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Oregon Lawyer
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November 16th 2004 • Printer version
Life @Law November 15 -28, 2004
HIGHLIGHTS: Negotiation Team wins in BC! Uniform Commercial Code for
tribes, World Conservation Congress, Class of 1954, Measure 36 - what
next? and more
Through November 24 HUNGER: FOOD DRIVE
Yes, there are still hungry people in Lane County. Law fraternity Phi
Alpha Delta is leading a food drive to help needy families this
winter. Food for Lane County suggests: canned meats, fish and
stews; family-sized soups and chili with beef or chicken; peanut
butter; hot and cold cereal; deluxe macaroni and cheese; refried beans,
canned spaghetti with meat; spaghetti noodles; corned beef or spam.
(Sorry - no home-processed items.) Food bins are in the commons. INFO aurquha1@law.uoregon.edu: .
Tuesday, November 16 PANEL: Greenbook Initiative
Noon, Room 184. Lane juvenile court judge Kip Leonard and Diana Avery
of the Family Violence Response Initiative will discus The Greenbook, a
pilot program in several counties, including Lane, that encourages
agencies and the courts to work together in cases where domestic
violence and child maltreatment intersect. Sponsored by FLIP - Family
Law in Practice student group. INFO: flip@law.uoregon.edu.
Wednesday, November 17 MOVIE: Where Do You Stand?
4:30 P.M., Room 141. Join a new group of law students interested in
labor law, immigrant workers and worker rights. Their goal is to
network with LERC faculty, local attorneys and unions for internships,
summer jobs and projects that help fulfill your writing requirement.
The group will screen a 2004 video about mill workers in Kannapolis,
North Carolina who won the SouthÃs largest union victory after a very
tough 25 years of bad working conditions, intimidation and fear in a
segregated, company town. Sponsored by the UO Labor Education and
Research Center and the Morse Center Pizza provided. INFO: hallock@uoregon.edu.
Thursday, November 18 MEETING: Land Air Water
Thursday, November 18 SLIDESHOW: Umpqua Watershed
7:00 P.M.-8:30 P.M.,Room 175. Umpqua basin resident Bob Hoehne
presents aerial and ground photographs of the region. followed by
Farming the Seas, a PBS documentary about aquaculture and
sustainability. Co-sponsored by Land Air Water Free and open to the
public. INFO: orahoske@law.uoregon.edu or jhartz@law.uoregon.edu
Thursday, November 18 Dinner at the DeanÃs
UO law students of color are invited to dine and Dean Laird and Lind
KirkpatrickÃs home tonight. INFO: lrichard@law.uoregon.edu.
Saturday, November 20 WORK PARTY: Fight the Invaders
9:30 Noon, F.M. Wilkins Shelter, 220 Summit Ave. Make Hendricks Park
safe for law-abiding native plants. Join Land Air Water at the
Hendricks Park monthly volunteer work party. Says LAW member Jason
Hartz, If you arrive earlier, coffee and pastries are usually
available in limited quantities. INFO: jhartz@law.uoregon.edu.
Saturday, November 20 AFTER THE WORK PARTY: The Horsehead
9:00 P.M., 99 West Broadway, Eugene. Land Air Water informal gathering
at The Horsehead bar in downtown Eugene. INFO: jhartz@law.uoregon.edu.
Sunday, November 21 Civil War Relay
The 50-mile race from Autzen Stadium in Eugene to Linn Benton Community
College in Albany takes place the day after the UO Ducks and OSU
Beavers battle for top....vertebrate? Rumor has it that the law school
running team plans to run the Civil War Relay again (this year without
stalwart Jane Steckbeck, associate director of career services.) Stay
tuned.
Tuesday, November 23 DEADLINE: Learned Hand Awards
UO president and former law school dean Dave Frohnmayer will receive a
2004 Learned Hand Award at the 2004 CLE luncheon in Portland on
November 30. Dean Kirkpatrick is hosting the law school table, which is
already full. You may still purchase seats individually - please make
your reservations no later than today: portland@ajc.org.
Tuesday, November 23 ROUND TABLE: Duncan Campbell 73
Noon 1:00 P.M., Room 282. Roundtable lunch with Portland attorney and
CPA Duncan Campbell Ã73. Campbell has over 25 years experience in the
forest industry and is the founder and chair of The Campbell Group, a
timberland investment management company. In 1993, Campbell founded
Friends of the Children a Portland nonprofit that provides full-time,
professional mentors to high-risk youth for 12 years, starting in first
grade. He was a member of Gov. KulongoskiÃs transition team steering
committee. The dean is hosting CampbellÃs visit to the law school. RSVP
for the round table to dgilbert@law.uoregon.edu.
Thursday, November 25 THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
HereÃs something to add to your thank-you list.... our beautiful
William W. Knight Law Center enjoys its fifth birthday this fall. Be
sure to let it know how much you love its light-filled spacious self.
(And that you also love the 1,000 donors who helped build it.)
Friday, November 26 THANKSGIVING STAFF HOLIDAY
Jaqua Law Library open. 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Administrative offices closed
NEWS
NEGOTIATION TEAM WINS IN BRITISH COLUMBIA
Two provincial Supreme Court judges and a partner in Fraser Milner
Casgrain, one of CanadaÃs largest law firms, judged 3Ls Jesse Sweet and
Elizabeth Allred the winners in of the ABA regional negotiation
competition last weekend at the University of British Columbia. It was
fun, and a very full schedule - we just got back last night and weÃre
beat, said Sweet, one of four UO law students at the event. Members
of the other team, 3L David Eder and 1L Andy Albertson, finished in the
top four. Twenty teams from western Canada and the Northwest U.S.
competed.
In September, thirty-two UO law teams participated in the first round
of this annual competition sponsored by the Moot Court Board. The topic
was Art Museums and Collectibles: Transactions and Disputes. Two
teams advanced to the regionals. Now the winning team of Sweet and
Allred will battle for the national championship in Salt Lake City next
February 12 and 13. (Better block out your calendar for July- just in
case they go to internationals!)
SEEKING HARMONY
Oregon voters decisively rejected the idea of gay marriage, said law
professor Robert Tsai in op eds published on November 12 in the Eugene
Register-Guard and on November 15 in the Oregonian. Now it is the
Oregon Supreme CourtÃs solemn task to harmonize Measure 36 with the
rest of the state constitution...the court should take care to
recognize that the measure leaves intact legislative power to enact
laws that extend protections and benefits to same-sex couples, such as
civil unions. READ THE FULL STORY:
Register Guard
Oregonian
KUDOS
Order of the Emerald
The Class of 1954 gathered in the Lewis Lounge for their fiftieth
reunion on November 12 and were inducted into the universityÃs Order
of the Emerald. Mrs. A. Lois Ackerman - retired registrar and
longtime sole administrative employee of the law school- read each name
and UO president Dave Frohnmayer presented fifty year medals to Leon
Campbell, William Deatherage, Don Dunn, the Hon. Malcolm Marsh and
Ilene Hershner, widow of classmate Jim Hershner. Dean Laird Kirkpatrick
gave a gold pin to each alum on behalf of the School of Law.
A Uniform Commercial Code for Tribes
Commercial law professor Carl Bjerre writes, I am the reporter (the
drafter or pen-wielder or statute-shaper) for a committee of NCCUSL,
the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. We are
working on adapting parts of the Uniform Commercial Code for possible
adoption by Native American tribes. We generally work on harmonizing
laws among the 50 states, but in this case we are thinking about
harmonization between the 50 states -which already have the UCC - and
the Native American tribes - which don't. Many tribes are particularly
interested in adopting Article 9, which governs secured lending. With
the law governing loans to tribal residents being, today, very
dissimilar to the law governing mainstream U.S. borrowers, mainstream
lenders are reluctant to extend secured credit to that community, just
as they were reluctant to lend across state lines in the old days. With
harmonization of the law, that impediment will be removed. Bjerre is a
member of NCCUSL, which is responsible for formulating most of the
nationÃs commercial law.
Good Advice
Two local entrepreneurs and community activists will give small
business clinic students the benefit of their long experience when they
talk about how to select a business attorney on November 17. Carolyn
Chambers is chair of the Center for Law and Entrepreneurship Advisory
Board and CEO of Chambers Communications, the family firm she helped
build. Broker Ruby Brockett cofounded Prudential Preferred Properties,
which grew to three Eugene offices and 90 employees. This year, it
merged with a Salem company to form the largest real estate firm
outside the Portland metro area. INFO: lstrothe@law.uoregon.edu.
World Conservation Congress
Environmental law professors Svitlana Kravchenko and John Bonine will
give 10 lectures in 10 days during a whirlwind tour of the Philippines
and Thailand. This week, they will help train Filipino environmental
law professors. Next week, they travel to the World Conservation
Congress in Bangkok, where 4,000 top government officials and
conservation and biodiversity experts will gather. Kravchenko will
present at Judiciary Day, where supreme court and constitutional court
judges from around the world will discuss how to improve their handling
of environmental matters. Bonine and Kravchenko also helped organize a
workshop on human rights and the environment and drafted a motion on
the same topic that they hope the Congress will adopt.
COMING UP
Monday, November 29 Last day of fall semester classes
Tuesday, November 30 PORTLAND: Learned Hand Awards Lunch
11:45 A.M.-1:30 P.M., Governor Hotel. University president Dave
Frohnmayer will be honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award. INFO:
mailto:portland@ajc.org.
Tuesday, November 30 DEADLINE: 2005 Frohnmayer Award nominations
. INFO: colleen@law.uoregon.edu.
Thursday, December 9 2005 Frohnmayer Award meeting
The Frohnmayer Award Committee will meet on December 9th, in Portland, to select
the 2005 honoree.
Sunday, December 12 DeanÃs Holiday Open House
Laird and Lind Kirkpatrick host their annual open house for law school faculty
and staff. INFO: swilson@law.uoregon.edu.
All events are free and open to the public at the Knight Law Center
(1515 Agate Street, Eugene), unless otherwise noted. Dates and times
are subject to change best to check the contact number or email just
to make sure.
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