university of wisconsin law school gargoyle alumni magazine

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(4 o V L E E L LAW SH ALUMNI BULLETIN OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN Volume 4 Number 3 Spring 1973

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Spring 1973 Gargoyle Alumni Magazine

TRANSCRIPT

(4oVLE

E

LLAW S HALUMNI BULLETIN OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN

Volume 4Number 3

Spring 1973

Return address:

:J~egar,o,leLaw SchoolUniversity of WisconsinMadison, Wisconsin 53706

Second Class Postage Paid atWaterloo, Wis. 53594

A TRIBUTE TOGLEN CAMPBELL

Glen Campbell's contributionsto the legal profession and theLaw School were so great thatthis page has been devoted to amemorial to him.

He was, when he died, Presidentof the Wisconsin Law Alumni As-sociation. He had devoted his tre-mendous energies to this job be-cause of his concern for the im-provement of legal education andthe' profession. At the last meetingof the Board of Directors, he vol-unteered to speak to county barassociations about the needs of theLaw School and the desirability ofcloser communication between theSchool and the Bar, he announcedhis intention to initiate a programto provide summer jobs for LawSchool students with members ofthe Rock County Bar, and hewrote a substantial personal checkto the Law Alumni Fund to helppay for student scholarships. Glengave of himself far more thanmost of us do.

Glen graduated first in a classof 134 in June of 1951. He hadserved as executive editor of theWisconsin Law Review and hadbeen awarded the Order of theCoif. He practiced in Janesvillewhere he was active in many civicactivities. It was typical of Glen'sdevotion to his fellow man thathe should serve six years on theboard of directors of the Com-munity Chest, with one as presi-dent and another as campaignchairman.

Glen's professional activitieswere both numerous and outstand-ing. He was well known as ageneral practitioner, author, andteacher.

1\

He was a general practitioner inthe best sense. His strong intellect,and conscientious pre par at ion,brought to his clients high qualityservice in many areas of the law.Once while teaching in this LawSchool, Glen led the class throughthe maze of legal issues he ex-plored as attorney for the sellerin setting up a major shoppingcenter. He listed on the blackboard41 areas of the law involved inthat single complex transaction.Glen was author of a chapter ofthe book Presentation and Preser-vation of Evidence. At his death,he was a senior member of thefirm of Campbell, Brennan, Steiland Ryan in Janesville.

He was active in bar activities,serving three terms as secretaryand one as president of the RockCounty Bar Association. He wasa member of the corporate andnegligence sections of the State Barof Wisconsin, a member of theAmerican Bar Association, amember of the National Legal Aidand Defender Association, a mem-ber of the World Law Center ofGeneva, Switzerland, and a mem-ber of the Committee on WorldPeace through Law of the StateBar.

Glen was a l s o interested, inworking with young people andin education. A few years ago, hewent back to school (at the sametime continuing his practice) toget a master's degree in education.He became a part-time teacher ofhistory in the Janesville publicschools. In addition he lecturedand presented professional papersto State Bar regional and statemeetings, and to seminars of Con-tinuing Legal Education in Wis-consin, a service of U.W. Exten-sion. He presented CLEW's tele-lectures on Evidence in 1967 andCLEW's programs on the Uni-form Commercial Code in 1965.Continuing Legal Education re-warded him with an award ofmerit. He also taught periodicallyin the U.W. Law School in theGeneral Practice and Trial Advo-cacy courses in which practitionersshare with students, the experiencegained in practice.

GLEN CAMPBELL

December, 1972

Glen served this School and hisprofession through his many ac-tivities in the Wisconsin LawAlumni Association, whose Fundsupplies the great bulk of thescholarships available to our stu-dents. The officers and directorsof the Association provide adviceand assistance to the School con-cerning the Fund, the relationshipof the Law School to the Bar,and the knowledge and skills theprofession seeks when hiring ourgraduates.

We will miss Glen's tremendousenergy, strong support and wisecounsel.

Irvin Charne, ChairmanBoard of Visitors

Thomas Barland, Vice-President,Wisconsin Law Alumni

AssociationGeorge Bunn, Dean

THE GARGOYLE

VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES KEEP PROFESSORS BUSY

The world-wide nature of theWisconsin Law School's commit-ment is demonstrated this year bythe fact that several regular Facul-ty members are on leave to teachabroad. Professors Larry Churchand Robert Seidman are at theCollege of Law, University ofZambia, Africa, Professor JosephThome is teaching at the CatholicUniversity at Santiago, Chile. Oth-er Faculty members are on leavewithin the United States. ProfessorStewart Macaulay is at the StateUniversity of New York at Buf-falo; Professor William Whitfordis teaching this year at Stanford.Professors Rob e rt Skilton andMargo Melli are on leave, he asSmongeski Research Professor.Professor Bill Foster is doing re-search at the American Bar Foun-dation in Chicago. His work is

Law professors have alwaystaken seriously the Wisconsin Idea-to wit, that the boundaries of theUniversity are the boundaries ofthe state. To be more accurate,perhaps, it should be stated that,at least in the latter part of thetwentieth century, the Universityhas no boundaries; it encircles theworld.

Law professors also feel strong-ly that two of their important func-tions are the advancement ofknow-ledge and public service. They par-ticipate heavily in many activities,in addition to their ever-increasingresponsibilities for teaching lawand training lawyers.

About once a year the Gargoyleattempts to bring the alumni up-to-date on the extra-curricular lifeof the Faculty. What follows areexamples of some of their currentactivities. Some are public andprofessional services, some arescholarly publications, some arepublications of teaching materials,directly related to the improvementof legal education, both here andelsewhere.

Professor Gullickson

devoted to a study of ClassActions, a currently controversiallegal development.

(Editor's note: Professors onleave do not receive their teachingsalaries, but are supported byother sources, such as researchgrants from foundations orgovernment. )

Professor Stuart Gullickson, na-tionally recognized as the leadingteacher of practice skills to lawstudents, and director of the LawSchool's General Practice coursehas been commissioned by theJoint Committee on ContinuingLegal Education of the AmericanLaw Institute and the AmericanBar Association to write a bookon how to present a general prac-tice course for use in other lawschools.

On December 8, 1972, he spokeat the dedication of the new lawschool building at the Universityof Toledo on the controversial to-pic, the Systems Approach to LawPractice. Emphasizing that the goalof systems is not to mechanize thelawyer, Professor Gullicksonstatedthat "the first function of automa-tion is to relieve people of the ne-cessity of being automatons. ""Sys-tems should unmechanize us," hedeclared, by removing the repeti-tive processes from the lawyer'sday. Describing some of the sys-tems-both manual and computer-ized-which are being developed inthe United States, he noted that"increasing the productivity of alllawyers, and the competency ofnew lawyers, will bring us closerto the goal of quality legal serv-ices for all, at costs all can afford."

***

Legal Education Opportunities-A Nationwide Movement .. 9

Not All Alumni Practice Law:Some Are Judges . . . . 11Some Are Members of

Congress . 13Some Are Members of

the Legislature. . . 13Some Are Professors. . 13

THE GARGOYLE

U.W. Campus-January, 1973

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Bulletin of the University of Wisconsinlaw School, published quarterly.

Vol. 4, No.3 Spring, 1973Ruth B. Doyle, editor

Photos by David UllrichPublication office, 213 W. Madison St.,Waterloo, Wis. Second class postage paidat Madison, Wis. and Waterloo, Wis.Postmaste,'s Note: Please send form 3579to "Gargoyle", University of WisconsinLaw School, Madison, Wisconsin.Subscription Price: 50¢ per year for mem-bers, $1.00 per year for non-members.

A Tribute to Glen Campbell .. 2

Variety of Activities KeepProfessors Busy 3

Proceeds of Alumni Fund Downin 1972 Over 1973 . . . . .. 7

THE GARGOYLE III

In March, 1972, a monumen-tal report on the Urban PoliceFunction was released by the Am-erican Bar Association Project onStandards for Criminal Justice,through its Advisory Committeeon the Police Function. ProfessorFrank Remington served as Chair-man of the Committee, and Pro-fessor Herman Goldstein served asReporter. The Standards and ac-companying commentaries, forwhich Professor Goldstein was pri-marily responsible, are the resultof several years of intensive effort.The report has just been approvedwith several amendments by theAmerican Bar Association Houseof Delegates at the February, 1973meeting. Fourteen thousand copiesof the publication were circulatedfor review prior to the meeting.

* * *Professor Edward Kimball, who

will leave a big hole in the Facul-ty when he departs to join the newlaw school at Brigham Young Uni-versity in 1973-74, is serving onthe Evidence Committee of the Wis-consin Judicial Council, which hasrecently proposed a new evidencecode for Wisconsin. He also serveson the Evidence Committee of theMultistate Bar Examination, andon the Special Review Board of theWisconsin Department of Healthand Social Services. He has servedon the committee which is prepar-ing the Criminal Defense Hand-book. During the summer of 1972,he participated in the criminal de-fense section of Dane County LegalServices.

A study of international sales,and a manuscript on Security In-terests in Inventory and Accountsare occupying the time of Profes-sor Robert Skilton, during his onesemester leave as the SmongeskiResearch Pro fe s s0 r . ProfessorMargo Melli is serving on theLegislative Council AdvisoryCommittee on Revision of Healthand Social Service laws, the Gov-ernor's Task Force on Court Re-organization, the Board of Direc-tors of the State Bar Association'sSection of Family Law, and theBoard of Directors of the DaneCounty Legal Services Center. Sheis presenting two lectures at theUW-Oshkosh's Day for Womenin March, and will participate inthe State Bar ATS Program on

IV

Professor Goldstein

Professor RCiushenbush

Professor Kimball

Professor Young

Divorce in W au s a u and EauClaire on March 22 and 23.

Professor Walter Raushenbush'sbusy life includes a full-load ofteaching, plus the Chairmanshipof both the Admissions and theFinancial Aid Committees. AsChairman of the Admissions Com-mittee, he bears the heaviest partof the burden of selecting the en-tering class each year. This pre-occupation has led him to par-ticipation in the nationwide LawSchool Admission Council and tomembership on the Council onLegal Education Opportunity(CLEO), an arm of the AmericanBar Association and the Associ-ation of American Law Schoolswhose responsibility it is to pro-mote the recruitment of membersof minority groups. As chairmanof the Pre-law Committee of theLaw School Admission Test Coun-cil, he has supervised the prepar-ation of the Pre-Law Handbook,which is the bible of potential lawschool applicants.

He is also working on a revi-sion of the late Professor RayBrown's text on Personal Proper-ty, which will be published in thefall of 1973.

Professor Arlen Christenson,currently serving as Ass 0 cia t eDean, is one of the members of theTask Force on Judicial Organiza-tion. He also has participated thisyear in the Law Extension's Tele-lecture series on collective bargain-ing in public employment. In Feb-ruary, he addressed the seventhannual Conference on EducationalManagement of Exceptional Chil-dren on the work of his SummerAssessment of Government Agen-cies (Gargoyle, Colume 4, number1.)

Alumni will be interested toknow that Professor George Younghas continued his long-time (since1956) service on the InfractionsCommittee of the NCAA, whichcontinues to conduct hearings oninfractions of inter-collegiate athle-tic rules. He also serves, as he hasfor many years, on the Legal Re-view Board, which is Advisory tothe Bureau of Personnel on the es-tablishment of new legal positionsand the establishment and changeof salary classifications for law-yers employed in state govern-ment. He also serves as Chairmanof the Legal Education Opportuni-ties Committee in the Law School.

THE GARGOYLE

Associate Dean Orrin Helstadhas completed a three year termas a member of the State Depart-ment of Agriculture's ConsumerAdvisory Council, which is study-ing various consumer problemareas, and developing departmen-tal rules to solve the problems.Professor John Kidwell is takingProfessor Helstad's place as amember of the Council.

Mr. Helstad has also just com-pleted a term on a special commit-tee of the Wisconsin LegislativeCouncil dealing wit h proposedamendments to the Uniform Com-mercial Code.

His continuing interest in inter-national law keeps Professor Rich-ard Bilder busy with many re-search and publication projects.He has contributed a chapter onu.S.-Canadian co opera tion incontrolling Great Lakes pollutionto a book, recently published bythe Carnegie Endowment and theAmerican Society of InternationalLaw, entitled Law, Institutionsand the Global Environment. Theforthcoming issue of the WisconsinLaw Review will contain his articleon the Anglo- Icelandic FisheriesDispute. Other research includesfurther study of international en-vironmental law, the law of thesea, and dispute settlement in in-ternational organizations.Professor Remington

* * *

* * *

A study of OEO Service Pro-grams and the Pursuit of SocialChange, dealing with the relation-ship between ideology and perfor-mance in legal services programsby Professor Ted Finman, has re-cently been published by the Amer-ican Bar Foundation as part ofa series on legal services for thepoor. The study, which was finan-ced jointly by ABF and the Officeof Economic Opportunity, was firstpublished in the Wisconsin LawReview (vol. 1971, No.4, pp.1001-1084).

Professor Bilder

Professor Bilder serves on theBoard of Trustees of the village ofShorewood Hills. He is a com-mander in the Judge AdvocateGeneral Corps in the Naval Re-serve, and a member of the Gov-ernor's Commission on the UnitedNations. He is a member of theExecutive Council of the AmericanSociety of International Law, ofthe Board of Editors of the Amer-ican Journal of International Lawand of the Committee on Interna-tional Marine Sci enee AffairsPolicy of the National Academyof Sciences. He is on advisoryboards of the U.S. Institute ofHuman Rights and the Instituteon Procedural Aspects of Inter-national Law, and is a memberof the Task Force on HumanRights of the U.S. National Com-mission for UNESCO.

Professor Mermin

Professor Helstad*

*

*

*

*

*

The development of teaching ma-terials has been the chief interest ofProfessor Samuel Mermin. He iscurrently at work on a reorganiza-tion of the survey course in Juris-prudence. He is finishing a shortintroductory text on Law and theLegal System to be published byLittle Brown in summer, 1973. Itis based on the material he pre-pared for the first year orientationin the fall of 1972. He also servesas a member of the ABA Adminis-trative Law Section's ConsumerProtection Committee, on the Uni-versity's Committee on Studentconduct policy, and as chairmanof the Law Schools Grading Com-mittee.

THE GARGOYLE v

Professor Tuerkheimer

*

*

*

*

*

*F acuity and alumni will per-

haps envy Professor James MacDonald his appointment as a Leo-nardo scholar for the spring andsummer of 1973. Financed by agrant from the National ScienceFoundation, the five scholars areparticipating in an intensive semi-nar seeking to develop a proce-dure for determining national nat-ural resource goals and policies.Other participants are ProfessorsWesley Foell, nuclear engineering;Matthew Holden, political science;Van Potter, oncology; Jan Van-sina, history and anthropology,and Paul G. Hayes, a MilwaukeeJournal environmental reporter.Announcing the program, Chan-cellor Young said "This seminarcan be the beginning of a 'univer-sity for professors' . . . providinga mix of backgrounds to give eachparticipant a chance to learnsomething of the concepts andattitudes of other disciplines-anoverview now needed in attempt-ing to understand and solve thecomplex problems of today'sworld."

Before becoming a Leonardos choi a r, Professor MacDonaldcompleted Volume 1 of the seventhedition of Wisconsin Probate Lawand Practice and, with Jack R.DeWitt (Class of '42), the ThirdEdition of Volume 1 of WisconsinPractice, dealing with Methods ofPractice.

Professor Gordon Baldwin is do-ing research currently on the pos-sibilities of power rationing. Heserves as director of Officer Educa-tion Progr a m s (ROTC) on theMadison campus, and on the Ex-ecutive Committee for the MiddleEast Studies Program, also on theMadison campus. He is on theMayor's Committee on Merger,for the city of Madison, and isan advisor on Law to the Ful-bright-Hayes Program of the U.S.Department of State. He representsthe Law School on the facultysenate, and has a heavy respon-sibility as a member of the HumanExperimentation Committee of theU.W. Medical Center.

Continued on Page 14Professor Baldwin

Professor MacDonald

Professor Warren Lehman, whoas Smongeski Research Professorin 1971-72 did work in trademarklaw, twice this January addressedgroups on topics growing out ofthat study. On the 17th he gave atalk before the Antitrust Section ofthe Chicago Bar Association en-titled How Trademark Law Sub-verts the Policy of the Anti-TrustLaws. On the 21st at an extensionseminar for members of the Spe-cialty Advertising Association hespoke, as a member of a panel,on legal and ethical aspects oftrademark use.

***

Professor Tuerkheimer has com-pleted an addendum to the deskbook for district attorneys in Wis-consin, dealing with the powers ofD.A.'s in the environmental fieldand spelling out appropriate crimi-nal and civil actions which can bebrought.

The Columbia Law Review ofMay, 1972, contained an articleby Mr. Tuerkheimer on the sub-ject of sewer service in New YorkCity.

For the past year and a half,Professor Frank Tuerkheimer hasrepresented the Sierra Club in alaw suit against the U.S. ArmyCorps of Engineers to prevent con-struction of a dam on the Kicka-poo River near LaFarge. The caseis on appeal in the U.S. Court ofAppeals of the Seventh Circuit.Professor Tuerkheimer, assisted bya group of students, is also de-fending the Sierra Club in a lawsuit brought by the WisconsinElectric Power Company and theWisconsin-Michigan Power Com-pany in the State Court and re-moved to the U.S. Court for theEastern District of Wisconsin. Thesuit charges that the Sierra Club'sintervention before the Atomic En-ergy Commission to prevent theissuance of licenses to operate theatomic power plant at Point Beach(Wisconsin) was a breach ofagreement.

VI THE GARGOYLE

PROCEEDSOF ALUMNI FUND DOWN IN 1972 OVER 1971.

A sharp cut-back in sizeablenon-recurring gifts from non-alumni and foundations to theU.W. Foundation and the U.W.Regents for the benefit of the LawSchool, co up 1ed with a slightdecline in the number of alumnigivers accounts for the fact that

the Law Alumni Fund has pro-duced a smaller total in 1972 thanit did in 1971.

Alumni and stu den t givingincreased from $53,682.16 to$57,024.29, an increase due to agift of $4,000 from the StudentBar Association.

Alumni will be heartened toknow that a number of gifts re-ceived after February 1, 1973, hasthe fund drive off to a fine startfor the new year.

Following is an analysis ofthe proceeds of the alumni funddrive, by amount, by region, andby class:

* * *WISCONSIN LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONANNUAL REPORT OF LAW ALUMNI FUND

February 1, 1972-January 31, 1973

Annual GivingLaw Alumni FundGeneralEarmarked

BenchersWLAA MembershipsTo Regents for Law School Use

$16,523.1443,606.2610,250.002,241.503,771.75 $76,392.65

Endowment Gifts to WLAAJacob BeuscherOthers

1,589.00240.00 1,829.00

Total Gifts to WLAA and Regents $78,221.65

Deferred Endowments through Insurance Program59 participants (1970, 1971, 1972)

at $5,000 ($295,000.00)*

*This figure represents the ultimate commitment to the Fund, basedon $5,000 per participant. It does not represent income received.

OTHER GIFTS

To U.W. FoundationFor 1972 Law Alumni Fund Drive $ 555.00

ANALYSIS OF ANNUAL GIFTS BY ALUMNIBY SIZE OF GIFTS

Comparison-1970, 1971, 1972

No. of Contributions and Amounts

$1,000 & over7-$ 9,500.008- 12,659.076- 16,982.65

$500-9998-$3,600.006- 3,420.005- 2,900.00

$200-49951-$13,039.0057- 14,374.5052- 13,493.00

197019711972

$0-99 $100-199213-$5,559.00 118-$12,836.00326- 8,388.30 133- 14,316.74322- 7,279.44 113- 13,493.00

Totals (law student giving not included)Contributors Amount

397 $44,534.00530 53,158.61498 52,811.29

197019711972

THE GARGOYLE VII

Other States121-$10,078.00160- 10,560.00146- 8,716.00

ANALYSIS OF ANNUAL GIFTSOF ALUMNI BY REGION

Comparison-1970, 1971, 1972

Wis. outsideDane & Milw. C'ty.133-$13,941.00165- 14,381.95175- 12,107.94

197019711972

No. of Contributors and AmountMilwaukee Dane

82-$10,907.00 61-$ 9,608.00113- 14,242.00 92- 13,974.66106- 12,414.70 71- 19,572.65

Totals for alumni giving (law students not included)Contributors Amount

397 $44,534.00530 53,158.61498 52,811.29

BREAKDOWN OF ALUMNI GIFTS BY REGION

197019711972

Wisconsin RegionsCounty Contributors Amount

Region No. I-Milwaukee 106 $12,414.70Region No. 2- Kenosha and Racine 16 1,405.00Region No. 3-Dane 71 19,572.65Region No. 4- Walworth, Rock, Green 17 2,197.94Region No. 5- Dodge, Jefferson, 11 545.00

Waukesha, Ozaukee,Washington

Region No. 6-Calumet, Winnebago, 20 1,720.00Fond du Lac, Green Lake,Manitowoc, Sheboygan

Region No. 7-Forest, Florence, Oconto, 15 1,760.00Marinette, Brown, Door,Kewaunee, Langlade

Region No. 8-Columbia, Marquette, 22 1,885.00Sauk, Waushara, Lincoln,Marathon, Oneida, Vilas,Portage, Waupaca, Wood

Region No. 9-Crawford, Grant, Iowa, 23 1,660.00Lafayette, Richland, La-Crosse, Monroe, Vernon,Adams, Clark, Jackson,Juneau

Region No. lO-Buffalo, Dunn, Pepin, 45 665.00Pierce, St. Croix, Rusk,Sawyer, Chippewa, EauClaire, Trempealeau

Region No. 11-Ashland, Bayfield, Iron, 6 270.00Price, Taylor, Barron,Burnett, Douglas, Polk,Washburn

Total for Wisconsin Regions 352 $44,095.29Metropolitan AreasChicago 27 $3,925.00Los Angeles 9 512.00San Francisco 9 193.50Minneapolis-St. Paul 6 225.00New York 14 845.00Washington, D.C. 24 1,237.00Other States 57 146 1,778.50 8,716.00

Total Contributors 498 $52,811.29

Student Bar Assn. and Law Students 4,213.00Continued on

Total Alumni Giving $57,024.29 Page 15

VIII THE GARGOYLE

LEGAL EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES-A NATIONWIDE MOVEMENT

Selection from among manyapplicants is made on the rec-ommendation of the LEO Com-mittee. The number chosen is lim-ited by the amount of financialaid available.

The result of the failure to admitminority students to law schoolsis easily seen in the State Bar ofWisconsin. Because there havebeen so few graduates, only thirty-five of the 6650 active membersof the Bar of Wisconsin, who re-side in the state, are black. At

It is only in recent years thatinstitutions of higher education,including law schools, have con-cluded that non-discriminatory ad-missions policies did not solve theproblem of providing equal edu-cational opportunities. The Uni-versity of Wisconsin, for example,has never excluded students forreasons of race, color, or creed.No records of the racial composi-tion of the student body were kept.Despite its open admissions, it be-came clear here, as elsewhere, thatour institutions were almost totallywhite. 1n1964-65, when the firsthard look at the racial composi-tion of the student body was taken,the number of blacks on the Madi-son campus of the University wasless than 4/ lOths of 1%. In someother state colleges, it was zero.

It was true elsewhere as well.

So there have been efforts madein all colleges, universities, grad-uate and professional schools ofany standing to encourage theparticipation of minority groupstudents in what we have alwaysassumed to be the mainstreamsof American education.

***

The total number of law stu-dents from all minorities in theUnited States increased from 2933in 1969-70 to 5568 in 1971-72.It can be presumed that there isfurther increase in 1972-73. Ofthese totals, 2128 of the 2933 in1969-70, and 3732 of the 5568were black students in 1971-72.

In 1971-72, only 8 law schoolsreported that 15% or more of theirstudent populations were membersof minority groups. Sixteen lawschools reported 1%, 25 reported2%, 20 reported 3%, 19 had 4%and 18 had 5%.

present, there are more black lawstudents in the two law schools ofWisconsin than there are blacklawyers in the state. While the pop-ulation of Wisconsin is 4% black,the number of black lawyers rep-resents one half of one percent ofall lawyers.

In the United States as a whole,there is one black lawyer for every7000 black citizens, compared toone white lawyer to 637 whites.In the south, an estimated 350black lawyers serve 13 millionblack citizens. There are just afew more than 100 black law pro-fessors, and almost half of thesemake up the faculties of the fewpredominantly black law schools.

Pressures from the public atlarge, from the black communityand from various governmentalagencies wh ic h dispense fundshave begun the slow turn-aroundof American education.

The Association of AmericanLaw Schools has begun a care-ful monitoring of minority enroll-ments and of efforts to increase.The results are somewhat encour-aging, although there is still along way to go. The stated non-discriminatory provision in theAssociation's articles is interpretedto require affirmative action toincrease the number of minoritygroup students in each of theAssociation's members.

*

*

*

*

*

*

The Legal Education Opportu-nities Program was established atthe University of Wisconsin in1968, when seven members of mi-nority groups were admitted, withspecial consideration of their aca-demic backgrounds, and specialfinancial assistance. Each year thenumber of entering minority groupstudents has increased. In the fallof 1972, there were 17 new stu-dents accepted into the program.The group includes 2 AmericanIndians, 4 Chicanos and 11 blackstudents.

The total number of LEO stu-dents presently attending the LawSchool is 35. It is anticipated that20 new students will be added inAugust, 1973, and at least thatmany each year thereafter. Of the35 now in attendance, it is ex-pected that six will graduate in1973. Ten students are in theirsecond year. Academic require-ments for graduation are the samefor all students, regardless of raceor academic background.

Financial assistance is providedfrom gifts of alumni, students andfriends of the Law School. Someof the money comes in earmarkedgifts to the Law Alumni Fund;some of it is allocated by theWLAA Board of Directors fromthe funds given to be distributedat the Board's discretion. Both theBoard of Directors and the Boardof Visitors are enthusiastic sup-porters of the program. The Uni-versity's contribution consists ofa. small number of non-residenttuition remissions.

First year LEO students receivegrants as needed to cover all theirexpenses. Con tin u i n g studentshave National Defense Stu den tloans and part-time employment.

THE GARGOYLE IX

SUPPORTTHE LAW SCHOOL

FUND

There are counter-pressures, ofco u r s e. Expansion of minoritygroup enrollment is s e rio u slyhampered by shortage of funds.Most programs are handicappedby an inability to plan for nextyear or the year after.

Last year, a s tat e SuperiorCourt in the state of Washingtonordered the Law School of theUniversity of Washington to ad-mit an applicant who was deniedadmission, although minoritygroup students with lower qualifi-cations were accepted. This caseis on appeal in the Supreme Courtof the state of Washington.

The effort is being made onmany fronts. Under sponsorshipof the American Bar Associationand the Association of AmericanLaw Schools, the Council on LegalEducation Opportunities has con-ducted summer pre-admission pro-grams for minority group stu-dents. Successful participants aregranted flnancial assistance whileattending law school. The CLEOprogram was financed originallyby private funds, particularly theFord Foundation and the Rock-efeller Brothers Fund. More re-cently the Legal Services Divisionof the Office of Economic Oppor-tunity has supported it. Over 1200students have participated in theCLEO program since 1968. Thereis a similar program at the Uni-versity of New Mexico which easesthe way into Law School for agroup of American Indians eachyear, through a special preadmis-sion preparatory program andspecial financial assistance.

It is estimated that more than60 law schools in the United Statesoffer special programs for minor-ity group students. Many of theseinclude the application of specialentrance standards; many of theminclude special financial assistance;some include both.

NOTICE TO BENCHERSMAKE PLANS NOW TO ATTEND

THE ANNUAL BENCHERS DINNERAPRIL 6, 1973

DETAILSWILL FOLLOW

lunchDinner

*

Although progress is slow, andproblems are great, this is a land-mark year for LEO. The firstAmerican Indian wit h i n recentmemory to be graduated from theWisconsin Law School is a highlysuccessful member of the Class of1973.

*

SAVE ME A PLACE!

Name

Address

Make_ reservations for me

PLAN NOWFOR

THE 1973 SPRING PROGRAMAPRIL 7, 1973

A full day of activities

MorningMoot Court Final ArgumentsMeeting of WlAA Boards of Directors,

VisitorsAfternoon

Reunion luncheonClasses of 1923, 1928, 1933, 1938, 1943,

1948, 1953, 1958, 1963, 1968Special Honors to 1933, 1948

Awards to Distinguished Faculty, AlumnusAwards Convocation

EveningGala Dinner Dance

*

In Wisconsin, there has beenvociferous objection by some toalleged discrimination a g a ins tmiddle-class white applic an ts,many of whom are denied admis-sion each year. Selection of lawstudents, as alumni are aware, isbased on an annually elevatingacademic standard.

***

x THE GARGOYLE

NOT All ALUMNI

PRACTICE LAW

SOME ARE JUDGES:

The relations between the Wis-consin Law School and the Wis-consin Judiciary have always beenclose. Early in the Law School'shistory, members of the WisconsinSupreme Court served as lecturers;today Wisconsin Supreme CourtJustice Nathan Heffernan offers aseminar in Appellate Practice.Some members of the F aculty haveserved as law clerks to Federaljudges. Emeritus Professor WilliamGorham Rice, Jr. and ProfessorWillard Hurst both served as lawclerks to U.S. Supreme Court Jus-tice Louis D. Brandeis. ProfessorJoel Handler served as clerk tojustice of the New Jersey SupremeCourt; Professor William Whitfordserved as Motions Clerk in theU.S. Court of Appeals, Washing-ton, D.C. Several of the new mem-bers who will join the Faculty in1973-74 have served clerkships,one with a United States SupremeCourt Justice. Each year, ten ortwelve graduates accept Widelysought positions as law clerks toFederal district court and federaland state court appellate judges.

The most striking indication ofthis close association is found inthe fact that almost half of thecounty judges currently sitting inWisconsin and a little more thanhalf of the sitting Circuit Courtjudges are alumni of the WisconsinLaw School. We know of ten alum-ni who are judges in other states.

Three members of the WisconsinSupreme Court are Law Schoolalumni: Justices Bruce Beillfuss(1938), Connor Hansen (1937)and Nathan Heffernan (1948).

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Judge Duffy(Milwaukee Sentinel Photo)

Judge Fairchild

Two members of the U.S. Courtof Appeals for the Seventh Circuit,Judge Thomas E. Fairchild(1937) and Senior Judge F. RyanDuffy (1912) are alumni. U.S.District Judge John W. Reynolds( 1947), Milwaukee, is also analumnus of the Wisconsin LawSchool.

Here are your classmates whoare circuit and county judges:

1925-Circuit Judge RobertGollmar, Baraboo;

1928-County Judge CharlesKading, Jefferson;

1929-County Judge ElliottWalstead, .Milwaukee;Circuit Judge Lewis J.Charles, Ashland;

1930-County Judge ByronConway, Wisconsin Rapids,Circuit Judge Merrill R.F arr, Eau Claire;

1931-County Judges WilliamBundy, Menomonie; JosephReidner, Durand; CircuitJudges Milton Meister,West Bend; James A.Martineau, Marinette;

1932-County Judges WilliamO'Neil, Prairie du Chien;Harry White, Marinette;Harland Hill, Baraboo;

1933-County Judges HarryLarsen, Superior; LeonardRoraff, LaCrosse; Herbert J.Mueller, Oshkosh; RichardG. Harvey, Jr., Racine;Circuit Judge RichardOrton, Lancaster;

1934-County Judges Charles D.Madsen, Balsam Lake;William Jones, Racine; LeeC. Youngman, Barron;Circuit Judge NorrisMaloney, Madison;

1935-County Judges DonaldSchnabel, Merrill; OlgaBennett, Viroqua;

1936--County Judges Walter Cate,Ashland; Marshall Norseng,Chippewa Falls; WilliamBuenzli, Madison; Carl E.Bjork, Phillips;

1937-County Judges AndrewCotter, Montello; SverreRoang, Janesville; DanielO'Connor, Portage;

1938-County Judge Urban VanSusteren, Appleton;

1939-County Judges EugeneToepel, LaCrosse; Albert L.Twesme, Whitehall; JosephW. Wilkus, Sheboygan;Circuit Judge JohnDecker,Milwaukee;

XI

Justice Beilfuss

Justice Hansen

Justice Heffernan

XII

1940-County Judges Roger Elmer,Monroe; Erwin Zastrow,Elkhorn; David Sebora,Chilton; Circuit JudgesRobert Parins, Green Bay;William C. Sachtjen,Madison;

1941-County Judges Peter J. Seidl,Medford; David Dancey,W aukesha; Nathan Wiese,Waupaca; Circuit JudgesChrist Seraphim, Milwaukee;William Duffy, Green Bay;Lowell Schoengarth,Neillsville;

1942-County Judge Arthur Cirilli,Superior; Circuit JudgesMarvin Holz, Milwaukee;Robert Pfiffner, ChippewaFalls; Henry Gergen, .r-,Juneau; Arthur Luebke,Janesville;

1946-County Judges Boyd Clark,Wautoma; Ervin Bruner,Madison; Circuit JudgesPeter Pappas, LaCrosse;Richard W. Bardwell,Madison;

1947-Circuit Judges EdmundArpin, Oshkosh; AllanKinney, Superior;

1948-County Judges John G.Buchen, Sheboygan; WarrenWinton, Shell Lake; HaroldMueller, Manitowoc; EdwinStephen, Sturgeon Bay;

1949-County Judges Edwin C.Dahlberg, Beloit; John C.Ahlgrimm, Racine; FrankW. Carter, Jr., Eagle River;Eugene Me Essey, Fond duLac; Circuit Judge RobertLandry, Milwaukee;

1950-County Judges WarrenGrady, Port Washington;James W. Rice, Monroe;Leon Jones, Manitowoc;Robert Dean, Wausau;

1951-County Judges James R.Seering, Baraboo; DonaldSteinmetz, Milwaukee; JamesByers, Green Bay; CircuitJudges William Crane,Oshkosh; Ronald Kebede,Wausau;

1952-County Judges MarkFarnum, Beloit; JohnCurtin, Kewaunee; David

Willis, Green Lake; ArchieSimonson, Madison;William Byrne, Madison;Joseph Schultz, Watertown;

1953-County Judge GarySchlosstein, Alma;

1954-County Judges HarryGundersen, Grantsburg;James M. Daley, Portage;

1955-County Judge WilliamReinecke, Lancaster; CircuitJudge John F. Foley,Milwaukee;

1956-County Judges ThomasBarland, Eau Claire; JosephKucirek, Wausau;

1957-County Judge MichaelTorphy, Madison;

1962-County Judge Alvin Kelsey,Hayward;

1963-County Judge P. CharlesJ ones, Madison;

1966-County Judge Fred Kessler,Milwaukee;

Serving as judges in other statesare:

1926-Circuit Judge GeorgeFeidler, Chicago;

1931-Circuit Judge William Atten,Wheaton, illinois;

1933-Supreme Court JusticeKenneth J. O'Connell,Salem, Oregon;

1934-Circuit Judge Newell A.Lamb, Kentland, Indiana;

1936-Supreme Court JusticeHoward Schmidt, Glendale,California;

1940-Justice David Zenoff,Supreme Court of Nevada,Carson City;

1948-County Judge Howard J.Otis, Brighton, Colorado;

1949-Judge Norman J. Putnam,Court of Appeals, Canton,Ohio;

1951-Judge Joseph J. Pernick,Court of Common Pleas,Detroit, Michigan;

1952-Circuit Judge John Warden,Coquille; Oregon;

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SOME ARE M EMBERS OFCONGRESS:

Wisconsin's Senior Sen at 0 r ,Gaylord Nelson is a member ofthe Class of 1942. Four of the 9members of Wisconsin's delegationto the House of Representativesare also distinguished alumni:

1932-Vernon W. Thomson1938-Glenn R. Davis1952-Robert W. Kastenmeier1962-Harold V. Froelich

SOME ARE MEMBERS OFTHE LEGISLATURE:

Seven of the twelve lawyers nowserving in the Wisconsin State Sen-ate .are alumni of the Law School:

1939-Carl W. Thompson,Stoughton

1947- Henry Dorman, Racine1950-Ernest Keppler, Sheboygan1951-Roger P. Murphy, Waukesha1955-J ack D. Steinhilber,

Oshkosh1966-Dale T. McKenna, Jefferson1968- William A. Bablitch,

Stevens Point

Of the eighteen lawyer-membersof the Wisconsin Assembly, twelveare Wisconsin Law School alumni:

1954-Norman C. Anderson,Madison

1955-Edward Nager, Madison1956-James Azim, Muscoda;

Lloyd Barbee, Milwaukee1964-Paul Sicula, Milwaukee1965-Jon Wilcox, Wautoma;1966-Delmar DeLong, Clinton;

John H. Niebler,Menomonee Falls; TommyG. Thompson, Elroy;

1967-Louise M. Tesmer,St. Francis;

1968-F. James Sensenbrenner,Shorewood;

1972-Mel J. Cyrak, Lake Mills;

In addition, Mary Lou Munts,Madison, is on leave from theClass of 1973 to serve her firstterm.

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SOME ARE PROFESSORS:

If you have lost track of a.class-mate, and haven't found him orher in Martindale or the Bar Direc-tories, it may be that he or she ishiding in the ivyed walls ofacademe.

Ninety alumni of the LawSchool are professors of law; an-other six are professors of busi-ness, communications, and agri-culture. Seventeen are members ofour Faculty, the others broadlyscattered. Here they are:

1924-Frederick Moreau,University of California-(Hastings );

1929-Harry M. Schuck, Universityof Wisconsin (School ofBusiness);

1931-Mrs. John E. Roe, WisconsinLaw School; Orrin B. Evans,University of SouthernCalifornia;

1933-John C. Stedman, WisconsinLaw School;

1935-John E. Conway, WisconsinLaw School;

1938-Clark M. Byse, HarvardLaw School;

1939-G. Stanley Joslin, EmoryUniversity;

1940-Kate Wallach, LouisianaState University; MarlinM. Volz, University ofLouisville; Richard W.Effland, Arizona StateUniversity;

1941-GeorgeH. Young, WisconsinLaw School; Norman 1.Wengert, Colorado StateUniversity (PoliticalScience); Robben W.Fleming, University ofMichigan (President);

1942-Marvin J. Anderson,University of California-Hastings;

1945-Leo W. Leary, MarquetteUniversity;

1946-J oseph A. Romig, MichiganCollege of Mining &Technology; Eugene N.Hanson, Ohio NorthernUniversity; August G.Eckhardt, University ofArizona;

1947-George Thompson, Jr.,Ohio Northern University;Morris L. Stevens, KansasState College; Marigold S.Melli, Wisconsin LawSchool; James B.MacDonald, Wisconsin LawSchool;

1948-Carlisle Runge, WisconsinLaw School; Maurice D.Leon, Wisconsin LawSchool; Daniel J. Dykstra,University of California-(Davis);

1949-Frank J. Remington,Wisconsin Law School;Daniel R. Mandelker,Washington University(Missouri);

1950-G. Graham Waite, CatholicUniversity of America;Sherman B. Sweet,University of California-(Los Angeles); Eileen H.Searls, St. Louis University;Hugh A. Ross, CaseWestern Reserve University;Stuart G. Gullickson,Wisconsin Law School;Orrin Helstad, WisconsinLaw School;

1951-Lynn H. Peters, San DiegoState College;

1952-Roy M. Mersky, Universityof Texas; Leon Letwin,University of California(Los Angeles); Mrs.Douglas S. Brown,University of Michigan;Scott Van Alstyne, Universityof Florida;

1953-Justin Sweet, University ofCalifornia (Berkeley);Walter B. Raushenbush,Wisconsin Law School;

1954-Justin C. Smith, Universityof California (Hastings);Frank W. Miller,Washington University(St. Louis); David Kuechle,University of WesternOntario (School ofBusiness);

1955-Albert M. Witte,University of Arkansas;

XIII

The Law School at Night

1956-Melvin S. Sager. GoldenGate College; James E.Jones, Jr., WisconsinLaw School; William F.Dolson, University ofLouisville;

1957-David S. Ruder,Northwestern University;John A. Reuling, Jr .•Willamette University;Gaylord A. Jentz,University of Texas,(School of Business);Ronald Z. Domsky, JohnMarshall Law School;John W. Cowee, MarquetteUniversity;

1958-Zigurds L. Zile, WisconsinLaw School; Wilder G.Penfield, McGill University(Montreal); Gordon H.Johnson, University ofWisconsin (School ofBusiness );

1959-Judith G. McKelvey,Golden Gate College;'Wayne I.•aFave, Universityof Illinois; Donald G.Hagman, University ofCalifornia (Los Angeles);

1960-Robert A. Weninger, U.S.International University;John P. McCrory,University of Montana;Arlen C. Christenson,Wisconsin Law School;

1962- Richard 1. Aaron,University of Utah;

1963-Michael V. McIntire,Notre Dame; James W.Kolka, University ofWisconsin (Green Bay);Peter N. Davis, Universityof Missouri; William L.Church. University ofZambia (Africa), on leavefrom Wisconsin Law School;

1966-Robert Spector, LoyolaUniversity; Thomas A.Lockyear, LoyolaUniversity; George E. Dix,University of Texas;Orlando Delogu, Universityof Maine; Jon E. Bischel,Syracuse University; JamesE. Krier, University ofCalifornia (Los Angeles);Harold P. Southerland,Florida State University;

1967-Robert R. Wright, Universityof Oklahoma; Lawrence P.Tiffany, University ofColorado (Denver);

XIV

ProfeSlllor Hurst

1968-J ames W. Torke, IndianaUniversity; Michael D.Rappaport, University ofCalifornia (Los Angeles);John L. McCormack,Loyola University; JamesA. Jablonski, WashingtonUniversity (St. Louis);John F. Hagemann,University of South Dakota;Jonathan 1. Charney,Vanderbilt University; JeanC. Love, University ofCalifornia (Davis);

1969-Carlton J. Snow, WillametteUniversity; Paul H.Brietzke, University ofMalawi (Africa);

1970-Timothy M. Wendt,Vanderbilt University;

1971-Mary Lou Robinson,University of Wisconsin(Stevens Point); Janet S.Harring, University ofChicago (Teaching Fellow);

Faculty continued from page 6

Professor Willard Hurst per-formed yeoman service during thepast year as Chairman of theSearch and Screen Committee tochoose a new dean for the LawSchool, on which Professors Wil-liam Clune and James MacDonaldalso served. In addition, he is pre-paring a book on the legal historyof money in the United States,based on the Pound lectures he de-livered at the University of Ne-braska Law School. His lecture onThoreau, Conscience and the Lawat the University of South Dakotain November, 1972. will be pub-lished during 1973 in the SouthDakota Law Review.

Professor Zigurds Zile's studyof the legal problems of protectingthe coastal lands of Lake Superiorwill result during 1973 in a bookon the legal constraints in the man-agement of the Lake Superiorshore. Professor Zile has been in-volved in his study of Lake Su-perior for the nast year.

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ANALYSIS OF ANNUAL GIFTS BY ALUMNI BY CLASS

1970 1971 1972Clas. Donors Amount Donors Amount Donor. Amount1905 1 s 2,500.00 1 $ 3,000.00 1 s 500.001906 0 1 50.00 01907 1 100.00 0 01909 1 100.00 1 100.00 1 100.001910 1 100.00 1 100.00 1 100.001912 2 200.00 3 400.00 3 250.001914 1 230.00 2 175.00 1 200.001917 1 10.00 0 01920 1 100.00 0 01921 1 100.00 3 505.00 2 520.001922 4 752.00 5 531.00 2 200.001923 4 1,400.00 3 500.00 2 125.001924 2 300.00 4 285.00 3 215.001925 5 887.00 5 760.00 5 408.501926 3 410.00 4 350.00 3 425.001927 4 235.00 3 330.00 4 260.001928 3 550.00 4 520.00 6 485.001929 5 400.00 7 405.00 5 500.001930 8 1,375.00 13 1,686.25 10 1,694.001931 8 1,045.00 7 730.00 9 11,778.501932 11 715.00 14 896.00 9 648.501933 14 2,135.00 14 2,063.50 13 1,515.001934 9 1,125.00 12 2,595.00 15 1,400.001935 11 2,545.00 13 3,275.00 12 2,933.001936 14 980.00 14 1,105.00 14 935.001937 9 1,000.00 13 1,374.49 12 1,030.001938 6 585;00 6 550.00 8 435.001939 7 1,200.00 11 835.00 7 510.001940 10 1,540.00 17 1,620.00 18 1,585.001941 16 1,030.00 15 930.50 13 745.001942 8 885.00 11 673.20 9 807.001943 2 100.00 2 100.00 4 180.001944 2 75.00 1 30.00 01945 2 35.00 4 130.00 2 110.001946 4 285.00 6 460.00 2 110.001947 15 1,748.00 28 1,977.50 22 1,595.001948 13 1,070.00 17 1,410.00 22 1,135.001949 11 894.00 12 4,000.07 14 3,986.151950 18 2,040.00 18 1,300.00 20 1,730.001951 12 1,635.00 15 2,138.50 14 1,570.001952 15 1,445.00 18 1,888.00 20 1,814.001953 10 1,010.00 14 1,040.00 16 923.001954 3 303.00 10 762.00 9 915.001955 6 725.00 8 1,174.50 10 863.701956 4 105.00 11 640.00 15 900.001957 8 330.00 14 645.00 7 315.001958 7 1,300.00 11 1,380.00 9 1,175.001959 8 340.00 5 255.00 7 140.001960 4 140.00 7 360.00 7 325.001961 6 510.00 11 820.00 7 425.001962 8 2,035.00 9 2,582.50 8 260.001963 7 811.00 8 1,120.00 9 882.941964 8 205.00 10 285.00 9 590.001965 7 1,096.00 9 678.50 9 205.001966 8 640.00 12 170.00 12 1,170.001967 11 295.00 16 307.00 7 190.001968 20 660.00 20 510.00 12 256.001969 5 50.00 15 296.00 14 195.001970 (15) 10(15) 345.00 7(14) 265.001971 2(4) 118.00 2(27) 9.10 13(26) 206.001972 (3) 3(29) 75.00

397 530 498Law Students 523.55 4,213.00

Total $44,534.00 $53,682.16 $57,024.29

Note: The figures in parenthesis represent the participants in thedeferred insurance program.

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