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#CARD
WILLIAM HUBBS REHNQUIST, Chief Justice of the United States; born in
Milwaukee, WI, October 1, 1924; son of William Benjamin and Margery Peck Rehnquist;
married to Natalie Cornell of San Diego, CA; children: James, Janet, and Nancy,
member of Emmanuel Lutheran Church, Bethesda, MD; served in the U.S. Army Air
Corps in this country and overseas from 1943 46; discharged with the rank of
sergeant; Stanford University, B.A., M.A., 1948; Harvard University, M.A., 1950;
Stanford University, LL.B., 1952, ranking first in class; Order of the Coif; member
of the Board of Editors of the Stanford Law Review; law clerk for Justice Robert
H. Jackson, Supreme Court of the United States, 1952 53; private practice of
law, Phoenix, AZ, 1953 69; engaged in a general practice of law with primary
emphasis on civil litigation; appointed Assistant Attorney General, Office of
Legal Counsel, by President Nixon in January 1969; nominated Associate Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States by President Nixon on October 21, 1971,
confirmed December 10, 1971, sworn in on January 7, 1972; nominated by President
Reagan as Chief Justice of the United States on June 17, 1986; sworn in on
September 26, 1986.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
BYRON RAYMOND WHITE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in Fort Collins, CO, June 8, 1917; son of Alpha Albert and Maude
Burger White; elementary and high school, Wellington, CO; B.A., University of
Colorado, 1938; Rhodes scholar, Oxford, England, 1939; officer, USNR, 1942 46;
LL.B., Yale Law School, 1946; married to Marion Lloyd Stearns of Denver, CO, June
15, 1946; children: Charles Byron and Nancy Pitkin; law clerk to the Chief Justice
of the United States, 1946 47; associate, Lewis, Grant, Newton, Davis & Henry
(now Davis, Graham & Stubbs), 1947 50, partner, 1950 60; Deputy Attorney
General of the United States, 1961 62; nominated Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States by President Kennedy on April 3, 1962, confirmed by
the Senate on April 11, 1962, and sworn in on April 16, 1962.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
THURGOOD MARSHALL, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in Baltimore, MD, July 2, 1908; son of William C. and Norma A.
Marshall; attended public schools in Baltimore; graduated with honors from Lincoln
University in 1930, and in 1933 graduated, at the head of his class, from Howard
University Law School in Washington; married to Vivian Burey (deceased), September
4, 1929; married to Cecilia A. Suyat, December 17, 1955; children: Thurgood, Jr.
and John William; entered private law practice in Baltimore, and in 1934 became
counsel for the Baltimore branch, National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People; in 1936, joined the organization's national legal staff, and in
1938 appointed chief legal officer, serving from 1940 until appointed to the
Federal bench as director-counsel of the NAACP legal defense and educational fund;
nominated by President Kennedy for appointment to the Second Circuit Court of
Appeals on September 23, 1961, given recess appointment in October 1961, confirmed
by the Senate on September 11, 1962; nominated by President Johnson for
appointment as Solicitor General of the United States on July 13, 1965, taking oath of
office August 24, 1965; nominated by President Johnson as Associate Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States on June 13, 1967, confirmed by the Senate
on August 30, 1967, took the constitutional oath on September 1, 1967, and took
the judicial oath and was seated on October 2, 1967.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
HARRY A. BLACKMUN, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in Nashville, IL, November 12, 1908; son of Corwin M. and Theo
(Reuter) Blackmun; A.B. (summa cum laude), Harvard College, 1929; LL.B., Harvard Law
School, 1932; married to Dorothy E. Clark, June 21, 1941; children: Nancy Clark
(Mrs. John C. Coniaris), Sally Ann (Mrs. Michael V. Elsberry), and Susan Manning
(Mrs. William H. Brown); admitted to the Minnesota Bar, 1932; law clerk to the
Honorable John B. Sanborn, judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit, 1932 33; associate, junior partner and general partner, Dorsey, Colman,
Barker, Scott & Barber and predecessor firms, Minneapolis, MN, 1934 50;
occasional member of the faculties of St. Paul College of Law (now William Mitchell
College of Law) and University of Minnesota Law School; resident counsel, Mayo
Clinic and Mayo Association (now Mayo Foundation), and member of the Section of
Administration, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, 1950 59; nominated by President
Eisenhower as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, succeeding the
Honorable John B. Sanborn, August 18, 1959; confirmed September 14, 1959; sworn
in on November 4, 1959; nominated associate justice by President Nixon April
14, 1970, confirmed May 12, 1970; sworn in on June 9, 1970; numerous honorary
degrees; member, Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Judicial Activities, 1969
79; representative of Judicial Branch, National Historical Publications and
Records Commission, 1975 82, 1986 present; chairman of Faculty, Salzburg
Seminar on American Studies (Law), July 1977, and member of the faculty, July 1989;
participant, Franco-American Colloquium on Human Rights, Paris, France, December
1979; co-moderator, Seminar on Justice and Society, Aspen Institute, 1979 90,
inclusive; Brandeis Medal, presented by Brandeis Honor Society, University of
Louisville School of Law, 1983; University Citation, presented by Rutgers, The
State University of New Jersey School of Law/Newark, 1985; The Hebrew University
Honorary Fellowship, presented at Jerusalem, 1986; Justice Award, presented by
Justice Lodge of B'nai B'rith, Philadelphia, 1986; Public Service Award,
presented by the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, 1987; Presidents' Award,
presented by American Society of Law & Medicine, 1987; UCLA Medal, presented by
University of California at Los Angeles, 1989; Distinguished Contributions to
Psychology and the Law Award, presented by the American Psychology-Law Society, 1990;
Brandeis Medal for Distinguished Legal Service, presented by Brandeis University,
1990; Learned Hand Medal, presented by Federal Bar Council, New York, 1990;
co-moderator, Seminar on Constitutional Justice and Society, Aspen Institute,
Italia, Rome, July 1986; visiting instructor on Constitutional Law, Louisiana State
University Law School Summer Session at Aix-en-Provence, France, July
1986.08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
JOHN PAUL STEVENS, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in Chicago, IL, April 20, 1920; son of Ernest James and Elizabeth
Street Stevens; A.B., University of Chicago, 1941; J.D., Northwestern University,
1947; married to Elizabeth Jane Sheeren (deceased), 1942; married to Maryan
Mulholland Simon, 1979; children: John Joseph, Kathryn Stevens Jedlicka, Elizabeth
Jane Stevens Sesemann, and Susan Roberta Mullen; admitted to Illinois Bar, 1949;
practiced law in Chicago; law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Wiley Rutledge,
1947 48; served in the U.S. Navy, 1942 45; associate counsel, Subcommittee
on the Study of Monopoly Power, Judiciary Committee of the U.S. House of
Representatives, 1951 52; member of the Attorney General's National Committee to Study
Antitrust Laws, 1953 55; appointed U.S. Circuit Judge for the Seventh
Circuit, October 14, 1970, entering on duty November 2, 1970, and serving until
becoming an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; nominated to the Supreme Court
December 1, 1975, by President Ford; confirmed by the Senate December 17, 1975;
sworn in on December 19, 1975.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
SANDRA DAY O'CONNOR, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in El Paso, TX, March 26, 1930; daughter of Harry A. and Ada Mae
Wilkey Day; B.A. (magna cum laude), Stanford University, 1950; LL.B., Stanford Law
School, 1952; Order of the Coif, Board of Editors, Stanford Law Review; married
to John Jay O'Connor III, 1952; children: Scott, Brian, and Jay; deputy county
attorney, San Mateo County, CA, 1952 53; civilian attorney for Quartermaster
Market Center, Frankfurt, Germany, 1954 57; private practice of law in Maryvale,
AZ, 1958 60; assistant attorney general, Arizona, 1965 69; elected to the
Arizona State senate, 1969 75; senate majority leader, 1974 and 1975; chairman
of the State, County, and Municipal Affairs Committee in 1972 and 1973; also
served on the Legislative Council, on the Probate Code Commission, and on the
Arizona Advisory Council on Intergovernmental Relations; elected judge of the
Maricopa County Superior Court, Phoenix, AZ, 1975 79; appointed to the Arizona Court
of Appeals by Gov. Bruce Babbitt, 1979 81; nominated by President Reagan as
Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court on July 7, 1981; confirmed by the U.S.
Senate on September 22, 1981; and sworn in on September 25, 1981; member,
National Board of Smithsonian Associates, 1981 present; president, board of
trustees, The Heard Museum, 1968 74, 1976 81; member: Salvation Army Advisory
Board, 1975 81, board of trustees, Stanford University, 1976 81, Board of
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 1988 to present.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
ANTONIN SCALIA, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; born in Trenton, NJ, March 11, 1936; A.B., Georgetown University and
University of Fribourg (Switzerland), 1957; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1960; note editor,
Harvard Law Review; Sheldon fellow, Harvard University, 1960 61; married to
Maureen McCarthy, September 10, 1960; children: Ann Forrest; Eugene, John
Francis, Catherine Elisabeth, Mary Clare, Paul David, Matthew, Christopher James, and
Margaret Jane; admitted to practice in Ohio (1962), Virginia (1970); in private
practice with Jones, Day, Cockley, & Reavis (Cleveland, OH), 1961 67; professor
of law, University of Virginia Law School, 1967 74 (on leave 1971 74);
general counsel, Office of Telecommunications Policy, Executive Office of the
President, 1971 72; chairman, Administrative Conference of the United States, 1972
74; Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of
Justice, 1974 77; scholar in residence, American Enterprise Institute, 1977;
visiting professor of law, Georgetown University, 1977; professor of law, University
of Chicago, 1977 82; visiting professor of law, Stanford University, 1980
81; editor, Regulation Magazine, 1979 82; chairman: ABA Section of
Administrative Law, 1981 82 and ABA Conference of Section Chairmen, 1982 83; appointed
by President Reagan as Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit; sworn in on August 17, 1982; appointed by President
Reagan as Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court; sworn in on September 26,
1986.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
ANTHONY M. KENNEDY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States, born in Sacramento, CA, July 23, 1936; son of Anthony James and Gladys
McLeod Kennedy; married to Mary Davis, June 29, 1963; children: Justin Anthony,
Gregory Davis, and Kristin Marie; Stanford University, 1954 57; London School of
Economics, 1957 58; B.A., Stanford University, 1958; LL.B., Harvard Law
School, 1961; associate, Thelen, Marrin, John & Bridges, San Francisco, 1961 63;
sole practitioner, Sacramento, 1963 67; partner, Evans, Jackson & Kennedy,
Sacramento, 1967 75; professor of constitutional law, McGeorge School of Law,
University of the Pacific, 1965 88; California Army National Guard, 1961; member:
the Judicial Conference of the United States' Advisory Panel on Financial
Disclosure Reports and Judicial Activities (subsequently renamed the Advisory Committee
of Codes of Conduct), 1979 87; Committee on Pacific Territories, 1979 90
(chairman, 1982 90); board of the Federal Judicial Center, 1987 88; nominated
by President Ford to U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; sworn in on May
30, 1975; nominated by President Reagan as Associate Justice of the United
States Supreme Court; sworn in on February 18, 1988.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
DAVID HACKETT SOUTER, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States, born in Melrose, MA, September 17, 1939; son of Joseph Alexander and
Helen Adams Hackett Souter; Harvard College, A.B., 1961, Phi Beta Kappa, selected
Rhodes Scholar; Magdalen College, Oxford, 1963, A.B. in Jurisprudence, 1989, M.A.
1989; Harvard Law School, LL.B., 1966; associate, Orr and Reno, Concord, NH.,
1966 68; Assistant Attorney General of New Hampshire, 1968 71; Deputy
Attorney General of New Hampshire, 1971 76; Attorney General of New Hampshire, 1976
78; Associate Justice, New Hampshire Superior Court, 1978 83; Associate
Justice, New Hampshire Supreme Court, 1983 90; member: Maine-New Hampshire
Interstate Boundary Commission, 1971 75; New Hampshire Police Standards and Training
Council, 1976 78; New Hampshire Governor's Commmission on Crime and
Delinquency, 1976 78; 1979 83; New Hampshire Judicial Council, 1976 78; Concord
Hospital Board of Trustees, 1972 85 (president, 1978 84); New Hampshire
Historical Society, 1968 present, (vice-president, 1980 85, trustee, 1976 85);
Darmouth Medical School, Board of Overseers, 1981 87; Merrimack County Bar
Association, 1966 present; New Hampshire Bar Association, 1966 present; American
Bar Association, 1981 present; member of the Appalachian Mountain Club, 1980
present; nominated by President Bush to U.S. Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit; took oath May 25, 1990; nominated by President Bush as Associate Justice of
the U.S. Supreme Court; took oath of office October 9, 1990.
* * *
#ENDCARD
#CARD
WARREN E. BURGER, Chief Justice of the United States (retired); born in St.
Paul, MN, September 17, 1907; son of Charles Joseph and Katharine Burger;
University of Minnesota (pre legal); St. Paul College of Law (now Mitchell College of
Law), 1931, LL.B. (magna cum laude); married to Elvera Stromberg, 1933;
children: Wade Allan and Margaret Mary Elizabeth; admitted to Minnesota Bar, 1931;
engaged in private general practice, 1931 53; associate and partner, Boyesen, Otis
& Faircy; partner in successor firm, Faircy, Burger, Moore & Costello: member,
faculty of St. Paul College of Law, 1931 46 (contracts, trusts); Assistant
Attorney General of the United States, appointed by President Eisenhower, 1953
56; appointed by President Eisenhower as Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals
(District of Columbia Circuit), 1956 69; nominated Chief Justice of the United
States by President Nixon on May 22, confirmed June 9, and sworn in on June 23, 1969;
retired September 26, 1986; named Chairman of the Commission on the
Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution by President Reagan, June 25, 1985; faculty appellate
judges' seminar, N.Y.U. Law School, 1958 present; chairman, Judicial
Conference of the United States, 1969 86; chairman, Federal Judicial Center, 1969
86; chancellor, Smithsonian Institution, 1969 86; chancellor emeritus, 1986
present; trustee: National Gallery of Art (chairman, 1969 79), and National
Geographic Society; Chancellor, College of William and Mary, 1986 present;
honorary chairman, Institute of Judicial Administration; National Judicial College;
trustee emeritus: William Mitchell College of Law, Macalester College, and Mayo
Foundation; honorary chairman, Supreme Court Historical Society; honorary bencher,
Middle Temple, London, 1967 present; president, St. Paul Council of Human
Relations, 1947 52; attendee, Hague Academy of International Law, 1960; honorary
degrees: LL.D.: William Mitchell College of Law, Macalester College, University
of Minnesota, New York University, Columbia University, University of
Pennsylvania, New York College of Law, Georgetown University, American University, College
of William and Mary, Mercer University, Yeshiva University, Howard University,
Ripon College, Washington College, Brigham Young University, George Washington
University, West Virginia University, and Pace University.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
WILLIAM J. BRENNAN, Jr., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the United States (retired); born in Newark, NJ, April 25, 1906; son of William J.
and Agnes (McDermott) Brennan; married to Marjorie Leonard, May 5, 1928
(deceased, 1982); children: William J., Hugh Leonard, and Nancy, married to Mary
Fowler, 1983; B.S. (with honors), Wharton School of Business, University of
Pennsylvania, 1928; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1931; associate, Pitney, Hardin & Skinner,
Newark, NJ, 1931; member, 1937 42, and again 1945 49, firm name Pitney,
Hardin, Ward & Brennan; major, later colonel, U.S. Army, specializing in manpower
and personnel work, 1942 45, awarded Legion of Merit; appointed by Governor
Driscoll, New Jersey Superior Court, 1949, served as assignment judge, Hudson
County, to 1951; appointed to Appellate Division of that court, 1951; appointed by
Governor Driscoll, associate justice of New Jersey Supreme Court, 1952; appointed
as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President
Eisenhower, a recess appointment on October 15, 1956; sworn in on October 16,
1956; was nominated by President Eisenhower on January 14, 1957; the nomination was
confirmed by the Senate on March 19, 1957; was given a new commission on March
21, 1957, and again took the oaths on March 22, 1957; retired on July 20,
1990.08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
#ENDCARD
#CARD
LEWIS FRANKLIN POWELL, Jr., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the United States (retired); born in Suffolk, VA, September 19, 1907; married
to Josephine Pierce Rucker, 1936; children: Josephine McRae (Mrs. Richard Stowers
Smith), Ann Pendleton (Mrs. Basil Terence Carmody), Mary Lewis Gwathmey (Mrs.
Christopher James Sumner), and Lewis Franklin Powell III; B.S., Washington and
Lee University, 1929, magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa; LL.B., 1931; LL.M.,
Harvard Law School, 1932; during World War II, served with U.S. Army Air Forces from
1942 46, including service in the European and North African theaters; 319th
Bombardment Group, the 12th Air Force, and as Chief of Operational Intelligence
for U.S. Strategic Air Forces in Europe; held rank from first lieutenant to full
colonel; awarded Legion of Merit, Bronze Star, and France's Croix de Guerre
with Palm; attorney, Hunton, Williams, Gay, Powell, and Gibson, Richmond, VA, 1935
71; general counsel, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 1957 71; member:
National Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, appointed by
President Johnson, 1965 67; National Advisory Committee on Legal Services to
the Poor, established pursuant to the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964; Blue
Ribbon Defense Panel, appointed by President Nixon to study the Department of
Defense, 1969 70; Virginia State Board of Education, 1961 69 (president, 1968
69); chairman: Richmond Public School Board, 1952 61, and special commission
which wrote the charter introducing the manager form of government to the city of
Richmond, 1947 48; member, Virginia Constitutional Revision Commission, 1967
68, which proposed the new constitution adopted by the State of Virginia in 1970;
trustee emeritus of Washington and Lee University; chairman emeritus of
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation; member: American Bar Association (president, 1964
65); American College of Trial Lawyers (president, 1969 70); and American Bar
Foundation (president, 1969 71); honorary bencher, Lincoln's Inn, London;
nominated by President Nixon as Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court on
October 21, 1971, confirmed by the U.S. Senate on December 6, 1971, and sworn in on
January 7, 1972; retired on June 26, 1987.
12
#ENDCARD
#CARD
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE CHIEF JUSTICE
Lawrence H. Averill.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT
Clerk. William K. Suter.
Librarian. Shelley Dowling.
Marshal. Alfred Wong.
Reporter of Decisions. Frank D. Wagner.
Counsel. Richard G.R. Schickele.
Curator. Gail A. Galloway.
Budget and Personnel Officer. Cyril A. Donnelly.
Public Information Officer. Toni House.
Director of Data Systems. James R. Donovan.
Congressional Directory
District of Columbia Judicial Circuit (District of Columbia). Chief
Justice Rehnquist, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. Abner J. Mikva. Circuit
Judges. Harry T. Edwards, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Laurence H. Silberman, James L.
Buckley, Stephen F. Williams, Douglas Ginsburg, David B. Sentelle, Raymond A.
Randolph, Karen LeCroft Henderson, Clarence Thomas. Clerk. Constance L.
Dupre, Washington, DC 20001, (202) 535 3308.
06
First Judicial Circuit (Districts of Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, Puerto Rico, and Rhode Island). Justice Souter, Circuit Justice. Chief
Judge. Stephen G. Breyer. Circuit Judges. Levin H. Campbell, Juan R.
Torruella, Bruce M. Selya, Conrad K. Cyr, Clerk. Francis P. Scigliano, Boston,
MA 02109, (617) 223 9057.
06
Second Judicial Circuit (Districts of Connecticut, New York, and
Vermont). Justice Marshall, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. James L. Oakes.
Circuit Judges. Thomas J. Meskill, Jon O. Newman, Amalya Lyle Kearse, Richard J.
Cardamone, Ralph K. Winter, Jr., George C. Pratt, Roger J. Miner, Frank X.
Altimari, J. Daniel Mahoney, John Walker, Jr., Joseph P. McLauglin. Clerk.
Elaine B. Goldsmith, New York, NY 10007, (212) 791 0103.
06
Third Judicial Circuit (Districts of Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
and Virgin Islands). Justice Souter, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge.
Dolores Korman Sloviter. Circuit Judges. Samuel H. Alito, Jr., Edward R.
Becker, Walter K. Stapleton, Carol Los Mansmann, Morton I. Greenberg, Anthony J.
Scirica, William D. Hutchinson, Robert E. Cowen, Richard Lowell Nygaard. Clerk.
T1Sally Mrvos, Philadelphia, PA 19106, (215) 597 2995.
06
Fourth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Maryland, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia). Chief Justice Rehnquist, Circuit Justice.
T3Chief Judge. Sam J. Ervin III. Circuit Judges. Paul V. Niemeyer,
Donald Stuart Russell, H. Emory Widener, Jr., Kenneth K. Hall, James Dickson
Phillips, Jr., Francis D. Murnaghan, Jr., James M. Sprouse, Robert F. Chapman, James
Harvie Wilkinson III, William W. Wilkins, Jr., Clerk. John Greacen,
Richmond, VA 23219, (804) 771 2213.
06
Fifth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas).
Justice White, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. Charles Clark. Circuit
Judges. Rhesa H. Barksdale, Henry A. Politz, Carolyn Dineen King, Samuel D.
Johnson, Jr., William L. Garwood, E. Grady Jolly, Patrick E. Higginbotham, W.
Eugene Davis, Edith Hollan Jones, Jerry Edwin Smith, John M. Duhe, Jr., Jaques L.
Weiner, Jr. Clerk. Gilbert F. Ganucheau, New Orleans, LA 70130, (504) 589
6514.
06
Sixth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and
Tennessee). Justice Scalia, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. Gilbert S. Merritt.
3Circuit Judges. Richard F. Suhrheinrich, Damon J. Keith, Cornelia G.
Kennedy, Boyce F. Martin, Jr., Nathaniel R. Jones, Robert B. Krupansky, H. Ted
Milburn, Ralph B. Guy, Jr., David A. Nelson, James L. Ryan, Danny J. Boggs, Alan E.
Norris. Clerk. Leonard Green, Cincinnati, OH 45202, (513) 684 2953.
06
Seventh Judicial Circuit (Districts of Illinois, Indiana, and
Wisconsin). Justice Stevens, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. William J. Bauer,
Circuit Judges. Walter J. Cummings, Harlington Wood, Jr., Richard D. Cudahy,
Richard A. Posner, John L. Coffey, Joel M. Flaum, Frank H. Easterbrook, Kenneth F.
Ripple, Daniel A. Manion, Michael S. Kanne, Clerk. Thomas F. Strubbe,
Chicago, IL 60604, (312) 435 5850.
06
Eighth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota). Justice Blackmun, Circuit Justice.
McMillian, Richard S. Arnold, John R. Gibson, George G. Fagg, Pasco M. Bowman
II, Roger L. Wollman, Frank J. Magill, Clarence Arlen Beam. Clerk. Robert
D. St. Vrain, St. Louis, MO 63101, (314) 539 3609.
06
Ninth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Alaska, Arizona, California, Guam,
Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Northern Mariana Islands, Oregon, and
Washington). Justice O'Connor, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. J. Clifford Wallace.
Circuit Judges. Ferdinand F. Fernandez, Pamela Ann Rymer, James R. Browning,
Procter Hug, Jr., Thomas Tang, Mary M. Schroeder, Betty B. Fletcher, Jerome
Farris, Harry Pregerson, Arthur L. Alarcon, Cecil F. Poole, Dorothy W. Nelson,
William C. Canby, Jr., William A. Norris, Stephen Reinhardt, Robert R. Beezer,
Cynthia Holcomb Hall, Charles E. Wiggins, Melvin Brunetti, Alex Kozinski, John T.
Noonan, Jr., David R. Thompson, Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain, Edward Leavy, Stephen S.
Trott. Clerk. Cathy Catterson Hansen, San Francisco, CA 94101, (414) 556
7340.
06
Tenth Judicial Circuit (Districts of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Utah, and Wyoming). Justice White, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge.
William J. Holloway, Jr. Circuit Judges. Monroe G. McKay, James K. Logan,
Stephanie K. Seymour, John P. Moore, Stephen H. Anderson, Deanell Reece Tacha, Bobby
R. Baldock, Wade Brorby, David M. Ebel. Clerk. Robert Hoecker, Denver, CO
80294, (303) 844 3157.
06
Eleventh Judicial Circuit (Districts of Alabama, Florida, and Georgia).
Justice Kennedy, Circuit Justice. Chief Judge. Gerald B. Tjoflat.
Circuit Judges. Joel F. Dubina, Stanley F. Birch, Jr., Peter T. Fay, Phyllis A.
Kravitch, Frank M. Johnson, Jr., Joseph Woodrow Hatchett, R. Lanier Anderson III,
Thomas A. Clark, J.L. Edmondson, Emmett Ripley Cox, Clerk. Miguel J.
Cortez, Jr., Atlanta, GA 30303, (404) 331 6187.
06
Federal Judicial Circuit. Chief Justice Rehnquist, Circuit Justice.
Chief Judge. Helen W. Nies. Circuit Judges. Giles S. Rich, Howard T.
Markey, Pauline Newman, Glenn L. Archer, Jr., Haldane Robert Mayer, Paul R. Michel,
S. Jay Plager, Alan D. Lowrie, Raymond C. Clevenger III, Randall R. Rader.
Clerk. Francis X. Gindhart, Washington, DC 20439, (202) 633 6550.
Congressional Directory
United States Courthouse, Room 1130, Third Street and Constitution Avenue
20001. Phone, (202) 535 3390
Act and Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act)
Chief Judge. Reynaldo G. Garza, Brownsville, TX.
Judges:
A. Sherman Christensen, Senior District Judge, Salt Lake City, UT.
Walter E. Hoffman, Senior District Judge, Norfolk, VA.
Robert A. Grant, Senior District Judge, South Bend, IN.
Charles M. Metzner, Senior District Judge, New York, NY.
John W. Peck, Senior Circuit Judge, Cincinnati, OH.
Fred Daugherty, Senior District Judge, Oklahoma City, OK.
Wesley E. Brown, Senior District Judge, Wichita, KS.
Stanley A. Weigel, Senior District Judge, San Francisco, CA.
Homer Thornberry, Senior Circuit Judge, Austin, TX.
Robert Earl Maxwell, Chief Judge, U.S. District Court, Elkins, WV.
Clerk. Cynthia A. Dykes.
Chief Deputy Clerk. Sharon A. Krosel.
Deputy Clerk. Alex Van Veen.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Room 5423, U.S. Courthouse, Third Street and Constitution Avenue 20001.
Phone, 535 3300
ABNER J. MIKVA, chief judge; born in Milwaukee, WI, January 21, 1926; son
of Henry A. and Ida (Fishman) Mikva; served 2 years in Army Air Force, World War
II; J.D., University of Chicago Law School, 1951, cum laude; member of Order of
Coif and Phi Beta Kappa; LL.D., University of Illinois, 1980; D.H.L. Hebrew
Union College, 1989; editor-in-chief, University of Chicago Law Review; law clerk to
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sherman Minton, 1951 52; practicing attorney, 1952
68, 1973 74; chairman: Illinois Board of Ethics, 1973; served in Illinois
Legislature, 1956 66; chairman, Illinois House Judiciary Committee, 1965 66;
chairman, Illinois House Subcommittee on New Criminal Code, which was adopted in
1961; member, U.S. House of Representatives, 1969 73, 1975 79; in Congress
served as member of the Judiciary Committee for three terms, the District of
Columbia Committee for one term, and the Ways and Means Committee for three terms;
chairman, Democratic Study Group; appointed to the National Committee on Reform
of Federal Criminal Laws and the National Committee on Individual Rights and
Privacy; adjunct professor of law, Northwestern University School of Law, 1973
75; lecturer, University of Pennsylvania Law School, 1983 84; lecturer,
Georgetown University Law School, 1985 88; lecturer, Duke University School of Law,
1989 present; member: American Bar Association; Council of the Section of
Individual Rights and Responsibilities; Council of the Section of Litigation, 1975
76; Chicago Bar Association, Board of Managers, 1962 64; District of Columbia
and Illinois Bars; married to the former Zorita Wise; daughters: Mary, Laurie,
and Rachel; appointed U.S. Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, District of
Columbia Circuit, by President Carter under commission September 26, 1979, resigning
from the Congress; became Chief Judge January 19, 1991.
08
PATRICIA M c GOWAN WALD, circuit judge; born in Torrington, CT,
September 16, 1928; daughter of Margaret (O'Keefe) and Joseph McGowan; B.A.,
Connecticut College, 1948; Phi Beta Kappa; LL.B., Yale Law School, 1951;
case editor, Yale Law Journal; Order of the Coif; law clerk, Judge Jerome
Frank, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1951 52: associate,
Arnold, Fortas & Porter, Washington, DC, 1952 53; member,
President's Commission on Crime in the District of Columbia, 1965 66; attorney,
Office of Criminal Justice, Department of Justice, 1967 68; attorney,
Neighborhood Legal Services Program, 1968 70; co-director, Ford
Foundation Drug Abuse Research Project, 1970; attorney: Center for Law and Social
Policy, 1971 72; Mental Health Law Project (litigation director, 1975 77), 1972
77; Assistant Attorney General for Legislative Affairs, Deparmtent of
Justice, 1977 79; board of trustees, Vera Institute of Justice, 1965 72;
American Law Institute (Council, 1978 present; Second Vice President,
1989 present), 1972 present; Juvenile Justice Standards Project (IJA ABA)
joint commission member and Exec;utive Commission 1973 77; board of governors,
District of Columbia Bar (Executive Committee, 1975 76), 1974 77; board of
editors, American Bar Association Journal, 1978 present; Institute of Medicine,
National Science Foundation, 1978 present; board of trustees, Ford Foundation
(Executive Committee, 1975 77), 1972 77; Carnegie Council on Children, 1973
77; Exeter Academy, 1975 77; board of trustees, Connecticut College, 1976
77; Meyer Foundation, 1976 77; married to Robert L. Wald, 1952; children:
Sarah, Douglas, Johanna, Frederica, Thomas. Appointed to the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit by President Jimmy Carter on July 26, 1979,
and entered on duty July 31, 1979; served as chief judge July 26, 1986 to January
19, 1991.
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HARRY T. EDWARDS, circuit judge; born in New York, NY, November 3, 1940;
son of George H. Edwards and Arline (Ross) Lyle; B.S. Cornell University, 1962;
J.D. (with high distinction), University of Michigan Law School, 1965; associate
with Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson, 1965 70; professor of law,
University of Michigan, 1970 75 and 1977 80; professor of law, Harvard University,
1975 77; visiting professor of law, Free University of Brussels, 1974;
arbitrator of labor/management disputes, 1970 80; vice president, National Academy
of Arbitrators, 1978 80; member (1977 79) and chairman (1979 80), National
Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak); Executive Committee of the Association
of American Law Schools, 1978 80; public member of the Administrative
Conference of the United States, 1977 80; International Women's Year Commission, 1976
77; American Bar Association Commission of Law and the Economy; coauthor of
four books: Labor Relations Law in the Public Sector, the Lawyer as a Negotiator,
Higher Education and the Law, and Collective Bargaining and Labor Arbitration;
recipient of the Judge William B. Groat Alumni Award, 1978, given by Cornell
University; the Society of American Law Teachers Award (for ``distinguished
contributions to teaching and public service''); the Whitney North Seymour Medal
presented by the American Arbitration Association for outstanding contributions to the
use of arbitration; and several Honorary Doctor of Laws degrees. Judge Edwards
teaches law on a part-time basis; he has recently taught at Duke, Georgetown,
Michigan and Harvard Law Schools, and he is presently teaching a course in Federal
Courts at N.Y.U; A.B.A.; married to The Honorable Mildred Matesich Edwards;
children: Brent and Michelle; appointed to the U.S. Court of Appeals, February 21,
1980; office: 5400 U.S. Courthouse, Washington, DC 20001.
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RUTH BADER GINSBURG, circuit judge; born in Brooklyn, NY, March 15, 1933,
daughter of Nathan and Celia (Amster) Bader; A.B. Cornell University, 1954;
LL.B., Columbia Law School, 1959; Honorary degrees: Lund University, Sweden, 1969;
American University Law School, 1981; Vermont Law School, 1984; DePaul University,
1985; Georgetown University, 1985; Brooklyn Law School, 1987; Hebrew Union
College, 1988; Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, 1973 74, Kent Scholar, Columbia
Law School; married to Martin D. Ginsburg, June 23, 1954; children: Jane Carol and
James Steven; law secretary, Judge Edmund L. Palmieri, U.S. District Court,
S.D.N.Y., 1959 61; research associate, Columbia Law School Project on
International Procedure, 1961 62; associate director, Columbia Law School Project on
International Procedure, 1962 63; professor, Rutgers School of Law, 1963 72;
Professor, Columbia University School of Law, 1972 80; fellow, Center for
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (Stanford), 1977 78; member: American Bar
Association; Association of the Bar of the City of New York, executive committee,
1974 78; American Bar Foundation, secretary, board of directors and executive
committee, 1980 90; American Law Institute, council member; Council on
Foreign Relations; American Academy of Arts and Sciences; bar admissions: State of New
York; District of Columbia; U.S. Supreme Court; U.S. Courts of Appeals, Second,
Fifth, and District of Columbia Circuits; U.S. District Courts, Southern and
Eastern Districts, New York and District of Columbia; Robert S. Marx, Lecturer,
University of Cincinnati, 1974; Frank Irvine Lecturer, Cornell University, 1975;
George Abel Dreyfous Lecturer, Tulane University, 1978; Will E. Orgain Lecturer,
University of Texas, 1979; Cleveland-Marshall Fund Lecturer, Cleveland-Marshall
College of Law, 1979; John A. Sibley Lecturer, University of Georgia, 1981; John
R. Coen Lecturer, University of Colorado, 1983; William T. Joyner Lecturer,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1984; Dunwoody Lecturer, University of
Florida College of Law, 1985; Lester W. Roth Lecturer, University of South
Carolina, 1986; David C. Baum Lecturer, University of Illinois, 1988; Dooley
Lecturer, Loyola (Chicago) University, 1988; Jurisprudential Lecturer, University of
Washington, 1989; Altheimer Lecturer, University of Arkansas at Little Rock, 1990;
took oath of office June 30, 1980, under commission issued by President Carter,
June 18, 1980.
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LAURENCE HIRSCH SILBERMAN, circuit judge; born in York, PA, October 12,
1935; son of William Silberman and Anna (Hirsch); married to Rosalie G. Gaull,
January 5, 1957; children: Robert Stephen, Katherine DeBoer Balaban, and Anne Gaull;
B.A., Dartmouth College, 1957; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1961. Admitted to
Hawaii Bar, 1962, District of Columbia Bar, 1973; associate, Moore, Torkildson &
Rice, 1961 64; partner (Moore, Silberman & Schulze), Honolulu, 1964 67;
attorney, National Labor Relations Board, Office of General Counsel, Appellate
Division, 1967 69; Solicitor, Department of Labor, 1969 70; Under Secretary of
Labor, 1970 73; partner, Steptoe & Johnson, 1973 74; Deputy Attorney General of
the United States, 1974 75; Ambassador to Yugoslavia, 1975 77; President's
Special Envoy on ILO Affairs, 1976; senior fellow, American Enterprise Institute,
1977 78; visiting fellow, 1978 85; managing partner, Morrison & Foerster,
1978 79 and 1983 85; executive vice president, Crocker National Bank, 1979
83; lecturer, University of Hawaii, 1962 63; board of directors, Commission on
Present Danger, 1978 85, Institute for Educational Affairs, New York, NY,
1981 85, member: General Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament, 1981
85; Defense Policy Board, 1981 85; vice chairman, State Department's
Commission on Security and Economic Assistance, 1983 84; American Bar Association
(Labor Law Committee, 1965 present, Corporations and Banking Committee, 1973,
Law and National Security Advisory Committee, 1981 present); Hawaii Bar
Association Ethics Committee, 1965 67; Council on Foriegn Relations 1977 present;
Adjunct Professor of Law (Administrative Law) Georgetown Law Center, 1987
present; appointed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
by President Ronald W. Reagan on October 28, 1985.
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JAMES LANE BUCKLEY, circuit judge, born in New York, NY, March 9, 1923; son
of William Frank and Aloise Josephine (Steiner) Buckley; married to Ann Frances
Cooley, May 22, 1953; children: Peter, James, Priscilla, William, David, and
Andrew; B.A., Yale University, 1943; Lt. (j.g.), U.S. Navy Reserve, 1943 46;
LL.B., Yale, 1949; admitted to: Connecticut Bar, 1949; District of Columbia Bar,
1953; associate: Wiggin & Dana, New Haven, CT, 1949 53; Reasoner & Davis,
Washington, DC, 1953 57; Vice President, Catawba Corp., New York City, 1957 70;
U.S. Senator, 1971 77; Director, Executive Committee, Donaldson, Lufkin &
Jenrette, New York City, 1977 78; Business Consultant, 1978 80; Under Secretary
for Security Assistance, Science and Technology, U.S. Department of State, 1981
82; president, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Munich, West Germany, 1982 85;
appointed to U.S. Court of Appeals (District of Columbia Circuit) in December
1985.
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STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, circuit judge; born in New York, NY, September 23,
1936, son of Charles Dickerman Williams and Virginia (Fain); B.A., Yale, 1958,
J.D., Harvard Law School, 1961. U.S. Army reserves, 1961 62; associate, Debevoise,
Plimpton, Lyons & Gates, 1962 66; Assistant U.S. Attorney, Southern District
of New York, 1966 69; associate professor and professor of law, University of
Colorado School of Law, 1969 86; visiting professor of law, UCLA, 1975 76;
visiting professor of law and fellow in law and economics, University Chicago Law
School, 1979 80; visiting George W. Hutchison Professor of Energy Law, SMU,
1983 84; consultant to: Administrative Conference of the United States, 1974
76; Federal Trade Commission on energy-related issues, 1983 85; appointed to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit by President
Ronald Reagan, June 16, 1986; member, American Law Institute; married to Faith
Morrow, 1966; children: Susan, Geoffrey, Sarah, Timothy, and Nicholas.
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DOUGLAS HOWARD GINSBURG, circuit judge; born in Chicago, IL, May 25, 1946;
son of Maurice and Katherine (Goodmont) Ginsburg; married to Claudia DeSecundy,
May 31, 1968 (divorced); one child, Jessica J.E. DeSecundy; married to Hallee
Perkins Morgan, May 9, 1981; children, Hallee Katherine Morgan and Hannah Maurice
Morgan; education: Diploma, Latin School of Chicago, 1963; B.S., Cornell
University, 1970 (Phi Kappa Phi, Ives Award); J.D., University of Chicago, 1973 (Mecham
Prize Scholarship 1970 73, Casper Platt Award, 1972, Order of Coif, Articles
and Book Rev. Ed., 40 U. Chi. L. Rev.); bar admissions: Illinois (1973),
Massachusetts (1982), U.S. Supreme Court (1984), U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit (1986). Member: American Economic Association, Executive Council of
Antitrust Section of the American Bar Association (ex officio, 1985 86); law clerk
to: Judge Carl McGowan, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit, 1973 74; Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, U.S. Supreme Court, 1974
75; previous positions: assistant professor, Harvard University Law School, 1975
81; Professor 1981 83; Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Regulatory
Affairs, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1983 84; administrator for
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Executive Office of the President, Office
of Management and Budget, 1984 85; Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust
Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1985 86; visiting professor of law, Columbia
University, New York City, 1987 88; lecturer law, Harvard University, Cambridge
Massachusettes, 1987 90; Foundation professor of law, George Mason
University, Arlington, Virginia, 1988 ; Charles J. Merriam visiting scholar, senior
lecturer, University of Chicago, 1990. Appointed to U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit by President Ronald Reagan on October 14, 1986,
taking oath of office on November 10, 1986.
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DAVID BRYAN SENTELLE, circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals (District of
Columbia Circuit); 535 3348; born in Canton, NC, February 12, 1943; son of Horace
and Maude Sentelle; B.A., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1965;
J.D. with honors, University of North Carolina School of Law, 1968; associate,
Uzzell & Dumont, Charlotte, 1968 79; Assistant U.S. Attorney, Charlotte, 1970
74; North Carolina State District Judge, 1974 77; partner, Tucker, Hicks,
Sentelle, Moon & Hodeg, Charlotte, 1977 85; U.S. District Judge for the Western
District of North Carolina, 1985 87; married to Jane LaRue Oldham; daughters:
Sharon, Reagan, and Rebecca.
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CLARENCE THOMAS, circuit judge; born in the Pinpoint community, near
Savannah, GA, June 23, 1948; son of M.C. Thomas and Leola Williams; married to
Virginia Bess Lamp, May 30, 1987; one child, Jamal; B.A. with honors, Holy Cross
College, Worcester, Massachusetts, 1971; J.D., Yale Law School 1974; admitted to
Missouri Bar, 1974; Assistant Attorney General of Missouri 1974 77; attorney,
Monsanto Company, 1977 79; legislative assistant to Senator John C. Danforth of
Missouri, 1979 81; Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, U.S. Department of
Education, 1981 82; Chairman, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1982
90; appointed to the District of Columbia Circuit by President George Bush on
March 6, 1990.
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RAYMOND RANDOLPH, circuit judge; born in Riverside, NJ, November 1,
1943; son of Arthur Raymond Randolph, Sr. and Marile (Kelly); two children, John
Trevor and Cynthia Lee Randolph; married to Eileen Janette O'Connor, May 18,
1984. B.S., Drexel University, 1966; J.D., University of Pennsylvania Law School,
1969, summa cum laude; managing editor, University of Pennsylvania Law Review;
Order of the Coif. Admitted to Supreme Court of the United States; Supreme Court of
California; District of Columbia Court of Appeals; U.S. Courts of Appeals for
the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, Eleventh, and District
of Columbia Circuits. Memberships: American Law Institute; The Barristers;
National Press Club. Law clerk to Judge Henry J. Friendly, U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit, 1969 70; Assistant to the Solicitor General, 1970 73;
adjunct professor of law, Georgetown University Law Center, 1974 78; Deputy
Solicitor General, 1975 77; Special Counsel, Committee on Standards of Official
Conduct, House of Representatives, 1979 80; special assistant attorney general,
State of Montana (honorary), 1983 July 1990; special assistant attorney
general, State of New Mexico, 1985 July 1990; special assistant attorney general,
State of Utah, 1986 July 1990; advisory panel, Federal Courts Study Committee,
1989 July 1990; partner, Pepper, Hamilton & Scheetz, 1987 July 1990; appointed
to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit by President
George W. Bush on July 16, 1990, and took oath of office on July 20,
1990.08
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SPOTSWOOD W. ROBINSON III, senior circuit judge; born in Richmond VA, July
26, 1916; son of Spottswood W., Jr., and Inez Robinson; attended public
schools of Richmond, VA, and Virginia Union University, Richmond, VA; LL.B. (magna
cum laude), Howard University, Washington, DC, 1939; LL.D., Virginia Union
University, 1955; LL.D., Howard University, 1981; LL.D., Georgetown University, 1983;
LL.D., New York Law School, 1986; married to Marian B. Wilkerson; children:
Spottswood W. IV, and Nina Cecelia (Mrs. Oswald G. Govan); admitted to Virginia
Bar, 1943; member of faculty, School of Law, Howard University, 1939 48 (on
leave 1947 48); practiced law in Richmond, VA, as a member of firm of Hill &
Robinson, later Hill, Martn & Robinson, 1943 55, and as sole practitioner,
1955 60; Dean of School of Law, Howard Universiry, 1960 63; member of United
States Commission on Civil Rights, 1961 63; vice president and general
counsel, Consolidated Bank and Trust Co., Richmond, VA, 1963 64; member of American
Bar Association, Virginia State Bar (judicial member), Bar Association of the
District of Columbia (honorary), Bar Association of the City of Richmond, VA
(honorary), fellow, Virginia Law Foundation, National Lawyers Club (honorary);
nominated by President Kennedy as judge of the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia on October 1, 1963; following adjournment of the Senate, received
recess appointment as judge of said court under commission of President Johnson
dated January 6, 1964, and took oath of office on January 7, 1964; nominated by
President Johnson as judge of said court on February 3, 1964, confirmed by
Senate on July 1, 1964, and took oath of office on July 7, 1964, under commission of
President Johnson dated July 2, 1964; nominated by President Johnson as judge of
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on October 6,
1966, confirmed by Senate on October 20, 1966, and took oath of office on November
9, 1966, under commision of President Johnson dated November 3, 1966 (served as
chief judge May 7, 1981 to July 25, 1986).
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GEORGE E. MacKINNON, senior circuit judge; born in St. Paul, MN,
April 22, 1906; son of James Alexander Wiley and Cora Blanche (Asselstine) Mac
Kinnon; married to Elizabeth Valentine Davis, August 20, 1938; children: Catherine
Alice, James Davis, and Leonard Davis; student, University of Colorado 1923 24;
LL.B., University of Minnesota, 1929; member of editorial board, University of
Minnesota Law Review, 1927 29; Western Conference Medal, 1929; assistant
football coach, University of Minnesota, 1928 32; admitted to Minnesota Bar, 1929;
assistant general counsel, Investors Syndicate, Minneapolis, MN, 1929 42;
elected Minnesota State representative, 29th district, 1934, 1936, 1938, 1940; served
with U.S. Navy Air Force, 1942 46, discharged as commander; cited for
meritorious service by commander Air Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet; Member, 80th Congress,
Third Minnesota District, 1947 48, Committee on Education and Labor; U.S.
District Attorney for Minnesota, 1953 58; Republican nominee for Governor of
Minnesota, 1958; special assistant to U.S. Attorney General, 1960; private practice
of law, 1949 53, 1958 61; general counsel, Investors Mutual, Minneapolis,
MN, 1961 69; appointed U.S. Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit by President Nixon under commission dated May 6, 1969, and
took oath of office on June 16, 1969; presiding judge, U.S. Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review, 1979 82; presiding judge, Division of Court
for Appointment of Independent Counsels, July 5, 1985 present; appointed member,
United States Sentencing Commission, 1985 present; member: Minnesota and
Hennepin County Bar Associations, U.S. Supreme Court Bar, American Bar Association;
member, Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Phi.
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OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CIRCUIT
Circuit Executive. Linda J. Finkelstein.
Clerk. Constance L. Dupre.
Chief Deputy Clerk. Marilyn R. Sargent.
Chief Staff Counsel. Mark J. Langer.
Congressional Directory
FEDERAL CIRCUIT
717 Madison Place 20439. Phone, 633 6550
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HELEN WILSON NIES, chief judge; born August 7, 1925, in Birmingham, AL;
daughter of George Earl and Lida Erckert Wilson; raised in the Midwest, graduating
from Mount Pleasant High School, Mount Pleasant, MI, 1942; University of
Michigan, B.A., with honors, 1946, 1987; University of Michigan Law School, J.D., with
honors, 1948; member: Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Order of the Coif;
admitted to the U.S. Supreme Court, Michigan and District of Columbia Bars; married
to John Dirk Nies, 1948; children: Dirk, Nancy, and Eric; Government service:
Department of Justice, 1948 51; Office of Price Stabilization, 1951 52; after
retirement to raise family, returned to private practice in 1961 with Woodson,
Pattishall & Garner, Chicago, IL, and Washington, DC; partner, Pattishall,
MacAuliffe & Hofstetter, 1964 77; partner, Howrey & Simon, Washington, DC, 1978
80; chairman, Trademarks Division, Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law Section,
American Bar Association, 1977 78; board of directors: American Patent Law
Association, 1979 80; 1976 78 and chairman, Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law
Section, 1975 76, Bar Association of the District of Columbia; United States
Trademark Association, 1976 78; committee of visitors, University of Michigan
Law School, 1975 78; board of directors, 1978 80, Woman Lawyer of the Year
Award, 1980, Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia; chairman,
National Coordinating Committee for Trademarks, 1979 80; member, U.S. Department of
Commerce Public Advisory Committee, 1976 80; representative of A.B.A, A.P.L.A,
and U.S.T.A. to various conferences of World Intellectual Property Organization,
Geneva, Switzerland, 1978 80; Judicial Conference of the United States
Committee on the Bicentennial of the Constitution (circuit delegate), 1986 present;
The American Law Institute for Restatement of the Law of Unfair Competition
(Advisor), 1986 present; recipient of Athena Award, University of Michigan, 1987;
U.S. Delegate; World Conference of Judges, Calcutta, India, 1987; frequent
lecturer on unfair competition law; president, Mohican Hills (Maryland) Citizens
Association, 1964; appointed judge of the U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
by President Carter on June 18, 1980; assumed duties on July 25, 1980; as of
October 1, 1982, continued in office as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982,
Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat. 50. Assumed position of chief judge on June 27,
1990.
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GILES SUTHERLAND RICH, circuit judge; born May 30, 1904, in Rochester, NY;
son of Giles Willard and Sarah Sutherland Rich; education: public and private
schools in Rochester, Horace Mann School for Boys in New York; Harvard College,
S.B., 1926, Columbia University School of Law, LL.B., 1929; admitted to the New
York Bar and commenced practice in New York City in 1929; married, to Gertrude
Verity Braun, 1931 (deceased), one daughter, Verity Sutherland (Verity S. Grinnell,
M.D.), married, 1953, Helen Gill Field of Milton, MA, and Washington, DC;
practiced patent and trademark law in New York City as partner in the firms of
Williams, Rich & Morse and Churchill, Rich, Weymouth & Engel; lecturer on patent law,
Columbia University, 1942 56; adjunct professor of patent law, Georgetown
University Law Center, 1963 69; honorary life member: Rochester, NY, and Los
Angeles Patent Law Associations; LL.D. (honoris causa) John Marshall Law School,
Chicago, 1981 and the George Washington University, 1989; member: American Bar
Association, the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, New York Patent,
Trademark and Copyright Law Association (past president), American Intellectual
Property Law Association, Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity; appointed judge of the
U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Eisenhower on July 19, 1956;
assumed duties as judge July 20, 1956; as of October 1, 1982, continued in
office as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to
section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat.
50.
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HOWARD THOMAS MARKEY, circuit judge; J.D., cum laude, editor-in-chief, Law
Review publication, Loyola University, Chicago, 1949; master's degree, John
Marshall Law School, 1950; Parker, Markey & Plyer, 1949 50, 1952 72; married
Elizabeth Pelletier, 1942; four children: Jeffrey, Christopher, Thomas (deceased),
and Jennifer Catherine; served 5 years Army Air Corps, World War II; jet test
pilot (1944); served 21 months in Korean war; major general, U.S. Air Force
Reserve (retired); DSM, LM, DFC, SM, PH, AM, BS, Mil. Merit Ulchi (Korea), and nine
service medals; George Washington Honor Medal, Freedoms Foundation, Valley Forge
(1964); Citation of Merit, John Marshall Law School (1972); Medal of Excellence,
Loyola University School of Law (Chicago, 1973); Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa,
New York Law School (1977); Jefferson Medal, New Jersey Patent Law Association
(1977); Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa, Western State University College of Law
(1982); Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1982);
Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa, The Dickinson School of Law (1982); Doctor of
Laws, Honoris Causa, Loyola University, Chicago (1983); Doctor of Laws, St. John's
University (1985); American Judicature Society's Herbert Harley Award (1985);
Thomas More Award, (1986) member: Judicial Conference of the United States, 1972
; Board of Trustees, Supreme Court Historical Society, 1985 ; chairman:
American Inns of Court Foundation, 1986 ; International Appellate Judges
Conference, 1987 ; liaison, Administrative Conference of the United States, 1981; past
chairman: Ethics Advisory Committee on Codes of Conduct; Ad Hoc Committee on
American Inns of Court; Circuit Chief Judges Conference; Committee on Bicentennial
of the Constitution; Science Advisory Committee, Federal Judicial Center; past
member: Executive Committee of the Judicial Conference; Committee on Court
Administration; Board of Certification for Circuit Executives; past coordinator,
Committee on Bicentennial of the Declaration of Independence; past liaison, The
Scientific Community; past president, American Inn of Court VI. Lecturer in law,
George Washington University; faculty, Federal Judicial Center; member: American Bar
Foundation (Fellow); American Law Institute; National Academy of Public
Administration; American Judicature Society; American Bar Association; Federal Bar
Association (chairman, Professional Ethics Committee, 1979 81; 1985 87); Board of
Advisors, Loyola University School of Law World Association of Judges, board of
advisors, Loyola University School of Law; World Association of Judges;
nominated, confirmed, appointed, and commissioned Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of
Customs and Patent Appeals, June 21, 1972; entered upon duties of that office on
June 26, 1972; continued in office as chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit, October 1, 1982. On June 27, 1990, he stepped aside as
Chief Judge and remained an active judge of the court.
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PAULINE NEWMAN, circuit judge; born June 20, 1927, in New York, NY;
daughter of Maxwell H. and Rosella G. Newman; B.A. degree from Vassar College in 1947;
M.A. in pure science from Columbia University in 1948; Ph.D. degree in chemistry
from Yale University in 1952; LL.B. degree from New York University School of
Law in 1958; admitted to the New York Bar in 1958 and to the Pennsylvania Bar in
1979; worked as research scientist for the American Cyanamid Co. from 1951 54;
worked for the FMC Corp. from 1954 84 as patent attorney and house counsel
and, since 1969, as Director of the Patent, Trademark, and Licensing Department;
on leave from FMC Corp. worked for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization as a science policy specialist in the Department of
Natural Sciences, 1961 62; offices in scientific and professional organizations
include: member of Council of the Patent, Trademark and Copyright Section of the
American Bar Association, 1982 84; board of directors of the American Patent Law
Association, 1981 84; vice president of the United States Trademark
Association, 1978 79, and member of the board of directors, 1975 76, 1977 79; board
of governors of the New York Patent Law Association, 1970 74; president of
the Pacific Industrial Property Association, 1978 80; executive committee of the
International Patent and Trademark Association, 1982 84; board of directors:
the American Chemical Society, 1973 75, 1976 78, 1979 81; American
Institute of Chemists, 1960 66, 1970 76; member: board of trustees of Philadelphia
College of Pharmacy and Science, 1983 84; patent policy board of State
University of New York, 1983 84; national board of Medical College of Pennsylvania,
1975 84; board of directors of Research Corp., 1982 84; governmental
committees include: State Department Advisory Committee on International Intellectual
Property, 1974 84; advisory committee to the Domestic Policy Review of
Industrial Innovation, 1978 79; special advisory committee on Patent Office Procedure
and Practice, 1972 74; member of the U.S. Delegation to the Diplomatic
Conference on the Revision of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial
Property, 1982 84; awarded Wilbur Cross Medal of Yale University Graduate School,
1989, the Jefferson Medal of the New Jersey Patent Law Association, 1988, and
the Award for Outstanding Contributions in the Intellectual Property Field of the
Pacific Industrial Property Association, 1987; appointed judge of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by President Reagan and entered upon duties
of that office on May 7, 1984.
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GLENN LeROY ARCHER, Jr., circuit judge; born March 21, 1929, in
Densmore, KS; son of Glenn L. Archer and Ruth Agnes Ford; educated in Kansas public
schools; Yale University, B.A., 1951; George Washington University Law School,
J.D., with honors, 1954; married to Carole Joan Thomas; children, Susan, Sharon,
Glenn III, and Thomas; First Lieutenant, Judge Advocate General's Office, U.S.
Air Force, 1954 56; Captain, U.S. Air Force Reserve, honorable discharge, 1962;
associate (1956 60) and partner (1960 81), Hamel, Park, McCabe & Saunders,
Washington, DC; nominated in 1981 by President Ronald Reagan to be Assistant
Attorney General for the Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice, and served in
that position from December 1981 to December 1985; nominated in October 1985 by
President Ronald Reagan to be circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, and assumed duties of the office on December 23, 1985; member: American
Bar Association, Federal Bar Association,, District of Columbia Bar
Association, Bar Association of the District of Columbia, Phi Alpha Delta.
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H. ROBERT MAYER, circuit judge; born in Buffalo, NY, February 21, 1941; son
of Haldane and Myrtle (Gaude) Mayer; educated in the public schools of
Lockport, New York; U.S. Military Academy, West Point, New York, B.S., 1963; and
Marshall-Wythe School of Law, The College of William and Mary in Virginia, J.D., 1971;
editor-in-chief, William and Mary Law Review, Omicron Delta Kappa;
admitted to practice in Virginia and the District of Columbia; Board of Directors,
William and Mary Law School Association, 1979 85; served in the Army of the United
States from 1963 until 1975, in the Infantry and the Judge Advocate General's
Corps; awarded the Bronze Star Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Army
Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, Combat Infantryman Badge, Parachutist Badge,
Ranger Tab, Ranger Combat Badge, Campaign and Service Ribbons; resigned from Regular
Army and was commissioned in the U.S. Army Reserve, currently Lieutenant
Colonel, retired; law clerk for Judge John D. Butzner, Jr., U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit, 1971 72; private practice with McGuire, Woods & Battle in
Charlottesville, Virginia, 1975 77; lecturer, University of Virginia School of
Law, 1975 77; Special Assistant to the Chief Justice of the United States,
Warren E. Burger, 1977 80; private practice with Baker & McKenzie in Washington,
DC, 1980 81; Deputy and Acting Special Counsel (by designation of the
President), United States Merit Systems Protection Board, 1981 82; appointed by
President Reagan to the U.S. Claims Court, 1982; Judicial Conference of the United
States Committee on the International Appellate Judges Conference, 1988 91,
Committee on Judicial Resources, 1990 present; appointed by President Reagan to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, June 15, 1987; assumed duties
of the office, June 19, 1987; married Mary Anne McCurdy, August 13, 1966; they
have two daughters, Anne Christian and Rebecca Paige.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
PAUL R. MICHEL, circuit judge; born February 3, 1941, in Philadelphia, PA;
son of Lincoln M. Michel and Dorothy Kelley; educated in public schools in Wayne
and Radnor, PA; Williams College, B.A., 1963; University of Virginia Law
School, J.D., 1966; married Sally Ann Clark, 1965 (divorced, 1987); children, Sarah
Elizabeth and Margaret Kelley; married Dr. Elizabeth Morgan, 1989; Second
Lieutenant, U.S. Army Reserve (1966 72); admitted to practice in Pennsylvania, 1967,
U.S. district and circuit courts, and U.S. Supreme Court, respectively, 1968, 69,
70; Assistant District Attorney, Philadelphia, PA (1967 71); Deputy District
Attorney for Investigations (1972 74); Assistant Watergate Special Prosecutor
(1974 75); Assistant Counsel, Senate Intelligence Committee (1975 76);
Deputy Chief, Public Integrity Section, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice
(1976 78); ``Koreagate'' prosecutor (1976 78); Associate Deputy Attorney
General (1978 81); Acting Deputy Attorney General (Dec. 1979 Feb. 1980);
Counsel and Administrative Assistant to Senator Arlen Specter (1981 88); nominated
December 19, 1987 by President Ronald Reagan to be circuit judge, U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit, confirmed by Senate on February 29, 1988, and
assumed duties of the office on March 8, 1988.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
S. JAY PLAGER, judge; son of A.L. and Clara (Matross) Plager; educated
public schools, Long Branch, NJ; University of North Carolina, A.B., 1952;
University of Florida, J.D. with high honors, 1958; Columbia University, LL.M., 1960; Phi
Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Order of the Coif, Holloway program, University of
North Carolina; Editor-in-Chief, University of Florida Law Review; Charles Evans
Hughes Fellow, Columbia University; married to Ilene H. Nagle; three children,
Anna, David, and Daniel; commissioned, Ensign U.S. Navy, 1952; active duty Korean
conflict; honorable discharge as Commander, USNR, 1971; professor, Faculty of
Law, University of Florida, 1958 64; University of Illinois, 1964 77; Indiana
University at Bloomington, 1977 89; visiting research professor of law,
University of Wisconsin, 1967 68; visiting fellow, Trinity College and Visiting
Professor, Cambridge University, 1989; Visiting Scholar, Stanford University Law
School, 1984 85; dean and professor, Indiana University at Bloomington, 1977
84; Counselor to the Under Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, 1986 87; Associate Director, Office of Management and Budget, Executive
Office of the President of the United States, 1987 88; Administrator, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Executive
Office of the President of the United States, 1988 89; circuit judge, U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, appointed by President George Bush November
1989; member: American Bar Association, Administrative Conference of the United
States, Florida Bar, Illinois Bar, Association of American Law Schools; author
of numerous articles and books.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
ALAN D. LOURIE, circuit judge; born January 13, 1935, in Boston, MA; son of
Joseph Lourie and Rose Hurwitz; educated in public schools in Brookline,
Massachusetts, Harvard University, B.A. (1956); University of Wisconsin, M.S. (1958);
University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D (1965); and Temple University, J.D. (1970);
married to the former L. Elizabeth D. Schwartz; children, Deborah L. Rapoport and
Linda S. Lourie; employed at Monsanto Company (chemist, 1957 59); Wyeth
Laboratories (chemist, literature scientist, patent liaison specialist, 1959 64);
SmithKline Beecham Corporation, (Patent Agent, 1964 70; Assistant Director,
Corporate Patents, 1970 76; Director, Corporate Patents, 1976 77; Vice President,
Corporate Patents and Trademarks and Associate General Counsel, 1977 90);
Vice Chairman of the Industry Functional Advisory Committee on Intellectual
Property Rights for Trade Policy Matters (IFAC 3) for the Department of Commerce and
the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (1987 90); Treasurer of the
Association of Corporate Patent Counsel (1987 89); President of the Philadelphia
Patent Law Association (1984 85); member of the Board of Directors of the American
Intellectual Property Law Association (formerly American Patent Law Association)
(1982 85); member of the U.S. delegation to the Diplomatic Conference on the
Revision of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property,
October-November 1982, March 1984; chairman of the Patent Committee of the Law
Section of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (1980 85); Member of the
American Bar Association, the American Chemical Society, and the Harvard Club of
Washington; admitted to: Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, U.S. District Court for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, U.S. Supreme Court; nominated
January 25, 1990, by President George Bush to be circuit judge, U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit, confirmed by Senate on April 5, 1990, and assumed
duties of the office on April 6, 1990.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
RAYMOND C. CLEVENGER III, circuit judge, born August 27, 1937, in Topeka,
KS; son of R. Charles Clevenger and Mary Margaret Ramsey Clevenger; educated in
the public schools in Topeka, Kansas, and at Phillips Academy, Andover,
Massachusetts; Yale University, B.A., 1959; Yale University, LLB, 1966; law clerk to
Justice White, October term, 1966; practice of law at Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering,
Washington, DC, 1967 90. Nominated by President George Bush on January 24, 1990,
confirmed on April 27, 1990 and assumed duties on May 3, 1990.
08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
RANDALL R. RADER, circuit judge; born April 21, 1949 in Hastings, NE, son
of Raymond A. Rader and Gloria R. Smith; higher education: Brigham Young
University, 1971 74, B.A. (magna cum laude), Phi Beta Kappa; George Washington
University Law Center, 1974 78, J.D.; married the former Sheryl Fluckiger, children:
Larke, Samuel, Lisa, and Andrew. 1975 78: Legislative Assistant to
Representative Virginia Smith; 1978 81: Legislative Director, Counsel, House Committee on
Ways and Means to Representative Philip M. Crane; 1981 86: General Counsel,
Chief Counsel, Subcommittee on the Constitution; 1987 88, Minority Chief
Counsel, Staff Director, Subcommittee on Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights, Senate
Committee on Judiciary; 1988 90: Judge, U.S. Claims Court; 1990 present,
Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, nominated by President
George Bush on June 12, 1990; confirmed by Senate August 3, 1990, sworn in
August 14, 1990, recipient: Outstanding Young Federal Lawyer Award by Federal Bar
Association, 1983, bar member: District of Columbia, 1978, Supreme Court of the
United States, 1984, U.S. Claims Court, 1988, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, 1990.
* * *
#ENDCARD
#CARD
WILSON COWEN, senior judge; born near Clifton, TX, December 20, 1905; son
of John R. and Florence (McFadden) Cowen; LL.B., University of Texas, 1928;
married to Florence Elizabeth Walker, April 18, 1930; children: Wilson Walker and
John Elwin; admitted to Texas Bar in 1928; private practice in Dalhart, TX, 1928
34; county judge, Dallam County, TX, 1935 38; State director for Texas, 1938
40, and regional director, 1940 42, Farm Security Administration, region XII;
commissioner, U.S. Court of Claims, 1942 43; assistant administrator, War
Food Administration, 1943 44; returned to the Court of Claims as commissioner in
1945, and was designated chief commissioner in 1959; nominated by President
Lyndon B. Johnson as chief judge, U.S. Court of Claims, June 16, 1964, and assumed
duties of the office July 14, 1964; retired from active service as chief judge,
March 1, 1977, and assumed status as senior judge; as of October 1, 1982,
continued in office as senior judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law
97 164, 96 Stat. 50.
08
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#CARD
BYRON G. SKELTON, senior judge; born in Florence, Williamson County, TX,
September 1, 1905; son of Clarence Edgar and Avis (Bowmer) Skelton; graduated from
Clarendon Texas High School in 1923; student at Baylor University, Waco, TX,
1923 24; B.A., 1927, M.A.,1928, and LL.B.,1931, University of Texas, Austin, TX;
married to Ruth Alice Thomas, November 28, 1931; children: Sue Helen (Mrs.
Jerry Ramsey) and Sandra (Mrs. Robert T. Farrell); admitted to State Bar of Texas in
1931; private practice of law in Temple, TX, 1931 42, 1945 66; county
attorney of Bell County, TX, 1934 38; special assistant to the U.S. Ambassador to
Argentina, 1942 45; city attorney of Temple, TX, 1945 60; admitted to
practice before U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (5th Circuit), 1937, U.S. Supreme Court,
1946, Federal Communications Commission, 1950, Tax Court of the United States,
1952, U.S. Treasury Department, 1952, Interstate Commerce Commission, 1953;
member: Bell-Lampasas-Mills Counties Texas Bar Association (past president), American
Bar Association, American Law Institute, American Judicature Society; served on
the Grievance Committee, Committee on Administration of Justice and Legislative
Committee of the State Bar of Texas; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Sigma Alpha, Delta
Theta Phi, and Sigma Delta Pi; appointed judge of the U.S. Court of Claims August
17, 1966, confirmed by the U.S. Senate, October 20, 1966, and assumed duties of
that office on November 9, 1966; retired from active service May 1, 1977, and
assumed senior judge status; continued in office as senior judge of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts
Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat. 50; office: W.R. Poage Federal
Building, Temple, TX 76504.
08
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#CARD
PHILLIP B. BALDWIN, senior judge; born December 23, 1924, in Marshall,
Harrison County, TX; son of Dr. Jack B. Baldwin and Lucille Jones Baldwin;
education: Marshall, TX, public schools, University of Texas, North Texas State Teachers
College, B.A. in biology, minor in chemistry, 1949, East Texas Baptist College,
Baylor Law School, South Texas School of Law; married to Mertie Bellamy Baldwin
of Marshall, TX, 1948; children: Mrs. Rebecca Baldwin Clark (Bruce C.), Mrs.
Nancy Baldwin Rohtert (Tom), Mrs. Jane Chrisenberry (Bradley S.), and Phillip B.,
Jr.; admitted to the Supreme Court of the State of Texas, 1952; admitted to the
U.S. Supreme Court, 1961; practiced law in Marshall, TX, as partner in law firm
of Baldwin & Curry; assistant district attorney, Marshall, Harrison County, TX,
1953 54; criminal district attorney of Harrison County, TX, 1954 58; member:
American Bar Association; Texas Bar Association; Northeast Texas Bar
Association; Harrison County Bar Association (secretary, 1957; president, 1958 60); Texas
State Bar Grievance Committee, 1st District, 1965 66; Alpha Tau Omega; Phi
Delta Phi; Elks Lodge; Veterans of Foreign Wars; American Legion; appointed judge
of the U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Johnson on July 25,
1968; assumed duties as judge, August 7, 1968; as of October 1, 1982, continued
in office as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit,
pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97 164,
96 Stat. 50; assumed senior circuit judge status as of November 25,
1986.08
#ENDCARD
#CARD
MARION T. BENNETT, senior judge; born in Buffalo, MO, June 6, 1914; son of
former Congressman Philip Allen Bennett and Mary Bertha (Tinsley) Bennett;
received A.B. degree from Southwest Missouri State University, 1935; J.D. degree,
Washington University School of Law; St. Louis, MO, 1938; married to June Young of
Hurley, MO, April 27, 1941; children: Ann (Mrs. Paul B. Guptill) and William
Philip; admitted to the Missouri Bar, 1938; private practice of law, Springfield,
MO, 1938 43; admitted to bar of the District of Columbia, 1956; elected to U.S.
House of Representatives (R), 6th District of Missouri, and served in the 78th,
79th, and 80th Congresses, 1943 49; appointed and served as a Commissioner,
U.S. Court of Claims, 1949 64, when appointed Chief Commissioner of the Trial
Division, serving until July 7, 1972; Colonel (ret.), USAFR, member: Reserve
Officers Association, American Bar Association, District of Columbia Bar
Association, National Council of the Federal Bar Association (1958 76), National Lawyers
Club, Former Members of Congress, Inc.; past president, Bethesda-Chevy Chase
chapter of the National Exchange Club; former trustee and chairman (two terms) of
the board, Chevy Chase United Methodist Church; nominated by President Richard
Nixon as judge of the U.S. Court of Claims on May 22, 1972, confirmed by the
Senate on June 28, 1972, and assumed the duties of that office from July 7, 1972 to
October 1, 1982; circuit judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, as
of October 1, 1982; senior circuit judge as of March 1, 1986.
08
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#CARD
JACK R. MILLER, senior judge; born June 6, 1916, Chicago IL, moved to Sioux
City, IA, with parents in 1932; A.B. (cum laude), Creighton University (1938);
M.A. (Knights of Columbus Fellow), Catholic University (1939); J.D., Columbia
University (1946); post-graduate study, State University of Iowa College of Law
(1946); LL.D. (honorary), Creighton University (1966), Loras College (1967), Iowa
Wesleyan College (1969), and Yonsei University (Korea) (1976); served over 4
years with U.S. Air Force during World War II, assignments including faculty of
U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, KS, and
China-Burma-India Theater of Operations; brigadier general, U.S. Air Force Reserve (ret.);
married to Isabelle (Jerry) Browning of Windber, PA, 1942; children: Janice (Mrs.
Robert Amott), Mrs. Judy Flynn, James, and Jaynie (Mrs. A. H. Studenmund);
member: Iowa (1946), Nebraska (1946), and District of Columbia (1948) bars and bar
associations, American Bar Association, American Law Institute (life), and
American Patent Law Association; attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue
Service, Washington, DC, 1947 48; professorial lecturer in taxation, George
Washington University, 1948; assistant professor of law, University of Notre Dame
College of Law, 1948 49; private practice of tax law, Sioux City, IA, 1949
60; member of Iowa House of Representatives, 1955 56, and Iowa State Senate,
1957 60; U.S. Senator from Iowa, 1961 73; nominated judge of the U.S. Court of
Customs and Patent Appeals by President Nixon on June 28, 1973, and confirmed by
U.S. Senate same date; assumed duties July 6, 1973, under commission of same
date; continued in office October 1, 1982, as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act
of 1982, Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat. 50.
08
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#CARD
DANIEL M. FRIEDMAN, senior circuit judge; born New York, NY, February 8,
1916; son of Henry M. and Julia (Freedman) Friedman; attended the Ethical Culture
Schools in New York City; A.B., Columbia College, 1937; LL.B., Columbia Law
School, 1940; married to Leah L. Lipson (deceased), January 16, 1955; married to
Elizabeth M. Ellis, October 18, 1975; admitted to New York Bar, 1941; private
practice, New York, NY, 1940 42; legal staff, Securities and Exchange Commission,
1942, 1946 51; served in the Army of the United States, 1942 46; Appellate
Section, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1951 59; assistant to
the Solicitor General, 1959 62; second assistant to the Solicitor General, 1962
68; First Deputy Solicitor General, 1968 78; Acting Solicitor General,
January March 1977; nominated by President Carter as chief judge of the U.S. Court
of Claims, March 22, 1978; confirmed by the Senate, May 17, 1978, and assumed
duties of the office on May 24, 1978; as of October 1, 1982, continued in office
as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to
section 165, Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat.
50.
08
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#CARD
EDWARD SAMUEL SMITH, senior judge; born in Birmingham, AL, March 27, 1919;
son of Joseph Daniel Zadock and Sarah Jane (Tatum) Smith; educated in the public
schools of Jefferson County, AL, Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn
University), 1936 38 (mechanical engineering), University of Virginia, B.A., 1941,
and University of Virginia Law School, LL.B. (now J.D.), 1947; admitted to the
practice of law in Virginia, 1947, the District of Columbia, 1948, and Maryland,
1953; associate and partner, Blair, Korner Doyle & Appel, Washington, 1947
54; partner, Blair, Korner, Doyle & Worth, 1954 61; chief of the Trial Section
(1961) and Assistant for Civil Trials (1962 63) in the Tax Division, U.S.
Department of Justice; partner and head of the tax department, Piper & Marbury,
Baltimore, 1963 78 (managing partner 1971 74); enlisted USNR, June 1941, active
duty September 1941; separated as lieutenant, USNR, February 1946 and retired as
commander, USNR, July 1, 1968; member, American Bar Association (Section of
Taxation chairman), Committee on Cooperation With State and Local Bar Associations,
1972 74), Section of Litigation (chairman, Committee on Tax Litigation, 1977
78), Section of Corporation, Banking and Business Law, Section of Economics of
Law Practice), Maryland State Bar Association (chairman, Section of Taxation,
1971 72), the Bar Association of the City of Baltimore, Baltimore Association of
Tax Counsel, National Tax Association Tax Institute of America, Federal Bar
Association, the Bar Association of the District of Columbia, Virginia State Bar,
District of Columbia Bar, permanent member Judicial Conference of the Fourth
Circuit, and chairman, 1979 Court of Claims Judicial Conference; director, Roland
Park Civic League, Inc., 1977 78; president, Saint Andrew's Society of
Washington, DC, 1956 58; married to Innes Adams Comer, 1942; children: Edward S., Jr.,
and Innes Comer (Mrs. Ronald F. Richards); recommended for appointment to the
U.S. Court of Claims by the U.S. Committee on Selection of Federal Judicial
Officers and nominated by President Carter to be an associate judge, U.S. Court of
Claims on June 30, 1978, confirmed by the U.S. Senate on July 26, 1978,
commissioned July 28, 1978, and took the oath of office and assumed duties of the office on
August 3, 1978; as of October 1, 1982, continued in office as judge of the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, pursuant to section 165, Federal
Courts Improvement Act of 1982, Public Law 97 164, 96 Stat. 50, assumed senior
status June 1, 1989.
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OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL
CIRCUIT Clerk. Francis X. Gindhart, 633 6550.
Chief Deputy Clerk. Diane M. Frye, 633 6550.
Administrative Services Officer. Ruth A. Butler, 633 6588.
Senior Technical Assistant. Melvin L. Halpern, 633 6564.
Librarian. Patricia McDermott, 633 5871.
Congressional Directory
U.S. Courthouse, Third Street and Constitution Avenue 20001 Phone, 535
3594
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AUBREY E. ROBINSON, Jr., chief judge; born in Madison, NJ, March 30,
1922; son of Aubrey E. and Mabel J. Robinson; married to Sara E. Payne
(deceased), December 31, 1946; children: Paula Elaine Collins and Sheryl Louise; married
to Doris A. Washington, March 17, 1973; educated in the public schools of
Madison; NJ; B.A., Cornell University, 1943; LL.B., Cornell Law School, 1947; served
in the U.S. Army, 1943 46; member of the bars of the State of New York and the
District of Columbia; engaged in the private practice of law in the District of
Columbia, 1948 65; board of trustees, United Planning Organization, 1963 66;
board of directors: Family Service Association of America, 1958 67; Family
and Child Services of Washington, DC, 1954 63; Washington Action for Youth, 1962
64; District of Columbia Public Welfare Advisory Council, 1963 65; Eugene
and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation, 1969 85; Consortium of Universities of the
Washington Metropolitan Area, 1969 74; American Bar Association Advisory Committee
on Judges' Function, 1970 72; American Bar Association Committee on Courts and
the Community, 1972 78; Judicial Conference Committee on Court Facilities and
Design, 1971 78; chairman, National Conference of Federal Trial Judges, 1973
74; Cornell University Council, 1976 78; Judicial Conference Committee on
the Administration of Criminal Law, 1976 82; adjunct professor, Washington
College of Law, American University, 1975 84; board of directors, Federal Judicial
Center, 1978 82; Cornell University Board of Trustees, 1982 present; member,
Judicial Conference of the United States, 1982 present; Executive Committee,
Judicial Conference of the United States, 1985 90; associate judge of the
Juvenile Court of the District of Columbia, 1965 66; appointed judge of the U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia by President Lyndon B. Johnson on
November 3, 1966; chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia since September 20, 1982.
08
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GERHARD A. GESELL, judge; born June 16, 1910, Los Angeles, CA; son of Dr.
Arnold L. and Beatrice Chandler Gesell; married to Marion Holliday Pike,
September 19, 1936; children: Peter Gerhard, and Patricia Pike; graduate Phillips
Andover Academy, 1928; A.B., Yale, 1932, LL.B., Yale, 1935; attorney with Securities
and Exchange Commission at Washington, DC, 1935 40; technical adviser to
chairman, 1940 41; acted for Commissioner as special counsel, Temporary National
Economic Committee, to study legal reserve life insurance companies; partner in
private practice, Covington & Burling, Washington, DC, 1941 67; member, American
Bar Association; fellow, American College of Trial Lawyers, American Law
Institute, District of Columbia Bar Association, Phi Delta Phi; honorary member,
executive committee, Yale Law School Association; received Yale Law School Citation of
Merit, 1967; chief assistant counsel Joint Congressional Committee on
Investigation of Pearl Harbor Attack, 1945 46; chairman, President's Commission on
Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces, 1962 65; member, Lawyer's Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law, 1963 67; chairman, Committee on the Administration of
Justice of the Judicial Conference of the District of Columbia, 1966 67;
director, Federal Judicial Center, 1970 72; member, District of Columbia Commission on
Judicial Disability and Tenure, 1975 80; recipient of the Eighth Annual
Edward J. Devitt Distinguished Service to the Justice Award, 1989; nominated by
President Lyndon B. Johnson November 29, 1967, confirmed by the Senate December 7,
1967, and took oath of office January 2, 1968, under Presidential Commission of
December 11, 1967.
08
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CHARLES R. RICHEY, judge; born in Logan County, OH, October 16, 1923; son
of Paul D. and Miriam Blaine Richey; married to Agnes Mardelle White, March 25,
1950; sons: Charles R., Jr., and William P.; A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University,
1945; LL.B., Case Western Reserve University School of Law, 1948; member, bars of
Ohio, District of Columbia, Maryland, and U.S. Supreme Court; legislative counsel,
Representive Frances P. Bolton, 1948 49; private law practice, Washington, DC
area and Maryland 1950 71; taught speech and was debate coach at American
University, 1954 55; adjunct faculty, Georgetown University Law Center on Trial
Advocacy and Practice, 1976 present; general counsel, Maryland Public Service
Commission by appointment of Governor of Maryland, 1967 71; served as member
of Montgomery County, Maryland Board of Appeals, 1965 67, and chairman 1966
67; elected council, American Bar Association, Section of Criminal Justice, 1976
80; chairman, Advisory Board, Project Advocate, a national criminal justice
civil and legal aid project for ex-offenders, 1976 79; chairman, 1981, and
member, Executive Committee, National Conference of Federal Trial Judges of the
American Bar Association, 1976 82; elected fellow, American Bar Foundation from
District of Columbia, 1979; Council Member, Judicial Administrative Division,
American Bar 1980 82; elected member, ABA House of Delegates, 1981 85, faculty
member, National Judicial College, Reno, NY 1973 75 teaching Administrative Law
for the Administrative Law Judges of the United States; Faculty and Lecturer,
Federal Judicial Center for the Federal Judges, 1976 86; Faculty lecturer, ALl
ABA, P.L.I., ATLA Advocacy Institutes, 1973 present; Attorney General's
Advocacy Institute, 1977 83; and various Bar, Law School and Civic Groups
throughout the United States, 1972 to present; nominated by President on April l9, 1971,
U.S. District Judge for the District of Columbia, confirmed April 29, 1971, and
entered on duty May 19, 1971, under a commission dated May 5, 1971; sat by
designation as membe,r U.S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit,
1972 75, 1977 85; designated member of the U.S. Temporary Emergency Court of
Appeals, 1983 84 by Chief Justice of the United States; member of the Committee
on Criminal Law and Administration of Probation System of the Judicial
Conference of the United States (1984 89).
08
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LOUIS FALK OBERDORFER, judge; born in Birmingham, AL, February 21, 1919;
son of A. Leo and Stella Falk Oberdorfer; married to Elizabeth Weil of Montgomery,
AL, July 31, 1941; children: John, Kathryn, Thomas, and William; educated in
the public schools of Birmingham, AL; A.B., Dartmouth College, 1939; LL.B., Yale
Law School, 1946 (editor in chief, Yale Law Journal, 1941); admitted to the bar
of Alabama, 1947, District of Columbia, 1949; served in the U.S. Army, rising
from private to captain, 1941 45; law clerk to Justice Hugo L. Black, 1946 47;
attorney, Paul Weiss, Wharton, Garrison, 1947 51; partner, Wilmer, Cutler &
Pickering, and predecessor firms, 1951 61 and 1965 77; Assistant Attorney
General, Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1961 65; president, District of
Columbia Bar, 1977; counsel and transition chief executive officer, Legal
Services Corp., 1975; cochairman, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, 1967
69; member, Advisory Committee on Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 1963
84; visiting lecturer, Yale Law School, 1966, 1971; appointed judge of the U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia by President Jimmy Carter on October
11, 1977, and took oath of office on November 1, 1977.
08
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HAROLD H. GREENE, judge; born in Frankfurt, Germany, February 6, 1923; son
of Irving and Edith Greene; married to Evelyn Schroer, September 19, 1948;
children: Michael David and Stephanie Alison; education: George Washington
University, 1949; J.D., George Washington University Law School, 1952; served in U.S.
Army, 1944 46; admitted to the bars of the District of Columbia, State of
Maryland, U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth
Circuits, and the U.S. Court of Military Appeals; member: American Bar Association,
Bar Association of the District of Columbia, World Trial Judges Association,
American Judicature Society, National Lawyers' Club, Order of the Coif, Phi Delta
Phi legal fraternity; assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, 1953
57; Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of Justice, 1957; Civil Rights
Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1958 65; associate judge, District of
Columbia Court of General Sessions, 1965 66; chief judge, District of Columbia
Court of General Sessions, 1966 71; chief judge, Superior Court of the District
of Columbia, 1971 78; appointed judge of the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia by President Carter, May 17, 1978, and took oath of office June
22, 1978.
08
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JOHN GARRETT PENN, judge; born in Pittsfield, MA, March 19, 1932; son of
John and Eugenie Heyliger Penn; married to Ann Elizabeth Rollison of Lenox, MA,
May 7, 1966; children: John, Karen, and David; educated in the public schools of
Pittsfield, MA; A.B., University of Massachusetts (Amherst), 1954; LL.B., Boston
University School of Law, 1957; admitted to bars of Massachusetts, 1957 and
District of Columbia, 1970; served in U.S. Army, first lieutenant, Judge Advocate
General Corps, 1958 61; attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Tax Division, 1961
70; trial attorney, 1961 65, reviewer, 1965 68, assistant chief, 1968
70; National Institute of Public Affairs Fellow, Woodrow Wilson School of Public
and International Affairs, Princeton University, 1967 68; appointed judge,
Superior Court of the District of Columbia by President Richard Nixon, October
1970; appointed judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by President
Jimmy Carter, March 23, 1979, and took oath of office, May 15, 1979.
08
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JOYCE HENS GREEN, judge; born in New York, NY, November 13, 1928; daughter
of James S. and Hedy Bucher Hens; married to Samuel Green (deceased), September
25, 1965; children: Michael Timothy, June Heather, and James Harry; education:
B.A., University of Maryland, 1949; J.D., George Washington University Law
School, 1951; admitted to bars of the District of Columbia, 1951 and Virginia, 1955;
member: American Bar Association, District of Columbia Bar, Bar Association of
the District of Columbia, Virginia State Bar, Arlington County, VA, Bar
Association, Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia (president, 1960 62),
Federal Judges Association, board of directors; American Judicature Society,
fellow: American Bar Foundation, American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, Kappa Beta
Pi, Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity, honorary member, National Lawyers Club;
Lawyers' Club of Washington; George Washington Law Alumni Association (secretary);
private law practice, 1951 68; partner, Green & Green, 1966 68; associate
judge, District of Columbia Court of General Sessions, 1968 71; associate judge,
Superior Court of the District of Columbia, 1971 79; appointed judge, U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia by President Carter, May 11, 1979, and
took oath of office, June 27, 1979.
08
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NORMA HOLLOWAY JOHNSON, judge; born in Lake Charles, LA; daughter of H. Lee
and Beatrice Williams Holloway; married to Julius A. Johnson of St. Louis, MO,
June 18, 1964; educated in the public schools of Washington, DC; B.S.,
University of the District of Columbia, 1955; J.D., Georgetown University Law Center,
1962; admitted to bar of the District of Columbia, 1962; attorney, Civil Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, 1963 67; Office of Corporation Counsel, District
of Columbia, 1967 70; judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia, 1970
80; appointed judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by
President Jimmy Carter, May 12, 1980, and took oath of office, July 8, 1980.
08
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THOMAS PENFIELD JACKSON, judge; born Washington, DC, January 10, 1937; A.B.
Dartmouth College, 1958; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1964; line officer aboard
U.S. Navy destroyer, 1958 61; admitted to bars of District of Columbia (1965),
Maryland (1966), and U.S. Supreme Court (1970); private practice of law in the
District of Columbia, Maryland, with firm of Jackson & Campbell, P.C., 1965 82;
president, bar association of the District of Columbia, 1981 82; fellow,
American College of Trial Lawyers; appointed judge of U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia by President Ronald Reagan, June 25, 1982.
08
THOMAS F. HOGAN, judge; born in Washington, DC, May 31, 1938; son of Adm.
Bartholomew W. (MC) (USN) Surgeon Gen., USN, 1956 62, and Grace (Gloninger)
Hogan; married to Martha L. Wyrick (M.D.), July 16, 1966; one son, Thomas Garth;
Georgetown Preparatory School, 1956; A.B., Georgetown University (classical),
1960; master's program, American and English literature, George Washington
University, 1960 62; J.D., Georgetown University, 1966; St. Thomas More Fellow,
Georgetown University Law Center, 1965 66; American Jurisprudence Award: Corporation
Law; member: bars of the District of Columbia and Maryland; law clerk to Hon.
William B. Jones, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, 1966 67;
counsel, Federal Commission on Reform of Federal Criminal Laws, 1967 68; engaged
in private practice of law in the District of Columbia and Maryland, 1968 82;
adjunct professor of law, Potomac School of Law, 1977 79; adjunct professor of
law, Georgetown University Law Center, 1986 88; public member, officer
evaluation board, U.S. Foreign Service, 1973; member: American Bar Association (State
Chairman, Maryland Drug Abuse Education Program, Young Lawyers Section, 1970
73), District of Columbia Bar Association, Bar Association of the District of
Columbia, Maryland State Bar Association, Montgomery County Bar Association, served
on many committees, National Institute for Trial Advocacy, Defense Research
Institute; chairman, board of directors, Christ Child Institute for Emotionally Ill
Children, 1971 74; member, The Barrister Lawyers' Club, USDC Executive
Committee; Conference Committee on Administration of Federal Magistrates System 1988
91; Chairman Inter-Circuit Assignment Committee, 1990 ; appointed judge of
the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by President Ronald Reagan on
October 4, 1982.
08
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STANLEY S. HARRIS, judge; born in Washington, DC, October 19, 1927; son of
Stanley Raymond and Elizabeth Sutherland Harris; married to Rebecca L. Ashley,
August 1, 1964; sons: Scott S., Todd A., and Mark A.; educated at Landon School
(Bethesda, MD) and in District of Columbia public schools; U.S. Army (sergeant),
1945 47; attended Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1945; B.S., University of
Virginia, 1951, LL.B., 1953 (articles editor, Virginia Law Review); associate and
partner, Hogan & Hartson, Washington, DC, 1953 70; judge, Superior Court of
the District of Columbia (appointed by President Nixon), 1971 72 (attended
National College of State Judiciary, Reno, NV, in 1971); judge, District of Columbia
Court of Appeals (appointed by President Nixon), 1972 82 (attended Senior
Appellate Judges' Seminar, N.Y.U., 1973); U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia
(appointed by President Reagan), 1978 83; appointed by President Reagan on
November 14, 1983, to become U.S. District Judge for the District of Columbia,
took oath of office December 2, 1983; member: Committee on Criminal Law and
Probation Administration of the Judicial Conference, of the U.S., 1988 present;
District of Columbia Bar, the Bar Association of the District of Columbia (chairman,
Annual Convention Committee, 1969 70; Board of Directors, 1969 71); the
American Bar Association; Federal Communications Bar Association (secretary, 1964
66, Executive Committee, 1966 69); board of trustees, Landon School
Corporation, 1965 68, 1983 85; board of directors, Newfound Corporation, 1969 71;
Capital Beltway Hockey League, 1973 81 (president, 1979 81); member: Chevy
Chase Club, National Lawyers Club, The Barristers, Lawyers Club of Washington, Phi
Kappa Sigma, The Raven Society, and Pi Delta Epsilon.
08
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GEORGE H. REVERCOMB, judge; born in Charleston, WV, June 3, 1929; son of
Chapman and Sara Hughes Revercomb; married to McCall Henderson, October 10, 1960;
A.B., Princeton University, 1950; J.D., University of Virginia Law School, J.D.
1955; LL.M., in the Judicial Process, 1982; served in the U.S. Air Force, 1951
53; member; bars of Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia;
engaged in private practice of law, corporate law department and government service
in Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, 1955 69; Associate
Deputy Attorney General of the United States, 1969 70; visiting lecturer,
University of Virginia Law School, 1976 85; chairman, National Conference of State
Trial Judges, American Bar Association, 1984 85; appointed judge of the
Superior Court of the District of Columbia by President Richard M. Nixon and served
1970 85; appointed judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
by President Ronald Reagan on December 17, 1985.
08
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STANLEY SPORKIN, judge; born in Philadelphia, PA, February 7, l932, son of
Hon. Maurice W. Sporkin, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia, PA,
and Ethel Sporkin (deceased), married to Judith Sally Imber, September 30, 1955;
children: Elizabeth Michael, Daniel Paul, and Thomas Abraham; A.B., Pennsylvania
State University, 1953; LL.B., Yale University, 1957; member, Pennsylvania and
Delaware Bars, 1958, and the District of Columbia Bar, 1963; admitted to
practice before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, 1958, Delaware Supreme Court, 1958,
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, 1963, U.S. Supreme Court, 1964,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 1975, and U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit, 1978; served as law clerk to Hon. Caleb M. Wright, Chief
Judge of the District Court for the District of Delaware, 1957 60; served as law
clerk to Hon. Paul Leahy, Senior Judge for the U.S. District Court for the
District of Delaware, 1960; practiced law as an associate in the firm of Baley
Wollenberg & Sader, 1960 61; Securities and Exchange Commission, 1961 81 (staff
attorney, Special Studies of the Securities Markets, 1961 63; Division of
Trading and Markets, 1963; Chief, Branch of Enforcement, 1963 66; Chief Enforcement
Attorney, Office of Enforcement, 1966 67; Assistant Director, Enforcement,
1966 68; Associate Director, Enforcement, 1968 72; Deputy Director of
Enforcement, 1972 74; Director of Enforcement, 1974 81); General Counsel, Central
Intelligence Agency, 1981 86; appointed judge of the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia by President Ronald Reagan on December 17, 1985.
08
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ROYCE C. LAMBERTH, judge; born in San Antonio, TX, July 16, 1943; son of
Nell Elizabeth Synder and Larimore S. Lamberth, Sr.; married Janis Kay Jost, June
17, 1979; South San Antonio High School, 1961; B.A., University of Texas at
Austin, 1966; LL.B., University of Texas School of Law, 1967; permanent president,
Class of 1967, University of Texas School of Law; 1967 74, U.S. Army (Captain,
Judge Advocate General's Corps, 1968 74; Vietnam Service Medal, Air Medal,
Bronze Star with Oak Leaf Cluster, Meritorious Service Medal with Oak Leaf
Cluster); 1974 87, Assistant U.S. attorney, District of Columbia (Chief, Civil
Division, 1978 87); President's Reorganization Project, Federal Legal Representation
Study, 1978 79; honorary faculty, Army Judge Advocate General's School, 1976;
Attorney General's Special Commendation Award; Attorney General's John Marshall
Award, 1982; vice chairman, Armed Services and Veterans Affairs Committee,
Section on Administrative Law, American Bar Association, 1979 82, chairman, 1983
84; chairman, Professional Ethics Committee, 1989 present; co-chairman,
Committee of Article III Judges, Judiciary Section 1989 present; chairman, Federal
Litigation Section, 1986 87; chairman, Federal Rules Committee, 1985 86;
deputy chairman, Council of the Federal Lawyer, 1980 83; chairman, Career Service
Committee, Federal Bar Association, 1978 80; appointed judge, U.S. District
Court for the District Court for the District of Columbia by President Ronald
Reagan, November 16, 1987.
* * *
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WILLIAM BENSON BRYANT, senior judge; born Wetumpka, AL, September 18, 1911;
son of Benson and Alberta Bryant; married to Astaire A. Gonzalez, August 25,
1934; children: Astaire and William, Jr.; educated in the public schools of
Washington, DC; Howard University, A.B., 1932; Howard University Law School, LL.B.,
1936; served in U.S. Army, World War II, 1943 47; member of the bar of the
District of Columbia and of the Supreme Court of the United States; assistant U.S.
attorney for the District of Columbia, 1951 54; engaged in the private practice
of law in District of Columbia as partner in firm of Houston, Bryant & Gardner,
1954 65; member: Committee on Admissions and Grievances of U.S. District Court
for District of Columbia, 1959 65; District of Columbia Board of Appeals and
Review, District of Columbia Special Police Trial Board, American Bar
Association, National Lawyers' Club (honorary); appointed judge of the U.S. District Court
for the District of Columbia Circuit by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 11,
1965, and entered upon the duties of that office on August 16, 1965; served as
chief judge, 1977 81; took senior judge status on January 31, 1982.
08
OLIVER GASCH, senior judge; born Washington, DC, May 4, 1906; son of Herman
E. and Marie (Manning) Gasch; married Sylvia Meyer of Washington, DC; one son,
Michael Barrett Gasch; educated in the public schools of the District of
Columbia; Princeton University, A.B., 1928; George Washington University Law School,
LL.B., 1932; admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia, 1931; private
practice, 1931 37; assistant corporation counsel, District of Columbia 1937 53;
principal assistant, U.S. attorney, 1953 56; U.S. attorney for the District of
Columbia, 1956 61; partner, Craighill, Aiello, Gasch & Craighill, 1961 65;
appointed judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by
President Johnson and entered upon the duties of that office August 16, 1965; presiding
judge, special panel, Regional Rail Reorganization Court; member, general
panel, Regional Rail Reorganization Court; president, District of Columbia Bar
Association, 1964 65; member, House of Delegates, American Bar Association, 1964
65; fellow, American College of Trial Lawyers; American Law Institute; fellow,
American Bar Foundation; chairman, Committee of the General Counsel, Federal Bar
Association; the Barristers (past president); the Lawyers Club; the National
Lawyers Club; the Counsellors Club; member, Phi Delta Phi Legal Fraternity; Order of
the Coif; general counsel, Interstate Commission on Potomac River (1940 60);
served in AUS 1942 46, was separated as lieutenant colonel.
08
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JOHN HELM PRATT, senior judge; born in Portsmouth, NH, November 17, 1910;
son of Harold Boswell and Marguerite (Rockwell) Pratt; A.B. (cum laude), Harvard,
1930, LL.B., 1934; married to Bernice G. Safford, October 25, 1938; children:
Clare (Sister Clare Pratt, RSCJ), Lucinda (Mrs. Daniel Pearlman), John H., Jr.,
Patricia (Mrs. George Moriarity, Jr.), and Mary (Mrs. Wm. DeLong); admitted to
bars of District of Columbia, 1935, Maryland, 1950; partner in the firm of Morris,
Pearce, Gardner & Pratt, 1954 68; served as captain, U.S. Marines, 1942 46,
Pacific theater; decorated Bronze Star, Purple Heart, two Presidential Unit
citations; chairman of the board of trustees, Legal Aid Agency of the District of
Columbia, 1967 68; member of American Bar Association (House of Delegates 1963
64); fellow, American Bar Foundation, Bar Association of the District of
Columbia (president, 1963 64), American Judicature Society, Harvard Law School
Association of District of Columbia (president, 1952 53); Barristers (president,
1959); Lawyers (president, 1987); U.S. Judicial Conference Committee on Judicial
Ethics (chairman, 1984 90); nominated by President Johnson judge of the U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia on April 11, 1968, and took oath of
office on June 12, 1968.
08
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JUNE LAZENBY GREEN, senior judge; born in Arnold, MD, January 23, 1914;
daughter of Eugene H. Lazenby and Jessie (Briggs) Lazenby; married to John Cawley
Green, September 5, 1936; J.D., American University (Washington College of Law),
1941; private practice of law in Maryland and District of Columbia for
approximately 25 years; bar examiner for the District of Columbia; member: Committee on
Admissions and Grievances of U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia,
1963 68; president, Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia, 1955
57; director, Bar Association of the District of Columbia, 1966 68; founder,
National Lawyers Club, Washington, DC; member: Kappa Beta Pi legal sorority,
American Bar Association; Bar Association of the District of Columbia, and Maryland
State Bar Association; appointed judge of U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia by President Johnson, April 11, 1968, and took oath of office June
18, 1968; also appointed judge of the Regional Rail Reorganization Court, April
1987.
08
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THOMAS A. FLANNERY, senior judge; born in Washington, DC, May 10 1918;
married to Rita Sullivan; children: Irene and Thomas, Jr.; educated in the parochial
schools in Washington; LL.B. Columbus University Law School (now Catholic
University), 1940; admitted to the District of Columbia Bar, 1940; served in the U.S.
Air Force as a combat intelligence officer, 1942 45; returned to Government
service and served as assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, 1950
62; engaged in general practice of law as partner in firm of Hamilton &
Hamilton, 1962 69; nominated U.S. Attorney, for the District of Columbia by
President Nixon, 1969; served as U.S. attorney, 1969 71; member of the Judicial
Conference of the District of Columbia Circuit for many years; served on a number of
committees, including Committee on the Administration of Justice of the Judicial
Council; active in the District of Columbia Bar Association; member, board of
directors of the District of Columbia Bar Association; served as member of the
board of trustees of the Legal Aid Agency of the District of Columbia; served as a
special hearing officer for the Department of Justice, 1964 68, in
conscientious objector cases; lectured at the Northwestern University School of Law for
many years; fellow in the American College of Trial Lawyers; nominated judge, U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia, November 18, 1971, by President
Richard M. Nixon, confirmed by the Senate on December 1, 1971.
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OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA Clerk. Nancy Mayer-Whittington.
Chief Deputy Clerk. [Vacant.]
United States Magistrates: [Vacant]; Patrick J. Attridge; Deborah A.
Robinson.
Bankruptcy Judge. S. Martin Teel, Jr.
Chief Probation Officer. Eugene Wesley, Jr.
Deputy Chief Probation Officer. [Vacant.]
Congressional Directory
One Federal Plaza, New York, NY 10007. Phone, 212 264 2900
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EDWARD D. RE, chief judge; born in Italy, October 14, 1920; derivative
citizenship, 1928; educated in public schools, city of New York; B.S. (cum laude),
St. John's University, New York, 1941; LL.B. (summa cum laude), St. John's
University, New York, 1943; J.S.D. New York University, New York, 1950; honorary
degrees: Ped.D., University of Aquila, Italy; LL.D., St. Mary's College, Notre Dame,
IN; LL.D., St. John's University, New York; LL.D., Maryville College, St. Louis,
MO; LL.D., New York Law School; LL.D., Brooklyn College of the City University
of New York; LL.D., Nova University, Fort Lauderdale, FL; LL.D., Roger Williams
College, Providence, RI; L.L.D., Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle, PA; L.L.D.,
Seton Hall University, Newark, NJ; L.H.D., DePaul University, Chicago, IL;
L.H.D., College of Staten Island, City University of New York, NY; L.H.D., Pace
University, New York, NY; D.C.S., University of Verona, Italy; D.J., University of
Bologna, Italy; admitted to New York Bar, 1943; U.S. Air Force, 1943 47;
colonel, Judge Advocate General's Department, USAF (ret.); appointed to faculty St.
John's University School of Law, 1947; professor of law, 1951 61; adjunct
professor, 1969 80; distinguished professor of law, 1980 present; Martin
Distinguished Visiting Professor, New York Law School, 1982 90; visiting professor of
law, Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, DC, 1962 67; member: American
Bar Association; Association of the Bar of the City of New York; Brooklyn Bar
Association; president, Federal Bar Council, 1973 74; American Law Institute;
American Society of International Law; president: American Foreign Law
Association, 1971 73; American Association for the Comparative Study of Law, 1971
present; American Justinian Society of Jurists, 1974 76; and Scribes, 1978 79;
appointed by Attorney General of the United States, special hearing officer,
Department of Justice, 1956 61; member, Board of Higher Education of the City of
New York, 1958 69, emeritus, 1969 present; member of Advisory Committee on
Appellate Rules, Judicial Conference of the United States, 1976 88; chairman,
Advisory Committee on Experimentation in the Law, Federal Judicial Center, 1978
81; statutory member of the Judicial Conference of the United States, 1986
present; appointed by President Kennedy, chairman, Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission of the United States, 1961; reappointed by President Kennedy, 1963;
reappointed by President Johnson, 1966; appointed by President Johnson, Assistant
Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs, 1968; nominated by President
Johnson, judge, U.S. Customs Court September 12, 1968, confirmed by Senate,
October 2, 1968, assumed duties, January 10, 1969; appointed Chief Judge by
President Carter, March 21, 1977; November 1, 1980 became Chief Judge of the U.S. Court
of International Trade; appointed by Chief Justice Rehnquist, Member, Executive
Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States, 1990 present; appointed
by Chief Justice Rehnquist, mMember, Committee on Long Rrange Planning, Judicial
Conference of the United States, 1990 present; married to Margaret A.
Corcoran, 1950; children: Mary Ann, Anthony, Marina, Edward, Victor, Margaret, Matthew,
Joseph, Mary Elizabeth, Mary Joan, Mary Ellen, and Nancy.
08
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JAMES L. WATSON, judge; born in New York City, May 21, 1922; son of Violet
L. and James S. Watson (deceased); first Negro jurist elected in New York State;
educated in New York City, B.A., New York University, 1947; LL.B., Brooklyn Law
School, 1951; wounded in active duty in Italy with the 92d Infantry Division;
honorably discharged in 1945; received Battle Star, Purple Heart, Combat Infantry
Badge, Good Conduct Medal, European Theater Ribbon, and Army Commendation
Ribbon; admitted to the New York State Bar, 1951; admitted to practice in U.S.
District Court for Southern District, 1951; Board of Immigration Appeals and the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1952; U.S. District Court for Eastern
District, 1956; elected to New York State Senate as State senator for the 21st
Senatorial District in 1954 63; elected as judge of the Civil Court of the City of New
York 1963 66; nominated by President Lyndon B. Johnson, and confirmed by the
U.S. Senate, to the U.S. Customs Court, now U.S. Court of International Trade,
March 1966; married to D'Jaris Hinton (deceased); children: Norman, Karen, and
Kris.
08
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GREGORY W. CARMAN, judge; born in Farmingdale, Long Island, NY, January 31,
1937; son of retired District Court Judge Willis B. and Marjorie Sosa Carman;
B.A., St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY, 1958; national exchange student, 1956
57, studying at the University of Paris through Sweet Briar Junior Year in
France Program; J.D., St. John's Law School, 1961; member, St. John's Law Review;
University of Virginia Law School honors graduate, JAG; New York University Law
School; captain, U.S. Army, 1958 64, stationed with the 2d Infantry Division,
Fort Benning, GA; received Army Commendation Medal for meritorious service, 1964;
admitted to the New York Bar, 1961; practiced law with the firm of Carman,
Callahan & Sabino, Farmingdale, NY; admitted to practice in U.S. Court of Military
Appeals, 1962; certified by Judge Advocate General to practice at general court
martial trials, 1962; admitted to practice eastern district of New York, southern
district of New York, Second Circuit Court of Appeals, 1966; Supreme Court of
the United States, 1967; U.S. Court of Appeals, District of Columbia, 1982;
councilman for the town of Oyster Bay, 1972 80; member, U.S. House of
Representatives, 97th Congress, appointed to Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs Committee and
Select Committee on Aging, 1981 82; U.S. congressional delegate,
International I.M.F. Conference, 1982; nominated by President Ronald Reagan, and confirmed
by the U.S. Senate, to the U.S. Court of International Trade March, 1983;
bicentennial commission of Nassau County; Rotary International, 1964 present; United
Way, town of Oyster Bay, chairman, 1973 76; member, Benevolent Protective
Order of Elks; past president, savings and loan league committee, New York chapter
of the American Bar Association; president, Protestant Lawyers Association of
Long Island; fellow, American College of Mortgage Attorneys; Phi Delta Phi legal
fraternity; district committee, Nassau County Council of Boy Scouts of America,
1964 to present; past vice chairman, Paumanok Boy Scout District; district
chairman, United Cerebral Palsy; member: Holland Society; Sigma Chi, social fraternity;
children: Gregory Wright, John Frederick, James Matthew, and Mira
Catherine.08
JANE A. RESTANI, judge; born February 27, 1948 in San Francisco, CA;
daughter of Emilia C. and Roy J. Restani (deceased); B.A., University of California at
Berkeley, 1969; J.D., University of California at Davis, 1973; law review staff
writer, 1971 72; articles editor, 1972 73; member, Order of the Coif;
elected to Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society; admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of
the State of California, 1973; joined the Civil Division of the Department of
Justice under the Attorney General's Honor Program, 1973 as a trial attorney;
Assistant Chief Commercial Litigation Section, Civil Division, 1976 80; director,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, 1980 83; assumed the duties of a
judge of the U.S. Court of International Trade on November 25, 1983.
08
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DOMINICK L. DiCARLO, judge; born March 11, 1928 in Brooklyn, NY;
B.A., St. John's College; LL.B., St. John's University School of Law; LL.M., New
York University Graduate School of Law; assistant U.S. attorney for the eastern
district of New York, 1959 62; counsel to minority leaders of the New York City
Council, 1962 65; New York State Assemblyman, 1965 81; chairman, New York
State Assembly Standing Committee on Codes; ex officio member, New York State Law
Revision Commission, New York State Judicial Conference, 1971 74; deputy
minority leader of the New York State Assembly, 1975 78; Assistant Secretary of
State for International Narcotics Matters, 1981 84; representative of the United
States on the Commission on Narcotic Drugs of the Economic and Social Council of
the United Nations from 1982 84; appointed judge of the U.S. Court of
International Trade by President Reagan on June 11, 1984; married to Esther Hansen
(deceased); children: Vincent, Carl, Robert, and Barbara; married to Susan L. Hauck,
1988.
08
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THOMAS J. AQUILINO, J r., judge; born in Mount Kisco, NY, December 7,
1939; son of Thomas J. and Virginia B. ( Doughty) Aquilino; attended Cornell
University, 1957 59; B.A., Drew University, 1959 60, 1961 62; University of
Munich, Germany, 1960 61; Free University of Berlin, Germany, 1965 66;
J.D., Rutgers University School of Law, 1966 69; research assistant, Prof. L.F.E.
Goldie (Resources for the Future Ford Foundation) (1967 69); administrator,
Northern Region, 1969; Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition; served in
the U.S. Army, 1962 65; law clerk, Hon. John M. Cannella, U.S. District Court
for the Southern District of New York, 1969 71; attorney with Davis Polk &
Wardwell, New York, 1971 85; admitted to practice New York, U.S. Supreme Court,
U.S. Courts of Appeals for Second and Third Circuits, U.S. Court of International
Trade, U.S. Court of Claims, U.S. District Courts for Eastern, Southern and
Northern Districts of New York, Interstate Commerce Commission; Adjunct Professor
of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, 1984 present; appointed by President
Reagan on February 22, 1985; confirmed by U.S. Senate, April 3, 1985; married
to Edith Berndt Aquilino; children: Christopher Thomas, Philip Andrew, Alexander
Berndt.
08
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NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS, judge; born August 24, 1926 in New York, NY; one of
five children of George M. and Maria (Monogenis) Tsoucalas; educated in elementary
and secondary New York City public schools; received B.S. degree from Kent State
University, 1949; received LL.B. from New York Law School, 1951; attended New
York University Law School; entered U.S. Navy, 1944 46; reentered Navy, 1951
52 and served on the carrier, U.S.S. Wasp; admitted to New York Bar, 1953;
appointed Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1955
59; appointed in 1959 as supervisor of 1960 census for the 17th and 18th
Congressional Districts; appointed chairman, Board of Commissioners of Appraisal;
appointed judge of Criminal Court of the City of New York, 1968; designated acting
Supreme Court Justice, Kings and Queens Counties, 1975 82; resumed service as
judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York until June 1986; appointed
judge of the U.S. Court of International Trade by President Ronald Reagan on
September 9, 1985, and confirmed by U.S. Senate on June 6, 1986; former chairman:
Committee on Juvenile Delinquency, Federal Bar Association, and the Subcommittee on
Public Order and Responsibility of the American Citizenship Committee of the
New York County Lawyers' Association; former president: Greek-American Lawyers'
Association, and Board of Directors of Greek Orthodox Church of ``Evangelismos'',
St. John's Theologos Society, and Parthenon Foundation; member, Order of Ahepa,
Parthenon Lodge, F.A.M.; married to Catherine Aravantinos; two daughters:
Stephanie and Georgia (Mrs. Christopher Argyrople).
08
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R. KENTON MUSGRAVE, judge, born Clearwater, FL, September 7, 1927; attended
public schools and Augusta Military Academy (Virginia); B.A., University of
Washington, 1948; editorial staff, Journal of International Law, Emory University;
J.D., Emory University, 1953; assistant general counsel, Lockheed Aircraft and
Lockheed International, 1953 62; vice president and general counsel, Mattel,
Inc., 1963 71; director, Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Combined Shows, Inc.,
1966 72; commissioner, BSA (Atlanta), 1952 55; partner, Musgrave, Welbourn &
Fertman, 1972 75; assistant general counsel, Pacific Lighting Corporation, 1975
81; vice president, general counsel and secretary, Vivitar Corporation, 1981
85; vice president and director, Santa Barbara Applied Research Corp., 1982
87; director, Morris Animal Foundation, 1981 present; director emeritus, Pet
Protection Society, 1981 present; director, Dolphins of Shark Bay (Australia)
Foundation, 1985 present; and the Digit Fund, 1987 present; vice president
and director, South Bay Social Services Group, 1963 70; director, Palos Verdes
Community Arts Association, 1973 79; member, Governor of Florida's Council of
100, 1970 72; director, Orlando Bank & Trust, 1970 72; counsel, League of
Women Voters 1964 66; member: State Bar of Georgia, 1953 present; State Bar of
California, 1962 present; Los Angeles County Bar Association, 1962 present;
and Corporate Law Departments Section (chairman, 1965 66); admitted to
practice: U.S. Supreme Court, 1962; Supreme Court of Georgia, 1953; California Supreme
Court, 1962; U.S. Court of International Trade, 1967; married to former Ruth
Shippen Hoppe, of Atlanta, Georgia May 7, 1949; children: Laura Marie (deceased),
Ruth Shippen, and Forest Kenton Musgrave; nominated by President Ronald Reagan on
July 1, 1987; confirmed by the Senate on November 9, and took oath of office on
November 13, 1987.
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MORGAN FORD, senior judge; born on a farm near Wheatland, ND, September 8,
1911; son of Morgan J. and Mary Langer Ford; graduated from Casselton High
School, Casselton, ND, 1929; B.A., University of North Dakota, 1935; teacher in
District 102, Everest Township, Cass County, ND, 1933 34; mortgage loan department,
Lincoln Mutual Life Insurance Co., Fort Wayne, IN, 1931 37; LL.B., Georgetown
University, Washington, DC, 1938; state manager, Royal Union Fund of Des
Moines, IA, 1938 39; engaged in general law practice, Fargo, ND, 1939 49;
president, Surety Mutual Health & Accident Insurance Co., Fargo, ND, 1939 49; city
attorney, Casselton, ND, 1942 48; vice president, First State Bank of Casselton,
ND, 1941 49; appointed by Governor Fred G. Aandahl of North Dakota as a member
of the advisory board by registrants in selective service, 1942; nominated to
be judge of the U.S. Customs Court by President Truman, June 22, 1949; entered
upon the duties of that office on July 28, 1949; married to Margaret Duffy;
children: William, Patrick, and Michael, and Mary Ellen.
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HERBERT N. MALETZ, senior judge; born in Boston, MA, October 30, 1913; son
of Reuben and Frances Maletz; educated in the public schools of Boston, MA;
A.B., cum laude, Harvard College, 1935; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1939; member,
Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, 1938 39; admitted to the practice of law in
Massachusetts, 1939, and the District of Columbia; 1952; married to Catherine B. Loebach of
Montana, 1947; one son, David; review attorney, Marketing Laws Survey, WPA,
1939 41; attorney, Truman Committee of U.S. Senate, 1941 42; served in the Army
of the United States, 1942 46, ending as technical sergeant in the Army
Ground Forces; trial attorney, Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, 1946 51;
served in the Office of Price Stabilization as assistant chief counsel and later
as chief counsel, 1951 53; private practice of law, District of Columbia,
1953 55; chief counsel, Celler Antitrust Subcommittee, Committee on the
Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives, 1955 61; commissioner, U.S. Court of Claims,
1961 67; lieutenant colonel, U.S. Army Reserve (ret.); member of the bars of
Massachusetts, District of Columbia, U.S. Supreme Court, and U.S. Court of
Claims; nominated November 6, 1967 by President Lyndon B. Johnson as judge of the U.S.
Customs Court (now the U.S. Court of International Trade), confirmed by the
Senate, November 16, 1967, and assumed duties of office, December 4, 1967; assumed
senior status December 31, 1982; visiting judge, U.S. District Court for the
District of Maryland at Baltimore, 1987 present.
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BERNARD NEWMAN, senior judge; born October 28, 1907; son of Isidor J. and
Sarah C. Newman; lifelong resident of New York; graduate of New York University
College and Law School (B.S., LL.B.); associate editor of Law Review (2 years);
president of New York University Law Review Alumni Association (3 years), and
currently a governor of the Law Review Alumni Association for upwards of thirty
years; silver medal winner in national essay contest; admitted to bar of New York
and of several U.S. courts; assistant corporation counsel, New York City,
secretary to New York Supreme Court Justice Samuel H. Hofstadter, and official referee
of Appellate Division of New York Supreme Court by appointments of Presiding
Justices David W. Peck and Bernard Botein, respectively; designated ``Merit Man''
for New York City; trial counsel in several landmark cases of first impression;
lectured at New York University Law School and Practicing Law Institute; counsel
to New York County Republican Party; chairman of New York County Republican
Party; designated chairman of five county chairmen for New York City Republican
Party; delegate to Republican Judicial and National Nominating Conventions'; referee
on special panels of New York State Labor Relations Board and New York State
Mediation Board; government appeals agent, Selective Service; seaman 2d class,
Coast Guard Auxiliary Reserve (World War II); active in bar associations; appointed
to National Conference of Federal Trial Judges Public relations Committee of
American Bart Association; director, Civic Center Synagogue, Community Synagogue
Center, Metropolitan Advisory Board of Anti-Defamation League and La Guardia
Memorial Association; cited by American Legion, International Trade Board and severl
civic, fraternal, and charitable organizations; recipient of a number of post
graduate achievements by College and Law School of New York University; appointed
by President Lyndon B. Johnson to U.S. Customs Court (July 21, 1968), now U.S.
Court of International Trade; married to Kathryn Bereano, who formerly was also
his classmate and law partner in the firm of Newman and Newman; two daughters:
Mrs. Phyllis Cechini and Mrs. Helene Bernstein, and five grandsons: Craig, John
and Mark Cechini; Scott and Brad Bernstein.
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SAMUEL M. ROSENSTEIN, senior judge; born in Frankfort, KY, on June 7, 1909;
son of Robert and Yetta Rosenstein; graduated from Frankfort High School;
attended University of Kentucky; University of Cincinnati Law School, 1931; receiving
a doctor of jurisprudence degree; admitted to practice law by Supreme Court of
Ohio, 1931; Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1931; Circuit Court of Appeals, Sixth
Circuit, Cincinnati, OH; Supreme Court of the United States; member of Kentucky
State Bar Association, Louisville Bar Association, and American Bar Association;
past member of the House of Delegates of American Bar Association; member,
American Judicature Society; secretary of Kentucky State Bar Association, 1934 50;
member of executive committee, Louisville Bar Association, 1967 68; elected
two terms as city prosecutor, Frankfort, KY, 1933 41; acting county attorney,
Franklin County, KY, 1941 42; special counsel to Department of Revenue of
Kentucky and Welfare Department of Kentucky, 1935 43; general counsel to Kentucky
State Fair Board, 1956 63, associated with the late Senator Mills M. Logan,
Frankfort, KY, in law practice, 1933 35; partner: Smith, Reed & Leary, Frankfort,
KY, 1935 46, and Milliken, Handmaker & Rosenstein, Louisville, KY, 1946 68;
senior member, Milliken, Handmaker & Rosenstein, Louisville, KY, 1964 68;
served in Air Corps Technical Training Command, U.S. Army, World War II; awarded
honorary life membership, Kentucky State Bar Association, in 1950; member of
Kentucky Constitution Revision Assembly, 1964 66; member of faculty of Jefferson
School of Law, Louisville, KY; recipient, Distinguished Community Service Award,
by Broward County, Florida Chapter of National Conference of Christians and Jews,
1987; volunteer, Hospice Care of Broward County; elected to Board of Directors
of Hospice Care of Broward County, Inc., September, 1990; United Way of Broward
County; nominated by President Lyndon B. Johnson as a judge of the U.S. Customs
Court, now U.S. Court of International Trade, and confirmed by the U.S. Senate
on July 25, 1968; took oath of office as judge on August 22, 1968; married to
Helen T. Levitan of Louisville, KY, August 22, 1960 (deceased, March 9, 1986);
children: Elaine and Lawrence; retired from regular active service January 1,
1971.08
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NILS A. BOE, senior judge; born September 10, 1913, Baltic, SD; attended
elementary and secondary schools, Sioux Falls, SD; A.B., University of Wisconsin,
1935; LL.B., University of Wisconsin, 1937; LL.D. (honoris causa), Huron
College, Huron, SD, 1972; Augustana College, SD, 1986; special investigator and deputy
State's attorney, Minnehaha County, SD, 1938 42; served in the U.S. Navy
during World War II, 1942 46; discharged as lieutenant senior grade; member of law
firm May, Boe, and Johnson (formerly Stordahl, May & Boe), Sioux Falls, SD, 1946
65; member: American Bar Association, Wisconsin State Bar Association
(inactive), South Dakota Bar Association, and Bar of the District of Columbia; admitted
to bar of the U.S. Supreme Court; member: of Benevolent Protective Order of
Elks, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Phi Alpha Delta Fraternity, American
Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; South Dakota State Legislature, 1951 59; speaker
pro tem, session of 1953; speaker of the house in sessions of 1955 and 1957;
Lieutenant Governor of the State of South Dakota, 1963 65; Governor of the State
of South Dakota, 1965 69; appointed Director of the Office of Intergovernmental
Relations, Executive Office of the President, established by Executive order of
President Nixon, February 14, 1969; appointed Assistant Director, Office of
Emergency Preparedness by President Nixon on March 28, 1969; appointed judge of the
U.S. Customs Court by President Nixon, August 10, 1971; entered upon the duties
of that office on August 20, 1971; designated chief judge of the U.S. Customs
Court by President Nixon, effective October 15, 1971; served until March 9, 1977;
judge, U.S. Court of International Trade until April 30, 1984; senior judge May
1984.
OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Clerk. Joseph E. Lombardi (212) 264 2814.
Congressional Directory
Lafayette Square, 717 Madison Place 20005. Phone, (202) 633 7257
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LOREN ALLAN SMITH, chief judge; born December 22, 1944, in Chicago, IL;
B.A., Northwestern University, 1966; J.D., Northwestern University School of Law,
1969; married to Catherine Yore; children: Loren, Jr. and Adam; admitted to the
Bars of the Illinois Supreme Court; the Court of Military Appeals; the U.S. Court
of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit; the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit; the U.S. Supreme Court; the U.S. Claims Court; member: Federal Bar
Association and American Bar Association; honorary member: National Lawyers
Club; consultant, Sidley & Austin Chicago, 1972 73; general attorney, Federal
Communications Commission, 1973; assistant to the Special Counsel to the President,
1973 74; Special Assistant U.S. Attorney, District of Columbia, 1974 75;
chief counsel, Reagan for President campaigns, 1976 and 1980; professor, Delaware
Law School, 1976 84; deputy director, Executive Branch management Office of
Presidential Transition, 1980 81; Chairman, Administrative Converence of the
Unites States, 1981 85; served as a member of the President's Cabinet Councils on
Legal Policy and on Management and Administration; appointed judge of the U.S.
Claims Court on July 11, 1985; entered on duty September 12, 1985; designated
Chief Judge on January 14, 1986.
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JAMES F. MEROW, judge; born in Salamanca, NY, March 16, 1932; son of Walter
and Helen (Smith) Merow; educated in the public schools of Little Valley, NY
and Alexandria, VA; A.B. (with distinction), The George Washington University
1953; J.D. (with distinction), The George Washington University Law School, 1956;
member: Phi Beta Kappa, Order of the Coif, Omicron Delta Kappa; officer, U.S. Army
Judge Advocate General's Corps, 1956 59; trial attorney-branch director,
Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1959 78; trial judge, U.S. Court of
Claims, 1978 82; judge, U.S. Claims Court since October 1, 1982 (reappointed by
President Reagan to a 15-year term commencing August 5, 1983); member of
Virginia State Bar, District of Columbia Bar, American Bar Association, and Federal Bar
Association; married.
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JOHN PAUL WIESE, judge; born in Brooklyn, NY, April 19, 1934; son of Gustav
and Margaret Wiese; educated in the public schools of Brooklyn, NY; B.A., cum
laude, Hobart College, 1962, Phi Beta Kappa; LL.B., University of Virginia School
of Law, 1965; married to Alice Mary Donoghue, June 1961; one son, John Patrick;
served U.S. Army, 1957 59; law clerk: U.S. Court of Claims, trial division,
1965 66, and Judge Linton M. Collins, U.S. Court of Claims, appellate division,
1966 67; private practice in District of Columbia, 1967 74 (specializing in
government contract litigation); trial judge, U.S. Court of Claims, 1974 82;
designated in Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982 as judge, U.S. Claims
Court, reappointed by President Reagan on October 14, 1986, to 15-year term as judge,
U.S. Claims Court; admitted to Bar of the District of Columbia, 1966; admitted
to practice in the U.S. Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, the U.S. Claims Court; member: District of Columbia Bar Association
and American Bar Association.
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ROBERT J. YOCK, judge; born in St. James, MN, January 11, 1938; son of Dr.
William J. and Erma (Fritz) Yock; educated in the public schools of St. James,
MN; B.A. St. Olaf College, 1959; J.D. University of Michigan Law School, 1962;
married to Carla M. Moen, June 13, 1964; children: Signe Kara and Torunn Ingrid;
admitted to the Minnesota Supreme Court in 1962; Court of Military Appeals, 1964;
U.S. Supreme Court, 1965; U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota,
1966; U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, 1972; U.S. Court of
Claims, 1979; and U.S. Claims Court, 1982; member: American Bar Association, Federal
Bar Association, Minnesota State Bar Association, and District of Columbia Bar
Association; served in the U.S. Navy, Judge Advocate General's Corps, 1962 66;
private practice, St. Paul, MN, 1966 69; entered Government service as chief
counsel to the National Archives and Record Services of the General Services
Administration, 1969 70; executive assistant and legal advisor to the Administrator
of General Services, 1970 72; assistant general counsel at GSA, 1972 77;
trial judge, U.S. Court of Claims, 1977 82; designated by Public Law 97 164 as
judge, U.S. Claims Court, 1982 83; renominated by President Reagan as judge,
U.S. Claims Court, June 20, 1983, confirmed by U.S. Senate, August 4, 1983,
reappointed to 15-year term, August 5, 1983.
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REGINALD W. GIBSON, judge; born in Lynchburg, VA, July 31, 1927; son of
McCoy and Julia Gibson; married to Jeanette Roberts, 1961 (divorced); son, Reginald
S. Gibson, Jr.; educated in the public schools of Washington, DC; served in the
U.S. Army, 1946 47; B.S., Virginia Union University, 1952; Wharton Graduate
School of Business Administration, University of Pennsylvania, 1952 53; LL.B.,
Howard University School of Law, 1956; admitted to the District of Columbia Bar
in 1957 and to the Illinois Bar in 1972; Internal Revenue agent, Internal
Revenue Service, Washington, DC, 1957 61; trial attorney, tax division, criminal
section, Department of Justice, Washington, DC, 1961 71; senior and later general
tax attorney, International Harvester Co., Chicago, IL, 1971 82; nominated by
President Reagan as judge, U.S. Claims Court, September 30, 1982; confirmed by
the Senate December 10, 1982; entered on duty December 15, 1982.
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LAWRENCE S. MARGOLIS, judge; born in Philadelphia, PA, March 13, 1935; son
of Reuben and Mollie Margolis; B.A., Central High School, Philadelphia, PA; B.S.
in mechanical engineering from the Drexel Institute of Technology (now Drexel
University), 1957; J.D., George Washington University Law School, 1961; admitted
to the District of Columbia Bar; patent examiner, U.S. Patent Office, 1957 62;
patent counsel, Naval Ordnance Laboratory, White Oak, MD, 1962 63; assistant
corporation counsel for the District of Columbia, 1963 66; attorney, criminal
division, U.S. Department of Justice and special assistant U.S. attorney for
District of Columbia, 1966 68; assistant U.S. attorney for the District of
Columbia, 1968 71; appointed U.S. magistrate for District of Columbia in 1971;
reappointed for a second 8-year term in 1979 and served until December 1982 when
appointed a judge, U.S. Claims Court; chairman, American Bar Association, judicial
administration division, 1980 81; chairman, National Conference of Special
Court Judges, 1977 78; board of directors, Bar Association of the District of
Columbia, 1970 72; editor: DC Bar Journal, 1966 73, Young Lawyers Newspaper,
1965 66; executive council, Young Lawyers Section, 1968 69; board of editors,
The Judges' Journal and The District Lawyer; president-elect, George Washington
University National Law Association, 1982 83; president, George Washington Law
Association, District of Columbia Chapter, 1975 76; board of governors, George
Washington University General Alumni Association, 1978 82; fellow, Institute
of Judicial Administration; member, District of Columbia Judicial Conference
since 1968; former member, board of directors, National Council of U.S.
Magistrates; former president, Federal Bar Toastmasters; former technical editor, Federal
Bar Journal; faculty, Federal Judicial Center; associate trustee, Drexel
University, 1983; member, Rotary Club; American Bar Association Judicial Administration
Division Award for distinguished service as chairman for 1980 81; married to
Doris May Rosenberg, January 30, 1960; children: Mary Aleta and Paul Oliver;
nominated by President Ronald Reagan as a judge on the U.S. Claims Court on
September 27, 1982, confirmed by the Senate and received Commission on December 10,
1982, took oath of office on December 15, 1982.
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CHRISTINE COOK NETTESHEIM, judge; born in Oakland, CA, August 26, 1944;
educated in public schools in Ukiah, CA; B.A., Stanford University, 1966; J.D.,
University of Utah College of Law, 1969; comment editor, Utah Law Review; member,
Utah Chapter Order of the Coif; clerk to chief judge David T. Lewis, U.S. Court
of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, 1969 70; trial attorney, civil division, U.S.
Department of Justice, 1970 72; trial attorney, Federal Trade Commission,
Bureau of Consumer Protection, 1972 74; Hogan & Hartson, litigation section, 1974
76; Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, special counsel, 1976 78; U.S.
Railway Association, assistant general counsel, 1978 80; Shack & Kimball, P.C.,
litigation, 1980 83; member of the Bars of the State of California, District of
Columbia, and State of Utah; married to Paul H. Nettesheim.
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MOODY R. TIDWELL III, judge; born in Miami, OK, February 15, 1939; son of
Maj. Gen. M.R. Tidwell, Jr., and Dorothy (Thompson) Tidwell; married to Rena C.
Tidwell; children: Gregory T. and Jeremy H.; B.A., Ohio Wesleyan University,
1961; J.D., Washington College of Law, American University; LL.M., National Law
Center, George Washington University; admitted to the bar of the District of
Columbia; admitted to practice in the U.S. Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit and the U.S. Claims Court and various other circuit and
U.S. district courts; attorney, General Acounting Office, 1965 69; associate
solicitor, Divisions of General Law and Energy and Resources, Office of the
Solicitor, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1969 77; staff director and vice chairman,
Legal Remedies Study Group, Commission on Government Procurement, 1971 73;
Associate Solicitor, Mine Safety and Health, Office of the Solicitor, U.S.
Department of Labor, 1977 80; Deputy Solicitor and Advisor to the Secretary of the
Interior, 1980 83; appointed and confirmed by the President as judge in the U.S.
Claims Court, May 17, 1983.
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MARIAN BLANK HORN, judge; born in New York, NY, 1943; daughter of Werner P.
and Mady R. Blank; married to Robert Jack Horn; daughters: Juli Marie, Carrie
Charlotte, and Rebecca Blank; attended Fieldston School, New York, NY, Barnard
College, Columbia University and Fordham University School of Law; admitted to
practice U.S. Supreme Court, 1973, Federal and State courts in New York, 1970, and
Washington, DC, 1973; assistant district attorney, Bronx Couty, NY, 1969 72;
attorney, Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin & Kahn, 1972 73; adjunct professor of
law, Washington College of Law, American Univeristy 1973 76; litigation
attorney, Federal Energy Administration, 1975 76; senior attorney, Office of General
Counsel, Strategic Petroleum Reserve Branch, Department of Energy, 1976 79;
deputy assistant general counsel for procurement and financial incentives,
Department of Energy, 1979 81; deputy associate solicitor, Division of Surface Mining,
Department of the Interior, 1981 83; associate solicitor, Division of General
Law, Department of the Interior, 1983 85; principal deputy solicitor,
Department of Interior, 1985; assumed duties of judge, U.S. Claims Court, April 14,
1986.
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ERIC G. BRUGGINK, judge; born in Kalidjati, Indonesia, September 11, 1949;
naturalized U.S. citizen, 1961; married to Melinda Harris Bruggink; sons: John
and David; B.A., cum laude (sociology), Auburn University, AL, 1971; M.A.
(speech), 1972; J.D., University of Alabama, 1975; Hugo Black Scholar and Note and
Comments Editor of Alabama Law Review; member, Alabama State Bar and District of
Columbia Bar; served as law clerk to chief judge Frank H. McFadden, Northern
District of Alabama, 1975 76; associate, Hardwick, Hause & Segrest, Dothan, AL, 1976
77; assistant director, Alabama Law Institute, 1977 79; director, Office of
Energy and Environmental Law, 1977 79; associate, Steiner, Crum & Baker,
Montgomery, AL, 1979 82; Director, Office of Appeals Counsel, Merit Systems
Protection Board, 1982 86; judge, U.S. Claims Court, April 15, 1986.
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WILKES COLEMAN ROBINSON, judge; born September 30, 1925 in Anniston, AL;
B.A., University of Alabama, 1948; LL.B., University of Virginia, 1951; J.D.,
University of Virginia, 1972; member: Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Alpha
Theta, Kappa Alpha fraternity; associate attorney, Bibb & Hemphill, Anniston, AL,
1953 55; city recorder of Anniston, AL, 1953 55; judge, Juvenile and Domestic
Relations Court, Calhoun County, AL, 1954 56; attorney: Gulf, Mobile and Ohio
Railroad, 1956 58; Seaboard Airline Railroad Company, 1958 66; Monsanto
Company, 1966 70; Marion Laboratories, Inc., 1970 80; president and member of
board of directors, Gulf and Great Plains Legal Foundation, 1980 85; vice
president and general counsel, S.R. Financial Group, Inc., 1986 87; judge, U.S.
Claims Court, July 10, 1987; member: Alabama State Bar, Virginia State Bar, Missouri
State Bar, Kansas State Bar, U.S. Supreme Court Bar, Tenth Circuit Court of
Appeals, Alabama and Missouri U.S. District Courts, U.S. Claims Court Bar; married
to Julia Von P. Rowan; three children: Randolph C., Payton H., and T. Wilkes C.
Robinson.
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BOHDAN A. FUTEY, judge; born in the Ukraine, June 28, 1939; B.A., Western
Reserve University, 1962; M.A., 1964; J.D., Cleveland Marshall Law School, 1968;
partner, Futey & Rakowsky, 1968 72; chief assistant police prosecutor, city of
Cleveland, 1972 74; executive assistant to the mayor of Cleveland, 1974 75;
partner, Bazarko, Futey and Oryshkewych, 1975 84; chairman, U.S. Foreign
Claims Settlement Commission, May 1984 87; nominated judge of the U.S. Claims
Court on January 30, 1987, and entered on duty, May 29, 1987; married to the former
Myra Fur; three children: Andrew, Lidia, and Daria; member: Cleveland Bar
Association, District of Columbia Bar Association, American Bar Association, Parma Bar
Association, the Ukrainian American Bar Association.
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ROGER B. ANDEWELT, judge; born August 4, 1946, in Brooklyn, NY; son of
Samuel F. and Belle (Hockman) Andewelt; educated in the public schools of Brooklyn,
NY; B.S., Brooklyn College, 1967; J.D., National Law Center, George Washington
University, 1971; member: Order of the Coif; married to Maxine Mitchnick; two
children: Alexa Sara and Ian Samuel; patent examiner, U.S. Patent Office, 1968
72; attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division: trial attorney, 1972
78; assistant chief/Chief Intellectual Property Section, 1978 84; deputy
director of operations, 1984 86; deputy assistant attorney general for
litigation, 1986 87; nominated by President Reagan as judge, U.S. Claims Court on March
3, 1987, and assumed duties of the office on August 1, 1987.
08
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JAMES T. TURNER, judge; born March 12, 1938, in Clifton Forge, VA; B.A.,
Wake Forest University, 1960; LL.B., University of Virginia Law School, 1965;
private practice of law , Williams, Worrell, Kelly & Greer, 1965 79; U.S.
Magistrate for the eastern district of Virginia, 1979 87; president, National Council
of U.S. Magistrates, 1984 85; judge, U.S. Claims Court since July 2, 1987;
member of the American Bar Association, Federal Bar Association, Virginia State
Bar, Norfolk and Portsmouth Bar Association.
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ROBERT HAYNE HODGES, J r., judge; born in Columbia, SC, September 11,
1944, son of Robert Hayne and Mary (Sawton) Hodges; educated in the public
schools of Columbia, SC; attended Wofford College, Spartanburg, SC; B.S., University
of South Carolina, 1966; J.D., University of South Carolina Law School, 1969;
married to Ruth Nicholson (Sady) Hodges, August 23, 1963; children: Robert Hayne
III, Ruth Walker, Elizabeth Wallace; legislative aide to Senator Strom Thurmond
1969 71; legislative assistant to Congressman Floyd Spence 1971 77; vice
president and general counsel of First National Bank of South Carolina, 1977 85;
executive vice president and general counsel South Carolina Bankers
Association, 1985 86; partner, Quinn, Arndt & Manning, Columbia, South Carolina, 1986 to
March 1990; judge, U.S. Claims Court, April 9, 1990.
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DIANE GILBERT WEINSTEIN, judge; born June 14, 1947, in Rochester, NY;
daughter of Myron B. and Doris (Robie) Gilbert; married to Allen Weinstein, June
1969; children: Andrew and David; educated at the Lincoln School, Buenos Aires,
Argentina, and in the public schools of Lexington and Brookline, Massachusetts;
B.A., Smith College, 1969; visiting student at Stanford University Law School and
Georgetown University Law Center, 1977 78; J.D., Boston University Law School,
1979; Boston University Alumnae Association Young Lawyers' Chair, 1989; law
clerk, Judge Catherine B. Kelly, District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1979 80;
associate, Peabody, Lambert & Meyers, 1980 83; Assistant General Counsel, Office
of Management and Budget, Executive Office of the President, 1983 86; Deputy
General Counsel for Departmental Services, U.S. Department of Education, 1986
88; Acting General Counsel, U.S. Department of Education, 1988 89; Counselor
to the Vice President of the United States, Counsel to the President's
Competitiveness Council, Chair of the Competitiveness Council's Interagency Task Force on
Product Liability, 1989 90; nominated by President Bush as judge, U.S. Claims
Court, on July 31, 1990, entered on duty October 22, 1990; admitted to the bars
of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the District of Columbia; member of the
American Bar Association and the Federalist Society.
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KENNETH R. HARKINS, senior judge; born in Cadiz, OH, September 1, 1921;
educated in public schools of Zandesville, OH; Ohio State University, B.A.
(economics), 1943; LL.B., 1948; J.D., 1967; admitted to practice of law in Ohio, April
1949; married to Helen Mae Dozer, 1942; children: M. Elaine and Richard A.; U.S.
Army active duty, July 1943 to June 1946, 500 AFA Battalion, 14th Armored
Division, private to 1st lieutenant; attorney, U.S. Housing and Home Finance Agency,
1949 51; trial attorney, Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, 1951 55;
cocounsel, Antitrust Subcommittee, Judiciary Committee, House of
Representatives, 1955 60; general counsel, Stromberg Carlson Division and Electronics
Division, General Dynamics Corp., 1960 64; chief counsel, Antitrust Subcommittee,
Judiciary Committee, House of Representatives, 1964 71; commissioner (trial
judge), U.S. Court of Claims, 1971 82; judge, U.S. Claims Court, pursuant to Public
Law 97 164, section 167(a), October 1, 1982 through November 30, 1986.
Recalled to active service in senior status pursuant to 28 U.S.C., section 797,
December 1, 1986.
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THOMAS J. LYDON, senior judge; born June 3, 1927 in Portland, ME; educated
in the parochial and public schools in Portland; attended University of Maine,
1948 52, B.A.; Georgetown University Law Center, 1952 55, LL.B., 1956 57,
LL.M.; trial attorney, Civil Division, Department of Justice, 1955 67; Chief,
Court of Claims Section, Civil Division, 1967 72; trial commissioner (trial
judge), U.S. Court of Claims, 1972 to September 30, 1982; member of the bars of the
District of Columbia and the State of Maine; married; assumed senior judge
status, August 1, 1987.
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OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES CLAIMS COURT
Clerk. [Vacant.]
Chief Deputy Clerk. Roger L. Nieman.
Financial Officer. Dale H. DeBuhr.
Building Manager. Charles L. Leath.
Congressional Directory
400 Second Street 20217. Phone, 376 2754
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ARTHUR L. NIMS III, chief judge New Jersey; elected chief judge for a
2-year term beginning June 1, 1988, re-elected chief judge beginning June 1, 1990;
born January 3, 1923, Oklahoma City, OK; married to Nancy Chloe Keyes; two
daughters; attended public schools in Macon, GA, and Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, MA;
B.A., Williams College; LL.B., University of Georgia Law School; LL.M. (Tax),
New York University Law School; served as an officer, lieutenant (jg.), U.S. Naval
Reserve, on active duty in the Pacific theater during World War II; admitted to
the bar of Georgia, 1949; and practiced in Macon, GA, 1949 51; served as
special attorney, Office of the District Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, New
York, NY, 1951 54; attorney, Legislation and Regulations Division, Chief Counsel's
Office, Washington, DC, 1954 55; admitted to the bar of New Jersey, 1955; was
with the law firm of McCarter & English, Newark, NJ, until 1979, having become
a partner in 1961; served as secretary, Section of Taxation, American Bar
Association, 1977 79; served as chairman, Section of Taxation, New Jersey State Bar
Association, 1969 71; member, American Law Institute; appointed by the
President to the U.S. Tax Court, June 21, 1979, to succeed Judge Arnold Raum, who
assumed senior status; took office on June 29, 1979.
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HERBERT L. CHABOT, judge Maryland; born July 17, 1931, Bronx County, NY;
married to Aleen Kerwin, 1951; four children: Elliot C., Donald J., Lewis A., and
Nancy Jo; attended public schools of New York; graduated, Stuyvesant High
School, 1948; B.A. (cum laude), C.C.N.Y., 1952; LL.B., Columbia University, 1957;
LL.M. (taxation), Georgetown University, 1964; enlisted in U.S. Army for 2 years and
Army Reserves (civil affairs units), 8 years; served on legal staff, American
Jewish Congress, 1957 61; law clerk to tax court Judge Russell E. Train, 1961
65; served on staff of congressional Joint Committee on Taxation, 1965 78;
elected delegate, Maryland Constitutional Convention, 1967 68; adjunct
professor, National Law Center, George Washington University, 1974 83; member, American
Bar (tax section) and Federal Bar Associations; appointed to the U.S. Tax Court
for a 15-year term, beginning April 3, 1978.
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EDNA G. PARKER, judge Virginia; born 1930, Johnston County, NC; son,
Douglas Benjamin Parker; attended public schools in Washington, DC; New Jersey College
for Women (now Douglass College); University of Arizona (B.A., 1953, with
honors); University of Arizona Law School; George Washington University College of
Law (LL.B., 1957, Law Review, Order of the Coif); law clerk to Judge J. Warren
Madden and Chief Judge Marvin Jones, U.S. Court of Claims, 1957 59;
attorney-adviser, Office of General Counsel, Department of the Navy, 1959 60; trial
attorney, Civil and Tax Divisions, Department of Justice, 1960 69; Administrative
Judge, Contract Appeals Board, Department of Transportation, 1969 77; member, tax
section, American Bar Association; Federal Bar Association; District of
Columbia Bar; District of Columbia Bar Association, Women's Bar Association of the
District of Columbia; National Association of Women Lawyers; National Association of
Women Judges; appointed special trial judge, U.S. Tax Court, September 1, 1977;
oath of office as judge, U.S. Tax Court, May 30, 1980.
08
JULES G. KO AE4RNER III, judge Maryland; born July 27, 1922, Washington,
DC; married to Jean McKee in 1943; two children: Jules G. IV and Catherine Anne;
graduated from St. Albans School, 1939; University of Virginia (intermediate
honors and Dean's List), A.B., 1943; University of Mexico (Mexico, D.F.), Summer
school, 1941; University of Virginia Law School, Dean's List, LL.B. (later J.D.),
1947; member of Phi Delta Phi Legal Fraternity and Kappa Sigma Fraternity;
commissioned ensign, U.S. Naval Reserve, 1943; served on active duty with U.S. Navy,
amphibious forces as commanding officer of amphibious landing ship, 1943 46, in
various places, including Pacific theatre and Japan; resigned as lieutenant,
USNR, 1960; past commanding officer (1955 56) of Naval Reserve Material Company
W 2, under Office of Naval Materiel; member: Bars of the District of Columbia,
Virginia and Maryland; attorney in the area of Federal Tax law in the
Washington, DC law firm of Blair, Ko AE4rner, Doyle & Worth (later Ko AE4rner, Doyle,
Worth & Crampton), 1947 70; senior tax partner Pope Ballard & Loos, 1970 81;
served as a tax member of a private mission employed by the Government of Ecuador,
1961; served as adjunct professor of law at Georgetown University from 1963
68, appointed to the U.S. Tax Court on November 16, 1981, and took oath of office
on January 22, 1982; nominated for a 15-year term to fill one of the three new
seats on the court, created by Congress, effective February 1, 1981, term
expires January 22, 1997.
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PERRY SHIELDS, judge Tennessee; born January 12, 1925, Townsend, Blount
County, TN; son of Fred David and Alice Dorsey Shields; married to Bonnie Manning
Davis, 1951; children: Bailey Davis Leslie and Beth; graduated Everett High
School, Maryville, TN, 1943; Yale University (U.S. Army), 1943; Princeton University
(U.S. Army), 1944; Duke University, 1946 47; Duke School of Law, 1947 50;
revenue agent, Internal Revenue Service, Knoxville, TN; 1950 52; claims
attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC, 1952 54;
Civil Advisory and Trial Attorney, office of Regional Counsel, Internal Revenue
Service, Atlanta, GA, and Greensboro, NC, 1954 56; private practice of law
specializing in tax matters in Knoxville and Chattanooga from 1956 to date of
appointment to the Tax Court; military service: U.S. Army and U.S. Army Air Force,
1943 45, including combat service in France, Belgium, Holland, and Germany;
member: Knoxville Bar Association, Tennessee Bar Association, American Bar
Association, Federal Bar Association, Tennessee Trial Lawyers Association, and American
Trial Lawyers Association; appointed to the U.S. Tax Court for a 15-year term
commencing on February 5, 1982.
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LAPSLEY WALKER HAMBLEN, Jr., judge Virginia; born December 25, 1926,
Chattanooga, TN; married to Claudia Royster Terrell, Lynchburg, VA, 1971; three
sons by previous marriage; served in the U.S. Navy, 1945 46, graduated from
McCallie School, Chattanooga, TN, 1943; B.A., University of Virginia, 1949; LL.B.,
1953; member: Order of the Coif, Raven Society, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Alpha
Delta, and Phi Delta Theta; admitted to the bar, West Virginia, 1954, Ohio,
1955, and Virginia, 1957; trial attorney, office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue
Service (Atlanta, GA), 1955 56, attorney-advisor, Tax Court of the United
States (Judge Craig S. Atkins), 1956 57; private practice of law, Lynchburg, VA,
as a member of Caskie, Frost, Hobbs & Hamblen and predecessors, 1957 82; Deputy
Assistant Attorney General, Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1982;
former chairman, Tax Section Board of Governors, Virginia State Bar; former
trustee, Southern Federal Tax Institute, Atlanta, GA; past codirector, Annual Virginia
Conference on Federal Taxation, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA;
fellow, American College of Tax Counsel and American College of Probate Counsel;
member: Virginia, Federal and American (tax section) Bar Associations and Virginia
State Bar; took oath of office as a judge of the U.S. Tax Court, September 14,
1982, for a 15-year term to succeed Judge Sheldon V. Ekman, deceased.
08
MARY ANN COHEN, judge California; born July 16, 1943, Albuquerque, NM;
attended public schools in Los Angeles, CA; B.A., University of California at Los
Angeles, 1964; J.D., University of Southern California, 1967; admitted to
California Bar, 1967; private practice of law, Los Angeles, with firm of Abbott & Cohen,
a professional corporation (and predecessors), 1967 82; member: American Bar
Association (sections of taxation, litigation, and criminal justice), American
Judicature Society, Attorney General's Advisory Committee on Tax Litigation, U.S.
Department of Justice (1979 80); appointed to U.S. Tax Court, July 1982 to
succeed Cynthia H. Hall; term expires September 24, 1997.
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CHARLES E. CLAPP II, judge Rhode Island; born Newton, MA, December 25,
1923; married to Elinor L. Jones, 1951; three sons and four daughters; attended
public schools in Dedham, MA and Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, MA; B.A., Williams
College, 1945; LL.B., Harvard Law School, 1949; served as an officer in the U.S.
Navy on active duty during World War II (Pacific theater) and the Korean war,
lieutenant (retired), 1953; admitted to Massachusetts Bar, 1949, Rhode Island Bar,
1956, and Florida Bar, 1982; practiced law in the firm of Richardson Wolcott,
Tyler & Fassett, Boston, 1949 50; served as law clerk to Judge J. Edgar Murdock
of the U.S. Tax Court, 1952 55; joined Edwards & Angell, Providence, RI, 1955,
became a member of the firm in 1959, and was senior tax partner at the time of
appointment to the Tax Court; member: American Bar Association (tax section);
Rhode Island Bar Association (chairman, tax committee, 1966 69 and 1979 82);
Florida Bar Association; and executive committee of the Federal Tax Institute of
New England; cofounder, Federal Tax Forum, Rhode Island; advisory committee,
University of Rhode Island Institute on Federal Taxation; involved in many civic
activities including United Way Board and campaign; past president, Narragansett
Council, Boy Scouts of America; past president, Barrington (RI) Town Council;
appointed to the Tax Court for a term expiring August 15, 1998.
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STEPHEN J. SWIFT, judge California; born September 7, 1943, Salt Lake City,
UT, son of Edward A. Swift and Maurine Jensen; married to Lorraine Burnell
Facer, 1972; children: Carter, Stephanie, Spencer, Meredith, and Hunter; graduated,
Menlo Atherton High School, Atherton, CA, 1961; B.A., Brigham Young University,
political science, 1967; George Washington Law School, J.D. (with honors), 1970;
trial attorney (Honors Program), Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 1970
74; assistant U.S. attorney, tax division, U.S. attorney's office, San
Francisco, CA 1974 77; vice president and senior tax counsel, tax department,
BankAmerica N.T. & S.A., San Francisco, CA, 1977 83; adjunct professor, Graduate Tax
Program, Golden Gate University, San Francisco, CA 1978 83; member:
California Bar, District of Columbia Bar, and American Bar Association (section of
taxation); appointed August 16, 1983 to the U.S. Tax Court for a 15-year term expiring
August 16, 1998.
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JULIAN I. JACOBS, judge Maryland; born in Baltimore, MD, August 13, 1937;
children: Richard and Jennifer; residence: Bethesda, MD; B.A., University of
Maryland, 1958; LL.B., University of Maryland Law School, 1960; LL.M. (taxation),
Georgetown Law Center, 1965; began legal career with the Internal Revenue Service,
first in Washington, DC, drafting tax legislation and regulations from 1961
65, and then in Buffalo, NY, as a trial attorney in the regional counsel's office
from 1965 67; entered private practice of law Baltimore City, 1967; partner,
Baltimore law firm of Gordon, Feinblatt, Rothman, Hoffberger & Hollander, 1967,
and remained until his appointment to the Tax Court on March 30, 1984, for a
15-year term to succeed Senior Judge Theodore Tannenwald, Jr.; chairman, study
commission to improve the quality of the Maryland Tax Court, 1978, appointed by
Maryland Gov. Blair Lee; member, several study groups to consider changes in the
Maryland tax laws and as a commissioner on a commission to reorganize and recodify
that article of Maryland law dealing with taxation, 1980, appointed by Maryland
Gov. Harry Hughes; lecturer, tax seminars and professional programs; chairman,
section of taxation, Maryland State Bar Association.
08
JOEL GERBER, judge Virginia; born in Chicago, IL, July 16, 1940; married to
Judith Smilgoff, 1963; three sons: Jay Lawrence, Jeffrey Mark, and Jon Victor;
attended Chicago public schools; B.S., business administration, Roosevelt
University, 1962; J.D., DePaul University, 1965; LL.M., taxation, Boston University
Law School, 1968; admitted to the Illinois Bar, 1965; Georgia Bar, 1974; Tennessee
Bar, 1978; member American Bar Association (section of taxation); served with
U.S. Treasury Department, Internal Revenue Service as: Trial Attorney, Boston,
MA, 1965 72; staff assistant, regional counsel/senior trial attorney, Atlanta,
GA, 1972 76; district counsel, Nashville, TN, 1976 80; Deputy Chief Counsel,
Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC, 1980 84; Acting Chief Counsel,
Internal Revenue Service, May 1983 to March 1984; recipient of a Presidential
Meritorius Rank Award, 1983 and the Secretary of the Treasury's Exceptional Service
Award, 1984; lecturer, law, Vanderbilt University, 1976 80; appointed to the Tax
Court for a 15-year term, beginning June 18, 1984, to succeed Senior JUdge C.
Moxley Featherston.
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LAWRENCE A. WRIGHT, judge Vermont; born in Stratton, ME, December 25, 1927;
married to Avis Leahy, 1953; five sons: Michael, David, James, Stephen, and
Douglas; B.A., government, University of Maine, 1953; J.D., Georgetown University
Law School, 1956; LL.M., taxation, Boston University Law School, 1962; practiced
law with Gravel, Shea & Wright, Ltd., Vermont; tax commissioner, State of
Vermont, 1969 71, Senior Trial Counsel, Chief Counsel's office of the Internal
Revenue Service, Boston, 1958 69; admitted to practice in the States of Vermont,
Maine, Massachusetts, and the District of Columbia; member, American Bar
Association (tax section); chairman, tax committee, Vermont Bar Association; taught the
State and Federal tax portion of the Vermont Bar Association bar review course;
served on several tax seminars as a panelist on both State and Federal tax
matters; served in the U.S. Army 1945 48, second lieutenant; retired, U.S. Army
Reserve, 1978, as colonel in the Judge Advocate Branch; appointed to the Tax Court
for a 15-year term beginning October 30, 1984.
08
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CAROLYN MILLER PARR, judge; born Palatka, FL, daughter of Arthur C. Miller
and Audrey Dunklin Miller; married to Jerry S. Parr in 1959; three daughters:
Kimberly, Jennifer, and Trish; attended public schools in Miami, FL; received B.A.
(English) from Stetson University, 1959; M.A. (English), Vanderbilt University,
1960; J.D., Georgetown University Law Center, 1977; served as senior trial
attorney, Internal Revenue Service, 1977 82; special counsel to the Assistant
Attorney General, and Acting Chief, Office of Special Litigation, Tax Division,
Department of Justice, 1982 85; admitted to Maryland and District of Columbia
Bars, U.S. Supreme Court, and U.S. Tax Court. Member American Bar Association
(section of taxation Court Procedure Committee), Maryland State Bar Association, DC
Bar Association, Federal Bar Association, and National Association of Women
Judges; chairman, Board of Directors, Heritage Christian Church, 1982; took oath of
office on November 25, 1985, for a 15-year term to succeed William M.
Fay.08
THOMAS B. WELLS, judge; born Akron, OH, July 2, 1945; married Mary
Josephine Graham of Vidalia, GA in 1974; children: Kathryn and Graham; received B.S.
degree from Miami University, Oxford, OH in 1967; his J.D. degree from Emory
University School of Law, Atlanta, GA in 1973; LL.M. degree (in Taxation) from New
York University Graduate School of Law, New York, NY in 1978; attended Ohio
Northern University School of Law, Ada, OH, served as managing editor of the law review
until he transferred to Emory University School of Law in 1972; completed
active duty in 1970 as a supply corps officer in the U.S. Naval Reserve after tours
in Morocco and Vietnam; admitted to the practice of law in the State of Georgia
and practiced law in Vidalia, GA with the law firm of Graham & Wells, P.C.,
served as county attorney for Toombs County, GA and city attorney for the city of
Vidalia, GA until 1977, and in Atlanta with the law firm of Hurt, Richardson,
Garner, Todd & Cadenhead until 1981 and with the law firm of Shearer & Wells, P.C.
until his appointment to the U.S. Tax Court in 1986; member; American Bar
Association (section of taxation); State Bar of Georgia, served as a member of its Board
of Governors; Board of Editors of the Georgia State Bar Journal; active in the
Atlanta Bar Association, served as editor of The Atlanta Lawyer; active in
various tax organizations such as the Atlanta Tax Forum; the Atlanta Estate Planning
Council, served as a director; and the North Atlanta Tax Council, served as a
director; nominated by President Reagan and confirmed by the Senate as a judge of
the U.S. Tax Court for a term of 15 years beginning October 12, 1986 to succeed
Judge Richard C. Wilbur who retired.
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ROBERT PAUL RUWE, judge Virginia; born July 3, 1941, Cincinnati, Ohio;
married to Mary Kay Sayer, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1967; children: Paul, Michael,
Christian, and Stephen; graduated Roger Bacon High School, St. Bernard, OH, 1959, Xavier
University, Cincinnati, OH, 1963; Salmon P. Chase College of Law, J.D., 1970;
admitted to Ohio Bar, 1970; joined Office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue
Service in 1970 and held the following positions, Trial Attorney (Indianapolis),
Director, Criminal Tax Division, Deputy Associate Chief Counsel (Litigation), and
Director, Tax Litigation Division; member, American Bar Association (Section of
taxation); took oath of office as a judge of the U.S. Tax Court, November 20,
1987 for a 15-year term to succeed Judge Charles R. Simpson.
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LAWRENCE J. WHALEN, judge Oklahoma; born 1944, Philadelphia, PA; married
Nan Shaver Whalen; son: E. Holmes Whalen; A.B., Georgetown University, 1967; J.D.,
Georgetown University Law Center, 1970; LL.M., 1971; Special Assistant to the
Assistant Attorney General, 1971 72; trial attorney, Tax Division, 1971 75;
private practice in Washington, DC, with Hamel & Park (now Hopkins, Sutter, Hamel
& Park), 1977 84; also in Oklahoma City, OK, with Crowe & Dunlevy, 1984 87;
member: Oklahoma Bar Association, District of Columbia Bar Association,
American Bar Association, and Bar Association of the District of Columbia; appointed to
the U.S. Tax Court, November 23, 1987.
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JOHN O. COLVIN, judge Virginia; born November 17, 1946, Canton, OH; married
Ava M. Belohlov in 1970; one son: Timothy; graduated from the University of
Missouri (A.B., 1968), and Georgetown University Law Center (J.D., Masters of Law
in Taxation, 1978). During college and law school, employed by Niedner, Niedner,
Nack & Bodeux, St. Charles, MO; Missouri Attorney General John C. Danforth and
Missouri State Representative Richard C. Marshall, Jefferson City, MO; and U.S.
Senator Mark O. Hatfield and Congressman Thomas B. Curtis, Washington, DC;
admitted to the practice of law in Missouri, 1971 and District of Columbia, 1974.
Office of the Chief Counsel, U.S. Coast Guard, Washington, DC, 1971 75; served as
Tax Counsel, Senator Bob Packwood, 1975 84; Chief Counsel, 1985 87, and
Chief Minority Counsel, 1987 88, U.S. Senate Finance Committee; officer of the Tax
Section, Federal Bar Association since 1978, and adjunct professor of law,
Georgetown University Law Center since 1987. Numerous civic and community
activities; Judge Colvin was nominated by President Reagan and confirmed by the Senate as
a Judge of the U.S. Tax Court for a term of 15 years beginning September 1, 1988
and expiring August 31, 2003. Judge Colvin filled a vacancy due to the
resignation of Judge Samuel B. Sterrett.
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JAMES S. HALPERN, judge District of Columbia; born 1945, New York City;
married to Nancy A. Nord; two children: W. Dyer Halpern and Hilary Ann Halpern;
graduated from Hackley School, Terrytown, New York, 1963; Wharton School,
University of Pennsylvania, B.S. 1967; Law School, University of Pennsylvania, J.D.,
1972; Law School, New York University, LL.M. (in taxation) 1975; associate attorney,
Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander, New York City, 1972 74; assistant
professor of law, Law School, Washington and Lee University, 1975 76; assistant
professor of law, St. John's University, New York City, 1976 78, visiting
professor, Law School, New York University, 1978 79; associate attorney, Roberts and
Holland, New York City, 1979 80; Principal Technical Advisor, Assistant
Commissioner (Technical) and Associate Chief Counsel (Technical), Internal Revenue
Service, Washington, DC, 1980 83; partner, Baker and Hostetler, Washington, DC,
1983 90; adjunct professor, Law School, George Washington University,
Washington, DC, 1984 90; Colonel, U.S. Army Reserves; appointed to the U.S. Tax Court on
July 3, 1990.
08
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ARNOLD RAUM, senior judge Massachusetts; born 1908, Massachusetts; married
to Violet Gang Kopp; Harvard College, A.B. (summa cum laude), 1929, and Harvard
Law School, LL.B. (magna cum laude), 1932; member of Phi Beta Kappa; member,
Editorial Board of Harvard Law Review, 1930 32; traveling fellowship, Cambridge
University, England, 1932; attorney, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1932
34; special assistant to Attorney General, Tax Division, Department of Justice,
1934 39; in 1939, entered Solicitor General's office, in charge of Government
tax litigation and other types of cases in U.S. Supreme Court; has argued more
tax cases in Supreme Court than anyone in history; assistant to Solicitor General
(now Deputy Solicitor General), and Acting Solicitor General from time to time;
lectured on taxation as a member of faculty at Harvard and Yale; U.S. military
service, World War II, lieutenant commander, Coast Guard; oath of office as
judge, U.S. Tax Court, September 19, 1950; reappointed for succeeding terms beginning
June 2, 1960, and June 2, 1972; retired October 27, 1978; presently serving on
senior status.
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WILLIAM MILLER DRENNEN, senior judge West Virginia; born 1914, Jenkins, KY;
married to Margaret Morton, 1940; children: Margaret Penelope, Dale Louise,
William M., Jr., and David Holmes; attended public schools in Charleston, WV,
Denver, CO, and Columbus, OH; Ohio State University, B.S., 1936, and J.D., 1938;
admitted to the bar, West Virginia, 1939; employed during law school years in office
of Ohio State Tax Commissioner, and as assistant to the clerk of the Ohio
Supreme Court; law clerk to judge of U.S. District Court for Southern District of
West Virginia, 1938 40; associate and later partner in law firm of Brown, Jackson
& Knight (now Jackson, Kelly, Holt & O'Farrell), Charleston, WV, 1940 58; air
combat intelligence officer, USNR, 1942 45; past president and member of
board of West Virginia Tax Institute; former member, city council of Charleston, WV;
board of directors, Charleston Chamber of Commerce; board of trustees,
Charleston Memorial Hospital; member, American Bar Association (section of taxation),
West Virginia State Bar, West Virginia Bar Association, and American Judicature
Society; member, Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; appointed to the
U.S. Tax Court October 1, 1958, for term expiring June 1, 1968, to succeed Judge
Stephen E. Rice, deceased; reappointed for term expiring June 1, 1980; elected
chief judge July 1, 1967; reelected July 1, 1969, and July 1, 1971; retired June
1, 1980; presently serving on senior status.
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IRENE FEAGIN SCOTT, senior judge Alabama; born October 6, 1912, Union
Springs, AL; daughter of Arthur H. and Irene Peach Feagin; married to Thomas J.
Scott, 1939; children: Thomas J., Jr., and Irene (Mrs. Franklin L. Carroll III);
attended public school in Union Springs, AL; graduated Union Springs High School,
1929; A.B., University of Alabama, 1932; LL.B., University of Alabama, 1936;
LL.M., Catholic University of America, 1939; LL.D., University of Alabama, 1978
(honorary); admitted to Alabama Bar 1936; attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, Internal
Revenue Service, 1937 50; member, Excess Profits Tax Council, Internal
Revenue Service, 1950 52; Special Assistant to Head of Appeals Division, Office of
Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, 1952 59; Staff Assistant to the Chief
Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, 1959 60; member, Alabama Bar Association;
honorary member, The Bar Association of the District of Columbia; member:
American Bar Association (section of taxation), Federal Bar Association, Inter-American
Bar Association, American Judicature Society, National Association of Women
Lawyers, National Association of Women Judges, Kappa Beta Pi; appointed as judge,
U.S. Tax Court in May 1960, for term expiring June 1, 1972; reappointed June 1,
1972 for 15-year term; assumed senior status July 1, 1982.
08
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THEODORE TANNENWALD, Jr ., senior judge, elected chief judge for a
2-year term beginning July 1, 1981 New York; born 1916, Valatie, NY; married to
Selma Peterfreund; two sons: Peter and Robert; graduated Brown University, 1936,
A.B., summa cum laude, in political science and mathematics, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma
Xi, Delta Sigma Rho; graduated Harvard Law School, 1939, LL.B., magna cum
laude, Fay Diploma for highest 3-year average, Note Editor, Harvard Law Review;
admitted to New York Bar, 1939, District of Columbia Bar 1946; engaged in practice of
law with firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges, New York, NY, 1939 65, except for
absences for service as Principal Assistant, Lend-Lease Administration, and Acting
Assistant Chief, Foreign Funds Control Division, Department of State, 1942
43, Special Consultant to the Secretary of War, 1943 45, Consultant to Secretary
of Defense James Forrestal, 1946 49, Counsel to Special Assistant to
President Truman, W. Averell Harriman, 1950 51, Assistant Director for Mutual
Security, 1951 53, and Member of President Kennedy's Task Force on Foreign Assistance
and Special Assistant to Secretary of State, 1961 61; also served for the
State of New York as Special Counsel to the Moreland Commission for the
Investigation of Workmen's Compensation, 1955 58, and New York member, Governors'
Tri-State Committee on Taxation of Nonresidents, 1958; member: American Bar Association
(tax section), Federal Bar Association, Bar Association of the District of
Columbia, and Council on Foreign Relations; honorary chairman and member, board of
governors, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion; professional
lecturer, George Washington University School of Law 1968 76; University of Miami Law
School, 1976 to date; appointed to the U.S. Tax Court for term expiring June 1,
1974, to succeed Judge Clarence V. Opper, deceased; reappointed for a 15-year
term expiring June 1, 1989; retired June 30, 1983; presently serving on senior
status.
08
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C. MOXLEY FEATHERSTON, senior judge Virginia; born 1914, Jayton, TX;
married to Rose Darlington Ross, 1938; two sons and a daughter; attended public
schools in Petersburg, TX; Hardin-Simmons University, A.B., 1935 (magna cum laude);
George Washington University, J.D., 1939; admitted to the bar, Texas, 1940, and
District of Columbia Bar, 1939, the U.S. Supreme Court; practice of law,
Hereford TX (1940); attorney, Department of Agriculture (1940 42); War Relocation
Authority (1942 45); assistant general counsel, Institute of Inter-American
Affairs (1949 51); Department of Justice, Tax Division (1945 49; 1951 67);
member: Order of the Coif; Alpha Chi; oath of office as judge, U.S. Tax Court, July
24, 1967; reappointed June 1, 1980; term expires June 1, 1995; retired December
24, 1983; presently serving on senior status; residence.
08
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WILLIAM M. FAY, senior judge Pennsylvania; born Pittston, PA; married to
Jean M. Burke, Plainfield, NY, 1945; son, Michael; attended St. John's Academy,
Pittston; Georgetown and Catholic Universities; LL.B., 1942; admitted to District
of Columbia Bar, 1942, and U.S. Supreme Court, 1946; Assistant Counsel, U.S.
Senate Atomic Energy Committee, 1946; Executive Assistant to Senator McMahon of
Connecticut, 1946 48; Office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, 1948
57, serving successively as Trial Attorney, Assistant Head of Civil Division, and
Assistant Head of Appeals Division; Assistant Regional Counsel; military
service: 1942 45, serving successively as Naval Intelligence Officer, Gunnery
Officer and Legal Officer; member of the American Bar (tax section), and the District
of Columbia Bar Association; appointed to the U.S. Tax Court on August 3, 1961;
retired May 14, 1985; presently serving on senior status.
08
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WILLIAM A. GOFFE, senior judge Oklahoma; born 1929, Sulphur, OK; not
married; University of Oklahoma College of Business Administration, B.B.A., 1951;
University of Oklahoma College of Law, LL.B., 1956; member: Beta Gamma Sigma
honorary business fraternity, Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity; admitted to bar,
Oklahoma, 1956, Federal District Courts of Oklahoma and U.S. Court of Appeals for the
10th Circuit; attorney in office of chief counsel, Internal Revenue Service 1956
60; engaged in private law practice in Tulsa, OK, since 1960; member of the law
firm of Martin, Logan, Moyers, Martin & Conway; military service, active duty
1951 53 as auditing officer, auditor general, U.S. Air Force, followed by 8
years in Air Force Reserve with rank of captain; member: American Bar Association
(sections of taxation, judicial administration, and litigation), Oklahoma Bar
Association, past president, Oklahoma Institute on Taxation, past president, Tulsa
Tax Club; member of advisory board, Southwestern Law Journal, and member of
visitor's board, Southern Methodist University; oath of office as judge, Tax Court,
November 4, 1971; retired November 3, 1986; presently serving on senior
status.08
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HOWARD A DAWSON, J r., senior judge Arkansas born October 23, 1922,
Okolona, AR, married to Marianne Atherholt; two daughters, Amy and Suzanne;
graduated from University of North Carolina, B.S. in business administration, 1946;
George Washington University Law School, J.D. with honors, 1949; president, Case
Club; secretary-treasurer, Student Bar Association; private practice of law,
Washington, DC, 1949 50; served with the U.S. Treasury Department, Internal
Revenue Service, as follows: Attorney, Civil Division, Office of Chief Counsel, 1950
53; Civil Advisory Counsel, Atlanta District, 1953 57; Regional Counsel,
Atlanta Region, 1958; Personal Assistant to Chief Counsel, December 1, 1958 to June
1, 1959; and Assistant Chief Counsel (Administration), June 1, 1959 to August
19, 1962; military service: U.S. Army Finance Corps, 1942 45; served 2 years in
European theater; captain, Finance Corps, U.S. Army Reserve; member of District
of Columbia Bar, Georgia Bar, American Bar Association (Section of Taxation),
Federal Bar Association, National Lawyers Club, Delta Theta Phi Legal Fraternity,
George Washington University Law Alumni Association; appointed on August 21,
1962, to the U.S. Tax Court for term expiring June 1, 1970; reappointed on May 21,
1970, to the U.S. Tax Court for a 15-year term expiring June 1, 1985; elected
chief judge for a 2-year term beginning July 1, 1973; reelected chief judge for a
2-year term beginning July 1, 1975; again elected Chief Judge for a 2-year term
beginning July 1, 1983. Assumed status as a Senior Judge on June 2, 1985. David
L. Brennan Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law, University of Akron School
of Law, Spring Term, 1986, professor of law and director, Graduate Tax Program,
University of Baltimore School of Law, 1986 89; presently serving on senior
status.
08
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MEADE WHITAKER, senior judge Washington, DC; born March 22, 1919; married;
two children; B.A. with honors, Yale University, 1940; LL.B. University of
Virginia, 1948; board of editors, Virginia Law Review; Order of the Coif, The Raven
Society; Phi Delta Phi; admitted Alabama Bar, 1948; Cabaniss & Johnston (and
successor firms), Birmingham, AL, 1948 69 and 1970 73; tax legislative counsel,
Treasury Department, 1960 70; chief counsel, Internal Revenue Service,
Treasury Department 1973 77; Arter and Hadden, Washington, DC, 1977 78; assistant
general counsel, Federal tax, Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, MI, 1978 81; member:
Alabama, District of Columbia, and American Bar Association (section of taxation);
American Law Institute; military service: 1941 46 U.S. Marine Corps;
appointed to the Tax Court of the U.S. for a 15-year term, beginning January 12, 1982;
assumed senior status March 22, 1987.
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SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGES OF THE COURT
James M. Gussis; Francis J. Cantrel; Daniel J. Dinan; Marvin F.
Peterson; John J. Pajak; Lee M. Galloway; Helen A. Buckley; Peter J. Panuthos; Joan
Seitz Pate; D. Irvin Couvillion; Norman H. Wolfe; Stanley J. Goldberg; Carleton D.
Powell; Larry L. Nameroff.
OFFICERS OF THE COURT
Clerk. Charles S. Casazza, 376 2754.
Deputy Clerk. Lynne L. Glasser.
Budget and Accounting Officer. Washington B. Bowie.
Librarian. Jeanne R. Bonynge.
Reporter. John T. Fee.
Congressional Directory
450 E Street 20442 0001. Phone, 272 1448
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EUGENE R. SULLIVAN, chief judge; born August 2, 1941, in St. Louis, MO; son
of Raymond V. and Rosemary K. Sullivan; married to Lis U. Johansen of Ribe,
Denmark, June 18, 1966; children: Kim A. and Eugene R. II; B.S., U.S. Military
Academy, West Point, 1964; J.D., Georgetown Law Center, Washington, DC, 1971; active
duty with the U.S. Army, 1964 69; service included duty with the 3rd Armored
Division in Germany, and the 4th Infantry Division in Vietnam; R&D assignments
with the Army Aviation Systems Command; one year as an instructor at the Army
Ranger School, Ft. Benning, GA; decorations include: Bronze Star, Air Medal, Army
Commendation Medal, Ranger and Parachutist Badges, Air Force Exceptional Civilian
Service Medal. Following graduation from law school, clerked with U.S. Court of
Appeals (8th Circuit), St. Louis, 1971 72; private law practice, Washington,
DC, 1972 74; Assistant Special Counsel, White House, 1974; trial attorney,
U.S. Department of Justice, 1974 82; Deputy General Counsel, Department of the
Air Force, 1982 84; General Counsel of the Department of Air Force, 1984 86;
Governor of Wake Island, 1984 86; presently serves on the Board of Governors
for the West Point Society of the District of Columbia; the American Cancer
Society (Montgomery County Chapter); nominated by President Reagan, as judge, U.S.
Court of Military Appeals on February 25, 1986, and confirmed by the Senate on May
20, 1986, and assumed his office on May 27, 1986. President Bush named him the
chief judge of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals, effective October 1,
1990.08
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WALTER THOMPSON COX III, judge; born August 13, 1942, in Anderson, SC; son
of Walter T. Cox and Mary Johnson Cox; married to Vicki Grubbs of Anderson, SC,
February 8, 1963; children: Lisa and Walter; B.S., Clemson University, 1964;
J.D. (cum laude), University of South Carolina School of Law, 1967; graduated
Defense Language Institute (German), 1969; graduated Basic Course, the Judge Advocate
General's School, Charlottesville, VA, 1967; studied Procurement Law at that
same school, 1968. Active duty, U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's Corps, 1964
72 (1964 67, excess leave to U.S.C. Law School). Private law practice, 1973
78. Elected Resident Judge, 10th Judicial Circuit, South Carolina, 1978 84;
also served as Acting Associate Justice of South Carolina Supreme Court, on the
Judicial Council, on the Circuit Court Advisory Committee, and as a Hearing Officer
of the Judicial Standards Commission; member: Bar of the Supreme Court of the
United States; Bar of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals; South Carolina Bar
Association; Anderson County Bar Association; the American Bar Association; the
South Carolina Trial Lawyers Association; the Federal Bar Association; and the Bar
Association of the District of Columbia; has served as a member of the House of
Delegates of the South Carolina Bar, and the Board of Commissioners on Grievances
and Discipline. Nominated by President Reagan, as judge of U.S. Court of
Military Appeals, June 28, 1984, for a term of 15 years; confirmed by the Senate, July
26, 1984; sworn-in and officially assumed his duties on September 6,
1984.08
* * *
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WILLIAM HOLMES COOK, senior judge; born in Carbondale, IL, June 2, 1920;
son of Rex H. and Mary Dola (Carter) Cook; prelaw, Southern Illinois University,
1938 40; J.D., Washington University, St. Louis, MO, 1947; active duty in U.S.
Army, 1942 46; admitted to bar of Illinois and to practice before the Illinois
Supreme Court, 1947; and before the Supreme Court in 1956; private practice of
law in Charleston, IL, 1949 52; joined Federal Trade Commission as an attorney
in 1954; became assistant to the chairman in 1957; in 1959, joined the
Department of the Navy serving as Associate Counsel for Property and Special Matters; in
1963, appointed counsel for the Armed Services Committee, House of
Representatives; nominated by President Nixon to be an associate judge of U.S. Court of
Military Appeals on August 2, 1974, for the remainder of the term expiring May 1,
1976; unanimously confirmed by the Senate on August 16, 1974, and took oath of
office on August 21, 1974; commission signed by President Ford on August 20, 1974;
reappointed by President Ford on February 10, 1976, and again unanimously
confirmed by the Senate for the term expiring May 1, 1991, and took oath of office on
April 23, 1976; retired on March 31, 1984 and immediately assumed status of
senior judge, returning to full active service until June 30, 1984.
08
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WILLIAM HORACE DARDEN, senior judge; born in Union Point, GA, May 16, 1923;
son of William W. and Sara (Newsom) Darden; B.B.A., University of Georgia,
1946; LL.B., University of Georgia, 1948; admitted to bar of Georgia and to practice
before the Georgia Supreme Court, 1948; active duty in U.S. Navy from July 1,
1943 to July 3, 1946, when released to inactive duty as lieutenant (jg.); married
to Mary Parrish Viccellio of Chatham, VA, December 31, 1949; children: Sara
Newsom, Martha Hardy, William H., Jr., Daniel Hobson; secretary to U.S. Senator
Richard B. Russell, 1948 51; chief clerk of U.S. Senate Committee on Armed
Services, 1951 53; professional staff member and later chief of staff, U.S. Senate
Committee on Armed Services, February 1953 to November 1968; received recess
appointment as judge of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals from President Johnson on
November 5, 1968, to succeed the late Judge Paul J. Kilday; took oath of office
on November 13, 1968; nominated by President Johnson for the unexpired part of
the term of the late Judge Paul J. Kilday ending May 1, 1976; confirmed by
Senate on January 14, 1969; designated chief judge by President Nixon on June 23,
1971; resigned December 29, 1973; elected to become senior judge on February 11,
1974.
08
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ROBINSON O. EVERETT, senior judge; born in Durham, NC, March 18, 1928; son
of Reuben O. and Kathrine (Robinson) Everett; A.B. (magna cum laude), Harvard
College, 1947; J.D. (magna cum laude), Harvard Law School, 1950; LL.M., Duke
University, 1959; active duty in U.S. Air Force, 1951 53; thereafter served in U.S.
Air Force Reserve and retired as colonel, 1978; married to Linda McGregor of
Greensboro, NC, August 27, 1966; children: Robinson O., Jr., McGregor, and Lewis
Moore; commissioner, U.S. Court of Military Appeals, 1953 55; private law
practice, Durham, NC, 1955 80; assistant professor of law, 1950 51; adjunct
professor of law, 1963 66; professor of law, Duke Law School, 1967 present;
chairman Durham Urban Redevelopment Commission, 1958 75; counsel, 1961 64;
consultant, 1964 66; Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights, Senate Committee on the
Judiciary; chairman, Standing Committee on Military Law, American Bar
Association, 1977 79; president, Durham County Bar Association, 1976 77; commissioner,
National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, 1961 73, 1977
present; member, American Law Institute, 1966 present; councillor, North
Carolina State Bar, 1978 83; nominated by President Carter as judge of U.S. Court of
Military Appeals, February 14, 1980, for the remainder of the term expiring May
1, 1981; unanimously confirmed by the Senate and designated chief judge by
President Carter, March 28, 1980; took oath of office, April 16, 1980; term of
office extended until April 15, 1990, by Act of December 23, 1980, Public Law 96
579, section 12, 94 Stat. 3369; term of office further extended until Sep. 30,
1990 by Act of November 29, 1989, Public Law 101 189, section 1301, 103 Stat 1575
76. Immediately upon his retirement at the end of his term on September 30,
1990, assumed status of senior judge and returned to full active service pending
the appointment of his successor.
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OFFICERS OF THE U.S. COURT OF MILITARY APPEALS
Clerk of the Court. Thomas F. Granahan.
Central Legal Staff Director. William N. Early.
Reporter of Decisions. John A. Cutts II.
Administrative Officer. Robert J. Bieber.
Librarian. Mary Shaw Kuck.
Congressional Directors
Washington, DC 20544. Phone, 633 6040; FTS phone numbers are identical
for each phone listing
Director. L. Ralph Mecham, 633 6097.
Confidential Assistant. Joan Phillips, 633 6097.
Secretary to the Director. Barbara O. Denham, 633 6097.
Deputy Director . James E. Macklin, Jr., 633 6135.
General Counsel . William R. Burchill, Jr., 633 6127.
Legislative and Public Affairs Officer. Robert E. Feidler, 633
6040.Chief, Judicial Conference and Management Coordination. Karen K. Siegel,
786 7138.
Assistant Director for
Administration and Human Resources. Clarence A. Lee, Jr., 633
6200. Deputy Assistant Director for Special Projects. R. Townsend Robinson,
633 5987.
Automation and Technology. Edwin L. Stoorza, Jr., 633 6106.
Deputy Assistant Director, Automation and Technology. Charles F.
McBride, 633 6537.
Court Programs. [Vacant.]
Court Security Officer. William A. Cohan, Jr., 786 6003.
Judges Programs. Peter G. McCabe, 633 5922.
Chief for
Accounting Division. Alaxander L. Lloyd (acting), 633 6124.
Article III Judges Division. John E. Howell, 633 8350.
Audit Division. David L. Gellman (acting), 633 6193.
Automation Resources Division. Albert E. Ball, 633 6175.
Bankruptcy Division . Francis F. Szczebak, 633 6231.
Budget Division. Dewey R. Heising, 633 6231.
Court Administration Division . Duane R. Lee, 633 6478.
Court Systems Division. Dennis E. Morey, 633 5803.
Contracts and Services Division . Ralph J. Simmons, 633 6117.
Defender Services Division . Theodore J. Lidz, 633 6051.
Evaluation and Assessment Division . Robert M. Crowder, 633 6200.
Financial Applications and Analysis Division. Penny G. Jacobs, 633
6101.
Human Resources Division. Charlotte G. Peddicord (acting), 786
6112.
Integrated Technology Division. Pamela B. White, 633 6220.
Magistrates Division . John T. Jones, 633 6251.
Policy and Management Coordination Division. Cathy A. McCarthy, 633
6200.
Probation and Pretrial Services Division . Donald L. Chamlee, 633
6226.
Space and Facilities Division . P. Gerald Thacker, 633 6090.
Statistics Division . David L. Cook, 633 6094.
Systems Technology Division . Frank S. Dozier, 633 5804.
1520 H Street 20005. Phone, 633 6365
FAX phone numbers: 786 6389 and 633 6349
Director. Judge William W Schwarzer, 633 6311.
Administrative Assistant to the Director. Peggy A. Smith, 633
6311.Special Assistant and Counsel to the Director. James G. Apple, 633
6321.
Deputy Director. Charles W. Nihan, 633 6311.
Director of
Continuing Education and Training. Daniel L. Skoler, 633 6332.
Innovations and Systems Development. [Vacant.]
Publications. Sylvan A. Sober, 633 6321.
Research. William B. Eldridge, 633 6326.
Special Educational Services. Russell R. Wheeler, 633 6216.
Information Specialist. Leonard E. Klein, 633 6365.
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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
500 Indiana Avenue 20001
Chief Judge. Judith W. Rogers, 879 2770.
Associate Judges:
James A. Belson, 879 2760.
Michael W. Farrell, 879 2790.
John M. Ferren, 879 2750.
Frank E. Schwelb, 879 2730.
John M. Steadman, 879 2785.
John A. Terry, 879 2780.
Annice Wagner, 879 2727.
Retired Judges: Gerard D. Reilly (chief judge), 879 2755; George R.
Gallagher, 879 2764; John W. Kern III, 879 2754; William C. Pryor, 879 2745;
Julia Cooper Mack, 879 2765; Theodore R. Newman, Jr., 879 2740.
Clerk. Richard B. Hoffman, 879 2725.
Chief Deputy Clerk. [Vacant], 879 2722.
Director of Admissions, Committee on Admissions. Clare Marie Jones,
879 2714.
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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURTS
Phone, 879 1010
Executive Officer. Ulysses B. Hammond, 879 1700.
Deputy Executive Officer. James E. Gregory, 879 4616.
Fiscal Officer. John F. Schultheis, 879 2806.
Director, Court Reporting Division. Shirley Shepard-Curley, 879
1016.SUPERIOR COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Phone, 879 1010
Chief Judge. Fred B. Ugast, 879 1600.
Associate Judges:
Mary Ellen Abrecht, 879 7834.
Geoffrey M. Alprin, 879 1577.
Sylvia Bacon, 879 1444.
John H. Bayly, 879 7874.
Bruce D. Beaudin, 879 1575.
Shellie F. Bowers, 879 1288.
A. Franklin Burgess, Jr., 879 1164.
Arthur L. Burnett, 879 4883.
Kaye K. Christian, 879 1668.
Harold L. Cushenberry, Jr., 879 4866.
Herbert B. Dixon, Jr., 879 4808.
Frederick D. Dorsey, 879 7837.
Mildred M. Edwards, 879 7840.
Stephen F. Eilperin, 879 1566.
William C. Gardner, 879 1088.
George Herbert Goodrich, 879 1055.
Steffen W. Graae, 879 1244.
Henry F. Greene, 879 1455.
Eugene N. Hamilton, 879 1070.
Linda Turner Hamilton, 727 9632.
Eric H. Holder, Jr., 879 7843.
Nan R. Huhn, 879 1207.
Ellen Segal Huvelle, 879 1264.
Henry H. Kennedy, Jr., 879 1202.
Gladys Kessler, 879 1616.
Rufus G. King III, 879 1480.
Warren R. King, 879 1280.
Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, 879 1430.
Noel A. Kramer, 879 1446.
Richard A. Levie, 879 1247.
Cheryl M. Long, 879 1200.
Jose M. Lopez, 879 7877.
Bruce S. Mencher, 879 1358.
Stephen G. Milliken, 727 9672.
George W. Mitchell, 879 1277.
Zinora Mitchell-Rankin, 879 7846.
Gregory E. Mize, 879 1395.
Truman A. Morrison III, 879 1060.
Evelyn E. Queen, 879 4886.
Michael Lee Rankin, 879 1220.
Robert I. Richter, 879 1422.
Richard S. Salzman, 879 1717.
Robert M. Scott, 879 1550.
Robert A. Shuker, 879 1739.
John H. Suda, 879 4873.
Emmet G. Sullivan, 879 1414.
Harriett R. Taylor, 879 1442.
Robert S. Tignor, 879 1252.
Ricardo M. Urbina, 879 1167.
Curtis E. von Kann, 879 1210.
Paul R. Webber III, 879 1426.
Frederick H. Weisberg, 879 1066.
Ronald P. Wertheim, 879 1170.
Susan K. Winfield, 879 1272.
Peter H. Wolf, 879 1388.
Patricia A. Wynn, 879 4630.
Joan Zeldon, 879 1590.
Retired Judges:
Samuel B. Block, 879 1570.
John F. Doyle, 879 1099.
Margaret A. Haywood, 879 4633.
John R. Hess, 879 1420.
Fred L. McIntyre, 879 1428.
Luke C. Moore, 879 1588.
George D. Neilson, 879 1477.
Nicholas S. Nunzio, 879 1440.
Joseph M.F. Ryan, Jr., 879 1448.
Donald S. Smith, 879 1490.
William S. Thompson, 879 1470.
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SUPERIOR COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SUPPORT PERSONNEL
Clerk of the Court. Frederick B. Beane, Jr., 879 1400.
Deputy Clerk of the Court. Roy S. Wynn, Jr., 879 4837.
Auditor-Master. Anita Isicson, 879 4621.
Director
Civil Division. Thomas M. Hammond, 879 1680.
Criminal Division. Carolyn R. Davenport, 879 1689.
Family Division. H. Edward Ricks, 879 1633.
Social Services. Alan M. Schuman, 879 1800.
Probate, Register of Wills. Constance G. Evans, 879 4800.
Multi-Door Dispute Resolution Division. Melinda Ostermeyer.
Chairman. James S. Gardiner, 879 1328.
Co-Chairman. Walter J. Murphy, Jr., 879 1328.
Morton Berg, 879 1552.
Jerry S. Byrd, 879 1189.
Paul Buxbaum, 879 4795.
Evelyn B. Coburn, 879 4853.
Pamela Young Diaz, 879 1565.
J. Dennis Doyle, 879 1194.
Roy M. Ellis, 879 4793.
Fern Flanagan, 879 4854.
Thomas J. Gaye, 879 4797.
Andrea L. Harnett, 879 1714.
John W. King, 879 1169.
Earl E. Shamwell, Jr., 879 4852
Hugh O. Stevenson, 879 4851
John H. Treanor, 879 4798.
12
500 Indiana Avenue 20001. Phone, 879 1499
Register of Wills. Constance G. Evans, 879 4800.
Deputy Register of Wills. Cicily Collier, 879 4801.
Assistant Deputy Register of Wills. Laura Reed, 879 4802.
Assistant Deputy Register of Wills. Laura Reed, 879 4802.
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