of the UW School of Law, the

UW Foster School of Business and the firm Davis

Wright Tremaine.

This work comes as an addition to Professor

Krug’s other scholarly interests and pursuits. Her

forthcoming article for the Boston University Law

Review titled “Downstream Securities Regulation,”

is noted as “the first scholarly work to articulate

how securities regulation encompasses two

distinct spheres of regulation, each of which

is based on its own core principles — and,

importantly, each of which necessitates its own

regulatory approaches.” Professor Krug’s recent

scholarship has also appeared or will appear in the

Columbia Law Review, the Southern California Law

Review and the Iowa Law Review.

In addition to her extensive scholarly work,

Professor Krug also teaches business and

securities law courses, including courses on

26

Ñ CIVIL PROCEDURE Ñ TORTS

Ñ COMPLEX LITIGATION

Professor Elizabeth Porter has had a truly

exceptional year as a scholar and as a teacher.

Her scholarship focuses on the influence of

broader cultural trends on the structure and

substance of civil litigation. Her most recent

article, “Taking Images Seriously,” which critiques

the emergent phenomenon of multimedia written

legal argument, will be published in the Columbia

Law Review this November.

A former high school teacher with an Ed.M. from

Harvard Graduate School of Education, Professor

Porter has also been widely recognized for her

teaching. Professor Porter’s classes are marked by

rigor, enthusiasm and innovation. For example,

last spring she created a new complex litigation

course in which students are assessed on a series

of simulated legal filings rather than an exam or

traditional paper. In this way, Professor Porter

seeks to combine deep doctrinal instruction with

practical, hit-the-ground-running legal skills. In

recognition of her dedication to teaching, she has

received UW Law’s Philip A. Trautman Professor

of the Year Award three times, including most

recently in 2014. In addition, last June she was

honored with a university-wide Distinguished

Teaching Award, which is given to only seven

faculty members each year across the three

campuses of the University of Washington.

After earning an M.A. and J.D. from Columbia

University in 2000, Professor Porter clerked for

the Honorable Sidney R. Thomas of the Ninth

Circuit Court of Appeals, followed by a clerkship

with the Honorable Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

of the United States Supreme Court. Prior to

joining the UW Law faculty, she practiced at the

law firm of Jenner & Block in Washington, D.C.,

where she also served as a visiting assistant

professor at Catholic University of America’s

Columbus School of Law.

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ELIZABETH

PORTER

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Professor Lisa Manheim’s scholarly focus has a

broad and national reach in the exploration of the

role of courts in a democracy. Professor Manheim

has the experience to match this area of focus,

as she clerked for the Honorable Anthony M.

Kennedy on the United States Supreme Court and

the Honorable Pierre N. Leval on the United States

Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

In her recent article for the Boston University

Law Review, “Redistricting Litigation and the

Delegation of Democratic Design,” Professor

Manheim explores the role that litigants play in

the redistricting process. The article argues “that

while litigant participation reflects a troubling

delegation of democratic design, virtually

anyone with sufficient resources and an interest

in electoral lines has the opportunity to litigate

as a form of redistricting.” The article proposes a

series of reforms meant to increase transparency,

improve representativeness and reduce

opportunities for procedural manipulation.

CIVIL PROCEDURE Ò ELECTIONS Ò

U.S. SUPREME COURT Ò

Professor Manheim’s scholarly work on democracy

also informs her work in the classroom. This fall

she will be teaching UW Law’s new course on

election law, which Professor Manheim has added

to her current teaching portfolio of constitutional

law and federal courts. Professor Manheim also

recently co-taught an undergraduate student

seminar about diversity and the rule of law, which

focused heavily on the recently published memoir,

My Beloved World, written by United States

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Prior to joining UW Law in 2011, Manheim litigated

extensively in state and federal courts while

working on a range of matters, including those

involving political law, constitutional claims,

commercial contract disputes and intellectual

property, as an associate at the Seattle law firm

Perkins Coie.

LISA

MANHEIM

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Ñ TRIBAL COURTS

Ñ PUBLIC POLICY Ñ PUBLIC DEFENSE

BRENDA

WILLIAMS

After serving for 10 years as a public defender at

the Defender Association in Seattle, representing

clients in all areas of public defense, Brenda

Williams brought this experience to the UW

School of Law, where she is now a lecturer and

co-director of the Tribal Court Public Defense

Clinic. The Tribal Court Public Defense Clinic,

part of the UW School of Law’s Clinical Legal

Education Program and also its 15-year old Native

American Law Center, serves as the primary public

defender for the Tulalip Tribes. This innovative

partnership addresses the Tribes’ need for legal

representation, resulting in the clinic formation in

July 2002.

The Tribal Clinic provides unique and challenging

opportunities for law students through the

representation of persons charged with

misdemeanor offenses in the Tulalip Tribal Court.

Since its inception, UW Law students have handled

more than 2,000 criminal cases to resolution,

through trial, plea or dismissal, and several habeas

petitions in the Tulalip Court of Appeals.

The work of the clinic, and that of Professor

Williams, has recently expanded, due to

changes in federal law. In June of 2013, the U.S.

Congress reauthorized the Violence Against

Women Act (VAWA), a wide-sweeping bill that

funds investigation and prosecution of violent

crimes against women, imposes automatic

and mandatory restitution on those convicted

and allows civil damages in cases that aren’t

prosecuted. For Tribes, a key component is

the legislative recognition of the inherent

authority of tribal governments to prosecute

domestic violence crimes. The jurisdictional

acknowledgment includes the prosecution of

non-native persons, a recognition of criminal

jurisdiction unseen since the Oliphant decision

in 1978. The Tulalip Tribes is currently one of

only three tribes nationwide and the only tribe

in Washington State selected as a pilot tribe to

exercise this special domestic violence criminal

jurisdiction.

In addition to the recent VAWA amendments,

Professor Williams conducts research on the

history of tribal court actions and the habeas

corpus procedures of the Indian Civil Rights Act.

Habeas corpus practice has evolved from the time

of treaty making through the recent amendments

to the Indian Civil Rights Act. Professor Williams

focuses her research on this evolution.

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Professor David Ziff, one of UW Law’s newest

lecturers, teaches legal analysis, research and

writing to first-year students and trial-level motion

drafting to upper-level students. To inform his

teaching methods, Professor Ziff draws on his

extensive history in private practice. “Whether

I’m working with the class as a whole or with

individual students, we’re all trying to get to the

same place: an effectively written final product,”

says Ziff. “Different students, like different lawyers,

might choose to get there in different ways. And

that’s fine. My job is to help the students learn the

judgment to decide which methods of analysis and

expression are most effective, and then to figure

out how best to execute their chosen method.”

In addition to his work in the classroom, Professor

Ziff maintains a strong connection to current legal

issues. He writes a well-read legal blog and is

active on social media, where he writes about a

variety of legal topics, including the Affordable

Care Act, the recent decision by the Seattle City

Council to enact a $15 minimum wage and the

National Security Agency’s data collection, just to

name a few.

WHITE COLLAR CRIME Ò

CIVIL LITIGATION Ò CRIMINAL DEFENSE Ò

DAVID

ZIFF

“Since leaving practice, I’ve stayed connected with

the latest practice-related legal developments

and I try to incorporate those current events into

my teaching,” says Ziff. “When teaching students

about seemingly abstract concepts like holding or

precedent, I think linking those concepts to real

world examples helps the students understand

the practical effects of what they’re learning.

Moreover, as they struggle to wrap their heads

around an idea or try to find the ‘right answer,’ it

is often a comfort to see that experienced lawyers

and judges are themselves trying to figure out

these complicated issues.”

Professor Ziff received his J.D. in 2005 from

Columbia Law School, where he was the Executive

Managing Editor of the Columbia Law Review.

He then clerked for Judge Gerard E. Lynch on

the Southern District of New York and then-Chief

Judge Dennis Jacobs on the Second Circuit Court

of Appeals. He then spent several years working

in private practice on civil and criminal litigation.

Professor Ziff is also a part-time volunteer advisor

for the national champion Seattle Preparatory

School mock trial team.

30

Professor Kimberly Ambrose’s strong background

in advocacy for youth, adolescents and indigent

adults in the area of criminal defense has informed

not only her research, teaching and scholarship,

but also her efforts to pass this legacy on to her

students both locally and abroad. She is a senior

lecturer and also the director of the Race and

Justice Clinic, a clinic she founded in 2011 that

focuses on racial disparities in the juvenile justice

system and the “school-to-prison pipeline.”

Professor Ambrose also created and taught UW

Law’s Legislative Advocacy Clinic, a clinic that

continues to train students in the legislative

process, including drafting bills, working with

coalitions and advocating for laws that better

serve youth and their communities.

For the past three years, through UW Law’s Asian

Law Center, Professor Ambrose has worked

on the United States Agency for International

Development funded project “E2J,” Educating

& Equipping Tomorrow’s Justice Reformers. This

project has helped develop clinical legal education

in eight universities in Indonesia. Indonesian law

professors attend UW Law to earn their LL.M.

degree and learn Ambrose’s clinical teaching

methods. As part of the project, Professor

Ambrose just completed her third trip to Indonesia

in September, where she conducted trainings at

seven universities throughout the country.

This past May, Professor Ambrose and students

from the Race and Justice Clinic participated in

the Washington State Supreme Court Symposium

put on by the Minority and Justice Commission

titled, “Looking to the Future: Adolescent Brain

Development and the Juvenile Justice System.”

The students appeared before the Justices and

presented the stories of youth who have been or

are currently incarcerated. Professor Ambrose was

also recently selected by King County Executive,

Dow Constantine ’89, and appointed by the King

County Council to serve a three-year term on the

first King County Public Defense Advisory Board.

As part of this new board Ambrose will review the

activities and plans of the Department of Public

Defense, advocate for high-quality public defense,

assist in the selection of the Public Defender and

advise the executive and council on matters of

equity and social justice related to public defense.

KIM

AMBROSE

Ñ CHILD ADVOCACY Ñ RACE AND JUSTICE

Ñ CRIMINAL JUSTICE

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UW Leaders on Law Faculty

Jeffrey Riedinger came to the University of

Washington School of Law as a student in 1977

to study and work with Professor Roy Prosterman,

building upon an interest in land tenure security

and land reform that he developed as an

undergraduate at Dartmouth. Although Riedinger

graduated from UW Law in 1980, his interests and

passion kept him close to the school, and the two

have been working together in one capacity or

another ever since. In 1981, he helped Professor

Prosterman establish the Rural Development

Institute (now Landesa), the world’s first non-

governmental organization designed specifically

for partnering with governments to extend land

rights to the world’s poorest people, housed at

the time at the law school.

Riedinger, now an expert on the political economy

of land reform and sustainable agriculture and

natural resource management, has travelled

around the world in the decades since he first

came to UW Law, conducting research in East

and Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Central

America, the Middle East and South Asia. He has

conducted briefings on foreign aid, land reform

and other development issues for members of the

White House staff, state department and USAID

personnel, members of Congress and their staff,

World Bank, non-governmental organizations and

private foundations.

Last fall, however, he returned to his alma

mater, leaving his post as professor and dean of

International Studies and Programs at Michigan

State University to become the vice provost for

global affairs at the University of Washington.

Riedinger also has a faculty appointment at

the UW School of Law, joining the ranks of his

mentor and friend, Professor Prosterman, now an

emeritus member of the faculty.

JEFFREY RIEDINGER

Michael K. Young, president of the University

of Washington, is no stranger to the world of

law. Prior to coming to the UW, President Young

studied law at Harvard, clerked for the late

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William H.

Rehnquist, spent 20 years teaching at Columbia

Law School and was the dean of the George

Washington University Law School.

When he became president of the UW in July

2011, he also joined the faculty at UW Law,

bringing with him his decades of experience in

international law, with a special focus on Asian

law. He has published extensively on a wide range

of topics, including the Japanese legal system,

international trade law, international human rights

and freedom of religion. During his time at the

UW, he has published two books and six major

law review articles. The second edition of his most

recent textbook, International Environmental Law:

Cases, Materials, and Problems, will be published

this fall.

MICHAEL K. YOUNG

President Young spoke at the law school this past

winter as part of the Asian Law Center’s Lecture

Series and delivered a talk titled “Japanese

Attitudes Toward Contracts: An Empirical

Wrinkle in the Debate.” He founded the Centers

for Japanese and Korean Legal Studies during

his time at Columbia and remains an active

scholar. He will be traveling to Keio University in

Japan this December, joined by Dean Testy, to

deliver the keynote address at the International

Symposium on Global Legal Education, an event

co-sponsored by UW Law.

In addition to counting some of the best and brightest up and coming legal

teachers and scholars amongst its ranks, the UW Law faculty also includes

distinguished members of the university administration, who offer decades of

experience and extensive expertise.

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in ActionA Law Degree

JUDY RUNSTAD, ’74

If you made a movie about Judy Runstad’s life, you might call it “Right Time,

Right Place.” Both professionally and personally, Runstad ‘74 has spent the

past 40 years helping to shape Seattle into the city it is today. Along the way,

she has experienced her own growth and development inside the office and

out of it, as she has worn the hats of both counsel and community leader in

equal measure, often at the same time.

Judy RunstadA FORTUITOUS LIFE

Has Spent 40 Years Helping to Shape

Seattle Into the City it is Today

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Although she has played a crucial role in Seattle’s

evolution during a period of rapid growth,

Runstad hails from Idaho. She was one of many

who left the Gem State in the ‘60s and ‘70s in

search of better opportunities.

Runstad knew leaving her home state was

inevitable. “I wanted to leave Idaho from the time

I was a little girl. I wanted to go to Washington,

D.C., to work for the Washington Post…do

something big,” she says.

After earning a master’s degree in political

science from the University of Idaho, Runstad

moved to Seattle in 1967. Despite the move,

career opportunities still didn’t materialize. She

worked as a secretary during the summers and

taught at Shorecrest High School during the

school year until the big Boeing bust of 1971.

“People forget how bad that time was,” she says.

Many outside of Boeing also lost their jobs as a

result of the economic impact of the layoffs. All

the school levies failed, and as a junior teacher,

Runstad was laid off.

Like many others in the Seattle area at the time,

Runstad went back to school. She applied to the

University of Washington School of Law and was

accepted in 1971.

Runstad smilingly recalls that her mother always

said she should be a lawyer because she talked so

much. Runstad herself knew a law degree would

benefit her in critical ways. As she saw it, having

a law degree would give her credibility during a

time when women weren’t always taken seriously

in the professional world.

“Once I realized I was not going to Washington,

D.C. and I found myself in Seattle at a very good

law school, I knew becoming a lawyer would

give me tools,” Runstad explains. “And as a

woman, I knew I needed a label of some kind. My

experience working for a senator in Washington,

D.C. during college had taught me that. I knew I

could do anything, but I also knew a label would

help, and that I could become a ‘lawyer.’”

Always a go-getter, Runstad got her first legal

job while still in law school, working for the Civil

Division of the Prosecuting Attorney’s Office for

King County. The year was 1972, and the King

County Council was trying to go through the

approval process to build the massive sports

stadium known as the Kingdome.

This raised all sorts of land use issues, which were

new to the Council and to the attorneys both.

Researching these issues became Runstad’s job.

“I was new, young and absorbing facts like a

sponge. I learned a lot about land use issues in a

very short time,” she says.

After law school, Runstad wanted to go to work for

the firm Foster Pepper. Her mentor, King County

Prosecutor Norm Maleng, made sure she got an

interview. She got a job offer, and “I’ve been there

ever since!” says Runstad.

As it turned out, her research during law school

paid off in her role at the firm. Land use issues

were relatively new in 1972, but also important,

and not just because of the Kingdome. A major

movement was afoot. The prior year, a wave

of land use and environmental laws had swept

across the nation, including the Coastal Zone

Management Act and the Clean Water Act. In

Washington, the State Environmental Policy Act

and the Shoreline Management Act were both

enacted that same year, 1971. Those two laws had

a huge impact, because the Washington Supreme

Court ruled that they not only applied to public

projects, but also to private projects that required

government permits.

Runstad wasn’t at all surprised by the fallout of

these laws. “I could see this coming because of all

of the research I did while in law school,” she says.

Thanks to her background, she was quickly called

upon to help shepherd through projects for Foster

Pepper’s clients and she went from “a closet to the

big office,” she jokes. Runstad even helped draft

legislation. “It was a heady time,” she says. “It was

fun, exhilarating and challenging.”

Although these were monumental laws with

sweeping impact, Runstad was playing a role in

city land use issues too, as Seattle started to grow

in size. This led to Runstad’s rise in prominence in

the private sector as well.

In 1971, Seattle was still a one-dimensional city.

“It was a big city, but still a small town,” says

Runstad. It wasn’t as diverse nor as dynamic as

she had expected when she arrived, but she loved

its welcoming and can-do attitude. She quickly

dove into causes such as supporting Seattle’s ACT

Theater, and kept busy with political campaigns.

Soon, other opportunities to make a difference

began to present themselves.

“I was involved with the City Council and politics

early on,” she says, “and it was unusual that I was

a woman, so I stood out. Then I found myself

active in the Chamber of Commerce and the

Downtown Seattle Association too, as I was asked

to become a part of these organizations.”

“I did not come to Seattle to conquer it,” she

laughs. “It just happened, and it was fun and

gratifying to come here and be part of a city really

on the move.”

When asked if her role as a lawyer played a part in

making her such a public figure, Runstad answers

emphatically, “Absolutely!”

“My profession is very high profile,” she explains.

As she saw it, having a law degree would give her

credibility during a time when women weren’t always

taken seriously in the professional world.

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“When you’re a land use attorney, you’re on the

front lines. A lot of my projects were big projects,

and I was constantly in council meetings and in the

public eye.” People knew Judy Runstad, and they

knew she could get things done.

Law school not only prepared Runstad for her

professional career, but for her role in Seattle’s

development too. “Law school taught me many

more things than just the law,” she says. “One is

that your job as a lawyer, if you’re a good lawyer,

is to find out what both parties want and bring

those together. Your job is to facilitate decision

making. As Tom Foster would say, ‘There are deal

makers and deal breakers.’ A good lawyer is a deal

maker.” This approach has served her well as she

has navigated the committees and boards of the

organizations she cares about.

While Runstad’s legal work helped to propel her

into public life, her civic involvement has helped

to shape her career. “When you get out and

get involved, you’re exposed to other points of

view,” she says. “It broadens and deepens your

understanding of the human psyche and how

people will react to you.”

This increased empathy ties into her philosophy

of how to be a good lawyer: “Always try to

understand how the other parties are looking

at a situation. Then you have a better chance

of crafting a solution that meets everyone’s

expectations,” she counsels.

While all of the attorneys at Foster Pepper are

encouraged to be involved in the community,

Runstad realizes that finding time outside of work

can be a challenge with the pressure of billable

hours. She encourages recent graduates to find

firms that support their desire to give back and to

get active in causes where they really think they

can make a difference.

The world needs lawyers, she stresses, and the

world needs them to be involved outside of

the office. “Good lawyers are taught to solve

problems. And Lord knows we have enough

problems!” she laughs.

As for her own involvement, Runstad isn’t ready

to step down yet, although she takes more of a

backseat these days, as a new generation steps

forward to chair committees and lead the charge.

She remains actively involved with the UW School

of Law, working with with the alumni advisory

committee and with fundraising efforts. She has

been recognized several times by the law school

for all of her hard work and service. She has

received the Distinguished Alumni Award from

the UW School of Law, and she recently received

the Washington Law Review Distinguished Alumni

Award. She has also been the recipient of the Law

Women’s Caucus Distinguished Alumni Award.

Reflecting on the changes in Seattle over the

past 40 years, Runstad points out that she got to

see her involvement in Seattle’s evolution come

full circle. “Twenty-five years after working on

approvals for the building of the Kingdome,” she

says, “I got to serve as the land use attorney on

the team responsible for obtaining the permits to

implode the Kingdome and develop CenturyLink

Field. Those are nice career bookends.”

And a nice way to wrap up a movie, too.

“When you get out and get involved, you’re exposed to other

points of view. It broadens and deepens your understanding

of the human psyche and how people will react to you.”

JUDY RUNSTAD

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in ActionA Law Degree

CHARLES DUAN ’90

He has gone from opening China’s first private law firm to producing its first

television legal drama. It’s not a path he expected to take, growing up as

he did under a restrictive regime, but China has come a long way since Duan

graduated from the University of Washington School of Law nearly 25 years

ago, and so has Duan.

Lawyers are not always the prominent figures in China that they are in the

United States, making Duan’s celebrity status even more unusual. Although

the business and practice of law are essentially the same in both countries,

lawyers have a different kind of social status in each.

The Chinese culture of Duan’s youth did not regard the practice of law as

a desirable career, compared to being a government official, for example,

which was a highly sought after position. Instead, it was a movie that

prompted Duan to consider a law degree: an Indian movie titled, “Awara.”

Charles Duan PUSHING FOR REFORM

Paved the Way for Private Practice in His Native China

20 Years Ago and Still Pushes Boundaries There Today

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“In that movie, when I saw the hero examined by the

judge, I saw that being a lawyer could be a lofty and

great career. So I started thinking about becoming a

lawyer myself,” says Duan.

Prior to that, Duan’s educational and career

prospects had been limited by China’s restrictive

policies. “I participated in the college entrance

examination when I was around 23 years old,”

he says. But first, he had to wait until that was

even a possibility, because there was no entrance

examination during the Cultural Revolution. In lieu

of higher education, Duan worked for several years,

until he finally had the opportunity to take the exam.

“I took the examination in the first year after China

reopened it and I was admitted to the East China

University of Political Science and Law,” he says.

Then Duan followed through on his plans to study

abroad, plans that were commonplace among his

contemporaries. “Studying abroad was the dream

of all Chinese college students at that time,” he

explains. “So I spent a lot of time studying English

to ensure I could go abroad for further studies.”

Duan started school on the east coast, attending

New York University (NYU) and majoring in English.

When it came time for an advanced degree, he was

very interested in the UW School of Law because

of its ties to China. “At that time, the University of

Washington had cooperative relations with East

China University of Political Science and Law,” says

Duan. “The UW School of Law was listed as one of

the top schools in the country and I was honored to

be admitted to such a good school.”

Although Duan set out to become a lawyer, and

earned his degree from the UW School of Law,

he had no intentions of returning to China and

opening the country’s first private law firm. In

fact, his original plan was to simply stay in Seattle

and work. And so he did, working for Williams

Kastner as the attorney in charge of Asia cases.

But in doing so, he learned “great things” had

happened back home.

“I had no thoughts of doing any pioneering work

during my time at the law school at UW. I just

wanted to graduate and find a job in Seattle and

stay in the United States,” says Duan. “When

I started working at Williams Kastner after

graduation, and I was dealing with SIMPLOT

investment projects--the first McDonald’s opened

in Beijing--I had more contact with my homeland

and I discovered that great changes had taken

place in China during my absence.”

“Policies were set in place to encourage overseas

students to return home and do business in

China,” says Duan. “So I started considering a

return to China for further career development.”

He returned to China in 1992. Still, opening his

own firm was not even a possibility.

“According to the rules at that time,

establishment of a private partnership law firm

was not allowed when I went back to China in

1992,” says Duan. “Returning students had to

work in the state-owned law firms.”

But by then, Duan knew what he wanted, and he

started campaigning for something totally new: a

private law firm. He succeeded, breaking ground

for every other lawyer in China with similar

dreams.

“After a series of efforts, on April 8, 1993, the

Duan & Duan law firm was specially approved

to be a private partnership law firm, making it

the first private partnership law firm in China,”

explains Duan. “Then, a few years later in

1997, China instituted a new law allowing other

partnership law firms to be established.”

Despite all of this, Duan does not see himself as

a pioneer. “I think I was a lucky guy,” he says.

“Thanks to Chinese reform and the opening-up

policy, I was able to return to China to practice

law. I happened to be the one who established

the first private partnership law firm in China. In

fact, I had the first returned student’s card, which

is now kept by the National Museum. My story

inspired other overseas students to also return to

and work in China.”

As a lawyer involved in international law, Duan’s

education at the UW School of Law serves

Duan well no matter the country with which

he is dealing. His education broadened his

understanding of the world, he explains, and also

qualified him to “enter the most professional law

firms in the United States.” The experience of

studying abroad also makes him more trusted

by his foreign clients, which is particularly useful

given that Duan has been involved in numerous

high-profile cases involving both foreign and

Chinese companies.

His experience at the UW School of Law also

helped him to expand his business when he

opened his own firm. Although he was allowed

to open the practice, his firm’s activities were

limited by the government. “Although there

were limitations on the kind of business that we

could do,” he says, “Duan & Duan was allowed

to handle foreign-related legal cases, and that

was in line with my own interests. In addition, my

study of comparative law in the United States,

plus my ability to speak English, qualified us

to provide legal services for both Chinese and

foreign clients.”

Duan & Duan worked closely with U.S. law firms

and lawyers, which continues to be critical to

the firm’s business. “Duan & Duan is still famous

for its foreign legal services,” says Duan. “The

business of Duan & Duan still mainly focuses on

the international cases, for example, cases of

international merger and acquisition, and cases of

international litigation and arbitration.”

Duan is one of the most famous lawyers in China,

yet he recognizes he has roles and responsibilities

beyond the law firm, including a political role

with the Chinese People’s Political Consultative

Conference (CPPCC). “In addition to being the

managing partner of Duan & Duan, I have now

become a domestic celebrity,” he admits. “After

being a member of CPPCC in Shanghai for three

consecutive terms, I filled a post as a CPPCC

national committee member for two consecutive

terms. And I am the only member of the CPPCC

national committee in the legal profession

in Shanghai. I participate in the council on

legislation, and participate in the administration

and discussion of state affairs.”

Outside of the practice of law and politics, Duan

has also found a different kind of celebrity. He has

become a TV producer, creating “China Legal,”

the first Chinese drama about the practice of

law and lawyers. “It reflects the Chinese lawyer’s

lifestyle, and it caused a great sensation after it

was released in China,” he says. He’s hoping the

TV show will encourage young people to consider

a law degree in the same way his reputation as a

lawyer has inspired others.

Regardless of what inspires them, however, Duan

firmly believes students should attend law school

abroad as he did. “I encourage all potential

lawyers who have the opportunity to study

abroad to do so, to broaden their understanding

and get to know the world,” he says.

Certainly Duan’s studies in the U.S. helped to

make things happen for him, and other lawyers,

back in China.

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One of the Law Library’s main goals is to

support the research and curricular needs of

UW Law’s outstanding faculty. We work with

UW Law faculty in many different capacities,

with a particular emphasis on supporting faculty

scholarship and research. We work to connect

faculty with resources that meet their research

needs, facilitate access to our rich collection of

electronic and print materials and teach faculty

members to use materials and databases in ways

that will enhance their scholarship and make the

most efficient use of their time.

All UW Law faculty members have access to

the Law Library’s resources, which include over

475,000 volumes in our print collection and

subscriptions to hundreds of legal databases,

including Westlaw, LexisNexis and Bloomberg

Law. Faculty members also have access to

materials from the University of Washington

libraries and from 36 other college and university

libraries due to the Law Library’s participation

in a consortium. The Law Library is committed

to providing our faculty with the best resources

possible and we work especially hard to

ensure that new and visiting faculty members

understand the range and depth of materials

available to them when they join UW Law.

But perhaps one of the most important ways in

which the Law Library supports UW Law faculty

and scholarship is by assisting faculty members

with research. Did you know that the reference

librarians respond to hundreds of research

questions from UW Law faculty each year? Faculty

questions often involve complicated research

that is interdisciplinary or obscure in nature

and require expert research skills in the law and

beyond. The questions we receive cover a wide

range of topics, including:

• Federal and Washington state legislative history and other historical materials

• Medical and health-related issues

• Foreign and international law

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BooksSUPPORTING FACULTY SCHOLARSHIP

All faculty members at UW Law are challenged with legal research issues and questions

that are varied and difficult to answer. Our well-published and prominent faculty are

major contributors to UW Law’s stellar academic reputation. UW Law’s Marian Gould

Gallagher Law Library understands and supports the faculty’s positive impact on UW

Law’s reputation. The Law Library helps UW Law faculty produce the fine scholarship

that makes UW Law shine.

Our reference librarians have extensive

experience in legal research; most hold law

degrees in addition to degrees in library science.

Their education and expertise allow the reference

team to deliver research results that are timely,

relevant and accurate. The reference librarians

produce their own scholarship and often publish

in the field of law librarianship. In fact, the

reference librarian team was given a Faculty

Scholarship Award this year for our contribution

to scholarly excellence.

In addition to working on faculty research

questions, the reference librarians also support

faculty in many other ways, such as:

• Visiting law school classes to teach law students research strategies in specialized areas. Reference librarians also prepare research guides to assist students in finding resources on a particular topic. Currently, the Law Library makes over 120 guides available via our publicly accessible website, for free.

• Scheduling one-on-one meetings with faculty upon request to discuss their scholarship and information needs.

• Training faculty members to use databases and citation managers to aid them in their research and scholarship and help them work as efficiently as possible.

• Reviewing nearly completed manuscripts for proper Bluebook citation style before they are submitted to law reviews for publication. This Bluebooking service began as a pilot program in late 2012 and has gotten such positive reviews that we continue to offer it.

• Reaching out to faculty at the beginning of the summer to offer our services to them. This outreach project often results, as it did this summer, in many substantive research projects

for the reference librarians to tackle.

Please feel free to visit the Law Library to learn

more about what we do and our amazing

collection. We are open to the public and

reference librarians are often available to answer

questions and suggest resources to aid you in

your research. We also offer services especially

for alumni, including Law Books on Demand,

which allows you to borrow a book or brief from

our collection for free! You can read more about

our alumni services on our website (lib.law.

washington.edu/services/alumni.html).

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Anna L . Endter

& Beyond

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PILA Auction February 1, 2014

Guests went back to the roaring 20’s at the “All that Jazz” auction gala to contribute to the Public Interest Law Association (PILA). The generous donations and auction purchases this year raised enough to fund 21 grants and made progress toward an endowment.

1 STEPHANIE CURRY ’13, LARA HRUSKA ’13, JOSEPHINE ENNIS ’13, SARAH LIPPEK ’13, KERRA MELVIN ’13, CAITLIN CUSHING ’12, JOANNA SYLWESTER ’14

2 2013 – 2014 PILA BOARD OF DIRECTORS INCLUDING: FRONT ROW: KEPA ZUGAZAGA, REYNA ROLLOLAZO, ANNA RAE GOETHE, COURTNEY SCHIRR, TORI AINSWORTH, JOCELYN WHITELEY, NIKI MORRISON. BACK ROW: WYATT GJULLIN, MICHAEL CAULFIELD, JOHN STEINNES, SAM MENDEZ, MAX BURKE, HARLEY HUNNER

3 JON BRIDGE ’76, ASSISTANT DEAN MICHELE STORMS, THE HON. BOBBE BRIDGE ’76

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Law Dawgs in the Desert

March 18, 2014

The seventh annual UW Law Dawgs Dinner gathered alumni & friends in the Southern-California area. The evening was generously hosted by Evan ’56 and Elizabeth Inslee at their home in La Quinta, CA. The dinner is part of a series of programs hosted by the UW Alumni Association in the area each spring.

4 STEVEN WEINBERG ’78, BARBARA SHELLAN, THE HON. JERRY SHELLAN, SHARON WEINBERG

5 DOUG BOHLKE ’56, BOBI BOHLKE, JOHN COOPER ’70, PAT FINLEY

6 CAROL BARER, JIM HILTON ’59, PEGGY HILTON

7 DEAN TESTY, EVAN INSLEE ’56, ELIZABETH INSLEE

8 RICK DODD ’70, POLLY DODD, MIKE JEFFERS ’64

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Installation of

UW Law Foundation Professor

Anita Ramasastry

May 1, 2014

Anita Ramasastry is the second UW Law Foundation Professor of Law. The installation event featured UW Law Foundation Board Member Joel Benoliel, Prof. Jon Eddy’s remarks about his colleague and Prof. Ramasastry’s lecture titled: Is There a Right to be Free from Corruption?

1 JOEL BENOLIEL ’71, PROFESSOR ANITA RAMASASTRY

Tokyo Alumni Reception May 16, 2014

Dean Kellye Testy and a group of law school faculty gathered with law school alumni and friends in Tokyo to share an update on the law school and the Asian Law Center, and connect with this important group of alumni in Japan.

2 CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: PROFESSOR JOHN HALEY ’71, ASSISTANT DEAN KIMBERLY ECKSTEIN, TAKEO KOSUGI, DEAN KELLYE TESTY, TASUKO MATSUO ’69

Commencement June 8, 2014

Faculty, staff, graduates and guests celebrate the 2014 UW School of Law Commencement.

1 2

3 CLASS OF 2014

4 CLASS OF 2014 MEMBERS OF WASHINGTON LAW REVIEW: FRONT ROW: JENNA SMITH ’14, KATE SEABRIGHT ’14, LAUREN WATTS ’14, BRADY DOUGLAS ’14. BACK ROW: STEPHANIE LIU ’14, BROOKE HOWLETT ’14, LAURA POWELL ’14, MATTHEW SOUZA ’14

5 ASHLEY PAINTER ’14, ANDREA WOODS ’14, STEPHEN COGER ’14, WILLIAM H. GATES ’50, SHELLEY HALSTEAD ’14, SHON HOPWOOD ’14

6 KAELA JOYNER ’14 AND FAMILY

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Golden Alumni Reunion Luncheon June 20, 2014

The Golden Alumni Reunion Luncheon honors all UW Law alumni who graduated from the law school at least fifty years ago.

1 CLASS OF 1954 60-YEAR REUNION ATTENDEES: GEORGE FAIR, LEO GESE, DEAN TESTY, JON JONSSON, CAROL FULLER, HERB FULLER, AND BOB MUCKLESTONE

2 THE HON. MARY BRUCKER ’58 AND THE HON. DONALD HALEY ’58

3 THE HON. WALDO STONE ’49, AND THE HON. JACK KURTZ ’51

4 C. HENRY HECKENDORN ’49, CHARLES WARNER ‘48 AND BETTY HECKENDORN

5 DESA GESE AND THE HON. CAROL FULLER ’54

6 JOHN COSTELLO ’56, RODERICK DIMOFF ’55 AND EVAN INSLEE ’56

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1 2

CELEBRATING A TRADITION

OF GIVING JUNE 6, 2014

THE THIRD ANNUAL CELEBRATING A TRADITION OF GIVING DINNER RECOGNIZED

MEMBERS OF UW LAW’S THREE GIVING SOCIETIES: THE JOHN T. CONDON SOCIETY,

THE MARIAN GOULD GALLAGHER SOCIETY AND THE HENRY M. SUZZALLO SOCIETY.

FACULTY JOINED ALUMNI TO THANK THEM FOR THEIR SUPPORT AND TO CELEBRATE

ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL ACADEMIC YEAR.

1 DEAN TESTY, LONNIE ROSENWALD ’94

2 JON BRIDGE ’76, THE HON. CAROLYN DIMMICK ’53, THE HON. BOBBE BRIDGE ’76, VASILIKI DWYER

3 CLAUDETTE HUNT, ANNE JOHNSON

4 ROBERT FLENNAUGH ’96, NICOLE WAGNER

5 MARY HJORTH, DEAN EMERITUS RON HJORTH, ASSOCIATE DEAN MARY HOTCHKISS, MARY WHISNER

6 BERYL SIMPSON ’85, BILL BECROFT

3 4

6

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7 PAULA LITTLEWOOD ’97, STEVE CROSSLAND

8 ALAN KANE ’65, CHERYL KANE

9 JOE BROTHERTON ’82, MAUREEN BROTHERTON

10 BRANDON LOO, CHRIS SWEENEY ’04

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CELEBRATING A TRADITION OF GIVING

FACULTY & ALUMNI

NewsFALL 2014

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The LOS Convention: Extending U.S. Continental Shelf Rights in the Arctic and the Arctic Council: Recent De-velopments, U.S. Alaska Command (ALCOM) Joint Task Force-Alaska and Canadian Joint Operations Command (JCOM), Dec. 11, 2013 (Anchorage, AK)

HSE Regulations in Canada, Green-land, Norway, Russia and the United States, with Roman Sidortsov, Statoil-Det Norske Veritas, Arctic Compe-tence Escalator, Safe Arctic Opera-tions, Sep. 17, 2013 (Oslo, Norway)

ANNA BAKHMETYEVA

PublicationsN.I. Dobryakova & A.V. Bakhm-etyeva, Legal Protection of Software in Russian and USA Legisla-tion, Человеческий Капитали Профессиональное Образование [Human Capital & Prof. Educ.], Apr. 2014, at 76-82. (Russ.)

PresentationsLegal English for Foreign IP Lawyers, University of Washing-ton School of Law, Center for the Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property, Jul. 17, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

KAREN BOXX

PublicationsShakespeare in the Classroom: How an Annual Student Production of King Lear Adds Dimension to Teaching Trusts and Estates, 58 St. LouiS u. L. J. 751-65 (2014).

PresentationsUndue Influence in the Making of Wills: The Most Lucrative Form of Financial Exploitation, American Society on Aging, Aging in America: 2014 Annual Conference, Mar. 14, 2014 (San Diego, CA)

Washington Update, Portland Es-tate Planning Council, 42nd Annual Estate Planning Seminar, Jan. 31, 2014 (Portland, OR)

RYAN CALO

PublicationsCommunications Privacy for and by Whom?, 162 u. Pa. L. Rev. onLine 231 (2014) (in response to Orin S. Kerr, The Next Generation Com-munications Privacy Act, 162 u. Pa. L. Rev. 373 (2014)).

PresentationsPanelist, University of California Berkeley School of Law, Our Robot Future: The Moral, Ethical, and Legal Challenges of Ubiquitous Robotic Systems, Jul. 11, 2014 (Berkeley, CA)

A Federal Robotics Agency for the United States, Aspen Institute, Aspen Ideas Festival, Jun. 27, 2014 (Aspen, CO)

Legal and Policy Implications of Intelligent Systems, Microsoft, May 16, 2014 (Washington, DC)

Robotics and the New Cyberlaw, University of California Berkeley School of Law, TRUST Security Semi-nar, Apr. 24, 2014 (Berkeley, CA)

Panelist, Is Privacy Regulation Likely to Reduce the Value of the Internet?, Federalist Society, 16th Annual Faculty Conference, Jan. 4, 2014 (New York, NY)

RONALD COLLINS

PublicationsRonaLd CoLLinS & david M. SkoveR, When Money SPeakS: the MCCutCh-eon deCiSion, CaMPaign FinanCe LaWS, and the FiRSt aMendMent (Top Five Books 2014). 160 pages.

RECENT FACULTY

NewsCRAIG ALLEN

PublicationsManning the Helm, PRoC. u.S. navaL inSt., Aug. 2014, at 20-25.

inteRnationaL LaW FoR Seagoing oFFiCeRS (6th ed. U.S. Naval Institute Press, 2014). 481 pages.

Why a U.S. Coast Guard?, MaR. exeCutive (July 21, 2014).

Law of the Sea Tribunal Implies a Principle of Reasonableness in UNCLOS Article, oPinio JuRiS ( Apr. 17, 2014).

International Court Orders Japan to Cease Whaling, MaR. exeCutive (Mar. 31, 2014).

The Coast Guard’s Proposed Maritime Preemption Assessment Framework, MaRine neWS, Feb. 2014, at 25-28.

KIMBERLY AMBROSE

PresentationsTaking Charge of Our Professional Growth While Adapting to Meet Community Needs, Association of American Law Schools, 37th Confer-ence on Clinical Legal Education, Apr. 28, 2014 (Chicago, IL)

Addressing the School to Prison Pipeline Through a Problem Solving Clinic Model, Southwest Regional Clinical Workshop: Empowering Future Generations, Apr. 18, 2014 (Tempe, AZ)

Debunking the Myths: Public Ac-cessibility of Juvenile Delinquency Records, American Bar Association, CLE Webinar, Mar. 17, 2014

ROBERT ANDERSONPublicationsRePoRt oF the CoMMiSSion on indian tRuSt adMiniStRation and ReFoRM (U.S. Dep’t of the Interior, Dec. 10, 2013). 1 vol.

PresentationsTribal Interests in the Regulation of Air and Water, with Emily Hutchinson Haley, Washington State Bar Association, Environmental and Land Use Section, 2014 Midyear Meeting and Conference, May 3, 2014 (Cle Elum, WA)

Federal Reserved Rights, American Indian Resource Institute, Indian Water 2014, May 2014 (Valley Center, CA)

Changing Land, Changing Water, Indian & State Water Rights, Na-tional Judicial College, May 2014 (Eugene, OR)

Tribal Jurisdiction: Tribal Law and Order Act (2010) and Violence Against Women Act (2013), Wash-ington State Bar Association, World Peace Through Law Section, May 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Alaska Native Law, Alaska Bar Asso-ciation, Apr. 9, 2014 (Anchorage, AK)

Recent Developments in Alaska Native Subsistence Fishing Rights, University of Washington School of Law, Social Justice Tuesday, Apr. 8, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

BETSY BAKER

PublicationsMarine Biodiversity, Ecosystems Services and Better Use of Science Information, in SeCuRing the oCean FoR the next geneRation 382-412 (Harry N. Scheiber & Moon Sang Kwon eds., University of California, Berkeley, Law of the Sea Institute-School of Law 2013).

The Developing Regional Regime for the Marine Arctic, in The LaW oF the Sea and PoLaR RegionS: inteRaC-tionS BetWeen gLoBaL and RegionaL RegiMeS 35-59 (Erik Jaap Molenaar et al. eds., Martinus Nijhoff 2013).

Betsy Baker & Sarah Mooney, The Legal Status of Arctic Sea Ice in the United States and Canada, 36 PoLaR geogRaPhy 86-104 (2013).

From the Gulf of Mexico to the Beaufort Sea: Inuit Involvement in Offshore Oil and Gas Decisions in Alaska and the Western Canadian Arctic, 43 envtL. L. ReP. 10925-37 (2013).

PresentationsWho ‘Owns’ the North Pole and Who Decides? Science, Politics, and Continental Shelf Claims, Dart-mouth College, Dickey Center for International Understanding, Feb. 20, 2014 (Hanover, NH)

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Chair and panelist, Examining Market Actors, 2014 International Conference on Law and Society, May 31, 2014 (Minneapolis, MN)

PATRICIA KUSZLER

Publicationsthe u.S. SuPReMe CouRt on diSaBiLity LaW: Sixteen ModeRn CaSeS (Christy Thompson Ibrahim, Patricia C. Kuszler & Erin Moody eds., Carolina Academic Press 2014). 360 pages.

diSCuSSionS on diSaBiLity LaW and PoLiCy (Patricia C. Kuszler & Christy Thompson Ibrahim eds., Carolina Academic Press, 2014). 449 pages.

Caleb J. Banta-Green, Leo Beletsky, Jennifer A. Schoeppe, Phillip O. Coffin & Patricia C. Kuszler, Police Officers’ and Paramedics’ Experi-ences with Overdose and Their Knowledge and Opinions of Wash-ington State’s Drug Overdose–Nal-oxone–Good Samaritan Law, 90 J. uRB. heaLth 1102-11 (2013).

PresentationsConstitutional Power-Sharing, De-volution/Center-Periphery Relations and Comparative Analysis of Con-stitutions in Transitional Countries, United Nationalities Federal Council of Burma and Columbia University, Institute for the Study of Human Rights, Feb. 9, 2013 (Chiang Mai, Thailand)

Constitutional Power-Sharing, De-volution/Center-Periphery Relations and Comparative Analysis of Con-stitutions in Transitional Countries, National Peace Center of Myanmar and Columbia University, Institute for the Study of Human Rights, Feb. 4, 2013 (Yangon, Myanmar)

Islam in Burma: What We Know and What We Need to Learn, Islam in Burma, National University of Singapore, Jan. 9, 2014

Who Should Interpret and Imple-ment Constitutional Provisions Referencing Islam?, Abir Annual Conference: The Middle East in Transition, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, June 2013

Designing Islamic Constitutions: Past Trends and Options for a Democratic Future, American Society of International Law, Annual Legal Theory Workshop, May 2013 (Washington, DC)

Overprescribing Rule of Law in the Contemporary Muslim World: What Conditions Are Necessary for Rule of Law Reform to Promote Democracy, Folke Bernadotte Academy Annual Meeting of Experts in Rule of Law Promotion, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of Lon-don, Apr. 2013 (London, England)

Forbidding Wrong and the Demand for the Judicially Enforced Rule of Law in Contemporary Egypt, Conference on Shari`a Transitions, Boston University, Mar. 2013 (Boston, MA)

Conceptualizing and Construct-ing the Islamic State after the Arab Spring, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 2013 (New Orleans, LA)

JACQUELINE MCMURTRIE

PublicationsThe Innocence Network: From Beginning to Branding, in ContRo-veRSieS in innoCenCe CaSeS in aMeRiCa 21-37 (Sara Lucy Cooper ed., Ashgate 2014).

PresentationsPanelist, Innocence Network Am-icus Brief Impact, 2014 Innocence Network Conference, Apr. 2014 (Portland, OR)

PETER NICOLAS

PublicationsThe Sneetches as an Allegory for the Gay Rights Struggle: Three Prisms, 58 N.Y.L. SCh. L. Rev. 525-45 (2013-14).

Presentations[G]a[y]ffirmative Action: The Constitutionality of Sexual Orien-tation-Based Affirmative Action Policies, Association of American Law Schools, Midyear Meeting, Workshop on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Issues, Jun. 6, 2014 (Washington, DC)

[G]a[y]ffirmative Action: The Con-stitutionality of Sexual Orientation-Based Affirmative Action Policies, Law and Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 31, 2014 (Minneapo-lis, MN)

CHERYL NYBERG

PublicationsSuBJeCt CoMPiLationS oF State LaWS 2012-13 (Boast/Nyberg 2014). 256 pages.

CLARK LOMBARDI

PublicationsClark B. Lombardi & Shamshad Pasarlay, Might Afghans Amend the 2004 Constitution? Hints from a Televised Presidential Debate, int’L J. ConSt. L. BLog (Apr. 3, 2014).

Book Review, 31 LaW & hiSt. Rev. 475-76 (2013) (reviewing kRiSten StiLt, iSLaMiC LaW in aCtion: authoRity, diSCRetion, and eveRyday exPeRienCeS in MaMLuk egyPt (2011)).

Fierce Contest: Constitutional Islam and the Arab Spring, WoRLd PoL. Rev. (Oct. 8, 2013).

Recent Faculty News

JENNIFER FAN

PresentationsPro Bono Opportunities with the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic, Perkins Coie, Aug. 13, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

IP Entrepreneurship, University of Washington School of Law, Center for the Advanced Study and Research on Intellectual Property Summer Institute, Jul. 28, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Pro Bono Training, Amazon.com, Jul. 9, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

MARY D. FAN

PublicationsAdversarial Justice’s Casualties: De-fending Victim-Witness Protection, 55 BoSton CoLLege L. Rev. 775-820 (2014).

Post-Racial Proxy Battles over Im-migration, in StRange neighBoRS: the RoLe oF StateS in iMMigRation PoLiCy 229-58 (Carissa Byrne Hessick & Ga-briel J. Chin eds., NYU Press 2014).

The Law of Immigration and Crime, in the oxFoRd handBook oF ethniCity, CRiMe and iMMigRation 628-59 (Sandra Bucerius & Michael Tonry eds., Oxford University Press 2013).

PresentationsPanelist, Law & War: International Humanitarian Law Professional Panel, American Red Cross, Interna-tional Humanitarian Law Workshop, Mar. 2, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Guns and Suicidal Violence, As-sociation of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Guns, Violence and Children Panel, Jan. 3, 2014 (New York, NY)

ROBERT GOMULKIEWICZ

PublicationsRoBeRt W. goMuLkieWiCz, xuan-thao nguyen & danieLLe M. ConWay, LiCenSing inteLLeCtuaL PRoPeRty: LaW and aPPLiCation (3d ed. Aspen 2014). (Aspen Casebook Series) 864 pages.

SoFtWaRe LaW and itS aPPLiCation (As-pen 2014). (Aspen Casebook Series) 578 pages.

PresentationsFederal Circuit Jurisprudence on Licensing Rules, Law Seminars International, Licensing IP and Tech-nology Conference, Aug. 22, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Software and Multimedia Licensing, New York University School of Law, Seminar on Patent Licensing, Apr. 16, 2014 (New York, NY)

MICHAEL HATFIELD

PublicationsCommittee Opinions and Treasury Regulation: Tax Lawyer Ethics, 1965-1985, 14 FLa. tax Rev. 675-735 (2014).

SPeCiaLized LegaL ReSeaRCh (Penny A. Hazelton ed., 2014 rev. ed., Galla-gher Law Library 2014). 1 volume.

PresentationsOrbis Cascade Alliance Summit: A Library Management Service Model for the Future: The Director’s View, American Association of Law Librar-ies, Annual Meeting, Jul. 15, 2014 (San Antonio, TX)

GREGORY HICKS

PresentationsSwinomish v. Ecology: Implications for Instream Flows, Water Reserva-tions, and Overriding Consider-ations of the Public Interest, 23rd Annual Comprehensive Conference on Water Law in Washington, Jun. 19, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

PEGGY JARRETT

PublicationsPeggy Roebuck Jarrett & Susan Lyons, Law Library Depositories: The Next 200 Years, SPeCtRuM (Am. Ass’n. Law Libraries), May 2014, at 33-34.

SANNE KNUDSEN

PublicationsThe Long-Term Tort: In Search of a New Causation Framework for Natural Resources Damages, 108 nW. u. L. Rev. 1-67 (2014).

ANITA KRUG

PublicationsRethinking U.S. Investment Adviser Regulation, 87 St. John’S L. Rev. 451-76 (2014).

Regulatory Entity-Centrism in Financial Services, RegBLog (Jul. 29, 2013).

PresentationsPanelist, Regulating Swaps and Other Derivatives, 2014 National Business Law Scholars Conference, Jun. 20, 2014 (Los Angeles, CA)PENNY HAZELTON

PublicationsBanking Law, in SPeCiaLized LegaL ReSeaRCh 10-1 to 10-76 (Penny A. Hazelton ed., rev. ed., Gallagher Law Library 2014).

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Revisiting the Efficacy of Regional Human Rights Mechanisms: A Look at Europe and the Americas, Istanbul University Faculty of Law (Istanbul Üniversitesi Hukuk Fakül-tesi) and Raul Wallenberg Institute for Human Rights, Mar. 11, 2014 (Istanbul, Turkey)

ZAHR SAID

PresentationsCopyright’s Interpretive Complexity, University of Oregon, Faculty Work-shop, Apr. 1, 2014 (Eugene, OR)

PresentationsThe Washington State Constitution (1889 and All That), Washington State Supreme Court, Legislative Scholars Program, Jul. 15, 2014 (Olympia, WA)

Common Law and the Role of the Judiciary in Interpreting the Law, U.S. District Court, iCivics Institute for Middle and Junior High Teach-ers, Jul. 10, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Panelist, A Case Study of a Success-ful Public-Private Partnership, Wash-ington State Alliance Program, May 1, 2014 (Kent, WA)

TOSHIKO TAKENAKA

PublicationsToshiko Takenaka, Employee Invention System in the United States, Человеческий Капитал и Профессиональное Образование [Human Capital & Prof. Educ.], Apr. 2014, at 41. (Russ.)

PresentationsPatent Eligibility and Extent of Patent Protection for Inventions in the Information Age, International Association for Advancement of Teaching and Research in Intellectu-al Property, 33rd Annual Congress, Jul. 6, 2014 (Montpellier, France)

Patent Infringement Remedies for Standard Essential Patents, Tokyo Science University, Jun. 5, 2014 (Tokyo, Japan)

Apple v. Samsung, Disputes under Comparative Law, Shandong University, May 27, 2014 (Shandong, China)

Apple v. Samsung, Disputes under Comparative Law, International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property, Apr. 7, 2014 (Istanbul, Turkey)

Recent Trends in Patent Supreme Court Decisions in Japan, University of Toronto, 2013 Patent Colloquium, Nov. 21, 2013 (Toronto, Canada)

IP Special Courts: US and Japa-nese Experiences, Asia-Pacific IP Research Forum, Nov. 16, 2013 (Suzhou, China)

Intellectual Property and Human Rights: Global and Multidisciplinary Legal Education, Southeast Asia Legal Education, Oct. 1, 2013 (Sura-baya, Indonesia)

KELLYE TESTY

PublicationsBeing a Dean is a Drag . . . But Not for the Reasons You Might Expect, 42 SW. L Rev. 765-69 (2013).

PresentationsPanelist, Future of Legal Education, Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference, Jul. 17, 2014 (Monterey, CA)

Panelist, Deans’ Panel, University of Colorado Law School, The Future of Law School Innovation, Apr. 17, 2014 (Boulder, CO)

Moderator, Part I: Challenges in Le-gal Education and Part II: Using Tools of Awareness for Coping with the New Reality, Association of Ameri-can Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 4, 2014 (New York, NY)

Moderator, Looking Forward—The Next 100 Years, Washington Courts Historical Society, 100 Years of Justice: Looking Back, Looking For-ward, Nov. 22, 2013 (Olympia, WA)

Panelist, Women, Power, and Lead-ership, Minority Bar Associations Collaboration Project, Statewide Diversity Conference, Oct. 18, 2013 (Seattle, WA)

SALLIE SANFORD

PublicationsThe Struggle to Bury Pre-Existing Condition Consideration, 7 St. LouiS u. J. heaLth L. & PoL’y 405-14 (2014).

PresentationsThe Affordable Care Act at Four: Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?, Association of Washington Cities, Health Care Reform Summit, Mar. 25, 2014 (Tukwila, WA)

HUGH SPITZER

PublicationsPivoting to Progressivism: Justice Stephen J. Chadwick, the Washing-ton Supreme Court, and Change in Early 20th-Century Judicial Reason-ing and Rhetoric, 104 PaC. nW. Q. 107-21 (2013).

Recent Faculty News

SEAN O’CONNOR

PublicationsThe Aftermath of Stanford v. Roche: Which Law of Assignments Governs?, Человеческий Капитал и Профессиональное Образование [Human Capital & Prof. Educ.], Apr. 2014, at 36. (Russ.)

Crowdfunding’s Impact on Start-Up IP Strategy, 21 geo MaSon L. Rev. 895-918 (2014).

PresentationsModerator, Ownership of Inventions Made by Employees and University Researchers, University of Washing-ton Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property, 2014 High Technology Protection Summit, Jul. 26, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Alice’s Abstractions, George Mason University School of Law Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property, Inaugural Summer Institute in Patent Law, Jul. 23, 2014 (Beaver Creek, CO)

Distinguishing the Public Sphere from the Public Domain and Its Impli-cations for Copyright Law, George Mason University School of Law Cen-ter for the Protection of Intellectual Property, Twain Fellowship Meeting, Jun. 27, 2014 (Arlington, VA)

History of IP as an Asset Class, University of Washington School of Law, World Economic Forum, IP and Big Data Workshop, Jun. 23, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Moderator, IP Regimes as Ana-logues for Future Big Data Archi-tectures, University of Washington School of Law, World Economic Forum, IP and Big Data Workshop, Jun. 23, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Digital Copyright and Music Law Is-sues, Seoul National University Law School, May 27, 2014 (Seoul, Korea)

Life Sciences Commercialization Issues, Seoul National Univer-sity Medical School, May 26, 2014 (Seoul, Korea)

Green Technology Platform Licens-ing Strategies, Licensing Executives Society International, Annual Meet-ing, May 21, 2014 (Moscow, Russia)

TERRY PRICE

PresentationsThe Future of Compensated Surro-gacy in Washington State, with Sara Ainsworth, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, May 15, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

DANA RAIGRODSKI

PublicationsProperty, Privacy and Power: Re-thinking the Fourth Amendment in the Wake of U.S. v. Jones, 26 B.u. PuB. int. L.J. 67 (2013), reprinted in 41 SeaRCh & SeizuRe L. ReP., Mar. 2014, at 17-24.

PresentationsEconomic Growth on the Backs of Human Trafficking Victims–The Dependency of Global Trade and Economic Development on Forced Labor and the Trafficking of Hu-mans, Law and Society Association, Annual Meeting and 2014 Inter-national Conference on Law and Inequalities: Global and Local, May 29, 2014 (Minneapolis, MN)

Speaker, American Bar Association Center for Human Rights, Summit on Business and Human Rights, Apr. 2014 (Washington, DC)

Guest lecturer, National University of Ireland, Irish Center for Human Rights, Mar. 2014 (Galway, Ireland)

WILLIAM RODGERS

PublicationsenviRonMentaL LaW in indian CountRy (Thomson/West 2014 Supp.).

enviRonMentaL LaW (Thomson/West 2006 & Supps. 2014). 4 vols.

STEPHEN ROSENBAUM

PublicationsBeyond the Fakultas’ Four Walls: Linking Education, Practice, and the Legal Profession, 23 PaC. RiM L. & PoL’y J. 395-421 (2014).

Schools and Educational Programs, in aidS & the LaW 5-1 to 5-39 (4th ed. David W. Webber ed., Wolters Kluwer Law & Business 2014 Supp.).

Mary Pat Treuthart & Stephen A. Rosenbaum, Engendering a Clinic: Lessons Learned from a Domestic Violence Clinical Course in Qatar, 2013 int’L Rev. L. 1-24.

PresentationsBetter Practices in Managing Pro Per Hearings, Administrative Law Judges and Impartial Hearing Of-ficers, 13th Academy for IDEA [Indi-viduals with Disabilities Education Act], Jul. 17, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Respondent, Universal Perspec-tives on Holocaust Remembrance, University of Washington Center for Human Rights, and School of Law, William. H. Gates Public Ser-vice Law Program, Apr. 30, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Workshop leader, Clinical Legal Instruction, Universite’ de Caen Basse-Normandie, Faculty of Law, Centre de Recherche sur les Droits Fondamentaux et les Evolutions du Droit & PILNet: Global Network for Public Interest Law, Mar. 2014 (Caen, France)

ANITA RAMASASTRY

PresentationsIs There a Right to Be Free From Corruption?, University of Wash-ington School of Law, Installation Ceremony for Anita Ramasastry as the UW Law Foundation Professor of Law, May 1, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Panelist, RightsCon, Apr. 2014 (San Francisco, CA)

Panelist, Corporations Acting as the State, University of Georgia Dean Rusk Center for International Law and Policy, The New Roles of Corporations in Global Gover-nance, Apr. 2014 (Atlanta, GA)

Recent Faculty News

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KATHRYN WATTS

PresentationsRulemaking as Legislating, Ohio State University Moritz College of Law, Faculty Workshop, Apr. 8, 2014 (Columbus, OH)

Judges and Their Papers, Widener University, John Gedid Lecture, Apr. 3, 2014 (Harrisburg, PA)

MARY WHISNER

PublicationsThe 4-1-1 on Legal Directories, 106 LaW LiBR. J. 257-66 (2014).

There Oughta Be a Law--A Model Law, 106 LaW LiBR. J. 125-34 (2014).

Thanking and Being Thanked, 105 LaW LiBR. J 561-66 (2013).

Some Guidance about Federal Agencies and Guidance, 105 LaW LiBR. J. 385-94 (2013).

JANE WINN

PublicationsPolitique culturelle française: Regard d’un juriste américain à l’heure de la mondialisation, JuRiS aRt etC., June 2014, at 27-29.

Jane Winn & BenJaMin WRight, the LaW oF eLeCtRoniC CoMMeRCe (4th ed. Aspen 2014 Supp. no. 1).

PresentationsInnovation Triumphalism and Privacy by Design, George Washington University, Privacy Law Scholars Workshop, Jun. 7, 2014 (Washington, DC)

Globalization and Payment Card Network Governance, University of Washington School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Apr. 24, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

Recent Developments in Electronic Payments Law, NACHA Payments 2014, Apr. 6, 2014 (Orlando, FL)

Does Europe Face an E-Commerce Innovation Deficit?, University of Strasbourg, Centre d’Etudes Internationales de la Propriété Intellectuelle, Mar. 18, 2014 (Strasbourg, France)

Applying the Kraljic Risk-Value Matrix to Contract Design, Institute for Supply Management of Western Washington, Mar. 6, 2014 (Seattle, WA)

U.S. and E.U. Competition to Regu-late the Emerging Global Identity Architecture, RSA Computer Secu-rity Annual Conference, Feb. 27, 2014 (San Francisco, CA)

JEFFREY WOOL

PublicationsJeffrey Wool & Andrej Jonovic, The Relationship Between Transnational Commercial Law Treaties and National Law–A Framework as Applied to the Cape Town Convention, 2 CaPe toWn Convention J. 65-129 (2013).

EMILY SHELDRICK ’96 recently joined the Clark County Prosecutor’s Office. She is currently Treasurer of the Clark County Chapter of the Washington Women Lawyers and a member of the Clark County Bench Bar Committee.

Class Notes70sRODNEY WALDBAUM ’70, senior attorney at the Seattle law firm of LeSourd & Patten, P.S., received the Roger Stouder Award from the Washington State Bar Association’s Tax Section.

90sKWANG-YI GER GALE ’99 has joined the Business Immigration practice group at Tonkon Torp LLP. She was recognized this year by the American Society of Legal Advocates as a “Top 40 Under 40” immigration lawyer in California.

CHRISTINE MASSE ’99 and JOSEPH VANCE ’95 have been recognized as among the best attorneys in Washington state by the annual Super Lawyers and Rising Stars lists.

00sHEATHER BOWMAN ’07, associate with Bodyfelt Mount, was selected to the Rising Stars list in Oregon Super Lawyers magazine. Bowman concentrates her practice on employment litigation, professional malpractice defense and insurance coverage.

GREG FERNEY ’06 is the newest associate attorney at Angstman Johnson, where he will work with the transactional and litigation team. He represents clients in the areas of business law, real estate law and litigation matters.

WILLIAM RASMUSSEN ’06, Miller Nash LLP land use and real estate attorney, was recently elected to the board of directors of Morrison Child and Family Services.

MEGAN STARICH ’08 is the newest addition to Miller Nash LLP’s Seattle office employment law & labor relations team. Starich previously served as a law clerk to the Honorable Brian E. Sandoval, formerly of the United States District Court, District of Nevada.

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Class Notes

CHRISTOPHER SWEENEY ’04, a partner in Knobbe Martens Olson & Bear LLP’s Seattle office, has been elected president of the Washington State Patent Law Association (WSPLA).

10sMATTHEW COLLEY ’12 recently joined the Portland, Oregon firm Black Helterline, LLP. Matthew’s practice focuses on representing business, non-profit organizations and individuals in litigation matters.

AYDIN PAUL FIRUZ ’12 has been recognized as among the best attorneys in Washington state by the annual Super Lawyers and Rising Stars lists.

JUAN PABLO G. ZARAGOZA ’05, an attorney with the national law firm Polsinelli, has been selected for inclusion in Arizona Business Magazine’s Top Lawyers list in the category of Estates and Trusts.

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In MemoriamCLASS OF 1933

RICHARD FOLSOM MARPLE passed away on January 10, 2013, at the age of 102. A colonel of the U.S. Army, Marple served in the Quartermaster Corps during World War II and the U.S. Army Officers Reserve Corps. He was employed in the Federal Excise Tax Division of the Internal Revenue Service until 1970.

CLASS OF 1940

SIDNEY A. ANDERSON passed away at the age of 98 on January 4, 2014. Anderson served in the U.S. Navy during World War II as a lieutenant commander before moving to Walla Walla, WA and establishing Graves-Anderson Pontiac. He was later employed at Baker-Boyer Bank, where he retired as a Trust Officer and senior vice president in 1977.

CLASS OF 1947

THE HONORABLE WILLARD A. ZELLMER passed away on March 7, 2013, at the age of 93. He was a partner with Underwood, Campbell, Zellmer and Brock. Zellmer was elected Lincoln County Superior Court Judge and served on the bench until his retirement in 1988.

CLASS OF 1948

ROBERT F. GARING passed away on February 19, 2012.

CLASS OF 1949

JON H. PHELPS passed away on January 8, 2014, at the age of 95. Prior to attending the UW School of Law, Jon was a fingerprint analyst with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Additionally, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, serving as a seabee in Hawaii and Guam. Phelps began working in private practice in Wenatchee, WA in 1951, and retired in 1996.

CLASS OF 1952

STEPHEN F. CHADWICK passed away on March 14, 2014. Born in Seattle, Chadwick served in World War II as a foot soldier in the 44th Division in Europe and earned a bronze star for heroic action. He was the city attorney for Medina, WA for 25 years.

MILTON JOHN STICKLES passed away at the age of 85 on February 17, 2014. Milton served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War and also in the Army Reserve. He then worked as a maritime lawyer for the U.S. Navy’s Military Sealift Command, from which he retired in the late 1980s. Milton was also counsel at the Washington office of Cadwalder, Wickersham and Taft for 12 years.

WILLIAM O. WEBB passed away June 2, 2013.

CLASS OF 1959

WILLIAM R. ROETCISOENDE passed away October 7, 2013.

CLASS OF 1961

RICHARD H. MULLER passed away on April 20, 2014. Muller served in the U.S. Marine Corps as a colonel.

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in Memoriam

CLASS OF 1965

GILBERT E. MULLEN passed away on February 23, 2013. Mullen served as a Superior Court Judge for Skagit County.

CLASS OF 1966

KENNETH R. AHLF passed away on January 6, 2014. He started his legal career as a law clerk for the Auditor’s division in the Washington State Attorney General’s Office. He then moved to private practice and later served as the Lacey City Attorney in 1970. Ahlf also served on the North Thurston School Board for 16 years and as president of the Lacey Rotary.

CLASS OF 1969

EUGENE G.”GARY” DONION passed away on February 18, 2014, at the age of 70. In his early legal career, Donion worked as a public defender. Additionally, he served as pro bono counsel for the Central Area Motivation Project in Seattle for many years.

CLASS OF 1971

DENNIS R. COLWELL passed away at the age of 71 on May 10, 2014. After law school, Colwell joined the Grays Harbor County Prosecutor’s Office and worked as chief civil deputy prosecutor from 1974 to 1979. He then joined the firm Ingram, Zelasko & Goodwin. Colwell was also active in his community, serving on a number of boards and as a trustee of Grays Harbor College for 13 years.

Friends

CATHY W. BRYAN passed away on January 5, 2014. Wife of Robert Bryan ’58, Bryan graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in drama. She served as a hostess of the television program Buttons and His Buddies while working with the Woodland Park Zoo. Cathy pursued a second career in theater and appeared in Bremerton Theater productions, commercials and Seattle Repertory Theater productions.

JOANNE JONSSON passed away at the age of 80 on September 27, 2013. Married to Jon Jonsson ’54 for over 50 years, she served as Secretary for the Wives of the Consular Corp and played flute with the Seattle Philharmonic. She was also a Docent and Board Member of the Dunn Gardens and volunteered at the Nordic Heritage Museum.

Faculty

PROFESSOR EMERITUS WILLIAM R. BURKE passed away at the age of 87 on July 4, 2014. A law school faculty member for 30 years prior to taking emeritus status in 1998, Professor Burke specialized in the law of the sea, fisheries law and marine affairs. He made significant contributions to scholarship on ocean law and public policy and served as a member of a number of organizations concerned with the use and regulation of the world’s oceans. Professor Burke was the principal founder of the UW’s School of Marine Affairs, the founding editor of Ocean Development and International Law and a founding member of the Law of the Sea Institute at the University of California Berkeley.

REPORT TO

Donors2013-14

Note: The University of Washington School of Law is deeply grateful to our many alumni and friends whose annual gifts, large and small, help create futures for our students, promote faculty scholarship and support justice throughout the world. Every effort is made to ensure the accurate listing of donors, and we sincerely apologize for misspelling or inadvertently omitting the names of any donors. We appreciate the opportunity to correct our records, so please advise us of errors by using the enclosed envelope or call the Advancement Office at 206.685.9115.

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School of Law Annual Summary of Income and ExpendituresJULY 1, 2013 — JUNE 30, 2014

Contributions by Purpose

PROGRAM SUPPORT $1,778,603 51%

STUDENT SUPPORT $1,024,143 29%

UNRESTRICTED $565,142 16%

GRANTS $84,013 2%

FACULTY SUPPORT $47,630 1%

CAPITAL $408 <1%

TOTAL $3,499,939

Expenditures by Purpose

STUDENT SUPPORT* $3,323,162 49%

PROGRAM SUPPORT* $2,403,938 36%

FACULTY SUPPORT $991,958 15%

CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS/FACILITIES EXPENSES $24,303 <1%

Contributions by Group

CORPORATION $868,360 25%

ORGANIZATION $707,691 20%

FOUNDATION* $546,714 16%

FRIEND** $499,251 14%

LAW ALUMNI $443,026 13%

OTHER UW ALUMNI $434,897 12%

TOTAL $3,499,939

GIFTS RECEIVED

* Includes: all types of foundations and trusts

** Includes: non law alumni (faculty, former faculty, former staff, friends, parents, retired staff, current staff, students and visiting scholars/faculty)

Above total is excluding MacDonald gift of $56,100,000. Outstanding pledges and unrealized testamentary gifts total $58,350.98. Total Fundraising Activity $59,606,217.17.

Above total is excluding MacDonald gift of $56,100,000. Outstanding pledges and unrealized testamentary gifts total $58,350.98. Total Fundraising Activity $59,606,217.17.

EXPENDITURES BY PURPOSE

15%

36%

49%

* William H. Gates Public Service Law Program expenditures are part of Student and Program Support.

20%

25%

14%

13%

12%

16%

1%<1%

2%

29%

16%51%

<1%

1940 10% $56,100,000

1942 20% $2,500

1947 6% $275

1948 11% $200

1949 6% $300

1950 12% $11,152

1951 7% $12,700

1952 18% $900

1953 17% $6,660

1954 18% $4,547

1955 11% $925

1956 20% $4,100

1957 18% $100,850

1958 15% $4,345

1959 11% $1,600

1960 17% $42,650

1961 30% $3,902

1962 9% $751

1963 17% $252,325

1964 14% $2,000

1965 10% $2,150

1966 14% $6,690

1967 13% $18,157

Giving Percentages by YearCLASS YEARS THAT HAD AT LEAST ONE LIVING ALUMNI THAT GAVE IN FY 2013-14

1968 11% $9,350

1969 13% $17,275

1970 22% $9,925

1971 11% $3,600

1972 13% $14,625

1973 9% $6,405

1974 16% $15,112

1975 8% $14,275

1976 11% $31,525

1977 10% $12,001

1978 16% $11,500

1979 11% $6,715

1980 14% $6,350

1981 13% $7,645

1982 18% $11,880

1983 12% $5,600

1984 10% $9,065

1985 11% $85,025

1986 3% $1,050

1987 11% $4,216

1988 10% $8,990

1989 8% $9,810

1990 7% $16,230

1991 8% $7,597

1992 4% $700

1993 4% $1,100

1994 8% $7,450

1995 5% $4,270

1996 5% $6,000

1997 7% $14,612

1998 3% $675

1999 7% $3,115

2000 6% $5,810

2001 4% $2,340

2002 4% $2,250

2003 4% $3,111

2004 6% $2,570

2005 6% $2,115

2006 6% $2,840

2007 9% $6,843

2008 5% $12,954

2009 7% $5,145

2010 4% $1,260

2011 4% $2,762

2012 9% $3,605

2013 9% $4,230

2014 8% $1,136

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Condon Society Laureates

Lifetime giving totaling $1,000,000 or more to the School of Law.

Anonymous

Greg Amadon (FM)

Stan ‘63 & Alta Barer (FM)

Steve & Kathy Berman (FM)

Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman (FM)

Evelyn S. Egtvedt (D)

Michael ‘64 & Lynn Garvey (FM)

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Bill & Melinda Gates (FM)

D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger (FM)

Landesa Rural Development Institute

Jack MacDonald ‘40 (D) (FM)

Microsoft Corporation

Elisabeth Miller (D)

William & Sally Neukom (FM)

Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock (FM)

Linden Rhoads ‘11 (FM)

The Seattle Foundation

The Tulalip Tribes

United Way of King County

University of Washington School of Law Foundation

(D) DECEASED (FM) FOUNDING MEMBER

JOHN T. CONDON SOCIETYINDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS

Members have lifetime giving totaling $25,000 or more.

Acknowledgment of the John T. Condon Society Founding Members, Laureates and Benefactors can also be found on our donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.

Condon Society Benefactors

Lifetime giving totaling $100,000 to $999,999 to the School of Law.

Sophie & Wilbur Albright (D)

American Bar Association

William & Katherine Andersen Jr. (FM)

Alice & Edna Athearn (D) (FM)

Aviation Working Group

Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich (FM)

Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel (FM)

Frederick Betts ‘33 (D) (FM)

Judith Bigelow ‘86 (FM)

The Boeing Company

The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jon ‘76 Bridge (FM)

The Bullitt Foundation

Clarence ‘30 & Vivian Campbell (D)

Cloud L. Cray Foundation

Costco Wholesale Corporation

Kenneth ‘40 (D) & Nona ‘42 Cox (FM)

Richard Cray (D)

Gordon Culp ‘52 (D) (FM)

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis

Carol A. Davidson

Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

Colonel Josef ‘31 & Muriel Diamond (D)

Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd (FM)

Marie Donohoe ‘63 (D)

The Dorsey & Whitney Foundation

Scott Dunham ‘75 & Barbara Eliades (FM)

Duward & Susan Huckabay Foundation

The Honorable William ‘52 (D) & Vasiliki Dwyer (FM)

Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger (FM)

Evergreen Legal Services

Ernest Falk ‘28 (D)

Dean Judson ‘19 & Dorothy Falknor (D)

Donald Fleming ‘51 (D)

The Ford Foundation

Foster Pepper PLLC

Marion Garrison (D) (FM)

Garvey Schubert Barer (FM)

Mary Gates (D)

William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr. (FM)

Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88 (FM)

Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder

Greater Everett Community Foundation

Greenwall Foundation

Gerald & Carolyn Grinstein (FM)

Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen (FM)

Douglas Hendel ‘56 (FM)

Professor Dan Henderson (D)

The Henry M. Jackson Foundation (FM)

Herbert B. Jones Foundation

Dean & Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth (FM)

John A. Huckabay

Susan Huckabay

Japan Foundation

John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Jean Johnson ‘82 & Peter Miller ‘83 (FM)

Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation

K & L Gates

Michael Kates Trust

Katherine Kellogg Smith Trust

Nanci Kertson

Ed Kim ‘95

King County Bar Association

King County Bar Foundation

King County Bar Institute

C. Calvert Knudsen ‘50 (D) (FM)

The Korea Foundation

Kreielsheimer Foundation (FM)

Theodore & Pamela Kummert (FM)

Sam Levinson ‘25 (D)

Gordon Livengood ‘52 (D)

Willaim ‘38 (D) & Virginia Lowry

Bruce ‘49 & Jean Maines (D)

Charlotte Malone (D)

Robert McMillen (D) (FM)

Veida Morrow ‘24 (D)

Larry ‘63 & Judith Mounger Jr. (FM)

Muckleshoot Indian Tribe

Pacific Coast Banking School

Perkins Coie LLP (FM)

Preston Gates & Ellis LLP (FM)

Progeny 3, Inc.

Puyallup Tribe of Indians

Quil Ceda Village

Riverstyx Foundation

Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr. (FM)

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

Katie Sako ‘87 & Kendall Flint (FM)

Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr. (FM)

The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan

Spencer Short ‘24 (D)

W. Hunter (D) & Dorothy Simpson (FM)

James & Janet Sinegal

Virginia Smith ‘46 (D)

Max ‘52 & Ruth Soriano (D) (FM)

Squaxin Island Tribe

SSA Marine, Inc.

David Stobaugh ‘75 & Lynn Prunhuber ‘79

Stuart Foundation

Paul Van Wagenen ‘73

Washington Research Foundation

Washington State Bar Association

Philip Weiss ‘23 (D)

Carrie Welch (D)

Condon Society

Lifetime giving totaling $25,000 to $99,999 to the School of Law.

Anonymous (14)

Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams

Helen Adams (D)

Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama (FM)

Thomas Allison ‘72 (D) & Kimberlee Brackett

American College of Trial Lawyers

Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84

Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman

John Applegate ‘41 (D)

James ‘39 (D) & Kathleen Arneil

Lawrence & Mary Ann Bailey

Barbara Barbee-Pelzel

Bardehle Pagenberg Dost

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80

Jack (D) and Becky Benaroya (FM)

Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong, P.C.

William Bennett ‘95 & Michele Borovac (FM)

Family of Homer Bergren ‘35 (D) (FM)

Betts, Patterson & Mines, P.S.

Boehmert & Boehmert

Bogle & Gates Law Offices

Mary ‘75 & David Boies (FM)

F. Ross Boundy ‘71

Alexander ‘63 & Cornelia (D) Brindle Sr.

Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton

James ‘35 & Jane Bryson (D)

Charles Stimson Bullitt ‘49 (D)

M. John ‘69 & Mattie Bundy (FM)

John ‘61 (D) & Sybil Burgess

Robert ‘73 & Katherine Campbell

Diana ‘86 & Charles (D) Carey Jr.

C. Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson (FM)

Casey Family Foundation

Michael Cason

Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation

Charles ‘61 & Donna Cole (D) (FM)

Coleman Foundation, Inc.

Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins

Comdisco, Inc.

Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation

Martin ‘65 (D) & Diane Crowder (FM)

Clydia Cuykendall ‘74

Dana Corporation Foundation

John ‘40 & Ruth (D) Davis

Mabry Debuys ‘79 (D)

Deloitte & Touche Foundation

Denny Miller Associates, Inc.

The Honorable Carolyn ‘53 & Cyrus (D) Dimmick

Dorsey & Whitney, LLP

Lloyd DuCommun ‘34 (D)

Robert ‘61 & Judith Duggan

Duty Free Shoppers Ltd.

Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson

Barney Ebsworth

Richard ‘74 & Mary ‘75 Ekman

James Ellis ‘49 (FM)

John ‘53 & Doris Ellis

Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons

Sylvia Epstein (D)

Fenwick & West LLP

W. J. Thomas Ferguson ‘67

Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP

Leslie Fishel Jr. (D)

Daniel ‘88 & Frances Fisher (FM)

The Honorable Betty ‘56 & Professor Emeritus Robert Fletcher (D) (FM)

James ‘71 & Marlene Fletcher

Floyd & Pflueger, P. S.

Foley Family Charitable Foundation

William ‘74 & Carol Foley II (FM)

Carl Franklin (D)

Dennis Franklin ‘78 & Melinda Yee

Yasuhiro Fujita ‘68 (D)

Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison (FM)

William & Carrie Garrison (D)

Jennifer Gavin

Timothy Gavin ‘91 (FM)

General Service Foundation

Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles (FM)

Peter & Sally Glase

The Glenhome Foundation

Glenhome Trust

Stanley Golub ‘36 (D)

Gordon Derr, LLP

Laura Grace

Graduate Program in Taxation (FM)

Greater Kansas City Community Foundation

Greenwood Shopping Center

Camden Hall ‘65

John ‘78 & Patty Hammar

Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc.

Charles Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01

Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)

Heller Ehrman LLP

James Hilton ‘59 (FM)

Akimitsu LL.M. ‘95 & Kaoru Hirai

John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster (FM)

The Honorable Alfred ‘48 & C. Lillian Holte (D)

The Honorable Charles Horowitz ‘27 (D)

Professor Mary Hotchkiss

Gary ‘75 & Chris Huff

James ‘39 & Rose Hunter (D) (FM)

Thelma Hutchinson (D)

Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin

James & Nancy Irwin

Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel

Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe

Janet Wright Ketcham Foundation

Japanese American Society

Japan/U.S. Friendship Commission

Eric & Ingrid Jarvis

The Honorable Peter ‘62 & Sally Jarvis

Jeffers, Danielson, Sonn & Aylward (FM)

Michael B. Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich

Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle

Professor Ralph (D) & Anne Johnson (FM)

Marjorie Jones (D)

James & Diana Judson

Kao Corporation

Day ‘29 & Susan Karr (D)

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, LLP

W.H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask (FM)

Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear, LLP

Carl Koch ‘40 (D)

Henry Kotkins Sr. ‘35 (D)

Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane (FM)

The Lane Family Foundation

Lane Powell, PC

Linda Larson ‘78 & B. Gerald Johnson (FM)

Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee

Ronald ‘71 & Toshiko Lee

Legal Environmental Assistance

James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.

Byron & Alice Lockwood Foundation

Barbara & Professor Wallace Loh (FM)

Ruth Lothrop (D)

Peter ‘65 & Marian Lucas

Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.

John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr.

Norman ‘66 (D) & Judith Maleng

Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69

Frank McAbee (D)

The McIntosh Foundation

McNaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren PLLC

Polly ‘87 & David McNeill (FM)

Merchant & Gould

NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY

Report to Donors

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HENRY SUZZALLO SOCIETY

Members have made testamentary or other planned gifts to the School of Law.

Anonymous (8)

Patricia Allendoerfer

Edna Alvarez ‘67

Edward Chandler ‘78 & Laura Phillips

Laura Crawford ‘86

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis

Vasiliki Dwyer

Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott

James Ellis ‘49

Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison

Gail Gordon ‘77

Douglas Hendel ‘56

William Hochberg ‘83

Garfield & Cynthia Jeffers

Michael Jeffers ‘64

Alan ‘65 & Cheryl Kane

Nanci Kertson

Keith ‘72 & Lynn Kessler

W.H. (Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask

Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher III

Thomas Loftus ‘57

Wallace & Barbara Loh

Virginia Lowry

Judith Maleng

Polly ‘87 & David McNeill

William Nelson ‘68

Ralph ‘62 & Bonnie Olson

Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot

John ‘52 & Jacqueline Riley

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan

William Snyder ‘89/LL.M. ‘06

Diane ‘76 & Larry Stokke

Paul Van Wagenen ‘73

Professors Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobel III

Paul ‘67 & Kathryn Whelan

MARIAN GOULD GALLAGHER SOCIETY

Members have lifetime giving totaling $15,000 or more to the Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library at the School of Law.

Acknowledgment of the Marian Gould Gallagher Society can also be found on the law library donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80

Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich

Professor Charles & Betty Corker (D) & Family

Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis

Lloyd A. DuCommun ‘34 (D)

W. J. Thomas ‘67 & Kristin Ferguson

Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)

Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton

The Family of Lawrence Hickman ‘36

Professor Mary Hotchkiss & Mary Whisner

Partners of Levinson, Friedman, Vhugen, Duggan, Bland & Horowitz

Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.

Polly ‘87 & David McNeill

Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot

Dean Richard & Joanne Roddis (D) & Family

Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer

Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D)

Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle

Professor Jane & Peter Winn

Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels

Denny & Sandra Miller (FM)

Hugh Miracle ‘34 (D)

Mitsubishi Research Institute

Frank (D) & Ella Moquin

Thelma Moriarty (D)

Morrison & Foerster, LLP

Jonathan ‘80 & Lynn Mott (FM)

Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse

Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin (FM)

Sharon Nelson ‘76

The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen (FM)

The Norcliffe Foundation

Dan ‘66 & Diane O’Neal (FM)

P&E C Miller Charitable Foundation

Arthur Paulsen ‘46 (D) (FM)

Earl Phillips ‘34 (D)

Walter Pitts ‘52 (D) (FM)

Pogo Producing Co.

Cheryl Pope

William Pope ‘79 (FM)

Wayne L. Prim Foundation

Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim

Constance ‘78 & Rodney Proctor

Public Interest Law Association

Karl ‘79 & Lianne Quackenbush

Josef Rawert ‘09

Dale ‘39 & Evelyn Read ‘40 (D)

Helen Reardon Agnew (D)

Eric & Heather Redman (FM)

Bruce ‘77 and Alida Robertson (FM)

ROC/US Technology Cooperation

The Rock Foundation

Professor William Rodgers Jr.

Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer

Ropes & Gray

Ryan Investments LLC

NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY

Report to Donors

Mary Ryan (D)

Safeco Insurance Company

Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D)

Thomas ‘73 (D) & Greta Sedlock (FM)

Seed I.P. Law Group, PLLC

Shidler McBroom Gates & Lucas (FM)

Beryl Simpson ‘85

Skokomish Tribal Nation

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Catherine Smith ‘79

Eugene Smith ‘56 (D)

Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith

Smith Goodfriend, P.S.

Sonderhoff & Einsel Law & Patent

Evelyn Cruz ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe Jr. (FM)

Carlyn ‘81 & George (D) Steiner (FM)

William & Augusta Steinert (D)

R. Jack. ‘64 & Sandra Ann Stephenson (FM)

Professor Emeritus William ‘59 (D) & Mary Stoebuck (FM)

Eleanor Stokke (D)

Carl Stork (FM)

Daniel (D) ‘55 & Susan Sullivan

Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka

Lyn Tangen ‘74 & Richard Barbieri (FM)

Tani & Abe

Texas Instruments Incorporated

Donald ‘54 & Kay Thoreson (FM)

Edith Tollefson (D)

Tousley Brain

Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle

TRACE International, Inc.

Irwin (D) ‘57 & Betty Lou Treiger (FM)

Robert & Kathleen Trimble (FM)

U.S. Charitable Gift Trust

United States-Japan Foundation

United Way of Snohomish County

Nancy & Fred Utter

Val A. Browning Charitable Foundation

Van Ness Feldman GordonDerr

Verizon Communications Inc.

W.A. Franke

Washington State Bar Foundation

Griffith ‘49 & Patricia Way

Paul Webber ‘62 (FM)

Werner Erhard Foundation

Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison

William G. McGowan Charitable Fund

William Randolph Hearst Foundation

David ‘61 & Mary Williams

Woodcock Washburn

Bagley & Virginia Wright Foundation

Charles & Barbara Wright

The Honorable Eugene ‘37 (D) & Esther Wright

D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young

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Starbucks Coffee Company

Winifred & Clifton Stratton

David & Daphne Tang**

Dean Kellye Testy & Tracey Thompson

Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle

Arthur Tsien ‘78 & Judith McGuire***

United Way of Snohomish County

Lori Walls ‘07 & John Garibaldi

Ronald & Kiti Ward

Washington State Bar Association*

Mary Whisner**

Professor Jane & Peter Winn*

Yuasa and Hara

1,000 TO $1,999

Terry Abeyta ‘76*

Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams**

Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84*

Brian Balch ‘81

Arnold ‘59 & Carol Barer*

Bennett, Bigelow & Leedom

Jim Bishop

Stephen ‘93 & Julie Bishop*

Bosch Jehle Patentanwaltsgesellschaft mbH

Alexander ‘63 & Madeleine Brindle Sr.

The Honorable Robert & Cathy (D) Bryan ‘58*

John ‘82 & Starla Budlong

Craig ‘56 & Jean Campbell

Florence Carkeek

Darren Carnell ‘95**

Samual & Loretta Chapin

Chevron Humankind

Stewart Cogan

William ‘75 & Kathleen Collins**

Jack & Angela Connelly

Carmela Conroy ‘90

The Honorable John & Gwen Coughenour

Charles Curran ‘60

Clydia Cuykendall ‘74***

Bruce Dick ‘82 & Rexanne Gibson ‘82

Scott Dinwiddie ‘95 & Andrea Menaker ‘95

DIRECTV Sports Networks, LLC

Mary Donovan

Dominick ‘56 & Aurora Driano*

Bruce ‘89 & Roberta Duff

Charles ‘71 & Jane Ekberg***

Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott**

Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger**

Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons

Professor Mary Fan

Lorraine Felleisen

Daniel Finney ‘88**

Franzosi Dal Negro Setti

Patricia & Michael Frost

Lourdes Fuentes ‘96*

Mark ‘90 & Diane Gary

GDG Consulting

GE Foundation

Camille Gearhart ‘85 & Timothy Burner

Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88

Greater Everett Community Foundation

Lynn Hall ‘91

Daniel ‘77 & Margaret Hannula*

Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen

Jeanette Heard ‘90

Ann Hemmens*

The Henry M. Jackson Foundation

Christopher ‘75 & Cheryle Hirst**

Richard Hopp ‘76 & Debbie Walsh

Wesley Hottot ‘08

Spencer Hutchins ‘13

Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin

Inland Northwest Community Foundation

Jamila Johnson ‘07

Judicial Dispute Resolution LLC

Diane Kero ‘81*

Charles ‘65 & Nancy Kimbrough

Richard ‘77 & Christine Kitto Jr.

Brian ‘71 & Marilyn Kremen

Julie Lanz ‘01 & Max Ochoa

Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher III

Cari Laufenberg ‘03

Diankha Linear

Nicholas & Diane Lovejoy

Betty Lukins

Felix Luna ‘97

Martin ‘70 & Andrea Lybecker***

Maisano Mediation, LLC

Professor Deborah Maranville*

Toby Marshall ‘02

Jerry ‘68 & Darlene McNaul***

Brian ‘77 & Elizabeth Morrison

Sharon Nelson ‘76

The North Ridge Foundation*

Douglas ‘89 & Emilie Ogden**

Oh-Ebashi LPC and Partners

Leslie ‘00 & Mark Olson

Norman Page ‘79 & Chih-Chuan Hsu

The Paget Family Trust

Joel Paget ‘70 & Helen Ho

Ashley Painter

Alyssa Pomponio ‘12

Wayne L. Prim Foundation

Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim

Josef Rawert ‘09

Kristina Ringland ‘09 & Thomas O’Brien

Charles Robinson ‘81*

Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94*

Ruckelshaus Center Foundation

Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr.*

Savitt Bruce & Willey LLP

Professors Eric Schnapper & Susan Casteras

Jon Schneidler ‘69

Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr.**

Steven Seward LL.M. ‘03

Elizabeth Siler

Abby St. Hilaire ‘14

John ‘70 & Rebecca Steel**

Stokes Lawrence, P.S.

Swanson Capital Management, LLC

Gerald LL.M. ‘96 & Bridget Swanson II

Daniel Syrdal ‘75**

Philip Thompson ‘82 & Elizabeth Dolliver**

James Torgerson ‘84 & The Honorable Morgan Christen**

Betty Lou Treiger*

Michael ‘96 & Dina Wampold

Ian Warner ‘11

WAMS

Cynthia Whitaker ‘76 & Dan Carmichael

David ‘61 & Mary Williams*

Craig Wright ‘91

H. Kevin ‘89 & Anne Wright

The Honorable Mary Yu

David Zapolsky & Elizabeth Hubbard

$500 TO $999

Anonymous (2)

Robert ‘94 & Elena Allnutt

Edna Alvarez ‘67

American Arbitration Association

Amgen Foundation, Inc.

Professor Tom Andrews

Marlin Appelwick ‘79 & Sharron Sellers**

The Honorable Sharon Armstrong ‘74

J. Patrick ‘76 & Peggy Aylward

Mark Beatty ‘79

Breean Beggs ‘91 & Laurie Powers ‘91

Caroline Bercier ‘13 & Brett Satterlund

Ian ‘01 & Karena Birk

David ‘63 & Mary Broom

Michael ‘83 & Linda Bugni

Feliciana ‘78 & Professor William (D) Burke*

Robert Butler

Robert ‘73 & Katherine Campbell**

Karen & Michael Carlson

Amanda Carr ‘06

David ‘94 & Miriam Chiappetta

Lisa Christoffersen ‘96 & Jeffrey Weber

Richard Cleva ‘79*

Michiko ‘74 & Bernard Crampe

Robert Crees ‘56*

Patrick ‘88 & Karen Crumb

Crissa Cugini ‘85

Glenn Draper ‘94 & Kimberly Watson ‘99

Dunmire Property Management

Gregory Edmiston ‘87/LL.M. ‘99 & Debra Leith ‘87

Juli Farris

Linda & Terry Finn

Flooring Association Northwest

Joanne Foster ‘77

Thelma Franco

(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING

Report to Donors

DONORS by GIVING LEVEL

Gifts reported here are those received this fiscal year and do not include pledges or other unrealized contributions or bequests.

$10,000 TO $24,999

Anonymous (3)

Bagley and Virginia Wright Foundation

The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jonathan ‘76 Bridge***

Charles and Barbara Wright Foundation

Costco Wholesale Corporation

Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

Barney Ebsworth

Fenwick & West LLP

Donald Fleming ‘51

William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr.

Ashley ‘08 & Steven Greenberg

Dean and Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth***

Edward & Karen Jones

Patrick Kennedy

John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr.

Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69

Pacific Bankers Management Institute

Pendleton and Elisabeth Miller Charitable Foundation*

Perkins Coie LLP*

The R.B. and Ruth H. Dunn Charitable Foundation

Ropes and Gray LLP

Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka

The Rock Foundation

Charles & Barbara Wright III

$5,000 TO $9,999

Anonymous (4)

AMPACC Law Group, PLLC

Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman

Baker & Hostetler LLP

Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich *

Boehmert & Boehmert*

The Boeing Company***

Bracewell & Giuliani LLP

Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson**

Dorsey & Whitney, LLP*

Drinker Biddle & Reath, LLP

Scott Dunham ‘75 & Barbara Eliades**

Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson*

W. J. Thomas Ferguson ‘67

Gary Fluhrer ‘74

Foster Pepper PLLC

$1,000,000 OR MORE

Jack MacDonald ‘40

$100,000 TO $999,999

Anonymous

Stanley ‘63 & Alta Barer

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Carol Davidson

Durward & Susan Huckabay Foundation

The Ford Foundation

D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger ***

John Huckabay

Susan Huckabay

Microsoft Corporation***

Muckleshoot Indian Tribe

Joseph & Katherine Ryan

The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan

The Tulalip Tribes

United Way of King County

Katherine & Richard Williams

$25,000 TO $99,999

Anonymous

Sophie Albright (D)

American Bar Association

Alice & Edna Athearn (D)*

Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder*

Janet Wright Ketcham Foundation

Janet Ketcham

Landesa*

Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock

RiverStyx Foundation

Ryan Investments LLC

Skokomish Tribal Nation

Squaxin Island Tribe

TRACE International, Inc.

Val A. Browning Charitable Foundation

Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc

Professor Mary Hotchkiss**

The John Paul Stevens Fellowship Foundation

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP

Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear, LLP

Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane

Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.

McKinley Irvin, PLLC

Merchant & Gould

The Pew Charitable Trusts

Professor William Rodgers Jr.*

The Seattle Foundation***

Seed Intellectual Property Law Group, PLLC*

Professor William Stoebuck ‘59 (D)

Swinomish Indian Tribal Community

Van Ness Feldman LLP

The Honorable Frederick ‘68 & Jane Van Sickle*

Margaret & Douglas Walker

$2,000 TO $4,999

Anonymous (3)

AIP Patent & Law Offices

Kimberly Ambrose ‘89

American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers

Eric Anderson ‘94 & Stephen Tollafield

Bardehle Pagenberg Partnerschaft mbB*

Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80

Kenneth ‘88 & Lisa Baronsky

Betts, Patterson & Mines, P.S.

Thomas Bingham ‘77 & Patricia Char

Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton

Martin Bruce

Professor Tom Cobb & Kevin Francis

Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins***

Nona Cox ‘42

Cutler Nylander & Hayton, P.S.

John ‘70 & Zona DeWeerdt

The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53

Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd**

Professor Dwight ‘73 & Kathleen Drake*

Professor Melissa Durkee

John ‘53 & Doris Ellis*

EY

Cynthia Fester*

Bradley Fresia ‘88

John Garner ‘77***

Garvey, Schubert & Barer

Timothy Gavin ‘91

Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles

John ‘78 & Patty Hammar

Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton*

Hillis Clark Martin & Peterson

John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster**

Lauren Hruska

Institute for Human Rights and Business

Inslee, Best, Doezie, & Ryder, PS*

Integrative Family Law, LLC

Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe

Jean ‘82 & Peter ‘83 Johnson

Kyungil Jun LL.M. ‘97

Craig ‘82 & Danna Kinzer

Professor Sanne Knudsen & Todd Wildermuth

Lacey OMalley

The Lane Family Foundation

J.J. Leary Jr. ‘78 & Dorothy Hall

Lee & Hayes PLLC

Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee**

James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.**

Beth Loveless

MacDonald Hoague & Bayless

Kara & Ken Masters

Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels

Laurie Minsk ‘84 & Jerry Dunietz

James Molleur

Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse

Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin

OncoGenex Technologies Inc

Professor Kathleen O’Neill & David Laskin

Esther Park ‘00

Peterson Wampold Rosato Luna Knopp

Nancy Pleas

Riley & Nancy Pleas Family Foundation

Joanne Roddis (D)

Saltchuk Resources, Inc.

Sonderhoff & Einsel Law and Patent office

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Professor Anna Mastroianni & Gregory Shaw

Gail Mautner

Carol ‘97 & Phillip McCoog

Evy McElmeel ‘00 & Jan Hirschmann

Professor Jacqueline McMurtrie & William Gales

Kerra Melvin ‘13

Fraser Mendel ‘94 & Meitsu Chuang-Mendel

Matthew Menzer

Christina Meserve ‘78 & Charles Szurszewski

Jonathan Meyers LL.M. ‘05

Carol Moody ‘80

Scott ‘97 & Jennifer Morris*

Wesley ‘89 & Kirsten ‘91 Morrison Jr.

James Nelson ‘80

Kiichi Nishino

Dean Pedersen

Ruby Pediangco ‘94 & Matt Shumway

Charles Peery ‘62

Professor Deborah Perluss & Mark Diamond

Robert Peterson ‘53*

Rebecca ‘05 & Valentin ‘05 Povarchuk

Anna ‘10 & Braden Price

Milbert ‘62 & Rachel Price**

The Honorable Norman ‘58 & Barbara Quinn

Edwin Rauzi ‘81 & Shana Chung***

Howard ‘61 & Lavonne Reser*

Nathan Roberts

Alan Ross ‘00 & Peggy Keene

Theresa Rozzano-Preston ‘87 & Isaac Preston

Jo ‘74 & Michael Sandler

Kenneth Schubert III ‘97 & Karen Foster-Schubert

Jenifer Schultz

Stephanie Searing ‘78 & Randall Barnard ‘78

Barbara Selberg ‘87*

Grant ‘53 & Nancy Silvernale Jr.

Kazuaki Sono ‘69

Michele & Jack Storms

Jordan Talge ‘11

David & Sri Thornton

Richard Titus Jr. ‘78**

Cesar Torres

Professor Michael Townsend & Jenny McCloskey

Hubert ‘66 & Margueriette Travaille

Richard Ullstrom ‘83

Holly Vance ‘05 & Joshua Gaul ‘05

James ‘71 & Rebecca Varnell

Lucille Walls

James ‘70/LL.M. ‘71 & Cynthia Walsh

Lon-Marie Walton & Professor Alan Kirtley

John Ward ‘54

Charles Warner ‘47

Joseph ‘81 & Kathryn Weinstein

John Whalen LL.M. ‘06

The Honorable Jay White ‘71

Wild Sky Law Group, PLLC

Mark Wilner ‘01

Phillip ‘69 & Constance Winberry***

Fritz Wollett

The Honorable Thomas ‘68 & Yvonne Wynne

Professor David Ziff

100 TO $249

Anonymous (2)

3M Foundation

Arthur ‘79 & M. Elizabeth Abel

Rajesh Agny

Ahlers & Cressman, PLLC

Sara Ainsworth ‘96

Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama

The Honorable Gerry ‘64 & Christine Alexander

Perveen Ali ‘04

Lesley Allan ‘83

Joan Altman ‘12

Kirsten ‘04 & Douglas Ambach

Robert ‘97 & Paula Amkraut

Professor William & Mary Andersen

Edwin ‘56 & Jeanne Anderson Jr.

Mark ‘88 & Marlee Anderson

Thomas ‘67 & Saloma-Lee Anderson*

Jessica Andrade

Professor Thomas & Lauren Andrews

Yosuke ‘81 & Sakae Aoyagi

Teresa ‘83 & Professor Robert Aronson

Association of American Law Schools

Leva Aubin

Timothy ‘75 & Christine Austin

Bernda Bacani ‘93

Ellen Bachman ‘74**

Badgley-Mullins Law Group

Laura & Charles Bailey

William ‘97 & Yao LL.M. ‘98 Bailey

Lawrence Baker ‘74

Brian Balleria & Joan Bechtold

Brendan Barnicle ‘93

Jerry Bassett ‘72***

Monika Batra & Andrew Kashyap

Jacquelyn Beatty ‘87 & Warren Wilkins

The Honorable Mary Becker ‘82

Stephanie Beers

John Bennett LL.M. ‘81

Alan Berg LL.M. ‘75

The Honorable Daniel Berschauer ‘72 & Phyllis Edwards***

Timothy Billick ‘13

Robert Bilow ‘70 & Jeannine Mehrhoff***

John Binns Jr. ‘64

Charles ‘79 & Katharine Blackman

Alison ‘06 & Matthew Blair

Kenneth Bloch ‘64

The Honorable Fred Bonner ‘74

Cecilia Boudreau ‘08

Ellen Bowman & Gary Morse

Jill Bowman ‘81

Bradley Johnson Attorneys

Donald Brazier Jr. ‘54**

Rear Admiral Herbert Bridge & Edith Hilliard

Amanda Brings

William ‘69 & Kathleen Britton*

Elaine Brockway

James Brown LL.M. ‘05

Shelley LL.M. ‘01 & David Buckholtz

Ward ‘93 & Boni Buringrud**

Teresa ‘03/LL.M. ’04 & Matthew Byers

Stephen Camden ‘67

A. Campbell ‘07 & Rolland Riives

Doreen Cardin

Stanley Carlson ‘65***

Laurie Carlsson

Christopher Carney ‘00 & Angela Prosek

John ‘69 & Susan Cary**

Elizabeth Castilleja

Dariene Castro

Professor Angelica Chazaro

Jeffrey Christensen ‘07

John ‘73 & Susan Clees

Ken Cleveland

Carolyn Cliff ‘84

Gerald ‘70 & Jeannie Coe

Molly Cohan ‘77

Joshua Colangelo-Bryan ‘99

Tom Cole

Kendra Comeau ‘11

Stacy Connole ‘02 & Sims Weymuller ‘02

David ‘88 & Melinda Cook

The Honorable Susan Cook ‘85

Elizabeth & Scott Coplan

Angela Cornell ‘89

Tara Correll

John ‘56 & Mary Costello

Anne ‘76 & George Counts

Professor William Covington

Pamela Cowan ‘77 & Steven Miller

Craig S. Sternberg, PLLC

Shane Cramer ‘04 & Aasta Haugen

William ‘69 & Martha Creech

Caroline Crenna ‘87

John Crosetto ‘05

Steve Crossland

Michael Cummins ‘94

Gary ‘65 & Marilyn Cunningham***

Donald Dahlgren ‘60

Judy Davis

Rosario Daza ‘09

William Deasy ‘63

Julian ‘57 & Alice Dewell

Charles ‘65 & Lorna Diesen

Maureen Dightman ‘73*

The Honorable Roderick Dimoff ‘55

Susan Dittig

The Honorable Robert Doran

Diane & Daniel Dorsey

Robert Doyle

Amanda DuBois

Theresa Durkan ‘81 & Charles Burdell Jr.

Gary ‘77 & Gay Duvall

Deborah Dwyer ‘89 & Lawrence Field

Report to Donors

(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING

Susan French ‘67 & Tom Rowe

Jason Froggatt ‘95 & Wendy Lister

The Honorable Carol ‘54 & Herbert ‘54 Fuller

Leonor ‘84 & Jay Fuller

Nathan Garnett ‘04 & Sarah Tilstra ‘04

Glenda Gertz ‘14

Danielle ‘99 & Michael Githens

Professor Julia Gold*

Claire ‘86 & Paul Grace*

Steven ‘91 & Amy Gustafson

Arley ‘73 & Debra Harrel Jr.

The Honorable Robert ‘58 & Mary Harris

Victoria Hasty ‘90

Kinne Hawes ‘72

Elizabeth Hawkins ‘10

Klara ‘96 & Professor Gregory Hicks

Mark ‘87 & Margo Huth

Evan ‘56 & Elizabeth Inslee

Yi Jiang LL.M. ‘00

James Johns

Thomas Keane ‘78 & Martha Noerr ‘78**

Professor Lisa Kelly

The Honorable Ernest Kubota ‘58**

Professor Patricia Kuszler

Tovah LaDier ‘72

Law Office of Mark R. Beatty

The Honorable J. Robert Leach ‘76 & Vickie Norris**

Leadership Council on Legal Diversity

Robert ‘97 & Jennifer Leinbach

Jonathan Leptich ‘08

Linda Lillevik

Dario Machleidt ‘09

Dennis Madsen

Professor Elisabeth Manheim

Kari Manlove

James Marston ‘69

Riley & Michael Martin

Mills Meyers Swartling, PSC

Professor Donna Moniz ‘82*

Montgomery Scarp, PLLC

William ‘90 & Brenda Montgomery

Jeff ‘67 & Julia Morris

Mundt MacGregor LLP

The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen*

Tom O’Grady

Randall Olsen ‘06 & Terra Clarke Olsen

Oxford University Press

Joel Paisner & Elizabeth Gorman

Jeffrey ‘74 & Pamela Pewe

Professor Liz & Drew Porter

Tony Quang ‘13

Thomas ‘84 & Tracy Read***

Nita Rinehart ‘89

David ‘83 & Donna Robbins

Bruce ‘77 & Alida Robertson

Darcy Roennfeldt

Professor Emerita Marjorie Rombauer ‘60**

Glenn ‘78 & Beverly Sakuda

Faye Samuels

Betty ‘78 & Professor Lawrence Schall

B. Michael Schestopol ‘73 & Sarah Mann

Hatsushi Shimizu

Shan Sivalingam ‘07

William Snyder ‘89/LL.M. ‘6

Professor Hugh Spitzer ‘74 & Ann Scales

Evelyn ‘78 & J. Sroufe

Stokes Lawrence Charitable Foundation

Todd Terbeek

John ‘55 & Susan Tomlinson

JoAnne Tompkins ‘80 & Jon Schorr

The Honorable Michael ‘79 & Lois ‘80 Trickey

The Honorable Robert ‘54 & Elizabeth Utter

Wakeen & Associates

Raymond ‘76 & Marie Walters***

Washington Women’s Foundation

Thomas ‘90 & Alison Weinberg

David ‘83 & Sharon West

Jack Whisner

James Williams

Bruce ‘84 & Janet Winchell

Michael Withey

Professor Louis & Susan Wolcher

Ya-Ling Wu ‘08 & Clark Lin ‘08

John Wynn

Motohiro Yamane LL.M. ‘07 & Ha Ju

President Michael & Marti Young

Lien Yu ‘97

Jingxin Zhan LL.M. ‘12

Matt Zuchetto ‘02

$250 TO $499

Anonymous (3)

Amy Alexander ‘11 & Gabriel Kangas

R. Alleman

Professor Craig ‘89 & Joyce Allen

Steven Arterberry ‘99 & Catherine Tamaro

Jorgen Bader ‘61***

Jeff ‘12 & Heather Barnum

Jared Barrett ‘07

Marsha Beck ‘72*

Laurel Beeler ‘89

John Bishop ‘51

The Honorable Philip ‘72 & Dorothy Brandt

James ‘80 & Mary ‘84 Brewer

Dianne Brookins ‘87

Lt. Colonel Harold Brown ‘84

Byrnes Keller Cromwell, LLP

Professor Steve Calandrillo & Chryssa Deliganis*

Scott ‘79 & Elizabeth Campbell

Gretchen ‘99 & Adam Cappio

Aline Carton

Robert ‘72 & Joan Cathcart

Bruce ‘61 & Karen Cohoe

Complete Equity Markets, Inc.

Lauren Conner

John Cooper ‘70

Meredith Copeland ‘82

J. ‘66 & Marcia Crockett

Disability Rights Washington

Professors Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobel III***

Roxanne Eberle ‘09

David & Kimberly Eckstein

Malcolm Edwards ‘57

Howard ‘61 & Diane ‘61 Engle Jr.***

Josephine Ennis ‘13

Gordon ‘73 & Robin Ferguson

Brian Ferrasci-O’Malley ‘13

First Hawaiian Bank

Janice Flynn & Professor Walton Fangman

Fred & Margaret Grimm Foundation

Fuller & Fuller

Gino ‘82 & Christina Gabrio

John Gadon ‘83

Richard Gans ‘88 & Jennifer Turner

Andrew ‘74 & Carlyn Gauen

Sonja Gerrard

Douglas Green ‘78***

Grace Greenwich

Rita ‘84 & Professor John Griffith

G. Keith ‘52 & Naomi Grim

Frederick ‘81 & Margaret Grimm

Gerald ‘61 & Michelle Hahn

Garrett and Marcie Hall

Richard Hansen ‘74

Donald Harrison ‘74

Frederick ‘61 & Jean Hayes

Stephen ‘73 & Lynn Hazard

Hope Herron

William Hochberg ‘83

Brice Howard ‘03

Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel***

Nancy Isserlis

Sylvester ‘79 & Marlys Jaime***

Aurora Janke ‘12

Professor Stewart Jay

Richard ‘82 & Agnes Johannsen*

Nathan Johnson

Alexander Jones

Brent ‘99 & Amy Jones

Kim & Pamela Kaiser

Andreas ‘99 & Professor Sarah ‘03 Kaltsounis

Alan ‘65 & Cheryl Kane***

Van Katzman

Matthew ‘79 & Phyllis Knopp

John Knox ‘82 & DeeAnn Sisley*

Karen Kruse ‘90 & Bruce Cross*

Victor Lara

The Honorable Robert ‘78 & Seda Lasnik

The Honorable Robert ‘63 & Claudia Leick

Lexwell Partners

Henry Lippek ‘71

Paula Littlewood ‘97*

Fengming & Monica Liu

Robert MacAulay ‘82 & Keri Ellison*

Donald ‘68 & Brenda Mallett***

David & Jo Ann Marshall

The Honorable Ricardo Martinez ‘80 & Margaret Morris-Martinez

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Robert ‘70 & Patricia Nostrand

Lenell Nussbaum

Robert Nylander ‘87 & Andrea Faste

Professor Sean & Nicole O’Connor III

Karen Oewing

Leslie Ogg ‘66

Janet Olejar ‘72

Patrick O’Loughlin ‘82

Theodore Olson ‘61

Ramon Ortiz-Velez LL.M. ‘09

The Honorable Tina Orwall

Joni Ostergaard ‘80 & William Patton

PACCAR Foundation

Alyson Palmer ‘13

Grace Pangilinan Powers ‘96

Gavin Parr ‘00*

Frank ‘57 & Carol Payne

PCC Natural Markets

Michael Pedhirney ‘04

Aaron Perrine ‘02

Jan ‘69 & Marguerite Peterson

John Peterson ‘07

Arlene Price**

Gregory Provenzano ‘82

William Purdue

Daniel Quinn ‘82 & Mary Pinkel

James Ransom ‘81

Fred Rapaport ‘82 & Christine Sutton*

Tom Ravensberg

Timothy Redford ‘83**

Fredric ‘72 & Tana Reed*

AJ Rei-Perrine ‘04

Geoffrey ‘72 & Teresa Revelle*

James Reynolds ‘67

Roxana Rezai ‘10

Jeffrey ‘80 & Beverly Riedinger

Glade LL.M. ‘07 & Tamera Risenmay

Daniel Ritter ‘63

Robin Robbins

Michael ‘92 & Bridget ‘93 Rodden

Charles ‘60 & Marilyn Roe Jr.

Michael ‘86 & Susan Rogers

James ‘80 & Mary Rohrback

Martin ‘84 & Genevieve Rollins

Reyna Rollolazo ‘14

Linda Roubik ‘85***

E. ‘69 & Susan Routh

Lawrence Rozsnyai ‘06

Todd Rudberg

Virginia Rusch ‘77 & Ira Perman

The Honorable John ‘59 & Ann Rutter Jr.***

Susan Sampson ‘74

Beverly Sanders

The Honorable Richard Sanders ‘69

Professor Sallie & Christopher Sanford

Suzanne Sarason ‘81*

Daniel Satterberg ‘85 & Linda Norman ‘85

Klaus Schaie & Sherry Willis

Robert Schillberg ‘59

David ‘75 & Julie Schnapf

Louise Schneider

The Honorable Jack Scholfield ‘48

Jeffrey Schouten ‘97

Bruce ‘83 & Pamela Schroeder

Theodore Schultz ‘67***

Elise Scott

William Severson ‘74 & Meredith Lehr ‘81

Professor Bradley ‘88 & Ann Shannon***

Isidore Shapiro

Richard ‘87 & Barbara Sharkey

Cynthia Sharp ‘10 & Lincoln Kamell

Karin ‘70 & Thomas ‘70 Sheldon

David Shelton ‘70 & Frauke Rynd

Allison Sherrill ‘12

Samuel Sherry

Morris ‘63 & Donna Shore

Neal ‘64 & Linda Shulman

Susan Shyne ‘85 & Kirk Dawson

Mark Sidran ‘76 & Anais Winant

J. Ronald ‘68 & Barbara Sim**

Simburg, Ketter, Sheppard & Purdy, LLP

Richard Simkins

Phillip Singer ‘01

Natasha Singh ‘07

Benjamin Smith

Gerald Smith ‘70***

Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith

Mary Soderlind

Alan ‘96 & Kathryn Souders

Carole Souvenir ‘87 & Donald Hendrickson

Robert Spielman ‘05

Nancy Spigal

Richard Spoonemore ‘92 & Laura Periman

Michael ‘12 & Nicole Sprangers

Lynn St. Louis ‘85

Shannon ‘56 & Donna Stafford**

Eric ‘97 & Robyn Stahl

Casey Stamm

Michael Stanley ‘78

The Honorable Robert ‘61 & Dolores Stead

John Steinnes

Craig ‘70 & Sheila Sternberg

Frances Stickles

Alice Stokke & Jerome Kraus

David & Marcie Stone

The Honorable Waldo ‘49 & Norma Stone

Christopher Strawn & Brynn Blanchard

Paul Street ‘73**

Jack ‘65 & Peggy Strother

Angela Summerfield ‘94 & Brian Belbeck

Karen ‘81 & Clyde Summerville

Margaret Sundberg ‘84***

Neil Sussman ‘82

Kevin ‘88 & Lynn Swan

Gary Swearingen ‘94

Christopher Sweeney ‘04 & Brandon Loo

The Honorable Duane Taber ‘52

John Taggart ‘78

Jerry ‘69 & Susan Talbott

The Honorable Philip ‘76 & Darlene Talmadge

William ‘91 & Susan Taylor*

Karl Tegland ‘72*

Robert Thiel LL.M. ‘98

Jeffrey Thomas ‘91

Thompson and Delay

Daniel Thompson ‘88

Paul Thonn ‘55

Michael Tierney ‘91

Erin Toland ‘05/LL.M. ‘07

Pamela Tonglao ‘99

Maria Torres & Bruce Leech

Russell ‘67 & Sarah Tousley

Patrick ‘65 & Rebecca Turner**

John Vezina

Valerie Villacin ‘03

Megan ‘08 & Jeffery Vogel

Sharon & David Von Wolffersdorff

Ronald Wagenaar ‘84**

Connie Wan ‘06

The Honorable Thomas ‘66 & Mary Warren

The Honorable Anthony ‘63 & Lynn Wartnik

Washington Mediation Association

Carolanne & Eric Watness

Laura Watson ‘98

John ‘73 & Mary Watts*

Professor Kathryn & Andrew Watts

Kenneth ‘84 & Ellen ‘85 Weber

Carla & Brett Weiler

Steven ‘78 & Sharon Weinberg

Sheila Weirth ‘91

Ann Wennerstrom ‘08

Angela West

Ronald Weston ‘85

Dwight Wheaton II ‘97

Chach White

Renee Willette ‘94 & James Schwartz

Brooke Williams ‘12

Patrick Willison LL.M. ‘90

Bruce Witenberg & Nancy Carel

Jeannette & Eli Yim

Yong Yoon LL.M. ‘90

Wei-Mou Yu LL.M. ‘06

JoAnn Yukimura ‘74 & John Wehrheim

$1 TO $99

Anonymous (2)

W. Allan ‘63

Mallory Allen ‘12

Altria Group, Inc.

Justin ‘03 & Elizabeth Anderson

Nicholas Anderson ‘04*

Nelson Appelgate

Erin Apte

Valerie Balukas LL.M. ‘06

Battelle Memorial Institute

James Baxter

Marisa Bender ‘06

Lovie Bernardi ‘88 & Griffith Flaherty ‘88

Matthew Berry ‘12

Norman Best ‘86 & Susan Taylor

Report to Donors

(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING

Carol Ebinger

Frederick Ebinger

Hideo Egawa LL.M. ‘73

Susan ‘79 & Terry Egnor**

Shauna Ehlert ‘92

Kelsey Endres ‘07

Rudy ‘75 & Julie Englund

Lawrence Enomoto LL.M. ‘86

Muriel Epstein

Madoka Etoh

Expedia Inc.

Penny & Gerry Fagerlie

The Honorable Ellen ‘82 & Douglas Fair*

Philip ‘49 & Lindy Faris

Harry Fay ‘70

James ‘60 & Ulla Feeley

Alicia Feichtmeir ‘09

Grace Feldman

James ‘78 & Barbara Fitzgerald

Martha Fleming

Michele & Manuel Flores

Richard Forsell ‘80**

Mary ‘82 & Karl ‘82 Forsgaard

Lara Fowler ‘04

Steven Fox

Jonathan & Louise Franklin

Kristen Fraser ‘91

Frederick ‘65 & Carol Frederickson

Steve Fredrickson

Brian ‘04 & Jenna Free

Malik Freeman ‘83

Marthalee Galeota

Trent Gardner ‘04

Meghan Gavin

Jennifer ‘92 & Randolph ‘92 Geller

Gibbs Houston Pauw

Daniel ‘80 & Emily Gibson

Global Impact

Darcey Goelz ‘09

Michael Gotham ‘93 & Kenneth Wingard

Graham & Dunn PC

Michael Green ‘61

Don Gulliford ‘68 & Sharon Setzler

Ramon ‘98 & Ann Gupta

Janet Gwilym ‘12 & Bing Tso Jr.

Henry ‘63 & Kay Haarmann

Henry ‘62 & Catherine Haas

Clyde Haglund Jr. & Shelley Gibson

Kevin & Michelle Hamilton

Professor Michael Hatfield

Nathan Hatfield ‘13

John ‘53 & Geraldine Hay

Lisa Hayes ‘99

Alice Hearst ‘80

Mary Heath

C. Henry ‘48 & Beatrice Heckendorn

David Heller

Jeanette Henderson ‘88

Hendricks & Lewis, PLLC

Morton Herman ‘60 & Antonie Humphreys

Nicholas Hesterberg ‘09 & Maria Forero LL.M. ‘13

Nanette Heyning

Deborah Hilsman ‘83

Jayanne Hino ‘83

George ‘77 & Patsy Holzapfel

Lenny Hom*

Shon Hopwood ‘14

David Huang ‘71/Ph.D. ‘75

Juvella & Joseph Huang

Rex Huang ‘01

Claudette Hunt

Charles ‘56 & Gerry Huppin

Jennifer ‘00 & Joseph Hurley

Professor John Huston ‘52 & Heather Van Nuys LL.M. ‘07

Caitlin Imaki ‘11

Ross Jacobson ‘76

Constance Jarvis ‘55

Michael Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich

Andrea Johnson

The Honorable Charles Johnson ‘57*

Frances & William Johnson

Jennifer Johnson ‘99

The Honorable Larry ‘71 & Roberta Jordan

Cristina Jorgenson ‘04

Henry Josefsberg ‘88

Douglas Kaimakis

Robert Kaplan ‘69 & Professor Margaret Levi

Roberta ‘80 & Charles Katz

Professor Stephen Kauffman

Kathleen Keasler

Stanley Kehl ‘73 & Karen Fie

Kathryn Kelly

Diane ‘73 & Dennis ‘72 Kenny

Robert ‘66 & Mary Keolker*

H. K. Bruss Keppeler ‘66

Roger ‘81 & Cynthia Kindley

David ‘71 & Karen King

Robert King ‘99 & Patricia Fulton ‘99

William Kinsel ‘88

Marie Kirk ‘81

Mary ‘74 & Professor Alan Klockars***

The Honorable Ted ‘64 & Marian Kolbaba

Albert ‘78 & Sally Kookesh

Jeffrey ‘86 & Suzanne Koontz

Jane Korn

The Honorable Kevin Korsmo ‘82

Amy Kratz ‘96

Lisa Kremer ‘08

Professor Anita Krug

The Honorable David ‘78 & Peggy Kurtz***

Margarida Kuwan

Winnie Kwan

Stephanie Lakinski ‘13

Marc Lampson

Anne ‘80 & Brian Lawler

Shannon Lawless ‘10 & Paul Crisalli

Linda Lawson

Rhys ‘07 & Brooke Lawson

Matthew ‘97 & Karen LeMaster

Janet & David Leatherwood

Micah Lebank

Anne Lee

Karen ‘95 & Robert Lee

Serena Lee

Legal Career Management

Kathleen & Tom Lemly

Irene Leonard

Larry ‘71 & Karen Leonardson

Jeffrey ‘88 & Jennifer Letts

Larry Levy ‘68 & Diana Brambrink

Thomas Lewellyn

Richard & Anne Lichtenstadter

Jennifer Lippman

Richelle Little ‘07

Derek Loeser ‘94 & Katherine Van Kessel

Professor Clark Lombardi & Greta Austin

Ronnie ‘80 & Peggy Lopez

Suzanne Love ‘05

William Love

Vivian Luna ‘77 & Caesar Pizano

Donna Lurie

Edward ‘62 & Janis Mackie

Macquarie Group Foundation

Jennifer Mahalingappa ‘00

Marnie Malpass ‘02

J. Manning

Donald Marinkovich ‘59

Julia Markley ‘99

Nicholas Marritz ‘11

Susie Mathews

Rachel Mathisen

James McAteer ‘54

Kevin McClure ‘95

Professor Shannon McCormack

John ‘68 & Karen McGary

Professor Kathleen McGinnis

The Honorable Larry McKeeman ‘76 & Cynthia Treharne

Harry ‘77 & Marjolein McLachlin*

Jack ‘59 & Carolyn McMurchie**

Nancy & James McMurrer

Joseph Meara ‘02 & Karen Rebholz

Ian Mensher ‘07

David Merchant ‘92 & Shelley Pellegrino ‘98

MFR Law Group LLC

John & Diane Michalik

The Honorable Richard ‘70 & Janis Miller

Rodman Miller ‘50**

Thomas Miller

George & Nilmah Mills Jr.

Ioana ‘07 & Titus Miron

Maureen Mitchell ‘00

Roland Mitchell ‘96

Sarah & Don Moran

Peter Moreno ‘08

Rick ‘70 & Susan Morry***

Mary Moseley ‘87

Chris Muller

Richard ‘61 (D) & Mertie Muller**

Michael Nagle

Karen ‘06 & Todd Nashiwa

Thomas Nast ‘77

William Nelson ‘68

Alison Nesmith

Betty Ngan ‘82 & Tom Mailhot

Jessica Nguyen ‘06

Professor Peter Nicolas

Mark ‘84 & Mary Nielsen

Kelly ‘89 & Dermot Noonan

David Norris ‘78

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GIFTS IN HONORAND IN MEMORYOF FAMILY ANDFRIENDS

During the 2013-14 Fiscal Year the School of Law received gifts in honor of and in memory of the following individuals and groups.

Eugene Pinkelmann Jr. LL.M. ‘78

Pitman ‘85 & Victoria Potter*

Justin Quackenbush

Malia Radford

Glenn Ramel LL.M. ‘04

Heather Rankie ‘09

Robert ‘57 & Harriet Redman

Milton ‘07 & Tara Reimers III

Daniel Richards ‘14

Eryne Richards

Marilou Rickert ‘90

Megan Rinehimer ‘10

Bethany Roberts ‘14/LL.M. ‘14

M. ‘85 & James Roche

Sondra Rose

Stephen Rosenbaum

Elizabeth ‘94 & Paal Ryan**

Yoshiko Saheki*

Scott Samuelson ‘93

Julie Sarale

Jeffrey Schick ‘01

Andrea Schmitt ‘07

Loretta Schutten-Pieretti & Art Pieretti

Michael & Jane Schwab

Miriam Schwartz

Kate Seabright

Michael Sennott ‘02

Linda Sferra ‘95 & Forrest Miller

Sammuel Shaddox ‘13

Ashley Shattles

Judith Shoshana ‘83

F. Andrekita Silva ‘87 & Philip Mealand

Marcus ‘14 & Stephanie Skeem

The Honorable T. Small ‘78

Jenna Smith

Sidney Snyder Jr. ‘78 & Robin Powell

Ann Spangler

Sprint Foundation

Maxine Stansell ‘79

Quentin ‘70 & Sherry Steinberg

Jan Stephens

Robbins ‘66 & Ann Stocking

Joseph Stockton ‘12

Heather Straub ‘99

John Sullivan

Shara Svendsen ‘06 & Alejandro Cumplido

Joanna Sylwester ‘13

Leila Taaffe ‘79 & Arthur Kellermann

Trisna Tanus ‘13

Faye Tao

Katherine Tarlock

Toby Thaler ‘76 & Beckey Sukovaty*

Devin Theriot-Orr ‘03 & Amber Vora

Lawrence ‘52 & La Vaughn Therriault

Eric & K. Thorsos

Emily Toler

Danh Tran

Michael ‘93 & Lori Trevino

Reba Turnquist

Pongtawat Uttravorarat LL.M. ‘11

Joseph Vance ‘95

Josephine Vestal ‘74

Darryl ‘82 & Jann Vhugen

Rodney ‘70 & Nina Waldbaum**

Emily Warden ‘94*

Robert ‘56 & Nancy Westberg

Robert ‘52 & Cynthia Wetherholt

Stephanie White

Stephen White LL.M. ‘87

Brenda Williams ‘97

Irving Williams

Todd ‘10 & Emily Williams

Cheryl Wilson

Lewis Wilson ‘72*

Rachael Wisecarver ‘12

Carmen Wong ‘11

Jesse Woo ‘13

Andrea Woods

Patsy Wosepka & Shashi Karan

Ge Wu

Ryan Yoke ‘13 & Leah Hampson-Yoke

YourCause/EA Outreach

Zelle Hofmann Voelbel & Mason LLP

Report to Donors

(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING

In honor of Joel Benoliel ‘71

In honor of Laurie Carlsson

In honor of John Davis’s ‘40 100th Birthday

In honor of Margaret J. Fester

In honor of Debra and Robert Field

In honor of William Gates, Sr. ‘50

In honor of Miriam Gordon ‘13

In honor of Dean Roland Hjorth

In honor of The Immigration Clinic

In honor of IPNW Exonorees

In honor of Joe Janes’s and Terry Price’s Marriage

In honor of Lisa Kelly

In honor of Dr. Robert Kyler

In honor of Jackie McMurtie

In honor of Emily Nelson ‘14

In honor of Brandon Olebar

In honor of Joe Pierce

In honor of Ronald R. Ward’s outstanding service

In memory of Nicholas Ryan Abel

In memory of Nancy Brown

In memory of F. Lee Campbell ‘50

In memory of Justice Tom Chambers ‘69

In memory of Professor Charles E. Corker

In memory of Betty Jean Ewart

In memory of Professor Joan Fitzpatrick

In memory of Donald Fleming ‘51

In memory of Robert and Betty B. ‘56 Fletcher

In memory of Kristen J. Fluhrer ‘74

In memory of D. Wayne Gittinger ‘57

In memory of The Honorable James B. Haines, Jr.

In memory of Ralph Johnson

In memory of Professor Richard O. Kummert

In memory of Professor Paul Steven Miller

In memory of Robert A. Purdue ‘42

In memory of Joanne M. Roddis

In memory of Stanley M. Samuels ‘56

In memory of Lyle R. Schneider ‘47

In memory of J. Dimmitt Smith ‘53

In memory of Professor William B. Stoebuck ‘59

In memory of Jim Trujillo ‘76

In memory of Josephine Vaughn

In memory of the WSBA Board of Governors, Governor At-Large Karen Denise Wilson’s Mother

Catherine Borden ‘07 & Gabe Murphy

Anna Borris ‘14

Melissa Bowers

Andrea Bradford ‘12

Jessica Bran ‘05

Skylar Brett ‘12

Kathleen & Professor Devon Brewer

Taya Briley ‘00 & Brian Fox

Roger Brodniak ‘00

Thomas Brookes ‘89

Cathy Brooking

Terry Brooks ‘66

Nadia Bugaighis ‘12

Kevin Burke

Bryan Caditz ‘85

Hugh Cain ‘82 & Anne Clark

Charles Caldart ‘74 & Mary Kopas

Robert ‘83 & Janice Carmichael

Susan ‘05 & Theodore Carroll

Nikki Carsley

Holley Cassell

Janice Caulfield

Pedro Celis ‘14

Sarah Chaplin

Alena Ciecko ‘04

Katherine Ciliberto

James Cissell ‘87 & Linda Johnson

Barbara Clabots

Kern Cleven ‘83

Timothy Clifford ‘60

William Coats ‘72

Richard ‘71 & Jane Cohen**

Mary Conlisk

Rachel Cook ‘13

Emily Cordo ‘05

Gary Cronk ‘64

Robroy Crow ‘85

Caitlin Cushing ‘12 & Benjamin Dog

Dessa Dal Porto ‘14

Zachary & Allison Daniels

Don Dascenzo ‘78

William Davis ‘98*

Emily Deckman ‘05

Tyler Dehart-Krahn

Michelle Delappe ‘09/LL.M. ‘10 & Avilio Moreno Villamediana

Frances ‘10 & Nicholas Dewing

Ishbel Dickens ‘02

Jessica Dickinson

Stephanie Do ‘09/LL.M. ‘10

Patrick Doherty

Michael Douglas ‘06

George Dowd ‘58

Danielle Doyle ‘09

Kim Ebinger

Amy Edwards ‘01

Michael Edwards

Constance Ellingson ‘76 & Roger Cohen

Susan Encherman

The Honorable Mary Fairhurst

Virginia Faller ‘87

Professor Jennifer Fan

Jay Farrell LL.M. ‘07

Mary Lou Fenili & Karen Hansen

John Fetters

Joshua Field ‘06

Emily Fondaw

Steven ‘90 & Louise Forrest*

Jerome Froland ‘84

Everett Fruehling ‘91 & Lynne Thomas

Alison Gaffney ‘12

Margaret Gaffney ‘81

Carrie Gage ‘08

Courtney Garcia ‘06

Gerard ‘83 & Jill Gasperini

Christina Gebreab ‘14

Jeremy Gelms ‘12

Getty Images Seattle, Inc.

Lee Glidewell

Paul Goldberg ‘67*

Jeffrey Gonzales ‘82*

Miriam Gordon ‘13

Gail Gorud ‘82

David ‘58 & Carolyn Gossard Jr.

Lola Gracey

Heather ‘12 & Reverend G. Griffith

Sheila Griffiths

Nicole Gustine ‘14

Donald & Karen Gwilym

Joseph Haberzetle ‘99/LL.M. ‘00 & Katherine Gardner

Donald ‘65 & Mary Hale

Marilyn Hall

Shelley Halstead ‘14

Hilary Hammell ‘12

Terence Hanley ‘57

Fred Harrington & Najmi Voss

Benjamin Harris ‘12

Lena Haslund ‘07

Katy ‘07 & Robert ‘07 Hatfield

Nicholas Hathaway ‘14

Beau Haynes ‘11 & Idalia Limon

John ‘53 & Phyllis Hazelwood

Erin Hebert ‘14

Dennis Helmick ‘70

Lara Hemingway ‘00/ LL.M. ‘01

The Honorable Stephen Hillman ‘75

Douglas Hojem ‘80

Richard ‘58 & Gerene Holt*

Courtney Hood

James Howe ‘80 & Janet Gros Jacques**

Brooke Howlett ‘14

Yang-Hsien Hsu ‘11

Douglas Huber

Thomas Hudson ‘13

Intel Foundation

John ‘62 & Marli Iverson***

James Jackson

Professor Cynthia Jacobs

Lauren Jacobs

Robert Jacoby

Meena Jagannath ‘10

Andrew ‘09 & Laurel Jennings

Tor Jernudd ‘13

Augustin ‘79 & Margarita Jimenez

Eric Johnson

Larry ‘78 & Cynthia Johnson

Barbara ‘73 & Craig Johnston

Jones & Ibrahim, PLLC

Alison Jones

Patrick Joyce ‘12

Sarah Joye ‘11

Bruce ‘79 & Colett Judd

Tyson ‘06 & Joan Kade

Stanley Kanarowski ‘91/LL.M. ‘92

Gayle Kenison

Daniel Kenny

Christine Kim ‘10/LL.M. ‘11

Ronald Kinsey Jr. ‘67

John & Heather Kirkwood

David Klein LL.M. ‘11

Kathleen Kline ‘13

Ada Ko LL.M. ‘99

Judith Kovarik

James Ladley ‘61

Vanessa Lee

Richard Lentini ‘88

The Honorable Roger Lewis ‘54*

Jenna Lieske ‘14

Nicole Lindquist ‘09

Richard Linville ‘82

Sarah Lippek ‘13

Stephanie Liu ‘14

Mindy Longanecker ‘10

Jeanine ‘13 & Mark Lutzenhiser

Chauncey MacLean LL.M. ‘97

Stacy Marchesano ‘08

Berrie Martinis ‘94

Stephen Masciocchi ‘90

Scott Matheson ‘01

Paul Mathew LL.M. ‘02

Nicholas Mathews ‘03/ LL.M. ‘08

Thomas McCall Jr. LL.M. ‘81 & Kathleen Taimi

Jacob McCoy ‘14

Lindsey McCune ‘07

Ellen ‘99 & Michael McCurdy

Earl McGimpsey ‘71

Samuel Mendez

Amy Mensik ‘11

Kanen Merrill-Currie ‘12

Mark & Susan Miller

Deane ‘82 & Leslie Minor

Kristen Mitchell ‘01

Shane ‘04 & Andrea Moloney

Jonathan ‘09 & Christina Moore

Andrew Morgan ‘14

Carol Mortensen ‘03

Satoshi Murakami LL.M. ‘13

David Myers LL.M. ‘12

Krista Nelson

Ari ‘10 & Candace Neumann

Nicholas ‘70 & Gail Newman

Wright Noel ‘95

Cooper ‘08 & Lauren ‘09 Offenbecher

David Paige

Nancy Paine

Paul Panther ‘88

Caitlin Park

Glen ‘97 & Madelyn Pascual**

Patrick ‘80 & Julie Paulich

Drew Pearsall ‘13

Peick Law Group, P.S.

John ‘75 & Vickie Peick

Jane Pelly

Chelsea ‘09 & Matthew Peters

John Peterson

Erin Pettigrew ‘12

Juli Pierce ‘04*

8180

uw

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FA

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20

14

Gerry Alexander ‘64Bean Gentry Wheeler Peternell

Stan Barer ‘63Saltchuk Resources Inc.

Nathan Barnes ‘12CBRE

The Hon. Bobbe Bridge ‘76Center for Children &Youth Justice

David Broom ‘63Paine Hamblen LLP

Joseph Brotherton ‘82The Brotherton Companies

Darren Carnell ‘95King County Prosecutor’sOffice

Kendra Comeau ‘11Patterson Buchanan

The Hon. Carolyn Dimmick ‘53U.S. District Court of Western WA

Jack Ding ‘11Desh International Law

Rick Dodd ‘70K & L Gates

Prof. Dwight Drake ‘73UW School of Law

UW SCHOOL OF LAW LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

The UW School of Law Leadership Council is an organization that advances the mission of the

UW School of Law by building the institution through leadership, serving as a bridge between the

UW School of Law and the community, inspiring alumni and community involvement, and securing

the financial future of the law school.

President Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94Intellectual Ventures

Vice President Judy Bendich ‘75 Attorney at Law

Executive DirectorDean Kellye TestyUW School of Law

Chair, Advancement Committee Greg Gorder ‘85 Intellectual Ventures

E XECUTIVE COMMIT TEE

Vice Chair, Advancement CommitteeJoel Benoliel ‘71 Retired, Costco Wholesale Corporation

Chair, Engagement CommitteeGerald Swanson ‘96KOM Consulting PLLC

Vice Chair, Engagement CommitteeRebecca Glasgow ‘02 State Attorney General’s Office

Chair, Stewardship Committee President, Law School Foundation Robert Giles ‘74Perkins Coie

Vice Chair, Stewardship Committee VP, Law School Foundation Craig Wright ‘91Gordon Thomas Honeywell

Ad-hoc memberLinda Ebberson ‘76Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson

Ad-hoc memberPaula Littlewood ‘97Washington State Bar Association

Ad-hoc memberKimberly EcksteinUW School of Law

Daniel Finney ‘88Witherspoon Kelley

Robert Flennaugh ‘96Robert Flennaugh II PLLC

Leonor Fuller ‘84Fuller & Fuller

Arley Harrel ‘73Williams Kastner

John HuckabayChemAlum

Colleen Kinerk ‘77Cable, Langenbach, Kinerk,& Bauer, LLP

Craig Kinzer ‘82Kinzer Real Estate Services& Denny Hill Capital, LP

Earl Lasher ‘66Lasher Holzapfel Sperry &Ebberson

Eugene Lee ‘66/LL.M. ‘68Blakemore Foundation

Elizabeth Leedom ‘84Bennett Bigelow & Leedom

Mindy Longanecker ‘10Seattle City Attorney’s Office

Suzanne Love ‘05King County Prosecutor’s Office

Scott Morris ‘97Inland Construction

Christina Richmond ‘07Snohomish County Prosecutor’s Office

Bruce Robertson ‘77Garvey Schubert Barer

Skylee Robinson ‘09Attorney at Law

Judith Runstad ‘74Foster Pepper

Deep Sengupta ‘01Fed Ex Trade Networks

Sabina Shapiro ‘02Foster Pepper

David TangK & L Gates

James Torgerson ‘84Stoel Rives

Michael Wampold ‘96Peterson WampoldRosato Luna Knopp

Ron Whitener ‘94Tulalip Tribal Court

MEMBERS

In 2013, Jack MacDonald ’40, a humble yet remarkable alumnus, bequeathed $56 million to

the University of Washington School of Law. Jack’s gift made history as the largest ever in the

law school’s 114 year history, and the largest ever estate gift to the UW. Jack’s transformative

gift, in the form of a trust, will reach every corner of the law school. The annual income from

Jack’s trust will support student scholarships, faculty excellence and investment in innovative

programs that will enhance students’ education and professional opportunities.

What inspired Jack to give so generously to the UW School of Law? The legacy Jack created

stemmed from a profound gratitude for his legal education and a desire to help others realize

the dream of obtaining a law degree. Less than 4% of UW Law’s funding comes from the state.

Therefore every gift, irrespective of size, is crucial to the school’s success. As we continue our

work of educating leaders for the global common good, we are profoundly grateful to every

donor who invests in the future of UW Law.

Jack’s transformative generosity leaves a legacy that will be felt for generations to come.

What will your legacy be?

Learn more about the options for giving by contacting

Assistant Dean for Advancement Kimberly Eckstein at 206.543.2964.

82

BOX 353020 SEATTLE, WA 98195-3020

Nonprofit OrgUS Postage PAIDSeattle, WAPermit No. 62

Celebrat ion of

D I S T I N C T I O N

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR 2014 ALUMNI AWARD RECIPIENTS

R ECENT GR A DUATE AWA R D Abigail Daquiz ‘04

SERV ICE R ECOGNIT ION AWA R D C. Kent Carlson ’67

DIST INGUISHED A LUMNI AWA R D Joel Benoliel ‘71

HENRY M. JACK SON DIST INGUISHED

A LUMNI PUBL IC SERV ICE AWA R D Gary Bass ‘65

THIS YEAR’S EVENT WILL HONOR OUR ANNIVERSARY CLASSES OF

1964, 1974, 1984, 1994 AND 2004.

For information on our alumni events, visit www.law.washington.edu/alumni