Hastings Alumni Bulletin Vol. VII, No.2 (1966)

Transcription

Hastings Alumni Bulletin Vol. VII, No.2 (1966)
UC Hastings Scholarship
Repository
UC Hastings Magazine
UC Hastings Archives and History
1966
Hastings Alumni Bulletin Vol. VII, No.2 (1966)
Hastings College of the Law Alumni Association
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VOL. VII, NO. 2. SEPTEMBER 1966
HOW THE NEW HASTINGS WILL LOOK
In the right front of the photograph is the present building on McAllister Street.
Behind it, in the left rear, is the proposed new addition at Hyde Street and Golden Gate Avenue, the present location of the Iris Hotel. (The square building in
the right rear is the KGO-TV Building.)
The University has already acquired the site of the new addition, and authorized
work plans which include the model pictured above. Construction should begin
in July, 1967 and should be completed in July, 1969. The total expenditure of two
and one-half million dollars will double the present space of the College. Part of
the funds will be made available from the bonds proposed by Proposition No. 2.
on the November ballot.
HASTINGS ALUMNI BULLETIN
published by
HASTINGS COLLEGE OF THE LAW
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
198 McAllister Street
San Francisco 2, California
OFFICERS
HON. JOHN W. PRESTON, JR.,
.
President
ROBERT T. ADAMS... . . ..
Vice-President
HAROLD S. DOBBS...
. ..
Vice-President
MARTIN E. FIELD.Vice-President
BEN K. LERERV.
.....
Vice-President
KNEELAND H. LOBNER
.
Vice-President
HENRY C. KRIVETSKY Vice-President and Secretary
RAYMOND L. HANSON ......
Treasurer
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
HON. STANLEY ARNOLD
ROBERT S. CROSSLAND
MYRON E. ETIENNE, JR.
EUGENE L. FREELAND
ELIZABETH L. McGILVRAY
CARL B. METOYER
HOWARD J. PRIVETT
CHARLES A. RUMMEL
HON. ALAN B. SHORT
GERALD W. STUTSMAN
BULLETIN STAFF
HENRY C. KRIVETSKY, Editor
DOUGLAS T. Y. LEE
JEROME MARKS
ALBERT F. PAGNI
STUDENT RESEARCH
AT YOUR SERVICE
A campaign has been started to market
a new service-the Hastings Research Pool.
This pool provides temporary student research assistance to local law firms at a
$3.00 hourly rate. The pool is explained
in a letter recently sent to many San Francisco firms and available upon request. The
first research pool jobs have been filled
with the firms of Velasquez & McCready
by Miss Joanne Condas, and with O'Gara
& O'Gara by Brian Ogden.
Letters were also sent to the presidents
of all local bar associations explaining the
new placement program and exploring the
possibility of promoting it through a student guest speaker at one of the fall luncheon meetings. Mr. E. Warren McGuire has
confirmed a student appearance at the October meeting of the Marin County Bar Association, and similar plans are pending
with Mr. David Wendel of the Alameda
County Bar Association.
HASTINGS LAW JOURNAL
CAN HELP YOU!
Volume 12 started a new look by devoting each issue to a legal problem of particular interest to California lawyers. Now
you can refer to one issue of the Journal
and find the latest analysis of the current
problems within the field of your interest.
Volume 17 contained over 800 pages of
text.
Topics to be covered by Volume 18: Evidence, Trusts & Wills, Tenant & Landlord,
Admiralty.
Orders may be placed with The Hastings
Lw Journal, 198 McAllister Street, San
Francisco, California 94102.
ACTION ON JOBS,
PARTIES, PLACEMENT
On May 6, 1966, at the Tahoe Alumni
Center the Board of Governors of the Association held a meeting and, in addition
to other business, took the following action:
* Appointed a committee to sponsor
cocktail parties in Los Angeles and San
Francisco in January of each year for new
alumni admittees to the bar (Jerome
Marks, '64 was appointed chairman).
* Recommended changes in the Constitution whereby the graduating president of
the Associated Students would become an
ex-officio member of the Board of Governors. (See page 5.)
* Appropriated $900.00 to establish a
pilot job placement solicitation program
for the summer of 1966. (See other stories
on this page.)
* Reviewed an application for a
$5000.00 grant for scholarships made to
the James Irvine Foundation.
40 FIRM INTERVIEWS FOR FALL
CAROLE KORNBLUM
Carole Kornblum, 23, a second year student at Hastings, was selected to organize the new Student Placement Program. Throughout the summer, she has
been contacting the larger law firms
throughout the state, both by phone and
by letter, to introduce the new Program
and to encourage more law firms to interview Hastings students. The Program
has been in operation since June 20 and
as a result, fall interviews for summer
clerkships and permanent placement
have already been scheduled with more
than 25 firms.
Mrs. Kornblum is the daughter of Herbert Ritts and Mrs. Evan Thomas of Los
Angeles. She attended UCLA, where she
participated in the Education Abroad
Program as a junior student at the Universite de Bordeaux in France. She received her B.A. in Political Science with
Honors in 1964, and she completed two
years at Hastings.
This fall, Mrs. Kornblum will transfer
to the University of Indiana Law School
extension in Indianapolis where her husband, Guy 0. Kornblum, '66, will be
practicing.
Hastings' new Student Placement Program has been in operation since June 20
and has shown most encouraging results.
The program has been run during the summer by a Hastings second year student,
Mrs. Carole Kornblum, under the direction
of Assistant Dean Marvin J. Anderson,
and has sought to elicit greater participation in the various placement services offered by Hastings.
Early in the summer a placement letter,
bulletin and return post card were mailed
to some 300 law firms, judges and government offices throughout the state of California. The mailing was followed up by
personal phone calls to the hiring partners
of 75 law firms in the Bay Area. To date,
more than forty firms and agencies have bury, Madison & Sutro; Schofield, Hanson,
arranged for fall interviews with second Bridgett, Marcus & Jenkins; Thelen, Marand third year Hastings students. Inter- rin Johnson & Bridges; Walkup, Downing,
views will be conducted for the positions Wallach & Sterns.
of summer clerkship, and part-time fall
From Oakland: Donahue, Richards &
law clerk, as well as for permanent hiring. Gallagher; Stark & Champlin.
The following firms will participate in the
From Hollister: Wycoff, Parker, Boyle
program:
& Pope.
From San Francisco:Allan, Miller, GroeFrom Santa Barbara:Archbald, Zelezny
zinger, Keesling & Martin; Bacigalupi, El- & Spray; Price, Postel & Parma.
kus, Salinger & Rosenberg; Bancroft, AvFrom Los Angeles: Buchalter, Nemer,
ery & McAlister; Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison; Chickering & Gregory; Cooley, Fields& Savitch; Burris & Lagerlof; ChrisCrowley, Gaither, Godward, Castro & Hud- tie, Parker & Hale (Pasadena) ; Gendel,
dleson; Dinkelspiel & Dinkelspiel; Philip Raskoff, Shapiro & Quittner; Jordan,
S. Erlich, Jr.; Elke, Farella, Braun & Mar- Dodge, Kemble & Loveridge (Santa Ana);
tel; Graham, James & Rolph; Heller, Ehr- Kindel & Anderson (Santa Ana) ; Loeb &
man, White & McAuliffe; Jacobs & Mush- Loeb; Shell & Dalamer; Walker, Wright,
rush; Lillick, Geary, Wheat, Adams & Tyler & Ward.
Judges: Honorable Richard M. Sims, Jr.,
Charles; Long & Levit; Morrison, FoerFirst District Court of Appeal.
ster, Holloway, Clinton & Clark; O'Gara
& O'Gara; Orrick, Dahlquist, Herrington
Federal: Federal Bureau of Investiga& Sutcliffe; Peart, Baraty & Hassard; Pills- tion; Navy Office of Counsel General.
'66 HASTINGS' FACULTY POSES FOR A RARE PICTURE
Standing (left to right): David L. Moore, George Neff Stevens, Norman T. Lattin, Stephen R. Curtis, Richard V. Carpenter, Ralph A. Newman, Edgar J. Braun, Jack H.
Werchick. Seated (clockwise, beginning in the lower left corner): J. Warren Madden, William Wirt Blume, Robert R. B. Powell, Rollin M. Perkins, George E. Osborne,
Richard B. Amandes, Arthur M. Sammis, Brook Cox, Roscoe T. Steffen, Lewis M. Simes, Frederick J. Moreau, Marvin J. Anderson. Missing: Rudolph Nottelmann, William L. Prosser, Clarence M. Updegraff, Paul E. Basye, Paul E. Anderson, Keith R. Ferguson, James R. Frolik, Thomas H. Rothwell.
A Woman in Hastings' Life
SAMMIS CASEBOOK
PUBLISHED
A case book, California Community
Property, written by Dean Sammis and
Professor Harold E. Verroll, was published in May of this year.
.
. The Ameri-
can Law Institute named four Hastings'
Professors to life membership: Everett
Fraser, Judge Warren Madden, Rollin M.
Perkins, and Richard R. Powell.. .
NEW HASTINGS RETURNS
TO OLD HASTINGS
Harry H. Hastings, the great-grandson
of S. Clinton Hastings, the first Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court of the State
of California and the founder of the College, was elected to the Board of Directors
of the College.
The new director lives in Hillsborough
and operates a thoroughbred breeding farm
near Pescadero in San Mateo County. He
is a director of the Santa Marguarita Land
& Cattle Company and the Reis Estate
Company.
AMANDES GOES, MUNSTER COMES
Richard Amandes, '53, associate dean at
Hastings has been named Dean of Texas
Tech's new law school.
Coming to Hastings this fall to assist
Dean Sammis and Assistant Dean Anderson is the new assistant dean, Joe H. Munster, Jr., formerly professor of law at Western Reserve University.
A new name was added to the Hastings'
faculty as of July 1, 1966. The event will
be unique in two important respects: Not
only does the new law professor fail to
come within the provisions of the "Over
65 Club" (and by a long shot) but establishes an entirely new category. Renee Rubin will be the first lady appointed to that
august body.
A new Yorker by birth, Renee spent her
early years in Southern California. Following graduation from high school in Pasadena, she entered the University of California at Berkeley and received (at age 19)
her Bachelor of Arts degree, with a major
in Criminalistics. The subject fascinated
her to such an extent that she continued on
into graduate school, becoming the first
woman to receive a Master of Criminology
degree from U.C.
Ren6e does not believe in permitting
grass to grow under her five feet ten and
one-half inches: Following receipt of her
M. CRIM. degree on a fine June Saturday,
2d Lt. Rene Rubin reported the next day
for active duty at Lackland Air Force Base,
San Antonio, Texas (having been sworn in
as an Air Force officer the previous February), and eventually was sent to Europe.
When the Air Force initiated an ROTC
program for women, Renee was one of ten
female Air Force officers assigned to this
duty. She was stationed at the Pennsylvania
State University where she instructed far
more men than women-to everybody's
delight!
At the completion of her ROTC tour,
she returned to Lackland Air Force Base
to help organize a new Air Force Officers
Training School. She served there as Chief
of both the Effective Communication and
WAF Officer Development Branches.
Resigning as a regular Air Force officer
in order to enter law school, Miss Rubin
spent the next three years at Hastings in
diligent pursuit of THE LAW.
Since admission to the California Bar in
1964, she has been the Extraordinary Writ
Clerk, District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District. As in all her previous endeavors, Renee has distinguished herself in
this important assignment.
As of July 1st, she assumed her new
duties as Assistant Professor of Law at
Hastings, teaching a Second Year course in
Legal Research and Writing.
Condensed from an article by Marjorie Childs
in the "Brief Case"
NEVADA NOTES
by Albert F. Pagni, '64
B. BADT, '09, Nevada Supreme
MILTON
1200 WATCH 257 GRADUATE
Hastings College of the Law held its
third "unofficial" graduation exercises on
Friday, June 10, 1966 in the Grand Ballroom of the San Francisco Hilton Hotel.
The impressive ceremonies in which 257
graduates were hooded and received a
warm handshake from the Dean of the
College, Arthur M. Sammis, in the presence of some 1200 friends, family and
guests was a most impressive occasion. The
commencement address was given by Dr.
Allen F. Smith, the former Dean of the
University School of Law and now the
Vice President of the University of Michigan.
The Valedictorian's address was given
by Robert W. Crabtree, who ranked number one in a class of 257 graduates. Mr.
Crabtree is from Modesto, California.
The graduation banquet following the
exercises was also held at the Grand Central Ballroom of the Hilton Hotel. Profes-
sor Richard Powell, a distinguished member of the Sixty-five Club, was the Master
of Ceremonies. The Honorable John Preston, Judge of the Superior Court in Los
Angeles and Chairman of the Board of
Governors of the Alumni Association, welcomed the new graduates into the growing
alumni family. Dean Sammis granted the
PH.T. (Putting Hubby Through) to the
wives of the Class of '66.
The attendance of the Class of '66 at the
formal University of California graduation
exercises at Berkeley the next Saturday
morning was particularly gratifying to
Dean Sammis and Assistant Dean Anderson. They noted that the Hastings contingent was much more impressive in size
and in enthusiasm than the country cousins
from Strawberry Canyon. This did not escape the notice of several of the University
officials.
PROPOSED REVISIONS TO THE CONSTITUTION AND BYLAWS
OF THE HASTINGS COLLEGE OF THE LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
The following proposal revisions will be
submitted to the annual membership meeting, 12:00 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21, 1966
at the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim, Calif.:
FIRST, RESOLVED: Article IX of the
By-Laws shall be amended by adding the
following words:
"Eight (8) members shall constitute a
quorum at any meeting of the Board of
Governors of the Association."
SECOND, RESOLVED: Article IV (1)
of the Constitution of the Hastings College
of the Law Alumni Association shall be
amended by striking the present words and
substituting the following:
"Government and management of the
Association shall be confined to twentythree of its members, who shall be known
as the Board of Governors. Twenty of the
Board of Governors shall be elected for a
term of two years by the membership as set
forth in Section (3) below. The terms of
half of the elected Board of Governors
shall expire in odd numbered years; and
the terms of the remaining half shall expire in even numbered years.
"The following shall be ex-officio members of the Board of Governors for a term
of one year, with one vote: the member of
the last graduating class of the University
of California, Hastings College of the Law,
who was president of the Associated Students of Hastings or a member of that class
appointed by him; the last president of the
Association and the second last president
of the Association.
"The officers of the Association shall be
a president, six (6) vice-presidents, a secretary and a treasurer. These officers shall
be elected by the Board of Governors from
among their members and shall hold office
for the term of one (1) year from the date
of their election or until their successors
shall have been elected and qualified."
Court Justice for 19 years and one of the
state's great legal scholars, died on April
2, 1966. Respected as one of the most
learned jurists of the west, Judge Badt in
1963 was given a citation as Hastings
Alumnus of the year...
SAMUEL B. FRANCOVICH, '49, in a recent criminal case in Washoe County,
raised the somewhat unique defense that
his clients were wrongly charged for burglary of a Reno store where they were
caught, since it was obvious that they had
actually intended to enter the jewelry store
next door ... RICHARD H. BRYAN'S, '63,
fear of securing paying clients was resolved
when the Clark County Commissioners
named him as the state's first Public Defender, a post created to represent persons
unable to pay for legal counsel. Bryan was
formerly a defender of the peace with the
Clark County District Attorney's office ...
Joining ROBERT PETRONI, '62, in the District Attorney's office of Clark County, is
classmate JAMES SANTINI, '62, after a
lengthy vacation in sunny Fort Huachuca,
Arizona. Also touring the Northwest at
the expense of others is GEORGE ALLISON,
'63, now living at Fort Lewis, Washington
... The show must go on ordered Judge
JOHN GABRIELLI, '49, when he issued an
injunction prohibiting the musicians in
Reno and Lake Tahoe from going on strike
over the Memorial Day week-end. But the
Nevada Supreme Court directed that the
show was over when the Ormsby County
District Attorney, THEODORE STOKES, '57,
with the able assistance of Viet Nam War
Correspondent, ROBERT LIST, '62, sought
to have the Grand Jury impaneled to investigate the State Highway Department.
Reading from a new script, Washoe County District Attorney, WILLIAM J. RAGGIO,
'51, appealed to the Supreme Court and
was awarded an Oscar for his outstanding
performance in Grand Juries in State Mental Hospitals...
A well marinated little mouse in a bottle
of Squirt did not die in vain, argued WILLIAM HAMMERSMITH, '48, to the jury and
Washoe County District Judge JoHN BARRETT, '49, shortly before a favorable verdict was returned for his client. However,
the
jury
told VIRGIL BUCCHIANIERI'S, '63,
client that he could not claim "treasure
trove" when he found a grasshopper in a
can of beans in a recent case before Ormsby
County District Judge FRANK GREGORY,
'29, in spite of the fact that the packer's
attorney, ALBERT F. PAGNI, '64, was making no claims of ownership.
.
. Political
observers have noted that Hastings Law
Alumni are seeking political positions in
the forthcoming election - among those
-
Continued on page five -
CONTRIBUTORS TO SNODGRASS
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
if you have not yet contributed you may do so by addressing check to the Snodgrass Memorial Scholarship
Fund, 198 McAllister Street, San Francisco, California.
Robert Adams, Richard B. Amandes, Paul E. Anderson,
ArRaymond J. Arata, Herbert D. Armstrong, Stanley
C.
nold, Samuel Axtell, Clement W. Ausman, James
George 0.
Bachman, Edward S. Bades, Milton B. Badt,Gus
BarL.
Bahrs, James R. Bancroft, R. K. Banows,
Benaty, Charles V. & Thomas J. Barfield, Eugene D.Bondnett, A. Brooks Berlin, Louis L. Bernheim, Rolf A. R.
elie, Bornemeier & Kurtiff, John S. Bradway,
Bray, Leila V. Bray, Valentine Brooks, Jos. McNeil
Brower, Louis Bularky, A. M. Burlet, William Chow,
Frank W. Clark, Jr., Class of 1931, Class of 1963,
Thomas Coabley, Keating Coffey, Edward E. Colby,
James B. Corisor, Judson Crane, C. L. Cummins, Robert Davis, L. H. DeLap, Henry Dietz, Edward M. Digardi, Harold S. Dobbs, Dorsey K. Dwelle, Daniel J.
Dykstra, James S. Eddy, Florence H. Ehrman, Sidney
M. Ehrman, Chas. Elkus, Jr., Robert R. Elledge, Byron
K. Elliott, John W. Ervin, Myron E. Etienne, Joseph P.
Fallon, John J. Ferdon, Martin E. Field, Charles W.
Fisher, James Fortino, Everett Fraser, Eugene Freeland,
Samuel Friedman, M. D. Fuller, Joseph Gallan, Dorothy A. Geary, George W. Goble, Bert I. Graves, Raymond J. Gualco, Nathan Guthertz, Martin W. Haley,
Raymond L. Hanson, Artemus W. Harr, Jr., Robert W.
Harrison, Lewis N. Hawkins, Emmet B. Hayes, Archie
Hefner, Winifred R. Hepperle, Ingemar Hoberg, W. R.
Holcomb, Daniel W. Hone, Jack M. Howard, J. Albert
Hutchison, Alvin P. Jackson, Edward N. Jackson, Jay
Jackson, Max K. Jamison, John J. Kas, Donald G.
Kendall, S. Kido, Floyd H. King, W. Knapp, John
Knowles, John T. Knox, Robert B. Kutz, Kneeland H.
Labner, John Langer, Keith Lyde & Raymond Leonard,
Ben K. Lerer, Mildred W. Levin, Jerome R. Lewis,
Lawrence Livingston, Kneeland H. Lobner, E. Frandsen
Loomis, Charles A. Loring, Louis Lurie, Elmer L.
Machado, Lee A. MacNicol, J. W. Madden, Doris
Maier, Harry Margolis, Max H. Margolis, Eva Markus
Foundation, Roy C. Markus, Charles Mayer, James H.
McAlister, Dorothea M. McVay, E. L. Means, A. John
Merlo, William C. Meux, James Michael, James A.
Miller, Norman Miller, Edwin S. Moore, Wilson C.
Moore, Jr., George W. Murphy, James Nasser, Guy B.
Nayler, Ben E. Nordman, Rudolph Nottelmann, Judge
W. A. O'Brien, John F. O'Hara, Andrew D. Orrick,
A. Donham Owen, Clarence E. Patty, Rollin Perkins,
Phi Delta Phi, Miles N. Pike, Georgson Price, Grayson
Price, William L. Prosser, Stanley Pugh, J. N. Radil,
Crossland, Richardson, John H. Riordan, Alec E. Roberts, Claude N. Rosenberg, Walter Rountree, Barry J.
Rubin, Thomas C. Ryan, Jerome Sack, Tessing Salov,
Arthur M. Sammis, William C. Sanford, Jerome Sapiro,
George Saxne, Andrew R. Schotthy, Jr., George N.
Shield, Daniel R. Shoemaker, Mr & Mrs. Lewis M.
Simes, Edgar Sinton, Edith Slack, John H. Smissaert,
Rear Admiral & Mrs. W. 0. Spears, Jerry L. Stanley,
Jesse H. Steinhart, George N. Stevens, John Stone,
Gerald W. Stutsman, Harry B. Swanson, Frank & Russell P. Taft, Henry Taketa, Benjamin M. Tashiro,
Heber Teerlink, Charles E. Townsend, Jr., Stephen S.
Townsend, James B. Tulley, Wayne Veatch, Fred C.
Vogel, Richard Walden, William R. Wallace, Thomas
Wailner, Robert L. Ward, Irwin Warsaw, Stanford A.
Waugh, Laurence Wayte, Sidney L. Weinstock, Olga
Wellman, Richard J. Werthimer, John A. White, Gordon Wild, Philip C. Wilkins, Edgar Wilson, Herbert
S. Woodward, Young, Ralvenavirtz & Chontean, Judge
Edgar T. Zook.
Alumni News:
BARBER UP; KIMURA RUNS
ROBERT K. BARBER, '48 was elevated
from the Oakland -Piedmont Municipal
Court to the Alameda County Superior
Court ... In Hawaii SHUNICHI KIMURA, '61 was up for re-election for the
position of County Chairman of (Mayor)
Big Island of Hawaii; and EUGENE K.
H. LUM, a Bank of Hawaii attorney, is the
Republican candidate for the State House
of Representatives from the 12th District
& Berger, which includes CHARLES P.
MOLINARI, '36 has moved its offices to
595 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco
. .. SIDNEY M. EHRMAN, '98, has do-
nated a Tottel's Edition of Bracton, "De
Legibus Anglise" (1569) to the College
library ...
ROBERT E. CARLSON, '58,
has formed a new firm, Agnew, Miller
and Carlson, Suite 709, Western Federal
Building, 606 South Hill Street, Los Angeles, California, 90014... BEN K. LERER, '33, has been elected President of the
San Francisco Branch of the American
Cancer Society. . . ALAN W. FORD, '51,
is now Secretary for Political Affairs in the
American Embassy in Rome, Italy . . .
William Kiriakis, '60 is a member of a new
partnership, Kiriakis and Sullivan, 445
Sutter St., San Francisco .
The following members of the Class of
1966 have been elected to the ORDER OF
THE COIF.
Robert Crabtree, Gary Anderson, George Nock,
Griffith Humphrey, Emmett Harrington, John
Lewis, Guy Kornblum, Thomas Campbell, Gerald Riggs, Bruce Munro, Timothy McFarland,
Alan Vogl, Michael Dowling, John Bessey,
Richard Dumki, William Horton, Gilbert Kruger, Clark Deichler, Thomas Boyle, Michael
Kelly, Joseph Saunders, Leland Spencer, Lindell Marsh, Jeffrey Smith, Leland Jarnagin, John
Wahl.
Continued from page four -
noted are MARIO RECANZONE, '50, who is
seeking the Regent's post at the University
of Nevada; Judges JOHN BARRETT, '49,
JOHN GABRIELLI, '49 and FRANK GREGORY, '29, have also filed... RICHARD W.
HORTON, '50, filed an action in Washoe
County District Court for breach of contract involving pollination services. "Sex is
only half of it,"' claims MELVIN BRUNETTI,
'64, setting up the defense that the plaintiff's bees were not pollinating according
to the rules.
'61 (Joan Thomas)
has returned to the
United States after
serving in the Min:t1Z
Carl B. Metoyer, '52, Association governor, enjoyed a breakfast at the Tahoe
Alumni Center in May where he attended
a meeting of the Board of Governors.
istry of Justice in
Zomba, Malawi
with the Peace
Corps.
. . . The Law Firm of Molinari, Casalnuovo
NEVADA NOTES
-
BACK FROM AFRICA
Joan de R. O'Byrne,
The Hon. John W. Preston, Jr.
1161 Heatherside Road
Pasadena, California
Dear Judge Preston:
I would like to thank you and the members of the Board of Governors of the
Hastings College of the Law Alumni Association for making the spring tea possible
for the Hasting? wives.
Approximately 125 wives of Hastings'
students attended the tea plus wives of the
faculty and the board of governors. Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Dobbs were very gracious in offering their home once again of
which we are most appreciative. It was a
pleasure visiting the Dobbs home and leing a part of this group for the third consecutive year. We are hopeful that an affair such as this can be continued in the
future.
The Hastings Wives' Club had a very
profitable year, making approximately
$1,700 from our bazaar, the fall barbecue,
the spring dance, and the coffee, doughnut,
and sandwich sales held at the school each
Saturday. With an amount of $600 in the
student emergency loan fund, we can afford to give more scholarships than ever
before, one-$500 scholarship and four$200 scholarships, for the 1966-6 7 school
year and donating another$200 to the new
placement program. An excellent staff of
new officers ate enthusiastically looking
forward to another successful year for the
wives' club.
From all of the Hastings' wives, I want
to express our sincere appreciation to all
of you in making our spring tea a most enjoyable social eVent.
Sincerely your,
Phyllis Regardie, President
Hastings Wives' Club 1965 -'66
ATTORNEYS WANTED
For information contact: Assistant Dean
Marvin J. Anderson, Dir. of Law Placement, 198 McAllister St., San Francisco.
HONORS TO PROFESbOR OSBORNE
George E. Osborne, professor of law at
Hastings, whose probing logic has stirred
many a lethargic student into a better understanding of the priciples of mortgages
and suretyship, was awarded an honorary
doctor of laws degree by the Regents of
the University of California in June.
Professor Osborne previously earned
two degrees in law at Harvard University
where he was editor-in-chief of the Harvard Law Review.
In 1940-43, he was chairman of several
national industry committees to set national
minimum wage rates. He also served on the
Presidential Railway Emergency Boards in
LOS ANGELES FIRM looking for an associate with
good scholastic background. Prefer someone with
some trial experience. #224.
OPENING IN HOLLISTER office of good firm with
main office in Watsonville, for recent graduate
about to take bar exam or recent bar admittee.
#225.
FIRM has more work than it can handle, is looking
for someone to take overflow in exchange for office
space, telephone, secretary plus overage on cost
of these (space figures about $300 mo.) plus
own practice. Office located 1/2 blk. from San
Mateo Co. seat. Must be member of Calif. Bar, experience helpful but not necessary. Also have associate in SF and might be possible to move there
at a later date if desired. #226.
OFFICE primarily engaged in representing casualty insurance companies in defense of personal
injury litigation is looking for young man with
potential for developing a successful trial attorney. Would consider exceptional recent grad. Santo Barbara. #227.
S.F. FIRM of six attorneys looking for a man with
one or two years experience. Primarily a trial practice, personal injury defense. Want person who
can handle trial work well. Salary open, commensurate with experience and qualifications. #228.
LONG BEACH FIRM needs young attorney to train
and work actively in all areas of practice of firm
with general practice, 1 partner specializes in
plaintiff personal injury & limited criminal defense, other 2 partners handle wide scope of matters incid business, probate, domestic relations.
Recent admittee or grad who is taking Aug. bar
exam, if interested should send resume incld expected starting salary and date available for interview. #229.
POSITION to commence on or about October 1,
1966. Will be assistant staff counsel and Legislative Rep., involves performing lobbying work for
ACLU in Sacramento during 6 months out of every
2 yrs, participating in legal pgm during balance
of time. Starting salary: $8,000-$10,000. Some
law practice experience desirable. #232.
ATTORNEY for S.F. firm with trial practice. Experience not necessary. This might be good for someone trying to get some experience background.
244.
1949.
Before joining the famous Sixty-five
Club at Hastings inthe spring of 1959,
GEORGE E. OSBORNE
he was a member of the Standford law faculty for 35 years where he was William
Nelson Cromwell Professor from 1952
SIGN UP FOR HASTINGS ALUMNI LUNCHEON
The Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, Magnolia Room "B", will be the scene
of the annual Hastings Alumni Luncheon held in conjunction with the convention of the State Bar of California. The time is Wednesday, September 21,
1966, at 12:00 Noon. Tickets are $3.75 a piece. Guests are welcome. You
can secure tickets by mailing the coupon below.
Howard J. Privett, Esq.
McCutchen, Black, Verleger & Shea
615 South Flower Street
Los Angeles, California 90017
tickets at $3.75 each for the Hastings Alumni
Please send me
Luncheon to be held at the Disneyland Hotel, Wednesday, Sept. 21,1966.
Enclosed in my check for $
NAME
ADDRESS
ANNUAL ALUMNI LUNCHEON
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1966
AT DISNEYLAND
BULK RATE
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
San Francisco, Calif.
Permit No. 2655
HASTINGS ALUMNI BULLETIN
198 McALLISTER STREET
SAN FRANCISCO 2, CALIFORNIA
Return Requested