A monthly e-newsletter for friends and alumni of the Moritz College of Law at The Ohio State University. Subscribe now!
July, 2004
| Moritz Alumna Erin Moriarty '77 Gives OSU Commencement Address |
Only the fourth woman in a hundred years to speak at an OSU
commencement, Erin Moriarty '77, left with Dean Rogers, returned
to campus June 13 to address more than 7,000 graduates in
the first full class of the millennium generation. A lawyer
turned award-winning journalist, Erin is a correspondent for
the CBS News program "48 Hours." (learn
more) |
| Harlem School Honors Peter Eikenberry '64 for Thirty Years of Public Service |
Hundreds of friends and supporters of The
Children's Storefront gathered in May at the Copacabana
in New York to celebrate the school's 2004 graduates and honor
trustee Peter Eikenberry '64 for his more than 30 years of
service as a volunteer lawyer. Moritz classmates Donald Wheeler
'64 and Niki Schwartz '64 were on hand to offer congratulations.
(learn
more) |
| Kim Shumate '92 Makes History as Youngest Columbus Bar Association President |
If 12 years from professional admittance to taking leadership
of the Columbus bar seems like a fast track, the facts only
underscore the point. Kimberly Callery Shumate, associate
legal counsel at The Ohio State University, recently became
the youngest Columbus Bar Association President in the bar's
135 years. (learn
more) |
| Frank Bazler '53 Honored for Distinguished Service at OSU Commencement |
OSU President Karen A. Holbrook presented the University's
Distinguished Service Award to Frank Bazler '53 and wife,
Ginni, B.A. '54, at the June 2004 commencement ceremony. It
was the most recent honor for the Bazlers, whose long association
with Ohio State began in their respective childhoods, including
an introduction to each other in the Registrar's Office of
the University in 1952, which introduction blossomed into
a partnership that exemplifies the best in alumni loyalty,
leadership, and philanthropy. (learn
more) |
| Dan Shaban '82 Appointed to Connecticut Superior Court |
Everyone knew Dan Shaban would become a judge except Dan
Shaban. The 1982 Moritz graduate had been working in private
practice in Connecticut for more than 20 years when, out-of-the-blue,
a judge he knew suggested a change of career he had rarely
considered: pursuing a robe and gavel of his own. In May,
Dan was appointed to a bench on the Connecticut Superior Court.(learn more) |
| In Brief |
Past Issues of This Month @ Moritz: June 2004 | May 2004 | April 2004 | March 2004 | February 2004 | January 2004 | December 2003 | November 2003 | October 2003 | September 2003 | August 2003 | Complete Archive List Comments or questions? | Subscribe | Send This Month @ Moritz to a Friend Published by: Moritz Law Alumni Relations |

Only the fourth woman in a hundred years to speak at an OSU
commencement, Erin Moriarty '77, left with Dean Rogers, returned
to campus June 13 to address more than 7,000 graduates in
the first full class of the millennium generation. A lawyer
turned award-winning journalist, Erin is a correspondent for
the CBS News program "48 Hours." (
Hundreds of friends and supporters of
If 12 years from professional admittance to taking leadership
of the Columbus bar seems like a fast track, the facts only
underscore the point. Kimberly Callery Shumate, associate
legal counsel at The Ohio State University, recently became
the youngest Columbus Bar Association President in the bar's
135 years. (
OSU President Karen A. Holbrook presented the University's
Distinguished Service Award to Frank Bazler '53 and wife,
Ginni, B.A. '54, at the June 2004 commencement ceremony. It
was the most recent honor for the Bazlers, whose long association
with Ohio State began in their respective childhoods, including
an introduction to each other in the Registrar's Office of
the University in 1952, which introduction blossomed into
a partnership that exemplifies the best in alumni loyalty,
leadership, and philanthropy. (
Everyone knew Dan Shaban would become a judge except Dan
Shaban. The 1982 Moritz graduate had been working in private
practice in Connecticut for more than 20 years when, out-of-the-blue,
a judge he knew suggested a change of career he had rarely
considered: pursuing a robe and gavel of his own. In May,
Dan was appointed to a bench on the Connecticut Superior Court.