INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BILL OF PARTICULARS Volume 4, No. 2 Indiana University, Bloomington Summer 1972 New system adapted for ranks and grades A new system of evaluating students has been adopted which will permit each student to know his approximate standing in his class, but which eliminates serial ranking of students based on grade point averages computed to one-thousandth of a decimal place. Grade point averages will still be computed and recorded, but they will be rounded to the nearest tenth of a point, instead of to the thousandth. A student or graduate's relative position in the class will only be determined as his grade point average is identified on bar graphs which are computed each year for his law school class. These bar graphs will be available to the student and to prospective employers. Assistant Dean Nicholas L. White explains that a student with a 2-8 average would know from the bar graphs that, for example, 10 percent of the persons in his class had a 2-8 average that year. At the close of each academic year bar graphs will be prepared showing the distribution for the year of students completing their first year, second year, and graduating from the school. Also graphs of the cumulative grade averages of students completing their second year and their final work in the school will be prepared. With each bar graph illustration the percent of the class with that grade average will be specified. Computations of student grade point averages to the thousandth will still be kept by the school for its own determination of honors and for academic eligibility. Honors standards will remain 3.000-3.299 for "with honor" designations; 3.300-3.599 for "with high honor," and 3.599-4.000 for "with highest honor." Mr. White explains that this change reflects the feeling of students and faculty that grade averages to the thousandth place made finer distinctions than the grading system warranted and that the serial class rankings created artificial distinctions among students. IU Alumni at ABA Acting Dean Douglass G. Boshkoff and other representatives of the law faculty and of the Alumni Association will greet IU alumni at a reception Monday, August 14, 4 to 6 o'clock, at the American Bar Association meeting in San Francisco. The reception will be in the Teakwood Suite of the San Francisco Hilton. Library addition sought Funds for a $4.3 million library addition to the present School of Law Building are included in the University's request to the General Assembly for capital expenditures for academic facilities. The law addition ranks third on the list of new construction requests for the Bloomington campus. The request total for capital expenditures for academic facilities in Bloomington is $19,638,567. Because the present library space cannot be extended northward without destroying the area adjacent to Bryan Administration Building and the Observatory, the addition would be attached to the south end of the present building. Plans call for the present library to be remodeled for other academic purposes after the addition is completed. The request is now being studied by the state Commission on Higher Education and the state budget committee. It must be approved by those bodies before it can be included in the University's total budget request to the General Assembly for the 1973-75 biennium. The law library addition was included in the 1971 University request list as a "project," but no funding was sought at that time. According to Charles W. Hagen, Jr., associate dean for academic affairs, and facilities planning, this is the first time the law library addition has been included with the University's capital expenditure requests. Half of 72 grads stay in Indiana More than half of this year's graduating class from the law school will remain in Indiana, according to statistics compiled by the School's placement director. Mrs. Ann Mitchner reports that 85.2 percent of the January, May, and August graduates have been placed. Close to 50 percent will go into private practice (law firms and sole practices) now. Of those going into government service (including deputy prosecutors who plan to start their own practices or work for firms on the side) or taking additional academic work, most plan to go into private practice in the next two years. Mrs. Mitchner predicts that two years from now 60 percent will be in private practice. INSTALLATION OF THE PLAQUE acknowledging the Walter W. Foskett Professorship at the Law School brought together Acting Dean Dpuglass G. Boshkoff and IU Chancellor Herman B Wells, a long time friend of Foskett's and then chairman of the IU Foundation. Plaque recognizes Foskett endowed chair A plaque acknowledging the establishment of a professorship in estates and trust in the School of Law was installed in the Law Building this spring. Walter W. Foskett, who completed his legal education at IU in 1907, endowed the chair during the recent 150th Birthday Fund campaign. When the gift was announced in 1970 Dean William B. Harvey said, "The broad-gauged concept of the Foskett Chair will permit us to add to the faculty an outstanding teacher-scholar and to provide him an essential range of support for his research and other professional activities." Although other professorships carry the names of former teachers and alumni, this is the first endowed chair. Foskett, who at the age 87, has remained active in his law practice in Palm Beach, Fla., was born in Royal Center, Ind., and grew up in Logansport. After finishing at IU he went to Seattle then later returned to practice law in Logansport. In 1922 he moved to Florida and went into practice with Bert Winters, a fraternity brother of his from IU. A flourishing legal prac- tice specializing in estates and trusts brought Foskett an extraordinary clientele for whom he traveled the world. Foskett has kept his ties with Indiana by spending summers at his home on Lake Maxinkuckee at Culver. At the time of the presentation of the professorship, Foskett's son, John, described his father as "still a Hoosier, an unpretentious man, proud of his small-town heritage." His greatest affection outside his family and his career is reserved for his fraternity and his alma mater which gave him his first understanding of what was possible with hard work. Summer enrolls 158 About one-third of the law students who are regularly enrolled for the fall and spring semesters at the School of Law are taking courses this summer. The average course load for the 158 summer students is seven hours. Of the total enrollment 23 students are beginning first year students. Sixteen faculty members are offering 16 courses, and three faculty members are offering independent research courses. School News Mrs. Sue Lena Hickam, who had been recorder at the law school for the past seven years, retired this winter. Most law students since 1965 have had some contact with Mrs. Hickam during her tenure when they needed transcripts or wanted to check on their school records. Prof. Julius G. Getman has received a $51,000 grant from the Russell Sage Foundation for a continuation of his study of National Labor Relations Board elections. Mr. Getman is conducting the study with Stephen B. Goldberg of the University of Illinois, and the grant will be applied mainly to clerical expenses for work done by a staff at Illinois. The study, which should be completed next spring, received a $203,000 grant in 1969 from the National Science Foundation. The advisory committee on the selection of a new dean for the School of Law has submitted its report to Bloomington Chancellor Byrum E. Carter. The appointment by the Board of Trustees is expected early this fall, according to Chancellor Carter. Assistant Dean Nicholas L. White and three law students are currently working on a research project for lU's new School Public and Environmental Affairs. The study of legal aspects of waste water management is for US Senate Bill No. 2770 (the Muskie bill). William B. Harvey, former law dean, will be on sabbatical for the next year to teach as a visiting professor at Duke University. He will retain his IU faculty position during that time. Since his return from Africa in March Harvey has been revising a book, "An Introduction to the Legal Systems of East Africa, Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania." Harvey describes the book as "a teaching aid for those countries, for they have no texts to work with." Tom Clancy of Michigan City received the Student Bar Association's President's Award this spring in recognition of his organizing Law Day student-faculty dinners and his chairmanship of the new SBA Relations Committee. A Briton at IU: People are her specialty Two years ago a British social worker accepted an invitation to come to this country to see how she liked teaching in an American university's law school. When she came to Indiana her job was not defined precisely, so she felt her way along to determine where her talents could be used most. Phyllida Parsole's specialty was working with people—and helping other persons work with people. At first she just helped teach people-oriented clinical courses in juvenile law and parole problems. As the students concentrated on the legal problems, she helped them also see the psychological problems. Phyllida Parsloe Miss Parsloe quickly realized that this experimental visit was evolving into a more permanent arrangement—and the law school felt the same way. This spring the "visiting" part of her title was dropped. Phyllida Parsloe, a psychiatric social worker from Great Britain who is not a lawyer, is now an associate professor at the Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington. She is teaching a full load at the school year-round. She is president of the local chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. She assists with the local probation and parole offices. And as of this summer she is an American homeowner. It didn't take Miss Parsloe long to find out that she liked America, Indiana, and the law school. She is very quick to say, "I'm very happy here." Miss Parsloe has broad experiences working with people, and her teaching assignments at the law school are an effort to combine for her students an understanding of human behavior with the study of law. She points out that other courses in the University could provide basic training in "people problems," but she feels it is important to have someone in the law school to relate behavior to the law. While working in the law school Miss Parsloe is making a conscientious effort to keep thinking like a social worker rather than like a lawyer. However, she admits she has not been able to avoid learning to argue—perhaps in self defense. As a social worker she was trained to listen for the positive and reinforce it. Now she finds that her colleagues and her students listen more for the points they can attack and rarely comment on the ideas they agree with. Miss Parsloe also finds that teaching in an American school is completely different from teaching in British schools. At the London School of Economics, where she taught professional social work courses, she worked more on a one-to-one basis. Here she deals with classes of as many as fifty students. In the clinic in legal education, Miss Parsloe joins Professors Edward F. Slerman and Edwin H. Greenebaum to teach about teaching. Their students, who are second-year law students, assist as group leaders in the first-year courses in civil procedure. The group leaders record their interviews with their own students on video tape. Miss Parsloe then sits down with the group leaders and discusses with them interviewing techniques. This kind of coaching not only applies to teacher-student relations but also helps them in preparing for lawyer-client relationships in practice. In this legal education clinic Miss Parsloe also does some work in group dynamics, helping students prepare to relate to their students and later to clients, other lawyers, and judges in the profession. Miss Parsloe reports that her students who see themselves on the video tapes are often surprised by their behavior in interviews. "I never realized I was so authoritarian," is a common response of students viewing themselves as they take chair-back poses to talk down—literally and figuratively—to their students. The new faculty member is also teaching a course on the legal profession, which emphasizes the different roles of the attorney—as marriage counselor, advocate, negotiator, etc. Miss Parsloe also still co-teaches the juvenile law and parole problems clinics. A basic course in understanding people that Miss Parsloe has introduced is Aspects of Behavioral Science for Lawyers. She tries to help the law students with their understanding of personality development, causes of delinquency, mental health, and behavioral patterns. Because Miss Parsloe is also disturbed the lack of concern—or expression of concern—among lawyers about professionalism, this year she will teach a course to help law students become more conscious of the profession—ethics, value bases, and generally what is beyond the canons, which she finds superficial. Student responses to Miss Parsloe's new courses at the school and to her as a person have been quite positive, as judged by the constant stream of students who stop by her office. She has attained the level of acceptance in the school that allows her very little privacy as long as she is in the building. Her colleagues in the school have also been most receptive of her innovations and her presence. Their approval in faculty curriculum committees has ultimately made the new courses possible. After two years Miss Parsloe has made herself indispensable enough that questions on her application for a long-term visa were easy for her full staff of legal advisers to answer. As far as they know. Miss Parsloe is the only psychiatric social worker on a law faculty in the United States. Her contribution is unique. State Supreme Court meets on campus The Indiana State Supreme Court met in Bloomington at the Law School this spring in what was reported to be the first time in history that the court has set outside the state capital. The five-member court came to IU at the invitation of Acting Dean Douglass G. Boshkoff. The justices met in the Moot Court Room to hear oral arguments in the case of LaMar vs. Indiana. The case was selected by the court to give IU law students exposure to an actual appellant-appellee situation. At the conclusion of the proceedings Chief Justice Norman F. Arterburn thanked the attorneys and addressed the courtroom, which had "standing room only": "We are glad to go as far as we can to the Indiana University Law School for we owe much to law education." The question discussed was: What sort of foundation must be prepared by the prosecution to make a tape recording admissable as evidence, explained Roger Dworkin, associate professor. The state was represented by Assistant Attorney General William D. Bucher. John G. Bunner, public defender of Evansville, represented the defendant, Ralph James LaMar. The arguments focused on the admissibility of evidence contained in a tape-recorded statement that LaMar gave police the night he was arrested. He had been convicted by a Venderburgh County jury in 1970 for voluntary manslaughter in the death of Noble Vernon (Frog) Nelson. Husband-wife Hirschoffs leave practices to join IU law faculty Jon T. Hirschoff and Mary-Michelle Upson Hirschoff will leave private practices in Connecticut to join the IU law faculty this fall. Mr. Hirschoff, a native of Minneapolis, will teach torts and corporations. In practice with Tyler, Cooper, Grant, Bowerman and Keefe in New Haven since September 1968, he has had experience in most areas of the firm's general practice with concentration in corporate and corporate tax problems. Mr. Hirschoff was a Sloan Scholar at Stanford University, where he received his AB in history with distinction and with honors in 1963. He completed his legal training at Yale in 1967. After finishing law school he worked as a clerk for the Hon. J. Joseph Smith, U.S. Circuit Judge in Hartford. Mrs. Hirschoff will teach constitutional law and administrative law. She has been an associate with Day, Berry and Howard in Hartford, Conn. Previously she had been a junior associate with Joel Cogen Associates, New Haven, and a research assistant for the New Haven Redevelopment Agency. A native of Seattle, Mrs. Hirschoff received her Stanford undergraduate degree in political science with distinction and with honors in 1964. Her law degree from Yale was awarded in 1970. Harvey gets Gavel William B. Harvey, professor of law and professor of political science, was given the Gavel Award at the Law Day ceremony this spring. The Gavel Award is given to that member of the School of Law faculty or staff whom the seniors believe has done most for them during their three years in law school. According to Mike Huston, Student Bar Association, Harvey's award was due, in part, to his efforts to improve the quality of the legal education offered I.U. students here and in upgrading the school. Harvey, who is on leave of absence, resigned last fall as dean of the School of Law. BILL OF PARTICULARS Douglass G. Boshkoff Faculty Representative Bruce B. Temple Director of Alumni Publications I.U. Alumni Association Suzann Mitten Owen Editorial Co-ordinator OFFICERS OF THE SCHOOL OF LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, 1972-73 President Saul I. Ruman, BS'49, JD'52 5261 Hohman Hammond 46320 Vice President Harold J. Bitzegaio, LLB (JD)'53 Vigo County Court House Terre Haute 47801 Secretary James B. Sparks, BS'49, LLB(JD)'51 8 c. Main St. Bloomfield 47424 Treasurer Len E. Bunger, Jr., BS'43, JD'49 110 S. Washington St. Bloomington 47401 Executive Council Representative Carl D. Overman, BS'49, JD'52 710 Guaranty Bldg. Indianapolis District Directors 1969-72 Robert L. O'Maley, AB'50, LLB(JD)'50, Richmond Robert E. Fulwider, LLB(JD)'52, Indianapolis Joseph S. Thompson, BS'49, JD'54, Columbus 1970-73 Thomas Ridley Lemon, BS'63, JD'66, Warsaw Sam Furlin, BS'57, LLB'59, Gary Richard P. Good, BS'54, JD'59, Kokomo Thomas M. Lofton, BS'51, JD'54, Indianapolis 1971-74 Marvin Crell, AB'54, LLB'57, Ft. Wayne Harold A. Harrell, AB'58, JD'61, Bloomington Robert E. Peterson, JD'64, Rochester Ted C. Ziemer, Jr., LLB'62, Evansville Past President George B. Gavit, JD'53 161 Harrowgate Dr. Carmel 46032 Alumna named visitor Prof. Shirley Schlanger Abrahamson, JD'56, of the University of Wisconsin, is a new member of the law school's Board of Visitors. She replaces Telford B. Orbison of New Albany, who declined re-appointment. Members of the Board are invited to membership by the University president to consult with the dean and faculty on the programs of the school and its facilities. It includes practicing attorneys and judges from Indiana, New York, Washington, Chicago, and Detroit, and law teachers. Alumni report activities Walter G. Mead, AB'06, LLB'09, is in active practice with his son and grandson in Salem. His address there is Rt. 3. James W. Sutton, LLB'31, is now retired and living at 2305 Indian Village Blvd., Fort Wayne. He formerly was assistant vice president and assistant general counsel of the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company. William Franklin Radcliff, JD'51, is a partner in DeFur, Voran, Hanley, Radcliff and Reed in Muncie. Radcliff's home address is 1605 Winthrop Road, Muncie. J. Arnold Feldman, AB'50, LLB(JD)'53, is chief of the compliance division of the Small Business Administration in Washington. He and his wife, Aline, BS'51, have three daughters and live at 5513 Oakmont Ave., Bethesda, Md. Richard R. Mybeck, JD'53, is a senior patent attorney with the Greyhound Corporation and also has a private practice in Oak Park, Ill. He is a columnist and sports editor for the Oak Park-River Forest World and West Suburban World and is active in school, church, and community affairs. He and his wife, the former Betty Engle, '54, have five children and live at 200 S. Elmwood Ave., Oak Park, Ill. Porter R. Draper, JD'55, and his wife, the former Elsie Cox Spears, are partners in the Gary law firm Draper and Draper. They live at 12624 Buchanan Street in Crown Point. H. Richard Hartzler, JD'55, is professor of law and environment at the School of Business Administration, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His address there is 87 Harlow Dr. Robert H. Rideout, LLB'57, is a partner with Rideout and Phillips in Boonville. He is also president and principal owner of Boonville Title Co., Inc., an abstract and title company, with agency service for Pioneer National and Lawyers Title Insurance Companies. He is active in church, community, fraternal, and social groups in Boonville, and in 1963 received the Distinguished Service Award for Boonville. He and his wife have three daughters and live at 321 S. Second St., Boonville. Samuel I. Reed, BS'56, JD'59, is a partner with DeFur, Voran, Hanley, Radcliff and Reed in Muncie. He is president of the Muncie Community Schools Board of Trustees, of Eastern Indiana Public Television, Inc., and of the Muncie Exchange Club. He and his wife, the former Jean Guinn, BS'56, have four children and live at 76 Warwick Rd., Muncie. Rodney G. Haworth, BS'56, LLB'62, is a hearing examiner with the Social Security Administration, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, in Cincinnati. He lives at 3105 Pickburg Dr., Cincinnati. Gene M. Jones, LLB'63, is in general practice of law in LaPorte. He lives there at 424 Southmoor Rd. John R. Browne, III, LLB'64, is in private practice in San Francisco. Gayle W. Gardner, LLB'64, is a partner in the law firm of Harrington, Gardner, Haworth and Maley in Richmond and an attorney representing Wayne County, Indiana. He lives at 645 Boston Township Line Rd., Richmond. Matthew N. Lees, AB'64, JD'67, is a trial attorney with Federal Defenders Inc. of San Diego. Formerly he was with the Judge Advocate General's Corps in the U.S. Army for four years. He and his wife have two daughters and live at 3415 Mt. Carol Dr., San Diego. Terry V. Lehr, JD'67, is an associate with Crumpacker, May, Levy, and Searer in South Bend. He lives at 53150 Tammy Dr., Granger. John C. Watkinson, JD'68, is an associate with Johnson, Johnson and Harrang in Eugene, Oregon. Foster M. Young, JD'69, is practicing with the law firm of Yudkin, Yudkin, and Coppeto in Derby, Conn. He recently was appointed corporation counsel for the City of Derby, and he is secretary-treasurer of the Valley Bar Association. He and his wife, Myra, have a daughter, Jessica, and live at 48 Lewis St., Derby, Conn. David Thomas Stutsman, JD'70, is a federal law clerk for Judge S. Hugh Dillin in Indianapolis. He lives at 2050 Stoneham Dr., N. in Indianapolis. Donald Gordon Henderson, BS'68, JD'71, is now a legal assistance officer for the U.S. Army at Fort Sill, Okla. After he finishes his military service in January he will go into practice with his father, Gordon R. Henderson, LLB'39, in Bedford. Henderson's current address is 3809 Cherry Ave., Lawton, Okla. 73503. Joel C. Mandelman, JD'71, is working in the estate tax division of the Internal Revenue Service in New York. He lives at 68-44 Burns Street, Forest Hills, N.Y. Strain to clerk for Rehnquist James A. Strain, JD'69 has been named a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist. He will begin his new duties in August. Strain, who lives in New York City, is teaching constitutional law at I.U., Bloomington, this summer. He is an associate in the law firm of Cahill, Gordon, Sonnett, Reindel & Ohl in New York. In 1970-71, he was a law clerk in the office of John S. Hastings, senior judge, United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit. In 1969-70 he was an instructor in law at the I.U. Indianapolis Law School. School of Law Fund Report In 1971, contributions to the School of Law Fund totaled $45,921.84 and set new highs for the nine-year history of the program. Under the direction of Paul G. Jasper, Class of 1932, a system of class agents was utilized to further stimulate alumni support of the program. This approach proved to be very successful, particularly in raising the number of contributors to 395. Following this report is an honor roll listing of class agents and contributors by class. The Class of 1968 led all classes in number of contributors and the Class of 1938 was tops in total contributions. The Class of 1934 had the highest percentage of participation among its members. (In arriving at this figure, classes of less than five members were excluded.) The support of the School of Law Fund in 1971 has been very gratifying. Acting Dean Douglass Boshkoff and National Chairman Paul Jasper, as well as the Alumni Association and the Indiana University Foundation, express their thanks to all who supported the program in 1971. We can now set our sights on higher goals for 1972. 1971 LAW SCHOOL FUND HONOR ROLL All Classes Prior to 1930 Class Agents: Howard P. Robinson Class of 1925 Sherwood Blue Class of 1928 Carl M. Gray Ralph V. Sollitt Hubert Hickam Judge John S. Hastings Perry E. O'Neal William R. Stuart Clarence R. McNabb Grester H. Lamar Charles E. Dare Coburn T. Scholl Edwin R. Thomas Mr. Mrs. Charles F. Reed Gerald R. Redding Mr. Mrs. Daniel James Class of 1930 Class Agent—Theodore R. Dann Joseph V. Heffernan Milton A. Johnson Alvin B. Lowe Class of 1931 Class Agent—Arthur J. Palmer James L. Miller Maurice B. Miller Mr. Mrs. Birch E. Morgan Class of 1932 Class Agent—Ralph E. Hamill Charles F. Brewer Charles W. Hahn Lloyd J. Hurst Mr. Mrs. Paul G. Jasper Class of 1933 Class Agent—Sol Rothberg Joe S. Hatfield George R. Rancs Mr. Mrs. Leon H. Wallace Class of 1934 Class Agent—Philip E. Byron, Jr. Judge Addison M. Beavers Carlton S. Dargusch Mr. Mrs. Eugene D. Fletchall Robert A. Gemill R. S. Melvin Robert A. Ralston William H. Waldschmidt Mr. Mrs. James B. Wallace James D. Williams Class of 1936 Class Agent—A. Walter Hamilton Harry L. Browne John E. Early Charles C. Fox Mr. Mrs. C. E. Harrell Bruce H. Johnson John R. Martindale James F. Thornburg Class of 1937 Class Agent—Edwin Kemp Steers Mr. Mrs. Benton W. Bloom Richard J. Lowther William I. Marlatt Louis F. Niezer Class of 1938 Herbert J. Backer Judge S. Hugh Dillin Mr. Mrs. Henry Fleck Earl W. Kintner Robert E. Meyers Arthur E. Murphy Class of 1939 . James M. Crum Raymond M. Fox, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Robert F. McCrea Isadore J. Newman Class of 1940 Class Agent—Robert L. Stevenson Mr. Mrs. C. Benjamin Dutton Class of 1941 Class Agent—W. Dan Bretz, Jr. Mr. Mrs. John F. Beckman, Jr. W. Spencer Harrison Robert J. Parrish David Peters Class of 1942 William J. Regas John D. Widaman II Class of 1943 Class Agent—Claude M. Spilman, Jr. Magnus F. Heubi Julius D. Mann, Jr. Benjamin F. Small, Jr. Class of 1945 Warren E. McGill Class of 1946 Mr. Mrs. Glen J. Beams Mrs. Ruth V. Smalley Dr. Herman L. Trautman . Class of 1947 Class Agent—William F. McNagny Jonas M. Berkey Mr. Mrs. J. Arclen Rearick Class of 1948 Class Agent—John M. Ryan Garza Baldwin, Jr. Gordon G. Beemer Samuel L. Blue Capt. Raymond O. Kellam David A. Macklin Jeanne S. Miller Mickey M. Miller John M. Records Mr. Mrs. Raymond E. Sweat Mr. Mrs. John J. Thomas Class of 1949 Class Agent-Dan R. Winchell Mr. Mrs. Frederick A. Beckman Judge Jesse E. Eschbach G. Burt Ford Mr. Mrs. Henry T. Lee J. Keith Mann Leo Plotkin Earl C. Ulen, Jr. Charles S. White Class of 1950 Class Agent—Ewing Rabb Emison Robert L. Bach Charles W. Byer Mr. Mrs. Philip J. Harris Clyde Hartzell John F. Kimberling Mr. Mrs. Phil M. McNagny, Jr. Mr. Mrs. William C. McPike James H. Pankow Richard P. Robinson Ken M. Smith Stanley Talesnick Class of 1951 Class Agent—Robert O. Aders Mrs. Howard Adler, Jr. F. Wesley Bowers Samuel E. Bressner Max Cohen Charles L. Whistler Class of 1952 Class Agent—Howard J. Cofield Ellis B. Anderson Mr. Mrs. Glenn W. Bordner Richard T. Conway Thomas F. Dean Richard R. DeCamp Elwood H. Hillis Michael H. Kast Alan H. Lobley Mr. Mrs. Charles Marcus Mr. Mrs. Lindy G. Moss Mr. Mrs. Saul I. Ruman James M. Schwentker, Jr. Class of 1953 Sidney D. Eskenazi Mr. Mrs. J. Arnold Feldman Mr. Mrs. George B. Gavit Richard S. Rhodes Class of 1954 Class Agent—Philip D. Pecar Dale E. Custer Thomas M. Lofton Class of 1955 Class Agent—Thomas Sheperd Emison John T. Corle Alexander Jokay Carl D. Overholser Mr. Mrs. David Rogers Bernard G. Wintner Class of 1956 Class Agent—Wayne C. Ponader Mr. Mrs. Ferderick R. Franklin Miles C. Gerberding Mr. Mrs. Robert W. Miller John N. Pichon, Jr. Joseph G. Roberts Class of 1957 Class Agent—Phillip E. Gutman Rudolph V. Dawson Mr. Mrs. Fred F. Eichhorn, Jr. Theodore W. Hirsh Carl C. Kling Robert C. Riddell Class of 1958 Vincent F. Grogg James S. Wood Class of 1959 Class Agent—Virgil L. Beeler Paul E. Ave Eugene N. Chipman James F. Fitzpatrick Richard L. Mclntire Robert N. Meiser George D. Owens Judge Philip C. Potts Samuel L. Reed William J. Rogers Stanley T. Skrentny Allen W. Teagle Mr. Mrs. Hillard J. Trubitt Theodore D. Wilson Class of 1960 Class Agent—George N. Beamer, Jr. Birch E. Bayh, Jr. Robert C. Beutter Mr. Mrs. Calvin K. Hubbell Mr. Mrs. Lloyd H. Milliken, Jr. E. Kent Moore Mr. Mrs. Verner P. Partenheimer, Jr. David A. Willis Class of 1961 Class Agent—Eugene J. McGarvey, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Carl M. Bornmann Mr. Mrs. John R. Burke, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Donald W. Buttrey Robert P. Duvin James D. Hall George W. Hamman John S. Jackson James M. Klineman Michael McCray H. Theodore Noell Peter L. Obremskey Lt. Col. James R. Peva John B. Scales Donald R. Wright Class of 1962 Class Agent—John R. Barney, Jr. Rafe H. Cloe Lee W. Dabagia Jack C. Dunfee, Jr. James W. Elliott Martin J. Flynn Miss Janice K. Hattendorf Herbert L. Lyons Dr. Milford M. Miller, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Sidney Mishkin Arthur J. Pasmas, Jr. William P. Philips, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Evan E. Steger III Dan G. Sterner Carl E. Verbeek Class of 1963 Class Agent—David Goeller Judge Joe E. Beardsley, Jr. Charles E. Bruess John W. Clark Gordon S. Eslick Mr. Mrs. Joseph A. Franklin, Jr. William V. Hutchens Thomas F. Lewis, Jr. Mr. Mrs. David A. Malson William R. Riggs Robert J. Wampler Class of 1964 Class Agent—Robert P. Kassing John E. Allen Gregory D. Buckley Vincent P. Campiti Ralph A. Cohen Gerald H. McGlone James V. McGlone P. Michael Mitchell Mr. Mrs. Lawrence R. Murrell James J. Nagy R. Scott Plain Marshall D. Ruchman Richard S. Young Charles O. Ziemer Class of 1965 Class Agent—Terrill D. Albright Thomas A. Berry Mr. Mrs. Stephen W. Crider Leonard E. Eilbacher William A. Fawcett Mr. Mrs. Jurij Fedynskyj Thomas G. Fisher Mr. Mrs. Thomas E. Fruechtenicht Ezra H. Friedlander Dennis M. Hanaghan Brian M. McCormick Mr. Mrs. Gerald K. F. Mai Peter M. Miller David A. Rothberg D. Reed Scism Mr. Mrs. Ernest W. Smith John M. Smith Robert F. Welker John W. Whiteleather, Jr. Class of 1966 Class Agent—William D. Bontrager Thomas M. Barney Herbert E. Boase R. Stephen Browning Arvin L. Davis Stephen L. Ferguson Robert A. Jefferies, Jr. Denis L. Koehlinger Thomas R. Lemon Tracy E. Little Thomas R. McCully Guerry B. McNabb Robert D. Mann Frank J. Otte Peter D. Shumacker Dr. Charles E. Silky, Jr. Class of 1967 Class Agent—Robert J. DuComb, Jr. Morris B. Blumberg Mr. Mrs. F. Roberts Hanning, Jr. Marion J. Huntington Jeffrey J. Kennedy Michael S. Maurer Bruce A. Polizotto Mr. Mrs. Jerry D. Sparks Roland A. Tibaldi William L. Wilson, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Richard Woosnam Class of 1968 Class Agent—Frederick F. Thornburg John V. Barnett, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Larry D. Berning Bruce J. Bon Durant Stephen W. Cook Richard J. Darko Charles R. Deets III James B. Dodd S. James Fishman Capt. John G. Forbes, Jr. Robert L. Gowdy Mr. Mrs. John K. Graham Mr. Mrs. Stephen A. Harlow Thomas A. Keith David A. Kruse Mr. Mrs. Michael V. Lehman Mr. Mrs. Thomas M. McGlasson David F. McNamar Thomas K. Maxwell Mr. Mrs. Malcolm M. Metzler Marshall S. Sinick John C. Watkinson Mr. Mrs. John M. Whitmore, Jr. Anthony A. Windell Class of 1969 Class Agent—Paul W. Stivers Jon C. Chambers Mr. Mrs. Robert B. Chapman Robert E. Fogarty Mr. Mrs. Edwin A. Harper William R. Pietz Mr. Mrs. Rex L. Reed Mr. Mrs. Robert W. Rosen Mr. Mrs. Jay W. Sexton William K. Steger David T. Woods Class of 1970 Class Agent—John D. Craig Capt. Mrs. Daniel C. Blaney Capt. Stephen C. Eastham Miss Penelope Farthing Lambert C. Genetos David E. Gilman J. Patrick Glynn Capt. Thomas T. Hodgdon Mr. Mrs. Rex M. Joseph, Jr. Thomas O. Magan John W. Mead Mr. Mrs. A. David Meyer Mrs. Janet Pauls William C. Rastetler III Mr. Mrs. William A. Resrieck David T. Stutsman Class of 1971 Robert W. Gilmore, Jr. Stephen M. Trattner George A. Winwood Non-Law School Graduate Support Fred P. Bamberger Howard T. Batman Mr. Mrs. Douglass G. Boshkoff Joseph F. Brodley Call, Call, Borns & Theodoros Mr. Mrs. Dean J. Call Mrs. Edgar J. Call Mrs. Jessie H. Call Walter Carsch Mr. Mrs. Fred Collins Mrs. Ralph L. 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