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L E A D E R S F O R T H E G L O B A L C O M M O N G O O D
AN ERA OF
EXCELLENCEWITH DEAN TESTY
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Fall quarter is well underway and I am delighted with the direction our law school is headed. Our incoming class of 170 J.D. and 200 graduate students includes students from 48 different countries — a shining example of our mission to be leaders for the global common good in all areas of law, business and public policy. Our graduates who took the Washington bar exam over the summer had a passage rate of 91%, 15% above the state average. The UW was just named the 4th most innovative university in the world, and we are heavily engaged in advancing law’s role in fostering innovation in many fields. Every day I hear of some new success by our faculty, staff, students and alumni, and each time I am filled with pride for the role the UW Law community is playing in the world. Our reach is tremendous and growing in all the right directions.
As we all know, law truly is at the “center of the universe,” in that there is no area of society that law does not touch. A strength of our law school is the wide range of areas in which our alumni work and make a positive difference. In these pages, you will read about several of our alumni who exemplify the ways in which law is connected to so many other disciplines. From business, to technology, to philanthropy, to global health, to public policy and beyond — our alumni are shaping the fields in which they work and serving as shining examples of the interdisciplinary nature of this profession.
MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN
Kellye Y. TestyToni Rembe Dean & Professor of Law
We strive to make UW Law a place that inspires our students with a sense of limitless possibility, combined with a deep appreciation for the responsibility that comes with their education. My hope is that each student at UW Law finds, with our support, the right pathway for their professional life, one that is integrated with their personal values so that the alignment of “head and heart” means they do both good and well in whatever field they choose. At the core, we strive to teach our students to be creative and ethical problem solvers, a role so desperately needed in a world with ever changing and evolving challenges.
Our mission and accomplishments recently inspired Toni Rembe ’60 and her husband, Arthur Rock, to create a permanent endowed deanship at UW Law. It is one of the true honors of my lifetime to be the first dean to hold the title of “Toni Rembe Dean and Professor of Law.” The reach of this gift will be felt for generations to come. Their commitments to law and justice and to helping us reach even greater heights should be an immense source of pride for all of us at the law school. UW Law is more than just what takes place within William H. Gates Hall every day, impressive as that may be. UW Law is all of us who cross paths here and seek to tilt the world toward peace, justice and prosperity with whatever leverage we can gain. And for that, I say thank you. It is my immense privilege to be your dean.
uw lawFALL 2015
A LAW DEGREE IN ACTION Sarah Bird ‘05 3 4
BOOKS & BEYOND 3 8
IN THE SPOTLIGHT 4 0
RECENT FACULTY NEWS 5 4
CLASS NOTES 6 4
IN MEMORIAM 6 6
REPORT TO DONORS 7 1
L AW SCHOOL NEWS 2
Celebration of Distinction
Law School Part of Groundbreaking Partnership with Tsinghua University
R2-D2 to Driverless Cars: Conference at UW Law Explored Gray Areas in Robotics Law
Law School Students Achieve Legislative Victories
UW Law Welcomes Senator Murkowski and Key Stakeholders at Arctic Encounter Symposium
FEATURES
TECH TIES 10How UW Law Alumni and Startup Hall are Shaping Seattle’s Tech Scene
AN ER A OF EXCELLENCE 18Dean Kellye Y. Testy
GATES PUBLIC SERVICE LAW PROGR AM 26Marks 10 Years
DEPARTMENTS
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UW LAW VOLUME 69 FALL 2015
Dean Kellye Y. Testy
Editor Alison Jones
Copyright 2015 University of Washington School of Law. All rights reserved. UW Law is published once a year by the University of Washington School of Law.
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Dani Bell, Sharon Ernst, Alison Jones, Jennifer Langston and Martha Wharton
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS: Kerry Dahlen, Matt Hagen, Alison Jones, Devon Kelley, Greg Olsen, Jack Storms and Team Photogenic
DESIGN: Jo-Ann Sire
EDITORIAL OFFICE AND SUBSCRIPTION CHANGES
UW Law, William H. Gates Hall, Room 383 University of Washington School of Law Box 353020, Seattle, WA 98195-3020 Email: [email protected]
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On October 16, 2015, five distinguished alumni of the University of Washington School of Law will be honored at the school’s annual Celebration of Distinction. This year’s award recipients include internationally-admired leaders in technology, public service and legal practice, all of whom will be recognized for their exceptional contributions to the law school and beyond.
William H. Gates Sr. ’49, ’50 will receive the law school’s Henry M. Jackson Distinguished Alumni Public Service Award. Following three years of service in the U.S. Army during World War II, Gates Sr. became a founding partner at Preston Gates & Ellis, and served as president of both the Seattle/King County Bar Association and the Washington State Bar Association. He currently guides the vision
and strategic direction of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he first answered his son’s request for help in using his resources to improve reproductive and child health in the developing world. UW Law’s Public Service Law Program, created in 2005 with a gift from the Gates Foundation, is named after Gates Sr. and was established by his family in honor of his 80th birthday.
Mary Boies ’75, Adam Brotman ’95, Diana Carey ’66, ’69, ’86 and Greg Gorder ’85 will each receive the law school’s Distinguished Alumni Award, which is awarded to a select group of alumni who demonstrate a record of civic, professional and community service.
newsLAW SCHOOL
CELEBRATION of
DISTINCTIONWILLIAM H. GATES SR. ’49, ’50, MARY BOIES ’75, ADAM BROTMAN ’95,
DIANA CAREY ’66, ’69, ’86 AND GREG GORDER ’85 TO BE HONORED AT
CELEBRATION OF DISTINCTION
Mary Boies is counsel to Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP where she specializes in antitrust and corporate commercial litigation. She is a member of the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations and chairs its Committee on Nominations and Governance, and is Vice Chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a private sector group that connects best business practices to government agencies in the national security space. She is on the Executive Committee and Dean’s Council of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and the Board of Directors of the International Rescue Committee. She also served on the committee established by President Dwight Eisenhower to conduct non-partisan, professional peer review of federal judicial nominees, as well as
founding Boies & McInnis LLP and working as the assistant director of the domestic policy staff at the White House.
Adam Brotman is chief digital officer for Starbucks Coffee Company and a key member of Starbucks’ senior leadership team. Brotman leads Starbucks’ core digital businesses, including mobile and mobile payments, web, card, loyalty, e-commerce, Wi-Fi and the Starbucks Digital Network. He previously served as senior vice president and general manager of Digital Ventures, where he led the enterprise digital platform strategy, roadmap and delivery for core web and mobile offerings. Prior to joining Starbucks, Brotman held several leadership positions at leading digital
MARY BOIES ADAM BROTMAN
GREG GORDERDIANA CAREYWILLIAM H. GATES SR.
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newsLAW SCHOOL 6
media companies, and most recently was CEO of Barefoot Yoga Company. He served as senior vice president at the digital image licensing and e-commerce company Corbis, and founded PlayNetwork, Inc., a leading provider of in-store digital media and entertainment services for businesses worldwide.
Diana Carey currently chairs the Creditors’ Rights and Insolvency Practice Group at Karr Tuttle Campbell. She has an extensive background in bankruptcy and creditors’ rights, representing landlords and creditors in contested bankruptcy matters. She has received several awards, including the 2015 Seattle Bankruptcy & Creditor Debtor Rights/Insolvency Lawyer of the Year award. In 2014, she was inducted into the American College of Bankruptcy where she serves on the pro bono committee; she also serves on the national Super Lawyers Advisory Board, the Executive Board of the T.T. Glover Mediation Program and Friends of the University of Washington Libraries. She is the former president of the King County Bar Foundation and CENTS, a nonprofit that provides financial education to clients in the Puget Sound. She served for nine years on UW Law’s Foundation Board.
Greg Gorder is a founder and vice-chairman of Intellectual Ventures, which he helped found in 2000. Throughout his years with Intellectual Ventures, Gorder has served in various capacities, including COO, CFO and general counsel, prior to leading the company’s efforts to recruit and hire the current executive team. He continues to provide ongoing guidance and counsel across the company in areas including operations, investor relations, finance, legal, corporate development, licensing, human resources and marketing. Before joining Intellectual Ventures, Gorder was partner at Perkins Coie LLP, where he specialized in high-technology, corporate and securities law, and provided business and legal counsel to early stage technology companies. He currently serves as the chair of the UW Law Advancement Committee.
IN PURSUIT OF SOLUTIONS TO
SOME OF THE BIGGEST GLOBAL
CHALLENGES, TWO OF THE WORLD’S
LEADING RESEARCH UNIVERSITIES,
THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
AND TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, ARE
PARTNERING TO CREATE THE GLOBAL
INNOVATION EXCHANGE (GIX),
AN INSTITUTE DEDICATED TO
EDUCATING THE NEXT GENERATION
OF INNOVATORS.
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With $40 million in foundational support from Microsoft,
GIX will bring together students, faculty, professionals
and entrepreneurs from around the world to collaborate
on real-world technology and design projects. Based in
a new facility in the Seattle area, this is the first time a
Chinese research university has established a physical
presence in the United States. GIX will open its doors
in the fall of 2016 with an inaugural master’s degree in
technology innovation, and will grow with additional
degree and certificate programs and fields of study over
the next decade.
“The intersections of law, business and technology
are critical focus areas for our future,” noted Dean
Testy. “This exciting project will provide an additional
and innovative platform for advancing our work in this
area, as well as for continuing our now 50-plus years of
leadership in Asian Law.”
UW Law has a longstanding relationship with Tsinghua
University and looks forward to the increasing
opportunities for collaboration that the launch of GIX
brings. Initially, law school faculty will teach courses as
part of the core curriculum for GIX students, and faculty
and students from the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic will
advise GIX student teams.
GIX will pioneer new models of global teaching and
learning by directly connecting students and faculty
through equal collaborations with research-led
L AW SCHOOL PART OF
GROUNDBREAKING PARTNERSHIP WITH TSINGHUA UNIVERSIT Y
companies and nonprofits in a holistic, project-based
environment that will prepare students to help solve a
range of global challenges, from the drive for sustainable
development to the need for mobile health solutions.
“This is outstanding news for Washington and a result
of our ongoing efforts to strengthen our unique and
cutting-edge education and business relationships with
China,” said Washington state Governor Jay Inslee in
response to the launch of the new initiative. “Given our
state’s close economic ties to China and our history of
fostering innovative, forward-looking industries, the Puget
Sound region is the perfect place for leading minds from
around the world to collaborate on scientific and technical
solutions to global challenges. GIX is a groundbreaking and
unprecedented idea that will create new opportunities for
the people of Washington, China and beyond.”
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ROBOTS SUCH AS HOUSEHOLD HELPERS,
DRIVERLESS CARS AND PERSONAL
DRONES ARE — OR WILL SOON BE —
AVAILABLE TO CONSUMERS. BUT WHAT
PROTECTIONS GUARANTEE THEY WON’T
SPY ON US OR SURREPTITIOUSLY SELL US
THINGS? COULD A ROBOT BE USED TO
VERIFY AN ALIBI IN A CRIMINAL COURT
CASE? WHO IS LIABLE IF A DRIVERLESS
CAR CRASHES INTO A PERSON?
R2-D2 TO DRIVERLESS CARS: CONFERENCE AT UW LAW EXPLORED GRAY AREAS IN ROBOTICS LAW
newsLAW SCHOOL 8
UW LAW PROFESSOR RYAN CALO WITH R2-D2 BUILDER TONY DYSON AND PROFESSOR HOWARD CHIZECK, UW PROFESSOR OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
We Robot 2015, a conference held April 10
and 11 at UW Law, explored these multiplying
gray areas in robotics law, policy and ethics
and how emerging technologies are disrupting
existing regimes.
The fourth annual national conference
featured presentations from leading academic
researchers, discussions with industry experts
and robotics demonstrations from UW research
laboratories. Tony Dyson — the man who built
R2-D2 for Star Wars, oversaw special effects for
The Empire Strikes Back and builds robots for the
world’s largest electronics companies — delivered
the keynote lecture.
We Robot 2015 built on existing scholarship
that explores how the increasing sophistication
and autonomous decision-making capabilities
of robots and their widespread deployment
in homes, hospitals, public spaces and
battlefields requires rethinking existing legal
and policy structures.
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“This is a moment in time when we’re starting to
figure out the right legal and policy frameworks
to guide this innovative and transformative
technology,” said We Robot co-founder Ryan Calo,
UW assistant law professor and co-director of
the UW Tech Policy Lab. “We have to get this right
because people will not adopt technology that
they’re afraid of or that they fear has no limits.”
The event convened engineers, roboticists,
communications researchers, philosophers and
ethicists, as well as legal experts in fields ranging
from cyberlaw to medical malpractice to labor
law. Discussion topics included regulation of
technologies such as personal drones, driverless
cars and surgical robotics; consumer protection
regulations for household robots that perform
domestic tasks or help stroke patients exercise;
how robots in the workplace complicate existing
labor laws; and how cloud robotics might be
stymied by international trade law.
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Thanks to their hard work and involvement, students working with UW Law’s Clinical Law Program saw two bills signed into law for Washington state this past spring. The first bill, signed on May 11, 2015 by Washington Governor Jay Inslee, requires that DNA products secured in connection with a felony violent or sex offense be preserved after conviction. The second bill, the Youth Equality and Reintegration (YEAR) Act, became law on May 14, 2015 and enacts a major change to the way the legal system treats former juvenile offenders.
The DNA bill was championed by four students, Stephanie Brown ’15, Karen Fossum ’15, Sheana Kleist ’15 and Brandon Skyles ‘15, working with the law school’s Innocence Project Northwest Legislative Advocacy Clinic, which trains students for work in legislative and public policy advocacy. Prior to the law’s passage, no state law prevented the destruction of crime scene DNA evidence. As a result, Innocence Project Northwest was forced to close many cases after discovering that critical DNA evidence, often the only evidence capable of exonerating an innocent person, had been destroyed without having been subjected to scientific analysis.
Prior to the YEAR Act, youth who committed non-violent, non-sexual offenses were permitted to seal their juvenile record when they turned 18, but only if they had paid all court fines and fees. This created significant discrepancies in access to justice for those who could not afford to pay these fees.
LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS ACHIEVE
LEGISL ATI V E V IC TOR IES
The YEAR Act abolishes most of the millions of dollars of court costs, fees and fines levied against juveniles in Washington state, and was co-authored by five students, Manmeet Dhami ’16, Michael Huggins ’16, Thomas O’Ban ’15, Daniel O’Brien ’16, and Margaret Sholian ’16, working with UW Law’s Children and Youth Legislative Advocacy Clinic (CAYLAC). This clinic works to advance pro-children legislation in Washington through research, community engagement and legislative advocacy.
Both laws passed the Washington state House and Senate with nearly unanimous support.
IPNW LEGISLATIVE ADVOCACY CLINIC STUDENTS AND CAYLAC STUDENTS WITH WASHINGTON GOVERNOR JAY INSLEE AT THEIR RESPECTIVE BILL SIGNINGS
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On January 30 and 31, 2015, UW Law welcomed experts from around the world to the second annual Arctic Encounter Symposium, designed to explore the shared interests of the United States and the global community in the Arctic. Participants included key industry leaders, policymakers including Senator Lisa Murkowski from Alaska, and regional stakeholders from all relevant sectors, including science, technology, maritime and energy.
The event, organized by Rachel Kallander ‘15 with strong support from the school’s Washington Journal of Environmental Law & Policy, focused on the role of the United States as an arctic nation and the challenges it will confront in its upcoming chairmanship of the Arctic Council, such as climate change, natural resources, investment opportunities and international relations. “Thank you for joining us for this timely discussion about a range of issues in the Arctic, including ongoing and emerging challenges, policy reform, groundbreaking technologies, and culture and human values,” said Dean Kellye Y. Testy at the symposium’s opening panel. “In keeping with our mission to serve as leaders for the global common
UW LAW WELCOMES
SENATOR MURKOWSKI AND
KEY STAKEHOLDERS AT
ARCTIC ENCOUNTER SYMPOSIUM
good, and this year’s conference theme, we challenge you to consider the shared interests and concerns of the United States and the global community.”
In her discussion of the ways UW Law seeks to engage in interdisciplinary research and collaboration to address society’s most pressing problems, Dean Testy mentioned the school’s recently created Arctic Law and Policy Institute, led by Professor Craig Allen. The institute provides objective analysis of selected law and policy issues related to Arctic marine science, governance, pollution prevention and response, safety of navigation, and conservation and management of natural resources for the assurance of a healthy and sustainable future for Arctic peoples.
UW Law will again host the Arctic Encounter Symposium this coming January, as well as sponsor the Arctic Encounter in Paris, which is happening in conjunction with the United Nations Convention on Climate Change.
SENATOR MURKOWSKI ADDRESSING SYMPOSIUM ATTENDEES
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Tech Ties:
HOW UW LAW ALUMNI AND STARTUP HALL
ARE SHAPING SEATTLE’S TECH SCENE
AS A LAW SCHOOL THAT OFFERS EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES IN
ENTREPRENEURIAL LAW, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY,
THE UW SCHOOL OF LAW IS FORWARD-THINKING AND TECH-ORIENTED, AS ARE
THE GRADUATES IT PRODUCES. THE LEGAL EDUCATION OFFERED AT UW LAW
TEACHES THE KIND OF INNOVATIVE THINKING AND PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS
THAT ENABLE GRADUATES TO TACKLE A WIDE RANGE OF CHALLENGES—AND
POSITIONS—UPON EARNING THEIR DEGREES.
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By Sharon Ernst
AS A RESULT, SEVERAL UW LAW ALUMNI HAVE POSITIONS AT NOTEWORTHY
SEATTLE STARTUPS, DEMONSTRATING THE VALUE—AND ADAPTABILITY—OF THE
EDUCATION THEY RECEIVED. THESE ALUMNI HAVE EACH TAKEN A DIFFERENT PATH
FROM LAW SCHOOL TO TECH VENTURE, YET EACH WITH A SIMILAR PASSION FOR
THE CHALLENGE OF WORKING IN A STARTUP ENVIRONMENT—A CHALLENGE THEIR
UW LAW EDUCATION PREPARED THEM FOR.
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ASHER BEARMAN General Counsel, Trupanion
Trupanion is a tech-driven provider of pet insurance, and Asher Bearman ’01 is the company’s first in-house legal counsel. Bearman joined Trupanion in 2013 after serving as the startup’s outside legal counsel for five years.
Bearman went to law school with a desire to work with startups, and 10 years working at DLA Piper gave him the opportunity to do so, as he served a variety of tech ventures as outside counsel. Then the opportunity to switch to in-house lawyer came along when Trupanion, Bearman’s former client, offered him a job. However, Bearman discovered a dramatic difference between being on the outside as a lawyer versus being in the thick of things at a startup—a difference he enjoys.
“When you’re outside, you sort of come and go and you don’t get the full picture,” explains Bearman. “You’re trying to do your best to understand what the business needs are when you’re giving them legal advice. But you’re always going off of limited information.” Now that he’s involved in management at Trupanion, he has a better feel for how to manage legal risk against business needs.
Bearman likes the fast-paced environment of a startup and the on-the-job training he gets as Trupanion’s in-house legal counsel. He has friends from law school who went to work for more established companies like Amazon, but he likes the startup environment. “I like rapid change and innovation,” he says. “We’re changing constantly. It’s dynamic and that can be off-putting, but it’s also kind of exciting.”
It’s also different, he says, because of the need to make sure everyone is working towards the same vision. “There’s a lot more face-to-face interaction, a lot more meetings to make sure everybody understands what the goals are, and that everyone is on the same page about how we think we’re going to get there,” he explains.
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ANTHONY KAPPUS Vice President of Legal, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Redfin
Redfin is now a household name across the nation, but just 10 years ago, it was a fledgling startup looking to revolutionize real estate through technology. Anthony Kappus ’08 is vice president of legal, general counsel and corporate secretary at Redfin. Before joining the company in 2014, Anthony was a corporate and securities attorney in the Seattle office of DLA Piper. But he had his eye on startups all along.
“I went to law school with the goal of representing startup and technology companies in a transactional and corporate setting,” says Kappus. “I definitely wanted to develop a skill set that I could use to help new companies grow.”
Kappus wasn’t necessarily looking to leave his law firm. He enjoyed his work at DLA Piper, but the opportunity to move to Redfin came up and the timing seemed right to make the switch to inside counsel. He had been watching Redfin from afar already and was intrigued by the marriage of technology to “helping people go through this emotional process of buying or selling a house.” He had a prior interest in tech companies as well as a passion for Redfin’s mission, so the move made sense. And, like Bearman at Trupanion, he learned it’s quite different being on the inside.
“The big difference for me is that I love having a dedicated client and getting to know the business much better than I ever can outside,” says Kappus. “And I love the breadth. I love fielding a wide variety of questions, and it’s just really fun to have all kinds of different colleagues.” Working with a range of people, like data scientists and marketers, pushes and challenges you and helps you grow, he says.
“Law school gives you a phenomenal toolkit, and helps you solve some challenges in a startup,” says Kappus. And working at a startup has helped Kappus grow as a lawyer. “One of the things about working at a technology company is seeing how engineers approach a problem and how data people approach a problem. I think that definitely causes me to stretch and be challenged and is a tremendous add-on to my core legal skills,” he explains.
Kappus believes that working as inside counsel also gives him the opportunity to work in a wide variety of legal areas. It also gives him a broader perspective on business and the interests of a variety of stakeholders.
As much as he enjoys the diversity of his work, however, Kappus’ favorite part about working for Redfin is his passion for the product. “I love what we do,” he says. “I love having a mission-driven approach to helping change real estate for the benefit of consumers. I love being able to go tackle that challenge every day.”
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BEN GOLDEN Director of Legal Affairs, TUNE
Compared to a powerhouse like Redfin, TUNE is definitely still in the startup stage, as a tech company offering a unified mobile marketing console that brings together paid, organic and owned marketing channels into one dashboard. It is the fastest growing company in Washington state, and boasts not one but two UW Law alumni: Ben Golden ’11 and Danan Margason ’10.
Golden is the director of legal affairs at TUNE. His path to TUNE’s legal team was not a direct one, as he started out his career in public policy. However, he later chose law school as the next step in his career.
Upon graduating, he went to work for Perkins Coie in its startup group, because he was drawn to the passion of entrepreneurs and their efforts to make something from nothing. “Those were the folks I wanted to work with,” he says.
He had met fellow student Margason in law school. Margason had started at HasOffers (now TUNE), and Golden tried to get him to hire Perkins Coie as outside counsel. Instead, Margason convinced his former classmate to join him at TUNE.
“That meeting went a lot differently than I expected,” laughs Golden.
Not that the change in direction was totally unexpected. While working with startups at Perkins Coie and witnessing the passion of entrepreneurs, says Golden, “you get the itch to see what it’s like on the other side.”
Now that he’s on the inside of a startup, Golden enjoys the diversity. “You wear a lot of hats. It’s more than just being a lawyer,” he says. “We do a lot of operations work. The responsibility level is high, and the opportunity is huge. We are a growing company and we have really big ambitions. Instead of being a specialist and doing one thing over and over again, I do 10 or 15 different things in a day and think about the big picture.”
Despite how much he enjoys his work at the fast-paced TUNE, Golden is grateful for his law firm experience at Perkins Coie. “I don’t know that I would be the lawyer that I am without that experience,” he says.
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DANAN MARGASON General Counsel, TUNE
Margason was the first general counsel at TUNE. “I learned very early on that it was important to be part of the business team as well as the legal team,” he says. “I learned a lot about business in the first six months to a year, more so than law.”
Margason also found his entrepreneurial fit. “I knew there was a lot more opportunity to work with [TUNE] and define for them how I could help, rather than going into a company that has been around for a long time and has a very set process in place,” says Margason. As an early stage company, TUNE didn’t know or care about the traditional legal path, and that suited Margason just fine.
In the fast-paced startup world, alumni rely on the innovative thinking and problem-solving skills nurtured at UW Law. And the Seattle startups served by these lawyers are better positioned to thrive when UW Law alumni make up part of their agile teams.
Margason took a different path, starting his law career at a small firm. But that choice turned into a straight shot into the startup world, which is exactly where he wanted to go.
Margason is the general counsel at TUNE and a member of the executive team. He joined the company, which now has over 300 employees, early on as its 40th team member.
Being at TUNE is a perfect fit for Margason, who has always been entrepreneurial, starting his first business in middle school and continuing through college as he attempted to fund his education with a painting company. That passion for startups stayed with him as he started at UW Law.
“When I went to law school, I wanted to end up in the entrepreneurial world again,” says Margason. Upon graduating, he first went to work at a small firm that utilized his skills in estate planning and public interest work. Soon after, however, the firm realized the opportunity for a technology practice. “And that was my path in,” he says. “I met the people at TUNE when the company was very, very small. I tried to recruit them as a client. They didn’t want to change firms, but I stayed in touch with them and when they were ready to hire a lawyer, they called me.”
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When you think “Seattle startups,” you might not picture Seattle’s University District. In the past, tech startups have launched from the city’s historic brick buildings downtown or, more recently, the South Lake Union neighborhood. Today, however, entrepreneurship is finding a foothold in the University District, in partnership with the University of Washington and with strong ties to the UW School of Law.
The law school connection comes in part thanks to the new life buzzing through Condon Hall. Just west of campus, in the building that housed the law school until 2003, entrepreneurship is taking root as the startup community’s movers and shakers create a place to nurture early-stage innovation. Ultimately, they aim to transform this section of the University District into a thriving startup hub. Although the movement is starting inside the walls of Condon—now renamed Startup Hall—the plan is to attract other entrepreneurial businesses to the neighborhood.
The future of Startup Hall shines like Husky gold. Already several businesses that nurture Seattle’s startups have moved into the building: TechStars, Founder’s Co-op and UP Global were initial tenants.
The building’s history is only part of the deepening connection between the law school and the entrepreneurial arena. UW Law also has a tangible presence within the walls of Startup Hall, thanks to the school’s Entrepreneurial Law Clinic.
The Entrepreneurial Law Clinic serves entrepreneurs throughout the Northwest by teaming law and business students with pro bono attorneys and advisors to provide the kind of early stage legal and business counseling that’s vital to their success. The lawyers involved specialize in the fields that matter most to startups, including intellectual property, corporate and securities law, and tax. And the innovative model of the clinic enables significant interaction between students and clients, giving emerging businesses a competitive edge and law school students invaluable firsthand experience.
NEW STARTUP HALL: DEEPENING UW LAW’S
CONNECTION TO THE
ENTREPRENEURIAL COMMUNITY
Ben Golden ‘11, now director of legal affairs at TUNE, volunteered with the clinic as a student. He helped nonprofits incorporate and apply for tax exempt status with the IRS; social enterprises to incorporate and outline operating structures that ensured they would stay true to their founding ideals; and tech startups to identify the most appropriate type of legal entity and then incorporate.
This direct experience gave Golden a solid foundation for working with startups upon earning his law degree. “The clinic experience—particularly the direct client interaction—gave me confidence that I’d enjoy working with startups at a firm,” says Golden. “It was also great to collaborate with other students with different areas of focus as we assisted the same client; this issue-spotting practice proved to be helpful in advising early-stage clients in the future.”
Golden later returned to the clinic as a mentor, supervising students. He calls the clinic’s connection with Startup Hall a “natural fit,” and an impactful opportunity for students and clients both.
With Condon Hall now reborn as Startup Hall, and the law school playing an increasing role in the nurturing of these kinds of early-stage ventures, one can expect to see only more success stories coming out of Seattle’s startup community, and even more alumni guiding these startups along the way.
OLD CONDON HALL
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UW LAW IS THRIVING UNDER
DEAN KELLYE Y. TESTY’S
LEADERSHIP. WITH PASSION
AND OPTIMISM, SHE SETS HER
EYES TOWARD THE FUTURE .
A N E R A O F EXCELLENCE
By Dani Bell
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Entering Dean Kellye Testy’s office, one instantly understands the driving force behind her ambition. A poster reading “Passion Never Rests” is displayed prominently in the entryway. Battling through a seemingly perfect storm of financial adversity, Dean Testy can safely say the law school has come out the other side undaunted. And UW Law is not stopping there. “Onward and upward!” as she often says.
Indeed, relentless energy and determination fuel the law school’s triumphs just as much as its vision for the future. Even amid an era of declining nationwide enrollments and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, the law school has made remarkable progress. Under Dean Testy’s leadership, the school has advanced in national rankings, scholarly impact and the quality of the student experience. UW Interim President Ana Mari Cauce commends Dean Testy’s ability to galvanize change and ignite passion amongst her colleagues. “Dean Testy’s positive outlook and willingness to step
up to challenges is inspiring the faculty and staff of the School of Law,” Cauce says. “Her strength in developing strong relationships with alumni and community leaders has enhanced the reputation and visibility of the law school in the greater community.”
As she begins her seventh year, a number more than double the average tenure of a law school dean, Dean Testy is proud of the school’s history and optimistic about its future. “We have the intellectual and institutional capacity to make a difference in the world,” Dean Testy says of the school. “Ultimately, we have both the passion and the muscle, which can be rare to find in one place.”
Dean Testy is one of the nation’s most respected deans. In January 2016, she will become the President of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). To top it all off, Dean Testy recently was appointed the inaugural Toni Rembe Dean of Law, thanks to a generous gift from Toni Rembe ‘60 and Arthur Rock to establish a permanently endowed deanship at UW Law. The gift was made in honor of Dean Testy, her leadership, and her commitment to excellence, social justice and diversity. This is the first endowed law deanship in the world named solely after a woman. An endowed deanship is something of a watershed moment for the law school, providing the necessary resources to create immediate impact and long-lasting
“ Dean Testy’s positive
outlook and willingness to
step up to challenges is
inspiring the faculty and
staff of the School of Law.
Her strength in developing
strong relationships with
alumni and community
leaders has enhanced the
reputation and visibility
of the law school in the
greater community.”
Ana Mari Cauce, UW Interim President
U.S. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE SONIA SOTOMAYOR WITH DEAN TESTY DURING JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR’S VISIT TO UW LAW
transformative power for Dean Testy and future law deans. It catalyzes the law school’s ability to recruit and retain top leadership and strengthens its reputation. She and her successors will have the funding they need to bring visionary ideas to life — from seeding new programs to elevating the school’s ability to make legal education more accessible and affordable for all. Dean Testy notes, “I am honored to be the inaugural holder of the Toni Rembe Deanship in Law. It’s one of the proudest moments of my professional career”.
Dean Testy herself is a product of modest means, a background she credits with inspiring her commitment to law and justice. She was the first in her family to graduate from college, where she majored in journalism and business. Her interest in law was ignited while reading about the famed libel case, NY Times Co. v. Sullivan in a communications course. Without the funds to attend law school immediately, she worked in marketing for five years before entering law school at Indiana University in Bloomington. She graduated at the top of her class and clerked on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit before entering academia. She joined the faculty of the University of Puget Sound School of Law (now Seattle University),
teaching in the areas of business and commercial law for many years and later serving as Seattle University’s dean of law for five years. She was recruited to become dean at the UW School of Law in 2009.
As the school’s first female dean and a member of the LGBT community, Dean Testy has a strong commitment to diversity and equality. “One of the big questions for me has always been, when you have power, how do you use it? If you’ve been on the receiving side of the abuse of power, you think about it differently than if you haven’t,” she explains. She also has a keen understanding of emerging trends in the legal industry and the ways that law can partner with all disciplines to address society’s pressing issues. Two programs that have especially thrived are the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic and the Tech Policy Lab. Dean Testy enjoys helping the faculty and students achieve their goals, and is not afraid to break barriers in the way of their accomplishments. Fortunately, her ambitious agenda is met with an equally ambitious outlook. “I believe we have to take risks if we’re going to make a difference. If we’re too safe we’ll never make any change,” she explains.
DEAN TESTY WITH ATTENDEES OF THE 2013 DIVERSITY IN LAW SCHOOL LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE, AN EVENT SHE FOUNDED EIGHT YEARS AGO
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Dean Testy’s capacity to intuitively understand and navigate the complexities of power and inequality has served her well at the university, where she is known for her extraordinary level of commitment to cultivating a real sense of community and inclusion. She seeks to create an inclusive and intellectually rigorous community.
“I never think that ambition and fairness have to be opposed to each other,” says Dean Testy of her leadership style. “I believe in having a very fair, humane and kind approach to solving problems.”
Unsurprisingly, her vision and drive are very much matched by an exceptional faculty. Dean Testy committed to revitalizing the faculty six years ago by recruiting the next generation of faculty leaders. Those new professors have joined with their experienced colleagues to increase the energy and productivity of the school. The shift in culture has resulted in the school’s best years in terms of faculty scholarly productivity and placements in top law journals and publications. In short, part of Dean Testy’s leadership strategy involves hiring other leaders. A strong faculty has had a ripple effect on the students as well. “In addition to the faculty’s scholarly accomplishments, they care deeply for their students’ development and also work well
together and with me for the overall welfare of the school and the profession,” noted Dean Testy. “That culture is a precious asset. Rowing the boat together is so important. If you don’t, you spin in circles and never get anywhere.”
Students at UW Law thus enjoy a collegial and inspiring environment. They have the resources they need — the support in and outside of the classroom — to truly thrive. “We have a good balance in that students are definitely challenged academically, but they are also supported in their development. Our law school graduates healthy, successful people who inspire others. This cycle is great for institutional growth,” remarks Dean Testy.
Lonnie Rosenwald ’94, Vice President and Chief Counsel, Technology Creation and Commercialization at Intellectual Ventures, reflected on the way in which Dean Testy’s results-oriented approach has enacted dramatic change for the law school. “Her experience has enabled her to identify key areas for improvement in ways that brought immediate impact to faculty recruitment, student applications and fundraising, all of which will be translated into higher rankings for the school. Then there is a quality that is more difficult to describe,
DEAN TESTY AND LONNIE ROSENWALD AT THE LAW SCHOOL’S ANNUAL GIVING SOCIETY DINNER
“ Our feet may be in Washington, but our reach goes around the world.”
Dean Kellye Y. Testy
but equally or perhaps more important — Dean Testy has a vision for the school that is more than rankings, fundraising or other measurable numeric achievements. She is trying to create a meaningful role for the school in the greater community and in the world, through scholarship, publications and the training given to new lawyers who then go out and try to change the world,” says Rosenwald.
The UW School of Law is extraordinary not just because of the people. Indeed, Dean Testy credits its location for providing students with unprecedented access to resources and business leaders. “Seattle is a big, small town. You can have influence more easily than you would in a Boston or a DC. It helps us accomplish things,” she says
Seattle has also proved to be a prime location for the school’s thriving Tech Policy Lab. This unique, interdisciplinary collaboration unites the School of Law, Information School and Computer Science & Engineering, allowing policy and technology to work more closely together during the upfront stages of the development process. “I love to find things where we have strength, our region has strength and where there is a problem that our world needs help with,” she says. “I want to be answering the pressing issues of the day.”
Despite her love for Seattle, Dean Testy recognizes the continued need for an expanded global outreach. The law school established the Asian Law Center more than 50 years ago, an area of excellence for which the school is known nationally and internationally. “We’re broadening our reach to include more countries. We’re looking toward Latin America and Europe,” she says. “Our feet may be in Washington, but our reach goes around the world.”
It is that same desire for broad outreach that has helped the law school move the dial on the issue of inclusion and equality. Last year, the school began a very ambitious diversity plan that was adopted unanimously by the faculty. One of its many goals was to address a frustrating statistic: the school admits far more underrepresented students than the number who actually enroll. This realization provoked the Gregoire Fellows Program, a partnership between the UW School of Law and 15 of the leading law firms and companies in Seattle. The collaboration will help the school better recruit students as diverse as our society, placing them in paid summer internships with participating law firms after their first year of study and providing bar exam support and mentorship along the way.
DEAN TESTY WITH UW LAW PROFESSORS KATHRYN WATTS AND PETER NICOLAS AT THE 2013 INSTALLATION OF PROFESSOR WATTS AS THE GARVEY SCHUBERT BARER PROFESSOR OF LAW
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Dean Testy’s commitment and reputation have made her highly visible and influential among her colleagues nationwide. In early 2015, she was voted President-Elect of the Association of American Law Schools. An active member of the organization for several years, she served a three-year term on the Committee on Recruitment and Retention of Minority Law Teachers and Students. Most recently, she served as co-chair of the AALS Section for the Law School Dean and is a current member of the AALS Committee on Audit and Association Investment Policy, and the AALS Executive Committee. Judith Areen, Executive Director of AALS, commends Dean Testy’s leadership and engagement with the organization. “She has extraordinary leadership skills as well as broad and deep knowledge of legal education,” says Areen. “There is no better spokesperson on behalf of legal education in the nation. We are extraordinarily fortunate to have her wise counsel at this time of challenge for legal education.”
Dean Testy’s term as president begins in January of 2016. She’ll be succeeding good friend and current dean of George Washington School of Law, Blake Morant, who believes Dean Testy is a great fit for the role. “Dean Kellye Testy remains one of the stalwarts and leading lights of American legal education. I have had the privilege of knowing and working with her for more than ten years and continually find her insights, wisdom and magnanimity both gratifying and inspiring,” Morant says.
The upcoming presidency is an excellent chance to put a spotlight on the accomplishments of the UW School of Law. “It gives us an amazing national and international visibility platform. The national view of law schools is really East Coast biased. We don’t always get the credit for all we do because we’re just less visible. I’m excited about having a platform for the year to shout from the rooftops how great UW is, while providing national leadership at a critical time for higher education,” says Dean Testy. As president, she will help appoint new leaders,
DEAN TESTY WITH GUESTS AT THE MINORITY BAR ASSOCIATION RECEPTION, HOSTED AT UW LAW IN 2011.
bringing in fresh ideas and talent. She will also have the chance to exert some leadership at a time when legal education is evolving. “It’s not been an easy time for law schools and I want to try and provide some leadership around remaining committed to our mission of legal education,” says Dean Testy. “The gap in the world between the people who need access to justice and those who have it is getting wider all the time. We have to stay on our mission to enact change.”
When asked for advice for future lawyers, Dean Testy paused for a moment. “There’s that line in Shakespeare, ‘the first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.’ Most people interpret that as meaning lawyers are disliked. But the actual context of it is that if you’re trying to overthrow a society, you have to get rid of the lawyers first, because they’re the ones who are going to stand for liberty and justice. If you get rid of them, the rest is easy. And I think that’s right. We should feel good about being the guardians of democracy and liberty. Even though we sometimes have to speak out in ways that are unpopular, that’s our role.”
“ The gap in the
world between the
people who need
access to justice and
those who have it
is getting wider all
the time. We have to
stay on our mission
to enact change.”
Dean Kellye Y. Testy
DEAN TESTY AT THE 2015 AALS ANNUAL MEETING WITH INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON PROVOST LAUREN ROBEL AND NORTHWESTERN LAW SCHOOL DEAN DANIEL RODRIGUEZ
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By Martha Wharton
GATES
PUBLIC
SERVICE
LAW
PROGRAM
MARKS
10YEARS
IT BEGAN IN HOMAGE TO A MAN
WHO BELIEVES THE GREATEST GIFT WE
GIVE THE WORLD IS “SHOWING UP.”
TODAY, THE SCHOLARS OF THE
WILLIAM H. GATES PUBLIC SERVICE
LAW PROGRAM ARE DOING EXACTLY
THAT IN ARENAS ACROSS THE
COUNTRY AND AROUND THE WORLD,
LIVING OUT THEIR COMMITMENT TO
PUBLIC SERVICE LAW.
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The groundbreaking program began in 2005,
funded by a $33 million endowment from the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in honor of its
remarkable Co-Chair, William H. Gates Sr. ’49,
’50. The program awards five scholarships on
an annual basis to first year students entering
the UW School of Law J.D. program. Each Gates
program scholarship award covers tuition, books
and living expenses. Acceptance of a Gates
program scholarship represents a commitment
on the part of each Gates scholar to work in
public service for five years following graduation.
According to Amy Carter, Deputy Director at the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates Sr. took
a hands-on role in crafting the program after his
family surprised him by announcing the gift. Not
coincidentally, the Gates program is designed
for an 80-year time span, mirroring its timing in
honor of his 80th birthday. The foundation and
the Gates family wanted to honor Gates Sr.’s
deep commitment to public service by creating a
scholarship at his alma mater.
“It’s had tremendous meaning for him,” Carter
said. “He wanted to do everything he could to
make sure it was the most impactful program
for the students and for UW Law. He wanted to
make sure the support they receive is right-sized.”
Gates Sr., ever-magnanimous and inclusive, also
wanted to ensure that students outside of the
five scholarship recipients would benefit as well,
by providing support for all students to attend
lecture series and receive mentoring with the
goal of raising the importance of public service
law throughout the school and with all students.
The result has been to raise the visibility and
importance of public service law across the board.
Michele Storms, Assistant Dean for Public Service
Law and Executive Director of the Gates program,
is especially pleased to see the program enhance
the law school’s overall commitment to public
service law. “Our goal is to benefit the whole
school. The impact of this program is like dropping
a very large pebble into a very large body of water.”
said Storms. “As the graduates go into the world
and do great work for justice, there’s no telling
how wide the ripples will spread.”
“ OUR GOAL IS TO BENEFIT THE WHOLE SCHOOL. THE IMPACT OF THIS PROGRAM
IS LIKE DROPPING A VERY LARGE PEBBLE INTO A VERY LARGE BODY OF WATER.
AS THE GRADUATES GO INTO THE WORLD AND DO GREAT WORK FOR JUSTICE,
THERE’S NO TELLING HOW WIDE THE RIPPLES WILL SPREAD.”
Michele Storms, Assistant Dean for Public Service Law and Executive Director of the Gates Program
As the program marks its tenth anniversary, the
ripple effect is well underway. Three of the four
members of the first cohort of Gates scholars,
those who entered the program in 2006, have
completed their five-year commitment to public
service law — the fourth will finish soon. Each
is, as Gates advocated in his 2010 book, Showing
Up for Life: Thoughts on the Gifts of a Lifetime,
“showing up.”
The four scholars from the original group are
now fully engaged in public service law; the fifth
member of the 2006 class had to withdraw. We
spoke to each of the four who completed to find
out where the Gates program, and public service
law, have taken them.
Vanessa Hernandez, ’09, works diligently
on behalf of American Civil Liberties Union of
Washington state’s Second Chances program,
where she is an advocate for the rights of
individuals who want to reduce the barriers posed
by criminal records, many of whom are juveniles.
Hernandez was a dedicated teacher when she and
her young family moved to Seattle, shortly before
the Gates program was announced. “I came to
teaching because I wanted to work for social,
racial and economic justice,” she recalls. “I always
thought that sometime down the line, if I was
ready to transition to a different field, the tools of
the law would be a way to effect that change.”
“At the beginning of law school, I wouldn’t have
anticipated that I’d be working on reentry,” said
Hernandez. ”One of the amazing things about
going to law school and doing internships is that
you get a really good sense for how things often fit
together. What I’m doing now is part of a broader
continuum to achieve racial and economic justice.
Education is the very front end. You could say that
I now work on the back end, with people whom
the system has failed. I love the work I’m doing
now. I feel incredibly privileged to do this.”
At his own five-year mark, fellow Gates scholar
Mike S. Peters, ’09, sees himself in an equally
privileged opportunity to serve. He recently
moved with his wife and young children to Bonn,
Germany, where he is Chief of Staff for the
International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
Peters came to UW Law after he too had
established a career in teaching, working as
assistant professor of communications at the
University of Washington and doing research on
VANESSA HERNANDEZ MIKE PETERS
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how couples and families adapt to the onset of
chronic illness or disability. At the same time, he
was involved in the paralympic movement, having
been a captain of the U.S. Paralympic National
Soccer Team and having served with the U.S.
Olympic Committee. When the Gates program
invited applicants, Peters stepped forward.
Like Hernandez, Peters was interested only in
public service law from the outset. The Gates
program provided an opportunity to pursue
what he had already resolved to do. Immediately
following graduation, Peters worked in immigration
law as an Equal Justice Works Fellow at Northwest
Immigrant Rights Project in Seattle. “I fell in love
with immigration law,” he said, “especially the
opportunity to help kids who have no special
protections in immigration law proceedings.”
But when lack of funding ended his time there,
Peters moved to the City of Seattle’s Office of
Intergovernmental Relations where he drafted and
worked to approve policies that support the city’s
diplomatic efforts.
In each role Peters learned vital skills he uses
on a global stage through his work with the IPC.
Peters calls himself fortunate to be working for
the international organization that provides
opportunities for athletes with impairment
to realize their goal of achieving competitive
excellence on the biggest stage of all, the
Paralympic Games. “In my new role,” he said,
“I’m very happily in the nexus of what the Gates
program hopes to achieve.”
Emily Alvarado, ’09, has taken a very focused
path since her law school graduation, setting
her sights on the issue of affordable housing. “I
chose a non-traditional career,” she explained.
“The Gates program gave me access to a
network, the confidence and the financial ability
to choose a path that was different.” That path
led directly to the City of Seattle’s Office of
Housing, where she is now Manager of Policy
and Equitable Development. In her role with the
City of Seattle, Alvarado lives out her passion,
developing and implementing broad strategic
policy that makes affordable housing for Seattle
residents, as well as addressing specific housing
issues on a daily basis.
“ WE KNEW THAT THE BEST POSSIBLE GIFT FOR HIM WOULD BE ONE THAT SUPPORTS
AND CONTINUES HIS LONG TRADITION OF SERVICE BY OPENING THE DOOR OF
OPPORTUNITY TO OTHERS. THIS PROGRAM WILL HAVE AN IMPACT NOT JUST ON
THE LIVES OF [THE] SCHOLARS, BUT ON ALL OF THE PEOPLE THEY SERVE.”
Bill Gates 2005
“I wasn’t always interested in law,” said
Alvarado. “I was interested in policy, in urban
politics, in how cities function and how they
can foster equity or inequity. As I got closer
to law school, I wanted the tools of the law to
help bring more credibility and power to my
voice in advocacy work.” She believes the law
gave her a different lens through which to view
the challenges of inequity. Alvarado echoes
her benefactor, Gates Sr., when she says, “The
law is a tool.” She is currently using that tool to
address Seattle’s much publicized affordable
housing crisis. “The issue certainly has public
attention right now because so many people
are feeling the effects of rising rents. But low
income people are struggling merely to get by
in Seattle. Given our city’s tremendous wealth,
everyone should have their basic needs met,
and that includes housing.”
Colleen Melody, ’09, was struck by the power
of law in an incident in northern Idaho near her
home. “A very famous group of white supremacists
lived in Hayden Lake. They promoted and engaged
in race-based violence that was harmful to
our community.“ In September 2000, an Idaho
jury rendered a $6.3 million verdict against the
group, the outcome of a civil suit brought by the
Southern Poverty Law Center that eventually led
to the group’s bankruptcy. “It was stunning to
me to see that lawyers could effect that kind of
change. Before that, I hadn’t thought that lawyers
could do so much good.”
Following a post-law school year of clerking for
The Honorable Ronald M. Gould on the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Melody
joined the United States Department of Justice in
Washington, DC as a trial lawyer in the Civil Rights
Division, Housing & Civil Enforcement Section. In
January of this year, Melody was named chief of
the newly created Civil Rights Unit in the Office of
EMILY ALVARADO COLLEEN MELODY
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the Washington state Attorney General. Under her
leadership, the new unit will investigate and litigate
violations of the laws of Washington, including
discrimination on the basis of race, gender, sexual
orientation, religion, disability and veteran status.
By 2086, when, according to the terms of the
endowment, the program as it exists now will end,
nearly 400 aspiring attorneys will have discovered,
as Melody puts it, “how to use lawyering” to
change the world.
Although each is pursuing a different goal, the
four original Gates scholars are unanimous on two
points. When asked if they intended to change
the focus of their careers now that their formal
commitment to public service law has been
fulfilled, all four gave the same answer: “I can’t
imagine doing anything else.” And when asked,
“What do you see happening in the future with this
program,” they again agreed: “It will never end.”
They are confident the Gates program will create
an ever-widening web of impact, a vast network
of passionate people who believe, as they do, that
people who care enough can indeed change the
world, a network of people who will continue to
show up.
From the Gates Foundation’s point of view, Carter
said they expect year 81 to reveal “a huge cohort
of citizens who are out in the world showing up for
life and for others in the spirit of Bill Sr. and all that
he is and has contributed — both as an attorney
“ WE’RE DELIGHTED TO HONOR BILL SENIOR IN THIS WAY. HE HAS BEEN AN
INCREDIBLE EXAMPLE TO BILL AND MYSELF, AND WE WANTED TO EXPRESS OUR
ADMIRATION AND APPRECIATION WITH A GIFT THAT CONNECTS HIM TO FUTURE
GENERATIONS OF COMMITTED, CIVIC-MINDED STUDENTS, AND THE ONGOING
WORK OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON.”
Melinda French Gates, 2005
and as an engaged citizen.” Results so far have
already shown “an impressive, dedicated group of
people who represent all the best of Bill’s values,
and he is extremely proud of the students and
what they have already accomplished.”
The Gates scholars of 2006 are unanimous on
one other point — their deeply felt gratitude.
Peters articulated sentiment expressed by all
four original scholars. “The gratitude,” he said,
“the thankfulness for the opportunities continues
beyond the five years. I think we’re all very grateful,
not only to the Gates family, but to the program
staff and to those UW Law faculty members who
put their hearts and souls into it. We’re all very
happy to see the program grow and become so
widely diverse.”
CLASS PHOTOS (L TO R) opposite
CLASS OF 2009: VANESSA HERNANDEZ, MIKE PETERS, EMILY ALVARADO, COLLEEN MELODY
CLASS OF 2010: SALMUN KAZEROUNIAN, MEENA JAGANNATH, NETSANET TESFAY, JENNIFER KRENCICKI-BARCELOS, MICHAEL GEOGHEGAN
CLASS OF 2011; LILLIAN HEWKO, NICK MARRITZ, REBECCA WATSON, MIRANDA STRONG, WYATT GOLDING
CLASS OF 2012: HILARY HAMMELL, JOAN ALTMAN, MIRANDA STRONG, KATHERINE KIRKLIN, ARIANA FLORES, MIKE FELTON
CLASS OF 2013: JOHANNA GUSMAN, SARAH LIPPEK, YURIJ RUDENSKY, LEO FLOR, MICHAEL WINDLE
CLASS OF 2014: ASHLEY PAINTNER, ANDREA WOODS, STEPHEN COGER, SHELLEY HALSTEAD, SHON HOPWOOD
CLASS OF 2015: VICTORIA CLARK, NIKKITA OLIVER, JESSICA KNOWLES, LAUREN CONNER, MEGAN CRENSHAW
CLASS OF 2016: MICHAEL HUGGINS, SARAH CHAPLIN, SHIZUKO HASHIMOTO, THOMAS MILLER, MICHAEL JETER
CLASS OF 2017: DANI MEYERING, FRANCISCO CARRIEDO, BRUNA ESTRADA, CAMILLE MCDORMAN, MARTINA KARTMAN
10Y E A R S
CLASS OF
2014
CLASS OF
2013
CLASS OF
2017
CLASS OF
2016
CLASS OF
2010
CLASS OF
2015
CLASS OF
2009
CLASS OF
2011
CLASS OF
2012
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IN ACTIONA LAW DEGREE
SAR AH BIRD ’05
By Sharon Ernst
Just ask Sarah Bird ’05, CEO of Moz, a software
company helping online marketers measure and
improve search, social and content marketing.
Bird was employee number eight when she joined
Moz in 2007 as its in-house lawyer. Within six
months, she was appointed COO. And now, just
a few years later, she heads up the company as
CEO. This might not have been on her radar when
she graduated from UW Law 10 years ago, but law
school helped prepare her for the entrepreneurial
world nonetheless.
BEYOND BILLABLE HOURS
Bird majored in philosophy and literature,
fields of study that are hardly the harbingers
of a tech career, but she has always been up
for a challenge—and a change of scenery. In
Sarah Bird CEO at Moz
TAKING RISKS AND TAKING CHARGE:
In tech-oriented Seattle, one can’t always predict where a law
degree will lead. One might land at a desk at an international law
firm, or earn the title of Chief Digital Officer for a major brand, or
even be named CEO of a fast-moving Seattle startup. Anything is
possible when you start at the UW School of Law.
addition to UW Law, her studies have taken her
to Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British
Columbia; Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey;
and East China University School of Law and
Politics in Shanghai, China. No matter the field of
study or the geography, Bird is a creative thinker,
communicator and problem solver, traits that
make her adaptable and successful as a lawyer
and as an entrepreneur.
After finishing law school, Bird took a position
as an associate attorney at a small firm in
Auburn, Washington, where she worked doing
general practice and family law. After a few
years, she knew it was time for a change, but
wasn’t sure what that change would be, or where
it would lead.
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“I wanted a change from firm life. I didn’t like
billable hours and how little control I had over my
schedule,” she explains. “Plus, I was feeling very
tied down to a geography. I quit my job at the
firm before I knew what I was going to do next. It
was 2007 and the economy was booming. I had
no kids, no mortgage, no ties. So I was in a good
position to take risks.”
A risk presented itself in the form of an offer from
her good friend Rand Fishkin, who suggested she
join his newly funded company Moz. “Neither of
us had any idea what we were getting into, but we
decided to work together,” says Bird. “I told myself
I would give it one year.”
One year turned into eight—and counting. “It
ended up being one of the best decisions of my
life,” says Bird. “I got the opportunity to do all
kinds of things nobody in their right mind would
have paid me to do.”
FROM SMALL FIRM
TO GROWING STARTUP
Moz began in the early 1980s. Fishkin joined the
company in the late 1990s, and by 2007, he had
transformed Moz into a technology company
seeking venture capital. Fishkin suggested Bird
come on board at Moz, neither one realizing that
an in-house lawyer is not usually one of the first
hires made by a startup. Bird’s legal education
and training, plus her passion for problem solving,
made her well-suited to a role at a fledgling tech
company.
From that point on, Fishkin and Bird worked
side-by-side to build the company into the
major—and growing—brand that it is today. Six
months after coming on board, Bird was made
Chief Operating Officer (COO), a position that gave
her ample opportunity to take initiative, tackle
problems, and think on her feet. As COO, she
was responsible for overseeing the fundraising,
facilities, board meetings, finance, HR, recruiting,
marketing, product development and legal
advising. In 2009, in recognition of her critical
role at Moz, Bird was named one of the top
100 women in Seattle tech by the Puget Sound
Business Journal.
In 2013, Bird added president to her title, and the
following year she took over as CEO, making her
one of the top women executives at a Seattle-
area technology company. Bird now guides the
company’s future growth by setting strategy and
driving execution. She also manages an annual
budget of $48 million and 160 employees, in
addition to recruiting the top talent needed to
make it all possible.
As for Moz, the company has grown by leaps and
bounds. During her eight years at the company,
Bird has overseen the growth of Moz from a few
hundred to over 30,000 passionate customers all
over the world. Moz also hosts the world’s largest
community of online marketers, with over 2
million visits to the Moz blog each month.
LAW SCHOOL AS PREPARATION
FOR STARTUP LIFE
The road from law school to CEO is perhaps not an
obvious one, but there are certainly shared skills
needed and nurtured in both the legal field and
the entrepreneurial arena. One must learn quickly,
be creative and courageous, spot opportunities,
and be able to communicate a vision in such a way
that persuades others to see it too, whether that’s
a judge or an investor. In addition, Bird says, “The
firm taught me about juggling multiple priorities
and getting up to speed on technical subjects
quickly. All of these skills have served me extremely
well in the startup world.”
As for the transition from lawyer to COO to CEO
at Moz, Bird loves the challenge of constantly
evolving. “I’m always learning on the job,” she
says. “If I wasn’t learning, I would probably switch
jobs. I am absolutely addicted to learning and
problem solving.”
The world of startups is a good fit for a self-starter
like Bird. “Startup culture worships the new and
experimental,” she says. “It’s more fun and casual.
You’re encouraged to continually reinvent the
world, your company and yourself.”
A DRIVING FORCE IN
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL COMMUNITY
Bird not only took a job at a startup. She immersed
herself in the startup community, and she regularly
speaks at related events and strives to support
other entrepreneurs. She is also on the board
of Sitrion—another Seattle startup—and the
Washington Technology Industry Association, where
she is part of the Diversity Action Committee.
Her involvement with the Diversity Action
Committee is due in part to the challenges she
faces as a CEO who must recruit and retain
technology employees. The shortage of tech talent
is something she hopes to overcome by breaking
down barriers and encouraging more diversity
in the technology field. Bird is driven to increase
the tech pipeline and make sure everyone has a
chance to succeed in technology, regardless of
gender, race or socioeconomic background.
In recognition of her accomplishments in and out
of the office, Bird was recently named one of the
“Top 40 Under 40” by the Puget Sound Business
Journal for 2015, an award that spotlights top
business leaders under the age of 40 who excel
in their industry and show dynamic leadership.
After she finished law school in 2005, Bird was not
concerned with pursuing accolades. Yet her time
at UW Law and her early experiences at a small
firm helped to prepare her for this role, and for
whatever adventure comes next.
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BooksBooksBooksBooks
40
Here, I inherited a law library that was well run and
had a great staff. How was I to get to know it? Little
by little, with the help of everyone in the law school
and its library, I came to learn the central role the
law library played in the region and in the lives of
our students, the faculty, the University, the legal
profession and the public.
Students came to the library to study (the reading
room on the 2nd floor of Condon Hall was the best
space in the whole building and could hold 120
students), to meet others in the group study rooms, to
check out books from our reserve collection, to read
cases and other printed legal materials, to do legal
research, to ask research and reference questions,
to be seen and sometimes, to sleep. Faculty came to
the law library to find books in the collection using
a card catalog and then a microfiche, to browse the
collection and ask questions.
You may remember — 1985 was a time when you had
to come to the physical law library to read anything
about the law or to do legal research. No computers
(except a dedicated terminal for Westlaw and Lexis), no
email, no internet, no electronic calendars, no cloud
computing, no tablets or laptops, no Google or Bing.
If you wanted cases on a particular issue of law, you
used a print digest, annotated code or secondary
source to locate citations. Then you had to move to
another part of the library to find the volumes of the
correct reporters in order to read these cases. When
you found cases to use, you verified the authority
of those cases by Shepardizing and using endless
newsprint pamphlets to update the bound volumes of
Shepards Citations (remember those confusing, tiny
columns of numbers and letters?). No red stop signs
or yellow caution symbols to make your interpretation
of case authority easy. No immediate access to the
cases that interpret your case; you’d have to locate
and read those cases, too, and draw your own
conclusions.
The law library duplicated most primary legal
materials because of the heavy demand by students
and other users. There were three sets of U.S.
Reports and 20 sets of Washington Reports, as well as
innumerable copies of Washington statutes. Lawyers
I arrived wide-eyed and excited in 1985 to be the director of the Marian Gould Gallagher
Law Library and Professor of Law at the University of Washington School of Law. Prior
to this, I had last been in Condon Hall in 1975 when I took my final class from Mrs.
Gallagher (Mrs. G) and left Seattle to seek my fortune as a newly minted law librarian.
My professional career took me first to the University of Maine and then to the library
of the U.S. Supreme Court, before coming back to the UW and Seattle 30 years ago.
BooksRUMINATIONS ON A L AW LIBR ARYBooksRUMINATIONS ON A L AW LIBR ARY
40 41
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& BeyondBy Penny Hazelton, Professor of Law
and law faculty actually read all new cases from the
paper advance sheets to keep up in their fields. The
gray BNA loose leaf service, United States Law Week,
was mandatory reading for practitioners and scholars
of the U.S. Supreme Court.
The law library staff still published the Current Index
to Legal Periodicals every week, collating the weekly
paper copies (upwards of 1,500!) to distribute to our
faculty mailboxes and to mail to every law school in the
country. A few legal research guides were printed for
students and attorneys interested in legislative history,
administrative law research and other basic topics.
Fast forward 30 years to 2015. We now have 24/7
access to hundreds of thousands of digital legal
publications in commercial databases and free on
the Internet; a law library website with over 100
legal research guides available; blogs that offer the
newest news and analysis on nearly every legal topic.
The current generation of law students and new
faculty grew up using computers, and few of them
have ever opened a print volume of a case reporter
and wouldn’t recognize a digest if you put it in their
hands. Legal research now takes place at 3 a.m. while
scholars, students and lawyers are in their pajamas.
But even in this revolutionized world of law libraries,
some things bring us back down to earth quickly.
Some legal materials are not in electronic form and
are still only available in print. Some electronic reports
and documents disappear from the web, never to be
located again. Information is ubiquitous, but not all
of it is reliable or authentic. We still need to read legal
materials carefully and craft our arguments and advice
accordingly. We still write copiously — briefs, complaints,
motions, client letters, memos, opinions, statutes, rules
and regulations. Students still need a place to study and
learn. Faculty members still need to produce scholarship
and master subjects they teach.
So, what about the next 30 years at the Gallagher
Law Library?
Will the physical law library still exist, with its
generous space for library users, and its collection of
contemporary Native American art? Of course. Students
will still need comfortable, quiet surroundings as well as
different types of places to learn and study law.
Will library staff using their expertise be even more
valuable as creators and curators of legal information
tools, trainers of the next generation of legal
professionals and scholarship partners with faculty? No
doubt in my mind.
Will the law library continue to select resources
to be available and accessible to all of its many
users? Absolutely. Guiding users to the best legal
materials available will be essential in supporting
the educational enterprise.
The future of the law library at UW is bright! It is full
of change and excitement, led by innovative and
imaginative librarians who understand legal information
systems and the people who need access to the best
legal information to solve the world’s problems.
41
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ALUMNI TAILGATE SEPTEMBER 27, 2014The annual alumni tailgate rallied Law Dawgs and friends to cheer on the Huskies as they took on the Stanford Cardinal.
1 GUY TOWLE ’77, BRIAN MORRISON ’77 & BRUCE ROBERTSON ‘77
2 JUDGE KEN SCHUBERT III ’97, OMAR CONTRERAS ’17 & BEN ROBBINS ‘17
1
“MAGGIE’S BUMBLEBEES” REUNION OCTOBER 9, 2014UW Law hosted a reunion event and panel presentation for a group of alumni, affectionately called “Maggie’s Bumblebees,” who worked for Senator Warren Magnuson. Alumni panelists addressed students and spoke about their experiences working for Senator Magnuson and how those experiences impacted their lives and career paths.
1 “MAGGIE’S BUMBLEBEES” ALUMNI GROUP WITH DEAN TESTY
2 STAN BARER ’65 WITH 2014-2015 BARER FELLOWS: MOSES WANYONYI WANJALA (KENYA), JONATHAN MUWAGANY (UGANDA) & HEZRON KROP KANGEREP (KENYA)
in the SPOTLIGHT
1
1 2
7
6
2 3
3 ASSOCIATE DEAN MARY HOTCHKISS, JOE BROTHERTON ’82, MAUREEN BROTHERTON, JOE E. BROTHERTON ’14 & FRIEND
4 JOE BROTHERTON ’82, FRIEND, EMMA GORDER, GREG GORDER ’85 & JOEL BENOLIEL ’71
2
3 4
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1 AWARD RECIPIENTS: ABIGAIL DAQUIZ ’04, JUDGE GARY BASS ’65, C. KENT CARLSON ’67, JOEL BENOLIEL ’71 & DEAN TESTY
2 CLASS OF 1964 & DAN RITTER ’63
3. CLASS OF 1994
4 BERRIE MARTINIS ’94, NORMA LINDA UREÑA ’94 & RHE ZINNECKER ’94
5 JAMES BABCOCK, ABIGAIL DAQUIZ ’04, DONNA MUSTARD BOND ’04, JAMES BOND, CRISTINA JORGENSON ’04 & ANNIKA POLLOCK ‘04
6 CLASS OF 2004
CELEBRATION OF DISTINCTION OCTOBER 10, 2014This evening honored our alumni award recipients and celebrated our reunion classes from 1964, 1974, 1984, 1994 and 2004. Also recognized were new members in the Washington Chapter of the Order of the Coif from the Class of 2014.
in the SPOTLIGHT2
1
3
65
4
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FORMER PRESIDENT MICHAEL YOUNG SAYS GOODBYE TO UW JANUARY 27, 2015Prior to his departure from the University of Washington for Texas A&M University, Michael Young, the UW’s now former president, visited the Gallagher Law Library and donated a collection of books to the law school.
PILA AUCTION FEBRUARY 20, 2015This year the Public Interest Law Association (PILA) celebrated its 20th anniversary by “Rolling out the Red Carpet” for its alumni, friends and members of the community. The annual auction raises money to fund student grants that send students around the state and around the world to work on public interest projects and serve communities in need.
1 ASSISTANT DEAN MICHELE STORMS & ALEXANDRA REVELAS ’15
2 2014 — 2015 PILA BOARD OF DIRECTORS INCLUDING: BACK ROW: WYATT GJULLIN, HARLEY HUNNER, KEVIN DUFFY-GREAVES, MAX BURKE, MICHAEL CAULFIELD, JOHN STEINNES. FRONT ROW: SOPHIE POSNOCK, MARIAH HANLEY, ANNA RAE GOETHE, VICTORIA AINSWORTH, ALYSSA FAIRBANKS, COURTNEY SCHIRR, JOCELYN WHITLEY
in the SPOTLIGHT
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UW LAW CELEBRATES BLUE THURSDAY JANUARY 29, 2015In advance of the Seattle Seahawks’ trip to Super Bowl XLIX, Dean Testy, staff and students got into the 12th Man spirit and celebrated at William H. Gates Hall.
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2 3
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. PHOTO EXHIBIT FEBRUARY 26, 2015 Photographer Bernard Kleina unveiled a set of photographs of Martin Luther King Jr., which were taken as part of King’s efforts to bring integration to Chicago area housing. The photography exhibit was just one part of this year’s annual Diversity Week.
in the SPOTLIGHT
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LAW DAWGS IN THE DESERT MARCH 18, 2015
The eighth annual UW Law Dawgs Dinner gathered alumni & friends in La Quinta, CA as part of a series of programs hosted by the UW Alumni Association in the area.
1 BILL KINZEL ’60 & MIKE JEFFERS ’64
2 JULIE LAWRENCE & JOE LAWRENCE ’73
3 POLLY DODD & ELIZABETH INSLEE
4 SHARON WEINBERG, STEVE WEINBERG ’78 & DEAN TESTY
5 J. SHAN MULLIN ’56 & LEE MULLIN
1
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GIVING SOCIETY DINNER JUNE 5, 2015The fourth annual Giving Society Dinner recognized members of UW Law’s three giving societies: The John T. Condon Society, The Marian Gould Gallagher Society and the Henry M. Suzzallo Society. Faculty joined alumni and committee members to thank them for their support and to celebrate another successful academic year.
1 JIM FLETCHER ’71 & MARLENE FLETCHER
2 MEGAN KRUSE & BOB MUCKELSTONE ‘54
3 DEAN EMERITUS ROLAND HJORTH & MARY HJORTH
4 DEAN TESTY, DAN SATTERBERG ’85 & JOE BROTHERTON ’82
5 ELIZABETH LANE, DEAN TESTY & DENNIS LANE ’67
6 AUBRI MARGASON ’11, DANAN MARGASON ’11, SARAH REYNEVELD ’11, JOEL MERKEL & GARRETT HALL
7 GUY TOWLE ’77, JACKIE TOWLE, LIDIA ROBERTSON, BRUCE ROBERTSON ’77, CAROL HOERSTER & JOHN HOERSTER ’69
in the SPOTLIGHT5 6
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3 4
7
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in the SPOTLIGHT4 5
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COMMENCEMENT JUNE 7, 2015Faculty, staff, graduates and guests celebrated the 2015 UW School of Law Commencement.
1 JUSTINE OLIMENE, SMRITI SHUKLA, MAHLET BAHITA
2 JIWOOK CHUNG AND CHILD WITH DEAN TESTY
3 MAUREEN JOHNSTON, NIKKITA OLIVER, TAYLOR RICHMAN
4 LAUREN JACOBS, MEGAN CRENSHAW, CHRISTAL HARRISON
5 JOCELYN WHITLEY, MICHAEL CAULFIELD, PATRICK MALLOY, VICTORIA AINSWORTH, TAYLOR CLARK
6 STEPHANIE BROWN AND FAMILY.
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FA C ULT Y & A LUMNI
News
FA L L 20 15
FA C ULT Y & A LUMNI
News
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KIMBERLY AMBROSE
PUBLICATIONS
Kimberly D. Ambrose et al., Cross-Border Teaching and Collaboration, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANS-FORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 148-61 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Ethical Considerations for Legal Clinic Volunteers, QLaw Foundation, Legal Clinic Training, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Ethical Issues for Juvenile Lawyers, Washington State Bar Association Juvenile Law Section, Youth Law Symposium and Annual Meeting, Nov. 14, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Current Issues in Juvenile Law, 2014 Washington State Office of Public Defense Joint Contractor CLE, Oct. 24, 2014 (Wenatchee, WA)
R E C E N T FA C U LT Y
News
CR AIG ALLEN
PUBLICATIONS
Law of the Sea Tribunal Adopts “Due Diligence” Standard for Flag State Responsibility for IUU Fishing, OPINIO JURIS (Apr. 4, 2015, 1:53 AM).
US Establishes Fund for Abandoned Seafarers, SEAWAYS: J. NAUTICAL INST., Feb. 2015, at 14.
113th Congress Addresses Arctic Maritime Transportation Needs, PAC. MAR., Feb. 2015, at 36-37.
PRESENTATIONS
Speaker and moderator, Marine Transportation and the Polar Code, 6th Symposium on Impact of an Ice-Diminishing Arctic on Naval and Maritime Operations, Jul. 14, 2015 (Washington, DC)
Panel Chair, Current Legislative and Regulatory Climate for Arctic Opera-tions, Promise of the Arctic Confer-ence, Jun. 16, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
The Preservation of Living Marine Resources and the Environment, U.S. Pacific Command, 28th Annual International Military and Opera-tional Law Conference, May 18, 2015 (Auckland, New Zealand)
Moderator, Semper Paratus: Military Presence in the High North, Arctic Encounter Symposium, Jan. 31, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
HELEN ANDERSON
PUBLICATIONS
Frenemies of the Court: The Many Faces of Amicus Curiae, 49 U. RICH. L. REV. 361-416 (2014).
ROBERT ANDERSON
PUBLICATIONS
ROBERT T. ANDERSON, BETHANY BERGER, SARAH KRAKOFF & PHILIP P. FRICKEY, AMERICAN INDIAN LAW: CASES AND COM-MENTARY (3d ed. West 2015) (Ameri-can Casebook Series) 945 pages.
WILLIAM BAILEY
PUBLICATIONS
RONALD H. CLARK, GEORGE R. DEKLE, SR. & WILLIAM S. BAILEY, CROSS EXAMINATION HANDBOOK: PERSUASION, STRATEGIES, AND TECHNIQUES (2d ed. Wolters Kluwer 2015). (Aspen Coursebook Series) 362 pages.
WILLIAM S. BAILEY & TERENCE J. MCADAM, LAW, SCIENCE AND EXPERTS: CIVIL AND CRIMINAL FORENSICS (Carolina Aca-demic Press, 2014). 336 pages & CD-ROM.
STEVE CAL ANDRILLO
PUBLICATIONS
Dark Winter Evenings Pose a Double Risk, PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, Nov. 11, 2014, at A17.
RYAN CALO
PUBLICATIONS
Robotics and the Lessons of Cyber-law, 103 CALIF. L. REV. 513-63 (2015).
Privacy Harm Exceptionalism, 12 COLO. TECH. L. J. 361-64 (2014) (invited).
Franziska Roesner et al., Augmented Reality: Hard Problems of Law and Policy, PROC. UBICOMP ’14 (Sept. 2014). 6 pages.
Digital Market Manipulation, 82 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 995-1051 (2014).
The Case for a Federal Robotics Com-mission, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION (Sept. 2014). 17 pages.
PRESENTATIONS
The Surveillance Paradox, University of Chicago Law School, Law Review Symposium—National Security: The Impact of Technology on Separation of Powers, Jun. 19, 2015 (Chicago, IL)
Listening Machines, Microsoft Research and New York Times R&D Lab Summit, Jun. 11, 2015 (New York, NY)
Privacy and Markets: A Love Story, 8th Annual Privacy Law Scholars Con-ference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Berkeley, CA)
MELISSA DURKEE
PRESENTATIONS
The Business of Treaties, Law & So-ciety Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
The Business of Treaties, Northwest Junior Faculty Forum, Mar. 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Commentator, Socializing Students: Law Schools as International Compli-ance Agents, Junior International Law Scholars Association, Annual Meeting, Feb. 2015 (Miami, FL)
The Business of Treaties, Junior International Law Scholars Asso-ciation, Annual Meeting, Jan. 2015 (Miami, FL)
The Business of Treaties, American Society of International Law, In-ternational Organizations Interest Group Workshop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY)
Commentator, Domestic Legal Culture and Treaty Action Behavior: A Look at Human Rights Treaties, American Society of International Law, International Organizations Interest Group Workshop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY)
Organizations Interest Group Work-shop, Dec. 2014 (New York, NY)
ANGÉLICA CHÁZ ARO
PRESENTATIONS
Panelist, Antiviolence Movements in the Shadow of the Carceral State, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 31, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
DWIGHT DR AKE
PUBLICATIONS
Business and Financial Literacy, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORM-ING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 407-12 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
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RECENT FACULTY NEWS
JENNIFER FAN
PUBLICATIONS
Institutionalizing the USPTO Law School Clinic Certification Program for Transactional Law Clinics, 19 LEWIS & CLARK L. REV. 327-59 (2015).
PRESENTATIONS
The Role of IP in the Innovation Ecosystem, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property, IP Management Track, Jul. 27, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Creatively Embracing Change by Using an Eco-System Model, 38th Annual Conference on Clinical Education, May 5, 2015 (Rancho Mirage, CA)
Nuts and Bolts Teaching Plenary, 14th Annual Transactional Clinical Conference, Apr. 24, 2015 (Kansas City, MO)
Educating the Next Generation of Intel-lectual Property Lawyers, Lewis & Clark School of Law Business Law Forum, Oct. 3, 2014 (Portland, OR)
Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Tsinghua University, Sept. 10, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Pro Bono Opportunities, Perkins Coie, Aug. 13, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
IP Entrepreneurship, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property, IP Manage-ment Track, Jul. 28, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
UW Entrepreneurial Law Clinic Pro Bono Training, Amazon.com, Inc., Jul. 9, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
MARY D. FAN
PUBLICATIONS
Legalization Conflicts and Reliance Defenses, 92 WASH. U. L. REV. 907-58 (2015).
The Supply-Side Attack on Lethal Injection and the Rise of Execution Secrecy, 95 BOSTON UNIV. L. REV. 427-60 (2015).
Disarming the Dangerous: Preventing Extraordinary and Ordinary Violence, 90 IND. L.J. 151-78 (2015).
A. Rowhani-Rahbar, D. Zatzick, J. Wang, B. Mills, J. Simonetti, M.D. Fan, F.P. Rivara, Firearm-Related Hospitalization and Risk for Subse-quent Violent Injury, Death, or Crime Perpetration: A Cohort Study, 162 ANNALS INTERNAL MED. 492-500 (2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Prosecutorial Dissonance, Law & So-ciety Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Presidential Plenary, Western Soci-ety of Criminology, Feb. 20, 2015 (Tucson, AZ)
Private Data, Public Safety, New York University School of Law, Institute for International Law and Justice, Measurement and Data in the Governance of Illicit Activities, Nov. 2014 (New York, NY)
Combatting Counterfeit Drugs: Addressing Data Dissemination Challenges in the Domain of Private Enforcement, New York University School of Law, Institute for Inter-national Law and Justice, Confer-ence on Global Institutions and Technologies in the Governance of Illicit Activity, Nov. 17, 2014 (New York, NY)
DANIEL FOOTE
PUBLICATIONS
‘Saiban’in seido to keiji shihō ni taisuru hitobito no ishiki’ ni tsuite – kenkyū no igi to sono go no kadai –” [Regarding ‘[The Survey of] People’s Consciousness with respect to the Lay Judge System and Criminal Justice’: Significance of the Research and Future Tasks], in NIHONJIN KARA MITA SAIBAN’IN SEIDO [THE LAY JUDGE SYSTEM AS SEEN BY THE JAPANESE PEOPLE] 231-43 (Matsumura Yoshiyuki, Ōta Shōzō & Kinoshita Manako eds., Keiso Shobo, 2015). (in Japanese)
Hōritsuka no yakuwari: Gasshūkoku to no hikaku o chūshin ni [The Roles of Jurists: Centered on Comparisons with the United States], in Hō no Hendō no ninaite [tHe Bearers of LegaL CHANGE] 27-61 (Atsushi Omura ed., Iwanami Shoten 2015). (Gendaihō no dōtai [Trends in Current Law], vol. 5) (in Japanese)
Daniel H. Foote, Book Review, 41 J. JAPANESE STUD. 190-94 (2015) (reviewing DARRYL E. FLAHERTY, PUBLIC LAW, PRIVATE PRACTICE: POLITICS, PROFIT, AND THE LEGAL PROFESSION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY JAPAN (2013)).
PRESENTATIONS
Discussant, ADR Viewed from Us-ers: Findings from a Questionnaire Survey of ADR Users in Japan, East Asian Law and Society Conference, Waseda University, Aug. 5, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Discussant, Assessing Citizen Partici-pation in Criminal Trials in East Asian Countries, East Asian Law and Soci-ety Conference, Waseda University, Aug. 5, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Session chair, Human Rights in Asia, East Asian Law and Society Confer-ence, Waseda University, Aug. 4, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Panelist, Round Table on Internation-al Educational Exchange, American Association of State Colleges and Universities, Japan Studies Insti-tute, American Center Japan, Jul. 7, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Panelist, UCLA Global Forum, Jun. 24, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Criminal Justice Reforms in Japan: A Changing Dynamic for Prosecutors?, Law & Society Association Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Discussant, Civil Justice System and Legal Policy, Law & Society Associa-tion, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Chair and discussant, Civil Justice System and Legal Policy, Law & So-ciety Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Lessons from Fifteen Years of a Transpacific Course Taught via Videoconference, International Legal Education Abroad Confer-ence, Washington College of Law, American University, Apr. 14, 2015 (via Skype)
Chair and discussant, What Is Globalization for Law and Legal Stud-ies?, Keio University Law School, International Symposium on Global Legal Education: How Should Law be Taught in the Globalizing World? Japanese and Asian Perspectives on Global Legal Education, Dec. 16, 2014 (Tokyo, Japan)
Japan’s New “Jury” System: A Five-Year Progress Report, University of Washington, Griffith and Patricia Way Lecture, Dec. 3, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Fifteen Years of Justice System Reform in Japan, University of Washington School of Law, Asian Law Lecture Series, Oct. 21, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
JONATHAN FR ANKLIN
PUBLICATIONS
Law Libraries and Legal Education, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORM-ING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 140-47 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
ROBERT GOMULKIEWICZ
PUBLICATIONS
In the Stewardship of Business Model Innovation, 67 FLA. L. REV. FORUM 35-37 (2015).
XUAN-THAO N. NGUYEN, ROBERT W. GOMULKIEWICZ & DANIELLE M. CONWAY, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, SOFTWARE, AND INFORMATION LICENSING: LAW AND PRACTICE (Cum. Supp. 2014 Bloomberg BNA). 1 vol.
PRESENTATIONS
IP in the Cloud: The Use of the Cloud by Universities, National Association of College & University Attorneys, Jul. 1, 2015 (Washington, DC)
The Business of Innovation, Indiana University, McKinney School of Law, Center for Intellectual Prop-erty and Innovation, Nov. 18, 2014 (Indianapolis, IN)
PENNY HAZELTON
PUBLICATIONS
Searching for the Borders, 20 LEGAL WRITING J. 17-20 (2015).
Ruth Bird, Penny A. Hazelton & Kyle Brown, CTC and International Research and Information Systems, 3 CAPE TOWN CONVENTION J. 69-80 (2015).
Library Director as Mentor, in ACA-DEMIC LAW LIBRARY DIRECTOR PERSPECTIVES 97-110 (Michelle Wu ed., Wm. S. Hein & Co. 2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Legal Research and Writing, Wash-ington State Bar Association, Readmission Workshop, Mar. 19, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
JEFFREY K ADET
PUBLICATIONS
Expansion of the Profit-Split Method: The Wave of the Future, 77 TAX NOTES INT’L 1183-88 (2015), reprinted in 2015 WORLDWIDE TAX DAILY 61-118 (Mar. 31, 2015).
Fair Approaches for Taxing Previously Untaxed Foreign Income, 146 TAX NOTES 1385-88 (2015).
SAR AH K ALTSOUNIS
PUBLICATIONS
Recent Skirmishes Between Washing-ton’s Legislature and Supreme Court in the Battle over K-12 Public School Funding, 1 WASH. J. EDUC. L. & POL’Y 67-69 (2015).
MICHAEL HATFIELD
PUBLICATIONS
ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Washington Gallagher Law Library, 2015). 556 pages.
Taxation and Surveillance: An Agenda (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 2014-34).
Committee Opinions and Treasury Regulation: Tax Lawyer Ethics, 1965-1985, 15 FLA. TAX REV. 675-735 (2014), reprinted in ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK 5-65 (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Wash-ington Gallagher Law Library, 2015).
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ANITA KRUG
PUBLICATIONS
Investing and Pretending, 100 IOWA L. REV. 1559-1618 (2015).
Downstream Securities Regulation, 94 B.U. L. REV. 1589-1650 (2014).
PRESENTATIONS
Investing and Pretending, 2015 Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, Jun. 17, 2015 (Cambridge, MA)
Uncertain Futures in Evolving Financial Markets, 2015 National Business Law Scholars Conference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Newark, NJ)
Panelist, Corporate Law Roundtable: Shareholders, Stewardship & Ac-countability, Law & Society Associa-tion, Annual Meeting, May 28, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Uncertain Futures in Evolving Finan-cial Markets, University of Colorado School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Jan. 30, 2015 (Boulder, CO)
Guest presenter, University of Colorado School of Law, Business Law Colloquium, Jan. 29, 2015 (Boulder, CO)
Moderator, M&A from the CEO’s Per-spective, Pacific Rim M&A Institute, Dec. 11, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Investing and Pretending, Midwest-ern Law and Economics Associa-tion, Annual Meeting, Oct. 11, 2014 (Indianapolis, IN)
LISA MANHEIM
PUBLICATIONS
Elizabeth Porter & Lisa Manheim, Book Review, 64 J. LEGAL EDUC. 511-14 (2015) (reviewing SONIA SOTOMAYOR, MY BELOVED WORLD (2013)).
PRESENTATIONS
Severability Analysis and the Roberts Court, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
DEBOR AH MAR ANVILLE
PUBLICATIONS
BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORM-ING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). 479 pages.
Deborah A. Maranville et al., Incorporating Experiential Education Throughout the Curriculum, in BUILD-ING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 162-87 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
Deborah Maranville with Cynthia Batt, Pathways, Integration, and Sequencing the Curriculum, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 52-58 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015). 479 pages.
Ensuring Effective Education in Alternative Clinical Models, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 245-51 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
Deborah Maranville, Ruth Anne Robbins & Kristen K. Tiscione, Faculty Status and Institutional Effec-tiveness, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 432-43 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
Transfer of Learning, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 90-93 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
Lisa Radtke Bliss & Deborah A. Maranville, A Conscious Institutional Strategy for Expanding Experiential Education, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 427-31 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
ANNA MASTROIANNI
PUBLICATIONS
Jessica A. Cohen, Anna C. Mastroi-anni & Ruth Macklin, Ethical Issues for Late-State Trials of Multipurpose Prevention Technologies for HIV and Pregnancy, 127 INT’L J. GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS 221-24 (2014).
PRESENTATIONS
Country Report: United States, Nagoya University, International Symposium: Justice and Challenges in Clinical Research, Mar. 13, 2015 (Nagoya, Japan)
SHANNON MCCORMACK
PRESENTATIONS
Uncle Sam and the Child Care Squeeze: (Over-)Taxing the Working Family, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
K ATHLEEN MCGINNIS
PUBLICATIONS
Revisiting Claim and Issue Preclusion in Washington, 90 WASH. L. REV. 75-145 (2015).
PETER NICOL AS
PUBLICATIONS
Straddling the Columbia: A Constitutional Law Professor’s Musings on Circumventing Washington State’s Criminal Prohibition on Compensated Surrogacy, 89 WASH. L. REV. 1235-1309 (2014).
CHERYL NYBERG
PUBLICATIONS
SUBJECT COMPILATIONS OF STATE LAWS 2013-2014: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY (Boast/Nyberg, 2015). 321 pages.
PRESENTATIONS
Effective Research Strategies: Conducting 50-State Legal Research, National Conference of State Legis-latures, Legislative Summit, Aug. 5, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Finding 50-State Information, National Conference of State Legislatures, Legal Services Section and Research and Committee Staff Section, Joint Professional Development Seminar, Oct. 6, 2014 (Richmond, VA)
SEAN O’CONNOR
PUBLICATIONS
Creators, Innovators, and Appropria-tion Mechanisms, 22 GEO. MASON L. REV. 973-1000 (2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, 2015 Asia Pacific IP Forum, Jun. 2015 (Taipei, Taiwan)
Distinguished lecturer, Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Jun. 2015 (Shanghai, China)
Alice’s Abstractions: Up or Down the Rabbit Hole?, Jhejiang University, Jun. 2015 (Hangzhou, China)
Discussant, Intellectual Property Theory 3, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Speaker, Cannabis and Real Estate in Washington CLE Seminar, May 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Panelist, with Judge Randall Rader (ret.), The Future of Fostering and Protecting Innovation, May 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Senior commentator, University of Washington School of Law, Center for Advanced Studies and Research on Intellectual Property, China IP Scholars Works in Progress, May 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Ganjapreneurship in Washington State: Creating a Regulated Inno-vation Industry Without the Feds, Gruter Institute, Annual Confer-ence, May 2015 (Olympic Valley, CA)
Featured speaker, IP Licensing Case Law Year in Review, Washington State Bar Association, Intellectual Property Law Section, Annual Licensing Seminar, May 2015 (Seattle, WA)
A Statutory Digital First Sale Proposal, Innovation in the Creation and Distribution of Content, Mar. 2015 (Boulder, CO)
Fourth Annual IP Teaching Work-shop, Feb. 2015 (New Delhi, India)
Medical Marijuana in Washington, Tribal Marijuana Conference, Feb. 2015 (Tulalip, WA)
Featured speaker, Crowdfunding and IP, Beijing Intellectual Property Association, Jan. 2015 (Beijing, China)
The Overlooked French Influence on the IP Clause, Temple University School of Law, Faculty Colloquium, Dec. 2014 (Philadelphia, PA)
University Technology Transfer in Practice, Licensing Executive Soci-ety Deutschland, Annual Meeting, Nov. 2014 (Leipzig, Germany)
Creators, Innovators, and Appropria-tors, George Mason University Law School, Center for Protection of IP, Common Ground: How IP Unites Creators and Innovators, Oct. 2014 (Arlington, VA)
Preserving Innovative Business Mod-els in Digital First Sale Debates, Asia Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Oct. 2014 (Seoul, Korea)
Moderator, The Contribution of Copyright to a Free and Democratic Society, Copyright’s Republic: The Contribution of Copyright to Cul-ture, Freedom, and Human Flour-ishing, Oct. 2014 (Nashville, TN)
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ELIZ ABETH PORTER
PUBLICATIONS
The Socratic Method, in BUILDING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 101-10 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
Taking Images Seriously, 114 COLUM. L. REV. 1687-1782 (2014).
Elizabeth Porter & Lisa Manheim, Book Review, 64 J. LEGAL EDUC. 511-14 (2015) (reviewing SONIA SOTOMAY-OR, MY BELOVED WORLD (2013)).
TERRY PRICE
PRESENTATIONS
Panelist, Washington Law Review, Compensated Surrogacy Panel, Jan. 13, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
As Families Evolve, Courts Lurch to Keep Up, National Association of Appellate Court Attorneys, Jul. 17, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Family Law Introduction, QLaw (LGBT) Foundation, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Consumer Rights or Human Rights?: A Conversation about the Arleen’s Flowers Case, University of Wash-ington School of Law, Feb. 26, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Introduction to Washington State Legislative Process, University of Washington School of Social Work and Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Jan. 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Limited License Legal Technicians: Lessons from Washington State’s Access to Justice Initiative, Univer-sity of Washington School of Law, Washington’s New Limited License Legal Technician Program, Dec. 12, 2014 (Anchorage, AK)
DANA R AIGRODSKI
PUBLICATIONS
Kimberly D. Ambrose, William H.D. Fernholz, Catherine F. Klein, Dana Raigrodski, Stephen A. Rosenbaum & Leah Wortham, Cross-Border Teaching and Collaboration, in BUILD-ING ON BEST PRACTICES: TRANSFORMING LEGAL EDUCATION IN A CHANGING WORLD 148-61 (Deborah Maranville et al. eds., LexisNexis 2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Creative Capitalism and Human Trafficking: The Business Case for Eliminating Forced Labor and Human Trafficking from Global Supply Chains, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 29, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
ANITA R AMASASTRY
PUBLICATIONS
Should Apps Map Illness Like We Map the Weather?, VERDICT (Jul. 1, 2015).
Personalized Pricing in the Air? Why Consumers Should Be Wary of a New Airline Pricing Proposal, VERDICT (May 13, 2015).
WILLIAM RODGERS
PUBLICATIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW (Thomson/West 2006 & Supps. 2015). 4 vols.
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW (Thomson/West Supp. Dec. 2014). 4 vols.
Z AHR SAID
PUBLICATIONS
Foreword: Fair Use in the Digital Age, and Campbell v. Acuff-Rose at 21, 90 WASH. L. REV. 579-96 (2015).
Defending Deference: A Reply to Professor Sylvain’s Disruption and Deference, 74 MD. L. REV. 777-84 (2015).
Reforming Copyright Interpretation, 28 HARV. J. L. & TECH. 469-524 (2015).
ERIC SCHNAPPER
PUBLICATIONS
Brief for Respondent. United States v. Wong, No. 13-1074 (U.S. Nov. 4, 2014), 2014 WL 5804278. Oral argument, Dec. 10, 2014.
Reply Brief for Appellants. Alabama Legislative Black Caucus v. Alabama, No. 13-895 (U.S. Oct. 27, 2014), 2014 WL 5475026. Oral argument, Nov. 12, 2014.
SCOTT SCHUMACHER
PUBLICATIONS
JOHN A. TOWNSEND, LARRY A. CAMPAGNA, STEVE JOHNSON & SCOTT SCHUMACHER, TAX CRIMES (2d ed. LexisNexis 2015). 678 pages & apps.
ETHICAL DUTIES TO THE TAX SYSTEM: A HANDBOOK (Scott A. Schumacher & Michael Hatfield eds., University of Washington Gallagher Law Library, 2015). 556 pages.
PRESENTATIONS
Criminal Tax: Prosecution Policies and Voluntary Disclosures, Wash-ington State Bar Association, Tax Section Seminar, Dec. 15, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Representing Taxpayers in IRS Disputes, 2014 Annual Low-Income Taxpayer Clinics Grantee Conference, Dec. 9, 2014 (Washington, DC)
Investigations and Compliance: When Things Go Wrong, Washington State Bar Association, Corporate Counsel Ethics Seminar, Nov. 14, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
HUGH SPITZER
PUBLICATIONS
Ethics Issues in Representing Inter-governmental Entities, in PROCEEDINGS OF THE WASHINGTON STATE ASSOCIATION OF MUNICIPAL ATTORNEYS, SPRING CONFERENCE 5-1 (2014).
Revisiting the Client Conundrum: Whom Does Lawyer for a Govern-ment Represent, and Who Gives Direction to That Governmental Lawyer? (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 25-10).
“Home Rule” vs. “Dillon’s Rule” for Washington Cities, 38 SEATTLE U. L. REV. 809-60 (2015).
Scandal Rocks Washington’s Supreme Court, NW LAW., Apr.-May 2015, at 48-50 (Hugh Spitzer ed.).
Adam Sherman & Hugh Spitzer, Washington State’s Mandate: The Constitutional Obligation to Fund Post-Secondary Education, 89 WASH. L. REV. ONLINE 15-46 (2014).
ALICE STOKKE
PRESENTATIONS
Discussant, Situating Legal Educa-tion Reform Efforts in Rule of Law Promotion, Law & Society Associa-tion, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
TOSHIKO TAKENAK A
PUBLICATIONS
Toshiko Takenaka & Linda Falcon, Human Rights and Intellectual Prop-erty in the United States: The Role of US Courts in Striking a Fine Balance Between Competing Policies, in RE-SEARCH HANDBOOK ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 253 (Christophe Geiger ed., Edward Elgar 2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Japan’s IP High Court as a Best Prac-tice for IP Specialized Courts: Lessons from U.S. & Japanese Experiences, Czech Republic Industrial Property Office, Uniform Patent and Unified Patent Court Seminar, Jun. 26, 2015
Keynote speaker, Determination of Patent Protection Scope under U.S. and German Patent Acts, Technical University Dresden, 2015 IP Col-loquium, Jun. 22, 2015 (Dresden, Germany)
Legality of On-line News Aggregation, University of Prague, Charles Law School, Jun. 15, 2015 (Prague, Czech Republic)
Japan’s IP High Court as a Best Prac-tice for IP Specialized Courts: Lessons from U.S. & E.U. Experiences, 2015 Asia-Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Jun. 8, 2015 (Taipei City, Taiwan)
Panelist, New Trend of International IP Laws: Initiatives and Judicial Practice, 2015 Asia-Pacific Intellectual Property Forum, Jun. 8, 2015 (Taipei City, Taiwan)
Employee Inventions: Ownerships and Compensations: Comparative Law Perspective, Osaka University and AIPPI Japan, French-Japan IP Academic Conference, Jun. 4, 2015 (Osaka, Japan)
Trade Dress Protection under U.S. Trademark System, Japan Patent Attorneys Association, Advanced Foreign IP Seminar Series, Jun. 2, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Comparative Study of Employee In-vention Systems: U.S., U.K. and Japan, CASRIP-TMI Joint Seminar, Jun. 1, 2015 (Tokyo, Japan)
Legality of Online News Aggregation, East China University of Political Science and Law, Conference on Competition Law Regulating Inap-propriate Online Behaviors, May 29, 2015 (Shanghai, China)
Limits on IP Exclusive Right, East China University of Political Science and Law, CASRIP, Supreme People’s Court of China Judicial Conference, May 28, 2015 (Shanghai, China)
Chair, JiaoTong University Law School, IP Teaching Workshop: Emerging IP Issues from Compara-tive Law Perspective, May 27, 2015 (Shanghai, China)
Employee Invention System in U.S. and Japan, KIPA, Annual CASRIP Conference, May 26, 2015 (Seoul, South Korea)
Discussant, Patent Session, Univer-sity of Washington School of Law, IP Work-in Progress Colloquium for Chinese Junior IP Scholars, May 7, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Panelist, India’s IP and Innovation Policies, University of Washington School of Law, NBR-CASRIP Joint Workshop on Innovative in India: Global Perspectives on the Con-tinuing Evolution of India’s IP Policy, Apr. 10, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
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PUBLICATIONS
Foreword: Compensated Surrogacy in the Age of Windsor, 89 WASH. L. REV. 1069-76 (2014).
PRESENTATIONS
Panelist, Legal Education in Transi-tion, Washington State Bar As-sociation, 125th Anniversary: Past, Present, and Future, Jun. 26, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Panelist, Family Law’s Response to Changing Families, Association of American Law Schools, Workshop on Next Generation Issues of Sex, Gender, and the Law, Jun. 24, 2015 (Orlando, FL)
Leadership During Crisis, Washing-ton Leadership Institute, Jan. 24, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Co-moderator, The Opportunities of Law School Leadership: Nurtur-ing the Diverse Leaders Our Schools Need for the 21st Century, Asso-ciation of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 4, 2015 (Washington, DC)
Roundtable, Thriving as a Dean in Today’s World, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Jan. 3, 2015 (Washington, DC)
Moderator, William D. Ruckelshaus Center and the Slade Gorton Inter-national Policy Center, Stateswom-anship & Public Policy: Reflections on Leadership & Collaboration, Dec. 12, 2014 (Seattle, WA)
Panelist, Latest Developments in Patent Litigation in Europe and U.S.--Perspective from the Judiciary, Pat-ent Litigation Conference and Mock Trials, University of Strasbourg, Mar. 27, 2015 (Strasbourg, France)
Keynote, Determination of Patent Protection Scope under U.S. and Ger-man Patent Acts, 2015 Dusseldorf Patentrechtstage Conference, Mar. 19, 2015 (Dusseldorf, Germany)
Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank, Hokkaido University School of Law, Jan. 22, 2015 (Japan)
Standard Essential Patents: U.S., E.U. and Japan, Indian Society of Inter-national Law, Intellectual Property Policy Seminar, Jan. 16, 2015 (New Delhi, India)
U.S. Case Law Developments: Influ-ence of Patent Assertion Entities, Japan Intellectual Property Asso-ciation, JIPA Seminar, Dec. 19, 2014 (Osaka, Japan)
U.S. Case Law Developments: Influ-ence of Patent Assertion Entities, Japan Intellectual Property Asso-ciation, JIPA Seminar, Dec. 15, 2014 (Tokyo, Japan)
Patent and Innovations, World Intellectual Property Organization, Intellectual Property Education and Policy, Dec. 10, 2014 (Beijing, China)
IP Protection in Free Trade Zone: Best Practice, 11th Shanghai Interna-tional Intellectual Property Forum, Dec. 8, 2014 (Shanghai, China)
Patent Assertion Entities and Soft-ware Patents, Bardehle IP Academy, Nov. 19, 2014 (Munich, Germany)
Patent Assertion Entities: Plagues Unique to U.S. Patent System?, Mu-nich Technical University, Nov. 5, 2014 (Munich, Germany)
Extent of Patent Protection: U.S., Japan and Germany, Seoul National University Law School, 2d Asia Pacific Forum, Oct. 1, 2014 (Seoul, South Korea)
JANE WINN
PUBLICATIONS
JANE WINN & BENJAMIN WRIGHT, THE LAW OF ELECTRONIC COMMERCE (4th ed. Aspen 2015 no. 2).
Innovation Governance Competition: Payment Modernization Strategies in India and China (Univ. of Wash. Sch. of Law Research Paper No. 2015-01).
PRESENTATIONS
Move Slow and Make Things: Regulat-ing Innovative Solidarity, European Law & Economics Association, Sep. 18, 2015 (Vienna, Austria)
Perspectives on International E-Commerce Law, Zhejiang Univer-sity Guanghua Law School, Jun. 15, 2015 (Hangzhou, China)
National Resistance to Global Private Regulation: China UnionPay and In-dia’s RuPay Networks, Law & Society Association, Annual Meeting, May 30, 2015 (Seattle, WA)
Smart Governance: Intellectual Prop-erty and Self-Regulation, University of Strasbourg, Centre d’Etudes Internationales de la Propriété Intellectuelle, May 24, 2015 (Stras-bourg, France)
Recent Developments in Electronic Payments Law, NACHA Pay-ments 2015, Apr. 20, 2015 (New Orleans, LA)
The Secession of the Successful, Uni-versity of Arizona School of Law, Jean Braucher Festschrift, Apr. 17, 2015 (Tucson, AZ)
The Role of Contractarian Ideology in the Construction of Global Markets, University of Nevada, William S. Boyd School of Law, 10th Interna-tional Conference on Contracts, Feb. 28, 2015 (Las Vegas, NV)
Payment Modernization Strategies in India and China, National Law University-Odesha, Feb. 19, 2015 (Cuttack, India)
Llewellyn Has Left the Building: The Growing Irrelevance of the UCC to 21st Century Sales Law, Association of American Law Schools, Annual Meeting, Contracts Section Meet-ing, Jan. 4, 2015 (Washington, DC)
The Decline and Fall of the Docu-mentary Letter of Credit in the 21st Century, ELTE Law School, 6th Transnational Commercial Law Conference, Oct. 17, 2014 (Buda-pest, Hungary)
K ATHRYN WATTS
PUBLICATIONS
Rulemaking as Legislating, 103 GEO. L. J. 1003-60 (2015).
PRESENTATIONS
Rulemaking as Legislating, North-western University School of Law, Public Law Colloquium, Oct. 14, 2014 (Chicago, IL)
MARY WHISNER
PUBLICATIONS
Race and the Reference Librarian, 106 LAW LIB. J. 625-32 (2015).
STEVEN M. BARKAN, BARBARA A. BINTLIFF & MARY WHISNER, FUNDAMENTALS OF LEGAL RESEARCH (10th ed. Foundation Press, 2015). 774 pages (University Treatise Series)
Getting to Know Fastcase, 106 LAW LIBR. J. 473-81 (2014).
LOUIS WOLCHER
PRESENTATIONS
Commentator, University of London, Professor Adam Gearey Inaugural Lecture: Lives That Slide Out of View: Jurisprudence and Poverty, Jun. 17, 2015 (London, England)
ALENA WOLOTIR A
PUBLICATIONS
Googling the Law: Apprising Stu-dents of the Benefits and Flaws of Google as a Legal Research Tool, 21 PERSPECTIVES 33-37 (2012).
Sherry L. Leysen & Alena L. Wolotira, Innovative Displays in Law Libraries, AALL SPECTRUM, Jul. 2013, at 17-19.
DAVID ZIFF
PRESENTATIONS
Panelist, What Is the Law, and on Which Side Is the IRS?, Cato Institute, Pruitt, Halbig, King & Indiana: Is ObamaCare Once Again Headed to the Supreme Court?, Oct. 30, 2014 (Washington, DC)
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70’s
V. RAFAEL STONE ’73 was recently selected a member of The National Black Lawyers – Top 100, an invitation-only professional honorary association including the top 100 black lawyers from each state.
80’sDAVID COOK ’88, a partner at Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, has been included on the 2015 Best Lawyers in America list as Best Lawyer for Immigration Law.
JUDGE DAVID CHRISTEL ’85 was selected as the new full-time magistrate judge in Tacoma, WA.
JEAN HILDE-FULGHUM ’89 has retired from her law practice and is working as a professional voice actor.
90’sJUDGE VERONICA ALICEA-GALVÁN ’94 became a judge of the King County Superior Court at the Kent Regional Justice Center.
C L A S S
NotesDENISE ASHBAUGH ’98 has become a partner at Yarmuth Wilsdon.
00’sJOHN G. AMAYA ’05 was sworn in as a Counselor to the Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, a component of the Department of Homeland Security.
CAMERON MONTI ’02 has joined Howard & Howard in the firm’s Chicago office, concentrating on taxation, business law and employment law.
DYLAN ORR ’09 was selected as a 2015-2016 Marshall Memorial Fellow, the German Marshall Fund of the United States’ flagship leadership development program.
MATTHEW RECHTIEN ’07 was admitted as a member of the Detroit-based firm Bodman PLC.
10’sELIZABETH DONOVAN ’90 was recently appointed Ave Maria School of Law’s first Director of Experiential Education, where she will direct the school’s clinical and externship programs.
GRACIELA GOMEZ COWGER ’97, partner at Stolowitz Ford Cowger LLP, was honored by the Oregon Hispanic Bar Association with the 2015 Paul J. De Muniz Professionalism Award.
KATHLEEN HOPKINS ’91 has taken office as the 2014-2015 Chair of The Fellows of the American Bar Foundation.
JUDGE RAQUEL MONTOYA-LEWIS ’95 was appointed by Washington Governor Jay Inslee to the Whatcom Superior Court.
ROBERT SAPERSTEIN ’93 joined the board of directors for the Channel Islands YMCA and will assist in providing strategic direction for the organization and help it oversee community activities.
HEATHER BOWMAN ’07 became a partner with the civil defense law firm Bodyfelt Mount, focusing on employment litigation, professional malpractice defense and insurance coverage.
KIERAN CURLEY ’01 was named by the Portland Business Journal as co-CEO of the Year for his work at Miller Nash Graham & Dunn.
ISHBEL DICKENS ’02 was honored by the Washington State Housing Finance Commission with its lifetime achievement award for her work on behalf of manufactured home communities.
AMY EDWARDS ’01 received the Oregon Area Jewish Committee’s Community Leadership Award.
STEVEN GILLESPIE ’07 was recently promoted to partner at Foster Pepper PLLC, where he is a member of the firm’s Land Use practice.
ANDREA HARRIS ’04 was recently elected to the Washington State Board of Governors for District 8.
JUDGE ANDREA HOWARD-GEORGE ’05 recently joined the judiciary as an Associate Judge at the Colville Tribal Court.
MEENA JAGANNATH ’10 was awarded a 2015 Echoing Green fellowship for launching the social justice legal organization Community Justice Project, Inc.
BRENDAN MCNAMARA ’09 has joined Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck as an associate in the firm’s Denver, CO office.
WILLIAM MINER ’04, partner-in-charge at the Portland, OR office of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, has been named to the Portland Business Journal’s 2015 Forty Under 40 list.
JAMES BARKER ’14, BERT BOUQUET ’14 and STEPHANIE MARTINEZ ’14 have all joined Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton as intellectual property attorneys in the firm’s Seattle office. YIN CHEUNG ’11 joined the firm as an associate on the Software Electrical Engineering Team. RACHEL SAIMONS ’13 also joined the firm as an associate in the Native American Practice Group.
IAN WARNER ’11 became Mayoral Counsel to Seattle’s mayor, Ed Murray. Warner will report directly to the Mayor, advising on a broad array of legal matters affecting city policy through a legal lens.
JOSEPHINE L. ENNIS ’13, SARAH S. WASHBURN ‘11 and ANDREW R. ZELLERS ’12 joined the Pacifica Law Group as associates in its Seattle office.
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John MacDougall Davis passed away on April 17, 2015. While attending UW Law, John served on the school’s Law Review and was president of the student body. He founded his solo law practice in 1944, a venture that would evolve into the Seattle law firm Davis Wright Tremaine. He was involved in many areas of public service, including work with the Pacific Science Center, founding the Mountaineers Foundation and serving on the board of Virginia Mason Medical Center.
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Merle Cohn passed away on August 16, 2014. He practiced law in Seattle for over 50 years and was involved with the B’nai B’rith, the Stroum Jewish Community Center and served on the national board of the Anti-Defamation League. During World War II, Merle flew in the Air Force.
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The Honorable Warren Chan passed away on June 15, 2015. Prior to attending law school, Judge Chan enlisted in the army during the early months of World War II and was trained as a radio operator and served in the Pacific. He was the first Chinese American graduate of UW Law, Seattle’s first Chinese American attorney and the first Chinese American judge in America, when in 1956 he was appointed judge pro-tempore on the Seattle Municipal Court. He later won a seat on the King County Superior Court, and chaired the National Conference of State Trial Judges. Judge Chan cofounded the Wing Luke Museum and the Chinese Community Service Organization and was the Museum’s first president.
William “Bill” Donley passed away on October 16, 2014. During World War II he served in both the Pacific and Atlantic and remained active in the Naval Reserve for many years after the war, retiring as a Captain. After law school, he joined Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane and retired as a Vice President in 1985. Bill was the leader of The Old Salts, a social organization of veterans that graduated from the UW NROTC and served in WWII.
Elmen Robert “Bob” Fristoe passed away on March 3, 2015. He served in active duty in the South Pacific during World War II. In 1949 he joined the law firm of Brodie, Brodie and Fristoe and later became senior partner of Fristoe, Taylor and Schultz. Bob practiced law for 64 years and retired from Owens, Davies, Fristoe, Taylor and Schultz in 2012. He received the award for Thurston County Bar Association attorney of the year in 2003 and was a member of Elks, Kiwanis and Rotary organizations.
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James Dubuar passed away on July 4, 2014. He was active in the Boy Scouts, Mountaineers and various maritime organizations and served as a captain in the US Naval Reserve, serving in both WWII and the Korean War. Jim practiced law for over 60 years.
Robert “Bob” Snyder passed away on June 11, 2014. Bob served in the US Navy during WWII. Afterward, he received his law degree from UW Law before being called back to active duty during the Korean War. Bob practiced law in West Seattle for 35 years and was active in the West Seattle Kiwanis and the Chamber of Commerce, serving as president of both.
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Donald Fleck passed away on June 29, 2014. After graduating from high school, Donald joined the Army and served during World War II. He practiced law for more than 50 years with a focus on organizing new businesses, business development, aviation law, real estate and estate planning. During that time he took a nine year break from law to start a company that pioneered the development of wheelchair lifts for transit buses. Donald also performed as a guest soloist with many major symphony orchestras in the U.S. and Canada, and sang on stage at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.
The Honorable Robert “Bob” Jacques passed away on November 26, 2012. During WWII, Judge Jacques served with the Navy Air Corps on both Atlantic and Pacific Coast patrols. After law school, Judge Jacques entered into public service as a Pierce County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney, a position he left to help build the law firm Binns, Jacques, and Petrich. He was later appointed to the Pierce County Superior Court Bench. He was also involved in local chapters of the Elks Club, the Knights of Columbus and the Democratic Party.
C L A S S O F 195 4
Frank William Draper passed away on May 26, 2014. He was a member of the US Army’s Counter Intelligence Corps and after his service, moved back to Seattle and became an attorney for the Corporation Counsel of the City of Seattle. He later joined the firm of Lane Powell, specializing in marine law, and went on to form the law firm Detels, Draper and Marinkovich. In 1975, he was made a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers.
The Honorable William “Bill” M. Hamilton passed away on January 29, 2014. After high school, he became a paratrooper in the Army and later worked as a smoke-jumper fighting forest fires during his summer breaks from law school. He began his legal practice in East Wenatchee and formed Hamilton, Lynch & Kuntz. He also served as Municipal Court Judge in East Wenatchee for 15 years. Judge Hamilton was a member of the East Wenatchee Baptist Church, the American Trial Lawyers Association, the Heritage Society and a charter member of East Wenatchee Rotary Club.
Donald Thoreson passed away on January 16, 2015. After graduation from law school, he spent two years in the Army with the military police, stationed at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Returning to Seattle, he joined a firm that would later become Thoreson, Yost, Berry & Matthews. Donald then joined Betts Patterson & Mines, where he practiced until his retirement in 2013. He was active in the King County Bar Association and served as president of the Seattle Executives Association, the Norwegian American Chamber of Commerce and also the Nordic Heritage Museum.
The Honorable Robert F. Utter passed away on October 15, 2014. Justice Utter was a former chief justice of the Washington Supreme Court, from which he resigned in 1995 to protest the death penalty and to dedicate himself to mentoring judges in emerging democracies around the world. As a young King County Juvenile Court commissioner, he co-founded the state’s first Big Brother chapter. The YMCA Youth in Government program in 1997 named its top award for citizenship in his honor. Justice Utter was an active trustee of the Seattle-based Rural Development Institute, now Landesa.
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C L A S S O F 195 5
The Honorable James “Jim” Dore, Sr. passed away on May 11, 2013. Judge Dore practiced law with his brother at the firm Dore, Dubuar and Cummins for five years before being elected a Seattle District Justice Court Judge. He served 28 years as a judge, six in the Seattle District Justice Court and 22 in King County Superior Court. After retiring from the bench, he practiced law with his son. Judge Dore was on the board of the Seadrunar drug treatment program and was active in the Elks, Toastmasters, YMCA Businessman’s Club and Loyal Order of the Moose serving as National Supreme Governor of that organization from 1996-97. Upon his retirement, he earned a horticultural degree from the University of Washington and became a master gardener.
John Gose passed away on January 2, 2015. After graduating college, John joined the Marines and fought in the Korean War. After law school, John joined the Preston firm, focusing on real estate law. He was chair of the ABA Real Property, Probate & Trust Law Section and founder and president of the American College of Real Estate Lawyers. He served on the Bankruptcy Reform Task Force, which substantially revised the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and was an acting Special Assistant to the Washington state Attorney General in reviewing and restructuring the AG’s Civil Litigation Department.
The Honorable Richard “Dick” Gustafson passed away April 22, 2015. He joined the Navy after high school and went on to practice law for more than 40 years in Tacoma as a personal injury attorney. He was a member of the American and Pierce County Bar Associations and a member of the Pierce County Arbitration Board. He served as Municipal Court Judge in Fircrest, WA and was also a member of the city’s Planning Commission. Judge Gustafson was a charter member of the Kiwanis Club of Tacoma Mall and recipient of the club’s Hickman Award.
Charles “Chuck” Mullavey passed away on February 23, 2015. Chuck practiced law for 60 years in Ballard and was very active in sports throughout his life.
C L A S S O F 195 6
Peter Walton passed away on May 24, 2014.
C L A S S O F 1957
Arthur “Art” Lane passed away on August 24, 2014. After college, he served two years as a U.S. Marine officer in the Western Pacific. Art worked for 30 years for the City of Seattle Law Department as director of the Utilities Division, representing the city’s utilities and City Light. In 1978, he received the Outstanding Public Employee award from the Municipal League of Seattle and King County. Upon retirement, he did consulting work for Seattle City Light. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus, a founding member of the Highland Poetry Society and past president of the Seattle Metropolitan Credit Union.
C L A S S O F 195 8
Joseph “Joe” Holmes, Jr. passed away on December 1, 2013. After serving in the US Air Force, Joe started his career as an attorney for the Internal Revenue Service in San Francisco. He then returned to Seattle and spent his career practicing tax and real estate law at Karr Tuttle Campbell, where he was a partner until retiring in 1997.
C L A S S O F 1959
James “Jim” Finlay passed away on November 1, 2013. After graduating from law school, Jim and a colleague opened two law offices in Raymond, WA and Long Beach, WA. He also served in Korea with a United States Marine Corps aviation unit.
Richard Foreman passed away on August 13, 2014. After his first year of law school, Richard was drafted for the Korean War. He served in the United States Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps for two years. Upon return, he completed his law degree and after serving as deputy prosecuting attorney for the City of Seattle, went into private practice. Richard served 12 years on the Bellevue City Council and went on to serve three terms as mayor of Bellevue, WA. For the past two decades, he was helping to build Columbia West Properties and Pineapple Hospitality. He also enjoyed donating his time and service to legal aid.
The Honorable Mark Fortier passed away on April 7, 2015. He served in the Air Force on active duty during the Korean War prior to attending law school. Mark worked as a deputy prosecuting attorney at the Yakima County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office and was later elected Justice of the Peace, serving as Municipal Judge for the City of Yakima. He then went into private practice until his retirement. Judge Fortier also served as a member of the Yakima County Planning Commission and was a member of the Kiwanis Club. He served on the Washington State Bar Association Disciplinary Committee and the Judicial Qualifications Committee, and was president of the Yakima County Bar.
William “Bill” Roetcisoender passed away on October 7, 2013. He practiced law for 37 years in the Seattle neighborhood of Lake City.
C L A S S O F 1960
Charles Peter “Pete” Curran passed away on May 11, 2014. Following a stint in the Army, Pete graduated from UW Law and began practicing with his brother in Kent. He and his wife were devoted to the civic development of Kent and were active philanthropists in many charitable and arts organizations. Pete spearheaded the construction of Valley General Hospital and worked as an advance man on Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign in 1968.
C L A S S O F 196 2
Arthur “Art” Allsworth passed away on August 18, 2014. He moved to Phoenix and practiced law in Arizona for over 50 years as a tax law specialist. Art was active in the Arizona State Bar, the Phoenix Art Museum and Arcosanti. He was a founder of the University Club and former council member of the Boy Scouts of America.
C L A S S O F 196 5
Frank Frisk, Jr. passed away on May 19, 2015. After law school, Frank moved to the Washington, DC area, where he worked for the American Public Power Association and later as an attorney in private practice.
William “Bill” Long, Jr. passed away on July 15, 2014.
C L A S S O F 1966
Ivan Fisk passed away on September 20, 2014. Prior to obtaining his law degree, Ivan worked as a geologist for the Atomic Energy Commission in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico during the 1950s uranium boom. He worked in private practice after graduating from UW Law.
C L A S S O F 1967
Hugh Graham Gaiser passed away on February 24, 2013.
Alan Rasmussen passed away on June 21, 2014.
C L A S S O F 1969
Anthony Schwab passed away on January 31, 2014.
C L A S S O F 197 1
Steven Chestnut passed away on December 16, 2013. Upon earning his law degree, Steven became deeply involved in the field of Indian Law, winning in front of the United States Supreme Court and writing federal and tribal legislation on behalf of numerous tribes.
C L A S S O F 197 5
Scott Dunham passed away October 26, 2014. After law school, Scott began practicing law at O’Melveny & Myers in Los Angeles. He spent his entire career at the firm, where he was a partner for 30 years before retiring in 2010. Scott was a fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers, as well as a former co-chair of the American Bar Association’s Labor and Employment Law Section Occupational Safety and Health Law Committee.
C L A S S O F 1978
Betty Schall passed away on January 9, 2015. She was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and spent her legal career in the field of title insurance, including serving as Northwest Regional Counsel for Chicago Title Insurance Company.
IN MEMORIAM
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C L A S S O F 198 1
Linda Navarro passed away on August 12, 2014. Linda clerked for Judge Charles Z. Smith and practiced as a public defense attorney for the Associated Counsel for the Accused in Seattle. She joined King County Superior Court Judge Michael J. Fox as his bailiff until her retirement in 2010.
C L A S S O F 199 3
Ronald Beard passed away on November 18, 2014. Ronald spent 21 years at Lane Powell as an attorney specializing in maritime and banking law, where he ultimately became a partner. He was the 2014 recipient of the Loren Miller Bar Association’s “Excellence in the Legal Profession Award” and the 2014 recipient of the “Distinguished Alumni Award” from Highline Community College.
Kenneth Hershey passed away on November 13, 2014. He practiced mediation law in Auburn, WA and had a criminal defense practice in Burien, WA.
C L A S S O F 200 1
Susan Hepburn passed away on February 2, 2015. She spent her career in corporate finance and legal positions, including advocacy work for the disabled and elderly. Susan was appointed to the Governor’s Committee on Disability Issues in Washington State and was awarded the 1999 Civil and Legal Rights Appreciation Certificate.
F R I E N D S
Katherine “Katie” Campbell passed away on November 20, 2014. Wife of Bob Campbell, she graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in history and went on to teach at Lakeridge Elementary School. She was involved with the Greater Seattle Service League and Junior League, among other philanthropic endeavors.
Deborah Emory passed away on August 4, 2014. Married to George Emory for over 50 years, she graduated from Smith College with degrees in American literature and history and a Master’s degree in economic geography from the University of California Davis. She pursued doctorate studies in music history at the University of Washington and was an active writer and prolific researcher.
IN MEMORIAM
Donors20 14-15
Note: The University of Washington School of Law is deeply grateful to our many alumni and friends whose annual gifts, large and small, help create boundless opportunities for our students, promote faculty scholarship and support justice throughout the world. Every effort is made to ensure the accurate listing of donors, and we sincerely apologize for misspelling or inadvertently omitting the names of any donors. We appreciate the opportunity to correct our records, so please advise us of errors by using the enclosed envelope or call the Advancement Office at 206.685.9115.
R EP OR T TO
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SCHOOL OF LAW ANNUAL SUMMARY OF
INCOME AND EXPENDITURES FROM GIFTSJULY 1, 2014 - JUNE 30, 2015
Contributions by Purpose
FACULTY SUPPORT $5,340,702 58%
PROGRAM SUPPORT $2,049,116 22%
STUDENT SUPPORT $898,981 10%
UNRESTRICTED $792,674 8%
GRANTS $104,991 1%
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS $83,517 1%
TOTAL $9,269,981
Expenditures by Purpose
PROGRAM SUPPORT $3,322,733 43%
STUDENT SUPPORT $3,149,040 41%
FACULTY SUPPORT $ 1,213,762 16%
TOTAL $7,685,535
Contributions by Group LAW ALUMNI $6,136,114 66%
ORGANIZATION $1,051,806 11%
CORPORATION $831,955 9%
FOUNDATION* $709,790 8%
OTHER UW ALUMNI $275,853 3%
FRIEND** $264,463 3%
TOTAL $9,269,981
G I F T S R E C E I V E D
* Includes: all types of foundations and trusts ** Includes: non law alumni (faculty, former faculty, former staff, friends, parents, retired staff, current staff, students and visiting scholars/faculty)
E X P E N D I T U R E S B Y P U R P O S E
16%
41%
43%
66%
11%
9%
8%
3% 3%
1%1%
22%
10%
8%58%
72
1926-49 8 $9,625
1950-55 23 $362,590
1956 6 $5,350
1957 6 $1,275
1958 11 $8,945
1959 7 $2,350
1960 9 $5,241,300
1961 12 $413,466
1962 3 $454
1963 10 $16,125
1964 8 $1,275
1965 8 $3,075
1966 8 $6,870
1967 16 $31,100
1968 13 $10,200
1969 16 $16,225
1970 22 $11,860
1971 14 $10,220
1972 19 $6,810
1973 14 $24,215
1974 20 $12,108
GIVING COUNT BY YEARCLASS YEARS THAT HAD AT LEAST ONE LIVING ALUMNUS WHO GAVE IN FISCAL YEAR 2014-15
1975 17 $40,050
1976 25 $42,600
1977 18 $17,526
1978 26 $13,075
1979 13 $6,080
1980 17 $4,598
1981 18 $6,188
1982 30 $32,839
1983 22 $4,925
1984 24 $9,045
1985 16 $80,572
1986 12 $54,075
1987 11 $2,780
1988 19 $14,622
1989 12 $6,075
1990 11 $12,340
1991 14 $5,845
1992 8 $690
1993 10 $2,475
1994 14 $5,975
1995 11 $28,500
1996 15 $6,300
1997 16 $14,100
1998 10 $1,225
1999 17 $3,830
2000 11 $9,410
2001 8 $7,095
2002 9 $1,636
2003 12 $1,975
2004 15 $1,718
2005 17 $2,652
2006 21 $3,380
2007 21 $4,391
2008 15 $2,300
2009 14 $2,548
2010 9 $360
2011 19 $1,585
2012 26 $6,265
2013 23 $3,070
2014 20 $2,200
2015 31 $6,197
Y E A R D O N O R S A M O U N T Y E A R D O N O R S A M O U N T Y E A R D O N O R S A M O U N T
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REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR
CLASSES OF 1926 – 1949 Number Living: 106Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $9,625
Nona Cox
Philip Faris
E. Robert Fristoe
William Gates Sr.
C. Henry Heckendorn
Wayne Prim
The Honorable Waldo Stone
Charles Warner
CLASSES OF 1950 – 1955 Number Living: 181Number Giving: 23Percentage Giving: 13%Total Contributions: $362,590
The Honorable James Cook
The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick
The Honorable Roderick Dimoff
David Dorsey
John Ellis
The Honorable Carol Fuller
Herbert Fuller
Warren Gilbert Jr.
John Hay
Professor John Huston
Constance Jarvis
The Honorable Roger Lewis
Mark Litchman
Charles Magnuson
James McAteer
Rodman Miller
Robert Mucklestone
James Nelson
Dudley Panchot
Robert Peterson
Clarence Rabideau
Grant Silvernale Jr.
Paul Thonn
CLASS OF 1956Number Living: 44Number Giving: 6Percentage Giving: 14%Total Contributions: $5,350
Charles Bohlke
Craig Campbell
John Costello
Robert Crees
Dominick Driano
Shannon Stafford
CLASS OF 1957Number Living: 35Number Giving: 6Percentage Giving: 17%Total Contributions: $1,275
Julian Dewell
Malcolm Edwards
The Honorable Charles Johnson
Frank Payne
Robert Redman
Rex Walker
CLASS OF 1958Number Living: 50Number Giving: 11Percentage Giving: 22%Total Contributions: $8,945
The Honorable Mary Brucker
The Honorable Robert Bryan
Robert Carter
George Dowd
The Honorable Joseph Farris
David Gossard Jr.
The Honorable Robert Harris
Richard Holt
The Honorable Ernest Kubota
Jack Mullin
The Honorable Norman Quinn
CLASS OF 1959Number Living: 46Number Giving: 7Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $2,350
Arnold Barer
James Hilton
Michael Holmes
Donald Marinkovich
Jack McMurchie
The Honorable John Rutter Jr.
Robert Schillberg
CLASS OF 1960Number Living: 45Number Giving: 9Percentage Giving: 20%Total Contributions: $5,241,300
Timothy Clifford
Donald Dahlgren
James Feeley
Morton Herman
Donald Lehne
Toni Rembe
Charles Roe Jr.
Professor Emerita Marjorie Rombauer
Michel Stern
CLASS OF 1961Number Living: 43Number Giving: 12Percentage Giving: 28%Total Contributions: $413,466
Jorgen Bader
Stanley Barer
The Honorable Bruce Cohoe
Diane Engle
Howard Engle Jr.
Gerald Hahn
The Honorable Frederick Hayes
James Ladley
Theodore Olson
Howard Reser
The Honorable Robert Stead
David Williams
CLASS OF 1962Number Living: 53Number Giving: 3Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $454
Henry Haas
John Iverson
Milbert Price
CLASS OF 1963Number Living: 71Number Giving: 10Percentage Giving: 14%Total Contributions: $16,125
Alexander Brindle Sr.
David Broom
William Deasy
Donald Hale
Bertil Johnson
Alan Kane
James Lindsey Jr.
The Honorable William Nielsen
Daniel Ritter
The Honorable Anthony Wartnik
CLASS OF 1964Number Living: 60Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 13%Total Contributions: $1,275
The Honorable Gerry Alexander
John Binns Jr.
Kenneth Bloch
Gary Cronk
Ralph Hawkins Jr.
Robert Keolker
The Honorable Ted Kolbaba
Neal Shulman
CLASS OF 1965Number Living: 78Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 10%Total Contributions: $3,075
John Carlson
Stanley Carlson
Gary Cunningham
Frederick Frederickson
Camden Hall
Charles Kimbrough
Jack Strother
Patrick Turner
CLASS OF 1966Number Living: 83Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 10%Total Contributions: $6,870
Keith Baldwin
J. Richard Crockett
Michael Emmons
Earl Lasher III
Eugene Lee
Leslie Ogg
Hubert Travaille
The Honorable Thomas Warren
CLASS OF 1967Number Living: 104Number Giving: 16Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $31,100
Thomas Anderson
Jeffrey Brotman
Stephen Camden
C. Kent Carlson
Frank Falk Jr.
W. J. Thomas Ferguson
Susan French
Paul Goldberg
Stephen Good
Mark Hutcheson
Edward Irwin
Ronald Kinsey Jr.
Dennis Lane
Jeff Morris
Theodore Schultz
Richard Settle
CLASS OF 1968Number Living: 88Number Giving: 13Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $10,200
Thomas Collins
Laurence Finegold
Darrell Hallett
Mark Honeywell
Larry Levy
Donald Mallett
John McGary
Jerry McNaul
William Nelson
J. Ronald Sim
Sheldon Sutcliffe
The Honorable Frederick Van Sickle
The Honorable Thomas Wynne
CLASS OF 1969Number Living: 108Number Giving: 16Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $16,225
Clemens Barnes
Charles Blumenfeld
William Britton
John Cary
William Creech
John Hoerster
Robert Kaplan
James Marston
Tasuku Matsuo
Jan Peterson
E. Charles Routh
The Honorable Richard Sanders
Kazuaki Sono
Keith Tichenor
Julie Weston
Phillip Winberry
CLASS OF 1970 Number Living: 97Number Giving: 22Percentage Giving: 23%Total Contributions: $11,860
John Aramburu
Charles Clark
Gerald Coe
John Cooper
John DeWeerdt
Richard Dodd
P. Wickstrand Dufford
Thomas Gayton
Dennis Helmick
Martin Lybecker
The Honorable Richard Miller
G. Rick Morry
Robert Nostrand
David Shelton
Gerald Smith
Terry Snow
John Steel
Quentin Steinberg
Craig Sternberg
Rodney Waldbaum
James Walsh
Robert Welden
CLASS OF 1971Number Living: 95Number Giving: 14Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $10,220
Joel Benoliel
Richard Cohen
Charles Ekberg
Ronald Franz
Professor John Haley
Gwendolyn Howard
David Huang
David King
Brian Kremen
Larry Leonardson
Earl McGimpsey
James Varnell
The Honorable Jay White
Judy Young
CLASS OF 1972Number Living: 121Number Giving: 19Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $6,810
Jerry Bassett
Marsha Beck
The Honorable Daniel Berschauer
The Honorable Philip Brandt
Mike Cathcart
Stephen Fredrickson
Michael Hall
Kinne Hawes
Robert Jaffe
Keith Kessler
Tovah LaDier
John Magee Jr.
Janet Olejar
Robert Parlette
Fredric Reed
Geoffrey Revelle
Paul Roesch Jr.
Karl Tegland
Lewis Wilson
CLASS OF 1973Number Living: 151Number Giving: 14Percentage Giving: 9%Total Contributions: $24,215
Robert Campbell
Maureen Dightman
Professor Dwight Drake
Gordon Ferguson
Arley Harrel Jr.
Earle Hereford Jr.
Helen Johansen
Barbara Johnston
Stanley Kehl
Gerald Kovach
B. Michael Schestopol
Paul Street
Paul Van Wagenen
John Watts
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REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR
CLASS OF 1974Number Living: 137Number Giving: 20Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $12,108
The Honorable Sharon Armstrong
Ellen Bachman
Lawrence Baker
Charles Caldart
Clydia Cuykendall
Richard Elliott
Gary Fluhrer
Andrew Gauen
Robert Giles
Richard Hansen
Donald Harrison
Mary Klockars
Robin Lindley
Jeffrey Pewe
Judith Runstad
William Severson
Nancy Sorensen
Professor Hugh Spitzer
JoAnn Yukimura
John Ziegler Jr.
CLASS OF 1975Number Living: 144Number Giving: 17Percentage Giving: 12%Total Contributions: $40,050
Takeo Akiyama
The Honorable Joan Allison
Timothy Austin
Judith Bendich
William Collins
Mark Davidson
Scott Dunham
Rudy Englund
The Honorable Stephen Hillman
Christopher Hirst
Michael Hoge
John Mooring
Scott Osborne
David Schnapf
Stephen Strong
Daniel Syrdal
D. Michael Young
CLASS OF 1976Number Living: 154Number Giving: 25Percentage Giving: 16%Total Contributions: $42,600
J. Patrick Aylward
The Honorable Bobbe Bridge
Jonathan Bridge
Anne Counts
The Honorable Ronald Culpepper
Janis Cunningham
Richard Du Bey
Linda Ebberson
Constance Ellingson
Timothy Hogan
Richard Hopp
Ross Jacobson
Rodney Kawakami
Dan Kilpatric
The Honorable J. Robert Leach
Alan Macpherson
The Honorable Larry McKeeman
Sharon Nelson
Alan Peizer
David Sonn
Diane Stokke
The Honorable Philip Talmadge
Raymond Walters
Cynthia Whitaker
Richard Wilson
CLASS OF 1977Number Living: 165Number Giving: 18Percentage Giving: 11%Total Contributions: $17,526
Gregory Adams
Thomas Bingham
Stephen Cole
Gary Duvall
John Garner
Philip Grennan
Karen Hoewing
George Holzapfel
Mary Kinerk
Richard Kitto Jr.
F. Wayne Lieb
Vivian Luna
Harry McLachlin
Brian Morrison
Thomas Nast
The Honorable Jean Rietschel
Bruce Robertson
Guy Towle
CLASS OF 1978Number Living: 174Number Giving: 26Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $13, 075
Randall Barnard
Feliciana Burke
Don Dascenzo
The Honorable William Downing
Douglas Green
John Hammar
Allen Israel
William Jaquette III
Larry Johnson
Thomas Keane
The Honorable David Kurtz
The Honorable Karen Lansing
Gregory Lawless
John Leary Jr.
Martha Noerr
Eugene Pinkelmann Jr.
Glenn Sakuda
Betty Schall
Stephanie Searing
G. William Shaw
Sidney Snyder Jr.
Evelyn Sroufe
Michael Stanley
Richard Titus Jr.
Arthur Tsien
Steven Weinberg
CLASS OF 1979Number Living: 142Number Giving: 13Percentage Giving: 9%Total Contributions: $6,080
Arthur Abel
The Honorable Marlin Appelwick
Allan Baris
Mark Beatty
Richard Cleva
Chloethiel DeWeese
Susan Egnor
The Honorable Laura Inveen
Sylvester Jaime
Michael Ricketts
Maxine Stansell
Holly Towle
The Honorable Michael Trickey
CLASS OF 1980Number Living: 143Number Giving: 17Percentage Giving: 12%Total Contributions: $4,598
The Honorable Stephen Brown
Daniel Gibson
James Howe
Lynn Hvalsoe
Mark Johnsen
Roberta Katz
Ronnie Lopez
The Honorable Ricardo Martinez
Carol Moody
James Nelson
Christopher Noe
Patrick Paulich
Jeffrey Riedinger
James Rohrback
Laurence Severance
Lois Trickey
Karen Watts
CLASS OF 1981Number Living: 157Number Giving: 18Percentage Giving: 11%Total Contributions: $6,188
Anonymous
Yosuke Aoyagi
John Bennett
Bruce Borrus
T. Ryan Durkan
William Ferron Jr.
Diane Kero
Marie Kirk
Michael Kuntz
Meredith Lehr
Edwin Rauzi
Alan Rubens
Heidi Sachs
Suzanne Sarason
Stephen Shuman
Martin Smith
Carol Warner
Joseph Weinstein
CLASS OF 1982Number Living: 161Number Giving: 30Percentage Giving: 19%Total Contributions: $32,839
The Honorable Mary Becker
Joseph Brotherton
Hugh Cain
Bruce Dick
The Honorable Ellen Fair
Karl Forsgaard
Mary Forsgaard
Rexanne Gibson
Jeffrey Gonzales
Gail Gorud
Richard Johannsen
Craig Kinzer
John Knox
Richard Linville
Robert MacAulay
Deane Minor
Professor Donna Moniz
Betty Ngan
Patrick Oughlin
Teresa Pottmeyer
Gregory Provenzano
Fred Rapaport
Shannon Skinner
John Smith
Katherine Steele
Thomas Tanaka
Philip Thompson
Darryl Vhugen
Marc Wilhelm
Professor Yeong Chyan Wu
CLASS OF 1983Number Living: 151Number Giving: 22Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $4,925
Lesley Allan
Teresa Aronson
Scott Borth
Professor Karen Boxx
Robert Carmichael
Kevin Doyle
John Gadon
Daniel Hendrickson
Deborah Hilsman
Jayanne Hino
William Hochberg
Lori Irwin
W. Temple Jorden
Timothy Lovain
Ross Macfarlane
Patricia Novotny
Timothy Redford
David Robbins
Judith Shoshana
Richard Ullstrom
Scott Warner
David West
CLASS OF 1984Number Living: 166Number Giving: 24Percentage Giving: 15%Total Contributions: $9,045
Professor Helen Anderson
Lee Brillhart III
Harold Brown
Beth Clark
Carolyn Cliff
Michael Cummings
Leonor Fuller
Howard Goodfriend
James Grant
Rita Griffith
Robert Heller
Anthony Medina
Laurie Minsk
Pamela Nordquist
Thomas Read
Martin Rollins
Cynthia Shaw
The Honorable Lori Smith
The Honorable Mariane Spearman
Margaret Sundberg
Cynthia Thomas
James Torgerson
Ronald Wagenaar
Bruce Winchell
CLASS OF 1985Number Living: 158Number Giving: 16Percentage Giving: 10%Total Contributions: $80,572
The Honorable Susan Cook
Jose-Angel Correa
Robroy Crow
Crissa Cugini
Kimberly Ellwanger
Camille Gearhart
Robert Gellatly
Gregory Gorder
Frank Michiels
Pitman Potter
Linda Roubik
Richard Shattuck
Susan Shyne
Leslea Smith
Bruce Turcott
Ronald Weston
CLASS OF 1986Number Living: 149Number Giving: 12Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $54,075
Karen Andersen
Norman Best
Jeffrey Capeloto
Diana Carey
Brent Carson
Lawrence Enomoto
Linda Gallagher
Claire Grace
Jon Hongladarom
Jeffrey Koontz
Arlene Ragozin
Michael Rogers
CLASS OF 1987Number Living: 160Number Giving: 11Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $6,075
James Cissell
Caroline Crenna
Virginia Faller
Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz
Mark Lansing
Brendan Mangan
Mary Moseley
Robert Nylander
Barbara Selberg
Catherine Shaw
Carole Souvenir
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REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR
CLASS OF 1988Number Living: 192Number Giving: 19Percentage Giving: 10%Total Contributions: $14,622
Mark Anderson
Kenneth Baronsky
Lovie Bernardi
John Clynch
David Cook
Patrick Crumb
Daniel Finney
Griffith Flaherty
Bradley Fresia
Richard Gans
Lisa Gillin
Jeanette Henderson
Henry Josefsberg
Andrea Lairson
Jeffrey Letts
Douglas Love
Pamela McClaran
Professor Bradley Shannon
John Stansell
CLASS OF 1989Number Living: 169Number Giving: 12Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $6,075
Professor Craig Allen
Kimberly Ambrose
Laurel Beeler
Thomas Brookes
Marco de Sa e Silva
Bruce Duff
Deborah Dwyer
Janine Lawless
Wesley Morrison Jr.
Kelly Noonan
Douglas Ogden
Nita Rinehart
CLASS OF 1990Number Living: 178Number Giving: 11Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $12,340
Carmela Conroy
Steven Forrest
Mark Gary
Jeanette Heard
Karen Kruse
Kris Lee
Janet May
Jessica Mindlin
William Montgomery
Amy Sommers
Professor Toshiko Takenaka
CLASS OF 1991Number Living: 177Number Giving: 14Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $5,845
Breean Beggs
Scott Edwards
Kristen Fraser
Everett Fruehling
Steven Gustafson
Lynn Hall
Stanley Kanarowski
Kirsten Morrison
Chun Ng
Laurie Powers
William Taylor
Michael Tierney
James Weisfield
Craig Wright
CLASS OF 1992Number Living: 173Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 5%Total Contributions: $690
Michael Bayley
Shauna Ehlert
Wendy Goffe
Hana Kern
David Merchant
Michael Rodden
Andrew Shogren
Virginia Shogren
CLASS OF 1993Number Living: 184Number Giving: 10Percentage Giving: 5%Total Contributions: $2,475
Stephen Bishop
Ward Buringrud
Michael Gotham
Jeffrey Johnson
Lori Nomura
Hossein Nowbar
Bridget Rodden
Joseph Sakay
Scott Samuelson
Michael Trevino
CLASS OF 1994Number Living: 183Number Giving: 14Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $5,975
Robert Allnutt
Eric Anderson
Riza De Jesus
Marc Greenough
Derek Loeser
Berrie Martinis
Ruby Pediangco
Lonnie Rosenwald
Elizabeth Ryan
Gary Swearingen
Thanh Tran
Emily Warden
Renee Willette
Rhe Zinnecker
CLASS OF 1995Number Living: 187Number Giving: 11Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $28,500
Kristin Anger
Scott Dinwiddie
Sally Feldman
Jason Froggatt
Ed Kim
Patra Liu
Kevin McClure
Andrea Menaker
Wright Noel
Shannon Phillips
Linda Sferra
CLASS OF 1996Number Living: 215Number Giving: 15Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $6,300
Mark Bailey
Lisa Christoffersen
Dennis de Guzman
Kevin Diaz
Robert Flennaugh II
Klara Hicks
Jeffrey Kusumi
Jo McLaughlin Flannery
Roland Mitchell
Kirk Muzzy
Joanna Otero
Alan Souders
Gerald Swanson II
Michael Wampold
John Wechkin
CLASS OF 1997Number Living: 251Number Giving: 16Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $14,100
Anonymous
William Bailey
Tarik Burney
Wei-Fu Hsu
Robert Leinbach
Matthew LeMaster
Paula Littlewood
Chauncey MacLean
Aurora Martin
Hugh Matsubayashi
Carol McCoog
James McCullagh
Scott Morris
Glen Pascual
Dwight Wheaton II
Lien Yu
CLASS OF 1998Number Living: 233Number Giving: 10Percentage Giving: 4%Total Contributions: $1,225
Anonymous
Yao Bailey
William Davis
Ramon Gupta
Jule Northup
Shelley Pellegrino
Silvia Saucedo
Robert Thiel
D. Douglas Titus
Clay Wilson
CLASS OF 1999Number Living: 248Number Giving: 17Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $3,830
Steven Arterberry
Colonel Betz Jr.
Joshua Colangelo-Bryan
Danielle Githens
Joseph Haberzetle
Lisa Hayes
Brent Jones
Andreas Kaltsounis
Dustin Klinger
Ada Ko
Drew Markham
Julia Markley
Ellen McCurdy
Orland Seballos
Heather Straub
Akane Suzuki
Pamela Tonglao
CLASS OF 2000Number Living: 202Number Giving: 11Percentage Giving: 5%Total Contributions: $9,410
Roger Brodniak
Charles Harer
Yi Jiang
Jennifer Mahalingappa
Steven Miller
Maureen Mitchell
Esther Park
Gavin Parr
Sheila Phillips
Alan Ross
Amy Tucker
CLASS OF 2001Number Living: 265Number Giving: 8Percentage Giving: 3%Total Contributions: $7,095
Norimitsu Arai
Julie Lanz
Scott Matheson
Lisa McGimpsey
Kristen Mitchell
Mary Peterson
Phillip Singer
Dawn Sugihara
CLASS OF 2002Number Living: 252Number Giving: 9Percentage Giving: 4%Total Contributions: $1,636
Andrew Bryant
Ishbel Dickens
Rebecca Glasgow
Brent Hyer
Megan Kirk
Toby Marshall
Aaron Perrine
Evan Shapiro
Sabina Shapiro
CLASS OF 2003Number Living: 252Number Giving: 12Percentage Giving: 5%Total Contributions: $1,975
Rebecca Andrews
Lieutenant Joshua Berger
Laura Gerber
Brice Howard
Professor Sarah Kaltsounis
Cari Laufenberg
Nicholas Mathews
Carol Mortensen
Steven Seward
Aimee Sutton
Yung-Hern Tan
Valerie Villacin
CLASS OF 2004Number Living: 267Number Giving: 15Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $1,718
Kirsten Ambach
Carly Chan
Paige Crick
Abigail Daquiz
Molly Eckman
Lara Fowler
Andrew Greene
Cristina Jorgenson
Shane Moloney
Michael Pedhirney
Juli Pierce
Grzegorz Plichta
Glenn Ramel
Christopher Sweeney
David Whedbee
CLASS OF 2005Number Living: 241Number Giving: 17Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $2,652
Jessica Bran
James Brown
John Crosetto
Emily Deckman
Joshua Gaul
Colette Kostelec
Suzanne Love
Jonathan Meyers
Shintaro Miyazaki
Rebecca Povarchuk
Valentin Povarchuk
Elizabeth Schubert
Robert Spielman
Douglas Steding
Karl Tjerandsen
Holly Vance
Erika Yuen
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REPORT TO DONORS GIVING BY CLASS YEAR
CLASS OF 2006Number Living: 269Number Giving: 21Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $3,380
Valerie Balukas
Alison Blair
Rebecca Bowen Jamil
Amanda Carr
Michael Douglas
Courtney Garcia
Rachel Gold
Demetrios Heliotis
Tyson Kade
Terrance Keenan
Kirsten Lundell Koester
Karen Nashiwa
Jessica Nguyen
Lawrence Rozsnyai
Lila Silverstein
Tammy Sittnick
Shara Svendsen
Connie Wan
John Whalen
Wei-Mou Yu
Lizhu Zheng
CLASS OF 2007Number Living: 264Number Giving: 21Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $4,391
Gaurab Bansal
Jared Barrett
Kelly Canary
Jeffrey Christensen
Katherine Chung
Jay Farrell
Steven Gillespie
Katy Hatfield
Robert Hatfield
Jamila Johnson
Llewellyn Lawson
Megan Lim
Daniel Manson
Ian Mensher
John Peterson
Milton Reimers III
Christina Richmond
Martha Sandoval
Shan Sivalingam
Heather Van Nuys
Motohiro Yamane
CLASS OF 2008Number Living: 256Number Giving: 15Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $2,300
Karen Bloom
Ragnar Bloom
Cecilia Boudreau
Jennifer Chiang
Jerry Chiang
Carrie Gage
Chris Henderson
Lisa Kremer
Jonathan Leptich
Clark Lin
Peter Moreno
Matthew Rudow
Julie Schaffer
Megan Vogel
Ya-Ling Wu
CLASS OF 2009Number Living: 273Number Giving: 14Percentage Giving: 5%Total Contributions: $2,548
Emily Alvarado
Adam Andrews
Kelsey Beckner
Rike Connelly
Aimee Decker
Timothy Defors
Michelle Delappe
Roxanne Eberle
Alicia Feichtmeir
Vanessa Hernandez
Jeff Lane
Nicole Lindquist
Colleen Melody
Chelsea Peters
CLASS OF 2010Number Living: 289Number Giving: 9Percentage Giving: 3%Total Contributions: $360
Brianna Chung
Tobias Damm-Luhr
Holly Golden
Katherine Herche
Noah Jaffe
Mindy Longanecker
Lauren Sancken
Jovita Wang
Todd Williams
CLASS OF 2011Number Living: 294Number Giving: 19Percentage Giving: 6%Total Contributions: $1,585
Emily Brice
Katherine Clark
Kendra Comeau
Derek Crick
Jessica Dales
Laura Eshbach
Josias Flynn
Benjamin Golden
Fen Gui
Yang-Hsien Hsu
Caitlin Imaki
David Klein
Eric Laliberte
Michael Licata
Nicholas Marritz
Shane Ratigan
Jordan Talge
Ian Warner
Lindsey Weidenbach
CLASS OF 2012Number Living: 277Number Giving: 26Percentage Giving: 9%Total Contributions: $6,265
Mallory Allen
Joan Altman
Nathan Barnes
Matthew Berry
Nadia Bugaighis
Gregory Chiarella
Kay Duza
Adam Engst
Aydin Firuz
Heather Griffith
Janet Gwilym
Benjamin Harris
Aurora Janke
Lee Marchisio
Rachel Mathisen
Ryan McRobert
Mike Meredith
David Myers
Katherine O’Brien
Chris Olah
Katherine Richard
Luke Rona
Leonard Sanchez
David Stearns
Joseph Stockton
Jingxin Zhan
CLASS OF 2013Number Living: 284Number Giving: 23Percentage Giving: 8%Total Contributions: $3,070
Jessica Belle
Briana Coyle
Shawna Deane
Josephine Ennis
Brian Ferrasci-Olley
Elizabeth Findley
Miriam Gordon
Kathleen Grohman
Heather Hightower
Kenneth Hong
Tor Jernudd
Bruce Johnson
Ethan Jones
Stephanie Lakinski
Kerra Melvin
Tony Quang
Tony Ramsey
Sammuel Shaddox
Samuel Strauss
Joanna Sylwester
Lori Tonnes-Priddy
James Wendell
Ryan Yoke
CLASS OF 2014Number Living: 300Number Giving: 20Percentage Giving: 7%Total Contributions: $2,200
Todd Bloom
Jonathan Collins
Heather Cook
Jonah Crollard
Dessa Dal Porto
Peter Dolan
Cody Fenton-Robertson
Evan Fuller
Nick Hathaway
Erin Hebert
Brooke Howlett
Laurel Jones
Wesley Kovarik
Jenna Lieske
Stephanie Liu
Niki Morrison
Tony Ramsey
Rachel Ryon
Jenna Smith
Lisa Tamaki
Shira Zucker
CLASS OF 2015Number Living: 267Number Giving: 31Percentage Giving: 12%Total Contributions: $6,197
Lydia Ansari
Eddie Burns
Daniel Cairns
Derek Chen
Devra Cohen
Lauren Conner
Irvine Corbett
Katherine Crabtree
Sarah Demaree
Andrew Durland
Michael Ellis
Jessica Erickson
Christopher Ferrell
Karen Fossum
Andrea Frey
Meghan Gavin
Sonja Gerrard
Mallory Gitt
Charles Hausberg
Courtney Hood
Christopher Jordan
Blake Koerner
Carolyn Krol
Kirsten Nelsen
Christopher Reed
Laurie Rosini
Robert Sykes
Ross Tanaka
Ryan Thomas
Jocelyn Whiteley
Qiuwen Xu
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Condon Society Laureates
Lifetime giving totaling $1,000,000 or more to the School of Law.
Anonymous
Greg Amadon (FM)
Stan ‘63 & Alta Barer (FM)
Steve & Kathy Berman (FM)
Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman (FM)
Evelyn S. Egtvedt (D)
Michael ‘64 & Lynn Garvey (FM)
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Bill & Melinda Gates (FM)
D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger (FM)
Landesa Rural Development Institute
Jack MacDonald ‘40 (D) (FM)
Microsoft Corporation
Elisabeth Miller (D)
William & Sally Neukom (FM)
Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock (FM)
Linden Rhoads ‘11 (FM)
The Seattle Foundation
The Tulalip Tribes
United Way of King County
University of Washington School of Law Foundation
(D) DECE A SED (FM) FOUNDING MEMBER
JOHN T. CONDON SOCIET YINDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS
Members have lifetime giving totaling $25,000 or more.
Acknowledgment of the John T. Condon Society Founding Members, Laureates and Benefactors can also be found on our donor wall in William H. Gates Hall.
Condon Society Benefactors
Lifetime giving totaling $100,000 to $999,999 to the School of Law.
Anonymous (9)
Sophie & Wilbur Albright (D)
American Bar Association
William & Katherine Andersen Jr. (FM)
Alice & Edna Athearn (D) (FM)
Aviation Working Group
Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich (FM)
Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel (FM)
Frederick Betts ‘33 (D) (FM)
Judith Bigelow ‘86 (FM)
The Boeing Company
The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jon ‘76 Bridge (FM)
The Bullitt Foundation
Clarence ‘30 & Vivian Campbell (D)
Cloud L. Cray Foundation
Costco Wholesale Corporation
Kenneth ‘40 (D) & Nona ‘42 Cox (FM)
Richard Cray (D)
Gordon Culp ‘52 (D) (FM)
Gerald ‘53 & Lucille Curtis
Carol A. Davidson
Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
Colonel Josef ‘31 & Muriel Diamond (D)
Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd (FM)
Marie Donohoe ‘63 (D)
The Dorsey & Whitney Foundation
Scott Dunham ‘75 (D) & Barbara Eliades (FM)
The Honorable William ‘52 (D) & Vasiliki Dwyer (FM)
Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger (FM)
Evergreen Legal Services
Ernest Falk ‘28 (D)
Dean Judson ‘19 & Dorothy Falknor (D)
Donald Fleming ‘51 (D)
The Ford Foundation
Foster Pepper PLLC
Marion Garrison (D) (FM)
Garvey Schubert Barer (FM)
Mary Gates (D)
William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr. (FM)
Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88 (FM)
Gregory ‘85 & Valerie Gorder
Greater Everett Community Foundation
Greenwall Foundation
Gerald & Carolyn Grinstein (FM)
Edward ‘66 & Andrea Hansen (FM)
Douglas Hendel ‘56 (FM)
Professor Dan Henderson (D)
The Henry M. Jackson Foundation (FM)
Herbert B. Jones Foundation
Dean & Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth (FM)
Duward & Susan Huckabay Foundation
John A. Huckabay
Susan Huckabay
Japan Foundation
John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Jean Johnson ‘82 & Peter Miller ‘83 (FM)
Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation
K & L Gates
Michael Kates Trust
Katherine Kellogg Smith Trust
Nanci Kertson
Ed Kim ‘95
King County Bar Association
King County Bar Foundation
King County Bar Institute
C. Calvert Knudsen ‘50 (D) (FM)
The Korea Foundation
Kreielsheimer Foundation (FM)
Theodore & Pamela Kummert (FM)
Donald P. Lehne ‘60Sam Levinson ‘25 (D)
Gordon Livengood ‘52 (D)
Willaim ‘38 (D) & Virginia Lowry
Bruce ‘49 & Jean Maines (D)
Charlotte Malone (D)
Robert McMillen (D) (FM)
Veida Morrow ‘24 (D)
Larry ‘63 & Judith Mounger Jr. (FM)
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
James ‘53 & Patsy NelsonPacific Coast Banking School
Perkins Coie LLP (FM)
Preston Gates & Ellis LLP (FM)
Progeny 3, Inc.
Puyallup Tribe of Indians
Quil Ceda Village
Riverstyx Foundation
Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr. (FM)
Joseph & Katherine Ryan
Katie Sako ‘87 & Kendall Flint (FM)
Kenneth ‘64 & Lucia Schubert Jr. (FM)
The Honorable Gerard & Barbara Shellan
Spencer Short ‘24 (D)
W. Hunter (D) & Dorothy Simpson (FM)
James & Janet Sinegal
Virginia Smith ‘46 (D)
Society of Counsel Representing Accused Persons
Max ‘52 & Ruth Soriano (D) (FM)
Squaxin Island Tribe
SSA Marine, Inc.
David Stobaugh ‘75 & Lynn Prunhuber ‘79
Stuart Foundation
Paul Van Wagenen ‘73
Washington Research Foundation
Washington State Bar Association
Philip Weiss ‘23 (D)
Carrie Welch (D)
Condon Society
Lifetime giving totaling $25,000 to $99,999 to the School of Law.
Anonymous (15)
Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams
Helen Adams (D)
Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama (FM)
Thomas Allison ‘72 (D) & Kimberlee Brackett
American College of Trial Lawyers
Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84
Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman
John Applegate ‘41 (D)
James ‘39 (D) & Kathleen Arneil
Lawrence & Mary Ann Bailey
Barbara Barbee-Pelzel
Bardehle Pagenberg Dost
Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80
Beijing Lawyers Association
Jack (D) and Becky Benaroya (FM)
Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong, P.C.
William Bennett ‘95 & Michele Borovac (FM)
Family of Homer Bergren ‘35 (D) (FM)
Betts, Patterson & Mines, P.S.
Boehmert & Boehmert
Bogle & Gates Law Offices
Mary ‘75 & David Boies (FM)
F. Ross Boundy ‘71
Alexander ‘63 & Cornelia (D) Brindle Sr.
Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton
James ‘35 & Jane Bryson (D)
Charles Stimson Bullitt ‘49 (D)
M. John ‘69 & Mattie Bundy (FM)
John ‘61 (D) & Sybil Burgess
Robert ‘73 & Katherine (D) Campbell
Diana ‘86 & Charles (D) Carey Jr.
C. Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson (FM)
Casey Family Foundation
Michael Cason
Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation
Christensen O’Connor Johnson Kindness
Charles ‘61 & Donna Cole (D) (FM)
Coleman Foundation, Inc.
Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins
Comdisco, Inc.
Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation
Theiline Cramer & Stephen Romein
Martin ‘65 (D) & Diane Crowder (FM)
Clydia Cuykendall ‘74
Dana Corporation Foundation
John ‘40 & Ruth Davis (D)Mabry Debuys ‘79 (D)
Deloitte & Touche Foundation
Denny Miller Associates, Inc.
The Honorable Carolyn ‘53 & Cyrus (D) Dimmick
Dorsey & Whitney, LLP
Lloyd DuCommun ‘34 (D)
Robert ‘61 & Judith Duggan
Duty Free Shoppers Ltd.
Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson
Barney Ebsworth
Richard ‘74 & Mary ‘75 Ekman
James Ellis ‘49 (FM)
John ‘53 & Doris Ellis
Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons
Sylvia Epstein (D)
Equal Justice WorksFenwick & West LLP
W. J. Thomas Ferguson ‘67
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP
Leslie Fishel Jr. (D)
Daniel ‘88 & Frances Fisher (FM)
The Honorable Betty ‘56 & Professor Emeritus Robert Fletcher (D) (FM)
James ‘71 & Marlene Fletcher
Floyd & Pflueger, P. S.
Foley Family Charitable Foundation
William ‘74 & Carol Foley II (FM)
Carl Franklin (D)
Dennis Franklin ‘78 & Melinda Yee
Yasuhiro Fujita ‘68 (D)
Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite Garrison (FM)
William & Carrie Garrison (D)
Jennifer Gavin
Timothy Gavin ‘91 (FM)
General Service Foundation
Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles (FM)
Peter & Sally (D) Glase
The Glenhome Foundation
Glenhome Trust
Stanley Golub ‘36 (D)
Gordon Derr, LLP
Laura Grace
Graduate Program in Taxation (FM)
Greater Kansas City Community Foundation
Greenwood Shopping Center
Camden Hall ‘65
John ‘78 & Patty Hammar
Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc.
Charles Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01
Alfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)
Heller Ehrman LLP
James Hilton ‘59 (FM)
Akimitsu LL.M. ‘95 & Kaoru Hirai
John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster (FM)
The Honorable Alfred ‘48 & C. Lillian Holte (D)
The Honorable Charles Horowitz ‘27 (D)
Professor Mary Hotchkiss
Gary ‘75 & Chris Huff
James ‘39 & Rose Hunter (D) (FM)
Thelma Hutchinson (D)
Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin
Inslee, Best, Doezie, & Ryder, PS
James & Nancy Irwin
Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel
Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe
Janet Wright Ketcham Foundation
Japanese American Society
Japan/U.S. Friendship Commission
Eric & Ingrid Jarvis
The Honorable Peter ‘62 & Sally Jarvis
Jeffers, Danielson, Sonn & Aylward (FM)
Michael B. Jeffers ‘64 & Hope Aldrich
Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle
Professor Ralph (D) & Anne Johnson (FM)
Marjorie Jones (D)
James & Diana Judson
Kao Corporation
Day ‘29 & Susan Karr (D)
Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, LLP
Richard ‘77 & Christine Kitto
W.H. ( Joe) Knight Jr. & Susan Mask (FM)
Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear, LLP
Carl Koch ‘40 (D)
Henry Kotkins Sr. ‘35 (D)
Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane (FM)
The Lane Family Foundation
Lane Powell, PC
Linda Larson ‘78 & B. Gerald Johnson (FM)
Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee
Ronald ‘71 & Toshiko Lee
Legal Environmental Assistance
James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.
Byron & Alice Lockwood Foundation
NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY
REPORT TO DONORS
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HENRY SUZ Z A LLO SOCIE T Y
Members have made testamentary or other planned gifts
to the School of Law.
Anonymous (4)Patricia AllendoerferEdna Alvarez ‘67Edward Chandler ‘78 &
Laura PhillipsGerald ‘53 & Lucille CurtisVasiliki DwyerRichard ‘74 & Diane ElliottJames Ellis ‘49Bruce ‘78 & Aphrodite GarrisonGail Gordon ‘77Douglas Hendel ‘56William Hochberg ‘83Garfield & Cynthia JeffersMichael Jeffers ‘64Alan ‘65 & Cheryl KaneNanci KertsonKeith ‘72 & Lynn KesslerW.H. ( Joe) Knight Jr. &
Susan MaskEarl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher IIIDonald Lehne ‘60Thomas Loftus ‘57Wallace & Barbara LohJudith MalengPolly ‘87 & David McNeillJames ‘53 & Patsy NelsonWilliam Nelson ‘68Ralph ‘62 & Bonnie OlsonDudley ‘55 & Anne PanchotJohn ‘52 & Jacqueline RileyJoseph & Katherine RyanThe Honorable Gerard &
Barbara ShellanWilliam Snyder ‘89/LL.M. ‘06Diane ‘76 & Larry StokkePaul Van Wagenen ‘73Professors Lea Vaughn &
Patrick Dobel IIIPaul ‘67 & Kathryn Whelan
MA R IA N GOULD GA LL AGHER SOCIE T Y
Members have lifetime giving totaling $15,000 or more to the Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library at the School of Law.Acknowledgment of the Marian Gould Gallagher Society can also be found on the law library donor wall in William H.
Gates Hall.
Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80Judith ‘75 & Arnold BendichProfessor Charles & Betty Corker (D)
& FamilyGerald ‘53 & Lucille CurtisLloyd A. DuCommun ‘34 (D)W. J. Thomas ‘67 & Kristin FergusonAlfred & Dorothy Harsch (D)Professor Penny & Norris HazeltonThe Family of Lawrence Hickman ‘36Professor Mary Hotchkiss &
Mary WhisnerPartners of Levinson, Friedman,
Vhugen, Duggan, Bland & HorowitzThe Macfarlane FoundationRobert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.Polly ‘87 & David McNeillThe Meid and MacFarlane
FoundationDudley ‘55 & Anne PanchotDean Richard & Joanne Roddis (D)
& FamilyProfessor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 &
Edgar ‘35 (D) RombauerLowden Sammis ‘26 (D)Guy ‘77 & Jackie TowleProfessor Jane & Peter Winn
Barbara & Professor Wallace Loh (FM)
Ruth Lothrop (D)
Peter ‘65 & Marian Lucas
Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.
John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr.
Norman ‘66 (D) & Judith Maleng
Brad & Susan MartenTasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69
Frank McAbee (D)
The McIntosh Foundation
McNaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren PLLC
Polly ‘87 & David McNeill (FM)
Merchant & Gould
Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels
Denny & Sandra Miller (FM)
Hugh Miracle ‘34 (D)
Mitsubishi Research Institute
Frank (D) & Ella Moquin
Thelma Moriarty (D)
Morrison & Foerster, LLP
Jonathan ‘80 & Lynn Mott (FM)
Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse
Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin (FM)
MultiCare Health SystemSharon Nelson ‘76
The Honorable William ‘63 & Marta Nielsen (FM)
The Norcliffe Foundation
Dan ‘66 & Diane O’Neal (FM)
P&E C Miller Charitable Foundation
Arthur Paulsen ‘46 (D) (FM)
Earl Phillips ‘34 (D)
Pierce CountyWalter Pitts ‘52 (D) (FM)
Pogo Producing Co.
Cheryl Pope
William Pope ‘79 (FM)
Wayne L. Prim Foundation
Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim
Constance ‘78 & Rodney Proctor
Public Interest Law Association
Karl ‘79 & Lianne Quackenbush
Josef Rawert ‘09
Dale ‘39 & Evelyn Read ‘40 (D)
Helen Reardon Agnew (D)
Eric & Heather Redman (FM)
NAMES IN BOLD ARE NEW TO THE GIVING SOCIETY OR HAVE MOVED UP TO A NEW GIVING LEVEL WITHIN THE SOCIETY
Bruce ‘77 and Alida Robertson (FM)
ROC/US Technology Cooperation
The Rock Foundation
Professor William Rodgers Jr.
Professor Emerita Marjorie ‘60 & Edgar ‘35 (D) Rombauer
Ropes & Gray
Ryan Investments LLC
Mary Ryan (D)
Safeco Insurance Company
Lowden Sammis ‘26 (D)
Thomas ‘73 (D) & Greta Sedlock (FM)
Seed I.P. Law Group, PLLC
Shidler McBroom Gates & Lucas (FM)
Beryl Simpson ‘85
Skokomish Tribal Nation
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Catherine Smith ‘79
Eugene Smith ‘56 (D)
Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith
Smith Goodfriend, P.S.
Sonderhoff & Einsel Law & Patent
Southwest Center for Law and Policy
Evelyn ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe Jr. (FM)
Carlyn ‘81 & George (D) Steiner (FM)
William & Augusta Steinert (D)
R. Jack. ‘64 & Sandra Ann Stephenson (FM)
Professor Emeritus William ‘59 (D) & Mary Stoebuck (FM)
Stoel Rives LLPEleanor Stokke (D)
Carl Stork (FM)
Daniel (D) ‘55 & Susan Sullivan
Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka
Lyn Tangen ‘74 & Richard Barbieri (FM)
Tani & Abe
Texas Instruments Incorporated
Donald ‘54 (D) & Kay Thoreson (FM)
Charles H. ‘37 & Anne Galbrath Todd (D)
Edith Tollefson (D)
Tousley Brain
Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle
TRACE International, Inc.
Irwin (D) ‘57 & Betty Lou Treiger (FM)
Robert & Kathleen Trimble (FM)
U.S. Charitable Gift Trust
United States-Japan Foundation
United Way of Snohomish County
Nancy & Fred Utter
Val A. Browning Charitable Foundation
Van Ness Feldman GordonDerr
Verizon Communications Inc.
W.A. Franke
Washington State Bar Foundation
Griffith ‘49 & Patricia Way
Paul Webber ‘62 (FM)
Werner Erhard Foundation
Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison
William G. McGowan Charitable Fund
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
David ‘61 & Mary Williams
Professor Jane & Peter Winn
Woodcock Washburn
Bagley & Virginia Wright Foundation
Charles & Barbara Wright
The Honorable Eugene ‘37 (D) & Esther Wright
D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young
Yuasa and Hara
REPORT TO DONORS
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Diane Kero ‘81*
Keith ‘72 & Lynn Kessler
Colleen Kinerk ‘77 & Dan Kilpatric ‘76
Earl ‘66 & Kristin Lasher III
Eugene ‘66/LL.M. ‘78 & Sachiko Lee**
James ‘63 & June Lindsey Jr.***
Beth Loveless
Martin ‘70 & Andrea Lybecker***
Professor Deborah Maranville**
McKinley Irvin, PLLC
Frank ‘85 & Teresa Michiels
Miller Nash Graham & Dunn
Miller Nash LLP
Laurie Minsk ‘84 & Jerry Dunietz
Brian ‘77 & Elizabeth Morrison
Robert Mucklestone ‘54 & Megan Kruse
Shan ‘58 & Lora Mullin
The News Tribune
Panagiotu Pension Advisors, Inc.
Peterson Wampold Rosato Luna Knopp
Dana Pigott
Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94*
Laurie Rosini ‘15
Judith ‘74 & Jon Runstad Jr.**
Saturna Capital Corp.
Betty ‘78 (D) & Professor Lawrence Schall
Timothy Schellberg
Selland Auto Transport
Sonderhoff & Einsel Law and Patent office
Winifred & Clifton Stratton III
Tacoma Pierce County Bar Association
David & Daphne Tang**
Dean Kellye Testy & Tracey Thompson
The Princeton Review
Tiffany & Co.
Guy ‘77 & Jackie Towle
Arthur Tsien ‘78 & Judith McGuire***
Brooke Van Peski
Washington State Bar Foundation
Mary Whisner**
Professor Jane & Peter Winn*
Stewart Young
David & Valarie Zeeck
Gif ts of $1,000 TO $1,999
Anonymous (3)
Gregory ‘77 & Anne Adams**
Professor Craig ‘89 & Joyce Allen
Eric Anderson ‘94 & Stephen Tollafield
William & Sylvia Bailey
Barbri Oregon Bar Review, Inc.
Arnold ‘59 & Carol Barer*
Allan Baris ‘79 & Karen Watts ‘80*
Clemens ‘69 & Lisa Anderson
Mark Beatty ‘79
Ben Bridge Jewelers
Bennett, Bigelow & Leedom
Buckley & Associates, PS, Inc.
Ben Byers
Chevron Humankind
Annette Clark
Richard Cleva ‘79*
William ‘75 & Kathleen Collins**
Carmela Conroy ‘90
Crowley Maritime Corporation
Pete & Pat Curran Family Fund
Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
H. Joachim Deeg & Francoise Deeg-Le Gal
Sarah Demaree ‘15
Scott Dinwiddie ‘95 & Andrea Menaker ‘95
Mary Donovan
Dorsey & Whitney, LLP
Professor Dwight ‘73 & Kathleen Drake*
Bruce ‘89 & Roberta Duff
David & Kimberly Eckstein
Charles ‘71 & Jane Ekberg***
Richard ‘74 & Diane Elliott**
Kimberly ‘85 & Charles Ellwanger**
Professor Mary Fan & Dean Kawamoto
Cynthia Fester*
Daniel Finney ‘88**
Angela Foster
Franzosi, Dal Negro, Pensato, Setti
Mario Franzosi
Mark ‘90 & Diane Gary
Jay & Gerri Gass
Professor Robert Gomulkiewicz ‘87 & Andrea Lairson ‘88
Steven ‘91 & Amy Gustafson
Camden Hall ‘65
Lynn Hall ‘91
Darrell ‘68 & Nina Hallett
Bill & Cydney Hamett
Randi Hedin
Ann Hemmens*
Klara ‘96 & Professor Gregory Hicks
Lynn Hvalsoe ‘80 & Clinton Chapin
Inland Northwest Community Foundation
Robert ‘72 & Carol Jaffe
K & L Gates
Kent Dawson Company, Inc.
Charles ‘65 & Nancy Kimbrough
Brian ‘71 & Marilyn Kremen
Julie Lanz ‘01 & Max Ochoa
Latina/o Bar Association of Washington
Janine ‘89 & Gregory ‘78 Lawless
Matthew ‘97 & Karen LeMaster
John Leary Jr. ‘78 & Dorothy Hall
Micah Lebank & Jenny Hapgood
Mark ‘51 & Claire Litchman
Nicholas & Diane Lovejoy
Betty Lukins
MacDonald Hoague & Bayless
Professor Jacqueline McMurtrie & William Gales
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project
Sebastian Miller
Steven Miller ‘00
North Pacific Crab Association
The North Ridge Foundation**
Douglas ‘89 & Emilie Ogden**
Oh-Ebashi LPC and Partners
Olgoonik Development, LLC
Esther Park ‘00
Parr Byerly, PLLC
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Professor Liz & Drew Porter
Wayne L. Prim Foundation
Wayne ‘50 & Miriam Prim
Roxanne Reese
James & Doreen Rigos
David ‘83 & Donna Robbins
Bruce ‘77 & Alida Robertson
Professor William Rodgers Jr.*
Rachel Ryon ‘14
Saltchuk Resources, Inc.
Patrick Siler
Buster Simpson & Laura Sindell
Shan Sivalingam ‘07
Ann Spangler
Swanson Capital Management, LLC
Gerald LL.M. ‘96 & Bridget Swanson II
Daniel Syrdal ‘75**
Targa Sound Terminal
Themis Bar Review
Philip Thompson ‘82 & Elizabeth Dolliver**
James Torgerson ‘84 & The Honorable Morgan Christen**
Holly Towle ‘79
Betty Lou Treiger*
Trident Seafoods Corporation
Jennifer Velling
Julie Weston ‘69 & Gerhardt Morrison
David ‘61 & Mary Williams*
Michael Withey
Jingxin Zhan LL.M. ‘12
Gif ts of $500 TO $999
Anonymous
The Honorable Joan ‘75 & George Allison
Robert ‘94 & Elena Allnutt
Sophia Amberson
Kimberly Ambrose ‘89
Professor Helen Anderson ‘84 & Howard Goodfriend ‘84*
Adam Andrews ‘09
The Honorable Marlin Appelwick ‘79 & Sharron Sellers**
The Honorable Sharon Armstrong ‘74
J. Patrick ‘76 & Peggy Aylward
Raz Barnea
(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
DONORS BY GI V ING LE V EL
Gifts reported here are those received this fiscal year and do not include pledges or other unrealized contributions
or bequests.
Gif ts of $25,000 TO $99,999
Anonymous (3)
Sophie Albright (D)
Alice & Edna Athearn (D)*
Bagley and Virginia Wright Foundation
Beijing Lawyers Association
Judith ‘75 & Arnold Bendich*
Diana Carey ‘86
Theiline Cramer & Stephen Romein
Equal Justice Works
Greg ‘85 & Val Gorder*
Ed Kim ‘95
Landesa*
RiverStyx Foundation
Joseph & Katherine Ryan
Southwest Center for Law and Policy
The Tulalip Tribes
Washington State Bar Association*
Yakama Nation
Gif ts of $10,000 TO $24,999
Anonymous (4)
The Honorable Bobbe ‘76 & Jonathan ‘76 Bridge***
Alexander ‘63 & Madeleine Brindle Sr.
Joseph ‘82 & Maureen Brotherton*
Jeffrey ‘67 & Susan Brotman
Costco Wholesale Corporation
Barney Ebsworth
Professor Mary Hotchkiss**
Intellectual Ventures Management, LLC
Charles & Diana Judson
Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP
Tasuku Matsuo LL.M. ‘69
Perkins Coie LLP*
Ropes and Gray LLP
Paul Van Wagenen ‘73
Charles & Barbara Wright III
Charles and Barbara Wright Foundation
Gif ts of $1,000,000 OR MORE
Toni Rembe ‘60 & Arthur Rock
Gif ts of $100,000 TO $999,999
Stanley ‘63 & Alta Barer
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation*
D. Wayne ‘57 (D) & Anne Gittinger***
King County Bar Foundation
Donald Lehne ‘60
Microsoft Corporation***
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
James ‘53 & Patsy Nelson
Pacific Bankers Management Institute
Quil Ceda Village
The Seattle Foundation***
Society of Counsel Representing Accused Persons
United Way of King County
Gif ts of $5,000 TO $9,999
Anonymous (3)
AMPACC Law Group, PLLC
Norimitsu Arai LL.M. ‘01
Joel ‘71 & Maureen Benoliel
Bernard J. Kleina Photography
Boehmert & Boehmert**
The Honorable Robert Bryan ‘58*
Kent ‘67 & Sandra Carlson**
Catholic Health Initiatives
Connelly Law Offices
Jack & Angela Connelly
Patrick ‘88 & Karen Crumb
Richard ‘70 & Polly Dodd**
Dorsey & Whitney, LLP*
Scott Dunham ‘75 (D) & Barbara Eliades**
Linda ‘76 & Randal Ebberson*
W. J. Thomas ‘67 & Kristin Ferguson
Franciscan Health Systems
John Frank & Delia Jampel
William ‘50 & Mimi Gates Sr.
Carl M. Hansen Foundation, Inc
Ken Harer ‘00/LL.M. ‘01 & Grace Seidel
Kinzer Real Estate Services
Craig ‘82 & Danna Kinzer
Dennis ‘67 & Elizabeth Lane*
Littler Mendelson Foundation, Inc.
Robert & Janet Macfarlane Jr.
Brad & Susan Marten
North Pacific Seafoods, Inc.
Pendleton and Elisabeth Miller Charitable Foundation*
Seed Intellectual Property Law Group, PLLC*
Shell Exploration and Production
Skokomish Tribal Nation
Shawna Smith & Alan Northrop
Squaxin Island Tribe
St. George Marine, Inc.
Stoel Rives LLP
Sughrue Mion, PLLC
Professor Toshiko LL.M. ‘90/Ph.D. ‘92 & Hisato Takenaka
The Copyright Alliance
TRACE International, Inc.
Van Ness Feldman LLP
The Honorable Frederick ‘68 & Jane Van Sickle*
Margaret & Douglas Walker
President Michael & Marti Young
Yuasa and Hara
Gif ts of $2,000 TO $4,999
Anonymous (3)
AIP Patent & Law Offices
Alena Suazo Foundation
American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers
Professor Robert Anderson & Marilyn Heiman
Kenneth ‘88 & Lisa Baronsky
Thomas Bingham ‘77 & Patricia Char
Richard Caulfield
Thomas ‘68 & Jane Collins***
Raven Conrad
John ‘56 & Mary Costello
Nona Cox ‘42
Clydia Cuykendall ‘74***
DaVita, Inc.
John ‘70 & Zona DeWeerdt
Bruce Dick ‘82 & Rexanne Gibson ‘82
The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53
DIRECTV Sports Networks, LLC
John ‘53 & Doris Ellis**
Adam Engst ‘12/LL.M. ‘15
Foster Pepper PLLC
Bradley Fresia ‘88
Frommer Lawrence & Haug LLP
John Garner ‘77***
Garvey, Schubert & Barer
Robert ‘74 & Barbara Giles
John ‘78 & Patty Hammar
Professor Penny & Norris Hazelton*
Hillis Clark Martin & Peterson
Dean and Professor Emeritus Roland & Mary Hjorth***
John ‘69 & Carol Hoerster**
Wei-Fu Hsu ‘97 & Chiachi Lin
Inslee, Best, Doezie, & Ryder, PS*
REPORT TO DONORS
8988
uw
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15
Charles Blumenfeld ‘69 & Karla Axell
Carolyn Bowman
Todd Boysen
Lt. Colonel Harold Brown ‘84*
Jeffrey Capeloto ‘86
Karen & Michael Carlson
Stanley Carlson ‘65***
Aline Carton
Tiffany Cartwright & Jonathan Gaw
Bruce ‘61 & Karen Cohoe
Joshua Colangelo-Bryan ‘99
The Honorable Ronald Culpepper ‘76
William Deasy ‘63
Julian ‘57 & Alice Dewell
The Honorable Roderick Dimoff ‘55
Downtown Dental Solutions
Theresa Durkan ‘81 & Charles Burdell Jr.
Roxanne Eberle ‘09
Molly ‘04 & Daniel Eckman
Jon Eldan
Suzanne Elliott & Louis Frantz
Michael ‘66 & Gail Emmons
Howard ‘61 & Diane ‘61 Engle Jr.***
Lawrence LL.M. ‘86 & Yuriko Enomoto
Linda Eskenazi
Madoka Etoh
Penny & Gerry Fagerlie
Mona Fairbanks
Gordon ‘73 & Robin Ferguson
Michael Filipovic
Tim & Barbara Ford
Dennis Forsyth & Elaine Spencer
Katrin Frank
Ronald ‘71 & Carmella Franz
John Gadon ‘83
Rebecca Gaff
Richard Gans ‘88 & Jennifer Turner
Rebecca ‘02 & Jamie Glasgow
Global Impact
Alejandra Gonza
Kimberly Gordon
Douglas Green ‘78***
Andrew ‘04 & Hillary Greene
Marc Greenough ‘94
Philip ‘77 & Alison Grennan
Rita ‘84 & Professor John Griffith
Debra & Jordan Gussin
Janet Gwilym ‘12 & Bing Tso Jr.
Gerald ‘61 & Michelle Hahn
The Honorable Robert ‘58 & Mary Harris
Donald Harrison ‘74
Hope Herron
Christopher ‘75 & Cheryle Hirst**
William Hochberg ‘83
Timothy ‘76 & Candyce Hogan
Kelly Holler
Richard Hopp ‘76 & Debbie Walsh
Brice Howard ‘03
Gwendolyn Howard ‘71
Icicle Village Resort
Imaginessence
Allen ‘78 & Nettie Israel***
Sylvester ‘79 & Marlys Jaime***
Aurora Janke ‘12
William Jaquette III ‘78
Zabrina Jenkins
Richard ‘82 & Agnes Johannsen*
Jeffrey ‘93 & Cassandra Johnson
Lynn Johnson
Brent ‘99 & Amy Jones
Henry Josefsberg ‘88
Roberta ‘80 & Charles Katz*
Rodney ‘76 & Kristine Kawakami
Kathleen Keasler
Kaitlyn Kelly
William & Elizabeth Ketcham
John Knox ‘82 & DeeAnn Sisley*
Karen Kruse ‘90 & Bruce Cross*
KZOK Radio
Stephanie Lakinski ‘13
Eric Laliberte ‘11
Anne Lee
Kris Lee ‘90/LL.M. ‘91
Sungyong Lee
Larry ‘71 & Karen Leonardson
Michael Licata ‘11
Richard & Anne Lichtenstadter
F. Wayne Lieb ‘77
Patra Liu ‘95
Mariko Lockhart
Derek Loeser ‘94 & Katherine Van Kessel
Ross ‘83 & Lisa Macfarlane
Donald ‘68 & Brenda Mallett***
Brendan Mangan ‘87
Andrea Mann
Toby ‘02 & Torrie Marshall
James Marston ‘69
The Honorable Ricardo Martinez ‘80 & Margaret Morris-Martinez
Maryhill Winery
David McDonald
Professor Kathleen McGinnis
Gayle McKool
Harry ‘77 & Marjolein McLachlin*
Kerra Melvin ‘13
Nicole Mitchell & Joseph Pierce
William ‘90 & Brenda Montgomery
Carol Moody ‘80
Sarah & Don Moran
Scott ‘97 & Jennifer Morris*
Niki Morrison ‘14
Ward ‘89 & Kirsten ‘91 Morrison Jr.
Mary Moseley ‘87 & Thomas Kennedy
William Nelson ‘68
Chun Ng ‘91 & Pei Wang
The Ocean Lodge
Professor Kathleen O’Neill & David Laskin
Scott Osborne ‘75
Pacific Northwest Ballet
Dean Pedersen
Jan ‘69 & Marguerite Peterson
Milbert ‘62 & Rachel Price**
The Honorable Norman ‘58 & Barbara Quinn
Jasmine Reese
The Honorable Yancey ‘61 & LaVonne Reser*
Riddell Williams P.S.
The Honorable Jean Rietschel ‘77 & Professor Lois Thetford
Frederick Rivera
James ‘80 & Mary Rohrback
Michelle Rusk
The Honorable John ‘59 & Ann (D) Rutter Jr.***
Glenn ‘78 & Beverly Sakuda
The Salish Lodge
Suzanne Sarason ‘81*
Amy Schiffhauer
Jenifer Schultz
Richard Settle ‘67
Evan ‘02 & Sabina ‘02 Shapiro
Catherine Shaw ‘87
Susan Shyne ‘85 & Kirk Dawson
Grant ‘53 (D) & Nancy Silvernale Jr.
John ‘82 & Christine Smith
Kazuaki Sono ‘69
Sorrento Hotel
Alan ‘96 & Kathryn Souders
Carole Souvenir ‘87 & Donald Hendrickson
The Honorable Mariane ‘84 & The Honorable Michael Spearman
Professor Hugh Spitzer ‘74 & Ann Scales
Kevin Stock
Diane ‘76 & Larry Stokke
Gary Swearingen ‘94
Yung-Hern Tan ‘03
Thomas Tanaka ‘82 & Shannon Skinner ‘82
Ten Directions Design
Tom Douglas Restaurants
Pamela Tonglao ‘99
Hubert ‘66 & Margueriette Travaille
Elizabeth Utter
Holly Vance ‘05 & Joshua Gaul ‘05
James ‘70/LL.M. ‘71 & Cynthia Walsh
Raymond ‘76 & Marie Walters***
Charles Warner ‘47
The Honorable Thomas ‘66 & Mary Warren
Professor Kathryn & Andrew Watts
Joseph ‘81 & Kathryn Weinstein
James Weisfield ‘91 & Kelly O’Connell-Weisfield
The Honorable Jay White ‘71
Sheree Whiteley
Wild Sky Law Group, PLLC
Phillip ‘69 & Constance Winberry***
Wine Outlet
Professor Yeong Chyan Wu LL.M. ‘82/Ph.D. ‘88
(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
Rebecca Bay & Allan Saarinen
Breean Beggs ‘91 & Laurie Powers ‘91
The Honorable Daniel Berschauer ‘72 & Phyllis Edwards***
Timothy Bever
Stephen ‘93 & Julie Bishop*
The Boeing Company***
Bruce ‘81 & Christine Borrus
Professor Karen Boxx ‘83 & Todd Maybrown
Katherine Brennan
David ‘63 & Mary Broom
Craig ‘56 & Jean Campbell
Robert ‘73 & Katherine Campbell**
Canlis Restaurant
Laurie Carlsson
Amanda Carr ‘06
Lisa Christoffersen ‘96 & Jeffrey Weber
Katherine Chung LL.M. ‘07
Margaret Clements & David Allen
John Clynch ‘88/LL.M. ‘08 & Michael Spencer
Coal Creek Jazz Band
John ‘70 & Barbara Cooper
Robert Crees ‘56*
J. Richard ‘66 & Marcia Crockett
Crissa Cugini ‘85
Peter Danelo
Jim Day
Deloitte & Touche Foundation
Doe Bay Resort & Retreat
Byron Doepker
Kevin ‘83 & Kimberly Doyle
Dominick ‘56 & Aurora Driano*
El Gaucho
The Honorable Joseph Farris ‘58
Juli Farris
Fenwick & West LLP
First Giving
Robert Flennaugh II ‘96
Jonathan Flugstad
Gary Fluhrer ‘74
Janice Flynn & Professor Walton Fangman
Thelma Franco
Susan French ‘67 & Tom Rowe
Andrea Frey
Jason Froggatt ‘95 & Wendy Lister
The Honorable Carol ‘54 & Herbert ‘54 Fuller
Leonor ‘84 & Jay Fuller
Camille Gearhart ‘85 & Timothy Burner
Robert ‘85 & Susan Gellatly
Danielle ‘99 & Michael Githens
Miriam Gordon ‘13
Claire ‘86 & Paul Grace*
James Grant ‘84 & Sarah Kohut
Marvin Gray Jr.
Mark Griffin
Lori Guzzo
Madeleine Haller
Richard Hansen ‘74
Arley ‘73 & Debra Harrel Jr.
Kinne Hawes ‘72
Kristin Hawes & Eric Chesley
Ralph Hawkins Jr. ‘64 & Anne Northrup
Frederick ‘61 & Jean Hayes
James Hayes
Jeanette Heard ‘90
James Hilton ‘59
The Honorable Vicki Hogan
Mark ‘67 & Julie Hutcheson
J. Scott Shrader Photography
J.A.S. Design-Build, Inc.
JayRay Ads & PR
Julie Jernudd
Helen Johansen ‘73
Johnson, Graffe, Keay, Moniz & Wick, LLP
Alan ‘65 & Cheryl Kane***
Thomas Keane ‘78 & Martha Noerr ‘78**
Richard ‘77 & Christine Kitto Jr.
The Honorable Ernest Kubota ‘58**
Paul Kundtz
Michael ‘81 & Karin Kuntz
Tovah LaDier ‘72
Derrick LaHaye
Keller Rohrback LLP
The Honorable J. Robert Leach ‘76 & Vickie Norris**
Nancy Avinger & Linda Lillevik
Douglas Love ‘88 & Rachel Running
Robert MacAulay ‘82 & Keri Ellison**
Ellen Macomson
Drew Markham ‘99
Julia Markley ‘99
Aurora ‘97 & David Martin
James ‘54 & Judith McAteer
Carol ‘97 & Phillip McCoog
Lisa McGimpsey LL.M. ‘01
Jerry ‘68 & Darlene McNaul***
Colleen Melody ‘09 & Zach Hoit
Jonathan Meyers LL.M. ‘05
Roland Mitchell ‘96
Professor Donna Moniz ‘82*
Sharon Nelson ‘76
Network for Good
The Honorable Frem ‘63 & Marta Nielsen*
Hossein Nowbar ‘93 & Lori Nomura ‘93
Patricia O’Connor
Ellie Page
Joel Paisner & Elizabeth Gorman
Dudley ‘55 & Anne Panchot
Jeffrey ‘74 & Pamela Pewe
Sheila Phillips ‘00
Porter Foster Rorick LLP
Queen Anne Painting Co.
Thomas ‘84 & Tracy Read***
Nita Rinehart ‘89
Paul ‘72 & Nancy Roesch Jr.
Professor Emerita Marjorie Rombauer ‘60**
Faye Samuels
Martha Sandoval ‘07 & Robert Kristjanson
B. Michael Schestopol ‘73 & Sarah Mann
Elizabeth Schubert ‘05 & Carl Ton
Schwabe, Williamson, & Wyatt, P.C.
Lila Silverstein ‘06 & Tom Wick
Amy ‘90 & Kenneth Sommers
Evelyn ‘78 & J. Parker Sroufe Jr.
John ‘70 & Rebecca Steel**
Michele & Jack Storms
Stritmatter Kessler Whelan
The Lawless Partnership, LLP
Cynthia Thomas ‘84
David & Sri Thornton
Richard Titus Jr. ‘78**
Thanh ‘94 & Sammantha Tran
The Honorable Michael ‘79 & Lois ‘80 Trickey
Joseph Velling
Rex ‘57 & Ruth Walker
Michael ‘96 & Dina Wampold
Chris Webster
David ‘83 & Sharon West
John Whalen LL.M. ‘06
Cynthia Whitaker ‘76 & Dan Carmichael
Marc Wilhelm ‘82
James Williams
Clay Wilson ‘98
Richard ‘76 & Catherine Wilson
Professor Louis & Susan Wolcher
Woodburn Company
Craig Wright ‘91
Ya-Ling Wu ‘08 & Clark Lin ‘08
John & Pat Wynn
Lien Yu ‘97
Lizhu Zheng LL.M. ‘06
Matthew Zuchetto
Gif ts of $250 TO $499
Anonymous (4)
ACLU of Washington
Adrift Hotel
Airial Balloon Company
Syd & Alene Akman
Karen Andersen ‘86
Rebecca Andrews ‘03 & Scott Olmsted
Professor Thomas & Lauren Andrews
Sheryll Apte
Steven Arterberry ‘99 & Catherine Tamaro
Jorgen Bader ‘61***
Keith Baldwin ‘66
Taylor & Jennifer Ball
Barre 3
Marsha Beck ‘72*
Laurel Beeler ‘89
Lance & Ramona Behnke
Lieutenant Joshua Berger ‘03/LL.M. ‘14
Blue Haven Medical Spa
REPORT TO DONORS
9190
uw
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20
15
Katie Guldhammer
Ramon ‘98 & Ann Gupta
Henry ‘62 & Catherine Haas
Clyde Haglund Jr. & Shelley Gibson
Garrett & Marcie Hall
Michael ‘72 & Virginia Hall
Hallmark Resort Newport
Georgia Harker
John ‘53 & Geraldine Hay
Lisa Hayes ‘99
Mary Heath
Erin Hebert ‘14
C. Henry ‘48 & Beatrice Heckendorn
Dennis Helmick ‘70
Jeanette Henderson ‘88
Daniel ‘83 & Susan Hendrickson
Henry Art Gallery
Katherine Herche ‘10
Earle Hereford Jr. ‘73 & Margaret Winsor
Morton Herman ‘60 & Antonie Humphreys
Jana Heyd
Deborah Hilsman ‘83
Jayanne Hino ‘83
Stephanie Hirano
Karen Hoewing ‘77
Michael Hoge ‘75
Michael ‘59 & Anne Holmes
George ‘77 & Patsy Holzapfel
Lenny Hom*
Mark Honeywell ‘68
Kenneth Hong ‘13
Jon ‘86 & Jane Hongladarom
Hoodsport Winery
Horseshoe
John Houlihan Jr. & Valerie Voss
Lauren Hruska
Juvella & Joseph Huang
Dolly Hunt
Professor John Huston ‘52 & Heather Van Nuys LL.M. ‘07
Ibex Outdoor Clothing
Il Fornaio
Caitlin Imaki ‘11
Jane Inaba
Inspired Learning Seattle
The Honorable Laura Inveen ‘79 & G. William Shaw ‘78
Edward ‘67 & M. Susan Irwin
Lori Irwin ‘83
Ivars/Kidd Valley
Ross Jacobson ‘76
Constance Jarvis ‘55
Judy Jennison
Michael Jeter
Yi Jiang LL.M. ‘00
John Howie Restaurants
Mark Johnsen ‘80
Bertil ‘65 & Nancy Johnson
The Honorable Charles Johnson ‘57*
Frances & William Johnson
Jamila Johnson ‘07
Larry ‘78 & Cynthia Johnson
W. Temple LL.M. ‘83 & Ise Jorden
Cristina Jorgenson ‘04
Kim & Pamela Kaiser
Andreas ‘99 & Professor Sarah ‘03 Kaltsounis
Robert Kaplan ‘69 & Professor Margaret Levi
Professor Stephen Kauffman
Kathryn Kelly
Professor Lisa Kelly
Robert ‘66 & Mary Keolker**
Deborah Kerdeman & David Tarshes
Hana ‘92 & Michael Kern
David ‘71 & Karen King
Barbara & Judd Kirk
Marie Kirk ‘81
Megan Kirk ‘02
David Klein LL.M. ‘11
Mary ‘74 & Professor Alan Klockars***
The Honorable Ted ‘64 & Marian Kolbaba
Jeffrey ‘86 & Suzanne Koontz
Valerie Kornowske
Colette Kostelec ‘05 & Richard Talbot
Gerald LL.M. ‘73 & Jo Kovach
Lisa Kremer ‘08
Betty Kuhnau
The Honorable David ‘78 & Peggy Kurtz***
Jeffrey ‘96 & Robin Kusumi
Professor Patricia Kuszler
Keith Kutler
Seamus Labrum
Lash Allure
Cari Laufenberg ‘03
Henry Laufenberg
Rhys ‘07 & Brooke Lawson
Robert ‘97 & Jennifer Leinbach
Irene Leonard
Jonathan Leptich ‘08
Jeffrey ‘88 & Jennifer Letts
Jan Levy
Larry Levy ‘68 & Diana Brambrink
LexisNexis
Nicole Lindquist ‘09
Richard Linville ‘82
Lithia Springs Resort
Paula Littlewood ‘97*
Ronnie ‘80 & Peggy Lopez
Suzanne Love ‘05 & Ori Amiga
Vivian Luna ‘77 & Caesar Pizano
Alan ‘76 & Jane Macpherson
John ‘72 & Susan Magee Jr.
Charles Magnuson ‘55
Jennifer Mahalingappa ‘00
Daniel LL.M. ‘07 & Kristen Manson
Kelli Maquire
Donald Marinkovich ‘59
Nicholas Marritz ‘11
Berrie Martinis ‘94
Mason County Bar Association
Scott Matheson ‘01
Nicholas Mathews ‘03/LL.M. ‘08
Susie Mathews
Rachel Mathisen ‘12
Hugh Matsubayashi ‘97 & Ivy Chen
Michael Matthews
Kevin McClure ‘95
Camille McDorman
John ‘68 & Karen McGary
Earl McGimpsey ‘71
Patrick McHenry
The Honorable Larry McKeeman ‘76 & Cynthia Treharne
Marsha McKim
Jo McLaughlin Flannery ‘96
Jack ‘59 & Carolyn McMurchie**
Nancy & James McMurrer
Ryan McRobert ‘12
Ian Mensher ‘07
David Merchant ‘92 & Shelley Pellegrino ‘98
Diane Meyers
John & Diane Michalik
Christeen Miller
Debra Miller
The Honorable Richard ‘70 & Janis Miller
Rodman Miller ‘50**
Jessica Mindlin ‘90 & Alexander Schafir
Mirabella Seattle
Maureen Mitchell ‘00
Shintaro Miyazaki LL.M. ‘05
Claire Molesworth
Mon Amie Bakery and Cafe
Moore Brothers Music
John Mooring ‘75
Peter ‘08 & Megan Moreno
Jennifer Morgan
Jeff ‘67 & Julia Morris
G. Rick ‘70 & Susan Morry***
Amy & Mark Mullins
Martin Munguia & Sara Fagerlie
Kirk LL.M. ‘96 & Darcy Muzzy
Karen ‘06 & Todd Nashiwa
Thomas Nast ‘77*
James Nelson ‘80*
Alison Nesmith
Betty Ngan ‘82 & Tom Mailhot
Jessica Nguyen ‘06
Wright Noel ‘95
Dennis Nollette
Kelly ‘89 & Dermot Noonan
Northwest Dance Network
Julia Norwood
Robert ‘70 & Patricia Nostrand*
Robert Nylander ‘87 & Andrea Faste
Leslie Ogg ‘66
Crys O’Grady
Colleen O’Holleran
Janet Olejar ‘72
Patrick O’Loughlin ‘82
Theodore Olson ‘61
Oregon Shakespeare Festival
Joanna Otero ‘96
PACCAR Foundation
Parlor Billiards & Spirits
Gavin Parr ‘00**
Patrick Dunn and Associates, LTD
Patxi’s Pizza
Patrick ‘80 & Julie Paulich
Frank ‘57 & Carol (D) Payne
(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
Gif ts of $100 TO $249
Anonymous (2)
Arthur ‘79 & M. Elizabeth Abel
Tareq Abu-Rish
Rajesh Agny
Takeo LL.M. ‘75 & Etsuyo Akiyama
The Honorable Gerry ‘64 & Christine Alexander
Lesley Allan ‘83
Mallory Allen ‘12
Joan Altman ‘12
Kirsten ‘04 & Douglas Ambach
Mark ‘88 & Marlee Anderson
Pamela Anderson
Thomas ‘67 & Saloma-Lee Anderson*
Kristin ‘95 & Matthew Anger
Annapurna Cafe
Yosuke ‘81 & Sakae Aoyagi
Paul & Marcia Armitstead
Teresa ‘83 & Professor Robert Aronson
Barry Arps
Timothy ‘75 & Christine Austin
John & Cheryl Avery
Ellen Bachman ‘74**
William ‘97 & Yao LL.M. ‘98 Bailey
Lawrence Baker ‘74
Gaurab Bansal ‘07
Jared Barrett ‘07
Jerry ‘72 & Carol Bassett***
Battelle Memorial Institute
Michael Bayley ‘92
Jeffrey Beaver
The Honorable Mary Becker ‘82
John Bennett LL.M. ‘81
Betts Austin PLLC
Colonel ‘99 & Stacey Betz Jr.
John Binns Jr. ‘64
Alison ‘06 & Matthew Blair
Kenneth Bloch ‘64
Todd Bloom LL.M. ‘14
BECU
Scott ‘83 & Barbara Borth
Cecilia Boudreau ‘08
Ellen Bowman & Gary Morse
The Honorable Philip ‘72 & Dorothy Brandt
Zyanya Breuer
Emily Brice ‘11
Rear Admiral Herbert Bridge & Edith Hilliard
William ‘69 & Kathleen Britton*
Daryl Brotman
Elizabeth Brown
James Brown LL.M. ‘05
Stanford & Gwen Brown
The Honorable Stephen Brown ‘80
The Honorable Mary ‘58 & Thomas Brucker
Andrew ‘02 & Jean Bryant
Ward ‘93 & Boni Buringrud**
Feliciana ‘78 & Professor William (D) Burke*
Tarik Burney ‘97 & Shannon Phillips ‘95
Professor John & Anne Cahn
Professor Steve Calandrillo & Chryssa Deliganis**
Stephen Camden ‘67
Kelly Canary ‘07
Cappy’s Boxing Gym
Doreen Cardin
John Carlson ‘65
Robert ‘83 & Janice Carmichael
Brent Carson ‘86 & Jill Burday-Carson
Caruh Salon & Spa
John ‘69 & Susan Cary**
Robert ‘72 & Joan Cathcart
Central Bark
Central Cinema
Century Ballroom
Wanderley Ceschim
Chaco Canyon Cafe
Sarah Chaplin
Angelica Chazaro & Devon Knowles
Jerry ‘08 & Jennifer ‘08 Chiang
Melissa Chin
Christensen O’Connor Johnson Kindness PLLC
Jeffrey Christensen ‘07
Professor Laurel Clapp
Beth Clark ‘84
Carolyn Cliff ‘84
Timothy Clifford ‘60
Professor Tom Cobb & Kevin Francis
Gerald ‘70 & Jeannie Coe
Devra Cohen ‘15
Jonathan Collins ‘14
Kendra Comeau ‘11
David ‘88 & Melinda Cook
The Honorable James ‘54 & Mary Cook
The Honorable Susan Cook ‘85
Cork and Canvas Events
Correa Forms Preparation
Jose-Angel Correa ‘85
Tara Correll
Anne ‘76 & George Counts
Stephanie Cox
William ‘69 & Martha Creech
Caroline Crenna ‘87
John Crosetto ‘05
Judy & Michael Crutcher
Gary ‘65 & Marilyn Cunningham***
Donald Dahlgren ‘60*
Anne Daly & Patrick Dowd
Abigail Daquiz ‘04 & James Babcock
Carol Davidson
Mark Davidson ‘75 & Cheryl Delappe
Dennis de Guzman ‘96
Marco ‘89 & Ryangja De Sa E Silva
John & Mary-Keith Deacon
Shawna ‘13 & Geoff Deane
Timothy Defors ‘09
Kevin Diaz ‘96
Ishbel Dickens ‘02
Maureen Dightman ‘73*
Professors Lea Vaughn & Patrick Dobel III***
The Honorable Robert Doran
Diane & Daniel Dorsey
Tom Douglas & Jackie Cross
George Dowd ‘58
The Honorable William ‘78 & Laura Downing
Lena Draper
P. Wickstrand ‘70 & Sheila Dufford
Susan & Patrick Dunn
Jennifer Durham
Gary ‘77 & Gay Duvall
Deborah Dwyer ‘89 & Lawrence Field
Scott ‘91 & Christine Edwards
Shauna Ehlert ‘92
Eight Bells Winery
Elliott Bay Book Company, LLC
Susan Encherman
Rudy ‘75 & Julie Englund
Josephine Ennis ‘13 & John Klepack
Muriel Epstein
Experience Music Project
The Honorable Ellen ‘82 & Douglas Fair*
Frank Jr. ‘67 & Cheryl Falk
James ‘60 & Ulla Feeley
Alicia Feichtmeir ‘09
Sally ‘95 & Kurt Feldman
Robert Ferguson & Colleen Cooper
Brian Ferrasci-O’Malley ‘13
William ‘81 & Amy Ferron Jr.
Filipino Lawyers of Washington
Elizabeth Findley ‘13
Laurence ‘68 & Sharon Finegold
Mary ‘82 & Karl ‘82 Forsgaard
Karen Fossum ‘15 & Connon Price
Foundation Bank
Lara Fowler ‘04
Robert Franceschini III
Kristen Fraser ‘91
Frederick ‘65 & Carol Frederickson
Stephen Fredrickson ‘72
Everett Fruehling ‘91 & Lynne Thomas
Courtney Garcia ‘06
Gary Grotz Law Firm PLLC
Andrew ‘74 & Carlyn Gauen
Thomas Gayton ‘70
Sonja Gerrard
Daniel ‘80 & Emily Gibson
Warren Gilbert Jr. ‘54
Steven ‘07 & Emma Gillespie
Anna Goethe
Professor Julia Gold*
Rachel Gold ‘06 & Joshua Miller
Stephen Good ‘67
Google Inc.
Lynn Gordon
Devon Gores
Michael Gotham ‘93 & Kenneth Wingard
Grace Greenwich
Daniel Grenet
REPORT TO DONORS
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Elliot Wolfe
Fritz Wollett
Jeffrey Wong
Woodland Park Zoo
Emil & Karen Wozniak
The Honorable Thomas ‘68 & Yvonne Wynne
Motohiro Yamane LL.M. ‘07 & Ha Ju
Alan & Judy Yoshinaga
D. Michael ‘75 & Julia Young
Wei-Mou Yu LL.M. ‘06
Erika Yuen ‘05
JoAnn Yukimura ‘74 & John Wehrheim
Rhe Zinnecker ‘94 & Paul Nelson
Gif ts of $1 TO $99
Anonymous
8 Limbs Yoga Center
Linda Adams
Aha Toro Tequila
Kamal & Sara Alavi
Altria Group, Inc.
Emily Alvarado ‘09
Laurie Anderson
Jessica Andrade
Lydia Ansari ‘15
John Aramburu ‘70
Diane Armstrong
Jan Asbjornsen
Aveeda
Babeland
Mark Bailey ‘96
BAKED custom cakes
Ballard Annex
Valerie Balukas LL.M. ‘06
Nathan Barnes ‘12
James Baxter
Kelsey Beckner ‘09
Stephanie Beers
Jessica Belle ‘13
Shandra Benito
Lovie Bernardi ‘88 & Griffith Flaherty ‘88
Matthew Berry ‘12
Norman Best ‘86 & Susan Taylor
Ragnar ‘08 & Karen ‘08 Bloom
Charles ‘56 & Barbara Bohlke
Rebecca Bowen Jamil ‘06 & Mustafa Jamil
Melissa Bowers
Jessica Bran ‘05
Kathleen & Professor Devon Brewer
Lee Brillhart III ‘84
Roger Brodniak ‘00
Thomas Brookes ‘89
Cathy Brooking
Pam Brulotte
Nadia Bugaighis ‘12
Burke Museum
Alafair Burke
Eddie Burns ‘15
Hugh Cain ‘82 & Anne Clark
Daniel Cairns ‘15
Charles Caldart ‘74 & Mary Kopas
Ann Carey
Robert ‘58 & Sue Carter
Holley Cassell
Janice Caulfield
Central Co-op
Carly Chan ‘04
Derek Chen ‘15
Gregory Chiarella ‘12
Brianna Chung ‘10
James Cissell ‘87 & Linda Johnson
Charles Clark ‘70
Katherine Clark ‘11
Richard ‘71 & Jane Cohen**
Stephen ‘77 & Laurie Cole
Lauren Collins
Community Fitness
Rike Connelly ‘09
Lauren Conner ‘15
Heather Cook ‘14 & John De Turk
Adam Copley
Irvine Corbett ‘15
Corretto Trattoria and Bar
Briana Coyle ‘13
Katherine Crabtree ‘15
Paige LL.M. ‘04 & Derek LL.M. ‘11 Crick
Jonah Crollard ‘14
Gary Cronk ‘64
Robroy Crow ‘85
Daining Cui
Michael ‘84 & Jean Cummings
Janis ‘76 & John Cunningham
Dessa Dal Porto ‘14
Jessica Dales ‘11
Tobias Damm-Luhr ‘10
(D) DECEASED * 10 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING ** 15 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING *** 20 YRS OR MORE OF CONSECUTIVE GIVING
PCC Natural Markets
Michael Pedhirney ‘04 & Bridie Sullivan
Ruby Pediangco ‘94 & Matt Shumway
Professor Deborah Perluss & Mark Diamond
Aaron Perrine ‘02
John Peterson ‘07
Mary Peterson ‘01
Robert Peterson ‘53*
Desiree Phair
Juli Pierce ‘04*
Christopher Pierce-Wright
Grzegorz Plichta ‘04
Alexa Polaski
Jeannine & Robert Polaski
Paula Pollack
Portland Trailblazers
Pitman ‘85 & Victoria Potter*
Teresa Pottmeyer ‘82 & Geoffrey Trowbridge
Rebecca ‘05 & Valentin ‘05 Povarchuk
Gregory Provenzano ‘82
Puget Consumers Co-Op
William Purdue
Tony Quang ‘13
Timothy Quigley
Quinault Beach Resort and Casino
Clarence Rabideau ‘55
Arlene Ragozin ‘86
Hollis-Anthony Ramsey ‘13/LL.M. ‘14
Fred Rapaport ‘82 & Christine Sutton*
Shane LL.M. ‘11 & Kerri-Ann Ratigan
Edwin Rauzi ‘81 & Shana Chung***
Barbara Read
RealNetworks Foundation
Timothy Redford ‘83**
Anne Redman
Fredric ‘72 & Tana Reed**
Katy Reed
Report Shoes
Geoffrey ‘72 & Teresa Revelle*
Katherine Richard ‘12
Michael Ricketts ‘79
Jeffrey ‘80 & Beverly Riedinger
Ristorante Picolinos
Daniel Ritter ‘63
Robin Robbins
Anna Robinson
Michael ‘92 & Bridget ‘93 Rodden
Charles ‘60 & Marilyn Roe Jr.
Michael ‘86 & Susan Rogers
Edith Rohrback (D)
Martin ‘84 & Genevieve Rollins
Alan Ross ‘00 & Peggy Keene
Linda Roubik ‘85***
E. Charles ‘69 & Susan Routh
Lawrence Rozsnyai ‘06
Alan ‘81 & Suzanne Rubens
Matthew Rudow ‘08 & Christina Richmond ‘07
Elizabeth ‘94 & Paal Ryan**
Heidi Sachs ‘81 & John Friedhoff
Yoshiko Saheki*
Professor Zahr Said
Joseph Sakay ‘93 & Lisa Lee
Salsa Con Todo
The Honorable Richard Sanders ‘69
Kana Sasakura
Silvia Saucedo ‘98
Robert Schillberg ‘59
David ‘75 & Julie Schnapf
Theodore Schultz ‘67***
Professor Scott & Moira Schumacher
Miriam Schwartz
Seafair
Stephanie Searing ‘78 & Randall Barnard ‘78
Seattle City Attorney’s Office
Seattle Mariners
Seattle Men’s Chorus
Seattle Shakespeare Company
Orland Seballos ‘99
Barbara Selberg ‘87*
Ann Selland
The Honorable Susan & Peter Serko
William Severson ‘74 & Meredith Lehr ‘81
Linda Sferra ‘95 & Forrest Miller
Sammuel Shaddox ‘13
Professor Bradley ‘88 & Ann Shannon***
Richard Shattuck ‘85
Cynthia Shaw ‘84
David Shelton ‘70 & Frauke Rynd
James & Deborah Shields
Neal ‘64 & Linda Shulman
S. Leonard & Virginia Shulman
J. Ronald ‘68 & Barbara Sim
Richard Simkins
Phillip Singer ‘01
Tammy Sittnick ‘06
Skin Logic
Gerald Smith ‘70***
The Honorable Lori Smith ‘84
Martin Smith ‘81 & Cathy Jones-Smith
Terry ‘70 & Colleen Snow
Hilary Soderland
Nancy Sorensen ‘74
Nancy Spigal
Lauren & Frank Spokane
Shannon ‘56 & Donna Stafford**
Michael Stanley ‘78
John Stansell ‘88 & Dori Cahn
Maxine Stansell ‘79
The Honorable Robert ‘61 & Dolores Stead
David Stearns ‘12
Michel ‘60 & Roberta Stern
Joseph ‘12 & Leena Stockton
The Honorable Waldo ‘49 & Norma Stone*
Paul Street ‘73**
Stephen Strong ‘75 & Lorri Falterman
Jack ‘65 & Peggy Strother
Student Bar Association
Margaret Sundberg ‘84***
Sheldon Sutcliffe ‘68
Akane Suzuki ‘99 & Alexander Rea
Christopher Sweeney ‘04 & Brandon Loo
Joanna Sylwester ‘13
Keith Talbot
The Honorable Philip ‘76 & Darlene Talmadge
Faye Tao
Shelly Tatistcheff
William ‘91 & Susan Taylor*
Teatro ZinZanni
Karl Tegland ‘72*
Consuelo Templeton
Robert Thiel LL.M. ‘98
Thirsty Hop
Paul Thonn ‘55
Lara Thurman & B. Michelle Johnson
Keith Tichenor ‘69
Michael Tierney ‘91
D. Douglas Titus LL.M. ‘98
Karl Tjerandsen ‘05
James Tolin
Alejandro & Leslie Torres
Cesar Torres
Toulouse Petit Kitchen and Lounge
Amy Tucker LL.M. ‘00
Tulio Italian Restaurant
Patrick ‘65 & Rebecca Turner**
Uber
Richard Ullstrom ‘83
University Christian Church
Vacasa Rentals
Vain
Anna Van Pelt
James ‘71 & Rebecca Varnell
Chaya Venkatesh
Valerie Villacin ‘03
Vitality Pilates
Viviane Skin Care
Megan ‘08 & Jeffery Vogel
Professors Walter Walsh & Anita Ramasastry
Connie Wan ‘06
Carol Warner ‘81
Ian Warner ‘11
Scott LL.M. ‘83 & Mimi Warner
The Honorable Anthony ‘63 & Lynn Wartnik
John ‘73 & Mary Watts*
John Wechkin ‘96
Karen Weiland
Steven ‘78 & Sharon Weinberg
Robert Welden ‘70
James Wendell ‘13
Angela West
Brenden & Irina West
Ronald Weston ‘85
Dwight Wheaton II ‘97
David Whedbee ‘04
Laurelle Whiteley
Willamette Valley Vineyards
Renee Willette ‘94 & James Schwartz
Nancy Williams
Sandra Willoughby
Wilmer Cutler & Pickering
Karen Wilson
Bruce ‘84 & Janet Winchell
Bruce Witenberg & Nancy Carel
Lema Woldegiorgis
REPORT TO DONORS
Carly Darcher
Don Dascenzo ‘78
William Davis ‘98*
Steve De Forest
Riza De Jesus ‘94 & Frederick Robinson
Aimee Decker ‘09 & Kevin Higinbotham
Emily Deckman ‘05*
Michelle Delappe ‘09/LL.M. ‘10 & Avilio Moreno Villamediana
Krupal & Kalpana Desai
Chloethiel DeWeese ‘79
Manmeet Dhami
Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley
Peter Dolan ‘14
David ‘55 & Nancy Dorsey
Michael Douglas ‘06
Kay D’Souza ‘12
Richard ‘76 & Lynn Du Bey
Andrew Durland ‘15
Elena Dzhalazova
Malcolm Edwards ‘57 & Elizabeth Dowd
Susan ‘79 & Terry Egnor**
Wendy Ehringer
Constance Ellingson ‘76 & Roger Cohen
Michael Ellis ‘15
Emerald Downs
Jessica Erickson ‘15
Laura Eshbach LL.M. ‘11
Bruna Estrada
Wendy Ewbank
David Fairbanks
The Honorable Mary Fairhurst
Virginia Faller ‘87
Professor Jennifer Fan
Philip ‘49 & Lindy Faris
Tyler Farmer
Jay Farrell LL.M. ‘07
Mary Lou Fenili & Karen Hansen
Cody Fenton-Robertson ‘14
Christopher Ferrell ‘15
Aydin Firuz ‘12/LL.M. ‘15
Josias Flynn ‘11
Steven ‘90 & Louise Forrest*
Laura Fox & Rodrick Merrell
Howard Franklin
Jay Free
Carolann & Gene Freedman
Andrea Frey ‘15
Fringe Hair Salon
E. Robert Fristoe ‘49 (D)
Evan Fuller ‘14
Carrie Gage ‘08
Linda ‘86 & Gerald Gallagher
Meghan Gavin
Laura Gerber ‘03 & Michael Denlinger
Catlin Gibson
Lisa Gillin ‘88
Mallory Gitt ‘15
Wyatt Gjullin
Gretchen Glaub
Lee Glidewell
Wendy Goffe ‘92 & Scott Schrum
Paul Goldberg ‘67*
Holly ‘10 & Benjamin ‘11 Golden
Jeffrey ‘82* & Loida Gonzales
Jessica Gonzalez
Good Bar
Gail Gorud ‘82
David ‘58 & Carolyn Gossard Jr.
Robert Greaves
Jason Greene
Heather ‘12 & G. Mark Griffith
Kathleen Grohman ‘13
Fen Gui ‘11
Kylie Gursky
Joseph Haberzetle ‘99/LL.M. ‘00 & Katherine Gardner
Kellen Hade & Ralph Feriani
Donald ‘65 & Mary Hale
Professor John ‘71 & Karin Haley
Mariah Hanley
Fred Harrington & Najmi Voss
Benjamin Harris ‘12
Katy ‘07 & Robert ‘07 Hatfield
Nicholas Hathaway ‘14
Charles Hausberg ‘15
Heavy Restaurant Group
Demetrios Heliotis ‘06
Robert Heller ‘84
Chris Henderson ‘08 & Megan Hirsh
Vanessa ‘09 & Luis Hernandez
The Honorable Stephen Hillman ‘75
Richard ‘58 & Gerene Holt*
Courtney Hood
Mike Horri
Hothouse Spa and Sauna
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GIFTS IN HONOR AND IN MEMORY OF FAMILY AND FRIENDS
During the 2014-15 Fiscal Year the School of Law received gifts in honor of and in memory of the following individuals and groups
In honor of Bill AndersenIn honor of Joel Benoliel ‘71In honor of William T. BurkeIn honor of Carey Lillevik, PLLCIn honor of Charles K. Carlson ‘67In honor of the Class of 1963In honor of Dawn EnglishIn honor of Margaret J. FesterIn honor of Garvey, Schubert & BarerIn honor of Associate Dean Penny HazeltonIn honor of the great work of the IPNW
clinical students and staffIn honor of Professor Lisa KellyIn honor of Mark Litchman Sr. and Mark Litchman Jr. ‘51In honor of Keith LovelessIn honor of Professor Jacqueline McMurtrieIn honor of Steven NeumanIn honor of Guy Towle ‘77In honor of The Honorable Robert F. Utter ‘54In memory of Kalief BrowderIn memory of Professor William T. BurkeIn memory of The Honorable Tom Chambers ‘69In memory of Professor Charles E. CorkerIn memory of Pete ‘60 and Pat Curran ‘48In memory of John M. Davis ‘40In memory of Deborah EmoryIn memory of Robert Fetty ‘58In memory of Professor Joan FitzpatrickIn memory of Professor Robert Fletcher and
The Horable Betty Fletcher ‘56In memory of Richard Max Foreman ‘59In memory of Jay S. GassIn memory of Wayne Gittinger ‘57In memory of Mr. Carl HansenIn memory of Donald L. Thoreson ‘54In memory of Robert Allen Purdue ‘42In memory of Richard Quinn ‘55In memory of Pinckney M. Rohrback ‘48In memory of Stanley M. Samuels ‘56In memory of Alena Suazo ‘10In memory of Catherine H. SutcliffeIn memory of Yoseleh the Holy MiserIn memory of Norman Zevin
James Howe ‘80 & Janet Gros Jacques**
Brooke Howlett ‘14
Lauren Hruska
Yang-Hsien Hsu ‘11
David Huang ‘71/Ph.D. ‘75
Douglas Huber
Brent Hyer ‘02
Icicle Brewing Company
Intel Corporation
John ‘62 & Marli Iverson***
Professor Cynthia Jacobs
Robert Jacoby
Noah Jaffe ‘10
Tor Jernudd ‘13 & Julia Ryan
Jet City Improv
Sophie Jin
Bruce Johnson ‘13
Barbara ‘73 & Craig Johnston
Alison Jones
Ethan Jones ‘13
Laurel Jones ‘14 & Kris Simonsen
Christopher Jordan ‘15
Tyson ‘06 & Joan Kade*
Daniel Kamkar
Stanley Kanarowski ‘91/LL.M. ‘92
Melissa Kane
Terrance Keenan ‘06
Stanley Kehl ‘73 & Karen Fie
Jack Kelly
Hana Kenny
Ronald Kinsey Jr. ‘67
Kirkland Chiropractic and Massage
Kiss Cafe
Kitchen n’ Things
Dustin ‘99/LL.M. ‘99 & Mary Klinger
Jessica Knowles
Ada Ko LL.M. ‘99
Blake Koerner ‘15
Judith Kovarik
Wesley Kovarik ‘14 & Heather Hightower ‘13
Inge Krippaehne
Carolyn Krol ‘15
Margarida Kuwan
Kathleen Kyle
James Ladley ‘61
Landmark Theatre Corporation
Jeff Lane ‘09
The Honorable Karen Lansing ‘78
Mark Lansing ‘87
L’Ecole No. 41
Cary Lee
The Honorable Roger Lewis ‘54*
Jenna Lieske ‘14
Megan ‘07 & Jeremy Lim
Robin ‘74 & Elizabeth Lindley
Stephanie Liu ‘14
Mindy Longanecker ‘10
Timothy Lovain ‘83
Lucca Great Finds
Kirsten Lundell Koester ‘06
Macklemore LLC
Chauncey MacLean LL.M. ‘97
Eric Madsen
Majestic Bay Theatres
Mama Stortini’s
Lee Marchisio ‘12
Janet ‘90 & Tim May
Pamela McClaran ‘88
Professor Joyce McCray-Pearson
James McCullagh ‘97
Ellen ‘99 & Michael McCurdy
Francoise McMurtrie
Anthony ‘84 & Jane Medina
Debbie & John Mercer
Mike Meredith ‘12
Mexico Cantina Y Cocina
Middleton Brewing
James Miller II
Kendra Miller
Mark & Susan Miller
Thomas Miller
Deane ‘82 & Leslie Minor
Kristen Mitchell ‘01
Shane ‘04 & Andrea Moloney
Carol Mortensen ‘03
James Mullins
Museum of Flight
Amy Muth
David Myers LL.M. ‘12
Kirsten Nelsen ‘15
Hanh Nguyen
Christopher Noe ‘80
Pamela Nordquist ‘84
Jule ‘98 & Frederick Northup Sr.
Northwest Outdoor Center, Inc.
Patricia Novotny ‘83
Katherine ‘12 & Colin O’Brien
Lisa & Norman Odom
Chris Olah ‘12
Julie Orr
Other Coast Cafe
Harrison Owens
Pacific Science Center
Robert ‘72 & Senator Linda Parlette
Glen ‘97 & Madelyn Pascual**
Pedal Bike Tours
Alan ‘76 & Elaine Peizer
Peso’s Kitchen and Lounge
Chelsea ‘09 & Matthew Peters
Pete’s Wine Shop
Blythe Phillips & Laura Shepherd
Piatti Ristorante and Bar
Eugene Pinkelmann Jr. LL.M. ‘78
Portage Bay Cafe
Elisa Pupko-Pope & Michael Pope
R. M. Holt, Inc. P.S.
Glenn Ramel LL.M. ‘04
Rat City Rollergirls
Robert ‘57 & Harriet Redman
Christopher Reed ‘15
Milton ‘07 & Tara Reimers III
Duffy Romnor
Luke Rona ‘12
Andrew Russell
Scott Samuelson ‘93
Leonard Sanchez ‘12
Lauren Sancken ‘10
Beverly Sanders
Sarducci’s
Satay Malaysian Restaurant
Julie Schaffer ‘08
Schilling Cider
Michael & Jane Schwab
Seattle Bouldering Project
Seattle International Film Festival
Seattle ReCreative
Seattle Seahawks Charitable Foundation
Seattle Tilth
Jack Seeley
Seven Hills Winery
Laurence Severance ‘80
Katherine Seward
Steven LL.M. ‘03 & Margaret Seward
Virginia ‘92 & Andrew ‘92 Shogren
Judith Shoshana ‘83
Shultzy’s Sausage Inc.
Stephen Shuman ‘81
Jenna Smith ‘14
Leslea Smith ‘85
Snapdragon Lace
Sidney Snyder Jr. ‘78 & Robin Powell
David ‘76 & Ann Sonn
Robert Spielman ‘05
Elizabeth St. Clair
Starbucks Coffee Company
Douglas ‘05 & LeeAnn Steding
Katherine ‘82 & Steven Steele
Quentin ‘70 & Sherry Steinberg*
Craig ‘70 & Sheila Sternberg
Heather Straub ‘99
Samuel Strauss ‘13 & Eddie Curran
Sub Pop Records
Dawn Sugihara ‘01 & Colin Beard
Sarah Sumadi
Aimee Sutton ‘03 & Evan Fein
Shara Svendsen ‘06 & Alejandro Cumplido*
Katie Swartz
Robert Sykes ‘15
Jordan Talge ‘11
Lisa Tamaki ‘14
Ross Tanaka ‘15
Jordan Taren
Cristina Teodorescu
The Barrel Thief
Ryan Thomas ‘15
Eric & K. Terry Thorsos
John Tirpak
Lori Tonnes-Priddy ‘13
Town Hall Seattle
Terrye Townley
Tractor Tavern
Trader Joe’s Company
Michael ‘93 & Lori Trevino
Tully’s Coffee
Bruce Turcott ‘85
Reba Turnquist
Tutta Bella
Uneeda Burger
Unexpected Productions
University Book Store
Urban Coffee Lounge
Veraci Pizza
Melissa Verrilli
Darryl ‘82 & Jann Vhugen
Ronald Wagenaar ‘84**
Nicole Wagner
Rodney ‘70 & Nina Waldbaum**
Lon-Marie Walton & Professor Alan Kirtley
Don Wang
Jovita Wang ‘10
Emily Warden ‘94*
Washington Trust Bank
Stryder & Lauren Wegener
Lindsey Weidenbach LL.M. ‘11
John Wheaton
Jocelyn Whiteley ‘15
Todd ‘10 & Emily Williams
Sarah & Ray Willis
Elliot Wilson
Lewis Wilson ‘72**
William Woodruff Jr.
World Affairs Council
Patsy Wosepka & Shashi Karan
Qiuwen Xu ‘15
Ryan Yoke ‘13 & Leah Hampson-Yoke
Judy Young ‘71
John Ziegler Jr. ‘74
Shira Zucker ‘14
REPORT TO DONORS
9696
The Honorable Gerry Alexander ‘64Bean Gentry Wheeler Peternell
Stan Barer ‘63Saltchuk Resources Inc.
Nathan Barnes ‘12CBRE
The Honorable Bobbe Bridge ‘76Center for Children &Youth Justice
David Broom ‘63Paine Hamblen LLP
Joseph Brotherton ‘82The Brotherton Companies
Darren Carnell ‘95King County Prosecutor’sOffice
Kendra Comeau ‘11Patterson Buchanan
The Honorable Carolyn Dimmick ‘53United States Courthouse
Jack Ding ‘11Desh International Law
Rick Dodd ‘70K & L Gates
Dwight Drake ‘73
U W S C H O O L O F L AW L E A D E R S H I P C O U N C I L
The UW School of Law Leadership Council is an organization that advances the mission of the
University of Washington School of Law by building the institution through leadership, serving
as a bridge between the UW School of Law and the community, inspiring alumni and community
involvement with the school, and securing the financial future of the School of Law.
President Lonnie Rosenwald ‘94Intellectual Ventures
Vice President Judy Bendich ‘75 Attorney at Law
Executive DirectorDean Kellye TestyUW School of Law
Chair, Advancement Committee Greg Gorder ‘85 Intellectual Ventures
E X E C U T I V E C O M M I T T E E
Vice Chair, Advancement CommitteeJoel Benoliel ‘71 Retired, Costco Wholesale Corporation
Ad-hoc memberLinda Ebberson ‘76Lasher Holzapfel Sperry & Ebberson
Chair, Engagement CommitteeGerald Swanson ‘96KOM Consulting PLLC
Vice Chair, Engagement CommitteeRebecca Glasgow ‘02 State Attorney General’s Office
Ad-hoc memberPaula Littlewood ‘97Washington State Bar Association
Chair, Stewardship Committee President, Law School Foundation Robert Giles ‘74Perkins Coie
Vice Chair, Stewardship Committee VP, Law School Foundation Craig Wright ‘91Gordon Thomas Honeywell
Ad-hoc memberKimberly EcksteinUW School of Law
Professor, UW School of Law
Daniel Finney ‘88Witherspoon Kelley
Robert Flennaugh ‘96Robert Flennaugh II PLLC
Leonor Fuller ‘84Fuller & Fuller
Arley Harrel ‘73Williams Kastner & Gibbs
John HuckabayChemAlum
Colleen Kinerk ‘77Cable, Langenbach, Kinerk,& Bauer, LLP
Craig Kinzer ‘82Kingzer Real Estate Services& Denny Hill Capital, LP
Earl Lasher ‘66Lasher Holzapfel Sperry &Ebberson
Eugene Lee ‘66, LL.M. ‘68Blakemore Foundation
Elizabeth Leedom ‘84Bennett Bigelow & Leedom
Mindy Longanecker ‘10
Seattle City Attorney’s Office
Suzanne Love ‘05King County Prosecutor’s Office
Scott Morris ‘97Inland Construction
Christina Richmond ‘07King County Prosecutor’s Office
Bruce Robertson ‘77Garvey Schubert Barer
Skylee Robinson ‘09Nellermoe Wrenn, PLLC
Judith Runstad ‘74Foster Pepper
Deep Sengupta ‘01Fed Ex Trade Networks
Sabina Shapiro ‘02Foster Pepper
David TangK & L Gates
James Torgerson ‘84Stoel Rives
Michael Wampold ‘96Peterson WampoldRosata Luna Knopp
The Honorable Ron Whitener ‘94Tulalip Tribal Court
M E M B E R S
In 2013, Jack MacDonald ’40, a humble yet remarkable alumnus, bequeathed $56 million to the
UW School of Law. Jack’s gift made history as the largest ever in the law school’s 115 year history,
and the largest ever estate gift to the UW. Jack’s transformative gift, in the form of a trust, will
reach every corner of the law school. The annual income from Jack’s trust will support student
scholarships, faculty excellence and investment in innovative programs that will enhance
students’ education and professional opportunities.
What inspired Jack to give so generously to the University of Washington School of Law?
The legacy Jack created stemmed from a profound gratitude for his legal education and a desire
to help others realize the dream of obtaining a law degree. Less than 4% of UW Law’s funding
comes from the state. Therefore every gift, irrespective of size, is crucial to the school’s success.
As we continue our work of educating leaders for the global common good, we are profoundly
grateful to every donor who invests in the future of UW Law.
Jack’s transformative generosity leaves a legacy that will be felt at the UW School of Law
for generations to come.
What will your legacy be?
Learn more about the options for giving by contacting Asstistant Dean Kimberly Eckstein in Advancement at 206.543.2964 or [email protected].
98
BOX 353020 SEATTLE, WA 98195-3020
Nonprofit OrgUS Postage PAIDSeattle, WAPermit No. 62
C E L E B R A T I O N o f
D I S T I N C T I O NCONGR ATUL ATIONS TO OUR 2015 ALUMNI AWARD RECIPIENTS
HENRY M. JACKSON DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD
WILLIAM H. GATES SR. ’49, ’50
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD
MARY BOIES ’75
THIS YE AR ’ S E VENT WILL HONOR OUR REUNION CL A SSES OF
1965, 1975, 1985, 1995 AND 20 05.
For more information on our alumni events, visit www.law.washington.edu/alumni
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD
ADAM BROTMAN ’95
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARDDIANA CAREY ’66, ’69, ’86
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI AWARD
GREG GORDER ’85