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Dean Kellye Y. Testy and Seattle University School of Law invite alumni and friends to toast the foundation and the future of Seattle University School of Law at a gala celebration and special Seattle Symphony performance Friday, April 25, at Benaroya Hall in downtown Seattle. Directions to Benaroya Hall and parking information can be found online.
| 5:30 - 7 p.m. | Reception |
| 7 p.m. | Performance |
| 8:30 p.m. | Dinner and dancing with the band Second Wind |
View a list of deans and law faculty who plan to attend the 35th Anniversary Gala.
Registration is now closed. For more information, contact 35th anniversary coordinator Eva Mitchell at mitche@seattleu.edu or (206) 398-4210.
A day of activities will set the stage as the law school commemorates 35 years of standing for excellence and reaching for justice.
| 10 a.m. | Continental breakfast and tours of Sullivan Hall, second floor gallery. Tours begin at 10:15 and 11 a.m. No RSVP required. |
| 12 - 4 p.m. | Legal and Professional Ethics CLE with Networking Lunch: Three of the Law School's most distinguished faculty will examine and discuss the implications of the new Washington Rules of Professional Conduct in three specific contexts. The presenters include Professor Janet Ainsworth, Associate Professor Sidney DeLong, and Associate Professor John Strait. Three CLE ethics credits anticipated...(Legal & Professional Ethics CLE Agenda) |
You may also read about the 35th Anniversary Kickoff Celebration in Tacoma on October 17, 2007.
Anna
Deavere Smith is an actress, playwright, author and teacher. When her work was
recognized with a prestigious MacArthur Award, it was described as “a
blend of theatrical art, social commentary, journalism and intimate reverie.”
Among her many honors, Ms. Smith received the 2007 Kitty Carlisle Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Arts from Americans for the Arts and the 2007 New York Mayor’s Award for Art and Culture. She was the recipient of the 2006 Alphonse Fletcher Fellowship, which recognizes work by scholars, writers and artists who address and carry out the broad social goals of the Brown v. Board Supreme Court decision of 1954. She was twice nominated for the NAACP Image Award. She will receive the prestigious New York Women in Communication's Matrix Award for her remarkable achievements and outstanding leadership roles in her field in Spring 2008.
Her work in the theater has been her intellectual focus, but she also has performed in film and television. She is well-known for her role as National Security Advisor Nancy McNally on the hit show, “The West Wing,” and has been featured in several films, including “The American President,” “The Human Stain,” “Dave,” and “Rent.” She co-starred in HBO’s 2007 film, “Life Support.”
Ms. Smith is University Professor at New York University, where she is appointed in the Tisch School of the Arts and affiliated with the New York University School of Law. She was Ann O’Day Maples Professor of the Arts at Stanford University, where she taught from 1990 – 2000. She also taught at Carnegie Mellon and the University of Southern California and was a visiting professor at Yale School of Medicine. She recently taught, at the invitation of Oprah Winfrey, at Oprah Winfrey's Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa.
Her theater combines the journalistic technique of interviewing her subjects with the art of interpreting their words through her performance. Among her works are the critically acclaimed Broadway Show “Twilight: Los Angeles,” about the 1992 Los Angeles riots, and “Fires in the Mirror,” which examined a race riot that occurred in Crown Heights, Brooklyn (1991) when age-old racial tensions between Black and Jewish neighbors exploded. It received an Obie Award, numerous other awards and was a runner up for the Pulitzer Prize. She is developing a new play on the subject of the resilience and vulnerability of the human body, which was inspired by her work at Yale.
Her book, “Talk to Me: Listening Between the Lines,” is based on her observations of time she spent in Washington, D.C. To prepare for that book, she followed both President Clinton and Bob Dole on their 1996 campaign trails. Her articles and writings have appeared in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, The New Yorker, O Magazine, O Home, Elle, The Atlantic, A Public Space, Essence, Fortune, and The Drama Review. Her latest book is “Letters to a Young Artist.”
Honorary Co-Chairs: The Honorable Richard and Leslie Jones; Co-Chairs: Marlys ’82 and Ralph Palumbo; Members: Joe and Terri Gaffney, Lem and Pat Howell, Lucy ’77 and Paul Isaki, Laura Newton Kimball ‘95 and Bob Kimball, Martha Kongsgaard ’84 and Peter Goldman ’84, John McKay, Sim Osborn ’84 and Monica Hart, Tony ’07 and Mitra Ravani, Stu ’78 and Lee Rolfe, Professor Emeritus Dick and Trish Settle, The Honorable Mary Yu.
| Co chairs | ||
| Justice Charles Johnson ‘76,
Washington State Supreme Court Lucy Clifthorne ‘97, Vandeberg, Johnson & Gandara |
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| Members | ||
| P. Craig Beetham 1989 Judith Billings 1987 Hon. Frank Cuthbertson 1993 Janina Duling 1994 Gregory Duras 1982 Tracy Flood 1999 Charles Granoski 1974 Erik Grotzke 2005 Lara Herrmann 2000 James Holman 1976 |
Bradley Jones 1979 Colleen Klein 1985 Peter Kram 1976 Amy Lewis 1992 James Lopez 1978 Thaddeus Martin 1998 Michael McKasy 1976 Joan Mell 1991 Stuart Morgan 1996 Aaron Owada 1983 |
Tanya Pemberton 1991 Laird Pisto 1979 Christine Quinn-Brintnall 1980 Rodney Ray 1976 Vonda Sargent 1994 D. Michael Shipley 1988 Sabrina Smith-Ahrens 2001 Shelly Speir 1997 Wendy Zicht 1991 Candace Zygar 1987 |
The School of Law is grateful to the following sponsors for their generous support.
Platinum Level
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Gold Level
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Sponsorships are available at the following levels:
For more information, contact Susan Ahearn, Associate Dean for Development, at (206) 398-4306 or ahearns@seattleu.edu or John McKay, Professor from Practice, at (206) 398-4051 or jmckay@seattleu.edu.
From airplanes to escalators – share your memories and photographs of law school experiences by e-mailing them to 35thann@seattleu.edu.
The School of Law Library is establishing an archive of the school’s history, and the next chapter of the school’s history will be written from this process. We need your help. Please watch your e-mail for requests for memorabilia and stories!