The Record, Fall 2022

Message from the Dean

Dear Alumni and Friends,

The study of law has some unchanging aspects. Every student at the Law School learns about Mrs. Palsgraf, the hand with the skin graft gone awry, and the fox who escaped one pursuer only to be captured by another. Cases and legal materials such as these are classics. At the same time, our faculty offers fresh ideas that address emerging challenges in our world and exert immediate influence. How can this mix of unchanging and dynamic co-exist?

Dean Thomas J. Miles

The answer, I believe, lies in our longstanding commitment to asking foundational questions, and the legal classics help to do this. Since its founding, the Law School has been dedicated to interdisciplinarity, the use of tools and methods from other fields to help advance the rigor of our analysis. This combination—a devotion to serious inquiry in law and an openness to a multiplicity of methods—has time and again produced field-defining scholarship from our faculty and prepared our students for extraordinarily varied and accomplished careers.

This issue of The Record illustrates the power of these values. The rise of Big Data, AI, and their associated algorithms, or as some have called it, the “data economy,” present a host of factual, legal, and ethical questions. By asking fundamental questions and relying on multiple methods, our faculty is tackling the most important questions presented by this new phenomenon, and their analyses have far-reaching influence on the academy and policy.

Professor Lior Strahilevitz led cutting-edge research that was the first in the world to show the effectiveness of manipulative online tactics known as dark patterns; he is now frequently called upon to advise lawmakers and regulators here and abroad. Assistant Professor Bridget Fahey enabled us to more clearly see the scope of intergovernmental data sharing and raised important new questions about how this could affect our federalist structure. And Professor Omri Ben-Shahar has introduced new paradigms of thinking about how we use and regulate data, work that includes a fascinating account of how we might use data-fueled algorithms to someday “personalize” the law.

While the data economy brings us to the cutting edge, our faculty has long had influence on the worlds of practice, business, and policy. Look no further than this issue’s article on the Law School’s annual Federal Tax Conference. The conference celebrates its 75th anniversary this November. While the Federal Tax Conference is slightly older than the Rolling Stones, its tickets sell out even faster.

The education at the Law School has consistently produced alumni whose careers defy boundaries and shape our world. In this issue, I am pleased to share a story about an alumna who helped create the world’s first centralized collision avoidance platform for space using an idea she developed in a Law School course.

The vibrancy of our Law School requires a constant search for the next generation of great thinkers, and this issue provides an exciting update on this, too. In July, we welcomed Adriana Robertson, an innovative business law and finance scholar who joined us from the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and has been named the inaugural Donald N. Pritzker Professor of Business Law; Jacob Goldin, a top scholar of tax law and policy who joined us from Stanford Law and who has been named the inaugural Richard M. Lipton Professor of Tax Law; and rising star Adam Davidson, ’17, who attended the Law School as a Rubenstein Scholar and taught legal research and writing as a Harry A. Bigelow Teaching Fellow. Each exemplifies University of Chicago values and promises to invigorate our community with their innovative work, independent thinking, and energetic teaching. As we embark upon another academic year, we look forward to bringing the classics, such as Mrs. Palsgraf, as well as the innovations, such as the data economy, to a new generation of Chicago law students. I wish each of you a happy and healthy autumn, and I thank you for being a part of our distinctive community.

Warmly,

Thomas J. Miles
Dean, Clifton R. Musser Professor of Law and Economics

Development News

2021-22 Fundraising Highlights

  • 3,820 Alumni, friends, and students who made gifts to the Law School
  • $4.2M Annual Fund Dollars
  • $30.6M Total Dollars

Giving Day 2022

The Law School celebrated its most successful Giving Day to date this past spring. Thanks to the support of a record-breaking 374 members of the Law School community and the generosity of
our alumni challengers, we collectively raised nearly $340,000 over the course of just one day.

We could not have reached our ambitious goal without more than 215 alumni, 63 faculty and staff, 68 students, and 40 friends coming together to fuel the future success of our institution. We would also like to extend a special thank you to our challengers, Doug Clark, ’89, and Ian Edvalson, ’95, for their enthusiasm and generosity.

2022 Reunion

We are so thankful for your support. We are excited to celebrate Reunion 2023!

  • $9.5M: Dollars raised by Reunion classes
  • 36%: Reunion celebrants who made a gift

2022 Law Firm Challenge Winners

  • Group 1 (40 or more alumni): Sidley Austin
  • Group 2 (21-39 alumni): Bartlit Beck
  • Group 3 (11-20 alumni): Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz*; Neal Gerberg & Eisenberg*
  • Group 4 (10 or fewer alumni): Dechert*; Fox, Swibel, Levin & Carroll*; Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson*

* Firms with 100 percent alumni participation.

Congratulations to these firms for securing your place in first and thank you so much to all those who participated!

In Memoriam

1947

Marshall Forrest

January 12, 2022

Forrest was an alumnus of Princeton University and Northwestern University; he served in the US Army Signal Corps during World War II. He practiced law in Bellingham, Washington, and later served as a judge in Whatcom County Superior Court and on the Washington State Court of Appeals. He also served in the state legislature and on the state gambling commission, and was a trustee of Western Washington State College.

1948

Arthur H. Simms

March 3, 2022

Simms earned a bachelor’s degree from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and served in the US Army during World War II. He spent nearly three decades on the Civil Aeronautics Board, eventually serving as director of the board’s Bureau of Economics, and also worked at the US Office of Rail Public Counsel before practicing in the private sector. He lived in Bethesda, Maryland.

1953

Jost J. Baum

May 26, 2020

A native of Germany, Baum served in the US Army before earning his undergraduate degree at the College and studying further at the London School of Economics. In the 1960s, Baum served as chief legal counsel for a number of publicly traded companies. Later, he taught law at Santa Clara University, where he founded the school’s JD/MBA program and its summer study abroad program. After his retirement, Baum studied art at Stanford University and volunteered as a docent at its arts center.

Ken D. Koenig

Koenig was a graduate of the College.

1955

Joseph S. Lobenthal

May 5, 2021

Lobenthal spent a year in Frankfurt, Germany, as part of an exchange program while at the Law School. He served as an attorney in the US Navy and later had his own practice in New York City. He wrote books that included Growing Up Clean in America and Power and Put-on: The Law in America, as well as a number of articles. He also taught at the New School for Social Research.

1956

Michael L. Igoe Jr.

January 9, 2022

Igoe was an alumnus of Georgetown University and served in the US Army before enrolling in the Law School. He was a partner in the Chicago firm of Vedder Price, spent nearly three decades as secretary of the Cook County Board of Commissioners, and was special counsel to the Illinois secretary of state. He served on a number of nonprofit boards, including those of the Chicago Theological Union, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and the Jesse White Scholars Foundation, and was active in nature conservation efforts. Igoe lived in Chicago.

1957

Kenneth W. Dam

May 31, 2022

See full story.

Dam, the Law School’s Max Pam Professor Emeritus of American and Foreign Law, was a graduate of the University of Kansas. He practiced law in New York City before returning to the University, where he both taught and served as provost. One of the nation’s foremost scholars in domestic and foreign economic law, Dam had a long career in public service, including serving as deputy secretary of state in the Reagan administration and deputy secretary of the Treasury under President George W. Bush. Additionally, he was an arbitrator in collective bargaining negotiations in the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League. He served as the interim president of the United Way of America, cochair of the Aspen Strategy Group, chair of the German-American Academic Council, steering committee member of the Bilderberg Group, and director of the Alcoa Corporation and BMW.

Terrance Sandalow

January 29, 2022

Sandalow, a graduate of the College, clerked for Judge Sterry Waterman of the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and Justice Potter Stewart of the US Supreme Court. He taught at the University of Michigan Law School for more than three decades and served as its dean. His many writings included legal essays as well as the brief submitted to the Supreme Court in the 1975 Bakke case on behalf of the American Association of University Professors. Sandalow loved travel, Scrabble, walks in the woods, and reading.

1958

Jerome B. Bohman

January 1, 2022

Twice drafted by the Cincinnati Reds, Bohman earned his undergraduate degree and played baseball at the University of Dayton before serving in the US Army. He practiced law in Dayton, Ohio, for more than 50 years, and was very active in the community, volunteering at his church, the YMCA, local nonprofits, and the Aullwood Audubon Center. He supported many arts organizations and loved reading, running, and classical music. Bohman was a resident of Dayton.

Peter O. Steege

December 8, 2021

Steege was an alumnus of Wesleyan College. He served as a judge in the Pennsylvania Courts of Common Pleas and was eventually senior judge in Beaver County, where he also served as president of the county bar association. His other volunteer work included serving as board president of the local medical center and as a faculty advisor to the Pennsylvania society of the National Judicial College. Steege lived in Baden, Pennsylvania.

1959

Donald G. Buonomo

January 29, 2022

Buonomo was a graduate of Colby College. After earning his JD, he joined his father’s law practice in New York State. He was a Boy Scout leader and outdoorsman and served on the Armonk Volunteer Fire Department; he loved to travel, collect antiques, and research genealogy.

Howard M. Turner

April 24, 2022

An alumnus of the College, Turner focused his 60-year law practice on construction law. He was a charter member of the Society of Illinois Construction Attorneys and taught at the John Marshall Law School. His textbook, Turner on Illinois Mechanics Liens, is considered the authoritative source for Illinois mechanics lien law; he also authored a number of articles and book chapters. Turner was active in his synagogue and founded its Ba’al Korei Institute to promote Torah reading.

1960

Joseph H. H. Kaplan

January 5, 2022

Kaplan earned his undergraduate degree at Johns Hopkins University and served in the US Army, Army National Guard, Air Reserve, and Naval Reserve. He was administrative judge and chief judge of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, where his notable accomplishments over three decades included resolving Maryland’s savings and loan crisis in the 1980s and brokering a settlement that allowed the Camden Yards development to proceed. He volunteered with a number of organizations, including the Baltimore City Historical Society, the Baltimore Bar Foundation, and Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Maryland.

1962

Richard P. Komyatte

February 1, 2022

Komyatte was a graduate of the University of Notre Dame. He spent several years working at a civil law firm before opening his own practice in Highland, Indiana. He volunteered in many roles at his church and on a number of nonprofit boards, including those of Catholic Charities, Lake Area United Way, the Calumet College of St. Joseph, and his local community foundation. Komyatte helped establish the Indiana Pro Bono Commission and Indiana Legal Services and served on the board of the Indiana State Bar; he was recognized with several awards for his service.

1965

Donald T. Dickson

January 18, 2022

An alumnus of Carleton College, Dickson also earned a PhD at the University of Michigan. He was a professor in the Rutgers University School of Social Work for more than 35 years; there, he created a combined MSW/JD program, directed the PhD program, and developed a course on law and social work. He authored several articles and the book Law in the Health and Human Services. Dickson was awarded an Antarctic Service Medal from the National Science Foundation in recognition of valuable contributions to exploration and scientific achievement under the US Antarctic Program. He lived in Florida.

1967

Wayne A. Kerstetter

February 17, 2022

Kerstetter earned his undergraduate degree at the College. He worked for the Chicago Police Department, served as the New York Police Department’s assistant deputy commissioner, and was superintendent of the Illinois Bureau of Investigation before joining the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Illinois–Chicago, where he taught for more than 25 years. Kerstetter was an accomplished sculptor and after retiring enjoyed boating, fishing, and studying Native American history. He was a resident of Marco Island, Florida, and Beverly Shores, Indiana.

Philip W. Moore III

February 19, 2022

A graduate of Harvard University, Moore was a civil rights worker in the Mississippi Summer Project, registering Black voters in Jackson, Mississippi. He served as executive director of the Project on Corporate Responsibility, which began as the “Campaign GM” project, and later taught history and law. He was an avid tennis player and Chicago Cubs fan, and enjoyed reading, writing, boating, music, dancing, and the New York Times crossword. Moore was a resident of Charlevoix, Michigan.

1968

David Thorpe Cumming

February 8, 2022

Cumming was a graduate of Brandeis University. He practiced law in New York State and Colorado, and later worked in insurance at Leucadia National Corporation and CNA. After his retirement, he was a technology investor and entrepreneur. He read and wrote mystery novels, maintained a political news blog, and counted wine, chess, crossword puzzles, cycling, and skiing among his hobbies. Cumming lived in Holladay, Utah.

1969

Elizabeth M. Taylor

June 12, 2021

Taylor was a resident of New York City.

Henry J. Underwood Jr.

March 9, 2022

A University of North Carolina alumnus who also earned an LLM at the London School of Economics, Underwood was managing partner of Defrees & Fiske in Chicago, led its 2009 merger with Howard & Howard, and headed the combined firm’s Chicago office. He was a longtime supporter and board member of Altus Academy middle school in Chicago’s Lawndale neighborhood and was active in his church. He loved dogs, golf, gardening, and wine. Underwood lived in Chicago.

1970

Eugene I. Caffrey

January 9, 2022

Caffrey taught high school French and owned an ice cream truck after his graduation from Seton Hall University. He worked for the Philadelphia firm of Montgomery McCracken before leaving the law to become an entrepreneur and the author of a series of mystery novels. Caffrey lived in Florida and Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, where he was a longtime community volunteer, leading the Chestnut Hill Realty Trust and volunteering for the Chestnut Hill Youth Sports Club, the Crefeld School, and Friends of the Wissahickon.

1971

Russell Francis Kurdys

January 30, 2022

Kurdys was a resident of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Elizabeth H. Tockman

June 19, 2022

Tockman earned a bachelor’s degree at American University. Passionate about public service and civil rights, she practiced law in Baltimore, Maryland, working for a number of local and state agencies on issues that included workplace discrimination and the foster-care system. She later served as general equity master in the Maryland Judiciary. She enjoyed international travel, reading, and editing her community’s monthly newsletter. Tockman lived in Tampa, Florida.

1972

Arthur Leon Beamon

February 10, 2022

Beamon was a graduate of the US Air Force Academy and earned a master’s degree at George Washington University. He worked for nearly three decades at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, retiring as associate general counsel in its legal division. He lived in Washington, DC.

James Richard Reilly Jr.

April 4, 2022

Reilly earned a bachelor’s degree from Illinois College. He practiced law with the firm of Foreman, Rammelkamp, Bradney, and Hall in Jacksonville, Illinois; worked as the Jacksonville city attorney; and was elected to the Illinois General Assembly. He was chief executive officer of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, chair of the Regional Transportation Authority, CEO of the Chicago Convention and Tourism Bureau, and chair of the Illinois Capital Development Board. Reilly was a devotee of trains, both real and model, and a supporter of arts organizations and nonprofits around the state.

1973

Donald Samuel Parker

February 7, 2022

Parker was a graduate of Wesleyan University. He was an associate at the New York firm of Cahill Gordon & Reindel and went on to work for a number of corporations, including Unilever, Sprint International, and Global One Communications. In retirement, he continued to consult for select clients and served on the board of the Washington, DC, nonprofit Jubilee Jobs. He enjoyed discussing politics, following college football, and listening to music. Parker lived in Alexandria, Virginia.

1975

Sidney B. Chesnin

March 15, 2022

Chesnin was an airborne infantry officer in the US Army; he completed an undergraduate degree at the College and a master’s degree in political science at Yale University before earning his JD. He worked for Legal Aid Chicago and the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Fluent in seven languages, Chesnin pursued hobbies that included sailing, dancing, horseback riding, pool, and target shooting. He was a resident of Dallas, Texas.

1977

Carl E. Witschy

November 1, 2020

Witschy was a partner in the global law firm Latham & Watkins. A lover of dogs and a devoted University of Illinois fan, he lived in Oak Park, Illinois.

1980

Alice Melissa Stuart

February 9, 2022

A graduate of The Ohio State University, Stuart was an attorney at the New York City law firm LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae. She enjoyed genealogy and was a board member of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the state of New York and a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. An accomplished magician, she was also a life member of the Society of American Magicians. Stuart lived in Monticello, New York.

1981

Paul Stanford

January 28, 2020

Stanford was a resident of Indianapolis, Indiana.

1987

John A. Summers

March 16, 2022

Summers served as a radar technician in the US Air Force. He was an accomplished musician who played bass guitar with blues pioneer T-Bone Walker and is featured on the album Fly Walker Airlines. He earned a degree at Jarvis Christian College and practiced law in Phoenix, Arizona, while continuing to perform music.

1997

R. Carter Kirkwood IV

April 7, 2021

Kirkwood was an alumnus of the University of California–Los Angeles. After earning his JD, he worked for the Committee on Oversight and Reform in the US House of Representatives before joining the Los Angeles firm Irell & Manella. He later left his practice to found Docuthentic, a document management technology company. Kirkwood enjoyed mountain biking, fly fishing, and barbecuing. He was a resident of Concord, Massachusetts.

2007

Johnathon P. Hardaway III

January 15, 2021

Hardaway earned a bachelor’s degree at Howard University and an MBA at the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University. He practiced sports law at Williams & Connolly in Washington, DC, and was later a partner in Lord & Hardaway, with offices in Washington and New York state. He represented clients in a broad range of civil, criminal, and commercial matters, and was also an agent for players in the Canadian Football League and the National Football League.

2013

Dustin Arthur Liddle

May 16, 2022

Liddle held an accounting degree from the University of Oregon and worked as a certified public accountant before enrolling in the Law School. While enrolled, he worked as a summer honors law clerk at the US Securities and Exchange Commission and as a legal extern for the Internal Revenue Service. He practiced law at Hawley Troxell and Perkins Coie in Boise, Idaho, and Karnopp Petersen in Bend, Oregon, and was active in animal rights and environmental causes. He lived in Boise.

Graduates of the Class of 2022

For the Degree of Master of Laws

  • Abdulaziz Fahad Alaskar
  • Munirah Almulhim
  • Paavni Anand
  • Aroob Ansar
  • Sven Asmussen
  • Sarah Bakchi
  • Pegah Banihashemi
  • Rosario Paz Becker Seco
  • Marc Bircher
  • Elizabeth Boulos
  • Fangfei Cai
  • Yui Yin Alvin Cheung
  • Charu Chitwan
  • Juan Jose Crespo
  • Yuka Daimon
  • Thadeu Henrique de Almeida Buarque Bretas
  • Enrico Drigani
  • Christoph Eichinger
  • Joaquin Gallastegui Rodriguez
  • Charlotte Garcia-Moreno
  • Eleni Amalia Giannakopoulou
  • Nicole Gresati Fernandez
  • Hiroto Hayashi
  • Ana Maria Herrera
  • Yurika Inoue
  • Kentaro Isogai
  • Kwan Yuen Iu
  • Maria Dolores Jimenez Calderon
  • Ming Juan
  • Marcela Junqueira Cesar Pirola
  • Spyridon A. Kalogeropoulos
  • Peilin Kang
  • Anna Evelina Karlsson
  • Fabian Kratzlmeier
  • Franziska Lange-Schlüeter
  • Heewoong Lee
  • Jose Manuel Llamazales
  • Enrique Lopez Scherer
  • Tiago Molina Ferreira
  • Juliana Maria Molinelli
  • Pamela Midori Morales Nakandakari
  • Adrian Moreno
  • Yuki Mori
  • Olga María Mutis Ordóñez
  • Ana Paula Novoa
  • Rino Ohkawa
  • Bruna Pavanello
  • Maria Cristina Pezzullo
  • Julian Pricking
  • Giovanna Rennó Duque
  • Yutaro Saito
  • Yared Salgado Solórzano
  • Francisco José Sama
  • Masataka Sato
  • Christoph Schoppe
  • Negar Shaban
  • Maiko Shinoto
  • Yiwei Sun
  • Stanislaw Szemplinski
  • Chunhapak Taechakumtornkij
  • Tetsuya Tamura
  • Rodrigo Valencia Navarro
  • Justitia Avila Veda
  • Jose Felix Villafuerte Mendoza
  • Andres Vodanovic
  • Tzu Pao Wang
  • Zhen Wang
  • Wanawat Wechakit
  • Ian James Wilkinson
  • Raphael Wyss
  • Ahmet Gediz Yerlikaya
  • Feifei Yi
  • Maki Yoshino
  • Nicolle Zennaro Buarque Bretas
  • Yiyuan Zhang
  • Yuxuan Zhao
  • Ziyue Zhou

For the Degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence

  • Filippo Maria Lancieri
  • Yali Peng
  • Ziv Schwartz
  • Hanock A. Spitzer

For the Degree of Master of Legal Studies

  • Kaneesha Rene Johnson

For the Degree of Doctor of Law

  • Hannah Storm Abrahams
  • Haim Ariel Aiash
  • Franchesca Isabel Alamo
  • Anthony Cooper Alessi*
  • Blake H. Altman
  • Alonso Aquije*
  • Willy Aquino
  • Marisa Josephine Ball
  • Kathryn Elizabeth Banks
  • Edmund Thurstan Roger Bannister
  • Tasbiha Batool
  • Viranpal Singh Batth
  • Sean James Iams Beecroft
  • Alexander Paul Beer
  • Nena Victoria Benavides***†‡
  • Isabella Bergonzoli Jaramillo*
  • Jordan Allan Block
  • Anna Foley Boardman
  • Wilson Paul Boardman
  • Brian S. Bornhoft*
  • Jacob Botros
  • William L. Boudreau*
  • Alexandra Jane Bright*
  • Nicole Marie Briones§
  • Eleanor F. Brock
  • Liam Alexander Brown
  • Rachel Leigh Brown
  • Mitchell Evan Caminer
  • Garry Canepa
  • Ryne Matthew Cannon**†‡
  • Samuel R. Capparelli*
  • Timothy James Carey, Jr.
  • Austin Michael Clark Carsh*
  • Angela Chang**†‡
  • Jennifer Nien-Hwa Chang
  • Kevin Andrew Chapman**†‡
  • Yujin Rosa Chong
  • Tawkir Chowdhury*
  • Griffin A. Clark
  • Robert Stephen Clark**†‡
  • Jess Alexander Clay
  • Jason H. Clayton**†‡
  • Sarah Devorah Cohen**†‡
  • Sterling B. Coleman-Selby*
  • George Riley Colligan*
  • Jonathan David Concepción
  • Kyra Mae Cooper
  • Christopher Michael Crum
  • Alexandra Smith Cullen
  • Lina Dayem*
  • Evan M. De Ycaza
  • Miles O’Brien Dearden
  • Tony Gondolfo Dechario
  • Sophie Anne Desch
  • Lazaro Donis Munoz
  • Clare Marlow Downing*
  • Katya El Tayeb
  • Joshua Thomas Ellis**†‡§
  • Ross Ewing*§
  • Stephen Alexander Ferro*
  • Jake Anthony Ferzacca
  • Austin Alexander Feuer
  • Darby Elaine Findley
  • Hannah Brittany Fisher
  • Joshua Alex Fox*
  • Emily Caroline Snell Freeman*‡
  • Julian Edward Leslie Gale
  • Travis Jamaal Gidado§
  • Emma K. Gilmore
  • Meera Sarina Gorjala*
  • Natalie Marie Granda
  • Alexandra Bonner Green
  • Kelly Gregg**†‡
  • Natalie Nicole Griffin*‡
  • Salim Hafid
  • Kiyon Hahm
  • Alexandra Williams Hale
  • Nicholas Hallock*†‡
  • Rebecca J. Hansen**†‡
  • Jacqueline Frances Horwitz*
  • Richard Henry Howell
  • Conley Karlovic Hurst*
  • Megan Christina Ingram
  • Simon David Jacobs**†‡
  • Felix Jen*
  • Irene Jeon
  • Yiwei Jiang**†‡
  • Jacob Edward Johnson
  • Kimberly R. Johnson*
  • James E. Jones
  • Meena Kandallu*
  • Reagan Woodson Kapp
  • Briana C. Katinic
  • Rachel Ilyssa Katzin
  • Crofton Kelly*
  • Sicily Maleva Kiesel
  • Carol JiEun Kim
  • Lyudmila Kirichenko
  • Jordan Julius Kleist*
  • Rekha Subhashini Korlipara
  • Kyle Anthony Kreider*§
  • Dashia Shi-Xian Kwok§
  • Kelsey Lynn Laabs§
  • William Peter Ladas*
  • Daniel Alejandro Lastres
  • Thomas Francis Lawton
  • Elise Marie LeCrone
  • Yanna Lee
  • Gwendolyn Hope Lemley*
  • Andrew Phillip Leonard*†‡§
  • Anthony Joseph Leyh
  • Jennifer Ronghui Lin
  • Kimberly Liu
  • Angel Ronette Lockhart
  • Katherine F. Luo
  • Sara E. Maier
  • Connor Mallon
  • Benjamin Samuel Mann
  • Mark Robert Marzziotti
  • Syed S. Matin
  • Keila Marie Mayberry
  • Kelly C. McGee*
  • Christian McGuire
  • Alexander M. McNamara
  • Alexander Christian Meade*
  • Henry Visser Melville
  • Hunter Andrew Michielson
  • Samuel Evan Milner***†‡
  • Alexander Thomas Minuete Lovrine
  • Sophie Talin Mirzaian
  • Jacob Lee Mitchell*
  • Ryann Esther Moelis
  • Dylan Moore
  • Savannah Leigh Mora
  • Silvia Daniela Moreno
  • Eduardo Manuel Morera
  • Michael W. Morgan
  • Alec Fredrick Mouser**†‡
  • Jeffrey M. Murphy
  • Rachel Sophia Murphy
  • Elena Musz*
  • Kelsey L. Nelson
  • Molly Elizabeth Nelson
  • Remilekun S. Ogunsanya
  • Elisabeth Temitayo Ojo
  • Maria K. O’Keeffe
  • Daniel J. Oppenheimer
  • Parth Yatin Patel*
  • Jacob R. Pavlecic
  • Ryan Gregory Peaslee*
  • Julia M. Petsche*
  • Jason Alexander Petty*
  • Marissa Ashlyn Piccolo*
  • Dylan C. Platt
  • Jasper S. Primack*‡
  • Delaney Cathleen McComb Prunty
  • Suzannah Abigail Richmond Ranzo
  • Zachary Brennan Reger
  • Samuel S. Renner
  • Luke David Riel
  • Christine Dolores Robb*§
  • Victoria Grace Rose
  • Laura K. Russell
  • Itka Shira Safir
  • Alec Zenaido Sandler*
  • Nicholas Vincent Sardi*§
  • Hallie Saunders*
  • Julian Guido Savelski
  • Kathleen C. Schmidt
  • Benjamin James Schroeder**†‡
  • Karishma Atul Shah
  • Samantha Elizabeth Sherman**†‡
  • Nancy Sheu
  • Samantha Nicole Silva
  • Adam C. Simon
  • Louise Kathleen Simpson
  • Eric Paul Singerman*
  • Tamara S. Skinner*
  • Spencer A. Slabaugh
  • Mikaila Veta Smith*
  • Rachel E. Smith**†‡
  • Erin Michelle Smith-Lanyon
  • Michael C. Springer-Ingram
  • Lauren Sage Spungen*
  • Alan Joe Steiner*
  • Summer Charis Stevens
  • Amber S. Stewart§
  • Leonor Beatriz Suarez
  • Joshua Alexander Sullivan
  • Daniel Sung
  • Caitlan Marissa Sussman
  • Bailey Hawkes Swainston
  • Robert P. Taglia
  • Mi Amy Tang
  • Alberto Paolo Tohmé
  • Luz Tur-Sinai Gozal
  • Cullen Blair Tyndall*
  • Amanda Van Auken*
  • Spencer Jackson Velarde§
  • Caroline Anne Veniero**†‡
  • Henry Walter**†‡
  • Claudia Wang
  • Ryan Thomas Wheless
  • Fleet Russell White III
  • Steven Joseph Wickman
  • Ellen Anka Wiencek*
  • Natasha Maria Wiltz
  • Tyler Marshall Wood**†‡
  • Candice J. Yandam Riviere
  • Joshua Payam Yasmeh*
  • Kaylee Marissa Yocum§
  • Chloe M’Lynn Zagrodzky*
  • Andrew K. Zeller*
  • Carol Tianyue Zhang
  • Junqiao Zheng*
  • Erik Ray Zimmerman
  • * Honors
  • ** High Honors
  • *** Highest Honors
  • † Order of the Coif
  • ‡ Kirkland & Ellis Scholar
  • § Doctoroff Business Leadership Program
Ken Dam black and white photo
Longtime Law School Professor Served as University Provost, Deputy Secretary in the Departments of State and Treasury
New Hires Bring Expertise in Law and Finance, Tax Policy, and Criminal and Constitutional Law
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A Law School course helped create the world’s first centralized collision avoidance platform for space. It also helped shift one student’s career path.