;hirley S.Abrahamson - University Of Wisconsin Law School

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3;hirley S. Abrahamson'rofessor of Law; Justice, Supreme Court ofVisconsinlorn New York, 1933l.B., New York University, Phi Beta Kappa;953, J.D., Indiana University, Coif; 1956, .].D.,University of Wisconsin, 1962A fter ten years on the faculty of thet1. University of Wisconsin Law School,hirley Schlanger Abrahamson wasppointed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court11 1976. justice Abrahamson, elected to thelench in 1979, is currently on leave from the.aw School but continues to be a highly visi.le and contributing member of its faculty,nd was selected by students to give the,raduation convocation address on two.ccasions.Honors accrued by justice Abrahamsonluring her distinguished career include airesidenrial appointment to the Advisoryloard of the National Institute of justice ofhe United States Department of justice, andLOnoraryDoctor of Law degrees from johnAnn AlthouseAssociate Professor of LawBorn Wilmington, Delaware, 1951B.FA. University of Michigan, 1973; J.D.New York University, 1981Ann Althouse joined the OW LawSchool faculty in 1984, after havingworked as an associate at the New York firmof Sullivan &1 Cromwell and as a judicialclerk for the Honorable Leonard B. Sand of:he United States District Court for theSouthern District of New York Prof.Althouse's impressive law school honorsinclude the NYU. University GraduationPrize. She was also the Senior Note andComment Editor of the NYU. Law Review.Marshall Law School (Illinois), NortheasternUniversity (Massachusetts), Capitol University (Ohio), Willamette University (Oregon),Ripon College (Wisconsin) and Beloit College (Wisconsin). She is also a fellow of theAmerican Bar Foundation.justice Abrahamson delivered the FrankRowe Kenison Lecture in 1986 at FranklinPierce Law Center; the Edith House Lecturein 1985 at University of Georgia Law School;the Tom Sealy Lecture in 1985 at Universityof Texas School of Law; the William H. LearyLecture in 1984 at University of Utah Collegeof Law; the Roger G. Traynor Lecture in 1984at California judicial College; the Roy R. RayLecture in 1982 at Southern Methodist University School of Law, and the ClevelandMarshall Fund Lecture in 1987.justice Abrahamson formerly practiced lawwith the Madison firm of LaFollette &1Sinykin, and taught tax law courses as a professor at Wisconsin. She is married to Seymour Abrahamson, professor of zoology andgenetics and chair of the State Radiation Production Council, Their son, Daniel, is a lawstudent at Yale.Prof. Althouse brings her expertise in federalism and federal jurisdiction to her courses:Civil Procedure, Evidence, Federal jurisdiction, and Civil Rights Actions. She is a member of a number of law school committeesand maintains her New York State Bar membership. Her publications include "How toBuild a Separate Sphere: Federal Courts andState Power" in Harvard Law Review. She isworking on a series of articles concerning therelationship between federal courts and thestates.Prof. Althouse is also an artist whose paintings were selected for the 1987 WisconsinTriennial exhibit at the Madison Art Center,and is the author of a noveL She has twoyoung sons, Christopher and john.

4counselor on internationallaw to the USState Department from 1975 to 1976, was aUS. delegate to the United Nations Conference on Charter Review in New York in early1976, and participated in a number of US.State Department missions to Bolivia onnarcotics matters in 1977. In 1983, he arguedWelsh v Wisconsin before the US.Supreme Court.Prof. Baldwin, who served as AssistantDean, then Associate Dean of the Law Schoolbetween 1959 and 1966, spent four yearspracticing international and constitutionallaw in the US. Army Judge Advocate Gener-Gordon Brewster BaldwinProfessor of LawBorn Binghamton, New York, 1929B.A. Haverford College, 1950; LLB. CornellUniversity, 1953Anationally-known expert on constitutional and international law, GordonBaldwin has been a member of the UW LawSchool faculty since 1957. He has served as aal's Corps before coming to the Law School.Since then he has traveled as a visiting professor to Chou University, Tokyo, in 1984,and to Justus Liebig University, Geissen,West Germany, in 1987. He was also a Fulbright Professor in Egypt, Iran and Cyprus inthe late 1960s and early 1970s, and served asStockton Professor ofInternational Law atthe US. Naval War College in 1963 64. Atthe UW Law School he currently teachesConstitutional Law I &: II and a 1st Amendment Seminar. He is of counsel to the Madison law firm, Murphy &: Desmond.Prof. Baldwin, who was a member of LawReview at Cornell, majored in both Historyand Government at Haverford and wasDaniel O. BernstineProfessor of LawBorn Berkeley, California, 1947B.A. University of California-Berkeley, 1969;J.D. Northwestern University, 1972; LLM.University of Wisconsin, 1975Daniel Bernstine's experience prior tojoining the University of WisconsinLaw School faculty in 1978 includes teachingat Howard University Law School from 197578 and working for two years as a staff attorney with the US. Department of Labor. Prof.Bernstine spent the 1987-88 academic yearas a visiting law professor at Howard University, and since 1987 has served as Howard'sGeneral Counsel. In August of 1988 he wasalso appointed Interim Dean of Howard'sLaw School.Prof. Bernstine's major teaching areas areCivil Procedure, Federal Jurisdiction, LegalMethod and Civil Liberties. He publishedelected to Phi Beta Kappa. He lettered incricket and soccer. He is a past president ofthe Madison Downtown Rotary and MadisotRotary Foundation; the Wisconsin Conference of the American Association of University Professors and the Madison MUP Chatter, and he has served on the NationalCouncil of MUP. From 1981 to 1982 hechaired the State Public Defender Board, anein 1979 80 and 1985-86 he served as president of the University Club at the Universityof Wisconsin. He is a member of the Wisconsin and New York Bar.Prof. Baldwin has written widely on a variety of legal topics. His articles have appeareein such diverse publications as InternationalLawyer, Military Law Review, Revue AI-LnumAl Qanuyiya Wal-Iqtisadiya (Egypt), andnumerous law reviews and journals.Married to Helen Hochgraf Baldwin, Associate Director of the University of WisconsinClinical Cancer Center, Prof. Baldwin enjoysgardening, jogging, biking, foreign travel,reading, automobiles, baseball and classicalmusic. The Baldwins have two children:Schuyler, a computer specialist with a degreein aeronautical engineering, and Mary Page,a recent graduate of Smith College.Wisconsin and Federal Civil Procedure withJohn Conway in 1986, and is working onVol. II of that text. His scholarly interests arereflected in his numerous law review articleson civil procedure and minority rights, in hiswork as a hearing examiner for the D.C. Public Employee Relations Board, and as a Neutral for the American Arbitration Association.A member of the D.C. and Wisconsin Bar,Prof. Bernstine is the 1988 Vice-Chairman ofthe Wisconsin Supreme Court's Board ofAttorneys on Professional Competence, aposition he also held during 1986. He is alsoa member of the Torts Drafting Committeefor the Multi-State Bar Examination.A William H. Hastie Fellow in 1974-75 atthe University of Wisconsin, Prof. Bernstinealso served as Senior Editor of the Clearinghouse Review at Northwestern University in1971-72.Proud father of daughter Quincy and sonJustin, Prof. Bernstine enjoys travel, tennisand basketball.

5dchard B. Bilderty's Pembroke College in 1949, Prof. Bilder.urrus-Bascom.orn 1927versity of Toronto, the University of Virginia,and the University of North Carolina. He hastaught courses including Admiralty, Contracts, Criminal Law, International Law,International Organizations and Tort Law.Prof. Bilder has written widely on intern a-has served as a visiting professor at the Uni-Professor of law;.A. Williams College, 1949; ].D. HarvardJniversity,1956An expert in the areas of internationallaw, foreign relations law, intema-ional transactions, and international organiations, Richard Bilder served as an attorneyu.s.tionallaw and other issues in a number oflaw reviews and journals. He is the author ofManaging the Risks of International Agreement(1981), and is a member of the Board of Edi-n the Office of the Legal Advisor in thetate Department for nearly eight years.efore becoming a law professor. He was athe State Department during the Suez crisis,he Bay of Pigs incident, the Cuban Missile.risis, and during the beginning of the Viettors of the American]ournal of InternationalLaw. He is currently working on a book concerning the relationships between the UnitedStates and Canada.Prof. Bilder, an advisor to the WisconsinInternational Law Society, is married to Sally am war.A Fulbright Fellow at Cambridge Universi-Bilder and they have four children.)eter C. Carstensen'rofessor of lawlorn Ellensburg, Washington,LA. University of Wisconsin,.LB. Yale University, 1968entitled Busting the Beer Barons. His recent19421964; M.A.,Peter Carstensen was a trial attorney inthe U.S. Department of justice's Anti-rust Division for five years before joining theJW Law School faculty in 1973. His experise in the areas of business, banking and.ntitrust is reflected in the courses heeaches: Antitrust Law, Business Organizaions: Publicly Held Corporations, Torts,legulated Industries, Securities Regulation.nd Selected Problems in Trade Regulation.Ie spent Spring Semester 1977 as a visitingirofessor at Cornell University Law School.Aside from his teaching duties and servingIS the director of the Corporate Governance'reject of the Institute for Legal Studies, Prof.arstensen is working on a number ofirojects, including a book on the history ofmtitrust enforcement in the beer industry,publications include: "Legal and EconomicAnalysis of Vertical Restraints: A Search forReality or Myth Making," in Issues After aCentury of Federal Competition Policy, Wills,Culbertson, Casewell, eds., 1987; "VerticalRestraints in Beer Distribution: A Study ofthe Business and Legal justifications forRestricting Competition," in the WisconsinLaw Review (with Richard Dahlson) (1986),and a Review Essay in the Michigan LawReview (1988) entitled, "Explaining Tort Law:the Economic Theory of Laudes and Posner."Prof. Carstensen has participated as aspeaker and commentator at many legal andbanking conferences, and was an expert witness before the Antitrust Subcommittee ofthe Senate judiciary Committee in August1987, in connection with the Malt BeverageInterbrand Committee Act. Since 1974 he hasserved as an unpaid consultant to the Wisconsin Departmentmatters.of justice on antitrustProf. Carstensen and his wife, Carol, havefour children: Mary, jean, Dan and Steve.

6R. Alta CharoAssistant Professor of law and MedicineBorn, Brooklyn, New York, 1958B.A. Harvard-Radcliffe,19821979;].D.Columbia,When Alta Charo comes to Wisconsin in the Fall of 1989, she WIllteach in both the Law School and the Medical School. Following her graduation cumlaude, in biology, from Harvard-Radcliffe, sheengaged in several biological researchprojects before entering the study of law as aHarlan Fisk Stone Scholar at Columbia. Following her graduation from law school, shewas admitted to the New York Bar. Sheserved as associate director of the ColumbiaUniversity Legislative Drafting Research Fundfrom 1983 to 1985 and was a lecturer at theColumbia University School of Law duringthe same period.In 1985 and 1986 Prof. Charo lectured onAmerican legal and political institutions atthe University of Paris. Following that sheserved as Legal Analyst for the Office ofTechnology Assessment for the U.S. Congress. Her most recent appointment has beeas Legal Analyst for the United States Agencfor International Development developingprivate sector family planning initiatives inAfrica and latin America. She also isresearching population law and development.Her scholarly publications include severalarticles on energy production and conservation, published in the Columbia Journal ofEnvironmental Law, works on state and localgovernment, and studies of family planning,artificial insemination and bioethical considerations surrounding surrogate motherhoodHer most recent publication is "LegislativeAlternatives for Surrogate Mothering," whiclappeared in the Journal of Law, Medicine andHealth Care (1988).Prof. Charo has presented papers internationally on reproductive rights, technologiesand the law.Arlen C. ChristensonAdvisory Committee since 1976, was Chairman from 1980 to 1982, and has been aProfessor of lawBorn Wanderoos,member of the National Academy of Arbitrators since 1983.Wisconsin,1934B.s. University of Wisconsin- River Falls,1958; LL.B. University of Wisconsin, 1960Arlen Christenson has made numerouscontributions to the University ofWisconsin and state government for the past25 years. A member of the Law School faculty since 1963, he served as the State's Deputy Attorney General from 1966-68 and asExecutive Assistant Attorney General until1969. Shortly thereafter, he became Assistantto the UW Chancellor, then Associate Deanof the UW Law School (1972-74), and servedas co-director of the Center for Public Representation in the mid-1970s. He has been amember of the Wisconsin Public IntervenorsProf. Christenson was Note Editor of Wisconsin Law Review, and a member of Order 0the Coif. He teaches courses in environmental law, administrative law, contracts, arbitration, and local government. He is currentlyresearching a work on local government regulatory power, and has published a numberof articles in the Wisconsin Law Review.Prof. Christenson's non-legal interestsinclude canoeing, fishing, hunting and hiking, spectator sports, and reading history,biographies, and spy and mystery novels. Heand his wife, Judy, have two children: John,a student at St. Olaf College, and Anne, whois working in St. Paul and plans to attendLaw School.

7Villiam lawrence Churchherwood R. Volkman-Bascomrofessor of Lawom Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1938.A. Amherst College, 1960; LL.B. Universityf Wisconsin, 1963associate with Foley and Lardner in Milwaukee. Since joining the UW Law School faculty in 1968, he has served as an advisor tothe Supreme Court of Afghanistan, lecturedat the University of Zambia Law School, andhas been a visiting law professor at Brighamclassroom instructor,received the UniversityfWisconsin Distinguished Teacher Award1 1985 and was named Sherwood R.'olkman-Bascom Distinguished Teachingrofessor of Law in 1986. His teaching hasIso won "popular acclaim," with student-Young University, the University of Oregon,and American University Law School. He hasalso given lectures on law in West Germanyand, on a regular basis, to foreign studentswho come annually to Madison for a coursein American law.Prof. Church is responsible for the JudicialIntern Clinical Program, and is a member ofthe Foreign Study and the Curriculum andPetitions faculty committees. He teachesoted teaching awards in 1971, 1975, 1976,977, 1978, 1979 and 1988.courses including Property, ConstitutionalLaw, Criminal Law, Law and Population andProf. Church is a summa cum laude gradute of Wisconsin and former Note Editor of!le Wisconsin Law Review. Other scholastic.onors include the Dalberg Award, Order ofne Coif, and a Ford Foundation Fellowship1Urban and Regional Planning.After graduation, he joined the U.S. Peace.orps to teach law at Haile Sellassie Univerity in Ethiopia. On return he became anseminars on legal advocacy. He writes andcompiles his own teaching materials for mostcourses .Recent articles by Prof. Church include"Farmland Conversion: the View from 1986,"in the 1986 Illinois Law Review, and "Soil Erosion-the Next Crisis?" in Wisconsin LawReview 1982 (with]. Arts). He is a co-authorof the Casebook, Legislative and Administra-.arin Ann Clausstrative Conference, and played a major rolein the Department's regulatory and legislativessociate Professor of Lawprocess.Prof. Clauss' experience is invaluable in thecourses she teaches: Labor Law, Administrative Law, Protective Labor Legislation andA n exceptionalt1. Larry Church.A. Vassar College, 1960; LL.B. Columbiaaw School, 1963Carin Clauss specialized in Labor Lawfor 17 years before joining the UWaw School faculty in 1981. During the threeears immediately prior to coming toVisconsin, Prof. Clauss was the Solicitor ofabor, primarily responsible for the Laboraw Reform Bill and for handling legalspects of coal, railroad and trucking strikes.Vhile in government service she also serveds Counsel for Appellate Litigation, and laters Associate Solicitor for the Fair Labor Stanards Division of the U.S. Department ofabor. She served as the Labor Department'sepresentative to the United States Adminis-Legal Process. A frequent speaker on EqualEmployment, Civil Rights, and Labor Law atconferences and symposiums throughout theUnited States, Prof. Clauss served as ViceChair of the Wisconsin Governor's TaskForce on Comparable Worth in 1984-85.Her non-law activities often center aroundher interests in anthropology, gardening,photography and her golden retriever,"Emma." She also has a private pilot's licenseand her extensive world travels include arecent white-water canoe trip in the junglehead-waters of the Amazon, and trekkingin Kashmir.tive Processes. Works in progress include abudgetary review of the Wisconsin LawSchool in 1961 and 1986.Prof. Church, who is married to attorneyFredericka Paff, enjoys reading, music, andoutdoor sports and activities. He has threechildren: Laurel, 22, at Colorado State University; Emily, 21, and Gwynne, 19, at Hamilton College.

8William H. Clune IIIWilliam Voss-BascomProfessor of LawBorn Plainfield, New Jersey, 1942B.S. Loyola University (Chicago), 1964;].D.,A.B.D., M.A. Northwestern University, 1967,1972,1975Law and Public Policy. During 1983-85, ProClune conducted research on legal implementation, focusing on the field of education. Since 1985, he has been Principal Investigator of the Wisconsin branch of the Centefor Policy Research in Education, a five-yearResearch Center funded by the US. Department of Education to study state and localWeducational policy. He has also conductedresearch in the areas of Constitutional Law,and the relationship between economics, lavAttorney General in preparation of SupremeCourt cases. He has served as Faculty Associ-and education.Prof. Clune, member of Coif and managingeditor of Northwestern Law Review, worked asilliam Clune's expertise in the areaof Education Law is frequently utilized by various attorneys and the Stateate for the Wisconsin Center for EducationResearch, and teaches Constitutional Law,Education Law, Insurance Law, and Sociology of Law. He is on the Executive Committee of the LaFollette Institute of Public Affairsat UW and teaches a LaFollette course inKenneth Boone Davis, Jr.Professor of LawBorn Louisville, Kentucky, 1947A.B. University of Michigan, 1969; ].D. CaseWestern Reserve, 1974Arespected instructor who was votedconvocation speaker by the graduatingclass of 1986, Ken Davis worked as an associate with Covington and Burling in Washington, D.c., and as a judicial clerk for the Honorable Richard H. Chambers, US. Court ofAppeals for the Ninth Circuit, before joiningthe University of Wisconsin Law School faculty in 1978. He was a visiting professor atthe uc.L.A. School of Law in 1985-86. Inaddition to his 1986 teaching award, hereceived the Wisconsin Law Alumni Association teaching award in 1987.Prof. Davis, who was editor-in-chiefof theCase Western Reserve Law Review, practicedprimarily in the areas of corporate law, securities regulation, and corporate and foreigntax. The courses he teaches reflect his experi-an associate for Hopkins, Sutter, Owen,Mulroy and Davis in Chicago prior to joinirfthe UW Law School faculty. He has served a Chair of the Admissions Committee of theUW Law School.ence and continuing interest in these areas:Business Organizations I & II, CorporateGovernance Seminar, and Securities Regulation. He speaks frequently at continuing education programs in the areas of corporate ancsecurities law, and is a reporter for the Corporate and Business Law Committee of theWisconsin State Bar. He is a member of theOhio and District of Columbia Bar Associations, and was recently elected to membership in the American Law Institute.Prof. Davis' recent Law Review articlesinclude: "Epilogue-The Role of the HostileTakeover and the Role of the States," 1987Wisconsin Law Review; 'The Discretion ofCorporate Management to Do Good at theExpense of Shareholder Gain-A Survey of,and Commentary on, the US. CorporateLaw," 1987 Canada-US. Law Journal; 'Judicial Review of Fiduciary DecisioncMakingSome Theoretical Perspectives," 1985 Northwestern University of Law Review; and"Shareholder Liability for Claims by Employees," in the 1984 Wisconsin Law Review.Prof. Davis and his wife, Lindy, have twosmall children, Peter and Mary ("Mimi").

9achard Delgado'rofessor of law10m Chicago, IllinoisI.B.University ofWashington;].D.Jniversity of California-Berkeley, 1974Richard Delgado joined .the Law Schoolin the fall of 1988. While at Berkeley,)elgado was editor of the California Lawlevin.\(Following graduation, he taught law.t Arizona State University (1974-75), andvas a Commonwealth Fellow in Law, Sci.nce and Medicine at Yale Law School durng 1975 and 1976. He taught at the Univerity of Washington from 1975 to 1978 and atJCLA from 1978 to 1986.He has published extensively in a variety)f areas, ranging from his recent "Derricklell and the Ideology of Racial Reform: WillNe Ever Be Saved?" in the Yale Law JournalWalter]. Dickey)rofessor of Law30m Bronx, New York, 19463.A.,J.D. University of Wisconsin,1968,1971Illustratingthe UW commitment to theWisconsin Idea of Law in Action, Walter)ickey, a member of the UW Law Schoolaculty since 1976, served as Director of theNisconsin Division of Corrections from 1983o 1987. He returned to the faculty full-timen 1987. Prof Dickey has also had a substan.ial involvement with the UW Law School's.egal Assistance to Institutionalized Persons)rogram as a teacher, scholar, and adminisrator of the program, which he directedrom 1975 to 1983.Prof Dickey teaches Criminal Law, Crimital Procedure, Law and Corrections, and(1988) to "The Imperial Scholar: Reflectionson a Review of Civil Rights Literature" in theUniversity of Pennsylvania Law Review (1984),to "Religious Totalism: Gentle and UngentlePersuasion under the First Amendment" inthe Southern California Law Review In theseand 36 other articles and reviews, Delgadohas focused on a variety of issues, includingcivil rights, bioethics, and criminal law. Hehas written chapters for five books andwrites non-legal articles for publications asdiverse as US. News and World Reports andthe New York Times. He lectures regularly,most recently focusing on civil rights.Prof Delgado is a member of the executivecommittee of the Society of American LawTeachers and has served on numerousresearch and steering committees throughouthis career. He teaches Civil Procedure, Biotechnology and the Law, and a Civil RightsSeminar.Professional Responsibility. With Remington,Newman, Kimball and Goldstein, he coauthored the text Criminal Justice Administration, and he drafted the Wisconsin Administrative Code for the Division of Corrections.He is a recognized national authority onprison issues and has written extensively oncriminal justice issues.He has been a member and chair of theWisconsin Judicial Council, and served aschair of the Council's Homicide Committee.The work of that committee resulted in amajor revision of the homicide law inWisconsin which went into effect onJanuary 1, 1989.He and his wife, Mary, have two sons andlive in the town of Roxbury, in rural DaneCounty. Their home is in the Sauk PrairieSchool District, where Prof Dickey is a mernberof the School Board.

10ulty as a professor of law in 1981 after earning his J.D. He was a Phi Beta Kappa economics major at UC Berkeley, from which hegraduated summa cum laude; a Ford Fellowas a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Berkeley;and winner of several awards at the UW LawSchool, where he graduated magna cumlaude and was awarded Order of the Coif.Prof. Erlanger was a research assistant forthe President's Commission on Causes andPrevention of Violence in 1968, and wasresearch coordinator for Projects in Law andPoverty for the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University from 1972 to 1976.Currently he is the Review Section editor forHoward S. ErlangerProfessor of Law and SociologyBorn San Francisco, California, 1945B.A., Ph.D. University of California atBerkeley, 1967, 1971; J.D. University of Wisconsin, 1981HowieErlanger, a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsinsince 1971, joined the UW Law School fac-Board of Directors from 1982 to 1985.Prof. Erlanger teaches Trusts and Estates,Estate Planning for Families, and MaritalProperty Law. He is currently researchingorganizational response to affirmative actionin the UW Medical Scholars Program butwould rather be riding, and Jeff, a Madisonhigh school student who would rather spendthe day at the ballpark; and two horses: B.].and Regal.mandates, and is preparing Continuing LegalEducation materials on taxation of maritalHe was voted teacher of the year by students in 1987 and 1989.versity of Wisconsin Legal Education Opportunities Program in 19En. Prior to joining theUW Law School faculty in 1976, she clerkedfor the Honorable Luther M. Swygert, U.S.Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Shehas been a visiting law professor at the University of Miami Law School and at the University of Texas at Austin.Prof. Fineman's scholarly interests are inthe areas of feminism and legal theory, civilprocedure, and family and juvenile law. Sheteaches courses and seminars in Civil Procedure, Legal History, Family Law and Children and the Law. From 1984-87 she was aboard member of the Institute for LegalStudies and director of its Feminism andB.A. Temple University, 1971; J.D. Universityof Chicago, 1975ments in divorce, the socialization of lawstudents, stratification in the legal profession,careers of public interest lawyers, physicaland mental disability, the jury system, andinterpersonal violence. Recently, he and fellow UW Law professor June Weisberger coauthored publications on estate planning andmarital property, for which they received theState Bar's Charles Dunn Award.A Milwaukee Brewers baseball fan and acartoon aficionado who enjoys "sedentaryexercise," Prof. Erlanger is married to Pam,an occupational therapist and avid horsebackrider. They have two children: Lisa, who isartha Fineman received the Professor of the Year award from the Uni-Professor of LawBorn 1943ished work of the late Robert Stover, to bepublished this fall. His previous publicationsinclude Lawyers and the Pursuit of LegalRights, which he co-authored, and articles onissues including the negotiation of agree-Law & Social Inquiry, the journal of theAmerican Bar Foundation; Co-director of theDispute Processing Research Program of theInstitute of Legal Studies, UW Law School;and a member of the Board of Directors ofthe Center for Public Representation. Heserved on the Law and Society Association'sMMartha 1. Finemanproperty. He is the editor of Making It andBreaking It: The Fate of Public Interest Commitment During Law School, based on the unfin-Legal Theory Program; she is currently onthe board of the Intemationaljoumalof theSociology of Law, and is a member of the Lawand Society Association's Hurst Prize Committee.Among her many publicationsare "Domi-nant Discourses: Professional Language andLegal Change," 101 Harvard Law Review(1988), and "The Use of Social Science Datain Legal Policy Making: Child Custody atDivorce," with Anne Opie, 1987 WisconsinLaw Review, Vol. 1. Her work in progressincludes a study on rhetoric, symbolism andlegal reform that will be part of the UWPress' Rhetoric of Human Sciences series.Prof. Fineman was organizer and conference chair for the Feminism and Legal Theory conferences held at UW-Madison everysummer since 1985, and has been a speaker/panelist for many other national conferences.Her local involvement has included a fouryear stint as Commissioner of the MadisonEqual Opportunities Commission (1980-84),and work as a member of the Mayor's Comparable Worth Committee (1981).Prof. Fineman has two daughters, MarthaAnn and Amy, students at UW-Milwaukee,and twin sons, Benjamin and Jonathan, Madison West High School students.

11fed Finman ascom Professor of Law orn San Francisco, California, 1931 .A. University of Chicago, 1950; J.D.,tanford University, 1954Ted Finman has taught at the UW LawSchool in the areas of civil procedure,professional responsibilities and legalmethod since 1963. He was named a BascomProfessor of Law in 1986. Before joining theUW Law School faculty, Prof. Finman was alaw professor at the University of New Mexico, and a visiting professor at Stanford andRutgers Universities. He worked as an attorney for a California law firm for five yearsupon his graduation from law school, wherehe earned Order of the Coif honors and wasPresident of the Stanford Law Review.Prof. Finman is a member of the UW Athletic Board, and serves as the UW FacultyRepresentative to the Big Ten and the NCAA.G. William FosterEmeritus Professor of LawBorn 1919e.s. Stanford,1947; LL.B. Georgetown, 1951;LL.M. Yale, 1952G.W. "Bill" Foster recently entered a"phased retirement" from his numerous responsibilities in the Law School,including serving as faculty advisor to theiWisconsin Law Review. During his 35 years onthe Law School faculty he taught a wide variety of classes, and continues to inspire largesections of first -year law students.Prof. Foster was an executive assistant toPennsylvania Senator Francis]. Myers from1949 to 1950, and worked as a Special Assistant to Secretary of State Dean Acheson in1951. He joined the UW Law School facultyin 1952. As an expert in state-federal jurisdictional issues, he wa

J.D. Northwestern University, 1972; LLM. University of Wisconsin, 1975 D aniel Bernstine's experience prior to joining the University of Wisconsin Law School faculty in 1978 includes teaching at Howard University Law School from 1975-78 and working for two years as a staff attor-ney with the US. Department of Labor. Prof.