1990s Class Notes
1990
Lee Goodman recently
joined the board of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni.
An attorney with Wiley, Rein and Fielding LLP in Washington, D.C., Goodman previously served as Virginia Governor James
Gilmore’s chief education
policy advisor for K–12 and higher education and as counsel
to the Attorney General of Virginia. He also worked as associate
general counsel for UVA, where he litigated tenure and employment
matters involving medical research, and legal matters involving
student rights, board governance, and the commercialization of
academic inventions.
William Hood III recently
joined Isaacson, Rosenbaun, Woods & Levy PC as of counsel
in the litigation department. He focuses his practice on criminal
and civil matters. As former chief deputy district attorney in
the 18th Judicial District, Hook supervised the appeals unit
and handled matters before the U.S. Supreme Court, the Tenth
Circuit, Colorado Supreme Court, and Colorado Court of Appeals.
Prior to running appeals, he supervised a felony trial division.
He has tried more than 100 cases, including eight first-degree
murder cases. Hood also has commercial litigation experience
in employment law, commercial and government contracts, trusts,
toxic torts, construction, and tax. He currently teaches trial
practice as an adjunct professor at the University of Denver
College of Law.
Michael McCue and his wife Camille announce
the birth of their second son, Carson, on September 10.McCue
has moved to the Las Vegas office of Lewis and Roca LLP, where
he practices as a partner in the intellectual property and technology
group.
1991
Anthony Black and his wife Andrea have a
new son, Christopher John, born June 11. Big sister, Emily, 2,
welcomed him home.
D. E. Boehling and
her husband, Robert J. Pallace, Jr., became the proud parents
of a second daughter, Tai Fu Fen, now D.E.B. “Trey” Pallace
on August 26. Trey was born September 4, 2002, in Taizhou, China.
Jeremiah DeBerry recently
joined the New York office of Thelen, Reid & Preist LLP
as an equity partner in the business and finance department.
His practice areas include general corporate, mergers and acquisitions,
private equity, sports, and entertainment.
Andrew Glickman and his wife, Julie Cohen,
welcomed their first child, Eli Zachary, on June 14. The family
resides in Washington, D.C., and is searching for a home larger
than their current one-bedroom apartment. Glickman works at the
Securities and Exchange Commission as a senior special counsel,
and also practices photography. His work is currently on display
at the Andrew Smith Gallery in Santa Fe, NM, and was published
in the August issue of Communication Arts Magazine. Cohen
teaches intellectual property law as a law professor at the Georgetown
University Law Center.
Andre Hollis writes that he just finished
a very rewarding term as the counter drug chief of the U.S. Defense
Department. He has returned to the private sector government
relations business. On August 21 his son, Maxwell Clark, was
born, joining older brother, Alex, 3.
Alexander Macaulay recently
formed Macaulay & Burtch
PC with fellow principal Jack Burtch, Jr. The two Richmond,
VA, lawyers decided to create a business model in which lawyers
and lobbyists run their own practices and bill according to a
flat fee schedule. Macaulay & Burtch consists of five lawyers
and three lobbyists who focus on employment, health care, insurance
defense, contracts, commercial litigation, and government affairs.
Practitioners rely on the latest technology to keep overhead
low and pass on the savings to clients. “We are a small
firm,” says Macauley, “but we have some of the best
Richmond lawyers and lobbyists in their respective fields. We’re
all refugees from big law firms who want to do it differently — with
less bureaucracy, more cost-effectiveness for the client, and
greater satisfaction for the practitioner.”
John “Jack” Martin took
the post of senior litigation counsel for the Bureau of Competition
at the Federal Trade Commission in November. Formerly a partner
on the litigation, antitrust, and intellectual property team
at Hunton & Williams LLP in Washington, D.C., he now litigates
antitrust matters for the FTC.
Ken Paxton, Jr., has
just completed his first legislative session since being elected
to the Texas House of Representatives in November 2002. He
serves on the ways and means committee, the financial institutions
committee and as vice chair of general investigations, and
has recently been appointed by the House Speaker to serve on
the cost adjustments subcommittee of the House select committee
on public school finance. In addition to his legislative responsibilities,
Paxton practices law in the areas of estate planning, corporate
law, and real estate. He also is acting as a fee agent for
Bridgespan Title Company in Frisco, TX. He lives in McKinney, TX, with his wife Angela and their four children — Tucker,
11, Abby, 9, Madison, 7, and Katie, 5.
Timothy Webster has
been made a partner in the Washington, D.C., office of Sidley,
Austin, Brown & Wood
LLP. His practice includes both civil and criminal environmental
matters, as well as regulatory advocacy and related compliance
counseling. Webster also advises clients on food and drug-related
matters where environmental issues are implicated. Before joining
the firm in 1999, Webster litigated complex civil enforcement
cases as a trial attorney in the environmental enforcement section
of the U.S. Department of Justice.
President George Bush has appointed Victor Wolski to
be a judge on the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. The U.S. Senate
confirmed the appointment on July 9, and Wolski took up his duties
later that month. Formerly he practiced with Cooper & Kirk
in Washington, D.C. He also has served as general counsel to
the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress and as tax
counsel to Senator Connie Mack (R-FL). Wolski and his wife Lisa
live in Arlington, VA. She works in the U.S. Senate as tax counsel
to Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ).
1992
Bill Carbaugh has taken a new job as senior
vice president of leasing with Guardian Realty Management, Inc.
Guardian Realty is a $250 million commercial real estate company,
which owns and manages 24 properties in the Washington, D.C.
area. The company currently is raising an additional $100 million
to acquire more properties, Carbaugh wrote.
John Lynch and Cynthia Cordle
Lynch ’95 welcomed
their first child, Taylor Grace, on August 22. John serves as
an assistant Commonwealth Attorney for Arlington County, VA, and Cynthia is an associate solicitor with the U.S. Patent & Trademark
Office.
Theodore Mathas has
been elected executive vice president of New York Life Insurance
Company’s board
of directors. Senior vice president since 1998, Mathas also was
named co-head of the life and annuity business unit, the company’s
largest operation, accounting for more than $11 billion in operating
revenue in 2002. The business unit includes all domestic life
insurance and annuity products, as well as agency management
and services, marketing, client service, and financial management.
Vytas Petrulis now serves as senior counsel
in the business transactions section of Jackson Walker LLP in
Dallas, TX, practicing primarily in the real estate, energy,
and corporate areas. Prior to his arrival at Jackson Walker,
Petrulis served as general counsel of an energy infrastructure
development company that was active in developing and operating
project- financed petrochemical facilities.
Adam Pritchard has
been promoted to Professor of Law at the University of Michigan
Law School, where he teaches corporate and securities law.
His current research focuses on the effects of fraud on securities
markets and the role of class action litigation in controlling
fraud. In September he presented “Behavioral
Economics and the SEC ” at the American and Law Economics
Association annual meeting at Northwestern University School
of Law. His articles have appeared in the Business Lawyer,
Virginia Law Review, Southern California Law
Review, and the Stanford Law Review. Previously
Pritchard served as senior counsel in the Office of the General
Counsel of the Securities Exchange Commission, where he wrote
appellate briefs and studied the effect of recent reforms in
the areas of securities fraud litigation. He received the SEC ’s
Law and Policy Award for his work in United States v. O’Hagan, in
which the Supreme Court upheld the misappropriation theory of
insider trading.
Michael Wu and his
wife, Tara O’Brien
Wu, announce the birth of their first child, Erika Michele, born
September 6.Wu continues to work as a vice president and acting
general counsel in the Reston, VA, office of Teleglobe America,
Inc., an international telecommunications provider.
1993
Vincent Grieco accepted a new job as the
senior counsel at the United States Filter Company beginning
January 1, 2003.
Lt. Col. Richard Gross and his wife Vickie
moved to Heidelberg, Germany, in July. Formerly with the U.S.
Army Special Operations Command in Fort Bragg, NC, Gross is
now the deputy staff judge advocate for V Corps, U.S. Army Europe.
William Pusey, Jr., has
joined Michael Joyce & Associates
PC as vice president in the firm’s Richmond office. He
leads the family office advisory practice, helping high net worth
families structure their estates, plan their investments, and
prepare the next generations for inheritance. He also directs
the firm’s strategic initiatives. Pusey formerly provided
strategic business advisory services through his company, EpiGnosis
LLC, and served as senior vice president for financial and risk
management services at Envera LLC, a Richmond-based eBusiness
network serving the global petrochemical industry.
The U.S. Senate confirmed C. Stewart Verdery, Jr., June
19 as the first assistant secretary for homeland security for
border and transportation security policy and planning. He advises
Border and Transportation Security Under Secretary Asa Hutchinson
on policy development in immigration and customs inspection and
investigations, cargo and trade policy, transportation security,
counter narcotics, and federal law enforcement training. Verdery
frequently represents the Department of Homeland Security before
Congress and private sector bodies. He formerly served as general
counsel to Senator Don Nickles (R-OK).
1994 
Dan Donahue has been
promoted to chief operating officer at the Broder-Webb-Chervin-
Silbermann Agency (BWCS). In this newly created position he
oversees the business affairs department and manages daily
operations. A key member of the agency for many years, Donahue
will continue crafting high-level deals for BWCS’s film
and television clients.
Rudolf Haas was elected
to the partnership of Latham & Watkins LLP in Frankfurt, Germany, effective January 1. He practices corporate and
securities law.
David Haddock recently joined Baker Botts
LLP as an associate in the Washington, D.C., corporate department.
His practice focuses on mergers and acquisitions, as well as
securities matters, especially in the broadcast and cable media,
telecommunications and advertising industries. Haddock has been
responsible, both as outside counsel and as a member of a corporate
legal department, for the acquisition or divestiture of dozens
of companies in more than ten countries.
Lawlor Quinlan III was
recently named as one of the top ten “up and coming” attorneys
in Western New York by a panel of Buffalo and Rochester legal
professionals. The award was based in part upon Quinlan’s
successful defense of a town supervisor in a highly publicized
suit brought against her by the town board. The following month,
Quinlan and his partner Terry Connors successfully represented
a man who had been rendered quadriplegic while performing as
a professional diver. The $58.6 million verdict rendered after
six weeks of trial was the highest ever awarded in that part
of the state and was ranked as one of the top ten verdicts nationally
in 2003 by Lawyers Weekly USA. Quinlan
is a partner with Connors & Vilardo LLP, a boutique litigation
firm engaged in both civil and criminal trial and appellate practice.
He and his wife Elizabeth live in Buffalo with their three children.
Jeffrey Stern and his wife, Amy Wong, a pediatric
nurse practitioner, welcomed their first child, Josh, on September
22. Stern and Mitchell Bompey both work in
the technology law group in Morgan Stanley’s law division.
Both were promoted from vice presidents to executive directors
last fall.
Kim Willoughby has spent
the last ten years developing a practice emphasizing gay and
lesbian family law and alternative reproduction. She manages
Willoughby Law Firm LLC, a three attorney firm located in Denver,
CO. In 2003 she published a book entitled, Ordinary Issues,
Extraordinary Solutions: A Legal Guide to the Colorado GLBT
Community (Bradford Publishing Co., July 2003) Also in
2003, she gave birth to a baby boy, Van Willoughby Guelzow, who
joins her and her partner in their home in the foothills of Golden,
CO.
Brigen Winters and his wife Jennifer welcomed
their second son, Andrew James, on September 17. Drew joined
older brother Jake, in the family home in Arlington, VA.
1995
In September Chris Baradel completed
his first Ironman Triathlon (2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike ride,
26.2- mile run).While his finishing time of 13 hours and 35
minutes placed him 806th, it was good enough to put him in
the top half of more than 1,800 entrants in Ironman Wisconsin. “Given
the unseasonably warm 89-degree temperature, I was happy not
to be one of the record 273 participants not to finish the race!” he
wrote. Baradel works for Zyman Group, a leading management consulting
firm based in Atlanta and Chicago that specializes in marketing,
branding, and growth strategies.
Jan Berlage was appointed
chair of the bankruptcy law committee of the Young Lawyer’s Division of the American
Bar Association in August. The committee monitors bankruptcy
related legislation and case law, provides information to local
practitioners, and sponsors outreach programs and clinics for
consumers and businesses. Berlage practices commercial litigation
as an associate in the litigation department of Ballard, Spahr,
Andrews & Ingersoll LLP in Baltimore, MD. A member of the
bankruptcy, reorganization, and capital recovery group, he also
practices intellectual property litigation.
Diana Strauss Casey was
elected to partnership with Latham & Watkins LLP in San
Diego, CA, effective January 1. She practices litigation
in the environment, land, and resources department with a focus
on complex insurance disputes and contaminated site work.
Andrea Cummings became
a partner with Sidley, Austin, Brown & Wood LLP in Chicago, IL, effective July 1. She practices real estate finance.
Maura Perry Goldstein recently became a partner
with Baker Botts LLP in global projects in Washington, D.C. Goldstein
represents lenders and borrowers in complex financing transactions
and has substantial experience acting for multilateral and bilateral
financing institutions and energy sector borrowers. She has advised
parties in project financings in Latin America, Russia and Eastern
Europe, China, and the U.S.
In January Paul Hourihan was
elected a partner of Williams & Connolly LLP in Washington,
D.C. Hourihan has appeared in courts across the country on
behalf of clients in a wide range of civil and criminal matters,
including representation of both plaintiffs and defendants
in fraud, civil rights, professional malpractice, commercial
contracts, and RICO cases.
J. Travis Laster was
at the Law School last Fall to teach a short-course on takeover
litigation. He specializes in corporate law and litigation
as a partner with Richards, Layton & Finger
PA in Wilmington, DE.
Cynthia Cordle Lynch and John
Lynch ’92 welcomed
their first child, Taylor Grace, on August 22. Cynthia is an
associate solicitor with the U. S. Patent & Trademark Office,
and John serves as an assistant Commonwealth Attorney for Arlington
County, VA.
Bob Ritter and his
wife Kristin announce the birth of their second daughter, Emily,
on August 29. She joins older sister Helen, 2, in the family
home in Harpers Ferry, WV. Ritter specializes in mergers
and acquisitions, transactions, corporate law, and telecommunications
as of counsel with Lukas, Nace, Gutierrez & Sachs, Chartered,
in Leesburg, VA.
Wendy Barrett Warren recently joined Baker
Botts LLP as special counsel with global projects in Washington, D.C. Warren represents clients before the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission and the New York Public Service Commission in rate
and merger proceedings and other regulatory matters.
Jonathan Wolcott was
elected to the partnership of Holland & Knight LLP in January.
A member of the business law section in Washington, D.C.,
he concentrates his practice on corporate and securities law
and merger and acquisition transactions. He was formerly senior
counsel.
1996
Stephen Adams and Tracy Welch live
in Boston, MA. Welch was recently promoted to vice president
at Credit Suisse First Boston, while Adams was named partner
in the corporate department at Goodwin Proctor.
In September Josh Black co-founded
Bello Black LLP, a new management-side labor and employment
litigation boutique in Boston ’s Back Bay. Black and
his wife Sally have two children, Ginny, 7, and Will, 4. They
live in Wellesley, MA.
In October Elizabeth “Lily” Engle opened
her own law firm, Chamowitz, Chamowitz & Engle PLC, in Old
Town Alexandria, VA. The newly formed firm is only four blocks
from Young, Goldman & VanBeek, where she was previously an
associate. “Neither firm is quite near enough to the river
to have been wiped out by (Hurricane) Isabel, thank goodness,” she
writes. “I am very excited about this endeavor, as are
my new partner and his wife, who is of counsel to the firm. We
are having a great time so far.” She continues her practice
of both transactional and litigation work with concentrations
in commercial law, real estate matters, contracts, equity sharing
agreements, preventing and conducting foreclosures, and partition
suits.
Robert Howard, Jr., and his wife Susan celebrated
the birth of their second child, Kathryn Ann, on July 17. Howard
practices securities litigation and investment regulation law
as a partner with LeClair Ryan PC.
In September, Rob Masri was
named a National TRIO Achiever by the U.S. Department of Education
Office of Postsecondary Education. Recipients of the TRIO Achiever
Award are honored for their accomplishments and dedicated commitment
to excellence in education. A student in the Virginia Tech
Upward Bound Program, Rob is the first participant from a Virginia
TRIO program to receive this honor. Masri lives in Charlottesville, and serves as Principal Gifts Officer for the Law School
Foundation. Prior to joining the Law School Foundation, Masri
was executive vice president of corporate development and general
counsel for Multicity, Inc., where he was responsible for developing
and managing the company’s strategic business partnerships and handling
its legal affairs. Prior to joining Multicity, he was an attorney
with Cooley Godward LLP and Hunton & Williams. In addition,
Masri co-taught a course at the Law School on high technology
start-ups and venture capital financing.
Michael Reese was
recently elected a partner with Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes & Lerach
LLP in New York City. His practice involves antitrust, securities,
and consumer fraud class action litigation. Reese and his wife
Sue also celebrated the birth of their first son, Tayson, in
March 2003.
In December Regan Safier was
made a partner in the Philadelphia office of Weber, Gallagher,
Simpson, Stapleton, Fires & Newby LLP. She is the youngest
partner in firm history. Her practice is devoted almost exclusively
to the defense of physicians and hospitals in medical malpractice
actions. She and her husband Duane Smith reside in Merion,
PA, with their two daughters Jolie, 2, and Devin, 1.
1997
Benkai Bouey moved
to Los Angeles last summer with his wife, Theresa Mann (Wellesley ’96 and Harvard ’02),
and their daughter, Kaiya Elizabeth, 1. Bouey started a new job
as vice president and general counsel for Career Resources Group
LLC.
Elisa Stinchcum Carlson practices
as an associate with Mary G. Commander, Attorney & Mediator. Her Norfolk, VA, practice emphasizes family law, adoption, and workers’ compensation.
Anissa Crumley and Davis Paddock were married
in Austin, TX, on June 21. The Paddocks live in Houston.
Anne Davis is living
in the Netherlands, working as a prosecutor/legal officer
at the United Nations' international war crimes tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia. In August, she was in trial on a case
involving four Bosnian Serb military officers alleged to have
been responsible for the July 1995 massacre of over 7,000 Muslim
men and boys at Srebrenica, Eastern Bosnia. Davis is on leave
from her practice at Arnold & Porter
in Washington, D.C., where she practices as an associate in
the general litigation practice group. She plans to return to
her firm this year.
Catherine Henderson Day and Jonathan
Day ’99 were married in Houston, TX, on March
15, 2003.
In October Greg Feder gave presentations
at two special conferences of the World Online Gambling
Law Report, the newsletter of the e-gambling industry.
He spoke in Long Beach, CA, and Washington, D.C., on “How
Money Circulates in Online Gambling.” Feder serves as senior
associate in the financial regulatory and ecommerce practices
at Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP in Washington, D.C.
In December William “Billy” Jones and
his family moved from Richmond, VA, to Denver, CO, where
Jones practices litigation with Moye Giles LLP.
Eric Kadel, Jr., and his wife Heather welcomed
their first child, Eric John Kadel III, to the world on August
21, 2002.
Stephen Malone joined
the National Broadcasting Company in New York as employment
counsel in September. Previously, he practiced labor and employment
law as an associate at New York ’s Proskauer Rose LLP.
He lives in Manhattan.
Paula Collins McGlarry recently
left Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP to work for the Mercer Consulting subsidiary
of Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., as corporate counsel.
Her husband, Robert McGlarry ’98, recently
left Willkie, Farr & Gallagher LLP to work for the Office
of the Commissioner of Baseball as counsel.
Andrew Jackson Montague, son of Latane Montague IV, was
born February 12, 2003.
Deborah Owen Pell and her husband Nick had
a baby girl, Cecelia Elizabeth, on January 5, 2003. Big brother
Nicholas turned three this summer, and starts pre-school this
fall. Pell continues her position as an in-house attorney for
Bechtel Power Corporation in Frederick, MD. Her husband now
works as a senior systems analyst at Booz, Allen, Hamilton in
Baltimore, MD.
Neil Richards and his wife Wendy celebrated
the birth of their first child, Fiona, in April. Several weeks
later, they moved to St. Louis, where Richards has taken a job
as an associate professor at Washington University School of
Law. He teaches privacy law, property, and First Amendment.
Andrew Rosenberg wrote
about running for U.S. Congress in Virginia ’s 8th district, challenging
incumbent Congressman Jim Moran for the Democratic nomination. “Two
months into the most challenging experience of my life, my campaign
to unseat the rightfully embattled incumbent, Jim Moran, we are
off to a great start,” he wrote. “I have an amazing
campaign manager, fundraiser, and staff, and have been relying
heavily on the support of a great group of friends from, among
other places, my UVA days. One of the most enjoyable parts of
the experience thus far has been receiving words of encouragement
from old Law School friends. In our first six weeks my campaign
raised nearly $160,000, which brings us within shooting distance
of the incumbent. Unfortunately, it will take much more for us
to run a truly competitive race. I really hope fellow classmates
and others will check out the latest from the campaign trail
at www.andyrosenbergforcongress.com, where, incidentally,
they can easily contribute to my campaign!”
Glenn Saks has left
private practice with White & Case LLP to join the Miami-Dade County Attorney’s
Office.
Salmon Shomade began
his management doctoral degree studies at the Eller College
of Business and Public Administration at the University of
Arizona in September. He is majoring in public administration
and policy with a possible minor in political economy or finance.
He was inspired and encouraged to return to school by his “lovely
wife of six years,” Beretta
Smith-Shomade (Ph.D. ’97, UCLA), an assistant professor
in media arts at the University of Arizona.
Jason Sneed and his
wife Charity are proud to announce the birth of their third
child, Andrew Nicholas, born May 18. Big sister, Tara, 4,
and big brother, Henry Jason, 2, love their baby brother. Sneed
continues to practice copyright, trademark, and other business
litigation at Alston & Bird
LLP in Charlotte, NC.
Cory Way is completing a
doctorate in law at Merton College, Oxford. Way is examining
television news coverage of crimes in the United States and England.
Wendy Yoviene married Joe Lissenden at Selma
Plantation in Leesburg, VA, on October 26, 2002. The couple
lives in Reston, VA. Early in 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court granted
a petition for writ of certiorari that Yoviene prepared
with fellow Law alum, Chip English ’84. Both
Law alumni sat at counsel table during oral arguments and recently
learned that the Supreme Court voted eight to one in their favor.
The case involved issues relating to the Commerce Clause.
1998
William Baroni, Jr., received
the Professional Achievement Award from the New Jersey State
Bar Association’s
Young Lawyers Division at its 2003 annual meeting in Atlantic
City. He previously practiced election and campaign finance
law and government relations with Blank Rome LLP in Trenton,
NJ. Throughout his practice he has represented numerous candidates
for public office and served as counsel to the New Jersey Republican
Congressional delegation during the 2001 Congressional redistricting
process where the first-ever compromise redistricting map was
drawn. Baroni has authored “The Emerging Trend of Unionization
of Doctors in Health Maintenance Organizations” in FOCUS
(December 1998) and “Torricelli v. Samson and
the Creation of the Administrative Feasibility Standard in New
Jersey Election Law” in The Seton Hall Legislative
Law Journal.
Peter Bowden has returned
to Andrews Kurth LLP in Houston, TX, where he practiced from
1998 to 2000. He spent three years with Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett
LLP in Palo Alto, CA.
M. Beth Frackleton Colling recently
left the law firm of Gentry, Locke, Rakes & Moore LLP in Roanoke, VA, to practice closer to home. She joined the Lynchburg firm
of Petty, Livingston, Dawson & Richards PC in Lynchburg.
Colling lives in Forest, VA, with her husband Kent, daughter
Mackenzie Frackleton, 7, and son, Jack Colling, 1.
Prentiss Hallenbeck, Jr., joined
Ulmer & Berne
LLP in Cincinnati, OH, in October. He practices in the firm’s
liability defense and pharmaceutical, medical device and mass
tort litigation groups and concentrates on product liability,
personal injury, litigation, trademark, and insurance.
Jonathan Hamilton practices
in the Washington, D.C., office of White & Case LLP. He previously worked
in the firm’s Mexico City and New York City offices. He
resides in Alexandria, VA, with his wife Andrea (Arts & Sciences ’98),
son Joaquin, and two dogs.
R. Lucas Hobbs recently moved to Bristol, VA, and joined the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Western
District of Virginia in its Abingdon branch office. He is primarily
prosecuting narcotics and firearms offenses in Southwest Virginia.
Tracey Howard Livesay and
her husband James are pleased to announce the birth of their
first child and son, James “Trey” David Livesay
III, on June 30. The family resides in Woodbridge, VA, and
would love to hear from other classmates at tlivesay@msn.com.
Stanford McCoy started a new job in June
as assistant general counsel in the Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative.
Robert McGlarry recently
left Willkie, Farr & Gallagher
to work for the Office of the Commissioner of Baseball as Counsel.
His wife, Paula Collins McGlarry ’97, recently
left Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP to work for the Mercer Consulting
subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., as corporate
counsel.
Curtis and Jennifer Murphy Romig welcomed
their daughter, Laura Fair, into the world on April 11, 2003. Curtis continues to practice law with Powell, Goldstein, Frazer,
and Murphy LLP in Atlanta, GA. Jennifer is teaching legal research
and writing for the third year at Emory University School of
Law.
Eric Scott and Kathryn
Swint ’99 became
parents of twin boys, Vaughn Robert Scott and Graham Daniel Scott,
on March 26, 2003. The growing family recently moved to San
Antonio, TX, where Scott practices law with Fulbright & Jaworski
and Swint currently is staying home with the boys.
Millicent Roberts Stilwell and
her husband, McDavid, have recently moved to Cambridge where
McDavid is attending Harvard Business School. Stilwell wrote, “I am not practicing
law presently, but rather practicing being a full-time mother” to
her daughter Louise, 2.
1999 
San Antonio Business Journal chose Stephanie
Chandler as one of its “40 Under Forty,” individuals
whom the paper describes as people who have made significant
accomplishments in their career, business, community, or a
combination of those areas in the San Antonio area. Chandler
practices in the business transactions section and the Internet
law group of Jackson Walker LLP.
Jonathan Day and Catherine
Henderson Day ’97 were married in Houston, TX, on March
15, 2003.
Clarissa Chun Kang has
become the proud mother of a healthy, fun, little boy, Aaron
Jayson, born March 14, 2003. “He’s the light of my life!” she
writes. She also changed firms and now specializes in employee
benefits and ERISA litigation with Trucker Huss APC, still
in San Francisco, CA.
Jennifer Crimmins Keeley and Stephen J. Keeley welcomed
a new child, Kathryn Marie, on May 27. The couple resides in
Naperville, IL, along with their older daughter, Charlotte
Rose.
Galina Kolomietz and her husband, Matthew
Frank, welcomed their first child, Hannah Robin Frank, on February
5, 2003.
In November D. David Parr, Jr., joined
the asset securitization group of the global capital markets
and mergers and acquisition teams of Hunton & Williams
LLP in Richmond, VA.
George Peterson has
joined Sands, Anderson, Marks & Miller PC as an associate
in the McLean office. Peterson focuses his practice on professional
liability defense and commercial litigation as a member of
the business and professional liability practice group and
the healthcare practice group.
Mark Rankin has joined the Federal Public
Defenders Office for the Middle District of Florida as an assistant
federal public defender in the trial division of the Tampa office.
Michelle Sheridan married
Andrew Adams in Washington, D.C., on June 7. The couple resides
in Boston, MA. Sheridan recently left Nutter McClennen & Fish
LLP to join the Office of the Attorney General in the appellate
division of the criminal bureau.
Scott Spence and his partner of over five
years married in Leiden, the Netherlands, in April. In September
Spence graduated from Leiden University with an LL.M. in public
international law. He has joined the Harvard Sussex Program on
Chemical and Biological Weapons Armament and Arms Limitation
as the programs researcher in The Hague. He is on secondment
to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and
works primarily for the Office of the Legal Adviser. Scott and
his partner reside in their new home in The Hague.
Kathryn Swint and Eric
Scott ’98 became
parents of twin boys, Vaughn Robert and Graham Daniel Scott,
on March 26, 2003. The growing family recently moved to San
Antonio, TX where Scott practices law with Fulbright & Jaworski
and Swint currently is staying home with the boys.
Kashi Way recently
married Diane Ferguson (Arts & Sciences ’88).
Pre-1960
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
LL.M.
UVA Lawyer
Home