THE JUDICIAL FELLOWS PROGRAM 2001--2002 Supreme Court of the United States Washington, D. C. 20543 CHAMBERS OF T H E C H I E F J U S T I C E Dear Candidate: The Judicial Fellows Program is entering its 28th year in 2001. The Program continues to offer a unique opportunity for outstanding individuals to apply their talents and interests to the administration of justice at the national level. Since its beginning, the Program has attracted candidates with proven records of accomplishment. Their efforts as Fellows have made a lasting impact on the Supreme Court, the Federal Judicial Center, the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, and the United States Sentencing Commission. The Fellowship Program seeks people with fresh insights, imagination, and special abilities. I encourage you to consider the objectives of the Judicial Fellows Program, its design and your qualifications. We need exceptional people to help meet the challenges facing the federal courts. Sincerely, INTRODUCTION For the past 27 years, the Judicial Fellows Work assignments and projects reflect the Program has enabled exceptionally talented people needs of the judiciary and the interests and capabil- to contribute to the work of the Supreme Court of ities of the fellows. Fellows gain insight into the the United States, the Federal Judicial Center, the contemporary policy issues facing the judiciary as Administrative Office of the United States Courts, well as an appreciation of the nature of more routine and more recently the United States Sentencing administrative tasks. Individuals best able to Commission. Founded by Chief Justice Burger in maximize the resources of the Judicial Fellows 1973, the program provides fellows an opportunity Program are those with initiative, poise, and to study first-hand both the administrative adaptability. machinery of the federal judiciary and the dynamics The Judicial Fellows Program is of inter-branch relations. administered by the Office of the Administrative The Judicial Fellows Program seeks Assistant to the Chief Justice in cooperation with outstanding individuals from diverse professions the Federal Judicial Center, the Administrative and academic backgrounds, including law, the Office of the United States Courts, and the United social and behavioral sciences, public and business States Sentencing Commission. The Supreme administration, systems research and analysis, Court Historical Society serves as the fiscal agent communications, and the humanities. for the fellowship program. The west front of the Supreme Court at night. 1 2000-2001 JUDICIAL FELLOWS L. Karl Branting joins the Judicial Fellows Jill E. Evans comes to the Judicial Fellows Program from the Department of Computer Science at Program from the Cumberland School of Law in the University of Wyoming, where he is an Associate Birmingham, Alabama, where she is an Associate Professor. After having graduated magna cum laude Professor specializing in Torts and Environmental Law. from the University of Colorado, Mr. Branting obtained Upon receiving a degree in Social Ecology from the a J.D. from the Georgetown University Law Center. University of California, Irvine, Ms. Evans co-enrolled at While at Georgetown, he was Assistant Editor of the the J. L. Kellog Graduate School of Management and Georgetown Journal of International Law and recipient the Northwestern University School of Law. While of the Barrister's Counsel Teaching Fellowship. Upon attending Northwestern, she served as a Regional Ad- graduation, he worked as an associate at Davis, ministrator of the Jessup International Law Moot Court Moorhead & Ceriani in Denver and later obtained a Competition, and successfully completed both M.M. and Staff Attorney position with the Colorado Court of J.D. degrees. Ms. Evans' extensive private sector experi- Appeals. Mr. Branting then received a MCD Doctoral ence includes a position as a litigation and environmental Fellowship to the University of Texas at Austin, com- partner with Keck, Mahin & Cate in both Chicago and pleting both M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Los Angeles. She has worked for District Court Judges Science. His significant contributions to the legal and James E. Doyle of Madison, Wisconsin as a law clerk, scientific disciplines are seen in his receipt of the Award and Terry J. Hatter of Los Angeles as an intern. Ms. for Extraordinary Merit in Research from the University Evans has contributed greatly to Cumberland Law of Wyoming College of Arts and Sciences. Mr. Branting School, serving as Administrator of the Voting Rights has taught and written extensively on law and informa- Moot Court Competition, an advisor and facilitator to tion technology, recently publishing Reasoning with student organizations including the Environmental Law Rules and Precedents: A Computational Model of Legal Society and the Black Law Students Association, a Analysis. He has also made significant contributions to member of the University Values Council, and a mem- the journals Artificial Intelligence and Law, the Interna- ber of numerous faculty committees. She recently tional Journal of Law and Information Technology, The authored law review articles on Challenging the Racism Colorado Lawyer, and Law and Policy in International in Environmental Racism: Redefining the Concept of Business, and was Program Chair of the Sixth Interna- Intent, and The Lawyer as an Enlightened Citizen: tional Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law Towards a New Regulatory Model in Environmental (ICAIL ­ 97). Mr. Branting will be the Judicial Fellow Law. Ms. Evans will be the Judicial Fellow at the at the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Federal Judicial Center. 2 2000-2001 JUDICIAL FELLOWS Barry T. Ryan joins the Judicial Fellows Jennifer A. Segal comes to the Judicial Fellows Program from Point Loma Nazarene University in San Program from the University of Kentucky, where she is Diego, California, where he is Vice President for an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political University Relations and Professor of History. He Science. While at the university, she has earned an formerly directed the Center for Teaching and Learning Outstanding Teacher Award from the College of Arts and was chair of the Faculty Council and the Department and Sciences. Ms. Segal currently serves as faculty of History and Political Science. Following graduation advisor to pre-law students and is a member of the magna cum laude from Westmont College in Santa Undergraduate Studies Committee for the Department of Barbara, Mr. Ryan completed a master's program at Political Science. After graduating cum laude from the Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, received a University of California, San Diego, Ms. Segal earned a Ph.D. in History from the University of California, Santa M.A. and a Ph.D. from the Ohio State University. She Barbara, and earned a J.D. from Boalt Hall School of has conducted extensive research in the fields of judicial Law at the University of California, Berkeley. While a politics and public law, focusing much attention on law student, he was awarded the Prosser Prize in federal courts and the mass media, representation, public American Legal History and was named Outstanding opinion and decisionmaking. Results of her studies are Graduate Student Instructor. His areas of academic included in a recently published book, Television News concentration include history, law, and theology, and he and the Supreme Court: All the News That's Fit to Air? has demonstrated proficiency in the German, French, Ms. Segal has also made significant scholarly contribu- Italian, Spanish, and Classical and Medieval Latin tions to Political Research Quarterly, the American languages. Mr. Ryan has published articles in the Review of Politics, and Judicature. Currently, she is Thomas Jefferson Law Review, the International Tax and investigating the impact of gender and judicial decision Business Lawyer, Augustinus, Fides et Historia, and making on the federal district courts. She has had the Studia Patristica, as well as edited A Collection of opportunity to appear as a guest on Court TV's Supreme Readings in the History of European Society, 1300 ­ Court Watch, and has served as chair and is a member of 1648. In addition to his current position at Point Loma, the editorial board for The Law and Politics Book he has been a visiting scholar at the University of Review. Ms. Segal will be the Judicial Fellow at the London, a lecturer at Boalt Hall School of Law and United States Sentencing Commission. Thomas Jefferson School of Law, and a visiting Assist- ant Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Mr. Ryan will be the Judicial Fellow at the Supreme Court of the United States. 3 AGENCY ASSIGNMENTS Fellows are usually assigned to work at one of the following national institutions of the federal judiciary: Supreme Court of the United States One fellow is chosen to serve in the Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice, located in the Supreme Court of the United States. The Administrative Assistant aids the Chief Justice in his administrative, policy, and ceremonial responsibilities for the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary. These responsibilities include: chairing the Judicial Conference of the United States; serving as Chancellor of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution; overseeing the Administrative Office of the United States Courts; and chairing the Board of Directors of the Mark Miller, 1999­2000 Judicial Fellow at the Supreme Court, with James Duff, former Federal Judicial Center. The Administrative Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice. Assistant serves as a liaison for the Chief Justice to these agencies, the legislative and executive branches, and other non-judicial entities. Federal Judicial Center Fellows assigned to the Court participate in long-range projects as well as day-to-day adminis- One fellow is assigned to the Federal Judi- trative tasks, and are assisted by two Judicial Interns cial Center, the federal judiciary's agency for operating under the fellow's supervision. Projects research and education. The Center provides in which fellows may participate include: research- orientation and continuing education for all federal ing and providing background information for the judges, as well as management and supervisory Chief Justice's speeches and reports; briefing education for the courts' staff. Its educational distinguished Court visitors, many of whom are programs include seminars, electronic media foreign government officials, on the workings of the programs and broadcasts, instructional monographs American judicial system and the Supreme Court of and manuals, and curriculum guides for in-court the United States; preparing analytical reports on training. legal and managerial issues; providing assistance to The Center also provides both empirical and the Court offices; assisting with three-branch qualitative policy planning and research, usually at seminars on the administration of justice; assisting the request of committees of the Judicial Confer- Judicial Conference committees; working in coor- ence and the courts themselves. In recent years, the dination with the Administrative Office, the Federal Center has investigated structural and procedural Judicial Center, and the United States Sentencing alternatives for the federal appellate courts, evalu- Commission to research and complete special ated various types of alternative dispute resolution projects; and developing programs designed to procedures, surveyed federal judges and probation enhance public understanding of the federal judi- officers about possible changes in the sentencing ciary and the Supreme Court. 4 AGENCY ASSIGNMENTS guidelines, and assessed the operation of rules tives and, later, research and other assistance as part governing federal class-action lawsuits. of the Center's work for the Commission on Struc- The Center also houses the Federal Judicial tural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals; History Office, which encourages preservation of, and assisting Center staff and the Board of Editors and research on, the third branch's past, and the of the Manual for Complex Litigation in the re- Interjudicial Affairs Office, which provides infor- search and analysis necessary for revisions of the mation for judges and officials of foreign countries, manual. and assesses transnational developments relevant to Center educational programs. United States Sentencing Commission The Center's staff of approximately 135 includes lawyers, social scientists, adult education One fellow is assigned to the United States specialists, computer scientists, historians, and Sentencing Commission, an independent agency in media professionals. Assignments for fellows the Judicial Branch charged with establishing working at the Center have included: researching sentencing guidelines for the federal courts. The special masters and other topics as part of the Commission's duties also include (1) collecting data Center's project on science and technology; orga- on all federal guideline sentencings; (2) conducting nizing an oral history project of the first large class research on sentencing-related issues; (3) providing of women federal judges appointed in the 1970s; training to circuit and district court judges, proba- developing a study of specialized panels in the tion officers, prosecuting and defense attorneys, courts of appeals, as part of the Center's statutory congressional staff members, law clerks, and other study of federal appellate court structural alterna- government agency personnel; and (4) serving as an information resource for Congress, criminal justice practitioners, and the public. The Commission's seven voting members- three of whom must be federal judges-are ap- pointed to staggered six-year terms by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The staff of 100 employees, headed by a Staff Director, is organized into seven offices: General Counsel, Monitoring, Education and Sentencing Practice, Policy Analysis, Special Counsel, Legislative and Governmental Affairs, and Administration and Planning. Fellows working at the Commission have the opportunity to conduct quantitative, qualitative, and legal research addressing such topics as deter- rence, incapacitation, recidivism, and judicial decisionmaking. In addition, as part of its con- tinuing analysis of the sentencing guidelines and related sentencing issues, the Commission annually identifies a number of priorities for the coming Pamela Barron, Deputy General Counsel at the Sentencing year. Each priority is examined by a Commission Commission, with Amie Clifford, 1999­2000 Judicial Fellow. policy development team, and fellows may play integral roles in the work of these teams. Fellows also have access to a variety of research data, including the Commission's extensive files on the 5 AGENCY ASSIGNMENTS ways in which federal courts have imposed guide- ings; drafting publications for the bench and public; line sentences. and researching areas of civil justice reform, federal/ Possible future Commission projects that state judicial relations, and international judicial may be of interest to fellows include policy issues, relations. In connection with the judiciary's long- if any, that have been deferred from the previous range planning efforts, fellows have documented guideline amendment cycle, as well as any crime innovations in long-range planning pilot programs; legislation from the Congress that requires Com- researched topics relating to the jurisdiction, struc- mission action. ture and governance of the judicial branch; and developed research papers on the impact of growth Administrative Office of the United States on the federal court. Courts Potential research projects are available in many other areas, as well, including the federal rule- One fellow is assigned to the Administrative making process and court management. Future Office of the United States Courts, an agency that fellows are also likely to assist in the drafting of provides program management, legal counsel, publications for a new pamphlet series on adminis- legislative services, and administrative support to trative issues of particular interest to judges. Other the federal courts. The Administrative Office possible assignments include the analysis and implements the policies of the Judicial Conference implementation of studies requested by Congress or of the United States (the central policy-making the Judicial Conference. body for the federal judiciary), and it provides full staff services to the Conference and its committees. Agency attorneys support the rules committees that review and propose amendments to the rules gov- erning procedures and the admission of evidence in the federal courts. The Administrative Office also serves as the judiciary's liaison to the Congress and the executive branch on appropriations and legisla- tive affairs. The Administrative Office provides administrative support for all federal court opera- tions (other than the Supreme Court), including statistical analysis, budget and financial services, human resource management, contracting and procurement, automation and technology, and space and facilities. Assignments for fellows at the Administra- tive Office have included: analyzing legal and policy issues associated with the judiciary's use of information technology (e.g., initiatives to develop electronic case filing capabilities and to study and implement courtroom technologies); participating in a study of ways to optimize the use of judicial Richard Mendales, 1999­2000 Judicial Fellow at the officer resources; studying specialized courts and Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, with Jeffrey Hennemuth, Deputy Assistant Director for Policy mass tort litigation; analyzing litigation and pro- Development, and Management Analyst Brian Pisaro. posed legislation affecting federal court proceed- 6 THE FELLOWSHIP YEAR ACTIVITIES DURATION A variety of educational and social opportu- The Judicial Fellowship is a one-year ap- nities broaden the fellowship experience. Fellows pointment, beginning in August or September; the have access to some of the Federal Judicial Center's exact duration is subject to mutual agreement educational programs, including various colloquia between each fellow and the program's executive and meetings relevant to their professional interests director. Most fellows take a sabbatical or leave of and specific projects. They also attend special absence without pay to participate in the program luncheon seminars sponsored by the Administrative and return to their professional careers after the Assistant to the Chief Justice and lecture series fellowship year has ended. sponsored by the Supreme Court Historical Society, and share some social and guest speaker activities COMPENSATION with the White House Fellows. In recent years, fellows have participated in events with individual Judicial Fellows become employees of the justices, law professors, the Attorney General, and federal court system and receive salaries commen- the Director of the FBI. In addition, fellows are surate with their education, experience, and salary invited to participate in Judicial Fellows Program history. Salaries are based on the government pay Alumni Association activities. These activities scale but cannot exceed the equivalent of GS-15/3 include the association's annual meeting and panel ($87,900 as of January 3, 2000). Fellows are discussions on issues of interest to program alumni. eligible for federal employees' health and life Past panel members have included federal judges, insurance programs. academics, and members of the media. Members of the Judicial Fellows Program Alumni Association meet for breakfast. 7 SELECTION PROCESS The Judicial Fellows Commission, a panel Commission. Immediately thereafter, the appointed by the Chief Justice, selects the Judicial Commission selects the fellows for the fellowship Fellows. As competition is intense, a degree of self- year. screening, according to the following criteria, is advisable. CONTACTS BACKGROUND Questions about the Judicial Fellows Pro- gram should be directed to (202) 479-3415. The Judicial Fellows Program solicits professionals who will receive long-term career APPLICATION MATERIALS benefits from the experience and who are interested in improving both the operation of the federal Applicants should submit the following judicial process and the public's understanding of it. materials by November 3, 2000: Candidates must have: (1) A résumé highlighting specific * at least one post-graduate degree, academic, professional, and personal * two or more years of professional experi- accomplishments. ence with a record of high performance, and (2) An essay of not more than 700 words * multi-disciplinary training and experience, explaining the applicant's interest in, including familiarity with the judicial pro- and relevant qualifications for, the cess. program. To the degree possible, A degree of proven administrative ability is desir- essays should reference specific able for some assignments. projects of the sponsoring agencies (see pp. 4-6) to which applicants CAPABILITIES believe they could contribute and describe as specifically as possible Fellows must be bright, energetic, and how the applicant's background and highly motivated; original and flexible in their skills relate to those projects. thinking; articulate speakers and capable writers; (3) Copies of no more than two publica- able to prepare quality staff work within tight tions or other writing samples. deadlines; personable, discreet, trustworthy, and committed to serving the federal judiciary. In addition, applicants should have three letters of reference forwarded directly to the program, FINALISTS' SELECTION focusing on the applicant's personal character and professional qualifications. Completed applications are screened Send to: initially by a review panel that selects 15 to 20 Vanessa M. Yarnall semi-finalists for review by the full Commission. Administrative Director The Commissioners will choose approximately Judicial Fellows Program eight finalists who will visit Washington as guests Room 5 of the program in late January 2001 for an orienta- Supreme Court of the United States tion session, a reception with the Chief Justice and Washington, D.C. 20543 other officials, and individual interviews with the 8 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI 1999-2000 Teacher of the Year (1994), and of Judges Programs, Amie L. Clifford: B.A., Junior Faculty Fellowship Administrative Office of the Northwestern State University Award for excellence in teach- U.S. Courts. Former Senior of Louisiana; J.D., University of ing and research (1996). Counsel, Office of Policy South Carolina School of Law. Author of The High Priests of Development, U.S. Department Former Assistant Solicitor, American Politics: The Role of of Justice. Charleston County Office, Lawyers in American Political Ninth Judicial Circuit of South Institutions (1996). Christie S. Warren: B.A. with Carolina. Former Assistant Distinction in Academic Attorney General, Criminal 1998-1999 Standing, University of Appeals Section, South Caro- Mary L. Clark: B.A., Bryn California at Berkeley; J.D., lina Attorney General's Office. Mawr College; J.D., Harvard University of California at President, Judicial Fellows Law School. Visiting Lecturer Davis. Fellow, National Center Program Alumni Association. and Research Scholar on for State Courts Institute for Vice-Chair for Professional Women in the Profession, and Court Management (May 2000). Development/CLE, American Director of the Arthur Liman Consultant, International Rule Bar Association Criminal Public Interest Program, Yale of Law programs in Albania, Justice Section. Co-author, The Law School. Former Teaching Bosnia, Cambodia, El Salvador, South Carolina Criminal Trial Fellow and Adjunct Professor, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Techniques Handbook. Georgetown University Law Montenegro, Rwanda, the Center. Former Appellate Serbian Republic, Venezuela, Richard E. Mendales: A.B. and Attorney, Equal Employment and Vietnam. Training Director, A.M. recipient, as well as Ph.D. Opportunity Commission. Judicial Training Project in candidate, University of Chi- Former clerk for Judge John C. Bosnia and the Serbian cago; J.D. Yale Law School. Godbold of the United States Republic. Former International Professor of Law, University of Court of Appeals for the Project Coordinator, Judicial Miami Law School. Chair of Eleventh Circuit. Author, "The Mentor Program in Haiti. the Disability and Placement First Women Members of the Former Director of Training and Committees and the Humanities Supreme Court Bar, 1879- Curriculum, Cambodia Court Subcommittee of the University 1900." Training Project. Project Research Council; faculty Director, Manual for advisor to the Business Law Paul E. Fiorelli: B.A., St. Implementing International Society and the Business Law Lawrence University; J.D. and Legal Programs for the Review; recipient of the Golden M.B.A., University of Dayton. Indigent. Apple Award for service (1993), Professor of Legal Studies, University of Miami Law Xavier University, Cincinnati, 1997-1998 School. Ohio. Co-author, The Federal Robert P. Clayman: B.A., Sentencing Guidelines: American University; M.Ed., Mark C. Miller: B.A., Ohio Guidelines for Internal Tufts University; J.D., Boston Northern University; J.D., Auditors. University School of Law. George Washington University; Former Executive Director, M.A. and Ph.D., Ohio State Nancy G. Miller: B.A., Massachusetts Judicial Institute. University. Associate Professor University of California at San Director of Law-Related of American Government, Clark Diego; J.D., University of Education, Massachusetts University. Outstanding California at Berkeley. Office Supreme Judicial Court and 9 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI District Court Department. and Utilitarian Jurisprudence. Mark Syska: B.S., University Faculty, Institute for Faculty Editor, The Political Theory of of Illinois at Champaign- Excellence in Judicial Educa- the American Judiciary. Urbana; J.D., University of tion. Instructor, Northeastern Illinois College of Law. Assist- University College of Criminal 1996-1997 ant District Counsel for Immi- Justice and Tufts University. Sirkka A. Kauffman: B.A., gration and Naturalization Author, The Excellent Judge Union College; M.P.A., New Service. Former Attorney- Educator: Agency of Change- York University; Ph.D. in Advisor, Rules Committee Creating a State of Mind and higher education, University of Support Office, Administrative Living the Change. Michigan. Director of Evalua- Office of the U.S. Courts. tion, Research, and Grants Former Staff Attorney, United David T. Pimentel: B.A., Administration, Landmark States Court of Appeals for the summa cum laude, Brigham College. Former research Seventh Circuit. Former clerk Young University; M.A., Uni- associate, University of Michi- for U.S. District Judge James versity of California at Berke- gan. Former Associate Director Holderman, Northern District ley; J.D., Boalt Hall School of of Admissions, Vermont Law of Illinois. Former visiting Law, University of California. School. Former policy analyst, instructor at the Northwestern Deputy Circuit Executive, Port Authority of NY & NJ and University School of Law and United States Court for the Fifth NYS Urban Development University of Illinois College of Circuit. Former Assistant Corporation. Law. Former associate, Sidley Circuit Executive, United States & Austin. Court for the Ninth Circuit. H. L. Pohlman: [See 1997- Former attorney, Perkins Coie, 1998] Seattle, Washington. Former clerk, Judge Martin Pence, United States District Court, Honolulu, Hawaii. H. L. Pohlman: B.A., Univer- sity of Dayton; M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. A. Lee Fritschler Professor of Public Policy, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Distin- guished Fulbright Lecturer, 1999. Author, The Whole Truth?: A Case of Murder on the Appalachian Trail; Constitu- tional Debate in Action, a three- volume series; Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes: Free Speech and the Living Constitution; and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes C-SPAN covers a panel discussion on "Media Coverage and Relationship of the Press to the Federal Judiciary," sponsored by the Judicial Fellows Program. 10 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Former clerk for Judge Thomas Office of the United States A. Clark, United States Court of Courts. Former staff attorney, Appeals for the Eleventh United States Court of Appeals Circuit. Former Executive for the District of Columbia Editor, Yale Law Journal. Circuit. Former associate, Crowell & Moring, R. Barry Ruback: B.A., Yale Washington, D.C. University; J.D., University of Texas; M.S., Ph.D., University Barbara A. Perry: B.A., of Pittsburgh. Professor of University of Louisville; M.A., Crime, Law and Justice, and Oxford University; Ph.D. in Sociology, Pennsylvania State government, University of Robb Jones, former Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice, and University. Former Fulbright, Virginia. Professor of Judge Diana Murphy, Chair of the Fulbright-Hays and Indo- Government and Director, U.S. Sentencing Commission, attend American Fellow to India. Center of Civic Renewal, Sweet the Program's annual dinner. Former Visiting Fellow, Briar College. Author, The National Institute of Justice. Priestly Tribe: The Supreme Co-author, Social Psychology Court's Image in the American Elizabeth C. Woodcock: B.A., of the Criminal Justice System; Mind. Co-author (with Henry Bowdoin College; M.A., After the Crime: Victim Deci- J. Abraham), Freedom and the Stanford University; J.D., sion Making; and Interpersonal Court: Civil Rights and University of Maine School of Violent Behavior: Social and Liberties in the United States Law. Assistant United States Cultural Aspects. (7th ed.). Attorney, Washington, D.C. Former Assistant Director, Alexander Wohl: B.A., Sarah L. Wilson: B.A., Department of Justice's Office Brandeis University; J.D., Williams College; M.Phil., of Legal Education. Former Washington College of Law at American Studies, Yale Assistant United States Attor- American University. Director University; J.D., Columbia ney, Bangor, Maine. Former of Communications, U.S. University. Associate Counsel Legislative Assistant, Senator Department of Education. to the President, White House William Cohen of Maine. Former legislative assistant to Counsel's Office. Deputy Former clerk for Associate Congressman Stephen Solarz. Assistant Attorney General, Justices David Roberts and Former attorney, Dickstein, Office of Policy Development Samuel Collins, Jr., Supreme Shapiro & Morin. Former clerk and Trial Attorney, Civil Judicial Court of Maine. for Judge Ralph B. Guy, Jr., Division, Department of Justice, Former Associate Dean of United States Court of Appeals Washington, D.C. Former law Admissions, Bates College. for the Sixth Circuit. Former clerk for Richard L. Williams, editor, Boston Jewish Times. United States District Court for 1995-1996 the Eastern District of Virginia. Paul W. "Whit" Cobb, Jr.: 1994-1995 B.A., Duke University; J.D., Robert P. Deyling: B.A., 1993-1994 Yale University. Associate, Stanford University; J.D., New Mark R. Brown: B.S., Jenner & Block, Washington, York University. Attorney- University of Dayton; J.D., D.C. Former Assistant to the Advisor, Office of Judges University of Louisville; LL.M., General Counsel of the Army. Programs, Administrative University of Illinois. Professor 11 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI of Law, Stetson University Former clerk for Justice Earl Ralph R. Papitto School of College of Law. Former law Johnson, Jr., California Court of Law, Roger Williams clerk to the Honorable Harry W. Appeal and for Judge Dickran University, Rhode Island. Wellford, United States Court M. Tevrizian, Jr., United States Former Legal Counsel to the of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. District Court for the Central Deputy Director, FBI. Former District of California. Awarded Administrative Assistant to the Rosann Greenspan: B.A., grant from American Sociologi- Chief Justice, Supreme Court Yale University; M.A., cal Association and the Na- of the United States. Former University of Toronto; M.A. tional Science Foundation for a law clerk for Judge Leonard I. and Ph.D. in jurisprudence and research project entitled Garth, United States Court of social policy, University of Gender and Judging: Exploring Appeals for the Third Circuit. California at Berkeley. the Careers and Work of Women Research Director, Police Judges in the South (1996- 1992-1993 Foundation, Washington, D.C. 1998). Author, "Law and Sex Margaret G. Farrell: B.A., Status: The Concept of Sexual Cornell University; J.D., Uni- Susan McCoin: B.A., Property," 19(3) Women's versity of Chicago. Of Coun- University of Texas at Austin; Rights Law Reporter 237-245. sel, Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld M.A. and Ph.D., University of & Toll. Former partner, Ennis, California, Los Angeles; J.D., Harvey Rishikof: B.A., Friedman, Bersoff & Ewing, University of Southern McGill University; M.A., Washington, D.C. California. Visiting Assistant Brandeis University; J.D., New Professor, Department of York University Law School; Susan M. Kuzma: B.A. and Sociology, University of Ph.D. in Government, Harvard J.D., Ohio State University. California, Los Angeles. University (forthcoming). Dean, Attorney-Advisor, Office of the Pardon Attorney, Department of Justice. Former clerk for Judge William K. Thomas, United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, and for Judge John D. Holschuh, Southern District. Former law professor, University of Louisville School of Law. Former Commissioner, Public Advocacy Commission, Kentucky. Former trial attorney, U.S. Department of Justice. Marjorie S. McCoy: B.A., College of New Rochelle; M.A., University of Chicago; J.D., Syracuse University. Deputy Clerk of the New York Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor joins Judicial Fellows Program guests at the annual dinner. 12 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Jeffrey Jackson: B.A., Cleveland-Marshall School of Haverford College; J.D., Uni- Law; LL.M., Yale Law School. versity of Pittsburgh School of Senior Director for Legal Law. Professor of Law, Missis- Affairs and Policy Research, sippi College School of Law. Association of Trial Lawyers of Consultant, United States America. Adjunct Professor, Judicial Conference Committee American University, on Long Range Planning (1993- Washington College of Law. 1995). Former Reporter, Author, Libraries, Cyberspace Mississippi Supreme Court and the First Amendment; The Advisory Committee on Rules Bill of Rights and the Politics of (1988-1989) and Subcommittee Interpretation; and We the on Appellate Rules (1989- People: The Constitution in Associate Justice Ruth Bader 1991). Author, Mississippi American Life. Ginsburg speaks at the Judicial Civil Procedure (1996). Fellows Program's 25th Anniversary dinner. Mary F. Radford: B.A., Janice Sumler-Edmond: Newcomb College of Tulane Court of Appeals. Former law B.A., M.A., and J.D., Univer- University; J.D., Emory assistant to Retired Judge sity of California at Los University. Professor of Law, Richard D. Simons, New York Angeles; Ph.D. in American Georgia State University Court of Appeals. history, Georgetown University. College of Law. Associate Professor and Marc J. Rosenblum: A.B. and Chairperson, Department of 1989-1990 M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., History, Clark Atlanta Robert P. George: B.A., University of Minnesota; J.D., University. Former National Swarthmore College; M.T.S. Georgetown University. Office Director, Association of Black and J.D., Harvard University; of General Counsel, United Women Historians, Inc. D.Phil. in philosophy of law, States Equal Employment Southeast Employment Oxford University. Cyrus Hall Opportunity Commission. Arbitration Panel of the McCormick Professor of Adjunct Professor, Georgetown American Arbitration Jurisprudence, Princeton University Law Center. Association. University. Of Counsel, Robinson & McElwee, 1991-1992 1990-1991 Charleston, West Virginia. Jonathan L. Entin: A.B., Anthony M. Champagne: Former Commissioner, United Brown University; J.D., B.A., Millsaps College; M.A. States Commission on Civil Northwestern University. and Ph.D., University of Illi- Rights. Former Visiting Fellow Professor of Law and Political nois. Professor of Government in Law, New College, Oxford Science, Case Western Reserve and Politics, The University of University. Author, Making University. Former clerk for Texas at Dallas. Author, Men Moral: Civil Liberties and Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Congressman Sam Rayburn and Public Morality and In Defense United States Court of Appeals Sam Rayburn: A Biobibliog- of Natural Law. Editor, Natural for the District of Columbia raphy. Law Theory: Contemporary Circuit. Former co-editor, Essays; The Autonomy of Law: Journal of Legal Education Robert S. Peck: B.A., George Essays on Legal Positivism; (1992-1998). Washington University; J.D., Natural Law, Liberalism, and 13 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Morality; Great Cases in Con- Linda S. Mullenix: B.A., City 1998. Former law clerk for stitutional Law; and Natural College of New York; M.Phil. Judge Bernard S. Meyer, New Law and Public Reason. and Ph.D. in political science, York Court of Appeals, and for Columbia University; J.D., Chief Judge Thomas E. G. Kevin Jones: B.S. and J.D., Georgetown University. Fairchild, United States Court Brigham Young University; Reuschlein Distinguished of Appeals for the Seventh LL.M., University of Utah; Visiting Chair, Villanova Circuit. Former Visiting S.J.D., University of Virginia. (2000). Visiting Professor, Professor, St. Petersburg State Adjunct Professor, J. Reuben Southern Methodist Law School University (Russia) and Clark School of Law, Brigham (1998). Visiting Professor, Vermont Law School. Member, Young University and University of Michigan Law Judicial Fellows Commission, Department of Public School (1996). Visiting 1993-1999. Reporter, ABA Administration, University of Professor, Harvard Law School Standards of State Judicial Utah. Former law clerk, acting (1994-1995). Bernard J. Ward Retirement, 1999-2000. magistrate, and consultant to the Centennial Professor, School of Author, Studies in American Alaska Court System. Author Law, University of Texas. Tort Law; Teaching Torts; and of articles on natural resources Author, Understanding Federal Mastering Torts. law and policy and recipient of Courts (with Redish & Vairo awards from the National 1998); Mass Tort Litigation: Lane V. Sunderland: B.A., Wildlife Federation, the Cases and Materials (1996); Kansas State University; M.A., American Bar Association, Federal Courts in the Twenty- University of Washington; Rocky Mountain Mineral Law First Century (with Fink, Rowe, Ph.D. in government, Foundation and the Eastern & Tushet 1996); and Moore's Claremont Graduate School. Mineral Law Foundation. Federal Practice Vol. 17 (3d ed. Chancie Ferris Booth Professor 1997). Associate reporter, ALI of Political Science and Restatement of the Law International Relations, Knox Governing Lawyers. Reporter, College. Former Director of ABA Tort and Insurance Educational Programs, Section Task Force on Class Commission on the Actions (1995-97). Co-reporter, Bicentennial of the United Report and Plan, Civil Justice States Constitution. Author, Reform Act Advisory Group for Popular Government and the the United States Court for the Supreme Court (1995); Southern District of Texas. Obscenity: The Court, the Congress and the President's 1988-1989 Commission; and numerous Vincent R. Johnson: B.A. articles in political science and LL.D., St. Vincent Col- journals and law reviews. lege; J.D., University of Notre Dame; LL.M., Yale University. 1987-1988 Judge Jerome Farris of the Judicial Fellows Commission with former Professor of Law and Director Albert M. Pearson: B.A., Fellow Harvey Rishikof (1993­1994) of the Institute on World Legal Birmingham-Southern College; Problems, St. Mary's University J.D., Vanderbilt University. of San Antonio. Fulbright Partner, Moraitakis, Kushel & Senior Scholar, Beijing, China, Pearson, Atlanta, Georgia. 14 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Former Professor of Law and Chairperson, Ohio Continuing Policy, Journal of Politics and Director of Legal Aid Clinic, Legal Education Commission, Polity. University of Georgia School of Ohio Supreme Court. Part-time Law. Reporter, Judicial instructor, E.W. Scripps School Ira P. Robbins: A.B., Univer- Conference Ad Hoc Committee of Journalism. Former sity of Pennsylvania; J.D., on Federal Habeas Corpus Municipal Court and Common Harvard University. Barnard T. Review of Capital Sentences Pleas Judge, Athens, Ohio. Welsh Scholar and Professor of (1988-1989). Former Chairperson, Board of Law and Justice, American Trustees, Ohio University. University, Washington College Judy B. Sloan: B.A., Univer- of Law. Former Acting Director, sity of Chicago; J.D., University 1985-1986 Federal Judicial Center, Judicial of Maryland. Professor of Law, Thomas E. Baker: B.S., Education Division. Reporter, Southwestern University School Florida State University; J.D., ABA Task Force on Privatiza- of Law, Los Angeles. Former University of Florida. James tion of Corrections. Reporter, Professor of Law, University of Madison Chair in Constitutional ABA Task Force on Death Toledo College of Law. Co- Law & Director, Constitutional Penalty Habeas Corpus. Recip- author, Bankruptcy Appellate Law Center, Drake University ient, Chief Judge John R. Panels: The Ninth Circuit's Law School. Fulbright Brown Award for Judicial Experience. Professor, University of Athens Scholarship and Education. (Fall 1992). Former Acting Author, Comparative Post- 1986-1987 Administrative Assistant to the Conviction Remedies; Judicial Vincent Martin Bonventre: Chief Justice of the United Sabbaticals; The Law and B.S., Union College; J.D., States. Former law clerk for Process of Post-Conviction Brooklyn Law School; M.A., Judge James C. Hill, United Remedies; The Legal University of Virginia. States Court of Appeals for the Dimensions of Private Professor of Law, Albany Law Fifth Circuit. Author, The Most Incarceration, Toward a More School. Editor, State Wonderful Work - Our Just and Effective System of Constitutional Commentary. Constitution Interpreted; The Review in State Death Penalty Editor in Chief, Government, Good Judge; A Primer on the Cases; Prisoners and the Law; Law and Policy Journal. Jurisdiction of the Courts of and Habeas Corpus Checklists. Former law clerk for Judge Appeals; and Rationing Justice 1984-1985 Stewart F. Hancock, Jr. and for on Appeal - The Problems of Saul M. Kassin: B.S., Judge Matthew J. Jasen, New the U.S. Courts of Appeals. Brooklyn College; M.A. and York Court of Appeals. Ph.D. in psychology, University Susan M. Olson: B.A., of Connecticut. Postdoctoral Thomas S. Hodson: B.S., Pomona College; M.A. and Fellow, University of Kansas, Ohio University; J.D., Ohio Ph.D. in political science, Stanford University. Professor, State University. Chief Syracuse University. Associate Williams College. Author, Executive Officer, Hodson & Professor and Chair of Political Psychology. Co-author, The Associates, Media Consulting Science, University of Utah. American Jury on Trial: Firm. Partner and Vice Author, Clients and Lawyers: Psychological Perspectives; President, Eslocker, Hodson & Securing the Rights of Disabled Social Psychology; The Oremus, L.P.A., Athens, Ohio. Persons and articles in Law & Psychology of Evidence and Board of Directors, American Society Review, Justice System Trial Procedure; and Confes- Judicature Society. Former Journal, Judicature, Law and sions in the Courtroom. 15 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Douglas D. McFarland: B.A., Institute, DePaul University United States Court of Appeals Macalester College; J.D., New College of Law. Author, AIDS: for the Ninth Circuit. Co- York University; Ph.D. in Cases and Materials; Legal author, Ending It: Dispute speech-communication, Aspects of AIDS; AIDS Law and Resolution in America and University of Minnesota. Policy; AIDS Law in a Nutshell; Constitutional Law: Cases in Professor of Law, Hamline and Mental Health Law in a Context. University School of Law. Nutshell. Former Acting Administrative 1982-1983 Assistant to the Chief Justice of Susan M. Leeson: B.A. and Julie Horney: B.A., University the United States. Candidate J.D., Willamette University; of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; for U.S. Senate, Minnesota, M.A. and Ph.D. in government, Ph.D. in experimental 1993-1994. Author, Minnesota Claremont Graduate School. psychology, University of Civil Practice (2nd ed.) and Justice, Oregon Supreme Court. California, San Diego. Computer-Aided Exercises on Former Judge, Oregon Court of Professor of Criminal Justice, Civil Procedure (4th ed.). Appeals. Former Professor of University of Nebraska at Political Science and Associate Omaha. Recipient of research D. Marie Provine: A.B., Professor of Law, Willamette grants from the National University of Chicago; J.D. and University. Former law clerk Institute of Justice and the Ph.D. in government, Cornell for Judge Alfred T. Goodwin, National Science Foundation. University. Professor of Law and Political Science, Syracuse University. Currently on leave to serve as Director, Program on Law and Social Science for the National Science Foundation. Author, Settlement Strategies for Federal District Judges; Judging Credentials: Non-lawyer Judges and the Politics of Professionalism; and Case Selection in the U.S. Supreme Court. 1983-1984 Donald H. J. Hermann: A.B., Stanford University; J.D., Columbia University; LL.M., Harvard University; M.A. and Ph.D. in philosophy, Northwestern University; Former Judicial Fellows Program Commissioner Kenneth Starr joins former M.A.A.H., School of the Art Executive Director James Duff and former Fellows at the annual dinner. Institute of Chicago. Professor of Law and Philosophy, Director of the Health Law 16 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Co-author (with Cassia Spohn), 1981-1982 thor, The Business of Practicing Rape Law Reform: A Ronald K.L. Collins: B.A., Law: The Work Lives of Solo Grassroots Revolution and Its University of California, Santa and Small-Firm Attorneys Impact (Plenum, 1992). Author, Barbara; J.D., Loyola Univer- (Temple University Press). Co- articles on criminal case sity. Writer. Former law clerk author, The Part-time Paradox: processing and on patterns of for Justice Hans A. Linde, Time Norms, Professional Life, criminal behavior in journals Oregon Supreme Court. Family and Gender including American (Routledge). Project Director Sociological Review, Joyce E. Plotnikoff: LL.B., and co-author, "A Report of the Criminology, Journal of University of Bristol, England; Perceptions and Experiences of Criminal Law and Criminology, M.Sc., Oxford University. Lawyers, Judges and Court and Law and Society Review. Partner and Consultant in Employees Concerning Gender, Management, IT and the Law. Racial, and Ethnic Fairness in David M. O'Brien: B.A., Project coordinator, judicial the Federal Courts of the M.A., and Ph.D. in political training video, A Case for Second Circuit of the United science, University of Balance (1997), a video raising States," New York University California, Santa Barbara. awareness about sex offenders School of Law Annual Survey of Leone Reaves and George in child care (1999), and a video American Law 1997: 1&2. Spicer Professor of Government for young witnesses in criminal and Foreign Affairs, University cases (2000). Co-author, Michael J. Tonsing: B.A., St. of Virginia. Former Fulbright "Policing Domestic Violence" Mary's College of California; Visiting Professor in (1988); "An Evaluation of Sex M.A., Claremont Graduate Constitutional Studies, Oxford Offender Registration" (2000). School; J.D., University of San University, and Fulbright Senior Francisco. Attorney in private Scholar at the University of E. Keith Stott, Jr.: B.S., practice, San Francisco, Bologna, as well as Fulbright Brigham Young University; California. Former Assistant Researcher in Japan. Author, J.D., University of Utah; United States Attorney, Civil Storm Center: The Supreme M.P.A., University of Colorado Division, San Francisco. Court in American Politics (5th at Denver. Executive Director, ed.) and Constitutional Law and Arizona Commission on John C. Yoder: B.A., Politics (2 volumes, 4th ed.), Judicial Conduct. Editor, Chapman College; J.D., among other books. Judicial Conduct and Ethics: A University of Kansas; M.B.A., Reference Manual for Arizona University of Chicago. Jolanta Juszkiewicz: B.A., Judges (1992 - present). Minority Whip, West Virginia University of Illinois; M.A. and Senate. Attorney in private Ph.D. in political science, 1980-1981 practice, Washington, D.C. and Northwestern University. Carroll Seron: B.A., Univer- Harper's Ferry, West Virginia. Deputy Director, Pretrial sity of California at Santa Cruz; Republican nominee, United Services Resource Center. M.A. and Ph.D. in sociology, States Senate, West Virginia Former Social Science Program New York University. Profes- (1990). Former Director, Asset Specialist, Office for Improve- sor, Baruch College and Gradu- Forfeiture Office, United States ments in the Administration of ate Center, City University of Department of Justice. Former Justice, United States Depart- New York. Former Research Special Assistant to the ment of Justice. Associate, Research Division, Administrative Assistant to the Federal Judicial Center. Au- Chief Justice of the United 17 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI States. Former District Judge, of Political Science; Former Ninth Judicial District, Kansas. Dean, College of Liberal Arts, Rochester Institute of 1979-1980 Technology. Former Associate Gary J. Aichele: B.A., J.D., Dean and Professor of Political and Ph.D. in political science, Science, Union College. University of Virginia; M.Div., Lancaster Theological James A. Robbins: B.A. and Seminary. Interim Pastor, J.D., University of Iowa. United Church of Christ, President, Business Cluster Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Development Corporation. Former Executive Director, Former Personnel and Organi- Supreme Court Historical zational Development Officer, Society. Author, Oliver Supreme Court of the United Wendell Holmes, Jr.: Soldier, States. Scholar, Judge and Legal Associate Justice David Souter with Realism and Twentieth-Century 1977-1978 former Fellows John Yoder (1980­ American Jurisprudence: The Judith C. Chirlin: B.A., 1981) and Alexander Wohl (1995­ 1996). Changing Consensus. George Washington University; M.A., Rutgers University; J.D., Philip L. Dubois: A.B., Uni- University of Southern D.C. Author, Mightier Than versity of California, Davis; California. Judge, Los Angeles the Sword, Citing and Typing M.A. and Ph.D. in political Superior Court. Past Chair of the Law and Legal Research . . . science, University of the Board of Directors, Without Losing Your Mind. Wisconsin. President, American Judicature Society. University of Wyoming. Formerly, Lecturer in judicial 1976-1977 Author of books and articles on administration, University of Thomas E. Baynes: B.B.A., state judicial selection, court Southern California. Judicial University of Georgia; J.D. and reform and the initiative Educator at California Judicial LL.M., Emory University; process. College, National Judicial LL.M., Yale University. United College, Russian Academy of States Bankruptcy Judge, Donald P. Ubell: A.B., Univer- Jurisprudence. Consultant on Middle District of Florida, sity of North Carolina, Chapel Court Reform in Peru, Chile, El Tampa. Former Professor of Hill; J.D., University of Michi- Salvador, Honduras and in Law and Public Administration, gan. Partner, Parker, Poe, various regions in Russia, Nova University Law Center. Adams & Bernstein L.L.P., Latvia, Slovakia, and Bulgaria. Member, Board of Directors, H. Charlotte, North Carolina. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Former Chief Commissioner, C. Edward Good: A.B., Research Institute (1990-1994; Michigan Supreme Court. University of North Carolina, 1997-present). Member, Chapel Hill; J.D., University of American Inns of Court; 1978-1979 Virginia. Counsel and Writer- Supreme Court Historical William J. Daniels: B.A., in-Residence, Finnegan, Society; American Law M.A., and Ph.D. in public law Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Institute. President, Ferguson- and judicial behavior, Dunner, L.L.P., Washington, White Inn (1992-1993). University of Iowa. Professor Contributing author, The 18 JUDICIAL FELLOWS ALUMNI Supreme Court Justices: Reporters of Decisions: From Alan M. Sager: B.S., Tufts Illustrated Biographies, 1789- Edmundus Plowden to Henry University; J.D., University of 1993. Putzel, Jr. Editor, Mr. Justice Michigan; M.A. and Ph.D. in and Mrs. Black: The Memoirs political science, Northwestern Larry C. Farmer: B.S., of Hugo L. Black and Elizabeth University. Private business, University of Washington; Black and Lions Under the Austin. Former member, Texas Ph.D. in clinical psychology, Throne: The Edward Douglass Judicial Council. Lecturer in Brigham Young University. White Lectures of Chief Government, University of Professor of Law, J. Reuben Justices Warren E. Burger and Texas, Austin. Clark Law School, Brigham William H. Rehnquist. Young University. Former 1973-1974 Visiting Professor, Harvard Jack R. Buchanan: B.S. and E. Gordon Gee: B.A., Law School. M.S., University of Utah; Ph.D. University of Utah; J.D. and in computer science, Stanford Ed.D., Columbia University. Jeffrey B. Morris: B.A., University. Currently in private President, Vanderbilt Princeton University; J.D. and business development and University. Former President, Ph.D. in political science, investment management. Brown University. Former law Columbia University. Former Senior Vice President clerk for Chief Justice David T. Professor, Touro Law School. and Chief Information Officer, Lewis, United States Court of Author, Federal Justice in the CUNA Mutual Insurance Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. Second Circuit. Editor, Group, Madison, Wisconsin. Encyclopedia of American Former Associate Professor, Russell R. Wheeler: B.A., History (7th ed.). Harvard Business School. Augustana College; M.A. and Former Director, Innovations Ph.D. in political science, 1975-1976 and Systems Division, Federal University of Chicago. Deputy Paul R. Baier: A.B., Judicial Center. Director, Federal Judicial University of Cincinnati; J.D., Center. Former Research Harvard University. George M. 1974-1975 Associate, Office of the Armstrong, Jr., Professor of Donald W. Jackson: B.A. and Administrative Assistant to the Law, Louisiana State University J.D., Southern Methodist Chief Justice of the United Law Center. Scholar in University; M.A. and Ph.D. in States. Residence, Louisiana Bar political science, University of Foundation (1990-1992). Wisconsin. Herman Brown Howard R. Whitcomb: A.B., Executive Director, Louisiana Professor of Political Science Brown University; M.A., Commission on the and Chair of the Department of Lehigh University; Ph.D. in Bicentennial of the United Political Science, Texas political science, State States Constitution (1987- Christian University. Recent University of New York, 1991). Author, "Father Chief books: The United Kingdom Albany. Emeritus Professor of Justice": E.D. White and the Confronts the European Political Science, Lehigh Constitution, A Play; The Bill of Convention on Human Rights University. Co-author, Legal Rights and Judicial Balance: A (1997) and Presidential Foundations of Public Tribute to Lewis F. Powell, Jr.; Leadership and Civil Rights Administration (2nd ed.). and Court Reports and Policy (co-editor, 1995). 19 JUDICIAL FELLOWS COMMISION The Judicial Fellows Commission is ap- C. Boyden Gray pointed by the Chief Justice of the United States. Partner, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, Washington, The 2000 Commission members are: D.C. Maureen E. Mahoney L. Ralph Mecham Chair, Judicial Fellows Commission; Partner, Director, Administrative Office of the United States Latham & Watkins, Washington, D.C. Courts Sally M. Rider The Honorable Diana E. Murphy Executive Director, Judicial Fellows Program; Chair, United States Sentencing Commission, and Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, Minnesota The Honorable Maryanne Trump Barry Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Third E. Barrett Prettyman, Jr. Circuit, New Jersey Partner, Hogan & Hartson, Washington, D.C. The Honorable Jerome Farris The Honorable Fern M. Smith Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Director, Federal Judicial Center, and Judge, United Circuit, Seattle, Washington States District Court for the District of Northern California Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist attends a luncheon with Judicial Fellows Program Commissioners (2000). 20 The Judicial Fellows Program is administered by the Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Chief Justice, in cooperation with: The Administrative Office of the United States Courts; The Federal Judicial Center; and The United States Sentencing Commission Thurgood Marshall Federal Judiciary Building One Columbus Circle, NE Washington, DC and the Program's fiscal agent: The Supreme Court Historical Society at Opperman House 224 East Capitol Street, NE Washington, DC Photographs (except on pages 2, 3, 5­7 and 10) by Franz Jantzen, Supreme Court of the United States The Thurgood Marshall Federal Judiciary Building. 21