WINTER 2012 Alumni Magazine & Dean’s Report · WINTER 2012 Alumni Magazine ... and political...

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A NEW ERA BEGINS WINTER 2012 Alumni Magazine & Dean’s Report

Transcript of WINTER 2012 Alumni Magazine & Dean’s Report · WINTER 2012 Alumni Magazine ... and political...

A N E W E R A B E G I N S

WINTER 2012

Alumni Magazine & Dean’s Report

Message from the Dean

Gary R. RobertsDean and Gerald L. Bepko Professor of Law

By now, I hoPe aLL of you have heaRD aBout the PhenomenaL GIft fRom BoB mcKInney to name ouR Law schooL. It would be almost impossible to overstate the significance of this for the future of the school and for the state of Indiana. the school is now positioned to take it to the next level (to borrow an oft-used phrase from the athletic world).

I should emphasize that Bob would not have made this transformational gift if he had not had the vision to see what this law school can be and the confidence to believe that his investment will be used wisely to advance the school’s greatness. thus, while we certainly have to thank Bob for that vision and confidence, we also have to thank our superb, hard-working faculty and staff that make this the excellent school that it is, the great students who make all of us proud, as well as all of the many alumni and friends who have stepped up to support the school with their time, wisdom, and dollars. without the commitment and contributions of everyone in the law school’s wonderful extended family, it would not be the kind of place that would generate the great positive momentum that Bob’s gift and all of the school’s other recent accomplishments reflect.

I have often argued that our law school is and has long been the single most important educational asset in all of Indiana inasmuch as it produces most of the lawyers and judges for the state as well as much of the business and political leadership. But with the resources that Bob’s marvelous gift will provide, along with the additional funds being raised in the capital campaign and the new base budget dollars being provided by a renegotiated deal with the university lowering our annual overhead charges, the school is now positioned to evolve from being an excellent Indiana law school to being one of the nation’s best and most respected public law schools.

as I mentioned, the school’s faculty plays an integral part in making our school the fine institution that it is. this issue focuses on several of our outstanding faculty. I think you will be impressed with their passion and their accomplishments. and I hope that all of you will have the opportunity soon to get to know many of the faculty who have arrived since you left, and that you will follow their careers as they lead our school to greater national and international prominence. I am sure you will be as proud of them as I am.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 1

Alumni Magazine and Dean’s Report

The alumni magazine is published by the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law and the IU McKinney School of Law Alumni Association.

EDITORJonna Kane MacDougall

ASSOCIATE EDITORElizabeth Allington

EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSShari BaldwinShaun DankoskiAmanda KammanDavid MortonLisa Schrage

WRITERSElizabeth AllingtonAlicia Dean CarlsonJonna Kane MacDougallRebecca Trimpe

PHOTOGRAPHYJohn FleckJohn GentryZach HetrickIUPUI Visual Media: David Jaynes Tim YatesTyagan MillerSam Scott

Other photos courtesy of:Americans for Community DevelopmentAzalea AssafCynthia AdamsErin AlbertEric DannenmaierFrank EmmertIndiana State Bar AssociationIndiana University FoundationIndianapolis ColtsNCAAPeter PrescottErin RadefeldMark ShawTom Wilson

DESIGNDesignMark: Susie CooperPRINTING:Fineline Printing Group

The magazine is printed on Utopia #2 Extra Green

2 News Briefs

4 Generosity Personified

8 Focus on Faculty

20 Health Law Compliance Program

23 Environmental and Natural

Resources Law

24 Terror at the Super Bowl

28 Evening of Celebration

32 Commencement

36 Law School for Journalists

37 Labor-Management Seminar

39 James P. White Lecture

40 Annual CLE Program

41 Faculty News

51 Class Notes

53 New Books by Mark Shaw ‘72

57 In Memoriam

59 Dean’s Report 2010-2011

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8

20

24

On The Web indylaw.indiana.edu

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CONTENTS

On The Cover Dean Gary R. Roberts and Robert H. McKinney

NewsBriefs

ProfessorCarrieHaganPresentsinSpain

ON JuLY 13, PROfESSOR CARRIE

HAGAN presented a paper on “Marginalizing

Discrimination: How Social Justice,

Advocacy and LGBT Awareness on a

Clinical Level Can Make Equality More of

a Reality,” at the 6th Global Alliance for

Justice Education Worldwide Conference

in Valencia, Spain. The conference, which

hosted approximately 285 delegates

from 43 countries, this year was held in

partnership with the 9th International

Journal of CliniCal legal eduCation (IJCLE)

Conference. The conference was hosted

by the Institute of Human Rights, faculty

of Law, university of Valencia. The Valencia

Conference is an opportunity for law

teachers, law students, legal practitioners,

jurists and social activists to acquire new

ideas, models, and skills for the use of

education to promote social justice.

Professor Hagan’s talk pointed out that

clinical students, through training regarding

LGBT issues, can make a difference for a

vulnerable population that may not otherwise

obtain legal assistance.

Professor Hagan earned her B.A. from

the university of Kansas and her J.D. from

the university of Cincinnati College of Law.

She is a Clinical Associate Professor of

Law. Previously, she directed a family law/

domestic violence clinic in Rhode Island,

and was supervising attorney for a domestic

violence clinic in Ohio. Her research agenda

focuses on interdisciplinary partnerships

between law and social work.

ProfessorCynthiaAdamsCollaborateswithKenyaLawSchool

AT THE INVITATION Of THE KENYA

SCHOOL Of LAW, PROfESSOR CYNTHIA

ADAMS made a presentation on clinical

skills curriculum development at the

school’s Midterm Review, held in Nairobi on

September 21-23. Those attending included

the Minister of Justice and Constitutional

Affairs, Justices of the Kenyan High Court,

the Secretary of Kenya’s Council of Legal

Education, the Deans from Moi university

School of Law and Strathmore university

School of Law, as well as administration

and law faculty from the Kenya Law School,

Moi university, the university of Nairobi, and

Strathmore university.

The Kenya Law School is consulting with

Professor Adams on enhancing its Advocates

Training Programme. Kenya Law School,

founded in 1963 as the country’s first law

school, began its one-year Advocates Training

Programme in 2008 upon recommendation

from the Ministerial Taskforce on the

Development of a Policy and Legal framework

for Legal Education in Kenya. The Advocates

Training Programme provides clinical skills

training to prepare students for admission

to the Roll of Advocates and to become

officers of Kenya’s High Court.

Professor Adams is pictured above (front row, second from left) with dignitaries and representatives from the Kenya School of Law.

JudgeRobb,‘78,ReceivesAntoinetteDakinLeachAward

CHIEf JuDGE MARGRET G. ROBB,

of the Indiana Court of Appeals, received

the Indianapolis Bar Association’s 2011

Antoinette Dakin Leach Award on October 5,

at the IBA’s Women and the Law Division’s

“Women, Law & Leadership Symposium.”

The award, established to honor outstanding

women in the legal profession, is named for

one of the first female lawyers in Indiana.

Chief Judge Robb expressed her

gratitude, saying, “We’ve gone from

Antoinette Dakin Leach and Helen Gougar

to this day. Who knows where the next 130

years will take us? —not only as a milestone

that commemorates women’s achievements,

but the achievements of all who value

excellence and fairness and the promise of

the law to treat all people equally.”

Appointed to the Court of Appeals in

July, 1998, Chief Judge Robb holds B.S. and

M.S. degrees from Purdue university, a J.D.

(magna cum laude) from the law school, and

is a graduate of the Graduate Program for

Indiana Judges. In 2011, she was elected

by her colleagues as the first woman Chief

Judge in the Court’s 110-year history.

She has held numerous positions

in state and national bar and law-related

organizations and is a frequent speaker

on legal topics for attorneys, judges,

and professional, civic and community

organizations. Chief Judge Robb has

received numerous awards for her

contributions to the judicial system.

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HershmanNamedtoDirectorPositionINDIANA SENATOR BRANDT

HERSHMAN has been named the Director of Educational Outreach for the Program on Law and State Government at the law school.

Senator Hershman, also a second-year student at the school, comes from a rural background and has experience working with elected officials at the local, state, and federal levels. He has represented Senate District 7 since 2000, which encompasses parts of Jasper, White, Carroll, Tippecanoe, Clinton, and Boone counties.

He intended to enroll in law school right after completing his undergraduate studies; he majored in political science at Purdue university. But an opportunity to work in President George H.W. Bush’s administration was “too good to pass up.” He sees earning a law degree as a benefit to his work as a state senator, and believes that there are opportunities for non-lawyer public servants to interact with the law school.

“This is a unique opportunity to leverage the resources of the law school in a proactive way to benefit those in public service,” Senator Hershman said.

NewsBriefs

JanetGongola,‘03,OverseesNewIPLawEnforcement

JANET GONGOLA,‘03, has been

appointed as Patent Reform Coordinator by

David Kappos, undersecretary of Commerce

for Intellectual Property and Director of

the u.S. Patent and Trademark Office. In

this role, she is the chief agency official

responsible for implementing the rules,

regulations, and studies in support of the

Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA), the

biggest change in patent law since 1836.

The AIA converts the patent procedure

from a first-to-invent to a first-to-file

system. It also creates new definitions of

prior art, excludes certain subject matter

as unpatentable, provides new post grant

challenges to patents, eliminates the best

mode defense, replaces interferences with

derivation proceedings, expands prior user

rights, and makes a myriad of other major

alterations, both substantive and procedural.

Previously, Gongola served as Associate

Solicitor, Office of the Solicitor, u.S. Patent &

Trademark Office.

ProfessorandStudentAppearonL3CPanelinChicago

EVENING DIVISION STuDENT, DR. ERIN

ALBERT, ‘12, and Professor Antony Page

spoke at the inaugural conference on the

“L3C” (or low-profit limited liability company)

in Chicago, June 6 -7. The event examined a

new paradigm in private-public partnerships.

Albert and Page spoke on a panel

entitled “The L3C: from Hypothetical to

Reality.” Albert presented the story of two

L3Cs, real and hypothetical, notably in health

care. Professor Page discussed Ben &

Jerry’s, their supposed need to sell out and

what would have happened if it was an L3C.

The event was sponsored by the

Americans for Community Development

and the Levy Entrepreneurship Center

of the Kellogg School of Management at

Northwestern university. The gathering

received additional support from the

Council on foundations.

Albert, who holds a B.S. in Pharmacy,

an M.B.A. in Marketing, and a Doctor of

Pharmacy, is a business owner, writer,

assistant professor at Butler university

and a current evening division law student.

Professor Page is a John S. Grimes fellow

at the law school, who holds a J.D., an

M.B.A., and a Bachelor of Commerce

degree. He specializes in corporations,

corporate governance, and mergers &

acquisitions. His scholarly work has been

cited by several u.S. courts, including the

Supreme Court of the united States and

four state supreme courts.

The photo above shows Professor Antony Page speaking at the conference.

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Generosity Personified

“It is impossible to overstate the impact of this gift

Law School Named After Robert H. McKinney

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 5

Robert H. McKinney (center) receives the first of four standing ovations. He is shown with IU President Michael A. McRobbie (left) and Dean Gary R. Roberts (right).

I ndiana University President Michael A. McRobbie announced the naming of the Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis in honor of Indianapolis attorney, banker and civic leader Robert H. McKinney.

The school is now known as the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in recognition of the largest gift ever received by the school and one of the largest in legal education. McKinney’s gift of $24 million, along with matching funds committed through the IUPUI IMPACT fundraising campaign, brings the total value of the gift to $31.5 million.

The landmark gift will provide funding for five endowed chairs to attract and retain nationally recognized scholar-teachers to the faculty. The gift will also create a $17.5 million endowment to fund McKinney Family Scholarships for outstanding students.

“With this extremely generous gift, Bob McKinney will have a transformative impact on a law school that already has provided the academic foundation for a remarkable number of lawyers, judges, and community and government leaders across Indiana and beyond,” McRobbie said.

“This gift will be instrumental in our efforts to attract nationally renowned legal scholars to our law school in Indianapolis, as well as top-flight students from around the country, and we are deeply grateful to Bob for his generosity,” McRobbie added.

Law school dean, Gary R. Roberts, said the gift will make a major difference in the school’s ability to achieve its long-term goals.

“It is impossible to overstate the impact of this gift upon the law school, the campus and the state,” Roberts said, adding that the McKinney School is believed to be one of just a few of the nearly 200 law schools in the country to be named for

People don’t often have the opportunity to see generosity in action, but that

is exactly what law school

students, faculty, staff, and

alumni, along with numerous

government and university

officials, were able to witness on

Thursday, December 1 at Inlow Hall.

upon the law school, the campus and the state.”—Dean Gary R. Roberts

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a major benefactor. “It provides for faculty chairs and student support to create an unparalleled resource with which to realize the aspirations of our school: to become one of the finest public law schools in the nation. And because this law school produces so many leaders throughout the state, this is an investment in the future of the people of Indiana and beyond.”

Dean Roberts continued, “The most important asset anybody owns is his name—and Bob, giving your hard-earned treasure is certainly a wonderful gift, and we’ll take it—but giving us your name is even more special and significant—and it puts a special responsibility on all of us to make sure that you will always be proud of this school.”

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Chancellor Charles R. Bantz praised the gift as being consistent both with the school’s future vision and Bob McKinney’s commitment to legal education in Indiana.

“This tremendous gift supports the McKinney School’s commitment to being a leader in legal education,” Bantz said. “As a founding partner of Bose McKinney & Evans LLP, one of the largest law firms in Indianapolis, Bob McKinney will lend his name to a school that can proudly claim many prominent lawyers, judges and public servants worldwide as its alumni.”

“A law degree is a great introduction to broad areas of leadership —political leadership, business leadership and civic leadership,” McKinney said. “The IU law school in Indianapolis plays a vital role in developing the leaders Indiana needs to succeed. I am excited to be able to make a commitment that will help the school build on its proud heritage and achieve its goal of being one of the best law schools in the country.”

“Bob is absolutely dedicated to excellence and to his community, and expresses that commitment with integrity, loyalty and grace,” said IU Foundation President Gene Tempel. “His gift today stands as a challenge and invitation to others who believe in the mission of the school and the importance of its contributions to the community and the state.”

McKinney’s gift, which will be administered and invested by the IU Foundation, was made through the IUPUI IMPACT campaign, a $1.25 billion fundraising campaign publicly announced in October 2010. As of September 2011, the effort had surpassed the $1 billion mark.

The IU Board of Trustees approved the naming at its October meeting. The name change took effect on December 1. A formal naming ceremony is planned for the fall of 2012.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 7

Robert H. McKinneyThroughout his career—as a legal, business and civic leader—

Robert H. McKinney has served his community, his state and his nation with integrity and passion.

McKinney was born November 7, 1925, in Indianapolis, Indiana. His boyhood dream of becoming a national park guide was derailed when World War II broke out. Eager to serve his country, McKinney attended the U.S. Naval Academy, where he received a B.S. in engineering. He served in the Pacific theater for three years (including a period on General Douglas MacArthur’s staff) before returning to law school in Indianapolis in 1949. Recalled to the Navy after receiving his law degree from Indiana University, he served in the Korean War for two years.

Until his retirement in 2005, McKinney was chairman and CEO of First Indiana Corporation, parent company of First Indiana Bank (now M&I Bank), at the time the largest bank based in Indianapolis. He was chairman and CEO of The Somerset Group, Inc., a diversified manufacturing and investment company. He was also a founding partner of Bose McKinney & Evans LLP, one of the largest law firms in Indianapolis, and was instrumental in the firm’s growth until he retired in 1992.

McKinney’s commitment to community-based banking prompted President Jimmy Carter to appoint McKinney as chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation in 1977.

He is a director of the U.S. Naval Academy Foundation, Indiana University Foundation, the Conservation Law Center, the Sierra Club Foundation (former chair), and advising director of the IU School of Public & Environmental Affairs. He has been a director of many civic corporations including the Indianapolis Economic Club, the Indianapolis and Indiana Chambers of Commerce, Chief Executives Organization, Inc., the World Presidents’ Organization, and the Indianapolis Committee on Foreign Relations.

McKinney served on the IU Board of Trustees from 1989 to 1998 and was president from 1993 to 1994. He was chairman of the Board of Advisors of IUPUI and was formerly a director and chairman of the Board of Trustees of Marian College.

McKinney has been active in the American, Indiana, and Indianapolis Bar Associations, serving as a director of the Young Lawyers Section of the ABA, a director of the Indiana State Bar, and treasurer and director of the Indianapolis Bar Association. He has received Honorary Doctorates of Law from Marian College in 1976 and Butler University in 1981. McKinney is the 1994 recipient of the Junior Achievement Central Indiana Business Hall of Fame Award, a 1995 recipient of the Hoosier Heritage Award, a 1999 recipient of the IU Academy of Law Alumni Fellows Award, and the 2000 recipient of the Indianapolis Archdiocese Spirit of Service Award.

1– Robert H. McKinney (center) with Dean Gary Roberts, IUPUI Chancellor Charles Bantz, IU President Michael A. McRobbie, and IU Foundation President Gene Tempel in the law school’s Woodard Room in front of a fireplace from the Maennerchor building where McKinney attended classes.

2– McKinney (center), with daughters Marni McKinney Waterfield and Lisa McKinney, wearing Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law caps.

3– McKinney (second from right) with his children, Kevin McKinney, Lisa McKinney and Marni McKinney Waterfield.

4– The law school’s Conour Atrium was overflowing with alumni, faculty, students, staff and special guests for the landmark announcement.

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Professors Michael Pitts, Peter Prescott, and Max Huffman share a collegial moment while walking on campus.

FacultyA Focus on

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 9

Our exceptional and dedicated faculty members are committed to excellent teaching, research,

and service to the profession and community. Their diverse

academic backgrounds allow them to offer a rich curriculum

covering a wide range of subjects. Law school faculty

members regularly publish books, law review articles,

essays, book chapters, and book reviews. Our nearly 50 full-

time professors are joined each year by visiting and adjunct

professors, many of whom are practicing attorneys, creating

a team of scholars and practitioners who provide first-rate,

comprehensive education for all of our students.

In the next two years, the school will be adding several

new faculty positions, enabling us to have smaller classes

and providing students with more individualized attention.

Three outstanding individuals with proven track records

have accepted our offers to join the faculty next year, and

we expect to add to that list. The future of the faculty looks

very bright indeed.

This issue of the magazine focuses on several of our

outstanding faculty and outlines their many accomplishments.

In future issues, we hope to spotlight faculty members on a

regular basis so you can become better acquainted with them

and their academic areas of interest.

At the heart of every

academic institution

is its faculty, and at

the Indiana University

Robert H. McKinney

School of Law, we are

extremely proud of

our faculty.

Professors Michael Pitts, Peter Prescott, and Max Huffman share a collegial moment while walking on campus.

A Focus on Faculty

10 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Professor Gerard Magliocca Published Book, is Named Associate Dean for Research

Professor Gerard N. Magliocca has had a busy year. In

April, his second book, The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan:

Constitutional Law and the Politics of Backlash, was published

by Yale University Press. In July, he was named a Samuel R.

Rosen Professor of Law, and in November, he was appointed

Associate Dean for Research. In that capacity, Professor

Magliocca will advise faculty on research and article placement,

promote and market the scholarly output of the faculty, and

organize scholarly presentations, by our faculty and by visitors

from other schools as well.

As if that weren’t enough, Professor Magliocca is now

working on his third book, a biography of John Bingham, author

of the first section of the 14th Amendment to the United States

Constitution. Titled “John Bingham: American Founding Son,” the

book is slated for publication in 2013 by NYU Press. Bingham

has never been the subject of a full-fledged biography before,

Professor Magliocca said, and he believes it’s time for an

examination of this individual who is such an important figure in

constitutional law. Bingham also served as a prosecutor of the

conspirators in Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, and was an

ambassador to Japan.

Additionally, Professor Magliocca is at work on a paper

titled “Constitutional Liability Rules.” He first presented the

work, which examines different ways of protecting constitutional

rights, at the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis in

Bloomington in September. He also presented the paper at the

law school for the Samuel R. Rosen Professorship Lecture on

Nov. 8, 2011, in the Wynne Courtroom.

Professor Magliocca has been with the law school since

2001. He teaches Torts, Constitutional Law, Intellectual Property,

Legal History, and Admiralty. He received his undergraduate

degree from Stanford University and his J.D. from Yale Law School.

Above: Professor Magliocca’s book, The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan, was published by Yale University Press. He was named Associate Dean for Research in November.

Left: Professor Magliocca also was named the Samuel R. Rosen Professor of Law in July.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 11

A Focus on Faculty

Professor Karen Bravo Named Associate Dean for International Affairs

Professor Karen E. Bravo, a well-known international law

scholar and an expert in the study of human trafficking,

has been named Associate Dean for International Affairs

at the law school. She will collaborate with law school

administration and faculty to identify and prioritize goals

for international programs and initiatives, and to raise

awareness of the school’s international initiatives among

internal and external constituencies.

Professor Bravo, who hails from Jamaica, has lived and

worked in four countries. In the Republic of Armenia she was a

Rule of Law Liaison with the American Bar Association’s Central

European and Eurasian Law Initiative. In Australia she worked

with the Northern Land Council, an indigenous human rights

non-governmental organization.

This past summer, Professor Bravo published two research

articles on the subject of human trafficking. The first, “The

Role of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in Contemporary Anti-

Human Trafficking Discourse,” published in the Spring/

Summer 2011 edition of the Seattle Journal for Social JuStice,

analyzed the usefulness of comparing human trafficking with

transatlantic slavery. She found that, as used in mass media,

the political and policy spheres, and by some scholars, the

comparison to transatlantic slavery is too superficial and

requires more analysis. The

second article, titled “On Making

Persons: Legal Constructions of

Personhood and their Nexus with

Human Trafficking,” was published

in the summer 2011 edition of

the northern illinoiS univerSity

law review. Professor Bravo

identified, analyzed, and critiqued

the mechanisms through which

the legal system contributes to

individual and group vulnerability

to exploitation, including human

trafficking.

Professor Bravo is a John

S. Grimes Fellow, and Dean’s Fellow, and joined the faculty

in 2004. She teaches International Business Transactions,

International Law, International Trade, Closely Held Business

Organizations, and a research seminar: Illicit International

Markets. She received her undergraduate degree with honors

from The University of the West Indies, her J.D. from Columbia

University School of Law, and her LL.M. from New York University

School of Law.

12 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Center for Intellectual Property Law and Innovation Hosts an Array of Events

The law school’s Center for Intellectual Property Law and

Innovation hosted a variety of events in September and October,

starting with its IP Luncheon Speaker Series, which takes

place at the center’s Canal Walk office. The series gives

students the opportunity to hear from and interact with IP

professionals from the local community, many of whom are

alumni of the law school. This Fall, the center launched the

series on August 30, when Robert E. Lee, Jr., ‘80, spoke

to a gathering of students about trademark practice in a

multinational, regulated environment. Lee, the Assistant

General Patent Counsel for Patents, Trademarks and Copyright

at Eli Lilly and Company, has decades of experience protecting

and enforcing intellectual property rights.

Cedric D’Hue, ‘05, spoke on October 5 on “Financial

Considerations with Starting Your Own Law Firm.” D’Hue started a

law firm in 2009 after working as a patent attorney for Baker &

Daniels for four years. He is currently Of Counsel with Bingham

McHale, LLP, where he specializes in intellectual property

(patents, trademarks, and copyrights), and general business

advice and counsel. D’Hue has worked on patent prosecution

and patentability analysis, including preparing and prosecuting

patents related to chemical and mechanical devices.

Amie Peele Carter, a partner at Baker & Daniels, spoke on

November 10. Peele, who had spoken at an IP CLE program in

September, was “back by popular demand” for a presentation to

students as part of the Luncheon Speaker Series. Her talk, “How to

Prepare for a Sports Law Practice While Still in Law School,” gave

students practical advice on career planning. She encouraged them

to spend time thinking about what interests them outside of law

school, and consider how that may translate into a legal career.

Left: Robert E. Lee, Jr., ‘80 Center: Cedric D’Hue, ‘05 Right: Author Ken Unger and attorney Amie Peele Carter spoke at the September CLE program.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 13

A Focus on Faculty

Receptions. The IP Center hosted two receptions in September. On September 8, Professor Schaibley, Adjunct Professor Kenan Farrell, ‘03, and Assistant Dean Patricia Kinney, ‘02, were presented with awards from the Fashion Art & Design Law Society in celebration of the addition of a new course related to art law. Additionally, Rob Day, the illustrator who created the art work that is used in many IP Center brochures, was recognized at the reception.

On September 15, the center hosted the inaugural IP in-house Counsel Reception. In-house counsel from throughout Central Indiana attended the informal reception that created an enjoyable opportunity for idea exchange, benchmarking, and networking. It also gave attendees a chance to become more familiar with the activities and initiatives of the center.

CLE Program: From Tight Ends and Trademarks

to Scorecards and Social Media—The Importance

of Branding in Contemporary Sports

The IP Center hosted a continuing legal education program

on September 27. Executive Director of the center and adjunct

professor, John Schaibley, welcomed attendees to the evening

program entitled “From Tight Ends and Trademarks to Scorecards

and Social Media—The Importance of Branding in Contemporary

Sports,” featuring Ken Unger and Amie Peele Carter. Carter

is a member of Baker & Daniels’ trademark, copyright and

e-commerce group of the intellectual property practice,

representing clients ranging from entrepreneurs to international

organizations. She is also an active member of the firm’s sports

and entertainment practice team devoting much of her time to

representing artists, musicians and sports organizations. Unger

serves as President of the sports marketing agency, U/S Sports

Advisors. He is also the author of the book, Ahead of the Game:

What Every Athlete Needs to Know About Sports Business.

Top: The Fashion, Art and Design (FAD) Law Society celebrated the addition of a new course offered at the school: Art & Museum Law, with a reception on September 8 at the IP Center. At the reception, plaques made by law student Will Simmonds (left) were presented to Center Executive Director, John Schaibley; Assistant Dean Patricia Kinney (FAD Law Society advisor) and Adjunct Professor Kenan Farrell, ’03, who teaches the course.

Middle: Third-year student Andrea Castetter chats with Clare Hendrix, ’09, Professor John Schaibley and Dean Gary Roberts at the IP In-house Counsel Reception on September 15.

Bottom: Professor John Schaibley and illustrator, Rob Day, are shown next to the poster created from the art work that Day produced for the IP Center.

14 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Professor Wilson’s International Efforts Link School to China and Brazil

In summer 2012, students from Sun Yat-sen University Law

School will travel outside China for that school’s first summer

study abroad program, and their destination will be IU Robert

H. McKinney School of Law. Professor Tom Wilson met with Sun

Yat-sen officials on October 11, 2011, in Guangzhou, China, to

finalize the plans.

Professor Wilson met with Sun Yat-sen University Law School

Vice-Dean Li Zhiping, Director of Career Development Wang Yi,

and Dean’s Assistant for International Programs Zheng Liwei,

regarding plans for the summer visit to the law school. Also

involved in the discussion was Vice Dean Huang Yao, who is

currently in residence at Cambridge University.

The meeting was followed by a signing ceremony at

which Professor Wilson and Sun Yat-sen Law School Dean Xu

Zhongming executed a partnership agreement between the

schools. The agreement calls for Sun Yat-sen law students to

come to the McKinney School of Law for three weeks, where

they will receive classroom instruction and participate in

law-related and cultural field trips. Two weeks will be spent in

Indianapolis, and one week will be spent in Washington, D.C.

Sun Yat-sen University Law School expects 30 to 40 students to

enroll in the inaugural program.

It wasn’t Professor Wilson’s only trip to China of late. He led

students from the law school and nine other schools in the second

International Forum for Law Students, held on June 5, 2011, at

Renmin University of China Law School in Beijing. It would be one

of three events he took part in while in China last summer.

“Pro Bono, Experiential Learning & the Law School Curriculum,”

was a forum initiated in 2010 by Professor Wilson and

Renmin University law professor Ding Xiangshun, LL.M.

‘06. The forum provided a platform for law students from

China and the United States to express their ideas for

improving legal education. Students prepared papers to

present to an audience of professors, graduate students,

and peers, and a panel of experts offered comments on

each presentation. The papers will be published in China

later this year in a book edited by Professor Ding. The

forum was sponsored by the Comparative Law Program

at Renmin University of China Law School and the Joint

Center for Asian Law Studies, a partnership of Renmin

University and the law school.

Professor Wilson also was invited to speak at the International

Forum on Judicial Training, held June 8 and 9, 2011, in Beijing.

The forum was sponsored by the National Judges College of the

Peoples Republic of China, the United Nations Development

Program – China, and the European Union – China Project of

Governance for Equitable Development. The forum was convened

to enable China to analyze its judicial training procedures and to

learn about methods used in other nations to train judges and

maintain judicial competence.

Professor Wilson also directed the second Sino-U.S. Law

Conference, held June 11, 2011, at Renmin University of China Law

A Focus on Faculty

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 15

The Brazil program included visits to:•

the United States District Court for the Southern

District of Indiana, where FAESA participants met with Judges Sarah Evans Barker and William T. Lawrence, J.D. ‘73, who talked about the role of federal courts in a federalist system,

• the Indiana Supreme Court, where Justice Frank Sullivan talked about the state court system,

• the Indiana Senate, where the group heard from

Sen. Phil Boots and Sen. Brandt Hershman, second-year law student, about matters ranging from state government finance to the most pressing issues on the legislative agenda,

• the Office of the Indiana

Attorney General, where Attorney General Greg Zoeller spoke about his duties and relationships with attorneys general in other states,

• the Baker & Daniels law firm, where Brita A. Horvath, J.D. ‘02, spoke about pro bono and civic engagement activities

undertaken by Indiana’s lawyers and specific initiatives involving the firm’s lawyers.

• Wabash College, where they met with students

enrolled in a course on the culture and social issues of Brazil and spoke with students and faculty in an open forum.

Professor Wilson will host another group from FAESA in September 2012.

School in Beijing. This year’s event was titled “The Changing Face of

the Real Estate Finance Marketplace: Two Perspectives on Reform.”

Professors Wilson and Ding started the conference in 2010. It is

sponsored by the Joint Center for Asian Law Studies, a partnership of

Renmin University of China Law School and the McKinney School of Law.

China wasn’t Professor Wilson’s only focus during the last few

months. He hosted professors and students September 4 through

10, for the third annual Program in American Law for professors

and students from the Faculdades Espirito Santenses Law School

(FAESA), located in Vitoria, Brazil. Professor Wilson is the program’s

founder and director.

The program consists of classroom instruction each morning

and field trips each afternoon. This year’s theme was “The

Common Law in Principle and Practice,” and it gave participants

an opportunity to gain a better understanding of common law and

to compare it to the civil law system in their home country.

International visitors from Brazil and China with Professor Wilson in Indiana Supreme Court Justice Frank Sullivan Jr.’s chambers. Pictured: Elisia Christine Matias de Souza, Professor Stella Emery Santana, Gleide Maia, Jéssica Aleixo de Souza, Professor Jairo Maia, Jr., Justice Sullivan, Zuo Quan, Dean Sayury Otoni, André Luiz Morena de Gama, and Professor Tom Wilson

16 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Orr and Watson Named Co- Directors of Clinical Programs

Clinical Professors of Law Joanne Orr and Frances Lee

Watson, ‘80, have been named Co-Directors of Clinical

Programs at the law school.

“As co-directors we want to enable the clinical programs to

continue to serve as one of the school’s core strengths, while

increasing the clinical opportunities as a whole,” Professor

Watson said. “Professor Orr and I are fortunate to work together

as co-directors at a time when the legal profession and

academic community are recognizing the importance of providing

meaningful clinical learning opportunities to law students.”

The law school has a history of promoting clinical programs,

social justice, and interdisciplinary education, the clinical program

co-directors said. Current clinical program offerings include

Appellate, Civil Practice, Criminal Defense, Disability, Immigration,

Wrongful Conviction, and the new clinic for Health & Human

Rights which started in the Fall 2011 semester.

As the economy continues to sputter, and job opportunities

prove difficult to come by “law students appreciate hands-on legal

education which achieves justice and the public good,” Professor

Watson said. “Offering quality clinical legal education means teaching

skills, judgment, and overall excellence in the practice of law.”

New Health and Human Rights Clinic Helps the Communityby Rebecca Collier Trimpe

Unraveling the problem started with a simple question: What’s

causing the scars? The solution came when a family who didn’t

know they had rights obtained legal representation from students

and faculty at IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law and the new

Health and Human Rights Clinic.

A 3-year-old toddler and his mother went to see the child’s

pediatrician at Wishard Westside Community Health Center, where

the doctor noticed the child was covered in tiny scars. Mom told the

doctor about the bedbug problem in their rented home, and the

doctor asked whether the family had notified their landlord about the

infestation. The landlord said the bedbug problem was hers to resolve,

and that he would sue the family if they tried to break the lease and

move. The family didn’t know they had legal rights in this situation, so

the doctor referred mom to the law school’s new clinic. Students

and faculty were successful in getting the landlord to take care of

the bedbug problem.

Addressing these kinds of issues is what the new law clinic

is all about, said Clinical Professor of Law Fran Quigley, ‘87, who

is teaching the clinic with adjunct professor, Dea Lott, ‘08. It’s a

legal-medical partnership between the law school and the Wishard

health center, located just a few miles from the law school in

Indianapolis’ Haughville neighborhood.

Professor Fran Watson, left, and Professor Joanne Orr, both clinical professors of law, want to increase the number of clinic opportunities while maintaining the program’s strengths.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 17

Beginning in early 2012, the Health and Human Rights Clinic at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law will be inviting local attorneys to team with clinical faculty and students in providing pro bono representation to clients referred from its medical-legal partnership affiliate Wishard Westside Health Center. The Health and Human Rights Clinic faculty will provide attorney volunteers with free training, materials, and guidance as needed. If you are interested in learning more, please call 317-274-1911 or email [email protected] and check the law school’s Facebook page for updated information.

A Focus on Faculty

Law students and faculty receive referrals from physicians and

social workers at the health center, which serves the ethnically

diverse neighborhood’s low-income residents, many of whom don’t

know they have legal rights that if addressed can have a direct

impact on their quality of life. It’s critical to address the social

deterrents to good health—rights to safe housing, access to health

care, and personal safety, among others, Professor Quigley said.

“It’s health law in its broadest sense,” Professor Quigley said. This

side of the practice is also something health law attorneys don’t

often get a chance to see, he said.

The Health and Human Rights clinic had a direct impact on a

family in danger of losing their home. Their doctor asked the family

about their housing situation, and then referred them to the legal clinic.

They had purchased a home on a rent-to-own contract with a hefty

down payment. They made payments faithfully for five years, according

to the contract’s terms, but the owner refused to honor the contract

and tried to evict the family so he could rent to others. They had tried

to hire a lawyer but couldn’t afford one. The law clinic students and

faculty stepped in and saw to it that their legal rights were protected.

Legal clinic staff members work with health center staff on

training, and there are posters throughout the health center in

English and Spanish alerting the health center’s clients about where

they can go to get their legal needs met.

The legal clinic’s 10 students have seen more than 50 clients

so far. Professor Quigley is aiming for 20 students for the spring

semester, maybe more.

A longtime legal services lawyer, Professor Quigley, ‘87, is senior

advisor to the IU Center for Global Health, where he works with

AMPATH and Legal Aid Centre of Eldoret (LACE) programs in Kenya.

He’s also starting to do some work in Haiti that he’d like to tie into

the new law clinic at some point in the future. He’s also worked as

executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana. He

said the work at the Health and Human Rights Clinic has shown him

that there are a number of legal services cases that never make it

downtown to legal services offices because people don’t know they

have rights, or that there is anyone willing and able to help them.

The clinic students also are able to do what Professor Quigley

calls “preventive lawyering,” which means helping people before

their cases reach crisis levels—before the home is in foreclosure or

the child is covered in bedbug scars.

Clinical Professor of Law Fran Quigley appreciates the chance to teach students the benefits of “preventive lawyering.”

18 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Program in International Human Rights Law Earns U.N. Special Consultative Status

The Program in International Human Rights Law at the law

school has been awarded “Special Consultative Status” by the

United Nations Economic and Social Council. The UN Committee on

Non-Governmental Organizations made the referral in May, and the

official designation was announced on July 25.

The accreditation process began in 2006, and now PIHRL joins

a select group of about 2,000 organizations from 200 countries

to carry that designation. The program was founded by Professor

George E. Edwards, and Perfecto “Boyet” Caparas, LL.M. ‘05, serves

as program manager.

Professor Edwards is the “Main Representative” to United

Nation World Headquarters in New York, as well as the

“Main Representative” to the UN European Headquarters

in Geneva. Caparas is the PIHRL “Main Representative” to

UN Headquarters in Vienna. He also is accredited to the

UN in New York and the UN in Geneva as PIHRL “Additional

Representative.”

Founded in 1997, PIHRL’s projects include numerous

“shadow reports” to the UN, which are detailed and documented

descriptions of human rights violations in different countries or

related to a specific subject matter. The reports have tackled

a variety of issues including freedom of expression in Zambia,

discrimination based on caste in Nepal, discrimination against

women in Chad and Australia, sexual orientation discrimination

in the U.S. and Chile,

and indigenous rights

in Panama, among

other topics. Students

also have traveled to

the UN in Geneva and

New York, disseminated

shadow reports within

the UN system, and given

presentations on the

reports on the floor of

official UN proceedings.

This new status for

the program can have a

significant impact on the

future for law students.

“With this, we hope

to see more aspiring lawyers and human rights defenders

trailblazing, assuming leadership roles, and making a real life

impact and difference in the field of international human rights

law and its broad cross-section of various other important

disciplines, notably environmental protection and climate

change,” said Caparas.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 19

A Focus on Faculty

Professor Edwards said, “This is the equivalent of the UN

telling the PIHRL, ‘We have vetted your organization extensively

and have determined that you and your members possess

special expertise. We trust you and your expertise.’ The UN is

telling us we can freely provide them with research, position

papers, reports, and briefs in written form. We can also

Professor Edwards Publishes LL.M. Roadmap: An International Student’s Guide to U.S. Law School Programs

Professor George E. Edwards’ new book, LL.M. Roadmap: An International Student’s Guide to U.S. Law School Programs, held its official U.S. launch at Harvard Law School on September 16, 2011. The event took place as part of “Harvard Literati: Celebrating the Works of Alumni Authors.”

The European debut for the 624-page LL.M. Roadmap was in Paris on September 26, 2011. The event was an “LL.M. Workshop” sponsored by the U.S. Department of State/Franco-American Commission, along with the Fulbright Commission.

Professor Edwards says, “The LL.M. Roadmap is a comprehensive guide to assist students from around the world in choosing, applying to, and succeeding in an American LL.M. program, and to assist them in reaching their personal, professional and career goals upon graduation.”

Meredith McQuaid, president and chair of the board of directors, NAFSA – Association of International Educators wrote, “LL.M. Roadmap….will motivate law schools to reflect critically on the LL.M. programs they offer.”

Professor Edwards, the Carl M. Gray Professor of Law, established and supervised the law school’s LL.M. track in International Human Rights Law from its inception until the spring of 2011. He is also the former executive chair of graduate programs at the school. In July 2011, Professor Edwards was named a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation.

Professor Edwards is affiliated faculty of the Center for the Study of Global Change at Indiana University in Bloomington, and has received numerous teaching, research and civic engagement awards. He has presented on the topic

of U.S. legal education for international students and other international issues in over two dozen countries.

Professor Edwards is donating all of his profits from this edition of the LL.M. Roadmap to the International Law Students Association, which is the parent organization of International Law Societies at law schools across the U.S.

“I encourage all LL.M. applicants to read through the book’s list of 218 criteria for choosing a school or LL.M. program, decide which criteria are important to them as a student, and choose a school they believe is reasonably likely to satisfy or meet those criteria,” said Professor Edwards.

participate in making speeches or ‘interventions’ on the floor

at UN proceedings.”

PIHRL began sending student interns to work at the UN the

same year the program started. During the 2010-2011 academic

year, a record number of seven current and former interns were

working at the UN in various sites around the world.

Above: The inaugural Biomedical and Health Industry Law and Compliance Conference kicked off the school’s new Health Compliance Program.

Near Right: NBC journalist Jonathan Alter spoke at lunch in the Conour Atrium.

Far Right: Joyce R. Branda of the U.S. Department of Justice gave the morning keynote address in the Wynne Courtroom.

20 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

LawSchoolLaunchesHealth Compliance ProgramwithMajorConference

By Elizabeth Allington

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 21

The Inaugural Biomedical and Health Industry Law and Compliance Conference on September 21 drew a

crowd of over 200 attendees to the event which focused on emerging compliance trends; fraud, abuse and

enforcement; pharmaceutical and manufacturing issues.

AT A TIME WHEN ISSUES OF HEALTH CARE REFORM DOMINATE THE HEADLINES, the law school’s Hall Center for Law and Health has launched a major initiative in biomedical and health industry compliance law. The Inaugural Biomedical and Health Industry Law and Compliance Conference on September 21 drew a crowd of over 200 attendees to the event which focused on emerging compliance trends; fraud, abuse and enforcement; pharmaceutical and manufacturing issues.

The new initiative offers expanded course offerings, including clinical opportunities, in the compliance field, and, beginning in 2012, will offer a certificate program in health law with a specialty in biomedical and health industry compliance law. The certificate is offered within the existing J.D. health law curriculum and the existing LL.M. track in Health Law, Policy and Bioethics.

Dean Gary R. Roberts said, “The school has the expertise to provide outstanding education to the growing group of health lawyers and professionals pursuing careers in health care compliance law.”

At the conference, NBC journalist Jonathan Alter spoke on political and health law related issues, and Joyce R. Branda, Director of the Fraud Section of the Commercial Litigation Branch at the U.S. Department of Justice, gave the morning keynote on “Health Care Reform and Health Care Fraud Enforcement.” Branda supervises civil fraud matters and federal litigation under the False Claims Act and other laws. She has lectured extensively and appeared on panels on health care fraud, procurement fraud and on the False Claims Act and civil enforcement.

A variety of experts from the government, private sector, as well as academia participated in panel discussions on topical issues. The panel on “Emerging Trends in Compliance,” featured

The law school is honored to announce that Professor Nicolas P. Terry will become co-director of the Hall center for Law and Health in January of 2012. Terry has been the Chester A. Myers Professor of Law at Saint Louis University (SLU) School of Law, where he taught Torts, Products Liability, Health Information Technology, Law & Science, and Health Care Quality. Terry, who co-directed SLU’s top-ranked Center for Health Law Studies from 2000-2008, will lead the law school’s program here in Indianapolis along with Professor David Orentlicher, who joined the Center in 1995.

“We could not have asked for a more qualified addition to our health law credentials. Professor Terry is universally known and respected in the field of health law and will increase the national prominence our Hall Center enjoys,” says the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law Dean, Gary R. Roberts. “We look forward to welcoming him to our law school family.”

A British native, Terry was educated at Kingston University and the University of Cambridge, and first taught at the University of Exeter in England. He served as a Senior Fellow at Melbourne Law School and has visited at the law schools of Santa Clara University, the University of Missouri-Columbia, Washington University, and the University of Iowa. From 2008-10 Terry served as SLU’s Senior Associate Dean. His research focuses primarily on the intersection of medicine, law, and information technology.

Terry replaces Professor Eleanor DeArman Kinney who retired from Indiana University in June of 2011 after founding and leading the Hall Center for Law and Health for 24 years.

Hall Center Welcomes Health Law ExpertNicolas Terry to Its Ranks

Mary Beth Claus, Deputy Chief Legal Officer, Cleveland Clinic; David Douglas, Partner, Shook, Hardy & Bacon, Washington, D.C.; Norm Tabler, Executive Vice-President & General Counsel, Chief Compliance Officer, IU Health; Jim Utterback, Senior Compliance Counsel, GE Healthcare—Americas; and Robert Wade, Partner, Krieg DeVault. At another session, “Issues of Fraud and Abuse,” were discussed by Linda Baumann, Partner, Arent Fox, Washington, D.C.; Jim Shaheen, Former Medicaid Inspector General, Office of New York State and Alan Pope, Medicaid Director, Office of the Attorney General of Indiana.

Alice King, Senior Consultant at Towers Watson in Dallas, Texas spoke on “Accountable Care Organizations,” and Ralph Hall, Visiting Professor from the University of Minnesota School of Law spoke on “Advertising and Promotion.”

A panel examining “Health Care—Life Sciences Business Relationships” brought together Tom Hutchinson, Partner, Krieg DeVault; Clarice McCauley, Director, Corporate Compliance, Roche Diagnostics; and Dr. Eric Potts, Goodman Campbell. “HIPAA Privacy and Data Sharing,” was the topic of the panel featuring Adriane E. Siefert, General Counsel & Compliance Officer, Regenstrief Institute, Inc.; Eric Thieme, General Counsel and Compliance Officer, Indiana Health Information Exchange, Inc.; and Joy Pritts, Chief Privacy Officer, Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, Washington, D.C. The final session of the day dealt with “Auditing, Investigations and Enforcement and the Theory or Strategy Behind Them.” Erin Lewis, Counsel, Baker & Daniels; Rob Banter, Auditor, Office of the Indiana Attorney General, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit; and Shelese Woods, Assistant United States Attorney, Southern District of Indiana, were the featured panelists.

Professor Emeritus and former co-director of the Hall Center, Eleanor DeArman Kinney was honored at a reception in the Conour Atrium following the conference. It was also announced that the annual conference will henceforth be named for Professor Kinney.

Over 200 people attended the event on September 21.

22 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Law Degree? Medical Degree? Why Not Both? IU Has a Plan!

Indiana University students can graduate with medical and law degrees through a new joint degree program offered through the IU School of Medicine and the law school.

The joint degree program is yet another opportunity for students seeking to expand their career options.

“We are actively seeking opportunities that would benefit our students and many are interested in joint degrees,” said Paula Wales, Ph.D., interim associate dean for undergraduate medical education at the IU School of Medicine.

“The schools of law and medicine at IU have a long tradition of collaboration,” said Gary R. Roberts, Dean of the law school. “The idea of combined degrees in law and medicine makes great sense for individuals interested in pursuing careers in public health, health policy and life sciences to name a few of the increased options.”

The J.D./M.D. degree program is available to IU students beginning in the fall of 2012. Students must complete national admissions tests for law and medical school and be admitted to each school individually. If the course work is completed in optimal time, the dual degrees can be awarded within six years of enrollment.

For additional information on the program, contact the law school’s Hall Center for Law and Health at 317-274-1912.

Save the Date: Center for Law and Health 25th Anniversary Celebration, April 12, 2012. Watch for more information on the school’s website: www.indylaw.indiana.edu

THE IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW NOW OFFERS A NEW CONCENTRATION IN ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATURAL RESOURCES LAW (ENR) for eligible J.D. graduates. Students completing the concentration will study legal frameworks for managing environmental and natural resource challenges facing policymakers, businesses, and the public—the same challenges that are featured in headlines and in public policy debates on a daily basis.

The ENR Concentration will serve as a gateway for students wishing to work in the growing fields of environmental or natural resources law as well as those interested in future work concerning property law, real estate development and transactions, corporate acquisitions, land use, energy policy or regulation, urban planning, transportation, agriculture, conservation, public health, or occupational safety. The concentration also will benefit students interested more generally in public policy, public interest advocacy, or government at the local, state, national, or international level.

“It is difficult to imagine a more compelling issue facing our country—indeed our planet—than the question of how to protect human life and conserve vital resources even as we secure long-term prosperity,” noted Professor Eric Dannenmaier, who directs the school’s ENR Program. “Managing development in a way that balances economic growth with broader societal needs is a complex and critical task, and it is at the heart of environmental and natural resources law. The new ENR Concentration recognizes our school’s commitment to preparing our students to address these difficult issues. The concentration provides academic grounding and analytical tools necessary to compete and lead effectively whether our graduates work at the state, local, national, or international level.”

A new course in Agricultural Law and the Environment also is being offered in the spring semester, 2012, and new courses on Environmental Justice and Environmental Compliance and Enforcement are in the planning stages for the 2012-13 academic year.

A Concentration in Environmental and Natural Resources Law will be awarded to J.D. candidates who complete at least six approved courses totaling at least 15 credit hours in Environmental and Natural Resource Law and closely-related subjects while maintaining a minimum grade point average of 3.0.

Courses that meet the ENR requirement include:

• Environmental Law• Natural Resources Law• Administrative Law• Animals and the Law • Climate Law and Policy• Energy Law and Regulation• International Environmental Law• Land Use• Toxic Tort and Environmental Law• Utility Law• Water Law

In addition, ENR Concentration students will complete a research or experiential “capstone course” that may include externships, law and state government placements, supervised research, and advanced field research. Full details on the concentration can be found on the school’s website at http://indylaw.indiana.edu/programs/ENR/Concentration.htm

The ENR Concentration is one part of the law school’s broader ENR Program, which is a curricular and co-curricular program designed to prepare students for practice in the private sector, government, and public interest organizations. The ENR Program is an important and growing part of the school’s educational mission. More information is available at http://indylaw.indiana.edu/programs/ENR/

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 23

Law School Establishes New Concentration inEnvironmental andNatural Resources LawA group of students from the Environmental Law Society climbed the Hickory Ridge Fire

Tower at the Charles C. Deam Wilderness Area in the Hoosier National Forest in Southern

Indiana in October. Professor Eric Dannenmaier led the group through Indiana’s only

federally-designated wilderness area. The 110 ft tower was built in 1936 by the Civilian

Conservation Corp, and the ELS students were glad that the construction remains sound to

this day. Shown, left to right: Roger Bartlett, Jennifer Rice (SPEA), Kelly Poole, 3L; Jessica

Topor, 2L; Leontiy Korolev, 3L; Kevin Willis, 2L; Yetunde Okunade, 2L; Mandy McIlwain, 2L.

Photo by Eric Dannenmaier

Terror Super Bowl

at the

24 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Global Crisis Leadership Forum Simulation: Testing Local Readiness in a Time of Terror

ThousandsoffanswerestreamingintodowntownIndianapolisfor

theSuperBowl,andsincethescenewasFebruaryinIndiana,a

severewinterstormwaspredictedtodumpaninchoffreezingrain

andfourto14inchesofsnowonthecentralpartofthestate.

TH

E P

LAyER

S

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 25

EVEN WITHOUT A TERRORIST ATTACK, THE SCENE AT THE SUPER BOWL WOULD BE ENOUGH TO TRY THE CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS OF THE MOST SEASONED PUBLIC OFFICIAL OR EMERGENCY RESPONSE WORKER. But then the simulation’s mayhem began: a train derailed on the bridge over Washington Street at Harding Street, and tanker cars were leaking chlorine, contaminating water and causing people nearby to have difficulty breathing. People were ordered to evacuate the vicinity, but determined football fans either didn’t get the warning or ignored it and continued to pile into downtown for pre-game festivities. About 90 minutes after the train derailment, a car bomb exploded, killing people and leaving many others with severe injuries.

That was the scenario for this year’s counter-terrorism simulation, part of the “Testing Local Readiness in a Time of Terror” program on Oct. 27 and 28, at the law school. Eighteen students from Professor Shawn Boyne’s Seminar in Comparative National Security Law played roles during the exercise. A total of 38 students from the School of Public

and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) at IUPUI played roles in the exercise or attended the panel discussions that were part of the symposium. The event was part of the Global Crisis Leadership Forum (GCLF), a partnership of the law school and SPEA. The simulation was sponsored by the law school, SPEA, and the Indiana Department of Homeland Security.

News anchor Scott Sander from WISH-TV in Indianapolis provided the “breaking news” during the simulation as he did during the inaugural simulation exercise in 2009. But this year the media involvement wasn’t limited to taped news segments. Students also had to cope with being bombarded with reporters’ questions during press conferences in the Conour Atrium, courtesy of reporters Ruthanne Gordon, also from WISH, and Russ McQuaid from WXIN-TV. They provided students with a real-world taste of what it’s like to face questions at a press conference. Also new this year, Indianapolis-area media covered the event live.

Dealing with an unruly press corps was just one of the new elements of this year’s exercise, according to Professor Boyne, associate professor of law and the chair of the GCLF. The private sector also was involved in this event—the Pacers and National Football League’s security consultants, in addition to business leaders, took part in the simulation. Students were evaluated using Homeland Security Exercise Protocol, the same performance standards used by the federal government. Security professionals served as

observers and facilitators and gave students feedback on how they were doing throughout the morning.

The focus of this year’s simulation was the Mayor’s Office, reflecting the public security maxim that “all events are local,” said Professor Boyne. “The students in the Mayor’s Office in particular proved that they were up to the task,” she said. “That office was the hot seat of the simulation and the students never wavered under pressure.”

Students did feel the pressure, said Traci Tetrick, the third-year law student from Plainfield who portrayed the mayor. “I was most caught off-guard by the level of initial anxiety caused by the simulation. Walking out to give my first press conference—parts of which had already been drafted in the event of such an attack—I was momentarily overwhelmed by the presence of real press and real cameras.”

By Rebecca Collier Trimpe

Tetrick also noted that Professor Boyne “devoted a full class session to governmental unit meetings. Meeting and planning with my local team members (fellow students Megan Smither, Cassie Nielsen, Robert Anderson, and Marti Showers) gave me the confidence I needed to know that I could trust the local team in the midst of chaos.” This group continued to prove its worth as the simulation unfolded, she said, noting that the team decided to protect her from added stress by not telling her that a death threat against the mayor had been phoned in following a press conference.

Anthony Green, ’04, Deputy Commissioner and General Counsel at the Indiana Department of Administration and an adjunct professor who teaches National Security Law at the law school, thought students did well responding to the “fog and friction,” a term typically used to describe the need to respond to a variety of different scenarios unfolding at the same time.

Dr. William A. Foley, Jr., SPEA lecturer at IUPUI and that school’s co-chair of the GCLF, said the exercise was specifically designed this year to include more “injects,” which

he described as “further problems arising from the cascading effects of an incident of national significance—which when injected into exercise play—cause the person receiving the information to respond immediately in the role he or she is playing.”

Law student Bobby Courtney, Director of Policy and Planning for MESH Coalition, (a public-private coalition related to emergency response) took part as a facilitator. He said students responded as anyone would who was taking part in such an exercise

for the first time. “It’s hard to ratchet down your stress level,” he said, even when you know it’s a simulation and you’re just playing a role. MESH got involved in the planning stages for this year’s simulation to help provide the medical community perspectives for the injects.

Larry Allen, a third-year law student who lives in Bloomington, portrayed the President of the United States in the simulation. He learned how valuable leadership style is in such a crisis. “It’s important to know what kind of atmosphere you want to create in the room” he said of walking into a press

26 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 27

conference where the leader is expected to relay information to a wide audience. Allen said he was glad he was able to take part in the exercise, and sees the value of this type of cross-collaboration among schools.

Jim White, a public safety lecturer at SPEA and another of that school’s co-chairs for GCLF, also believes the collaboration between the schools is valuable for more than the schools alone. “The hope is to leverage this year’s exercise and coalition building into a true partnership which allows us (IUPUI, law school, and SPEA) not only to train students

but to train members of the public safety community and the private sector as well. A failure to seize this initiative would be foolhardy,” he said.

The event was a learning opportunity for more than students, said Joseph Wainscott, Jr., Executive Director of the Indiana Department of Homeland Security.

He also thought the students performed well, and said “I hope they look at public safety as one of those avenues they want to get involved with in the future.”

1–OnThursday,October27,NicholasBeadle,CMG,UnitedKingdomNationalSecurityCouncil,CabinetOffice,London,gaveakeynoteaddress,“TheLegalityofNATO’sInterventioninLibya.”

2–LeeHamilton,DirectoroftheCenteronCongressatIndianaUniversity,deliveredtheFridaykeynotelectureonOctober28,“AStatusReportonHomelandSecuritySince9/11.”

3–Membersofthelawschool’sBoardofVisitorsattendedtheevent,fromleft,MichaelFreeborn,‘72;AlanSpears,‘90;JohnKautzman,‘84;andBillNeale,‘73.

4–Apaneldiscussionon“TheLegalityandWisdomofArmedInterventioninLibya,”tookplacefollowingthesimulation.ThepanelwasmoderatedbyProfessorKarenBravoandincludedpanelistsJ.NicholasBeadle,CMG,UKNationalSecurityCouncil;ProfessorMarjorieCohn,ThomasJeffersonSchoolofLaw;DavidCortright,DirectorofPolicyStudies,NotreDameKrocInstituteforInternationalPeacestudies;Dr.StevenMetz,Chairman,RegionalStrategyDepartment,StrategicStudiesInstitute,U.S.ArmyWarCollege.

5–Asecondpaneldiscussionon“TheChallengeofCoordinatingLocalResponse,”featuredPeterS.Beering,‘86,asmoderator,andincludedDr.Abdul-AkeemSadiq,IUSchoolofPublicandEnvironmentalAffairs;JosephE.Wainscott,ExecutiveDirector,IndianaDepartmentofHomelandSecurity;GregMassa,SupervisorySpecialAgent,JointTerrorismTaskForce,Indiana;andJimCutrell,DeputyChief,PublicSafetyCommunications,IndianapolisDepartmentofPublicSafety.

Beadle and HamiltonLectures, along with PanelDiscussions, Highlighted

the Program1

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2011 Evening of Celebration

On Friday, May 13, law school reunion classes celebrated with soon-to-be graduates and prospective students at the annual Evening of Celebration, which took place in the Conour Atrium at Inlow Hall. Two graduates, Emily Benfer, ‘05, and Sean Monkhouse, ‘06, received Early Career Achievement Awards, while three individuals, John Maley, ‘88, Susanah Mead, ‘76, and Stephen Stitle, ‘70, received Distinguished Alumni Awards. The evening included a special toast to the graduating class of 2011.

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Emily Benfer, ‘05 Early Career Achievement Award After earning her undergraduate degree, Emily Benfer spent two years in the Peace Corps, which took her to Zimbabwe, Belize and Thailand. She also worked as a law clerk at the New Haven Legal Assistance Association, Inc., which led her to the study of law. She received her J.D., cum laude, in 2005, and was an editor on the IndIana InternatIonal and ComparatIve law revIew. She also served on the Order of the Barristers, and was president of Equal Justice Works, both locally and nationally. During law school, she clerked for Judge

David Hamilton, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, the Indiana Protective Order Pro Bono Project, and the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. In 2008, Benfer was awarded the Equal Justice Works Martindale Hubbell Exemplary Public Service Award. While in Washington, D.C., she received an Arnold and Porter Equal Justice Works Fellowship. Additionally, she received the Judy M. Weightman Memorial Public Interest Award from the ABA. She is a Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Health Justice Project at the Loyola University Chicago School of Law.

Sean Monkhouse, ‘06 Early Career Achievement Award Originally from Terre Haute, Indiana, Sean Monkhouse, ‘06, earned his undergraduate degree from IUPUI in 1996. As a law student, Monkhouse travelled to the Netherlands in 2005 for an internship working with a legal team on an important human rights case dealing with the former Yugoslavian dictator, Slobodan Milosevic. The internship, through the law school’s Program in International Human Rights Law (PIHRL), turned into a permanent position as a court officer for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). The ICTY, part of the United Nations (along with the nearby World Court, based in the Peace Palace), deals with crimes involving the countries that once made up Yugoslavia. Monkhouse has continued to serve the law school by mentoring interns from the PIHRL program placed at the ICTY office.

John Maley, ‘88 Distinguished Alumni Award In the letter nominating John Maley for the Distinguished Alumni Award, he was described as “an excellent example of what all lawyers should aspire to be —as mentors, leaders, business owners, and fathers.” A partner in Barnes & Thornburg LLP’s Indianapolis office, he received his B.A. from the University of Notre Dame and M.B.A. from Indiana University. In 1988 he earned the J.D. summa cum laude, from the law school, where he was executive editor of the IndIana law revIew. From 1988 to 1990 he clerked for the Honorable Larry J. McKinney in U.S. District Court in Indianapolis.

Maley has a long record of service to the school. He has served on the alumni association board of directors, including a term as president in 1998. An adjunct professor at the law school for many years, in 2003 he was chosen as a recipient of the Maynard K. Hine Award in recognition of his outstanding service to the IUPUI campus.

A past-president of the Indianapolis Bar Association, Maley has published numerous articles on federal practice, is the author of the Appellate Handbook for Indiana Lawyers, and lectures frequently on federal civil practice, noncompetition, and employment matters.

His many civic activities include service as chair of the Local Rules Committee, S.D. of Indiana, chair of the Marion County Local Rules Committee, president of the Indianapolis Chapter of the Federal Bar Association, and chair of the Indiana State Bar Association’s Appellate Practice Section. He is a fellow of the Indianapolis and Indiana State Bar Associations.

Susanah M. Mead, ‘76 Distinguished Alumni Award Educator, professional, trailblazer, are just a few of the many words that describe Susanah Mead. A 1976 graduate of the law school, Professor Mead joined the faculty in 1978 as a lecturer in the legal writing program, becoming the program’s director in 1980. She later became one of the first tenured female law professors at the law school, teaching products liability and torts. In 1997, Dean Norman Lefstein selected Professor Mead to be the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. She worked collaboratively with Dean Lefstein on leading the law school through an ambitious capital campaign that resulted in the construction of Lawrence W. Inlow Hall.

Her dedication and service to the law school was demonstrated in 2005 when the Chancellor of IUPUI, Charles Bantz, appointed Professor Mead as Interim Dean of the school. She served in that post for two years. As one

Left: Amy Halsey, ’11 (right) celebrates her graduation with her parents.

Above: Members of the class of 1996 gathered for a reunion dinner after the reception.

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of her many supporters wrote in her award nomination letter, “From 2005-2007, Susie fearlessly led the law school through an extremely challenging transition and difficult financial period, paving the way for the school to continue to grow and succeed.”

Professor Mead has served as chair of the Indiana State Bar Association’s Conclave on Legal Education, on the advisory committee for the IUPUI master plan, and in 2009 was named a Distinguished Barrister by the Indiana Lawyer. In 2007, she received the law school’s Alumna of the Year Award. In June of 2011, Susanah Mead retired after 33 remarkable years of teaching and serving the school.

Stephen A. Stitle, ‘70 Distinguished Alumni Award Stephen A. Stitle is regional president for PNC Bank, Indiana. He previously served as president of National City Bank in Indiana and executive vice president of National City Corporation. Prior to joining National City, Stitle served in a variety of executive positions for Eli Lilly and Company for nearly 25 years.

Stitle’s exemplary civic involvement encompasses a wide array of community organizations. He currently serves on the boards of directors for the Central Indiana Corporate Partnership, Center for Leadership Development, Indiana Chamber of Commerce, Greater Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, Indiana University Foundation, St. Vincent’s Heart Center of Indiana, Greater Indianapolis Progress Committee, Pacers Foundation, Inc., United States Auto Club, Simon Youth Foundation, and Sagamore Institute for Policy Research. He is the former chairman of the board of directors of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce and served on the board of trustees of DePauw University.

One of his many award nominators described Stitle, “Whether in his profession as an intelligent, knowledgeable, highly respected banker, or in his community role as a leader, philanthropist, and supporter of countless non-profit organizations, Steve is a winner.”

Stitle has served on the law school’s Board of Visitors for many years and he has volunteered annually for the law school’s mock interview program since its inception in 2006.

Stitle received a bachelor of arts degree in political science and economics from IU in 1967 and was awarded the J.D., cum laude, from the law school in 1970.

Distinguished Alumni AwardsDistinguished Alumni Award recipients pictured with Dean Gary R. Roberts (center) and IUAA Board Member Allyson R. Breeden, ‘01. Honorees were John Maley, ‘88 (top); Susanah M. Mead, ‘76 (middle); and Stephen A. Stitle, ‘70 (bottom).

The law school also recognized its second S.J.D. degree recipient, Dr. Giancarlo Panagia. Faculty hooders, chosen by the student body, included Professor Frank Emmert (hooding S.J.D. and LL.M. graduates) and Professors George E. Edwards and Lloyd T. Wilson, Jr. for the LL.M. graduates. Professors Eric Dannenmaier, Andrew Klein, Michael Pitts and Florence Wagman Roisman hooded the J.D. graduates. The student speakers were Jonathan Bashi (LL.M. Division), Jeff Elftman (Full-time J.D. Division), and Alex Schmitt (Part-time J.D. Division). Vice Dean Paul Cox presented Katherine Mercer-Lawson with the Faculty Prize.

The law school was honored to have Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. deliver the commencement address. Jordan is a Senior Managing Director of Lazard Frères & Co., LLC., in New York. Prior to joining Lazard, he was a Senior Executive Partner with the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, LLP, where he remains Senior Counsel. While there, he practiced general, corporate, legislative and international law in Washington, D.C. Before Akin Gump, Jordan was President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Urban League, Inc.; Executive Director of the United Negro College Fund, Inc.; Director of the Voter Education Project of the Southern Regional Council; Attorney-Consultant, U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity;

Assistant to the Executive Director of the Southern Regional Council; Georgia Field Director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and an attorney in private practice in Arkansas and Georgia. His presidential appointments include: the President’s Advisory Committee for the Points of Light Initiative Foundation; the Secretary of State’s Advisory Committee on South Africa; the Advisory Council on Social Security; the Presidential Clemency Board; the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission; the National Advisory Committee on Selective Service; and the Council of the White House Conference “To Fulfill These Rights.” In 1992, Jordan served as the Chairman of the Clinton Presidential Transition Team.

A graduate of DePauw University, Jordan earned his law degree at Howard University Law School. He holds honorary degrees from more than 60 colleges and universities in America. He is a member of the Bars of Arkansas, the District of Columbia, Georgia and the U.S. Supreme Court. He is a member of the American Bar Association, the National Bar Association, the Council on Foreign Relations and The Bilderberg Meetings. He is the author of Vernon Can Read! A Memoir (Public Affairs, 2001) and Make It Plain, Standing Up and Speaking Out (Public Affairs, 2008).

On May 14, before a capacity crowd of almost 2,500 at the Indiana Convention Center, degrees were bestowed upon members of the Class of 2011, including 251 J.D. and 30 LL.M. candidates.

Vernon Jordan Delivers 2011 Commencement Address

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1– Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. delivered the 2011 Commencement Address.

2– A happy graduate prepares his hood.

3– Vice Dean Paul Cox presents the Faculty Prize to Kate Mercer-Lawson.

4– New graduate William Hartzell-Baird joined his sister, Suzanna, ‘07 (left), and mother, Susan K. Street, ‘99 in the alumni family.

5– Carlota Toledo, Associate Director of Student Affairs (far right), helps students prepare to graduate.

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Dignitaries attending the commencement ceremony for the law school’s LL.M. program in Egypt included (left to right): David Risley, U.S. Justice Department Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo; Steve Morin, Acting director of USAID in Egypt; Counselor Mohamed Mostafa al Behbeity, Deputy Minister of Justice and Head of the International Cooperation Unit in Egypt; Dr. Ahmed Gamal el Din Moussa, Minister of Education; Dr. Amr Ezzat Salama, Minister of Higher Education, Scientific Research and Technology; Dr. Noha Bakr, Deputy Minister of International Cooperation; Kathryn Ainsworth, Egypt Program Director, American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative, and Charles Davidson from the American Bar Association.

The law school’s LL.M. program in Cairo held its third annual commencement ceremony at 7pm on July 16, 2011. Seventy-nine students were certified to graduate at the ceremony that took place at the Dusit Thani Lakeview Cairo Hotel. Dean Gary R. Roberts gave welcoming remarks, and program director, Professor Frank Emmert, also provided a welcome.

The two commencement keynote speakers were Dr. Noha Bakr, Deputy Minister of International Cooperation, and Counselor Mostafa Al Behbeity, Deputy Minister of Justice and Head of International Cooperation Unit in Egypt. More than 600 distinguished guests, including representatives from the government of Egypt, USAID and the ABA, joined IU Dean Gary Roberts and Dean Mahmoud Kebeish of Cairo University, along with friends and family members of graduates, at the event. Additionally, the law school hosted an Evening of Celebration, also at the Dusit Thani Lakeview, on July 15, for the class of 2011 and program alumni.

In May of 2007, the law school signed a cooperative grant agreement with USAID Egypt and has been offering the only fully accredited on-site American Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program in the Middle East since January 2008. IU-Indianapolis professors travel to Cairo on a regular basis and teach the same courses they teach in Indianapolis, using the same books and syllabi that they use in the states. Courses are held to the same standards and the same exams are administered as well. Egyptian students who successfully complete 24 credits, including a Master thesis, receive the same IU diploma as the school’s LL.M. students in Indianapolis.

Most recently, 63 students entered the program in January 2011, bringing the total number of students (past and present) in the Egypt program to 225. Of that number, 128 have graduated and the remaining students are working toward degree completion. Many of the students are already accomplished legal professionals in Egypt. More than a dozen serve as judges on the Council of State (comparable to the U.S. Federal Appellate Courts). Many work in international law firms and multinational enterprises. About one third of the students are women.

“We are optimistic that the program in Egypt will continue and that the next group of students will be admitted soon,” said Professor Emmert.

EgyptLL.M.Commencement CeremonyTakesPlaceinCairo

New Master of Laws graduates celebrate at the end of the July ceremony in Cairo, Egypt.

THE LAW SCHOOL WELCOMED TWENTY NEW STUDENTS TO THE LL.M. PROGRAM IN AUGUST, 17 OF WHOM ARE INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS. With 10 students admitted to the program last January, total enrollment for 2011 climbed to 30 new students. Students enroll in one of four masters tracks: American Law for Foreign Lawyers; Health Law, Policy and Bioethics; International and Comparative Law; or Intellectual Property Law. The school’s new LL.M. students will benefit from the teaching of three prominent state officials who have recently agreed to teach in the program: Indiana Supreme Court Justices Steven David and Robert Rucker teaching Contracts and Torts, respectively, and Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, teaching Constitutional Law.

In October, Professor Frank Emmert, John S. Grimes Professor of Law and Director of the Center for International and Comparative Law, and Azalea Assaf, LL.M candidate, visited Costa Rica to promote collaboration among universities, faculty exchanges, student exchanges and recruitment, and joint research.

Professor Emmert delivered a three-day international business law seminar at El Colegio de Abogados de Costa Rica, the national bar association, covering topics including international commercial transactions, basics of international contract law, the United Nations Convention on International Sale of Goods (CISG), as well as dispute settlement in foreign courts and via arbitration. Approximately 300 law students and attorneys attended the seminar.

U.S. Ambassador Anne Slaughter Andrew, ‘83, delivered the seminar’s keynote address, and graciously hosted a breakfast reception at her residence, attended by Costa Rican and U.S. government officials, prominent attorneys, and the deans of the law schools of Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR), Universidad Autonoma de Centroamerica (UACA) and Universidad Latinoamericana de Ciencia y Tecnologia (ULACIT). The breakfast provided an opportunity for discussion of potential partnerships with the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law.

The Costa Rican Minister of Justice, Hernando París, invited Professor Emmert and Assaf to discuss Costa Rican priorities for ratification of international trade treaties after the country’s recent implementation of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Model Code on International Commercial Arbitration and the ratification of a free trade agreement with China. Assaf was a guest on “Pasion por la Justicia,” a nationally syndicated radio program, where she discussed international alternative dispute resolution.

The trip concluded at ULACIT, where Professor Emmert lectured on World Trade Organization Law to students and discussed the potential for future collaboration with administrators. ULACIT teaches part of its LL.B. Program in English and there was significant interest among third and fourth year students in the IU McKinney School of Law LL.M. Program.

Update on Law School LL.M. Program

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EgyptLL.M.Commencement CeremonyTakesPlaceinCairo

Top left: US Ambassador Anne Slaughter Andrew,‘83, delivered the keynote speech at the International Business Law Seminar. From left to right: Ambassador Andrew, Professor Frank Emmert, Azalea Assaf, LL.M Candidate 2011, and Lic. Miguel Arias Maduro, Colegio de Abogados de Costa Rica. Top right: In the center of San José, stands the Casa Amarilla, or Yellow House, which was built in 1912. Originally known as the Palace of Peace of Central America, it is currently the headquarters for the Costa Rican Ministry (previously Secretariat) of Foreign Affairs. Bottom right: Approximately 300 law students and lawyers attended the International Business Law Seminar, held at the Colegio de Abogados de Costa Rica (Costa Rican Bar Association).

INDIANA UNIVERSITY ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WAS THE SITE FOR THIS YEAR’S LAW SCHOOL FOR JOURNALISTS, co-hosted by the Indiana Supreme Court and the law school, on July 20, 2011. About 60 people attended the all-day program, which was designed to help working media better understand the legal system.

The luncheon keynote speaker was Jerrianne Hayslett, former Los Angeles Superior Court Media Liaison and author of Anatomy of a Trial: Public Loss, Lessons Learned from ‘ The People v. O.J. Simpson.’ Hayslett discussed her experiences in coordinating media logistics for numerous high-profile trials, including O.J. Simpson, Rodney King, Heidi Fleiss, and the Menendez brothers.

Participants were greeted by Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard, who also offered opening remarks. Sessions through the day included: “Problem-solving Courts—A New Approach to Justice,” presented by Mary Kay Hudson, Indiana Judicial Center Director of Court Services; Madison Superior Judge Dennis Carroll; and Vanderburgh Superior Judge Wayne Trockman;“Structure of Indiana Trial Courts,” presented by Hamilton Superior Judge Gail Bardach; and Senior Judge Barbara Harcourt, Court Personnel/Program Attorney at the

Indiana Judicial Center; “Cost of Courts,” presented by Indiana Court of Appeals Judge John Baker; Professor John Krauss, director of the Indiana University Public Policy Institute; Jeff Wiese and Tom Carusillo, staff attorneys at the Division of State Court Administration; and Tracy Warner of the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, and “20 Years With 6 Suspended and Credit For Time Served,” presented by Marion Superior Judge Robert Altice; Floyd Superior Judge Maria Granger; and Professor Joel Schumm of the law school.

Other presentations were “When Children Are in Court,” presented by Lake Superior Judge Mary Beth Bonaventura; and Scott Circuit Judge Roger Duvall and “Least Understood Area of The Law,” presented by Monica Foster; Greta Scodro, assistant administrator, Supreme Court Administration; Kyle Gillaspie, staff attorney, Indiana Court of Appeals; and Professor Shawn Boyne of the law school. Additionally, a presentation entitled “Online, On the Phone and In Person—Getting Court Information,” was presented by Kelly Lucas of the Indiana Lawyer; Kathryn Dolan, Indiana Supreme Court Public Information Officer; Harold Adams of the Louisville Courier-Journal; and Susan Brown of The Times of Northwest Indiana.

Law School for Journalists Takes Place at Law School

By Rebecca Collier Trimpe

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1– Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard talked with members of the working press during this year’s “Law School for Journalists.”

2– Jerrianne Hayslett, former Los Angeles Superior Court Media Liaison, offered her perspective on working with the media.

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THIS YEAR’S 31ST LABOR-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS SEMINAR featured the law school’s own Dean Gary R. Roberts who gave a keynote address on “The Unique Labor Law Issues Involved in Collective Bargaining between Professional Sports Leagues & Player Unions,” a timely topic as the NFL’s labor negotiations were taking place at that time. Mark Gaston Pearce, National Labor Relations Board Member, was the other keynote speaker and his talk was entitled, “The NLRB Today: Upholding the Law in Changing Times: A Discussion of the National Labor Relations Act and its Relevance to Current Trends in Labor Management Relations.”

This year’s program theme was “Labor Law in the Age of Social Media” and featured presentations by experts on labor, management and arbitration issues from the government, private sector and academia. Seminar Steering Committee co-chairs, Professor Robert Brookins, and Rik Lineback from the NLRB, both served as presenters, as did fellow-committee members, Barry A. Macey, Frederick (“Rick”) Dennerline,‘74, Ryan Poor,

Richard Swanson, Michael H. Boldt, and Mary Jane Mitchell. In addition to Lineback and Mitchell, other NLRB faculty included Roberto G. Chavarry, Kim Sorg-Graves, Lori Ketcham, and Derek A. Johnson. Attorneys who volunteered their time to be faculty members included Steve Garrett, Todd M. Niermann, Donald S. Smith, ‘81, Geoffrey S. Lohman, ‘97, Travis P. Meek, ‘05, Stephen W. Lyman, Aarika Mack-Brown, William T. (“Tuck”) Hopkins, Brian R. Garrison, David Williams, Marilyn L. Widman, Robert A.

Hicks, Jan Michelsen, ‘94, Anthony Alfano, Aarika Mack-Brown, Jonathan C. Bumgarner, and Steven Southwood. Commissioner Lori Torres, ‘86 from the Indiana Department of Labor also shared her expertise during one breakout session.

The Labor-Management Relations Seminar seeks to bring together experts on both sides of current labor and employment law issues, as well as academics and neutral parties for the educational benefit of all. The proceeds of the seminar are awarded as scholarships to students of the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law who express an interest in pursuing labor law as a career.

DeanRobertsandNLRBMemberHeadlinethe Annual Labor-Management Relations SeminarDean Gary R. Roberts (above) and NLRB Member Mark Gaston Pearce (inset) both spoke during plenary sessions at the Annual Labor-Management Relations Seminar in June.

WITH A DIPLOMACY THAT CAN TYPICALLY ONLY BE ACHIEVED WITH THE PASSAGE OF TIME, a discussion at the law school titled “A Legal Retrospective on the Recent Unpleasantness at Conner Prairie,” addressed issues related to Conner Prairie’s becoming an independent entity in 2005. On September 12, the law school hosted a panel discussion in the Wynne Courtroom on this topic.

The panel included former Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter; Ellen M. Rosenthal, President and CEO of Conner Prairie Museum; Timothy L. Seiler, Ph.D., Director, Public Service and The Fund Raising School, Indiana University Center on Philanthropy; and Conner Prairie Museum board member and author, Berkley W. Duck III. The program was moderated by law school Professor Rob Katz. Duck signed copies of his book Twilight at Conner Prairie: The Creation, Betrayal, and Rescue of a Museum, in the Conour Atrium following the panel presentation.

Discussion explored the law of charitable trusts and nonprofit organizations by analyzing the legal controversies that led to Conner Prairie Interactive History Park’s independence from Earlham College, its original trustee, in 2005. Topics included drafting and interpretation of charitable trust instruments, nonprofit governance, fiduciary duties, conflicts of interest, and the state attorney general’s role in supervising charitable trusts.

Conner Prairie offers museum goers a chance to step back into the past and explore what life was like in Indiana in the 1830s. Duck’s book follows the development of the museum, legal challenges presented by the terms of founder Eli Lilly’s gifts, and the breakdown of the relationship between the museum and its trustee, Earlham College. Duck, who served on Conner Prairie’s independent board of directors when the board and CEO were dismissed, provides an inside look at what he believes went wrong at Conner Prairie and how it was put to right.

School Hosts ProgramRelated to Conner Prairie

By Rebecca Collier Trimpe

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1– President and CEO of Conner Prairie Museum Ellen M. Rosenthal; Director of Public Service and The Fundraising School at the Indiana University Center on Philanthropy Timothy L. Seiler, PhD.; and Conner Prairie Museum board member and author Berkley W. Duck III.

2– Indiana University School of Law Professor Rob Katz and former Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter.

3– George Suttles, an M.A. student in Philanthropic Studies at the Center on Philanthropy, asked a question after the program.

4– Duck wrote the book “Twilight at Conner Prairie: The Creation, Betrayal, and Rescue of a Museum.”

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AT THE JAMES P. WHITE LECTURE on Legal Education on September 13, 2011, former Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, Judith Kaye, talked about her experiences as the first woman to lead that court.

Judge Kaye received her undergraduate degree from Barnard College in 1958 and her LL.B. degree from New York University School of Law in 1962, graduating cum laude. Immediately following law school, she entered private practice at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City. From 1965 to 1969, while starting a family, she was part-time assistant to Dean Russell Niles of NYU School of Law. In 1969, she joined Olwine, Connelly, Chase, O’Donnell & Weyher as a litigation associate, and was later named partner.

In 1983, she was appointed by then-Governor Mario M. Cuomo to New York’s highest court, the Court of Appeals, becoming the first woman serve on that body. In 1993, Gov. Cuomo appointed her that court’s chief judge, making her the first woman to occupy that post. The only New York chief judge ever to complete a full 14-year term, she was re-appointed in 2007 to a term that ended Dec. 31, 2008, because of the state’s mandatory retirement provisions.

As chief judge, she led numerous initiatives to make the New York court system more efficient and responsive to the needs of all residents, including reform of the jury system/creating problem-solving courts; implementing a commercial division of specialized commercial courts for cost-effective resolution of business disputes; establishing a statewide network of child-care centers for litigants in courthouses; and streamlining procedures for children in foster care and their families.

Today, she is of counsel to the firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, LLP, in New York City.

The James P. White Lecture on Legal Education was established in 2000 to honor Professor Emeritus James P. White, who served for 25 years as the American Bar Association’s Consultant on Legal Education. White’s colleagues at the ABA and other friends contributed to the establishment of the annual lecture series in his honor.

TrailblazingWomanJudge Judith Kaye SpeaksatJamesP.WhiteLecture

Judge Judith Kaye, former Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, poses with Professor Emeritus James P. White, following the lecture that carries his name.

Hon. Randall Shepard, Chief Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, poses a question to Judge Kaye.

ON OCTOBER 11, 2011, THE LAW SCHOOL HOSTED the Deputy Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Teresa Stanek Rea and Zimmer Holdings Chairman, John McGoldrick, along with other legal experts in health law and ethics. Rea spoke on “Navigating the 21st Century Patents Terrain In a Global Innovation Economy” and McGoldrick, who serves as Special Adviser on the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, spoke on “The End of AIDS—When? How?”

“Our annual fall semester continuing legal education program strives to provide timely topics of interest by well-known experts in the government, private sector and the academy,” says Professor Andy Klein, who moderated the program.

The event was inaugurated in 2002 and has raised over $156,000 for student scholarships. “We are extremely proud that this program is able to provide quality continuing legal education to attorneys from Indianapolis and around the country, while also assisting current law students through scholarship support. It’s a win-win for the legal community and the law school,” says Jim Burns, ‘75, Senior Counsel at Ice Miller LLP and former assistant general counsel of Eli Lilly and Company, who is the founding organizer of the program.

The program, “Health Law Developments and Trends” was

a one-day event with 6 hours of Indiana CLE credit, including 1 hour of ethics credit. The morning featured Rea, who is Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property, as well as second in command at the U.S. Patent Office. In addition, there was a session on “Foreign Corrupt Practices Act—Where We Are and Where the Government is Going” by Tim Pratt, Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer, General Counsel and Secretary for Boston Scientific, and Ralph Hall, Distinguished Professor & Practitioner, University of Minnesota School of Law. Nicolas P. Terry, the Chester A. Myers Professor of Law at Saint Louis University School of Law spoke on “Electronic Medical Records: Flavors of Regulation, From Privacy, Meaningful Use, and Products Liability to Device Regulation.”

In the afternoon, Professor Mary Davis, the Stites and Harbison Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law, addressed “Federal Preemption of State Law: The Supreme Court’s Moving Target.” She was followed by McGoldrick who spoke on patent, regulatory and contract issues involved in finding a way to stop the AIDS virus. Rounding out the day was G. Michael Witte, ‘82, of the Indiana Disciplinary Commission, who provided an update of Indiana lawyer disciplinary cases.

Patents in a Global Economy and an End to AIDSAmongTopicsatLawSchool’sAnnualProgram

Top: The audience at this year’s Annual CLE Program enjoyed the presentations on a variety of topics related to patents and health law.

Right: Presenters included Professor Ralph Hall, John McGoldrick, Professor Nicolas Terry, Professor Andy Klein (moderator), Professor Mary Davis, and Teresa Stanek Rea.

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FacultyNewsAt the invitation of the Kenya School of Law, CyNTHIAADAMS

made a presentation on clinical skills curriculum development at the school’s Midterm Review, held in Nairobi in September. Those attending included the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Justices of the Kenya High Court, the Secretary of Kenya’s Council of Legal Education, the Deans from Moi university School of Law and Strathmore university School of Law, as well as administration and law faculty from the Kenya Law School, Moi university, the university of Nairobi, and Strathmore university. In ensuing months, Professor Adams will continue to consult closely with the Kenya Law School on enhancing their Advocates Training Programme.

In June Professor Adams visited Turkey as part of a cultural exchange program where, as the guest of the Niagara foundation, she met with Turkish leaders in academia, business, and government. Also in June, at the Mid-Year Meeting of the Association of American Law Schools’ Conference on Clinical Legal Education, Professor Adams and Professor Carrie Hagan made a poster presentation, “Course Collaboration for a Richer Learning Experience and Institutional Change,” reporting on experiences and outcomes of their collaborative experience with students in Professor Adams’ legal writing course and Professor Hagan’s clinic, and providing advice for clinicians on collaborative efforts.

In July Professor Adams presented “Prometheus unbound: Applying Creative, Critical Pedagogy in the Global Classroom,” at the Applied Legal Storytelling Conference at the Sturm College of Law, university of Denver, in Colorado. The conference was sponsored by the Clinical Legal Education Association and the Legal Writing Institute.

Professor Adams is a member of the Association of American Law Schools’ newly created Section on Transactional Law and Skills and was named editor for that Section’s semi-annual newsletter.

Chancellor Emeritus GERALDL.BEPKO spoke on behalf of the alumni at an event on July 21 at the Chicago Cultural Center at the IIT/Chicago Kent College of Law celebration of the 50th year of teaching by Professor Ralph L. Brill. Chancellor Bepko was appointed Co-Chair with Indiana Commission on Higher Education Commissioner Marilyn Moran Townsend of fort Wayne, of the Indiana Reaching Higher Part 2 planning process. He was also appointed Chair of the Academic Affairs Committee of the ICHE and a member of the ICHE Executive Committee. On August 12, Chancellor Bepko served as an Honorary Pallbearer at the Memorial Mass for Iu President Emeritus John W. Ryan.

On October 1, Chancellor Bepko was a speaker at a program in memory of Robert Payton, first Director of the Iu Center on Philanthropy. He also was appointed to serve on the 2011 Rhodes Scholars Selection Committee for Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio which met on November 18 and 19, in Indianapolis.

SHAWNBOyNE was appointed to the IuPuI Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Council by Dean Roberts for the 2011-12 year. On December 7th, Professor Boyne, with SPEA faculty member Jim White, made a report to the State of Indiana’s Counter-Terrorism and Security Council on the lessons learned

from the law school’s 2011 counter-terrorism simulation. Additionally, Professor Boyne was recently appointed to the AALS Curriculum Committee based on the creative work that she has been doing on global curricular issues. The Committee studies changes in teaching pedagogy and disseminates information on innovations in legal education.

KENNETHCHESTEKparticipated in the third Applied Legal Storytelling Conference in July, 2011, held at the university of Denver, Sturm College of Law. He presented his latest paper, “Competing Stories: A Case Study of Narrative Reasoning,” in which he analyzes the briefs and opinion filed in the recent nationwide litigation over national health care reform to see if the different results reached by the trial courts could be attributed, at least in part, on the different stories told by the plaintiffs in each of those cases.He also was part of a panel presentation (with two professors from the university of California—Irvine) at the Central States Regional Legal Writing Conference, held in Chicago in September. The panel’s topic was “Just the facts, Ma’am: using Client Interviews and Role Play to Teach fact Investigation.”

JIMDIMITRI made a presentation at the Central States Regional Legal Writing Conference at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago on friday, September 16. His presentation, entitled “Driven Away from Distraction: Teaching Students to unplug (at Least Periodically) in the Digital Age,” proposed tools to law professors to help them cultivate their students’ concentration and critical thinking skills by getting the students to periodically “unplug” from digital devices and social media. Professor Dimitri emphasized the impairment that multi-tasking and distractions can cause to students’ short-term and long-term memories, which in turn hinders the students’ learning process.

This year’s Central States Conference included more than 80 speakers and was attended by more than 200 legal writing professionals and teachers from all over the country. It is believed to have been the largest regional legal writing conference to date.

JENNIFERDROBAC returned in the fall of 2011 to teach in Indianapolis after a sabbatical leave at Berkeley Law during the spring of 2010 and a visit at Santa Clara Law School during the 2010-2011 academic year. Professor Drobac was an invited presenter on: “Student Speech in the Wake of Morse v. Frederick,” at the Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Annual Meeting in Hilton Head, South Carolina in July.

GEORGEEDWARDSand the Program in International Human Rights Law hosted five women’s rights advocates and journalists from Yemen on October 11, at the law school. Professor Edwards talked with the visiting delegates about international human rights law education, research, advocacy for women’s right to freedom of expression and political participation. The visitors included Thuraya Ameen Qasem Dammag, project manager, International federation of Journalists in Yemeni Syndicates; Arwa Ibrahim Mohammed Al Shawafi, executive assistant and financial assistant, Academic for

FacultyNews’

42 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Education Development; Altaf Shaher Ali Mohammed Al Yousefi, coordinator, Civic Democratic Initiative Support foundation; Samia Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Saif, journalist, al Thori Newspaper; and Maha Naji Yahya Salah, author and human rights activist. The u.S. Department of State sponsored the Yemeni women’s visit under its International Visitor Leadership project on “Young Leaders: The u.S. Political Process.”

Professor George E. Edwards’ new book, LL.M. Roadmap: An International Student’s Guide to U.S. Law School Programs, held its official u.S. launch at Harvard Law School on September 16. The event took place as part of “Harvard Literati: Celebrating the Works of Alumni Authors,” which was attended by numerous well-known authors. The following week, the European debut of the book took place in Paris, france.

Additionally, Professor Edwards was named a fellow of the American Bar foundation in July. The fellows are selected to participate in activities that advance justice through research and to address the changing needs of the system of justice and the legal profession. Professor Edwards published an article, “How to Choose the Best u.S. Law School for foreign Lawyers,” in the November, 2011 issue of The National Jurist. He also published “International Students and Master of Laws (LL.M.) Programs in the u.S.: What u.S. Law Schools Will Not Tell Your About Choosing the Best School, Getting Admitted, Succeeding in their LL.M. Programs, and Getting a Good Job Post-Degree,” in the fall issue of the ILSA Quarterly.

Professor Edwards gave a presentation on “China, the u.S. and Law—Opportunities for Continued Transnational Legal Education with Chinese Students Joining Master of Laws Programs in the u.S.,” in

Beijing, China at the invitation of the u.S. Embassy on July 26. Also, Professor Edwards was nominated for the John S. Ryan Award for International Distinction.

FRANKEMMERTwas again teaching during the summer term in Indianapolis, this year adding “International Commercial Arbitration” to “WTO Law.” In July, Professor Emmert also taught WTO Law in Cairo in the framework of the school’s LL.M. Program in Egypt. During the third week of August, he visited AlHosn university in Abu Dhabi to explore bringing the school’s LL.M. program to the united Arab Emirates. In the fall semester, Professor Emmert taught “European union Law - foundations” in Indianapolis. from September 19-23, he visited universidad Sergio Arboleda in Bogotá to promote the LL.M. Program and made a presentation on “The Draft Common frame of Reference as the Greatest Innovation in Contract Law since the french Code Civil and the German BGB” at a conference on the latest developments in international contract law.

In the first week of October, Professor Emmert visited Yerevan State university in Armenia to promote the LL.M. Program and to continue his support for the Chair of European and International Law in the framework of the Open Society Institute’s Higher Education Support Program, where Professor Emmert serves as an International Scholar. from October 10-18, Professor Emmert worked in Costa Rica and delivered a three-day training session on International Commercial Transactions at the Colegio de Abogados y Abogadas, the Costa Rican Bar Association, to approximately 300 attorneys, arbitrators, and other legal professionals. The American Ambassador to Costa Rica, Anne Slaughter Andrew, not only

NCAA Division IPresidential Retreat

NCAA President Mark Emmert addressing NCAA Division I Presidential Retreat attendees August 9, 2011 at Lawrence W. Inlow Hall.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 43

FacultyNewsdelivered the opening address for the training session but also invited Professor Emmert and the leaders of the legal profession in Costa Rica for a breakfast at her residence. Among the attendees were the Costa Rican Minister of Justice, His Excellency Hernando París, the Deans of the three leading law schools in Costa Rica, several of the country’s highest profile attorneys, as well as several representatives of various programs implemented or coordinated by the Embassy. Iu already has a relationship with universidad de Costa Rica and the Law School will now add a partnership with universidad Latinoamericana de Ciencia y Tecnologia (uLACIT). Professor Emmert is exploring opportunities for law school JD students to do summer internships in Costa Rican law firms and at the new Costa Rican regional arbitration center.

from November 10-12, he attended a conference of the OSI Higher Education Support Program in Istanbul and made a presentation on the development of successful research proposals. At the conference, Professor Emmert was also able to present his latest book, a work on the implementation of the European Convention on Human Rights and fundamental freedoms in Central and Eastern Europe. The book is published by Eleven International Publishing of the Netherlands and brings together analysis on 20 countries in the region. Professor Emmert co-edited the work with Professor Leonard Hammer of Tel Aviv and wrote the overall conclusions.

As a consultant to the u.S. Department of Justice, Professor Emeritus JEFFGROVE completed a research project in connection with a federal prosecution, of a foreign national, under the Economic Espionage Act of 1996--a statute that has been successfully invoked in only a handful of past cases. During September-October 2011, he was a Visiting Professor at Renmin (People’s) university of China Law School, teaching a six-week accelerated course for Chinese Juris Master students on comparative elements of the u.S. legal system. He also delivered remarks to a class of international students enrolled in Renmin Law’s LL.M Program in Chinese Law, drawing on his experience over 24 years and 15 visits to Chinese law schools and legal institutions. Professor Grove had principal responsibility for instituting the law school’s summer program with Renmin Law School, which was inaugurated in 1998 and has operated continuously for 14 years.

PRISCILLAKEITH served as a panelist for the CLE “Business of Healthcare: The Development of State Based Health Care Exchanges” sponsored by the ABA’s Business Law Section’s Government Affairs Committee and Health Care Committee and the ABA Health Law Section at the American Bar Association’s Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada in August. A major component of the “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” was the creation of State Based Health Care Exchanges. The State Based Health Care Exchanges would serve as the “store” for citizens to shop for health insurance. Professor Keith’s presentation explored the concept from the practicality of a state’s perspective.

In June, Professor Keith and Professor Emeritus Eleanor Kinney served as panelists in the Robert Wood Johnson foundation’s Public Health Law Network Webinar on “Comparative Effectiveness

in Public Health.” Professor Keith served as a panelist on the topic, “Accountable Care Organizations” at the 34th Annual Health Law Professors Conference in June at the Loyola university Chicago School of Law. Professor Keith’s discussion focused on antitrust and fraud and abuse legal issues associated with accountable care organizations. Professor Keith served as a panelist on the CDC’s Webinar titled “Public Health Law fundamentals: A Webinar for PHPS fellows” in September. The purpose of the webinar was to provide an overview of public health, its uses and its past and future impact on health, as well as the legal issues relevant to public health prevention service fellows as federal employees. Professor Keith’s area of interest was the impact of local public health departments.

Additionally, Professor Keith participated in Seton Hall Law Review’s 2011 Symposium “Implementing the Affordable Care Act,” in October. A law review article related to this presentation will be published in the Seton Hall law review in the fall of 2012. Also, she moderated the panel discussion on the “Constitutionality of Health Care Reform” with David Orentlicher and Tom fisher, Solicitor General for the Office of the Attorney General’s Office of Indiana, at the Washington Health Care Summit sponsored by the American Bar Association Health Law Section in October.

ANDyKLEIN recently published a book, Craig, Green, Klein, and Sanders, Toxic and Environmental Torts: Cases and Materials (West 2011). Professor Klein was on a panel entitled “Leadership in the Law School Curriculum” last summer at the annual Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Conference.

In June, NORMANLEFSTEIN, Professor and Dean Emeritus, spoke at a conference at the Cardozo School of Law in New York City sponsored by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the National Legal Aid & Defender Association. The conference focused on Padilla v. Kentucky, a 2010 united States Supreme Court decision dealing with collateral consequences of criminal convictions and effective defense representation. In October, in New York City, he addressed a meeting of the American Branch of the International Law Association dealing with “International Perspectives on Indigent Defense.” Also in October, he was a featured speaker at the Annual Texas Indigent Defense Workshop in Austin where he discussed solutions to caseload problems confronted by lawyers representing the indigent accused. During the summer, his law review article, “Excessive Public Defense Workloads: Are ABA Standards for Criminal Justice Adequate?” appeared in 38 Hastings Const. L. Q. 949 (2011). In October, the American Bar Association published his book, Securing Reasonable Caseloads: Ethics and Law in Public Defense, which was supported by a grant from Atlantic Philanthropies. Professor Lefstein continues to serve as an expert witness in several criminal cases, including a class action lawsuit in Georgia related to the state’s failure to provide lawyers for defendants appealing their criminal convictions and an Alabama post-conviction death penalty case.

CATHERINELEMMER, Head of Library Information Services, presented “Developing an Effective Online Legal Research Course

FacultyNews

Professor Pitts Wins Kiss-A-Pig Competition

During the fall 2011 semester, legal fraternity Phi Alpha Delta held a fund raising contest in which students voted for which faculty member they would most like to see kiss a pig. More than twenty McKinney Law faculty members volunteered to be on the voting list. After a hard-fought battle among finalists (Professors Mike Pitts, Nicholas Georgakopoulos, Jim Dmitri, and Jeff Cooper), Professor Pitts claimed victory! All funds from the contest went to Phi Alpha Delta to help fund annual academic lectures and philanthropic events.

44 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

for Law Students,” on October 20 at Navigating the Rapids of Change the Annual Conference of the Ohio Regional Association of Law Libraries, in Cincinnati, Ohio.

GERARDMAGLIOCCA was named the Samuel R. Rosen Professor of Law and presented the Inaugural Rosen Lecture on “Constitutional Liability Rules,” on November 8 in the Wynne Courtroom at the law school.

Professor Magliocca made five presentations about his book, The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan. Three of those presentations were at law schools: Nebraska Law School, Marquette Law School, and Boston College Law School. He also made presentations about the book at the Indianapolis Law Club and at the faculty Club on the IuPuI Campus. Additionally, Professor Magliocca presented on “Constitutional Liability Rules” at the Workshop on Political Theory and Policy Analysis in Bloomington, and also at Northwestern university Law School.

JAMESNEHFpublished a book chapter titled “Guaranties in Secured Transactions,” in Secured Transactions Under the Uniform Commercial Code, ch. 8A (J. McDonnell, ed., 2011). He also agreed to assume the principal editing duties of that commercial law treatise after the retirement of a long-time friend from the university of Georgia, Julian McDonnell. He also published two articles: one for a symposium on e-commerce—”The fTC’s Proposed framework for Privacy Protection Online:

A Move Toward Substantive Controls or More Notice and Choice,” 37 wm. mitCHell l. rev. 1727 (2011); and another on the recent financial crisis—”Preventing Another financial Crisis: The Critical Role of Consumer Protection Laws,” in a book being published in Brazil by the research institute Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad. Professor Nehf spoke at two conferences over the summer: “Consumer Law as a Bridge in a Global Legal System,” at the Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Conference in Hilton Head, South Carolina, and “Paying for the Internet: Implications of the fTC’s New Privacy framework,” at the biennial meeting of the International Association of Consumer Law, Brunel university (u.K.). He also taught a comparative consumer law course in the law school’s LL.M. program in Cairo in June.

In June, MICHAELPITTS was named a John S. Grimes fellow and in August he was named a Dean’s fellow for scholarly excellence (both for the 2011-12 academic year). In June, he served as a guest-blogger at Concurring Opinions. In July, he appeared on Boston’s NPR affiliate discussing voter identification. In September, he was elected to the law school’s Executive Committee, and in October, he appeared on a panel discussing redistricting law at the university of Kentucky College of Law.

FRANQUIGLEy delivered presentations on “Indiana Drones: International Law, Morality and Robot Warfare in the Heartland”

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 45

FacultyNewsat the university of Southern Indiana on November 10 and on “Strengthening Rule of Law—The Role of International Humanitarian Activities by Lawyers and Judges” at the Appellate Judges Education Institute (AJEI) Summit in Washington, D.C. on November 12. He wrote several articles on human rights issues in Haiti which were published in the Indianapolis Star and other media outlets. Professor Quigley teaches and directs the school’s new Health and Human Rights Clinic, which received the Indianapolis Bar foundation Impact fund award for 2011-12, along with support from the Health foundation of Greater Indianapolis.

FLORENCEWAGMANROISMAN, William f. Harvey Professor of Law, was named a John S. Grimes fellow. The fellowship supports her research into the current crisis in residential mortgage foreclosures.

Professor Roisman recently published two articles. “Thirteen Principles for Effective Advocacy,” 63 rutgerS l. rev. 985 (2011), was an invited contribution to a festschrift for the late Professor John M. Payne of Rutgers School of Law—Newark, a leading scholar in land use law, particularly with regard to the Mount Laurel doctrine in New Jersey. Her “Tribute to Professor Mary Harter Mitchell,” 44 indiana l. rev. 667 (2011), was part of a volume dedicated to Professor Mitchell. Professor Roisman had helped to organize that volume, which comprises articles on topics that had been important to Professor Mitchell. She also has helped to raise money for a scholarship honoring Professor Mitchell.

Students and Professors Pull All-Nighter During the “Red Eye Relay”

Members of the law school’s Running Club participated in the Red Eye Relay, a 100 mile odyssey which began at 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, September 23 and ended at 8:12 a.m. on Sunday the 24th. Each team member ran three legs, and the legs ranged from 2.22 miles to 7.49 miles in length. The race started on the IU Bloomington campus and ran through countryside northeast of Bloomington, including the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. The law school’s team placed first (out of 12 teams) in the Open Mixed category and 18th overall (out of 62 teams who started and 59 who finished).

Standing (left to right): Todd Hassee, Katie Brant, Professor Ken Chestek, Quinn Ladd Sitting (left to right): Aimee Heitz, Andrea Kochert, Professor Peter Prescott

Professor Roisman made three presentations recently. Two were at the Committee on Regional Training (CORT) housing training for legal services advocates from Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia, held in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Her plenary presentations, both made on June 15, were “The use of fair Housing and Other Human Rights Law in Legal Services Practice” and “A Call to Advocacy.” The third presentation was on September 24, at the ClassCrit IV Conference held at American university, Washington College of Law, in Washington, D.C. The conference’s theme was “Criminalizing Economic Inequality” and Professor Roisman was a member of a panel discussing “Brick by Brick: understanding Systems of Domination in the Core Curriculum.” Her talk was entitled “The Property Course: A Manifestation of Systems of Domination.”

During the fall 2011 semester, Professor Roisman taught Property in the day division and Housing Discrimination and Segregation in the evening. She continues to supervise students in an Advanced Course-Related Experience addressing issues related to landlord-tenant court proceedings in Indiana. She also serves on the faculty Recruitment Committee; she continues to be the faculty advisor for the Equal Justice Works chapter at the law school, and helped to organize the student chapter of the American Civil Liberties union (ACLu) of Indiana.

Professor Roisman was selected to be a founding member of the board of the fair Housing Center of Central Indiana, Inc. that recently was established in Indianapolis. She was elected to a

FacultyNews

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three-year term on August 29. She also was re-elected to a three-year term on the board of directors of the American Civil Liberties union of Indiana, and she continues as a member of the board and vice chair of the Inclusive Communities Project of Dallas, Texas. She also is a member of the committee that is planning the 25th Anniversary Rededication of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, Washington, D.C.

finally, under the auspices of the Women Trailblazers in the Law Project of the American Bar Association’s Senior Lawyers Division, Professor Emeritus Mary Therese Wolf interviewed Professor Roisman on several occasions between 2005 and 2009 to produce an oral history of Professor Roisman which will be deposited with the Library of Congress and the Schlesinger Library at Harvard university and will appear on the website of the ABA Senior Lawyers Division.

In June, JOELSCHUMM authored an amicus brief on behalf of a bipartisan group of 71 members of the General Assembly in the high-profile Barnes v. State, 946 N.E.2d 572 (Ind. 2011) case, which held citizens may not resist unlawful entry by police into their homes. The court granted rehearing to address the concerns raised. Professor Schumm wrote the criminal law survey article for the Indiana Law Review for the fourteenth year and co-authored a tribute article for the law review upon the retirement of Justice Ted Boehm:

“Recent Developments in Indiana Criminal Law and Procedure,” 44 ind. l. rev. 1135 (2011); “Tribute to Justice Theodore R. Boehm,” 44 ind. l. rev. 347 (2011) (co-authored with Paul Jefferson). In July he wrote A Review of 2011 Criminal Law Legislation for the Indianapolis Bar Association’s section of the Indiana Lawyer.

He conducted a law school class for several teachers as part of the Indiana Supreme Court’s summer teacher workshop in June and later collaborated on high school classes and spoke with students from Shortridge Magnet School and Decatur Discovery Academy. In July he was a panelist with Judge Robert Altice and Judge Maria Granger on the topic of “20 Years with 6 Suspended and Credit for Time Served” at the “Law School for Journalists” program sponsored by the Indiana Supreme Court and the law school. In November he joined Justice Brent Dickson in speaking with members of the General Assembly at the Indiana State Bar Association’s first “Law School for Legislators”

Other presentations included: “Hot Topics and Legislative update: Indiana Criminal Law,” at the Indianapolis Bar Association Bench Bar Conference, in french Lick, Indiana, on June 17; “Where to Draw the Line Between Consistency and Autonomy in a Legal Writing Program,” (with Professor Debby McGregor), at the Central States Legal Writing Conference, in Chicago on September 16;

Faculty Spotlight: Professor Emily MorrisProfessor Emily Michiko Morris, Associate Professor of Law and Grimes

Fellow, is currently working on three areas of research in the realm of patent law: patent claim interpretation and uncertainty, the Hatch-Waxman Act, and patentable subject matter, all of which are solo projects.

Her work on patent claim interpretation has found that while some think there needs to be more uniformity in how patent claims are interpreted, how claims are in fact interpreted is not as important as some practitioners may believe. Her article, “Res or Regulation? Patents and the (Uncertain) Rules of the Game,” will be published in the Michigan TelecoMMunicaTions and Technology law Review in spring 2012. Professor Morris’ work concerning the Hatch-Waxman Act points up the difficulty of having a one-size-fits-all patent system. Her article, “The Myth of Generic Competition Under the Hatch-Waxman Act,” will be published in the FoRdhaM inTellecTual PRoPeRTy Media and enTeRTainMenT law JouRnal in spring 2012. Her work in the area of patentable subject matter analyzes how patent law struggles to keep up with real-world technological advances. She plans to submit a paper on her findings on this subject in spring 2012.

Professor Morris has been with the law school since 2008, and teaches patent law, copyright law, and intellectual property law. She received her undergraduate degree, magna cum laude, from Harvard University; and her J.D., magna cum laude, from University of Michigan Law School.

When not teaching or doing research, Professor Morris has been known to be a fierce competitor in the annual Phi Alpha Delta Chili Cook-Off.

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FacultyNews“Sentencing Advocacy on Appeal,” at the Indiana Public

Defender Council Homicide/Death Penalty Defense Seminar, in Merrillville, Indiana, on September 22, and “Incorporating forensic Evaluations into Your Case: What You Don’t Know Can Hurt Your Client,” (with Dr. Mike Jenuwine), Indianapolis Public Defender Council Juvenile Defender CLE, in Indianapolis on October 7.

Additionally, he served as moderator for a panel discussion, “Access to Counsel for Kids in Juvenile Court,” at the Indiana State Bar Association Annual Meeting, in french Lick, Indiana, on October 20. This panel discussion followed his work as part of the Civil Rights for Children committee, which drafted a proposed rule amendment to require the appointment of counsel in all juvenile delinquency cases. His article, “Counsel for Indiana’s Kids: A Modest Proposal,” appeared in the September 2011 issue of Res Gestae.

finally, over the course of the past few months Professor Schumm was interviewed by several media outlets on a wide range of topics related to criminal law and juvenile justice including the Indianapolis Star, Terre Haute Tribune-Star, Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, and the Elkhart Truth. He appeared on Indianapolis television stations WTHR (Channel 13), WRTV (Channel 6), WISH (Channel 8), the Mark Riley Show on WWRL in New York City, and the Ed Wenck Show on WIBC.

In September, Professor EmeritusJAMESP.WHITE was appointed to chair an ABA Task force on the Accreditation Process. The task force will examine ways to improve the law school accreditation process to make it more efficient and less intrusive. Also in September, Professor White was elected as chair of the Butler university Holcomb Research Institute. He continues as a member and Secretary of the Butler university Board of Trustees and as a member of Atlanta’s John Marshall Board of Trustees.

LLOyDT.“TOM”WILSON led students from the law school and nine other schools in the 2nd International Forum for Law Students, held on June 5, at the Renmin university of China Law School, in Beijing. The title of the forum was Pro Bono, Experiential Learning & the Law School Curriculum. Professor Wilson also was an invited speaker at the International forum on Judicial Training, held on June 8 & 9, in Beijing, China. The forum was sponsored by the National Judges College of the Peoples Republic of China, the united Nations Development Program—China, and the European union-China Project of Governance for Equitable Development.

On June 11, Professor Wilson directed the 2nd Sino-U.S. Law Conference, held on June 11, at the Renmin university of

Former IRS Commissioner Visits Tax Class

On September 23, former IRS Commissioner Mark Everson visited Professor Peter Prescott’s federal income tax class. Everson spoke for over an hour and took questions from students for 30 more minutes.

“Commissioner Everson’s real-world perspective, brought from his time leading the IRS, was a perfect complement to the statutes, regulations, and cases that we’ve covered in federal income tax,” says Professor Prescott. “I know that my students and I benefited greatly from the experience.”

Everson is the current Commissioner of Indiana’s Department of Workforce Development and served as IRS Commissioner under President George W. Bush from 2003-2007. He talked to the students about tax administration and tax policy issues, including some of the most significant administration and policy challenges he faced as Commissioner, comparing them to the challenges that he sees today. Professor Prescott says, “He closed by talking about the important role that attorneys and accountants play in our voluntary compliance federal income tax system, how he believes they’ve failed to live up to that role in recent years, and how the professional responsibility rules should be revised to discourage such failures going forward.”

Before joining the IRS, Everson worked as Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget under then-Director Mitch Daniels. He also worked as Deputy Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service under President Reagan. He holds a B.A. from Yale and an M.S. in accounting from New York University.

FacultyNews

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China Law School in Beijing, China. The title of the conference was “The Changing face of the Real Estate finance Marketplace: Two Perspectives on Reform.” The principal expression of reform considered at the conference was the Dodd-frank bill, formally known as the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. As the organizer of the Conference, Professor Wilson recruited three nationally-known authorities to join him as presenters: Cristeena G. Naser, Associate General Counsel of the American Bankers Association Securities Association and Senior Counsel in the ABA’s Center for Securities, Trust & Investment Group; Reginald T. O’Shields, General Counsel of the federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta; and Jason H.P. Kravitt, Senior Partner, Mayer Brown LLP and co-founder of the American Securitization forum. Professor Wilson’s presentation, entitled “‘What Reform’ begins with ‘Reform What’: Causal and Policy Analysis of Banking and Real Estate finance Regulation in the u.S.,” framed the conference agenda by placing reform measures in the context of assumptions made by proponents of and critics of the Dodd-frank bill.

from September 4 through 10, the law school was the site

of the third annual Program in American Law for professors and students from the faculdades Espirito Santenses Law School (fAESA), which is located in Vitoria, Brazil. Professor Wilson founded the program and is its director. The program consists of classroom instruction each morning and field trips each afternoon. Classroom instruction explores a topic chosen each year by the fAESA professors. In 2011, the subject of the program was “The Common Law in Principle and Practice.” This topic allowed the participants to gain a better understanding of the common law and to compare it to the civil law system of their home country.

On October 11, in Guangzhou, China, Professor Wilson met with Sun Yat-sen university Law School Vice-Dean Li Zhiping and Dean’s Assistant for International Programs, Zheng Liwei, to execute an agreement for a summer program. The agreement calls for Sun Yat-sen law students to come to the Indiana university Robert H. McKinney School of Law for three weeks, where they will receive classroom instruction and participate in law-related and cultural field trips. Sun Yat-sen university Law School expects to bring forty students to Indianapolis for the inaugural program in July 2012.

Law School Hosts Visitors from Yemen

Professor George E. Edwards and the Program in International Human Rights Law hosted five women’s rights advocates and journalists from Yemen on October 11, at the law school.

Professor Edwards talked with the visiting delegates about international human rights law education, research, advocacy for women’s right to freedom of expression and political participation.

The visitors included Thuraya Ameen Qasem Dammag, project manager, International Federation of Journalists in Yemeni Syndicates; Arwa Ibrahim Mohammed Al Shawafi, executive assistant and financial assistant, Academic for Education Development; Altaf Shaher Ali Mohammed Al Yousefi, coordinator, Civic Democratic Initiative Support Foundation; Samia Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Saif, journalist, al Thori Newspaper; and Maha Naji Yahya Salah, author and human rights activist.

The U.S. Department of State sponsored the Yemeni women’s visit under its International Visitor Leadership project on “Young Leaders: The U.S. Political Process.”

New Forum Has Leadership FocusThe Global Crisis Leadership Forum, established

in September 2011, is a joint initiative of the law school and IU’s School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Professor Shawn Boyne is the law school’s Forum chair. SPEA’s Forum co-chairs are Dr. William Foley, Jr. and Jim White.

The move formalizes the working relationship between the two schools. After a series of meetings with the local public safety community that took place throughout spring 2011, and determining “that they would enthusiastically support our venture,” the Forum was launched in the fall, said Professor Boyne. The process for elevating the Forum to Center status is under way.

By broadly focusing on the strategic, legal, and operational issues involved in crisis management, the Forum will help advance the academic field of global crisis management that is still in an embryonic stage.

The Forum will provide students on the IUPUI campus with opportunities to test and develop their own crisis management and leadership skills through a biennial simulation exercise in which students work side by side with experts in the field to respond to a series of simulated crises.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 49

Professor Eric Dannenmaier, Director of Environmental and Natural Resource Law Program2011 Grant for “Bringing Property Law Home,” underwriting the development of simulation and case studies in first-year property law classes.

Professor Antony Page, John S. Grimes Fellow2011 Grant for “Enhanced Multimedia in the Classroom” for increased use of multimedia and creative presentation techniques aimed at Millennial students, as well as a workshop for other faculty on the topic.

Priscilla Keith, ‘93, Adjunct Professor and Director of Research and Projects for the Hall Center for Law and Health2011 Grant for “Biomedical and Health Industry Compliance Program” to expand course and clinical education offerings in the compliance field and develop a certificate program in health law with a specialty in biomedical and health industry compliance law.

IUAA Presents Grants to Law School FacultyProfessor George Edwards, the Carl M. Grey Professor of Law, Founder and Director of the Program in International Human Rights Law2010 Grant for “Introducing International Law to Our First-Year Students to Help Prepare Them for Practice in the Global Legal Environment.” International law teaching materials were prepared for class sessions for the first-year contracts, civil procedure, criminal law, property law and torts classes.

Clinical Professor Deborah B. McGregor, Assistant Director of Legal Analysis, Research and Communication (LARC) 2010 Grant for “Developing an Online Course in Rhetoric,” enabled attendance at conferences and purchase of needed equipment to create 13 recorded classes and an online exam for “Principles of Rhetoric.”

Professor Florence Wagman Roisman, the William F. Harvey Professor of Law2010 Grant for “Enhancement of Housing Law Course,” enabled the creation of teaching materials for “Foreclosure Prevention and Alleviation for Homelessness and Renters.”

The Alumni Association of the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law has awarded six grants over the past two years to law school faculty members to assist in their teaching.

WINTER COLLEGE FEBRUARY 10-12Naples Grande Beach Resort, A Waldorf Astoria Resort • Naples, Florida

Expand your mind this February in sunny Naples, Florida! Winter College, the IU Alumni Association’s premier personal enrichment program, will be in session Feb. 10-12. The weekend includes interactive classes led by some of IU’s most accomplished professors. Explore this year’s theme, “American Vistas: This Land Is Your Land,” with fellow alumni and friends at the gorgeous Naples Grande Beach Resort. Don’t miss this one-of-a-kind educational experience!

alumni.indiana.edu/wc (800) 824-3044

P.S. Extend your trip to include the Hoosier Open Golf Outing and Dinner, set for Feb. 13 in Naples. Book the Florida Package which includes Winter College and the Hoosier Open for the low price of $600 before the end of 2011 and save $70! Details: iuaa.imodules.com/hoosier-open

IN CLE hours will be available, pending approval.

FacultyNews

This year, the law school welcomes two new faculty members and welcomes back a former faculty member. Professors Lahny Silva and Margaret Tarkington have joined the ranks of the law school faculty and Fran Quigley, ‘87, has returned to the school to serve in the school’s clinical program.

Fran Quigley Fran Quigley has rejoined the clinical law faculty as clinical professor of law. He is senior advisor to the IU Center for Global Health, where he works with the AMPATH and Legal Aid Centre of Eldoret (LACE) programs in Kenya. He is a longtime legal services lawyer, having served as executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of

Indiana, and as a staff attorney with Indiana Legal Services.Professor Quigley is the author of several academic

journal articles on social justice and human rights and a book, Walking Together, Walking Far: How a U.S. and African Medical School Partnership Is Winning the Fight Against the HIV/AIDS Pandemic (Indiana University Press, 2009). His law review and journal articles include “Torture, Impunity, and the Need for Independent Prosecutorial Oversight of the Executive Branch,” coRnell JouRnal oF law and Public Policy, Vol. 20, pp. 270-311, 2010; and “Growing Political Will From the Grassroots: How Social Movement Principles Can Reverse the Dismal Legacy of Rule of Law Interventions,” coluMbia huMan RighTs law Review, Vol. 41, No. 1, pp. 13-66, 2009. He received his undergraduate degree cum laude from Hanover College, his master’s degree from Indiana University, and his J.D. from the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law.

Lahny R. Silva Associate Professor Lahny R. Silva comes to the law school from University of Wisconsin Law School in Madison, where she was the William H. Hasite Fellow. She is an expert in criminal law and teaches Criminal Law; Criminal Procedure: Adjudication; and Criminal Procedure: Investigation. In 2010 she was a legislative appointee for the State of Wisconsin Special Committee on

Review of Records Access of Circuit Court Documents. She also worked as an attorney for Greater Hartford Legal Aid in Connecticut.

Professor Silva has received the Evidentiary Objections

Award from the American Trial Lawyers College. She also received two CALI awards, one for Advanced Constitutional Law Freedom of Speech and one for Contemporary Issues in Criminal Law. She worked on Connecticut’s statewide legal services initiative, “Ban the Box,” and served as Chair of the Diversity Committee while a student at the University of Connecticut School of Law, where she was also involved in the Black Law Student Association (BLSA), the Public Interest Law Group, and Equal Justice Works, and worked as a law clerk in Hartford’s Office of Corporation Counsel.

She received her undergraduate and master’s degrees from Boston University, her J.D. from the University of Connecticut School of Law, and her LL.M. from the University of Wisconsin Law School.

Margaret Tarkington Associate Professor Margaret Tarkington teaches Professional Responsibility, Civil Procedure, and Federal Courts. She comes to the law school from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University where she received the SBA Award for Professor of the Year for First Year Courses. In 2010-2011, she was a

Visiting Associate Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati College of Law, where she taught Legal Ethics, Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, and Torts.

In an article forthcoming in the u.c. davis law Review, Professor Tarkington proposes a new methodology for analyzing the free speech rights of lawyers that works to preserve the essential role of attorneys in the U.S. justice system. She has also explored how the judicial punishment of attorney speech for impugning judicial integrity undermines the core purposes of the First Amendment and impedes protection of constitutional and legal rights to an unbiased and competent judiciary. Her work examining the right of lawyers to criticize the judiciary has been published in the geoRgeTown law JouRnal, the bosTon college law Review, and the Review oF liTigaTion.

She clerked for Judge Kenneth F. Ripple, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in South Bend, Indiana, and was an associate at Sommer Barnard in Indianapolis and at Wood Crapo in Salt Lake City.

She received her undergraduate degree from Brigham Young University, and her J.D. from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University.

New Faculty at Home in Inlow HallBy Rebecca Collier Trimpe

50 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 51

1967ROBERTF.WAGNER, an attorney at Lewis Wagner, LLP, was recently selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the categories of Personal Injury Litigation - Defendants and Product Liability Litigation - Defendants.

1970STEPHENA.STITLE is PNC Bank’s regional chairman for Indiana. He has a combined 15 years of experience with PNC and National City Bank and more than 25 years as an executive with Eli Lilly and Company.

1976JOHNO.FEIGHNER, a partner at Haller & Clovin, PC, has been elected president of the Indiana Trial Lawyers Association.

HEATHERMCPHERSON, senior counsel at Kroger, Gardis & Regas, LLP, has been recognized for the second time as a “five Star Wealth Management” professional.

JOSEPHSMITH and his family were recognized by the Archdiocese of Indianapolis for using Catholic school values to make a difference in the world. They received the honor at the 15th Annual Celebrating Catholic School Values: Scholarship and Career Achievement Awards in November, 2010.

RICHARDA.yOUNG, a senior partner with Kightlinger & Gray, LLP, and Chair of the Management Committee, was recently appointed to the Indiana Pro Bono Commission by Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard for a term ending in 2014.

1977KATHyGROVE has been selected by the National Women’s Studies Association as the recipient of its Women’s Centers Committee’s Outstanding Achievement Award, in recognition of her efforts as director of the IuPuI Office for Women.

1979BILLWININGHAM, a partner at Wilson Kehoe Winingham LLC for 25 years, was recently named “Distinguished Barrister” by The Indiana Lawyer.

1980CHARLESE.BARBIERI, a shareholder at foster Swift Collins & Smith P.C., is included in both The Best Lawyers in America 2012 and Michigan Super Lawyers. He is recognized in four practice areas: environmental law, first Amendment law, natural resources law and litigation-environmental.

MICHAELP.BISHOP, a partner at Cohen Garelick & Glazier, has been elected to serve as president of the Indiana Bar foundation. The florida Mediation Institute chose Bishop, along with select peers from around the country, to present at their August meeting. His session was entitled “Avoiding Pessimism in Mediation.” He was also named to The Best Lawyers in America for 2012 in the practice areas of Litigation-Trusts and Estates, and Trusts and Estates.

JOHNTAyLORhas been re-appointed to the Indiana Commission on Autism by the speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives. Taylor has served on the commission since 2001 and is personally committed to its work because he has a son who is profoundly autistic.

1981JEFFREyA.ABRAMS has been selected as the 2014 President of the Indianapolis Bar Association (IBA). He currently serves as the IBA’s Treasurer, will serve as first Vice President on the 2012 Board of Directors, and will be President-elect in 2013. He is a par tner-in-charge at the firm of Benesch, friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff, LLP, in their Real Estate & Environmental Practice Group in Indianapolis.

JOHNC.TRIMBLE, an attorney at Lewis Wagner, LLP, has been appointed vice-chair of the Defense of the Judiciary Committee of the federation of Defense and Corporate Counsel. He also was recently selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the categories of Insurance Law and Personal Injury Litigation - Defendants.

1982MARyELLENKILEyBISHOP was selected by Ball State university’s College of Sciences and Humanities to receive a 2011 Indiana Woman of Achievement Award for her distinction in the legal profession. She was also named one of The Best Lawyers in America for 2012 in the specialty of Alternative Dispute Resolution, the seventh consecutive year she has been honored in that publication. Bishop is a partner at Cohen Garelick & Glazier and was elected to Indiana university’s Board of Trustees in 2010.

JARRELLB.HAMMOND, an attorney at Lewis Wagner, LLP, was recently selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the categories of Litigation - Trusts and Estates, and Trusts and Estates.

SHARONF.MURPHy was elected president of the board of governors of the College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers. She manages Lewis Wagner’s workers’ compensation practice group. She currently serves as the ABA’s Workers’ Compensation Committee newsletter editor. She is a founding fellow of the College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers and a board member of the Indiana Workers’ Compensation Institute.

1987JAMESD.JOHNSON, a named partner at Rudolph, fine, Porter & Johnson, LLP (Evansville), was appointed to serve on the Local Rules Advisory Committee for the u.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.

JAMESF.LUDLOW was recently selected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the field of Personal Injury Litigation.

1988STEVENM.CRELL, a partner at Cohen Garelick & Glazier, has broadened his professional accomplishments and added “Registered Civil Mediator” to his practice’s scope of work. He was also recently elected as president of Congregation Beth-El Zedeck.

MARyFOLEyPANSzI, an attorney at Lewis Wagner, LLP, has been appointed to the Central Indiana Association of Collaborative Professionals’ first board of directors.

1989DIANAL.WANN has joined Rudolph, fine, Porter & Johnson, LLP,

ClassNotes

ClassNotesafter seven years with McCray Lavallo frank & Klingler. She will be based in Crawfordsville, Indiana. She has been named to Indiana Super Lawyers (2010, 2011); Best Lawyers in Indiana (2008); and Best Lawyers in America (2010). She was also inducted into the College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers (2010), named to “Top Attorneys in Indiana” by Indianapolis Monthly in 2011, and she has a Martindale Hubbell AV rating.

1990SUSANE.CLINE, an attorney with Lewis Wagner, LLP, was named as “Indianapolis Best Lawyers Medical Malpractice Law – Defendants Lawyer of the Year” for 2012. She was also selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the category of Medical Malpractice Law - Defendants.

1992DENNISBLAND received the Rev. Charles R. Williams Community Service Award at the Governor’s Reception at Indiana Black Expo’s 41st Summer Celebration in July.

1995DINAM.COx, an attorney at Lewis Wagner, LLP, was recently selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 in the categories of Product Liability Litigation, Product Liability Litigation - Defendants, Professional Malpractice Law and Professional Malpractice Law - Defendants.

1996ANDIMETzEL, a partner with Benesch, friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff, LLP, is one of three new members appointed by the Indiana Supreme Court for a five-year term on the Indiana Disciplinary Commission. She also has been elected treasurer of the Commission. In addition, she serves on the Indiana State Employees’ Appeals Commission, by appointment of Governor Mitch Daniels. In 2010 she was elected to serve as a member of the ABA House of Delegates.

2002TONIEVERTON has been promoted to associate with the labor and employment team at Baker & Daniels, LLP.

PATRICIAKINNEy was promoted from director to Assistant Dean for Admissions at Iu School of Law – Indianapolis. She joined the Admissions office in 2004.

2005ANDREWCAMPBELL of Baker & Daniels, LLP, received a 2011 Pro Bono Publico Award from the Indiana Bar foundation in recognition of his contributions toward broadening the availability of legal services to the underserved.

2007KIAMESHA-SyLVIAG.COLOM ’07 and JOSEPHR.DELAMATER ‘07 had their first child, Ysabella Grace Delamater, on March 21, 2011.

ALUMNI AMBASSADOR PROGRAM CONNECTING APPLICANTS WITH ALUMNI

What is an Ambassador? Ambassadors provide prospective students with insight into life as a student and graduate of the IU School of Law-Indianapolis. Ambassadors are proud of the law school, and excited to share their experiences!

What do Ambassadors do?• Contact targeted admitted students in your area• Describe your experience at the school and living in Indianapolis• Share your career path and offer to answer questions

For more information about the Alumni Ambassador program, please contact Frank Giammaria at 317.274.6587

or [email protected]

• ATLANTA • SAN FRANCISCO • CHICAGO • WASHINGTON D.C.• MIAMI

WE NEED YOUR HELP IF YOU LIVE IN ONE OF THE FOLLOWING CITIES:

What is an Ambassador? Ambassadors provide prospective

students with insight into life as a student and graduate of the

law school. Ambassadors are proud of the law school, and

excited to share their experiences!

What do Ambassadors do?

• Contact targeted admitted students in your area

• Describe your experience at the school and living in Indianapolis

• Share your career path and offer to answer questions

52 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Mark Shaw, ‘72, has written 25 books, but one of his latest, Road to a Miracle, is deeply personal.

There’s the “road” part: a happy childhood in Auburn, Indiana, college, a series of career attempts, then law school and a criminal defense practice that included work with attorney F. Lee Bailey.

Also along the road: a move to Colorado where he was frequently mistaken for John Denver, TV gigs—he’s been a legal analyst for the Mike Tyson, O.J. Simpson and Kobe Bryant trials—and movie deals. The book details Shaw’s first marriage, a return to Indiana, his career as a radio talk show host and an infamous run-in with IU basketball coach Bob Knight, followed by a sad, messy divorce.

Then there’s the “miracle”: A spiritual awakening, seminary, and, finally, a happy second marriage and the surprising discovery of an adult daughter and two grandchildren he never knew existed that he calls “the gift of a lifetime.”

“It was the culmination of a spiritual journey,” Shaw says.

Shaw, who graduated from San Francisco Theological Seminary at age 60, hopes the book inspires others. But he’s already at work on books No. 25—No Peace for the Wicked, a legal thriller to be published in January—and No. 26, its sequel, Guilty Conscience.

The new novels are based on true stories, Shaw says. Lawyers have lots of good stories to tell, Shaw says, and he plans to continue writing fiction and working as a literary consultant to others who believe they may have a book to write. All the while, he savors his law school experience. “It shaped everything in my life,” he says.

Six days a week, Shaw starts his day in his writing studio in Superior, Colorado, with his dog, Black Sox, breaking for breakfast with his wife, Wen-Ying Lu, and a walk with the dog. Although he has five portraits of his literary hero, Earnest Hemingway, in the studio, Shaw says he knows he’s not a great writer—just an inspired one.

“I just try to tell stories,” Shaw says. “I hope they are ‘stop and think’ books.”

Mark Shaw, ‘72, is a Writer and StorytellerBy Alicia Dean Carlson

1– Mark Shaw, ‘72, has written 25 books.

2– Left: Road to a Miracle, published by People’s Press and Globe Pequot, is available on Amazon. To see photos of Shaw’s new family, visit www.markshawbooks.com. Right: Shaw’s latest book, No Peace for the Wicked, will be published in January.

3– Hon. Patricia Riley, ‘74, Mary Beth Ramey, ‘72, Mark Shaw, and Nancy Belli, Melvin Belli’s wife, at a Chicago book signing for Mark’s 2006 book, Melvin Belli: King of the Courtroom.

1

3

2

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 53

ClassNotes

On June 30, Indiana University graduates re-elected Patrick A. Shoulders, ‘78, of Evansville, Indiana, to a fourth three-year term on the IU Board of Trustees.

Shoulders, a member of the law firm of Ziemer, Stayman, Weitzel & Shoulders in Evansville, was initially appointed as an IU trustee in 2002, and then was elected by alumni to the board again in 2005 and 2008.

“I’m honored that the alumni have given me the opportunity to serve our beloved alma mater for another three years. IU is on a great path right now, and I pledge to work hard to continue its success,” Shoulders said. “I want to thank my opponents and encourage them to stay connected to IU and encourage all of our alumni to stay involved with the university.”

In addition to his law degree, Shoulders earned a B.A. from IU Bloomington. He chaired the IU Alumni Association

in 2000 and has served on the Varsity Club and IU Foundation Board of Directors.

He is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and has played a leadership role in a number of professional organizations. He received the Hine Medal from IUPUI in 2005, a Sagamore of the Wabash in 1996, and the Herman Wells Leadership Award from Sigma Nu Fraternity in 2005.

In accordance with state law, the annual trustee election is conducted by the

Dean of University Libraries on the Bloomington campus, with assistance from the IU Alumni Association. Library staff and students undertook the task of counting nearly 16,500 ballots.

IU has nine trustees, three of whom are elected by alumni. Law school alumna, MaryEllen Kiley Bishop, ‘82, was elected in 2010. Her term expires in 2013.

Shoulders, ‘78, Re-elected to IU Board of Trustees

2008MATTHEWDIONNE won second place in the 52nd Annual Lincoln Award Legal Writing Contest sponsored by the Illinois State Bar Association. His article was published in the June edition of the Illinois Bar Journal. He is currently clerking for Chief Judge David R. Herndon at the united States District Court of the Southern District of Illinois.

2009KATHRyNE.OLIVIERhas joined Baker & Daniels, LLP, as an associate. She focuses on business litigation in the downtown Indianapolis office.

2011zACHARyG.JACOB has joined Baker & Daniels, LLP, as an associate.

TIMOTHyJ.MORIARTy has joined Baker & Daniels, LLP, as an associate. He works with the firm’s business litigation practice group in the downtown Indianapolis office.

MINDyA.WESTRICKhas joined Baker & Daniels, LLP, as an associate. She is a member of the government services practice in downtown Indianapolis.

Alumni Recognized as Best and Brightest

Junior Achievement of Central Indiana, Inc. selected seven alumni as finalists for the 2011 Indy’s Best and Brightest Awards. Congratulations to our young leaders!

• Richard Ellery, ‘97

• Joshua P. Hollingsworth, ‘00

• Chasity Q. Thompson, ‘02

• Kenan L. Farrell, ‘03

• Daniel Kent, ‘07

• Joel Nagle, ‘07

• Tonya Vachirasomboon, ‘08

54 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 55

John Krauss, ‘76 Appointed to Indiana Education Employment Relations Board

In October, Governor Mitch Daniels appointed John Krauss, ‘76, to serve on the Indiana Education Employment Relations Board. As a lawyer and expert in alternative dispute resolution, Krauss has been a member of the board’s Ad-hoc Panel of Mediators and Fact Finders since 1991 and is also director of the Indiana Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations. He heads the IU Public Policy Institute—a collaborative, multidisciplinary research institute within the IU School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA)—that serves as an umbrella organization for research centers affiliated with SPEA, including the Center for Criminal Justice Research, which regularly works with state agencies on matters of public safety.

Krauss is a Clinical Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs and an Adjunct Professor of Law. He has more than 35 years of executive experience in government, higher education, and as a business consultant. His areas of expertise include intergovernmental relations, economic development, arbitration, conflict resolution (including labor/management disputes and employment and contract disputes), land use, zoning, political process and advocacy, management restructuring, and international consulting, including governmental reform for newly developed countries.

To give the gift of membership, sign up online at alumni.indiana.edu or call (800) 824-3044.

GIVE THEGIFT OF IU

A membership in the IU Alumni Association is the perfect gift for new graduates, alumni, and anyone who loves the IU School of Law-Indianapolis.

And there’s something in it for you, too: IUAA memberships are 80 percent tax deductible as a charitable contribution.

A membership in the IU Alumni Association is the perfect gift for new graduates, alumni, and anyone who loves the law school.

And there’s something in it for you, too:IUAA memberships are 80 percent tax deductible as a charitable contribution.

• Hon. Margret G. Robb, ‘78: David Hamacher Public Service Award

• Kiamesha-Sylvia G. Colom, ‘07: Outstanding Young Lawyer Award

• Hon. Melissa S. May, ‘84: Women in the Law Award

• Grant W. Hawkins, ‘74 (not pictured): Rabb Emison Award (diversity)

At the Indiana State Bar Association’s annual meeting in French Lick, Indiana, on October 20, ten alumni received recognition for their contributions to the legal profession.

Alumni Receive ISBA Awards

Robb, ‘78 Colom, ‘07 May, ‘84

Murphy, ‘82 Burroughs, ‘92 John, ‘72 Garau, ‘86 Blaiklock, ‘97 Cohen, ‘80

• Sharon P. Murphy, ‘82: Rabb Emison Award (diversity)

• Kathryn H. Burroughs, ‘92: Gale Phelps Award (professionalism)

• Robert John, ‘72: Civility Award

• Jerry A. Garau, ‘86: Civility Award

• A. Richard M. Blaiklock, ‘97: Civility Award

• Steven J. Cohen, ‘80: Civility Award

ClassNotes

56 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Black Law Student Association Assists Marion County Alternative Court Program

Members of the Black Law Student Association at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law held a clothing drive, collecting business clothes for participants in the Marion County Alternative Court Program. The drive was an effort to help increase the chances for ex-offenders to find gainful employment by providing interview attire. The students collected clothing from October 24-28 and presented the clothes to the program on December 2. The BLSA members also held a resume review session for interested individuals in the program on October 24. Shown in the photo above are BLSA students and alumni, along with the Court Commissioner and staff. From left: Alternative Court Program staff member, Jack Diliberto; Anthony Jenkins, 3L; Maurice Scott, 3L; Marion Superior Court Commissioner, John S. Alt, ‘95, Alfred Degrafinreid II, and Tareq Nazamy, ‘09.

Robb, ‘78 Colom, ‘07 May, ‘84

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 57

InMemoriamHon. J. Patrick Endsley, ‘56

J. Patrick Endsley, retired united States Magistrate Judge,

passed away on September 1, 2011. A military veteran who

served during the occupation of Japan, he was also a graduate

of Iu’s School of Business, as well as the law school. During

his long career he was an active member of the city, state,

7th Circuit, federal and American bar associations. He served

as president of the Indianapolis Chapter of the federal Bar

Association, and director of the Association of Conciliation

Courts. He was also a member of the federal Magistrate

Judges Association and served as counsel for the Sugamo

Prison Veterans Associations.

A life-long Democrat, Judge Endsley served as precinct

and ward chair, and was awarded the JfK Award by the Marion

County Young Democrats. He was admitted to practice before

the Supreme Court of the united States, as well as the u.S.

District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, the 7th Circuit

Court of Appeals, and the Indiana bar. Judge Endsley practiced

in Marion County from 1956 until his election as Judge of the

Circuit Court, 19th Judicial Circuit in 1974. In 1978 he was

appointed as a united States Magistrate for the Southern

District of Indiana and held that position until his retirement

in 1994. His other civic roles included serving as Clerk-

Treasurer of the then Town of Lawrence, Deputy City and County

Prosecutor, Public Defender and Chief Deputy Attorney General

under the late John J. Dillon ‘52 from 1965 until 1969. In

retirement he served as chairman of the organizing committee

for the federal Court’s Public Defender Program in the Southern

District, having served on its Board of Directors for a number

of years. Judge Endsley was named a Sagamore of the Wabash

by both Governor Roger Branigan and Governor Evan Bayh. In

addition, he was a member of the Honorable Order of Kentucky

Colonels. A dedicated supporter of the law school’s alumni

association, he was a member of the Alumni Association

Board of Directors for over a decade and in 1990 received

the “Distinguished Alumni Service Award” from the IuAA. He

was recognized with IuPuI’s Spirit of Philanthropy award for

his volunteer and financial donations to the law school. His

daughter Nancy G. Endsley, an attorney at Landman & Beatty,

is also a 1988 graduate of the law school. Judge Endsley is

survived by his five children: Nancy G. (Vincent Wagner), Deirdre

E., Kevin C. (Kerry), Kathleen A. (George) Miroslavich and

Rosemary C. (Jeffery) Kemp; brother, Thomas C. (Barbara); and

sister, Mary Ellen Kelly. His wife, Eleanor Raudenbush Endsley

and a brother, Robert B. Endsley predeceased him.

PHILIPF.BOBERSCHMIDT‘67May 15, 2011

CLARENCED.BOLDEN‘53June 5, 2011

ROBERTRICHARDBROWN‘63September 12, 2011

TERRyCLIFTONCHRISTIAN‘87October 20, 2011

RICHARDLEECHRISTOPHER‘73June 11, 2011

KATHRyNMAUDESUTHERLANDCOx‘77September 12, 2011

RUSSELLJENNINGSDEAN‘62November 5, 2011

GERALDMARSHALLDEWESTER‘77September 4, 2011

JAMESFRANKDURHAM‘46May 20, 2011

JOHNPATRICKENDSLEy‘56September 1, 2011

DONALDRAyEWERS‘60July 7, 2011

JAyB.FARRAR‘86October 15, 2011

FREDERICKARTHURFETTA‘62June 20, 2011

FREDERICKWILLIAMGARVER‘64July 13, 2011

GARyL.GRIFFITHS‘90December 30, 2010

THOMASANDREWHARGETT‘94June 27, 2011

ROBERTD.HOLLINGSWORTH‘72December 24, 2010

STEPHENIESUTLIFFVEACHJOCHAM‘01June 2, 2011

JACKLEEKANE‘98May 18, 2011

MARKALANKAPOURALOS‘87April 21, 2011

JEFFREyROBERTKINNEy‘67November 5, 2011

EDWARDBRUCEMCLEAN‘75September 12, 2011

MILTONMARCUSMONDOR‘61November 4, 2011

KARLOVERBECK‘47June 19, 2011

ANDREWF.PETERCHEFF‘90April 16, 2011

CLARENCEALFREDPOST‘52May 3, 2011

ROBERTRUSSELLROBBINS‘56October 20, 2011

VICKIERENEESHAW‘92March 14, 2011

ROBERTHOWARDSTATON‘55July 18, 2011

FRANKDOANSTREIGHTOFF‘70May 6, 2011

WILLIAMHENRyWOLF‘50September 13, 2011

InMemoriamHon. Robert H. Staton, ‘55

Robert H. Staton served with

the 91st Infantry Division of the

fifth Army from 1943 to 1946 and

was attached to the 801 Special

Combat force which specialized in

reconnaissance work behind enemy

lines. He achieved the rank of major

and was awarded numerous medals for

his bravery, including a Silver Star, two

Bronze Stars, and the Distinguished

flying Cross. After returning from the war, he enrolled at Indiana

university, where he earned his undergraduate degree in 1952

and his LL.B. in 1955. After graduation, he spent three years as

a Deputy Prosecuting Attorney for Marion County. He founded the

law firm of Staton & Ward, ran for the 10th District Congressional

seat in 1966, and was made a Sagamore of the Wabash twice. He

also carried the title of Life Honorary Editor of the Indiana Law

Review. A distinguished attorney, jurist, and author, he served on

the Indiana Court of Appeals from 1971-2000, where he authored

more than 3,000 majority opinions. The first editor of Res Gestae,

he also authored several state legal histories, including “The

History of the Court of Appeals of Indiana” and “Lessons Learned:

The History of Continuing Legal Education and Experiences

from Mandatory Continuing Legal Education States.” Judge

Staton was also the Chairman of the annual Indiana Continuing

Legal Education forum update, as well as numerous Appellate

seminars. He was a member of the American Bar Association,

past president of the Indiana State Bar Association, and the

Chairman of the ISBA specialization committee. Judge Staton was

an avid supporter of the law school and the Iu Alumni Association,

having served as President of the Iu Alumni Association as well

as having served on the Executive Council for Indiana university,

representing the law school. He also served on the law school’s

Alumni Association Board of Directors from 2004 to 2007. The

Intramural Moot Court Competition at the law school is named

in his honor after friends and former law clerks of Judge Staton

raised money to endow the competition. In 2007, Judge Staton’s

own donation established the Honorable Robert H. Staton Best

Brief Scholarship which is awarded to a legal writing student.

Both of his daughters are attorneys and Jennifer Staton Stoesz

is a 1987 graduate of the law school. He is survived by his two

daughters, Jennifer Staton Stoesz (Steven) and Elizabeth Staton

Idleman (Scott), and four grandchildren.

Stephenie Jocham ‘01Stephenie Jocham, ‘01 passed

away on June 2, 2011 after a battle

with a rare form of cancer. Shortly

after graduating from law school,

she and two fellow women law

school alumni founded Hollingsworth

Jocham & Zivitz, where she practiced

family law. In 2008 she helped

to found another family law firm,

Jocham Harden Dimick Jackson

(JHDJ). An avid volunteer, she worked for many community and

professional organizations, including the Indiana State Bar

Association, Sagamore American Inn of Court, the Association

for Conflict Resolution, the Women in Law Division of the IBA,

the National Association of Women Lawyers and the Indiana

university School of Law – Indianapolis Alumni Association. She

also founded Education Initiatives International to help local

orphanages, as well as a program to help cancer patients. She

received a Distinguished Barrister award from the Indiana

Lawyer (2011), as well as awards from the Indiana Bar

foundation and the Indianapolis Bar foundation. In addition,

she gave her time to serve as a court-appointed special

advocate and literacy tutor.

A regular speaker at continuing legal education and other

programs, she also served as a mediation trainer at the law

school. She was a frequent guest to discuss divorce and family

law issues on local television programs as well as local and

nationally syndicated radio programs.

A statement from JHDJ says, “Jocham was renowned for

her skills as an experienced negotiator and respected for her

professionalism as an attorney, but it was her sharp wit, comedic

timing, and genuine warmth and compassion which endeared her

to colleagues and clients. Despite the challenges she faced during

grueling cancer treatment, her humor, grace, faith and courage did

not waiver and continued to inspire members of the Indianapolis

legal community.“

58 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 59

Honoring the many

alumni and friends

who support the

law school.

2010-2011 Dean’s Report

1,151 alumni made a gift to the law school—the highest number of alumni donors in the past 10 years.

$1,487,241 in dollars “raised,” which includes outright gifts received, matching gifts received, and new pledges made.

$1,140,606 in dollars “received,” which includes outright gifts received, matching gifts received, and payments on pledges.

The total number of donors increased from 1,938 to 1,946, which includes 125 first-time donors to the school.

The number of donors at the Partners in Progress level of $1,000 or more increased 9.6% from 166 to 182.

The rate of alumni supporting the law school increased to 12.34% from 12.13% in fiscal year 2009-2010.

52% of the law school faculty and staff collectively contributed more than $152,000 to the law school in 2010-2011.

Dean’s Report

60 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Dean’s Report 2010-2011 he Dean’s Report recognizes those generous alumni and friends who have supported the school financially during

fiscal year 2010-2011. Donors to the law school are recognized in several ways, including membership in a

variety of giving societies, including the Landmark Society, the Century Society, the Black Cane Society, and the

Maennerchor Society, all carrying the Partners in Progress giving designation. Other giving societies include the Dean’s

Council, and the Law School Associates, along with the Harrison Society that honors the school’s highest levels of

cumulative lifetime giving and the Legacy Society, recognizing those benefactors who have made a provision to benefit

the law school through their estate plans or other planned gifts.

Giving highlights from the fiscal year include:

T

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 61

Q: Dean Roberts, this is your fifth year as dean of the school. Can you talk about some of the highlights of your work to generate increased philanthropic support of the law school.

A: Of course, at the top of the list is the recent extraordinary $24 million gift from Bob McKinney. This landmark gift will provide funding for multiple endowed chairs and scholarships for excellent students. It will be transformative for the law school and is cause for celebration.

I am also extremely grateful for the support we have received from many other alumni and friends. Donor-established scholarships give students the opportunity to pursue a legal education. Other supporters have recognized the considerable strengths of our programs and centers and have established funds to support them. And we’re pleased that alumni and friends of the law school have been responding generously with support for the endowed chairs that are being created to honor former law dean and IUPUI chancellor, Jerry Bepko, and Professor Larry Jegen. Both men are incredible assets to this institution and continue to have far-reaching impact on students, alumni and the community.

Larger gifts certainly advance the law school in significant ways, but I also consider the increase in annual fund gifts to be among the highlights of my tenure as dean. The number of alumni making gifts to the school has grown in recent years, and this past fiscal year was the highest level in a decade. Over the past two fiscal years, the number of annual donors giving at the “Partners in Progress” level of $1,000 or more has grown by more than 20%.

I would also like to mention the great help we get from our alumni volunteer leaders: the Board of Visitors, the school’s Alumni Association Board of Directors, the school’s IMPACT Campaign Committee, the Law Firm and Corporate Campaign Chairs, and the Class Agents. These loyal and tireless advocates of the school serve as our ambassadors and champion our cause; their work has generated wonderful fundraising results.

Q: Describe why philanthropic support is so important to the law school.A: Historically, public law schools like ours were funded primarily through state

appropriations. However, as public funding for legal education has diminished throughout the country, our law school has become state-assisted, not state-funded. While tuition revenue provides an important source of funding for operating expenses, tuition has increased significantly in recent years, requiring students to incur large debt. Therefore, high quality academic institutions like ours have become increasingly reliant on the philanthropic support from alumni and friends to enable us to provide our students with a first-rate education.

Q: In 2010, the law school—together with the entire IUPUI campus—publicly announced the IMPACT Campaign. Talk about the success of the campaign thus far.

A: One of the best aspects of being dean is the chance to engage with alumni of the school and learn about their experiences as students. Countless alumni have shared with me that they would not have enjoyed professional success if it weren’t

for the education they received from our law school. I’m continually impressed with how this school has touched the lives of so many in such a profound manner. The IMPACT Campaign is an opportunity for alumni who value the education they received, to invest in the future of the school.

I’m deeply gratified for the many gifts we have received, whether it is to establish a scholarship fund or to support endowed faculty positions or to help strengthen an academic program or

our efforts to provide real-world experiential learning opportunities. So many alumni and friends have stepped forward in providing generous gift commitments to the campaign through pledges and planned gifts, while at the same time we have seen growth in our annual giving through support at all levels. This growth in all types and levels of philanthropic support has been wonderful.

Q: You previously noted the recent gift from Robert H. McKinney. In addition to the new endowed chairs and scholarships that it will create, what are some other ways it will transform the law school?

A: In many conversations I’ve had with alumni since the announcement of Bob’s gift, I’ve heard several phrases used to describe the way our graduates feel, such as “it’s a whole new day” and “it’s only the beginning.” The energy and enthusiasm I have encountered since the announcement of the gift is inspiring. To have

Bob McKinney’s name—which is so well-respected and admired—associated with the law school is a great honor. Bob’s gift is one of the largest in legal education and sends a powerful message about the quality of our law school to the legal academy, to the rest of higher education, to the legal profession, and beyond. As such, it will raise the prestige level of a degree from our school. And as the impact of the gift is felt and our reputation for excellence rises, so will the expectations that are associated with the school. Bob McKinney has a strong belief in what our law school can accomplish. One of his goals in giving the gift is to inspire others who believe as he does that this is an institution of great importance and is worthy of generous support.

Q: The McKinney gift has built momentum for the school. Why is this important? A: Momentum keeps an institution moving forward toward even greater

achievements. We are well-positioned to capitalize on our history of educating outstanding lawyers, judges, executives, policy-makers, and leaders throughout Indiana and across the nation. We are on the threshold of a whole new level of excellence as a law school. To achieve this excellence and realize the true potential of this great educational resource, however, we need to continue to pursue substantial philanthropic support. We hope that the level of generosity and commitment that has already been displayed by so many will inspire others to join with them in supporting the school. With the ongoing support of alumni and friends, our future will be even brighter and I’m confident we can seize the opportunities that our recent momentum has presented us.

n August 22, 2011, the law school, together with Mike Miller, John Muller and Tilden Mendelson, founding partners of Montross, Miller, Muller, Mendelson & Kennedy, LLP, announced the establishment of the Timothy J. Kennedy Memorial Moot Court fund. The endowed fund was created with a $50,000 gift to the school to honor Kennedy’s contributions to the practice of law and in support of the newly-created National Professional Responsibility Moot Court Competition, which will be organized and hosted by the school for the first time on March 9 -10, 2012.

Dean Gary R. Roberts says, “We are very proud that Montross, Miller, Muller, Mendelson & Kennedy has decided to continue Mr. Kennedy’s legacy by supporting the law school’s first national moot court competition, on professional responsibility, in Kennedy’s name. ‘Here we advocate with integrity’ is not just a slogan at our school. It is a cornerstone of our mission to produce ethical members of the legal profession. This gift will

O fur ther that cause for many years to come. And because this competition is a national event, the impact will reach very far.”

Mike Miller, ‘75, said of the late Tim Kennedy, “Tim was not only our partner for more than 30 years, but was a colleague and friend.”

“Tim was an active volunteer in moot court and trial advocacy programs at the Iaw school,” said John Muller.

“for over twenty years Tim chaired one of the Indianapolis Bar Association’s grievance committees, quietly working to preserve the integrity of the legal profession. We could not think of a better way to honor Tim than with a gift which will support a national moot court competition involving cutting edge professional responsibility concerns,” added Tilden Mendelson.

Kennedy, ‘83, was a founding partner of the firm and practiced in the areas of medical malpractice and personal injury. He also found time to give back to law students and fellow lawyers by volunteering at the law school.

62 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Timothy J. Kennedy Memorial Moot Court Fund Established at the Law School

Above: John Muller,

Dean Gary R. Roberts,

Mike Miller, and

Tilden Mendelson.

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 63

During the 2010-2011 fiscal year, law school faculty and staff collectively contributed more than $152,000 to the school. That amount represents an increase of nearly 50% above the 2009-2010 fiscal year. There was also an increase in participation from 50% to 52%.

“The tremendous support of the faculty and staff

Law School Faculty and Staff Give Back

reflects the strong dedication and commitment of those who work every day to achieve our school’s mission in teaching, research and service,” said Mark Wunder, the school’s assistant dean for development. “To have such a high level of philanthropic support says a lot about the excellence of the law school,” he added.

is grandfather was a judge who embarked on his career by riding a donkey for several days on the journey from his home in western Greece to Athens university School of Law. Professor Nicholas Georgakopoulos recently chose to honor that family legacy with a $50,000 gift commitment to the law school for an endowed scholarship in memory of his late father, Prof. Dr. Leonidas Georgakopoulos, who also graduated from Athens university School of Law, studied abroad and worked as a corporate and commercial attorney in Athens.

Georgakopoulos says it’s difficult to say whether it was nature or nurture that prompted him to pursue law. A third

generation graduate of Athens university School of Law, he went on to study law and finance at Harvard, and taught at the university of Connecticut School of Law before coming to Indianapolis.

Georgakopoulos teaches and writes extensively on business associations, mergers and acquisitions, bankruptcy law and securities regulation.

He wanted to honor his father’s influence on his life, but wanted “more than his name on a plaque,” Georgakopoulos says. “It is deeply touching to see him, who tried to make the world a better place through law, being honored at the law school, an institution dedicated to improving our legal system.”

H

Professor Georgakopoulos Honors Father with Gift to the Law SchoolBy Alicia Dean Carlson

Dean’s Report

Gerald L. Bepko Lawrence A. Jegen, III

o honor two men who have made tremendous contributions to the Indiana university Robert H. McKinney School of Law and the community, the law school has established the Gerald L. Bepko Chair in Law and the Lawrence A. Jegen, III Chair in Tax Law.

Chancellor Bepko joined the faculty at the law school in 1972, becoming dean in 1981. He was appointed Chancellor of IuPuI in 1986, and the university went through a considerable period of academic and physical growth during his leadership. He led efforts to establish IuPuI as an important component of central Indiana’s research corridor and make it a major urban campus. Enrollment grew by 25 percent, external support for faculty initiatives grew to over $200 million in 2001-02, and construction occurred on more than 20 buildings. Chancellor Bepko led the first six years of the seven-year fundraising “Campaign for IuPuI,” which generated more than $1 billion for the campus before it concluded in 2004.

His appointments as an executive of Indiana university culminated in his serving as interim president in 2002-2003. He then served as the first Director of the Randall L. Tobias Center for Leadership Excellence based at IuPuI, and currently teaches courses in leadership and law and in commercial law at the law school. He is IuPuI Chancellor Emeritus, Iu Trustee professor, and professor of law. He also is a member of the American Law Institute, a life member of the National Conference of Commissioners on uniform State Laws, a member of the American Bar Association, and is a life fellow of the American Bar foundation.

The Gerald L. Bepko Chair in Law will provide valuable resources to attract a professor of national stature and support the academic initiatives of the holder.

Professor Jegen began his academic career in the Maennerchor building in 1962. In 1982, the Iu trustees named him the Thomas f. Sheehan Professor of Tax Law and Policy, a title he continues to hold. He is a member of the faculty of Philanthropic Studies at the Indiana

T

university Center on Philanthropy; Internal Tax Counsel to Indiana university; a representative of Indiana university to the National Association of College and university Attorneys; and a co-founder and co-director of the Annual Tax Institute for Colleges and universities.

Since he joined the faculty, Professor Jegen has taught in the areas of federal and state taxation; business and estate planning; philanthropy; and civil and criminal law. He has been a visiting professor at other law schools, has given lectures at professional institutes to lawyers, accountants, representatives of Congress, to various divisions of the Internal Revenue Service, and to the Indiana Department of State Revenue.

Twice he has received the Thomas Hart Benton Mural Medallion, the highest award granted by Indiana university. Professor Jegen also has received the Presidents Circle Commemorative Medallion for exceptional support of Indiana university; Indiana university’s President’s Distinguished Teaching Award; Indiana university’s Teaching Excellence Recognition Award; Indiana university’s Most Outstanding Law Professor Award (the Black Cane Award) six times; Indiana university School of Law Distinguished Alumni Award; four Special Indiana

64 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Law School to Establish Bepko and Jegen Chairs

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 65

university Law School Alumni Awards; and the Indiana university Trustees Teaching Award.

The Lawrence A. Jegen, III Chair in Tax Law will enable the law school to attract a senior academic with a national reputation in tax law. The endowed chair also will fund this individual’s research and teaching activities.

While substantial progress has been made toward the minimums of $1.5 million needed to endow each of these chairs, additional gift commitments are needed to reach

Several alumni and friends have already made pledges to the Gerald L. Bepko Chair in Law and to the Lawrence A. Jegen, III Chair in Tax Law. A portion of Robert H. McKinney’s $24 million gift to the law school will provide substantial support for these chairs. In addition, here are a few inspiring stories of others who have chosen to support the Bepko and Jegen Chairs. These gifts are all part of the IMPACT Campaign.

• Adam Arceneaux, ‘93, and his wife Margaret, have pledged $25,000 to the Bepko Chair. Arceneaux is pleased to be concentrating his gift on “the people and the programs,” he said. “I want us to be a destination school for top legal academic talent.”

Arceneaux is a litigation partner at Ice Miller and joined the firm in 1993 after graduating summa cum laude from the law school. He serves on the school’s IMPACT Campaign Committee, is a past president of the school’s Alumni Association Board of Directors, has served as a Class Agent, serves as fundraising chair for the law school at his law firm, and is the firm’s liaison for the James V. Donadio Scholarship.

• Paul and Lana M. Kruse, both ‘81, have also made a $25,000 pledge to the Bepko Chair in honor of all Chancellor Bepko has done for the law school and IUPUI. Gerald L. Bepko, IUPUI Chancellor Emeritus, IU Trustee Professor, and Professor of Law, was a law professor when Paul and Lana Kruse were students, and later served as dean of the school. “He was loved by the IUPUI student body, particularly the law students,” Paul Kruse said. “A chair to support elevating the reputation

Alumni Support Faculty Chairs for Bepko and Jegenof the law school’s faculty is a fitting tribute to all Chancellor Bepko has done.”

Paul Kruse graduated cum laude from the law school and has been a partner at Parr Richey Obremskey Frandsen & Patterson in Lebanon since 1984. Lana Kruse graduated with a joint degree in law and business (JD/MBA) and worked at PSI Energy. Paul serves on the law school’s Alumni Association Board of Directors and as a Class Agent.

• Stephen A. Stitle, ‘70, and his wife Elaine, made a $25,000 pledge to the Jegen Chair in recognition of Professor Jegen’s excellence as an educator. Virtually every student who took his classes has a “Professor Jegen story” from their law school days, Stitle noted. He was a student of Professor Jegen’s, and remembers his former professor as being “caring and compassionate about the development of his students.He really wanted us to learn.”

Professor Jegen is more than a great educator in Stitle’s estimation. “He’s as much a part of the fabric of the law school as any one individual has been in the last 50 years,” he said. Donating to the Jegen Chair is a way of honoring Professor Jegen for all he has done for the law school—and all he has meant to the law school—for many years.

Stitle graduated cum laude from the law school and is chairman of PNC Bank, Indiana. He previously served as president of National City’s Bank in Indiana and executive vice president of National City Corporation. Prior to joining National City, he served in a variety of executive positions for Eli Lilly and Company for nearly 25 years. Stitle has served on the law school’s Board of Visitors for many years and serves on the school’s IMPACT Campaign Committee.

the funding goals. Alumni and friends of the law school who have known Chancellor Bepko and Professor Jegen, and whose lives have been impacted by their leadership, teaching, and service, are encouraged to donate to the funds. for additional information on joining with others who have generously supported these funds to honor Chancellor Bepko and Professor Jegen, contact Assistant Dean for Development, Mark Wunder, at 317-274-8147 or [email protected].

Dean’s Report

The IndIana law revIew dedicated Issue 3 of Volume 44 as a special tribute to the memory of Professor Mary Harter Mitchell who passed away in 2009. ILR Editor-in-Chief for Volume 44, Kate Mercer-Lawson, says, “The articles were specifically solicited for this issue because we thought the authors shared Professor Mitchell’s passion

Law Review Dedicates Issue to Professor Mitchell

for certain topics.” In addition to articles about prisoners’ rights and women lawyers, there are also several tributes by faculty colleagues. Mercer-Lawson says, “We were even fortunate enough to publish some of Professor Mitchell’s poetry.” For further information on how to order, please contact Chris Paynter at (317) 274-4440 or [email protected].

rofessor Mary Harter Mitchell was a member of the law school’s faculty from 1980-2009, teaching courses in contracts, elder law, law and religion, rape law, prisoners’ rights, and prison literature. She was passionate in her support of our law school, our students, and the underserved population. She earned the distinctions of being named an Indiana university Trustee’s Teaching Award recipient in 2003 and the Alan H. Cohen Professor of Law in 2004.

The law school community and all of the lives that Professor Mitchell touched were deeply saddened by her sudden and untimely passing in 2009. As a tribute to her and her lasting impression upon the many lives she affected, the law school has established the Professor Mary Harter Mitchell Scholarship in her memory. Many faculty and staff members at the law school have already contributed to this fund, raising more than $30,000. It is our hope that our alumni and friends will join us in honoring Professor Mitchell

P and contribute to the scholarship as well.The Mitchell Scholarship will be awarded to an incoming

student and will be renewable for the student’s second and third years of law school if the student meets certain GPA renewal requirements. The law school will be able to utilize this scholarship to attract and retain high-quality students to our law school, thereby strengthening our student body, and ultimately adding to the number of successful alumni we have in the legal community.

The inaugural Professor Mary Harter Mitchell Scholarship will be awarded for the upcoming 2012–2013 academic year as contributions continue to be received. Please join us in honoring the memory of Professor Mitchell through this scholarship fund.

To find out more about giving to the Mary Harter Mitchell Scholarship, please contact Mark Wunder at (317) 274-8147 or [email protected].

66 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Scholarship Established in Memory of Professor Mary Harter Mitchell

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 67

our alumni of the law school were inducted into the 2011 Presidents Circle on September 16 in the Peterson Room at the Indiana university foundation. Such induction is a prestigious honor which recognizes philanthropic leaders with cumulative giving of more than $100,000. Members of the Presidents Circle receive a medallion engraved with their names. The medallions have been struck using metal from the original carillon bells that once rang in the Iu Bloomington Student Building. In addition, a plaque in the Indiana Memorial union displays members’ names. The law school’s Presidents Circle inductees were Jim Barkley, ’77; Sharon Merriman, ’75; and Dan,’74, and Marilyn,’74, Quayle.

Jim Barkley graduated from the Kelley School of Business at Iu Bloomington and earned his J.D. from the law school in 1977. Jim’s wife, Cindy Barkley, graduated from Iu Bloomington and also was inducted into the Presidents Circle. Jim joined Melvin Simon and Associates, Inc., in 1978 as a staff attorney and was named assistant general counsel in 1984. He was named general counsel in 1992 and was appointed general counsel and secretary of Simon Property Group, Inc., in 1993. He

joined the law school’s Board of Visitors in 2008. Cindy is a full-time philanthropist and volunteer with several Indianapolis charities.

Sharon R. Merriman earned her J.D., magna cum laude, at the law school in 1975 while raising two young daughters with her husband, Roger. She has practiced law

in Indianapolis throughout her career and has a general practice at Voyles Zahn Paul Hogan

& Merriman. She inspired her children to follow in her footsteps, and when

her first daughter graduated from law school, they were the first

mother-daughter lawyers in Indiana. When Sharon’s second daughter graduated from law school, they were the first mother-daughters lawyers in the state.

Dan and Marilyn Quayle met and married while students at the law school,

earning their J.D.s in 1974.They both practiced law prior

to Dan’s election to the u.S. Congress in 1976. Dan served in

the House of Representatives from 1977 to 1981, the Senate from 1981

to 1989, and as vice president from 1989 to 1993. Dan currently is chairman of Cerberus

Global Investments. Marilyn is a former partner with Indianapolis-based firm Krieg DeVault. She also is an author, philanthropist, and a sculptor.

F

Presidents Circle Inductees

Dean’s Report

Landmark Society $10,000 and above annual contribution

James M. and Lucinda J. BarkleyProfessor Gerald L. and Jean C. BepkoPamela L. CarterProfessor Nicholas L. GeorgakopoulosProfessor Eleanor D. Kinney and Charles M. Clark, Jr.Professor Norman Lefstein and Diane LanmanMichael D. and Margaret A. McCormickSharon R. MerrimanWilliam R. and Carolyn A. NealeDouglas K. and Melanie S. NormanReed S. OslanDan and Marilyn QuayleJames H. Voyles, Jr. and Joan A. Voyles

Century Society $5,000 - $9,999 annual contribution

Adam and Margaret R. ArceneauxRichard N. BellMichael P. Bishop and MaryEllen Kiley Bishop

David B. and Julia A. BoodtAlan H. and Linda M. CohenProfessor Jennifer A. DrobacJ. Patrick Endsley*E. Anthony and Jeanie FiggRobert T. and Melody K. GrandRobert D. and Sue T. MacGillHerbert Simon

Black Cane Society $2,500 - $4,999 annual contribution Louis M. and Patricia M. BellardoKathryn R. and Russell S. BoothJohn W. and Laurie L. BoydJames T. and Jean S. BurnsSara B. and David R. CobbStephen J. Dutton and Ellen W. LeeJoseph G. and Florie T. EatonThomas P. and Alice A. EwbankRichard W. Fields

Left: Ron Schwier and Marti Starkey, ‘81, joined in the festivities at the Annual Donor Recognition Reception at D’Amore in downtown Indianapolis.

Right: Michael, ‘80, and MaryEllen Bishop, ‘82, were joined by their son, John, at the Donor Recognition Reception.

*Posthumous Recognition

68 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Partners in Progress 2010-2011 Donors artners in Progress are donors who contributed at one of the four leadership giving levels—Landmark Society, Century Society,

Black Cane Society, or Maennerchor Society—between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011 to the law school. Giving totals

include gifts, pledge payments, and matching gifts received by the Iu foundation between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011.

We would like to thank the following individuals for their generous support of the law school.

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Dean’s Report

Michael D. and Nancie FreebornJohn R. Hammond III and Diana H. HamiltonDavid W. HilleryS. Steven and Tina A. KaralekasPaul S. and Lana M. KruseJohn R. and Vivian T. MaleyThomas J. and Patricia A. OberhausenCharles R. OehrleJohn C. Render, Jr. and Diane L. RenderDean Gary R. RobertsMark A. RoeslerProfessor Florence W. RoismanKaren Denny Scanlon and Christopher G. ScanlonN. Kent and Diane L. SmithJerome J. and Iris R. SobelMartha T. Starkey and Ronald B. SchwierWilliam B. and Carol A. StephanJohn R. and Lesa M. TalleySteven L. Tuchman and Reed E. BobrickJon E. and Daris A. WilliamsProfessor R. George Wright

Maennerchor Society $1,000 - $2,499 annual contribution Susan C. AdinamisRichard E.* and Marilyn E. AikmanJerald I. and Gayle E. Ancel

George T. Angelone and Gretchen K. GutmanRobert R. and Carolyn S. AylsworthGary H. and Ann G. BaiseDavid A. BartaMichele L. and Rue BaxJohn S. and Cynthia S. BeemanEmily A. Benfer and John McHughAnthony S. BentonGerald M. and Suzanne M. BishopHenry B. Blackwell II and Nancy Neckers BlackwellKerry H. BlomquistEllen E. BoshkoffProfessor Shawn M. BoyneMary Beth BraitmanSusan W. and David M. BrooksRonald W. and Cindy BuchmeierTimothy H. and Paige T. ButtonMildred L. Calhoun and Joseph U. SchorerEdward J. ChesterA. Scott ChinnLee C. ChristieLance D. ClineSusan E. ClineEdward B. Cloutman III and Elizabeth K. JulianJ. Terrence and Peggy P. CodyAngela D. Coe

Left: Rob MacGill, ‘81, attended the Annual Donor Recognition Reception with his daughter, Sarah MacGill, ‘08.

Right: Indiana Supreme Court Justice Frank Sullivan conversed with Paul Mannweiler, ‘76.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 69

*Posthumous Recognition

Partners in Progress 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

Fred B. Croner, Jr. and Alice J. CronerRoy S. Dale and Katie Pearson DaleWilliam J. Dale, Jr. and Jill H. DaleProfessor Eric DannenmaierDonald K. DensbornAnna C. Dillon*Lante K. EarnestAnnette M. EngleSidney D. and Lois J. EskenaziRandall R. Fearnow and Beth A. ComptonMary A. Findling and John C. HurtCraig R. and Pamela K. FinlaysonMaribeth Zay Fischer and Thomas J. FischerDavid M. and Lindsey A. FlahertyKent M. FrandsenKristin G. and Michael R. FruehwaldAlan L. GenicoffDavid W. Givens, Sr. and Betty D. GivensTali GiveonAlan H. and Caron E. GoldsteinDonald J. Graham and Kathleen A. Berry GrahamProfessor Emeritus Harold GreenbergE. Sean and Denise R. GriggsEugene E. and Helene M. HennPaul K. HoMartha S. HollingsworthJohn D. Hoover and Martha Sanders HooverFrederick R. HovdeHarry M. HubbleKatherine E. HuserRichard A. HuserRuth A. HyattEric M. and Mercy HyltonSwadesh S. and Sarla S. KalsiLeon R. and Norma Lynn KaminskiJohn F. Kautzman and Katherine TurnerProfessor Andrew R. Klein and Diane F. SchusselJulie Roe LachMartha D. Lamkin and E. Henry Lamkin, Jr.Mark S. LangeJoshua B. LeeClaire E. LewisPaul F. and Janet R. LindemannApril A. LuriaProfessor Gerard N. MaglioccaJane E. Magnus-StinsonPaul S. and Kimberly W. MannweilerMitzi H. MartinJohn E. MarynellCraig M. and Diann E. McKeePatrick E. and Judith A. McNarny

Professor Susanah M. and William J. MeadDavid R. and Mary A. MichauDavid W. MillerGary W. MillerMarvin H. and Susan MitchellTim D. and Nancy J. MosbyMichael A. Mullett and Patricia N. MarchKarl L. and Janet R. MulvaneyAnthony NimmoTimothy A. and Patricia L. OgdenCharles A. and Jacqueline PechetteJeffrey PeekJohn M. and Sally PellettW. Stephen and Sheila PerryMichael K. and Julie M. PhillipsDonald J. and Susan PoldenDrew W. and Kellie K. PrusieckiPatricia A. RileyMargret G. and Stephen RobbWilliam L. RobertsonKenneth J. RojcFrank E. and Nancy M. RussellMichael J. SacopulosWilliam B. Scanlon and Marguerite Crooks ScanlonPatrick J. SchauerJohn B. and Jamie P. ScheidlerReed S. and Lori M. SchmittJon F. SchmollJack R. and Karen P. ShawCurtis E. ShirleyMark I. ShublakCharles V. and Pamela J. SloneCharles E. and Robin M. SpevacekRobert H. Staton*Barbara B. and Robert J. StevensLarry W. and Robyn L. SuciuFrank E. Sullivan, Jr. and Cheryl Gibson SullivanColleen E. TonnFred C. Tucker III and Nancy S. TuckerGregory J. and Melinda R. UtkenSteven R. and Susan M. ValentineLaurel A. WendtProfessor Emeritus James P. and Anna S. WhiteBradley L. and Anne F. WilliamsMichael E. and Teresa C. WilliamsProfessor Lloyd T. Wilson, Jr.Jerome L. and Mary J. WitheredBarbara A. Wolenty

*Posthumous Recognition

70 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Partners in Progress 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 71

Dean’s Council 2010-2011 Donors nnual contributions of $500 to $999 to the law school are recognized by membership in the Dean’s Council. Giving totals

include gifts, pledge payments, and matching gifts received by the Iu foundation between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011.

Annual contributions from alumni and friends help strengthen and maintain the high standards of legal education provided at

the law school. We give special thanks to the following loyal alumni and friends who have contributed at the Dean’s Council level.

ADean’s Council $500 - $999 annual contribution

Professor Emeritus Thomas B. AllingtonHarold R. and Rosemary BickhamElias and Marilyn D. BloomRobert J. BornsBrian C. and Cheryl H. BosmaElaine Parran BoydAlan S. and Tonya L. BrownAnita H. BrysonJack E. and Jane BucklesJonathan B. BurnsPerfecto G. CaparasJ. Murray and Janet ClarkRobert A. and Sue M. ClaycombeLinda J. CooleyVice Dean Paul N. and Christine A. CoxMichael B. and Patricia S. CracraftNancy L. CrossG. Terry and Nancy C. CutterMelvin R. DanielElizabeth L. DeCouxJoseph E. and Debra L. DeGroffBrent E. and Jan A. DicksonKaren Babyak DowCraig D. and Lee A. DoylePaul M. DubbelingJ. William and Jane L. DuMondJohn H. Edris, Jr. and Carolyn A. EdrisL. Richard Gohman and Anne Fox GohmanGeoffrey P. and Joan K. GoochSally H. and Ralph GrayKaren M. HahnMeridth V. HammerJohn C. HandTimothy M. and Cheryl M. HardenNancy J. HarrisonRonald J. Henderson and Giovanna F. PaganoJames H. HernandezJoyce M. Hertko and Jeffrey D. MillerAndrew W. and Elizabeth HibelFrances J. HolmesGlenn J. HomStephen E. JacksonSamuel L. JacobsLynn B. and A. Dave JongleuxJohn S. KeelerJames J. Kelley

Susan W. and John R. KlineProfessor John L. KraussBenjamin B. and Abigail L. KuzmaJon B. Laramore and Janet G. McCabeRobert W. LatimerJames G. and Kathy A. LauckIrwin B. LevinPatrick S. LooneyL. Robert Lowe, Jr.David W. LuhmanJonna M. MacDougallNicholas E. and Marilyn K. MathioudakisMichael T. and Angela M. McNelisLinda K. Meier-Sargent and James F. Sargent, Jr.Anthony J. Metz III and Carol C. MetzCarol S. and Michael R. MillerGary L. Miller and Tammy J. MeyerDon F. and Cheryl L. MortonSharon F. MurphyDavid R. PapkeJohn J. PetrDaniel J. and Cynthia D. PflegingPhillip V. Price and Patricia A. QuinnEric A. Riegner and Nicole BledsoeEdward E. and Anne E. SchillingDiane S. SheaJanna J. ShislerCharles W. SmithGilbert Spears and Delores A. Henderson SpearsScott L. and Phyllis A. StarrJanet R. and Todd R. StephensonE. Thomas SullivanPaul C. and Donna M. SweeneyJ. Joseph and Jill H. TannerWayne C. TurnerSajil J. and Ramesh UnniBlair R. VandivierRobert F. and Patricia D. WagnerLinda M. WagonerJohn R. Walsh IIMichael W. and Mary A. WellsBarbara C. and Brian P. WilliamsBrian E. and Michelle L. WittlerProfessor Mary T. Wolf and Ignacio M. LarrinuaMichael J. and Leona B. WoodyMark V. and Marilyn WunderLinda D. Yager Reed

Dean’s Report

Law School Associates $100 - $499 annual contribution

Jonathan B. AbelsJeffrey A. and Lynn J. AbramsWayne O. Adams III and Linda S. AdamsProfessor Cynthia M. AdamsDavid L. and Shelley L. AhlersmeyerJohn R. and Judith L. AikmanRichard E. Aikman, Jr. and Judith N. AikmanMatthew T. and Jessica B. AlbaughChristina M. AlexanderErik C. AllenElizabeth AllingtonDonald R. and Alma AndersonDeborah L. AndersonJoseph W. and Jane B. AnnakinProfessor Judith F. AnspachJohn L. and Kimberly AsburyMargaret S. AshbridgeRobin L. BabbittJohn C. Babione II and Leslie Smith BabioneFred J. BachmannDavid and Donna L. BadgerProfessor Cynthia A. BakerHelen N. and Roland C. BakerRobin J. BandyCharles E. Barbieri and Lorie J. Seitz-BarbieriJennifer L. BarbieriRyan C. BarkerDavid N. BaumgartnerRobert C. BeasleyFred R. and Judith E. BeckerGordon L. and Anna M. BeemanRichard E. and Lynn R. BeersElizabeth M. BehnkeAllen A. Bell, Jr.James J. and Anne O. BellJeannine BellDavid W. and Mary S. BenferJay D. BenjaminThomas H. and Emily A. BennerBryce H. Bennett, Jr. Jeffrey A. and Marilyn BercovitzMatthew T. Besmer and Aleyna Tomate BesmerLaura K. and Gregory D. BinfordGary W. Bippus

Dennis E. BlandKelli M. BlockTimothy J. and Beth A. BloomDonald P. BogardSteven R. BoneCatherine BorkowskiMarvin T. and Iris J. BornsteinCraig M. and Angela M. BorowskiMichael C. and Audrey BorschelMary E. BoxJill Bracken-Emerson and James R. EmersonJohn M. BradshawBruce D. BrattainProfessor Karen E. BravoAllyson R. BreedenPaul D. and Amanda J. BrinkFranklyn D. Brinkman, Jr.John P. and Toni BrinsonJohn P. and Laura A. BroadheadTerrence L. BrookieD. Randall and Sheila M. BrownChristopher and Leslie D. BrownClifford W. BrowningRobert L. BrowningM. Elizabeth BumgardnerEdwin F. Bush IIPatricia G. and Robert ButschJoseph D. CalderonThomas K. and Carolyn B. CaldwellDavid C. CampbellJulia A. and Ron D. CarpenterAngela Stemle CashDonald R. CassadyRonald B. CassidenteRyan H. and Stephanie L. CassmanBurnett Caudill, Jr.M. Carolyn and Anthony M. CecereCalvin R. ChambersRobert P. and Sandy A. ChamnessLarry R. and Victoria L. ChampionStephen L. ChapmanBarbara J. CheekAndrea L. CiobanuPeter D. ClevelandProfessor Daniel H. Cole and Izabela Kowalewska-Cole

William S. Coleman, Jr. and Judy Marie ColemanTy H. ConnerJ. David CookRichard P. CooleyProfessor Jeffrey O. CooperPhilip S. CooperTerry L. and Melodie A. CorneliusPaul J. CorsaroCarolyn Cook CoukosJohn B. CraneKit C. and Stacey L. CraneTy M. and Sarah S. CraverJames T. Crawford, Jr. and Lisa CrawfordSteven M. and Amy S. CrellKenneth D. and Elizabeth CrewsMark S. and Patricia L. CrowderTeresa J. CuellarJohn F. and Elizabeth CulpRichard C. CurreyTerry R. Curry and Sheila A. MarshallDavid J. Cutshaw and Deborah J. CarusoGregory N. and Carol DaleLeone S. DalrympleRichard G. and Holly H. D’AmourDonald L. DanielMark R. DanielMichael M. and Theresa M. DanielAlan J. and Kathleen J. DanskerCarr L. DardenMark S. Davis and E. S. Norris-DavisThomas L. and Anna M. DavisJennifer L. DayEdward P. and Lynda J. DechertMary R. and Russell B. DeerCraig A. DefoeHeather Fesko Delgado and Michael DelgadoJason R. and Melissa E. DelkTimothy L. and Bethany DeMotteFrederick W. Dennerline III and Jody DennerlineAndrew J. DetherageStephen E. and Mary O. DeVoeRichard J. Dick and Mary A. Mitchell-DickWalter J. DickersonAleksandra and Slobodan DimitrijevicBette J. DoddMichael A. and Shanna R. Dorelli

72 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Law School Associates 2010-2011 Donors nnual contributions of $100 to $499 to the law school are recognized by membership in the Law School Associates. Giving

totals include gifts, pledge payments, and matching gifts received by the Iu foundation between July 1, 2010 and June 30,

2011. The entire law school family is sincerely appreciative of the loyalty of the alumni and friends who contribute annually to

the school. We give special thanks the following alumni and friends who have contributed at the Law School Associates level.

A

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 73

John B. and Deborah K. DrummyAndrew R. DuncanDavid J. DuncanRichard W. and Leslie L. DyarThomas V. Easterday and Debra Scott EasterdayChristopher J. EckhartPeter B. EdelmanKristen E. EdmundsonDeborah C. EdwardsAnthony M. EleftheriThomas H. EngleLynn M. EriksMark A. and Molly M. ErvinTodd A. and Kymberly EtzlerRobert H. Everitt and Joan Rothrock EverittDaniel R. FaganThomas W. and Lorelei R. FarlowKevin P. FarrellGregory M. FearyJohn M. and Debbie FeickJohn O. and Margaret FeighnerChristopher P. and Paje L. FeltsJohn M. and Linda J. FerrenChristine S. Fields and Jack BorgerdingNatalie R. FierekA. Jack FinkleaG. William Fishering IIIWalter H. FleischerMarvin J. and Susan J. FrankSarah Myers FrankErica A. FranklinEric W. and Jan L. FredbeckSteve FredricksonEdwin W. Free III and Cynthia A. Zweber-FreeHenry A. and Helen E. FreedmanDennis K. Frick and Crystal L. FrancisRyan J. FunkBradley S. and Terri FusonJ. Patrick Gallagher IIIMichael C. GallowayThomas P. GannonWilliam S. GardinerJames A. GarrardNorman R. GarvinJohn R. and Teresa L. GaskinRobert L. and J. Christy GaussJulia Blackwell Gelinas and Mark A. GelinasJames K. GildayRoberta GillisCarlo T. GirolamoRaymond and Lillian A.* GoodMax E. GoshertSandra L. GoslingJames A. and Susan E. Gothard

Michael J. GouldThomas J. and Jo D. GrauDavid E. GrayDavid W. and Sarah G. GrayJ. Curtis GreeneGaile A. GreleDaniel B. and Mary L. GriffithAudrey K. and Martin GrossmanJ. Michael GrubbsRobert G. and Melia J. GuldeJames M. Gutting and Sara Zarick GuttingWarren Haas and and Karen L. BehnkeEric K. HabigGregory F. HahnTrenton F. and Anna S. HahnChristopher B. and Emily F. HaileJames M. and Madeleine C. HaineDavid R. and Shirley L. HamerLinda Y. HammelLynne D. HammerJarrell B. and Laura J. HammondT. Jeffrey and Therese Ann HannahDouglas J. and Ann B. HannoyJames H. and Kelly J. HansonThomas A. and Cari M. HardinScott A. and Nancy L. HarknessDaniel J. and Ann HarriganBurton M. HarrisCharles W. HarrisJames E. HarrisMichael R. and Carol S. HartmanOni N. and Corey L. HartonJoseph P. and Ellen S. HawkinsCarl A. and Deanna HayesPatricia A. HebenstreitCraig J. HelmreichRodger K. and Patricia K. HendershotBeth Holland Henkel and Dan HenkelDavid R. Hennessy and Vickie R. YaserJason R. and Marjorie HesslerMarc A. and Rosalie M. HetznerBrian C. HewittCathy A. HewittRobert J. Hill, Jr. and Susan M. HillJack G. and Lidian R. HittleGloria HoWayne T. HoeingJo Ann HoffmanRicki J. HoffmannJ. David and Carol A. HollingsworthGilbert L. and Karen R. HolmesRandolph G. HoltSteven A. HoltSara A. Hook

Gregory A. HornJim and Zona F. HostetlerCarla R. HounshelKimberly E. HowardRichard D. and Jane E. HughesTimothy J. Hulett and Sharon M. HaleyRichard H. HustonThomas N. and Heather S. HutchinsonRobert F. InselbergGlenn W. IrwinJeffrey S. JacksonJ. Christopher and Kimberly A. JanakJames C. and Teri C. JarretteMichele L. and Robert JohnsF. Bradford JohnsonKelley J. and Chad JohnsonPaul H. Johnson, Jr. and Rita G. JohnsonThomas E. and Jacklyn A. JohnsonRussell L. JonesAmanda K. KammanDavid J. KarnesL. Diane KeatonJan and John R. KeeferMichael D. and Elizabeth R. KeeleRoger W. and Beverly KellamsKit KellerKathryn L. KelleySanford D. Kelsey III and Paula KelseyLawrence R. and Maura KemmAlan P. KempAnne Marie Kempf and David T. FrancisDouglas G. and Linda S. KennyAlexander C. and Dana J. KenworthyGladys KesslerDouglas M. and Jennifer KinserJames E. and Susan KirschnerAndrew A. KleimanMary M. and David J. KleimanMatthew T. KleinGary L. KlotzJames A. and Jill W. KnauerKevin R. and Lisa L. KnightThomas J. KnightTeresa Knight and Nicholas GrahameElizabeth H. KnottsDavid A. and Kathy L. KolgerSamuel D. and Angela P. KrahulikM. Edward Krause III and Tracy F. KrauseJanice E. KreuscherSonja A. KriegsmannSteven W. and Susan E. KrohneChristina L. Kunz and Hassan SaffouriGregory L. and Jeanne K. Laker

Law School Associates 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

*Posthumous Recognition

Larry A. LandisSally E. and Kyle E. LanhamM. Joan LaskowskiLawrence E. LawheadKathy A. and Jeff W. LeeJeffrey J. LeechSonia J. LeerkampJordan H. and Joan R. LeibmanRyan L. and Amy L. LeitchCatherine A. Lemmer and Brian S. WilliamsDavid M. LeonardCamilyn K. and Peter-John LeoneJanice L. Lesniak and Robert L. SmithLynne D. LidkeJoe LiebeschuetzAndrew K. LightCynthia M. LockeJoseph E. Loftus, Jr.Nancy A. and Martin C. LoganChristopher D. and Allison A. LongKristyn Elizabeth Looney and Michael D. LooneyProfessor Maria Pabon Lopez and Gerardo R. LopezRuth R. and Kent G. LoPreteKaren M. LoveJames F. LudlowAlyson K. LurkerDavid C. and Huong C. LyonsSarah T. MacGillCatherine M. MahernRichard M. and Robin MaladJacob J. ManaloorJanice R. MandlaAndrew F. MarquisVirginia D. MarschandLaurie E. MartinEdgardo J. MartinezMichael M. MaschmeyerConstance MattsW. Tobin McClamrochRobert W. and Margaret A. McClellandThomas V. and Norma J. McCombMichael K. McCrory and Patricia Polis McCroryKip S. McDonaldKevin C. McDowellTimothy A. McGeathDaniel J. McGloneJoseph and Denise McGonigalProfessor Deborah B. McGregorPamela J. McIntyreJohn M. McLaughlinDeborah M. and Steve M. McNearMichael B. McNeil and Katharine C. Liell

Richard L. McOmberHeather McPhersonJanet A. and James J. McShararTabitha MeierMary B. MeinersMichael and Kristine S. MeinersEdward J. MerchantMark J. Merkle and Sue E. StemenGary C. MessplayAndrielle M. MetzelW. Todd MetzgerDonald M. and D. Kimberly MeyerDouglas W. and Jane E. MeyerLester C. MillerSeymour M. MillerMichael E. and Taya MillikanJames P. and Judy M. MoloyMichael D. Moon, Jr.David R. MooreRonald J. MorelockJohn D. Moriarty and Laura L. VolkJohn V. and Martha M. MoriartySteven J. and Michelle L. MossNathan R. and Susan K. MoweryJames D. MundtKevin C. MurrayCynthia A. and David J. MuseJonathan J. and Soultana S. MyersJames B. Myers, Jr. and Sharon MyersPeggy J. NaileJoseph A. Naughton, Jr.Brian S. NealeR. Gregory and Vicki L. NeelyThomas C. and Laurice E. NewlinNorman R. NewmanThomas Newman, Jr.Timothy E. and Ann T. NiednagelMary J. and John E. NormanFrank M. NorthamDouglas G. O’Brien, Jr. and Catherine SmithHelen M. and Tim O’ConnellRobert C. Oliver, Jr.Patrick J. Olmstead, Jr. and Julia C. OlmsteadE. Van and Ruth M. OlsonProfessor David Orentlicher and Judith L. FailerKaren R. OrrGregory A. OstendorfSusan Jebens Pachapa and Edward PachapaProfessor Antony Graham PageTheresa R. ParishBen H. ParkTerry K. ParkMark E. and Kristine K. PattersonStephen H. and Deborah L. Paul

Eric S. and Lorrie N. PavlackL. Scott and Amy PaynterNorman PearlmanMichael B. PenceGinny L. and Nels A. PetersonPaul S. PetticrewHudnall A. and Diane L. PfeifferDaniel L. and Diane M. PflumMatthew K. PhillipsJohn O. and Julie M. PhippsProfessor Michael J. and Jennifer B. PittsHoward D. PolskyGeorge G. PontonRandall E. and Pamela S. PriceJohn P. Price, Jr. and Joy G. PriceJames A. PriceRoger L. and Janine K. PrillamanDavid J. PryzbylskiProfessor Francis P. and Ellen W. QuigleyMatthew B. and Stephanie C. QuigleyG. Dean and D. Ann RainboltCynthia L. Ramsey and Steven E. CalaFrank T. ReadBaker R. RectorJames A. ReedJulie E. and Scott A. ReedHolly A. and Anthony L. ReedyWilliam T. ReesCharles R. and Carole S. ReevesGregory M. Reger and Lisa Garcia RegerMarlene Reich and Andrew ChraplaRuth D. ReichardAllan W. Reid and Mary F. PansziGayle A. ReindlPaul G. ReisKaren Butler Reisinger and Mark A. ReisingerDavid J. Remondini and Lou Ann BakerRichard A. RezekAnne K. and Anthony RicchiutoSonja L. RiceCaroline E. RichardsonMariana RichmondStephen A. RigaCharles W. Ritz IIILarry W. RobbinsCharles F. Robinson, Jr. and Diane M. RobinsonJay D. Robinson, Jr. Robert E. and Mary Ann RobinsonSamuel R. RobinsonRichard A. RocapJack E. and Suzanne L. RoebelJames David RoellgenJoyce Q. RogersJohn M. and Sharon Ross

74 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Law School Associates 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 75

Leonard S. RubinowitzSteven E. RunyanAnnette F. and Robert L. RushSean M. RussellRobert and Sloan SableRonald G. SalatichT. Jeffrey SalbKeith D. SaletteNathaniel G. SaylorMichael T. and LuAnn J. ScanlonJohn R. Schaibley III and Donna J. SchaibleyLeslie W. and Nathan S. SchickelJason M. and Lindsey J. SchiesserW. Michael and Lee SchiffMary F. and Anton SchmidStephen A. SchmidtG. Michael and Laurie S. SchopmeyerEugene P. and Linda M. SchulstadThomas E. SchulteProfessor Joel M. SchummJames H. and Sandra E. SchwarzBradley W. and Melinda J. SchwerJuval O. ScottMichelle E. ScottRebecca J. and Eric S. SeamandsJames P. Seidensticker, Jr. and Janice B. SeidenstickerChristopher D. and Jane A. SeigelLewis A. and Caryn ShafferDavid A. ShaheedMichael G. ShanleyWilliam M. Sharp, Sr. and Jane E. ShiversJohn H. SharpeShannon M. and Michael ShawThomas F. SheaLawrence E. and Martha A. ShearerChris L. and Pam J. ShelbyGlenna Dudley ShelbyJ. Gregory and Leticia L. ShelleyRandall T. Shepard and Amy W. MacDonellElissa A. ShetlerJoseph F. and Colleen M. ShikanyGina R. ShockleySteven C. and Cheryl L. ShockleyJeffrey W. and Cassandra R. ShortJohn G. and Jayne A. ShubatJoseph W. ShullShirley A. SiegelThomas J. and Margaret SimmonsWilliam J. SingerKendrick J. SinnockWilliam J. and Elaine SkinnerGeorge G. and Nancy SlaterWilliam O. and Lynda M. Smith

Allison Owen SmithAlva SnyderMary L. SnyderDean A. SobeckiMary E. SoladaTheodore M. and Judith L. SosinJonathan F. SpadorciaKarol K. and Stephen M. SparksFredrick R. and Lori L. SpencerMark E. and Hope L. SpitzerStephen J. and Patricia L. SpoltmanRoss E. and Rosemarie P. SpringerCharlotte V. SquarcyJohn H. and Mary M. StanleyDouglas E. StarkeyMichel L. StarkeyRichard B. SteedmanDeetta M. SteinmetzAngela E. StephensAmy Lynne StewartPhillip L. and Judith StewartSara J. StewartTimothy L. StewartDavid A. StirsmanSteven J. and Janet A. StrawbridgeSusan P. StuartBeth M. Sullivan-SummersCarolyn R. SuttonDavid L. and Cynthia L. SwiderChristie Bodnar Swiss and Timothy SwissAlexandra S. SylviaSusan B. TablerJack A. TandyAnthony A. TanoosJohn W. and Lisa J. TanselleDavid A. and Victoria S. TempleBernard L. and Karen TetreaultAllan D. and Carolyn N. ThomasTimothy N. ThomasMichael ThomassonCarlota I. Toledo and Jonclair Y. GoncalvesJeffrey S. and Julie R. TooleJohn C. and Ann W. TrimbleJoseph D. TroutDavid F. TruittPatricia and Robert B. TruittJennifer R. TudorBoris UmanskyLisa D. UpdikeThomas W. Vander LuitgarenPaul D. VinkDavid C. VladeckRandall L. and Emily G. VonderheideRobert W. Wade

Timothy L. Wade and Tamara S. ZahnMark E. WagnerGregg M. and Cynthia J. WallanderJohn D. WallerD. Michael and Norma B. WallmanMichael J. and Ann M. WalroAlastair J. and Teresa P. WarrMichael B. and Claudia S. WatkinsProfessor Frances L. WatsonMichelle Presswood Waymire and William M. WaymireThomas D. and Janet WebsterClaude D. WegnerRichard L. WehrelBrian W. and Susan A. WelchGary R. WelshSean T. and Stephanie D. WhiteJohn F. Wickes, Jr. and Julia Zollman WickesCharles A. and Jeanne P. WilesKathryn WileyMichael D. and Melissa A. WilhelmGlen G. WilliamsGeorge T. WilsonDavid P. and Barbara R. WilsonWilliam E. Winingham, Jr.W. Michael and Sally WiseTimothy W. WisemanJames D. and Lucinda J. WitchgerMark E. and Michelle L. WitmerG. Michael and Dawn A. WitteRichard D. and Carol S. WoodStephen M. and Pamela J. WoodardJudy L. WoodsJoseph S. and Amy R. WooldridgeMonty K. and Lisa L. WoolseyVicki J. WrightDavid E. and Linda S. WrightPeter C. Wright and Monica L. BauerChad D. WuertzWilliam F. WursterRichard W. YarlingMatthew A. and Julie A. YeakeyScott D. YonoverRoberta YoumansJames H. and Clare D. YoungRichard A. YoungJohn R. ZeinerStephen E. and Elizabeth A. ZlatosJames E. and Christine M. ZoccolaBrian K. ZoellerGerald S. and Debra D. Zore

*Posthumous Recognition

Law School Associates 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

Harrison SocietyJames M. ‘77 and Lucinda J. Barkley

Gerald L. and Jean C. Bepko

Evelyn H. Blanford*

Alan H. ‘73 and Linda M. Cohen

William F. ‘74 and Jennifer A. Conour

Eli Lilly & Company

Eli Lilly & Company Foundation

J. Patrick Endsley* ‘56

Cleon H. Foust*

John S. Grimes*

Guidant Foundation, Inc.

William S. ‘51*and Christine S.* Hall

Hall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman, P.C.

Dorothy F. Harrison*

John E. Hurt, Sr. ‘44*

Indiana University School of Law - Indianapolis

Alumni Association

The Indianapolis Foundation

Anita C. Inlow

Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis

Katz, Sapper & Miller LLP

Rebecca O. ‘75 and Charles E. Kendall

Kresge Foundation

Norman Lefstein and Diane Lanman

Ruth E. Lilly*

Marjorie W. Littell*

Lumina Foundation for Education

Michael D. ‘80 and Margaret A. McCormick

Barry L. ‘75 and Linda Meadow

Sharon R. Merriman ‘75

William R. ‘73 and Carolyn A. Neale

M. Dale Palmer ‘61

Dan ‘74 and Marilyn ‘74 Quayle

Thomas F. ‘68 and Joan M. Sheehan

Stephen A. ‘70 and Elaine S. Stitle

United Student Aid Funds, Inc.

Harold R.* and Clara F. Woodard

John W. ‘63 and Barbara S. Wynne

*Posthumous Recognition

76 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Harrison Society 2010-2011 Donors he law school gratefully acknowledges the members of the Harrison Society, whose cumulative gifts of $100,000 or more

have served to keep the school at the forefront of legal education. The society is named in memory of former u.S. President

Benjamin Harrison, a trustee of the original Indiana Law School, and namesake of the Benjamin Harrison Law School, both

predecessor schools of the law school.

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Dean’s Report

Legacy Society Raymond H. Carlson ‘81

David W. Givens, Sr. ‘60

John R. Hammond III ‘91

John L. Krauss ‘76

Joshua B. Lee ‘05

John E. Marynell ‘67

Sharon R. Merriman ‘75

David W. Miller ‘77

Marvin H. Mitchell ‘63

Charles R. Oehrle ‘68

Judith G. Palmer ‘74

Patrick J. Schauer ‘79

Diane Meyer Simon

William B. ‘84 and Carol A. ‘84 Stephan

James H. Voyles, Jr. ‘68

Charles E. Wilson ‘65

Clara F. Woodard

Legacy SocietyFor more information, contact Mark V. Wunder, Assistant Dean for Development, at 317-278-8147 or via email at [email protected].

There are several ways you can support the law school, reduce your income taxes, and even retain payments for life.

Types of Planned Gifts:

• Outright Gifts (cash, securities, closely held stock, tangible personal property)

• Life Income Plans (charitable gift annuity, charitable remainder annuity trust, charitable remainder unitrust)

• Revocable Gifts (bequest, revocable living trust, retirement plan assets)

• Other Gifts (donor advised fund, retained life estate, charitable lead trust, life insurance)

We Make a Living by What We Get. We Make a Life by What We Give. —Winston Churchill

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 77

Legacy Society 2010-2011 Donors he Legacy Society honors individuals who seek to advance legal education at the law school by investing in its future. The society

enrolls benefactors who confirm planned or deferred gift arrangements benefiting the law school. When alumni and friends let us

know that they have included the school in their estate plans, they are invited to join the Legacy Society.

If you have included our school in your estate plans, please let us know. Doing so will ensure that we understand your wishes and can

use your gift exactly as you intend. It also allows the school to make note of your gift as we plan for the future—and finally, and most

importantly, it allows us to thank you, honor you, and show our appreciation for your generosity. We would like to thank the following

members of the Legacy Society.

for more information about including the law school in your estate plans, please contact Mark Wunder, Assistant Dean for Development,

at (317) 278-8147 or [email protected].

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Dean’s Report

78 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Recognition of Funds 2010-2011 stablished funds at the law school help to support and advance the work of our various centers, program, and clinics on

projects and initiatives that enhance the curriculum for our students, improve the law, understand its complexities, and

disseminate a better understanding of the law to those external to the law school. We would like to recognize the following

donors for their support of these listed funds.

EBaker and Daniels LLP Public Interest Law FundThe Baker & Daniels LLP Public Interest Law Fund was established

to promote pro bono, clinic, and diversity efforts at the law school.

Baker & Daniels Public Interest Fellows work with clinical faculty

in the Civil Practice, Disability, and Criminal Clinics and with the

Innocence Project.

Birch E. Bayh Annual LectureFriends of Birch E. Bayh created the Birch E. Bayh Annual Lecture

Endowment to support an annual lecture at the law school in their

friend’s name.

Eugene N. and Marian C. Beesley FundThe Eugene N. and Marian C. Beesley Fund was established in 1973

to support the Ruth Lilly Law Library. Mr. Beesley served as president

and board chairman of Eli Lilly and Company. He was the first non-

Lilly family member to serve as president. Income from the fund is

used to finance acquisitions for the law library.

Ona Chambers FundThis fund was established in 1974 by the Ona Chambers Trust. Income

from this gift is used to purchase art for display at the law school.

Hall Render Fund for Excellence in the William S. and Christine S. Hall Center for Law and HealthHall Render Killian Heath & Lyman, P.C. established the Hall Render

Fund for Excellence in the William S. and Christine S. Center for Law

and Health in 2011 for general support of the Hall Center for Law

and Health at the law school.

Ted B. Lewis Memorial FundThe Ted B. Lewis Memorial Fund was created in 1991 by Stephen B.

Lewis, Kurt W. Lewis, and other friends, family, and colleagues of Ted

B. Lewis, ‘49, principal partner at Lewis & Kappes, formerly known as

Lewis Kappes Fuller & Eads. Income from the endowment is used to

improve the training of law students in fundamental lawyering skills,

supporting programs such as Moot Court, Client Counseling, Legal

Writing, and Clinical Education.

Joseph Maley Memorial FundIn 2010, the Joseph Maley Foundation established the Joseph

Maley Memorial Fund at the law school to support general efforts

of the Disability Law Clinic, and in particular, the Clinic’s role in

serving children.

Barry L. Meadow Endowment FundThis endowment was established in 1992 by Barry L. Meadow, ‘75, and

is used at the discretion of the Dean to benefit students, faculty, and

programs at the law school.

Mark and Stacey Roesler Intellectual Property Law and Innovation Center FundThis endowed fund was established in 2011 by Mark R., ‘82, and

Stacey Roesler to support efforts of the law school’s Intellectual

Property Law and Innovation Center.

Robert H. Staton Intramural Moot Court CompetitionFriends of the late Honorable Robert H. Staton, ‘55, established

an endowment in 2005 to honor their longtime friend and alum of

the law school. The fund supports the annual Robert H. Staton

Intramural Moot Court Competition at the law school.

James P. White Endowed Lectureship in Legal EducationIn 2002, James P. White and his friends funded an endowment to

establish the James P. White Endowed Lectureship in Legal Education.

Professor White served as Consultant on Legal Education to the

American Bar Association for 26 years and is a professor with the

law school. Income from the fund supports an annual lecture in legal

education at the law school.

James H. and Joan A. Voyles Law Clinic FundJames H., ‘68, and Joan A. Voyles established this endowment in

2008 to support the law school’s Clinic with preference given to the

Criminal Defense Clinic and other clinic activities which involve

law students experiencing criminal defense work and representation

of clients.

Dean’s Report

PreviousLawSchoolSpiritofPhilanthropyAwardRecipients

he law school is proud to recognize John L. Krauss for his generosity and years of loyal support. He is a 1976 graduate of the school and an Adjunct Professor of Law, teaching a

nationally recognized public policy mediation course open to students, practicing attorneys, judges and professionals in all public policy fields.

He is the Director of the Iu Public Policy Institute and the Center for urban Policy and the Environment and a Clinical Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs. Krauss has more than 40 years of experience in government, higher education, and business consulting and volunteers his time to countless community organizations.

His philanthropic legacy will establish the John L. Krauss Chair in Alternative Dispute Resolution and ensure that the law school, in partnership with the Iu School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA), continues to educate and prepare students for successful legal and professional careers for years to come.

T

John Krauss ‘76 Receives Spirit of Philanthropy Award

Krauss has more than 40 years of experience

in government, higher education, and

business consulting and volunteers his time to countless community

organizations.

Above: John Krauss, ‘76, is pictured with Dean Gary Roberts and Chancellor Charles Bantz.

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 79

2010 James M. Barkley ‘77

2009 Hall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman, P. C.

2008 Adam Arceneaux ‘93 Stephen A. Stitle ‘70

2007 Hon. J. Patrick Endsley ‘56 Alan I. Klineman ‘56

2006 Clara F. Woodard Eli Lilly and Company Foundation

2005 Bose McKinney & Evans LLP James T. Burns ‘75

2004 Hon. Brent E. Dickson ‘68

2003 William R. Neale ‘73

2002 Alan H. ‘73 and Linda M. Cohen L. Steven ‘73 and Cathy J. Miller

2001 William F. ‘74 and Jennifer A. Conour John ‘63 and Barbara Wynne

2000 Anita C. Inlow

1999 Frederick R. Hovde ‘80 Michael D. McCormick ‘80

1998 David W. Givens ‘60 Rebecca O. Kendall ‘75

1997 Thomas Q. Henry ‘75 M. Dale ‘60 and Kay Palmer

1996 Henry B. Blackwell, II ‘56 and Nancy Neckers Blackwell ‘56

1995 Hall, Render. Killian, Heath & Lyman, P. C.

1994 Robert F. Wisehart ‘54 Barry L. Meadow ‘75

1993 Hon. Samuel R. Rosen

1992 Jack F. Holmes ‘71

1991 John M. Holt ‘56 Sidney D. Eskenazi

1990 James V. Donadio

1989 Lante K. Earnest ‘73 Harold R. Woodard

Dean’s Report

80 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Professorships 2010-2011 rofessorships allow the law school to attract and retain a faculty of highly recognized scholars and teachers. We would like to

recognize the following donors for their steadfast support. The following pages list our professorships for the 2010-2011

academic year and the respective professorship holders.PPaul E. Beam Professor of LawThe Paul E. Beam Professorship is made possible by a gift to the

law school from the estate of the late Paul E. Beam, Sr., ‘21. In

addition to serving as an adjunct faculty member, Mr. Beam was an

Indianapolis attorney who served as general counsel to the Indiana

State Bar Association for many years.

Professor Andrew R. Klein

Gerald L. Bepko Professor of LawIn 2007, a professorship reserved for the dean (or former dean) of

the law school was spearheaded by, and ultimately named for, Gerald

L. Bepko. Bepko is Chancellor Emeritus of IUPUI, as well as a

former professor and dean of the law school whose reputation for

administrative excellence will benefit the law school community for

generations to come.

Dean Gary R. Roberts

Centennial Professor of LawThe Centennial Professorship is the name given to this professorship

in recognition of the rich history of the law school, spanning more

than one hundred years, and tracing its origin to the Indiana Law

School, established in 1894.

Vice Dean Paul N. Cox

Carl M. Gray Professor of LawThe Carl M. Gray Professorship is named for the late Mr. Gray, a

Petersburg, Indiana attorney who made a gift in 1978 to support

programs at the law school. Mr. Gray, a former trustee of Indiana

University, was recognized during his lifetime for distinguished service

by both the Indiana and American Bar Associations.

Professor George E. Edwards

John S. Grimes Professor of LawThe John S. Grimes Professorship is made possible thanks to a bequest

from the estate of Mr. John S. Grimes. Mr. Grimes was a Professor

Emeritus of the law school who taught Property and Trusts and Estates.

Professor Frank Emmert

Hall Render Professor of LawThe Hall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman Professorship was made

possible by a generous gift to the law school from William S., ‘51, and

Christine S. Hall. Mr. Hall founded the firm that is the namesake of

this endowed professorship in 1967. The firm has focused its practice

on health law and is now recognized as one of the nation’s preeminent

health law firms.

Professor Eleanor D. Kinney

M. Dale Palmer Professor of LawThe M. Dale Palmer Professorship was established in 1997 by

the generosity of M. Dale Palmer, ’61, a respected attorney and

businessman.

Professor Linda A. Kelly Hill

William F. Harvey Professor of LawThe William F. Harvey Professorship was established by Michael D.

McCormick, ‘80. The former general counsel of Bindley Western

Industries and long-time supporter of the law school funded two

endowed professorships with his generous gift.

Professor Florence Wagman Roisman

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 81

Professorships 2010-2011

Lawrence A. Jegen III ProfessorshipThe Lawrence A. Jegen III Professorship was established by Michael

D. McCormick, ‘80. The former general counsel of Bindley Western

Industries and long-time supporter of the law school funded two

endowed professorships with his generous gift.

Professor R. George Wright

Samuel R. Rosen Professors of LawThe Samuel R. Rosen Professorships are named in honor of the late

Judge Rosen, a respected member of Indiana’s legal community. The

1933 graduate of Harvard Law School held a number of judicial

posts after he moved to Indiana in 1963, including serving as deputy

attorney general, an Indiana Supreme Court administrator and the

state’s first senior judge accorded “at-large” judicial authority in

Indiana. In 1992, Judge Rosen made a gift for the benefit of the

law school to honor his Harvard classmate, Cleon H. “Bill” Foust,

who served as dean of the school from 1967 until 1973. That gift

supports these endowed professorships, one of which is in the

process of being filled.

Professor David Orentlicher

Thomas F. Sheehan Professor of Tax Law and PolicyThe Thomas F. Sheehan Professorship of Tax Law and Policy was

established in 1981 by Thomas F., ’68, and Joan M. Sheehan. The

professorship is intended to foster important teaching and research on

tax law and policy.

Professor Lawrence A. Jegen III

R. Bruce Townsend Professor of LawThe R. Bruce Townsend Professorship is made possible through gifts

contributed in honor of the late R. Bruce Townsend, a professor at

the law school from 1946 until his retirement in 1982. He became

one of the best loved professors at the school, widely known for his

outstanding teaching ability, his wit, and his compassion.

Professor Daniel H. Cole

Harold R. Woodard Professor of LawThe Harold R. Woodard Professorship was established in 2004 and

awarded for the first time in 2006. Clara Woodard gave the founding

gift and named it in memory of her late husband, Harold R. Woodard.

Mr. Woodard was a well-known intellectual property attorney and

partner at the firm of Woodard Emhardt Moriarty McNett & Henry.

He taught for many years as an adjunct professor at the law school.

Professor Nicholas L. Georgakapoulos

Dean’s Report

2010-2011 Top Law Firms and Corporations

82 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Annual Law Firm and Corporate Campaign 2010-2011 Donors he law school would like to thank the 40 law firms and corporations and 407 alumni who participated in the

2010-2011 Law firm and Corporate Campaign. Highlighted below are the top firms and corporations.T

Top Firms by Total Dollars Raised

Barnes & Thornburg LLP $31,243.33

Krieg DeVault LLP $26,125.00

Ice Miller LLP $17,360.81

Simon Property Group, Inc. $10,674.68

Cohen Garelick & Glazier $10,650.00

Baker & Daniels LLP $9,655.00

Bingham McHale LLP $7,725.00

Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman, P.C. $7,520.00

Parr Richey Obremskey Frandsen & Patterson LLP $5,400.00

Top Firms by Percentage of Alumni Participation

Cline Farrell Christie Lee & Caress 100%

Cohen and Malad, LLP 100%

Cohen Garelick & Glazier 100%

Hoover Hull LLP 100%

Lewis & Kappes 100%

Lewis Wagner, LLP 100%

Scopelitis Garvin Light Hanson & Feary, P.C. 100%

Yarling & Robinson 100%

Benesch Attorneys at Law 92%

Riley Bennett & Egloff, LLP 91%

Schultz & Pogue, LLP 88%

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart, P.C. 80%

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 83

Firm/Corporation Percentage Rate of Participation Dollars Raised

Baker & Daniels LLP 30% $9,655.00

Barnes & Thornburg LLP 41% $31,243.33

Barrett and McNagny 13% $1,600.00

Benesch Attorneys at Law 92% $2,420.00

Bingham McHale LLP 44% $7,725.00

Bose McKinney & Evans, LLP 42% $3,785.00

Church Church Hittle & Antrim 23% $375.00

Cline Farrell Christie Lee & Caress 100% $2,500.00

Cohen and Malad, LLP 100% $1,520.00

Cohen Garelick & Glazier 100% $10,650.00

Dow AgroSciences 55% $655.00

Drewry Simmons Vornehm, LLP 16% $362.50

Ernst & Young 25% $500.00

Frost Brown Todd LLC 41% $2,185.00

Hackman Hulett & Cracraft, LLP 50% $1,110.00

Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman, P.C. 22% $7,520.00

Harrison Moberly, LLP 45% $3,000.00

Hill Fulwider McDowell Funk & Matthews, P.C. 63% $270.00

Hoover Hull LLP 100% $1,450.00

Ice Miller LLP 25% $17,360.81

Kightlinger & Gray, LLP 57% $925.00

Krieg DeVault LLP 48% $26,125.00

Kroger Gardis Regas, LLP 56% $2,320.00

Lewis Kappes 100% $2,185.00

Lewis Wagner, LLP 100% $3,580.00

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart, P.C. 80% $200.00

Parr Richey Obremskey Frandsen & Patterson 60% $5,400.00

Plews Shadley Racher & Braun 43% $530.00

Riley Bennett & Egloff, LLP 91% $2,310.00

Ruckelshaus Kautzman Blackwell Bemis & Hasbrook 50% $1,550.00

Schultz & Pogue 88% $300.00

Scopelitis Garvin Light Hanson & Feary, P.C. 100% $2,800.00

Simon Property Group 15% $10,674.68

Stewart & Irwin, P.C. 47% $925.00

Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP 31% $3,440.00

Wilkinson Goeller Modesitt Wilkinson & Drummy, LLP 29% $1,100.00

Woodard Emhardt Moriarty McNett & Henry LLP 47% $1,125.00

Wooden & McLaughlin LLP 36% $525.00

Yarling & Robinson 100% $350.00

Zimmer Stayman Weitzel & Shoulders, LLP 27% $500.00

2010-2011 Law Firm and Corporate Campaign Results

Annual Law Firm and Corporate Campaign 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

Landmark Society $10,000 and above annual contribution

Acair FoundationBessemer Trust CompanyCohen and Malad LLPIndiana University School of Law – Indianapolis Alumni AssociationKatz, Sapper & Miller LLPLumina Foundation for EducationMeijer, Inc.United Student Aid Funds, Inc.

Century Society $5,000 - $9,999 annual contribution

Baker & Daniels LLPEli Lilly & CompanyErnst & Young FoundationJewish Federation of Greater IndianapolisKaiser Family Foundation

Black Cane Society $2,500 - $4,999 annual contribution

The Brooks TrustCMG Worldwide, Inc.Dunham TrustIndianapolis Bar FoundationJoseph Maley FoundationMiller Scholarship TrustProLiance Holdings, LLCScopelitis, Garvin, Light, Hanson & Feary, P.C.

Maennerchor Society $1,000 - $2,499 annual contribution

Allen County Bar AssociationCorvee, Inc.Eskenazi Family Foundation, Inc.Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift FundHall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman, P.C.Health Foundation of Greater IndianapolisIndiana State Bar AssociationIndianapolis Bar AssociationJohnson & JohnsonLilly Endowment, Inc.

AXA FoundationBall CorporationThe Charles Schwab FoundationCooper Industries FoundationDeloitte FoundationThe Dow Chemical Company FoundationDuke Energy FoundationEli Lilly & CompanyErnst & Young FoundationJohnson & Johnson

Lilly Endowment, Inc.Lincoln Financial FoundationLumina Foundation for EducationMerck Company FoundationMeredith Corporation FoundationMiller & CompanyMorgan StanleyState Farm Companies FoundationUnited Student Aid Funds, Inc.

Includes matching gifts received from 07/01/10 to 06/30/11

Matching Gift Companies 2010-2011

84 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Firms, Foundations, Corporations and Organizations 2010-2011 Donors ommunity support from firms, foundations, corporations, and organizations provides a critical extra dimension to the law

school’s programming that will make us stand apart from other law schools. Giving totals include gifts, pledge payments,

and matching gifts received by the Iu foundation between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011. We would like to recognize the

following entities for their support.

C

Dean’s Report

Dean’s Council $500 - $999 annual contribution

Ball CorporationBenesch, Friedlander, Coplan & Arnoff, LLPBingham McHale LLPCooper Industries FoundationThe Dow Chemical Company FoundationDuke Energy FoundationIndiana Legal Services, Inc.Indiana University HealthKatz & Korin, PCLewis and Kappes, P.C.Miller & CompanyMillerMeyer LLPMonarch Beverage Company, Inc.Morgan StanleyRuppert & Schaefer, P.C.Women’s Caucus

Law School Associates $100 - $499 annual contribution

AXA FoundationBarnes & Thornburg LLPBose McKinney & Evans LLPDeloitte FoundationDonaldson Andreoli & TruittEqual Justice WorksIndiana Bar Foundation, Inc.Kennedy Tank and Manufacturing Company, Inc.Lanham Family FoundationLincoln Financial FoundationMeitus Gelbert Rose LLPMerck Company FoundationMeredith Corporation FoundationNational Attorneys’ Title Assurance Fund, Inc.Parr Richey Obremskey Frandsen & PattersonThe Petticrew FoundationState Farm Companies FoundationSun King Brewing CompanyTriumph Church

Your employer, or your spouse’s employer, may match your gift for higher education. Some will even triple it! For each gift or installment, ask your human resources office for a Matching Gift form, complete it, and send it in with your gift.

How Can I Double—or Even Triple—My Gift?

$ x 2 = $$$ x 3 = $$$

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 85

Firms, Foundations, Corporations and Organizations 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

86 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Gifts in Honor and Memory 2010-2011 e give special thanks to the following alumni and friends who, between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011, chose to

contribute to the school by giving a gift in honor or memory of a friend, alumnus, or parent. An honorary or memorial gift is

a special way to pay tribute to those individuals.WGifts in Honor of Alumni and Friends

Cynthia A. BakerGiven by John R. and Vivian T. Maley

Pamela L. Carter, ‘84Given by Meijer, Inc.

Velma E. DobbinsGiven by Jonna M. MacDougall

William F. HarveyGiven byJohn R. and Vivian T. MaleyMargret G. and Stephen Robb

Lawrence A. Jegen IIIGiven byRichard N. BellCraig R. FinlaysonMartha S. HollingsworthJohn R. and Vivian T. Maley

Barton L. KaufmanGiven by Stephen H. and Deborah L. Paul

Norman LefsteinGiven by John R. and Vivian T. Maley

Susanah M. Mead, ‘76Given byJohn R. and Vivian T. MaleyFranklin I. Miroff

William J. MeadGiven by Franklin I. Miroff

Florence Wagman RoismanGiven byFred R. and Judith E. BeckerJeannine BellEmily A. Benfer and John McHughThomas H. and Emily A. Benner

Christopher and Leslie D. Brown Anita H. BrysonTimothy H. and Paige N. ButtonGordon CavanaughEdward B. Cloutman and Elizabeth K. JulianPeter B. EdelmanMonica A. FennellJohn M. and Linda J. FerrenWalter H. FleischerSteve FredricksonHenry A. and Helen E. FreedmanDennis K. Frick and Crystal L. FrancisGeorge Gould and Diane GallagherGaile GreleChristopher B. and Emily F. HailePhyllis J. HolmenGilbert L. and Karen R. HolmesZona F. and Jim HostetlerAlan P. KempSheila Suess Kennedy and Robert N. KennedyGladys KesslerAndrew R. Klein and Diane F. SchusselJanice E. KreuscherJon B. Laramore and Janet G. McCabeMarta J. LaskowskiJulie E. LevinSusan Leviton and Jeffrey LaurenLinda LinnDouglas M. Magee and Anne Marie ReganGerard N. MaglioccaSeymour M. MillerConnie M. PascaleFrancis P. and Ellen M. QuigleyLeonard S. RubinowitzRobert and Sloan SableShirley A. SiegelPeter and Ruth SimmonsArnold C. and Denise SternbergBernard L. and Karen TetreaultAllan D. and Carolyn N. ThomasDavid C. VladeckMichael J. and Leona B. WoodyRoberta Youmans

Dean’s Report

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 87

*Posthumous Recognition

Gifts in Honor and Memory 2010-2011

James W. TorkeGiven by John R. and Vivian T. Maley

Lawrence P. WilkinsGiven by John R. and Vivian T. Maley

Lloyd T. Wilson, Jr.Given by Charles F. Miller, Jr. and Laura L. Miller

Gifts in Memory of Alumni and Friends

Mary Jane Frisby, ‘00Given byIndianapolis Bar AssociationMeitus Gelbert Rose LLP

Shao HoGiven by Paul K. Ho

Harry JacobsGiven byBenesch Attorneys at LawIra C. and Amy KaplanKevin and Sheila Margolis

Henry C. KarlsonGiven by James P. and Anna S. White

Mary Harter MitchellGiven byCynthia M. AdamsGerald L. and Jean C. BepkoPerfecto G. CaparasKenneth D. ChestekJeffrey O. CooperJennifer A. DrobacKyle E. GalsterJoyce M. Hertko and Jeffrey D. MillerAndrew R. Klein and Diane F. SchusselNorman LefsteinMaria Pabon Lopez and Gerardo LopezLumina Foundation for Education

Kaiser Family FoundationJonna M. MacDougallGerard N. MaglioccaDeborah B. McGregorSusanah M. and William J. MeadCarol S. MillerMichael J. and Jennifer B. PittsFrancis P. QuigleyFlorence Wagman RoismanUnited Student Aid Funds, Inc.Frances L. WatsonLloyd T. Wilson, Jr.R. George Wright

Merrill Moores, ‘53Given byJack E. BucklesJ. Patrick Endsley*

John M. Ryan, Sr.Given byGretchen K. GutmanKennedy Tank and Manufacturing Company, Inc.Charles A. and Jacqueline Pechette

R. Bruce TownsendGiven by Maribeth Zay Fischer

Willard VanHorneGiven by Charlotte VanHorne Squarcy

Dean’s Report

1948Philip S. Cooper

1949Richard P. CooleyDorothy J. Leggett*Richard W. Yarling

1950Robert A. ClaycombeThomas L. DavisLeon R. Kaminski

1951Richard H. HustonFrank E. Russell

1953Jack E. BucklesJohn H. Edris, Jr.

1954LeRoy D. GudemanJohn P. Price, Jr.

1955Fred B. Croner, Jr.Paul H. Johnson, Jr.Jack M. SchenckRobert H. Staton*

1956Henry B. Blackwell IINancy Neckers BlackwellJ. Patrick Endsley*

1957Robert C. Lewis

1958William K. ByrumJames P. Seidensticker, Jr.

1959Roberta GillisGertrude R. Zarek

1960David W. Givens, Sr.Raymond GoodMax E. GoshertEugene E. HennRichard F. JoyceJoseph A. Naughton, Jr.

Norman R. NewmanRobert E. Robinson

1961Roy S. DaleCharles A. Wiles

1962David W. FoleyDaniel J. HarriganRobert V. Johnson*Robert W. WadeWilliam F. Wurster

1963Marvin H. MitchellDonald R. Phillippe

1964Dave BadgerWilliam L. RobertsonKent O. Stewart

1965Joseph W. AnnakinM. C. BassiouniMarvin T. BornsteinStephen E. DeVoeRobert H. EverittJohn M. HigginsFranklin I. MiroffRichard H. RiegnerRaymond S. RobakEdward E. SchillingKenneth L. ScroghamWilliam J. Skinner

1966Marvin J. FrankPatrick E. McNarnyDon F. MortonCharles F. Robinson, Jr.Thomas J. SimmonsHerbert A. Spitzer, Jr.Ross E. Springer

1967L. Robert Lowe, Jr.John E. MarynellWilliam H. Merrill, Jr.Thomas L. PlimptonJon F. SchmollRobert F. WagnerEldon C. Woods

1968Jerald I. AncelGary H. BaisePatricia G. ButschDonald R. CassadyG. Terry CutterBrent E. DicksonArvin R. FolandHarry M. HubbleGary W. MillerCharles R. OehrleJohn K. PetersJack R. ShawKendrick J. SinnockRonald C. SmithJames H. Voyles, Jr.Gerald S. Zore

1969Paul J. CorsaroJohn B. CraneStephen J. DuttonThomas P. EwbankAlan H. GoldsteinJames A. GothardRichard D. HughesRobert W. LatimerThomas J. MatternJohn V. MoriartyW. Stephen PerryMichael K. PhillipsG. Dean RainboltJerome J. SobelTheodore M. SosinLarry W. Suciu

1970Jon B. AbelsBurnett Caudill, Jr.Larry R. ChampionCarr L. DardenJames E. HarrisS. Steven KaralekasGary J. KruchtenMartha D. LamkinDavid R. MichauLarry S. PughMichael Thomasson

1971Donald P. BogardPaul D. BrinkRobert E. Cambridge

Includes all gift amounts.

88 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors

Dean’s Report

*Posthumous Recognition

William J. Dale, Jr.L. Richard GohmanDavid R. HamerJames A. KnauerJames W. LongJohn G. MarvelGeorge E. PalmerGeorge G. PontonJohn C. Render, Jr.Ronald G. SalatichWilliam B. ScanlonLawrence E. ShearerFredrick R. SpencerSteven L. Tuchman

1972William S. Coleman, Jr.John F. CulpMelvin R. DanielHarold D. EwenMichael D. FreebornWilliam S. GardinerJohn Q. Herrin, Jr.Martha S. HollingsworthJoseph A. JonesRonald A. LisakRoland D. MatherJohn C. McLaughlinThomas Newman, Jr.James W. PayneRobert J. Spolyar, Sr.

1973Richard E. Aikman, Jr.Harold R. BickhamEdwin F. Bush IIAlan H. CohenMichael B. CracraftJames T. Crawford, Jr.Edward P. DechertLante K. EarnestE. Anthony FiggCraig R. FinlaysonNorman R. GarvinMartha B. GaschoDavid W. GotshallJohn C. HandCharles W. HarrisJack G. HittleEugene C. HollanderJ. David HollingsworthSteven A. HoltStephen E. JacksonJames C. Jarrette

Thomas E. JohnsonLarry A. LandisRobert E. LybrookRichard M. MaladWilliam R. NealeStephen M. SimsWilliam O. SmithSteven J. StrawbridgeE. Thomas SullivanFred C. Tucker IIIRichard L. Wehrel

1974Wayne O. Adams IIIJohn S. BeemanDavid C. CampbellJ. Terrence CodyTerry L. CorneliusMark S. CrowderDonald L. DanielFrederick W. Dennerline IIIKevin P. FarrellGregory F. HahnSteven R. HallL. Diane KeatonJames E. KirschnerMartha A. KleinJeffrey J. LeechRobert W. McClellandThomas V. McCombJane B. MerrillDouglas W. MeyerJames D. MundtR. Gregory NeelyFrank M. NorthamJohn S. NullJudith G. PalmerDaniel J. PflegingDonald J. PoldenDan QuayleMarilyn QuaylePatricia A. RileyCharles W. Ritz IIIJoel D. RobertsJohn M. RossJoseph F. ShikanySteven V. ShoupR. Lawrence Steele, Jr.Charles E. TaylorRobert T. ThopyGregory J. UtkenHarry J. Watson IIIClaude D. WegnerJames D. Witchger

IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT 89

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors1975Gordon L. BeemanRichard N. BellJames T. BurnsJ. David CookJames M. DavisJ. William DuMondG. William Fishering IIIKent M. FrandsenKristin G. FruehwaldDavid W. GrayJames M. HaineLinda Y. HammelTimothy M. HardenKenneth E. HatchRodger K. HendershotFrank P. Huse IIISheila Suess KennedyJerry L. KerkhofSonia J. LeerkampSharon R. MerrimanLeon M. Neddo, Jr.Daniel L. PflumPhillip V. PriceBaker R. RectorWilliam T. ReesHubert J. Riedeman, Jr.T. Jeffrey SalbLewis A. ShafferJoseph L. SmithJonathan F. SpadorciaSusan B. TablerTimothy L. WadeMark E. WagnerJohn R. Walsh IIJohn F. Wickes, Jr.W. Michael WiseRandy W. Young

1976George T. AngeloneRichard E. BeersAnthony S. BentonGerald M. BishopElias BloomSteven R. BoneJohn W. BoydCarolyn Cook CoukosDonald K. DensbornRichard J. DickRobert A. FanningJohn O. FeighnerWarren HaasWilliam N. Hardy

Dean’s Report

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors Samuel L. JacobsProfessor John L. KraussPaul F. LindemannPatrick S. LooneyPaul S. MannweilerHeather McPhersonProfessor Susanah M. MeadJohn M. PellettHoward D. PolskyRandall E. PriceLarry W. RobbinsChris L. ShelbyBruce A. SmithLinda M. WagonerBruce A. WalkerMichael J. WalroJon E. WilliamsRichard A. Young

1977John R. AikmanJames M. BarkleyJohn P. BrinsonAlan J. DanskerDaniel R. FaganSarah Myers FrankAudrey K. GrossmanJohn R. HoogeF. Bradford JohnsonLynn B. JongleuxJohn S. KeelerDavid W. LuhmanDavid W. MillerLester C. MillerTim D. MosbySteven J. MossKarl L. MulvaneyRobert C. Oliver, Jr.John J. PetrCharles R. ReevesGloria SamuelsJoseph W. ShullStephen J. SpoltmanCharlotte V. SquarcyD. Michael WallmanDavid E. WrightStephen E. Zlatos

1978John L. AsburyBryce H. Bennett, Jr.Timothy J. BloomAlan S. BrownClifford W. Browning

Robert A. BurnsMildred L. CalhounRobert P. ChamnessDavid C. ChapleauTerry R. CurryJohn M. FeickMaribeth Zay FischerMichael C. GallowayJulia Blackwell GelinasDavid E. GrayMillicent E. HatchJo Ann HoffmanGary L. KlotzChristina L. KunzIrwin B. LevinKathleen G. LucasGary P. PriceRobert E. RheinlanderMargret G. RobbJack E. RoebelWilliam M. Sharp, Sr.Glenna Dudley ShelbyRichard B. SteedmanDavid L. SwiderBrian W. WelchLaurel A. Wendt

1979Robert R. AylsworthMichael T. BinderLaurie L. BoydBruce D. BrattainRonald W. BuchmeierRichard C. CurreyPamela Jones DavidsonMark S. DavisJoseph E. DeGroffJames F. Donahue IIIKaren Babyak DowThomas W. FarlowGeoffrey P. GoochSally H. GrayLee L. HeydeJames G. LauckJordan H. LeibmanJanice L. LesniakMichael K. McCroryPatricia Polis McCroryCharles F. Milller, Jr.Kevin C. MurrayMichael B. PencePaul S. PetticrewJames David RoellgenPatrick J. Schauer

John B. ScheidlerW. Michael SchiffChristopher D. SeigelJane A. SeigelGeorge G. SlaterKarol K. SparksSteven E. SpringerDavid F. TruittPatricia TruittMichael W. WellsBarbara C. WilliamsWilliam E. Winingham, Jr.Richard D. WoodJohn R. Zeiner

1980Robin L. BabbittCharles E. BarbieriRobert C. BeasleyAllen A. Bell, Jr.Michael P. BishopElaine Parran BoydFranklyn D. Brinkman, Jr.James P. CaseyEdward J. ChesterLance D. ClineMichael C. GemignaniSteven J. GlazierDonald J. GrahamNancy J. HarrisonCarol S. HartmanMichael R. HartmanWinston T. HayFrances J. HolmesJohn D. HooverMartha Sanders HooverGregory A. HornFrederick R. HovdeRichard A. HuserAnne Marie KempfThomas J. KnightMark S. LangeAndrew K. LightCatherine M. MahernW. Tobin McClamrochMichael D. McCormickKevin P. McGoffGary L. MillerE. Van OlsonGregory A. OstendorfRoger L. PrillamanPaul G. ReisRichard A. RocapKenneth J. Rojc

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Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 DonorsRobert C. RothkopfProfessor Joan M. RuhtenbergJames H. SchwarzCharles V. SloneKathy R. SmithCharles E. SpevacekDouglas E. StarkeyScott L. StarrCarolyn R. SuttonRandall L. VonderheideProfessor Frances L. WatsonJerome L. WitheredJo Angela Woods

1981Jeffrey A. AbramsJeffrey A. BercovitzMary Beth BraitmanJohn P. BroadheadTerrence L. BrookieRaymond H. CarlsonDeborah J. CarusoStephen L. ChapmanThomas L. ClemPeter D. ClevelandRichard G. D’AmourRichard W. DyarDebra Scott EasterdayThomas V. EasterdayRandall R. FearnowChristine S. FieldsJames H. HansonDavid W. HilleryPatrick J. HoganKathryn L. KelleyLana M. KrusePaul S. KruseLawrence E. LawheadRobert D. MacGillMichael M. MaschmeyerKevin C. McDowellR. Russell Petterson, Jr.Annette F. RushMichael F. SchwankeJohn H. SharpeDonald S. SmithN. Kent SmithJohn H. StanleyMartha T. StarkeyJanet R. StephensonAnthony A. TanoosJohn W. TanselleJohn C. TrimbleBlair R. Vandivier

Candace S. WalkerJames H. Young

1982Margaret S. AshbridgeGary W. BippusMaryEllen Kiley BishopLee C. ChristieJ. Murray ClarkCarol W. CollinsDavid J. CutshawRichard W. FieldsEric W. FredbeckGregory M. FudgeRobert T. GrandJarrell B. HammondJohn F. HanleyT. Jeffrey HannahTherese Ann HannahBeth Holland HenkelDavid R. HennessyRobert J. Hill, Jr.Timothy J. HulettMichael D. KeeleKit KellerClaire E. LewisLynne D. LidkeDavid R. MooreMichael A. MullettSharon F. MurphyCarolyn J. NicholsThomas J. OberhausenDouglas G. O’Brien, Jr.Terry K. ParkMark A. RoeslerMary E. SoladaMary M. StanleyPhillip L. StewartSusan P. StuartMark X. SullivanJack A. TandySteven R. ValentineMichael E. WilliamsG. Michael WitteBarbara A. WolentyProfessor R. George WrightSteven L. Yount

1983Professor Cynthia M. AdamsDonna G. CampbellBette J. DoddCraig D. DoyleStephen E. Elsner

Mark A. FosterThomas J. GrauJohn M. HaeckerMarc A. HetznerBrian C. HewittDouglas G. KennyJoseph E. Loftus, Jr.Christopher D. LongSue T. MacGillJane E. Magnus-StinsonJohn C. McColleyCraig M. McKeeRichard L. McOmberJanet A. McShararMark J. MerkleDonald M. MeyerAlex R. MurphyAnthony NimmoHelen M. O’ConnellJeffrey PeekHudnall A. PfeifferJames A. ReedMarlene ReichKaren Denny ScanlonG. Michael SchopmeyerSue E. StemenLisa J. TanselleJoseph D. TroutStephen M. Woodard

1984Brian C. BosmaPamela L. CarterRonald B. CassidenteMark R. DanielRobert E. FergusonDavid M. FlahertyJ. Patrick Gallagher IIIAnn B. HannoyBurton M. HarrisMartin D. HilleryKevin A. HooverJohn F. KautzmanLinda S. KennyMary M. KleimanDavid A. KolgerKathy L. KolgerJanice E. KreuscherGregory L. LakerCynthia M. LockeApril A. LuriaDavid C. LyonsJames P. MoloyNathan R. Mowery

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Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors C. Duane O’NealRichard A. RezekReed S. SchmittDavid A. ShaheedSteven C. ShockleyCarol A. StephanWilliam B. StephanTimothy L. StewartTeresa C. WilliamsGeorge T. WilsonMonty K. WoolseyVickie R. Yaser

1985David L. AhlersmeyerDavid N. BaumgartnerSusan W. BrooksShaun Healy CliffordSara ComptonJohn B. DrummyBradley S. FusonJames M. GuttingJames H. HernandezRussell L. JonesMitzi H. MartinJames R. McKneight, Jr.Mary J. NormanSusan Jebens PachapaDrew W. PrusieckiKellie K. PrusieckiRuth D. ReichardJ. Gregory ShelleyDean A. SobeckiBarbara B. StevensDavid A. StirsmanJohn R. TalleyLesa M. TalleyJill H. TannerBernays K. ThurstonColleen E. TonnWayne C. Turner

1986Gregory N. DaleMary A. FindlingJames K. GildayPatricia A. HebenstreitAndrew A. KleimanPaul A. KraftKaren M. LoveJonna M. MacDougallSheila A. MarshallSusan T. McColleyMario P. Musilli

Jonathan J. MyersSoultana S. MyersThomas C. NewlinCynthia L. RamseyKeith D. SaletteBeth M. Sullivan-SummersMichael B. WatkinsPeter C. Wright

1987Deborah L. AndersonDonald R. AndersonFred J. BachmannRichard E. ColesonJohn P. Daly, Jr.Patricia A. DouglassJohn R. GaskinLaura Reed GelardenPeter J. GeorgeoffKathy A. LeeRyan L. LeitchJames F. LudlowLinda K. Meier-SargentReed S. OslanScot W. OverdorfTanya Stuart OverdorfJohn O. PhippsFrancis P. QuigleyVictoria Varga RansbergerGayle A. ReindlThomas R. SchultzDeetta M. SteinmetzJ. Joseph TannerMarilyn M. WilderJudy L. WoodsElizabeth A. Zlatos

1988Jay D. BenjaminRobert L. BrowningJulia A. CarpenterSteven J. ChestnutSteven M. CrellMichael P. DuganGregory M. FearyEdwin W. FreeJ. Michael GrubbsKaren M. HahnDouglas J. HannoyAmy L. LeitchJohn R. MaleyJill L. McCroryDaniel J. McGloneKatharine C. Liell

Michael T. McNelisDouglas K. NormanMary F. PansziEllen W. QuigleyRisa A. RegnierEric A. RiegnerJay D. Robinson, Jr.Janna J. ShislerJohn G. ShubatMary J. Hunter Wedding

1989Laura K. BinfordJoseph D. CalderonCarolyn B. CaldwellThomas K. CaldwellBarbara J. CheekKit C. CraneMary M. FeldhakeMichele L. JohnsMichael R. KerrCarol KirkTammy J. MeyerPeggy J. NaileTimothy E. NiednagelJean M. Nies-BlackwellKaren R. OrrLabros E. PilalisRobert P. SchlossDiane S. SheaScott D. Yonover

1990Helen N. BakerElizabeth M. BehnkeKerry H. BlomquistDavid B. BoodtJulia A. BoodtD. Randall BrownM. Carolyn CecereSusan E. ClineSara B. CobbAndrew J. DetherageThomas P. GannonSandra L. GoslingDaniel B. GriffithKevin R. KnightDeborah M. McNearMark E. PattersonJon M. PinnickRichard K. ShoultzDaun A. SimpsonMark E. SpitzerTimothy N. ThomasMatthew A. Yeakey

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Dean’s Report

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors1991Catherine BorkowskiEdwin J. BroeckerDouglas W. BrownJoseph G. EatonTodd A. EtzlerPaje L. FeltsLisa A. FikeRobert G. GuldeJohn R. Hammond IIIKimberly E. HowardJan KeeferElizabeth H. KnottsRuth R. LoPreteConstance MattsMichael B. McNeilPatricia J. PikelMariana RichmondRaymond J. SchoettleMichael G. ShanleyCurtis E. ShirleyJeffrey W. ShortThomas S. SolomonAlastair J. WarrJames E. Zoccola

1992Kenneth M. BernerDennis E. BlandDonald L. BuckinghamM. Elizabeth BumgardnerBeth A. ComptonLinda J. CooleyMark A. ErvinLaura C. HagenowScott A. HarknessLawrence R. KemmPeter S. KovacsSonja A. KriegsmannJoe LiebeschuetzRonald S. MaciakJoe McGonigalEvelyn A. MurphyJanet Halline NelsonElizabeth A. PavelkaRebecca J. SeamandsNikki G. ShoultzJerry L. Siefers, Jr.MaCharrie R. Vorndran-JonesEric R. WaldkoetterMark E. WitmerChristine M. Zoccola

1993Adam ArceneauxWalter J. DickersonRobert L. GaussAndrew W. HibelWayne T. HoeingMylene M. HuybersSally E. LanhamJennifer A. Larson-HaussinNancy A. LoganMary B. MeinersGary C. MessplayRonald J. MorelockMark R. NelsonNorman G. Printer, Jr.Mary F. SchmidGregg M. WallanderJohn D. WallerGary R. WelshTimothy W. Wiseman

1994David A. BartaLaura Spitzberg CarafiolTimothy C. CaressA. Scott ChinnTodd L. EadsRobert M. FryeMichael J. GouldE. Sean GriggsRicki J. HoffmannSara Anne HookJ. Christopher JanakDavid M. LeonardCamilyn K. LeoneJanice R. MandlaNicholas E. MathioudakisJan MichelsenElizabeth W. O’GaraL. Scott PaynterGregory M. RegerLisa Garcia RegerAllan W. ReidMichael J. SacopulosPaula J. SchaeferMichelle E. ScottThomas F. SheaDavid A. TempleMichelle Presswood WaymireThomas D. WebsterBrian H. Williams

1995Kevin M. AlerdingDavid B. AllenDallas S. BoschenJill M. Bracken-EmersonAngela Stemle CashJeffrey A. ClarkDina M. CoxSteve A. CvengrosAnnette M. EngleJohn D. HeinRonald S. HendersonJohn D. MoriartyJames B. Myers, Jr.Laura L. Volk

1996Robert J. BornsChristopher A. BrownHeather Fesko DelgadoAnthony M. EleftheriLara B. EngelkingThomas H. EngleAllison J. GrittonThomas A. HardinCarla R. HounshelThomas N. HutchinsonJames J. KelleyDouglas M. KinserAndrielle M. MetzelMichael D. Moon, Jr.Thomas F. O’GaraPatricia L. OgdenTimothy A. OgdenJoyce Q. RogersMichael T. ScanlonAllison Owen SmithCharles W. SmithAlexandra S. SylviaJeffrey S. TooleDaylon L. WelliverGlen G. WilliamsBrian E. WittlerBrian K. Zoeller

1997Adrienne QuillA. Richard M. BlaiklockDavid G. FieldJames A. GarrardGretchen K. GutmanJoseph M. HendelEric M. HyltonW. Todd Metzger

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Dean’s Report

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 Donors Ginny L. PetersonDavid J. RemondiniRobert E. RheeThomas E. SchultePaul C. SweeneyMatthew T. TroyerSajil J. UnniThomas W. Vander LuitgareSean T. White

1998Ty M. CraverJennifer L. DayMichael A. DorelliGloria HoRandy HoltSteven W. KrohneSusan E. KrohneKyle A. LansberrySuzette E. MathisMichael E. MillikanBrad A. SchepersProfessor Joel M. SchummNancy SlaterMary SnyderAngela E. StephensCharles R. WhybrewMichael J. WoodyVicki J. Wright

1999Erik C. AllenJames J. BellJohn M. BradshawRachel A. BriscoeStefanie R. CrawfordChristopher P. FeltsEric K. HabigGilbert L. HolmesHeather S. HutchinsonKristyn Elizabeth LooneyTimothy A. McGeathEric S. PavlackKaren Butler ReisingerMichael T. ScartonKaren B. ScheidlerBradley W. SchwerAmy Lynne StewartKathleen M. Van Dyke

2000Jeffrey A. AdamsCraig M. BorowskiMichael C. Borschel

Stephanie L. CassmanTy H. ConnerAleksandra DimitrijevicJoel D. DuthieA. Jack FinkleaErica A. FranklinJeffrey S. GibsonLisa M. GlennCraig J. HelmreichMichael P. HughsValerie L. HughsSusan W. KlineDavid E. Kress, Jr.Cynthia A. MuseSamuel R. RobinsonDaniel W. SchmidtLarna K. SpearmanBoris UmanskyJennifer L. Weikel

2001Matthew T. AlbaughJohn C. Babione IIRyan C. BarkerDaniel J. BartnickiMichele L. BaxChad A. BrandenburgAllyson R. BreedenCheryl D. FinchumMeridth V. HammerKatherine A. Hogue HarmonDavid J. KarnesDana J. KenworthyMatthew T. KleinAngela P. KrahulikSamuel D. KrahulikKori L. McOmberHarley K. MeansPatrick J. Olmstead, Jr.Matthew B. QuigleyJoshua T. RobertsonJason M. SchiesserEugene P. SchulstadEric C. ScrogginsMark I. ShublakNatalie M. SnyderZachary J. Stock

2002Anthony P. AaronJulie M. AndrewsCharles W. ArnettJennifer L. BarbieriRyan H. Cassman

Angela D. CoeTimothy L. DeMotteCarey J. HaleyCarl A. HayesTodd J. JanzenAndrew T. KerrAlyson K. LurkerJimmie L. McMillian, Jr.Mark C. ReichelJuval O. ScottPaul D. VinkAngela K. WesslerAlexander P. Will

2003Denise M. BohnertJennifer M. BrunerCarolyn A. Clay HallCurtis D. CondictJonathan GoehringDanica L. HostettlerSanford D. Kelsey IIIJacob J. ManaloorMarco A. MorenoKevin S. PriceKevin M. QuinnKatherine McCanna RuhlStephen A. SchmidtShannon M. ShawThomas D. ShrackTara M. SmalstigGary M. TimpeThomas Vandenabeele

2004Tonya J. BondEstacia Medlen BrandenburgTimothy H. ButtonMichael P. CahillAmanda L. CoddensJulia Abbott CondictLeeanne R. CoonsJason R. DelkDavid J. DuncanNatalie R. FierekAnthony C. HahnTrenton F. HahnRobert F. InselbergTeresa KnightM. Edward Krause IIIJulie Roe LachVirginia D. MarschandEdgardo J. MartinezAver E. Oliver

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Dean’s Report

Donors by Class Year 2010-2011 DonorsMelanie D. RasmussenJulie D. ReedKameelah Shaheed-DialloGina R. ShockleyMichel L. StarkeyKathryn WileyMelissa A. WilhelmMichael D. WilhelmChad D. Wuertz

2005Robert M. Baker IVEmily A. BenferBradley J. BinghamPerfecto G. CaparasCalvin R. ChambersJohn A. ChristianBrian D. DeiwertKristen E. EdmundsonGrant F. GoshornJ. Curtis GreeneJoseph P. HawkinsJason R. HesslerJeffrey S. JacksonKelley J. JohnsonJoshua B. LeeChad M. PulleyAnne K. RicchiutoNigel J. RigginsSteven E. RunyanNathaniel G. SaylorKrista M. Vargo

2006Thomas H. BennerMatthew T. BesmerJonathan B. BurnsAndrew R. DuncanDeborah C. EdwardsBrian M. HeatonBrett Y. HoyMichael A. LangJason M. LeeLaurie E. MartinEdward J. MerchantJames E. MooreSusannah P. MrozLesley A. PflegingMarc D. PflegingJames A. PriceStephen A. RigaAlexis N. SumnerChristie Bodnar SwissLynn A. Toops

Lisa D. UpdikeJoseph Scott Wooldridge

2007Andrew S. BergerAmy O. CarsonCraig A. DefoeLynn M. EriksAlan L. GenicoffRaegan M. GibsonCathy A. HewittShelley M. JacksonKatherine G. KarresCasey R. StaffordBrian S. NealeSean E. ObermeyerBen PearlmanColleen M. PowersMark A. RederSonja L. RiceLeslie W. SchickelMichael P. ShanahanLinda D. Yager Reed

2008Kelli M. BlockJacob V. BradleyMeredith A. DevlinBrenda K. DevriesChristopher J. EckhartTali GiveonLynne D. HammerOni N. HartonTasha R. KelleyKevin D. KoonsChris J. KoschnitzkySarah T. MacGillPatrick R. MalloyTabitha MeierJessica A. MitchellHolly J. MooreMatthew MorganJoseph K. MummertTheresa R. ParishDavid J. PryzbylskiToni M. PurdumChristopher L. PurnellHolly A. ReedySean M. RussellMichael A. ValinetzParaskevi Patty N. Xidias

2009Kay D. BairdRobin J. BandyEric R. FrandsenCarlo T. GirolamoAndrew M. HeatonAndrew F. MarquisJohn M. McLaughlinMaria E. MesolorasTiffany T. MurrayMatthew K. PhillipsCaroline E. RichardsonKyle RingRobert N. SahrElissa A. ShetlerBryan S. StrawbridgeEdward D. ThomasJennifer R. TudorDavid P. Wilson

2010Christina M. AlexanderVictoria Lewinski CainAndrea L. CiobanuChristina J. FotschKelly HuangJonathan A. KnollZachary T. LeeRyan C. MarquesKip S. McDonaldMarc A. MenkveldDavid E. PaulElizabeth A. TrachtmanDanielle B. TuckerJustin T. Walton

2011Courtney L. AndreoneJanet K. ChandlerZachary G. JacobRyan K. LightyJulie M. MahomedEric M. NeuburgerMelissa L. Stuart

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 rivately-funded scholarships and awards assist our students in lightening the heavy financial burden of law school. We would like to

thank these donors for their tremendous support and for recognizing the importance of scholarships and awards to our students.

The selection criteria for these scholarships and awards vary, as some reward strong academic record and others are based on

financial need. The following pages list our scholarships and awards for the 2010-2011 academic year and the respective recipients.

PBarbara Abrams ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2005 by Jerome, Jeffrey, ‘81, and John Abrams in memory of Barbara “Bobbie” K. Abrams. The scholarship supports one annual graduate student with both exceptional academic performance and financial need.Michael J. Hoffman

Allen County Bar Foundation ScholarshipThis scholarship is funded by the Allen County Bar Foundation and is awarded to a student who is from Allen County, Indiana.Jessica A. Niese

Annual CLE ScholarshipThe law school sponsors an annual Continuing Legal Education (CLE) program. The proceeds of this program are used to award scholarships to deserving students.Whitney M. BrockusAshley A. FryCasey C. MorganAmy L. NicholasMatthew C. OlsenJeremy R. ParkerKathleen E. TabbertLance R. Worland

Edward P. Archer Labor Law AwardThis award is presented to the top students in Labor Law and Labor Arbitration courses. The award is funded by gifts from Gregory J. Utken, ‘74, and David W. Miller, ‘77, partners in the Indianapolis law firm of Baker & Daniels LLP.Macon JonesBryan M. Likins

Lloyd G. Balfour ScholarshipFunded by a bequest from Lloyd G. Balfour this scholarship recognizes one student annually for academic achievement with a preference given to members of Phi Delta Phi Legal Fraternity.J. Eric Schronce

Banta ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1978 by a bequest from the estate of George Banta, Jr., and it is named in memory of David D. Banta, the first Dean of the Indiana University School of Law.Jodi L. Walters

Judge Betty Barteau ScholarshipThis scholarship was established by Addison M. Beavers in 1997 to honor his longtime friend, the Hon. Betty Barteau, ‘65. Judge Barteau

is a former judge of the Indiana Court of Appeals, Fifth District, and she has also served as a judicial advisor in Russia. The scholarship is awarded to deserving law students with a preference given to women.Kelly Brummett

Mollie E. Bennett FellowshipEstablished in 1975 by the estate of Mollie E. Bennett, this fellowship is awarded annually to deserving students who demonstrate a need for financial assistance.Alex T. Krouse

Best Brief in the Robert H. Staton Intramural Moot Court CompetitionThis award is given to the students submitting the best briefs in the third semester of legal writing as a component of moot court participation.Ashley N. Lindenmier

Bingham McHale LLP Tax AwardOne annual award of $500, given to one student who has demonstrated outstanding ability in the subject of taxation. This award is granted by the law firm of Bingham McHale LLP, of Indianapolis, Indiana.Hao Wang

Patrick J. Burns Excellence in Tax AwardThis award was established by Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP in 2008 in memory of Patrick J. Burns, ‘78. Two annual awards of $2,500 each are given to two students who have excelled in at least two tax courses at the law school with a preference for those students who have shown an interest in practicing tax at an accounting firm. The recipients must be pursuing a law degree, an accounting degree, and/or an MBA from Indiana University.Teddy N. LahoudMatthew C. Piatt

Charles C. Carey Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1987 by the late Mary T. Carey and friends to honor the memory of her husband, Charles C. Carey, ‘75, a trial attorney with Dow Chemical Company.Kelly S. Earls

Cohen & Malad ScholarshipThis scholarship was established by Cohen & Malad, LLP in 2006. The recipients will be in the top 50% of his/her class, demonstrate an interest in volunteerism, and demonstrate financial need.Daniel Lundstrom

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Otto W. and Jessie A. Cox Memorial Scholarship

The Otto W. and Jessie A. Cox Memorial Scholarship was established in 1979 through a bequest to the law school from Jessie Adele Cox. It is awarded to deserving students.Jacob A. May

John J. Dillon Memorial ScholarshipThis endowed scholarship was established in 1983 in recognition of a distinguished alumnus and former Attorney General for the State of Indiana, John J. Dillon, ‘52. The income from the endowment is awarded annually to selected students on the basis of academic promise, character, financial need, and previous military record, if any. Recipients are selected by the Dillon Scholarship Committee.Erin R. ElamJin KongAaron P. KriegerMegan M. LewisMy-Phuong Anna Ly-PhamLeslie M. SmithJudith A. Thompson

Velma Dobbins ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1994 in honor of Velma E. Dobbins, who retired after seventeen years of service as the law school recorder. Scholarships are awarded to students with a record of academic excellence and financial need.Kimberly A. Opsahl

James V. Donadio ScholarshipEstablished in 1988 through a substantial gift from the Indianapolis firm of Ice Miller Donadio & Ryan to honor the memory of its senior partner, with continuing support through the years from many friends and colleagues of James V. Donadio, this scholarship provides substantial tuition reimbursement for a student exhibiting academic excellence and

demonstrable financial need. Preference is given to full-time students who have completed no more than two semesters of law school and who intend to remain full-time during the remainder of law school.Sean R. RothBeau F. Zoeller

Equal Justice Works Professor Florence Wagman Roisman Summer ScholarshipEqual Justice Works, a student-run organization dedicated to public service through law and justice, sponsors this scholarship. It is given in honor of Professor Florence Wagman Roisman in recognition of her receiving the Outstanding Law Faculty Award from the national Equal Justice Works organization. A student awarded this scholarship must have a tentative job offer in an area of Public Interest Law.Amy L. NicholasKatherine Velora RobinsonJennifer S. SanohJohn L. Tao

J. Patrick and Eleanor L. Endsley ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 by the late Judge J. Patrick Endsley, ‘56, and his wife, the late Eleanor L. Endsley. It is given to a part-time working student who is a resident of Indiana based on financial need.Naun A. Benitez

T.M. Englehart, Jr. Memorial FellowshipThis fellowship was established in 1980 in memory of Theodore M. Englehart, Jr., son of T. M. Englehart, Sr. and the late Nancy C. Englehart. Two fellowships are awarded annually based on academic record, evidence of exceptional talent, financial need, and high moral character.Nicholaus D. EddyMaritza K. Webb

T.M. Englehart, Jr.

Memorial Fellowship

recipients Nick Eddy

and Maritza Webb are

shown with Ted and

Dorothy Englehart.

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Sidney D. Eskenazi ScholarshipEstablished in 1970 by a gift from Sidney D. Eskenazi, this scholarship is awarded to students who are residents of Indiana and have demonstrated a reasonable expectation of devoting their time and energy to making a contribution to the State of Indiana.Joshua N. Bittinger James K. Wisco

G. Kent Frandsen ScholarshipThis scholarship was established to honor the late Associate Dean G. Kent Frandsen, ‘65, and was made possible by contributions from friends, colleagues, family, and former recipients. The scholarship supports incoming students and is based on demonstrated leadership ability, undergraduate extracurricular activity and grade point average, financial need, and community involvement, with a preference for Indiana residents. The scholarship is renewable if academic performance is excellent and financial need continues.Amy L. BeardKatherine E. FloodJustin P. Forkner

Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman Health Law AwardThis award, presented annually to a graduating student who has excelled in health law, is provided by the law firm of Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman of Indianapolis, Indiana.Julie M. Mahomed

Judge Ralph Hamill Memorial AwardThis award was established in 1973 with a gift from the estate of Judge Ralph Hamill. It is given to senior student members of the Ralph Hamill Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity, International, who have evidenced those qualities of leadership and legal scholarship required of capable and competent lawyers including such qualities as honesty, integrity, common sense, and knowledge of law.Richard J. LeeScott C. Robichaux

William F. Harvey Endowed ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1997, funded by many gifts in honor of Professor Emeritus William F. Harvey. The scholarship is awarded to law students who demonstrate academic achievement and financial need, with preference given to students who have demonstrated academic achievement in the areas of civil procedure or evidence.Amy K. Jacobson

Hendrickson ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2004 by the estate of Dorothy Hendrickson Leggett, ‘49. It also honors Harry C. Hendrickson, Harry H. Hendrickson, and Richard E. Hendrickson, ‘82, and is awarded to worthy law students.Kathleen S. Crebo

Cale J. Holder ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1984 in memory of Hon. Cale J. Holder, who graduated from the old Benjamin Harrison Law School in 1934 and received his Doctor of Jurisprudence from the Indiana Law School in 1938. It is awarded annually to students based on dedication to the administration of law, financial need, desire to be a practicing trial lawyer, capacity for leadership, academic achievement, and military service record, if any. The recipients are selected by the Holder Scholarship Committee.Michael A. DelphEdward M. Smid

John E. Hurt and Mary Doswell Hurt ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 by the estate of John E. Hurt, ‘44. The scholarship is given to law students with preference given to those who are from Morgan County, Indiana.Whitney N. CooperJames K. Wisco

IBA Taxation Section ScholarshipEstablished in 2005 by the Executive Council of the Taxation Section of the Indianapolis Bar Association, this scholarship goes to a student who has excelled in one or more tax classes, with a preference given to students with an interest in pursuing a career in Indiana in tax or a tax-related field.Matthew S. Long

The recipient of the William F. Harvey Endowed Scholarship, Amy Jacobson,

visited with Dean Harvey and Gerry Harvey at the Donor/Scholar Brunch.

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Indiana State Bar Association Taxation Section Award

One annual award of $500 and a certificate given each year to one outstanding tax law student. This award is granted by the Taxation Section of the Indiana State Bar Association, of Indianapolis, Indiana.Jennifer A. Carnes

Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis Faculty PrizeThis prize, funded by contributions from the law school’s faculty, is given to a graduating student on the basis of scholarship, service, and demonstrated capacity for leadership.Katherine J. Mercer-Lawson

Indianapolis Bar Foundation Dillin-Noland-Steckler ScholarshipThis annual scholarship was established by the Indianapolis Bar Association and Bar Foundation in honor of the Honorable S. Hugh Dillin, the Honorable James E. Noland, and the Honorable William E. Steckler. The scholarship is awarded on a rotating basis so that each of the named scholarships will be awarded every third year. The scholarships are awarded to second- or third-year students. The Dillin Scholarship is awarded to second- or third-year law students based on academic excellence (as determined by GPA and class ranking), a demonstrated commitment to civil rights, and a demonstrated commitment to the legal profession. The Noland Scholarship is based on academic excellence, a demonstrated commitment to advancing understanding of the law, and orientation toward public service. The Steckler Scholarship is based on academic excellence, financial need, and orientation toward public service.Sara M. Benson

Indianapolis Bar Foundation Rosalie F. Felton ScholarshipThis scholarship is made possible by the Indianapolis Bar Foundation and is named in memory of Rosalie F. Felton. It is awarded to a second- or third-year student who demonstrates dedication to the practice of law, an active involvement in community service, and academic excellence.James R. Smerbeck

Indianapolis Bar Foundation Neil E. Shook ScholarshipThe Indianapolis Bar Foundation awards this scholarship in memory of Neil E. Shook, ‘75, a past president of the Indianapolis Bar Association. It is awarded to a second-year law student based on academic proficiency, interest in creditors’ rights and bankruptcy law, financial need, exceptional leadership skills, demonstrated commitment to excellence, and a proponent of civility in the legal profession.Amanda K. Dalton

Indianapolis Law Alumni Association ScholarshipThe Board of Directors of the Law School Alumni Association funds scholarships to assist deserving law students in the pursuit of their legal education, to enhance the school’s ability to financially

facilitate the education of its most promising students, and to foster loyalty of the law school’s future alumni.James B. BanisterJennifer L. EkblawTara L. GerberJohn P. HigginsMelinda K. MainsKatherine J. Mercer-LawsonEdward M. SmidMelissa L. StuartWesley Womer

Forrest E. Jump Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1980 by a generous gift from the estate of Frieda E. Jump in loving memory of her late husband, Judge Forrest E. Jump, a respected and admired former judge of the Howard County Circuit Court in Kokomo, Indiana, and a 1908 graduate of the Indiana Law School. The scholarships are given to students based on academic credentials, financial need, well-rounded interests and activities, professional qualities and attitudes, and high moral character. The Jump Scholarships are awarded to incoming first-year law student and are renewable if the students remain in good standing with the law school and meet certain GPA requirements.Charles B. DaughertySarah E. HeilmanMary E. LaddKatherine J. Mercer-LawsonEmily A. Shrock

Katz & Korin Estate and Business Tax AwardOne annual award of $500, given to one student who has demonstrated outstanding ability in both estate and business taxation law. This award is granted by the law firm of Katz & Korin, of Indianapolis Indiana.James R. Smerbeck

Stephen W. Kellams Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship honors the late Stephen Kellams, a 1992 summa cum laude graduate of the law school, and a former attorney with Barnes and Thornburg in Indianapolis. Following his untimely death in 1996, family, friends, and colleagues generously established this scholarship fund in his memory. The scholarship is given to students who demonstrate financial need and academic achievement, with preference given to students who majored in music or mathematics as undergraduates or who have taught school.Eric GrzegorskiSiarhei U. Zaitsau

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Clara Lee Kittle ScholarshipJames Louis Kittle, Jr., ‘69, and John Lee Kittle established this scholarship in 1994 in memory of their mother, Clara Lee Kittle. The scholarship is given to full-time law students who participate in extracurricular activities and have potential to make a contribution to society.Alexander R. Schmitt

Alan I. Klineman ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 by Alan I., ‘56, and Dorothy C. Klineman. It is given to an incoming student who is a resident of Indiana.Heather A. Shah

Jon D. Krahulik Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2005 by the law firm of Bingham McHale LLP in memory of Jon D. Krahulik, ‘69, a former managing partner at Bingham McHale for 19 years. It is given to a student who has a record of academic excellence.Matthew A. Brown

Labor Management Relations Seminar ScholarshipThe law school co-sponsors an annual labor law seminar with the Indianapolis Regional Office of the National Labor Relations Board. Proceeds from the seminar fund scholarships to second-year students who have enrolled in a labor or employment law course and have financial need, scholastic achievement, demonstrated interest in labor and employment law, ethnic diversity, and any other special circumstances warranting consideration.Bryan M. LikinsDavid Vlink

Lefstein Legacy ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2003 to honor Norman Lefstein on his retirement of 14 years of outstanding service to the law school as Dean. A scholarship is awarded to a returning student who has demonstrated a commitment to public service, including especially a willingness to assist persons who are economically disadvantaged, and a scholarship is also awarded to an incoming minority student in an effort to promote diversity within the student body.Bryan M. LikinsAlise B. PhillipsAshley D. Yee

Eli Lilly Alumni ScholarshipThis scholarship is awarded to students with strong academic performance and demonstrated leadership qualities in law school, undergraduate study, or in the community. It is funded by alumni of the law school who are, or have been, employed at Eli Lilly and Company.Viorel CiobanuAngela B. Freeman

Amy K. JacobsonRobert A. JorczakMelinda K. MainsKatherine J. Mercer-LawsonWesley Womer

Lloyd Littell Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship, established by a generous gift from the estate of Marjorie W. Littell of West Lafayette, Indiana, is given in memory of her husband, Lloyd W. Littell, ‘42. Two scholarships are awarded each year.Richard McKnight SchillingAlicia A. Wanker

Christopher M. Maine Advocacy AwardThis award is given to the top advocate in the final round of the law school intramural moot court competition. The award is named in honor of the late Christopher M. Maine, ‘90, winner of the Martin-Haas Prize in the 1988 intramurals, and it is funded annually from the Christopher M. Maine Memorial Scholarship Endowment, which was established in 1991 by gifts from family and friends.Eric Grzegorski

Dean Emeritus Norman Lefstein met scholarship recipients at the Donor/

Scholar Brunch. From left: David Vlink, Dean Lefstein, and Bryan Likins.

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Christopher M. Maine Memorial Scholarship

This scholarship was established in 1992 with memorial contributions from family and friends of Christopher M. Maine, ‘90. Preference is given to Chinese students enrolled in the law school’s J.D. program who exhibit academic achievement and financial need.Hao Wang

Martha Snoddy Marshall Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 in memory of Martha Snoddy Marshall. It is given to students enrolled at the law school who have a record of academic achievement.Theodore R. Batson, Jr.

Mitzi H. Martin Moot Court AwardThis award is funded annually by a gift from Mitzi H. Martin, ‘85, a partner at Baker & Daniels. It is given to the top advocate in the preliminary rounds of the law school intramural moot court competition.Alexander R. Berger

John E. Marynell Endowed ScholarshipThis endowed scholarship was established in 2009 by John E. Marynell, ‘67, after funding an annual scholarship since 1994. This scholarship is awarded to an incoming first-year law student who has demonstrated financial need and the potential to succeed in the practice of law. It is renewable for the second- and third-years of law school if the recipient meets certain GPA requirements.Samer S. Fakhran

Annalee Webb Miller ScholarshipThis scholarship is named in memory of Annalee Webb Miller, who with her husband, James Lawrence Miller, wanted to recognize law students who had excellent scholastic records and were also working their way through law school. The scholarship is awarded to a second-year law student who exhibits financial need and is working while in law school to pay the cost of legal education.Jeffery Gorham

National Attorneys’ Title Assurance Fund AwardThis award is made possible by the National Attorneys’ Title Assurance Fund. An award is made annually to a top student in real property law class.Kory T. Bell

C.S. Ober Endowed ScholarshipEstablished by the Ober Foundation in memory of Ceril ‘Cy’ S. Ober, ‘44, this scholarship is given to a student who has demonstrated financial need and the capability for achieving excellence in the practice of law.Courtney Andreone

Charles R. Oehrle ScholarshipEstablished in 1982, this award is named for Charles R. Oehrle, ‘68. It is given annually to students who have demonstrated outstanding performance in estate planning or insurance law courses.Edward M. Smid

The Papke PrizeThis prize was established in 2001 and is named in honor of Professor David R. Papke, former R. Bruce Townsend Professor of Law and faculty advisor to the IndIana law revIew. The award is given annually to the student who has written the best note in the IndIana law revIew.Lara K. Langeneckert

Woodrow W. Pence Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship fund was established in memory of Woodrow ‘Woody’ W. Pence. Mr. Pence served as Chief United States Probation Officer in the Southern District of Indiana. He later spent several years serving as the law school’s Placement Director. His daughter, Linda L. Pence, ‘74, and son, Michael B. Pence, ‘79, both graduated from our law school. The scholarship is given to students based on financial need combined with academic achievement and evident leadership qualities.Jennifer B. BeinartJordan Szymialis

Ronald W. Polston ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2002 by Yi Zhang, ‘96, in honor of Ronald W. Polston, Professor of Law Emeritus. It is awarded to one or more students enrolled in the J.D., LL.B., or LL.M. program with preference given to Chinese students.Wenqin Fan

Joan M. Ruhtenberg Scholarship for Achievement in Life and Legal WritingThis scholarship was established in 1997 by Michael A. Mullett, ‘82, and his wife, Patricia N. March, in honor of Professor Joan Ruhtenberg, ‘80, the Director of Legal Analysis, Research, and Communication at the law school. The scholarship is given to a student who demonstrates excellence in legal writing, qualifies for financial need, and overcame obstacles in order to be admitted to the law school.Melody S. HinesNicole R. Veal

Judge John Ryan ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 in memory of Judge John M. Ryan by his friends and family. The scholarship supports students who are Indiana residents with superior aptitude for the study of law. Preference is given to those students who have overcome obstacles to achieve their admission to the law school, graduates of Indiana colleges and universities, employment experience in government agencies, and those who intend to live and work in Indiana after graduation.Noelle M. Stock

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Michael J. Sacopulos Tax AwardsTen annual awards of $100 each, given to ten students who have demonstrated the ability to do quality legal tax work in one or more tax courses. These awards are granted by Michael J. Sacopulos, attorney at law, of Terre Haute, Indiana.Robert R. AndersonEric M. BlumeAmber D. CollinsValerie CowanAllison N. DeYoungMatthew B. GaudinElizabeth R. JonesBrandy M. KumferYana Y. SpitzerRyan W. Tanselle

Thomas M. Scanlon Memorial ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2002 by family and friends in memory of Thomas M. Scanlon, a 1935 graduate of the old Benjamin Harrison Law School. It is given to law students who demonstrate academic achievement and financial need with a preference for those enrolled in the part-time evening program.Perry J. Whan

Shirley A. Shideler ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2003 by Gail Frye in memory of her mother, Shirley A. Shideler, ‘64. Ms. Shideler made history by becoming the first woman partner of a large Indiana law firm in 1971 and the first woman president of the Indiana Bar Foundation. Her contributions to the legal profession were numerous as she acted as an outstanding role model for female attorneys. Ms. Shideler was named Outstanding Alumna of the Year in 2001 by the law school, and in 1995, she received the Antoinette Dakin Leach Award from the Indianapolis Bar Association. She was truly a pioneer for women in the legal profession.Christina M. Bellardo

Curtis E. Shirley Tax AwardsTwo annual awards of $500 each, given to two students who have demonstrated excellent ability in the area of federal and/or state tax procedure. These awards are granted by Curtis E. Shirley, attorney at law, of Indianapolis, Indiana and a member of the graduating class of 1991.Charles Christopher Engel IITheresa A. Searles

Ben F. Small Memorial FellowshipThis endowed fund was established in memory of Ben F. Small by his family and friends. He was a former dean of the law school and distinguished member of the faculty.Amber R. Malcolm

Benjamin F. Small ScholarshipThe Benjamin F. Small Scholarship Fund was endowed in 2002 by a gift from the Evelyn H. Blanford Trust to honor the memory of Benjamin F. Small, a former dean of the law school. The scholarship supports law students with a preference for Indiana residents who demonstrate financial need.Emily L. AngelAshley L. BrianKayla R. HanlonKatherine E. Scott

Robert S. Smith Memorial ScholarshipThis endowed scholarship was established in 1995 through a bequest of Mrs. Dorothy Foster Smith Harrison to honor her late husband, Robert S. Smith, a 1927 graduate of the Benjamin Harrison Law School. Mrs. Harrison, who passed away in October 1994, established the scholarship to provide assistance to part-time evening law students who demonstrate financial need and academic achievement.Viorel CiobanuAmanda K. DaltonLaura M. LongstreetLeslie M. SmithJohn Thomas Young

Harold W. Starr ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 1999 by the estate of Martha Johnson Starr in memory of her late husband, Harold W. Starr, to provide scholarship funds for deserving law students.Martsyl Joseph

The Honorable Robert H. Staton “Best Brief” ScholarshipThis scholarship was established in 2007 by the late Hon. Robert H. Staton, ‘55. The scholarship is given to the law student who has completed two semesters of the Legal Analysis, Research, and Communication courses and has written the best brief among those prepared for class assignments.Brock L. Easton

Larry W. Suciu Windfall AwardThese awards are funded by Larry W. Suciu, ‘69, and awarded to students who are working either part- or full-time and “giving their all” to complete law school. The windfall is supposed to be spent on something fun and frivolous.Amanda K. DaltonAlfred DegrafinreidJulie M. ElliottKimberly A. OpsahlJeremy R. ParkerBrandon A. SkatesJayne A. StoneRonald A. TapiaDoris B. TolliverAdele A. Wood

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Scholarship and Award Recipients 2010-2011 Franklin D. and Susie H. Tally Scholarship

This scholarship was established in 1990 by a generous bequest to Indiana University from the estate of Franklin D. Tally. It is awarded to students pursuing degrees in law, medicine, or the ministry.Yuka E. Miura

USA Funds ScholarshipThis scholarship is funded by United Student Aid Funds, Inc. at the direction of David B., ‘90, and Julia A., ‘90, Boodt. The recipients are chosen based on need.Sierra BunnellBrandy Swing Kumfer

Winning Team in the Robert H. Staton Intramural Moot Court CompetitionThis award recognizes the winning team of the Robert H. Staton Intramural Moot Court Competition at the law school.Eric GrzegorskiAshley N. Lindenmier

Women’s Caucus AwardThe Women’s Caucus student organization at the law school provides an annual award to a student who has demonstrated a high potential for outstanding future contributions to the advancement of women in the legal community.Kathleen S. Crebo

Harold R. Woodard ScholarshipThis scholarship is made possible by the generosity of the late Harold R. Woodard, who was a member of the Indianapolis Bar and a professorial lecturer at the law school for many years. The scholarship is awarded on the basis of character, scholastic attainment, and capacity for law study.Ryan B. AdamsWhitney N. CooperKatelyn M. HinesKelleigh M. IrwinTraci Tetrick

Drew Young FellowshipThis fellowship was established in 1987 by Eleanor M. Weaver in honor of Richard Andrew ‘Drew’ Young, ‘71. It is given to a deserving, upper class students with demonstrable financial need and a preference to students who have family responsibilities.Zachary J. Mulholland

Clara Woodard met

the recipients of the

Harold R. Woodard

Scholarship at the

Donor/Scholar Brunch.

From left: Katelyn M.

Hines, Ryan B. Adams,

Clara Woodard,

Kelleigh M. Irwin, and

Whitney N. Cooper.

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Board of Visitors 2011-2012 James M. Barkley, ‘77Secretary and General CounselSimon Property Group, Inc.Indianapolis, IN

Franklin E. Breckenridge, Sr., ‘68Breckenridge Law FirmElkhart, IN

Susan W. Brooks, ‘89Gen. Counsel & Sr. V.P. ofWorkforce & Economic DevelopmentIvy Tech Central IndianaIndianapolis, IN

James T. Burns, ‘75Senior CounselIce Miller LLPIndianapolis, IN

Pamela L. Carter, ‘84PresidentCummins Distribution BusinessFranklin, TN

Richard W. Fields, ‘82Chairman & Chief Executive OfficerJuridica Capital Management Ltd.New York, NY

Michael D. Freeborn, ‘72PartnerFreeborn & PetersChicago, IL

Kristin G. Fruehwald, ‘75PartnerBarnes & Thornburg LLPIndianapolis, IN

Robert T. Grand, ‘82Managing PartnerBarnes & Thornburg LLPIndianapolis, IN

Lacy M. Johnson, ‘81PartnerIce Miller LLPIndianapolis, IN

S. Steven “Spike” Karalekas, ‘70Senior ConsultantClark & WeinstockWashington, D.C.

John F. Kautzman, ‘84 PartnerRuckelshaus Kautzman Blackwell Bemis & HasbrookIndianapolis, IN

Hon. Jane E. Magnus-Stinson, ‘83Federal JudgeU.S. District CourtSouthern District of IndianaIndianapolis, IN

Paul S. Mannweiler, ‘76PartnerBose McKinney and EvansIndianapolis, IN

Barry L. Meadow, ‘75Law Offices of Barry L. MeadowMiami, FL

L. Steven Miller, ‘73 Chief Executive OfficerGriffin Enterprises LLCIndianapolis, IN

Alan K. Mills, ‘82PartnerBarnes & Thornburg LLPIndianapolis, IN

William R. Neale, ‘73 PartnerKrieg DeVault LLPIndianapolis, IN

Douglas K. Norman, ‘88General Patent CounselEli Lilly and CompanyIndianapolis, IN

Reed S. Oslan, ‘87PartnerKirkland & Ellis LLPChicago, IL

Linda L. Pence, ‘74PartnerPenceHensel LLCIndianapolis, IN

Michael K. Phillips, ‘69PartnerPhillips & PhillipsBoonville,

John C. Render, Jr., ‘71ChairmanHall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman, PCIndianapolis, IN

Mark A. Roesler, ‘82Chairman & Chief Executive OfficerCMG Worldwide, Inc.Indianapolis, IN

Alan M. Spears, ‘90Sr. V.P. & Sr. Trust OfficerFirst Bank RichmondRichmond, IN

William B. Stephan, ‘84Vice President for EngagementIndiana UniversityIndianapolis, IN

Stephen A. Stitle, ‘70President IndianaPNC Financial Services GroupIndianapolis, IN

John R. Talley, ‘70PresidentProLiance Holdings, LLCIndianapolis, IN

John C. Trimble, ‘81Managing PartnerLewis Wagner LLPIndianapolis, IN

Steven L. Tuchman, ‘71DirectorLewis & Kappes PCIndianapolis, IN

James H. Voyles, Jr., ‘68PartnerVoyles Zahn Paul Hogan & MerrimanIndianapolis, IN

Michael W. Wells, ‘79PresidentREI Investments, Inc.Carmel, IN

EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS

Kerry Hyatt Blomquist, ‘ 90President-ElectIndianapolis Bar AssociationIndiana Coaltion Against Domestic ViolenceIndianapolis, IN

C. Erik ChickedantzPresidentIndiana State Bar AssociationHawk, Haynie, Kammeyer & Chickedantz, LLPFort Wayne, IN

A. Scott Chinn, ‘94PresidentIndianapolis Bar AssociationBaker & Daniels LLPIndianapolis, IN

Jimmie L. McMillian, ‘02PresidentAlumni Association Board of DirectorsBarnes & Thornburg LLPIndianapolis, IN

Hon. Randall T. ShepardChief JusticeIndiana Supreme CourtIndianapolis, IN

Daniel B. VinovichPresident-ElectIndiana State Bar AssociationHilbrich Cunningham Dobosz Vinovich & Sandoval LLPHighland, IN

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Alumni Association Board of Directors 2011-2012

Members of the law school’s Board of Visitors and Alumni Board of Directors at their joint meeting in the spring. Front row: Julie Roe Lach, Franklin E. Breckenridge, Sr., and John Kautzman. Second row: Michele Bax, Kristin Fruehwald, Michael Freeborn, Alan Spears, Scott Chinn, Tom Oberhausen, Adam Arceneaux, Dean Gary Roberts, Eric Riegner, Hon. Robyn L. Moberly, Bill Neale and Mary Panzi. Third row: Jimmie McMillian, Jeff Lind, Karen Orr, Paul Kruse, Steven Karalekas, Tadd Miller, Jerry Withered, Jim Burns, John Render, Jim Gilday, John Trimble, Steve Tuchman, Scott Yonover, Tom Malapit, Hon. Gerald S. Zore, Allyson Breeden, Linda Meier, Bill Stephan, Paul Mannweiler, SBA President Josh Levin, Hon. Jane Magnus-Stinson, and Patrick Schauer.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

PresidentJimmie McMillian, ‘02

Vice-PresidentHon. Patricia A. Riley, ‘74

SecretaryA. Scott Chinn, ‘94

TreasurerHon. Robyn L. Moberly, ‘78

Executive Council RepresentativeThomas J. Oberhausen, ‘82

Immediate Past PresidentJulie Roe Lach, ‘04

Ryan O. Marques, ‘10Tadd M. Miller, ‘06Karen R. Orr, ‘89Tony C. Pearson, ‘10Hon. Patricia A. Riley ‘74 Barbara B. Stevens, ‘85

2011-2014Allyson R. Breeden ‘01Pamela J. Hensler, ‘00Max Kelln, ‘07Jenna N. LeClere, ‘08Michael T. McNally, ‘02Thomas J. Oberhausen ‘82Mary F. Panszi, ‘88Mary F. Schmid, ‘93Juval O. Scott, ‘02LaKesha D. Triggs, ‘07

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

2009-2012Dennis E. Bland ‘92Kathy L. Kolger, ‘84Julie Roe Lach, ‘04Linda K. Meier, ‘87Hon. Robyn L. Moberly, ‘78Eric A. Riegner, ‘88Hon. Margret G. Robb, ‘78Patrick J. Schauer, ‘79

2010-2013Hon. L. Mark Bailey, ‘82Michele L. Bax, ‘01A. Scott Chinn, ‘94 Sara Cobb, ‘90Paul S. Kruse, ‘81Tom R. Malapit, ‘96

SBA PresidentJosh Levin

Friend of the Board RepresentativeHon. Gerald S. Zore, ‘68

Ex-Officio MembersElizabeth Allington Stefan DavisAmanda KammanJonna Kane MacDougall, ‘86Danny KibbleJohnny PryorDean Gary RobertsChasity Thompson, ‘02Mark Wunder

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Professor fran Watson and law student Melinda Mains represented the

school’s Clinical program, where, over the past 10 years, more than 1,000

students have assisted more than 800 local clients in need. LaWand Ward

and Matt Gaudin represented the Pro Bono program, where students have

provided 128,000 hours of free legal service in the past 15 years. Ward

directs the Pro Bono Program and Professor Watson is co-director of the Clinics.

Professor Fran Watson, ‘80, Pro Bono Program Director LaWanda Ward, ‘03, Melinda Mains (3L), and Matt Gaudin (3L) were featured at the Indianapolis Colts football game against the Tennessee Titans on December 18th as the IUPUI “IMPACT Persons” of the game. They were chosen to highlight the law school’s commitment to serving the community.

106 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

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Multidisciplinary Science Building II

spirit.iu.edu

Spirit of IU

Upcoming Events 2012 February 2, 2012 Operation LAWS: CLE and Networking ReceptionTime: 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. Location: Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)A panel discussion on collective bargaining and labor relations in the NFL featuring Dean Gary R. Roberts; Dennis Curran, senior vice-president and general counsel for the NFL Management Council (invited); and Gregg Levy, senior partner at Covington & Burling and chief outside counsel for the NFL (invited).CLE: 1.0 credit (pending approval)Time: 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. Post-CLE/Pre-Bowl Reception Location: Conour AtriumContact: Danny Kibble at (317-274-8828 or [email protected]) February 10, 2012 Winter College American Vistas: This Land is Your LandLocation: Naples Grande Beach Resort, 475 Seagate Drive, Naples, FloridaContact: Nicki Bland (812-855-6843 or [email protected])CLE: 2.0 credits

February 16, 2012 International Human Rights Guest SpeakerTime: 2:30 p.m.Speaker: Leymah Gbowee of Liberia, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize Co-recipientLocation: Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)Contact: Shari Baldwin (317-274-8036 or [email protected])

February 16, 2012 Women’s Caucus Auction Time: 7:00 p.m.Location: Conour AtriumContact: Melinda Mains ([email protected])

March 6, 2012Indiana Supreme Court Lecture A Conversation with Chief Justice Rebecca White Berch Time: 5:00 p.m.Speaker: Chief Justice Rebecca White Berch, Supreme Court of ArizonaLocation: Wynne CourtroomContact: Shari Baldwin (317-274-8036 or [email protected])CLE: 1.0 credit

March 30, 2012 5th Annual Spring Symposium on Environmental Law and Policy Environmental Stewardship: the role of culture, society, and belief systems in shaping environmental law and policyLocation: Wynne Courtroom and Conour AtriumContact: Kyle Galster ([email protected] or 317-274-1916)CLE: 5.0 credits (pending approval)

March 31, 2012 Equal Justice Works Fourth Annual Public Interest Recognition DinnerHonorees: Sheila Jenkins, ‘98, Executive Director, Community Development Law Center; Hon. Michelle Smith Scott, ‘94, Marion County Center Township Small Claims Court; G. Michael Witte, ‘82, Executive Secretary, Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary CommissionTime: TBALocation: Conour AtriumContact: Shari Baldwin (317-274-8036 or [email protected])

April 3, 2012 The James P. White Lecture on Legal EducationThe Transformation of the Legal Profession and Legal Education Time: 5:00 p.m.Speaker: E. Thomas Sullivan, ‘73, Former Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, University of MinnesotaLocation: Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)Contact: Shari Baldwin (317-274-8036 or [email protected])CLE: 1.0 credit

April 5, 2012 indiana law Review SymposiumTopic: Judicial Selection Time: 8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.Keynote: William T. Robinson, III, ABA PresidentFeaturing: Chief Justice Marsha Ternus (former), Iowa Supreme Court; Professor Penny White, University of Tennessee; Attorney James Bopp, Jr.Location: Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)Contact: Beau F. Zoeller at (812) 697-0903CLE: (available pending approval)

April 12, 2012Hall Center for Law and Health 25th Anniversary Symposium and McDonald-Merrill-Ketcham (MMK) Award LectureTime: TBAKeynote/ MMK Award Recipient: Professor Wendy Mariner, the Edward R. Utley Professor of Health Law, Bioethics & Human Rights at Boston UniversityLocation: Wynne Courtroom (Room 100)Contact: Carsandra Knight (317-274-1912 or [email protected])CLE: (available pending approval)

May 4, 2012Evening of Celebration/Alumni ReunionsTime: TBALocation: Inlow HallReserve the date for Classes Without Quizzes CLE programs in the afternoon, an all-class reception to honor the Distinguished Alumni Award recipients, followed by reunion class dinners. More information coming soon!

See the law school web site for more upcoming events: http://indylaw.indiana.edu/news/events.cfm

108 IU ROBERT H. McKINNEY SCHOOL OF LAW WINTER ALUMNI MAGAZINE & DEAN’S REPORT

NonprofitU.S. Postage

PAIDIndianapolis, INPermit No. 803

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