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Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons In Brief Law School Publications 1982 In Brief Follow this and additional works at: hps://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/in_brief is Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Publications at Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in In Brief by an authorized administrator of Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. Recommended Citation In Brief, iss. 25 (1982). hps://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/in_brief/25

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Case Western Reserve UniversitySchool of Law Scholarly Commons

In Brief Law School Publications

1982

In Brief

Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/in_brief

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Publications at Case Western Reserve University School of Law ScholarlyCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in In Brief by an authorized administrator of Case Western Reserve University School of Law ScholarlyCommons.

Recommended CitationIn Brief, iss. 25 (1982).https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/in_brief/25

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in briefLaw Alumni News Bulletin Case Western Reserve University December, 1982

The Dean Reports

The passing of Dean Fletcher Reed Andrews saddens us and leaves the legal community without one of its noblest persons and sagest advisers. His record as an educator and admin­istrator within the law school and University and in leading charitable campaigns as well as providing ser­vices to the courts makes us proud to be part of the CWRU tradition. I know that I speak for all who knew him much better than 1; we are richer for having known him. He was a gentle man of the highest stand­ards. When people think of Fletcher Andrews, the words integrity, kind­ness, intelligence, and humor come to mind. We will miss him and cher-

h his memory.As the autumn leaves turn and tall, le winter snow cannot be far ehind. We likewise must look ahead ot only to completing the year that eems to have just begun but also to ecruiting the class for the fall ot 983. In preparing for this future, ’rofessor Ronald J. Coffey and a lommittee of faculty, students, and itaff have prepared a careful repor hat outlines our goals for the 1980s n admissions and financial aid. It 'harts a course that would reduce the mtering class from its recent 250 to 260 level to a goal of 200 by 1986. It also outlines investment strategies that will ensure careful management of our endowment and loan and scholarship programs designed to attract the highest-quality students tothe School of Law.

To give you some flavor of the dimension of the financial aid prob­lems we face and the kinds of ques­tions the Coffey Committee consid­ered, let me quote from an abstract;

"As a result of governmental and university decisions occurring dur­ing the 81-82 school term, our law students have become ineligible to borrow very substantial principal amounts of loans . . . that were heavily subsidized by the federal government. We estimate that about $870,000 in principal amount of such loans was withdrawn from our students for the 82-83 school term now in progress. For 83-84, the principal amount of subsidized loans withdrawn from our students will be close to $1,000,000. That figure is equal to about 20% of our estimated tuition income for83-84. . . .

"Some students, however, because of their weak credit stand­ing, will be unable to borrow from other sources. Consequently, we must be prepared to capitalize a loan fund to replace some of the principal amount of withdrawn federally subsidized loans.

"The most important observation is that, for all students becoming ineligible for federally subsidized loans, the price of legal education has been increased. Even if they can borrow elsewhere, the terms of their loans will be costlier. Put another way, their cost of education is increased by the present value of subsidies withdrawn by the federal government. For the average stu­dent becoming ineligible for the so- called Graduate Student Loan in 83-84, increased costs of borrowing from alternative sources will have a negative present value of about $1,800. That is, it will appear to each such student that the cost ofeducation—independent ofincreases in tuition, room and board, books, and transportation- has risen by $1,800, or about 30% of the prior year's tuition. ...

"There will probably be enough applicants to fill 240 first-year seats. There is no substantial threat that we will not be able to adrnit enough students to meet our rigid fixed costs. The greater threat is that, absent responses on our part, the quality of our student body will deteriorate. ...

"The most direct way to deal with the problem is to meet it where it originates-in price. The strongest responsive tactic is to dis­tribute our internally funded subsi­dies through a merit-based system that will effectively cut prices to students in relation to their quality. Our present needs-dominated sys­tem of awarding internally funded subsidies does not help us resist the forces that erode student quality. Moreover, in light of the sudderi jump in costs to students caused by reductions in federal subsidies not to mention other rapid increases m

prices—our internally funded sub­sidy programs (grants or subsidized loans) should be expanded. Such a move will involve cutting the resource pie differently or enlarging it, or both. Finally, a reduction of enrollment will aid us somewhat in preserving the quality of the stu­dent body, but such a contraction must be viewed as an ancillary quality-preservation technique, which may create some resource problems of its own, though riot of the magnitude that might instinc­tively be suspected.

"Other responsive tactics are pos­sible, but they are not as promising as the foregoing, and they are sub­ject to substantial criticism. For example, it is proper to warn that we should, in general, be careful about tuition increases, but it can­not be forgotten that tuition is a method of internally funding subsi­dies for higher-quality students. When other methods of funding fail, tuition increases, up to a point, become the resource of last resort."

Ernest Gellhorn

Number 25in briefPublished by the Case Western Reserve University School of Law for alumni, stu­dents, faculty, and friends.Editor

Anne M. McIntyre Law Alumni Office

Faculty Editor Wilbur C. Leatherberry Professor of Law

Copy Editor Barbara Perris

Designer Tom Rask

Law School ''Alumni Association .1982-83 Officers 'Charles R. Ault, '51

PresidentFred D. Kidder, '50

Vice President Richard C. Renkert, '50

Secretary-Treasurer F. Rush McKnight, '55

Annual Fund Chairman M. Patricia Donnelly, '80

Visiting Committee RepresentativeBoard of GovernorsDonald F. Barney, '79 James H. Berick, '58 Edgar H. Boles II, '73 Sheldon Braverman, '65 John J. Carney, '43 Beverly Coen, '77 Byron D. Fair, '48 Ben C. Green, '30 Rosaleen Kiernan, '80 Thomas J. LaFond, '66 George McGaughey '75 John S. Pyle, '74 Robert Reffner, '77 Arthur J. Tassi, '79

CoverThis portrait of Fletcher Reed Andrews, dean of the School of Law from 1948 to 1958, hangs in the lower rotunda of George Gund Hall.

Our ApologiesPlease note: The bust of Abraham Lincoln pictured on the cover of the Autumn,1982, In Brief was given to the law school by Mr. Robert Fillous, the son of Mr. James J. Fillous, the sculptor. The gift was mistakenly credited to Mr. William L. Ziegler, '55. We regret this error.

Dear Alumnus:I have been asked to lead the 1983

Law Alumni Fund drive and I must admit I am pleased to do so. I, like many of you, am deeply honored to be able to practice the profession of law and I am most happy to have an opportunity to assist the school that made it possible.

The year of this fund drive will be Ernie Gellhorn's first year as the new dean of the law school. I cannot think of a better way to extend our welcome to him and to demonstrate the sincerity of that greeting than by offering our financial support.

It is no secret that with the cutback in federal aid programs, private insti­tutions of higher learning will soon be facing hard times. The burden will be placed increasingly, where many urge it should have been all the time, upon individuals like you and me. Many fine young people with out­standing qualifications will be unable to achieve their dream of becoming lawyers simply because of a lack of

money, unless we provide financial aid. Remember, all of the money col­lected in our Law Alumni Fund Drive is used for student aid programs.

The goal for the 1983 Law Annual Fund Drive is $225,000—a modest 4.4 percent increase over the 1982 target. I truly believe we can reach this amount even despite the current recession.

Included elsewhere in this issue of In Brief is a letter report from Charles R. Ault on the 1982 Law Annual Fund Report. The fund drive was a great success and we owe a debt of thanks to Charlie and to all of those who helped out in the campaign.

I hope that all of you who read this letter will lend your support to the 1983 drive because we shall surely need it.

Rush McKnight, '55Chairman, 1983 Law AnnualFund

2

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V

Fletcher Reed AndrewsGentleman, Scholar, and Deanby Oliver C. Schroeder

Late in 1947, Fletcher Reed Andrews became acting dean of Western Reserve Law School. Dean Clarence M. Finfrock, who had reac­tivated the law school after the World War II interregnum, was seriously ill. Upon Dean Finfrock's death in 1948, "Fletch" was named dean. As a teacher at the law school for 22 years, he was already a highly respected scholar in the areas of criminal law, negotiable instruments law, and conflict of laws. He had been designated a Sterling Fellow at Yale Law School, where he was awarded a J.S.D. in 1941. As a consis­tent contributor of scholarly writings, Fletcher Andrews served as associate editor of Throckmorton's Ohio General Code, editor of the Ohio Annotations to the Restatement of Conflict of Laws, and editor of Baldwin's Ohio Law Review and Quizzer. Articles for the University of Cincinnati Law Review, Yale Law Journal, Banking Law Jour­nal, Indiana Law Journal, Ohio State Law Journal, and Western Reserve Law Review further identified him as a solid legal scholar. "Fletch” served his country as a regimental sergeant- major, 37th Division, U.S. Army, in

World War I and as a lieutenant colo­nel, Judge-Advocate General's Corps, U.S. Army, in World War II, for which he was awarded the Legion of Merit. He served his community as a general chairman of the Cleveland Community Chest, forerunner of today's United Way, and as a trustee for the Cleveland Welfare Federation, University School, and the American Red Cross Cleveland Chapter. He served his profession as president of the Cleveland Bar Association, as president of the League of Ohio Law Schools, as chief master and referee for the Cuyahoga County Probate Court, and as a member of the Coun­cil of the American Law Institute and the Executive Committee of the Legal Aid Society.

But it was as dean of the law school that "Fletch" really per­formed. He changed the law school from its role as an excellent school for highly qualified Ohio residents into a school which was to serve out­standing college graduates from the entire nation. During his tenure as dean the legal education program was greatly enhanced by adding a new wing to the dignified old building.

Instructor of law, circa 1930.

3

Dean Andrews with Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., and Associate Justice Rankin M. Gibson. Mqpt Court Night, 1963.

doubling its size; by the expansion of legal writing courses (good legal writ­ing was a special concern of Dean Andrews): by requiring all first-year students to participate in Moot Court; by establishing an excellent law review, by creating the Law-Medicine Center in cooperation with the School of Medicine and the Cuyahoga County Coroner's Office; by institut­ing a graduate program for the LL.M. degree and a continuing legal educa­tion program, both to meet the needs

, of the practicing lawyer; and by enrolling the law school as an early member of the National Moot Court Competition.

Fletcher Reed Andrews, the man, was, in the words of an editorial in the Cleveland Press, January 18, 1951, "one of our greatest civil, legal and human assets. Just a swell guy any way you look at him—is what we mean!" Fletcher Reed Andrews was a "swell guy." He loved his fellow human beings. They loved him. But in all of his life Fletch had one spe­cial love, his wife of nearly 60 years, Marguerite Jeavons. If you think that "Fletch" was a "swell guy," Mar­guerite was a "swell gal." Together they made a "swell couple." Witty, charming, gracious, Marg matched Fletch's talents in concern for their law faculty, their law alumni. The Andrews team was unbeatable and we who lived with them through the great changes in legal education at the University have been doubly blessed.

The following is excerpted from Fletcher R. Andrews: A Profile, by Carl D. Friebolin, which appeared in the Western Reserve Law Review (Volume 9, 1958, p. 404.J

Fletch Andrews ... is a man of multiple talents. It is difficult to trap his performance on paper. Whatever the subject, he was all animation. He was putting his ideas across. When you realize that he was attractively constructed, physically, and had an engaging manner and a clear, bell-like voice, with the ability of shifting his vocal gears without grinding, accom­panied by frequent pertinent gestures and movements, you may well believe that his presentation was arresting, lasting, and vivid—"Vivid"

is the name for Fletcher.There were no dull aridities in his

discourse, no vaporous vagueness, no arthritic cliches. If words are the stuff of which lawyers are made, he knew the words and how to put them together—and in good English. He possessed the incandescence which made his enthusiasm for the subject contagious. And he interlarded his explanations with per­tinent stories and anecdotes, some­times in dialect and frequently with language that was on the salty side. While his students were envisaging the ectoplasmic faces of Hammurabi, Chitty and Story, they would never forget the mobile face of Professor Andrews.

Robert D. Moss, Society of Benchers, 1974.

Gifts can be made to the Fletcher and Marguerite Andrews Endowment Fund at the law school.

Louis A. Toepfer, spring, 1980.

4

The Magnificence of 'Tletch"by Sam Gaines, '23

The year was 1958. Fletcher Reed Andrews was retiring as dean. Stu­dents at our law school who recog­nized in him the embodiment of uncommonly high standards of excel­lence as a teacher, as an administra­tor, and as a member of the legal community, in his honor and in rec­ognition of alumni whose ideals and accomplishments emulated those of "Fletch," established the Fletcher Reed Andrews Outstanding Alumnus Award. I was privileged to compose the presentation remarks made on the first occasion of that award. Each year, save one, during the quarter century since then, on the occasion of the award bestowal, it has been my privilege to compose the presen­tation remarks. On one occasion, when I happened to be the awardee, "Fletch" composed them.

To express, in words, the why of an Andrews award selection, it was nec­essary for me to understand ade­quately the qualities which distin­guished "Fletch." Resultantly the acquaintanceship which existed between "Fletch" and me ripened into a treasured friendship. And, for me, the presentation remarks justify­ing each selection constitute a contin­uum reflecting the ideals and accom­plishments of "Fletch."

Permit me a few random excerpts from past presentation remarks about Andrews awardees, which are illus­tratively apposite "Fletch.” ... "a wise and knowledgeable counselor, sensititve to professional obligations" . . . "warm bearing, fine face ... a personality always distinc­tive, always human ...". . . "teacher to a host of lawyers upon whom he lavishes his learning

while almost literally they sit at his knee and hang upon his every word "ever pragmatic yetnever without a sense of fairness "administrator dis­charging his duties with courteous dispatch . . . integrity and , intelligence "he runs faceforward—his life a pursuit of a pur­suit forever"a talent ... for inducing others to employ the evalua­tive processes of their minds."

. . . unselfish performance in societal affairs "he understood thepoems and processes of democracy and the Federal Constitution ..."... "a deep faith in people irrespec­tive of race, creed, or color ..."... "a life's mosaic etched against a dominant theme of conscience, com­passion, consideration, decency, and fairness—in short—character ...". . . "forceful and amiable ...". . ."forthrightly responsive ...". . . "intensity of devotion, consum­mate skill in performance ...”. . . "exemplary acumen . . . common sense in uncommon degree ...". . . "outstanding dedication to the welfare of his profession and his community. .."... "a mind which thinks, understands, wills, and acts . . . yet possessed of virtues and graces which as the Bard put it "speak what no words can utter."

"Fletch" always regarded the award as a "beautiful tribute . . . the highest honor bestowed upon me at the time of my retirement as dean.” Though handicapped and harassed by gnawing illness, "Fletch" always kept the Jest in life. There were moments when each of us would chide the other in friendly banter. On occasion I referred to the award as sustenance

for his ego. Wryly he once said to me, "Are you a man of action or are you just a talker?", a line from Born Yesterday in quite a different context, as I recall it. In writing to me, how­ever, he was always gracious and generously laudatory. In one letter he wrote, "You and I really have a mutual admiration society going for us, but because it is sincere on both sides, it is very, very good, especially in a world where there is so much adverse criticism and lack of understanding."

In his last letter to me, dated June 26 of this year after the Benchers' dinner, he wrote, "What a wonderful friend you are! It was so good to see you and listen to you at the Ben­chers' dinner. I thank you for the wonderfully kind remarks which you made about me. Actually tears came to my eyes but I managed to blink them away before the other guests sat down. But I will never forget the friendship and affection which you have showed toward me over the long years and you may be assured that your feelings toward me are returned in kind. Affectionately, Fletch."

What an honest and what an elo­quent expression by a beautiful, down-to-earth human being!

It will be easy to maintain a lasting, yet ever fresh, recall of "Fletch," who, as Ollie Schroeder has pointed out, was indeed "quite a guy," as each future Fletcher Reed Andrews Outstanding Alumnus Awardee, each "quite a guy” in his own right, reflects the magnificence of "Fletch."

An Expression of Remembrance of Fletcher Reed Andrewsby Ivan L. Miller, '38

If ever an individual became immortal in his lifetime it was Flet­cher Reed Andrews. His humor, wit, and capacity for friendship; his ele­gance of body, mind, spirit, manner, and gesture; and his down-to-earth­ness, willingness to help and teach, simplicity of expression, and forthrightness were traits which attracted all who were fortunate to come across his horizon as student, colleague, friend, or acquaintance. His dignity and distinguished charac­

ter left an indelible mark in whatever arena he moved, in the public forum, civic assembly, and elsewhere as he served, with distinction, his country and his fellow man.

He became part of us and we became part of him. In that sense all of us have become immortal because of the life he lived.

Ivan L. Miller, '38, Annual Dinner, 1958.

5

V/kExploring a legal precedent

How I Spent My Sabbaticalby Patricia Smith

When the Cleveland Electric Illumi­nating Company, a privately held, regulated utility, went head-to-head with publicly owned, subsidized Muny Light in the Cleveland court­room of Judge Robert B. Krupansky the trial attracted both local and national media attention. But Art Austin, a CWRU law professor with a specialty in antitrust legislation, had a particular interest in the case, an interest that made him a regular spectator in the courtroom as the two utilities slugged it out.

Austin wanted to find out whether jurors would be able to handle the complex arguments that would be

presented to them in such an anti­trust trial. The two CEI-Muny Light trials afforded him the perfect oppor­tunity, and Austin intends to spend the six-month sabbatical he is about to begin sifting through the mass of raw data the trial provided him with.

According to Austin, very few anti­trust cases go to jury. The litigants usually prefer to let a judge resolve the issues. Yet Muny Light believed that its case would have a better chance in front of a jury, and indeed, the first trial resulted in a hung jury, 5-1 in favor of Muny. Unfortunately for Muny Light, the second trial was decided in favor of CEI, but with two

juries, Austin had more chance for observation.

Austin not only watched the jurors during the trial; he talked to them afterward, went to their homes, and invited them to the School of Law, where he videotaped their reactions to the experience. He had a readabil­ity study done on the instructions to the jury and intends to take more measurements of the jury's abilities. Already he has noted one fact: "It would take anywhere from a 16th- to an 18th-year education to understand the jury instructions, and except for one alternate, none of the jurors went beyond high school."

Austin believes the type of study he is doing is a first. "To my knowl­edge, it is the only time someone has taken two juries and interviewed them extensively to determine how well they understood a trial's pro­ceedings," he says.

Once he reaches his conclusions, Austin's work may have a significant impact on jurisprudence. "The criti­cal issue I have to confront is whether you can create procedural devices that make it easier for jurors to comprehend complex testimony" he states.

"The findings will have a lot to say about whether this type of trial should ever go to a jury. Right now two of the circuit courts are in con­flict over this very issue. In fact, one holds that due process is denied if the jury cannot understand the testi­mony and render a rational verdict."

6

Deja VuVisiting Professor Robert Bensingby Wilbur C. Leatherberry

Visiting Professor Robert Bensing has returned to the law school this year after a 20-year absence. He is teaching Wills and Trusts and the estate planning course this semester. This spring he will teach a newly designed course, Estate Planning and Taxation, which will include material formerly taught in the estate and gift taxation course and material on income taxation of estates.

Professor Bensing began teaching here in 1948 after taking his law degree at Louisville and doing gradu­ate work at Yale. He recalls his job interview with Dean Fletcher Reed Andrews. The dean and Mrs. Andrews were eating lunch in their hotel suite. Dean Andrews offered to share his sandwich and ice cream, but Bensing politely declined. The interview was going well until Mrs. Andrews asked Bensing his age.When he replied "Twenty-six," she exclaimed "Why, you're just a baby!" As the interview ended. Dean Andrews expressed a desire to hire Bensing but said he would need approval of the president of the Uni­versity. He promised a decision in two weeks and inquired about Mrs. Bensing. When told she was waiting in the lobby, Andrews came down, introduced himself, and greeted her warmly.

Three days later, the dean called to tell Bensing the job was his. As he hung up, Mrs. Bensing asked about the salary, and Bensing realized he had forgotten to ask. He says that was no mistake "because of the sort of person Dean Andrews was." He describes Andrews as "one of the fin­est scholars, teachers, and persons” he has known. Dean Andrews is, according to Bensing, assured of immortality "in the memories of his students, colleagues, and friends."

Professor Bensing was, at the beginning of his teaching career, in awe of some of his distinguished col­leagues. In addition to Dean Andrews, there was Professor Lattin, known for his work in criminal law and corporations. Professor Clinton DeWitt was a distinguished scholar and teacher whose principal interest was evidence. Bensing also met a young man just beginning his aca­demic career, Oliver Schroeder, Jr.The two became very close friends and later collaborated in writing a book on homicide.

In his first year in teaching. Profes­sor Bensing confronted an entering class of more than 200 students in Contracts. The postwar boom was

"seWTLeMEtJ, AH SUBMIT To YOU...."

on. After a week or two, that extraor­dinarily large class was divided into two sections of 100 or so each. That was a small consolation to Bensing. He taught both of them. Many of those students were unsure of their desire for a law career and, in 1951, just over 100 graduated. Bensing recalls many of the students from that and succeeding classes. His classes this year include at least three students whose fathers he taught, and he knows there are other sons and daughters and nephews and nieces of former students whom he has not met. He categorically denies having taught any current student's grandparents, however.

In addition to the large Contracts classes. Professor Bensing taught the Wills course seven terms in a row, including summer sessions. He con­cluded that by the seventh time through the Wills course he knew how to handle 90 percent of the Wills material. Unfortunately, he found the other 10 percent "impossible and depressing." Some things about the law remained nearly incomprehensi­ble even with years of teaching expe­rience and dedicated study.Undaunted, he found time to write his thesis on sex laws for his J.S.D. degree from Yale. The thesis was used and cited in the Kinsey report. Over the years he published 12 or 13 articles, including one very well- received piece on admiralty law, and was quite successful and content in his teaching career.

In 1961, he was approached by an officer of Central National Bank who offered him a position as associate counsel in the Trust Department. The offer provided only a modest increase in compensation but was an opportu­

nity Bensing could hot decline. He saw the chance to "get more expo­sure" in his field, wills and trusts. After just a few years as associate counsel, Bensing became senior coun­sel of the Trust Department and a vice president of the bank. For the past several years he has been man­ager of the Trust Department and senior vice president of the bank. He has seen and worked on numerous complex and difficult problems in the wills and trusts field and has partici­pated actively in the development in that area of law in Ohio and other states.

When asked about differences between the law school as he knew it 20 years ago and as it is today, Ben­sing finds the dramatic increase in the number of women students most notable. He cannot recall ever having more than three women students in a class in previous years. The emphasis on Ohio law which existed then is gone. The students today are "very bright but not brighter" than the stu­dents of the earlier era. He is a bit disappointed to find today's students somewhat less combative in class than those he knew before. He delights in the comforts of the new building and in getting to know the members of the current faculty.

Like most teachers. Professor Ben­sing admits he is something of a ham and says he loves to "perform" in class. Teaching is, to him, an "awe­some responsibility" and a very demanding but rewarding profession. In his two careers, he has met many practitioners who are or could have been outstanding legal scholars. The practice severely limits that sort of academic activity, but "professors have time to think and to write." His teaching and scholarly efforts pro­vided him with a priceless back­ground for his work at the bank, and he is now finding that his years of experience are of inestimable value in his teaching.

7

Honor Roll of Annual Giving 1981-82

Dear Alumnus:Fund raising is not something that

one necessarily approaches with great joy and enthusiasm. I am always worried that people will say, "Here comes old Charlie again with his hand out." Seriously, though, when Dean Cowen approached me and asked me to serve as chairman of the 1982 Law Annual Fund, I could not refuse.

Our task last year was to convince our alumni and friends that giving to the school is as important to the indi­vidual donor as it is to the commu­nity and to the school. I believe, and apparently so do our alumni, as the results of the 1982 campaign confirm, that we owe a debt to the institution

that has enabled us to be successful. On a more pragmatic level, these contributions will ultimately benefit each of us personally. As the school improves through our support and grows in stature, so does the value of the education we received. The new tax laws in effect during 1982 were expected to have some adverse effects on charitable giving. This, happily, was not true for the Case Western Reserve University Law Annual Fund. Our graduates were and are motivated to give to the law school for reasons that are far more profound and personal.

Before you read this report, I would like to point out to you that we were successful in two very sig­

nificant ways. First, the total money raised was $236,000, against our goal of $215,000 (an increase of 17 per­cent over the previous year|. Equally important, we attracted 200 addi­tional donors. This is very promising and I am pleased that 45 percent of our alumni are convinced of the value of their legal education and are willing to help underwrite an even better education for future genera­tions. However, we will not be satis­fied until every graduate of this law school is convinced that his or her gift, no matter how modest, is impor­tant to the school.

F. Rush McKnight, '55, has accepted the chairmanship of the 1983 Annual Fund. He faces a goal of $225,000, and with your continued and, we hope, increased support, this goal is attainable. The first 25 years of Law Annual Fund activity are only the prologue for 1983 and beyond. The future of our law school demands that we continue to reach— indeed, exceed—each annual goal, and I urge you to make your commit­ment now.

I hope you will read this report carefully and share the pride I feel in our accomplishments. Without your support we would not succeed, and I thank you for it!

Sincerely,

Charles R. Ault, '51Chairman, 1982 Law AnnualFundPresident, Law Alumni

Association 1982-83

1981-82 Law Annual FundGoal: $215,000Attainment: $236,566% of goal attained: 110.0% of increase over 1981: 17.8Number of alumni gifts: 1,807Average alumni gift: $123

$225,000 1982-83 Law Annual Fund Goal

8

Deans' Donors Honor RollFLETCHER R. ANDREWS

came to the faculty at Reserve law school in 1927 and was appointed professor of law in 1935. He served as dean from 1948 to 1958 and was dean emeritus until his death. Dean Andrews gradu­ated from Dartmouth Col­lege in 1916. He received an LL.B. degree from Yale in 1941. Under Dean Andrews' leadership at the law school, the graduate program came into being and the Law-Med­icine Center was developed. A number of student activi­ties grew to very substantial and significant proportions.A student board was estab­lished for the Law Review, which published four issues annually, and the Moot Court program was also developed. Dean Andrews served as president of the Cleveland Community Fund and of the Cleveland Bar Association.

DEAN ANDREWS DONORS ($1,000 and above)Fletcher R. Andrews '25

(deceased)George N. Aronoff '58 Elmer J. Babin '26 Frank E. Barnett '36 Keith S. Benson '47 James H. Berick '58 David L. Brennan '57 Paul Brickner '66 Lisle M. Buckingham '19 Robert W. Campbell '38 Manning E. Case, Jr. '41 Lloyd J. Colenback '53 William E. Davis '48 Rufus S. Day, Jr. '35 Robert M. Dunn '81 Sherman Dye '40 Daniel L. Ekelman '52 David K. Ford '21 Harrison M. Fuerst '50 Samuel T. Gaines '23 Ben C. Green '30 Jack H. Green '30 (deceased) Bruce Griswold '47 Lawrence G. Knecht '36 F. Rush McKnight '55 Arthur C. Mentall '36

Hal H. Newell '47 Marshall 1. Nurenberg '53 Clare D. Russell '22 Maurice M. Sayre '49 Thomas W. Towell '27

(deceased)Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Van

den Eynden, Friends Paul W. Walter '32 James A. Weeks '23 Orrin B. Werntz '36 John D. Wright '29 Mrs. Odette Wurzburger,

FriendBingham W. Zellmer '36

EVAN H. HOPKINS came to the School of Law as registrar in 1892 and was appointed dean in 1895. Dean Hopkins laid a broad and deep foundation for the School of Law. Many of his wisely established policies persist today. A graduate of Adelbert College in 1889, he received his LL.B. from Harvard in 1892. Having experienced hardships during his own education. Dean Hopkins was sympathetic to students with similar difficulties and helped them in many ways. During his administration. Dean Hopkins engineered the move to start a new building and was also responsible for a start toward the fine library at the law school today.

DEAN HOPKINS DONORS ($500 to $999) Charles R. Ault '51 Gary A. Banas '57 Daniel M. Belden '42 Lawrence M. Bell '61 Anthony O. Brown '73 Gary L. Bryenton '65 John B. Calfee '38 John J. Carney '43 Kenneth L. Cohen '69 John J. Conway '42 Ralph A. Colbert '30 Thomas Dechant '58 John A. Demer '71 Donald M. Frankel '50 Harold N. Galvin '30 John H. Gherlein '51 James J. Gilvary '54 John T. Gladis '59 Gerald S. Gold '54 Thomas W. Goslee '40 Raymond E. Griffiths '57 Charles D. Harmon '50 Carl W. Hauser '24 Thomas J. Heffernan '64 Ronald P. Kananen '64 Donald J. Kennedy '57 Fred D. Kidder '50 Charles W. Kitchen '50 Allan D. Kleinman '52 Jeffrey M. Kossak '74

Marvin L. Krichman '38 Blanche E. Krupansky '48 George A. Leet '46 Timothy F. McMahon '39 Harley J. McNeal '36 Raymond S. Morris '40 Nelson E. Pike '47 John W. Renner '53 Alan E. Riedel '55 Earl P. Schneider '32 Roger A. Scott '57 Roger L. Shumaker '76 Loren E. Souers '40 Lawrence E. Stewart '50 Joseph P. Valentino '67 David S. Weil, Jr. '70 Fred Weisman '51 William L. West '29 Paul M. Wilson, Jr. '50 Don J. Young '34

9

ij|,.

V‘

WALTER T. DUNMORE earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at Oberlin College in 1900 and returned to study at the School of Law, where he was awarded theBachelor of Laws in 1904.The next year he received the Master of Arts degree from Oberlin. An ardent advocate of the idea that if an Office of the Public Prosecutor is justifiable, an Office of the PublicDefender should be established to enable . accused persons to finance their defense. DeanDunmore founded the Cleveland LSgal Aid Society, which he headed as president for 20 years. Recognizing his distinguished service,Oberlin conferred an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree on the dean in 1925.

DEAN DUNMORE DONORS ($300 to $499)Bruce Alexander '39Melvin J. Andrews '50John R. Baskin '40Paul E. Beck '39Mrs. Robert B. Blyth '31 Edgar H. Boles II '73William V Cawley '55Robert L. Chapman '68John R. Climaco '67William D. Buss II '70Cray J. Coppins, Jr. '71Robert N. Dineen '62Robert R. Disbro '50George J. Durkin '62Austin T. Fragomen '68Alan V. Friedman '63Allan J. Goodfellow '50 Bernard D. Goodman '60 Alvin L. Gray '51Richard M. Hanhart '51 Michael T. Honohan '61 Leonard Lane '47Irwin M. Levy '63Ernest P. Mansour '55J. Craig McClelland '26Robert D. Moss '33Robert B. Neville '41S. Samuel Nukes '56Ivan L. Otto '62Douglas J. Paul '74

John J. Raymond '37Peter Reed '25Richard C. Rose '47Robert J. Rotatori '63Rocco J. Russo '51George Sauter and Jean

Sauter '46David I. Sindell '36Norman A. Sugarman '40 William V. Valis '68Tom J.E. Walker '39Slepheix C. Weingrad '73Paul D. White '50John A. Williams '50Eldon S. Wright, Jr. '50 William L. Ziegler' '55

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CLARENCE M.FINFROCK served on the law faculty more than 40 years. His leadership as dean brought to the School of Law an accelerated program, a large resident faculty, and curriculum changes to keep the school at the forefront of legal education. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1902 from Ohio Wesleyan University, which later conferred on him degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Laws. For a time in World War II he was the only resident member of the law school faculty, yet managed to serve as public member of the Regional War LaborBoard in Cleveland and was a member of the executive committee of the draft board chairmen of CuyahogaCounty.

DEAN FINFROCK DONORS ($100 to $299)

John W. Barkley '14J. Hall Kellogg '17Jack L. Griffiths '22Oscar A. Hunsicker '22Perry B. Jackson '22William W. Weir '22Joel H. Sharp '22Leonard S. Danaceau '24 Solomon J. Krohn '24Isidor V. Rosenman '24 Clarence J. Carlin '25Henry B. Johnson '25Elmer I. Schwartz '26Ralph Vince '26Emmer Martin Lancaster '27 Willis F. Hotchkiss '28Robert M. Kimmel '28John G. Rowley '28Richard B. Barker '29Ben W. Dreyer '29Leo Grossman '29Edgar P. Stocker '29Samuel Handelman '30Bruce B. Krost '30Kenneth V Nicola '30William J. Papenbrock '30 Joseph L. Abrams '31Leonard S. Becker '31Jack S. Roesch '31Willard R. James '32

Gerald E. Johnson '32Harold H. Barnett '33John K. Bartram '33Aaron A. Caghan '33Victor DeMarco '33Harold Fallon '33Arthur W. Fiske '33Arthur S. Goldsmith '33Harry Jaffe '33Glendon W. Juergens '33 Maurice Maschke '33Roger L. Metzger '33

(deceased)Bernard C. Moloney '33E. Clark Morrow '33Robert D. Moss '33Edwin D. Northrup '33 Clarence G. Oviatt '33Walter G. Whitlatch '33King A. Wilmot '33George M. Brown '34Ezra K. Bryan '34Roman F. Gruber '34Fred Guarnieri '34William J. Kraus '34

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Everett D. McCurdy '34 Christian E. Rhonemus '34 Cornelius J. Ruffing '34 Eugene B. Schwartz '34 John S. Beard '35 Norman E. Gutfeld '35 Lee C. Howley '35 Jay S. Hudson '35 Francis R. O'Brien '35 Herman E. Rabe '35 Norman J. Cipra '36 Peter R DiLeone '36 William H. Harris '36 Joseph C. Heinlein, Jr. '36 John Howland '36 Casper H. Kast '36 J. Norman McDonough '36 Norman B. Miller '36 Louis A. Otto, Jr. '36 Joseph D. Robbins '36 Otto W. Schutz '36 Warren G. Smith '36 George A. Spear '36 Myron W. Ulrich '36 Mrs. J. Rogers Vogelgesang Paul R. Zurlinden '36 Mrs. A.L. Diamond '37 Edward C. Lay '37 Adrian W. Miller '37 Lewell Rosenthal '37 William R. Van Aken '37 William H. Victor '37 Ivan L. Miller '38 John C. Oberlin '38 Carl W. Robinette '38 Robert M. Rybolt '38 Lawrence S. Carpenter '39 Sheridan H. Harwin '39 Kenneth H. Landmark '39 Hubert M. Marshall '39 Robert M. Stepp '39 Arthur J. Stern '39 John R. Burton '40 John M. Drain '40 Franklyn S. Judson '40 John T. Keenan '40 Harry M. Leet '40 Irvin M. Milner '40 Theodore C. Robinson '40 William T. Walker '40 Ralph L. Baker '41 Robert C. Horrigan '41 Robert V. Fullerton '41 John J. Klise, Jr. '41 James J. McGettrick '41 Robert Petersilge '41 Philip J. Hermann '42 Alvin M. Kendis '42 George Keyser '42 Joseph F. Lombardo '42 Edward A. Mahoney, Jr. '42 Robert L. Myers '42 Francis M. Payne, Jr. '42 Stanley M. Clark '45 John E Ray, Jr. '45 June L. Roth '45 Jeanne L. Winkler '45 Stanley I. Adelstein '46

Mrs. Robert J. Newton '46 George V Sauter '46 Jean Sauter '46 George H. Bowman, Jr. '47 William Hartland Brown '47 McConnell A. Coakwell '47 Louis E. Dolan '47 Darrell R. Hottle '47 Daniel C. Schipfer '47 Jordan C. Band '48 Robert J. Bowman '48 Robert L. Brown '48 Richard A. Chenoweth '48 Frank W. Daykin '48 Milton Dunn '48 Byron D. Fair '48 William R. Fifner '48 Martin T. Franey '48 Edward F. Green '48 Albert P. Hadley '48 James A. Hoffman '48 John P. Mahoney '48 Ray L. Miraldi '48 R. Dugald Pearson '48 Tress E. Pittenger '48 Charles R. Richey '48 Joseph R. Rygiel '48 Leonard R Schur '48 Raymond R Snow '48 Max B. Stewart '48 Lawrence Traeger '48 Frank W. Vargo '48 David H. Wilson '48 Lorry R. Bleiweiss '49 Loren Buckey '49 Lake Giles '49 Robert T. Izant II '49 Albert J. Rhoa '49 Arthur T. Wincek '49 Robert R. Augsburger '50 Robert R. Disbro '50 Victor H. Hahn '50 Russell Hitchcock '50 A. Robert Johnson '50 J. Rhillip Jones '50 Bronis Klementowicz '50 Arthur R Lambros '50 Thomas O. Matia '50 Thomas C. Murphy '50 Roger M. Nelson '50 Richard C. Renkert '50 Lad J. Roth '50 George S. Spanagel '50 Frederick C. Tyler '50 Willard R. Stetzelberger '50 Raul M. Wilson, Jr. '50 John H. Butala, Jr. '51 Mario D. Corsi '51 Francis G. Fitzpatrick '51 Edward I. Gold '51 Robert J. Grogan '51 William X. Haase '51 Jules L. Markowitz '51 Lawrence A. Noeth '51 Arthur R Steinmetz '51 Richard B. Steuer '51 William H. Talmadge '51 Ratricia A. Thomas '51

James H. Wilkinson '51 Donald W. Zimmerman '51 Joseph G. Berick '52 Joseph E. Cirigliano '52 Mel J. Massey, Jr. '52 Robert B. Rreston '52 Earl C. Sheehan '52 Joseph J. Sommer '52 William M. Warren '52 Bernard A. Berkman '53 Roby L. Grubb '53 Howard E. Hendershott, Jr.

'53Herbert J. Hoppe, Jr. '53 Robert E. Levitt '53 Ronald L. Fenn'er '53 Bernard E. Reisman '53 Harold L. Ticktin '53 Carl E. Chancellor '54 Salvatore R Jeffries '54 William J. Miller '54 Forrest A. Norman, Jr. '54 John A. Schwemler '54 Gerald Wells '54 Russell Z. Baron '55 Mary R Bogan '55 Angela G. Carlin '55 Richard J. Cusick '55 Michael T. Gavin '55 Arthur S. Leb '55 Donald E. Lefton '55 Charles R. Rerelman '55 Thomas S. Schattenfield '55 Albert G. Schleicher '55 Edwin Z. Singer '55 Sherwood M. Weiser '55 Martin C. Blake '56 John M. Cronquist '56 Jerome M. Ellerin '56 Robert J. Federman '56 Larry S. Gordon '56 David E. Griffiths '56 Walter E. Hallock, Jr. '56 Jay A. Hollingsworth '56 Irvin S. Inglis '56 Jack Kaufman '56 J. Robert Malloy '56 John F. Rice, Jr. '56 Daniel B. Roth '56 Keith E. Spero '56 Robert C. Weber '56 Garry A. Banas '57 Jerry B. Helwig '57 Jacque M. Haines '57 Hays M. Hunter '57 Norman D. Nichol '57 James F. O'Day '57 Joseph G. Schneider '57 Henry B. Bruner '58 David J. Cook '58 John A. Kuntz '58 Thomas J. McGuire '58 George Limbach '58 Harold A. Fhelan '58 Albert F. Fickus '58 Robert S. Reitman '58 Jack D. Shoffner '58 Jack E. Short '58

Eugene Stevens '58 Morton Stotter '58, LL.M. Thomas A. Unverferth '58 David C. Comstock '59 Harold E. Friedman '59 Homer Giles '59 John F. Norton '59 Jack L. Renner '59 Donald K. Tenney '59 Lyman H. Treadway III '59 Harold L. Witsaman '59 James M. Amdur '60 Richard Colella '60 Robert A. Goodman '60 Philip E. Howes '60 John J. Kelley, Jr. '60 Marvin A. Sicherman '60 Jerry F. Whitmer '60 John H. Wilharm, Jr. '60 James A. Young '60 Allan J. Zambie '60 Harvey M. Adelstein '61 J. Kenneth Brown '61 Timothy A. Garry '61 Joseph Guilitto '61 Robert H. Jackson '61 Gerald A. Messerman '61 Thomas J. Miller '61 Phillip A. Ranney '61 Roland E. Remley '61

(deceased)John R. Werren '61 Marion B. Amato '62 Arthur Axner '62 Edward R. Brown '62 Thomas P. Curran '62 Robert Dougherty '62 Julius R. Gerlack '62 Robert W. Gilcrest '62 Byron S. Krantz '62 Richard H. Kraushaar '62 Frederic M. Lombardi '62 Marc A. Meshorer '62 James S. Monohan '62 George B. Ramsayer '62 Richard W. Schwartz '62 Alan J. Shapiro '62 Perry R. Taylor, Jr. '62 Peter F. Young '62 Sheldon M. Young '62 Martin A. Yurick '62 Nicholas J. Fillo '63 Herbert I. Goulder '63 Carol and Paul Mancino '63 J. Rogers Padgett '63 William A. Papenbrock '63 Michael D. Rose '63 Edward Kancler '64 Robert A. Lenga '64 Donald H. Pace '64 Melvin H. Singer '64 Edward P. Weber '64 Charles E. Zumkehr '64 Robert S. Balantzow '65 Phillip A. Barragate '65 Eugene S. Bayer '65 Sheldon L. Braverman '65 Jeremy Dworkin '65

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Lawrence H. Friedlander '65 Stuart Saltman '65David A. Basinski '66Robert Burkey '66Phillip Campanella '66 William A. Hancock '66 James D. Kendis '66Dale C. LaPorte '66Robert L. Matia '66Benson D. Philloff '66James D. Snively '66James F. Streicher '66Leon A. Weiss -'66Elliott H. Goldstein '67Gerald Kurland '67 ^Robert G. Markus '67 Raymond D. Meyo '67 ,Marian Ratnoff '67 'Joseph S. Trapanese '67 William N. West '67John A. Zangerle '67John J. Bagnato '68 Christopher W Baldwin '68 Neil D. Baron '68Gary L. Carrothers '68Robert J. Crump '68John F. Dunlap '68Frank A. Fortunato '68Harlan Gordon '68Robert D. Gutin '68Anthony J. Hartman '68David C. Johnson '68Daniel M. Jonas '68Alan R. Kretzer '68Ira H. Meyer '68W. James Ollinger '68David L. Rosenzweig '68 Robert G. Rubin '68Frederick A. Watkins '68 Michael S. Yauch '68

Boyd G. Adelman '69William W. Allport '69 William D. Beyer '69John D. Brown '69Stephen L. Buescher '69 Terence J. Clark '69Chester F. Crone '69David S. Dubin '69Lowell J. Gettman '69W. Jack Grosse '69William A. Koenig '69Calvin B. Kurimai '69Gerald R. Lublin '69Robert A. Marcis '69Joel A. Makee '69 \James W McKee '69Judith A. Meshorer '69 Thomas Master '69Thomas F. Norton '69William S. Paddock '69John D. Petruso '69Robert D. Poling '69William C.H. Ramage '69 Ronald J. Rakowsky '69Peter D. Roth '69John Z. Szabo '69John F. Wetli '69Jack A. Bjerke '70Lee J. Dunn, Jr. '70Lawrence M. Kukey '70Ellen Lake '70Stuart Laven '70William B. Lawrence '70Terry P. Leiden '70Thomas C. Liber '70Roger G. Lile '70Stanley G. Berlin '71William L. Gaunt '71Mark E. Gammons '71 Norman A. Levine '71

Timothy T. Reid '71Charles T. Riehl '71Theodore D. Ward '71Jerome F. Weiss '71John S. Wilbur, Jr. '71 Bernard R. Baker '72Richard H. Bamberger '72 Paul Dutton '72Stephen C. Ellis '72Dennis H. Fike '72Kenneth A. Hook '72Lee S. Kolczun '72Lucien Marino '72William J. Martin '72Michael L. Pashos '72Alvin M. Podboy '72 Benjamin J. Randall '72 Charles B. Zellmer '72 Thomas E. Zena '72Gary S. Brackett '73Susan G. Braden '73William G. Compton '73 William S. Derkin '73 Michael K. Magness '73 Michael J. Peterman '73 Lawrence F. Smith '73 Randall L. Solomon '73 George W. Wenz III '73Roger E. Bloomfield '74 Kenneth B. Davis, Jr. '74 Mitchell and Julie Dubick

'74Bruce N. Eberlin '74Alan S. Kleinman '74John T. Mulligan '74Glenn T. Piercy '74R. Byron Wallace '74Kevin A. Cudney '75Marc S. Stein '75Larry A. Zink '75

Vivian C. Folk '76James N. Gross '76Joan Mandel Gross '76 Christopher P. Kunzi '76 Andrew P. Meyer '76Dixon F. Miller '76Patricia Plotkin '76Clifford Preminger '76 William S. Simon '76Howard A. Weiner '76Hazel Willacy '76Delwyn D. Ehresman '77 Sandra K. liunter '77Marc I. Lipton '77Wayne P. Marta '77Victoria Matts Beach '78 Francis X. Gardner '78 Michael J. Roth '78Sheldon M. Sager '78Donald F. Barney '79Stephen F. Belden '79Julia S. Bolton '79James J. Connelly '79Jill J. Goubeaux '79Jeffrey S. Hyman '79Duncan S. MacCallum '79 Lynn Shott '79Thomas R. Theado '79 Kendrew H. Colton '80 Carolyn Davenport Dumas

'80Lisa F. Mann '80Thomas D. Moffitt III '80 Donald A. Navatsyk '80Dale H. Cowan '81Jean Kalberer '81Susan Metzenbaum Hyatt

'81

CLASS OF 1914John W. BarkleyCLASS OF 1917J. Hall KelloggCLASS OF 1918Harley E. ChenowethCLASS OF 1919Lisle M. BuckinghamCLASS OF 1920Roy G. EngstromCLASS OF 1921Harry A. BlachmanDavid K. FordCLASS OF 1922Jack L. GriffithsOscar A, HunsickerPerry B. JacksonClare D. RussellWilliam W. WeirCLASS OF 1923Stanton A. AddamsSamuel T. GainesCharles C. QuitmanReuben H. SacharowJoel H. SharpJames A. WeeksCLASS OF 1924Henry S. BrainardLeonard S. DanaceauHyman R. Goldstein

Carl W. HauserDennis E HoynesSolomon J, KrohnHarvey G. Oliver, Jr.Isidor V. RosenmanEdwin E. RossCLASS OF 1925Fletcher R. Andrews |deceased| Clarence J. CarlinHenry B. JohnsonRobert F. MooneyPeter ReedCLASS OF 1926Elmer J. BabinSidney CohenJerome N. CurtisThomas A. GrabienJ. Craig McClellandCharles F. MoranMax A. PilloffGeorge H. RudolphElmer I. SchwartzRalph VinceCLASS OF 1927Arthur J. KleinElmer Martin LancasterJohn H. LeonardCyril F. McFrederickHarold A. MinnichHerbert H. SchettlerThomas W. Towell (deceased)

Paul E. WernerRudford K. WilsonCLASS OF 1928William G. BlowerJames W. BortonWendell A. FalsgrafLouis H. FlorianWillis L. HotchkissJohn J. JosephRobert M. KimmelLouis E. LewisFrank C. LeyshonWilliam MendelsonDennis W. PalmquistHarold J. RosewaterJohn G. RowleySanford S. SchnurmacherLeo N. SchwartzFrances Fish SmithCLASS OF 1929Bertram W. AmsterLawrence A. ArthRichard B. BarkerDorothy H. BlazekBen M. DreyerBruce W. EakenGilbert EisenbergLeo GrossmanHoward R. HirschAlbert C. KeskeGeorge R. Kloppman

Henry X. KutashZellie MinerLouis B. MitchellC. Daniel MurrayRobert W. ReamerEdgar P. StockerAlbert E. WalderHoward T. WarnerWilliam L. WestJohn D. WrightCLASS OF 1930Harry AuslanderMrs. Seville S. BergerElmer F. BurwigRayjnond S. BuzzardRalph A. ColbertHarold N. GalvinBen C. GreenJack H. Green (deceased)Samuel HandelmanIrving KaneBruce B. KrostPaul E. LeesKenneth V NicolaWilliam J. PapenbrockElmer C. PhillipsRichard L. SnyderWilliam K. WatsonCLASS OF 1931Joseph L. AbramsLeonard S. Becker

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John F. Benes, Jr.Mrs. Robert B. Blyth George K.C. Ellsworth Lester J. Farber James A. Gleason Gordon C. Nichols Jack S. Roesch Ferdinand E. Warren Irwin E. YarnsCLASS OF 1932 Virginia A. Albright Aubrey Billings Walter J. Graul Benjamin Jaffe Willard R. James Gerald E. Johnson David H. McKinley Earl R Schneider Mark Sperry Paul W. Walter

CLASS OF 1933 Harold H. Barnett John K. Bartram Stanley M. Beckerman James A. Bravo Aaron A. Caghan Victor DeMarco Harold Fallon Arthur W. Fiske Arthur S. Goldsmith Harry Jaffe Glendon H. Juergens Maurice Maschke, Jr.Robert L. Metzger (deceased) Bernard C. Moloney E. Clark Morrow Robert D. Moss Edwin D. Northrop Clarence J. Oviatt Alfred Palay Joseph A. Ranallo Bernard Schwartz Walter G. Whitlatch Clyde K. Wiley King A. WilmotCLASS OF 1934 George M. Brown Ezra K. Bryan Norman L. Epstein Bernard Friedman Alfred C. Grisanti Roman F. Gruber Fred R. Guarnieri Glenn Kitson Austin T. Klein Allen J. Koehler Karl Krastin William J. Kraus Walter F. Liesegang Alba B. Martin Everett D. McCurdy Ernest G. Pfleiderer Christian E. Rhonemus Cornelius J. Ruffing Eugene B. Schwartz Don J. YoungCLASS OF 1935 John S. Beard Mrs. Charles E. Chaney Allen R. Cole Rufus S. Day, Jr.Ronald O. Dunn Norman E. Gutfeld Clayton E. Horne Lee C. Howley Jay S. Hudson Francis R. O'Brien Herman E. Rabe John R. Ruggles, Jr.Samuel C. Vary

CLASS OF 1936 Frank E. Barnett Howard Bernstein Norman J. Cipra H. Alberta Colclaser Peter P. DiLeone William H. Harris Joseph C. Heinlein, Jr. John Howland Lewis H. Jones Casper H. Kast Lawrence G. Knecht Daniel W. Kornhauser J. Norman McDonough Harley J. McNeal Arthur C. Mentall Norman B. Miller Louis A. Otto, Jr.William R. Quinn Maurice J. Reigert Joseph D. Robbins Otto W. Schutz David I. Sindell Warren G. Smith George A. Spear William W. Stickle Horace G. Tetlow Myron W. Ulrich Mrs. J. Roger Vogelgesang Orrin B. Werntz Bingham W. Zellmer Paul R. ZurlindenCLASS OF 1937 Jack T. Clark Mrs. A.L. Diamond Benjamin J. DiMarco J. Elliott Hannon Edward C. Lay Donald C. Mathewson Adrian W. Miller John J. Raymond Lewell Rosenthal Edwin F. Sawicki Mrs. Robert W. Stromberg William R. Van Aken William H. Victor Willis J. ZangerleCLASS OF 1938 Vincent M. Arnold Robert G. Boes John B. Calfee Robert W. Campbell Emil C. Farkas Frank P. Gedeon David D. Green Charles R. Iden Marvin L. Krichman Ivan L. Miller Robert G. Morton John C. Oberlin Joseph W. Persky Carl W. Robinette Robert M. RyboltCLASS OF 1939 Bruce Alexander George H. Barnett Paul E. Beck Louis A. Boxleitner David L. Buchanan Lawrence S. Carpenter Ralph D. Cole, Jr.Alfred D. Edgerton George N. Gafford Sheridan H. Harwin Paul C. Hopkins Welden A. Hulligan Hudson Hyatt Ralph S. Locher Kenneth H. Lundmark Hubert M. Marshall Timothy F. McMahon Alfred W. Newman

Thelma B. Newman Frank J. Schneider, Jr. Robert M. Stepp Arthur J. Stern Frederick H. Stickney Sherman F. Tramer Tom J.E. Walker

CLASS OF 1940 Stanley L. Abrams John R. Baskin John R. Burton John M. Drain Sherman Dye Hubert E. Evans Thomas W. Goslee Charles D. Harmon Franklyn S. Judson John T. Keenan Loren S. Kendis Harry M. Leet Richard E. Lipman Irvin M. Milner Minor Myers Raymond S. Morris Theodore C. Robinson Irving Sadugor Loren E. Souers Norman A. Sugarman William T. Walker John G. Wilson

CLASS OF 1941 Ralph L. Baker Herbert S. Bialosky Manning E. Case, Jr. Robert Penn Eshelman Robert V Fullerton Harold D. Hoenig Robert C. Horrigan John J. Klise, Jr.John B. McDonald, Jr. James J. McGettrick Robert B. Neville Robert Petersilge Joseph B. Quatman Raymond H. Robertson George W. Schoen

CLASS OF 1942 Richard D. Armold Daniel M. Belden John J. Conway Herman W. Goldner Walter T. Hanahan L. Mason Harter Phillip J. Hermann Fred C.Jones Alvin M. Kendis George F. Keyser Joseph F. Lombardo Edward A. Mahoney, Jr. Robert L. Myers Francis M. Payne, Jr. Paul J. Pojman Jason H. Schuster Richard K. Wagner

CLASS OF 1943 John J. Carney Robert J. Felixson Mrs. Donald C. Gilley Myron C. Hoff Louis R. Tucci Richard S. Weygandt

CLASS OF 1945 Stanley M. Clark Mrs. Woodrow Hoffman Mrs. Ann W. Myers John F. Ray, Jr.June L. Roth Jeanne L. Winkler

CLASS OF 1946 Stanley I. Adelstein Sherman S. Hollander George A. Leet Mrs. Robert J. Newton George Sauter Jean Sauter Jerome Silver Jay B. White

CLASS OF 1947 Keith S. Benson George H. Bowman, Jr. William Hartland Brown McConnell A. Coakwell Louis E. Dolan Bruce Griswold Darrell R. Hottle Everett H. Krueger Leonard Lane Mrs. George Maurath, Jr. Delos T. Nelson Hal H. Newell Nelson E. Pike Richard C. Rose Daniel C. Schipfer Robert H. Seeley Joseph A. Thiel

CLASS OF 1948 Jordan C. Band Robert J. Bowman Jack C. Boyd Robert L. Brown Jack E. Butler Richard M. Cerrezin Richard A. Chenoweth John V. Corrigan Joseph O. Coy (deceased) William E. Davis George M. Davison, Jr. Frank W. Daykin Harold N. Dembe James M. DeVinne Milton Dunn Catherine M. Durkin Vernon J. Einhart Byron D. Fair William R. Fifner Martin T. Franey George V. Gardner Robert G. Gilchrist Mrs. Barbara Gorman Frank J. Gorman Edward F. Green Donald E. Gropp Marvin J. Gross Albert P. Hadley Howard N. Heasley James A. Hoffman Oscar A. Hunsicker, Jr. John R. Jewitt, Jr. Raymond R. Kail Thomas M. Kennedy Edward W. Kilrain Benjamin A. King Alvin I. Krenzler William W. Kridler Blanche E. Krupansky Robert B. Krupansky Jay E. Lehman Herbert B. Long John P. Mahoney Donald H. MacDowell Edward J. McCormick, Jr. Allan J. Miller Walter F. Mills Ray L. Miraldi George W. Morrison E. Dugald Pearson Thomas Piraino Tress E. Pittenger, Jr. Albert L. Reisenfeld Clyde K. Rhein

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Charles R. Richey Robert S. Ricksecker Ronald W. Riggs Alton L. Rinier Joseph R. Rygiel Leonard R Schur John E. Smeltz Raymond E Snow, Jr. Max B. Stewart Thomas C. Stout Floyd L. Thorne Lawrence C. Turnock Lawrence Traeger Frank W. Vargo Russell E. Vunderink

, Ebert Weidner David H. Wilson Flenry E. Young Robert E. Younger

CLASS OF 1949 Lorry R. Bleiweiss Donald R. Brooks Loren Buckey Glen B. Cameron F. Wilson Chockley, Jr. Harold J. Fast Clarence E. Fox, Jr. Mark Frankel Lake Giles James A. Haynes Robert T. Izant II James E. Kuth William C. McCoy, Jr. Frances McGovern Edward A. McLeod Albert J. Rhoa Sheldon E. Ross Maurice M. Sayre Newton E. Thomas James M. Toomey Harold H. Uible Albert Vito William A. Welty Arthur T. Wincek

CLASS OF 1950 Emil N. Albu Melvin J. Andrews Robert R. Augsburger Albert A. Baillis Ignatius A. Cornelia Warren D. Couger Robert R. Disbro Donald M. Frankel Harrison M. Fuerst Donald A. Gaynor Richard T. Golrick Allan J. Goodfellow Ralph A. Guenther Victor H. Hahn Harold K. Hitchcock Russell W. Hitchcock A. Robert Johnson J. Phillip Jones Reynold L. Kenen Stanley B. Kent Fred D. Kidder Charles W. Kitchen Bronis J. Klementowicz Arthur R Lambros Edward Mamrack William A. Martin Thomas O. Matia John S. Morehead Thomas C. Murphy Roger M. Nelson Thomas Paris Richard W. Portmann Richard C. Renkert Lad J. Roth Clyde E. Shy Robert R. Soltis George W. Spanagel

Willard P. Stetzelberger Lawrence E. Stewart Kent C. Taylor Charles S. Tricharichi Frederick C. Tyler Frank Vaccariello Paul D. White John J. Whitney James D. Wilder John A. Williams Paul M. Wilson, Jr.Eldon S. Wright, Jr.Philip ZimmermanCLASS OF 1951 Charles R. Ault John H. Butala, Jr.Armand I. Cohn Neil J. Conway \Mario D. Corsi James C. Cory Raymond M. Druhot Francis G. Fifzpatrick John H. Gherlein Edward I. Gold Alvin L. Gray Robert J. Grogan William X. Haase Walter A. Hall Richard M. Hanhart Robert E. Henderson Jonah Howells, Jr.Robert W. Jeavons Theodore W. Jones Mrs. Charles W. Landefeld Fred W. Manning Jules L. Markowitz Lawrence A. Noeth Morris W. Pitts Myron J. Regenstreich James E. Ritchie Sam L. Rose Rocco J. Russo Oliver J. Schneider Jack H. Seibold Joseph F. Spaniol, Jr. Arthur P. Steinmetz Richard B. Steuer Patricia A. Thomas Fred Weisman James H. Wilkinson George R. Wood Rudolph S. Zadnick Donald W. Zimmerman Joseph ZitoCLASS OF 1952Joseph G. Berick Joseph E. Cirigliano Richard Clapp Joseph F. Cook Daniel L. Ekelman George Hall Donald Hansen Allan D. Kleinman Meyer J. Kohn Mel J. Massey, Jr.Robert B. Preston Andrew C. Putka Thomas Sharratt Earl C. Sheehan Joseph J. Sommer Harold S. Stern William M. WarrenCLASS OF 1953 Bernard A. Berkman Bruce Birrell Melvin C. Blum Lawrence A. Brock Allan R. Cole Lloyd J. Colenback Matthew A. Formato, Jr. Herbert R. Groger Roby L. Grubb

Howard E. Hendershott, Jr. Herbert J. Hoppe, Jr.Robert M. Lawther Robert E. Levitt Lloyd F. Loux, Jr.Wilford R. Miller Richard R. Moore Mrs. Daniel Nathans Marshall I. Nurenberg Robert Penn Ronald L. Penner Bernard E. Reisman John W. Renner Jack E. Shelley Kenyon F. Snyder Howard L. Sokolsky Gabriel S. Szabo William H. Talmage Harold L. Ticktin Harlan H. Todd, Jr.Donald WolfsonCLASS OF 1954 Frank J. Bayer William A. Brahms Carl E. Chancellor Jerold S. Cook Louis M. Davies Robert A. Ewers Donald J. Fallon James J. Gilvary Gerald S. Gold John J. Hritsko Salvatore P. Jeffries Robert J. Kalafut Herbert B. Levine William J. Miller Mrs. Richard L. Neubert Forrest A. Norman, Jr.R. Joseph Opperman Sheldon Portman John A. Schwemler John Smerritt, Jr.Russell J. Spetrino Melvin J. Strouse Paul C. Wagner, Jr.Gerald Wells Arthur C. WolfcaleCLASS OF 1955 Russell Z. Baron Allan J. Bartunek Mary P Bogan Mrs. Angela G. Carlin William V Cawley Richard J. Cusick Marvin J. Feldman Michael T. Gavin Frank H. Harvey, Jr. Alexander Kanareff Arthur S. Leb Donald E. Lefton Phillip G. Levitt Ernest P. Mansour F. Rush McKnight Charles R. Perelman Alan E. Riedel Thomas S. Schattenfield Albert G. Schleicher Frederic B. Schramm Fred Siegel Edwin Z. Singer John F. Terry James E. Wanner Sherwood M. Weiser William L. ZieglerCLASS OF 1956 Martin C. Blake Barry M. Byron James E. Canaris John M. Cronquist Marvin Drucker Jerome M. Ellerin David Essi, Jr.

Robert J. Federman John J. Filak David C. George Larry S. Gordon David E. Griffiths Walter E. Hallock, Jr. Sanford A. Halpert Jay A. Hollingsworth Irvin S. Inglis Jack Kaufman Richard E. Kleinman John Kollar J. Robert Malloy Richard J. McGraw S^Samuel Nuke's John Rice, )r.Daniel B, Roth Fred V Skok Keith E. Spero Brano Urbancic Robert C. WeberCLASS OF 1957 Gary A. Banas David L. Brennan Edward J. Frantz Raymond E. Griffiths Joan E. Harley Jerry B. Helwig Hays M. Hunter, Jr. Donald J. Kennedy William A. Minnich Norman D. Nichol James F. O'Day Daniel S. Rak Joseph G. Schneider Roger A. Scott Lawrence Tucker Patricia A. WilbertCLASS OF 1958George N. Aronoff James H. Berick Henry B. Bruner David J. Cook Thomas Dechant John P. Falcone Sheldon L. Greene Jacque M. Haines Norman S. Jeavons Agnes A. Kelly J. Andrew Kundtz George C. Limbach Ronald M. Lipson Thomas J. McGuire David S. Perelman Harold A. Phelan Albert P. Pickus Donald C. Price Robert S. Reitman Edmund W. Rothschild Nicholas R. Sagan Stanley A. Samad Jack D. Shoffner Jack E. Short Alan E. Sims Eugene Stevens Morton Stotter, LL.M. Thomas A. UnverferthCLASS OF 1959 William R. Beard David C. Comstock Domonic J. Fallon Harold E. Friedman Gerald E. Fuerst Homer W. Giles John T. Gladis Alan D. Greenberg Thomas L. Jacobs Alvin W. Lasher Robert S. More John F. Norton Robert F. Orth David C. Osborn

14

Norman S. Pomerantz Jack L. Renner Edward L. Seikel James F. Sweeney Donald K, Tenney Donald M. Tomsik Lyman H. Treadway III William E. Tumney Richard E. Vila Harold L. WitsamanCLASS OF 1960 James A. Amdur Richard Colella Richard J. Giffels Bernard D. Goodman Robert A. Goodman Richard A. Goulder John B. Hammett Philip E, Howes William P Inman John J. Kelley, Jr.Neal P. Lavelle Robert M. Lustig Josiah L. Mason Richard H. Shinn Marvin A. Sicherman Victor Sperling Jerry F. Whitmer John H. Wilharm, Jr.James A. Young Allan J. ZambieCLASS OF 1961Harvey M. Adelstein Edward A. Bayer Lawrence M. Bell J. Kenneth Brown Robert M. Dixon Marvin Dronzek Robert L. Dubay Timothy A. Garry Joseph Giullitto Robert N. Gudbranson Marvin N. Halpern Michael T. Honohan Robert H. Jackson Richard A. Lesco Thomas A. Mason Gerald A. Messerman Thomas J. Miller Raymond R. November Phillip A. Ranney Roland E. Remley (deceased) John R. Werren Peter C. WykoffCLASS OF 1962 Marion Amato Arthur Axner Frank Berndt Edward R. Brown Daniel T. Clancy David G. Clark Thomas P. Curran Robert N. Dineen Robert A. Dougherty George Downing George J. Durkin Gary A. Ferber Julius R. Gerlack Robert W. Gilcrest H. Philip Heil William E. Karnatz Byron S. Krantz Richard H. Kraushaar Leroy L. Lamborn William H. Lodgson Frederic M. Lombardi Marc A. Meshorer James S. Monohan Ivan L. Otto George B. Ramsayer Robert J. Rotator!Richard W. Schwartz

Alan J. Shapiro Perry R. Taylor, Jr.Peter F. Young Sheldon M. Young Martin A. YurickCLASS OF 1963 Worth A. Fauver, Jr. Dennis G. Fedor Nicholas J. Fillo Alan V. Friedman Herbert I. Goulder Milan D. Karlan Harold E. Leidner Charles W. Lissauer Carol and Paul Mancino J. Rogers Padgett William A. Papenbrock Michael E. Rose Robert F. SchifkoCLASS OF 1964 William T. Bullinger Richard H. Cox, Jr. Kenneth A. Dettelbach John D. Emerich Thomas A. Heffernan Sheldon R. Jaffery Ronald P. Kananen Edward Kancler James A. Laurenson Robert A. Lenga Irwin M. Levy Gary W. Melsher Donald H. Pace John H. Parker Dennis Lee Patterson Richard M. Robey Richard A. Rosner Michael B. Shagrin Joseph F. Shekleton Melvin H. Singer Ritchie T. Thomas Edward R Weber, Jr. Charles E. ZumkehrCLASS OF 1965 Robert S. Balantzow Phillip A. Barragate Eugene S. Bayer Armand P. Boiselle Christ Boukis Sheldon L. Braverman Gary L. Bryenton Gary W. Dubin Jeremy Dworkin Thomas J. Eberly Lawrence H. Friedlander James G. Gowan Alan S. Hartman Herman F. Inderleid, Jr. Gary B. Kabat David A. Katz Daniel G. LaPorte Donald M. Levy Russell B. Mamone John A. Murphy, Jr. Russell A. Olson Stuart Saltman Frederick G. Wilder CLASS OF 1966 David A. Basinski Robert R. Bauer Richard C. Binzley Kenneth Boukis Alan C. Brandt, Jr.Paul Brickner James N. Brown III Paul Brickner Robert F. Burkey Phillip Campanella Michael A. DiSanto Logan Fulrath, Jr.John A. Hallbauer William A. Hancock

Lawrence M. Kahn James D. Kendis Jules N. Koach Peter G. Kratt Thomas J. LaFond Dale C. LaPorte John B. Lindamood Evan E. Lloyd Robert L. Matia Gordon R. Miller Jonathan I. Narcus Benson D. Pilloff Timothy P. Ristau Thomas R. Schuman James D. Snively James F. Streicher Mrs. Charlotte Van Stolk Leon A. Weiss David R. Williams

CLASS OF 1967 John P. Berena Hugh L. Black Carol McCloskey Chaplin John R. Climaco Stephen M. Darlington Joel M. Ellis Stuart L. Fauver Sheldon G. Gilman Elliott H. Goldstein Jerrold L. Goldstein Robert W. Krayer, Jr. Michael R. Kube Gerald Kurland Ray E. Laribee Philip E. Lattavo Sheldon H. Lustig Robert D. Markus Lloyd D. Mazur Barry M. Meyer Raymond D. Meyo James T. Millican II C. Ronald Olbrysh Marian Ratnoff Robert Rivitz Mrs. Jonathan Sabo Mark B. Schwartz Loren H. Seidman William L. Spring John D. Steele, Jr.Ronald J. Suster John L. Tomec Joseph S. Trapanese Joseph R Valentino Joseph N. Vitale William N. West Marshall J. Wolf John A. Zangerle

CLASS OF 1968 Timothy R. Arnold John J. Bagnato Christopher W. Baldwin Neil D. Baron Gary L. Carrothers John R. Casar Robert L. Chapman Mario Ciano Robert J. Crump John E. Drury III John F. Dunlap Frank A. Fortunate Jerry L. Foust Austin T. Fragomen Alan B. George Harlan M. Gordon Robert D. Gutin Anthony J. Hartman J. Robert Horst John J. Hurley, Jr.Donald A. Insul David C. Johnson Daniel M. Jonas Robert J. Kolesar

Timothy E. Kramer Alan R. Kretzer Wilbur C. Leatherberry Wilson A. Leece II Richard F. Mack Joseph T. McGinness Frank S. Merritt Ira H. Meyer George M. Miller Peter A. Morse W. James Ollinger Martin O. Parks James M. Payback David L. Rosenzweig Gerald H. Rubin Robert G. Rubin Edward J. Schoenbaum David N. Strand William V. Valis Frederick A. Watkins Michael S. Yauch

CLASS OF 1969Boyd G. Adelman William W. Allport William D. Beyer John D. Brown Stephen L. Buescher Terence J. Clark Kenneth L. Cohen Chester F. Crone David S. Dubin William J. Edwards William I. Fadel Lawrence R. Fishman Lowell J. Gettman David Goldberg W. Jack Grosse Gary C. Haas Frank I. Harding III Jan Horbaly Howard P. Kasdan Herbert R. Katz Thomas H. Kemp James M. Klein William A. Koenig Calvin B. Kurimai Gerald R. Lublin Robert W. Lynch Joel A. Makee Robert A. Marcis Wallace J. Mayer, Jr. James W. McKee Judith A. Meshorer Thomas Mester Thomas F. Norton William S. Paddock John D. Petruso Robert D. Poling Ronald J. Rakowsky William C.H. Ramage David J. Reiner Peter D. Roth Mark Schlachet Thomas B. Schneider Robert C. Schollaert Jan Soeten, Jr.John Z. Szabo James R. Walpole Harold R. Weinberg John F. Wetli Thomas L. Wiseman

CLASS OF 1970Jack A. Bjerke Roger E. Bloomfield William D. Buss II Ralph W. Christy Kevin P Connolly J. Michael Drain Lee J. Dunn, Jr.Harry E. Field Howard J. Freedman Christopher J. Goldthorpe

15

John N. Gulick, Jr, Kenneth A. Hook Timothy D. Johnson James D. DennisNorman C. Hartsel William C. Kirk Ronald S. Kahn James A. EllowitzJohn R. Hoffman, Jr. Lee S. Kolczun Stephen R. Kalette Edward D. EtheredgeGrover Hull Howard A. Levy Mark D. Katz William N. Farran IIIRobin M. Kennedy Lucien Marino Alan S. Kleinman Donald J. FisherLawrence M. Kukey Randall A. Martin Mary Jane Kober Vivian C. FolkEllen Lake William J. Martin Andrew Kohn Richard C. FooteStuart A. Laven David E. Meek David Kolick Ronald J. FrantzWilliam B, Lawrence Agnes Mlott Lee and Margery Koosed Stephen B. FrewTerry P. Leiden Lawrence W. Nelson Jeffrey M. Kossak Frederic M. FriedmanThomas C. Liber Michael L. Pashos Deanne Coe Kursh Robert R. GatesRobert G. Lile Alvin M. Podboy Paul S. Lefkowitz William A. GerberDonald Modica Benjamin J. Randall Charles A. Leppert Margaret J. GillisRoger D. Morris Roland W. Riggs Mark S. Loewenthal Cathy C. GodshallJohn R. Preston Harry A. Smith III John T. Mulligan Barbara GordonMichael J. Saltzman Robert M. Spira David S. Neufeld James D. GottfriedJay M. Schonfeld William R. Strachan Karen K. Nygaard James N. GrossVetus Syracuse Peter H. Turkopuls 1 David M. O'Laughlin Joan Mandel GrossHomer S. Taft, Jr. Diane R. Williams Dougas J. Paul Patrick A. Guida ’Raymond F. Voelker Charles B. Zellmer Judy Perelman Gary H, HoffmanDavid S. Weil, Jr. ' Thomas E. Zena William C. Phillippi John D. IndellicatiE. Joel Wesp ' Glenn T. Piercy William JacobsDaniel D. Wilt CLASS OF 1973 John S. Pyle Barney K. Katchen

Frederick W, Anthony Marcialyn G. Robinowitz Michael C. KazerCLASS OF 1971 Alan P. Baden Frank J. Rose, Jr. Andrew R KrembsRichard I. Abrams Deborah D. Benik Arthur J. Rowbotham Christopher P. KunziThomas E. Africa Alec Berezin Jerry W. Semer Martha C. LeeJeffrey P. Albert Edgar H. Boles II Edward F. Siegel Rosalind C. LindGary R. Axner Gary S. Brackett Jeffrey D. Sherwin Richard LolliCharles F. Baumgartner Susan G. Braden Robert G. Sillars David J. LundgrenThomas G. Belden Anthony 0. Brown Kenneth D. Simmons Brant D. MaltbyStanley G. Berlin Abraham Cantor Arthur P. Sims Bruce P. MandelJoseph W. and Madge L. Casper Lawrence J. Carlini Loren E. Souers, Jr. Theodore M, Mann, Jr.

Roger G. McCrearyPatrick M. McLaughlin

Cray J. Coppins, Jr.Vincent K. DeMelto

Randall A, ColeWilliam G. Compton

Michael A. ThompsonGuy E. Tweed II

John A. Demer William S. Derkin R. Byron Wallace Andrew C. MeyerA.J. DiMattia Deborah Detz Helene Weiss Dixon F. MillerJane M. Dixon Lee J. Dixon II Victoria A. MorrisonJeffrey S. Feder Leonard Ehrenreich CLASS OF 1975 Beverly E. MyersCharles W. Findlay III Nelson E. Genshaft Vivian S. BalesterWilliam L. Fleming Susan and Stanley Jaros Solomon H. Basch Roderick O. OttMark E. Gammons Richard J. Kaplow Douglas C. Carlson Rosemary PaguniWilliam L. Gaunt Francis B. Keefe Michael J. Casper Kent W. PenhallurickKatherine Anne Hossofsky Donald L. Korb George S. Coakley Patricia PlotkinJack Kurant Gary D. Krugman Kevin A. Cudney Jeffrey P Posner

Clifford C. PremingerNorman A. Levine Michael K. Magness Donad CybulskiJames E. Moore Robert D. McBride Peter G. Dearing Edward J. Putka

Gary C. ReiterR. Andrew Richner

Robert M. Nelson Carl G. McMahon Mark H. DorisCarl A. Nunziato Robert R. Newcomb Stanley M. DubMichael R. Oker Michael J. Peterman Daniel C. Durand IIITimothy T. Reid Stephen E Rachlis Oldrich Foucek III Warren M. RosmanCharles T. Riehl Neil E. Roberts Peter A. Gadiel Dennis A. RotmanHarvey N. Shapiro Alan A. Rudnick Thomas M. George David L. RowthornThomas C. Simiele William G. Schmidt Gary S. Glazer Karen R. Savransky

Roger L. ShumakerJames P, Sileneck

Thomas E. Taylor David E. Schreiner Richard GoismanMaynard F. Thomson Richard E. Siferd Mark J. HassettTheodore D. Ward Steven T. Sloan George T. Kimmel IIIGregory A. Weiss Lawrence F. Smith Daniel J. KolickJerome F. Weiss Randall L. Solomon Edward T. Krumeich John G. Strand

James R. StrawnRobert E WeaverHoward A. WeinerHazel M, WillacyThomas D. Williamson

John S. Wilbur, Jr. Ronald E. Stocker Richard M. Lorenzo

CLASS OF 1972Joseph J. AllottaTimothy J. ArmstrongBernard R. Baker

Stephen D. WebsterStephen C. WeingradCharles D. WellerGeorge E. Wenz IIIMiles J. Zaremski

George L. McGaughey, Jr.John F. MelvinAlien R. MushenoWilliam A. NormanDonald A. RicherRichard H. Bamberger Steven E. SigalowKenneth R. Spanagel

CLASS OF 1977Roger Bamberger CLASS OF 1974 Frank T. Bailey IIIJoseph Bancsi Roger E. Bloomfield Emilie D. BarnettDouglas N. Barr Charles J. Bauernschmidt Douglas K. BarthRobert A. Boardman Steven N. Bulloch Ralph S. Tyler

Peter H. WeinbergerLeslie Weisenberger

Janet R. BeckWilliam P. Bobolsky Stuart Z. Chiron David L. BellThomas B. Brigham, Jr. Kenneth B. Davis, Jr. David M. BenjaminAlan K. Brown Thomas F. Dowd Robin A. BozianRobert C. Cagen Mitchell and Julie Dubick Marian C. BroderRick J. Carbone Elizabeth M. Durkin Larry A. Zink R. Marshall BrownCynthia Catalano Bruce N. Eberlin Herman J, CarachRichard J. Duffy Brian W. Fitzsimmons CLASS OF 1976 Joseph D. CarneyPaul Dutton John D. Flynn Lynn B. Alfred Gail L. CudakStephen C. Ellis Glenn Galbreath Robert W. Avery Delwyn D. EhresmanDennis H. Fike Frank J. Hariton Gregory W. Bagen John C. FairweatherGerry Gaydos K. Mark Harman Joseph A. Baldinger Polly Haight FrawleyJohn H. Gibbon Stephen A. Hill Sander M. Bieber Steven M. GenshaftJames Hinckley Howard H. Hop wood Arunas F. Bielinis Gwenn E. GloverDonald J. Hoffman Douglas M. Johnson John E. Campion II Frances F, Goins

16

David I. Hammond Michael F. Harris John F, Hersch Ruth L. Hilliard Timothy D. Holder Richard F. Horvath Sandra K. Hunter Louis J. Juliano, Jr. Terry G.R Kane Gordon D. Kinder Bernard P. Klein Philip Kolczynski Thomas J. Lee Mary E. Lewis Marc I. Lipton Wayne P Marta Christine J. McCamont Edward A. Pace Peter Peckarsky John W, Powell Kenneth J. Rapoport Russell D. Raskin Homer R. Richards Jeffrey A. Rocke David I. Rosen Debra J. Samad John D. Sayre JoAnne I. Schwartz Grant D. Shoub Roger Stern Stuart A. Strasfeld Robert J. Styduhar Stephen G. Thomas Kenneth H. Watman Carl D. Weinberg James W. Westfall, Jr. Charles D. Whitney Ralph B. Williams Scott R. Wilson Christopher H. Wright CLASS OF 1978 Robert S. Amrein John P. Batt Victoria Matts Beach Andrew W. Bederman Bruce J. Belman Ann Womer Benjamin Michael Berg Ronald J. Bernstein Gary A. Boncella Mark F. Brancato Steven A. Caputo William S. Cline J. Keven Cogan Mary Lynn Durham Martin T. Franey Francis X. Gardner David J. Gordon Timothy J. Grendell Richard G. Hardy Stephen M. Harnik Albert J. Hauschulz IV Daniel J. Herron Donald A. Heydt William H. Howard Jonathan Hull Randall C. Hunt John P. Josephs, Jr.Joy L. Koletsky Charles R. Kowal F. Gifford Landen Barbara A. Larsen Janet A. Mackenzie David R. Maier Emma N. Mason Andrew R. Morse Debbie L. Moss Michael A. Ogline Daniel H. Plumly Mary Ann F. Rabin W. Read Rankin Jeanne Martin Rickert David B. Roberts

Michael J. Roth Sheldon M. Sager Alexander J. Savakis Richard J. Schager, Jr.John V. Scharon, Jr.Sandra Sedacca Kenneth A. Sprang Jan H. Stamm Geoffrey Stein Kathleen A. Wanner Leo R. Ward Dwight S. Williams Bradford D. Zelasko Francis J. Witt III Patrick M. Zohn

CLASS OF 1979 Donald F. Barney Stephen F. Belden Harvey P Blank Julia S. Bolton Kurt A. Bruenig Michael E. Brittain John R Brody Harold J. Bush Barbara Ann Ciokan Carolyn Cobb James J. Connelly Mary R. Craig Stephanie L. Croom Janice E. Cross Nancy Welch Deeter Michael J. Denney Katherine A. Dumas Robert C. Ellis Mary Louise Elmlinger Bruce E. Fassler David L. Giles Jill J. Goubeaux Marc W. Groedel Bob Gross Martin J. Gruenberg M. Elaine Guminiak Roy A. Hulme Jeffrey S. Hyman John J. Inglis Richard J. Jacobson Cary D. Jones Constance R. Kelly Elizabeth K. Kozul James C. Lewis III Duncan J. MacCallum Evelyn G. Maier Jeffrey Mallamad Janice L. Mazurkiewcz Laura J. Metcoff Robert J. O'Brien George S. O'Hara, Jr. Randolph C. Oppenheimer Thomas M. Parker Jan Lee Roller Clifford G. Savren Alexander C. Schoch Lyn M. Schott Joseph M. Sellers Anne K. Stevens Richard E. Sympson Arthur J. Tassi III Jeffrey W. Van Wagner Thomas R. Theado Joan G. Walkowsky Clifford M. Weiner Cynthia J. Wiens Roger H. Williams Joel D. Zychick

CLASS OF 1980 Christopher M. Bechhold Brian R. Bodager Frank R. Cergol Kendrew H. Colton Douglas A. DiPalma M. Patricia Donnelly William T. Drescher

Carolyn Davenport Dumas Rosemary D. Durkin Michael E. Elliott Brian M. Fallon Colleen M. Flynn Frank I. Ford, Jr.Mary Anne Garvey Earl F. Ghaster, Jr.James G. Glazebrook James A. Goldsmith David S. Grendel Karen Cockley Grunawalt David M. Hanhart Dennis P. Hennigan Martin R. Hoke William C. Huffman Jeffrey R. Huntsberger Patricia F. Jacobson Gary C. Johnson'Robert D. KatzR. Eric KennedyRosaleen L. KiernanDavid A. KutikScott W. LaffertyNancy D. LamsonAndrew R. LefkowitzBeatrice D. LinzIrene J. LoweRosemary MacedonioLisa F. MannThomas W. McCrystalJean M. McQuillanJane S. MillerThomas D. Moffitt IIIThomas L. MushroVickie Jo MusialDonald A. NavatsykTrischa J. O'HanlonGwendolyn K. ParksDominic V. PerryMarc A. RabinAnn M. RothwellJoel L. SaltzmanGeorge R. SarkisRandy J. SchaalPhilip A. SchusterThomas A. ShanksHewitt B. ShawPeter M. SikoraBranka Ann Snajdar-MismasJohn R. StrebPaul G. ThompsonMilana M. TomecDavid C. VanamanRichard S. WiedmanAnthony N. Woloch

CLASS OF 1981 John M. Allan, Jr.James T. Ball Rita Ann Bartnik Mark L. Behnke Luis O. Beltre Richard T. Bendycki Thomas C. Blank Howard E. Brechner Dorothy H. Bretnall Brian K. Brittain Virginia Brown John A. Collins Colleen M. Conway Stuart W. Cordell Dale H. Cowan Robert M. Dunn Benjamin F. Farah Douglas R. Folkert Jacob A. Frydman Alonzo H. Garcelon V Neil B. Glassman Arlene E. Gold Fern J. Goodman Lee D. Gottesman Karen H. Greve

Bob C. GriffoBryan J. HolzbergThomas J. HortonSusan Metzenbaum HyattRobert M. IngersollHarry J. Jacob IIISeth A. JacobsSuellen Shapiro KadisJean KalbererJeffrey S. KaufmanNeil J. KozokoffJeffrey C. LeBarronLaura H. MarksonJames E. PhillipsWilliam H. Pruden IIISteven RosenbergSteven S. ShagrinDavid W. SkibbensVincent SlusarzGregory L. SmithDavid H. Van DamFRIENDSDaniel J. BurnsJames R ConwayOliver C. SchroederMrs. Irwin A. AdlerMrs. Thomas C. FlaniganMr. William H. FlemingMr. and Mrs. Charles P. BoltonBernard R. Krashin

MATCHING GIFTS Allegheny Ludlum

CorporationAmeriTrust Corporation Borg Warner Corporation Brown Derby, Inc.Chessie System Cleveland Cliffs Iron

Company Cleveland Electric

Foundation CNA Foundation Coca-Cola Company COMSAT Corporation Continental Corporation

Foundation Coopers & Lybrand

FoundationCPC International, Inc. Cravath, Swaine & Moore Denman Rubber Mfg.

Company Eaton Corporation Firestone Tire & Rubber

CompanyGannett Newspaper

FoundationGeneral Electric Foundation General Tire Foundation B.F. Goodrich Company Gulf Oil Foundation Hallmark Cards, Inc.Hoover Foundation IBM Corporation Illinois Bell Telephone

Company INA Foundation John Hancock Mutual Life

Insurance Company Marathon Oil Corporation Marathon Oil Foundation,

Inc.

17

Mellon Bank Prudential Insurance Standard Brands, Inc. Union Pacific CorporationMerck Company Foundation Company Standard Oil Company of Warner Communications,National City Bank Republic Steel Corporation Ohio Inc.National Gypsum Company Sandoz, Inc. Textron Foundation Trust Westinghouse EducationalOhio Bell Telephone SCM Foundation Travelers Insurance Foundation

Company Scott Fetzer Company CompanyParker Hannifin Foundation Foundation TRW FoundationPittsburgh National Bank Sherwin-Williams UGI CorporationPrentice-Hall, Inc. Foundation Union Commerce Bank

Please note: The giving levels for the law LAW SCHOOL PARTICIPATION,school's Deans' Donors Clubs have beenchanged for the 1983 Law Annual Fund. Designation as a Dean's Donor now begins No. No. $ %with a gift of $250. Class Year Alumni Donors Contributed Participating

1908-1928 155 67 $18,136Dean Finfrock Donor $250 to $499 1929 40 21 1,128 52

V. « 1930 43 17 3,315 39Dean Dunmore Donor $500 to $749 1931 32 11 936 34Dean Hopkins Donor $750 to $999 1932 30 10 7,759 33

1933 41 24 2,477 59Dean Andrews Donor $1,000 to $2,449 1934 37 20 2,425 54Dean's Fellow $2,5004 1935 33 13 1,895 39

1936 54 31 11,110 571937 25 14 1,275 541938 41 15 3,435 371939 43 25 2,885 581940 43 22 5,283 511941 34 15 1,275 441942 43 17 3,650 491943 16 6 680 371945 21 6 580 291946 24 8 1,575 331947 58 17 4,339 281948 199 73 11,354 391949 67 24 6,173 361950 no 50 7,978 451951 112 40 5,948 361952 70 17 3,010 241953 67 30 5,730 451954 68 25 2,257 371955 71 27 4,910 381956 68 28 2,620 411957 59 16 5,661 271958 55 28 6,225 511959 55 24 2,358 441960 52 20 2,283 381961 48 22 2,788 461962 56 32 3,935 571963 40 13 1,258 321964 60 23 2,920 381965 60 23 2,685 381966 82 33 2,330 401967 127 37 2,885 291968 119 45 4,045 381969 117 49 4,540 421970 81 33 2,640 411971 90 35 2,614 381972 140 43 3,453 311973 196 43 3,150 221974 169 56 4,075 331975 180 36 1,373 201976 224 71 3,568 321977 205 60 2,455 291978 198 57 1,910 291979 229 58 2,260 251980 217 63 2,165 291981 234 46 2,220 20

18

Class NotesWalter G. Whitlatch, '33,was awarded a plaque at the annual convention of the Ohio Association of Juvenile Court Judges in recognition and appreciation of his contribu­tions to the juvenile justice system for the past 46 years.

Maurice J. Reigert, '36, and Robert F. Desberg, '36, met by accident at a Harvard luncheon in Tacoma, Washing­ton. Both men are retired and live in the Tacoma area.

George W. Schoen, '41, is assisting the Miami Crime Commission in the State's Attorney's Office—Prosecutor's Office—on a part-time basis.

Hays M. Hunter, '57, wasappointed vice president, gen­eral counsel, and secretary of the Norter News in Cranston, Rhode Island.

William W. Falsgraf, '58,was elected state delegate for Ohio to the ABA's House of Delegates during the annual meeting in August.

Michael T. Honohan, '61,and Peter R. Harwood announce the formation of a law firm under the name of Honohan and Harwood, LPA, One Erieview Plaza, Cleveland 44114.

Harold R. Weinberg, '69,continues to teach and write in the areas of commercial law, antitrust law, and economics and legal history. His latest publications appear in the Jour­nal of Legal Studies, the Tulane Law Review, and the Journal of Economic History. Professor Weinberg was recently appointed faculty adviser to the Kentucky Law Journal and chairman of the University of Kentucky College of Law com­mittee on program and curriculum.

Michael J. Saltzman, '70,was named regional partner of the Philadelphia region of Hyatt Legal Services.

Raymond F. Voelker, '70,has been elected judge of pro­bate for the Cheshire Prospect Probate District in Connecti­cut. Voelker is chairman of the Cheshire Town Council and honorary mayor of the town of Cheshire. He will continue as a partner in the firm of Secor, Cassidy & McPartland in Waterbury. He and his wife, Lynn, and their two children live in Cheshire.

Alan K. Brown, '71, was appointed staff vice president and director of compensation benefits of Allegheny Interna­tional in Pittsburgh.

Mark E. Gammons, '71, was admitted to partnership in the worldwide public accounting firm of Ernst & Whinney in Cleveland.

William J. Martin, '72, waselected judge of the Carroll County Common Pleas Court in Carrollton, Ohio, for a six- year term.

James M. Petro, '73, was elected to the Ohio House of Representatives for the Sixth District for a second term. He is also a partner in the firm of Petro & 'Troia in Cleveland.

Gregory P. Szuter, '73, wasselected to join the Labor Law Advisory Committee to the Council on Union-Free Envi­ronment, an educational sub­sidiary of the National Associa­tion of Manufacturers.

Judy Perlman, '74, is a part­ner in Lord, Bissell & Brook in Chicago.

Cathy Carter Godshall, '76, and her husband, Douglas, '77, are the parents of Hallie Blair, born July 17, 1981.

Michael P. Kelbley, '76,moved to a new office at 38 Washington Street in Tiffin, Ohio.

Edward N. Winitz, LL.M.,'76, announces the formation of a professional association for the practice of law under the name of Winitz, Liroff & Kolsky at 239 N.E. 70th Street Miami, Florida 33137.

David M. Benjamin, '77, and Michael E. Grueschow, '77, announce the opening of a law office at 409 Prospect Street in Ravenna, Ohio.

Andrew E. Bederman, '78,opened his office for the gen­eral practice of law at 121 Congressional Lane, State Route 502, Rockville, Maryland.

Mike J. Hoover, '78, is an attorney in the International Department of Brown & Wil­liamson Tobacco Corporation in Louisville, Kentucky.

Geoffrey Stein, '78, has joined the law firm of Walter, Haverfield, Buescher & Chock- ley in Cleveland,

Elise L. Farrell, '79, spoke on stress and relaxation tech­niques at the Ohio State Legal Services Association confer­ence on "Effective Communi­

cation and Problem Solving" in August. Farrell also gave an audience-participation demon­stration of the techniques to the lawyers, paraprofessionals, and legal secretaries present. Farrell is editor and co-author of Farmer's Home Advocates Practice Manual, published in October by the Ohio State Legal Services Association,

Don Featherstun, '79, left the Office of General Counsel of the Navy and joined the firm of Pettit & Martin in San Francisco.

Marc D. Flink, '79, was transferred to Baker & Hos­tetler's Denver office.

Rosaleen L. Kiernan, '80, isnow staff counsel at Leaseway Transportation, Inc., in Cleveland.

David L. Moskowitz, '80, and Heidi Carmel, '80, were married June 13, 1982. Heidi is employed at Cooperman,Levitt & Winikoff, and David is an associate with D'Amato & Lynch in New York City.

Richard Newman, '80, pub­lished "Venture Capital Forma­tion Under the SEC's New Regulation D" in the July,1982, issue of District Lawyer, the journal of the Bar Associa­tion of the District of Colum­bia. The article also appeared in the National Law Journal, July 5, 1982.

David D. Green, '82, is working with Ernst & Whin­ney in Cleveland.

IN MEMORIAMFletcher R. Andrews, '25 Jack H. Green, '30 Edward J. Hyland, '45 Sam Lerner, '51 Ronald E. Remley III, '61

19

ENDOWMENT

. . . Serves the futureHeld in perpetuity, endowment funds provide a stable base of income for the Case Western Reserve Univer­sity School of Law. Alumni and friends over the years have generously added to the law school's endow­ment in several effective ways. Perhaps one of these giving methods would be beneficial to you and your family.

. . Serves your educational goalsNamed endowment opportunities are varied and^ex- citing. Among them ate:Professorships Faculty funds Scholarships Research funds Student loan funds Prize or award funds

$750,000 to $1 million $200,00p to $500,000

$50,000 minimum $20,000 $ 5,000 $ 5,000

. . . Serves your life goalsLife income gifts are tailored to your individual needs:Charitable Gift Annuity

(Minimum $2,000)6% to 14% fixed income for life. Charitable deduction this year. Income about 2/3 tax-free each year.Deferred Payment Gift Annuity

(Minimum $5,000)8% to 14% fixed income begins five or more years from now, but charitable deduction is earned this year. Income will be partially tax-free.Pooled Income Fund

(Minimum $5,000)6% to 9% variable income. Immediate charitable de­duction and avoidance of all capital gains liability.Annuity Trust

(Minimum $25,000)Fixed income 6% to 15% for life. Immediate charita­ble deduction and no capital gain liability.Unitrust

(Minimum $50,000)Variable income 6% to 15% for life. Immediate chari­table deduction and no capital gain liability.

. . . is foreverYou can remember your school through a bequest in your will. Each year the law school receives bequests ranging from $100 to several million dollars.All are gratefully used as the donor has directed.To receive information on these tax-saving ways to establish a named endowment fund, please call (216) 368-4460, the Futures Program of Case Western Reserve University:

James P. Conway or Jean C. Hachen Room 3, Adelbert Hall Cleveland, Ohio 44106